Connie, good luck. We are all thinking of you. Sue Liedtke ----- Original Message ----- From: "C Hurley" <hurley@myonetone.com> To: <kincaid@rootsweb.com> Sent: Friday, September 26, 2008 4:31 PM Subject: [KINCAID] Hi everyone- Connie-Kentucky-DNA 3350 > Hi everyone, > It has been a while since I have posted anything at all, > My name is Connie Poole Hurley , > I live in Kentucky and my/our DNA number is 3350. > > There are a few of us under that number, > Y Search and Kit numbers and ours is-Kit #3350. > Tamara Kincaide's husband Charles > is and was our donor of his DNA Cell Swab Test. > > Tamara Kincaide > Darlene Embry > Dyane Guisto > Elaine Ezell > > We are the descendants of John Kincade and his son > David Kincade who we assume to be the son of John > Kincade, since he did sigh the marriage bond for him/them. > > We find them in the beginning of our search in > Wilson County, Tennessee. > > I would like to at this time say this, we do have copies > of all documents that we could possibly find, from > marriage bonds to death certificates, to deed, to census > records. And in some instance we are beginning to > gather quite a few photo's up to the present time. > But we don't have David's or John's or their wives. > I only wish (smile) > > I will not be posting very much at all,my health at this time > prevents me from doing so, I am now waiting for a call from > my doctor to let me know when I go to the hospital again, I > have a 90 to 95% blockage in my neck on the left side, I'm > not sure what will happen at this point,I could stroke out, I > have opted for a Stent and not Surgery. > So all prayers will be very appreciated. > > My email address is : > hurey@myonetone.com > and also > conniehurley2003@yahoo.com > --- > John Kincade b.1760-1780 VA > John appears 1820-1830 Wilson Co. Tn. Census. > John was bond & witness at marriage of son ? > David Kincade to Sarah/Sally McWhirter > > We still do not know who John is. > is So we assume he is David's father. > > David Kincade-Born 1802 Tn. > d.aft 1860 > Married Feb 27 1824 Wilson Co,TN. > Sally/Sarah McWhirter-Born 1808 Tn. > d.aft 1860 > > Their Children: > > (1) Elizabeth E Kincade b.1828 Tn. > d. aft 1900 Ky. > --- > (2) Hugh A. Kincade/Kinkade b.1827 Tn. > d. May 1860 Butler Co. Ky. > --- > (3)John T. Kincade b.Oct 29 1829 Tn. > d.May 4 1911 Ohio Co,Ky. > --- > (4) Elias J Kincade b.1834 Tn. > d.aft 1880 Spencer Co. Ind. > --- > (5) Mary A Kincade b.Feb 2 1835 Tn. > d.Oct 9 1878 Spencer Co. Ind. > --- > (6)William Kincade b.Oct 10 1837 Tn. > --- > (7) Henry H Kincade b.Oct 7 1842 Tn. > d.Feb 8 1915 Warrick Co Ind. > --- > (8) David Blackburn Kincade b.1845 Tn. > d.aft 1880 Ky. > --- > (9) Andrew I Kincade b.1847/48 Tn. > --- > Wilson Co formed from Sumner Co > and was formed from Davidson Co- > Davidson Co and formed from Washington Co NC > --- > County Facts > Wilson County History and Information > > Date Created:October 26, 1799 County Seat: Lebanon > Name Origin: Major David Wilson > Formed From: Sumner County > --- > Source as > The Tennessee Encyclopedia of History and Culture > Tennessee Historical Society > > The Tennessee General Assembly created Wilson County > on October 26, 1799. > > Its prehistoric heritage is rich. The Sellars temple mound on > Spring Creek, for example, yielded an outstanding piece of > pre-Columbian sculpture that has been the emblem of the > Tennessee Archaeological Society. > > Europeans explored the land long before settlement: > French trappers arrived as early as 1760, and the > hunting party of Henry Scraggins passed through the > area in 1765. > > John B. Walker led the first permanent settlers to > Hickory Ridge, west of the present site of Lebanon, > in 1794. > > ---------------- > Sumner County History and Information > > Date Created:1786 County Seat: Gallatin > Name Origin: General Jethro Sumner > Formed From: Davidson County > --- > Source as > "The Tennessee Encyclopedia of History and Culture > Tennessee Historical Society > > Archaeological evidence in Sumner County indicates > occupation by Paleoindian, Archaic, Woodland, and > Mississippian cultures in the deep past. > > Two easily accessible prehistoric mounds stand at > Castilian Springs, where Native Americans for centuries > came to hunt the game which gathered at the springs and > its salt lick. > > The first white long hunters included Henry, Charles, and > Richard Skaggs, and Joseph Drake in 1765. Among other > early explorers and long hunters were James Smith and > an eighteen-year-old male mulatto slave in 1766, and > Kasper Mansker, Isaac Bledsoe, and others in 1771-72. > > The first permanent settler was the fearless Thomas Sharp > Spencer, who earned that distinction by living several months > in the hollow of a sycamore tree at Bledsoe's Lick in 1776, > then planting crops and building cabins from 1776 to 1779. > > By 1783 settlers had erected three forts--Mansker's, Bledsoe's, > and Asher's--for protection against Indian attack. > --------------------------------------------- > Davidson County History and Information > Date Created:1783 County Seat:Nashville TN > Name Origin: William Lee Davidson > and was Formed From:Washington County, NC > > Davidson County is the oldest county in Middle Tennessee. > It dates to 1783, when the North Carolina legislature created > the county and named it in honor of William L. Davidson, a > North Carolina officer who died in the Revolutionary War > on January 1, 1782. > > The county seat, Nashville, is also the oldest permanent > white settlement in Middle Tennessee, founded by James > Robertson and John Donelson during the winter of > 1779-80. > > The initial white settlers established the Cumberland > Compact in order to establish a basic rule of law and > to protect their land titles. Through much of the early > 1780s the settlers also faced a hostile response from > Native American tribes. As the county's many known > archaeological sites attest, the resources of Davidson > County had attracted Native Americans for centuries. > > In fact, the first whites to encounter the area were fur > traders, then long hunters, who came to a large salt > lick, known as French Lick, in present-day Nashville > to trade with Native Americans and to hunt the abundant > game. > > Nashville has always been the region's center of > commerce, industry, transportation, and culture, > but it did not become the capital of Tennessee until > 1827 and did not gain permanent capital status until > 1843. Its story is best told through its individual entry > and the hundreds of other entries in this volume that > cover significant people, events, and institutions > associated with Nashville as the capital city of > Tennessee. > --- > TNWILSON > Wilson County, Tennessee > http://www.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~tnwilson/index.html > --- > Wilson County, Tennessee > Genealogy Depot > http://www.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~tnwcogs/ > --- > Wilson County > Marriage Records - GROOMS > > KINCADE, David McWHIRTER, Sally24 > Feb 182427 Feb 1824 > Hardy Hunt, J.P. John Kincade > > http://www.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~tnwcogs/marriage/groomsA-L.html > --- > 1830 Federal Census of Wilson County, Tennessee > > KINCADE, John 147 01012001--10011001 > http://www.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~tnwcogs/census/1830wctK.html > --- >>From Wilson County Archives > > Rutherford County and Wilson county TN have a common boarder > and the "old timers" moved freely across it during their lives there. > It was a source of commerce. > >>> This John Kincaid in the 1820 census could > have been on both sides at different times. > The eastern end of the Wilson/Rutherford line moved > north just a bit in 1815. > It's possible these folks changed counties without moving. > --- > And then we find them here in Sumner County, Tennesse in 150 > 1850 Sumner County, Tennessee Federal > Census Indexed Individuals > [ K ] > http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~providence/census/census1850_k.htm > --- > 1850 Sumner County, Tennessee Federal > Census Transcription > Transcribed in 1997/1999/2000 by Linda Carpenter, > Jan Johnson Barnes, Marie Johnson, and E. J. Keen > http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~providence/census/census1850ndx.htm > --- > District 12 > 12 287 Kincade, David 48 M > 12 287 Kincade, Sarah 42 F > 12 287 Kincade, Hugh 25 M > 12 287 Kincade, Elizabeth 21 F > 12 287 Kincade, John 20 M > 12 287 Kincade, Elias 16 M > 12 287 Kincade, William 12 M > 12 287 Kincade, Mary 14 F > 12 287 Kincade, Henry 9 M > 12 287 Kincade, Blackburn 8 M > 12 287 Kincade, Jackson 4 M > http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~providence/census/census1850_k.htm > --- > Connie > *In Beautiful Western Kentucky* > DNA Kincaid # 3350 > DNA Knight #N38010 > ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ > Connie's Links-Lots of Links-Try Them > www.angelfire.com/ky2/connie/Links.html > ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ > (\o/) The first duty of love is to listen. > /_\ ~ Paul Tillich~ > --- > Browse the KINCAID archives > http://listsearches.rootsweb.com/?list=KINCAID > Browse the KINCAID archives > http://archiver.rootsweb.com/th/index/KINCAID/ > > To see the Kincaid of all spellings DNA chart in Excel: > http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~adgedge/Research/April%202004/Kincaid%20%20DNA.xls > > > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to > KINCAID-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the > quotes in the subject and the body of the message