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Charles Keesee was probably the son of George Keesee who immigrated to the United States ca. 1700 from Germany. Charles was born ca. 1714 and was located on records of Henrico Co., Virginia by the year 1737. He married Elizabeth (surname unknown) sometime prior to 1743 and she died before 1760. Charles then married Mildred (surname unknown). He was the father of five known children and died sometime after 1773. Descendants lived primarily in Virginia, Kentucky, Tennessee and elsewhere.
A project of the Johnson County Historical and Genealogical Society.
James Craft (ca. 1730) was probably born in Pennsylvania, but possibly in Germany. He married Sarah Hammons and they had at least one child. Their son, Archealous Craft (1749-1853) was born in North Carolina. He married Elizabeth Adams and they had ten children. They moved to Kentucky ca. 1806- 1807. Their descendant Maude Craft (1905- 1991) was born in Letcher County, Kentucky. She married three times and had two children. Descendants and relatives lived in Kentucky, Iowa, Indiana, Tennessee, North Carolina, Illinois, Virginia, Missouri, Texas, Arizona, Louisiana, Oklahoma, California and elsewhere.
"We are pleased to present to you a collection of Allen family genealogy. We have included primarily the families of William Allen and Caty Gearheart, Richard Allen and Edy Williams, George Allen and Cynthia Patton, James Allen and Nancy Louise Roberts, Samuel Patton Sr. and Elizabeth Allen, Isaac E. Allen and 1st wife Frances E. Pettit and 2nd wife Margaret Poplett ... Settlement of the Big Sandy, Licking and Kentucky River valleys was happening by 1800. By tracing the Allen generation on back before this date, we find that they lived in Virginia or North Carolina. By 1800 many of them began their westward movement into eastern Kentucky ... again we are reminded of the different 'sets' of Allens, such as the Floyd County set, the Breathitt County set, or the Morgan County- White Oak set; however it is believed but not fully proven that all the so-called 'sets' are really just branches of one family tree with a progenitor yet unproven"--Foreword, p. [4] in v. 1