Re: Fisher Lenoir & Robert Crawley Lenoir
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In reply to:
Fisher Lenoir & Robert Crawley Lenoir
Robert Baldwin 2/23/99
Bob, I am sure that you will catch the typo, you do mean Fisher Lenoir, b. ca. 1760 rather than 1860, do you not??
Fisher and May Lenoir had four known children.
1. Annie, b. ca. 1778, m. Mr. Coleman and had 3 children, Harriet and two sons, names unknown. Annie and Mr. Coleman, after their marriage are the ones who brought the Lenoir siblings to Tn.
1. Annie, b. ca. 1778, m. Mr. Coleman and had 3 children, Harriet and two sons, names unknown. Annie and Mr. Coleman, after their marriage are the ones who brought the Lenoir siblings to Tn.
2. Frances Fisher Lenoir.
3. William Lenoir, b. ca. 1782, who left Tn. when a very young man and went to Ky. Nothing more known of him.
3. William Lenoir, b. ca. 1782, who left Tn. when a very young man and went to Ky. Nothing more known of him.
4. John Peterson Lenoir, b. ca. 1784, and according to Henry Eustace McCulloch he married a Miss Le Grand and had one daughter Elizabeth, but according to a deed of gift from Drury Vaughan to his daughter Nancy Vaughan Lenoir and her three children, Elizabeth, Alexander and John P.H. Lenoir, dated 10 July 1815, in Rutherford Co, Tn, the wife of John Peterson Lenoir was Nancy Vaughan.
4. John Peterson Lenoir, b. ca. 1784, and according to Henry Eustace McCulloch he married a Miss Le Grand and had one daughter Elizabeth, but according to a deed of gift from Drury Vaughan to his daughter Nancy Vaughan Lenoir and her three children, Elizabeth, Alexander and John P.H. Lenoir, dated 10 July 1815, in Rutherford Co, Tn, the wife of John Peterson Lenoir was Nancy Vaughan.Henry Eustace McCulloch wrote the information about Miss Le Grand in 1892 when he was quite elderly and I have found several things that he got mixed up. Some of the mistakes were probable made by the original transcriber of this letter (which no longer exists), who simple did not know who was who and wrote what they thought the letters were.
Henry Eustace McCulloch wrote the information about Miss Le Grand in 1892 when he was quite elderly and I have found several things that he got mixed up. Some of the mistakes were probable made by the original transcriber of this letter (which no longer exists), who simple did not know who was who and wrote what they thought the letters were.Of John Peterson Lenoir he wrote, My mothers brother (John Peterson LeNoir) lived with my father since boyhood and continued to do so after his marriage and when the war of 1812 broke, out, volunteered in that service, was a lieutenant in the U.S. volunteer army and while in command of a party of skirmishers on the night of the 23rd of December before the battle of the 8th of January he received a flesh wound in the thigh, and although his surgeon insisted against it he continued on duty until after the battle of the 8th of January when mortification took place from which he died and was buried at New Orleans, La. A year or so after his death his widow married against my mother's will and my mother prevailed on her to give her the child (Elizabeth) who grew up to be a beautiful woman and married Joseph Page, settled in Counttena, Alabama where he died and left her with two daughters, and we have known nothing of them for several years.
Of John Peterson Lenoir he wrote, My mothers brother (John Peterson LeNoir) lived with my father since boyhood and continued to do so after his marriage and when the war of 1812 broke, out, volunteered in that service, was a lieutenant in the U.S. volunteer army and while in command of a party of skirmishers on the night of the 23rd of December before the battle of the 8th of January he received a flesh wound in the thigh, and although his surgeon insisted against it he continued on duty until after the battle of the 8th of January when mortification took place from which he died and was buried at New Orleans, La. A year or so after his death his widow married against my mother's will and my mother prevailed on her to give her the child (Elizabeth) who grew up to be a beautiful woman and married Joseph Page, settled in Counttena, Alabama where he died and left her with two daughters, and we have known nothing of them for several years.Henry E. wrote nothing of the two sons she also had.
Henry E. wrote nothing of the two sons she also had.There certainly needs to be a lot more research done on this LeNoir family.More Replies:
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Re: Fisher Lenoir & Robert Crawley Lenoir
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Re: Fisher Lenoir & Robert Crawley Lenoir
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Re: Fisher Lenoir & Robert Crawley Lenoir
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Morning Crawley, mother of 10 children
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Re: Morning Crawley, mother of 10 children
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Re: Morning Crawley, mother of 10 children
Pauline Mitchell Pierce 4/28/99
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Re: Morning Crawley, mother of 10 children
Elaine Blackman 4/29/99
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Re: Morning Crawley, mother of 10 children
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Re: Morning Crawley, mother of 10 children
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Re: Morning Crawley, mother of 10 children
Pauline Mitchell Pierce 7/11/99
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LENOIR, Thomas, b 5 May 1701 NY
Winnie Gilreath Westbury 7/04/07
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Re: Morning Crawley, mother of 10 children
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Morning Crawley, mother of 10 children
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Re: Fisher Lenoir & Robert Crawley Lenoir
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Re: Fisher Lenoir & Robert Crawley Lenoir