Sunday, July 25, 2021

Wedding: Blades - Fortenberry, 1945 MS

This wedding announcement is very short & does not give the wedding date but it does include a photograph of the bride. The couple was back in the newspaper in 1946 when their twin sons were born.

 

 

Pansy Fortenberry Blades


1924 MS – 1999

Daughter of Willis Franklin Fortenberry & Ivy May Smith

Wife of William Edwin Blades




 

 

 

Recent Bride – Mrs. W. E. Blades, who before her recent marriage to W. E. Blades, SM 2/c. was Miss Pansy Lola Fortenberry, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. W. F. Fortenberry, of Progress, Miss.

 

Mr. Blades is the son of Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Blades, Sr., of Baton Rouge, La. After a furlough with his wife and relatives in Baton Rouge and New Orleans, he will report to the Navy Base in New Orleans.


Source: Recent Bride. (McComb, MS: Enterprise - Journal, 7 May 1945) 3; digital image, Newspapers.com: accessed March 2021.


Related Posts:



Wednesday, July 21, 2021

Forget Me Not: Jeremiah Smith, 1894 MS

 Jeremiah Smith

30 April 1821 MS – 13 May 1894 MS

Son of Jeremiah G. Smith & Joanna Dillon

Husband of Pernesia (Smith) Smith

 

My 4th great uncle



This obituary is colorful and interesting. However, I hesitate to include it in any serious research because I don to know where it originated. I found it tied to an Ancestry tree but the primary source is not explained. I have looked, unsuccessfully, on Newspapers.com for an obituary. 


 If you read this and know where it came from, please share with me.


 




 

Died at his residence May 13th, 1894, in Pike county, Mississippi. Was born April 30th, 1821. Age 73 years, 13 days. Bro. Smith joined Silver Creek church September 17th, 1837, and was dismissed by letter February 22nd, 1873, and assisted in the constitution of Bogue Chitto Church March 29th, 1873. He was a true, faithful, and consistent member of the Baptist church from the time he first joined until his death. 

 

The writer being well acquainted with him, was married to Pernesa (Pernesia) Smith July 15th, 1841. Bro. Smith left three children, twenty grandchildren and nine great – grandchildren to mourn for him. He was the subject of many sore conflicts, and bereavements, while passing through time, he had two sons die in the late civil war, far away from a father’s or mother’s care to wipe away the cold clammy sweat from their brows or to smooth the pillows under their dying head! He enjoyed a flattering degree of wordly prosperity which was swept away by the late civil war and other casualties, yet amidst all these severe dispensations of providence through which he was called to pass, he never was heard to murmur or complain, but resignedly submitted to the beneficent rulings of providence. 

 

His last illness was severe, but of short duration. He submitted to his suffering with the greatest of Christian fortitude.

 

He was a man of a happy spirit, always cheerful, earnest and honest in every pursuit of life. He was a dutiful husband and an affectionate father, a kind brother and faithful friend. He set before children an example of kindness of charity and purity; waited on the sick with untiring strength and patience, was universally loved by all who knew him. He lived as his calling demanded, his life accorded with his profession. 

 

When the sun goes out in the darkness and the last star fades away from the Heavens, Gabriel from the throne of God come down and sound his trumpet to announce the great and dreadful catastrophe of nature, to which we are all hasting. His funeral services were ably conducted by Rev. Willis J. Fortenberry. He was followed to the grave by a large concourse of relatives and friends where he was buried in the following cemetery where with each passing breeze the pines wave a perpetual requiem over his prostrate form, that now sleeps its last long sleep beneath their boughs.



 

Wednesday, July 14, 2021

Spotlight on Amanda (Brown) Patrick

  Amanda (Brown) Patrick

1813 MS - 1882 MI

Daughter of Moses Brown & Nancy Perkins

My Half 4th Great Aunt



Amanda (Brown) Patrick
Photo from Patrick Family Photograph Album, 1880's, In possession of this blogger

 

 

Amanda (Brown) Patrick was a woman who always had a houseful of her extended family members. The daughter of Moses Brown and his second wife, Nancy (Perkins) Brown; she was born 13 May 1813 in Marion County, Mississippi. She married Samuel A. Patrick who was born in 1809 in Ohio.[i]Amanda’s sister, Nancy, married Samuel’s brother, Johnson. 

            In 1850 Samuel and Amanda were living in Jefferson, Cass County, Michigan. Samuel was a farmer whose real estate was valued at $1,200. Amanda was 37 with three children at home. Two of those children were born in Ohio: James Patrick, 14 years old; and Eliza Patrick, 9 years old. Their youngest child was born in Michigan: Elma Patrick, four years old. Amanda’s widowed mother, Nancy (Perkins) Brown, and her sister, Samantha Brown, were living with the family.[ii]  

In 1850 they farm included:

50 acres of improved land

70 acres of unimproved land

$1,000 value of farm

$50 value of machinery

2 horses

3 milch cows

3 other cattle

25 sheep

8 swine

$185 value of livestock

200 bushels of wheat

300 bushels of Indian corn


            Amanda had sorrows in her life. In 1851 her daughter, ten-year-old Eliza Patrick died.[iii]This would not be the last tragedy. 

            In 1860 Samuel and Amanda had a houseful again. Daughter, Elma, was still at home and Amanda’s mother was still with them. Two unknowns were also living with them in Jefferson: James M. Reed, 14; and Resana Brown, 4.[iv]

Samuel, 60 years old, was still farming in 1870. Their property was then valued at $6,000. Daughter, Elma, and Elizabeth Patrick [daughter of Johnson Patrick and Nancy P. (Brown) Patrick], a niece, lived with them.[v]Samuel A. Patrick died in 1878. He is buried in Reames-Norton Cemetery in Cassopolis, Cass Co., Michigan.[vi]

            In 1880 Amanda was still in Cassopolis, taking in boarders to support the family. Her daughter, Elma, and grandson, Rolfe Patrick, lived with her.[vii]Amanda (Brown) Patrick died in 1882.[viii]

            Elma moved to Iowa. In 1900 she lived in Nevada, Iowa with her son, Rolfe, who was a hardware merchant. The census report showed Elma to be divorced.[ix]In 1910 Elma and her son were still living together in Nevada, Iowa. He owned the hardware store where he worked and he was married to Anna. They had a three-year-old son named Robert Patrick.[x]

         Elma A. Patrick died in 1925. She is buried with her parents and her sister in Reames -Norton Cemetery with Eliza and Samuel.[xi]

 



Samuel Patrick
1809 OH - 1878 MI

Photo from Patrick Family Photograph Album, 1880's, In possession of this  blogger



[i]Criminger, Adrianne Fortenberry. The Fortenberry families of southern Mississippi: with early records concerning the Faulkenberry/Fortenberry families of the South. Easley, SC: Southern Historical Press, 1984. Print.

[ii]1850 US Census, MI, Cass, Jefferson; ancestry.com; Samuel Patrick Family.

[iii]Find A Grave; MI, Cass, Cassopolis; Reames-Norton Cemetery; ancestry.com; Samuel A. Patrick, Amanda B. Patrick, Eliza Patrick and Elma Patrick.

[iv]1860 US Census, MI, Cass, Jefferson; ancestry.com; Samuel Patrick family.

[v]1870 US Census, MI, Cass, Jefferson; ancestry.com; Samuel Patrick family.

[vi]Find A Grave; MI, Cass, Cassopolis; Reames-Norton Cemetery; ancestry.com; Samuel A. Patrick, Amanda B. Patrick, Eliza Patrick and Elma Patrick.

[vii]1880 US Census, MI, Cass, Cassopolis; ancestry.com; Amanda Patrick family.

[viii]Find A Grave; MI, Cass, Cassopolis; Reames-Norton Cemetery; ancestry.com; Samuel A. Patrick, Amanda B. Patrick, Eliza Patrick and Elma Patrick.

[ix]1900 US Census, Iowa, Story, Nevada; ancestry.com; Elma A. Patrick family.

[x]1910 US Census, Iowa, Story, Nevada; ancestry.com; R S Patrick family.

[xi]Find A Grave; MI, Cass, Cassopolis; Reames-Norton Cemetery; ancestry.com; Samuel A. Patrick, Amanda B. Patrick, Eliza Patrick and Elma Patrick.

Sunday, July 11, 2021

Forget Me Not: Charles Brumfield, 1870 MS

At first this would seem a very brief obituary for Charles. However, in 1870 MS many people were never mentioned in the newspapers at all.

 

Charles Brumfield


1 January 1796 SSC – 29 July 1870 MS

Son of John Brumfield & Margaret Kelly

Husband of Harriet Knight

Father of 7 children


My 4th Great Uncle




Obituary. Died at his residence in Yazoo county, on 29thJuly 1870 Charles Brumfield, a native of York District, South Carolina, for the last 60 a resident of this State and for the last 40 years of Yazoo county, where he has reared a large and respectable family – a man of the strictest integrity – just and true in all the relations of life.

 

Source: Obituary. (Jackson, MS: The Semi – Weekly Clarion, 19 Aug 1870) 3; digital image, Newspapers.com: accessed March 2021.

Thursday, July 8, 2021

John Hollis' Revolutionary War Service


 John Hollis


   b 3 Dec 1751, on the Potomac River, Fairfax Co., VA

d 1836 South Carolina

       Son of Moses Hollis & Rosannah Berry Hagan

My 6x great uncle



 

            We had several Revolutionary War soldiers in our family, including Jacob Alford, Charles Brumfield, Richard Dillon and John Faulkenberry. Of all of the soldiers John Hollis may have the most complete record of service. Between 1830 and 1833, 45 pages of papers were filed to prove his eligibility for a pension. Those papers include details on his nine tours of service, his wounds, his prisoner of war parole, the battles he participated in and even the death of his horse.

 

            John Hollis was 26 years old and living on the Wateree River in Craven County, South Carolina when he served. In the winter of 1775 he was a private under Captain Samuel Boykin and Colonel Fletcher for one month.[1],[2],[3]

            His second tour of service lasted for 18 months. He was a sergeant under Colonel Thompson. This tour began in November 1775 and lasted through June 1777 and included the Battle of Sullivan’s Island on 28 June 1776.[4]This took place near Charleston, South Carolina when the British troops tried to capture the city. American troops had begun construction of a fortress built out of palmetto logs and sand to defend the island and the channel into Charleston Harbor.  The British and American forces faced each other across the channel. The British launched a naval bombardment on Fort Sullivan. Due to the nature of its construction the fort absorbed the cannonballs rather than splintering. When night fell the British withdrew.[5] John had been on the island during the battle.[6]

After this battle John Hollis was transferred to Richard Winn’s company. They marched to the Georgia, Florida border area.[7]Fort McIntosh, Georgia was a small stockade of 100 square feet on the bank of the Satilla River. About 80 patriots, led by Winn, were inside the fort. After a battle of several days the British took the fort in March 1777. Winn surrendered[8]and John Hollis became a prisoner. He was held for a short time and then received a parole and was allowed to return to his home in South Carolina where he remained until his enlistment expired.[9][10]

            An 1833 letter written by John Buchanan in support of John’s pension included the following description of John.

 

We have no revolutionary soldier whose case excites more general interest in this District than his. There is no one better entitled, there is no one who stands in greater need of his Country’s assistance. He was gifted by nature with a robust and athletic frame, a daring courage and an unbending spirit of resistance to opposition, and singularized himself throughout the war as one of the most active and efficient officers of his rank in this section of the Country. He is now reduced from easy circumstances to a state of poverty by the workings of providence…[11]

 

Starting with John Hollis’ third tour of duty he was a captain in rank. He served for one month and a half under Colonel Thomas Sumpter. Captain William Miller was absent without leave and his men were assigned to Captain Hollis’ company.[12]

His fourth tour lasted two months under Major John Odair. They were “engaged in marching through the country.”[13]It must have been during the third and fourth tours that John was a part of the Battle of Rocky Mount that took place 1 August 1780 at Rocky Mount, Lancaster County, South Carolina. Sumpter was unable to defeat the British at Rocky Mount. He had the British trapped in log cabins.[14]

 

Sumter rolled a burning wagon against the cabins. The Tories put up a white flag and was going to surrender. Just at that time, a torrential downpour appeared and the rain quickly put out the fire. The Tories withdrew their surrender request and engaged the Americans again.[15]

 

 

John Hollis was also at the Battle of Hanging Rock on 6 August 1780. Colonel Thomas Sumpter and Major William Richardson Davieled this battle. They attacked a British camp. The British had 200 men killed but the Patriots lost only 12 men in this victory for the Patriots.[16]On 15 August they were a part of the skirmish at Carey’s Fort on the west bank of the Wateree River Ferry in Kershaw County. 

 

Sumter and his men took 70 British soldiers, 150 loyalists, some horses, 44 wagons loaded with supplies, a drove of three hundred cattle and a flock of sheep. When Sumter learned of the British preparing to cross the river and retrieve there American prisoners and stores, they then made a hasty retreat up the west side of the Wateree River.[17]
 

 

John was involved in the Battle of Camden on 16 August 1780 which was a devastating defeat.[18]And on 7 October 1780 John participated in the Battle of King’s Mountain, a series of hills inside the South Carolina border. The colonists steadily fought their way up King’s Mountain and killed or captured the British troops.[19]

During his fifth tour he commanded a company[20]and was involved in the Battle at Fort Granby, which was fought May 2 – 15, 1781 in Lexington County, South Carolina. Captain Hollis was one of 400 – 500 men who served under Colonel Sumpter as he laid siege to Fort Granby, a British post. An American victory was the result of musket and cannon fire.[21]Captain Hollis said there was “a considerable body of militia at the taking of the fort at Granby, perhaps one thousand men.”[22]

During his sixth tour of two months John was under Colonel Edward Lacy in the 3rdRegiment of South Carolina Rangers. John was frequently “out scouting.”[23]

John’s next three tours were all served as captain in the Orangeburg area of South Carolina and each lasted two months. Edward Lacey was in command during his seventh tour. The “army attacked and defeated a body of Tories.” During this tour, John Stallings, a British Captain with 25 or 30 men surrendered themselves a prisoners of war. In a sudden quarrel shots were fired. Captain Hollis “received one of the balls through his left arm.”[24]

He served under Major Wise during his eighth tour. There were several regiments serving together.[25]  In his final tour in Orangeburg they oversaw the surrender of between 200 and 300 soldiers.[26]

In his recollections to the court John Hollis said, “he was never at home more than one month at a time and seldom from the year 1778 to the conclusion of peace and during all this period was in active duty as Captain of a Company when his Company’s services were required.”[27] 

 

He [John Hollis] stated that he was wounded in the right leg and his horse shot in an engagement on ‘the Juniper’, and was also wounded by a musket ball passing through his left arm on his first tour to Orangeburg …[28]

 

In 1830 Captain Elijah Hollis wrote a letter in support of John’s pension application. Under oath Elijah swore that he was the brother of John Hollis and that John was “out almost the whole time of the Revolutionary War”.  Elijah verified that everything in John’s statements about his service to the country were accurate.[29]

Captain John Hollis’s application for pension was granted. Hopefully that money made his last years of life easier. One of the documents in his file said John was supporting four daughters and four grandchildren. He died 4 November 1836 in South Carolina. 

It was the actions of Captain John Hollis and many others who fought for our freedom and gave birth to our country. 

 

May Heaven’s blessing descend on our United States,

And grant that the union may never abate;

May love, peace, and harmony ever be found,

For to go hand in hand America round.

 

From ‘On Independence’ by Jonathan Mitchell Sewall

 

 



 



[1][1]Revolutionary War Pension and Bounty Land Warrant Application Files; NARA record group 15; digital image, Flod3 (fold3.com: accessed Sept. 2020) John Hollis, SC.

[2]Roster of South Carolina Patriots in the American Revolution; digital image, Ancestry (ancestry.com: accessed Sept. 2020) Hollis.

[3]Daughters of the American Revolution, Lineage Book of the Charter Members of the DAR, Volume 15; digital image, Ancestry (ancestry.com: accessed Sept. 2020) p. 189, John Hollis. 

[4]Revolutionary War Pension and Bounty Land Warrant Application Files; NARA record group 15; digital image, Flod3 (fold3.com: accessed Sept. 2020) page 24, John Hollis, SC.

[5]The Battle of Sullivan’s Island, American Revolutionary War; digital record, (revolutionarywar.us: accessed Sept. 2020).

[6]Revolutionary War Pension and Bounty Land Warrant Application Files; NARA record group 15; digital image, Flod3 (fold3.com: accessed Sept. 2020) page 25, John Hollis, SC.

[7]Revolutionary War Pension and Bounty Land Warrant Application Files; NARA record group 15; digital image, Flod3 (fold3.com: accessed Sept. 2020) John Hollis, SC.

[8]Revolutionary War Raids & Skirmishes in 1777; digital record (myrevolutionarywar.com: accessed Sept. 2020).

[9]Revolutionary War Pension and Bounty Land Warrant Application Files; NARA record group 15; digital image, Flod3 (fold3.com: accessed Sept. 2020) page 5, John Hollis, SC.

[10]Roster of South Carolina Patriots in the American Revolution; digital image, Ancestry (ancestry.com: accessed Sept. 2020) Hollis.

[11]Revolutionary War Pension and Bounty Land Warrant Application Files; NARA record group 15; digital image, Flod3 (fold3.com: accessed Sept. 2020) page 14, John Hollis, SC.

[12]Revolutionary War Pension and Bounty Land Warrant Application Files; NARA record group 15; digital image, Flod3 (fold3.com: accessed Sept. 2020) page 25, John Hollis, SC.

[13]Revolutionary War Pension and Bounty Land Warrant Application Files; NARA record group 15; digital image, Flod3 (fold3.com: accessed Sept. 2020) John Hollis, SC.

[14]The Battle of Rocky Mount; digital record, (revolutionarywar.us: accessed Sept. 2020).

[15]The Battle of Rocky Mount; digital record, (revolutionarywar.us: accessed Sept. 2020).

[16]American Battlefield Trust. Battle of Hanging Rock; digital record (battlefields.org: accessed Sept. 2020). 

[17]Skirmish at Carey’s Fort; digital record (myrevolutionarywar.com: accessed Sept. 2020).

[18]American Battlefield Trust. Camden; digital record (battlefields.org: accessed Sept. 2020).

[19]American Battlefield Trust. King’s Mountain; digital record (battlefields.org: accessed Sept. 2020).

[20]Revolutionary War Pension and Bounty Land Warrant Application Files; NARA record group 15; digital image, Flod3 (fold3.com: accessed Sept. 2020) John Hollis, SC.

[21]The Siege at Fort Granby; digital record, (revolutionarywar.us: accessed Sept. 2020).

[22]Revolutionary War Pension and Bounty Land Warrant Application Files; NARA record group 15; digital image, Flod3 (fold3.com: accessed Sept. 2020) page 26, John Hollis, SC.

[23]Revolutionary War Pension and Bounty Land Warrant Application Files; NARA record group 15; digital image, Flod3 (fold3.com: accessed Sept. 2020) page 22, John Hollis, SC.

[24]Revolutionary War Pension and Bounty Land Warrant Application Files; NARA record group 15; digital image, Flod3 (fold3.com: accessed Sept. 2020) page 27, John Hollis, SC.

[25]Revolutionary War Pension and Bounty Land Warrant Application Files; NARA record group 15; digital image, Flod3 (fold3.com: accessed Sept. 2020) John Hollis, SC.

[26]Revolutionary War Pension and Bounty Land Warrant Application Files; NARA record group 15; digital image, Flod3 (fold3.com: accessed Sept. 2020) page 27, John Hollis, SC.

[27]Revolutionary War Pension and Bounty Land Warrant Application Files; NARA record group 15; digital image, Flod3 (fold3.com: accessed Sept. 2020) John Hollis, SC.

[28]Revolutionary War Pension and Bounty Land Warrant Application Files; NARA record group 15; digital image, Flod3 (fold3.com: accessed Sept. 2020) page 9, John Hollis, SC.

[29]Revolutionary War Pension and Bounty Land Warrant Application Files; NARA record group 15; digital image, Flod3 (fold3.com: accessed Sept. 2020) page 7, John Hollis, SC.

Friday, July 2, 2021

Our Family came Together During Times of War: The Revolution


There were times when the branches of our family came together. Some of those occasions were routine like having business at a courthouse or attending church or a town meeting together. We can imagine them talking as they met at a sawmill, a general store or while helping each other on their farms. Our families came together in everyday interactions and special occasions, often without any record of those interactions. We do have records of our families serving and fighting together in times of war.



Three of our family members served under the famous Swamp Fox.


            Francis Marion, the legendary ‘Swamp Fox’ was a hero of the Revolutionary War and the commander of at least three of our family members. 

With the American army in retreat, things looked bad in South Carolina. Marion took command of a militia and had his first military success that August, when he led 50 men in a raid against the British. Hiding in dense foliage, the unit attacked an enemy encampment from behind and rescued 150 American prisoners. Though often outnumbered, Marion's militia would continue to use guerilla tactics to surprise enemy regiments, with great success. Because the British never knew where Marion was or where he might strike, they had to divide their forces, weakening them. By needling the enemy and inspiring patriotism among the locals, Busick says, Marion "helped make South Carolina an inhospitable place for the British. Marion and his followers played the role of David to the British Goliath." In November of 1780, Marion earned the nickname he's remembered by today. British Lieutenant Colonel Banastre Tarleton, informed of Marion's whereabouts by an escaped prisoner, chased the American militia for seven hours, covering some 26 miles. Marion escaped into a swamp, and Tarleton gave up, cursing, "As for this damned old fox, the Devil himself could not catch him." The story got around, and soon the locals—who loathed the British occupation—were cheering the Swamp Fox. [Crawford, Amy. The Swamp Fox; digital record, Smithsonian Magazine (smithsonianmag.com: accessed Feb 2021).

 

Jacob Ott II

14 Aug 1755 Orangeburg, SC - 12 Sep 1820 Orangeburg, SC

My 5th Great Grandfather

Jacob was one of the many men who fought for our independence. During the Revolutionary War Jacob both gave supplies to troops and served during the war for freedom. In 1780, 1781 and 1783 Jacob gave cattle, corn and hogs to the South Carolina Militia. In 1781 he gave the soldiers 1,200 pounds of beef. After the wars end Jacob was compensated by the national Treasury for those supplies. In 1783 he was given Four Pounds, Twelve Shillings and Two Pence. Jacob was a Captain in General Francis Marion’s Brigade, serving from 1781 to 1782.[1],[2],[3],[4]




John Brumfield

27 Jun 1750 VA - 6 May 1845 LA

Son of John Watson Brumfield & Elizabeth

My 6th Great Uncle


John was a Revolutionary War soldier who served through several years of the war, participated in numerous battles and acted as a spy. Details of his time in the service of our country are available to us because of the pension request he filed. That pension file contains over fifty pages of information. He enlisted in 1775 in the light horse Regiment under Captain Edward Richardson, Colonel Thompson and General Richardson in which he served as a private for six months. He later served under Francis Marion. John Brumfield wrote, “His envoy was small, not more than thirty or forty men. I joined him as a volunteer and served with him as a Sergeant.” 

 

I was always with General Marion from a short time after the Surrender of Charleston to Sir Clinton until was concluded on 30thof November 1782 and to the best of my recollection it was not less than three years and in all that time I was not employed in no civil pursuit, we were always in the field and the camp was my home; when I went to see my family I hide it so never slept in my home. Times were very dangerous, never had but short time at home...I have served about all the time from 1775 to 1782. All during the war I was all the time within the boundaries of the State of South Carolina. I went all about it after the British and after the Tories. I was in a great number of engagements for Marion was always at it.[5]   

 

                 Read more details of John's service in the Related Posts link below.


            According to military records viewed at fold3.com, Jacob Ott II and John Brumfield served under Marion at the same time. They were distantly related.  Another relative, William Hollis,  also served under Marion.



William Hollis

b c 1748 VA

Son of Moses Hollis & Rosannah Berry Hagan

My 6th great uncle


William enlisted in May 1776. At various times he served under General Francis Marion, Colonel Thomson and General Sumpter. Both William and his brother, John Hollis, participated in the Battle of Sullivan’s Island on 28 June 1776. Both brothers were also at the Battle at King’s Mountain on 7 October 1780. Both were victories for the patriots.[6]

The Battle at Cowpens was on 17 January 1781 when the British had 800 troops killed, wounded or captured and the patriots had less than 100 casualties. The victory was a boost to the morale of the patriots. William was a part of that encounter with the British.[7],[8]

William said he was “under the Command of Gen. Marion on the Pee Dee.”[9]


 Afterwards, he volunteered on many occasions. He was in the Battle at Cowpens and was wounded once. He was with Colonel Cleveland on the Broad River and General Marion on the Pee Dee River.[10]

 

Like his brother, William’s last area of service was in Orangeburg. William wrote that he “was wounded with a sword near Orangeburg.”[11]


These three soldiers served under Francis Marion and it appears their service overlapped. Did they know they were distant relatives? Did they support each other during their service? We can only speculate as to those details. We had others who fought in the war, but I have found no evidence of them serving together. I enjoy knowing that our family was there, strengthening the beginning of our marvelous country. 

 


Related Posts:



[1]South Carolina Department of Archives and History. Account Audited of Claims Growing Out of the American Revolution; Series S108092, Reel 113, frame 534; digital image (scdah.sc.gov: accessed March 2019) Jacob Ott, Orangeburgh.

[2]Daughters of the American Revolution, Ancestor Record, Ancestor #A084856, Jacob Ott; digital image, DAR (dar.org: accessed February 2019).

[3]The American Revolution in South Carolina, The Orangeburg District Regiment Militia; digital image (carolana.com: accessed February 2019) Jacob Ott, Captain.

[4]Wallis, Ruth Ott. Descendants of Jacob Ott of South Carolina and Louisiana(Bogalusa, LA: Privately printed, 1967) 3 – 4.

[5]NARA, The Revolutionary War Pension and Bounty Land Warrant Application Files; Fold 3(fold3.com: accessed June 2017) 25; John Brumfield.

[6]Revolutionary War Pension and Bounty Land Warrant Application Files; NARA record group 15; digital image, Flod3 (fold3.com: accessed Sept. 2020) William Hollis.

[7]Revolutionary War Pension and Bounty Land Warrant Application Files; NARA record group 15; digital image, Flod3 (fold3.com: accessed Sept. 2020) William Hollis.

[8]Roster of South Carolina Patriots in the American Revolution; digital image, Ancestry (ancestry.com: accessed Sept. 2020).

[9]Revolutionary War Pension and Bounty Land Warrant Application Files; NARA record group 15; digital image, Flod3 (fold3.com: accessed Sept. 2020) William Hollis.

[10]Roster of South Carolina Patriots in the American Revolution; digital image, Ancestry (ancestry.com: accessed Sept. 2020).

[11]Revolutionary War Pension and Bounty Land Warrant Application Files; NARA record group 15; digital image, Flod3 (fold3.com: accessed Sept. 2020) William Hollis.