USA > Virginia > Culpeper County > Culpeper County > Genealogical and historical notes on Culpeper County, Virginia > Part 40
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is certain, though, that her daughter, Mary, m. Col. Thomas Barbour, and another, Catherine, mn. Ambrose Barbour. Her son, Richard, m. in 1753 Mildred Taylor, of Orange county; their children were : Richard, George, James, Sarah, and Mildred, mn. John Piper. James Thomas m. in 1781 Eliza- beth, dau. of Henry Pendleton.
John Thomas, youngest son of (John, William, William Ap Thomas.) and brother of Richard, was born about 1690; he bought land in King William, Spot- sylvania, Hanover, Orange and King George counties, between 1725 and 1739. In 1776 he was living in Bromfield Parish, Culpeper county. He died in 1782, a very old man, having survived two of his sons, and having several great grand children. He mentions in his will the following children : Benjamin, John, Massey, William, Margaret McKey, Sarah Powell, and Ann Kirk. His son, Benjamin. succeeded to his property in King George county, and died 1782. His son, William, made his will in 1776 in Maryland. His son, Massey Thomas, died in 1776, leaving wife, Elizabeth, children : Reuben, John, Wil- liam, Massey, Jesse, and Susannah. Massey Thomas Jr. served in the Revo- lutionary Army from 1776 to 1779 in the 10th. Va. Regiment, Col. John Green. He m. 1st. Elizabeth Barlow, 2nd Martha Pendleton, dau. of Philip, 2nd. son of Heury and Mary (Taylor) Pendleton. Thus, the great nephew of Richard Thomas m. the great neice of Isabella Pendleton, his wife. The children of Massey Thomas and Martha Pendleton were : 1. Frances Taylor, b. 1788, m. -Lewis; 2. Philadelphia Pendleton, b. 1789, m. James Dunnica; 3. Sallie Minor, b. 1791, m. Wm. H. Dunnica; 4. Granville Pendleton, b. 17 -; 5. Vir- ginia Curtis, b. 1794, m .- Norwood; 6. John Price. b. 1796; 7. Martha Cur- tis, b. 1798, m .-- Ramsey. Massey Thomas moved to Woodford county, Ky., before 1813 and died there. His son, Granville Pendleton Thomas, fought in the war of 1812 to 1915, in the 2nd. Kentucky Regiment. The moth- er, Martha (Pendleton) Thomas, moved, after her husband's death, to Missou- ri with her two sons-in-law, James and William H. Duunica, and died there in 1824. The Thomas family of Culpeper county goes back to the emigrant in the following order : Massey (6), Massey (5), John (4), John (3), William (2). William Ap Thomas.
MISCELLANEOUS.
CHAPTER X.
GEN. LA FAYETTE IN CULPEPER.
Next to Washington, as a Revolutionary patriot the memory of La Fay- ette is cherished and honored by Virginians.
The Marquis, Gilbert Mottier De La Fayette, was born on the 6th of Sep- tember, 1757, at Charagnac, in the ancient province of Auvergne. He was the son of Col. La Fayette who was killed in the battle of Minden two months before the birth of La Fayette. His mother did not long survive her husband's death, leaving La Fayette an infant, the heir to immense estates. By his guardian, he was sent, at the age of twelve, to college in Paris; at eighteen years of age he married his wife, who was two years younger than himself, which marriage proved to be a happy co-partnership, the wife being truly a helpmeet and promoter of the independent views and plans of the husband-a worker for mankind and individual liberty.
La Fayette was the founder of the national guard at Paris. On account of this he encountered the opposition of the Royalists. He was in favor of
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THIS PLAQUE IS A PIECE OF THE LAFAYETTE OAK;A TREE UNDER WHICH GENERAL, GILBERT MOTIER LAFAYETTE STRICK HIS TENT ON THE MARQUIS ROAD IN VIRGINIA WHICH HIS TROOPS CONSTRUCTED EN ROUTE TO MEET GENERAL CORNWALLIS AT YORKTOWN.
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PRESENTED BY MRS.ANNE S. GREEN OF CULPEPER, VIRGINIA! AND MRS.WILLIAM WGRANTI- DENVER, COLORADO TO THE CONTINENTAL HALL OF THE DAUGHTERS OF THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION.
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constitutional governinent, consequently he became the target of the Jaco- bins, being arrested and tried for treason. At that time he saw, from afar, the struggle our Colonies were making against the greedy encroachments of England; being unable to help his own people, he determined to join forces with America, and help to achieve her independence. When the news came, and was hailed with joy by the Colonists. Lord Cornwallis spoke with con- tempt, of his advent, calling him, in his dispatches to the Queen, a boy who could easily be put down. But the prophesy was refuted by the surrender of Cornwallis at York Town. For this "boy" took a prominent part in the final overthrow of the English commander.
La Fayette made four separate visits to America; first in 1777; then in 1780, after which he returned to bring money and men to aid the Colonists. His third visit was in 1784 to enjoy the conclusion of peace. The last in 1825. when he accepted the invitation of Congress to become the guest of the Nation. It was during this visit that he was the guest of Culpeper. The town of Culpeper sent a committee, composed of La Fayette's old comrades in arms, Col. Gabriel Long and Capt. Philip Slaughter, to convey to him their invitation. he being, at the time, at Monticello, the home of Jefferson, where he was ineeting his old friends, Madison, Monroe, William Wirt, and others. That evening be journeyed, with Mr. Madison, to Montpelier, where the Culpeper committee found him and delivered their invitation, which was accepted.
The next morning, with this committee, he took up his line of journey, throughout which he received ovations from all classes of people, men, women, and children coming out to greet him as he passed along. His journey was near to the old Marquis road, which had been constructed by his troops when on their way to York Town, and on which stood the historic La Fayette Oak, which had been his shelter in '76. This tree was located near what is now Rhodesville, and known as La Fayette Station on the railroad from Orange to Fredericksburg. A piece of this La Fayette Oak was recently made into a plaque and sent to the unveiling of the La Fayette monument in Paris, as a souvenir, presented by Mrs. Anne S. Green, of Culpeper, she having procured a portion of the historical old tree from the Rev. R. R. Howison, historian, of Virginia. A representation of this testimonial from Culpeper accompanies this description of La Fayette's visit.
The party reached Crooked Run at about 10 o'clock on the 22nd. of An- gust. 1825, where they were met by a company of horsemen, under the command of Col. Jonathan Catlett Gibson, ladies in carriages, and citizens on foot. The next stop was made at Greenwood, the home of Judge John W. Green, of the Court of Appeals of Virginia. The guests went into the house and partook of some refreshments, attended by Mrs. Green, Mrs. Patton, Mrs.
Slaughter, and others, after which, the escort having dismounted and arranged themselves in a double line at their horses' heads, La Fayette, at his own request, was intro- duced to each man individually, Judge Green refreshing the entire party with cool drinks of iced today, which was a favorite Virginia beverage in those days. Resuming their march, the party reached Culpeper before two o'clock and stopped at the Episcopal rectory, the home of the Rev. Alonzo Welton, remaining there an hour, when they were escorted to the Masonic Hall, where Mr. Jolin Shackelford eloquently addressed the multitude that had assembled to greet the distinguished guest. After the address La Fayette received the old soldiers, who were the veterans of '76, and who had come from far and near to see him-from the hills and valleys of Culpeper and Orange, many of whom had been members of the old Minute Men of Culpeper, who were among the earliest to enlist in the fight for liberty and country.
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After this came the great dinner, which was prepared under the direction of Jere Strother, at the old Bell Tavern, the great bell in its front giving it its name. No dining hall was spacious enough to accommodate the guests, so the banquet was held under a tent in the garden, which required five hun- dred yards of brown linen to construct. And under this grand canopy the La Fayette banquet was held. Meats were barbecued in every style-in pits and on spits. There were roasted pigs, ducks, turkies, hamns, and everything else to correspond. Thirty toasts were drank. Lovely maidens, in white, were the waitresses, one of thein, Miss Sallie Barbour, reciting a poem. Mrs. Ger- aldine Lightfoot, Misses Sarah and Ann Norris were also among them. Years ago Miss Sarah Norris gave the writer an account of this event, in which she recalled the dessert of nuts, etc., and the filbert that La Fayette put in his mouth, which, proving a nut that he could not crack, he laid beside his plate, and was secured by her as a souvenir of the hero. A ball at night in the Masonic Hall wound up the day, La Fayette leaving next morning for Warren- ton, having many citizens and military as his escort, among whom were Cols. Gibson and Storrow, Judge Green and others. On his visit to Culpeper Gen. La Fayette was accompanied by ex- President Monroe.
THE PRESBYTERIANS OF CULPEPER. [By G. D. Gray.]
'The Presbyterian church of Culpeper was organized in 1813, consisting then of 24 members.
On the 14th of April, 1815, Samuel Davies Hoge, father of the late Dr. Moses D. Hoge, of Richmond, was installed as the first pastor. He had been supplying the pulpit for about two years previous to that time. He contin- ued to be the pastor for several years. Who succeeded him as pastor, or stat- ed supply, is not known, but in 1832, Rev. A. D. Pollock became their stated supply, and continued to be such till some time in 1837, when Rev. John J. Royall became their stated supply. The church, at that time, comprised the counties of Culpeper, Madison, Orange, Spotsylvania and Rappahannock, and had over 50 members. Among them were the following:
Elders: William Kemper, father of Governor Kemper, John GHassell. Members: Elizabeth Slaughter, Lney Ashby, Mary Somerville, Maria Kemper, Irena P. Green, Sarah Freeman, Lucy Gordon, Betsy Gordon, M. G. Spots- wood, Hannah Grymes, Betsy Shackleford, Anne Robertson, Mildred Smith, Cecilia Wallace, Sarah C. Barbour, Mary H. Somerville, Mrs. Susan Thorn- ton, Fanny Shackleford, William Glassell, Walter Somerville, John Ashby, William Ashby, Miss Duncanson, Marion Glassell, Elizabeth Lee, Louisa B. Glassell, Elizabeth Ashby, Emily Ashby, Mary Anne Wallace, Mrs. Martin Slaughter, Mrs. H. Strother, Mrs. Mary Ann Strother, Harriet P. Strother. Henry Strother, Aylette Buckner, Mary
Rolls, Robert Deatherage, Mrs. Deatheinge, George Thom, Jane Nelson, Susan Nelson, Elizabeth Nelson, Harriet P. Spotswood, Mary Frances Thornton, Elizabeth Thornton, Mrs. Nancy Shivers, Miss Calvert, Mrs. Jett, Mrs. Sally Grimes, Miss Sally Grymes, Mrs. Nellie Skinker, Miss Agnes Kem- per, and Miss Sarah Kemper.
Mr. Royall continued to supply the pulpit of this church till the month of December, 1855. when Rev. A. D). Pollock again became the stated supply, and continued this relation with the church till the year 1867, when he re- signed, and, at his request, Rev. Robert L. McMurran was invited to take his place. The house of worship, situated at the northern end of Main street, had been destroyed during the war between the States, the lot sold, and money invested in the lot on which the present building was erected, which
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was built in the year 1868. The congregation occupied their new church building in March, 1869, for the first time. Rev. Mr. McMurran continued to occupy the position of stated supply till some time in the year 1870, when Rev. R. T. Berry took his place and occupied the pulpit till September, 1871.
The church was without a pastor or stated supply till January, 1874, when Rev. W. W. Reese became the supply which position he held till January, 1876, when he was elected and installed pastor, which office he held till Sep- tember, 1875. In 1877 Rev. Samuel K. Winn was elected and installed pastor, and he continued as such till April, 1879, when he resigned to accept a call to Petersburg. The church pulpit was again vacant till May, 1881, when Rev. J. P. Strider was installed pastor, which position he filled till October, 1883, when he resigned to accept a call to Savannah, Ga. The church was left again without any stated ministry till April, 1886, when Rev. Edward Eells was elected and installed pastor, which office he held till October 1887. From October, 1837, to May, 1839, the pulpit was again vacant. From May, 1899, to March, 1894, Rev. R. R. Howisou supplied the pulpit From October, 1894 to October, 1895, the pulpit was filled by Rev. T. R. Sampson, D. D., after which time there was no stated supply till April, 1896, when Rev. J. Louis McClung Was elected pastor. Mr. McClung declined the call as pastor but has contin- ued to supply the pulpit to the present time, November, 1900. The present number of members is 40.
REGARDING THE GERMANNA SETTLEMENT.
[Mr. Willis M. Kemper, of Cincinnati, Ohio, author of the "Kemper Gene- alogy," has recently (Sept., 1900) been on a visit to Germany, and has furnish- ed the following concerning the old settlement of Germanna .- R. T. G.]
Several years prior to 1714 Gov. Spotswood discovered deposits of iron ore on the large tracts of land he had entered, where Germanna was afterwards located, in Spotsylvania (now Orange) county. He spent much time arranging his plans to work this one, and in getting the Queen's (Ann) permission, and in having the royal share determined. After these matters were adjusted he needed iron miners and iron workers, to mine the ore, and build furnaces and run them, and there were none in Virginia. When the Baron de Graffenreid was in Virginia after his escape from the North Carolina Indian massacre, he arranged with Spotswood to get miners for him from Germany, and with this in view de Graffenried wrote to miners with whom he was acquainted in Ger- many, and arranged for their coming to Virginia. The colony was gathered from the neighborhood of the village of Musen in the province of Nassau- Siegen, in Westphalia, some ten miles Northeast of the old city of Seigen. This is a mining country, and at Musen is one of the most celebrated iron mines in Germany, which has been worked since early in the 14th century. The colony, as it reached Virginia, was composed of twelve heads of families, viz: John Kemper. Jacob Holtzelaw, John and Harman Fishback, John Hoff- inan, Harmon Utterback, Tillman Weaver (Webber), John Joseph Martin, (Merdten), Peter Hitt (Heide), Jacob Coons (Countz), -Wayman and -Handback. The colony may have been larger when it left Germany, for it spent the greater part of the fall of the year 1713, and January, 1714, in London, and some names are mentioned which do not appear in Virgina. There also came, either with them or very shortly after them, their pastor, John Henry Hager, a very learned man, who had been pastor of the reformed church at Ober Fishback, in the neighborhood of Musen. This was the first German colony that came to Virginia, and they were settled by Gov. Spotswood at Germanna in April, 1714, where cabins and a block house were built for them. They went to mining ore for the governor, and built the blast furnace, the remains of which are to be seen in the neighbor- hood. Here they remained for several years, when, owing to some dissatisfaction with the governor's treatment of them, they removed, about 1720, to Germantown, in what is now Fanquier county, where they leased large tracts of lands and went to farming. By this time other German colonies had come to Virginia, some of which had to pay their passage by working for the governor. The reformed part of these emi. grants, with their old pastor, went to Germantown, Fauquier, while the Luth- eran part of the colonists went a little later to Robinson's river. A recent visit
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to Musen shows it a prettily situated village of about 2,000 people in a narrow valley. It has grown up around the old mine, still worked. The parish was ent off from the neighboring parish of Ferndorf, in the wider valley nearer Siegen, in 1727. The little reformed church, built about that time, was de- stroyed, in the 30 years war, with all of its records. The church was rebuilt and the new records begin 1649. The church was again destroyed by fire in 1892, but the records were saved. The entire village attends this church; there is not a Catholic in the town. The villages of Fishback and Holtzclaw are a few miles to the West of Musen. No doubt the families, in the colony, of those names came from these villages. The records of the Kemper family is to be found in the church records at Musen. There is no one by the name at Mu- sen today. Utterbacks and Webbers are still living in Musen. The names of Hoffman, Merdten and Countz are still to be found in the neighborhood. The maine Heide is still to be found in the meadows about Ferndorf. No doubt old records of some of these families can be found at Ferdorf. Siegen is the large town in this part of the country, and is a picturesque old place, with its old castle high on a hill, its steep narrow winding streets, and high gabled, ov- erhanging houses, and is a thrifty place of some 25,000 people, largely engaged in iron manufacturing. The Westphalian country is one of the most thrifty in Germany. Musen is a clean little town, with neat houses, intelligent people, and a respectable air about it. These German farmers soon made the wilder- ness about Germantown to blossom as the rose, and Germantown was for years the center of the German people, and known far and wide.
THE CULPEPER OF TO-DAY.
[To be read in conjunction with page 11, of Part II, which was written in April, 1899.]
Now (October, 1900.) the municipal goverment is : Mayor, Alden Bell; Re- corder and Assessor. G. Chapin Lightfoot; Treasurer, G. W. Keerl; Council- men, R. F. Booton. David Bailey, Samuel Diener, A. M. Allan, J. S. Coving- ton and C. E. Smith.
Instead of one hank, there are now three, viz : The Culpeper National Bank, S. Russell Smith, President; The Farmers' and Merchants' Bank, C. J. Rixey, proprietor: and the Second National Bank, C. J. Rixey, President.
Among the lawyers D. J. F. Strother has removed to West Virginia, and Messrs. Alden Bell and E. S. Perry are now members of the Culpeper bar. S. M. Newhouse, having succeeded S. R. Mcclanahan, is now the Culpeper mem- ber of the House of Delegates.
THE FIRST COUNTY COURT.
The earliest county court held for Culpeper county, as shown by the deed books, the first minute book having been lost, was on the 18th day of May, 1749, without the place being mentioned. On another of the first pages of the first deed book it appears that court was held on Thursday, June 15, 1749, at the residence of Robert Coleman.
The clerks of the County Court, from 1749 to the present time, with their respective periods of service, are : 1. Roger Dixon, 1749 to 1772, 23 years; 2. John Jameson, 1772 to 1810, 38 years; 3. William Broaddus, 1810 to 1811 (died); 4. William Broaddus, Jr., 1811 to 1816, 5 years; 5. Thos. W. Lightfoot, 1816 to 1831. 15 years; 6. F. T. Lightfoot, 1831, to 1838, 7 vears: 7. Fayette Mauzy, 1838 to 1873. 35 years; 8. W. M. Manzy, 1873 to 1874, 1 year; 9. Charles B. Payne, 18- 74 to 1893. 18 years; 10. Warren F .. Coons, 1893 (still serving).
The deed books of the county are intact from 1719. Three of the will books "G," from April 1. 1813, to June 17, 1817, "L." and "M." from 1827 to 1833, were lost during the war beween the States, as were also several of the County Court Minute books.
TOWN OF CULPEPER LAID OUT.
Pursuant to an act of the General Assembly, passed at a session held in Williamsburg on the 22nd. of Feburary, 1759, the town of Fairfax (Culpeper's original name) was laid off on 27 acres of the land of Robert Coleman, the Court House being located on lot No. 24 (which is now the corner of Davis and Main [er Coleman] streets, where stands the store building of Joseph Messinger), the prison and stocks on lot No. 14 (opposite corner, on which is now Joseph B. Gorrell's building). The Town was laid off by William Green, Philip Slaughter, Nathaniel Pendleton, and William Williams, the plan be- ing submitted to the County Court on Thursday, June 21, 1759, and ordered to be recorded.
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INDEX TO MARRIAGE RECORD.
-: 000:
The marriage record, beginning on page 56 of the second part, and ending on page 74, is printed in alphabetical order, according to the name of the hus- band. Owing to its great length the reverse was not printed, but the names of the wives are given in the following index. The following omissions were inadvertently made in the record :
Leroy Cooper m. Harriet Byron Vaughn in 1808.
Daniel Grimsley m. Frances Estes in 1796.
William Grimsley in. Agnes Norman in 1807.
[In looking up naines in the following index, please note that where a name appears more than once on a page, it is only indexed once, hence it will be well to always look through the entire page. The names are printed exactly as they appear in the record, but in a number of instances it can be seen that they are wrongly spelled, and in a majority of cases, can be detected.]
A
Abbott,
69
Belly. Bennett, Berden,
58
Bryan,
57, 66, 71, 72
Adams, 60, 63. 64, 67, 70, 73
Berry,
57, 59. 67,73
Buingardner, 63, 69
Allan,
63, 69, 71
Bingard,
64
Burgess,
65
Allen,
68
Bingham, 56, 63
Burke, 59, 61, 68, 78
Alexander,
61, 73
Bishop,
58, 65, 67, 71
Burns.
66
Alsop.
62, 68
Blackburn, 62
59,73
Burton,
62
Anderson,
59,69
Blair,
60
Butler,
57, 58. 59, 61. 62,
Antram,
61,64
Appleby,
64,72 64
Boone,
57.71
Asher, 58, 60, 68, 72
Borst,
65. 67
Button, 70
Askins,
59
Bosan,
57
Atkins,
57, 58, 72
Boston,
71
Atwood,
Boswell,
58,67
Aynes.
63
Botts.
58, 61, 72
Callaban. 66
Bahanghamn,
65
Bourne.
67,68
Camp,
60,70
Baldick,
74
Ball,
63. 64
Bowling,
74
Ballance,
63
Bowry,
71
Canady, 58,71
Ballinger,
59, 64, 70
Cannon, 59
Banks,
65
Brandam,
57
Cardwell, 58
Barler,
63
Branham,
63. 64
Barnes,
62, 65, 66, 70
Bredlove,
62, 63
Barnhisle,
74
Bridwell,
64
Carroll,
67
Bates,
65
Brooke,
57
Casey,
68
Bawsell,
69
Catlett,
72
Baxter,
70,174
Caul,
56
Bayne,
71
Cave,
60
Beasy,
70
Browning, 59, 61, 65, 66,
Caynor, 60
Beckham,
66, 69, 73
67, 71, 73, 74
|Chancellor,
63
Bell,
73
Broyles, 62, 67
Chandler,
65
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Baker,
57.45
Bowen,
57
Campbell, 58. 59, 61, 63.
Bowers,
72
68, 70, 71, 72
Ballard,
62,69
Brady,
63
Bragg,
58, 73
Carder, 57. 58,59, 65, 69
Barbour,
72,74
Brandon,
57, 66,71
Carpenter, 58, 65. 67, 72. 74
Basye,
57
Broadus,
59
Carter, 57,64, 70, 74
Baugher,
69
Brown,
56,57. 58, 59, 61, 64, 65, 66 67. 68, 69. 71, 72, 73,
.
Cabler. 74
B
Boughan,
68 57
Calvert, 56, 58, 61, 64, 67, 71, 73
Boughorn,
63,65, 66, 68, 72,
Bohen, 59
73
Arnold,
Butt, 63
Bywaters 58, 60, 61, 62, 67
C
60
Burris, 69
Amiss,
61
Blackwell,
61
Burbridge, 57
Bigbee.
62 | Bruce, 60, 64
68
Bryant,
71
Blankenbaker, 59, 73
Cammeral,
72
Carper, 71
II Chapman,
56,74 62
D
Flinn,
72
Chappaliar,
Florence,
Chart,
64
David,
58
Cheek.
64, 65, 70
Davis,
63, 68
Chester,
59
Day.
Foster.
62.72
Chieh, 74
Debourd,
60
Fox,
67 74
Christler,
Dennis,
56
Fristoe,
58
Cinnie,
67
Diffee,
65
Fryer,
62, 68, 71
Dillard.
57
Fucks,
63
Clatterbuck, 57. 61, 62,
Dobbs,
67
Dodson,
57,58,69
Dogan,
73
Gaines,
56, 57, 58, 60, 61,
Clinch,
58
Clore.
69, 73
Donald,
Garner,
68. 72
Cocke.
65, 70
Coffer,
63
Drake,
67
Coffinan,
72
Duff,
63
Garrott,
66
Coghill,
62, 64
Dulaney, 58, 61, 62, 15, 66,
Gaunt,
67.73
Coleman.
60, 70, 73
Dunaway 70
Gibbs,
57,60
Duncan, 65, 69, 71. 72
Gibson,
58. 64, 72
Colvin, 59, 60, 65, 69, 71,
72. 73
E
Golden,
69, 70
Compton,
69
Conner,
59. 71.72
Cooke,
57, 74
Edge,
Edrington.
61,67
Gosney,
67.73
Cooper,
69,73
Edwards,
59. 72
Grady,
63
Corbin, 60, 62, 65, 66, 67,
Eldridge.
66
Graves
62, 63, 65, 66, 73
Corley,
67,72
Cornelius,
71, 72
Cornett.
67
Cosney.
61
Cosper,
F
Grewis, Griffin,
58. 61
Covington,
58. 59,61
Farley. 58
Grimsley,
59. 68
Cowen,
Farmer,
69. 68. 73
Grinnan,
62. 68, 69
Cowgill,
Farrow,
60, 61, 71
Grisby,
65, 73
Cowne,
64,65
Fauleoner,
66, 69
Groves.
17
C'ral,
70
Feaganes.
63
Gully,
Chain.
69, 70
Crawford.
61,68
Crawley,
Fergersou.
64, 66. 70
Haden,
:1
Creal,
57. 70
Fewel,
69, 74
Haines,
(68, 72
Crigler,
64
Ficklin.
58, 69. 71
Hall.
58. 59. 79
Crisal,
59
Fiddle,
62
Han-,
61
Cronch,
60
Finch.
64
Hampkin,
70
Crow,
68
Fincham,
60, 01, 71
Hand,
22
Crutcher,
62, 70
Finks,
62, 71, 72 | Handback.
TO
Cullen,
57
Finnell,
62 Haddox,
61
Cummings,
Fishback,
58, 72, 73 Haney,
63
Cunningham,
60,61
Fleshinan,
63, 70 Hangue,
Curtis,
57.68 Fletcher,
68 Hansbrough,
64, 68
Chewning.
69
Deale,
64
Foushee,
58, 61, 62, 65
Chilton, 56, 61, 71, 74 71
Delany,
59
Chishom.
Dell,
TO
Freeman,
60, 65
Christopher,
60, 71
Dicken,
58, 74
Fry,
58, 71
Clark, 57, 58, 59, 60, 63, 64. 65, 74
Dillen.
57
Furguson,
72
G
Clifton,
73
Doggett, 58, 60, 63, 65, 69 Doores,
62, 63, 66, 68, 69, 72.74
Cochran.
63
Dowling,
62 61
67, 68, 69. 73, 74
Cogell. 68
Duke,
64
Garwood,
64, 65
Colbert.
60
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