I9836: Pamela ALVIS

My Southern Family

Pamela ALVIS


!LIVING

INDEX

Mary Boyd BELL

ABT 1805 - ____

ID Number: I47142

  • RESIDENCE: Pontotoc Co. MS
  • BIRTH: ABT 1805
  • RESOURCES: See: [S553] [S1063]
Father: Hugh BELL
Mother: Margaret MCKINNEY



                                             __
                                            |  
                       _Robert M. BELL _____|
                      | (1731 - 1816) m 1774|
                      |                     |__
                      |                        
 _Hugh BELL __________|
| (1779 - 1809) m 1800|
|                     |                      __
|                     |                     |  
|                     |_Mary BOYD __________|
|                       (1750 - ....) m 1774|
|                                           |__
|                                              
|
|--Mary Boyd BELL 
|  (1805 - ....)
|                                            __
|                                           |  
|                      _John MCKINNEY ______|
|                     | (1760 - ....)       |
|                     |                     |__
|                     |                        
|_Margaret MCKINNEY __|
  (1781 - 1840) m 1800|
                      |                      __
                      |                     |  
                      |_Margaret FULKERSON _|
                        (1760 - ....)       |
                                            |__
                                               

Sources

[S553]

[S1063]


INDEX

HOMEBack to My Southern Family Home Page



EMAIL

© 1995, 1997, 1998, 2000. Josephine Lindsay Bass and Becky Bonner.   All rights reserved.

HTML created by GED2HTML v3.6-WIN95 (Jan 18 2000) on 05/29/2005 09:03:10 PM Central Standard Time.


Thomas CHRISTIAN Sr. "the Immigrant"

ABT 1636 - ABT 1694

ID Number: I39905

  • RESIDENCE: Isle of Man, England and by 1657 Jamestown, VA
    [S1840]
  • BIRTH: ABT 1636, Sledgby, Onchan Douglas, Isle of Man, England
  • DEATH: ABT 1694, St. Paul's Parish, Goochland Co. or Charles City Co. VA
  • RESOURCES: See: [S1454] [S1840] [S3164]
Father: William CHRISTIAN "the Immigrant"
Mother: Elizabeth COTTIER?


Family 1 : Eleanor KEWLY?
  1. +Thomas CHRISTIAN Jr.
  2.  John CHRISTIAN
  3. +James CHRISTIAN
  4. +Charles CHRISTIAN Sr.

Notes


Took out patent for transportation of himself from Eng 1657 to James River, Charles City, Cty, Va. Immigrated Before 15 Jan 1657 James River at Chickahominy Creek, James City Co., Virginia Colony.


CONFLICT in parents and spouses.
Father: William CHRISTIAN b: ABT. 1620 in Baldrome, Isle of Man or Father: Edward CHRISTIAN b: ABT 1595 in Isle of Man, Eng.
Mother: Katherine HARRISON b: ABT 1595 in Isle of Man, Eng.
Marriage 1 Miss HUNT b: ABT 1660 Married: in Charles City, VA
Marriage 1 Corbin Married: 1663
Marriage 2 Ellinor KEWLEY b: ABT. 1650 Married: 1663
Children
Charles CHRISTIAN I b: 1684 in Charles City Co., VA
Thomas CHRISTIAN , Jr. b: ABT. 1664 in GOOCHLAND CO., Virginia
James CHRISTIAN b: 29 Apr 1676
Jane CHRISTIAN b: 17 Nov 1680 in ONCHAN, ISLE OF MAN
John CHRISTIAN b: ABT. 1686 in VIRGINIA
George CHRISTIAN b: ABT. 1710


"Elusive Connections: The Immigrant Ancestors
Christian Family Chronicles, July 1983, p. 848-853
By Agnes Branch Pearlman, Editor
For Christian descendants with roots in the colonial south, Virginia was the most likely place of first settlement. The earliest immigrant most often mentioned in southern genealogical literature is Thomas Christian, granted land in Charles City County, Virginia, in 1657.


Although there is record of earlier Virginia Christian immigrants that Thomas – Richard as early as 1642, William in 1652, possibly of Northumberland County, and Christopher or Christians in Norfolk County in 1656 – they are seldom if ever mentioned in genealogies as “the immigrant ancestor.” With the exception of Gilbert and Israel of Augusta County during the second quarter of the eighteenth century, the other proven and probable immigrants of the era are best known for being left out of “the immigrant ancestor” category than for mention of their status or lineage – notably Oliver Christian, who left will in Lancaster County in 1702, and Michael Christian, who wrote his will in Northampton County in 1725 leaving male issue.


How these Christians were related to the more prominently mentioned Mr. Thomas Christian remains to be established; but it is likely that all came from the British Isles, with possible earlier connections on the Isle of Man.


As editor of Christian Family Chronicles, I have been frequently questioned about the identity of the immigrant ancestor of the Charles City, Henrico, Goochland, and New Kent line. “Was he Thomas Christian, as James Christian Lamb believed when writing for the William and Mary Quarterly shortly before his series of articles was reprinted in Americans of Gentle Birth in 1909?” or was he William Christian, as A. W. Moore suggest in his Manx Worthies in 1901?” “What is the evidence to support the various claims regarding the immigrant’s identity?” “Does anyone have proof of his forebears?”


Analysis of the articles of Lamb and Moore as well as of later writers who usually accepted the authority of one or the other should do much to answer the questions of readers. Furthermore, knowing the basis of the historians’ conclusions will aid future researchers in evaluating the secondary or tertiary sources they may encounter and about which I am frequently asked.


Following is the beginning paragraph of Lamb’s article, which has numbers assigned to each individual:


The Virginia progenitor of the family is 1, Thomas CHRISTIAN. As “Mr. Thomas Christian” he patented, Oct. 21, 1687, 1080 acres in Charles City county. While the family did not assume in the eighteenth century the important position it has enjoyed in the nineteenth, the term “Mr.” accorded to the immigrant, is indicative of social standing. In 1694 “Thomas Christian, Sen.,” got a patent for 193 acres south of Chickahominy Swamp. The “Sen.” Here shows that there was another Thomas Christian, who was probably a son of the elder Thomas and already of age…


From the foregoing, it is apparent that Lamb used land records to infer that Thomas Christian was the immigrant and used a qualifier when stating that the younger Thomas was “probably” a son; however, the genealogy as given is based on that assumption and on family tradition. Lamb seems to dismiss any doubts that another was the progenitor of the line he presents:


It seems to be beyond questions that “Mr. Thomas Christian” was the progenitor of the Virginia family. Independently of the records, tradition has affirmed for more than a century that “all the Christians trace back to Mr. Thomas Christian, who owned all the land on both sides of the Chickahominy river from Windsor shades to Squirrel Park.”


Perhaps it is the above statement, more than anything else, that is responsible for the convictions that “all” the Christians trace back to Thomas. Of course, it is the families along the Chickahominy and their descendants to who the author alludes.


Lamb later turns his attention to the subject of the immigrant’s ancestry:


It has always been firmly believed in the Virginia family of Christians that they are descended from the family of that name in the Isle of Man, who, as is well known, were for centuries the Dempsters or Judges of that Island….. Perhaps this belief, until a few years ago, had no more substantial basis than tradition, but it seems to have the support of evidence at least a little more satisfactory – especially to those who, very naturally, are not unwilling to be convinced.


In this Lamb was referring to the announcement that a silver spoon engraved with the Christian Coat of Arms Crest had been discovered during remodeling of the Christian home at Cherry Bottom, then in the possessions of Thomas Llewellyn and Louisa (Christian) Christian. Clearly, his tone implies reservation. Today, the knowledgeable skeptic might be quick to point out that the arms were not granted until long after Thomas Christian reached America. So how and when did the spoon find its way into the rat’s next of the attic?


I believe much confusion about Christian immigrants to Virginia would have been avoided in subsequent works were it not for the following misleading information published in 1901 in Manx Worthies regarding Man’s emigrants:


The next Manx emigrants we hear of left the island in 1655, their destination being Virginia. They consisted of two brothers, WILLIAM and JONATHAN CHRISTIAN, from the parish of Maughold, and a family named COTTIER from the parish of Lazayre. One result of their emigrating together was that the brothers Christian married two of the Cottier girls. WILLIAM received a grant of land from the Crown, which is still in the possession of descendants.


Comparison of known connections and conditions with the above quotation points to a number of errors in this brief passage. One of the earliest corrections came from Mrs. Rita Brown, born 1 Nov 1878, who relied on and added much to the genealogical work of her mother Violet, the fourth wife of the Reverend William Bell Christian of the Isle of Man. Mrs. Brown has been quoted as saying that the two brides’ surname was “Collier,” not “Cottier,” as Moore had stated. What Mrs. Browne failed to note is that the Christian brothers who married the Collier sisters were descendants of and several generations removed from the immigrant. William Christian of Cherry Bottom on the Chickahominy River was born about 1740 and died before 31 July 1808; he married as his first wife, Elizabeth Collier, and secondly, Sally Atkins. By Elizabeth he was the grandfather of Letitia (Christian) Tyler through son Robert. Coincidentally, Moore does identify this Robert Christian as a “descendant” of William, apparently not realizing that he was dealing with a son and father. The William Christian who first married Elizabeth Collier did, indeed, have a brother John who married Mildred Collier. Naturally, here again, John was of a later generation and died in 1801; and he was not an immigrant. Moore also errs when he states that William received the land grant when, in fact, Thomas received it.


What of the possibility of “a grain of truth” in the reference to someone named “Cottier,” a common Manx name? William “Illiam Dhone’ Christian, the Manx patriot and martyr, married Elizabeth Cottier in 1630. On Man her name is pronounced roughly “Cotcher” and sometimes appears in the records as “Cockshutt.” This William never came to the colonies although he was reputedly the ancestor of the Augusta County Christians.


Moore does not give his source for the information he published about the émigrés from Man, but internal evidence is some of his other articles about the Christians would intimate that some material came through Mrs. Browne’s mother, who was apparently also in contact with members of the Virginia family.


The chain of misinformation and mixing of the generations continues to the present. Verbatim reference will be made to only a few of the many more recent publications which make reference to “the immigrant ancestor” and his Manx heritage since so many readers have asked me specifically about them. Invariably, the source goes back to Mrs. Rita Browne’s qualified opinions or speculation – at times being misinterpreted or being repeated as fact.


For example, in Ruth Nelms Hooker’s article, “Christians of Virginia and Kentucky,” published in 1949 in the Register of Kentucky State Historical Society, is the following:


B. R. S. Megaw, B. A., F. S. A., Director & Librarian of the Manx Museum, Library and Art Gallery, Douglass, Isle of Man, considers Mrs. Rita Browne of Somerset, England, the best authority on the Christian family of Milntown, Isle of Man…


…Mrs. Rita Brown of Somerset, England, says that descendants of William (1) Christian, who m. Elizabeth Collier (not Cottier as stated in A. W. Moore’s “Manx Worthies”) and who settled in Virginia in 1655, have done much research on this family. This Wm. (1) Christian’s son, Thos. (2) Christian was patenting land in Virginia in 1657. Mrs. Browne believes Wm. (1) Christian to have been the grand-son of Daniel Christian of Baldroma, Isle of Man, who was son of Demster John McCrystyn IV of Milntown, living 1498-1511. She further states that in 1913 Louisa Christian, gr-gr-gr-dau. of Thos. (2) Christian (Wm. 1), who had m. her cousin Capt. Thos. Llewellyn Christian, and lived on part of the original grant to Thos. (2) Christian (Wm. 1), was having her house repaired, when in a rat’s nest a silver teaspoon engraved with the Milntown Crest was found. This would seem to indicate a connection between the family of Wm. (1) Christian and the Christians of the Isle of Man.


Using the above as her source, Mrs. Eunie V. Christian Stacy presents her interpretation in Christians of Charles City, published in 1982:


William Christian, who married Elizabeth Collier, is believed by some authorities in Christian genealogy to be the father of Thomas Christian. William Christian was among 40 persons transported to Virginia in 1652 by Mrs. Jane Harmer. At that time, 50 acres of land were allotted for the transportation of one person to the colony. Mrs. Harmer was granted 2000 acres in the county of Northumberland in Virginia for transporting 40 persons to the colony.
The identity of the father of William Christian is unknown, but his grandfather was Daniel McCristyn of Baldroma, Isle of Man, according to a very good authority.


The source, as indicated, was Hooker’s article; and the authority was none other than Mrs. Rita Browne.


Mrs. Hicks Beach, author of The Yesterdays Behind the Door, originally published in 1956, credits Mrs. William Bell Christian and daughter Rita Browne as the source of the material for her book. In the preface to the 1973 reprint, Christine Carthew-Yorstoun refers the reader to page 22 with these words:


Letitia Christian who married President John Tyler, descends From Daniel Christian of Baldroma Isle of Man, son of John (IV) McCrystyn (1420-1511). Since Letitia Christian, daughter of Robert Christian and Mary Brown, is recorded in this country stemming from Thomas Christian, the earliest known Christian to America who patented land in Virginia in 1647, then all others also stem from Daniel Christian of Baldroma, Isle of Man, son of John (IV) McCrystyn (1420-1511).


Exact words, to which Carthew-Yorstoun had referred the reader, are found in a footnote on page 22:


A notable landed family of Christians in Virginia claim to descend from Daniel McCrysten of Baldroma, a younger son of Deemster John IV (died 1511). The legal strain has come out strongly in them. A daughter, Letitia Christian, was the wife of President Tyler.


Nowhere is supporting evidence given for the claim; and here as elsewhere, with repetition a claim becomes certain and a belief may suddenly appear as fact.


Significantly, nothing in the texts of any of the quoted works offers further information about Daniel and his family other than he was the “second son” of John. As such, he had to have been born many years before his father’s death in 1511 at age 89. Therefore, at least four or five unknown generations would have appeared in the interval before any Christians landed on Virginia’s shores – before Thomas Christian acquired land in Charles City County or William Christian’s sponsor received land in Northumberland County. I wonder, then, how any claim of descent made 450 years later could be considered reliable without some indication as to the identity of the intervening generations.


Every time I have been led to writings purportedly offering evidence about the immigrant’s forebears, close examination of the data shows nothing more than reassertions of previous undocumented statements or misinterpretations of the source due to unclear syntax. Indeed, all conclusions regarding ancestry of the immigrant I have seen in published form can be attributed to one of the sources mentioned herein.


So, in response to the question, “Does anyone have proof of ‘the immigrant ancestor’s identity or ancestry?” I can only say, “Not as far as I know!” I just hope some undiscovered documents will yet come to light.
Agnes Branch Pearlman, Editor"


Thomas Christian, 100 acs. James City Co., 15 Jun 1657, p. 167. On N. side of James River & E. side of Chicohominy Riv., along trees of Capt. Bridges Freeman, SW on trees of Thomas Young & NW on Iland Cr. Trans. of 2 pers: Tho. Christian, John Wilkinson.


Cavaliers and Pioneers: Abstracts of Virginia Land Patents and Grants, 1623-1800. In Five Volumes. Publication: Press of The Dietz Printing Co., Richmond, VA, 1934


Cavaliers and Pioneers, Patent Book 4, Page 364
Jan 15, 1657, Thomas Christian 100 acres James Citty Co., VA, P. 167, (249), on N. side of James River and E. side of Chickahominy River, along trees of Capt. Bridges Freeman, S. W. on trees of Thomas Young and N. W. on Island Creek. Trans. of two pers: Thomas Christian, John Wilkinson.


Cavaliers and Pioneers, Patent Book 4, Page 420
Mar 18, 1662, Thomas Christian 100 acres James City Co., VA, P. 77, (549), on N. side of the James and E. side of Chickahominy River upon marked trees of Thomas Young and on the Island Creek. (Jan 15, 1657).


Genealogies of Virginia Families, Volume I, Christian Family, Page 785
Oct 21, 1687, Mr. Thomas Christian received a land patent for 1080 acres in Charles City Co., VA.


Source: Ria Hendrix, [email protected]
Green Oak Farm located in the Sterling Heights area of the county and along the shore of the Chickahominy River. Patent dated 21 Oct 1687 to Thomas Christian for 1080 acres in Weyanoke Parish, on the south side of Store's (Stoney) Run, crossing Black Gutt to the Chickahominy River may well have been the patent for this farm. Formerly called "Cherry Bottom", this land is thought to have been passed down in the family, by wills, through the Christian family to the present time. According to Bruce B. James, who lives on this property, there is a family cemetery, as well as a slave cemetry to the rear of the old home.


Genealogies of Virginia Families, Volume I, Christian Family, Page 785
Oct 26, 1694, Mr. Thomas Christian, Sen., received a land patent for 193 acres south of Chickahominy Swamp, in Charles City Co., VA.


Genealogies of Virginia Families, Volume I, Christian Family, Page 785
Nov 2, 1705, Charles Christian received a land patent for 75 acres in Charles City Co., VA.


Nov 27, 1705 Thomas Christian and Edmond New, Jr. received a land grant for 1324 acres in Charles City Co., VA. Surveyed by Robert Bolling.


Historical and Genealogy of the Woodsons and Their Connections, by Henry Morton Woodson
Something of the Christian Family, Page 60, See William and Mary College Quarterly
This is a family of Scandinavian origin and had attained great eminence at a very early date. They were deemsters or judges in the Isle of Man as early as 1408, and as such succeeded one another for several centuries, embracing many generations. The name was formerly Mac Cristen, then Cristen, and finally about the year 1600 it was changed to its present form by Ewan Mac Cristen who, in 1605, when only twenty-six years old, was made deemster, and held the office fifty-one years. He was also deputy governor of Peel Castle and the most influential man in the island. Early in the seventeenth century some of the descendants of this ancient family emigrated to Virginia, acquired large bodies of land and entered vigorously into the development of the new country. The Virginia progenitor of the family was Thomas Christian. As "Mr. Thomas Christian" he patented, October 21, 1687, 1080 acres in Charles City county. The term "Mr." accorded to the immigrant, is indicative of social standing. In 1694 "Thomas Christian Sen" obtained a patent for 193 acres south of Chickahominy swamp. It appears that he had at least four sons: (1) Thomas Christian2 "of Charles City county" who patented land (1712 and 1727) in the forks of Beaver Dam Creek in that part of Henrico county called Goochland: (2) Charles Christian,2 of Charles City county, who located lands in the same vicinity in 1714 and 1727. (3) James Christian,2 in the same vicinity, located land bounding on Thomas Christian's line (1719). (4) John Christian,2 of Charles City county, in the same vicinity (1724). This Charles Christian2 (Thomas1), lived in Westover parish in Charles City county, and obtained numerous patents to land in Goochland. There is a record there of his deed of gift (1750) to Stephen Watkins of Amelia county. The record also shows his deed to Charles Christian, Jr.,3 of Goochland (1754).




                                        __
                                       |  
                                     __|
                                    |  |
                                    |  |__
                                    |     
 _William CHRISTIAN "the Immigrant"_|
| (1615 - 1657)                     |
|                                   |   __
|                                   |  |  
|                                   |__|
|                                      |
|                                      |__
|                                         
|
|--Thomas CHRISTIAN Sr. "the Immigrant"
|  (1636 - 1694)
|                                       __
|                                      |  
|                                    __|
|                                   |  |
|                                   |  |__
|                                   |     
|_Elizabeth COTTIER? _______________|
  (1614 - 1653)                     |
                                    |   __
                                    |  |  
                                    |__|
                                       |
                                       |__
                                          

Sources

[S1840]

[S1454]

[S1840]

[S3164]


INDEX

HOMEBack to My Southern Family Home Page



EMAIL

© 1995, 1997, 1998, 2000. Josephine Lindsay Bass and Becky Bonner.   All rights reserved.

HTML created by GED2HTML v3.6-WIN95 (Jan 18 2000) on 05/29/2005 09:03:10 PM Central Standard Time.


Sarah COBBS

ABT 1760 - ____

ID Number: I63063

  • RESIDENCE: Columbia Co. GA
  • BIRTH: ABT 1760
  • RESOURCES: See: [S2387]
Father: Thomas Addison COBBS


Family 1 : John (Benin) BENNING
  1. +Pleasant Moon BENNING
  2.  Joseph BENNING
  3.  Susan BENNING
  4.  Elizabeth BENNING
  5.  Sarah Cobb BENNING
  6.  Thomas BENNING

Notes


"Sarah Cobb, a daughter of the old patriarch of Columbia, married John Benning, an officer of the Revolution, whose family escutcheon was brought to this country by Francois Benin, a refugee from France. The children of John Benning, by his wife, Sarah Cobb, were: Joseph, Pleasant Moon, Susan, Elizabeth, Sarah Cobb, Thomas, and perhaps others."

[S2387]


                                               _Ambrose COBBS _____________+
                                              | (1662 - 1718) m 1687       
                         _John COBBS _________|
                        | (1692 - 1775) m 1729|
                        |                     |_Frances Elizabeth PINKETT _+
                        |                       (1665 - 1718) m 1687       
 _Thomas Addison COBBS _|
| (1740 - 1832)         |
|                       |                      _John ADDISON ______________
|                       |                     | (1670 - ....)              
|                       |_Susannah ADDISON ___|
|                         (1700 - ....) m 1729|
|                                             |____________________________
|                                                                          
|
|--Sarah COBBS 
|  (1760 - ....)
|                                              ____________________________
|                                             |                            
|                        _____________________|
|                       |                     |
|                       |                     |____________________________
|                       |                                                  
|_______________________|
                        |
                        |                      ____________________________
                        |                     |                            
                        |_____________________|
                                              |
                                              |____________________________
                                                                           

Sources

[S2387]

[S2387]


INDEX

HOMEBack to My Southern Family Home Page



EMAIL

© 1995, 1997, 1998, 2000. Josephine Lindsay Bass and Becky Bonner.   All rights reserved.

HTML created by GED2HTML v3.6-WIN95 (Jan 18 2000) on 05/29/2005 09:03:10 PM Central Standard Time.


Samuel Dedman COLEMAN

21 Mar 1812 - 25 Nov 1889

ID Number: I15084

  • RESIDENCE: Pike and Gibson Co. IN
  • BIRTH: 21 Mar 1812, Gibson Co. Indiana
  • DEATH: 25 Nov 1889, Gibson Co. Indiana
  • BURIAL: Williams (Patoka & Whitman) Cemetery
  • RESOURCES: See: [S24] [S424] [S190] [S3610]
Father: Henry COLEMAN
Mother: Sarah Fields DEDMAN


Family 1 : Charlotte BASS

Notes


"Samuel was born 2 yrs before Sarah married Henry Coleman in 1814, Samuel is probably son of Walter Jarrell, Sarah's 1st husband. 1850 Pike County Indiana list Samuel image #33 @ accestry.com"
Children:
2 Mathew "Taylor" COLEMAN b: Jun 1854 d: 1913 + Marrilla Jane MCGREGOR b: 7 Apr 1859 d: 1934
2 Ellyn COLEMAN b: 1850
2 Conrad COLEMAN b: 1852
2 Charlotte COLEMAN b: 1857
2 Lucy COLEMAN b: 1862
2 Mary D COLEMAN b: 18 Jun 1859


[S3610]


                                                  ____________________________
                                                 |                            
                        _Thomas COLEMAN _________|
                       | (1754 - 1811)           |
                       |                         |____________________________
                       |                                                      
 _Henry COLEMAN _______|
| (1783 - 1840) m 1814 |
|                      |                          _William PEMBERTON _________+
|                      |                         | (1725 - 1786)              
|                      |_Ann (Nancy) PEMBERTON? _|
|                        (1760 - 1804)           |
|                                                |_Elizabeth VAUGHAN _________+
|                                                  (1718 - ....)              
|
|--Samuel Dedman COLEMAN 
|  (1812 - 1889)
|                                                 _Samuel DEDMAN Sr.__________
|                                                | (1720 - 1800) m 1746       
|                       _Samuel DEDMAN Jr._______|
|                      | (1748 - 1834) m 1769    |
|                      |                         |_Mary FIELD ________________+
|                      |                           (1725 - 1819) m 1746       
|_Sarah Fields DEDMAN _|
  (1778 - 1828) m 1814 |
                       |                          _John DIXON "the immigrant"_
                       |                         | (1700 - 1758)              
                       |_Mary Elizabeth DIXON ___|
                         (1742 - 1820) m 1769    |
                                                 |_Lucy READE ________________+
                                                   (1701 - 1731)              

Sources

[S24]

[S424]

[S190]

[S3610]

[S3610]


INDEX

HOMEBack to My Southern Family Home Page



EMAIL

© 1995, 1997, 1998, 2000. Josephine Lindsay Bass and Becky Bonner.   All rights reserved.

HTML created by GED2HTML v3.6-WIN95 (Jan 18 2000) on 05/29/2005 09:03:10 PM Central Standard Time.


Robert CUTLER

ABT 1630 - ____

ID Number: I55826

Original Submitter (General Source): [S1670]
  • RESIDENCE: ENG
  • BIRTH: ABT 1630
  • RESOURCES: See: [S1670]

Family 1 : Anne HEREFORD

Sources

[S1670]

[S1670]


INDEX

HOMEBack to My Southern Family Home Page



EMAIL

© 1995, 1997, 1998, 2000. Josephine Lindsay Bass and Becky Bonner.   All rights reserved.

HTML created by GED2HTML v3.6-WIN95 (Jan 18 2000) on 05/29/2005 09:03:10 PM Central Standard Time.


Frances Elizabeth DUDLEY


!LIVING

INDEX

Hon. James JACKSON C.S.A.

18 Oct 1819 - 13 Jan 1887

ID Number: I72346

  • TITLE: Hon.
  • OCCUPATION: C.S.A. advocate on the staff of Gen. Thomas J. (Stonewall) Jackson 1861-1865; U.S. Representative from Georgia 6th District, 1857-61.
  • RESIDENCE: Macon and Atlanta, GA
  • BIRTH: 18 Oct 1819, Jefferson Co. Georgia
  • DEATH: 13 Jan 1887, Atlanta, Georgia
  • BURIAL: Rose Hill Cemetery, Macon, Georgia
  • RESOURCES: See: notes
Father: William Henry JACKSON
Mother: Mildred Lewis COBB


Notes


Jackson, James (1819-1887) Grandson of James Jackson (1757-1806); nephew of Jabez Young Jackson. Born in Georgia, 1819. Democrat. Member of Georgia state legislature; state court judge; U.S. Representative from Georgia 6th District, 1857-61. Died in 1887. Interment at Rose Hill Cemetery, Macon, Ga.


JACKSON, James, 1819-1887


JACKSON, James, (grandson of James Jackson [1757-1806] and nephew of Jabez Y. Jackson), a Representative from Georgia; born in Jefferson County, Ga., on October 18, 1819; pursued classical studies and was graduated from the University of Georgia at Athens in 1837; studied law; was admitted to the bar in 1839 and commenced practice in Athens, Ga.; secretary of the State senate in 1842; served in the State house of representatives 1845-1849; judge of the superior court 1846-1859; resigned in June 1859; elected as a Democrat to the Thirty-fifth and Thirty-sixth Congresses and served from March 4, 1857, until January 23, 1861, when he retired from the House; judge advocate on the staff of Gen. Thomas J. (Stonewall) Jackson 1861-1865; moved to Macon, Ga., and practiced law from 1865 until 1875, when he moved to Atlanta; appointed an associate justice of the State supreme court in 1875; elected to the position by the legislature in 1880 to fill an unexpired term; reelected in 1887; chief justice of Georgia from 1879 until his death in Atlanta, Ga., January 13, 1887; interment in Rose Hill Cemetery, Macon, Ga.
Bibliography Dictionary of American Biography.


From http://www.famousamericans.net/jamesjackson/ "James's grandson, James, jurist, born in Jefferson county, Georgia, 18 October, 1819; died in Atlanta, Georgia, 13 January, 1887, was graduated at the University of Georgia in 1837, studied law, and was admitted to the bar in 1840. He was in the legislature in 1840-'1, and was elected secretary of the senate of Georgia, which office he held for one year. He was elected judge of the superior court in 1846, and remained on the bench till 1859, when he resigned, having been chosen as a Democrat to congress, where he served until Georgia withdrew from the Union. He was then made judge-advocate of Stonewall Jackson's corps of the Confederate army, and served until the close of the civil war. He afterward practised law at Macon, was appointed associate justice of the supreme court of Georgia in August, 1875, and chief justice in 1879, which office he held till his death. He was a delegate to every conference of the Methodist church after the admission of lay delegates, and was a delegate to the oecumenical conference in London. Judge Jackson was a strong advocate of the union of the northern and southern Methodist churches. He was for many years a trustee of the University of Georgia."




                                                                    _James JACKSON ________
                                                                   | (1730 - ....)         
                          _James JACKSON of Georgia "the Immigrant_|
                         | (1757 - 1806) m 1785                    |
                         |                                         |_Mary WEBBER __________
                         |                                           (1740 - ....)         
 _William Henry JACKSON _|
| (1786 - 1875)          |
|                        |                                          _______________________
|                        |                                         |                       
|                        |_Mary Charlotte YOUNG ___________________|
|                          (1760 - ....) m 1785                    |
|                                                                  |_______________________
|                                                                                          
|
|--James JACKSON C.S.A.
|  (1819 - 1887)
|                                                                   _John COBBS ___________+
|                                                                  | (1692 - 1775) m 1729  
|                         _John Addison COBBS Jr.__________________|
|                        | (1740 - 1803) m 1769                    |
|                        |                                         |_Susannah ADDISON _____+
|                        |                                           (1700 - ....) m 1729  
|_Mildred Lewis COBB ____|
  (1780 - 1853)          |
                         |                                          _Howell LEWIS _________+
                         |                                         | (1731 - 1813) m 1751  
                         |_Mildred LEWIS __________________________|
                           (1753 - 1791) m 1769                    |
                                                                   |_Mary Isabella WILLIS _+
                                                                     (1733 - 1811) m 1751  

Sources


INDEX

HOMEBack to My Southern Family Home Page



EMAIL

© 1995, 1997, 1998, 2000. Josephine Lindsay Bass and Becky Bonner.   All rights reserved.

HTML created by GED2HTML v3.6-WIN95 (Jan 18 2000) on 05/29/2005 09:03:10 PM Central Standard Time.


SALTER


!LIVING

INDEX

Sir ALEXANDER ST. JOHN

____ - ____

ID Number: I95121

  • TITLE: Sir
  • RESIDENCE: England
  • RESOURCES: See: [S3501]
Father: OLIVER ST. JOHN 3rd Lord of Bletsoe
Mother: DOROTHY REDE


Notes


(C) Sir Alexander St. John m. Margaret Tyre (dsp 27.08.1666, dau of John Tyre)

[S3501]


                                                                             _JOHN ST. JOHN of Bletso_+
                                                                            | (1498 - ....) m 1515    
                                       _OLIVER ST. JOHN 1st Lord of Bletsoe_|
                                      | (1516 - 1582) m 1548                |
                                      |                                     |_MARGARET WALDEGRAVE ____+
                                      |                                       (1485 - ....) m 1515    
 _OLIVER ST. JOHN 3rd Lord of Bletsoe_|
| (1550 - 1618)                       |
|                                     |                                      _JOHN FISHER ____________
|                                     |                                     | (1500 - ....)           
|                                     |_AGNES FISHER _______________________|
|                                       (1520 - ....) m 1548                |
|                                                                           |_________________________
|                                                                                                     
|
|--ALEXANDER ST. JOHN 
|  
|                                                                            _________________________
|                                                                           |                         
|                                      _JOHN REDE of Odington_______________|
|                                     | (1520 - ....)                       |
|                                     |                                     |_________________________
|                                     |                                                               
|_DOROTHY REDE _______________________|
  (1550 - 1605)                       |
                                      |                                      _________________________
                                      |                                     |                         
                                      |_____________________________________|
                                                                            |
                                                                            |_________________________
                                                                                                      

Sources

[S3501]

[S3501]


INDEX

HOMEBack to My Southern Family Home Page



EMAIL

© 1995, 1997, 1998, 2000. Josephine Lindsay Bass and Becky Bonner.   All rights reserved.

HTML created by GED2HTML v3.6-WIN95 (Jan 18 2000) on 05/29/2005 09:03:10 PM Central Standard Time.


ILyann VANDERMARK

ABT 1840 - ____

ID Number: I78601

  • RESIDENCE: PA
  • BIRTH: ABT 1840
  • RESOURCES: See: [S2992]

Family 1 : George CONEY
  1.  Ellsworth CONEY
  2.  William W. CONEY

Notes


George Coney was married to ILyann Vandermark (Bond).

Sources

[S2992]


INDEX

HOMEBack to My Southern Family Home Page



EMAIL

© 1995, 1997, 1998, 2000. Josephine Lindsay Bass and Becky Bonner.   All rights reserved.

HTML created by GED2HTML v3.6-WIN95 (Jan 18 2000) on 05/29/2005 09:03:10 PM Central Standard Time.


Irena M. VIA

1824 - ____

ID Number: I40288

  • RESIDENCE: Albemarle Co. VA
  • BIRTH: 1824, Fredericksville Parish, Albemarle, Virginia
  • RESOURCES: See: [S784]
Father: Clifton VIA
Mother: Judith SANDIDGE



                                             _Micajah VIA Sr.___________+
                                            | (1740 - 1818)             
                       _Micajah VIA Jr._____|
                      | (1766 - 1849) m 1789|
                      |                     |_Phillipi BURNETT _________
                      |                       (1744 - 1811)             
 _Clifton VIA ________|
| (1793 - 1869) m 1816|
|                     |                      ___________________________
|                     |                     |                           
|                     |_Mary Nancy MILLS ___|
|                       (1770 - 1825) m 1789|
|                                           |___________________________
|                                                                       
|
|--Irena M. VIA 
|  (1824 - ....)
|                                            _Stephen SANDIDGE _________+
|                                           | (1752 - 1821) m 1770      
|                      _Dillard SANDIDGE ___|
|                     | (1774 - 1850) m 1797|
|                     |                     |_Sarah "Sally" HENDERSON? _
|                     |                       (1755 - ....) m 1770      
|_Judith SANDIDGE ____|
  (1798 - 1883) m 1816|
                      |                      _David EPPERSON ___________
                      |                     | (1750 - ....)             
                      |_Hannah EPPERSON ____|
                        (1780 - 1850) m 1797|
                                            |_Judith MAUPIN ____________+
                                              (1756 - 1837)             

Sources

[S784]


INDEX

HOMEBack to My Southern Family Home Page



EMAIL

© 1995, 1997, 1998, 2000. Josephine Lindsay Bass and Becky Bonner.   All rights reserved.

HTML created by GED2HTML v3.6-WIN95 (Jan 18 2000) on 05/29/2005 09:03:10 PM Central Standard Time.