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BISHOP Thomas[1]

Male - Yes, date unknown


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  • Name BISHOP Thomas  [2
    Gender Male 
    Residence Dendron, Surry, Virginia, United States Find all individuals with events at this location  [1, 2
    Will wills 
    • Wills, Etc. 6, 1830-1834, p. 223- 225 -- system #000547307
      Wills, Etc. 6, p. 466-468 -- system #000547309
      Wills, Etc. 6, p. 548-554 -- system #000547308
    Death Yes, date unknown 
    Notes 
    • Register Report for Thomas Bishop
      Generation 1
      1. Thomas Bishop-1.
      Thomas Bishop and unknown spouse married. They had the following children:
      2. i. John D. Bishop was born in 1794. He married Anna Ellis on 28 Dec 1818 in Surry,
      Virginia, USA. He died in 1836.
      Generation 2
      2. John D. Bishop-2 (Thomas-1) was born in 1794. He died in 1836.
      Anna Ellis daughter of Benjamin Ellis and Sarah Jones was born in 1793. She died in 1865.
      John D. Bishop and Anna Ellis were married on 28 Dec 1818 in Surry, Virginia, USA. They had the
      following children:
      i. Roberta J Bishop was born in 1820. She died after 1860.
      Notes for Roberta J Bishop:
      General Notes:
      1850 census living in Surry with mother
      1860 census living in Sussex with Alexander T Clary
      3. ii. Ann Elizabeth Bishop was born on 06 Mar 1822. She married Alexander Thomas Clary in
      1839. She died after 1870.
      4. iii. Milton Lafayette Bishop was born on 22 Aug 1824 in Surry, Virginia, USA. He married
      Susan Lambeth Smith on 21 Aug 1851 in Campbell, Virginia, USA. He died on 29 Jul 1892
      in Campbell, Virginia, USA.
      iv. Albert J Bishop was born in 1827.
      Notes for Albert J Bishop:
      General Notes:
      1850 census living in Surry with mother
      v. India Seymore Bishop was born in 1833 in Surry, Virginia, USA. She married John Holt
      Rice on 10 Feb 1853 in Campbell, VA. She died on 02 Jul 1890 in Cave Spring, Roanoke,
      Virginia, USA.
      Notes for India Seymore Bishop:
      General Notes:
      1850 census, living in Sussex Co with Alexander T Clary
      vi. Julia Bishop was born in 1834.
      Notes for Julia Bishop:
      General Notes:
      1850 census living in Surry with mother
      Page 1 of 2 Thursday, September 30, 2010 8:49:19 PM
      Register Report for Thomas Bishop
      Generation 3
      3. Ann Elizabeth Bishop-3 (John D.-2, Thomas-1) was born on 06 Mar 1822. She died after 1870.
      Notes for Ann Elizabeth Bishop:
      General Notes:
      1870 census living with son, Thomas L Clary and his wife Ann
      Alexander Thomas Clary son of Thomas Clary and Jenny Virginia Presson was born on 19 Feb
      1809. He died on 26 Apr 1868.
      Alexander Thomas Clary and Ann Elizabeth Bishop were married in 1839. They had the following
      children:
      i. Thomas L Clary was born in 1841.
      4. Milton Lafayette Bishop-3 (John D.-2, Thomas-1) was born on 22 Aug 1824 in Surry, Virginia, USA.
      He died on 29 Jul 1892 in Campbell, Virginia, USA.
      Notes for Milton Lafayette Bishop:
      General Notes:
      1874? widower? involved in church sex scandal
      Church trial 1883
      Susan Lambeth Smith was born on 03 Jul 1834 in Lynchburg, Campbell, Virginia, USA. She died on
      18 Jan 1908.
      Milton Lafayette Bishop and Susan Lambeth Smith were married on 21 Aug 1851 in Campbell,
      Virginia, USA. They had the following children:
      i. Ann V Bishop was born in 1852 in Campbell, Virginia, USA.
      ii. Eloisa L Bishop was born in 1856 in Campbell, Virginia, USA.
      iii. Ludie Bishop was born in 1854 in Campbell, Virginia, USA.
      iv. Corrine L Bishop was born in 1858 in Campbell, Virginia, USA.
      v. Milton L Bishop was born in 1860 in Campbell, Virginia, USA.
      Page 2 of 2 Thursday, September 30, 2010 8:49:19 PM

      Sketches of the Virginia Conference, Methodist Episcopal Church, South
      By John James Lafferty
      REV-MILTON LAFAYETTE BISHOP
      A SINGLE leaf can contain a recital of deeds which have blessed thousands of hearts, the Church and the
      Commonwealth, and more, made heaven glad. The simple narrative that follows these lines are without
      ornament, but tells the unvarnished story of a useful life. 'We have little doubt that the readers of this brief
      sketch will receive good from the perusal:
      I was the third child of my parents\emdash Anna Ellis, daughter of Benjamin Ellis, and John D. Bishop, son
      of Thomas Bishop, all of Surry county, Virginia. There were six children of us, two sons and four
      daughters, all now living except the oldest, who died in 1847. I was born in 1824, August 22d. I never
      knew any of my ancestry to follow anything but farming as a vocation. My father died when I was about
      twelve years of age, and my mother in 1865, having been a Methodist from one year after I joined the
      church. From my earliest recollections I was trying to be a Christian, mainly from the influence of
      Christian slaves, as neither of my parents professed religion. My mother was always a pious woman. I
      read my Bible regularly and prayed up to the session of the Virginia Conference held in Petersburg in
      1843 (perhaps in 1842), when I openly sought conversion at the altar in Washington street church.
      Though I realized a change in all my feelings and views of life\emdash a change that entered at once into all my
      plans for life\emdash I did not accept such as conversion, simply because of the extravagant experiences I had
      often heard related by the old slaves of my father. Nor did I become satisfied of my conversion till some
      months after. I had read the Old Testament through in the last eight months, and the New Testament eight
      times, sitting up late at night to read after I had prepared my school studies, and so was at no loss in
      making up my mind as to what Church I should join. I joined at Carsley's church, Surry County, Virginia,
      then served by Rev. G. M. Andross, who baptized me by pouring just as I received the Holy Ghost. He
      appointed me class-leader. I had formed my ideas of the doctrines of the Bible before I joined the church,
      and to this day have not had to change those views. I had read with prayer to be guided, and I believe I
      was directed by the Spirit of all Truth. With the change of heart in Petersburg, I received the conviction of
      my call to the ministry, and my studies at school were all conducted in view of that calling; yet my mind
      was not satisfied on that subject for years after. I had my heart on farming\emdash a sort of inherited
      proclivity\emdash nor did I consent to quit it until "Woe is me if I preach not the Gospel" had shut me up to
      preaching or ruin. From the time of my conversion I went to school in Surry; Little Town, in Sussex;
      Emory and Henry, and Randolph Macon College, up to the year 1848, May 17th, when my health forced
      me to leave school. I was licensed as an exhorter in 1847, October 5th, by William A. Smith, D. D.,
      Presiding Elder; was licensed to preach in April, 1848, by Rev. J. H. Davis. Presiding Elder; joined the
      Virginia Conference in the fall of 1848, at Elizabeth City, and was sent as a helper under Rev. G. N.
      Winfree, on the Amelia circuit, then embracing all of Amelia and about half of Dinwiddie. I traveled but
      five months of this year, in consequence of the work\emdash eighteen appointments being too large for my
      feeble health. Yet I preached much in my native county, and held several very successful protracted
      meetings. The next year, 1850, I was sent to Bedford circuit under Rev. A. Wiles, but as his health failed
      him in the spring, he left the circuit, and I fell in charge; and here I did the hardest year's work of my life,
      and I realized the greatest success in the way of revivals\emdash -over three hundred professing conversion. The
      next year, 1851 and 1852, I was on the Staunton circuit\emdash part of South Bedford and Campbell counties;
      in 1853 and 1854 on the Amherst circuit; in 1855 and 1856, the Charlotte circuit: in 1857, the
      Mecklenburg circuit; in 1858, the Murfreesboro circuit; in 1859, the Fincastle circuit, Botetourt county; in
      1860, the Nelson circuit, in all of which I had a successful work. By this time my health had become very
      bad, and by the urgent advice of my Presiding Elder and physician, I took a supernumerary relation,
      which I sustained until the fall of 1865, when I located. My health improved so much that I joined
      Conference again in the fall of 1868, and was sent to Fluvanna circuit four years. I rested one year there,
      or a part of one year, my throat being badly diseased. I then was sent to the Rappahannock circuit, where I
      travelled three years; from which I was sent to the South Bedford circuit, where I am now serving out my
      fourth year. On all my fields of labor I had good revivals\emdash an average of not less than one hundred and
      fifty conversions a year. Some twenty of these are in the ministry, mostly the Methodist.
      The Virginia conference annual
      By Methodist Episcopal Church, South. Virginia Conference
      SIXTH DAY.
      TUESDAY, November 20th, 1883.
      AFTERNOON SESSION.
      HALF-PAST THREE O'CLOCK P. M.
      Conference met according to adjournment. L. S. Reed (by appointment of Bishop Kavanaugh)
      in the Chair.
      Divine service was conducted by J. D. Hank.
      The minutes of the morning session were read and approved.
      On motion of P. Whitehead, the report of the Committee on Memoirs was made the order of
      the day for half-past 10 o'clock A. M. to-morrow.
      T. McN. Simpson, from the Committee of Investigation in the case of M. L. Bishop, made the
      following report:
      The Committee of Investigation, to whom was referred the case of Rev. Milton L. Bishop, beg
      leave to report that they regard the reports reflecting upon the character of Rev. Milton L. Bishop
      of such gravity as to demand an investigation, but as the accused is not present, nor any
      witnesses, they respectfully ask that the case be remanded to the Presiding Elder of the
      Lynchburg District for investigation.
      (Signed) T. McN. SIMPSON, J. C. REED, W. G. WILLIAMS.
      Which on motion was adopted, and the case of Brother Bishop remanded accordingly


      Library of Virginia Microfilm Reel #35 Surry County Order Book (23 May 1804 - 26 March 1807) pp. 1-523:
      Upon the petition of Stephen Lucas for leave to open a new Road, the persons appointed to view the way proposed returned their report in these words to wit, "Agreeably to an order of the worshipful Court of Surry County hereto annexed We Edward Marks, Robert Booth, Thomas Bishop and Herman Bishop hath viewed the way proposed to open a Road from the Otterdam meeting house in the Huntington road opposite to Stephen Lucas's plantation, and we find that no inconvenience can result in consequence of opening the said Road, and believe that the publick will be much benefitted by the same" (signed) "Edward Marks, Robert Booth, Thomas Bishop, Herman Bishop" The same being read and considered it is ordered that leave be granted to open the said Road from the Otterdam meeting house to the Huntington Road, that the same compose a District to be denominated the Otterdam Meeting house Road, that Robert Booth be surveyor thereof and that he, with the male labouring tithables of himself, Stephen Lucas, Nicholas Hite, Thomas Bishop, Robert Davis, James Bishop, Jonathan Richards, and
      [p.401] Abraham Freeland do keep the said Road in constant good repair.
      Ordered that Littleberry Chappell be appointed Surveyor of the Road in [blank] precinct in the room of Stephen Lucas who is discharged to work thereon do keep the said Road in constant lawful repair. [The Otterdam Meeting house Road/District/Precinct?]
    Person ID I10050  Booth Family
    Last Modified 7 Nov 2017 

    Children 
     1. BISHOP John D.,   b. 1794   d. 1836 (Age 42 years)
    Family ID F3352  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart
    Last Modified 1 Oct 2010 

  • Sources 
    1. [S1125] James Lafferty, Rev. Milton LaFayette Bishop (Reliability: 3).

    2. [S1120] joann rice, joann rice, (Bishop-Ellis families) (Reliability: 2).