Dinah Brown & Lawrence Wood

After the Civil War ended, Dinah Brown married Lawrence Wood. Dinah was the daughter of Charles Brown and Susan Wood. She was named for the grandmother of Susan, who had been enslaved by Robert Darnall. [See Fishwick v. Sewall, and the post on Dinah’s Descendants] Dinah and her descendants were enslaved by the Robert Darnall and then devised to Robert Sewall and his heirs.

Dinah was listed as the youngest of Susan “Suck” Wood’s children in the 1853 Inventory of Robert D Sewall’s estate at “Poplar Hill”. Her age was recorded as 7; her estimated birth year was 1846.

Her marriage to Lawrence Wood was solemnized in January 1866 when she was 22 years old.


early marriage years

After their marriage, they lived near “Poplar Hill” and Dinah’s brother, Joseph Henry Brown, near the Catholic Church where Rosaryville would develop into a town. The first map is from Martenet’s Map of Prince George’s County in 1863. The second map is from Hopkin’s Atlas of Prince George’s County in 1878. The development of Cheltenham and Rosaryville results from the building of the railroad and the development of villages after emancipation.

Excerpt from Martenet’s 1863 Map with my annotations | loc.gov
Excerpt from Hopkin’s 1878 Atlas with my annotations | loc.gov

In the 1870 census, they lived with their two children: Louisa and Buddy, and a teenager named Thorton. The 1870 census did not record relationships leaving us to infer relationships.

In the 1880 census, they are still living near Dinah’s siblings and her mother. They have an additional son, which they named after Lawrence. Dinah is working as a cook.


searching for Lawrence Wood prior to emancipation

Dinah’s family has strong ties to “Poplar Hill” and the “Woodyard”, her family having lived there since Susan’s grandmother was brought from Dorchester County prior to 1775, when Darnall moved to “Poplar Hill” with his step-daughter Jane Fishwick who had enslaved Dinah prior to Darnall taking possession of Dinah.

Lawrence does not appear in the 1853 inventory and his name, Lawrence is not one that appears in the 1821 inventories or other identified records related to “Poplar Hill”.

enslaved by Charles F Calvert

A “Lorenzo Wood” appears in the lists submitted to Prince George’s County Commission on Slave Statistics and compiled in 1867 & 1868. As enslavers had been been compensated for their “lost property” when the District had emancipated the enslaved in 1862, Maryland enslavers also hoped for compensation and many submitted lists to the commission. The Dangerfield family who owned “Poplar Hill” did not submit a list. However, Charles F Calvert submitted the name “Lorenzo Wood” along with sixteen other names.

Charles F Calvert was descendant from “the Calverts”. He purchased the tract of land he called “Belle Chance” which situation on the north part of the land that would become Andrews Air Force Base in the 1840s. Prior to his purchase of “Belle Chance”, he is listed in the 1840 census near Wm. P Brinham and Joseph B Hill, suggesting he owned land near the southern edge of “Poplar Hill”.

From Google Maps
Excerpt from Martenet’s 1863 Map with my annotations | loc.gov

Calvert, before and after his purchase of Belle Change” was a neighbor of the Sewalls and the Dangerfields at “Poplar Hill”. As evidenced by the “Early Records of White Marsh”, Sewall allowed the people he enslaved to enter into relationships on neighboring estates. 1828 Baptismal Records identifies the following relationships:

  • James and Sarah were identified as husband and wife; James was enslaved by Arthur West and Sarah was enslaved by Sewall.
  • Barney and Betsey were identified as husband and wife; Barney was enslaved by Jane Stone and Betsey by Sewall.
  • Nicholas and Ann were identified as husband and wife; Nicholas was enslaved by Sewall and Ann by Joseph Hill.

The same may be possible for the Dangerfields who inherited “Poplar Hill” after 1853, allowing Lawrence “Lorenzo” Wood to meet Dinah Brown.

The list submitted by Calvert lists 4 people with the surname Wood:

  • Betsy Wood, age 49
  • Francis L. Wood, age 17
  • Josephine Wood, age 15
  • Lorenzo Wood, age 18

Lawrence Wood is listed as 27 in the 1870 Census records, nine years older than the age reported in the “Slave Statistics”. It is often ambiguous what age the enslaver used for the “Slave Statistics”. For example, Marsham Waring’s heirs used the same ages as on the early 1860s inventory compiled for his estate, even though the list suggests it represents their age at 1864. Others used their 1867 age. For Lawrence Wood and Lorenzo Wood to be within 9 years of each other suggests that they are the same.

Maryland State Archives

The organization of his list makes it hard to tell if those with the same surname are closely related and if they are family groups. If we assume that they are, this suggests that Betsy Wood if the mother of the three teenagers.

Sources

Early Records of the White Marsh Church, Prince George’s County, Maryland. Bowie, MD: Prince Georges County Genealogical Society, 2005. Print.

Eliza Wood

Eliza Wood is the daughter of John Wood; both are listed in the 1853 Inventory of Robert Darnall Sewall [JH 2:699].

Eliza’s Children

In the 1853 Inventory, Eliza is 38 years old and listed with six children. Her children are about two years apart. She is not listed with a partner, unlike other family groups. This suggests that her partner was likely enslaved by another. If Martha Ann is her oldest, then she began to have children when she was 26.

NameAgeEst BYIdentified Name Connections
Martha Ann121841
Henny101843
John Robert81845John is the name of Eliza’s father
Mary Jane61847
Fanny41849Fanny is the name of Eliza’s grandmother
Phillis11852Phillis is the name of Eliza’s mother

After Emancipation

Eliza and some of her children are identified in the US Federal Census as still living in close proximity to Poplar Hill after emancipation in 1870 and 1880. I have yet to locate John Robert and Mary Jane.

“Poplar Hill” can be identified on the 1863 Martenet Map of Prince George’s County by the name H(enry) Dangerfield, the guardian of Sewall’s nieces who inherited land from Sewall.  Immediately south of Woodyard in the north part of Surrats District, the road leading south to Surratsville (present-day Clinton) cut the land into two pieces.  

Martenet labeled a Mill near Henry Dangerfield and the Woodyard intersection.  This mill can be identified in the 1870 Census as dwelling number 21, with Head of Household Henry Tarman who was identified as a Miller.  Immediately enumerated after him is Annie Marshall in dwelling number 22. She is the mother of WH Marshall who is named on the map and who had moved out of state after the Civil War.  

Households 23-32, 35-42, 47-49 are freed Black families who have names with connections to the 1853 Inventory. The enumerator appears to have followed the road south from Woodyard and then turned right [northwest] onto the road to the Jenkins property.  

Members of the Eliza Wood family are enumerated among these households. 

Eliza & ‘Feles’ with grandchildren

In the 1870 census, Eliza is listed as the head of household with her occupation listed as “keeping house”, a phrase usually reserved for a woman taking care of her own house (as opposed to “domestic” which indicated work as a servant). There is no indication of a partner. She is living with ‘Feles’, age 19, likely to be Phillis who was one in the 1853 inventory, and two children: Susanna Johnson, age 7, and Fannie Johnson, infant.

They are listed in dwelling number 26.

Phillis was married in 1870; the officiant McDonald, was a priest for the Catholic Church. She married James Clarke in September. James was listed in dwelling number 25 of the 1870 census.

Martha Ann & Charles Johnson

In 1870, Martha and Charles are not found in the US Federal Census, though to of their children are listed with Eliza (Susanna and Fannie). This suggests that they either lived separated from the Wood family, or the enumerator only listed those “at home” at the time of the record, rather than asking about additional family members.

In 1880, Eliza is living with the Charles Johnson household (dwelling number 173). She is listed as a “Cook”. She likely worked for a private family. She may work for the same private family as her granddaughter, Christiana, age 16, who is listed as a servant. They are living adjacent to the Tenley family and Walters Family, both white. James Walters is indicated on the 1878 Hopkins map of Surratts District, allowing us to identify their residence in 1880.

On the same Census page, James and Phillis (Wood) Clarke are listed. They are listed with three grandchildren: Rose, James, and Agustus.

James Wood

Between the two Wood families in the 1880 census, sits James Wood, age 45. He is living with his wife, Annie, and their children: Eliza, Catherine, Edward, Nancy, Susanna, and Martha.

NameAgeEst BYIdentified Name Connections
Eliza A161866Possibly named after Eliza Wood, subject of post
Catherine A13?1867Possibly named after Eliza’s sister, Kitty
Edward H91871[Not discussed in this post and “Ned” is a name that will repeat in generations of Woods]
Nancy71873
Susanna41876[Not discussed in this post and “Susanna” is a name that will repeat in generations of Woods]
Martha21878Possibly named after Eliza’s oldest identified daughter.

The relationships of James Wood with Eliza Wood is unclear. The names of his children and his geographic proximity suggests a kin relationship.

If he is Eliza’s son, he would have been born around 1835 and he would have been older than the children listed in the 1853 Inventory. She would have been 20 when he was born which is within her child-bearing years.

It is possible, that he was sold as a teenager to a local enslaver, when Sewall needed ready cash. He was a reputed drinker and gambler. Berry, in The Price for Their Pound, describes how the teen years were when most separations from families occurred, as the children were older and able to perform heavy labor. “Most of the [enslaved people] sold in the Upper South were teenagers and young adults”. [p. 66]

In 1870, James and Ann are living in the Marlboro District with his two daughters, Eliza and Catherine and other freed people who appear unrelated (John King, Robert Smith, Henry Harley, Washington Marlow, Catherine Beall).

Henny

Henny, Eliza’s second oldest daughter, is listed with as the head of household of dwelling number 23 in the 1870 census. The enumerator records her as living with Lewis Brown, age 45.

Based on her listed occupation, “Domestic”, and that females were rarely listed as head of household if there was an older male, I propose the possibility that the enumerator miss identified the household. I suggest that Henrietta Wood, Domestic, age 28, should have been listed with the previous household, and Lewis should be head of household of his own house. If this is the case, then she would have been working the household of Annie Marshall, who lived in a dwelling house adjacent to the “Poplar Hill” tract of land.

Three years later, she married John H Jackson, in a ceremony officiated by Walsh. She and John moved to Rosaryville, nearby, and lived there with her children. They are living near the children of Charles and Susan (Wood) Brown, discussed in the post on William Hannibal Gantt Brown. Susan is like Henrietta’s great-aunt, as identified in the 1821 inventory [TT 4:352].

Sources

Berry, Daina R. The Price for Their Pound of Flesh: The Value of the Enslaved, from Womb to Grave, in the Building of a Nation. United States: Random House Inc, 2018. Print.

John Wood

John Wood is listed in the 1853 Inventory of Robert Darnall Sewall’s estate [JH 2:699] as a 55 year old man who was appraised at $400.

In her book, The Price for a Pound of Flesh, Berry talks about the stages of an enslaved person’s life. For John Wood, age 55, he would have been considered elderly as he had surpassed the age of forty, the boundary between mature and elderly. John may still have be performing labor for the Sewall family, and yet, he had surpassed the age of most of the enslaved whose life span was shortened by hard work and captivity. Berry described the work of the “able-bodied enslaved people” over forty as performing tasks including serving as cooks, body servants, gardeners, and caretakers of enslaved children. [page 133]

Berry separates out the “soul value” — “an intangible marker that often defied monetization yet spoke to the spirit and soul of who they were as human beings.” As an elderly member of the plantation, he would have been a valuable member for the community in terms of wisdom and kin connections. He may have taken on the role of caretaker as evidenced by his placement in the 1853 inventory.

John Wood’s Daughters

He is situated between two family groups: Eliza and her children and John and Kitta Brown and their children.

Annotated excerpt from 1853 Inventory showing John Wood between the two families.

It is inferred that Eliza and Kitta are John’s daughters due to their placement in the 1853 inventory, and when names and ages are compared with the 1821 [TT 4:352] and 1853 Inventory.

Name1821 Age & EST BY1853 Age & EST BY
John23 – 179855 – 1798
Eliza6 – 181538 – 1815
Kitta/Kitty2 – 181934 – 1819

John Wood may have taken care of his grandchildren and other small children as the adults and older children were sent to the fields to perform labor. He has not been located in the 1870 census suggesting that he may have died prior to 1870; he would have been 72 had he lived.

John and Phillis, partners

The 1821 Inventory shows John listed with a partner, Phillis, the inferred mother of his daughters, Eliza and Kitty. Phillis, age 24, in the 1821 inventory, would have been born in 1797. She would have been 18 when she gave birth to Eliza and 22 when gave birth to Kitty. The inventories do not indicate if they had additional children. Eliza named her youngest daughter after her mother. Phillis, the grand-daughter, is listed with Eliza in both the 1853 inventory and in the 1870 US Census.

Phillis is not listed in the 1853 Inventory when she would have been 56. This suggests that she either died prior to the inventory was taken, or that she was sold by the Sewall family.

It is also unclear if the relationship between John and Phillis was self-selected or if the overseers and enslavers chose the relationship between the two.

Sources

Berry, Daina R. The Price for Their Pound of Flesh: The Value of the Enslaved, from Womb to Grave, in the Building of a Nation. United States: Random House Inc, 2018. Print.

William Hannibal Brown Gantt | Proposed Parentage

William Hannibal Gantt, a Black landowner in Cheltenham, died prior to 1898 and the use of death certificates in Maryland. The purpose of this post is to propose a set of parents and siblings for William Hannibal Brown Gantt.

A Note, first, on William Hannibal Brown Gantt and his Surnames

Connecting the 1870 & 1880 Census

In 1880, William H Gantt was enumerated with David Crack in the district of Brandywine.  David and his family are listed first, at dwelling number 169, and William H Gantt, with his wife, Mary A, and children, are listed at dwelling number 170. 

1880; Census Place: Brandywine, Prince George’s, Maryland; Roll: 514; Page: 229B; Enumeration District: 131 | ancestry.com

In 1870, a William Brown was enumerated with Davy Crack at dwelling number 20; his wife, Agnes is not listed, however, the children match those of the 1880 William H Gantt entry.  The alignment of children’s names with the inclusion of Davy Crack suggests that William Brown and William H Gantt are the same person. 

1870; Census Place: Nottingham, Prince Georges, Maryland; Roll: M593_592;Page: 115B | ancestry.com

Land Records

Hannibal Gantt purchased property in Cheltenham, MD after the Civil War with David Crack that had been part of the “Poplar Neck” estate owned by the Brooke family in the 18th and 19th centuries.  Araminta Brooke, the widow of John B Brooke, sold the land to Adam Diehl in 1870, who subdivided the land for small farmers.  Their names appear on the 1878 Hopkins map of the Brandywine District as “H. Gaunt and D. Crack”.  (Prince George’s Co. Land Records, HB 5:13-14, HB JWB 33:82-3, 79:99 | mdlandrec.net)

In the land records, he is consistently referenced as William H Gantt.  In an 1874 Post Office Directory for Maryland, he is listed as Hannibal Gant, Farmer, which is consistent with the 1878 Hopkins map. This suggests he changed his surname between 1870 and 1874.

Marriage Record of Clora Ann Crack and Joseph Henry Brown 

A review of the Index to Marriage Licenses for Prince George’s County does not return a marriage license for William Gantt/Brown and Agnes Crack.  There are two entries for the surname Crack:

  • Clora Ann Crack to Joseph Henry Brown
  • John William Crack and Eliza Jane Savoy

As evidenced by the land records (namely the 1912 record in which the heirs of Clora Brown transfer their inherited property to Agnes Gantt: PG Land Records: 79:99), Clora Ann Crack and Agnes Crack are sisters.  It appears that they may have married Brown brothers. 

Brown-Wood Family Group

Joseph Henry Brown died in 1915; his death certificate lists his parents as “Charles Brown and ? Wood”. In 1870, Charles Brown, age 75, was living in the household enumerated immediately prior to William Brown. The geographic proximity of William Hannibal Brown Gantt to Charles and Susan Brown in the 1870 census with the twin marriages of siblings suggests further research into the Brown-Wood Family group to further identify relationships.

Death Certificates

In addition to Joseph Henry Brown, the following death certificates were identified:

  • John A Brown died in 1904; his death certificate lists his parents as “Charles Brown and Susan Wood”.   
  • Crissie (Brown) Wilks died in 1912; her death certificate lists her parents as “Charles Brown and Susanna Wood”.

1853 Robert D Sewall Inventory

William and Agnes’s daughter, Ella Gantt married Frank Wilkes in 1898. In my search for Frank’s parents, I had researched the Wilkes family previous to this post. I have yet to definitively identify Frank’s parents. However, the search for Wilkes lead me to the Edward and Maria Wilkes family which had been enslaved by Robert D. Sewall, the owner of Poplar Hill, and identified on the 1853 Inventory of his estate.

“Poplar Hill”

Robert D Sewall owned Poplar Hill, a large tract of land near Woodyard, in Prince George’s County, MD.  He died in the early 1850s, and as part of the probate process, an inventory was created of his estate (JH 2:699-703).  It included the names and ages of over a hundred people he enslaved on the land.  The Brown-Wood Family group is on page 702 in the portion detailed as “property managed by Mr. Jenkins”.  

Charles and Luck are the inferred parents, Charles and Susan, from their ages of 54 & 47.  

Sukey is a common nickname for Susan and the possibility exists that Luck was mistakenly written for Suck/Suckey.  If so, this would suggest that the mother’s name was Susan

The 1853 inventory includes the names of eight children.  No further information has been located for Paul, Michael and Philis.  

Below, I attempt to track Charles and Susan, and their children, across the census records.

Census Comparison

The 1870 Census

Cheltenham

In 1870, Charles and Susan Brown (parents) are enumerated living in the Nottingham District in the neighborhood of the TB Post Office.  Based on the landowners enumerated around them, it can be inferred that they are closer to what would become Cheltenham by the late 1870s.

On the annotated map, the villages of Upper Marlboro, Surratsville, Croom, Brandywine and TB are marked with white lettering.  By 1880, the additional villages of Cheltenham and Rosaryville were developed and are seen on the 1878 Hopkins Map.  These are marked in light gray. 

Two tracts of land are identified in light green and placed by their landowners: Robert D. Sewall’s land (Poplar Hill) which is identified by the name Henry Dangerfield that guardian of Sewall’s heirs and the land of the Brooke family (Poplar Neck) which is identified by the name Mrs. Brooks, the widow of John B Brooke.  The numbers represent the dwelling numbers, or the sequence of households visited by the census enumerator in the 1870 census. 

Charles and Susan Brown are enumerated at dwelling 19, with their son, John Brown and a child named Alice Willis.  They are enumerated next to William Brown (dwelling 20).  William Brown is living with his father-in-law Davy Crack, who was enslaved by Mrs. Brookes on the “Poplar Neck” track.  Davy Crack, his wife, and children were identified in the 1853 Inventory of her husband John B Brooke (WAJ 1 3-5). William Brown and Davy Crack purchased land in Cheltenham, which is at the center of the circle.  They are identified on the 1878 Hopkins Map as H. Gaunt and D. Crack.

Charles is listed as 54 in the 1853 census and 75 in the 1870 census.  This provides an estimated birth year range of 1795-1799.  

Susan is listed as 47 in the 1853 census and as 60 in the 1870 census.  This provides an estimated birth year range of 1806-1810.

John Brown appears unmarried in the 1870 census.  Later census records suggest that he may have been married with two small toddlers living with his wife at another location.  A marriage record for John Arthur Brown and Mary Jane Jackson is consistent with the older census record. 

Susan Brown (age 40), the daughter of Charles and Susan, is living nearby working for the household of Martha Townshend.  

Year: 1870; Census Place: Nottingham, Prince Georges, Maryland; Roll: M593_592;Page: 115B

Rosaryville

North of Cheltenham is the Holy Rosary Catholic Church, around which the village called Rosaryville developed.  Rosaryville, not present on the 1861 map of Prince George’s County, is shown on the 1878 Hopkins Atlas of Prince George’s County.  It sits on the border of the Brandywine District and Upper Marlboro District.  

Joseph Henry Brown, the third youngest child in the 1853 inventory married Clora Ann Crack, the daughter of David Crack, in 1865 (Index to Marriage Licenses, PG Co).  

In 1870, Joseph Henry Brown and his family were living in Marlboro District, at dwelling number 456 & 457.  Joseph is listed in the household of Lawrence Wood, and his wife, Dinah.  Chloe/Clora is listed in the next household with their children, James, Julia, Peter.  The names of the children are consistent with the heirs of Clora Brown named in a 1912 land record (Liber 79, Folio 99). 

Year: 1870; Census Place: Marlboro, Prince Georges, Maryland; Roll: M593_592; Page: 104A

They listed immediately prior to a merchant named Washington Beall.  Both Beall and Joseph Brown are labeled on the 1878 Hopkins Map of Marlboro, showing their location in the village of Rosaryville. 

Two land records show that Joseph H Brown purchased land in Rosaryville (JWB 1:130 & JWB 1:220).  The first, dated 1882, shows that Joseph purchased a parcel of land from the tract “Woodstock” owned by Henry Clagett and adjoining the residence of Charles Brown. It is on the north east side of the main road leading from Rosaryville to Centreville.  This is consistent with the map, as the pink area is north and east of the road that leads to Centreville (which is northwest of Rosaryville).  The second, also dated 1882, shows that Joseph purchased land from James Belt, next to land owned by Peter Wood and Washington Beall. 

Croom

Charles Henry Brown, the third oldest child of Charles and Susan (Wood) Brown was likely married to Annie Gordon in the 1850s, after 1853 (the inventory) and before 1856 (birth of his eldest child in the 1870 census.)

In 1870, he was enumerated in Marlboro District, at dwelling 105, living near the landowner W. D. Bowie.  

This places him in the larger neighborhood of the Charles/Susan Brown family groups living near Cheltenham and Rosaryville.  The proximity to W.D. Bowie suggests that he is on the road that runs between Rosaryville and Croom, which is the border between the two districts, Marlboro and Nottingham.  

Charles’ household is himself, his wife Annie, and their children, whose ages range from 14 to 1, which allows for the estimated marriage year in the mid 1850s.  

Immediately enumerated after Charles and his family are Joseph Gordon, age 50, and Polly, age 78.  Based on Annie (Gordon) Brown’s death certificate, it is inferred that Joseph is an older brother, and Polly is her mother.  

Maryland State Archives

1880 Census

Rosaryville

By 1880, the surviving members of the Charles-Susan Wood Brown family named in the inventory had moved to Rosaryville.  Joseph Henry Brown, though documented in 1882 land records to be in the area and marked on the 1878 Hopkins Map, is not recorded in the 1880 census.  His other siblings and mother are however.  

Dwelling NumberHead of HouseholdNotes
139Cornelius GordonPossibly related to Charles’ wife, Annie Gordon
140James DorseyContains the household member Lawrence Wilks
143Henry ClaggettLarge Landowner prior to the Civil War
Residence noted on the 1878 Hopkin Map
146John BrownSon of Charles Brown and Susan Woods
147John ThomasOccupation listed as Teacher, suggesting residence near School House
151Barney JohnsonResidence noted on the 1878 Hopkin Map
153Lawerence WoodHusband of Dinah WoodIncludes both Susan (mother) and Susan (daughter) in household
154Charles BrownSon of Charles Brown and Susan Woods
155Robert WilkesHusband of Crissy (Brown) Wilks 
157Uriah GoldsmithResidence noted on the 1878 Hopkin Map
As recorded in Marlboro District Map
As recorded in the Brandywine District Map

1900 Census

By 1900, Susan Brown has died, and Dinah (Brown) Wood, a widow, has moved to the District of Columbia.  

The remaining male siblings are still living in Rosaryville. The census enumerator did not record complete details for the series of dwelling numbers recorded below.  Ages and birth years are missing and relationships are not obviously clear.  Numbers are crossed out in the column for dwelling numbers and other numbers are scribed above them. 

Dwelling NumberHead of HouseholdNotes
40/41Joseph BrownLiving with his daughter Mary, son Peter, his daughter-in-law- Mamie, and Peter and Mamie’s child, Ellen
41/42Robert WilksHusband of Crissy (Brown) Wilks
42/43John A BrownLiving with his wife and children
43/44Barney JohnsonResidence noted on the 1878 Hopkin Map
54/53Charles H BrownLiving with his wife and children

Christianna “Chrissy” (Brown) Wilks

Crissy Wilks is not included in the 1853 inventory of Robert D Sewall’s estate, though her estimated birth year (1840) suggests that she should have been if she was living with her family.  Her husband, Robert Wilks, is listed on Sewall’s inventory, with the Wilks family group. 

1853 Inventory of Robert D Sewall | JH 1:699 | familysearch.org

1870 Census

In 1870, Edward Wilks and his children are enumerated in the Surratt’s District in the neighborhood of the TB Post Office.  They appear to be still living in the quarters provided them on Poplar Hill with a number of other people enslaved by the Sewalls/Dangerfields prior to emancipation in 1864.  

Dwelling NumberHead of HouseholdNotes
21Henry TarmanHis occupation is listed as a Miller; a mill is indicated on the Martenet Map at Woodyard, where “Poplar Hill”, or Sewall’s estate is located.
22Annie MarshallWhite landowner, likely the mother of William H Marshall who is listed as a planter with real estate valued at $14000 in Surratts.  In 1870, he has moved to Kentucky.  
24Edward WilksEdward and Maria, inferred parentsLawrence, Richard, Susan, Washington are listed in household
29Robert WilksSole member of the household
30Christinia WilksShe is listed with 5 children, suggesting they had been married since at least 1860. 

1880 & 1900 Census

Edward Wilks died in 1879.  His account in the Freedmen’s Bank references his death and directs payments to his wife, Maria Wilkes, who is living with Robert in the 1880 census.  His original deposit slip also notes his relationship to Poplar Hill.

As noted above, Robert Wilks, his wife Chrissy and his brother have moved to Rosaryville by 1880.  Robert and Christiana/Crissy are enumerated as neighbors of the Brown siblings in both the 1880 and 1900 census. 

Conclusions

Although there is no direct documentary connection between Charles and Susan Brown with William Hannibal Brown Gantt, I suggest that that the families are connected and that it is highly likely that William was the son of Charles and Susan and sold to another enslaver prior to the 1853 inventory.

  1. They were neighbors in the 1870 census
  2. Both William Brown and Joseph Henry Brown married daughters of David Crack
  3. Crissie Brown married into the Wilks family; a daughter of William Hannibal Brown Gantt married a Wilkes man (connection unclear, though the surname occurs only in the Surrattsville/Rosaryville area)

Based on these reasons, I propose that Charles Brown and Susan Wood are the parents of William Hannibal Brown Gantt.