In Reply To:Carrington by Clem on February 17, 2004 at 15:26:33
Clem,
According to family history, Nathanial Carrington b1702 (son of Dr. Paul Carrington and Henningham Codrington) had a daughter with one of the family's African slaves on their plantation in St. Phillips. They called this mulatto girl Lucious Carrington. She was later sold to Judge Hackett, who had several children with her, all with the surname Carrington (these children would be one-fourth African). Judge Hackett eventually married Lucious and had additional children who were given the surname Hackett. Their Carrington and Hackett children were full brothers and sisters even though they had different last names. One of their sons was Richard S. Carrington, who had a daughter, Elizabeth Ann Carrington, who married Samuel Augustus Bayne (b. 1853 d. 1920, son of Nathaniel Perry Bayne and Miriam Augusta) of St. Thomas in 1878 in the Church of the Holy Innocents in St. Thomas, Barbados. They had two daughters, Irene Renee Bayne (married Frederick Blenman) and Armintha Doira Bayne (married Alfred Arthur).
This information is from various sources posted on genealogy websites, so I have no other details.
I descend from Nathanial Carrington and wife Mary Howell through their son John Carrington who moved to Orange County, North Carolina.