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- JERSEY SETTLERS: Vol. II, page 401:
Entire Genealogy of Jones Family.
William Jones, son of Lane Jones and Anne Barber Jones, m. Phoebe Brown, daughter of Zachariah Brown.
(note: Phoebe Brown disputed - looks like she was Phoebe Courtney - see notes on Phoebe) William Jones Died very young, leaving a widow and an only son by the name of John. Mrs. Jones then married a man named Richard Curtis, Sr. and five sons and three daughters were born to them.
John Jones was educated at William and Mary College and in 1768, married Anna Brown, daughter of Abraham Brown.
At the breaking of the Revolutionary War, the family was found in South Carolina on the Great Pee Dee River about sixty miles from Charleston. John Jones ardently espoused the cause of the Revolutionists. He enlisted in the army, served three campaigns under General Francis Marion and was also in the siege of Charleston. The name of John Jones appears on the marble tablet in the Wren Building of William and Mary College, Williamsburg, Virginia, listing the known members of the College in the Revolution. John Jones is identified as being from Dinwiddie County, Virginia. (Approved DAR line)
At the close of the War, Richard Curtis, Sr., and his family, John Jones and his family, sons and daughters and their families, emigrated to the Mississippi Territory, joined the Jersey Settlers in the Natchez Country, settled on Fairchild's Creek. John Jones is buried at a place called Forty Hills Plantation.
(See the Rev. Samuel Swayze line for descendants.)
John Jones, b. 14 Dec. 1744, Dinwiddie Co., Virginia; d. 10 Sept. 1821, Jefferson Co, MS; m. 28 June 1768 in SC, Anna Brown, b. 22 June 1751, SC, d. 14 June 1842 in Mississippi...
NEW JERSEY SETTLERS OF ADAMS CO, MISS.
Vol. I, pg 176-178
THE FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH IN MISSISSIPPI
Dr. Richard Aubrey McLemore in his History of Mississippi Baptists concedes: "The first protestant settlement in the Old Natchez region was established at Kingston, about sixteen miles southeast of Natchez in 1773. The community flourished and a Congregational church was established.
In 1781, the Indians became hostile and forced the abandonment of the settlement." But he concludes, "Many of these people later became members of other churches, several of them joining the Baptist Church".
Dr. McLemore describes the beginning of the Baptist church thus: "A group of seven people met at Sister Stampley's home on Cole's Creek," This was in 1791, eighteen years after Reverend Swayze established his Congregational group. The list of this pioneer group as given in the Salem Baptist Church Minutes in the Mississippi Baptist Archives is as follows:
Richard Curtis, Jr., pastor, William Thompson, recording clerk, William Curtis, John Jones, Benjamin Curtis, Ealiff Lanier and Margaret Stampley. Among the seven we note John Jones the forebear of this distinguished Methodist minister and historian John Griffing Jones. This was a group of Baptists from South Carolina but other farm families were among the early members. Several of them with Congregational connections. In fact, Rev. Swayze's daughter Hannah had for her second husband (after the death of Jeremiah Coleman) the Baptist leader Richard Curtis, Sr., whose daughters Hannah and Phoebe with their husbands John Courtney and John Stampley came in the South Carolina party. Other names found on the early church rolls were then or later connected with the Jersey Settler families: Miss. F. Coleman, Elizabeth Chaney, Elizabeth Coleman, Feribu Coleman, Buchner Darden, Maria Darden, Jane Farrar, Elizabeth Farrar, Miss Aleaf Farrow, Sarah Guice, Martha Harper, John Jones, Phebe Jones, Daniel and Jane Perry, James B. Truly, Sarah and William Whitney and Willis McDonald. Then there were Elizabeth R. and M. B. King.
The difficulties suffered by this second Mississippi Protestant group were greater than the Congregationalists. Five factors caused the greater difficulty, first, the river routes were traveled, encountering Indians; second, the situation had not been reconnoitered by scouts as the Swayze brothers and the King brothers had done; third, land was not legally held with authorities notifies; fourth, the rip was made during the Revolutionary War; fifth, the Spaniards, having gained strength in their hold on the colony by 1791 were more daring in prosecution.
The story will be told from the writings of recognized historians, the early Methodist historian, Rev. John Griffing Jones, already memntioned, and the recent Baptist historian, Dr. Richard Aubrey McLemore. Rev. Jones writes: "About the year 1743 there lived in Dinwiddie county, near Petersburg, in Virginia, a newly-married couple, of Welsh descent, by the name of William and Phebe Jones. Mr. Jones soon after died, leaving a young widow and an only son, by the name of John. Within a few years after the death of her husband Mrs. Jones married the man who will hereafter be known in these sketches as Richard Curtis, senior, by which marriage they had five sons and three daughters. After the marriage of Mrs. Jones to Mr. Curtis we have no very satisfactory knowledge of the family for about thirty years.
In the meantime, John Jones, the son of Mrs. Curtis by her first marriage, had grown up to manhood, and on the 28th of June, 1768, had married Miss Anna Brown, daughter of Abraham Brown. At the breaking out of the Revolutionary war the family was found in South Carolina, on the Great Peedee river, not far from the mouth of Black river, and about sixty miles from Charleston... "The Curtis famiy decided to establish their new homes on Cole's Creek, about twenty miles above Natchez. The stories of productive farm lands that were free to all settlers and the peace they would have from the turmoil of the fratricidal strife in South Carolina must have made the prospects of beginning again very enticing. Spain had conquered the Natchez district in 1779, but the emigrants did not anticipate any difficulty from this source.
The route the migrants followed to their new homes was the familiar one used by many who were a part of the great westward migration. They left their homes early in 1780 and traveled to the Holston River. It was not a long journey, but winter weather, bad roads, and the poor transportation equipment available made it a difficult and heart-breaking trip. They arrived on the Holston in the early spring and immediately began the task of raising a crop of corn while building flatboats for the journey down the rivers to their new home.
In the fall of 1780 the revelers were ready to begin their voyage. The party included Richard Curtis, Sr., and his wife; two brothers, William and Benjamin Curtis and their wives; Richard Curtis, Jr. and his wife; John Courtney and John Stampley and their wives (nee Hannah and Phoebe Curtis, respectively, daughters of Richard Curtis, Sr.); John Jones and his wife; and others whose names are unknown. On the second boat were Daniel and William Ogden and their families, and a Mr....(need page 178)
Page 486: PHOEBE JONES MARRIES IN SECRET - SPRING OF 1795
"Richard Curtis who brought his family from Virginia and Charleston to Natchez after 1780, was the first Baptist to operate in the district. They settleed on Cole's Creek, hacked their homes out of the wilderness, and spent most of their Sundays praying and reading scriptures in the privacy of their own homes. Curtis died in 1784, and his son, Richard Curtis, Jr., assumed the preaching duties, ably assissted by John and Jacob Stampley, gifted "natural" preachers. The young Curtis had none of the reserve or respect for the law that his father had shown, and he soon embroiled his sect in an argument with the Catholic priests and Spanish government.
In the Spring of 1795, as the religious situation grew more tense in Natchez, Gayoso called Curtis to government house and asked him to swear that he would not preach in public again, under pain of confiscation of his goods and expulsion from the province. Curtis signed the agreement, but as soon as Gayoso left the province for top secret business up the Mississippi River, the Baptists operated openly. The crisis developed when David Greenleaf, a noted Natchez mechanic who built the first cotton gins in Natchez, decided to marry Phoebe Jones, the daughter of John Jones, who wanted the ceremony performed by her uncle, Richard Curtis, Jr. The couple arranged for an elaborate meeting in the woods. Greenleaf and his companions would ride south from Villa Gayoso, while Miss Jones and her entourage rode north. With a sign and coutersing, they would meet and be married. Practical jokers in Greenleaf's party persuaded him to ride past the meeting without acknowledging the sign (or did he have cold fee?), but they returned within minutes and the couple laughingly rode to William Stampley's plantation and were married by torchlight.
The ceremony was secret, but what married couple are able to live together clandestinely? Greeleaf's fame as a mechanic and his numerous contacts with the Spanish government made him anything but inconspicuous. The secret was uncovered and the Spanish priest demanded to know who had performed the illegal ceremony. When it was discovered that not only had Curtis done the horrors in the Greenleaf-Jones nuptials, but, in addition, had baptized William Haberlin and Stephen deAlvo, acting commandant Grand-Pre issued orders for their arrest. But sentires posted on the roads leading to Curtis' home warned the trio, and they escaped through the wilderness to South Carolina, not to return during the Spanish rule."
http://wc.rootsweb.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=tsmith&id=I300688
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