Thanks, Craig...He does sound like an interesting character! I played around on the internet yesterday and I guess I am hooked on looking at another female ancestor's line. Matilda Pinkard married my Thomas R. Hawkins in Culpeper in 1823. She died very young, but she is definitely the mother of all of Thomas R. Hawkins's children and thus my 3-gr-grandmother. Thanks for the background on the suspected origins of the line. John certainly sounds worth some research. Thanks. Marsha On Mar 2, 2009, at 8:06 AM, Craig Kilby wrote: > Marsha. Always good to hear from you. I can't answer your specific > question, but I can tell you that Pinkard (Pinckard) family starts > with Capt. John PInckard, who was quite an interesting character. He > came first to South Carolina with wife Mary. Due to some legal > problems there, he found it convenient to move to Northumberland > County, Virginia, where he married his second wife. Later still, he > married a third time and moved to Lancaster County, where he served > as a member of the House of Burgesses in 1688. He died in 1690 or > thereabouts. (I am writing from memory,) > > If you find a positive connection to this family, you have some > interesting research ahead of you. > > Craig > > > On Mar 1, 2009, at 7:30 PM, marsha moses wrote: > >> I'll take the opportunity of quiet time on this list to ask if anyone >> has information about the possibility of a marriage between a Pinkard >> male and a Marshall female? > > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to VACULPEP-request@rootsweb.com > with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and > the body of the message
That is interesting. Elizabeth must have been a widow for MANY years. I'll take a look at the 1860 census. Thanks so much. Marsha On Mar 1, 2009, at 8:38 PM, cpzb4@aol.com wrote: > I forgot to mention that on the 1860 Culp Co census is a Elizabeth > Pinkard age 87 I can't make out the name of the person living with > her. Elizabeth is head of the house.? Also the name Betsy is the > nickname for? Elizabeth as well as Ann > June > cpzb4@aol.com > > > -----Original Message----- > From: marsha moses <mosesm@earthlink.net> > To: vaculpep@rootsweb.com > Sent: Sun, 1 Mar 2009 7:30 pm > Subject: [VACULPEP] Pinkard in Culpeper > > > > I'll take the opportunity of quiet time on this list to ask if anyone > has information about the possibility of a marriage between a Pinkard > male and a Marshall female? Or perhaps does anyone have information > about the below heads of household in Culpeper County in 1820? Thanks > for any help that you can give me. Marsha Moses > > There are two head of households with Pinkard surname in the Culpeper > 1820 Census > > Elizabeth Pinkard > > 3 young males, 2 males 16-26 and 2 young females, one female between > 16 to 26, and Elizabeth must be between 26 and 45. I suppose she is a > young widow. But the one that jumped out at me is > > Marshall Pinkard > > 4 young males, 1 10-16, 1 16-18, and one 16-26, 2 young females, 1 > 16-26 and 1 26-45 Both households have slaves. > > >> It has been a long while since anything has been posted to this >> list. So, just wondering is anyone still out there? >> >> Craig Kilby >> > > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to VACULPEP-request@rootsweb.com > with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and > the body of > the message > > > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to VACULPEP-request@rootsweb.com > with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and > the body of the message
Thanks, June. the Matilda Pinchard and Thomas R. Hawkins are mine. But the Spencer Pinkard and Betsy Marshall are married too late to have son Marshall Pinkard in 1820...well I suppose if the Marshall was 16-20 in the census he could have been son of that couple....but the household doesn't make much sense if he is that young...don't know....but thanks so much for taking the time to do the look up for me. Marsha Moses On Mar 1, 2009, at 8:25 PM, cpzb4@aol.com wrote: > I have a book on Culpeper marriages in it, it list: > > Spencer Pinkard married August 30, 1799 to Betsy Marshall? Minister > William Mason [Baptist] > > Under the female Culpeper marriages: > > Polly Pinkard and Gabriel Rosson? 11/19/1800 Minister William Mason > Methelean Pinckard & Robert Green? 10/6/1825 Minister: Alonzo Waltonh > Mitilda Pinchard & Thomas R. Hawkins? 8/28/1823 Minister James > Garnett Sr. > > Hope this helps > June > cpzb4@aol.com > > -----Original Message----- > From: marsha moses <mosesm@earthlink.net> > To: vaculpep@rootsweb.com > Sent: Sun, 1 Mar 2009 7:30 pm > Subject: [VACULPEP] Pinkard in Culpeper > > > > I'll take the opportunity of quiet time on this list to ask if anyone > has information about the possibility of a marriage between a Pinkard > male and a Marshall female? Or perhaps does anyone have information > about the below heads of household in Culpeper County in 1820? Thanks > for any help that you can give me. Marsha Moses > > There are two head of households with Pinkard surname in the Culpeper > 1820 Census > > Elizabeth Pinkard > > 3 young males, 2 males 16-26 and 2 young females, one female between > 16 to 26, and Elizabeth must be between 26 and 45. I suppose she is a > young widow. But the one that jumped out at me is > > Marshall Pinkard > > 4 young males, 1 10-16, 1 16-18, and one 16-26, 2 young females, 1 > 16-26 and 1 26-45 Both households have slaves. > > >> It has been a long while since anything has been posted to this >> list. So, just wondering is anyone still out there? >> >> Craig Kilby >> > > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to VACULPEP-request@rootsweb.com > with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and > the body of > the message > > > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to VACULPEP-request@rootsweb.com > with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and > the body of the message
Marsha. Always good to hear from you. I can't answer your specific question, but I can tell you that Pinkard (Pinckard) family starts with Capt. John PInckard, who was quite an interesting character. He came first to South Carolina with wife Mary. Due to some legal problems there, he found it convenient to move to Northumberland County, Virginia, where he married his second wife. Later still, he married a third time and moved to Lancaster County, where he served as a member of the House of Burgesses in 1688. He died in 1690 or thereabouts. (I am writing from memory,) If you find a positive connection to this family, you have some interesting research ahead of you. Craig On Mar 1, 2009, at 7:30 PM, marsha moses wrote: > I'll take the opportunity of quiet time on this list to ask if anyone > has information about the possibility of a marriage between a Pinkard > male and a Marshall female?
This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list. Author: JamesHankins1 Surnames: Finnie/Finney, Edzard Classification: queries Message Board URL: http://boards.rootsweb.com/localities.northam.usa.states.virginia.counties.culpeper/250.252/mb.ashx Message Board Post: Daniel, ref your post below. The surname list contains the name of Edzard, but I saw no mention of that name in any of the notes. In what way is the Edzard name tied to your genealogy. My specific interest concerns Esras Theodore Edzard and his wife Frances Unknown. I do know that they were somehow associated with Culpeper, Virginia, and more specifically, I'm trying to determine Frances Edzard's maiden name. Thanks in advance! Important Note: The author of this message may not be subscribed to this list. If you would like to reply to them, please click on the Message Board URL link above and respond on the board.
Hi Jim, Do you know the parents of Abigail HAINES? My husband's HAINES line from Culpeper is incomplete and I'd love to fill in some of the gaps. Any help would be appreciated, Linda Cashen Gaunt In a message dated 3/1/2009 7:49:20 P.M. Pacific Standard Time, jnturner@earthlink.net writes: My 3rd Gr Grandfather, Samuel Turner, married a Quaker girl, Abigail Haines, in Culpeper Co. in 1793. She was part of a several family group of Quakers who moved into the Culpeper area from the Burlington Co., NJ area around 1773. The records of Evesham Monthly Meeting in Burlington Co. reflect a request by the her Haines family to transfer membership to the Hopewell Monthly Meeting in Virginia. At that time, the area of jurisdiction of the Hopewell MM included several counties in the VA Northern Neck region, including Culpeper Co. Later, as more and more Quakers moved into the area, the area of jurisdiction was broken up and there was at least one Monthly Meeting in Culpeper Co. Most of the Haines family in Culpeper Co. moved to Columbiana Co., Ohio around 1804. If you haven't already, look at William Wade Hinshaw's Encyclopedia of Quaker Genealogy. It is commonly available in genealogical libraries and on CD. Jim Turner ----- Original Message ----- From: <SuFrancis@aol.com> To: <VACULPEP@rootsweb.com> Sent: Sunday, March 01, 2009 7:45 PM Subject: [VACULPEP] Quakers in Culpeper? > > Was there a Quaker population in Culpeper and, if so, where would the > records for the church be? I have ancestors from Culpeper who moved to > Indiana in > the 1820s because of strong antislavery sentiments. I can't find records > for > them in Virginia and thought they might have been Quakers. They are > Susan > Nash, born 24 Nov 1797 and William Scott born 31 Jul 1798. They married > on > 31 July 1819, and their first child, Goerge was born 9 Aug 1820. Their > next > child Mary Jane was born 24 Dec 1824 in Bartholomew county, Indiana. > Another > child was born in Jennings county, Indiana, and they finally settled > north in > St. Joseph county, Indiana. > Is anyone familiar with a possible migration route from Culpeper to > the > Bartholomew/Jennings counties area in southern Indiana? > Thanks. > > > Susan Roland Francis > 701 Palm Valley Dr. E. > Harlingen, TX 78552-9027 > (956) 428-5434 (956) 453-6678 > sufrancis@aol.com > **************You're invited to Hollywood's biggest party: Get Oscars > updates, red carpet pics and more at Moviefone. > (http://movies.aol.com/oscars-academy-awards?ncid=emlcntusmovi00000001) > > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to > VACULPEP-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the > quotes in the subject and the body of the message > ------------------------------- To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to VACULPEP-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message **************Get a jump start on your taxes. Find a tax professional in your neighborhood today. (http://yellowpages.aol.com/search?query=Tax+Return+Preparation+%26+Filing&ncid=emlcntusyelp00000004)
Hi Linda, I believe we have talked before, but not about the Haines family. I sure do have some information I would like to share on Abigail's ancestry. It will take me a while to put it together, so give me a day or so. Thanks for contacting me. Jim Turner Houston, TX ----- Original Message ----- From: <RRG410@aol.com> To: <VACULPEP@rootsweb.com> Sent: Sunday, March 01, 2009 10:11 PM Subject: Re: [VACULPEP] Quakers in Culpeper? > Hi Jim, > > Do you know the parents of Abigail HAINES? My husband's HAINES line from > Culpeper is incomplete and I'd love to fill in some of the gaps. > > Any help would be appreciated, > Linda Cashen Gaunt > > > In a message dated 3/1/2009 7:49:20 P.M. Pacific Standard Time, > jnturner@earthlink.net writes: > > My 3rd Gr Grandfather, Samuel Turner, married a Quaker girl, Abigail > Haines, > in Culpeper Co. in 1793. She was part of a several family group of > Quakers > who moved into the Culpeper area from the Burlington Co., NJ area around > 1773. The records of Evesham Monthly Meeting in Burlington Co. reflect a > request by the her Haines family to transfer membership to the Hopewell > Monthly Meeting in Virginia. At that time, the area of jurisdiction of > the > Hopewell MM included several counties in the VA Northern Neck region, > including Culpeper Co. Later, as more and more Quakers moved into the > area, > the area of jurisdiction was broken up and there was at least one Monthly > Meeting in Culpeper Co. > > Most of the Haines family in Culpeper Co. moved to Columbiana Co., Ohio > around 1804. > > If you haven't already, look at William Wade Hinshaw's Encyclopedia of > Quaker Genealogy. It is commonly available in genealogical libraries and > on > CD. > > Jim Turner > > ----- Original Message ----- > From: <SuFrancis@aol.com> > To: <VACULPEP@rootsweb.com> > Sent: Sunday, March 01, 2009 7:45 PM > Subject: [VACULPEP] Quakers in Culpeper? > > >> >> Was there a Quaker population in Culpeper and, if so, where would the >> records for the church be? I have ancestors from Culpeper who moved to >> Indiana in >> the 1820s because of strong antislavery sentiments. I can't find >> records >> for >> them in Virginia and thought they might have been Quakers. They are >> Susan >> Nash, born 24 Nov 1797 and William Scott born 31 Jul 1798. They >> married >> on >> 31 July 1819, and their first child, Goerge was born 9 Aug 1820. Their >> next >> child Mary Jane was born 24 Dec 1824 in Bartholomew county, Indiana. >> Another >> child was born in Jennings county, Indiana, and they finally settled >> north in >> St. Joseph county, Indiana. >> Is anyone familiar with a possible migration route from Culpeper to >> the >> Bartholomew/Jennings counties area in southern Indiana? >> Thanks. >> >> >> Susan Roland Francis >> 701 Palm Valley Dr. E. >> Harlingen, TX 78552-9027 >> (956) 428-5434 (956) 453-6678 >> sufrancis@aol.com >> **************You're invited to Hollywood's biggest party: Get Oscars >> updates, red carpet pics and more at Moviefone. >> (http://movies.aol.com/oscars-academy-awards?ncid=emlcntusmovi00000001) >> >> ------------------------------- >> To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to >> VACULPEP-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the >> quotes in the subject and the body of the message >> > > > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to > VACULPEP-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the > quotes in the subject and the > body of the message > > > **************Get a jump start on your taxes. Find a tax professional in > your > neighborhood today. > (http://yellowpages.aol.com/search?query=Tax+Return+Preparation+%26+Filing&ncid=emlcntusyelp00000004) > > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to > VACULPEP-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the > quotes in the subject and the body of the message >
I find this interesting. Bowen family 'this & that' notes record family oral history. James BOWEN (b. 1790) who married Ann FOUSHEE in 1815 in Culpeper County is said to be of a 'Quaker background.' All the family, though, seems to be Baptists...in records, such as I have found. I do have a citation somewhere that the FOUSHEEs were Episcopalian. The BOWENs of Culpeper area are said to have been generally anti-slavery yet most were slave-owners; however, they openly educated their slaves, are said to have kept families intact, etc. One of the notes relates James' "Welsh temper" and that he was quite educated. On Sun, Mar 1, 2009 at 9:23 PM, Joan Horsley <jhorsley46@yahoo.com> wrote: > Long-time Culpeper researchers Jim and Louise Hodge told me that there was > a sizable Quaker presence in Culpeper County. Some names were Cowgills, > Garwoods, Sharps, and Euans families. Most of these ended up in Logan and > Champaign Counties in Ohio. Some of the Culpeper Quakers came from > Burlington County, NJ after the Revolutionary War. > > They mentioned Friends of Southland Meeting near Mount Poney and said that > records may still exist. (I'd contact the current Monthly Meeting in the > area for more information.) > > Joan > > > --- On Sun, 3/1/09, SuFrancis@aol.com <SuFrancis@aol.com> wrote: > > From: SuFrancis@aol.com <SuFrancis@aol.com> > Subject: [VACULPEP] Quakers in Culpeper > To: VACULPEP@rootsweb.com > Date: Sunday, March 1, 2009, 8:37 PM > > Was there a Quaker population in Culpeper and, if so, where would the > records for the church be? I have ancestors from Culpeper who moved to > Indiana in > the 1820s because of strong antislavery sentiments. I can't find records > for > them in Virginia and thought they might have been Quakers... > > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to > VACULPEP-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the > quotes in the subject and the body of the message > -- Kathleen Bowen Simons Falls Church, Virginia IMAGE - a No. VA Christian church whose mission is simple: Worship. Community. Service. www.thisisimage.com (click on the Audio icon to hear Pastor Chris' messages!) Listen to a beautiful song, "Feel the Ocean Calling," by Roderick C. Simons: http://www.myspace.com/roderickcsimons
My 3rd Gr Grandfather, Samuel Turner, married a Quaker girl, Abigail Haines, in Culpeper Co. in 1793. She was part of a several family group of Quakers who moved into the Culpeper area from the Burlington Co., NJ area around 1773. The records of Evesham Monthly Meeting in Burlington Co. reflect a request by the her Haines family to transfer membership to the Hopewell Monthly Meeting in Virginia. At that time, the area of jurisdiction of the Hopewell MM included several counties in the VA Northern Neck region, including Culpeper Co. Later, as more and more Quakers moved into the area, the area of jurisdiction was broken up and there was at least one Monthly Meeting in Culpeper Co. Most of the Haines family in Culpeper Co. moved to Columbiana Co., Ohio around 1804. If you haven't already, look at William Wade Hinshaw's Encyclopedia of Quaker Genealogy. It is commonly available in genealogical libraries and on CD. Jim Turner ----- Original Message ----- From: <SuFrancis@aol.com> To: <VACULPEP@rootsweb.com> Sent: Sunday, March 01, 2009 7:45 PM Subject: [VACULPEP] Quakers in Culpeper? > > Was there a Quaker population in Culpeper and, if so, where would the > records for the church be? I have ancestors from Culpeper who moved to > Indiana in > the 1820s because of strong antislavery sentiments. I can't find records > for > them in Virginia and thought they might have been Quakers. They are > Susan > Nash, born 24 Nov 1797 and William Scott born 31 Jul 1798. They married > on > 31 July 1819, and their first child, Goerge was born 9 Aug 1820. Their > next > child Mary Jane was born 24 Dec 1824 in Bartholomew county, Indiana. > Another > child was born in Jennings county, Indiana, and they finally settled > north in > St. Joseph county, Indiana. > Is anyone familiar with a possible migration route from Culpeper to > the > Bartholomew/Jennings counties area in southern Indiana? > Thanks. > > > Susan Roland Francis > 701 Palm Valley Dr. E. > Harlingen, TX 78552-9027 > (956) 428-5434 (956) 453-6678 > sufrancis@aol.com > **************You're invited to Hollywood's biggest party: Get Oscars > updates, red carpet pics and more at Moviefone. > (http://movies.aol.com/oscars-academy-awards?ncid=emlcntusmovi00000001) > > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to > VACULPEP-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the > quotes in the subject and the body of the message >
This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list. Author: johnnygstarke Surnames: BROWN BRUCE STARKE Classification: queries Message Board URL: http://boards.rootsweb.com/localities.northam.usa.states.virginia.counties.culpeper/4520.2/mb.ashx Message Board Post: I am a distant descendant of one Brown family of Culpeper county, namely Mary Bruce Brown, the daughter of Gideon Brown, who was the son of John Brown. In about 1730 that John Brown and his young wife (nee Miss Evans) left North Wales and settled in Essex county VA. During the second wave of immigration from that section to the Mountains, they settled in Culpeper county on Thornton's River above Oak Shade. They had five sons (viz. Thomas, Evans, Gideon, James and John. The branches of this Brown family settled along Thornton's River from Oak Shade to Homeland, as well as the area down southwest from Reva to Brown's Store / Bethel Baptist Church vicinity. Are you familiar with this Brown family of Culpeper? I cannot find any connection with your James Brown family of Stevensburg / Lignum vicinity. Do you know of any inter-relationship? I will expand information on my Brown family line, if interested. Finally, my grandfather Starke claimed descendency from the Bruces o! f Scotland thru his grandmother Mary Bruce Brown who married Weedon Starke, of "Cedar Hill" farm near Oak Shade. Does anybody know of such a Brown / Bruce connection in Culpeper, or elsewhere? I see that one Bruce family lived in the Brown's Store / Reva vicinity as well (ie, Bruce's Mountain, and Bruce's Mtn Rd-Rt 636, and an old Bruce graveyard thereabouts). However, I have no Bruce / Brown marriages in my Brown family notes. I am John Starke, great-great grandson of the above mentioned Weedon Starke & Mary Bruce Brown. My Email: johnstarke@comcast.net Important Note: The author of this message may not be subscribed to this list. If you would like to reply to them, please click on the Message Board URL link above and respond on the board.
A portion of the Quaker families in Culpeper Co. were Garwoods who were among those that left. My wife's Inskeep (Inskip) line had a connection. Ruth Inskeep's "Meet the Families of Inskeep and Garwood", Unigraphic, Inc. Evansville, Indiana 1975. has a section on pp312. Begins with Thomas of County Suffolk. One of his sons, William and family came to the colonies in ca. 1687 to West NJ. See H. E. Wallace Jr.'s Burlington Co. NJ Genweb item from the Moorefield Examiner, WV of 1906. _www.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~njburlin/inskeepbio.html_ (http://www.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~njburlin/inskeepbio.html) Scott In a message dated 3/1/2009 8:45:33 P.M. Eastern Standard Time, SuFrancis@aol.com writes: Was there a Quaker population in Culpeper and, if so, where would the records for the church be? I have ancestors from Culpeper who moved to Indiana in the 1820s because of strong antislavery sentiments. I can't find records for them in Virginia and thought they might have been Quakers. They are Susan Nash, born 24 Nov 1797 and William Scott born 31 Jul 1798. They married on 31 July 1819, and their first child, Goerge was born 9 Aug 1820. Their next child Mary Jane was born 24 Dec 1824 in Bartholomew county, Indiana. Another child was born in Jennings county, Indiana, and they finally settled north in St. Joseph county, Indiana. Is anyone familiar with a possible migration route from Culpeper to the Bartholomew/Jennings counties area in southern Indiana? Thanks. Susan Roland Francis 701 Palm Valley Dr. E. Harlingen, TX 78552-9027 (956) 428-5434 (956) 453-6678 sufrancis@aol.com **************You're invited to Hollywood's biggest party: Get Oscars updates, red carpet pics and more at Moviefone. (http://movies.aol.com/oscars-academy-awards?ncid=emlcntusmovi00000001) ------------------------------- To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to VACULPEP-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message **************You're invited to Hollywood's biggest party: Get Oscars updates, red carpet pics and more at Moviefone. (http://movies.aol.com/oscars-academy-awards?ncid=emlcntusmovi00000001)
Hi Susan, I know that my husband's GAUNT family married into the HAINES line in 1815 Culpeper Co., Virginia. The HAINES line was QUAKER, but I do believe they joined the Thorton Gap Baptist Church in Virignia. Some GAUNT families were from the New Jersey Quaker lines. Don't know if my husband's line descended from them, but the HAINES line was from that area. I found tons of information from this title: Haines, John Wesley, Richard Haines and his descendants; a Quaker family of Burlington County, New Jersey, since 1682, (1966), "Electronic," John Wesley Haines, (Boyce, Va., Printed by Carr). Wasn't there a New Hope Meeting House in the Culpeper area? Some of my husband's GAUNT/HAINES line moved into Ohio and Indiana from Virginia. Hope I'm not leading you astray, Linda Cashen Gaunt In a message dated 3/1/2009 5:37:37 P.M. Pacific Standard Time, SuFrancis@aol.com writes: Was there a Quaker population in Culpeper and, if so, where would the records for the church be? I have ancestors from Culpeper who moved to Indiana in the 1820s because of strong antislavery sentiments. I can't find records for them in Virginia and thought they might have been Quakers. They are Susan Nash, born 1797 and William Scott born 1798. They married on 31 July 1819, and their first child, Goege was born 9 Aug 1820. Their next child Susan Roland Francis 701 Palm Valley Dr. E. Harlingen, TX 78552-9027 (956) 428-5434 (956) 453-6678 sufrancis@aol.com **************You're invited to Hollywood's biggest party: Get Oscars updates, red carpet pics and more at Moviefone. (http://movies.aol.com/oscars-academy-awards?ncid=emlcntusmovi00000001) ------------------------------- To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to VACULPEP-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message **************Get a jump start on your taxes. Find a tax professional in your neighborhood today. (http://yellowpages.aol.com/search?query=Tax+Return+Preparation+%26+Filing&ncid=emlcntusyelp00000004)
You might check Mercer Co and Woodford Co, KY. My Jelf line migrated from Culpeper Co to Mercer and Woodford Co, and then Bartholomew Co and Jennings Co, IN. On Sun, Mar 1, 2009 at 8:45 PM, <SuFrancis@aol.com> wrote: > > Was there a Quaker population in Culpeper and, if so, where would the > records for the church be? I have ancestors from Culpeper who moved to > Indiana in > the 1820s because of strong antislavery sentiments. I can't find records > for > them in Virginia and thought they might have been Quakers. They are Susan > Nash, born 24 Nov 1797 and William Scott born 31 Jul 1798. They married > on > 31 July 1819, and their first child, Goerge was born 9 Aug 1820. Their > next > child Mary Jane was born 24 Dec 1824 in Bartholomew county, Indiana. > Another > child was born in Jennings county, Indiana, and they finally settled north > in > St. Joseph county, Indiana. > Is anyone familiar with a possible migration route from Culpeper to the > Bartholomew/Jennings counties area in southern Indiana? > Thanks. > > > Susan Roland Francis > 701 Palm Valley Dr. E. > Harlingen, TX 78552-9027 > (956) 428-5434 (956) 453-6678 > sufrancis@aol.com > **************You're invited to Hollywood's biggest party: Get Oscars > updates, red carpet pics and more at Moviefone. > (http://movies.aol.com/oscars-academy-awards?ncid=emlcntusmovi00000001) > > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to > VACULPEP-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the > quotes in the subject and the body of the message >
Was there a Quaker population in Culpeper and, if so, where would the records for the church be? I have ancestors from Culpeper who moved to Indiana in the 1820s because of strong antislavery sentiments. I can't find records for them in Virginia and thought they might have been Quakers. They are Susan Nash, born 24 Nov 1797 and William Scott born 31 Jul 1798. They married on 31 July 1819, and their first child, Goerge was born 9 Aug 1820. Their next child Mary Jane was born 24 Dec 1824 in Bartholomew county, Indiana. Another child was born in Jennings county, Indiana, and they finally settled north in St. Joseph county, Indiana. Is anyone familiar with a possible migration route from Culpeper to the Bartholomew/Jennings counties area in southern Indiana? Thanks. Susan Roland Francis 701 Palm Valley Dr. E. Harlingen, TX 78552-9027 (956) 428-5434 (956) 453-6678 sufrancis@aol.com **************You're invited to Hollywood's biggest party: Get Oscars updates, red carpet pics and more at Moviefone. (http://movies.aol.com/oscars-academy-awards?ncid=emlcntusmovi00000001)
I forgot to mention that on the 1860 Culp Co census is a Elizabeth Pinkard age 87 I can't make out the name of the person living with her. Elizabeth is head of the house.? Also the name Betsy is the nickname for? Elizabeth as well as Ann June cpzb4@aol.com -----Original Message----- From: marsha moses <mosesm@earthlink.net> To: vaculpep@rootsweb.com Sent: Sun, 1 Mar 2009 7:30 pm Subject: [VACULPEP] Pinkard in Culpeper I'll take the opportunity of quiet time on this list to ask if anyone has information about the possibility of a marriage between a Pinkard male and a Marshall female? Or perhaps does anyone have information about the below heads of household in Culpeper County in 1820? Thanks for any help that you can give me. Marsha Moses There are two head of households with Pinkard surname in the Culpeper 1820 Census Elizabeth Pinkard 3 young males, 2 males 16-26 and 2 young females, one female between 16 to 26, and Elizabeth must be between 26 and 45. I suppose she is a young widow. But the one that jumped out at me is Marshall Pinkard 4 young males, 1 10-16, 1 16-18, and one 16-26, 2 young females, 1 16-26 and 1 26-45 Both households have slaves. > It has been a long while since anything has been posted to this > list. So, just wondering is anyone still out there? > > Craig Kilby > ------------------------------- To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to VACULPEP-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message
Was there a Quaker population in Culpeper and, if so, where would the records for the church be? I have ancestors from Culpeper who moved to Indiana in the 1820s because of strong antislavery sentiments. I can't find records for them in Virginia and thought they might have been Quakers. They are Susan Nash, born 1797 and William Scott born 1798. They married on 31 July 1819, and their first child, Goege was born 9 Aug 1820. Their next child Susan Roland Francis 701 Palm Valley Dr. E. Harlingen, TX 78552-9027 (956) 428-5434 (956) 453-6678 sufrancis@aol.com **************You're invited to Hollywood's biggest party: Get Oscars updates, red carpet pics and more at Moviefone. (http://movies.aol.com/oscars-academy-awards?ncid=emlcntusmovi00000001)
I have a book on Culpeper marriages in it, it list: Spencer Pinkard married August 30, 1799 to Betsy Marshall? Minister William Mason [Baptist] Under the female Culpeper marriages: Polly Pinkard and Gabriel Rosson? 11/19/1800 Minister William Mason Methelean Pinckard & Robert Green? 10/6/1825 Minister: Alonzo Waltonh Mitilda Pinchard & Thomas R. Hawkins? 8/28/1823 Minister James Garnett Sr. Hope this helps June cpzb4@aol.com -----Original Message----- From: marsha moses <mosesm@earthlink.net> To: vaculpep@rootsweb.com Sent: Sun, 1 Mar 2009 7:30 pm Subject: [VACULPEP] Pinkard in Culpeper I'll take the opportunity of quiet time on this list to ask if anyone has information about the possibility of a marriage between a Pinkard male and a Marshall female? Or perhaps does anyone have information about the below heads of household in Culpeper County in 1820? Thanks for any help that you can give me. Marsha Moses There are two head of households with Pinkard surname in the Culpeper 1820 Census Elizabeth Pinkard 3 young males, 2 males 16-26 and 2 young females, one female between 16 to 26, and Elizabeth must be between 26 and 45. I suppose she is a young widow. But the one that jumped out at me is Marshall Pinkard 4 young males, 1 10-16, 1 16-18, and one 16-26, 2 young females, 1 16-26 and 1 26-45 Both households have slaves. > It has been a long while since anything has been posted to this > list. So, just wondering is anyone still out there? > > Craig Kilby > ------------------------------- To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to VACULPEP-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message
I'll take the opportunity of quiet time on this list to ask if anyone has information about the possibility of a marriage between a Pinkard male and a Marshall female? Or perhaps does anyone have information about the below heads of household in Culpeper County in 1820? Thanks for any help that you can give me. Marsha Moses There are two head of households with Pinkard surname in the Culpeper 1820 Census Elizabeth Pinkard 3 young males, 2 males 16-26 and 2 young females, one female between 16 to 26, and Elizabeth must be between 26 and 45. I suppose she is a young widow. But the one that jumped out at me is Marshall Pinkard 4 young males, 1 10-16, 1 16-18, and one 16-26, 2 young females, 1 16-26 and 1 26-45 Both households have slaves. > It has been a long while since anything has been posted to this > list. So, just wondering is anyone still out there? > > Craig Kilby >
Long-time Culpeper researchers Jim and Louise Hodge told me that there was a sizable Quaker presence in Culpeper County. Some names were Cowgills, Garwoods, Sharps, and Euans families. Most of these ended up in Logan and Champaign Counties in Ohio. Some of the Culpeper Quakers came from Burlington County, NJ after the Revolutionary War. They mentioned Friends of Southland Meeting near Mount Poney and said that records may still exist. (I'd contact the current Monthly Meeting in the area for more information.) Joan --- On Sun, 3/1/09, SuFrancis@aol.com <SuFrancis@aol.com> wrote: From: SuFrancis@aol.com <SuFrancis@aol.com> Subject: [VACULPEP] Quakers in Culpeper To: VACULPEP@rootsweb.com Date: Sunday, March 1, 2009, 8:37 PM Was there a Quaker population in Culpeper and, if so, where would the records for the church be? I have ancestors from Culpeper who moved to Indiana in the 1820s because of strong antislavery sentiments. I can't find records for them in Virginia and thought they might have been Quakers...
Skipping back a few generations the Henry ISHAM I do have in my gedcom (no birthyear, no source, just a scribbled note: "south bank of the James River"), purported to be the father of Mary ISHAM "of Bermuda Hundred" m. 1680 the Col. Wm. RANDOLPH of Turkey Island, Henrico Parish, Va. who d. either 1 Nov 1706 (or 11 Apr 1711 as it says on p251 below) ~ probably the latter 'n maybe *wrote* his will in 1706....:) Had 9 kids anyway, a couple of which m. BEVERLEYs. [And I see one m. Judith Churchill...] Googling any one of these prominent surnames in the Book Search, or better yet a phrase like "William Randolph m. Mary Isham", "William Randolph of Turkey Island", whatnot ~ stands a good chance of bringing up, if you're really really lucky, a genealogy written by an actual descendant, sometimes with scraps of personal letters, bible entries, tombstone inscriptions & voila !, Collateral Lines. Heritage Quest is another source of digitized books, including many limited old private publications, which I am so very grateful to be able to access just by inputting the barcode on my local library card. You (generic You, Craig, for folks who may not know this) need to check with your local library to see if they offer access. Oddly enuf, a recent source I have for Mary ISHAM is a Google scanned bk "Genealogy of the PAGE Family in Virginia" the 2nd edition (corrected & expanded 1893) by Richard Channing Moore Page p251. Well okay, it is infact the PAGE family (I must have been googling the CHURCHILLs and tripped over it). There's a bit more on that page too on the emigrant Henry Isham, Craig, whom I'm guessing had the same inclination to name a kid after himself and start an annoying tradition this side of the pond resulting in the same mass confusion we CLAYTONs have with our Samuels and Philips in Virginia. One cool thing though, with the digitizing of all these old books and records, that devastating pronouncement "unfortunately that's one of Virginia's burnt counties" is losing a wee bit of its gravitas. .