It has been ages since I've looked at any of this, but I do have your Jack
J. Camp, Born July 28, 1813, married to Mary Ann Sharp, December 10, 1836. The
only child I have listed for them is Versie Rachel Camp. Do you have any of
their other children? Maybe Versie is William A. Camp's sister? I have Versie
as born December 23, 1866. Versie married Robert Erasmus Camp, but she died
February 6, 1922 and Robert remarried. My grandfather, Walter Luther Camp was
Robert's brother.
Also, Norm...I looked in my history for Alfred Banks Camp, and I think he is
my great, great grandfather. The Alfred Banks Camp I have married Mary C.
Heath and died May 30, 1853. Alfred Banks Camp was the father of Henry Clay
Camp. Henry Clay Camp was the father of Robert Erasmus Camp and my grandfather,
Walter Luther.
If these seem related to your family members, I'll be happy to get the
information in a format that makes more sense and share.
Susan
In a message dated 3/30/2008 4:20:35 P.M. Central Daylight Time,
bramasole(a)cox.net writes:
Hi Susan:
Yes, his name was John (or possibly "Jack") J. Camp. Born July 28,
1813, died August 21, 1880.
My William A. Camp was born in Wedowee, Randolph County, Alabama on November
29, 1845.
He was first married to Sarah E. Jeter (Geter) on January 27, 1867;
then after her death to Catherine Jeter on June 26, 1882 and finally to
Elizabeth Wilder at Forrester's Chapel on October 1, 1897.
Children of Sarah & Catherine (Jeter sisters) and William were:
Green Berry Camp born 2/13/1868
Alonza B. Camp born 2/3/1870 (my great grandfather)
Mollie (Mary J) Camp born 2/23/1872
Nora Camp born 12/16/1874
Harriett Elizabeth Camp born 5/12/1877
James William Camp born 10/04/1898
Alice Camp born 03/05/1882
Lucinda (Ludi) V. Camp born 04/15/1883
Martin L. (Lutha) Camp born 01/07/1886
Robert McDoler Camp born 01/11/1888
Mabel Camp born 03/05/1890
Eunice L. Camp born 12/03/1892
I have an enormous amount of information on my William Camp which I must go
through -- but maybe some of the individuals I've listed may ring a bell
with someone -- I would certainly like to get beyond my J.J. Camp -- I know
I have more info on him but will have to look for it. I run my own
medical-legal nurse consulting business so have a pretty full schedule and
not as much time as I would like to devote to genealogy.
Best, Annie
----- Original Message -----
From: <CalvinDogs(a)aol.com>
To: <camp(a)rootsweb.com>
Sent: Sunday, March 30, 2008 4:13 PM
Subject: Re: [CAMP] Jennifer's suitcase/Annie McMullen
Hi Annie,
I was wondering if you had any dates on William A. Camp or J. J. Camp?
Any
idea what the "J's" stand for? I can't find them in my line at the
moment, but
my mother's (Camp) family comes from Randolph County, Alabama and there
are
Methodist ministers. Any other names you are aware of? I don't see an
immediate connection, but Randolph county and Methodist minister caught my
attention.
Susan
In a message dated 3/30/2008 1:32:51 P.M. Central Daylight Time,
bramasole(a)cox.net writes:
Hi Carol:
My name is Annie McMullen and we live in Rhode Island. My mother's
mother
was a "Camp" descended from William A. Camp in Wedowee, Randolph County,
Alabama at the time of his death (Cleburn County, I believe before that).
I
have only been able to work on genealogy on the web with a one time
exception when we did make it down to Georgia and Alabama to try to trace
her roots (my mother's mother, Mozell Missouri Camp died when mom was
only 2
years old and thus she never knew her -- her father would remarry and
nothing was ever mentioned about Mozelle).
Anyway, I did, by a great source of luck hook up with a third cousin who
is part of the Texas Camp family who had a bible in which my
grandmother's
name was mentioned so I was able to establish some lineage.
What I do know is that William A. Camp married three times -- his first
born son was "Greenberry Camp" (that name Berry seems to run throughout
all
these Camp families thus I wonder if there is a relation somewhere) --
his
second born was Alonzo (or Alonza, aka "Lonnie") who would marry a
"Cora
Dunson (? Duncan)" In Randoloph County, ALa who would give birth to
Della,
Ira, Mozelle and Emma Camp. My grandmother, Mozelle would eventually
marry
a Leroy Cobb in nearby Troup County, Ga and then my grandfather, Robert
James Daniel in Troup County, Ga.
William A. Camp's father, to the best of our knowledge was a fellow by
the name of J.J. Camp who was apparently a Methodist minister (I
believe)
in
Alabama.
William A. Camp, Lonnie and Cora and Emma are all buried in Forrester's
Cemetery in Wedowee, Randolph County, Alabama.
I am wondering if any of these names might be familiar to "Jennifer". I
have had the darndest time trying to trace this family -- despite having
William's Civil War papers (he was a member of the Alabama 1st UNION
Cavalry!! -- that in itself is an interesting bit of Civil War history
one
does not hear about too often!).
Any help would be greatly appreciated and if I can be of any help from
this far way on the Camp family I would gladly do so.
With best regards,
Annie McMullen
Bristol, RI
Bramasole(a)cox.net
----- Original Message -----
From: "Carole Johnson" <ammcj(a)bellsouth.net>
To: <camp(a)rootsweb.com>
Sent: Sunday, March 30, 2008 1:39 PM
Subject: [CAMP] Jennifer's suitcase
> Hello everyone,
>
> I don't know how many have read the emails from Jennifer about the
> suitcase that is in her possession, but PLEASE continue to read
> this even if you don't think it pertains to your Camp line.
>
> My brother, Joe Camp, and I had the very good fortune to take
> advantage
> of Jennifer's hospitality and visit her on Friday. The scope
> of the material in the suitcase is unbelievable - and the
> quantity - 3,000 items all together.
>
> Among the items - The 1818 unrecorded will of John
> Camp who was married to Mary Tarpley. There is much
> speculation about him - including now his death date.
> It has been recorded (although I've never seen the source)
> that he died in 1813, yet here is his will listing children
> written in 1818. He also refers to his wife "Marey", so
> he must have remarried after the death of Mary Tarpley Camp.
> That I actually held this document in my hands was
> an unspeakable moment.
>
> Also in the suitcase is an affidavit from Anneyomey Camp
> Hill, also known as Annie Naomi, daughter of the above
> John Camp and Mary Tarpley Camp. In it she swears
> to the names of her brother James and his children.
> She was 87 at the time of the affidavit.
>
> Of much interest to me are items related to my ancestor
> "Big-Head" John, grandson of the above John. My "Big-Head"
> was pretty much impatient and arrogant having rushed
> to judgement in settling his nephew's estate and selling
> off his property (including slaves) and distributing the
> proceeds to the heirs (including himself) without due
> authorization. This created a rife among his coexecutor
> and brother, Robert Berry Camp, that continued the
> rest of their lives. There is a hand-written, angry letter
> from my "Big-Head" to his brother Robert dated October
> 1857. This was no doubt what led "Big-Head" to move
> to Texas pre Civil War.
>
> There is so much more in the suitcase - land records,
> letters, tax receipts, lawsuit information apparently all
> collected by Merit Camp who was born in 1813 and
> died in 1883.
>
> That Jennifer has spent the past four years of her life
> sorting, copying, transcribing and organizing this wealth
> of information is mind boggling. That this information
> exists at all is miraculous and in the pristine condition
> it is in - and so much in one location unbelievable.
>
> Jennifer is applying for a grant to publish all of the information
> in the suitcase, but to do so must research every name,
> place, etc to qualify for the grant. SHE NEEDS OUR HELP
> to research and help her with this huge task. She is not
> directly related to our Camps, but her husband is and
> therefore HAS EVERY RIGHT TO THE ITEMS IN THE
> SUITCASE - so please do not hassle her
> about ownership. The suitcase was in the possession
> of Jennifer's mother-in-law (a Camp descendant) and
> she requested her son to take care of the suitcase, which
> he has.
>
> Jennifer has indexed every name mentioned in any
> document in the suitcase. Much is the history of Gwinnett
> and Walton Counties and she needs help with those
> who were living there and the many other locations.
>
> This has the potential of being one of the best written and
> best documented genealogy books ever done. For
> Jennifer this has been an unselfish act of love. She
> has the intelligence, skill and devotion to see this through.
>
> If you have family in John Camp's line or Camp's
> in Georgia, Alabama and Texas, please consider
> lending Jennifer a hand.
>
> BLESSINGS!
> Carole Camp Johnson
>
> -------------------------------
> To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to
> CAMP-request(a)rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes
> in the subject and the body of the message
>
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-------------------------------
To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to
CAMP-request(a)rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the
subject and the
body of the message
**************Create a Home Theater Like the Pros. Watch the video on AOL
Home.
(
http://home.aol.com/diy/home-improvement-eric-stromer?video=15&ncid=a...)