A Brief History
The idea of a Cory Family Society was first discussed
between Mark Hester and Rev. Jack Cory in 1981 at a meeting of the Western
Pennsylvania Association. Five years later, they formed the society.
Since then it has become an international organization and is still
growing.
In October of 1992, a preliminary meeting was held in
Northampton, England. On 17 December 1992, a steering committee
was appointed and the Cory Society was
formed in England.
A Brief History of the Cory Family in America
The Cory families in America sprang from several men
who were among the earliest settlers. Among these were:
Giles, John of Southold, John of Roxbury, William, and Thomas.
For the most part, they were not related. A second wave of Cory
families came from Ireland and England during the Irish immigration
from 1830 to 1880.
We now know that there were three Cory progenitors who
settled in America circa 1630-1640 who were the ancestors of the vast
majority of Americans who bear the Cory/Corey surname. One was Thomas
Corey of Chelmsford, Massachusetts. Our
DNA research
shows that he was related to the Cory families in the Northampton area,
in particular, the small village of Harpole. Giles Cory of Salem
Witchcraft fame, is also from this area. Therefore, two men were
related, but that relations is still not fully understood. Christening
records from the area suggest that they may have been third cousins,
once removed. It is theoretically possible that he could have been from
the Bramerton Hall, Norfolk, England line. DNA suggests
that he is a descendant of Nicholas Cory (d1551) of Northampton.
Another was William Cory who arrived on Rhode Island
as a young child with his father John Cory, his grandmother, Anne (Waulker)
Roome, and Anne's second husband, John Roome. They arrived in the Colony
at Portsmouth in approximately the year 1638 as immigrants from Bristol.
We have discovered William's baptismal certificate in Bristol, the birth
records of his father, John, and also his grandfather, John. We know
that Cory families were in Bristol as early as the 14th century and
their surname had been spelt in a variety of ways, e.g., Cory, Corry,
Corye, Coury, Chori, and etc. The given names common among the Bristol
Corys suggest a connection with the Cornwall Cory families.
John Cory, the father of William of Portsmouth, disappeared
from that colony after December, 1643, probably to escape prosecution
for making insulting references about the Governor. Shortly thereafter
a John Cory appeared in Southampton, Long Island, and a few years later
appeared in the nearby colony at Southold, where he married and raised
a large family. We had no documentary evidence that John of Southold
was the father of William. There was a strong suspicion based on circumstantial
evidence that is described in our newsletter of April, 2000. Our
DNA research
has subsequently shown that these John Corys have no relationship to
each other.
Another theory has been proposed that "the first American
progenitor of both the Rhode Island and Long Island Cory families was
the same person, John Cory, a sailor who immigrated from Bristol."
In fact, John Cory, who settled on Long Island was apparently a weaver.
The John Cory who immigrated to Portsmouth with his mother Anne Roome
was the son of a sailor, also named John, who lived and died in the
Bristol area. Again, our
DNA research
has subsequently shown that these John Corys have no relationship to
each other.
In any case, William (like John) had a large family
and many male descendants. Their descendants are spread all over this
continent and and together, along with the descendants of Thomas of
Chelmsford, constitute the majority of Americans who bear their surname.
The famous (or infamous) Giles Cory of Salem, Massachusetts
was another early Cory/Corey immigrant. We have found his birth record
in Northampton, England, but he had no male descendants and was not
a progenitor of the Cory/Corey surname in America.
The Northampton connection, implies that there may be a distant connection
of Giles Cory and Thomas of Chelmsford. Christening records
from the area suggest that they may have been third cousins, once
removed.
Our English Roots
Following are two summaries of the Cory history in England.
You will notice that there is some controversy over the origins of the
family.
Thomas Wendell Corey supplies the following brief history:
The records state we are of Celtic descent and that
the family had come out of Scotland in 1378, when the King of Scotland
in person with his troops gave safe passage to the borders of Scotland
and England. Sir Robert Corrie /Corry, Laird of Corrie and his wife
Lady Sussanne Caryle were viewed as being of King's Blood. They
were given safe passage by the King of England and his troops to
Cornwall, England with there sons William and John, with Thomas
Corrie in control of the lands in Scotland.
Some time later it looks like Robert and his wife
went to Norwich, Norfolk, England or a grandson named Robert Corrie/Cory
and took over at Bramerton Hall. Some of them changed
the spelling to Cory and Corey.
William Cory's line starts out in Cornwall, England.
John Corrie's line starts out in Devonshire, England and It seems
Robert Corrie/Cory and his wife may of gone to Norfolk, England.
Then later two brothers by the names of John and
Thomas Cory set sail from Devonshire, England in 1657/58?
They landed at Charlestown, MA. In 1662, they where granted land
by the Crown in Chelmsford, MA. Thomas Cory married on Sept. 19,
1665 to Abigail Gould and they had ten Children. John Cory moved
to RI or CT and started his family.
There was a second wave of Cory/Corey Families to
arrive between 1830 to 1860 because of food shortages and other
reason from Ireland. William Cory had some sons who left England
for Ireland where they did very well for themselves and had very
large families so 100 to 200 years before the problems started to
cause the Irish people to leave between 1830 to 1880.
Our DNA results show that both the William and John lines are of
Celtic descent, while the Thomas line is of Anglo-Saxon descent.
Mrs. Kathleen B. Cory, FSA Scotland, is a Genealogist
who has done considerable research in England and Scotland. In
a letter to the Society president, Art Corey, she writes.
CORY and CORRIE are distinct and separate families
in spite of spelling variations that people insist on latching on
to as ?proof? of them having been from a common root.
CORRIE / CORRI / CORRY is found in George
F. Black?s ?Surnames of Scotland? [pub. The New York Library
1946, 1962 & 1974?] the Scottish genealogists ?Bible?!
and its derivation given as ?CORRIE - from the lands of Corrie
now included in the parish of Hutton-Corrie, Dumfriesshire?
The first CORRIE that Black mentions is ?Hugh de
Corrie witnessed a charter of a fishery in Torduf circa 1194 ? 1211?.
No mention is made at all of any English connection nor is there
a CORY spelling.
A couple of years ago I decided to extract every
Birth, Marriage and Death entry for CORY from the Scottish Statutory
Indexes, which as you know start in 1855. I followed each
and every name to a census entry and not one of the families had
a Scottish origin. Most were English and a few (with COREY
variations) were born in Ireland. I realize this is late,
- the 1800s - but it makes no sense that all the early Scottish
CORYs upped and went to England!
On another
tack, Heraldry, the CORY crest is a griffin on a ducal crown,
whereas the CORRIE crest is a cock.
The earliest CORY on our Bramerton tree is ROBERT
who ?emigrated? from Cornwall and settled at Bramerton, Norfolk
circa 1398 and died there 1444.
The introduction to our long chart (there is a similar one with
the Norwich Record Office) states that the name is CHORI
in the Doomsday Book but I haven?t checked that yet.
This information was researched by ROBERT CORY Jnr
of Yarmouth, Norfolk (1776 ? 1840)...
I have a lot of collateral lines on our chart but
nothing earlier than the first ROBERT
who died there in 1444.
We still
have to establish a link between ROBERT CORY who arrived in Norfolk
circa 1398 and Cornwall.
Is that with an "e"?
Many spellings of the Cory family name may be found,
for example: Cory, Corey, Coray, Corie, Corry, and Corrie.
In her unpublished writings "My Direct Line Cor(e)y Family", Etta
Corey Holbrook makes the statement that the Corey name was not always
spelled the way it as today and has met with change. (for example, one
branch of the Thomas Cory and Abigail Gould line had taken on the spelling
of "CORAY")
If the Scottish origins of the Cory name are to be believed,
then the direct line name changes of our main Corey line change as following
CORY, CORRY, CORIE, CORRIE, CURRIE, MacMHURRICH, O'DALY, O'DEA and lastly
the given surname in Gaelic was Ua DEAGHAIDH.
Regardless of the spelling, this web site is dedicated
to the research and publication of information about these families,
their ancestors and descendents.
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