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  1. Cecily Jordan Farrar was one of the earlier women settlers of colonial Jamestown, Virginia. She arrived in the colony as a child in 1610 and was established as one of the few female ancient planters by 1620.

  2. The Cecily Jordan v. Greville Pooley dispute was the first known prosecution for breach of promise in colonial America and the first in which the defendant was a woman.

  3. Mrs Cecily Farrar. Cecily Jordan Farrar was one of the earliest women settlers of colonial Jamestown, Virginia. She arrived in the colony on board the Swan in August 1611, at around 10 years of age and one of 20 women among the 260 passengers.

  4. 11 de mar. de 2021 · The war did not stop the arrival of more settlers from England, however, and many of them women. Cecily Jordan Farrar, who would become the matriarch of the well-known Farrar family, arrived in 1610 as a ten-year-old girl whose name appears on a passenger list with 20 women.

  5. 12 de sept. de 2023 · Cecily (Unknown) Farrar (abt.1600-aft.1637) is often conflated with Cecily (Jordan) Phippen (1559-1608). That Cecily (Jordan) Phippen (1559-1608) is purorted to have passed away in 1608 in Weymouth, Dorset, England.

  6. Cecily Reynolds was a Jamestown colonist who married five times and outlived them all. She is the great-great-grandmother of Mary Ball, who married Augustine Washington, and the great-great-great-grandmother of George Washington, the first president of the United States.

  7. 17 de may. de 2020 · CECILY REYNOLDS JORDAN FARRAR. Cecily Farrar is considered the first Southern belle, the first to master flirting in Virginia. Needless to say, she was beautiful. She was also quite a good business manager. Cecily was the daughter of Joan Phippen and Thomas(?) Reynolds, a sea-faring man.