George Righter, Junior, son of No.5 George and Elizabeth (Cumree or Gomry), married Christina or Christiana Roop, Daughter of John and Elizabeth (Nice or Neis) Roop or Rupp.[Genealogical Records of Schwenkfelder Families also Deed Book RLL-52,271] He had sufficient eduation to be able to write his namem but Christina could not. George was a farmer. When his father sold his land in Roxborough Township in 1784, George Jr., purchased for 900 pounds, from Jacob Auld, 111 acres of land, a plantation, which had once belonged to Nicholas Rittenhouse, in Norriton Township. The next day, he sold back to Jacob Auld a messuage and lot of 104 perches, from this farm on the Reading Road, which he had reserved for himself at the time of the sale.[Montgomery County Deed Book 3,508 and 510]
They did not remain in Norriton Township long, for between 22 May 1786 and 1 April 1788, they sold their land there. He received 76 pounds more than he paid in 1784. Now George returned to Roxborough, where he purchased from John Barndoller for 600 pounds a two story stone messuage and 2 adjoining lots of 64 acres, 140 perches, on the westerly side of the road to Plymouth or Ridge Road.[Deed Book D-21,261 The Barndollar tract is located on the map in Historical Sketch of Roxborough and Manayunk, by J.S.Miles,70] This land was in upper Roxborough, not very far from the tract his father owned before 1784. On this land George and Christina lived until his death. They sold a small lot in 1797 to James Linson, cordwainer, and2 small lots in 1805, and probably another in 1806, for the acreage on the tax assessors' lists for Roxborough Township went from 51 acres in 1805 to 45 acres in 1806. These lists showed that he was a shop keeper from 1799 to 1802, and the property in 1805 included, besides his land and stone dwelling, a stone barn, and a log hatter's shop, 2 horses and 2 cows. 11 April 1804, george with Christiana, along with other children of John Roop, dec'd, joined in the sale of a stone messuage and lot in Germantown Township, devised by will of John Roop, after the death of his wife Elizabeth, to his children.