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151 BUCHANAN – April 4, at Lisnamallard, Omagh, Elizabeth Eleanor, the youngest daughter of the late John Buchanan, of Lisnamallard, in her 77th year.

source: Obituary of Elizabeth Eleanor Buchanan. Belfast, UK: The Belfast Newsletter, 5 Apr 1906, p. 1. 
Buchanan, Elizabeth Eleanor (I158)
 
152 Buchanan – December 30, at Omagh, John Blacker Buchanan, Esq., for many years Deputy-Clerk of the Peace for County Tyrone, and agent to the Earl of Charlemont.

source: Obituary of John Blacker Buchanan. Belfast, UK: The Belfast Newsletter, 2 Jan 1862, p. 2.

 
Buchanan, Esquire John Blacker Esq. (I39)
 
153 CAMPBELL - In this city, March 16, John S. Campbell, aged 72 years, late of Manzanita, Or. Funeral services will be held Saturday, March 19, at 2 P. M. from the residence funeral chapel of Miler & Tracey. Interment Riverview cemetery.

source: Obituary of John S. Campbell. Portland, OR: The Morning Oregonian, 18 Mar 1921, p. 14. 
Campbell, John S. (I294)
 
154 Capt. JOHN B. JOHNSTON (1841-1922) was born in Fort Gaines, Ga. He was a confederate officer the Civil War and was wounded twice. He came to Florida in 1883, settling in Alachua County, where he started a newspaper. He later moved to Dade City, where he established the Pasco County Democrat in 1887. and represented Pasco County in the state legislature for three terms. In 1895 he was elected speaker of the house. He served two terms as Mayor of Dade City and was later editor of a Bartow newspaper.

Source: Jeff Miller, History of Pasco county, Florida, "Early Residents of Pasco County," http://fivay.org/pasco2j.html 
Johnston, Capt. John B. (I609)
 
155 Captain Campbell was the son of Patrick Campbell, and his mother was Miss Steele. His grandfather was also Patrick Campbell, a brother of Charles Campbell, who was the father of Gen. William Campbell of King's Mountain fame.

source: Des Cognets, Anna Russell. William Russell and His Descendants. Lexington, KY: Samuel F. Wilson, 1884. 
Campbell, Col. William (I89)
 
156 Captain David Campbell's great grandfather, Alexander Campbell, lived in Argyleshire, Scotland; the name of his wife is unknown. He had a son, William Campbell, who married Mary Byars. They went from Scotland to Ireland during the religious persecutions in that country, hoping to find a place where they could worship God in their chosen way, but were disappointed and discontented in Ireland, and finally decided to emigrate to the English colonies in America. They settled in Virginia. Others of the same name and clan, and relations, settled first in Lancaster County, Pennsylvania, remained some years and then removed to Augusta County, Virginia, about the year 1730.

William Campbell and his wife, Mary Byars, had seven children. The eldest, David Campbell, married Jane Conyngham, a granddaughter of Colonel Patrick Conyngham, whose family lived in Ireland on the river Boyne. The head of the house was Sir Albert Conyngham. Colonel Patrick Conyngham commanded a regiment at the battle of Boyne, 1690.

source: Pilcher, Margaret Campbell. “Sketch of Captain David Campbell.” The American Historical Magazine and Tennessee Historical Society Quarterly, Volume 8, Number 2. Nashville, TN: Goodpasture Book Company, 1903.

 
Campbell, William (I1991)
 
157 Captain David Campbell, who was born in 1753, married his cousin, Margaret Campbell, daughter of White David and his wife, Mary Hamilton. On July 29, 1799, Captain David Campbell lost his wife, by whom he had eight children, four of whom died in childhood. Jane married Colonel Wright, of the United States army. They left no issue. Mary married her cousin, David Campbell, afterwards Governor of Virginia. They had no children. John entered the regular army and served until the close of the War of 1812, when he retired with the rank of Lieutenant Colonel. He left no children. The youngest son, David, was born on March 4, 1781. He married Catherine Bowen, daughter of Captain William Bowen and granddaughter of General William Russell. Captain David Campbell, after the death of his wife, Margaret, married a second time and by this wife had one child, Margaret Lavinia, who married Rev. John Kelly. In 1823 Captain David Campbell removed to Middle Tennessee and lived for a time in Sumner County; then bought a farm in Wilson County, where he died August 18, 1832.

source: Cisco, Jay Guy. Historic Sumner County, Tennessee with Genealogies of the Bledsoe, Cage and Douglass Families, and Genealogical Notes of Other Sumner County Families. Nashville, TN: Polk-Keelin Printing Company, 1909.

 
Campbell, Capt. David (I1988)
 
158 Captain Roger Mallory, the son of Dr. Thomas Mallory, and named in the two wills which have been given, received a grant of land in 1660; but probably had been in Virginia a few years before. He settled in that part of New Kent county, which was afterwards King and Queen and King William, and was a justice of the last named county in 1680 (and no doubt long before), and of King and Queen in 1690. If he was the Roger Mallory who was a justice of King William in 1705, he was a very old man. In the records of Elizabeth City county appears under date of August 16, 1680, a power of attorney from Ann, wife of William Mallory, to her “father-in-law,” Captain Roger Mallory of New Kent county, authorizing him to release her dower (expectant) in certain lands there. William and Ann (Wythe) Mallory were the ancestors of the Mallorys of Elizabeth City, &c.

source: Withington, Lothrop and H. F. Waters. "Virginia Gleanings in England," The Virginia Magazine of History and Biography, Volume 12, No. 1. Richmond, VA: William Ellis Jones, 1904.

 
Mallory, Capt. Roger (I143)
 
159 Catherine, dau of Griffith ap John ap Griffith, of Cefn-amlwch, derived from Rhys ap Tewdwr Mawr, Prince of South Wales.
 
source: Burke, John. The Royal Families of England, Scotland, and Wales, with Their Descendants, Sovereigns and Subjects, Volume 2. London, UK: E. Churton, 1851. 
ferch Griffith, Catherine (I223)
 
160 Charles Campbell, son of Patrick, died in Augusta in 1767. He was the father of General William Campbell, of King's Mountain fame. In his will, dated August 4, 1761, proved in court and admitted to record March 17, 1767, he speaks of himself as a resident of Beverley's Manor. He appointed his wife, Margaret, sole executrix, provided for her support, left 1,000 acres of land on the Holston to his son William, and lands in the same section to his daughters. The inventory of the estate shows a larger amount of personal property than was common at that time.

source: Waddell, Joseph Addison. Annals of Augusta County, Virginia, from 1726 to 1871, 2nd Edition. Staunton, VA: C. Russell Caldwell, 1902.
 
Campbell, Capt. Charles (I11659)
 
161 CHARLES, FIFTH EARL OF ABERCORN, died June 1701. He married Catherine, only child of James, Lord Paisley, who died 24th May 1723, leaving a daughter.

source: Johnston, George Harvey. The Heraldry of the Hamiltons with Notes on All the Males of the Family, Descriptions of the Arms, Plates and Pedigrees. Edinburgh, UK: W. and A.K. Johnston, 1909. 
Hamilton, Charles 5th Earl of Abercorn (I68)
 
162 Christian: We have traced this family back to Gilbert Christian, a native of Scotland, who settled in the North of Ireland, A.D. 1702, and there married Margaret Richardson, by whom he had children: that Gilbert was ,we find, the great-great-grandfather of J. R. Christian, living in 1877, in Holly Springs, Mississippi, United States, America; subject to whose correction we write this notice of his family. And, we find, that Duncan Campbell of Inverary, Scotland, whose wife was Mary McCoy, and who settled in Ireland at the time of the “Plantation of Ulster,” by King James II., of England, was one of Mr. Christian's maternal ancestors. This Duncan lived near Londonderry, where his son Patrick Campbell purchased some land. Patrick's youngest son, John, when far advanced in life, migrated to America, A.D. 1726: from him and his numerous children and other kindred have descended a large progeny, spread over the Southern States of the American Union.

source: O’Hart, John. Irish Pedigrees: or, The Origin and Stem of the Irish Nation, Volume 1, 5th Edition. Dublin, Ireland: Jack Duffy and Company, 1892.

 
Campbell, John (I6198)
 
163 Christian: We have traced this family back to Gilbert Christian, a native of Scotland, who settled in the North of Ireland, A.D. 1702, and there married Margaret Richardson, by whom he had children: that Gilbert was ,we find, the great-great-grandfather of J. R. Christian, living in 1877, in Holly Springs, Mississippi, United States, America; subject to whose correction we write this notice of his family. And, we find, that Duncan Campbell of Inverary, Scotland, whose wife was Mary McCoy, and who settled in Ireland at the time of the “Plantation of Ulster,” by King James II., of England, was one of Mr. Christian's maternal ancestors. This Duncan lived near Londonderry, where his son Patrick Campbell purchased some land. Patrick's youngest son, John, when far advanced in life, migrated to America, A.D. 1726: from him and his numerous children and other kindred have descended a large progeny, spread over the Southern States of the American Union.

source: O’Hart, John. Irish Pedigrees: or, The Origin and Stem of the Irish Nation, Volume 1, 5th Edition. Dublin, Ireland: Jack Duffy and Company, 1892.

 
Campbell, Duncan (I11569)
 
164 Christian: We have traced this family back to Gilbert Christian, a native of Scotland, who settled in the North of Ireland, A.D. 1702, and there married Margaret Richardson, by whom he had children: that Gilbert was ,we find, the great-great-grandfather of J. R. Christian, living in 1877, in Holly Springs, Mississippi, United States, America; subject to whose correction we write this notice of his family. And, we find, that Duncan Campbell of Inverary, Scotland, whose wife was Mary McCoy, and who settled in Ireland at the time of the “Plantation of Ulster,” by King James II., of England, was one of Mr. Christian's maternal ancestors. This Duncan lived near Londonderry, where his son Patrick Campbell purchased some land. Patrick's youngest son, John, when far advanced in life, migrated to America, A.D. 1726: from him and his numerous children and other kindred have descended a large progeny, spread over the Southern States of the American Union.

source: O’Hart, John. Irish Pedigrees: or, The Origin and Stem of the Irish Nation, Volume 1, 5th Edition. Dublin, Ireland: Jack Duffy and Company, 1892.

 
Campbell, Patrick (I11571)
 
165 Christopher Higginson lived in James City Co., and was a brother of Humphrey Higginson, member of the Virginia Council. Christopher Higginson died in 1673. Bishop Wren was at that time the incumbent of the see of Ely.

source: Stanard, William Glover, ed., The Virginia Magazine of History and Biography, Volume 13. Richmond, VA: Virginia Historical Society, 1905. 
Higginson, Col. Humphrey Esq. (I646)
 
166 Christopher Higginson lived in James City Co., and was a brother of Humphrey Higginson, member of the Virginia Council. Christopher Higginson died in 1673. Bishop Wren was at that time the incumbent of the see of Ely.

source: Stanard, William Glover, ed., The Virginia Magazine of History and Biography, Volume 13. Richmond, VA: Virginia Historical Society, 1905. 
Higginson, Capt. Christopher (I649)
 
167 Christopher, who was buried in Ripon Minster on July 2nd, 1598. He came to an untimely end. According to a letter from Queen Elizabeth, preserved among the Johnstone MSS. at Campsall, it appears that young Mallory had been in attendance upon his father in Ireland, and that, as he was returning home, he was murdered, whilst riding on the highway, by Michael Cubbedge, servant to Sir Edward York, and a person of the name of Johnson, who were indicted. (Catalogue of Hist. MSS., vi., 450).

source: Walbran, John Richard, ed. Memorials of the Abbey of St Mary of Fountains, Volume 2. London, UK: Whittaker and Company, 1878. 
Mallory, Christopher (I209)
 
168 CLAUD HAMILTON, fifth son of James, second Earl of Arran, born about 1543; died 1621. He commanded the vanguard of Queen Mary's army at Langside, 13th May 1568. On 24th July 1587 he was created LORD PAISLEY. He married 1st August 1574, Margaret, daughter of George, fifth Lord Seton, who died in March 1616. They had issue:-

(a) James
(b) Henry Hamilton, died 15th March 1585, aged three months.
(c) Alexander Hamilton, died 21st November 1587, aged eight months.
(d) Sir John Hamilton. Married Johanna, daughter of Levimus Everard, who afterwards married three other husbands.
(e) Sir Claud
(f) Sir George Hamilton of Greenlaw, Co. Tyrone, and Roscrea, Co. Tipperary, died before 1657. He married, first, Isobel Leslie, daughter of James, Master of Rothes. He also married Mary Butler, daughter of Walter, eleventh Earl of Ormonde. He had a son:- (1) James Hamilton, died unmarried. His Will proved 2nd February 1658-59.

Arms.- Gules, three cinquefoils argent, a label of four points (?or) (Workman's MS.).

Arms an addition to Lindsay's MS. of 1542.- Gules, three cinquefoils argent, a label of three points or. [Plate II., fig. 8.] CREST: A tree proper traversed by a frame saw or. SUPPORTERS: Two antelopes argent, horned and unguled or. The label was dropped after extinction of elder line.

source: Johnston, George Harvey. The Heraldry of the Hamiltons with Notes on All the Males of the Family, Descriptions of the Arms, Plates and Pedigrees. Edinburgh, UK: W. and A.K. Johnston, 1909. 
Hamilton, Claud Lord Paisley (I45)
 
169 CLAUD HAMILTON, second son of first Earl of Abercorn, on his brother's resignation became LORD STRABANE 7th May 1633; died 14th June 1638. He married, 28th November 1632, Jean Gordon, daughter of George, first Marquis of Huntly, and had issue:-

(a) James
(b) George

source: Johnston, George Harvey. The Heraldry of the Hamiltons with Notes on All the Males of the Family, Descriptions of the Arms, Plates and Pedigrees. Edinburgh, UK: W. and A.K. Johnston, 1909. 
Hamilton, Lord Strabane Claud 2nd Lord Strabane (I19)
 
170 CLAUD, FIFTH LORD STRABANE, baptised Dublin 13th September 1659. Succeeded his kinsman as FOURTH EARL OF ABERCORN. He was killed 1690, and was succeeded by his brother:- CHARLES, FIFTH EARL OF ABERCORN, died June 1701.

source: Johnston, George Harvey. The Heraldry of the Hamiltons with Notes on All the Males of the Family, Descriptions of the Arms, Plates and Pedigrees. Edinburgh, UK: W. and A.K. Johnston, 1909. 
Hamilton, 5th Lord Strabane Claud 4th Earl of Abercorn (I67)
 
171 COLLWYN ap Tangno (Lord of Ardudwy, Efionydd, and Part of Llyn, and the Cantref of Dunodu, one of the fifteen tribes of Northwales) ap Cadfael, ap Lludd Gwyn, ap Llew, ap Llyminod Angel, ap Pasgen, ap Uriin Reged (Prince of Regedia in the North), ap Meirchion Gul, ap Gorwst Ledlwm, ap Cenau, ap Coel Godhebog King of the Britons (the father of Helen the Mother of Constantine the Great), and so on to Brutus, the first King of this Island. See Appendix to Wynne’s History of Wales.
 
He dwelt some time at Brownwen’s Tower in Harlech, calling the same by his own name Caer Collwyn; but his Grandchildren lived in Llyn about the year 1080, as may be seen in the Life of Griffith ap Conan.
 
His Posterity were always reckoned the noblest and best Men in Efionydd and Ardudwy, next to the Princes and their Issue.
 
His arms were, Sable, a Chevron between three Fleurs-de-Lys Argent; he married Modlan Benllydan (Sister of Ednowen Bendew one of the fifteen Tribes), Daughter of Conan Feiniad, Son of Gwaithfod Fawr of Powis, great Grandfather of Bleddyn ap Cynfyn, Prince of Northwales and Powis, who died 1073, by whom he had, 1. Ednowen. 2. Merwydd Goch. 3. Eginir, Ancestor to Rys Goch of Eryri, a famous Bard about 1400, and Roberts of Sygyn in Nanmor. 4. Ednyfed. 5. Owain (alias Einion), Ancestor to Wilmot Vaughan, Lord Viscount Lisburne, in the Kingdom of Ireland. He had another Son called Conan ap Collwyn, by a Daughter of Einion ap Engor of Mochnant.
 
source: Pennant, Thomas. A Tour in Wales. MDCCLXX. London, UK: Henry Hughes, 1778.

 
ap Tangno, Lord of Ardudwy and Efionydd and part of Llyn Collwyn (I13651)
 
172 Colonel Arthur, born in 1742; hero of Indian wars; married a sister of General William Campbell; removed in 1804 to Yellow Creek, Knox County, Kentucky, where he died in 1815. He had two sons, who died in the war of 1812 – Colonel James Campbell, at Mobile, and Colonel John B. Campbell, who fell at Chippewa, where he commanded the right wing of the army under General Winfield Scott.

source: Brock, Robert Alonzo and Virgil A. Lewis. Virginia and Virginians: Eminent Virginians, Executives of the Colony of Virginia from Sir Thomas Smyth to Lord Dunmore. Executives of the State of Virginia from Patrick Henry to Fitzhugh Lee. Sketches of Gens. Ambrose Powell Hill, Robert E. Lee, Thos. Jonathan Jackson, Commodore Maury; History of Virginia, from Settlement of Jamestown to Close of the Civil War. Richmond, VA: H. H. Hardesty, 1888.

 
Campbell, Col. Arthur (I11664)
 
173 Colonel William Hamilton, killed in Germany in his father's lifetime, s.p.

source: Johnston, George Harvey. The Heraldry of the Hamiltons with Notes on All the Males of the Family, Descriptions of the Arms, Plates and Pedigrees. Edinburgh, UK: W. and A.K. Johnston, 1909. 
Hamilton, Col. William (I41)
 
174 DANIEL McCURDY, “the Refugee,” the fifth and youngest of the brothers, was born about 1650. He had four sons (with no historic knowledge of any daughters), and they located around Ahoghill and County Derry. It may be noted that in the reprint of Historical Genealogy, published by W. D. McCurdy, at the foot of page twenty-one is a statement regarding the children of DAVID. This is probably a misprint for DANIEL, this latter word appearing in the original version of D. E. McCurdy. To these four sons, then, of DANIEL may be assigned the approximate birth-dates: James, born in 1678; Samuel, born in 1682; Thomas, born in 1686; and Daniel, born in 1690. This James moved to America as a young man, and was one of the early settlers of Londonderry, N.H. Of his children, Robert, born about 1705, became a prominent citizen, and served as a Selectman of the town for 1741-45. The children of Robert (order of birth unknown) were: John, born in 1746, died in 1824, who fought in the Revolution and moved to New Boston, N.H. John married Nancy Cochrane, but was married a second time. The other children of Robert were Mary, married Peter Cochrane; Janette, married Henry Parkinson; a daughter who married a Mr. Story; and Elizabeth, who married Daniel Short.

source: Blanchard, Henry Percy. The Ancestral McCurdys: Their Origin and Remote History. London, UK: Covenant Publishing Company, Covenant Publishing Company, 1930. 
McCurdy, Daniel (I61)
 
175 Daniel of Carsoig, m. Janet, daughter of Patrick CAMPBELL, of Kilduskland.

source: Burke, Bernard and Ashworth Peter Burke. A Genealogical and Heraldic History of the Colonial Gentry, Volume 2. London, UK: Harrison and Sons, 1895. 
Campbell, Daniel (I124)
 
176 Daniel, the fourth child of James and Jerusha McCurdy, was born in 1698. He married Rachel McGill (a sister of his brother Andrew’s wife Mary). He is sometimes known as of “Caramore.” This seems to be in a manner synonymous with the “Cabry.” Possibly the latter is a more local name than the former, perhaps the name of a farm. Robert, the youngest son of this Daniel, is also described as of the “Cabry”; and the conclusion is permissible that Robert took over the farm lease of the Cabry when his father became ill. We know that from a letter he wrote his son Alexander, then in Nova Scotia, he was in poor health in 1763, and addressed his letter from Bellyhelly. Daniel and Rachel (McGill) McCurdy had four children, namely ALEXANDER, known as “the Pioneer,” born 1734; Peggy, born about 1736; David and Robert. Of these, Alexander, “the Pioneer,” moved to Nova Scotia with his sister Peggy in 1762. With them is begun the history of the Nova Scotia branch of the McCurdy family, taken up in a separate volume already alluded to.

source: Blanchard, Henry Percy. The Ancestral McCurdys: Their Origin and Remote History. London, UK: Covenant Publishing Company, 1930. 
McCurdy, Daniel (I35)
 
177 Daniel, the third child of Daniel and Margaret (Laughlin) McCurdy, was born in 1702. He married Jennet Jackson. They had five children: Jackson, Patrick, Daniel, Archibald, and Jennie. The second of these children, Patrick, had seven children: Catherine, Jennie, Mary, Archibald, Daniel, John, and Patrick. Of these, it is supposed that Archibald and John moved to Sherbrooke, in the Eastern Townships, Canada; and if so, John had two sons, George and William, and three daughters. This latter George had three sons: John, William, and George, and five daughters; while his brother William had two sons, George of Lennoxville and William Henry of Los Angeles; and three daughters, Mrs. Rand, Mrs. J. R. Campbell, and Jean of Summerland, B.C. Archibald, the other emigrant to Canada, had three sons, James, David, and John, and three daughters. James had two sons, Robert and Archibald, and three daughters. His brother David never married; but brother John had four daughters. The youngest of these seven children of Patrick, also Patrick, remained in Ireland on the “Cairn,” Ballintoy. He was born about 1816.

source: Blanchard, Henry Percy. The Ancestral McCurdys: Their Origin and Remote History. London, UK: Covenant Publishing Company, Covenant Publishing Company, 1930. 
McCurdy, Daniel (I6)
 
178 David and Jane Conyngham Campbell had four children. William married Mary Ellison, and was prominent in the Indian and Revolutionary wars. His two brothers-in-law, Captain William Ellison, who married Mary Campbell, and Major John Morrison, who married Martha Campbell, were also patriotic defenders of their liberty in the same war.

David, the subject of this sketch, was the youngest child. He was born in Augusta County, Virginia, August, 1753. Three months previous to his birth his father died, and his mother died when he was but six years of age.

His brother William, being the eldest, according to the old English common law which was in force at that time, inherited the whole of his father's property, which consisted entirely of landed estates and slaves, so young David was forced to depend upon his own resources very early in life, and bravely he solved the problem of making his living. He had accumulated some means by the time he was twenty years of age, which he invested in a small farm in Washington County, Virginia, to which he moved. This was near Abingdon. Soon after settling on his farm he met his cousin, Margaret Campbell (daughter of his mother's half sister, Mary Hamilton, and David Campbell, a distant relation). They became attached to one another and were married in 1774, she being about 21 years of age at the time of her marriage.

source: Pilcher, Margaret Campbell. “Sketch of Captain David Campbell.” The American Historical Magazine and Tennessee Historical Society Quarterly, Volume 8, Number 2. Nashville, TN: Goodpasture Book Company, 1903.

 
Campbell, Capt. William (I1982)
 
179 David and Jane Conyngham Campbell had four children. William married Mary Ellison, and was prominent in the Indian and Revolutionary wars. His two brothers-in-law, Captain William Ellison, who married Mary Campbell, and Major John Morrison, who married Martha Campbell, were also patriotic defenders of their liberty in the same war.

David, the subject of this sketch, was the youngest child. He was born in Augusta County, Virginia, August, 1753. Three months previous to his birth his father died, and his mother died when he was but six years of age.

source: Pilcher, Margaret Campbell. “Sketch of Captain David Campbell.” The American Historical Magazine and Tennessee Historical Society Quarterly, Volume 8, Number 2. Nashville, TN: Goodpasture Book Company, 1903.

 
Campbell, Capt. David (I1988)
 
180 David and Jane Conyngham Campbell had four children. William married Mary Ellison, and was prominent in the Indian and Revolutionary wars. His two brothers-in-law, Captain William Ellison, who married Mary Campbell, and Major John Morrison, who married Martha Campbell, were also patriotic defenders of their liberty in the same war.

source: Pilcher, Margaret Campbell. “Sketch of Captain David Campbell.” The American Historical Magazine and Tennessee Historical Society Quarterly, Volume 8, Number 2. Nashville, TN: Goodpasture Book Company, 1903. 
Allison, Capt. William (I3326)
 
181 David and Jane Conyngham Campbell had four children. William married Mary Ellison, and was prominent in the Indian and Revolutionary wars. His two brothers-in-law, Captain William Ellison, who married Mary Campbell, and Major John Morrison, who married Martha Campbell, were also patriotic defenders of their liberty in the same war.

source: Pilcher, Margaret Campbell. “Sketch of Captain David Campbell.” The American Historical Magazine and Tennessee Historical Society Quarterly, Volume 8, Number 2. Nashville, TN: Goodpasture Book Company, 1903. 
Morrison, Maj. John (I3327)
 
182 David ap Howel, who m. a dau. of Ievan ap Griffith ap Madoc ap Ririd Flaidd, Lord of Penllyn, by Gwenllian, dau. and co-heiress of Ievan ap Howell, of Henllys, and had a son, Robin Vaughan ap David, father, by his wife, Angharad, dau. of Rhys ap Griffith, of a dau. and heiress, Catherine, who m. Rhys ap Einion Vychin, descended from Grono Lloyd-y-Penwyn.

source: Burke, Bernard. A Genealogical and Heraldic Dictionary of the Peerage and Baronetage of the British Empire, Twenty-Seventh Edition. London, UK: Harrison, 1865. 
ap Howel, David (I543)
 
183 David Campbell (called "Black David," because of his dark hair, eyes and complexion, and to, distinguish him from his cousin, "White David" Campbell, who was very fair, with yellow hair and blue eyes) was born about 1710. He married Jane Conyngham, a half-sister of Mary Hamilton (White David Campbell's wife). David Campbell and his wife, Jane Conyngham, came from Ireland with their parents. They settled in the Colony of Virginia, it is thought, first in Culpepper County. Later, they removed to Augusta County, Virginia, which was at that time a frontier settlement. To this section of Virginia had emigrated a large number of Scotch-Irish, a brave, independent, liberty-loving race of people, who were faithful friends and the best of citizens. They gave to our country many of her greatest men.

David Campbell, born in 1710, died in November, 1753, and Jane Conyngham, his wife, died in August, 1759. They had four children, namely: William, Mary, Martha and David Campbell.

source: Pilcher, Margaret Campbell. Historical Sketches of the Campbell, Pilcher and Kindred Families, including the Bowen, Russell, Owen, Grant, Goodwin, Amis, Carothers, Hope, Taliaferro, and Powell Families. Nashville, TN, Marshall and Bruce Company, 1911. 
Campbell, David (I1984)
 
184 David Campbell, fifth son of David, was a lawyer and removed to Tennessee. He was first the Federal Judge in the Territory, and then one of the Judges of the Supreme Court of the State. His death occurred in 1812, in the sixty-second year of his age. He had been appointed Federal Judge of the Territory which afterwards formed the State of Alabama, but died before he removed his family to the new country.

source: Waddell, Joseph Addison. Annals of Augusta County, Virginia, from 1726 to 1871, 2nd Edition. Staunton, VA: C. Russell Caldwell, 1902. 
Campbell, Maj. David (I11665)
 
185 David Campbell, son of John and brother of Patrick and Robert, married, in Augusta, Mary Hamilton, and had seven sons and six daughters, all of whom, except a son who died young, emigrated to the Holston. The sons were John, Arthur, James, William, David, Robert and Patrick; and the daughters Margaret, Mary, Martha, Sarah, Ann, and sixth not named.

source: Waddell, Joseph Addison. Annals of Augusta County, Virginia, from 1726 to 1871, 2nd Edition. Staunton, VA: C. Russell Caldwell, 1902.

 
Campbell, David (I3330)
 
186 DAVID McCURDY, the second son of Petheric, "the Refugee," was probably born in 1670. There is a tradition that his children were all girls. With no knowledge of the names of their husbands, the gates are closed against further research.

source: Blanchard, Henry Percy. The Ancestral McCurdys: Their Origin and Remote History. London, UK: Covenant Publishing Company, 1930. 
McCurdy, David (I4)
 
187 DAVID McCURDY, “the Refugee,” the second of the brothers, was born about 1642. Nothing is known of him. It may be, after all, that he perished, as there seems to be some tradition, during or as the result of the perilous flight by sea from Scotland.

source: Blanchard, Henry Percy. The Ancestral McCurdys: Their Origin and Remote History. London, UK: Covenant Publishing Company, Covenant Publishing Company, 1930. 
McCurdy, David (I58)
 
188 David, first clerk of Washington County, which office he held until March 17, 1779, when he was succeeded by his brother John. Removing to Tennessee, he became distinguished in its annals.

source: Brock, Robert Alonzo and Virgil A. Lewis. Virginia and Virginians: Eminent Virginians, Executives of the Colony of Virginia from Sir Thomas Smyth to Lord Dunmore. Executives of the State of Virginia from Patrick Henry to Fitzhugh Lee. Sketches of Gens. Ambrose Powell Hill, Robert E. Lee, Thos. Jonathan Jackson, Commodore Maury; History of Virginia, from Settlement of Jamestown to Close of the Civil War. Richmond, VA: H. H. Hardesty, 1888.

 
Campbell, Maj. David (I11665)
 
189 David, married, in 1735, Mary Hamilton (who came to America in the same ship as him), and, about the year 1772, settled at the “Royal Oak,” in the valley of the Holstein (now rendered Holston), about one mile west of Marion, the county seat of Smyth County. He left issue seven sons: i. John, born April 20, 1741. ii. Colonel Arthur, born in 1742; hero of Indian wars; married a sister of General William Campbell; removed in 1804 to Yellow Creek, Knox County, Kentucky, where he died in 1815. He had two sons, who died in the war of 1812 – Colonel James Campbell, at Mobile, and Colonel John B. Campbell, who fell at Chippewa, where he commanded the right wing of the army under General Winfield Scott. iii. James; iv. William; v. David, first clerk of Washington County, which office he held until March 17, 1779, when he was succeeded by his brother John. Removing to Tennessee, he became distinguished in its annals. vi. Robert, Colonel, and Indian fighter, born in 1755; displayed great bravery in many conflicts with the Cherokees, and subsequently at the battle of King’s Mountain; nearly forty years a magistrate of Washington County, and in 1825 removed to Tennessee; died near Knoxville in February, 1832.

source: Brock, Robert Alonzo and Virgil A. Lewis. Virginia and Virginians: Eminent Virginians, Executives of the Colony of Virginia from Sir Thomas Smyth to Lord Dunmore. Executives of the State of Virginia from Patrick Henry to Fitzhugh Lee. Sketches of Gens. Ambrose Powell Hill, Robert E. Lee, Thos. Jonathan Jackson, Commodore Maury; History of Virginia, from Settlement of Jamestown to Close of the Civil War. Richmond, VA: H. H. Hardesty, 1888.

 
Campbell, David (I3330)
 
190 David, the eighth and youngest child of James and Jerusha McCurdy, was born in Cavan Parish, in 1709. When a young man he came to America, and settled in Westmoreland County, Pa., where he married Susan Madden. They had five sons: John, David, William, Robert, and Samuel. He and his five sons fought in the Revolutionary War, and he himself was frequently with Washington. His son John married Mary Fox, and they had twelve children: Elijah, who went to the South; Ebenezer; Rev. Elisha, born in 1763, “A Presbyterian minister, and his memory still lives”; John, born 1770; James, an Elder for over fifty years; David, lived in Ohio; Dr. Allen Fox; Lucinda; Lucy; Mary; Rebecca; and Nancy.

David, the Old Veteran, died in 1833, at the extreme age of 124 years.

source: Blanchard, Henry Percy. The Ancestral McCurdys: Their Origin and Remote History. London, UK: Covenant Publishing Company, Covenant Publishing Company, 1930. 
McCurdy, David (I40)
 
191 David, the subject of this sketch, was the youngest child. He was born in Augusta County, Virginia, August, 1753. Three months previous to his birth his father died, and his mother died when he was but six years of age.

His brother William, being the eldest, according to the old English common law which was in force at that time, inherited the whole of his father's property, which consisted entirely of landed estates and slaves, so young David was forced to depend upon his own resources very early in life, and bravely he solved the problem of making his living. He had accumulated some means by the time he was twenty years of age, which he invested in a small farm in Washington County, Virginia, to which he moved. This was near Abingdon. Soon after settling on his farm he met his cousin, Margaret Campbell (daughter of his mother's half sister, Mary Hamilton, and David Campbell, a distant relation). They became attached to one another and were married in 1774, she being about 21 years of age at the time of her marriage.

Her father, David Campbell, was an officer in the Virginia army in 1759, when his young son, Arthur, was taken prisoner by the Indians and escaped after three years captivity in Canada. (See old family manuscripts and also Virginia Magazine of History and Biography, Vol. VII, No. 2, October, 1899.) She had several brothers who were distinguished in the war of 1776, Margaret Campbell was keeping house at the “Royal Oak,” the family seat of her two brothers, Colonel John and Colonel Arthur Campbell, at the time of her marriage.

source: Pilcher, Margaret Campbell. “Sketch of Captain David Campbell.” The American Historical Magazine and Tennessee Historical Society Quarterly, Volume 8, Number 2. Nashville, TN: Goodpasture Book Company, 1903. 
Campbell, Margaret (I1989)
 
192 David, the third child of Daniel and Rachel McCurdy, was born about 1737. He married Grace Kennedy. They had five children: David, who went to America; Alexander; Mary, who died young; Rachel, who went to America: and Cecilia, who died young. This Alexander, the second child, married Cecilia Kennedy. Their daughter Mary married John Annesley, the parents of Mrs. Mary Burris.

source: Blanchard, Henry Percy. The Ancestral McCurdys: Their Origin and Remote History. London, UK: Covenant Publishing Company, Covenant Publishing Company, 1930. 
McCurdy, David (I69)
 
193 David, was called “Black David” because of his dark hair and complexion, and to distinguish him from his distant cousin, “White David,” who was fair, with yellow hair and blue eyes. These two married half sisters. Black David, who was born in 1710, married Jane Cunnyngham. They came from Ireland with their parents and settled in Virginia, it is thought, first in Culpepper County; later they removed to Augusta County, which at this time was the extreme frontier. They had four children: William, Mary, Martha and David.

source: Cisco, Jay Guy. Historic Sumner County, Tennessee with Genealogies of the Bledsoe, Cage and Douglass Families, and Genealogical Notes of Other Sumner County Families. Nashville, TN: Polk-Keelin Printing Company, 1909.

 
Campbell, David (I1984)
 
194 Deed from Alexander Stewart and Elizabeth, his wife, conveyed property to John Hawks in 1768. Deed proved Sept. 1772.

Beaufort County, Court Minutes - March Court - 1758 - The Revd. Mr. Alex Stewart moves to keep ferry over Durhams Creek from Garrison point to Ware Point. Granted and permitted to take eight pence procla. money for man and horse, giving bond according to Law.

Craven County, North Carolina Court Minutes, 1767-1771, Book VII - Marriage settlement from Alexr. Stewart to James Davis, Esquire on Elizabeth Hobbs was proved in open Court by Thomas Haslen. Evidence agreeable to Law and Ordered to be Registered. Dated March 1770.

From the Colonial Records of NC, Vol IX, page 7 - Letter from James Reed to the Secretary: "The Rev. Mr. Stewart, the Society's Missionary at Bath died last spring and has left a widow and four children and his affairs in great confusion."

James Stewart named adm. of estate of Rev. Alexander Stewart in December 1801.

Alexander Stewart is said to have had 4 additional children: Alexander, James, William Samuel and a daughter who married Jordan Shepherd of Pitt County and had three daughters.

Source Information: Scarola, Lisa Wallendorf. "Pitt County Families." Rootsweb.com Worldconnect page. Last updated: 2005-02-28. April 1, 2005. http://wc.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=feonadorf&id=I40869

"Even before Bath Town was incorporated, 'St. Thomas parish in Pamplico' had a jewel in its crown that roused cries of envy from the older Albemarle?a truly princely library of 1,050 books and pamphlets. Dr. Thomas Bray, founder of the Society for the Propagation of the Gospel in Foreign Parts (S.P.G.), purchased it in London with funds subscribed to supply libraries and missionaries in the colonies. It may have been entrusted to the care of Christopher Gale in 1700 at his plantation, Kirby Grange, on Adams Creek. Here the books were a source for worship services observed by the Reverend Benjamin Dennis in 1711. "At Major Gale's . . . the people met each Sunday, where a young gentleman, a lawyer [possibly Gale's brother, Edmond] was appointed to read prayers and a sermon, they having no minister."

Dr. Bray had selected the library carefully so that an isolated clergyman would be able "to instruct his People in all things necessary to Salvation," which to him demanded that it be a wellspring of learning in all fields. In addition to religious works, he included volumes on geography, biography, sports, medicine, poetry, and classical literature. For years it provided Bath's only tangible link with the established church except for brief periods when a minister came and soon left the little town where only a few devout souls noticed either his arrival or departure.

When the Reverend John Garzia, from the borough church in Norfolk, Virginia, agreed to be their rector in 1734, it was cause for rejoicing by the wardens and vestry (or at least part of them)! Work began at last on building a brick church on the lot next to the courthouse that John Lawson had surveyed. Worshipers were not as numerous, nor as dedicated Anglicans, as Garzia might have hoped. He told the S.P.G. his chief problem was with "twelve vestrymen whose only endeavor is to hinder." The last subject his congregation wanted to hear about from the pulpit was sin, inasmuch as many of them practiced these sins more devoutly than churchmanship, according to their rector. In spite of this, construction of the church proceeded, with walls two feet thick, with brick laid in Flemish bond, and with square red paving tiles embellished with designs of flowers and dragons.

Meanwhile this clergyman of Spanish origin who could "scarce speak English," and whose salary went unpaid for four years, baptized 635 persons in St. Thomas Parish in one year alone. A special favorite of the Bishop of London, Garzia also brought the parish several lasting and valuable gifts?a silver communion chalice from the bishop and two silver candelabra, said to have been presented by King George II when the church was consecrated about 1740. In addition, a handsome bell, cast in 1732, was purchased for the church through Queen Anne's Bounty, a perpetual fund created by her royal charter to augment the income of poorer parishes. In November 1744, while visiting a sick member of his congregation, Garzia was killed in a fall from his horse. Soon the vestry was appealing to the S.P.G. for a new priest, but no doubt recalling the penniless Garzia's treatment, they were many years in responding.

A decade later, by a stroke of amazing good fortune, the Reverend Alexander Stewart, with his wife and two sons, traveled up the post road to Bath to be their minister. A member of the Royal Stuart clan of Scotland, Stewart had a master's degree from the University of Dublin. The 30-year-old clergyman hailed from County Antrim, Ireland, as did the newly appointed governor, Arthur Dobbs, who had asked Stewart to come to Carolina as chaplain to the Dobbs household. Stewart had planned to settle in New Bern, but finding that the vestry of Christ Church there had just employed a minister, he accepted the offer to serve St. Thomas. His career began in sorrow when the port was swept by a yellow fever epidemic that claimed the lives of his entire little family, as well as one of his parishioners, John Peyton Porter. When the bereaved minister called to comfort Porter's widow, Elizabeth, the two found they had more than their grief in common. After sufficient time to satisfy the amenities, they were married. He plunged immediately into completing the unfinished church that had been "under construction" for so long that many worshipers had forgotten that this was not the intended effect. He got work moving again, and soon the final details were completed.

Not long after the Stewarts' daughter, Rosa, was born, the rector of St. Thomas became a widower again, this time with a small baby to rear. He looked for a new wife and found one?a Miss Johnston, said to be a sister of the late Governor Gabriel Johnston. Turning back to the problems of his parish, he found they were numerous. For one, there was a growing number of "dippers," as he called the Baptist sect, and in 1758 he tried to combat their influence by writing a book, The Validity of Infant Baptism, which was printed by James Davis in New Bern. He was likewise upset over the growing number of "New Lights"?a product of the Great Awakening?who substituted revivalism, dramatic conversions, and emotional religious ecstasy for the time-honored ritual of the Book of Common Prayer, an anchor in stormy seas to devout Anglicans but an empty mouthing of phrases to the unchurched or the backsliders. As a last resort, Stewart even tried "dipping" a few converts himself. He also worried over the inroads made by "numerous sectuaries . . . having strollers" (itinerant clergymen.)

One of these "strollers" was Methodist George Whitefield, who personified the Great Awakening in Carolina. He had visited Bath first in 1739 while Garzia was struggling with the faithless in his congregation. The portly Englishman took the old north-south route from Edenton, "the worst roads they had since they began their journey" and that night in Bath heard "the wolves on one side of them howling like a kennel of hounds." In 1747 and again during Stewart's ministry, he returned, hoping the conversion of "North Carolina sinners would be glad news in Heaven." Legend has it that on one occasion a secular celebration was scheduled in town at the same time as Whitefield's previously announced preaching. This so insulted the fiery evangelist that he left Bath at once, shaking its dust from his heels and calling down heaven as his witness that it would never amount to anything but an insignificant village, which the legend-quoters say stunted its growth from that day forward.

The Reverend Stewart must have groaned aloud when he read a letter from the S.P.G. in 1763 suggesting that he open a school for black and Indian children. Didn't he have enough burdens already? His joints continually ached from getting soaked to the skin as he ferried back and forth across the river on pastoral calls, frequently catching cold. He had only one Sunday to preach on the south shore, where there were thirteen chapels to be served for every three in Bath. As usual, duty triumphed over his cantankerous side. Although one schoolmaster in the parish was willing to teach black children, few slave owners had "the Salvation of Negro Souls at heart," he discovered. Apparently only a few classes were ever held, but he was successful in opening a school at the Lake Mattamuskeet reservation for Indian children.

The poor clergyman had lost his third wife, and once again it fell to his lot to console another widow, Sarah Coutanch, whose late husband, Michael, had built the finest house in town on Water Street [the Palmer-Marsh House] and represented Bath for many years in the legislature. Stewart was engaged at this time in duties more physical than spiritual, as the long-awaited construction of St. Thomas's glebe house got underway after he agreed with the vestry to clear and improve 25 acres of the glebe himself, and donate 140 towards furnishing the house. When it was completed on the glebe land southeast of town along Adams Creek, the Reverend Stewart moved in with his fourth bride, the widow Sarah.

Hurricanes, howling in from the Outer Banks, had battered the Pamlico for centuries. In September 1769, coastal residents were alarmed by "a blazing star or planet" that streaked across the night sky in what they took as an omen of disaster. The next day a hurricane struck Bath with such ferocity that a pounding tide rose twelve feet above the previous high water mark, ripping every ship on the waterfront from its moorings and driving them over the banks into town or the woods beyond. As Alexander Stewart dashed from his house to secure the livestock and outbuildings, he was struck by flying debris that injured his legs so severely he never fully regained the use of them. In 1771, complications from his injury recurred, this time fatally. He was survived by his widow and four children, but most of all by the indelible stamp of his unique personality and tireless work on St. Thomas Parish.

Inside the Church
Artifacts owned by the church include:

* Queen Anne's Bell?18 years older than the Liberty Bell?was cast in 1750 and recast in 1872.
* A slate tablet erected in memory of Col. Robert Palmer's wife, Margaret, who died in Bath in 1765.
* A large silver chalice presented to Reverend Garzia by the Bishop of London in 1738.
* A silver candelabra, ca. 1740, reputed to have been given by King George II. "

Source information: "Everything Needed for Salvation." St. Thomas Episcopal Church Built 1734, Bath Historic Site. North Carolina Office of Archives and History. April 1, 2005. http://www.ah.dcr.state.nc.us/sections/hs/bath/st-thomas.htm

"Rev. Nathaniel Blount, familiarly known as "Parson Blount," was a first cousin of the brothers, John Gray, Reading, and Thomas Blount, all of whom are mentioned in the journal. He was a student for the ministry under Rev. Alexander Stewart of St. Thomas church, Bath. He was ordained in London in 1773. In the same year he built "Blount's Chapel," now Trinity Church, Chocowinity. The families of Mrs. Thomas Kingsbury of Wilmington and Mr. Levi Blount of Mississippi represent his descendants."

Source information: Attmore, William. Journal of a Tour of North Carolina, 1787. Chapel Hill, North Carolina: University of North Carolina, 1922. Documenting the American South. UNC University Library, April 1, 2005. http://docsouth.unc.edu/nc/attmore/attmore.html

"We inherited this Indian ancestory in many ways: Some by direct descent, others by indirect descent. There were many legitimate and common-law marriages between Indians and whites. During the middle to late 1700's, the Indians in this area were so poverty stricken that they often accepted jobs of servitude among the white settlers. The males usually became common laborers. The females became servants, and all too often, the mistress to the "master"of the family. Many children were born as a result of these relationships, and were accepted as family members. During the year of 1763, the Rev. Alexander Stewart, a missionary of the Society for the Propagation of the Gospel, visited Hyde County and made the following report: "The remains of the Attamuskeet (Mattamuskeet), Roanoke and Hatteras Indians, live mostly along the coast, mixed with the white inhabitants. Many of these attended the places of public worship while I was there, and behaved with decency and seemed desirous of instruction. They offered themselves and their children to me for baptism...." Similar stories are told of the Tuscarora mixing with the whites after their tribes became disorganized. T'he French and Indians "freely" intermarried, and the offspring became members of our society. For 250 years these Indian genes have been distributed through marriage and offspring. The Cucklemaker story is probably more typical than unusual."

Source information: Hoggard, Stanley. "Chief Cucua Mucua, alias Cucklemaker." 1112 Bull Hill Road, Windsor, NC 27983. Bertie County, North Carolina. USGenweb Project. April 1, 2005.
http://www.rootsweb.com/~ncbertie/cuckle.htm

"The central cause for all this trouble was the right of presentation to livings. The authorities in England were zealous for the supremacy of the Church and the Crown, and wished to retain it, while the democratic temper of the colonial Churchmen made them equally determined to secure it for the vestry, and caused them to clog their bills “with objections incompatible with the rights of the Crown and the ecclesiastical jurisdiction. They excluded the Bishop from examining and correcting abuses, and the right of appeal was taken from the Crown. After all these provisions, writes the Bishop of London in regard to the Act of 1754, what becomes of the king’s supremacy or the bishop’s jurisdiction? He thought this model of government might have come from the Presbyterians and Independents of New England. He was astonished to see such a statute in the laws of North Carolina, where conformity is so strongly insisted on” that each vestryman is compelled to subscribe to the same declaration as is required of clergymen in England.

So keen was this jealousy on the part of the home government that the Rev. Alexander Stewart, missionary at Bath, writes in 1760 that within the last six years four acts for electing vestries and supporting the clergy had been passed only to be repealed by the authorities at home because unsatisfactory. To prevent the Church law that was enacted in 1760 from being repealed by proclamation, it was necessary to divide the clauses relating to vestry and clergy, and to pass them separately. These were then referred to the Bishop of London. It was not enough for him that the vestrymen should take the oath of abjuration and subscribe the Test Act. The declaration required, a simple promise not to oppose the Church of England as by law established, he correctly claimed, might have been taken with equal propriety by Presbyterian, Anabaptist, Independent, Quaker, Jew, or pagan. The bishop demanded that the vestry be required to subscribe to the declaration of conformity laid down by the vestry act of 1755. He objected that there was no means provided for the minister to recover dues in case of refusal of payment, and the section in regard to the removal of the minister, he said, tended to take away “the little remains of ecclesiastical jurisdiction, if any is left in that province. The law was repealed."

Source information: Weeks, Stephen Beaugregard. Church and State in North Carolina. Baltimore, MD: Johns Hopkins Press, 1893. 34-35. Dinsmore Documentation, Digitizers of Documents. April 1, 2005. http://www.dinsdoc.com/weeks-1-3.htm

"In May, 1761, the Rev. Alexander Stewart, a missionary of the Society for the Propagation of the Gospel, wrote of his visit to Hyde County, including this mention:

'I likewise with pleasure inform the Society, that the few remains of the Altamuskeet [Mattamuskeet], Hatteras & Roanoke Indians (whom I likewise mentioned in a former letter) appeared mostly at the chapel & seemed fond of hearing the Word of the true God & of being admitted into the church of our Lord Jesus Christ. 2 men and 3 women & 2 children were baptized by me. I could have wished the adults were better instructed, but their sureties & a northern Indian among them, who had been bred as a christian, promised to take that care.'

Two years later the same clergyman made another voyage to Hyde County and reported:

'The remains of the Attamuskeet, Roanoke and Hatteras Indians, live mostly along the coast, mixed with the white inhabitants, many of these attended at the Places of Public Worship, while I was there & behaved with decency seemed desirous of instruction & offered themselves & their children to me for baptism. & after examining some of the adults I accordingly baptized, 6 adult Indians, 6 Boys, 4 Girls & 5 Infants & for their further instruction (at the expence of a society called Dr. Bray's associates, who have done me the honor of making me Superintendent of their schools in this Province, have fixed a school mistress among them, to teach 4 Indian & 2 negro boys & 4 Indian girls to read & to work & have supplied them with Books for that purpose & hope that God will open the eyes of the whites everywhere that they may no longer keep the ignorant in distress but assist the charitable design of this Pious Society & do their best endeavours to increase the kingdom of our Lord Jesus Christ.'

The possibility that members of the tribe migrated to Robeson County, where several thousand so-called Croatan Indians now reside, seems very remote."

Source information: Rights, Rev. Douglas L. The American Indian in North Carolina. Winston-Salem, NC: John F. Blair, publisher. Carolina Algonkian Project. 2001. April 1, 2005. http://homepages.rootsweb.com/~jmack/algonqin/rights.htm 
Stewart, Rev. Alexander (I277)
 
195 DIED

On the 15th inst. At Glenelg Cottage, near Omagh, Alex. Buchanan, Esq.

source: Death notice of Alexander Buchanan. Belfast, UK: The Belfast Newsletter, 21 Feb 1840, p. 2.

 
Buchanan, Esquire Alexander Carlisle Esq. (I36)
 
196 died unmarried

source: Burke, John and Bernard Burke. A Genealogical and Heraldic Dictionary of the Landed Gentry of Great Britain and Ireland, Volume 2. London, UK: Henry Colburn, 1847. 
Mallory, Rev. Thomas (I452)
 
197 died without issue

source: Burke, John and Bernard Burke. A Genealogical and Heraldic Dictionary of the Landed Gentry of Great Britain and Ireland, Volume 2. London, UK: Henry Colburn, 1847. 
Mallory, Sir William (I11048)
 
198 Dionisia, married William Mallory, of Hutton Conyers, esq., and was thirty-six years of age, Oct. 24th, 1451.

source: Stanard, William Glover, ed. The Virginia Magazine of History and Biography, Volume 13. Richmond, VA: Virginia Historical Society, 1905. 
Tempest, Dionysia (I128)
 
199 Dionysia Newton bapt. 11 Sep. 1642 bur. 1st Oct. 1642.

source: Genealogical Memoranda Relating to the Family of Newton. London, UK: Taylor and Company, 1871. 
Newton, Dionysia (I58)
 
200 DIONYSIA, m. to William Mallorie, to whom she conveyed the manor of Studley; and from this marriage the late MRS. LAWRENCE, of Studley, derived.

source: Burke, John and Bernard Burke. A Genealogical and Heraldic Dictionary of the Landed Gentry of Great Britain and Ireland, Volume 2. London, UK: Henry Colburn, 1847.

 
Tempest, Dionysia (I128)
 

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