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Note NI22745 :

Individuals : Andrews John
Cabarrus County Marriage Bonds

 

Note NI22766 :

Individuals : Snyder Martin
He died as result of falling from a wagon. He was a strong Adams Whig and a hard-working man. He had a good knowledge of veterinary surgery.

 

Note NI22788 :

Individuals : Jamison John
In 1802 John came to Ohio and stayed with Henderson where he purchased around 650 acres. He passed on the land to his son, Walter at his death.

 

Note NI22798 :

Individuals : Jamison Francis
Informationi from Jamison and Truesdale Families Genealogy
mjamison3
jimpat1016@@woh.rr.com or bozobreath@@hotmail.com

 

Note NI22817 :

Individuals : Jamison Robert B.
Source: A biographical history of Darke County, Ohio - Evansville, Ind. 1900 - Page 582
ge 582
ROBERT B. JAMISON, a native of the county of Delaware, Ohio, was born September 22, 1858, his parents being James M. and Elizabeth (High) Jamison. The father was a native of Virginia and the mother of Pennsylvania, and they were among the early settlers of Delaware county, Ohio. Robert Jamison, the grandfather, was also a native of the Keystone state, but removed to Delaware county, Ohio, at an early day, spending his remaining days within its borders. He married a Miss Baird, who with her husband came to the Buckeye state in 1812, when its lands were wild, its forests uncut and when there was little to indicate that civilization was soon to work a marvelous (change in this section of the country.
Robert B. Jamison spent his youth upon the farm, attending the district schools and lie made rapid progress in his studies, manifesting special aptitude in mastering the branches therein taught. A love of knowledge incited him to secure a college education and he entered the Wesleyan University, at Delaware, Ohio, in which institution lie was graduated with the class of 1879. He afterward engaged in teaching, following that profession in the county of his nativity until 1882. In that year he came to Greenville, Ohio, and entered into partnership with John H. Martz, under the firm name of Jamison & Martz. They purchased the hardware stock belonging to R. A. .Shuffleton and continued in that business un­til 1887, when they sold this store to the firm of Foster & Son. They then turned their attention to the real estate and insurance business. They buy and sell real estate on commission, loan money and are agents for the Union Central Life Insurance Company, of Cincinnati. Mr. Jamison also carries on five farms in connection with his real estate and insurance business, the places comprising several hundred acres of land, much of which is under a high state of cul­tivation and well stocked with horses, sheep, cattle and hogs. He is thus a representative of the agricultural as well as the commercial interests of the county.
On the 18th of May, 1882, Mr. Jamison was united in marriage to Miss Mary L. Huddle, of Darke county, in which place she was born and reared. She is a daughter of the late Levi Huddle and Lucinda (Hetzler) Huddle. Mr. and Mrs. Jamison have two sons, Roy H. and Walter I., who are with their parents. Their home is a large and substantial brick residence on Washington avenue and the household, is noted for its hospitality. Socially Mr. Jamison is a member of Greenville Lodge, No. 143, F. & A. M., and is a valued representative of that beneficent fraternity.
Source: A biographical history of Darke County, Ohio - Evansville, Ind. 1900 - Page 582

 

Note NI22821 :

Individuals : Jamison Burton Fearey
Sec. L 46
Woodlands Cemetery
Cambridge, Washington County, New York
ew York
Contributed by Linda Marra, [she_who_can@@yahoo.com]

 

Note NI22836 :

Individuals : Jamison John
Information from
CONT
LINEAGE OF ROBERT AKERS

 

Note NI22849 :

Individuals : Jamison Daniel
Greenville Twp. -
CONT
DANIEL JAMISON, manufacturer of and dealer in brick; P. O. Greenville; the subject of this memoir was born in Darke Co., Sept. 8, 1849, where he has since resided, and where he obtained a common-school education, and at the age of 21 commenced life for himself, and has since, by his own exertion, accumulated a liberal amount of means for a person of his age.
eral amount of means for a person of his age.
Source: History of Darke County, Ohio -1880. - Page 503

 

Note NI22858 :

Individuals : Jamison James W.
1 yr. 7 mo

 

Note NI22859 :

Individuals : Jamison Thomas
Ohio Source Records from the Ohio Genealogical Quarterly

 

Note NI22861 :

Individuals : Jamison T. A.
Ohio Source Records from the Ohio Genealogical Quarterly

 

Note NI22873 :

Individuals : Jamison Hosea
Divorce Petition from Hosea Jamison asking for a divorce from his wife,
Nancy Jamison. 66 supporting signatures. (see also 1819-102)
Maury 1821 41

 

Note NI22875 :

Individuals : Yearwood John
Rutherford Co. Archives Marriage Index
Marriages 1804-1850
Yearwood, John Jamison, Elizabeth Apr 20, 1838 Apr 24, 1838 no no

 

Note NI22877 :

Individuals : Smith Robert M.
Rutherford Co. Archives Marriage Index
Marriages 1804-1850
0
Smith, Robert M. Jamison, Mary J. Mar 1, 1841 Mar 4, 1841 yes no

 

Note NI22879 :

Individuals : Gregory Marshall Hooks
Information from FamilyTreeMaker: The Methvin-Cunningham-McManus-Swartz Family*
Mildred "Mimi" Methvin
Satori ADR, L.L.C. (www.satoriadr.com)
P. O. Box 81483
Lafayette, LA 70598
A-United States
Fax: 888-298-0566
memethvin@@gmail.com
Fax: 888-298-0566
The June 17-18, 1880 census of Attala Co., Mississippi, shows Marshall Gregory, age 60, a farmer, with wife Sarah, 53 (keeping house), and children John C., 20 (farmer), Elijah, 16 (laborer), Emma, 13, and Cooper H., 7.
, 20 (farmer), Elijah, 16 (laborer), Emma, 13, and Cooper
Sallie Brooks was Marshall Hooks Gregory's third wife. Marshall Hooks Gregory has at least one child from his previous marriages.

 

Note NI22885 :

Individuals : McAlister Sarah Thompson
5657

 

Note NI22888 :

Individuals : Jamesons Ulster Ireland
Great Appreciation and Acknowledgement to SomeJamisons.com Genealogy Report this:
this:
Our Jamesons in Ulster
s in Ulster
Ulster is one of four provinces that make up all of Ireland and is in the northernmost part of that country. Ulster has nine counties, six of which make up modern day Northern Ireland, the other three remain part of the Republic of Ireland.
In the very early 1600s, King James I, of England, began a massive repopulation of Ulster with mostly Scottish and English Protestants. The area was at the time largely occupied by indigenous people and their powerful overlords, who had been defeated and depleted in various rebellions with the crown during the reign of Queen Elizabeth. This forced plantation, much of it by private means, was an effort by the king to colonize this here-to-fore troublesome area with a more sympathetic and supportive people. This population was largely increased with further immigration over the next fifty years as a result of persecutions at home by English Kings Charles I and Charles II in their effort to establish the Church of England in Scotland.
a result of persecutions at home
With this repopulation of Ulster, came several families with the surname Jam?son. Our particular Jameson family was one of these.
1 CONT With this repopulation of Ulster, came several families with the surname
Apart from a story about a William Jameson's involvement in the 1690 Battle of Boyne and a few records here and there, very little else is known about these early Ulster Jameson families. Although research on Jam?sons in early, pre 1750, Ulster has apparently been sparse, what has been done shows most Jam?son families of that time seem to have been concentrated in the northern counties of Antrim and Londonderry - from Belfast northwestward to Londonderry city. Unfortunately, many of the early (1600s and 1700s) records from this area, were lost in a 1922 Dublin fire. Those that do remain are mostly reconstructions from a collection of various local church, municipal and some miscellaneous other records.
922
One group of surviving records are the 1630 Muster Rolls, which show two Jamesons in the northwestern section of County Antrim on the eastern side of the Bann River Valley and two others in the City of Londonderry in that county. This is important because, even though these records are probably incomplete, it does show a very early Ulster Jameson presence.
CONC of the Bann River Valley and two others in the City of Londonderry in
There are also the reconstructed Hearth Money Rolls of 1660's. These are records of taxes levied on families and based on the number of household fireplaces. Of these there are twenty two Jameson families listed in County Antrim, thirteen on the eastern banks of the Bann River, four of which were close to Coleraine and four in County Londonderry, two on the western banks of the Bann River in Coleraine Parish. Amongst these Jameson families are many with the familiar given names we recognize in our Colonial American Jameson immigrants, including Alexander, John, Thomas, etc. Any one of these could easily be our ancestors. In fact, the 1669 Hearth Money Rolls for Antrim[1] show both an Alexander and a Thomas Jamesone in Ballymoney, County Antrim, right where our Hugh Jameson was listed in the 1740 Protestant Householder's Returns,[2] suggesting this as our immigrant Jameson's earliest homelands in Ulster, or at least, their homelands around that time in history.
r and a Thomas
However, we do now know, thanks to modern genetic testing of some descendants of these Ulster Jameson families, that not all of these families are related. In fact most, apparently, are not - at least not genetically.
lster, or at least,
Scott Jameson wrote in his genealogy, a section he calls "The Argyle Jamesons" about his research on the subject of these Ulster Jamesons in Nutfield. Although this work is no longer available on line, we have added a little of it here as background.[3]
ost, apparently, are not - at least not
"From this area of the Bann Valley came several Jamesons who migrated at various times and settled, coincidentally enough, in Nutfield, New Hampshire:[4] Jonathan Jamison, prior to 1725; William Jamison, prior to 1733; Thomas Jamison, 1746;[5] Hugh Jamison, 1746; Alexander Jamison, prior to 1746; and Elizabeth Jamison Boyd Woods, 1746. The latter four were from the area around Coleraine, while Jonathan Jamison was from Kilrea where a brother, Edward, lived as a farmer."
in Nutfield, New
Scott goes on to say that "some evidence suggests that the father of these Jamisons was one William Jamison, a Presbyterian Scots-Irish, whose family emigrated to Ulster from Argyleshire, Scotland around 1612-19. William Jamison Sr. served during the Siege of Londonderry in 1689. Research shows that they all came from the Bann Valley, lived within ten miles of each other, and emigrated, while at different times, to the same area in New Hampshire. Records also indicate that many of these same people used the same man, Robert Parkinson (of Bavagh, Londonderry Co.), as their Power-of-Attorney in Coleraine in their absence." Unfortunately, some of what Scott had written has been disproved with YDNA testing.[6] Scott himself tested as not a match with those tested from the Hugh and Thomas Jameson family. This would then prove these ancestors were not all related, particularly his William, and those ancestors from that side of the family can not be shared.
1 CONC people used the same man, Robert Parkinson (of Bavagh, Londonderry Co.),
Not very much is known about our particular Jameson family during this early time when they were living in Ulster and before they began leaving, during the first half of the 1700's. Nor, for that matter, do we know anything about any of our Jameson families that may have remained in Ulster after our immigrant ancestors, left Ireland. We do know that at least some in our family were from the area around Coleraine and other parts of the Bann River valley area in the northwestern most parts of County Antrim and the northeastern parts of County Londonderry. We also know about several of our Jameson families that emigrated to early New England of which at least two, Thomas and Hugh sailed from Portrush on the northern coast of Ireland not far from Coleraine. It is also known that many of the other families that can be found in early Colonial New Hampshire, amongst our Jameson immigrants, can also be found in the Bann River Valley of that time. Names like Cochran, Boyd, Rogers, McHenry, Taggart and so may others. In fact, it is said that the ship "William," with Archibald Hunter master, sailing from Coleraine (April or May), arriving in Boston (August 4-11, 1718), carried what became the Nutfield founding families.
least two, Thomas and Hugh sailed from Portrush on
The Bann River Valley area of Ulster is one of the oldest human settlement areas in Ireland, thought to date back to the end of the last glacial age. The Bann River, the longest river in Northern Ireland, is often referred to as the dividing line between the east and western parts of Northern Ireland. The town of Coleraine in the northern part of the valley, near the mouth of the Bann River and close to the Atlantic Ocean, is one of the oldest cities in all of Ireland dating back to the time before the Picts and is said to have gotten it's name from Saint Patrick himself, who built a church there. Coleraine had been the main town of County Coleraine, which became part of County Londonderry in 1613 when Ulster began it's repopulation by the English using commercial Plantations.
. The Bann River, the longest river in Northern Ireland, is
We don't know when or how our Jameson family ended up around Coleraine or the Bann River Valley area. Or, for that matter when or how they came to Ulster, either. They may have originally come early to County Antrim, perhaps in the Ards peninsula, then migrated westward to the Bann area, or they may have come later as part of the Londonderry settlement, directly to Coleraine area, or perhaps to the city of Londonderry, then eastward to Coleraine. Either way, this is the only place, so far, we find any evidence of them. Following are those we do know about.
613 when
Jonathan Jameson is thought to be the oldest and most likely the first of our Jameson family to have emigrated, leaving sometime prior to 1725, He may have been with some of the earliest of those who left the Bann Valley for New England in 1718. He was a cousin of Thomas, Hugh and Alexander, who also came to New England, and was a brother to Edward who remained in Ireland.
ds peninsula, then migrated westward to the Bann area,
Thomas Jamison sailed July 26, 1738 on board the ship Lime from Portrush, Ireland. The ship arrived November 16, in Boston, of that year commanded by Capt. Gabriel Black.[5][7] There were 123 immigrants of whom nineteen were named: Thomas Jamison, Nathaniel Furber, George Marshall, William Leus, William Cox, Alexander Nesmith, Abraham Weir, Archibald Fullerton, Alexander Caldwell, William Dickey and his wife, David Griffin, Robert Griffin, John Arbuckle, George Robinson, Thomas Galt, George Galt, John Ball, and Mary Smith."[8]
iest of those who left the Bann Valley
It is not known when Alexander Jameson left Ulster. He is mentioned in Jonathan's 1741 will as being in Londonderry New Hampshire, so it is thought he may have sailed with Thomas in 1738. Little or nothing else is known about the Alexander Jameson, apart from what is found in his cousin Jonathan's 1741 will.[9]
ember 16, in Boston, of that year commanded
On August 4, 1746, Parkinson with Hugh Jamison and Elizabeth Woods, all were aboard the ship "Molly" when it left Port Rush, Ireland. They arrived at Boston, sometime in the early fall of that year.[10]
h, Abraham Weir, Archibald Fullerton,
It is known, that Hugh Jameson, Thomas Jameson, Alexander Jameson, Elizabeth Jamison Boyd Woods, and three Jameson daughters, sisters of the above people, were brothers and sisters.[9] They were also first cousins to Edward Jamison of Kilrea, Ireland whose brother, Jonathan, emigrated prior to 1725 and settled in Nutfield.[9]
Londonderry New Hampshire, so it is
It is known that Jonathan, Thomas and Hugh were cordwainers (shoemakers - historically, those that made shoes) by trade in New England. It is also known that Hugh Jameson was a cordwainer in Coleraine before leaving Ulster in 1746. Clearly, these Jamesons were a family of cordwainers.
ll
Edward Jameson of Kilrea, Ulster, a brother to Jonathan, remained in Ireland.[9] He was said to have had ten children. His eldest son John lived in Balleystrone, Dunboe (Dumbough) Parish, County Londonderry, where he was a farmer and who, as far as we know, remained in Ireland. Unfortunately, nothing further is known of this Edward or John Jameson, although several Jameson families can be found in the Movanagher (Kilrea Parish) area in the latter part of the 1700s and throughout the 1800s. Some of these Jamesons are known to have emigrated to America during the famine years.[11] Unfortunately, no connections have yet been made with our Jamesons from earlier times.
oes) by trade in New England. It is also
There are and have been other Jamesons in Coleraine and the surrounding Bann Valley since. But again, there are no known details or any connections with them and our immigrant New Hampshire Jamesons.
ster, a brother to Jonathan, remained in
[1] [S129] 1669 Hearth Money Rolls for North Antrim - transcript here.
1 CONC lived in Balleystrone, Dunboe (Dumbough) Parish, County Londonderry,
[2] [S9] 1740 Protestant Householders' Returns - transcript here..

[3] The Argyle Jamesons [S42] - please note, the annotations and/or foot notes for the passages from "The Argyle Jamesons" are NOT those of Scot Jameson the author of that work
in the latter part of the 1700s and throughout the 1800s.
[4] Which was renamed Londonderry, NH, in 1722.
to America during the
[5] There had been some confusion as to which Thomas Jamison (Jameson) this may have been. Early researchers thought it was this Thomas Jameson, more recent research has concluded it is more likely this Thomas Jameson. See a detailed explanation here.
are no known details or any
[6] Who Really Was Hugh's Father?.
nt New Hampshire Jamesons.
[7] The source for this is from a subsequent court trial regarding this voyage as listed in the New England Historical and Genealogical Register [S91] Vol.51 - p.469
- transcript here..
[8] New England Historical and Genealogical Register [S91] Vol.51 - p.469.
nd/or
[9] [S98] 1741 Will of Jonathan Jameson - Probate Records of the Province of New Hampshire, Vol 3 - New Hampshire Wills, p.85, 86
1 CONT [4] Which was renamed Londonderry, NH, in 1722.
[10] Hugh Jameson's Court Case
some confusion as to which Thomas Jamison
[11] Famine Jam?sons
been. Early researchers thought it was this

 

Note NI22889 :

Individuals : Jamison Thomas
Scotland, Births and Baptisms, 1564-1950, index, FamilySearch, Thomas Jamison in entry for Mary Jamison, Falkirk, Stirlingshire, Scotland,

 

Note NI22914 :

Individuals : Brown Archibald
http://www.frontierfolk.net/ramsha_research/Notes/brown.html
Misc. Notes
Subject: Family of Archibald Brown
Date: Wed, 14 Jun 2000 20:06:00 EDT
From: TSLindley@@aol.com
TSLindley@@aol.com
Family of Archibald Brown, Bourbon Co., Kentucky pioneer
Submitted by William B. Lindley [tslindley@@aol.com]

 

Note NI22943 :

Individuals : Jamison Charlotte
5417

 

Note NI22944 :

Individuals : Jamison Durrett Hubbard
12753

 

Note NI22954 :

Individuals : Jamison John Daniel
Thanks to in part:
CONT
Rootsweb Family Tree Data G392 for Spencers and Jamisons:
WBrownel
Brownel
Phalen/DeMars Family Tree
Janet Phalen and
Records of Colleen Kelly
ecords of Colleen Kelly
1860 Federal Census, State of Kentucky
of Kentucky
Proctor, Owsley Co.
Owsley Co.
dwelling755, family 769
Jamison, John, age 62, male. white, occupation Farmer, property value$100, POB Kentucky
Elizabeth, age 44, female KY
Rhoda 25 F Domestic KY
Elizabeth 19 F Domestic KY
Patience 17 F Domestic KY
John D 15 M Farmer KY
Marium 14 F KY
Spencer, Middleton 7 M KY
Farmer KY
CONT Marium 14 F KY
1870 Federal Census, State of Kentucky
1 CONT
Thomas Precinct, Lee Co.
ate of Kentucky
dwelling 74, family 74
inct, Lee Co.
Jamerson, John age 75, male, white, occupation: farm laborer, place ofbirth: Virginia
Elizabeth age 64, female, white, occupation: keeping house, place ofbirth: Kentucky
Elizabeth (dau) age 23, female, white, place of birth: Kentucky
Spencer, Rebecca age 8, female, white, place of birth: Kentucky
e of birth: Kentucky
Father: John Jamison b: 3 SEP 1758 in Georgia
Mother: Elizabeth McWilliams b: ABT 1757 in Orange Co., Virginia
1758 in Georgia
Marriage 1 Elizabeth "Betty" Kelly b: 1806 in Harlan Co., Kentucky
ØMarried: 1834
ØMarried: ABT 1832 3
Children
1. Rhoda Jamison b: 1834 in Estill Co., Kentucky
2. Mary Ann Jamison b: 1835 in Kentucky
3. Middleton Jamison b: 1837 in Estill Co., Kentucky
4. Elizabeth Jamison b: 1841 in Rockcastle Co., Kentucky
5. Patience Jamison b: 1841 in Estill Co., Kentucky
6. John D. Jamison b: 14 JUL 1843 in Owsley Co., Kentucky
7. Mariam Jamison b: 20 MAY 1846
son b: 1841 in Estill Co., Kentucky
Sources:
1.Title: WFT Vo. 10, #3884 2.Title: Records of Colleen Kelly
Repository:
Media: Other
Text: Date of Import: Jan 4, 2002 3.Title: ckelly522.FTW
Author: Colleen Kelly
Publication: records
Repository:
Media: Other
Text: Date of Import: Jan 6, 2002

 

Note NI22967 :

Individuals : Jamison Rebecca Clementine
5414

 

Note NI22980 :

Individuals : Fleming Burl White
"Joe Stout"
Fleming, B. White, b. 10/1/1846; TN 1st Cav. Co.A,H; He entered the army at the early age of sixteen, joining the First Tennessee Regiment, with Gen. Forrest, in 1863. He served through the remainder of the war and was neither wounded not captured.; (Parents; Andrew Jackson and Mary Elizabeth Jameson
Fleming)

 

Note NI22987 :

Individuals : Word William Ottis
WILLIAM WORD, 02 Dec 1902, Dec 1985, 60466 (Park Forest, Cook, IL) (none specified) 298-05-5938 Ohio

 

Note NI22989 :

Individuals : Word Thomas W.
Sources: 1.Historical Society, Obion Co.TN History, Vol. 1, (Taylor Pub Co, Dallas TX, 1981), p.443
2.Overton & Threlkeld, Cemeteries of Obion Co., TN, Vol. 2, (Obion Co. Genealogical Soc., 1990), p.97
gical Soc., 1990), p.97
from Jane N. Powell

 

Note NI22990 :

Individuals : Word Chester D.
Caldwell & Word Info from Jane N. Powell on Rootsweb that referenced:
CONT
Sources: 1.Historical Society, Obion Co.TN History, Vol. 1, (Taylor Pub Co, Dallas TX, 1981), p.282
2.Obit: Ralph Caldwell, Commercial Appeal, Memphis, TN, Tuesday, 25 Oct. 1988
sday, 25 Oct.
CONC 1988
CHESTER WORD, SSN 412-20-9810 Residence: 38260 Troy, Obion, TN; Born 18 May 1909, Last Benefit:; Died 2 Apr 1996, Issued: TN (Before 1951)

 

Note NI22993 :

Individuals : Caldwell Ella Winnie
Obit: Ella Word, (May 15, 1911 - October 24, 2006) White-Ranson Funeral Home, Union City, TN
ty, TN
Ella (Caldwell) Word, 95, of Troy, who died Oct. 24, 2006, at Obion County Nursing Home. Services will be 10 a.m. Thursday at White & Mahon Funeral Home in Troy, with the Rev. Judd Mowery officiating. Burial will follow in Troy?s Terrace Hill Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home 5-8 this evening. Pallbearers will be Mike Watson, Mark Watson, Kenny Caldwell, Kurt Caldwell, Ray Woody, Scott Woody, Kent Woody, Bo McEwen and Gary Dyer. She was born May 15, 1911, in Obion County, daughter of the late Robert Samuel and Lottie Pearl (Joyner) Caldwell. She married Chester D. Word Dec. 24, 1934. He died March 2, 1996. She was a member of Troy United Methodist Church and a former member of Sardis United Methodist Church in the Polk community. She was the founder of the former Wesley Service Guild and was a member of Ruth Sunday School Class and the Methodist Quilters. Survivors include her daughter, JoAnn Maloney of Troy; her grandson and his wife, Lyn and Kim Maloney of Troy; her granddaughter and her husband, Lisa and Kurt Lansdell of Athens; three great-grandchildren, Spenser Maloney of Troy and Jordan Lansdell and Ella Lansdell, both of Athens; and two sisters-in-law, Catherine Caldwell and Iris McCarroll, both of Troy. She was also preceded in death by four brothers, Rupert Caldwell, W.J. Caldwell, Ralph Caldwell and Bobby Caldwell; and her son-in-law, Gates Maloney.
ll and
CONC Iris McCarroll, both of Troy. She was also preceded in death by four

 

Note NI22997 :

Individuals : Word Benjamin Hicks
Rootsweb from Jane N. Powell. Obion CO., TN Genealogy

 

Note NI23011 :

Individuals : Nix Thomas
Info from GenForum posted by Joyce Willoit, Jan 14, 2000 in regard to William Brewer of Middle TN
dle TN
Adonna Ray Morgan indicated that his name was Robert Nix

 

Note NI23015 :

Individuals : Brewer Celia J.
Info from Pamela Fletcher concerning Celia Brewer.

 

Note NI23016 :

Individuals : Jameson James Berryman
Contributed and Transcribed by
Tara Esquilla & Lynn Sherman - October 2001
1
Inscription:
Aged 67 yrs 4 mos 17 days

 

Note NI23017 :

Individuals : Parrish Jane
Inscription:
Consort of Jas B Jameson
Aged 40 yrs 2 mos 12 days

 

Note NI23018 :

Individuals : Jameson Ella
Inscription:
Aged 1 yr 2 mos 9 days

 

Note NI23019 :

Individuals : Jameson Pompy
Inscription:
Aged 7 mos 25 days
s
CONT
Burial:
Jameson Cemetery
Gallatin
Sumner County
Tennessee, USA

 

Note NI23020 :

Individuals : Jameson William H.
Inscription:
Aged 20yrs 9 mos 28 days

 

Note NI23030 :

Individuals : Parrish Parks
They had at least 12 Children.
Virginia Veteran of The War of 1812 1st Regiment (Truehearts) Virginia Militia Rank Private.
Son of Joel Parrish and Elizabeth Hill.
Married Elizabeth Tisdale Dec 28 1792 in Louisa, Louisa, Virginia.
ouisa, Louisa, Virginia.
Parks Parrish
R.I.P. He and Elizabeth also had a son named Parks T. (Tisdale?) Parrish (1800 - 1850) who married Elizabeth Duke (1809 - 1855) He died in San Francisco - Found Gold! Their children were Elizabeth A. [1832 - 1892] (married Dr. Edmund Shackelford), the Honorable Benjamin Mills Parrish (1836 - 1910), and N. Roberta Parrish (b 1841)
- Matthew Waack

 

Note NI23043 :

Individuals : Donnelly Lucy
Wife of Clifton R Rogers
CONT
Thank you to Dave Hardesty for the following information:
:
Lucy Donnelly, daughter of Peter and Eliza (Dwyer) Donnelly, was born February 10, 1817 in Ireland. Lucy married John C. Wilborn on January 16, 1836 in Rutherford County, Tennessee. Lucy removed, along with her husband, and mother Eliza (Dwyer) Donnelly to Missouri. The 1840 census records indicate that the three of them were residing in Pike County, Missouri.
e three of them were residing in Pike County,
John served as a senator in Missouri, 1842-1844. Do not believe that any children were born to this union. John died on October 26, 1856 and is buried in the Saverton Cemetery in Ralls County, Missouri.
d in the Saverton Cemetery in Ralls County, Missouri.
Lucy married second, in 1859, a widower by the name of Clifton Rogers. He had three children by his previous wife, Eliza A. Vaughn, who died in 1856; the same year that John Wilborn died.
same year that John Wilborn died.
Family links:
Parents:
Elizabeth Dwyer Donnelly (1797 - 1855)
Donnelly (1797 - 1855)
Spouse:
John C Welborn (1807 - 1856)*
rn (1807 - 1856)*
Siblings:
Lucy Donnelly Rogers (1817 - 1874)
Catherine Donnelly Jameson (1820 - 1903)*
Eliza Virginia Donnelly Matson (1826 - 1884)*

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