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Will of George Mackall Clarke, St. Mary's County,
5/13/1751-7/21/1753.
Son: John Attaway Clarke "Piney Point" and if should die without
issue by his wife Hannah, then said Hannah to enjoy aforesaid
tract.
Daughter: Susanna Mackall Smoot "Clarke's Range".
Son: John Attaway Clarke, land on Blake Creek bought from John
Tannehill.
Wife: Susanna Clarke, use of plantation where I now live with
several tracts purchased of Stephen Martin and Jane his wife and
Robert Mason.
Wife is to also have the rents of all my other lands until my
youngest child arrives at age 21 or marries.
Daughters: Hannah Key, Ellen Clarke, Susanna Clarke, Anne
Clarke, and Sarah Clarke the plantation after the d. of my wife;
all land bought from William Cavenaugh; and two tracts bought of
Robert Nugent; a tract mortgaged by Andrew Bulther; a tract
mortaged by William Jones at the head of St. Clement's Bay. In
case of all them should die without issue then to John Attaway
Clarke and Susanna Mackall.
Slaves to be sold to support daughters Ellen, Susanna, Anne, and
Sarah.
Wit: John Reeder, Thomas Perrin, James Hardwick, James Kendrick,
Phyllis Griffin, James Murrin, John Hughes, Thomas Innis.
Codicil: Wife, two tracts that I bought from Robert Morgan.
Wit: John Reeder, James Hardwick, Phyllis Griffin, John Hughes,
James Kendrick. 6/29/1753:
Came John Reeder and Ann Reeder who state that Col. George
Clarke now deceased about 6/23 instant June--that about 7 weeks
before his death he gave this wife Susanna Clarke verbally the
following: Negro boy Dick bought of John Stanfield; John
Blackistone's bond; and Capt. Gilbert Ireland's bond and
furniture (listed) and gave his daughters Ann and Sarah Clarke a
horse, saddle, and furniture.
p.320 Acct Elisabeth Cooke Extx of will of Thomas Cooke late of
SM Decd.... 2 pair of Shoes recd. of George Clarke.... 15 Apr
1717
===
Ste Mary's Co. 29 June 1753. Came John Reader and Ann Reeder,
both of the co. aforesaid, say that Collo. George Clarke now
deceased about 23 instant June and also before the said 23 of
this Instant. June to witt: about 7 weeks before the date hereof
in the presence of them the sd. John and Ann Reeder, gave unto
his then wife Susanna Clarke verbally the following articles to
witt: Negro boy Dick purchased of John Stanfield, John
Blacklaton's bond and Capt. Gilbert Ireland's bond and furniture
[listed]. And gave to each of his two daus., Ann and Sarah
Clarke, horse, saddle and furniture. 28, 520
===
CLARKE, GEORGE, 13 May 1751
21 Jul 1753
To son John Attaway Clarke, tract called "Piney Point" and If he
should die without issue by his wife Hannah, then said Hannah to
enjoy aforesaid tract.
To dau. Susanna Markall Smoote, tract called "Clarkes Range."
To son John Attaway Clarke, land upon Blake Creek, purchased of
John Tunhill(?).
To wife Susanna Clarke, use of plantation whereon I now live
with several tracts purchased of Stephen Martin and Jane his
wife and Robert Mason.
To wife the rents of all my other lands until my youngest child
arrives at age of 21 or marriage.
To daus. Hannah Hey, Ellen Clarke, Susanna Clarke, Anne Clarke
and Sarah Clarke, after the death of my wife,. plantation
whereon I live and other land mentioned above held by wife; all
-the land purchased of William Cavenough and also two tract
purchased of Robert Nugent., also tract mortgaged by Andrew
Bulther.. tract mortgaged by William Jones at the head of
Clements Bay. In case all of them should die without heirs then
to John Attaway Clarke and Susanna Markall. That slaves be hold
for the support and maintenance of four daus; Ellen, Susanna,
Anne and Sarah.
Wit: John Reader, Thomas Perrin., James Hardwick, James
Kendrick, Millis; Griffin, James Murrin, John Hues, Thomas
Innis.
Codicil: To wife - two tracts that I bought of Robt. Morgan.
Wit: John Reader, James Hardwick, Phills Griffin, John Hues,
James Kendrick. 28.521
===
George Clarke Smoot, son of George Clarke and Sarah Smoot, was
born in Charles County, Maryland. He settled in Washington
County, Maryland, where he was one time connected with the
county court house. His wife is buried in the Episcopal
graveyard at Hagerstown. Her tomb reads: "Mrs. Matilda Smoot
wife of George C. Smoot departed this life March 7, 1844 aged
68".
===
Rev. Henry Ogle 47.28 CH £94.5.2 Apr 9 1750 Apr 25 1751
Appraisers: Mungo Huschet, Daniel of St. Thomas Jenifer.
Creditors: Samuel Luckett, George Clarke.
Next of kin: Samuel Ogle.
Administrator: Rev. Theophilus Swift."
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The Founding Fathers of Sigma Alpha Epsilon
http://thehookup.richmond.edu/~sae/pages/sae_founders.html#Kerr
Noble Leslie Devotie
Noble Leslie Devotie was born in Tuscaloosa, Alabama, January
24, 1838. He spent his early life in Marion, Alabama. He entered
the University of Alabama in October, 1853, in the sophomore
class, having spent his two years at Howard College. All through
his university course he brilliantly maintained his intellectual
supremacy. His grade average for his entire course at Alabama
was 96 3/4. He was graduated as valedictorian at the had of his
class July 17, 1856. In the fall of 1856 he entered Princeton
Theological School, from which he graduated in 1859. The he
became pastor of the First Baptist Church at Selma, Alabama. In
1861 he enlisted as chaplain in the C.S.A. when the Independent
Blues and the Governor's Guard of Selma were sent to Fort
Morgan. On February 12, 1861, as he was about to board a steamer
at Fort Morgan, Alabama, he made a misstep and fell into the
water. Three days later his body was washed ashore. He was the
first man to lose his life in the Civil War.
http://thehookup.richmond.edu/~sae/pages/sae_founders.html#Noble%
20Leslie%20Devotie
DeVotie helped found SAE at the University of Alabama in 1856.
After finishing the seminary he came south to Columbus where his
father was the minister at First Baptist Church. DeVotie joined
the Confederate Army as a chaplain. On, Feb. 12, 1861, he was
praying for the troops on a dock in Mobile, Ala., and he fell
off and drowned. Three days later his body was found and brought
to Columbus to be buried, Boyce said.
Because DeVotie's death came three days after the Confederate
States of America were formed on Feb. 9, 1861, many credit his
as the first death of the Civil War. Fort Sumter was attacked
three months later on April 12, 1861, and the war officially
began.
From: http://www.archives.state.al.us/markers/ibaldwin.html
Noble Leslie DeVotie
First Alabama soldier to die in the Civil War. Drowned February
12, 1861, while on duty as chaplain of the Alabama troops here.
Before enlisting, he was the pastor of Selma Baptist Church. He
was 23 at time of death. Noble Leslie DeVotie–First Alabama
soldier to lose life in Civil War. DeVotie graduated in 1856
from University of Alabama; Presbyterian Theological Seminary at
Princeton in 1859. In 1856 at the University of Alabama, he was
chief founder of Sigma Alpha Epsilon Fraternity, the only
national social fraternity founded in the Deep South. (Located
at Fort Morgan)
Sigma Alpha Epsilon (SAE) is a social fraternity based on
scholarship, friendship and leadership. SAE’s pride themselves
on the brotherhood they acquire during various social activities
and the support they give the brothers in all their endeavors.
Sigma Alpha Epsilon has over 140 years of proud traditions. It
was founded at the University of Alabama in 1856 by Noble Leslie
DeVotie. SAE’s have had more than men initiated that any other
fraternity. In fact, Sigma Alpha Epsilon is the largest
fraternity organization in the world. International Fraternity,
part of the North-American Interfraternity Conference (NIC).
History of Sigma Alpha Epsilon Fraternity
http://nickgray.net/10192002/history.html
http://www.ncsu.edu/stud_orgs/frat_sor/sigma_alpha_epsilon/histor
y.htm
History - Excerpt.......
Sigma Alpha Epsilon was founded March 9, 1856 at the University
of Alabama at Tuscaloosa. Its eight founders included five
seniors. Noble Leslie DeVotie, John Barratt Rudulph, Nathan
Elams Cockrell, John Webb Kerr, and Wade Foster, and three
juniors, Samuel Marion Dennis, Abner Edwin Patton and Thomas
Chappell Cook. Their leader was DeVotie who had written the
ritual, devised the grip and chosen the name. The badge was
designed by Rudulph. Of all existing fraternities today, Sigma
Alpha Epsilon is the only one founded in the ante-bellum South.
Founded in a time of growing and intense sectional feeling,
Sigma Alpha Epsilon, although it determined at the outset to
extend to other colleges, confined its growth to the southern
states. Extension was vigorous, however, and by the end of 1857
the Fraternity counted seven chapters. Its first national
convention met in the summer of 1858 at Murfreesboro, Tennessee,
with four of its eight chapters in attendance. By the time of
the outbreak of the Civil War in 1861, fifteen chapters had been
established.
The Fraternity had fewer than four hundred members when the
Civil War began. Of those, 369 went to war for the Confederacy
and seven fought with the Union forces. Every member of the
chapters at Hampden-Sydney, Georgia Military Institute, Kentucky
Military Institute an d Oglethorpe University fought for the
gray. Members from the Columbian College, William and Mary and
Bethel (KY) were in both armies. Seventy members of the
Fraternity lost their lives in the War, including Noble Leslie
DeVotie, who is officially recorded in the annals of the War as
the first man on either side to give his life.
The miracle in the history of Sigma Alpha Epsilon is that it
survived that great sectional conflict. when the smoke of the
battle had cleared, only one chapter, at tiny Columbian College
in Washington, D.C., survived, and it died soon thereafter.
When a few of the young veterans returned to the Georgia
Military Institute and found their little college burned to the
ground, they decided to go to Athens, Georgia, to enter the
state university there. It vas the founding of the University of
Georgia chapter at the end of 1865 that led to the Fraternity's
revival. Soon other chapters came back to life, and in 1867 the
first post-war convention was held at Nashville, Tennessee,
where a half dozen revived chapters planned the Fraternity's
future growth.
The Reconstruction years were cruel to the South, and southern
colleges and their fraternities shared in the general malaise of
the region. In the 1870s and early 1880s more than a score of
new chapters were formed, some of them in exceedingly frail
institutions. Older chapters died as fast as new ones were
established. By 1886 the Fraternity had charted 49 chapters, but
scarcely a dozen could be called active. Two of the 49 were in
the North. After much discussion and not a little dissent, the
first northern chapter had been established at Pennsylvania
College, now Gettysburg College, in 1883, and a second was
placed at Mt. Union College in Ohio two years later.
It was in 1886 that things took a turn for the better. That
autumn a 16-year-old youngster by the name of Harry Bunting
entered Southwestern Presbyterian University in Clarksville,
Tennessee, and was initiated by the young Tennessee Zeta chapter
there that had previously initiated two of his brothers. When
Sigma Alpha Epsilon took in Harry Bunting, it caught a comet by
the tail.
In just eight years, under the enthusiastic guidance of Harry
Bunting and his younger brother, George, Sigma Alpha Epsilon
experienced a renaissance. Together they prodded Sigma Alpha
Epsilon chapters to enlarge their membership; they wrote
encouraging articles in the Fraternity's quarterly journal, The
Record, promoting better chapter standards; and above all they
undertook an almost incredible program of expansion of the
Fraternity, resurrecting old chapters in the South (including
the mother chapter at Alabama) and founding new ones in the
North and West. In an explosion of growth, the Buntings
single-handedly were responsible for nearly fifty chapters of
Sigma Alpha Epsilon.
In 1904 the Fraternity erected a building at Tuscaloosa,
Alabama, as a memorial to Noble Leslie DeVotie and the other
seven founders. Later a chapter house was attached to it, and
the entire structure served for many years as a home for the
original chapter This was replaced in 1953 by a larger structure
on a new site and was dedicated at the Fraternity's centennial
celebration on March 9, 1956.
The Fraternity's International headquarters is maintained at the
Levere Memorial Temple in Evanston Illinois. Honoring all the
members of the Fraternity who have served their countries on
land or sea or in the air since 1856, it was dedicated on
December 28, 1930.
THE RITUAL Excerpt.........http://sae.rso.wisc.edu/ritual.htm
The ritual for Sigma Alpha Epsilon is the tradition and
background that has been handed down to the Fraternity's
initiates since 1856. This includes its history, written
Ritual, insignia and ceremonies. Below is a bit of information
on different parts of the Fraternity's ritual.
Written Ritual
The written Ritual is the document that binds all SAE's, living
or passed, together. It is the tradition that has started since
the Fraternity's founding in 1856, and is passed down to the
active members of today. Because of this sacred tradition that
exists only between SAE's, the Ritual is a protected tradition.
True Gentleman
"The true gentleman is the man whose conduct proceeds from good
will and an acute sense of propriety, and whose self control is
equal to all emergencies: who does not make the poor man
conscious of his poverty, the obscure man of his obscurity, or
any man of his inferiority or deformity; who is himself humbled
if necessity compels him to humble another; who does not flatter
wealth, cringe before power, or boast of his own possessions or
achievements; who speaks with frankness, but always with
sincerity and sympathy; whose deed follows his word; who thinks
of the rights and feelings of others, rather than his own; and
appears well in any company; a man with whom honor is sacred and
virtue safe."
-John Walter Wayland
"The True Gentleman"... For almost three-quarters of a century,
our Brothers have been guided by these simple but powerful
words. They have inspired us in times of discouragement, guided
us in times of confusion, humbled us at our moments of great
achievement, and bonded us across all distance and time.
In many ways the words penned by John Walter Wayland are Sigma
Alpha Epsilon, to members and non-members alike. No other piece
of writing captures so completely our intentions and standards;
no other works sums up so concisely what we stand for, aspire
to, and work toward in everything we do.
National History
In 1856, at the University of Alabama in Tuscaloosa, a young
Alabamian named Noble Leslie DeVotie and his seven closest
friends founded Sigma Alpha Epsilon. From those humble
beginnings Sigma Alpha Epsilon has grown and been through many
difficulties. Only five months after the creation of SAE, the
University of Alabama abolished fraternities. The original
chapter of SAE was forced to disband 18 months later.
Fortunately, SAE had expanded to six other colleges in that
time. The advent of the Civil War posed a major problem, not
only for the expansion of SAE but for its survival as well.
Sadly, Noble Leslie DeVotie became the first man to lose his
life in the war. Many SAE's followed DeVotie into battle, and
SAE's very existence was threatened. Only one chapter remained
after the war, but SAE soon recovered and grew stronger. A major
part of the rebuilding of Sigma Alpha Epsilon was the decision
to expand into northern and western states in 1885. All through
the expansion SAE managed to keep it's "Southern Gentleman"
values and beliefs intact.
Fraternity pledges seek DeVotie grave
BY SCOOTER MAC MILLAN
Staff Writer
On Saturday, 19 members of Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity
chapter from Georgia Southern University planted a willow oak at
the grave of Noble Leslie DeVotie in Linwood Cemetery.
http://www.ledger-enquirer.com/mld/ledgerenquirer/news/local/1100
2691.htm
A County Older Than the State–Baldwin County
Third oldest county in Alabama. Created in 1809 while still part
of Mississippi Territory. Named for Abraham Baldwin (1754-1807),
founder of the University of Georgia, delegate to the
Constitutional Convention, member of Congress, 1789-1807. This
county once lay west of the Tombigbee River; but, after series
of boundary changes, it now lies east of the Mobile and Alabama
Rivers. County seat at Bay Minette since 1901; earlier seats at
McIntosh Bluff, Blakely, and Daphne. It has long been a center
of conflicting claims: by Spain, France, and England; by royal
governors of Florida, Louisiana, Carolina, Georgia, and West
Florida until the Mississippi Territory formed in 1798 and from
it, the Alabama Territory in 1817. In struggle for control of
the Southeast, many armies have camped in this area:
1528–Narvez, Spanish conquistador 1588–DeLuna, Spanish colonizer
1719–Bienville, French colonizer 1780–Galvez, Spanish conqueror
1813–Red Eagle, Indian revolter 1814–Jackson, American defender
1815–Packenham, British invader 1864–Maury, Confederate defender
1865–Canby, Federal invader.
Confederate Rest Cemetery
The Grand Hotel and the Gunnison House served as a hospital for
wounded Confederate soldiers from the Battle of Vicksberg during
the Civil War. The Confederate Rest Cemetery commemorates more
than 300 Confederate soldiers who died while in the hospital.
The original tract of seven acres included markers erected to
the Unknown Confederate Dead. The records of the soldiers were
kept in the hotel until a fire in 1869, when the identities of
those buried in Confederate Rest were lost.
Samuel Marion Dennis
Samuel Marion Dennis was born in Richmond, Alabama on December
24, 1834. In his senior year at college he attended Princeton
University from which he graduated in 1857. He studied law and
located to Columbus, Texas. At the outbreak of the Civil War, he
joined "Terry's Texas Rangers" and served in Company K, Eighth
Texas Calvary. He was captured by Union soldiers near
Murfreesboro, Tennessee, placed on a steamboat and sent
northward to Saint Louis and confined in a military prison. He
had to remain in his wet clothes which caused him to contract
pneumonia and soon after caused his death on January 28, 1863.
Wade Foster was born on March 7, 1838, in Tuscaloosa County,
Alabama. He graduated from the
University of Alabama in 1856, and went to Starkville,
Mississippi, to become principle of the local
high school. On November 11, 1857, he married Sara Bell in
Starkville and in 1860 moved to DeSoto
Parish, Louisiana, where he began his life of a cotton planter.
During the Civil War he was a private in
Company D, Second Alabama Calvary, under General Forrest in
Ferguson's Brigade. His company
surrendered at Washington, Georgia, while acting as escort for
Jefferson Davis. After the war he
engaged in business in Marshall, Texas, and died there February
15, 1867.
Abner Edwin Patton was born in Knoxville, Alabama on September
14, 1835. He entered the
University of Alabama on October 4, 1854, and graduated in 1857.
At the Fraternity's first meeting he
was elected president of the chapter. He entered the confederate
Army as a private with the Eleventh
Alabama regiment in the Army of Virginia, where he was adjutant
of the regiment. He was mortally
wounded at the battle of Gaines Mill, July 13, 1863, and died in
a hospital in Richmond, VA, where he
was buried.
Thomas Chappell Cook was born in Fairfield, Alabama on September
19, 1836. He entered the
University of Alabama on October 5, 1853, and remained there
until January 1, 1856. Later he attended Princeton
University and graduated with a degree in medicine from the
University of Pennsylvania in 1859. At
the outbreak of the Civil War, he enlisted in the 1st Texas
heavy artillery. After the war, he returned to
Weimar, Texas. He was a member of the 19th Legislature of Texas
in 1885-1886 and was Couty
Physician of Colorado County, Texas. President Cleveland
appointed him medical examiner of the
U.S. Army and Navy from 1889-1893. He died at Weimar, Texas on
February 18, 1906.
Nathan Elams Cockrell was born in Livingston, Alabama on
September 27, 1833. He entered the
University of Alabama in 1854 and graduated July 18, 1856. He
managed his father's plantation and later became
editor of the Livingston Messenger. He was the first founder to
die - June 3, 1859 - and is buried in
Sumterville, Alabama.
John Barratt Rudulph was born in Benton, Alabama on October 10,
1837. He graduated in from the
University of Alabama in 1856 and married Miss Virginia Blount
on July 2, 1856. He was a delegate to
the state convention of 1861, known as the seccessionist
convention of Alabama. He enlisted as
captain of the 10th Alabama regiment calvary in 1862 and rose to
the rank of Major and later Colonel.
He lost his left arm at the battle of New Hope Church on May 27,
1864. After the war was over he
moved to Pleasant Hill, Alabama, where he was Justice of the
Peace for Dallas County, Alabama, and
Tax Assessor during 1890-92. He became president and also a
trustee of the Pleasant Hill Academy.
He attended the Atlanta Convention in 1906 and the Atlantic City
Convention in 1909. He died in
Pleasant Hill, Alabama on April 13, 1910, and was buried there.
John Webb Kerr was born on March 7, 1835, in Greensboro,
Alabama. He enrolled at the University of
Alabama on October 19, 1852. He was elected first secretary of
the Fraternity. After graduation in 1856 he began
studying law in the office of Chief Justice Peck of Alabama. In
the fall of that year he entered the law
department of Cumberland University in Lebanon, Tennessee. He
left there shortly after and entered
Harvard Law School where he received his L.L.B. in 1858. He died
in St. Louis, Missouri, September 14, 1898.
Lauren Foreman and John O. Moseley provided strong leadership
through the following years. Moseley, a professor, philosopher
and former Rhodes Scholar, began the Leadership School, a fine
tradition of the fraternity that exists today.
http://www.kentuckykappa.com/hist.htm
In 1828, Edward Lloyd Thomas and his son Truman were surveying
land in West Central Georgia for what would become Columbus,
Georgia. Working in the harsh conditions of the winter of 1827 -
1828, Truman became ill in March. Suffering for over a week,
Truman passed away on March 26, 1828. The next day, Edward
buried his son. The following month, Edward surveyed the four
acres surrounding the grave of his son for use as a cemetery for
Columbus.
Located behind the Old City Hospital, now the Medical Center,
Linwood Cemetery was included in the 1828 plan of Columbus,
Georgia as the first public cemetery. Known as the 'City
Cemetery", Linwood did not receive its current name until City
Council action on November 7, 1894. Rich in tradition and
history, Linwood is the final resting-place for some 500
Confederate soldiers, sailors, Columbus Guard and Columbus
Artillery as well as several nationally notable persons. Linwood
Cemetery is also listed on the National Register of Historic
Places.
Columbus, Georgia is the site of the last Civil War land battle
east of the Mississippi River. On Easter Sunday, April 16, 1865
(a week after the Surrender at Appomattox), Wilson's Federal
Raiders, being 4,000 strong, overran a Confederate entrenchment
over a mile long in Alabama, crossed the Chattahoochee River
entering Georgia and captured Columbus.
1860 Census: Selma, Alabama
Name: N L Devotie
Age in 1860: 22
Birthplace: Alabama
Home in 1860: Selma, Dallas, Alabama
Gender: Female
Value of real estate:
Post Office: Selma
Roll: M653_8 Page: 840 Year: 1860
Head of Household: W B Milton
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Mother: Margaret M. BROWN |
__ | __________________________________________| | | | |__ | _William R. HILL ____| | (1830 - 1894) m 1860| | | __ | | | | |__________________________________________| | | | |__ | | |--Margaret "Maggie" Brown HILL | (1860 - 1900) | __ | | | _(RESEARCH QUERY) BROWN of Amherst Co. VA_| | | | | | |__ | | |_Margaret M. BROWN __| (1830 - ....) m 1860| | __ | | |__________________________________________| | |__
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Mother: Martha CARY |
_________________________________ | _John JAQUELIN ______| | (1640 - ....) | | |_________________________________ | _Edward JAQUELIN "the Immigrant"_| | (1668 - 1730) m 1706 | | | _________________________________ | | | | |_Elizabeth CRADDOCK _| | (1640 - ....) | | |_________________________________ | | |--Edward JAQUELIN | (1716 - 1734) | _Miles CARY Esq. "the Immigrant"_+ | | (1622 - 1667) m 1645 | _William CARY I______| | | (1657 - 1713) | | | |_Anne TAYLOR ____________________+ | | (1621 - 1656) m 1645 |_Martha CARY ____________________| (1686 - 1738) m 1706 | | _John SCARBROOKE ________________ | | (1625 - ....) |_Martha SCARBROOKE __| (1660 - ....) | |_Mary MARTIAN (MARTIAU) _________+ (1624 - ....)
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Father: David Scott MCCANTS Mother: Jane MCNISH |
_James MCCANTS Esq.___+ | (1713 - 1772) m 1740 _Nathaniel MCCANTS __| | (1745 - 1816) m 1766| | |_Agnes MCNEALY _______+ | (1725 - 1760) m 1740 _David Scott MCCANTS _| | (1781 - 1864) m 1803 | | | _John James GOTEA I___+ | | | (1720 - 1807) | |_Elizabeth GOTEA ____| | (1745 - 1824) m 1766| | |_Elizabeth MCCONNELL _+ | (1730 - ....) | |--James Nathaniel MCCANTS | (1809 - ....) | _John MCNISH I________+ | | (1720 - 1748) | _James MCNISH _______| | | (1743 - ....) | | | |_Margaret ALEXANDER? _ | | (1720 - ....) |_Jane MCNISH _________| (1780 - 1837) m 1803 | | ______________________ | | |_____________________| | |______________________
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Mother: MARY BUTLINE |
_THOMAS MONTAGU _____+ | (1370 - ....) _JOHN MONTAGU _______| | (1400 - ....) | | |_CHRISTIAN BASSETT __ | (1370 - ....) _WILLIAM MONTAGU ____| | (1420 - ....) | | | _____________________ | | | | |_ALICE HALCOT _______| | (1400 - ....) | | |_____________________ | | |--RICHARD MONTAGU | (1450 - ....) | _____________________ | | | _____________________| | | | | | |_____________________ | | |_MARY BUTLINE _______| (1420 - ....) | | _____________________ | | |_____________________| | |_____________________
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Mother: Mary CHAMBERLAIN |
_John PHILLIPS ________ | (1696 - ....) m 1719 _Francis PHILLIPS __________| | (1720 - 1788) | | |_Sarah WEST ___________+ | (1700 - 1747) m 1719 _John PHILLIPS ______| | (1751 - 1846) m 1771| | | _Arthur AYLESWORTH Jr._+ | | | (1683 - 1761) m 1704 | |_Demis (Dimmis) AYLESWORTH _| | (1725 - 1761) | | |_Mary FRANKLIN ________ | (1684 - 1761) m 1704 | |--Hosea PHILLIPS | (1781 - ....) | _______________________ | | | _Joseph CHAMBERLAIN ________| | | (1720 - 1761) m 1740 | | | |_______________________ | | |_Mary CHAMBERLAIN ___| (1744 - 1815) m 1771| | _______________________ | | |_Hannah NEWTON _____________| (1720 - ....) m 1740 | |_______________________
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Mother: Frances GARLAND |
_William RUST "the Immigrant"_ | (1634 - 1699) m 1662 _Samuel RUST ________| | (1665 - 1715) m 1690| | |_Ann METCALFE ________________+ | (1642 - 1699) m 1662 _Mathew RUST ________| | (1697 - 1751) m 1739| | | _John GARNER "the Immigrant"__ | | | (1633 - 1712) | |_Martha GARNER ______| | (1676 - 1726) m 1690| | |_Susannah KEENE ______________+ | (1634 - 1716) | |--Frances RUST | (1739 - ....) | ______________________________ | | | _____________________| | | | | | |______________________________ | | |_Frances GARLAND ____| (1696 - 1761) m 1739| | ______________________________ | | |_____________________| | |______________________________
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Mother: Lucy Gregory WOODFORD |
iii. Edmund, m 1845, Susan Moris, b. 1827; dau. of John Blair
and Eliz'h Lewis (Towles) Dabney (Dabney Fam. of Va., 109, 114.)
Children:
[523572]
or Liberty Hill, Caroline Co. VA
_James TAYLOR ________________+ | (1729 - 1756) m 1750 _John TAYLOR of Caroline_| | (1753 - 1824) m 1783 | | |_Anne POLLARD ________________+ | (1732 - 1815) m 1750 _John TAYLOR Jr.________| | (1810 - ....) | | | _John PENN "The Signer" of NC_+ | | | (1741 - 1787) m 1763 | |_Lucy M. PENN ___________| | (1764 - 1831) m 1783 | | |_Susannah LYNE _______________+ | (1740 - ....) m 1763 | |--Edmund Pendleton TAYLOR C.S.A. | (1822 - 1880) | _William WOODFORD ____________+ | | (1734 - 1780) m 1763 | _John Thornton WOODFORD _| | | (1763 - 1845) m 1786 | | | |_Mary THORNTON _______________+ | | (1744 - ....) m 1763 |_Lucy Gregory WOODFORD _| (1800 - ....) | | _Walker TALIAFERRO ___________ | | (1733 - ....) m 1755 |_Mary Turner TALIAFERRO _| (1772 - 1828) m 1786 | |_Sarah TURNER ________________ (1733 - ....) m 1755
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HTML created by GED2HTML v3.6-WIN95 (Jan 18 2000) on 05/29/2005 09:03:10 PM Central Standard Time.