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Alphonzo Daniel Boone

Male 1837 - 1915  (78 years)


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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Alphonzo Daniel Boone was born on 21 Feb 1837 in Jefferson City, Cole, Missouri (son of Alphonso Boone and Nancy Boone); died on 29 Mar 1915 in Sumner, Coos, Oregon; was buried in Sumner Pioneer Cemetery.

    Alphonzo married Nancy Letha Barker on 21 Mar 1875 in Coos, Oregon. Nancy was born about 1837; died after 1876. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


Generation: 2

  1. 2.  Alphonso Boone was born on 7 Nov 1796 (son of Jesse Bryan Boone, Judge and Chloe Van Bibber); died on 27 Feb 1850 in Trading post at Long's Bar, Feather River, California.

    Alphonso married Nancy Boone on 21 Feb 1822 in Callaway Co, Missouri. Nancy (daughter of George Boone and Nancy Ann Linville) was born on 30 Apr 1798 in Shelby, Kentucky; died on 9 Jun 1838 in Cole, Missouri. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  Nancy Boone was born on 30 Apr 1798 in Shelby, Kentucky (daughter of George Boone and Nancy Ann Linville); died on 9 Jun 1838 in Cole, Missouri.
    Children:
    1. Chloe Donnelly Boone was born on 9 Dec 1822 in Montgomer, Missouri; died on 10 Feb 1899 in Portland, Multnomah Co, Oregon; was buried in Lone Fir Cem, Portland, Multnomah Co, Oregon.
    2. Jesse Van Bibber Boone was born on 25 Jan 1824 in Montgomer, Missouri; died on 24 Mar 1872 in Boone's Ferry, Oregon.
    3. Mary Elizabeth Boone was born on 3 Apr 1825 in Montgomer, Missouri; died on 4 Jun 1907 in Coquille, Coos, Oregon; was buried in Fam Cem at Fairview near Coquille.
    4. George Luther Boone was born on 6 Jun 1826 in Montgomery, Missouri; died on 4 Dec 1910 in Medford, Jackson, Oregon; was buried in Jacksonville Cem. Jacksonville, Oregon.
    5. James C Boone was born on 14 Mar 1827 in Montgomery, Missouri; died after 1848 in Okanagon, Washington.
    6. (Infant) Boone was born on 23 Dec 1829 in Montgomery, Missouri; died on 23 Dec 1829.
    7. Harriet B Boone was born on 3 Oct 1831 in Montgomer, MO.; died on 27 Mar 1836 in Montgomer, MO..
    8. Joshua Morris Boone was born on 30 Jul 1833 in Montgomer, Missouri; died after 1864 in Prineville, Wasco, Oregon.
    9. Lucy Ann M Boone was born on 23 Feb 1835 in Montgomer, Missouri; died after 1852 in California.
    10. 1. Alphonzo Daniel Boone was born on 21 Feb 1837 in Jefferson City, Cole, Missouri; died on 29 Mar 1915 in Sumner, Coos, Oregon; was buried in Sumner Pioneer Cemetery.


Generation: 3

  1. 4.  Jesse Bryan Boone, Judge was born on 23 May 1773 in Yadkin River, Rowan Co, North Carolina (son of Daniel Boone, (the explorer) and Rebecca Ann Bryan); died on 22 Dec 1820 in St.Louis, Missouri.

    Jesse married Chloe Van Bibber in Sep 1790 in Point Pleasant, West Virginia. Chloe (daughter of John Van Bibber, Capt and Chloe Staniford) was born on 13 Aug 1772 in Greenbrier Co, Virginia; died in Aug 1822 in Callaway Co, Missouri. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 5.  Chloe Van Bibber was born on 13 Aug 1772 in Greenbrier Co, Virginia (daughter of John Van Bibber, Capt and Chloe Staniford); died in Aug 1822 in Callaway Co, Missouri.
    Children:
    1. Jemima Boone was born on 9 Jan 1793; died after 1794.
    2. Harriet Morgan Boone was born on 22 Feb 1794 in Fayette Co, Kentucky; died on 17 Nov 1861 in Jefferson Co, Missouri.
    3. 2. Alphonso Boone was born on 7 Nov 1796; died on 27 Feb 1850 in Trading post at Long's Bar, Feather River, California.
    4. Minerva S Boone was born on 28 Jul 1799; died in 1849 in Weston, Missouri.
    5. Panthea Grant Boone was born on 20 Sep 1801; died on 23 Sep 1880 in Napa Co, California.
    6. Albert Gallatin Boone was born on 17 Apr 1806; died on 14 Jul 1884 in LiVita, Colorado.
    7. James Madison Boone was born on 13 Feb 1808; died on 27 Feb 1868 in Callaway Co, Missouri.
    8. Emily Boone was born on 31 Aug 1811; died in 1873 in Fulton, Missouri.
    9. Van Daniel Boone was born on 29 Apr 1814; died on 4 May 1873 in Booneville, Colorado.

  3. 6.  George Boone was born on 13 Jan 1739 in Exeter Twp, Berks Co, Pennsylvania (son of Squire Boone, I and Sarah Morgan); died on 14 Nov 1820 in Kentucky.

    George married Nancy Ann Linville about 1764. Nancy (daughter of William Linville and Eleanor (Ellender)^ Bryan) was born in 1744 in Winchester, Frederick Co, Virginia; died on 28 Mar 1814 in Richmond, Shelby Co, Kentucky. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  4. 7.  Nancy Ann Linville was born in 1744 in Winchester, Frederick Co, Virginia (daughter of William Linville and Eleanor (Ellender)^ Bryan); died on 28 Mar 1814 in Richmond, Shelby Co, Kentucky.
    Children:
    1. Elizabeth Boone was born in 1765 in Rowan Co, North Carolina; died after 1855 in Boone Co, Missouri.
    2. Elender Boone was born in 1766 in North Carolina; died after 1787.
    3. William Linville Boone was born on 22 Feb 1768 in Rowan Co, North Carolina; died on 13 Apr 1847 in Shelby Co, Kentucky.
    4. John Linville Boone was born in 1769 in Off Bear Creek, Rowan Co, North Carolina; died in 1845 in Callaway Co, Missouri.
    5. George Boone was born about 1770 in Rowan Co, North Carolina; died before 18 Nov 1811 in Madison Co, Kentucky.
    6. Squire Boone was born about 1772 in Rowan Co, North Carolina; died after 1800.
    7. Sarah "Sally" Boone was born about 1774 in Rowan Co, North Carolina; died after 1796.
    8. Mary Boone was born on 2 Apr 1776 in Rowan Co, North Carolina; died on 14 Sep 1831 in Madison Co, Kentucky.
    9. Susanna Boone was born on 22 Apr 1778 in Rowan Co, North Carolina; died on 16 Oct 1804 in Madison Co, Kentucky.
    10. Mariah "Marian" Boone was born about 1780 in Rowan Co, North Carolina; died after 1806.
    11. Samuel Boone, Capt was born on 15 Jan 1782 in Hoy's Station, Madison Co, Kentucky; died in Sep 1869 in Callaway Co, Missouri.
    12. Edward Boone was born about 1783 in Rowan Co, North Carolina; died in Aug 1869.
    13. Nestor Boone was born about 1785 in Rowan Co, North Carolina; died after 1786.
    14. 3. Nancy Boone was born on 30 Apr 1798 in Shelby, Kentucky; died on 9 Jun 1838 in Cole, Missouri.


Generation: 4

  1. 8.  Daniel Boone, (the explorer) was born on 2 Nov 1734 in Upper Schuylkill River Valley, Pennsylania (son of Squire Boone, I and Sarah Morgan); died on 26 Sep 1820 in Charritte Village, St.Charles Co, Missouri.

    Notes:

    Blazing The Way West: Daniel Boone & Davy Crockett
    http://www.letsfindout.com/subjects/america/frntrmen.html

    Boone, born Nov. 2, 1734, in Pennsylvania, opened up Kentucky for settlement between 1767 and 1784. He founded towns, served in the legislature, and became the most famous hunter and explorer of his time. As new settlers moved into the land he had opened, Boone moved further west and finally died in Missouri on Sept. 26, 1820.

    Encarta:
    Boone, Daniel (1734-1820), American pioneer, who played a major part in the exploration and settlement of Kentucky. Boone was born near Reading, Pennsylvania. In 1753 his family settled in a primitive settlement in what is now North Carolina, where Boone became a skillful hunter and trapper.

    Boone set out to explore the wilderness around the Kentucky River, making the first of many trips into the region in 1767. Between 1769 and 1771, he explored eastern Kentucky, following a trail through the Cumberland Gap. In 1775, having been engaged by a Carolina trading company to establish a road by which settlers could reach Kentucky, he built a fort on the site of Boonesborough. The road established by Boone was later called the Wilderness Road. The settlement at Boonesborough was eventually established as a permanent village.


    Daniel married Rebecca Ann Bryan on 14 Aug 1756 in Rowan Co, North Carolina. Rebecca (daughter of Joseph Bryan, Sr and Hester Hamdon (or Hampton)) was born on 9 Jan 1739 in Winchester, Frederick Co, Virginia; died on 18 Mar 1813 in Defiance, St.Charles Co, Missouri; was buried in Old Bryan Farm Cem, Marthasville, Warren Co, Missouri. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 9.  Rebecca Ann Bryan was born on 9 Jan 1739 in Winchester, Frederick Co, Virginia (daughter of Joseph Bryan, Sr and Hester Hamdon (or Hampton)); died on 18 Mar 1813 in Defiance, St.Charles Co, Missouri; was buried in Old Bryan Farm Cem, Marthasville, Warren Co, Missouri.

    Notes:

    Wikipedia:
    She was born near Winchester, Virginia. Her father was Joseph Bryan, Sr. but there is no clear documentation as to her birth mother. Some[who?] say her mother, Hester Hampton, died in childbirth, and that Alice (or Aylee) Linville, Bryan's second wife, raised her.

    Early American Pioneer. She is best remembered as the wife of famed American pioneer and frontiersman Daniel Boone. While no actual portrait of her exists when she was living, people who knew her said that when she met her future husband, she was nearly his height and very attractive with black hair and dark eyes. Born Rebecca Ann Bryan, at the age of 10 she moved with her Quaker grandparents, Morgan and Martha Bryan, to the Yadkin River Valley in the backwoods of North Carolina where she met and courted Daniel Boone in 1753 and married him three years later at the age of 17. This union would product ten children. Additionally, she took in her new husband's two young orphan nephews, who lived with them in North Carolina until the family left for Kentucky in 1773. Without any formal education, she was reputed to be an experienced community midwife, the family doctor, leather tanner, sharpshooter, and linen-maker, resourceful and independent in the isolated wilderness areas that she and her large, combined family often found themselves. In the autumn of 1773, she came through the Cumberland Gap with her family and fifty others under the leadership of William Russell, though they were turned back by the violent resistance by Native Americans to British colonization west of the Allegheny Mountains. In 1775 her husband brought the family to the Kentucky River where, on behalf of the Transylvania Company, he and Richard Henderson laid out Fort Boonesborough. In May 1778 she left Kentucky under a cloud of rumors that her husband, who had been capture by the Chilicothe Shawnee Native American tribe, had turned Tory. She returned to her parents' settlement in North Carolina with five of her children, leaving behind her daughter Jemima who by then had married. In June 1778 her husband escaped his captors and returned to his family in North Carolina and finally convinced her to leave again for Kentucky, this time with nearly 100 of their relatives. They departed in September 1779, the largest emigration to date to travel through the Cumberland Gap. By late October 1779, they reached Fort Boonesborough but conditions were so bad that they left on Christmas Day, during what Kentuckians later called the "Hard Winter," to found a new settlement, Boone's Station, with 15 to 20 families on Boone's Creek about six miles northwest (near what is now Athens, Kentucky). By the following spring, she and her husband moved to a cabin several miles southwest on Marble Creek. In 1781 she lived in a double cabin with five of her children still living at home, the six children of her widowed uncle James Bryan, as well as her daughter Susannah with her husband, and with 2 to 3 children of their own, a household of almost 20 people. In 1783 she and her family moved where for the next few years she assisted her husband in creating a landing site at the mouth of Limestone Creek for flatboats coming down the Ohio River from Fort Pitt in Pennsylvania. They lived in a cabin built out of an old boat (on what is now Front Street in Maysville, Kentucky) and she ran the tavern kitchen and oversaw the seven slaves they owned. In 1787 he husband was elected to the Virginia legislature as Bourbon County's representative, and she moved with him to Richmond, Virginia and their youngest child, leaving the tavern in the hands of their daughter Rebecca and husband Philip Goe. In 1788 they moved to Point Pleasant (now in West Virginia) in the Kanawha Valley, settling on the south side of the river almost opposite the mouth of Campbell's Creek. In 1799 they followed their youngest son Nathan to Spain's Alta Louisiana (Upper Louisiana, now Missouri, about 45 miles west/northwest of Saint Louis) in the Femme Osage Valley. She died there after a brief illness at the age of 74 in the home of her daughter Jemima Boone Callaway and was interred at the nearby Old Bryan Family Cemetery, on the bank of Tuque Creek near Marthasville, Missouri. In 1845 her remains, along with her husband's (reportedly) were disinterred and reburied in Frankfort, Kentucky. (bio by: William Bjornstad)
    findagrave

    Died:
    After a brief illness, Rebecca Boone died at the age of 74 on March 18, 1813, at her daughter Jemima Boone Callaway's home near the village of Charette (near present-day Marthasville, Missouri). She was buried at the Bryan family cemetery nearby overlooking the Missouri River. She and her husband's remains were reinterred and buried again in Frankfort, Kentucky in 1845.
    Wikipedia

    Children:
    1. James Boone was born on 3 May 1757 in Yadkin River, Rowan Co, North Carolina; died on 10 Oct 1773 in Powell's Valley, Kentucky.
    2. Israel Boone was born on 25 Jan 1759 in Yadkin River, Rowan Co, North Carolina; died on 19 Aug 1782 in Blue Lick, Kentucky.
    3. Susannah Boone was born on 2 Nov 1760 in Yadkin River, Rowan Co, North Carolina; died on 19 Oct 1800 in St.Charles Co, Missouri.
    4. Jemima "Duck" Boone was born on 4 Oct 1762 in Yadkin River, Rowan Co, North Carolina; died on 30 Aug 1834 in Marthasville, Warren Co, Missouri.
    5. Levina Boone was born on 23 Mar 1766 in Yadkin River, Rowan Co, North Carolina; died on 6 Apr 1802 in Clark Co, Kentucky.
    6. Rebecca Boone was born on 26 May 1768 in Yadkin River, Rowan Co, North Carolina; died on 14 Jul 1805 in Clark Co, Kentucky.
    7. Daniel Morgan Boone was born on 23 Dec 1769 in Yadkin River, Rowan Co, North Carolina; died on 13 Jul 1839 in Jackson Co, Missouri.
    8. 4. Jesse Bryan Boone, Judge was born on 23 May 1773 in Yadkin River, Rowan Co, North Carolina; died on 22 Dec 1820 in St.Louis, Missouri.
    9. William Boone was born on 20 Jun 1775 in Boonesboro, Fayette Co, Kentucky; died in Jul 1775 in Boonesboro, Fayette Co, Kentucky.
    10. Nathan Boone was born on 2 Mar 1781; died on 16 Oct 1856 in Ashgrove, Greene Co, Missouri.

  3. 10.  John Van Bibber, Capt was born on 7 Jan 1731 in Lebanon Co, Pennsylvania (son of Peter* Van Bibber and Ann* Henriette Gooding); died in 1820 in Kanawha Co, Virginia.

    Notes:

    1767 Pittsylsvania CO VA tax list of Hugh Innes-
    John, Peter and Isaac Van Bibber listed. Next to Peter and Isaac Van Bibber are Veath Dillingham with negro Jeany 2 taxables;
    James Rentfro Sr. & Joseph Rentfro and Peter Rentfro 3 taxables
    James Rentfro Jr. also listed.
    John Calloway negroes- Flemen, Asher, Nan and Nell.
    William and Joshua Dillingham 2 taxables.

    GREENBRIER COUNTY VA COURT RECORDS
    Pg 20 Sept 1790 On motion of Conrad Keller a commission is given him to take the acknowledgement of Cloe VanBibber wife of John VanBibber [son of Peter & Margery] her relinquishment of dower in land sold by her husband to said Keller. [NOTE: Capt. John VanBibber lived near Kellers now Summers County WV. They move to Point Pleasant after this date. Brother Peter had already settled there about 1781. The Indians were still a problem on the frontier which continued till the Anthony Wayne Treaty 1795.]
    _________
    John Van Bibber had wandered over much of the eastern wilderness from Pennsylvania to Tennessee seeking a suitable place to settle & thoroughly enjoying his nomadic freedom. Through some misadventure, he lost his way & all his possessions including his survive-or-die flintlock rifle. That was not a very healthy situation - with Indians lurking everywhere, who were taking an increasinly-dim view of the invading hordes of whites - & with no way to slay game for a growling stomach.
    Just about to give up in despair, Van Bibber spotted smoke curling skyward from what could only have been a chimney. He was certain it was no Indian campfire.
    Charging through the underbrush, joy of joys, he found a pioneer cabin which was little more than a lean-to. Whooping & hollering - in English so he wouldn't be shot for an Indian - he greeted the inhabitant, who welcomed him only as a lonioneer & hospitable Southerners can do. The man introduced himselft as Dan Boone, who fed & bedded Van Bibber, beginning a friendship lasting for decades.
    Finally, Van Bibber felt he must take his leave, & Boone loaded him up with light trail food, probably including jerky & rockahominy, or parched corn, such as the Indians used, & forced upon him, against his protests, one of his prized flins. It was a beautiful piece, with carved wood stock & fancy brass plating, plus a silver sight made by gunsmith, Michael Kimberlin, of whom research disappointingly fails to turn up any record.
    It is entirely probable that several of Chief Cornstalk's braves on the other end of it said, "Ow, that smarts," since the piece had a bore of about 60 caliber.
    John later passed the now-famous Van Bibber rifle to his son, Mathias (Mathias was not a son of john, but a nephew through brother Peter) reputed to have been one of the 1st sheriffs of Kanawha County, who scratched his monogram in the brasck plate.
    --Van BIbber Pioneers E-Newsletter, Volume 4, No. 8, June 2001.
    ____
    John was a Captain and served in Indian wars, Dunmore's War, Colonial wars, and the Revolutionary War.

    John married Chloe Staniford about 1769. Chloe was born about 1743 in Cecil Co, Maryland; died after 1781. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  4. 11.  Chloe Staniford was born about 1743 in Cecil Co, Maryland; died after 1781.
    Children:
    1. Rhonda Van Bibber was born in 1768; died in 1787 in Scalped by Indians.
    2. Joseph Van Bibber was born about 1770; died after 1787.
    3. 5. Chloe Van Bibber was born on 13 Aug 1772 in Greenbrier Co, Virginia; died in Aug 1822 in Callaway Co, Missouri.
    4. Olive Van Bibber was born about 1774; died after 1814.

  5. 12.  Squire Boone, I was born on 25 Nov 1696 in Bradnich, Devonshire, England (son of George Boone, III and Mary Milton Maugridge); died on 2 Jan 1765 in Mocksville, Rowan Co, North Carolina; was buried in Joppa Cem, Mocksville, Davie Co, North Carolina.

    Notes:

    Squire Boone came to America in 1713 when he was 18 with a brother and a sister. The three were sent by their father, George Boone of the town of Bradninch, near Exeter, England. The Boones were members of the Society of Friends. The wento the town of Abington, twelve miles north of Philadelphia. (From the book, DANIEL BOONE, by John Mack Faragher in 1992.
    (WFT V 2, 3979)

    -----------

    Squire Boone was born in Bradninch, Exeter, Devonshire, England to George Boone III & Mary Milton Maugridge; he had the following siblings: George Boone IV, Sarah Boone Stover, Mary Boone b. in 1694 d. 1696; Mary Boone b. 1699 d. 1744, John Boone, Joseph Boone, Benjamin Boone, James Boone, & Samuel Boone.

    Squire married Sarah Morgan 23 July 1720 at the Gwynned Meeting of Quakers, Berks Co, Pennsylvania. Squire died 2 January 1765 and Sarah died 1777; both buried at Mocksville, North Carolina.

    They had the following children: Sarah Cassandra, Israel Boone (buried at Joppa Cem.), Samuel, Jonathan, Elizabeth Boone Grant, Daniel Boone (famous pioneer), Jacob, Mary Boone Bryan, George W., Edward, Nathaniel, Squire Boone Jr., and Hannah Boone Stewart Pennington.

    Squire had accompanied his brother George, and his sister, Sarah, to America ahead of their parents.
    (findagrave http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=8318855 )

    Squire married Sarah Morgan on 23 Jul 1720 in Philadelphia Co, Pennsylvania. Sarah (daughter of Edward Morgan, (immigrant) and Margaret Elizabeth Jarman (?)) was born in 1700 in Philadelphia Co, Pennsylvania; died in 1777 in Mocksville, Rowan Co, North Carolina; was buried in Joppa Cem, Mocksville, Rowan Co, North Carolina. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  6. 13.  Sarah Morgan was born in 1700 in Philadelphia Co, Pennsylvania (daughter of Edward Morgan, (immigrant) and Margaret Elizabeth Jarman (?)); died in 1777 in Mocksville, Rowan Co, North Carolina; was buried in Joppa Cem, Mocksville, Rowan Co, North Carolina.
    Children:
    1. Sarah Cassandra Boone was born on 7 Jun 1724 in New Britain Twp, Bucks Co, Pennsylvania; died in 1815 in Estill Co, Kentucky.
    2. Israel Boone was born on 20 May 1726 in New Britain Twp, Bucks Co, Pennsylvania; died on 26 Jun 1756 in Yadkin Valley, North Carolina.
    3. Samuel Boone, Sr was born on 31 May 1728 in New Britain Twp, Berks Co, Pennsylvania; died in 1808 in Fayette Co, Kentucky.
    4. Jonathan Boone was born on 6 Dec 1730 in New Britain Twp, Bucks Co, Pennsylvania; died about 1808 in Mt.Carmel, Wabash Co, Illinois.
    5. Elizabeth Boone was born on 16 Feb 1732 in Exeter Twp, Berks Co, Pennsylvania; died on 25 Feb 1825 in Fayette, Kentucky.
    6. Daniel Boone, (the explorer) was born on 2 Nov 1734 in Upper Schuylkill River Valley, Pennsylania; died on 26 Sep 1820 in Charritte Village, St.Charles Co, Missouri.
    7. Mary Boone was born on 14 Nov 1736; died in 1819.
    8. 6. George Boone was born on 13 Jan 1739 in Exeter Twp, Berks Co, Pennsylvania; died on 14 Nov 1820 in Kentucky.
    9. Edward "Ned" Boone was born on 30 Nov 1740 in Exeter Twp, Berks Co, Pennsylvania; died on 6 Oct 1780 in Boonesboro (Blue Licks), Kentucky.
    10. Squire Boone, II was born on 5 Oct 1744 in Exeter Twp, Berks Co, Pennsylvania; died in Aug 1815; was buried in Squire Boone Caverns, Mauckport, Harrison Co, Indiana.
    11. Hannah Boone was born on 24 Aug 1746 in Exeter Twp, Berks Co, Pennsylvania; died on 4 Sep 1828.

  7. 14.  William Linville was born in 1710 in Winchester, Frederick Co, Virginia (son of John* Linville, Sr. (Immigrant) and Mrs. (1st wife of John)* Linville); died in 1766 in Linville Fall, Avery Co, North Carolina; was buried in Wilksboro, Wilkes Co, North Carolina.

    Notes:

    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.


    Died:
    Killed by Indians
    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.
    (snip)
    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.

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

    William married Eleanor (Ellender)^ Bryan in 1733 in Virginia. Eleanor (daughter of Morgan Bryan and Martha Strode) was born in 1722 in Chester Co, Pennsylvania; died on 21 Oct 1772 in Rowan Co, North Carolina or Kentucky. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  8. 15.  Eleanor (Ellender)^ Bryan was born in 1722 in Chester Co, Pennsylvania (daughter of Morgan Bryan and Martha Strode); died on 21 Oct 1772 in Rowan Co, North Carolina or Kentucky.

    Notes:

    Married:
    Name: William Linville
    Gender: Male
    Birth Place: PA
    Birth Year: 1710
    Spouse Name: Eleanor Bryan
    Spouse
    Birth Place: PA
    Spouse Birth Year: 1722
    Marriage
    Year: 1733 (Eleanor was 11 years old!)
    Marriage State: VA
    Number Pages: 1

    Children:
    1. John Linville was born about 1737; died in 1766 in Linville Fall, Avery Co, North Carolina.
    2. Morgan L. Linville was born in 1741 in Chester Co, Pennsylvania; died after 1830 in Clark Co, Kentucky.
    3. 7. Nancy Ann Linville was born in 1744 in Winchester, Frederick Co, Virginia; died on 28 Mar 1814 in Richmond, Shelby Co, Kentucky.
    4. Lucretia Linville was born about 1750; died after 1833 in of, Clark Co, Kentucky.