Chapter I - Our
Ancestors
Scalf or Scarfe
In researching
the history of the Scalf family it is inevitable that one will encounter
various spellings of the Scalf name. A most difficult and controversial
decision to be made is deciding which name came first. Although many other
spellings of the family name have appeared from time to time the two appearing
most significantly during Colonial times were Scalf and Scarfe. These two
spellings, Scarfe and Scalf, have been used at times interchangeably in
court-related documents. It is however, the opinion of the writer that the
family name was Scarfe previously. The major difficulty encountered in writing
the name during Colonial times was that semi-literate court scribes and clerks
wrote what they heard from illiterate people.
As many
students of genealogy have done in the past this author has examined Nell
Marion Nugent's book, Cavaliers and Pioneers. This reference which
transcribes old, Virginia land grants mentions transporters and transportees to
the New World. Among those transportees to America mentioned in Cavaliers
and Pioneers is Edward Scarfe who was transported to America by Peter Gill
and Henry White in 1663. This Edward Scarfe is almost certain to be the
ancestor of many Scalfs in America today. The author has examined a copy of the
land grant issued to Peter Gill and Henry White in 1663 and the determination
that the name is spelled Scarfe is absolutely conclusive. The rationale for
determining that Edward Scarfe must be the ancestor of many Scalfs living today
is made from an analysis of the available information.
It is certain
that the Scarfe (Scalf) family was living in 1719 near the Pasquotank River in
the Albemarle Sound region of what is today northeastern North Carolina. There
is on record at the Pasquotank County Courthouse in North Carolina a deed
showing the grantee to be one John Scarfe (Scalf). The deed was dated 1719.
This deed indicates that in 1719 John Scarfe (Scalf) purchased 100 acres of
land on the Southwest side of the Pasquotank River from John Smithson. The
price paid was 24 pounds. This same John Scarfe (Scalf) left a will in 1751 in
Pasquotank County. In his will he devised to his wife, Mary, and children:
James, John, Edward, Jonathon, Israel, Anne Richardson and Mary Jones. He also
mentioned in his will his grandsons: John (son of James), James (son of John)
and William (son of Edward).
Henry White,
transporter of Edward Scarfe (Scalf) to America in 1663, was also a resident in
the Albemarle Sound area of North Carolina. John Scarfe (Scalf) who left his
will in 1751 must have been a son or grandson of Edward Scarfe. The naming of
John Scarfe's (Scalf) third son, Edward, was probably in honor of John' s
father or grandfather.
There is a
positive connection between today's Scalfs and the John Scarfe (Scalf) who left
his will in 1751. One of John's sons, Israel, married first to Dinah Purdy. On
February 25, 1793 Israel Scarfe (Scalf) and his wife, Dinah, along with Dinah's
sister, Mary Purdy, sold a tract of land to one Benjamin Capps. The parcel of
land was located in Princess Anne County, Virginia. Israel and Dinah were
living in Craven County, North Carolina at the time. The land sold for 28
pounds and 10 shillings. In this indenture the name of Israel Scarfe is used.
However, the signatures sealing this transaction are clearly Israel Scalf,
Dinah Scalf and Mary Purdy.
As has been
mentioned Henry White was also a resident of Pasquotank County. He patented 250
acres of land on the north side of the Carolina River (Albemarle Sound) in
September of 1663. It is also a matter of record that Henry White left a will
in the Pasquotank Precinct in North Carolina on February 17, 1696.
There is
further and even more conclusive evidence connecting John Scarfe (Scalf) to the
Scalf name. Another son of John Scarfe (Scalf) was James Scarfe (Scalf). In
1758 James Scarfe (Scalf) of Pasquotank County, North Carolina sold 60 acres of
land at the head of the Pasquotank River by Ready Swamp to Edward Halstead for
20 pounds eight. James used as his "mark" the symbol
when signing this deed. In 1755 this same
James Scarfe (Scalf) had sold for 20 pounds a tract of land in Pasquotank
County to William Ward. The deed indicates this was land James had inherited
from his father, John Scarfe (Scalf). This tract of land was located on the
south side of the Pasquotank River. Again the
was used by James as his "mark"
when signing.
Lewis Scalf was
the son of James Scarfe (Scalf). James and his wife, Sarah, recorded in 1745
the birth of their son, Lewis. This birth record is in the reference, Pasquotank
Births, Marriages, Deaths, Brands and Flesh Marks 1691-1797. This writer
upon close examination of the record found the name to be spelled Scarlf. This
is merely an indication that the records do not always reflect the correct
spelling of the name Scal. What is more significant is the fact that this Lewis
Scalf later used the name Scalf and also used the
symbol as his "mark." Lewis
Scalf used this
"mark" when he signed a deed in
1836 showing that he had sold 125 acres of land in Habersham County, Georgia to
Paul Rossignal. To prove the connection between today's Scalfs and the John
Scarfe (Scalf) who left his will in 1751 it is necessary to identify the
continuous use of the
symbol through several generations. One
son of Lewis Scalf was John Scalf born about 1761 in North Carolina. This is
the John Scalf who was a soldier in the Revolutionary War and the Scalf from
whom the author and many other Scalfs living today are descended. This John
Scalf, soldier, when making a deposition on his own behalf to get his military
pension restored in 1839 used as his "mark"
.
The deposition was made in Hawkins
County, Tennessee before John Mitchell, Justice of the Peace. Beginning then
with James Scarfe (Scalf), son of John Scarfe (Scalf) who left his will in
1751, there was a continual use of the symbol
in succeeding generations to John Scalf,
Revolutionary Soldier. It will be illustrated in continuing chapters how many
of today's Scalfs are descended from John Scalf the Revolutionary Soldier and
therefore descended from John Scarfe (Scalf) who left his will in 1751 in
Pasquotank County, North Carolina and recorded his deed in 1719.
The key to the
linking together of the past Scalf generations has been the continual use of
the symbol
down to John Scalf, Revolutionary soldier.
Scarfe
(Scalf) Ancestors
There is a
definite link between the Scarfe (Scalf) name and the Isle of Man. This author
firmly believes that the Scarfes who came to America had their origin on the
Isle of Man. As pointed out earlier, John Scarfe (Scalf) recorded a deed in the
Pasquotank region of North Carolina in 1719. In this deed it is mentioned that
the original owner was one Thomas Abbington. However, the second owner was
Richard Marsden who according to the "North Carolina Historical and Genealogical
Register" came from Douglas, Isle of Man. The author has referred earlier
to the John Scalf who served in the Revolutionary War. The wife of this John
Scalf was Edeah Carlisle. Edeah's grandmother had married a Bell before
marrying William Carlisle. The Bell family was settled in the Pasquotank area
by the year 1700 as the name is mentioned on the earliest tax roll there. The
Bell name is a Manx name and the earliest Bell known to the writer appears on
the Memorial Roll of the Kirk Patrick for the years 1511-1515.
The name Scarfe
which later became Scalf beginning with Lewis Scalf, James C. Scalf and other
descendants of James Scarfe (Scalf) began originally with William Skerfe on the
Isle of Man in the year 1417. The name was on the earliest court rolls at that
time. By the year 1429 the name had become William Scarffe. This William
Scarffe is mentioned in the list of names of persons at the Court Held At
Tynwald in 1429 and again in 1430 at the Court Held At Castle Rushen. In the
manorial rolls taken in 1511 the name appears as Skerff at Kirk Lonan. The
author believes this area or parish of Lonan on the Isle of Man to be the
location where the Scarfes who migrated to America originally lived. Listed in
the "Distinctive Manx Surnames" by the government of the Isle of Man
is Scarffe.
During the past
two years of researching the Scalf name, this writer has often found the Scalf
named spelled various ways. An example of this is hereby given as evidence of
this point.
On July 17,
1804 in Pasquotank County, North Carolina, David Scaff purchased a 60 acre
tract of land from Sam Spence. A look at the tax record on this land is
conclusive proof of the interchangeable use of the various spellings of the Scalf name.
Between 1804 and 1831 the spellings Scaff, Scarfe, Scalf, Scarff and Scarfe
were all used to indicate the owner of the property. Beginning with Lewis Scalf
(B. 1745) our line of the family has used the Scalf name.
Copyright (c) 1982 Elmer D. Scalf. All rights reserved.