Mother: Daughter of Orleans |
_____________________ | _____________________| | | | |_____________________ | _GUIGUIN de SOISSONS of Soissons_| | (0799 - 0844) | | | _____________________ | | | | |_____________________| | | | |_____________________ | | |--EUDES of Troyes | (0829 - 0870) | _____________________ | | | _HADRIAN Of Wormgau__| | | (0769 - 0824) | | | |_____________________ | | |_Daughter of Orleans_____________| (0800 - ....) | | _LAMBERT of Hornbach_+ | | (0739 - 0783) |_WALDRAT of Hornbach_| (0770 - 0824) | |_____________________
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Mother: Mary Ann GIBSON |
_David ALVIS III_______________+ | (1781 - 1848) m 1807 _Gabriel Alexander ALVIS Sr._| | (1830 - 1865) m 1851 | | |_Elizabeth DEQUARE (DEQUOIRE) _ | (1784 - 1853) m 1807 _Charles H. E. ALVIS _| | (1857 - 1942) m 1877 | | | _______________________________ | | | | |_Mary A. VANZANDT ___________| | (1830 - 1868) m 1851 | | |_______________________________ | | |--James E. ALVIS | (1883 - 1884) | _______________________________ | | | _____________________________| | | | | | |_______________________________ | | |_Mary Ann GIBSON _____| (1855 - ....) m 1877 | | _______________________________ | | |_____________________________| | |_______________________________
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I think that R.B. was mistaken for Capt. Lewis Ervin Lindsay who
was killed
in the 1st battle of Manassa. He is my relative. Their names are
inscribed on the monument at the battlefield. My brother's
have been to the site. Sharon james
__ | __| | | | |__ | _(RESEARCH QUERY) LINDSAY MD & VA & TN & AL & SC_| | | | | __ | | | | |__| | | | |__ | | |--R. B. (Linsey) LINDSAY C.S.A. | (1830 - 1861) | __ | | | __| | | | | | |__ | | |_________________________________________________| | | __ | | |__| | |__
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Mother: Sarah M. HUNDLEY |
this Henry Clay appears to be the same one from both msgs. more
research required.
"My Pendleton contact lived in north Georgia but I have lost
contact with her over the past 20 years. I am sure that if you
can acquire a phone listing for Clarkston, Habersham Co., GA.,
you might find a number for one or more of them.
Henry Clay Pendleton's mother is buried in our old family
cemetery but the site of the graves is believed to be in the
middle of a cow pasture belonging to a dairy. I've placed the
balance of the Pendleton information below. This is the same
information I will use in my pending family history that I hope
to publish in the next few years." (see info on each record
attached).
1880 United States Census Fulton Co. GA
H.C. PENDLETON Self M Male W 38 VA Agt For Tobacco
House VA VA
Nanie E. PENDLETON Wife M Female W 35 GA Keeps
House NC TN
Eugine R. PENDLETON Son S Male W 8 GA VA GA
Hary PENDLETON Son S Male W 6 GA VA GA
Lewis PENDLETON Son S Male W 4 GA VA GA
Richard H. PENDLETON Son S Male W 3 GA VA GA
Nellie E. PENDLETON Dau S Female W 10M GA VA
GA
Anney E.K. CATHEY Other S Female W 18 TN Cook TN
TN
James BROWN Other S Male B 10 SC Servant SC SC
Source Information: Census Place West End, Fulton, Georgia
Family History Library Film 1254147 NA Film Number T9-0147
Page Number 132D
_____________________ | _(RESEARCH QUERY) PENDLETON _| | | | |_____________________ | _Joseph Holmes PENDLETON _| | (1809 - 1848) m 1834 | | | _____________________ | | | | |_____________________________| | | | |_____________________ | | |--Henry Clay PENDLETON Sr. C.S.A. | (1842 - 1931) | _Ambrose HUNDLEY I___ | | | _Ambrose HUNDLEY II__________| | | | | | |_Mary RYLAND ________+ | | |_Sarah M. HUNDLEY ________| (1814 - 1901) m 1834 | | _John HAILE Jr.______+ | | (1710 - ....) |_Elizabeth HAILE ____________| | |_____________________
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Mother: Frances Amanda BOOTH |
"Major-General William Booth Taliaferro, a representative of an
old and famous Virginia family, was born at Belleville,
Gloucester county, Va., December 28, 1822. He was educated at
Harvard college and William and Mary, being graduated t the
latter institution in 1841. His activity was directed to a
military channel by the Mexican war, and on April 9, 1847, he
became captain of a company of the Eleventh United States
infantry. August 12th, and held this rank his command being
disbanded turned to the pursuits of civil life and was one of
the Democratic presidential electors in 1856, but continued to
be prominent in military affairs and commanded the state forces
at the time of John Brown's raid. As major-general of Virginia
militia, he took command at Norfolk on April 18, 1861, and later
with the rank of colonel was assigned to the post and troops at
Gloucester Point, opposite Yorktown. Subsequently he marched
with the Twenty-third Virginia regiment to reinforce General
Garnett in West Virginia. During the retreat from Laurel Hill,
Colonel Taliaferro was in command of the rear guard which
gallantly contested the enemy's pursuit at Carrick's ford, just
before Garnett was killed. At the battle on Greenbrier river,
October 3d, he commanded a brigade, consisting of his own
regiment, the Twenty-fifth and Forty- fourth Virginia regiments,
and contributed largely to the victory by his cool and gallant
conduct. On March 4, 1862, he was promoted brigadier-general. He
joined Jackson in the Valley early in December, and with a
brigade composed of the Tenth, Twenty-Third, and Thirty-seventh
Virginia, took a prominent part in the defeat of the Federals at
McDowell, where he was in immediate command on the field after
Edward Johnson was wounded, and participated in the victories ,
at Cross Keys and Port Republic. Continuing in command of
Jackson's Third brigade, he fought at Cedar mountain, August
9th, and after the death of General Winder was given charge of
Jackson's division. In this command he continued during' the
subsequent operations about Manassas, participated in the
maneuvers around Pope's army, and on August 28th, when Jackson
determined to strike the enemy as he moved along the Warrenton
pike, he immediately ordered Taliaferro to take his division and
attack. In the fierce fight which followed, sustained on the
Confederate side by Taliaferro and Ewell, both those commanders
were seriously wounded. He was able to return to the field in
time to participate in the battle of Fredericksburg, where he
rendered efficient service in repelling the Federal force which
secured temporary lodgment in the Confederate lines. His
subsequent military career was in the department of South
Carolina, Georgia and Florida, to which he was assigned in
March, 1863, as commander of the district of Savannah. During
the famous assault on Battery Wagner, July, 1863, he had charge
of the defenses and troops on Morris island, and next month he
took command of a division on James island. February 20, 1864,
he was given temporary command of all troops in the district of
East Florida, which embraced the forces that day engaged at
Olustee. Returning March 5th to James island, in May he was
assigned to the Seventh district of South Carolina, and the
entire State was put under his military charge in December of
that year. When Sherman's army reached Savannah, he exercised
command to the north of that city, with the forces of Jenkins,
Harrison and Chestnut, at Coosawhatchie and Pocotaligo, guarding
the route of escape for Hardee. In the latter part of December
he was given command of a division made up of Elliott's, Rhett's
and Anderson's brigades, with which he participated in the
subsequent movements, being promoted on January 1, 1865, to the
rank of major-general.
After the surrender of Johnston's army, he returned to
Gloucester, Va., where he completed his long career of honor and
usefulness. He served ten years in the State legislature, and
rendered good service in the cause of education as a member of
the board of visitors of the Virginia military institute,
William and Mary college and other State institutions. His death
occurred at his home in Gloucester county, February 27, 1898.
Confederate Military History, Vol. III, pp. 670-672.
"CAMPAIGNS: Rich Mountain, Corrick,'s Ford, Shenandoah Valley
(1862), First Winchester, Port Republic, Cedar Mountain,
Groveton, Fredericksburg, Battery Wagner, and Bentonville.
HIGHEST RANK ACHIEVED: Brigadier General
BIOGRAPHY
William Booth Taliaferro (pronounced Tarl'-iver) was born in
Gloucester County, Virginia, on December 28, 1822. Graduating
from the College of William and Mary in 1841, he studied law at
Harvard. In 1847, he joined the Regular Army and fought in the
Mexican War. Serving in the Virginia legislature from 1850 to
1853, he was a Democratic presidential elector in 1856, and led
the militia at Harpers Ferry after the November 1859 raid on
John Brown. Taliaferro joined the Confederacy and, when the
Civil War began, he was the major general in command of Virginia
militia at Norfolk and Gloucester Point. He was such a strict
disciplinarian to his subordinates that at least one of them
physically assaulted him. When Taliaferro and other officers
protested the poor conditions of the winter quarters Maj. Gen.
"Stonewall" Jackson had assigned to them, he began his
relationship with his new superior on poor footing. This
relationship did not improve when Taliaferro made denigrating
comments about Jackson, or when he personally intrigued against
Jackson in Richmond, Virginia. After a period on detached
service, Taliaferro, by then a brigadier general, returned to
serving under Jackson. Taliaferro commanded well in Jackson's
Shenandoah Valley Campaign in the spring of 1862, and
distinguished himself at McDowell and First Winchester. He took
part in the fighting at Port Republic; Cedar Mountain;
Grovetown, where he was wounded three times; and Fredericksburg.
Despite his service, he was not promoted to major general, so he
left Jackson's army in February of 1863. After that, Taliaferro
served under Gen. P. G. T. Beauregard; held Battery Wagner
against Union attack; led troops on James Island and in eastern
Florida; helped with the evacuation of Savannah and led a
division at Bentonville. In the years following the Civil War,
Taliaferro returned to the state legislature, and served as a
county judge and member of the boards of visitors of the College
of William and Mary and the Virginia Military Institute.
Taliaferro died at his estate in Gloucester County, "Dunham
Massie," on February 27, 1898."
http://www.multied.com/Bio/CWcGENS/CSATaliaferro.html
Manuscripts Department Library of the University of North
Carolina at Chapel Hill SOUTHERN HISTORICAL COLLECTION #1822
WILLIAM BOOTH TALIAFERRO PAPERS Summary
NOTE: A more complete finding aid for this collection is
available at the Southern Historical Collection. Contact staff
at: (919)962-1345 (telephone); (919)962-4452 (FAX);
[email protected].
Taliaferro, William Booth, 1822-1898.
Papers, 1805-1951.
4 items.
Four volumes containing typescripts of diaries and letters of
William Booth Taliaferro of Dunham Massie, Gloucester, Va.,
1844-1890; the diary of his wife Sally Lyons Taliaferro
(1828-1899), 1859-1899; and other materials relating to members
of the Taliaferro and Lyons families.
Volume 1 contains letters of the Taliaferrros and Lyons family
data.
Volume 2 contains the Mexican War diary, 1847, and letters,
1847-1848, of William Booth Taliaferro, documenting his
activities during the war. Also included is Taliaferro's
1871-1890 diary, which contains brief entries relating to
weather, financial transactions, planting, and family and
neighborhood activities.
Volume 3 contains Sally Lyons Taliaferro's diary, 1859-1874;
volume 4 contains her diary, 1875-1899. These diaries have brief
entries about the weather and family and neighborhood news.
ONLINE CATALOG TERMS:
Family--Virginia--Social life and customs--19th century.
Lyons family.
Mexican War, 1846-1848.
Taliaferro family.
Taliaferro, Sally Lyons, 1828-1899.
Taliaferro, William Booth, 1822-1898.
United States. Army--Officers--Correspondence--History--Mexican
War,
1846-1848.
United States. Army--Officers--Diaries--History--Mexican
War, 1846-1848.
Women--Diaries--History--19th century.
Women--Virginia--Social life and customs--19th century.
COPYRIGHT: Retained by the authors of items in these papers, or
their descendants, as stipulated by United States copyright law.
Tombstone pic: William Booth Taliaferro (28 Dec 1822 – 28 Feb
1898)
Virginia USGenWeb Archives Ware Church Cemetery Gloucester
County, VA
https://sites.rootsweb.com/~usgenweb/va/vastones/gloucester/ware/wc1
5.jpg
Major-General William Booth Taliaferro, a representative of an
old and famous Virginia family, was born at Belleville,
Gloucester county, Va., December 28, 1822. He was educated at
Harvard college and William and Mary, being graduated t the
latter institution in 1841. His activity was directed to a
military channel by the Mexican war, and on April 9, 1847, he
became captain of a company of the Eleventh United States
infantry. August 12th, and held this rank his command being
disbanded turned to the pursuits of civil life and was one of
the Democratic presidential electors in 1856, but continued to
be prominent in military affairs and commanded the state forces
at the time of John Brown's raid. As major-general of Virginia
militia, he took command at Norfolk on April 18, 1861, and later
with the rank of colonel was assigned to the post and troops at
Gloucester Point, opposite Yorktown. Subsequently he marched
with the Twenty-third Virginia regiment to reinforce General
Garnett in West Virginia. During the retreat from Laurel Hill,
Colonel Taliaferro was in command of the rear guard which
gallantly contested the enemy's pursuit at Carrick's ford, just
before Garnett was killed. At the battle on Greenbrier river,
October 3d, he commanded a brigade, consisting of his own
regiment, the Twenty-fifth and Forty- fourth Virginia regiments,
and contributed largely to the victory by his cool and gallant
conduct. On March 4, i862, he was promoted brigadier-general. He
joined Jackson in the Valley early in December, and with a
brigade composed of the Tenth, Twenty-Third, and Thirty-seventh
Virginia, took a prominent part in the defeat of the Federals at
McDowell, where he was in immediate command on the field after
Edward Johnson was wounded, and participated in the victories ,
at Cross Keys and Port Republic. Continuing in command of
Jackson's Third brigade, he fought at Cedar mountain, August
9th, and after the death of General Winder was given charge of
Jackson's division. In this command he continued during' the
subsequent operations about Manassas, participated in the
maneuvers around Pope's army, and on August 28th, when Jackson
determined to strike the enemy as he moved along the Warrenton
pike, he immediately ordered Taliaferro to take his division and
attack. In the fierce fight which followed, sustained on the
Confederate side by Taliaferro and Ewell, both those commanders
were seriously wounded. He was able to return to the field in
time to participate in the battle of Fredericksburg, where he
rendered efficient service in repelling the Federal force which
secured temporary lodgment in the Confederate lines. His
subsequent military career was in the department of South
Carolina, Georgia and Florida, to which he was assigned in
March, 1863, as commander of the district of Savannah. During
the famous assault on Battery Wagner, July, 1863, he had charge
of the defenses and troops on Morris island, and next month he
took command of a division on James island. February 20, 1864,
he was given temporary command of all troops in the district of
East Florida, which embraced the forces that day engaged at
Olustee. Returning March 5th to James island, in May he was
assigned to the Seventh district of South Carolina, and the
entire State was put under his military charge in December of
that year. When Sherman's army reached Savannah, he exercised
command to the north of that city, with the forces of Jenkins,
Harrison and Chestnut, at Coosawhatchie and Pocotaligo, guarding
the route of escape for Hardee. In the latter part of December
he was given command of a division made up of Elliott's, Rhett's
and Anderson's brigades, with which he participated in the
subsequent movements, being promoted on January 1, 1865, to the
rank of major-general.
After the surrender of Johnston's army, he returned to
Gloucester, Va., where he completed his long career of honor and
usefulness. He served ten years in the State legislature, and
rendered good service in the cause of education as a member of
the board of visitors of the Virginia military institute,
William and Mary college and other State institutions. His death
occurred at his home in Gloucester county, February 27, 1898.
Confederate Military History, Vol. III, pp. 670-672.
http://members.aol.com/jweaver300/grayson/taliaferro.htm
_Phillip TALIAFERRO of Hockley_+ | (1745 - 1791) _William Throckmorton TALIAFERRO _| | (1773 - ....) | | |_Sarah Smith BAYTOP ___________+ | (1745 - ....) _Warren Throckmorton TALIAFERRO _| | (1797 - 1877) m 1822 | | | _Warren THROCKMORTON __________ | | | (1750 - ....) m 1776 | |_Mary THROCKMORTON _______________| | (1782 - ....) | | |_Mary Julia LANGBORNE _________+ | (1758 - ....) m 1776 | |--William Booth TALIAFERRO C.S.A. | (1822 - 1898) | _______________________________ | | | _George Wythe BOOTH ______________| | | (1773 - ....) | | | |_______________________________ | | |_Frances Amanda BOOTH ___________| (1801 - 1824) m 1822 | | _______________________________ | | |_Lucy JONES ______________________| (1773 - ....) | |_______________________________
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