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William Lynn

Also Known As: "Laird William Lynn"
Birthdate:
Birthplace: Kilmacrenan, County Donegal, Ireland
Death: 1727 (50-59)
Fredricksburg, Spotsylvania, British Colony
Immediate Family:

Husband of Margaret Lynn
Father of Elizabeth Hutchenson; Dr. William Lynn; Margaret Lewis; Dr. John Lynn; Audley Lynn and 1 other

Managed by: Private User
Last Updated:

About William Lynn

He was not a son of Andrew Lynn of that Ilk and Ann Blair of Auldmuir. They had no children. There is no evidence he was a brother of Andrew Linn. He was not Laird of Loch Lynn or Laird of Lynn.

http://www.house-of-lynn.com/Dr_William_Lynn.html


Biography

https://www.werelate.org/wiki/Person:William_Lynn_%289%29

Margaret Lynn, wife of John Lewis, was almost certainly of the Lynn family of Donegal and Londonderry counties, Province of Ulster, Ireland. She was the daughter of William Lynn, and his wife, Margaret Patton, who brought him to the estate, "Ruskie," Parish of Drumachose, County Derry, inherited from her father, John Patton. Another child of William and Margaret Patton Lynn was a physician, Dr. William Lynn, who immigrated to the Virginia Colony and settled in Fredericksburg. He was a member of the earliest land company that made discoveries and petitioner, in 1727, the Council of Virginia for a land grant west of the Blue Ridge."

Children of William Lynn and Margaret Patton:

  1. Elizabeth Lynn Hutchenson,
  2. William Lynn,
  3. Margaret Lynn Lewis,
  4. John Lynn (perhaps)
  5. Audley Lynn,
  6. Charles Lynn

Dr. William Lynn, brother of Charles Lynn, Audley Lynn, Elizabeth (Lynn) Hutchenson, and Margaret (Lynn) Lewis, wrote his will on 21 October 1757 and named these four siblings (describing Audley as deceased) and no more. He named no sons in his will but made bequests to his daughter Ann and to several more distant relatives back in Ireland. (See Will transcription: < PDF >




Sometimes called Laird of Loch Lynn but there was no such place. a man named William Lyne (Lynn) and a man named David Lyne (Lynn) who both were Scots Protestant proprietors of properties in Kilmacrenan, County Donegal called Bunintyne [i.e., Bunnaton], Carrowreagh and Largebreak [i.e., Lurganbrack]. In fact, both men owned some portion of all three properties and all in the same year - 1654. See the discussion at https://www.geni.com/discussions/158311.


The statement from The Encyclopedia Britannica Library, which is contained entirely in the first paragraph below the next underline, does not in any way address the question of whether or not there actually was a “Laird of Loch Lynn”. That title in fact was invented by a known 19th-century author of poetry and prose named Mary Jane Stith Upshur under the pseudonym Fanny Fielding in her 1869 so-called “Common-Place Book of me Margaret Lewis, nee Lynn, of Loch Lynn, Scotland”.1/,2/,3/,4/ Also known as “The Valley Manuscript”, it was published in a North Carolina rather than Virginia historical magazine, republished and embellished in 1892 in a West Virginia historical magazine, but entirely discredited in the February 15, 1948 issue of “The Richmond-Times Dispatch”.5/,6/ The last paragraph in the narrative below the underline here, if kept, should read, “It is reported ...” rather than "documented that he was known as the Laird of Loch Lynn [etc.]”.

1/ Appleton's Cyclopaedia of American Biography, James Grant Wilson and John Fiske, New York (1889), vol. 6, pp. 214, 733.

2/ ‘’Dictionary of American Biography’’, Francis S. Drake, Boston (1879), p. vii.

3/ ‘’Living Female Writers of the South’’, Edit. Author of "Southland Writers", Philadelphia (1872), pp. 416-19.

4/ ‘’Southland Writers’’, Ida Raymond, Philadelphia (1870), vol. 2, pp. 799-805.

5/ The Richmond Times-Dispatch, 15 Feb. 1948 : "Bogus Portrait Supplements 'Old Valley Manuscript' Hoax"].

6/ http://www.house-of-lynn.com/Margaret_Lynn_Lewis.html.

Another popular but erroneous belief is that the “Lynns of the Cunningham Dist, Ayrshire, Scotland were of the Boyd clan.” Most relevant is the fact that the Boyds were not an historic clan per se prior to the 20th century. To the chagrin of some living Scots of title, Scotland’s Court of the Lord Lyon (likely in order to encourage Scottish tourism and interest in Scotland worldwide) decided to grant clan status to any family whose chief had a proven coat of arms and proven lineage. Until the last two or three centuries, coats of arms were entirely an Anglo-Norman device never used by clans. Today, however, even a school, university, sporting club, charity, etc. can register a coat of arms. In 1956, to accompany the new status of clan, Lord Kilmarnock commissioned and registered a tartan [https://www.tartanregister.gov.uk/tartanDetails.aspx?ref=326]. Perhaps there is more than an aesthetic reason their “clan” is titled simply “House of Boyd Society”.

Once clan status was gained and a tartan registered, certain Boyds set about trying to link as many Ayrshire families as possible and adding them to their clan as septs and surnames. They presumed that any family found living in or connected to any piece of property over which the Boyds had dominion at any point in time - including any that held such property - must have been allied to the Boyds and must have owed its ownership of property to the Boyds. For the Lynns, they understandably but mistakenly relied on a 1563 resignation in which Thomas Boyd of Kilmarnock was called Laird of Lynn : search for Reference # GD8/179. It turns out that document is much more recent than a number of other documents concerning the Lynns of Cunningham District and their barony. Just one example, and most pointedly, it was 31 years earlier - May 11, 1532 to be precise - that the Lynns sold a portion of their barony to the Boyds, proving they owned it before and independently of the Boyds ["The Register of the Great Seal of Scotland A.D. 1513-1546", Edit., James Balfour Paul, F.S.A. Scot., and John Maitland Thomson, M.A., Advocates, Edinburgh (1883), p. 254].

Finally, considering the 1757 will of Dr. William Lynn of Fredericksburg, assumed son of this William Lynn, it is questionable whether Sarah Cameron Lynn was a daughter of this William. There are no records contemporaneous to the younger William indicating that he had a sister named Sarah Cameron Patton nee Lynn. Specifically, while his will does name his siblings - both living and dead - there is no mention of a sister Sarah. What source does anyone rely on for the relationship claimed? ___________________________________________________

The Laird of Loch Lynn: The Encyclopedia Brittanica Library Research Service states: The Loch Lynn referred to is "The Loch Linnhe" in western Scotland, County of Inverness. It extends from the Firth of Lome which empties into the Scottish Sea and extends north and east for a distance of 21 miles. The region was the home of the Camerons and McDonalds and of the Dukes of Argyll of the Clan Campbell. It was the seat of many of the principal historical Highland Clans.

Little is known of the Laird of Loch Lynn. He was of Presbyterian faith and was forced to flee Scotland for Ulster, Ireland due to religious persecution.


The Lynns of Cunningham Dist, Ayrshire, Scotland were of the Boyd clan. According to web page appalachian home.tripod.com David was David Cameron, "Laird of Loch Linnhe" in Scotland. He was born betw 1640-1645 in Scotland. He was of the Presbyterian faith and was forced to flee Scotland for Ulster, Ireland due to religious persecution. He was known as David of Lynn. He's also been called William David Lynn.


The information here is borrowed from

http://worldconnect.rootsweb.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db...



According to Jonathan Wolfson: It is documented in some information that He was known as the Laird of Loch Lynn, and a Physician. He and his wife, Margaret, had at least 6 children: Sarah Cameron Patton; Margaret Lewis; John Lynn; Charles Lynn; William Lynn; (Audley Lynn and Jane Paul) Brother of Andrew Linn, Sr., Much of the Lynn land was sold to the Boyd family. The family fled to Ireland from Scotland probably due to religious reasons, finally ending up in Virginia USA.



There is no historical record of or source for Andrew Lynn of that Ilk and Ann (Blair) Lynn ever having children, much less children born in Ireland. They lived out their days in Ayrshire, Scotland, and Andrew's property went to persons of other surnames.


https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Lynn-83

William David [uncertain] Lynn Born before 1650 in Corkaugh, County Donegal, Ulster Province, Ireland [uncertain]

Son of [father unknown] and [mother unknown]

[sibling%28s%29 unknown]

Husband of Margaret (Patton) Lynn — married [date unknown] [location unknown]

Descendants descendants

Father of Elizabeth (Lynn) Hutchenson, Sarah Cameron (Lynn) Patton, Thomas Andrew Linn, William Lynn, Margaret (Lynn) Lewis, John Lynn, Audley Lynn, Charles Lynn and Ann (Lynn) Miller

Died about 1727 in Fredericksburg, Spotsylvania, Colony of Virginia

Biography

It is unlikely that this William Lynn had the middle name David, or any middle name, since the use of middle names was uncommon in his day. In a collection of over 1,800 parish records of Lynn births and baptisms, only one child born prior to 1700 had a middle name recorded. Also, two separate individuals, one named William Lyne and the other David Lyne, are listed in the 1654 Civil Survey of Ireland as living in County Donegal. It is likely that the two men were, at some point, mistakenly thought to be one and the same. Following is the historical background of Lynns in County Donegal ...

   An earlier William Lynne was a Scotsman who held land in Counties Donegal, Londonderry, and Tyrone in Ulster, Ireland from 1604 until his death in about 1625. He was named in a number of sources of the period, and the fact that he left a prerogative will, which indicates ownership of land in more than one county, supports the record in its entirety representing one and the same man. 

As evidenced by a deed produced in 1775 to James Hamilton, then Earl of Abercorn, "William Lynne of Londonderry" was conveyed the County Tyrone property of Cloghogle by one of the Earl's predecessors on "27 October in the 38th year of reign by James". This monarch was James VI of Scotland, who reigned Scotland from 1567 to 1625 and became James I of England in 1603, reigning there also until 1625. This conveyance to William Lynne thus can be dated to 1604.[1]
In 1609, William Lynn appeared on the patent rolls of James I as holding land of Carrigcooley [Carrickcall] in Moville Parish, Donegal with a lease from the bishop of Derry.[2]
In 1610, William Lynne was paid 40 pounds for a "house with a backside and divers tenements" in Londonderry.[3]
In 1616, the following were granted denizenship, which was the equivalent of naturalization: (1) William Lynne of Derry City [i.e., Londonderry], a Scottish settler; (2) John Lynn, a Scottish settler in Dunnalong; and (3) David Lynn, also a Scottish settler in Dunnalong.[4]
Nicholas Pynnar's 1618-1619 survey of the Ulster plantation provides the next record of William holding land in County Donegal : 108 acres called Caroreagh [Carrowreogh] and 240 acres called Laurgaurack [Lurganbrack]. Later research by Rev. Hill, which he used to enlighten the survey in his 1877 volume memorializing the first Ulster plantation, reveals that William's heir was a nephew of the same name.[5] Hill reports that a nephew was served heir in 1635 and therefore must have been born before 1615. The one flaw in the report is that Hill mistakenly estimated the year of William's death at 1633. The error presumably was made because Hill assumed the death occurred not long before the 1635 inquisition, but the longer delay was necessitated by the nephew still being a child when William died.
While living, the elder William - William Lynne, gentleman - was agent to the Earl of Abercorn in the manor of Dunnalong in Strabane, County Tyrone, as well as a freeholder with a stone house therein. As agent, he conducted a survey in 1622 and presented a certificate of the state of settlement in Dunnalong. Also a freeholder in Dunnalong that year was John Lynne; the David Lynn who lived there in 1616 apparently had since died or moved elsewhere, although Pynnar's survey specifically named only those men who actually owned property or held leases.[6]
William Lynne died between 1622 and 1625, and his prerogative will - one in which the testator owned property in more than one county - was recorded in the latter year.[7] Unfortunately, all early Irish wills were lost in a 1922 fire, and only the indexes remain.
The nephew in the 1635 inquisition, who also was named William, inherited William Lynne's properties. Not being served as heir until 1633, he presumably was then just 21 and therefore born in or about 1612. He shared at least three properties with one David Lynn. In Ireland's 1654 Civil Survey for County Donegal, David Lyne and William Lyne each are listed as Scots Protestant proprietors of Bunintyne [Bunnaton], Largebreake [Lurganbrack], and Carrowreagh in the barony of Kilmacrenan.[8]
Thus, there were two men - an uncle and nephew - who were named William, were Ulster Scots born decades before this William, and lived in County Donegal. Their relationships to this William, if any, are unknown.

Clearly contradicted by historical documents are a number of widely disseminated, erroneous reports concerning this family. Here are two such ...

   (1) Andrew Lynn and Ann Blair of Ayrshire, Scotland, contrary to some published family trees, were not the parents of this William Lynn or any other Lynn who was born in Ireland. Andrew and Ann remained in Ayrshire all their days and appear to have had no children at all, much less a child born in Ireland. Ann died between 1657 and 1659, Andrew in 1670, and the heir to Andrew’s Ayrshire property was a Blair. Also, Andrew was but a child – if even born – when Scottish Lynns went to the northwest Ulster counties of Donegal, Londonderry, and Tyrone (discussed above). 

(2) The supposed title "Laird of Loch Lynn" and claims of birth "in Loch Lynn", are misconceptions initially prompted by the publication of a manuscript passed off in 1869 as the diary of Margaret (Lynn) Lewis, reportedly the daughter of this William Lynn, and furthered by an embellished 1892 reprint in a West Virginia historical society magazine. Need one ask why the "contributor" of the manuscript submitted it to a North Carolina historical society. The manuscript in fact was subsequently exposed as a work of fiction in a 1948 news article in "The Richmond Times-Dispatch".[9] The true author of that manuscript was Mary Jane Stith Upshur, a known 19th-century author of fiction and poetry, writing as Fanny Fielding.[10] For a copy of the "Times-Dispatch" article and additional details, see : (1) the biography for Margaret (Lynn) Lewis and (2) the lengthy discussion and documentation at the Lynn genealogy website [1] Notably, a loch is a body of water; no one was ever titled laird of a body of water but of land; and any claim of being born in Loch Lynn defies logic.
Some family trees assert that David a/k/a William a/k/a William David Lynn a/k/a William David Cameron Lynn was the father of Sarah Cameron (Lynn) Patton and additional children. For a discussion on this subject, see Dr. William Lynn, one of the purported sons. Research Notes

(1) A family tree at familysearch.org (https://ancestors.familysearch.org/en/LVKH-DVD/william-david-camero...) erroneously describes William as the 7th Laird and claims as his birth place Lochaline, Argyll, Scotland. Historical records from Scotland's National Archives and nearly 100 other accounts published by Scottish historians reveal only three families of Lynns who were lairds or lords in Scotland ...

   1. The lords of Lyne and Scroggs in Peeblesshire and of Loquhariot in Midlothian, all from the late 12th century to the mid 13th century. The properties all went to the de Hay family with the marriage of a daughter of the last lord of Lyne, Scroggs, and Loquhariot. 

2. The lords of Lynn, Highlees, and Bourtreehill, all in Ayrshire, from the mid 13th century until 1532. This is the family most often associated with the Lynns of Counties Donegal, Londonderry, and Tyrone in Ulster, Ireland. While there is good reason for the association, John Linn or Lynn, chief of the family in 1532, sold the greater part of the barony of Lynn that year to Thomas Boyd, brother of Robert Boyd of Kilmarnock; and the title "Lord of Lynn" afterward belonged to Thomas Boyd and his heirs.
3. The lairds of Larg in Wigtownshire from about 1628 to the early 18th century. This family's property was situate in Wigtownshire and did not even bear the family name. The property was forfeited in about 1767.
(2) The following, taken from "The Tinkling Spring: Headwater of Freedom" by Howard Wilson at p. 9 and contributed by profile manager Ted Williams, relates not to the subject of this profile but to individuals who are believed to be his daughter and son-in-law, Margaret and John Lewis, and to Margaret's brother, Dr. William Lynn of Fredericksburg ...

"There is very little documented fact available to day in Virginia about the early life of the Lewis family in Europe. However, the earliest source found -- George Rockingham Gilmer, Governor of Georgia, who wrote with his mother (granddaughter of John Lewis and daughter of Thomas Lewis) at his side -- said that John Lewis was a native of county Dublin, Ireland; that John Lewis' grandfather, or other more remote ancestor, emigrated from Wales to Ireland1/ in the time of Charles I, King of Great Britain and Ireland; that circumstances induced him to the opinion that the Lynns emigrated with the Lewises; that 'the red hair and irascible temper which still continues to distinguish the family' indicates Welsh rather than French, Scotch, or English origin; and finally that the John Lewis family -- three sons and two daughters -- came to the South Fork of the Shenandoah River in 1731. Mr. Virgil A. Lewis, who repeats these early writings about his family, traces the source, and brands as imaginary the traditional history about his emigrant ancestor, so often repeated in Virginia history."

1/ Welsh Ancestry - There is no historical or scientific evidence for the idea that red hair is a particularly Welsh characteristic. To the contrary, red hair is common in the northern and western fringes of Europe, is seen also along the Mediterranean, and was even mentioned by a number of ancient Greek writers. The Lewises may or may not have come from Wales. Notably, the Lewis surname appears 61 times before 1600 in documents extracted at the National Records of Scotland website, and the first Lynns in County Donegal are noted in the historical record as being Scots.

"Margaret Lynn, wife of John Lewis, was almost certainly of the Lynn family of Donegal2/ and Londonderry counties, Province of Ulster, Ireland. She was the daughter of William Lynn, and his wife, Margaret Patton, who brought him to the estate, "Ruskie," Parish of Drumachose, county Derry, inherited from her father, John Patton. Another child of William and Margaret Patton Lynn was a physician, Dr. William Lynn, who immigrated to the Virginia Colony and settled in Fredericksburg. He was a member of the earliest land company that made discoveries and petitioned, in 1727, the Council of Virginia for a land grant west of the Blue Ridge."

2/ Donegal - This Ulster county is largely bog and mountain land and contains the towns of Letterkenny, Donegal, Ballyshannon, Lifford, Stranorlar, Killybegs, and Bundoran. County Donegal was known as the Kingdom of Tirconnel in the old Irish administrative system. It was the territory of the powerful O'Donnell family. The other major family names were O'Boyle, O'Doherty, O'Friel, O'Sheil, MacWard, McLoughlin, McDunlevy, McGillespie, MacRearty, McGrath, McGonagle, O'Mulholland, O'Harkin, O'Derry, and O'Strahan. The McSweeneys, also a relatively common name in the county, were a gallowglass, or mercenary, family who arrived in the county in the thirteenth century. The county wasn't affected much by the Norman invasion of the twelfth century and it wasn't until the later 16th century that England gained a foothold in the county. In 1592 they lost that when the O'Donnells, under their chief Red Hugh O'Donnell, joined with the O'Neills in a rebellion against the English. It ended in the defeat of the Ulster Chieftains in 1602 and the county was then included in the plantation of Ulster. Lands were confiscated, the native Irish owners were disinherited, and much of their property was given to Scottish and English undertakers. Surnames that became common in County Donegal were: Elliott, Campbell, Anderson, Baird, Thompson, McClintock, Hamilton, Browne, Barr, Stewart, Smith, Johnston, Irwin, Morrison, Young, and White.


References

  1. https://www.nidirect.gov.uk/information-and-services/public-record-... : Public Records Office Northern Ireland : Select eCatalogue and enter Ref. #T2541/IA/2/1/47
  2. http://www.ulsterancestry.com/ua-free-Inquistion_at_Lifford.html : Patent Rolls of James I: Inquisition at Lifford (1609)
  3. Roulston, William J., Ph.D. : "The Parishes of Leckpatrick and Dunnalong - Their Place in History" (2000), ch. 3
  4. Stewart, Rev. David, D.D. : The Scots in Ulster, Their Denization and Naturalisation, Edinburgh (1955)
  5. https://archive.org/stream/anhistoricalacc00hillgoog#page/n536/mode... : Hill, George, Rev. : An Historical Account of the Plantation in Ulster, Belfast (1877), CXVI and fn. 215 on pp. 525-6
  6. Bready and District Ulster-Scots Development Association : The Plantation - The Manor of Dunnalong
  7. Vicars, Sir Arthur, F.S.A., Ulster King of Arms : Index to the Prerogative Wills of Ireland, 1536-1810, Dublin (1897)
  8. http://www.ulsterancestry.com/ua-free-CivilSurvey1654.html : Ulster Ancestry : The Civil Survey of 1654
  9. “Richmond Times-Dispatch”, Richmond, VA, 15 Feb 1948 : Bogus Portrait Supplements Old 'Valley Manuscript' Hoax
  10. https://archive.org/stream/livingfemalewrit00tard#page/416/mode/1up... : Raymond, Ida, Edit. : "Living Female Writers of the South", Philadelphia, PA (1872), pp. 416-19
view all

William Lynn's Timeline

1672
1672
Kilmacrenan, County Donegal, Ireland
1690
1690
Ulster, Ireland
1690
1693
July 3, 1693
Kilmacrenan Parish, County Donegal, Ulster Province, Ireland
1695
1695
County Donegal, Ireland
1700
1700
Ireland
1700
Ireland
1727
1727
Age 55
Fredricksburg, Spotsylvania, British Colony
????