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Jesse Hamilton was born in about 1745. He married Margaret in about 1770 and they had thirteen children. They lived in Natchez, Mississippi. Jesse died in about 1819. Descendants and relatives lived mainly in Mississippi, Kentucky, Alabama, Texas and Missouri.
William Mosley was born in about 1776. He married Ruth in about 1807. They had eight children. He died in Floyd County, Kentucky. Descendants and relatives lived mainly in Kentucky, Ohio, Arkansas and Missouri.
Thomas Gleeson was born in Ireland in about 1895. He married Margaret Spain. They had eight children. They emigrated and settled in Floyd County, Indiana. Descendants and relatives lived mainly in Indiana and Illinois. Includes Barrett, Cowie, Kellner, Shrosbree, Zeman and related families.
Sylvester Keough was born in about 1775. He married Martha Whelan. They has three sons, Michael, John and James. They lived in Ferryland, Newfoundland. Descendants and relatives lived mainly in Newfoundland and Massachusetts. Includes Audie, Dunphy, Kehoe, Tobin and related families.
Victor Nicholas Lebre was born 27 March 1860 in Lewisport, Kentucky. His parents were Claude Francis Lebre and Christiana Boeswald. He married Eva Rosskopf, daughter of Balthasar Rosskopf and Julia Ruhmann, 6 May 1890 in Louisville, Kentucky. They had three children. Ancestors, descendants and relatives lived mainly in Germany, France and Kentucky.
Joseph Boeswald was born in Germany. He married Teresa Young in about 1835. They had four known children. Descendants and relatives lived mainly in Kentucky and Missouri.
Alabama's capital has roots all over the state. It first emerged in St. Stephens in 1799, a small fort acquired from the Spanish atop a tall limestone bluff overlooking the Tombigbee River. Next came Huntsville in the Tennessee Valley, where the state constitution emerged. Cahawba was the capital to receive a visit from the Marquis de Lafayette, the last surviving general of the American Revolution. In 1826, Tuscaloosa took the reins for twenty years before the final move to Montgomery. Discover the leaders and events that established the state and the fates of each dynamic governmental center as author Jim Lewis traces the history of Alabama's lost capitals.