Paternal Line of Robin Bellamy - pyan560 - Generated by Personal Ancestral File

Piatt/Pyatt/Peyatte of all spellings

Notes


August R (Piatt)

This family is listed in Scioto Co, OH 1930 and 1920
WW1 draft registration Scioto Co, OH 1917


Bertie F Roe

1920 Census shows her born Ohio


David Hamilton Cutlip

Lucinda had an illegitimate child, David Hamilton, possibly by Josiah Beard. When David was two years old, Lucinda married George W. Cutlip. He then adopted the child. Josiah was a friend of Lucinda Jane "Jane" Fowler's family. She worked as a domestic for them and her family visited them often. This information was developed by Eula Conley. The records she used to determine this are still missing.

On tombstone:
Dearest father thou hast left us,
Here thy loss we deeply feel.
But, tis God who has berieved us.
He can all our sorrow heal.


Civil War Records

David H. Cutlip, Company H, 19th Va. Cavalry. Private. Capt. Wm. P. O'Brien's Co. of Cavalry.
Company Muster Roll not dated.
Enlisted March 19, 186_.
Where: Frankfort.
By whom: Col. Wm. Jackson.
Period: 3 years.

Company Muster Roll for Sept. & Oct. 1864
Enlisted Aug. 1, 1863 Pocahontas.
By whom: Wm. P. O'Brien
Period: 3 yrs.

Additional information from General Services Adm. Nat'l Archives & Records Service, Washington, D.C.:

Never received pay. Absent. Absent without leave.


Additional information on Col. Wm. Jackson:

Gen. William Lowther "Mudwall" Jackson was a cousin of General Stonewall Jackson.

Gen. W. L. Jackson was also a judge and known for having a temper in courtroom. In May, 1861, three men were arrested as suspected would be CSA guerrillas. The Yankees had already taken over the area and wanted to try the men in a military court.


Judge William L. Jackson informed the Yankees that it was a civilian matter. The prosecuting attorney, James M. Jackson, said that the three men were going to destroy a railroad bridge and should be tried in a military court. Judge W. L. dismissed the case. The prosecutor was furious.


The two Jacksons started screaming at each other in the courtroom. W. L. told James M. to shut up and ordered the prosecutor confined in jail under a bench warrant for contempt in court.


Then one spectator jumped up with a pistol in his hand and other fire arms appeared. It looked like Judge W. L. was going to be killed. Confederates in the courtroom immediately surrounded Judge Jackson and took him home. Judge Jackson knew the Yanks would soon arrest him and he left a few minutes later.


Judge W. L. went south and contacted his cousin, Stonewall Jackson and the judge became a member of Jackson's staff.


Judge William L. Jackson was later commissioned commander of the 19th Virginia Cavalry, a unit composed mostly of Western Virginians.

1900 census shows David Hamilton Cutlip was born Jan. 1828.

LDS records say 01-Jan-1826
1850 census says 1828

Census 1850 Nicholas Co., WV Cutlip, Hamilton, 22 (Farmer)
Mary, 20
John, 2
Margaret, 1

Lucinda had an illegitimate child, David Hamilton, possibly by Josiah Beard. When David was two years old, Lucinda married George W. Cutlip. He then adopted the child. Josiah was a friend of Lucinda Jane "Jane" Fowler's family. She worked as a domestic for them and her family visited them often. This information was developed by Eula Conley. The records she used to determine this are still missing.

On tombstone:
Dearest father thou hast left us,
Here thy loss we deeply feel.
But, tis God who has berieved us.
He can all our sorrow heal.


Civil War Records

David H. Cutlip, Company H, 19th Va. Cavalry. Private. Capt. Wm. P. O'Brien's Co. of Cavalry.
Company Muster Roll not dated.
Enlisted March 19, 186_.
Where: Frankfort.
By whom: Col. Wm. Jackson.
Period: 3 years.

Company Muster Roll for Sept. & Oct. 1864
Enlisted Aug. 1, 1863 Pocahontas.
By whom: Wm. P. O'Brien
Period: 3 yrs.

Additional information from General Services Adm. Nat'l Archives & Records Service, Washington, D.C.:

Never received pay. Absent. Absent without leave.


Additional information on Col. Wm. Jackson:

Gen. William Lowther "Mudwall" Jackson was a cousin of General Stonewall Jackson.

Gen. W. L. Jackson was also a judge and known for having a temper in courtroom. In May, 1861, three men were arrested as suspected would be CSA guerrillas. The Yankees had already taken over the area and wanted to try the men in a military court.


Judge William L. Jackson informed the Yankees that it was a civilian matter. The prosecuting attorney, James M. Jackson, said that the three men were going to destroy a railroad bridge and should be tried in a military court. Judge W. L. dismissed the case. The prosecutor was furious.


The two Jacksons started screaming at each other in the courtroom. W. L. told James M. to shut up and ordered the prosecutor confined in jail under a bench warrant for contempt in court.


Then one spectator jumped up with a pistol in his hand and other fire arms appeared. It looked like Judge W. L. was going to be killed. Confederates in the courtroom immediately surrounded Judge Jackson and took him home. Judge Jackson knew the Yanks would soon arrest him and he left a few minutes later.


Judge W. L. went south and contacted his cousin, Stonewall Jackson and the judge became a member of Jackson's staff.


Judge William L. Jackson was later commissioned commander of the 19th Virginia Cavalry, a unit composed mostly of Western Virginians.

1900 census shows David Hamilton Cutlip was born Jan. 1828.

LDS records say 01-Jan-1826
1850 census says 1828

Census 1850 Nicholas Co., WV Cutlip, Hamilton, 22 (Farmer)
Mary, 20
John, 2
Margaret, 1

Lucinda had an illegitimate child, David Hamilton, possibly by Josiah Beard. When David was two years old, Lucinda married George W. Cutlip. He then adopted the child. Josiah was a friend of Lucinda Jane "Jane" Fowler's family. She worked as a domestic for them and her family visited them often. This information was developed by Eula Conley. The records she used to determine this are still missing.

On tombstone:
Dearest father thou hast left us,
Here thy loss we deeply feel.
But, tis God who has berieved us.
He can all our sorrow heal.


Civil War Records

David H. Cutlip, Company H, 19th Va. Cavalry. Private. Capt. Wm. P. O'Brien's Co. of Cavalry.
Company Muster Roll not dated.
Enlisted March 19, 186_.
Where: Frankfort.
By whom: Col. Wm. Jackson.
Period: 3 years.

Company Muster Roll for Sept. & Oct. 1864
Enlisted Aug. 1, 1863 Pocahontas.
By whom: Wm. P. O'Brien
Period: 3 yrs.

Additional information from General Services Adm. Nat'l Archives & Records Service, Washington, D.C.:

Never received pay. Absent. Absent without leave.


Additional information on Col. Wm. Jackson:

Gen. William Lowther "Mudwall" Jackson was a cousin of General Stonewall Jackson.

Gen. W. L. Jackson was also a judge and known for having a temper in courtroom. In May, 1861, three men were arrested as suspected would be CSA guerrillas. The Yankees had already taken over the area and wanted to try the men in a military court.


Judge William L. Jackson informed the Yankees that it was a civilian matter. The prosecuting attorney, James M. Jackson, said that the three men were going to destroy a railroad bridge and should be tried in a military court. Judge W. L. dismissed the case. The prosecutor was furious.


The two Jacksons started screaming at each other in the courtroom. W. L. told James M. to shut up and ordered the prosecutor confined in jail under a bench warrant for contempt in court.


Then one spectator jumped up with a pistol in his hand and other fire arms appeared. It looked like Judge W. L. was going to be killed. Confederates in the courtroom immediately surrounded Judge Jackson and took him home. Judge Jackson knew the Yanks would soon arrest him and he left a few minutes later.


Judge W. L. went south and contacted his cousin, Stonewall Jackson and the judge became a member of Jackson's staff.


Judge William L. Jackson was later commissioned commander of the 19th Virginia Cavalry, a unit composed mostly of Western Virginians.

1900 census shows David Hamilton Cutlip was born Jan. 1828.

LDS records say 01-Jan-1826
1850 census says 1828

Census 1850 Nicholas Co., WV Cutlip, Hamilton, 22 (Farmer)
Mary, 20
John, 2
Margaret, 1


Mary Ann Ward

[S.W.HamrickandMavisLopes022802.FTW]

St. Luke's Cemetery

O Tombstone:
Lo where the silent marble weeps,
A friend, a wife, a mother sleeps.
A heart within who's sacred cell.
The peaceful virtures love to dwell.

1900 census shows Mary Ward was born in Jan 1830.


Margaret Ann (Jane) Cutlip

Could be Margaret Jane
[S.W.HamrickandMavisLopes022802.FTW]

Could be Margaret Jane.
Died about 20 years old.

2 SOUR S04168
3 DATA
4 TEXT Date of Import: Feb 28, 2002


Could be Margaret Jane
[S.W.HamrickandMavisLopes022802.FTW]

Could be Margaret Jane.
Died about 20 years old.

Could be Margaret Jane
[S.W.HamrickandMavisLopes022802.FTW]

Could be Margaret Jane.
Died about 20 years old.

2 SOUR S04168
3 DATA
4 TEXT Date of Import: Feb 28, 2002


Thomas Cutlip

[S.W.HamrickandMavisLopes022802.FTW]

Died as an infant.

2 SOUR S04168
3 DATA
4 TEXT Date of Import: Feb 28, 2002


[S.W.HamrickandMavisLopes022802.FTW]

Died as an infant.

[S.W.HamrickandMavisLopes022802.FTW]

Died as an infant.

2 SOUR S04168
3 DATA
4 TEXT Date of Import: Feb 28, 2002