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Genealogy of the Gann, Donaldson, Laubacher, McDowell and related families
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3801 Some researchers give middle name "Emma."
Some researchers give surname "Johnston" or "Johnstone." 
Johnson, Lucinda E (I2224)
 
3802 Some researchers give middle name "Louise", others "Elizabeth" Miller, Rachel E (I193)
 
3803 Some researchers give Salem MA as the location but Salem town records do not record it Family F1630
 
3804 Some researchers give surname as "Baker" Elizabeth (I4303)
 
3805 Some researchers have "Lewis" as the middle name Nichols, Turner L (I1879)
 
3806 Some researchers have a birth place of Barren Co., Kentucky Bybee, Mary Ann (I1165)
 
3807 Some researchers have a last name of Woodson. Woodson is later a family name among her descendants Elizabeth (I138)
 
3808 Some researchers have a marriage date of 4 Nov 1914 (but no sources cited) Family F028
 
3809 Some researchers have a middle name "Henry" McDowell, Robert (I2760)
 
3810 Some researchers have given names "Lemuel Taylor" Hensley, Lemuel Thomas (I3219)
 
3811 Some researchers have her middle name as "Louisa" Miller, Rachel E (I193)
 
3812 Some researchers have her surname as "Gann" with her being the daughter of George Washington Gann (1853-1914) and Sarah L "Sally" Ponder (1859-1945). Her marriage record with William J Gann directly contradicts this, saying it was her first marriage and giving her maiden name as "Clark." Clark, Mollie (I795)
 
3813 Some researchers indicate that he was born in White county, Tennessee Gann, Thomas Jefferson (I016)
 
3814 Some researchers make her a daughter of Levi Watson (b. 1795 in Rutherford Co., NC; d. 09 Feb 1862 in Maxville, Lawrence, AR) and his wife Nancy Jane Owens (b. 1795 in Rutherford Co., NC; d. Nov 1885 in Sharp Co., AR); however, Levi Watson's will mentions daughter Elizabeth Beason rather than Elizabeth Smart. Watson, Elizabeth (I0916)
 
3815 Some researchers make her middle name "Sanovah" but do not cite a source. Gann, Mary Savannah (I212)
 
3816 Some researchers make him the son of William Richardson, Sr. of Wilkes Co., Georgia but do not cite sources. Richardson, John Wiley (I3267)
 
3817 Some researchers make the last name "Kerbo" without offering proof Phaeda (I3314)
 
3818 Some researchers make the last name Moore, but cite no sources Ann (I3456)
 
3819 Some researchers make the middle name "Erwin" Smith, James Ervin (I213)
 
3820 Some researchers make the middle names Louis Peter Lab, John L Peter (I2506)
 
3821 Some researchers make the name Hazen Henry, Henry or Henry Hazen Wardlow, Hazen (I1013)
 
3822 Some researchers say 1857 not 1851 Wardlaw, Janet (I1056)
 
3823 Some researchers say he was born in Augusta Co., Virginia Calvin, Joseph (I1063)
 
3824 Some researchers say he was christened in 1589 in Crewkerne, England Bursley, Captain John (I2040)
 
3825 Some researchers show a birth place of Blount Co., Tennessee. We have seen no solid evidence either way and show the most commonly given county Logan, Robert McKinley (I397)
 
3826 Some researchers show her as the daughter of Nathaniel Miller (b 1777 in Spartanburg Co., SC) and Margaret Newton Miller, Rachel E (I193)
 
3827 Some researchers show her death in 1900 in Auborn, Namaha, Nebraska Sarah E (I3068)
 
3828 Some researchers show her full name as "Sarah Ellen Mann" Sarah E (I3068)
 
3829 Some researchers show her last name as "Horning" Catherine (I2878)
 
3830 Some researchers show his ancestry from New England (Stamford, Connecticut by way of Watertown, Massachusetts) through Long Island, New York; the connection to South Carolina is not established by these researchers, nor are there definite records of this person; that said, the "children" shown here are definitely all siblings of one another Jaggers, Jeremiah (I587)
 
3831 Some researchers show his middle name as "Booher" or variants Miller, Michael B (I2879)
 
3832 Some sources and researchers have her given name as "Nancy" York, Mary (I0911)
 
3833 Some sources give "Fifield" as the surname; this may be a transcription error as capital 'F' was often written to appear as 'Ff' in older English scripts Field, Elizabeth (I4231)
 
3834 Some sources give 1872 as the year; we have chosen the year given in an 1881 affidavit by his aunts, Hannah C (Gann) Bozeman and Frances I (Gann) Shaw; they witnessed his birth. Gann, James Franklin (I188)
 
3835 Some sources give a middle initial "I"; one source gives a first name "Mary" Clark, Mollie (I795)
 
3836 Some sources give Alabama as the birth place Buckelew, Thomas Jefferson (I2225)
 
3837 Some sources give Ardmore, Carter, Oklahoma, but the Richard F Donaldson family lived in Cleveland County in 1919 (Oklahoma school census) and Pansy's delayed birth certificate gives Cleveland County as the birth place. Donaldson, Pansy Geneva (I1003)
 
3838 Some sources give Roxanna, some Roxie Ann, and some Roxie Anna Wardlow, Roxie Anna (I0900)
 
3839 Some sources give the middle name "Pleasant" Lyle, John P (I3294)
 
3840 Some sources give the middle name as "Mae" Donaldson, Jessie May (I1001)
 
3841 Some sources give the same date but year 1819; the probate record is clear that he lived into 1821 Hunt, Lieutenant Richard (I1978)
 
3842 Some sources profess more surety of the surname than others; no primary source yet found Hammond, Ann (I4117)
 
3843 Some sources put the birthplace in Fairford, Gloucestershire, roughly 15 miles from Rodborough Bliss, Thomas (I1212)
 
3844 Some sources render the surname as "zur Horst"; "von der Horst" is more common. von der Horst, Anna Maria Adelheid Judith (I4636)
 
3845 Some sources say William "Buck" Hester was born in Ceder Creek, Franklin County, North Carolina. He left North Carolina in the Spring of 1818 for north Alabama. He was accompanied by his oldest son, Roling. That spring they cleared several acres of land in Franklin County near Gaines Trace at Tharp Springs and planted a corn crop. In the fall they returned to North Carolina to bring Amy and the rest of the children to Alabama in an ox cart. Two of Amy's brothers, Pumpfrey Malone and James Malone, also made the trip and settled in Alabama at the same time. The 1830 census of Franklin County, Alabama shows a Wm Hester, P(umpfrey) Malone, James Malone and R(oling) Hester all on the same page, p. 41.

In his book Forefathers of Franklin County, p. 76, Ritchie Hester recounts that a short while later Buck moved his family to Tollison Creek to be in a less populated area and to be near Amy's brothers. According to Ritchie Hester, Buck had a reputation as a great bear hunter and the Tollison Creek area offered bountiful fishing and game.

Buck made his living as a farmer.

According to Johnny Hester in his book Facts and Fables of Franklin County pgs. 31-32, there are two theories regarding where Buck Hester may be buried. Some people believe that he is buried in the Malone Cemetery which is the final resting place of his son, Roling. There is an unmarked grave next to Lucendy, Roling Hester's wife. Some people believe that this is Buck's grave.

The second theory is that Buck is buried in an unnamed cemetery about 2 1/2 miles from Frankfort. The cemetery has ten unmarked graves. Less than a quarter of a mile from Buck's last homeplace, this is a possibility because it was customary at that time for people to buried near their homes. Some people believe that this may be the burial site for both Buck and Amy.

Additional sources for the information on this generation are:

My Malones by Darse Malone Fant.
Records and information from Freddie Mae Malone.
Records and information from Evelyn Evans.
Olden Times Book, Volume I, sections on the Greenhill Family Cemetery. 
Hester, William H (I034)
 
3846 Some years after his marriage Thomas moved to Lexington (Mass.) where he took up land and became one of the town's most active and prominent citizens, and the ancestor of the greater part of the Lexington Blodgetts. He was assesses in Woburn from 1684 to 1689, and first assessed in Lexington in 1691. "Captain Blodgett" as he was familiarly called was a subscriber to the "Meetinghouse"; he gave 1 pound, 6 shillings towards the first Meetinghouse, and 5 shillings towards the purchase of Lexington Common, at a meeting held April 1711. At another meeting held June 9, 1713. It was voted to build a new church on the plan of the one at Concord, and Thomas Blodgett and two others were appointed to carry out the measure, (Hudson's History of Lexington) Thomas and his wife were admitted to the Church March 5, 1699, by letters of dismissal from the Church in Woburn. At the first town meeting in Lexington, Thomas Blodgett was chosen Tythingman, an office of great importance and dignity at that time. He was made an assessor in 1704, chosen Selectman in 1714, many times re-elected, and in short filled nearly every place of honor and trust in the town. The will of Thomas Blodgett was filed in Probate Court, November 24, 1740, and recorded with Middlesex Wills, Book 22, p.341; it mentions wife Rebecca, sons Thomas and Joseph, who had 20 pounds extra, son Samuel and daughter Rebecca, who had 10 pounds extra. Blogget, Thomas (I2265)
 
3847 Somerset County was established in Sept 1795, by an act of Assembly and the town of Somerset became the county seat. Abraham Miller operated a tannery there in 1800, and in the 1800 census he is age 26-45 with 5 males and 5 females in his home; this is the only Miller family in Someerset in 1800. (Since Peter was born 25 Dec 1795, no doubt he was the first child born in Somerset.) He (Abraham) was elected Sheriff in October 1804, was the 4th sheriff, and served from 1805 until 1808.

On 25 Jan 1807, David Pollock was murdered near Buckstown in Somerset County, presumably by a roving Frenchman (Neal Hugous) along the Forbes Road. On 5 Feb 1807 the defendent was found guilty by the jury and sentenced by the court to be hanged. This was during Sheriff Miller's term of office and is the only occasion of record where Sheriff Miller was involved in an execution of his neighbor. The rope broke the first time, but the second time did the trick.

According to a History of Bedford and Somerset Counties, Abraham Miller was awarded the contract for the building of a permanent jail. The contract for $2,329 was awarded on 7 Oct 1802. Sundry changes during construction brought the final cost up to $2,600.50. The jail had a front 28x35 feet, was of stone, two stories high and stood at the SE corner of the court house square, next to Court Alley. In the rear of the jail was a yard enclosed by a substantial stone wall from 12-15 feet in height. This building continued in use for the purposes for which it had been built until 1856, at which time it gave way to a more modern building. It is said that Abraham Miller Jr. was a wealthy man who rolled his kegs of money across the floor. Abraham, in performing his duty in the hanging caused him to lose his mind and he squandered his money. Abraham's sisters were very vain and helped spend the kale (money) 
Miller, Abraham (I2889)
 
3848 Sometimes "Stephen Wood" Atwood, Stephen (I3829)
 
3849 Sometimes appears as Johan Bernard Burlage; surname is sometimes given as "Sube," his wife's surname. Burlage, Bernard (I4659)
 
3850 Sometimes known as Achsah Blodget, Azubah (I4203)
 

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