Download Free The Descendants Of The Routh Family Book in PDF and EPUB Free Download. You can read online The Descendants Of The Routh Family and write the review.

Jacob Routh (1745-1827) married Marthe Redfern about 1768, and moved from North Carolina to Jefferson County, Tennessee about 1791. Descendants lived in North Carolina, Tennessee, Missouri, Oklahoma, Texas, California and elsewhere.
Lawrence Routh (ca. 1660-1691) married Ann Metcalf in 1683, and they immigrated from England to Chester County, Pennsylvania, to join his cousin, William Penn. Descendants lived in most of the United States.
Dr. Hugh Lincoln Routh (1844-1919) was born at Fayetteville, Arkansas, the son of Rev. Benjamin Murrell Routh and Louisa Marion Lillard Routh, natives of Tennessee. He served in the Confederate army and then attended medical school in Philadelphia. He married Alice Helen McCallie (1845-1913) in 1868 at Carrollton, Arkansas. They had three children, 1870-1876. The family lived at Carrollton, until 1873, when they moved to Harrison, Arkansas. After his wife's death, he married 2) Laura Locklin, a widow. He died in Michigan while visiting his wife's family. Hugh and Alice Routh are buried in the Rose Hill Cemetery, Harrison, Arkansas. Most descendants listed lived in Arkansas.
Stephen Routh (ca.1797-1871) married Sarah McCluskey and moved from Sevier County to Grainger County, Tennessee. Descendants lived in Tennessee, Virginia, Kentucky, Oklahoma, Texas and elsewhere. Includes some English ancestry.
Lawrence Routh was born about 1660 in Hawes, Yorkshire, England and married Anne Metcalfe. They immigrated in 1688 to Easton, Talbot Co., Maryland and moved to Chester Co., Pennsylvania. He died in 1691 and his widow married Humphrey Johnson and had several more children.
Joseph Routh (b.ca.1747) married Mary Redfern, and they moved from Randolph County, North Carolina to Jefferson County, Tennessee between 1792 and 1795. Descendants lived in Tennessee, Illinois, Indiana, Missouri, Kansas, Texas 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.
Americans have an unusually strong family ideology. We believe that morally self-sufficient nuclear households must serve as the foundation of a republican society. In this brilliant history, Barry Levy traces this contemporary view of family life all the way back to the Quakers. _____ Levy argues that the Quakers brought a new vision of family and social life to America--one that contrasted sharply with the harsh, formal world of the Puritans in New England. The Quaker emphasis was on affection, friendship and hospitality. They stressed the importance of women in the home, and of self-disciplined, non-coercive childrearing. _____ This book explains how and why the Quakers' had such a profound cultural impact (and why more so in Pennsylvania and America than in England); and what the Quakers' experience with their own radical family system can tell us about American family ideology. ______ Who were the Northwest British Quakers and why did their family system so impress English, French, and New England reformers--Voltaire, Crevecouer, Brissot, Emerson, George Bancroft, Lydia Maria Child, and Lousia May Alcott, to name just a few? To answer this question, Levy tells the story of a large group of Quaker farmers from their development of a new family and communal life in England in the 1650s to their emigration and experience in Pennsylvania between 1681 and 1790. The book is thus simultaneously a trans-Atlantic community study of the migration and transplantation of ordinary British peoples in the tradition of Sumner Chilton Powell's Puritan Village; the story of the formation and development of a major Anglo-American faith; and an exploration of the origins of American family ideology.