Shirley Juanita Brown Adair
Author
Publisher
S.B. Adair
Pub. Date
[1995], c1993
Edition
[Rev.]
Physical Desc
vi, 258 [i.e. 330] p. : ill., coat of arms, facsims, geneal. table, maps, ports.
Language
English
Description
Benjamin Brackett (ca. 1740-1810) was living at or near Charleston, South Carolina, 1767-1770. By 1772, he was living in Old Tyron County, North Carolina. He was in Rutherford County, North Carolina, by 1800 and had moved to Burke County, North Carolina, by 1805. He married twice and was the father of at least seven children. He died before July 1810. Descendants and relatives lived in North Carolina, Kentucky, Oklahoma, Texas, Georgia, California,...
Author
Publisher
S. Adair
Pub. Date
1995
Physical Desc
141 p. : ill.
Language
English
Formats
Description
Luevina Mae Beauchamp was born in Oklahoma Indian Territory in 1905. She married twice, to Oscar Adair, who was the father of her four children, and later to Alfred Bowles. She died in Oklahoma in 1990. Information on her ancestral lines who moved west from several southern states is included in this volume. Descendants and relativers lived in Kentucky, Texas, Indiana, Oklahoma, Oregon, Louisiana, Kansas, Missouri, Illinois and elsewhere.
Author
Publisher
S. Adair
Pub. Date
1995
Physical Desc
Also available on microfilm and digital images.
Language
English
Formats
Description
Richard Evans Wiley Thompson was born in Alabama in 1856. He married twice, to Susan Sellers and later Martha Emiline Clark. He was the father of thirteen children. Information on his ancestry, descendants and his life is given in this volume. Descendants now life in Oklahoma, Texas, and elsewhere.
Includes Thompson, Adair, Clark, Carroll, Sellers, Lawson, Beauchamp, Casey, and families.
Author
Publisher
S.B. Adair
Pub. Date
c1995
Edition
limited ed
Physical Desc
[5], 156, [5] p. : geneal. tables, ill., maps, ports.
Language
English
Description
"The author's primary purpose is to explore connections of Adair families that came to America before the Revolution and then to follow their migration westward to Tennessee, Mississippi, Texas, and Indian Territory."--Pref.