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Terry Mason's Family History Site

55,914 names. Major lines: Allen, Beck, Borden, Buck, Burden, Carpenter, Carper, Cobb, Cook, Cornell, Cowan, Daffron, Davis, Downing, Faubion, Fauntleroy, Fenter, Fishback, Foulks, Gray, Harris, Heimbach, Henn, Holland, Holtzclaw, Jackson, Jameson, Johnson, Jones, King, Lewis, Mason, Massengill, McAnnally, Moore, Morgan, Overstreet, Price, Peck, Rice, Richardson, Rogers, Samuel, Smith, Taylor, Thomas, Wade, Warren, Weeks, Webb, Wodell, Yeiser.

 

Notes


Elijah Fike

Research notes of Lynda Cupido.


Captain John Morgan

RESEARCHER: Lynda Cupido [cupido@cchat.com] e-mail to T.Mason; 19-Sep-1998; ; indicates children: Malinda, Charles, Hiram, Nancy, Daniel, Martha, Susan, John, Mary

Research notes of David K. White Homepage.


Charles Morgan

Research notes of David K. White Homepage.


Isaac Morgan

Research notes from David K. White's Homepage.

RESEARCHER: All of the descendants in my (T. Mason) file from this Isaac Morgan come from the records of Ginny Faulkner.

Isaac Morgan served as a private in the continental line of North Carolina during the revolutionary war. For his services he was given 640 acres on the south side of the Cumberland river on May 10, 1793. He enlisted in 1782 and served 18 months in Bacots Company as a Pvt. in the 10th NC regiment of the revolutionary war.

Isaac and his wife Judith Smith came from Fauquier Co., VA to Cotton Ginport on the Tombigbee river in Monroe Co., MS - possibly around 1835.


Judith Smith

NOTE: Judith died at the home of her son, Joseph Smith Morgan, on whose land she was buried. This became known as the Morgan cemetery. Upon my last visit [Ginny Faulkner], May 2000, I was still unable to enter the cemetery. It is now in the middle of a large farm owned by a gentleman from Olive Branch, MS. We are going to attempt to get to this cemetery later in the summer.

Judith Smith's parents were said to have gone from Cumberland County, VA to Stokes City, NC and then to Davidson Co., TN.

NOTE: Judith was the oldest of 9 children. The marriage license of she and Isaac Morgan is on file.

NOTE: On November 3, 1976 there was a ceremony at the church in Greenleaf in her honor. The Thomas Wells chapter of the National Society Colonial Dames of America, which was led by Mrs. Fountain Dawson, to dedicate a marker that was placed on her grave in the Morgan Cemetery.