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Re: william rich b nov. 1 1802 no carolina
Posted by: lynn dabbah Date: April 10, 2000 at 11:20:13
In Reply to: Re: william rich b nov. 1 1802 no carolina by Sue Kenfield of 3136

dear sue, sorry it has taken so long to respond. the following is a very long history of the hampton family. i am writting to you from los angeles calif. enjoy.
Members of the Hampton family
Name       Birth date       Death date
Channie Hall       Abt. 1807       Abt. 1860
Mac Halloway              
Glenn Hamilton              
Guy Hamilton              
James Buckner Hamilton       Abt. 1860       Abt. 1895
Mabel Hamilton              
Ray Hamilton              
Ward Hamilton              
Hampton              
Ahab Hampton       Abt. 1760       Bef. 1820
Elizabeth Hampton              
Ezekiel Hampton       Abt. 1762       
George W. Hampton              
Hosea Hampton       Abt. 1772       
Jedidah Jane Hampton       Abt. 1770       
Job Hampton              
Job Hampton              
Lent Hampton              
Mary Hampton              
Micajah Hampton              
Micajah Hampton       WFT Est. Bef. 1729       WFT Est. Bef. 1783
Samuel Hampton              
Wade Hampton              
William Hampton              
Hannah              
Martha Hannah              
Hardcastle              
Abigail Harmon              
Harriet              
J. D. Harris              
Ruth Harris              
Thomas Harris              
Jimmy Harrison              
Kerry Ray Harrison              
Rena Harrison              
Samuel Harrison              
Sheila Harrison              
Tammy Harrison              
Agnes Harvey              11 Sep 1747
Thomas Harvey              
Jerry Hatfield              
Linda Hatfield              
Luther J. Hatfield       24 Oct 1925       08 Apr 1990
Theresa Hatfield              
Elma Hathaway              
Malinda Hawkins              
Dale Hayes       27 Mar 1948       
Ramona Hayes       18 Aug 1930       
Sabrina Denise Hayes       25 Jul 1969       

The very long History of Lent Hampton’s family
**Contains many spelling errors I chose not to correct as I was not sure of the meaning. I think this was translated from French**
William Elmore Mullins, born 1823 in N.C.; died August 23, 1889 in Mo.. He was the son of 60. Elijah Mullins and 61. Mary. He married 31. Jane Copeland October 22, 1846 in Saline County, Mo.. 31. Jane Copeland, born May 22, 1830 in Probably in Saline County, Mo.; died February 06, 1912 in Mo.. She was the daughter of 62. John Copeland and 63. Mary Gwinn.

Notes for William Elmore Mullins:
'The des Moulins family were, of course, Huguenots. Smiles, in his work on the Huguenot emigration to England and Ireland, describes family as "an ancient and noble family of the Isle de I7rance." The family of Manakin, Virginia, bore arms of the Paris des Moulins "Gules a la croix recercelee d'or." This family, like thousands of Protestant families, fled from the Kingdom of France following the Edict of Nantes by Louis XIV in October 1685.

'During the summer of 1700 "Abraham Moulin et sa femme" ''Jaques Broret, sa femme et deux en fants'' were among the Huguenot onins who immigrated to Virginia aboard "The Mary and Ann," from Gravesend and arriving at James City 12 August 1700. Led by the quis Oliver de la Muse and his assistant, Charles de Sailly, the company tied the well-known Huguenot community named Manakintowne Virginia. Abraham Moulin remained at Manakin until shortly before 1707, when he first purchased land in Perquimans County, North
ttl; descendants in America are in lineage from his three sons by Broret these being Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, all born at Virginia, between 1700 and 1706. (I) During the years following his immigration to the Colony of then to Perquimans County, North Carolina, the spelling of the surname the immigrant ancestor appears in the documents as Moulin-M Moulins and finally Mullen. By the second generation, with two or three ceptions, the documented

MULLEN Thomas
b. abt. 1720 Fcrquimans Co., N.C. d. 1786 Perquimans Co., N.C.

MULLEN Thomas b. 19 July 1741 Albermarle Parish, Surry Co., Virginia d. 4 March 1832
Harrison Co., Kentucky

William MULLEN b. IS June 1781 Loudon Co., Virginia d. 5 June 1855 Harrison Co., Kentucky m. 4 October 1SOS
Bourbon Co., Kentucky Y1I J.

MULLEN Barzilla abt. 7 June 1807 Warrison Co., Kentucky d. 28 March 1854 Harrison Co., Kentucky m. 24 March 1828 Harrison Co., Kentucky

Thomas Jefferson MULLEN b. 25 November 1834 Harrison Co., Kentucky d. 5 August 1871 Harrison Co., Kentucky m. 5 November 1863 Ilarrison Co., Kentucky

Sarah Thomas MULLEN b. 28 November 1866 Harrison Co., Kentucky d. 14 January 1958
Harrison Co., Kentucky m. 13 February 1889 Harrison Co., Kentucky

Emmelt Moore WAITS b. II January 1891 Harrison Co., Kentucky d. 6 October 1941 Indianapolis, Indiana In. Z August 1921 Indianapolis. Indiana

Emmett Moore WAITS. b. 6 April 1923 Indianapolis, Indiana Anne Mallone b. ? Surry County, Virginia 1742/45 Perquimans Co., N.C.

Mary Holloway b. ? Perquimans Co, North Carolina d. after 1832 Mason Co., Kentucky

Sarah ENDICOTT b. 2 Angst 1787 Bourbon Co., Kentucky d. 27 April 1827 Posey Co., Indiana

Elizabeth GARNETT b. 1810 Ilarrison Co., Kentucky d. 21 February 1862 Harrison Co., Kentucky

Sarah Ann DAVIS b. 23 October 1843 Harrison Co., Kentucky IS December 1866 Harrison Co., Kentucky

Elmer Dunham WAITS b. II September IA61 Harrison Co., Kentucky 19 November 1944 Harrison Co., Kentucky

Marie Church WILLIAMS b. 6 October IYOI Washington Indiana d. 9 March 1933 Indianapolis. Indiana

have been approximately 73-75 years. (2) The second argument for establishing that Abraham des Moulins West Street in London was the same as tile immigrant can be found by examination of the registers of the Huguenot churches of the area of don approximate to West Street. Following the registration ojlris m to Rachel Brorer in 1699 Abraham (des) Moulins dirappearsjrom record the church registers However frequent references to the other members; this family continue to appear long after 1700, these being those
to Abraham’s mother, who by then was "Madame Madeleine Chu femme de Mr. Benjamin Godde"; to his brothers, Paul and Jean, and to sister, "Marie des Moulins, femme de George Orvin. " The absence of rion of Abraham des Moulins after 1699 coincides with the 1700 of so many of the post-Revocation refugees to Virginia.
(3) There is further strength for this argument in the evident of the Marquis de la Muse with the des Moulins and other families who of Manakin colonist’s . (4) Finally, I would point to the strongest evidence. Abraham ( Moulins married Kachel Uroret at L'Elgise Des Grecs in London I) December 1699.+ In the list of arrivals at James City aboard "The Mary Ann" 12 August 1700 the following names appear side by side: "Jaques Broret, sa femme et deux enfants. Abraham Moulin et femme."
Madeleine CHUPKET (Chypre') I b. abt. 1640 Paris d. after 1706 London
I Abraham des Moulins b. abt. 1630 I'aris, France d. bef. 1687 prob. Paris

II Abraham des Moulins' b. abt. 1678/R0 d. 1743 Perquirnans Co., N.C. n. 27 December 16Y9 L`Eglise Des Grecs London
III Jacoh MULLEN abt. 1700 Manakin, Virginia d. November/December 1757 Perquimans Co., North Carolina

+"27 Dec. 1699. Abraham Moulins, faiseur de savon, dem en West Sir., --C-
par. de Sr. Gilles -- Kachel Droret, en I'eglise des Grecs par Mr. Severin, min. lecteur. Uancs dans lad. e.g. Volume XXVI, 1922: "Repisters de la (Huguenot) Society of London, Savoye de Spring Gardens el des' (recs 1684-1900.") page 13Y

Rachel BRORET b. abt. 1680 France d. alter 1710 Perquimans Co., N.C.

Sarah NICHOLSON b. 1700/1706 Perquirnans Co., North Carolina d. bef. 1757 Perquimans Co., North Carolina

Des Moulins is styled "avocat" or "counsellor" i.e. "lawyer." Jean des Moulins, apparently the only daughter of the family, married Orvin, also styled "avocat" in the records of the Eglise des Grecs. The children and grandchildren of Paul and Jean des Moulins, their George births, baptisms, marriages and deaths, continue to be recorded in the Huguenot registers aforementioned It was L'Eglise des Grecs, however, which Seems to have been the home parish of this family and in which the members most frequently appear, until well into the late 1700'S and without doubt, the family Des Moulins reside in the Lon- (4) Finally, do, parish of St. Giles and for some years on West Street.
Of the Des Moulins ancestry in France very little is known, except for the statement by Samuel Smiles in his The Huguenots: Their Settlements, Churches, and Industries in England and Ireland that this was "an ancient and noble family of the Isle de France," related to the famous Huguenot divines, Pierre, Charles and Louis des Moulin.' And in Volume V111 of The Huguenot 'he publication of the Huguenot Society of the Founders of JManakin i" 'he Colony of Virginia, it is stated that the Des Moulins or De Moulin family was one of those of the Manakintowne families who were armigerous: "Gules de la croix d'or, pattee' et alezee'."'
I am inclined to trust both of these claims. It is apparent that this family London associated with members of the exiled French gentry and that, the Widow Madeleine (Chupret) des Moulins married into the Godde lunily, which was of the nobility. For Benjamin Godde was a brother of the Sieur Pierre Godde, as seen in the church registers. At the baptism of Jacob Oodde, son of Benjamin (1692) and Madeleine (Chupret) Godde, It Is interesting to notice that the sponsors are listed as Lord Pierre de Baufre and Dame Judic Toulle'. Secondly, it is of interest to notice that in the same page of the register is reference to Oliver, Marquis de la Muse. This page is I from the Huguenot Church of Le Carre and Berwick Street, and certainly more than suggests association of the Des Moulins family with the Marquis - de la Muse, who formed and led the Huguenot refugees from London to Virginia in 1699/1700. As to the claim of arms, those described as borne by the Moulin family of Manakintowne, Colony of Virginia, that is by Abraham Moulin, are, among the numerous armorial bearings used by the French-Flemish Belgian des Moulins-du-Moulin-de Moulin families, one of the most obscure. The only reference I find to these particular arms and tinctures is that of Philippe Des Moulins, bishop of Nevers in the 1400's. The arms, however, are claimed by Rietstap to have been those of L>es Moulins oj

Finally, there remain the necessary arguments for claiming that Abraham Des Moulin, or Des Moulins, of London and Abraham Moulin-Mullen of Manakin, Virginia, and Perquimans County, North Carolina, were one and
the same. 1 presents the following:
(I) the historical chronology is perfectly compatible with the claim that Abraham des Moulins of London was the same as the immigrant to Manakin, Virginia. Abraham Moulin would have been approximately IS-U) years of age on 27 December 1699 when he married Rachel Broret in London. His migration to Virginia with "sa femme" but no children followed soon after, in 1700. His death in 1743 would have made his age at the time to be the distinguished Huguenot nobleman, Marquis Oliver de la Muse and his assistant, Charles de Sailly. The " and Ann" reached James City on 12 August 1700, bearing the colonists what was to become the "Oted Huguenot settlement of Manakown'. Abraham Moulin et sa femme" and members of bride's family, the Brorets. Most of this company was made up of Protestants who had fled France following the Revocation of the Edict of Nantes by Louis XIV in October 1685.fhe Protestants, having suffered growing intimidation persecution (Or yC;1IY during the reign of Louis XIV, now had no alter native, Flight became a matter of survival Alter the "Sun King'' aboli the edict which had protected non-Catholics in France for more than quarters of a century, it suddenly became punishable by death for Protestants even to assemble for public worship, to proclaim allegiance to Among these were Virginia. Their leaders the I<ingdom to Holland Switzerland Scandinavia, Germany, an England by the thousands. It was a blow recovered For with the Huguenots went the best of French school technical knowledge, industry and craftsmanship, and the most re of the noble families. Such a family was the Des Moulins, or Du Moulin, family who migrated to London immediately following the Revocation. They had from Paris and were, according to Smiles' The Huguenots, of noble o This family apparently consisted of the widow and four children

Abraham Des Moulins, who may have died in Paris before the Ke or shortly after the family’s night to London These were Madeleine (Chupret) Des Moulins and her children, Paul, Abraham, and Marie, all of whom arrived in London as refugees sometime 1685 and 1687. They resided in West Street in London's Soho section, appear frequently in the registers of the French Protestant churches of the area, namely the French church Treadneedle Street, Des Grecs, Le and Berwick Street and the Church of the Tabernacle. From these records it is possible to glean a wealth of information about the years subsequent the night to London and before the immigration to the New World of
aforementioned Ancestor, ARKAHAM DES MOULINS the younger. of the family is established by the following marriage.

(I) First, the Parentage of the who was apparently the eldest son of the marriage record of Paul des
rarely "Paul nes Moulins, natil de Paris, fils de feu Abraham clrs Moulins ,I de det'unte Madeleine Chupret; Jeanne de ia Ruelle, de I'aris, lille de (;uillaurne de la Ruelle ct de Kachel Loret Aout 7 (16H9). 1:po"'''sle
(2) Madame Madeleine (Chupret) des Moulins, widow o: Abraham Moulins the elder, and mother of this family, remarried following the ment in London her second husband having been Benjamin <;odde.'
(3) The trades and professions into which the sons of this family entered are also proved by the informative entries In the church records Paul des Moulins, who married Jeanne de la Ruelle, is st "ebeniste" or Cabinet-maker. the immigrant to Manakin colony A braharn des Moulins the younger, Septembre 1689. Virginia, is styled "faiseur de savon or "maker of soap." MULLEN (I)es Moullns - Du Moulin) By The Rev. Emmett Moore Waits

ABRAHAM DES MOULINS, whose surname became Anglicized to the subsequent Mullen spelling, came to the Colony of Virginia aboard " The Mary and Ann" during the summer of 1700. He and his bride, RACHEL
(BRORET), had been married 27 December 1699 at L'Eglise Francais Des Grecs in London and had joined the large company of French Huguenots who sailed from Gravesend during the summer of 1700 destined for THE ABNER AND JEDIDAH HAMPTON MULLINS FAMILY
At the beginning of the 19th century. Abner and Jedidah Hampton Mullins migrated from Halifax County, Virginia to the Morgan District of Buncombe County. N C They came in a group, which included not only Abner’s parents David D and Athalian Mullins but also Jedidah’s parents Micajah and Ann Hampton and at least two of her brothers Ezekiei, and Ahab Hampton. Others of the families settled in Cocke County, Tennessee. Abram Jedidah Mullins brought with who had them their children who had been born in Halifax County Virginia Ahag, Eliiah and perhaps one other. While they lived in Buncombe County they had additional children named Abner P., Frances, Pasty, Newraney and Matthew, perhaps others Micajah Hampton and Ann, parents of Jedidah. and her brothers Ahab and Ezekiei Hampton and their families remained in Buncombe County, but others of that family plus the Mullein’s family of Abner and Jedidah and their children moved on about 1817.
Abner and his sons and brothers-in-law by the names of Gwinn and Hampton, all built keelboats on the bank of the Big Pigeon River in Haywood County. They loaded their possessions and livestock on these keelboats in the early fall of 1817 and floated on the Big Pigeon River to the French Broad River. From there they reached the Tennessee, going over Muscle Shoals on to the Ohio to the Mississippi which they crossed to about where St. Couis is located today. This was known as Missouri Territory. They arrived in the winter, and the French offered them home sites and rights to share public pasture which they were glad to accept for the rest of the winter. The Gwinns in this group were brothers Bartholomew, Allmond and William who had married three of Abner Mullins' sisters, namely Susannah Bly. Hampton was Jedidah`s brother These people had previously settled in what later became Cocke County, Tennessee.
The next spring they rowed or otherwise managed to get their keelboats up the Missouri River to Booneville, and from they’re the family split up. Abner's son David and his wife Rebecca Ann (Roboson) Mullins settled with their children in what became Howard County, Missouri. Their children were born in Buncombe County were Abner b 1810: Sarah, b 1814: Aifred, b. 1815, and M R iMcCama) b 1817 (They had children born subsequently, in Missouri: Missouri Ann: Jedidah Jane: Rebecca Mary Ann; Peter, and two girls names not known.)
Abner and Jedidah Mullin's with others of their sons, settled in Cooper County, then later Saline County. The Gwrnn families and Hosea Hampton settled on land that became Saline County, Missouri. Those remaining in Buncombe, Ahab Hampton had married Nancy Cheatham daughter of David Cheatham, and they had sons George W., Micajah jcailed Cajahi whose wife was Mary, Job, Samuel, Wade and Lent; daughters Mary Elizabeth and one unidentified by the 1820 census, Ahab had died and before 1830 his widow Nancy Hampton had migrated to Overton County. Tennessee and her son Lent was in Monroe County, Tenn.

DOCUMENTS,
Chiefly Unpublished

RELATING TO THE I-Huguenot Emigration TO VIRGINIA AND the SETTLEMENT AT MANAKIN-TOWN, with APPENDIX Or; GENEALOGIES presenting DATA OF THE Fontaine MAURY, DUPUY, TKABUE, Marye, Chastian Cocke, AND other FAMILIES, EDITED and COMPII.ED for THE Virginia HISTORICAL Society

I. R. A. Brock, Huguenot Emigration to Virginia (Genealogical Pub Company, Daltimore, 1973 reprint), page 254.
II. Samuel Smiles, The Huguenots: Their Settlements Churches and industries in England and Ireland (London), page 507.
III. Registers L 'Eglire Francais de Threadneedle Street, Huguenot Society London, Volume 16 (1906/19(i9 reprint),
IV. Registers 1.'Eglise Le Carre and Rerwick Street 1690-/7813, H Society oj London, Volume ZS (1921), page 2.
V. Register de la Savoye de Spring Gardens et des Grecs 1684Huguenors Society oj London, Volume 26, page 139.
VI. Smiles, ibid. 7. The Ilugueno, 1959-61, Publication # 19 (Huguenot Society founded Manakintowne in the Colony of Virginia), page 123.
VII. Register L 'Eglire Le Carre and Berwick Street, page 2.


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