[1] Margaret entered into a relationship with a white gentleman Robert Sweat (or Sweet), and they had a mixed-race child around 1640.
[1] He lost interest in freeing Cornish, but he had saved his earnings and had enough money to purchase his son.
He filed a lawsuit in on March 31, 1641 to purchase his son from Lieutenant Robert Sheppard, who was the slaveholder of the enslaved woman and her child.
[6] Graweere was said to have "exhibited a sure-handed understanding of Chesapeake social hierarchy and the complex dynamics of patron-client relations.
While still at the Stafford plantation, Mihill fathered a child with an enslaved black woman known as Prossa as well as Pallassa, a Kimbundu name.
[1][c] Gowen was freed of his indentured servitude by Christopher Stafford in his will and he lived in York County, Virginia.
Barnhouse, of Martin's Hundred, had William baptized and she posted a bond for the boy.
[1] There was a man, John, who was a servant of ship captain William Evans or Ewins.