Ellwood Genealogy

A History of the Ellwood Family, from 1550 in Cumbria, England to the United States in 1900.

The direct line of Ellwood ancestry will be traced from Edward Ellwood of Dufton, Westmorland, to his 12th generation descendants in Illinois and Kentucky in 1900. Other Cumbrian Surnames included in the history of this ancestral line are: McAllister, Benn, Lowrey, Ward, White, Boadle, Hutchinson, Rudd, Watson, Dobson, and Gargatt. The origin of the surname Ellwood is from the Old English AElfweald or "Elf Ruler". The name is found in Northern England and the Scotch Borders in a variety of spellings as early as the 13th century. Elwold was a common spelling found by the 16th century in Cumbria. Elwood or Ellwood become the most standard spellings after 1700, and seem to be interchangeable depending on the generation. To maintain consistency, I have used the later double " L" spelling for all entries, beginning with Edward Ellwood of Dufton, the first generation in the direct line.

My personal interest in making a study of the Ellwood ancestral lines began in 1987 with the desire to trace the lineage of my great-grandmother Hannah Ellwood McAllister. Hannah Ellwood was born in Whitehaven, England in 1848, and died in Streator, Illinois in 1934. She was a direct descendant of the early Ellwood families which are the subject of this study.

  • Bruce Morrison
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I. Edward Ellwood and Ellyn

Edward Ellwood was a yeoman class farmer living at Dufton during the latter half of the 16th century. Dufton is a small village at the foot of the Pennine Mountains in Westmorland. The earliest references to Dufton begin in 1298. Edward Ellwood's wife was named Ellyn. As their marriage was prior to the earliest parish records in 1570, her maiden name remains unknown. Edward is the only male Ellwood to be found in Dufton of his generation. Ellwoods are found in nearby Penrith during this period, but any direct relationship to this group cannot be established. The children of Edward and Ellyn Ellwood were: Richard born about 1567; Lancelot about 1569, (died in 1580); EDMUND born in 1573; and Janet born in 1575. (Janet married Robert Blaymire in 1595). Edward Ellwood died in 1591, and was buried in the parish churchyard. An inventory of his possesions can be found in the probate records at Carlisle. Ellyn Ellwood died in May of 1597 at Dufton.

II. Edmund Ellwood and Elizabeth Howe

Edmund Ellwood, born in 1573, married Elizabeth Howe in May of 1595 at St. Cuthberts Church in Dufton. He would die at Dufton in 1657, being well over 80 years of age. Because of this fact, his age at death is recorded in the parish records, something rarely done in the 17th century registers. Through two sons of Edmund Ellwood and his wife Elizabeth, a double line of direct descent occurs in the Ellwood family. In 1742, we will find an Ellwood-Ellwood marriage, with both bride and groom tracing to their common ancestor, Edmund Ellwood. The female Ellwood line, descended from son Thomas listed below, will be discussed at that point in the narrative. Children of Edmund and Elizabeth Ellwood were: CHRISTOPHER (1598-1664); Janet (1599-1638), who married Lancelot Walton; THOMAS (1600-1655), who married Margaret Atkinson; Margaret (1602-?), who married Richard Parkin; William (1605-1671); Edward (c.1608-1677), who married Margaret Ewbank; and Mark (1611-1654). A number of the above children had wills at the time of their deaths, which provides us with considerable information on this next generation of Ellwoods in Dufton. The male line of ancestry will continue through Christopher, eldest son of Edmund and Elizabeth Ellwood.

III. Christopher Ellwood and Bridget Dobson

Christopher Ellwood married Bridget Dobson on July 17, 1625 in Dufton. The Dobsons were a large and prominent family in Dufton, dating well back into the 14th century. (note: William Dobson and John Dobson appear in the 1366 will of Willam Brampton, Rector of Dufton Parish). Bridget Dobson was born in 1607, the second of six children born to Reginald and Margaret Dobson. Bridget's grand-parents were John and Jane Dobson, and we find her great-grandfather was Reginald Dobson, born about 1510, who died at Dufton in 1567. Reginald Dobson left an extensive will probated in 1567. The Dobson family also produces a double line of direct descent through William Dobson, brother of Bridget. This double descent will occur through a later generation Ellwood-Dobson marriage in the female Ellwood line already mentioned.
The children of Christopher and Bridget Ellwood were: Edmund born 1625; Janet born 1628; CHRISTOPHER born 1631; Reginald born 1634; Mark born 1640; Bridget born 1642; and John born 1647. Christopher Ellwood died at Dufton in January of 1664. His wife Bridget Dobson had died on Dec. 27, 1662. The given names of Christopher, Edmund, Thomas, and Mark will be used multiple times in each generation of Ellwoods over the next hundred years in Dufton.



IV. Christopher Ellwood II and Jane Gargatt

Christopher Ellwood was born in 1631, the third child of Christopher Ellwood Sr. and his wife Bridget. He married his wife Jane about 1662, no wriitten record being found. Her maiden name and lineage were discovered in the will of William Gargatt of Dufton probated in 1668. In the will he mentions Christopher Ellwood as his son- in- law, and as the husband of his daughter Jane. William Gargatt's wife was Jane Natteras, whom he had married in 1629. The Gargatt lineage is traced to Edward Gargatt of Dufton in the mid-16th century. Christopher Ellwood II died in August of 1676. From his will, we learn he was a yeoman farmer and property owner. His wife Jane is still living in 1676, and the names of his surviving children are given. The will also requests that he be buried in the churchyard of St. Cuthberts in Dufton. The children of Christopher Ellwood II and Jane Gargatt were: Christopher, born 1664, who died young; EDMUND born 1667; Elizabeth, born 1669, who died unmarried in 1743; Mary, born c. 1672, who married George Thornborough; and John, born c. 1674.
The numerous wills of the Ellwoods in Dufton provide a picture of prosperous, and property owning farming families over many generations.
This remains a consistent pattern from 1600 until well into the 19th century. The lead mining industry would expand to a great extent in Dufton and throughout the Pennines by the start of the 18th century. This mining industry will have a direct effect on the future course of the Ellwood line we are following.
In the present day, Dufton is a small and attractive village set at the foot of the Pennine Mountains. It has a large central Green, with an unusual and distinctive fountain erected in the mid-19th century. The current population of the village is 158. After the end of the lead mining era, farming remains as the principal occupation in the parish.





St. Cuthberts Church, Dufton, England

The parish church is first mentioned in 1298. St. Cuthberts is located one mile west of the village of Dufton. Photo by author, May 12, 2000.

V. Edmund Ellwood and Anne Rudd

Edmund Ellwood first married Dorothy Spedding in 1689. She died in 1695, and the couple had three children: Frances, John, and Bridget. Edmund then married Anne Rudd of Sandford in Warcop Parish on June 1, 1696. Anne Rudd was christened Feb. 3, 1667, and was the daughter of Thomas Rudd and Catherine Atkinson. Anne Rudd's grand-parents were William and Isabel Rudd; her great-grandparents were William Rudd and Margaret Gibson; and her great-great-grandfather was John Rudd of Sandford, who died in 1591. Edmund Ellwood and Anne Rudd had six children, all born in Dufton: THOMAS (1697-1785); Christopher (born and died 1699); Edmund (born 1700, who married Eliz. Robinson in 1725): William (1702-1789): and Dorothy (born 1706, who married Joseph Richardson in 1735). Edmund Ellwood died in 1730 at Dufton. Anne Rudd died at some point after his will was probated in 1730. His children and grand-children, along with their residences which are all listed in the will, provide the proof of the next two generations in the direct Ellwood line.

VI. Thomas Ellwood and Jane

Thomas Ellwood resided at Murton, a small village 2 miles south-east of Dufton in the parish of Appleby-Bongate. The will of his father Edmund in 1730 had stated his son Thomas lived at Murton, and named his grand-children living at Murton. Thomas Ellwood married at an early age, his first child Thomas being born in late 1715. His wife was named Jane, but a parish record of the marriage has not been found. With his wife Jane, Thomas Ellwood had four children: THOMAS in 1715; Ann in 1720, (she died unmarried in 1755); Edward in 1721; and Jane in 1724. Jane, the wife of Thomas, died on Feb. 5, 1727. In 1729, Thomas Ellwood married Elizabeth Wilson as his second wife. They had two sons named Edmund, both of whom died in infancy. Thomas Ellwood was listed in records as a yeoman, and also as church warden of Bongate Parish. He died June 6, 1785, at the age of 88. Thomas is the sixth, and last generation of our Ellwood direct line to be a yeoman farmer. His is also the last generation to remain an entire lifetime in the Dufton area.

VII. Thomas Ellwood and Mary Ellwood

Thomas Ellwood married Mary Ellwood at Dufton on Feb. 5, 1742. Mary Ellwood was a distant (4th) cousin of Thomas. They shared two common great-great-great grandfathers in Edmund Ellwood (1573-1657), and Reginald Dobson (1575-1626). Thomas Ellwood had been born at Murton, but was a lead miner living in Dufton at the time of his marriage. He was most likely an employee of the London Lead Mining Company. This large company had extensive holdings throughout the Pennine region. Thomas and Mary Ellwood had one child born at Dufton in 1742. This child, named Joseph, died in 1743. The following year, the couple moved to the small village of Knarsdale in Northumberland. A daughter named Jane was born here in 1745. Jane would later marry Thomas Reid in 1775 at Alston. Thomas and Mary Ellwood would now move to the nearby large lead mining town of Alston in the county of Cumberland. Their remaining children would all be born in Alston: John in 1748,( he would marry Mary Gibson at Whitehaven in 1775, and later return to Alston. In the 1790's he would move to Paisley, Scotland.); Frances (Fanny) born in 1751; THOMAS born in 1753; Mary born in 1755; Elizabeth born in 1758, (married John Brown in 1782.); and finally, two daughters named Ann who died in infancy. Mary Ellwood would die at Fairhill in Alston Parish in 1789. Thomas Ellwood would then move to the town of Whitehaven and die there in 1801. The next section will discuss the lineage of Mary, our other direct Ellwood ancestor.

Mary Ellwood was born at Dufton in 1723, the daugher of Thomas Ellwood and Frances Watson. She had three sisters: Isabell, who married John Cooper; Anne, who married George Doten; Barbara, who married Henry Bell; and one brother, John, who married Anne Blenkarn. Thomas Ellwood was born in 1698, and died at Dufton in 1757. His will mentions all of the above children along with his wife Frances. Mary Ellwood's maternal lineage is quite interesting. Her mother, Frances Watson, was born at Kirkland Parish, which is near Dufton, but over the county line in Cumberland. Frances Watson was the daughter of Thomas Watson and Barbara Hutchinson, and was born in 1700. The earlier Hutchinson family held the lease of Skelling in Kirkland. The Hutchinsons were of the landed-gentry class, and can be traced in Kirkland and the adjoining parish of Ousby to the late 15th century. Mary Ellwood's great-grandparents were Joseph Hutchinson and Anne Thomson of Skelling. A number of early wills found in the Hutchinson line give a good picture of their relative wealth and social class. Robert Hutchinson of Ousby is the earliest of the family recorded, being an adult in the 1490's. Mary Ellwood's paternal ancestry is listed below. It shows the connection to Edmund Ellwood, the common ancestor she shared with her husband Thomas.

  • Thomas Ellwood & Frances Watson
  • Edmund Ellwood & Isabel Cryer
  • Thomas Ellwood & Elizabeth Dobson
  • Thomas Ellwood & Margaret Atkinson
  • EDMUND ELLWOOD (1573-1657)

VIII. Thomas Ellwood and Hannah Lowery

Thomas Ellwood was christened at Alston on Apr. 15, 1753, the son of Thomas and Mary Ellwood. A miner like his father, he came with his brother John to work at the coal mines in the Whitehaven area in the early 1770's. On Aug. 26, 1776, Thomas Ellwood married Hannah Lowery at Moresby Church located just north of Whitehaven. The couple lived at Hensingham for many years, and then moved to the New Houses in Whitehaven. These row house residences had been built for coal miners by the wealthy mine-owning family of Lowther. The New Houses survived in Whitehaven until 1940. Hannah Lowery was born at Hensingham in April of 1754. She was the daughter of John Lowery and Janet Ward. Hannah had two sisters, Peggy and Jane, and one brother named Edward. John Lowery and Janet Ward had married at Arthuret on June 14, 1753. John Lowery was listed as being of Whitehaven, Janet Ward as from Kirk Andrews upon Esk Parish. This parish is on the Scottish border, and had been the site of many border battles in earlier centuries. Janet Ward was the daughter of Edward Ward and Jane White, being born in 1725. Jane White had been born at Kirk Andrews in 1691, and was the daughter of John and Jane White. While visiting the churchyard of Kirk Andrews upon Esk, I found the gravestones of three of these direct ancestors in very readable condition. One is of John White (1653-1708), with a reverse side showing a coat-of-arms. The others being: Edward Ward of Moat (1692-1739); and his wife Jane White (1691-1744).
Thomas Ellwood and Hannah Lowery had 13 children born between 1777 and 1798: John 1777; Edward and twin Thomas 1778; Mary 1780; William 1782; Joseph 1784; Hannah 1787; ROBERT 1789; Samuel 1791; Jane 1793; Isaac and twin John II 1795; and last, Henry in 1798. Thomas Ellwood, and his sons Thomas and ROBERT, are listed in the payroll of the Howgill Colliery in 1801. This was a large coal mine operating in Whitehaven during the period. Hannah Lowery, namesake of Ellwood generations to come, died on March 6, 1808. Thomas Ellwood died on Dec. 13, 1826. Both were buried at Holy Trinity Church in Whitehaven.

St. Bridgets Church, Moresby, England

St. Bridgets Church at Moresby stands on a high bluff overlooking the Irish Sea, located just north of Whitehaven. Photo by author, May 21, 2000

IX. Robert Ellwood and Martha Saxon/Saxton

Robert Ellwood was born on Jan. 11, 1789,
the 7th child of Thomas and Hannah Ellwood. Robert was working as a coal miner by the age of 12, and remained with this occupation through his lifetime. By 1816, he was working at the mines around Bolton in Lancashire. On April 16, 1816, he married Martha Saxon at Deane Church near Bolton. Within a year, Robert and his wife had moved back to Whitehaven. Church and census records show them living at a number of different residences in Whitehaven over the next decades. These included the New Houses, Hilton Row, Harris, and Ginnes. In the 1840's, Robert and Martha Ellwood moved to the Castle Eden Colliery in County Durham. Martha Saxon died at Castle Eden in 1849. Robert Ellwood returned to Whitehaven by 1851, he died there on Jan. 24, 1862. Robert Ellwood and Martha Saxon had 13 children, all of whom were born in Whitehaven: THOMAS born in 1817, married ELIZABETH BENN in 1837 (came to the U.S.); John born in 1819, married Bridget Anderson (died Whitehaven 1892); William born in 1821, married Elizabeth Howe 1847; Eleanor born in 1822, died young; Hannah born in 1824, married John Young (came to the U.S.); James born in 1826; Samuel born in 1827, died in Whitehaven 1849; Robert born in 1829, wife Louisa (came to the U.S.); Martha born and died in 1831; Sarah born in 1832; Mary born 1833, died 1834; Isaac born in 1834, married a Trotter (came to the U.S.); and Jane born in 1836, died at Durham in 1847.
Valuable detailed information on this generation was kindly provided by Adrian Taylor in England. Mr. Taylor is a descendant of the William Ellwood cited above, and has a collection of Ellwood family letters and Bible records from the period.

X. Thomas Saxon Ellwood and Elizabeth Benn

Thomas Ellwood was the first born child of Robert Ellwood and his wife Martha. He was born on June 20, 1817 at Ginnes in Whitehaven. He became the 4th consecutive generation in the Ellwood line to become a miner. Thomas Ellwood married Elizabeth Benn on May 10, 1837, at Holy Trinity Church in Whitehaven. The Benn family had been mariners for a number of generations, and thus the marriage represented a union of the two major professions of 18th and 19th century Whitehaven.
Elizabeth Benn was born Apr. 19, 1818, and was the daughter of Daniel Benn and his wife Mary Boadle. Daniel Benn was Master and owner of a ship at the port of Whitehaven. He was the son of another mariner named Joseph Benn, and had been born in 1792. Daniel's mother was Elizabeth Benn, (this was an unrelated Benn-Benn marriage). She was born in 1751, the daughter of William Benn and Mary Harrison. This William Benn had also been a mariner, and appears to have been lost at sea in 1753. Joseph Benn was born in 1747, and was the son of William and Mary Benn.
Mary Boadle was descended from the very old line of Boadles in Cleator, who trace to the 15th century. I have data on the Boadle family and all their female lines completed to the early 1600's, and would be happy to share this with those interested in the Boadle family history.
Returning to Thomas Ellwood and Elizabeth Benn, information from the Whitehaven Records Office and census returns provide a picture of their life in Whitehaven. The couple begin their married years at the New Houses with Thomas listed as a coal miner. By the mid-1840's, Thomas Ellwood begins to get promotions every two or three years to higher supervisory positions at the mines. This economic rise is reflected in changes of residence. By the 1851 census, the family is living in a house at #6 Jonathan Gardens and employing a live-in servant. In 2000, I found this house to be still occupied.
Thomas and Elizabeth Ellwood had 6 known children born in Whitehaven, the last of these in 1851. Some time in 1852/53, the family left England and sailed for the United States, settling first in Pennsylvania. Several more children would be born after their arrival in the United States.
By the early 1860's the Ellwoods were in Hunnewell Furnace in Greenup Co., Kentucky. Thomas Ellwood was a manager of the mine works and making $1200 a year. The 1870 census lists him as a Mining Engineer, and shows assets that would classify him as wealthy in terms of the time. In the same period, his sister Hannah Young and his brother Robert Ellwood have also come to the United States, and are living in the Pittsburgh area.
His brother Isaac would immigrate at a later date.
Elizabeth Benn appears to have had a final child in early 1865, and would die soon after in Jackson Co., Ohio while the Ellwood family was on a temporary stay in this coal mining county. Thomas Ellwood married Elizabeth Wooldridge as his second wife in Greenup Co. on June 20, 1866. Thomas Ellwood would have 13 children with Elizabeth Benn, and 7 more with his second wife Elizabeth Wooldridge. After 1870, Thomas Ellwood would purchase land and move to the adjoining area of Carter Co., Ky. From various records, we can place the death of Thomas Ellwood to have been in 1878. Elizabeth Wooldridge would later marry George Hull, and have 12 additional children.

XI. The Children of Thomas Ellwood

1. Children of Thomas Ellwood and his first wife, Elizabeth Benn: In an 1864 letter written from Thomas Ellwood to his brother William in Whitehaven, Thomas mentions all of his six living children by name. He further says that he and Elizabeth had a total of 12 children born to that date. (They would have one more in 1865.) The six unnamed children all would have died at an early age. I discovered three of them in English records at Whitehaven: A daughter Hannah was born in 1845, and died on Jan. 19, 1847. ( A second Hannah would be born in 1848 ). A son named Daniel Benn Ellwood was c. Nov. 20, 1846, and died on Dec. 4, 1846. Another son, Thomas Benn Ellwood, was born in June of 1851 and died the same month. (A second Thomas Benn Ellwood would be born to the couple.)
The surviving children of Thomas Ellwood with his first wife Elizabeth Benn will be discussed in seperate items below. This will then be followed by a section on the children of Thomas with his second wife, Elizabeth Wooldridge.

Martha Ellwood was born at Whitehaven on Apr. 17, 1838. She was the first born child of Thomas Ellwood and Elizabeth Benn. Martha would marry James Jones at Wellersburg, Pa. on July 15, 1854. James Jones was a coal miner, and had been born in England in 1831. He had come to the United States in 1845, and would later serve in the Union Army during the Civil War.
The Jones family were in Mason City, Virginia by the late 1850's, they then appear in the Greenup Co., Ky. census of 1860. During the Civil War, the family had returned to Virginia. James Jones would later be Mayor of Kanawha, West Va.
By the 1870's, the Jones family had located in Streator, Illinois. Two of Martha Ellwood's sisters had also moved to Streator in in the same period. Martha Ellwood Jones died a the age of 87 in Streator on Jan. 22, 1925. James Jones had died in 1919. Children of James and Martha Jones were: Richard 1855; Mary Ann 1856--married William McAllister (one of four inter-marriages between Ellwood descendants and the McAllisters); James Henry 1858--married Mary Jane McAllister; Edwin 1861; Martha 1863--married John McAllister; Elizabeth 1865; Charles 1866; Robert 1868--married Maria Morrell; Hector 1870--married Mary Jardin; Hannah 1872--married Hector Dennison; Thomas 1875; and William Cadet in 1878. Six of the above children were living in 1925.

Mary Ellwood was born in Whitehaven on May 30, 1840. She married William Morrell in 1856 at Schuylkill Co., Pa. William Morrell was a mining blacksmith and was born in 1834 at Belper, Derbyshire, England as the eldest child of Mathew Morrell and his wife Maria Gregory. The family moved from Pennsylvania to Hunnewell Furnace to join the other Ellwoods in the 1860's. In 1866 they were in Ohio, and then returned to Kentucky. In 1875, the family moved to their final home in Streator, Illinois.
William Morrell died at Streator on Aug. 29, 1905. Mary Ellwood Morrell would die on Oct. 1, 1909. Children of the Morrells were: Maria 1858-1928--married (1) William Williams and (2)David Hill; Thomas 1861-?; Robert 1863-?; Elizabeth 1866-1921--married Thomas Holmes; Mary 1868-1911--married John Dawson; Jane 1871-1954--married James McDermott; Charles 1874-1939--married Mary Bunker; Hannah 1876-1929--married Orville White; Ida Mae 1879-1945--married Henry Guy; Etta 1883-1929.

Robert Ellwood was c. Aug. 6, 1842 at Holy Trinity Church in Whitehaven. Robert became a coal miner like all the members of the Ellwood family. He married Hannah Leonard on July 29, 1865 in Greenup Co. Ky. Robert Ellwood was living in Hunnewell Furnace in 1870, and moved to Carter Co., Ky. by the 1880's. He had one daughter named Paulina with his wife Hannah. After the death of Hannah, Robert had four children with his second wife Linda. These were: Gertrude 1889; Jessie 1892; Roberta 1896; and Abbey 1905.
Robert Ellwood committed suicide and died on Feb. 21, 1918 at Pineville Ky. His wife Linda died in 1942.

Hannah Ellwood McAllister & Family, circa 1900 (back L-R) Elizabeth, James, William, and Margaret (seated L-R) Hannah, Bertha, Martha, and a Morrell family niece. Center: Hector McAllister.

Hannah Ellwood was born in Whitehaven on June 2, 1848, and christened two days later. She married Hector McAllister on July 5, 1867 in Greenup, Ky. Hector had also been born in Whitehaven, and was a third generation coal miner in his line. He was born on Apr. 27, 1846, and was the son of James McAllister and Margaret Hutchinson. Hector McAllister's paternal grandparents were James and Mary McAllister, who had come from Ireland to Whitehaven in 1818. Hector and his brother Thomas came to the United States in 1864, two years after his parents and younger siblings.
Hector and Hannah left Kentucky in 1869 and moved to their final home of Streator, Illinois.
Hector McAllister would be employed by the Vermillion Coal Co., he later was appointed State Mine Inspector during the terms of three Illinois Govenors.
Hannah Ellwood McAllister died in Streator on July 8, 1934. She was buried at Riverview Cemetery with her husband Hector, who had died on May 2, 1917. The surviving adult children of Hector and Hannah McAllister were: Margaret 1868-1937--married Charles Beard; Elizabeth 1870-1939--married Albert S. Morrison; James 1872-1959-- married Katie Zintner; William 1875-1926--married Florence Brooker; Martha 1878-1954--married George Hall; and Bertha 1881-1957--married Lee Ramsey.
Elizabeth Morrison was my grandmother, putting me in the 14th generation of the descending line.

John Ellwood was born to Thomas Ellwood and Elizabeth Benn in 1856. Census records state he was born in Pennsylvania, and he was mentioned in his father's letter of 1864. Sarah Ellwood was born in 1865, and was the final child of Thomas Ellwood and Elizabeth Benn. She was named for a sister of Elizabeth. Both John Ellwood and his sister Sarah are found in the 1870 census of Greenup Co. listed in the household of their father.
No further record of Sarah has been found, son John Ellwood died in an industrial accident in Birmingham, Alabama in September of 1892. No known descendants of John have been found.

Thomas Benn Ellwood was born in Pottsville, Pa. on July 14, 1858. He also became a coal miner, and was to marry Sarah Matilda Rice on May 16, 1878. In the 1880 census he was employed as a coal miner at Hunnewell Furnace, Kentucky. By the early 1880's, Thomas and his family had moved to Marshall, Texas. Children of Thomas Benn Ellwood and Matilda Rice were: Pearl b. 1879; William Robert b. 1880; Thomas Benn Jr. b. 1887; Henry Rice b. 1888; Howard Taylor b. 1896; John b. 1900; and Nancy Louise b. 1903. Thomas Benn Ellwood remained in Marshall, Texas and died in 1940. His wife Matilda Rice would die in 1952. Thomas Benn Ellwood would be the last living child of Thomas Saxon Ellwood and Elizabeth Benn.

2. Children of Thomas Ellwood with his second wife Elizabeth Wooldridge: In 1866, the 48 year old widower Thomas Ellwood married his second wife Elizabeth Wooldridge. Elizabeth was born in 1844, the daughter of Samuel Wooldridge and Lucy Hannah. The couple would have seven children by the time of Thomas Ellwood's death in 1879. They were: Lucy 1867; Samuel W. 1870-1955; William J. 1873-1928; Isaac 1874-1948; Maggie 1876; James 1877; and David 1878. At the time of the birth of his last son in 1878, Thomas Ellwood had already become a great-grandfather.
Elizabeth Wooldridge would later marry George Hull and have 12 more children. Elizabeth would die in 1926 at Rush, Kentucky. The information on the second family of Thomas Ellwood has been kindly provided by Rhonda Warner, a Kentucky descendant of the Ellwood/Wooldridge line.
Details on descendants of the line will follow.

Samuel Wooldrige Ellwood was born in Kentucky on Sept. 14, 1870. He married Rebecca Coburn on Apr. 9, 1892 in Campbell Co., Tennessee. In 1899, the family moved to Birmingham, Alabama. Four years later they moved west to Albuquerque, New Mexico. Samuel Ellwood was a Mining Engineer, and began a silver mine company in New Mexico. He worked for Pancho Villa in Juarez, Mexico during the next decade, and then left for Utah in 1917. He returned home in the early 1920's and was divorced from Rebecca Coburn. Samuel Ellwood never remarried, and was to die in Ohio on Oct 3, 1955.
The children of Samuel and Rebecca Ellwood were: Andrew T. 1896-1925, married Hazel Green; Arthur C. 1899-1965, married Mary Jane Reed; Clara E. 1902-1991, married William Moore; Robert H. 1905-1977, married Christina Davis; and Howard W. 1909-1910.

Maggie Ellwood was born in 1876, likely in Carter Co. Kentucky. She was to marry Thomas Davis in Boyd Co., Ky. in 1896. Their only known child to date, was a son named McClellan born in 1897. Maggie Ellwood Davis would die in Greenup Co. on March 5, 1940.

William James Ellwood was born on June 27, 1872 in Kilgore, Ky. He married Rachel Marshall in 1897 at Campbell Co., Tennessee. They had one son, Samuel 1897-1973, who married Hattie Robbins. William Ellwood was then divorced from Rachel Marshall, and remarried Rachel Wood in 1901. William Ellwood was a coal miner by profession, and by 1912 had moved to Price, Utah. He was a Superintendent of Mines, and served as a State Representative, elected in 1912. He moved to Long Beach, Ca. in 1925, but returned to Utah in 1927, where he died as a result of a mine accident on Apr. 22, 1927. The children of William Ellwood and Rachel Wood were:
Curtis E. 1902-1981, married Phoebe May James; William; Kenneth; James; and Gladys. All were living at the time of William Ellwood's death.

In Conclusion

The Descendants: The 12th generation listed in the previous section was the first to be entirely born in the United States, and the last to be mainly born in the 19th century. They began to migrate to other states, and were no longer concentrated principally in Eastern Kentucky and Illinois. The 13th generation would greatly increase the number of descendants, and would see a large expansion of new surnames in the Ellwood line.
These would include: Russell, Kief, Jahneke, Tabor, Mattingly, Burnell, Kettman, Barwick, Farrimond, Dixon, Kidd, Peterson, Beckman, White, Jensen, Morgan, Pinney, Songer, Pettigrew, Koeneman, Higgins, Kinkade, Bohanan, Mcdermott; Guy; and Dawson. By the end of the 20th century we have entered into the 16th and 17th generations. Large numbers of the descendants of Thomas Ellwood are now living coast to coast in the United States; and when we consider all the possible descendants of our original ancestor Edward Ellwood, they would now be found living both worldwide and in countless numbers.
I have recently begun contact with "cousins" who share Cumbrian ancestry in England, Australia, New Zealand and Switzerland. The histories of these branch families have been most enjoyable to discover. I would like to acknowledge the following American Ellwood descendants who have shared photographs, family information, and remembrances over the past 20 years:
Hannah Russell; Lois Jean Johnson; Sandra Parcher; Lois Gregory; Hannah Kief; Dorothy Kidd; Marilyn Johnson; Betty Beckman; Cynthia Ali; and Rhonda Warner.

Research and Sources: The search for the Ellwood family ancestry, along with that of many other Cumbrian ancestors, was begun in 1986. A major part of that research was shared by my wife Barbara Morrison. Her expertise at reading early manuscript documents of the 16th and 17th centuries is just one example of her many contributions to the research. Source materials were located at sites visited in both the United States and England.
The largest sources of information were found in the Parish records of England (1570-1860), and the Probate records of the Carlisle and Richmond Dioceses. Other sources include: Marriage Bond records; 1641 Protestation Lists; 17th century Tax Lists; Cemetery inscriptions; Census records of England and the United States; Obituaries and Death records; Marriage records; United States Wills and Probate records; Employment records; Family Bible records; Newspaper articles; Parish and Church Histories; and numerous other facts found in miscellaneous local records. When possible, photocopies of all documents have been made. Microfiche and filmed records from the Family History Library in Salt Lake City were used extensively in our research.

  • Bruce Morrison
  • 3488 Elmendorf Way
  • Lexington, Ky. 40517
  • copyright 2000

Elizabeth Benn McAllister

Elizabeth Benn McAllister (1870-1939) circa 1888. She was the daughter of Hector McAllister and Hannah Ellwood.

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