Fanny of Covey

The 1817 slave register for John Tharp's Covey estate lists five individuals with a mother called Fanny: Tamar (f) (b. 1763), Mary (b. 1767), Abbreba (f) (b. 1770), George (b. 1777) and Mamma (b. 1777).

Fanny was born in Jamaica in about 1743 and the 1820 return for the estate recorded her death on the 15th of December 1817. 


Going down a generation Tamar had three daughters and a son: Lilly (b. 1782), Phillis (b. 1782), Maria (b. 1795) and George Gale (b. 1801). Note that George Gale may have been named after his uncle.

Another generation down, Lilly was named as the mother of three children in her turn: Fidelia (b. 1814), James Mitchell (b. 5th of November 1817) and Sarah Phillips (b. 1829).

Tamar's second daughter, Phillis, also had three children: Frank (b. 1814), Alex Campbell (b. 2nd of October 1818) and Priscilla (b. 1824). Frank was described as Mulatto, indicating that his father was white.

When the birth of a girl called Sarah Rodney (b. 1831) was recorded in 1832, her mother was named as Maria Shackleton. This was either Tamar's youngest daughter or another Maria (b. 1809), whose family tree is discussed in a post called 'Two women called Marina on Covey'. 

So far, so straightforward, but Fanny's second daughter, Mary, had a daughter called Rose (b. 1781), and this is where things get more complicated. For possible children of Rose, see the post called 'Two women called Rose on Covey'.


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