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Also, whites and people of color could marry in certain parts of certain
states with the permission of the parents as early as the late 1800's.
Please, What part of Which State, I have never heard of Any of the $8
nStates as haveing a Varrying Law, that Applied in one area ^ Not cover the
WHOLE STATE??? For Sure not in Va. Nor in any other State that I have heard
of, Please Name that State, that permits one act ion one part of the State &
Forbid it in the Other parts of the same state??? CUZ AT
_Atpowelljr(a)aol.com_ (mailto:Atpowelljr@aol.com)
Campbell Marriage Practices
The most notable and discernible marriage practice followed by both the
"Black David" and "White David" Campbells of Virginia, Kentucky and
Tennessee, is the frequency of cousin marriages or at least marriages within the
Campbell Clan. One result of this consanguinity is that the author of this
essay is a direct descendant of both Black David Campbell and his brother
Robert! This _hyperlinked table_ (http://philnorf.tripod.com/table-1.htm)
provides some examples of these cousin marriages, including the degrees of
consanguinity from both the Civil and Canon Law perspectives, for members of the
"Black David" and "White David" families.
Campbell Child Naming Practices
In the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, both the Scots and the Irish
had a frequently used scheme for child naming. The first born male child
was normally named after the paternal grandfather; likewise, the first borne
female child was named after the maternal grandmother. The second borne
male child was named after the maternal grandfather and the second borne female
child was named after the paternal grandmother. Only with the third born
son and daughter, did you use the names of the parents, if those names
differed from those of the grandparents. In many but not all cases, this naming
scheme seems to have been used by the Southwest Virginia Campbell families
that are discussed at this web site.
The Child Nameing Practice in the British Isles was SO; The first Male was
named after the Fathers Father; The second Male was Named After the
Mothers Father: The 3rd male was named after the Father, In the event that the
Father was named after His Father, SAY, George-------------? The first son
would have been named George, Then when # 3 Sonn came along to be named
after His father, GEORGE, BINGO Two George's in the Same family. In my
campbell family, There were 17 George campbell in the first three generations. CUZ
A T
In a message dated 2/22/2011 10:50:06 A.M. Eastern Standard Time,
marychildress234(a)hotmail.com writes:
WELL, you and I differ. I have found siblings with the same name, but
only when the firstborn had died. A question of carrying on the name. Also,
whites and people of color could marry in certain parts of certain states
with the permission of the parents as early as the late 1800's.
> From: childress-request(a)rootsweb.com
> Subject: CHILDRESS Digest, Vol 6, Issue 3
> To: childress(a)rootsweb.com
> Date: Tue, 22 Feb 2011 01:01:55 -0700
>
>
>
> Today's Topics:
>
> 1. SO much knowledge & no logic Makes for a BIG Genealogical
> QUESTION (Atpowelljr(a)aol.com)
>
>
> ----------------------------------------------------------------------
>
> Message: 1
> Date: Mon, 21 Feb 2011 03:35:16 EST
> From: Atpowelljr(a)aol.com
> Subject: [CHILDRESS] SO much knowledge & no logic Makes for a BIG
> Genealogical QUESTION
> To: childress(a)rootsweb.com
> Message-ID: <1645f1.373543bf.3a937dc4(a)aol.com>
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="US-ASCII"
>
> I have researched primary documents in state and county archives for
over
> 25 years in VA, NC, SC, TN and KY have have found none of the previous
> posters comments to be true - unless one is making assumptions in order
to
> justify missing documents. I have transcribed 1000s of pages of wills,
marriage
> records, deeds, court records, etc, and not in one single case have I
> found multiple sons with the same name in a family : nephews, uncles,
cousins,
> yes - siblings no.
>
>
> AND as it was Ilegle for Whites & People of color to marry untill 1969
> when the U S Supreem Court Decsion in The Case of a Black Woman Marring
a Whte
> man in Caroline County Va. CUZ A T _atpowelljr(a)aol.com_
> (mailto:atpowelljr@aol.com)
>
>
> ------------------------------
>
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> CHILDRESS-admin(a)rootsweb.com.
>
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> with the word "unsubscribe" without the quotes in the subject and the
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> End of CHILDRESS Digest, Vol 6, Issue 3
> ***************************************
-------------------------------
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and the body of the message
WELL, you and I differ. I have found siblings with the same name, but only when the firstborn had died. A question of carrying on the name. Also, whites and people of color could marry in certain parts of certain states with the permission of the parents as early as the late 1800's.
> From: childress-request(a)rootsweb.com
> Subject: CHILDRESS Digest, Vol 6, Issue 3
> To: childress(a)rootsweb.com
> Date: Tue, 22 Feb 2011 01:01:55 -0700
>
>
>
> Today's Topics:
>
> 1. SO much knowledge & no logic Makes for a BIG Genealogical
> QUESTION (Atpowelljr(a)aol.com)
>
>
> ----------------------------------------------------------------------
>
> Message: 1
> Date: Mon, 21 Feb 2011 03:35:16 EST
> From: Atpowelljr(a)aol.com
> Subject: [CHILDRESS] SO much knowledge & no logic Makes for a BIG
> Genealogical QUESTION
> To: childress(a)rootsweb.com
> Message-ID: <1645f1.373543bf.3a937dc4(a)aol.com>
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="US-ASCII"
>
> I have researched primary documents in state and county archives for over
> 25 years in VA, NC, SC, TN and KY have have found none of the previous
> posters comments to be true - unless one is making assumptions in order to
> justify missing documents. I have transcribed 1000s of pages of wills, marriage
> records, deeds, court records, etc, and not in one single case have I
> found multiple sons with the same name in a family : nephews, uncles, cousins,
> yes - siblings no.
>
>
> AND as it was Ilegle for Whites & People of color to marry untill 1969
> when the U S Supreem Court Decsion in The Case of a Black Woman Marring a Whte
> man in Caroline County Va. CUZ A T _atpowelljr(a)aol.com_
> (mailto:atpowelljr@aol.com)
>
>
> ------------------------------
>
> To contact the CHILDRESS list administrator, send an email to
> CHILDRESS-admin(a)rootsweb.com.
>
> To post a message to the CHILDRESS mailing list, send an email to CHILDRESS(a)rootsweb.com.
>
> __________________________________________________________
> To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to CHILDRESS-request(a)rootsweb.com
> with the word "unsubscribe" without the quotes in the subject and the body of the
> email with no additional text.
>
>
> End of CHILDRESS Digest, Vol 6, Issue 3
> ***************************************
I have researched primary documents in state and county archives for over
25 years in VA, NC, SC, TN and KY have have found none of the previous
posters comments to be true - unless one is making assumptions in order to
justify missing documents. I have transcribed 1000s of pages of wills, marriage
records, deeds, court records, etc, and not in one single case have I
found multiple sons with the same name in a family : nephews, uncles, cousins,
yes - siblings no.
AND as it was Ilegle for Whites & People of color to marry untill 1969
when the U S Supreem Court Decsion in The Case of a Black Woman Marring a Whte
man in Caroline County Va. CUZ A T _atpowelljr(a)aol.com_
(mailto:atpowelljr@aol.com)
Campbell Marriage Practices
The most notable and discernible marriage practice followed by both the
"Black David" and "White David" Campbells of Virginia, Kentucky and
Tennessee, is the frequency of cousin marriages or at least marriages within the
Campbell Clan. One result of this consanguinity is that the author of this
essay is a direct descendant of both Black David Campbell and his brother
Robert! This _hyperlinked table_ (http://philnorf.tripod.com/table-1.htm)
provides some examples of these cousin marriages, including the degrees of
consanguinity from both the Civil and Canon Law perspectives, for members of the
"Black David" and "White David" families.
I have more thjan one ancestroal family & in researching my many families,
AND im have childress Family connection, I have Found Much about one
family that aplys to other Of my Ancestroal families.
One of My third great grand Mothers was A Stinnett AND Two of Her Great
great grand aunts, Precila Stinnett & Susannah Stinnett did Marry two
childress men in the area of va That became amherst county Va in 1761
then below information is to show the Childress Researchers that there
were Often more than one Male member of A family with the same name. OE should
Try it because Multi family research is Egucational
CUZ AT
Campbell Child Naming Practices
In the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, both the Scots and the Irish
had a frequently used scheme for child naming. The first born male child
was normally named after the paternal grandfather; likewise, the first borne
female child was named after the maternal grandmother. The second borne
male child was named after the maternal grandfather and the second borne female
child was named after the paternal grandmother. Only with the third born
son and daughter, did you use the names of the parents, if those names
differed from those of the grandparents. In many but not all cases, this naming
scheme seems to have been used by the Southwest Virginia Campbell families
that are discussed at this web site.
) Circuit rider Ministers who failed to return the marriage bonds to the
courthouse
MR. Expert Researcher. for your enlightment, The License was to be issued
in the CDounty of the Bride, BUT when the Circut Rider Married a Couple he
was NOT required to Post the Marriage in the same county There fore With na
mariage in Amherst county Va could be Registered in Campbell or augusta
depending which direction that the Circut Rider was going when he left
Amherst county. And as for the posiability of the Bride having been Native Am
erican. Your theroy is as Shodyb as you Claim Mine to be. When America was
being Settled there were more Men than Women. Now it may be that YOU have
never had the experence of Being where Women were scarce, Through the history
of the world, New Men entering a country have intermingled with the native
women. Your OH that just cain't be has no bearing then NOW or ever then
Incomeingn Men have & always will find female Companion SHIP wheather you
discovered it in your Research or not. Maybe you Should have had the chance to
see the German move <TOXIE> And it was not Legal for White People &
people of color to marry in Va untill the Supreem court dession in the Case of
the Black woman Married the white man in caroline county va in 1969. I
still contend that there were
Many common Law Unions between White Men & Native Women AND Native Women
had ONLY ONE NAME, Warenting the bit: Catherine UNK
For My 5th great grand Mother.
FOR these researchers Who insist on Authenicty & Source<??> sounds more
like Coppying other peoples Work than doing Research.
CUZ A T atpowelljr(a)aol.com.