Peyton Townes and Muriel Pearce Family History

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Gwynn Island

Gwynn Island Project - This is a link to a website dedicated to the African Americans whose ancestral home is Gwynn Island, a settlement founded by Hugh Gwynn, from whom Frances Ann Gwynn  (Great Grandmother of Peyton Townes) was descended.

The Gwynn branch may have the dubious distinction of setting a legal precedent for legal slavery through Col. Hugh Gwynn (although the descendent lines are not certain to him.)  - From PBS website: Africans in America 

Col. Hugh Gwynn established a settlement known as Gwynn's Island.

He is responsible for what may be the first instance of legal enslavement of a Black man in America. Originally, a source of labor in Virginia was indentured servitude. These were people seeking to come to America. In exchange for transportation they agreed to a period of what was basically contractual slavery. At the end they regained their freedom,. and often land. 

"The transformation from indentured servitude (servants contracted to work for a set amount of time) to racial slavery didn't happen overnight. There are no laws regarding slavery early in Virginia's history. By 1640, the Virginia courts had sentenced at least one black servant to slavery.


Three servants working for a farmer named Hugh Gwyn ran away to Maryland. Two were white; one was black. They were captured in Maryland and returned to Jamestown, where the court sentenced all three to thirty lashes -- a severe punishment even by the standards of 17th-century Virginia. The two white men were sentenced to an additional four years of servitude -- one more year for Gwyn followed by three more for the colony. But, in addition to the whipping, the black man, a man named John Punch, was ordered to "serve his said master or his assigns for the time of his natural Life here or elsewhere." John Punch no longer had hope for freedom.

It wasn't until 1661 that a reference to slavery entered into Virginia law, and this law was directed at white servants -- at those who ran away with a black servant. The following year, the colony went one step further by stating that children born would be bonded or free according to the status of the mother. The transformation had begun, but it wouldn't be until the Slave Codes of 1705 that the status of African Americans would be sealed."