Frances Young


AMERICA THE GREAT MELTING POT

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Direct descendant is highlighted in red 

Frances Young
   
Born: 18 Jul 1769 Granville, NC

 

   
Married: 20 Sep 1786 Granville, NC

 

   
Died: 1824 Granville, NC   Deed Bk 2 pg 264 "This land was legally the property of the children and heirs at law of Frances Young, former wife of John Young, who died before partition was made of the land of John Young. Sr., this May 15, 1824

FATHER

John Young

MOTHER

Rachel Young

HUSBAND

John Young

CHILDREN

1. Rachel Young

2. Frances Young

3. Henry Young b. 1801

4. Smith Young b. 1797

5. John Y. Young
    born:. 16 Apr 1793
    married::  Eliza Henry Jones on 11 Mar 1824 in Raleigh, Wake, NC
    died: 27 Aug 1868 Columbia, Arkansas

Deed BK 2 pg 264 Granville Co., NC

Smith Young, John Y. Young, and Henry Young deed to James Young who had already purchased the share of Hume R. Field; these parties and Elizabeth Strong (then Elizabeth Young) had bought land on April 28, 1807 from their father, John Young, adjoining the lands of James Young.  This land was legally the property of the children and heirs at law of Frances Young, former wife of John Young, who died before partition was made of the land of John Young, Sr., this May 15, 1824

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Estate Settlement of 1829 in Granville, NC

In 1825 John, James and Henry Young sold land to the Clack brothers. (We think these three men are James and Henry Young sons of John and Rachel Young, and the John Young is the husband of Frances Young, daughter of John and Rachel Young.)  Later Mrs Sally Field, widow of James Field, correctly claimed that 100 acres of the land that was sold had belonged to her husband and that she was therefore entitled to compensation from the Clack brothers because she had never received any money from the sale of the land.  The Clack brothers brought suit in 1829 against James, Henry and the estate of John Young who had died  The children of the deceased John Young who were then in  Tennessee are his executors, John Y. Young, Henry and Smith Young. For purposes of the suit, only Smith Young qualified as executor of the estate of John Young, deceased.

 

 

 

 

 

 

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