Download Free Hardison And Allied Families Book in PDF and EPUB Free Download. You can read online Hardison And Allied Families and write the review.

James Hardison (1759-1842) was born in Martin County, North Carolina. After serving in the Revolutionary War he migrated to Maury County, Tennessee where he married Mary Roberson in about 1789 and Mary Smithwick in 1808 or 1809. Descendants and relatives lived in Tennessee, North Carolina and Virginia.
Walter LaFayette Bell (1889-1976) was born in Butterfield, Missouri, son of Jonas Bradley Bell (1843-1931) and Martha Ann Cooper (1865-1890). He married Ruth Rankin (1900-1975), born in Jonesboro, Arkansas, daughter of James Lewis Rankin (1854-1928) and Mary Elizabeth Dawson (1860-1912). Ancestry traced to John Bell (1668-1713) who died in Surry County, Virginia and Robert Rankin (1749-1816) of the Carolinas and Kentucky, as well as many other ancestors. Ancestors, descendants and relatives lived in Illinois, Missouri, Utah, Tennessee, Kentucky, Virginia, Arkansas, Texas, Indiana, North Carolina, Wisconsin, Iowa, Mississippi, South Carolina and elsewhere.
This ten-year supplement lists 10,000 titles acquired by the Library of Congress since 1976--this extraordinary number reflecting the phenomenal growth of interest in genealogy since the publication of Roots. An index of secondary names contains about 8,500 entries, and a geographical index lists family locations when mentioned.
William McAteer (1783-1829) was born in Ireland, and apparently immigrated to the United States before 1805. About that year, he married his wife Mary; they had ten children. Descendants live throughout the United States.
Christian Eberhard (ca. 1725-1779) was born in Germany and probably immigrated to America in 1744. He married Maria Sophia Carl, probably in Pennsylvania. They had at least three children, 1757-ca. 1764, born in Pennsylvania, Virginia, and North Carolina. He died in Rowan County, North Carolina. Descendants of his sons, John Peter Eberhard (1757-1836) and Christian Eberhard (ca. 1764-1828 or 1829), lived in North Carolina and elswhere. Most descendants spell their surname Everhart or Everhardt.
Richard Bater (1824-1890) was born in Chulmleigh, Devon, England. He married Margaret Graddon in 1847. They immigrated to the United States in 1851 and settled in Batavia, Genesee County, New York. In 1861 they moved to Hillsdale County, Michigan. Descendants and relatives lived in New York, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Colorado, Texas, Washington, California and elsewhere in the United States as well as in Canada. Includes ancestors and descendants in England.
"Jno. Mackey, the first of the name in the country, was a Quaker of Irish or Scotch-Irish descent. He came between the Yrs. 1740/45, & after several yrs. spent in the southern part of the Co. in the vicinity of Cape May C.H. he located upon what is known as the Mackey Place in Petersburg [New Jersey]. ... Col. Mackey's w[ife] died of heart disease sometime prior to 1784. The Col. d[ied] in Sept. of that y[ear]. Both he & his w[ife] were buried in the in the family burying ground on the Mackey Place."--P. 12. "After the section dealing with the family of John Mackey, Sr., was compiled and ready for print, [the author] found [she] had accumulated so many valuable records which did not belong directly to [her] branch of the Mackeys, that [she] desired others to benefit from them."--Introd. Includes research on many different Mackey families, especially those of Pennsylvania and the southern United States. Also includes variant spellings of McKay, McCoy, McKee, McKey, McKie, Mackie, and others.