_Silas Green BAUGH _____
| (1853 - 1918) m 1871
_Timothy Perkins BAUGH _|
| (1877 - 1946) m 1898 |
| |_Lydia Emarine BLEVINS _+
| (1847 - 1920) m 1871
|
|--Emma BAUGH
| (1900 - 1923)
| ________________________
| |
|_Susie Elizabeth OWENS _|
(1880 - 1954) m 1898 |
|________________________
_William Edmund "Bud" BLEVINS _+
| (1855 - 1943) m 1875
_Henry Harvey BLEVINS _|
| (1892 - ....) m 1914 |
| |_Nancy Jane SKINNER ___________+
| (1858 - 1943) m 1875
|
|--Opal BLEVINS
|
| _______________________________
| |
|_Mollie _______________|
(1896 - ....) m 1914 |
|_______________________________
__
|
_James BLEVINS ______|
| (1786 - ....) |
| |__
|
|
|--William BLEVINS
| (1825 - 1863)
| __
| |
|_Sarah ______________|
(1791 - ....) |
|__
__
|
_John "Shoutin John" BORDERS _|
| |
| |__
|
|
|--Sarah Jane BORDERS
| (1851 - 1925)
| __
| |
|_Isabel BROWN ________________|
|
|__
[9139] Lawernce Co. records state that Sarah died in Lawrence Co., KY.
[9138]
[S108]
Rowland, Mrs. Elaine
_John "Dunk" BOWLING _+
| (1832 - ....) m 1853
_George BOWLING _____|
| (1854 - ....) |
| |_Susan NAPIER ________
| (1835 - ....) m 1853
|
|--Sarah BOWLING
| (1878 - ....)
| ______________________
| |
|_Mary DAVIDSON ______|
(1856 - ....) |
|______________________
_______________________
|
_Thomas DEATON ______|
| (1848 - ....) m 1868|
| |_______________________
|
|
|--Martha DEATON
| (1885 - ....)
| _James LITTLE _________+
| | (1825 - 1880) m 1847
|_Eliza LITTLE _______|
(1852 - ....) m 1868|
|_Mary "Polly" GAMBILL _
(1823 - ....) m 1847
_William FUGATE _____+
| (1783 - 1859) m 1801
_Ira E. FUGATE ______|
| (1806 - 1874) m 1830|
| |_Lydia TATE _________+
| (1785 - 1854) m 1801
|
|--Phoebe FUGATE
| (1828 - 1905)
| _____________________
| |
|_Margaret HANEY _____|
(1804 - 1871) m 1830|
|_____________________
_________________________
|
_John HALL __________|
| (1710 - 1783) |
| |_________________________
|
|
|--Lucy Cocke HALL
| (1736 - 1815)
| _Robert "Robin" BOLLING _+
| | (1682 - 1749) m 1706
|_Anne BOLLING _______|
(1713 - ....) |
|_Anne COCKE _____________+
(1688 - 1749) m 1706
[12691]
[S219]
World Family Tree Vol. 1, Ed. 1
[12692]
[S219]
World Family Tree Vol. 1, Ed. 1
[23323]
From Hopkins of Virginia and Related Families by Walter Lee Hopkins,J. W. Fergusson and Sons. Richmond, Virginia. 1931:
Judge Arthur Francis Hopkins (James, Arthur, Jr., Dr. Arthur andElizabeth Pettus, Captain Thomas, Col. Thomas the emg.), b. Oct. 18,1794, in Pittsylvania Co., Va., is mentioned in the will of his greatuncle, Dr. James Hopkins of Amherst Co., Va. He died in Feb., 1866, athis home in Mobile, Ala., and was buried at Magnolia cemetery of thatcity. Educated at Chapel Hill, N. C., he read law under Judge WilliamLeigh of Virginia, removed to Alabama with his negroes and soon aftersettled in Huntsville; was a member of the 1st ConstitutionalConvention of his adopted state and frequently represented his countyin the legislature. All of his children but one were born inHuntsville. In politics a "Whig," he was, however, elected Judge ofthe Supreme Court by a democratic legislature, and his associateselected him Chief Justice. It is written by Judge Somerville that hisopinions and those of Samuel F. Rice were more like those of LordEldon than of any Judge who ever adorned the Bench of Alabama. He wason one side or the other of every big case, and as a jurist had nosuperior in his State. He was the "Whig" candidate for the UnitedStates Senate on several different occasions, and at one time he wasdefeated by Clement C. Clay by only two votes. While on the Bench heremoved with his family to Tuscaloosa, and later to St. Louis, but theclimate proving unfavorable to his health, returned to Alabama, andsettled finally about 1845 in Mobile, where he subsequently resided.In 1857 he was made President of the Mobile and Ohio R. R. Seeing thatthe war between the states was inevitable, he supported Breckinbridgeand Lane; was a commissioner from Alabama to Virginia to induce thelatter state to secede. He contributed liberally of his means toenable his noble wife, known as "The Florence Nightingale of theConfederacy," to establish hospitals and organize nurses for thewounded of the Southern soldiers. In recognition of her valuableservices, the State of Alabama printed her vignette on its bills ofcurrent money, and hung her portrait in the Alabama Hall of Fame.Despite his at one time wealth, shown by his patriotic and munificentgift to the Confederacy, he died soon after the war, broken in spiritby the fortunes of war, with comparatively little saved from thewreckage of his property. He foresaw the future of Chicago, and "TheHopkins & Pryor Quarter" of that city is evidence that he once ownedforty acres there. He is described as a handsome man, with especiallycourtly manners in a courtly age, and an earnestness that the jurycould not withstand. Had President Harrison lived, it is believedJudge Hopkins would have gone to the Supreme Court of the UnitedStates, for which high office he was eminently fitted. Married, April6, 1815, Pamelia Thorpe Moseley, b. Feb. 8, 1800, near the Peaks ofOtter, Bedford Co., Va., dau. of Arthur Moseley by his wife (the widowof Thomas Crump by whom a dau. Elizabeth Calloway Crump, b. July 27,1788) nee Pamelia Thorpe, b. May 10, 1768, dau. of Francis Thorpe byhis wife Elizabeth Calloway. This first wife was a lovely woman and anearnest Christian, d. Oct. 4, 1852, in Hinds County, Miss. He married(2nd) Nov. 7, 1854, a widow, Mrs. Juliet A. Gordon (whose firsthusband was U. S. A. Officer), dau. of Hiram Lindsay Opie of Virginia,by which marriage there were no children. It was this last wife ofJudge Hopkins who devoted her life and her husband's means to theservice of the wounded Confederate soldiers in Richmond, Va., earningthe title "The Florence Nightingale of the Confederacy." (See "EarlySettlers of Alabama," Part I, p. 87, by Col. James Edmond Saunders.)
[23324]
[S393]
Hopkins, Walter Lee
[23325]
[S396]
Miller, Joseph Lyon, MD
_John Ward ISAACS ___+
| (1915 - 1992)
_Gary ISAACS ________|
| |
| |_Virginia RUHNKE ____
|
|
|--Jonathan ISAACS
|
| _____________________
| |
|_Barbara LEHNEN _____|
|
|_____________________
_Baxter JONES ___________
|
_Steve Dalton JONES _|
| |
| |_Ella ___________________
|
|
|--Kathryn Janet JONES
|
| _Charles Albert BLEVINS _+
| | (1884 - 1959) m 1908
|_Mary Zelma BLEVINS _|
|
|_Grace Truman BEAVER ____+
(1889 - 1983) m 1908
_____________________
|
_William M. LEWIS ___|
| (1825 - ....) m 1846|
| |_____________________
|
|
|--Ervin H. LEWIS
| (1849 - ....)
| _John BLEVINS _______
| | (.... - 1831)
|_Theresa BLEVINS ____|
(1827 - ....) m 1846|
|_____________________
_Joshua RIPPEE ______+
| (1797 - ....) m 1818
_James RIPPEE _______|
| (1829 - ....) m 1850|
| |_Sarah HICKS ________
| (1801 - ....) m 1818
|
|--Louisa RIPPEE
| (1856 - ....)
| _____________________
| |
|_Lucretia ___________|
(1831 - ....) m 1850|
|_____________________
_Valentine SEVIER ___+
| (1711 - 1803) m 1738
_Valentine SEVIER ____|
| (1747 - 1800) m 1767 |
| |_Joanna GOAD ________+
| (1723 - 1773) m 1738
|
|--Joseph SEVIER
| (1788 - 1794)
| _____________________
| |
|_Naomi "Amy" DOUGLAS _|
(1742 - 1844) m 1767 |
|_____________________
[14208]
Reference: Handbook of the American Frontier, Four Centuries ofIndian-White Relationships, Vol I: The Southeastern Woodlands. NativeAmerican Resources Series No. l by J. Norman Heard, The ScarecrowPress, Inc. 1987;
Sevier, Valentine: Family Of:
...
Valentine's Station near Clarksville, TN, was attacked by ChiefDoublehead on November 11, 1794. The old frontiersman, ValentineSevier, stood off the Chickamaugas, but his daughter and her husband,Charles Snyder, and his son, Joseph Sevier, were killed in Snyder'scabin.
...
[14209]
[S260]
Moore, John Trotwood
[14210]
[S227]
World Family Tree Vol. 2, Ed. 1
[14211]
[S227]
World Family Tree Vol. 2, Ed. 1
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