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Source Information: Census Place Limestone, Alabama
Family History Library Film 1254019 NA Film Number T9-0019 Page
Number 342D
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Mother: Harriett SHIRLEY |
_(RESEARCH QUERY) BASS\BASSE\BAAS\BAYSE _ | _Matthew BASS _______| | (1770 - 1840) | | |_________________________________________ | _John T. BASS _______| | (1800 - ....) m 1828| | | _________________________________________ | | | | |_Elizabeth?__________| | (1780 - ....) | | |_________________________________________ | | |--Elija BASS | (1846 - ....) | _________________________________________ | | | _Robert SHIRLEY _____| | | (1780 - 1841) | | | |_________________________________________ | | |_Harriett SHIRLEY ___| (1807 - ....) m 1828| | _________________________________________ | | |_Elizabeth___________| (1780 - ....) | |_________________________________________
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Mother: Susannah WILSON |
_Matthew COMPTON I_______+ | (1671 - 1747) m 1700 _Matthew COMPTON II__| | (1709 - 1770) m 1733| | |_Susannah BRISCOE _______+ | (1687 - 1738) m 1700 _William COMPTON ____| | (1733 - 1809) m 1758| | | _William Stevens HOWARD _+ | | | (1684 - 1734) | |_Rachel HOWARD ______| | (1714 - 1787) m 1733| | |_Elizabeth DOUGLAS ______ | (1685 - ....) | |--Elizabeth COMPTON | (1771 - ....) | _________________________ | | | _John WILSON ________| | | (1690 - ....) | | | |_________________________ | | |_Susannah WILSON ____| (1731 - ....) m 1758| | _________________________ | | |_____________________| | |_________________________
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Mother: Martha TERRELL |
______________________ | _(RESEARCH QUERY) GREGORY _| | | | |______________________ | _John GREGORY _______| | (1750 - ....) | | | ______________________ | | | | |___________________________| | | | |______________________ | | |--John Mumford GREGORY Sr. | (1770 - ....) | _Richmond TERRELL III_+ | | (.... - 1771) | _William TERRELL __________| | | (1720 - ....) | | | |_Ann MERTON __________ | | (.... - 1795) |_Martha TERRELL _____| (1756 - ....) | | ______________________ | | |_Mary COLLIER _____________| (1720 - ....) | |______________________
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Mother: Mary Ann BARNES |
2 Ann Catherine Harrison b: 23 OCT 1761 d: 6 DEC 1839 + Francis
Henry Hereford Sr. b: 19 NOV 1767 d: 16 OCT 1821
2 Matthew Harrison b: 19 SEP 1763 d: UNKNOWN
2 Jane Harrison b: 29 SEP 1765 d: UNKNOWN
2 Burr Harrison IV d: UNKNOWN
2 Cuthbert Harrison b: 28 DEC 1768 d: 26 SEP 1795
2 Ann Barnes Harrison b: 20 FEB 1771 d: UNKNOWN
2 Thomas Harrison b: 22 MAY 1774 d: UNKNOWN
2 Mary Ann Harrison b: 1 MAY 1776 d: 2 DEC 1803
[S720]
[523892]
IGI International Genealogical Index, LDS
_Burr HARRISON "the Immigrant"_+ | (1637 - 1706) _Thomas HARRISON I____________________| | (1665 - 1746) | | |_Lettice (Mary) SCARLETT ______ | (1638 - 1672) _Burr HARRISON III___| | (1699 - 1775) m 1722| | | _______________________________ | | | | |_Sithia Elizabeth or Sophia C. SHORT _| | (1665 - 1746) | | |_______________________________ | | |--Burr HARRISON IV | (1734 - 1790) | _Henry BARNES "the Immigant"___+ | | (1643 - 1676) | _Mathew BARNES _______________________| | | (1670 - 1746) | | | |_Sarah COFFER _________________+ | | (1641 - ....) |_Mary Ann BARNES ____| (1699 - ....) m 1722| | _______________________________ | | |_Frances OSBORNE _____________________| (1660 - ....) | |_______________________________
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Mother: Mary WEBBER |
Jackson, James (1757-1806) Father of Jabez Young Jackson;
grandfather of James Jackson (1819-1887). Born in England,
September 21, 1757. Delegate to Georgia state constitutional
convention, 1777; U.S. Representative from Georgia at-large,
1789-91; U.S. Senator from Georgia, 1793-95, 1801-06; died in
office 1806;
Governor of Georgia, 1798-1801. Killed George Wells in a duel in
1780; injured in both knees. Died March 19, 1806. Original
interment at Rock Creek Cemetery, Washington, D.C.; reinterment
in 1832 at Congressional Cemetery, Washington, D.C. Jackson
County, Ga. is named for him.
JACKSON, James, 1757-1806: Senate Years of Service: 1793-1795;
1801-1806 Party: Anti-Administration; Republican; Library of
Congress:
JACKSON, James, (father of Jabez Y. Jackson and grandfather of
James Jackson [1819-1887]), a Representative and a Senator from
Georgia; born in Moreton-Hampstead, Devonshire, England,
September 21, 1757; emigrated to Georgia in 1772 and located in
Savannah; served in the Revolution with the Georgia State
forces; studied law and built a lucrative practice in Savannah;
several times elected to the state legislature; elected governor
of Georgia in 1788 but declined; planter; elected to the First
Congress (March 4, 1789-March 3, 1791); contested the election
of Anthony Wayne in the Second Congress and the seat was
declared vacant by the House of Representatives March 21, 1792;
elected to the United States Senate and served from March 4,
1793, until his resignation in 1795; again a member of the State
legislature; Governor of Georgia 1798-1801; was again elected as
a Republican to the United States Senate and served from March
4, 1801, until his death in Washington, D.C., March 19, 1806;
interment in the Congressional Cemetery.
Bibliography: American National Biography; Dictionary of
American Biography; Lamplugh, George R. “ ‘Oh The Colossus! The
Colossus!’: James Jackson and the Jeffersonian Republican Party
in Georgia, 1796-1806.
"Journal of the Early Republic" (Fall 1989): 315-34; Foster,
William. James Jackson: Duelist and Militant Statesman. Athens:
University of Georgia Press, 1960.
http://bioguide.congress.gov/scripts/biodisplay.pl?index=J000017
From http://www.geocities.com/genjacksondar/
National Society Daughters of the American Revolution General
James Jackson Chapter
Valdosta, Georgia, For membership in the General James Jackson
Chapter NSDAR, contact General James Jackson Chapter. For
membership information for the National Society DAR, go to the
National Page on membership.
Welcome to our chapter's home page. We are glad that you decided
to visit us. We would like to tell you a little bit about our
chapter's namesake, General James Jackson. We have also provided
additional information about our chapter. Please feel free to
contact us if you are interested in learning more about us!
General James Jackson was born September 21, 1757, in
Moreton-Hampstead, Devonshire, England, the son of James and
Mary (Weber) Jackson. In 1772, at age fifteen, he emigrated to
Georgia. He studied law under James Wereat and George Walton and
built a lucrative practice in Savannah.
He was married in 1785 to Mary Charlotte Young, daughter of a
Revolutionary War soldier, by whom he had four sons, all of whom
later became influential citizens in public life in Georgia.
Along with his military, legal, and political activities, James
Jackson was also a planter.
He was active in all movements to establish independence and
liberty for the colonies. During his six years of military
service in the Revolutionary War as a member of the Georgia
Colonial forces, he participated in the unsuccessful defense of
Savannah (1778), the Battle of Cowpens (1780), and the Recovery
of Augusta (1781). General Wayne ordered him, as a Lt. Colonel,
to repossess Savannah (July 1782). The Georgia Legislature
rewarded his Revolutionary War services by giving him a house in
Savannah.
General Jackson, known as "The Chatham Wolf," was very prominent
in political life in Georgia from 1784 until his death in 1806.
He was elected to the State Legislature several times and was
elected Governor of Georgia in 1788, but declined the seat.
Subsequently, he was elected to the United States Senate, where
he served from March 4, 1801, until his death. He was an
Anti-Administration Republican and led a campaign for the
election of members of the Legislature who would rescind and
publicly burn the records of the Yazoo Act.
He died in Washington, D.C., on March 19, 1806, and was buried
in the Congressional Cemetery.
JACKSON, James, soldier, born in Moreton-Hampstead, Devonshire,
England, 21 September, 1757; died in Washington, D. C., 16
March, 1806. He came to this country in 1772, and studied law in
Savannah, Georgia He was active in repelling the British from
Savannah in March, 1776, and commanded a company until the
Florida expedition of General Howe. He was made brigade-major of
Georgia militia in 1778, and was wounded in the skirmish at
Midway, Georgia, in which General James Screven was killed. He
took part in the defence of Savannah, and when it was captured,
29 December, 1778, he fled to South Carolina, where he joined
General Moultrie. His appearance was so wretched while in his
flight that he was arrested by a party of Whigs, tried and
condemned as a spy, and was about to be executed when a
reputable citizen of Georgia, who knew him, identified and saved
him. In March, 1780, he fought a duel with Lieutenant Governor
Wells, and killed his antagonist, but was wounded. He joined
Colonel Elijah Clark in August, 1780, was volunteer aide to
Sumter at Blackstocks, and in 1781 was brigade-major to General
Pickens, sharing in the victory of the Cowpens. At the battle of
Long Cane, when Colonel Clark was disabled, Jackson saved his
company from dispersion, was at the siege of Augusta, and left
in charge of the garrison after the expulsion of the British. He
next commanded a legionary corps, with which he did excellent
service. At the close of the war the assembly of the state of
Georgia presented him with a house and lot in Savannah. He
engaged successfully in the practice of law, was made a
brigadier-general in 1786, and was elected governor of Georgia
in 1788, but declined to serve, pleading youth and inexperience.
He was a member of the convention that adopted the first
constitution of Georgia, and was elected a representative in the
1st congress, serving from 20 April, 1789, till 3 March, 1791.
He was afterward chosen United States senator from Georgia, and
served from 2 December, 1793, till 1795, when he resigned. He
was governor of Georgia in 1798-1801, and was again elected a
senator, serving from 7 December, 1801, till his death. While in
congress he strongly opposed the bill for the suppression of the
slave-trade.-- Edited Appletons Encyclopedia, Copyright © 2001
VirtualologyTM
From http://www.famousamericans.net/jamesjackson/ "Henry
Jackson's older brother James Jackson (1757-1806), a
Revolutionary War general and political protege of William
H.Crawford, served as a U.S. congressman from Georgia in the
early 1790s, as governor of Georgia from 1798 to 1801, and as a
U.S.senator from that state from 1801 until his death. Henry's
older brother Abraham also lived in Georgia in the 1790s and
served in the Georgia House of Representatives circa 1803."
__ | __| | | | |__ | _James JACKSON ______| | (1730 - ....) | | | __ | | | | |__| | | | |__ | | |--James JACKSON of Georgia "the Immigrant | (1757 - 1806) | __ | | | __| | | | | | |__ | | |_Mary WEBBER ________| (1740 - ....) | | __ | | |__| | |__
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Mother: Annis "Annie" Davis HARE |
_John James MCCANTS Jr._+ | (1807 - 1887) m 1823 _John Owens MCCANTS C.S.A._| | (1831 - 1908) m 1863 | | |_Martha CANNON _________+ | (1805 - 1882) m 1823 _Josiah Owens MCCANTS Sr.__| | (1864 - 1952) m 1893 | | | _George Cannon OWENS ___ | | | (1810 - 1884) | |_Mary Schuler OWENS _______| | (1843 - 1921) m 1863 | | |_Mary Shuler CRAWFORD __ | (1825 - 1843) | |--Josiah Owens "Bubba" MCCANTS Jr. | (1901 - 1916) | ________________________ | | | _Adam Davis HARE __________| | | (1825 - 1895) | | | |________________________ | | |_Annis "Annie" Davis HARE _| (1874 - 1965) m 1893 | | ________________________ | | |_Annis T. MAREE ___________| (1849 - 1885) | |________________________
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Mother: Nannie Ellen COLEMAN |
_Dillard SANDIDGE ___+ | (1774 - 1850) m 1797 _Joel M. SANDIDGE ___| | (1806 - 1865) m 1836| | |_Hannah EPPERSON ____+ | (1780 - 1850) m 1797 _Dabney Lewis SANDIDGE _| | (1860 - 1937) m 1880 | | | _____________________ | | | | |_Susan F. WOOD ______| | (1818 - 1883) m 1836| | |_____________________ | | |--Alberta SANDIDGE | (1890 - ....) | _____________________ | | | _____________________| | | | | | |_____________________ | | |_Nannie Ellen COLEMAN __| (1861 - 1931) m 1880 | | _____________________ | | |_____________________| | |_____________________
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