Donna, thank you for your work desiminating the ELDRIDGE genealogy. Have you checked TENNESSEE COUSINS by Worth S. Ray? He is also author of LOST TRIBES OF NORTH CAROLINA. These books are old. I only have access to Tenn. Cousins but on page 373 he lists the 1830 census for Monroe county and one of the residents "THOMAS ELDRIDGE between 30 & 40 & he must have come down out of old Brunswick Co. Virginia to East Tenn." Could he have meant N. carolina instead? Page 453 lists "SIMEON ELDRIDGE from N. Carolina, revolutionary soldier living in Roane co. Tenn." Then on page 552, he writes about the ELDRIDGE family of Overton Co. Tenn. Three - Sampson, John and Zaachariah. Again he states that they came from Brunswick, Va "of old Prominent families" Further, the author mentionS JUSTINIAN COOPER. For anyone tracing these connections, I would suggest getting the book.
Donna: Thanks for your response. I was just in Chatham two weeks ago for the Nickerson Family Association reunion but unfortunately we didn't have the time to stop at the library. I have nothing new on her and have copies of the Vital Records of Chatham, Mass. I suspect either she came from a neighboring town or the records simply don't exist. Anyone who has done any research on the Cape knows how many of their records were lost or burned in fires over the years. I think my best chance for success on this one is to get lucky and find a primary source document such as her father's will which makes mention of her. I will keep looking! Thanks again, Brian -----Original Message----- From: DELDRIDGE1@aol.com [mailto:DELDRIDGE1@aol.com] Sent: Tuesday, September 26, 2000 11:49 AM To: ELDRIDGE-L@rootsweb.com Subject: Re: [ELDRIDGE-L] Letitia Eldridge, Chatham to Barrington, N.S. Hi Bryan, I saw your posting several weeks ago about Letitia (Lettice) Eldridge and Thomas Doane. The library here in Orlando has several books on Chatham, MA and Yarmouth, MA. I had copied the index for the Eldridge family on the two books about Chatham. I keep thinking that I would make copies of the entire books or look into purchasing them. I am going to do a separate posting in regards to the books on Chatham. Nothing but tons of info on the Eldred/Eldredge/Eldridge, etc. familes. I found Letitia (Lettice) Eldridge was in the two books for Chatham, MA. However, I took a look on my last visit to the library and did a lookup for you. I am sorry to say that it only mentions the marriage of Letitia to Thomas Doane. I was wondering, there is an Eldredge Public Library in Chatham, MA, has anyone ever written to them about further research? They have a webpage, I don't remember when I was looking at it, if they have an e-mail address or not. I saw in the archives several years ago someone had mentioned that they have an Eldredge genealogy section. What do you think? Have you found anything new about Letitia Eldridge? Maybe you could give it a try and let us know how it goes. Donna ==== ELDRIDGE Mailing List ==== ============================== http://www.ancestry.com/oft/login.asp The only real-time collaboration tool that allows you and other family members to create a FREE, password-protected family tree.
IN MEMORY OF THE PIONEERS OF CHATHAM ----------- WILLIAM NICKERSON --------------- HE CAME FROM NORWICH ENGLAND IN 1637 HE ACQUIRED FROM THE INDIANS BY A SERIES OF PURCHASES PRIOR TO THE YEAR 1683 THE GREATER PART OF THE PRESENT TOWNSHIP THEN KNOWN AS MONOMOYICK HE AND HIS SONS AND SONS-IN-LAW ROBERT NICKERSON JOSEPH NICKERSON SAMUEL NICKERSON ROBERT ELDREDGE JOHN NICKERSON TRISTRAM HEDGES WILLIAM NICKERSON NATHANIEL COVELL WERE WITH THEIR FAMILIES THE FIRST SETTLERS THEY WERE SOON FOLLOWED BY EDWARD COTTLE TEAGUE JONES THOMAS CROWELL CALEB LUMBERT JOHN DOWNING JOHN SAVAGE WILLIAM GRIFFITH HUGH STUART LATER CAME JOHN ATKINS EBENEZER HAWES SAMUEL ATKINS ISAAC HAWES THOMAS ATKINS THOMAS HOWES NATHAN BASSETT RICHARD KNOWLES BENJAMIN BEARSE ELISHA MAYO WILLIAM CAHOON JUDAH MAYO JOHN COLLINS WILLIAM MITCHELL JOHN CROWELL ROBERT PADDOCK PAUL CROWELL BENJAMIN PHILLIPS THOMAS DOANE JOHN RYDER JEHOSHAPHAT ELDREDGE DANIEL SEARS JOHN ELLIS RICHARD SEARS MORRIS FARRIS EDWARD SMALL GEORGE GODFREY JOHN SMITH JONATHAN GODFREY JOHN TAYLOR MOSES GODFREY NATHANIEL TOMLON DANIEL HAMILTON SAMUEL TUCKER JOSEPH HARDING JONATHAN VICKERY HE WHO HAS NO FEELINGS OF VENERATION FOR HIS PREDECESSORS SHOULD EXPECT NONE FROM THOSE WHO FOLLOW HIM Presented to the Town of Chatham by William Emery Nickerson of Boston a Descendant in the Ninth Generation from the First William Nickerson A.D. 1924 (Monument erected by William Emery Nickerson in 1924 in front of the Eldredge Public Library in Chatham) Source: "VITAL RECORDS, TOWN OF CHATHAM, MASSACHUSETTS 1696-1850" - Compiled by Shiela M. Dann Westgate and Anna Lowell Tomlinson. Published by The Chatham Historical society, Inc. Chatham, Massachusetts, 1991. (PREFACE: ....For further research, we recommend the "Vital Records of Yarmouth, Massachusetts To The Year 1850"; "Vital Records of Eastham, Mass. and Orleans, Mass."; and "Vital Records, Town of Harwich, Massachustts, 1694-1850.".......Manuscript by Rachel B. Napier, typed in 1977.) Another book is "A HISTORY OF CHATHAM, MASSACHUSTTS" - Formerly the Constablewick or Village of Monomoit, with Maps and Illustrations and Numerous Genealogical Notes, by William C. Smith. Fourth Edition, 1992, Published by The Chatham Historical Society, Inc. Chatham, Massachusetts. (FOREWORD:...other publications published by the Society...."Vital Records- town of Chatham, Massachusetts 1696-1850"; "Days to Remember" by Joshua Atkins Nickerson; "The Narrow Land" by Elizabeth Reyard; "Chatham Since The American Revolution" by Ernest John Knapton)
Hi Bryan, I saw your posting several weeks ago about Letitia (Lettice) Eldridge and Thomas Doane. The library here in Orlando has several books on Chatham, MA and Yarmouth, MA. I had copied the index for the Eldridge family on the two books about Chatham. I keep thinking that I would make copies of the entire books or look into purchasing them. I am going to do a separate posting in regards to the books on Chatham. Nothing but tons of info on the Eldred/Eldredge/Eldridge, etc. familes. I found Letitia (Lettice) Eldridge was in the two books for Chatham, MA. However, I took a look on my last visit to the library and did a lookup for you. I am sorry to say that it only mentions the marriage of Letitia to Thomas Doane. I was wondering, there is an Eldredge Public Library in Chatham, MA, has anyone ever written to them about further research? They have a webpage, I don't remember when I was looking at it, if they have an e-mail address or not. I saw in the archives several years ago someone had mentioned that they have an Eldredge genealogy section. What do you think? Have you found anything new about Letitia Eldridge? Maybe you could give it a try and let us know how it goes. Donna
COLONY OF NORTH CAROLINA 1765 - 1775 364 pg. 201 SAMUEL ELDERIDGE 30 October 1765 80 acres in Johnston on the S. side of Mill Creek, joining Elderidges own land, the run of Bushes Branch, and the run of the creek which is Elderidges old line. 2379 pg. 555 NATHAN WILLIAMS 9 April 1770 100 acres in Johnston on the W. side of Bushes Branch of Mill Creek, joining SAMUEL ELDRAGE, Bushes Line, WM. BUSH, and the side of the sd. branch. 4098 pg. 159 SAMUEL ELDREDGE 22 January 1773 100 acres in Johnston on the S. side of Mill Creek and in the fork of Maple Branch. FOREWORD Publication of this volume completes Margaret Hofmann's abstracts of grants of patents for land in North Carolina throughout the colonial period, from 1663 through 1775, whether issued by the governor and council under authority of the Lords Proprietors of Carolina (1663-1729) or under authority of King George I, King George II, or King George III (1729-1775). There remains only one other group of records conveying original title to land in colonial North Carolina, and abstracts of those are in preparations by Ms. Hofmann. That group is the body of indented deeds issued out of the proprietary land office of John Carteret, Earl Granville, from 1748 until his death in 1763; they are commonly called "Granville Grants." In the foreword to the volume of these abstracts for the years 1735 through 1764, the user's attention was called to the fact that after 1744 Crown patents were not issued for land that lay within the Granville Proprietay. At the risk of appearing repetitious or pedantic, one feels obliged to emphasize once more the fact that in this present volume the resarcher will not find record of instruments of original title to land in the Granville Proprietary. This district comprised the northern half of North Carolina and included all land lying between the Virginia boundary and the southern boundary of the present counties of Dare, Tyrrell, Washington, Randolph, Davidson, Rowan, and Iredell. Theoretically, the eastern and western boundaries of Lord Granville's tract were formed by the two oceans. For all practical purposes, had that title to be made good, the earl probably could have established his western boundary only at the Mississippi River. The researcher will not, then, find in this volume any titles to land in Northampton County, for example, or Wilkes, or Yadkin, or Davie, or Burke, or any other present day county that lay within the old boundaries of the Granville Proprietary. This does not mean, let me hasten to say, that researchers will not find names of patentees who lived within the Granville Proprietary but obtained grants within the Crown district in he southern half of North Carolina. One did not have to reside in either half of the province in order to own land there. Some individuals owned enormous landholdings in both districts. A greater number lived first in one district, then in the other, and owned land in both Lord Granville's district and in the Crown's district. Easily available, relatively inexpensive, vacant land is a powerful motivator; it is frequently the underlying force in the movement of population. Conversely, a well-stocked geographical territory is a continuing desideratum of governments and proprietaries. Both the Crown and Earl Granville desired a well-populated district. The opening of Lord Granville's land office in 1748 obliged the governor of North Carolina to introduce changes in the operation of the Crown land office, since both districts were in competition for the same market. We, therefore, see influences and alterations in the methods of operation of the Crown land office that it may be useful to speak of specifically. From the earliest days of the Lords Proprietores it ws usually possible to secure land only by immigrating or by importing immigrants (called "headrights"). So much land was granted per headright -- usually 100 acres per adult male, and vaying amounts of females, children, and slaves. Land was seldom sold by the Lords Proprietors for mere cash. The Crown officers continued the headright system of granting land upon importation of settlers and payment of surveyro's and office fees. The headright system was dealt a severe blow from which it never recovered when the Granville land office opened. Lord Granville's agents sold land outright to any purchaser with ready money and did not concern themselves with headrights. The system of granting land in the Crown's district as a reward for immigrating or for importing immigrants appears to have been allowed to lapse just prior to or with the death of Governor Gabriel Johnston (1752). The royal instructions to Governor Arthur Dobbs, dated 17 June 1754, stipulated merely that land be granted to persons who were "in a condition to cultivate and improve the same by settling thereon in proportion to the quantity of acres a sufficient number of white persons or negroes." Surveyors' fees and office fees were still charged by the Crown to the settlers, and an annual quitrent (a form of tax) was reserved to the Crown, of course. The grants of patent abstracted in this present volume, then, do not represent "headright" grants, and researchers should be careful not to speculate on the size of families by applying to these grants an old headright formula of so many acres per person imported. Great caution must be used, as well, in attempting to deduce inferences about economic well-being of the patentee by the size of his grant. While it is true that the criterion for grants was altered from headrights to "a condition to cultivate and improve" the land that the settler wanted, there is another factor at work in determining the size of the tract granted. In the eastern end of the province, there was naturally less desirable vacant land in the second half of the eighteenth century than there was in the more recently and more sparsely populated western end of the province, where there was an expanding frontier. One should expect to find, and will find, therefore, a great number of grants for small tracts in the eastern counties that have no bearing on the patentee's economic condition. In addition to abandoning the headright system, Crown officers made improvements in their land office. In the earliest years all applications for vacant land were made directly to the Provincial Secretary who brought the fact of the "entries" to meetings of the governor and council sitting as a Court of Claims. Initially the Crown continued this method of making an "entry" for lands after it had purchased the soil of North Carolina from the Lords Proprietors of Carolina. When Earl Granville's land office opened in 1748, however, his agents rode the court circuit and made themselves readily available throughout the northern half of the province to any who wished to make an "entry" directly with them. The Crown land office did not immediately adopt this convenience of making the entry takers more readily accessible to enteres, but within five years of the closing of the Granville land office (1763), additional entry takers were commissioned to assist the Provincial Secretary by taking the initial entry and forwarding it to him. The Provincial Secretary then presented the entry at the Court of Claims. (The ordinary steps of issuing a warrant to the surveyor authorizing him to lay off the land, his return to the Provincial Secretary of a plat map of the tract of land, and the issuance of a patent out of the Provincial Secretary's office under the signature of the Governor and the great seal of North Carolina all remained in force and were not altered.) Probably the major factors influencing the addition of more entry takers in the Crown land office were the growth of the population in the southern half of the province, the expansion of the western frontier by Cherokee Indian land cessions in 1768, and the increase in the Crown's land office business due to the unavailability of grants through Lord Granville's land office after his death in 1763. By 1768, the year of the Cherokee cessions which led to the formation of Tryon County and the opening of the Catawba, Pacolet, and Tyger river lands, the Crown's land office divided the southern half of the province into three geographical districts (Western, Northern, and Southern) and appointed sub-entry takers. The Western district initially included Mecklenburg and Tryon counties, and Martin Phifer was the entry taker; by 1773 John Kirconnel was made entry taker for Tyron County, where there was a booming land office business. The Northern district included Craven, Dobbs, Carteret, Hyde, and Beaufort counties and that portion of Johnston County that lay below the Granville line; Christopher Neale was entry taker in 1768, and by 1773 he had been succeeded by Peter Johnston (at which time Onslow County was added to the district). The Southern district remained the responsibility of the Provincial Secretary and included the counties of Duplin, New Hanover, Brunswick, Bladen, Cumberland, and Anson; initially Onslow County fell into the district. By 1773 the land office business in Anson had become so brisk that James Cotten was commissioned entry taker for that county. This final appointment put individual entry takers in the three western counties of Anson, Mecklenburg, and Tryon, and in those appointments lies a useful hint concerning the growing density of the frontier population on the eve of the American Revolution. The greater part of this growth can probably be dated from the Cherokee Indian cession of 1768, under which the Indians surrendered title to land lying west of the Catawba River and east of the foothills of the Appalachian Mountains. (It was in this area that Tryon County was formed.) The southern line of Tryon County was meant to be the North Carolina-South boundary. This however, had never been surveyed. When it was surveyed in 1772, North Carolina agreed to a line that placed the southern strip of Tryon County and much of the Pacolet and Tyger river lands in South Carolina. Consequently, a large number of patents abstracted in this volume represent the instrument from which devolve a very large number of present-day South Carolina land titles. It is not known to what extent the closing of the Crown's land office motivated North Carolinians to join in the rebellion that was the American Revolution, but it certainly must have been one of the moving forces. By order of the King in Council dated 7 April 1773, Governor Josiah Martin was ordered to close the land office. Accordingly, the land office closed in North Carolina on 28 June 1773, when the order was received and read to the council of state. Although the Court of Claims continued to sit, and although patents based on old entries, warrants, and surveys continued to ripen and were issued as late as 25 July 1774, applications for new entries and warrants were denied. Rumor spread through the province that it was the Crown's intention to secure an Act of Parliament that would vacate all American titles to land by annulling former patents, thereby causing all titles to land to revert to the Crown. Governor Martin issued a proclamation to suppress this rumor. He even went so far as to hold another Court of Claims in February 1775 in which 74 petitions for patents were accepted. It was too late. The Crown land office had closed forever. When the land office reopened in 1778, it opened as the State land office under authority of a sovereign people who had assumed title in themselves to all vacant lands within their charted boundaries. The question occasionally arises as to whether or not North Carolina emulated South Carolina after the American Revolution by requiring citizens to present memorials setting forth their land titles. North Carolina did not do this. It accepted the fact that natural title to vacant land vested originally in the chartered proprietor or sovereign power, whether the Lords Proprietors of Carolina or the kings of Great Britain. It merely held that in 1775 title to all vacant lands within its boundaries had demised on the new state upon the cessation of the king's sovereignty within those boundaries. North Carolina allowed no question to shake earlier titles; she held her citizens secure in their lands. In the preparation of this volume, as in her volumes of abstracts for the years from 1663 through 1729 and from 1735 through 1764, the compiler has consulted (and where necessary, conflated) the patent books in the office of the Secretary of State in Raleigh, the Auditor General's record of patents in the British Public Record Office in London, the Provincial Auditor's records of patents in the North Carolina State Archives and the Secretary of State's office in Raleigh, and the records of the colonial Court of Claims in the North Carolina State Archives. (The minutes of the closing years of the Court of Claims, from 1772 through 1775, are not with their fellows in the Archives but are in the Southern Historical Collection at the University of North Carolina Library in Chapel Hill, where they have been assigned the collection number of 2145.) Researchers who wish to obtain copies of the original abstracts of patents or copies of the warrants an d plats for them should address their inquiries to the Land Grant Office, New Legislative Office Building -- Room 302, 300 North Salisbury Street, Raleigh, North Carolina 27611. Perhaps writers of forewords should not praise the books they intend to introduce. But to say that this volume is another milestone in opening to researchers the single most important goup of records in North Carolina is no more than to acknowledge what is a self-evident truth. And to say that Margaret Hofmann has placed the world of researchers irretrievably in her debt is mere understatment. George Stevenson Reference Unit Supervisor North Carolina State Archives Raleigh, North Carolina June 1984 Source: "Colony of North Carolina 1765-1775, Abstracts of Land Patents, Volume Two" by Margaret M. Hofmann. ============================================================
Virginia researches: Note: Several years ago, I worked on the Eldred/Eldredge/Eldridge Immigrant Project. I believe that Samuel Eldridge - Isle of Wight, VA arrived in the early 1600's. The following is information that I have retrieved from the Archives. When I was working on the project it was confusing because I "thought" at the time that while I was working on the project the source that I was utilizing identified separate immigrants and their arrival dates. However, further research using the source "Cavaliers & Pioneers" really identifies the purchase of lands in Virginia. I have also included research from Mike Marshall and posted by Pam Wilson a further study on Samuel Eldridge of Virginia. If anyone as further information on Samuel Eldridge, please share with us. I know it will help a lot of other researchers. Thanks, Donna ============================================================ IMMIGRANT - SAMUEL ELDRIDGE - VIRGINIA ELDRIDGE, SAM Immigrated, was naturalized or arrived approximately 1683 USA: Virginia Source: Nugent, Nel Marion. Cavaliers and Pioneers: Abstracts of Virginia Land Patents and Grants. Vol 2: 1666-1695. Indexed by Claudia B. Grundman. Richmond VA: Virginia State Library, 1977, 609p. ELDRIDGE, SAML Immigrated, was naturalized or arrived approximaley 1666 USA: Virginia Source: Nugent, Nel Marion. Cavaliers and Pioneers: Abstracts of Virginia Land Patents and Grants. Vol 2: 1666-1695. Indexed by Claudia B. Grundman. Richmond VA: Virginia State Library, 1977, 609p. ELDRIDGE, SAMLL Immigrated, was naturalized or arrived approximately 1636 USA: Virginia Source: Nugent, Nel M. Cavaliers and Pioneers: A Calendar of Virginia Land Grants. 1623-1800. Vol 1: 1-6 Richmond, VA: Dietz Printing Co. [1929-1931. Although Vol 6 ends with the year 1695, no other volumes were published.] (NOTE: The above sources may contain additional information.) ============================================================ IMMIGRANT - SAMUEL ELDREDGE - VIRGINIA ELDREDGE, SAMLL Immigrated, was naturalized or arrived approximately 1618 USA: Virginia Source: Nugent, Nell Marion, Abstractor. Cavaliers & Pioneers: Abstracts of Virginia Land...Reprint. Baltimore: Genealogical Pub. Co. 1969 ELDREDGE, SAMUELL Immigrated, was naturalized or arrived approximately 1637 USA: Virginia Source: Greer, George Cabell. Early Virginia Immigrants 1623-1666 Reprint. Baltimore Genealogical Pub. Co. 1960. (NOTE: The above sources may contain additional information.) ============================================================ Early Wills and Deeds, Isle of Wight 1600-1800, p. 206: Samuel Eldridge to Humphrey Clark, 280 (a) March 13, 1654; mark Virginia Land Records, Isle of Wight Deeds and other Records, p. 183: [Patent, no date, listed between Patents Sept 13, 1636 for John Bridges and Christopher Reynolds on Sept 15, 1636] Justinian Cooper, 1050 acres in county of Warrisquick, bounded on the northwest by land on Lawn's Creek southeast of Back Creek northeast, by his dwelling house, &c., due 50 acres for his personal adventure and 1000 acres for the transportation of 20 persons, viz.: Justinian Cooper, Richard Casey, Nicholas Man, John Curtis, John Corker, Henry Rancifull, Clement Evans, Henry Boney, James Smith, George Stacy, William Redman, George Archer, William Banister, William Cooke, Samuel Eldridge, William Nosse, Mary Clinton, Jno. Davis, Robert Radge, Rich. Smith, William Underwood. Virginia Land Records, Isle of Wight Deeds and other Records, p. 189: Robert Blake & Samuel Eldridge, Aug. 20, 1650, 560 acres Upon the third swamp So. W't. by W't. from Henry White's plantation. ============================================================ IMMIGRANT - ELDRIDGE, SAML. 1740 (1655) VIRGNIA LEWIS BURWELL, Gent., 3,600 acs. Is. Of Wight Co., N side of the Main Black Water Sw., N side of Brawlers br., by a Pocoson, down the third Sw., down the great Sw., down the Indian br., by the Main Road; adj. Ruben Cooke, Abraham Jones, Solomon Stephenson, Samuel Croft, Mr. William Camp, John Clark, Mr John Blacknell & Francis Williamson; 20 Aug 1740, p. 703. �6.S10. 1,800 acs. being part of a larger Tract formerly Gtd. Doctor Robert Williamson by Pat. 6 June 1662 [3,350 acs. PB 5 p. 511 (626) & SAML. ELDRIDGE's PB 3 p. 348, 8 Jun 1655] & 500 acs. other part formerly Gtd. Robert Williamson, Son of the aforesaid Robert Williamson by Pat. 30 Oct 1686 [PB 7 p. 544] & by divers Mesne Conveyances the Right & Title of both the sd Tracts is become Vested in sd Lewis Burwell & the Residue being Waste Land found within the bounds of the sd Patents. Source: "Cavaliers and Pioneers - Abstracts of Virginia Land Patents and Grants". Edited by Denis Hudgins, Volume Four: 1732-1741, Virginia Genealogical Society, 1994, p. 222-223. ============================================================ I have come across some information about a Samuel Eldridge married to an Elizabeth Champion. I "believe" that this might be our immigrant Samuel Eldridge of Virginia in 1636? ============================================================ IMMIGRANT - SAMLL ELDRIGE - VIRGINIA Source: "Cavaliers and Pioneers, Abstracts of Virginia Land Patents and Grants" 1623-1666, Abstracted and Indexed by Nell Marion Nugent. Volume One, Baltimore, Genealogical Publishing Company, 1969, p. 47. JUSTINIAN COOPER 1050 acs. Warrisquick Co., 13 Sept. 1636, p. 380. N. "W. upon the head of Lawnes Cr., S.E. upon the back Cr., N.E. upon his dwelling howse & S.W. into the woods. 50 acs. for his per. adv. & 1000 acs. for trans. of 20 pers: Justinian Cooper, Rich. Cosey, Nich. Man, John Curtis, John Coker, Henry Bonney, James Smith, Geo. Stacy, Wm. Redman, Geo. Archer, Wm. Bannister, Wm. Cooke, Samll. Eldrige, Wm. Nesse, Mary Clinton, Jon. Davis, Robert Radye, Rich. Smith, Wm. Underwood, Henry Rouncifull, Clement Evans. ============================================================ IMMIGRANT - SAMLL ELDREGE - VIRGINIA Source: "Cavaliers and Pioneers - Abstracts of Virginia Land Patents and Grants", 1623-1666. Abstracted and Indexed by Nell Marion Nugent, Volume One, Baltimore, Genealogical Publishing Company, 1969, p. 143. JUSTINIAN COOPER Gent., 2,400 acs. Isle of Wight Co., Mar. 16, 1642, Page 874. 100 acs. due for per. adv. of Ann, his wife, in 1618, 500 acs. for her adv. of 50 Lbs. Sterling, & 200 acs. for the per. adv. of Robert Olliffe unto whom the sd. Anne was sister & heir, & for his ad. of 27 Lbs. into the Colony 300 acs. more; 1,300 acs. for the trans. of 26 pers.: Justinian Cooper, 4 times, Ann his wife, Clement Ewins, Wm. Bisley, Hen. Rownfifall (?), Georg Archer, Wm. Woodward, Samll. Eldrege, Mary Veare, Eliz. Reades, Jon. Davis, Robert Feasly, James Smith, Wm. Cooke, Henry Bony, Ursula Waight, Wm. West, Wm. Redman, Robert Kenin, Geo. Stacie, Wm. Underwood, Nicholas Richard Coursie. =========================================================== IMMIGRANT - SAMUELL ELDREGE - VIRGINIA SOURCE: "Cavaliers and Pioneers - Abstracts of Virginia Land Patents and Grants", 1623-1666. Abstracted and Indexed by Nell Marion Nugent. Volume One, Baltimore, Genealogical Publishing Company, 1969, p. 65. JUSTINIAN COOPER 1050 acs. Isle of Wight Co., 16 Aug. 1637, p. 454. N. W. upon the head of Lawnes Cr., S.E. upon the back Cr., N.E. upon his dwelling howse & S.W. into the woods. 50 acs. for his own per. adv. & 1000 acs. for trans. of 20 pers: Richard Cosey, Nich. Mann, John Curtis, John Coker, Henry Ronncifull, Clement Evans, Henry Boney (or Bouey), James Smith, Geo. Stacy, William Redman, Georg Archer, William Bannister, William Cooke, Samuell Eldrege, William Nesse, Mary Clinton, John Davis, Robt. Rabye, Richard Smith, Wm. Underwood (first written Robert.) =========================================================== ELDRIDGE Samuel 1636 Isle of Wight Co., VA Junstinian Cooper 1050 ac. on Lawne's Creek for the transportation of 20 persons including Samuel Eldridge. 13 Sep 1636. ELDREDGE Samuell 1636 Isle of Wight Co., VA Transported by Justinian Cooper ELDREDGE Samuell 1637 Isle of Wight Co., VA Transported by Justinian Cooper ELDREDGE Samuel 1642 Isle of Wight Co., VA Justinian Cooper, gent., 2400 ac. 16 Mar 1642. 100 acres due for per. adv. of Ann, his wife, in 1618, 500 ac. for her adv. of 50 L Sterling, and 200 ac. for per. adv. of Robert Oliffe unto whom the said Anne was sister and heir, and for his adv. of L 27 into the colony 300 ac. more; and 1300 for the trans. of 26 persons including himself 4 times and his wife, George Archer, Samuel Eldredge, Wm. Cooke, Wm. Underwood, Nicholas Mann. ELDRIDGE Samuell 1650 Isle of Wight Co., VA Robert Flake & Samuell Eldridge, 560 ac. Isle of Wight Co 20 Aug 1650 lyeing upon the third swamp S.W. by W. from Henrry White's plantation Due unto sd. Flake & Eldridge for trans. of 11 persons: John Clements, Edw. Alchard, Jo. Storrey, Wm. Batts, Eliz. Phillips, John Vassae or Vassal, Richard Walton, Mary Martin, Martha Cole, Tho. Syer, Wm. Baldwinn. ELDRIDGE Samuel 1654 Isle of Wight Co., VA Grant of land to Humphrey Clark, Isle of Wight Co. May be the Humphrey Clark 1650 by Robert Bird ELDRIDGE Samuel 1654 Isle of Wight Co., VA Samuel Eldridge to Humphrey Clark 280 ac. Blackwater river patented by Eldridge and Robert Flake 13 Mar 1654 ELDRIDGE Samuel 1655 Isle of Wight Co., VA Samuel Eldridge granted 295 ac. on main branch Blackwater river, between Mr. Sewards and Humphrey Clerk's land 8 Jun 1655 for transporting 6 persons: Job Beasly (3 times), Richard Henry, Jas. Mathewson and Christian Hygate. Job Bazely d. intestate in Isle of Wight and his relict Amy requested admin. on his estate 5 Jan 1662. ELDRIDGE Samuel 1657 Isle of Wight Co., VA 13 Mar 1657 (?) ...Samuel Eldridge to Humphrey Clark...280 ac. being part of the land taken up by said Eldridge and Robert Flake (or Blake). Wit: Peter Bedford and Thomas Walter. Signed Samuel x Eldridge. Rec. 9 Jul 1656. Note, in a 10 Aug 1691 deposition, Robert Flake/Blake, aged 70 (i.e. b.c. 1621) states William Evans conveyed to James Benn 400 of 800 acres of Kingsale. ELDRIDGE Samuel 1665 Isle of Wight Co., VA Samuel Eldridge dying intestate, administration of his estate requested by Thomas Moore who married his relict. 10 Apr 1665, recorded 21 Jun 1665. Security: George Moore, ___ Brantlie. ELDRIDGE Samuel 1666 Lancaster Co., VA Headright of Richard Parrott, Gent. of Lancaster Co., VA land on south side Rappahannock River. ELDRIDGE Samuel 1667 Isle of Wight Co., VA Account of the estate of Samuel Eldridge presented 22 Aug 1667 by Thomas More who married his relict. ELDRIDGE Samuel 1683 James City Co., VA Mrs. Lydia Nowell, 357 ac. James City Co., N. side James River, 16 Apr 1683 beginning at Mr. John Edloe on W. side of Woolfe's plantation on Ellibris' line; including plantation called Forman's sd. land purchased 27 Sep 1655 by William Fry, gent. of Rice Hoe. gent., for 252 ac. the residue for transportation of 3 persons: Henry Bowser, Samuel Eldridge, John Rosse. ELDRIDGE Samuel 1696 Isle of Wight Co., VA Estate of Samuel Gainor, dec'd, appraised by John Carrell and Samuel Eldridge 9 Jun 1696. It is likely that this is Samuel Jr. s/o of Samuel who d.c. 1667. ELDRIDGE Samuel 1699 Isle of Wight Co., VA Will of William Brasie (Brasseur) of Isle of Wight of Levy Neck. Leg. John Harrison my kinsman, son of John and Milboran Harrison lately deceased, land bounding on John Murrey and John Carroll; to his brother William Harrison the rest of the land purchased of John Seward; Samuel Newton of Lawnes Creek Parish in Surry Co., VA; Thomas Page, taylor of Nansemond Co.; the three children of James Tullagh's of ye Lower Parish; Hugh Brassie; William Brasie; wife Susanna. trustees: Daniel Sanborne of the Lower Parish of Isle of Wight; Henry Wiggs carpenter; Isack Reeks, Clerke of ye Yearly Meeting; John Jordan son of Thomas Jordan lately deceased and Robert Lacie of Lawnes Creek in Surry. Wife extx. 22 Jan 1699, proved 9 Jun 1701. Wit: Martha Thropp, William Wilson, Samuel Eldridge, Elizabeth Gainer, John Crabham. ELDRIDGE Samuel 1709 Isle of Wight Co., VA Will of Samuel Eldridge. Legatee son William; son Samuel; daughter Elizabeth; daughter Martha; son William to my loving friend Murfrey; son Samuel to my brother-in-law William Hook; daughter Martha to Elizabeth Gayner, if she should die before said daughter is 16, to her daughter Mary Gainer. Exs., friends William Hook and Roger Tarlton. Dated 9 Apr 1709 proved 2 May 1709. Wit: Francis Seagrave, Roger Tarlton, John Tarlton. ELDRIDGE Samuel 1709 Isle of Wight Co., VA Samuel Eldridge m. Mrs. Hooks, sister of William Hooks 109. W&D B. 2, p. 500. Pam _________________ Pam Wilson Arledge Family History Project http://www.geocities.com/heartland/prairie/8208 wilsonpam@mindspring.com ==========================================================
Hi Barbara, I am posting separately info that I have found on Samuel Eldridge of Virginia. I would like to learn more about this Samuel Eldridge of Virginia. Have you got this sorted out. I did an immigrant project for the Eldridge-L list several years ago and identified Samuel Eldridge - Isle of Wight, VA - as being one. Did the immigrant Samuel Eldridge marry an Elizabeth Champion and after his death, did she marry Thomas Moore. Or could this have been a son of the immigrant Samuel? Have you been able to identify the children and/or grandchildren. I think that this information would help a lot of researchers on the Eldridge list if it could be sorted out and posted. Thanks, Donna
This is in reply to Terry Eldridge. Where is this inn located? Karen
I am searching for a John Eldridge who was in the Rev War. I would be extremely interested in any info you might have on him. Merle W. Kuhn TERRYEL@aol.com wrote: > > I found an in quite by accident built by a Capt John Eidridge, The woman > that owns the Inn has books about some Eldridges that were Sea Captians, I do > believe I am related, but haven't had time to pursue this lead. I have the > Inn name somewhere, if interested respond. > Terry Eldridge > > ==== ELDRIDGE Mailing List ==== > > ============================== > Visit ROOTS-L, the Internet's oldest and largest genealogical > mailing list: > http://www.rootsweb.com/roots-l/ -- "Of all the things I ever lost, I miss my mind the most" Merle W. KUHN Kuhnie the COON hunter mkuhn@enter.net
Would love to know more. Please share with us whatever you have, it would be greatly appreciated. Sharon Pearce
I found an in quite by accident built by a Capt John Eidridge, The woman that owns the Inn has books about some Eldridges that were Sea Captians, I do believe I am related, but haven't had time to pursue this lead. I have the Inn name somewhere, if interested respond. Terry Eldridge
My name is Neda Cochran (Formerly Neda Lynn Eldgridge-at birth; Neda Lynn Inman-after adoption by mom's second husband; Neda Lynn Richardson-after my first marriage). I was born in Frankfort, Indiana, Feb. 24, 1965. My real fathers name is Bill, his mothers name is Dorothy (she married Richard Myers-they still live in Frankfort, Indiana-if they are still living). I am having health problems, and need to find some of this family, so that I might see if there have been any similar problems in the family. The last I knew for sure, Bill (my father) lived in Florida. If anyone can help, I would really appreciate it. My mother's name is Kitty Sue Inman (maiden name Bowman). Thanks! Neda Cochran
The following are 1910 Harlan County, KY Census records **All were born in KY. 179/179 Eldridge, David Head Male White Age 52 Married 32 Yrs. Farmer Elizabeth Wife F W 51 " 32 Yrs. Had 5 children with 4 living John Son M W 25 Single Laborer Jesse Grandson Male Age 3 Single 185/185 Blevins, David Head Male White Age 45 Married 20 Yr Farmer Lucinda Wife F W 46 " 20 " Had 7 children with 6 living Reury Son M W 16 Single Lucy Daug F W 14 " Sallie Daug F W 12 " Elizabeth Daug F W 10 " William Son M W 8 " Wynn, Wright Son in law Male White Age 22 Married 1 Yr Mary J. Daug F W 18 " 1 " 187/187 Blevins, John Head Male White Age 29 Married 5 Yr Bettie Wife F W 27 " 5 " Had 2 children with 2 living Henry son M W 4 Single Fauvia Daug F W 2 Single 188/188 Blevins, Henry Head Male white Age 22 Married 3 Yr Susan Wife F white 20 Married 3 Yr __________________________________________________ Do You Yahoo!? Send instant messages & get email alerts with Yahoo! Messenger. http://im.yahoo.com/
I found the following census records that might interest some of you. 1920 Harlan County, KY Census Evarts, Precinct 2 ****EVERYONE WAS BORN IN KY EXCEPT FOR THE PARENTS OF FRANK SWIGO AND BOTH WERE BORN IN FRANCE. 417/417 Blevins, Henry Sr. Head, Male, White, 37, Married, Cut timber in coal mine Tilda Wife Female, 30, Married Susan Daug Female, 8, Single Lucy, Daug Female, 6, Single Jackson Son Male, 2 4/12, Single John R. Sr. Grandfather, Male, 71, Widowed **His mother may have been born in England. 418/418 Eldridge, Wilson Head, Male, White, 30, Married Miner in coal mine Nersis Wife, F, W, 40, Married Harmon Son, M, W, 8, Single Lucy Daug, F, W, 4 6/12, Single 419/419 Swigo, Frank Head, Male, White, 30, Married Miner in coal mine Josie Wife, F, W, Unk. 420/420 Middleton, Chad Jr. Head, Male, White, 28, Married Miner in coal mine Grace Wife, F, W, 22, Married Josie Daug, F, W, 2 0/12, Single Marie Daug, F, W, 4/12, Single 421/421 Wynn, William Head, Male, White, 34, Married Miner in coal mine Martha Wife, F, W, 57, Married Henry Son, M, W, 14, Single Ludie Daug, F, W, 14, " Vina Daug, F, W, 5, " __________________________________________________ Do You Yahoo!? Send instant messages & get email alerts with Yahoo! Messenger. http://im.yahoo.com/
I just found this on the internet. Hope it helps someone. Headstones at Pomfret Street Cemetery at Pomfret, Ct. located in village of Pomfret Street. http: HALE COLLECTION //www.geocities.com/Heartland/Fields/4791/pomfretpomfretstreetcem.html Eldridge, Edward, son of Captain James, born Oct. 18, 1794, died Sept. 8, 1847 Eldridge, Edward Jr., died Jan. 19, 1876, age 49 yrs Eldridge, Frances harriet, daughter of Honorable Edward & Hannah, G., born June 29, 1830, died Dec. 24, 1899 Eldridge, Hannah, wife of Hon. Edward & daughter of Col. Thomas & Anna Mumford Grosvenor, born May 19, 1799, died Aug. 5, 1865 Eldridge, Mary Anna, born Dec. 16, 1822, died Dec. 19, 1849 Eldridge, Wright Goodhue, son of Harry & Mary Louise Goodhue, born July 7, 1905, died Aug. 12, 1931 -- "Of all the things I ever lost, I miss my mind the most" Merle W. KUHN Kuhnie the COON hunter mkuhn@enter.net
POCAHONTAS' DESCENDANTS (Part 3 of 3) 58 Martha Eldridge (10/23/1749- ), m. John Harris of Goochland 59 Jane Eldridge, m. John Robinson In the digital numbering system, in order to avoid confusion, the tenth child of a descendant is lettered �x�; the eleventh child is lettered �a�; the twelfth child is lettered �b�; etc., with the letters �x�, �a�, �b�, etc., being used in lieu of digits. OMSS OMSS shows the following data (the numbers, which do not appear in OMSS, are those employed in this volume. (511) married (513) m. Thomson (516) m. John Johnson OMSS = An old manuscript (early 19th Century) now or formerly in the possession of Robert T. Collidge, Historian of The Monticello Association, and probably use din the preparation of MEMOIR. MEMOIR = Bolling, Robert. A MEMOIR OF A PORTION OF THE BOLLING FAMILY IN ENGLAND AND VIRGINIA (1868). CORRECTIONS AND ADDITIONS TO POCAHONTAS� DESCENDANTS by Stuart E. Brown, Jr., Lorraine F. Myers and Eileen M. Chappel THE POCAHONTAS FOUNDATION 1992 Additions and corrections to POCAHONTAS� DESCENDANTS are included in this volume. Any other suggestions as regards additions or corrections to POCAHONTAS� DESCENDANTS or to this volume are cordially invited and earnestly requested. Please write to The Pocahonas Foundation, P. O. Box 431, Berryville, Virginia 22611. 5 Martha Bolling, m. Thomas Eldridge. �Rochedale Hundred� (now known as Jones� Neck) was on the south side of the James River, opposite Curle�s Neck Elizabeth Jones, mother of Thomas Eldridge, is shown as the dau. of Sarah Howell Jones. Reference: John Bennett Boddie�s HISTORICAL SOUTHERN FAMILIES. Vol. Xx, page 32. 51 Thomas Eldridge III (ca. 1737 in Sussex County - 1822 in Madison County, AL). A Revolutionary War Soldier. M. Winifred Jones Miller (b. 5/22/1843). 511 Thomas Eldridge IV (ca. 1777-ca. 1824 in Sussex County, m. 3/24/1804 Elizabeth Hall (b. ca. 1780 in Virginia). 5118 Rolfe Eldridge (11/6/1807 in Sussex County - 4/30/1859 in Woodruff County, AR), m. 11/28/1828, in Sussex County, Caroline Mary Hall (1/28/1807 in Sussex County - 1890 Woodruff County), dau. of Dr. John and Martha Hall. Rolfe and Caroline migrated on Germantown, Shelby County TN, between 1836 and early 1837. Sometime after 1850 Rolfe and Caroline Eldridge moved to the Gregory Community in Woodruff County, AR. 512 Judith Eldridge (b. Nottoway County - d. 8/30/1856 in Franklin County, AL) m. in Nottoway County, Henry Cox III (b. in Nottoway County 1/22/11774-11/26/1921 in Franklin County, AL). 5122 Ann Harris Cox (5/5/1800 in Nottoway County - 1/22/1864 in Franklin County), m. 12/5/1816, in Madison County, AL, William Stratton Jones (12/30/1798 in Amelia County-1/30/1870 in Franklin County, AL) The following data is from �Hearst�s Sunday American,� Atlanta, April 12, 1931: 513 Rev. David Thompson, b. Glasgow (educated at University of Edinburgh). In 1809, the Thompsons moved to Madison County, AL. 52 Jenny Eldridge is Jane Eldridge known as Aunt Jenny. 541 Maj. James Boswell Ferguson (b. 1781-96 V 212). The Fergusons lived at �La Valee�, Goochland County. 5527 David Mann Branch (six lines) Fouchee Street). 561 Rolfe Eldridge, Jr. See 20 W (1) 207. 5632 Ann Elizabeth Eldridge (d. 1848), m. Thomas Henry Garrett (3/12/1819-9/26/1906) 5633 John Rolfe Eldridge, m. 9/20/1848 Eliza Maria Hanes (12/10/1827-8/8/1899) 5634 David Walker Eldridge, m. Amanda Hooker 5635 Susan Bolling Eldridge (5/10/1830-7/5/1896), m. 3/7/1855 Peter Sipe 5636 Courtney Wythe Eldridge 5637 Mary Virginia Eldridge (3/19/1836- ) 58 (to be omitted) - It is believed that Martha eldidge who married John Harris of Goochland was a daughter of Thomas and Judith Kennon Eldridge, and was not a descendant of Pocahontas. Martha�s daughter, pamela Harris married Rev. Christopher MacRae and Martha�s son (Pamela�s brother) was Eldridge Harris (1764-1803). Wyndham Robertson apparently is in error on pages 39-and 34 of his work POCAHONTAS AND HER DESCENDANTS (1887). See 46 V 172 and 267. SECOND CORRECTIONS AND ADDITIONS TO POCAHONTAS� DESCENDANTS by Stuart E. Brown, Jr., Lorraine F. Myers and Eileen M. Chappel THE POCAHONTAS FOUNDATION 1994 A list of the names of the descendants of Pocahontas as poresently prepared by The Pocahontas Foundation (hereinafter referred to as Foundation) is in the three volumes: POCANONTAS� DESCENDANTS (1985) (hereinafter reffered to as PD), CORRECTIONS AND ADDITIONS TO POCAHONTAS� DESCENDANTS (1882) (hereinafter referred to as C & A) and SECOND CORRECTIONS AND ADDITIONS TO POCAHONTAS� DESCENDANTS (1994). But the list does not pretend to be complete and any and all proposed additions and corrections will be cordially invited. Please write, sending a stamped and addressed envelope, to The Pocahontas Foundation, P. O. Box 431, Berryville, Virginia 22611. 5 Martha Bolling, m. Thomas Eldridge. Elizabeth Jones, second wife of Thomas Eldridge, is shown as the dau. of Sarah Edmunds Jones. 56 Rolfe Eldridge (12/29/1744 or 5-1806), of �Subpoena�, Buckingham County, m. (MB 11/26/1773 Brunswick County), Susannah Everard Walker (1754-3/27/1821), dau. of Col. George Walker, originally of Elizabeth City County, and his wife, the former Mary Meade. 5617 Benjamin Eldridge, m. Eliza Perkins, a near kinswoman to Monroe Perkins of Richmond who married Elizabeth (�Lizzie�) Langhorne, eldest of the famed langhorne sisters. 5642 Susannah Walker Williams (10/ /1821-12/13/1906) (died in Mobile), m. 10/26/1848 in Mobile, AL, Michael Threefoot (1822-4/30/1902) born in Germany, died in Mobile) NOTE: The following is a list of surnames for a continuation of the descendants of Pochontas that is included in the book - POCAHONTAS� DESCENDANTS. (I only typed the first few generations.) 51 ALLEN, BENTLEY, BLISS, CLARK, COX, CUSHING, ELDRIDGE, ELMS, GALLOWAY, GRAY, HALL, HALLIGAN, HARRIS, HILL, JOHNSON, JONES, KERNACHAN, KEYES, LUSK, MILLER, MOORE, MOSELEY, MOSELEY, NEBEL, PERRY, POVALL, POWELL, REYNOLDS, SPENCER, STEWARD, THOMPSON, THOMSON, WATKINS, WATSON, 52 ELDRIDGE 53 ELDRIDGE 54 ALEXANDER, ELDRIDGE, FERGUSON, GRATTAN, KEAN 55 ADAMS, ALLY, ANDERSON, ARCHER, AUSTIN, BALDWIN, BARRETT, BAUCAM, BAXTER, BECKER, BELL, BENEDICT, BOHANNON, BOMAN, BRADFORD, BRADLEY, BRANCH, BROWN, BROWNE, BROYLES, BUNTING, CALDWELL, CASEY, CAULK, CHAPMAN, CLARK, CORY, COX, CRUIKSHANK, CUNNINGHAM, DORRITEE, DRASKOVICH, DRIPS, ELDRIDGE, EUBANK, FLETCHER, FORD, FOWLER, GADE, GLOVER, GRAHAM, GRAMMAR, GRAVES, GREGG, GREGORY, HADEN, HAINES, HALL, HAMMOND, HARRIS, HARRISON, HENNEY, HERSHEY, HIATT, HODDARD, HOGE, HOLBROOK, HOLLADAY, HOLTZ, HOUGH, HOWARD, HOWE, HUNTINGTON, IRVING, JACOBSON, JARVIS, JENKINS, JOHNSON, JOHNSTON, JONES, KARR, KENNEDAY, KEYS, LALICKER, LAMBERT, LANGHORNE, LAUCK, LEITCH, LEONARD, LOVINGER, McCARTHY, McGUIRE, McKAY, McKINNEY, MacDONALD, MANN, MAREE, MARTIN, MAY, MILLER, MONREAL, MOSLEY, MUNSON, MURPHY, MUSE, NEAL, NELSON, NICHOLS, NOLL, PAGE, PALMER, PANKEY, PENNINGTON, PERDUE, PERRY, POPKIN, PREUITT, RAYBURN, REED, RIGDON, ROBERTSON, ROGERS, RUDD, RUST, RYONS, SADLER, SCRUGGS, SHERLOCK, SIMMONS, SMITH, SOWDEN, SPARKS, SULZBACH, SUTLERLE, SWITZLER, TATUM, TAYLOR, THUILARD, TICE, TOWNER, TRAIL, TUCKER, VANCLEVES, VIRTS, WADDELL, WADE, WARFIELD, WARNER, WARRENS, WATSON, WEST, WHITE, WILCOXEN, WILEY, WILSON, WINSTON, WITT, WOOD 56 ANDERSON, ANEPOHL, AUSTIN, AYRES, BARNES, BENTLEY, BET, BLAIR, BRINKLEY, BROCK, BURCK, BURKHALTER, BURST, CABELL, CAMPBELL, CARUTHERS, CHEATHAM, COBB, CONNOR, COOPER, D�AIUTOLO, DAPAS, DETRICK, DRISCOLL, DUNCAN, EISSLER, ELDRIDGE, EPPIHIMER, FITZGERALD, FLEMING, FLETCHER, FORE, FOWLER, GARRETT, GARNETT, GILL, GILBERT, GLOVER, GRIFFIN, HALES, HAMES, HANES, HITCHCOCK, HOLMAN, HOOKER, IRVING, JACOB, JAMES, JANAK, JONES, LEDFORD, LEONARD, LITTLE, LOWRIE, MAHON, MARLETTE, MEDE, MOORMAN, MORTON, MOSELEY, OWENS, PARKE, PATTERSON, PENLAND, PERKINS, POOLE, RAGLAND, RAISIN, RENSHAW, RICE, RICHMOND, RISER, ROBERTS, ROSENBERGER, RUTLEDGE, SAWYER, SHACKELFORD, SIPE, SMITH, STANLEY, STUART, SUHOR, THATCHER, THREEFOOT, TURNER, VAUGHAN, WALKER, WEBBER, WEIHE, WILLIAMS, WINGFIELD 57 BAILEY, BANKS, BENSTER, BLAND, BLUNT, BROWDER, BRYANT, BUTTS, CHANLER, COLYER (COLLIER), COPPEDGE, CURTWRIGHT, DANIEL, DARDEN, DIETZ, EDWARDS, ELDRIDGE, FENTRESS, GOODLOE, GRIFFIN, HALSEY, HAVENS, HOFF, HOLLAND, HOUSTON, JAMES, JOHNSON, JONES, KELLY, KING, KIRKLAND, LAMBERT, LANKFORD, LEWIS, MARSHALL, MASON, MOORE, NICHOLSON, PARHAM, PEEPLES, PICKARD, POLLARD, POND, POSTON, QUINITCHET, RIVES, ROBINSON, SARGENT, SCHWAR, SCOTT, SEBRELL, STEGBAUER, THOMAS, TINKER, TUCKER, WILKINSON, WINFIELD, WOODS 58 ELDRIDGE, HARRIS, MacRAE 59 ELDRIDGE, ROBINSON
POCAHONTAS' DESCENDANTS (Part 2 of 3) 55 Mary Eldridge (3/11/1742*3-living in November 1792 (twin), m. 1760, Thomas Branch (ca. 1730-7/4/1815) of "Hannah Spring" Chesterfield County, son of Matthew Branch ( -ca. 1766) and Elizabeth Goode Branch of Henrico County 551 Maj. Bolling Branch ( -11/4/1829) of Buckingham County m. (1st) 2/20/1800*1 in Chesterfield County, Rebecca Graves ( -8/7/1815), dau. of Arthur Graves. The Major m. (2nd) 6/3/1817, Mary H.. Bell (9/22/1781 -8/15/1722), dau. of Henry and Rebecca Harrison Bell. (See 552) Children by first wife: 5511 Mary Susan Branch (11/9/1801-1890), m. John F. Wiley (d. before 1903, in Gerrardstown, W. VA) 5512 William Arthur Branch (9/30/1805-1893). He d. in Albemarle County 5513 Sarah Graves (�Sally�) Branch (2/19/1808- ), m. Capt. Edward Gregg 5514 Robert Bolling Branch (11/30/1803-2/12/1827). died in Richmond 5515 Thomas Branch (2/15/1811-4/26/1817) Child by second wife: 5516 Wiley Harrison Branch (7/28/1821-d. age 15 mos., 2 days) (NOTE: Family bible notes death of Bolling Henry Bell Branch on 8/20/1822) 552 Matthew Branch (ca. 1776-ca. 1828), lived, d., and was bur. at �Tower Hill�, buckingham County, m. (1st) Martha Cox; m. (2nd) Rebecca Bell (1/18/1777-12/31/1858), dau. of henry and Rebecca Harrison Bell of �Cold Comfort�. Rebecca Harrison Bell was the dau. of Benjamin Harrison of �Horn�s Quarter�. �Towe Hill� adjoins �Cold Comfort� (both are near the village of Dillwyn), and �Cold Comfort� adjoins �Belmont� which is on Hatcher�s creek, fifteen miles below Buckingham Court House. �Belmont� was built by Colonel Bell who married a daughter of Archibald Cary, and who, from 1761 to 1770, was Clerk of the Buckingham Coounty Court. �Horn�s Quarter� (part in Buckingham County, and part in Cumberland County) lies on both sides of Willis� River, six and one-half miles northwest from Cumberland Court House. All of the children of Matthew Branch were born at �Tower Hill�. 5521 Mary (�Polly�) Branch, m. Thomas May. Lived and died at Buckingham Court House 5522 Henry Bell Branch (5/13/1793 or 1798-7/17/1842), m. his first cousin, 9/18/1823, Susan Cary Bell (5/15/1805-5/16/1864, dau. of Henry Cary and Susan P., Mosley Bell of Buckingham County. Henry Bell Branch failed as a merchant in Caira, Cumberland County, and moved to Missouri where he soon died. 5523 Eliza Rebecca Bolling Branch (1/20/1797-d. after 1858), m. (1st) Dr. James Austin; m. (2nd) Young Pankey (4/16/1788-5/25/1833) of Manchester, Va., son of Stephen and Elizabeth Kelso Pankey 5524 Virginia Branch (4/23/1802-12/12/1893) (d. Springfield, Mo., and is bur. in Hazelwood Cemetery, Springfield), m. Josiah Perdue ( -1859) (bur. in Ray County, Mo.) 5525 Emily Anne Branch (before 1804-after 1858) (d. �Tower Hill�), m. (1st Rev. Henry Ally ( -d. after 1923, at �Tower Hill�), m. (2nd), after 1827, Dr. Carter H. Bradley. 5526 Martha Nelson Branch (11/6/1812-7/9/1844), m. 5/9/1833, as his second wife, Dr. John Wesley Langhorne (9/25/1808-5/9/1881. She is buried in Lexington, MO. 5527 David Mann Branch (7/21/1809-12/18/1869) (d. St. Louis, Mo.), m. 5/25/1837, by the Reverend William J. Armstrong of Richmond, Sarah Ellen Harris (10/21/1813-4/21/1875) (d. St. Louis, Mo.), dau. of Benjamin James and Sarah Ellyson Harris. David Mann Branch built, in 1839, the house at No. 1 East Main Street (corner of Rouchee Street) in Richmond, Virginia, that was afterwards occupied by Ellen Glasgow, the novelist. He was a tobacco merchant in Richmond, and in 1857, he removed with his family to St. Louis. Their family Bible contains a full record of the family through 1933. Data for the years 1933 through 1963 have been furnished by living members of the family. 5528 Judith Sarah Branch (1812- ), m. after 1827, George W. Nichols. No issue. He is said to have been very wealthy, and avidly devoted to fox hunting. 5529 Augusta Young Branch (1817 or 1820/9/10/1855) (bur. in Helena, Ark.), m. 6/14/1836, in Buckingham County, Absolom Harper Kenneday (4/20/1811-10/15/1867) (b. Davidson County, N.C., d. Memphis), son of William and Sarah Kenneday 552x Lavinia Cary Branch (1802- ), m. Robert Graham 553 Willliam Branch 554 Mary Branch, m. Drew NOTE: Benjamin B. Weisiger III, M.D., identifies Mary Drew as a child of (55), noting that she (of Buckingham County) received a slave in a three-way deed with her father, Thomas Branch and Bolling Branch 555? Sarah Branch, m. 1798, Daniel Weisiger (4/15/1776-6/26/1848) of �The Grove� near Manchester, Chesterfield County, son of Samuel and Mary Kendal Weisiger. NOTE: Sarah Branch�s number is followed by a ? for the reason that there is some doubt that she was the daughter of Thomas and mary Eldridge Branch. ROBERTSON, stating that Thomas and Mary Eldridge Branch had three sons, identifies two: Bolling (551) and Matthew (552). And it is believed that the third son (553) was named William. See, also 26 W(1)114. There were other Branches named Thomas who were contemporaries of the Thomas Branch who married mary Eldridge. One of these, Thomas Branch who married Miss Hayes made in 1803, a gift of a slave to each of the following children: Elizabeth Branch, Thomas Branch, Jr., Richard Hayes Branch, Catharine C. Branch, Anne Branch, Rebecca G. Branch, and Willliam Hayes Branch. And Dr. Weisiger states that this Anne Branch apparently was the Nancy Branch who married David Weisiger in 1806. As regards Miss Hayes,m GOODE 84 and 84A states that she was the daughter of Richard Hayes of Amelia County (b. 1710 or 20), and that by Mr. Branch, she had (1) a daughter who married �Capt. Weisiger�, (2) a son (�Capt. Branch of Buckingham County�), and (3) a daughter (Mrs. Gunn). GOODE 134 identifies �Capt. Weisiger� as David Weisiger, a Captain in the War of 1812. Dr. Weisiger writes �it is * * * suspected� that Sarah Branch Weisiger was the daughter of Thomas and Mary Eldridge Branch. And John D. Schaperkotter, Esq., writes that �the only available Thomas Branch to have a daughter marry in 1798 as Sarah Branch did Daniel Weisiger would appear to be Thomas Branch who married Mary Eldridge�. Sarah Branch Weisiger and her husband Daniel had the following children: (a) Mary B. Weisiger ( -4/6/1839), m. 4/3/1821, Joseph Albert Royall of Powhatan County. They had three chldren (b) Joseph Kendall Weisiger, m. Pochontas-descendant Anne Bolling (2191). For their children see 2191. (c) William Washington Weisiger (ca. 1803-5/4/1868), m. 11/14/1831, Sarah Ann Patteson (1814-1863), dau. of James Anderson and Martha Patteson. They had nine children. Daniel Weisiger, m. (2nd) 2/13/1815, Seignora Tab Smith, and had issue. 56 Rolfe Eldridge (12/29/1744 or 5-1806), of �Subpoena�, Buckingham County, m. (MB 11/26/1773 Brunswick County), Susannah Everard Walker (1754-3/27/1821), dau. of Col. George Walker, originally of Elizabeth City County, and his wife, the former Mary Meade. 561 Rolfe Eldridge, Jr. (1780-1861) of �Rolfeton�, Buckingham County, m. 12/16/1808, Mary Moseley, dau. of Benjamin and Mary Branch Moseley 5611 Susanna Eldridge, m. Dr. James Austin 5612 Lucy Eldridge, m. Rev. James H. Fitzgerald 5613 Elizabeth Eldridge, m. Bernard Austin 5614 Delia Eldridge, m. Robert Kincaid Irving ( -1894). They lived at �Rolfeton�. Had issue. Grandchildren: Mrs. H. C. Thornton, Delia E. Brock, Robert K.Brock 5615 William Moseley Eldridge, m. Katherine Nixon 5616 Mildred Kidder Eldridge (d. 1902, age 79), m. 1867, William Meredith Cabel (12/2/1823- ), son of Col. Edward A. and Mary Rice Garland Cabell. No issue. Lived near Buckingham C. H. 5617 Benjamin Eldridge, m. Elizabeth Perkins 5618 John Eldridge, m. 1857, Sarah Perkins Moseley, dau. of Col. Grandison Moseley (1830-1903). Lived near Buckingham C.H. 5619 Frances Eldridge, m. Samuel Anthony Glover 561x Mary Eldridge. Unm. 561a Martha Bolling Eldridge. Unm. 562 Susanna Everard Eldridge, m. Webber 563 Thomas Kidder Eldridge (1804-12/19/1864), m. ca. 1820, Mary Hales Ayres (6/8/1803-7/2/1869), dau. of Rev. John and Elizabeth Bransford Ayres. Mary Hales Ayres was born in Buckingham County 5631 Delia Eldridge. This may not be correct. 5632 Ann Elizabeth Eldridge (1821-1844), m. Thomas Henry Garnett 5633 John Rolfe Eldridge (4/7/1825-12/19/1894), m. Eliza Hanes, dau. of Col. Elijah and Mary Jane Brown Hanes 5634 David Walker Eldridge (ca. 1827- ), m. Amanda Hocker 5635 Susan Bolling Eldridge (ca. 1830 - ), m. Peter Sipe 5636 Courtney Wythe Eldridge (2/24/1833-2/5/1928) (b. at �Subpoena�, 12/16/1857, in Buckingham Countym Capt., John Clark Turner (9/23/1823-10/14/1906), (b. and d. in Buckingham County), son of Fleming and Turner. 5637 Mary Virginia Eldridge (ca. 1834- ), m. Robert Hales, M.D., son of Dr. Peter and Jennings Hales 5638 Patsy (Ann?) Eldridge (ca. 1844- ) was an invalid. Unm. 564 Courtenay Tucker Eldridge, m. John Price Williams 5641 John Rolfe Williams (ca. 1824- ) (b. Buckingham County), m. 1848, Susan Campbell 5642 Susanna Williams (b. Buckingham County) 5643 Mary Jane Williams (ca. 1827- ) (b. Buckingham County 5644 Elizabeth Williams (ca. 1829- ) (b. Buckingham County) 5645 Warner Archer Williams (ca. 1830-ca. 1880) (b. Buckingham County, d. Henderson, KY), m. 4/6/1857 in Collirene, Lowndes County, Ala., Jane Emily Rives. Practiced dentistry in Mobile, Ala., then moved to Pleasant Hill, Lowndes County, after marriage. Ca. 1865 moved to Corydon, Ky., because of economic chaos in Ala. Eventually moved practice to Henderson, Ky. 5646 Pocahontas Williams (ca. 1832- ) (b. Buckingahm County) 5647 Thomas Eldridge Williams (6/14/1833-9/ /1913) (b. Buckingham County, d. Dallas), m. Elizabeth Martha Rives 5648 George Williams (ca. 1836- ) (b. Dallas) 5649 Daniel Claude Williams (ca. 1838- ) (b. Dallas) 565 David Walker Eldridge. Unm. 566 George Wythe Eldridge. Unm. 567 Mary Meade Eldridge. Unm. 568 Nancy Eldridge. Unm. 569 Jane Pocahontas Eldridge. Unm. 56x Martha Bolling (�Patsy�) Eldridge. Unm. 57 Sarah Eldridge (1740- ), m. 6/9/1762, Col. George Rives (ca. 1737-1795), son of George and Frances Tatum Rives. They lived in Surry and Sussex Counties. 571 Judith Rives (10/29/1762- ), m. (MB 1/6/1790) Thomas Blunt of �Blackwater�, Sussex County 5711 Sally Blunt, m. vivante Quinitchet 5712 Eldridge Blunt 5713 Pamela Blunt, m. Nat Colyer (Collier), son of Mrs. Sarah Williamson Colyer 5714 Thomas Blunt, m. Evelyn Colyer (Collier), sister of Nat Colyer (Collier) 5715 Judith Blunt, m. Edwards 572 Capt. Thomas Eldridge Rives (12/15/1764-ca. 1832) of Sussex County, m. Keziah Tucker, dau. of Rev. Wright Tucker of Dinwiddie County 5721 Thomas Wright Rives (11/13/1815-6/11/1895), m. (1st) Martha Houston of Marshall County, Mississippi; m. (2nd) 7/22/1856, Virginia A. Moore of Macon, Tennessee. Prior to 1848, Rives moved to LaGrange, Tennessee. 5722 (son) d. inf. 573 Martha Rives (3/22/1767- ), m. John Wilkinson (3/22/1761-2/23/1823), a Revolutionary soldier, son of William (of Sussex) and Elizabeth Stith Wilkinson (of Brunswick). William Wilkinson�s mother was Agnes Bolling. 5731 William Wilkinson (6/1/1780- ) 5732 Wiley Wilkinson (5/9/1783- ) 5733 Anne Wilkinson (8/12/1787- ) 5734 Stith Wilkinson (4/6/1791- ) 5735 Thomas Wilkinson (10/27/1794- ) 5736 Henry Wilkinson (5/10/1797-8/6/1883), M. 1827, Ann Eliza Kirkland (5/6/1810-5/20/1871) 574 Capt. George Rives (1/10/1769- ) of Sussex County, m. (1st) Patsy Goodwin; m. (2nd) Mrs. Sarah Williamson Colyere (Collier) of South Carolina Children by first wife: 5741 Amy Goodwin Rives, m. Browder 5742 Thomas Peterson Rive, M.D. (8/7/1797-8/9/1840), m. (1st) 1827 (MB 4/5/1827) Martha Dillared; m. (2nd.) 9/12/1831, Martha Ann Nicholson ( -4/9/1880) of Southampton County. Dr. Rives and family lived in sussex County. 5743 John Eldridge Rives, m. Virginia Lewis. They lived in Sussex County. 5744 Sarah Martha Thweatt Rives, m. 1820 (MB 6/9/1820) (her first cousin) Eldridge Blunt Children by second wife: 5745 Rev. George Rives (9/28/1818-9/30/1895), m. 9/ /1841, Ann Pollard, dau. of John and Ann Morris Pollard, of Petersburg 5746 Edwin Williamson Rives (1819-5/27/1846), m. Indiana Scott, dau. of Henry and Caroliine Scott of Sussex County 575 Nancy Rives (ca. 1772- ), m. Stith Parham, Jr. 5751 Nancy Parham, m. Dr. Edward Winfield 576 Frances Rives (8/20/1774- ) 577 Eldridge Rives (5/6/1776 - d. young) 578 Pamela Rives (5/31/1778- ), m. thomas Lewis (MB Sussex County 11/7/1818) 5781 Nancy Lewis 5782 Pamela Lewis
POCAHONTAS� DESCENDANTS by Stuart E. Brown, Jr., Lorraine F. Myers, ad Eileen M. Chappel A revision, enlargement and extension of the list as set out by Wyndham Robertson in his book POCAHONTAS AND HER DESCENDANTS (1887) THE POCAHONTAS FOUNDATION (1985) 5 Martha Bolling (1713-10/23/1749), m. 1737, (her first cousin), Thomas Eldridge, Jr. (1710-12/4/1754), of Henrico and Sussex Counties, son of Thomas and Judith Kennon Eldridge of "Rochdale", located twelve miles from Richmond. Thomas Eldridge, Jr., practiced law in Amelia County, and later moved to Prince George County, and died in Sussex County. He m. (2nd) Elizabeth Jones, dau. of James III and Sarah Edmunds Jones of Surry County. Thomas Eldridge, Jr., and Elizabeth Jones Eldridge had children including Aristotle, Howell and Sarah who m. Col. Thomas Edmunds of Brunswick (MB 11/25/1771-28 V 167). After the death of Thomas Eldridge, Jr., Elizabeth Jones Eldridge m. Col. Drury Stith of Brunswick County (she was his second wife). For material on the Eldridges, see 46 V 172 and 267. THE READ CONNECTION MEADE, Vol. II, 28, states that Rev. Clement Read (son of Col., Isaac Read) married " a descendant of Pochontas, ---a Miss Edmunds, of Brunswick --- by whom he had thirteen children". And GOODE 195 states: "Miss Edmunds was a descendant of Pocahontas. Thomas Eldridge, according to Mr. Brock, m. Martha Bolling (b. 1713, d. Oct. 23, 1749). Their eldest son, Thomas, m. H. E. Read, and their (italicized) eldest dau., Sarah, m. Col. Thomas. Edmunds". "Miss Edmunds was Clarissa, daughter of Sarah Eldridge and her husband, Col. Thomas Edmunds, and MEADE and GOODE were apparently laboring under the impression that Sarah Eldridge was the daughter (granddaughter?) of Pocahontas- descendant Martha Bolling (1713-10/23/1749), the first wife of Thomas Eldridge, Jr. However, ROUSE 336,m shows quite conclusively that Sarah Eldridge "who married 1771 Capt. Thomas Edmunds", and who was born in 1754 (several years after the death of Martha Bolling Eldridge), was the daughter of Thomas Eldridge, Jr.'s second wife, Elizabeth Jones, who was not a descendant of Pocahontas. 51 Thomas Eldridge III (1730's- ) who probably moved to Goochland County, m. Winifred Jones Miller, dau. of William Miller, Sheriff of Goochland County in 1741, and his wife, Mary Heath Miller, dau. of Thomas Heath and Winifred Jones Heath, dau. of Robert Jones, Jr., and his wife Sarah Garlington (dau. of Christopher Garlington, Jr., and his wife Margaret). Thomas Heath's mother was Mary Lee, dau. of Capt. William Lee and grand-dau. of Col. Richard Lee NOTE: There is some confusion concerning the wife or wivesof Thomas Eldridge III. One source states that he married, first, Winifred Jones of Goochland County, and that he married, second, in 1776, Winifred Anne Miller Povall, dau. of William Miller and widow of Robert Povall. And GOODE says that he married H. E. Read (see above). 511 Thomas Eldridge IV (Will prob. Madison County, Ala., in 1822) 5111 John Bolling Eldridge 5112 Mary Miller Eldridge 5113 Martha Bolling Eldridge 5114 Winifred Jones Eldridge 5115 Sally Eppes Eldridge 5116 William Miller Eldridge 5117 Elizabeth Susan Eldridge 512 Judith Eldridge (1774-1852), m. 4/3/1794, Henry Cox (1774-1821) of Nottoway County, son of Henry and Ann Harris Cox (Cumberland County MB). Ann Harris Cox was the dau. of Benjamin and Ann Eppes Harris. Henry and Judith Eldridge Cox moved to Madison County, Ala. (Huntsville). 5121 Winifred Miller Cox (1798-1802) 5122 Ann Harris Cox (1800- ), m. 1816, William Stratton Jones (1796-1870), son of Thomas Speck and Prudence Jones Jones of Amelia County (Thomas Speck Jones, a son of Peter Jones of Dinwiddie County, was a Colonel in the Revolution). Willliam Stratton Jones moved to Madison County, Ala., in 1813, and he and his wife moved to Franklin County, Ala., in 1819 5123 Martha Bolling Cox (1803-1818) 5124 Henry Cox, Jr. (1805-1839), m. (1st) Matilda Moore. No issue. m. (2nd) Sarah A. Steward 5125 Thomas Eldridge Cox (1807-1818) 5126 Judith Eldridge Cox (1810-1852), m. John Harris 5127 Vincent P. Cox (1815-1832) 5128 Sarah Eldridge Cox (1815-1819) 513 Winifred Jones Eldridge (1776- ), m. Rev. David Thompson 5131 Judith Bolling Thompson, m. John Gay Bentley (4125) 5132 John Eldridge Thompson, m. Blanche B. 514 John Rolfe Bolling Eldridge (1783-1868), d. Madison County, Ala. (Huntsville), m. Susan Miller (1788-1844) 5141 William Eldridge. Moved to Ohio 5142 John M. Eldridge, m. Frances Powell, dau. of Peyton Powell (Revolutionary soldier) and his wife Elizabeth Biscoe 515 Sarah ("Sally") Eppes Eldridge, m. (1st) Thomas Hill. M. (2nd) George Moseley (Will recorded Madison County, Ala. Child by first husband: 5151 Winifred Jones Thompson Hill, m. (her cousin), John Rolfe Bolling Johnson 5152 George Moseley, Jr. 5153 Joseph Eldridge Moseley 5154 George Miller Moseley 516 Jane Eldridge, m. John Johnson 52 Jenny Eldridge (1740-in the 1800's). Unm. 53 John Bolling Eldridge (4/22/1741- ). unm. 54 Judith Eldridge (3/11/1742*3- ) (twin), m. James Ferguson of "Fairfield", Goochland County (he made his will in 1769 in Amelia County) 541 Maj. James Boswell Ferguson, m. (1st) Jane S. Payne Bolling ( -1806) (widow of Robert Bolling) (126). M. (2nd) Sally Gay (419). For Maj. James Boswell Ferguson's children by Sally Gay, see 419. 419 Sally Gay, m. 1808, Maj. James Boswell Ferguson (541). She was his second wife. 4191 Judith Gay Ferguson (1801-1839), m. John A. Carr, U.S.N., grandson of Martha Jefferson and Dabney Carr 4192 Rebecca Pocahontas Ferguson, m. 10/22/1833, John Meriwether Vaughan, M.D. (1805-1/3/1855), son of Nicholas Meriwether and Ann Randolph Pleasants Vaughan 4193 Maj. James Boswell Ferguson, C.S.A., m. 12/22/1858, Emma Cabell Henry (2/14/1838- ), dau. of Col. John Henry, and grand-dau. of Patrick Henry 4194 Mary Frances (Fanny") Ferguson, b. ca 1818. Unm. 4195 William Gay Ferguson, M. Margaret Bryce, nee Pickett 4196 Robert Ferguson 5411 Jane Elvira Ferguson (4/6/1806-9/8/1898), m. 1827, Peachy R. Grattan (11/7/18019/8/1771), son of Maj. Robert Grattan of Rockingham County and his wife, the former Martha Divers Minor Grattan (or Elizabeth Gilmer Thornton. See LM, p. 174). 5412 Robert Bolling Ferguson. Settled in St. Louis ca. 1840, and died there 5413 (son) 5414 (son) 5415 (son) 5416 (dau) 5417 (dau) 5418 (dau) 542 (son)
ELLEDGE ALABAMA SOCIAL SECURITY DEATH INDEX (SSDI) ISSUED IN ALABAMA - 55 LAST RESIDED IN ALABAMA - 44 LAST - FIRST - BIRTH - DEATH - (LAST RESIDENCE) - ISSUED ELLEDGE, BEULAH 13 JAN 1899-JUL 1987 (SHEFFIELD, COLBERT, AL) AL ELLEDGE, EFFIE 13 NOV 1908-NOV 1992 (MUSCLE SHOALS, COLBERT, AL) AL ELLEDGE, HUGHIE 20 AUG 1897-JAN 1970 (SHEFFIELD, COLBERT, AL) AL ELLEDGE, JOHN 28 OCT 1909-APR 1988 (SHEFFIELD, COLBERT, AL) AL ELLEDGE, KELLEY 21 AUG 1907-APR 1983 (SHEFFIELD, COLBERT, AL) AL ELLEDGE, LOUIS 25 NOV 1900-DEC 1986 (SHEFFIELD, COLBERT, AL) AL ELLEDGE, MAIDELINE 18 MAR 1906-SEP 1972 (TUSCUMBIA, COLBERT, AL) AL ELLEDGE, TOM 7 FEB 1895-15 NOV 1967 (TUSCUMBIA, COLBERT, AL) AL ELLEDGE, RUSSELL 16 NOV 1909-25 NOV 1987 (RUSSELLVILLE, FRANKLIN, AL) AL ELLEDGE, CHARLES 14 JUN 1889-NOV 1972 (RED BAY, FRANKLIN, AL) RR ELLEDGE, CLAUD 8 SEP 1900-SEP 1981 (BIRMINGHAM, JEFFERSON, AL) AL ELLEDGE, OLIVETTE 14 APR 1919-28 NOV 1995 (BIRMINGHAM, JEFFERSON, AL) AL ELLEDGE, CARRIE 16 SEP 1902-MAY 1980 (VERNOON, LAMAR, AL) AL ELLEDGE, HERMAN 5 MAY 1925-NOV 1974 (ROGERSVILLE, LAUDERDALE, AL) AL ELLEDGE, LESTER 26 JUN 1919-MAR 1987 (FLORENCE, LAUDERDALE, AL) AL ELLEDGE, MARTHA 15 AUG 1920-14 DEC 1997 (FLORENCE, LAUDERDALE, AL) AL ELLEDGE, MARY 5 AUG 1909-3 DEC 1997 (FLORENCE, LAUDERDALE, AL) IL ELLEDGE, CHARLES 21 MAY 1915-JUN 1979 (ATHENS, LIMESTONE, AL) AL ELLEDGE, HERSCHEL 31 AUG 1907-JUL 1984 (ATHENS, LIMESTONE, AL) MI ELLEDGE, NAOMI 29 JUL 1929-22 SEP 1992 (ATHENS,M LIMESTONE, AL) MI ELLEDGE, OLLIE 8 FEB 1891-FEB 1968 (ATHENS, LIMESTONE, AL) AL ELLEDGE, ALTA 5 AUG 1907-JUL 1981 (HUNTSVILLE, MADISON, AL) AL ELLEDGE, BUFORD 12 MAY 1918-JAN 1983 (HUNTSVILLE, MADISON, AL) AL ELLEDGE, CLARA 11 OCT 1905-4 SEP 1993 (HAZEL GREEN, MADISON, AL) AL ELLEDGE, ARVIE 17 SEP 1918-15 MAR 1981 (HUNTSVILLE, MADISON, AL) AL ELLEDGE, ERNEST 5 JUL 1903-NOV 1972 (HUNTSVILLE, MADISON, AL) AL ELLEDGE, LARKIN 11 NOV 1909-FEB 1987 (HUNTSVILLE, MADISON, AL) AL ELLEDGE, PEARL 26 OCT 1888-JUL 1976 (HUNTSVILLE, MADISON, AL) AL ELLEDGE, REX 4 MAY 1930-25 AUG 1996 (HAZEL GREEN, MADISON, AL) AL ELLEDGE, VERNIE 20 FEB 1911-7 JUL 1991 (HUNTSVILLE, MADISON, AL) AL ELLEDGE, LONA 1 FEB 1893-JAN 1985 (MONTGOMERY, MONTGOMERY, AL) AL ELLEDGE, BONNIE 11 FEB 1951-JUN 1985 (LACEYS SPRING, MORGAN, AL) AL ELLEDGE, COLEMAN 21 JUL 1935-15 DEC 1995 (LACEYS SPRING, MORGAN, AL) AL ELLEDGE, DORA 16 JAN 1912-NOV 1995 (LACEYS SPRING, MORGAN, AL) AL ELLEDGE, ROBERT 21 DEC 1915-MAR 1979 (LACEYS SPRING, MORGAN, AL) AL ELLEDGE, TOMMY 16 JUL 1968-18 NOV 1999 (LACEYS SPRING, MORGAN, AL) AL ELLEDGE, EDWIN 11 APR 1906-4 AUG 1993 (REFORM, PICKENS, AL) AL ELLEDGE, LUELLA 17 MAR 1882-15 MAR 1970 (GORDO, PICKENS, AL) AL ELLEDGE, WARNER 4 JUL 1897-JUL 1983 (ALICEVILLE, PICKENS, AL) AL ELLEDGE, CHRISTINE 25 NOV 1912-6 APR 1992 (COKER, TUSCALOOSA, AL) AL ELLEDGE, ERNEST 3 MAY 1904-18 MAR 1991 (COKER, TUSCALOOSA, AL) AL ELLEDGE, FLOSSIE 5 FEB 1913-MAY 1977 (TUSCALOOSA, TUSCALOOSA, AL) AL ELLEDGE, JAMES 3 AUG 1910-JAN 1993 (TUSCALOOSA, TUSCALOOSA, AL) AL ELLEDGE, JOHNNIE 31 MAR 1913-10 DEC 1995 (TUSCALOOSA, TUSCALOOSA, AL) AL ELLEDGE, MATTIE 30 MAY 1912-AUG 1975 (CHICAGO, COOK, IL) AL ELLEDGE, LYNN 8 JUN 1932-14 FEB 1991 (WHITMORE LAKE, WASHTENAW, MI) AL ELLEDGE, HATTIE 9 MAR 1907-DEC 1982 (DETROIT, WAYNE, MI) AL ELLEDGE, PARKER 2MAY 1903-MAR 1978 (DETROIT, WAYNE, MI) AL ELLEDGE, ETHEL 13 SEP 1912-8 NOV 1996 (GRESHAM, MULTNOMAH, OR) AL ELLEDGE, J. 19 JUN 1933-15 APR 1993 (PE) AL ELLEDGE, CHARLES 3 MAY 1926-NOV 1973 (NOT SPECIFIED) AL ELLEDGE, DORIS 12 JUN 1912-MAR 1989 (NOT SPECIFIED) AL ELLEDGE, JAMES 17 OCT 1917-JUL 1971 (NOT SPECIFIED) AL ELLEDGE, JOE 3 FEB 1936-3 APR 1993 (NOT SPECIFIED) AL ELLEDGE, MARVIN 27 OCT 1944-NOV 1974 (NOT SPECIFIED) AL ELLEDGE, PARKER 11 JUN 1928-21 FEB 1991 (NOT SPECIFIED) AL ELLEDGE, RICHARD 19 OCT 1909-FEB 1966 (NOT SPECIFIED) AL ELLEDGE, T. 4 NOV 1948-JAN 1990 (NOT SPECIFIED) AL ELLEDGE, WILLIE 3 OCT 1909-20 APR 1990 (NOT SPECIFIED) AL
ELDRED ALABAMA SOCIAL SECURITY DEATH INDEX (SSDI) ISSUED IN ALABAMA - 1 LAST RESIDED IN ALABAMA - 4 LAST - FIRST - BIRTH - DEATH - (LAST RESIDENCE) - ISSUED ELDRED, NANCY 14 OCT 1903-FEB 1979 (ATHENS, LIMESTONE, AL) AL ELDRED, RAY 14 SEP 1898-11 MAR 1993 (LIMESTONE, AL) KY ELDRED, ALBERTA 12 JUL 1931-11 MAY 1997 (PHENIX CITY, RUSSELL, AL) GA ELDRED, CALVIN 13 APR 1885-JUL 1969 (TALLADEGA, TALLADEGA, AL) MA