It is interesting how myths can develop and take on a life of their own.  For decades Skaggs researchers have been trying to fit a Mary Thear into their genealogies.  Mary Thear was supposedly the mother to a Richard and John Scaggs in Kent County, Maryland in the mid-1700s.  In 1928 a gentleman by the name of Gaius Marcus Brumbaugh published a volume of colonial Maryland Maryland  land leases in 1766, reported to the Lord Proprietor of Maryland Maryland  and leased portions of it to Maryland Maryland 
KEAR, MARY, on 10 April 1753, had a lease from Benjamin Tasker of Annapolis Kent  County 
Evidently, the name Kear looked like Thear to Brumbaugh and Scags looked like Scago.  Over the years Skaggs researchers have not been able to find credible evidence of a Mary Thear in Maryland 
Tasker, Benjamin, Receiver General, to Kear, Mary (KE).
Dates: 1753/04/10.
Property lease agreement.
MSA S1005-27-3443 MdHR 19,999-025-004 Location: 1/8/5/26
Dates: 1753/04/10.
Property lease agreement.
MSA S1005-27-3443 MdHR 19,999-025-004 Location: 1/8/5/26
Mary Kear subsequently had this land surveyed.
Garnett, George, Dep. Surveyor, to the Agent (KE).           
Dates: 1753/04/06.
Survey and plat for Kear, Mary's land.
MSA S1005-27-3444 MdHR 19,999-025-005 Location: 1/8/5/26
Dates: 1753/04/06.
Survey and plat for Kear, Mary's land.
MSA S1005-27-3444 MdHR 19,999-025-005 Location: 1/8/5/26
There was no Mary Thear.  She was a myth.  However, there actually was a Mary Kear and she did have some relationship to Richard and John Scaggs, since her 1753 lease was to run for the lifetimes of said Mary Kear, Richard and John.  And that relationship may have been more than lessor /sub-lessee, since in 1766 the tenant in possession was listed as Annas Glenn, not Richard or John Scaggs.
 
Mary was likely the second wife of William Scaggs of Kent County, Maryland. William had a first wife, Ann, who died February 23, 1738/9 according to the Shrewsbury Parish Register. William had a will executed October 27, 1742 in which he lists a son Richard, daughter Elizabeth and wife Mary. I believe this wife Mary married Benjamin Kear in 1747, becoming the Mary Kear that shows up in the 1753 lease.
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