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Rebecca Camilla Shaw

Female 1843 - 1921  (78 years)


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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Rebecca Camilla Shaw was born on 3 Jul 1843 in Vermillion Parish, Louisiana (daughter of William Wade Shaw and Elizabeth A. Lyons); died on 2 Sep 1921 in Cedar Bayou, Harris Co, Texas; was buried in Barber and Williams Cem Mont Belvieu, Barbers Hill, Texas.

    Rebecca married Robert Dunman in 1857 in Texas. Robert (son of John Henry Dunman and Adeline Thibodeaux Barrow) was born on 14 Aug 1835 in Harris Co, Texas; died on 4 Jun 1917 in Aransas Pass, San Patricio Co, Texas. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. Mary Elizabeth "LIzzie" Dunman was born on 21 May 1861 in Refugio, Refugio Co, Texas; died on 13 May 1918 in Sinton, San Patricio Co, Texas.
    2. Rachel Dunman was born about 1870; died after 1895.
    3. James Lon Dunman was born on 16 Jul 1884 in Blanconia, Bee Co, Texas; died on 31 Mar 1957 in Baytown, Harris Co, Texas.

Generation: 2

  1. 2.  William Wade Shaw was born on 6 May 1819 in Louisiana (son of John C Shaw and Margaret Camilla Newman); died on 11 Feb 1892 in Bee Co, Texas.

    William married Elizabeth A. Lyons in 1842 in Louisiana. Elizabeth (daughter of David Lyons and Margaret Rebecca Merriman) was born on 17 May 1824 in St. Landry Parish, Louisiana; died on 25 Jan 1892 in Refugio, Refugio Co, Texas; was buried in Blanconia, Bee Co, Texas. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  Elizabeth A. Lyons was born on 17 May 1824 in St. Landry Parish, Louisiana (daughter of David Lyons and Margaret Rebecca Merriman); died on 25 Jan 1892 in Refugio, Refugio Co, Texas; was buried in Blanconia, Bee Co, Texas.
    Children:
    1. 1. Rebecca Camilla Shaw was born on 3 Jul 1843 in Vermillion Parish, Louisiana; died on 2 Sep 1921 in Cedar Bayou, Harris Co, Texas; was buried in Barber and Williams Cem Mont Belvieu, Barbers Hill, Texas.


Generation: 3

  1. 4.  John C Shaw was born on 12 Nov 1789 in North Carolina; died in 1867 in Vermilion Parish, Louisiana.

    Notes:

    Dr. John Shaw

    In 1805 John Shaw wrote a letter to President Jefferson in which he expressed his admiration for the President's politics and introduced himself as "a native of North Carolina, descended from European parents." He had been in the Natchez District and active in politics as early as 1797 when he served on a Citizen's Committee whose duty it was to keep order until the Spanish struck their colors and pulled out of Natchez. Andrew Ellicott, surveyor general and government representative who was present for the occasion , noted Shaw as "an itinerant attorney of some education and abilities."

    Shaw was a dedicated Republican who supported Jeffersonian policies completely, an avid member of the Mississippi Republican Society, along with friends such as Thomas M. Green, Cato West , Judge David Ker and Edward Turner. He was never shy about his
    stand and was constantly in one political battle or another. He and Judge Thomas Rodney had a disagreement about the qualification of territorial judges which led Judge Rodney to attack him as "a quandam pillmaker from the frogponds of North Carolina."

    He was the first settler of Clifton, also named Hayes City, which he called Lowenburg.In addition, he was the first postmaster of Greenville in Jefferson County, MS, and a practicing physician there. In 1804-1805, he served as a representative from Jefferson County to the Mississippi Territorial Legislature. He was one of the founding members of the Franklin Society in Greenville in Jefferson County in 1806. Also that year, he was commissioned by the governor as an attorney in that county.

    During the 1807-1811 era, he was involved in may activities, including editing for a time, the Mississippi Messenger , one of the first newspapers in the territory and printing the Acts of the Territorial Legislature. For several years, he served a member of the Natchez Mechanical Society which was a city council of sorts, and in 1810 became its president, similar to a mayor of today. During this time his life was never dull. The Attorney General of the Mississippi Territory, Seth Lewis, even brought suit against him and other prominent Republicans who were giving Governor Williams a very difficult time.

    By 1815, he moved to Franklin County, Mississippi where he continued as a doctor, lawyer, and postmaster. He and the Baptist minister, Bailey Chaney, were arch political rivals. Shaw wanted the Mississippi Territory divided into the two states of Alabama and Mississippi; Chaney did not.

    Shaw ran successfully against Chaney for the legislature seat from Franklin County in 1817, and in July was a member of the State Constitutional Convention. Unfortunately, he died during the session on August 1 at the home of Anthony Campbell near Natchez. For the remainder of the convention all delegates wore black crepe armbands in his memory and honor. Judge Edward Turner said of him, ?He was a man of wit and honor, an ardent politician, and a caustic writer, well educated and a respectable poet.?

    Partridge in Debow's Review in 1860 said of him, ?His style was rough, rasping, and vigorous, and his power of ridicule and satire were of the highest order. He was also a poet of the Hudibrastic school, and was famous for epigrams and pasquinades. He
    belonged to the Jeffersonian party and, for the reason mentioned, was greatly dreaded by his adversaries. He lived at Natchez, and afterwards at Greenville, in Jefferson County, once a gay, refined and thriving village, but now entirely extinct. Dr. Shaw was for a longtime a member of the Territorial legislature, and was also a member of the convention which framed the first constitution of the State of Mississippi.? Known descendants of John Shaw were Thomas Breckinridge Shaw, Elizabeth Shaw, Mary Shaw, and Saxton Shaw. I descend through Elizabeth who married Robert Griffing April 4, 1807, in Jefferson County, Mississippi.

    Contributed by:
    Sue Burns Moore
    sbmoore@swbell.net

    http://jeffersoncountyms.org/bios.htm#shaw

    John married Margaret Camilla Newman between 1815 and 1818 in St. Mary Parish, Louisiana. Margaret was born in 1793 in Berwick, St. Mary Parish, Louisiana; died on 11 Oct 1827 in St. Martin Parish, Louisiana. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 5.  Margaret Camilla Newman was born in 1793 in Berwick, St. Mary Parish, Louisiana; died on 11 Oct 1827 in St. Martin Parish, Louisiana.
    Children:
    1. 2. William Wade Shaw was born on 6 May 1819 in Louisiana; died on 11 Feb 1892 in Bee Co, Texas.

  3. 6.  David Lyons was born in 1798 in Bayou Queue de Tortue, Vermilion Parish, Louisiana; was christened on 16 Jun 1804 in St Martinville Church, St. Martin Parish, Louisiana (son of John Michael Lyons, Jr and Rachel Marie Forman); was buried after 1826 in Louisiana.

    Notes:

    Occupation: Farmer, Plantation Owner, Sugar Chemist (Bootlegger)
    Succession APR 1826 Opelousas, St. Landry Parish, Louisiana (#393)
    Succession 28 AUG 1829 Lafayette Court House (#164)

    David married Margaret Rebecca Merriman on 14 Jul 1822. Margaret (daughter of Jean (John I) Merriman and Anne Marie Berwick) was born on 12 Jan 1804 in Louisiana; died on 10 Oct 1859 in New Iberia, Louisiana. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  4. 7.  Margaret Rebecca Merriman was born on 12 Jan 1804 in Louisiana (daughter of Jean (John I) Merriman and Anne Marie Berwick); died on 10 Oct 1859 in New Iberia, Louisiana.
    Children:
    1. 3. Elizabeth A. Lyons was born on 17 May 1824 in St. Landry Parish, Louisiana; died on 25 Jan 1892 in Refugio, Refugio Co, Texas; was buried in Blanconia, Bee Co, Texas.
    2. David Merriman Lyons was born on 23 May 1826 in Louisiana; died on 15 Oct 1891 in Abbeville, Vermilion Parish, Louisiana; was buried in Masonic Cem, Abbeville, Louisiana.


Generation: 4

  1. 12.  John Michael Lyons, Jr was born about 1783 in Pensacola, Escambia Co, Florida (near - then Georgia) (son of John Lyons, Sr and Nancy Anne Ahart); died on 27 May 1852 in Robert's Cove, St. Landry Parish, Louisiana.

    Notes:

    son of John and Nancy Ahart)
    Wit: marriage of Joseph Ephrem Forman & Marie Charlotte Stout 15 Jul 1813)
    --
    According to historian, Mary Allice Fontenot, on the night of September 27, 1819, a band of armed men forcibly entered Lyon's home, tied up Lyon, his wife and children, and threatened to take their lives if they resisted. The men spoke English and pretended to be officers of the government. The intruders ransacked the house and carried off the linen and wearing apparel of the family. Ten slaves were taken. An investigation found that the bandits were led by George Brown, one of Jean Lafitte's men. Captain J.H. Madison, commander of a United States schooner, the Lynx, found Lafitte at Galveston, Texas. Lafitte delivered the bandits to the authorities except for Brown, the leader, who Lafitte hung from a gallows.
    Source: Title: Acadia Parish Louisiana, a History prior to 1900.
    Abbrev: Acadia Parish History, Vol. 1
    Author: Fontenot, Mary Alice; Freeland, Paul B.
    Date: 1976; Text: p. 75
    --


    Died:
    L'Anse Robert, now known as Robert's Cove, St. Landry (now Acadia) Parish, Louisiana.

    L'Anse Robert, now known as Robert's Cove, St. Landry (now Acadia) Parish, Louisiana.

    John married Rachel Marie Forman on 30 Mar 1804 in Attakapas Post, St. Martinville, St.Martin Parish, Louisiana, and was divorced on 21 May 1824 in St. Landry Parish, Louisiana. Rachel (daughter of Joseph Ephraim Forman, Sr. and Elizabeth Brown) was born in 1787 in North Carolina; died after 1860 in Louisiana; was buried in Big Woods Cem, Edgerly, Calcasieu Parish, Louisiana. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 13.  Rachel Marie Forman was born in 1787 in North Carolina (daughter of Joseph Ephraim Forman, Sr. and Elizabeth Brown); died after 1860 in Louisiana; was buried in Big Woods Cem, Edgerly, Calcasieu Parish, Louisiana.

    Notes:

    Forman, Marie (Ephreme & Elizabeth Brown) m 30 Mar 1804 John Lyons (SM Ch v. 5 # 13)

    Forman, Marie (Ephrem & Elisabeth Brown of Opel) m 30 Mar 1804 John Lyons (John & Nancy Ahart) of Opelousas) All Protestants. Wits: Antoine Dronet, David Harman, Jean Claude Perrilliat. Fr. Etienne Viel (SM Ch: v.5, #13)

    Notes:

    children and descendants at Rootsweb:
    http://wc.rootsweb.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=samlyons&id=I4637

    Married:
    a Marie Charlotte married Hoffpauir by Commandant of Opel Post in 1804

    Married: 30 MAR 1804 1 in St. Martin de Tours Catholic Church at Attakapas Post - now, St. Martinville, St. Martin Par., LA 1
    Divorced: 21 MAY 1824 in St. Landry Par., LA
    (SW Louisiana Records and St. Martinville Ch Records, V.5 #13)

    Children:
    1. 6. David Lyons was born in 1798 in Bayou Queue de Tortue, Vermilion Parish, Louisiana; was christened on 16 Jun 1804 in St Martinville Church, St. Martin Parish, Louisiana; was buried after 1826 in Louisiana.
    2. John L. Lyons, III was born on 5 Jul 1804 in Calcasieu Parish, Louisiana; died on 31 Mar 1887.
    3. Joseph H. Lyons was born in 1820 in Opelousas, St. Landry Parish, Louisiana; died on 8 Oct 1866 in Orange, Orange Co, Texas.

  3. 14.  Jean (John I) Merriman was born about 1774 in Ireland/England; died after 1805 in of, St. Martin Parish, Louisiana.

    Jean married Anne Marie Berwick on 10 Jun 1794 in Opelousas, St. Landry Parish, Louisiana. Anne (daughter of Thomas Berwick, (immigrant) and Eleanore Helena Brigitta Wallace (or Walles)) was born on 14 Oct 1774 in St. Martinville, St Martin Parish, Louisiana; died on 15 Jan 1832 in Louisiana. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  4. 15.  Anne Marie Berwick was born on 14 Oct 1774 in St. Martinville, St Martin Parish, Louisiana (daughter of Thomas Berwick, (immigrant) and Eleanore Helena Brigitta Wallace (or Walles)); died on 15 Jan 1832 in Louisiana.

    Notes:

    Berwick, Marie (Thomas & Hypolita Wols) m 10 Jun 1794 Jean Merriman (Ople Ch v. 1, p 50)

    Notes:

    Between 1813 and 1816 two of Thomas Berwick's daughters also left St. Mary Parish. In 1813 a list of persons subject to taxation in the parish included William Prather, who had married Aanes Imoqene Berwick and John Merriman, married to Mary, who was also called Polly, Berwick. But two civil suits filed in December 1816 show that by then the Prathers had moved to Opelousas, and the Merrimans had moved to St. Martin. Later the Merrimans moved to SL (St. Landry); Mary, settling on Bayou Said. John Merriman was active on several police jury committees.
    https://archive.org/stream/AttakapasGazette/1986_Vol21_djvu.txt

    Children:
    1. Eleanor Merriman
    2. 7. Margaret Rebecca Merriman was born on 12 Jan 1804 in Louisiana; died on 10 Oct 1859 in New Iberia, Louisiana.
    3. John Merriman was born on 28 Jan 1806 in St. Martinville, St Martin Parish, Louisiana; died before 1860 in of, Orange, Orange Co, Texas.