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Mother: Hannah SNEED |
__ | _Richard BLANTON I___| | (1675 - 1734) m 1724| | |__ | _Richard BLANTON II__| | (1726 - 1806) m 1758| | | __ | | | | |_Elizabeth LINDSEY __| | (1700 - ....) m 1724| | |__ | | |--William BLANTON | (1763 - ....) | __ | | | _____________________| | | | | | |__ | | |_Hannah SNEED _______| (1735 - ....) m 1758| | __ | | |_____________________| | |__
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Mother: Mary Ann GRAYSON |
_John CATLETT II "the Immigrant"_+ | (1624 - 1670) m 1663 _John CATLETT III________________| | (1665 - 1724) | | |_Elizabeth UNDERWOOD ____________+ | (1632 - 1673) m 1663 _John CATLETT IV_____| | (1677 - 1739) m 1726| | | _Daniel GAINES __________________+ | | | (1614 - 1682) m 1643 | |_Elizabeth GAINES _______________| | (1659 - ....) | | |_Margaret BERNARD _______________+ | (1625 - 1686) m 1643 | |--Judith CATLETT | (1730 - 1798) | _________________________________ | | | _John B. GRAYSON "the Immigrant"_| | | (1665 - 1736) | | | |_________________________________ | | |_Mary Ann GRAYSON ___| (1707 - ....) m 1726| | _________________________________ | | |_Susannah WHITE _________________| (1665 - ....) | |_________________________________
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Mother: Mary Ann LEACH |
_Robert CORLEY ________+ | (1725 - 1778) _Zacchaeus CORLEY I__| | (1762 - 1843) m 1805| | |_Sarah PETTY (PETTEY) _+ | (1740 - ....) _Wiley CORLEY _______| | (1811 - 1864) m 1837| | | _Pleasant BURNETT _____+ | | | (1750 - 1795) | |_Elizabeth BURNETT __| | (1785 - 1853) m 1805| | |_Anna GENTRY __________+ | (1750 - 1829) | |--Mary Monteria CORLEY | (1856 - 1891) | _______________________ | | | _James LEACH ________| | | (1787 - ....) | | | |_______________________ | | |_Mary Ann LEACH _____| (1817 - 1896) m 1837| | _______________________ | | |_Emeilia_____________| (1787 - ....) | |_______________________
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Mother: Anna Barbara MCCARTY |
_Henry FITZHUGH ________________ | (1620 - ....) _William FITZHUGH I "the immigrant"_| | (1650 - 1701) m 1674 | | |________________________________ | _John FITZHUGH Sr. of "Marmion"_| | (1695 - 1733) m 1715 | | | _John TUCKER "the Immigrant"____+ | | | (1639 - 1671) | |_Sarah TUCKER ______________________| | (1663 - ....) m 1674 | | |_Rosanna "Rose" STURMAN ________+ | (1629 - 1710) | |--Elizabeth FITZHUGH | (1732 - ....) | _Dennis MCCARTY "the Immigrant"_ | | (1649 - 1694) m 1674 | _Daniel MCCARTY I___________________| | | (1679 - 1724) m 1698 | | | |_Elizabeth BILLINGTON __________+ | | (1656 - 1715) m 1674 |_Anna Barbara MCCARTY __________| (1702 - 1737) m 1715 | | _Humphrey POPE I________________+ | | (1645 - ....) m 1665 |_Elizabeth POPE ____________________| (1677 - 1716) m 1698 | |_Elizabeth HAWKINS _____________+ (1650 - 1695) m 1665
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Father: Richard F. FORTSON Mother: Nancy HAM |
_Thomas FORTSON Jr.________+ | (1742 - 1824) m 1762 _Benjamin FORTSON ___________| | (1765 - 1823) m 1797 | | |_Rachel WINN ______________+ | (1744 - ....) m 1762 _Richard F. FORTSON _| | (1813 - 1894) m 1832| | | _Richard GAINES ___________+ | | | (1759 - 1824) m 1782 | |_Elizabeth GAINES ___________| | (1770 - ....) m 1797 | | |_Elizabeth EASTIN _________ | m 1782 | |--Sophia H. FORTSON | (1837 - 1924) | _Stephen HAM ______________+ | | (1734 - 1811) m 1760 | _John HAM ___________________| | | (1763 - 1821) m 1787 | | | |_Mildred RUCKER ___________+ | | (1740 - 1823) m 1760 |_Nancy HAM __________| (1812 - 1887) m 1832| | _Richard GATEWOOD _________+ | | (1740 - 1794) m 1760 |_Elizabeth "Betsy" GATEWOOD _| (1771 - 1861) m 1787 | |_Elizabeth "Betty" FOSTER _+ (1744 - 1807) m 1760
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Mother: Sarah HOWARD |
Children with Judith Cary Bell:
2 Sarah Howard GIST b: ABT 1783 d: 31 JAN 1849 + Jesse BLEDSOE
2 Henry Cary GIST b: 1786 d: 1883 + Ann PACE
2 Judith Bell GIST b: 1788 + Joseph BOSWELL
2 Thomas Nathaniel GIST b: 1790 d: SEP 1856 + Ann Reed BARBOUR +
Polly M UNKNOWN
2 Anna Maria GIST b: 1791 d: 1815 + Nathaniel Gray HART
2 Davidella C GIST b: 1793 d: BEF 1815
2 Elizabeth Violet GIST b: ABT 1795 d: 1877 + Francis Preston
BLAIR
2 Maria Cecil GIST b: 18 JUL 1797 d: 4 NOV 1841 + Benjamin GRATZ
_Christopher GIST "the Immigrant"_ | (1655 - 1691) _Richard GIST _________________| | (1684 - 1741) m 1704 | | |_Edith CROMWELL __________________ | (1660 - 1694) _Christopher GIST "Scout"_| | (1705 - 1759) m 1729 | | | _James MURRAY "the Immigrant"_____ | | | (1665 - 1704) m 1684 | |_Zipporah MURRAY ______________| | (1685 - 1760) m 1704 | | |_Jemina MORGAN ___________________+ | (1668 - 1711) m 1684 | |--Nathaniel GIST | (1733 - 1796) | __________________________________ | | | _Joshua HOWARD "the Immigrant"_| | | (1659 - 1738) m 1695 | | | |__________________________________ | | |_Sarah HOWARD ____________| (1711 - 1757) m 1729 | | __________________________________ | | |_Johanna O'CARROLL ____________| (1675 - 1763) m 1695 | |__________________________________
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Mother: Mollie GRAY |
_Samuel SLOAN ________ | (1758 - 1840) m 1780 _Alfred A. SLOAN ___________| | (1810 - 1888) m 1837 | | |_Elizabeth PATTERSON _ | (1765 - 1842) m 1780 _Alfred A. "Bud" SLOAN Jr._| | (1851 - ....) m 1879 | | | _James HARRISON ______+ | | | (1790 - 1873) m 1815 | |_Margaret Jane C. HARRISON _| | (1820 - 1890) m 1837 | | |_Elizabeth HARRISON __+ | (1790 - 1849) m 1815 | |--Tera SLOAN | (1880 - ....) | ______________________ | | | ____________________________| | | | | | |______________________ | | |_Mollie GRAY ______________| (1863 - ....) m 1879 | | ______________________ | | |____________________________| | |______________________
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|
_WILLIAM de TRACEY __+ | (1134 - 1224) _WILLIAM de TRACEY __| | (1185 - ....) | | |_HARVISE de BORN ____ | (1137 - ....) _HENRY de TRACEY ____| | (1215 - 1296) | | | _____________________ | | | | |_____________________| | | | |_____________________ | | |--JOHN TRACEY | (1245 - ....) | _____________________ | | | _____________________| | | | | | |_____________________ | | |_____________________| | | _____________________ | | |_____________________| | |_____________________
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Mother: Anne CARTER |
On January 11, 1848, he married Lucy Penn Taylor,
great-granddaughter of John Penn, one of the signers of the
Declaration of Independence from North Carolina. He was elected
to the Virginia house of delegates in I849; was presiding
justice of the county court of Hanover county for many years. In
1858 he was commissioned captain of Virginia volunteer cavalry,
and in 1859 was elected to the State senate from the district
composed of Hanover and Henrico, as a Whig. In 1861, elected by
the people of Henrico to the State convention as a Union man, he
was bitterly opposed to the war and voted against the ordinance
of secession, but immediately upon the secession of Virginia, he
determined to share the fortunes of his people, and took his
company, "the Hanover dragoons," into active service.
He participated in the first battle of Manassas and the
preceding outpost skirmishes, and in September, 1861, was
commissioned by Governor Letcher, lieutenant-colonel of the
Fourth Virginia cavalry. On May 4, 1862, he received a severe
saber wound in a cavalry charge at Williamsburg, which prevented
him from participating in the battles around Richmond. While
wounded he was taken prisoner at his home on McClellan's
advance, paroled, and speedily exchanged by special cartel for
his wife's kinsman, Lieut.-Col. Thomas L. Kane, of the
Pennsylvania "Bucktails."
In August,' 1862, he was commissioned colonel of the Fourth
Virginia cavalry, and in that rank he participated in the
battles of Second Manassas, Boonsboro, Sharpsburg and the
frequent engagements of the cavalry under General Stuart. During
the advance of the army of the Potomac into Virginia, after the
battle of Sharpsburg, he was again wounded, by a piece of shell,
in the neck, while temporarily in command of Fitz Lee's brigade
at Upperville. Recovering from this wound, he regained his
command in time to take part in the battle of Fredericksburg,
December 12, 1862. When the army went into winter quarters, he
was on the picket lines on the Rappahannock river from
Fredericksburg to a point above the junction of the Rapidan, and
was on those lines when Burnside made his unsuccessful attempt
to cross the river again. In the spring of 1863, he and his
command participated actively in the outpost conflicts preceding
the battle of Chancellorsville, and was posted on the right
flank during that battle. Prior to the opening of the campaign
in 1863, while in command of his regiment at the front, he
announced himself a candidate for the Confederate Congress from
the Richmond district, and without going into the district was
elected shortly after the battle of Chancellorsville, by an
unparalleled majority. He, however, remained at his post in the
army, leaving his seat in Congress vacant until the fall of
1864. On the advance into Pennsylvania Colonel Wickham's command
formed a part of the force which Stuart took on his raid around
Meade's army, rejoining the army of Northern Virginia on the eve
of the battle of Gettysburg, was posted on the extreme left
flank during that engagement, and aided in covering the retreat.
On September 9, 1863, he was commissioned brigadier-general, and
put in command of Wickham's brigade of Fitzhugh Lee's division.
The cavalry of both armies had frequent encounters during the
following months, the engagements at Bristoe, Brandy Station and
Buckland Mills being the most serious until February, 1864, when
the fighting to repel Kilpatrick's raid upon Richmond, and
Custer's attack on Charlottesville was very desperate.
In March and April, 1864, General Wickham and his brigade were
again on guard on the Rapidan and Rappahannock rivers. He took
part in the battles of the Wilderness and Spottsylvania Court
House, and when Sheridan moved on Richmond, he was with Stuart
on May 11th at Yellow Tavern. "Order Wickham to dismount his
brigade and attack," was the last order given by General Stuart
to a brigade of cavalry. Subsequently he was actively engaged
in the battles of Totopotomay, Cold Harbor, Trevilian's, Reams'
Station and many of the lesser cavalry engagements. On August
10, 1864, he and his command were ordered from the south side of
the James river to join Early's army in the valley of Virginia,
Fitzhugh Lee being in command of the cavalry corps with General
Wickham in command of Lee's division. At the battle of
Winchester on September 19, 1864, General Wickham covered the
retreat. Rallying his men with great ability, General Early
again sustained a terrific reverse at Fisher's hill, September
::d, and his army was saved from destruction by the successful
defense of the Luray valley by Lee's cavalry division under the
command of General Wickham, against the advance of Torbert's
corps on which Sheridan relied to intercept the retreat of Early
at New Market in the main valley. Rejoining General Early at
Brown's gap, Wickham was ordered to guard Rockfish gap, and on
arriving at the foot of the mountain attacked the Federal
cavalry at Waynesboro, driving them back. The next day the enemy
retreated down the valley, and the lines of the armies were
established at Bridgewater.
General Wickham resigned his commission in the Confederate army
on October 5, 1864, transferred his command to General Rosser,
went to Richmond and took his seat in Congress when the session
opened. It took him but a few days after the assembling of the
Confederate Congress to ascertain that the end of the
Confederacy was drawing near, and for a brief period he had the
hope that reunion could be brought about upon a basis which,
while it would in no way tarnish the honor of the armies or
people of the South, would save the lives of thousands of noble
men, and preserve some of their property from the wreck of war.
After the failure of the Hampton Roads conference, he continued
at his post in Richmond, awaiting the end. After the surrender
of the armies, General Wickham addressed himself to the effort
to restore friendly relations between the sections of the Union;
to reorganize on a mutually satisfactory basis the labor
necessary for the farming operations of the country, and to
induce his fellow-citizens to accept the situation. The
condition of the South was terrible.
General Wickham stood side by side with his old constituents and
shared their fate. He had been educated a Whig and a Union man.
When the war ended, his political faith remained unchanged, and
as the Whig party had disappeared, he adopted the principles of
the party which he regarded as its legitimate successor. On
April 23, 1865, in an open letter, he aligned himself with the
Republican party. This step estranged very many of his old
associates from him. In November, 1865, he was elected president
of the Virginia Central railroad company; in November, 1868,
president of the Chesapeake & Ohio railroad company, and in 1869
was made vice-president of the company with C. P. Huntington as
president, and continued as such until 1875, when he was
appointed its receiver, which position he held until July 1,
1878, when he became its second vice-president and so continued
until his death. He was elected chairman of the board of
supervisors of Hanover county in 1871, and was continuously
re-elected as long as he lived. In 1872 he was a member of the
electoral college of Virginia, and cast his vote for General
Grant. In 1880 he was honored by a tender of the secretaryship
of the navy by President Hayes, but declined on account of
business engagements. In 1881 he was tendered the nomination for
governor of the State by the Republican convention, but declined
to accept it. Opposing the "readjuster party" in 1883, he again
became a member of the State senate, and was the chairman of the
finance committee of that body until his death, although he
occupied an independent position and declined to go into any
caucus.
While not an impassioned speaker, he was brave and calm and
cool, and possessed in a remarkable degree the capacity to
arouse manifestations of enthusiasm and personal attachment. On
the 23d of July, 1888, he died in his office in Richmond of
heart failure. The men of his old command, from many of whom he
had become politically estranged, resolved that "in the camp and
on the field of battle, in the fatigue of the march, in the
gloom of the hospital, under the depression of the waiting and
in the glory of the charge, he was the friend, the comrade, the
guardian, the leader of his men, the beau-ideal of a soldier and
of a commander," and they organized to perpetuate his memory in
bronze. In 1890 the general assembly of Virginia provided for a
site on the capitol grounds for the statue of General Wickham.
which was unveiled on October 29, 1891, the oration being
delivered by Gen. Fitzhugh Lee.
[150176]
Heart attack in his office.
________________________________ | __________________________| | | | |________________________________ | _William Fanning WICKHAM _| | (1800 - ....) | | | ________________________________ | | | | |__________________________| | | | |________________________________ | | |--William Carter WICKHAM C.S.A. | (1820 - 1888) | _Charles Hill CARTER of Shirley_+ | | (1733 - 1802) m 1770 | _Robert CARTER of Shirley_| | | (1774 - ....) m 1792 | | | |_Ann Butler MOORE ______________+ | | (1756 - 1810) m 1770 |_Anne CARTER _____________| (1800 - ....) | | _Thomas NELSON Gov. of Virginia_+ | | (1738 - 1789) m 1762 |_Mary NELSON _____________| (1774 - ....) m 1792 | |_Lucy GRYMES ___________________+ (1743 - 1830) m 1762
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