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Few Genealogy
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Family of James FEW and Sarah WOOD

Husband: James FEW (1746-1771)
Wife: Sarah WOOD (1750-1804)
Children: William FEW (1771-1856)
Sarah FEW (1771- )
Marriage 1769 Alamance, North Carolina, USA

Husband: James FEW

Name: James FEW
Sex: Male
Father: William FEW (1714-1794)
Mother: Mary WHEELER (1710-1778)
Birth 1746 Three Sisters Plantation, Baltimore, Maryland, USA
Death 17 May 1771 (age 24-25) Hillsborough, Orange, North Carolina, USA

Wife: Sarah WOOD

Name: Sarah WOOD
Sex: Female
Father: -
Mother: -
Birth 1750
Death 1804 (age 53-54) Alamance, North Carolina, USA

Child 1: William FEW

Name: William FEW
Sex: Male
Spouse 1: Susannah TUBBS (1774-1816)
Spouse 2: Nancy CHASTAIN (1789-1850)
Birth 9 Feb 1771 Alamance, North Carolina, USA
Death 12 Jun 1856 (age 85) Oneal, Greenville, South Carolina, USA

Child 2: Sarah FEW

Name: Sarah FEW
Sex: Female
Spouse: John GARVIN (bef1771- )
Birth 9 Feb 1771 Alamance, North Carolina, USA

Note on Husband: James FEW

James Few was born in 1746 in Hartford (present-day Baltimore) County, Maryland. His parents were William Few, Sr., and Mary Wheeler (James was their second-oldest son). James migrated with his parents and siblings to Orange County, North Carolina circa 1758.

 

Circa 1770, James married Sarah Wood in Orange County, North Carolina. They had twins, William and Sarah, who were born February 9, 1771.

 

James may have been a carpenter, but so far no primary source documents have come to light to prove that he was or that mentions his occupation.

 

James was executed west of Hillsborough, North Carolina on May 17, 1771], after taking part in the Battle of Alamance. He was executed by North Carolina militia troops while they were serving under North Carolina's royal Governor, William Tryon. James was hanged at the militia's camp approximately five miles northeast of the Alamance battlefield (as described by William Tryon in his orders book).

 

His children moved to Georgia with their grandparents after his death; his wife Sarah later remarried (a Loyalist officer) and moved to Greenwood County, South Carolina. It is unknown what happened to his body after he was executed; either his family members retrieved it (it took about one day to get to the campsite from their home east of Hillsborough at that time; the campsite was directly on the public road from Hillsborough to Salisbury, North Carolina, just after the ford over Great Alamance Creek) or he was unceremoniously buried at the campsite in an unmarked grave nearby by the militia troops that hanged him.

 

According to historical rumors, James's "fiancée" was seduced by Edmund Fanning, and James was the "sole support of his widowed mother." However, James was already married (to Sarah Wood) and had twins by her (William and Sarah), and his then 60 or 61 year-old mother lived with his father, William (who didn't pass away until 1794) on their farm near Hillsborough.

 

His brother, William Few, Jr., later became known for his service as an officer during the Revolutionary War and as a politician in Georgia and New York.