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Benjamin Reynolds was born before 1710. He married Mary and they had four children, William, Jane, John and Amey. Richard Reynolds was born in about 1672. He married Mary Capers, daughter of Richard Capers and Mary Barnet. They had eleven children. Their son, William (ca. 1720-ca. 1788), married Jane Reynolds, daughter of Benjamin and Mary, 11 August 1748. Descendants and relatives lived mainly in New York, South Carolina, Tennessee, Georgia and Texas.
Reynolds families came to America mainly from England, Flaunders, Germany, Holland, Ireland, and Scotland. Early ancestors settled Barbados, Bermuda and Nevis, and in Connecticut, Delaware, Maryland, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, and Virginia in the 1600's. Some also settled Kentucky, Maine, New Jersey, New York, North and South Carolina, and Vermont in the 1700's. Some were Loyalists. During the 1800's, some migrated to Canada, and to Alabama, Arizona, California, Georgia, Illinois, Indiana, the Indian Territory, Louisiana, Michigan, New Mexico, Ohio, Utah, Washington Territory, Washington D.C. and Wyoming. Later families also lived in Ontario (Canada), England, Colorado, Iowa, Nebraska, Nevada, Oregon, Washington, and elsewhere.
The bibliographic holdings of family histories at the Library of Congress. Entries are arranged alphabetically of the works of those involved in Genealogy and also items available through the Library of Congress.
Letter, 24 Apr. 1885, Columbia, S.C., M. Reynolds, Jr. to E.W. Anderson, re visit to Jim Hunter at Lunatic asylum, Hunter's epilepsy, and his job breaking rocks to pave the Asylum grounds; letter, 19 May 1885, Columbia, S.C., M. Reynolds, Jr., to M.M. Reynolds, re Episcopal church convention in Columbia, debate about status of freedmen, and plans to amend Episcopal Church constitution to accomodate Reconstruction.
John Gatch (ca. 1725-ca. 1790) was probably the son of German immigrants who settled in Maryland. John and his wife Catherine appear in South Carolina before 1748, when their one known son, John, Jr., was born. Descendants live throughout the southern United States. John, Sr., may have had two brothers who became the ancestors of Gash and Gatch families in Kentucky, Ohio, and Maryland.
William Reynolds was born in about 1765. He married Mary and they had ten children. Descendants and relatives lived mainly in South Carolina.
The ancestors of Timothy Hogan can be traced from Greene County, Tennessee before the Civil War to Haddon Hall in Derbyshire, England where his ancestors were Lords and Ladies of ancient England and Wales. Many lines go back to the ancient leaders of Wales including Rhys aps Griffith and to the Merovingian Kings and Queens of Normandy, France. Timothy's Swedish line, which came to Iowa in the USA, came directly from Sweden where they can be traced back to the sea kings of Uppsala, Sweden in about 500 AD. Continuing back some of his European ancestors, they can be traced to Seleucus Nicator in ancient Syria, the father of Helen of Troy. It is easy to imagine that some of the members of the Hogan Family retained the ambition and traits of their ancient ancestors. Many of his forefathers in Colonial America were Freemasons and instrumental in forming the burgeoning American Nation. Front cover photo - Margarette Falls, Greene Co., TN Rear cover photo -Haddon Hall in Derbyshire England