Display Patriot - P-243466 - Benjamin MAY

Benjamin MAY

SAR Patriot #: P-243466

The following information was assembled from numerous sources and cannot be used directly as proof of Qualifying Service or Lineage.
It is considered a research aid and is intended to assist in locating sources that can be used as proof.
 

State of Service: NC      Qualifying Service: Major / Patriotic Service / Civil Service
DAR #: A075992

Birth: 17 Mar 1736 / / Scotland
Death: 08 Aug 1808 Farmville / Pitt / NC

Qualifying Service Description:
  1. 1771-1776, a member of the committee of Safety, Pitt County
  2. 1775, he signed the Martinborough Resolves of 1 July 1775
  3. 1775, he served as a Captain of the 15th Regiment of Pitt County Militia
  4. 1776, member of the Provincial Congress from Pitt County
  5. 1776; appointed Major by Governor Caswell of the Pitt County Militia Regiment
  6. 1781, Commander of the Pitt County Militia at the Battle of Guilford Courthouse
  7. 1781, elected to the House of Commons
  8. Additionally, DAR cites: He served as Justice of the Peace

Additional References:
  1. Clark, Walter, William Saunders, and Stephen Weeks, The Colonial Records of North Carolina: Published Under the Supervision of the Trustees of the Public Libraries, by Order of the General Assembly, North Carolina. Goldsboro: Nash Brothers, 1907:
    • Vol 9, pg 696, 1075, 1095, 1240, 1266 and 1281
    • Vol 10 pgs 14, 61, 64, 99, 295, 494, 499, 525, 618, 915, 925, 943
    • Vol 14, pg 333
    • Vol 15, pg 580
    • Vol 16, pg 580
    • Vol 17, pg 655, 715
    • Vol 19, pg 427
    • Vol 22, pg 99, 913,915
  2. DAR Historical Brochure: The Benjamin May Chapter House, Farmville, North Carolina, North Carolina. New Bern: Owen G. Dunn Co, c. 1949, pg 11

Spouse: Mary Tyson;
Children: William; Mary/Polly; Sallie; Benjamin Jr; James; Patsy; Clara; Fanny/Fannie;
Members Who Share This Ancestor
Date Approved Society ACN SAR Member Info Lineage via Child View Application Detail
1971-02-09 NC Unassigned John Randolph Riley (101078) Benjamin   
1978-09-05 VA Unassigned John E Cobb Jr (114741) Benjamin   
1982-03-11 NC Unassigned Charles Stuart Ward Jr (119948) Benjamin   
1982-08-17 NC Unassigned Charles Suttle Forbes (120710) Mary   
1982-11-02 NC Unassigned James Thomas Lang Jr. (121119) Benjamin   
1982-11-29 NC Unassigned Claude L Barrett Jr (121252) William   
1983-06-01 NC Unassigned William Taylor Baker Jr. (122300) Benjamin   
2001-06-05 NC 9589 William Henry Cox (155947) Clara   
2002-01-22 NC 11658 William Henry Cox Jr. (157290) Clara   
2002-01-22 NC 11659 Clinton Jason Cox (157291) Clara   
2008-08-01 NC 32402 William Garrison Cox (172173) Clara   
2010-01-14 NC 37674 Walter Robert Newton (175971) Mary/Polly   
2010-01-14 NC 37675 Walter Scott Newton II (175972) Mary/Polly   
2014-12-12 CT 61942 William Bennett Bullock II (193141) James   
2020-12-04 MS 93218 Karl Michael Tischer (189531) Fanny/Fannie   
2024-03-29 NC 111210 Lynn Watson Evans II (229614) Benjamin   
2024-03-29 NC 111211 Robert Harriss Evans (229615) Benjamin   
2024-03-29 NC 111212 James Lanier Evans (229616) Benjamin   
2025-01-31 NC 115141 David Wayne Cox (232505) Clara   
Location:
Farmville / Pitt / NC / USA
Find A Grave Cemetery #:

Grave Plot #:
Grave GPS Coordinates:
n/a
Find A Grave Memorial #:
Marker Type:
SAR
SAR Grave Dedication Date:
10 Dec 2013

Comments:
  • Active family association of the descendants of Major Benjamin May. If there was an original gravestone, it may have been badly decayed and has since been lost, which may be why there is now just a modern stone.
  • Find-a-Grave offers no evidence of a burial.


Directions to Cemetery / Gravesite:



Author: William Henry Cox


Benjamin May, the son of John and Mary (Stafford) May, is believed to have been born in Virginia March 17, 1737. (Tradition says he was born in Scotland but never proven.)
Benjamin May is first found listed in the 1762 Pitt County tax list as living with his father John May and brother, James May. In the 1764 Pitt County tax list Benjamin is found living in the household of Mary May, his widowed mother.

Benjamin May settled on Black Swamp, Pitt County, on the south side of Contentnea Creek near the present town of Farmville. He was listed as a "Saddler to the County and Province" as early as 1767 and he began purchasing large amounts of land as early as 1766. Between the years 1779 to 1783, Benjamin May received land grants totaling 1200 acres from the State of North Carolina. He became a very active and influential figure in the social, political and military affairs of Pitt County.

In 1773 Benjamin May was named as captain of the local regiment of Pitt County Militia. On July 30, 1779, he was appointed 1st. Major of the Pitt Regiment of Militia by Governor Richard Caswell. It is said that Benjamin May commanded the local militia at the Battle of Guilford Courthouse on February 15, 1781.

On October 4, 1774, Benjamin May was elected a member of the Pitt County Committee of Safety and was on the committee to build the courthouse and jail at Martinsborough, now Greenville, Pitt County, North Carolina.
On July 17, 1775, the Pitt County Safety Committee chose Benjamin May as one of the captains of the 15th Company of Pitt Patrollers.

Benjamin May was a delegate from Pitt County to the NC Provincial Congress at Halifax, North Carolina, April 12, 1776, when they passed the Halifax Declaration of Independence. He was appointed there with James Gorham (for Pitt County) to "receive, procure, and purchase firearms for the use of the troops". When the Provincial Congress met again on November 12, 1776, Benjamin May was chosen one of the five delegates from Pitt County.

Benjamin May served as a justice of the peace and resigned in 1784 after many years of service. He served as a member of the NC House of Commons from 1804 until his death on August 8, 1808,

Benjamin May appears to have been married several times. He married first on November 25, 1765 to Mary Tyson (b. April 16, 1748-d. 1800) daughter of Cornelius and Mary (Sherrod) Tyson. They had the following 12 known children: Tyson, Benjamin (Jr.), Fanny, John, Patsy, Sally, Elizabeth, Delitha, Mary, Clara, James and William May.


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