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Albemarle's First Settler
By Howard Draper, Museum of the Albemarle
Pasquotank County takes great pride in knowing that the first
land grant in North Carolina occurred there in 1660 when Kiscutanaweh,
chief of the Yeopim Indians deeded to Nathaniel Batts "all
ye land on ye southwest side of Pascotank River from ye mouth
of ye sd river to ye head of New Begin Creeke." What falls
between the cracks many times, however, is that the land at that
time was a part of Norfolk County, Virginia, the deed was actually
recorded there. Therefore, the first recorded land grant in North
Carolina actually belongs to George Durant.
Very little is known of George Durant. In fact, the only substantial
biography is Mattie Erma Parker's entry of Durant in William
S. Powell's landmark Dictionary of North Carolina Biography.
However, the story of Durant and the tract of land that would
come to be known as Durant's Neck in present-day southern Perquimans
County is a very interesting story.
Shortly after his marriage in January 1658 in Northumberland
County, Virginia to Ann Marwood, Durant decided he wanted to
make a home away from his Nansemond County residence. Where Durant
was living at the time is not known. Possibilities include Northumberland
County, Westmoreland County, or Nansemond County. It is known
that at this time, he joined with at least six other gentlemen
including John Battle, Thomas Relfe, Roger Williams, Thomas Jarvis,
John Harvey, and John Jenkins to explore the Albemarle area,
at the time a Virginia frontier called Roanoke. Many of these
men brought land which Durant was witness to, including the one
dated September 24, 1660 to Nathaniel Batts. It is possible that
Durant was employed by Batts. Richard Batts, Nathaniel Batts
brother, was a sea captain, and it is known that Durant was a
mariner.
It is known that land was purchased from Cisketando, a Yeopim
Indian chief on August 4, 1661. Shortly after, Durant purchases
more land from the Yeopim. This deed is now recorded in the Perquimans
County records, making it the oldest deed in North Carolina.
The area that Durant settled, now known as Durant's Neck, proved
to be a good location for him. Located in present Perquimans
County on a tract of land jutting into the Albemarle Sound, the
soil proved to be good for growing corn and wheat. In addition,
cattle and swine were prosperous, as were the numerous forest
animals. Unfortunately, Durant would have many problems with
this tract of land.
One year after Durant settled his land, Virginia Governor
William Berkeley informed all settlers that if they obtained
land from the Indians, they must now obtain grants from Virginia.
Under these rules, Berkely granted George Catchmaid of Northumberland
County, Virginia the same land that Durant was living upon. Durant,
feeling the land was rightfully his, refused to move. It did
not take long for the two men to temporarily settle their differences.
They both agreed that Durant could settle the western side
of the point, Catchmaid the east. Catchmaid also promised to
have the land patented in Durant's name. Unfortunately for Durant,
Catchmaid died before the patent was obtained. To complicate
matters for Durant, Catchmaid's widow, remarried a wealthy Quaker,
Timothy Biggs, with whom he did not get along. Biggs, ignoring
the gentlemanly agreement made between Durant and Catchmaid,
pursued the title. Not until 1697, almost three years after Durant's
death was a suit won by Durant's son giving them legal title
to the land they had been living for thirty-five years. George
Durant - Albemarle Patriot and Politician
George Durant (a.k.a. Duren, Duram and Duran) was born in
England. The most accepted date for his birth is 1 Oct 1632 -
although 1 Aug 1632, is also seen in some records. His father
is unknown. He was possibly the son (or brother) of John Durant,
who was appointed a lecturer by the House of Commons. John was
an ardent supporter of the Roundheads during the English Civil
War. It was reported that he always left the line "as we
forgive them that trespass against us" out of the Lord's
Prayer. Instead, he substituted "Lord, since Thou hast now
drawn out Thy sword, let it not be sheathed again till it be
glutted in the blood of the malignants" - the malignants
being the Cavaliers. George Durant often reported having a brother
in London by the name of John, as well as nephews named George,
Henry and John Durant - the sons of his brother John. The last
theory is that George Durant was the son of William Durant and
Alice Pell of England.
Whatever his background, George Durant was in Northumberland
(later Westmoreland) County, Virginia by 1650 or before. He would
have been about eighteen years old in 1650. By trade, Durant
was a "marriner" - as attested in his will dated 9
Oct 1688. The earliest sailing voyage that is documented for
George Durant was in 1658, when he sailed aboard the Patomack
Mecht, commanded by Robert Clarke. Young George Durant was about
twenty-five years old at the time. The Patomack Mecht was possibly
of Dutch construction and sailed from Virginia to Holland with
a cargo of tobacco and other goods. We know of this voyage because
there is a court case associated with the thirty hogsheads of
tobacco stowed on board. This tobacco was owned by the Lee family,
who were represented in court by Ms. Hannah Lee. Upon arrival
in Zeeland, the tobacco was found to be rotten and unfit for
sale. The Dutch refused to buy and the Lees sued for damages.
On 20 Jul 1658, George Durant testified on behalf of his commander,
saying that the hold remained dry during the entire voyage and
that the tobacco was spoiled when it was loaded back in Virginia.
The verdict of this case remains unknown.
George Durant married Ann Marwood (a.k.a. Moorwood or Norwood)
in Northumberland County, Virginia on 4 Jan 1658/9. The Reverend
David Lindsey performed the Anglican ceremony. On 24 Dec 1659/60,
a son George Jr. was born. On 15 Feb 1661, a daughter Elizabeth
was born and on 26 Dec 1662, a son John was born. These children
were possibly born at Durant's Virginia home. All other Durant
children were born in North Carolina.
It is not known whether George Durant lived on the waters
of the Potomac in Westmoreland County, or in Nansemond County
near the Carolina border. He originally purchased 300 acres of
land in Westmoreland County, but it is suspected that he spent
most of his married life in Nansemond. There is a Nansemond land
grant made to Anthony Branch in October of 1665 for the transportation
of six persons. George Durant is listed there as being transported
three times and his wife once. There is also a Nansemond land
grant made to Godfrey Hunt in April of 1664 for the transportation
of twelve persons, including a George Duram. In April of 1665,
George Durant sold his Westmoreland County property to Richard
and Thomas Bushrod. We know that this property was on the south
side of the Potomac River near an area called Nomeny Bay. He
had purchased the land from a gentleman named Dr. Rice Maddocks.
Northumberland County was a very large county and was later divided
- one part retaining the name of Northumberland and the other
becoming Westmoreland County. When George bought the Maddocks
land in the late 1650s (around the time of his marriage), Dr.
Maddocks retained the plantation house. As part of the payment,
George Durant built Dr. Maddocks a 50-foot tobacco barn. Rice
Maddocks, a well-known local doctor, did not live to see his
new barn used for very long. He was murdered by three men (Edmund
Goddard, John Fryer, and William Webb) around 1662.1 The three
men were convicted and jailed, but Ann Maddocks was left a widow.
Robert Noble, a chirurgeon, was paid 500 pounds of tobacco for
performing the autopsy on Rice Maddocks' body.
George Durant often appears in both Northumberland and Westmoreland
County court documents of the time, indicating that he was an
active member of the community. On 18 Dec 1660, he signed a document
stating that he owed Mr. Charles Ashton (the high sheriff of
the County) "one man servant betwixt the age of sixteen
and thirty, to be paid 1 March next." On 3 Feb 1661, George
Durant was authorized as the attorney of Robert Mosely in his
case against a suit by one Richard Granger. George had several
other grants for land in Virginia prior to leaving the colony.
One of these was for 400 acres in Lower Norfolk County and another
was for 700 acres in what is now Currituck County, North Carolina.
He received the Carolina property in September of 1670 for the
transportation of fourteen persons. Soon after the initial settlement
of Virginia, the colony's best lands along the Potomac, Rappahannock,
York, and James Rivers were granted to wealthy planters in large
tracts of as much as 175,000 acres. The southern frontier of
Roanoke offered fertile land for small farmers - land that was
now unavailable in their current location.
About the time of his marriage, George Durant apparently formed
the purpose of making a new home for himself in some more favored
spot. In the year of 1658, he joined a party composed of John
Battle, Dr. Thomas Relfe, Roger Williams, Thomas Jarvis, John
Harvey, John Jenkins and others to explore and settle the wilderness
of the Albemarle - which was then a frontier of Virginia called
Roanoke. Most of these men were from Isle of Wight and Nansemond
County. The other explorers speedily bought land from the Indians
and George was a frequent witness to these deeds. One deed, found
in the Norfolk County records in 1965, is dated 24 Sep 1660.
This deed grants the entire tip of the peninsula (which is now
Pasquotank County in North Carolina) to Captain Nathaniell Batts.
It is signed with the mark of Kiscutanewh (also known as Kilcocanen),
chief of the Yeopim Indians. The deed granted Batts "all
ye land on ye southwest side of Pascotanck River, from ye mouth
of said river to ye head of new Begin Creeke." This deed
was recorded in Virginia, as Roanoke was considered part of the
colony at that time. It is not known if George Durant was in
the employ of Nathaniell Batts at the time of this land sale.
Captain Nathaniell Batts was a famous explorer and fur trader
who lived in Lower Norfolk County. His brother Richard Batts
was a wealthy sea captain and merchant from Barbados, who traded
with Virginia. As Durant was a mariner, it is possible that he
could have worked with Richard Batts and later become acquainted
with his brother Nathaniell. George Durant may also have known
Nathaniell Batts in Northumberland County. There is a court record
for a person by that name, who was accused of beating a man while
intoxicated. Nathaniell Batts reputedly was a hard drinker and
was also fond of swearing.
Although Durant helped to locate land for others, he spent
two years exploring and determining the best spot for his new
home before purchasing land. On 4 Aug 1661, land was purchased
from Cisketando, a Yeopim Indian Chief. On 13 Mar 1661/2, a second
purchase was made. The new land was bought from Kilcocanen, the
same chief that had sold land to Nathaniell Batts. This deed
is still in existence and is now the oldest deed in North Carolina.
The land chosen by Durant still bears the name of Durant's Neck
(formerly known as Wikacome) and is located on a point of land
bordered by Roanoke Sound (now Albemarle Sound) in southern Perquimans
County. Perquimans means "land of beautiful women"
and was named by the Yeopim Indians. Although much of the new
frontier was composed of swamp and watery marsh, Durant chose
his plot well. His land had virgin forests, holly trees, lofty
pines, white juniper and rhododendrons. The soil was a mixture
of sand and heavy humus; it grew corn and wheat well. Cattle
and swine thrived and the animals of the forest furnished skins.
The tall pines were generous with the tar and pitch so wanted
by naval interests. The ground itself yielded the herbs, including
"saxafras," so desired as "druggs" by the
apothecaries of Europe. The wide rivers offered transportation
for the settlers and teemed with fish. By 1662, Durant had already
built a house and had cleared a part of the land.
A year later, the governor of Virginia (Sir William Berkeley)
told all settlers who had obtained land from the Indians that
they must now obtain grants from Virginia. It was at this time
that the governor granted George Catchmany (a.k.a. Catchmaid)
of Northumberland County, the same land purchased by Durant.
Durant was already settled on the land and refused to leave.
He believed that he had purchased the land fairly. Catchmaid,
a member of the Virginia House of Burgesses, first employed men
to "settle and seat" this land. However, by 1664 he
resided on the land himself and began construction of his new
estate called Birkswear. In 1663, the land matter was temporarily
settled to both men's satisfaction. Durant settled the western
side of the point and Catchmaid settled the eastern side. Catchmaid
acknowledged Durant's right to the land and promised to have
the land patented in Durant's name. Unfortunately, this patent
was never obtained. George Catchmaid, the speaker of the first
Assembly of the Albemarle, passed away before the proper papers
could be signed. After his death, Catchmaid's widow remarried
a wealthy Quaker by the name of Timothy Biggs. Biggs and Durant
had little love for each other and Biggs renewed the land claim
feud. It was not until 1697 (after George Durant's death) that
the title was cleared by Durant's sons. A suit was brought against
Edward Catchmaid of London, who was nephew and heir to George
Catchmaid. The suit resulted in a decree giving the Durant sons
title to their father's land, on which the family had lived for
over thirty-five years.
Despite the trouble about his land, George Durant decided
by 1665 that he would live permanently in Roanoke. He sold his
Virginia lands and became one of the area's most prosperous merchants.
The wharves of the plantations on the Little and Perquimans Rivers
served the white-sailed ships that carried tobacco, indigo, tar
and pitch to New England, the West Indies and Great Britain.
By 1665 the Roanoke area was no longer part of Virginia, but
had been included in the province of Carolina. King Charles II
of England (newly restored to the throne) designated eight Lords
Proprietors to govern the new colony. The Roanoke area was renamed
the County of Albemarle. However, the Proprietors were to cause
many future problems for the Carolina settlers. Communication
between England and Albemarle was laborious and settler's complaints
were often ignored for months at a time. The main concern of
the Proprietors was the extreme southern frontier, the new area
later known as South Carolina.
George Durant (along with Captain John Hecklefield and Captain
Richard Sanderson) offered the use of his home for court to be
held, council meetings to convene, and assemblies called. In
fact, court was held so often at Durant's home, that a set of
stocks was eventually erected on his property. Durant was a popular
man, who had a reputation for fairness. By the 1670s, he had
become a leader of the political party representing the interests
of the original settlers. This put him increasingly in conflict
with the Lords Proprietors, who were imposing restrictive measures
on trade. George and others especially opposed new restrictions
on tobacco shipped from Albemarle. They felt that the restrictions
would produce undo hardship in a colony still struggling to establish
itself.
These new rules were part of a set of British laws called
the Navigation Acts. In these acts, all colonial trade was required
to be carried in English ships, while all European goods destined
for the colonies had to be first landed in England. Certain items,
such as tobacco shipped from Carolina, could land only in England.
In addition, heavy customs duties had to be paid on the tobacco
once it entered British ports. This effectively cut off the New
England market, one of Albemarle's prime trading partners. Carolina
planters did not wish to be forced into paying expensive customs
duties and were unhappy with the fact that they were no longer
allowed to trade with other foreign countries.
To circumvent the Navigation Acts, Albemarle merchants began
smuggling. The New England coastal traders opened a profitable
illegal trade with the Carolina planters. Tobacco was carried
by sloop to Boston. From there it was transported to heavy ships
bound for Scotland, Ireland, Holland, France, and Spain. England
quickly caught on to the fact that they were losing valuable
customs revenue and retaliated by passing the Plantation Duty
Act in 1673. This act stated that colonial ships leaving port
had to pay customs duties prior to sailing. Parliment appointed
customs officials in Albemarle to collect the duties.
The Carolina planters were outraged. They felt that they should
be able to trade with whomever they pleased. As many of the planters
and merchants had settled in Albemarle before the Lords Proprietors
gained control, they resented English intrusion into their affairs.
Anti-proprietary factions were afraid that the main aim of
England was to establish an aristocracy in Carolina, reducing
all others to a state of poverty and servitude. The freedom and
independence that the original colonists attempted to gain by
settling in Albemarle and carving out a new life, was in danger
of being lost. The settlers were supported by many New England
merchants who wished to maintain trade relations with Albemarle.
In 1675 or the following year, Durant went to London and presented
his party's views to the Proprietors. He protested against conditions
then existing in the Albemarle and warned of trouble to come.
His comments were ignored. However, he was informed that the
Lords Proprietors had chosen a new governor for North Carolina
named Thomas Eastchurch. Eastchurch would enforce the collection
of the customs duties and the rules of the Plantation Duty Act.
Durant told the Lords that he would revolt before he would support
Eastchurch and that he refused to allow the appointment! These
were strong words for a colonial settler and reveal much concerning
Durant's important role in Albemarle politics. Durant promptly
sailed back to Albemarle aboard Zachariah Gilliam's 5-gun ship
the Carolina. On the way to his new assignment in North
Carolina, Thomas Eastchurch's ship stopped at the island of Nevis
in the West Indies. There the governor courted and married a
wealthy widow.
In the meantime, the new bridegroom sent a deputy (Thomas
Miller) to govern Albemarle in his place. In Aug 1677, Miller
arrived back in Albemarle and began collecting customs with a
vengeance. A guard force was organized to enforce his dictates.
A sloop, chartered by Miller, cruised the Albemarle Sound, ready
to pounce upon merchants trying to sail out of the harbors without
settlement. Merchants who had not paid any customs fees since
the passing of the Plantation Duty Act, were forced to pay back
duties. Unhappy planters eagerly awaited the return of George
Durant from London. The setting was ripe for rebellion.
On the first Saturday of December, 1677, Captain Zachariah
Gilliam sailed into Albemarle Sound. On board was George Durant
and in the hold was a large amount of firearms, ammunition, and
swords. Gilliam's response to authorities, when questioned about
the nature of his cargo, was that it was to be sold to white
settlers for defense against the Indians. Gilliam, a native of
Boston, had been in the Carolina trade since 1674 and was firmly
allied with the planters. Upon dropping anchor, Captain Gilliam
went ashore to tender his papers to Miller. To the Collector's
question if Gilliam had ever carried tobacco out of Albemarle,
the captain answered that he had carried some 180 hogsheads.
Triumphant, Miller said that Gilliam would have to pay back duties
of one penny a pound on that cargo. Gilliam stated that the duties
had already been paid in England, but Miller arrested him anyway.
The captain's papers were seized and his boat crew placed in
confinement.
Among Gilliam's papers was his passenger list. After discovering
that George Durant was a passenger aboard the Carolina, Miller
armed himself with a brace of pistols and rowed out to the ship
at about eleven o' clock at night. Stepping on deck, he thrust
his cocked pistols into Durant's chest and "in an insolent
Hectoring manner," arrested him as a "Traytour."
The crew onboard quickly overpowered him. Benjamin Gilliam, the
captain's son, offered Miller the use of the ship's longboat
to go ashore, but the Collector angrily refused. For the next
two hours he was kept confined aboard ship, all the while railing
against the indignities to which he was subjected.
During this time, several planters came out to the ship for
a hurried conference with Durant. The plan of action was quickly
laid. The rebellion that would become known as Culpeper's Rebellion,
was to begin in earnest at first light. It is now seen as one
of the earliest uprisings against the British Crown in the New
World.
Furnished with muskets and cutlasses from Gilliam's ship,
the rebels began a wholesale arrest of the proprietary faction.
Timothy Biggs (Eastchurch's customs official and a leading Quaker
politician), Henry Hudson, John Nixon, and other proprietary
men were rounded up and imprisoned in the house of seaman William
Crawford. The prisoners were later moved to Durant's plantation.
Timothy Biggs later recalled that Durant's home was often the
site of rebel meetings and considered "their usual rendezvous."
Durant had called a new Assembly and his supporters included
John Jenkins (whom Durant declared governor), Alexander Lillington,
Thomas Collen (speaker of the Assembly), James Blount, Henry
Bonner, Thomas Jarvis, and nearly all of the leading planters.
A trial was begun to convict Thomas Miller and his supporters
of "several odious crymes, including blasphemy and treason."
The trial was cut short by word that Governor Thomas Eastchurch,
back from the West Indies, had finally landed at Jamestown.
The rebels, determined that Miller and should not be freed,
moved him to William Jenning's house, along the upper reaches
of the Pasquotank River. Later, a small log jail was constructed
to hold the prisoner. Not only was Miller "clapt in irons,"
but he was allowed no communication with anyone and was treated
in what he claimed was "a cruell and barbarous manner shut
up from all society."
As the return of Eastchurch from Virginia meant that the rebels
would be tried for treason, armed troops were sent to guard the
border between the two colonies against his return. Eastchurch
promptly applied to Virginia's Governor William Berkeley for
an armed force to invade Albemarle. However, before a force could
be organized, Thomas Eastchurch fell ill of a fever and was soon
dead.
No longer threatened by the presence of a duly authorized
government, the rebels began to fashion their own. With Culpeper
acting as Collector, the people got what they wanted - no duties
on tobacco. For a short time, peace reigned in the area and merchant
business flourished. Unfortunately, the Crown's officials would
not let the matter end so easily. After about seven weeks of
imprisonment, Timothy Biggs escaped and made his way back to
England to report the turmoil in Albemarle. Aware that Royal
justice would be swift and severe, the rebels began going through
confiscated proprietary records and papers, carefully selecting
those best suited to justify their cause.
Surprisingly, the information provided by Biggs only made
the Lords Proprietors in London stubbornly insist that the matter
should be settled within the colony of Carolina. Biggs was returned
to Albemarle with the title of Comptroller and Surveyor-General
in late 1678. Once there, he had his authority immediately revoked
by John Culpeper. The rebels controlled the government and Biggs
found the situation even worse than before. He grew accustomed
to sleeping with a loaded musket at his side and took turns with
members of his family in guarding his house every hour of the
day.
George Durant's home was now the unofficial seat of government
and Timothy Biggs, in an effort to deny recognition to the rebels,
refused to set foot in it. After learning that Thomas Miller
was still imprisoned, Biggs and several loyal proprietary men
helped him to escape. Miller headed immediately back to England
and Biggs fled to Virginia. At this news, the rebel government
dispatched John Culpeper to London, in order to counter the charges
that were sure to be levied. John Culpeper sailed first to Boston
with Benjamin Gilliam and from there to London with Benjamin's
father Zachariah.
By the time that Culpeper arrived in London in late November,
Biggs had already informed officials that 58,392 pounds of tobacco
had been embezzled by the Carolinians. Culpeper was arrested
until he promised to deliver the tobacco within a year. With
things thus settled to everyone's satifaction, Gilliam and Culpeper
boarded the Carolina and dropped down the Thames towards the
Atlantic Ocean. Luck was not with them however, for soon Thomas
Miller arrived in London, penniless, sick and bitter. Miller
quickly gave additional evidence to the Commissioners of Customs.
He charged that, besides the tobacco confiscated by the rebels,
that they had also stolen some of His Majesty's customs receipts
and fines amounting to 1,242 Pounds Sterling.
Gilliam and Culpeper were still at the mouth of the Thames
awaiting a favorable wind and were quickly apprehended. They
were returned to London where they were kept in custody by order
of the King in Council. Both Culpeper and Gilliam were charged
as "being two of the Principall Contrivers and Promoters
of the said Rebellion." On 31 Jan 1680, depositions were
taken from Thomas Miller, Timothy Biggs, Henry Hudson, John Taylor
and Solomon Summers. The weight of their evidence was overwhelmingly
against Culpeper and he was found guilty of "Treason in
abetting and encouraging a Rebellion in Carolina." The following
day the prisoner was committed to Newgate Prison. Zachariah Gilliam
was called before the Lords of Trade and Plantations a week later.
He skillfully defended himself as an innocent ship's captain,
caught up in events of which he had nothing to do. As there was
no direct evidence against him, he was allowed to go free and
promptly sailed away.
John Culpeper's treason case dragged on and on until 20 Nov
1680, when the trial finally began. Representing the Lords Proprietors
during the trial was Lord Shaftesbury, the Earl of Craven. Lord
Shaftesbury's devotion to his "darling Carolina" was
well-known and he surprised everyone by siding with the accused!
Apparently he was aware that, should Culpeper be found guilty,
the Carolina charter could easily be revoked. The Lords Proprietors
were taking no chance of losing their favorite cash cow. Shaftesbury
argued that John Culpeper, George Durant, and the others rebelled
only due to Thomas Miller's loose tongue, his threats, and his
fanatical zeal in governmental operations. Culpeper's claim that
his authority was derived from the Assembly of the people, said
the Proprietor, was not without basis. Under their constitution,
the people of Carolina had been granted the privilege of electing
delegates to the legislature every two years. Therefore, Albemarle's
"pretended Parliament" was in itself a legal body!
The verdict was acquittal for John Culpeper. The Proprietors
gave assurances that restitution would be made for the confiscated
customs, which was done by the Carolinians.
After several years, the uprising finally drew to a close.
The Culpeper Rebellion lasted from 1677-1680 and Durant's estate
had been a frequent meeting place for insurgents, as well as
a jail for political prisoners. An Act of Oblivion granted pardons
to the rebels and in 1681 the Proprietors relaxed their claims
on all products of the whaling industry for seven years, in order
to allow the inhabitants to steady their fortunes. John Jenkins
was eventually recognized as governor and George Durant became
attorney general in 1679. He also served as speaker of the Assembly.
However, some of his contemporaries claimed that "though
Jenkins held the title, yet in fact Durant governed and used
Jenkins as his property."
The Culpeper Rebellion received its name due to John Culpeper's
trial in London. Yet it was George Durant who initially determined
that Culpeper should go to London and it was Durant that first
encouraged the arrest of the proprietary faction. Until his death,
Durant continued to influence the colony and did not hesitate
to punish his enemies - particularly the Old Neck Quakers who
had supported the proprietary faction during the rebellion.
Some years later, it being considered that one of the Proprietors
should have the administration, Seth Sothel was appointed governor
of Albemarle. On the way to Carolina, Sothel's ship was captured
by Turkish pirates and he was held for ransom. By the time of
his liberation, Sothel's formerly placid personality had been
greatly altered. Upon arrival in Albemarle in 1681, he immediately
developed into a tyrant and was guilty of many excesses. One
of the allegations made against him was that he liked to obtain
the property of other men. On one occasion, two ships from Barbados
- on legitimate business - were seized by Sothel as pirates.
The captains of both vessels were thrown into prison, where one
of them died through ill treatment. The dying man made a will,
but Sothel refused to let the will go to probate and seized the
dead man's effects. The captain's Executor, Thomas Pollack, threatened
to carry the story to England.
Afraid that his dirty politics would be disclosed back home,
Sothel arrested Pollock and threw him in jail. Durant denounced
these events, whereupon Sothel seized and imprisoned Durant and
took possession of some of his property. Durant led a movement
that resulted in seizing the governor, incarcerating him in a
log house ten feet square and convening an Assembly. The Assembly
determined to send Sothel to England for trial. Sothel was so
alarmed at these proceedings that he compromised with the people
and accepted a trial by the Assembly. The sentence was banishment
from the colony. In 1689, after an oppressive tenure of several
years, Sothel left the Albemarle. Durant was seen as responsible
for the "Rebell rout" and "all along when at home
beene one of the most violent, active and most outrageous of
all the Conspirators and Insurrecters."
During his lifetime, there were no church buildings in Albemarle,
except for those where the Quakers held their services. Therefore,
no knowledge exists concerning Durant's religious beliefs. Some
theorize that he may have been Quaker, but this is highly unlikely.
His marriage was performed by an Episcopal minister and all of
his children but one (Deborah), married into Episcopalian families.
Many think that he was a Scotsman, and therefore of the Presbyterian
faith, but his church affiliations in Perquimans County are uncertain.
Durant's will was probated on February 6, 1694, some thirty-five
years after his first arrival in Albemarle. At the University
of North Carolina in Chapel Hill, George Durant's Bible - printed
in London, England in 1599 - is displayed in a locked cabinet.
He brought this Bible with him when he came to the New World.
It is one of the oldest English Bibles in the United States.
The Durant plantation was called Wicocombe and was also used
as an inn. Wikacome was the name of the area before it became
known as Durant's Neck. The exact location of the house, or of
the Durant burial grounds, is shrouded in mystery. It is said
that George Durant's grave was once to be seen under a sweetgum
tree, on the bank of a large drain overlooking the Albemarle
Sound - and that in cutting out the ditch, the stone was undermined
and mud from the bottom was thrown over the grave until it disappeared.
In the will of William Therrell, George Durant's plantation is
referred to as "Berty Point" and the deeds of Perquimans
County speak of the home as being located on a "Point which
divides sd land from a Neck called Langleys." An old map
of Durant's Neck shows a Berty Point at the southernmost tip
of the peninsula. There is also a Langley's Neck on the southwestern
side of the point. It seems certain therefore, that Wicocombe
was located on the southwestern side of Durant's Neck, somewhere
near the village of Little River. However, the actual site of
the home has probably been covered by the encroaching Albemarle
Sound. George Durant died on February 6, 1692, leaving a legacy
as one of North Carolina's outstanding colonial leaders. He was
60 years old.
By Deborah Barclift, The Descendants of William Bartlett
Website
(Contact information for Deborah Barclift would be
appreciated)
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