Major Jasper Farmar: Father At 62?

Is it possible for a father to have a son in his senior years? Recently in the news, Al Pacino, age 83, welcomed his fourth child Roman with actress Noor Alfallah, age 29. A month ago, Robert De Niro, age 79, welcomed his seventh child with girlfriend Tiffany Chen.

Many times in building a family tree, age is a factor in identifying the right parents. This is especially true when the grandfather, father, and/or son shares the same name.

Normally, we apply today’s timelines in our biases. For example, let’s assume we are building a tree for John Smith. A record has John Smith born to Joe Smith, the father of another Joe Smith. However, this record may indicate Joe Smith was 80 years old when his son John was born. Our biases would cause us to think that Joe Smith the younger is the more likely father.

This biased thinking also tricks us into adding non-existent persons into our tree. For example, John Smith is born to Joe Smith, but unlike the example above, there is no Joe Smith Jr. Our biased thinking says that surely Joe Smith didn’t have a son at the age of 80, so it must be a son that we don’t know about… and so we add a Joe Smith Jr. to the tree.

Such is the case for Edward Farmar of Whitemarsh, Pennsylvania, the son of Major Jasper Farmar.

Edward Farmar was born in 1672 when Major Jasper was 62 years old. For some, the age difference doesn’t seem correct, so there must have been two Major Jasper’s. Or for some, Major Jasper’s father Robert was not the son of Sir George Fermor, but rather the son of yet another Robert Farmar. Adding the extra Robert or the extra Major Jasper makes our biased timelines seem more “correct.”

This biased thinking seems even more plausible when considering Major Jasper’s wife, Mary Gamble. How can Mary born in 1614 have a son at the age of 58?

She didn’t. When Mary Gamble died, Major Jasper remarried in 1671 to widow Mary Batsford, age 36. We know this from the birth dates of Edward’s siblings, his Farmar half-siblings, as well as legal documents of his Batsford half-siblings. Yet family trees will show Major Jasper had one wife, and name her Mary Gamble Batsford.

The moral of the story is that adding extra persons in our tree to make our biased timelines “correct” only creates more brick walls for ourselves and other family historians, especially when a deep dive of available records proves otherwise.

Philip Farmer is the author and publisher of “Thomas Fermor and the Sons of Witney” tracing the family history from 1420 to 1685, and “Edward Farmar and the Sons of Whitemarsh” following their 1685 arrival from Ireland into Pennsylvania, North Carolina, Virginia, Tennessee, and Harlan County, Kentucky.

Wife of Stephen Farmer, Nancy Russell?

Did Stephen Farmer Marry Nancy Russell?

In 1682, Major Jasper Farmar sent his son Jasper Jr. to purchase 5,000 acres in Pennsylvania. Jasper Jr. then made the return trip to Ireland to gather his family and sail again for Philadelphia in 1685. Like his father and his sister, he never arrived and was buried at sea.

Jasper Jr.’s son Thomas Farmar, who was ten years old, and nephew to 14-year-old Edward Farmar (Major Jasper’s son), would grow up on Staten Island after his mother, Widow Katherine, remarried a British naval officer, Captain Christopher Billopp.

On 20 June 1700, at the age of twenty-five, Thomas was personally appointed by William Penn to be High Sheriff of Philadelphia City and County. He was reappointed until he resigned his commission in August 1703, when he sailed to England and married his step-sister Anne Billopp, Captain Billopp’s daughter.

In 1705, Thomas returned to America and settled on Staten Island. The 1708 Census of Staten Island has Thomas, age thirty-three, his children, and “Nansie Farmar, a woman.” Nancy was a common nickname for Ann, Anna, or Agnes in the eighteenth century.

Fast forward eighty-two years to 1790 and we find Edward Farmar’s great grandson Stephen Farmer marrying Nancy Russell according to family tradition. Nancy’s background to include her birth date, birth place, parents, and siblings is just as elusive as Stephen’s.

Stephen and Nancy moved from Virginia, into Tennessee, into Kentucky, and back into Tennessee. When using the 1840 federal census in locating Stephen and Nancy’s residence, or determining if they had passed away, there is an enumeration for “Sarah Farmer” in Hawkins County, Tennessee with information that closely matches Nancy Russell, assuming her husband Stephen had passed away.

Up to 1840, Nancy’s name has not appeared on a birth certificate, marriage license, census record, land deed, or any other reputable proof that Stephen’s wife is named Nancy. Given that we have no record for a “Nancy Russell,” have we mistaken the name of Stephen’s wife, and her name is actually Sarah?

Perhaps her birth name was Sarah Ann Russell and she had the nickname Nancy?

More information can be found in the book Edward Farmar and the Sons of Whitemarsh available now through our partner LuLu Printing.