Origins of Robert Ivey

Exploring the Origins of Robert Ivey Sr.

The antecedents of Robert Ivey Sr. are a genuine mystery.  One reason for my efforts in identifying the descendants of the various Ivey immigrants was to identify those who might have been possible fathers or ancestors of “my” Robert Ivey.  Unfortunately, no obvious candidates were revealed by these efforts.  If he was descended from one of the immigrants, I was unable to identify a plausible line of descent.

DNA evidence also suggests that Robert Ivey was unrelated to the other immigrants I studied.  At least two male-line descendants of Robert Ivey have participated in YDNA testing but they do not match any other Ivey/ivy participants.

An obvious possibility, for which there is some evidence, is that he was himself an immigrant.

Reviewing the Evidence

The earliest certain record of Robert Ivey Sr. is a deed from John Spann to Robert Ivey of Dobbs County for 440 acres on 30 April 1759.1   He was evidently a relatively young man at the time, for his first few children were apparently born beginning at about this time.  That would seem to place his year of birth somewhere within the 1720-35 timeframe.

He may have been in Granville County a year earlier.  A Robert “Ive” and John “Ive” were listed together as tithables in the 1758 tax list of Granville County.  Neither appeared in the previous tax lists (which are admittedly quite sketchy) nor in later ones, and neither owned land in Granville.  This John Ivey may have been the same person who died in Halifax County in 1774 leaving a minor son named Robert Ivey.

A Related Robert Ivey – John Spann Connection?

Coincidentally, on 7 November 1734 a Robert Ivey of the “upper parish of Bertie prect.” (the part of Bertie that would shortly become Northampton County) sold a 242-acre parcel on the north side of the Morratuck (Roanoke) River “being the land that I bought of John Spann and it was granted unto the said John Spann by pattant for 242 acres bearing date the 8th of April 1730”.2   This Robert Ivey is unidentified.  He may be Robert Ivey Sr., though that would make him considerably older than other evidence indicates.  John Spann is thought to have been the father of the John Spann of the deed 25 years later to Robert Ivey of Dobbs County.

However, I could not find any such patent to John Spann, nor an earlier deed from Spann to Ivey.  It is possible that a deed from Spann to Ivey is among the lost early records of Brunswick County, Virginia (see below.)

Locating the 242-acre parcel

The 242-acre parcel was located in what is now Northampton County within a short walk of the Virginia border.  We know this by examining subsequent deeds for the parcel as well as deeds for adjacent properties.  Robert Ivey sold the land to Jasper Stuart who nine years later sold it to Robert Rogers.3.  It then passed to Anthony Head in 1743, to James Taylor in 1747 and to Thomas Colley in 1758.4  In the meantime in 1747, John Glover sold the adjacent land, describing it as being on Beaverpond Creek near his father’s plantation —  which was on Beaverpond near “the old county line”.5  .

Beaverpond Creek runs along the northwestern reaches of Northampton County, part of it extending above the state line into what was then Brunswick (now Greensville) County, Virginia. Could this Robert Ivey have been one of the Brunswick County Iveys?

Possible connection to John Ivey of Halifax County?

I note that John Ivey of Halifax County had probably also lived in Northampton County at the time he married, and moved across the Roanoke River into Halifax County a few years later. See this paper for the details.  I also note that he named his only son Robert.

An Irish Immigrant?

The family of Barna Ivey, eldest son of Robert Ivey Jr., believed that the Iveys were Irish.   An 1893 biography of Barna Ivey’s eldest son Malachi states that Barna Ivey’s “father was named Robert Ivey and was a native of North Carolina, of Irish descent.”6   The 1892 biography of his brother James Washington Ivey says “his great-grandfather [Robert Ivey Sr.] emigrated from Londonderry, Ireland, at an early day.7

Family legends are rarely entirely accurate.  However, we can’t ignore the possibility that either Robert Ivey Sr. or his father immigrated from Ireland.  Both of these men were presumably were repeating what they had been told by their father or grandfather.

I will note, however, that at least one member of the family had an entirely different — and obviously erroneous — legend.  An 1888 biography of William Henry Denson, a grandson of Barna Ivey, states that “The Ivey family… came originally from Wales in the person of Barna Ivey.8

  1. A deed filed in the NC Archives as PC 1828.1, from a manila folder of 18 loose original papers, mostly deeds.  This collection was apparently in the possession of the family of Richard Ivey, as it contains his original will.  Richard Ivey was the son of John Ivey,and grandson of Robert Ivey. []
  2. Bertie County Deed Book D, page 180. []
  3. Northampton County Deed Book 1, p54, dated 23 February 1742/3. []
  4. Respectively, Northampton County Deed Book 1, p82, p321 and Deed Book 2, p485. []
  5. Northampton County Deed Book 1, p304. []
  6. Memorial Record of Alabama (Brant & Fuller, Madison, Wisconsin, 1893), Vol. 1, p553-4, a sketch of Malachi Ivey. []
  7. Indian Territory, its Chiefs, Legislators, and Leading Men, H. F. & E. S. O’Beirne (1892), pp440.  This is an interesting account of James Ivey and his wife, but elements appear to be exaggerated.   I would note that James Ivey shown with 9 slaves on the 1860 slave schedule, not the 110 claimed by this article, and that I can find no record that he rose above the rank of private in the 28th Infantry, much less was a Colonel. []
  8. Northern Alabama Historical and Biographical (Smith & Deland, Birmingham, 1888), p357. []