1695 George Hinson of Westmoreland, Virginia sold land to James Neale, gentleman on July 10; for 6000 pounds tobacco; 100 acres of land, bounded by Francis Adams' land called Batchelors Hope. Signed by George Hinson. Witnessed by James Taylor, John Poirst, John Champ, George Hardwick. (Liber Q, page 92, Abstracts of Charles County, Maryland Court and Land Records: 1694-1722 by Elise Greenup Jourdan, Heritage Books, 2007, page 12).
1719 The will of Elizabeth Hall was dated May 7 in Richmond, Virginia. The will was witnessed by Elizabeth Hinson and stated that George Hinson should have Elizabeth Hall's youngest daughter. [1]
1726 The will of George Hinson of Richmond County was in probate in February 1726. George gave a plantation of 100 acres in Westmoreland County to son William. The will named 4 children: William, Mary, Frances Martha. Brother William Bailey was named executor. (Richmond County, Virginia Will 5-33, inventory 5-50)[2] [3] [4]
Research Notes:
George Hinson was the father of William, Mary, Frances, and Martha. He died in 1728. [5]
Daughter Frances married Hopkins Thornton by 1736.
[1] Robert Kirk Headley, Wills of Richmond County, Virginia, 1699-1800 (Baltimore: Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc., 1983), 45, citing page 107, [AncestryImage].
[2] Margaret Kimbrough Mulkey, Kimbrough, Dumas and Related Southern Families (Naples, Florida: self-published, 1977), 160.
[3] Robert Kirk Headley, Wills of Richmond County, Virginia, 1699-1800 (Baltimore: Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc., 1983), 58, citing pages 33, Will 5-33; and page 50, inventory 5-50, [AncestryImage].
[4] Virginia, U.S., Wills and Probate Records, 1652-1900, [AncestryRecord], [AncestryImage].
[5] William Ashley Hinson, Hinson and Related Families (Winston-Salem, NC: 1986), 148.