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51 Shelby County marriages: BARCUS E R SMITH MARY F 1852 book 1 / page 294 Family: F1622
 
52 Southern Advocate, Huntsville, Alabama; August 23, 1854 - Married on the 13th by HON. J. G. Dixon, at the residence of Thomas Snodgrass, Esq., Col. Benjamin Snodgrass to Mrs. Nancy Chandler, all of Jackson County. Family: F6
 
53 The IGI gives 1911, Chester, Massachusetts. Family: F1419
 
54 The marriage date was calculated from the age at first marriage from the 1930 census, however in the 1910 census, Charles and Mattie are both listed separately and as being single. Family: F164
 
55 There is record of Lucy Cannon joining the Congregational Church in Southwick, MA in 1774 and therefore likely her marriage to Timothy occurred about this time. Family: F1346
 
56 Title Marriage
Section/pg 84
Bride Canaday, Sarah C.
Groom Cox, J. M.
Date Sept.29,1870
Marriagebk 6 
Family: F331
 
57 Wednesday, June 11, 1823

Tompkins, 1st inst. Caleb Smith, Capt. James J. GALLY to Abby CANNON

Source:

Delaware County, NY Genealogy and History Site

MARRIAGES TAKEN FROM THE DELAWARE GAZETTE
Copied from newspapers on deposit at the Walton Library, Walton, NY,
Delaware Co, NY
Copied and Compiled by Gertrude A. Barber, New York, NY, 1933 
Family: F1333
 
58 [2536763-2.FTW]

_STATMARRIED 
Family: F1195
 
59 [2536763-2.FTW]

_STATMARRIED 
Family: F1194
 
60 [2536763-2.FTW]

_STATMARRIED 
Family: F1186
 
61 [2536763-2.FTW]

_STATMARRIED 
Family: F1094
 
62 [2536763-2.FTW]

_STATMARRIED 
Family: F1093
 
63 [2536763-2.FTW]

_STATMARRIED 
Family: F1092
 
64 [2536763-2.FTW]

_STATMARRIED 
Family: F1091
 
65 [2536763-2.FTW]

_STATMARRIED 
Family: F1090
 
66 [2536763-2.FTW]

_STATMARRIED 
Family: F1088
 
67 [2536763-2.FTW]

_STATMARRIED 
Family: F147
 
68 [2536763-2.FTW]

_STATMARRIED[jc3.FTW]

_STATMARRIED 
Family: F1193
 
69 [2536763-2.FTW]

_STATMARRIED[jc3.FTW]

_STATMARRIED 
Family: F1185
 
70 [2536763-2.FTW]

_STATMARRIED[jc3.FTW]

_STATMARRIED 
Family: F1183
 
71 Many Researchers have generously shared their Family Histories with me.
These files are offered with the hope they will provide new clues for your research.
Would appreciate your help by offering corrections for errors or Omissions.
EVERYTHING I HAVE IS ON THIS PAGE. 
Davis
 
72 Many Researchers have generously shared their Family Histories with me.
These files are offered with the hope they will provide new clues for your research.
Would appreciate your help by offering corrections for errors or Omissions.
EVERYTHING I HAVE IS ON THIS PAGE. 
Eby
 
73 Many Researchers have generously shared their Family Histories with me.
These files are offered with the hope they will provide new clues for your research.
Would appreciate your help by offering corrections for errors or Omissions.
EVERYTHING I HAVE IS ON THIS PAGE. 
Gardner
 
74 Marriage: Source: _The Hutchinson Family: or the Descendants of Barnard
Hutchinson, of Cowlam, England_, compiled by Perley Derby, Essex
Institute Press, 1870, Salem, Massachusetts, p. 13. 
Margaret
 
75 Many Researchers have generously shared their Family Histories with me.
These files are offered with the hope they will provide new clues for your research.
Would appreciate your help by offering corrections for errors or Omissions.
EVERYTHING I HAVE IS ON THIS PAGE. 
Marshall
 
76 1850 United States Federal Census
Name: Martha H Jones
Age: 28
Estimated birth year: abt 1822
Birth place: Alabama
Gender: Female
Home in 1850
(City,County,State): Not Stated, Issaquena, Mississippi
Page: 299
Roll: M432_373 
Martha H.
 
77 daughter of Lucius & Catherine, died Feb. 26, 1864, age 5 yrs. Lena B. Adams
 
78 died Aug. 24, 1895, age 80 yrs 9 mos. Lucius Adams
 
79 Consumption Arba Adkins
 
80 Parents Arba & Almira Adkins Arba Adkins
 
81 Gleason was a salesman for Granby Seafood and lived in Suffield, CT. He died in Holyoke or Farmington, MA. Gleason C. Allshouse
 
82 William was a PVT in the 105th regiment Ohio Volunteers during the Civil war. William Allshouse
 
83 Amis, Thomas (1744-1797)
North Carolina SENATE, 1788, 1789; representing Hawkins County (then North Carolina, now Tennessee). Born in Middlesex County, Virginia, on January 1, 1744; son of John and Mary (Dillard) Amis. Married (1st) in Northampton County, North Carolina, on January 26, 1763, to Alice Gale, daughter of Thomas and Mary (Griffith) Gale. Eleven children--Tabitha (Mrs. John Cox), Frances (Mrs. Richard Grantham), Mary (Mrs. Joseph Rogers), Elizabeth, John Rachel (Mrs. James Hagan), Willis, Lincoln, Alice Gale (Mrs. John Gordon), Thomas Gale and Penelope Amis. He was married (2nd) on March 26, 1787, to Lucy Haynes, daughter of Francis and Ann (Smith) Haynes; four children--Haynes, William, James, and Nancy Amis (Mrs. Jesse Howell). Amis went to what is now Hawkins County c. 1781, erected a stone house three miles above Rogersville, around which he built a fort for protection against the Indians; shortly thereafter added a store, blacksmith ship, distillery, grust and saw mills, a tavern, school, forge, and post office. Amis had previously been a member of the Provincial Congress, 1776; a justice of the peace; served as superintendent of commissary, with the rank of captain in the 3rd Regiment of Continental troops. Member of the Society of the Cincinnati. Died at his home on Big Creek in Hawkins County on November 18, 1797; buried at that place. Father of James Amis; grandfather of John A. Rogers, sometime members Tennessee General Assembly 
Thomas Amis
 
84 Name: Harold E Amsbaugh
Gender: Male
Date of Death: 06 April 1975
Volume: 22070
Certificate: 030131
Autopsy: Yes - Used for certification
Marital Status: Divorced
Place of Death: Mansfield, Richland County
Certifier: Physician
Race: White
Residence: Mansfield, Richland County
Age: 69 Years 
Harold E. Amsbaugh
 
85 At least one living individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living
 
86 U.S. Veterans Gravesites, ca.1775-2006 about Butler P Anderson
Name: Butler P Anderson
Service Info.: CPT US AIR FORCE WORLD WAR II
Birth Date: 11 Mar 1901
Death Date: 18 Dec 1976
Service Start Date: 31 Mar 1943
Interment Date: 9 Feb 1977
Cemetery: Fayetteville National Cemetery
Cemetery Address: 700 Government Avenue Fayetteville, AR 72701
Buried At: Section 15 Site 80 
Butler P. Anderson
 
87 1 _UID 1AA157111E8C454B8BC5E3D08A67A91A1455
Rebecca was a schoolmate of Augusta Payne, the younger sister of J.J.W. Payne 
Elizabeth Rebecca Anderson
 
88 Ione was adopted by William and Martha Huse of St Louis after her parents death. Ione Anderson
 
89 1Notes from William Kent Anderson 28 Oct 1999.. "Notes for JAMES PATTON ANDERSON:
In October of 1810. James Patton Anderson was standing on the
Steps of the Bedford Courthouse at Shelbyville and was approached
by Jonathan Magness and his two sons Perry green Magness and
David Magness. A quarrel exploded and James Patton pulled a dirk
from his pantaloons but friends drew him aside. Both groups
exchanged shouts and curses for a short while. A very large crowd
was gathering. After a short time, Perry Green Magness walked up
to James Patton and shot him through the heart.

Jonathan Magness and his sons were apprehended and the best
lawyers appeared on both sides of the case. Counsel included
such members of the Nashville bar as John Haywood, Felix Grundy,
later a United States Senator, and Jenkins Whiteside, just elected
Senator. the Magnesses objected that they would not get a fair
trial, and it was shifted to Williamson. The jury found Perry Magness
guilty and was sentenced to be branded and imprisoned for
eleven months. Sitting in the courtroom during all the preceedings
was James Patton's good friend, Andrew Jackson.

Jonathan Magness and his other son David, were held for later
trial for pressing Perry Green to shoot James Patton. The trial was
held in May 1811 in the Franklin Courthouse, but he and his son
were found not guilty.". 
James Patton Anderson
 
90 Biographical Note:
James Patton Anderson was born in Franklin County, Tennessee on February 16, 1822. He was admitted to the bar in 1843 and practiced law in DeSoto County, Mississippi. In 1847, he was asked by Governor A.G. Brown to raise and eventually command the 1st Battalion Mississippi Rifles in the Mexican War with the rank of Lieutenant Colonel. Anderson returned from Mexico and spent one term in the Mississippi legislature, where he made the acquaintance of Jefferson Davis, who was soon to be President Pierce's Secretary of War. Through Davis' assistance, he was soon appointed by President Pierce as Marshal for Washington Territory, from which he was elected as delegate to Congress.
Believing that the Union was collapsing, and not wanting to be far from the south, he refused a second appointment to Washington and moved to Florida in the late 1850s. After Abraham Lincoln's election in 1860, he quickly was elected as a member of the state secession convention. Anderson was appointed Colonel of the
1st Florida Regiment (Infantry), and he soon found himself with General Bragg in Pensacola. He was promoted to the rank of Brigadier General in 1862, a rank which he held throughout the War. It was in the battle of Jonesboro in 1864 that he was seriously wounded and was forced home to Monticello where he wrote the sketch of his life up to that date.
After the war General Anderson worked in the insurance business and also edited an agricultural paper in Memphis. He died at his home in Memphis on September 20, 1872, due to his war wound, and was buried there.
[Source: Sketch of General Anderson's Life (James Patton Anderson), Special Collections, Robert Manning Strozier Library, Florida State University, Tallahassee, Florida.] 
James Patton Anderson
 
91 Immigrated to the US in 1853. John Anderson
 
92 1910 Census: Tennessee > Shelby > Memphis Ward 27 > District 281 > Page 3 John A. Anderson
 
93 Born at the Anderson home on Galloway Ave., Memphis. Katheryn M. Anderson
 
94 Name: Keith Anderson
SSN: 510-09-6172
Last Residence: 65804 Springfield, Greene, Missouri, United States of America
Born: 19 Jul 1902
Died: Jan 1983
State (Year) SSN issued: Kansas (Before 1951 ) 
Keith Anderson
 
95 NORMAN TRANSCRIPT May 26, 2000
Kenneth Clyde Anderson
Kenneth Clyde Anderson, 81, died Monday, May 22, at Norman Regional Hospital. Memorial services will be at St John's Episcopal Church at 11 am. today with Father Joe Ted Miller officiating. Mayes Funeral Directors is handling the services.
Mr. Anderson was born December 21, 1918, in Kansas City, Mo., to Samuel Wood and Sadie A. Anderson. He earned his bachelor's degree from the University of Oklahoma in 1940 and his master's degree in 1946 in geology.
He was a member of the American Association of Petroleum Geologists since 1942 and served on active duty with the Army from 1942 to 1946. After serving in India from 1944 to 1946, he ended his active duty as a captain on March 10, 1946, and served as a reserve officer until April 1, 1953.
He was vice president for exploration and production of APCO Oil Corp. in Oklahoma City after working in Midland, Texas, Billings, Mont., New Orleans, La., and Calgary, Alberta, Canada.
He was married to Holly Smith November 15. 1947, in Midland, Texas. He was a member of St. John's Episcopal Church.
Mr. Anderson is survived by his wife, Holly, of the home in Norman; a daughter, Deborah S. Anderson of Norman; three sons, Bruce G. Anderson of Palo Alto, Calif., and his wife, Sue; John Earl Anderson of Richardson, Texas, and his wife, Louise; Keith C. Anderson of Naperville, Ill., and his wife, Sara; and four grandchildren, Megan, Glenn, Benjamin and Kendra.
He was preceded in death by his parents; a brother, Keith Anderson; and a sister, Dorothy Juett. 
Kenneth Clyde Anderson
 
96 ANDERSON, THOMAS SCOTT (~1830-1868) ~ Thomas Scott Anderson was born between 1827 and 1830 in Tennessee. He and his family moved to Texas in 1852. He began a law career in Austin and advertised in the local newspaper. During the same year of his move, he served on the Provisional Railroad Association of Travis County. He was at one time a law partner of Horace Cone in Houston. On December 22, 1857, Governor Hardin R. Runnels appointed Anderson secretary of state. When Runnels lost his gubernatorial election in 1859, to Sam Houston, Anderson resigned his post as secretary. During the time he was secretary, he married Mary McNeill Harper on January 30, 1858. After, their marriage they moved to Dallas and then settled in Columbus in 1860. Anderson served as Colorado County delegate to the Secession Convention in Austin in 1861.

On August 21, 1861, Anderson joined the Texas State Militia where he obtained the rank of Captain. He then mustered into the Confederate Army in Colorado County and obtained the rank of colonel. Anderson's Second Texas Regiment, a division of the Third Texas Cavalry saw action in the Arkansas valley as well as in Tennessee before Anderson assumed command of the Confederate Military Prison, Camp Ford, near Tyler. When the war ended, he moved back to Eagle Lake. Anderson died there at his home on September 25, 1868 and was buried near the graves of Confederate soldiers who had died while encamped there. His burial prompted the beginning of Lakeside Cemetery.

Source: www.tsha.utexas.edu/handbook/articles/AA/fan12.html
entered by: Stephanie S. Sorensen, Historian, Texas State Cemetery, Research Staff, Austin, Texas.
 
Thomas Scott Anderson
 
97
Sources:
Title: Monday, May 23 1831, page 3, col 4 Area Deaths National Banner & Nashville
Whig.
Abbrev: Monday, May 23 1831, page 3, col 4 Area Deaths National Banner & Nashville~~Whig.
Text: Died at the home of his daughter Musadora and James Campbell in Winchester.

Monday, May 23 1831, page 3, col 4 Area Deaths National Banner & Nashville
Whig. In Winchester, Tenn. (Franklin County) in 56th year of age about 7:00
PM, Monday of the 25th ultimo, Col William P Anderson good father, husband and
friend--enlightened zeal in favor of his country, during the late ware with
Great Britain, and when upon the very point of starting to assist in asserting
those rights, and maintaining those principles which the statesmen of the
revolution successfully advocated- - he received a wound in his left side,
which
prevented him from proceeding at the head of his troops, and from the effects
of which he never fully recovered, and which ultimately terminated his life--
left disconsolate widow, a numerous progeny and many friends to mourn his
loss.
Title: On pages 206 and 207 of Records of Men Enlisted in the US Army, order 2015.
Captain William Preston Anderson was appointed Colonel of the 24th US
Infantry on 6 July 1812 at Fort Meigs.
Abbrev: On pages 206 and 207 of Records of Men Enlisted in the US Army, order 2015.~~Captain William Preston Anderson was appointed Colonel of the 24th US~~Infantry on 6 July 1812 at Fort Meigs.
Text: On pages 206 and 207 of Records of Men Enlisted in the US Army, order 2015.
Captain William Preston Anderson was appointed Colonel of the 24th US
Infantry on 6 July 1812 at Fort Meigs.
Title: Notes From William Kent Anderson sent on 28 Oct 1999.
Abbrev: Notes From William Kent Anderson sent on 28 Oct 1999.
Text: Col William Preston Anderson was living in Franklin Co Tennessee by 1800. It is
reported that he and his brother James Patton Anderson were very good friends
with Andrew Jackson, and helped first lay out the state of Tennessee. William Preston
loved horses and owned a grand race track. The race track was called the Old
Clover Bottom Race Track and was located near Nashville. William Preston's
plantation was called 'Crazy Hope Farm'. Andrew Jackson mentioned the track as
one of his favorite places to visit. (My William Preston Anderson also had one
of the first race tracks in Texas when he moved to Sabine Co Texas from Bossier
Parish La in 1870). He and Andrew Jackson did have a severe disagreement in
the 1820's over a duel that was fought. Apparently Andrew Jackson allowed a
duel to proceed in his presence. William Preston was angry that Andrew knew
one of the young men was the only child of a family close by, and said he
should have talked them out of it. The young man was killed in the duel. It
is ironic because Andrew Jackson saved his brothers life (James Patton
Anderson) several years before. This was reported in the Washington Daily
Globe of Jan 1, 1855. It seems James Patton was a very passionate man and
stood up for what he believed was right. During a meeting at the Winchester
Courthouse James Patton became the target of a sure lynching by the men
attending the meeting. As the crowd moved toward him making their motives
known, Andrew Jackson jumped upon the long conference table and challenged the
crowd by himself. He had his hand in his breast pocket, snapping his iron
tobacco box which sounded like his was cocking his gun. The crowd stood their
ground and finally moved back to their seats. During this time, James Patton
had left through another door. It has been mentioned that the story could have
been reversed and James Patton was the one on the table, but the story was
changed to place Andrew Jackson in a better light due to his political
position.

William Preston was a surveyor and a land speculator. He bought and sold land
all over Tennessee. He and a man named LeRoy Pope and James Jackson came up with a
plan to make some money. Mr Pope owned a large amount of land in Madison Co Alabama
and they decided to lay out a new town and lobby for the state capital to be
moved there. They first called the town Twickenham, then later called it
Huntsville. 
William Preston Anderson
 
98 Many Researchers have generously shared their Family Histories with me.
These files are offered with the hope they will provide new clues for your research.
Would appreciate your help by offering corrections for errors or Omissions.
EVERYTHING I HAVE IS ON THIS PAGE. 
Caleb Armacost
 
99 Many Researchers have generously shared their Family Histories with me.
These files are offered with the hope they will provide new clues for your research.
Would appreciate your help by offering corrections for errors or Omissions.
EVERYTHING I HAVE IS ON THIS PAGE. 
Christophel Armacost
 
100 Many Researchers have generously shared their Family Histories with me.
These files are offered with the hope they will provide new clues for your research.
Would appreciate your help by offering corrections for errors or Omissions.
EVERYTHING I HAVE IS ON THIS PAGE. 
Diana Armacost
 

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