South Carolina Marriages, 1641-1965
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| Name: | Robert Haddon |
|---|---|
| Spouse: | Jane Ross Lindsay |
| Marriage Date: | 1774-1890 |
| County: | Abbeville |
| Source: | Marriages, Ninety-Six and Abbeville District |
Robert
Haddon d. 1791
Jane Haddon, Admin.
John Lindsay and William Ross, bondsmen
Was Jane Ross her maiden name? Was William Ross a son?
Jane Bradley Lindsay
| Thomas Lindsay | Jane Jennie Mcfa Bradley | 1774-1890 | Abbeville |
Jane was born ca. 1797. Was her husband Thomas
Lindsay, b. 1793, son of Thomas and Grizel?
Since i am undergoing the scapel agin tomorrow morning,
I wanted to
contribute my 2 cents worth on Lindseys before i get goofy
on pills. That
fabulous rag, the Due West Telescope of 15 March 1861
announced the demise of
one of my grandpaws, Mr. John Bradley. The article went on
to say "Mrs. Jane
[Bradley] Lindsay, sister of Mr. Bradley. who rode from home
that day, a
distance of 5 or 6 miles, in perfect health, and had walked
the last mile
after hearing of her brother's death, was only permitted to
see the corpse
until she also dropped into eternity without a struggle or
lingering
breath.... Mrs Lindsay was about 65 yrs of age. she left 7
children, 3 sons
and 4 daughters." It aint easy figuring out who these kids
are, or even
Janes husband, who could easily be the son of Thomas
Lindsay, age 1, on the
Earl of Hillsborough. You see, Mrs Jane Bradley Lindsay's
mama was also on
the Earl. In referring to Jane's death 30 yrs later, her
nephew wrote "It was
the most amazing occurrence in the {Long Canes} neighborhood
ever. They were
both taken to the cemetery in the same hearse" Trouble is,
John Bradley is
buried at LLCARP and Jane is not, or at least has no visible
tombstone. I
think that means she is buried there but the stone is lost.
That Pulitzer class rag, the Due West Telescope, also
announced on 9 Jan
1857 the marriage of Jane's son, Joseph Lindsay to Miss Jane
Robinson on 1
Jan 1857 by Rev. H.T. Sloan of LLCARP. Has anyone ever heard
of any
Robinsons? Does that make me kin to the Boggs yet?
I will comment on her kids when i find her page next week.
Renwick
1850 United States Federal Census
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http://newsfeed.rootsweb.com/th/read/LINDSAY/2007-11/1194575565
From:
Shrockray@aol.com
Subject: Re: [LINDSAY] Lindsay Marrying a Lindsey
Date: Thu, 8 Nov 2007 21:32:45 EST
Please keep me on the Lindsay list.
I descend from the Abbeville district SC Lindsays -
Grandmother Ella N. Lindsay
Great grandfather Thomas N. Lindsay KIA CSA
Great great grandfather Thomas Lindsay m. Jane Bradley
Do you have info re children of Thomas Lindsay and Jane
Bradley Lindsay?
Do you have info re Patrick or Joseph who married Jane?
http://genforum.genealogy.com/cgi-bin/pageload.cgi?lindsay::bradley::4615.html
Posted by:
Laura Lambert (ID *****2543)
In Reply to: BRADLEY SC-Abbeyville by Nephre' Golden-Glenn
Patrick Bradley Ireland born 1756-58
Came to Abbeville,SC 1783-4 from NY
married widowed Jane McFarland Creswell
children:
Susana
John K. b-1784 married 1812 Mary Kidd
Archibald b-1788 m-Sarah Kidd sister of Mary
Patrick Jr.
Thomas d-1823 never married
Isabelle d-1840 never married
Jane m-Thomas Lindsay
These are some descendants of Gen. Patrick Bradley from
Bradley, SC
My grandmother, Mary Shiland Bradley was born in Abbeville in
1892 and was the youngest of 5 children born there.her parents
were William and Laura Moffatt. Her 4 brothers were Moffatt,
Thomas, William and John.
Samuel Lindsay, ancestor of L0043, DNA Group 13
http://www.clanlindsay.com/dna_group_13.htm
Lindsay Code No.: L0043
http://files.usgwarchives.org/sc/abbeville/deeds/l5320001.txt
Samuel Lindsay, Abbeville, S. C. Abbeville District. In Equity
to the
Honr. the Chancellors, your orator Samuel Lindsay formerly of
Lowdesville in the Dist aforesaid now of Elberton, Ga. That on
the 11
Dec. 1854 your orator made with Jesse W. Norris a contract for
the sale
of a house and lot in the village of Lowndensville, bounded by
lot owned
James M. Latimer Esq. Formerly owned by Dr. A. B. Arnold, for
the sum of
$600. Two bills or notes was made in the sum of $300 each. One
note on
W. A. Giles for $232.86 was paid to your orator and placed as
credit on
said notes. The said Jesse W. Norrs has neglected and failed
to pay your
prator the full purchased price etc. filed 28 April 1856
Rebekkah Lindsay, widow of John?
Roster of South Carolina Patriots in the American Revolution, by Bobby Gilmer Moss: Pg. 157 lists a John Lindsay who died from wounds after the Battle of Cowpens, leaving a widow, Rebeckah.
Series: S213190
Volume: 0015
Page: 00127
Item: 001
Date: 10/23/1785
Description: LINDSAY, REBEKKAH, PLAT FOR 150 ACRES ON
JOHNSONS CREEK, ABBEVILLE COUNTY, NINETY SIX DISTRICT,
SURVEYED BY THOMAS LOFTON.
Names indexed: JOHNSON, HENRY; JOHNSON, JOHN; LINDSAY,
REBEKKAH; LOFTON, THOMAS
Locations: ABBEVILLE COUNTY; JOHNSON CREEK; NINETY SIX
DISTRICT; SAVANNAH RIVER
Document type: PLAT
John Lindsey, d. ca. 1841
One daughter was named Margaret, wife of Larkin Latimer. Census data shows she was born ca. 1812. Daughter Jane, wife of Alanson Nash, was born ca. 1798.
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http://archiver.rootsweb.ancestry.com/th/read/SCSPARTA/2001-02/0981738629
DR. JOHN LINDSAY DIES AT LOCAL
HOSPITAL- Jan. 1939
Funeral services for DR. JOHN J. LINDSAY, 74, well-known
physician will be at Floyds Mortuary and burial at Oakwood
Cemetery. He was born
Feb. 12, 1865 at Due West, the son of the late DR. J.O.
LINDSAY and MRS. AMANDA
DRENNAN LINDSAY. For a period of 30 years he was the company
physician at
Drayton Mill. On Oct. 3, 1899 he married MISS MARIE HUFFMAN of
Seneca. Dr.
Lindsay was the last surviving child of his parents. Surviving
are his wife and
three children; OLIVER'ZERO' LINDSAY of Lyman, LOWRY LINDSAY
of
Washington, D.C., and MRS. FRANK EDWARDS of Caroleen, NC. and
two grandchildren,
Sallie and MARGARET EDWARDS.
http://www.nationalregister.sc.gov/abbeville/S10817701012/S10817701012.pdf
Information about Lindsay Cemetery in Due West.
http://www.erskine.edu/news/05.12.10/cd.05.12.10.htm
May 12, 2010
Lindsay-Pratt-Bell Student Cabin dedicated at Erskine
A 160-year-old structure that once housed
Erskine College students was dedicated as the
Lindsay-Pratt-Bell Student Cabin in a ceremony April 24.
Sarah Kennerly of Due West and Dr. Martha Macdonald of Rock
Hill, members of the Class of 1965, have conducted several
"Stories by the Student Cabin" sessions over the past few
years, drawing attention to the historic value of the
building.
The dedication included a dramatic
program portraying historic personages connected with the
cabin, from James Lindsay, the first mayor of Due West, who
built the cabin behind his home on Abbeville Street, to Totsy
Lesesne, first lady of Erskine from 1954-66, who played a
leading role in efforts by the American Association of
University Women (AAUW) to preserve the cabin in the 1960s.
Professor Emeritus of History Dr. Lowry Ware was recognized at
the dedication for publishing facts about the cabin in two of
his books, A History of Erskine College, 1839-1982
and A Place Called Due West: The Home of Erskine College.
http://www.clanlindsay.com/sln_v2_n4.pdf
Pg. 10 of PDF:
James LINDSAY b. 18 Jly 1802 Due West, Abbeville Co, SC, d. 10 Aug 1854, son of John LINDSAY and Elizabeth BROWNLEE, m. Polly Ann HAWTHORNE, b. 6 Aug 1802 Due West, Abbeville Co, SC, d. 20 Apr 1868. Children all b. Due West, Abbeville Co, SC:
1. John Oliver b. 23 Dec 1823, d. 11 May 1900, m. 1846 Amanda DRENNAN
2. Laney Armathine b. 16 Oct 1825, d. 30 Mch 1880, m. 25 Sep 1845 Dr. John Irwin BONNER
3. Leroy Tillotson b. 17 Jan 1828, d. 29 Jly 1855 unm.
4. Henry Leander b. 2 Dec 1829, d. 27 Sep 1846
5. Cornelius Erskine b. 22 Dec 1831, d. 28 Sep 1846
6. Alexander Poinsett b. 2 Apr 1834, d. 27 Jne 1862
7. Winfield Washington b. 6 Sep 1836, d. 20 Nov 1862
8. A.B. Calvin, Dr., b. 18 Aug 1839, d. 26 May 1910, m. Meh 1864 Mattie Clark McCASLIN
Source: Wills, Abbeville S.C.: Family rec. of O.Y. Brownlee of Greenville, S.C.
Information about Samuel Lindsay
http://mimpickles.com/lindsey/south_carolina/abbeville/andrea_files.pdf (page 3 of PDF)
In 1930, the Index Journal carried the history written by S. A. Agnew:
https://www.newspapers.com/newspage/70068115/
March 2, 1930
The Index-Journal from Greenwood, South Carolina · Page 9
Publication: The Index-Journal i
Location: Greenwood, South Carolina
Issue Date: Sunday, March 2, 1930
Page: Page 9
This is my transcription of the OCR text:
...Dr. James P. Pressley, pastor of the Due West A.R.P. church at Due West, had in his possession a valuable article by S. A. Agnew, a native of the Due Went community, which would throw additional light on the subject and would also give some important early history of that section. Acting on the suggestion of Judge Greene, Dr. Pressley was requested to allow publication of the Agnew article, he graciously consented and it is given in full below...
...There In 1777 a treaty was made and signed between the Indians and the whites, and I could be glad if you could get a copy of that treaty and publish it for it would be interesting not only to those who live around Due West, but the people generally all over your state...
...First settlers around Dewitt’s Corner I have been able only partially to obtain the names of those citizens who lived In that country before the Revolution. The most of them came from Ireland. Samuel Lindsay lived in the present bounds of Due West before the Revolution. His residence was at the Cross Roads between the 1st residence of Dr. J. P. Pressley and James Lindsay, Esq., and in full view of the present site of Erskine College. George Brownlee, Sr., before and during the Revolution, grandfather of James Lindsay, Esq., lived at the Murphy place across Chickasaw Creek. By the way, Chickasaw in the first surveys of the country was known by a different name but I cannot now recall it. The following names are of families who lived in the country adjacent to Dewitt's corner before the revolution: the Brownlee, McClains, Martins, Webbs, Tyler, Lindsays, Cowan, Haddons, Ellis, Dunns, Drakes, Stevensons, Seawrights, Agnew, Murphy, Wallaces, Hawthorns, Sharps, McKinneys, McAdams, etc. The Agnews and Stevensons came from Pennsylvania, the others as far as I can ascertain came direct from Ireland...
Link to full article: https://www.newspapers.com/clip/2482185/the_indexjournal/
Interestingly, Dr. Agnew did not state that Samuel Lindsay was the grandfather of James Lindsay, but he did state that George Brownlee was the grandfather. It may have been Lowry Ware who stated that Samuel Lindsay was the grandfather of James Lindsay. See the information below. It seems that Ware may have used information from Agnew's manuscript, and misinterpreted Agnew's statement about the grandfather of James Lindsay, if the information below was copied correctly.
http://familytreemaker.genealogy.com/users/b/l/a/Robert-Mason-Blake/GENE1-0018.html
From "A Place Called Due
West," by Lowry Ware, at pages 19-28:
"What families made up this congregation if it was, in fact,
constituted before the coming of Peter McMullen? Agnew and
Lathan agreed that they had come from northern Ireland, that
they were often intermarried, and that they were probably
members of the Secession Church (Seceders) before they came to
America. According to tradition, Samuel Lindsay, the
grandfather of James Lindsay, Esq., lived within the later bounds of Due West. The records of the colonial plats indicate that Samuel Lindsay, Isabella Lindsay, and John Lindsay all secured lands, 100, 100, and 250 acres,
respectively, on February 27, 1767 on Clark's (later called
Chickasaw) Creek. Samuel Lindsay's land was on 'a small branch
of Clark's Creek.' All three of the plats bordered on the land
of Andrew Miller, and Samuel and John's lands joined. John
Lindsay's plat description said that it was near Boonesborough,
and the three Lindsays were listed in the South Carolina
Council Journals along with the Scotch-Irish settlers who were
to be settled in the township of Boonesborough which was
located at the head of Long Cane Creek. The Lindsay family was
so important in the early settlement of this spot that In the
1820 map of the Abbeville District which was in Robert Mills'
Atlas of the State of South Carolina (1825), the site of the
Due West Corner Church was designated as 'Linsey's."
"On February 10, 1768, John Brownlee received a land grant of
100 acres on Hogskin branch, and James Brownlee on February 13
received 200 acres on Clark's Creek which had the Cherokee
Path through it. By tradition, the Brownlees first acquired the land on which the Due West Church was located. S. A. Agnew learned from Mrs. Sarah Jane Lyon, his grand daughter, that George Brownlee, John's son, 'soldiered against the Indians,' possibly in the Williamson's expedition of 1776. She told him of 'her grandmother telling her of her mortal terror there not far from the Murphy place' [on west side of Chickasaw from the Due West Church]. 'She heard one night some cattle trampling the brush near their dwelling and they imagined that they were Indians prowling around with murderous intent."
"Agnew listed 'the following names . . . of families who lived
in the country adjacent to DeWitt's Corner before the
Revolution: the Brownlees, McClains, Martins, Webbs, Tylers,
Lindsays, Cowans, Haddons, Ellis, Dunns, Drakes, Stevensons,
Seawrights, Agnews, Murphys, Wallaces, Hawthorns, Sharps,
McKinneys, McAdana, etc.' Agnew said that of the above list,
only his own family and the Stevensons came south from
Pennsylvania, and he believed that all the rest came directly
from Ireland. He noted that Dr. Lathan in his sketch of Peter
McMullen reported that the Cowans and the Dunns came from
McMullen's congregation in northern Ireland, Ahoghil. Agnew
said that 'nearly all' of these families were related, and
that the Martins, Lindsays, Haddons, Cowans, Ellis, Murphys,
Wallaces and Dunns were Seceders in Ireland. He said that of
the men who later became elders of the Due West Corner Church,
two, Robert Wallace and John Murphy, were known to have been
in America during the Revolution.
http://www.archivesindex.sc.gov/onlinearchives/RecordDetail.aspx?RecordId=192160
Series: S213190
Volume: 0025
Page: 00232
Item: 001
Date: 12/21/1789
Description: LINDSAY, SAMUEL, PLAT FOR 200 ACRES ON WATERS OF CHECASAW CAMP BRANCH,
NINETY SIX DISTRICT, SURVEYED BY PATRICK CALHOUN FOR JAMES SEAWRIGHT ON OCTOBER 14, 1784.
Names indexed: CALHOUN, PATRICK; LINDSAY, SAMUEL; SEAWRIGHT, JAMES
Locations: BELFAST TOWNSHIP; CHICKASAW CREEK; NINETY SIX DISTRICT
Document type: PLAT
Samuel Lindsey witnessed the 1789 will of James Seawright:
Series: S213192
Volume: 0036
Page: 00156
Item: 004
Date: 12/13/1797
Description: LINDSEY, SAMUEL, PLAT FOR 71 ACRES ON BRANCH OF PARKERS CREEK, ABBEVILLE COUNTY, NINETY SIX DISTRICT, SURVEYED BY ADAM CRAIN JONES, JR.
Names indexed: BROWNLEE, GEORGE; COWAN, WILLIAM; GIBSON, ROBERT; JONES, ADAM CRAIN JR.; LINDSEY, SAMUEL
Locations: ABBEVILLE COUNTY; NINETY SIX DISTRICT; PARKER CREEK; SAVANNAH RIVER
Document type: PLAT
Samuel, James, and Joseph Lindsey witnessed the 1804 will of John Cowan of Abbeville County:
Samuel Lindsay signed to receive his military pay in 1785:
Samuel Lindsay had served as a private in Captain Wilson's Company. Source: Samuel Lindsay Account Audited file#4598, SC Archives.
This page was updated on
14 Jan. 2017