Is your surname Langhorne?

Research the Langhorne family

Share your family tree and photos with the people you know and love

  • Build your family tree online
  • Share photos and videos
  • Smart Matching™ technology
  • Free!

Mary Langhorne (Beverly)

Birthdate:
Birthplace: Middlesex County, Virginia, United States
Death: King and Queen County, Virginia, United States
Immediate Family:

Daughter of Major Robert Beverley, of Jamestown
Wife of John Langhorne
Mother of William Langhorne; Lockey Tabb; Col. Maurice Langhorne and Mary Langhorne
Sister of Col. Peter Beverley; Robert Beverley; Elizabeth Tuydey BEVERLEY; Gladys Beverley; Barbara Beverley and 1 other
Half sister of Captain Harry Beverley; Mary Jones; John Beverley; William Beverley; Catherine Robinson and 2 others

Managed by: Private User
Last Updated:

About Mary Langhorne

MARY BEVERLEY married John Langhorne.


1. JOHN LANGHORNE was born 1695 in Warwick County, Virginia, and died 1767 in Warwick County, Virginia. He was the son of 2. MAURICE LANGHORNE and 3. ANN CARY. He married MARY BEVERLEY 1719 in Middlesex County, Virginia. She was born in Middlesex County, Virginia, and died in Warwick County, Virginia.

Children

  • 1. Maurice Langhorne
  • 2. William Langhorne
  • 3. Mary Langhorne
  • 4. Lockey Langhorne

General Notes: John's parent died when he was about three years old. He was sent to live with his maternal grandparents, Henry and Judith Cary in the "Forest".

When in his early twenties however, John Langhorne III had become anxious for his own personal success. Thus in 1719, he took over Gambell and married Mary Beverley of Middlesex County. Mary Beverley was a granddaughter of Capt. John Langhorne's old friend and contemporary Maj. Robert Beverley. Throughout his long career, Hon. John Langhorne served as a Justice of the Peace, a member of the House of Burgesses, Sheriff of Warwick County, and Presiding Justice of Warwick County from 1749-1762. In addition to his numerous political duties, John Langhorne III continued to expand his land holdings by purchasing new plantations in Chesterfield County, and was also a highly successful merchant, continuing the tradition laid out by his fortune-founding grandfather some fifty years before. John Langhorne and Mary Beverley had three children who left issue. Their only daughter Lockey (named after Judith Lockey, the wife of Capt. Henry Cary and mother of Anne Cary) was successfully courted by Thomas Tabb. Lockey's considerable dowry helped to establish the Tabb family as members of the Tidewater elite. The elder son, Maj. Maurice Langhorne II (1719-1790) removed to Cumberland County to live near his cousin Col. Archibald Cary of "Ampthill" and his lovely wife, the former Mary Randolph of "Curles". This Maurice Langhorne bought thousands of acres in Cumberland and established himself as a great success in his own right.

SRC: Litten article on the history of the Langhornes.


page 174 of The Virginia Magazine of History and Biography, Volume 3 edited by Philip Alexander Bruce, William Glover Stanard


General Notes: There is great controversy over the identity of John Langhorne's wife. Most agree that she is a "Mary" but the agreement ends there.

1. Support for the name, "Mary Rice":

During October 1736 in a case before the court in Warwick County (?), Virginia (Sir John Randolph's reports, Vol 1, 1725-1745, case R109 by Randolph, B53 by Barrandall (whatever all of that means)) John Langhorne was a defendant in Jones vs Langhorne. The action was to recover the possession of slaves belonging to the estate of Mary Rice. Mary Rice was married to a Myers with four children and the suggestion is that Myers died and she remarried to John Langhorne.

Sources here seem to make a strong case for Mary Langhorne to have been Mary Rice: http://wc.rootsweb.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=adgedge&i...

Circumstantially, the Rice family have a history in Warwick County, Virginia, apparently close to the Langhornes living at "Gambell".

2. Support for the name "Mary Beverley".

The first son of Maurice Langhorne 1719 was William Beverley Langhorne born about 1790, suggesting a relationship with the Beverley family. According to David Hackett Fischer in his book on the sociology of colonial America, "Albion's Seeds", he says naming practices were such that the first born son would often (but not always) be named after a grandfather (either one), provided he was reputable, and the first son would also carry the maiden name of his mother as a middle name, considered an honor to her. Note that William Beverley Langhorne is the name of Maurice Langhorne's first born son. A clue, not evidence. (Second or third son gets dad's name). The second son was named Maurice Cary Langhorne. This would seem to indicate that this family followed the rules more often than not.

Thomas Litten in his article on the Langhorne family claims that Mary Beverley is the name of John's spouse. (see notes under John Langhorne - this family)


No positive proof that Mary Beverley was Salvadore's wife. However, his will does call his wife Mary and Mary Beverley's brother William Beverley is a witness to the will.

Sources: 1.Title: One World Tree (sm) Author: Ancestry.com Publication: Provo, UT, USA: The Generations Network, Inc., n.d. Note: www.ancestry.com Ancestry.com Text: Online publication - Ancestry.com. OneWorldTree [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: MyFamily.com, Inc.

2.Repository: Name: Ancestry.com Note: 

Title: Ancestry Family Trees Publication: Online publication - Provo, UT, USA: The Generations Network. Original data: Family Tree files submitted by Ancestry members. Note: This information comes from 1 or more individual Ancestry Family Tree files. This source citation points you to a current version of those files. Note: The owners of these tree files may have removed or changed information since this source citation was created. Page: Ancestry Family Trees Note: Text: http://trees.ancestry.com/pt/AMTCitationRedir.aspx?tid=8773355&pid=...


http://www.multiwords.de/genealogy/Be11%20Robert%20Beverley.html

William Beverley b 4 Jan 1680 Blandfield Middlesex

m about 1698 Judith Wormley b 1682 in Middlesex, VA dau of Christopher wormley she m1 Corbin Griffin Esq m3 Christopher Robinson

  • -1 Thomas BEVERLEY b c 1700
  • -2 John BEVERLEY b c 1700
  • -3 Christopher BEVERLEY
  • -4 Catherine BEVERLEY
  • -5 Katherine BEVERLEY
  • -?6 possibly here was: Mary Beverley b about 1700 Middlesex Co m John Langhorne b 1695 Warwick Co Va d there 1767 son of Maurice Langhorne and Ann Cary grandson of Henry Cary of The Forest b 1650 Va and Judith Lockey

-

view all

Mary Langhorne's Timeline

1678
June 28, 1678
Middlesex County, Virginia, United States
1719
1719
Warwick, VA, United States
1720
1720
'Gambell,' Warwick County, VA
1723
1723
Warwick, Virginia
????
????
King and Queen County, Virginia, United States