I am currently working on 'Our Brown Roots' which will be a book about my father's family.
This is a small portion of that book.
Note: This is a work in progress & may be changed as more evidence is collected.
Jacob Alford
15 Aug 1761 NC - 16 Jul 1824 LA
Son of Julius Alford & Lucy Newton
Jacob Alford, son of Julius and Lucy, was born 15 August 1761 in Granville County, North Carolina.[i] He was only
ten years old when his father died. Jacob inherited land and farm animals.
I give to my welbeloved [sic] son Jacob the Land
& plantation whereon I now live lying on both sides Tarr River, together
with Six Cows and Calves Six Sows and Piggs [sic] & one breeding mare to
him and his heirs forever.[ii]
Like his father,
Jacob can be found in various counties in North Carolina because those county
lines changed several times.
Jacob Alford was born on August
15, 1761 in Granville County, North Carolina. In 1764, without moving,
three-year-old Jacob found himself living in Bute County. Bute was formed when
Granville County split to make Bute County. In 1779 Jacob found himself living
in Franklin County. Again, he had not moved. This time North Carolina had
completely abolished Bute County and divided it into the counties of Franklin
and Warren.[iii]
Jacob ‘s father, Julius, had served in the North
Carolina Militia during troubles with the Native Americans and Jacob served in
the Revolutionary War, according to his grandson, Walter Edwin Tynes.
Only one record has been found
detailing Jacob's personal involvement in this war. In 1926 Jacob's grandson Walter Edwin Tynes
(son of Harriet Jane Alford Tynes) wrote a diary referring to his
great-grandfather as a 'Revolutionary Patriot'.
Jacob was only fourteen years old when the Revolutionary War began, but
he was twenty-two years old when it ended.[iv]
It is likely that Jacob Alford did have a role in
the war when we look at North Carolina’s military involvement in obtaining
independence from Great Britain. The state legislature established a state
militia. All free white males between the ages of 16 and 50 were obligated to
serve. Unfortunately no accurate muster rolls of the militia were kept during
the war. Additionally there were artillery and horse companies that were paid,
armed and maintained by the state. There were also ten regiments of the
Continental army formed in North Carolina.[v] Jacob
remained in North Carolina through the war and through the early days of the
formation of our national government.
Jacob married twice while still in North Carolina.
He first married circa 1785 to Elizabeth Bryant (b 20 June 1765)[vi]. They
had three children: Needham Judge Alford (b 12 July 1789 NC), Sarah (Alford)
Pierce (b c 1791 NC) and Edwin Barksdale Alford (b 25 November 1792 NC).
Elizabeth died about 1792.[vii] Our direct ancestor, Edwin, would not have
remembered his mother. He was raised by his stepmother, Frances Seaborn (b 29
September 1766 VA).[viii]
Jacob married Frances soon after Elizabeth’s death, most likely because he had
three children who needed a mother. Jacob and Frances had several children
together. Their first child, Lucy (Alford) Maines b c 1793, was born in North
Carolina.[ix]
---
Georgia ---
Whether Jacob Alford was looking for adventure,
economic improvement or a fresh start in life, he was motivated to move further
south, moving his family to Georgia. In 1788 Georgia had become the fourth of
the United States of America. Georgia was a state-land state in
which land was distributed first by the governor and then through land courts
established from 1783 to 1909.[x]
Jacob and family were probably in Georgia for less than ten years.
By 1795 they had migrated to
Montgomery County, Georgia. Jacob moved to Georgia with other Alford families,
his brothers Job and Goodrich Alford and his first cousins James and Julius
Alford.[xi]
Jacob settled his family in Montgomery County,
Georgia. In 1798 he paid taxes there for 143 acres of ‘swamp land’. Three more
children were born to Jacob and Frances in Georgia: Julius C. Alford (b c
1798), William Alford (b 1804) and Nancy (Alford) Berryhill (b c 1805).[xii] Jacob
did not remain there long, continuing to move further south.[xiii]
Jacob Alford had moved from
Cumberland County, NC, to Georgia about the turn of the century. He was granted 450 acres of land in
Montgomery County, Georgia, in February 1802. He apparently stayed in Georgia
until 1806, when his name disappeared from the records there.[xiv]
---
Louisiana ---
In 1803 the United States, under
President Thomas Jefferson and assisted by the U. S. Minister to France, Robert
R. Livingston, purchased 828 square miles of land that doubled the size of our
country. The Louisiana Territory stretched from the Mississippi
River in the east to the Rocky Mountains in the west and from the Gulf of
Mexico in the south to the Canadian border in the north. Part or all of 15
states were eventually created from the land deal. Western expansion into this
new area began immediately. In 1804 a territorial government was formed. In
1812 the first state in the territory was formed, the state of Louisiana.[xv]
Jacob Alford
left Georgia and settled in the area before it became a state.
By 1807 he was in the area known
as Spanish West Florida, where his twin sons were born. He was given head
rights on over 600 acres. The northern boundary of his property was the line
between the Mississippi Territory and Spanish West Florida. The eastern boundary was the Bogue Chitto
River.[xvi]
This area would later
become Wamerton, Washington Parish, Louisiana.[xvii] According
to the Alford American Family Association Jacob and his family wanted the
boundary between states drawn so that their land would be in Mississippi rather
than Louisiana.
Had our ancestors in Washington Parish gotten their way
we would be writing about families of a prominent southern Mississippi County
now rather than a Louisiana Parish. Around 1811 about 200 of the men of the
area, including our Jacob Alford, his son Needham Alford and son-in-law William
Maines signed a petition to congress asking that the area be made a part of
Mississippi. Most of the early settlers came from Georgia and the Carolinas and
were of English descent and preferred to be a part of similar Mississippi
rather than a part of Louisiana which was largely French speaking. After all,
just seven years prior Louisiana was part of France.[xviii]
The 1812 tax list included Jacob Alford and wife as
one man, one woman and nine children. He was taxed on two horses and 21 ‘stock
cattle’.[xix]
Four children were born
to the family in Louisiana. Twins, John Seaborn Alford and Seaborn John Alford,
were born 11 October 1807. Joseph W. Alford was born circa 1816 and Martha
(Alford) Stovall was born circa 1820.[xx] These
children were young when Jacob died 16 July 1824.[xxi]
There was a difference of opinion in our Alford
family as to where Jacob was buried. Two of Jacob's great-grandsons Claude
Alford and Glenn A. Alford maintained that Jacob was buried in an unmarked
grave in the Brock Cemetery in Pike County, Mississippi. In 1984 these
descendants felt so strongly about this they placed a sign in the cemetery
marking his grave. I visited the Brock Cemetery in June of 1996, and all that
remained of the sign was the iron stake. Other members of the family claimed
Jacob was buried in a grave at the Louisiana/Mississippi border on land he once
owned in Washington Parish. Pat Brock Smith, a descendant of Jacob who
presently lives close to the Brock Cemetery, remembers, as a child, her aunt
Thelma Smith (also a descendant of Jacob's) showing her what she believed was
Jacob's grave. Pat said her aunt took her by the Brock Cemetery, by some crape
myrtle trees, and then down a path for fifty feet or so to an area that was
grown up with weeds. Here she was shown some sandstone rock markers, one of
which was supposedly Jacob's grave. Since this time, according to Pat, the land
had been cleared by hired help or loggers, and it was impossible to know
exactly where the old sandstone markers once were.[xxii]
In the 1830
US Census ‘Franky’ B. Alford is listed in Bogue Chitto. She was a widow by that
time.[xxiii]
Her death date is unknown.
Are you connected to this family? Let's share & compare.
[i] Saunders, C. A., My Alford Heritage [Limited Edition]
(Texas: Morgan Printing, 2005) 27.
[ii] “Will of Julius Alford,” The Alford American Family Association (alfordassociation.org:
accessed June 2017) AAFA Wills.
[iii] Saunders, C. A., My Alford Heritage [Limited Edition]
(Texas: Morgan Printing, 2005) 27.
[iv] Saunders, C. A., My Alford Heritage [Limited Edition]
(Texas: Morgan Printing, 2005) 27.
[v] Powell, William S., North Carolina Through Four Centuries
(Chapel Hill: The University of North Carolina Press, 1989) 190 – 191.
[vi] “US and International Marriage
records, 1560 – 1900,” Ancestry
(ancestry.com. Accessed May 2017). Jacob Alford m. Elizabeth Bryant.
[vii] Conerly, Luke Ward, and E. Russ
Williams, Source Records from Pike
County, Mississippi 1798 - 1910 and Misc. Legal and Family Records Pertaining
to the Areas of Pike and Walthall Counties, MS (Easley, South Carolina:
Southern Historical Press, 1978) 92 – 98.
[viii] “US and International Marriage
records, 1560 – 1900,” Ancestry
(ancestry.com. Accessed May 2017) Jacob Alford m. Frances Seaborn.
[ix] ‘The Alford American Family
Association, Alford Genealogies
(alfordassociation.org: accessed 2016).
[x] “Georgia Land and Property,” Family Search Wiki (familysearch.org.
Accessed 2017).
[xi] Saunders, C. A., My Alford Heritage [Limited Edition]
(Texas: Morgan Printing, 2005) 36.
[xii] ‘The Alford American Family
Association, Alford Genealogies
(alfordassociation.org: accessed 2016).
[xiii] Conerly, Luke Ward, and E. Russ
Williams, Source Records from Pike
County, Mississippi 1798 - 1910 and Misc. Legal and Family Records Pertaining
to the Areas of Pike and Walthall Counties, MS (Easley, South Carolina:
Southern Historical Press, 1978) 95.
[xiv] Heard, Ruby Alford and Gil Alford,
Early Mississippi Alfords (AAFA
Action III 1990) 35.
[xv] ‘Louisiana Purchase’, History
Channel.com.
[xvi] Heard, Ruby Alford and Gil Alford,
"Early Mississippi Alfords." (AAFA Action III 1990) 35.
[xvii] Conerly, Luke Ward, and E. Russ
Williams, Source Records from Pike
County, Mississippi 1798 - 1910 and Misc. Legal and Family Records Pertaining
to the Areas of Pike and Walthall Counties, MS (Easley, South Carolina:
Southern Historical Press, 1978) 95.
[xviii] The Alford American Family
Association, Alford Genealogies
(alfordassociation.org: accessed 2016).
[xix] Williams, E. R., A Potpourri of
Historical Data Concerning the Founding Families and Individuals of Washington
Parish, Louisiana, 1798 – 1860 (Monroe, LA: Northeast Louisiana University,
1990) 1.
[xx] The Alford American Family
Association, Alford Genealogies
(alfordassociation.org: accessed 2016).
[xxi] The Alford American Family
Association, Alford Genealogies
(alfordassociation.org: accessed 2016).
[xxii] Saunders, C. A., My Alford Heritage [Limited Edition]
(Texas: Morgan Printing, 2005) 38.
[xxiii] Williams, E. R., A Potpourri of
Historical Data Concerning the Founding Families and Individuals of Washington
Parish, Louisiana, 1798 – 1860 (Monroe, LA: Northeast Louisiana University,
1990) 11.
1 Jacob
Alford b: 15 Aug 1761 Granville, NC, d: 16 Jul 1824 Washington Parish, LA
+Elizabeth
Bryant b: 20 Jun 1765, d: Abt. 1793, m: c. 1785 NC
2 Needham Judge Alford b: 12
Jul 1789 NC, d: 19 Sep 1869 TX
+Martha Waddell b: 15 May 1798 SC, m: 18 Feb
1815 Franklin, MS
2 Sarah Alford b: c. 1791
+Rubin Pierce b: 1780, d:
1841, m: c. 1820
2 Edwin Barksdale Alford b: 25
Nov 1792 NC, d: 10 Mar 1878 Pike, MS
+Martha P. Smith b: 25 Mar 1802 SC,
d: 8 Aug 1861 Pike, MS, m: 20 Dec 1818 MS
+Frances Seaborn b: 29 Sep
1766 VA, d: c. 1860 LA, m: c. 1792 Cumberland, NC
2 Lucy Alford b: c. 1796, d:
24 May 1841 Sabine Parish, LA
+William Maines
2 Julius C. Alford b: c. 1798
GA, d: c. 1880 Sabine Parish, LA
+Elizabeth Waddell m: c. 1828
2 William Alford b: 1804 GA
+Eveline Ginn b: 1808 MS
2 Nancy Alford b: 1805 GA
+Robert Berryhill
2 Seaborn John Alford b: 11
Oct 1807 LA, d: 07 Feb 1884 Pike, MS
+Mary Catherine Felder b: MS
+Mary S. Kirk
2 John Seaborn Alford b: 11
Oct 1807 LA, d: 15 Nov 1891 Washington Parish, LA
+Margaret Brumfield b: 9 Feb
1819 Washington, LA, d: 8 Sep 1885, m: 1835
2 Joseph Warren Alford b: c.
1816 LA, d: 18 Aug 1878 LA
+Catherine Euphemia Cook b:
1831, d: 1884
2 Martha Alford b: c. 1819 LA
+William J. Stovall
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