Philip Hoggatt

Last updated 17 Sep 2023 in Spear–Johnson Family.

Individual

Supporting evidence for:
name

family-anthony-mary-hoggatt-quaker-mm: U.S., Quaker Meeting Records, 1681-1935, database with images, Ancestry (https://www.ancestry.com: accessed 23 July 2019), North Carolina ⟩ Guilford ⟩ New Garden Monthly Meeting ⟩ Men's Minutes, 1783–1800, image 183; citing "The Third Book: In which are recorded minutes of the monthly meeting of New Garden (Men's Minutes, 1783-1800), Records Volume 1, page 22”

Comment Detail: Source includes name (Philip Hoggatt).

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Family

Spouse/Partner: Mary ____ (? – ?)

Married: ?

Supporting evidence for:
marriage

family-anthony-mary-hoggatt-quaker-mm: U.S., Quaker Meeting Records, 1681-1935, database with images, Ancestry (https://www.ancestry.com: accessed 23 July 2019), North Carolina ⟩ Guilford ⟩ New Garden Monthly Meeting ⟩ Men's Minutes, 1783–1800, image 183; citing "The Third Book: In which are recorded minutes of the monthly meeting of New Garden (Men's Minutes, 1783-1800), Records Volume 1, page 22”

Comment Detail: Source identifies "Philip Hoggatt & Mary his wife".

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Child: Anthony Hoggatt (1730 – ?)

Research Notes (Conflicts/Spelling/Followup)

FOLLOWUP

Was Philip born 16 Jan 1687 in England, and immigrated to the colonies as a child?

Did Philip and Mary wed sometime around 1721 in Chester County, Pennsylvania? And did they have seven children: six boys and one girl? Was the youngest of the boys Joseph?

Did they subsequently migrate to North Carolina and build the log house, now part of High Point Museum exhibit called The Hoggatt House?

The house is believed to have been originally built about 1754, but tests competed in 2005 suggest the main structure was built in 1801 (a rebuilding? a replacement?) with an addition in 1824. These were presumably done by descendents.

A slide show about the house on the museum website shows a list of owners and dates, though I have some question about the first one at least. (1) 1801 - Joseph Hoggatt (son of Phillip), (2) 1815 - Zimri Hoggatt (son of Joseph), (3) 1821 - Mahlon Hoggatt (son of Zimri), (4) Zimir Hoggatt (son of Mahlon), (5) 1868 - Everett Turner Corbit (Joseph, son of Mahlon, sold to the Corbit family). The Corbits then owned it until it was donated to the High Point Museum in 1973.

Did Philip die in 1783?

Check the Springfield Friends Meeting cemetery in High Point, North Carolina.

Sources

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