8 Generations of Cass County connections of Roger Bruce Whitaker
Generations [1-5]
[6] [8]
| Iltrails Cass County page
Generation No. 7
76.
Phineas Underwood
, born March 28, 1801 in New York; died March 28, 1884 in Cass County, Illinois. He was the son of 152.
Phineas Underwood and 153.
Sarah Burly. He married 77.
Susan Sarah Ann Appleton May 16, 1825 in New York, New York.
77.
Susan Sarah Ann Appleton
, born April 11, 1803 in Boston, MA; died July 18, 1859. She was the daughter of 154.
Thomas Appleton and 155.
Mary.
Notes for Phineas Underwood:
from: http://awt.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=osborn&id=I3096
# ID: I3096
# Name: Phineas UNDERWOOD
# Given Name: Phineas
# Surname: Underwood
# Sex: M
# Birth: 28 MAR 1801 in New York
# Death: 28 MAR 1884 in Cass Co. Illinois
# Burial: Waltnut Ridge Cem. Cass Co. Virginia
# Note:
73] Case of Phineas Underwood. County Court Record, v. B, p. 529.
1850 Cass Co. IL p61
Underwood Phineas 50 NY
Sarah 47 MA
Susan 7 IL
Thomas 25 NY
Zada 22 TN
1860 Cass Co. IL p67
Underwood Phinies 59 NY living with Rachel Anderson
1880 Township 18 N., Range 9 W., Cass, Illinois National Archives Film T9-0178; Page 675C
P. UNDERWOOD Self Male W W 79 NY Occ: Farmer Fa: MA Mo: NY
Louis COWAN SonL Male M W 36 IL Occ: Farmer Fa: NC Mo: NC
Susan COWAN Dau Female M W 38 IL Occ: Keeps House Fa: NY Mo: NY
Dolly COWAN GDau Female S W 11 IL Occ: Works In House Fa: IL Mo: IL
Delta COWAN GDau Female S W 8 IL Fa: IL Mo: IL
Bertis COWAN GSon Male S W 2 IL Fa: IL Mo: IL
COWAN GSon Male S W 6M IL Fa: IL Mo: IL
UNDERWOOD, Phineas, Jr. - Virginia Gazette, Jone 4, 1884
Last Monday, Phineas Underwood was struck by a
train and died a short time later. He was 85 years old. Three children survive, Rachel Anderson of here, Susan Cowan, who resides on the homestead, and Thomas Underwood, of Missouri. He was a Mason for 60 years and a member of the Methodist E. Church. He buried in Powell Cemetery. (Thomas is buried in Walnut Ridge Cemetery in Virginia, IL.)
# Change Date: 10 MAR 2004 at 10:48:41
Father: Phineas UNDERWOOD b: 1764 in Westford,MA or VT
Mother: Sarah BURLY b: 13 MAR 1768 in Hempstead
Marriage 1 Susan Arah Ann APPLETON b: 11 APR 1803 in Boston,MA
* Married: 16 MAY 1825 in New York,New York
Children
1. Has Children Thomas A UNDERWOOD b: 1828 in New York
2. Has Children Rachel UNDERWOOD b: 13 FEB 1834 in ,Morgan Co.,Illinois
3. Has Children Susan UNDERWOOD b: 1843 in Cass Co. Illinois
More About Phineas Underwood:
Burial: Powell Cemetery, Cass County, Illinois
More About Susan Sarah Ann Appleton:
Burial: Powell Cemetery, Cass County, Illinois
Children of Phineas Underwood and Susan Appleton are:
38 i.
Thomas A. Underwood, born 1828 in New York; married (1)
Zadia W. Arnold May 11, 1848 in Cass County, Illinois; married (2)
Elizabeth Ann Twedle January 20, 1868 in Cass County, Illinois.
ii.
Rachel Underwood, born February 13, 1834 in Morgan County, Illinois; died April 03, 1901 in Cass County, Illinois; married
John Milton Anderson; born 1827 in New York; died December 29, 1858 in Henry Co., Illinois.
iii.
Susan Underwood, born 1843 in Cass Co, IL; married
Louis Cowan; born 1844 in Illinois.
116.
Dennis Heaton
, born in Wigan, Lancastershire, England; died 1816 in Wigan, Lancastershire, England. He was the son of 232.
Bartley Heaton. He married 117.
Kate Bartley.
117.
Kate Bartley
, died Abt. 1852 in Yorkshire, England.
Child of Dennis Heaton and Kate Bartley is:
58 i.
Capt. John Heaton, born January 01, 1810 in Wigan / Wiggin, Lancastershire, England; died June 22, 1899 in Virginia, Illinois; married
Mary Jane Fullerton November 02, 1840 in Bolton, Lancastershire, England.
118.
James Fullerton
, died in 20 miles from Toronto, Canada. He married 119.
Martha Glen.
119.
Martha Glen
More About James Fullerton:
Military service: Enlisted in English 7th Batallion and was commander of the Tower of London in 1820
Child of James Fullerton and Martha Glen is:
59 i.
Mary Jane Fullerton, born February 29, 1820 in Tower of London, England; died November 30, 1895 in Bluff Springs, Illinois; married
Capt. John Heaton November 02, 1840 in Bolton, Lancastershire, England.
120.
Obediah Nix
, born May 11, 1798 in Georgia; died January 28, 1859 in Texas. He was the son of 240.
Edward Nicks and 241.
Milly Akin. He married 121.
Luvicy Bruce.
121.
Luvicy Bruce
, born April 27, 1798; died December 21, 1890 in Fannin County, Texas. She was the daughter of 242.
Anderson Bruce and 243.
Sarah Manning.
More About Luvicy Bruce:
Burial: Oakwood Cemetery, Fannin Co., Texas
Children of Obediah Nix and Luvicy Bruce are:
i.
Mary Arminda Nix, born May 04, 1820 in Madison Co., Tennessee; died August 06, 1915 in Colorado City, Texas; married
Preston Kemper Phenix October 30, 1838; born October 30, 1815 in Near Quincy, Illinois; died November 07, 1898.
Notes for Mary Arminda Nix:
A PIONEER WOMAN
Mary Frances Phenix Nelson Meridith
1847-1917
Mrs. Mary Frances Phenix Nelson Meridith was a pioneer and from a long line of pioneers. Before giving something of her life, a background of her parents would be interesting in showing something of the preparation she had for meeting responsibilities as a homesteader and settler in the West.
ONE HUNDRED YEARS ON THE FRONTIER
Tennessee, Illinois and Texas
(This story was told by Mary Arminda Nix Phenix (Mrs.. Preston Kemper Phenix), in l914, to her granddaughter Mary Arminda Meredith Wilson and her husband J. Andy Wilson while visiting in their home in Lubbock, Texas. Some names and dates taken from Mrs. Phenix' Bible have been added. It is written in the first person as Mrs. Phenix told her story).
I was born in Madison County, Tennessee, May 4, 1820 and was the first white child born in the county.
My father, Obedia Nix, had a water mill and hauled the products to the mouth of Obion River. He signed some notes, with a man whose name I do not know, to put in a stock of goods. He had two flat boats built and they were ready to put on the river when father became ill with "fever". This was about 1827. The co-signer of the notes failed to assume his responsibility and placed what he had in his wife's name leaving my father to pay the notes. Everything they had was sold at Sheriff's sale leaving father and mother destitute - father was confined to his bed for the fever had settled in one limb leaving him unable to walk and unable to provide for the family.
My parents had one pony, a cow and calf and in 1827 father traded the cow for a cart, killed the calf and preserved the meat to be used for a trip to Morgan County, Illinois, where father had a brother living.
There were, when the trip began, four children:
Mary Arminda, 8 years old - born May 4, 1820
John Edward, 6 years old - born January 27, 1822
William Anderson, 4 years old - born March 11, 1824
Lucrita, 2 years old - born May 7, 1826
Five other children were born after we moved to Illinois:
Jasper Levi - born April 28, 1929
Newton Thomas - born March 29, 1831
Francis Marion - born April 28, 1833
Harriett - born January 29, 1836
Maning Lafayette - born September 5, 1838
There was room in the small cart for father and the two youngest children. My mother, John Edward and I had to walk. The grass was high and I remember that in some places the dew was heavy. At Springfield, Illinois, there were only three or four houses.
Two freighters driving oxen overtook us. One of the men was named Morton. When we asked hour far it was to Morgan County he told us 'three days' drive and that he lived there.' When father asked him if he knew his brother who lived there, he said 'he did and that he lived within one-half mile of him and that Mr. Nix was a fine man.'
We were without money and had very little to eat. Mother made a trade with Mr. Morton to knit socks for him from some of the yarn he had on his wagon. He took this as pay for some food. As mother walked behind the cart she did the knitting.
When we arrived in Morgan County, with the help of father's brother, we rented a farm and mad a small crop that year. Mother and the children did most of the work - we had only the one pony to use. After the crop was laid by, Father made a lathe for turning out chair rounds. My oldest brother and I held to the frame and turned the lathe as father could not stand on his good leg and turn it. He made some chairs which he sold for $1.00 each in Quincy, Illinois. There were very few chairs on this frontier - most families used benches.
Father sold the first crop and we moved between the Mississippi and the Illinois rivers on what was know as the "Military Tract". Here we made the second crop with the same pony. Mother hauled rails to fence the farm. At this farm we could not get water and had to haul it about one-half mile to so father traded this farm for a yoke of oxen and moved about eight miles where there was a spring of good water. We were at Mount Stirling before the town was layed out. Here father took up some land. He moved his feed, corn, and a barrel of pork. He built a log house but before it was completed there was a big snow storm. He worked here for about three months without bread but did have kraut, pork and hominy and the deer were plentiful in the timber.
The next year there were three or four more families who settled near us. All our crops were short and we harvested just a little frost-bitten corn. Father made a hand mill out of sand stones to grind the corn and all the neighbors used it.
Father found some good sand stone and he marked them out and mother helped him cut them for grind stones. He made frames and handles for them and with his ox team he hauled these stones to Quincy, Illinois, where he sold the larger ones for $5.00 each and the smaller ones in proportion. While he was gone a big snow and sleet storm came up. He was gone for nine days. The families in the settlement were about out of everything to eat - just a little frost-bitten corn from which to make meal. Father was delayed because the oxen could not climb the hills on account of the ice. The night he got home all the neighbors were at home with us, very anxious about him. He had brought a barrel of pork, some white corn meal. From that time on we had plenty to eat. We stayed on this place for two of three years, then sold that farm and took a Soldier's Claim. While we were living on this land General Levenworth ate dinner with us. He had bought a lot of Soldier's Rights and was attempting to locate the land. The town of Levenworth, Kansas, was named for him. The Nix family lived on this land for several years: father was well again, was prosperous, and we had a good house, bar, and other buildings.
It was while we were living on the "Soldier's Claim Farm" that I married Preston Kemper Phenix, October 30, 1838, near Quincy, Illinois. He was born October 30, 1815 as son of Henry Phenix (born February 11, 1778) and Nancy Todd (born August 2, 1781) who were married February 11, 1798 at Davidson County, Tenneseee.
Preston Phenix began the study of medicine under the supervision of H. H. Witty, MD and studied from him in 1840 and 1841, at Mount Stirling, Brown County, Illinois. Our six oldest children were born in Illinois:
1. Thomas J. born November 15, 1839, died June 1865 (single person)
(murdered and robbed on way home from Confederate Army.
2. John - born April 7, 1841, died September 12, 1866 (single person)
3. Sophronia L., born April 5, 1843. Married J. G. Thomas, Jacksboro, Texas March 9, 1860. (FROM CHRISTINE - ACTUALLY 1859)
4. Columbia Ann born January 3, 1845. Married George W. Bullion December 5, 1869. (born September 25, 1845 - died September 14, 1885, buried Rock Creek Church Cemetery, Paluxy, Texas)
5. Mary Frances, born July 3, 1847, Died January 29, 1917.
Married Tandy James Nelson 1871. Married William Lewis Meridith May
21, 1882. He was born November 15, 1838, died July 23, 1888.
6 William Preston born June 11, 1849, died 1817 or 1918
Married Mollie Moore and they had one girl who died as a child
7 Harriet Lavicy, born November 11, 1851. Married Dr. J. A. Pharr
8 . Newton Jasper Phenix born January 16, 1861. Died December 12, 1916
Married Lillian Alberta Clark. He died in Colorado City Texas
9 Francis Lafayette Phenix born September 11, 1862
It was about 1847 that Dr. Phenix's health failed and in 1848 we moved to Texas and located at Pin Hook, now Paris, Lamar County. A great deal of distance we traveled by boat and landed at Port Jefferson which was the furtherest we could go by boat. This was another frontier and settlers were few.
When we arrived at Pin Hook, we traded a suit of home-made clothes and several yards of jeans for a log house and filed a claim on 310 acres of land. We had about $40.00 or $50.00 in money. Dr. Phenix had learned how to make bed steads and chairs. He put in a lathe, made a bed stead but did not have the money to buy the varnish for finishing it. We borrowed a yoke of oxen and took the bed to Honey Grove, Texas, where he sold it for $10.00 and he was then in the business. We hired two boys for $15.00 each, per month, and on this next trip to Honey Grove he sold ten beds for $10.00 each. Our supplies had been very low and we had borrowed corn meal to tide us over until the beds were sold.
We sold our first claim and bought 200 acres on the old freight road from Port Jefferson. There I bargained with a rancher for the privilege of milking 30 of his cows. I then made cheese and butter which I sold to the freighters. We lived on this 200 acres farm for about 8 years. Dr. Phenix and improved and was able to ride a horse and to practice medicine.
About 1856 or 1857 we moved to Jack County, Texas, before the county was organized. This was a real frontier and there was danger from the Indians. They stole most of our stock and some of our neighbors were killed by them.
If there was more to the written story, it has been lost. We know that the Phenix family also lived in Hood County and there are memories of stories told by Mrs. Phenix of Indian fighting and of all members of the community gathering in their home, the Old Rock House.
Dr. Preston Kemper Phenix, born Nashville, Tennessee, October 30, 1815
Married Mary Arminda Nix, October 30, 1838
He died November 7, 1898, at the home of his son Dr. N. J. Phenix,
Alvin, Texas, age 83 years, 7 days
Mary Arminda Nix, born May 30, 1820, Madison County, Tennessee
Daughter of Obedia Nix (born May 11, 1789) and of Lavicy
Bruce Nix (Born April 29, 1789)
Died August 6, 1915, at home of son, Dr. N. J. Phenix, Colorado
City Texas. Age 96 years, 2 months.
60 ii.
John Edward Nix, born January 27, 1822 in Madison Co., Tennessee; died 1847 in Illinois; married
Mahala Ann Frances Mitchell June 11, 1846 in Mason County, Illlinois.
iii.
William Anderson Nix, born March 11, 1824 in Madison Co., Tennessee.
iv.
Lucrita Nix, born May 07, 1826 in Madison Co., Tennessee.
v.
Jasper Levi Nix, born April 28, 1829 in Morgan Co. Illinois.
vi.
Newton Thomas Nix, born March 29, 1831 in Morgan Co. Illinois.
vii.
Francis Marion Nix, born April 28, 1833 in Morgan Co. Illinois.
viii.
Harriett Nix, born January 29, 1836 in Morgan Co. Illinois.
ix.
Maning Lafayette Nix, born September 05, 1838 in Morgan Co. Illinois.
122.
Isaac Mitchell, Jr
, born January 01, 1771 in Virginia; died July 20, 1863 in Bath, Mason Co., Illinois. He was the son of 244.
Isaac Mitchell, Sr and 245.
Elizabeth Hickman. He married 123.
Frances Stribling February 28, 1811 in Russelville, Logan Co, KY.
123.
Frances Stribling
, born March 13, 1793 in Stafford Co., VA; died April 28, 1840 in Morgan Co, IL. She was the daughter of 246.
Thomas Stribling and 247.
Elizabeth Ayers.
Notes for Isaac Mitchell, Jr:
The Easton Enterprise, August 18, 1932 (Easton, IL) "Genealogy of the Samuell Family" by William Lee, husband of Ella Samuell Lee. Revised by Dudley Samuell:
"Uncle Isaac Mitchell and his sister were the ones who accompanied the Samuells from Virginia into Kentucky and thence into Illinois. Uncle Isaac Mitchell was married twice, first to a Stribling, then to Ann Robinson." The above source then lists the children of both marriages.
Moved from Kentucky to Morgan, Illinois in 1828 and to Field's Prairie in 1846
(information thanks to Tim Hopkins - e-mail: hop@biospec.com)
1850 census, IL, Mason Co., p.163a, family #269 Isaac Mitchell 68 (65?) Farmer 2000 VA Ann 57 VA Mary B 36 KY Isaac N 21 Farmer IL Virginia C 18 IL James H 16 IL Marcy M 9 IL Henry H 7 IL 1860 census: IL MASON BATH P O 1860 [30th Aug]
MITCHELL, ISAAC N; age 30, m, w, IL, Merchant
Ann L Mitchell; age 26, f, w, TN
Charles W Mitchell; age 3, m, w, IL
Isaac F Mitchell; age 1/12, m, w, IL
Caroline E Barker; age 12, f, w, IL
Isaac Mitchell; age 81, m, w, VA, Gentleman
Martha M Mitchell; age 17, f, w, IL
Henry H Mitchell; age 17, m, w, IL, Clerk
Timothy Carney; age 40, m, w, MD, Tailor
LIVING NEXT DOOR: (in the home of George W Morrow)
James Mitchell; age 24, m, w, IL, Clerk
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
ID: I2019
Name: Isaac MITCHELL , Jr
Sex: M
Birth: 1 JAN 1771 in , , VA
Death: 20 JUL 1863 in Bath, Mason, IL
Residence: moved from KY to Morgan Co., IL in 1828 and to Field's Prairie in 1846
Residence: 1850 Next to James Robertson's farm. Married one his daughters
Burial: Bath Cemetery in Bath, IL
Note:
The Easton Enterprise, August 18, 1932 (Easton, IL) "Genealogy of the Samuell Family" by William Lee, husband of Ella Samuell Lee. Revised by Dudley Samuell:
"Uncle Isaac Mitchell and his sister were the ones who accompanied the Samuells from Virginia into Kentucky and thence into Illinois. Uncle Isaac Mitchell was married twice, first to a Stribling, then to Ann Robinson." The above source lists the children of both marriages.
Note from TRH: Isaac Mitchell, Jr and his wife may have been in KY several years before his recorded 1815 migration with his sister, his mother (Elizabeth Hickman Mitchell Broaddus) and Andrew Samuell and his wife, Sarah Broaddus. Isaac's marriage to Frances Stribling is reported to be in Logan Co., KY on 1811.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------- --------------------
Note: There are two Isaac Mitchells found in early KY census. Both are listed here but one needs to be weeded out.
1810 census, KY, Shelby Co., p.234 (Ancestry.com image): 20010-10100
Thus, in 1810 Isaac Mitchell was age 26-44 (b. bet 1766-1784), is spouse was age 16-25 (b. bet 1785-1794) and they had a girl and two boys age under 10 (b. bet 1801-1810).
Nearby surnames on this census page are Samuel Mitchell (00010-20010), William Daniel (10201-02101), Nathaniel Daniel (30010-10100), Scott, Sutton, and Harrison.
---------------------------
Another Isaac Mitchell in the same census year, same county and state but on p. 228: 10110-10100
Nearby surnames on this census page are Williams, Saddler, Ransdale, Hamilton, Barnell, Marshall, Downer, Lyle, Cannel and Reeser.
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1820 census, KY, Mercer Co., unk twp, p.109 (Ancestry.com image): 201110-01110-3
Thus, in 1820 Isaac Mitchell and his spouse were age 26-44 (b. bet 1776-1794).
-------------------------
Another Isaac Mitchell in the same census year but in Russelville, Logan Co., KY, p.44 (Ancestry.com image): 300010-10100-1
Thus, this Isaac Mitchell was age 26-44 (b. bet 1776-1794). In his household were a female age 16-25 ( b. bet 1795-1804) and a girl and three boys age under 10 (b. bet 1811-1820).
Nearby surnames on this census page were Smith, Loveland, Price, Rager, Wilson, Clepford, Roberts and Duncan.
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1830 census, KY, Mercer Co., Unk twp 2, p.308 (Ancestry.com image): 0011000100000-0000010000000
Thus, in 1830 Isaac Mitchell was age 50-59 (b. bet 1771-1780). In his household is a female age 30-39 (b. bet 1791-1800), a boy age 20-29 (b. bet 1801-1810) and a boy age 10-14 (b. bet 1816-1820).
Nearby surnames on this census page are Bridges, Lowrey, Micoff, Charles Beazley, Davis, and Slaughter.
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1850 census, IL, Mason Co., p.163a, family #269 (Ancestry.com image)
Isaac Mitchell 68 (65?) Farmer 2000 VA
Ann 57 VA
Mary B 36 KY
Isaac N 21 Farmer IL
Virginia C 18 IL
James H 16 IL
Marcy M 9 IL
Henry H 7 IL
On the next census page is the family of Andrew Samuell. Isaac's second wife, Ann Robertson may have been an older sister of James Robertson (age 45 from KY), the later living next door (same census page, family #268). Ann is the mother of the last two children listed in this census.
Father: Isaac MITCHELL , Sr
Mother: Elizabeth HICKMAN b: BET. 1745 - 1746 in , King and Queen , VA
Marriage 1 Frances STRIBLING b: 13 MAR 1793 in , Stafford, VA
Married: 28 FEB 1811 in Russellville, Logan, KY
Children
Elizabeth MITCHELL b: 18 JUN 1812 in , , KY
Mary Blackman MITCHELL b: 29 SEP 1814 in , , KY
Washington Asbury MITCHELL b: 21 DEC 1816 in , , KY
Thomas Leland MITCHELL b: 26 JUL 1819 in , , KY
Julia Ann MITCHELL b: 30 MAY 1821 in , , KY
Joel Stribling MITCHELL b: 4 OCT 1822 in , , KY
Mahala Ann MITCHELL b: 8 JUL 1825 in , , KY
Sarah Elizabeth MITCHELL b: 2 JAN 1827 in , , KY
Isaac Newton MITCHELL b: 13 FEB 1829 in Little Indian, Morgan, IL
Virginia Caroline MITCHELL b: 23 OCT 1832 in near Jacksonville, Morgan, IL
James Hickman Herndon MITCHELL b: 8 AUG 1836 in , Morgan, IL
Marriage 2 Anne ROBERTSON b: OCT 1798 in , , VA
Married: 10 DEC 1840 in , Morgan, IL
Children
Martha Morton MITCHELL b: 30 OCT 1841
Henry Harrison MITCHELL b: 11 MAR 1843 in , , IL
More About Isaac Mitchell, Jr:
Burial: Bath Cemetery
More About Frances Stribling:
Burial: Stribling family farm, Virginia, Illinois.
Children of Isaac Mitchell and Frances Stribling are:
i.
Elizabeth Mitchell, born June 20, 1812 in VA; died March 18, 1815 in VA.
ii.
Mary Blackman Mitchell, born September 29, 1814 in Logan County, KY; died March 09, 1875 in Illinois.
More About Mary Blackman Mitchell:
Burial: Bath, Illinois
Census: 1850, Listed in Mason Co., IL
iii.
Washington Asbury Mitchell, born December 21, 1816 in Logan County, KY; died February 20, 1905 in Ashland, Illinois; married
Rebecca W. Crow October 10, 1840; born 1821; died 1901 in Ashland, Illinois.
iv.
Thomas Leland Mitchell, born July 26, 1819.
v.
Julia Anne Mitchell, born May 30, 1821 in Logan County, KY; died September 26, 1821.
vi.
Joel Stribling Mitchell, born October 04, 1822; died January 22, 1860; married
Catherine Masterson September 03, 1845 in Menard.
More About Joel Stribling Mitchell:
Burial: Bath, Illinois
61 vii.
Mahala Ann Frances Mitchell, born January 08, 1825 in Logan Co, Kentucky; died October 28, 1886 in Bath, Illinois; married (1)
John Edward Nix June 11, 1846 in Mason County, Illlinois; married (2)
John Boring August 24, 1856 in Mason Co., IL; married (3)
John Leland Carpenter August 08, 1863.
viii.
Sarah Elizabeth Mitchell, born June 03, 1827 in Logan County, KY; died January 18, 1863 in Bath, Illinois; married
John Leland Carpenter February 06, 1845 in Cass County, Illinois; born March 28, 1812; died January 06, 1899.
ix.
Isaac Newton Mitchell, born February 13, 1829 in Little Indian, Morgan Co., IL; died October 21, 1898 in Mason Co., IL; married
Anna Louise Campbell March 18, 1856 in Havana, Mason Co., IL; born Bet. 1829 - 1836.
Notes for Isaac Newton Mitchell:
From Harvy L Bottoms, <harvyBottoms@CompuServe.com>, rec'd Jul 2001:
It appears that Isaac may have been a middle name. His marriage records, as well as the 1880 census, show a first initial of "S".
x.
Virginia Caroline Mitchell, born October 22, 1832 in Near Jacksonville, Morgan Co., IL; died March 04, 1874; married
William L. Beasley December 25, 1852 in Havana, Mason Co., IL; born May 16, 1829; died September 04, 1884.
More About William L. Beasley:
Residence: Havana, Illinois
xi.
James Hickman Herndon Mitchell, born August 08, 1836 in Morgan Co, IL; died September 28, 1901 in Havana, Illinois; married (1)
Elizabeth F. Fields January 14, 1864 in Mason County, Illlinois; born 1841; died March 22, 1865; married (2)
Sarah Felicia Vaughan October 07, 1873 in Havana, Mason Co., IL; born September 30, 1851; died August 28, 1890.
More About James Hickman Herndon Mitchell:
Burial: Bath Cemetery
Military service: Enlisted 4-25-1861, Discharged 6-16-1864, !st Lieutenant Co. K. 17th Regular Illinois Volunteers.
124.
Steven McGehee
, born in Wales. He married 125.
Olive McCrackin.
125.
Olive McCrackin
Child of Steven McGehee and Olive McCrackin is:
62 i.
Harvey McGehee, born 1814 in Illinois; married
Harriett Levica Brant.
Notes for Elizabeth Ayers:
Elizabeth Ayers Stribling emigrated to Morgan Co, Illinois in the Fall of 1827 with her son Benjamin and his family. In 1830 they moved to Cass Co, Illinois near (N. West of) the town of Virginia. She is buried in the Stribling family graveyard on the farm owned by her son Benjamin at the time of her death. Eventually all of her other living children, Milly Martin Stribling Horn, Frances Stribling Mitchell, and William Cohely (Colclough) Stribling became residents of central Illinois. Joel died in Logan Co, KY 4-22-1826.
More About Elizabeth Ayers:
Burial: Stribling family cemetery on the Stribling farm, near Virginia, in Cass County, Illinois
Residence: 1827, Morgan Co., IL
Children of Thomas Stribling and Elizabeth Ayers are:
i.
Milly Martin Stribling, born October 19, 1791 in Stafford Co., VA; died June 08, 1860 in Peru, NE; married
Reddick Horn February 02, 1811; born January 06, 1791 in Charlestown District, Dorchester Co, St. Georges Parish, SC; died January 08, 1860 in Peru, NE.
Notes for Reddick Horn:
Scots-Irish in Virginia, Vol. 1
Viewing records 10,774-10,793 of 11,389 total records
Original court records and documents of Augusta County, VA More information below
Jacksonville, Ill., 7th January, 1833. Letter by Nancy W. Horn, recommending Rev. Reddick Horn, whose daughter, Susan, married Abram N. Mills, who has another wife in Virginia.
Name: Reddick Horn
Nature of Claim: Compensation for services as chaplain in Black Hawk war
Congress: 25
Session: 2
Manner Brought: Documents
Journal Page: 87
Referred to Committee: Claims
More About Reddick Horn:
Residence: 1820, Russellville, Logan, KY
123 ii.
Frances Stribling, born March 13, 1793 in Stafford Co., VA; died April 28, 1840 in Morgan Co, IL; married
Isaac Mitchell, Jr February 28, 1811 in Russelville, Logan Co, KY.
iii.
William Cohely Stribling, born March 18, 1795 in Stafford Co., VA; died December 18, 1872 in Jacksonville, IL; married
Mahala Becraft; born September 27, 1804; died November 20, 1891 in Jacksonville, IL.
Notes for William Cohely Stribling:
Became a Methodist Minister. Lived near Salem Church 3 mi East of Jacksonville. It was one of the earliest religeous societies formed in the county. It was noted for the residence of a remarkably gifted and singular minister, Rev. William Stribling". Illinois Historical Journal Vo. 4 p. 310 says "Among early preachers in Illinois were some noted for various eccentricities, William C. Stribling was an illustration of this. He was a very able and eloquent preacher. His command of language was most extraordinary. He asministered the following reproof to a user of tobacco: "venerable sir, the doleterious effluvia eminating from your tobacconistic reservoir so overshadows our occular optics and so obfuscates our sensorium that our respirable apparatus must shortly be obtunded unless, through your abundant suavity and pre-eminent politeness, you will disimbogue that illusinistic tube from the stimulating and stermatatory ingredient, which replenishes the rotundity of the vastness of its concavity."
More About William Cohely Stribling:
Religion: Methodist Minister
Residence: 1803, Logan County, KY
iv.
Benjamin Stribling, born February 11, 1797 in Stafford Co., VA; died June 25, 1881 in Virginia, Illinois; married (1)
Nancy Washburn December 10, 1818 in Russelville, Logan Co, KY; died September 12, 1845; married (2)
Lucy Ann Rew March 26, 1846 in Rev Reddick Horn conducted the ceremony; born 1804 in New York.
Notes for Benjamin Stribling:
Born about 8 o'clock in the morning in Stafford Co., Va. Went to live 7 miles from Russellville, Logan, Co., Ky in 1803. Left there in the fall of 1827 for Morgan County, IL. Lived there untill 1830 when he moved to Cass, County, IL NW of Virginia, IL. Died there 6-25-1881 (Death certificate at Co. courthouse. 1880 on tombstone.)
m. (1st) Nancy Washburn b.___ d. 9-12-184(5)? Broken off tombstone in Stribling family graveyard in home farm NW of Virginia.
m (2nd) Lucy Ann Rew. Rev. Reddick Horn, husband of Milly Martin Stribling conducted the ceremony. Res. in Virginia and Beardstown, IL.
More About Benjamin Stribling:
Immigration: 1803, Moved to Kentucky
More About Nancy Washburn:
Burial: Stribling family graveyard NW of Virginia, Illinois
Generations [1-5]
[6] [8]
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