Mother: Isabel GREENFIELD |
_JOHN DUDLEY Earl of Newcastle_+ | (1530 - ....) m 1560 _ROBERT DUDLEY Earl of Newcastle, Knt._| | (1540 - 1613) m 1574 | | |_BRIDGET CARRE ________________+ | (1542 - ....) m 1560 _Ambrose DUDLEY Esq._| | (1582 - 1626) | | | _CHRISTOPHER WOOD of Newcastle_ | | | (1514 - ....) | |_ANNE WOOD of Newcastle________________| | (1556 - ....) m 1574 | | |_______________________________ | | |--William DUDLEY | (1600 - ....) | _______________________________ | | | _______________________________________| | | | | | |_______________________________ | | |_Isabel GREENFIELD __| (1585 - ....) | | _______________________________ | | |_______________________________________| | |_______________________________
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Mother: Sarah DOTY |
_(RESEARCH QUERY) DUNN ___ | _Benjamin DUNN ______| | (1800 - ....) m 1823| | |__________________________ | _James DUNN _________| | (1824 - 1874) m 1865| | | _James BURNSIDE __________+ | | | (1778 - 1861) m 1801 | |_Clara BURNSIDE _____| | (1805 - ....) m 1823| | |_Martha "Patsy" GATEWOOD _+ | (1780 - 1853) m 1801 | |--Carrie DUNN | (1868 - ....) | __________________________ | | | _____________________| | | | | | |__________________________ | | |_Sarah DOTY _________| (1842 - ....) m 1865| | __________________________ | | |_____________________| | |__________________________
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Mother: Frances "Fanny" BROADDUS |
_James GAINES I__________________+ | (1719 - 1786) m 1731 _Henry GAINES ____________| | (1737 - 1830) m 1756 | | |_Mary PENDLETON _________________+ | (1717 - 1803) m 1731 _Richard George GAINES ____| | (1760 - 1832) m 1785 | | | _Richard GEORGE _________________+ | | | (1709 - 1773) m 1734 | |_Ann (Martha Ann) GEORGE _| | (1735 - 1801) m 1756 | | |_Elizabeth Ann MAYO _____________+ | (1715 - 1782) m 1734 | |--James GAINES | (1799 - 1868) | _Edward BROADDUS "the Immigrant"_ | | (1672 - 1749) m 1725 | _John BROADDUS ___________| | | (1727 - 1799) m 1760 | | | |_Mary SHIPLEY ___________________ | | (1700 - ....) m 1725 |_Frances "Fanny" BROADDUS _| (1762 - 1812) m 1785 | | _________________________________ | | |_Frances PRYOR ___________| (1740 - ....) m 1760 | |_________________________________
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Father: Benjamin HOLLADAY Mother: Susannah HICKMAN |
_Thomas I (HOLLIDAY\HALLIDAY) HOLLADAY _ | (1648 - 1701) m 1670 _John Marshall HOLLADAY II_| | (1676 - 1742) | | |_Elizabeth SEVILLE _____________________ | (1650 - ....) m 1670 _Benjamin HOLLADAY __| | (1720 - 1785) | | | ________________________________________ | | | | |_Ann Elizabeth LEWIS ______| | (1688 - ....) | | |________________________________________ | | |--Agnes HOLLADAY | (1758 - ....) | _Lockhart BIBB _________________________+ | | (1887 - ....) | _Edwin HICKMAN ____________| | | (1690 - 1769) m 1723 | | | |_Mary Chambers BIBB ____________________+ | | (1842 - 1874) |_Susannah HICKMAN ___| (1725 - 1759) | | _Henry WEBBER Gent._____________________ | | (1650 - ....) |_Eleanor WEBBER ___________| (1680 - 1745) m 1723 | |________________________________________
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The Lamars were a very old French family. They lived in Normandy
and it is said that some of their members were involved in the
Norman Conquest of England with William the Conqueror in 1086.
But later, in the massacres of the Reformation and during the
Religious Wars in France, many members of the family found it
necessary to seek safety in other countries.
The Lamar family arrived in America from France in the 1600's.
They arrived in Maryland after a residence of unknown time in
Virginia. Peter and Thomas Lamore were issued naturalization
papers 17 Nov, 1663 from Lord Baltimore in Maryland. Ten years
later, a certificate of nationality was granted to John Lamore.
Peter Lamar, upon coming to this country, acquired plantations
in Calvert County, Maryland, where he lived and died. He might
have been single when he arrived as he received a land grant for
transporting himself and his servant, Katherine, a white woman.
His will, which was probated 31 March, 1694, mentions his wife
Frances and daughters Ann, wife of Peter O'Neal, Mary, and
Margaret. No sons were listed in his will.
Thomas Lamar owned property in England at the time of his death.
He made application Nov 24, 1665 for 100 acres of land for
transporting himself and wife Mary to the colony. The year
before, Nov 8, 1664, he and Peter bought 350 acres in Calvert
Co., MD. He lived in Calvert Co., which became Prince George's
Co. in 1696. Will Oct 4, 1712. PR May 29, 1714. Various
spellings: Lamair, Lemaire, Delemaire, Lemarr, Lamarr, and
Lamar.- Source: E. C. McCormick, 1920 Timber Ridge Dr., Cedar
Hill, Tx. 75104
Thomas may have been in Maryland as early as 1659. On 20 Aug
1659, a survey was made on eastern shore of Chesapeake Bay,
Talbot Co, for "Thomas LAYMOUR".
After wife Mary died, Thomas married Ann Pottinger. Thomas had
two sons: Thomas Jr. and John.
DATES:
19 Mar 1663. Statement of account in favor of "Peter Lamore
&Bro", 1,800 pounds of tobacco against Thomas Dent.
06 Oct 1663. Peter and Thomas LAREMORE were called for coroner's
jury duty at St. Maries Co, MD.
17 Nov 1663. Ceritificates of naturalization issued to "Thomas
LEMORE and Peter LEMORE, late of Virginia, and subjects of
France."
"Whereas I Thomas and Peter Lamore, LATE OF VIRGINIA and
subjects of the
Crown of France...likewise any all liberties franchizes and all
priviledges of THIS OUR PROVINCE OF MARYLAND freely quietly and
peaceably have possess occupy and enjoy as our faithful people
born or
to be born within our said Province of Maryland..."
08 Nov 1664. Peter and Thomas LAMORE, bought 350 acres in
Calvert Co, MD from William Tennehill
30 Apr 1676. Bought land known as "Fishing Place" which became
the seat of his extensive plantation in Calvert Co (In an area
that became Prince George's County in 1696
SOURCE: "History of the Lamar or Lemar Family", Harold Dihel
Lemar.
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Mother: Sarah Augusta E. SITES |
_Batson MORGAN ______+ | (1756 - 1828) m 1780 _William MORGAN _____| | (1784 - 1838) m 1805| | |_Elizabeth WADDELL __+ | (1764 - 1825) m 1780 _John Gayden MORGAN C.S.A._| | (1818 - ....) m 1840 | | | _George GAYDEN ______ | | | (1739 - 1819) m 1782 | |_Elizabeth GAYDEN ___| | (1785 - 1854) m 1805| | |_Lois COLLINS _______+ | (1749 - ....) m 1782 | |--Cynthia Elizabeth MORGAN | (1843 - 1905) | _____________________ | | | _Leonard SITES Sr.___| | | (1796 - ....) | | | |_____________________ | | |_Sarah Augusta E. SITES ___| (1822 - 1853) m 1840 | | _____________________ | | |_____________________| | |_____________________
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Mother: Ruth WILSON |
Children:
6 Beatrice PATTON
6 Ruth Ellen PATTON
6 George Smith PATTON IV (1923)
"General George S. Patton, Jr. had many reasons to be a great
military leader. Patton had a long heritage of greatness. His
father had lived through the Civil War and had vivid memories of
the Confederacy. In the Patton home, there were many mementos of
the Civil war; from steel engravings of General Lee and
Stonewall Jackson to the shell fragment that was taken from the
lifeless body of the first George Patton. In a recent interview,
Patton's daughter, Ruth Ellen Patton Totten recalls, "Until he
was 15 years old, my father thought those steel engravings were
of God and Jesus Christ."
One of the senior Patton's best friends was Colonel John Mosby,
the fabled "Grey Ghost" of J.E.B. Stuart's legendary cavalry.
During visits to the Patton Ranch in Southern California,
Colonel Mosby would re-enact the Civil War with George Junior;
playing himself, he let George play the part of General Lee as
they would recount the battles of the war, astride their horses.
Although young George was named "Junior", he was actually the
third to bear the name George Smith Patton. The first Patton was
killed in the Civil War at the Battle of Winchester at the age
of 26. He was commanding the 22nd Virginia Regiment in the
Shenandoah Valley. Walter Taswell Patton, a brother of the first
George Patton was killed at Gettysburg while leading a regiment
under the command of Major General George E. Pickett."
Children:
2 beatrice "bee" PATTON b: 1911 d: 1952 + John Knight WATERS
2 Ruth Ellen PATTON b: 28 FEB 1915 d: 25 NOV 1993 + James K.
TOTTEN d: 1967
2 George Smith VI PATTON b: 24 DEC 1923 + Joanne HOLBROOK
AIDE DE CAMP TO GENERAL PERSHING, 1916
5TH IN THE PENTATHLON, STOCKHOLM OLYMPICS, 1912
PILOT, HORSEMAN, SAILOR
The controversial Gen. George S. Patton served under Gen.
Pershing in World War I and commanded the Seventh Army in World
War II during the invasion of Sicily in 1943. He was largely
responsible for repelling the German counter-attack at theBattle
of the Bulge.
"The object of war is not to die for your country but to make
the other bastard die for his." --General George S. Patton
"If everyone is thinking alike, then somebody isn't thinking. "
--General George S. Patton
"Through A Glass, Darkly
So forever in the future,
Shall I battle as of yore,
Dying to be born a fighter,
But to die again, once more."
--a poem by George S. Patton
George C. Scott immortalized Gen. Patton in the 1970 Oscar
winning film, "Patton."
[378382]
Hamm, Luxembourg (among those who died at the Battle of the
Bulge)
_John Mercer PATTON C.S.A._+ | (1797 - 1858) m 1823 _George Smith PATTON C.S.A.__________| | (1833 - 1864) m 1855 | | |_Margaret French WILLIAMS _+ | (1804 - 1873) m 1823 _George Smith PATTON II_| | (1856 - 1927) m 1884 | | | _Andrew GLASSELL __________+ | | | (1793 - 1873) m 1825 | |_Susan Thornton GLASSELL ____________| | (1835 - 1883) m 1855 | | |_Susan Thompson THORNTON __+ | (1804 - 1836) m 1825 | |--George Smith PATTON III WWII | (1885 - 1945) | ___________________________ | | | _Benjamin Davis "Don Benito" WILSON _| | | (1811 - 1878) m 1853 | | | |___________________________ | | |_Ruth WILSON ___________| (1861 - 1928) m 1884 | | ___________________________ | | |_Margaret S. HEREFORD _______________| (1820 - 1898) m 1853 | |___________________________
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Mother: Susannah Smith WILKINSON |
PICKENS, Francis Wilkinson, 1805-1869
-----------------------------------------------------------------
---------------
PICKENS, Francis Wilkinson, (grandson of Andrew Pickens), a
Representative from South Carolina; born on a plantation on the
Toogoodoo River, St. Paul’s Parish, Colleton District, S.C.,
April 7, 1805; completed preparatory studies; attended Franklin
College, Athens, Ga., and was graduated from South Carolina
College (now the University of South Carolina) at Columbia;
studied law; was admitted to the bar and commenced practice in
Edgefield District in 1829; engaged in planting; member of the
State house of representatives 1832-1833; elected as a Nullifier
to the Twenty-third Congress to fill the vacancy caused by the
resignation of George McDuffie; reelected to the Twenty-fourth
and Twenty-fifth Congresses and as a Democrat to the
Twenty-sixth and Twenty-seventh Congresses and served from
December 8, 1834, to March 3, 1843; chairman, Committee on
Foreign Affairs (Twenty-sixth Congress); member of the State
senate 1844-1846; member of the Nashville southern convention in
1850; delegate to the Democratic National Convention in 1856;
unsuccessful candidate for the United States Senate in 1857 to
fill the vacancy caused by the death of Andrew P. Butler;
Minister to Russia 1858-1860; Governor of South Carolina
1860-1862; died in Edgefield, Edgefield County, S.C., January
25, 1869; interment in Edgefield Cemetery.
Bibliography DAB; Edmunds, John B., Jr. Francis W. Pickens and
the Politics of Destruction. Chapel Hill: University of North
Carolina Press, 1986.
Major Events and Accomplishments - 1860-1862
South Carolina seceded from the United States - December 20,
1860
Pickens authorized troops to fire on the Star of the West, a
Union ship, in the first military engagement of the Civil War -
January 9, 1861
South Carolina College closed as a result of the onset of the
Civil War - 1862
Francis W. Pickens (1860-1862), son of Governor Andrew Pickens
followed Hammond to the governor's chair after a lapse of 16
years. At 27, he was elected without opposition to succeed
McDuffie in Congress, and was the presiding officer of the state
convention of 1852 which drew up the ordinance affirming the
right to secession. He was appointed by President Buchanan to
the post of Minister to Russia, returning to South Carolina to
be elected to be governor 4 days before the state formally broke
with the Union. Pickens died at "Edgewood" at Edgefield and is
buried in Edgefield Cemetery. The residence was removed some
years ago to Aiken, where it was restored to become the
residence of Mrs. J.B. Salley.
http://www.edgefieldsc.org/ten_governors.htm
Francis W. Pickens and the Politics of Destruction (Fred W.
Morrison Series in Southern Studies) by John B., Jr. Edmunds
Availability: Out of Print--Limited Availability
Francis Wilkinson Pickens served in the Seminole Indian War in
Florida in 1835-1836; served in South Carolina Legislature as
Rep. of Edgefield Dist.in 1832; served in U.S. Congress as Rep.
of the South Carolina Congressional District from 1834-1843, as
U.S. Senator of South Carolina of 1844-1858, when President
James Buchanan appointed him minister to Russia, where he was
stationed in 1858 and 1859 in the Czar's city, St. Petersburg.
In prospect of outbreak of the war of 1861-65 he resigned his
Russian post for U.S.A. and hastened home in late 1859 or early
1860 and "at a Session of the South Carolina Assembly, called"
the Secession Conation" was elected Governor of South Carolina
serving through that war until Surrender. Calmly and studiously
he led the State to its fatal plunge in December 1860. He ac-
knowledged his responsibility for thus beginning the war.
Children by Simkins:
2 Francis W. PICKENS
2 Maria Simkins PICKENS
2 Eldred Simkins PICKENS
2 Susan Wilkinson PICKENS
2 Andrew PICKENS b: ABT. 1830
2 Eliza Smith PICKENS b: 1833 d: 1895
2 Rebecca PICKENS b: 1833
Marriage 2 Marion Antoinette DEARING Married: 9 JAN 1845
Child: Jennie M. PICKENS
Marriage 3 Lucy Pettway HOLCOMBE Married: 24 APR 1858
Child: Eugenia Frances Dorothea PICKENS b: 14 MAR 1859 in St.
Petersburg, Russia
_________________________________ | _Andrew PICKENS Sr._______| | (1739 - 1817) m 1765 | | |_________________________________ | _Andrew PICKENS Gov. of South Carolina_| | (1779 - 1838) m 1804 | | | _Ezekiel CALHOUN "the Immigrant"_+ | | | (1720 - 1762) m 1742 | |_Rebecca Floride CALHOUN _| | (1745 - 1814) m 1765 | | |_Jane EWING _____________________ | (1720 - ....) m 1742 | |--Francis Wilkinson PICKENS Gov. of South Carolina | (1805 - 1869) | _________________________________ | | | __________________________| | | | | | |_________________________________ | | |_Susannah Smith WILKINSON _____________| (1788 - 1810) m 1804 | | _________________________________ | | |__________________________| | |_________________________________
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Mother: Unity CREW |
_Thomas STANLEY II_____________+ | (1665 - 1733) m 1685 _John STANLEY "The Eldest"_| | (1691 - 1783) m 1744 | | |_Anne? or Mary Holme?__________ | (1665 - 1703) m 1685 _Thomas STANLEY _____| | (1752 - 1823) m 1780| | | _Nicholas HUTCHINS (HUTCHENS) _ | | | (1680 - ....) m 1701 | |_Martha HUTCHINS __________| | (1709 - 1789) m 1744 | | |_Mary WATKINS _________________+ | (1682 - 1736) m 1701 | |--Thomas Crew STANLEY | (1790 - ....) | _______________________________ | | | _James CREW _______________| | | (1735 - ....) m 1759 | | | |_______________________________ | | |_Unity CREW _________| (1760 - 1852) m 1780| | _Benjamin HARRIS ______________+ | | (1698 - 1765) m 1737 |_Judith HARRIS ____________| (1739 - ....) m 1759 | |_Sarah DUMAS __________________+ (1715 - 1780) m 1737
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