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Author: Gen2008
Surnames: clark
Classification: queries
Message Board URL:
http://boards.rootsweb.com/surnames.clark/4525.4526.4645.1/mb.ashx
Message Board Post:
I am seeking any and all information about the family of
P. H. Clark- [Patrick Henry] living in Murfreeboro/ and or Nashville-shown in this census. If you have any
information, it would be greatly appreciated!
Born: 31 July 1835
Rutherford,,Tennessee,USA
Died: 20 Aug 1917
Taney, , Missouri, USA
--
1850 United States Federal Census
about John Clark
Name: John Clark
Age: 63
Estimated Birth Year: abt 1787
Birth Place: North Carolina
Gender: Male
Home in 1850 (City,County,State): Nashville, Davidson, Tennessee
Household Members:
Name Age
Catharine Clark 60
Catharine Clark 12
David Clark 18
Henry Clark 14
James Clark 15
John Clark 63
Robert Clark 21
'
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Author: lisaking6551
Surnames:
Classification: queries
Message Board URL:
http://boards.rootsweb.com/surnames.clark/4525.4755/mb.ashx
Message Board Post:
I found your message on the Clark message board on Ancestry from 2000. I would like some info, but don't know if you're still around! Please reply if you still participate and I'll write my question.
Thank you,
Lisa Clark King
lisaking51(a)aol.com
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Author: rhm1001
Surnames:
Classification: queries
Message Board URL:
http://boards.rootsweb.com/surnames.clark/12432/mb.ashx
Message Board Post:
If your Genealogical Society is looking for information to print in its newsletter, try this website:
MySecretLetters.com
In addition to the "Love Letters from the Civil War," it also has a "Genealogy Tip of the Day," and a "Thought for the Day."
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Author: bdooley100
Surnames:
Classification: queries
Message Board URL:
http://boards.rootsweb.com/surnames.clark/12427.1/mb.ashx
Message Board Post:
Who are the relatives, and when did they live in Ringgold?
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Author: Gen2008
Surnames: CLARK,HOLT,BRIGHTWELL,
Classification: queries
Message Board URL:
http://boards.rootsweb.com/surnames.clark/12076.1/mb.ashx
Message Board Post:
I am posting this as a follow-up, for others who are looking ________________________ Patrick Henry Clark, is Buried in Rhodes Cemetery,Big Creek in Protem, Mo.[ refer to findagrave.com]
http://thelibrary.springfield.missouri.org/lochist/periodicals/wrv/v31/N3...
_
Volume 31, Number 3, Spring 1992
Nancy Elizabeth Holt
(m. Magness, Terry, Clark) (1836 - 1907)
by Hillary Brightwell and Lynn Morrow
Holt families from the East were among the first settlers in the 'White River Valley. This article centers upon a woman whose southern upland forbearers migrated in typical fashion from Virginia westward.
Richard Holt (1740-?) a Virginian, had a son Fielding (1767-?) also born in Virginia. In 1806 Fielding's family, including William H. Holt (1799-1860) moved into Cannon County, Tennessee, near Bradyville, where William and his wife Mary L. Stevens Holt reared most of their family. On July 27, 1836, William's new daughter Nancy Elizabeth arrived. When Nancy was three years old the Holt family loaded a covered wagon, and traveled six weeks westward, stopping in Ozark County, Missouri.
The William Holt family settled on Little North Fork River in southwest Ozark County about three miles above modern Theodosia. They remained there for ten years until 1849 when they resettled southward into Marion County, Arkansas, above the mouth of Shoal Creek on White River.
Neighbors included the Joe and Patsy Magness family who arrived in 1827 and gave their name to the Magness Bottom on White River. As Nancy Holt became a woman during the early 1850s, Wilshire Magness courted her, they married, and the young couple began a family with the birth of their firstborn in 1854, another in 1857, and a daughter who died in infancy and was buried in the Joe Magness family graveyard. Wilshire and Nancy lived along Marion County's Big Creek.
A half century later when Ozarks Chronicler Silas Turnbo interviewed Nancy, she recalled an incident from her youth involving Wilshire. Nancy spun and wove all the wearing apparel for her family including a pair of nice jeans for Wiltshire. She striped the cloth of his new pants with red and blue colors. Wiltshire donned his new threads and paid a visit to the Johnson blacksmith shop in Panther Bottom. While there Jim Johnson fancied the pants and ultimately purchased them for three dollars and fifty cents in silver. Wiltshire promptly gave Jim the pants and rode home in his drawers. The sight of Wiltshire's unusual arrival home frightened young Nancy. When she found out the truth, Wiltshire had to endure a tongue lashing from his wife for startling her so. Unfortunately, not long after, Wiltshire died in early 1859.
In 1860 Nancy married Tom Terry (whose first wife had been a sister to Wiltshire Mangoes). During a Sabbath day in the summer of 1861 Nancy proved she had more than just domestic skills. While her husband Tom and his two brothers searched for a bee tree, Nancy found her own colony of bees. When she called the men to her discovery they thought she was kidding them, but soon the men had to acknowledge one of the
[3]
Largest honey reservoirs ever found in the neighborhood. Nancy later bore a son to Tom in January 1862; that summer Tom Terry enlisted in the Union cause and paid dearly with his life in the conflict.
During Tom's absence Nancy supported six children-two from her marriage with Wiltshire, three from Tom's first marriage, and one that she and Tom had together. The Terries had a sizable cattle herd of 100 or more at the beginning of the war, but by 1862 the land pirates had stolen most of them. Nancy was able to keep a few milk cows that provided for the children. The cows were on the open range while their calves were penned in a cow lot near the family's dogtrot house.
Nancy told Sills Turbo about her most anxious moments during the war when two armed men interrogated her in front of the house. They asked her for the whereabouts of rebels-she said she did not know; they asked about federalize-she still answered in the negative. The men slowly rode their horses away from the house, whispering to each other as they went. Nancy sensed foul play coming and directed the children to carry all domestic articles lying in the yard into the house and armed the older children and herself with an axe, hatchet, butcher knife and club.
Sure enough, the rascals returned driving the milk cows toward the penned calves intending to round up all the stock from the Terry farm. Instinctively, Nancy grabbed the dinner horn in the hall of the dog-trot, blew it fiercely a couple oftimes, and yelled at the top of her voice, "Here they are, come quick!" She repeated the sequence another time. The spooked bandits decided to retreat across the river while Nancy continued blowing the horn and yelling. Her bluff worked.
Nancy learned later that these men joined other southern men at a well known rendezvous in Marion County called Short Mountain. Surviving this desperate event, Nancy then moved her family northward into a Union region in Ozark County, Missouri, where she had better protection from roving guerrillas.
While on Little North Fork in Ozark County the war was never far away. In fall, 1864, Gen. Sterling Price's Confederates failed in their invasion into Missouri, and Southerners retreated southward throughout the Ozarks. Nancy told Silas Turnbo of seeing these stragglers-partly clothed, barefoot, ragged and hungry-pass through her neighborhood. On one occasion she saw a grizzled group of men. One of them drove a boy, who carried a sack of corn, in front of the group. When the boy faltered from the physical effort, the brutish man would strike him on the shoulder with a club. Nancy confronted the men and gave some milk to the boy while the men voiced their displeasure at her generosity. Madam Rumor later reported that the straggling warriors murdered the boy farther south in the hills. While Nancy and her family enjoyed protection in Ozark County during the last couple of years of the war, she reported seeing others suffer the indignity of hunger and retreat from their Arkansa!
s homes northward in search of asylum at Union-protected Springfield or elsewhere.
Patrick Henry Clark became acquainted with Nancy's wartime husband Tom Terry while both served the Union army. It was Patrick who brought the news of Tom's death in August, 1862, to Nancy. Patrick Clark remained in the region and by the end of the war Patrick and Nancy married. During this third marriage, Nancy bore five more children, two boys in Arkansas and three girls in Missouri-all in the White River country.
Besides these glimpses of another time, Nancy left evidence of her domestic art in the form of quilts and coverlets passed down to her children. One coverlet, woven on her loom during the late 1870s or early 1880s, is preserved by grandson Hillary Brightwell. The coverlet contains a most intricate
[5]
design rarely seen today. The Brightwells have found only one other coverlet with the same design mounted in the Golden Pond Museum, Land Between the Lakes state park, Kentucky. Even more rare are samples of the hand drawn templates that have miraculously survived. Nancy referred to these strips of paper while working at the loom. The origin of the coverlet pattern itself remains obscure. It is probably one of the many taken from newspapers of the day and circulated among neighbors. Does anyone know its name or origin? (See photograph.)
Nancy made this coverlet inside the Clark's log house. The white is cotton and the brown is wool; Nancy used a homemade black walnut hull dye to color the wool. The coverlet is two halves of the same pattern sewed together. The cotton, of course, came from the family plot and was used after many tedious nights of extracting seeds from the cotton.
The Brightwell family will continue to treasure these artifacts of pioneer craft-a tangible legacy from Nancy who would be proud to see her descendants respect them as a symbol for the home they represent.
Copyright Ó White River Valley Historical Quarterly
Next Article | Table of Contents | Other Issues
Local History Home _____________________________________________
From: findagrave.com-Wife of Patrick Henry Clark is Nancy Elizabeth Holt-
Birth: Jul. 27, 1836
Death: Feb. 13, 1907
Inscription: Mother; In memory of Mother
Burial:
Protem Cemetery
Protem
Taney County
Missouri, USA
Plot: Row from East, N of Dividing Road: 22
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Author: Gen2008
Surnames: CLARK,HOLT,BRIGHTWELL,
Classification: queries
Message Board URL:
http://boards.rootsweb.com/surnames.clark/12429/mb.ashx
Message Board Post:
Clark, Patrick Henry born July 30, 1833, Murfreeboro, Tn=http://trees.ancestry.com/owt/person.aspx?pid=27952298
Please note that Nancy Elizabeth Holt
born July 27, 1836
Cannon County, Tennessee, near Bradyville_died, 1907-02-13
Taney,,Missouri,USA-
was married 3 times[ civil war times]
#1 Wilshire Magness
#2 Thomas Marion Terry
# 3 Patrick Henry Clark
http://trees.ancestry.com/owt/person.aspx?pid=129051334http://thelibrary.springfield.missouri.org/lochist/turnbo/Morrow.html
--
'
Silas Turnbo and His Writings
The Brightwell farm lay across the high bluffs and table land in southeast Taney ... Hillary Brightwell (1912-), John and Fanny's youngest and seventh son, remembers ...
thelibrary.springfield.missouri.org/lochist/turnbo/Morrow.html
This is an excerpt of the above link...
Some Turnbo relatives thought Silas was cursed with a strange idiosyncrasy-he never really worked in his later years, just mused about old times before the Civil War; later, some descendants thought anyone who ascribed importance to Silas' writings must be a damn fool.
Silas, however, "knew who would treat him friendly," and always found a welcome hand at the John and Fanny Brightwell home; Fanny was distant kin to Silas through his mother's Holt family.
The Brightwell farm lay across the high bluffs and table land in southeast Taney county bordered on the south by White River. As usual, Silas came to stay a week. The family always saw him coming in the distance, kicking up small clouds of summer dust on the country road. Mrs. Brightwell then sent her children upstairs to prepare for Silas' first duty-a bath and clean clothes.
Fanny assigned her young boys to provide company and transportation for "Uncle Clabe" during his stay. The youths led an old horse while Silas rode around the White River country. Hillary Brightwell (1912-), John and Fanny's youngest and seventh son, remembers taking Silas to all the highest promontories in the neighborhood where he would dismount and sit for two or three hours gazing over the land, sometimes recording pages of notes. After several days both Hillary and Silas mounted horses, and under escort, Silas struck out for old friends on Big Creek; Hillary returned home with both horses.
Silas spent another short term in the Confederate Home in fall 1923, but lived his last days in Oklahoma still making notes, according to family tradition; he died at age eighty and was buried in Park Cemetery, Broken Arrow, in March, 1925, where Matilda preceded him in 1922. Whatever became of Silas' notes and/or writings that he made after the sale to Connelley in 1913 is unknown.
William Connelley published his last book in 1922, but never got around to dealing with Silas' Ozark collection. Connelley died in 1930 and his widow advertised an estate sale that was widely attended by collectors and book dealers. Connelley had acquired and deposited numerous items with the Kansas Historical Society, but he retained a considerable personal collection-one of which was the Turnbo Papers.
http://thelibrary.springfield.missouri.org/lochist/turnbo/v17/st510.html
------------------------------------------------------------
Many stories are found at this link.
http://thelibrary.org/lochist/turnbo/v26/st734.html
[ On the search link, type in the family name you seed]
A FRIGHTFUL RUNAWAY
By S. C. Turnbo
On the first day of November 1880 as Henry Clark was going from Lead Hill Arkansas to his home in the south east part of Taney County, Mo. in a wagon drawn by two fine mares. His team run away from the top of the dividing ridge between the head of the hollow that runs down to Bradleys Ferry and the breaks of Horse Hollow that runs into East Sugar Loaf Creek. Miss Fannie and Ida two of his little daughters accompanied him. When Mr. Clark had arrived at the grove of timber on the crest of the ridge where the road was then he halted his team to fix something about the wagon, and when he got out of the wagon the team took fright and started down the hill in a run. They followed the road only a few yards when they turned to the left and went as fast they could go over the stony ground which stuck out of the ground a few inches above the surface. The wagon was pulled and jerked so swiftly along that there was a constant bouncing of the wagon on the rough stones which nearly beat t!
he life out of the children. The sight of the runaway team as they went plunging down the rough hill side with the two little girls in the wagon box was horrifying and as the despairing father followed on after the wagon unable to check the terrified mares did not expect to find his darling children alive, Some distance down the hill while the team was rushing along at break neck speed the children were both hurled out of the wagon onto the stones. Fortunately they were not killed, but Ida was seriously injured. Fannie was not so badly hurt. The poor father now rejoiced that he did not find them dead. Onward rushed the frantic team running over bushes, saplings and boulders until they turned to the right and struck the road and ran across it where the wagon box was thrown off and the hind wheels were detached from the fore wheels. Here the mares in their frenzied fury turned to the left again and recrossed the road and dashed down the hill side taking the fore parts of the !
running gears of the wagon with them, the team went straight toward th
e hollow below where the original road crosses at the cliff of rock, but before they reached the bed of the hollow they ran between two post oak trees which the wheels struck with such force and the mares going at such a high speed that they jerked loose from the remainder of the wagon and the team separated and went on. One of the mares was named Diner and the other Fan. Diner ran across the hollow and up the hill side and fell dead near the road. "Fan" was found alive in the hills of Big Beach Hollow a few days afterward. Soon after the fearful run away occurred Bob Trotter and Lige Motley came along in a wagon. They were living on the river and were going from Lead Hill and the children were taken to Lead Hill by these men and cared for by friends until Mr. Clark and his wife could convey them home. Fannie recovered from her injuries in a few days but Ida lay several weeks before she was able to walk.
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Author: woodlanet
Surnames: Clark;Ingram
Classification: queries
Message Board URL:
http://boards.rootsweb.com/surnames.clark/12428/mb.ashx
Message Board Post:
I'm looking for information on the family of Charles Clark.
He was born abt. 1859 in Indiana & died 29 Dec 1919.
He married Rosetta Cooper 27 Sep 1902. His father was Samuel Clark and his mother was Drusilla Ingram but have no information on them. I'm stuck. Any advice? I'm still a newbie. Thanks.
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Hello,
Someone on one of the Quebec Lists reminded me to check out the passenger
lists at www.theshipslist.com for my KERR and HENDERSON names. In
particular, I was looking to find ships arriving in Quebec City in 1823 and
1824.
The page that was suggested was for the steamboats traveling from Quebec
City to Montreal. Even though this was not about the ships arriving in
Quebec, it meant these people were in Canada in the 1820's.
The reason I'm mentioning this is that, when I was looking for my names, I
spotted a couple of CLARK names. One name which stuck out at me was ..
James CLARK .. on a steamboat in 1824.
As I've mentioned many times in the past, a man who I think is an ancestor
is a James CLARK .. who was born "someplace" between 1790 and 1800
(probably). He shows up in Rhode Island around 1827, and marries in
Westport, MA, in 1829.
Using my imagination, I wonder if it is at all possible that this
mysterious James CLARK in New England, actually came from "old" England and
went to Canada around 1824. And, then changed his mind and got on a ship
in Quebec City which was heading down to Providence ??
By the way, I don't know as much about RI history as I should. During the
1700's and early 1800's, which town in RI was the major port ?
Thank you for your time. (THINK SPRING !)
Betty (near Lowell, MA)
(A reminder is that James and Rhoda CLARK had a baby girl in MA in 1836, and
then James "disappeared" a few years later. He might have been the James
CLARK who got on a ship in 1844 in New Bedford, MA, which was heading out to
the Indian Ocean. He "deserted" in Australia.) ("Traveling man?" Add
to my imagination?)
Remember to check the archives of all the Lists and Boards for your surnames
and place-names.
And, please remember to check the on-line auctions for for your surnames and
place-names.
We may have arrived on different ships but we're all in the same boat now.
:o)
(thinking genealogy)
(possibly first said by Martin Luther King, Jr.)
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Author: anniebell52
Surnames:
Classification: queries
Message Board URL:
http://boards.rootsweb.com/surnames.clark/12393.1/mb.ashx
Message Board Post:
what area or state are you researchng for your people?
please email.
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Author: sunkissangel1
Surnames: Clark
Classification: queries
Message Board URL:
http://boards.rootsweb.com/surnames.clark/12427/mb.ashx
Message Board Post:
Looking for relatives :)
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Author: wrcn3366
Surnames: Clark Jamieson Brown Clarke Marshall Balls
Classification: queries
Message Board URL:
http://boards.rootsweb.com/surnames.clark/12424.1.1.1/mb.ashx
Message Board Post:
Hi Graham,
Searching from March Q 1895 to December Q 1925, I could not find a marriage for Mary Ann and George anywhere in Hants. Actually, I'm not certain I even found your Mum's birth, although I did find 2 that could be. Was your Mum born in February or June? How did you work out her parents wed around 1900? It's just that she wasn't born until 1922, so that is quite a long time between the marriage and her birth, unless there were hoards of children in-between.
Is there anything at all which might pin-point things to a more definate time frame or any hint of another place or another surname?
I did find the following with FreeBMD-UK (not totally transcribed as yet though): I included the one with SEXTON as I thought if odd both had your surnames and both were a Mary A. born in the same quarter of the same year, as your Mum. I think they may be the same person actually, but only the birth certs will give full names of parents. All are Hampshire (Hants) births by the way.
Surname First name(s) Mothers m/s District Vol Page
Births Mar Q 1922
Clark Mary A Sexton Portsmouth 2b 851
Marshall Mary A Sexton Portsmouth 2b 851
Births Dec Q 1921
Marshall Mabel E Clark Christchurch 2b 1060
Births Mar Q 1920
Marshall Horace E Sexton Portsmouth 2b 1174
Births Mar Q 1916
Marshall Ida E M Clark Christchurch 2b 1084
Births Mar Q 1915
Marshall Eva D Clark Andover 2c 463
Let me know if you have any more details; I'll do what I can to help you.
Toni
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Author: GrahamHerriott1711
Surnames:
Classification: queries
Message Board URL:
http://boards.rootsweb.com/surnames.clark/12424.1.1/mb.ashx
Message Board Post:
Hi Toni
Its Portsmouth in Hampshire, England. Thank you. Look forward to hearing from you.
Graham
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Author: maryachtrh
Surnames:
Classification: queries
Message Board URL:
http://boards.rootsweb.com/surnames.clark/12425/mb.ashx
Message Board Post:
Appears in "The Ravia Herald" 2 May 1908, Ravia, Johnston County, Oklahoma
Last week Mary Parker, the fifth daughter of Chief Quanah Parker, of the Comanche Indians, was married to Edward H. Clark, of Faxon, a half blood son of Dr. Clark, who was a soldier at Fort Sill many years ago, and married a Comanche squaw.
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Author: wrcn3366
Surnames: Clark Jamieson Brown Clarke Marshall Balls
Classification: queries
Message Board URL:
http://boards.rootsweb.com/surnames.clark/12424.1/mb.ashx
Message Board Post:
Graham Herriott wrote:
>> I am trying to find details of the above - can anyone help me. I assume they would have married in Portsmouth around 1900 but i dont have a lot of detail. My mother born Mary Alice Marshall was just one of their children (born 06.02.1922). She had many brothers and sisters but her mother died we think when my mother was about 7 and was adopted.
if anyone has an info i would be really grateful.
Many thanks - <<
Graham,
Where is Portsmouth? England? Australia? Canada? NZ? and I think there is at least one in the USA? Easier to help you if we know which it is.
Toni
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Author: GrahamHerriott1711
Surnames: G W Marshall/Mary Ann Clark
Classification: marriage
Message Board URL:
http://boards.rootsweb.com/surnames.clark/12424/mb.ashx
Message Board Post:
I am trying to find details of the above - can anyone help me. I assume they would have married in Portsmouth around 1900 but i dont have a lot of detail. My mother born Mary Alice Marshall was just one of their children (born 06.02.1922). She had many brothers and sisters but her mother died we think when my mother was about 7 and was adopted.
if anyone has an info i would be really grateful.
Many thanks - Graham Herriott
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Author: bobbiclark1
Surnames: Clark
Classification: queries
Message Board URL:
http://boards.rootsweb.com/surnames.clark/12422.1/mb.ashx
Message Board Post:
Hello,
Do you possibly have any more information on Alexander Clark and sources on known data? I am interested in a great- grandfather Alexander Clark, bc 1844; dc: 1881-93.
Thanks.
Bobbi. Contact: bobbiclark(a)embarqmail.com
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Author: jkbadgle
Surnames: Clark, Badgley
Classification: queries
Message Board URL:
http://boards.rootsweb.com/surnames.clark/12423/mb.ashx
Message Board Post:
I am looking for information about a young women named Addie Clark. She was bron in 1879 in the Midland, MI area. Her Mother was Alice Clark. Alice Donahue is her maden name(She later became Alice Badgley)Addie's father was William CLark who i think died in 1880. Addie lived in the Freeland Saginaw area when she Married Issac Austin in 1894. She dies in 1896 area and is buried in Freeland. Her grave stone does not say her name. It only says wife of Issac and daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Badgley. Any information would be great
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Author: Marglou
Surnames: Clarke/Clark
Classification: queries
Message Board URL:
http://boards.rootsweb.com/surnames.clark/3677.3974.1.1.1/mb.ashx
Message Board Post:
Sorry Theresa but I have nothing on them... I will however look to see if I can find anything.
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