A History of Four Jackson Purchase Families


Book Description

Various counties in Kentucky and Tennessee emerged from land included in Jackson's Purchase Treaty with the Chickasaw Indians of 1818. Isham Browder (1762-1830) moved from Virginia to Kentucky. Descendants listed chiefly lived in Kentucky and Tennessee.










The Quarterly


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Subject Catalog


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Our Nunnally/Nunley Family


Book Description

Richard Nunnally was among the earliest English settlers into America and found his way into Virginia where he married in about 1666. Descendants lived mostly in the South but others live in other parts of the United States. Thomas Ferrill was born about 1728 in North Carolina and his descendants lived mostly in the South.




Kentucky Ancestors


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The Civil War in the Jackson Purchase, 1861-1862


Book Description

The Jackson Purchase is the far western section of Kentucky. In 1861, it was a rich agricultural and iron producing region. It also controlled the mouths of the Ohio, Cumberland, and Tennessee rivers, as well as that middle stretch of the mighty Mississippi where it transitions from a northern to a southern river. The Purchase was the riverine gateway to the Deep South. The obvious military importance of the region caused both the Federal and Confederate governments to pour material resources and military talent into the Purchase in an effort to hold it and defend it against the incursions of their enemies. The Jackson Purchase was the Civil War training ground of such army officers as U.S. Grant, C.F. Smith, Leonidas Polk, Lloyd Tilghman, and the navy's own Andrew H. Foote, commander of the Federal "Brown Water Navy." Four major amphibious battles were fought for control of the area: Columbus-Belmont, Fort Henry, Fort Donelson, and Island Number Ten. This book tells the story of the bloody years 1861 and 1862 and the tense, contested Union occupation that followed in the region known as "The South Carolina of Kentucky."