Mother: Bethia KIRBY |
_ ANDREWS ___________________+ | (1600 - ....) _Francis ANDREWS ANDRUS "the Immigrant"_| | (1623 - 1662) m 1645 | | |_____________________________ | _John ANDREWS ANDRUS I_| | (1646 - 1683) m 1679 | | | _Giles SMITH "the Immigrant"_+ | | | (1604 - 1669) | |_Anna SMITH ____________________________| | (1625 - 1663) m 1645 | | |_Mary WHEELER _______________ | (1605 - ....) | |--John ANDREWS II | (1679 - 1728) | _____________________________ | | | _John KIRBY ____________________________| | | (1620 - 1677) m 1644 | | | |_____________________________ | | |_Bethia KIRBY _________| (1658 - 1700) m 1679 | | _____________________________ | | |_Elizabeth______________________________| (1624 - 1697) m 1644 | |_____________________________
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Mother: Bodicia "Dicie" MEADE |
___________________________ | ______________________| | | | |___________________________ | _John Henry BENTLEY ____| | (1877 - ....) m 1897 | | | ___________________________ | | | | |______________________| | | | |___________________________ | | |--Elwood BENTLEY | (1903 - ....) | _Richard Lewis MEADE ______+ | | (1811 - 1880) | _William Henry MEADE _| | | (1840 - 1894) | | | |_Laticia HIGGINBOTHAM _____+ | | (1811 - ....) |_Bodicia "Dicie" MEADE _| (1877 - ....) m 1897 | | _Noah KISER _______________+ | | (1809 - 1884) m 1827 |_Elizabeth KISER _____| (1850 - ....) | |_Bodecia (Dicie) THOMPSON _+ (1811 - 1886) m 1827
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Mother: Anne COLLIER |
_Thomas CHRISTIAN Sr. "the Immigrant"_+ | (1636 - 1694) m 1663 _James CHRISTIAN ____| | (1676 - 1754) m 1710| | |_Eleanor KEWLY? ______________________ | (1640 - ....) m 1663 _William CHRISTIAN __| | (1713 - 1808) | | | _Gideon MACON "The Immigrant"_________ | | | (1648 - 1702) m 1681 | |_Anne MACON _________| | (1685 - 1755) m 1710| | |_Martha WOODWARD _____________________+ | (1655 - 1727) m 1681 | |--William CHRISTIAN | (1742 - ....) | ______________________________________ | | | _____________________| | | | | | |______________________________________ | | |_Anne COLLIER _______| (1711 - ....) | | ______________________________________ | | |_____________________| | |______________________________________
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Mother: Mildred PRESLEY |
_Roger CLEVELAND __________________+ | (1645 - ....) _John CLEVELAND _____| | (1675 - ....) | | |___________________________________ | _Alexander CLEVELAND Sr._| | (1687 - 1775) m 1710 | | | ___________________________________ | | | | |_____________________| | | | |___________________________________ | | |--William CLEVELAND | (1718 - 1788) | _William PRESLEY I "the Immigrant"_ | | (1608 - 1655) | _Peter PRESLEY ______| | | (1636 - 1693) m 1660| | | |_Jane PRESLEY _____________________ | | (1613 - 1655) |_Mildred PRESLEY ________| (1692 - 1770) m 1710 | | _Richard THOMPSON "the Immigrant"__ | | (1613 - 1649) m 1641 |_Elizabeth THOMPSON _| (1642 - 1720) m 1660| |_Ursula BISHE _____________________ (1613 - 1658) m 1641
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Mother: Nancy MCLAURIN |
"Hiram Bronson Granbury was born in Copiah County, Ms., March 1,
1831, and was educated at Oakland College, Rodney, Ms. Removing
to Texas in the early 1850's he established himself in Waco,
studied law, was admitted to the bar, and served as chief
justice of McLennan County from 1856-1858, an office roughly
comparable to that of chairman of a country board of
supervisors. He recruited the Waco Guards in 1861, took it east
and was elected major of the 7th Texas Infantry in Oct. of that
year. After being captured and exchanged at Fort Donelson, he
became colonel of the 7th Texas, serving as the Vicksburg
campaign, at Chickamauga, and at Chattanooga. Granbury, who was
in brigade command during the retreat from Chattanooga, was
especially commended by his division commander, General Pat
Cleburne. Commissioned brigadier general to rank from Feb. 1864
through the Atlanta campaign and into Tennessee with Hood. At
the battle of Franklin, November 30, 1864, Granbury was one of
six Confederate general officers killed or mortally wounded. He
died along with Cleburne within a few rods of the Federal works.
First buried near Franklin, his remains were removed 29 years
later to the town of Granbury, Texas, named in his honor."
Seventh Texas Infantry: Generals John Gregg and Hiram B.
Granbury
by Rebecca Blackwell Drake
Brigadier General John Gregg
1828-1864
Brigadier General Hiram B. Granbury
1831-1863
In 1858 in Morgan County, Alabama, John Gregg and his bride,
Mary Francis Garth, stood before a magistrate and repeated their
vows, "In sickness and in health - Till death do us part."
Following their marriage, the couple left for Fairfield, Texas,
where Gregg served as District Judge. He also founded the first
newspaper in the county, the Freestone Country Reporter.
In that same year, March 31, 1858, Hiram B. Granbury, a former
Mississippian who had moved to Waco in the early 1850s, stood
with his 20-year old bride, Fannie Sims, formerly from Alabama,
and repeated the same vows. Hiram Granbury served as the chief
justice of McLennan County, Texas. During the early years, he
had helped to establish the newspaper in Waco.
In 1861, after Texas seceded from the Union, John Gregg
organized the 7th Texas Infantry, a group of 746 men recruited
from nine East Texas counties. That same year, Hiram Granbury
formed the Waco Guards that would soon become a part of the 7th
Regiment Texas Infantry. In the fall of 1861, both men, still in
the honeymoon years of their marriage, left Texas to fight in
the war. In February of 1862, the 7th Texas and other
Confederate regiments were captured at Fort Donelson, Tennessee,
and John Gregg and Hiram Granbury were taken prisoner. Stunned
over the turn of events, Granbury and a friend, Capt. K. M Van
Zandt, decided to approach General U. S. Grant to make several
requests. First, they requested that Colonel Clough (killed in
action) be given a proper burial. Secondly, they requested that
Col. Granbury be given some time before being taken prisoner in
order to settle his wife, Fannie. During the early months in
Hopkinsville, Fannie had been the houseguests of the Steven
Trice family, supporters of the Confederate cause. However, in
1862, when the epidemic of measles began to spread throughout
the camp, Fannie moved to Clarksville, Tennessee, a distance of
some twenty-five miles.
General Grant listened to Granbury and Van Zandt's petition and
surprised everyone by granting both requests. As Granbury
traveled to Clarksville to make plans for Fannie, Mary Gregg
paid for a train ticket and took the train to Decatur, Alabama.
At first Granbury and Gregg were imprisoned at Fort Chase in
Columbus, Ohio. However, on March 6, 1862, they were moved to
Fort Warren Prison in the Boston Harbor. Fannie rode the train
from Columbus, Ohio to Boston, Mass. with the soldiers. However,
after arriving at the Boston train station, she was not allowed
to accompany the prisoners out to Fort Warren, an island six
miles from Boston. Thanks to the kindness of Granbury's
cellmate, Dr. Charles McGill, a physician, Fannie was taken in
as a house guest of Mary McGill in Hagerstown, Mass. During her
stay with the wife of Dr. McGill, Fannie began to experience
problems with abdominal swelling. In July of 1862, she made an
appointment to meet with a physician in Baltimore for
exploratory surgery. Granbury was released from prison [prisoner
exchange] in order to attend the surgery. A letter to Col. J.
Dimick, U. S. Army, Fort Warren, Boston, documents Granbury's
early release: "Washington, July 29, 1862. The eight or nine
prisoners referred to and those who have taken the oath of
allegiance will not be sent to Fort Monroe; Parole Major
Granbury, of Texas, that he may attend his wife having a
surgical operation performed at Baltimore, then to report to
General Wool, in Baltimore. L. Thomas, Adjutant-General." The
outcome of the doctor's appointment was never made known.
However, after examining Fannie, Dr. Smith apparently made the
diagnosis of ovarian cancer. The prognosis was only months to
live.
Fannie and Hiram decided to get a second opinion and went to
Richmond, Virginia. Again, the reports of the doctor were not
publicized but it was obvious by this time that Fannie and Hiram
were in the throes of accepting a death sentence for Fannie.
Since Fannie was no longer able to withstand the traveling that
it took to keep up with her husband, Fannie returned to the
McGill residence in Hagerstown where she would reside until
Hiram could come for her.
Following his release from prison, Granbury was promoted to the
rank of colonel with the 7th Texas and sent to Texas on
recruiting duty. General Gregg was also exchanged from prison
and promoted to brigadier general August 29, 1862. At this time,
he was given command of a brigade consisting of the Seventh
Texas, Third Tennessee, Tenth Tennessee, Fifth Tennessee, and
Forty-first Tennessee Infantry regiments and a battery of light
artillery.
In October of 1862, Granbury went to Hagerstown to get Fannie.
Her health was declining rapidly and she wanted to be back in
Alabama in the home of her father. On March 20, 1863, Fannie
passed away in Mobile, eleven days before what would have been
their 5th wedding anniversary. On March 21, her obituary
appeared in the Mobile Advertiser and Register: "DIED on
yesterday at 11:00 A.M., Mrs. Fannie Granbury, aged 25 years,
Wife of Col. H. B. Granbury, 7th Regiment Texas Infantry. The
funeral will take place from Providence Infirmary, at 3 o'clock
P. M. TODAY." Unable to afford a headstone, Fannie was buried in
Magnolia Cemetery, in an unmarked grave.
Colonel Granbury and General Gregg continued fighting in the
war. On May 12, 1863, less than three months after the death of
Fannie, Gregg's Brigade was ordered to Raymond, Mississippi, to
defend against the approaching Union Army. The battle was an
overwhelming loss for the Confederates. Gregg's Brigade was
forced to retreat.
On September 19, 1863, Brig. Gen. John Gregg was severely
wounded during the Battle of Chickamauga and was taken to a
Confederate hospital in Marietta, Georgia. Once again, Mary
Garth traveled to be by his side and to assist with his
recovery. This was perhaps one of their last chances to be
together in life. One year later, Oct. 7, 1864, while fighting
in Virginia, Brig. Gen. John Gregg was killed. His marriage had
lasted less than six years. Mary Garth heard the news of her
husband's death while staying at her father's plantation in
Alabama. "Her soul was plunged in grief beyond all other grief,"
friends recalled.
After several months of grief and depression, Mary Garth decided
she could not rest until she traveled to Virginia to claim her
husband's body. Traveling with Sgt. E. L. Sykes, a Confederate
soldier and family friends, Mary left on January 18, 1865, to
reclaim her husband's body. They arrived in Virginia a month
later but overwhelmed by the experience, Mary Garth succumbed to
a nervous breakdown. They had to wait weeks before she could
recover enough of her strength to make the long journey back. In
April of 1865, Mary Garth Gregg finally arrived in Aberdeen,
Mississippi, where she laid her husband to rest in the Odd
Fellows Cemetery on the outskirts of town.
Like Brig. Gen. John Gregg, a friend in love and war, Brig. Gen.
Hiram Granbury, also went to his death a hero. He was killed
Nov. 30, 1864, during the Battle of Franklin. Witnesses of the
blood bath at Franklin reported,
"General Granbury was hit in the eye about the same time
Gen.Patrick Cleburne was hit in the chest. The bullet passed
through his brain and exploded at the back of his head. He threw
his hands up to his face and fell dead instantly."
Granbury was initially buried near Franklin but later his body
was reinterred at St. Luke's Cemetery, Ashwood, Tennessee. In
1893, his body was once again moved - this time to Granbury,
Texas, a town named in his honor. A lonely, unmarked grave in
Mobile and a faded obituary are all that remain of his beloved
Fannie.
Of the foursome in love and war, Mary Garth Gregg was the only
one left. She remained in Aberdeen, Mississippi, where she could
be near her husband's grave. For the remaining thirty years of
her life she never left the town where her husband's remains
were interred. When Mary Gregg died in 1897, she was buried next
to her famous husband. Her tombstone reads, Mrs. General John
Gregg.
-----------------------------------------------------------------
---------------
Sources: Force Without Fanfare, by K. M. Van Zandt and edited by
Sandra L. Myres, published by Texas Christian University Press,
1995 (http://www.prs.tcu.edu/prs/); Letter from L. Thomas,
Adjutant-General to Col. J. Dimick, U.S. Army, Fort Warren,
Boston, dated July 29, 1862; Official Records of the Civil War;
Compiled War Records from the State of Texas, Harold B. Simpson
History Complex, Hillsboro, Texas; Cemetery Records of Mobile;
March 21, 1863 Obituary of Fannie Granbury from the Mobile
Advertiser and Register; An Account of the Burial of Gen. John
Gregg in Mississippi, 1865, by E. L. Sykes, Aberdeen,
Mississippi; Autograph Album of Col. John Towers, 8th Georgia
Volunteer Infantry (prisoner at Ft. Warren); Lone Star Generals
in Gray by Ralph Wooster; 1858 McLennan County Marriage Records,
Intrepid Gray Warriors by James Newsom (PhD Dissertation from
Texas Christian University on the 7th Texas Infantry).
Assisting Rebecca Drake in researching this article were: Jane
Ambrose, Ashland, Ohio, descendant of the Granbury family; Mary
Eddies Johnson, professional genealogy researcher from Mobile;
and Edward Lanham, Atlanta, Georgia, Civil War researcher."
http://www.raymondms.com/history/lovewar.htm
"Prison life for Granbury was tolerable since, along with John
Gregg and Randal McGavock, he was quartered in the facility for
officers. Prison regulations would not allow Fannie on the
premise so she traveled to Hagerstown, Maryland. While in
Hagerstown she resided with the family of Dr. Charles MacGill,
Hiram's new cell mate. Dr. MacGill had been one of the most
prominent doctors in the east until he was arrested for being a
Southern sympathizer. In July of 1862, Fannie began to
experience health problems. There was an unexplained swelling in
her abdomen and she was constantly nauseated and fatigued. Dr.
MacGill took matters in his own hands and referred her to Dr.
Nathan Smith, one of the finest of the surgeons in Baltimore. An
appointment was made and Granbury was given early parole
(prisoner exchange) in order to meet her in Baltimore. There was
no record of the diagnosis but undoubtedly Dr. Smith advised
Fannie that she could be suffering from ovarian caner.
Refusing to face the situation and anxious to accompany her
husband who was leaving for Richmond, Virginia, to be exchanged,
the Granbury's left Baltimore without medical help. All Fannie
wanted to do was to be with her husband. If she could accompany
him to Richmond, she would agree to seek medical help there. In
early August, Hiram and Fannie sailed from Baltimore to Richmond
for the process of exchanging prisoners. While in Richmond, they
visited another surgeon and the news was tragically confirmed.
Fannie was suffering from advanced ovarian cancer and would not
be expected to live through the year. The situation they were
facing was beyond comprehension. Fannie was only 24 years old at
the time of her diagnosis.
Once again, Fannie and Hiram parted ways. Hiram rejoined his
regiment and returned to Southern soil prepared to continue the
fight for the Southern cause. Fannie returned to Hagerstown and
the home of Mrs. MacGill where she would be treated like family.
Fannie had her own battle to fight - to live as long as
possible. All that she had left of Hiram was a photograph that
he had taken for her during their stay in Boston.
In October of 1862, stricken with grief over her illness and the
separation from her husband, Fannie returned to her home state
of Alabama to spend her last days. Hiram took the train up to
get Fannie and Alice MacGill, daughter of Dr. MacGill. Alice had
agreed to accompany them back. At first Fannie was taken to the
home of her father in Tuscaloosa where she remained for several
months. When the end was near, Hiram took leave from the brigade
at Port Hudson and moved her to Providence Hospital in Mobile.
Fannie finally succumbed to death on March 20, 1863, eleven days
before what would have been her 5th wedding anniversary. She was
buried in Magnolia Cemetery in a large plot purchased by the
Redmond family. Due to poverty brought about by prison life,
there was no money for a headstone. The young wife was laid to
rest in an unmarked grave and literally forgotten over the
course of time.
Following Fannie's death, Col. Granbury returned to Port Hudson
then on to Raymond, Mississippi, where he led the 7th Texas
Infantry in the Battle of Raymond. His constant cohort on and
off the battlefield was General John Gregg. More than anyone,
this old friend knew the extent of Granbury's personal loss.
Even though the Battle of Raymond was a disaster for the
Confederate forces, Col. Granbury performed brilliantly. He
continued on to Chickamauga where he was wounded by a bullet
that struck his lower abdomen. On February 29, 1864, he was
commissioned brigadier general- an honor that his wife had not
lived to see. Nine months later Granbury led his brigade in the
Battle of Franklin and was killed in action. Initially Brig.
Gen. H. B. Granbury was buried near the battlefield but later he
was re-interred at the Ashwood Cemetery south of Columbia,
Tennessee. In 1893, his body was exhumed and re-interred in
Granbury, Texas, a town named in his honor.
Since 1893, General Granbury has been hailed a hero and his
grave viewed annually by thousands of visitors. On the other
hand, for 139 years, Fannie Sims Granbury has been resting in an
unmarked grave hundreds of miles away, completely forgotten. The
only tangible reminder of Fannie is a death notice dated March
21, 1863: "DIED on yesterday, at 11 o'clock A. M., Mrs. Fannie
Granbury, aged 25 years. Wife of Col. H. B. Granbury, 7th
Regiment Texas Infantry. The funeral will take place from the
Providence Infirmary, at 3 o'clock P. M. TODAY."
The shroud of mystery has finally been lifted. Fannie Granbury
was not left behind to die in a cold and hostile northern state
- a victim of war, as once was believed. The young wife was
simply a victim of a tragic fate and the heartbreaking
circumstances of the time.
-----------------------------------------------------------------
---------------
Sources: Compiled Service Records for the State of Texas;
Obituary of Mrs. Fannie Granbury in Mobile Advertiser and
Register, March 21, 1863 (discovered in January 2002); Intrepid
Gray Warriors, 7th Texas Infantry 1861-1865 by James Newsom;
Force Without Fanfare, Reminiscences of Gen. K. M. VanZandt;
1862 letters of Dr. and Mrs. Charles MacGill, courtesy of Duke
University; and The Official Records of the War of the
Rebellion, Vol. 24.
Credit for finding the burial site and obituary of Fannie Sims
Granbury goes to: Edward Lanham, Brooks, Georgia; Mary Eddins
Johnson, Mobile, Alabama and Jane Embrose, descendant of Gen.
Granbury. Lanham researched cemetery records in Baltimore,
Mobile and Waco and located the body. Johnson researched the
archives and Mobile and found the death records as well as the
obituary." http://www.raymondms.com/history/mystery.htm
OUR HERO
GENERAL HIRAM BRINSON GRANBURY
Presented By Vircenoy B. Macatee
President Gen. Hiram B. Granbury Chapter No. 683
United Daughters of The Confederacy
June 25, 1996
(following taken from the original text)
However, at the time of his internment in Granbury in November,
1893, his sister, Mrs. Nautie Granberry Moss who lived in
Brownwood at the time and attended the reinternment, said that
the name had always been spelled Granberry, but, because of some
peculiar whim, General Granbury, on arriving at maturity,
insisted on spelling his name "Granbury". She said that she even
had letters from him signed "Granbury".
General Granbury was buried in a pauper's grave in Ashwood
Cemetery in Columbia, TN. Twenty-nine years later, Granbury
Mayor J. N. Doyle organized the ex-Confederate soldiers in the
Hood County area who pooled their resources to bring General
Granbury's remains to the town named for him. Mrs. Nautie
Granberry Moss, General Granbury's sister who lived in
Brownwood, was contacted and agreed wholeheartedly.
__ | __| | | | |__ | _Norvell R. GRANBERRY _| | (1806 - 1850) m 1827 | | | __ | | | | |__| | | | |__ | | |--Hiram Bronson GRANBERRY C.S.A. | (1831 - 1864) | __ | | | __| | | | | | |__ | | |_Nancy MCLAURIN _______| (1809 - 1850) m 1827 | | __ | | |__| | |__
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Mother: MARGERY de SCALES |
_JOHN I HOWARD _____________________________ | (1276 - 1331) _JOHN HOWARD ____________________| | (1310 - ....) | | |_JOAN de CORNWALL __________________________+ | (1272 - 1341) _ROBERT HOWARD ______| | (1336 - 1388) m 1365| | | ____________________________________________ | | | | |_ALICE de BOYS __________________| | (1310 - ....) | | |____________________________________________ | | |--JOHN HOWARD of Wigginhall, Knt. | (1365 - 1436) | ____________________________________________ | | | _ROBERT de SCALES Lord of Scales_| | | (1310 - ....) | | | |____________________________________________ | | |_MARGERY de SCALES __| (1339 - 1416) m 1365| | _HUGH de COURTENAY 1st Baron of Devon, Knt._+ | | (1273 - 1340) m 1292 |_EDELINE de COURTENAY ___________| (1310 - ....) | |_AGNES de ST. JOHN of Hants_________________+ (1275 - 1345) m 1292
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__ | __| | | | |__ | _Jacob INBODY Sr.____| | (1783 - 1850) | | | __ | | | | |__| | | | |__ | | |--Samuel INBODY | (1817 - ....) | __ | | | __| | | | | | |__ | | |_____________________| | | __ | | |__| | |__
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Mother: Elizabeth MOSELEY |
_John JONES __________________________+ | (1715 - 1798) _William Richard JONES ___| | (1745 - 1781) m 1770 | | |_Elizabeth WALKER ____________________+ | (1725 - 1798) _David JONES ________| | (1780 - 1853) | | | ______________________________________ | | | | |_Agnes WALKER ____________| | (1749 - 1826) m 1770 | | |______________________________________ | | |--Louisa W. JONES | (1815 - ....) | _Robert Ligon MOSELEY ________________+ | | (1700 - ....) | _Robert Peter MOSELEY ____| | | (1732 - 1804) m 1756 | | | |_Sarah Rachel "Sary" TAYLOR __________+ | | (1704 - 1762) |_Elizabeth MOSELEY __| (1783 - 1867) | | _Pierre "Peter" GUERRANT (GUERIN) Sr._+ | | (1697 - 1750) m 1732 |_Mary Magdelene GUERRANT _| (1740 - 1820) m 1756 | |_Magdalene TRABUE ____________________+ (1715 - 1787) m 1732
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Mother: Mary Jesse SMITH |
_Robert Samuel MCCANTS _+ | (1816 - 1876) _Phillip James MCCANTS C.S.A._| | (1835 - 1862) | | |_Caroline I. DAVIS _____ | (1817 - 1877) _Thomas Robert MCCANTS _| | (1858 - 1915) | | | _Thomas COLLIER ________ | | | (1814 - 1895) | |_Mary Ann Elizabeth COLLIER __| | (1837 - 1909) | | |_Amarintha P. SHULER ___+ | (1816 - 1853) | |--Hannah MCCANTS | (1901 - 1974) | ________________________ | | | _Thomas A. SMITH _____________| | | (1821 - 1890) | | | |________________________ | | |_Mary Jesse SMITH ______| (1861 - 1931) | | ________________________ | | |_Marietta Jane FOXWORTH ______| (1832 - 1903) | |________________________
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Mother: Leonie WILSON |
_______________________ | _____________________| | | | |_______________________ | _John E. RINKER _____| | (1868 - 1950) m 1900| | | _______________________ | | | | |_____________________| | | | |_______________________ | | |--Theodore Wilson RINKER | (1901 - 1977) | _______________________ | | | _Leonard WILSON _____| | | (1846 - 1905) m 1868| | | |_______________________ | | |_Leonie WILSON ______| (1873 - 1973) m 1900| | _John Wood SANDIDGE ___+ | | (1809 - 1857) m 1834 |_Mary Wood SANDIDGE _| (1850 - 1926) m 1868| |_Mariah Louisa BRENTS _ (1816 - 1906) m 1834
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_Edmund Pendleton TAYLOR _+ | (1791 - 1840) _Erasmus TAYLOR _______| | (1830 - 1907) m 1851 | | |_Mildred Edmonia TURNER __+ | (1799 - 1882) _Jaquelin P. TAYLOR _| | (1857 - 1858) | | | _John Strother ASHBY _____+ | | | (1807 - 1850) | |_Roberta Stuart ASHBY _| | (1830 - 1893) m 1851 | | |_Mary_____________________ | (1810 - ....) | |--Jaquelin Erasmus TAYLOR Sr. | (1904 - 1985) | __________________________ | | | _______________________| | | | | | |__________________________ | | |_____________________| | | __________________________ | | |_______________________| | |__________________________
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