The Cherokee Ward family holds a significant place in the history of the Cherokee Nation, marked by the valor and leadership of Nancy Ward. Nancy, a full-blood Cherokee of the Wolf clan, first gained prominence when her husband, Kingfisher of the Deer clan, was killed in a battle with the Muskogees. Demonstrating remarkable courage, Nancy continued to fight in the battle, leading to the Muskogee’s defeat and earning her the esteemed title of Ghi-ga-u, or Beloved Woman, a position that granted her exceptional influence within the tribe. Her second marriage to Bryan Ward, a white trader, further intertwined her lineage with the Ward family, establishing a notable Cherokee ancestry. Nancy’s actions during the Revolutionary War, including her timely warnings to settlers and her efforts to aid the patriots, cemented her legacy as a pivotal figure in Cherokee and American history.
Na-Ni Ward (Nancy Ward)
A22. A full blood Cherokee of the Wolf clan, whose name may have been Na-ni. Her first husband, Kingfisher, of the Deer clan, was the father of her first two children: Catherine and Fivekiller. In a battle with the Muskogees, Kingfisher was killed and his wife, who had been laying behind a log, chewing the bullets so that they would lacerate the more; picked up his rifle and fought as a warrior throughout the rest of the skirmish. The Muskogees were defeated and according to custom the captured spoils were divided among the victors. Kingfisher’s widow was given a negro that had been captured from the vanquished and in this manner became the first slave owner among the Cherokees and by common consent she became the Ghi-ga-u, or Beloved Woman of the Cherokees, this life time distinction was only granted as an extreme mark of valorous merit and carried with it the right to speak, vote and act in all of the peace and war councils of the tribe, it also vested her with the supreme pardoning power of the tribe, a prerogative that was not granted to any other, not even the powerful peace or war chiefs.
She was described even after she was an old woman as a person of remarkable beauty, poise “with a queenly and commanding presence. Her second husband was Bryan Ward, a White man, a widower, who had located in the Cherokee country as a trader. Ward had brought his son John, whose deceased mother was a White woman, and John subsequently married Catherine McDaniel, a half breed Cherokee woman and is the ancestor of the numerous Ward family, among the Cherokees. Bryan Ward had one daughter; Elizabeth, by the Ghi-ga-u, whose first husband was Brigadier General Joseph Martin, and her second husband was ____Hughes, a trader. Bryan Ward lived only a few years after his marriage to The Ghi-ga-u.
In June 1776, Dragging Canoe, Abraham and Raven; war chiefs of the Cherokees, with about two hundred and fifty warriors each, at the instigation of the British, planned to attack the western settlements. But the effect these raids were greatly modified by the Ghi-ga-u’s timely warning to the settlers. On July 20, 1776, Abraham marching to attack Watauga, in E Tennessee, captured Mrs. Bean, wife of William Bean, the mother of the first White child born in Tennessee. On the return of the war party to the Cherokee country, Mrs. Bean was condemned by her captors to be burned at the stake. She was conducted to the top of the mound that stood in the center of Tuskeegee1, which was located just above the mouth of Tellico or Little Tennessee River, where she was bound to the stake, the fagots were piled around her, but just as the torch was about to be applied, the Ghi-ga-u appeared, cut the thongs that bound her and took the captive to her home, where the grateful Mrs. Bean taught her how to keep house and make butter.
As soon as it was safe to do so, the Ghi-ga-u sent Mrs. Bean under the escort of her brother, Tuskeegeeteehee or Longfellow of Chistatoa and her son Hiskyteehee, or Fivekiller, sometimes known as Little Fellow, to her husband and family. Tuskeegee is the town name of one of the original eight subdivisions of the Cusetah, the primal peace town of the Coosas, the primordial mother tribe of the Muskogees, Choctaws, Chickasaws and Seminoles. The suffix tee-hee, means killer and therefore the Ghi-ga-u’s brother’s name was Tuskeegee killer, although he was known to the English by the descriptive name of Longfellow on account of his stature. Hisky is the Cherokee rendering of the number, five.
At the beginning of September 1780 Gates had been defeated at Camden. Savannah and Charlestown were in the hands of the British; Georgia and South Carolina were conquered; the enemy exultantly moved northwest to the conquest of North Carolina and Virginia. This was the critical moment of the Revolution. Alexander Cameron of Lochabar, the British agent among the Cherokees and an intermarried citizen of that nation had been able to sustain the alliance of the Chickamaugas and many other Cherokees as well as other tribesmen with the British interests. Brave and resourceful pioneer soldiers, dressed in homespun and buckskin, coon skinned capped with the peculiar rifle with which they were wont to shoot the head off of a squirrel in the tallest tree or cut the neck of the turkey at an incredible distance, held back the equally dangerous Indians and Tories while others of their kind destroyed Ferguson’s crack troops at Kings Mountain on October 7, 1780 and turned the tide in favor of the Americans.
While a portion of the patriots won in the Kings Mountain campaign, that part that were rear guarding the frontier became short of rations. “Nancy Ward agreed to furnish beef and had some cattle driven in.”1 She and her family had been consistent Americans since she had sent William Fawling2 and Isaac Thomas on a hundred- and twenty-mile trip to warn the settlers of the Proposed attack of Dragging Canoe, Abraham and Raven with their pro-British Cherokee commands in July 1776.3
“When the Revolutionary War came, the British Government determined to employ the Indians against the southern and western frontiers. The organization of the southern tribes was entrusted to Superintendent Stuart. Their general plan which was only partially successful, was to land an army in west Florida, march them through the country of the Creeks and Chickasaws, who Were each to furnish five hundred warriors and thence to Echota, the capital of the Cherokee nation. Being reinforced by the Cherokees, they were to invade the whole of the southern frontier, while the attention of the colonies Was diverted by formidable naval and military demonstrations on the sea coast. Circular letters outlining the plan, intended for the information of the Tories who were expected to repair to the royal standards, were issued May 9, and reached the Watauga settlement May 18, 1776.
The Cherokees, when the play was first submitted to them, were not prepared to take sides in the contest. A civil war was unknown to their nation, and they could hardly believe that the British government would make war against a part of its own people. Moreover, they had been at peace with the Americans since their treaty with Governor Bell, had no new complaint against them and were living heedless, happy lives in their own towns.
The campaign was planned with the utmost secrecy. It was agreed that North Carolina and Virginia, South Carolina and Georgia should be attacked simultaneously; the Overhill towns were to fall upon the back settlements of North Carolina and Virginia; the Middle towns were to invade the outlying districts of South Carolina; and the Lower towns were to strike the frontiers of Georgia.
The Overhill towns which mustered about seven hundred warriors were to move in three divisions; the first, commanded by Chuconsene or Dragging Canoe, who has been called a savage Napoleon, was to march against the Holston settlements; the second under Ooskiah or Abraham of Chilhowie, a half breed chief who had fought under Washington on the frontiers of Virginia, was to attack Watauga; and the third led by Colonah or the Raven of Echota was to scour Carters Valley.
At this time there lived in Echota a famous Indian woman named Nancy Ward. She held the office of Ghi-ga-u or Beloved Woman, which not only gave her the right to speak in council, but conferred such great power that she might, by the wave of a swan’s wing, deliver a prisoner condemned by the council, though already tied to the stake. She was of queenly and commanding presence and manners and her house was furnished in a style suitable to her high dignity. She was a successful cattle raiser and is said to have been the first to introduce that industry among the Cherokees.
When Nancy Ward found that her people had fallen in with the plans of Stuart and Cameron, she communicated the intelligence to a trader named Isaac Thomas and provided him with the means of setting out as an express to warn the back settlers of their danger. Thomas was a man of character and a true American, who has left distinguished descendants in the State of Louisiana. Accompanied by William Fawling, he lost no time in conveying the alarming intelligence to the people on the Watauga and Holston. His services were afterwards recognized and rewarded by the State of Virginia.
The information conveyed by Thomas produced great consternation at the border. Couriers were dispatched in every direction. They had not had an Indian war since the settlement was begun, some seven years before. The was not a fort or block house from Wolf Hills westward. But preparations for defense now became nervously active; the people rushed together in every neighborhood and hurriedly constructed forts and stockades. Dragging Canoe was met at Long Island on the Holston on July 20, 1776, and defeated. Fort Watauga was attacked at sunrise next morning by Abraham who was driven away after having captured Mrs. William Bean and Samuel Moore, a b Raven upon finding the Carter’s Valley in forts and prepared and having heard of the repulses of Dragging Canoe and Abraham retired without doing any damage.
Upon the whole, the Indian invasion was a failure, owing to the timely warning of Nancy Ward, and the concentration of the inhabitants in forts built, in consequence of the information, she conveyed. If the well-guarded secret of the Indian campaign had not been disclosed and they had been permitted to steal upon the defenseless backwoodsmen, who, in fancied security, had remained scattered over the extensive frontiers, every soul of them would probably have been swept from the borders of Tennessee. As it was, only slight injury was inflicted on the Whites; a few were killed, some were wounded and two were taken prisoners. The boy, Samuel Moore, was burned at the stake. The Tassel afterwards asserted that he was the only White person burned by the Indians in Tennessee.
Ghi-ga-u for many years conducted an inn at Womankiller ford of the Ocowee River and became quite wealthy, her property consisting of livestock slaves and money. The traveling public called her “Granny Ward on account of her age and the fact that she was the widow of Bryan Ward. After she got so old that she could not attend the councils, she sent her walking cane and vote on all important questions and in this manner voted at Amoah, on May 6, 1817, the renunciation of her delegated rights and in favor of the first constitutional enactment of the Cherokees.
She died at her home at the Womankiller Ford of Ocowee River in the spring of 1824.
George Ward
A39. George Ward, born March 17, 1787. Married December 15, 1805. Lucy Mayes, a White woman and sister of Samuel Mayes. He was assassinated during the civil war by Pin Indians and Mrs. Ward died on November 11, 1867.
Instructions on how to interpret this information
11 | Catherine McDaniel. John Ward | A22 | |
1112 | James Ward. Sidney Redding* and Lucy Haynie | ||
2 | George Ward. Lucy Mayes | A39 | |
OK | 3 | Samuel Ward. Easter Davis and Sallie Earwood | |
4 | Elizabeth Ward. Elijah Sutton and John Cox | ||
5 | Susie Ward. William England | ||
6 | Nannie Ward. Thomas Monroe and Stephen Carroll | ||
7 | Bryan Ward. Temperance Stansel | ||
8 | Charles Ward. Nannie Cross, Ruth Hollingsworth and Mary Elvira Hensley | ||
111213 | Catherine Ward. Joseph Keaton | ||
2 | John Ward* | ||
3 | Thomas Carroll Ward. Mary Annie Hicks | ||
4 | Moses Haynie Ward. Elizabeth Lear | ||
5 | Bryan Ward. Martha Kinchlow and Delilah Hicks* | ||
6 | George Ward. Mary Kinchlow and Mary Townsend | ||
7 | Lucy Ward. James Williams | ||
8 | Rosanna Ward. Daniel Tittle | ||
9 | James Ward. Esther Susan Hoyt | ||
10 | Nannie Ward. Caldean Gunter | ||
112213 | Sabrina Ward. Felix Arthur | ||
2 | Charlotte Ward. John Henry Stover | ||
OK | 3 | John M. Ward. Narcissa Monroe | |
4 | James Ward. Louisa M. Williams | ||
5 | Nannie Ward. William Dameron | ||
6 | Martha Ward. John Countryman | ||
7 | Mary Ward. Joseph Henry Clark |
Instructions on how to interpret this information
8 | Samuel Ward. Louisa England, Laura Spears, Tennessee Howell and Louisa J. Vann | |
9 | Susie Ward. Joshua Lindsey | |
10 | Lucy Ann Ward. George Colcher, Matthew Thompson, Robert Howell and Napoleon Bonaparte Luckey. | |
11 | Malinda Josephine Ward. Samuel Elihugh Thornton. | |
113213 | Samuel Ward. Cynthia Annie Wagnon | |
_________ | ||
2 | George Howard Ward. Mary Carroll | |
3 | Martin Ward. Sallie Cooper | |
114213 | John W. Sutton. Mary Copeland | |
2 | Harriette Sutton | |
OK | 3 | Henrietta Sutton. – Elledge |
4 | Loretta Sutton. Youngbird | |
5 | Catherine Sutton* | |
_________ | ||
6 | George Morris* | |
115213 | Sabra England. William Henderson, Joseph Kirby and John Stover | |
2 | Matilda England. William Queen | |
OK | 3 | Hepsie Tngland. Jeremiah Roberson |
4 | Joseph England. Sabra Cooper, Martha Adams and Mary Brown | |
5 | Tillman England* | |
6 | William England. Arminda England and Elizabeth Medley nee Harlin | |
7 | Chapman England* | |
116213 | Narcissa Monroe. John M. Ward and Samuel Melton | |
2 | Simpson Foster Monroe. Rebecca Hopkins | |
OK | 3 | Fincher Monroe. Mary Shields |
4 | Lucretia Monroe. James Humphrey, ____ McDuff, _____ Mulford, James Joleff and William Colwell | |
5 | Thomas R. Monroe. Saphronia England and Susie Conner | |
__________ | ||
6 | Susie Carroll. John Carroll | |
7 | Annie Carroll* Hareford | |
8 | Lucy Jane Carroll* William Hathaway | |
9 | Lettie Carroll* | |
10 | Caroline Carroll. Thompson Fields | |
117213 | John S. Ward. Jennie Loveless | |
2 | Mildred Ward. John Woods and Lewis Wilkerson | |
3 | Martha Ann Ward. Lewis Scrimsher | |
4 | George Hilmon Ward. Margaret McIntosh | |
5 | Frances Catherine Ward. James Duncan, ____ Marcurn and Charles Barney | |
118213 | Elizabeth Jane Ward. Daniel Newnon McIntosh | |
2 | Mary Adeline Ward. Wiley Ingram, Martin Vann, Joseph Brown and John A. Richards |
Instructions on how to interpret this information
OK | 3 | William Ward* Susannah Vann |
4 | Minerva Ward Lewis Clark, John Creason, Eli Stucker and James A.Jackson | |
________ | ||
5 | Matilda Ward | |
6 | Mary Elvira Ward. John Wesley Holland | |
7 | Martha Catherine Ward. James Cloud | |
8 | John Tisdale Ward. Elizabeth Killian | |
9 | George Washington Ward. Margaret Pinion and | |
10 | Charles Rufus Ward. Catherine Ray and | |
11 | Benjamin Ward. Jennie Ray | |
11121314 | Lucy Keaton. Abel Fike Dial | |
2 | Nannie Keaton. Martin Dial | |
OK | 3 | Martha Keaton. Pinkney Martin |
11123314 | Rose Ann Ward. Bayless Langley, Buck Gear and Newton Martin | |
2 | John Franklin Ward. Sallie Quixanna Summerhill | |
OK | 3 | Julia Ann Ward. Joseph Newton Thompson |
4 | Barbara Alice Ward. Rufus Sidney Steward | |
5 | James Carroll Ward | |
6 | George Oscar Ward. Minnie Bullock and Alma Bullock | |
7 | Thomas Charles Ward | |
8 | Sarah Catherine Ward. Hutchinson Murphy Roberson | |
9 | Lucy Ann Ward. Alfred Washington Shelley | |
10 | Mary Ellen Ward. John William Bradshaw | |
11 | Daniel Moses Ward. Lydia M. Burke | |
11124314 | Thomas Franklin Ward. Elizabeth Ward | |
2 | James McDaniel Ward. Susie Stepp | |
3 | Caldean Ward. Nannie E. Griffin | |
4 | Josephine Ward. Charles Henson Franks | |
5 | Helen Naomi Ward. Rhoderick Dhu Perry | |
6 | Joel Bryan Ward. Florence A. Newton | |
11126314 | John Ward* | |
2 | James Ward.* | |
3 | William Jasper Ward. Dora Florence Francis | |
4 | Mary Elizabeth Ward. Robert William Swim | |
5 | Nannie Ward. William Jackson | |
6 | Evaline Ward. Joseph Cephus Bean and ____ Grover | |
7 | Esther Ward. Jack Roberson | |
8 | Joel Bryan Cornelius Ward. Catherine Mills and Minnie Lowrey | |
11126314 | Elizabeth Ward. William Kelly and Tillman Queen | |
2 | Lucy Ann Ward. Albert Gass | |
3 | Alexander the Great Ward. Sarah Elizabeth Thomas | |
4 | Yell Clement Ward. Julia Cynthia Thomas | |
5 | James Ward | |
6 | Fannie M. Ward. Robert Andrew Hosey |
Instructions on how to interpret this information
7 | Martha Jane Ward. Ira Washington Thomas | |
8 | John Ward. Sallie Blackwood | |
9 | Caroline Ward. Forest Guilliams | |
11127314 | Nannie Elizabeth Williams. George Washington Eaton | |
OK | 2 | Martha Pauline Williams. Epp G. Thompson |
11128314 | James Marion Tittle. Annie Henrietta Prather and | |
2 | Amelia Arline Tittle. August Sager | |
OK | 3 | Robert Wooden Tittle. Mary Susie Murry nee Blackburn |
4 | Mary Madora Tittle. John Robert Dobkins | |
5 | Martha Ellen Tittle. Jacob M. Hiser | |
6 | Susan Jane Tittle. Thomas Tipton Wimer | |
11129314 | Darius Edwin Ward. Sallie Caroline Ritter and Mary Murphy nee Hester | |
2 | Lydia Ann Ward. William Clifford Chamberlin | |
3 | Clara Alice Ward | |
| | 4 | William Wirt Ward. Roxana Stannard |
| | 5 | Henry Julian Ward. Emma Luckenback |
111210314 | Ann Eliza Gunter. John Powell and Burgis Gaithor Chandler | |
2 | Lavinia Arline Gunter. Lewis Lafayette Duckworth | |
OK | 3 | Lucy Jane Gunter. Dr. Benjamin Franklin Fortner |
4 | John Thomas Gunter. Alice Lee Heath | |
5 | Amanda Olivia Gunter. David Matthew Marrs | |
6 | Lulu Hazeltine Gunter. William Curtis | |
7 | Sarah Amnia Gunter. Samuel Frazier | |
8 | Nannie Augusta Gunter. James Alfrey | |
9 | Caldean Gunter | |
11221314 | Charlotte Arthur* Milton Tarrents | |
2 | Lucy Arthur. Isaac Nidiffer | |
OK | 3 | Sallie Arthur. John Ballard |
4 | Nannie Arthur. Jacob Nidiffer | |
5 | Freeman Arthur* | |
6 | George Arthur* | |
7 | Martha Arthur. George Washington Luckey | |
11222314 | Sabrina Stover. Benjamin Large | |
2 | Nannie Stover. Yancey Dameron | |
OK | 3 | Sallie Stover* Ellis Hildebrand |
4 | George Stover* | |
5 | Elisha Stover | |
6 | James Stover | |
7 | Louisa J. Stover. Joseph Lynch Williams and William Archibald Yell Hastings | |
8 | Charlotte Stover. James Stanford Fields | |
9 | Martha Francis Stover. Thomas Stewart Bacon and George Thomas Black | |
10 | John Rogers Stover | |
11 | Malinda Rogers Stover* William Lafayette Trott |
Instructions on how to interpret this information
12 | Madora Stover. James Campbell Trott | |
13 | William Riley Stover. Minerva E. Garrison | |
11223314 | George Monroe Ward. Emily Jane Roberts, Amanda Skaggs nee -, Charlotte Mayes, Mary Ezell and Martha Jane Nidiffer | |
2 | Nannie Ward. William Hamilton and John Henry Clark | |
OK | 3 | Lucy Ward* Stephen Brown |
11224314 | Samuel Taylor Ward. Catherine Jane Lear | |
2 | Joseph Lynch Ward. Alice N. Scott | |
OK | 3 | George De Shields Ward. Eliza Frances Phillips |
4 | John Lowrey Ward. Laura Ann Edmondson | |
5 | William Wyly Ward. Addie Belle Handlin | |
6 | James Oliver Ward* | |
12225314 | Lucy Jane Dameron. John Anderson Johnson, John Hunt | |
2 | Martha J. Dameron* George W. Johnson | |
OK | 3 | Mary Ann Dameron. Lemuel Cowart, R. H. F. Thompson |
4 | Susan Frances Caroline Dameron. Charles Patterson | |
11226314 | John Marcus Countryman. Belle Hopkins, Esther Blevins nee Ward, Dove Piercefield and Vinita Belle Mayes | |
2 | George Washington Countryman. Minerva Ballard | |
OK | 3 | Mary Countryman. Ransom Blevins, William Taylor and James Ward |
4 | Andrew Jackson Countryman. Clementine Hastings, Rebecca Morris, Rebecca Duncan and Zimerhew Black nee Ward | |
5 | Lucy Ann Countryman. Samuel McDowell and Caleb Conner | |
6 | Samuel Countryman* | |
7 | Malinda Nancy Countryman. Thomas Ballard and George W. Williams | |
11227314 | George Washington Clark. Lydia A. Scraper | |
2 | James Clark* | |
OK | 3 | Lucy Ann Clark. William Abbott Thompson, Joshua Bertholf Duncan and James Abercrombie Duncan |
4 | Louisa Maria Clark. Daniel Young | |
5 | Ellen Clark. Joseph M. Scraper and Washington Taylor | |
6 | William Andrew Clark. Lillian Belle Berry | |
11228314 | Valzie Lucy Ward. John Emmett Vann | |
________ | ||
2 | Jeanette Ward. Berry H. Ladd | |
3 | Minnie Viola Ward. Robert Edward Lee Rogers | |
4 | Nina Ward. William Thomas Byrd | |
5 | Joseph McCann Ward | |
6 | Zona Ward. Justis Jones | |
7 | Hugh Tinnon Ward. Lulu Barlow | |
8 | Rose Alvin Ward* |
Instructions on how to interpret this information
9 | Lillie Debris Ward | |
10 | Beulah Belle Ward | |
11 | Delena Ward | |
11229314 | Margaret E. Lindsey. Henry H. Curry | |
OK | 2 | Sabrina Lindsey. Bartley Elam Scott |
112211314 | George Washington Thornton. Emily Jane Austin and Elizabeth Rebecca McKenzie | |
OK | 2 | Lucy Gertrude Thornton. Samuel Early Aultman |
11321314 | Mary Ward. Issac Boyce Cornwell, _____ Harris and William Lyman | |
2 | Esther Ward. William Blevins and John Marcus Countryman | |
OK | 3 | Martin Ward* |
4 | Burrell Ward* Jennie Sherrell | |
5 | James Ward. Margeret Robertson and Mary Ann Taylor nee Countryman | |
6 | Martha Ward. Frederick Risemon | |
7 | Cynthia Ward. Henry Benton | |
8 | Zimerhew Elizabeth Ward. Randolph Black and Andrew Jackson Countryman | |
9 | Josephine Ward. James Mitchell | |
11322314 | Sallie Ann Ward. James Mitchell | |
2 | Louisa Jane Ward. Samuel Trout Jackson and Samuel Smith | |
OK | 3 | Van Velt Ward. Elmira Long, Kalena Bradley and Mary Isreal |
4 | Amanda Melvina Ward. Jesse Champion Wood | |
5 | Minerva Cherokee Ward. Ezekial Miller | |
6 | Martin Cicero Ward* Sarah Blevins | |
7 | Samuel Foster Ward* Malissa Blevins | |
8 | Mary Ann Ward. William Blevins | |
9 | Sabra Elizabeth Ward. Ezekial Fields | |
11323314 | Sallie Ann Ward. George Washington McClure | |
OK | 2 | Samuel Benjamin Ward. Sinia Elizabeth Buffington and Amanda Read |
11421314 | George Sutton* Mary Malinda Cushman nee Melton and Jennie Reno | |
2 | William Henry Sutton. Harriette Rozila Raymond | |
OK | 3 | Nancy Ann Sutton. Samuel Cass Glenn |
4 | Elizabeth Jane Sutton. John Henry Clark | |
5 | Alexander Sutton. Sarah Price | |
6 | John Seaborn Sutton. Minnie F. Walker | |
11521314 | Wiliam Penn Henderson. Susie Ballard and Eliza Marshall nee Condon | |
2 | James MeGhee. Julia Hoskins |
Instructions on how to interpret this information
OK | 3 | Matilda Kirby. Albert Weir Harlan |
11522314 | Martha Cherokee Queen* | |
2 | Tillman Queen. A. Phillips and Elizabeth Kelly nee Ward | |
3 | John Queen* | |
11523314 | M. J. Roberson | |
2 | J. C. Roberson | |
3 | Samuel H. Roberson | |
11524314 | Susan Ann England. Elias Reeder, John B. Harris and Henry Edmonds | |
2 | William England. Sarah Mayes | |
OK | 3 | Benjamin Cornelius England. Jincy Jane Ezell |
4 | Sabra England. William Webster Weir | |
5 | Louisa England. David Suagee | |
__________ | ||
6 | Martha Adeline England. James Cobb Cowles | |
7 | Mary Josephine England. Joseph Quinton Buchanan | |
8 | Viola Jane England. William B. Rains | |
11526314 | Mary Jane England. James Franklin Williams, William Havish and Daniel Bachtel | |
_________ | ||
2 | Catherine Indiana Englland. Larkin Goddard and Fleming H. Wasson | |
OK | 3 | Chapman England |
11621314 | George Monroe Ward. Emily Jane Roberts, Amanda Skaggs nee ______ , Charlotte Mayes, Mary Ezell and Martha Jane Nidiffer | |
2 | Nannie Ward. William Hamilton and John Henry Clark | |
OK | 3 | Lucy Ward* Stephen Brown |
_________ | ||
4 | Mary Malissa Melton. Harris Alexander, John Cushman, George Sutton and William Dawes | |
5 | Simpson Foster Melton. Isabelle Murphy nee Graham | |
6 | Charles Franklin Melton. Elizabeth Robb nee Lindsey | |
7 | Elizabeth Melton. William M. Toffelmire | |
8 | Wiley James Milton. Ella Wilkerson | |
9 | William Thomas Melton. Louisa Beavert and nee Tunnell | |
11622314 | Louisa Monroe* William Hereford | |
2 | Ryland Myers Monroe* | |
OK | 3 | Julia Esther Monroe. Treadwell Scott Remson |
4 | Narcissus Monroe. Logan Henderson Duncan | |
11623314 | James Madison Monroe. Mary Frances Kelly | |
2 | Thomas Jefferson Monroe. Florence Vinita Landerdale | |
OK | 3 | Miriam Monroe. Randolph Ballard |
4 | Martha Monroe. Addison Allen Roach | |
11624314 | William Humphrey* | |
2 | John Humphrey. Dora Jackson and Mary Louisa Hoffman |
Instructions on how to interpret this information
3 | Fannie Humphrey* William Rogers and Thomas Hooper | |
4 | Nannie Humphrey Jackson Blevins | |
5 | Ellen Humphrey* | |
6 | David Humphrey Narcissa Blevins and | |
7 | Malinda Humphrey Joseph Whipple and John Galligher | |
11625314 | Saphronia Monroe James H. Hereford | |
________ | ||
2 | Clarinda Susan Monroe. John Calvin Morets and James Ray | |
OK | 3 | William Allen Monroe* |
4 | Minerva Sijourney Monroe. William A. Fisk | |
5 | Ellen Rebecca Monroe. Thomas Clark | |
6 | Nannie Drucilla Monroe. Luke Harrison | |
7 | Dora Nettie Monroe | |
8 | Myrtle Pauline Monroe. Robert L. Sanders | |
11626314 | Hugh Carroll. Lucy Putnam | |
OK | 2 | Fincher Carroll* |
116210314 | Johnson Thompson Fields. Delilah Cox and Norma Rebecca Hepler nee Robison | |
2 | Matthew Fields. Margaret V. Trotter | |
OK | 3 | Victoria Fields. John E. Barks |
11721314 | Eliza Jane Ward. James H. Deems and James Stout |A36 | |
________ | ||
2 | Charlotte E. Ward. James Lovely Bumgarner | |
OK | 3 | Susie Ward. Edward Gwartney |
4 | Margaret M. Ward. Joseph Frank Baker | |
5 | Debra B. Ward. Henry F. Carter | |
6 | Joel Ward. Myrtle L. Crance | |
7 | Queen Victoria Ward. William T. Holt | |
8 | Elizabeth Ward. R. L. Holt | |
11722314 | Hillman Wilkerson. Mary Brown | |
2 | Mildred Jane Wilkerson. John Patton | |
OK | 3 | Catherine Wilkerson* William Woodard |
11723314 | John Scrimsher | |
2 | Temperance Scrimsher. James Duncan and George Southerland | |
OK | 3 | Ann Eliza Scrimsher. John Lairy and Elisha Gray |
11724314 | Sallie Ann Ward. James H. Bendure and Edward Livingston | |
2 | Mary Jane Ward. James Duncan | |
3 | Bryan Ward* | |
11725314 | Ruth Rogers. Daniel Webster Rogers | |
________ | ||
OK | 2 | Felix Barney. Mary Joe Arwood |
11821314 | Albert Gallatin McIntosh. Elizabeth Fisher and Mary Frances Boulton | |
2 | Lucy McIntosh. Charles Bard |
Instructions on how to interpret this information
OK | 3 | Freeland Buckner McIntosh. Catherine Louisa Archer, Georgia Ann Vann and Catherine Welch. |
4 | Susie McIntosh. Thomas Harvison | |
5 | Rowley C. McIntosh. Fannie Adkins | |
6 | Daniel Newnon McIntosh. Alice Bailey | |
11822314 | Louisa Ingram* | |
_______ | ||
2 | Charles Brown. Mary Coker | |
11824314 | Myrtle Clark. William Stucker and Frank Thompson | |
11825314 | Annie Beaver. Benjamin Price and James Walker Gott | |
11826314 | Manuel Jefferson Holland. Martha Matilda Pennell and Mary Crittenden Gore | |
2 | Alfred Benjamin Holland. America Johnson | |
OK | 3 | Sarah Loretta Holland. Isaac Payne |
4 | Martha Alice Holland. Robert Wesley Early and John H. Abbott | |
5 | John Alvin Holland. Rebecca Welch and Margaret J. Brown | |
6 | Noah Seaborn Holland. Julia Ann Johnson and Mary Holland | |
7 | Mary Elizabeth Holland. George Gasaway and Thomas J. Jones | |
8 | Melvina Holland. Richard Willey King | |
9 | James Adolphus Holland. Laura C. Johnson | |
10 | Lillie Belle Holland. John H. Gibson | |
11 | Ida Josephine Holland. James Wesley Halford | |
12 | William Richard Holland. Minnie Buckner | |
11827314 | Charles Cairo Cloud. Mary Jane Townsend nee Horn | |
2 | Laura Vianna Cloud. William Lemuel Cowart | |
OK | 3 | Robert Littleton Cloud. Lucy Adair |
4 | James Loamner Cloud. Sarah J. Townsend | |
5 | Hallie Etta Cloud. Benjamin Felix McPherson | |
6 | John Edward Coud | |
7 | Joseph Henry Cloud. Catherine Christy | |
8 | George Starr Cloud. Lura _______ | |
9 | William Monroe Cloud. Lena Bates | |
11828314 | Charles Ward | |
11829314 | Mary Keziah Ward | |
2 | Martha Ward | |
3 | Annie Ward | |
4 | John Ward | |
5 | Charles Ward | |
6 | Samuel Ward | |
7 | Martin Ward | |
8 | Harry Ward | |
118210314 | Annie Ward | |
118211314 | Martha Ward | |
2 | Annie Ward | |
3 | Charles Ward |