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The immigrant ancestor of this family, William Strother I (ca. 1627/30- 1700/02), is supposed to have immigrated from Northumberland, England to Virginia around 1650. He married Dorothy Savage, daughter of Capt. Anthony Savage, ca. 1651. He settled in Sittenborne Parish on the Rappahannock River then in "Old" Rappahannock County. This county was later Richmond Co. and is now in King George County. Couple had the following children: William II (ca. 1653-1726), James, Jeremiah, Robert, Benjamin and Joseph. William II married Margaret Thornton, (1678-1756), daughter of Francis Thornton, Sr. and Alice Savage. Descendants live in Virginia, West Virginia, Oklahoma, Texas, Ohio, Indiana, Kentucky, Tennessee and elsewhere.
The immigrant ancestor of this family, William Strother I (ca. 1627/30- 1700/02), is supposed to have immigrated from Northumberland, England to Virginia around 1650. He married Dorothy Savage, daughter of Capt. Anthony Savage, ca. 1651. He settled in Sittenborne Parish on the Rappahannock River then in "Old" Rappahannock County. This county was later Richmond Co. and is now in King George County. Couple had the following children: William II (ca. 1653-1726), James, Jeremiah, Robert, Benjamin and Joseph. William II married Margaret Thornton, (1678-1756), daughter of Francis Thornton, Sr. and Alice Savage. Descendants live in Virginia, West Virginia, Oklahoma, Texas, Ohio, Indiana, Kentucky, Tennessee and elsewhere.
A Pride of Place, the result of a quarter-century’s worth of painstaking research and collection, presents the first comprehensive architectural and historic inventory of the widely diverse and irreplaceable rural residences of Fauquier County, Virginia. Hundreds of photographs and illustrations, each accompanied by informative text, provide a fascinating and helpful overview of the county’s rich architectural heritage.
Noted historian pens biography of Ferry Farm—George Washington's boyhood home—and its three centuries of American history In 2002, Philip Levy arrived on the banks of Rappahannock River in Virginia to begin an archeological excavation of Ferry Farm, the eight hundred acre plot of land that George Washington called home from age six until early adulthood. Six years later, Levy and his team announced their remarkable findings to the world: They had found more than Washington family objects like wig curlers, wine bottles and a tea set. They found objects that told deeper stories about family life: a pipe with Masonic markings, a carefully placed set of oyster shells suggesting that someone in the household was practicing folk magic. More importantly, they had identified Washington's home itself—a modest structure in line with lower gentry taste that was neither as grand as some had believed nor as rustic as nineteenth century art depicted it. Levy now tells the farm's story in Where the Cherry Tree Grew. The land, a farmstead before Washington lived there, gave him an education in the fragility of life as death came to Ferry Farm repeatedly. Levy then chronicles the farm's role as a Civil War battleground, the heated later battles over its preservation and, finally, an unsuccessful attempt by Wal-Mart to transform the last vestiges Ferry Farm into a vast shopping plaza.