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_ENWULF______________+ | _THINGFERTH__________| | | | |_____________________ | _OFFA of the Mercians_| | (.... - 0796) | | | _____________________ | | | | |_____________________| | | | |_____________________ | | |--ALFFLAD | (0750 - ....) | _____________________ | | | _____________________| | | | | | |_____________________ | | |______________________| | | _____________________ | | |_____________________| | |_____________________
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Mother: Elizabeth Rhodes KANNON |
__ | _(RESEARCH QUERY) BOTTS _| | | | |__ | _Thomas BOTTS II__________| | (1674 - 1742) m 1699 | | | __ | | | | |_________________________| | | | |__ | | |--Elizabeth BOTTS | (1701 - 1754) | __ | | | _________________________| | | | | | |__ | | |_Elizabeth Rhodes KANNON _| (1681 - 1751) m 1699 | | __ | | |_________________________| | |__
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Mother: Sarah THOMAS |
_Anthony Tscharner DEGRAFFENREID _+ | (1722 - 1794) m 1742 _Tscharner DEGRAFFENREID _| | (1752 - ....) | | |_Mary BAKER ______________________+ | (1725 - ....) m 1742 _Allen DEGRAFFENREID _| | (1764 - 1801) | | | __________________________________ | | | | |_Elizabeth ALLEN _________| | | | |__________________________________ | | |--Regina DEGRAFFENREID | | __________________________________ | | | _James THOMAS ____________| | | | | | |__________________________________ | | |_Sarah THOMAS ________| | | __________________________________ | | |_Susannah MABRY __________| | |__________________________________
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Mother: Oylmpia Charlotte de GOUGES |
Garnett was appointed adjutant general of the state troops of
Virginia, and allotted the task of organizing this heterogeneous
force into an army. Early in June he was commissioned
brigadier-general and given command of the Confederate troops
operating in northwestern Virginia.
When the Federal attack dislodged the Confederates from Rich
Mountain, Garnett was compelled to abandon Laurel Hill. He saved
his army, outnumbered more than six to one by McClellan's men,
by a most masterly retreat. In the heat of the retreat, Garnett
shouted: "They need a little lesson. They may get away if they
like". These were to be his last words. On July 13, 1861 General
Robert Selden Garnett was killed instantly while directing the
conduct of his rear guard after the sharp engagement at
Carrick's Ford, on Cheat River.
Garnett had the distinction of being the first general officer
to be killed in the Civil War. He was a brave and skilful
officer, of whom the South expected much, but who did not have
opportunity to fulfil the promise of his military training.
Confederate Brigadier General Robert Selden Garnett (1819 -
1861): Robert Selden Garnett was born on December 16, 1819 in
Essex City, Virginia. He was a graduate of the U.S. Military
Academy at West Point in 1841, standing 27th in his class of 52.
He served on the frontier, as a tactics instructor at West
Point, and Aid de Camp to Wool and Taylor in the Mexican War
where he received 2 brevets. He was then West Point commandant,
in Indian fighting, and was on a leave of absence in Europe when
the war began.
Returning, he resigned from the U.S. Army as a Major on April
30, 1861. He was then assigned to be Adjutant General of
Virginia State troops in the C.S.A. He was made Brig. Gen. on
June 6, 1861 to command in West Virginia. Near Carrick's Ford,
on July 13 1861, he became the first Southern officer and first
general on either side to be killed in action. In deference to
Garnett's heroism during the Mexican War, a Union honor guard
conveyed the body to his family under a truce flag. He was the
West Point classmate and cousin of Confederate General Richard
B. Garnett who was killed in action at Gettysburg.
Src: http://www.richmountain.org/garnett.htm.
CONFEDERATE FORCES BRIGADIER GENERAL ROBERT SELDEN GARNETT
1st Georgia Infantry Regiment
20th Virginia Infantry Regiment --- Major Nat Tyler
23rd Virginia Infantry Regiment --- Colonel William Booth
Taliaferro
25th Virginia Infantry Regiment --- Colonel J. M. Heck
Artillery --- Captain Julius A. de Lagnel (W)
Detachment, 1,300 men -- Lieutenant Colonel John Pegram
UNION FORCES MAJOR GENERAL GEORGE BRINTON McCLELLAN
Rosecrans Brigade – Brigadier General William Starke Rosecrans
19th Ohio Militia Infantry Regiment
3rd Indiana Infantry Regiment
10th Indiana Infantry Regiment
13th Indiana Infantry Regiment
Burdsal’s Cavalry
Hill’s Brigade – Brigadier General C. W. Hill
5th Ohio Militia Infantry Regiment --- Colonel Dunning
8th Ohio Militia Infantry Regiment --- Colonel Depuy
13th Ohio Militia Infantry Regiment --- Colonel W. S. Smith
15th Ohio Militia Infantry Regiment --- Colonel G. W. Andrews
16th Ohio Militia Infantry Regiment --- Colonel J. Irvine
18th Ohio Militia Infantry Regiment --- Colonel T. R. Stanley
Other Brigade Commanders:
Brigadier General Thomas A. Morris
Brigadier General C. W. Hill
Brigadier General Newton Schleich
Brigadier General William Starke Rosecrans
Colonel Robert L. McCook
Other Troops:
6th Indiana Infantry Regiment
7th Indiana Infantry Regiment --- Colonel Ebenezer Dumont
8th Indiana Infantry Regiment
9th Indiana Infantry Regiment
11th Indiana Infantry Regiment --- Colonel Lew Wallace
14th Indiana Infantry Regiment
15th Indiana Infantry Regiment
3rd Ohio Militia Infantry Regiment
4th Ohio Militia Infantry Regiment
6th Ohio Militia Infantry Regiment
7th Ohio Militia Infantry Regiment
10th Ohio Militia Infantry Regiment
12th Ohio Militia Infantry Regiment --- Colonel John W. Lowe
14th Ohio Militia Infantry Regiment
17th Ohio Militia Infantry Regiment
20th Ohio Militia Infantry Regiment
Burdsal's Ohio Dagroons
Barker's Illinois Cavalry
Howe's U.S. Artillery
Barnett's Ohio Light Artillery
Loomis's Michigan Battery
Daum's Virginia Battery
Src:
http://www.fortunecity.com/victorian/pottery/1080/rich_mountain_w
va_11jul61.htm.
The Constitutional Convention of 1849 adopted a "Great Seal of
the State of California." The seal was designed by Major Robert
Selden Garnett of the United States Army, and presented to the
convention by Caleb Lyon, one of the clerks of the convention.
The explanation accompanying the seal, as read to the convention
on October 2, 1849, is as follows:
"Around the bevel of the ring are represented thirty-one stars
being the number of states of which the union will consist upon
the admission of California.
"The foreground figure represents the Goddess Minerva having
sprung full grown from the brain of Jupiter. She is introduced
as a type of the political birth of the State of California
without having gone through the probation of a Territory. At her
feet crouches a grizzly bear feeding upon clusters from a grape
vine emblematic of the peculiar characteristics of the country.
A miner is engaged with a rocker and bowl at his side,
illustrating the golden wealth of the Sacramento upon whose
waters are seen shipping typical of commercial greatness and the
Snow-clad peaks of the Sierra Nevada make up the background
while above is the Greek motto "Eureka" (I have found it)
applying either to the principle involved in the admission of
the State, or the success of the miner at work."
An amendment adding the words, "The Great Seal of the State of
California," to the design was adopted on October 11, 1849.
This seal, as designed and submitted to the convention, with
some slight changes, has been made the official State Seal by
statue and is called "The Great Seal of the State of
California."
The design of the Great Seal of the State shall correspond
substantially with the above representation.
The Great Seal is located in the office of the Secretary of
State, where its impression is affixed to official state
documents.
Any person who maliciously or for commercial purposes uses or
allows to be used any reproduction or facsimile of the Great
Seal or the seals of the Senate or Assembly of the State of
California in any manner whatsoever is guilty of a misdemeanor.
History and Seal courtesy of the Office of the Secretary of
State.
In 1848 he was transferred to the 7th Infantry and fought in
Florida in the Seminole uprisings, served on a national board of
proper military dress in Washington D. C., and served on
frontier duty at Corpus Christi. In 1851, he was promoted again
to Captain of the 7th Infantry and served at Ringold Barracks,
Fort Monroe, and perhaps his most important position before his
Civil War service as Commandant of Cadets at West Point under
General Lee's direction from November 1852 to July 1854. After
briefly being named a Captain of the 1st Cavalry in 1855, he was
quickly promoted to his final commission before the Civil War,
as Major of the 9th Infantry on March 27, 1855. In 1855 he was
commissioned major and sent to the Northwest, where he commanded
the Puget Sound and Yakima expeditions, and remained on duty
there until 1858. In this capacity, he served throughout
Washington State mostly at Fort Simcoe. He distinguished himself
in operations against the Indians in Washington Territory from
1856 to 1858.
From 1858 to 1861 he requested and was granted a leave of
absence to travel to Europe and study military tactics in the
Crimea. Returning from abroad when the Civil War broke out, he
was torn between his loyalty to "the old army" and the rising
support for independence in the South. Robert Garnett resigned
his United States military service on April 30, 1861 and offered
his services to Virginia and the Confederacy. Although he parted
company from the federal forces, his past promotions and
gallantry in the Old Army did not go unnoticed.
On the Confederate side of the approaching great battle between
North and South, Garnett was appointed adjutant general of the
state troops of Virginia, and allotted the task of organising
this heterogeneous force into an army. Early in June he was
commissioned brigadier-general and given command of the
Confederate troops operating in northwestern Virginia.
Circumstances were against him from the start of his campaign.
Sentiment in that part of the state was against the Confederacy;
he lacked cavalry and guns, and had serious difficulty obtaining
supplies. He saw that his little army could not hope to
accomplish much against the overwhelming enemy forces; but,
undaunted, he established headquarters at Laurel Hill,
entrenching half of his troops there and half at Rich Mountain
under Pegram. When the Federal attack dislodged the Confederates
from Rich Mountain, Garnett was compelled to abandon Laurel
Hill. He saved his army, outnumbered more than six to one by
McClellan's men, by a most masterly retreat. In the heat of the
retreat, Garnett shouted: "They need a little lesson…they may
get away if they like…". These were to be his last words. On
July 13, 1861 General Robert Selden Garnett was killed instantly
while directing the conduct of his rear guard after the sharp
engagement at Carrick's Ford, on Cheat River. Garnett had the
distinction of being the first general officer to be killed in
the Civil War. He was a brave and skilful officer, of whom the
South expected much, but who did not have opportunity to fulfil
the promise of his military training. SOURCES: The Harper
Encyclopaedia of Military Biography, Trevor N. Dupuy, Curt
Johnson and David L. Bongard editors. Edison New Jersey, 1992.
Page 274; genealogy of the family of James Mercer Garnett of
Virginia; Official Records of the Army, 1 ser., vol. II; G.W.
Cullum, Biog. Reg. (3rd edition, 1891); C.A. Evans, editor,
Confederate Military History (1899), vol. III; H.M. Price and
C.T. Allen, Rich Mountain in 1861; notes for a masters thesis at
Bowling Green State University written by Matthew W. Burton, The
River of Blood and the Valley of Death: The Lives of Two Cousins
for the Cause, Robert Selden Garnett and Richard Brooke Garnett,
C.S.A.
_James GARNETT of "Mount Pleasant"_______________+ | (1692 - 1765) m 1734 _Muscoe GARNETT ______| | (1736 - ....) | | |_Elizabeth MUSCOE _______________________________+ | (1690 - 1736) m 1734 _Robert Selden GARNETT Sr. of "Champlain"_| | (1789 - 1840) m 1812 | | | _John of Marlborough MERCER Esq. "the Immigrant"_+ | | | (1704 - 1768) m 1725 | |_Grace Fenton MERCER _| | (1740 - ....) | | |_Catherine MASON ________________________________+ | (1707 - 1750) m 1725 | |--Robert Selden GARNETT Jr. C.S.A. | (1819 - 1861) | _________________________________________________ | | | ______________________| | | | | | |_________________________________________________ | | |_Oylmpia Charlotte de GOUGES _____________| (1796 - 1856) m 1812 | | _________________________________________________ | | |______________________| | |_________________________________________________
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Mother: Mary TRUEMAN |
Defendant Lewis Rawlings; James Estis; John Purnell; Frances
Purnell; James Hayes; Mary Jane Hayes; Andrew Estis; Littleton
Estis; Henson Boswell; William Boswell; John Estis; Fanny Estis;
Sarah Ann Boswell; William A. Miles; Polly Miles; Hiram Boswell;
George W. Estis; James Shy; Jenny L. Shy; James Etherington;
Lucy Etherington; Thomas J. Estis; Joel S. Estis; John M. Estis;
Nancy Gordon; Ab. Purnell; Frances M. Purnell; Joel Lewis; David
Lewis; Joseph Willoughby; Susan Willoughby; Dorcas Johnston;
Frances Johnston; Polly Taylor; Elijah Robbins; Benjamin Lewis;
William T. Lewis; John. Pendleton; Huldah Pendleton; George
Combs; Nancy Combs; Martha Combs
Deponent / Affiant Mrs. Elizabeth Thornton; Robert Hackney; John
Acors (80); William T. Willoughby (65); Ira E. Lipscomb; James
R. Holladay; William Buchannan; James Brooks; James Mills; David
Bronaugh (84); Henry Willoughby; Phebe Wheeler (about 70); James
S. Willoughby (75 or 76)
Marriage John T. Pendleton -mr- Huldah Lewis, daughter of
Tureman Lewis
Marriage Elijah Robbins -mr- Sally Lewis, daughter of Tureman
Lewis
Marriage William Johnston -mr- Frances Lewis, daughter of
Tureman Lewis
Marriage George Taylor -mr- Polly Lewis, daughter of Tureman
Lewis
Marriage Aquilla Johnston -mr- Dorcas Lewis, daughter of Tureman
Lewis
Family James Lewis & Benjamin T. Lewis, sons of Tureman Lewis
Family Molly Lewis, half blood sister to Tureman Lewis, Joel
Lewis, David Lewis & Susan Lewis
Administrative Information
Record title Johnston vs Rawlings
Year recorded 1853
Collection CR-CI-H
Record ID 157-24
End Notes
Preserved by City of Fredericksburg
Processed by Margaret Anne Crickman
Extracted by Barry L. McGhee
Extracted on 9/5/2002
When ordering a copy of this record please include all of the
Administrative Information.
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1 Tureman Lewis b: 1755 + Margaret Polly Davidson Married: 1780
2 James Lewis
2 Benjamin T Lewis
2 Dorcus Lewis b: ABT. 1780 + Aquilla Johnston b: ABT. 1780
2 Susan Lewis b: ABT. 1775 + James S. Willoughby b: 1775 +
Joseph Willoubouby
2 Frances Lewis b: ABT. 1775
2 David Lewis
2 Tureman Lewis b: ABT. 1775
2 Hudula Lewis + John T. Pendleton
_John IV "Councillor" LEWIS __+ | (1669 - 1725) m 1685 _David LEWIS I_______| | (1695 - 1779) m 1717| | |_Elizabeth (Isabelle) WARNER _+ | (1672 - 1719) m 1685 _Joel LEWIS Sr.______| | (1730 - 1813) | | | _William A. TERRELL Sr._______+ | | | (1660 - 1743) m 1685 | |_Anne TERRELL _______| | (1695 - 1734) m 1717| | |_Susanna WATERS ______________+ | (1667 - 1734) m 1685 | |--Trueman LEWIS | (1755 - ....) | ______________________________ | | | _____________________| | | | | | |______________________________ | | |_Mary TRUEMAN _______| (1733 - ....) | | ______________________________ | | |_____________________| | |______________________________
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Mother: JEANNE de BEAUVIOR |
_WALRAM IV (Limburg) de LUXEMBURG Count of Luxemburg_ | (1180 - 1226) m 1214 _HENRY III "le Blondel" de LUXEMBURG of Luxembourg_| | (1217 - 1281) m 1240 | | |_ERMESINDE NAMUR Countess of Luxemburg_______________ | (1186 - 1247) m 1214 _WALRAM de LUXEMBURG _| | (1244 - 1288) | | | _HENRY II von BAR of Bar_____________________________ | | | (1200 - ....) | |_MARGARET von BAR of Bar___________________________| | (1220 - 1275) m 1240 | | |_PHILIPPA de DREUX __________________________________+ | (1200 - 1240) | |--WALRAM de LUXEMBURG | (1280 - 1353) | _____________________________________________________ | | | _JOHN BEAUVIOR of Luxemburg________________________| | | (1220 - ....) | | | |_____________________________________________________ | | |_JEANNE de BEAUVIOR __| (1250 - ....) | | _____________________________________________________ | | |___________________________________________________| | |_____________________________________________________
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Mother: Susanne LAVERGNE |
__ | __| | | | |__ | _Humberto MORUELLE "the Immigrant"_| | (1712 - ....) | | | __ | | | | |__| | | | |__ | | |--Francoise de MORUELLE | (1750 - 1823) | __ | | | __| | | | | | |__ | | |_Susanne LAVERGNE _________________| (1720 - ....) | | __ | | |__| | |__
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Mother: Sarah "Sally" BANKS |
_John PENDLETON _____+ | (1691 - 1775) m 1719 _William or John? or Richard? PENDLETON _| | (1720 - 1779) m 1748 | | |_Mary TINSLEY _______+ | (1703 - ....) m 1719 _John PENDLETON ______| | (1762 - 1830) m 1786 | | | _Edward TINSLEY Sr.__+ | | | (1704 - 1782) m 1724 | |_Elizabeth TINSLEY ______________________| | (1727 - 1783) m 1748 | | |_Margaret TAYLOR ____+ | (1705 - 1782) m 1724 | |--Tinsley PENDLETON | (1795 - ....) | _Gerrard BANKS II____+ | | (1704 - 1780) m 1736 | _Linn BANKS _____________________________| | | (1739 - 1799) | | | |_Ann STANTON ________+ | | (1715 - 1791) m 1736 |_Sarah "Sally" BANKS _| (1762 - 1859) m 1786 | | _____________________ | | |_Sarah PROCTOR __________________________| (1740 - 1827) | |_____________________
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Mother: Jannett (Jeanette) SCOTT |
______________________________ | _Robert WINTER __________| | (1740 - 1800) m 1769 | | |______________________________ | _James WINTER _____________| | (1770 - 1837) | | | _James MCCANTS Esq.___________+ | | | (1713 - 1772) m 1740 | |_Mary Elizabeth MCCANTS _| | (1745 - 1818) m 1769 | | |_Agnes MCNEALY _______________+ | (1725 - 1760) m 1740 | |--Emily A. WINTER | (1812 - 1861) | _John SCOTT I "the Immigrant"_+ | | (1665 - 1749) | _Alexander SCOTT ________| | | (1740 - ....) | | | |_Margaret DICK _______________+ | | (1700 - 1749) |_Jannett (Jeanette) SCOTT _| (1780 - 1845) | | ______________________________ | | |_Margaret________________| (1750 - ....) | |______________________________
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