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- [S50] Moody Kellem Miles II, M.K. Miles, (1983 to 2011), Roland Harry Satchell - Pedigree Chart.
- [S53] Compiler: John Frederick Dorman, F.A.S.G., Adventurers of Purse and Person VIRGINIA 1607-1624/5, 4th Edition, Vol 3, Families R-Z, (Genealogical Publishing Company, 3600 Clipper Mill Rd., Baltimore, MD 21211-1953, 2007), Page 143.
Edmund Scarburgh, son of Henry and Elizabeth Scarburg of Walsham, County Norfolk, England, was baptized 25 Dec 1584....
- [S147] Compiler: Moody K. Miles III, The Scarburgh Family of the Eastern Shore of Virginia, (Self Published, Woodbridge, VA, March 2008), Page 92.
- [S143] Descendents of Edmund Scarborough, Generation 1; URL - http://www.esva.net/ghotes/scarb/scarb.htm#gen1.
- [S144] John Frederick Dorman, F.A.S.G., Adventurers of Purse and Person, Virginia, 1607-1624/5, (Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc., Baltimore, MD, 2007), Page 142.
- [S145] Jennings Cropper Wise, Ye Kingdom of Accawmacke, (The Bell Book and Stationery Co, Richmond, VA, 1911), Page 41.
- [S145] Jennings Cropper Wise, Ye Kingdom of Accawmacke, (The Bell Book and Stationery Co, Richmond, VA, 1911), Page 41.
In the Assembly of 1629, "For the Easterne Shoare noe burgesses did appear," but in the Assembly of 1629-30, Accomac was represented by Captain Thomas Graves, Captain Edmund Scarburgh, Obedience Robins and Henry Babgwell. The Assembly of 1631-2 (in which Accomac was represented by Captain Scarburgh and John Howe) enacted a law, restricting intercourse between the people and the Indians.
- [S145] Jennings Cropper Wise, Ye Kingdom of Accawmacke, (The Bell Book and Stationery Co, Richmond, VA, 1911), Page 85.
Captain Edmund Scarburgh, the immigrant from Norfolk, and the father of the famous Colonel Edmund Scarburgh, was one of the Justices of the first Accomac Court in 1631-2.
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