USA > Virginia > Culpeper County > Culpeper County > Genealogical and historical notes on Culpeper County, Virginia > Part 37
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The Rices, when living in Wales, had a Coat of Arms, of which the widow of Izard Bacon Rice long ago had a copy. The widow of John Holt Rice, D. D., who died in 1831, also had a copy. Mrs. Sara A. Pryor, a prominent mem- ber of the Daughters of the American Revolution, wife of General Roger A. Pryor, late Justice of the Supreme Court, New York, now has a copy. Mrs. Pryor is a descendant of Thomas Rice, of Hanover.
The Rice motto was "Fides Non Timet." In the old days, when written in Welsh, the name was spelled "Rhys," though even then, when written in English, it was often spelled, as now, "Rice."
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THE BARBOUR FAMILY GENEALOGY. By John Strode Barbour.
[The following genealogy of the Barbour family was received too late to be placed in St. Mark's proper, in which Dr. Slaughter's sketch of the Bar- bour family is printed .- R. T. G.]
There is some confusion as to the name of the first emigrant and founder of the Barbour family in Virginia, or rather who was the emigrant of this par- ticular family. All traditions seem to give their extraction as Scotch, and the time of coming to this country as about the middle of the 17th century. Some traditions give William Barbour, who was said to have been a younger son of the Baron of Mulderg, and who was County Lieutenant of York in 1656, and also one of the commission appointed by the governor, Sir William Berkley, in 1660, to superintend the erection of the State house at Jamestown, as the first emigrant (See Hardesty's Historical and Geographical Encyclopedia [1884] p. 358), while others give James Barbour, a Scotch merchant. One tradition, in connection with this last theory, is that, on arriving in Virginia, James Bar- bour established a home on a plantation, since famous as the seat, for genera- tions, of another distinguished Virginia family. That he there married a Miss Taliaferro, and died, leaving an infant son, James, and a widow. That the widow re-married, and by some means the issue of this second marringe, who was ahnost an imbecile, became the owner of the entire Barbour property. He was a great gambler, and soon squandered it. The only form of gambling he had intellect sufficient to engage in was "push pins", and he is reported to have lost the homestead upon the issue of a single game. However true this tradition may be, the son, James, left the home of his childhood after his father's death, and came to Culpeper near the end of the first quarter of the 18th century, and settled finally in Culpeper county, It was here that he lived, and died, and was buried. The tombstone marking his grave is still standing at Smith's Cottage, the old homestead, now in Madison county. This second James, spoken of by Dr. Slaughter as the first, was a vestryman of St. Mark's Parish at its organization in 1731. Probably the most authentic account of the founder of the Virginia family, now attainable, is the following extract from the bible of Governor James Barbour, entered therein in his own handwriting, under date of June 6th, 1806. It will be observed that he makes no reference to William Barbour, and no claim to descent from titled ances- tors, but seems rather to emphasize the fact that his ancestors were "farmers or yeomen". It will be observed also that he refers to the defeat of the expec- tions of the second James, by reason of the re-marriage of his mother. He says: "The farthest back that I have been able to trace, with any certainty, is my great grandfather, who came over to this country from Scotland, in the 17th century. He came in the character of a merchant, and was wrecked on his first adventure. His friends, as stated by tradition, being rich, furnished him with a new cargo, which he turned to a profitable account in (I believe) the county of King and Queen. He had issue, only one son, whom he called after himself, James, who intermarried with Sarah Todd, of a most respecta- ble family. My grandfather's prospects in life were considerably blasted by the second marriage of his mother, an usual concomitant of such connections with the wreck of his expectations. He was either the first or second settler in this country: I mean the South West Mountains. I am certain he was the first inhabitant of this neighborhood, which was at first about the plantation now in the occupancy of the Newman family, that being the place of resi- dence from which he moved to a place nearer the river that belonged to Wilham Johnson. He had issne, five sons, and three daughters *
* *. My father Thomas, as well as his father, were farmers or yeomen." In the
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136 obitnary notice of his distinguished great grandson, Judge Philip Pendleton Barbour, published in Vol. 16, Peters' U. S. Supreme Court reports, it is said : "His (Judge Barbour's) great grandfather was a merchant of Scotland, who emigrated to this country. His grandfather (the second James) was the founder and.first settler of the country lying between the eastern base of the Blue Ridge and the South West Mountains." While it is possible that the first James, instead of being the emigrant, was a son of a grand son of the William Barbour, above mentioned, in the following chart this James Bar- bour is treated as the founder of the family.
[In order that any errors or omissions, found in this account of the Bar- bour family, may be corrected in any future editions, the publisher requests that any such may be reported to John S. Barbour, Culpeper, Va. The names in parenthesis denote the line of descent. Thus : "Gabriel Barbour (Thos .. Jas., Jas., Jas.,) signifies that Gabriel Barbour was the son of. Thomas, the grandson of James, and so on .- R. T. G.J.
JAMES BARBOUR emigrated from Scotland in the 17th. century; settled in King and Queen, or in Gloucester county; married Miss Taliaferro, and had but one son, James, erroneously called James, the first, by Dr. Slaughter, who was "defeated of his expectancy" by the second marriage of his mother.
JAMES BARBOUR (James.) In. twice: first Elizabeth Todd, by whom he had one son, Richard, who never married. His second wife was Sarah Todd, proba- bly a sister of the first. He was presiding justice of the Culpeper county court in 1764, and died in 1775 in Culpeper county. His widow, Sarah, died in 1781. Their wills are both recorded in Culpeper county, and show them both to have been posessed of large estates. There were by the second marriage five sons: James, Thomas, Philip, Ambrose, and William, and four danghters. as follows : Mary, Fanny, Betty, and -- , who m. James Boyd.
JAMES BARBOUR (James, James.) m. Frances Throckmorton, of Glouces- ter county. He was a member of the House of Burgesses from Culpeper in 1764, County Lieutenant of the militia of Culpeper county in 1725, an officer in the revolutionary army, and was also a judge of the first court ever held in Kentucky, being the head of a commission appointed by the Legislature of Virginia to settle disputed land titles. His children were . 1. Mordecai, who m. Elizabeth Strode; 2. James who died unmarried; 3. Thomas, m. Mary Tay- lor; 4. Richard, m. Mary Moore; 5. Gabriel; 6. Philip, m. 1st. Lucy Taylor, 2nd. Eliza Hopkins; 7. Frances, in. John Moore; 8. Sarah, m. Col. John (or James) Harrison: 9. Mary, mn. Col. David Walker, who was for years a member of Con- gress: 10. Lucy, m. Wythe Baylor.
AMBROSE BARBOUR (James, James.) lived in Orange county, where he married Catherine Thomas, a sister of Mary Pendleton Thomas, who married his brother, Thomas Barbour. They afterwards moved to Kentucky. Their children were : 1. Philip, who died in Richmond, Virginia, in 1794 unmarried; 2. Major James Barbour, of Kentucky, m. Letitia Green; 3. Lucinda, m. Benj. Hardin; 4. Richard Barbour, of Kentucky; and 5. Lucy in. Mr. Davis, and went South. Major James Barbour was an officer in the war of 1812. His wife, Letitia Green, was a daughter of Willis Green (Duff, Robert). Their children were : 1. Catherine, m. J. Wesley Vick, of Vicksburg, and had Kate, Martha, Nannie, Amanda; 2. James Barbour, a banker of Maysville, Ken - tucky, who m. Elizabeth Foster, of Maysville, and had James F. Barbour, who m. Elizabeth Taylor, and Rev. John Green Foster Barbour, a Preshy- terian minister of Gillery county, Kentucky; 3. Martha. m. Rev. B. M. Hobson, having Barbour and Lewis Green; 4. Rev. Lewis Green Barbour, m. Elizabeth Ford, of Richmond, Kentucky, and had several children. He is the au-
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thor of a poem, entitled "The End of Time," which has attracted a good deal of favorable criticism. Lucinda and Benjamin Hardin had a daughter, Mary, who m .- Letcher. Their descendants, as well as those of this Richard, and of Lucy, who married Davis, are unknown.
THOMAS BARBOUR (James, James.) in. Mary Pendleton Thomas, of Orange, (a sister of Catherine Thomas, who married his brother Ambrose). Their chil- dren were : 1. Richard; 2. James; 3. Thomas. (Richard and Thomas both died in their youth). 4. Lucy T .; 5. Phillip P .; 6. Nelly; 7. Mary, or Polly; 8. Sally. Nelly died unmarried in 1798. He was a member of the House of Burgesses from Orange county, and signed the non-importation act, of 1769, between this country and Great Britain, and after the formation of the union, was a member of the Legislature. Richard Henry Lee, in a letter to his brother, Arthur Lee, wrote that he was glad that Thomas Barbour was in our State Conneils, "for he was a truly intelligent and patriotic man."
PHILIP BARBOUR (James, James.) m. and left one child, name unknown.
MARY BARBOUR (James, James.) m. John Harrison. They had one daugh- ter, who married a Mason, and their son, James Barbour Mason, at one time represented Garrard county in the Kentucky Legislature. He married a daughter of Hugh Logan, and their son, James B. Mason, was clerk of Gar- rard county. Kentucky, and now (1899) lives in Lancaster.
FANNY BARBOUR (James, James.) m-Smith. Of this family was Geo. A. Smith, who sold the old Barbour homestead, Smith's Cottage, and moved to Texas before the Civil War. His older brother was Dr. Cam R. Smith, of Galveston, Texas. Mrs. Jeremiah Morton was their sister. Their mother was Mildred Glassel. Mildred, the only child of Mrs. Jeremiah Morton, m. J. J. Halsey, a prominent lawyer of Orange county. R. Ogden Halsey, and J. Mor- ton Halsey, of Orange, are her children.
BETTY BARBOUR (James, James.) m. Benjamin Johnson. They had two daughters : Lucy, m. her first cousin, James Barbour (Thomas, James, James), and Frances Todd Johnson, m. his brother, Philip Pendleton Barbour.
-- BARBOUR (James, James,) in. James Boyd. They had a son, James Boyd, whose descendants, if any, are unknown.
MORDECAI BARBOUR (James, James, James.) in. Elizabeth Strode, a daughter of John Strode, of "Fleetwood" in Culpeper county. John Strode was master of the gun factory near Falmouth, Virginia, which was largely in- strumental in supplying arms to the Virginia troops in the revolutionary war. The Strodes are said to have been of French Hugenot extraction. John Strode came to Culpeper from King George county. Mordecai Barbour was in the Revolutionary army, and drew a pension for military services therein. The children of Mordecai Barbour, and Elizabeth Strode, were : 1. John Strode Barbour, m. Eliza A. Byrne; 2. Frances, in. Judge Henry Minor, of Ala- bama; 3. Ann, or Nancy, m. Dr. Thomas Gist, of Kentucky; 4. Maria, m. Col. Tillinghast, of South Carolina, and afterwards married Col. J. B. Hogan, who was collector of the port of Mobile, Alabama; 6. Mordecai, who died unmarried. After the death of his wife, Elizabeth, Mordecai Barbour married Sally Byrne (nee Haskell), who was the widow of James Byrne, of Petersburg, and the mother of Eliza A. Byrne, the wife of his son, John S: Barbour. Mordecai Barbour died at the home of his daughter, Mrs. Minor, of Alabama, Jan. 4th. 1846, in his 82nd. year.
THOMAS BARBOUR (James, James, James.) m. Mary Taylor, a daughter of Capt. James Taylor, Clerk of Orange county, March 22nd, 1787. This James Taylor was the oldest son of the well known Col. George Taylor, of Orange, who was commissioned Colonel by Governor Dinwiddie in 1755, and who had
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nine sons in the revolutionary army, and had himself been a Burgess and a member of of the convention of 1776. Captain Taylor moved to Kentucky about 1798 or '99, giving up his clerkship to a half brother. Thomas Barbour and his wife also moved to Kentucky about the same time, and had seven children : 1. James. 2. Gabriel; 3. Nathaniel; 4. Ann; 5. Lucy; 6. Fanny; and 7. Edwin.
PHILIP BARBOUR (James, James, James.) Was a colonel in the war of 1812, mn. 1st. Lucy Taylor, no issue : m. 2nd. Elizabeth Hopkins, of Henderson City, Kentucky, a daughter of General Samuel Hopkins. Issue, five children : 1. Lucy, m. Dr. Glass, of Henderson, Ky; 2. Elizabeth, m. Win. L. Jones, of Memphis; 3. Major Philip Norborne Barbour; 4. Samuel Barbour, m. Miss Clay, and left no issue; 5. James Mordecai Barbour, m. Miss Lydia A. Scott.
RICHARD BARBOUR (James, James, James.) m. Mary, daughter of Major Win. Moore, of Orange. They had the following children : 1. Maria, m. Jack Taylor; 2. Eliza, m. Robert M. Taylor; 3. Lucy, m. Col. Alexander; 4. James, who died single.
FRANCES BARBOUR ( James, James, James.) m. John Moore, of Orange, son of Major William Moore, and Mary Throckmorton, August 1st. 1798. Is- sue : James Barbour, b. March 8th., 1800; 2. William Catlett, b. February 13th., 1802, mn. Matilda R. Taylor; 3. John Throckmorton b. 1807, in. Mary Crutch- field; 4. Gabriel Barbour, h. December 10th., 1810; 5. Richard Barbour, b. March 28th., 1814, m. 1st .- Mallory, in. 2nd. Susan Crump; 6. Frances Throckmorton, b. December 25th., 1816, m. A. G. Crutchfield.
LUCY BARBOUR (James, James, James.) in. Wythe Baylor, had a daugh- ter Lucy, who m. Gabriel Barbour, son of Thomas Barbour (James, James).
SARAH BARBOUR (James, James, James.) m. Col. John (James) Harrison, and had two children : James, mn. Miss Talbot, having five children, names not known, and Lucy, m. -- Davis.
MARY BARBOUR (James, James, James.) in. Col. David Walker, who was a member of Congress from Kentucky for years. They left seven children : 1. Mary, m. Col. R. K. Meade; 2. Fannie, mn Humphrey Gwynn; 3. Helen m. -- Browder; 4. James Volney; 5. Jefferson Walker; 6. George Walker; and 7. David Walker. The two latter were leading lawyers of Tallahassee, Fla .. and both left families. James and Jefferson died without issue.
JAMES BARBOUR (Thomas, James, James.) m. Lucy, daughter of Benja- min Johnson and Bettie Barbour. Resided in Orange county, Virginia. Was a representative in Congress from Virginia from 1815 until he resigned in 1825. Was Secretary of War, and Minister to England under John Quincy Adams' administration, and Governor of Virginia during the war of 1812. His chil- dren were : 1. Benjamin Johnson, died in 1820 at 20 years of age; 2. James, who died in 1857 without issue; 3. Benjamin Johnson, b. 1821, m. Caroline Watson; 4. Lucy, in John Seymour Taliaferro; 5. Frances Cornelia, mn. Win. Handy Collins, of Baltimore.
PHILIP PENDLETON BARBOUR (Thomas, James, James.) was a brother of Governor James Barbour, and married a sister of his wife, Frances Todd John- son, and earned equal distinction with his distinguished brother. He was born May 25th .. 1783; was a member of the Virginia Assembly in 1812. In 1814 was elected to Congress, and continned therein until 1825. and was chosen speaker of the House in 1821. He was a lawyer of great distinction; was offer ed the professorship of law at the University of Virginia by Mr. Jefferson, but declined it, and was appointed a judge of the General Court of Virginia. In 1827 he resigned, and was re-elected to Congress without opposition. In 1829 he, together with ex-President Madison, represented Orange county in the
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Constitutional Convention of that year, and on the death of ex-President Mon- roe, succeeded him as president of that distinguished body. In 1830 he Was appointed U. S. District Judge for the Eastern District of Virginia. He de- clined the post of Attorney General, and refused nominations for a seat on the Court of Appeals of Virginia, for the gubernatorial chair, and the Senate of the United States, but in 1836 accepted an appointment as a Justice of the Su- preme Court of the United States, and held this position until his death in 1842 (16 Peters). His children were : 1. Philippa, m. Judge R. H. Field; 2. Elizabeth, in. J. J. Ambler; 3. Dr. Thomas; 4. Edmund Pendleton; 5. Quintus; 6. Sextus; 7. Septimus, died without issue.
RICHARD BARBOUR (Thomas, James, James) Issue unknown.
MARY BARBOUR (Thomas, James, James.) m. Daniel Bryan, of Harrison- burg, Virginia. Issue : 1. Mary Anna, mn .- Lathrop; 2. Caroline, m. Judge Wylie, of Washinton; 3. Sally, m .- Brown: 4. Thomas; 5. William.
LUCY BARBOUR (Thomas, James, James.) m. Thomas Newman, of Orange county. Issue : 1. Veranda, m. Nathaniel Welch; 2. Lucetta, m. James Madison Macon; 3. James B., m. Sallie Battle Fitzhugh.
NELLY M. BARBOUR (Thomas, James, James.) m. Martin Nalle, Issue : 1. Philip P., mn. Elizabeth Wallace, of King George, and had the following children : G. B. W .. m. Nannie Porter, P. P. Jr., Robert Mason, Fanny, m. C. Y. Steptoe, and Mary Fenton, wife of Douglas G. Somerville, all of whom reside in Culpeper county, except Mason, who lives in Washington D. C .; 2. Cordelia U. T., m. Joseph Hiden, father of Rev. J. C. Hiden, D. D., (Baptist), and Philip B. Hiden, of Fluvanna. J. C. Hiden in. Bessie Chewning, of Flu- vanna, and has four children as follows : Anna, wife of Ira F. Davis, of Charleston, W. Va., Joseph H. Hiden, in. Nellie Battle, of Accomac, Robert C. Hiden, managing Editor of the Richmond Times, and Grace, wife of Edward Wilkinson, of Birmingham, Alabama. P. B. Hiden m. Bettie H. Goodwin, of Louisa, and has six children as follows : George C. Hiden, of Brandy Station, Philip W. Hiden, of Newport News. Nannie M., Elizabeth, Martin Barbour, and William Conway; 3. Edmonia Nalle, m. William Major, the father of Wil- liam Major, who m. Laura M. Spindle. Samuel Major, who in., and Philip Ma- jor. I. Anna L. Hill of Culpeper; 4. Fanny Nalle, in. John C. Hansborough, a prominent lawyer, whose children are : Bettie C. Hansborough, of Upper Marlboro, Md .. and Nellie Hansborough, of Virginia; 5. Martinet Nalle, m. Blucher W. Hansborough, of "Cole's Hill," where she still lives; 6. Lucetta Nalle, who in. George Booton, of Madison. He represented Madison in the Virginia Legislature, and lett but one child, Mollie, who m. W. J. Cave, for years treasurer of Madison county. Their children are : Belle, Mary, m. Lucio Hill, Eloise, George, Norma, Roy, Herbert; 7. Jane Nalle, m. Edward M. Clarke, of Washington, D. C., and had Edwin M. Clarke, Jas. Clarke, and Florence, who m .- Haldiman, of the Louisville Courier Journal; 8. Dr. Richard Thomas Nalle, mu. Miss Hooe, of Fauquier. Their children were : Jas., Edmund P., m. 1st. Miss Wallace, who left one child, m. 2nd. Kate Robertson of Culpeper, by whom there are four or five children, and Mary D., mn. James Belt, of Upper Marlboro, Md., and Bettie Rice, in. C. C. Magruder, of Maryland; 9. Sarah Ellen Nalle, m. Col. Garrett Scott. father of Rev. F. G. Scott, of Gor- densville, Nellie Scott. J. M. Scott, Edward Scott, Thomas Scott, and W. W. Scott, the present State Librarian; 10. Mary Nalle, mn. Richard H. Willis, hav- ing Byrd Willis, who m. a daughter of John Willis, Philip Willis, of Mississip- pi, Fanny, wife of Dr. Madison, of Orange, Rosa Willis, wife of Benton Willis, of Mississippi, Elizabeth, m .- , Lucy Willis, who died unmarried, Bar- bour Willis, who m. a Miss Huntou, of Fauquier, and died in Dakota, Richard
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H. Willis, who m. Elizabeth Hall of Syracuse, N. Y., having Richard L. and Katherine Murat, who died 1899, and Nellie M. who m. Martin Stringfellow, having Rittenhouse, Byrd, Willis, R. Stanton, Anne S., m .- Taylor, Champe, C., m .-- Taylor; 11. B. Johnson Nalle; 12. James Barbour Nalle, neither of whom ever married.
SALLY BARBOUR (Thomas, James, James.) m. Gabriel Gray, of Culpeper, is- sne: 1. Rebecca, wife of Shelton F. Leake, a distinguished lawyer and debater, and the father of Shelton F. Leake, of Tyler, Texas, who m. Kate Nelson, a daughter of Mr. Lewis P. Nelson, of Culpeper; 2. Martha, in. Win. L. Ander- son, who was killed at the battle of Seven Pines. Their children were: John R., of the University of Virginia, and Richard, who died at Charlottesville in 1899, leaving two infant children; 3. Philippa, m. R. W. Anderson. Their children are Rev. John Gray (Presbyterian), of Tampa, Florida, Lucy, who lives with him, and Martha: 4. Lucy, m. James B. Cowles. She died about 1881, leaving one daughter, Florence; 5. Dr. John Gray, who died at Brents- ville, unmarried, in 1851.
JOHN S. BARBOUR (Mordecai, James, James, James.) in. Elizabeth Byrne, of Petersburg. Was a lawyer and orator of distinction, and represented Vir ginia in the U. S. House of Representatives from about 1821 to 1831. Was a member of the constitutional convention of 1829, and presided over the Demo- cratic National Convention that nominated Franklin Pierce for the presiden- cy. His children were: 1. Sally, who never married; 2. John S. Barbour, for years president of the O. & A. R. R. Co., afterwards the Virginia Midland, a representative in congress from Virginia; conducted the campaigns that crush- ed the power of the coalition between the Republican and Readjuster parties in Virginia, and was afterwards elected to the U. S. Senate, of which body he was a member at the time of his death, in May, 1892. His wife was Susan Dan- gerfield, of Alexandria. They had no children; 3. James Barbour, m. Fanny T., a daughter of Coleman C. Beckham, of Culpeper. He represented Cul- peper repeatedly in the Legislature. Was a member of the constitutional con - vention of 1849, and of the secession convention. He was also a member of the Peace Commission. During the civil war he was for a time Adjutant General on General Ewell's staff, but was compelled to resign by reason of health. He died in 1895, leaving seven children, as follows: Ellie B., wife of Hon. John F. Rixey, at present a representative in Congress from Virginia; Mary B., wife of Prof. Clarence B. Wallace, of Nashville, Tenn .. James Barbour, of San Joa- quin Co .. Cal., John S. Barbour, a lawyer of Culpeper, who m. Mary, daugh- ter of Judge D. A. Grimsley, of Culpeper. Edwin Barbour, of St. Louis, Mo., who m. Josie, daughter of Alex. McDonald, ex-senator from Arkansas, A. Floyd Barbour, of Nashville, Tenn., and Fanny C., wife of B. Collins Beck. ham, of Culpeper connty: 4. Major Alfred M. Barbour, who was commandant of the Arsenal at Harper's Ferry at the time of the John Brown raid. a mem. ber of the secession convention, and was Gen. Joseph E. Johnston's Quarter- master General during the war. He died at Montgomery, Ala., in 1866. His wife was Kate Daniel, of Jefferson county, Virginia. His children died in in- fancy; 5. Eliza B., the wife of Capt. George G. Thompson, of Culpeper; she died in 1887, leaving the following children: J. S. B. Thompson, a prominent general officer of the Southern Ry. Co .. with headquarters at Atlanta, Ga., who m. Mary, daughter of Col. Morton Marye, Auditor of Virginia, Lelia Thompson, Annie, the wife of Rev. J. G. Minnegerode, rector of Calvary Epis- copal church. Louisville, Ky., Richard C. Thompson, lawyer, of Washington, D. C., Eliza B .. of Culpeper, George G. Thompson, Jr., also prominent among the So. Ry., officials, at Raleigh, N. C., and Ruth, the wife of John Hanckle, of Roanoke, Virginia; 6. Edwin Barbour, who died unmarried in 1892.
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FRANCES BARBOUR (Mordecai, James, James, James.) in. at Petersburg, Virginia, Sept. 14th., 1809, Judge Henry Minor, who was a judge of the Su- preme Court of Alabama; issue: 1. Henry, b. July 7th, 1810, d. at sea November 25th., 1839; 2. Mordecai, d. in infancy; 3. Ann Virginia, b. August 23rd., 1814, m. John Gilliam Friend, of Mobile, Alabama, d. March 5th., 1884 Issue : Fanny Friend, of Mobile, Alabama. Eliza, who died in 1898, Maria, who died in 1878, Virginia Friend, of Mobile, Henry Minor Friend, of Mobile, m. Amanda Moore, Mary Minge Friend, mn. James D. Harwell, and lives at Meridian, Mississippi. John Gilliam Friend, m. Lulu H. Dunn, died in 1890, and Alice Friend, who died in 1854, 4. Eliza Barbour, b. December 12th., 1816, died in 1842, unmarried; 5. Frances Cosby. b. Jan. 16th., 1819, died March 4th., 1846; 6. Maria, b. July 23rd., 1820, in. Dr. Ezra F. Bouchelle, having Fanny Minor, Maria Barbour, Ezra Fiske, m. Sally Gould, Philip Minor, Henry Minor, Benjamin Rush, Lu- cy. Amanda, John Friend, and Henry Tutwiler, m. Innes Gould. Ezra Fiske Bouchelle and Sallie Gould, his wife, have issue : Delia 'T., Maria Minor, Annie B., Sallie G., Fannie M., Ezra T., Jessie C., and Bessie Innes. Henry Tutwiler Bouchelle, and Innes Gould, his wife, have issue as follows : Delia F .. Henry T., John MeK. G., and Lucy Minor. The Bouchelles and Goulds reside in Boligee, Green county, Ala .; 7. Louisa, b. September 22nd., 1822, m. -; 8. Mordecai Lafayette, b. April 22nd., 1824, m. Hattie Fleming, died at Elinira, N. Y., a prisoner after the close of the civil war. Left one son, John Launcelot Minor; 9. John Launcelot, b. June 3rd., 1826, died in Mobile, Ala., in 1855; 10. Philip P. B .. b. Jan. 23rd., 1828, in. Eliza Perry, died June, 1884. Their issue were : Lucy Barbour, Fannie Friend, m. Dr. E. P. Riggs, a proin- inent physician of Birmingham, Ala , Mary Perry, Caro Boddie, mn. Rev. J. Y. Penn, Philip Barbour, of Eutaw. Ala., and Elsie; 11 Lucy Landon Barbour, in. Dr. Joseph C. Hamilton. Their issue were : Joseph Courten, Henry Mi- nor. Frances Barbour, who m. Richard B. Shepherd, of Mt. Vernon, Alabama, and Charlotte Anna, who in. Isaac B. Swift. The children of Henry M. Friend and Amanda Moore, are : Anne Virginia and Henry Minor. John Gilliam Friend and Loula Dunn Friend left one child, Ellen Trabue Friend. Fannie Minor, who in. Dr. E. P. Riggs, has three children : Philip Minor Riggs, Elise Riggs, and Fannie Minor Riggs. Caro Boddie Minor, who m. J.V. Penn, has one child, Sallie Bouchelle Penn. Frances B. Hamilton, who m. Richard B. Shepherd, has seven children : Frederick, Joseph H., Richard, William, Lu- cian M., Frances B., and Tazewell.
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