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"The grave markers of Wicomico County are more than genealogical records. They are records of custom, fashion, economic conditions, even the twang of Wicomico County speech. "Through them the settlement and movement of families can be traced. Epidemics that swept the area. The storms that blasted it. The wars that plagued it. Through our grave markers is revealed much of the history of two hundred years of Wicomico County living as well as dying." "The earliest death in the county marked by a still readable inscription dates from 1739..." Most entries are from the 1800s. A full name index adds to the value of this work.
John Holloway (1580-1643) emigrated from England to Accomack (later Northampton) County, Virginia during or before 1633/1634. Descendants and relatives lived in Virginia, Maryland, Delaware, Ohio, Kansas, Oklahoma, California and elsewhere. Includes ancestors in England to 1066 A.D.
Henri Perduex (b.1625), Huguenot and son of Pierre Perduex, married Marie Toisson. They emigrated from France to England in 1655, and in 1657 went to Martinique in the West Indies as resident factor for the Indies Company. By 1661 they immigrated to Elizabeth City, Virginia and, seeking fellow Huguenots, settled in eastern Worcestor County, Maryland in 1662. "There is a gap between the time Henri Perdeux [sic] is reported to have come over to Maryland in 1662 and the time that we see records of the next Perdue, John Perdue in 1720 of more than 58 years. This is enough time for three generations to have started"--(P. 1.0-8). The Perdue family of the eastern shore of Maryland starts with John Perdue Sr. (d.1743), who purchased land in Somerset (later Worcester) County, Maryland in 1720. Descendants and relatives listed lived chiefly in Maryland.
In the 20th century, a handful of writers documented old, mysterious, roof-like grave covers in several cemeteries on the Delmarva Peninsula. Most marked graves without headstones. Since then, the peculiar grave markers have been all but forgotten. Chris Slavens investigates the custom and its possible origins.