John Newton Seawright was the son of Irish immigrant Samuel James Seawright. James Seawright 1747 - 1790 was born in Ireland, the son of Mary Eleanor Dickson and Andrew Seawright Sr. He with his parents came to America in 1762/63 to join the family of his grandparents, William Seawright and his wife, Esther Thompson. On the boat coming over, landing in Charleston, South Carolina 1762 or 1763, he fell in love with Elizabeth McCullough and later married her. Most of their family are buried at Greenville Presbyterian Church Cemetery, Donalds, Abbeville, South Carolina. James is listed with the DAR as a patriot: 1) CAPT JOHN WILSON, COL ANDERSON, MILITIA2) FURNISHED SUPPLIES
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John Newton Seawright
BIRTH 15 NOV 1772 • Donalds, Abbeville, South Carolina, USA
DEATH 16 MAR 1850 OF PNEUMONIA • Donalds, Abbeville, South Carolina, USA
Married: Nov. 17, 1772, in Abbeville County, South Carolina, USA
Jennet "Jane" Richey
BIRTH 12 FEB 1790 • Donalds, Abbeville, South Carolina, USA
DEATH 13 JUN 1872 • Donalds, Abbeville, South Carolina
Jane was the daughter of Robert J. Richie and Mary Caldwell Stewart
John's brother, Andrew, would marry Jane's sister, Margaret Richey
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John and Jane would have at least eleven children:
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1. James M. Seawright (1809-1904) married Elizabeth Brownlee (1810-1848)
2. Robert Richey Seawright (1811-1881) married Esther "Essie" Pyles (1818-1884)
3. Mary Anne Seawright (1814-1828)
4. Ebenezer Wilson Seawright (1816-1886) married Mary Polly Rochester Pyles (1824-1897)
5. John Newton Seawright Jr. (1818-1858) married Jane Eleanor Cowan (1834-1895)
6. William Marshall Seawright (1821-1903) married Sarah Elizabeth "Lizzie" Gaines (1840-1927)
7. Elizabeth Jane Seawright (1924-1904) married Samuel Edward Pruitt III (1817-1863) KIA CSA
8. Margaret Caroline Seawright (1827-1817)
9. Andrew Thompson Seawright (1828-1902) married Cornelia "Neely" Ann Hawthorn (1837-1931)
10. Emily Caroline Seawright (1831-1904) married Col. Samuel Houston Donnald (1806-1872)
11. Isaac Cowan Seawright (1833-1862) KIA CSA married Elaine "Laney" Caroline Hawthorne (1834-1897)
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Only Ebenezer and William Marshall Seawright families are listed below.
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Ebenezer Wilson Seawright
1816–1886
BIRTH 23 APRIL 1816 • Donalds, Abbeville, South Carolina, USA
DEATH 21 AUGUST 1886 • Santa Bárbara, Amazonas, Brazil
Married:
Mary "Polly" Rochester Pyles
1824–1897
BIRTH 23 NOV 1824 • Abbeville Dist, South Carolina, USA
DEATH 27 MAR 1897 • Santa Bárbara, Amazonas, Brazil
Married:
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CHILDREN:
1.
Ebenezer Jewett Seawright
1847–1871
BIRTH ABT 1847 • Donalds, Abbeville, South Carolina, USA
DEATH 1871 • Chattooga County, Georgia, USA
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2.
Samuel Augustus Seawright
1850–1881
BIRTH 1850 • Chattooga County, Georgia
DEATH 1881 • Campos, Rio de Janeiro,Brazil
Married:
Sara ______
1850–1881
BIRTH ABT 1850 • of, Brazil
DEATH 1881
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CHILDREN:
1.
Emma Georgina Seawright
1870–1876
BIRTH ABT 1870
DEATH 1876
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3.
John Reny Seawright
1852–1897
BIRTH 1852 • Chattooga County, Georgia
DEATH 1897 • São Paulo, São Paulo, Brazil
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4.
Eugene Virgil Seawright
1854–1918
BIRTH 10 NOV 1854 • Chatooga, Georgia, United States
DEATH 10 JUL 1918 • São Paulo, São Paulo, Brazil
Married:
Anna Elizabeth "Bettie" Carlton
1856–1908
BIRTH 23 MAY 1856 • Clarke County, Mississippi, USA
DEATH 04 SEP 1908 • Sao Paulo, São Paulo, Brazil
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CHILDREN:
1.
Minerva "Minnie" Carlton Seawright
1885–1964
BIRTH 07 MAY 1885 • Chattooga County, Georgia, USA
DEATH 4 MAY 1964 • Sao Paulo, São Paulo, Brazil
Married:
Albert Ernest Rowe
1880–
BIRTH ABT 1880 • Georgia
DEATH Unknown
2.
Emily "Emmie" Seawright
1886–
BIRTH 2 DEC 1886 • São Paulo, Brazil?
DEATH Sao Paulo, São Paulo, Brazil?
Married:
Stephen Rowe
1882–
BIRTH ABOUT 1882
DEATH São Paulo, São Paulo, Brazil​
3.
James Wilson Seawright
1889–1965
BIRTH 25 MAR 1889 • Villa Americana, Sao Paulo, Brazil
DEATH 10 APR 1965 • Paranapanema, Sao Paulo, Brazil
Married:
Helena Pin
BIRTH Unknown
4.
Margareth "Maggie" Seawright
1891–1987
BIRTH 16 MAR 1891 • Villa Americana, Sao Paulo, Brazil
DEATH OCT 1987 • Sao Pulo, Brazil
Married:
Luigi Pio Piccinini
1892–1949
BIRTH 24 AUG 1892
DEATH 26 JUN 1949 • Sao Paulo, Sao Paulo, Brazil
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CHILDREN:
1.
Helio Piccinini
1923–2002
BIRTH 1923
DEATH 19 JUL 2002 • Sao Paulo, Sao Paulo, Brazil
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5.
Elizabeth Jane Seawright
1854–1855
BIRTH 10 NOV 1854 • Chattooga, Georgia, United States
DEATH 1855 • Chattooga County, Georgia, USA
Died Young
6.
James Price Seawright
1856–1864
BIRTH 1856 • Chattooga, Georgia, United States
DEATH 1864 • Chattooga Co., GA?
7.
William Lewis Seawright
1859–1905
BIRTH 1859 • Dirt Town Valley, Chattooga, Georgia, USA
DEATH ABOUT 1905 • Sao Paulo, Sao Paulo, Brazil
8.
Emily Virginia Seawright
1861–1915
BIRTH 24 SEP 1861 • Chattooga, Georgia, United States
DEATH 01 AUG 1915 • Santa Bárbara, Amazonas, Brazil
Married:
Thomas Alonzo Keese
Son of Thomas Lafayette Keese and Florence Josephine Hubbard
1856–1926
BIRTH 20 FEBRUARY 1856 • Texas
DEATH 23 OCTOBER 1926 • Santa Bárbara, Amazonas, Brazil
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CHILDREN:
1.
Katherine Eugenia Keese
1886–1972
BIRTH 02 MAY 1886 • Santa Barbara, Sao Paulo, Brazil
DEATH 02 MAY 1972 • Donalds, Abbeville, South Carolina, USA
Married:
Robert Dodson Brownlee
Son of William Virgil Brownlee and Sonora Jane Dodson
1883–1974
BIRTH 10 AUG 1883 • Donalds, Abbeville, South Carolina
DEATH 27 FEB 1974 • Donalds, Abbeville, South Carolina
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CHILDREN:
1.
William Alonzo "Billy" Brownlee
1913–1981
BIRTH 9 NOV 1913 • Donalds, Abbeville, South Carolina
DEATH 1 MAR 1981 • Honea Path, Anderson, South Carolina
Married:
Lois Kathleen Martin
1914–1994
BIRTH 8 OCTOBER 1914 • Ware Shoals, South Carolina
DEATH 8 NOVEMBER 1994 • Due West, Abbeville, South Carolina
2.
Dorothy Brownlee
1915–2007
BIRTH 11 NOVEMBER 1915 • Abbeville County, South Carolina, USA
DEATH 29 DECEMBER 2007 • Honea Path, Anderson County, South Carolina,
Married:
Louis Carr Henry
Son of Louis Neal Henry and Alice Bell
1897–1983
BIRTH 12 FEB 1897 • Belden, Lee, Mississippi
DEATH 22 JAN 1983 • Donalds, Abbeville, SC
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2.
Rosa May Keese
1888–1969
BIRTH 6 AUG 1888 • Santa Bárbara d'Oeste, Sao Paulo, Brazil
DEATH 28 SEP 1969 • Santa Bárbara, Amazonas, Brazil
Married;
Henry Hill Dodson
Son of Charles Hill Dodson and Roberta "Bertie" Eugenia Seawright
1892–1906
BIRTH ABT 1892 • Donalds, Abbeville, South Carolina
DEATH 1906 • Brazil
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CHILDREN:
1.
Charles Keese Dodson
1921–
BIRTH 1921 • Brazil
DEATH Unknown
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9.
Roseman Orven Seawright
1864–1895
BIRTH 19 DEC 1864 • Jackson County,Florida
DEATH 1895 • São Paulo, São Paulo, Brazil
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Before WWI, two beautiful young sisters arrived in Donalds, SC., from Brazil, South America. They came to further their education in South Carolina's more modern system of higher learning. They were admired and welcomed by their many cousins whom they had never seen. The girls were the granddaughters of Ebenezer Wilson Seawright who moved to Brazil after the Civil War.
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Katherine and Rosa Keese are the ladies I am thinking of. It didn't take long for them to fit right in with the young folks and be admired and praised by the older people. Customs here were very different from their homeland, but that didn't take the girls long to overcome. The proms and lawn parties of that day made getting acquainted easy. Dating and college went hand in hand. Katherine was the first to go steady. The local young druggist and the drug store owner was the lucky man. Robert D. Brownlee popped the question and Katherine accepted. We soon heard wedding bells echoing through-out the little town of Donalds.
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Two fine children were born to this family, one boy and one girl, William A. Brownlee and Dorothy Brownlee (Henry).
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Rosa also had a sweetheart and they were very serious at that time. Rosa and Henry Dodson were engaged but their plans were very cloudy by the approach of WWI. Henry had been drafted and Uncle Sam had made his plans. So they postponed the wedding until a later date. Rosa hurriedly left for Brazil before the German U-boats cut off the shipping lanes to her home. The story does not end yet. Poor old Henry reluctantly marched off to war in Germany. Finally, after two long years, the war ended and Henry set foot on American soil again, but not for long. After visiting relatives he headed to Charleston, SC, and caught the first boat headed to Sao Paulo, Brazil. You guessed it, the wedding took place as planned. One fine boy was born to Henry and Rosa. They named him C.K. I suppose that stood for Charles Keese Dodson. Neither Henry nor Rosa ever returned to America.
Maggie Seawright
Luigi Piccinini
William Marshall Seawright
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William Marshall Seawright
BIRTH 2 JUN 1821 • Donalds, Abbeville, SC
DEATH 16 JUN 1903 • Donalds, Abbeville, SC
Married: 31 Jan 1856 • Abbeville Co., SC
Sarah Elizabeth "Lizzie" Gaines
BIRTH 4 MAR 1840 • South Carolina or Georgia
DEATH 2 JAN 1927 • Donalds, Abbeyville, South
Carolina, USA
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William Marshall. SEAWRIGHT born in Donaldsville,
SC, 2 JUN 1821; married Sarah Elizabeth GIAINES on
31 Jan 1856 at Abbeville, SC; died Donalds, Abbeville,
SC 16 JUN 1903; MILITARY: CSA; BURIED: Greenville
Presbyterian Cemetery, SC
SEAWRIGHT, WILLIAM (m. Sarah Elizabeth Gaines)
Private. Company A, 5th South Carolina Reserves (90
Days, 1862-63).
Enlisted: 17 November, 1862, Abbeville, SC. Age 42 years.
On last roll: 15 February, 1863.
SEAWRIGHT, WILLIAM (same)
Private. Company F, 1st South Carolina State Troops
(6 months, 1863-64).
Enlisted: 1 August, 1863, Abbeville, SC.
On last roll: November/December, 1863.
Sarah, the wife of William L. Seawright, filed for his Civil War Pension.
Drefus Seawright told this story of his grandfather, William M. Seawright :
As are all Seawrights, he was very talented. He was a successful farmer, carpenter, cotton gin owner and operator, an excellent mechanic, and could do anything else where his skills were needed. He volunteered in the Civil War leaving his wife and four small children to run the farm. In later years, he lost one hand operating the gin. A gin used a process where seeds were removed from the cotton and it was pressed into bales that were sent to cotton mills to be made into threads and then into cloth.
Albert and Pearlene Seawright told this story:
One day when a group of politicians (probably Wade Hampton and his men) came by on their way to Abbeville, and stopped for a drink of water. Elizabeth, who was a snappy, black-eyed beauty, belleved in doing things right. She put fresh, cold well water in her best pitcher, then put in two or three of her silver napkin rings so it would tinkle like there was ice in it when she served it to her guests.
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William and Lizzie would have at least thirteen children:
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1. Isaac Phineas Seawright (1856-1922) married 1st Ida Linsey Hall, (1856-1892) married 2nd
Indianna Simpson (1872-1952)
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2. John Rany Seawright (1858-1912) married 1st Annie T Kelley (1854-1888), married 2ndFrances Elizabeth "Fannie" "Lizzie" Wansley (1853-1937)
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3. William "Will" Leonidas Seawright (1859-1918) married Alice Adella Killingsworth (1855-1935)
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4. Robert Emmett Seawright 1862-1942) married Elva "Elvy" Vashti Tucker (1859-1939)
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5. Sarah "Sallie" Jane Seawright (1863-1938) married Amaziah Marion Shirley (1856-1936)
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6. Samuel "Sam" Willson Seawright (1867-1937) married Louanah "Lou" Tennessee Seawright (1872-1951)
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7. James Augustus "Gus" Seawright (1869-1043) married Fannie Fay Byers (1878-1954)
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8. Roberta "Bertie" Eugenia Seawright (1869-1908) married Charles Hill Dodson (1866-1934)
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9. Charles Reid Seawright (1873-1875)
10. Vernon Caldwell Seawright (1875-1927) married Elizabeth "Nettie" Cordelia Richey (1881-1928)
11. Olin Gaines Seawright (1877-1943) married TeaCora Malinda Drake (1883-1931)
12. Caroline "Carrie" Ola Seawright 1879-1963) married George Hayden Cason (1877-1955)
13. Lula Ellen Seawright (1882-1901) married William Isaac "Will" Richey (1869-1965)
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1.
Kittie M Dodson
BIRTH 10 SEP 1890 • Donalds, Abbeville, South Carolina, USA
DEATH 21 JAN 1962 • South Carolina, USA
Married: 1903, South Carolina, USA
Lander Holmes Willis
BIRTH 25 MAY 1885 • Sullivan, Laurens, South Carolina, USA
DEATH 26 MAR 1955 • Laurens, South Carolina, USA
Son of John Roland Willis and Sarah A. "Sallie" Miller
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2.
Henry Hill Dodson
BIRTH 26 JUL 1892 • Donalds, Abbeville, South Carolina
DEATH 26 JUL 1936 • Chácara Recreio, Santa Barbara d'Oeste, São Paulo, Brazil
Married: About 1905 • São Paulo, Brasil
Rosa May Keese
BIRTH 6 AUG 1888 • Santa Bárbara d'Oeste, Sao Paulo, Brazil
DEATH 28 SEP 1969 • Santa Bárbara d'Oeste, Sao Paulo, Brazil
Daughter of Thomas Alanzo Keese and Emily Virginia Seawright
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Rosa and Henry Dodson were engaged but their plans were very cloudy by the approach of WWI. Henry had been drafted and Uncle Sam had made his plans. So they postponed the wedding until a later date. Rosa hurriedly left for Brazil before the German U-boats cut off the shipping lanes to her home. The story does not end yet. Poor old Henry reluctantly marched off to war in Germany. Finally, after two long years, the war ended and Henry set foot on American soil again, but not for long. After visiting relatives he headed to Charleston, SC, and caught the first boat headed to Sao Paulo, Brazil. You guessed it, the wedding took place as planned. One fine boy was born to Henry and Rosa. They named him C.K. I suppose that stood for Charles Keese Dodson. Neither Henry nor Rosa ever returned to America.
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Henry and Rosa would have one son
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1.
Charles Keese Dodson
BIRTH 1921 • Brazil
3.
Lillie E Dodson
BIRTH NOV 1893 • Donalds, Abbeville, South Carolina, USA
DEATH 11 MAR 1915 • Laurens County, South Carolina, USA
Married: 10 Jun 1914, Abbeville County, South Carolina, USA
Samuel Earl Elledge Sr
BIRTH 21 JUL 1885 • South Carolina
DEATH 17 APR 1931 • Ware Shoals, Laurens, South Carolina, USA
Son of John Porter Elledge and Mary Judson Cooper
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4.
Jeanie Ruth Dodson
BIRTH 8 APR 1895 • Donalds, Abbeville, South Carolina, USA
DEATH 27 MAY 1967 • Greenwood, Greenwood, South Carolina, USA
Married: 3 Dec 1919 • South Carolina, USA
John Robert Dunn Sr
BIRTH 23 NOV 1877 • Shoals Junction, Abbeville, South Carolina, USA
DEATH 07 MAR 1942 • Gaffney, Cherokee, South Carolina, USA
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Jeanie and John would have at least six children:
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5.
Myra Dodson
BIRTH 17 APR 1897 • Abbeville County, South Carolina, USA
DEATH 20 OCT 1899 • Abbeville County, South Carolina, USA
Died as a young child
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6.
Ora L Dodson
BIRTH 12 OCT 1898 • Donalds, Abbeville, South Carolina, USA
DEATH 21 OCT 1978 • Simpsonville, Greenville, South Carolina, USA
Married: May 27, 1925, • Greenville, South Carolina, USA
Lawrence Edward King Sr
BIRTH 13 JUNE 1896 • South Carolina
DEATH 20 NOVEMBER 1980 • Simpsonville, Greenville, South C
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Ora and Lawrence would have at least two children:
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1.
Margaret B Dunn
BIRTH 7 JAN 1921 • Donalds, Abbeville, South Carolina, USA
DEATH 30 AUG 2008 • Ware Shoals, Greenwood, South Carolina, USA
Married: 9 Jun 1942, South Carolina, USA
James Howard "Slick" Drake
BIRTH 2 JAN 1917 • Shoals Junction, Greenwood, South Carolina, USA
DEATH 25 NOV 2002 • Ware Shoals, Greenwood, South Carolina, USA
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2.
John Robert Dunn JR
BIRTH 5 MAY 1922 • Abbeville County, South Carolina, USA
DEATH 2 OCT 2003 • Greenwood, Greenwood, South Carolina, USA
Married: 24 Oct 1944 • Due West, Abbeville, South Carolina, USA
Elsie Knight
BIRTH 06/21/1918 • Laurens County, South Carolina, USA
DEATH 2008 • Lexington County, South Carolina, USA
Daughter of Benjamin Arnold Knifgt and Fannie Dorothy Balentine
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3.
Charles Henry (Sam) Dunn
BIRTH 11 AUG 1923 • Donalds, Abbeville, South Carolina, USA
DEATH 26 JUL 1993 • Gaffney, Cherokee, South Carolina, USA
Married: 29 Jul 1949 • Greenwood, South Carolina, USA
Lillie Rebecca Wilson
BIRTH 5 JUNE 1928 • Greenwood, Greenwood, South Carolina, USA
DEATH 3 MARCH 2013 • Clinton, Laurens, South Carolina, USA
Daughter of Fred Guy Wilson and Arrena Adaline Gerrard
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4.
William Acker (Billy) Dunn
BIRTH 11 OCT 1924 • Donalds, Abbeville, South Carolina, USA
DEATH 8 FEB 1967 • Donalds, Abbeville, South Carolina, USA
Married: 20 Apr 1946 • Greenwood, South Carolina, USA, at his mother's home
Virginia E. Pearman
BIRTH 1928 • Abbeville County, South Carolina, USA
DEATH 30 DEC 2019 • Donalds, Abbeville, South Carolina, USA
Saughter of the late Floyd and Ethel Smith
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5.
Bertie Dunn
BIRTH 4 JAN 1928 • Donalds, Abbeville, South Carolina, USA
DEATH 4 JAN 1928 • Donalds, Abbeville, South Carolina, USA
Twin of Bernie - Died of premature birth
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6.
Bernie Dunn
​BIRTH 4 JAN 1928 • Donalds, Abbeville, South Carolina, USA
DEATH 4 JAN 1928 • Donalds, Abbeville, South Carolina, USA
Twin of Bertie - Died of premature birth
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7.
Wilma E. DODSON
BIRTH 12 NOV 1900 • Donalds, Abbeville, South Carolina, USA
DEATH 14 MAY 1975 • Greenwood County, South Carolina, USA
Married: 10 Mar 1921 • Greenville County, South Carolina, USA
Myrth James "Jimmie" Killingsworth
BIRTH 27 JUN 1898 • Sullivan, Laurens, South Carolina, USA
DEATH 23 SEP 1971 • Ware Shoals, Greenwood, South Carolina, USA
He was the son of Samuel "Sam" Clarence Killingsworth and Betty Lou Clodfelter
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Wilma and Jimmie would have at least four children:
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1.
Charles Edward "Ed" King
BIRTH 27 OCTOBER 1932 • Greenville, Greenville, South Carolina, USA
DEATH 20 JANUARY 2014 • Greenville, Greenville, South Carolina, USA
Married:
Betty Bramlett
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2.
Wilma Eugenia King
BIRTH 28 JUL 1934 • Simpsonville, Greenville, South Carolina, USA
DEATH 24 DEC 1994 • Greenville, Greenville, South Carolina, USA
Died from injuries suffered in a car crash
Married: 08 OCT 1954
Paul Gerald (Jerry) Jones
BIRTH 18 DEC 1932 • Simpsonville, Greenville, South Carolina, USA
DEATH 19 NOV 1986 • South Carolina, USA
He was the son of Paul Goodwin Jones and Essie Mae Howard
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Frances Noree Killingsworth
BIRTH 6 MAY 1922 • South Carolina
DEATH 21 MAR 2012 • Greenwood, Greenwood, SC
Married: 23 Nov 1946 • Greenwood, South Carolina, USA
Lynwood Talmadge Martin
BIRTH 14 JUN 1914 • Blacksburg, South Carolina, USA
DEATH 12 FEB 1984 • Charlotte, Mecklenburg, North Carolina, USA
He was the son of Lyman Hall Martin Sr. and Eula Mae Wylie
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2.
Hazel Betty Killingsworth
BIRTH 30 JUN 1926 • Ware Shoals, Greenwood County, South Carolina, USA
DEATH 12 NOV 2017 • Fort Mill, York, South Carolina, USA
Married 1st: 1948 • South Carolina, USA
George Hagan Haddon
BIRTH 16 MAR 1926 • Abbeville County, South Carolina, USA
DEATH 10 SEP 1975 • Donalds, Abbeville County, South Carolina, USA
He was the son of George Paul Haddon Sr. and Annie Belle Jordan
Married 2nd:
Edwin Andrew Manos
BIRTH 9 MAY 1918 • High Point, Guilford, North Carolina, USA
DEATH 23 OCT 1998 • Greenwood, Greenwood, South Carolina, USA
He was the son of Gus Athos "Constantine" Manos and Leona Dennard
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Hazel and George would have at least three children:
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1.
George Hagan Haddon Jr
BIRTH 5 JAN 1952 • Donalds, Abbeville, South Carolina, USA
DEATH 7 JUN 1997 • Washington, Wilkes, Georgia, USA
Married: 14 Apr 1990 • Donalds, Abbeville, South Carolina, USA
Mrs. Sandra Marie Frix
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2.
Michael Paul Haddon
BIRTH 1954 • Donalds, Abbeville, South Carolina, USA
DEATH OCT 1954 • Donalds, Abbeville, South Carolina, USA
Died as an infant
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3.
Wilma Eugenia Haddon
BIRTH 30 AUG 1957 • Abbeville County, South Carolina, USA
Married 1st: 28 Aug 1976 • Donalds, Abbeville, South Carolina, USA
Victor V Schelechow
Son of Russian immigrants George Schelechow and Lydia Haase
BIRTH 31 JUL 1950
Married 2nd: 2 Jul 1988 • Donalds, Abbeville, South Carolina, USA
James Frederick Thies
BIRTH 20 DEC 1956 • Catawba, Catawba, North Carolina, USA
Son of George Fredireck Thies and Clara Louise Cox
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3.
Myrth James "Jimmy" Killingsworth II
1930–1952
BIRTH 8 MAR 1930 • Ware Shoals, Greenwood, SC
DEATH 14 OCT 1952 • North Korea
Married:
Delores Paige
BIRTH 8 OCT 1930
DEATH AUG 1961
Jimmie and Delores would have one son, born about a month before Jimmie was killed in North Korea.
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1.
Myrth James Killingsworth III
BIRTH 14 OCT 1952
4.
Nancy Lee Killingsworth
1936–2017
BIRTH ABT 1936 • South Carolina, USA
Married: 25 Jun 1960 • Greenwood, South Carolina, USA
Joe Harold Martin
BIRTH 21 SEP 1937 • Ware Shoals, Abbeville, South Carolina, USA
DEATH 22 SEP 2017 • Greenwood, Greenwood, South Carolina, USA
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Nancy and Joe would have two sons:
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1.
Monty J. Martin
BIRTH 26 JUN 1965
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2.
Mickey L. Martin
8.
Charles "Charlie" Mark Dodson
BIRTH 14 SEP 1905 • Donalds, Abbeville, South Carolina, USA
DEATH 12 APR 1957 • Chácara Recreio, Santa Barbara d'Oeste, São Paulo, Brazil
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The Greenville News
May 2, 1957 Thursday
Page 2
Charles Dodson, Husband of Bertie Sea-wright, went to South America with a group of the Seawrights. When he got there he found that the climate was so much like South Carolina that he sent back home for cotton seeds. He became the first person to intro-duce cotton to Brazil.
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Charles Dodson and Roberta Seawright were married at 7 PM on Dec 21, 1887, at the home of the bride's father, William Seawright. The service was performed by Rev William Franklin Pearson, pastor of the Little Mountain Church in Abbeville, South Carolina. Source: a handwritten note of marriages performed by Rev Pearson.Rev Pearson's note names the bride as Bertie Eugenia Seawright.
Bertie and Charles would have at least eight children:
The Greenville News
August 30, 1936 Sunday Thursday
Page 9
William Marshall Seawright with
one of his sons
For more details on the Dodson family: See Dodson family page.
9.
Charles Reid Seawright
BIRTH 29 MAR 1873 • Donalds, Abbeville, South Carolina, USA
DEATH 31 OCT 1875 • Donalds, Abbeville, South Carolina, USA
Died as young child
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10.
Vernon Caldwell Seawright
BIRTH 14 JUL 1875 • Donalds, Abbeville, South Carolina, USA
DEATH 14 MAR 1927 • Donalds, Abbeville, South Carolina, USA
Married: 18 Jul 1901
Elizabeth "Nettie" Cordelia Richey
BIRTH 21 MAY 1881 • Donalds, Abbeville, South Carolina, USA
DEATH 4 APR 1928 • Donalds, Abbeville, South Carolina, USA
Daughter of Enoch Marshall Richey and Sarah "Sallie" Elizabeth Saylors
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Vernon and Sally would have at least three children:
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11.
Olin Gaines Seawright
BIRTH 26 AUG 1877 • Donalds, Abbeville, South Carolina, USA
DEATH 1 MAR 1943 • Due West, Abbeville, South Carolina, USA
Married: 3 Sep 1903 • South Carolina
TeaCora Malinda Drake
BIRTH 12 JUL 1883 • Donalds, Abbeville, South Carolina, USA
DEATH 19 MAY 1931 • Donalds, Abbeville, South Carolina, USA
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Olin and TeaCora would have twelve children:
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1.
Drefus Earl Seawright
BIRTH 12 MAY 1907 • Donalds, Abbeville, South Carolina, USA
DEATH 27 MAY 2004 • Charleston, Charleston, South Carolina, USA
Married: 15 Feb 1935 • Greenwood, South Carolina, USA
Pauline Carolyne Culbertson
BIRTH 21 NOV 1917 • Pottsboro, Grayson, Texas, USA
DEATH 10 APRIL 2020 • Charleston, Charleston, South Carolina, USA
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When he was a boy, Drefus liked to take hobo rides on trains. The real engineer was Mr. Jim Roland. r. Roland and Drefus' father enlisted in the Spanish-American War together in 1898. They were also discharged at the same time when they were no longer needed.
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Mr. Jim Roland was very kind to Drefus and would slow down so he could swing on. His nephew, Roland Hawthorne, was sometimes at the throttle. Roland would do all he could to keep Drefus from swinging on or would run the train so fast when he was on, that it would run Drefus into the briar patch when he swang off.
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Drefus was a heavy equipment operator in road building and shipbuilding. He had his own business for 30 years, operating a jewelry store repairing watches, clocks, and jewelry. He also repaired, cleaned, and calibrated instruments such as micrometers, pressure gauges, electric meters, and snap gauges for the Avco-Lucoming Turbin Company.
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Pauline Culbertson Seawright
November 21, 1917 - April 10, 2020
Charleston, South Carolina
Pauline Culbertson Seawright, 102, of Charleston, South Carolina, passed away peacefully at home on Good Friday, June 10, 2020, to be with her Lord. She was born on November 21, 1917, in Pottsboro, Texas to the late Thomas and Daisy Culbertson. She married Drefus E. Seawright on February 15, 1935, in Donalds, South Carolina and they moved to Charleston in 1942.
Pauline worked with Blanche Darby Florist until she retired. She loved spending time with her family and church friends. She enjoyed shopping, fishing, and beautiful flowers. Pauline and Drefus were married 69 years until his passing in 2004.
Pauline is survived by her only child and loving daughter, Geraldine S. Hughes (Elmond L. Hughes, Sr.); Grandsons, W.D. Hughes “Billy” (Beth) and E.L. Hughes Jr. “Jay” (Barbara); Great-grandchildren, Jennifer I. Hughes, Hudson L. Hughes of Charleston, and Debi N. Kless (Doug) of Huntersville, NC.
A private graveside service will be held Thursday, April 16, 2020, at Greenville Presbyterian Church in Donalds, South Carolina.
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Drefus and Pauline would have one daughter:
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1.
Geraldine Seawright
BIRTH JAN 1937
Married:
Edmond L Hughes Sr
BIRTH 6 MAY 1935
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2.
Oma Ruth Seawright
BIRTH 23 JUL 1913 • Donalds, Abbeville, South Carolina, USA
DEATH 9 APR 1993 • Richmond, Henrico, Virginia, USA
Married 1st: 2 Sep 1935
Bailey Meador Wade
BIRTH 26 JUN 1902 • Allen County, Kentucky, USA
DEATH 28 MAR 1981 • Atlanta, Fulton, Georgia, USA
Married 2nd: 31 May 1954 • Washington, D.C.
Winfree Gray Lee
BIRTH 24 AUG 1917 • Richmond City, Virginia, USA
DEATH 19 DEC 2011 • Virginia Beach City, Virginia, USA
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3.
Nola Caldwell Seawright
BIRTH 11 MAY 1917 • Donalds, Abbeville, South Carolina, USA
DEATH 27 MAR 2006 • Greer, Greenville, South Carolina, USA
Married 1st: 1939 • South Carolina, USA
Maj. Riegal Wister Davis
BIRTH 9 JAN 1919 • Walnut Grove, Greenwood County, South Carolina, USA
DEATH 17 FEB 1956 • plane crash while serving with U.S. Air Force, buried at Arlington Nat. Cemetery.
He was the spn of Daniel Morgan Davis and Nina Alice Clamp
Married 2nd:
Gary Edward Taylor
BIRTH 17 SEP 1918 • Greenville County, South Carolina, USA
DEATH 24 FEB 2013 • Taylors, Greenville, South Carolina, USA
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Nola and Riegal had two children:
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1.Carolyn Davis
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2.Michael Seawright Davis
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Nola S. Taylor
Greer, SC - Nola Seawright Taylor, 88, of 234 Sheffield Road, died March 27, 2006, at her home.
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Born in 1917 in Donalds, S.C., she was a daughter of the late Vernon and Nettie Richey Seawright. Mrs. Taylor was a homemaker and was a member of Greer First Presbyterian Church. Her first husband was the late Lt. Col. Riegel W. Davis, USAF Ret.
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Surviving are her husband, G. Edward Taylor of the home; a daughter, Caroline Davis Alley of Nashville, Tenn.; a son, Michael Seawright Davis of Roebuck; grandchildren, Margaret Alley Evans of Warrington, Pa., and Michael Lyles Alley of Chattanooga, Tenn.; a sister-in-law, Pauline C. Seawright; a niece, Geraldine S. Hughes; and three great-grandchildren.
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Mrs. Taylor was predeceased by a sister, Ruth S. Lee of Richmond, Va.; and a brother, Drefus E. Seawright of Charleston, S.C
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1.
Lula E. Seawright
BIRTH 17 FEB 1904 • Donalds, Abbeville, South Carolina, USA
DEATH 24 JUL 1987 • Anderson, Anderson, South Carolina, USA
Married: 4 Jan 1927
Philip "Phil" Maus
BIRTH 23 SEP 1902 • Hess Darmstadt, Germany
DEATH MAR 1979 • Anderson, Anderson, South Carolina, USA
Son of Louis Maus and Francesca Mensch
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2.
Winnie M. Seawright
BIRTH 28 JUN 1906 • Donalds, Abbeville, South Carolina, USA
DEATH 15 NOV 1924 • Abbeville County, South Carolina, USA
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3.
Bert Newton Seawright
1908–1946
BIRTH 9 JUN 1908 • Donalds, Abbeville, South Carolina, USA
DEATH 12 DEC 1946 • Columbia, Richland, South Carolina, USA
Married: aft 1932
Swan Eva Pauline Rowe
BIRTH 7 JUL 1907 • Newport, Cocke, Tennessee, USA
DEATH JUL 1983 • Spartanburg, Spartanburg, South Carolina, USA
Daughter of James Herbert Rowe and Laura Lavina Ramsey
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4.
Drake Seawright
BIRTH ABT 1910 • Donalds, Abbeville, South Carolina, USA
DEATH Unknown
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5.
Roy Olin Seawright
BIRTH 17 FEB 1910 • Donalds, Abbeville, South Carolina, USA
DEATH 22 MAR 2000 • Spartanburg, Spartanburg, South Carolina, USA
Married:
Sarah Jane Frey
BIRTH 28 JUL 1911 • Wayne County, North Carolina, USA
DEATH 16 MAY 1991 • Spartanburg, Spartanburg, South Carolina, USA
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Roy and Sarah would have two children:
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1.
Betty Jo Seawright
BIRTH 12 JUN 1934 • Spartanburg, Spartanburg, South Carolina, USA
DEATH 10 MAR 2019 • Spartanburg, Spartanburg, South Carolina, USA
Married:
Donald Ray Hild
BIRTH 30 MAY 1934 • Spartanburg County, South Carolina, USA
DEATH 19 NOV 2015 • Greenwood, Greenwood, South Carolina, USA
Son of Carl Jacob Hild and Alta Jay jones
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2.
Roy Olin Seawright Jr
BIRTH 26 JUL 1945 • Spartanburg, Spartanburg, South Carolina, USA
DEATH 11 NOV 1962 • Una, Spartanburg, South Carolina, USA
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6.
John Henry Seawright
BIRTH 16 FEB 1912 • Donalds, Abbeville, South Carolina, USA
DEATH 20 SEP 1983 • Augusta, Richmond, Georgia, USA
Married: 27 Sep 1941
Elsie Beulah Riley
BIRTH 30 NOVEMBER 1912 • Saluda, Saluda, South Carolina, USA
DEATH 1 JANUARY 1996 • Abbeville County, South Carolina, USA
Daughter of Amos Riley and Lula Amelia Grant
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7.
William Augustus "Gus" Seawright
BIRTH 14 JAN 1914 • Donalds, Abbeville, South Carolina, USA
DEATH 2 OCT 1967 • Donalds, Abbeville, South Carolina, USA
Married: 7 Sep 1935 • Anderson, Anderson, South Carolina, USA
Claudia Pearl Gambrell
BIRTH 10 APR 1914 • South Carolina, USA
DEATH 27 OCT 2005 • Anderson County, South Carolina, USA
Daughter of Enoch Edward "Edd" Gambrell and Bessie Lee Lusk
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Gus and Claudia would have at least one child:
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1.
Charles William Seawright
BIRTH 11 SEP 1943 • Abbeville County, South Carolina, USA
DEATH 16 AUG 1974 • Anderson County, South Carolina, USA
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8.
Mary Catherine Seawright
BIRTH 19 AUG 1915 • Donalds, Abbeville, South Carolina, USA
DEATH 10 MAR 1966 • Greenville County, South Carolina, USA
Married: 25 Mar 1936 • Greenwood, South Carolina, USA
Ray Whitey Wilson
BIRTH 7 JAN 1913 • Franklin County, Georgia USA
DEATH 12 MAR 1953 • Travelers Rest, Greenville, South Carolina, USA
Son of Nim Rainey Wilson and Dora Maye Starrett
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Mary and Whitey had at least two children:
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1.
Robert Ray Wilson
BIRTH 22 SEP 1946
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2.
Charles Wilson
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9.
Albert Lee Seawright
BIRTH 17 SEP 1917 • Donalds, Abbeville, South Carolina, USA
DEATH 15 SEP 2004 • Donalds, Abbeville, South Carolina, USA
Married:
Pearlene Woodall
BIRTH 14 MAR 1918 • Westminister, Oconee, South Carolina, USA
DEATH 14 JAN 2005 • Donalds, Abbeville, South Carolina, USA
She was the daughter pf Pearl Woodall and Lula S. Swafford
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Albert Lee Seawright, 86, of 375 Highway 178 N., husband of Pearlene Woodall Seawright, died Wednesday, Sept. 15, 2004, at Self Regional Medical Center in Green-wood.
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Born in Donalds, he was a son of the late Olin G. and Teacora Drake Seawright. He was retired from construction and farming. He was a member and Elder Emeritus of Greenville Presbyterian Church and a member of Center Lodge No. 37 A.F.M., the Eastern Star, and Hejaz Shrine Temple. He served in the Civil Conservative Corps in Oconee County and on the Abbeville County Council and Cattlemen’s Association.
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Survivors include his wife of the home; two sons, Jimmy Seawright and Jerry Seawright, both of Donalds; a daughter, Joy Golden of Donalds; a sister, Clara Sharpe of Anderson; four grandchildren; and three great-grandchildren.
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Pearlene Woodall Seawright, 86, of 375 Highway 178 N., widow of Albert Lee Seawright, died Friday, Jan. 14, 2005, at Abbeville County Memorial Hospital. Born in Oconee County, she was a daughter of the late Purl and Lula Swofford [sic] Woodall.
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She was retired from Belk Simpson of Honea Path. She was a member of Greenville Presbyterian Church, Past Worthy Matron of the Order of the Eastern Star, Honea Path Chapter, and served the American Cancer Society, Abbeville Chapter for many years.
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Survivors include two sons, Jimmy Seawright and Jerry Seawright, both of Donalds; a daughter, Joy Golden of Donalds; two brothers, Johnny Woodall and Blease Woodall, both of Westminster; three sisters, Maude Cobb of Mountain Rest, Beexie Lee of Westminster and Irene Spencer of Seneca; four grandchildren and three great-grandchildren.
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Albert and Pearline would have four children:
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1.
Albert Olin Seawright
BIRTH 1 MAY 1939 • Donalds, Abbeville, South Carolina, USA
DEATH 30 OCT 1942 • Donalds, Abbeville, South Carolina, USA
Died Young
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2.
James "Jimmy" Ralph Seawright
BIRTH 15 MAY 1940 • Donalds, Abbeville, South Carolina, USA
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3.
Joy Juliette Seawright
BIRTH 26 AUG 1943 • Abbeville County, South Carolina USA
DEATH 15 DEC 2014 • Anderson County, South Carolina, USA
Married 1st:
Robert Pruitt Smith
BIRTH 27 MAR 1943 • Abbeville County, South Carolina, USA
DEATH 12 DEC 2003 • Abbeville County, South Carolina, USA
Married 2nd: 3 Jan 1984 • Donalds, Abbeville, South Carolina, USA
James Ray Golden
BIRTH 23 AUG 1938 • Ware Shoals, Greenwood, South Carolina, USA
DEATH 4 MAR 2006 • Donalds, Abbeville, South Carolina, USA
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4.
Jerry Lee Seawright
BIRTH 5 DEC 1944 • Donalds, Abbeville, South Carolina, USA
DEATH Living
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10.
Clara Belle Seawright
BIRTH 19 SEP 1919 • Donalds, Abbeville, South Carolina, USA
DEATH 5 JUL 2014 • Anderson, Anderson, South Carolina, USA
Married: 13 Jun 1942 • Abbeville County, South Carolina, USA
John Brownlee Sharpe
BIRTH 13 JUL 1916 • Abbeville County, South Carolina, USA
DEATH 10 JAN 1995 • Anderson, Anderson, South Carolina, USA
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Clara Seawright Sharpe, 94, widow of John Brownlee Sharpe, Sr., died Saturday, July 5, 2014, at the Rainey Hospice House.
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Born September 19, 1919, in Abbeville County, she was the daughter of late Olin G. and Tecora Drake Seawright. She was a retired teacher in the Head Start Program in Anderson. Mrs. Sharpe was a member of the Central Presbyterian Church.
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Survivors include her children, John B. Sharpe, Jr. (Vickie), Sylvia Sharpe Wham (Wayne), Gwen Sharpe Burnett (Bruce), and Eric "Rick" Sharpe (Sherry), all of Anderson; ten grandchildren and twelve great-grandchildren. She was the last surviving member of her immediate family.
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In addition to her husband and parents, she was preceded in death by a grandchild, three sisters, and eight brothers.
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11.
James Robert Seawright
BIRTH 28 MAR 1921 • Donalds, Abbeville, South Carolina, USA
DEATH 12 JUL 1930 • Donalds, Abbeville, South Carolina, USA
Died Young
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12.
Charles Samuel Seawright
BIRTH 8 AUG 1924 • Donalds, Abbeville, South Carolina, USA
DEATH 22 MAR 1990 • Donalds, Abbeville, South Carolina, USA
Married: 15 May 1948 • Ware Shoals, Abbeville, South Carolina, USA
Nell Vaughn
BIRTH 1922 • Laurens County, South Carolina, USA
DEATH 1 APRIL 1991 • Anderson County, South Carolina, USA
Daughter of John Franklin Vaughn and Lena Kelly
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Charles and Nell would have at least two children:
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1.
Linda Nell Seawright
BIRTH 14 APR 1949 • Abbeville County, South Carolina, USA
DEATH 31 JAN 2012 • Donalds, Abbeville, South Carolina, USA
Married: 23 Jun 1968 • Greenwood, South Carolina, USA
Harry Mikel Wilson
BIRTH 18 FEB 1949 • Aiken County, South Carolina, USA
DEATH 14 JANUARY 2017 • Donalds, Abbeville, South Carolina, USA
Son of Raleigh Wilson and Mary Thelma Hilton
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2.
Ronald Gaines Seawright
BIRTH 1953 • Belton, Anderson, South Carolina, USA
DEATH 24 JAN 2018 • Greenwood, Greenwood, South Carolina, USA
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12.
Caroline "Carrie" Ola Seawright
BIRTH 9 NOV 1879 • Donalds, Abbeville, South Carolina, USA
DEATH 20 JAN 1962 • Demorest, Habersham, Georgia, USA
Married: 23 Dec 1903 • Donalds, Abbeville, South Carolina, USA
George Hayden Cason
BIRTH 16 JUN 1877 • Sautee, White County, Georgia, USA
DEATH 27 AUG 1955 • Demorest, Habersham, Georgia, USA
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Carrie and George would have at least two children:
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1.
Raymond Dwight "Ray" Cason
BIRTH 1935 • Michigan, USA
Married:
Patricia Ann Campbell
BIRTH 25 JUL 1935 • Detroit, Wayne, Michigan, United States
DEATH 1 MAR 2014 • South Lyon, Oakland, Michigan, USA
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2.
Carolyn Frances Cason
​ BIRTH JUL. 13, 1936 • Rabun County, Georgia, USA
DEATH MAY 20, 1997 • Traverse City, Grand Traverse, Michigan, USA
Married: 1982 • Traverse City, Grand Traverse, Michigan, USA
Gerald Dean “Jerry” Pankow
BIRTH 1 APR 1937 • Decorah, Winneshiek, Iowa, USA
DEATH 10 AUG 2015 • Traverse City, Grand Traverse, Michigan, USA
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2.
William Hal Cason Sr
BIRTH 25 JAN 1915 • Demorest Hab, Georgia
DEATH 19 JUL 1991 • Demorest, Habersham, GA
Married: 25 Dec 1935 • Clarksville, Habersham, Georgia, USA
Vera Adelaide Henry
BIRTH 17 FEB 1916 • Falling Water, Habersham, Georgia, USA
DEATH 10 OCT 1987 • Demorest, Habersham, Georgia, USA
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William and Vera would have three children:
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1.
Rev. William Hal Cason Jr
BIRTH 27 SEP 1936
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2.
Judy C Forbes
BIRTH 15 SEP 1951
Married:
Bruce Alan Forbes
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3.
Lucarol Cason
BIRTH JUL 1945
Married:
Phillip D Demore
BIRTH 15 APR 1943
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13.
Lula Ellen Seawright
BIRTH 25 FEB 1882 • Donalds, Abbeville, South Carolina, USA
DEATH 6 OCT 1901 • Donalds, Abbeville, South Carolina, USA
She died a week after the birth of her son
Married:
William Isaac "Will" Richey
BIRTH 28 NOV 1879 • Donalds, Abbeville, South Carolina, USA
DEATH 16 MAY 1965 • Abbeville, Abbeville, South Carolina, USA
Son of Enoch Marshall Richey and Sarah "Sallie" Elizabeth Saylors
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Lula and Will had one son:
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1.
William Llewellyn Richey
BIRTH 28 SEP 1901 • Donalds, Abbeville, South Carolina, USA
DEATH 27 FEB 1988 • Central, Pickens, South Carolina, USA
Married: 7 Jun 1923 • Donalds, Anderson, South Carolina, USA
Mary Blanche Newton
BIRTH 08 FEB 1900 • Pendleton, Anderson, South Carolina, USA
DEATH 30 NOV 1987 • Greenville County, South Carolina, USA
Daughter of Samuel Leard Newton and Mary Narcissa Boggs
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William and Mary had at least one child:
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1.
Dwight S Cason
BIRTH 3 APR 1906 • Habersham County, Georgia, USA
DEATH 20 SEP 1989 • Royal Oak, Oakland, Michigan, USA
Married:
Monterey Frances Dooly
BIRTH 5 MAY 1914 • Rabun County, Georgia, USA
DEATH 30 MAY 2002 • Southfield, Oakland, Michigan, USA
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Dwight Cason, 83, of Southfield, MI, formerly of Demorest, an auto mechanic with Farmington Michigan Board of Education, died Wednesday, September 20, 1989. He was born in Habersham County on April 3, 1906, and was the son of the late Georg H. and Caroline Seawright Cason. He was married to Monterey Dooly Cason. Survivors including his wife are one daughter, Mrs. Carolyn Pankow of Traverse City, MI; one son, Ray Cason of South Lyon, MI; one brother, Hal Cason Sr. of Demorest, six grandchildren, and four great-grandchildren. The funeral was 11 a.m. Saturday at Thayer-Rock Funeral Home Chapel, Farmington, MI. Burial was in White Chapel Cemetery, Troy, MI.
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Monterey Cason, 88, of Southfield, MI, formerly of Demorest, died May 30, 2002. She was born in Habersham County on May 5, 1914, and was the daughter of the late William Edgar and Frances Conola Shirley Dooly. She was preceded in death by her husband, Dwight Cason, and daughter, Carolyn Frances Pankow. Survivors include one son, Ray Cason of South Lyon, MI,; Grandmother of Romain LaLone, Vicki Sparkman, Ray Lee Cason, Leonard LaLone, Teri Francis, Lorie Crowley, Vernon LaLone; Great-Grandmother of 10; and a sister, Annie Mae Dooly Taylor of Clayton. Service was held Monday, 10:30 a.m. at Charles R. Step Funeral Home, 18425 Beech Daly (bet 6-7 mile), Redford. Interment White Chapel Cemetery, Troy, MI.
Dwight and Monterey would have two children:
1.
Mary Elizabeth Richey
BIRTH 2 MAR 1926 • Donalds, Abbeville, South Carolina, USA
DEATH 24 JAN 2004 • Pendleton, Anderson, South Carolina, USA
Married: 19 Dec 1948 • Pendleton, Anderson, South Carolina, USA
David Osborne Richey
BIRTH 4 NOV 1922 • Pendleton, Anderson County, South Carolina, USA
DEATH 18 FEB 2011 • Pendleton, Anderson, South Carolina, USA
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ANDERSON — Funeral services for Mary Elizabeth Richey Martin, 77, will be held at 4 p.m. Tuesday at the Sullivan-King Mortuary, Northeast Chapel in Anderson. She died January 24, 2004, at the Greenville Memorial Hospital.
An educator, Mrs. Martin was retired from Anderson College having served 40 years, the longest tenure of any member before or after her. She was Associate professor for Fashion Merchandising and upon her retirement was give the title of professor emeritus.
Mrs. Martin was the wife of David Osbourne Martin of the Welcome Community in Anderson County. In addition to her husband of 56 years, Mrs. Martin is survived by three daughters, Mary Carolyn Martin Harris and her husband, John Robert Harris, and their son, William Martin Harris of Fair Play and their daughter, Anna Elizabeth Harris Smith, and her husband, James Wayne Smith also of Fair Play, Ms. Emily Anne Martin of Anderson, Mrs. Sara Jane Martin Acevedo and husband, Donald Acevedo and their children, Virgil Martin Acevedo, Joshua Donald Acevedo and Heather Acevedo Albertson of Pendleton; and one son, David Charles Martin and his wife, Leesa Bowman Martin, and their three children, Mary Lee Amanda Martin, Kathleen Elizabeth Martin, and Samuel Richey Martin.
She was the daughter of William Llewelyn Richey and Mary Blanche Newton Richey. Mrs. Martin's maternal grandparents were Leard and Mary Boggs Newton and her paternal grandparents were William Issac Richey and Lula Ellen Seawright Richey.
Mrs. Martin was born in Donalds on March 2, 1926, later moving to the Pendleton area where she graduated from Pendleton High School. She received degrees from Winthrop College and Clemson University.
She began her teaching career at Pendleton High School then moved to Hanna High, the girls' high school, in Anderson. She accepted a position as teacher of Home Economics for Anderson College in 1956 and taught there for 40 years until her retirement in July 1998.
Mrs. Martin was a pioneer in developing and implementing the curriculum in the early 1970?s for fashion merchandising studies. She also served as Faculty Chairman for three terms.
She also began the annual Fashion Fair at Anderson College which brought high school and college students from all over the state to compete in several fashion divisions.
Much loved by her students Mrs. Martin on two occasions was given the Student Government Award for "dedicated service".
She received the Annie Dove Denmark award for "significant contribution to Anderson College" by the college alumni in 1998. She was given the "Personalities of the South" award, the Woman of the Year Award by the Anderson Business and Professional Women's Club, the President's Award for "service beyond the call," an award for Omicron lota Kappa, a fashion merchandising group, and the Faculty Award in recognition of her excellence as a "professor, master teacher, and dedicated Christian".
As the senior ranking faculty member Mrs. Martin for several years carried the college mace in the graduation processionals.
Mrs. Martin was a member of many professional groups including the prestigious Council of Fashion Designers of America, the American Home Economics Association, the South Carolina Home Economic Association, the South Carolina Nutrition Society, American Professors of College Teachers of Clothing and Textiles, and International Fashion Group. She was a former president of the South Carolina Home Economics Roundtable, a Taft Fellow in Political Science at Clemson, and a member of the president's Club at Anderson College.
A member of Welcome Baptist Church, Mrs. Martin had been a GA leader, a Sunday School teacher, a VBS teacher, and had served on many of the church's committees.
After her retirement from Anderson College, Mrs. Martin had more time to pursue her great love of gardening and the grounds of their home were evidence of that. She especially enjoyed growing and propagating roses and was always generous with her plants sharing them with family and friends. She also had an interest in genealogy.
Mrs. Martin was widely traveled both for professional and personal purposes. She was known for her intelligence, wisdom, and common sense and will be missed not only by her family and professional associates but also by her many friends, her church, and her community
Carolyn Frances Pankow, 60, died May 20, 1997, at her home in Traverse City where she had lived for the past eight years. She was a homemaker and spent most of her life in Williamsburg. She will be greatly missed by her family and friends. She and her daughter co-authored a book to help senior citizens.
Born July 13, 1936, in Demorest, GA, she was the daughter of Dwight and Monterey Dooly Cason. In 1982 in Traverse City, she married Gerald Pankow, who survives. Also surviving are sons Romain (Cheryl) LaLone of Buckley, Leonard (Diane) LaLone of Pekin, IL, Vernon (Tina) LaLone of Elk Rapids; daughter Teri (Dave) Francis of Rapid City, step-children Lori (Steve) Habity of Petoskey, Wade (Irene) Pankow, Bryan (Peggy) Pankow, Denise (Jim) McClain all of Traverse City; 13 grandchildren; a brother Ray (Pat) Cason of South Lyon; and her mother Monterey Cason of Southfield.
She was preceded in death by her father Dwight Cason. The funeral was held at the Elk Rapids Chapel of Covell Funeral Homes with Rev. Dan Herlein officiating. Burial was in Milton Township Cemetery. Memorials may be sent to the American Cancer (Leukemia) Foundation.
Some Ancestral history of the immigrant (Ireland)
Seawright, Caldwell, and Brownlee families
During the American Revolution, all was not well in the Abbeville district of South Carolina. Below is an example of what was transpiring. As a side note, other Confederado family ancestors from the same area also faced devastation.
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Miller’s Station
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Posted on January 22, 2019, by Surviving December
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By 1781, the Revolutionary War in and around Ninety-Six had eroded into a series of vengeful retaliation between neighbors and families that had more to do with personal disputes and profit than any military objective. Frontier farmers, like John Miller** (1748), that had served in Patriot militias were often the targets of marauding bands of British loyalists (“Tories“) and/or Indian warriors. For protection, these frontier farmers formed small militia companies based in the individual farms or seized plantations known as “stations” at strategic points within the frontier settlements in the backcountry of South Carolina.
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At the outset of the American Revolution (September 12, 1775), John Miller (1748) and his brother Andrew Miller had joined 54 of their backcountry neighbors to publicly pledged to serve in the (patriot) militia of the newly formed “Council of Safety” for the Ninety-Six District of South Carolina. “As a troop of horse”, they agreed to hold themselves ready to respond within “24 hours’ notice” under officers they elected “to defend our country in her liberties from any invasion”. Other members of the newly formed militia “Rangers” were John Norwood, David Hunter, James Morrow, Moses Liddell, John Johnson, James Stevenson, Hugh Stevenson, John Stevenson, Alexander Stevenson, William Miller Sr, William Miller Jr, David Miller, Robert Miller, John Calhoun, and Harris Tyner.[1]
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James Stevenson is believed to have been related (possibly a brother) to John Miller’s first wife Lucinda Stevenson. John Johnson (Johnston?) may have been married to John Miller’s sister.
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John Miller’s brother, Andrew Miller, served as a first lieutenant and James Stevenson served as second lieutenant in the “Little River” patriot militia under Captain David Hunter in 1775 (Jared Liddell served in the company).[2] When Captain Aaron Smith and his family were killed by Cherokee warriors in July 1776, Andrew Miller was named Captain of the “Little River” militia company of “rangers“. Captain Andrew Miller continued to command the company until he was killed while leading the company at the Battle of Cowpens on January 17, 1781. Following the battle, Captain John Norwood assumed command of the “Little River” militia company of “rangers” until the end of the war.[3]
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Conversely, after John Miller’s and Andrew Miller’s close neighbor Harris Tyner enlisted as a “ranger” the newly formed “Council of Safety” arrested Harris Tyner and imprisoned him for believing he was a British Loyalist. This may have been due to his close ties with the Cherokee as Harris Tyner (likely a trader) frequently traveled “between the Cherokee villages and the frontier settlements“.[4] After his release, Harris Tyner changed his allegiance and fought as a British Loyalist along with his brother Caleb Tyner and several members of his family.[5]
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Prior to the start of the revolution, Harris Tyner’s land bordered the land of John Miller on one side and the land of Andrew Miller on the other side. Likewise, the land of Harris Tyner’s brother Caleb Tyner bordered John Miller’s land on two sides while another brother (William Tyner) shared a land border with Andrew Miller.
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In 1781, John Miller (1748) was living with his family on a frontier farm “on the waters of Little River“[6] about a mile away from the home of Joseph Pratt. Joseph Pratt operated a grist mill (“Pratt’s Mill“) on the Little River, just above where the Little Hogskin Creek empties into the Little River (about eight miles northwest of present-day Abbeville). Other families living nearby were John Lindsay (Lindsey), Samuel Lindsay, Hugh Reid, Robert Ellis, Andrew Webb, James Brownlee, and John Johnston (Johnson?).
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Hugh Ried was a witness to the will of John Miller (1748).
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After General Nathaniel Green’s Patriots failed siege of Ninety-Six, General Green withdrew in June 1781. In July, Lieutenant Colonel John Harris Cruger withdrew the last organized British Loyalist forces from the area. In August 1781, British loyalist Captain William Cunningham organized a small band of between 30-60 British “Tories” from the area between the Enoree River and the Saluda River. From his base in the Long Cane settlement, Captain William Cunningham and his men “killed eight noted Patriots” living in the area settling personal vendettas.[7]
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William Cunningham was reputed to be a cousin of Long Cane Loyalist leader Robert Cunningham.[8] The daughter of Robert Cunningham’s daughter (Elizabeth Cunningham) married the son of James Brownlee** (1735) (John Brownlee) on May 1, 1782.
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In 1775, William Cunningham had enlisted as a private in a Patriot company commanded by Captain John Caldwell in Colonel Thompson’s Regiment of Rangers (South Carolina 3rd Regiment). When he was passed over for promotion and William Caldwell (John’s brother) was promoted to Captain, William Cunningham attempted to resign, was court-martialed, and flogged. Humiliated, William Cunningham changed his allegiance to the British embracing an intense hatred of the men he had fought alongside.[9]
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One of the Patriots killed by Captain William Cunningham and his marauding band of British Loyalists, may have been Francis Johnson (Johnston). A neighbor of John Miller, Lieutenant Francis Johnson had served in the “Little River” militia “rangers” under Captain Andrew Miller from 1779-1780. In 1780 or 1781, the “Tories” killed Lieutenant Francis Johnson and destroyed his farm leaving his wife Margaret homeless and his children (John, Jennet/Jane, & Isabell) orphans. In 1782 or 1783, Margaret Johnson would “married William Miller who was also a revolutionary war soldier“.[10]
​
-
William Miller (named his son Andrew) may have been a brother of both John Miller and Andrew Miller.
The recent deaths increased the tensions between the families living in and around the Long Cane settlement. Stationed at “Pratt’s Mill“, Captain Norwood’s “rangers” (including Andrew Cowan, David Caldwell, Joseph Pratt’s son William Pratt, & Andrew Miller’s son John Miller) regularly rode patrols between the militia company “stations” often covering the entire 40 miles between the Savanah and Saluda rivers. A young son of John Miller (1748), George Miller recalled the patrols of the “Little River” militia regularly passing by his frontier home and one British Loyalist “had a sword drawn over my own head” due to his family’s support of the patriot cause.[11]
​
-
The daughter of Andrew Cowan, Mary Cowan, would marry the son of James Brownlee (1735), William Brownlee (1770), some time prior to 1790.
-
The Caldwell family was closely aligned to the Brownlee and Richey families. This included the wife (Sarah Caldwell**) of George Brownlee Sr** (son of James Brownlee-1735) and the husband (John Caldwell Richey Sr) of Nancy Ann Brownlee (niece of James Brownlee-1735).
​
Captain William Cunningham and his band of British Loyalists surprised a company of Patriot militia stationed on Reedy Creek (about 20 miles east of Miller’s Station) on September 3, 1781. The commander of the company of “Rangers“, Captain John Ridgeway Sr, had served with Cunningham under Captain Caldwell in Colonel Thompson’s Regiment of Rangers (South Carolina 3rd Regiment) in 1775. Captain Ridgeway, another officer, and eight privates (including his half-brother William Ridgeway) were killed as the loyalist captured two “blockhouses” (known as Ridgeway’s Fort) the “Little River” militia company had constructed to protect the local settlers just north of the Saluda River.[12]
​
On December 29, 1780, Captain John Ridgeway Sr. had commanded one of three “Little River” militia companies supporting Lt. Colonel William Washington’s Dragoons in the rout of the British Loyalist under the command of Lt. Colonel Thomas Waters at Hammond’s Store (just south of present-day Clinton, about 30-35 miles east of Miller’s Station). The mounted militia under the command of Colonel Joseph Hayes and Lt. Colonel Washington’s Dragoons “drew swords and charged down the hill like madmen“. At the sight of the charge, the loyalist abandoned their lines and “flew in every direction without firing a gun“. The patriots slashed the fleeing “Tories” that had been plundering the countryside, killing 40-150 and capturing 100-200. In his escape, Captain William Cunningham was said to have run “a very fine mare to death“.[13]
​
On the night of October 3, 1781, Captain William Cunningham’s marauding band had been joined by Cherokee warriors when they surprised a Patriot company posted at “Pratt’s Mill“. The company of “Little River” militia was under the command of Captain John Norwood, another veteran that had served with Cunningham in Colonel Thompson’s Rangers. Although Captain Norwood “was grazed by a ball and was knocked down“, his entire company of “Rangers” quickly scattered into the night eluding capture. Unfortunately, the “Tories” were able to capture 30 horses, saddles, and most of the patriot’s weapons preventing any armed response from Captain Norwood’s company.[14]
​
After they burned “Pratt’s Mill” to the ground, the marauding band burned a farmhouse about a mile away that was vacant. Next, Captain William Cunningham and his men raided the farm of John Miller’s brother-in-law John Johnston (Johnson?). The loyalist burned every building on the farm, including the house with John Johnston inside, and captured four young women with three young girls. Although the “Tories” would not allow the Cherokee to kill the captured women, they allowed the women to be stripped of their clothes “and turned them loose amongst them“. Five of the naked women/girls escaped and fled to the house of John Miller. Following the attack, John Miller moved his family about a mile away and the patriot “Little River” militia converted his home to a “station” (known as “Miller’s Station“).[15]
​
On October 19, 1781, the British army under General Cornwallis had surrendered to General Washington at Yorktown, Virginia. Yet the bitter vindictive fighting between the colonial settlers in the backcountry of South Carolina continued. In early November, Captain William Cunningham was promoted to major and given official command of an 84 man regiment of British loyalists. On November 17, “at day-break” Major William Cunningham’s men attacked a company of Patriot militia “posted in a house on Cloud’s Creek” (east of present-day Saluda near Lick Creek & about 50 miles from Miller’s Station). Under the command of Captain Sterling Turner, the patriots provided “an obstinate resistance of an hour“.[16] Low on ammunition and with two men killed, Captain Turner and his remaining men were forced to surrender.
​
Major William Cunningham believed at least two of the patriots had killed loyalist (James Butler, Jr was believed to have killed Captain Ratcliffe & William Butler was believed to have killed Sergeant MacAllister). Captain Turner and Captain James Butler (Sr) surrendered first and were cut down by the sword of Major William Cunningham and the other “Tories” joined in until at least 23 patriots were hacked into pieces.[17] Only Benjamin Hughes and Bartlett Bledsoe are believed to have escaped.
​
Having earned the title of “Bloody Bill“, Major Cunningham moved on from Cloudy Creek to “Ensley’s shop” when he captured and hanged John Towles who had served as a captain in the militia.[18] The marauding band next arrived at the blacksmith shop of Oliver Towles. Oliver Towles had served with Cunningham as a sergeant under Captain John Caldwell in Colonel Thompson’s Regiment of Rangers (South Carolina 3rd Regiment) prior to being promoted to Captain.[19] After Oliver Towles had shod the loyalist horses, Major “Bloody Bill” Cunningham and his men killed Oliver Towles, his son, and a young Negro boy. The “Tories” set fire to all the buildings as they rode on.[20]
​
Major “Bloody Bill” Cunningham and his marauders proceeded next to the home of the now-retired Major John Caldwell (his brother Major William Caldwell’s land was adjacent to the land of Oliver Towles & Thomas Edgehill). In front of his men, “Bloody Bill” Cunningham road up to the gate of the house, and his former commander walked out to meet him. “Bloody Bill” Cunningham “drew a pistol and shot him dead in the presence of his wife, who fainted as she saw him fall” and then burn his house. Major John Caldwell and his brother Major William Caldwell (a member of the First Provincial Congress of South Carolina) were both uncles of a young John C. Calhoun (who would become the Vice President from 1825-1832).[21]
​
-
Major William Caldwell was the father of Margaret Caldwell, the wife of James Richey (Sr), and mother of John Caldwell Richey (Sr). About 1773, John Caldwell Richey (Sr) had married the niece of James Brownlee**(1735), Nancy Ann Brownlee.
​
After killing Caldwell, Major “Bloody Bill” Cunningham’s band had swelled to 150 loyalists. On November 19, 1781, Major “Bloody Bill” Cunningham’s band attacked the patriot militia company posted at “Hayes’ Station“. Located east of Little River and Simmon’s Creek (about 35 miles from Miller’s Station), Colonel Joseph Hayes had seized the “Edgehill” plantation from British Loyalist Colonel Thomas Edgehill.[22] After Colonel James Williams was killed at Kings Mountain, Colonel Joseph Hayes had assumed command of the patriot's “Little River” militia.[23]
​
Despite having been warned by his neighbor (Major ?) William Caldwell of a pending attack, Colonel Joseph Hayes and his men were taken by surprise and quickly surround in a small longhouse. The son of the deceased Colonel Williams, Major Daniel Williams reportedly shot and killed one of the loyalists, and two of Hayes’ men were killed before the loyalist were able to set the roof on fire. Overcome by the heavy black smoke, Colonel Joseph Hayes and his remaining men agreed to surrender “on the promise of good quarter“.[24]
​
Likely remembering Hammond’s Store, Major “Bloody Bill” Cunningham ordered Colonel Joseph Hayes and Major Daniel Williams immediately hanged. His 16-17-year-old brother, Joseph Williams cried out “Oh brother Daniel, what will I tell mother?“. Although he had known the boy since he was an infant, “Bloody Bill” Cunningham responded “You will tell her nothing” as he killed him with his saber and then led his men to hack to death the remaining prisoners (at least 18 men). Major William Dunlap, Captain William Millwee, James Tinsley, John Cummins, and possibly John Mangum (neighbor of Colonel Joseph Hayes) are the only patriots known to have been able to escape the melee.[25]
​
-
The niece of James Brownlee**(1735), Alice Brownlee, is believed to have been married to Colonel Joseph Hayes and living at Hayes Station.
​
After slaughtering the “Little River” company at Hayes’ Station, Major “Bloody Bill” Cunningham and his marauding band dispersed. Near Duncan Creek (east of Miller’s Station near present-day Whitmire), several of the British Loyalist were captured, and “speedy justice was administered” as they were hanged “where Charleston road crossed the main road to Ninety-Six“.[26] Major “Bloody Bill” Cunningham moved north where he reportedly murdered James Wood (the Commissioner of sequestered properties), his brother John Wood, at their homes along with shooting Captain Stedman as he lay sick in the house of Charles Moore.[27]
​
On or about December 5-7, 1781, Captain John Crawford led a detachment of Colonel Hezikiah Williams’ British Loyalist along with Cherokee warriors on an attack of the Patriot militia company station at White Hall. Locate just a few miles southeast of Miller’s Station, White Hall was the plantation of General Andrew Williamson. After forcing the militia to abandon their fortifications, the “Tories” destroyed them and quickly moved on to the nearby Andrew Pickens “blockhouse” (a Patriot supply depot near present-day Abbeville).[28] Around this same time, Loyalists had attacked Miller’s Station “one night but could not take it“.[29]
​
Just east of McCord Creek and south of Miller’s Station, Captain John Crawford’s band surprised a patriot militia company (including Hezekiah Posey) under the command of Captain Moses Liddell that was escorting a train of wagons sent out for supplies (they were out of corn). Several of his men were killed (including Enos Crawford & Hugh Porter)[30] and Captain Moses Liddell’s company was forced to abandon the wagons. The loyalist captured the drivers and burned seven wagons prior to escaping into the Cherokee territory where the captives were believed to have been killed in ceremonial fires. One of the captured drivers killed by the Cherokee, John Pickens, was the brother of General Andrew Pickens and had been a neighbor of John Crawford in the Long Cane settlement prior to the revolution.[31]
​
Hezekiah Posey (brother of Richard Posey**) was “shot through the left shoulder and arm by the first gun which was fired” However, he was able to escape when “he jumped on his horse in haste“. After riding a short distance, Hezekiah Posey “was met by a good man who took him and hid him in the woods where he remained until & dark“. With the help of two ladies and a boy, he was taken to his relatives, and “his wounds were there dressed by his Brother & was the next day taken… Doctor Harriss where he remained” until he recovered.[32]
​
-
Captain Moses Liddell was the brother of George Liddell. Both Mose Liddell and John Norwood were named executors by George Liddell when the 35-year-old Patriot died in 1789. John Miller (1748) would marry George Liddell’s widow (Rachel Liddell) on March 27, 1794.
-
Captain Moses Liddell had commanded a company of mounted militia in the rout of the British loyalist at Hammond’s Store on December 29, 1780.
​
Although the British retained firm control of Charleston, the South Carolina General Assembly was convened by the patriots in Jacksonborough on January 8, 1782. Largely comprised of men that had fought the British Loyalist (including Colonel Robert Anderson, Colonel LeRoy Hammond, & General Andrew Pickens), the South Carolina General Assembly passed the “Confiscation Acts” on February 26, 1782. Legalizing retribution against British Loyalists, the “Confiscation Acts” named estates to be seized and “Banished Certain Persons therein mentioned” including commissioned officers and “Obnoxious persons“.[33] The initial list (the list would be revised several times), which included William Cunningham and Robert Cunningham, was provided to the British and published in the Royal Gazette on March 20, 1782.
​
Captain John Norwood would continue to command the company of militia “rangers” at Miller’s Station until the spring of 1783. The company patrolled along the Little River and head of Long Cane creek for Indians and “Tories“. During this time, the “Little River” militia company included Lt. Hugh Reid, Lt. John Caldwell, Sergeant John Hunt, privates John Miller (the son of John Miller’s brother Andrew), Trius (Travis?) Harbison, James Thompson, Thomas Lacy, John Lindsay, James Hathhorn, Andrew Webb, Isaac Thatcher, Martin Miller, Andrew Watt, Samuel McMustre, Thomas Watt, John Casson, William Perry, John Fox Senior, John Fox Jr., William Pratt, Samuel Lindsay, James Lindsay, Ephraim Lindsay, Nathaniel Bailey, Robert Ellis, John Verner, and James Stevenson (John Miller’s brother-in-law?).[34]
​
-
Samuel Lindsay (Lindsey) was the father of John Lindsay, who would marry Elizabeth Brownlee (the daughter of James Brownlee-1735).
​
From 1782 until the spring of 1783, Captain Norwood’s company was not known to have killed any Indians. However, the company did reportedly kill three British Loyalists (John Masterson, Thomas Neil, & Andrew “Andy” Neil) while sparing the life of another (John McCamy/McCay) as “he being young“.[35] A British Loyalist, John Masterson (Materson/McMesterson) was known to have served with “Bloody Bill” Cunningham in the British Loyalist “Little River” militia under Captain John Cunningham and Major Patrick Cunningham in 1780; and a Captain John Masterson (with Captain John Crawford & Captain John Harris Tyner) served under Colonel Hezekiah Williams’ Loyalist Regiment in 1782. Captain Thomas Neal led a small six-man company of the Ninety-Six Loyalist in 1781-1782, and Lieutenant Andrew “Andy” Neal served with Captain John Crawford in King’s Loyalist Regiment of Lone Cane militia in 1780.[36]
​
-
John Norwood, Patrick John McMesterson, John Crawford, Enos Crawford, John Lindsay, Samuel Lindsay, John Miller, Andrew Miller, Hugh Read (Reid), James Stevenson, Caleb Tiner (Tyner), John Johnson, John Brownlee, James Brownlee, Francis Johnston (Johnson), John Calhoun, John Pickens, and Andrew Pickens, were all included in the 1778-1779 Petit-Jury List for “Long Canes and Places Adjacent” for the Ninety-Six District of South Carolina.[37]
-
Prior to the revolution, Andrew Neil was a neighbor of John Miller and Andrew Miller.
​​
For killing John Masterson, “a notorious and mischievous Enemy of the Country“, Captain John Norwood was given a confiscated slave as a reward (a common practice) in May 1782. Alexander Chaves would file a petition claiming the slave was his and requesting restitution in 1794. The court denied the claim due to “the times limits by law” for filing the claim had expired.[38] Following the raid of “Bloody Bill” Cunningham, the leaders of the British Loyalist were alarmed at the “retributions” taken against their brethren in the South Carolina backcountry. On April 19, 1782, eleven British loyalists signed a petition naming nearly 300 British Loyalists they believed had been “murdered” in South Carolina by members of the “natural rebellion“.[39] In the end, more South Carolinians would be killed by each other than were killed in all the armed conflicts in the colony between British and American military forces.
​
In August 1782, General Andrew Pickens was encamped at Long Cane (a few miles southwest of Miller’s Station) as he prepared for his second campaign against the Cherokee Indians of the year. Foraging supplies for General Pickens, Captain John Norwood provided a receipt for supplies (beef) provided by George Brownlee (1756).[40] Between March-April, General Pickens’ 275 man brigade reportedly killed 40 Cherokee Indians and burned thirteen villages along the Hiwassee River (Tennessee) prior to returning to Long Cane in June 1782.
​
-
The son of James Brownlee (1735), George Brownlee** (1756) would marry Sarah Caldwell sometime around 1787. Sarah Caldwell is believed to be the daughter of William Caldwell.
​
Over time the bitterness from the fighting would be forgotten in the community of Due West. Promoted to general of the militia, John Norwood ensured the payments (called “indents”) went to the widows of Andrew Miller, Francis Johnson, and others killed in the fight for independence. In his 1798 will, General John Norwood named “my good & trusty friends John Miller, Hugh Reid, & William Cunningham” (a relative of “Bloody Bill“) executors of his estate.[41] With no historical marker for John Miller’s farm, it would be the bond of “good & trusty friends” who fought for survival at Miller’s Station that would prevail.
​
Sources:
[1]Documentary history of the American revolution (1764-1776) edited by R.W. Gibbes M.D., Pages 179-180.
[2]Roster of South Carolina Patriots in the American Revolution by Bobby Gilmer Moss, Page 679, & 896; The South Carolina Historical Magazine, Volumes 1-2, Pages 296-297.
[3]Sworn Statement John Miller’s son (George Miller) supporting the Revolutionary War Pension Application of John Miller’s nephew John Miller (son of John Miller’s brother Andrew Miller) #S1702. Roster of South Carolina Patriots in the American Revolution by Bobby Gilmer Moss, Page 679. Sworn Statement of Aaron Smith (son of Captain Aaron Smith) dated July 1, 1776, American Archives compiled by Peter Force, Pages 1228-1229.
[4]Failure and the King’s Cause on the Southern Revolutionary War Frontier by Robert Scott Davis.
[5]Loyalists in the Southern Campaign of the Revolutionary War compiled by Murtie June Clark, Pages 46, 224, 246, & 291.
[6]Revolutionary War Pension Application of James Stephenson W#9685.
[7]The Royal Gazette, September 12, 1781; South Carolina Loyalist in the American Revolution by Robert Stansbury Lambert, Page 148.
[8]South Carolina Loyalist in the American Revolution by Robert Stansbury Lambert, Page 147.
[9]Random Recollections of Revolutionary Characters and Incidents by J.B. O’Neal in The Southern Literary Journal and Magazine of Arts, July 1838, Vol. 4, Pages 40-41.
[10]Revolutionary War Pension Application of Francis Johnson (Johnston) #W21805.
[11]Sworn Statement John Miller’s son (George Miller) supporting the Revolutionary War Pension Application of John Miller’s nephew John Miller (son of John Miller’s brother Andrew Miller) #S1702; Indents issued in payment of claims against South Carolina growing out of the Revolution. No. 226 Book K; Roster of South Carolina Patriots in the American Revolution by Bobby Gilmer Moss, Page 135.
[12]The Royal Gazette, September 24, 1781; Sworn statement by John R. Ridgeway dated September 1, 1787; Accounts Audited of Claims Growing Out of the Revolution File No. 6416 (South Carolina Department of Archives, Series: S108092, Reel: 125, Frame: 16).
[13]Memoir of Major Thomas Young, Orion Magazine, October-November 1843; Stand and Face the Morning by Helen S. Owens, Page 419.
[14]Revolutionary War Pension Application of John Miller (son of John Miller’s brother Andrew Miller) #S1702.
[15]Sworn Statement John Miller’s son (George Miller) supporting the Revolutionary War Pension Application of John Miller’s nephew John Miller (son of John Miller’s brother Andrew Miller) #S1702.
[16]Royal Gazette Wednesday, November 28, 1781; Death Notices compiled by Marvel L. Weber, The South Carolina Historical and Genealogical Magazine, Vol. 17, No. 4 (October 1916), Pages 161-162.
[17]Random Recollections of Revolutionary Characters and Incidents by J.B. O’Neal in The Southern Literary Journal and Magazine of Arts, July 1838, Vol. 4, Page 42.
[18]Colonial and Revolutionary History of Upper South Carolina by John Belton O’Neall Landrum, Pages 348-349. Ramsay’s History of South Carolina by David Ramsey, Page 257.
[19]Roster of South Carolina Patriots in the American Revolution by Bobby Gilmer Moss, Page 937.
[20]Andrew Pickens: South Carolina Patriot in the Revolutionary War
by William R. Reynolds, Jr; Page 293.
[21]Colonial and Revolutionary History of Upper South Carolina by John Belton O’Neall Landrum, Page 349.
[22]Random Recollections of Revolutionary Characters and Incidents by J.B. O’Neal in The Southern Literary Journal and Magazine of Arts, July 1838, Vol. 4, Page 43.
[23]Encyclopedia of War and American Society edited by Peter Karsten, Page 1027.
[24]Royal Gazette, Saturday, December 8, 1781; Andrew Pickens: South Carolina Patriot in the Revolutionary War by William R. Reynolds, Jr; Page 294. Random Recollections of Revolutionary Characters and Incidents by J.B. O’Neal in The Southern Literary Journal and Magazine of Arts, July 1838, Vol. 4, Page 43.
[25]Royal Gazette, Saturday, December 8, 1781; Andrew Pickens: South Carolina Patriot in the Revolutionary War by William R. Reynolds, Jr; Page 294. Random Recollections of Revolutionary Characters and Incidents by J.B. O’Neal in The Southern Literary Journal and Magazine of Arts, July 1838, Vol. 4, Page 43; John Mangum American Revolutionary War Soldier and Descendants by Delta Ivie Mangum Hale, Pages 7-16; Revolutionary War Pension Application of William Millwee #W9200; Petition And Supporting Papers Requesting Reimbursement For Losses Sustained During His Military Service In The American Revolution of William Millwee (South Carolina Archives Series: #S108092, Reel: 0105, Frame: 00359); “Random Recollections of Revolutionary Characters and Incidents” Western Carolinian (Salisbury, North Carolina) dated August 17, 1838, Page 1.
[26]Colonial and Revolutionary History of Upper South Carolina by John Belton O’Neall Landrum, Pages 351-352.
[27]History of the Presbyterian Church in South Carolina, Volume 1, by George Howe, Pages 437-438.
[28]Royal Gazette, Wednesday, January 2, 1782. South Carolina Revolutionary Battles, Part Seven by Terry W. Lipscomb, Pages 37-39.
[29]Sworn Statement John Miller’s son (George Miller) supporting the Revolutionary War Pension Application of John Miller’s nephew John Miller (son of John Miller’s brother Andrew Miller) #S1702.
[30]Logan Manuscript, Historical Collections of the Joseph Habersham Chapter, Daughters American Revolution, Volume III; Calhoun, Hamilton, Baskin, and related families by Lewin Dweinell McPherson, Page 210.
[31]Royal Gazette, Wednesday, January 2, 1782; Andrew Pickens: South Carolina Patriot in the Revolutionary War by William R. Reynolds, Jr, Pages 294-295; The Cherokee Struggle to Maintain Identity in the 17th and 18th Centuries by William R. Reynolds, Jr, Pages 215-216. Roster of South Carolina Patriots in the American Revolution by Bobby Gilmer Moss, Page 772; Calhoun, Hamilton, Baskin, and related families by LewinDweinell McPherson, Page 210.
[32] Revolutionary War Pension Application of Hezekiah Posey (brother of Richard Posey**) #S14192.
[33]Journal of the House of Representatives of South Carolina, Pages 121-134.
[34]Revolutionary War Pension Application of Robert Ellis #S26084; Revolutionary War Pension Application of James Stevenson #W9585; Revolutionary War Pension Application of John Verner #S7793; John Caldwell Account Audited (File No. 990) Of Claims Growing Out Of The American Revolution (South Carolina Archives).
[35]Revolutionary War Pension Application of Robert Ellis #S26084; Revolutionary War Pension Application of John Verner #S7793.
[36]Loyalists in the Southern Campaign of the Revolutionary War compiled by Murtie June Clark, Page 225, 264, 223, & 289.
[37]The Jury Lists of South Carolina (1778-1779), Page 83-86.
[38]Petition of Alexander Chaves (Chavis) dated December 12, 1793, South Carolina Department of Archives, Series: S165015, Item: 114.
[39]Petition to Lord Germain Dated 19 April 1782.
[40]South Carolina Department of Archives, Series S108092, Reel 15, Frame 220 (File No. 834); Roster of South Carolina Patriots in the American Revolution by Bobby Gilmer Moss, Page 113.
[41]Abbeville County (South Carolina) Probate Records, Box 78, Package 1722.
JAMES SEAWRIGHT
James Seawright (The Immigrant)
DESCENDANTS LIST
Member: -- Name Restricted -- Nat'l #: 991681
Ancestor #: A101224
​
1. -- Generation Restricted --
​
2. -- Generation Restricted --
​
3. -- Generation Restricted --
​
4. The Said -- Name Restricted -- was the child of
Charlie Hugh Seawright born on 30 - Aug - 1902 at Valley Mills Bosque Co TX
died at Clifton Bosque Co TX on 3 - Sep - 1955 and his ( 1st ) wife
Hulda Lena Walsleben born on 4 - Dec - 1905 at Valley Mills Bosque Co TX
died at Clifton Bosque Co TX on 13 - Nov - 2004 married on 9 - Feb - 1924
married at Bosque Co TX
​
5. The Said Charlie Hugh Seawright was the child of
John Frank Seawright born on 5 - Nov - 1855 at Abbeville Co SC
died at Valley Mills Bosque Co TX on 4 - May - 1940 and his ( 1st ) wife
Susan Tyndell born on 14 - Jan - 1870 at Marshall Co TN
died at Speegleville McLennan Co TX on 2 - Oct - 1904 married on 19 - Nov - 1885
​
6. The Said John Frank Seawright was the child of
John N Seawright born on 17 - Nov - 1818 at prob Donalds Abbeville Dist SC
died at Donalds Abbeville Co SC on 17 - Jun - 1904 and his ( 1st ) wife
Jane Eleanor Cowan born on 13 - Feb - 1834 at _______________
died at Donalds Abbeville Co SC on 13 - Sep - 1895 married on 23 - Dec - 1852
married at Donalds SC
​
7. The Said John N Seawright was the child of
John Seawright born on 15 - Nov - 1772 at Donalds Ninety Six Dist SC
died at Donalds Abbeville Dist SC on 16 - Mar - 1850 and his ( 1st ) wife
Jennet Jane Ritchie born on 12 - Feb - 1790 at Donalds Ninety Six Dist SC
died at Donalds Abbeville Co SC on 13 - Jun - 1872 married on - - 1807
married at Abbeville Dist SC
8. The Said John Seawright was the child of
James Seawright born on c - - 1745 at Ireland
died at Abbeville Co, Ninety Six Dist SC on a 6 - Apr - 1790 and his ( 1st ) wife
Elizabeth McCullough born on - - 1752 at Ireland
died at Donalds Abbeville Co, Ninety Six Dist on - - 1788 married on - -
married at SC
ASSOCIATED ANCESTOR (REVOLUTIONARY) RECORD
Ancestor #: A101224
Service: SOUTH CAROLINA Rank(s): PATRIOTIC SERVICE, SOLDIER
Birth: CIRCA 1745 IRELAND
Death: ANTE 4-6-1790 ABBEVILLE CO NINETY SIX DIST SOUTH CAROLINA
Service Source:
SC ARCH, ACCTS AUD #6856, ROLL #132; SALLEY & WATES, STUB ENTRIES TO INDENTS, BOOKS U-W, P 159, LIBER V #437
Service Description:
1) CAPT JOHN WILSON, COL ANDERSON, MILITIA
2) FURNISHED SUPPLIES
ROBERT RICHIE (The Immigrant)
​
​
Rboert Richie
DESCENDANTS LIST
​
Member: Ruth Vera Welch Nat'l #: 554359
Ancestor #: A096479
​
1. James Abel Welch born on 11 - Sep - 1841 at West Point Lawrence Co TN
died at Alamogordo Otero Co NM on 6 - Dec - 1928 and his ( 2nd ) wife
Minnie Viola Seawright born on 26 - Nov - 1860 at Due West Abbe Co SC
died at Alamogordo Otero Co NM on 8 - Feb - 1940 married on 23 - Nov - 1879
​
2. The Said Minnie Viola Seawright was the child of
Isaac Cowan Seawright born on 26 - Apr - 1833 at Donalds Abbe Co SC
died at West Point Clay Co MS on 28 - Jun - 1862 and his ( 1st ) wife
Lany Caroline Hawthorne born on c - - 1834 at Due West Abbe Co SC
died at Granite Greer Co OK on c - - 1895 married on 2 - Jul - 1857
​
3. The Said Isaac Cowan Seawright was the child of
John Seawright born on 15 - Nov - 1772 at Donalds Abbe Co SC
died at Abbe Co SC on 16 - Mar - 1850 and his ( 1st ) wife
Jennet Richey born on 12 - Feb - 1790 at Abbeville Co SC
died at Abbeville Co SC on 12 - Jun - 1872 married on - - 1809
​
4. The Said Jennet Richey was the child of
Robert Richey born on - - 1754 at Ireland
died at Donalds Abbe Co SC on a 15 - Aug - 1828 and his ( 1st ) wife
Mary Wier born on - - 1762 at SC
died at Donalds SC on - - 1835 married on - - 1784
ASSOCIATED ANCESTOR (REVOLUTIONARY) RECORD
Ancestor #: A096479
Service:
SOUTH CAROLINA Rank(s): PRIVATE
Birth: 1754 AMELIA CO VIRGINIA
Death: ANTE 8-15-1828 ABBEVILLE DIST SOUTH CAROLINA
Service Source:
SC ARCH, ACCTS AUD #6398, ROLL #124
Service Description:
1) PAID FOR MILITIA DUTY;
2) COL ANDERSON
GEORGE BROWNLEE (The Immigrant)
George Brownlee
​
DESCENDANTS LIST
​
Member: -- Name Restricted -- Nat'l #: 620945
Ancestor #: A016059
​
1. -- Generation Restricted --
​
2. -- Generation Restricted --
​
3. The Said -- Name Restricted -- was the child of
James Brownlee born on 1 - Apr - 1819 at Due West, Abbeville SC
died at Plainville Gordon Co GA on 21 - Dec - 1864 and his ( 1st ) wife
Caroline Creswell born on - - 1823 at Pendleton Dist SC
died at Plainville Gordon Co GA on 6 - Mar - 1894 married on - - 1844
​
4. The Said James Brownlee was the child of
George Brownlee Jrborn on 6 - Jan - 1782 at 96 Dist SC
died at Due West Abbeville Co SC on 28 - Feb - 1844 and his ( 1st ) wife
Anna Richey born on 26 - Jun - 1792 at 96 Dist SC
died at Due West Abbeville Co SC on 12 - Sep - 1870 married on - - 1810
​
5. The Said George Brownlee was the child of
George Brownlee born on - - 1756 at 96 Dist SC
died at 96 Dist SC on 25 - Feb - 1836 and his ( 1st ) wife
Sarah Caldwell born on - Dec - 1758 at SC
died at Abbeville Dist SC on 13 - Apr - 1826 married on - - 1778
ASSOCIATED ANCESTOR (REVOLUTIONARY) RECORD
Ancestor #: A016059
Service:
SOUTH CAROLINA Rank(s): PATRIOTIC SERVICE, PRIVATE
Birth: 1756 NINETY SIX DIST SOUTH CAROLINA
Death: ANTE 2-25-1836 NINETY SIX DIST SOUTH CAROLINA
Service Description:
1) RENDERED MATERIAL AID
2) PVT MILITIA.
REBEECA PARKS CALDWELL (The Immigrant)
Rebecca Parks
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DESCENDANTS LIST
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Member: -- Name Restricted -- Nat'l #: 985098
Ancestor #: A018248
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1. -- Generation Restricted --
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2. -- Generation Restricted --
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3. -- Generation Restricted --
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4. The Said -- Name Restricted -- was the child of
Thedford Cainard Shirley born on 6 - Mar - 1884 at SC
died at Greenwood Greenwood Co SC on 9 - Jan - 1961 and his ( 1st ) wife
Hattie Mae Cheek born on 15 - Feb - 1885 at Bowersville Hart Co GA
died at Greenwood Greenwood Co SC on 10 - Apr - 1952 married on c - - 1905
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5. The Said Thedford Cainard Shirley was the child of
George Fletcher Shirley born on 28 - Apr - 1850 at SC
died at Hodges Greenwood Co SC on 30 - Aug - 1920 and his ( 1st ) wife
Frances Elizabeth Richey born on 18 - Dec - 1858 at SC
died at Honea Path Anderson Co SC on 1 - Jan - 1927 married on 8 - Dec - 1881
married at SC
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6. The Said Frances Elizabeth Richey was the child of
William A Richey born on c - - 1831 at SC
died at Abbeville Co SC on p - - 1880 and his ( 1st ) wife
Jane W Dunn born on 18 - Sep - 1832 at SC
died at Abbeville Co SC on 4 - Feb - 1915 married on - -
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7. The Said Jane W Dunn was the child of
James Dunn born on c - - 1809 at SC
died at Abbeville Dist SC on 8 - Sep - 1835 and his ( 1st ) wife
Nancy Caroline Calvert born on c - - 1812 at SC
died at Abbeville Dist SC on 24 - May - 1883 married on - -
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8. he Said James Dunn was the child of
William Dunn born on c - - 1778 at SC
died at Abbeville Abbeville Co SC on 3 - Apr - 1856 and his ( 1st ) wife
Ally Richey born on c - - 1778 at SC
died at Abbeville Dist SC on p - - 1860 married on - -
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9. The Said Ally Richey was the child of
John Ritchie born on c - - 1753 at VA
died at Abbeville Dist SC on a 4 - Nov - 1808 and his ( 1st ) wife
Nancy Ann Brownlee born on - - 1753 at _______________
died at Abbeville Dist SC on 16 - Nov - 1812 married on a - - 1773
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10. The Said John Ritchie was the child of
James Ritchie Srborn on c - - 1727 at Ireland
died at Abbeville Dist SC on - Aug - 1808 and his ( 1st ) wife
Margaret Caldwell born on - - 1729 at Ireland
died at Abbeville Co SC on - - 1802 married on c - - 1749
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11. The Said Margaret Caldwell was the child of
William Caldwell born on - - at Ireland
died at Lunenburg Co VA on 17 - Feb - 1761 and his ( 1st ) wife
Rebecca Parks born on c - - 1707 at Ireland
died at Newberry Dist SC on - - 1806 married on - -
married at Ireland
ASSOCIATED ANCESTOR (REVOLUTIONARY) RECORD
Ancestor #: A018248
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Service:
SOUTH CAROLINA Rank(s): PATRIOTIC SERVICE
Birth: CIRCA 1707 IRELAND
Death: 1806 NEWBERRY DIST SOUTH CAROLINA
Service Source:
O'NEALL & CHAPMAN, THE ANNALS OF NEWBERRY SC, P 202
Service Description:
1) SAVED LIFE OF REV SOLDIER BY EFFECTING HIS
2) ESCAPE FROM A BAND OF TORIES
JOHN C. CALHOUN
Son of Patrick Calhoun and Martha Caldwell
Grandson of Rebecca Parks and William Findley Caldwell
Early Career
Born in Abbeville district, S.C., on March 18, 1782, Calhoun grew up in an atmosphere of contro-versy and social change. The extension of cotton culture was bringing slavery into the up-country, where small farmers like his father were challenging the political dominance of the low-country planters. Calhoun was largely self-educated before he entered Yale as a junior in 1801. He grad-uated with honors in 1804; went on to law school, in Litchfield, Conn.; and was admitted to the South Carolina bar in 1807.
Practicing in his native district, he quickly gained the reputation that took him to the state legis-lature. There, from 1809 to 1811, he helped establish an enduring balance of power between South Carolina's tidewater planters and piedmont farmers.
Calhoun's own future, both socially and economically, was assured by his marriage in 1811 to a wealthy cousin, Floride Bonneau Calhoun. The couple settled at Abbeville, moving in 1825 to the Fort Hill plantation near Pendleton, the future site of Clemson University.
National Politics
Calhoun entered CONGRESS in 1811. He was one of the group of young nationalists urging war with Britain to redeem America's honor. Calhoun introduced the war report of 1812, and throughout the contest, he urged measures to strengthen the armed forces and to finance the war. When hostilities were over he proposed reconstruction measures and supported what came to be known as the "American System"--a combination of the protective tariff, internal transportation, and the nat-ional bank. As secretary of war in James Monroe's cabinet, he contributed significantly to the reorganization of the Army and to the extension of the Western frontier.
In 1824, Calhoun was elected vice president of the United States with support from both the Adams and Jackson factions. He served under the victorious John Quincy ADAMS, but in 1828 he sup-ported Andrew JACKSON and was again elected to the vice presidency when Jackson won the presidency.
Between the close of the War of 1812 and the election of 1828, the American scene had changed radically. A postwar depression had aroused a hardcore of hostility against the Bank of the United States and had brought the first of a long series of increases in the tariff. The perennial question of state versus national power had been reopened by a series of centralizing Supreme Court decisions, while the Missouri Compromise of 1821 revealed an unsuspected depth of sectional cleavage over slavery.
Although the cultivation of new lands contributed to overproduction and falling prices, the Sou-thern cotton planters blamed their misfortunes on the tariff, which by raising the cost of manu-factured goods tended to depress the foreign market for their own staple. In South Carolina, men talked ominously of calculating the value of the union. The very high Tariff of 1828 drove the cotton states to the verge of rebellion. Calhoun had turned against the tariff after 1824, but Jackson's position was equivocal. To advise the incoming president of what the South expected of him, the South Carolina legislature asked Calhoun to prepare a report. The resulting document, known as the South Carolina Exposition (1828), was the first explicit statement of Calhoun's unique political philosophy.
Nullification
The theory that a state might nullify--that is, refuse to obey--an act of Congress it believed uncon-stitutional had been implied as early as 1798 by MADISON and JEFFERSON in the Kentucky and Virginia Resolutions against the Alien and Sedition laws. The doctrine of states' rights, based on the concept that each of the states originally had been sovereign and independent, had been expounded for a generation. From these theories, Calhoun derived his remedy. If the tariff were not reduced, he argued, the states might "interpose their sovereignty" to arrest the application of the law.
Congress failed to reduce the duties, and some South Carolinians were ready to put the theory to the test. To restrain the hotheads, Calhoun issued a further exposition of his doctrines, the Fort Hill Address of 1831. But when the Tariff of 1832 declared protection to be the fixed policy of the count-ry, a revolt broke out anew. Calhoun again amplified his doctrine, in a letter to Gov. James Hamilton, Jr., of South Carolina, but the time for words had passed. In November 1832 a special convention declared the tariff null and void within the state. Calhoun resigned from the vice presidency to reenter the SENATE, where he could better defend South Carolina's action. Ulti-mately a compromise tariff was negotiated, largely by Henry Clay.
By this time Jackson and Calhoun were sharply at odds. The president had now learned that Calhoun, when the secretary of war, had opposed Jackson's pursuit of marauding Seminoles into Spanish Florida. After the nullification episode, the gulf became unbridgeable, as Jackson fervently opposed that doctrine. When Jackson removed the government deposits from the Bank of the United States in 1833, Calhoun, though not a strong Bank supporter, joined the Whig opposition in censure of the president. He did not return to the DEMOCRATIC PARTY until the late 1830s.
Sectional Strife
By that time party politics, for Calhoun, had been superseded by sectional interests. As the antislavery crusade gained momentum in the North, he became preoccupied with the political defense and intellectual justification of the "peculiar institution" on which Southerners generally believed their whole economy rested. He supported the Independent Treasury plan proposed by President Martin VAN BUREN as an alternative to a national bank and opposed Whig attempts to restore the tariff, but for the most part the last 15 years of his life were devoted to the promotion of Southern unity.
In the Senate, Calhoun engineered passage of the gag rule that precluded discussion of slavery. As secretary of state in the last year of John TYLER's administration (1844), he arranged the annex-ation of Texas, which he justified on the ground that it would enlarge the area open to slavery and so help preserve sectional balance in the union. Back in the Senate in 1846, he led the battle against the Wilmot Proviso, which would have excluded slavery from territories acquired as a result of the Mexican War.
He was still insisting upon the right of the slaveholders to take their human chattels into any territory of the United States when he denounced the Compromise of 1850 almost with his last breath. Too ill to speak, Calhoun sat in the Senate while his final exhortation was read on March 4, 1850. His last appearance there was on March 7, when he heard and approved Daniel Webster's appeal for sectional peace. He died in Washington on March 31, 1850.
Philosophy
The substance of Calhoun's last speech was an argument for the restoration of the sectional equi-librium that had existed from the earliest days of the republic by giving to each section, through its own majority, a veto on the acts of the federal government. This doctrine of the concurrent majority had been implicit in his nullification papers. It was amplified in the 1840s in a Disquis-ition on Government, intended as an introduction to a larger Discourse on the Constitution and Government of the United States. The Discourse and its prologue were published by the state of South Carolina shortly after his death.
Although he was one of the intellectual progenitors of the Southern Confederacy, Calhoun never sought that solution. His tragedy was that his defense of an indefensible institution led him to reject democracy itself. His doctrine of representation by major interest groups influenced the functional federalism of a later day but in his own time only prepared the way for the destruction of the Union he loved.
Charles M. Wiltse
Dartmouth College
For Further Reading:
Coit, Margaret L., John C. Calhoun (Berg 1977)
Lander, E. M., Reluctant Imperialists: Calhoun, the South Carolinians,
and the Mexican War (La. State Univ. Press 1980)
Peterson, M. D., The Great Triumvirate: Webster, Clay, and Calhoun
(Oxford 1987)
Wiltse, Charles M., John C. Calhoun, 3 vols. (Bobbs 1944-1951)
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John Caldwell Calhoun was born March 18, 1782, the son of Patrick Calhoun and Margaret Caldwell. The place of his birth was then called Abbeville District, near Calhoun Mills, but is known today as Mount McCormick in McCormick County, South Carolina. His father was a slaveholder, having more than a dozen slaves on his plantation. It is probably no surprise, therefore, that John would grow up as a pro-slavery politician.
John attended and graduated from Yale University in 1804. His studies continued in the field of law and he was admitted to the bar in 1807 and began practice in Abbeville, SC. He became a member of the state House of Representatives, serving from 1808 to 1809. He married Floride Bouneau in 1811 and eventually had nine children. He was elected (as a Republican) to the US Congress and served from March 4, 1811, through November 3, 1817, when he resigned to serve as Secretary of War in the Cabinet of President James Monroe, 1817-1825.
He desired to succeed Pres. Monroe to the Presidency, but when support proved to be
insufficient, ran as Vice President and served in that position under John Quincy Adams. In
1828, he was re-elected to that position with Andrew Jackson and served until December 1828,
when he retired. Several reasons for his retirement are suggested. But it would seem that he
had wanted to have more of an influence as Vice President but had been unable to affect
legislation concerning the enactment of tariffs (John was in favor of high tariffs as a form of
protectionism). When Robert Y. Hayne resigned, John saw a chance to leave the Presidency
and filled that vacated position from December 29, 1832, until he again resigned effective March
3, 1843.
He served as Secretary of State in the cabinet of John Tyler from 1844-1845. Again elected to
the United States Senate, he served from November 26, 1845, until his death on March 31, 1850.
John Caldwell Calhoun was a very outspoken individual with definite political ideas, though those
did seem subject to adjustment from time to time. In 1957, the United States Senate voted him
one of the five greatest US Senators of all time. No less than eleven states now have counties
named in honor of Mr. Calhoun and a life-size statue of him can be found in the east-central hall
of the National Statuary Hall in Washington, D.C.
John Caldwell Calhoun was apparently very proud of his Caldwell heritage and is reported to have had in his possession, a copy of the history of the Caldwell name.
(submitted by Micheal Ross Caldwell)
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On a small plantation in Abbeville County, South Carolina, John Caldwell Calhoun was born on March 18, 1782. He studied at Waddel's Academy in Georgia, graduated with honors from Yale in 1804, studied at Tapping Reeve's Law School in Litchfield, Connecticut, and was admitted to the bar in 1807. He practiced briefly in Abbeville before pursuing a political career. After one year in the state House of Representatives, he served from 1811 to 1817 in the U.S. House of Representatives, becoming a leader of the "war hawks" and a staunch nationalist. Calhoun resigned to become President Monroe's secretary of war.
He subsequently was elected to two successive terms as vice president, serving under Presidents John Quincy Adams and Andrew Jackson. Resigning in 1832 because of political differences with Jackson, Calhoun was elected to the U.S. Senate and served until 1843. Appointed President Tyler's secretary of state, he secured the annexation of Texas. Elected again to the U.S. Senate in 1845, he served until his death.
A powerful orator, Calhoun became the leading spokesman for the South during attempts to resolve politically the conflict between the sections. Calhoun, a brilliant theoretician, advocated a fine balance of nullification and the use of "concurrent majorities" to prevent the dissolution of the Union. His political treatises, published posthumously, were influential in America and abroad. Calhoun died on March 31, 1850, in Washington, D.C., and is buried in Charleston, South Carolina.
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John graduated from Yale University 1802-1804-Law School at Litchfield, CT in 1805. He was admitted to the bar in 1807; elected to the House of Representatives from SC in 1807; 1808 appointed to the staff of Gov. Drayton; elected to Congress 1810, 1812, 1814, 1816; in 1817 he was selected Secretary of War by President Monroe until 1825; he was Vice President of the United States, resigning from that office in 1832; he was elected Senator from SC and re-elected 1834 and 1840, resigning in 1842-43.
In 1844, he was a candidate for US president, but withdrew and was appointed Secretary of State by President Tyler; served one year and again elected to Senate. He died in Washington, DC at age 86.
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VP under Andrew Jackson
JOHN C. CALHOUN - Biography
John Caldwell Calhoun, (1782-1850), kal-hoon', Amer-ican statesman and political philosopher. From 1811 until his death he served in the federal government, suc-cessively as a congressman, secretary of war, VICE PRESIDENT, senator, secretary of state, and again as a senator. Always he was at the heart of the issues of his time, notably the nullification crisis and the conflict over slavery. Loyal to his nation, to his state of South Caro-lina, and, above all, to his principles, he sought to preserve the union while advancing Southern interests.
Jimmy Carter aspired to make Government "competent and compassionate," responsive to the American people and their expectations. His achievements were notable, but in an era of rising energy costs, mounting inflation, and continuing tensions, it was impossible for his administration to meet these high expectations.
Carter, who has rarely used his full name--James Earl Carter, Jr.--was born October 1, 1924, in Plains, Georgia. Peanut farming, talk of politics, and devotion to the Baptist faith were mainstays of his upbringing. Upon graduation in 1946 from the Naval Academy in Annapolis, Maryland, Carter married Rosalynn Smith. The Carters have three sons, John William (Jack), James Earl III (Chip), Donnel Jeffrey (Jeff), and a daughter, Amy Lynn.
JIMMY CARTER -
39th President of the United States
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After seven years' service as a naval officer, Carter returned to Plains. In 1962 he entered state politics, and eight years later he was elected Governor of Georgia. Among the new young southern governors, he attracted attention by emphasizing ecology, efficiency in government, and the removal of racial barriers.
Carter announced his candidacy for President in December 1974 and began a two-year campaign that gradually gained momentum. At the Democratic Convention, he was nominated on the first ballot. He chose Senator Walter F. Mondale of Minnesota as his running mate. Carter campaigned hard against President Gerald R. Ford, debating with him three times. Carter won by 297 electoral votes to 241 for Ford.
Carter worked hard to combat the continuing economic woes of inflation and unemployment. By the end of his administration, he could claim an increase of nearly eight million jobs and a decrease in the budget deficit, measured in percentage of the gross national product. Unfortunately, inflation and interest rates were at near record highs, and efforts to reduce them caused a short recession.
Carter could point to a number of achievements in domestic affairs. He dealt with the energy shortage by establishing a national energy policy and by decontrolling domestic petroleum prices to stimulate production. He prompted Government efficiency through civil service reform and proceeded with deregulation of the trucking and airline industries. He sought to improve the environment. His expansion of the national park system included protection of 103 million acres of Alaskan lands. To increase human and social services, he created the Department of Education, bolstered the Social Security system, and appointed record numbers of women, blacks, and Hispanics to Government jobs.
In foreign affairs, Carter set his own style. His championing of human rights was coldly received by the Soviet Union and some other nations. In the Middle East, through the Camp David agreement of 1978, he helped bring amity between Egypt and Israel. He succeeded in obtaining ratification of the Panama Canal treaties. Building upon the work of predecessors, he established full diplomatic relations with the People's Republic of China and completed negotiation of the SALT II nuclear limitation treaty with the Soviet Union.
There were serious setbacks, however. The Soviet invasion of Afghanistan caused the suspension of plans for ratification of the SALT II pact. The seizure as hostages of the U. S. embassy staff in Iran dominated the news during the last 14 months of the administration. The consequences of Iran's holding Americans captive, together with continuing inflation at home, contributed to Carter's defeat in 1980. Even then, he continued the difficult negotiations over the hostages. Iran finally released the 52 Americans the same day Carter left office.
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Jimmy Carter is a direct descendant of :
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James Seawright (c1745–c1790)
Elizabeth McCullough (c1752–a1789)
and
George Brownlee (1756–c1836)
Sarah Caldwell (1758–1826)