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Josiah and Phillip Earp were born in Maryland about 1760. They fought in the Revolutionary War and later moved to Virginia and later North Carolina. Later generations moved farther west and today descendants are found throughout the United States. Information on their descendants and related lines are given in this volume including the infamous Earp brothers. Descendants now live in Texas, Missouri, and elsewhere in the United States.
William Richard Whitehurst was born in about 1600. He married Ellen and they had eight children. He died in 1651 in Princess Anne County, Virginia. Descendants and relatives lived mainly in North Carolina.
Most descendants shown in the New England states, although many moved to the midwest, and some elsewhere.
This is a story about family, adoption, heritage, and identity. It is also about place and people. Haralambie invites you to accompany her on her search for her biological roots, the hurdles and misdirections, and what happens when she finally finds out who her biological family members are. Every adoption search and reunion are different. The results, and how each adoptee deals with them, are also different. But everyone who has been touched by adoption -- whether directly or through friends, professional clients, or patients -- can learn from others' experiences. Haralambie's journey will intrigue readers and may make them laugh and cry. It will surely get them thinking about their own identity and heritage. Her message for readers is to approach the quest with kindness and understanding.
"I had a native ambition to rise from obscurity and make myself useful in the world, to shine and be distinguished." So said the Hon. Neil S. Brown, one of the 259 prominent 19th-century Tennesseans profiled in this extraordinary book. It is this kind of unique first-hand biographical information that makes this work unequaled in the canon of Tennessee genealogical literature. Not only did compiler William S. Speer have the unparalleled opportunity to interview a number of the featured Tennesseans himself, he also was able to garner--and include in this book--thousands and thousands of names of their family members, friends, and colleagues. The biographical sketches include numerous details about the lives of the subjects and their families. In addition, the compiler offers insight into the personal, professional, and sometimes even physical characteristics that made each of these men a success.