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  • Sir William Strother, II (1630 - 1702)
    Wm. (first of the name in Virginia) was born c. 1630. He immigrated from Northumberland, England to Virginia about 1650. Reaching Virginia, he settled in Sittenborne Parish along the Rappahannock River...
  • Colonel John Dandridge, II (1700 - 1756)
    Colonel John Dandridge of Chestnut Grove (13/14 July 1700 – 31 August 1756) was a distinguished colonel, planter, and Clerk of the Courts of New Kent County, Virginia from 1730 to 1756. Dandridge is ...
  • Col. James Slaughter (1732 - 1799)
    Col. James Slaughter [Parents] was born in 1732 in St. Marks, Culpeper Co., Virginia, USA. He died on 30 Nov 1799 in Nelson Co., Kentucky, USA. He married Susan Clayton in 1756 in Catalpa, Culpeper Co....
  • William Smallwood, 4th Gov. of Maryland (1732 - 1792)
    From his English Wikipedia page: Smallwood (1732 – February 14, 1792) was an American planter, soldier and politician from Charles County, Maryland. He served in the American Revolutionary War, rising ...
  • Source: https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/17911601/solomon-s-metzger
    Capt Solomon S Metzger, (USA) (1838 - 1904)
    Reference: Find A Grave Memorial - SmartCopy : Jun 2 2021, 4:12:21 UTC

A vestryman is a member of his local church's vestry, or leading body. He is not a member of the clergy.

History

In England especially, but also in other parts of the United Kingdom, parish councils have long been a level of local government rather than being solely ecclesiastical in nature. This probably arises from the role of the Church of England as the established church and the Parish (or area served by an individual church) as the most local and immediate level of social involvement.

As these councils often met in the vestry of the local church, either for convenience or because there were no other suitable rooms available, the name became associated with the council and in some places (e.g. Camberwell in London) identified it.

A Vestry may also have had the role of supervising local (Parish) public services, such as the workhouse, administration of poor relief, the keeping of parish records (baptisms, deaths and marriages) and so on. Usually the term vestryman (as used in the UK) would denote a member of the parish council at a certain period in history (and is synonymous with or equivalent to a parish councillor) but the term may, depending on context, also signify an official (or employee) of the Parish Council although strictly, this should be in the form Vestry man.

It is possible that usage in other countries derives from the English tradition and denotes someone involved in practical governance (of a church and its activities, if not a geographical or administrative area) as distinct from a purely spiritual ministry.

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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vestryman