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Blake of Calne Wiltshire


Wa28. WARIN de WALDEGRAVE b 1162 Walgrave Brixworth Northamptonshire
m
Wa27 WILLIAM de WALDEGRAVE b 1193, Walgrave Brixworth Northamptonshire
Wa26 WARREN de WALDEGRAVE b 1220, Walgrave Brixworth Northamptonshire
Wa25 JOHN de WALDEGRAVE b 1250 Walgrave Brixworth Northamptonshire (hastings.htm show him as John ap Meredyth and she m2 Sir Robert de Champayne)
m AUDRA/Alda HASTINGS b 1263 Ashill Norfolk dau of Sir HENRY HASTINGS and m Eve or Joan de Cantilupe (dau of George de Cantilupe, Lord of Bergavenny)
wa24 WALTER de WALDEGRAVE b 1280, Walgrave Brixworth Northamptonshire
m ELIZABETH NEVILLE b 1285 Whilton Daventry Northamptonshire
Wa23 RALPH de WALDEGRAVE b 1305 Walgrave Brixworth Northamptonshire
Wa22 RICHARD I de WALDEGRAVE b 1330 Walgrave Brixworth Northamptonshire
m AGNES DAUBENY b 1333 Holtolke Northamptonshire
m
wa21 RICHARD II de WALDEGRAVE b 1355 Walgrave Brixworth Northamptonshire d. 02.05.1401 Bures St Mary Sudbury Suffolk
m JOAN SILVESTER b 1356 Bures St Mary Sudbury Suffolk d 10.06.1406 dau of SILVESTER OF BURES
Wa20 RICHARD III de WALDEGRAVE b 1379, Bures St Mary Sudbury Suffolk England; d. 02.03.1435, Edwardstone Suffolk
m
m JOAN MUNCHENSY b 1380 Edwardstone Suffolk d 09.10.1450 dau of THOMAS de MUNCHENSY and JOAN VAUNCY
Wa19 RICHARD de WALDEGRAVE b 1397 Brixworth, Walgrave Northamptonshire d by 20.06.1453, Bures St Mary Sudbury Suffolk
m JOAN DOREWARD, b 1400 Braintree Essex d c 25.06.1474 dau of WILLIAM DOREWARD and KATHERINE de WALLCOTT
Wa18 THOMAS WALDEGRAVE b 1425, Smallbridge Suffolk d. 29.04.1500
m ELIZABETH FRAY b 1440 Smallbridge Suffolk d 4 Jun 1478 dau of JOHN FRAY and AGNES DANVERS
Wa17 WILLIAM WALDEGRAVE b 1455 Smallbridge Suffolk d. 30.01.1527.
m MARJORY WENTWORTH b 1453 Yorkshire d by 07.05.1540 dau of HENRY WENTWORTH of Codham d 22.03.1482 and ELIZABETH HOWARDb before 1460
Wa16 MARGARET WALDEGRAVE b 1491, Smallbridge Suffolk England; d. 1558, Bletsoe Bedford
m Sir JOHN ST JOHN b 1488 Bletsoe Bedford d 27.08.1562. Knight of the Body to King Henry VIII, 1516 Justice of the Peace for Bedfordshire, 1528-58 Sheriff of Bedfordshire and Buckinghamshire, 1529-30, 1534-5, 1549-50 Knight of the Shire for Bedfordshire, 1529, 1539, 1542 Guardian to Princess Mary Tudor (later Queen Mary I) 1536 Chamberlain of the Household of Princess Elizabeth Tudor (later Queen Elizabeth I), 1528-1558 Justice of the Peace Bedford,
he p2 Anne Nevell + 5 ch dau of Thomas Nevell of Cotterstock, son of William of Holte
St15-1 Oliver St. John, 1st Lord of Bletso d before 23.05.1582
m1 before 01.1548-9 Agnes Fisher dau/heir of Sir John Fisher, son of Sir Michael of Clifton
St15-1 MARGARET ST JOHN b 1528, Bletsoe Bedford England; d. 27.08.1562, Strand Middlesex
m1 FRANCIS RUSSELL, son of SIR RUSSELL and ANNE SAPCOTE. Han b 1527 Amersham Buckinghamshire England, d28.07.1585 London Middlesex
m
m (2) HENRY GREY. Han b 1520 Ruthin Denbighshire Wales, d 1544 Bletsoe Bedford
m 1552 Buckinghamshire Lord Lieutenant, 1555-1585 2nd Earl of Bedford, 1584-1585 Cornwall Lord Lieutenant, 1584-1585 Devon Lord Lieutenant , 1584-1585 Dorset Lord Lieutenant
St15-1-1 25. i. FRANCIS1RUSSELL b 1553, Buckinghamshire
St15-1-2 LADY ANN RUSSELL b 12.1548, Chenies Buckinghamshire d. 06.02.1604, Northaw Hertfordshire m AMBROSE DUDLEY b 1530, London Middlesex d. 21.02.1590, Westminster Middlesex
m 1561-1590 3rd Earl of Warwick, 1569-1570 Warwickshire Lord Lieutenant, 1587-1590 Warwickshire Lord Lieutenant, 21 FEB 1590 Westminster
St15-1-3 LADY MARGARET RUSSELL b 17.07.1560, Exeter Devon England; d. 22.05.1616, Brougham Castle Westmoreland England
m GEORGE CLIFFORD b 08.08.1558, Brougham Castle Westmoreland England; d. 29.10.1605, London Middlesex
m 13th Baron Of Clifford, 1570-1605 3rd Earl Of Cumberland Educ. 1576 Cambridge, Trinity College Navy 1591 HMS Garland, Admiral Ship Navy 1593 HMS Lion, Admiral Ship Navy 1596 HMS Quittance, Captain Ship 1603-1605 Westmorland Lord Lieutenant Flag 1603-1605 Cumberland Lord Lieutenant Flag 1603-1605 Northumberland Lord Lieutenant son of Henry Clifford, 2nd Earl of Cumberland and Anne Dacre.1,3 He married Lady Margaret Russell, daughter of Francis Russell, 2nd Earl of Bedford and Margaret St. John, on 24 June 1577.4 He died on 29 October 1605 at age 47, without surviving male issue.1 George Clifford, 3rd Earl of Cumberland succeeded to the title of 13th Lord Clifford [E., 1299] on 2 January 1569/70.1 He succeeded to the title of 3rd Earl of Cumberland [E., 1525] on 2 January 1569/70.1 He was educated at Peterhouse College, Cambridge University, Cambridge, Cambridgeshire,
m3 He graduated from Trinity College, Cambridge University, Cambridge, Cambridgeshire, England, in 1576 with a Master of Arts (M.A.).3 He held the office of Counsellor of the Navy in 1582.3 He was invested as a Knight in 1588.3 He was he made nine voyages to the West Indies, capturing the town of Fiall in the Azores and the fort of Puertorico between 1589 and 1598.3 He was invested as a Knight, Order of the Garter (K.G.) in 1592.3 He held the office of Constable and Steward of Knaresborough in 1597.3 He gained the rank of Admiral in 1598.3 He was Lieutenant-General in London in 1599.3 He gained the rank of Colonel in 1599 in the service of the London Trained Bands.3 He was Lieutenant-General in London in 1601.3 He held the office of Ranger of Salcey Forest in 1602.3 He held the office of High Steward of the Honour of Grafton in 1602.3 He held the office of Custos Rotulorum of Cumberland in 1603.3 He was invested as a Privy Counsellor (P.C.) in 1603.3 He held the office of Governor of Harbottle Castle.3 He held the office of Warden of the West and Middle Marches.3 He held the office of Governor of Carlisle Castle.3 He has an extensive biographical entry in the Dictionary of National Biography.5 Children of George Clifford, 3rd Earl of Cumberland and Lady Margaret Russell * Robert Clifford, Lord Clifford d. 24 May 15911 * Francis Clifford, Lord Clifford b. 1584/85, d. Dec 15891 * Anne Clifford, Baroness Clifford+ b. 30 Jan 1589/90, d. 22 Mar 1675/761
St15-1-4 WILLIAM RUSSELL b 1558, Strand Middlesex England; d. 09.08.1613, Northall Buckinghamshire
m ELIZABETH LONG b 1562, Shingay Cambridgeshire d. 12.06.1611, Watford Hertfordshire 1603-1613 1st Baron Of Russell Of Thornhaugh
St15-1-5 JOHN RUSSELL b 1553, Chenies Buckinghamshire England; d. 07.1584, Spms Highgate
m ELIZABETH COOKE b 1555, Gidea Hall Essex d. 02.06.1609, Bisham Berkshire
St15-2 21. ii. CRESSET ST JOHN b 1540, Bedfordshire Blettsoe Bedford England; d. 1580, Roxwell Essex
m
Wa17-2 RICHARD WALDEGRAVE b 1458, Novestock Essex
Wa17-3 JOAN WALDEGRAVE b 1459, Smallbridge Suffolk d. 1491
m WILLIAM WINGFIELD b 1457, Suffolk
m
Wa17-4 CATHERINE WALDEGRAVE b 1463 Smallbridge Suffolk
Wa17-5 EDWARD WALDEGRAVE b 1465, Borley Essex d. 1501, Essex
m1 ELIZABETH CHENEY b 1462 Devon d 07.06.1505 Pinhoe Devon + 1 ch dau of JOHN de CHENEY and MARGARET KIRKHAM
m2 MARY MANNOCK b 1471
Wa17-5-1 JOHN WALDEGRAVE b 1491 Borley Essex d 06.10.1543 Borley Essex
m LORA ROCHESTER b 1495 Borley Essex d 1522. ch of JOHN WALDEGRAVE and LORA ROCHESTER 22. i. EDWARD14 WALDEGRAVE b 1517, Borley Essex England; d. 11.09.1561, Tower of London London Middlesex
m
Wa18-2 ANNE de WALDEGRAVE b 1425, Walgrave Brixworth Northamptonshire d 1453 Bedingfield Suffolk
m THOMAS de BEDINGFIELD b 1423 Hartismere Suffolk d 12.10.1453 Bedingfield Suffolk
Wa18-2-1 Sir EDMOND BEDINGSFIELD b 1445 Bedingfield Suffolk d 15.10.1496 Oxborough Norfolk
m1 ALICE de SHELTON b 1448 Shelton Norfolk d by 1478 + 1 ch
m2 MARGARET SCOTT b 1448 East Ashford Kent d 29.01.1514 Oxborough Norfolk + 1 ch dau of WILLIAM KNIGHT and AGNES BEAUFIT
Wa18-2-1-1 MARGARET BEDINGFIELD b 1465 Oxborough Norfolk d. aft 24.03.1503
m EDWARD JERNEGANn b 1462 Somerleyton Suffolk d 1515 son of JOHN JERNEGAN and ISOBEL CLIFTON
Wa18-2-1-1 23. i. JOHN JERNEGAN b 1495, Somerleyton Suffolk d. 1559.
Wa18-2-1-2 AGNES BEDINGSFIELD b 1485 d.
m
m CHRISTOPHER BROWNE b 1450 Of Stamford Lincolnshire England, d 1516 son of JOHN BROWN and AGNES
Wa18-2-1-2 24. i. CHRISTOPHER14 BROWNE b 1482 Swan Hall Hawkedon Suffolk d. 03.07.1538 Hawkedon Suffolk
m
to be integrated above
14 21. CRESSET14 ST JOHN (MARGARET13 WALDEGRAVE, WILLIAM12, b 1540 Bedfordshire Blettsoe Bedford d 1580 Roxwell Essex
m JOHN BUTLER, ESQ, son of GEORGE BUTLER and MARY THROCKMORTON. Han b 1535 Bedfordshire Sharnrock Tofte Bedford d 1613 Bedfordshire Sharnrock Tofte Bedford Notater for JOHN BUTLER, ESQ: John Butler Esq aka Boteler His father George died in 1551. Since he was given a guardian in 1553, his mother was probably dead by that time. He grew up in the home of his guardian and cousin, Clement Throckmorton in Hasely, about six miles to the northwest of Warwick. In 1553 his cousin Clement Throckmorton was made his guardian. One of his sons, Captain Nathaniel Butler became Governor of the Bermudas, as well as Governor and Admiral of the Bahamas. GENUKI County Page Aged: 78 years John Butler Esq aka Boteler His father George died in 1551. Since he was given a guardian in 1553, his mother was probably dead by that time. He grew up in the home of his guardian and cousin, Clement Throckmorton in Hasely, about six miles to the northwest of Warwick. In 1553 his cousin Clement Throckmorton was made his guardian. One of his sons, Captain Nathaniel Butler became Governor of the Bermudas, as well as Governor and Admiral of the Bahamas. ch of CRESSET ST JOHN and JOHN BUTLER 26. i. JOHN15 BUTLER b 1568, Barham Kent England; d. 22.11.1632, Kent Island Queen Annes Co MD. 22. EDWARD14 WALDEGRAVE (JOHN13, EDWARD12, b 1517 Borley Essex England, d 11.09.1561 Tower of London London Middlesex England
m FRANCES NEVILLE, dau of EDWARD NEVILLE and ELEANOR WINDSOR. Hun b 1520 Addington Park Kent England, d 18.10.1599 Borley Essex ch of EDWARD WALDEGRAVE and FRANCES NEVILLE 27. i. NICHOLAS15 WALDEGRAVE b 1550, 23. JOHN14 JERNEGAN (MARGARET13 BEDINGFIELD, EDMOND BEDINGSFIELD12 KNIGHT, ANNE11 de WALDEGRAVE, RICHARD10, RICHARD III9, R b 1495 Somerleyton Suffolk England, d 1559
m BRIDGET DRURY, dau of SIR DRURY and ANNE CALTHORPE. Hun b 1492 Hawstead Suffolk ch of JOHN JERNEGAN and BRIDGET DRURY i. JOHN15 JERNINGHAM b 1525, Somerleyton Suffolk England; d. 1592, Somerleyton Suffolk England
m CATHERINE BROOKE b 1529, Cobham Hall Kent 24. CHRISTOPHER14 BROWNE ( b 1482 Swan Hall Hawkedon Suffolk England, d03.07.1538 Hawkedon Suffolk England
m ANNE. ch of CHRISTOPHER BROWNE and ANNE 28. i. THOMAS15 BROWNE b 1533, Swan Hall Hawkedon Suffolk England; d. 27.12.1590, Swan Hall Hawkedon Suffolk
to be integrated above
15 25. FRANCIS15 RUSSELL (MARGARET14 ST JOHN, MARGARET13 WALDEGRAVE, WILLIAM12, b 1553 Buckinghamshire England
m ANN FORESTER. Hun b 1553 Badby Northamptonshire ch of FRANCIS RUSSELL and ANN FORESTER 29. i. EDWARD16 RUSSELL b 20.12.1572, Badby Northamptonshire England; d. 03.05.1627, Moor Park Hertfordshire 26. JOHN15 BUTLER (CRESSET14 ST JOHN, MARGARET13 WALDEGRAVE, WILLIAM12, b 1568 Barham Kent England, d22.11.1632 Kent Island Queen Annes Co MD
m (1) JANE ELLIOTT, dau of EDWARD ELLIOT and JANE GEDGE. Hun b 22.06.1576 Essex England, d 16.12.1667 Kent Island Queen Annes Co MD
m (2) JANE ELLIOT. Hun b 22.06.1576, d 16.12.1667. Notater for JOHN BUTLER: The first permanent European settlement in what is now Maryland was established on Kent Island in 1631 by William Claiborne, his daugter's husband. This is the same year he immigrated. Also, Claiborne was the official surveyor of the Jamestown colony, and was appointed secretary of state for Virginia. Notater for JANE ELLIOTT: Note that in 1631 Kent Island was assumed to be part of Virginia, as Maryland was not given to Lord Baltimore until 1632, prior to her death. ch of JOHN BUTLER and JANE ELLIOTT 30. i. ELIZABETH16 BUTLER b 1612, Roxwell Essex England; d. 1676, VA ch of JOHN BUTLER and JANE ELLIOT 31. ii. ELIZABETH16 BUTLER b 1610, Essex, England; d. 1668, New Kent Co VA 27. NICHOLAS15 WALDEGRAVE (EDWARD14, JOHN13, EDWARD12, b 1550 England
m CATHERINE BROWNE. Hun b 1565 ch of NICHOLAS WALDEGRAVE and CATHERINE BROWNE 32. i. FRANCES16 WALDEGRAVE b 1577, Borley Essex England; d. 01.02.1644, Essex 28. THOMAS15 BROWNE (CHRISTOPHER14, b 1533 Swan Hall Hawkedon Suffolk England, d27.12.1590 Swan Hall Hawkedon Suffolk England
m (1) JOAN SAYER. Hun b 1552 Of Painswick Gloucester England, d 1610 Hawkedon Suffolk England
m (2) JOAN GABB. Hun b 1552 Painswick Gloucestershire England, d 1592 Swan Hall Hawkedon Suffolk ch of THOMAS BROWNE and JOAN SAYER 33. i. PETER16 BROWN b mel. 1596 - 1598, Of Hawkedon Suffolk England; d. 04.10.1633. ch of THOMAS BROWNE and JOAN GABB 34. ii. PETER BROWN16 (BROWNE) b 1590, Hawkedon Suffolk England; d. Plymouth Plymouth Co Massachusetts Usa.
to be integrated above
16 29. EDWARD16 RUSSELL (FRANCIS15, MARGARET14 ST JOHN, MARGARET13 WALDEGRAVE, WILLIAM12, b 20.12.1572 Badby Northamptonshire England, d03.05.1627 Moor Park Hertfordshire England
m LUCY HARINGTON, dau of JOHN HARINGTON and ANNE KELWAY. Hun b 1580 England, d 1627. ch of EDWARD RUSSELL and LUCY HARINGTON 35. i. JOHN17 RUSSELL b 1597, Cretingham Suffolk England; d. 08.05.1680, Hadley, Hampshire, Massachusetts, United States. 30. ELIZABETH16 BUTLER (JOHN15, CRESSET14 ST JOHN, MARGARET13 WALDEGRAVE, WILLIAM12, b 1612 Roxwell Essex England, d 1676 VA
m COL./HON. WILLIAM CLAIBORNE, son of THOMAS CLAIBORNE and SARAH SMITH. Han b 10.08.1600 Crayford Kent England, d 1676 King William Co VA Notater for ELIZABETH BUTLER: As a descendant of William Claiborne, you can claim descendancy from English and European royalty all the way back to Charlemagne and beyond through the ancestry of his wife Elizabeth Butler. Notater for COL./HON. WILLIAM CLAIBORNE: William Claiborne From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia This article is about the English pioneer and surveyor. For the United States politician, see William C. C. Claiborne. For the college football player and reverend, see Wild Bill Claiborne. William Claiborne William Claiborne (1600 – 1677).jpg Secretary of State for the Virginia Colony In office 1626–1634 Parliamentary Commissioner and Secretary of the Virginia Colony In office 1648–1660 Personal details Born c. 1600 Crayford, Kent, Kingdom of England Died c. 1677 West Point, Virginia Colony, Kingdom of England Occupation Surveyor, colonial government official, trader, planter William Claiborne also, spelled Cleyburne (c. 1600 – c. 1677)[1] was an English pioneer, surveyor, and an early settler in the colonies/provinces of Virginia and Maryland and around the Chesapeake Bay. Claiborne became a wealthy planter, a trader, and a major figure in the politics of the colonies. He was a central figure in the disputes between the colonists of Virginia and the later settling of Maryland, partly because of his earlier trading post on Kent Island in the mid-way of the Chesapeake Bay, which provoked the first naval military battles in North American waters. Claiborne repeatedly attempted and failed to regain Kent Island from the Maryland Calverts, sometimes by force of arms, after its inclusion in the lands that were granted by a 1632 Royal Charter to the Calvert family. Kent Island had become Maryland territory after the surrounding lands were granted to Sir George Calvert, first Baron and Lord Baltimore (1579–1632) by the reigning King of England, Charles (1600–1649; reigned from 1625 until his execution in 1649). Claiborne was an Anglican, a Puritan sympathizer, and deeply resentful of the Calverts' Catholicism. He was one of the signers, along with Virginia Governor John Pott, Samuel Matthews, and Roger Smyth, of a letter to the King's Privy Council, dated 30 November 1629, complaining that Lord Baltimore refused to take the Oath of Allegiance and Supremacy to the Church of
m[2] He sided with Parliament during the English Civil War of 1642–1651 and was appointed to a commission charged with subduing and managing the Province of Virginia and Province of Maryland, both British colonies at the time. He played a role in the submission of Virginia to parliamentary rule in this period. Following the restoration of the English monarchy in 1660, he retired from involvement in the politics of the Virginia colony. He died around 1677 at his plantation, Romancoke, on Virginia's Pamunkey River. According to historian Robert Brenner, "William Claiborne may have been the most consistently influential politician in Virginia throughout the whole of the pre-Restoration period".[3] Claiborne was born the county of Kent in England in 1600 to Sarah Smith, the daughter of a London brewer, and Thomas Clayborn, an alderman and lord mayor from King's Lynn, Norfolk, who made his living as a small-scale businessman involved in a variety of industries, including the salt and fish trades.[4] The family name was spelled alternately as Cleburn, Cleyborne, or Claiborne. William Claiborne, who was baptized in 1600, was the younger of two sons.[5] The family's business was not profitable enough to make it rich, and so Claiborne's older brother was apprenticed in London, becoming a merchant involved in hosiery and, eventually, the tobacco trade.[4] The Province of Virginia was still a frontier settlement in March 1622 when William Claiborne, (c.1600–c.1677), survived attacks by native Indian Powhatans that killed more than 300 Virginia colonists. However, Claiborne was offered a position as a land surveyor in the new colony of Virginia, and arrived at Jamestown, on the north shore of the James River in 1621. The position carried a 200-acre (80 hectare) land grant, a salary of £30 per year, and the promise of fees paid by settlers who needed to have their land grants surveyed. His political acumen quickly made him one of the most successful Virginia colonists, and within four years of his arrival he had secured grants for 1,100 acres (445 hectares) of land and a retroactive salary of £60 a year from the Virginia Colony's council. The native/Indian Powhatans Powhatan were frightened by the influx of immigrants, the expansion of new villages on traditional farming lands, the subsequent need to purchase food from the settlers, and the enforced placement of Indian youth in "colleges." In March 1622, they attacked the Jamestown plantations killing hundreds. The settlers quickly sought retaliation, killing hundreds of tribesmen and their families, burning fields, and spreading smallpox.[6] Claiborne managed to survive all of these attacks. His financial success was followed by political success, and he gained appointment as Councilor in 1624 and Secretary of State for the Colony in 1626. Around 1627, he began to trade for furs with the native Susquehannock Indians from further north on the shores of the Chesapeake Bay and two of its largest tributaries, the Potomac and Susquehanna Rivers. To facilitate this trade, Claiborne wanted to establish a trading post on Kent Island in the mid-way of the Chesapeake Bay, which he intended to make the center of a vast mercantile empire along the Atlantic Coast.[4] Claiborne found both financial and political support for the Kent Island venture from London merchants Maurice Thomson, William Cloberry, John de la Barre, and Simon Turgis.[7] Kent Island and the first dispute with Maryland Map of the Virginia colony showing its location relative to the proprietary colony, Province of Maryland controlled by Lord Baltimores of the Calvert family. In 1629, George Calvert, 1st Baron Baltimore, arrived in Virginia, having traveled south from Avalon, his failed colony on Newfoundland. Calvert was not welcomed by the Virginians, both because his Catholicism offended them as Protestants, and because it was no secret that Calvert desired a charter for a portion of the land that the Virginians considered their own.[8] After a brief stay, Calvert returned to England to press for just such a charter, and Claiborne, in his capacity as Secretary of State of Virginia colony, was sent to England to argue the Virginians' case.[9] This happened to be to Claiborne's private advantage, as he was also trying to complete the arrangements for the trading post on Kent Island. Calvert, a former high official in the government of King James I, asked the Privy Council for permission to build a colony, to be called Carolina, on land south of the Virginia settlements in area of the modern-day North Carolina, South Carolina, and Georgia. Claiborne arrived soon afterwards and expressed the concerns of Virginia that its territorial integrity was being threatened. He was joined in his protests by a group of London merchants who planned to build a sugar colony in the same area.[10] Claiborne, still intent on his own project, received a royal trading commission through one of his London supporters in 1631, one which granted him the right to trade with the natives on all lands in the mid-Atlantic where there was not already a patent in effect.[11] Claiborne sailed for Kent Island on 28 May 1631 with indentured servants recruited in London and money for his trading post, likely believing Calvert's hopes defeated.[12] He was able to gain the support of the Virginia Council for his project and, as a reward for London merchant Maurice Thomson's financial support, helped Thomson and two associates get a contract from Virginia guaranteeing a monopoly on tobacco.[13] Claiborne's Kent Island settlers established a small plantation on the island and appointed a clergyman.[14] While the settlement on Kent Island was progressing, the Privy Council had proposed to Sir George Calvert, former Secretary of State for the King that he be granted a charter for lands north of the Virginia colony, in replacement for the unsuccessful settlements of his earlier colony of Avalon in Newfoundland (eastern modern Canada), in order to create pressure on the Dutch settlements further north along the Delaware and Hudson Rivers (modern states of Delaware, New Jersey and New York). Calvert accepted, though he died in 1632 before the charter could be formally signed by King Charles I, and the Royal Grant and Charter for the new colony of Maryland was instead granted to his son, Cecilius Calvert, on 20 June 1632.[15] This turn of events was unfortunate for Claiborne, since the Maryland charter included all lands on either side of the Chesapeake Bay north of the mouth of the Potomac River, a region which included Claiborne's proposed trading post on Kent Island, mid-way on the Bay. The Virginia Assembly, still in support of Claiborne and now including representatives of the Kent Island settlers, issued a series of proclamations and protests both before and after when the news of the granting of the Maryland charter reached across the ocean, claiming the lands for Virginia and protesting the charter's legality.[16] Map of the modern State of Maryland with Kent Island highlighted in the mid-way of the Chesapeake Bay which nearly splits the region into an Eastern Shore (Delmarva peninsula) and a Western Shore (mainland). This island was the touchpoint for a long conflict between Claiborne and the Maryland colony. Claiborne's first appeal to royal authority in the dispute, which complained both that the lands in the Maryland charter were not really unsettled, as the charter claimed, and that the charter gave so much power to Calvert that it undermined the rights of the settlers, was rejected by the Lords of Foreign Plantations in July 1633.[17] The following year, the main body of Calvert's settlers arrived in the Chesapeake and established a permanent settlement on Yaocomico lands at St. Mary's City.[18] With the support of the Virginia establishment, Claiborne made clear to Calvert that his allegiance was to Virginia and royal authority, and not to the proprietary authority in Maryland.[19] Some historical reports claim that Claiborne tried to incite the natives against the Maryland colonists by telling them that the settlers at St. Mary's were actually Spanish and enemies of the English, although this claim has never been proven.[20] In 1635, a Maryland commissioner named Thomas Cornwallis swept the Chesapeake for illegal traders and captured one of Claiborne's pinnaces in the Pocomoke Sound. Claiborne tried to recover it by force, but was defeated; although he retained his settlement on Kent Island. These were the first naval battles in North American waters, on 23 April and 10 May 1635; three Virginians were killed.[21] During these events, Governor John Harvey of Virginia, who had never been well liked by the Virginian colonists, had followed royal orders to support the Maryland settlement and, just before the naval battles in the Chesapeake, removed Claiborne from office as Secretary of State.[22] In response, Claiborne's supporters in the Virginia Assembly expelled Harvey from the colony.[23] Two years later, an attorney for Cloberry and Company, who were concerned that the revenues they were receiving from fur trading had not recouped their original investment, arrived on Kent Island. The attorney took possession of the island and bade Claiborne return to England, where Cloberry and Company filed suit against him. The attorney then invited Maryland to take over the island by force, which it did in December 1637. By March 1638 the Maryland Assembly had declared that all of Claiborne's property within the colony now belonged to the proprietor.[24] Maryland temporarily won the legal battle for Kent Island and won again when Claiborne's final appeal was rejected by the Privy Council in April 1638.[25] Parliamentary Commissioner and the second dispute with Maryland In May 1638, fresh from his defeat over Kent Island, Claiborne received a commission from the Providence Land Company, who were advised by his old friend Maurice Thomson, to create a new colony on Ruatan Island off the coast of Honduras in the Caribbean Sea. At the time, Honduras itself was a part of Spain's Kingdom of Guatemala, and Spanish settlements dominated the mainland of Central America. Claiborne optimistically called his new colony Rich Island, but Spanish power in the area was too strong and the colony was destroyed in 1642.[26] Soon after, the chaos of the English Civil War gave Claiborne another opportunity to reclaim Kent Island. The Calverts, who had received such constant support from the King, in turn supported the monarchy during the early stages of the parliamentary crisis. Claiborne found a new ally in Richard Ingle, a pro-Parliament Puritan merchant whose ships had been seized by the Catholic authorities in Maryland in response to a royal decree against Parliament. Claiborne and Ingle saw an opportunity for revenge using the Parliamentary dispute as political cover, and in 1644 Claiborne seized Kent Island while Ingle took over St. Mary's.[27] Both used religion as a tool to gain popular support, arguing that the Catholic Calverts could not be trusted. By 1646, however, Governor Leonard Calvert had retaken both St. Mary's and Kent Island with support from Governor Berkeley of Virginia, and, after Leonard Calvert died in 1648, Cecil Calvert appointed a pro-Parliament Protestant to take over as governor.[28] The rebellion and its religious overtones was one of the factors that led to passage of the landmark Maryland Toleration Act of 1649, which declared religious tolerance for Catholics and Protestants in Maryland.[29] In 1648 a group of merchants in London applied to Parliament for revocation of the Maryland charter from the Calverts.[30] This was rejected, but Claiborne received a final opportunity to reclaim Kent Island when he was appointed by the Puritan-controlled Parliament to a commission which was charged with suppressing Anglican disquiet in Virginia; Virginia in this case defined as "all the plantations in the Bay of the Chesapeake."[31] Claiborne and fellow commissioner Richard Bennett secured the peaceful submission of Virginia to Parliamentary rule, and the new Virginia Assembly appointed Claiborne as Secretary of the colony.[32] It also proposed to Parliament new acts which would give Virginia more autonomy from England, which would benefit Claiborne as he pressed his claims on Kent Island. He and Bennett then turned their attention to Maryland and, arguing again that the Catholic Calverts could not be trusted and that the charter gave the Calverts too much power, demanded that the colony submit to the Commonwealth.[32] Governor Stone briefly refused but gave in to Claiborne and the commission, and submitted Maryland to Parliamentary rule.[33] Claiborne made no overt legal attempts to re-assert control over Kent Island during the commission's rule of Maryland, although a treaty concluded during that time with the Susquehannocks claimed that Claiborne owned both Kent and Palmer Islands.[34] Claiborne's legal designs on Maryland were once again defeated when Oliver Cromwell returned Calvert to power in 1653, after the Rump Parliament ended.[35] In 1654, Governor Stone of Maryland tried to reclaim authority for the proprietor and declared that Claiborne's property and his life could be taken at the Governor's pleasure.[36] Stone's declaration was ignored and Claiborne and Bennett again overthrew him, creating a new assembly in which Catholics were not allowed to serve.[37] Calvert, now angry at Stone for what he perceived as weakness, demanded that Stone do something, and in 1655 Stone reclaimed control in St. Mary's and led a group of soldiers to Providence (modern Annapolis). Stone was captured and his force defeated by local Puritan settlers, who took control of the colony.[38] Given the new situation, Claiborne and Bennett went to England in hopes of convincing Cromwell to change his mind but, to their dismay, no decision was made and, lacking royal authority, the Puritans gave power over to a new governor appointed by Calvert.[39] Going behind Claiborne's back, Bennett and another commissioner reached an agreement with Calvert that virtually guaranteed his continued control over Maryland through the remainder of the Protectorate.[40] With no authority left in Maryland, Claiborne turned to his political offices in Virginia. However, as a consequence of his continuous conflict and disruption, over several years, of authority and government in both Maryland and Virginia in pursuit of his commercial interests, as well as his alliance with the Parliament faction during these activities, upon the restoration of the British monarchy in 1660 he had few friends left in government. Claiborne therefore retired from political affairs in 1660 and spent the remainder of his life managing his 5,000 acre (2,023 hectare) estate, "Romancoke", near West Point on the Pamunkey River, dying there in about 1677.[41] Family life and descendants In the midst of the political turmoil of the conflict over Kent Island, Claiborne married Elizabeth Butler of Essex, who would remain his wife at least through 1668.[5] Claiborne was also the forebear of a number of lines of American Claibornes, and among his descendants are William C. C. Claiborne, first governor of Louisiana, fashion designer Liz Claiborne,[42] the late minister Jerry Falwell, Folk musician/science and linguistics writer Robert Claiborne, and a number of political figures from Tennessee and Virginia.[43] Descendants of the Claiborne family have formed a society to advance the genealogical study of Claiborne's lineage Christen 10 AUG 1600 England, Kent, Crayford ? More on this location Links GENUKI County Page Immigrate 1621 VA ? More on this location Links Cyndislist.com State Page FamilySearch State Page Other 1621 VA ? More on this location Links Cyndislist.com State Page FamilySearch State Page surveyor for the Virginia Company of London Occup 1626 VA Secretary of State Occup 1642 VA Treasurer Claiborne was appointed by Charles Treasurer of Virginia f Occup 1653 VA Governor Deputy Governor. Seated at "Romancoke," King William County, Virginia. Military 1653 VA Militia / Colonel CLAIBORNE was colonel of a command against the Indians History 1676 Bacon's Rebellion Member of court to try rebels. ch of ELIZABETH BUTLER and COL./HON. CLAIBORNE 36. i. LTC THOMAS17 CLAIBORNE b 17.08.1647, New Kent Co VA d. 07.10.1683, Romancoke King William Co VA 37. ii. WILLIAM CLAIBORNE b 17.08.1636, New Kent, VA ; d. 07.10.1683, King William, VA . 38. iii. MARY CLAIBORNE b 1630, King William Co VA d. 09.02.1708, Doswell Hanover Co VA 31. ELIZABETH16 BUTLER (JOHN15, CRESSET14 ST JOHN, MARGARET13 WALDEGRAVE, WILLIAM12, b 1610 Essex, England, d 1668 New Kent Co VA
m WILLIAM CLAIBORNE 1635 VA . Han b 10.08.1600 Crayford, Kent, England, d21.03.1677 Romancoke, King William, VA . ch of ELIZABETH BUTLER and WILLIAM CLAIBORNE i. MARY17 CLAIBORNE b 1635, Prince William, VA ; d. 09.02.1709, Doswell, Hanover, VA
m ROBERT HARRIS b 1635, Henrico, VA ; d. 1701, New Kent Co VA 32. FRANCES16 WALDEGRAVE (NICHOLAS15, EDWARD14, JOHN13, EDWARD12, b 1577 Borley Essex England, d01.02.1644 Essex
m RICHARD WESTON, son of JEROME WESTON and MARY CAVE. Han b 01.03.1577 Roxelle Essex England, d 13.03.1635 Wallingford House Whitehall Essex Notater for RICHARD WESTON: Org. 1621-1628 Chancellor of the Exchequer Occup 1628-1635 England Treasurer Org. 1628-1635 First Lord of the Admiralty Occup 1628-1635 1st Baron of Weston Occup 1629-1635 England, Essex Lord Lieutenant Occup 1631-1635 England, Hampshire Lord Lieutenant Occup 1633-1635 1st Earl of Portland ch of FRANCES WALDEGRAVE and RICHARD WESTON 39. i. CATHERINE17 WESTON b 08.06.1607, Roxelle Essex England; d. 31.10.1645, Rome Lazio Italy. 33. PETER16 BROWN (THOMAS15 BROWNE, CHRISTOPHER14, b mel. 1596 - 1598 Of Hawkedon Suffolk England, d04.10.1633
m MARTHA FOORDE. Hun b 1580 Inkburrow Worcestershire England, dmel. 1633 - 1634. ch of PETER BROWN and MARTHA FOORDE 40. i. EDWARD17 BROWN b 09.09.1586, Inkberrow Worcester Massachusetts England; d. 1610, Inkberrow Worcester Massachusetts 34. PETER BROWN16 (BROWNE) (THOMAS15 BROWNE, CHRISTOPHER14, b 1590 Hawkedon Suffolk England, dPlymouth Plymouth Co Massachusetts Usa
m MARTHA WILSON. Hun b 1589 Inkberrow Worcester England, d 1621 Plymouth Plymoth Co Massachusetts Usa. Notater for MARTHA WILSON: Martha Ford came from England to Plymouth on the ship the FORTUNE; her children with her first Husband were John Ford Martha Ford Married William Nelson son name unknown. Peter Brown married Martha ca.1624 Children: Mary Brown born ca. 1626 married Ephriam Tinkham Priscilla Brown born ca. 1629 married William Allen ch of PETER (BROWNE) and MARTHA WILSON 41. i. REBECCA17 BROWN b 1632, Plymouth Plymouth Co Massachusetts Usa; d. 31.01.1708, Plymouth Co Massachusetts Usa.
to be integrated above
17 35. JOHN17 RUSSELL (EDWARD16, FRANCIS15, MARGARET14 ST JOHN, MARGARET13 WALDEGRAVE, WILLIAM12, b 1597 Cretingham Suffolk England, d08.05.1680 Hadley, Hampshire, Massachusetts, United States
m (1) DOROTHY COTTON, dau of JOHN COTTON and ELIZABETH HORROCK. Hun b 1620 Marshfield Plymoth Co Massachusetts Usa, d 18.12.1687 Dartmouth Bristol Co Massachusetts Usa
m (2) ANNA PERKES. Hun b 1597 England, d 1640 Fairfield Co CT
m (3) PHEBE COLLINS 1624, dau of JOHN COLLINS and MAUDLEN TREITHERNE. Hun b 03.03.1605 London Middlesex England, d08.07.1642 Cambridge, Middlesex, Massachusetts, United States. ch of JOHN RUSSELL and DOROTHY COTTON 42. i. MARY18 RUSSELL b mel. 1644 - 1645, Darmouth Bristol Co Massachusetts Usa; d. 1710, Hempstead Nassau Co New York Usa. ch of JOHN RUSSELL and PHEBE COLLINS 43. ii. ELIZABETH18 RUSSELL b 1622, Dorchester Dorset 44. iii. PHILIP RUSSELL b 1629, Ipswich Essex Co Massachusetts Usa; d. 19.05.1693, Hatfield Hampshire Co Massachusetts Usa. 45. iv. JOHN RUSSELL b 1626, England; d. 10.12.1692, Hadley Hampshire Co Massachusetts Usa. 36. LTC THOMAS17 CLAIBORNE (ELIZABETH16 BUTLER, JOHN15, CRESSET14 ST JOHN, MARGARET13 WALDEGRAVE, WILLIAM12, b 17.08.1647 New Kent Co VA d07.10.1683 Romancoke King William Co Virginia Usa
m SARAH FENNE. Hun b 22.03.1660 VA d 18.10.1716. ch of LTC CLAIBORNE and SARAH FENNE 46. i. CAPT THOMAS18 CLAIBORNE b 16.12.1680, King William Co VA d. 16.08.1732, Sweet Hall King William Co VA ii. ELIZABETH CLAIBORNE b 1678, VA d. Virginia Usa
m OWEN SULLIVAN b 10.06.1673, Lynhaven Parish Alexandria Co VA d. 06.02.1769, Lunenburg Co VA 37. WILLIAM17 CLAIBORNE (ELIZABETH16 BUTLER, JOHN15, CRESSET14 ST JOHN, MARGARET13 WALDEGRAVE, WILLIAM12, b 17.08.1636 New Kent, VA , d07.10.1683 King William, VA
m KATHERINE ELIZABETH WILKES 19.11.1661 New Kent, VA , dau of JOHN WILKES and CATHERINE SHIPPEY. Hun b 1636 England, d03.05.1687 King William, King William, VA . Notater for WILLIAM CLAIBORNE: Other 1676 VA ? More on this location Links Cyndislist.com State Page FamilySearch State Page Signed Bacon’s Rebellion: The Declaration (1676) History 1679 Bacon's Rebellion Berkeley gave him a testimonial for fighting the Rebellion. ch of WILLIAM CLAIBORNE and KATHERINE WILKES 47. i. WILLIAM18 CLAIBORNE b 1671, VA 38. MARY17 CLAIBORNE (ELIZABETH16 BUTLER, JOHN15, CRESSET14 ST JOHN, MARGARET13 WALDEGRAVE, WILLIAM12, b 1630 King William Co VA d09.02.1708 Doswell Hanover Co VA
m (1) MAJOR ROBERT HARRIS, son of WILLIAM HARRIS and ELLEN BURROWS. Han b 1615 Wales, d 1712 Jamestown James City VA
m (2) EDWARD RICE, son of RICHARD RICE. Han b 1628 Dingle Kerry Co Ireland, dNorthumberland Co VA Notater for MAJOR ROBERT HARRIS: One issue is stated by Thomas King, "DNA has proven that Major Robert Harris who married Mary Claiborne could not possibly be the son of Capt Thomas Harris by either of his wives. yDNA from living direct male Harris descendants of Maj Robert Harris prove that he came from a different Haplo Blood Group as do the living direct male Harris descendants of Capt Thomas Harris. This proves conclusively that Maj Robert Harris and Capt Thomas Harris could not be related or have any common male Harris ancestor within thousands of years." ancestry.com Furthermore, he states "The Robert Harris who married Mary Claiborne was NOT the son of Sgt John Harris and wife Dorothy. Their son Robert died in ISle of wight in 1664. DNA of his male Harris descendants proves they come from a different Haplo Blood groups as do the living male direct Harris descendants of Maj Robert Harris which means is is impossible for them to be related nor have any common male Harris ancestor within thousands of years." ancestry.com ch of MARY CLAIBORNE and MAJOR HARRIS 48. i. CAPT. WILLIAM18 HARRIS b 1672, Wales; d. ett. 1725, Henrico Co VA 49. ii. MATTHEW HARRIS b 1661, Yorkhampton Parish York Co VA d. før 1727, York Co VA ch of MARY CLAIBORNE and EDWARD RICE 50. iii. THOMAS18 RICE b 1656, New Kent Co VA d. 1711, At sea. 39. CATHERINE17 WESTON (FRANCES16 WALDEGRAVE, NICHOLAS15, EDWARD14, JOHN13, EDWARD12, b 08.06.1607 Roxelle Essex England, d31.10.1645 Rome Lazio Italy.
m RICHARD IV WHYTE, son of RICHARD WHYTE and MARY PLOWDEN. Han b 1580 Hutton Hall Essex England, dett. 1660 Rome Lazio Italy. ch of CATHERINE WESTON and RICHARD WHYTE 51. i. JOHN18 WHITEHEAD b 1582, Bengeworth, Worchestershire, England; d. 06.01.1650, Jamaica, Queens, New York Colony, British Colonial America. 40. EDWARD17 BROWN (PETER16, THOMAS15 BROWNE, CHRISTOPHER14, b 09.09.1586 Inkberrow Worcester Massachusetts England, d 1610 Inkberrow Worcester Massachusetts England
m JANE LEIDS, dau of THOMAS LEIDS and JANE GRUBBS. Hun b 1578 Inkberrow Worcester Massachusetts England, d 1610 Inkberrow Worcester Massachusetts
m ch of EDWARD BROWN and JANE LEIDS 52. i. ANN18 BROWN b 1603, Inkberrow Worcester Massachusetts England; d. 04.12.1669, Lynn Essex Massachusetts Usa. 41. REBECCA17 BROWN (PETER BROWN16 (BROWNE), THOMAS15 BROWNE, CHRISTOPHER14, b 1632 Plymouth Plymouth Co Massachusetts Usa, d31.01.1708 Plymouth Co Massachusetts Usa.
m WILLIAM SNOW, son of NICHOLAS SNOW and MARY WALKER. Han b 1624 Dorset England, d31.01.1708 Bridgewater Plymouth Co Massachusetts Usa. ch of REBECCA BROWN and WILLIAM SNOW 53. i. HANNAH18 SNOW b 1655, Eastham Barnstable Co Massachusetts Usa; d. 22.12.1690, Plymouth Plymouth Co Massachusetts Usa. ii. WILLIAM SNOW b 1662, Bridgewater Plymouth Co Massachusetts Usa; d. 1726, Bridgewater Plymouth Co Massachusetts Usa
m NAOMI WHITMAN b 1664, Bridgewater Plymouth Co Massachusetts Usa; d. 12.01.1711, Bridgewater Plymouth Co Massachusetts Usa. iii. JOSEPH SNOW b 1664, West Bridgewater Plymouth Co Massachusetts Usa; d. 18.12.1753, West Bridgewater Plymouth Co Massachusetts Usa
m HOPESTILL ALDEN b 1668, Bridgewater Plymouth Co Massachusetts Usa; d. 1705, Duxbury Plymouth Co Massachusetts Usa.
to be integrated above
18 42. MARY18 RUSSELL (JOHN17, EDWARD16, FRANCIS15, MARGARET14 ST JOHN, MARGARET13 WALDEGRAVE, WILLIAM12, b mel. 1644 - 1645 Darmouth Bristol Co Massachusetts Usa, d 1710 Hempstead Nassau Co New York Usa.
m JOHN CORNELL, son of THOMAS CORNELL and REBECCA BRIGGS. Han b 06.06.1634 Essex England, d 1704 Hempstead Nassau Co New York Usa. ch of MARY RUSSELL and JOHN CORNELL 54. i. JOHN19 CORNELL b 1670, Hempstead Nassau Co New York Usa; d. Danbury Fairfield Co CT 55. ii. MARY CORNELL b 1679, Scarsdale Westchester Co New York Usa; d. 21.09.1730, Sands Point Nassau Co New York Usa. iii. CALEB CORNELL b 1683, Scarsdale Westchester Co New York Usa; d. 04.08.1754
m ELIZABETH HAGNER b 1683, Nassau Co New York Usa. 43. ELIZABETH18 RUSSELL (JOHN17, EDWARD16, FRANCIS15, MARGARET14 ST JOHN, MARGARET13 WALDEGRAVE, WILLIAM12, b 1622 Dorchester Dorset
m THOMAS HYATT. Han b 20.09.1618 Dorchester Dorset England, d09.09.1656 Stamford Fairfield Co CT ch of ELIZABETH RUSSELL and THOMAS HYATT 56. i. THOMAS19 HYATT b 28.03.1650, Stratford Fairfield Co CT d. 28.03.1698, Norwalk Fairfield Co CT 44. PHILIP18 RUSSELL (JOHN17, EDWARD16, FRANCIS15, MARGARET14 ST JOHN, MARGARET13 WALDEGRAVE, WILLIAM12, b 1629 Ipswich Essex Co Massachusetts Usa, d 19.05.1693 Hatfield Hampshire Co Massachusetts Usa
m (1) MARY CHURCH, dau of EDWARD CHURCH and MARY HOPKINS. Hun b 17.09.1656 Norwalk Fairfield Co CT d01.05.1743
m (2) ELIZABETH TERRY, dau of STEPHEN TERRY and JANE HARDY. Hun b 04.01.1642 Windsor Hartford County CT d 19.09.1677 Hatfield Hampshire Co Massachusetts Usa. ch of PHILIP RUSSELL and MARY CHURCH i. DANIEL19 RUSSELL b 08.10.1691, Hatfield Hampshire Massachusetts Usa; d. 28.06.1737, Sunderland Franklin Co Massachusetts Usa
m JERUSHA DICKINSON b 20.03.1692, Hatfield Hampshire Massachusetts Usa. 45. JOHN18 RUSSELL (JOHN17, EDWARD16, FRANCIS15, MARGARET14 ST JOHN, MARGARET13 WALDEGRAVE, WILLIAM12, b 1626 England, d 10.12.1692 Hadley Hampshire Co Massachusetts Usa
m REBECCA NEWBERRY, dau of THOMAS NEWBERRY and JOANE DABINOTT. Hun b 1635 England, d21.11.1688. ch of JOHN RUSSELL and REBECCA NEWBERRY 57. i. SAMUEL19 RUSSELL b 11.04.1660, New Haven New Haven Co CT d. 24.06.1731, Branford New Haven Co CT 46. CAPT THOMAS18 CLAIBORNE (LTC THOMAS17, ELIZABETH16 BUTLER, JOHN15, CRESSET14 ST JOHN, MARGARET13 WALDEGRAVE, WILLIAM12, b 16.12.1680 King William Co VA d 16.08.1732 Sweet Hall King William Co Virginia Usa
m ANNE FOX, dau of ESQ. FOX and ANNE WEST. Hun b 20.05.1684 New Kent Co VA d04.05.1733 Sweet Hall King William Co VA ch of CAPT CLAIBORNE and ANNE FOX 58. i. COL. NATHANIEL19 CLAIBORNE b 1716, Sweet Hall King William Co VA d. 1756, King William Co VA 59. ii. LEONARD CLAIBORNE b 1703, King William Co VA d. 08.05.1785, Hampton York Co VA iii. BERNARD CLAIBORNE b 1710, King William Co Virginia Usa
m HANNAH RAVENSCROFT b mel. 1707 - 1715, VA 47. WILLIAM18 CLAIBORNE (WILLIAM17, ELIZABETH16 BUTLER, JOHN15, CRESSET14 ST JOHN, MARGARET13 WALDEGRAVE, WILLIAM12, b 1671 Virginia Usa
m KATHERINE DANDRIDGE, dau of WILLIAM DANDRIDGE. Hun b 1676
m ch of WILLIAM CLAIBORNE and KATHERINE DANDRIDGE 60. i. WILLIAM19 CLAIBORNE b 1690, King William Co VA d. 19.03.1772, Liberty Hall,King William Co VA 48. CAPT. WILLIAM18 HARRIS (MARY17 CLAIBORNE, ELIZABETH16 BUTLER, JOHN15, CRESSET14 ST JOHN, MARGARET13 WALDEGRAVE, WILLIAM12, b 1672 Wales, dett. 1725 Henrico Co Virginia Usa
m TEMPERANCE OVERTON, dau of COL. OVERTON and MARY WATERS. Hun b 02.03.1678 Hanover Co VA d 10.02.1709 Hanover Co VA ch of CAPT. HARRIS and TEMPERANCE OVERTON 61. i. WILLIAM19 HARRIS b 1697, St Pauls Parish Hanover Co VA d. 06.12.1792, Hanover Co VA 62. ii. MAJ. ROBERT OVERTON HARRIS b 1696, Hanover Co VA d. 08.08.1765, Albemarle Co VA 49. MATTHEW18 HARRIS (MARY17 CLAIBORNE, ELIZABETH16 BUTLER, JOHN15, CRESSET14 ST JOHN, MARGARET13 WALDEGRAVE, WILLIAM12, b 1661 Yorkhampton Parish York Co VA dfør 1727 York Co Virginia Usa
m ELIZABETH LEE, dau of WILLIAM LEE and ANNE HARRISON. Hun b 1690 Yorkhampton Parish York Co VA d 1748 Goochland Co VA ch of MATTHEW HARRIS and ELIZABETH LEE 63. i. LEE19 HARRIS, CAPTAIN b 1725, York Co VA d. 1792, Amherst Co VA 64. ii. WILLIAM LEE HARRIS b 1713, York Co VA d. 1788, Scottsville Albemarle Co VA 50. THOMAS18 RICE (MARY17 CLAIBORNE, ELIZABETH16 BUTLER, JOHN15, CRESSET14 ST JOHN, MARGARET13 WALDEGRAVE, WILLIAM12, b 1656 New Kent Co VA d 1711 At sea
m ANN MARCY. Hun b 1664 New Kent Co VA d 1722 New Kent Co VA ch of THOMAS RICE and ANN MARCY 65. i. SUSANNAH19 RICE b 1692, New Kent Co VA d. Caswell Co NC 66. ii. DAVID RICE b 1684, Hanover Co VA 51. JOHN18 WHITEHEAD (CATHERINE17 WESTON, FRANCES16 WALDEGRAVE, NICHOLAS15, EDWARD14, JOHN13, EDWARD12, b 1582 Bengeworth, Worchestershire, England, d06.01.1650 Jamaica, Queens, New York Colony, British Colonial America
m ELIZABETH ALCOCKE 25.02.1615 Thanet, Kent, England, dau of JOHN ALCOCKE and ELIZABETH ALRICH. Hun b 1586 Bengeworth, Worcestershire England, dett. 1647 Lemington Priors,Broadstairs, Kent England. Notater for JOHN WHITEHEAD: was buried in England ch of JOHN WHITEHEAD and ELIZABETH ALCOCKE 67. i. DANIEL19 WHITEHEAD b 15.09.1620, Coventry, Warwickshire, England; d. 16.11.1668, Newtown, Long Island, New York Usa. 68. ii. ISAAC WHITEHEAD b 1624, Maidstone Kent England; d. 31.01.1690, Elizabeth Township, Essex, New Jersey, British Colonial America. 69. iii. JOHN WHITEHEAD b 1636, Bulkington, Warwickshire, England; d. 08.06.1695, Branford New Haven Co CT 52. ANN18 BROWN (EDWARD17, b 1603 Inkberrow Worcester Massachusetts England, d04.12.1669 Lynn Essex Massachusetts Usa.
m ADAM HAWKES, son of JOHN HAWKE. Han b 1599 Inkberrow Worcester Massachusetts England, d 13.03.1672 Saugus Essex Massachusetts Usa. ch of ANN BROWN and ADAM HAWKES 70. i. SUSANNA19 HAWKES b 13.08.1633, Charleston Boston Massachusetts Usa; d. 05.08.1696, Ispwich Massachusetts Usa. 53. HANNAH18 SNOW (REBECCA17 BROWN, PETER BROWN16 (BROWNE), THOMAS15 BROWNE, CHRISTOPHER14, b 1655 Eastham Barnstable Co Massachusetts Usa, d22.12.1690 Plymouth Plymouth Co Massachusetts Usa.
m GILES RICKARD, son of GILES RICKARD and HANNAH DUNHAM. Han b 1654 Plymouth Plymouth Co Massachusetts Usa, d29.01.1710 Plymouth Plymouth Co Massachusetts Usa. ch of HANNAH SNOW and GILES RICKARD 71. i. SARAH19 RICKARD b 1671, Plymouth Plymouth Co CT d. 1701, Plymouth Plymouth Co CT
to be integrated above
19 54. JOHN19 CORNELL (MARY18 RUSSELL, JOHN17, EDWARD16, FRANCIS15, MARGARET14 ST JOHN, MARGARET13 WALDEGRAVE, WILLIAM12, b 1670 Hempstead Nassau CoNY dDanbury Fairfield Co CT
m MARY STARR. Hun b 1671 Hempstead Nassau CoNY dDanbury Fairfield Co CT ch of JOHN CORNELL and MARY STARR i. DEBORAH20 CORNELL b 1692, Danbury Fairfield Co CT
m THOMAS BARNUM b 1696, Danbury Fairfield Co CT d. 1762. 55. MARY19 CORNELL (MARY18 RUSSELL, JOHN17, EDWARD16, FRANCIS15, MARGARET14 ST JOHN, MARGARET13 WALDEGRAVE, WILLIAM12, b 1679 Scarsdale Westchester CoNY d21.09.1730 Sands Point Nassau Co New York Usa.
m CAPTAIN JAMES SANDS, son of CAPTAIN SANDYS and SARAH WALKER. Han b 1662 Block Island Washington Co Rhode Island Usa, d 1732 Long Island Queens Co New York Usa. ch of MARY CORNELL and CAPTAIN SANDS 72. i. MARY20 SANDS b 1698, Cow Neck Nassau Co New York Usa; d. 1765, Long Island Queens Co New York Usa. 56. THOMAS19 HYATT (ELIZABETH18 RUSSELL, JOHN17, EDWARD16, FRANCIS15, MARGARET14 ST JOHN, MARGARET13 WALDEGRAVE, WILLIAM12, b 28.03.1650 Stratford Fairfield Co CT d28.03.1698 Norwalk Fairfield Co CT
m MARY ST JOHN. Hun b 1656 Norwalk Fairfield Co CT d 17.08.1745 Norwalk Fairfield Co CT ch of THOMAS HYATT and MARY ST JOHN i. SARAH20 HYATT b 06.12.1686, Norwalk Fairfield Co CT d. 09.02.1767, Richfield Fairfield Co CT
m JAMES BENEDICT b 05.06.1685, Norwalk Fairfield Co CT d. 25.11.1762, Richfield Fairfield Co CT 57. SAMUEL19 RUSSELL (JOHN18, JOHN17, EDWARD16, FRANCIS15, MARGARET14 ST JOHN, MARGARET13 WALDEGRAVE, WILLIAM12, b 11.04.1660 New Haven New Haven Co CT d24.06.1731 Branford New Haven Co CT
m ABIGAIL WHITING, dau of JOHN WHITING and SYBIL COLLINS. Hun b 1666 New Haven New Haven Co CT d07.05.1733 Branford New Haven Co CT ch of SAMUEL RUSSELL and ABIGAIL WHITING 73. i. ABIGAIL20 RUSSELL b 16.08.1690, Branford New Haven Conneticut Usa; d. 11.01.1764, Ridgefield, Fairfield County, Connecticut, Usa. ii. JOHN RUSSELL b 24.01.1687, Branford New Haven Co CT d. 07.07.1757, Branford New Haven Co CT
m SARAH TROWBRIDGE b 26.11.1686, New Haven New Haven Co Conneticut Usa. 58. COL. NATHANIEL19 CLAIBORNE (CAPT THOMAS18, LTC THOMAS17, ELIZABETH16 BUTLER, JOHN15, CRESSET14 ST JOHN, MARGARET13 WALDEGRAVE, WILLIAM12, b 1716 Sweet Hall King William Co VA d 1756 King William Co Virginia Usa
m JANE COLE, dau of WILLIAM COLE and MARY ROSCOW. Hun b 1719 Warwick Chesterfield VA d 1754. ch of COL. CLAIBORNE and JANE COLE i. MARY COLE20 CLAIBORNE b 07.03.1739, King William Co VA d. 10.11.1771, King William Co Virginia Usa
m ROGER GREGORY b 01.05.1729, King and Queen Co VA d. 02.10.1803, King William Co VA 59. LEONARD19 CLAIBORNE (CAPT THOMAS18, LTC THOMAS17, ELIZABETH16 BUTLER, JOHN15, CRESSET14 ST JOHN, MARGARET13 WALDEGRAVE, WILLIAM12, b 1703 King William Co VA d08.05.1785 Hampton York Co Virginia Usa
m ELIZABETH BARBER, dau of WILLIAM BARBER and ANNE ARCHER. Hun b 1703 Hampton York Co VA ch of LEONARD CLAIBORNE and ELIZABETH BARBER i. LEONARD20 CLAIBORNE b 1723, King William Co VA d. 09.07.1771, Augusta Richmond Co Georgia Usa
m ELIZABETH POYTHRESS b mel. 11.02.1729 - 1730, Prince George Co VA 60. WILLIAM19 CLAIBORNE (WILLIAM18, WILLIAM17, ELIZABETH16 BUTLER, JOHN15, CRESSET14 ST JOHN, MARGARET13 WALDEGRAVE, WILLIAM12, b 1690 King William Co VA d 19.03.1772 Liberty Hall,King William Co Virginia Usa
m ELIZABETH WHITEHEAD 1708 King William Co VA dau of ROBERT WHITEHEAD and ELIZABETH NEWNUM. Hun b 11.09.1698 Alconbury-Weston Huntingdon England. Notater for ELIZABETH WHITEHEAD: Robert Whitehead mentioned in the record of Elizabeth Whitehead Name: Robert Whitehead Gender: Male Wife: Elizabeth Daughter: Elizabeth Whitehead Other information in the record of Elizabeth Whitehead from England Births and Christenings Name: Elizabeth Whitehead Gender: Female Christening Date: 11 Sep 1698 Christening Place: Alconbury-Cum-Weston, Alconbury-Weston, Huntingdon, England Father's Name: Robert Whitehead Mother's Name: Elizabeth Indexing Project (Batch) Number: C16851-1 , System Origin: England-ODM , GS Film number: 1040595 Robert Whitehead mentioned in the record of Elizabeth Name: Robert Whitehead Gender: Male Wife: Elizabeth Daughter: Elizabeth Other information in the record of Elizabeth from England Births and Christenings Name: Elizabeth Gender: Female Christening Date: 1698 Christening Place: ALCONBURY CUM WESTON, HUNTINGDON, ENGLAND Father's Name: Robert Whitehead Mother's Name: Elizabeth Indexing Project (Batch) Number: C16851-1 , System Origin: England-VR , GS Film number: 1040595 , Reference ID: - 2:1M0TGQQ ch of WILLIAM CLAIBORNE and ELIZABETH WHITEHEAD 74. i. LUCIE20 CLAIBORNE b 1725, New Kent Co VA d. 06.03.1810, New Kent Co VA ii. PHILLIP WHITEHEAD CLAIBORNE b 1725, King William Co VA d. 05.12.1771, King William Co Virginia Usa
m ELIZABETH DANDRIDGE b 1722, Elsing Green King William Co VA d. 1783, King William Co VA iii. PHILADELPHIA CLAIBORNE b 1725, King George, King George, Virginia, Usa; d. 27.01.1765, King William, King William, Virginia, Usa
m THOMAS TUNSTALL FOX b 1711, King William Co, Virginia, Usa; d. 1792. 61. WILLIAM19 HARRIS (CAPT. WILLIAM18, MARY17 CLAIBORNE, ELIZABETH16 BUTLER, JOHN15, CRESSET14 ST JOHN, MARGARET13 WALDEGRAVE, WILLIAM12, b 1697 St Pauls Parish Hanover Co VA d06.12.1792 Hanover Co Virginia Usa
m ELIZABETH BURNETT. Hun b 1710 South Farnham Essex Co VA ch of WILLIAM HARRIS and ELIZABETH BURNETT 75. i. FREDERICK20 HARRIS b 1738, VA d. 08.06.1801, Louisa Co VA 62. MAJ. ROBERT OVERTON19 HARRIS (CAPT. WILLIAM18, MARY17 CLAIBORNE, ELIZABETH16 BUTLER, JOHN15, CRESSET14 ST JOHN, MARGARET13 WALDEGRAVE, WILLIAM12, b 1696 Hanover Co VA d08.08.1765 Albemarle Co Virginia Usa
m MOURNING GLEASON GLENN, dau of JAMES GLENN and MOURNING WINN. Hun b 1702 New Kent Co Virgina Usa, dett. 1776 Browns Cove Albemarle Co VA ch of MAJ. HARRIS and MOURNING GLENN i. FRANCES20 HARRIS b mel. 27.01.1745 - 1746, Louisa Co VA d. 1814, Albemarle Co Virginia Usa
m JOEL CRAWFORD b 16.10.1736, Hanover County, Province of VA d. 13.10.1788, Oglethorpe Co Georgia Usa. ii. CHRISTOPHER HARRIS b 17.02.1724, Louisa Co VA d. 14.03.1794, Madison Co Kentucky Usa
m MARY ELIZABETH DABNEY b 25.12.1726, Hanover Co VA d. 1794, Albemarle Co VA 63. LEE19 HARRIS, CAPTAIN (MATTHEW18, MARY17 CLAIBORNE, ELIZABETH16 BUTLER, JOHN15, CRESSET14 ST JOHN, MARGARET13 WALDEGRAVE, WILLIAM12, b 1725 York Co VA d 1792 Amherst Co Virginia Usa
m WINNIFRED WINNIE PHILLIPS, dau of LEONARD PHILLIPS and JOANNA DAVIS. Hun b 1726 Amherst Co VA d 1813 Amherst Co VA ch of LEE HARRIS and WINNIFRED PHILLIPS 76. i. MARY POLLY20 HARRIS b 1775, Amherst Co VA d. 11.05.1849, Shelby Co Tennessee Usa. 64. WILLIAM LEE19 HARRIS (MATTHEW18, MARY17 CLAIBORNE, ELIZABETH16 BUTLER, JOHN15, CRESSET14 ST JOHN, MARGARET13 WALDEGRAVE, WILLIAM12, b 1713 York Co VA d 1788 Scottsville Albemarle Co Virginia Usa
m MARY NETHERLAND, dau of JOHN NETHERLAND and SARAH HANKINS. Hun b 1719 Goochland VA d20.05.1799 Scottsville Albemarle Co VA Notater for WILLIAM LEE HARRIS: A history of Albemarle County states:[1] William Harris was long one of the early and leading citizens of Albemarle. His first patent was located on Beaverdam of Hardware in 1739. He also made entries on Totier and Green Creeks, until during the next forty years he possessed more than two thousand acres. He was evidently a man of fine judgement and great energy. He established on Green Creek one of the first mills erected in that part of the county, and it has ever since been an important centre to the surrounding country. In 1746, the year after the county was organized, he was appointed one of its magistrates. he died in 1788. His wife was Mary Netherland, and his children, Matthew, Sarah, the wife of a Mosby, Elizabeth, the wife of John Digges, Catharine, the wife of a Steger, John, William, Mary, the wife of a Woodfolk, Benjamin, Ann, the wife of Hawes Coleman, and Judith, the wife of George Coleman. From this stem has sprung a greater number of families perhaps than from any other ever domiciled in the county. wikitree.com Notater for MARY NETHERLAND: Mary Netherland married William Lee Harris in York County, Virginia, in 1736 and they moved first to Goochland county and then further into the Piedmont area, settling on Green Creek, where William established one of the first grist mills of the area. They farmed a plantation of over 2,000 acres and had 11 children. Mary Netherlands Harris survived her husband by 11 years, dying in May 1799. Her son Benjamin lived with her and cared for her in her later years. They were among the foremost families of Albemarle County, Virginia, and left a large progeny there. wikitree.com ch of WILLIAM HARRIS and MARY NETHERLAND i. MATTHEW20 HARRIS b 09.09.1737, Goochland Co VA d. 19.05.1805, Amherst Co Virginia Usa
m ELIZABETH TATE b 18.08.1746, Amherst Co VA d. 30.05.1834, Amherst Co VA Notater for MATTHEW HARRIS: Military VA / Patriotic Service / Revolutionary War AMHERST CO 65. SUSANNAH19 RICE (THOMAS18, MARY17 CLAIBORNE, ELIZABETH16 BUTLER, JOHN15, CRESSET14 ST JOHN, MARGARET13 WALDEGRAVE, WILLIAM12, b 1692 New Kent Co VA dCaswell Co NC
m THOMAS HART. Han b 1679 England, d 1755 Hanover Co VA ch of SUSANNAH RICE and THOMAS HART 77. i. NATHANIEL GREY T20 HART b 08.05.1734, Hanover Co VA d. 10.07.1782, Boonesborough Madison Co Kentucky Usa. 66. DAVID19 RICE (THOMAS18, MARY17 CLAIBORNE, ELIZABETH16 BUTLER, JOHN15, CRESSET14 ST JOHN, MARGARET13 WALDEGRAVE, WILLIAM12, b 1684 Hanover Co VA ch of DAVID RICE 78. i. MARY20 RICE b 1732, Hanover Co VA 67. DANIEL19 WHITEHEAD (JOHN18, b 15.09.1620 Coventry, Warwickshire, England, d 16.11.1668 Newtown, Long Island, New York Usa
m (1) SARAH ARMITAGE 1644NYdau of THOMAS ARMITAGE and SUSAN MICHELL. Hun b 1628 Thornton Yorkshire, England, d 1660
m (2) JANE SKIDMORE 1658. Hun b 1625 England, d 1695 Jamaica Queens Co New York Usa. ch of DANIEL WHITEHEAD and SARAH ARMITAGE i. JONATHAN20 WHITEHEAD b mel. 1644 - 1658. 79. ii. MAJOR DANIEL WHITEHEAD b 1646, Jamaica Queens Co New York Usa; d. 30.10.1704, Jamaica, Long Island, Queens County, New York Usa. 80. iii. DAVID WHITEHEAD b 1648. ch of DANIEL WHITEHEAD and JANE SKIDMORE iv. ADAM20 WHITEHEAD b 1659; d. 1681, Huntington, Long Island, New York Usa. v. THOMAS WHITEHEAD b mel. 1660 - 1681. vi. JEMIMA WHITEHEAD b mel. 1663 - 1681. vii. ELIZABETH WHITEHEAD b mel. 1663 - 1681. 68. ISAAC19 WHITEHEAD (JOHN18, b 1624 Maidstone Kent England, d31.01.1690 Elizabeth Township, Essex, New Jersey, British Colonial America
m (1) MARY YATES 1641. Hun b 1626 Barnstable Co Massachusetts Usa, d02.12.1702 Elizabethtown Essex Co New Jersey Usa
m (2) MARY HYDE BROWNE 06.12.1644 Rusper, Sussex, England, dau of WILLIAM BROWNE and JANE MILLS. Hun b 06.10.1622 Rusper, Sussex, England, d02.12.1702 Rusper, Sussex, England. Notater for MARY HYDE BROWNE: She lived in Piscataway, Middlesex, New Jersey, United States in 1680 ch of ISAAC WHITEHEAD and MARY YATES i. SARAH20 WHITEHEAD b 1642; d. 1682. ii. NATHANIEL WHITEHEAD b 1646; d. 1695. iii. SUSANNAH WHITEHEAD b 05.08.1650, New Haven, Connecticut Colony, British Colonial America; d. 12.02.1733, Springfield Monthly Meeting, Burlington, New Jersey, British Colonial America
m NATHANIEL BONNELL, 03.01.1665, New Haven, Connecticut Colony, British Colonial America b 1644, Newhaven Towne, New Haven, Connecticut Colony, British Colonial America; d. 12.05.1696, Elizabethtown, Essex, New Jersey, Usa. 81. iv. ISAAC WHITEHEAD b 20.11.1652, New Haven, Connecticut Colony, British Colonial America; d. 01.07.1724, Elizabeth Township, Essex, New Jersey, Usa. 69. JOHN19 WHITEHEAD (JOHN18, b 1636 Bulkington, Warwickshire, England, d08.06.1695 Branford New Haven Co CT
m MARTHA BRADFIELD 09.03.1661 Branford, New Haven, Connecticut, Usa, dau of LESLIE BRADFIELD and MARY BENTON. Hun b 1640 Branford New Haven Connecticut Colony, British Colonial America, d 1709 Branford New Haven Co CT ch of JOHN WHITEHEAD and MARTHA BRADFIELD 82. i. HANNAH20 WHITEHEAD b 10.03.1664, Branford New Haven Co CT d. 08.05.1693, Branford New Haven Co CT ii. JOHN WHITEHEAD b 20.02.1665, Branford, New Haven, Connecticut Colony, British Colonial America; d. 07.03.1707, Branford, New Haven, Connecticut Colony, British Colonial America
m MEHITABLE BISHOP, 09.08.1704, Branford, New Haven, Connecticut Colony, British Colonial America b 12.09.1668, Guilford, New Haven, Connecticut Colony, British Colonial America. iii. MARY WHITEHEAD b 10.01.1667, Branford, New Haven, Connecticut Colony, British Colonial America; d. 22.11.1743, East Haven, New Haven, Connecticut, Usa
m WILLIAM LUDINGTON, 06.1690, Branford, New Haven, Connecticut Colony, British Colonial America b 1655, Malden, Middlesex, Massachusetts Bay Colony, British Colonial America. iv. DAMARIS WHITEHEAD b 20.01.1669, Branford, New Haven, Connecticut Colony British Colonial America; d. 1714
m MICAH PALMER, 29.09.1748, Branford, New Haven, Connecticut Colony, British Colonial America b 19.08.1671, Branford, New Haven, Connecticut Colony, British Colonial America; d. 29.09.1748, Branford, New Haven, Connecticut Colony, British Colonial America. v. SAMUEL WHITEHEAD b 24.11.1672, Branford, New Haven, Connecticut Colony, British Colonial America; d. 1673. vi. ELIPHALET WHITEHEAD b 27.09.1674, Branford, New Haven, Connecticut Colony, British Colonial America; d. 10.06.1695, Connecticut Colony, British Colonial America. vii. ELIZABETH WHITEHEAD b 27.10.1677, Branford, New Haven, Connecticut Colony, British Colonial America; d. 04.07.1748, Branford, New Haven, Connecticut Colony, British Colonial America
m BENONI HOWD, 01.10.1705, Branford, New Haven, Connecticut Colony, British Colonial America b 10.09.1676, Branford, New Haven, Connecticut Colony, British Colonial America; d. 22.09.1749, Branford, New Haven, Connecticut Colony, British Colonial America. 70. SUSANNA19 HAWKES (ANN18 BROWN, EDWARD17, b 13.08.1633 Charleston Boston Massachusetts Usa, d05.08.1696 Ispwich Massachusetts Usa.
m WILLIAM COGSWELL. Han b 06.03.1619 Westbury Leigh Wiltshire England, d 15.12.1700 Essex Co Ispwich Massachusetts Usa. ch of SUSANNA HAWKES and WILLIAM COGSWELL 83. i. HESTER20 COGSWELL b 24.08.1655, Of Ipswich Chebacco Essex Massachusetts Usa; d. 17.01.1704, Of Ipswich Chebacco Essex Massachusetts Usa. ii. WILLIAM COGSWELL b 04.12.1659, Ipswich Essex Co Massachusetts Usa; d. 14.04.1708, Ipswich Essex Co Massachusetts Usa
m MARTHA EMERSON b 1662, Gloucester Essex Co Massachusetts Usa. iii. MARY COGSWELL b 1655, Ipswich Essex Co Massachusetts Usa; d. 09.11.1733
m JAMES BURNHAM b 1651, Ipswich Essex Co Massachusetts Usa; d. 1729, Ipswich Essex Co Massachusetts Usa. iv. SUSANNAH COGSWELL b 05.01.1657, Ipswich Essex Co Massachusetts Usa; d. 1701, Brookline Norfolk Co Massachusetts Usa
m BENJAMIN WHITE b 1655, Ipswich Essex Co Massachusetts Usa; d. 09.01.1723, Brookline Norfolk Co Massachusetts Usa. v. JONATHAN COGSWELL b 1661, Ipswich Essex Co Massachusetts Usa
m ELIZABETH WAINWRIGHT b 1667, Chebaco Essex Co Massachusetts Usa. 71. SARAH19 RICKARD (HANNAH18 SNOW, REBECCA17 BROWN, PETER BROWN16 (BROWNE), THOMAS15 BROWNE, CHRISTOPHER14, b 1671 Plymouth Plymouth Co CT d 1701 Plymouth Plymouth Co CT
m JOHN DOTY, son of EDWARD DOTY and FAITH CLARKE. Han b 1640 Plymouth Co CT d08.05.1701 Plymouth Co CT ch of SARAH RICKARD and JOHN DOTY 84. i. PATIENCE20 DOTY b 03.07.1697, Plymouth Co CT d. 18.02.1784, Marshfield Plymouth Co CT
to be integrated above
20 72. MARY20 SANDS (MARY19 CORNELL, MARY18 RUSSELL, JOHN17, EDWARD16, FRANCIS15, MARGARET14 ST JOHN, MARGARET13 WALDEGRAVE, WILLIAM12, b 1698 Cow Neck Nassau CoNY d 1765 Long Island Queens Co New York Usa.
m (1) JOHN ASPINWALL, son of JOSEPH ASPINWALL and HANNAH DEANE. Han b 1705 New York CoNY d05.07.1774 New York City New York Co New York Usa.
m (2) JOSEPH SUTTON, son of JOSEPH SUTTON and MARY ADAMS. Han b mel. 1690 - 1694 Hingham Plymouth Co Massachusetts Usa, dmel. 1769 - 1770 Suffolk Co New York Usa. ch of MARY SANDS and JOHN ASPINWALL i. HANNAH21 ASPINWALL b 1735, New York City New York Co New York Usa; d. 1777
m CAPTAIN LAWRENCE KORTRIGHT b 27.11.1728, New York City New York Co New York Usa; d. 09.1794, New York City New York Co New York Usa. 85. ii. JOHN ASPINWALL b 10.02.1774, New York City New York Co New York Usa; d. 06.10.1847, New York City New York Co New York Usa. ch of MARY SANDS and JOSEPH SUTTON iii. JAMES21 SUTTON b mel. 1720 - 1726, Fairfield Co CT d. 1775, Westchester Co New York Usa
m ELIZABETH BROWN b 17.11.1724, Rye Westchester Co New York Usa; d. 1813, Westchester Co New York Usa. 73. ABIGAIL20 RUSSELL (SAMUEL19, JOHN18, JOHN17, EDWARD16, FRANCIS15, MARGARET14 ST JOHN, MARGARET13 WALDEGRAVE, WILLIAM12, b 16.08.1690 Branford New Haven Conneticut Usa, d 11.01.1764 Ridgefield, Fairfield County, Connecticut, Usa.
m (1) REV JOSEPH MOSS, son of JOSEPH MOSS and MARY ALLING. Han b 07.04.1679 New Haven New Haven Conneticut Usa, d23.01.1732 Derby New Haven Conneticut Usa.
m (2) REV SAMUEL COOKE. Han b 23.11.1687 Guilford, New Haven County, Connecticut, Usa, d02.12.1747 Stratfield, Fairfield County, Connecticut, Usa. Notater for ABIGAIL RUSSELL: The daughter of Rev. Samuel Russell of Branford and the widow of Rev. Joseph Moss of Derby, she married Rev. Samuel Cooke on August 16, 1733. She was his 4th wife. Notater for REV JOSEPH MOSS: Rev. Joseph Moss was one of five persons graduating from Yale in 1702 to receive a Masters of Arts degree. He had formerly received a Bachelors of Arts from Harvard in 1699, and was Rector of the Hopkins Grammar School in New Haven thereafter. From 1706 until 1731, he was the settled pastor for the church in Derby. He is thought to have published the first almanac in 1720 in the state of Connecticut. Notater for REV SAMUEL COOKE: Late faithfull minister of Stratfield aged 63 years [In 1926, Rev Samuel Cooke was Transfered to the Tower Crypt to honor the early Ministry of the United Congregational Church of Bridgeport located in Mountain Grove Cemetery and Mausoleum, Bridgeport, Fairfield County, Connecticut, ch of ABIGAIL RUSSELL and REV MOSS i. DORCAS21 MOSS b mel. 1725 - 1726, Conneticut Usa; d. 29.09.1811
m JONATHAN INGERSOLL b 10.08.1714, New Haven Conneticut Usa; d. 02.10.1788, Conneticut Usa. 86. ii. ABIGAIL MOSS b 23.09.1717, Derby, New Haven County, Connecticut, UDanbury Fairfield Co CT d. 01.1751, Derby New Haven Co CT 87. iii. MARY MOSS b 28.08.1721, Derby New Haven Co CT d. 05.08.1746, CT 74. LUCIE20 CLAIBORNE (WILLIAM19, WILLIAM18, WILLIAM17, ELIZABETH16 BUTLER, JOHN15, CRESSET14 ST JOHN, MARGARET13 WALDEGRAVE, WILLIAM12, b 1725 New Kent Co VA d06.03.1810 New Kent Co VA
m SAMUEL DUVAL, son of CHEVALIER DUVAL and PHILADELPHIA DUBOIS. Han b 22.01.1714 Gloucester Gloucester Co VA d01.03.1784 Henrico Co VA ch of LUCIE CLAIBORNE and SAMUEL DUVAL i. MAJ WILLIAM21 DUVAL b 04.09.1748, Mt Comfort King William Co VA d. 13.01.1842, Richmond Buckingham Co Virginia Usa
m ANN NANCY POPE b 1753, Henrico Co VA d. 03.10.1792, VA 88. ii. SAMUEL DUVAL b 12.01.1752, Henrico Co VA d. 12.04.1825, Todd Co Kentucky Usa. iii. MAJ CLAIBORNE DUVAL b 16.07.1760, Henrico Co VA d. 07.03.1824, Logan Co Kentucky Usa
m ELIZABETH POPE b 15.05.1760, Richmond VA d. 15.10.1815, Logan Co Kentucky Usa. Notater for ELIZABETH POPE: Richmond is the capital of the Commonwealth of Virginia, in the United States. It is an independent city and not part of any county. Richmond is the center of the Richmond Metropolitan Statistical Area (MSA) and the Greater Richmond area. The population within the city limits was 208,834 in 2012, with an estimated population of 1,282,509 for the Richmond Metropolitan Area — making it the third largest in Virginia. Geographically, Richmond is located at the fall line of the James River, 44 miles west of Williamsburg, 66 miles east of Charlottesville, and 98 miles south of Washington, D.C. Surrounded by Henrico and Chesterfield counties, the city is located at the intersections of Interstate 95 and Interstate 64, and encircled by Interstate 295 and Virginia State Route 288. The site of Richmond had been an important village of the Powhatan Confederacy, and was briefly settled by English colonists from Jamestown in 1609, and in 1610–1611. The present city of Richmond was founded in 1737. It became the capital of the Colony and Dominion of Virginia in 1780. During the Revolutionary War period, several notable events occurred in the city, including Patrick Henry's "Give me liberty or give me death" speech in 1775 at St. John's Church, and the passage of the Virginia Statute for Religious Freedom written by Thomas Jefferson. During the American Civil War, Richmond served as the capital of the Confederate States of America. The city entered the 20th century with one of the world's first successful electric streetcar systems, as well as a national hub of African-American commerce and culture, the Jackson Ward neighborhood. Richmond's economy is primarily driven by law, finance, and government, with federal, state, and local governmental agencies, as well as notable legal and banking firms, located in the downtown area. The city is home to both the United States Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit, one of 13 United States courts of appeals, and the Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond, one of 12 Federal Reserve Banks. Dominion Resources and MeadWestvaco, Fortune 500 companies, are headquartered in the city, with others in the metropolitan area. Tourism is also important, as many historic sites are in or nearby the city. iv. MARY DUVAL b 1762, VA d. 06.03.1849, Virginia Usa
m NATHANIEL POPE b 1761, Westmoreland Co VA d. 1849, Taylorsvill Hanover Co VA Notater for NATHANIEL POPE: Killed in a duel near Taylorsville v. LUCIE DUVAL b 1767, Richmond Co Virginia Usa
m JOHN POPE b 1767, VA 75. FREDERICK20 HARRIS (WILLIAM19, CAPT. WILLIAM18, MARY17 CLAIBORNE, ELIZABETH16 BUTLER, JOHN15, CRESSET14 ST JOHN, MARGARET13 WALDEGRAVE, WILLIAM12, b 1738 VA d08.06.1801 Louisa Co Virginia Usa
m ELIZABETH TERRELL, dau of RICHMOND TERRELL and ANNE OVERTON. Hun b 1743 VA ch of FREDERICK HARRIS and ELIZABETH TERRELL i. GEORGE S21 HARRIS b 26.11.1778, Louisa Co VA d. 1845, Virginia Usa
m MARY COOKE b 1781, Louisa Co VA d. 12.08.1856, Fredricksville Albemarle Co VA 89. ii. FREDERICK OVERTON HARRIS b 1789, Louisa Co VA d. 09.04.1842, Louisa Co VA 76. MARY POLLY20 HARRIS (LEE19, MATTHEW18, MARY17 CLAIBORNE, ELIZABETH16 BUTLER, JOHN15, CRESSET14 ST JOHN, MARGARET13 WALDEGRAVE, WILLIAM12, b 1775 Amherst Co VA d 11.05.1849 Shelby Co Tennessee Usa.
m RICHARD BURKS, son of SAMUEL BURKS and ELIZABETH. Han b 1775 Amherst Co VA dett. 30.11.1836 Madison Co Alabama Usa. ch of MARY HARRIS and RICHARD BURKS i. EMELINE21 BURKS b 1795, Amherst Co VA ii. RICHARD HENRY BURKS b 1795, Amherst Co Virginia Usa
m ELIZABETH KENNEDY SHELTON b 1798, VA 90. iii. SARAH ANN BURKS b ett. 1795, Amherst Co VA 91. iv. LEE HARRIS BURKS b 1796, Amherst Co VA d. 1866, Lauderdale Co Tennessee Usa. v. LUCINDA BURKS b 1796, Amherst Co Virginia Usa
m GREEN WOOD b 1801, Amherst Co VA vi. MATHEW H BURKS b 07.01.1802, Amherst Co VA d. 21.11.1882, Texas Usa
m MARTHA WALLACE VINING b 11.09.1813, Tennessee Usa; d. 29.06.1881, Texas Usa. Notater for MARTHA WALLACE VINING: Martha was the daughter of John Vining born 1786 in NC. and Polly Hubert born 1782. Martha brought her father's bible with her and the miniture portrait of him to Texas. They were handed down through the Burks family and eventually the Vining Bible was donated to a Texas institution. The minitature portrait is still in Texas in a related family. vii. JOHN F BURKS b 1804, Amherst Co VA d. Arkansas Usa
m NANCY C HARRIS b 1804, VA d. ett. 1850. 92. viii. WILLIAM PINKNEY BURKS b 1810, Amherst Co VA d. 09.1866, Drew Co Arkansas Usa. 93. ix. WINNEY ELEANOR JANE BURKS b 1810, Amherst Co VA 94. x. MARY JANE BURKS b 1817, Madison Co Alabama Usa. 77. NATHANIEL GREY T20 HART (SUSANNAH19 RICE, THOMAS18, MARY17 CLAIBORNE, ELIZABETH16 BUTLER, JOHN15, CRESSET14 ST JOHN, MARGARET13 WALDEGRAVE, WILLIAM12, b 08.05.1734 Hanover Co VA d 10.07.1782 Boonesborough Madison Co Kentucky Usa
m SARAH SIMPSON. Hun b 1743 Virginia Usa ?, d 1785. ch of NATHANIEL HART and SARAH SIMPSON i. SUSANNAH21 HART b 18.02.1764, Kentucky Usa; d. 19.06.1833, Lincoln Co Kentucky Usa
m GOV. ISAAC SHELBY b 11.12.1750, Hagerstown Frederick Co MD; d. 18.07.1826, Lincoln Co Kentucky Usa. Notater for GOV. ISAAC SHELBY: History 10-7-1780 Battle of Kings Mountain General, USA Occup 1792-1796 KY Governor Occup 1812-1816 KY Governor 78. MARY20 RICE (DAVID19, THOMAS18, MARY17 CLAIBORNE, ELIZABETH16 BUTLER, JOHN15, CRESSET14 ST JOHN, MARGARET13 WALDEGRAVE, WILLIAM12, b 1732 Hanover Co VA
m JAMES GARLAND. Han b 1730 Hanover Co VA d 1812 Albemarle Co VA ch of MARY RICE and JAMES GARLAND i. JAMES21 GARLAND b 1753, Albemarle Co VA d. 1793, Albemarle Co Virginia Usa
m ANN WINGFIELD b 1757, Albemarle Co VA 79. MAJOR DANIEL20 WHITEHEAD (DANIEL19, JOHN18, b 1646 Jamaica Queens CoNY d30.10.1704 Jamaica, Long Island, Queens County, New York Usa
m ABIGAIL S STEVENSON 02.10.1672, dau of THOMAS STEVENSON and ANNE GRAVES. Hun b 1638 Jamaica, Long Island, Queens County,NY d 15.10.1717 Jamaica, Long Island, Queens County, New York Usa. Notater for MAJOR DANIEL WHITEHEAD: Links FamilySearch County Page FamilySearch State Page New York TTTP Other 1704 Representative in Colonial Assembly, MagistrateMajor Other 1704 Representative in Colonial Assembly, Magistrate Notater for ABIGAIL S STEVENSON: Also Known As: "Abigail (Stevenson) (Denton) Whitehead" ch of MAJOR WHITEHEAD and ABIGAIL STEVENSON 95. i. MARY21 WHITEHEAD, d. ett. 1707. 96. ii. THOMAS WHITEHEAD, d. 1732. 97. iii. MERCY WHITEHEAD b 1663, Long Island Suffolk Co New York Usa. 98. iv. JONATHAN WHITEHEAD b 1672, Jamaica Queens Co New York Usa; d. mel. 13.06.1736 - 26.07.1739, Jamaica, Long Island, New York Usa. 99. v. DEBORAH WHITEHEAD b 1673, Jamaica Queens Co New York Usa; d. 14.06.1712, Flushing, Queens County, New York Usa. 100. vi. ELIZABETH WHITEHEAD b 1673, New York City New York Co Usa; d. 10.11.1751, Somerset o New Jersey Usa. vii. AMY WHITEHEAD b 17.08.1679, Flushing, Queens County, New York Usa; d. mel. 07.04 - 02.08.1742, Bethlehem Twp, Hunterdon County, New Jersey Usa
m JACOB DOUGHTY b 14.02.1672, Flushing, Queens, New York Usa; d. mel. 07 - 01.08.1737, Bethlehem Twp, Hunterdon County, New Jersey Usa. 101. viii. MERCY WHITEHEAD b 1672, Long Island Suffolk Co New York Usa. 80. DAVID20 WHITEHEAD (DANIEL19, JOHN18, b 1648
m SARAH UPDYKE 1668, dau of DR. UPDYKE and KATHERINE SMITH. Hun b 25.10.1650 Lloyds Neck Long Island Kings Co New York Usa. ch of DAVID WHITEHEAD and SARAH UPDYKE i. CATHARINE21 WHITEHEAD. 81. ISAAC20 WHITEHEAD (ISAAC19, JOHN18, b 20.11.1652 New Haven, Connecticut Colony, British Colonial America, d01.07.1724 Elizabeth Township, Essex, New Jersey, Usa
m ABIGAIL CRANE HINDS 1689 Elizabeth Township, Essex, New Jersey, British Colonial America, dau of HINDS and ESTHER. Hun b 1655 New Haven, New Haven, Connecticut, Usa. ch of ISAAC WHITEHEAD and ABIGAIL HINDS 102. i. ISAAC21 WHITEHEAD b 1700, Morristown Morris Co New Jersey Usa; d. 06.02.1777, Morristown Morris Co New Jersey Usa. 82. HANNAH20 WHITEHEAD (JOHN19, JOHN18, b 10.03.1664 Branford New Haven Co CT d08.05.1693 Branford New Haven Co CT
m PETER TYLER, son of ROGER TYLER and ANN EATON. Han b 20.12.1645 Branford New Haven Co CT d30.04.1712 Branford New Haven Co CT ch of HANNAH WHITEHEAD and PETER TYLER 103. i. JOSEPH21 TYLER b 26.10.1691, Branford New Haven Co CT d. 19.11.1759. 104. ii. HANNAH TYLER b 1693, Branford New Haven Co CT d. ett. 1765. 83. HESTER20 COGSWELL (SUSANNA19 HAWKES, ANN18 BROWN, EDWARD17, b 24.08.1655 Of Ipswich Chebacco Essex Massachusetts Usa, d 17.01.1704 Of Ipswich Chebacco Essex Massachusetts Usa.
m (1) STEPHEN BISHOP, son of THOMAS BISHOP and MARGARET. Han b 1644 Ipswich Essex Massachusetts Usa, d03.12.1722 Ipswich Essex Massachusetts Usa.
m (2) THOMAS BURNHAM, son of THOMAS BURNHAM and MARY LAWRENCE. Han b mel. 19.01.1644 - 1645 Ipswich Essex Co Massachusetts Usa, dmel. 21.02.1726 - 1727 Southampton Suffolk New York Usa. ch of HESTER COGSWELL and STEPHEN BISHOP 105. i. MARGARET21 BISHOP b 17.05.1676, Ipswich Essex Massachusetts Usa. 84. PATIENCE20 DOTY (SARAH19 RICKARD, HANNAH18 SNOW, REBECCA17 BROWN, PETER BROWN16 (BROWNE), THOMAS15 BROWNE, CHRISTOPHER14, b 03.07.1697 Plymouth Co CT d 18.02.1784 Marshfield Plymouth Co CT
m KENELM BAKER, son of KENELM BAKER and SARAH BRADFORD. Han b 03.11.1695 Marshfield Plymouth Co CT d22.05.1771 Marshfield Plymouth Co CT ch of PATIENCE DOTY and KENELM BAKER 106. i. JOHN21 BAKER b 18.10.1719, Marshfield, Plymouth, Massachusetts, Usa; d. 01.07.1804, Marshfield, Plymouth, Massachusetts, Usa.
to be integrated above
21 85. JOHN21 ASPINWALL (MARY20 SANDS, MARY19 CORNELL, MARY18 RUSSELL, JOHN17, EDWARD16, FRANCIS15, MARGARET14 ST JOHN, MARGARET13 WALDEGRAVE, WILLIAM12, b 10.02.1774 NYC d06.10.1847 New York City New York Co New York Usa
m SUSAN HOWLAND 27.11.1803 Norwich, New London, Connecticut, Usa, dau of JOSEPH HOWLAND and LYDIA BILL. Hun b 20.05.1779 Norwich New London Co Connecticut, d23.12.1852 New York City New York Co New York Usa. ch of JOHN ASPINWALL and SUSAN HOWLAND 107. i. MARY REBECCA22 ASPINWALL b 20.12.1809, New York City New York Co New York Usa; d. 24.02.1886, New York City, New York, New York, U. 86. ABIGAIL21 MOSS (ABIGAIL20 RUSSELL, SAMUEL19, JOHN18, JOHN17, EDWARD16, FRANCIS15, MARGARET14 ST JOHN, MARGARET13 WALDEGRAVE, WILLIAM12, b 23.09.1717 Derby, New Haven County, Connecticut, UDanbury Fairfield Co CT d01.1751 Derby New Haven Co CT
m ELISHA KENT, son of JOHN KENT and ABIGAIL DUDLEY. Han b 09.07.1704 Suffield Hartfor Co CT d 17.07.1776 New York Usa. ch of ABIGAIL MOSS and ELISHA KENT i. MOSS22 KENT b 14.01.1733, Derby New Haven Co CT d. 1794, Putnam Co New York Usa
m HANNAH ROGERS b 1735, Norwalk Fairfield Co CT d. 1770, Putnam Co New York Usa. 87. MARY21 MOSS (ABIGAIL20 RUSSELL, SAMUEL19, JOHN18, JOHN17, EDWARD16, FRANCIS15, MARGARET14 ST JOHN, MARGARET13 WALDEGRAVE, WILLIAM12, b 28.08.1721 Derby New Haven Co CT d05.08.1746 CT
m EBENEZER RUSSELL WHITE, son of THOMAS WHITE and MARY WHITE. Han b 21.12.1709 Weymouth Norfolk Co Massachusetts Usa, d 11.09.1778 Danbury, Fairfield County, Connecticut, Usa. ch of MARY MOSS and EBENEZER WHITE i. EBENEZER RUSSELL22 WHITE. 108. ii. JOSEPH MOSS WHITE b 13.09.1741, Danbury Fairfield Co CT d. 10.07.1822, Darbury Fairfield Co CT 88. SAMUEL21 DUVAL (LUCIE20 CLAIBORNE, WILLIAM19, WILLIAM18, WILLIAM17, ELIZABETH16 BUTLER, JOHN15, CRESSET14 ST JOHN, MARGARET13 WALDEGRAVE, WILLIAM12, b 12.01.1752 Henrico Co VA d 12.04.1825 Todd Co Kentucky Usa
m MARGARET SHEPPARD. Hun b 1750 VA d 1782 VA ch of SAMUEL DUVAL and MARGARET SHEPPARD i. BENJAMIN22 DUVAL b 24.01.1765, VA d. 18.07.1826. ii. SAMUEL SHEPHERD DUVAL b 1773, VA d. 28.08.1800, Virginia Usa
m ANNE EVERARD BOLLING b 1782, Red Oak Hall Buckingham Co VA d. 26.01.1834, Retreat Buckingham Co VA 89. FREDERICK OVERTON21 HARRIS (FREDERICK20, WILLIAM19, CAPT. WILLIAM18, MARY17 CLAIBORNE, ELIZABETH16 BUTLER, JOHN15, CRESSET14 ST JOHN, MARGARET13 WALDEGRAVE, WILLIAM12, b 1789 Louisa Co VA d09.04.1842 Louisa Co Virginia Usa
m CATHERINE SNELSON SMITH. Hun b 1786 VA d26.12.1848. ch of FREDERICK HARRIS and CATHERINE SMITH 109. i. CHARLOTTE REBECCA22 HARRIS b 03.10.1816, VA d. 21.04.1879. 90. SARAH ANN21 BURKS (MARY POLLY20 HARRIS, LEE19, MATTHEW18, MARY17 CLAIBORNE, ELIZABETH16 BUTLER, JOHN15, CRESSET14 ST JOHN, MARGARET13 WALDEGRAVE, WILLIAM12, b ett. 1795 Amherst Co VA
m JAMES S TILLMAN. Han b 1815 Alabama Usa, d 1847 Madison Co Alabama Usa. ch of SARAH BURKS and JAMES TILLMAN i. GEORGE L22 TILLMAN b 1840, Alabama Usa. 91. LEE HARRIS21 BURKS (MARY POLLY20 HARRIS, LEE19, MATTHEW18, MARY17 CLAIBORNE, ELIZABETH16 BUTLER, JOHN15, CRESSET14 ST JOHN, MARGARET13 WALDEGRAVE, WILLIAM12, b 1796 Amherst Co VA d 1866 Lauderdale Co Tennessee Usa
m ELIZABETH KENNERLY SHELTON, dau of JOHN SHELTON and ANNE POINDEXTER. Hun b 1796 Amherst Co VA d 1866 Lauderdale Co Tennessee Usa. ch of LEE BURKS and ELIZABETH SHELTON 110. i. JOHN NAPOLEAN22 BURKS b 1824, Amherst Co VA d. 1867, Lauderdale Co Tennessee Usa. 92. WILLIAM PINKNEY21 BURKS (MARY POLLY20 HARRIS, LEE19, MATTHEW18, MARY17 CLAIBORNE, ELIZABETH16 BUTLER, JOHN15, CRESSET14 ST JOHN, MARGARET13 WALDEGRAVE, WILLIAM12, b 1810 Amherst Co VA d09.1866 Drew Co Arkansas Usa
m ANNA MARIAH JONES. Hun b 1816 Tennessee Usa, d 14.10.1876 Arkansas Usa. ch of WILLIAM BURKS and ANNA JONES 111. i. GEORGE WASHINGTON22 BURKS b 26.12.1844, Tennessee Usa; d. 01.05.1896, Drew Co Arkansas Usa. ii. JAMES BURKS b 1837, Tennessee Usa
m JOSEPHINE SHORTER b 03.01.1841, Tippah Missisippi Usa. iii. WILLIAM PINKNEY BURKS b 04.01.1838, Tennessee Usa; d. 22.07.1905, Monticello Drew Co Arkansas Usa
m MARGARET AGRIPPINA HEMINGWAY b 19.11.1846, Carroll Co Missisippi Usa; d. 28.08.1922, Pine Bluff Jefferson Co Arkansas Usa. iv. HENRY CLAY BURKS b 31.10.1838, Tennessee Usa; d. 05.12.1913, Drew Co Arkansas Usa
m CHARLOTTE MCDERMOTT b 21.06.1838, Arkansas Usa; d. 11.03.1915, Arkansas Usa. v. PATTIE BURKS b 09.09.1842, Tennessee Usa; d. 04.07.1884, Arkansas Usa. vi. HENRIETTA BURKS b 1848, Tennessee Usa. vii. CHARLES M BURKS b 03.03.1848, Tennessee Usa; d. 08.12.1892, Arkansas Usa. viii. MARIETTA BURKS b 1854, Tennessee Usa. ix. ANNA MARIAH BURKS b 27.12.1860, Tennessee Usa; d. 16.06.1883, Arkansas Usa
m W E COLE. 93. WINNEY ELEANOR JANE21 BURKS (MARY POLLY20 HARRIS, LEE19, MATTHEW18, MARY17 CLAIBORNE, ELIZABETH16 BUTLER, JOHN15, CRESSET14 ST JOHN, MARGARET13 WALDEGRAVE, WILLIAM12, b 1810 Amherst Co VA
m JOHN B HARRIS. Han b 1805 VA ch of WINNEY BURKS and JOHN HARRIS 112. i. MARY22 HARRIS b 1825, Madison Co Alabama Usa. 94. MARY JANE21 BURKS (MARY POLLY20 HARRIS, LEE19, MATTHEW18, MARY17 CLAIBORNE, ELIZABETH16 BUTLER, JOHN15, CRESSET14 ST JOHN, MARGARET13 WALDEGRAVE, WILLIAM12, b 1817 Madison Co Alabama Usa.
m WILLIS G EDDINS. Han b 1807 South Carolina Usa, d 1851 Tennessee Usa. ch of MARY BURKS and WILLIS EDDINS i. MARY BURKS22 EDDINS b 02.12.1835, Madison Co Alabama Usa; d. 10.10.1895, Drew Co Arkansas Usa
m CHARLES L BURKS b 07.09.1842, Haywood Co Tennessee Usa; d. 13.07.1905, Drew Co Arkansas Usa. 95. MARY21 WHITEHEAD (MAJOR DANIEL20, DANIEL19, JOHN18, døde ett. 1707.
m (1) THOMAS BURROUGHS. Han døde før 13.11.1703.
m (2) JOHN TAYLOR. Han døde ett. 1693.
m (3) WILLIAM URQUHART. Notater for MARY WHITEHEAD: Notes for Mary Whitehead 1693 John Taylor, son in law to Daniel Whitehead owned land called Dosoris which he got from Daniel Whitehead. [1] 1709 Mr Urquhart dated his will on August 29, and died within a few days. He bequeathed to wife Mary Urquhart "all my estate in America, both real and personal, of what nature or kind what so ever it be" and named his "well-beloved wife, Mary Urquhart, my sole and whole executrix of this my last will and testament". Mary continued to reside in the parsonage after his death. [2] A biosketch of Mary Whitehead, daughter of Daniel Whitehead reports [3]: Mary Whitehead, married (1st) John Taylor, of Oyster Bay; (2d) Thomas Burroughs; (3d) Rev. William Urquhart, the English church missionary to Jamaica, Long Island, from 1704 to 1709. By her first husband, Mary Whitehead had a daughter, Abigail Taylor, born 1695, married in 1714, Rev. Benjamin Woolsey (grandson of George Woolsey, of Yarmouth, England), who lived at Dosoris, Long Island, a homestead that John Taylor had bought of Major Daniel Whitehead. Abigail Woolsey died March 29, 1771. By her second husband Mary Whitehead had a daughter, Mary Burroughs, mentioned in Major Daniel Whitehead's will. ch of MARY WHITEHEAD and THOMAS BURROUGHS i. MARY22 BURROUGHS. ch of MARY WHITEHEAD and JOHN TAYLOR 113. ii. ABIGAIL22 TAYLOR b 1695, Jamaica Long Island New York Usa; d. 1771. 96. THOMAS21 WHITEHEAD (MAJOR DANIEL20, DANIEL19, JOHN18, døde 1732
m JANE CREED 24.12.1703 New York Usa. Hun b 1676. ch of THOMAS WHITEHEAD and JANE CREED i. DANIEL22 WHITEHEAD b 14.02.1711; d. 23.03.1711, Jamaica, Long Island, New York Usa. 97. MERCY21 WHITEHEAD (MAJOR DANIEL20, DANIEL19, JOHN18, b 1663 Long Island Suffolk Co New York Usa.
m CAPTAIN THOMAS BETTS, son of CAPTAIN BETTS and JOANNA CHAMBERLAIN. Han b 1646 Newton Suffolk CoNY d 1709 Newton Suffolk Co New York Usa. ch of MERCY WHITEHEAD and CAPTAIN BETTS i. THOMAS22 BETTS b 22.06.1684, Suffolk Co New York Usa; d. 31.03.1747, Bucks Co PA
m SUSANNA FIELD b 1702. 98. JONATHAN21 WHITEHEAD (MAJOR DANIEL20, DANIEL19, JOHN18, b 1672 Jamaica Queens CoNY dmel. 13.06.1736 - 26.07.1739 Jamaica, Long Island, New York Usa
m SARAH FIELD, dau of ROBERT FIELD. Hun b 1676 Jamaica Queens CoNY d 1739. ch of JONATHAN WHITEHEAD and SARAH FIELD 114. i. THOMAS22 WHITEHEAD b 1707, Queens Co New York Usa. 115. ii. SARAH WHITEHEAD b før 18.04.1713. iii. DANIEL WHITEHEAD b 1698; d. 1743
m ELINOR WILLETT, 17.05.1719, Jamaica, Long Island, New York Usa. iv. ABIGAIL WHITEHEAD b før 18.04.1713
m JOHN CORNELL b 1700; d. 1773. v. CHARITY WHITEHEAD b før 18.04.1713; d. mel. 01.12.1731 - 03.04.1732, Jamaica, Long Island, New York Usa
m DOUGHTY. 116. vi. BENJAMIN WHITEHEAD b 1705, Jamaica, Queens, New York, Usa; d. 11.09.1780, Jamaica, Queens, New York City, New York, Usa. vii. DEBORAH WHITEHEAD b før 18.04.1713
m JOSEPH KISSAM, 07.02.1728, Jamaica, Long Island, New York Usa. viii. SUSANNAH WHITEHEAD b før 18.04.1713; d. 18.09.1713, Jamaica, Long Island, New York Usa. 99. DEBORAH21 WHITEHEAD (MAJOR DANIEL20, DANIEL19, JOHN18, b 1673 Jamaica Queens CoNY d 14.06.1712 Flushing, Queens County, New York Usa.
m THOMAS HICKS, son of THOMAS HICKS and MARY DOUGHTY. Han b 1660 Flushing, Queens County,NY dmel. 28.01.1740 - 1741 Flushing, Queens County, New York Usa. ch of DEBORAH WHITEHEAD and THOMAS HICKS i. DEBORAH22 HICKS, d. ett. 30.04.1712. ii. ELIZABETH HICKS, d. ett. 30.04.1712. iii. HANNAH HICKS, d. ett. 30.04.1712. iv. MARTHA HICKS, d. ett. 30.04.1712. 117. v. MARY HICKS b 1696, Flushing Queens Co New York Usa; d. ett. 30.04.1712. vi. ROBERT PEQID HICKS b 1680. vii. STEVENSON HICKS b mel. 1691 - 1712; d. ett. 30.04.1712. viii. THOMAS HICKS b mel. 1691 - 1712; d. ett. 08.06.1726. ix. WHITEHEAD HICKS b mel. 1691 - 1712; d. mel. 30.04.1712 - 08.06.1725. 118. x. ABIGAIL HICKS b 16.10.1692, Quenns Co New York Usa; d. ett. 30.04.1712. xi. AUGUSTINE HICKS b ett. 30.04.1712. 100. ELIZABETH21 WHITEHEAD (MAJOR DANIEL20, DANIEL19, JOHN18, b 1673 New York City New York Co Usa, d 10.11.1751 Somerset o New Jersey Usa.
m ANTHONY WATERS. Han b 1665NY dmel. 1717 - 1719 New Jersey Usa. ch of ELIZABETH WHITEHEAD and ANTHONY WATERS 119. i. ANTHONY WHITEHEAD22 WATERS b 1696, Jamaica Queens Co New York Usa; d. mel. 1717 - 1719, Staten Island Richmond Co New York Usa. 101. MERCY21 WHITEHEAD (MAJOR DANIEL20, DANIEL19, JOHN18, b 1672 Long Island Suffolk Co New York Usa.
m THOMAS BETTS 03.04.1693 Long Island Suffolk Co New York Usa. Han b 1650 Newton Suffolk CoNY d 1709 Newton Suffolk Co New York Usa. Notater for THOMAS BETTS: Captain ch of MERCY WHITEHEAD and THOMAS BETTS i. MARY22 BETTS b 1698, Newton Suffolk Co New York Usa
m JONATHAN LAWRENCE b 25.11.1695, Newton Suffolk Co New York Usa; d. 1775, Rockland Co New York Usa. Notater for JONATHAN LAWRENCE: Captain 102. ISAAC21 WHITEHEAD (ISAAC20, ISAAC19, JOHN18, b 1700 Morristown Morris Co New Jersey Usa, d06.02.1777 Morristown Morris Co New Jersey Usa
m SARAH VAN COURTLAND 1718 Tarboro, Edgecombe, North Carolina, Usa. Hun b 1698 Elizabethtown Essex Co New Jersey Usa, d04.08.1804 Morristown Morris Co New Jersey Usa. ch of ISAAC WHITEHEAD and SARAH VAN COURTLAND 120. i. ONESIMUS CHARLES22 WHITEHEAD b 01.08.1741, Morristown Morris Co New Jersey Usa; d. 04.07.1814, Mendham Morris Co New Jersey Usa. 103. JOSEPH21 TYLER (HANNAH20 WHITEHEAD, JOHN19, JOHN18, b 26.10.1691 Branford New Haven Co CT d 19.11.1759. ch of JOSEPH TYLER 121. i. JOSEPH22 TYLER b 12.04.1716, Branford New Haven Co CT 104. HANNAH21 TYLER (HANNAH20 WHITEHEAD, JOHN19, JOHN18, b 1693 Branford New Haven Co CT dett. 1765.
m JOHN BALDWIN, son of GEORGE BALDWIN and DEBORAH ROSE. Han b 13.01.1690 Branford New Haven Co CT d 1765 Branford New Haven Co CT ch of HANNAH TYLER and JOHN BALDWIN 122. i. JAMES22 BALDWIN b 20.06.1730, Branford New Haven Co CT d. 23.05.1753. 105. MARGARET21 BISHOP (HESTER20 COGSWELL, SUSANNA19 HAWKES, ANN18 BROWN, EDWARD17, b 17.05.1676 Ipswich Essex Massachusetts Usa.
m ICHABOD GRIGGS, son of JOSEPH GRIGGS and HANNAH DAVIS. Han b 28.09.1675 Boston Suffolk Co Massachusetts Usa, d21.04.1718 Massachusetts Usa. ch of MARGARET BISHOP and ICHABOD GRIGGS 123. i. HANNAH22 GRIGGS b 22.10.1702, Roxbury Norfolk Massachusetts Usa; d. 18.05.1798, Bedford Hillsborough New Hampshire Usa. ii. ELIZABETH GRIGGS b 13.11.1705, Roxbury Norfolk Massachusetts Usa; d. 15.04.1781, Norwich New London Co CT
m ELEAZER JEWETT b 22.09.1704, Norwich New London Co CT d. 05.01.1747, Norwich New London Co CT iii. ESTHER GRIGGS b 22.06.1710, Roxbury Suffolk Co Massachusetts Usa; d. 28.11.1799, Massachusetts Usa
m SAMUEL LOVETT b 01.02.1702, Beverley Essex Massachusetts Usa; d. 05.02.1777, CT 106. JOHN21 BAKER (PATIENCE20 DOTY, SARAH19 RICKARD, HANNAH18 SNOW, REBECCA17 BROWN, PETER BROWN16 (BROWNE), THOMAS15 BROWNE, CHRISTOPHER14, b 18.10.1719 Marshfield, Plymouth, MA d01.07.1804 Marshfield, Plymouth, Massachusetts, Usa
m RUTH RANDALL BAKER 21.02.1742 Marshfield, Plymouth, MA dau of EBENEZER BARKER and DEBORAH RANDALL. Hun b 1723 Pembroke, Plymouth, MA d 17.03.1783 Plymouth, Massachusetts, Usa. ch of JOHN BAKER and RUTH BAKER i. PATIENCE22 BAKER b 14.11.1749, Marshfield, Plymouth, Massachusetts Bay Colony, British Colonial America
m ABRAHAM PETERSON, 03.03.1768, Marshfield, Plymouth, Massachusetts Bay Colony, British Colonial America b 06.09.1745, Duxbury, Plymouth, Massachusetts Bay Colony, British Colonial America; d. 16.11.1818, Winthrop, Kennebec, Maine, Usa.
to be integrated above
22 107. MARY REBECCA22 ASPINWALL (JOHN21, MARY20 SANDS, MARY19 CORNELL, MARY18 RUSSELL, JOHN17, EDWARD16, FRANCIS15, MARGARET14 ST JOHN, MARGARET13 WALDEGRAVE, WILLIAM12, b 20.12.1809 NYC d24.02.1886 New York City, New York, New York, U.
m DR. ISAAC VAN ROSENVELT/ ROOSEVELT, son of JAMES ROOSEVELT and MARY WALTON. Han b 29.09.1790 Hyde Park Dutchess CoNY d24.12.1863 Delaware Usa. ch of MARY ASPINWALL and DR. ROOSEVELT 124. i. JAMES23 ROOSEVELT b 16.07.1828, Mount Hope Dutchess County, New York Usa; d. 08.12.1900, Hyde Park Dutchess County, New York Usa. 108. JOSEPH MOSS22 WHITE (MARY21 MOSS, ABIGAIL20 RUSSELL, SAMUEL19, JOHN18, JOHN17, EDWARD16, FRANCIS15, MARGARET14 ST JOHN, MARGARET13 WALDEGRAVE, WILLIAM12, b 13.09.1741 Danbury Fairfield Co CT d 10.07.1822 Darbury Fairfield Co CT
m RACHEL BOOTH. Hun b 19.05.1741 Stamford Fairfield Co CT d08.05.1830. ch of JOSEPH WHITE and RACHEL BOOTH i. SARAH AMELIA23 WHITE b 17.05.1773, Danbury Fairfield Co CT d. 1851
m ISAAC IRA IVES b 13.01.1764, Wallingford New Haven Co CT d. 10.06.1843. 109. CHARLOTTE REBECCA22 HARRIS (FREDERICK OVERTON21, FREDERICK20, WILLIAM19, CAPT. WILLIAM18, MARY17 CLAIBORNE, ELIZABETH16 BUTLER, JOHN15, CRESSET14 ST JOHN, MARGARET13 WALDEGRAVE, WILLIAM12, b 03.10.1816 VA d21.04.1879.
m JOSEPH K PENDLETON, son of EDMUND PENDLETON and UNITY KIMBROUGH. Han b 05.12.1810 VA d21.04.1879. ch of CHARLOTTE HARRIS and JOSEPH PENDLETON i. DR. LEWIS SMITH23 PENDLETON b 1838, VA d. 28.03.1913. Notater for DR. LEWIS SMITH PENDLETON: Education 1860 VA, Richmond City, Medical College Of VA 110. JOHN NAPOLEAN22 BURKS (LEE HARRIS21, MARY POLLY20 HARRIS, LEE19, MATTHEW18, MARY17 CLAIBORNE, ELIZABETH16 BUTLER, JOHN15, CRESSET14 ST JOHN, MARGARET13 WALDEGRAVE, WILLIAM12, b 1824 Amherst Co VA d 1867 Lauderdale Co Tennessee Usa
m MARY HARRIS, dau of JOHN HARRIS and WINNEY BURKS. Hun b 1825 Madison Co Alabama Usa. Notater for JOHN NAPOLEAN BURKS: In personal email from Bettie B. Davis who researched the Lauderdale County TN Court Minutes: Inventory and Sale Bill of the estate of John N. Burks, deceased. Fourth of September, 1867, buyers were J. Trainham and R. H. Burks. ON 1860 Census John Napolean's Birthplace was listed as NC. Having worked with Census, it is unusual for errors within a high level of confidence to occur. Although not often per locale, a few misguided Field Agents have been known to "phone it in." ch of JOHN BURKS and MARY HARRIS i. CHARLES L23 BURKS b 07.09.1842, Haywood Co Tennessee Usa; d. 13.07.1905, Drew Co Arkansas Usa
m MARY BURKS EDDINS b 02.12.1835, Madison Co Alabama Usa; d. 10.10.1895, Drew Co Arkansas Usa. 111. GEORGE WASHINGTON22 BURKS (WILLIAM PINKNEY21, MARY POLLY20 HARRIS, LEE19, MATTHEW18, MARY17 CLAIBORNE, ELIZABETH16 BUTLER, JOHN15, CRESSET14 ST JOHN, MARGARET13 WALDEGRAVE, WILLIAM12, b 26.12.1844 Tennessee Usa, d01.05.1896 Drew Co Arkansas Usa
m CORINTHIA MAHALA RAGLAND, dau of JOHN RAGLAND and CHARITY CROSS. Hun b 26.12.1846 Meriwether Co Georgia Usa, d07.01.1910 Drew Co Arkansas Usa. ch of GEORGE BURKS and CORINTHIA RAGLAND i. WINNIE "OLIVE"23 BURKS b 09.1870, Arkansas Usa; d. 1955, Drew Co Arkansas Usa
m JOSIAH "BARKLEY" WHITE b 1868, Arkansas Usa; d. 30.04.1939, Drew Co Arkansas Usa. ii. WILLIAM "FLETCHER" BURKS b 09.08.1868, Drew Co Arkansas Usa; d. 18.11.1901, Drew Co Arkansas Usa
m WILLIE ETTA STEWART b 30.07.1873, Arkansas Usa; d. 20.05.1939, Drew Co Arkansas Usa. iii. JOHN HENRY BURKS b 17.07.1873, Arkansas Usa; d. 08.04.1959, Arkansas Usa
m EULA B b 05.09.1876, Arkansas Usa; d. 07.04.1937, Arkansas Usa. 125. iv. GEORGE WASHINGTON BURKS b 12.01.1875, Arkansas Usa; d. 1937. v. WALTER P BURKS b 02.07.1879, Arkansas Usa; d. 24.02.1933, Arkansas Usa. vi. ROY R BURKS b 07.1883, Arkansas Usa; d. 12.04.1954. 112. MARY22 HARRIS (WINNEY ELEANOR JANE21 BURKS, MARY POLLY20 HARRIS, LEE19, MATTHEW18, MARY17 CLAIBORNE, ELIZABETH16 BUTLER, JOHN15, CRESSET14 ST JOHN, MARGARET13 WALDEGRAVE, WILLIAM12, b 1825 Madison Co Alabama Usa.
m JOHN NAPOLEAN BURKS, son of LEE BURKS and ELIZABETH SHELTON. Han b 1824 Amherst Co VA d 1867 Lauderdale Co Tennessee Usa. Notater for JOHN NAPOLEAN BURKS: In personal email from Bettie B. Davis who researched the Lauderdale County TN Court Minutes: Inventory and Sale Bill of the estate of John N. Burks, deceased. Fourth of September, 1867, buyers were J. Trainham and R. H. Burks. ON 1860 Census John Napolean's Birthplace was listed as NC. Having worked with Census, it is unusual for errors within a high level of confidence to occur. Although not often per locale, a few misguided Field Agents have been known to "phone it in." Barn er listet ovenfor under (110) John Napolean Burks. 113. ABIGAIL22 TAYLOR (MARY21 WHITEHEAD, MAJOR DANIEL20, DANIEL19, JOHN18, b 1695 Jamaica Long IslandNY d 1771.
m BENJAMIN WOOLSEY, son of CAPTAIN WOOLSEY and HANNAH VAN ZANDT. Han b 19.11.1687 Dosoris Long Island New York, d 15.08.1756 Long Island New York. ch of ABIGAIL TAYLOR and BENJAMIN WOOLSEY 126. i. MELANCTHON TAYLOR23 WOOLSEY b 08.06.1717, Dosoris Long Island New York; d. 28.09.1758, Trenton Oneida Co New York Usa. 114. THOMAS22 WHITEHEAD (JONATHAN21, MAJOR DANIEL20, DANIEL19, JOHN18, b 1707 Queens Co New York Usa
m HANNAH SACKETT, dau of JOSEPH SACKETT and HANNAH ALSOP. Hun b 07.08.1711 Newtown Queens CoNY d26.07.1762 New York Usa. ch of THOMAS WHITEHEAD and HANNAH SACKETT 127. i. CHARITY23 WHITEHEAD b 1748, Queens Co New York Usa. 128. ii. HANNAH WHITEHEAD b 1728, Newtown Suffolk Co New York Usa; d. 04.08.1772, Newtown Suffolk Co New York Usa. 115. SARAH22 WHITEHEAD (JONATHAN21, MAJOR DANIEL20, DANIEL19, JOHN18, b før 18.04.1713.
m THOMAS STEVENSON 30.04.1730 Jamaica, Long Island, New York Usa. Han b 1707 Chesterfield Burlington Co New Jersey Usa, d 1766 Rocky Hill Somerset New Jersey Usa. ch of SARAH WHITEHEAD and THOMAS STEVENSON 129. i. JOHN23 STEVENSON b 22.01.1732, Kingwood Twp, Hunterdon County, New Jersey Usa; d. 12.04.1812, Hardwick, New Jersey Usa. 116. BENJAMIN22 WHITEHEAD (JONATHAN21, MAJOR DANIEL20, DANIEL19, JOHN18, b 1705 Jamaica, Queens, New York, Usa, d 11.09.1780 Jamaica, Queens, New York City, New York, Usa
m ELIZABETH WILLETT 28.02.1727 Jamaica, Long Island, New York Usa. Hun b 1705 Jamaica, Queens, New York City, New York, Usa, d 11.09.1780 Jamaica, Queens, New York City, New York, Usa. ch of BENJAMIN WHITEHEAD and ELIZABETH WILLETT i. SARAH23 WHITEHEAD b 1745, Queens County, New York Usa; d. 1781, Jamica, Queens, New York Usa. 117. MARY22 HICKS (DEBORAH21 WHITEHEAD, MAJOR DANIEL20, DANIEL19, JOHN18, b 1696 Flushing Queens CoNY dett. 30.04.1712.
m SAMUEL LAWRENCE, son of WILLIAM LAWRENCE and DEBORAH SMITH. Han b 16.04.1690 Smithtown Suffolk CoNY d06.1760 New York Usa. ch of MARY HICKS and SAMUEL LAWRENCE 130. i. AUGUSTINE23 LAWRENCE b 1719, Suffolk Co New York Usa; d. 05.04.1794, New York City New York Co New York Usa. 118. ABIGAIL22 HICKS (DEBORAH21 WHITEHEAD, MAJOR DANIEL20, DANIEL19, JOHN18, b 16.10.1692 Quenns CoNY dett. 30.04.1712.
m JAMES TALLMAN, son of JOHN TALLMAN. Han b 1693NY dmel. 1736 - 1737 Shcrewsbury Monmouth Co New Jersey Usa. ch of ABIGAIL HICKS and JAMES TALLMAN 131. i. DEBORAH23 TALLMAN. 119. ANTHONY WHITEHEAD22 WATERS (ELIZABETH21 WHITEHEAD, MAJOR DANIEL20, DANIEL19, JOHN18, b 1696 Jamaica Queens CoNY dmel. 1717 - 1719 Staten Island Richmond Co New York Usa
m MARGARET WILLETT. Hun b 1704 New York City New York Co Usa, d 10.11.1751 Somerset Co New Jersey Usa. ch of ANTHONY WATERS and MARGARET WILLETT 132. i. JOHN TREDWELL23 WATERS b 1740, Jamaica Queens Co New York Usa; d. 05.1796. 120. ONESIMUS CHARLES22 WHITEHEAD (ISAAC21, ISAAC20, ISAAC19, JOHN18, b 01.08.1741 Morristown Morris Co New Jersey Usa, d04.07.1814 Mendham Morris Co New Jersey Usa
m REBECCA CONDIT 31.10.1764, dau of PHILIP CONDICT and MARY DAY. Hun b 03.04.1746 Morristown Morris Co New Jersey Usa, d03.09.1805 Morristown Morris Co New Jersey Usa. ch of ONESIMUS WHITEHEAD and REBECCA CONDIT 133. i. EZEKIEL CONDICT23 WHITEHEAD b 07.05.1765, Morristown, Morris Co New Jersey Usa; d. 26.11.1851, Morristown, Morris Co New Jersey Usa. 134. ii. SILAS WHITEHEAD b 31.01.1767, Morris Co New Jersey Usa; d. 04.12.1819, Morristown, Morris Co New Jersey Usa. iii. HULDAH WHITEHEAD b 30.07.1769, Morris Co New Jersey Usa; d. 10.06.1846, Licking Co Ohio Usa
m SAMUEL WILLIAMS b 07.12.1774, Essex County, New Jersey, Usa; d. 06.06.1858, Licking Co Ohio Usa. 135. iv. ASA W WHITEHEAD b 04.05.1771, Morristown, Morris, New Jersey, Usa; d. 24.03.1822, Jersey, Licking, Ohio, Usa. 136. v. ISAAC PRALL WHITEHEAD b 28.08.1773, Morristown,Morris County, New Jersey, Usa; d. 30.06.1857, Licking County, Ohio, Usa. vi. ABNER WHITEHEAD b 22.10.1779, Morris Co New Jersey Usa; d. 18.05.1852, Licking Co Ohio Usa
m ABIGAIL CONDIT b 10.10.1779, New Jersey Usa; d. 18.05.1850, Licking Co Ohio Usa. Notater for ABNER WHITEHEAD: He died in Jersey Township. 137. vii. SYLVESTER RUSSELL WHITEHEAD b 25.08.1795, New Jersey Usa; d. 03.02.1887. viii. REBECCA CONDIT WILLIAMS b 12.09.1807, Usa; d. 04.06.1842, Licking County, Ohio, Usa
m ABNER WHITEHEAD b 02.12.1804, Romulus, Seneca County, New York, Usa; d. 29.09.1866, Ohio Usa. ix. LUCINDA WHITEHEAD b 01.01.1810, Morristown, Morris County, New Jersey, Usa; d. 31.08.1848, Licking County, Ohio, Usa
m ENOS OGDEN WILLIAMS b 17.11.1804, Orange, Essex County, New Jersey, Usa; d. 29.04.1875, Licking County, Ohio, Usa. 121. JOSEPH22 TYLER (JOSEPH21, HANNAH20 WHITEHEAD, JOHN19, JOHN18, b 12.04.1716 Branford New Haven Co CT
m JERUSHA TYLER, dau of JOHN TYLER and HANNAH THAYER. Hun b 16.08.1730 Branford New Haven Co CT ch of JOSEPH TYLER and JERUSHA TYLER i. MARTHA23 TYLER b 15.04.1753, New Haven Co CT d. 25.09.1801
m MOSES HEMINGWAY b 14.08.1751, East Haven New Haven Co CT d. 05.01.1816, East Haven New Haven Co CT 138. ii. PHILEMON TYLER b 03.11.1763, Branford New Haven Co CT d. 23.09.1829, Branford New Haven Co CT 122. JAMES22 BALDWIN (HANNAH21 TYLER, HANNAH20 WHITEHEAD, JOHN19, JOHN18, b 20.06.1730 Branford New Haven Co CT d23.05.1753
m DESIRE PARMELEE. Hun b 15.02.1729 CT d28.07.1805 Branford New Haven Co CT ch of JAMES BALDWIN and DESIRE PARMELEE 139. i. ZACHEUS23 BALDWIN b 09.01.1754, Branford New Haven Co CT d. 23.05.1831, Branford New Haven Co CT 123. HANNAH22 GRIGGS (MARGARET21 BISHOP, HESTER20 COGSWELL, SUSANNA19 HAWKES, ANN18 BROWN, EDWARD17, b 22.10.1702 Roxbury Norfolk Massachusetts Usa, d 18.05.1798 Bedford Hillsborough New Hampshire Usa.
m JOHN GOFFE, son of JOHN GOFFE and HANNAH PARRISH. Han b 25.03.1701 Boston Suffolk Massachusetts Usa, d20.10.1786 Bedford Hillsborough New Hampshire Usa. ch of HANNAH GRIGGS and JOHN GOFFE 140. i. MARGARET23 GOFFE b 26.11.1734, Derryfield Hillsborough New Hampshire Usa; d. 09.1775, Derryfield Hillsborough New Hampshire Usa. 141. ii. JOHN GOFFE b 16.02.1727, Bedford Hillsborough New Hampshire Usa; d. 03.02.1816, Bedford Hillsborough New Hampshire Usa.
to be integrated above
23 124. JAMES23 ROOSEVELT (MARY REBECCA22 ASPINWALL, JOHN21, MARY20 SANDS, MARY19 CORNELL, MARY18 RUSSELL, JOHN17, EDWARD16, FRANCIS15, MARGARET14 ST JOHN, MARGARET13 WALDEGRAVE, WILLIAM12, b 16.07.1828 Mount Hope Dutchess County,NY d08.12.1900 Hyde Park Dutchess County, New York Usa
m (1) SARA ANN DELANO, dau of WARREN DELANO and CATHERINE LYMAN. Hun b 21.09.1854 Aloquin Ontario CoNY d07.09.1941 Hyde Park Dutchess County, New York Usa
m (2) REBECCA BRIEN HOWLAND, dau of GARDINER HOWLAND and LOUISA MEREDITH. Hun b 1831, d 1876. ch of JAMES ROOSEVELT and SARA DELANO 142. i. FRANKLIN DELANO24 ROOSEVELT b 30.01.1882, Hyde Park, Dutchess County, New York Usa; d. 12.04.1945, Warm Springs, Georgia Usa. ch of JAMES ROOSEVELT and REBECCA HOWLAND 143. ii. JAMES24 ROOSEWELT b 27.03.1854, Hyde Park Dutchess Co New York Usa; d. 1927. 125. GEORGE WASHINGTON23 BURKS (GEORGE WASHINGTON22, WILLIAM PINKNEY21, MARY POLLY20 HARRIS, LEE19, MATTHEW18, MARY17 CLAIBORNE, ELIZABETH16 BUTLER, JOHN15, CRESSET14 ST JOHN, MARGARET13 WALDEGRAVE, WILLIAM12, b 12.01.1875 Arkansas Usa, d 1937
m EULA MAE STEPHENSON. Hun b 15.03.1888 Arkansas Usa, d 14.05.1962 Arkansas Usa. ch of GEORGE BURKS and EULA STEPHENSON i. LAURA EDNA24 BURKS b 17.10.1909, Wilmar Drew Co Arkansas Usa; d. 22.03.1992
m HARRIS POPE HALES b 21.09.1903, Jones Schoolhouse Community Drew Co Arkansas Usa; d. 24.01.1985, Arkansas Usa. 126. MELANCTHON TAYLOR23 WOOLSEY (ABIGAIL22 TAYLOR, MARY21 WHITEHEAD, MAJOR DANIEL20, DANIEL19, JOHN18, b 08.06.1717 Dosoris Long Island New York, d28.09.1758 Trenton Oneida Co New York Usa
m REBECCA LLOYD. Hun b 31.10.1718 Boston Suffolk Massachusetts Usa, d 13.09.1796 Boston Suffolk Massachusetts Usa. ch of MELANCTHON WOOLSEY and REBECCA LLOYD i. MELANCTHON LLOYD24 WOOLSEY b 08.05.1758, Poughkeepsie Dutchess Co New York Usa; d. 21.06.1819, Syracuse Onondaga cO nEW yORK uSA
m ALIDA LIVINGSTON b 05.05.1758, Poughkeepsie Dutchess Co New York Usa; d. 12.07.1843, Oswego Oswego Co New York Usa. 127. CHARITY23 WHITEHEAD ( b 1748 Queens Co New York Usa.
m JACOB FIELD, son of ROBERT FIELD and ELEANOR HICKS. Han b 1744 New York Usa. ch of CHARITY WHITEHEAD and JACOB FIELD 144. i. MARY24 FIELD b 1770, New York Usa; d. 1841. 128. HANNAH23 WHITEHEAD ( b 1728 Newtown Suffolk CoNY d04.08.1772 Newtown Suffolk Co New York Usa.
m JOHN MOORE, son of BENJAMIN MOORE and ANNA SACKETT. Han b 05.07.1730 Newtown Suffolk CoNY d 18.10.1827 Newtown Suffolk Co New York Usa. ch of HANNAH WHITEHEAD and JOHN MOORE 145. i. ABIGAIL24 MOORE b 11.01.1770, New York Usa; d. 22.11.1836. 129. JOHN23 STEVENSON (SARAH22 WHITEHEAD, JONATHAN21, MAJOR DANIEL20, DANIEL19, JOHN18, b 22.01.1732 Kingwood Twp, Hunterdon County, New Jersey Usa, d 12.04.1812 Hardwick, New Jersey Usa
m MERCY KING 07.12.1760 New Jersey Usa, dau of JOSEPH KING and MARY SIMCOCK. Hun b 26.12.1739 Hunterdon County, New Jersey Usa, d09.1823 Hardwick Sussex Co New Jersey Usa. ch of JOHN STEVENSON and MERCY KING 146. i. THOMAS24 STEVENSON b 24.02.1769, Kingwood Hunterdon County, New Jersey Usa; d. 17.06.1798, Independence Sussex Co New Jersey Usa. ii. SARAH STEVENSON b 07.01.1762, Hunterdon County, New Jersey Usa; d. 26.04.1785, Sussex Co New Jersey Usa. iii. MARY STEVENSON b 23.05.1764, Kingwood Hunterdon County, New Jersey Usa; d. Sussex Sussex Co New Jersey Usa. iv. JOSEPH STEVENSON b 19.03.1767, Kingwood Hunterdon County, New Jersey Usa; d. 04.08.1841, Quakertown Hunterdon County, New Jersey Usa. v. ABIGAIL STEVENSON b 31.03.1772, Kingwood Hunterdon County, New Jersey Usa. vi. ANNA STEVENSON b 11.03.1775, Kingwood Hunterdon County, New Jersey Usa; d. New York Usa. vii. DANIEL STEVENSON b 28.12.1777, Kingwood Hunterdon County, New Jersey Usa; d. 05.07.1799, Mendham Hardwick Sussex Co New Jersey Usa. viii. JOHN STEVENSON b 07.07.1780, Kingwood Hunterdon County, New Jersey Usa; d. 1824, Independence Warren Co New Jersey Usa. ix. JAMES STEVENSON b 22.06.1783, Kingwood Hunterdon County, New Jersey Usa; d. 21.09.1802, Mendham Hardwick Sussex Co New Jersey Usa. 130. AUGUSTINE23 LAWRENCE (MARY22 HICKS, b 1719 Suffolk CoNY d05.04.1794 New York City New York Co New York Usa
m JOHANNA VAN ZANDT, dau of WYANT VAN ZANDT and CATARINA EYCK. Hun b 15.08.1729NY d 1794. ch of AUGUSTINE LAWRENCE and JOHANNA VAN ZANDT 147. i. AUGUSTINE HICKS24 LAWRENCE b 11.10.1770, Whitestone Queens Co New York Usa; d. 10.09.1828, Manhattan New York Co Usa. 131. DEBORAH23 TALLMAN (ABIGAIL22 HICKS,
m ASHER MOTT, son of GERSHOM MOTT and SARAH CLAYTON. Han b 27.06.1704 Middletown Monmouth Co New Jersey Usa, d05.03.1761. ch of DEBORAH TALLMAN and ASHER MOTT 148. i. ABIGAIL24 MOTT b 1760, Monmouth Monmouth Co New Jersey Usa; d. 20.04.1842, Kingston Township Luzerne Co PA 132. JOHN TREDWELL23 WATERS (ANTHONY WHITEHEAD22, ELIZABETH21 WHITEHEAD, MAJOR DANIEL20, DANIEL19, JOHN18, b 1740 Jamaica Queens CoNY d05.1796
m ANN BETTS. Hun b før 1757 Jamaica Queens Co New York Usa. ch of JOHN WATERS and ANN BETTS 149. i. JOHN24 WATERS b 1787, North Carolina Usa; d. 06.08.1839. 133. EZEKIEL CONDICT23 WHITEHEAD (ONESIMUS CHARLES22, ISAAC21, ISAAC20, ISAAC19, JOHN18, b 07.05.1765 Morristown, Morris Co New Jersey Usa, d26.11.1851 Morristown, Morris Co New Jersey Usa
m MARY CONDIT, dau of JABEZ CONDICT. Hun b 09.07.1767 Morris Co New Jersey Usa, d29.01.1851 Morris Co New Jersey Usa. ch of EZEKIEL WHITEHEAD and MARY CONDIT i. ISAAC N24 WHITEHEAD b 1803, Morris Co New Jersey Usa; d. 02.02.1822. 134. SILAS23 WHITEHEAD (ONESIMUS CHARLES22, ISAAC21, ISAAC20, ISAAC19, JOHN18, b 31.01.1767 Morris Co New Jersey Usa, d04.12.1819 Morristown, Morris Co New Jersey Usa
m RUTH CONDICT, dau of JONATHAN CONDIT and JEMIMA CONDIT. Hun b 18.05.1764 New Jersey Usa, d 1840 New Jersey Usa. ch of SILAS WHITEHEAD and RUTH CONDICT 150. i. ONESIMUS24 WHITEHEAD b 26.03.1793, Essex Co New Jersey Usa; d. 25.08.1824, Galena, Delaware, Ohio, Usa. 135. ASA W23 WHITEHEAD (ONESIMUS CHARLES22, ISAAC21, ISAAC20, ISAAC19, JOHN18, b 04.05.1771 Morristown, Morris, New Jersey, Usa, d24.03.1822 Jersey, Licking, Ohio, Usa
m ABIGAIL LACEY 1792 Usa. Hun b 1780, d 1856. Notater for ASA W WHITEHEAD: He lived in Benton, Benton, Yates, New York, United States in 1809. ch of ASA WHITEHEAD and ABIGAIL LACEY i. WILLIAM24 WHITEHEAD b 04.05.1796, Essex New Jersey Usa; d. 09.12.1826. ii. AARON WHITEHEAD b 17.01.1800, Essex, New Jersey, Usa; d. 25.08.1869. iii. SILAS B WHITEHEAD b 1802; d. 1892. iv. LOUISA WHITEHEAD b 1803; d. 1811. v. ABRAHAM LACY WHITEHEAD b 1805; d. 1884. vi. REBECCA WHITEHEAD b 1807; d. 1860. vii. ISAAC WHITEHEAD b 1810. viii. PHEBE L WHITEHEAD b 1812; d. 1895. ix. ELIZA WHITEHEAD b 1814. x. HANNAH WHITEHEAD b 1817; d. 1885. 136. ISAAC PRALL23 WHITEHEAD (ONESIMUS CHARLES22, ISAAC21, ISAAC20, ISAAC19, JOHN18, b 28.08.1773 Morristown,Morris County, New Jersey, Usa, d30.06.1857 Licking County, Ohio, Usa
m (1) ELIZABETH PAYNE. Hun b 31.08.1772 New York, Usa, d27.06.1851 Licking County, Ohio, Usa
m (2) MARY ANN ATWOOD. Notater for ELIZABETH PAYNE: She died in Jersey Township. Notater for MARY ANN ATWOOD: Stephen Surden Arnold ch of ISAAC WHITEHEAD and ELIZABETH PAYNE i. ABNER24 WHITEHEAD b 02.12.1804, Romulus, Seneca County, New York, Usa; d. 29.09.1866, Ohio Usa
m (1) REBECCA CONDIT WILLIAMS b 12.09.1807, Usa; d. 04.06.1842, Licking County, Ohio, Usa
m (2) JEMIMA WHITEHEAD b 08.09.1799, Usa; d. 30.05.1846, Licking County, Ohio, Usa. ii. ALFRED PAINE WHITEHEAD b 07.05.1796, Morristown, Morris County, New Jersey, Usa; d. 30.01.1865, Ohio Usa. ch of ISAAC WHITEHEAD and MARY ATWOOD 151. iii. MARY ROLFE24 WHITEHEAD b 26.08.1819, New York Usa; d. 02.08.1879, Harlan County, Nebraska, Usa. 137. SYLVESTER RUSSELL23 WHITEHEAD (ONESIMUS CHARLES22, ISAAC21, ISAAC20, ISAAC19, JOHN18, b 25.08.1795 New Jersey Usa, d03.02.1887
m ABBIE SMITH FREEMAN. Hun b 12.03.1796 Morris Co New Jersey Usa, d01.04.1850. ch of SYLVESTER WHITEHEAD and ABBIE FREEMAN 152. i. ISAAC N24 WHITEHEAD b 01.09.1825, New Jersey Usa; d. 09.03.1903. 153. ii. AARON DODD WHITEHEAD b 28.11.1829; d. 31.05.1897. iii. MARY WHITEHEAD b 1830. 154. iv. MARY LOUISA WHITEHEAD b 23.04.1834, New Jersey Usa; d. 11.1899. 138. PHILEMON23 TYLER (JOSEPH22, JOSEPH21, HANNAH20 WHITEHEAD, JOHN19, JOHN18, b 03.11.1763 Branford New Haven Co CT d23.09.1829 Branford New Haven Co CT ch of PHILEMON TYLER i. ANSON24 TYLER b 06.12.1788, Branford New Haven Co CT d. 22.11.1822
m HARRIET LINSLEY b 15.06.1790, Branford New Haven Co CT 139. ZACHEUS23 BALDWIN (JAMES22, HANNAH21 TYLER, HANNAH20 WHITEHEAD, JOHN19, JOHN18, b 09.01.1754 Branford New Haven Co CT d23.05.1831 Branford New Haven Co CT
m SARAH BRANFIELD. Hun b 1755 CT d29.05.1784 Branford New Haven Co CT ch of ZACHEUS BALDWIN and SARAH BRANFIELD i. SAMUEL24 BALDWIN b 28.08.1777, Branford New Haven Co CT d. 22.08.1840
m FLORA WOODRUFF b 27.09.1780, Farmington Hartford Co CT d. 06.06.1862. 140. MARGARET23 GOFFE (HANNAH22 GRIGGS, MARGARET21 BISHOP, HESTER20 COGSWELL, SUSANNA19 HAWKES, ANN18 BROWN, EDWARD17, b 26.11.1734 Derryfield Hillsborough New Hampshire Usa, d09.1775 Derryfield Hillsborough New Hampshire Usa.
m JOHN SIMPSON MOORE 08.09.1754 Deerfield Rockingham New Hampshire Usa, son of SAMUEL MOOR and NANCY BUTTERFIELD. Han b 28.11.1731 Litchfield, Hillsborough, New Hampshire, USA, d09.01.1809 Norridgewock, Lincoln, Maine, United States. Notater for JOHN SIMPSON MOORE: Col ch of MARGARET GOFFE and JOHN MOORE 155. i. JOHN W24 MOORE b 11.12.1755, Pitt North Carolina Usa; d. 1820, Saint George Parish Burke Georgia Usa. ii. ENOCH MOORE b Russell, VA d. 14.03.1822, Russell County Virginia Usa
m MARY WHITLEY, 23.03.1786, Washington County Virginia Usa b 1763; d. 1813, Russell County VA iii. DEBORAH MOORE b 04.1755, Derryfield Hillsborough New Hampshire Usa; d. 22.07.1818, Anson Somerset Maine Usa. iv. SAMUEL MOORE b 1758; d. 1780, Georgia Usa. v. BENJAMIN MOORE b mel. 27.03 - 28.09.1758, Derryfield Manchester Hillsborough New Hampshire Usa; d. mel. 14 - 16.05.1826, Norridgewock Somerset Maine Usa. vi. CALEB MOORE b 1760, Pitt North Carolina Usa; d. 1821, Wayne Co Georgia Usa
m EUNICE BRILEY, mel. 1778 - 1788, Pitt County North Carolina Usa b 1765, Pitt Co North Carolina Usa; d. mel. 07.10.1822 - 1872, Wayne Co Georgia Usa. vii. GOFF MOORE b 04.12.1760, Derryfield Hillsborough New Hampshire Usa; d. 28.09.1850, Madison Somerset Maine Usa. viii. MARGARET MOORE b 24.08.1762, Derryfield Hillsborough New Hampshire Usa; d. 10.08.1820, Norridgewock Somerset Maine Usa. ix. ABRAHAM MOORE b 22.12.1766, Derryfield Rockingham New Hampshire Usa; d. 17.04.1844, Abbot Piscataquis Maine Usa. x. JOSEPH MOORE b 14.04.1770, Derryfield New Hampshire Usa; d. 23.09.1852, Anson Maine Usa. 156. xi. OLIVE MOOR b 20.07.1773, Derryfield Rockingham New Hampshire Usa; d. 18.03.1848, Skowhegan Sommerset Maine Usa. xii. HANNAH MOORS b 02.11.1774, Litchfield, Hillsborough New Hampshire Usa; d. 31.12.1857, Anson Maine Usa. 141. JOHN23 GOFFE (HANNAH22 GRIGGS, MARGARET21 BISHOP, HESTER20 COGSWELL, SUSANNA19 HAWKES, ANN18 BROWN, EDWARD17, b 16.02.1727 Bedford Hillsborough New Hampshire Usa, d03.02.1816 Bedford Hillsborough New Hampshire Usa
m JEMIMA HOLDEN, dau of STEVEN HOLDEN and HANNAH SAWTEL. Hun b 24.02.1730 Groton Middlesex Co Massachusetts Usa, d 11.09.1818 Bedford Hillsborough New Hampshire Usa. ch of JOHN GOFFE and JEMIMA HOLDEN 157. i. POLLY24 GOFFE b 23.06.1771, Groton Middlesex Co Massachusetts Usa; d. 1854.
to be integrated above
24 142. FRANKLIN DELANO24 ROOSEVELT (JAMES23, MARY REBECCA22 ASPINWALL, JOHN21, MARY20 SANDS, MARY19 CORNELL, MARY18 RUSSELL, JOHN17, EDWARD16, FRANCIS15, MARGARET14 ST JOHN, MARGARET13 WALDEGRAVE, WILLIAM12, b 30.01.1882 Hyde Park, Dutchess County,NY d 12.04.1945 Warm Springs, Georgia Usa
m ANNA ELEANOR ROOSEVELT, dau of ELLIOT ROOSEVELT and CATHERINE MANN. Hun b 11.10.1884 Manhatten New York CoNY d07.11.1962 Manhatten New York Co New York Usa. Notater for FRANKLIN DELANO ROOSEVELT: Notes for Franklin Delano Roosevelt Soundly defeated Herbert Hoover in the 1932 election by a popular vote of 22,809,638 to 15,758,901 and an electoral vote of 472 to 59. Was reelected in 1936 over Alfred Landon by votes of 27,752,869 to 16,674,665 and 523 to 8, again in 1940 over Wendell L. Willkie by votes of 27,307,819 to 22,321,018 and 449 to 82, and yet again in 1944 over Thomas E. Dewey by votes of 25,606,585 to 22,014,745 and 432 to 99; the only president elected 4 times. Since age 39 his legs were paralyzed. Garner, Wallace, and Truman were his vice-presidents. --- Thirty-second president of the United States. Born January 30, 1882, of his father's second marriage, to Sara Delano, the daughter of a prominent family. The Roosevelts had been moderately wealthy for many generations. Merchants and financiers, they had often been prominent in the civic affairs of New York. When Franklin was born, his father was 51 years old and semi-retired from a railroad presidency, and his mother was 28. Franklin was often in the care of a governess and tutors, and until at the age of 14 he attended Groton School, where he received a solid classical, historical, and mathematical training. His earnest attempts at athletics were mostly defeated because of his tall, ungainly frame. Roosevelt wanted to go to Annapolis, but his parents insisted on preparation for the position natural for the scion of the Delano and Roosevelt families, so he entered Harvard University. He was a reasonably good student and found a substitute for athletics in reporting for the Harvard newspaper, of which he finally became editor. While seeming to be a Cambridge socialite, he spent an extra year studying public affairs. He also met and determined to marry his cousin, Eleanor, to his mother's annoyance. Eleanor was the daughter of Elliott Roosevelt, a weak member of the family who had died early. Raised by relatives, she received a lady's education but little affection. She was shy and retiring, but Franklin found her warm, vibrant, and responsive. Despite his mother's opposition, they were married in 1905, and Franklin entered Columbia University Law School. He prepared for the bar examinations and without taking a degree became a lawyer and entered a clerkship in the Wall Street firm of Carter, Ledyard and Milburn. He took his duties lightly, however, and it was later recalled that he had remarked to fellow clerks that he meant somehow to enter politics and finally to become president. There was never any doubt of his ambition. Roosevelt's chance came in 1910. He accepted the Democratic nomination for the New York Senate and was elected. Opportunity for further notice came quickly. Although his backing had come from Democrats affiliated with New York City's notorious Tammany Hall, he joined a group of upstate legislators who were setting out to oppose the election of Tammany's choice for U.S. senator. The rebels were successful in forcing acceptance of another candidate. Much of Roosevelt's wide publicity from this struggle was managed by Albany reporter Louis McHenry Howe, who had taken to the young politician and set out to further his career. (This dedication lasted until Roosevelt was safely in the White House.) The Tammany fight made Roosevelt famous in New York, but it also won him the enmity of Tammany. Still, he was reelected in 1912. That year Woodrow Wilson was elected president; Roosevelt had been a campaign worker, and his efforts had been noticed by prominent party elder Josephus Daniels. When Daniels became secretary of the Navy in Wilson's Cabinet, he persuaded Wilson to offer Roosevelt the assistant secretaryship. As assistant secretary, Roosevelt began an experience that substituted for the naval career he had hoped for as a boy. Before long he became restless, however, and tried to capture the Democratic nomination for U.S. senator from New York. Wilson and Daniels were displeased. Daniels forgave him, but Wilson never afterward really trusted the brash young man. This distrust was heightened later by Roosevelt's departure from the administration's policy of neutrality in the years preceding World War I. Roosevelt openly favored intervention, agitated for naval expansion, and was known to be rather scornful of Daniels, who kept the Navy under close political discipline. America soon entered the war, however, and Roosevelt could work for a cause he believed in. At that time there was only one assistant secretary, and he had extensive responsibilities. Howe had come to Washington with him and had become his indispensable guardian and helper. Together their management of the department was commendable. Though Roosevelt tried several times to leave his civilian post to join the fighting forces, he was persuaded to remain. When the war came to an end and Wilson was stricken during his fight for ratification of the Versailles Treaty, there was an obvious revulsion throughout the United States from the disappointing settlements of the war. It seemed to many that the effort to make the world safe for democracy had resulted in making the world safe for the old empires. The Allied leaders had given in to Wilson's insistence on the creation of the League of Nations only to serve their real interest in extending their territories and in imposing reparations on Germany. These reparations were so large that they could never be paid; consequently the enormous debts the Allies owed to the United States would never be paid either. The American armies had saved Europe and the Europeans were ungrateful. Resentment and disillusion were widespread. The Republican party had the advantage of not having been responsible for these foreign entanglements. In 1920 they nominated Warren G. Harding, a conservative senator, as their presidential candidate. The Democrats nominated Governor James Cox of Ohio, who had had no visible part in the Wilson administration; the vice-presidential candidate was Roosevelt. It was a despairing campaign; but in one respect it was a beginning rather than an ending for Roosevelt. He made a much more noticeable campaign effort than the presidential candidate. He covered the nation by special trains, speaking many times a day, often from back platforms, and getting acquainted with local leaders everywhere. He had learned the professional politician's breeziness, was able to absorb useful information, and had an infallible memory for names and faces. The defeat was decisive; but Roosevelt emerged as the most representative Democrat. Nevertheless in 1940 Roosevelt determined to break with tradition and run for a third term. His reasons were partly that his reforms were far from finished, but more importantly that he was now certain of Adolf Hitler's intention to subdue Europe and go on to further conquests. The immense productivity and organizational ability of the Germans would be at his disposal. Europe would be defeated unless the United States came to its support. The presidential campaign of 1940 was the climax of Roosevelt's plea that Americans set themselves against the Nazi threat. He had sought to prepare the way in numerous speeches but had had a most disappointing response. There was a vivid recollection of the disillusion after World War I, and a good many Americans were inclined to support the Germans rather than the Allied Powers. So strong was American reluctance to be involved in another world war that in the last speeches of this campaign Roosevelt practically promised that young Americans would never be sent abroad to fight. Luckily his opponent, Republican Wendell Willkie, also favored support for the Allies. The campaign, won by a narrow majority, gave Roosevelt no mandate for intervention. Roosevelt was not far into his third term, however, when the decision to enter the war was made for him by the Japanese, whose attack on Pearl Harbor caused serious losses to American forces there. Almost at once the White House became headquarters for those who controlled the strategy of what was now World War II. Winston Churchill came immediately and practically took up residence, bringing a British staff. Together the leaders agreed that Germany and Italy must have first attention. General Douglas MacArthur, commander in the Pacific, was ordered to retreat from the Philippines to Australia, something he was bitterly reluctant to do. But Roosevelt firmly believed that the first problem was to help the British, and then, when Hitler turned East, to somehow get arms to the Soviets. The Japanese could be taken care of when Europe was safe. Hitler's grand strategy was to subdue the Soviet Union, conquer North Africa, and link up with the Japanese, who were advancing rapidly across the Eastern countries. Roosevelt wanted an early crossing of the English Channel to retake France and to force Hitler to fight on two fronts. Churchill, mindful of the fearful British losses in World War I, instead wanted to attack the underbelly of Europe, cut Hitler's lines to the East, and shut him off from Africa. The invasion of Europe was postponed because it became clear that elaborate preparation was necessary. But Allied troops were sent into Africa, with General Dwight Eisenhower in command, to attack Field Marshal Erwin Rommel from the rear. Eventually an Allied crossing to Sicily and a slow, costly march up the Italian peninsula, correlated with the attack across the English Channel, forced the Italian collapse and the German surrender. Meanwhile, MacArthur was belatedly given the support he needed for a brilliant island-hopping campaign that drove the Japanese back, destroyed their fleet, and endangered their home island. After the German surrender, the Pacific war was brought to an end by the American atomic bomb explosion over the Japanese cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. By this time Roosevelt was dead. He had not participated in that doubtful decision; but he had been, with Churchill, in active command during the war until then. Completely exhausted, Roosevelt had gone to Warm Springs early in 1945. He had recently returned from a conference of Allied leaders at Yalta, where he had forced acceptance of his scheme for a United Nations and made arrangements for the Soviet Union to assist in the final subjugation of Japan. At Warm Springs he prepared the address to be used at San Francisco, where the meeting to ratify agreements concerning the United Nations was to be held. He finished signing papers on the morning of April 12, 1945, and within hours he suffered a massive cerebral hemorrhage and died. His body was transported by train to Washington D.C., where he was buried in Hyde Park. Biography Resource Center, © 2000 Gale Group Notes for Eleanor (Anna) (Spouse 1) Niece of President Theodere Roosevelt and fifth cousin of her husband. After FDRs death she was appointed the US representative to the United Nations, where she served for 16 years. Notater for ANNA ELEANOR ROOSEVELT: ad feedback ad feedback Eleanor Roosevelt Original name: Anna Roosevelt Memorial Photos Flowers Edit Share Birth:  Oct. 11, 1884 New York New York County (Manhattan) New York, USA Death:  Nov. 7, 1962 Manhattan New York County (Manhattan) New York, USA Presidential First Lady. Her life was actually a unique two part American march to fame and immortality. Her early life with President Franklin Delano Roosevelt, where as a mother of five children and the first lady of the land, saw her active in Democratic politics while helping to shape her Husband's New Deal program. After the death of the President, she became an identity in her own right, lecturing and writing. (Her syndicated newspaper column, "My Day", started in 1936 and ran until a month before her death) She advocated racial equality, women's rights and world peace. Her resignation from the Daughters of the American Revolution in 1939 after the organization refused to let Marian Anderson sing at Constitution Hall because of her color set the early tone for the civil rights movement. She was the only person to hold the position of a public member of the United States delegation to the United Nations, where she chaired the Commission on Human Rights. In the summer of 1962, she was diagnosed with bone marrow cancer. Realizing the end was near, she convinced doctors to discontinue treatment while returning to her apartment in New York City where she remained until her death at the age of 78. Her remains were taken to Hyde Park where a private service was held at St. James Episcopal Church and concluded with a public graveside service attended by many dignitaries and all the nation's living presidents. Adlai Stevenson gave the eulogy, the person she supported in his two failed attempts for the presidency. Burial followed next to her husband in the Rose Garden at Hyde Park. The United Nations posthumously awarded its first Human Rights Prize to Eleanor Roosevelt. (bio by: Donald Greyfield)  ch of FRANKLIN ROOSEVELT and ANNA ROOSEVELT i. ANNA ELEANOR25 ROOSEVELT b 03.05.1906, New York New York Usa; d. 01.12.1975, New York New York Usa
m (1) JAMES ADDISON HALSTED b 19.04.1905, Syracuse Onondaga New York Usa; d. 02.03.1984, Boston Suffolk Massachusetts United States
m (2) CLARENCE JOHN BOETTIGER b 25.03.1900, Chicago, Cook County, Illinois Usa; d. 29.10.1950, New York County (Manhattan), New York Usa
m (3) COL CURTIS BEAN DALL b 24.10.1896, New York County (Manhattan), New York Usa; d. 28.06.1991, Beaufort, Beaufort County, South Carolina Usa. 158. ii. BRIG. GEN. ELLIOTT ROOSEVELT b 23.09.1910, New York City, New York Usa; d. 27.10.1990, Scottsdale, Maricopa County, Arizona, Usa. iii. JAMES ROOSEVELT b 23.12.1907
m (1) BETSEY CUSHING
m (2) ROMELLE THERESA SCHNEIDER, 14.04.1941, Beverly Hills, California Usa b 1916
m (3) GLADYS IRENE OWENS, 02.07.1956, Los Angeles Co California Usa b 1917
m (4) MARY MARY LENA WINSKILL, 03.10.1969, Hyde Park, New York Usa b 05.06.1939, Birkenhead, Cheshire, England. iv. FRANKLIN DELANO ROOSEVELT b 18.03.1909, New York City, New York Usa; d. 08.11.1909, New York City, New York Usa. v. FRANKLIN DELANO ROOSEVELT b 17.08.1914, Campobello, New Brunswick, Canada; d. 17.08.1988, Poughkeepsie, New York Usa
m (1) ETHEL DU PONT b 1915, Wilmington Delaware Co PA d. 25.05.1965, Grosse Pointe, Michigan Usa
m (2) LYNDA STEVENSON
m (3) SUZANNE PERRIN, 31.08.1949, Manhattan, New York Usa
m (4) FELICIA SCHIFF, 01.07.1970, New York Usa
m (5) PATRICIA LOUISE OAKES, 06.05.1977, Dutchess County, New York Usa b 17.03.1951, Mexico City, Mexico. vi. JOHN ASPINWALL ROOSEVELT b 13.03.1916, Washington D.C. Usa; d. 27.04.1981, New York Usa
m ANNE LINDSAY CLARK, 18.06.1938, Nahant, Massachusetts Usa b 13.07.1916, Concord, Massachusetts Usa; d. 28.05.1973, New York Usa. 143. JAMES24 ROOSEWELT (JAMES23 ROOSEVELT, MARY REBECCA22 ASPINWALL, JOHN21, MARY20 SANDS, MARY19 CORNELL, MARY18 RUSSELL, JOHN17, EDWARD16, FRANCIS15, MARGARET14 ST JOHN, MARGARET13 WALDEGRAVE, WILLIAM12, b 27.03.1854 Hyde Park Dutchess CoNY d 1927
m HELEN SCHERMERHORN ASTOR. Hun b 1855 New York CoNY d 1893 England. ch of JAMES ROOSEWELT and HELEN ASTOR i. HELEN REBECCA25 ROOSEVELT b 26.09.1881, New York City New York Co New York Usa; d. 08.07.1962, Mohawk Herkimer Co New York Usa
m THEODORE DOUGLAS ROBINSON b 28.04.1883, New York City New York Co New York Usa; d. 10.04.1934, Warren Herkimer Co New York Usa. Notater for THEODORE DOUGLAS ROBINSON: Occup 1917-1918 NY State Senator Occup 1921-1924 NY State Senator Occup 1924-1929 USA Asst Secretary of Navy 144. MARY24 FIELD (CHARITY23 WHITEHEAD, b 1770 New York Usa, d 1841.
m SAMUEL BLACKWELL, son of JACOB BLACKWELL and LYDIA HALLETT. Han b 10.1759 Newtown SuffolkNY d27.11.1832 Newtown Suffolk New York Usa. ch of MARY FIELD and SAMUEL BLACKWELL 159. i. FRANCES FIELD25 BLACKWELL b mel. 1787 - 1797, NC 160. ii. JOHN BLACKWELL b 10.06.1794, Newtown Suffolk Co New York Usa; d. 16.01.1864. 161. iii. ANNA E BLACKWELL b 1803, New Bern Craven Co North Carolina Usa; d. 28.09.1893. 145. ABIGAIL24 MOORE (HANNAH23 WHITEHEAD, b 11.01.1770NY d22.11.1836.
m THOMAS BILLOPP, son of CHRISTOPHER BILLOPP and FRANCES WILLETT. Han b 10.02.1767NY d21.07.1806. ch of ABIGAIL MOORE and THOMAS BILLOPP i. FRANCES25 BILLOPP b 20.02.1793, Staten Island Richmond Co New York Usa; d. 29.11.1863, Baltimore City Maryland
m WILLIAM EDWARD WYATT b 09.07.1789, Halifax Nova Scotia Canada; d. 21.06.1864, Baltimore City Maryland. 162. ii. REV THOMAS FARMAR BILLOPP b 22.05.1805, New York Usa; d. 06.09.1876. 163. iii. MARY LAWRENCE BILLOPP b 1785, Baltimore City MD. 146. THOMAS24 STEVENSON (JOHN23, SARAH22 WHITEHEAD, JONATHAN21, MAJOR DANIEL20, DANIEL19, JOHN18, b 24.02.1769 Kingwood Hunterdon County, New Jersey Usa, d 17.06.1798 Independence Sussex Co New Jersey Usa
m REBECCA STEVENSON FREEMAN WEBSTER, dau of SAMUEL WEBSTER and SUSANNA KESTER. Hun b 1771 Kingwood Hunterdon County, New Jersey Usa, d 14.03.1811 Rahway Plainfield Middlesex Co New Jersey Usa. ch of THOMAS STEVENSON and REBECCA WEBSTER i. SUSAN BATTERSON25 STEVENSON b 1796, Kingwood Hunterdon County, New Jersey Usa; d. 27.03.1832, Philadelphia Delaware Co PA
m LEWIS BATTERSON b 1791, Rahway Essex Co New Jersey Usa; d. 10.1858, Monmouth Co New Jersey Usa. 147. AUGUSTINE HICKS24 LAWRENCE (AUGUSTINE23, MARY22 HICKS, b 11.10.1770 Whitestone Queens CoNY d 10.09.1828 Manhattan New York Co Usa
m CATHARINE LEQUIER. Hun b 23.04.1771 New York Usa, d06.10.1817 Suffolk Co New York Usa. ch of AUGUSTINE LAWRENCE and CATHARINE LEQUIER i. JOANNA25 LAWRENCE b 08.07.1797, Queens Co New York Usa; d. 16.03.1878, Manhattan New York Co Usa
m JAMES MCCREA b 29.02.1792, Philadelphia Co PA d. 1832, New York Co Usa. 148. ABIGAIL24 MOTT (DEBORAH23 TALLMAN, ABIGAIL22 HICKS, b 1760 Monmouth Monmouth Co New Jersey Usa, d20.04.1842 Kingston Township Luzerne Co PA
m JOHN SPACE. Han b 1757 Germany, d 16.09.1813 Kingston Township Luzerne Co PA Notater for JOHN SPACE: John Space ofe American Army During the Revolutionary War, National Archives Microcopy M881, Roll 0612]e American Army During the Revolutionary War, National Archives Microcopy M881, Roll 0612]d 15 Mar Destd 15 Mayeth Townarktonmingtontch Plainslough Jersey Campruiting Svcey Hultsd Sussexd Southwarde American Army During the Revolutionary War, Nadonal Archives Mircoropy M881, Roll 0612]l (20 Doll Sub)l Sub)e American Army During the Revolutionary War, National Archives, Microcopy M881, Roll 0612 When John Space moved to Luzerne County, Pa., he settled on a farm in the Wyoming Valley, southeast of Harveys Lake, and he lived on this farm from 1790 until his death in 1813. ch of ABIGAIL MOTT and JOHN SPACE i. NANCY25 SPACE b 1780, Sussex Co New Jersey Usa. ii. ELSIE SPACE b 1782, Sussex Co New Jersey Usa. iii. JOHN SPACE b 1783, Harrisburg Dauphin Co PA
m (1) ELIZABETH BISSARD b 1786, New Jersey Usa
m (2) VALONIA FERRY b 1809, Vermont Usa; d. 01.01.1881, Delta Eaton Co Missisippi Usa. Notater for VALONIA FERRY: The possibility exists that Valonia (1850 US Census) or Velma (Louisa Van Guilder's Death Certificate) FERRY is also Veronica (Space?). Both are the same age and are identified as being born in Vermont in some census records. Apparently widowed between the 1850 US Census and the 1854 MI Census, she may have joined the John SPACE household. Phidilia (Fidelia) and Mary E. J. to appear in Census records for both households and the name, age and birth state combinations should be too unique to be coincidental. have not yet documented this. [W John Schuck] iv. RUTH SPACE b 1787, Huntington Mills Luzerne Co PA v. MARGARET SPACE b 19.09.1788, Luzerne Co PA
m PHILIP JACKSON b 29.03.1758, Luzerne Co PA 164. vi. ZEPHANIAH SPACE b 1789, Hackettstown Warren Co New Jersey Usa; d. 02.04.1871, Redbank Township Clarion Co PA vii. ELIZABETH SPACE b 1792, PA d. 21.09.1844, Forty Fort Luzerne Co PA
m DERRICK RICHARD BIRD b 21.08.1789, Luzerne Co PA d. 22.08.1831, Luzerne Co PA viii. ABIGAIL SPACE b 1793, Luzerne Co PA ix. SALLY SPACE b 1796, Luzerne Co PA d. 1860, Eaton Eaton Co Missisippi Usa
m ANSEL MASCHO b 1799, Luzerne Co PA d. 13.06.1885, Oneida Eaton Co Missisippi Usa. x. JAMES RICHARD SPACE b 12.07.1802, Huntington Township Luzerne Co PA d. 30.07.1884, Wyoming Valley Luzerne Co PA
m MAHALE PIATT b 1806, PA d. 1882. Notater for JAMES RICHARD SPACE: A farmer who lived in Wyoming, PA his entire life. Information received from Della Shafer Jan 1999 states that the will of James Space, filed 8 Aug 1884, Luzerne County, PA lists two heirs as Nancy Garrison and Mary Walker. Della is also the source of the birth/death dates of James Space and Mahale Piatt; also lists children as John, Charles, George, James (born 5 Dec 1824 and married Lucinda Pugh), Zephaniah, Harriet (married James Griener), Halley? Mary/Nancy? (married Ezekiel Garrison), Caroline, Sylvnia (who married Schooley) and Mary? (who married Walker) "John Space, The Progenitor and The Zephaniah and Allen Space Lines In The Space Family of America" by Ralph Stephen Space and Zeph Frederick Space published April 1935; page 5-6: "James Space, a son of John and Abigail Mott-Space, was born in Luzerne County? Pennsylvania, in 1802. He followed the occupation of farming and lived at Wyoming, Luzerne County, his entire life, and died there in 1884. James Space married Mahale Piatt, who was born in 1806, and died in 1882. They were the parents of ten children, five sons: John, Charles, George, James and Zephaniah; and five daughters; Harriet, Nancy, Mary, Caroline and Sylvina. The last named daughter, Sylvina, is now Mrs. Sylvina Space-Schooley, and lives a few miles from Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania. She was born in 1842, and is the eldest living Space that the writers of this history have on record. (April 1935). (This paragraph furnished by Mr. Edward F. Space, Forty Fort, Pennsylvania, and Miss Margaret E. Space, Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania. Mr. Edward F. Space is a great-grandson, and Miss Margaret E. Space is a great-great-granddaughter of James Space, 1802-1884.)" 149. JOHN24 WATERS (JOHN TREDWELL23, ANTHONY WHITEHEAD22, ELIZABETH21 WHITEHEAD, MAJOR DANIEL20, DANIEL19, JOHN18, b 1787 North Carolina Usa, d06.08.1839
m FRANCES FIELD BLACKWELL, dau of SAMUEL BLACKWELL and MARY FIELD. Hun b mel. 1787 - 1797 NC ch of JOHN WATERS and FRANCES BLACKWELL 165. i. MARGARET SAYRE25 WATERS b 23.12.1824, New Bern Craven Co North Carolina Usa; d. 27.08.1902, Setauket Suffolk Co New York Usa. 150. ONESIMUS24 WHITEHEAD (SILAS23, ONESIMUS CHARLES22, ISAAC21, ISAAC20, ISAAC19, JOHN18, b 26.03.1793 Essex Co New Jersey Usa, d25.08.1824 Galena, Delaware, Ohio, Usa
m PYRENA CASE 19.11.1818 Columbus, Franklin, Ohio, Usa. Hun b 1792 New Jersey Usa, dJersey, Licking, Ohio Usa. ch of ONESIMUS WHITEHEAD and PYRENA CASE 166. i. JOHN25 WHITEHEAD b 06.09.1819, Jersey, Licking County, Ohio, Usa; d. 14.02.1905, Newark, Essex County, New Jersey, Usa. ii. JANE ADAMS WHITEHEAD b 01.09.1820, Jersey, Licking, Ohio, Usa; d. 24.10.1881, Augusta, Kentucky Usa. 167. iii. STERN ONESIMUS WHITEHEAD b 12.12.1823; d. 02.10.1873. iv. RUTH WHITEHEAD b 1824; d. 1824. 151. MARY ROLFE24 WHITEHEAD (ISAAC PRALL23, ONESIMUS CHARLES22, ISAAC21, ISAAC20, ISAAC19, JOHN18, b 26.08.1819NY d02.08.1879 Harlan County, Nebraska, Usa.
m STEPHEN SURDEN ARNOLD 19.04.1838 Jersey, Licking, Ohio Usa, son of CHARLES ARNOLD and ELIZABETH WOLFE. Han b 18.04.1816 Morristown, Middlesex County, New Jersey, Usa, d 12.11.1887 Coin, Page County, Iowa, Usa. Notater for STEPHEN SURDEN ARNOLD: He was a Veteran of Co. H, 7th Iowa Infantry in the Civil War. Stephen enlisted in the same regiment as he son had served in previously from July 1861 to November 1861. His son was wounded and died at the age of 18. The following military service information kindly provided by K.L. Bonnett: From military records: Arnold, Stephen S. Age 44. Residence Washington,Ia. Nativity New Jersey. Enlisted Jan. 28, 1864. Mustered Feb. 19, 1864. Mustered out July 12, 1865, Louisville, Ky. -------------- Based on enlistment, his service included battles of Lay's Ferry,GA May 14-15 1864, Dallas,GA May 28-31, Kenesaw Mt,GA Jun 26 & Jul 2-3, Atlanta,GA Jul 24 - Aug 24, Jonesboro,GA Aug 31, Sherman's March to the Sea Nov 11-Dec 21, Carolinas Campaign Jan 28- Mar 30 1865 followed by triumphal grand review in Washington D.C. ch of MARY WHITEHEAD and STEPHEN ARNOLD i. SETH ATWOOD25 ARNOLD b 16.02.1839, Greenville, Darke County, Ohio, Usa; d. 15.02.1907, Vancouver, Clark County, Washington, Usa
m MELCENIA ELLIOTT b 09.04.1839, Greensburg, Decatur County, Indiana, Usa; d. 02.10.1926, Fisher, Clark County, Washington, Usa. 152. ISAAC N24 WHITEHEAD (SYLVESTER RUSSELL23, ONESIMUS CHARLES22, ISAAC21, ISAAC20, ISAAC19, JOHN18, b 01.09.1825 New Jersey Usa, d09.03.1903
m MARY LOUISA LUDLOW. Hun b 04.02.1827 New Jersey Usa, d 18.02.1909. ch of ISAAC WHITEHEAD and MARY LUDLOW i. GEORGE C25 WHITEHEAD b 03.01.1850, New Jersey Usa; d. 14.08.1850. ii. ABBIE L WHITEHEAD b 22.01.1851, New Jersey Usa; d. 14.01.1907. iii. IRA C WHITEHEAD b 11.03.1853; d. 11.03.1858. iv. AUGUSTUS L WHITEHEAD b 30.12.1854, New Jersey Usa; d. 09.12.1880. v. MARY C WHITEHEAD b 06.10.1856, New Jersey Usa; d. 16.08.1880. 153. AARON DODD24 WHITEHEAD (SYLVESTER RUSSELL23, ONESIMUS CHARLES22, ISAAC21, ISAAC20, ISAAC19, JOHN18, b 28.11.1829, d31.05.1897
m HARRIET ELIZABETH LEE. Hun b 19.02.1832, d06.12.1918. ch of AARON WHITEHEAD and HARRIET LEE i. WILLIAM25 WHITEHEAD b 06.11.1858. ii. EDWARD WHITEHEAD b 09.10.1859; d. 09.11.1859. 168. iii. CHARLES RUSSELL WHITEHEAD b 01.09.1860. iv. ASA WHITEHEAD b 12.05.1862; d. 15.01.1868. v. IRA CONDIT WHITEHEAD b 11.03.1868; d. 12.03.1869. vi. MARY HOWELL WHITEHEAD b 11.03.1868; d. 12.03.1869. 154. MARY LOUISA24 WHITEHEAD (SYLVESTER RUSSELL23, ONESIMUS CHARLES22, ISAAC21, ISAAC20, ISAAC19, JOHN18, b 23.04.1834 New Jersey Usa, d 11.1899.
m THEODORE SAYRE, son of WILLIAM SAYRE and HANNAH GUERIN. Han b 09.07.1829 New Jersey Usa, d07.08.1907. ch of MARY WHITEHEAD and THEODORE SAYRE i. FANNY L25 SAYRE b 20.12.1859, New Jersey Usa; d. 17.07.1957. 155. JOHN W24 MOORE (MARGARET23 GOFFE, HANNAH22 GRIGGS, MARGARET21 BISHOP, HESTER20 COGSWELL, SUSANNA19 HAWKES, ANN18 BROWN, EDWARD17, b 11.12.1755 Pitt North Carolina Usa, d 1820 Saint George Parish Burke Georgia Usa
m (1) CLARA MARTIN. Hun b 1765 Orange Co North Carolina Usa, d 1830 Chatham North Carolina Usa
m (2) MARCIA MCALL. Hun b 1777 Mecklenburg County North Carolina Usa, d 1840 Effingham Georgia Usa
m (3) WINNIFRED (WINNIE) HARDEMAN 14.06.1792 Effingham Georgia United States, dau of THOMAS HARDEMAN and ELIZABETH SIRMANS. Hun b 21.07.1754 Beaufort District, South Carolina Usa, d 1810. ch of JOHN MOORE and CLARA MARTIN i. JAMES25 MOORE b 1792, Orange North Carolina Usa; d. 1820, Orange NC ch of JOHN MOORE and MARCIA MCALL ii. CHARLOTTE25 MOORE b 1800, Bulloch County Georgia Usa; d. 1895, What Is Bradford Florida United States. ch of JOHN MOORE and WINNIFRED HARDEMAN 169. iii. BENJAMIN JOHN25 MOORE b 1786, Bladen County, North Carolina, Usa; d. 24.06.1862, Farmers Union, Columbus County, North Carolina, Usa. iv. ELIZABETH MOORE b 1782, Pitt North Carolina Usa; d. 06.10.1867, Lakeland Polk Florida Usa
m WILLIAM RAULERSON, 1798, McIntosh (fka Liberty) County Georgia Usa b 1780, South Carolina Usa; d. 1858, Columbia (nka Baker) County Florida Usa. v. THOMAS MOORE b 1790, Pitt North Carolina Usa; d. 1820, Laurens Georgia Usa. vi. JESSE MOORE b 1788, Wayne Co North Carolina Usa; d. 10.07.1855, Bulloch (fka Effingham) County Georgia Usa
m REBECCA STUDSTILL, 26.07.1808, Bulloch County Georgia Usa b 16.02.1793, Beaufort District South Carolina Usa; d. 12.04.1884, Bulloch (fka Effingham) County Georgia Usa. vii. SPENCER MOORE b 1800, Wayne County North Carolina Usa; d. 23.05.1872, Long Pond Levy County Florida Usa
m ELIZABETH MATTOX, 11.07.1827, Tattnall County Georgia Usa b 1805, Tattnall Co Georgia Usa; d. 1872, Long Pond Levy County Florida Usa. Notater for SPENCER MOORE: Justice of the Peace NOTE: Spencer Moore was Tattnall County (Georgia) Justice Of The Peace from 1830 to 1850 viii. EDWARD MOORE b 1803, Pitt North Carolina Usa; d. mel. 06.1880 - 1910, Reidsville Tattnall County Georgia Usa
m SARAH A. MATTOX, 05.09.1827, Tattnall County Georgia Usa. 170. ix. JOHN MOORE b 1785, Wayne Co North Carolina Usa; d. 1855, Clay Hill District Duval County Florida Usa. 156. OLIVE24 MOOR (MARGARET23 GOFFE, HANNAH22 GRIGGS, MARGARET21 BISHOP, HESTER20 COGSWELL, SUSANNA19 HAWKES, ANN18 BROWN, EDWARD17, b 20.07.1773 Derryfield Rockingham New Hampshire Usa, d 18.03.1848 Skowhegan Sommerset Maine Usa.
m THOMAS STEWARD, son of PHINEAS STEWARD and ANNE IRELAND. Han b 15.02.1766 Fitchburg Worcester County Massachusetts Usa, d 17.12.1839 Somerset County Maine Usa. ch of OLIVE MOOR and THOMAS STEWARD 171. i. SETH WYMAN25 STEWARD b 14.05.1798, Bingham Sommerset Maine Usa. 157. POLLY24 GOFFE (JOHN23, HANNAH22 GRIGGS, MARGARET21 BISHOP, HESTER20 COGSWELL, SUSANNA19 HAWKES, ANN18 BROWN, EDWARD17, b 23.06.1771 Groton Middlesex Co Massachusetts Usa, d 1854.
m JOSIAH WALLACE. Han b 1770 Bedford Hillsborough Co New Hampshire Usa. ch of POLLY GOFFE and JOSIAH WALLACE 172. i. NANCY M25 WALLACE b 1810, Bethlehem Grafton Co New Hampshire Usa; d. 01.05.1889, Butler Co Iowa Usa.
to be integrated above
25 158. BRIG. GEN. ELLIOTT25 ROOSEVELT (FRANKLIN DELANO24, JAMES23, MARY REBECCA22 ASPINWALL, JOHN21, MARY20 SANDS, MARY19 CORNELL, MARY18 RUSSELL, JOHN17, EDWARD16, FRANCIS15, MARGARET14 ST JOHN, MARGARET13 WALDEGRAVE, WILLIAM12, b 23.09.1910 New York City,NY d27.10.1990 Scottsdale, Maricopa County, Arizona, Usa
m (1) ELIZABETH BROWNING DONNER 16.01.1932. Hun b 05.12.1911 Pittsburgh, PA
m (2) RUTH JOSEPHINE GOOGINS 22.07.1933 Burlington Iowa Usa. Hun b 01.11.1908, d 17.07.1974 Muskegon, Muskegon County, Michigan, Usa
m (3) FAYE MARGARET EMERSON 03.12.1944 Grand Canyon, Colorado Usa. Hun b 08.07.1917 Elizabeth, Louisiana Usa, d09.03.1983 Majorca Island Spain
m (4) MINNEWA BELL 15.03.1951 Miami Beach, Florida Usa. Hun b 1911
m (5) PATRICIA PEABODY 11.1960 Qualicum, British Columbia, Canada, dau of FOLGER PEABODY and EUNICE FORD. Hun b 01.12.1922 Massachusetts Usa, d02.04.1996 Scottsdale, Maricopa County, Arizona, Usa. ch of BRIG. ROOSEVELT and ELIZABETH DONNER i. WILLIAM DONNER26 ROOSEVELT b 17.11.1932; d. 01.12.2003, West Palm Beach, Palm Beach County, Florida, Usa. Notater for WILLIAM DONNER ROOSEVELT: William Donner Roosevelt, investment banker and philanthropist, died in the early morning of Monday, December 1, 2003, following a seven-year struggle with prostate cancer. He was 72 years old. He was the grandson of U.S. President Franklin D. Roosevelt, and of William H. Donner, a major figure in the growth of America's steel industry. Bill Roosevelt was an investment banker. He began his professional career as vice president of Electronics Communications, Inc., first in Denver, Colorado, and later in Wichita, Kansas. He joined the investment firm of Laird and Company, a Wilmington firm, based in New York, in 1962. He would become a founder of the firm of Auerbach, Pollack and Richardson in 1966. He moved to McKinley Alsop, where he served as managing partner. He would serve as senior vice president and head of the institutional office of Buckingham Research's Palm Beach office. He joined Ryan Beck and Company of Palm Beach, FL where he served as senior vice president and headed their institutional effort. He was an advisor to several large institutional money managers, including Essex Management of Boston, Peter Cannell and Co. of New York, and several others. Roosevelt was an active philanthropist. An airplane pilot since the age of 15, he served on the Board of the Aircraft Owners and Pilots Association Foundation where his extensive flying experience enabled him to contribute to the development of many safety procedures commonly used in aviation today. His interests in sport fishing and diving would lead to his becoming the Chairman of the Perry Institute for Marine Science of West Palm Beach, Florida and the Bahamas. He was an active board member of the William Donner Science Foundation of New York and of the Donner Canadian Foundation of Toronto, Canada. Bill Roosevelt was born in New York City. His father was Elliott Roosevelt, 2nd son of FDR and Eleanor Roosevelt. His mother was Elizabeth Donner of Philadelphia, PA. He was educated at St. Marks School of Southboro, MA, and at Harvard University in the tradition of the Roosevelt family. He studied law and graduated from the University of Colorado Law School in 1958. He resided in Palm Beach, FL. He was a founding member of the Doubles Club of New York, and a member of the Weeburn Country Club of Darien, CT. He belonged to the Camp Fire Club of Chappaqua, New York, and the Sailfish Club and Beach Club of Palm Beach, FL. He is survived by his wife, Ava, and his two sons, Christopher Kyle Roosevelt of Portsmouth, RI, Nicholas Roosevelt of Wellington, FL, and a granddaughter, Alexa. His surviving brothers include Curt Winsor of McLean, VA, David Roosevelt of New York City and Tony Roosevelt of Dallas, TX, and his sister, Chandler Roosevelt Lindsley of Dallas, TX. A Memorial Service will be held in Palm Beach, Florida at a future date. ch of BRIG. ROOSEVELT and PATRICIA PEABODY ii. LIVINGSTON DELANO26 ROOSEVELT b 16.03.1962, Hinnepen Minneapolis Minnesota Usa; d. 21.03.1962, Hinnepen Minneapolis Minnesota Usa. 159. FRANCES FIELD25 BLACKWELL (MARY24 FIELD, CHARITY23 WHITEHEAD, b mel. 1787 - 1797 NC
m JOHN WATERS, son of JOHN WATERS and ANN BETTS. Han b 1787 North Carolina Usa, d06.08.1839. Barn er listet ovenfor under (149) John Waters. 160. JOHN25 BLACKWELL (MARY24 FIELD, CHARITY23 WHITEHEAD, b 10.06.1794 Newtown Suffolk CoNY d 16.01.1864
m ANN SELBY 1821. Hun b 1807 North Carolina Usa, d 1882. ch of JOHN BLACKWELL and ANN SELBY i. ANN MARIA26 BLACKWELL b 22.01.1822, North Carolina Usa; d. 07.03.1901, Washington Beaufort Co,North Carolina Usa
m MAJOR THOMAS SPARROW b 02.10.1819, Craven Co North Carolina Usa; d. 10.01.1884, Washington Beaufort Co,NC 161. ANNA E25 BLACKWELL (MARY24 FIELD, CHARITY23 WHITEHEAD, b 1803 New Bern Craven Co North Carolina Usa, d28.09.1893.
m ELI SMALLWOOD. Han b 1803 Craven Co North Carolina Usa, d21.02.1857 New Bern Craven Co NC ch of ANNA BLACKWELL and ELI SMALLWOOD 173. i. EDWARD F26 SMALLWOOD b 25.09.1822, New Bern Craven Co North Carolina Usa; d. 11.07.1881. 174. ii. MARY B SMALLWOOD b 1824, New Bern Craven Co NC 175. iii. ANNA M SMALLWOOD b 1826, New Bern Craven Co North Carolina Usa; d. 13.10.1915, NC iv. ELIZA B SMALLWOOD b 28.01.1829, New Bern Craven Co NC v. SAMUEL P SMALLWOOD b 08.05.1841, New Bern Craven Co NC 162. REV THOMAS FARMAR25 BILLOPP (ABIGAIL24 MOORE, HANNAH23 WHITEHEAD, b 22.05.1805NY d06.09.1876
m KATHERINE RISTEAU. Hun b 09.11.1809 MD, d21.04.1892. Notater for REV THOMAS FARMAR BILLOPP: Religion 1825-1875 Episcopal RectorMD, Prince Georges Co, Upper Marlboro, St Barnabas Church Religious All Episcopal Religious All Episcopal Rectors Religious All Episcopal Rectors Here Religious Religion Index Prince George's Co MDGenWeb Site FamilySearch County Page FamilySearch State Page Maryland TTTP episcopal Religion 1844 Episcopal RectorMD, Harford Co, Havre de Grace, St Johns Episcopal Church Religious All Episcopal Religious All Episcopal Rectors Religious All Episcopal Rectors Here Religious Religion Index FamilySearch County Page FamilySearch State Page Maryland TTTP episcopal Religion 1844 Episcopal RectorMD, Harford Co, St Georges Parish Church Religious All Episcopal Religious All Episcopal Rectors Religious All Episcopal Rectors Here Religious Religion Index FamilySearch County Page FamilySearch State Page Maryland TTTP episcopal Religion 1845-1856 Episcopal Rector ch of REV BILLOPP and KATHERINE RISTEAU i. KATHARINE CARNAN26 BILLOPP b 28.01.1848, Delaware Usa; d. 30.06.1925, Prince Georges Co Maryland
m WILLIAM BERRY b 01.12.1846, MD; d. 02.11.1928, Prince Georges Co MD. 163. MARY LAWRENCE25 BILLOPP (ABIGAIL24 MOORE, HANNAH23 WHITEHEAD, b 1785 Baltimore City MD.
m GEORGE CARR GRUNDY. Han b 1781 Baltimore City MD, d21.12.1834 Baltimore City MD. ch of MARY BILLOPP and GEORGE GRUNDY i. THOMAS BILLOPP26 GRUNDY b 13.12.1826, Baltimore City MD; d. 25.06.1879, Ashland Hanover Co Virginia Usa
m CLARA HAXALL b 25.08.1830, VA d. 26.03.1916. Notater for THOMAS BILLOPP GRUNDY: Military VA Army / Private / US Civil War VA Light Artillery (Anderson's) 164. ZEPHANIAH25 SPACE (ABIGAIL24 MOTT, DEBORAH23 TALLMAN, ABIGAIL22 HICKS, b 1789 Hackettstown Warren Co New Jersey Usa, d02.04.1871 Redbank Township Clarion Co PA
m CATHERINE ANN ARMSTRONG, dau of JOHN ARMSTRONG and BARBARA. Hun b 1793 Warren Warren Co New Jersey Usa, d 17.05.1868 Redbank Township Clarion Co PA Notater for ZEPHANIAH SPACE: Zephaniah Space, of Luzerne county, N. J., purchased of Henry Nolf, fifty acres north of Millville, for which he paid one dollar per acre. He moved on [p. 584] the land in 1818, and besides farming, worked at blacksmithing, and for many years was the only blacksmith in the township "Zephaniah Space worked at logging along the Susquehanna River and took many rafts of lumber to Northumberland and Sunbury and on one of these trips met Catherine Armstrong which resulted in their marriage." "History of Clarion County" by Davis; pp 583: Redbank Township "Zephaniah Space, of Luzerne County, N.J. purchased of Henry Nolf, fifty acres north of Millville, for which he paid one dollar per acre. He moved on the land in 1818, and besides farming, worked at blacksmithing and for many years was the only blacksmith in the township." Notater for CATHERINE ANN ARMSTRONG: John Space,The Progenitor and The Zephaniah and Allen Space Lines In The Space Family of America" by Ralph Stephen Space and Zeph Frederick Space (April 1935); Page 6: "...Catherine Armstrong was a hale and hearty Scots (sic) woman, and had a rather ruddy complexion. Her hair was of a dark auburn hue, and her eyes were dark brown. In the Armstrong Family, there were only two children, Catharine and her brother, John. Catherine's father was John Armstrong, and the parents died when John and Catherine were children. Catherine was reared in East Bethlehem, Pennsylvania, in a family by the name of Hart." Note: believe that the location of Catherine and the Hart family is in error as Catherine and Zephaniah were married in Luzerne County, PA. Zeph and his family are found living in Luzerne prior to his marriage, Zephaniah and Catherine were married in Luzerne County and had no previous connection with Clarion County until four years after their marriage. cbs Information received from Pat Springer , June 1998 taken from copies of Space family history in the possession of her mother: "The Armstrong Family belonged to the early Scotch families that were the original settlers of Wyoming Valley in Luzerne County, Pennsylvania. John Armstrong, Catherine's father, was a survivor of the Wyoming Valley Massacre which occurred in July of 1778. At that time he was only a boy. The killing and plundering was done by the Tories and Indians, preying on the Scots and Dutch families while most of the men were away fighting in the Revolution. Those who were able to reach the Pocono Mountains or Forty Fort were saved from this terrible raid. ch of ZEPHANIAH SPACE and CATHERINE ARMSTRONG i. GEORGE26 SPACE b 1812, Clarion Co PA d. 31.10.1865, Redbank Township Clarion Co PA
m (1) CATHERINE WECKERLY b 07.04.1814; d. 21.03.1844
m (2) SARAH CRIBBS b 22.10.1827, Monroe Clarion Co PA d. 22.04.1891, Clarion Co PA Notater for GEORGE SPACE: John Space, The Progenitor and The Zephaniah and Allen Space Lines in The Space Family of America. Authored by Ralph Stephen Space and Zeph Frederick Space. April 1935; "George Space...was an inkeeper at New Bethlehem, Pennsylvania." "History of Clarion County" by Davis; pp. 553: "In 1834, George Space moved to the place (New Bethlehem) and built a blacksmith shop. ...1853, when a charter of incorporation was granted by Clarion County Court, creating the town into a borough. John Himes was elected burgess, and George Space, Joseph Conger, Frederick Mohney, and Joseph Himes, councilmen". Additional information (birth and death dates of children), children's names and spouses taken from "The Spiece Family of German and The Space Family of America" by Zeph Frederick Space. Received from Pat Springer 1998. Other researchers claim death as occuring in 1865 HISTORY OF CLARION COUNTY edited by A. J. Davis, 1887 CHAPTER LXI. HISTORY OF NEW BETHLEHEM BOROUGH. By L. L. Himes. transcribed by Sue Llewellyn In 1834 George Space moved to the place and built a blacksmith shop. Adam Hilliard, P. H. Hoffman, Gabriel Miller, Jacob Shankle, Joseph Conger, moved to the place soon after. One after another continued to locate and build promiscuously until 1853, when a charter of incorporation was granted by Clarion County Court, creating the town into a borough. John Himes was elected burgess, and George Space, Joseph Conger, Frederick Mohney, and Joseph Himes, councilmen. George Space, husband of Catherine Weckerly petioned court of Center County, to partion the estate of the late Adam Hoy for John Hoy & Adam Hoy, minor children of Adam Hoy, deceased and widow Elizabeth Weckerly Hoy, then living in Armstrong County. He was guardian of the above children. Elizabeth Weckerly Hoy had remarried Samuel Larich. Their daughter, Margaret married Abraham Shlutterbach. ii. SYLVINA SPACE b 26.11.1814, Luzerne Co PA d. 12.12.1898, Clarion Co PA
m JOHN HIMES b 13.11.1810, New Bethlehem Clarion Co PA d. 25.01.1876, New Bethlehem Clarion Co PA Notater for SYLVINA SPACE: John Space, The Progenitor and The Zephaniah and Allen Space Lines in The Space Family of America. Authored by Ralph Stephen Space and Zeph Frederick Space. April 1935; pp 8: "It was the custom of Sylvinia Space Himes to keep a diary; and many friends and neighbors of the community would go to her for information from her records relative to births, marriages, deaths and community happenings." Notater for JOHN HIMES: "History of Clarion County" by Davis; pp. 553: "...1853, when a charter of incorporation was granted by Clarion County Court, creating the town into a borough. John Himes was elected burgess, and George Space, Joseph Conger, Frederick Mohney, and Joseph Himes, councilmen". "John Space, The Progenitor and The Zephaniah and Allen Space Lines in The Space Family of America". Authored by Ralph Stephen Space and Zeph Frederick Space. April 1935; pp 8: "John Himes married Sylvinia Space in 1837, two years previous Joseph Himes married Abigail Ann Space in 1835. At Abigail Ann's wedding, her maid of honor was her sister Sylvinia, and the Groomsmen was Joseph's brother John" "John Himes was a staunch Democrat; his brother Joseph Himes was a stiff Republican. When the Civil War started, Joseph Himes was called out with the State Militia. There were no trains in those days, and all travel was done by stage coach. The morning that Joseph left, the brothers met at the stage to bid each other good-bye. John Himes said to his brother Joseph; "Joe, if were going, would shoot north." This made Joseph very indignant, in fact almost to the extent where he was ready to give his brother a sound whipping. This farewell scene of the Himes brothers was often brought up by the Himes children, as they always thought of it as a good joke. Especially did the children of Joseph Himes tease their father about this, and it was a very laughable matter to them. (As related by Mrs. Mary Himes-Caldwell of New Bethlehem, Pennsylvania. Mrs. Mary Himes-Caldwell is a daughter of Joseph and Abigail Space-Himes.)" Additional information on children (names, spouses, birth/death dates) taken from "The Spiece Family of German and The Space Family of America" by Zeph Frederick Space. Received from Pat Springer 1998. 176. iii. ABIGAIL ANN SPACE b 20.05.1820, New Bethlehem Clarion Co PA d. 27.06.1892, New Bethlehem Clarion Co PA iv. SUSANNAH SPACE b 1822, Clarion Co PA d. 1909
m JACOB HOFFMAN. v. ALLEN SPACE b 02.03.1824, Hawthorne Clarion Co PA d. 07.01.1909, Leisure Run Clarion Co PA
m MARY ANN MERCER b 1826, Mayport Clarion Co PA d. 1912, New Bethlehem Clarion Co PA Notater for ALLEN SPACE: John Space, The Progenitor and The Zephaniah and Allen Space Lines in The Space Family of America. Authored by Ralph Stephen Space and Zeph Frederick Space. April 1935 pp 9-17 Allen Space..born north of Hawthorne..in 1824 and succeed to the interests of his father in blacksmithing and farming. (He) was fully six feet tall and a large man..his complexion was fair. He had blue eyes and sandy colored hair and beard. "The house and home established by Zephaniah Space on the original fifty acres purchased from Henry Nulf, was the birthplace of nearly all of the children of Zephaniah Space. When Allen Space was married he secured the original Space farm on which he was born. In 1854 Allen Space built on this property, what the Space children called, "The Red House," and in later years, it was termed "The Old Red House." This was a large two story structure, and it received its name from its color. Most of Allen's children were born in this remarkable old dwelling, and "The Old Red House" was much beloved and cherished by the Allen Space family, as it was a home of enjoyment and congenialtiy. "The Old Red House" was located diagonally across the road from the home of Zephaniah Space. "In the meantime, however, Allen Space added one hundred more acres of land to the Space farm; fifty acres purchased from a Mr. Gruber, and another fifter from John Baughman. Robert Baughman (1840-1920), a son of John Baughman, married Abigail Ann Space (1847-1898), eldest daughter of Allen Space. The home established by Zephaniah Space on the original fifty acre tract when he first came to Clarion County, and "The Old Red House", were the homes of the Space family from 1818 to 1873, and this property was not only the "cradle" for the Zephaniah Space Family, but also the Allen Space Family. "On the same location that Zephaniah Space had his blacksmith shop Allen Space built a new one for the purpose of carrying on the blacksmith trade as established by his father. Additional information "The Spiece Family of Germany and The Space Family of America" by Zephaniah Frederick Space. Received from Pat Springer. Source of dates and names (children and grandchildren) Notater for MARY ANN MERCER: "John Space, The Progenitor and The Zephaniah and Allen Space Lines in The Space Family of America". Authored by Ralph Stephen Space and Zeph Frederick Space. April 1935; pp 11: "Mary Ann Mercer was born near Mayport, Clarion County, Pennsylvania, in 1826. With her parents she came to the vicinity of New Bethlehem, Pennsylvania, in 1830, and grew to young womanhood on her father's farm. The father of Mary Ann Mercer was Amos Mercer of Scotch descent, born 1804, and her mother was Rachel Sidney Rimer-Mercer." pp 12: "Mary Mercer/Space died at the home of her daughter, Mrs. Catharine Space-Fowkes, in Clarion County, Pennsylvania in 1912, lacking only a few days of being 86 years old. Like her husband, she had a rugged constitution, and she was always active and cheerful. She was a small woman. Her eyes were deep blue and her hair was black. "A New Bethlehem newspaper in printing her obituary of Mary Mercer-Space stated the following; 'Her grandfather David Mercer, was a grandson of General Hugh Mercer, on of Washington's foremost commanders during the Revolutionary War. Fort Mercer, near Trenton, New Jersey, was named in his honor.'" vi. CATHERINE SPACE b 1826, Clarion Co PA
m SEPTANIUS ARMAGOST b 29.11.1824, Centre Co PA vii. ZEPHANIAH ALLEN SPACE b 1828, Redbank Township Clarion Co PA
m (1) MARGARET SHANKLE b 1828; d. 1904
m (2) HARRIET ARMANDA FRYER b 1851; d. 09.02.1940. Notater for ZEPHANIAH ALLEN SPACE: Obituary from Antigo Daily Journal; Friday, February 28, 1902: "Z. Space, an old and highly respected resident of the town of Peck, died at the advanced age of 77 years last Thursday. He leaves several children, one daughter being the wife of Myron H. McCord, former Congressman of this district and yesterday appointed U.S. Marshall of the district of Arizona by Pres. Roosevelt. The funeral was held in this city Friday, Rev. Nimits, officiating." "Returning to pioneer days, with the mill as a nucleus a small but thriving settlement sprang up...with their families as early as 1851...Zephaniah (sic) Space". Source: "A Lincoln County History" pp 25 Notater for MARGARET SHANKLE: Obituary from Antigo Daily Journal; Tuesday, November 29, 1904: "Mrs. Margaret Space, aged 78 years, one of the oldest residents of the town of Vilas died Sunday. She is survived by a number of relatives. One of her daughters, who died several years ago, was the wife of former Congressman Myron D. McCord. The remains will be taken to Merrill for interment." (Note: Myron McCord's middle initial is incorrectly identified, his middle initial was "H") Notater for HARRIET ARMANDA FRYER: Obituary from Antigo Daily Journal; Issue, Friday, February 9, 1940: "Mrs. Harriet A. Henry, 86, widow of Alex Henry who died in 1931, passed away this morning at the home of her daughter, Mrs. Kesler (sic), town of Peck. Friends may view the remains at the Kesler home. Funeral arrangements have not been completed." viii. JOHN ARMSTRONG SPACE b 1832, Clarion Co PA d. 1901
m MARY ANNE WECKERLY b 1835, Clarion Co PA d. 1914. ix. CHRISTIAN SHICK SPACE b 25.11.1834, PA d. 11.1913, New Bethlehem Clarion Co PA
m ELIZABETH RIMER b 1835, PA d. 1916. Notater for CHRISTIAN SHICK SPACE: 4 Dec 1913 , Redbank, PAce, one of the best read, most intelligent and highly esteemed citizens of Leisure Run, Redbank township, died November 23, 1913 just two days before completing his 79 years of life. r himself by intelligent reading. He stood among his neighbors as a man of high character, genial disposition, and broad gauge qualities of manhood. Back of and enforcing these was a sturdy Christian character. He united with the Leisure Run M.E. church about 45 years ago, living a true life ever since. His wife, Mrs. Elizabeth Rimer Space, to whom he was married April 1, 1858, survives with three daughters, only one of whom, Miss Nora, is at home. Six children preceded him in death.ion and he was a success at both.ervices had been conducted at the home by Rev. W.H. Robinson, assisted by Rev. Geo. S. Kespelher. John Space, The Progenitor and The Zephaniah and Allen Space Lines in The Space Family of America. Authored by Ralph Stephen Space and Zeph Frederick Space. April 1935; pp 8; "When Christian Shick Space was married, he and his wife lived on the John Mohney farm new Hawthorne. The same year that he was married (1858) he bought 10 acres of land, one mile north of Hawthorne, and this was known as the Bloom Lot. They lived there for four years, and he then traded this to Peter Shindledecker for property in Frogtown, where they lived until 1868, when he bought (sic) a farm on the Clarion and New Bethlehem road, four miles north of New Bethlehem, Pennsylvania. They resided on this farm the remaining years of their lives. Christian Shick Space was a successful stone mason and brick layer. He worked in many of the larger places from Pittsburgh to DuBoise. ...He was a member of the Methodist Episcopal Church. He died in his own home from (sic) which he was buried on his birthday, at the age of 79, November 25, 1913. (Biography of Christian Shick Space, furnished by his daughter, Nora Space of Great Falls, Montana.)" 165. MARGARET SAYRE25 WATERS (JOHN24, JOHN TREDWELL23, ANTHONY WHITEHEAD22, ELIZABETH21 WHITEHEAD, MAJOR DANIEL20, DANIEL19, JOHN18, b 23.12.1824 New Bern Craven Co North Carolina Usa, d27.08.1902 Setauket Suffolk Co New York Usa.
m EDWARD F SMALLWOOD, son of ELI SMALLWOOD and ANNA BLACKWELL. Han b 25.09.1822 New Bern Craven Co North Carolina Usa, d 11.07.1881. ch of MARGARET WATERS and EDWARD SMALLWOOD i. MARY B26 SMALLWOOD b 04.03.1857, North Carolina Usa; d. 25.03.1912, New Bern Craven Co NC 166. JOHN25 WHITEHEAD (ONESIMUS24, SILAS23, ONESIMUS CHARLES22, ISAAC21, ISAAC20, ISAAC19, JOHN18, b 06.09.1819 Jersey, Licking County, Ohio, Usa, d 14.02.1905 Newark, Essex County, New Jersey, Usa
m CATHARINE ABIGAIL MILLS 13.06.1843, dau of DAVID MILLS and CATHARINE GOULD. Hun b 1821 Morristown, Morris, New Jersey, Usa, d 1903 Morristown, Morris, New Jersey, Usa. ch of JOHN WHITEHEAD and CATHARINE MILLS i. FRANCES PENNINGTON26 WHITEHEAD b 17.03.1844, New Jersey Usa; d. 23.06.1854. ii. HENRY MILLS WHITEHEAD b 09.08.1845, New Jersey Usa; d. 18.03.1857. iii. KATHARINE MILLS WHITEHEAD b 17.03.1847, New Jersey Usa; d. 1917. 167. STERN ONESIMUS25 WHITEHEAD (ONESIMUS24, SILAS23, ONESIMUS CHARLES22, ISAAC21, ISAAC20, ISAAC19, JOHN18, b 12.12.1823, d02.10.1873
m PHEBE EVERETT. ch of STERN WHITEHEAD and PHEBE EVERETT i. JANE26 WHITEHEAD. 168. CHARLES RUSSELL25 WHITEHEAD (AARON DODD24, SYLVESTER RUSSELL23, ONESIMUS CHARLES22, ISAAC21, ISAAC20, ISAAC19, JOHN18, b 01.09.1860
m ELIZABETH LUDLOW LEE. Hun b 07.03.1864. ch of CHARLES WHITEHEAD and ELIZABETH LEE i. RUSSELL BRYANT26 WHITEHEAD b 28.10.1889; d. 1974, Morristown, Morris, New Jersey, Usa. 177. ii. DAVID LEE WHITEHEAD b 19.07.1896. 169. BENJAMIN JOHN25 MOORE (JOHN W24, MARGARET23 GOFFE, HANNAH22 GRIGGS, MARGARET21 BISHOP, HESTER20 COGSWELL, SUSANNA19 HAWKES, ANN18 BROWN, EDWARD17, b 1786 Bladen County, North Carolina, Usa, d24.06.1862 Farmers Union, Columbus County, North Carolina, Usa
m MARTHA PENELOPE JACOBS. Hun b 1790 North Carolina Usa, d 1880 Waccamaw, Columbus County, North Carolina, Usa. Notater for BENJAMIN JOHN MOORE: was born into slavery in Duplin County.North Carolina Usa Though Benjamin Spaulding was not formally freed by Samuel Swindale, Jr. until 1835, he lived essentially as a free man for many years before, as evidenced in census records and deed records. He and Edith had several prominent descendants, including Dr. Aaron Moore (1863-1923), co-founder of North Carolina Mutual Life Insurance Company, Mechanics and Farmers Bank, and Lincoln Hospital in Durham, and Charles C. Spaulding (1874-1952), who led North Carolina Mutual’s expansion in the first half of the 20th century. https://s3-us-west-2.amazonaws.com/find-a-grave-prod/photos/2015/135/122900180_1431830906.jpg ch of BENJAMIN MOORE and MARTHA JACOBS i. DEBBY26 MOORE b 1815, Columbus, North Carolina, Usa; d. 1850, Columbus, North Carolina, Usa
m SHADRACK CHAVIS b 1810, Columbus, North Carolina, Usa. 178. ii. ISRAEL MOORE b 24.02.1817, Columbus County, North Carolina, Usa; d. 18.02.1898, Welches Creek, Columbus, North Carolina, Usa. 179. iii. THURSEY MOORE b 1820, Bladen County, North Carolina Usa; d. Columbus County, North Carolina, Usa. 180. iv. PENELOPE MOORE b 13.11.1822, Elkton, Bladen, North Carolina, Usa; d. 04.02.1883, Whites Creek, Bladen, North Carolina, Usa. 181. v. JOHN MOORE b 01.1836, Welches Creek, Columbus, North Carolina, Usa; d. 1910, Welches Creek, Columbus, North Carolina, Usa. 182. vi. BENJAMIN JOHN MOORE b 07.1837, North Carolina Usa; d. 04.06.1923, Bogue, Columbus, NC vii. OWEN MOORE b 1842, Columbus County, North Carolina, Usa; d. Brunswick, NC 183. viii. LUCY ANN MOORE b 30.09.1843, Columbus County, North Carolina, Usa; d. 07.09.1898, Welches Creek Columbus NC 184. ix. AARON MOORE b 07.10.1844, Duplin Co.North Carolina Usa; d. 08.10.1914, Magnolia, Duplin, NC 170. JOHN25 MOORE (JOHN W24, MARGARET23 GOFFE, HANNAH22 GRIGGS, MARGARET21 BISHOP, HESTER20 COGSWELL, SUSANNA19 HAWKES, ANN18 BROWN, EDWARD17, b 1785 Wayne Co North Carolina Usa, d 1855 Clay Hill District Duval County Florida Usa
m MARGARETH ELIZABETH JONES 1808 Georgia Usa, dau of THOMAS JONES and ELIZABETH DAVIS. Hun b 1790 Burke Co Georgia Usa, d 1850 Atkinsons Co Georgia Usa. Notater for MARGARETH ELIZABETH JONES: Divorced from John Approx 1833. Never remarried. Had 7 children. Cemetery located on Highway 82 between Kirkland and Willachoochee. Turn north on County Rd 42 (Antioch Church Rd). Cemetery is located on corner of County Rd 42 and County Rd 35 (Sutton Rd)(approx 1 1/2 miles). Parents are unknown. Married to John Moore 1808. Divorced from John Approx 1833. Never remarried. Had 7 children. Buried near son Elias. Margaret Elizabeth "Martha" JONES was born in or near Burke County, Georgia, daughter of Thomas JONES and Elizabeth DAVIS Jones. Her sister Judith Delilah JONES married Mark LOTT. And another sister Sarah Ann JONES married John LOTT. In 1808 Georgia she married John MOORE, IV, son of John MOORE, III and wife Winnie HARDEMAN. On 8 AUG 1840 she was baptized by Elder William A. Knight into the Union Methodist Church of Georgia. Margaret and husband John had 8 known children: 1. Sarah "Sallie" Moore b: 1810 in Bulloch Co, GA: marr. John KNIGHT. 2. Winifred Ann "Winnie Ann" Moore b: 12 JAN 1812 in Emanuel (fka Bulloch) Co, GA: 1st marr. William Greene AKINS; 2nd marr. Jonathan STUDSTILL. 3. Vincent "Vinson" Moore b: MAY 1818 in Emanuel Co, GA: 1st marr. Marie HILL; 2nd marr. Julia Ann BOOTH; 3rd marr. Mary (unknown). 4. Elias Moore b: 27 AUG 1819 in Emanuel Co, GA: marr. Hester Ann LOTT. 5. Jesse Moore b: ABT. 1821 in Emanuel Co, GA. 6. John Moore, IV, CSA b: 1821 in Emanuel Co, GA: marr. Barbery ROBERTS **My Direct Ancestry** 7. Mary "Polly" Moore b: 13 MAR 1825 in Emanuel Co, GA: marr. Elisha Era LOTT. 8. Elizabeth Moore b: 1830 in Alapaha, Berrien (fka Lowndes) Co, GA: marr. Thomas Arthur NEWBERN. Abt. 1842 her husband abandoned her and their children for personal reasons and went to live in what is now Clay County, Florida. When she died he remarried to Mary PETERSON b: 1810 in Saint George Parish (nka Burke Co), GA. They already had children together. Margaret Elizabeth JONES Moore and husband John MOORE are my maternal 3rd great grandparents. (bio by: Wiregrass Irisheyes) Family links: Spouse: John Moore (1775 - 1855)* Children: Sarah Moore Knight (1809 - 1880)* Winnie (Winifred) Ann Moore Akins (1812 - 1878)* Elias Moore (1819 - 1878)* John Moore (1821 - 1886)* Mary Moore Lott (1825 - 1906)* *Calculated relationship Burial: Antioch Baptist Church Cemetery Kirkland Atkinson County Georgia, USA ch of JOHN MOORE and MARGARETH JONES 185. i. ELIAS26 MOORE b 27.08.1819, Douglas Coffe Co georgia Usa; d. 16.10.1878, Atkinson Co Georgia Usa. ii. SARAH MOORE b 1810, Emanuel Co Georgia Usa
m JOHN KNIGHT, 1830, Lowndes County Georgia Usa b 07.07.1807, Wayne (nka Brantley) County Georgia Usa; d. 1878, Lakeland, Berrien (fka Lowndes) County Georgia Usa. iii. WINIFRIED ANN MOORE b 12.01.1812, Bullock Co.Georgia Usa; d. 28.02.1878, Berrien (now Lanier) Co Georgia Usa
m (1) WILLIAM GREENE AKINS, 1830, Lowndes County Georgia Usa b 10.08.1806, Laurens District South Carolina Usa; d. 16.02.1866, Berrien (nka Lanier) County Georgia Usa
m (2) JONATHAN STUDSTILL, 15.12.1870, Berrien County Georgia Usa b 1812, Bulloch County Georgia Usa; d. mel. 1870 - 1880, Berrien (nka Lanier) County Georgia Usa. iv. JESSE MOORE b 1821, Lowndes County Georgia Usa. v. VINCENT MOORE b 05.1818, Emanuel Co. Georgia Usa; d. mel. 1880 - 1890, Coffee County Georgia Usa
m (1) MARIE HILL, 30.01.1840, Tattnall County Georgia Usa b mel. 1807 - 1827, Georgia Usa; d. mel. 1842 - 1849, Ware County Georgia Usa
m (2) JULIA ANN BOOTH, 16.01.1850, Duval County Florida Usa b 1829, Duval County Florida Usa; d. mel. 1880 - 1930, Lee County Florida Usa
m (3) MARY, 1868 b 05.1840, South Carolina Usa; d. mel. 1870 - 1940, Lake City Columbia County Florida Usa. 186. vi. MARY MOORE b 13.03.1825, Emanuel Co. Georgia Usa; d. 03.04.1906, Coffee County Georgia Usa. 187. vii. JOHN MOORE b 1821; d. 17.12.1886, Homerville Clinch County Georgia Usa. 171. SETH WYMAN25 STEWARD (OLIVE24 MOOR, MARGARET23 GOFFE, HANNAH22 GRIGGS, MARGARET21 BISHOP, HESTER20 COGSWELL, SUSANNA19 HAWKES, ANN18 BROWN, EDWARD17, b 14.05.1798 Bingham Sommerset Maine Usa
m ELIZA BAKER, dau of BROWN BAKER and HANNAH ROBINSON. Hun b 01.01.1805 Litchfield, Kennebec County, Maine Usa, d25.01.1890 Monson, Piscataquis County, Maine Usa. ch of SETH STEWARD and ELIZA BAKER 188. i. SETH WYMAN26 STEWARD b 04.05.1844, Monson, Piscataquis County, Maine Usa; d. 10.07.1934. 172. NANCY M25 WALLACE (POLLY24 GOFFE, JOHN23, HANNAH22 GRIGGS, MARGARET21 BISHOP, HESTER20 COGSWELL, SUSANNA19 HAWKES, ANN18 BROWN, EDWARD17, b 1810 Bethlehem Grafton Co New Hampshire Usa, d01.05.1889 Butler Co Iowa Usa.
m JOHN SCOBEY. Han b 18.04.1800 Francestown Hillsborough Co New Hampshire Usa, d29.06.1884 Shell Rock Butler Co Iowa Usa. ch of NANCY WALLACE and JOHN SCOBEY 189. i. PHILOMELIA SOPHIA26 SCOBEY b 1827, Bethlehem Grafton Co New Hampshire Usa; d. 1897.
to be integrated above
26 173. EDWARD F26 SMALLWOOD (ANNA E25 BLACKWELL, MARY24 FIELD, CHARITY23 WHITEHEAD, b 25.09.1822 New Bern Craven Co North Carolina Usa, d 11.07.1881
m MARGARET SAYRE WATERS, dau of JOHN WATERS and FRANCES BLACKWELL. Hun b 23.12.1824 New Bern Craven Co North Carolina Usa, d27.08.1902 Setauket Suffolk Co New York Usa. Barn er listet ovenfor under (165) Margaret Sayre Waters. 174. MARY B26 SMALLWOOD (ANNA E25 BLACKWELL, MARY24 FIELD, CHARITY23 WHITEHEAD, b 1824 New Bern Craven Co NC ch of MARY B SMALLWOOD i. CHARLES27. 175. ANNA M26 SMALLWOOD (ANNA E25 BLACKWELL, MARY24 FIELD, CHARITY23 WHITEHEAD, b 1826 New Bern Craven Co North Carolina Usa, d 13.10.1915 NC
m (1) DR. ISAAC WAYNE HUGHES, son of JOHN HUGHES and HANNAH BARTHOLOMEW. Han b 14.02.1804 Montgomery Co PA d21.02.1881 NC
m (2) BENJAMIN BARTHOLOMEW HUGHES, son of JOHN HUGHES and HANNAH BARTHOLOMEW. Han b 27.06.1808 Upper Merion Montgomery Co PA ch of ANNA SMALLWOOD and DR. HUGHES i. ISAAC WAYNE27 HUGHES b 26.02.1854, North Carolina Usa; d. 05.02.1862, NC 190. ii. DR. FRANCIS WAYNE HUGHES b 1858, North Carolina Usa; d. 01.11.1982, Wilmington New Hanover Co NC 176. ABIGAIL ANN26 SPACE (ZEPHANIAH25, ABIGAIL24 MOTT, DEBORAH23 TALLMAN, ABIGAIL22 HICKS, b 20.05.1820 New Bethlehem Clarion Co PA d27.06.1892 New Bethlehem Clarion Co PA
m JOSEPH HIMES, son of CHRISTIAN HIMES and MARGARET NOLF. Han b 04.05.1812 New Bethlehem Clarion Co PA d 16.04.1905 Redbank Township Clarion Co PA Notater for JOSEPH HIMES: "History of Clarion County" by Davis; pp. 553: "...1853, when a charter of incorporation was granted by Clarion County Court, creating the town into a borough. John Himes was elected burgess, and George Space, Joseph Conger, Frederick Mohney, and Joseph Himes, councilmen" "John Space, The Progenitor and The Zephaniah and Allen Space Lines in The Space Family of America". Authored by Ralph Stephen Space and Zeph Frederick Space. April 1935; pp 8: "John Himes married Sylvinia Space in 1837, two years previous Joseph Himes married Abigail Ann Space in 1835. At Abigail Ann's wedding, her maid of honor was her sister Sylvinia, and the Groomsmen was Joseph's brother John. After the wedding and the journey to the Joseph Himes home, it was necessary to cross a stream and the party was making this trip on horseback. The stream was not deep and no danger was involved, but the young bride Abigail nearly fell from her horse, much to the amusement of both the bridegroom and the bride. ch of ABIGAIL SPACE and JOSEPH HIMES i. MARY ABIGAIL27 HIMES b 25.05.1857, New Bethlehem Clarion Co PA d. 05.02.1942, New Bethlehem Clarion Co PA
m WILLIAM MCLEOD CALDWELL b 25.12.1860, Armstrong Township Indiana Co PA d. 26.09.1927, PA Notater for MARY ABIGAIL HIMES: Received from Kandy Harter July 1999; "Typed From Photocopy of Handwritten Pages By Mary Caldwell History of New Bethlehem - November 11, 1936": "My grandfather Christian Himes was the first white settler in what is now the vicinity of (New Bethlehem). He was a native of Eastern Penna. have no record of his birth, but was married when he came here in 1808 what is now known as New Bethlehem Clarion Co. He located on a 50 acre tract, known as the Wikoff land, formed the original burrough line on the North. My grandfather built the first house - a little log cabin in what is now the limits of the bourough on the east side of Lafayette St. on the lot now owned by H.H. Dhron (sp?) It stood there after my father bought the farm in 1849 - He used it for a sheep pen. My grandfather died in 1816, leaving 3 children Joseph (my father) John, the oldest and Christina. 191. ii. CATHERINE ANN HIMES b 10.03.1844, New Bethlehem Clarion Co PA d. 31.08.1930, New Bethlehem Clarion Co PA 177. DAVID LEE26 WHITEHEAD (CHARLES RUSSELL25, AARON DODD24, SYLVESTER RUSSELL23, ONESIMUS CHARLES22, ISAAC21, ISAAC20, ISAAC19, JOHN18, b 19.07.1896
m MABEL WEAR. ch of DAVID WHITEHEAD and MABEL WEAR i. DAVID LEE27 WHITEHEAD b 13.07.1924; d. 29.03.1925. 178. ISRAEL26 MOORE (BENJAMIN JOHN25, JOHN W24, MARGARET23 GOFFE, HANNAH22 GRIGGS, MARGARET21 BISHOP, HESTER20 COGSWELL, SUSANNA19 HAWKES, ANN18 BROWN, EDWARD17, b 24.02.1817 Columbus County, North Carolina, Usa, d 18.02.1898 Welches Creek, Columbus, North Carolina, Usa
m ANN ELIZABETH SPAULDING, dau of BENJAMIN SPAULDING and EDITH JACOBS. Hun b 03.1822 Colombus Co County North Carolina, Usa, d25.03.1906 Welches Creek Columbus North Carolina, Usa. ch of ISRAEL MOORE and ANN SPAULDING 192. i. CAROLINE A27 MOORE b 09.1853, Columbus County, North Carolina, Usa; d. 29.07.1935, Wilmington, New Hanover, North Carolina, Usa. 193. ii. DELPHIA ANN MOORE b 19.04.1861, Columbus County, North Carolina, Usa; d. 08.08.1932, Waccamaw, Columbus, North Carolina, Usa. 194. iii. LEWIS MOORE b 25.01.1843, Columbus County, North Carolina Usa; d. 01.05.1904, Welches Creek Columbus NC iv. CALVIN B. MOORE b 05.04.1845, Columbus County, North Carolina Usa; d. 21.04.1913, Welches Creek Columbus North Carolina Usa
m LENA VICTORIA WEBB b 05.1852, Brunswick, North Carolina, Usa; d. 16.09.1931, Welchs Creek, Columbus, North Carolina, Usa. 195. v. MARY EDITH MOORE b 22.08.1847, Welches Creek, North Carolina Usa; d. 22.07.1902, Welches Creek Columbus NC vi. AARON MCDUFFIE MOORE b 06.09.1863, Rosindale, North Carolina Usa; d. 29.04.1923, Durham Durham Co North Carolina Usa
m SARAH MCCOTTA DANCY, 1889 b 06.08.1866, Tarboro Edgecombe North Carolina Usa; d. 26.07.1950, Durham Durham Co NC Notater for AARON MCDUFFIE MOORE: Dr. Aaron M. Moore back Dr. Aaron M. Moore, co-founder of the North Carolina Mutual Life Insurance Company, was pre-eminent among the Negro leaders of Durham, deeply imbued with the spirit of public service. Born during the Civil War, September 6, 1863, he came to Durham in 1888, saved his money ($1 per visit, when and if collected), and won the respect and confidence of all people. Dr. Moore¹s efforts were seen in every move for the betterment of his race, many of which he initiated. He founded Lincoln Hospital in 1901, through the generosity of the Duke family. In 1913 he founded Sunday School Library at White Rock Baptist Church, in 1916 developed it into the S.L.Warren Public Library. In addition to NC Mutual, he was also one of the founders of the Mechanics & Farmers Bank, Bull City Drug Store and other interests. An idealist who never strived after wealth, he was successful in a material way. He never abandoned the practice of medicine, and his life was devoted to the service of his people and to the city. He died April 29, 1923. Aaron McDuffie Moore From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia A.M. Moore, MD, President, North Carolina Mutual Aaron McDuffie Moore, M.D. (September 6, 1863 – April 29, 1923) was the first Black medical doctor of Durham, North Carolina, USA, and a prominent leader in the African-American community based in the part of the city known as Hayti. He is best known for founding the Lincoln Hospital, a medical facility that served Negro patients during a time of racial segregation. Moore was also instrumental to the incorporation of North Carolina Mutual Life Company, which became the largest black-owned business in the country, and the improvement of North Carolina's rural school education. Through philanthropic works and business enterprises, Dr. Moore played a significant role in improving the standard of living of African Americans in Durham. He also overcame racial discrimination, bridging the White and Black communities in Durham in addition to improving its healthcare and economy. Contents [hide] 1 Early life and education 1.1 Leonard Medical School 1.2 Marriage and family 1.3 Politics 2 Self-help business enterprise 2.1 Early involvement 2.2 North Carolina Mutual and Provident Association 3 Lincoln Hospital 4 Contribution to education 4.1 Rural school movement for African Americans 5 Legacy 6 References Early life and education[edit] Aaron McDuffie Moore was born on September 6, 1863, in Rosindale, North Carolina, to Israel Moore and Anna Eliza Spaulding Moore.[1][2] Since the early nineteenth century, the Moore family, of African-Indian-European descent had owned land in Columbus County as free farmers. Like his nine siblings: 4 boys and 5 girls,[1] Aaron Moore alternated between working on the family farm (during the harvesting and planting seasons) and attending the segregated county school.[3] Upon completing 8th grade,[3] Moore became a teacher at the same county school.[2] He entered Whitin Normal School, in Lumberton, followed by the Normal School at Fayetteville to further his education. These institutions were both focused on teacher training, as education was considered key for freedmen's progress and there was an effort to develop black teachers for segregated schools across the state. However, after completing his first term at the latter, Moore was summoned home by his father to help on the farm. Leonard Medical School[edit] Ambitious beyond farming, Moore enrolled in 1885 in the newly established Shaw University, a historically black college in Raleigh, intending to become a professor.[1] But, encouraged by his teachers who saw his promise,[3] Moore entered the University's Leonard Medical School. Completing the prescribed 4 years of medical education in 3 years, Aaron Moore came before the Medical Examiners of the State of North Carolina in 1888. He passed the examinations and ranked second among the 46 candidates,[3][4] 30 of whom were white.[1] Having been certified as a Doctor of Medicine, Dr. Moore decided to practice in Durham, where he was the city's first Black medical doctor.[5][6][7] Marriage and family[edit] In 1889, Dr. Moore married Cottie S. Dancy, daughter of John C. Dancy, a leading African-American Republican in North Carolina.[1][8] They had a family together. Politics[edit] Moore became interested in politics and was nominated for the office of coroner of Durham County in 1888.[9] However, his campaign was met with much resistance from the white community, as shown by coverage in the Durham Recorder:[10] "White men of Durham, those who have any respect for the Anglo-Saxon race, will you fail your duty on the 6th of November? Will you allow Negro rule or a white man's government?" Dr. Moore was in a campaign marked by racial discrimination, as were many in those years. Whites were still struggling to maintain dominance; by the end of the century while in control of the state legislature, they passed a constitution that essentially disfranchised blacks, a situation that persisted until federal legislation of the mid-1960s to enforce constitutional rights for minorities. Dismayed by the antagonism, Moore withdrew from the campaign and settled for supporting candidates who served the Durham community's interest.[11] Self-help business enterprise[edit] Early involvement[edit] In 1895 Dr. Moore began to invest in new black-owned businesses, to enable the community to develop its own skilled educated class and provide jobs for them.[1][2] The Durham Drug Company was the first of his many ventures.[2] The pharmacy gave young black pharmacists an opportunity to practice[1] and served Durham's African-American community with dignity and excellence. While the pharmacy never made much of a profit, earning profits was not Moore's chief goal.[2] Instead, he made his priority the provision of affordable drugs to the Negro community. He believed that the "Negro business movement" was a means to achieve racial self-fulfillment. He became involved in numerous other black business ventures in Durham following this maiden enterprise.[3] Through this work, Moore established strong relationships with significant figures such as John Merrick, with whom he would later found the North Carolina Mutual Life Insurance Company.[2] North Carolina Mutual and Provident Association[edit] In October 1898, Dr. Moore, John Merrick and six other Black men gathered in Moore's office to organize an insurance association. They intended "to aid Negro families in distress" by this enterprise. They were inspired by similar associations organized by blacks in Richmond, Virginia in 1893 and 1894. During the meeting, each man pledged $50 to the association. They agreed to draw up a charter for the business, to be "presented as a bill before the State Assembly" in January 1899.[3] With the charter approved, North Carolina Mutual and Provident Association opened for business on April 1, 1899.[3] Dr. Moore served as its treasurer and medical director,[4] albeit without salary or remuneration. In addition, Moore agreed to rent out a part of his office to the association for $2 a month, a sign of his commitment to the Black community served by the association.[3] By 1900, the association was in a precarious financial position as claims increased. In response, Dr. Moore and John Merrick used personal funds to meet the company's obligations. The other incorporators were unwilling to fund the deficit and, by July 1900, withdrew from the company.[3] Dr. Moore understood that African Americans needed insurance services.[4][8] He also believed strongly that North Carolina Mutual was accountable to the Negro community, and that "to desert their policy holders was to discredit their people". Moore and Merrick bought the shares of withdrawing members. For "socially conscious Black businessmen" like Moore, the purpose of business enterprises extended beyond profit; more importantly, it was a means to improve the conditions of the segregated Black community.[2][3] Moore assumed the vacated position of secretary while his nephew, C. C. Spaulding, promoted the sale of insurance policies.[1] The partnership between Moore, Spaulding and Merrick as President transformed North Carolina Mutual and Provident Association into a strong enterprise. In 1919, the association was renamed North Carolina Mutual Life Insurance Company.[4] When Merrick died that year, Dr. Moore assumed presidency of North Carolina Mutual until his death in 1923. As President, Moore was insistent that the Company stayed true to the purpose of its founding: There was a larger truth… if the Company cannot live on truth, then let her go.[12] Dr. Aaron Moore rooted North Carolina Mutual Life Insurance Company in its "commitment to service", bringing much needed insurance services to the African American community in Durham.[3] The access to reliable insurance services ensured that individuals could afford necessary treatment and healthcare services in times of need. Through North Carolina Mutual, Moore also contributed to economic prosperity of the black community in Durham. Inspired by his success, other Black leaders began to enter business, founding the Mechanics and Farmers Bank in 1907 and Mutual Community Savings Bank in 1921. As black business continued to thrive in tandem with North Carolina Mutual, a "robust business district in downtown Durham" was developed, becoming what became known as the Black Wall Street.[13] The Black business movement contributed significantly to Durham's race relations; while there was interracial friction in other cities, Durham's whites tolerated and some supported its Black businessmen, as their progress benefited the city as a whole.[14] Dr. Moore was thus a key figure who not only stimulated growth in Durham, but also brought social progress to the city. Lincoln Hospital[edit] Dr. Aaron Moore founded the Lincoln Hospital in 1901.[6] Earlier in 1895, the Watts Hospital was completed, but its services were offered only to Whites.[4] Recognizing the needs of the African American community, Dr. Aaron Moore boldly proposed the construction of a Negro hospital in 1898. While some suggested that a separate wing for Negros be added to the city hospital, Moore rejected the idea, as Black doctors and nurses would not be permitted to work at the hospital.[1][15] With Merrick's help, Moore "raised $25,000 in the black community and $100,000 in the white community", $75,000 of which was contributed by the Duke family.[3] The Dukes' contributed based on Moore's advocating for the hospital's merit,[16][17] and because of their close relationship with Merrick. Moore directed the construction of Lincoln Hospital and oversaw its completion in 1901. He served as its Superintendent until his death in 1923.[1] Under Moore's leadership, the hospital served patients regardless of their ability to pay. It gained an increased in patronage[15] and by 1914, added a new wing.[4] Recognizing the need to train Black nurses, Moore set up the associated Lincoln Hospital Training School of Nursing in 1903.[18] In 1923, when he died, Moore bequeathed three properties to the hospital, an endowment to be used to generate income to fund students of the Lincoln Hospital Training School of Nursing.[15] Moore's most significant achievement was the Lincoln Hospital,[2] which contributed greatly to healthcare in Durham and improved life in the African-American community.[2] By establishing the Lincoln School of Nursing,[17] Dr. Moore ensured a system to provide healthcare personnel for black Durham citizens. Based on funding from both the black and white communities, the Lincoln Hospital was a symbol of racial cooperation and unity for a common purpose. Moore's success in rallying such White support was remarkable in an era of racial discrimination and segregation. With his reputation for competence, he commanded the attention of White leaders and spoke to them as equals.[19] Some whites considered their contributions a kind of thanks for what they saw as Black support during the Civil War.[3] The following was inscribed at the entrance of the Lincoln Hospital:[4] With grateful appreciation and loving remembrance of the fidelity and faithfulness of the Negro slaves to the Mothers and Daughters of the Confederacy, during the Civil War, this institution was founded by one of the Fathers and Sons. Today, Lincoln Hospital has been absorbed as part of the Duke Regional Hospital, following its merger with Watts Hospital in 1976.[20] Contribution to education[edit] Dr. Moore advocated education in the African-American community. Besides serving on the Board of Trustees at his alma mater, Shaw University, Moore was also one of the largest donors to the school. He also established a Colored Library in Durham, which became the Stanford L. Warren branch of the Durham County Public Library on January 17, 1940.[21] Besides improving the rural school system for Blacks in North Carolina,[1] Moore also formed the Volkemenia and Shubert-Shakespeare clubs, which were created to provide African Americans with access to concerts, speakers and reading sessions.[2] Rural school movement for African Americans[edit] With his personal experience in a rural school, Dr. Moore worked to improve these, which were typically underfunded by white local and state school authorities in the segregated system. Moore wrote about the need to improve rural schools in an April 26, 1915 letter to a state official:[22] These people in the main have not had enough schooling either to fit them for the demands of urban life or to make them content in the rural districts. The consequence is that a large percentage of them recruit the criminal class in the towns or remain in the rural districts as discouraged and nonproductive constituents... This failure on the part of the rural schools has become more apparent in recent years than before. In a rough way, the lessening of interest in the rural school and its problems has been coincidental with the disfranchisement of the colored voter… At present the appropriations by the Durham County Board average twice as much for each white child enrolled as for each colored child. Doubtless, the same discrimination is a common practice in all of the counties of the state in a greater or less degree. From 1914 until his death in 1923, Dr. Moore concentrated on improving rural schools for black children. He hired George W. Davis,[2] North Carolina's first rural school inspector, at his own expense. Moore wanted to document the condition of the poor rural schools.[3] Moore raised money for the schools through the Rosenwald Fund, established by philanthropist Julius Rosenwald of Chicago to aid the construction of rural schools, especially for African-American children, as their schools were underfunded. The Fund's contributions were based on matching monies raised by local communities, and also required a commitment by white-run school boards. Black parents were so eager for schools that they often taxed themslvesIn order to stimulate school involvement, he proposed that schools must "put down dollar for dollar for its own improvements".[23] Following Moore's success, the state of North Carolina took over his work while the North Carolina Teachers' Association made him the Secretary-Treasurer of its Rural School Extension Department, a position he served until 1922.[1] Legacy[edit] A revolutionary Black leader in a time of racial segregation, Dr. Moore is remembered as an individual who "transcended his times" for his ability to stand as equals with White leaders.[19] Capitalizing on this high ground, he improved standards of living for the African American community in Durham and North Carolina through his contributions to education, healthcare and social enterprises. To the disenfranchised African American community, "he emerges from the history of Black Durham as a Messiah moving quietly among the people, giving aid and comfort".[24] Race relations in Durham also improved following Dr. Moore's leadership in the Black business movement, which ushered in an age of cooperation between Black and White business leaders. His partnership with the White community in social projects such as the Lincoln Hospital also served to forge stronger bonds between the two races. Today, the Lincoln Hospital is remembered as "a monument of [the] spirit of racial cooperation".[4] Dr. Moore also spoke strongly against Jim Crow and racial discrimination.[2] This resonated with the larger social movement that eventually brought racial equality to North Carolina and the United States. Today a historic marker stands on 1201 Fayetteville Rd, Durham, N.C.[clarification needed] to honor the contributions of Dr. Aaron Moore.[25] Notater for SARAH MCCOTTA DANCY: House-wife vii. ISRAEL MOORE. 196. viii. MARGARET ANN VIRGINIA MOORE b 26.08.1849, North Carolina, Usa; d. 15.10.1920, Columbus County, North Carolina, Usa. 179. THURSEY26 MOORE (BENJAMIN JOHN25, JOHN W24, MARGARET23 GOFFE, HANNAH22 GRIGGS, MARGARET21 BISHOP, HESTER20 COGSWELL, SUSANNA19 HAWKES, ANN18 BROWN, EDWARD17, b 1820 Bladen County, North Carolina Usa, dColumbus County, North Carolina, Usa.
m NELSON JACOBS, son of JOHN MITCHELL and MARGARET JACOBS. Han b 1817 Brunswick, North Carolina Usa, dColumbus County North Carolina, Usa. ch of THURSEY MOORE and NELSON JACOBS 197. i. ISABELLA27 MOORE b 1845, Welches Creek, Columbus, North Carolina, Usa; d. 07.11.1932, Welches Creek, Columbus, North Carolina, Usa. ii. MARIA MOORE b 1850, Columbus County, North Carolina, Usa
m W J GRAHAM, 06.12.1866. 180. PENELOPE26 MOORE (BENJAMIN JOHN25, JOHN W24, MARGARET23 GOFFE, HANNAH22 GRIGGS, MARGARET21 BISHOP, HESTER20 COGSWELL, SUSANNA19 HAWKES, ANN18 BROWN, EDWARD17, b 13.11.1822 Elkton, Bladen, North Carolina, Usa, d04.02.1883 Whites Creek, Bladen, North Carolina, Usa.
m JOHN SPAULDING, son of BENJAMIN SPAULDING and EDITH JACOBS. Han b 03.02.1817 Elkton Bladen North Carolina, Usa, d 10.10.1894 Whites Creek Bladen, North Carolina, Usa. ch of PENELOPE MOORE and JOHN SPAULDING i. EDITH M27 SPAULDING b 04.10.1848, Columbus County, North Carolina, Usa; d. 04.06.1912, Whites Creek, Bladen, North Carolina, Usa
m STEPHEN CAMPBELL, 1868, North Carolina, Usa b 05.1846, Whites Creek, Bladen, North Carolina, Usa; d. Bladen, North Carolina, Usa. 198. ii. ELVY SPAULDING b 1845, Bladen, North Carolina, Usa; d. 1875, Whites Creek, Bladen, North Carolina, Usa. iii. JONATHAN SPAULDING b 04.1861, North Carolina, Usa; d. 10.11.1926, Welchs Creek, Columbus, North Carolina, Usa. 199. iv. CALDONIA SPAULDING b 01.06.1842, Elkton, Bladen, North Carolina, Usa; d. 12.06.1922, Bogue, Columbus, NC v. DELILAH SPAULDING b 10.05.1850, North Carolina Usa; d. 18.08.1921, North Carolina Usa
m HENRY DESET SPAULDING, 05.03.1878, Colombus City NC vi. PENELOPE SPAULDING b 10.08.1858, Columbus County, North Carolina, Usa; d. 02.10.1935, Elizabethtown, Bladen, North Carolina, Usa
m FRANKLIN W ROGERS b 06.1849, NC 181. JOHN26 MOORE (BENJAMIN JOHN25, JOHN W24, MARGARET23 GOFFE, HANNAH22 GRIGGS, MARGARET21 BISHOP, HESTER20 COGSWELL, SUSANNA19 HAWKES, ANN18 BROWN, EDWARD17, b 01.1836 Welches Creek, Columbus, North Carolina, Usa, d 1910 Welches Creek, Columbus, North Carolina, Usa
m (1) HARRIETT ADELINE SPAULDING, dau of ARMSTEAD SPAULDING and HELEN CAMPBELL. Hun b 1842 Columbus County, North Carolina, Usa, d 1862 Columbus County North Carolina, Usa
m (2) FRANCIS E SPAULDING 1863 North Carolina, United States. Hun b 06.1847 Clarkton, Bladen, North Carolina, Usa, d 1905. ch of JOHN MOORE and HARRIETT SPAULDING 200. i. ARMSTEAD MCLEAN27 MOORE b 1861, Colombus Co County North Carolina, Usa; d. 1896, Waccamaw Columbus Co NC ch of JOHN MOORE and FRANCIS SPAULDING ii. RHODA MARIAH27 MOORE b 1875, Welches Creek, Columbus, North Carolina, Usa; d. 1899, Welches Creek Columbus North Carolina Usa
m NATHAN W FREEMAN. iii. JOHN JAMES MOORE b 07.1871
m MARY A BLANKS, 06.02.1902 b 1875, NC 201. iv. MARTHA JANE MOORE b 15.04.1867, Columbus County, North Carolina, Usa; d. 24.05.1926, Clarkton RFD, Columbus, North Carolina, Usa. 202. v. ANDREW JACKSON MOORE b 02.04.1865, Welches Creek, Columbus, North Carolina, Usa; d. 25.09.1941, Welches Creek, Columbus, North Carolina, Usa. 203. vi. MARION MOORE b 02.1870, Welches Creek Columbus North Carolina Usa; d. 1945, White Creek Bladen County NC vii. FLORA ETTA MOORE b 26.09.1878, Welches Creek, Columbus, North Carolina, Usa; d. 29.10.1960, Lake Waccamaw Cemetery, Columbus, North Carolina, Usa
m (1) JOHN W. PATTERSON b 17.04.1906
m (2) EASON WILLIAM HEYWOOD b 14.07.1840, Gates, North Carolina Usa; d. 30.09.1934, Lake Waccamaw Cemetery, Columbus, North Carolina, Usa. viii. LUCREATIA MOORE b 03.1882, Welches Creek Columbus North Carolina Usa; d. Welches Creek Columbus NC Notater for LUCREATIA MOORE: Lucreaty Moore United States Census, 1900 Name: Lucreaty Moore Event Type: Census Event Year: 1900 Event Place: Welches Creek & Western Prong townships, Columbus, North Carolina, United States Gender: Female Age: 18 Marital Status: Single Race: Indian Race (Original): In Relationship to Head of Household: Daughter Relationship to Head of Household (Original): Daughter Birth Date: Apr 1882 Birthplace: North Carolina Father's Birthplace: North Carolina Mother's Birthplace: North Carolina Household Role Gender Age Birthplace John Moore Head M 64 North Carolina Francis E Moore Wife F 53 North Carolina Loretta Moore Daughter F 23 North Carolina Rosie L Moore Daughter F 20 North Carolina Lucreaty Moore Daughter F 18 North Carolina Anna M Moore Daughter F 16 North Carolina Fannie E Moore Daughter F 14 North Carolina Boyed Moore Son M 12 North Carolina Ira P Moore Son M 6 North Carolina District: 38 , Sheet Number and Letter: 7B , Household ID: 127 , Line Number: 87 , Affiliate Name: The U.S. National Archives and Records Administration (NARA) , Affiliate Publication Number: T623 , GS Film Number: 1241190 , Digital Folder Number: 004117815 , Image Number: 00130 204. ix. ANNIE MADLIN MOORE b 12.03.1885, Welches Creek Columbus North Carolina Usa; d. 12.03.1966, Welches Creek Columbus NC x. CAMMON BOYD MOORE b 26.11.1888, Welches Creek Columbus North Carolina Usa; d. 16.01.1937, Wilmington, New Hanover, North Carolina,Usa. xi. IVER PEARSON MOORE b 15.01.1894, Columbus, North Carolina, Usa; d. 20.06.1952, Whiteville, Columbus, North Carolina, Usa
m HALLIE ISADORE JACOBS b 11.11.1899, Columbus, North Carolina, Usa; d. 26.06.1955, Welches Creek Columbus NC 182. BENJAMIN JOHN26 MOORE (BENJAMIN JOHN25, JOHN W24, MARGARET23 GOFFE, HANNAH22 GRIGGS, MARGARET21 BISHOP, HESTER20 COGSWELL, SUSANNA19 HAWKES, ANN18 BROWN, EDWARD17, b 07.1837 North Carolina Usa, d04.06.1923 Bogue, Columbus, North Carolina Usa
m MARY CATHERINE FREEMAN. Hun b 24.12.1841 Bladen County, North Carolina, Usa, d07.02.1909 Welches Creek, Columbus, North Carolina, Usa. ch of BENJAMIN MOORE and MARY FREEMAN i. JANE27 MOORE b 11.1864, Welches Creek, Columbus, North Carolina, Usa; d. 1925, Whitesboro, Cape May, New Jersey, Usa
m EDWARD MITCHELL. 205. ii. DORCUS MOORE b 01.1874, North Carolina, Usa; d. 29.07.1906, Bogue, Columbus, North Carolina, Usa. 206. iii. ULYSSES STEPHENS MOORE b 09.06.1870, Welches Creek, Columbus, North Carolina, Usa; d. 27.06.1948, Welches Creek, Columbus, North Carolina, Usa. iv. CALISTER MOORE b 02.10.1874, Welches Creek Columbus North Carolina Usa; d. 26.08.1895, Welches Creek Columbus NC v. CARVER RILEY MOORE b 08.11.1882, Welches Creek Columbus North Carolina Usa; d. 17.01.1958, Clarkton, Columbus, North Carolina, USA
m SHARLEE SPAULDING b 07.06.1882, Columbus County, North Carolina, USA; d. 07.03.1958, Welches Creek Columbus NC 183. LUCY ANN26 MOORE (BENJAMIN JOHN25, JOHN W24, MARGARET23 GOFFE, HANNAH22 GRIGGS, MARGARET21 BISHOP, HESTER20 COGSWELL, SUSANNA19 HAWKES, ANN18 BROWN, EDWARD17, b 30.09.1843 Columbus County, North Carolina, Usa, d07.09.1898 Welches Creek Columbus NC
m WILLIAM MONROE EUDY 19.12.1857. Han b 28.11.1831 Mount Pleasant Cabarrus County NC ch of LUCY MOORE and WILLIAM EUDY 207. i. THOMAS BIRCHLEY27 EUDY b 12.05.1874, Mount Pleasant Cabarrus County North Carolina Usa; d. 08.08.1939, Mount Pleasant Cabarrus County NC 184. AARON26 MOORE (BENJAMIN JOHN25, JOHN W24, MARGARET23 GOFFE, HANNAH22 GRIGGS, MARGARET21 BISHOP, HESTER20 COGSWELL, SUSANNA19 HAWKES, ANN18 BROWN, EDWARD17, b 07.10.1844 Duplin Co.North Carolina Usa, d08.10.1914 Magnolia, Duplin, North Carolina Usa
m MARIA CALINE LOWRY 25.09.1865 Columbus, North Carolina Usa, dau of ALLEN LOWRY and MARY CUMBO. Hun b 1840 Robeson Co North Carolina Usa, d 13.02.1907 Welch Creek, Columbus, North Carolina. Notater for AARON MOORE: Aron Moore North Carolina, Deaths Name: Aron Moore Event Date: 08 Oct 1914 Event Place: Magnolia, Duplin, North Carolina Gender: Male Race (Original): Colored Race: Colored Age (Original): 70y Birth Year (Estimated): 1844 Birthplace: Duplin Co. Marital Status: Widowed Father's Name: Aron Moore Father's Birthplace: Duplin Co. Occupation: Farmer Cemetery: Moore Burial Grounds Burial Date: 09 Oct 1914 Informant's Name (Original): X GS Film number: 1877841 , Digital Folder Number: 4163061 , Image Number: 2703 , Reference ID: 15 Attach to Family Tree View the document View the original document to see a piece of history Download document North Carolina, Deaths, 1906-1930 Search collection About this collection Citing this Record "North Carolina, Deaths, 1906-1930," index and images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.1.1/F3FN-W85 : accessed 15 January 2015), Aron Moore, 08 Oct 1914; citing Magnolia, Duplin, North Carolina, reference 15, State Department of Archives and History, Raleigh; FHL microfilm 1,877,841. ch of AARON MOORE and MARIA LOWRY 208. i. GEORGE E27 MOORE b Columbus County, North Carolina, Usa. ii. ISABELLE MOORE. iii. MARTHA MOORE, g. WILLIAM J HILL, 22.02.1903, Magnolia ,Duplin NC Notater for MARTHA MOORE: Mary Moore mentioned in the record of William J. Hill and Martha Moore Name Mary Moore Gender Female Other information in the record of and from North Carolina, County Marriages Name William J. Hill Event Type Marriage Event Date 22 Feb 1903 Event Place Magnolia, Duplin, North Carolina, United States Gender Male Age 60 Marital Status Married Race Black Birth Year (Estimated) 1843 Father's Name Jeffrey Hill Mother's Name Phillis Hill Spouse's Name Martha Moore Spouse's Gender Female Spouse's Age 49 Spouse's Race Black Spouse's Birth Year (Estimated) 1854 Spouse's Father's Name Aaron Moore Spouse's Mother's Name Mary Moore iv. JOHN MOORE b 1856, Westfield Indiana Usa
m MARY REBECCA STANBOROUGH, 1876, Westfield, Indiana Usa b 28.10.1856, Westfield Indiana Usa; d. 1900. 209. v. WILLIAM LUTHER MOORE b 12.10.1857, Columbus County North Carolina Usa; d. 22.12.1930, Maxton Robeson Co NC vi. WILEY MOORE b 1860, Columbus County, North Carolina, Usa; d. Welchs Creek, Columbus, North Carolina, Usa. vii. MARINDA MOORE b 1861
m JAMES STOKES, 22.03.1896, Magnolia ,Duplin North Carolina Usa b 1875. 210. viii. JAMES DANIEL MOORE b 1863, Columbus County, North Carolina, Usa; d. Welchs Creek, Columbus, North Carolina, Usa. ix. ISAIH MOORE b 1864
m ANNA TAYLOR, 22.03.1896, Magnolia ,Duplin NC x. MARY ELIZA MOORE b 03.03.1865, Welches Creek Columbus County North Carolina Usa; d. 18.03.1922, Welchs Creek, Columbus, North Carolina, Usa
m (1) J L FREEMAN
m (2) BENJAMIN MITCHELL. xi. ELIZA MOORE b 1867, Columbus County, North Carolina, Usa
m JOHN FREEMAN. Notater for JOHN FREEMAN: Clawhammer xii. AARON EDWARD MOORE b 1867, Columbus County North Carolina Usa; d. 04.06.1925, White Creek Bladen North Carolina Usa
m AMELIA BUNTING, 16.10.1892, Colombus NC 211. xiii. JOSEPHINE B MOORE b 18.02.1868, Columbus, North Carolina, USA; d. 07.04.1902, Westford, Middlesex, Massachusetts, USA. 212. xiv. FRANCES MOORE b 22.09.1868, Hillsborough Orange North Carolina Usa; d. 25.11.1941, Welch Creek, Columbus, NC xv. REBECCA MOORE b 10.10.1870; d. 08.02.1909
m O H LENNON, 13.03.1889, Columbus, NC Notater for REBECCA MOORE: Aaron Moore mentioned in the record of O.H. Lennon and Rebecca I. Moore Name: Aaron Moore Gender: Male Wife: Mariah Moore Daughter: Rebecca I. Moore Other information in the record of O.H. Lennon and Rebecca I. Moore from North Carolina, Marriages Name: O.H. Lennon Spouse's Name: Rebecca I. Moore Event Date: 13 Mar 1889 Event Place: Columbus, North Carolina Mother's Name: Rhoda Lennon Spouse's Father's Name: Aaron Moore Spouse's Mother's Name: Mariah Moore Race: Black Spouse's Race: Black Indexing Project (Batch) Number: M75238-1 , System Origin: North Carolina-EASy , GS Film number: 557730 , Reference ID: p 102 Attach to Family Tree No image available North Carolina, Marriages, 1759-1979 Search collection About this collection Citing this Record "North Carolina, Marriages, 1759-1979," index, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.1.1/F887-32H : accessed 15 January 2015), Aaron Moore in entry for O.H. Lennon and Rebecca I. Moore, 13 Mar 1889; citing Columbus, North Carolina, reference p 102; FHL microfilm 557,730. 213. xvi. MARIAH MOORE b 17.12.1871, Duplin Co North Carolina Usa; d. 17.08.1964, Warsaw, Magnolia, Duplin, NC 214. xvii. HANNAH SURRENE MOORE b 1872, Duplin Co North Carolina Usa; d. 05.10.1938, Teachey, Duplin, NC xviii. IDA MOORE b 1876, Kentuckey Usa. Notater for IDA MOORE: UNITED STATES CENSUS, 1880 District ED 145 Sheet Number and Letter 279D Household ID 13588869 Affiliate Name The U.S. National Archives and Records Administration (NARA) Affiliate Publication Number T9 Affiliate Film Number 0424 GS Film Number 1254424 Digital Folder Number 005160684 Image Number 00282 xix. SIMEON MOORE b 1878, Welches Creek Columbus County NC 215. xx. IOMA MOORE b 1881. xxi. CROSSBURY MOORE b 09.1881, Welches Creek Columbus County NC xxii. LORAVINIA MOORE b 07.01.1883, Welches Creek Columbus County North Carolina Usa; d. 02.12.1948, Welches Creek Columbus County North Carolina Usa
m ANDREW MITCHELL. 185. ELIAS26 MOORE (JOHN25, JOHN W24, MARGARET23 GOFFE, HANNAH22 GRIGGS, MARGARET21 BISHOP, HESTER20 COGSWELL, SUSANNA19 HAWKES, ANN18 BROWN, EDWARD17, b 27.08.1819 Douglas Coffe Co georgia Usa, d 16.10.1878 Atkinson Co Georgia Usa
m HESTER ANN LOTT 1841 Telfair Co Georgia Usa, dau of DANIEL LOTT and LUCINDA PETERSON. Hun b 24.04.1824 McRae Telfair County Georgia Usa, d25.12.1892 Douglas, Coffee Co Georgia usa. Notater for HESTER ANN LOTT: Burial Antioch Church, Willacoochee, Atkinson Co., Ga ch of ELIAS MOORE and HESTER LOTT 216. i. LUCINDA27 MOORE b 15.03.1844, Ware Co Georgia Usa; d. 10.06.1930, Coffee Co.Georgia Usa. ii. AARON MOORE b 12.02.1842, Ware Co Georgia Usa; d. 15.07.1899, Atkinson Co Georgia Usa
m FANNIE DAUGHTREY b 23.03.1842, Tennessee Usa; d. 18.01.1926, Usa. iii. ARTHUR MOORE b 16.02.1846, Ware Co Georgia Usa; d. 11.06.1922, Atkinson Co Georgia Usa
m MATILDA GIDDENS b 07.05.1846, Lowndes (now Lanier) County, Georgia usa; d. 26.06.1936, Alapaha District, Berrien County, Georgia Usa. iv. HESTER ANN MOORE b 06.08.1847, Ware Co Georgia Usa; d. 01.01.1926, Atkinson Co Georgia Usa
m NEWTON MONROE PAFFORD, 1872, Coffee Co Georgia Usa b 05.01.1850, Ware Co Georgia Usa; d. 04.03.1909, Atkinson (formerly Coffee) County, Georgia Usa. v. ELIAS MOORE b 16.06.1850, Clinch Co Georgia Usa; d. 08.03.1924, Georgia Usa
m FRANCES ELLEN MEEKS, 18.02.1872, Georgia Usa b 05.06.1856, Coffee Co Georgia Usa; d. 03.08.1929, Alma,Bacon Co.Georgia Usa. vi. ELISHA MOORE b 02.03.1849, Georgia Usa; d. 18.12.1928, Beach, Ware County, Georgia Usa
m MARY MEEKS, 23.07.1871, Coffee Co Georgia Usa b 31.01.1855, Ware County, Georgia Usa; d. 20.06.1927, Beach, Ware County, Georgia Usa. Notater for ELISHA MOORE: Beach Community of Ware COUNTY, GA History File contributed for use in USGenWeb Archives by Barbara Winge barbarawinge@@yahoo.com http://www.rootsweb.com/~usgenweb/ga/ware.htm Table of Contents page: http://www.rootsweb.com/~usgenweb/ga/gafiles.htm Georgia Table of Contents: WAYCROSS JOURNAL-HERALD, Waycross, Georgia Monday, April 22, 1974. BEACH, GEORGIA, WAS THRIVING COMMUNITY By Pauline J. Taylor Beach, Georgia was the northernmost railroad stop in Ware County. This once thriving community is now only a small settlement. [According to Marion R. Hemperly, Deputy Surveyor General of Georgia, CITIES, TOWNS AND COMMUNITIES OF GEORGIA BETWEEN 1847-1962, 8500 PLACES AND THE COUNTY IN WHICH LOCATED, p. 11, Beach, Ware County, was established in 1920] The post office of Beach was on the Atlanta, Birmingham & Atlantic Railroad route and its postmaster was John C. Calhoun. It had only one rural route and Frank Quarterman was the postman. Later the Beach post office was disbanned and moved to Crawley, Georgia, four miles south of Beach. Crawley was known as the "Kirkland Knot Camp." Crawley was located in the area where the railroad now crosses U.S. 1 north. Crawley has no rural route and Calhoun continued as postmaster until he was replace by Zene Kirkland. Later Roy Lynn served as postmaster until his retirement. This post office accommodated only a small portion of Ware County and the remaining residents of all areas north of Waycross were on a Waycross Rural Route. Beach consisted of a general merchandise store, a barber shop and a machine shop. The justice of the peace was J. B. Quarterman and he performed many marriage ceremonies. The biggest industry in Beach was a huge saw mill operated by T. Harper Calhoun. They logged from the wilds of the "Fork of the Hurricane" by the way of tram-roads and engines used skidders and steel cables to drag the huge logs from the hurricane creek to the tram flat cars for loading. [Hurricane Creek and swamp covered an a rea in Appling, Bacon, Pierce and part of Ware County.] Mrs. Pauline Taylor of Ware County is holder of a warranty deed of 1884 giving easements for tram-roads right-of-ways. Housewives and gardners of Beach made their spending money peddling milk, eggs, fruits, and vegetables to the families of lumbermen living in rustic quarters. They paid with certain coins that could only be redeemed at the general store. Dr. J. B. Blitch was once the physician in Beach. He was convicted, it is said, for performing illegal surgery on a black boy and claimed him to be the only "Horned Negro in America," selling him to the circus. The boy admitted the surgery which caused the conviction and Beach was left without a doctor. Midwives served throughout the area delivering babies in the home for whites and blacks as well. Home remedies and practical nursing was essential to life. Practically all the buildings of the once thriving community of Beach are gone but terpentine and timber lands are still very much in use and most of the area is owned by I. W. Strickland and A. L. Strickland. vii. MARTHA ELIZABETH MOORE b 27.07.1852, Georgia Usa; d. 13.08.1934, Atkinson Co Georgia Usa
m (1) JAMES MATTHEW DAUGHTERY, mel. 1866 - 1874, Coffee Co Georgia Usa b 1852, Clinch County Georgia Usa; d. 12.1880, Lanier Co Georgia Usa
m (2) JESSE MADISON PAFFORD, 02.12.1880, Coffee Co Georgia Usa b 02.06.1858, Coffee (Now Atkinson) Co. Georgia Usa; d. 10.06.1922, Atkinson (formerly Coffee) County, Georgia Usa. 217. viii. DANIEL MOORE b 24.04.1856, Kirkland, Coffee Co. Georgia Usa; d. 26.02.1940, Kirkland, Atkinson Co . Georgia Usa. ix. REBECCA MOORE b 15.10.1858, Coffee Co Georgia Usa
m DANIEL M. SHEPPARD, 25.05.1881, Coffee Co Georgia Usa b mel. 1823 - 1863; d. Coffee (Now Atkinson) Co. Georgia Usa ?. x. SARAH ANN MOORE b 15.10.1858, Coffee County, Georgia Usa; d. 01.04.1930, Atkinson (formerly Coffee) County, Georgia Usa
m MARCUS A PAFFORD, Coffee County, Georgia Usa b 22.07.1854, Coffee County, Georgia Usa; d. 24.04.1931, Coffee (Now Atkinson) Co. Georgia Usa. xi. FRANCES M MOORE b Coffee County, Georgia Usa; d. mel. 1900 - 1910, Kirkland, Coffee (now Atkinson) County, Georgia Usa
m JAMES F OVERSTREET, 18.07.1886, Coffee Co Georgia Usa b 05.1864, Georgia Usa; d. 05.1910, Kirkland, Coffee (now Atkinson) County, Georgia Usa. 186. MARY26 MOORE (JOHN25, JOHN W24, MARGARET23 GOFFE, HANNAH22 GRIGGS, MARGARET21 BISHOP, HESTER20 COGSWELL, SUSANNA19 HAWKES, ANN18 BROWN, EDWARD17, b 13.03.1825 Emanuel Co. Georgia Usa, d03.04.1906 Coffee County Georgia Usa.
m ELISHA ERA LOTT 1842 Telfair Co Georgia Usa, son of DANIEL LOTT and LUCINDA PETERSON. Han b 17.05.1822 McRae, Telfair Co.Georgia Usa, d28.10.1886 Coffee (Now Atkinson) Co. Georgia Usa. ch of MARY MOORE and ELISHA LOTT 218. i. DANIEL PETERSON27 LOTT b 26.06.1848, Ware Co Georgia Usa; d. 25.03.1912, Coffee co Georgia Usa. 187. JOHN26 MOORE (JOHN25, JOHN W24, MARGARET23 GOFFE, HANNAH22 GRIGGS, MARGARET21 BISHOP, HESTER20 COGSWELL, SUSANNA19 HAWKES, ANN18 BROWN, EDWARD17, b 1821, d 17.12.1886 Homerville Clinch County Georgia Usa
m BARBARA ROBERTS 1842 Lowndes County Georgia Usa, dau of GRAY ROBERTS and SARAH LOTT. Hun b 30.10.1824 Coffee (nka Atkinson) County Georgia Usa, d 10.03.1902 Homerville Clinch County Georgia Usa. ch of JOHN MOORE and BARBARA ROBERTS i. ELIAS LOTT27 MOORE b 25.05.1845, Ware (nka Atkinson) County Georgia Usa; d. 14.08.1914, Cat Creek Lowndes County Georgia Usa
m MARTHA SIRMANS STRICKLAND, 27.06.1866, Clinch County Georgia Usa b 04.08.1847, Lanier County Georgia Usa; d. 22.09.1942, Valdosta Lowndes County Georgia. ii. JESSE MOORE b 1846, Ware (nka Atkinson) County, Georgia; d. 15.05.1866, Coffee (nka Atkinson) County Georgia Usa. iii. JOHN MOORE b 1848, Lowndes County Georgia Usa; d. 30.12.1869, Coffee (nka Atkinson) County Georgia Usa
m NANCY ELIZABETH LOTT, 30.12.1869, Coffee County Georgia Usa b 22.06.1854, Coffee County Georgia Usa; d. 03.06.1922, Coffee (nka Atkinson) County Georgia Usa. iv. HENRY CLAY MOORE b 10.10.1850, Clinch County Georgia Usa; d. 17.06.1891, Homerville Clinch County Georgia Usa
m FANNIE CATHERINE SMITH, 02.09.1879, Homerville Clinch County Georgia Usa b 1858, Lowndes County Georgia Usa; d. 14.04.1900, Homerville Clinch County Georgia Usa. v. MARY ANN MOORE b 14.02.1852, Clinch County Georgia Usa; d. 1940, Pickren Coffee County Georgia Usa
m GEORGE WASHINGTON LOTT, 1875, Clinch or Coffee County Georgia Usa b 03.04.1851, Coffee County Georgia Usa; d. 12.04.1925, Clinch or Coffee County Georgia Usa. vi. MARTHA ANN MOORE b 1854, Birds Mill Coffee (nka Atkinson) County Georgia Usa; d. 1896, Clinch County Georgia Usa
m BRYANT ROWAN JOHNSON, 1876, Coffee or Clinch County Georgia Usa b 1859, Clinch County Georgia Usa; d. mel. 1896 - 1956, Clinch County Georgia Usa. vii. ELISHA MOORE b 09.12.1857, Birds Mill Coffee (nka Atkinson) County Georgia Usa; d. 02.01.1919, Nashville, Berrien County Georgia Usa
m (1) LUCRETIA GIDDENS, 1877, Clinch Co Georgia Usa b 08.11.1858, Guest Millpond Clinch Co Georgia Usa; d. 12.03.1901, Nashville, Berrien County Georgia Usa
m (2) MATILDA ANN GRINER, mel. 1901 - 1905, Berrien County Georgia Usa b 21.10.1867, Berrien County Georgia Usa; d. 07.11.1905, Berrien County Georgia Usa
m (3) SARAH ANN AMERICA GRINER, mel. 1905 - 1919, Berrien County Georgia Usa b 11.06.1875, Berrien County Georgia Usa; d. Berrien County Georgia Usa. viii. LEVI JOHN MOORE b 15.09.1861, Clinch County Georgia Usa; d. 18.03.1927, Pickren Coffee County Georgia Usa
m TOBITHA PEARSON, 1880, Coffee County Georgia Usa b 22.12.1864, Pearson Coffee (nka Atkinson) County Georgia Usa; d. mel. 1920 - 1965, Pickren Coffee County Georgia Usa. ix. PERRYMAN MOORE b 15.12.1864, Valdosta Lowndes County Georgia Usa; d. 02.12.1918, Piedmont Sanitorium Atlanta Fulton County Georgia Usa
m SUSAN JANE TILLMAN, 10.05.1888, Quitman Brooks County Georgia Usa b 07.09.1868, Madison County Florida Usa; d. 05.05.1951, Tifton Tift County Georgia Usa. 219. x. MATHEW HOWARD MOORE b 13.08.1872, near Pearson, Coffee (nka Atkinson) County Georgia Usa; d. 21.03.1944, 1525 Minnesota Avenue, Winter Park Orange County Florida Usa. 188. SETH WYMAN26 STEWARD (SETH WYMAN25, OLIVE24 MOOR, MARGARET23 GOFFE, HANNAH22 GRIGGS, MARGARET21 BISHOP, HESTER20 COGSWELL, SUSANNA19 HAWKES, ANN18 BROWN, EDWARD17, b 04.05.1844 Monson, Piscataquis County, Maine Usa, d 10.07.1934
m MARY ABBIE COAN. ch of SETH STEWARD and MARY COAN 220. i. CLARA MAUDE27 STEWARD b 27.03.1881, Monson Maine Usa; d. 10.01.1958, Bristol Hartford CT 189. PHILOMELIA SOPHIA26 SCOBEY (NANCY M25 WALLACE, POLLY24 GOFFE, JOHN23, HANNAH22 GRIGGS, MARGARET21 BISHOP, HESTER20 COGSWELL, SUSANNA19 HAWKES, ANN18 BROWN, EDWARD17, b 1827 Bethlehem Grafton Co New Hampshire Usa, d 1897.
m PHINEAS WEED. Han b 1823 New Hampshire Usa, d 1895. ch of PHILOMELIA SCOBEY and PHINEAS WEED 221. i. FLORENCE IDA27 WEED b 1849, Wayne Co Ohio; d. 1921, Palo Alto Santa Clara Co California Usa.
to be integrated above
27 190. DR. FRANCIS WAYNE27 HUGHES (ANNA M26 SMALLWOOD, ANNA E25 BLACKWELL, MARY24 FIELD, CHARITY23 WHITEHEAD, b 1858 North Carolina Usa, d01.11.1982 Wilmington New Hanover Co North Carolina Usa
m CAROLINE ANN WINDER, dau of JOHN WINDER and OCTAVIA BRYAN. Hun b 10.1860 NC ch of DR. HUGHES and CAROLINE WINDER 222. i. JAMES BETTNER28 HUGHES b 22.09.1893, New Hanover Co NC 191. CATHERINE ANN27 HIMES (ABIGAIL ANN26 SPACE, ZEPHANIAH25, ABIGAIL24 MOTT, DEBORAH23 TALLMAN, ABIGAIL22 HICKS, b 10.03.1844 New Bethlehem Clarion Co PA d31.08.1930 New Bethlehem Clarion Co PA
m (1) J. K. HAMILTON. Han b 1894.
m (2) MARTIN WILLIAMS. Han b 1826, d 1899.
m (3) MAHLON DIXON RIDGEWAY. Han b 1833 New Bethlehem Clarion Co PA d 1879 New Bethlehem Clarion Co PA ch of CATHERINE HIMES and MAHLON RIDGEWAY 223. i. CARRIE ANN28 RIDGEWAY b 07.07.1861, New Bethlehem Clarion Co PA d. 26.01.1928, Du Bois Clearfield Co PA 192. CAROLINE A27 MOORE (ISRAEL26, BENJAMIN JOHN25, JOHN W24, MARGARET23 GOFFE, HANNAH22 GRIGGS, MARGARET21 BISHOP, HESTER20 COGSWELL, SUSANNA19 HAWKES, ANN18 BROWN, EDWARD17, b 09.1853 Columbus County, North Carolina, Usa, d29.07.1935 Wilmington, New Hanover, North Carolina, Usa.
m BERNARD SPAULDING 1875 Colombus NC Han b 12.1852 Colombus, North Carolina, Usa, d 16.02.1923 Ransom, Columbus, North Carolina, Usa. ch of CAROLINE MOORE and BERNARD SPAULDING 224. i. SUSIE MARIAH28 SPAULDING b 09.1875, Welchs Creek, Colombus, North Carolina, Usa; d. 24.03.1955, Freeman, Columbus, North Carolina, Usa. 193. DELPHIA ANN27 MOORE (ISRAEL26, BENJAMIN JOHN25, JOHN W24, MARGARET23 GOFFE, HANNAH22 GRIGGS, MARGARET21 BISHOP, HESTER20 COGSWELL, SUSANNA19 HAWKES, ANN18 BROWN, EDWARD17, b 19.04.1861 Columbus County, North Carolina, Usa, d08.08.1932 Waccamaw, Columbus, North Carolina, Usa.
m WILLIE BUNN JACOBS 1888 Colombus City North Carolina Usa, son of NELSON JACOBS and ANN MITCHELL. Han b 12.11.1858 Columbus County, North Carolina, Usa, d30.11.1904 Waccamaw, Columbus, North Carolina, Usa. ch of DELPHIA MOORE and WILLIE JACOBS 225. i. LILLIAN28 JACOBS b 03.02.1902, Columbus North Carolina Usa; d. 23.10.1980, Whiteville, Columbus, NC 194. LEWIS27 MOORE (ISRAEL26, BENJAMIN JOHN25, JOHN W24, MARGARET23 GOFFE, HANNAH22 GRIGGS, MARGARET21 BISHOP, HESTER20 COGSWELL, SUSANNA19 HAWKES, ANN18 BROWN, EDWARD17, b 25.01.1843 Columbus County, North Carolina Usa, d01.05.1904 Welches Creek Columbus North Carolina Usa
m AMANDA SPAULDING 1868, dau of EMMANUEL SPAULDING and SUSANNAH CUMBO. Hun b 07.04.1849 Columbus, North Carolina, Usa, d 14.11.1914 Welches Creek Columbus NC ch of LEWIS MOORE and AMANDA SPAULDING i. IDA VIRGINIA28 MOORE b 1869, Welches Creek Columbus North Carolina, Usa; d. 13.10.1937, Wilmington New Hanover NC ii. LETCY L MOORE b 07.1875, Welches Creek Columbus North Carolina, Usa; d. Brooklyn Kings New York Usa. iii. MAGGIE L MOORE b 18.05.1877, Welches Creek Columbus North Carolina, Usa; d. 22.10.1920, Welches Creek Columbus North Carolina, Usa. iv. ARAH BADIE MOORE b 09.05.1879, Columbus North Carolina, Usa; d. 04.12.1964, Mebane Alamance NC v. JOSEPH LOUIS MOORE b 09.09.1881, Welches Creek Columbus North Carolina, Usa; d. 30.12.1902, Welches Creek Columbus North Carolina, Usa. vi. WADE HAMPTON MOORE b 29.08.1886, Welches Creek Columbus North Carolina, Usa; d. 21.02.1936, Wilmington New Hanover NC vii. SUSANNAH OPHELIA MOORE b 02.12.1888, Welches Creek Columbus North Carolina, Usa; d. 14.12.1957, Welches Creek Columbus North Carolina, Usa. viii. LOYD MOORE b 03.1890, Welches Creek Columbus North Carolina, Usa; d. 05.01.1921, Welches Creek Columbus North Carolina, Usa. ix. LOUISA MOORE b 18.09.1891, Welches Creek Columbus North Carolina, Usa; d. 11.02.1924, Wilmington New Hanover NC 195. MARY EDITH27 MOORE (ISRAEL26, BENJAMIN JOHN25, JOHN W24, MARGARET23 GOFFE, HANNAH22 GRIGGS, MARGARET21 BISHOP, HESTER20 COGSWELL, SUSANNA19 HAWKES, ANN18 BROWN, EDWARD17, b 22.08.1847 Welches Creek, North Carolina Usa, d22.07.1902 Welches Creek Columbus NC
m JOHN W WHITE, son of WHITE and LUCY FREEMAN. Han b 08.08.1846 Northwest, Brunswick, North Carolina, Usa, d 11.12.1920 Welchs Creek, Columbus, North Carolina, Usa. ch of MARY MOORE and JOHN WHITE 226. i. SARAH JANE28 WHITE b 06.06.1870, Welches Creek Columbus North Carolina Usa; d. 02.07.1924, Welches Creek Columbus NC 227. ii. WILEY FRANKLIN WHITE b 05.03.1873, Welches Creek Columbus North Carolina Usa; d. 23.08.1930, Welches Creek Columbus NC iii. DANIEL J WHITE b 01.1877, Columbus North Carolina Usa; d. 30.12.1926, Durham, Durham, NC iv. MARY ELLEN WHITE b 08.1881, Welches Creek Columbus North Carolina Usa; d. Washington, District Of Columbia, Usa. v. ELIAS WHITE b 03.1884, Welches Creek Columbus NC vi. LUCY WHITE b 03.1889, Welches Creek Columbus NC vii. LUTHER WHITE b 03.1889, Welches Creek Columbus NC 196. MARGARET ANN VIRGINIA27 MOORE (ISRAEL26, BENJAMIN JOHN25, JOHN W24, MARGARET23 GOFFE, HANNAH22 GRIGGS, MARGARET21 BISHOP, HESTER20 COGSWELL, SUSANNA19 HAWKES, ANN18 BROWN, EDWARD17, b 26.08.1849 North Carolina, Usa, d 15.10.1920 Columbus County, North Carolina, Usa.
m BENJAMIN MCIVER SPAULDING, son of EMMANUEL SPAULDING and SUSANNAH CUMBO. Han b 07.01.1845 North Carolina, Usa, d05.03.1921 Columbus, North Carolina, Usa. ch of MARGARET MOORE and BENJAMIN SPAULDING i. ISRAEL ROYAL28 SPAULDING b 16.09.1886, Welches Creek Township, Columbus, North Carolina, Usa; d. 18.02.1973, Durham, North Carolina, Usa
m RUTH ALEXANDRIA WHITTED, 24.12.1919, Melville, Alamance, North Carolina, Usa b 02.07.1895; d. 31.03.1988, Durham Co NC Notater for RUTH ALEXANDRIA WHITTED: Hillsborough, Orange County, NC - living with grandparents Alston & Sallie Whitted 228. ii. ISRAEL ROYAL SPAULDING b 16.09.1886, Welches Creek Township, Columbus, North Carolina, Usa; d. 18.02.1973, Durham, NC 229. iii. MARY ANNA SPAULDING b 19.12.1881, Welchs Creek, Columbus, North Carolina, Usa; d. 26.04.1963, Bronx, Bronx, New York, Usa. iv. WILEY O SPAULDING. v. SUSANNIE L SPAULDING. vi. CHARLES CLINTON SPAULDING b 01.08.1874, North Carolina Usa; d. 01.08.1952, Durham Durham Co NC Notater for CHARLES CLINTON SPAULDING: 3rd President of North Carolina Mutual Life Insurance Company) Spaulding, Charles Clinton Sr. (1874-1952) was, like his contemporary, Dr. Aaron Moore, a community leader in black Durham and a prominent businessman, serving, most notably, as president of North Carolina Mutual Life Insurance from 1923 to 1952. Walter B. Weare describes him as having had “an international reputation as America’s leading black businessman.” In his capacity as a black community leader, Spaulding advocated for improvements in the community’s educational opportunities and deftly negotiated the rift between working toward racial uplift and avoiding a white backlash against such ambitions. A Democrat, he served as an advisor to President Franklin D. Roosevelt, particularly on appointments to the “black cabinet,” an informal group of black advisors on public policy, and as an advocate for the National Recovery Administration (NRA) to the black community. He was a member of the Rosenwald Fund’s board of directors. . from Dictionary of North Carolina Biography, vol. 5, p. 4 vii. ALONZA G SPAULDING. viii. EVANDER M SPAULDING. ix. AARON M SPAULDING. x. MARGARET L SPAULDING, g. KENNEDY. xi. GARLAND SPAULDING. 197. ISABELLA27 MOORE (THURSEY26, BENJAMIN JOHN25, JOHN W24, MARGARET23 GOFFE, HANNAH22 GRIGGS, MARGARET21 BISHOP, HESTER20 COGSWELL, SUSANNA19 HAWKES, ANN18 BROWN, EDWARD17, b 1845 Welches Creek, Columbus, North Carolina, Usa, d07.11.1932 Welches Creek, Columbus, North Carolina, Usa.
m IVER SPAULDING, son of BENJAMIN SPAULDING and EDITH JACOBS. Han b 03.02.1819 Columbus North Carolina, Usa, d04.02.1888 Welches Creek Columbus NC ch of ISABELLA MOORE and IVER SPAULDING i. GEORGE28 SPAULDING. ii. HENRY SPAULDING. iii. JASPER F SPAULDING. iv. LONNIE SPAULDING. v. MAHONEY SPAULDING. vi. WALTER SPAULDING, g. MAMIE KELSEY. vii. MCIVER SPAULDING. 198. ELVY27 SPAULDING (PENELOPE26 MOORE, BENJAMIN JOHN25, JOHN W24, MARGARET23 GOFFE, HANNAH22 GRIGGS, MARGARET21 BISHOP, HESTER20 COGSWELL, SUSANNA19 HAWKES, ANN18 BROWN, EDWARD17, b 1845 Bladen, North Carolina, Usa, d 1875 Whites Creek, Bladen, North Carolina, Usa.
m SOLOMAN WEBB 21.09.1866 Colombus NC Han b 03.1836 Brunswick, North Carolina, Usa, d 1912 Bradenton, Manatee, Florida, Usa. ch of ELVY SPAULDING and SOLOMAN WEBB 230. i. RACHEL CAROLINE28 WEBB b 04.10.1870, Whites Creek, Bladen, North Carolina, Usa; d. 13.09.1942, Welches Creek, Columbus, North Carolina, Usa. ii. WILLIAM BARTY WEBB b 13.08.1870, Whites Creek, Bladen, North Carolina, Usa; d. 14.01.1959, Bolton, Columbus, North Carolina, Usa
m MARY ARRIE FREEMAN b 27.12.1871, Waccamaw, Columbus, North Carolina, Usa; d. 31.05.1957, Bolton, Columbus, North Carolina, Usa. 199. CALDONIA27 SPAULDING (PENELOPE26 MOORE, BENJAMIN JOHN25, JOHN W24, MARGARET23 GOFFE, HANNAH22 GRIGGS, MARGARET21 BISHOP, HESTER20 COGSWELL, SUSANNA19 HAWKES, ANN18 BROWN, EDWARD17, b 01.06.1842 Elkton, Bladen, North Carolina, Usa, d 12.06.1922 Bogue, Columbus, NC
m JAMES OWEN FREEMAN. Han b 01.01.1837 Columbus, North Carolina, Usa, d02.04.1882 Bogue, Columbus, North Carolina, Usa. ch of CALDONIA SPAULDING and JAMES FREEMAN 231. i. ANDREW JOHNSON28 FREEMAN b 25.01.1866, Bogue, Columbus, North Carolina, Usa; d. 08.11.1924, Bogue, Columbus, North Carolina, Usa. 232. ii. ROBERT FREEMAN b 1867, Bogue, Columbus, North Carolina, Usa; d. Bogue, Columbus, North Carolina, Usa. 233. iii. CALDONIA VICTORIA FREEMAN b 10.1869, Bogue, Columbus, North Carolina, Usa; d. Montgomery, Georgia, Usa. iv. VICTORIA FREEMAN b 1870, NC v. MELTON FREEMAN b 1872, Bouge Colombus Co County North Carolina, Usa; d. Bouge Colombus Co County North Carolina, Usa. 234. vi. LORA PENELOPE FREEMAN b 04.1874, Bouge Columbus Co County North Carolina, Usa; d. Colombus Co County North Carolina, Usa. 235. vii. STEPHEN VANN FREEMAN b 07.1876, Bouge Columbus Co County North Carolina, Usa; d. Waccamaw Columbus Co NC 236. viii. JAMES GASTON FREEMAN b 12.09.1882, Bouge Colombus Co County North Carolina, Usa; d. 09.12.1952, Bolton Columbus Co County North Carolina, Usa. 200. ARMSTEAD MCLEAN27 MOORE (JOHN26, BENJAMIN JOHN25, JOHN W24, MARGARET23 GOFFE, HANNAH22 GRIGGS, MARGARET21 BISHOP, HESTER20 COGSWELL, SUSANNA19 HAWKES, ANN18 BROWN, EDWARD17, b 1861 Colombus Co County North Carolina, Usa, d 1896 Waccamaw Columbus Co North Carolina Usa
m ANABELLA LOWRY 01.09.1891 Robeson County, North Carolina Usa, dau of CALVIN LOWRY and MARIAH SAMPSON. Hun b 03.12.1864 Robeson County North Carolina Usa, d30.10.1965 Durham Durham NC Notater for ARMSTEAD MCLEAN MOORE: Inscription: Son of John & Harriet Moore Aged 31 Yrs, 11 Mos, 20 ds Notater for ANABELLA LOWRY: Annie Bell was the eldest daughter of Rev. Calvin and Maria Sampson Lowry. Her first marriage was to Rev. Armstead McLean Moore on Sep. 1, 1891 in Robeson County, North Carolina. The marriage produced two daughters. Her second marriage was to Armstead Kern Spaulding on Dec. 30, 1896 in Columbus County, North Carolina. The marriage produced two daughters and three sons. ***NOTE: Her maiden name is spelled Lowery on her headstone. ch of ARMSTEAD MOORE and ANABELLA LOWRY i. ADELE28 MOORE b 09.06.1896; d. 17.11.1964
m MINGO. ii. HATTIE JANE MOORE b 01.09.1892; d. 24.10.1971
m ANDREW MARTIN SPAULDING b 28.11.1888; d. 25.10.1966. 201. MARTHA JANE27 MOORE (JOHN26, BENJAMIN JOHN25, JOHN W24, MARGARET23 GOFFE, HANNAH22 GRIGGS, MARGARET21 BISHOP, HESTER20 COGSWELL, SUSANNA19 HAWKES, ANN18 BROWN, EDWARD17, b 15.04.1867 Columbus County, North Carolina, Usa, d24.05.1926 Clarkton RFD, Columbus, North Carolina, Usa.
m (1) WESLEY R FAULK. Han b 04.08.1856, d05.05.1921.
m (2) DANIEL JAMES MOORE 03.08.1885. Han b 20.02.1856 Welches Creek, Columbus, North Carolina Usa, d26.08.1908 Welches Creek Columbus NC Notater for MARTHA JANE MOORE: Additional Information for Martha Jane /Moore/ NOTES (4) AFGS 1 _FSFTID 2C1M-12H Martha was the second spouse for Rev. Daniel James Moore, whose first wife was Francenia Spaulding, daughter of William, son of Benjamin Spaulding. Description: Y Description: Y ch of MARTHA MOORE and WESLEY FAULK 237. i. ISRAEL28 MOORE b 10.09.1900; d. 06.08.1979, Columbus County, North Carolina, Usa. ch of MARTHA MOORE and DANIEL MOORE 238. ii. GEORGEANNA28 MOORE b 07.1887, North Carolina, Usa; d. 1968, Cape May Court House Cape May, New Jersey, Usa. 202. ANDREW JACKSON27 MOORE (JOHN26, BENJAMIN JOHN25, JOHN W24, MARGARET23 GOFFE, HANNAH22 GRIGGS, MARGARET21 BISHOP, HESTER20 COGSWELL, SUSANNA19 HAWKES, ANN18 BROWN, EDWARD17, b 02.04.1865 Welches Creek, Columbus, North Carolina, Usa, d25.09.1941 Welches Creek, Columbus, North Carolina, Usa. Notater for ANDREW JACKSON MOORE: Cherokee Indian ch of ANDREW JACKSON MOORE i. ESSIE MAE28 MOORE b 08.04.1896
m C.B. MURPHY b 10.07.1888; d. 23.08.1972. 203. MARION27 MOORE (JOHN26, BENJAMIN JOHN25, JOHN W24, MARGARET23 GOFFE, HANNAH22 GRIGGS, MARGARET21 BISHOP, HESTER20 COGSWELL, SUSANNA19 HAWKES, ANN18 BROWN, EDWARD17, b 02.1870 Welches Creek Columbus North Carolina Usa, d 1945 White Creek Bladen County North Carolina Usa
m MARY A FREEMAN 16.11.1892 Columbus County North Carolina Usa, dau of JOHN FREEMAN and SARAH SPAULDING. Hun b 18.08.1871 Welches Creek Columbus North Carolina Usa, d26.01.1951 Clarkton Bladen NC Notater for MARY A FREEMAN: John William Freeman mentioned in the record of Mary A. Moore Name: John William Freeman Gender: Male Wife: Sara Jane Spaulding Daughter: Mary A. Moore Other information in the record of Mary A. Moore from North Carolina, Deaths Name: Mary A. Moore Event Type: Death Event Date: 26 Jan 1951 Event Place: Clarkton, Bladen, N. C. Birth Year: 1878 Burial Date: 28 Jan 1951 Burial Place: Whiteville, N. C. Cemetery: Mitchell Field Residence Place: Clarkton, Bladen, N. C. Gender: Female Age: 72 Marital Status: Widowed Race (Original): Colored Occupation: Farming Birth Date: 12 Aug 1878 Birthplace: N. C. Father's Name: John William Freeman Mother's Name: Sara Jane Spaulding Additional Relatives: X Reference ID: v 4B cn 4779 , GS Film number: 1926820 ch of MARION MOORE and MARY FREEMAN i. HURSIE B28 MOORE b 24.09.1899, Waccamaw Columbus North Carolina, Usa; d. 01.1966, Cape May Court House Cape May New Jersey Usa. ii. MARION WALTER MOORE b 02.02.1902, Whites Creek Bladen Co North Carolina Usa; d. 25.06.1969, Elizabethtown Bladen NC 204. ANNIE MADLIN27 MOORE (JOHN26, BENJAMIN JOHN25, JOHN W24, MARGARET23 GOFFE, HANNAH22 GRIGGS, MARGARET21 BISHOP, HESTER20 COGSWELL, SUSANNA19 HAWKES, ANN18 BROWN, EDWARD17, b 12.03.1885 Welches Creek Columbus North Carolina Usa, d 12.03.1966 Welches Creek Columbus NC
m MACK GODWIN 13.03.1907 Colombus City North Carolina Usa, son of ALONZO GODWIN and LILLIAN BUNN. Han b 04.06.1889 Louisiana Usa, d 11.05.1964. ch of ANNIE MOORE and MACK GODWIN i. LESSIE ALBERTA28 GODWIN b 1920, Welches Creek Columbus North Carolina Usa; d. 18.04.1993, Whiteville, Columbus, North Carolina, Usa. 205. DORCUS27 MOORE (BENJAMIN JOHN26, BENJAMIN JOHN25, JOHN W24, MARGARET23 GOFFE, HANNAH22 GRIGGS, MARGARET21 BISHOP, HESTER20 COGSWELL, SUSANNA19 HAWKES, ANN18 BROWN, EDWARD17, b 01.1874 North Carolina, Usa, d29.07.1906 Bogue, Columbus, North Carolina, Usa.
m JOEL FREEMAN 31.10.1888, son of NEASE FREEMAN and MARY SPAULDING. Han b 15.05.1864 Bogue, Columbus, North Carolina, Usa, d29.01.1946. ch of DORCUS MOORE and JOEL FREEMAN i. JAMES L28 FREEMAN b 09.1889, Bogue, Columbus, North Carolina, Usa. ii. IDA JANE FREEMAN b 05.1893, Bogue, Columbus, NC iii. CARLOTTA FREEMAN b 12.1896, Bogue, Columbus, NC iv. TYSON P FREEMAN b 12.1897, Bogue, Columbus, NC 206. ULYSSES STEPHENS27 MOORE (BENJAMIN JOHN26, BENJAMIN JOHN25, JOHN W24, MARGARET23 GOFFE, HANNAH22 GRIGGS, MARGARET21 BISHOP, HESTER20 COGSWELL, SUSANNA19 HAWKES, ANN18 BROWN, EDWARD17, b 09.06.1870 Welches Creek, Columbus, North Carolina, Usa, d27.06.1948 Welches Creek, Columbus, North Carolina, Usa
m RACHEL CAROLINE WEBB 19.08.1892, dau of SOLOMAN WEBB and ELVY SPAULDING. Hun b 04.10.1870 Whites Creek, Bladen, North Carolina, Usa, d 13.09.1942 Welches Creek, Columbus, North Carolina, Usa. ch of ULYSSES MOORE and RACHEL WEBB 239. i. FLOYD BENJAMIN28 MOORE b 12.09.1896, Welches Creek Columbus NC ii. OSCAR CONRAD MOORE b 03.08.1898, Welches Creek Columbus NC 240. iii. NASHFIELD MOORE b 13.04.1900, Welches Creek Columbus North Carolina Usa; d. 16.03.1992, Whiteville, Columbus, North Carolina, USA. 241. iv. RICHARD D MOORE b 1903, Welches Creek Columbus NC 242. v. SHEPPARD STEPHENS MOORE b 21.10.1904, Welches Creek Columbus North Carolina Usa; d. 19.09.1976, Whiteville, Columbus, North Carolina, USA. 207. THOMAS BIRCHLEY27 EUDY (LUCY ANN26 MOORE, BENJAMIN JOHN25, JOHN W24, MARGARET23 GOFFE, HANNAH22 GRIGGS, MARGARET21 BISHOP, HESTER20 COGSWELL, SUSANNA19 HAWKES, ANN18 BROWN, EDWARD17, b 12.05.1874 Mount Pleasant Cabarrus County North Carolina Usa, d08.08.1939 Mount Pleasant Cabarrus County North Carolina Usa
m MOLLIE E MOOSE, dau of JULIS M MOOSE. Hun b 23.07.1873 Cabarrus County North Carolina Usa, d 16.12.1949 Mount Pleasant Cabarrus County NC ch of THOMAS EUDY and MOLLIE MOOSE 243. i. RUBEN MONROE28 EUDY b 30.01.1898, North Carolina Usa; d. 21.08.1970, Mount Pleasant Cabarrus County NC 208. GEORGE E27 MOORE (AARON26, BENJAMIN JOHN25, JOHN W24, MARGARET23 GOFFE, HANNAH22 GRIGGS, MARGARET21 BISHOP, HESTER20 COGSWELL, SUSANNA19 HAWKES, ANN18 BROWN, EDWARD17, b Columbus County, North Carolina, Usa
m GENCY. ch of GEORGE MOORE and GENCY 244. i. EDDIE28 MOORE. 245. ii. FRANCES FANNIE MOORE b 23.01.1840, Charlotte, Mecklenburg County, North Carolina, USA; d. 18.08.1825, Charlotte, Mecklenburg County, North Carolina, USA. iii. LORA MOORE. iv. JULIA MOORE. v. ESTHER LUTILLEY MOORE b 1875, Columbus County, North Carolina, Usa; d. Welchs Creek, Columbus, North Carolina, Usa. 209. WILLIAM LUTHER27 MOORE (AARON26, BENJAMIN JOHN25, JOHN W24, MARGARET23 GOFFE, HANNAH22 GRIGGS, MARGARET21 BISHOP, HESTER20 COGSWELL, SUSANNA19 HAWKES, ANN18 BROWN, EDWARD17, b 12.10.1857 Columbus County North Carolina Usa, d22.12.1930 Maxton Robeson Co North Carolina Usa
m MARY CATHRINE OXENDINE, dau of HUGH OXENDINE and ELIZA CHAVIS. Hun b 25.03.1854 Robeson Co North Carolina Usa, d07.01.1928 Smiths Robeson Co NC Notater for WILLIAM LUTHER MOORE: Rev. Moore was a Waccamaw Siouan Indian. He was the son of James and Carolina Spaulding Moore. He married Mary Catherine Oxendine on May 24, 1880 in Robeson County, North Carolina. He is recognized as the founder of the University of North Carolina at Pembroke. He first taught in Columbus County and later taught in Robeson County, North Carolina. He also served as the pastor of Prospect Methodist church for 44 years. In 1885, Rev. Moore was instrumental in enacting a North Carolina bill to establish the Croatan Indian Normal School in Robeson County. His enthusiasm inspired the community to unite and build and support the one-room school. In 1887, he along with Preston Locklear, "Big Jim" Oxendine, and James E. Dial, Sr. were appointed by the North Carolina General Assembly as the original trustees of the Croatan Normal School, known today as the University of North Carolina at Pembroke. Fifteen students enrolled when classes began later in the fall of 1887. Rev. Moore was the first principal and the only teacher for the first three years. In November 1964, the William Luther Moore Arts Building was dedicated at Pembroke State College (now UNC-Pembroke) in recognition for his contributions to his community and to his school. Rev. Doctor Fuller Lowry, the first graduate of the Indian Normal School, delivered the dedication address. ***NOTE: His wife, Mary Catherine Oxendine Moore, was the first female Native American teacher in Robeson County. ***NOTE: Moore Hall at UNC-Pembroke currently houses the Music Department. http://www.uncp.edu/map/moore_hall.htm ch of WILLIAM MOORE and MARY OXENDINE i. ELIZA CAROLINE28 MOORE b 12.08.1885, Robeson Co North Carolina Usa; d. 21.01.1904, Robeson Co NC ii. EMMA JANE MOORE b 09.06.1887, Smiths Robeson Co North Carolina Usa; d. 08.07.1965, Maxton Robeson Co North Carolina Usa
m EARLY BULLARD, 30.06.1910, Burnt Swamp Section of Robeson Co North Carolina Usa b 25.08.1888, Robeson County North Carolina Usa; d. 09.01.1977, Laurinburg Scotland Co NC iii. LUTHER WARD MOORE b 21.07.1889, Robeson Co North Carolina Usa; d. 04.12.1957, Prospect Robeson Co North Carolina Usa
m NORA REBECCA SMITH b 16.03.1903, Richmond County North Carolina Usa; d. 18.10.1991, Lumberton Robeson Co NC Notater for LUTHER WARD MOORE: Luther Ward was the son of Rev. W. L and Mary Catherine Oxendine Moore. He married Nora Rebecca Smith. The following was taken from the Dec. 6, 1957 edition of THE ROBESONIAN: Luther Moore, 68, of Maxton, route 3, died Wednesday morning at four o'clock at his home in the Prospect community, after an illness of several years. The funeral will be held Sunday afternoon at two o'clock from the Old Prospect Methodist church, conducted by the pastor, Rev. Simeon Cummings, who will be assisted by Rev. Venus Brooks and Rev. Jakie Locklear. Burial will be in the family cemetery. He is survived by his wife, Mrs. Nora Moore; six sons, Herbert, Charles, Earl, Richard, and Claude Moore, all of the Pembroke area, and Carl Moore of the Armed Forces; five daughters, Mrs. Richard Baker, Princeton, Ind., Mrs. Rudolph Hunt, Lumberton, route 4, Mrs. Newton Cummings, Maxton, route 3. Mrs. Henry Locklear, Wakulla, and Miss Geneva Moore of the home; 12 grandchildren; two sisters, Mrs. Noah Dial, Maxton, and Mrs. Earley Bullard, route 3, Maxton. iv. CHARLIE HADDEN MOORE b 03.11.1891, Robeson Co North Carolina Usa; d. 12.07.1943, Prospect Robeson Co North Carolina Usa
m MARIE SAMPSON b 20.03.1887, Robeson Co North Carolina Usa; d. 14.02.1973, Maxton Robeson Co NC Notater for CHARLIE HADDEN MOORE: Charlie Hadden was the son of Rev. W. L. and Mary Catherine Oxendine Moore. He married Marie Sampson on Dec. 13, 1911 in Robeson County, North Carolina. The following was taken from the Jul. 12, 1943 edition of THE ROBESONIAN: Charlie H. Moore, 51, one of the most prominent Indians of the Old Prospect community, fell from a tractor-drawn trailer this morning and died shortly after being brought to a Lumberton sanatorium. Death was attributed to a heart attack, which was believed to have been the cause of his fall. The accident occurred about 7 o'clock, while Mr. Moore was riding behind a tractor driven by his son, Charles Moore. The men were about a mile from home, on a road near the Bullard gin, when the elder man fell from the trailer in which tobacco was being hauled. The son said the trailer passed over his father's body, and that he complained that his head hurt. He was brought here in an automobile. Deceased was a native and lifelong resident of the Prospect community. He was son of the late Rev. W. L. Moore and a member of Prospect church. Surviving are his wife; three other sons, Curtis Moore of Baltimore, Md., James E. Moore and Henry Moore of the home; three daughters, Mrs. Carrie M. Dial, Misses Marjorie and Mary Moore; one brother, L. W. Moore, and two sisters, Mrs. N. H. Dial and Mrs. Early Bullard. Funeral arrangements awaited contact with the son in Baltimore. ***NOTE: In 1930, he graduated from what is presently known as the University of North Carolina at Pembroke. In July 2007, the Heritage Walk was dedicated to serve as a permanent monument to all of the university's graduates from 1905 to 1954. C. H. was honored by having his name engraved on a brick in the Heritage Walk walkway in front of Old Main, the oldest building on the campus. v. MARY ELLEN MOORE b 07.03.1896, Robeson Co North Carolina Usa; d. 09.06.1973, Maxton Robeson Co North Carolina Usa
m NOAH H DIAL, 29.04.1920, Thompson section of North Carolina Usa b 05.04.1897, Robeson Co North Carolina Usa; d. 27.09.1967, Lumberton Robeson Co NC Notater for MARY ELLEN MOORE: Mary Ellen was the daughter of Rev. W. L. and Mary Catherine Oxendine Moore. She married Noah H. Dial on Apr. 29, 1920 in the Thompson section of Robeson County, North Carolina. The following was taken from the Jun. 10, 1973 edition of THE ROBESONIAN: Mrs. Mary Ellen (Sugar) Dial, 77, of route 2, Pembroke, was killed instantly when sturck by a car about 7:50 a.m. today. The accident occurred about two miles north of Pembroke in the Prospect community on rural road No. 1340. 210. JAMES DANIEL27 MOORE (AARON26, BENJAMIN JOHN25, JOHN W24, MARGARET23 GOFFE, HANNAH22 GRIGGS, MARGARET21 BISHOP, HESTER20 COGSWELL, SUSANNA19 HAWKES, ANN18 BROWN, EDWARD17, b 1863 Columbus County, North Carolina, Usa, dWelchs Creek, Columbus, North Carolina, Usa
m LUCY MOORE. ch of JAMES MOORE and LUCY MOORE 246. i. MILLARD28 MOORE. ii. ASA CLEVELAND MOORE b 30.05.1889, Columbus County, North Carolina, Usa; d. Whitesboro, Cape May, New Jersey Usa
m GERTRUDE SPAULDING b 14.06.1891, Columbus County, North Carolina, Usa; d. 08.1975, Bronx Bronx New York Usa. 211. JOSEPHINE B27 MOORE (AARON26, BENJAMIN JOHN25, JOHN W24, MARGARET23 GOFFE, HANNAH22 GRIGGS, MARGARET21 BISHOP, HESTER20 COGSWELL, SUSANNA19 HAWKES, ANN18 BROWN, EDWARD17, b 18.02.1868 Columbus, North Carolina, USA, d07.04.1902 Westford, Middlesex, Massachusetts, USA.
m ABNER B LOWRY 08.01.1890 Columbus, North Carolina Usa, son of CALVIN LOWRY and MARIAH SAMPSON. Han b 26.10.1862 Pembroke, Robeson, North Carolina, USA, d26.07.1944 Robeson, North Carolina, USA. Notater for JOSEPHINE B MOORE: Aaron Moore mentioned in the record of Abner Lowery and Josephine V. Moore Name: Aaron Moore Gender: Male Wife: Mariah C. Moore Daughter: Josephine V. Moore Other information in the record of Abner Lowery and Josephine V. Moore from North Carolina, Marriages Name: Abner Lowery Spouse's Name: Josephine V. Moore Event Date: 08 Jan 1890 Event Place: Columbus, North Carolina Father's Name: Calvin Lowery Mother's Name: Mariah Lowery Spouse's Father's Name: Aaron Moore Spouse's Mother's Name: Mariah C. Moore Race: Black Spouse's Race: Black Indexing Project (Batch) Number: M75238-1 , System Origin: North Carolina-EASy , GS Film number: 557730 , Reference ID: p 106 Attach to Family Tree No image available North Carolina, Marriages, 1759-1979 Search collection About this collection Citing this Record "North Carolina, Marriages, 1759-1979," index, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.1.1/F887-357 : accessed 15 January 2015), Aaron Moore in entry for Abner Lowery and Josephine V. Moore, 08 Jan 1890; citing Columbus, North Carolina, reference p 106; FHL microfilm 557,730. Notater for ABNER B LOWRY: Abner was the son of Rev. Calvin and Maria Sampson Lowry. He married Josephine Moore on Jan. 8, 1890 in Columbus County, North Carolina. Their marriage produced two daughters and three sons. After Josephine's death, Abner married Rosie Bell on Feb. 8, 1905 in Robeson County, North Carolina. Their marriage produced six sons and four daughters. The following was taken from the Aug. 25, 1944 edition of THE ROBESONIAN: Eulogy A. B. Lowry, Deceased Pembroke - We now come to pay due respects to our deceased Brother and Friend, A. B. Lowry. Brother Lowry, the son of the late Calvin and Mariah Lowry, was born October 26, 1862, and departed from this life at 10:30 p.m. Wednesday, July 26, 1944, thus having lived to the ripe age of 81 years and 7 months. In early life he associated himself with the Methodist Church and proved to be a most loyal member and leader. During his life he was united in marriage twice. He was first married to Miss Josephine Amelia Moore, who departed this life in 1900. To this union were born 8 children, five of whom survive - Cottie Amelia, Plummer W., Bertie I., O. H. Elry and Zeb Abner Lowry. To his second union, he was married to Miss Rosa E. Bell, who survives, and to this union were born 10 children, nine of which survive - Ira Pate, Luler M., Carlee Stetson, Bernard Franklin Steel, Theodore McLean, Prebble M., Jason Brisco, Eunice Hazel, and Bernice Amelia Lowry. Brother Lowry was well known and admired for his leadership in Sunday school, church, civic affairs, business and farming. His departure is a distinct loss to the community and his host of friends ch of JOSEPHINE MOORE and ABNER LOWRY 247. i. COTTIE ARELIA28 LOWRY b 19.02.1891, Robeson Co North Carolina Usa; d. 22.06.1982, Lumberton, Robeson, NC ii. ZEB ABNER LOWRY b 25.12.1898, Robeson, North Carolina Usa; d. 18.02.1985, Lumberton, Robeson, North Carolina Usa
m FANNIE BELL MAYNOR. Notater for ZEB ABNER LOWRY: Other information in the record of Zeb Abner Lowry from North Carolina Deaths Name Zeb Abner Lowry Event Type Death Event Date 18 Feb 1985 Event Place Lumberton, Robeson, North Carolina Birth Year 1898 Burial Date 20 Feb 1985 Burial Place Lumberton, North Carolina Cemetery Lumbee Mem. Gardens Residence Place Pembroke, Robeson, North Carolina Address P.O. Box 491 Gender Male Age 86 Marital Status Married Race (Original) Indian Occupation School Teacher, Truant Of Birth Date 25 Dec 1898 Birthplace Robeson, North Carolina Father's Name Abner Lowry Mother's Name Josephine Moore Spouse's Name Fannie Bell Maynor Additional Relatives X CITING THIS RECORD "North Carolina Deaths, 1931-1994," database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:FG4P-88P : accessed 20 December 2015), Fannie Bell Maynor in entry for Zeb Abner Lowry, 18 Feb 1985; citing Lumberton, Robeson, North Carolina, v 8A cn 8453, State Department of Archives and History, Raleigh; FHL microfilm 1,985,163. 248. iii. BERTIE LOWRY b 01.02.1895, Robeson Co North Carolina Usa; d. 17.03.1990, NC 212. FRANCES27 MOORE (AARON26, BENJAMIN JOHN25, JOHN W24, MARGARET23 GOFFE, HANNAH22 GRIGGS, MARGARET21 BISHOP, HESTER20 COGSWELL, SUSANNA19 HAWKES, ANN18 BROWN, EDWARD17, b 22.09.1868 Hillsborough Orange North Carolina Usa, d25.11.1941 Welch Creek, Columbus, NC
m (1) EVERETT L FREEMAN 21.01.1885 Columbus, North Carolina Usa, son of JOHN FREEMAN and SARAH SPAULDING. Han b 14.10.1860 North Carolina Usa, d02.06.1942 Columbus Co NC
m (2) SAMUEL E WHITTED 04.12.1889 Hillsboro, Orange County, North Carolina Usa, son of CORNELIOUS WHITTED and JANE HALL. Han b 15.10.1871 Orange North Carolina, United States, d 11.05.1925 Hillsboro, Orange, NC Notater for FRANCES MOORE: (Fanny) Notater for SAMUEL E WHITTED: Fanny Moore mentioned in the record of Sam'L Whitted and Fanny Moore Name: Sam'L Whitted Birth Date: 1866 Age: 23 Spouse's Name: Fanny Moore Spouse's Birth Date: 1869 Spouse's Age: 20 Event Date: 04 Dec 1889 Event Place: Hillsboro, Orange Co., North Carolina Father's Name: Neal Whitted Mother's Name: Jane Whitted Spouse's Mother's Name: Maria Moore Race: Black Indexing Project (Batch) Number: M75218-5 , System Origin: North Carolina-EASy , GS Film number: 540319Carpenter Sam Whitted United States Census, 1870 Name: Sam Whitted Event Type: Census Event Year: 1870 Event Place: North Carolina, United States Gender: Male Age: 2 Race: Black Race (Original): B Birth Year (Estimated): 1867-1868 Birthplace: North Carolina Page Number: 8 Household Role Gender Age Birthplace Neal Whitted M 24 North Carolina Jane Whitted F 35 North Carolina Sally Whitted M 17 North Carolina Sam Whitted M 2 North Carolina Hinrich Whitted M 0 North Carolina Betten Hall F 8 North Carolina Household ID: 51 , Line Number: 21 , Affiliate Name: The U.S. National Archives and Records Administration (NARA) , Affiliate Publication Number: M593 , GS Film number: 000552652 , Digital Folder Number: 004277629 , Image Number: 00538 Neal Whitted mentioned in the record of Samuel E. Whitted Name: Neal Whitted Birthplace: Orange Co., North Carolina Gender: Male Wife: Jane Hall Child: Samuel E. Whitted Other information in the record of Samuel E. Whitted from North Carolina, Deaths Name: Samuel E. Whitted Event Date: 11 May 1925 Event Place: Hillsboro, Orange, North Carolina Gender: Male Race (Original): Negro Race: Negro Age (Original): 53y 6m 26d Birth Date: 15 Oct 1871 Birthplace: Orange Co., North Carolina Marital Status: Married Spouse's Name: Fannie Whitted Father's Name: Neal Whitted Father's Birthplace: Orange Co., North Carolina Mother's Name: Jane Hall Mother's Birthplace: Orange Co., North Carolina Occupation: Carpenter Burial Place: Hillsboro, Orange, North Carolina Burial Date: 13 May 1925 GS Film number: 1893412 , Digital Folder Number: 4216461 , Image Number: 1437 , Reference ID: fn 941 cn 361 ch of FRANCES MOORE and EVERETT FREEMAN i. LARKIE R28 FREEMAN b 1893; d. 1965, Columbus County, North Carolina, Usa
m LONNIE SHAW b 13.07.1891. ch of FRANCES MOORE and SAMUEL WHITTED 249. ii. SIMUEL J28 WHITTED b 12.12.1893, Orange Co North Carolina Usa; d. 11.05.1925, Hillsboro, Orange, NC iii. JANE C WHITTED b 06.1893, NC iv. MARY OVIDA WHITTED b 05.1895, NC 250. v. MARIAH H WHITTED b 07.1896, Orange Co North Carolina Usa; d. 24.09.1933, Hillsboro Township, Orange, NC 251. vi. WILLIE E WHITTED b 09.1890, North Carolina Usa; d. 15.07.1955, Tar Heel, Bladen, North Carolina, United States of America. 213. MARIAH27 MOORE (AARON26, BENJAMIN JOHN25, JOHN W24, MARGARET23 GOFFE, HANNAH22 GRIGGS, MARGARET21 BISHOP, HESTER20 COGSWELL, SUSANNA19 HAWKES, ANN18 BROWN, EDWARD17, b 17.12.1871 Duplin Co North Carolina Usa, d 17.08.1964 Warsaw, Magnolia, Duplin, NC
m JERRY GLASPIE. Notater for MARIAH MOORE: Magnolia, Duplin, Moore Cemetery NC Arron Moore mentioned in the record of Mariah Glaspie Name: Arron Moore Gender: Male Wife: Mary Daughter: Mariah Glaspie Other information in the record of Mariah Glaspie from North Carolina, Deaths Name: Mariah Glaspie Event Type: Death Event Date: 17 Aug 1964 Event Place: Warsaw, Magnolia, Duplin, North Carolina Birth Year: 1871 Burial Date: 22 Aug 1964 Burial Place: Magnolia, Duplin, N.C. Cemetery: Moore Cemetery Residence Place: Warsaw, Duplin, N.C. Address: R. 1 Box 189 Gender: Female Age: 92 Marital Status: Widowed Race (Original): Colored Occupation: Domestic Birth Date: 17 Dec 1871 Birthplace: Duplin Co., N.C. Father's Name: Arron Moore Mother's Name: Mary Reference ID: 24162 , GS Film number: 1953509 ch of MARIAH MOORE and JERRY GLASPIE i. EDWARD28 GLASPIE b 09.10.1909, North Carolina Usa; d. 1976, Fayetteville, Cumberland, NC Notater for EDWARD GLASPIE: Marie Moore mentioned in the record of Edward Glaspie Name: Marie Moore Gender: Female Husband: Jerry Glaspie Son: Edward Glaspie Other information in the record of Edward Glaspie from North Carolina, Deaths Name: Edward Glaspie Event Type: Death Event Place: Fayetteville, Cumberland, North Carolina Birth Year: 1909 Burial Place: Warsaw, N. C. Cemetery: Moore & Farrior Cem. Residence Place: Warsaw, Duplin, North Carolina Address: Box 289 Route One Gender: Male Age: 67 Marital Status: Widowed Race (Original): Black Occupation: Farmer Birth Date: 09 Oct 1909 Birthplace: North Carolina Father's Name: Jerry Glaspie Mother's Name: Marie Moore Reference ID: v 13A cn 13206 , GS Film number: 1984311 214. HANNAH SURRENE27 MOORE (AARON26, BENJAMIN JOHN25, JOHN W24, MARGARET23 GOFFE, HANNAH22 GRIGGS, MARGARET21 BISHOP, HESTER20 COGSWELL, SUSANNA19 HAWKES, ANN18 BROWN, EDWARD17, b 1872 Duplin Co North Carolina Usa, d05.10.1938 Teachey, Duplin, NC
m ELDER BANKS ALDERMAN. Han b 1870. Notater for HANNAH SURRENE MOORE: Hannah Surrene Alderman North Carolina, Deaths Name: Hannah Surrene Alderman Event Type: Death Event Date: 05 Oct 1938 Event Place: Teachey, Duplin, North Carolina Birth Year: 1872 Burial Date: 06 Oct 1938 Burial Place: Magnolia Gender: Female Age: 67 Marital Status: Married Race (Original): Colored Occupation: Housework Birth Date: 1872 Birthplace: Duplin Co., N.C. Father's Name: Aaron Moore Father's Birthplace: N.C. Mother's Name: Mary Moore Mother's Birthplace: N.C. Spouse's Name: Elder Banks Alderman Additional Relatives: X Reference ID: fn 2077 cn 97 , GS Film number: 1943162 Attach to Family Tree No image available North Carolina, Deaths, 1931-1994 Search collection About this collection Citing this Record "North Carolina, Deaths, 1931-1994," index, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.1.1/FPVX-T6L : accessed 15 January 2015), Hannah Surrene Alderman, 05 Oct 1938; citing Teachey, Duplin, North Carolina, fn 2077 cn 97, State Department of Archives and History, Raleigh; FHL microfilm 1,943,162. ch of HANNAH MOORE and ELDER ALDERMAN i. BENJAMIN28 ALDERMAN b 12.04.1904, Teachey, North Carolina Usa; d. 06.07.1993, Warsaw, Duplin, North Carolina Usa
m ANNIE LOUISE HIGHSMITH, 16.08.1930, Duplin, North Carolina, United States b 1911. Notater for BENJAMIN ALDERMAN: Doctor ii. ANNIE ALDERMAN b 1910, NC iii. JAMES ALDERMAN b 1915, NC iv. MARTHA ALDERMAN b 1917, NC v. WILLIAM A ALDERMAN b 1893, NC 252. vi. MARY R ALDERMAN b 1895, NC vii. BANK ALDERMAN b 1898, NC viii. ROBERT A ALDERMAN b 1900, NC ix. MITCHELL E ALDERMAN b 1903, NC x. MARTHA C ALDERMAN b 1906, NC xi. ARCHIE ALDERMAN b 1908, NC 215. IOMA27 MOORE (AARON26, BENJAMIN JOHN25, JOHN W24, MARGARET23 GOFFE, HANNAH22 GRIGGS, MARGARET21 BISHOP, HESTER20 COGSWELL, SUSANNA19 HAWKES, ANN18 BROWN, EDWARD17, b 1881.
m GEORGE H. GREEN 12.09.1907 Wilmington, New Hanover Co., North Carolina Usa, son of PRESTON GREEN and MARIA. Han b 1880. Notater for GEORGE H. GREEN: Maria Green mentioned in the record of George H. Green and Ioma Moore Name: Maria Green Gender: Female Husband: Preston Green Son: George H. Green Other information in the record of George H. Green and Ioma Moore from North Carolina, Marriages Name: George H. Green Birth Date: 1880 Age: 27 Spouse's Name: Ioma Moore Spouse's Birth Date: 1881 Spouse's Age: 26 Event Date: 12 Sep 1907 Event Place: Wilmington, New Hanover Co., North Carolina Father's Name: Preston Green Mother's Name: Maria Green Spouse's Father's Name: Aaron Moore Spouse's Mother's Name: Maria Moore Race: Black Spouse's Race: Black Indexing Project (Batch) Number: M75215-4 , System Origin: North Carolina-EASy , GS Film number: 276124 , Reference ID: 159 Attach to Family Tree No image available North Carolina, Marriages, 1759-1979 Search collection About this collection Citing this Record "North Carolina, Marriages, 1759-1979," index, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.1.1/F84D-W2S : accessed 15 January 2015), Maria Green in entry for George H. Green and Ioma Moore, 12 Sep 1907; citing Wilmington, New Hanover Co., North Carolina, reference 159; FHL microfilm 276,124. ch of IOMA MOORE and GEORGE GREEN i. BERTH E28 GREEN b 1901, NC ii. FLETCHER W GREEN b 1904, NC iii. COLUMBUS A GREEN b 1906, NC iv. LOUIS E GREEN b 1908, NC v. VONNIE E GREEN b 1910, NC vi. CLARA E GREEN b 1918, NC vii. EARL B GREEN b 1915, NC viii. ETHELENE GREEN b 1917, NC ix. JAMES T GREEN b 1919, NC 216. LUCINDA27 MOORE (ELIAS26, JOHN25, JOHN W24, MARGARET23 GOFFE, HANNAH22 GRIGGS, MARGARET21 BISHOP, HESTER20 COGSWELL, SUSANNA19 HAWKES, ANN18 BROWN, EDWARD17, b 15.03.1844 Ware Co Georgia Usa, d 10.06.1930 Coffee Co.Georgia Usa.
m CHARLES WESLEY MEEKS 15.08.1860 Coffee County, Georgia Usa, son of CHARLES MEEKS and LYDIA RYNER. Han b 24.02.1840 Appling County,Georgia Usa, d28.11.1898 Nicholls Coffee Co Georgia Usa. ch of LUCINDA MOORE and CHARLES MEEKS i. ELIZA ANN28 MEEKS b 12.01.1862, Coffee Co.Georgia Usa; d. 13.11.1877, Coffee Co.Georgia Usa
m THOMAS MADISON LEE, 11.01.1877 b 20.05.1856, Bacon County, Georgia Usa; d. 31.01.1935, Appling Co Georgia Usa. ii. HESTER ANN MEEKS b 08.01.1868, Coffee Co Georgia Usa; d. 06.12.1937, Coffee Co Georgia Usa
m WILLIAM MCDONALD THOMPSON b 29.08.1860, Georgia Usa; d. 29.07.1932, Coffee Co Georgia Usa. 217. DANIEL27 MOORE (ELIAS26, JOHN25, JOHN W24, MARGARET23 GOFFE, HANNAH22 GRIGGS, MARGARET21 BISHOP, HESTER20 COGSWELL, SUSANNA19 HAWKES, ANN18 BROWN, EDWARD17, b 24.04.1856 Kirkland, Coffee Co. Georgia Usa, d26.02.1940 Kirkland, Atkinson Co . Georgia Usa
m ANNE KIRKLAND 20.04.1882 Coffee Co Georgia Usa, dau of JAMES KIRKLAND and MARY SOLOMON. Hun b 28.05.1864 Ware Co Georgia Usa, d24.08.1902 Kirkland, Coffee (now Atkinson) County Georgia Usa. ch of DANIEL MOORE and ANNE KIRKLAND i. ELIAS DANIEL28 MOORE b 10.05.1890; d. 11.03.1969
m RHODA JEWELL b 06.01.1890; d. 06.10.1968. 218. DANIEL PETERSON27 LOTT (MARY26 MOORE, JOHN25, JOHN W24, MARGARET23 GOFFE, HANNAH22 GRIGGS, MARGARET21 BISHOP, HESTER20 COGSWELL, SUSANNA19 HAWKES, ANN18 BROWN, EDWARD17, b 26.06.1848 Ware Co Georgia Usa, d25.03.1912 Coffee co Georgia Usa
m MATILDA VICKERS. Hun b 20.04.1852 Georgia, USA, d 16.02.1923 Coffee co Georgia Usa. ch of DANIEL LOTT and MATILDA VICKERS i. HENRY OLEN28 LOTT b 06.07.1893; d. 21.04.1965, Douglas Coffee Co Georgia Usa
m ATTIE BELL CARTER, 31.05.1938, Alma Bacon Co Georgia Usa b 27.03.1915; d. 20.03.1980, Bacon Co Georgia Usa. Notater for ATTIE BELL CARTER: US Census 1920: Louisville, Bacon, Georgia, United States; citing sheet 15A, family 279, NARA microfilm publication T625, FHL microfilm 1820233. Household Gender Age Birthplace Head John L Carter M 30 Georgia Wife Millie Carter F 35 Georgia Daug Attie Belle Carter F 5 Georgia Son Alton M Carter M 3 Georgia 219. MATHEW HOWARD27 MOORE (JOHN26, JOHN25, JOHN W24, MARGARET23 GOFFE, HANNAH22 GRIGGS, MARGARET21 BISHOP, HESTER20 COGSWELL, SUSANNA19 HAWKES, ANN18 BROWN, EDWARD17, b 13.08.1872 near Pearson, Coffee (nka Atkinson) County Georgia Usa, d21.03.1944 1525 Minnesota Avenue, Winter Park Orange County Florida Usa
m REBECCA JANE SWEAT 13.03.1892 Homerville Clinch County Georgia Usa, dau of THOMAS SWEAT and SAPHRONIA GIDDENS. Hun b 03.01.1873 Pearson Coffee Co Georgia Usa, d22.03.1950 Orange Memorial Hospital Orlando Orange County Florida Usa. ch of MATHEW MOORE and REBECCA SWEAT i. BEULAH ELIZABETH28 MOORE b 01.04.1893, Axson Coffee (nka Atkinson) County Georgia Usa; d. 15.03.1934, Axson Coffee (nka Atkinson) County Georgia Usa
m ARTHUR TOMPKINS CARTLEDGE, 22.11.1908, Coffee County Georgia Usa b 10.08.1880, Edgefield County South Carolina Usa; d. 10.11.1964, Orlando Orange County Florida Usa. ii. BESSIE ESTELLE MOORE b 04.11.1903, Axson Coffee (nka Atkinson) County Georgia Usa; d. 14.06.1957, Wuesthoff Memorial Hospital Rockledge Brevard County Florida Usa
m GEORGE BAXTER MCMAHAN, 24.12.1929, Seminole County Florida Usa b 18.03.1909, Sugarland Sevier County Tennessee Usa; d. 09.11.1996, Columbia-Putnam Medical Center Putnam County Florida Usa. 220. CLARA MAUDE27 STEWARD (SETH WYMAN26, SETH WYMAN25, OLIVE24 MOOR, MARGARET23 GOFFE, HANNAH22 GRIGGS, MARGARET21 BISHOP, HESTER20 COGSWELL, SUSANNA19 HAWKES, ANN18 BROWN, EDWARD17, b 27.03.1881 Monson Maine Usa, d 10.01.1958 Bristol Hartford CT
m ERNEST WALTER FARRAR, son of ALEXSIS FARRAR and HENRIETTA THOMBS. Han b 01.11.1878 Marmony Maine Usa, d26.05.1943. ch of CLARA STEWARD and ERNEST FARRAR i. BERTHA LOIS28 FLOOD b 27.08.1919, Plainville CT d. 09.09.2013, Allentown, Lehigh County, PA
m CLARK CHARLES DODGE b 09.08.1918, CT d. 26.04.1968, Los Angeles, Los Angeles, California Usa. 221. FLORENCE IDA27 WEED (PHILOMELIA SOPHIA26 SCOBEY, NANCY M25 WALLACE, POLLY24 GOFFE, JOHN23, HANNAH22 GRIGGS, MARGARET21 BISHOP, HESTER20 COGSWELL, SUSANNA19 HAWKES, ANN18 BROWN, EDWARD17, b 1849 Wayne Co Ohio, d 1921 Palo Alto Santa Clara Co California Usa.
m CHARLES DELANO HENRY. Han b 20.07.1845 Wooster Wayne Co Ohio, d21.07.1928 Palo Alto Santa Clara Co California Usa. ch of FLORENCE WEED and CHARLES HENRY 253. i. LOU28 HENRY b 29.03.1874, Waterloo Black Hawk Co Iowa Usa; d. 07.01.1944, New York City New York Co Usa.
to be integrated above
28 222. JAMES BETTNER28 HUGHES (DR. FRANCIS WAYNE27, ANNA M26 SMALLWOOD, ANNA E25 BLACKWELL, MARY24 FIELD, CHARITY23 WHITEHEAD, b 22.09.1893 New Hanover Co North Carolina Usa
m ANN PENDLETON TALIAFERRO, dau of WALTER TALIAFERRO and CAROLINE LIPPETT. Hun b 26.09.1897 Charlotte Mecklenburg Co North Carolina Usa, d 16.06.1959 Wilmington New Hanover Co NC ch of JAMES HUGHES and ANN TALIAFERRO i. WALTER TALIAFERRO29 HUGHES b 27.12.1925, New Hanover Co North Carolina Usa; d. 26.04.2014, Wilmington New Hanover Co North Carolina Usa
m MARGARET GASTON b 16.01.1927, Gastonia Gaston Co North Carolina Usa; d. 12.06.2015, Wilmington New Hanover Co NC 223. CARRIE ANN28 RIDGEWAY (CATHERINE ANN27 HIMES, ABIGAIL ANN26 SPACE, ZEPHANIAH25, ABIGAIL24 MOTT, DEBORAH23 TALLMAN, ABIGAIL22 HICKS, b 07.07.1861 New Bethlehem Clarion Co PA d26.01.1928 Du Bois Clearfield Co PA
m WILLIAM NELSON CRIBBS, son of GEORGE CRIBBS and KEZIAH DAVIS. Han b 26.10.1852 Blairsville Indiana Co PA d30.09.1929 New Bethlehem Clarion Co PA ch of CARRIE RIDGEWAY and WILLIAM CRIBBS i. HARRY ALVIN29 CRIBBS b 05.03.1899, Du Bois Clearfield Co PA d. 20.10.1959, Los Angeles Los Angeles Co California Usa
m (1) EZLIN METRA BLACK b 26.06.1906, Hawthorne Clarion Co PA d. 25.10.1998, York York Co PA
m (2) MARY CATHERINE "MARIE" LASCOMB b 1904; d. 05.04.1981, Delaware Co PA Notater for HARRY ALVIN CRIBBS: Welder Pvt-US Army - WW-I # 166-07-6084 Burial: 23 OCT 1959 Los Angeles National Cemetery-Sect 230, Row-D, Site 21/Los Angeles,Los Angeles Co,CA Notater for EZLIN METRA BLACK: Ezlin M. Richards Ezlin M, Richards of York died at 2:15 a.m. Oct 25, at York County Nursing Home. She was 92. Mrs. Richards was a member of Yorktowne Senior Citizens Center. She was a 1925 graduate of New Bethlehem High School. Born in Hawthorn, Clarion County, PA. June 26, 1906, she was a daughter of the late Herbert and Margaret Shimmons Black. She was the wife of the late Alfred L. Richards. She leaves three daughters, Bertha Bergan of Bel Air, Md., Carol Brown of Garland, Texas, and Joan Armpriester of York; two sons, Fred L. Richards of Carrollton, Ga., and Gene Richards of Bridgeton, N.J.; 26 grandchildren; 54 great- grand-children; 16 great-great-grandchildren; two sisters, Margie Weiss and June Butler, both of Charleston, S.C.; and a brother, Hayden Black of Miami. A daughter, Marian Dean, is deceased. 224. SUSIE MARIAH28 SPAULDING (CAROLINE A27 MOORE, ISRAEL26, BENJAMIN JOHN25, JOHN W24, MARGARET23 GOFFE, HANNAH22 GRIGGS, MARGARET21 BISHOP, HESTER20 COGSWELL, SUSANNA19 HAWKES, ANN18 BROWN, EDWARD17, b 09.1875 Welchs Creek, Colombus, North Carolina, Usa, d24.03.1955 Freeman, Columbus, North Carolina, Usa.
m WILLIAM SCOFIELD MITCHELL, son of WILLIAM MITCHELL. Han b 10.1868 Freeman, Columbus, North Carolina, Usa, d20.05.1932 Ransom, Columbus, North Carolina, Usa. ch of SUSIE SPAULDING and WILLIAM MITCHELL i. CHARLES M29 MITCHELL. 225. LILLIAN28 JACOBS (DELPHIA ANN27 MOORE, ISRAEL26, BENJAMIN JOHN25, JOHN W24, MARGARET23 GOFFE, HANNAH22 GRIGGS, MARGARET21 BISHOP, HESTER20 COGSWELL, SUSANNA19 HAWKES, ANN18 BROWN, EDWARD17, b 03.02.1902 Columbus North Carolina Usa, d23.10.1980 Whiteville, Columbus, NC
m NASHFIELD MOORE, son of ULYSSES MOORE and RACHEL WEBB. Han b 13.04.1900 Welches Creek Columbus North Carolina Usa, d 16.03.1992 Whiteville, Columbus, North Carolina, USA. Notater for LILLIAN JACOBS: Nashfield Moore mentioned in the record of Lillian Jacobs Moore Name: Nashfield Moore Gender: Male Wife: Lillian Jacobs Moore Other information in the record of Lillian Jacobs Moore from North Carolina, Deaths Name: Lillian Jacobs Moore Event Type: Death Event Date: 23 Oct 1980 Event Place: Whiteville, Columbus, North Carolina Birth Year: 1902 Burial Date: 26 Oct 1980 Burial Place: Route 2, Clarkton, N.C. Cemetery: Mitchell Field Cemetery Residence Place: Clarkton, Columbus, North Carolina Address: Route 2, Box 240 Gender: Female Age: 78 Marital Status: Married Race (Original): Black Occupation: Farmer Birth Date: 03 Feb 1902 Birthplace: Columbus, N.C. Father's Name: Bunn Jacobs Mother's Name: Delphia Moore Spouse's Name: Nashfield Moore Additional Relatives: X Reference ID: v 36B cn 36727 , GS Film number: 1984632 ch of LILLIAN JACOBS and NASHFIELD MOORE i. LEORIA P.29 MOORE b 1924; d. 2010. 226. SARAH JANE28 WHITE (MARY EDITH27 MOORE, ISRAEL26, BENJAMIN JOHN25, JOHN W24, MARGARET23 GOFFE, HANNAH22 GRIGGS, MARGARET21 BISHOP, HESTER20 COGSWELL, SUSANNA19 HAWKES, ANN18 BROWN, EDWARD17, b 06.06.1870 Welches Creek Columbus North Carolina Usa, d02.07.1924 Welches Creek Columbus NC
m (1) WINNIE WHITE.
m (2) HENRY EVANS SPAULDING 15.03.1887 Columbus North Carolina Usa, son of BENJAMIN SPAULDING and EDITH JACOBS. Han b 1831 Columbus County North Carolina Usa, d 1906. ch of SARAH WHITE and WINNIE WHITE i. BEAUFORD ODELL29 WHITE b 04.09.1922, North Carolina Usa; d. 19.08.1923, Marsh, Surry, NC ch of SARAH WHITE and HENRY SPAULDING ii. ANNIE MADLIN29 SPAULDING b 02.01.1892, North Carolina Usa; d. 22.03.1968, Clarkton, Bladen, North Carolina
m CAMPBELL. iii. ELRA SPAULDING b 05.05.1896, North Carolina Usa; d. 25.09.1977, Whiteville, Columbus, NC iv. SPAULDING b 20.03.1914, North Carolina Usa; d. 20.03.1914, Whiteville, Columbus, NC v. CARRIE JANE SPAULDING b 1888, North Carolina Usa; d. 12.07.1937, Whiteville, Columbus Co., North Carolina
m TYWAN CATNEY. vi. JOHN HOOPER SPAULDING b 1903, North Carolina, United States; d. 14.03.1959, North Carolina, United States
m HENRIETTA. 227. WILEY FRANKLIN28 WHITE (MARY EDITH27 MOORE, ISRAEL26, BENJAMIN JOHN25, JOHN W24, MARGARET23 GOFFE, HANNAH22 GRIGGS, MARGARET21 BISHOP, HESTER20 COGSWELL, SUSANNA19 HAWKES, ANN18 BROWN, EDWARD17, b 05.03.1873 Welches Creek Columbus North Carolina Usa, d23.08.1930 Welches Creek Columbus North Carolina Usa
m MARY ANNA SPAULDING, dau of EMMANUEL SPAULDING and SUSANNAH CUMBO. Hun b North Carolina Usa, d 1911 Washington District of Columbia NC ch of WILEY WHITE and MARY SPAULDING 254. i. GEORGE HENRY29 WHITE b 18.12.1852, Rosindale Bladen Co North Carolina Usa; d. 28.12.1918, Colingdale Delaware Co PA 228. ISRAEL ROYAL28 SPAULDING (MARGARET ANN VIRGINIA27 MOORE, ISRAEL26, BENJAMIN JOHN25, JOHN W24, MARGARET23 GOFFE, HANNAH22 GRIGGS, MARGARET21 BISHOP, HESTER20 COGSWELL, SUSANNA19 HAWKES, ANN18 BROWN, EDWARD17, b 16.09.1886 Welches Creek Township, Columbus, North Carolina, Usa, d 18.02.1973 Durham, North Carolina Usa
m RUTH ALEXANDRIA WHITTED 24.12.1919 Melville, Alamance, North Carolina, Usa, dau of ANDREW WHITTED and ANNIE HUNTER. Hun b 02.07.1895, d31.03.1988 Durham Co NC Notater for RUTH ALEXANDRIA WHITTED: Hillsborough, Orange County, NC - living with grandparents Alston & Sallie Whitted ch of ISRAEL SPAULDING and RUTH WHITTED i. ROYAL29 SPAULDING b 1921, Georgia Usa
m VALDORA T YANCY b 28.05.1927. ii. RUTH ANNETTE SPAULDING b 29.10.1926; d. 19.03.2012, Durham North Carolina Usa
m BOYD. iii. ALEX SPAULDING. 229. MARY ANNA28 SPAULDING (MARGARET ANN VIRGINIA27 MOORE, ISRAEL26, BENJAMIN JOHN25, JOHN W24, MARGARET23 GOFFE, HANNAH22 GRIGGS, MARGARET21 BISHOP, HESTER20 COGSWELL, SUSANNA19 HAWKES, ANN18 BROWN, EDWARD17, b 19.12.1881 Welchs Creek, Columbus, North Carolina, Usa, d26.04.1963 Bronx, Bronx, New York, Usa.
m BENJAMIN MCLEAN SPAULDING 17.12.1902 Sandy Plain Church, Columbus County, North Carolina, Usa, son of HENRY SPAULDING and MATILDA CAMPBELL. Han b 18.06.1881 Welches Creek, Columbus, NC ch of MARY SPAULDING and BENJAMIN SPAULDING i. ELMORE MCROY29 SPAULDING b 27.08.1914, Welchs Creek Columbus North Carolina, U; d. 11.1974, Bronx, Bronx, New York, Usa. ii. AARON MCLEAN SPAULDING b 13.05.1918, Bronx Bronx New York, Usa; d. 31.03.1974, Bronx, Bronx, New York, Usa
m GERTIE MAE BRITTON b 11.11.1921, Buncombe, North Carolina, Usa; d. 20.10.2003, Brooklyn, Kings, New York, Usa. iii. SIDNEY BENJAMIN SPAULDING b 24.10.1922, Bronx Bronx New York, Usa; d. 1962, Bronx, Bronx, New York, Usa. iv. AGGREY POTTER SPAULDING b 1920, Bronx Bronx New York Usa; d. Bronx Bronx New York Usa. v. GENEVA B SPAULDING b 1907, Whelch Creek Columbus NC 230. RACHEL CAROLINE28 WEBB (ELVY27 SPAULDING, PENELOPE26 MOORE, BENJAMIN JOHN25, JOHN W24, MARGARET23 GOFFE, HANNAH22 GRIGGS, MARGARET21 BISHOP, HESTER20 COGSWELL, SUSANNA19 HAWKES, ANN18 BROWN, EDWARD17, b 04.10.1870 Whites Creek, Bladen, North Carolina, Usa, d 13.09.1942 Welches Creek, Columbus, North Carolina, Usa.
m ULYSSES STEPHENS MOORE 19.08.1892, son of BENJAMIN MOORE and MARY FREEMAN. Han b 09.06.1870 Welches Creek, Columbus, North Carolina, Usa, d27.06.1948 Welches Creek, Columbus, North Carolina, Usa. Barna er listet ovenfor under (206) Ulysses Stephens Moore. 231. ANDREW JOHNSON28 FREEMAN (CALDONIA27 SPAULDING, PENELOPE26 MOORE, BENJAMIN JOHN25, JOHN W24, MARGARET23 GOFFE, HANNAH22 GRIGGS, MARGARET21 BISHOP, HESTER20 COGSWELL, SUSANNA19 HAWKES, ANN18 BROWN, EDWARD17, b 25.01.1866 Bogue, Columbus, North Carolina, Usa, d08.11.1924 Bogue, Columbus, North Carolina, Usa
m BEDIE YOUNG. Hun b 05.1888 Waccamaw, Columbus, North Carolina, Usa, d03.02.1946 Bogue, Columbus, NC ch of ANDREW FREEMAN and BEDIE YOUNG i. VERA LEE29 FREEMAN b 1909, Bogue Columbus North Carolina Usa; d. 29.04.1961, Goldsboro, Wayne, North Carolina, Usa. ii. ADELL FREEMAN b 27.07.1910, Bogue Columbus North Carolina Usa; d. 09.04.1938, Hallsboro, Columbus, North Carolina. iii. MARSHALL FREEMAN b 04.05.1913, Bogue Columbus North Carolina Usa; d. 07.03.1979, Robeson Co NC iv. LLOYD FREEMAN b 1915, Colombus Co County North Carolina, Usa; d. Colombus Co County North Carolina, Usa. v. DILLARD FREEMAN b 1921, Bouge Colombus Co County North Carolina, Usa; d. Colombus Co County North Carolina, Usa. 232. ROBERT28 FREEMAN (CALDONIA27 SPAULDING, PENELOPE26 MOORE, BENJAMIN JOHN25, JOHN W24, MARGARET23 GOFFE, HANNAH22 GRIGGS, MARGARET21 BISHOP, HESTER20 COGSWELL, SUSANNA19 HAWKES, ANN18 BROWN, EDWARD17, b 1867 Bogue, Columbus, North Carolina, Usa, dBogue, Columbus, North Carolina, Usa
m BESSIE BAKER. ch of ROBERT FREEMAN and BESSIE BAKER i. BESSIE LEE29 FREEMAN b 26.07.1934, Gates Co, North Carolina Usa; d. 31.08.1934, Reynoldson, Gates, NC 233. CALDONIA VICTORIA28 FREEMAN (CALDONIA27 SPAULDING, PENELOPE26 MOORE, BENJAMIN JOHN25, JOHN W24, MARGARET23 GOFFE, HANNAH22 GRIGGS, MARGARET21 BISHOP, HESTER20 COGSWELL, SUSANNA19 HAWKES, ANN18 BROWN, EDWARD17, b 10.1869 Bogue, Columbus, North Carolina, Usa, dMontgomery, Georgia, Usa.
m EVERETT J BLANKS, son of SAMUEL BLANKS and EMELINE SPAULDING. Han b 05.1869 Carvers Creek Bladen North Carolina Usa, d26.10.1960 Chester, Middlesex, Connecticut, Usa. ch of CALDONIA FREEMAN and EVERETT BLANKS i. ANGRISH CURRY29 BLANKS b 02.07.1891, Ailey, Montgomery, Georgia, Usa; d. 15.08.1968, Hartford CT ii. SAMUEL C BLANKS b 14.08.1904, Higgston, Montgomery, Georgia, Usa; d. 28.09.1996, Deep River, Middlesex, Connecticut, Usa
m MARY E BUCKRIDGE, 11.01.1991, New London, New London, Connecticut, Usa b 26.05.1940, Connecticut, Usa; d. 12.11.2009, New London, New London, Connecticut, Usa. 234. LORA PENELOPE28 FREEMAN (CALDONIA27 SPAULDING, PENELOPE26 MOORE, BENJAMIN JOHN25, JOHN W24, MARGARET23 GOFFE, HANNAH22 GRIGGS, MARGARET21 BISHOP, HESTER20 COGSWELL, SUSANNA19 HAWKES, ANN18 BROWN, EDWARD17, b 04.1874 Bouge Columbus Co County North Carolina, Usa, dColombus Co County North Carolina, Usa.
m DAVID WEBB 24.09.1904 Columbus Co NC Han b 1842 Columbus Co County North Carolina, Usa, d21.04.1928 Welches Creek Columbus North Carolina, Usa. ch of LORA FREEMAN and DAVID WEBB i. IRWIN MACEY29 WEBB b 27.08.1899, Bouge Columbus Co County North Carolina, Usa; d. 01.02.1919, Welches Creek Columbus North Carolina, Usa. ii. ARCHIE DALLIE WEBB b 14.09.1906, Welches Creek Columbus North Carolina, Usa; d. 09.07.1984, Whiteville Welches Creek Columbus North Carolina, Usa. iii. LEE OLIVER WEBB b 23.09.1909, Welches Creek Columbus North Carolina, Usa; d. Columbus Co County North Carolina, Usa. iv. HOWARD WEBB b 05.10.1912, Welches Creek Columbus North Carolina, Usa; d. 08.10.1971, Elizabethtown Bladen County NC 235. STEPHEN VANN28 FREEMAN (CALDONIA27 SPAULDING, PENELOPE26 MOORE, BENJAMIN JOHN25, JOHN W24, MARGARET23 GOFFE, HANNAH22 GRIGGS, MARGARET21 BISHOP, HESTER20 COGSWELL, SUSANNA19 HAWKES, ANN18 BROWN, EDWARD17, b 07.1876 Bouge Columbus Co County North Carolina, Usa, dWaccamaw Columbus Co North Carolina Usa
m SILVIA BOUIE 25.03.1898 Columbus Co NC ch of STEPHEN FREEMAN and SILVIA BOUIE i. JAMES RILES29 FREEMAN b 02.1899, Waccamaw Columbus Co NC ii. ADDIE FREEMAN. iii. BULIA FREEMAN. iv. ROBERT FREEMAN. 236. JAMES GASTON28 FREEMAN (CALDONIA27 SPAULDING, PENELOPE26 MOORE, BENJAMIN JOHN25, JOHN W24, MARGARET23 GOFFE, HANNAH22 GRIGGS, MARGARET21 BISHOP, HESTER20 COGSWELL, SUSANNA19 HAWKES, ANN18 BROWN, EDWARD17, b 12.09.1882 Bouge Colombus Co County North Carolina, Usa, d09.12.1952 Bolton Columbus Co County North Carolina, Usa
m ANNIE JACOBS 25.03.1906 Columbus Co North Carolina Usa, dau of CHRISTOPHER JACOBS and ELIZABETH PATRICK. Hun b 31.03.1879 Ransom Columbus Co County North Carolina, Usa, d02.10.1961 Bolton Columbus Co County North Carolina, Usa. ch of JAMES FREEMAN and ANNIE JACOBS i. JAMES OWEN FREEMAN29 FREEMAN b 27.11.1907, Waccamaw Columbus Co North Carolina Usa; d. 30.07.1980, Whiteville Columbus North Carolina, United States of America. 237. ISRAEL28 MOORE (MARTHA JANE27, JOHN26, BENJAMIN JOHN25, JOHN W24, MARGARET23 GOFFE, HANNAH22 GRIGGS, MARGARET21 BISHOP, HESTER20 COGSWELL, SUSANNA19 HAWKES, ANN18 BROWN, EDWARD17, b 10.09.1900, d06.08.1979 Columbus County, North Carolina, Usa
m GLADYS LOCKLEAR. Hun b 13.08.1907, d22.03.1980 Columbus County, North Carolina, Usa. ch of ISRAEL MOORE and GLADYS LOCKLEAR i. THURMAN M29 MOORE b 19.04.1924; d. 31.08.1984, Columbus County, North Carolina, Usa
m THELMA LOCKLEAR b 29.01.1929; d. 20.07.2005, Columbus County, North Carolina, Usa. ii. VIVIAN MOORE b 06.10.1925; d. 28.05.1984, Columbus County, North Carolina, Usa
m LLOYD L FREEMAN b 27.09.1922; d. 08.12.2003, Columbus County, North Carolina, Usa. 255. iii. CATHERINE MOORE b 04.11.1928; d. 16.02.2004, Columbus County, North Carolina, Usa. iv. WILBERT MOORE b 01.06.1931; d. 03.09.1995, Columbus County, North Carolina, Usa
m ESSIE MAE b 18.12.1935; d. 31.07.1998, Columbus County, North Carolina, Usa. v. JOHN HUBERT MOORE b 26.10.1935; d. 01.06.1982, Columbus County, North Carolina, Usa. vi. GLADYS MOORE b 16.03.1937; d. 17.06.2003, Columbus County, North Carolina, Usa
m GARR. 238. GEORGEANNA28 MOORE (MARTHA JANE27, JOHN26, BENJAMIN JOHN25, JOHN W24, MARGARET23 GOFFE, HANNAH22 GRIGGS, MARGARET21 BISHOP, HESTER20 COGSWELL, SUSANNA19 HAWKES, ANN18 BROWN, EDWARD17, b 07.1887 North Carolina, Usa, d 1968 Cape May Court House Cape May, New Jersey, Usa.
m JOHN HENRY SPAULDING 15.05.1905 Columbus County, North Carolina, Usa, son of HENRY SPAULDING and MATILDA CAMPBELL. Han b 20.08.1886 Columbus County, North Carolina, Usa, d04.1963 Cape May Court House, Cape May, New Jersey Usa. ch of GEORGEANNA MOORE and JOHN SPAULDING i. VIOLA29 SPAULDING b 29.07.1915, Welches Creek, Columbus, North Carolina Usa; d. 02.11.1989, West Orange, Essex, New Jersey, Usa
m LESTER MOORE b 30.05.1913; d. 04.1969, Cape May, Cape May, New Jersey, Usa. 239. FLOYD BENJAMIN28 MOORE (ULYSSES STEPHENS27, BENJAMIN JOHN26, BENJAMIN JOHN25, JOHN W24, MARGARET23 GOFFE, HANNAH22 GRIGGS, MARGARET21 BISHOP, HESTER20 COGSWELL, SUSANNA19 HAWKES, ANN18 BROWN, EDWARD17, b 12.09.1896 Welches Creek Columbus North Carolina Usa
m BERTHA BROOKS, dau of CHARLES BROOKS and MARY ROACH. Hun b 17.08.1888 West Union, Fayette, Iowa Usa. Notater for FLOYD BENJAMIN MOORE: Floyd Benjaman Moore United States World War Draft Registration Cards Name: Floyd Benjaman Moore Event Type: Draft Registration Event Date: 1917-1918 Event Place: Columbus County, North Carolina, United States Gender: Male Nationality: United States Birth Date: 12 Sep 1896 Birthplace: Clarkton, North Carolina, United States Affiliate Publication Number: M1509 , Affiliate Publication Title: World War Selective Service System Draft Registration Cards , GS Film Number: 1765632 , Digital Folder Number: 005152107 , Image Number: 03427 ch of FLOYD MOORE and BERTHA BROOKS i. JIM D29 MOORE b 1921, NC ii. HATTIE MAY MOORE b 1923, NC iii. KATTIE O MOORE b 1925, NC iv. BESSIE MOORE b 1927, NC v. ROBERT C MOORE b 1929, North Carolina Usa; d. 04.01.1931, Olive Hill, Person, North Carolina. 240. NASHFIELD28 MOORE (ULYSSES STEPHENS27, BENJAMIN JOHN26, BENJAMIN JOHN25, JOHN W24, MARGARET23 GOFFE, HANNAH22 GRIGGS, MARGARET21 BISHOP, HESTER20 COGSWELL, SUSANNA19 HAWKES, ANN18 BROWN, EDWARD17, b 13.04.1900 Welches Creek Columbus North Carolina Usa, d 16.03.1992 Whiteville, Columbus, North Carolina, USA
m LILLIAN JACOBS, dau of WILLIE JACOBS and DELPHIA MOORE. Hun b 03.02.1902 Columbus North Carolina Usa, d23.10.1980 Whiteville, Columbus, NC Notater for LILLIAN JACOBS: Nashfield Moore mentioned in the record of Lillian Jacobs Moore Name: Nashfield Moore Gender: Male Wife: Lillian Jacobs Moore Other information in the record of Lillian Jacobs Moore from North Carolina, Deaths Name: Lillian Jacobs Moore Event Type: Death Event Date: 23 Oct 1980 Event Place: Whiteville, Columbus, North Carolina Birth Year: 1902 Burial Date: 26 Oct 1980 Burial Place: Route 2, Clarkton, N.C. Cemetery: Mitchell Field Cemetery Residence Place: Clarkton, Columbus, North Carolina Address: Route 2, Box 240 Gender: Female Age: 78 Marital Status: Married Race (Original): Black Occupation: Farmer Birth Date: 03 Feb 1902 Birthplace: Columbus, N.C. Father's Name: Bunn Jacobs Mother's Name: Delphia Moore Spouse's Name: Nashfield Moore Additional Relatives: X Reference ID: v 36B cn 36727 , GS Film number: 1984632 Barn er listet ovenfor under (225) Lillian Jacobs. 241. RICHARD D28 MOORE (ULYSSES STEPHENS27, BENJAMIN JOHN26, BENJAMIN JOHN25, JOHN W24, MARGARET23 GOFFE, HANNAH22 GRIGGS, MARGARET21 BISHOP, HESTER20 COGSWELL, SUSANNA19 HAWKES, ANN18 BROWN, EDWARD17, b 1903 Welches Creek Columbus North Carolina Usa
m ANNIE M OLIVER. ch of RICHARD MOORE and ANNIE OLIVER i. CATHY ANNETTE29 MOORE b 1964, Alamance, NC Notater for CATHY ANNETTE MOORE: Richard D Moore mentioned in the record of Cathy Annette Moore Name: Richard D Moore Gender: Male Daughter: Cathy Annette Moore Other information in the record of Cathy Annette Moore from North Carolina, Birth Index Name: Cathy Annette Moore Event Type: Birth Event Date: 1964 Event Place: Alamance, North Carolina Gender: Female Race: White Father's Name: Richard D Moore Page: 1148 Source Reference: 52 ii. PATRICIA MOORE b 18.09.1965, Iredell, NC 242. SHEPPARD STEPHENS28 MOORE (ULYSSES STEPHENS27, BENJAMIN JOHN26, BENJAMIN JOHN25, JOHN W24, MARGARET23 GOFFE, HANNAH22 GRIGGS, MARGARET21 BISHOP, HESTER20 COGSWELL, SUSANNA19 HAWKES, ANN18 BROWN, EDWARD17, b 21.10.1904 Welches Creek Columbus North Carolina Usa, d 19.09.1976 Whiteville, Columbus, North Carolina, USA
m LUCILLE MABLE MITCHELL. Hun b 1904, d 1972. ch of SHEPPARD MOORE and LUCILLE MITCHELL 256. i. JAMES29 MOORE b 19.09.1949, NC ii. RACHEL MOORE b 25.03.1936. iii. ELEANOR MOORE b 15.11.1938. iv. SHEPHARD MOORE b 25.06.1940. v. WILLIAM MOORE b 10.03.1942. vi. ZELMA MOORE b 27.06.1944. vii. ADRAINNE MOORE b 16.05.1946. 243. RUBEN MONROE28 EUDY (THOMAS BIRCHLEY27, LUCY ANN26 MOORE, BENJAMIN JOHN25, JOHN W24, MARGARET23 GOFFE, HANNAH22 GRIGGS, MARGARET21 BISHOP, HESTER20 COGSWELL, SUSANNA19 HAWKES, ANN18 BROWN, EDWARD17, b 30.01.1898 North Carolina Usa, d21.08.1970 Mount Pleasant Cabarrus County North Carolina Usa
m HETTIE MAGDALENE ROWLAND, dau of JAMES ROWLAND and ADELINE BARRIER. Hun b 07.10.1899 Cabarrus County North Carolina Usa, d 13.06.1960 Cabarrus County NC ch of RUBEN EUDY and HETTIE ROWLAND i. BESSIE CHRISTINE29 EUDY b 19.12.1926, Cabarrus County North Carolina Usa; d. 19.05.2010
m ELDRON HERNDON. Notater for BESSIE CHRISTINE EUDY: Bessie Christine Eudy Herndon (December 19, 1926 - May 19, 2010) Ms. Bessie Christine Eudy Herndon departed this earth on Wednesday, May 19, 2010 to be with her Lord and Savior. A visitation will be held at Hartsell Funeral Home in Concord on Saturday from 11:00 until noon. A graveside service will be held at Carolina Memorial Park at 12:30 with Chaplain John Sell officiating. Mrs. Herndon was born on December 19, 1926 in Cabarrus County to the late Ruben M. and Hellie Roland Eudy. In addition to her parents, Mrs. Herndon was preceded in death by her husband, Eldron L. Herndon, four sisters, and four brothers. She is survived by her sister Mary Kathleen Eudy, of Concord and a step daughter, Karen Oak, of Fortville, IN. In lieu of flowers, donations may be made to Odell Baptist Church Building Fund, 6320 Davidson Hwy, Concord, NC 28027 or Hospice & Palliative Care of Cabarrus County, 5003 Hospice Lane, Kannapolis, NC 28081. Her caregiver, Betty C. Barnhardt would like to thank all employees of Carebridge Assisted Living of Mt. Pleasant for all the special care that Mrs. Herndon received while at their facility. Hartsell Funeral Home Concord is serving the Herndon family. ii. MARY KATHLEEN EUDY. 244. EDDIE28 MOORE (GEORGE E27, AARON26, BENJAMIN JOHN25, JOHN W24, MARGARET23 GOFFE, HANNAH22 GRIGGS, MARGARET21 BISHOP, HESTER20 COGSWELL, SUSANNA19 HAWKES, ANN18 BROWN, EDWARD17,
m ANNIE MARIE. ch of EDDIE MOORE and ANNIE MARIE i. AVALEEA29 MOORE. ii. CURLEY ETTA MOORE. iii. FARMA LEE MOORE. iv. ISABELLE MOORE, g. IVER SPAULDING. v. NELLIE MOORE. vi. SHELVY JEAN MOORE. vii. SUSIE MOORE. viii. CELESTINE MOORE. ix. EDDIE MOORE. x. HANNAS MOORE. xi. MACK MOORE. xii. ROANIE B MOORE. xiii. SHIRLEY MOORE. 245. FRANCES FANNIE28 MOORE (GEORGE E27, AARON26, BENJAMIN JOHN25, JOHN W24, MARGARET23 GOFFE, HANNAH22 GRIGGS, MARGARET21 BISHOP, HESTER20 COGSWELL, SUSANNA19 HAWKES, ANN18 BROWN, EDWARD17, b 23.01.1840 Charlotte, Mecklenburg County, North Carolina, USA, d 18.08.1825 Charlotte, Mecklenburg County, North Carolina, USA.
m EDWIN AUGUSTUS YOUNG OSBORNE, son of EPHRAIM OSBORNE and NANCY SMITH. Han b 06.05.1837 Madison County, Alabama, USA, d 12.10.1926 Charlotte, Mecklenburg County, North Carolina, USA. Notater for EDWIN AUGUSTUS YOUNG OSBORNE: Rev Son of Dr.Ephraim Brevard and Nancy Smith Osborne.Moved with his family to Hill Co.,Texas in 1855.In 1858,he walked from Texas to Charlotte, North Carolina,to live with relatives there,so he could continue his education.He enrolled in Military School at Statesville,North Carolina. School was suspended when the Civil War started.Edwin entered the Confederate Army as a Captain in the North Carolina State Troops,formed in Iradell Co.,North Carolina.He was appointed Colonel in July,1864.He suffered from Measles,wounds to the thigh,leg,side,and hand,causing the loss of two fingers.The last injury caused the end of his active service in the military.He was appointed a Clerk of the Court in Charlotte.After the war Colonel Osborne married Frances Swan "Fannie" Moore,daughter of Alexander D and Harriet Osborne Moore,March 15,1865 in Charlotte,North Carolina.Edwin was a teacher,lawyer,Episcopal Priest,founder and superintendent of the Thompson Orphanage in Charlotte.He also served as Chaplain in the Spanish American War.On March 26,1915,Edwin was an honorary pallbearer at the funeral of Mary Jackson,widow of Stonewall Jackson.Age at death 89yrs 5mo 7d. Education: Attended Military School in Statesville, North Carolina? Civil War Career: Captain of North Carolina State Troops? ? Colonel of North Carolina State Troops? Occupation after War: Clerk of Court in Charlotte, North Carolina? ? Teacher in Charlotte, North Carolina? ? Attorney in Charlotte, North Carolina? ? Episcopal Minister in Charlotte, North Carolina? ? Founder & Superintendent of Thompson Orphanage? ? Served in Spanish American War as Chaplin? ? 1915: Honorary Pallbearer at Stonewall Jackson's Widows funeral? Died: October 12, 1926 Place of Death: Charlotte, North Carolina Age at time of Death: 89 years old Burial Place: Elmwood Cemetery, Charlotte, North Carolina ch of FRANCES MOORE and EDWIN OSBORNE i. EDWIN A29 OSBORNE b 25.10.1870; d. 1871, Mecklenburg County, North Carolina, Usa. ii. JAMES W OSBORNE b 30.10.1872; d. 14.04.1904, Mecklenburg County, North Carolina, Usa. iii. ADLAI OSBORNE b 03.07.1877, Fletcher, Henderson County, North Carolina, Usa; d. 17.04.1929, Huntersville, Mecklenburg County, North Carolina, Usa. 246. MILLARD28 MOORE (JAMES DANIEL27, AARON26, BENJAMIN JOHN25, JOHN W24, MARGARET23 GOFFE, HANNAH22 GRIGGS, MARGARET21 BISHOP, HESTER20 COGSWELL, SUSANNA19 HAWKES, ANN18 BROWN, EDWARD17,
m SARAH JANE SPAULDING, dau of HENRY SPAULDING and LINDA MOORE. ch of MILLARD MOORE and SARAH SPAULDING i. LESTER29 MOORE b 30.05.1913; d. 04.1969, Cape May, Cape May, New Jersey, Usa
m VIOLA SPAULDING b 29.07.1915, Welches Creek, Columbus, North Carolina Usa; d. 02.11.1989, West Orange, Essex, New Jersey, Usa. 247. COTTIE ARELIA28 LOWRY (JOSEPHINE B27 MOORE, AARON26, BENJAMIN JOHN25, JOHN W24, MARGARET23 GOFFE, HANNAH22 GRIGGS, MARGARET21 BISHOP, HESTER20 COGSWELL, SUSANNA19 HAWKES, ANN18 BROWN, EDWARD17, b 19.02.1891 Robeson Co North Carolina Usa, d22.06.1982 Lumberton, Robeson, NC
m CONLY L. RANSOM 18.09.1915 Robeson County, North Carolina Usa, son of MARTIN RANSOM and ALICE (ANN)JOHNSON. Han b 05.09.1892 Robeson Co North Carolina Usa, d25.05.1980 Laurinburg Scotland Co NC Notater for CONLY L. RANSOM: Conly was the son of Martin and Alice Johnson Ransom. He married Cottie Lowry on Sep. 18, 1915 in Robeson County, North Carolina. He was a World War veteran. ***NOTE: His brothers James Harrison Ransom, Walter Ransom, and Martin Luther Ransom and his sister Ader Ransom Chavis are buried nearby at the Pleasant Grove United Methodist Church Cemetery (aka Allen Lowry Family Cemetery). ch of COTTIE LOWRY and CONLY RANSOM 257. i. ANDREW N.29 RANSOM b 26.07.1916, Robeson Co North Carolina Usa; d. 05.12.1996, Lumberton Robeson Co NC 248. BERTIE28 LOWRY (JOSEPHINE B27 MOORE, AARON26, BENJAMIN JOHN25, JOHN W24, MARGARET23 GOFFE, HANNAH22 GRIGGS, MARGARET21 BISHOP, HESTER20 COGSWELL, SUSANNA19 HAWKES, ANN18 BROWN, EDWARD17, b 01.02.1895 Robeson Co North Carolina Usa, d 17.03.1990 NC
m FRANK LOCKLEAR, son of WILLIS LOCKLEAR. Han b 31.03.1894 Robeson Co North Carolina Usa, d21.11.1977 Robeson Co NC ch of BERTIE LOWRY and FRANK LOCKLEAR i. HAZEL MANDIE29 LOCKLEAR b 16.07.1926, Lumberton Robeson County NC ii. EDDIE MACK LOCKLEAR b 24.08.1928, Lumberton Robeson County North Carolina Usa; d. 26.12.2007, Lumberton Robeson County NC iii. MARVIN LEE LOCKLEAR b 02.01.1930, Robeson County North Carolina Usa; d. 13.11.1961, North Carolina Usa
m NINA LOCKLEAR b 01.11.1936; d. 13.11.1961. 249. SIMUEL J28 WHITTED (FRANCES27 MOORE, AARON26, BENJAMIN JOHN25, JOHN W24, MARGARET23 GOFFE, HANNAH22 GRIGGS, MARGARET21 BISHOP, HESTER20 COGSWELL, SUSANNA19 HAWKES, ANN18 BROWN, EDWARD17, b 12.12.1893 Orange Co North Carolina Usa, d 11.05.1925 Hillsboro, Orange, North Carolina Usa
m (1) SALLIE JANE MCNEILL Hillsboro Township, Orange, North Carolina Usa, dau of JAMES MCNEILL and LUCINDA LIVINGSTON. Hun b 06.10.1892 Maxton North Carolina Usa, d29.11.1936 Fayetteville, Cross Creek, Cumberland, North Carolina Usa
m (2) JULIA WILSON 17.11.1917 Hillsboro Township Orange, North Carolina, dau of JAMES WILSON and CATHARINE DICKENS. Hun b 15.08.1895 Hillsboro Orange Co North Carolina Usa, d09.07.1922 Hopkinsville, Christian, Kentucky Usa. Notater for SIMUEL J WHITTED: Sam Whitted United States World War Draft Registration Cards Name: Sam Whitted Event Type: Draft Registration Event Date: 1917-1918 Event Place: Orange County, North Carolina, United States Gender: Male Nationality: United States Affiliate Publication Number: M1509 , Affiliate Publication Title: World War Selective Service System Draft Registration Cards , GS Film Number: 1765737 , Digital Folder Number: 005152141 , Image Number: 01694Simuel Whitted United States Census, 1940 Name: Simuel Whitted Event Type: Census Event Date: 1940 Event Place: Ward 3, Fayetteville, Cross Creek Township, Cumberland, North Carolina, United States Gender: Male Age: 46 Marital Status: Widowed Race (Original): Negro Race: Negro Relationship to Head of Household (Original): Head Relationship to Head of Household: Head Birthplace: North Carolina Birth Year (Estimated): 1894 Last Place of Residence: Same House Household Role Gender Age Birthplace Simuel Whitted Head M 46 North Carolina Stacy Whitted Son M 20 North Carolina Eunice Whitted Daughter F 22 North Carolina Duncan Whitted Son M 18 North Carolina Allen Whitted Son M 17 North Carolina District: 26-17A , Family Number: 81 , Sheet Number and Letter: 5A , Line Number: 60 , Affiliate Publication Number: T627 , Affiliate Film Number: 2895 , Digital Folder Number: 005460226 , Image Number: 00694 Notater for SALLIE JANE MCNEILL: Sallie J. Whitted North Carolina, Deaths and Burials Name: Sallie J. Whitted Gender: Female Burial Date: 29 Nov 1936 Death Date: 27 Nov 1936 Death Place: Fayetteville, Cross Creek, Cumberland, North Carolina Age: 44 Birth Date: 06 Oct 1892 Birthplace: Maxton, North Carolina Occupation: Housewife Race: Black Marital Status: Married Spouse's Name: Samuel Whitted Father's Name: James Mcneill Father's Birthplace: Maxton, North Carolina Mother's Name: Lucinda Livingston Mother's Birthplace: Maxton, North Carolina Indexing Project (Batch) Number: B03493-0 , System Origin: North Carolina-EASy , GS Film number: 1943125 , Reference ID: 421Matches with Neale Dr. Jennifer Lynn Seely M.D. 10.08.2012 4th Cousin - Remote Cousin Add 39,00 Baker (South Carolina) / Baker (Tennessee)... User Image David M Bartlett 26.06.2013 4th Cousin - Remote Cousin Add 46,00 ADAMS / ALKIRE / ALLEN / ALMOND / ANDERSON... User Image Rev. James Robert Tyler 10.08.2012 5th Cousin - Remote Cousin Add 35,00 Samuels / Abney (England) / Acht / Ackley... User Image Darla Davidson Morales 10.08.2012 5th Cousin - Remote Cousin Add 29,00 Name: Sallie J. Whitted Gender: Female Burial Date: 29 Nov 1936 Death Date: 27 Nov 1936 Death Place: Fayetteville, Cross Creek, Cumberland, North Carolina Age: 44 Birth Date: 06 Oct 1892 Birthplace: Maxton, North Carolina Occupation: Housewife Race: Black Marital Status: Married Spouse's Name: Samuel Whitted Father's Name: James Mcneill Father's Birthplace: Maxton, North Carolina Mother's Name: Lucinda Livingston Mother's Birthplace: Maxton, North Carolina Indexing Project (Batch) Number: B03493-0 , System Origin: North Carolina-EASy , GS Film number: 1943125 , Reference ID: 421 James Mcneill in entry for Sallie J. Whitted North Carolina, Deaths and Burials, 1898-1994 Attach to Family Tree COPY PRINT SOURCE BOX SHARE Name: Sallie J. Whitted Gender: Female Burial Date: 29 Nov 1936 Death Date: 27 Nov 1936 Death Place: Fayetteville, Cross Creek, Cumberland, North Carolina Age: 44 Birth Date: 06 Oct 1892 Birthplace: Maxton, North Carolina Occupation: Housewife Race: Black Marital Status: Married Spouse's Name: Samuel Whitted Father's Name: James Mcneill Father's Birthplace: Maxton, North Carolina Mother's Name: Lucinda Livingston Mother's Birthplace: Maxton, North Carolina Indexing Project (Batch) Number:B03493-0 ,System Origin: North Carolina-EASy ,GS Film number:1943125 ,Reference ID: 421 Indexing Project (Batch) Number:B03493-0 ,System Origin: North Carolina-EASy ,GS Film number:1943125 ,Reference ID: 421 No image available Search collection About this collection Citing this Record "North Carolina, Deaths and Burials, 1898-1994," index, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.1.1/FZRG-LR6 : accessed 31 Jul 2014), Lucinda Livingston in entry for Sallie J. Whitted, 27 Nov 1936; citing Mile Branch Cemetery, Fayetteville, Cross Creek, Cumberland, North Carolina, reference 421; FHL microfilm 1943125. Lumberton Township (east of river), Robeson, North Carolina, United States Notater for JULIA WILSON: Alias Fannie Julia Wilson Long mentioned in the record of Sam Whitted and Julia Wilson Long Name: Sam Whitted Birth Date: 1894 Age: 23 Spouse's Name: Julia Wilson Long Spouse's Birth Date: 1895 Spouse's Age: 22 Event Date: 17 Nov 1917 Event Place: Hillsboro Township, Orange, North Carolina Father's Name: Sam Whitted Mother's Name: Fannie Whitted Spouse's Father's Name: Henry Wilson Spouse's Mother's Name: Katie Wilson Race: Black Spouse's Race: Black Indexing Project (Batch) Number: M75218-7 , System Origin: North Carolina-EASy , GS Film number: 540321 , Reference ID: 268 ch of SIMUEL WHITTED and SALLIE MCNEILL 258. i. SAMUEL STACY29 WHITTED b 22.02.1919, Cumberland, Cumberland County North Carolina Usa; d. 08.11.1958, Fayetteville, Cumberland, NC ii. DUNCAN WHITTED b 1921, NC 259. iii. THELMAN ALLEN WHITTED b 22.01.1922, Hoke County, North Carolina, Usa; d. 23.05.1976, Bath, Steuben, New York, United States of America. ch of SIMUEL WHITTED and JULIA WILSON 260. iv. LEELAND29 WHITTED b 11.05.1915, Fayetteville North Carolina Usa; d. 07.12.1994, Suffolk, New York ,Usa. v. EUNICE WHITTED b 14.07.1917, Fayetteville North Carolina Usa; d. 19.06.1983, Boston Massachusetts Usa. Notater for EUNICE WHITTED: Whitted in the U.S., Social Security Death Index, 1935-2014 Name: Eunice Whitted SSN: 243-26-1921 Last Residence: 02130 Jamaica Plain, Suffolk, Massachusetts, USA BORN: 12 Jul 1917 Died: 19 Jun 1983 State (Year) SSN issued: North Carolina (B Eunice Whitted Massachusetts, Death Index Name: Eunice Whitted Event Type: Death Event Date: 19 Jun 1983 Event Place: Boston, Massachusetts Certificate Number: 004480 Birth Date: 14 Jul 1917 Birthplace: North Carolina Born in Ward 3, Fayetteville, Cross Creek Township, Cumberland, North Carolina, United States 250. MARIAH H28 WHITTED (FRANCES27 MOORE, AARON26, BENJAMIN JOHN25, JOHN W24, MARGARET23 GOFFE, HANNAH22 GRIGGS, MARGARET21 BISHOP, HESTER20 COGSWELL, SUSANNA19 HAWKES, ANN18 BROWN, EDWARD17, b 07.1896 Orange Co North Carolina Usa, d24.09.1933 Hillsboro Township, Orange, NC
m LENZY PRICE. Han b 1900 NC Notater for MARIAH H WHITTED: Mary Price North Carolina, Deaths Name: Mary Price Event Type: Death Event Date: 24 Sep 1933 Event Place: Hillsboro Township, Orange, North Carolina Birth Year (Estimated): 1897 Burial Date: 25 Sep 1933 Burial Place: Orange Co. Residence Place: Hillsboro, North Carolina Gender: Female Age: 36 Marital Status: Married Race (Original): Black Occupation: Housewife Birthplace: Orange Co., N. C. Father's Name: Sam Whitted Father's Birthplace: Orange Co., N. C. Mother's Name: Fannie Whitted Mother's Birthplace: Orange Co., N. C. Spouse's Name: Linzie Price Additional Relatives: X Reference ID: fn 1659 cn 94 , GS Film number: 1943074 ch of MARIAH WHITTED and LENZY PRICE i. JAMES WILBUR29 PRICE b 20.04.1924, Hillsboro North Carolina Usa; d. 28.02.1989, Durham, Durham, North Carolina. Notater for JAMES WILBUR PRICE: Police Officer ii. LENZY PRICE b 1920, NC iii. SAMUEL PRICE b 1921, NC iv. WILLIAM H PRICE b 1926, NC v. ERNESTINE b 1928, NC 251. WILLIE E28 WHITTED (FRANCES27 MOORE, AARON26, BENJAMIN JOHN25, JOHN W24, MARGARET23 GOFFE, HANNAH22 GRIGGS, MARGARET21 BISHOP, HESTER20 COGSWELL, SUSANNA19 HAWKES, ANN18 BROWN, EDWARD17, b 09.1890 North Carolina Usa, d 15.07.1955 Tar Heel, Bladen, North Carolina, United States of America.
m (1) JOHN GRAVES 16.02.1910 Hillsboro Township, Orange, North Carolina Usa, son of CHARLES MERTEN and HARRIETT GRAVES. Han b 1885 Hillsboro Orange County, NC
m (2) W.A FURGERSON 11.05.1918 Cumberland, North Carolina, United States, son of S FURGUSON and ANNIE S. Han b 1873 NC Notater for WILLIE E WHITTED: Jane C Whitted United States Census, 1910 Name: Jane C Whitted Event Type: Census Event Year: 1910 Event Place: Hillsboro, Orange, North Carolina, United States Gender: Female Age: 17 Marital Status: Single Race: Black Race (Original): Black Relationship to Head of Household: Daughter Relationship to Head of Household (Original): Daughter Birth Year (Estimated): 1893 Birthplace: North Carolina Father's Birthplace: North Carolina Mother's Birthplace: North Carolina Household Role Gender Age Birthplace Sam E Whitted Head M 40 North Carolina Fannie C Whitted Wife F 38 North Carolina Jane C Whitted Daughter F 17 North Carolina Sam J Whitted Son M 16 North Carolina Mary P Whitted Daughter F 15 North Carolina Maria H Whitted Daughter F 13 North Carolina John Graves Son-in-law M 24 North Carolina Willie L Graves Daughter F 20 North Carolina District: 139 , Sheet Number and Letter: 8B , Household ID: 153 , Affiliate Name: The U.S. National Archives and Records Administration (NARA) , Affiliate Publication Number: M1283 , GS Film number: 1375139 , Digital Folder Number: 004449914 , Image Number: 00507 Notater for JOHN GRAVES: John Graves United States Census, 1920 Name: John Graves Event Type: Census Event Year: 1920 Event Place: Hillsborough, Orange, North Carolina, United States Gender: Male Age: 32 Marital Status: Married Race: Black Race (Original): Black Relationship to Head of Household: Head Relationship to Head of Household (Original): Head Birth Year (Estimated): 1888 Birthplace: North Carolina Father's Birthplace: North Carolina Mother's Birthplace: North Carolina Household Role Gender Age Birthplace John Graves Head M 32 North Carolina Willie Graves Wife F 27 North Carolina Pattie B Graves Daughter F 7 North Carolina Vera Graves Daughter F 6 North Carolina Dorothy Graves Daughter F 0 North Carolina James M Graves Son M 8 North Carolina District: 184 , Sheet Number and Letter: 10B , Household ID: 203 , Line Number: 25 , Affiliate Name: The U.S. National Archives and Records Administration (NARA) , Affiliate Publication Number: T625 , GS Film number: 1821314 , Digital Folder Number: 004384898 , Image Number: 00347 ch of WILLIE WHITTED and JOHN GRAVES i. PATTIE B29 GRAVES b 1913, NC ii. VERA GRAVES b 1914, NC iii. DOROTHY GRAVES b 1920, NC iv. JAMES M GRAVES b 1912, NC 252. MARY R28 ALDERMAN (HANNAH SURRENE27 MOORE, AARON26, BENJAMIN JOHN25, JOHN W24, MARGARET23 GOFFE, HANNAH22 GRIGGS, MARGARET21 BISHOP, HESTER20 COGSWELL, SUSANNA19 HAWKES, ANN18 BROWN, EDWARD17, b 1895 NC
m MCDUFFIE NEWKIRK. ch of MARY ALDERMAN and MCDUFFIE NEWKIRK i. CALVIN C.29 NEWKIRK b 1928, North Carolina Usa; d. 30.05.1953, R. 1, Wallace, NC ii. PAULINE NEWKIRK b 01.10.1918, North Carolina Usa; d. 08.10.1919, Rockfish, Duplin, NC 253. LOU28 HENRY (FLORENCE IDA27 WEED, PHILOMELIA SOPHIA26 SCOBEY, NANCY M25 WALLACE, POLLY24 GOFFE, JOHN23, HANNAH22 GRIGGS, MARGARET21 BISHOP, HESTER20 COGSWELL, SUSANNA19 HAWKES, ANN18 BROWN, EDWARD17, b 29.03.1874 Waterloo Black Hawk Co Iowa Usa, d07.01.1944 New York City New York Co Usa.
m HERBERT CLARK HOOVER, son of JESSE HOOVER and HULDA MINTHORN. Han b 10.08.1874 West Branch Cedar Co Iowa Usa, d20.10.1964 New York City New York Co Usa. Notater for LOU HENRY: Education 1898 CA, Santa Clara Co, Stanford University ? More on this location Links Santa Clara Co, CA TTTP California TTTP FamilySearch County Page FamilySearch State Page Org. 21 APR 1924 Time Magazine Cover Occup 1929-1933 USA First Lady Notater for HERBERT CLARK HOOVER: Hoover was born in West Branch, Iowa, of a very poor Quaker family. When he was a boy his mother died and there is a scene of the family gathered around the bedside in prayer. His father could not take care of the children, so they were "farmed out" to other members of the family. Hoover went to live with an uncle in Oregon. When he grew up he went to Stanford University. There he worked his way through school. He carried newspapers, mowed lawns, waited on tables. He would do anything that was honorable. He graduated as a mining engineer and, as the speakers at commencement exercises always say, went out into the world. In his case it was literally so. He went to Australia, New Zealand, China, and Europe. He was looking for minerals. don't mean gold and silver or even oil. Industry depends on some seventy minerals for alloys and other metals. They are such minerals as magnesium, zinc, nickel, copper, tin, bauxite. Hoover found them and signed contracts with grateful governments for the "development" of these resources. At 25 Hoover was well past his first million, so he retired. He became the protege of Woodrow Wilson, the head of the United States Food Administration in World War I, the head of the United States Relief Administration after the war, and finally Secretary of Commerce, where he was regarded as the strong roan in a cabinet which included such men as Charles Evans Hughes. In 1923 he had so many honorary college degrees that Menchen always referred to him as Lord Hoover. Such was the man who was now president. The nation had every reason to feel confident. Dr. Bonnell says that he was a very devout Quaker. do not know. When he was nominated for president, the question was raised - "Can a Quaker be commander-in-chief of the armed forces?" The answer was - Yes, he is not that kind of Quaker. There is one thing that impresses me. Hoover married a very lovely lady - Miss Lou Henry. The Henrys were a far cry from the Hoovers. They were extremely well-to-do and they were Episcopalians. Mrs. Hoover was a geologist. It is not possible to make more of a religious change than to go from Episcopalian to Society of Friends, but this Mrs. Hoover did. Therefore assume that she did so to be with her husband. But everything has to be assumption, for Hoover gives us no help at all. Hoover's administration was a complete disaster. To students of Hoover this is incredible, but that is the case. Coolidge's legacy to Hoover was the Crash of 1929. A chart of the economic picture during Hoover's four years is a line all the way down. We reached the point of 56% of the labor force out of work and all of the farmers in complete ruin. He had an answer to all of this. He had a bible. But it was not the Bible. It was Adam Smith's Wealth of Nations. Hoover was the last President of the United States to read this to the American people. From Adam Smith we get such notions as free enterprise, the sacred law of supply and demand, that government is best which governs least. This is the ideal state - Capitalism. Adam Smith saw two major functions for government - policemen and firemen. Stop now and try to think of some function the government performs other than these two. Hoover was positive that private industry would save this situation. "Prosperity is just around the corner" and private industry will take us there. Private industry reminds me of a line from Uncle Remus. Uncle Remus said, "Bre'r Rabbit, he lay low." For those of you who do not speak Uncle Remus shall translate: "Brother Rabbit maintained a low profile." Private industry was watching and waiting to see what would happen. Meanwhile, Hoover ordered General Douglas MacArthur to throw the veterans out of Washington, vetoed all bills including one to build a dam across the Colorado River, but was persuaded by private industry to sign the Reconstruction Finance Corporation Act. Hoover’s religion never helped him to understand the hunger and misery of millions. By the end of Hoover’s term the situation in the country was so bad that it was said that if the Democrats nominated a yellow dog, he would be elected. It must be emphasized that Hoover was not a crook. And it must be said again that this is too low a standard for our presidents. What were they? In Hoover’s case it is clear. That is, it is clear to us now. He never understood and left the office with greater bitterness than any president since John Adams.Education 1895 CA, Santa Clara Co, Stanford University ? More on this location Links Santa Clara Co, CA TTTP California TTTP FamilySearch County Page FamilySearch State Page Org. 1920 American Institute of Mining Engineers, President Occup 1921-1928 USA Secretary of Commerce Election 1928 USA Presidential Election Occup 1929-1933 USA President Election 1932 USA Presidential Election Election 1940 USA Presidential Election ch of LOU HENRY and HERBERT HOOVER 261. i. HERBERT CLARK29 HOOVER b 04.08.1903, London Middlesex England; d. 09.07.1969, Pasadena Los Angeles Co California Usa. 262. ii. ALLAN HENRY HOOVER b 17.07.1907, London Middlesex England; d. 04.11.1993, Portola Valley San Mateo Co California Usa.
to be integrated above
29 254. GEORGE HENRY29 WHITE (WILEY FRANKLIN28, MARY EDITH27 MOORE, ISRAEL26, BENJAMIN JOHN25, JOHN W24, MARGARET23 GOFFE, HANNAH22 GRIGGS, MARGARET21 BISHOP, HESTER20 COGSWELL, SUSANNA19 HAWKES, ANN18 BROWN, EDWARD17, b 18.12.1852 Rosindale Bladen Co North Carolina Usa, d28.12.1918 Colingdale Delaware Co PA
m (1) CORA LENA CHERRY, dau of HENRY CHERRY and MARY JONES. Hun b 24.12.1867 North Carolina Usa, d 19.01.1905 Delaware Co PA
m (2) FANNIE B RANDOLPH, dau of JOHN RANDOLPH and DELLA REDMOND. Hun døde 09.1880
m (3) NANCY J SCOTT 1882. Hun døde 1882
m (4) ELLEN AVANT MACDONALD 1915. Hun b NC Notater for GEORGE HENRY WHITE: US Congressman. He was elected to represent North Carolina's 2nd Congressional District in the United States House of Representatives, serving from 1897 to 1901. George Henry White (December 18, 1852 – December 28, 1918) was an American attorney and politician, elected as a Republican U.S. Congressman from North Carolina's 2nd congressional district between 1897 and 1901. He later became a banker in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania and in Whitesboro, New Jersey, an African-American community of which he was a co-founder. White is the last African-American Congressman during the beginning of the Jim Crow era and the only African American to serve in Congress during his tenure. In North Carolina, "fusion politics" between the Populist and Republican parties led to a brief period of renewed Republican and African-American political success in elections from 1894 to 1900, when White was elected to Congress for two terms after serving in the state legislature. After the Democratic-dominated state legislature passed a suffrage amendment that disenfranchised blacks in the state, White did not seek a third term. He moved permanently to Washington, D.C., where he had a law practice and became a banker, moving again to Philadelphia in 1906. After White left office, no other African American served in Congress until 1929. No African American was elected to Congress again from North Carolina until 1992. Born on December 18, 1852, in Rosindale, Bladen County, North Carolina, George Henry White died on December 28, 1918, in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. A successful attorney, White was among the most notable black Republican political leaders of his era: the last African American elected to Congress during the 19th century, and the first to serve in the 20th century. One of four black congressmen elected from North Carolina’s Second District, called the “Black Second” for its black-majority population, during and after Reconstruction, White served two terms (1897–1901). He was the only black member of the U.S. House during his two terms, and the nation’s last black congressman until 1929. Born to a free mixed-race father and an unnamed mother, perhaps a slave, George White was raised as a free child in Columbus County, North Carolina. Wiley Franklin White was a justice of the peace in Columbus County during Reconstruction, before moving to Washington, D.C., in 1872 to work for the U.S. Treasury Department. George White was raised by his stepmother, Mary Anna Spaulding White, a granddaughter of former slave and prosperous turpentine farmer Benjamin Spaulding. Educated privately before the Civil War, George White later attended Freedmen’s Bureau schools and the Whitin normal school in Lumberton. After graduating from Howard University in 1877, he then worked as a schoolteacher and principal in New Bern while reading the law under former Superior Court Judge William John Clarke. Among the first half-dozen black attorneys admitted to the N.C. bar (1879), White established a thriving legal practice in New Bern and became active in Republican politics, winning election from Craven County to the N.C. House of Representatives (1880) and the N.C. Senate (1884). In 1886, he won office as solicitor of the state’s Second Judicial District, a six-county area in northeastern North Carolina; reelected in 1890, he was the nation’s only elected black prosecutor for eight years. After Craven County was removed from the Second district, White moved to Tarboro in 1894 to pursue the congressional nomination. He lost in 1894 to his brother-in-law, former Rep. Henry P. Cheatham, who lost his bid at reelection. White came back to defeat Cheatham in 1896 for the nomination, and defeated Democratic incumbent Frederick A. Woodard and a Populist opponent in the general election. In March 1897, George White was sworn in as a member of the 55th Congress; he was reelected to his seat in November 1898, again in a three-way race. White also served as a state delegate to the Republican national conventions of 1896 and 1900. From 1897 to 1901, White became a national spokesman for equal rights and fair treatment for the nation’s African American population, as well as an outspoken opponent of lynching violence and Southern disfranchisement of black voters. In early 1900, he sponsored a bill to make lynching a federal crime punishable by death, but that bill died in committee. During his terms, he arranged appointments for more than three dozen black postmasters in the Second district, the largest number appointed in any district in the 19th century. After voters amended North Carolina’s constitution to ban illiterates from voting—effectively disfranchising more than 100,000 black voters who could not qualify under the new “grandfather clause”—George White chose not to seek reelection in 1900, and moved his family to Washington, D.C. On January 29, 1901, he delivered an oft-reprinted farewell speech to the U.S. House, pleading for equal justice for black Americans and predicting the eventual return of blacks to Congress. An active member of several civil rights organizations after 1898, White served as a national vice president of the National Afro-American Council (1900-1902), and helped found the Philadelphia chapter of the NAACP in 1913. After leaving Congress, White practiced law in Washington, D.C., and created the George White Land Development Company, through which shareholders established the all-black town of Whitesboro, New Jersey, after 1901. In 1906, he moved his law practice to Philadelphia, where he also established that city’s first black-owned commercial savings bank, People’s Savings Bank. In 1912, he unsuccessfully sought his party’s nomination in a special election for a vacant Congressional seat from Philadelphia. He remained active in local Republican politics, and in 1916, became the state’s first black alternate delegate to the Republican national convention. A year before his death, he was appointed as an assistant city solicitor for Philadelphia. White was married four times. His first wife, Fanny Randolph White (m. 1879), died in 1880. His second wife, Nancy Scott White (m. 1882), died in 1882. In 1887, he married Cora Lena Cherry, who died in 1905. He had four children: Della, Beatrice, Mary (Mamie), and George, Jr. He died of natural causes in Philadelphia in December 1918, and was survived by his fourth wife, Ellen Avant McDonald White (m. 1915). State highway historical markers in White’s memory are located in New Bern and Tarboro. He is buried in Eden Cemetery outside Philadelphia. Sources Benjamin R. Justesen, George Henry White: An Even Chance in the Race of Life (Baton Rouge: LSU Press, 2001); George W. Reid, “George Henry White,” in Dictionary of American Negro Biography, ed. Rayford W. Logan and Michael R. Winston (New York: W. W. Norton, 1982); Dictionary of North Carolina Biography, ed. William S. Powell (Chapel Hill: UNC Press, 1986); Black Americans in Congress, 1870–2007, ed. Matthew Wasniewski (Washington, DC: GPO, 2008). ch of GEORGE WHITE and CORA CHERRY i. MARY ADELYNE30 WHITE. ii. BEATRICE ODESSA WHITE. iii. GEORGE HENRY WHITE. ch of GEORGE WHITE and FANNIE RANDOLPH iv. DELLA30 WHITE, d. 1816, Washington DC. 255. CATHERINE29 MOORE (ISRAEL28, MARTHA JANE27, JOHN26, BENJAMIN JOHN25, JOHN W24, MARGARET23 GOFFE, HANNAH22 GRIGGS, MARGARET21 BISHOP, HESTER20 COGSWELL, SUSANNA19 HAWKES, ANN18 BROWN, EDWARD17, b 04.11.1928, d 16.02.2004 Columbus County, North Carolina, Usa.
m ODELL JACOBS. Han b 31.07.1921, d09.04.1986 Columbus County, North Carolina, Usa. ch of CATHERINE MOORE and ODELL JACOBS i. WELTON30 JACOBS b 17.02.1960, Elizabethtown, Bladen County, North Carolina, Usa; d. 25.11.2010, Whiteville, Columbus County, North Carolina, Usa. ii. INFANT JACOBS b 15.06.1946; d. 15.06.1946, Columbus County, North Carolina, Usa. 256. JAMES29 MOORE (SHEPPARD STEPHENS28, ULYSSES STEPHENS27, BENJAMIN JOHN26, BENJAMIN JOHN25, JOHN W24, MARGARET23 GOFFE, HANNAH22 GRIGGS, MARGARET21 BISHOP, HESTER20 COGSWELL, SUSANNA19 HAWKES, ANN18 BROWN, EDWARD17, b 19.09.1949 North Carolina Usa
m CONSTANCE PIGFORD. Hun b 30.01.1949. ch of JAMES MOORE and CONSTANCE PIGFORD i. SHEPARD30 MOORE b 18.12.1968. ii. SELENA MOORE b 14.02.1977. 257. ANDREW N.29 RANSOM (COTTIE ARELIA28 LOWRY, JOSEPHINE B27 MOORE, AARON26, BENJAMIN JOHN25, JOHN W24, MARGARET23 GOFFE, HANNAH22 GRIGGS, MARGARET21 BISHOP, HESTER20 COGSWELL, SUSANNA19 HAWKES, ANN18 BROWN, EDWARD17, b 26.07.1916 Robeson Co North Carolina Usa, d05.12.1996 Lumberton Robeson Co North Carolina Usa
m ELMA LOUISE ATER, dau of HORACE ATER and LUELLA MCFARLIN. Notater for ANDREW N. RANSOM: Andrew was the eldest child of Conly and Cottie Lowry Ransom. He married Elma Louise Ater. ***NOTE: In 1936, he received a degree from what is presently known as the University of North Carolina at Pembroke. In July 2007, the Heritage Walk was dedicated to serve as a permanent monument to all of the university's graduates from 1905 to 1954. Andrew was honored by having his name engraved on a brick in the Heritage Walk walkway in front of Old Main, the oldest building on the campus. ch of ANDREW RANSOM and ELMA ATER i. GERALD CONLEY30 RANSOM. 258. SAMUEL STACY29 WHITTED (SIMUEL J28, FRANCES27 MOORE, AARON26, BENJAMIN JOHN25, JOHN W24, MARGARET23 GOFFE, HANNAH22 GRIGGS, MARGARET21 BISHOP, HESTER20 COGSWELL, SUSANNA19 HAWKES, ANN18 BROWN, EDWARD17, b 22.02.1919 Cumberland, Cumberland County North Carolina Usa, d08.11.1958 Fayetteville, Cumberland, North Carolina Usa
m MARY E. Hun b 09.04.1921, d 14.02.2014 East Farmingdale Suffolk Co New York Usa. Notater for SAMUEL STACY WHITTED: Inscription: NORTH CAROLINA CPL BTRY B 99 COAST ART WORLD WAR II Samuel Stacy Whitted, Jr MemorialPhotosFlowersEditShare Learn about upgrading this memorial... Birth: Feb. 22, 1919 Death: Nov. 8, 1958 Family links: Spouse: Mary E Whitted (1921 - 2014)* *Calculated relationship Burial: Long Island National Cemetery Farmingdale Suffolk County New York, USA Plot: Z, 2310 Edit Virtual Cemetery info [?] Imported from: US Veteran's Affairs Record added: Mar 04, 2000 Find A Grave Memorial# 2852156 Samuel Whitted in the U.S., Social Security Death Index, 1935-2014 Name: Samuel Whitted SSN: 241-16-4107 BORN: 22 Feb 1919 Died: Nov 1958 State (Year) SSN issued: Samuel Stacy Whitted North Carolina, Deaths Name: Samuel Stacy Whitted Event Type: Death Event Date: 03 Nov 1963 Event Place: Fayetteville, Cumberland, North Carolina Birth Year: 1894 Burial Date: 06 Nov 1963 Burial Place: Fayetteville, N. C. Cemetery: North Side Residence Place: Fayetteville, Cumberland, North Carolina Address: Bain Dr. Gender: Male Age: 69 Marital Status: Widowed Race (Original): Colored Occupation: Shoe Repair Birth Date: 04 Mar 1894 Birthplace: Fayetteville, N. C. Reference ID: v 34A cn 34096 , GS Film number: 1953498 Name: Stacy Whitted Event Type: Census Event Date: 1940 Event Place: Ward 3, Fayetteville, Cross Creek Township, Cumberland, North Carolina, United States Gender: Male Age: 20 Marital Status: Single Race (Original): Negro Race: Negro Relationship to Head of Household (Original): Son Relationship to Head of Household: Son Birthplace: North Carolina Birth Year (Estimated): 1920 Last Place of Residence: Same House Household Role Gender Age Birthplace Simuel Whitted Head M 46 North Carolina Stacy Whitted Son M 20 North Carolina Eunice Whitted Daughter F 22 North Carolina Duncan Whitted Son M 18 North Carolina Allen Whitted Son M 17 North Carolina District: 26-17A , Family Number: 81 , Sheet Number and Letter: 5A , Line Number: 61 , Affiliate Publication Number: T627 , Affiliate Film Number: 2895 , Digital Folder Number: 005460226 , Image Number: 00694Born in Ward 3, Fayetteville, Cross Creek Township, Cumberland, North Carolina, United States Notater for MARY E: WIFE OF WHITTED, SAMUEL STACY JR CPL US ARMY ch of SAMUEL WHITTED and MARY E 263. i. DUANE30 WHITTED b 1959, Fayetteville, Cumberland, NC 259. THELMAN ALLEN29 WHITTED (SIMUEL J28, FRANCES27 MOORE, AARON26, BENJAMIN JOHN25, JOHN W24, MARGARET23 GOFFE, HANNAH22 GRIGGS, MARGARET21 BISHOP, HESTER20 COGSWELL, SUSANNA19 HAWKES, ANN18 BROWN, EDWARD17, b 22.01.1922 Hoke County, North Carolina, Usa, d23.05.1976 Bath, Steuben, New York, United States of America
m DELORES BROWN, dau of LEANDER BROWN. Hun b 20.08.1930. Notater for THELMAN ALLEN WHITTED: Branch of service: Us Air Force Rank attained: SSGT Wars/Conflicts: VietnamT Whitted United States Social Security Death Index Age 54 Given Name T Surname Whitted Birth Date 22 Jan 1922 State New York Event Date May 1976 TSGT, US AIR FORCE Jamaica the island in Virginia , going to the water is a little town called that Jamaica Thelma Allen Whitted Index-only record Add alternate information Report issue Name: Thelma A Whitted Birth Year: 1922 Race: White, citizen (White) Nativity State or Country: North Carolina State of Residence: North Carolina County or City: Cumberland Enlistment Date: 23 Aug 1940 Enlistment State: North Carolina Enlistment City: Fort Bragg Grade: Private Grade Code: Private Term of Enlistment: Enlistment for the Philippine Department Component: Regular Army (including Officers, Nurses, Warrant Officers, and Enlisted Men) Source: Civil Life Education: 1 year of high school Civil Occupation: Farm hands, general farms Marital Status: Single, without dependents Height: 70 Weight: 137 Born in Ward 3, Fayetteville, Cross Creek Township, Cumberland, North Carolina, United States Burial at Bath National Cemetery Bath, New York Steuben County Name: Thelma Allen Whitted Service Info.: SSGT US AIR FORCE Birth Date: 22 Jan 1922 Death Date: 23 May 1976 Relation: Unknown Relationship To Whitted, Thelma Allen Interment Date: 27 May 1976 Cemetery: Bath National Cemetery Cemetery Address: VA Medical Center Bldg. 1301 Bath, NY 14810 Buried At: Section J Row 43 Site 1 Thelma Allen Whitted MemorialPhotosFlowersEditShare Learn about sponsoring this memorial... Birth: Jan. 22, 1922 Death: May 23, 1976 TSGT, US AIR FORCE Burial: Bath National Cemetery Bath Steuben County New York, USA Plot: J, 43, 1 Notater for DELORES BROWN: Delores Whitted United States Public Records Name Delores Whitted Residence Date 01 Jan 1995-01 Jan 1998 Residence Place Syracuse, New York, United States Birth Date 20 Aug 1930 Address 200 Demong Dr Address Continued Syracuse, New York 13214 Possible Relatives Leeland D Whitted, Wellesley A Whitted Record Number 775608276 (315) 471-5987 Phone Number Recorded Date: 01 Jun 2004 Address: 60 Presidential Plz Address Continued: Syracuse, New York 13202 from 10 August 2005 to 15 November 2007 Syracuse, New York, United States Syracuse, New York 13214 Syracuse, New York, United States 200 Demong Dr Leeland D Whitted, Wellesley A Whitted lived together with her from 1 Januar 1995 to 1 Januar 1998 ch of THELMAN WHITTED and DELORES BROWN i. WELLESLEY ALLEN30 WHITTED b 29.10.1950, Jamaica New York Usa; d. 16.12.2011, Stone-Kethering Cancer center New York Usa
m LENORE BROWN, 1991 b 17.09.1959. Notater for WELLESLEY ALLEN WHITTED: Wellesley Allen Whitted was born in Jamaica, New York to Delores and Allen Whitted on October 29, 1950. Wellesley and his two brothers, Leeland and Kevin, spent most of their childhood in Syracuse. Wellesley graduated from William Nottingham High School in 1968. He earned an MS in computer science from New York University. He worked as a software engineer, a network software consultant and as a member of the technical staff at ATT Bell Labs. He was also professor of Math and Computer Science at Lehman College. Wellesley married Lenore Brown in 1991. During their marriage, they resided in Manhattan. Music and reading were Wellesley's passions. He enjoyed a good art film. Bob Dylan was his favorite artist. He saw numerous Dylan concerts over the years with his friends. In addition, he played guitar in many bands. He was known for a dry sense of humor and laughed often. Wellesley was compassionate. He was loved and respected by many. In particular, Wellesley loved his family. He often helped his nephew Phil with Statistics; he will be missed by all for his gourmet food during family gatherings. Wellesley departed to receive his reward with the Lord on Friday, December 16, 2011 at Stone-Kettering Cancer Center. He is survived by many family members: his wife, Lenore Brown-Whitted; mother, Delores Whitted; two brothers, Wellesley Whitfed United States Public Records, 1970-2009 COPY PRINT SOURCE BOX SHARE Name: Wellesley Whitfed Also Known As: Welles Whitted 2nd Also Known As Name: Wells Whitted 3rd Also Known As Name: Weslly A Whitted Residence Date: 01 Jan 2004 Residence Place: New York, New York, United States Birth Date: 29 Oct 1950 Phone Number: (212) 862-5881 Phone Number Recorded Date: 01 Jan 2009 Address: 1580 Amsterdam Ave Apt 25 Address Continued: New York, New York 10031 Address Date: 01 Jan 2004 2nd Address: 55 Amsterdam Ave # 1580 2nd Address Continued: New York, New York 10023 2nd Address Date: 01 Aug 1996-13 Nov 2000 3rd Address: 1580 Amsterdam Ave 3rd Address Continued: New York, New York 10031 3rd Address Date: 01 Jun 1993-15 Nov 2007 Record Number: 62914383 No image available Search collection About this collection Citing this Record "United States Public Records, 1970-2009," index, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.1.1/KJJR-B22 : accessed 26 Aug 2014), Wellesley Whitfed, Residence, New York, New York, United States; from a third party aggregator of publicly available information. Wellesley A Whitted United States Public Records, 1970-2009 Attach to Family Tree COPY PRINT SOURCE BOX SHARE Name: Wellesley A Whitted Ereignisdatum: 01 Jan 1995-01 Jan 1998 Ereignisort: Syracuse, New York, United States Address: 200 Demong Dr Address Continued: Syracuse, New York 13214 Weitere Namen: Delores Whitted, Leeland D Whitted Partner-Bezeichnung: 775608268 No image available Search collection About this collection Citing this Record "United States Public Records, 1970-2009", index, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.1.1/QJNP-Q2VY : accessed 26 Aug 2014), Wellesley A Whitted, 01 Jan 1995-01 Jan 1998. 264. ii. KEVIN S WHITTED b 01.09.1955. 265. iii. LEELAND DAVID WHITTED b 05.08.1958. 260. LEELAND29 WHITTED (SIMUEL J28, FRANCES27 MOORE, AARON26, BENJAMIN JOHN25, JOHN W24, MARGARET23 GOFFE, HANNAH22 GRIGGS, MARGARET21 BISHOP, HESTER20 COGSWELL, SUSANNA19 HAWKES, ANN18 BROWN, EDWARD17, b 11.05.1915 Fayetteville North Carolina Usa, d07.12.1994 Suffolk, New York ,Usa. Han møtte ESTHER IRENE WALLIN 05.1948 Fürth Bayern Germany, dau of JOHAN WALLIN and OLUFINE IVERSEN. Hun b 03.01.1920 Frankendalsgt. 17. Larvik., d 10.06.1983 Buggesgt. 20, Larvik.. Notater for LEELAND WHITTED: Recidence 1.june 1993 - 1.1.2004 Huntington New York Usa 40 Amsterdam Street Huntington New York Usa Leeland Whitted New York, New York Passenger and Crew Lists, 1909 Name Leeland Whitted Event Type Immigration Event Date 1953 Event Place New York City, New York, United States Ship Name Waldeck Leeland Whitted Obituary Save Tag Share Print Download Obituaries: Leeland Whitted The deceased was born Tuesday, May 11, 1915 and was living in the state of New York when they applied for Social Security benefits. Leeland Whitted died December 7, 1994 at the age of 79 years, 6 months and 27 days. Obituary Details: Name: Leeland Whitted Age at Death: 79 years, 6 months, 27 days Birth Date: May 11, 1915 Registration Place: New York Death Date: December 7, 1994 Death Place: --- Record Date: --- People Listed in This Obituary: Leeland Whitted Name: Leeland Whitted Name (Original): WHITTED LEELAND Event Type: Military Service Event Date: 24 Apr 1943 Term of Enlistment: Enlistment for the duration of the War or other emergency, plus six months, subject to the discretion of the President or otherwise according to law Event Place: New York City, New York, United States Race: Negro Citizenship Status: citizen Birth Year: 1915 Birthplace: NORTH CAROLINA Education Level: 3 years of high school Civilian Occupation: Shoemakers and shoe repairmen, not in factory Marital Status: Single, without dependents Military Rank: Private Army Branch: No branch assignment Army Component: Selectees (Enlisted Men) Source Reference: Civil Life Serial Number: 32896590 Affiliate ARC Identifier: 1263923 Box Film Number: 05802.244 Name: Leland Whitted Event Type: Census Event Year: 1920 Event Place: Blue Springs, Hoke, North Carolina, United States Gender: Male Age: 4 Marital Status: Single Race: Mulatto Race (Original): Mulatto Relationship to Head of Household: Son Relationship to Head of Household (Original): Son Birth Year (Estimated): 1916 Birthplace: North Carolina Affiliate Film Number: 1684Social Security Number: 060-14-7675 Previous Residence Postal Code: 11743 Suffolk New York 01 Jun 1993-01 Jan 2004 Residence Date:Huntington, New York, United States (516) 427-4129 40 Amsterdam St Huntington, New York 11743 01 Jun 1993-01 Jan 2004 2nd Address: 700 E 156th St Apt 9E 2nd Address Continued: Bronx, New York 10455 01 Apr 1974 Possible Relatives: Claire Mrs Whitted Record Number: 65274986 MILITARY SERVICE Military serial#: 32896590 Enlisted: April 24, 1943 in New York City New York Military branch: No Branch Assignment Rank: Private, Selectees (enlisted Men) Terms of enlistment: Enlistment For The Duration Of The War Or Other Emergency, Plus Six Months, Subject To The Discretion Of The President Or Otherwise According To Law INTRODUCTION These genealogies, comprising the colonial history of the majority of the free African American families of Virginia and North Carolina, reveal several facets of American colonial history previously overlooked by historians: Most families were the descendants of white servant women who had children by slaves or free African Americans. Many descended from slaves who were freed before the 1723 Virginia law which required legislative approval for manumissions. Families like Gowen, Cumbo, and Driggers who were free in the mid-seventeenth century had several hundred members before the end of the colonial period. Very few families descended from white slave owners who had children by their slaves, perhaps as low as 1% of the total. Many free African American families in colonial North Carolina and Virginia were landowners who were generally accepted by their white neighbors. Free Indians blended into the free African American communities. They did not form their own separate communities. Some of the light-skinned descendants of free African Americans formed the tri-racial isolates of Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee, Kentucky, Ohio, and Louisiana. Virginia Origins Most of the free African Americans of Virginia and North Carolina originated in Virginia where they became free in the seventeenth and eighteenth century before chattel slavery and racism fully developed in the United States. When they arrived in Virginia, Africans joined a society which was divided between master and white servant - a society with such contempt for white servants that masters were not punished for beating them to death [McIlwaine, Minutes of the Council, 22-24]. They joined the same households with white servants - working, eating, sleeping, getting drunk, and running away together [Northampton Orders 1664-74, fol.25, p.31 - fol.31; McIlwaine, Minutes of the Council, 466-7; Hening, Statutes at Large, II:26, 117; Charles City County Orders 1687-95, 468; Westmoreland County Orders 1752-5, 41a]. Some of these first African slaves became free: Michael Gowen, a "negro" servant, was freed by the 18 January 1654 York County will of Christopher Stafford [DWO 3:16]. Francis Payne of Northampton County paid for his freedom about 1650 by purchasing three white servants for his master's use [DW 1645-51, 14]. Emanuell Cambow (Cumbo), "Negro," was granted 50 acres in James City County on 18 April 1667 [Patent Book 6:39]. John Harris "negro" was free in 1668 when he purchased 50 acres in York County [Deeds 1664-72, 327]. A number of African Americans living on the Eastern Shore gained their freedom in the seventeenth century. There were at least 33 taxable African Americans in Northampton County in the 1670s who were free, later became free, or had free children. They represented one third of the taxable African Americans in the county.(1) The Nickens and Weaver families came from Lancaster County where Black Dick (Richard Nickens), his wife Chris, and their children were freed in 1690 by the will of John Carter [Wills 1690-1709, 5]. Free African Americans were beginning to be assimilated into colonial Virginia society in the mid-seventeenth century. Many were the result of mixed race marriages: Francis Payne was married to a white woman named Amy by September 1656 when he gave her a mare by deed of jointure [DW 1655-68, fol. 19]. Elizabeth Key, a "Mulatto" woman, successfully sued for her freedom in Northumberland County in 1656, and married her white attorney, William Greensted [Record Book 1652-8, 66, 67, 85a, 85b]. Francis Skiper was married to Ann, an African American woman, before February 1667/8 when they sold land in Norfolk County [W&D E:1666-75; Orders 1666-75, 73]. Peter Beckett, a "Negro" slave taxable from 1671 to 1677 in Northampton County, Virginia, married Sarah Dawson, a white servant [OW 1674-79, 203; OW 1683-89, 59]. Hester Tate, an English woman servant in Westmoreland County, had several children by her husband James Tate, "a Negro slave to Mr. Patrick Spence," before 1690 [Orders 1690-98, 40-41]. As the percentage of African Americans increased, so did tension between free African Americans and slave holders. In 1666 Bastian Cane, "Negro," was punished by the Northampton County court for harboring, concealing, and trading with Francis Pigott's "Negro slave" [Orders 1664-74, fol.29]. And as more and more slaves replaced white servants, the Legislature passed a series of laws which designated slavery as the appropriate condition for African Americans: In 1670 the Virginia Assembly forbade free African Americans and Indians from owning white servants [Hening, Statutes at Large, II:280]. In 1691 the Assembly prohibited the manumission of slaves unless they were transported out of the colony. It also prohibited interracial marriages and ordered the illegitimate, mixed-race children of white women bound out for 30 years [Hening, Statutes at Large, III:86-87]. In 1705 the Assembly passed a law which all but eliminated the ability of slaves to earn their freedom by ordering that the farm stock of slaves shall be seized and sold by the church-wardens of the parish wherein such horses, cattle, or hogs shall be, and the profit thereof applied to the use of the poor of said parish [Hening, Statutes at Large, III:459-60]. In 1712 all fifteen members of the Anderson and Richards families were freed and given 640 acres in Norfolk County, Virginia, by the will of John Fulcher, creating such a stir that the Legislative Council on 5 March 1712/3 proposed that the Assembly provide a Law against such Manumission of Slaves, which in time by their increase and correspondence with other Slaves may endanger the peace of this Colony [McIlwaine, Executive Journals of the Council, III:332]. In an effort to "prevent their correspondence with other slaves" Fulcher's executor, Lewis Conner, by a deed dated 20 March 1712/3, swapped their land in Norfolk County with land on Welshes Creek in Chowan County, North Carolina [Chowan DB B-1:109]. In 1723 the Virginia Assembly prohibited the freeing of slaves except in cases where they had rendered some public service such as foiling a slave revolt. Also in 1723, the Assembly amended the 1705 taxation law to make female free African Americans and non-reservation Indians over the age of sixteen tithable [Hening, Statutes at Large, IV:132-3].(2) Despite the efforts of the legislature, white servant women continued to bear children by African American fathers through the late seventeenth century and well into the eighteenth century. From these genealogies, it appears that they were the primary source of the increase in the free African American population for this period. Over 200 families in this history descended from white women. Many of these women may have been the common-law wives of slaves since they had several mixed-race children. Fifty families descended from freed slaves, twenty-nine from Indians, and nineteen from white men who married or had children by free African American women. It is likely that the majority of the remaining families descended from white women since they first appear in court records in the mid-eighteenth century when slaves could not be freed without legislative approval, and there is no record of legislative approval for their emancipations. The law binding the children of white women by African Americans until the age of thirty-one applied to their daughters and granddaughters, so any "Mulatto" child bound until the age of thirty-one descended from a white woman. Table 1. Descendancy of Free African American Families in This Genealogy: Virginia and North Carolina White servant women 202 Freed slaves 50 Indians 29 White men 19 The replacement of white servants with African slaves, begun in earnest in 1660, continued for more than a century. African slaves had still not completely replaced white servants by 17 October 1773 when the jailer in Prince William County advertised in the Virginia Gazette that he had caught a runaway white servant man: Committed to Prince William gaol a certain William Rawlings, who says he is the property of Francis Smith of Chesterfield. The owner is desired to pay charges, and take him away. and he advertised in the same edition that he had jailed a runaway white servant woman: Committed to the gaol of Prince William a servant woman about 26 years of age, named Mary Richardson; has on a short printed cotton gown, and striped Virginia cloth petticoat [R 17Oc73:33].(5) Elizabeth Bartlett, an indentured servant from Accomack County, was punished in July 1716 for running away with her mistress' "Negro man named James" [Orders 1714-7, 28]. George Wallis, a white man, and "Negro Dick" were taken up as runaways in Westmoreland County in November 1752 [Orders 1752-5, 41a]. Racial contempt for free African Americans did not fully develop as long as there were white servants in similar circumstances. It was during this period, as late as the end of the eighteenth century, that free African Americans were accepted in some white communities. Many free African Americans originated in or moved to Surry County, Virginia, where their deeds, marriage bonds, and wills were recorded in the seventeenth and eighteenth century. They were the Banks, Blizzard, Byrd, Charity, Chavis, Cornish, Debrix, Jeffreys, Kersey, Peters, Scott, Sweat, Tann, Valentine, Walden, and Wilson families. Descriptions in the Surry County, Virginia, "Registry of Free Negroes" in the late 18th and early 19th century read: Armstead Peters a Mulatoe man, ...aged about 56 years, born free of a yellowish complexion... (6 October 1794). James Williams a Mulatto man, pretty dark complexion, born of free parents residents of this county, 35 years old ... (11 May 1797). Joseph Byrd son of Joseph and Nelly Byrd free Mulatto persons & residents of this county 20 years old, 5'5" high, bright complexion, short thick hair, straight & well made (27 September 1798). William Tan, a mulatto man and son of Jemima Tan, a white woman late of this county. He is of bright complexion, has straight black hair, pretty stout and straight made, aged 21 last September (3 December 1801) [Back of Guardian Accounts Book 1783-1804, nos. 1, 21, 35, 136]. Since so many free African Americans were light-skinned, many observers assume that they were the offspring of white slave owners who took advantage of their female slaves. Only three of the approximately four hundred families in this history was proven to descend from a white slave owner. They were the children of South Carolina planters: Collins, Holman, and Pendarvis. Like their fathers, they were wealthy slave owners who were accepted in white society. In 1782 Virginia relaxed its restrictions on manumission, and thereafter manumitted slaves contributed to the increase in the free African American population. By 1790 free African Americans were concentrated on the Eastern Shore of Virginia, the counties below the James River, and the northeastern part of North Carolina [Heads of Families - Virginia, 9]. This was a pattern of settlement similar to that of newly freed white servants. Land was available in Southside Virginia and in the northeastern part of North Carolina at prices former servants could afford [Morgan, American Slavery, 227-30]. Table 2. Number of free African Americans in Virginia and North Carolina and their percentage of the total free population in 1790 by county Virginia North Carolina Charles City 363 (14.8%) York 358 (14.5%) Northampton 464 (12.7%) Surry 368 (11.8%) Henrico 581 (9.4%) Nansemond 480 (9.2%) James City 146 (8.8%) Dinwiddie 561 (8.5%) Powhatan 211 (8.5%) Southampton 559 (8.1%) Greensville 212 (7.7%) Sussex 391 (7.6%) Accomack 721 (7.4%) Prince George 267 (7.3%) Isle of Wight 375 (7.3%) Lancaster 143 (6.0%) Hardy 411 (5.9%) Goochland 257 (5.8%) New Kent 148 (5.8%) Chesterfield 369 (5.5%) Mecklenburg 416 (5.2%) Northampton 458 (8.2%) Hertford 232 (6.6%) Halifax 443 (5.8%) Robeson 277 (5.8%) Bertie 378 (5.1%) Craven 337 (4.9%) Granville 315 (4.6%) Total Virginia 12,866 (2.8%) Total North Carolina 5,041 (1.7%) Descendants of families which had been free during the colonial period continued to comprise a major part of the free African American population due to natural increase. In 1810 the Going/ Gowen family, free since the mid-seventeenth century, headed forty "other free" households with 105 persons in Virginia, sixty-two persons in North Carolina, eleven in South Carolina, and ten in Louisiana; the Chavis family, free since the seventeenth century, headed forty-one households containing forty-six persons in Virginia, 159 in North Carolina, and twelve in South Carolina. Table 3. Number of Persons in the Households of Families who had Been Free During the Colonial Period - 1810 Census Family Name Virginia North Carolina Anderson 7 52 Archer 9 51 Artis(t) 86 38 Banks 54 28 Bass 21 80 Battles 25 Be(a)vans 26 Beverly 79 Bunda(y) 70 Charity 41 Chavis/ Chavers 46 159 Cousins 52 6 Cuffee 96 Cumbo 43 Day 46 13 Elliott 43 Fuller 28 3 Going/ Gowen 105 62 Haithcock 9 70 Hammons 95 Harman 37 Howell 37 James 69 Johns 36 Ligan/ Ligon 39 Locklear 76 Locus/ Lucas 100 25 Meekins 26 Moore 65 Nickens 64 6 Overton 58 Oxendine 32 Pin(n) 48 Reed 12 43 Revell 35 Rich 64 Richardson 58 Roberts 111 Sample 36 Sparrow 19 Valentine 55 7 Vena/ Venie 64 Walden 24 87 Weaver 64 37 Migration to North Carolina Several free African Americans voted in the North Carolina General Assembly elections in 1701 [Saunders, Colonial Records, I:903]. Jack Braveboy was living in Chowan County before 17 July 1716 when he was presented by the court: a negro, Coming into this Government with a woman and do live together as man and wife, it is ordered that the sd. Braveboy produce a Sufficient Certificate of their Marryage [Hoffman, Chowan Precinct North Carolina 1696 to 1723, 224]. In 1725 John Cotton was indicted for marrying a "Molatto Man to a White woman," and in 1726 the Rev. Mr. John Blacknall was fined fifty pounds for "joyning together in ... Matrimony Thomas Spencer and Martha paule a Molatto Woman" [Saunders, Colonial Records, II:591, 662]. Many of those who were free in Northampton County, Virginia, settled in Craven County, North Carolina. They were the Carter, Copes, Driggers, George, and Johnston families. They can be traced directly back to their seventeenth century Virginia ancestors. Those in the early eighteenth century lists of Northampton County, Virginia tithables who immigrated to North Carolina were the Allen and Roberts families. The descendants of Nicholas and Bungey Manuel, "negro slaves" freed by the 28 October 1718 Elizabeth City County, Virginia will of Edward Myhill, were in the Edgecombe, North Carolina Militia in the 1750s [Elizabeth City County Deeds, Wills 1715-21, 194-5; Clark, Colonial Soldiers of the South, 675]. James and Peter Black came to Craven County from Essex County, Virginia, where they had been free born. John Heath tried to sell them as slaves to William Handcock, but the Craven County court intervened on their behalf on 21 June 1745. Moll, Nell, Sue, Sall, and Will Dove, "Negroes," came to Craven County, North Carolina, from Maryland with Leonard Thomas who was trying to keep them as his slaves in September 1749, but William Smith travelled to Maryland and proved their claim that they were free born [Haun, Craven County Court Minutes, III:465; IV:11-12]. The family histories of over 80% of those counted as "all other free persons" in the 1790-1810 federal census for North Carolina indicate that they were descendants of African Americans who were free in Virginia during the colonial period. Free African American immigrants were of sufficient number in 1723 that the North Carolina General Assembly received complaints of great Numbers of Free Negroes, Mulattoes, and other persons of mixt Blood, that have lately removed themselves into this Government, and that several of them have intermarried with the white Inhabitants of this Province... [Clark, State Records, XXIII:106-7]. Relations With Whites While some North Carolina residents were complaining about the immigration of free African Americans, their white neighbors in Granville, Halifax, Bertie, Craven, Granville, Robeson and Hertford counties welcomed them. Their neighbors may have been accustomed to living among free African Americans in Virginia; they may have moved from Virginia in company with them; or perhaps they were drawn together by the adversities of the frontier. Neighbor depended heavily upon neighbor, and whites may have been more concerned with harsh living conditions than they were with their neighbors' color. The slave population on the frontier was much lower than in the settled areas of Virginia, so the presence of free African Americans would not have posed a threat to most settlers. And several of these free African Americans owned slaves of their own. However, land ownership was more likely the social equalizer for them and their white neighbors. The McKinnie family, originally from Isle of Wight County, Virginia, was one of the leading white families in the area around the Roanoke River. Barnaby McKinnie, member of the General Assembly from Edgecombe County in 1735, was witness to many of the early Bass, Bunch, Chavis, and Gibson deeds. John McKinnie called Cannon Cumbo his friend when he mentioned him in his 28 February 1753 Edgecombe County will. Other leading white settlers who sold them land adjoining theirs and witnessed their deeds were Richard Washington, William and Thomas Bryant, Richard Pace, and William Whitehead. Arthur Williams, member of the General Assembly for Bertie County in 1735, and John Castellaw, (brother?) of James Castellaw, a member of the Assembly from Bertie County, had mixed-race common-law wives, Elizabeth and Martha Butler [Saunders, Colonial Records, IV:115 and the Butler history]. On 9 November 1762 many of the leading residents of Halifax County petitioned the Assembly to repeal the discriminatory tax against free African Americans, and in May 1763 fifty-four of the leading citizens of Granville, Northampton, and Edgecombe Counties made a similar petition. They described their "Free Negro & Mulatto" neighbors as persons of Probity & good Demeanor (who) chearfully contribute towards the Discharge of every public Duty injoined them by Law. About ten years later a similar petition by seventy-five residents of Granville County included those of a few of the free African Americans of the county: Benjamin, Edward, and Reuben Bass, William and Gibea Chavis, Lawrence Pettiford, and Davie Mitchell (negro) [Saunders, Colonial Records, VI:902, 982; IX:96-97]. In March 1782 a Continental officer observed a scene in a local tavern at Williamsboro, North Carolina: The first thing saw on my Entrance was a Free Malatto and a White man seated on the Hearth, foot to foot, Playing all fours by firelight: a Dollar a Game [Journals of Enos Reeves, March 13, 1782, Manuscript Department, Duke University, cited by Crow, The Black Experience in Revolutionary North Carolina, 32]. By 1790 free African Americans represented 1.7% of the free population of North Carolina, concentrated in the counties of Northampton, Halifax, Bertie, Craven, Granville, Robeson, and Hertford where they were about 5% of the free population [Heads of Families - North Carolina, 9-10]. In these counties most African American families were landowners, and several did exceptionally well. Economic Condition and Race Relations Edward Carter was the fourth largest Dobbs County landowner with 23,292 acres in 1780 [L.P.46.1 in Journal of N.C. Genealogy XII:1664]. He was head of a Dobbs County household of 8 "other free," one white woman, and 20 slaves in 1790 [NC:137].(6) The Bunch, Chavis and Gibson families owned slaves and acquired over a thousand acres of land on both sides of the Roanoke River in present-day Northampton and Halifax counties, and the Chavis and Gowen families acquired over a thousand acres in Granville County. William Chavis, a "Negro" listed in the 8 October 1754 muster roll of Colonel William Eaton's Granville County Regiment, owned over a thousand acres of land, a lodging house frequented by whites, and eight taxable slaves [Clark, Colonial Soldiers of the South, 716]. His son Philip Chavis also owned over a thousand acres of land, travelled between Granville, Northampton, and Robeson Counties, and lived for a while in Craven County, South Carolina. Migration to South Carolina Some members of the Gibson family moved to South Carolina in 1731 where a member of the Commons House of Assembly complained that "several free colored men with their white wives had immigrated from Virginia." Governor Robert Johnson of South Carolina summoned Gideon Gibson and his family to explain their presence there and after meeting him and his family reported, I have had them before me in Council and upon Examination find that they are not Negroes nor Slaves but Free people, That the Father of them here is named Gideon Gibson and his Father was also free, have been informed by a person who has lived in Virginia that this Gibson has lived there Several Years in good Repute and by his papers that he has produced before me that his transactions there have been very regular, That he has for several years paid Taxes for two tracts of Land and had several Negroes of his own, That he is a Carpenter by Trade and is come hither for the support of his Family [Box 2, bundle: S.C., Minutes of House of Burgesses (1730-35), 9, Parish Transcripts, N.Y. Hist. Soc. by Jordan, White over Black, 172]. Like the early settlers of the North Carolina frontier Governor Johnson was more concerned with the Gibsons' social class than their race. Many of the free African Americans who were counted in the census for South Carolina from 1790 to 1810 originated in Virginia or North Carolina. They were: Bass, Berry, Biddie, Bonner, Bowman, Bradley, Braveboy, Bryan, Bugg, Bunch, Butler, Buzby, Carter, Chavis, Clark, Collins, Combest/ Cumbess, Cumbo, Demery, Driggers, Ferrell, Gallimore, Gibson, Gowen, Grooms, Hagan, Haithcock, Harmon, Hatcher, Hawley/ Holly, Hays, Hazell, Henderson, Hicks, Hilliard, Howard, Huelin, Hunt, Ivey, Jacobs, Jeffries, Jones, Kersey, Lamb, Locklear, Lowry, Lucas, Matthews, Mitcham, Mosely, Mumford, Oxendine, Pavey, Rawlinson, Reed, Rouse, Russell, Scott, Shoecraft, Shoemaker, Sweat, Tann, Turner, Valentine, Weaver, Webb, Wilson, and Winn. They represented many of the "free persons of Colour" of present-day Liberty and Marlborough counties, South Carolina, who petitioned the legislature to repeal the discriminatory tax against "free Negroes" on 20 April 1794: Richard Evins (Evans), Nathaniel Conbie (Cumbo), George Collins, William (his mark) Turner, Thomas Hulen, Spencer (his mark) Bolton, William (his mark) Swett, Solomon Bolton, James (his mark) Shewmak (Shoemaker), John (his mark) Turner, Junr., Solomon (his mark) Shewmk, Sampson (his mark) Shewmak, Thomas (his mark) Shewmake, Junr., Thomas (his mark) Shewmake, Senr., John (his mark) Shumake, James (his mark) Shumake, David Collins, Thomas Collins, John (his mark) Turner, Senr., Mildred (her mark) Turner, Grenelaper(?) (her mark) Turner, Catherine (her mark) Turner, Elias Hulon, Cudworth Oxendine, Archmack Oxendine, Dellie Gibson, and Drusilla Gibson. Others who signed the petition were Isaac Linagear, Isaac Mitchell, Jonathan Price, Nathan Price, G(?)reter (his mark) Colder, Moses (his mark) Colder, and George Mccloud. Stephen Gibson, Isaac Linegear, Jr., Jur.(?) Driggers, James Ivey, Joseph (his mark) Bass and Levi Gibson were considered white when they signed in support of the petition [South Carolina Department of Archives and History, General Assessment Petition, 1794, no. 216, frames 370-374, Free People of Color ST 1368, series no. 165015, item 216]. Few colonial South Carolina county court records have survived, so it is difficult to determine the origin of the other families. However, at least three families were the descendants of white slave owners who left slaves and plantations to their mixed-race children: Collins, Holman, and Pendarvis. James Pendarvis expanded his father's holdings more than fourfold to 4,710 acres and 151 slaves. John Holman, Jr., established a plantation with 57 slaves on the Santee River in Georgetown District and then returned to his homeland in Rio Pongo, West Africa to resume the slave trading he learned from his English father [Koger, Black Slaveowners, 104, 108-110, 112-121]. According to Koger, free Indians in Charleston were part of the free African American community. They married members of the free African American community and were members of the Brown Fellowship Society, an organization of "lighter skinned men" which maintained a cemetery, operated a school for the children of its members, and supported charity and social functions. Proof of descent from a free Indian allowed free African Americans to avoid the discriminatory state capitation tax [Koger, Black Slaveowners, 16-17; S.C. Dept. of Archives & History, Public Programs Document Packet No.1]. Free association of Indians and African Americans is also evident from their family genealogies. Rachel Garden, "a free Mustee," married Robert Baldwin, "a free Blackman," in Charleston on 5 September 1801. Discriminatory Taxation and Indentured Apprenticeship In mid-eighteenth century North Carolina we find wealthy mixed race families counted in some years by North Carolina tax assessors as "mulatto" and in other years as white. Jeremiah and Henry Bunch, Bertie County slave owners, were taxed in Jonathan Standley's 1764 Bertie County list as "free male Molattors" in 1764, but as whites in Standley's 1765 Bertie list, and again as "free Molatoes" in 1766 [CR 10.702.1]. Michael Going/ Gowen was taxed in Granville County as white in 1754 and was called "Michael Goin, Mulattoe" in 1759 [CR 44.701.19]. John Gibson, Gideon Gibson and Gibeon Chavis, all married the daughters of prosperous white farmers. Some members of the Gibson, Chavis, Bunch and Gowen families became resolutely white after several generations. While some free African Americans owned slaves and were accepted in white society, others married slaves and socialized with slaves. Hester Anderson, one of those freed in 1712 in Norfolk County, was the common-law wife of a slave. She was the ancestor of the Artis family of Southampton County, Virginia, and several North Carolina counties. James Revell of Cumberland County entrusted his executor with the task of making application to the legislature for his wife's freedom [WB C:21].(7) Abel Carter was suspected of aiding a runaway slave. The 14 November 1778 issue of the North Carolina Gazette of New Bern advertised a reward for a negro fellow named Smart ... Tis supposed he is harboured about Smith River by one Abel Carter, a free Negro, as he has been seen there several times [Fouts, NC Gazette of New Bern, I:83]. However, the majority were small farmers owning a few hundred acres who married other free African Americans. Their marriages can be identified from colonial wills and tax lists, and they were recorded in the county marriage bonds starting in the late eighteenth century. They suffered under the discriminatory North Carolina tax law enacted in 1749 which described taxables as all and every White Person, Male, of the Age of Sixteen Years, and upwards, all Negroes, Mulattoes, Mustees Male or Female, and all Persons of Mixt Blood, to the Fourth Generation, of the Age of Twelve Years, and upwards, and all white Persons intermarrying with any Negro, mulatto, or Mustee, or other Person of mixt Blood, ... shall be deemed Taxables... [Leary & Stirewalt, North Carolina Research, Genealogy and Local History, chapter 13]. Thus, free African American and Native American households can be identified by the taxation of their female family members over twelve years of age. Some light-skinned people would claim to be white to avoid this discriminatory tax, and they would be listed by the tax collector with the notation, "Refuses to list his wife" [Thomas and Michael Gowin in the 1761 list of John Pope, CR 44.701.19]. It was in the interest of the tax collector to classify those of doubtful ancestry as "Mulatto" since he received a portion of the tax. However, those with some political and economic influence like the Bass and Bunch families were often listed as white. In addition to the discriminatory tax, poor and orphaned African American children were bound out until the age of twenty-one by the county courts just like their poor white counterparts.(8) In July 1733 the General Assembly received complaints from "divers Inhabitants" that divers free People, Negroes, Molattoes residing in this Province were ... bound out until they come to 31 years contrary to the consent of the Parties bound out. The said comittee further report that they fear that divers Persons will desert the settlement of those parts ... The General Assembly ruled that those illegally bound should be released and the practice of binding out children to thirty-one years of age instead of twenty-one was to cease [Saunders, Colonial Records, III:556].(9) The children were bound as apprentices in various crafts. Some apprentices were bound "to learn the art, trade, and mystery of farming" which may simply have meant working as an unpaid field hand; others were trained as coopers, blacksmiths, cordwainers, or other useful occupations. The November 1774 Bertie County Court of Pleas and Quarter Sessions ordered eight-year-old Jemima Wiggins and ten-year-old Mary Beth Wiggins, "bastard Mulattos of Sarah Wiggins," bound to John Skinner. However, this order was reversed in the May 1775 Court session when Edward Wiggins, the children's father, convinced the court of the said Skinners ill & deceitful Behavior procuring sd Order... [Haun, Bertie County Court Minutes, IV:157]. The courts bound out the children of many free African American women because they were the common-law wives of slaves, but Doll Burnett argued against the binding of her daughter, Edith, in the 28 May 1777 Johnston County court: and the court taking the Conduct Character and Circumstances of the said Doll Burnet into consideration & finding no just reasons to apprehend that the said Edith would become a charge to this County, Ordered her to be returned to the care of her said Mother again [Haun, Johnston County Court Minutes, II:260]. In some instances the indenture laws virtually enslaved a person for life. George Cummins had the indenture of his white servant woman named Christian Finny extended by a year and her child bound for thirty-one years by order of the 7 December 1736 Carteret County court because she had a "Mallatto Bastard Child during her service." She may have been the common-law wife of a slave for she was charged with having another "Melato" born 10 July 1739 and another on 20 December 1743. When she applied to the court for her freedom on 9 June 1744, the court ruled that she serve for another five months to pay for the cost of the court suit against her. When she again applied for her freedom six months later, the court ruled that on checking the record she serve another year since she had a "Mullatto Child in the time of her servitude" [Minutes 1723-47, fol.33c, fol.58, 59b-c, 62d, 151-2]. Some unscrupulous masters treated their apprentices like slaves. On 21 September 1742 David Lewis brought John Russell, a six-year-old mixed-race boy, into Craven County court, requesting that he be bound to him and promising to Cause to be learned the sd Boy to Read & Write a Ledgable hand & teach him or cause to be taught the Shoemakers trade... However, Lewis "made a present of the said boy" to his brother, John Lewis, of Chowan County, and his brother sold the boy to Captain Hews of Suffolk County, Virginia [Haun, Craven County Court Minutes, III:328, 653]. Between 1759 and 1786 there were sixteen African American apprentices in Craven County who at the completion of their indentures had to petition the court for their freedom. The court ruled in the favor of the petitioners in every case [Minutes 1758-66, 1:22c; 1764-75, 1:50d; 1772-84, 1:49c, 58c-d, 59d, 61c; 2:4b, 34a-b, 49a, 79a; 1784-87, 1:5c, 11c, 33d; 2:26b].(10) Caleb Lockalier was bound apprentice to Stephen Kades who assigned him to Francis Kennaday, who assigned him to James Oneal, who assigned him to Thomas Hadley, who refused to release him from his indenture until ordered to do so by the 27 July 1786 Cumberland County court [Minutes 1784-7, Thursday, 27 July 1786]. John Harris, a white Hyde County carpenter, found guilty of begetting a bastard child by Mary Ba_row, a white spinster, was required by law to support her. However, in June 1756 when the child was about two months old, the court learned that the child was mixed race. Harris was compensated for his expense by binding the child, a "Molatto Named George," to him for twenty-one years [Haun, Hyde County Court Minutes, II:174].(11) Robert West, Sr., advertised in the North Carolina Gazette of New Bern on 13 March 1752 for Thomas Bowman as if he were a runaway slave: Ran away from the subscribers, on Roanoke River, a Negro fellow, named Thomas Boman, a very good blacksmith, near 6 feet high, he can read, write and cyper, Whoever will apprehend him shall be paid 12 Pistoles, besides what the law allows [Fouts, NC Gazette of New Bern, I:3]. Almost twenty years later Thomas Bowman was a taxable "free Molatto" in John Moore's household in the Bertie County tax list of 1771, 1772, and 1774 [CR 10.702.1, Box 13]. A South Carolinian advertised in the North Carolina Central and Fayetteville Gazette on 25 July 1795 for Nancy Oxendine, daughter of Charles Oxendine of Robeson County: $10 reward to deliver to the subscriber in Georgetown, a mustie servant woman named Nancy Oxendine, she is a stout wench, of a light complexion about 30 years old. It is supposed she has been ??els away by her brother and sister, the latter lives in Fayetteville [Fouts, Newspapers of Edenton, Fayetteville, & Hillsborough, 81]. We also find cases where children were willingly bound by their parents to neighbors, friends, and relatives. Lovey Bass bound her illegitimate child, Nathan, to her neighbor, George Anderson. George Anderson was probably the boy's father. He devised his land to Nathan and his farm animals to Lovey Bass but left his wife and children only a shilling each [Original 1771 Granville County will]. Other apprenticeships were simply a way for a person to acknowledge responsibility for a child's support. Mary Bibby, a "black" taxable, had a "base born" child named Fanny who was bound out to Amy Ingram in Bute County on 13 May 1772 [Warren County WB A:227]. However, Mary had been living in the Ingram household for at least ten years prior to this. She and a slave named Charles were "black" taxables in Jesse Ingram's household in Gideon Macon's list for Goodwin's District of Granville County in 1761 [CR 44.701.19], and she and Charles were taxables in the Ingram household in the Bute County tax list of William Person in 1771 [CR 015.70001]. Mary was Charles' common-law wife according to a 28 June 1893 letter from a Bibby descendant, Narcissa Rattley, to her children.(12) Some masters took the apprenticeships seriously. In Bertie County on 26 September 1768 seven-year-old Frederick James, "natural son of Ann James," was bound as an apprentice to John Norwood [CR 10.101.7]. And about fifty years later on 25 February 1817 we find Frederick James able to write his own Bertie County will in good handwriting [Original at N.C. Archives]. Sale Into Slavery Free African Americans were also in danger of having their children stolen and sold into slavery. In his Revolutionary War pension application on 7 March 1834 Drury Tann declared in Southampton County, Virginia court that he was stolen from his parents when a small boy by persons unknown to him, who were carrying him to sell him into Slavery, and had gotten with him and other stolen property as far as the Mountains on their way, that his parents made complaint to a Mr. Tanner Alford who was Then a magistrate in the county of Wake State of North Carolina to get me back from Those who had stolen me and he did pursue the Rogues & overtook Them at the mountains and took me from Them. An advertisement in the 10 April 1770 issue of the North Carolina Gazette of New Bern describes how the Driggers family was victimized in Craven County, North Carolina: broke into the house ... under the care of Ann Driggus, a free negro woman, two men in disguise, with marks on their faces, and clubs in their hands, beat and wounded her terribly and carried away four of her children [Fouts, NC Gazette of New Bern, I:65-6]. And John Scott, "freeborn negro," testified in Berkeley County, South Carolina, on 17 January 1754 that three men, Joseph Deevit, William Deevit, and Zachariah Martin entered by force, the house of his daughter, Amy Hawley, and carried her off, with her six children, and he thinks they are taking them north to sell as slaves. One of the children was recovered in Orange County, North Carolina, where the county court appointed Thomas Chavis to return the child to South Carolina on 12 March 1754 [Haun, Orange County Court Minutes, I:70-1]. Stealing free African Americans to sell them into slavery in another state was not a crime in North Carolina until 1779. However, free African Americans were afforded some protection under the law. In 1793 the murderer of John James of Northampton County was committed to jail according to the 20 March 1793 issue of the North Carolina Journal: Last night Harris Allen, who was committed for the murder of John James, a free mulatto, of Northampton County, made his escape from the gaol of this town. He is a remarkable tall man, and had on a short round jacket [Fouts, NC Journal, I:205]. Service in the Revolutionary War Many of the families in this history have at least one member who fought in the Revolutionary War. Several moved to South Carolina in the eighteenth century, and their names appear in the musters of the South Carolina Militia in the 1759 Cherokee Expedition [Clark, Colonial Soldiers of the South, 701, 883, 892, 894]. This service alongside whites established long lasting friendships. William Bryan, a Justice of the Peace for Johnston County, testified in court for Holiday Haithcock in support of his application for a Revolutionary War pension on 21 September 1834 explaining that in the times of our Revolutionary War free negroes and mulattoes mustered in the ranks with white men ... This affiant has frequently mustered in company with said free negroes and mulattoes ... That class of persons were equally liable to draft - and frequently volunteered in the public Service. And H. Thompson Venable wrote for him to the Commissioner of Pensions in Washington, the case of Holliday Hethcock of N.C. has been suspended merely because he was a free man of color. As we understand that several cases of this sort have been admitted, you will oblige us by having it admitted. Charles Roberson Kee, a leading citizen of Northampton County, testified that he knew Drury Walden for more than twenty years and that no man, not James Polk himself is of better moral character. The Free Negro Code Many free African American families sold their land in the early nineteenth century and headed west or remained in North Carolina as poor farm laborers. This was probably the consequence of a combination of deteriorating economic conditions and the restrictive "Free Negro Code" laws. Beginning in 1826 and continuing through the 1850s, North Carolina passed a series of restrictive laws termed the "Free Negro Code" by John Hope Franklin. Free African Americans lost the right to vote and were required to obtain a license to carry a gun. Tensions arising from Nat Turner's slave rebellion in nearby Southampton County, Virginia, played a major role in the passage of these laws.(13) It is also possible that moves against the African American population helped to divert the attention of poor whites from their worsening economic conditions in the 1830s. With the whole state literally up in arms over Nat Turner's rebellion, delegates to the General Assembly from Newbern called on the Assembly "setting forth the incompetency of free persons of color exercising the privilege of voting." Edmund B. Freeman, editor of the Roanoke Advocate, a Halifax County Weekly, boldly came to their support in the January 5, 1832 issue: It cannot be denied that free negroes, taken in the mass, are dissolute and abandoned -yet there are some individuals among them, sober, industrious and intelligent - many are good citizens; and that they are sometimes good voters we have the best proofs ... We do think that too much prejudice is excited against this class of our population... -but, at the same time, there is a class of white skinned citizens, equally low and abandoned, whose absence whould be little regretted [N.C. Archives, Microfilm HaRA-2]. If his attitude toward free African Americans was typical of white Halifax County residents, this would help to explain why free African Americans made up over 18% of the free population of the county in 1810 [NC:59]. The editor's backhanded compliment certainly compares well to the sentiments of Robeson County residents: The County of Robeson is cursed with a free-coloured population that migrated originally from the districts round about the Roanoke and Neuse Rivers. They are generally indolent, roguish, improvident, and dissipated [Franklin, Free Negro in North Carolina, 79 (MS in Legislative Papers for 1840-41); Schweninger, Race, Slavery, and Free Blacks, Series 1, 96]. or a northern paper quoted in the 5 January 1832 issue of the Roanoke Advocate complaining about "the evils arising from the immigration of free blacks" from other states into Pennsylvania: Overun by an influx of ignorant, indolent & depraved popullation most dangerous to the peace, rights & liberties of our citizens ... [N.C. Archives Microfilm HaRA-2, January 5, 1832]. John Hope Franklin recorded a famous case in which Elijah Newsom of Cumberland County was prosecuted for carrying his gun in the county [Franklin, Free Negro in North Carolina, 77 (State v. Newsom, 27 N.C., 183)]. However, Halifax County and Robeson County appear to have granted gun licenses freely. These licenses were recorded in the county court records from 1841 through 1846.(14) Many of those who left the state were enumerated in the 1840-1860 censuses of Indiana, Illinois, Ohio, and Michigan. Some went to Canada and a few to Haiti and Liberia. By 1857 when Henry Chavers (Chavis) emigrated to Liberia, life for free African Americans in North Carolina must have been truly oppressive. A letter written for him to his friend, Dr. Ellis Malone of Lewisburg in Franklin County, describing Liberia sounds like that of a recently liberated slave: this Land of Freedom ... a nation of free and happy Children of a hitherto downcast and oppressed Race ... now begin to enjoy life as a man should do ... did my Coloured Friends only know or could they have seen what already have seen they would not hesitate a moment to come to this Glorious Country [Ellis Malone Papers, NUCMC, 21-H, William R. Perkins Library, Duke University].(15) By 1870 many of those who remained behind were living in virtually the same condition as the freed slaves. In the 1870 census for Northampton County, North Carolina, the most common occupation listed for those who were free before 1800 was "farm laborer," the same occupation as the former slaves. Some married former slaves, and by the twentieth century they had no idea their ancestors had been free. Indian Ancestry Indians who adopted English customs became part of the free African American communities. There were no Indian communities separate and distinct from the free African American communities. In order to have established a separate Indian community, Indians would need to have had a strong preference for marriages and relationships with other Indians. However, no such preference is evident in the marriages of families with Indian ancestry. They appear to have made no differences between themselves and African Americans. There were no complete nuclear Indian families (both parents, plus children) among Indian slaves mentioned in seventeenth century Accomack and Northampton County records, while there were many among African slaves [Deal, Race and Class, 75]. did not find any nuclear Indian families in the eighteenth century Virginia and North Carolina tax lists.(16) Molly Cockran, a free Indian woman from Goochland County, had a child by a slave, "Negro Ben," in August 1765 [Jones, The Douglas Register, 348]. The children of Judith Cypress, an Indian woman from Surry County, Virginia, married African Americans. Both families became part of the free African American community. John Teague was an Indian tenant on land in Accomack County on 8 September 1725 [Orders 1724-31, 37]. His likely descendants were Robert Teague, a "Mulato" taxable on himself and a horse in Northampton County, Virginia, in 1787 [Schreiner-Yantis, 1787 Census, 1260] and Sacker Teague who registered as a "free Negro" in Accomack County: born July 1785, a light Black, 5 feet 10-1/2 Inches, Born free [Register of Free Negroes, no.3]. William Press, an Indian "born ... of the body of a free Negro called Priscilla," was fined for failing to list himself as a taxable in Northampton County, Virginia, in 1730 [Mihalyka, Loose Papers 1628-1731, 239]. The descendants of David Pinn, an Indian taxed in Benjamin George's Christ Church Parish, Lancaster County household in 1745 and 1746 were so much a part of the African American community by 1785 that a descendant left his estate to his wife with the proviso that she not marry a slave. Otherwise, it was to go to his sister who was married to a member of the free African American Nickens family [Library of Virginia Microfilm, Lancaster Tithables 1745-95, 1, 6; Northumberland County Wills and Administrations, 80]. It appears that some Indians with English surnames took their names from African American parents. Solomon Bartlett (born about 1727), a "free Mulatto" living in Bertie County in 1772, was probably the ancestor of Solomon and Fanny Bartlett (born about 1800) who were counted in the 1808 Nottoway Indian census [Executive Papers, June 21-July 22, 1808, Gov. William H. Cabell, box 154a, LVA]. John Dungee, a "free Mulatto," received thirty lashes in July 1755 when he was convicted of the attempted rape of a white woman in Brunswick County, Virginia [Orders 1753-6, 451, 498]. He was probably the grandfather of John Dungee, a Pamunkey Indian "descended from the aborigines of this dominion," who petitioned the Virginia Legislature to allow his wife, the daughter of a slave and her slaveowner, to remain in Virginia in 1825 [King William County Legislative Petition, 19 December 1825, LVA]. Francis Skiper was married to Ann, an African American woman, before 2 February 1667/8 when they sold 100 acres of land in Norfolk County [W&D E:28; Orders 1666-75, 73]. They may have been the ancestors of George Skiper, one of the Nottoway Indians who sold land in Southampton County on 2 February 1749 [DB 1:98]. The history of the Bass family, a mixed-race Nansemond and English family, illustrates the position of culturally English Indians Americans in Virginia and North Carolina. Their ancestor, John Bass of Norfolk County, Virginia, married an Indian woman in 1638. There is no evidence that the family ever adopted any Indian customs. John Bass' son William1 Bass purchased land in Norfolk County in 1729. William's son Edward Bass purchased land there in 1699 and had normal dealings in the county court [DB 6, no.2, fols. 36, 170, 255; Orders 1708-10, 124; 1710-17, 14, 136]. William1's daughter Mary Bass was the mistress of two white children who were bound to her by the Norfolk County court on 8 June 1714 [DB 6:189]. William1 Bass obtained a certificate from the Norfolk County court clerk in 1727: An Inquest p'taining to possession & use of Cleared & Swamplands ... William Bass, Senr. & his kinsmen ... are persons of English and Nansemun Indian descent with no Admixture of negor, Ethipopic blood. William1 Bass' son by the same name, William2 Bass, described as tall and swarthy, also obtained a certificate of Indian ancestry from the Norfolk County Clerk on 20 September 1742 [Bell, Bass Families of the South, 15]. His descendants were at least as much African as Indian since he married Sarah Lovina, the "Molatto" daughter of a "Negro Woman" named Jean Lovina, in 1729 [Norfolk WB 6:fol.96; DB 12:188; 18:41-2]. About seventy years later on 27 May 1797 their grandson obtained a certificate from the Norfolk County Clerk stating that he was of English and Indian descent and is not a Negroe nor yt a Mulattoe as by some falsely and malitiously stated. and that he was the son of Sarah Lovina, a vertious woman of Indian descent [Virginia State Archives Accession no.26371].(17) William2 Bass' brothers came to North Carolina in the early eighteenth century, and their descendants settled in Northampton, Bertie, and Granville Counties. Those who settled in Northampton and Bertie Counties prospered and were among the larger landowners in the county. They married whites and most were considered white after a few generations. The Granville branch of the family were relatively small landowners who married free African Americans and were considered African American after a few generations. One of the Granville County descendants, William Bass, was called "free negro" in an undated Granville County court presentation [CR 44.289.19]. Another William Bass was the foster son of a slave in Marlboro District, South Carolina. His extraordinary case illustrates both the extent which the family intermarried with African Americans and the degree of repression suffered by free African Americans in the mid-nineteenth century. On 14 December 1859 he petitioned the legislature to become the slave of Philip W. Pledger explaining that his position as a free person of color, a negro, is more degrading and involves more suffering in this State, than that of a slave ... he is preyed upon by every sharper with whom he comes in contact ... and is charged with and punished for every offence guilty or not, committed in the neighborhood ... and lives a thousand times harder, and in more destitution, than the slaves of many planters [Henry, Police Control of the Slave in South Carolina, 196-7 (Charleston Courier, 20 December 1859)].(18) Definition of "Mulatto" John Bunch, "a Mulatto," and Sarah Slayden, a white woman, petitioned the Council of Virginia to allow them to marry because the Minister of Blisland Parish (in New Kent and James City counties) had refused to marry them. The Attorney General was undecided whether the petition "came within the intent of the Law to prevent Negros and White Persons intermarrying" because he could not resolve "Whether the issue begotten on a White woman by a Mulatto man can properly be called a Mulatto, that name as conceive being only appropriated to the Child of a Negro man begotten upon a white woman or a white man upon a negro woman...[McIlwaine, Executive Journals of the Council, III:28, 31]. In October 1705 Virginia passed a law barring anyone convicted of a crime as well as "any negro, mulatto or Indian" from holding office and added, "for the clearing all manner of doubts which hereafter may happen to arise upon the construction of this act, or any other act, who shall be accounted a mulatto, Be it enacted and declared...That the child of an Indian and the child, grandchild, or great grandchild, of a negro shall be deemed, accounted, held and taken to be a mulatto" [Hening, The Statutes at Large, III:229-235]. This has been taken by some to mean that there was a community of people of mixed white and Indian ancestry in Virginia. However, no such community existed. The law was apparently enacted in response to the request of John Bunch, a "Mulatto," the son or grandson of an African American man, who petitoned the Council of Virginia on 16 August 1705 for permission to marry a white woman. In October 1785 Virginia passed a law specifically "declaring what persons shall be deemed mulattoes": every person of whose grandfathers or grandmothers any one is, or shall have been a negro, although all his other progenitors, except that descending from the negro, shall have been white, shall be deemed a mulatto, and so every person who shall have one-fourth or more of negro blood, shall, in like manner, be deemed a mulatto [Hening, The Statutes at Large, XII:184]. But regardless of the legal definition, the word "Mulatto" was most commonly used by the colonial county courts of Virginia and Maryland when they prosecuted over one thousand cases in which white women who had children by a slave of African descent were sold with their "Mulatto" children as servants. The few cases in which a woman had a child by an Indian were prosecuted under the same law as white bastardy for which the penalty was a fine or corporal punishment. Tri-racial, "Portuguese," and "Indian" Communities Some of the lighter-skinned descendants of these families formed their own distinct communities which have been the subject of anthropological research. Those in Robeson County, North Carolina, are called "Lumbee Indians," in Halifax and Warren counties: "Haliwa-Saponi," in South Carolina: "Brass Ankles" and "Turks," in Tennessee and Kentucky: "Melungeons" and "Portuguese," and in Ohio: "Carmel Indians." Several fantastic theories on their origin have been suggested. One is that they were from Raleigh's lost colony at Roanoke and another that they were an amalgamation of the Siouan-speaking tribes in North and South Carolina [Blu, The Lumbee Problem, 36-41]. Documents from a court case held in Johnson County, Tennessee in 1858 provide a detailed description of one such family. They illustrate the extent to which the family was accepted by the white community and the extent to which the family history was already clouded by myths in 1858. Joshua Perkins, born about 1732 in Accomack County, Virginia, was the "Mulatto" son of a white woman [Orders 1731-36, 133]. He owned land in Robeson County, North Carolina, in 1761, moved to Liberty County, South Carolina, and in 1785 moved to what later became Washington County, Tennessee [Bladen County DB 23:80, 121, 104-5, 424-5, 147-8; Philbeck, Bladen County Land Entries, no. 1210]. Along the way, succeeding generations of his family married light-skinned or white people. They owned a ferry, race horses, and an iron ore mine; ran the local school house, and were election officials. However, conditions had changed drastically just prior to the Civil War in 1858 when Jacob F. Perkins, great-grandson of Joshua Perkins, brought an unsuccessful suit against one of his neighbors in the Circuit Court of Johnson County for slander because he called him a "free Negro" [The Perkins File in the T.A.R. Nelson Papers in the Calvin M. McClung Collection at the East Tennessee Historical Center]. More than fifty witnesses made depositions or testified at the trial. Many of the deponents had known three generations of the family in North Carolina, South Carolina, or Tennessee. Sixteen of twenty-two elderly witnesses who had actually seen Joshua Perkins testified that he was a "Negro," describing him as a dark skinned man with sheeps wool and flat nose ... [Ibid., deposition of Nancy Lipps]. black man, hair nappy ... Some called Jacob (his son) a Portuguese and some a negro [Ibid., deposition of John Nave, 88 years old]. Knew old Jock (Joshua) in North Carolina on Peedee ... right black or nearly so. Hair kinky ... like a common negro [Ibid., deposition of Abner Duncan, 86 years old]. However, eighteen witnesses for Perkins testified that Joshua Perkins was something other than "Negro" - Portuguese or Indian.(19) They said little about his physical characteristics and those of his descendants. Instead, they argued that he could not have been a "Negro" and been so totally accepted by his community: dark skinned man ... resembled an Indian more than a negro. He was generally called a Portuguese. Living well ... Kept company with everybody. Kept race horses and John Watson rode them [Ibid., deposition of Thomas Cook, 75 years old]. mixed blooded and not white. His wife fair skinned ... They had the same privileges [Ibid., deposition of Catherine Roller, 80 years old]. Hair bushy & long - not kinky. Associated with white people ... Associated with ... the most respectable persons. Some would call them negroes and some Portuguese [Ibid., deposition of John J. Wilson, about 70 years old]. He was known of the Portuguese race ... Four of his sons served in the Revolution ... Jacob and George drafted against Indians ... they came from and kept a ferry in South Carolina [Ibid., deposition of Anna Graves, 77 years old]. They kept company with decent white people and had many visitors [Ibid., deposition of Elizabeth Cook, about 71]. I taught school at Perkins school house ... they were Portuguese ... associated white peoples, clerked at elections and voted and had all privileges [Ibid., deposition of David R. Kinnick, aged 77]. Some who testified in favor of the Perkins family had never seen Joshua Perkins and seemed to be genuinely confused about the family's ancestry: I was well acquainted with Jacob Perkins (a second generation Perkins). A yellow man - said to be Portuguese. They do not look like negroes. have been about his house a great deal and nursed for his wife. She was a little yellow and called the same race. Had blue eyes and black hair. Was visited by white folks [Ibid., deposition of Mary Wilson]. One of the deponents, seventy-seven-year-old Daniel Stout, explained very simply how people of African descent could have been treated well by their white neighbors: Never heard him called a negro. People in those days said nothing about such things [Ibid., deposition of Daniel Stout]. Many of these light-skinned communities were isolated from both the white and former slave populations after the Civil War. Mobile Hobson was the descendant of Ann Hobson, a white woman of Elizabeth City County, and a slave. He was a very old man when interviewed by the Virginia Writers Project which described him as "Grecian featured with skin as white as a white man's." He described events in Poquoson, Virginia, after the Civil War: We used to go to de white churches fo' de war; an' arter dey started schools dey say we was Injuns. Well, we was, too, partly. But we wasn't no Negroes. First dey say we couldn't go in de white church no more. Well, we stopped goin'. Den when dey start de schools, dey say we couldn't go to de white schoolhouse. Some wouldn't go to de colored schoolhouse, an' some would. My dad wouldn't let us go to school wid de Negroes, so we didn't git no schoolin. When it come to marryin' we was in a worse fix. Couldn't marry white an' we wasn't aimin to marry colored. Started in to marryin' each other an' we been marryin' close cousins ever since [WPA, The Negro in Virginia, 36]. (The foreword to the 1994 printing warns that a thicker dialect was added in some interviews). And a study in 1886 described these groups and their relations with the newly freed slaves: The line of demarcation between the Old and New "Ishy" is not only still plainly visible, but bids fair long to continue so. Associating but little with each other, intermarriage is not common. A free Negro who marries a freed one almost invariably loses caste and is disowned by his people. In their habits, manner, and dress, the free negroes still resemble, as they always did, the poorest class of whites much closer than they do the freedman [Dodge, "Free Negroes of North Carolina," Atlantic Monthly 57 (January 1886):20-30].(20) Mixed-race families from Virginia were among the earliest settlers of Bladen County, North Carolina, from which Robeson County was formed in 1787. They were described in a report to the colonial governor of North Carolina in 1754: 50 families a mixt Crew, a lawless People, possess the Lands without patent or paying quit rents; shot a Surveyor for coming to view vacant lands being inclosed in great swamps. ... No Indians...in the county [Saunders, Colonial Records, V:161]. The colonial tax lists for Bladen County listed the following mixed-race families as "Mulattoes" from 1768 to 1770: Braveboy, Carter, Chavis, Clark, Cox, Cumbo, Dimry, Doyal (Dial), Drake, Evans, Goin, Groom, Hammons, Hayes, Hunt, Ivey, James, Johnston, Jones, Kersey, Lamb, Locklear, Lowery, Overton, Oxendine, Perkins, Phillips, Russell, Skipper, Sweat, Sweeting, Walden, Wharton, Wilkins, and Wilson. Only one person was called an Indian: Thomas Britt [Byrd, William L., III, Bladen County Tax Lists, 1768-1774, I: 4-9, 14-17, 24-46, 50]. A complaint of 13 October 1773 listed "free Negors and Mullatus living upon the Kings land...Raitously Assembled together" in Bladen County: Captain James Ivey, Joseph Ivey, Ephraim Sweat, William Chavours Clark, Bengman Dees, William Sweat, George Sweat, William Groom, Senr, William Groom, Junr, Gidion Grant, Thomas Groom, James Frace, Isaac Vaun, Sol. Stableton, Edward Locklear, Tiely Locklear, Major Locklear, Recher Groom, and Ester Carsey [G.A. 73, Box 7]. Actually, most of these families were either granted or purchased land in Bladen County during the eighteenth century. John Groom entered 200 acres in 1748, John Locklear entered 100 acres in 1752, and Major Locklear was living on 100 acres in 1753 when a land entry was recorded for that land in the name of two white men. Thomas Ivey recorded a land entry for 150 acres in February 1754 and in December 1754 Robert Sweat was granted 150 acres which was sold by Philip Chavis in 1768. A representation from Bladen County to the House of Assembly on 18 December 1773 complained of the number of free negroes and mulattoes who infest that county and annoy its Inhabitants [Saunders, Colonial Records, IX:768]. And a white man named Jacob Alford petitioned on behalf of the inhabitants of the upper section of Bladen County that he and his neighbors lived in "Constant dread & Fear of Being Robbed and Murdered by a Set of Robbers and Horse Thiefs," mostly "mulattoes" who numbered about forty [Schweninger, Race, Slavery, and Free Blacks, Series 1, 58]. Winslow Driggers was a notorious leader of one of the outlaw, back-country communities in South Carolina that bordered Bladen County and which were said to consist of both white and mixed-race men. In the Fall of the year 1770 he escaped from jail in Savannah, Georgia, and returned to the area of the Little Peedee River in North and South Carolina where he continued his outlaw career. The following year a band of ex-Regulators captured him at his hideout near Drowning Creek and used the provisions of the Negro Act as an excuse to hang him on the spot [Brown, South Carolina Regulators, 29-31, 103; Saunders, Colonial Records of North Carolina, IX:725, 771]. Most of the families listed in the 1790 and 1800 Robeson County census as "other free" are traced in this history back to persons referred to as "Negroes" or "Mulattos" in Virginia or North Carolina. These are the Branch, Braveboy, Brooks, Carter, Chavis, Cumbo, Dunn, Evans, Gowen, Hammond, Hogg, Hunt, Jacobs, James, Johnston, Kersey, Locklear, Manuel, Newsom, Oxendine, Revell, Roberts, Sweat and Wilkins families. It appears from court records that free African Americans in Robeson County were at times accepted by the white population. They attended white schools and churches, voted, and mustered with whites. On 1 April 1805 the Robeson County court appointed James Lowery overseer of a road, a position usually reserved for whites [Minutes I:321]. However, they lost many of their rights with the passage of North Carolina's "Free Negro Codes" from about 1826 to 1850. Charles Oxendine was indicted by the Robeson County court for assault and battery and fined fifteen dollars. When he failed to pay his fine, the court ordered the sheriff to hire him out since he was a "free Negro." Oxendine appealed the ruling to the supreme court of North Carolina in 1837 on the basis that the law unconstitutionally discriminated against free persons of color. During the Civil War, two cousins of the Lowery family of Robeson County were murdered while absent from fortification duty. The white man suspected of their murder was himself murdered shortly afterwards. A few months later in March 1865 a grandson of James Lowery, Allen Lowery, and his son William were murdered by the White Home Guard on the suspicion they were aiding escaped Union prisoners. The following month Hector Oxendine was murdered on the suspicion he helped General Sherman when he marched through Robeson County. In response to these acts Henry Berry Lowery, a son of Allen Lowery, led a band of armed men who killed or drove from the county those who were involved in the murders. The band remained at large for nearly ten years despite the determined efforts of the White Home Guard, federal troops, and huge rewards for bounty hunters [Blu, The Lumbee Problem, 50-65]. The New York Herald sent journalist Alfred Townsend to the county to report on the band. He described the area where most of the former free persons of color were living as Scuffletown...The Mulatto Capital...spreads besides three or four miles on both sides of the (Rutherford Railway) track and is surrounded on three sides with swamps, a tract of several miles, covered at wide intervals with hills and log cabins of the rudest and simplest construction, sometimes a half dozen of these huts being proximate. The people have few or no horses, but often keep a kind of stunted ox to haul their short, rickety carts... and a little old lever-well of the crudest mechanism. The cabin is found built of hewn logs, morticed at the ends, the chinks stopped with mud, the chimney built against one gable on the outside of logs and clay, with sticks and clay above where it narrows to the smoke hole. There is beside the large chimney place, a half barrel, sawed off, to make lye from the wood ashes, and the other half of the barrel is seen to serve the uses of a washtub. The mongrel dog is always a feature of the establishment. The two or three acres of the lot are generally ploughed or planted in potatoes or maize...The bed is made on the floor, there are two or three stools; only one apartment comprising the whole establishment. Just such a place as the above is the house of Henry Berry Lowery, the outlaw chief, except that, being a carpenter he has nailed weather strips over the interstices, between the logs and made himself a sort of bedstead and some chairs. His cabin has two doors, opposite each other. The Scuffletowners go out to work as ditchers for the neighboring farmers who pay them magnanimous wages of $6 a month. The above picture while true of the majority of Scuffletowners, is not justly descriptive of all. The Oxendines are all well to do, or were before this bloody feud began, and the Lowerys were industrious carpenters, whose handiwork is seen at Lumberton, Shoe Heel and all round that region...The whites hated the settlement because it was a bad example to the negroes. But most people were Baptists or Methodists, and nearly all owned their own homesteads [Townsend, The Swamp Outlaws, 42-5]. He described Henry Berry Lowery as "a yellow fellow, Indian-looking...of mixed Tuscarora, mulatto, and white blood...has straight black hair, like an Indian...one of the handsomest mulattoes you ever saw." And stated that the Lowerys "and their blood relatives showed Indian traces while Scuffletown at large is mainly plain, unromantic mulatto." He described the predominantly-white county seat of Lumberton as wholly built of unpainted planks or logs which have become nearly black with weather stains. The streets are sandy and without pavements of either brick or wood [Townsend, The Swamp Outlaws, 39, 42-6]. Though started for the purpose of exacting revenge for the murders of members of the Lowery family, the band also demonstrated that the community could not be intimidated by whites. Much of the white community was in fear of the band, but their leader was quoted as saying, We don't kill anybody but the Ku Klux [Townsend, Swamp Outlaws, 26-7]. The end of the band came in 1874 with the death of Steve Lowery, but the establishment of a self defence force helped their community maintain some political power at a time when white aggression prevented many African Americans from exercising their political rights. After the Civil War the former free persons of color voted for the same party as the former slaves: Republican. This made for an almost equal division between the Democrats and the Republicans in Robeson County (and in North Carolina as a whole) [Blu, The Lumbee Problem, 20, 61, 73]. However, those who had been free before the Civil War objected to the arrangement whereby the schools were divided between white and "Colored" districts. Their settlements were included in twelve of Robeson County's "Colored" districts. In 1885 North Carolina passed a law sponsored by Hamilton McMillan, a Democrat from Robeson County, creating separate school districts for the former free persons of color of the county. McMillan invented the name "Croatan Indians" and theorized that they had descended from a friendly tribe of Indians on the Roanoke River in eastern North Carolina who had mixed with the whites in Sir Walter Raleigh's lost colony in 1587 [Blu, The Lumbee Problem, 62]. Twelve "Croatan Indian" districts were created from districts which had formerly been "Colored" [Minutes, County Board of Education, 1885-1911, 1-4]. This swung many of their votes to the Democrats. Thus, in the early part of the Jim Crow era, the Democrats solidified their position in the legislature and solved the problem of drawing racial lines in a county where they had been blurred. In 1900 when the former slaves were disenfranchised by Jim Crow laws and "Red Shirt" violence, the "Croatan Indians" lost much of their political influence since the Republicans were no longer a factor in politics. The 1885 law did not confer any benefits, just made a division that created three castes in Robeson County: white, Colored and "Croatan Indian." Later, there would be three sets of water fountains, seating areas, rest rooms, etc. [Blu, The Lumbee Problem, 23, 62-3]. The change of name from "mulattoes" to "Croatan Indians" did not change white attitudes toward them. Whites shortened the name to the pejorative "Crows." The name was changed to "Cherokee Indians of Robeson County" in 1913, "Siouan Indians of Lumber River" in 1934-1935, and they were recognized by the U.S. Congress as Lumbee Indians in 1956. The 1885 North Carolina bill changed the history of Indians in the Southeast. Anthropologist James Mooney included the Croatan Indians and other mixed-race communities in adjoining North and South Carolina counties in his studies of the Indian tribes of the Southeast in 1907, and Frank G. Speck travelled throughout the Southeast "discovering" lost tribes [Blu, The Lumbee Problem, 41]. Person County granted a group called "old issue negroes" their own separate school on 2 February 1887. It was discontinued about 1896 but reestablished on 4 January 1901: listed as "Mongolian" through 1906, "Cuban" from 6 April 1908 through 1911, and listed as for "the Indian race" in October 1912 [Person County School Board Minutes cited by G.C. Waldrep, III, personal communication, 20 April 2000]. Other invented North Carolina Indian tribes followed: the Sampson County Coharie Indians, Columbus County Waccamaw-Siouan Indians, and Halifax County Haliwa-Saponi Indians. Virginia recognized the former free-person-of-color community of Norfolk County as Nansemond Indians and the community in Amherst county as Monacan Indians. A study in 1920 described the group in Halifax County: Probably the largest group of free Negroes to be found in North Carolina was the exclusive "old issue" settlement known far and wide as the Meadows, near Ransom's Bridge on Fishing Creek in Halifax County. The group still bears the appellation "old issue" and are heartily detested by the well-to-do Negroes in the adjoining counties [Taylor, R. H., The Free Negro in North Carolina (James Sprunt Historical Publications) v. 17, no.1, p.23]. Indian Reservations It is also evident that most Indians living on Virginia reservations during the colonial and early national periods made little distinction between themselves and African Americans. In 1811 Thomas Jefferson described the remaining members of the Mattopony tribe as being "three or four men only and they have more Negro than Indian blood [Johnston, Race Relations in Virginia, 281]. A number of free African American families had joined the Pamunkey reservation by 1836 when they signed a Pamunkey petition to the governor: Isaac Miles, Jr. (one of the "headmen"), Anderson Holt, William Holt, Ben Holt, Archia Miles, Sylvanus Miles, Pleasant Miles, William Sweat, Abram Sweat and Allen Sweat [Rountree, Pocahontas's People, 344]. One hundred and forty-three whites in Prince William County, Virginia, petitioned the legislature in 1843 concerning the Pamunkey Tribe saying Now the Pamunkys form only a small remnant of the population, having so largely mingled with the negro race as to have obliterated all striking features of Indian extraction. Their land is now inhabited by two unincorporated bands of free mulattoes in the midst of a large slave holding community. The Pamunkey submitted a counter-petition in which they claimed that they were generally of at least half Indian extraction [LVA, Legislative Petitions, King William County, 1843, B-1207, B-1208, cited by Russell, Free Negro of Virginia, 129]. The Gingaskin Indians of Northampton County, Virginia, said to be as numerous as all other tribes in the county put together, numbered only thirty persons by 1769. In 1813 their descendants were described as a heterogeneous mixture of Indian, Negro, and white [Whitelaw, Virginia's Eastern Shore, 30, 284]. Their land was divided among the heads of families, and in 1828 the clerk of Northampton County court stated that their descendants were respectable free Negro landowners [Johnston, Race Relations in Virginia, 280-1]. The nearest thing to a census of the reservations is provided by the deeds by which Indians living on tribal lands sold or leased their land. The deeds were signed by the "chief men" (and women) of the tribe. The principal members of the Nottoway and Nansemond living in present-day Southampton County were: King Edmunds, James Harrison, Ned, Peter, Robert Scoller, Sam, Wanoke Robin, William Hines, Frank, Wanoke Robin, Jr., Cockarons Tom, and Cockarons Will (in 1735). Sam, Frank, Jack Will, John Turner, Wat Bailey, and George Skiper (in 1750). John Turner, and Celia Rogers (a Nansemond Indian) and Suky Turner (in 1795) [Surry County DB 8:550; Southampton County DB 1:98; 7:714]. Between 1734 and 1756 the Nottoway had been so reduced by "the want of the common necessaries of life, sickness, and other casualties" that the Virginia Legislature allowed them to sell a total of 18,000 acres of their land in Southampton County [Hening, Statutes at Large, IV:459; V:170; VI:211; VMHB V:339]. They used land sales and leases to support themselves. There were only six adults and eleven children in the census taken in 1808: adults: Littleton Scholar, Tom Turner, Jemmy Wineoak, Edy Turner, Nancy Turner, and Betsy Step children: Tom Step, Henry Turner, Alexander Rogers, John Woodson, Winny Woodson, Anny Woodson, Polly Woodson, Fanny Bartlett, Solomon Bartlett, Billy Woodson, and Jenny Woodson [Executive Papers June 21- July 22, 1808, Gov. William H. Cabell, Box 154a, LVA]. No adult Indian was married to or sharing a household with any other adult Indian [Roundtree, "The Termination and Dispersal of the Nottoway Indians of Virginia," VMHB 95:193-214]. A legislative petition from Southampton County in 1818 reported that Their husbands and wives are chiefly free negroes [Legislative Petition, Southampton County, December 16, 1818, LVA]. Some of the names of the Chowan Tribe were recorded in Chowan County deeds by which they sold their land on Bennett's Creek in 1734 in what was later Gates County. They were Charles Beasley, James Bennett, Thos Hoyter, Jeremiah Pushin, John Reading, John Robins, & Nuce Will [Chowan DB W-1, 215-216, 237-239, 247-253]. When the surviving members of the tribe sold the last 400 acres of their 11,360 acre patent in 1790, they were described as a parcel of Indian women, which has mixed with Negroes, and now there is several freemen and women of Mixed blood as aforesaid which has descended from the sd Indians[General Asembly Session Records, Nov-Dec 1790, Box 2; Gates County DB 2:273, 274; A-2:33]. About 300 Tuscarora men, women, and children were living on 40,000 acres in Bertie County between 1752 and 1761 [Saunders, Colonial Records, V:161-2, 320-1]. The tribe never gave up its Indian customs. Their numbers had been reduced to 260 in 1766 when they leased part of their land. 155 members of the tribe moved to the state of New York after the 1766 lease, and the remainder joined them in 1802 [Swanton, Indian Tribes of North America, 87]. Since they left the Southeast, it is difficult to determine the extent to which they mixed with the free African American population of Bertie County. Many of their names were recorded in the deeds of 1766 and 1777 by which they leased over 8,000 acres of the land in the southwest corner of Bertie County between the Roanoke River and Roquist Pocosin to the Attorney General: James Allen, Sarah Basket, Thomas Basket, William Basket, Betty Blount, Billy Blount, Sr., Billy Blount, Jr., Edward Blount, George Blount, Sarah Blount, Thomas Blount, Bille Blunt, Jr, Samuel Bridgers, William Cain, John Cain, Molly Cain, Wineoak Charles, Jr., Wineoak Charles, Sr., Bille Cornelius, Charles Cornelius, Isaac Cornelius, Billy Denis, Sarah Dennis, Billy George, Snipnose George, Watt Gibson, James Hicks, John Hicks, Sarah Hicks, Senicar Thomas Howell, Tom Jack, Capt. Joe, John Litewood, Isaac Miller, James Mitchell, Bille Mitchell, Bille Netof, Bille Owens, John Owens, Nane Owens, William Pugh, John Randel, Billy Roberts, Tom Roberts, Jr., John Rogers, Harry Samuel, John Senicar, Thomas Senicar, Ben Smith, John Smith, Molly Smith, Thomas Smith, Bille Sockey, William Taylor, Bridgers Thomas, Tom Thomas, Lewis Tuffdick, West Whitmel Tufdick, Whitmel Tuffdick, Isaac Whealer, James Wiggians, John Wiggins, Molly Wineoak and Bette Yollone [DB L-2:56; M:314-9]. The names of the Piscataway Indians living in Richmond County, Virginia were mentioned in a court case in September 1704: Young Toby, Long Tom, Jack the Fidler, Old Mr. Thomas, Bearded Jack, Jemmy, Harry Capoos, and Bearded Jack [Orders 1702-1704, 361]. Members of the Sapony in Orange County, Virginia, were mentioned in a court case in 1742-1743 in which they were charged with stealing a hog and burning the woods: Alex Machartion, John Bowling, Manissa, Caft Tom, Isaac Harry, Blind Tom, Foolish Jack, Charles Gibb, John Collins, and Little Jack [VMHB III:190]. The Cherokee lived in the mountainous regions of North Carolina and East Tennessee and had little contact with the colonists. Endnotes: 1. Tithable Heads of Household: Bastian Cane and his wife Grace, Emanuel Driggers, Basshaw Ferdinando, his wife Susan, and Hannah Carter, John Francisco Negro and Christian Francisco, William Harman and his wife Jane, Anthony Johnson, John Johnston (2), John Kinge, Philip Mongon and his wife, Francis Pane Negro, King Tony and his wife Sarah. Tithables in White Households: John Archer Negro, Peter Beckett Negro, Edward and Thomas Carter, Thomas, Frances, and Mary Driggus Negro, Peter and Joan George, Jane Guzell, Ann Harmon, Gabriel and Bab Jacob, and Daniel and Isabell Webb [Order Books 1657-64, p.103, fol.104, 176, 198; 1664-74, fol.14, 15, 19, 42, 54, pp. 15, 42, 54, 55; 1674-79, fol.114, p.191]. In the year 1677 there were 25 tithable free African Americans and 53 tithable slaves out of a total of 467 tithables [1674-79, 189-91]. 2. Female free African Americans were made tithable in 1668, but the 1705 law did not include them [Hening, Statutes at Large, III:258-9]. Norfolk County officials did not enforce the 1723 amendment until 1735-1736 when female members of the Anderson, Archer, Bass, Hall, Manley, and Price families were taxed [Wingo, Norfolk County Tithables, 1730-1750, 144, 157, 168, 183, 185, 190]. Surry County probably did not enforce the 1723 amendment until 21 November 1758 when the Surry County court presented thirteen free African Americans for not listing their wives as tithables. They were the Banks, Barkley, Barlow, Charity, Debrix, Eley, Peters, Simon, Tann, Walden, and Wilson families [Orders 1757-64, 135]. 3. Families descended from white women whose histories are included in this work include the Allen, Alvis, Ancel, Anderson, Armstrong, Arnold, Baker, Baltrip, Banks, Barber, Barnett, Bazden (2 children), Beckett, Bell, Bibbens, Bibby, Boon, Boyd, Britt, Brooks, Bryant, Bugg, Bunch, Bunday, Burke, Burkett, Burnett, Burrell, Buss, Butler, Byrd, Cassidy, Chambers, Clark, Collins, Combess, Conner, Cook (two families), Cooley, Copes, Cousins, Cunningham, Cuttillo, Davenport, Davis, Day, Dempsey, Dennis, Donathan, Driver, Duncan, Dungee, Dunn, Dunstan, Elliott, Ellis, Farrell, Finnie, Fletcher, Flora, Fortune, Gallimore, Grace, Graham, Grant, Grantum, Graves, Gray, Grayson, Gregory, Griffin, Grimes, Gwinn, Hall, Hamilton, Hammond, Harrison, Haws, Haynes, Heath, Hilliard, Hobson, Hodges, Hogg, Holt, Hood, Howard, Howell, Hubbard, Hughes, Kelly, Kent, King, Lamb, Lang, Lansford, Lawson, Lewis (two families), Lighty, Ligon, Locus/ Lucas, Lynch, McCarty, McCoy, McIntosh, Madden, Magee, Manly (two families), Martin, Mason, Matthews, Mays, Meade, Mills, Morgan, Morris, Murray, Murrow, Nicholas, Norris, Norman, Oliver, Overton, Oxendine, Palmer, Parsons, Perkins, Phillips, Pickett, Pierce, Powell, Price, Proctor, Pryor, Pursley, Range, Redman, Reed, Ridley, Roach, Roberts, Robinson, Rollins, Ross, Ruffs, Russell, Sample, Sampson, Saunders, Scott, Shepherd, Simmons, Simms, Simpson, Sorrell, Sparrow, Stephens, Stewart, Stringer, Swan, Symons, Tate, Thomas, Timber, Toney, Tootle, Toyer, Tyler, Tyner, Tyre, Venie/ Venners, Wallace, Warwick, Webb (two families), West, Whistler, White (two families), Wiggins, Williams, Wilson, Winn, Wise Wood, Wooten and Worrell families. Other white women who had mixed-race children were: - Jane Alexander in 1754 [Prince William County Orders 1754-5, 4, 131]. - Mary Ballard on 29 March 1708 [Northampton County Orders, Wills 1698-1710, 398]. - the mother of Joseph Barham in July 1744 [Charles City County Orders 1737-51 311], - Dorothy Bestick, Accomack County in 1687 [W&Co 1682-97, 119a] - Hannah Boughan in 1714 in Northumberland County [Orders 1713-19, 102]. - Ann Bradger in 1744 [Chamberlayne, Vestry Book of Stratton Major Parish, King & Queen County, 56] - Mary Breedlove in 1767 [Essex County Court Orders 1764-7, 415, 469]. - Sarah Bunbury in 1692 [Richmond County Orders 1692-94, 40] - the mother of Margaret Callahan in 1751 [Frederick County Orders 1751-3, 418]. - Elizabeth Cambridge in 1702 [Essex County Orders 1699-1702, 116] - Eleanor Caverner in 1724 [Richmond County Orders 1721-32, 158, 164, 208] - Elizabeth Chilmaid in 1706 [York DOW 13:19] - Margaret Chiswick in 1705 [Richmond County Orders 1704-8, 97]. - Mary Cicile (3 children) in 1702 [Richmond County Orders 1702-04, 157] - Hannah Clagg in 1695 [Princess Anne County Minutes 1691-1709, 81]. - Mary Collowhough in 1691 [Westmoreland Orders 1690-92, 24] - Elizabeth Crane in 1712 [Westmoreland Orders 1705-21, 203a] - Margaret Davison in 1748 [Frederick County Orders 1745-8, 501, 505] - Catherine Dennison in 1704 [Lancaster County Orders 1702-13, 107]. - Charlotte Deormond before 1769 [Rowan County Minutes 1766-9, 16 (abstract p. 194)]. - Mary Edgar in 1772 [Princess Anne County Minutes 1770-3, 369]. - Eleanor Fielding in 1753 [York County Judgments & Orders 1752-4, 232]. - Christian Finny in 1736 [Carteret County Minutes 1723-47, fol.33c] - Margaret Fitzgerald in 1703 [Richmond County Orders 1702-04, 274] - Isabel Forbess in 1761 and 1764 [Historic Dumfries, Records of Dettingen Parish, 114-5] - Sarah Gupton in 1737 [Richmond County Orders 1732-9, 556]. - Tamer Haislip in 1765 [Chesterfield County Orders 1765-7, 96] - Eliza Hamilton in 1758 [Norfolk Orders 1755-9, 209] - Mary Hanson in 1706 [York DOW 12:424] - Mary Hipsley in 1707 [Westmoreland County Orders 1705-21, 64, 69, 72] - Martha Hudman in 1760 [Prince William County Orders 1759-61, 223, 229, 230, 241] - Isabel Hutton in 1707 [Accomack County Orders 1703-9, 91a, 122] - Martha Inglish in 1768 [Isle of Wight County Orders 1764-8, 498] - Dorcas Johnston in 1758 [Caroline County Court Orers 1755-8, 347]. - Jane Kewmin in 1703 [Richmond County, Va. Orders 1702-04, 154] - Jane Knox in Augusta County in 1758 [Orders 1757-61, 177, 221, 285]. - Elizabeth Lane in 1691 (two children) [Surry Orders 1682-91, 771, 777] - Mary Lawhan in 1708 [Middlesex County Orders 1705-10, 177, 181]. - Mary Lawler on 30 July 1707 [Westmoreland County Orders 1705-21, 64] - Isabella Levingston in 1768 [Fairfax County Orders 1768-70, 70, 90]. - Bridget Lugrove in 1692 (two children) [Henrico County Orders 1678-93, 406, 419] - Mary Lynn (Robert Hitch) before 1710 [Westmoreland County Orders 1705-21, 144]. - Katherine Mackeel in 1699 [Princess Anne County Minutes 1691-1709, 211, 213, 224]. - Jane Morrison in 1768 and 1770 [Fairfax County Orders 1768-70, 70; 1770-2, 17, 145]. - Mary Ormes in 1697 [Middlesex County Orders 1694-1705, 182]. - Mary Overton in Orange County, Virginia, in 1750 [Orders 1747-54, 259, 261]. - Mary Owen in 1720 [Prince George County Orders 1714-20, 320] - Mary Phillips in 1694 [Northumberland Orders 1678-98, part 2, 673] - Ann Pittman in 1722 [Princess Ann County Orders 1717-28, 151] - the mother of Sarah, a "molotto" in York County in 1694 [OW 9:318]. - Eleanor Poor in 1704 [Lancaster County Orders 1702-13, 70]. - Mary Poore (two children) in 1686 [Surry Orders 1682-91, 529, 630] - Ann Pullen in 1688 [Henrico Orders 1678-93, 278] - Ann Pursley in December 1737 [Westmoreland County Orders 1731-39, 252a] - Eleanor Road in Augusta County in 1747 [Orders 1745-7, 288] - Mary Rowland in 1740 [Surry Deeds, Wills, 9:172] - Jane Scot in Augusta County in 1749 [Orders 1747-51, 112] - Ann Screws in 1748 [Isle of Wight County Orders 1746-52, 109] - Margaret Shaw in 1715 [Prince George County Orders 1714-20, 30], - Susanna Shelton in 1686 [Surry Orders 1682-91, 508] - Mary Sherredon in 1736 [Surry DW&c 1730-38, 569] - Tamer Smith served a six months prison term and paid a 10 pound fine in order to marry Major Hitchens, head of a Northampton County, Virginia household of 4 free tithables and 2 slaves in 1737 and 1744 [L.P. 1737, 1744; L.P. #24 (1738) by Deal, Race and Class, 216] - Mary Taggat in 1751 [Lunenburg Orders 2:474]. - Margaret Theloball in 1735 [Princess Ann County Orders 1728-37, 272] - Ann Tillett in January 1744/5 [Pasquotank County Court Minutes, 1737-53, 141] - Joan Tinkham in 1687 [Westmoreland County Orders 1675-89, 611]. - Ann Vasper in 1732 [Overwharton, Stafford County Register, 1724-74, 30] - Anne Verty in 1747 [Frederick County Orders 1745-8 354] - Mary Vincent in 1664 [Accomack County DW 1664-71, fol. 20] - Sarah Williamson in July 1716 [Saunders, Colonial Records of North Carolina, V:114]. - Catherine Wilson in 1723 [Northampton County, Virginia Orders 18:86]. - Ann Wimball in 1703 [York County DOW 12:80]. 4. Families descended from freed slaves include: Africa, Anderson, Archer, Artis, Black, Bowser, Cane, Carter, Charity, Churton, Cole, Cornish, Cuffee, Cumbo, Dove, Driggers, Drury, George, Gowen, Harmon, Harris, Jacobs, James, Jeffries, Johnson, Leviner, Lytle, Manuel, Mongom, Moore, Mordick, Newton, Nickens, Payne, Roberts, Sisco, and Tann families. Families descended from Indians who married into the free African American community include: Bass, Cockran, Cypress, Findley, Hatcher, Hatfield/ Hatter, Hiter, Jeffery, Jumper, Kinney, Lang, Lawrence, Logan, Month, Pinn, Press, Teague, Robins, and Vaughan. Families descended from white men who married free African American women include: Berry, Combs, Ivey, Lantern, Newsom, Norwood, Snelling, Skipper and Sweat. 5. The same advertiser in that edition clearly identified a runaway free African American, Reuben Dye, as a "Negro man." 6. In a most extraordinary move, on 13 February 1773 the Dobbs County court recommended to the General Assembly that Edward Carter's daughters be exempted from the discriminatory tax against female children of African Americans [Saunders, Colonial Records of North Carolina, IX:495]. 7. Another member of this family, Hiram Revels, first African American to be elected to the U.S. Senate, was born in Fayetteville, Cumberland County, North Carolina in 1822 [Encyclopedia Britannica, Ready Reference & Index VIII:538]. 8. North Carolina and Virginia enacted apprenticeship laws similar to those in England. In 1646 Virginia passed a law giving justices of the peace at their own discretion the right to bind out children of the poor "to avoyd sloath and idleness wherewith such children are easily corrupted, as also for the relief of such parents whose poverty extends not to give them breeding" [Hening, Statutes at Large, XXVII:336]. 9. Carteret County, however, continued the practice of binding mixed-race children until the age of thirty-one at least until 1759 [Minutes, 1747-64, 53]. This attitude of the court may explain why free African Americans made up only 0.3% of the free Carteret County population in 1790. Craven and Granville Counties, on the other hand, bound out free African American girls until the age of eighteen - the same as for white girls, and free African Americans made up almost 5% of the free population of these counties in 1790 (4.6 and 4.9% respectively) [Heads of families - North Carolina, 10; Craven Minutes 1764-66, 50d; 1779-84, 79a; 1784-86, 49a; 1786-87, 26b; Granville Minutes, 1792-95, 65, 92]. 10. The Craven County court also ruled in favor of three African Americans who were born free elsewhere but held in bondage in Craven County between 1770 and 1778 [Minutes 1764-75, 2:147b; 1772-84, 2:38d, 48b, 58c-d, 69a]. 11. George Barrow was head of a Hyde County household of 5 "other free" and a slave in 1800 [NC:363] and 9 "free colored" in 1820 [NC:248]. 12. Narcissa Ratley's letter is in the possession of Robert Jackson of Silver Springs, Maryland. 13. Free African Americans arrested in Southampton County after Nat Turner's Rebellion included Arnold Artist (Artis), Exum Artes, Berry Newsom, Thomas Haithcock, and Isham Turner. Artes, Haithcock, and Newsom were sent for further trial [Drewry, The Southampton County Insurrection, 195-6]. 14. "By petition signed by 5 or more of their respectable neighbors" the 18 August 1845 Halifax Court issued gun licenses to Lemuel Morgan, Aaron, Arthur and Gabriel Locklear, Matthew Jones, John Smith, Robert Mitchum, Fed Haithcock, Fed Wilkins, Alex Jones, David Reynolds, Julius Flood, Ambrose Hawkins, Simon Purnin, William Jones. The November 1841 Robeson County court issued licenses using the form, "Whereas ... a Colored man residing in this County by name ____ doth sustain a good moral Character therefore it is adjudged that the said ____ be permitted to bear fire armes ... & use the same as any other good Citizen of the Community." They were issued to David, Aaron, and Alexander Oxendine, Ishmael, Ethelred, Nelson, and Willis Roberts, David Scott, William Goings, Henry Sampson, Abraham Jones, George Morgan, Levi and Hector Locklear, and John Blanks. 15. Bell I. Wiley understandably mistook Chavers for a recently manumitted slave, including this letter in his book, Slaves No More (1980), University Press of Kentucky. 16. The slave population of some Virginia counties may have had a fair amount of Indian ancestry in the early eighteenth century. Daniel Jenifer's "negro Slave called old Daniel" had a child by his Indian slave, Nanny, before 15 April 1687 when Jenifer made his Accomack County will. Their child Annis was called a "mustie" young woman in a 9 December 1697 Accomack County court case [Orders 1697-1703, 8]. Mary Scarburgh's slave, Songo, had an Indian wife named Molo when Scarburgh made her 19 December 1691 Accomack County will [Orders 1682-97, 216, 228a]. count thirty-two Indian children brought to court to have their ages adjudged in Charles City County court between 1687 and 1695, a similar number in Henrico County between 1683 and 1687 and another thirty children in Henrico County between 1691 and 1712 [Charles City Orders 1687-95, 144, 180, 244, 263, 295, 314, 332, 349, 351, 353, 385, 409, 415, 421, 458, 461, 474, 482, 505, 507, 535; Henrico Orders 1678-93, 139-41, 146-7, 150, 157-8, 161, 163, 177, 210, 241, 391, 430; 1694-1701, 40, 71, 80, 82, 112, 117, 149, 169, 200, 210, 211, 213, 218, 229-31, 235, 237; 1707-9, 29; 1710-4, 134, 161]. The Henrico County court bound out as an apprentice "Joe a Mollatto the Son of Nan an Indian Woman" in November 1740 [Orders 1737-46, 128]. And "Tom a Mulatto or Mustee" petitioned the Henrico County court for his freedom in January 1737/8, testifying that he was the grandson of a white woman but was held as a slave by Alexander Trent [Orders 1737-46, 20]. In June 1722 "Peg a Mulattoe woman Servant ... whose mother was an Indian" was ordered by the Henrico County court to serve her master until the age of thirty years [Orders 1719-24, 182]. 17. Other free African American families (Anderson, Weaver, Perkins, Bright, Newton, and Price) were issued certificates of Nansemond Indian ancestry by the Norfolk Court on 15 and 20 July 1833 [Bell, Bass Families of the South, chapter on Nansemond Indian Ancestry of Some Bass Families, 1, 8]. 18. Philip Pledger may have been related to Morris Pledger, head of an Anson County, North Carolina household of 6 "other free" in 1800 [NC:203]. 19. The use of the term "Portuguese" for a mixed-race person accepted as white was used as early as October 1812 when the Marion District, South Carolina Court of Common Pleas ruled that Thomas Hagans did not have to pay the levy on "Free Negros" because he was Portuguese [NCGSJ IX:259]. Thomas was the son of Zachariah Hagins, a "Mulatto" bound out in Johnston County, North Carolina Court in October 1760 [Haun, Johnston County Court Minutes, I:46]. 20. "Old" and "new issue" were terms used to distinguish African Americans free before and after the Civil War. The term probably referred to the new monetary currency issued after the war. 21. The free African American residents of colonial Bladen County were the Chavis, Grooms, Ivey, Kersey, Locklear, and Sweat families, called "free Negors and Mullatus living upon the Kings Land" in "A List of the Mob Raitously Assembled together in Bladen Countey October 13th 1773" [G.A. 1773, Box 7]. 22. Thomas Lockery was identified as "Thomas Lockleer" in the 1780 Granville County tax assessments list. 23. Scuffletown was the term for the center of the Lumbee settlement. 24. Kinston Robins was one of the "sundry persons of Colour of Hertford County" who petitioned the General Assembly in 1822 to repeal the act which declared slaves to be competent witnesses against free African Americans [NCGSJ XI:252]. Go to Family Histories, Abel - Avery Notater for ESTHER IRENE WALLIN: Døpt 16.05.1920. de bodde Frankendalsgt. 17, Larvik når hun b. Faddere: Glaspuster Ragnvald Opperud and hustru Magna, Murmester Julius Wallin and Frk. Sofie Iversen. Hun døde av kreft. Dødsannonse Østlands-Posten den 13.06.1983. ch of LEELAND WHITTED and ESTHER WALLIN 266. i. NELLIE IRENE30 WHITTED b 28.05.1949, Fürth, Bayern, Tyskland.. 261. HERBERT CLARK29 HOOVER (LOU28 HENRY, FLORENCE IDA27 WEED, PHILOMELIA SOPHIA26 SCOBEY, NANCY M25 WALLACE, POLLY24 GOFFE, JOHN23, HANNAH22 GRIGGS, MARGARET21 BISHOP, HESTER20 COGSWELL, SUSANNA19 HAWKES, ANN18 BROWN, EDWARD17, b 04.08.1903 London Middlesex England, d09.07.1969 Pasadena Los Angeles Co California Usa
m MARGARET EVA WATSON. Hun b 28.03.1904 California Usa, d26.06.1982 Los Angeles Co California Usa. Notater for HERBERT CLARK HOOVER: United States Under Secretary of State  1954-1957 ch of HERBERT HOOVER and MARGARET WATSON 267. i. MARGARET ANN30 HOOVER b 17.03.1926, Boston Suffolk Co Massachusetts Usa; d. 14.02.2011, West Chester Chester Co PA 262. ALLAN HENRY29 HOOVER (LOU28 HENRY, FLORENCE IDA27 WEED, PHILOMELIA SOPHIA26 SCOBEY, NANCY M25 WALLACE, POLLY24 GOFFE, JOHN23, HANNAH22 GRIGGS, MARGARET21 BISHOP, HESTER20 COGSWELL, SUSANNA19 HAWKES, ANN18 BROWN, EDWARD17, b 17.07.1907 London Middlesex England, d04.11.1993 Portola Valley San Mateo Co California Usa
m MARGARET COBERLY. Hun b 07.03.1911 Tuscon Pina Co Arizona Usa, d29.09.2009 Portola Valley San Mateo Co California Usa. ch of ALLAN HOOVER and MARGARET COBERLY i. ALLAN HENRY30 HOOVER b 15.11.1938, Palo Alto Santa Clara Co California Usa. ii. ANDREW HOOVER b 09.11.1940, Palo Alto Santa Clara Co California Usa. iii. LOU HENRY HOOVER b 09.01.1943, Palo Alto Santa Clara Co California Usa.
to be integrated above
30 263. DUANE30 WHITTED (SAMUEL STACY29, SIMUEL J28, FRANCES27 MOORE, AARON26, BENJAMIN JOHN25, JOHN W24, MARGARET23 GOFFE, HANNAH22 GRIGGS, MARGARET21 BISHOP, HESTER20 COGSWELL, SUSANNA19 HAWKES, ANN18 BROWN, EDWARD17, b 1959 Fayetteville, Cumberland, North Carolina Usa
m DONNA. ch of DUANE WHITTED and DONNA 268. i. CYLINDA31 WHITTED. ii. LOYD WHITTED. 264. KEVIN S30 WHITTED (THELMAN ALLEN29, SIMUEL J28, FRANCES27 MOORE, AARON26, BENJAMIN JOHN25, JOHN W24, MARGARET23 GOFFE, HANNAH22 GRIGGS, MARGARET21 BISHOP, HESTER20 COGSWELL, SUSANNA19 HAWKES, ANN18 BROWN, EDWARD17, b 01.09.1955
m JODY WORMACK, dau of ACE WOMACK and THELMA MCCULLOUGH. Hun b Chicago Cook, Illinois United States. Notater for KEVIN S WHITTED: Kevin Whitted is a retired American basketball player and coach. He played in Europe after a successful career at University of Tenneseee. He attended the same High School as Michael Jordan at Wilmington Laney High School. The school retired his Jersey and can be found right beside Michael's jersey in the schools Gymnasium. Coaching career During the 2007-08 Premier Basketball League season Whitted coached the Wilmington Sea Dawgs.[1] They played in the East Division. They finished the regular season at 11-9 and tied for second in the division with the Reading Railers behind the Rochester Razorsharks. They made the playoffs and faced the Maryland Nighthawks in the first round but lost. On April 22, 2008, Kevin Whitted resigned as head coach of the Sea Dawgs On October 17, Dale Kuhl was named head coach. NBA D League On July 29, 2009 Whitted was named an assistant coach for the Springfield Armor.[ On October 22, 2012 Whitted was named interim coach for Southwest Tennessee Community College. On October 13, 2014 Kevin Whitted was named as the first coach of the Westchester Knicks.[ On March 30, 2015, the Knicks announced via Twitter that head coach Kevin Whitted was relieved of his duties and that assistant coach Craig Hodges would serve as the interim head coach for the final week of the 2014-15 season. References ch of KEVIN WHITTED and JODY WORMACK i. PHILLIP31 WHITTED. ii. ELIZABETH WHITTED. 265. LEELAND DAVID30 WHITTED (THELMAN ALLEN29, SIMUEL J28, FRANCES27 MOORE, AARON26, BENJAMIN JOHN25, JOHN W24, MARGARET23 GOFFE, HANNAH22 GRIGGS, MARGARET21 BISHOP, HESTER20 COGSWELL, SUSANNA19 HAWKES, ANN18 BROWN, EDWARD17, b 05.08.1958
m TANYA WILLIAMSON. Notater for LEELAND DAVID WHITTED: Professor of History/ Social Science/ Academic Advisor at SUNY Broome Community College Syracuse New York, Delstaten New York, USA ch of LEELAND WHITTED and TANYA WILLIAMSON i. AYDEN31 WHITTED b 12.04.2006, New York Syracuse Usa. 266. NELLIE IRENE30 WHITTED (LEELAND29, SIMUEL J28, FRANCES27 MOORE, AARON26, BENJAMIN JOHN25, JOHN W24, MARGARET23 GOFFE, HANNAH22 GRIGGS, MARGARET21 BISHOP, HESTER20 COGSWELL, SUSANNA19 HAWKES, ANN18 BROWN, EDWARD17, b 28.05.1949 Fürth, Bayern, Tyskland.. Hun møtte KAI ARNT JAKOBSEN 27.05.1965 Larvik kirkes sakresti Vestfold, son of SVERRE ERIKSEN and RIGMOR ANDERSEN. Han b 20.02.1946 Skien,Telemark Norway. Notater for NELLIE IRENE WHITTED: Døpt den Evangelisk Lutherske kirke Fürth Bayern.Far Amerikansk soldat .Har funnet et søskenbarn New York,og venter nå på hva som videre skjer. Min slekts historie på farsiden Pamlico From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Not to be confused with Pimlico. This article does not cite any references or sources. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. (June 2007) Pamlico Total population Extinct as a tribe Regions with significant populations North Carolina Languages Algonquian (historical) Religion Tribal religion (historical) Related ethnic groups Chowanoke, Machapunga The Pamlico (or Pomouik) were a Native American people of North Carolina. They spoke an Algonquian language also known as Pamlico or Carolina Algonquian. Contents [hide] 1 Geography 2 History 2.1 17th century history 2.2 18th century history 3 Culture 3.1 Ceremonies 4 See also 5 References Geography[edit] Pamlico The Pamlico Indians lived on the Pamlico River in North Carolina. Named after them were Pamlico Sound, the largest sound in North Carolina, and Pamlico County. They are one of the most southerly Algonquian tribes on the Atlantic seaboard, and the most southerly one for which scholars collected a vocabulary. History[edit] The Raleigh colonists referred to the Pamlico in 1585-86 by the name Pomoui. 17th century history[edit] The Arrival of the Englishmen in Virginia, 1607. In 1695, smallpox, called "A great Mortality", devastated the Pamlico and neighboring Algonquian communities and reduced their populations. In 1701 the explorer John Lawson noted their Algonquian language and vocabulary (Lawson, 1860). By 1710 the Pamlico people were so limited that they lived in a single small village. Algonquian village on the Pamlico River estuary By 1709 the total North Carolina Algonquian population was down to some 600 from at least several thousand at the time of English encounter. The Tuscarora War, 1711-1713, claimed more fatalities among the Algonquian allies than of the Tuscarora. In the late stages, the Tuscarora turned on some of their allies. They likely incorporated some of the Pamlico as slaves. By the end of the century, only a handful of Algonkians remained. With the decrease in numbers came the loss of tribal lands. Thus, the Weapemeoc Indians sold their lands on Albemarle Sound in 1660 and 1662 and started to move to the interior. By 1697 they complained against the encroachments of white settlers in their new location. The English assigned a reservation on Bennetts Creek to the Chawanokes (Chowan) before 1700; they reduced its sized from 12 to 6 square miles (16 km2) by 1707; the Chowanoke sold off land in 1713. After the Tuscarora War, the Machapunga also were assigned to a reservation. Other groups on the Pamlico Sound joined either the Machapunga or the Tuscarora. With growing white presence in eastern Carolina, more products of European origin were introduced to the Indians. Guns were regularly used instead of bows and arrows during the eighteenth century. Iron hatchets had likewise replaced wooden clubs. English clothes were also widely used by the Indians. The Roanoke chief had an English-style house built in 1654. Other practices persisted through the nineteenth century, including the women making baskets of rushes and silk grass. They decorated them with woven-in life motifs. 18th century history[edit] An aged Native man from Pomeiock, c. 1590 During the seventeenth century, the Chawanoke were in frequent and partly hostile contact with their Virginia Algonquian neighbors. Their traditional hostilities with the Iroquoian Tuscarora continued during that tribe's war with the whites, when they were actively engaged in expeditions against the hostiles. The Machapungas and other tribes of Pamlico Sound, however, changed their alliances: before 1700 they were still at war with the Tuscarora and Coree, but in 1711 they sided with them against the English. The Hatteras, Weapemeoc, Paspatank, and Poteskeit Indians were at that time the most acculturated groups; they remained on the side of the English. Except for the Tuscarora War, there was little open fighting between the Algonquian and English colonists. They had suffered more from epidemics of infectious diseases. Due to small numbers, trade was of little importance. Sale of strong liquors to the Indians was probably the greatest problem created by white traders around 1700. Alcohol was banned from Indian towns in 1703, but the prohibition was never strictly enforced. Little was done for Indian education, even though native languages were being replaced by English during the eighteenth century. A small number of Indians were baptized as Christians by Anglican ministers throughout the late seventeenth and the eighteenth centuries. Tribe members starting adopting English names (sometimes as second names to be used occasionally) shortly after 1700. Indian medicine men earned money by treating white settlers as well as their own people. Some settlers in North Carolina bought Indians as slaves, and others transported them to northern markets. The extent of Indian servitude and slavery are not accurately known. Culture[edit] The town of Pomeiock The Pamlico created distinctive dugout canoes, and traveled extensively. Pamlico artifacts have been found as far away as the North Atlantic. They ate corn, fish, and other agricultural vegetables and fruits. Besides hunting and agriculture, the coastal groups still relied much on fishing and shellfish gathering, drying the products for preservation on reed hurdles over an open fire or in the sun. Sturgeon was not used as a food by the Indians along the coast. Cattle raising is documented for the Paspatanks around 1700 (Lawson 1709). The Tuscarora War disturbed the economic balance of many of the Algonquian groups: the fields of the Machapunga and their allies were destroyed by the English. The Hatteras were prevented from planting by their enemies, and in 1714-1715 needed supplies from the colonial authorities to survive. Political organization with hereditary chiefdoms was still functioning around 1700. Chiefs' corpses were buried in the temples as before. Commoners could purchase the right of burial in the temple precinct with enough money. Shell beads (wampum) served as money, for example, to compensate victims of crimes. Ceremonies[edit] Marriage restrictions that prohibited marrying first cousins made it difficult to find mates within rapidly shrinking communities. Resulting marriages into other tribes certainly strengthened intertribal bonds. The huskenaw rite appears to have been used as an initiation for both boys and girls. It was held around Christmas and lasted for five or six weeks, during which the adolescents were separated in a special building outside the village. There were some colonial reports that two of 50 families among the Machapungas practiced male circumcision, but this was not typical of the Native Americans. See also[edit] Distribution of Carolina Algonquian speaking peoples Algonquian languages Algonquian peoples Wikimedia Commons has media related to Pamlico. Pamlico County, North Carolina Roanoke tribe Algonquian languages From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Algonquian Algonkian Geographic distribution: North America Linguistic classification: Algic Algonquian Proto-language: Proto-Algonquian Subdivisions: Plains Algonquian Central Algonquian Eastern Algonquian ISO 639-2 / 5: alg Glottolog: algo1256[1] {{{mapalt}}} Pre-contact distribution of Algonquian languages The Algonquian languages (/æl'g??kwi?n/ or /æl'g??ki?n/;[2] also Algonkian) are a subfamily of Native American languages which includes most of the languages in the Algic language family. The name of the Algonquian language family is distinguished from the orthographically similar Algonquin dialect of the indigenous Ojibwe language (Chippewa), which is a senior member of the Algonquian language family. The term "Algonquin" has been suggested to derive from the Maliseet word elakómkwik (pronounced [?læ'gomogwik]), "they are our relatives/allies".[3][4] A number of Algonquian languages, like many of the Iroquoian languages of the hereditary enemies of the Algonquian peoples, have already become extinct. Speakers of Algonquian languages stretch from the east coast of North America to the Rocky Mountains. The proto-language from which all of the languages of the family descend, Proto-Algonquian, was spoken around 2,500 to 3,000 years ago.[5] There is no scholarly consensus as to the territory where this language was spoken. Contents [hide] 1 Family division 1.1 Subgroups 2 Grammatical features 3 Vocabulary 4 See also 5 References 6 Bibliography 7 External links Family division[edit] Main articles: Plains Algonquian languages, Central Algonquian languages and Eastern Algonquian languages This subfamily of around 30 languages is divided into three groups according to geography: Plains, Central, and Eastern Algonquian. Only Eastern Algonquian constitutes a true genetic subgroup.[6] The languages are listed below, following the classifications of Goddard (1996) and Mithun (1999). Extinct languages are marked with †, and endangered languages are noted as such. For dialects and subdialects, consult the separate main articles for each of the three divisions. Plains 1. Blackfoot Arapahoan (including Nawathinehena (†), and Besawunena (†)) 2. Arapaho proper 3. Gros Ventre (†) 4. Cheyenne (Šahíyena) Central 5. Cree–Montagnais–Naskapi 6. Menominee (severely endangered) Ojibwe–Potawatomi 7. Ojibwe (Ocipwe?) 8. Potawatomi (nearly extinct) 9. Sauk–Fox–Kickapoo (severely endangered) 10. Shawnee (Ša?wano?ki) (severely endangered) 11. Miami–Illinois (†) Eastern 12. Mi'kmaq Abenaki 13. Western Abenaki (nearly extinct) 14. Eastern Abenaki (†) 15. Malecite–Passamaquoddy 16. Massachusett 17. Narragansett (†) 18. Mohegan–Pequttôog (†) 19. Quiripi-Naugatuck-Unquachog (†) 20. Mahican (†) Delawarean 21. Munsee (nearly extinct) 22. Unami (†) 23. Nanticoke–Piscataway (†) 24. Carolina Algonquian (†) 25. Powhatan (†) 26. Etchemin (†) (uncertain - See Eastern Algonquian languages) 27. Loup A (†) (probably Nipmuck (†), uncertain - See Eastern Algonquian languages) 28. Loup B (†) (uncertain - See Eastern Algonquian languages) 29. Shinnecock (†) (uncertain) Subgroups[edit] Eastern Algonquian is a true genetic subgrouping. The Plains Algonquian and the Central Algonquian groups are not genetic groupings but rather areal groupings. However, these areal groups often do share linguistic features, but the sharing is attributed to language contact.[7] Paul Proulx has argued that this traditional view is incorrect,[8][page needed] and that Central Algonquian (in which he includes the Plains Algonquian languages) is a genetic subgroup, with Eastern Algonquian consisting of several different subgroups. However, this classification scheme has failed to gain acceptance from other specialists in the Algonquian languages.[9] Instead, the commonly accepted subgrouping scheme is that proposed by Ives Goddard (1994). The essence of this proposal is that Proto-Algonquian originated with people to the west, perhaps in the Plateau region of Idaho and Oregon or the Rocky Mountain-Great Plains boundary of Montana, and then moved east, dropping off subgroups as people migrated. By this scenario, Blackfoot was the first language to branch off, which coincides well with its being the most divergent language of Algonquian. In west-to-east order, the subsequent branchings were: Arapaho-Gros Ventre, Cree-Montagnais, Menominee, and Cheyenne; then the core Great Lakes languages: (Ojibwe–Potawatomi, Shawnee, Sauk–Fox–Kickapoo, and Miami–Illinois); and finally, Proto-Eastern Algonquian. This historical reconstruction accords best with the observed levels of divergence within the family, whereby the most divergent languages are found furthest west (since they constitute the earliest branchings during eastern migration), and the shallowest subgroupings are found furthest to the east (Eastern Algonquian, and arguably Core Central). Goddard also points out that there is clear evidence for pre-historical contact between Eastern Algonquian and Cree-Montagnais, as well as between Cheyenne and Arapaho-Gros Ventre. There has long been especially extensive back-and-forth influence between Cree and Ojibwe.[10] It has been suggested that the 'Eastern Great Lakes' languages—what Goddard has called 'Core Central', e.g., Ojibwe–Potawatomi, Shawnee, Sauk–Fox–Kickapoo, and Miami-Illinois (but not Cree–Montagnais or Menominee), may also constitute their own genetic grouping within Algonquian. They share certain intriguing lexical and phonological innovations. But, this theory has not yet been fully fleshed out and is still considered conjectural. Algonquian is sometimes said to have included the extinct Beothuk language of Newfoundland, whose speakers were both in geographic proximity to Algonquian speakers and who share DNA in common with the Algonquian-speaking Mi'kmaq.[11][12] Linguistic evidence is scarce and poorly recorded however, and it is unlikely that reliable evidence of a connection can be found.[13] Grammatical features[edit] The Algonquian language family is known for its complex polysynthetic morphology and sophisticated verb system.[14] Statements that take many words to say in English can be expressed with a single word. Ex: (Menominee) paehtawaewesew "He is heard by higher powers" (paeht- 'hear', -awae- 'spirit', -wese- passivizer, -w third-person subject) or (Plains Cree) kastahikoyahk "it frightens us". These languages have been extensively studied by Leonard Bloomfield, Ives Goddard, and others. Algonquian nouns have an animate/inanimate contrast: some nouns are classed as animate, while all other nouns are inanimate.[14] There is ongoing debate over whether there is a semantic significance to the categorization of nouns as animate or inanimate, with scholars arguing for it as either a clearly semantic issue, or a purely syntactic issue, along with a variety of arguments in between. More structurally inclined linguistic scholars have argued that since there is no consistent semantic system for determining the animacy of a noun, that it must be a purely linguistic characterization. Anthropological linguists have conversely argued the strong connection between animacy and items viewed as having spiritual importance. Another important distinction involves the contrast between nouns marked as proximate and those marked as obviative. Proximate nouns are those deemed most central or important to the discourse, while obviative nouns are those less important to the discourse.[15] There are personal pronouns which distinguish three persons, two numbers (singular and plural), inclusive and exclusive first person plural, and proximate and obviative third persons. Verbs are divided into four classes: transitive verbs with an animate object (abbreviated "TA"), transitive verbs with an inanimate object ("TI"), intransitive verbs with an animate subject ("AI"), and intransitive verbs with an inanimate subject ("II").[15] Vocabulary[edit] See the lists of words in the Algonquian languages and the list of words of Algonquian origin at Wiktionary, the free dictionary and Wikipedia's sibling project. Loan words Main article: List of English words of Algonquian origin Because Algonquian languages were some of the first which Europeans came into contact in North America, the language family has given many words to English. Many eastern and midwestern U.S. states have names of Algonquian origin (Massachusetts, Connecticut, Illinois, Michigan, Wisconsin, etc.), as do many cities: Milwaukee, Chicago, et al. Ottawa, the capital of Canada, is named after an Algonquian nation, the Odawa people. For a more detailed treatment of geographical names in three Algonquian languages see the external link to the book by Trumbull. See also[edit] The word woman in the different Algonquian languages Algic languages (from Proto-Algic) Algonquian Bible Algonquian peoples Algonquin language - a similarly-named language which is a member of the Algonquian language family Central Algonquian languages Eastern Algonquian languages Plains Algonquian languages Indigenous languages of the Americas Leonard Bloomfield Ives Goddard H.C. Wolfart References[edit] Jump up ^ Notater for KAI ARNT JAKOBSEN: Adoptert av Karl Fredrik Jakobsen. ch of NELLIE WHITTED and KAI JAKOBSEN 269. i. SONJA31 JAKOBSEN b 29.05.1965, Larvik,Vestfold. 267. MARGARET ANN30 HOOVER (HERBERT CLARK29, LOU28 HENRY, FLORENCE IDA27 WEED, PHILOMELIA SOPHIA26 SCOBEY, NANCY M25 WALLACE, POLLY24 GOFFE, JOHN23, HANNAH22 GRIGGS, MARGARET21 BISHOP, HESTER20 COGSWELL, SUSANNA19 HAWKES, ANN18 BROWN, EDWARD17, b 17.03.1926 Boston Suffolk Co Massachusetts Usa, d 14.02.2011 West Chester Chester Co PA
m RICHARD TATUM BRIGHAM. Han b 07.11.1925 Newton Middlesex Co Massachusetts Usa, d30.11.2012 West Chester Chester Co PA ch of MARGARET HOOVER and RICHARD BRIGHAM i. ANN31 BRIGHAM b 13.02.1952, PA
m GLENN E THOMAS b 26.09.1952. ii. DOUGLAS W BRIGHAM b 15.02.1960, Wilmington New Castle Co Delaware Usa; d. 17.10.2012, Tinicum Delaware Co PA
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31 268. CYLINDA31 WHITTED (DUANE30, SAMUEL STACY29, SIMUEL J28, FRANCES27 MOORE, AARON26, BENJAMIN JOHN25, JOHN W24, MARGARET23 GOFFE, HANNAH22 GRIGGS, MARGARET21 BISHOP, HESTER20 COGSWELL, SUSANNA19 HAWKES, ANN18 BROWN, EDWARD17, ch of CYLINDA WHITTED i. NOBLE32 WHITTED. 269. SONJA31 JAKOBSEN (NELLIE IRENE30 WHITTED, LEELAND29, SIMUEL J28, FRANCES27 MOORE, AARON26, BENJAMIN JOHN25, JOHN W24, MARGARET23 GOFFE, HANNAH22 GRIGGS, MARGARET21 BISHOP, HESTER20 COGSWELL, SUSANNA19 HAWKES, ANN18 BROWN, EDWARD17, b 29.05.1965 Larvik,Vestfold.
m (1) ROGER NILSEN. Han b 1972.
m (2) JAN ROGER DYBWAD 28.05.1990 Larvik.. Han b 20.05.1964 Gravdal, Lofoten,Nordland. ch of SONJA JAKOBSEN and JAN DYBWAD i. CECILIE32 DYBWAD b 17.08.1985, Larvik,Vestfold. Notater for CECILIE DYBWAD: Konfirmert den 07.05.2000 Tanum kirke, Brunlanes. ii. PATRICK DYBWAD b 09.12.1988, Larvik,Vestfold. 270. iii. CAROLINE DYBWAD b 28.06.1991, Larvik,Vestfold.
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32 270. CAROLINE32 DYBWAD (SONJA31 JAKOBSEN, NELLIE IRENE30 WHITTED, LEELAND29, SIMUEL J28, FRANCES27 MOORE, AARON26, BENJAMIN JOHN25, JOHN W24, MARGARET23 GOFFE, HANNAH22 GRIGGS, MARGARET21 BISHOP, HESTER20 COGSWELL, SUSANNA19 HAWKES, ANN18 BROWN, EDWARD17, b 28.06.1991 Larvik,Vestfold.
m WILLIAM EJDERSTEDT. Han b 27.07.1993. ch of CAROLINE DYBWAD and WILLIAM EJDERSTEDT i. ERLE EJDERSTEDT b 15.08.2021, Oslo Norway.