Mother: ELEANOR de GREY of Dorset |
[177005]
property confiscated; d. 1532?
____________________________________________ | _THOMAS ARUNDEL _________________________| | (1454 - 1485) m 1473 | | |____________________________________________ | _JOHN ARUNDEL Knt. of Lanhern_| | (1474 - 1545) m 1499 | | | ____________________________________________ | | | | |_CATHERINE DINHAM _______________________| | (1457 - 1502) m 1473 | | |____________________________________________ | | |--THOMAS ARUNDEL Knt. | (1500 - 1552) | _JOHN de GREY 7th Lord Ferrers of Groby_____+ | | (1432 - 1461) m 1452 | _THOMAS de GREY Lord of Groby, K.B. K.G._| | | (1452 - 1501) m 1474 | | | |_ELIZABETH (WOODVILLE) WYDEVILLE ___________+ | | (1437 - 1492) m 1452 |_ELEANOR de GREY of Dorset____| (1480 - ....) m 1499 | | _WILLIAM IV BONVILLE 6th Lord of Harrington_+ | | (1440 - 1460) m 1458 |_CECILY BONVILLE of Harrington___________| (1461 - 1530) m 1474 | |_KATHERINE de NEVILLE of Salisbury__________+ (1435 - 1503) m 1458
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Emeline Dudley Christian b About 1853, Richmond, Virginia
Charles Christian b abt 1855 Richmond, VA
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Unlike his uncle, William Croghan took sides with the Americans
and joined, with a company, the army of Washington, in the
region of Pittsburgh. He was assigned to Colonel Weedon's
Virginia regiment, shortly after the battle of Long Island, and
continued in active service for years.
He was promoted to be a major in 1778, and was assigned to
Colonel John Neville's Fourth Virginia Regiment and participated
in the battle of Monmouth. He marched with the Virginia troops
to Charleston, South Carolina, where the whole American army at
that place was compelled to surrender to the enemy. In 1781 he
was paroled and returned to Virginia, in company with his
friend, Colonel Jonathan Clark, and for a time was the guest of
Colonel Clark's father at the family residence, in Caroline
county. The transition from the exposures and hardships of army
and prison life to the comforts and enjoyments of this
hospitable Virginia home was doubtless most enjoyable, and all
the more so, as he was brought into agreeable female society
from which he had been long deprived. One of these young ladies
was Miss Lucy Clark, the young and attractive daughter of the
host, and it is not at all surprising that an attachment sprung
up between them, which ended in their marriage a few years
later.
John Clark, her father, removed with his family to the falls of
the Ohio in 1784, and as Miss Lucy was there, Major Croghan came
also in due season, and they were married soon after, and
finally settled at Locust Grove, a few miles above Louisville,
where they continued to reside the rest of their lives. He died
in September, 1822, in the seventieth year of his age, and she
in April, 1838, in her seventy-first year.
(NOTE: January 12, 1830, Lucy Croghan, sister of George Rogers
Clark, made a will devising to her daughter Serina E. Croghan
and her granddaughter Angelick Croghan the "land the south of
Tennessee" which had belonged to her brother George Rogers
Clark, also fee-simple of certain property in Louisville,
Kentucky, to her grandchildren, George and John Croghan. Will
probated June 1, 1840. (Records of Jefferson county, Kentucky.)
)
General George Rogers Clark died at their house where he had
lived many years. Major Croghan witnessed the surrender of
Cornwallis at Yorktown, but took no part, as he was under
parole. He was a delegate from Jefferson county to the Kentucky
conventions in 1789 and 1790, and he was one of the
commissioners to divide the land in Clark's Grant.
The children of Lucy Clark and William Croghan, her husband,
were six sons and two daughters, named as follows: John, George,
Charles, Nicholas, William, Edmund, Ann and Eliza.
Charles and Nicholas were twins.
Eliza married George Hancock, and Ann married General Thomas
Jessup, adjutant-general U. S. A.
John was a prominent physician and long resided at the old
family homestead where he was noted for hospitality and his care
of historical family papers.
George married Miss Livingston and greatly distinguished himself
as a soldier at Tippecanoe in 1811, in the War of 1812, and in
the Mexican War. He was a major at the time of his successful
defense of Fort Stephenson at Lower Sandusky in the War of 1812,
and won great fame for his gallantry on that occasion. He was
then barely twenty-one years of age. Congress presented him a
medal, a picture of which is given here.
General William Henry Harrison, in his official report of this
affair says: "It will not be among the least of General
Proctor's mortifications that he has been baffled by a youth who
has just passed his twenty-first year. He is, however, a hero
worthy of his gallant uncle, General George R. Clark."
"The brevet rank of lieutenant-colonel was immediately conferred
on Major Croghan by the President of the United States for his
gallant conduct, and the ladies of Chillicothe presented him an
elegant sword, accompanied by a suitable address." (NOTE: McAfee
History of the War of 1812.)
A fine monument has been erected on the site of Fort Stephenson
at Fremont, Ohio, in honor of Major Croghan's gallantry in
holding the fort. A picture of it will be found on the next
page."
Children of William Croghan and Lucy Clark: John; Nicholas;
Charles; Edward; William; Ann; George.
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Mother: Mary Ann TYNER |
_Jacob HIGGINBOTHAM Sr._+ | (1751 - 1836) m 1772 _John HIGGINBOTHAM __| | (1778 - ....) | | |_Anne HIGGINBOTHAM _____+ | (1752 - ....) m 1772 _Benjamin HIGGINBOTHAM _| | (1810 - ....) | | | ________________________ | | | | |_Susannah EAVENSON __| | (1780 - ....) | | |________________________ | | |--Jane HIGGINBOTHAM | (1849 - ....) | ________________________ | | | _____________________| | | | | | |________________________ | | |_Mary Ann TYNER ________| (1810 - ....) | | ________________________ | | |_____________________| | |________________________
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Mother: Mary RICE |
Virginia Marriages to 1800 Halifax County: Spouse: Madison,
Elizabeth + Moore, Rice Marriage Date: 20 Jun 1786.
Taken From " Life and Times of William Patton"
Written by: David R. McAnally
Rice Moore and Elizabeth Madison were married in Hailfax County,
VA.
Marriage Bond
Know all men by these present that Rice Moore and Obadiah
Hendricks of Halifax County are held and firmly bound unto
Patrick Henry Esq., the Governor of Virginia, and his successors
in the full sum of fifty pounds current money of Virginia to be
paid unto the said Patrick Henry and his successors. We bind
ourselves,our heirs firmly by these presents sealed with our
seals and dated this 20th day of June 1786.
Whereas there is a marraige depending and by God's permission
suddenly to take place between Rice Moore and Elizabeth Madison
of the aforesaid county. Now if there is no lawful cause to
obstruct the said intended marraige the above obligation to be
void or else to remain in full force and virtue.
Rice Moore Seal
Obadiah Hendricks Seal
Written in a different hand: This is to certify that I am agreed
that my daughter Elizabeth Madison should be given in marraige
to Rice Moore.
Roger Madison
June 10, 1786
Title: Bearers of the Pioneer Spirit
Author: Francis Blackburn Hillard
Children:
2 Mary MOORE b: Abt 1815/1825 + MCANALLYS b: Abt 1815/1825
2 Nancy MOORE b: Abt 1815/1825 + John BRYAN b: Abt 1815/1825
2 William MOORE b: Abt 1815/1825
2 John B. MOORE b: Abt 1815/1825
2 Elizabeth MOORE b: Abt 1815/1825 + MCANNALY b: Abt 1815/1825
__ | __| | | | |__ | _James MOORE ________| | (1730 - ....) | | | __ | | | | |__| | | | |__ | | |--Rice MOORE | (1760 - 1834) | __ | | | __| | | | | | |__ | | |_Mary RICE __________| (1740 - ....) | | __ | | |__| | |__
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__ | __| | | | |__ | _ROBERT or ROGER PULESTON _| | (1230 - ....) | | | __ | | | | |__| | | | |__ | | |--ALICE PULESTON | (1250 - ....) | __ | | | __| | | | | | |__ | | |___________________________| | | __ | | |__| | |__
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__ | __| | | | |__ | _(RESEARCH QUERY) SHEPHERD Old Virginia_| | | | | __ | | | | |__| | | | |__ | | |--James SHEPHERD | (1790 - ....) | __ | | | __| | | | | | |__ | | |________________________________________| | | __ | | |__| | |__
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Mother: Frances Gregory THORNTON |
_Francis THORNTON III______________+ | (1714 - 1749) m 1736 _William THORNTON ________| | (1742 - 1818) m 1775 | | |_Mary Frances GREGORY _____________+ | (1720 - 1790) m 1736 _George Alexander THORNTON M.D._| | (1782 - ....) | | | _John Alexander STUART ____________+ | | | (1730 - ....) m 1749 | |_Martha Alexander STUART _| | (1754 - 1812) m 1775 | | |_Frances ALEXANDER ________________+ | (1728 - ....) m 1749 | |--Matilda THORNTON | (1800 - ....) | _Francis THORNTON III______________+ | | (1714 - 1749) m 1736 | _John Spotswood THORNTON _| | | (1748 - 1822) m 1770 | | | |_Mary Frances GREGORY _____________+ | | (1720 - 1790) m 1736 |_Frances Gregory THORNTON ______| (1774 - ....) | | _Augustine (Austin) WASHINGTON Jr._+ | | (1720 - 1762) m 1743 |_Jane Augusta WASHINGTON _| (1756 - 1833) m 1770 | |_Anne AYLETT ______________________+ (1726 - 1773) m 1743
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Mother: Mary Ann ELSEY |
_Asberry WILSON ______+ | (1821 - 1885) m 1842 _John WILSON ________| | (1812 - 1879) | | |_Julia BEATY _________+ | (1828 - 1885) m 1842 _Thomas WILSON ______| | (1844 - 1909) | | | _Donald BLUE _________+ | | | (1799 - ....) | |_Jane BLUE __________| | (1820 - ....) | | |_Catherine MCFARLAIN _ | (1801 - ....) | |--Nellie Clyde WILSON | (1883 - 1962) | ______________________ | | | _____________________| | | | | | |______________________ | | |_Mary Ann ELSEY _____| (1843 - 1900) | | ______________________ | | |_____________________| | |______________________
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Mother: Mary BONNER |
Robert Wright's two daughters (2nd) Irene and (3rd) Fannie died
young. (4th) Sallie and (5th) Bettie who married Jackson Rose
and has no children. At this time she resides in a large roomy
house surrounded by many rare and beautiful hothouse plants.
Her Post Office address is Trinity, Alabama.
Another daughter (?) Roberta Wright is still unmarried. She is
a fine artist.
_____________________ | _____________________| | | | |_____________________ | _Claibourn WRIGHT ___| | (1790 - 1852) | | | _____________________ | | | | |_____________________| | | | |_____________________ | | |--Robert WRIGHT | (1830 - ....) | _John BONNER III_____+ | | (1723 - 1804) m 1747 | _John BONNER IV______| | | (1764 - 1842) m 1806| | | |_Sarah HICKS ________+ | | (1730 - 1807) m 1747 |_Mary BONNER ________| (1808 - ....) | | _Isham SMITH ________+ | | (1726 - ....) m 1762 |_Rebecca SMITH ______| (1772 - 1842) m 1806| |_Patience DREW ______ (1740 - 1800) m 1762
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