Notes


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Matches 301 to 350 of 921

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 #   Notes   Linked to 
301 Grave marking by Captain John Collins and Marquis de Lafayette Chapters SAR 13 Jun 2015. West, Willis Sr. (I247)
 
302 Grave marking by Marshes of Glynn Chapter 12 Sep 2015 Patterson, John (I242)
 
303 Grave marking by Marshes of Glynn Chapter SAR 12 Sep 2015 Gascoigne, Richard (I244)
 
304 Grave marking by Marshes of Glynn Chapter SAR 12 Sep 2015 Rudulph, Thomas (I245)
 
305 Grave marking by Marshes of Glynn Chapter SAR 12 Sep 2015 Scott, William (I246)
 
306 Grave markwed by Samuel Elbert and Atlanta Chapters GA SAR 03 Nov 2018 Adams, James (I304)
 
307 Grave was marked 30 Oct 2021 by Washington Wilkes Chapter GA SAR. Talbot, John W. (I313)
 
308 Graved marked 09 Apr 2022 by Piedmont, Captain John Collins, Button Gwinnett Chapters GA SAR Bradford, George (I337)
 
309 Gwathmey's Virginians in the Revolution, p. 783 states he was a private 10th Virginia State Continental Line Regiment. Brumbaugh also mentions John Vawter as being in the Am. Revolution.

Moved to Surry Co., NC in time to serve in that county for which service he received a land grant from Charles Bruce and James Hunter (Rev Army Accts, Vol. XII, p. 45, folio 4- Division of Archives & Records, Raleigh, NC).

 
Vawter, John (I121)
 
310 Had children but no mention of his wife's name, date of marriage. Old newspaper article states, "On the 17th of November 1802, Joel Darcy of Jefferson County, Georgia secured a passport to travel through the Creek Nation to the Mississippi Territory. About 1825, when the little group of families from Burke and Jefferson counties built the stockade at Lake Douglas (Decatur County), Joel and his son John were with them."
 
Darsey, Joel (I99)
 
311 Had nine children by first wife, of which five names are known. : Wm., Elias, Alston Jr., Pleasant and Richard. Three sons by second wife, all born in Harris Co., and possibly three daughters, names unknown. Massey, Alston S. (I101)
 
312 Harry and Elizabeth had thirteen children that lived. The oldest was John Wesley Wills born 1834 and the youngest was Berry Franklin Wills born in 1861. Many of the children and their descendants stayed in Paulding County and still live there today. There were several brothers that moved to Alabama and started families. Wills, Leonard (I314)
 
313 He fought in the French and Indian War under George Washinton-built forts in Wilkes Co-Heard's Fort was one which became eventually the City of Washington, GA. Stephen Heard fought for the Wilkes County Militia and was a Capt of one and was involved in many Indian and Loyalist's skirmishes. On one engagement, when he came home he found his wife and child in the cold after the Loyalist burned their home. His family died from exposure and around the end of the war he re-married - captured in the Battle of Kettle Creek - placed in prison in Augusta. He was appt. Governor in 1780-81.  Heard, Stephen (I187)
 
314 He came to Georgia at age 7. He served as a Colonel and later as a Brigadier General in the Continental Army.  Irwin, Jared (I210)
 
315 He commanded a troop of horsemen from Mecklenburg County, NC and later served in General Thomas Sumter?s South Carolina Brigade. Barnett, William (I316)
 
316 He died 25 July 1858 in Dawson County, GA and is buried in the Mt. Vernon Baptist Church Cemetery. Hill, Reuben/Reubin (I317)
 
317 He died at the home of his son-in-law, the Rev. James Hargrive, Franklin County on 18 May 1845. Parks, Henry (I236)
 
318 He drew land in the 1825 and 1832 Georgia Land Lotteries as a Revolutionary War Soldier and received a pension for his services. DAR 127909 Wilson, William (I330)
 
319 He drew land in the 1825 Land Lottery. He was a member of the Major Dobbs Battalion of Elbert County.  Maxwell, Reverend Thomas (I287)
 
320 He enlisted in August of 1781 in Captain Alexander Breward's Company commander by Colonel Archibald Lytle in the North Carolina Militia. In 1805, he moved to Jackson and then Gwinnett County, Georgia. He received a pension for his services. Morris, William (I151)
 
321 He enlisted on February 19, 1778 as a private in Capt. John Patton's Co., Hall's Delaware Regiment, joined the regiment at Valley Forge and served there for 3 months. He was transferred to Lt. Col. Charles Pope's Co. in May 1779, also disignated Capt. John Corse's Co., whose payroll he was on from May 1779 through Feb. 1780. He was in the battle of Monmouth and White Plains, where he was detached and placed in the regiment commanded by Col. Richard Parker. They were in the battle of Gates defeat, where nearly all of the Officers and Men of his regiment were either taken prisoner or killed. He was missing in action Aug. 16, 1780, later served in Capt. Stephen Thackleford's Co., Col. Youngs N.C, Regiment of light horse, then re-enlisted and in Capt. Hall James,s N.C, Co. He also served several other short until the end or the war. Then moved to Montgomery County, N.C., Then later to Wilkes County GA., settling 7 miles west of Washington, GA., on Skull Shoals road. Truitt, Purnal (I128)
 
322 He entered the army in 1776 as a lieutenant in the Eight Virginia Regiment. When he retired from the service,had the rank and command of a Major. He was at the battles of Brandywine, Germantown and Monmouth and at the seige of York. When General Greene, in 1781, had to cross the Yadkin River, Colonel Graves was intrusted with the comman of two hundred men detached by the General to protect the passage of the troops. This small band, headed by their gallant commander, sustained a desperate encounter with the army of Cornwallis and succeeded in protecting the passage of the American Troops and themselves in crossing the Yadkin with the loss of only nine men killed and five wounded.  Graves, John (I141)
 
323 He first married Sarah Anthony who died between 1765 and 1768. Later he married Phoebe Talbott (1739-1806) and they were the parents of Thomas Talbot (unknown-1853), Matthew Talbott (1767-1827) and Phoebe Talbot Cresswell (1768-1806). It should be noted that this son, Matthew, served for a short time as Governor of Georgia in the Democratic-Republican Party led by Thomas Jefferson. Talbot, John W. (I313)
 
324 He fought in the American Revolution with first his duty at age 16 years as a driver of a wagon.  Key, William Bibb (I288)
 
325 He fought in the Battle of Beard's Bluff in December 1776 and the Battle of Ogeechee Ferry I in November 1781 where he was wounded and captured. Bugg, William Sr. (I312)
 
326 He later moved to Elbert County, (now Hart County) Georgia becoming one of the first settlers on the Savannah River in North Georgia. McCurry, Angus Sr. (I212)
 
327 He married 1 Feb 1780 Christine "Kitty" White and had children James 1783, John 1785, Mary 1789, Nicholas 1790, Rachel 1792, Samuel III 1798, and Isaac 1801.

"Kitty" died 26 Sep 1822; Samuel's estate was appraised at $1,098.31. After Samuel's death Kitty moved to Madison Co., Georgia, where she lived with her daughter Mary and son-in-law Joseph Long. (Samuel and "Kitty" had 7 children-see above) 
Sewell, Samuel (I132)
 
328 He married 29 Nov 1785 in Goochland Co., VA to Sarah Thompson (b. 25 July 1764 Virginia, died 27 May 1849 in Arnoldsville, Oglethorpe Co., GA). Charles was the son of John Strong and wife Elizabeth Turnbull and Sarah was the daughter of Richard Thompson and Elizabeth Key.  Strong, Charles (I326)
 
329 He married Charity Jasper in 1781, the daughter of John and Mary Herndon Jasper. Eight children were born to John and Charity Hames. In later years he married Martha Pierce. Hames, John (I339)
 
330 He married Margaret Brien on February 9, 1791. Together they had 14 children.
Their children's names were William, Abel, James, Ailsey, David, Belariah, Arabella, Margaret, Asaph, John Reubin Jr., Nathaniel, Lillian, and Martha.
His wife died in Rutherford County, NC in 1839. 
Hill, Reuben/Reubin (I317)
 
331 He married Martha Justice in 1782 and lived in NC until some time in the late 1700's, when he and his family moved to Elbert County, GA.  Parks, Henry (I236)
 
332 He married Mary Ogletree. John and Mary later relocated to Twiggs County and had 4 children, all born in Twiggs County. Mary died in 1796. Jones, Private John (I230)
 
333 He married Nancy Williamson. John Clark and his wife died in 1832 after contracting yellow fever.  Clark, ` John (I338)
 
334 He married Patience Harris (born 1765), in 1785 in Liberty County, and they had two sons, William Harris (born 1787) and William Pickney (born 1798). Girardeau, William (I324)
 
335 He married Rebecca Bacon (1744 - 1775) on November 29, 1757, daughter of Joseph and Rebecca Baker Bacon, and they had five children: Margaret Rebecca (1758) who married Joseph Norman in 1775; Joseph (ca 1760 ? Revolutionary War Soldier) who married Elizabeth Quarterman (daughter of Robert Quarterman RS) in 1787; Thomas who married Renchie Norman; William, and Sarah Quarterman. Rebecca Bacon Quarterman died on March 11, 1775

On May 13, 1777, Thomas Quarterman married Rebecca Sumner Smallwood, widow of Matthew Smallwood, and they had one son, John (1777 ? 1790). Thomas? third marriage was to Rebecca Baker Ball, a widow of Edward Ball and daughter of William and Sarah Osgood Baker in South Carolina in 1779. Their four children were Susannah (1784); Robert (1787 - 1849) who became a minister; and Thomas (1791 ? 1792). Thomas? third wife, Rebecca Ball Quarterman died in 1792.
 
Quarterman, Thomas (I322)
 
336 He married Rebecca Lindley in March 1782 or 1783 at Abbeville District, South Carolina. She was born August 9, 1762 and was a daughter of James Lindley and Mary Cox. Rebecca Lindley was David Smith's only wife.She died in April 1857 in Walton County, Georgia. Smith, David (I307)
 
337 He met his wife Sarah Silers in Wilkes County GA and they were married there in July of 1782.
He and Sarah had the following children: James Hooper Born 1784 Married Mary Emmaline Chastain; Elizabeth Hooper born 1787 married William Henry Moss; Absalom Hooper,Jr born 1789 married Martha Kelly; Eleanor Hooper born 1790 married Abraham Picklesimer; Andrew Hooper born 1792 married 1st Dicea? 2nd Mary Cantrell; Nancy Hooper Born 1794 married Benjamin Chastain; Kessiah "Kizzy" "Kissa" Hooper born 1796 married Milton Brown; Mary Hooper born 1800 married "Bell" or "Ball"; Enos McHenry Hooper born 1805 married Matilda Burell; William Hooper born 1806 married Nancy "Nany" Bryson; and Isaac Hooper born 1807 married 1st Sarah Ledbetter 2nd Delaney Mathews
Sarah died in Haywood (now Jackson) County North Carolina in 1857. 
Hooper, Absalom (I290)
 
338 He received a pension(s) for his services in the Revolutionary War. Carter, David Sr. (I213)
 
339 He received bounty land in Washington County, Georgia for his services. After receiving bounty lands for his service in Wilkes County he moved there with his family in the spring of 1782. In 1792 they were living on Upton Creek near where he first built a log house. Later he built a frame house on Upton Creek eight miles from Washington where his six children were reared.  Barnett, William (I316)
 
340 He received two Bounty Land Warrants: #1250 for 300 acres and #1830 for 100 acres in the Ohio Territory. These warrants were issued to officers and soldiers who had served during the Revolutionary War.

Samuel Axson applied for a Pension on April 26, 1827, in Liberty County, In March of 1832, his widow, Ann Axson, submitted a request to the Federal Government for unpaid compensation for his Revolutionary War service. In a letter signed by President Andrew Jackson, remuneration of $10,850.86 (half pay plus interest) was granted to his surviving heirs: wife, Ann Axson, children, Richard F. S. Axson, Oliva Tuckerman Way, and son-in-law, Moses Liberty Jones.
 
Axson, Samuel Jacob T. (I283)
 
341 He served as a private in the 4th North Carolina Regiment under Colonel Benjamin Cole. Reed, William (I53)
 
342 He served as Sergeant in Captain Jeremiah Beall Company Militia of Georgia. Barnett, William (I316)
 
343 He served in Captain Felix Worley's Company of the 3rd South Carolina Regiment which was commanded by Colonel William Thompson. Peter and his brother were present at the siege of Charleston in 1780. Peter and his brother received land grants in SC and VA.
Georgia Revolutionary Soldiers & Sailors, Patriots & Pioneers, vol. 1, Ross Arnold and Hank Burnham, 2001, p. 358 
Temple, Peter (I234)
 
344 He served in the Georgia Legislature from Baldwin County where he died. Barrow, James (I327)
 
345 He served to the close of the war. Post-Revolution: William Bugg settled in Richmond County, Georgia.  Bugg, William Sr. (I312)
 
346 He settled in North Carolina, joined the militia and served as a private in the Revolutionary War. McCurry, Angus Sr. (I212)
 
347 He Shows on the 1827 Land Lottery he drew land for Revolutionary War Service. Merit, Toren (I205)
 
348 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Wiggins, William Jr. (I277)
 
349 He volunteered as a substitute for John White in 1780 and served for 3 months as a Malitiaman under Capt. James Johnson. After his discharge he spent a few months at home and then around Feb. he volunteered again for 3 months and ended up in the Battle of Guilford Courthouse; Again he was discharged after serving his term and again he rejoined and fought in a skirmish with the British at Petersburg and shortly thereafter was discharged. Almost immediately thereafter he signed for another tour and was at Little York (Yorktown) when Cornwallis surrendered to Washington.

After the War he and Judah moved around living in Bedford Co., VA; Hawkins Co., TN; North Carolina; Pendleton Dist., SC; Franklin State Co., KY; Cumberland Co., KY and finally moving to Habersham Co. (now White Co.), GA, where he lived for only a few months before dying in December of 1834. 
Ferguson, William (I146)
 
350 He was a Georgia Patriot who signed the Georgia Declaration of Independence in Liberty County, August 3, 1777. Legend says he murdered many Tories with a sabre. He was certified as a refugee soldier by Colonel John Baker and received 575 acres of bounty land along Walnut Creek and the Oconee River in Franklin County for his services. He lived in what is now the present-day Ryepatch District of Long County. Sallett, Robert (I334)
 

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