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___ SIMPSON _________|
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|--Anna SIMPSON
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___ SIMPSON _________|
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|--Dorcas SIMPSON
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[1602] Served as First Lady for her father-in-law, President Martin Van Buren.
_Guy DE BRIENNE, Lord, BARON _______________________+
| (1311 - 1390) m 1349
_William DE BRYAN ___|
| (1349 - 1413) |
| |_Elizabeth De MONTAGU (MONTACUTE), Baroness BADLES _+
| (1305 - 1359) m 1349
_Thomas BRYAN, SIR __|
| (1358 - 1444) |
| | _John FITZ ALAN, 1st Lord MALTRAVERS _______________
| | | (1306 - ....)
| |_Joan FITZ ALAN _____|
| (1351 - 1404) |
| |____________________________________________________
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|
|--Edmond Bryan, SIR
| (1412 - ....)
| ____________________________________________________
| |
| _____________________|
| | |
| | |____________________________________________________
| |
|_Margaret ECHYNAN ___|
|
| ____________________________________________________
| |
|_____________________|
|
|____________________________________________________
_Thomas Bryan, SIR _________+
| (1438 - ....) m 1463
_Thomas Bryan II, SIR ____________________________________|
| (1464 - 1516) |
| |_Margaret BOWSEY ___________+
| (1442 - ....) m 1463
_Francis Bryan I, Sir, Lord Marshall of IRELAND ____________|
| (1492 - 1549) m 1548 |
| | _Humphery Bourchier, SIR ___+
| | | (1444 - 1471)
| |_Margaret BOURCHIER ______________________________________|
| (1470 - 1551) |
| |_Elizabeth Tilney, DUCHESS _+
| (1465 - 1497)
|
|--Francis Bryan II, SIR
| (1549 - ....)
| ____________________________
| |
| _James F. (Fitzmaurice) Fitzgerald, 10th Earl of DESMOND _|
| | |
| | |____________________________
| |
|_Joan Fitzgerald (FITZ-MAURICE), Lady, Countess of ORMONDE _|
(.... - 1564) m 1548 |
| _Turlogh MAC-I-BRIEN-ARA ___
| |
|_Amy (O' Brien) MAC-I-BRIEN-ARA __________________________|
|
|____________________________
[65] http://home.att.net/~erifle/d0006/g0000004.html#I2205
_Francis Bryan I, Sir, Lord Marshall of IRELAND ____________+
| (1492 - 1549) m 1548
_Francis Bryan II, SIR _|
| (1549 - ....) m 1580 |
| |_Joan Fitzgerald (FITZ-MAURICE), Lady, Countess of ORMONDE _+
| (.... - 1564) m 1548
_William Smith BRYAN _|
| (1600 - 1667) m 1631 |
| | _William SMITH _____________________________________________
| | |
| |_Ann SMITH _____________|
| (1560 - ....) m 1580 |
| |____________________________________________________________
|
|
|--Francis Bryan III, SIR
| (1630 - 1694)
| ____________________________________________________________
| |
| ________________________|
| | |
| | |____________________________________________________________
| |
|_Catherine MORGAN ____|
(1604 - ....) m 1631 |
| ____________________________________________________________
| |
|________________________|
|
|____________________________________________________________
[57]
http://home.att.net/~erifle/d0002/g0000004.html#I2201
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Sir Francis Bryan, III b 1630 in Ireland lived in Denmark and married there to Sarah Brinker or Bringer b. 1634 in Denmark. Sir Francis Bryan, III returned to Ireland in 1671 where he probably died.
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Source Information:
Notable Southern Families, Volumes I-II. Richmond, VA: n.p., 1918.
Name: Brian
Francis Bryan, eldest son of William Smith Bryan, born about 1630, returned to Ireland in 1667 and endeavored to recover his hereditary titles and estates, but was so persecuted by the English Government that he sought refuge in Denmark where he married Sarah Brinker or Brunker. He later returned to Ireland, where he died in 1694. His son, Morgan, was born in Denmark in 1681
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Colonial Families of the United States of America: Volume 7
Lineage
page 105
WILLIAM SMITH BRYAN was a landholder in Ireland, County Clare, at the time of the British invasion under CROMWELL, and for taking the side of Ireland was transported as a rebellious subject, in 1650, to the American Colonies, with his family, goods and chattels, consisting of a ship load. He settled in Gloucester County, Virginia; he had eleven sons. Morgan BRYAN, who was in Norfolk County in 1693, was probably one of these sons. Francis BRYAN, the oldest son, returned to Ireland, in 1677, and endeavored to recover his hereditary titles and estates, but was so greatly persecuted by the English Government that he sought refuge in Denmark. After a few years he returned to Ireland. His oldest son Morgan was born in Denmark. It is believed that William BRYAN, b. in 1685, was also his son. William BRYAN and his wife, Margaret, lived at Ballyroney, County Down, Ireland. They were Presbyterians.
The town of Bryansford near by is said to have been named for some of his family. William and Margaret BRYAN one day sent their little son John into the woods to cut a stick to make a handle for a book used in weaving, and he was arrested for poaching. After much trouble and [p.105] expense the father got him clear and immediately sailed for America, where, he said, timber was free and there were no constables. This was in the year 1718. William BRYAN and family settled in New Jersey or Pennsylvania. (From Bryan-Akers Family by Jesse BRYAN.
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Source Information:
Notable Southern Families, Volumes I-II. Richmond, VA: n.p., 1918.
It has been said that the family tree of the O'Briens bends beneath the weight of its royal ancestry. "On every branch hangs a monarch" was almost too true at one time. Kings of Thomound, of Munster and Limrick, Earls of Ichquin and Barons of Tadcaster are of this line.
The Monarch, Brien Boru, killed at the battle of Cloutart in 1014, is said to be responsible for the name Bryan as the surname, the "O" meaning the son of, or descendant of Brien, and no matter what the spelling of the name, they are all the same family, from Machias O'Brien of Maine with his six fighting sons to Joseph Bryan, the English planter, who settled in South Carolina prior to 1700.
Pennsylvania, Virginia and North Carolina received their quota of emigrants of the name, three main lines all add to the same story of political intrigue in the old country, showing a common ancestor. Many believe this to be William Smith Bryan, "deported to the colony of Virginia in 1650, as an undesirable citizen, with his family goods and chattles, consisting of a shipload (McKenzie Colonial Families, Vol. VI).
He was the son of Sir Francis Bryan, a prominent man of Ireland about the middle of the 16th century.
One authority makes Francis Bryan the son of William Smith Bryan and places William Smith Bryan's arrival in Virginia, in 1615, with the statement that between the years 1623 and 1666 there were twenty-one Bryans, sons and grandsons of William Smith Bryan, who took up lands in Virginia. Certain it is that in 1631, January 2, John Bryan, aged 25, was transported to Virginia in boat "Bonaventure"
William Smith Bryan is said to be the ancestor of Sir Edward O'Brien, of William Smith O'Brien and Lord Ichquin. The Edward O'Brien line settled in North Carolina. "Edward was the eldest of five brothers, and brought with him the coronet which was his birth-right".
Needham Bryan, born in Virginia in 1690, settled in North Carolina, "urged by relatives already there". William Smith Bryan, the first in Virginia, son of Sir Francis Bryan, settled in Gloucester County, Virginia, and had eleven sons. We are only sure of one, Francis, the eldest, altho Morgan Bryan in Norfolk County in 1693 is thought to be a son. Perhaps also James Bryan a land owner in Isle of Wight County and his brother, William Bryan (father of Needham) who settled in Isle of Wight County in 1688, Richard in King George County, 1694 and John the father of five O'Briens who settled in North Carolina (Edward, William, John, Council and Hardy). In Vol. VI, Virginia Colonial Records, page 12, the will of Thomas Wight, Sept. 20, 1672, of Moratico Creek, mentions sons-in-law Thomas and Robert Bryan.
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Hugh de Swynford, SIR
____ - ____
Family 1
: Catherine Swynford ROËT
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