Genealogical and historical notes on Culpeper County, Virginia, Part 10

Author: Green, Raleigh Travers, 1872- [from old catalog]; Slaughter, Philip, 1808-1890. History of St. Mark's Parish, Culpeper County, Virginia. [from old catalog]
Publication date: 1900
Publisher: Culpeper Va.
Number of Pages: 344


USA > Virginia > Culpeper County > Culpeper County > Genealogical and historical notes on Culpeper County, Virginia > Part 10


Note: The text from this book was generated using artificial intelligence so there may be some errors. The full pages can be found on Archive.org (link on the Part 1 page).


Part 1 | Part 2 | Part 3 | Part 4 | Part 5 | Part 6 | Part 7 | Part 8 | Part 9 | Part 10 | Part 11 | Part 12 | Part 13 | Part 14 | Part 15 | Part 16 | Part 17 | Part 18 | Part 19 | Part 20 | Part 21 | Part 22 | Part 23 | Part 24 | Part 25 | Part 26 | Part 27 | Part 28 | Part 29 | Part 30 | Part 31 | Part 32 | Part 33 | Part 34 | Part 35 | Part 36 | Part 37 | Part 38 | Part 39 | Part 40 | Part 41 | Part 42 | Part 43


The author of this will was the great-grandfather of old Capt. Catlett Con- way, of Hawfield, in Orange (now owned by Win. Crenshaw, Esq.,) who was the father of the late Francis, Catlett, John and Henry Conway, of Orange and Madison; of Mrs. Hay Taliaferro, of Rose Hill, Orange County, and of Mrs. Fitzhugh, of Bedford, King George. Dr. Charles Conway (vestryman) is a di- rect descendant of the old vestryman, the first Edwin Conway of Lancaster.


THE FIELDS.


The first person of the name in the parish register is Henry Field, Sr., a member of the first vestry chosen by the freeholders and housekeepers of St. Mark's Parish. at Germanna. in January 1731. The next is Abraham Field, elected vestryman at the Great Fork Church in 1744, and served till his death in 1774, a term of thirty years. He had a son John, who represented Culpep- er in the House of Burgesses in 1765. He was probably the Col. John Field who had served in Braddock's War, and who fell, fighting gallantly at the head of his regiment, at the battle of Point Pleasant. One of his daughters married


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Lawrence Slaughter, an officer of the Revolution, and who was the father of John Field Slaughter, who married Miss Alexander, of Prince William. An- other of Col. John Field's daughters married Col. George Slaughter, who rais- ed one of the first companies of minute-men in Culpeper; and after the war moved to Kentucky with George Rogers Clarke, commanded a fort at the Falls of the Ohio, and was one of the founders of the city of Louisville, which was then in the State of Virginia.


Henry Field, Sr., the vestryman of 1731, served in that office and as church- warden till 1762, a term of thirty-one years. He executed many commissions for the vestry, such as going to Williamsburg on horseback several times on their behalf, and paying quit-rents for the churches and glebes. He and Francis Slaughter and Robert Green chose a site for a chapel between Shaw's Mountain, the Devil's Run and Hazel River. He was succeeded in the vestry by Henry Field, Jr., who served till his removal from the parish of St. Mark's into Bromfield Parish, whose records are lost or we should probaly have found his name on the vestry-books there. He represented Culpeper in the Conven- tion at Williamsburg in 1774 to consider the state of the country, in the House of Burgesses in 1775, and with French Strother in the Convention of 1776 which asserted the principle of religious liberty, declared American independ- ence, and adopted the first Constitution. Henry Field, Jr., died in 1785, leav- ing six sons-Daniel, Henry, George, Joseph, Thomas and .John, who were the ancestors of the families of that name. The late judge of this court, Richard H. Field, and his brothers Yancey and Stanton, were the sons of Daniel Field of what is now Madison. He (the Judge) inarried first Matilda, daughter of Robert Slaughter of the Grange, and second Philippa, daughter of the Hon. Philip P. Barbour. His three sons were killed in battle during the late war, and his daughter (Mrs. Norvell) is the only surviving child. Gen. James Field of the Culpeper bar, who lost a limb at the battle of Slaughter's Mountain, is a son of Yancey Field. He married Miss Cowherd of Orange.


THE FRY FAMILY.


The ancestor of the Frys who once so abounded in Culpeper, was Col. Josh- ua Fry, an Englishinan educated at Oxford. He lived some time in Essex, was Professsor of Mathematics at William and Mary College, a member of the House of Burgesses. commissioner to run one of the lines between Virginia and North Carolina, and negotiator of the treaty of Logstown. He, with Peter Jefferson, made a map of Virginia in 1749. He commanded a regiment against the French and Indians, of which Washington was lieutenant-colonel. I am indebted to his lineal descendant Frances Fry, of Charlottesville, for a copy of his commission, from the original in Mr. Fry's possession :-


"TO JOSHUA FRYE


"His Majesty, by his royal instructions, commanded me to send a proper number of forces to erect and maintain a fort at the Monongahela and Ohio Rivers; and having a good opinion of your loyalty, conduct and ability, I do hereby institute, appoint and commission you to be Colonel and Commander- in chief of the forces now raising, to be called the Virginia Regiment, with which and the cannon, arins and ammunition, necessary provisions and stores. you are with all possible dispatch to proceed to said fork of Monongahela, and there act according to your instructions."


Col. Joshua Fry married Mrs. Hill, the daughter of Paul Micon, a French Huguenot physician. He was the father of the Rev. Henry Fry, who lived in the fork of Crooked Run and the Robinson River, and occasionally preached in the Episcopal church near Orange C. H., when they had no minister, always prefacing his sermons with the old church service, says Col. Frank Taylor, a


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vestryman of that church. He was one of those good and guileless men whom all Christians respected and loved. His son Reuben m. Ann dau. of Col. Jas. Slaughter, and their ch. were Judge Joseph Fry, of Wheeling, Henry, Senator of Kanawha, and Philip S., Jate clerk of Orange and father of Philip, present clerk, William, Thomas and Luther. Thomas W., son of Rev. H. Fry, m. 1st Mrs. Slaughter, whose maiden name was Bourn, and 2d Ann dau. of Col. Abram Maury of Madison. He with three ch. moved to Kentucky (1816). Joshua In. Miss Walker, and Mrs. Willis dau. of William Twyman. Hugh and Joshua Fry, of Richmond, were his sons. Henry m. Mildred dau. of Rev. Mat. Maury. Frank Fry, Sr., of Charlottesville, is their son. John m. Miss Heywood, of Culpeper, and lived at the Warm Springs. Mrs. Dr. Archer Strother was his dau. Wesley m. 1st Miss Walker, and 2nd a French lady, Miss Leflet, and had thirteen children. Thornton m. a dau. of Hon. Philip R. Thompson, and their ch. were Gen. Burkitt Fry, C. S. A., Dr. Frank and Mrs. Jno. L. Bacon, of Richmond. Margaret dau. of Rev. Henry in. Philip Lightfoot and moved to Kentucky. Martha m. Goodrich Lightfoot and had ten ch., of whom Edward Lightfoot, of Madison, is the only survivor. Maria m. Hugh Walker and went to Kentucky, and had many children.


Col. Joshua Fry, the head of this family in Virginia, patented 1000 acres of land on the Robinson River in 1726, and 400 acres "in the fork of the Robinson" in 1739. Charles Meriwether Fry, of the Bank of New York, who m. Miss Leigh, is the son of Belville, who was the son of Joshua, who was the son of Rev. Henry Fry.


THE GARNETT FAMILY.


The chief seat of this family in Virginia was the county of Essex, where many of this name occupied a high social position and filled many places of public trust. The Hon. James M. Garnett was a member of Congress from 1805 to 1809. The Hon. Robert S. Garnett was in Congress from 1817 to 1827. The Hon. Muscoe Garnett was also a member of Congress and of the State Convention of 1850. Dr. A. Y. P. Garnett who married the daughter of Gover- nor Wise, has been for many years a leading medical man of Washington City. There was a General Garnett of the Confederate army who fell in battle, whose sister married Professor Williamson of the Virginia Military Institute; and there is now a Professor Garnett in the College at Annapolis, Md.


I have been disappointed in receiving the information which would have enabled me to show the connecting links between these several members of the family in Virginia. The first of the name in Culpeper was Anthony Gar- nett, who came from Essex, and from the names James, Muscoe and Reuben, which are common to both families, they probably sprang from the same stock. Anthony Garnett was a vestryman, churchwarden and lay reader of St. Mark's Parish from 1758. He lived at the Horse Shoe, where Joseph Wilmer, Jr., now resides, and when there was no minister of the parish, was in the habit of burying the dead with the church service. He married Mrs. Bowler (Miss Jones), and his children were Robin, who moved to Kentucky and died in his ninety-eighth year. His daughter married Stokely Towles of Madison, and their daughter married James L. Waggener of Russelville, Ky., father of Prof. Waggener of Bethel College, Ky. James, son of Anthony, was minister of Crooked Run Church. He married Miss Rowe, and was the father of Edmund, who was the father of the late Rev. James Garnett, whose sons, Joel, Absalom and Franklin, and daughter Tabitha, still survive. James, Sr., was the fath- er of the present James, whose children are Muscoe and others. John, son of Anthony, moved to Kentucky. Thomas married Miss Hawkins. Reuben, son


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of Anthony, married Miss Twyman, and was the father of the venerable Miss Tabitha Garnett, who, like her namesake in the Bible, is kind to the poor. Lucy married a Tinsley. Sally married a Stepp, and Betsy married William Willis of Culpeper, the father of the late Isaac Willis, who has many descend- ants, among whoin is the Rev. John C. Willis of Indian Town, Orange County.


THE GLASSELL FAMILY.


The Glassell (originally Glassele) family went from Poictiers, France, with Mary Queen of Scots on her return to her native country. John Glassell of Runkan, Scotland, m. Mary Coalter, a warm Covenanter, and their son Robert m. Mary Kelton and their son Andrew Glassell was born at Galway, Dum- friesshire, Scotland, near Torthorwald, "Castle of the Douglass," Oct. 8th, 1738, and emigrated to Madison County, Virginia, in 1756. He imported mechanics from Scotland, and built a large brick residence on his fine estate on the upper Robinson River, known as Torthorwald. He m. (1776) Elizabeth dau. of Eras- mus Taylor of Orange County, and died July 4th, 1827, aged 89. Their chil- dren were-


1. Millie Glassell in. Reuben Smith. Issue 1. Jane in. in 1822 Hon. Jereme- miah Morton (M. C.); issue one son, died in infancy. and one daughter, Mild- red m. J. J. Halsey, issue 1. Fannie M .; 2. Anne Augusta (Mrs. Alexander); 3. J. Morton m. Miss Stearns; 4. R. Ogden m. Miss Walker, and 5. Joseph J. Halsey. 2. George A. Smith (now of Bell County, Texas), m. Julia dau. of James Somer- ville of Culpeper Co .; issue 1. Eudora G. (Mrs. Lees); 2. Jane M. (Mrs. Ware); 3. Mary S.(Mrs. Coffee); 4. Margaret (Mrs. Russell), and several sons unmarried. 3. Dr. William R. Smith (late of Galveston), m. first Mrs. Middleton, no issue; m. second Mary Mayrant, issue John M. m. Miss Terry; and Mildred (Mrs. Crosby of New York City.)


2. John Glassell m. first Louisa Brown. Issue 1. Dr. Andrew m. Miss Downing; 2. Fanny (Mrs. Ware); 3. Mary (Mrs. Conway); 4. Louisa ( Mrs. Eno of Pennsylvania). John Glassell m. second Mrs. Lee, nee Margaret Scott; issue Mildred S. (Mrs. Covell) and John m. Miss Thom. John Glassell in. third Mary Ashton, by whom no issue.


3. Mary Kelton Glasssell m. Michael Wallace. Issue 1. Ellen (Mrs. Somer- ville); 2. Gustavus; 3. H. Nelson; 4. Elizabeth (Mrs. Wallace); 5. Louisa ( Mrs. Goodwin); 6. James, and 7. Marianna (Mrs. Conway.)


4. Helen Buchan Glassell m. Daniel Grinnan. Issue 1. Robert A. m. Rob- ertine Temple; 2. Cornelia (died 1864); 3. Andrew G. m. Georgie S. Bryan; 4. Daniella M.


5. Jane M. Glassell m. Benjamin Cave. (See Cave genealogy.)


6. Major James M. Glassell, U. S. Army, in. Eudora Swartout.


7. Andrew Glassell m. Susan Thornton. Issue 1. Andrew m. Miss Toland; 2. Capt. William S. Glassell; 3. Susan S. m. first Colonel George S. Patton (see Williams genealogy); m. second George H. Smith of California.


8. William E. Glassell in. first Margaret Somerville. Issue one child living, Margaret (Mrs. Weeks of Louisanna). M. second Harriet Scott.


John Glassell, brother of Andrew. came to Fredericksburg long before the Revolution. He was a merchant of large transactions, having branch estab- lishments in Culpeper and Fauquier, and became very rich. He returned to Scotland before the Revolution. He married Helen Buchan, of the family of the Earl of Buchan. One of her sisters married an Erskine, and another Dal- housie and Lord Erskine and the Earl of Dalhousie were her nephews. John Glassell's only daughter, Johanna, married Lord Campbell who became Duke of Argyle, and the present Duke of Argyle is her son.


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THE GREEN FAMILY.


ROBERT GREEN, son of William Green, an Englishman, emigrated from Ireland with his uncle, William Duff, a Quaker, to Virginia, and settled in King George county about the year, 1710. He was born in the year, 1695. He soon left his uncle and settled in what is now Culpeper county, near Brandy Station on the Southern Railway. He built his home near a large spring, which is on the road leading from Brandy Station to Rixeyville, and took up large tracts of land in what was, in 1712 Essex, in 1721 Spotsylvania, in 1735 Orange, and in 1749 Culpeper. His father was an officer in the body guard of William, Prince of Orange. He died in 1748, his will and inventory of his es- tate being recorded in the Orange county Clerk's Office. He was member of the Virginia House of Burgesses in 1736, and was one of the first vestrymen of St. Mark's Parish. When a young man, he married Eleanor Dunn, of Scotland, and had seven sons, as follows. [Note : The names in parenthesis or brackets signify the line of descent. Thus Joseph Green, [Francis, Wm., Wm., Robt.] means that Joseph Green was the son of Francis, the grand son of William, the great grandson of the first William and the great great grandson of the first Robert.]


1. William, born in Essex county; m. Miss Coleman, of Caroline county; was vestryman of St. Mark's Parish from 1749 to his death in Culpeper county in 1770. He was called Colonel Green, probably from military service against the Indians.


2. Robert, mn Patty Ball, of Northumberland, and died in Culpeper.


3. Duff, mn. 1st., Miss Thomas, 2nd., Anne Willis; he died in Culpeper about the beginning of the Revolution. His three youngest sous moved to Kentuc- ky about 1779, and afterwards carried out their mother and younger sister.


4. John, m. Susanna Blackwell; was Colonel in the Revolution; succeeded William Green in the vestry of St. Mark's Parish in 1770; was member of the House of Burgesses in 1769, and died in Culpeper in 1793.


5. Nicholas, m. Elizabeth Price, dau. of Ajola Price, of Orange, whose mother was a dau. of Capt. Win. Barbour; died in what is now Madison coun- ty, and left many children. who moved to Kentucky.


6. James, m. Elizabeth Jones, and died in Culpeper.


7. Moses, m. Mary Blackwell, sister of Susanna, and died in Culpeper.


WILLIAM GREEN, (Robert), who m. Miss Coleman had children as follows:


1. William, m. Eliza Green, dau. of Duff; died in Culpeper; his widow mov- ed to Kentucky, near Covington.


2. Ellen, mn. Peter Marye.


3. Betsy, m. H. Camp.


4. Mary or Anne, m. Geo. Thomas.


5. Milly, m. Mr. Stringer.


6. Lucy or Susan, mn. Mr. Pinckard.


7. Nancy, m. Jno. Poindexter.


8. Francis Wyatt, mn. Lucy Strother, dau. of Jos. Strother. They lived near Louisville, Ky., but died in Breckenridge county of that State.


ROBERT GREEN, (Robert), who m. Patty Ball, had


1. William, m. Miss Blackwell, and moved to Woodford county, Ky.


2. Armistead, m. Frances, dau. of Capt. Harry Pendleton, of Culpeper.


3. Samnel B., m. Miss Blair of Port Royal, Va.


4. Ellen, m. Aaron Lane, of Culpeper.


5. Anne, m. Dr. Joel Gustin, of Pennsylvania.


DUFF GREEN, (Robert), m. 1st. Miss Thomas, 2nd. Anne Willis, and had


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1. John, of famous memory. " My Lord John " died a bachelor, possessed of much wealth ; he was Captain in the Revolution, and was badly wounded.


2. Betsy, m. William, son of first William Green.


3. Willis, in. 1783 Sarah Reed and moved to Ky., near Danville. He set- tled on a farm called " Waveland," which is still owned by his descendants.


4. William, m. Miss Marshall, and moved to Lincoln county, Ky.


5. Henry, died single.


6. Ellen or Anne, m. Jno. Smith, and moved to Ky., had Jno., Henry and Willis.


JOHN GREEN, (Robert), m. Susanna Blackwell, had :


1. Wm., m. Lucy Williams ; was Capt. of the navy, and was lost at sea on the brig Defiance.


2. John, killed at 18 in duel at Valley Forge.


3. Robert, m. Frances Edmonds, and died 1789.


4. Moses, m. Fanny Richards.


5. Thomas m. 1st Miss Miller ; 2nd Lucy Peyton, and moved to Christian county, Ky .


NICHOLAS GREEN, (Robert), m. Elizabeth Price, and had :


1. Robert, d. single.


2. Jno., m. Jenny Hawkins.


3. Wm. m. and moved to Tenn. and had William and others.


4. Nicholas, left no children.


5. Mary, m. Mr. Stevens.


6. Lucy, d. single.


7. Eleanor, m. Mr. Rankin.


8. Joyce, m. Willis Ballance, and moved to Ky. Lived in Madison and Mercer counties.


9. Chas., had seven sons and two daughters.


JAMES GREEN, (Robert), In. Elizabeth Jones and had :


1. Gabriel, m. Miss Grant and moved to Green River, Ky.


2. James, m. Betsy Jones.


3. Jones, m. Miss Nevil, and moved to Hardy county, Va., and had Nevil, Jones, Nancy, Mrs. Parsons, Mary and Betsy.


4. Robt., m. Miss Edmunds, and had William, James, Thomas, Robert, Fanny, Ellen, Elizer, and Mrs. Cross.


5. John, m. Miss Catlett. of Fauquier, and moved to Henderson, Ky.


6. Dolly, m. Nimrod Farrow; no children.


7. Elizabeth, m. R. W. Peacock, and had 4 children ; and died in England,


8. Lucy, m. Noah G. Glascock, and moved to Mo.


9. Polly, m. Mr. Catlett.


10. Austin, m. Miss Ball ; lived and died in Hardin county, Ky. Some of his children went to Texas.


MOSES GREEN, (Robert), m. Mary Blackwell, and had:


1. Sarah, died single


2. Eleanor. m. Gen. Jas. Williams.


WILLIAM GREEN, (Win., Robert,) m. Eliza Green, and had,


1. Win., moved to Tenn.


2. Jno. m. Mrs. Faulk, and lived in Campbell county, Ky .; his widow m. Mr. Vickers.


3. Betsy, m. 1st. Mr. Craig, 2nd- -, 3rd. Mr. Magruder ; she d. a wid. in 1850, in Covington, Ky., leaving no children.


ELLEN GREEN, (Win., Robt.,). m. Peter Marye, and had,


1. Win. 2. Jas., and 2 daughters, who both in. a Gordon.


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BETSY GREEN, (Win., Robt.,) m. H. Camp, and had Jas., Jno. G., Wyatt, and Betsy, who was married.


MARY, OR ANNE GREEN, ( Wm., Robert), m. Geo. Thomas, and had Jas., a dan. m. Jas. Camp and 2 other m. dans. and 4 s. daus.


NANCY GREEN, [Win., Robt.], mn. Jno. Poindexter, and had Wm. G. and others.


FRANCIS WYATT GREEN, [Win., Robt. ] who in. Lucy Strother, had


1. Robt. who went to N.O. in war of 1812 ; settled and died there leaving a large family.


2. Nancy. mn. Mr. Bostwick.


3. Jos., a soldier in battle of N. O. m. Susan dau. of Jno. Ball ; died 1853 in Columbus, Ky.


4. Thompson, m. Betsy Askins ; lived in Breckinridge county, Ky., no children.


5. Francis, m. and left several children.


6. Jno., m. Mary Holt ; lived in Indiana.


7. Austin, m. and left 2 children in Perry county, Indiana.


WILLIAM GREEN, [Robt., Robt., ] m. Miss Blackwell, had Robt., Jas., Wm. S., Lucy, m. Mr. Bourne, Susan, m. Mr. Neale, Kitty, m. Mr. Blackman, Betsy, mn. Mr. Bourne, Celia, m., and others ; lived in Woodford county, Ky.


ARMISTEAD GREEN, [ Robt., Robt.] m. Frances Pendleton, and had : Henry, Robt., Anne, m. Jno. Ferguson, Polly, m. Slaughter, Fanny, m. Mr. Campbell, Harriett, m. Mr. Cenard, Ellen, Caroline, and


Edmund Pendleton, m. Martha Weems, and had Martha, who m. Francis W. Dickson, having Frank C., and Mattie Green, who m. Irwin Dugan


SAMUEL B. GREEN, [Robt., Robt. ] in. Miss Blair, of Port Royal, and had Samuel and Sally.


ELLEN GREEN. [Robt., Robt. ], m. Aaron Lane, and had Robert ; Jas .; Jno .; Peggy B., m. Win. Bell, and had Fontaine ; Polly, m. H. Latham ; Ellen, m. Mr. Crenshaw; Nancy, m. Mr. Whiting, having Jno., Ellen and Catherine ; and ·


William A. m. Eliza Green, dau. of James Green.


ANNE GREEN, [ Robt., Robt.], m. Dr. Joel Gustin, of Pennsylvania, and had Samuel G .; Theodosia, m; Ellen, in ; and Mary, who m. Daniel Remer. WILLIS GREEN. [Duff, Robt., ] m. Sarah Reed, and had :


1. Dr. Duff, major in war of 1812, died 1858. m. Miss Crecy, niece of Simon Kenton. Dr. Duff's children were: Dr. Willis Duff Green, m. and lived at Mt. Vernon, Ill., having numerous children ; Judge Wm. H., of Cairo, Ill., who m. 2 sisters [ Misses Hughes] and had 2 children ; and 2 daughters who m. and lived in Ill.


2. Judge John, b. 1786. d. 1838, m. 1st. Sarah Fry, 2nd Mary Keith Marshall He was at the battle of the Thames in 1812.


3. Letitia, m. Major Jas. Barbour an officer of the war of 1812.


4. Eliza, m. Dr. Ben. Edwards, bro. of Gov. Nimian and Judge Cyrus Ed- wards ; lived at Kirkwood, Mo.


5. Martha, m. Dr. William Craig : home near Danville, Ky.


6. Dr. Lewis Warner Green, Pres. of Centre College, Ky., in. 1st. Eliza J. Montgomery, 2nd. Mrs. Mary Lawrence Fry, and had Julia, who m. M. T. Scott, of Bloomington, Ill., having two daus ; and Lettie, who in. Hon. A. E. Stevenson,, vice-president of the U. S., having 4 children.


WILLIAM GREEN, [Duff, Robt. ] m. Miss Marshall, and had Willis, m. but left no children ; Judge William M., in. Miss Stone, lived in Russell county, Ky., and had dau. that m. Col. Spencer ; Gen. Duff, a prominent editor at


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Washington in Jackson's day, who m. Lucretia, a sister of, Dr. Benjamin Ed- wards ; Nancy mn ; Betsy m. Mr. Huling ; Ellen,m. Gen. Jas.Semple ; Sarah, m. Rev. Neale, a Presbyterian minister of Glasgow, Ky., and had several children.


WILLIAM GREEN. (Jno., Robert), m. Lucy Williams, and had one son, John W. Green, Judge of the Virginia Court of Appeals.


ROBT. GREEN, (Jno., Robt.,), m. Francese Edmunds, and had Robert, and Eliza who m. Robt. Pavne, and moved to Nicholas Co., Ky.


MOSES GREEN, (Jno., Robert), m. Fanny Richards, and had


1. Julia Amanda, who m. Bernard Peyton, having Jno. G., Susan, Eliza, T. Jefferson, Bernard, T. Green, M. Green, and Julia.


2. Thomas, m. 1st, Miss Lyons, 2nd. Miss Richie, 3rd. Miss Lomax, and had Mary Frances, who m. W. J. Stone, of Washington City; Isabella, who m. Mr. Ward; Emily, who married Mr. Legare; Thomas, and Bernard Peyton.


3. William, m. Miss Saunders, and had Wm., who ni. Miss Bagtop; Patty, who m. Col. Williamson; and Georgie.


4. Archibald Magill, in. 2 sisters (Misses Furnish) and had Moses; Rebec- ca, who m. Mr. Parr; Juo., who m. Miss Lewis; and Fanny. who m. F. M. Gilkeson.


THOMAS GREEN, (Jno., Robt.), m. 1st Miss Miller, 2nd. Lucy Peyton and had:


1. Edward H., who m. 1st Sarah Short, 2nd. Miss Ward, and had Bernard P., Anne. m. Win. C. Green; Sarah; E. H., m. Anna Wilson, and had Jno. W .; Mary E. m. C. S. Robertson; William W., Arrie, Mattie; and Chas. Short, who in. Laura E. Kinchloe, having Jno. Rouzie, Clara C .; C. S .; B. P., Grant, Thos., Laura Lee, Mary, Sallie, Win. S., and Edward H.


2. Anne Augusta, m. Edward Randolph, having Bathurst E., who m. Lizzie Glass; Dr. Thos. G., m. Anne Edgar.


3. Lucy Williams, who m. 1st. Daniel Henry, 2nd. Jas. C. Moore, and had Lucy Ann, mn. Jno Nelson; Mary Green, m. Geo. Champlin, a lawyer at Hop- kinsville, Ky .; Dr. Green, m. Kate Mansfield; Lucy W., m. Chas. Dade; Mattie P., Jotm C., and Gustavus H.


4. Mary Peyton, who m. 1st. Thomas Edmunds, 2nd. Col. Wm. S. Moore, and had John T., m. Mollie Campbell: Jas. H .; Lucy Peyton, m. Eckstein Nor- ton, pres. of L. & N. R. R .; Lizzie MeA., in. Jno. D. Tyler; Win. S .; Fannie Pey- ton: and Caroline Green.


5. Jno. Rouzie, who m. Elizabeth Nelson, and had William, m. Miss Armis- tead; Wallace, m. Miss Somerville; Edward, in. Miss Hartman; Lucius, m. in California; Jno. R. m. Miss Phelps; Rosalie, m. Hunter Wood, of Hopkinsville, Ky .; Lizzie, mn. Nicholas Edmunds; Robert; Anne, m. Wm. T. Townes; and Nelson.


6. Moses Thomas, who m. 1st. Caroline Venable, 2nd. Mary T. Moore, had Lucy P., m. Randolph Dade; Bettie, mn. Bankhead Dade; George, m. Lizzie Dade; Jno. R .; Thomas and Jas. W.


ELIZA GREEN, (Jno., Robert.), m. Jno. Hooe, of Fauquier county, and had no children.


JOHN GREEN. (Nicholas, Robt.), m. Jenny Hawkins, and had:


1. Benjamin, m. Becky Walker, and had Letitia; Lizzie, m. Mr. Evans; Morton, m. Mrs. Buckley; Coley; Nicholas; and John Willis, in. and had Benja- Juin, who m. Miss Parrent, and Sally, who m. Mr. Notey.


2. Willis, who m. Artemisia Lillard, of Owen county, Ky .; had John R., m. Hannah McClure; David, m. Lizzie Sale, and had Mollie, Tinnie and Nanie: and Anu Mary, m. 1st. Ben. Spencer, 2nd. Line Sale.


3. Hawkins, m. Jane Bulkly, and had Jno. W., who in. and had Fanny and others.


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. .. 4: Nicholas P., of Franklin county, Ky., m. 1st. Mrs. Hawkins, 2nd. Mrs. Gaines, and had, Martha, mn. Jas. Thomas; Scott, m. Helen Henry; Ruth, m. Geo. Green; and Dea, in, Colon M. Jones.


"5. Morton, who m. Eliza Spencer, and had Sallie, m. Robt. Payne, whose son. Jno. J., m. Ella Landrun ; Lizzie, m. 1st. Jno. McGinnis, 2nd. Geo. Clarke of Springfield, Ill .; Jno: in. Lida McGinnis ; Susan, mn. Dr. Austin.


"6."Letitia, m. Willis Roberts, Owen Co., Ky., and had Willis ; and Mary, who m. Charles Samuels in Mo.


.1º7: Betsy, m. Wm. Bower, and had John, in Mo .; Sue, m. Jas. Duncan ; Jane. In. Jno. Roberts.


8. Samuel, m. America Roberts, and had Mollie, mn. Jas. Suter ; Geo. in. Ruth Green; and Wm. Joseph.


JOYCE GREEN, (Nicholas, Robt.) m. Willis Ballance, and had James L .; Eliza; Chas., married, and lived at Peoria, Ill., had Jenny who m .; and Pa tience, Judge Bryant of Peoria, Ill.




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