Mother: Mary MALLORY |
_George ALVIS (ALVES) _+ | (1656 - 1734) _David ALVIS (OLVIS) I_______________| | (1714 - 1787) m 1739 | | |_Mary CRENSHAW? _______+ | (1700 - 1732) _Jesse S. ALVIS _____| | (1759 - 1841) m 1785| | | _Thomas STANLEY III____+ | | | (1689 - 1754) m 1715 | |_Elizabeth STANLEY? _________________| | (1718 - 1789) m 1739 | | |_Elizabeth MADDOX _____ | (1693 - 1724) m 1715 | |--Jane ALVIS | (1811 - ....) | _______________________ | | | _(RESEARCH QUERY) MALLORY of VA & MO_| | | | | | |_______________________ | | |_Mary MALLORY _______| (1772 - 1840) m 1785| | _______________________ | | |_____________________________________| | |_______________________
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Mother: Sarah Ann RUCKER |
___________________________ | _Andrew BROWN Sr.____| | (1769 - 1860) m 1794| | |___________________________ | _Andrew Jackson "Jackie" BROWN _| | (1816 - 1899) m 1839 | | | _James ADAMS ______________+ | | | (1753 - 1835) m 1772 | |_Margaret ADAMS _____| | (1780 - 1860) m 1794| | |_Jane Jennie CUNNINGHAM ___+ | (1756 - 1836) m 1772 | |--William Jefferson BROWN | (1840 - 1862) | _William RUCKER Jr.________+ | | (1744 - 1834) | _Barden RUCKER ______| | | (1785 - 1856) m 1810| | | |_Elizabeth ALEXANDER ______+ | | (1750 - 1830) |_Sarah Ann RUCKER ______________| (1822 - 1899) m 1839 | | _William ALEXANDER ________+ | | (1752 - 1811) m 1782 |_Frances ALEXANDER __| (1790 - 1860) m 1810| |_Frances "Frankey" RUCKER _+ (1727 - 1792) m 1782
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From the unpublished manuscript, Indian Atrocities Along the
Clinch, Powell and Holston Rivers, pages 211-218. On October 6,
1791, (1) Henry Smith, County Lieutenant of Russell Co., VA,
wrote to Governor Randolph, the following:
Immediately on the receipt of your Excellency's instruction of
the 25th of April, 1791, I gave orders to the commanding
officers of the companies to raise their proportion of 50 men,
which I judged absolutely necessary for our defense, but not one
man would serve. The approaching expected peace, to be made the
last of May with the Cherokees, seemed to look with a favorable
aspect on troubled country.
I, not willing to trust my own judgement called a council of
officers, whereupon it was advised to be unnecessary to order
any more men until it was known whether the Indians would accept
the terms of peace offered them at the expected treaty. After
this we remained tolerable peaceful, except some horses stolen,
till about the last of August, when part of two families were
killed; (Pendleton & McDowell), the week following (early
September) Elisha Farris and three of his family were killed,
and his daughter, a young woman, was taken prisoner. About a
fortnight ago, James Wharton, Esq., and his family was killed,
and a Negro taken prisoner.
In this unhappy situation I cannot raise a man in this county
for its defense. No man is willing, nor, I believe, can be
forced to strip his unguarded family, equally exposed to
dangers, of the only help and comfort they have in himself, to
defend others more distant, but less dear to his natural
feelings. A very considerable part of the country is at this
time, instead of taking up arms to defend themselves, employed
in moving their families to the interior parts of the country,
out of reach of savage cruelty...
In the foregoing letter Colonel Smith points up the
understandable reluctance of the settlers to abandon their own
families to serve in the militia as common defenders of all.
Undoubtably the killings mentioned in his letter were
perpetrated by the cunning half-breed Indian Chief Benge, for at
this time he was leading most of the forays against the
settlers. Benge was an uncanny cunning and cruel savage, using
secret routes to fall upon the unsuspecting settlers, hurriedly
committing his atrocious murders and then vanishing into the
wilderness over routes exceedingly hard to find or follow.
The Elisha Farris family lived on Moccasin Creek a short
distance fro the present town of Gate City. Although much closer
in time than many of the other massacre, I have not been able to
determine the names of those slain or the details, nor the name
of the daughter taken prisoner and her ultimate fate. This file
contributed by: Rhonda Robertson [email protected]
[S161]
__ | _(RESEARCH QUERY) FARIS\FARRIS\FERRIS\FARISH of Virginia_| | | | |__ | _William FARRIS _____| | (1720 - ....) | | | __ | | | | |_________________________________________________________| | | | |__ | | |--Gideon FARRIS | (1745 - 1818) | __ | | | _________________________________________________________| | | | | | |__ | | |_____________________| | | __ | | |_________________________________________________________| | |__
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Mother: Frances COLEMAN? |
"as my son John Sandidge having purchased the Intrust of all the
legatees to his father William Sandidge estate real and personal
as my dependence for all support & care taking of my person and
property has ever been in my son John Sandidge I do hereby
request that he will guard my intrust during my life and for his
fillial duty and piety toward me I give and bequeath to my
beloved son, John Sandidge all and every kind of goods and
chattels that I may die possessed of and as all subluary things
are perishable if there should not be at my deceased a
sufficiency to inter me decently I request as a mother that he
will supply the deficit."
Epitaph: Bur. Sandidge Cemetery, Liletown, KY.
"Elizabeth Sandidge, born Feb 14, 1720, died Jan 6, 1826"
The mother of John S. Sandidge was Elizabeth "Betty" Graves and
his father was William (Jr. or II or son of William). Elizabeth
moved from Virginia to Green Co., KY with her son, John and his
wife Mary Wood, in 1810. At that time Elizabeth Graves Sandidge
was 90 years old. She is buried in the Sandidge Cemetery in
Green Co., KY. She died at age 106.
SANDIDGE CEMETERY
Located on D.A.R. Cemetery Rd, on the farm of Howard Curry, in
the Newt Community of Green County, Kentucky.
Toombstone. Sandidge, Elizabeth 14 Feb 1720 - 6 Jan 1826 (dau of
John & Frances Graves)(Wfe of William Sandidge)
_Thomas GRAVES IV____+ | (1640 - 1711) m 1669 _John GRAVES I_______| | (1677 - 1747) | | |_Mary________________ | (1650 - ....) m 1669 _John GRAVES II______| | (1706 - 1772) | | | _____________________ | | | | |_Rebecca_____________| | (1670 - ....) | | |_____________________ | | |--Elizabeth "Betty" GRAVES | (1720 - 1826) | _____________________ | | | _____________________| | | | | | |_____________________ | | |_Frances COLEMAN? ___| (1695 - 1772) | | _____________________ | | |_____________________| | |_____________________
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Mother: AGNES LINDSAY |
_ALEXANDER de LINDSAY of Edzell___+ | (1505 - 1558) m 1530 _DAVID LINDSAY DD, Bishop of Ross_| | (1532 - 1613) | | |_RACHEL FILIA BARCLAY of Maithers_+ | (1510 - ....) m 1530 _HIEROME (Jerome) LINDSAY Lord of Annatland & Mount_| | (1562 - 1642) m 1604 | | | __________________________________ | | | | |_MARGARET COLVILLE _______________| | (1535 - ....) | | |__________________________________ | | |--JAMES LINDSAY "the Immigrant" | (1605 - ....) | __________________________________ | | | _DAVID LINDSAY 5th of the Mount___| | | (1555 - 1621) | | | |__________________________________ | | |_AGNES LINDSAY _____________________________________| (.... - 1621) m 1604 | | __________________________________ | | |_GRISELDA (Grissel) MELDRUM ______| | |__________________________________
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Mother: Elizabeth (Eliza Judith) TOWNES |
Inherited one feather bed, furniture, and fifteen pounds current
money.
_Thomas LOCKETT I____ | (1645 - 1686) m 1667 _Thomas LOCKETT II___| | (1673 - 1745) | | |_Margaret OSBORNE ___+ | (1649 - 1708) m 1667 _Thomas LOCKETT III_______________| | (1700 - 1775) m 1720 | | | _Thomas OSBORNE III__+ | | | (1641 - 1692) | |_Martha OSBORNE _____| | (1670 - ....) | | |_Martha GOODE _______ | (1645 - ....) | |--Mary LOCKETT | (1725 - 1791) | _____________________ | | | _____________________| | | | | | |_____________________ | | |_Elizabeth (Eliza Judith) TOWNES _| (1704 - 1782) m 1720 | | _____________________ | | |_____________________| | |_____________________
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Mother: MAUD de BEAUCHAMP |
In 1291 he was called into military service against the Scots,
and again in 1296. There had been a Parliament with the Scots at
Norham in the former year, and in the latter there was a savage
sacking of Berwick with Earl Warrenne being made ruler of
Scotland and the Stone of Scone removed to London.
From 1278 to 1294 there were quo warrento enquiries challenging
the jurisdictional rights of the magnates. Perhaps it was as an
outcome of these that in 1295 Roger was created Lord Mowbray,
Baron by Writ. As no previous barony had been created by writ,
he became premier baron of England.
In 1294 there was an outbreak of war with France when Philip IV
confiscated Gascony. In September 1294 Roger was going there on
the King's services. In 1297 Roger again attended Parliament,
this time at Salibury. A record from 1295 shows 53 magnates
summoned to Parliament
There is a record of Walter de Burnham agreeing to serve in
Flanders under Roger de Mowbray in 1297. In that year and Edward
I left for Flanders, and England was on the verge of civil war.
Roger died at Ghent in 1297 and his body was brought back to be
re-interred in Fountains Abbey where there his effigy in stone.
His marriage to to Rose de Clare, daughter of the Duke of
Gloucester, had been arranged as early as his 13th. birthday by
his and Rose's mothers. It took place in 1270 and produced a son
and heir, John and perhaps a second son Geoffrey.
The entry in Burke's Extinct Peerage makes reference to a son
Alexander who went to Scotland, but in the Mowbray Journal,
Stephen Goslin claims that Alexander was in fact one of the
seven sons of Geoffrey de Mowbray of Scotland, descended from
Philip de Mowbray.
Inquisition Post Mortem
This lists Roger's land in the following counties:
Essex: at Doddinghurst and Easthorpe.
Leicestershire: at Melton mowbray, Kirkby on the Wreak, Frithby,
Welby, Kettleby, Stathern, Eastwell, Goadby, Burton Lazars,
Wyfordby, Little Dalby, Sysonby, Queeniborough, Cold Newton,
Hoby, Pickwell, Leesthorpe, Bitteswell, Ullesthorpe, Ashton
Flamville, Thrussington, Radcliffe.
Lincolnshire: at Gainsborough, Scawby, Garthorpe, Blyborough,
Burton by Lincoln, and the whole of the Isle of Axholme
(including Haxey, Butterwick, Ouston, Beltoft and Belton)
Northamptonshire: at Crich and Welford.
Nottinghamshire: at Egmanton, Averham, Serlby in Harworth,
Auckley (partially in Yorkshire), and Finningley.
Rutland: at Empingham.
Warwickshire: at Monks Kirkby, Little Harborough, Wappenbury,
Brinklow, Hampton in Arden, Nuthurst, Over, Chadwick, Newham,
Baddesley Clinton, Shustoke, Bentley, Hesilholt and Smyte.
Yorkshire: too many places to list!
_NIGEL de MOWBRAY _______________________________________+ | (1145 - 1191) m 1170 _WILLIAM de MOWBRAY ___________________| | (1160 - 1223) | | |_MABEL de CLARE _________________________________________ | (1150 - 1203) m 1170 _ROGER de MOWBRAY of Thirsk & Slingsby_| | (1220 - 1266) | | | _WILLIAM "The Stronghand" d' AUBIGNY 1st Earl of Arundel_+ | | | (1102 - 1176) m 1136 | |_AGNES AUBIGNY of Arundel______________| | (1150 - ....) | | |_ADELIZA de LOUVAIN of England___________________________+ | (1103 - 1151) m 1136 | |--ROGER III de MOWBRAY 1st Baron of Axholme | (1254 - 1297) | _SIMON de BEAUCHAMP _____________________________________+ | | (1145 - 1207) | _WILLIAM de BEAUCHAMP Baron of Bedford_| | | (1185 - 1260) m 1220 | | | |_________________________________________________________ | | |_MAUD de BEAUCHAMP ____________________| (1220 - 1273) | | _WILLIAM Plantagenet de LONGESPEE 1st Earl of Salisbury__+ | | (1176 - 1225) m 1198 |_IDA de LONGESPEE _____________________| (1204 - 1268) m 1220 | |_ELA Fitzpatrick de SALISBURY of Salisbury_______________+ (1185 - 1261) m 1198
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