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Viny Linville

Male Abt 1770 - Aft 1825  (~ 56 years)


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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Viny Linville was born about 1770 in Laurens Co, South Carolina (son of Lewis (VA/SC) Linville, Sr. and Mrs. Mary (..) Linville); died after 1825 in of, Laurens Co, South Carolina.

Generation: 2

  1. 2.  Lewis (VA/SC) Linville, Sr. was born in 1731 in Virginia; was christened on 20 Feb 1737 in Shenandoah Settlement, Frederick Co, Virginia (son of John (VA/SC) Linville, Jr. and Anna Christina Stephens); died in Jul 1822 in Laurens Co, South Carolina.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Census: 1800, Newberry, Newberry Co, South Carolina
    • Census: 1810, Laurens Co, South Carolina

    Notes:

    DAVENPORT / LINVILLE
    ---------------------
    Seeking parents of Martha J. DAVENPORT, b. 1814 SC (probably Laurens Co.) m. ca. 1836 to Jacob LINVILLE, b. 1806 SC (either Laurens of Newberry Co.) Believe Martha J. DAVENPORT to be daughter of Thomas DAVENPORT, d. 1816 Laurens, by his second wife Leatrice.
    (Address) 201 First Ave N.
    Feb 19,1998

    Lewis LINVILLE, b. 1731 son of John and Anna Christina STEPHENS LINVILLE, died in Laurens Co., SC July 1822. Lewis' wife, Mary (maiden name unknown) d. in Laurens Co., Sc in Oct 1825. According to their estate files they had the following children, maybe more.
    1. Evan LINVILLE
    2. Massa LINVILLE
    3. Silvey LINVILLE
    4. Lewis LINVILLE, Jr.
    5. Viny LINVILLE
    Would like to find which of these children was the parent of Jacob LINVILLE, b. 1806 Laurens or Newberry Co., SC m. ca. 1836 Martha J. DAVENPORT and Jacob's brother, John LINVILLE, b. 1798, SC, m. Nellie Ellen (maiden name unknown), b. 1796 SC. IT is possible that Evan LINVILLE was the father of John and Jacob. Know that Lewis LINVILLE Jr. moved to Chambers Co., AL in the 1820's. John and Jacob were still in Laurens Co., SC as late as 1834/5 and then moved to Tennessee. Jacob settling in Lauderdale Co., TN with the DAVENPORTS and John settled in Wayne Co. TN.
    (Address) 201 First Ave N.
    Feb 19,1998

    Edgar D. Byler, III
    Collinwood,TN
    http://www.reocities.com/BourbonStreet/4492/1998.htm

    ---------------------------\http://familytreemaker.genealogy.com/users/c/r/e/Amy-Fowler-Creech/WEBSITE-0001/UHP-0115.html

    Lewis LINVILLE,
    Christening: February 20, 1737, Shenendoah Settlement, Frederick Co., VA.
    d. 1822
    estate of Mary LINVILLE who
    died in 1825,

    "Laurens County South Carolina Wills 1784-1840",

    son Evan Linville
    gson Jacob Linville 1806 SC

    Jacob Linville (son of Evan Linville) was born 1806 in South Carolina, and died Abt. 1860. He married Martha J. Davenport, daughter of Thomas Davenport and Leatrice "Lettie" Wharton.

    Children of Jacob Linville and Martha J. Davenport are:
    +Prucilla Frances Linville, b. July 04, 1837, Lauderdale County, TN, d. November 22, 1889, Wayne County, TN.


    Name: Lewis Linvill
    Home in 1810 (City, County, State): Laurens, South Carolina
    Free White Persons - Males - Under 10: 2 (gson)
    Free White Persons - Males - 10 thru 15: 1 1795-1800 (gson)
    Free White Persons - Males - 26 thru 44 : (son) 1 1766-1784
    Evan? Massa? Silvey? Viny? or ?

    Free White Persons - Males - 45 and over: 1 bef 1765 Lewis
    Free White Persons - Females - Under 10: 1
    Free White Persons - Females - 10 thru 15: 1
    Free White Persons - Females - 26 thru 44: 1 1766-1784 dLaw
    Free White Persons - Females - 45 and over : 1 wife
    Number of Household Members Under 16: 5
    Number of Household Members Over 25: 4
    Number of Household Members: 9


    Census:
    Name: Lewis Linville
    Home in 1800 (City, County, State): Newberry District, South Carolina
    Free White Persons - Males -10 thru 15: 1 1785-1790
    Free White Persons - Males - 16 thru 25: 1 1775-1784 Lewis
    Free White Persons - Females - Under 10: 1 1790-1800
    Free White Persons - Females - 10 thru 15: 1 1785-1790
    Free White Persons - Females - 16 thru 25: 1 1775-1784 wife
    Free White Persons - Females - 45 and over: 1 bef 1765 mother
    Number of Household Members Under 16: 3
    Number of Household Members Over 25: 1
    Number of Household Members: 6

    There is a male over 45 in 1810, possibly the father who just didn't show up in this 1800.


    Census:
    Name: Lewis Linvill
    Home in 1810 (City, County, State): Laurens, South Carolina
    Free White Persons - Males - Under 10: 2 1800-1810
    Free White Persons - Males - 10 thru 15: 1 1795-1800
    Free White Persons - Males - 26 thru 44 : 1 1766-1784 Lewis
    Free White Persons - Males - 45 and over: 1 1765 father
    Free White Persons - Females - Under 10: 1 1800-1810
    Free White Persons - Females - 10 thru 15: 1 1795-1800
    Free White Persons - Females - 26 thru 44: 1 1766-1784 wife
    Free White Persons - Females - 45 and over : 1 bef 1765 mother
    Number of Household Members Under 16: 5
    Number of Household Members Over 25: 4
    Number of Household Members: 9

    Lewis married Mrs. Mary (..) Linville about 1760 in of, South Carolina. Mary was born about 1745 in South Carolina; died in Oct 1825 in Laurens Co, South Carolina. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  Mrs. Mary (..) Linville was born about 1745 in South Carolina; died in Oct 1825 in Laurens Co, South Carolina.
    Children:
    1. Evan (SC) Linville was born about 1762 in South Carolina; died about 1860 in of, Lauderdale Co, Tennessee.
    2. Massa (SC) Linville was born about 1764 in Laurens Co, South Carolina; died after 1825 in of, Laurens Co, South Carolina.
    3. Silvey Linville was born about 1766 in Laurens Co, South Carolina; died after 1825 in of, Laurens Co, South Carolina.
    4. 1. Viny Linville was born about 1770 in Laurens Co, South Carolina; died after 1825 in of, Laurens Co, South Carolina.
    5. Lewis (SC) Linville, Jr. was born between 1766 and 1784; died after 1810 in of, Laurens Co, South Carolina.


Generation: 3

  1. 4.  John (VA/SC) Linville, Jr. was born about 1708 in Virginia (son of John* Linville, Sr. (Immigrant) and Mrs. Ann (..) Linville (not Hendricks)); died after 1740 in Of, Stephens City, Virginia.

    John married Anna Christina Stephens about 1838. Anna (daughter of Samuel Peter Stephens, Sr. and Maria Christina Rittenhouse) was born about 1715 in of, Virginia; died after 1835. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 5.  Anna Christina Stephens was born about 1715 in of, Virginia (daughter of Samuel Peter Stephens, Sr. and Maria Christina Rittenhouse); died after 1835.
    Children:
    1. 2. Lewis (VA/SC) Linville, Sr. was born in 1731 in Virginia; was christened on 20 Feb 1737 in Shenandoah Settlement, Frederick Co, Virginia; died in Jul 1822 in Laurens Co, South Carolina.


Generation: 4

  1. 8.  John* Linville, Sr. (Immigrant) was born in 1677 in Sussex Co, England (son of Richard* Linville, (Immigrant) and Mary* Hart, (Immigrant)); died after 1739 in of, Pennsylvania.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Emigration: 1682, Penn Colony, Pennsylvania
    • Immigration: 1682, Fletching, Sussex, England

    Notes:

    The story of this historical marker begins with the story of children.

    Two young boys, ages about 3 and 5, left their home in Fletching, Sussex, England to embark on an adventure that 300 years later would lead their descendants to this place after countless other journeys in between.

    John Linville and his younger brother Thomas Linville sailed to Penn's Colony on one of William Penn's 22 ships in the sailing year of 1682-3 along with their mother Mary (Hart) Linville and probably their father Richard. Richard either died at sea or possibly in an epidemic in southern Jersey shortly after they arrived. Before a year was up, their mother remarried to Thomas Baldwin - the first marriage license issued by Penn's Colony.

    The young boys, John and Thomas, grew up along Chester Creek in Pennsylvania in their step-father's household. In those times, few children grew to adulthood in a home with both birth parents. Thomas, the youngest son stayed close to that home base for the next 150 years. Even today some of Thomas's descendants still operate a spectacular home/farm/market just 3 miles up Chester Creek from the original Baldwin-Linville home.

    But, older son John, only five when he arrived, was more adventurous. He began an association with the local merchants and Indian traders. In 1715, John at age 36 with a family of at least two sons, Thomas and William, whose life we commemorate today with this marker, joined his half- brother Thomas Baldwin and Baldwin in-laws, the Hendricks, in a new adventure - an Indian trading point along the Conestoga River only 45 miles west, but in those days, completely uncharted county. The move of this group to the west represented the first leg of a movement west which would 100 years later become a rallying cry for all young men to go west.

    Two things about this move mark a pattern of human behavior in the colonial period. First, where younger brother Thomas's descendants stayed close to home in Pennsylvania for generations, older brother John's descendants were present in every "first" settlement west along the westward migration all the way to Oregon by 1846. That movement west actually began with a move south along the back side of the Appalachians.

    The second pattern is that the move west was not done by isolated families as is so often the impression found in history books, but by groups of interrelated families creating large extended families and the foundation of a community which offered the support necessary to sustain a life on the frontier.

    Within 15 years of John Linville's move to Conestoga his sons, Thomas, William and John, Jr. were moving again. This time farther west across the Susquehanna River, having learned the basics of frontier survival from their older relatives in the community. That survival included experience in Indian trading, bartering with neighbors and, for the most part lack of governmental oversight.

    Son Thomas Linville built a cabin along the Codorus Creek ( now Adams County, PA), on the other side of the Susquehanna from the Conestoga community before 1730 when Penn's government had already forbidden such moves because of agreements with the Susquehanna Indians. Son William Linville participated in the famous Cresap Affair challenging Maryland's claim to Pennsylvania. Disguising himself as a native American and brandishing a weapon William and a group of several others tried to scare Thomas Cresap off the land which Cresap claimed as Maryland's territory and the Linvilles, Hendricks and others claimed as Pennsylvania's.

    Within a year, sometime between 1733 and 1735, William developed a close association with Morgan Bryan?s family, marrying Morgan?s daughter Ellender Bryan and then moved with older brother Thomas Linville and his wife Hannah to an uninhabited 1500 acres of land around what became known as Linville Creek, VA. In the 1730s no more than a handful of families joined them at this place within sight of what would develop into the Great Wagon Road of migration a decade later.

    Linville Creek was the furthest point south of European settlement on the back side of the Appalachians in the 1730s. Father-in-law Morgan Bryan was still further north in and around what is now Martinsburg, WA and brother John Linville married into the Stephens family and settled half way between the two in what is now near Stephens City, VA. Sister Ann (Linville) Hendricks was still living back at the Codorus in PA.

    Such was the pattern of migration in those days, sending part of the family out along the trial, no more than a few days? distance. This made it possible to move family members up and down that trail in times of need, whether it be emotional, economic or safety.

    Again, within 15 years of their settlement of Linville Creek, VA, the brothers were on the move south again along the Indian Trail which was fast becoming the Great Wagon Road. This time they left sister Alice and her new husband, Joseph Bryan (William's wife's brother) in Linville Creek and two other sisters still back in PA.

    In 1747-8, William and Ellender Linville established a frontier plantation with their Bryan relatives on both side of the Yadkin River in what would become a hub of an active community in the forks of the Yadkin. What is now Blanket Creek and Lassiter Lake was then called Linville Creek, NC, a major geographic marker for all who passed down the Great Wagon Road.

    Brother Thomas Linville and his family established a similar family enclave along Belews Creek to the northeast of here, before the Moravian claim was established. Brother John moved even farther to the south to the mouth of the Tyger River, SC, originally called Linville River.

    Sisters Alice (Linville) Bryan and Ann (Linville) Hendricks and their families eventually joined the Yadkin enclave 10 years later, at the same time the Boone family caught up with the now thriving community in the forks of the Yadkin. It was Alice's step-daughter, Rebecca Bryan who became Daniel Boone?s wife and William Linville's daughter who married Daniel's brother George.

    No matter how convoluted the intermarriages between the Linvilles, Bryans, Boones and Hendricks were, the message of that association was clear. When living on the frontier, you needed the relationships in an extended family to sustain you and the tutelage of survival skills for the younger generation was dependent on the successful older generation which had already been tested in that survival. The Daniel Boone generation had been preceded by 40 years of experience in forging a survival on the frontier and the skills became part of those families legacy to the next generation.

    The Rowan County records convey the evidence of William Linville's activities in this early community from hunting wolves to speculating in Lord Granville Grants. Three of those grants - the ones encompassing Tanglewood Park, were his first plantation. A cabin he built, already referred to as old in 1757 when he sold it to John Johnson, stood somewhere near this spot along Linville's Run (now called Johnson's Creek). William then established a plantation directly across the Yadkin, surrounding himself with his in-laws and his sisters' children.

    The record is unclear as to William's activities during the skirmishes of the French and Indian War which caused families to move up and down the Great Wagon Road for safety. Both of this brothers John and Thomas died before the end of that period. His wife Ellender and sister Alice outlived all their siblings, and followed the trail to Kentucky laid out by Daniel Boone and others in the extended family.

    Sometime in the late summer of 1766, William, along with son John Linville and another young man went up into the mountains 70 miles west of here to hunt and fish. What happened on that trip became immortalize in two ways. The first report came in the South Carolina Gazette in Sept, 1766,

    One William Linville, his son and another young man, who had gone over the mountains at the head of the Yadkin River to hunt, were there surprised by some Indians. The father and son were both killed on the spot, the other young man got off though much wounded and arrived at his settlement.

    Something about the incident left an indelible imprint in the community, for sometime in the next 20 years, the location of the event became known as Linville River and later Linville Gorge and falls and much later, Linville Falls Wilderness Area.

    The scant report of the event was considerably embellished and the details written down for history one hundred years later when Lyman Draper, a famous 19th century historian sought out the descendants of the early migrating families to record their experiences. In an interview with William Linville's grandson, Capt. Samuel Boone, son of his daughter Nancy, reported that William had had a premonition about his death:

    The elder Linville aroused the young men just before morning, and bid them hasten away, or they would be massacred by the Indians.... "I have just dreamed that the Indians came up and massacred us. The circumstance was so vividly infused in my mind that I feel this it is a warning. So you escape and save yourselves. I am too feeble to make the attempt." The words had scarcely died upon his lips, and before the young men had time to make the least movement, when the Indians...now fired a volley and shot - killing the two Linvilles.

    The story goes on to tell of the surviving, but wounded, young man's attempt to get back to the Linville household for help, eventually reaching son-in-law George Boone who, with others, including probably Daniel Boone, according to the interview, went out to bury the bodies. Local residents near Linville Falls, point to a spot ten miles above the falls where William is buried.

    His widow, two remaining sons and grandchildren remained here on the Yadkin until others in the extended family encouraged them to join the settlement of Kentucky, which they did by 1792.

    Today, none of William's known descendants still live in the area but hundreds of his brother Thomas's still do and thousands of their descendants live along each stop of the westward movement. The area which commemorates the "Linville Affair" in the Blue Ridge mountains remains a active recreation area, available for many others to pursue some of the same activities in the wilderness that marked most of William's live. But nothing marks his presence at this place where he established an active participation in the early development of the forks of the Yadkin.

    This beautiful park remains a fitting memorial for all the families who preserved and cared for it, making it a place of joy, leisure and recreation for thousands. Today we add the Linville name to that list of families by placing this marker recognizing William and his families place in this important first settlement in western North Carolina.

    Alice Eichholz, Ph.D., C.G.
    24 Oct 1998

    John* married Mrs. Ann (..) Linville (not Hendricks) about 1717 in Chester Co, Pennsylvania. Ann was born in 1692 in Banks, Chester Co, Pennsylvania; died in 1785 in South Carolina. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 9.  Mrs. Ann (..) Linville (not Hendricks) was born in 1692 in Banks, Chester Co, Pennsylvania; died in 1785 in South Carolina.

    Notes:

    From:
    To:
    Sent: Tuesday, January 10, 2006 2:02 AM
    Subject: Re: [Hendrix-L] Re: Hendrix Bible of James Thomas Hendrix of Georgia

    Jan,
    I'm afraid that I was the perpetrator of misinformation about the wife of John Linville being Ann Hendricks, aughter of James (Jacobus) Hendricks and Lucy Duckett. There is absolutely no proof or in fact any indication that we know of that John Linville's wife Ann was a Hendricks.
    I realize this now and have changed the family descendancy line in my own records and posted this as well on the Hendricks/Hendrix MyFamily site also. John & Ann Linville did indeed have a daughter Ann Linville who married Henry Hendricks, son of Tobias and this Ann Linville is our
    ancestress... However we do not know who her mother Ann was. So the line from James & Lucy Duckett Hendricks is no longer and never was a part of the line that goes from Albertus to Tobias to Henry (north) to David & on down......

    Susan Gall
    http://archiver.rootsweb.ancestry.com/th/read/HENDRIX/2006-01/1136898311


    Name:
    Some sites show her as Ann Hendricks, daughter of Albertus Hendricks. However, an email from Alice Echols, historian of the Linville family,received by me on 1 October 2012, states, "John (b. 1677) was married to an Ann -- at least for one of his wives, but she was not an Ann Hendricks (no such member of the Albertus Hendricks family, neighbors of the Linvilles) exists. And it is much more likely that Ann was a second or third wife and NOT the mother of Thomas (b.c. 1703). John (b. 1677) was alive in PA as late as 1739. Ann, his second or third wife, surname unknown, seems to have move to SC and died there in 1785 (not Va in 1733), but, again, she is unlikely Thomas's mother.

    Children:
    1. 4. John (VA/SC) Linville, Jr. was born about 1708 in Virginia; died after 1740 in Of, Stephens City, Virginia.
    2. Elizabeth Linville (?) was born in 1710 in Chichester, Chester Co, Pennsylvania; died in 1755 in South Carolina.
    3. Ann Linville was born about 1708 in Pennsylvania; died after 1741 in Pennsylvania.
    4. Alice (Aylee) Linville was born in 1722 in Chester Co, Pennsylvania; died on 28 Mar 1814 in Floyds Fork, Shelby Co, Kentucky.

  3. 10.  Samuel Peter Stephens, Sr. was born on 3 Mar 1687 in Steinsfurt, Germany; died about 1757 in Frederick Co, Virginia.

    Notes:

    parents: Gabriel Steffen
    Birth: 07 Oct 1645 in Henggart, Zurich, Switzerland
    Death: 02 Apr 1720 in Steinsfurt, Rhein-Neckar-Kreis, Baden-Wuerttemberg, Germany

    Barbara Bar b: 28 Mar 1652 in Henggart, Zurich, Switzerland

    Samuel married Maria Christina Rittenhouse on 17 Nov 1712 in Germantown, Philadelphia Co, Pennsylvania. Maria (daughter of Nicholas Rittenhouse and Wilhelmina Dewees, (Immigrant)) was born about 1695 in Germantown, Philadelphia Co, Pennsylvania; died about 1758 in Frederick Co, Virginia. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  4. 11.  Maria Christina Rittenhouse was born about 1695 in Germantown, Philadelphia Co, Pennsylvania (daughter of Nicholas Rittenhouse and Wilhelmina Dewees, (Immigrant)); died about 1758 in Frederick Co, Virginia.
    Children:
    1. 5. Anna Christina Stephens was born about 1715 in of, Virginia; died after 1835.
    2. Lawrence Stephens was born in 1722 in Germantown, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; died in Oct 1776 in Frederick Co, Virginia.
    3. Samuel Peter Stephens, Jr. was born on 29 Sep 1735 in Frederick Co, Virginia; died in 1712 in Montgomery Co, Virginia.
    4. Keziah Stephens was born about 1737 in Augusta Co, Virginia; died on 5 May 1814 in Montgomery Co, Virginia.