Category Archives: Regions

Family Tree Progess

Okay, let’s do a quick wrap-up here…

The PARK family has descendency ties to Robert E. Lee; his ancestor who was George Washington’s wife (maiden name CUSTIS); PARK/PARKE/PARKS descendants are connected to the Burchfields — the Burchfields via the Park line (somewhere) are kin to the Gustafsson/Justice family originally from Sweden; and how did I get here (this time)?

Tracing the Davis-Smathers connection of Aunt Betty Davis (married – Jack Abernathy) — trying to learn about her father’s family.

The other point of interest is the ties to a Cherokee Chief Oowahooskie (various spellings found). His ‘wife’ had been captured from a white settlement/group when she was about six years old. They had three sons; she and the sons were later released — they lived as white men, and were land-holders. This made for Cherokee heritage claims with US courts unsuccessful — but the Indian connection seems valid from research/sources found online, now.

There is also a connection between the PARK family and a CHANDLER line in Georgia…will follow this up later.

Another connection exist between the DAVIS line and the CARPENTER (ZIMMERMAN) families from North Carolina — this warrants further research, since my mother and my father’s ancestral line include connection to the CARPENTER (ZIMMERMAN) lines from the Carolinas.

NO direct Patey/PATE/PATTY connections — but have found AYERS/AYRES, PAYNE, and McClellan connections in the Carolina regions (where my husbands family were from)…The PAYNE connection may link up with the TEAGUE, SPEER, PERRY, OWEN or other related families who later migrated to NE Alabama (near Ft. Payne).

With the research from the past three days — “We are all kin” has more meaning then is previously did, for me.

Each friend I have helped with their family tree research, I have also found something that fit with prior research for my own complicated ancestral lines.

Are your ancestors included in this tangle of kinfolks?

Contact me with a bit of your grandparents vital statics (dates, location, family members) — I will see what I can find.

– Cathy Ann Abernathy

weavercat@gmail.com



Hot Day

7 July 2010
One very hot day.
Dave and I delivered groceries to Mom; then headed back home.
Stopped at a few thrift/antique stores along the way.
Since getting in the AC, and starting to cool off, have been reading messages, and adding/correcting more items on my websites (someone set in havoc by my previous computer dying); as well as blogs, and misc. stuff.
Need to get things sorted out with this new laptop, get it behaving the way I want it; so I will be able to create a backup set of RECOVERY disks — then get Dave to set it for dual-boot (Windows 7 and Linux).
My head is pounding, so I won’t do much more for now.
How has your week been?
Would love to hear from my readers.
– Cathy

Horace Miller Sproull, Jr. ’41 — Davidson College / Class Memorials

Davidson College – Class Memorials – Summer 2008

He was elected finance commissioner for the City of Anniston and served from 1962–66. He helped found and build The Anniston Academy, a college preparatory school, and served as chairman of the board. The school later was named The Donoho School for which he was a director emeritus. His leisure-time activities included being an avid reader, a scratch golfer, an expert hunter, a world traveler, and a civilian pilot. He is survived by his wife, Barbara V. Sproull, 100 Raemon Dr., Anniston, AL 36207; children, James Creswell Sproull IV, Sara Sproull Choquette, Eva Abel Sproull, Hunt Miller Sproull (Susan Vinsant Sproull), Barbara Sproull Snow (Gary), and Horace Miller Sproull III (Joy Martin Sproull); grandchildren, James Creswell Sproull V, Drayton Allison Sproull, Paschal Trippe Sproull, Suzanne Sproull Choquette, Sara Catherine Choquette, Justin Hunt Sproull, Marie Louise Sproull, Eva Catherine Sproull, Chelsea Caroline Sproull, Logan Sproull Snow, Shannon Wimberly Snow, Vaughn Morton Stewart III, Houston Sproull Andrews, H. Miller Sproull IV, Wimberly Elisabeth Sproull, Holly Milliken Sproull, and Gabriel Sparks Sproull; and great-grandchildren, Lucienne Sproull, Hunter Jackson Sproull, Jackson Sproull, and Reagan Sproull.

NC Business History – North Carolina Iron Forging

Iron Ore Mining & Forging

In 1585, the Lane Colony found iron ore deposits in two locations, but it would be in 1729 that the first shipments of iron ore were sent to England. One of the first iron works would get started around 1770 near present day Reidsville. Most commonly known as the Troublesome Creek

Iron Works, a forge was constructed as early as 1771 and a furnace was added during the American Revolution (1776 – 1782).

Another early furnace (1777) was located on Tick Creek in Chatham County for the Revolutionary government of North Carolina. James Miles managed the Chatham furnace.

In the late 1770s, the Wilcox Iron Furnace and Forge was opened near present day Siler City. It produced cannon and shot for the North Carolina Council of Safety. The furnace and forge were abandoned by 1780.

In 1786, General Joseph Graham built the Vesuvius Iron Furnace near present-day Lowesville along Anderson’s Creek.

In 1788, the North Carolina legislature passed the “Act to Encourage the Building of Iron Works in This State” which titled 3,000 acres to anyone establishing a furnace operation — “every set of iron works, as a bounty from the state to any person or persons who will build and carry on the same.”

That same year, Peter Forney discovered the Big Ore Bank near Lincolnton. On May 18, 1789, North Carolina awarded 300 acres along Leeper’s (or Leaper’s or Leiper’s) Creek to Abraham Reinhart, Abraham Forney, Turner Abernathy, and Peter Forney.

In 1790, Turner Abernethy built the Mt. Carmel forge, located on Mountain Creek.

[...MORE]

via NC Business History – North Carolina Iron Forging.

Group One: Very Tightly Related

Group One: Very Tightly Related

via K0.

Document Index – Abernathy/Abernethy DNA Project Site

Index to Documents: Wills, Deeds, Court Orders, et cetera

<strike.via Document Index..

THis site has been moved; no current available — as of 30 August 2011.
Sorry.

– Cathy Abernathy

A25

Abernethy A25

Robert 1st Abernethy, b c 1632/3 Scotland, d bef 3 Feb 1685 in Charles City County, VA & Sarah Cubisha

. . Robert (2nd), b c 1660-70 d aft May 1727, VA & Christian Parham/Tillman

. . . . Robert (3rd), b c 1680-90 VA, d aft 31 Jan 1772 NC & Mary Unknown

. . . . . . David Sr, b 29 May 1726 VA d 19 Feb 1814 NC & Ann Turner

. . . . . . . . Robert, b 1751 VA d 1824 NC, m. Sarah Nichols

. . . . . . . . . . Turner T, b 1792 NC d 15 May 1865 NC & Fannie Whitener

. . . . . . . . . . . . Logan Benjamin, b 17 Aug 1824 NC d 24 Jan 1909 NC, md Catharine Jarrett

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . Logan Berge, b. 3 Jul 1864 NC d. 5 Dec 1928 NC & Tula E. Hudson

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Father (private)

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Living Abernethy A25 Test Complete

Note: Some pedigree information provided by family of immediate volunteer and not verified by project administrators.

via A25.

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I believe that Logan Benjamin is my direct ancestors – thus if a DNA sample were taken – it should be very close comparison to this family line.

– Cathy A.

Cemeteries and Tombstones – Photo Links

Assorted Tombstones

via cemeteries.

Assorted Abernathy Photos

Assorted Abernathy Photos

via Photos.

Browse All Photos

Abernathycat Family Tree

via Browse All Photos.