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Tristram WyattBorn 1592 Chardstock, Dorset, England, died 11 Dec 1634 Yorkshire, England, age 41 or 42 years Married/ Related to: Child: 1. Nicholas Mitford WyattBorn 1621 Virginia, British Colonial America, died 22 Jan 1673 Severn, Anne Arundel, Maryland, British Colonial America, age 51 or 52 years One of the first settlers of the Severn was Nicholas Wyatt, Gent., a wealthy planter, who migrated in 1649 with the non-conformists from Virginia up the Severn along with his wife, Damaris, and her daughter, Mary. Children of Nicholas and Damaris Wyatt 1. Sarah Wyatt Bland Dorsey, born 1650. 2. Samuel Wyatt, born ca 1657, died young. In 1651 Nicholas Wyatt took up lands on the Severn nine miles west of Annapolis, called "Wayfield." Among his Maryland patents were "Wyatt's Harbor" and "Wyatt's Hill." Apparently Nicholas transported people into Maryland in exchange for land as he has several land grants in Anne Arundel County. Nicholas Wyatt is usually associated as one of the Puritans of Virginia, but like several of the Dissenters, he became "convinced" of the Quaker beliefs and refused to take an oath. On October 10, 1662, he was fined 500 lbs. of tobacco or two months imprisonment without bail for refusing to bear arms. Nicholas Wyatt died in 1674. During his residence in Anne Arundel County he acquired one of the most affluent estates of his day. At his death the personal estate alone was appraised at ₤65,788. His will was dated December 10, 1671, and was probated in Anne Arundel County on January 22, 1673. Capt. Cornelius Howard wrote the will and testified that the testator did not appear to be in condition at that time to remember what he owned. Plantations were left to his minor son, Samuel, who died soon thereafter and to his daughter, Sarah, with his wife Damaris as the residuary heir. The inventory was taken room by room which indicated the pretentiousness of his estate. Personalty was reported at the Outward Plantation, in the hall at the Lower Plantation, the parlor, hall chamber, porch chamber, staircase, parlor chamber, kitchen chamber, kitchen loft, in the quarters, milk house, cellar, cellar loft, kitchen buttery, and at the Landing. There were books, six framed pictures, also three other pictures, and a silver plate. At the Landing there were one servant man, one servant woman, and one negro slave. Also at the Landing were one boat 17 feet long appraised at ₤800, one 10 feet boat appraised at ₤500, a large canoe at ₤200, and an old boat at ₤100. Damaris Wyatt was made executrix of her husband's will. Upon her subsequent marriage to Thomas Bland, Gent., attorney, there was a contest in chancery, in which Sarah Wyatt Dorsey, the heir, contended for the administration of the estate, on the ground of a subsequent revocation of the will of 1671. The case was decided in favor of the heir by her husband, Maj. Edward Dorsey, who administered. —Anne Arundel Gentry: A Genealogical History of Some Early Families of Anne Arundel County, Maryland by Harry Wright Newman | |||

