Paternal Line of Robin Bellamy - pyan935 - Generated by Personal Ancestral File

Piatt/Pyatt/Peyatte of all spellings

Notes


Ann Eccles

Link through Ann to James & Margaret Eccles 70% certain although not proved. Ann's brother John MAY be of a different family


Peter Paulus (Piatt)

According to the 1830 Washington County, Arkansas, Federal Census Peter P. Pyeatt was listed as having a household consisting of two females under the age of five, one female at least fifteen years old but under the age of twenty and one male at least twenty years old but under the age of thirty. He was not listed as owning any slaves.

BIRTH-DEATH:Family records;cemetery records.

BIRTH-DEATH:Cemetery directory of Polk County, Missouri;Call# US/CAN 977.877
V3c.

His name appears as "John P." in 1850 census & as "Peter" in 1860. Family
records & other documents list it as "Peter P." or "Peter Paulus."


Lavinia Cox

BIRTH-MARR-DEATH:History of Washington County, Arkansas;Springdale,
Ark.;Shiloh Museum, 1989;Call# US/CAN 976.714 D3n.

Info recd. from William (Bill) Hunt 4/2/2001:
Lavinia Cox (1810-1859)
The second child of Martha "Patsy" Buchanan and Coleman Cox was Lavinia Cox, who was born in North Bowling Green, Warren County, Kentucky, on December 15, 1810. She came with her parents when the family moved from Kentucky to Arkansas in 1820. The family settled in Crawford County, Arkansas, and lived there until after Lavinia's mother died in 1824.
Lavinia married Peter Paulus Pyeatt on January 15, 1827 in either Crawford or Washington County, Arkansas. In August of 1828, when the Cane Hill Congregation of the Cumberland Presbyterian Church was formed, both Lavinia and Peter Paulus Pyeatt were charter members. The Pyeatt family were Huguenot emigrants from France and the Finley family emigrated from Ireland.
Peter Paulus Pyeatt was born in April 1803 in Warren County, Kentucky. His parents were James Pyeatt and Catherine Finley, who were married in Charleston, South Carolina. James and Catherine Pyeatt came by wagon train to Logan County, Kentucky, from Charleston soon after the Revolutionary War.

Lavinia Cox Pyeatt died February 2, 1859 at Marrs Hill , Washington County, Arkansas. This location is probably named for the Marrs family, another French family that settled in Washington County and intermarried with others in this first group of settlers. Sources show various locations for Marrs Hill: the History of Washington County indicates that a postoffice named Marrs Hill was "just east of modern Farmington," which is near Fayetteville; in another instance, Goodspeed is referenced as placing Marrs Hill in the "Wedington area"; another instance refers to a Marrs Creek in the Prairie Grove area. Peter Paulus Pyeatt died in March 1884 in Washington County, Arkansas.


Catherine (Piatt)

BIRTH-DEATH:David Marrs' family Bible (Catherine's brother-in-law).


Elizabeth (Piatt)

BIRTH-DEATH:David Marrs' family Bible (Catherine's brother-in-law).


Lorenzo (Piatt)

WW1 draft registration Monroe Co, OH 1918

Lorenzo PiattSource: The Times Recorder, Zanesville, Ohio Thursday, December 9. 1968 WOODSFIELD- Lorenzo Piatt, 87 of near Woodsfield, retired farmer, diedTuesday evening (Dec. 7, 1968) in Barnesville Hospital after a long illness.Born June 9, 1878 in West Virginia, he was a son of Benjamin and Mary TruaxPiatt. Surviving are his widow, Pearl; four sons, John of Woodsfield Route 1, Paulof the home and Archie and Arthur of Lewisville, three daughters Mrs MaryNalley of Woodsfield Route 2, Mrs. Dorothy Briggs of New Concord and Mrs.Clara Briggs of Newport, PA. 17 grandchildren and five great grandchildren. Friends may call after noon today at Gardner Funeral Home here. Services will be held at 2:00 p.m. Saturday at Pleasant Ridge Church ofChrist, Minister J.V. A. Traylor will officiate and burial will be in thechurch cemetery
(contributed by Marlene Batdorf, granddaughter)


Clarence Monroe (Piatt)

Died in a flu epidemic