Mother: Elizabeth |
_Arthur AYLESWORTH AYLWORTH Sr. "the Immigrant"_+ | (1650 - ....) _Arthur AYLESWORTH Jr._| | (1683 - 1761) m 1704 | | |_Mary BROWNE ___________________________________+ | (1666 - 1725) _Philip AYLESWORTH __| | (1710 - 1789) | | | ________________________________________________ | | | | |_Mary FRANKLIN ________| | (1684 - 1761) m 1704 | | |________________________________________________ | | |--Benjamin AYLESWORTH | (1734 - ....) | ________________________________________________ | | | _______________________| | | | | | |________________________________________________ | | |_Elizabeth___________| (1714 - ....) | | ________________________________________________ | | |_______________________| | |________________________________________________
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Mother: Mildred TAYLOR |
_James BARBOUR II____+ | (1707 - 1775) m 1733 _Ambrose BARBOUR ____________| | (1735 - ....) | | |_Sarah TODD _________+ | (1717 - 1781) m 1733 _Richard Thomas BARBOUR _| | (1753 - ....) | | | _Joseph THOMAS ______+ | | | (1705 - 1773) | |_Catherine Pendleton THOMAS _| | (1730 - 1773) | | |_Sarah PENDLETON ____+ | (1711 - 1794) | |--Thomas BARBOUR | (1770 - ....) | _____________________ | | | _____________________________| | | | | | |_____________________ | | |_Mildred TAYLOR _________| (1750 - ....) | | _____________________ | | |_____________________________| | |_____________________
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|
Crawford Crenshaw deed of trust to Alex. B. Walthall to secure
debt due Wm. Green . 2 notes of $304.00, each. 152 acres in
Amelia Co., adj. Richard H. Brazeal, Archer St. Clair, Henry P.
Eanes and others, also a negro named Pascal . Nov. 18, 1831 . D.
B. 30, p. 300.
Crawford Crenshaw deed of trust to Alex. B. Walthall to secure
debts due John T. Jeter , Jones Wood , Executor of Wm. Wood, and
Henry Drerry, John A. Hillsman, Wm. Brazeal and Wm. E. Seay all
of Amelia . 154 acres in Amelia Co. adj. Henry Brazeal & others
&c. July 29, 1833 . D. B. 31, p. 213.
Crawford Crenshaw deed of trust to Geo. C. Moore to secure debt
due Henry L. Drewry . $1520. same property as above. Oct. 22,
1836 . D. B. 32, p. 390.
Crawford Crenshaw, and Frances D. his wife of Amelia Co. deed to
John T. Jeter of same Co. $900,00. 152 acres in Amelia Co., on
which the sd. Crawford Crenshaw and his wife live. adj. Richrd.
Brazeal & others. Apr. 16, 1838 . D. B. 33, p. 331.
Ordered that the Overseers of the Poor of District No. 1,
proceed to bind out Crawford Crenshaw . Feb. Court 1817 . O. B.
1814-17 , p. 262.
Crawford Crenshaw among those whose male tithables are ordered
to work on the road whereof Milton Vaughn is surveyor. July Crt.
1825 . O. B. 1825-27 , p. 16.
Crawford Crenshaw deed of trust to Alex. B. Walthall to secure
James M. Jeter . a negro named Paschal. Ack. & Recd . Aug. Crt.
1826 . O. B. 1825-27 , p. 283.
Crawford Crenshaw deed from Wm. Greene and Elizabeth , his wife,
recorded. Nov. Crt. 1831 . O. B. 1830-32 , p.
Crawford Crenshaw deed of trust to Alex. B. Walthall to secure
John T. Jeter . 154 acres, negro man Pashcal , household
furniture stock &c. Aug. Crt. 1833 . O. B. 1832-34 , p. 171.
Crawford Crenshaw , deed of trust to Geo. C. Moore to secure
Henry T. Drewry . Recorded. Oct. 27, 1836 . O. B. 1834-37 , p.
240
__ | __| | | | |__ | _(RESEARCH QUERY) CRENSHAW _| | | | | __ | | | | |__| | | | |__ | | |--Crawford CRENSHAW | (1790 - ....) | __ | | | __| | | | | | |__ | | |____________________________| | | __ | | |__| | |__
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Father: WILLIAM II de FIENNES Mother: BLANCHE de BRIENNE of Loupeland |
_WILLIAM de FIENNES ________________________+ | (1160 - 1241) _ENGUERRAN (Ingelram) de FIENNES _| | (1192 - 1267) | | |_AGNES (Alice) de DAMMARTIN ________________+ | (1166 - ....) _WILLIAM II de FIENNES __________| | (1245 - 1302) | | | _NICHOLAS de CONDE _________________________+ | | | (1184 - ....) | |_ISABEL de CONDE _________________| | (1210 - ....) | | |_ELISABETH de MORIALM ______________________ | | |--MARGARET de FIENNES | (1260 - 1334) | _JEAN (JOHN I) de BRIENNE of Constantinople_+ | | (1168 - 1237) m 1224 | _JEAN de BRIENNE _________________| | | (1225 - 1296) m 1251 | | | |_BERENGARIA of Leon_________________________+ | | (1199 - 1237) m 1224 |_BLANCHE de BRIENNE of Loupeland_| (1245 - 1302) | | _GEOFFREY VI de CHATEAUDUN _________________+ | | (1200 - ....) |_JEANNE de CHATEAUDUN ____________| (1227 - ....) m 1251 | |_CLEMENCE des ROCHES _______________________ (1200 - ....)
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Mother: Elizabeth DUDLEY |
However,Thomas, son of Thomas son of John & Amy, actualy moved
to Edgecomb Co. NC where he is referred to as of Northampton Co.
NC He had a brother, Ambrose, who left all to the only recorded
child he had, Dudley, also of NC. This Thomas, the younger, had
listed in his inventory "a passel al books", which would lead
one to believe he was able to read.
Thomas was in Calvert County, MD in 1748. He was a planter who
raised tobacco which he consigned to London agents for sale.
Thomas made his will 14 Sep 1753 while he was living in Saint
James Parish, Anne Arundel County, MD. He bequeathed his entire
estate to his wife during her widowhood.
He sold the land of his inheritance 18 Sep 1750 to William
Roane. He bought land of 150 acres in Edgecombe Co. NC 13 Apr
1752 from Samuel Hackney in which he is referred to as being
from Northampton Co. NC.
In 1761, Thomas is recorded as being of Halifax Co. NC he bought
1/2 acre from his bro Robert. On 17 Apr 1769, he sold his
Northampton property to Josias Crump. There was never a mention
of a wife in all of these land transactions.
[S125]
[S907]
[S907]
[S125]
_(RESEARCH QUERY) GATEWOOD\GATWOOD of England_ | _John GATEWOOD I "the Immigrant"_| | (1640 - 1706) m 1680 | | |______________________________________________ | _Thomas GATEWOOD ____| | (1688 - 1748) m 1716| | | _Thomas MCGRAW (MAGRAH) ______________________+ | | | (1640 - 1722) | |_Amy "Amie" MCGRAW (MAGRAH) _____| | (1660 - ....) m 1680 | | |______________________________________________ | | |--Thomas GATEWOOD Jr. | (1718 - 1775) | _Richard DUDLEY II____________________________+ | | (1646 - 1716) m 1664 | _Richard DUDLEY III______________| | | (1665 - 1716) m 1688 | | | |_Elizabeth STEPHENS __________________________+ | | (1645 - ....) m 1664 |_Elizabeth DUDLEY ___| (1692 - 1765) m 1716| | _Thomas SAXE _________________________________ | | (.... - 1654) |_Elizabeth SAXE _________________| (1670 - ....) m 1688 | |______________________________________________
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Mother: Frances WHITE |
One of the grandchildren mentioned in Daniel White's will
November 23, 1788.
He lived in Amherst co. until 1805, when he moved to Franklin
Co. VA and by 1811 to Barren Co. KY.
The following information is from Abner Harrison's article on
the Harrison Repository website:
The following information comes from a book, "Highlights of the
Capital Hill Community - Jimmie Harrison Taylor's Research". It
was sent in an e-mail message from Ron Bewley ([email protected])
on Thu, 13 Feb 1997.
"Reuben Harrison, son of Battaile and Frances Harrison, married
Margaret (Peggy) Franklin on October 9, 1770 probably in Amherst
County, Virginia as recorded in their family Bible. Peggy was
the daughter of Henry Franklin who was born ca. 1715 in Amherst
County, Virginia and Margaret {Peachy} Franklin. {Henry and
Margaret married in 1736.} " -- the brackets{ } indicate
handwritten parentheses around these items with an accompanying
note stating "not proven".
Reuben, Sr. HARRISON and Margaret (Peggy) FRANKLIN had the
following children:
i.Elizabeth HARRISON.
ii.Andrew HARRISON1 was born in 1773. Not mentioned in his
parent's will.
iii.Matilda Caroline HARRISON.
iv.Frances White HARRISON.
v.Robert HARRISON.
vi.William HARRISON.
vii.Reuben HARRISON.
viii.Polly HARRISON.
ix.Sally HARRISON.
x.Judith HARRISON.
xi.Samuel HARRISON.
1810 VA Census:
Reuben, Jr. X X X 1 X 3 X X 1 X 2 Franklin
Reuben, Sr. X 1 X 1 1 X X 2 X 1 8 Franklin
Josiah X X 1 X 1 X X 1 X 1 X Franklin
Barren County KY Will Book 2 1819-1824, pg390
Harrison, Reuben, Sr.W: 10 January 1821 /P: October 1824
Daughters:
Elizabeth, Polly, Sally, and Judith, and Matilda Carolin;
Sons:
Robert, Reuben, and Samuel Franklin; Wife, Peggy
Witnesses: Lot Bradshaw, Jacob Pock, and Oran Wood.
_Andrew HARRISON Sr._________+ | (1648 - 1718) m 1684 _Andrew HARRISON Jr._| | (1687 - 1753) m 1710| | |_Eleanor Long ELLIOTT _______ | (1642 - ....) m 1684 _Battaile HARRISON __| | (1720 - 1776) m 1744| | | _John "The Ranger" BATTAILE _+ | | | (1658 - 1707) m 1693 | |_Elizabeth BATTAILE _| | (1695 - ....) m 1710| | |_Elizabeth SMITH ____________+ | (1668 - 1770) m 1693 | |--Reuben HARRISON | (1749 - 1824) | _John WHITE _________________+ | | (1662 - 1743) m 1690 | _Daniel WHITE _______| | | (1706 - 1790) | | | |_Mary ELLIOT ________________+ | | (1663 - 1734) m 1690 |_Frances WHITE ______| (1725 - 1789) m 1744| | _____________________________ | | |_____________________| | |_____________________________
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Mother: Sarah Williamson BIRD |
LAMAR, Lucius Quintus Cincinnatus, 1825-1893
Senate Years of Service: 1877-1885
Party: Democrat Library of Congress
LAMAR, Lucius Quintus Cincinnatus, (uncle of William Bailey
Lamar and cousin of Absalom Harris Chappell), a Representative
and a Senator from Mississippi; born near Eatonton, Putnam
County, Ga., September 17, 1825; attended schools in Baldwin and
Newton Counties; graduated from Emory College, Oxford, Ga., in
1845; studied law in Macon; was admitted to the bar in 1847;
moved to Oxford, Miss., in 1849, where he practiced law and
served one year as professor of mathematics in the University of
Mississippi at Oxford; moved to Covington, Ga., in 1852 and
practiced law; member, Georgia State house of representatives
1853; returned to Mississippi in 1855; elected as a Democrat to
the Thirty-fifth and Thirty-sixth Congresses and served from
March 4, 1857, until his retirement in December 1860 to become a
member of the secession convention of Mississippi; drafted the
Mississippi ordinance of secession; during the Civil War served
in the Confederate Army as lieutenant colonel until 1862;
entered the diplomatic service of the Confederacy in 1862 and
was sent on a special mission to Russia, France, and England;
member of the State constitutional conventions in 1865, 1868,
1875, 1877, and 1881; professor of metaphysics, social science,
and law at the University of Mississippi; elected to the
Forty-third and Forty-fourth Congresses (March 4, 1873-March 3,
1877); did not seek renomination in 1876, having been elected
Senator; chairman, Committee on Pacific Railroads (Forty-fourth
Congress); elected as a Democrat to the United States Senate in
1876; reelected in 1883 and served from March 4, 1877, until
March 6, 1885, when he resigned to accept a Cabinet post;
chairman, Committee on Interior and Insular Affairs (Forty-sixth
Congress), Committee on Railroads (Forty-sixth Congress);
Secretary of the Interior in the Cabinet of President Grover
Cleveland 1885-1888; appointed by President Cleveland to be
Associate Justice of the United States Supreme Court and was
confirmed January 16, 1888; served until his death in Vineville,
Ga., January 23, 1893; interment in Riverside Cemetery, Macon,
Ga.; reinterment in St. Peter’s Cemetery, Oxford, Miss., in
1894. Bibliography
American National Biography; Dictionary of American Biography;
Mayes, Edward. Lucius Q.C. Lamar: His Life, Times, and Speeches,
1825-1893. 1896. Reprint. New York: AMS Press, 1974; Murphy,
James B. L.Q.C. Lamar: Pragmatic Patriot. Baton Rouge: Louisiana
State University Press, 1973.
Lucius Quintus Cincinnatus Lamar was born in Putnam County,
Georgia, on September 17, 1825, into an aristocratic planter
family. He attended Emory College and became a lawyer, was
elected to the Georgia state legislature for the 1853-54
session, but like many others during this time, he moved
westward to Mississippi to make his fortune. He took up
residence and opened a law practice in Oxford, Mississippi, and
later became a faculty member at the University of Mississippi,
a position he no doubt secured with the help of his
father-in-law, Augustus Baldwin Longstreet, who was president of
the university. During the Civil War, Lamar organized the 19th
Mississippi regiment of volunteers and saw action against Union
General George McClellan during his 1862 Peninsula campaign in
Virginia. Lamar was appointed ambassador to Russia by C.S.A.
President Jefferson Davis, but he was never received by the
Russian government since the Confederacy’s sovereignty was never
recognized abroad. After his return from Europe in 1864, he
served as a political spokesman for Davis and as a judge
advocate in the military court and as acting aide to General
James Longstreet, who was his father-in-law’s nephew.
Lamar returned to Mississippi after the war, where he resumed
his law practice and position on the university faculty,
directing the law department until 1870, the year Mississippi
was readmitted to the Union. In 1872, Lamar was elected to
Congress, Mississippi's first Democratic congressman since
Radical Reconstruction. In his solitary role, he was in a
position to lead the party to new goals, beginning with a
carefully formulated southern program of sectional
reconciliation, which he was able to present formally upon the
death of Massachusetts Senator Charles Sumner, whose fervent
abolitionist beliefs had been cause of much southern resentment
prior to the war. With rhetorical brilliance Lamar championed
Sumner’s call for amnesty for former Confederates, which quickly
rang throughout the country and made Lamar famous.
Lamar’s political fortunes continued to rise, as the Mississippi
legislature sent him to the U.S. Senate in 1877. With the
election in 1884 of Grover Cleveland to the presidency (the
first Democrat since before the Civil War), he became a cabinet
member for three years. In 1888, Lamar became a member of the
U.S. Supreme Court. As he had during his political career, he
continued to rule in favor of economic nationalism and states
right, opposing the enlargement of the national government's
political power, particularly in the area of implied authority
over civil rights. He died January 23, 1893, in Georgia.
Lamar County, Alabama was named after L.Q.C. Lamar in 1877.
The Law Center at the University of Mississippi was named in
honor of L.Q.C. Lamar, who played a key role in the early
history of the university's law school.
Speech of Hon. L.Q.C. Lamar of Miss., on the State of the
Country. Atlanta, Ga.: J.J. Toon and Company, 1864.
The Tariff: Speech in the Senate of the United States, February
7, 1883. Washington, D.C.: The United States Congress, 1883.
Oration on the Life, Character and Public Services of the Hon.
John C. Calhoun: Delivered before the Ladies Calhoun Monument
Association and the Public, at Charleston, South Carolina.
Charleston, S.C.: Lucas, Richardson and Company, 1888.
Bibliography
Biographical: Murphy, James B. “Lamar, Lucius Quintus
Cincinnatus: 1825-1893.” Lives of Mississippi Writers,
1817-1967. Ed. James B. Lloyd. Jackson: University Press of
Mississippi, 1981. 284-87.
Personal and Legal Information:
The Legal Information Institute at Cornell Law School features a
brief biographical sketch of Lamar and some information about
his Supreme Court rulings.
Oxford: City History, from the Oxford city web site.
From:
http://www.olemiss.edu/depts/english/ms-writers/dir/lamar_l_q_c/
[346213]
reinterment in 1894 at St. Peter's Cemetery, Oxford, MS
_Thomas LAMAR _______+ | (1746 - 1820) _John LAMAR III______| | (1769 - 1833) m 1795| | |_Catherine REYNOLDS _+ | (1750 - ....) _Lucius Quintus Cincinnatus LAMAR Judge_| | (1797 - 1834) | | | _____________________ | | | | |_Rebecca LAMAR ______| | (1774 - 1839) m 1795| | |_____________________ | | |--Lucius Quintus Cincinnatus LAMAR C.S.A. | (1825 - 1893) | _____________________ | | | _____________________| | | | | | |_____________________ | | |_Sarah Williamson BIRD _________________| (1798 - ....) | | _____________________ | | |_____________________| | |_____________________
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Mother: Elizabeth ARMISTEAD |
_Thomas LEE of Stratford_____________+ | (1690 - 1750) m 1722 _Richard Henry LEE of Chantilly_| | (1732 - 1794) m 1757 | | |_Hannah Philippa Harrison LUDWELL ___+ | (1701 - 1750) m 1722 _Ludwell LEE of "Belmont"_| | (1760 - 1836) m 1797 | | | _William AYLETT Jr. of Fairfield_____+ | | | (1695 - 1780) m 1737 | |_Anne AYLETT ___________________| | (1738 - 1768) m 1757 | | |_Elizabeth ESKRIDGE of "Sandy Point"_+ | (1715 - 1744) m 1737 | |--Elizabeth Armistead LEE | (1804 - 1887) | _William ARMISTEAD of "Hesse"________+ | | (1715 - 1775) m 1740 | _Bowles ARMISTEAD ______________| | | (1750 - ....) m 1780 | | | |_Mary BOWLES ________________________+ | | (1725 - ....) m 1740 |_Elizabeth ARMISTEAD _____| (1780 - 1820) m 1797 | | _Peter FONTAINE II Gent._____________+ | | (1720 - ....) m 1749 |_Mary Ann FONTAINE _____________| (1750 - 1799) m 1780 | |_Elizabeth Louise WINSTON ___________+ (1734 - ....) m 1749
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Mother: Emma ROURK |
_Thomas Whitfield MCCANTS _+ | (1814 - 1874) m 1853 _John Williams MCCANTS _____________| | (1850 - 1926) m 1872 | | |_Mary AUSTIN ______________ | (1830 - ....) m 1853 _Clarence Herbert MCCANTS _| | (1883 - 1910) | | | _Charles S. EDWARDS C.S.A._+ | | | (1825 - 1874) m 1849 | |_Cynthia Caroline "Carrie" EDWARDS _| | (1854 - 1926) m 1872 | | |_Cynthia Sarah HARVEY _____+ | (1832 - 1893) m 1849 | |--Carrie Rosalie MCCANTS | (1900 - ....) | ___________________________ | | | ____________________________________| | | | | | |___________________________ | | |_Emma ROURK _______________| (1880 - ....) | | ___________________________ | | |____________________________________| | |___________________________
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Mother: Nancy TWYMAN |
_Anthony THORNTON II_+ | (1727 - 1782) m 1746 _George THORNTON Sr._______| | (1752 - 1853) m 1774 | | |_Sarah TALIAFERRO ___+ | (1733 - 1762) m 1746 _Anthony THORNTON ___| | (1790 - 1855) m 1816| | | _Thomas STANLEY IV___+ | | | (1731 - 1797) m 1755 | |_Margaret "Peggy" STANLEY _| | (1758 - 1823) m 1774 | | |_Sarah CREW _________ | (1728 - ....) m 1755 | |--Francis THORNTON | (1820 - ....) | _____________________ | | | ___________________________| | | | | | |_____________________ | | |_Nancy TWYMAN _______| (1790 - ....) m 1816| | _____________________ | | |___________________________| | |_____________________
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|
_Roger or Robert WILLIAMS _ | (1620 - 1673) _John WILLIAMS Sr.______| | (1648 - 1691) m 1670 | | |___________________________ | _John WILLIAMS Jr.___| | (1671 - 1758) | | | _John WHITLEY I____________+ | | | (1628 - 1668) m 1648 | |_Elizabeth Ann WHITLEY _| | (1656 - 1694) m 1670 | | |_Anne MOSS ________________+ | (1634 - 1694) m 1648 | |--Mary WILLIAMS | (1700 - ....) | ___________________________ | | | ________________________| | | | | | |___________________________ | | |_____________________| | | ___________________________ | | |________________________| | |___________________________
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Father: James WILLIAMS of Soldiers Rest Mother: Elizabeth BRUCE |
Children:
I. James Williams((5)), d. in childhood.
II. Betty Bruce Williams((5)), never married.
III. Robert Williams((5)), Brigadier and Adjutant General U. S.
Army. Married Mrs. Douglas, widow of Senator Stephen A. Douglas.
Issue, six children.
IV. Anne Williams((5)), d. in childhood.
V. George M. Williams((5)). Married Miss G. S. Long, (+ Gertude
S. LONG) of Baltimore.
Children:
2 James WILLIAMS
2 Betty WILLIAMS
2 Robert WILLIAMS + Adele CUTTS
2 Adele WILLIAMS
2 George M. WILLIAMS + Gertude S. LONG
2 Lucy Mary WILLIAMS
_James WILLIAMS ____________+ | (1690 - 1735) m 1704 _William WILLIAMS ___| | (1720 - 1770) | | |_Anne_______________________ | (1690 - 1735) m 1704 _James WILLIAMS of Soldiers Rest_| | (1740 - 1822) | | | _Phillip CLAYTON of Catalpa_+ | | | (1702 - 1786) m 1720 | |_Lucy CLAYTON _______| | (1720 - 1775) | | |_Anne COLEMAN ______________+ | (1703 - ....) m 1720 | |--Philip WILLIAMS | (1800 - ....) | ____________________________ | | | _____________________| | | | | | |____________________________ | | |_Elizabeth BRUCE ________________| (1780 - ....) | | ____________________________ | | |_____________________| | |____________________________
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