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David Boyett | all galleries >> Boyt/Boyte/Boyett/e DNA Surname Project >> Boyt-Boyette DNA Surname Group 2 >> Stancil YDNA Surname Project > Godwin IOW map 1743 Capt Thomas and Col Joseph Godwin
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Godwin IOW map 1743 Capt Thomas and Col Joseph Godwin

Land patents GODWIN 1743 IOW Virginia Colony. BRIDGER, PIT
https://andersonnc.com/isle-of-wight-map/ See more detailed IOW maps
Capt Thomas Godwin and Col Joseph Godwin (located crossing the IOW and Nansemond Border)

Thomas Godwin
B:1610 Somerset, England
D:1655 Isle of Wight, Virginia, USA

https://history.house.virginia.gov/members/1545
Thomas Godwin/Goodwin/Goodwyn
Member From: 1654 - 1676

Bio: THOMAS GODWIN (or Goodwin, or Goodwyn) was Speaker of the House of Burgesses in June 1676. Speaker Godwin previously had represented Nansemond County in the assemblies of 1654-1655 and 1659. He had come to Virginia before 1650, in which year he and Richard Axom had patented more than 1,500 acres in York County. By April 1654 Thomas Godwin was a member of the Nansemond County Court, and in March 1656 he acquired 200 acres there. He sold at least some of his land in York County later that year. In 1668 he patented 179 acres in Chuckatuck Parish, Nansemond, and he probably owned other land of which there is no extant record.

In 1674 when the General Assembly drew the line between Isle of Wight and Nansemond counties it stipulated ''that the house and clered grounds of Capt. [later Major and Colonel] Thomas Godwin, who hath bin an antient inhabitant of Nanzemond countie court,. bee . . . in the county of Nanzemund.''
There is little evidence from which to determine Speaker Godwin's attitude toward Nathaniel Bacon, Jr. Much of the legislation passed in the so-called Bacon's Assembly, over which Godwin presided, seems not to have interested Bacon. A March 1676 act that named Thomas Godwin, John Lear, and Thomas Milner (who probably were Nansemond County's ranking militia officers) to impress men and supplies to fight against the Indians links him with neither Bacon nor Governor Sir William Berkeley. Yet, in 1676 it had been fifteen years since Speaker Godwin had sat in the House of Burgesses, and he was the first Speaker from the south bank of the James River elected since Thomas Dew in 1652. Both facts suggest that he was not allied with Governor Berkeley's Green Spring faction, but there is no evidence to suggest that Speaker Godwin was politically allied with Nathaniel Bacon, Jr. Speaker Godwin died in 1677 or 1678; his will was dated 24 March 1677.


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