Brink-Day-Johnston-Fletcher
Simmons-Garland-Anderson-Rugg
Person Page 43
Main Page - Master Index - Surname Index
Previous Page - Next Page
| Elizabeth Lewis1 (F) Pedigree | ||
| Father-Bio* | Charles Lewis | |
| Mother-Bio* | c 1758 | Mary Anderson |
| Immigrant | N | |
| Last Edited | 7 Mar 2001 | |
| ||
Sarah C. Lewis1 (F) Pedigree | ||
| Father-Bio* | Charles Lewis | |
| Mother-Bio* | c 1758 | Mary Anderson |
| Immigrant | N | |
| Last Edited | 7 Mar 2001 | |
| ||
Lucy A. Lewis1 (F) Pedigree | ||
| Father-Bio* | Charles Lewis | |
| Mother-Bio* | c 1758 | Mary Anderson |
| Immigrant | N | |
| Last Edited | 7 Mar 2001 | |
| ||
Henrietta M. A. Lewis1 (F) Pedigree | ||
| Father-Bio* | Charles Lewis | |
| Mother-Bio* | c 1758 | Mary Anderson |
| Immigrant | N | |
| Last Edited | 7 Mar 2001 | |
| ||
Samuel Venable1 (M) | ||
| Marriage* | 05 Mar 1782 | Anne Anderson; Mecklenburg County, Virginia, USA1 |
| Immigrant | N | |
| Last Edited | 31 Mar 2001 | |
| ||
Philamon Holcombe1 (M) | ||
| Note* | [Anderson,Richard.FTW] [Anderson.FTW] Subj: Beverly Anderson Date: 95-12-21 22:12:42 EST From: WarwickA To: PatAnder73 Patrick, Thank you very much for the information on Thomas and Sarah Anderson. I could not get the WordPerfect file to open very well, with a lot of gibberish coming through on my Windows Notepad program, which was all that I had that would open it. I have Microsoft Word and also Family Tree Maker which seems to be able to open GEDCOM files. If you could send the GEDCOM file, I would be grateful. I am amazed by how much information you have on the Andersons. I will try to add a little as best I can. I have four sources making reference to Lucy Maria Anderson Holcombe and her father Thomas Anderson. Two make reference to Beverly Anderson, although I believe my great-great grandfather, William Henry Holcombe, got Beverly and Thomas confused. I thought you might like to see the information on Lucy and Phil Holcombe, who were fairly colorful characters. The most recent reference I have is 'The Holcombes, Nation Builders.' by Hannah Elizabeth Weir McPherson, privately printed 1947, over 1,300 page and well written. On page 736 is the following: 'Major Philemon Holcombe, III met in 1784 and married Dec. 13, 1784, Lucy Maria 'Frances' ANDERSON, b. Mecklenburg Co., Va. 1765, d. 183_ in Fayette Co., Tenn., dau. of Thomas 'gentleman' of Mecklenburg Co., Va. and wife Sarah CLARK, who was dau. of Capt. James CLARK, of the English Navy, and wife, Henrietta Maria HARDEMAN, b. Paris, France about 1730, dau. of John HARDEMAN and wife, Henrietta Maria Taylor, son of Baron Von HARDEMAN, a Russian officer of State, had an estate on James River in Charles City Co., Va..' 'Henrietta Maria Taylor was the daughter of John of Flowendraj, said to have been maid of honor at the Court of Austria and of the royal House of Hapsburg, and related to Marie Antoinette, Queen of France.' 'Thomas ANDERSON was son of Beverley and Henrietta Elizabeth CLARK.' (Spelling is exactly as written) 'There was organized in Washington, D.C. a chapter of the Daughters of the American Revolution, which was named the 'Lucy Holcombe Chapter' in honor of Lucy Maria ANDERSON, wife of Maj. Philemon Holcombe.' A second reference is 'Lucy Holcombe of Virginia, A Sketch Prepared for the Lucy Holcombe Chapter, D.A.R.', by John Walker Holcombe, dated Nov. 21, 1916, in the 'City of Washington'. Not all of it will fit but here are the highlights: 'LUCY HOLCOMBE was a maid and matron of our Revolutionary period, a type of the patriotic women of that time who lived amid scenes of the marching and maneuvering of opposing armies. She was born in Mecklenburg County, Virginia, about 1765, daughter of Thomas Anderson ('Gentleman' in the old records) and was named Lucy Maria, deriving the second name from a great-grandmother, Henrietta Maria, formerly a maid of honor at the Court of Austria and related by blood to the imperial family, who with her husband, Baron Hardeman, had migrated to Virginia and settled in Charles City County.' 'Lucy Maria probably made the acquaintance of her future husband during the passage of General Greene's forces through her neighborhood on the way to and returning from the Battle of Guilford Court House, North Carolina, fought March 15, 1781. This was the young Philemon Holcombe, Jr., who was already a Major in the second regiment of General Lawson's brigade, though not yet nineteen years of age, and in the important battle mentioned was attached to the cavalry command of Col. William Washington. Later he served under Baron Von Steuben and was with LaFayette (as an aide-de-camp) at Yorktown, witnessing the surrender of Lord Cornwallis. He was commissioned Lieutenant Colonel in the War of 1812, but had already long been known as Colonel Holcombe of Virginia. His own narrative of his military career is preserved in the files of the Pension Office at Washington (Survivor's File No. 4399). (Here follows accounts of other Holcombes in the Rev. War.) 'Philemon and Lucy were married in the last year of the War and made their home in the former's native county of Prince Edward till 1790, when they removed to their estate called 'The Oaks' in Amelia County. There Mrs. Holcombe lived the laborious life of the mistress of a large plantation. She was a woman of great force of character, which she exercised in bringing up and training a family of ten children, all but two of whom lived to mature years (an unusual proportion in those days), and in the management of her many servants. Her house-keeping was of the old-fashioned lavish kind and her hospitalities famous, the Holcombe house being a gathering place for her husband's companions in arms and all Revolutionary veterans. It is said the Colonel's large and easy benevolence was often imposed upon by unworthy pretenders. Mrs. Holcombe took some share in her husband's farming operations, being reputed indeed the better manager of the two, and was no doubt interested in their fine horses, one of which, called 'Topgallant' was celebrated on the race tracks of eastern Virginia. 'Finally, their fortunes being much reduced by liberal living and the unscientific farming of that period, which exhausted the soil with successive crops of tobacco, the old couple, with the courage of youth, removed, along with their youngest son, two daughters and their husbands, to the rich cotton lands of Western Tennessee, and settled in Fayette County in 1829, where after a few years they died. More than seventy years afterward an aged granddaughter said, 'I perfectly remember my grandmother, Lucy Anderson Holcombe. She was a pretty old lady, of medium size with iron-gray hair, and used to be seen with her key basket on her arm, her hands generally slipped in the pockets of her skirt, everywhere directing the work of the servants. She petted especially her little namesake, my sister Lucy, saying, 'There never was a sweeter child.' ' One of her daughters-in-law wrote that she was in many respects the finest woman she ever knew.' There follows brief biographies of their children, Thomas Anderson Holcombe, Philemon H.W. Holcombe, William James Holcombe (my ancestor), Beverly LaFayette Holcombe, Sarah Taylor Holcombe (Ambler), and Martha Maria Holcombe (Robertson). 'In some respects the most interesting of this Revolutionary dame's descendants was her granddaughter and namesake, Lucy Holcombe, daughter of Beverly, born in Tennessee in 1832, who became the wife of Colonel Francis Pickens, a Senator from South Carolina and Minister of the United States to Russia. Noted for beauty and cleverness, she received marked attentions at the Imperial Court of St. Petersburg. The Czar and Czarina presented several magnificent diamond pieces to her infant daughter born at St. Petersburg, who was christened Eugenia, but was known through life by the Russian pet name 'Douschka'. Colonel Pickens was elected Governor of his state at the breaking out of the (Civil) War, and his wofe became known as 'Lady Lucy' to the Chivalry of the South. Her vignette adorns a certain hundred dollar bill (and a one dollar bill) of the Confederacy. After the War she was for many years a Regent of Mount Vernon, till her death in 1899.' I think that this is enough for one letter. I will write you soon about another Holcombe history-genealogy book, and about my great-greatgrandfather's diaries. Sincerely, Warwick ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ Subj: Re: Beverly and Thomas Anderson of Mecklenburg Date: 98-12-20 01:09:57 EST From: WarwickA To: PatAnder73, PEwald, bryan@@smartlink.net Dear Patrick, I am still amazed by your depth of knowledge of the Andersons of Virginia. I think you have presented a convincing picture of my Thomas Anderson ancestor and appreciate you sending it on. For accuracy of your information, I do not own the diary of my great-great grandfather William Henry Holcombe, MD (b. May 29, 1825, d. Nov. 29, 1893). The diary is a permanent part of the Southern Historical Collection, Manuscript # 1113, CB #3926, Wilson Library, The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC 27599-3926. A typed copy of the nearly 250 pages can be obtained on request. Your letter led me to reread some of the diary, particularly the autobiography part written in 1892, and it was so enjoyable to read I thought I would share some of it with you. 'At the first roll of the revolutionary drum in 1775, the sons of the soldiers of Culloden rushed into the rebel army. My grandfather, Philemon Holcombe, about 18 years of age at that time, ran away from Hampton Sidney College, without the knowledge or consent of parents or faculty and enlisted for the war. He served the whole eight years of that momentous struggle without wavering a moment in his fidelity to the cause. He shared all its hardships and anxieties, its defeats and its triumphs. 'He was with Gates and Greene in their Carolina campaigns. He fought at Guilford Courthouse side by side with Capt. Thomas Watts whose grand-daughter was married to one of his grandsons 60 years afterward. He was in Gen. Harry Lee's Light Horse at Brandywine and Germantown. He rose from the ranks to the position of Major and was promoted to a Colonelcy after serving as aid-de-camp to Gen. Lafayette at the siege of Yorktown. He was present when the noble Frenchman scornfully refused to open or even receive a special letter addressed to him by the traitor Benedict Arnold, and he saw Lord Cornwallis surrender his sword, an event which virtually closed the struggle. 'He used to tell how Lafayette once tried to utilize the turkey buzzard as an article of food, when the comissary department was reduced to desperation - 'I had no absurd antipathy to the American Turkey,'he said. 'I put him fairly on his merits - I roasted him, I baked him, I stewed him, I fried him, but confidentially - he is no good!' 'When Lafayette re-visited America in 1824 and was honored with ovations, such as only Washington could have received, throughout the length and breadth of the land, my grandfather, then 67 years of age, left his quiet farm and took his eldest daughter Mrs. Sarah Ambler and his youngest son, then quite a lad, to call upon him at Richmond. They were cordially received by the illustrious visitor; the young Beverly Lafayette Holcombe was duly presented, and General Lafayette complimented this party by gracefully leading out Mrs. Ambler for the first dance at the grand ball given in his honor. My grandfather was so delighted with his old compatriot in arms, that he followed him all the way to New York, no easy matter in those days of slow and difficult travel, and waved his last adieus to him as the vessel which bore the nation's guest back to France drifted away from the Battery. When the war was over Col. Holcombe devoted himself successfully to agricultural pursuits, and was particularly interested in the rearing and improvement of blooded stock. His fine horses were raced upon many a race track in eastern Virginia, such being the fashion among the first gentlemen of that day. Although horse-racing, card-playing and brandy drinking were the habits, we would now say the vice of the best society of the period. My grandfather never committed excesses of any kind. No persuasions could induce him, to the day of his death at the age of 77 to deviate from his old army custom of taking three small glasses of 'grog' every day, one just before each meal. One fine day somewhere in the eighties of the last century young Col. Philemon Holcombe mounted his finest charger and rode away to a neighboring county, intending to pay his addresses to a certain young lady with whom he had formed a very pleasant acquaintance. There he met another young lady visiting the one he went especially to see, who proved more fascinating than her hostess and carried off the prize - thus unknowingly constituting herself my grandmother. This lady, Lucy Maria Anderson, was the medium through whom the royal blood of the House of Hapsburg is said to flow in our veins. Somewhere in the first third of the last century a distinguished couple exiled from Austria located at Charles City, Va., Baron Hardimann and his beautiful and accomplished wife, Henriette Marie, a niece of Maria Theresa, Empress of Austria and cousin of the ill-fated Marie Antoinette of France. The Baron had been involved in some revolutionary attempt, and the punishment of death was commuted to banishment to America for life. 'A daughter of this couple named after her mother but anglicized to Henrietta Maria married a Capt. Clarke of the British Navy. A daughter of these parties named Henrietta Elizabeth, was married to Beverly Anderson, whose name stands upon the old records as 'gentleman and landholder.' Their daughter, Lucy Maria, became the bride of my grandfather. The portrait of Henriette Marie Hardimann, a fully detailed account of the family descent in all its branches written by my aunt, Mrs. Sarah Ambler, and many valuable letters and documents were destroyed by fire at the burning of Columbia. They were in the possession of Mrs. Lucy Holcombe Pickens the wife of the Governor of South Carolina at that time and a grand-daughter of Philemon and Lucy Maria Holcombe. 'My grandmother Holcombe was a lady of fine physique and strongly marked character. She was a grand old-fashioned Virginia housekeeper and that means a great deal to those acquainted with the social customs and immense hospitalities of that period. She was a superb manager of her servants, and we may add, sotto voce, of her husband. She was such a srict disciplinarian that she is said to have horse-whipped one of her sons for some act of disobedience, when he was eighteen years of age. It is through her side of the house that the Rev. Dr. Samuel Anderson of St. Louis was our cousin. He was breakfasting with me in New Orleans when we received the terrible news of President Lincoln's assassination, and we agreed in the opinion that it would prove a great calamity to the Southern people. Grand-nephews of my grandmother were also Col. Beverly Jones (the Beverly from his grandfather Beverly Anderson) who was killed in command of an Alabama regiment, and his brother James Alfred Jones of Richmond, one of the most distinguished lawyers in Virginia. My grandfather was independent and his wife was rich, so they lived in convivial, hospitable style. When one fortune was frittered away, Mrs. Holcombe received another by the will of a bachelor brother. The old colonel was exceedingly popular and highly respected. Some warm friends once wished to have him nominated for Congress, but he declined the proposed honor, saying that he had always been regarded by his friends and neighbors as an honorable, respectable man, but if he entered the political arena, it would soon be discovered that he was one of the greatest rascals in the state, a satire upon the bitter political spirit which prevailed in what we call 'the good old times.' Hope you enjoyed this! Sincerely, Warwick Aiken | |
| Marriage* | 13 Dec 1784 | Lucy Maria Anderson; Mecklenburg County, Virginia, USA1 |
| Immigrant | N | |
| Last Edited | 1 Apr 2001 | |
| CoParent | Lucy Maria Anderson | |
| Son-Bio* | 18 Aug 1785 | Thomas Anderson Holcombe |
| Son-Bio* | 1788 | Philemon William Henry Holcombe |
| Dau-Bio* | 1789 | Elizabeth Anna Holcombe |
| Dau-Bio* | 1791 | Sarah Taylor Holcombe |
| Dau-Bio* | 1793 | Frances A. Holcombe |
| Son-Bio* | 01 Mar 1798 | William James Holcombe |
| Dau-Bio* | 1800 | Lucy Ann Holcombe |
| Dau-Bio* | 27 Aug 1801 | Martha Maria Holcombe |
| Dau-Bio* | 1803 | Amanda Melvin Fizallen Holcombe |
| Son-Bio* | 03 May 1806 | Beverly LaFayette Holcombe |
| ||
James Field1 (M) b. c 1768, d. c 1800 | ||
| Birth* | c 1768 | 1 |
| Marriage* | 17 Feb 1789 | Henrietta Maria Anderson1 |
| Death* | c 1800 | 1 |
| Immigrant | N | |
| Last Edited | 31 Mar 2001 | |
| CoParent | Henrietta Maria Anderson | |
| Son-Bio* | Thomas Anderson Field | |
| Son-Bio* | Harrington Leander Field | |
| Dau-Bio* | 1792 | Mary Field |
| Son-Bio* | 10 Jul 1796 | William Hume Field |
| ||
William Hume Field1 (M) b. 10 Jul 1796 Pedigree | ||
| Father-Bio* | c 1768 | James Field |
| Mother-Bio* | c 1769 | Henrietta Maria Anderson |
| Birth* | 10 Jul 1796 | 1 |
| Marriage* | 1821 | Mary A. Flournay; Tennessee1 |
| Immigrant | N | |
| Last Edited | 7 Mar 2001 | |
| ||
Candis High1 (F) | ||
| Marriage* | c 1803 | Joseph Taylor1 |
| Immigrant | N | |
| Last Edited | 1 Apr 2001 | |
| CoParent | Joseph Taylor | |
| Son-Bio* | Howell Lewis Taylor+ | |
| ||
Howell Lewis Taylor1 (M) Pedigree | ||
| Father-Bio* | 14 Aug 1773 | Joseph Taylor |
| Mother-Bio* | Candis High | |
| Immigrant | N | |
| Last Edited | 7 Mar 2001 | |
| CoParent | Agnes K. Gurley | |
| Son-Bio* | Joseph W. Taylor | |
| ||
Annie Lewis1 (F) Pedigree | ||
| Father-Bio* | Thomas B. Lewis | |
| Mother-Bio* | Elizabeth Cobb | |
| Immigrant | N | |
| Last Edited | 7 Mar 2001 | |
| ||
Howell Lewis1 (M) Pedigree | ||
| Father-Bio* | Thomas B. Lewis | |
| Mother-Bio* | Elizabeth Cobb | |
| Immigrant | N | |
| Last Edited | 7 Mar 2001 | |
| ||
Mildred Lewis1 (F) Pedigree | ||
| Father-Bio* | Thomas B. Lewis | |
| Mother-Bio* | Elizabeth Cobb | |
| Immigrant | N | |
| Last Edited | 7 Mar 2001 | |
| ||
Willis Lewis1 (M) Pedigree | ||
| Father-Bio* | Thomas B. Lewis | |
| Mother-Bio* | Elizabeth Cobb | |
| Immigrant | N | |
| Last Edited | 7 Mar 2001 | |
| CoParent | Rosa Chrichton | |
| Son-Bio* | Thomas Lewis | |
| Dau-Bio* | Mildred Cobb Lewis+ | |
| Son-Bio* | Willis Lewis+ | |
| Son-Bio* | Leonidas Lewis+ | |
| Son-Bio* | Walter Henry Lewis+ | |
| Dau-Bio* | Mattie Lewis+ | |
| Dau-Bio* | Frances Elizabeth Lewis | |
| Son-Bio* | Charles Archibald Lewis+ | |
| Dau-Bio* | Margaret Eloise Lewis+ | |
| ||
Lucy Lewis1 (F) Pedigree | ||
| Father-Bio* | Thomas B. Lewis | |
| Mother-Bio* | Elizabeth Cobb | |
| Immigrant | N | |
| Last Edited | 7 Mar 2001 | |
| ||
Charles Lewis1 (M) Pedigree | ||
| Father-Bio* | Thomas B. Lewis | |
| Mother-Bio* | Elizabeth Cobb | |
| Immigrant | N | |
| Last Edited | 7 Mar 2001 | |
| ||
Agnes K. Gurley1 (F) | ||
| Immigrant | N | |
| Last Edited | 31 Mar 2001 | |
| CoParent | Howell Lewis Taylor | |
| Son-Bio* | Joseph W. Taylor | |
| ||
Joseph W. Taylor1 (M) Pedigree | ||
| Father-Bio* | Howell Lewis Taylor | |
| Mother-Bio* | Agnes K. Gurley | |
| Immigrant | N | |
| Last Edited | 7 Mar 2001 | |
| ||
Rosa Chrichton1 (F) | ||
| Immigrant | N | |
| Last Edited | 31 Mar 2001 | |
| CoParent | Willis Lewis | |
| Son-Bio* | Thomas Lewis | |
| Dau-Bio* | Mildred Cobb Lewis+ | |
| Son-Bio* | Willis Lewis+ | |
| Son-Bio* | Leonidas Lewis+ | |
| Son-Bio* | Walter Henry Lewis+ | |
| Dau-Bio* | Mattie Lewis+ | |
| Dau-Bio* | Frances Elizabeth Lewis | |
| Son-Bio* | Charles Archibald Lewis+ | |
| Dau-Bio* | Margaret Eloise Lewis+ | |
| ||
Thomas Lewis1 (M) Pedigree | ||
| Father-Bio* | Willis Lewis | |
| Mother-Bio* | Rosa Chrichton | |
| Immigrant | N | |
| Last Edited | 7 Mar 2001 | |
| ||
Mildred Cobb Lewis1 (F) Pedigree | ||
| Father-Bio* | Willis Lewis | |
| Mother-Bio* | Rosa Chrichton | |
| Immigrant | N | |
| Last Edited | 7 Mar 2001 | |
| CoParent | D. McK. Dunlop | |
| Son-Bio* | James Dunlop | |
| Dau-Bio* | Rosa Isabella Dunlop | |
| Dau-Bio* | Minna Lewis Dunlop | |
| ||
Willis Lewis1 (M) Pedigree | ||
| Father-Bio* | Willis Lewis | |
| Mother-Bio* | Rosa Chrichton | |
| Immigrant | N | |
| Last Edited | 7 Mar 2001 | |
| CoParent | Ella Adams | |
| Dau-Bio* | Genevieve Lewis | |
| ||
Leonidas Lewis1 (M) Pedigree | ||
| Father-Bio* | Willis Lewis | |
| Mother-Bio* | Rosa Chrichton | |
| Immigrant | N | |
| Last Edited | 7 Mar 2001 | |
| CoParent | Sarah Cabell | |
| Son-Bio* | Cabell Lewis | |
| Son-Bio* | Harrison Lewis | |
| Son-Bio* | Archibald Lewis | |
| Dau-Bio* | Mary Lewis | |
| ||
Walter Henry Lewis1 (M) Pedigree | ||
| Father-Bio* | Willis Lewis | |
| Mother-Bio* | Rosa Chrichton | |
| Immigrant | N | |
| Last Edited | 7 Mar 2001 | |
| CoParent | Sallie Cooper | |
| Child-Bio* | (?) Lewis | |
| Dau-Bio* | Annie Lewis | |
| Son-Bio* | Crichton Lewis | |
| ||
Mattie Lewis1 (F) Pedigree | ||
| Father-Bio* | Willis Lewis | |
| Mother-Bio* | Rosa Chrichton | |
| Immigrant | N | |
| Last Edited | 7 Mar 2001 | |
| CoParent | Adolphus Wortham | |
| Son-Bio* | Richard Jordan Wortham | |
| Son-Bio* | Willis Jordan Wortham | |
| Son-Bio* | Charles Archibald Wortham | |
| Son-Bio* | Alexander Sprunt Wortham | |
| ||
Frances Elizabeth Lewis1 (F) Pedigree | ||
| Father-Bio* | Willis Lewis | |
| Mother-Bio* | Rosa Chrichton | |
| Immigrant | N | |
| Last Edited | 7 Mar 2001 | |
| ||
Charles Archibald Lewis1 (M) Pedigree | ||
| Father-Bio* | Willis Lewis | |
| Mother-Bio* | Rosa Chrichton | |
| Immigrant | N | |
| Last Edited | 7 Mar 2001 | |
| CoParent | Carrie Smoot | |
| Dau-Bio* | Helen Lewis | |
| Dau-Bio* | Aileen Crichton Lewis | |
| Dau-Bio* | Mildred Sutphin Lewis | |
| ||
Margaret Eloise Lewis1 (F) Pedigree | ||
| Father-Bio* | Willis Lewis | |
| Mother-Bio* | Rosa Chrichton | |
| Immigrant | N | |
| Last Edited | 7 Mar 2001 | |
| CoParent | Gregory Lyne | |
| Dau-Bio* | Rosa Crichton Lewis | |
| Dau-Bio* | Mattie Lewis | |
| Dau-Bio* | Georgie Lewis | |
| ||
D. McK. Dunlop1 (M) | ||
| Immigrant | N | |
| Last Edited | 31 Mar 2001 | |
| CoParent | Mildred Cobb Lewis | |
| Son-Bio* | James Dunlop | |
| Dau-Bio* | Rosa Isabella Dunlop | |
| Dau-Bio* | Minna Lewis Dunlop | |
| ||
James Dunlop1 (M) Pedigree | ||
| Father-Bio* | D. McK. Dunlop | |
| Mother-Bio* | Mildred Cobb Lewis | |
| Immigrant | N | |
| Last Edited | 7 Mar 2001 | |
| ||
Rosa Isabella Dunlop1 (F) Pedigree | ||
| Father-Bio* | D. McK. Dunlop | |
| Mother-Bio* | Mildred Cobb Lewis | |
| Immigrant | N | |
| Last Edited | 7 Mar 2001 | |
| ||
Minna Lewis Dunlop1 (F) Pedigree | ||
| Father-Bio* | D. McK. Dunlop | |
| Mother-Bio* | Mildred Cobb Lewis | |
| Immigrant | N | |
| Last Edited | 7 Mar 2001 | |
| ||
Ella Adams1 (F) | ||
| Birth* | Chicago, Illinois1 | |
| Immigrant | N | |
| Last Edited | 31 Mar 2001 | |
| CoParent | Willis Lewis | |
| Dau-Bio* | Genevieve Lewis | |
| ||
Genevieve Lewis1 (F) Pedigree | ||
| Father-Bio* | Willis Lewis | |
| Mother-Bio* | Ella Adams | |
| Immigrant | N | |
| Last Edited | 7 Mar 2001 | |
| ||
Sarah Cabell1 (F) | ||
| Immigrant | N | |
| Last Edited | 31 Mar 2001 | |
| CoParent | Leonidas Lewis | |
| Son-Bio* | Cabell Lewis | |
| Son-Bio* | Harrison Lewis | |
| Son-Bio* | Archibald Lewis | |
| Dau-Bio* | Mary Lewis | |
| ||
Cabell Lewis1 (M) Pedigree | ||
| Father-Bio* | Leonidas Lewis | |
| Mother-Bio* | Sarah Cabell | |
| Immigrant | N | |
| Last Edited | 7 Mar 2001 | |
| ||
Harrison Lewis1 (M) Pedigree | ||
| Father-Bio* | Leonidas Lewis | |
| Mother-Bio* | Sarah Cabell | |
| Immigrant | N | |
| Last Edited | 7 Mar 2001 | |
| ||
Archibald Lewis1 (M) Pedigree | ||
| Father-Bio* | Leonidas Lewis | |
| Mother-Bio* | Sarah Cabell | |
| Immigrant | N | |
| Last Edited | 7 Mar 2001 | |
| ||
Mary Lewis1 (F) Pedigree | ||
| Father-Bio* | Leonidas Lewis | |
| Mother-Bio* | Sarah Cabell | |
| Immigrant | N | |
| Last Edited | 7 Mar 2001 | |
| ||
Sallie Cooper1 (F) | ||
| Immigrant | N | |
| Last Edited | 31 Mar 2001 | |
| CoParent | Walter Henry Lewis | |
| Child-Bio* | (?) Lewis | |
| Dau-Bio* | Annie Lewis | |
| Son-Bio* | Crichton Lewis | |
| ||
(?) Lewis1 (?) Pedigree | ||
| Father-Bio* | Walter Henry Lewis | |
| Mother-Bio* | Sallie Cooper | |
| Immigrant | N | |
| Last Edited | 12 Apr 2001 | |
| ||
Annie Lewis1 (F) Pedigree | ||
| Father-Bio* | Walter Henry Lewis | |
| Mother-Bio* | Sallie Cooper | |
| Immigrant | N | |
| Last Edited | 7 Mar 2001 | |
| ||
Crichton Lewis1 (M) Pedigree | ||
| Father-Bio* | Walter Henry Lewis | |
| Mother-Bio* | Sallie Cooper | |
| Immigrant | N | |
| Last Edited | 7 Mar 2001 | |
| ||
Adolphus Wortham1 (M) | ||
| Immigrant | N | |
| Last Edited | 31 Mar 2001 | |
| CoParent | Mattie Lewis | |
| Son-Bio* | Richard Jordan Wortham | |
| Son-Bio* | Willis Jordan Wortham | |
| Son-Bio* | Charles Archibald Wortham | |
| Son-Bio* | Alexander Sprunt Wortham | |
| ||
Richard Jordan Wortham1 (M) Pedigree | ||
| Father-Bio* | Adolphus Wortham | |
| Mother-Bio* | Mattie Lewis | |
| Immigrant | N | |
| Last Edited | 7 Mar 2001 | |
| ||
Willis Jordan Wortham1 (M) Pedigree | ||
| Father-Bio* | Adolphus Wortham | |
| Mother-Bio* | Mattie Lewis | |
| Immigrant | N | |
| Last Edited | 7 Mar 2001 | |
| ||
Charles Archibald Wortham1 (M) Pedigree | ||
| Father-Bio* | Adolphus Wortham | |
| Mother-Bio* | Mattie Lewis | |
| Immigrant | N | |
| Last Edited | 7 Mar 2001 | |
| ||
Alexander Sprunt Wortham1 (M) Pedigree | ||
| Father-Bio* | Adolphus Wortham | |
| Mother-Bio* | Mattie Lewis | |
| Immigrant | N | |
| Last Edited | 7 Mar 2001 | |
| ||
Carrie Smoot1 (F) | ||
| Immigrant | N | |
| Last Edited | 31 Mar 2001 | |
| CoParent | Charles Archibald Lewis | |
| Dau-Bio* | Helen Lewis | |
| Dau-Bio* | Aileen Crichton Lewis | |
| Dau-Bio* | Mildred Sutphin Lewis | |
| ||
Helen Lewis1 (F) Pedigree | ||
| Father-Bio* | Charles Archibald Lewis | |
| Mother-Bio* | Carrie Smoot | |
| Immigrant | N | |
| Last Edited | 7 Mar 2001 | |
| ||
For comments or corrections please contact
Compiler:
Benjamin McAlester Brink
Saint Louis, Missouri, USA
This page was created by John Cardinal's Second Site v1.4.7. Site updated on 4 Oct 2003 at 9:13:21 PM BRINK; 15565 people. Copyright 2003 Ben & Janet Brink