Sarah Anne JACKSON DEATHERAGE and William Frank ELLIS descendants
Wednesday October 25th 2006, 09:40:06 pm
Filed under: ellis, roane tennessee genealogy, records repository

A brief biography of Sarah Anne “Sally” (nee JACKSON) DEATHERAGE ELLIS - wife of William Frank ELLIS of Roane County, Tennessee - and other members of her family can be inferred from her son William Deatherage’s biography in the Arkansas Goodspeed (Fulton County, pp 280-281):

William DEATHERAGE, one of the foremost farmers of Mount Calm Township, on Bennett River, owes his nativity to Tennessee, where he was born in 1842. His father, A. J. DEATHERAGE [Andrew Jackson DEATHERAGE], was born in Tennessee, about 1811, and died in Roane County, of that State, in 1847. The latter was married in his native State to Miss Sarah JACKSON, also a native of Tennessee, born about 1822. Three children were the result of this union, William being the eldest. One was drowned in the Tennessee River, by the overturning of a skiff, when only seven years of age, and Martha, became the wife of O. B. FULLER, and is now living in Tennessee. Mrs. DEATHERAGE was married the second time, in 1850, to W. F. ELLIS, [William Frank ELLIS] and by this union became the mother of eight children, six daughters and two sons: Sarah (deceased), Margaret (deceased), Minerva, wife of George JONES, and now living in Tennessee; Nancy and Becky (twins), were married to twin brothers, Samuel and Elijah KELON [KEYLON], and live in Tennessee; Caleb, Franklin, and Mary, at home with her mother. A. J. DEATHERAGE was a major in the United States army when the Indians were moved to Indian Territory. William DEATHERAGE commenced for himself in life by joining the Confederate army, Company A, Twenty-sixth Tennessee Infantry Regiment, on the 15th of June, 1861, and served about four years. He participated in sixteen hard-fought battles, the principal ones being Fort Donelson, Murfreesboro, Chickamauga, Missionary Ridge, Taylor Ridge Gap, Swamp Creek, Resaca, New Hope, Marietta, Jonesboro, Columbia, Franklin, Nashville; was with Forrest at Murfreesboro the second time, Columbia. Bentonville, Chickasaw Mountain, etc. He surrendered on the 5th of April, 1865, at Greensboro, N. C., after which Mr. DEATHERAGE returned to Greeneville, Tenn., and from thence home, where he commenced farming. He started out after the war with nothing but a Confederate suit of clothes, with forty-eight bullet holes in it. He was married, May 28, 1868. to Miss Rebecca HALL, of Tennessee, and in the fall of the following year he came to Fulton County, and settled on Bennett’s Bayou, and there remained three years. In 1873 he moved to his present fine property. consisting [p.281] of 267 acres, with 100 acres improved. He has good buildings, and a comfortable home. As he has had but little help since commencing for himself, he is the architect of his own fortune. To his marriage were born eleven children, eight living at present: Susan, born October 12, 1870; E. J., born February 9, 1872; G. W., born on the 3d of September, 1874; Lydia M., born on the 8th of September, 1876; Sarah A., born on the 5th of December, 1878; W. S., born on the 5th of March, 1880; James K. P., born on the 12th of October, 1885, and Nancy, born on the 11th of June, 1888. Mr. DEATHERAGE has been justice of the peace of his township for one term. He is a member of the Masonic fraternity, County Line Lodge No. 373, and in his political opinions is with the Democrats. Mrs. DEATHERAGE is the daughter of Elijah and Lydia HALL, who were the parents of eleven children, the following living: Samuel, Elisha, Mollie, Elijah, Lydia, Thomas, Rebecca D. and J. K. P.

Notes:

  • W.F. ELLIS was William Frank ELLIS (abt 1829-1920), second huband of Sarah JACKSON DEATHERAGE ELLIS. He was a son of Caleb “Cale” ELLIS, Sr (1802-1859) and Hannah C. HANKINS (1813-aft 1860). Both his parents and his paternal grandparents - Francis ELLIS and Sarah “Sally” BREEDLOVE - were early 19th century Roane County, Tennessee settlers.
  • An Andrew J. DEATHERAGE (DETHEREDGE) is among those appearing on Roane County, Tennessee’s Cherokee removal rolls for Peak’s Company in Lindsay’s Regiment of the Tennessee Mounted Volunteers. | see the rolls on this Roane County Heritage Commission web page | For more documentation of A.J. DEATHERAGE, see Richard Tobin’s source citations page for him | here |.
  • Photographs of Elijah and Lydia (SCOTT) HALL, the parents of William DEATHERAGE’s wife Rebecca HALL, can be viewed on the Dixie Rose webpages | here |.


margaret abbey (GILES) BENNECKER obituary
Monday March 06th 2006, 05:24:46 pm
Filed under: vital records, ellis, giles, roane tennessee genealogy, records repository

Margaret Abbey Bennecker
 

BENNECKER, MARGARET ABBEY - age 86 of Harriman [Tennessee] passed away Friday March 3, 2006 at Parkwest Medical Center in Knoxville. She was a member of the Harriman United Methodist Church in Harriman, member of Laurel Chapter # 22 of the O.E.S.. Preceded in death by her parents, William M. & Cora P. Ellis Giles, 2 sisters & 8 brothers. Survivors: husband, E. Barton Bennecker of Harriman; daughters, Lynnette & husband Lester Easter of Kingston, Toni Cook of Harriman, Phyllis & husband Larry Vice of Vienna, Va.; grandchildren, Lisa, Lori, Lance & wife Jody Easter all of Kingston, Amy & husband Eric Hall of Oakdale, Graham & Mindy Vice of Vienna, Va.; great grandchildren, Chelsea Sexton & Jordan Hall of Oakdale, Landon Easter of Kingston. Funeral 8:00 PM Saturday March 4, 2006 at Kyker Funeral Home Chapel, Harriman, Rev. Mason Goodman officiating. Interment 2:00 PM Sunday in Roane Memorial Gardens. The family will receive friends from 6 to 8 PM Saturday at Kyker Funeral Home, Harriman. www.kykerfuneralhome.com

Published in the Knoxville News Sentinel on 3/4/2006.



roane county tn records dates and searching
Monday April 25th 2005, 08:18:18 am
Filed under: ellis, records repository


signature of mary (haggard) ellis, 16 Jan 1853 - Roane Co, TN- 1909, Roane Co, TN -
opens new window to companion rootseb site
 

dates to keep in mind when looking for roane county, tennessee records

first, there was the district of washington, north carolina

then:

1777 washington county, nc - roughly encompassed most of the present state of tennessee

1779 partition of washington co to form sullivan co

1783 partitition of washington co to form greene co

1786 sullivan, nc formed hawkins co

1790 present tennessee ceded to us government as part of the territory of the u.s. south of the ohio

11 jun 1792 knox county and jefferson county created from greene and hawkins co

1796 tennessee statehood

1801 knox co partitioned to form roane county and anderson county

abt 1794 white settlement of what would become roane co, tn

1794-1801 roane co records in knox co

♦ ♦ main roane county, tn adjustments after it became a separate county ♦ ♦

1807 roane county partitioned to form morgan co

1850 roane county partititioned to form part of cumberland co

1870 roane co partitioned to form part of loudon county

more than 20 boundary adjustments for roane county, tennessee since its founding

source: [inferred from:] roberts, snyder. roots of roane county tn 1792- . roane county publishing co. p.o. box 610, 204 franklin street, kingston, tn 37763. 1981. pp 62-63.