Notes
Note N4143
Index
HUBBARD -- At his residence in Cedar township, Boone county, Mo. at 4 o'clock a.m. Saturday, January 27, 1883, Mr. Eusebus Hubbard, in his 89th year of his age. He was born in Madison county Ky., July 10, 1794 and in 1800 In his 6th year, came to Missouri with his father's family and settled in Florisant Valley, St. Louis county, and in 1810 moved to what is now Howard county and settled in Cooper's bottom. The British and Indian war of that period greatly disturbed the new settlement and rendered additional defenses against the hostilities of the Indians necessary. Therefore among stockade forts erected was Fort Hempstead named in honor of Edward Hempstead, who in November 1812 was elected the first territorial delegate to congress from Missouri. It was situated about one mile west of Old Franklin and Mr. Hubbard in 1813 aided in building it and his father's family with the families of other pioneers lived in it until peace was conquered and it was safe to reside elsewhere. In 1814 he returned to St. Louis county and lived there near Florrisant till the fall of 1818. In 1816 he married Miss Ann Patterson of St. Louis county a lady who shared with him the privations, vicissitudes and perils of pioneer life, and died in Boone county, Mo. in her 72nd year on Sept. 12, 1873. In the fall of 1818; three years before the admission of Missouri into the Union and two years before the organization of Boone county, Mr. Hubbard entered the land now known as the Lewis M. Woolfolk farm five miles southeast of Columbia on the Ashland turnpike, and lived there for 15 years, till 1833, when he entered the land now constituting his farm and on which he has ever since resided. Returning to the county in 1818, sixty- five years ago he has not since been out of the county and in twenty five years past has not visited Columbia but a single time, and that was in 1871. On Sunday last his remains were interred at Bonne Femme church after a funeral sermon by Rev. R. F. Babb of this place.--2 Feb 1883, Columbia (MO) Statesman
Notes
Note N4144
Index
Alternate birthplace is Henry county, VA, per Find-a-grave.
Alternate date of death is 15 Aug 1840, per Find-a-grave.
Notes
Note N4145
Index
Alternate birth place is Pennsylvania, per Find-a-grave.
Notes
Note N4146
Index
Alternate birth data 1782, Russell county, Virginia, per Find-a-grave.
"Died, at his residence, in Russell county, Va., on the 2d inst., ARCHER JESSEE, Sen., in his 87th year."--17 Oct 1862, The Abingdon (VA) Virginian.
"Notice to Tax-Payers. I am now ready to receive all the Taxes due for the year 1863, in the 67th Distgrict, composed of the counties of Russell and Buchanan, and for that purpose, will attend at the following places at the times here specified: .....Friday, June 3d, at Mrs. Archer Jessee's Mill....Thomas H Garrett, Tax Collector for Dist. No. 67"--27 May 1864, The Abingdon (VA) Virginian
Notes
Note N4147
Index
Alternate birth date is 6 Jan 1691 per Find-a-grave
Notes
Note N4148
Index
"Alta A. J. Conner Mrs. Alta Amy Jones Conner, 63, prominent musician, died at the home of a daughter, Rachel O. Conner, 823 First avenue, Tuesday at 5:30 a.m. of coronary occlusion. A resident of Sedan, Kan., she had been visiting with her daughter when she died.
Mrs. Conner was born near Sedan, Kan., February 18, 1880. In Sedan she was active in civic affairs and a member of Coterie, a study group. She was pianist for the Presbyterian church at Sedan.
Surviving are her husband, Charles Conner, Sedan, to whom she was married in 1903; the following sons and daughters, Mrs. Edward H. Riggs, Wichita, Kan., Miss Lilian Conner, Sedan, Miss Rachel Conner, Salt Lake City, John Randolph Conner, seaman second class, stationed at Livermore, Cal., three grandchildren, two sisters, Mrs. J. H. Colyar, Copperton and Mrs. Roy Sharpless, Sedan, and a brother, O.C. Jones, Copperton."--20 Oct 1943, Salt Lake (UT) Telegram
Notes
Note N4149
Index
Alternate birthplace is Buncomb county, NC
"By 1840, John and his family had settled in Union Co in the Choestoe area living next door to his son-in-law, Elias Berry, who married John's eldest daughter, Sarah. His 1st wife was Malissa Cain.
Family history relates that after his first's wife death, John went back to North Carolina and married his second wife, a full-blooded Cherokee names Susan. Records show that John Johnson did marry a Susannah Cloninger on 10/6/1841 in Union Co. but this Susan was not of Indian heritage based on Cloninger history of North Carolina. When John died, he was buried on the top of the hill between the Johnson and the Berry farms.
He was married twice: 1)Malissa Cain about 1802 in North Carolina, 2)Susannah Cloninger on Oct. 6, 1841 in Union County, GA."--Find-a-grave