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John Aarmand Harmon, Sr

Male 1790 - 1871  (80 years)


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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  John Aarmand Harmon, Sr was born on 28 Apr 1790 in St.Martin Parish, Louisiana; was christened on 17 Jul 1800 in St. Martinville, St. Martin Parish, Louisiana (son of David (Levy) Harmon and Nancy* Ann White); died on 22 Feb 1871 in Orange, Orange Co, Texas.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Property: 9 Jan 1817, St. Martin Parish, Louisiana
    • Property: 21 May 1835, Jefferson District, Orange Co, Texas
    • Census: 21 Jun 1860, Duncans Wood (Precinct 2), Orange Co, Texas

    Notes:

    Hartman, John (dec David Armand & Anne White) b about 10 years old on 28 Apr 1800, bt 17 Jul 1800. Pats: John Hartman & Mary --- of Germany; Mats: John White & Sarah Gambil of Virginia; Spons: Agricole Landry & Pelagie Broussard. "A una Salida en" (during a missonary trip to) Carencro at Anselm Thibaudau. Fr. Michel Bernard Bariere (SM Ch: v.5 #286)

    Harmon, John - native of this parish (major son of levy - inhabitant on the lower Bayou Vermillion & Nancy Whyte (White) m 26 Jan 1813 Bethsy Clarke - native of this parish (minor daughter of James - inhabitant at Vermillion & Esther Corastock) Wits: Shadrach Porter, Henry Jackson, Emanuel D'Aspremont. Fr. Gabriel Isabey (SM Ch: v.5, #280)

    Served in the military in 1812. In 1830 he settled near Adams Bayou in what is now Orange and received a grant of 12,000 acres in Orange Co., TX from Lorenzo DeZavala. John later sold the land to a LA. capitalist by the name of Smith for $600, who paid for it in New Orleans bank notes,which later proved to be counterfeit. Smith sold the land to various persons. When John found the notes were worthless, he threw them into the Neches River. (from newspaper clipping from Opportunity Valley News,14 Mar 1973,Orange,TX. pg.28)

    1850 Jeff Co Census: John Harmon age 71, (1779) farmer, born LA -- note: census in error?
    Elizabeth age 62 (1768) born La
    John Jr born TX

    His children married into Peveto, Patillo, Bland, Cole and Means families.

    Property:
    9 Jan 1817 St Martin Parish LA, Vendor Index 001 B, 258, #3391
    John & Elizabeth Harmon to John R. Faulk for $600. 4 arpents x 40 arpents on Grosse Isle Coule bounded by Levi Campbell except for 15 poles square sold 25 Sep 1816 to Levi Campbell.

    Property:
    21 May 1835 Jefferson District, Orange Co TX Patent 495
    Patentee: John A. Harmon
    4428.4 acres of Title land

    Census:
    21 Jun 1860 Orange Co, Texas Precinct 2, PO Duncans Wood


    178 John Harmon 22 1838 TX
    Mary (Means) 19 1841 LA
    Martha 3 1857 TX
    Milley 1 1859 TX

    180 Harmon John 70 1790 LA <<<
    Elizabeth 1793 LA
    Green, Manda 20 1840 TX

    res 192 Solomon Sparks 40 1820 Alabama
    Martha C Sparks 40 1820 S.C
    John L 16 1844 TN
    James E 14 1846 LA
    William E 9 1851 TX
    Mary S 11 1849 TX
    Joseph M 7 1853 TX
    Oscah 4 1856 TX

    res 193 John Railah 1798 62
    Malinda Railah 1816 44
    Christian W Railah 1848 12 TX
    Isaac P Railah 8 1852 TX
    Rachel D Railah 5 1855 TX
    Mary C Railah 3 1857 TX
    Julia C 2 1858


    201 Burrell James 35 1825 LA
    Elizabeth 25 1835 LA
    William 12 1848 TX
    Robert 10 1850
    Emoly 8 1852
    David 3 1857
    Lucy 2 1858
    Frederick Burrell 19 1841 TX

    207 Gallier Jane 23 1837 MS
    Rufus 6 1854 TX
    Andrew 4 1856 TX
    Willis 3 1857 TX

    229 Jemima Morgan 54 1806 LA
    Allen 20 1840 TX
    William 17 1843
    Sarah 1 1847

    238 Myers James 31 1829 LA
    Sarah E 27 1833 TX
    James Orin 1 1859 TX
    Mary Myers 70 1790 LA

    240 John Cole 55 1805 farmer LA
    Rachel 55 1805 LA
    Absalome 20 1840 stock keeper TX
    James 16 1844 stock keeper TX
    Hulda 13 1847 TX
    Clark 20 1830 stock keeper TX

    241 Mark Cole 25 1835 TX
    Hester A. 21 1839 TX
    Hulda 1 1859 TX

    John married Elizabeth Comstock "Bethsy" Clark, (DNA Circle-g) on 26 Jan 1813 in St. Martinville, St. Martin Parish, Louisiana. Elizabeth (daughter of James* (Jacques) William Clark and Esther* "Hester" Comstock) was born on 1 May 1792 in St. Martinville, St. Martin Parish, Louisiana; died on 24 Apr 1868 in Orange, Orange Co, Texas. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Notes:

    Unknown-Begin:
    HISTORICAL MARKER #: 11504
    LOCATION: 803 West Green Avenue, Orange, Orange County, TX

    THE FIRST KNOWN SETTLERS IN WHAT IS NOW THE CITY OF ORANGE WERE JOHN AND ELIZABETH HARMON, WHO ARRIVED IN 1828 WITH THEIR THREE CHILDREN. KNOWN FIRST AS GREEN'S BLUFF, THE SMALL FARMING COMMUNITY THAT DEVELOPED ALONG A BEND IN THE SABINE RIVER WAS SELECTED AS THE SEAT OF GOVERNMENT WHEN ORANGE COUNTY WAS CREATED IN 1852. THE TOWN WAS CALLED MADISON FROM 1852 UNTIL 1858, WHEN THE NAME ORANGE WAS ADOPTED. THE EARLY ORANGE ECONOMY WAS BASED ON THE LUMBER AND SHIPBUILDING INDUSTRIES. LED BY PROMINENT PIONEER AREA LUMBER MEN AND AIDED BY THE ADVENT OF THE TEXAS AND NEW ORLEANS RAILROAD IN 1876, ORANGE WAS RECOGNIZED AS THE LEADER IN EAST TEXAS SAWMILL ACTIVITY BY THE 1880s. THE DEEP WATER PORT AND THE AVAILABILITY OF LUMBER MADE THE CITY AN IDEAL LOCATION FOR THE SHIPBUILDING INDUSTRY, WHICH REACHED ITS HIGHEST PRODUCTION LEVELS DURING WORLD WARS I AND II. FOR MANY YEARS THE CITY OF ORANGE HAS MAINTAINED A FULL RANGE OF SERVICES FOR ITS CITIZENS. PUBLIC SCHOOLS HAVE OPERATED SINCE THE 1880s AND ELECTRICITY WAS INSTITUTED IN 1890. ORANGE'S SHIPBUILDING AND PETROCHEMICAL INDUSTRIES CONTINUE TO MAKE THE CITY A LEADING COMMERCIAL CENTER IN SOUTHEAST TEXAS.



    Unknown-Begin:

    HISTORICAL MARKER #: 11504
    LOCATION: 803 West Green Avenue, Orange, Orange County, TX

    BORN IN 1790 IN ST. MARTIN PARISH, LOUISIANA, JOHN HARMON LIVED AT POSTE DE ATTAKAPAS, A SPANISH FORTIFICATION AT THE PRESENT SITE OF ST. MARTINVILLE. A VETERAN OF THE STATE'S DEFENSIVE ACTIONS DURING THE WAR OF 1812, HE WED ELIZABETH COMPSTOCK CLARKS IN 1813. SOON AFTER THE BIRTH OF THEIR FIRST CHILD IN 1816, THE HARMONS SOLD THEIR ST. MARTIN PARISH LAND AND MOVED WEST. ALTHOUGH NOT MUCH IS KNOWN ABOUT THEIR ACTIVITIES OVER THE FOLLOWING DECADE, IT IS KNOWN THEY HAD SETTLED ALONG THE EASTERN BANK OF THE SABINE RIVER BY 1826. THE NEXT YEAR, HARMON DECIDED TO RELOCATE IN THIS AREA. HE BUILT A MASSIVE RAFT OF CYPRESS LOGS WHICH TRANSPORTED A HOUSE, A WAGON, A PAIR OF OXEN, A HORSE, A COW, FARM TOOLS AND SUPPLIES, AND HIS FAMILY, WHICH NUMBERED FIVE. THE HARMON FAMILY RAFT ARRIVED HERE ON JANUARY 1, 1828. WEARY FROM THEIR JOURNEY, THE FAMILY FEASTED ON WILD GAME AND LATER DECIDED TO MAKE THEIR HOME IN THE AREA. THEIR ARRIVAL AT THE PRESENT SITE OF ORANGE MARKED THE BEGINNING OF PERMANENT SETTLEMENT. LATER, WHEN THE TOWN DEVELOPED, JOHN HARMON WAS A SADDLER, A CIVIC LEADER, AND A PROMINENT LANDOWNER. HE DIED IN 1874, BUT HIS CONTRIBUTIONS AND PIONEER SPIRIT REMAIN VITAL TO THE AREA'S HERITAGE.


    Children:
    1. David Harmon, (DNA-Circle-g) was born on 13 Feb 1816 in Louisiana; died on 10 Oct 1884.
    2. Joshua Harmon was born on 12 Mar 1821 in Louisiana; died on 2 Nov 1896 in Liberty Co, Texas; was buried in Abshier Cem, Devers, LIberty Co, Texas.
    3. Susannah Harmon was born on 2 Nov 1823 in Louisiana; died on 15 Aug 1892 in Orange, Orange Co, Texas.
    4. Hester A Harmon was born on 21 Mar 1828 in St. Martinville, St. Martin Parish, Louisiana; died on 18 Nov 1865 in Orange, Orange Co, Texas.
    5. Elizabeth Harmon was born on 13 Oct 1829; died on 29 Sep 1892 in Orange, Orange Co, Texas.
    6. John Harmon, Jr was born on 19 Oct 1836 in Orange Co, Texas; died on 23 Jan 1929 in Orange, Orange Co, Texas; was buried in Bland Cem, Orange, Orange Co, Texas.

Generation: 2

  1. 2.  David (Levy) Harmon was born in 1757 in St.Martin Parish, Louisiana (son of John Harmon and Mrs. Mary (..) Harmon); died in 1792.

    Notes:

    listed deceased at marriage of his widow Nancy Ann to Joseph Carr in Feb 1794.
    Also listed deceased at bt of his children, Anne, John, & Margaret on 17 Jul 1800.

    other Hartman family members from Germany, probably related to the David Hartman married to Nancy Anne White:

    John Peter Hartman, of Germany (c 1770)
    s/o Henry Hartman & Marie Hofman of Germany (c 1745)
    & Anne Ryan (Raing/Reinquen) of Pennsylvania, USA, diocese of Baltimore
    d/o Louis Ryan (Raing) & Marie Barba (Barbe') of Germany (c 1745)
    1. Jean Jacob Hartman (b 1791), bt 18 Jun 1795 at age 4 years.
    Spons: Jacob Nopre & Marguerite Rin. "Chez les allemands" (Among the Germans). Fr. Michel Bernard Barriere (SM Ch: v.4, #701)

    2. Jean Pierre Hartman (b Nov 1793) bt 18 Jun 1795 at age 19 mths.
    Spons: Adam Carles & Marguerite Nopre. "Chez les allemands" (among the Germans). Fr. Michel Bernard Barriere (SM Ch: v.4 #700)

    3. Mary Hartman (b 29 Nov 1795), bt 20 June 1797.
    Spons: Jean Pierre Folse & Sophie Hofman, wife of Jacob Miller.
    Note: Continuing the mission at "La praderia Salada costa de los Alemanos Habitation de Juan Pedro Hartman disho Jans Pedro" (during a mission in the Prairies on the German Coast - home of Jean Pierre Hartman "dit" (known as) Jans Peichel Bernard Barriere (SM Ch: v. 4, #880)

    4. John Hartman (b 24 Jun 1798), bt 17 Dec 1799
    Spons: John Noper & Margaret Ring.
    During a mission on Bayou Teych where I baptized at John Peter Hartman. Fr. Michel Bernard Barriere (SM Ch: v.5, #206)
    _________________________________



    NOTE: This is a different David Harmon!! (??)
    First Settlers of Jefferson Co, Texas by Gifford White
    Land Grants in Texas
    30th Applicant: David Harmon took and Subscribed to the oath required by the 12th Secretary of Land Law that he emigrated to Texas in 1829. It was proven that he was a citizen of Texas at the date of the Declaration of Independence by the oath of James Cole and John Harmon.

    A David Harmon wit marriage of Jacob Harmon & Isabelle Andrus 9 Nov 1795
    wit marriage of James Foreman (Edward & Marie Barrett) to Susan Cole 5 Feb 1805 Opel

    David married Nancy* Ann White on 21 May 1787 in Louisiana. Nancy* (daughter of John* White and Sarah Davenport "Sally"* Gambill) was born about 1770 in North Carolina; died about 1834 in Duncan Woods, Orange Co, Texas (maybe). [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  Nancy* Ann White was born about 1770 in North Carolina (daughter of John* White and Sarah Davenport "Sally"* Gambill); died about 1834 in Duncan Woods, Orange Co, Texas (maybe).

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Religion: Catholic

    Notes:

    White Ana of N. Carolina (Jean & Sara Gambie of Virginia) m David Armand of SM (SM Ch)

    Car, Guillaume (Joseph of Jamaca (Hugo & Marguerite Halfan) m 24 Feb 1794 Ane Wit, a widow. Fr. Carolina (SM ct hse OA - 15-75)
    White, Ana, wid of Carolina (Jean & Sara Gambel) m 24 Feb 1794 Joseph Car of Jamaica (SM Ct.Hse.: OA-15-75)
    White, Ane a widow; from Carolina (Jean & Sara Gambel) m 24 Feb 1794 Joseph Car of Jamaica (SM Ct. Hse: OA-15-75)

    (NOTE: Widow of David Harmon? He was in TX in 1829)

    White, Ana of N Carolina (Jean & Sara Gambie of Virginia) m Joseph Car of Jamaica (SM Ch)
    White, Nancy, wid of Joseph Carr m George Burrell, In Succ. of Joseph Carr dated 16 Aug 1816 (SM Ct. Hse.: Succ #242)

    White, Ana of N.Carolina (Jean & Sara Gambil of Virginia) m George Borel of England (SM Ch)
    White, Anna, widow of Joseph Car; from North Carolina; a Catholic (John & Sarah Gambil) m 1 Apr 1801 Georges Borrel, English, born in Hardfordshire; an Anglican (Robert & Elizabeth Tompkins from Ireland) * not entered in SM registers (NI Ch.: OA-#8)

    White, Anne of North Carolina, widow of Joseph Carr (John & Sara Gambil, natives of North Carolina) "Informacione de Solteria Producida" - (Marriage Investigation regarding the freedom to marry) dated 1 Apr 1801 George Borrel, Church of England, of Harfondchire, England and in this parish for 18 years (Robert & Elizabeth Tomkins native of Ireland and England) Signed: Frederic Tenholt, Louis Chemin, Peter O'Reilly, James Dunman. Fr. Michel Bernard Barriere (SM Ch: Marriage Investigation: Folio D, #33)
    ____________________
    NANCY WHITE'S LEGACY LIVES by Gwendolyn Wingate, staff correspondent. (Top of page is cut off but believe it appeared in an Orange, TX newspaper. (Sent by Barbara Vernon)

    Lusty, lovely Nancy White was four times married, and her offspring were among Texas' first settlers. Today's descendants may number in the thousands.
    There is no known picture of the enigmatic Nancy, but even from the dry, precise legal documents that record her actions, she emerges full-bodied and alluring. Desiring and desirable, strong-willed and physically hardy, she steps out faded pages and takes possession of the imagination.
    Nancy, or Ann, as her name is often recorded, was born to John White and Sarah Gambel a few years before the Am. Revolution. White is said to have descended from emigrants from the Isle of Wight on the southern coast of England. The ear in early records as householders in Virginia, but in the 1770's they were involved in the Regulator troubles in Burke Co., NC that preceded the revolution. Planters in the Carolina uplands rebelled against extortionate tax collectors of Gov. William Tyron, and two of the White brothers were beaten nearly to death during a riot. One was shot in the arm during the foray and lost the use of that arm, says an old court record. Six Regulators were hung and others killed by the governor's militia.
    Nancy could barely have remembered these bloody troubles, but it may have been because of them that the Whites moved on for a brief stay in Mississippi and then in the 1780's to the Attakapas dist. of Louisiana. That district, then undh rule, was made up of scattered settlements of Arcadians who had been expelled from Nova Scotia; Spanish from the Canary Islands who settled near present day New Iberia; a few Indians, some of the Attakapas tribe from which the district took its name; and trappers, traders and ranchers, some from the United States.
    Life was not easy in that pioneer land, Nancy's mother was a midwife assisting at the birthing of children. She bore nine of her own. John White was probably a farmer and cattleman, perhaps branding his own wild cattle of the coastal p, remnants of stock introduced by the Avoyelles Indians trading with the Spanish in Mexico. John White registered brands for himself and his son William in 1790.
    It was here in 1787 that the young Nancy fell in love with David Harmon and was married. The 1792 Spanish militia census for that post shows that Harmon, then 35, was a fusilier or infantryman. He was one of the few Americans listed amoles, Acadians and Europeans.
    Nancy and David Harmon had three children, Ann, John and Sarah. Their youngest daughter was born in 1792, the same year St. Martin's Parish records list an inventory of David Harmon's estate after his death. Those precisely written documents voice neither joy nor pain, but Nancy must have remembered her first love throughout her long life. She named a later son David.
    The young widow may have returned to her father's home with her children. She must have had some education, uncommon in that day for a woman, and she must have given her children some schooling, for both she and they signed their name on nts rather than making a mark. In 1804 she or her father registered brands for her children at St. Martinville.
    But by that time Nancy was no longer the widow Harmon. A marriage contract penned carefully in Spanish proclaims the union on Feb 24 1794, at the Attakapas Post of "the Widow Ane Wit, elder and ligitimate daughter of Jean Wit and Sara Gamative of Carolina…and, Joseph Carr of Jamaica, elder and legitimate son of Hugo Carr and Mrs. Marguerite Halfair of Jamaica." Officiating officer was the post commandant, Francisco Cago y Luongo, and the bride's brothers, William and Jesse White were witnesses.
    According to the contract the groom, who was probably of Scottish descent, brought to his marriage 1000 piastres (worth about $1 each) in notes, belongings consisting of 275 piastres, and other property commensurate with Nancy's half of thunity division from her marriage to Harmon.
    Nancy bore a son, William, and a daughter, Lucy, to Joseph Carr. But perhaps it was too soon after the loss of her first love, or maybe Carr had an insatiable wanderlust. He disappeared from the scene, and subsequent documents never ro Nancy as the widow Carr. Stories passed down through the generation's hint that Carr was a freebooter and adventurer. A man by that name took part in the 1812 Gutierrez expedition that attempted to wrest Texas from Spain. The expedition failed and if indeed Carr was with them, there is no clue to what happened to him.
    A few years later Nancy married George Burrell, or Borel as he sometimes appears. He and his family had been in the district as early as 1782 and were probably neighbors of the Whites. He and Maria Dunman were baptismal sponsors of Nancnger sister Sarah in 1801.
    Nancy's life with George Burrell may have lacked the ecstasy she knew with David Harman, but in maturity they must have brought warmth and understanding to the marriage that lasted nearly 20 years. She named her oldest son Robert, and the younger, David.
    The children of Nancy White's three marriages would play an important part of the history of Jefferson, Orange and Chambers counties. In 1830 John Harmon veteran of the War of 1812 and son of her first love David, settled near Adams Bayouat is now Orange. John's son David had come to Texas a year earlier, and Nancy's daughter Sarah, who married Absalom Gray came in 1833.
    One of John Harmon's son Joshua, was the ancestor of the Harmon saddlemakers of Hankamer. His other children married Pevitos, Patillos, Blands, Coles and Means most of who were also early settlers.
    William Carr was a part of Stephen F. Austin's third colony, claiming the William Carr League along Taylor's Bayou near LaBelle. He may have gotten additional land for furnishing horses to the TX. Revolutionists.
    David Burrell settled near Taylors Bayou in 1828, claiming the league of land that bears his name. His nephew, George, his brother Robert's son, married Nancy French, daughter of John J. French of the trading post. Their son, J.J. Burrelrried a cousin, Alzena Carr, daughter of Nancy White's son, William Carr.
    Probably all of Nancy's brothers and sisters except Jesse also settled in Texas. Her brother, James Taylor White, was in Chambers Co. before the TX Revolution and it was at his ranch that the Turtle Bayou resolutions were drawn up, an earlyfrontation of Texans and Mexicans. Nancy White Burrell herself claimed land in McLennan Co. which was later lost by her heirs in a lawsuit.
    By 1824 when Nancy made a settlement with her dau. Sarah Harmon for her share of her father's estate, Nancy was again a widow. But her love life was not over. Opelousas marriage records reveal that on June 8 1828, she married Jacob Hamshire
    Nancy was now past childbearing age, but Hamshire's descendants from an earlier marriage would also leave their mark on area history. His son John was one of High Island's early settlers and the town of Hamshire would take its name from the surname of his grandson, Lovan. An early Jefferson co. sheriff, David Garner married a Matilda Hamshire in 1839, who was a granddaughter of Jacob's.
    Other descendants of Nancy's, to name a few, are Clubbs, Moors, Dugars (Dugats), Jetts, Abshiers, Walles, Norwoods, Harrises, Pruetts, Wilcoxes, Gatlins, Hayes, Aubeys, Hargraves, Wingates, Alexanders, Van Wormers, Hoffpauirs, Heimans, Boused many others.
    When did Nancy die? And where is she buried? Some say in a half-forgotten cemetry near Duncan Woods in Orange Co. No one knows for sure.

    Died:
    The date of her death, or the place seems to be only conjecture, no actual records of her death appear to have been found. However, if her husband died in 1850 in St. Landry it doesn't seem likely she would be in Orange, unless his date/place of death is not accurate. Her son James Harmon settled in Orange, but have not been able to find her in his household.

    Children:
    1. Anne Harmon was born on 21 May 1788 in St.Martin Parish, Louisiana; died after 1810.
    2. 1. John Aarmand Harmon, Sr was born on 28 Apr 1790 in St.Martin Parish, Louisiana; was christened on 17 Jul 1800 in St. Martinville, St. Martin Parish, Louisiana; died on 22 Feb 1871 in Orange, Orange Co, Texas.
    3. Sarah Margaret Harmon was born on 19 May 1792; died after 1833.


Generation: 3

  1. 4.  John Harmon was born about 1737; died after 1800.

    Notes:

    Listed as Pats, John Hartman & Mary -- of Germany, in bt of Anne Hartman on 17 Jul 1800.

    John married Mrs. Mary (..) Harmon about 1768. Mary was born about 1737 in Germany; died after 1800. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 5.  Mrs. Mary (..) Harmon was born about 1737 in Germany; died after 1800.

    Notes:

    Listed as Pats, John Hartman & Mary -- of Germany, in bt of Anne Hartman on 17 Jul 1800.

    Children:
    1. 2. David (Levy) Harmon was born in 1757 in St.Martin Parish, Louisiana; died in 1792.

  3. 6.  John* White was born in 1744 in Orange Co, Virginia (son of James* Taylor White and Elizabeth* Powe (Poe) (Pou)); died on 8 Jan 1807 in Attakapas Co, Orleans Territory, Louisiana.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Residence: Abt 1766, Cheraws Dist, South Carolina
    • Other-Begin: Between 1772 and 1778, Burke Co, North Carolina
    • Residence: Between 1780 and 1781, Washington Co, North Carolina; tax rolls
    • Residence: May 1782, Natchez, Mississippi
    • Possessions: 17 May 1782, Natchez, Mississippi

    Notes:

    Said to have descended from emigrants from the Isle of Wight on the southern coast of England. Registered a cattle brand for himself and son William in 1790.

    White, Jean (Jacques & Elizabeth Pou) m Sara Gambel (SM Ch.)
    Possibly sons George (1801) & Henry (1805) but Sarah would be too old if b 1745.
    The family moved from North Carolina to Natchez, Mississippi, somewhere between 1780 and 1784. They then moved to Louisiana, probably St.Martinville, before 1787.

    living on Bayou Vermillion in 1810

    Other-Begin:
    1772-78 - John White and James White received land grants in Burke Co., NC but they did not stay long. [Gifford White]


    Residence:
    1780-81 - John White and James White appeared on the property tax rolls of Washington Co., NC, now part of Tenneessee.
    White, James 5 horses, 8 neat cattle 447.10.0
    White, John 3 horses, 5 cattle 107.10.0"



    Residence:
    1782, May - John White and James White arrived with their families in Natchez Terr. on the lower Mississippi River. James dies here c1783. The Spanish record here lists the families that arrived in May, 1782 in Natchez. [Natchez Court Records 1767-1805]

    Relacion de familias americanas, signed Carlos de Grand-Pré, Natchez, July 6, 1782 AGI, PC, leg. 193-b.
    13 familias como sigue:
    Individuos Esclavos (slaves)
    Thomas Green, wife & children 11 32
    Thomas Marston Green, wife & son 11 3
    Cato West, wife and son 8 3
    Guillaume Duelt, wife and children 3 23
    David Smith, wife & children 5 7 Guillermo David & wife & children 4 2
    Juan White, wife & children 8 1
    Tiago White, wife & children 11 1
    Ricardo Gooden, wife & children 5 2
    Thomas Ethridge, wife & children 4 -
    Xphal Ryer & wife 2 -
    Guillermo Barland 1 -
    ------
    Pasageros y enganchados: 7 72 88
    Total: 79

    note: Guillame Duelt is probably William Dewitt who had married Catherine White, the daughter of William White, just before the voyage.
    Juan White is John White.
    Guillaume White is William White brother to both Juan and Tiago (James) White.


    Possessions:
    17 May 1782
    ... appeared John White, who sells to Widow Anne McIntosh, here present and accepting, a negro woman named Jane, aged 18, native of Virginia, for $440 which seller acknowledges to have recived in cattle from purchaser, in the presence of Daveid Smith and Richard Gooding, who signed with seller.
    1 June 1782
    ... appeared James White who sold to Widow Anne McIntosh, resident of the post, a negro woman "Bretha", native fo Barbadoes, aged 40; consideration $300, which sd. purchaser has paid in cows and horses. Witnesses: Francois Farrell and Silas Crane. Signed James White." [Mc Bee]
    http://www.next1000.com/family/EC/white.jt.html

    John* married Sarah Davenport "Sally"* Gambill about 1765 in Virginia or South Carolina . Sarah (daughter of Henry* (John) Gambill and Mary* (Sarah) Davenport) was born about 1748 in Culpeper Co, or Hanover Co, Virginia; died on 20 Feb 1828 in Lafayette Parish, Louisiana. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  4. 7.  Sarah Davenport "Sally"* Gambill was born about 1748 in Culpeper Co, or Hanover Co, Virginia (daughter of Henry* (John) Gambill and Mary* (Sarah) Davenport); died on 20 Feb 1828 in Lafayette Parish, Louisiana.

    Notes:

    Sarah was a midwife. According to article, there were nine children.
    Sarah Gambil - parents listed as John Gambil & Sarah Dempot, all of Virginia, as mats in bt. of grandson James White in 1801.

    Gary Barr (gbarr@compuserve.com)
    Davenport, Gambill, White, Comstock

    Children:
    1. William "Guillaum" White was born on 17 Dec 1766 in Burke Co, North Carolina, or Cheraws Dist, South Carolina; died before 14 Sep 1824 in Lafayette,St.Martin Parish, Louisiana.
    2. 3. Nancy* Ann White was born about 1770 in North Carolina; died about 1834 in Duncan Woods, Orange Co, Texas (maybe).
    3. Lucy White was born about 1776 in Virginia/North Carolina; died after 1816 in of, Bayou Vermillion, St.Martin Parish, Louisiana.
    4. John Jesse White was born on 15 Sep 1778 in North Carolina; died before 3 Apr 1813 in St.Martin Parish, Louisiana.
    5. Mary "Polly" White was born on 9 Sep 1780 in North Carolina; died on 25 Jul 1821.
    6. Sarah White was born in 1784 in Natchez District, Mississippi; died on 10 Apr 1828 in Mountville, Louisiana.
    7. Elizabeth White was born about 1787 in Louisiana; died in 1810 in Louisiana.
    8. James Taylor White was born on 28 Jul 1789 in St. Martinville, St. Martin Parish, Louisiana; died on 5 Mar 1852 in Turtle Bayou, Chambers Co, Texas; was buried in White's Cem, Chambers Co, Texas.
    9. Susanna White was born on 2 Nov 1791 in St.Martin Parish, Louisiana; died after 1812.


Generation: 4

  1. 12.  James* Taylor White was born in 1710 in Orange Co, Virginia (son of James Taylor* White (Whyte)); died before 1785 in Natchez, Spanish Louisiana.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Other-Begin: 23 Feb 1743, Orange Co, Virginia; road orders
    • Other-Begin: 24 Feb 1743, Orange Co, Virginia; road orders
    • Other-Begin: 24 Nov 1743, Orange Co, Virginia; road orders
    • Other-Begin: 26 Apr 1744, Orange Co, Virginia; road orders
    • Other-Begin: 27 Mar 1746, Orange Co, Virginia; road orders
    • Other-Begin: 23 Mar 1748, Orange Co, Virginia; road orders
    • Property: 1749, Culpeper Co, Virginia
    • Property: 29 Mar 1757, PeeDee River area, Craven Co, South Carolina
    • Property: 14 Jan 1758, Craven Co, South Carolina
    • Other-Begin: 25 Oct 1760, Cashaway Baptist Church, Craven Co, South Carolina
    • Other-Begin: 20 Jul 1762, Culpeper Co, Virginia
    • Other-Begin: 20 Jun 1767, Cashaway Baptist Church, Craven Co, South Carolina
    • Other-Begin: 15 Aug 1768, PeeDee River, Mars Bluff, Craven Co, South Carolina; The Regulators
    • Other-Begin: 15 Aug 1770, Craven Co, South Carolina; re Mars Bluff incident
    • Residence: 1777, Burke Co, North Carolina

    Notes:

    White, Jacques Telleurs m Elizabeth Pou (SM Ch)

    George Hume Jr. of Culpeper Co. 220 A. on throughfare of Beaver Dam, Hazle R. in said Co. Surv. George Hume Sr. Adj. James Taylor Whyte, on Rich Mt., George Roberts, James Whyte. 15 july 1760.

    - Norther Neck Land Grants.

    http://wc.rootsweb.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=juuledwards&id=I1

    --
    White contact
    Jackie Ashley (Mrs. Jerry B.) PACE
    2206 John St.
    Pasadena, Texas 77502-3328
    United States
    (713)473-8250
    jbpace1@ibm.net
    ============

    JAMES TAYLOR WHITE OF VIRGINIA, by Gifford White" James Taylor White" is first recorded in Orange County, Virginia when he and William White made bond for Rebecca Chissum to be administratrix of John Chissum, deceased. William White was a constable for Orange County in 1740. On January 23, 1745 James Taylor White was appointed one of the overseers of road gangs from Hazle Rivers upwards to the Great Mountains`. Culpeper County was formed from Orange County in 1748. The following year James Taylor White was paid 154 pounds of tobacco for attending court as a witness in Orange County for coming nine miles here from Culpeper County`. Two land records from Lord Fairfax are recorded on June 26, 1749 for 217 acres on Gourd Vine Fork and Hazel River. The second was on October 8, 1750 also on Gourd Vine Fork in the County of Culpeper. Indian trouble in western Virginia in the 1750`s caused many settlers to leave. This may be the reason James Taylor White moved to Craven County, South Carolina. Land records dated March 29, 1757 gives James Taylor White 300 acres in the Welch Tract, Craven County. Another record records 300 acres in Craven County dated November 8, 1757. November 18, 1761 James and his wife, Elizabeth Powe sold 200 acres to Malachi Saunders.From the Cashaway Baptist Church Record Book 1756-1778` at Furman University Library, Greenville, South Carolina: Sat 25 Oct 1760 . . . Mr. James White for excess drinking be suspended from this church until satisfaction be given . . . 20 June 1767 . . . on Cashaway Neck on Pee Dee in Craven County. The names of all the members . . . Elizabeth White . . . gone`
    Prior to the Revolutionary War, trouble with the British caused many people to leave South Carolina. The White family moved to Burke County, North Carolina. All of the Whites appear on lists of witnesses against Tories in trials that were held in North Carolina about 1782."
    Marriage 1 Elizabeth POU b: 1710
    Children:
    William WHITE b: 1730
    Reuben WHITE b: 1734
    James WHITE b: 1736
    John WHITE b: 1744 in VA
    Elizabeth WHITE b: 1745

    http://wc.rootsweb.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=keithwlms&id=I7997

    --------------------
    Very closely related to the Davenport family. James Taylor White's sons William and James were married to Davenport sisters, Sophia and Jerusa, respectively,
    daughters of Thomas Davenport. John* White's wife Sarah* Gambell's mother was the sisters' aunt Mary "Sarah" Davenport Gambill.


    Other-Begin:
    23 February 1743, O.S. p. 51
    Ordered that James Taylor White be Appointed Overseer of the Road from Bever Dam to Thorntons Mill in the Roome of Jonas Jenkins & that the former work under him on said Road.

    Other-Begin:
    24 February 1743, O.S. p. 56 On the Motion of Robt Eastham Gent Ordered that Laurence Broadley James Taylor White & John Strother or any two of them Do view & Lay off the Road from Thorntons Mill to Bradley.s former Plantation & Ret to next Court.


    Other-Begin:
    24 November 1743, O.S. p. 25We Present the Overseer of the Road from the Devils Run to Thorns mill by the Information (?) of James Taylour White being the Road that goes Between Daniel Browns and Samuel Fargussons, Francis Brown Overseer.

    Other-Begin:
    26 April 1744, O.S. p. 100 On the Motion of Robert Eastham Gent That a Road formerly layd off from Thorntons Mill to Bradleys Plantation by Lawrence Bradley & James Taylor White Its Ordered That the said James Taylor White & Francis Brown & their Gangs do Clear & repayr said Road & that they be exempt of four Miles Labour below sd. Precincts, which the adjacent Overseers below them are Ordered to repayr instead of the sd. White and Brown.

    Other-Begin:
    27 March 1746, O.S. p. 461 Ordered that the Road from FT to the Great Mountains be Divided into two Precincts and thatthe Gangs on the said Road from the said FT to Hazle River do Attend James White who is by the Court appointed Overseer of that Part of the said Road and obey his Directions in clearing and keeping the same in repair and that the Gang on the Road from Hazle River upwards to the Great Mountains do attend James Taylor White their former Overseer who is continued in his said Office and obey their Directions in clearing and keeping the same in Repair and that the said Overseers cause Posts of Directions to be set up where Necessary.

    Other-Begin:
    23 March 1748, O.S. p. 176Robert Traurick Coleman Brown Robert Stuart & Lawrance Bradly are exempted from workingon the Road whereof James Cotton is Overseer & it is ordered that they work on the Road whereof James White is Overseer.
    The establishment and maintenance of public roads was one of the most important functions of the County Court during the colonial period in Virginia. Each road was opened and maintained by an Overseer of Highways appointed by the Gentlemen Justices yearly. He was usually assigned all the Labouring Male Titheables living on or near the road for this purpose. These individuals then furnished all their own tools, wagons, and teams and were required to labour for six days each year on the roads.

    Property:
    1749- "Lord Fairfax to James Taylor White of the County of Culpeper...land in the Gourd Vine Fork in the said county ... corner of a former survey of said White's ...corner Joseph Collins... 220 acres... 8 Oct 1750".
    [ book G, Northern Neck Grants, Virginia State Archives. ]

    Gourd Vine Fork, Hazel River of Thornton's line, 217 acres, 26 June 1749, in Culpepper Co. Virginia. [Book G, Northern Neck Grants, Virginia State Archives] [White, Gifford. James Taylor White of Virginia, p.3]


    Property:
    c1750's Indian trouble caused many to leave Virginia for the Carolinas. A land grant exists for James Taylor White in 1757, Craven Co. South Carolina by the colonial government. [White, Gifford. James Taylor White of Virginia, p.3]

    1757- Land grants were given by the colonial governments to family members in Craven Co., South Carolina, an old but extinct county with it records in many places. Sometimes records of the PeeDee River area can be found in conjunction with St David's Parish. [Land grant records are in the Archives at Columbia, South Carolina]

    29 March 1757 "To James Taylor White, 300 acres in the Welch Tract, Craven Co., pursuant to an order dated 1 March 1757" [Pre-Revolutionary Plats, vol. 6, pp 256]

    Property:
    14 Jan. 1758. "To James Taylor White, 300 acres in the Welch Tract, Craven Co., [Memorial Book No. 7, p 163]


    Other-Begin:
    1760, - The Records of the Cashaway Baptist Church show that On "Sat 25 Oct 1760 ... Mr. James White for excess drinking be suspended from this church until satisfaction be given..


    Other-Begin:
    1762 -July 20- James Taylor White, father of Elizabeth, settles his debts in Culpepper Co. Virginia before leaving for South Carolina. Elizabeth's brothers may have stopped in North Carolina due to marrying into families of that state. [White, Gifford. James Taylor White of Virginia, p.4]


    Other-Begin:
    20 June 1767 .. on Cashaway Neck on Pee Dee in Craven County. The names of all the members... Elizabeth White .. gone." [Cashaway Batpist Curch Record Book 1756-1778]


    Other-Begin:
    1768- August 15 -reported an incident near Marr's Bluff, on Pedee River. An armed company of Regulators, "headed by one Gideon Gibson, on the 25th past, near Marr's Bluff, surrounded a constable and twelve men, who were sent to bring one of the villans before a Magistrate, and after a short skirmish, where two of the Constable's Party were mortally wounded, and one shot thro the shoulder, took the Rest Prisoners, whom he discharged, after ordering them 50 lashes each." [South Carolina Gazette, August 15, 1768]


    Other-Begin:
    1770- Aug. 15 - William White and James Taylor White submit their cases to the Commons House of Assembly for South Carolina based on the Marr's Bluff incident reported above. William had been a constable in South Carolina for years before this and took his job very seriously although he was a "cooper", barrel maker, by trade.
    (see attached pdf)


    Residence:
    by 1777 - The entire White family had moved to Burke Co., North Carolina. [Gifford White]

    James* married Elizabeth* Powe (Poe) (Pou) in 1730 in Orange Co, Virginia. Elizabeth* was born about 1710 in Culpeper Co, Virginia; died before 20 Jun 1767 in Craven Co, South Carolina. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 13.  Elizabeth* Powe (Poe) (Pou) was born about 1710 in Culpeper Co, Virginia; died before 20 Jun 1767 in Craven Co, South Carolina.

    Notes:

    referred to as Elizabeth Spars in bt of her gandchild Marie (dau of John).
    ---------------------

    1772 -Pre-Revolutionary Plat Books, So. Caro. Archives Dept.
    There are a several land records for Craven county that list members of the White family. Another interesting connection my be with the District Surveyor on several of these is Thomas Powe. We still do not know if this person is related to Elizabeth above.
    21-424 James White, 200a Craven County Polk swamp, adj. John Baxter, John Hollowy, 10 Oct. 1772. Thos. Powe, D. S.
    21-431 Reuben White, 600a Craven in fork of Little Pee Dee Drownding Creek on Bell Swam, 10 Dec. 1772. John McCall, D. S.
    Same page, Reuben White, 500a Craven N. side of Little Pedee adj. Hugh Thomapson. Thos. Powe, D. S. 14 June 1773.

    21-433 Reuben White, 300a Craven on the Beaveer dam, waters of Jeffereys Creek adj. John Ward, Connels land, Reuben White and vacant land. 9 Oct 1881 Thos. Powe, D. S.


    http://www.next1000.com/family/EC/white.jt.html

    Children:
    1. William White, Esq. was born about 1730; died on 7 Nov 1818 in Burke Co, North Carolina.
    2. Capt Ruben White was born about 1733 in Orange Co, Virginia; died in Oct 1776 in Burke Co, North Carolina.
    3. James White was born about 1736 in Orange Co, Virginia; died in 1784 in Natchez District, Mississippi.
    4. 6. John* White was born in 1744 in Orange Co, Virginia; died on 8 Jan 1807 in Attakapas Co, Orleans Territory, Louisiana.
    5. Elizabeth White was born about 1745 in Culpeper Co, Virginia; died on 31 Aug 1817 in Baton Rouge, Louisiana.
    6. Jane White was born about 1747; died in Sep 1821 in Burke Co, North Carolina.

  3. 14.  Henry* (John) Gambill was born in 1710 in Virginia (son of Thomas* Gambill and Ann* (..) Gambill); died before 1768 in Brumfield Parish, Culpeper Co, Virginia.

    Notes:

    Information provided by Helen Roche, Correspondence Secretary for Wilkes Co. NC Genealogy Society, 1997

    Henry Gambrell (Ca 1700 - By 1768) married Mary Davenport around 1735. Legal records indicate that Henry resided in Louisa, Spotsylvania, Albemarle, Hanover, and Culpeper Counties in Virginia. He was a legal witness for Martin Davenport, his wife's father, in Hanover County, Virginia, in 1735, and purchased 175 acres of land on Little Rocky Creek in Hanover County, Virginia during the same year.
    In 1753, Henry purchased 900 acres of land in Culpeper County from Thomas Kennerly of South Carolina. John Minor of Spotsylvania County, Virginia, in his will executed in 1754, even refers to "land lately bough of Henry Gambrell in Culpeper".
    Henry and Mary had at least seven children - six sons and a daughter. Their children were: William, Benjamin, Henry, John, Thomas, Martin, and Sarah.
    This family probably lived in an area known as Gambrell's Mountain in Culpeper County, Virginia. Various court and service-connected records were recorded for Gambrells in the Culpeper region during the 1750-1780's era.
    Benjamin, Henry, John, and William are listed as witnesses in the 1764 Culpeper Court minutes, which was the only book preserved before 1798. Henry and John were sergeants in the Culpeper Militia under Colonel Thomas Slaugher. This group orgaed in August, 1755. For their service of approximately one year, Henry and John were each paid 1,710 pounds of tobacco in April, 1756. A David Gambrell also received pay on 5 Oct 1775,for service under Lord Dunmore. A payment was made to Thomas Gambrell, aninfantry soldier, on 24 July 1786. James and William were listed as Virginians in the Revolution. Matthew and Henry were noted living adjacent to the Albemarle Barracks in 1781. In fact, there were numerous Gambrells in Albemarle County, Virginia, in the mid to late 1700's. The Gambrells in the Albemarle County, Virginia area were even listed in the historical aspect when the county was formed in 1745. Richard was a long time Tobacco Inspector at the Henderson's Tobacco Warehouse. John was listed as a member of the Orthodox Reformed Presbyterian Church Congregation who hired Rev. Samuel Black on 29 March 1747. Henry (maybe Jr.) built the second jail in the county around 1783, and was on the 1785 Virginia Taxpayer List as a head of a family of 10. As late as 1796, Matthew Gambrell received a land grant of 25,798 acres of land in Albemarle, Orange, and Rockingham Counties. Hence, the Gambrells appeared to migrate to western Virginia or to western Carolina during the late 1700's.
    (Researched by Karen Paramore, November 1, 1995 in Claiborne County Library, Tazewell, Tennessee.)

    Henry* married Mary* (Sarah) Davenport in Oct 1735 in Hanover Co, Virginia (probably). Mary* (daughter of Martin* Davenport, Sr and Mrs. (1st wife of Martin)* Davenport) was born about 1706 in King William Co, Virginia; died before 1775 in Wilkes Co, North Carolina. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  4. 15.  Mary* (Sarah) Davenport was born about 1706 in King William Co, Virginia (daughter of Martin* Davenport, Sr and Mrs. (1st wife of Martin)* Davenport); died before 1775 in Wilkes Co, North Carolina.

    Notes:

    The identity of the Mary who later married Henry Gambill as a Davenport is clear from the baptismal record of a grandchild, Susanna White, in St. Martin's Church, St. Martinsville LA, dated 2 Nov 1791. That record identifies the child's mother as "Sarah Gambill, daughter of Henry Gambill and Marie Davenport, Virginians.

    Excerpt from "Pioneer Lewis Families, rev Jul 5, 1992"
    MARY DAVENPORT, m c 1735 Henry Gambill (Gamble), b early 1700s d between 1762 and 1775. Lived the last part of his life in Brumfield Parish, Culpeper County Virginia. Of their sons was William Gambill (father of Mary Gambill who married Fielding Lewis)
    Children of Henry Gambill and Mary Davenport are:
    William Gambill, Sr., born 1740 in Louisa County, VA; died 1779 in Wilkes Co, NC; married mary Johnson Wash; Benjamin Gambill; Henry Gambill; John Gambill;Thomas Gambill; Martin Gambill; Sarah Gambill.

    Children:
    1. Benjamin Gambill was born about 1736; died in 1839 in Wilkes Co, North Carolina.
    2. John Gambill was born in 1751 in Culpeper Co, Virginia; died in 1839 in Wilkes Co, North Carolina.
    3. William Gambill, Sr was born in 1740 in Hanover, Louisa Co, Virginia; died in 1779 in Wilkes Co, North Carolina.
    4. Thomas Gambill was born about 1742; died after 1786.
    5. Captain Martin Cleveland Gambill was born on 9 May 1750 in Culpeper Co, Virginia; died on 20 Feb 1812 in Wilkes Co, North Carolina.
    6. Henry Gambill was born about 1746; died after 1790 in Albermarle Co, Virginia or Giles Co, Tennessee.
    7. 7. Sarah Davenport "Sally"* Gambill was born about 1748 in Culpeper Co, or Hanover Co, Virginia; died on 20 Feb 1828 in Lafayette Parish, Louisiana.