10. Descendants of Edward Newby Generation No. 1 1. EDWARD NEWBY, b. in Lancaster Co., Va., and d. in Culpeper Co., Va. His wife’s name: not found. Child of Edward Newby and his wife i. HENRY NEWBY, b. 1783, Lancaster Co.; d. 1861, Bridgeport, Ohio. ii. LUCY NEWBY BAILEY iii. Several other children. Generation No. 2 2. HENRY NEWBY , b. 1783, Lancaster Co., Va.; d. 1861, Bridgeport, Ohio. Married ELSEY NEWBY , December 1, 1818; her parents are unknown. Children of HENRY NEWBY AND ELSEY: i. DANGERFIELD NEWBY , b. ca. 1825 ii. LUCY NEWBY, b. ca. 1826 iii. ELVIRA NEWBY, b. ca, 1828 iv. MARY NEWBY, b. ca. 1833 v. GABRIEL NEWBY , b. ca. 1835 vi. JAMES NEWBY , b. ca. 1837 vii. ANN NEWBY, b. ca. 1839 viii. WILLIAM NEWBY, b. ca. 1840 ix. FRANCIS NEWBY, b. ca. 1847 x. CATHERINE NEWBY, b. ca. 1849 Generation No. 3 3. DANGERFIELD NEWBY , b. ca. 1825 in Culpeper Co., Va.; d. October 18, 1859, Harpers Ferry, Va. Married HARRIET JENNINGS at unknown date—ca. 1840; d. early 1880s. Children of DANGERFIELD NEWBY and HARRIET JENNINGS-NEWBY i. ALICE NEWBY , b. ca. 1843 ii. JAMES NEWBY , b. ca. 1848 ii. AGNES NEWBY , b. ca. 1852 iii. JOHN NEWBY, b. Sept. 1853 iv. MARION NEWBY, b. April 20, 1856 v. GABRIEL NEWBY , b. ca. 1858 vi. LUCY NEWBY, b. 1859
44. Dangerfield’s and Harriet’s children Sources: Scott Casper, Sarah Johnson’s Mount Vernon: The Forgotten History of an American Shrine (N.Y., 2008), and another source.
46. The Robinson family, 1880 By the 1880s, William Robinson was, among African Americans, a substantial landowner in Fairfax County. Robinson later worked for Mount Vernon. Harriet died in the early 1880s. William Robinson was born in Shepherdstown, Va.--about 12 miles north of Harpers Ferry--before West Va. was created. “Farm Laborer”? He labored on his own land. Harriet Robinson
47. Other Newby households, 1880 “Daingerfield,” Agnes’s son, and Harriet’s and Dangerfield’s grandson Alice Newby Ford, Harriet’s and Dangerfield’s daughter
52. Dangerfield Newby and others were disinterred from the Harpers Ferry grave and reburied at John Brown’s homestead, North Elba (Lake Placid), N.Y., August 30, 1899.