Joseph Cason, Deceased 1835, and His Descendants


Book Description

Joseph Cason (ca. 1776-1835) was probably born in North Carolina. Rebecca Miller (ca. 1773-1835) was born in Laurens County, South Carolina, the daughter of John and Mary Anderson Miller. They were married in Georgia, close to the Mississippi border, before 1799. They had ten children, ca. 1798-ca. 1820. The family was living in North Carolina for the birth of their oldest child, in Abbeyville District, South Carolina, by 1800 and in Tennessee by 1812. Joseph and Rebecca Cason died in a cholera epidemic in Wilson County, Tennessee. Descendants lived in Tennessee, Texas, Oklahoma, and elsewhere.




David Young and Sarah Phillips Descendants, Wilson County, Tennessee, 1796-1994


Book Description

David Young was born Jan. 6, 1774. He married Sarah "Sally" Phillips on Dec. 9, 1796 in Davidson County, Tennessee. She was born Sept. 9, 1776 in North Carolina and died after 1840. David married second Mary "Polly" Petway before 1850. She was born ca. 1780 in Virginia. David died April 13, 1856 in Wilson County, Tennessee. David and Sarah were the parents of fourteen children all born in Wilson Co. They are: James, Elizabeth "Betsy or Betty", Delphy, Joseph, Doke, Carson, David Jr., Sarah "Sally", Alexander S., Alpha, Mary "Polly", Louisiana "Lucy Ann", and Frances "Fanny". Descendants live in Tennessee, Texas, Arkansas, Mississippi, Ohio, California, New York and elsewhere and include among many others the names of Beard, Beasley, Bryan, Cooksey, Huddleston, Puryear, Quarles, Turner, etc.




Families in Crisis in the Old South


Book Description

In the antebellum South, divorce was an explosive issue. As one lawmaker put it, divorce was to be viewed as a form of "madness," and as another asserted, divorce reduced communities to the "lowest ebb of degeneracy." How was it that in this climate, the number of divorces rose steadily during the antebellum era? In Families in Crisis in the Old South, Loren Schweninger uses previously unexplored records to argue that the difficulties these divorcing families faced reveal much about the reality of life in a slave-holding society as well as the myriad difficulties confronted by white southern families who chose not to divorce. Basing his argument on almost 800 divorce cases from the southern United States, Schweninger explores the impact of divorce and separation on white families and on the enslaved and provides insights on issues including domestic violence, interracial adultery, alcoholism, insanity, and property relations. He examines how divorce and separation laws changed, how married women's property rights expanded, how definitions of inhuman treatment of wives evolved, and how these divorces challenged conventional mores.







Cartwrights of the Southern United States


Book Description

Matthew Cartwright (born ca. 1634-1638) immigrated to Maryland from Holland. He married Sarah of Mary's County, Maryland and they were the parents of five children: John, Matthew, Thomas, Peter and Joanna.




Discovering Chandler Lines, 1475-1944, in Tennessee Death Records, 1908-1944


Book Description

"Only lines which seem to be fairly well supported by Death Certificates, 1820-1880, 1900, 1920 U.S. censuses, or prior research of the author, are shown here. Some are very short -- no further connections were found. A few are long, being supported by much research."--Page 75.







The Dallas Quarterly


Book Description