CAUTION - THIS DATA IS NOT VERIFIED AND MAY BE WRONG!
1. John Meeks died about 1772 in Pitt Co., NC. He was first mentioned in the 1755 poll tax of Beaufort Co., NC with a son. (Pitt County was formed from Beaufort County.) He received a land grant on 5 Mar 1761 from Lord Granville for 542 acres on Grindal Pocosin, joining Edward Collins and David Hataway. The surveyed was dated 22 Apr 1756. He signed with the mark "I". Deed records suggest that he had sons named John, Walter, Francis and James. The last deed record was dated 22 Jan 1772 for 100 acres to James Meek. Tax records also list the names Thomas and Nathan Meeks.
It is believed that John had a father or brother named James in this same area. James obtained land on 6 Dec 1747 in what is now Pitt Co., NC 100 acres from Joseph Barrow of Beauford County on the east side of Coneto Creek at Thomas Little's line. John sells this land on 1 Mar 1757. Court records place James in North Carolina in Bertie precinct on July 1727. James died before 1757.
Five men claiming descent from John Meeks have provided DNA samples. Four claim descent from the son Francis Meek and one from the son John Meek. To the extent that the genealogies are correct the results show that these five men shared a common ancestor. This author does not have sufficient data to confirm the genealogies provided. Although limited the DNA samples show a unique DNA profile which separate the ancestor John Meeks from other Pre-Revolutionary ancestors in the United States, with one exception. However, this profile does show a similarity to a group of ancestors named Meek that lived in Washington Co., PA in the late 1700’s. John Meeks shared a common ancestor with this group but any connection likely predates the settlement of the United States.