In George Howbert's will, he states the following: “I give to (my son Samuel) my negro man Peter to him and his heirs forever provided I may not sell said negro before my decease in that event he is not to be paid or to get any value in law of said negro before my decease…”
In George Howbert's will, he states the following: “I give to (my son Samuel) my negro man Peter to him and his heirs forever provided I may not sell said negro before my decease in that event he is not to be paid or to get any value in law of said negro before my decease…”
Was left his own furniture by George Howbert.
In IAS Book 1, Henry Snyder willed that his daughter Peggy's children have one eighth part of his estate, which consisted of "land, negroes, and bonds for money...".
In Common Law Book D, Peggy Jane is listed as having been "assessed" by Bernard Pitzer, William C. Williams, P.H. Huff, and George Shanks. She was listed alongside her child Mary, Nancy, Paulina, Edmund, Ellen, Simon, and Robert.