Click here to see the George Mills line of Jamaica, Queens, NY (eliminated as our line)
My gg grandmother, Martha Jane Mills Kirwin has been a real stinker to research! Several family members have given it a shot and all have come up empty handed. The member who has come the closest reports:
"After spending two weeks looking at every Mills name on the
Family history claimed Martha was born 4 July 1835, Charlotte,
"Mrs. Martha Kirwin, died at her home in West Cherry township,
This appears to make her birthdate 1838 instead of 1835. Census records are equally unhelpful; in 1860 Martha is 25 (b.1835), in 1870 she is 34 (b. 1836), in 1880 she is 46 (b. 1834). Average it and we have 1835 ...
On 22 July 1855, Martha married Patrick Kirwin, an Irish Famine Immigrant whom she met while
she was visiting her kin in Shelbyville, Shelby County, Indiana. Their
children; Francis Marion (legend says named for the Swamp Fox), William H.,
Mary A., John Arthur, Thomas Jordan, Charles Edward were all born in Addison
Township, Shelby Co., IN between 1855 and 1862. They went to
~~~~~
Cheska Callow Wheatley (now deceased) documented the descendancy of John Mills on her website which unfortunately was removed after her death. She and I spent many hours researching the John Mills line together via email in the early days of the internet and I am forever in her debt for helping me. Summaries of her background data is copied here, here, and here.
NOTE: the question remains as to whether John was b. in England or Pennsylvania.
NOTE: many researchers have specifed Rachel Bates as the wife of this particular John, however the Quaker Records do not support that - see below.
Family of John Mills and (1) Rebecca Wright
NAME |
BIRTH |
LOCATION |
DEATH |
LOCATION |
MARRIAGE |
LOCATION |
SPOUSE |
John Mills [1] |
29 January 1686/7 |
|
24 November 1760 |
New Garden
MM, |
[1] 14 September 1711 |
[1] Chester County, Pennslyvania |
[1]Rebecca Wright [2] [2] Rebekah Harrold |
Thomas Mills [3] |
ca.. 1709 |
assumed |
10 September 1793 |
buried Deep River
MM Friends Burial Ground, |
18 April 1730 |
|
Elizabeth Harrold |
John Mills Jr [3]. |
27 December 1712 |
|
18 April 1794 |
Deep River, |
abt. 1738 |
assumed Hopewell
MM, |
Sarah Beals |
Hur Mills [3] |
ca. 1716/17 |
|
26 November 1761 |
New Garden MM, |
abt. 1738 |
assumed Hopewell
MM, |
Rachel Harrold |
Henry Mills [3] |
23 September 1720 |
|
10 October 1810 |
Center MM, |
18 January 1740 |
|
Hannah Thornburg |
Mary Mills |
17 March 1724 |
|
|
|
abt. 1740 |
assumed Hopewell
MM, |
William Beeson |
[1] Probably came to America circa 1708 with Richard Harrold and worked in Philadelphia in the construction business for several years before moving to Maryland. In 1730 he was described as John Mills of "Manoquisy near ye River Potomac." On the marriage certificate of his son Thomas who married to Elizabeth Harrold, a daughter of Richard Harrold. In 1731 he witnessed a marriage at the home of Josiah Ballinger at "Monoguisie Province of Maryland." He owned 1315 acres in what is now Berkeley Co., WV described as being "on a branch of Opeckon, near but not adjoining Lewis DeMoss' land." In 1743 he deeded land to sons Thomas, Hur, Henry and John Jr. recorded in Frederick Co., VA. In 1757, he was visited by William Reckitt during the French and Indian War. John was then living within two or three miles of a place where not many weeks before Indians had killed and taken away people. He made his last will and testament 28 Sep 1759 which was probated Jul 1761 Rowan Co., NC. The will made specific bequests to his children Thomas, John, Hur, Henry, and Mary. He left one shilling each to the children of his then wife Rebeckah referring to the support of her children. John died 24 11th month 1760 and his death is noted in the monthly meeting records of New Garden MM, Guilford Co., NC.
In 1730 John witnessed the marriage of his eldest son Thomas, followed by the signature of a Rebecca Mills who was most likely his first wife and the mother of Thomas. Children by his first marriage were born between 1709 and 1724. Children from a second marriage to a woman also named Rebecca are recorded in the minutes of New Garden MM, NC. These children were born between 1742 and 1757. It would appear that John's first wife died after 1730 and he remarried circa 1740 to the second Rebecca. The second marriage no doubt occured while John and his children were members of Hopewell MM, VA. Unfortunately, the early records of this monthly meeting burned so there is no record of this marriage. The surnames of both wives remain unknown.
THE LAST WILL & TESTAMENT OF JOHN MILLS
ROWAN COUNTY, NC
Probated July 1761
Recorded Book A, p. 124
In the name of God Amen, the 28th day of Sept. 1759, I, John Mills Sr., of the County of Rowan & province of N.C. being sick & weak in body, but of sound & perfect memory, thanks be to Almighty for the same & calling to mind the uncertainty of this frail & mortal life & that it is appointed for all men once to die & after death to come to Judgement, do make & ordain this my last will & testament, disannulling & revoking all former wills made by me and as for such wordly estates it has pleased God to bless me with in this llife, I devise, dispose of & bequeath of as followeth.
Imprimis. First & principally I recommend my soul to Almight God my creator. Secondly I recommend my body to the earth to be buried in a Christian & decent manner at the discretion of my executrix hereafter named.
In witness therof I have hereunto set my hand & seal this Sept. 28, 1759.
John Mills
Witnesses:
.....William Buis
.....William Baldwin
.....John Baker
**********
HOPEWELL was the first Quaker meeting established in the Shenandoah Valley of Virginia. It was originally known as Opeckan and was set off from the Concord Quarterly Meeting of Pennsylvania in 1734. The actual date of first settlement is thought to be around 1730. The meeting house is located about 6 miles north of Winchester, Frederick Co., Virginia.
A land grant of 100,000 acres was purchased on the Opeckan River. Many of the earliest settlers moved into the area from the Valley of the Monocacy in Maryland. MILLS, John 1,315 acres, now in Berkeley Co., WV on a branch of Opeckan.
**************
John Mills was received at Cane Creek Monthly Meeting in North Carolina on 8/1/1752 on a certificate from Hopewell Monthly Meeting, Opeckan, Virginia dated 6/1/1752. Cane Creek Meeting at that time embraced a large area but John probably settled in Rowan County as he was a charter member of New Garden Monthly Meeting, Rowan County, when it was established in 1754. Sons Thomas, John, Hur & Henry followed on 9/1/1753 by certificate from Hopewell dated 5/7/1753.
John Mills and son John, Jr., are called "Fathers of the Colony" by Hinshaw in writing of Hopewell Monthly Meeting in Virginia. Unfortunately the early Hopewell records have been lost and we only know of the Mills family move to North Carolina from the minutes of the receiving meeting. Fortunately, as was often the case, children were recorded at New Garden Monthly Meeting even though born in Virginia and it is here that we learn that Rebeckah was second wife of John and find birth dates for the second set of children.
[2] "Wright" as the surname of John's first wife was supplied by Harold Curryer email him!
[3] Henry, Thomas, John & Hur Mills would have been automatically transferred to New Garden when it was set up in 1754 and they are mentioned as part of the original membership.
Family of John Mills and (2) Rebecca Harrold
NAME |
BIRTH |
LOCATION |
DEATH |
LOCATION |
MARRIAGE |
LOCATION |
SPOUSE |
John Mills |
29 January 1686/7 |
|
24 November 1760 |
New Garden
MM,
|
[1] 14 September 1711 |
[1] Chester County, Pennslyvania |
[1]Rebecca Wright [2] Rebekah Harrold [1] |
William Mills |
27 October 1742 |
|
abt. 1774 |
|
|
|
Rebecca ? |
Rebecca Mills |
15 February 1745 |
assumed |
|
|
25 June 1763 |
|
Henry Humphries |
George Mills (twin) |
8 December 1747 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Benjamin Mills (twin) |
8 December 1747 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Alice Mills |
22 August 1750 |
assumed |
|
|
|
|
|
Tabitha Mills |
8 April 1753 |
recorded New Garden
MM, |
|
|
|
|
|
Jonathan Mills |
14 May 1757 |
recorded New Garden
MM, |
|
|
|
|
|
[1]1786 Rowan
County Tax List shows Rebecca Mills widow of John Mills. Between 1747 and 1753
the family moved from
Family of Henry Mills and Hannah Thornburg
NAME |
BIRTH |
LOCATION |
DEATH |
LOCATION |
MARRIAGE |
LOCATION |
SPOUSE |
Henry Mills [1] |
23 September 1720 |
|
10 October 1810 |
Jefferson County, Tennessee |
18 January 1740 |
|
Hannah Thornburg/Thornborough [2] |
Moses Mills |
4 November or January 1743 |
recorded New Garden
MM, |
August 1759 |
|
|
|
|
Sarah Mills [3] |
17 August/October 1745 |
recorded New Garden
MM, |
1 November 1825 |
|
17 March 1765 |
|
Tarlton Johnson |
Margaret Mills |
27 October/December 1747 |
recorded New Garden
MM, |
October 1759 |
|
|
|
|
Aaron Mills |
22 December 1749 |
|
15 December 1794 |
Deep River, Guilford County, North Carolina |
18 January 1774 |
New Garden
MM, |
Charity Mendenhall |
Hannah Mills |
25 August 1752 |
|
27 March 1790 |
|
31 March 1774 |
|
Manlove Wheeler |
Hur Mills |
24 February 1755 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Charity Mills |
25 April 1758 |
|
24 December 1799 |
|
11 February 1799 |
New Garden MM, |
Samuel Hoggatt |
Joshua Mills |
14 February 1761 |
|
August 1762 |
|
|
|
|
Ruth Mills |
8 September 1763 |
|
25 June 1801 |
|
27 January 1780 |
New Garden MM, |
James Johnson |
Rebeckah Mills |
1 September 1765 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
[1] Henry Mills was received at Cane Creek Monthly Meeting in Orange County, North Carolina, on 9/1/1753. His certificate was a joint one with brothers Thomas, John, & Hur and was dated 5/7/1753 at Hopewell Monthly Meeting in Virginia. Henry's father had transferred from Hopewell on 8/1/1752. Henry Mills sat as head of Deep River Meeting for many years. He was issues 55 acres of land 12-1761 in Guilford County on West Deep River, North Carolina. Henry Mills has been accepted for membership in the Daughters of the American Revolution, Ancestor #A079909, based on Patriotic Service during the war out of Hillsborough District, North Carolina (including Caswell, Chatham, Granville, Orange, Randolph, and Wake Counties). Service Source: HAUN, NC REV ARMY ACCTS, VOL I, BOOK 2, P 202, CERT #2760 Service Description: 1) PAID FOR SERVICES RENDERED
[2] Hannah was b. 1725 Chester County, Pennsylvania and d. 27 March 1791 in Jeffereson County, Tennessee
[3] Deep River Monthly Meeting records show: Tarlton Johnson, son of Charles Johnson, of Amelia County, Virginia, and Sarah Mills, daughter of Henry Mills, of Roan Co., N. C., having declared intentions at New Garden in aforesdaid county, and having consent of parents, were married at Deep River, 7 of 3 mo. 1765. Witnesses were: Rachel, Sarah, Elizabeth, Rebeckah, Jemima, and Mary Mills; Richard Beeson, Thomas Thornbrugh, James Johnson, Zachariah Stanley, Anthony Hoggatt, and Isaac Beeson.
Family of Aaron Mills and Charity Mendenhall
NAME |
BIRTH |
LOCATION |
DEATH |
LOCATION |
MARRIAGE |
LOCATION |
SPOUSE |
Aaron Mills [1] |
22 December 1749 |
|
15 December 1794 |
Deep River, Guilford County, North Carolina |
18 January 1774 |
New Garden
MM,
|
Charity Mendenhall [2] |
Mordecai Mills |
31 January 1775 |
Deep River, |
11 July 1785 |
|
|
|
|
Hannah Mills |
16 August 1776 |
Deep River, |
20 January 1812 |
Lost Creek, |
10 January 1798 |
Lost Creek MM, |
Isaac Hammer |
John Mills |
4 September 1778 |
Deep River, |
12 January 1824 |
|
2 February 1803 |
Lost Creek, |
Mary Davis |
Henry Mills |
31 March 1780 |
Deep River, |
16 March 1833 |
|
10 January 1810 |
Lost Creek, |
Hannah Woodward |
Seth Mills |
19 June 1782 |
Deep River,
|
1876 |
|
16 October 1808 |
Lost Creek,
|
Charity Thornburg |
Maris Mills |
7 April 1784 |
Deep River, |
1858 |
|
25 March 1809 |
Lost Creek, |
William Locke |
Isaac Mills Sr. |
29 March 1786 |
Deep River, |
29 December 1855 |
|
23 July 1811 |
Lost Creek, |
Rachel Beales [3] |
Moses Mills |
4 December 1787 |
Deep River, |
14 April 1828 |
|
28 August 1808 |
|
Elizabeth Thornburg |
Charity Ellen Mills |
14 November 1789 |
Deep River, |
19 March 1876 |
Economy, Wayne County, Indiana |
12 March 1810 |
Lost Creek, |
James Gwin |
Aaron Mills |
18 December 1891 |
Deep River, |
|
|
1814 |
|
Ann ? |
William Mills |
28 February 1794 |
Deep River, |
|
|
7 December 1815 |
|
Dinah Hawkins |
[1] Aaron Mills died at Lost Creek, Jefferson County, Tennessee, while his youngest child was still a baby. He left the following will:
"I Aaron Mills of the County of Jefferson, and Western Territory South river Ohio, this third day of the eighth month in the year of our Lord 1794, being in perfect health of body mind and memory, but calling to mind the mortality of my body, and knowing that its appointed for all men to die, I make and ordain this my last will and Testament and as touching such worldly Estate as it has pleased the almighty to bless me with in this life, I give and dispose of the same in manner and form following:
I give and bequeath to my loving wife Charity all and the whole of my Estate during her natural life, for the support, education and bringing up, of my Children, believing that she will do the best in her power for their preservation everyway, and what shall remain of my Estate at the decease of my wife, I will and desire that it may be equally divided amongst my Children then living, born before, or after this time. And lastly I do hereby appoint my trusty Friends Elihu Swain and Samuel Mills to be my Executors jointly with each other to this my last will and Testament. And I do hereby disannul, revoke and make void all other wills by me made, ratifying this, and no other, to be my last will and testament. Whereunto I have set my hand and seal the day and year above written.
Published in the presence of us (no names)
/s/Aaron Mills (seal)"
[2] Charity Mendenhall was b. 19 April 1754, Guilford Co, North Carolina and d.19 February 1836, Wayne Co, Indiana.
Charity Mendenhall Mills was granted a certificate to Lick Creek Monthly Meeting in Indiana August 27, 1814, and traveled to Indiana with her sons Henry, Seth, Moses, Isaac & William, and sons-in-law John Gwin & William Lock. Son John Mills had gone to Ohio in 1807 but met with the rest of the family in Wayne County, Indiana. Son Aaron had preceded them in July of 1814 or perhaps had his certificate early and accompanied them.
Certificates for the families were received at Whitewater Monthly Meeting in Indiana instead of Lick Creek: 11/26/1814 Henry and son Josiah; Hannah and daughter Anna Maria, and mother Charity; 12/31/1814 Rachel (wife of Isaac); 1/28/1815 Moses and son Milton; Elizabeth and daughter Garelda; Seth and son Aaron and Kinsey; and Charity and daughters Betsy Ann and Mary Ann.
The children are scattered about in Wayne County in the 1820 census and mother Charity is living with son Moses and family. Charity Mendenhall Mill's death is recorded at Springfield Monthly Meeting in Wayne County, Indiana.
[3] Isaac eventually went to
Family of Seth Mills and Charity Thornburg
(NOTE: I have all the names of the grandchildren of Seth & Charity as well, email me if you need them)
NAME |
BIRTH |
LOCATION |
DEATH |
LOCATION |
MARRIAGE |
LOCATION |
SPOUSE |
Seth Mills [1] |
19 June 1782 |
Deep River,
|
1876 |
|
16 October 1808 |
Lost Creek,
|
Charity Thornburg/Thornborough |
Elizabeth (Betsy) Ann Mills |
23 June 1809 |
Lost Creek, |
15 October 1829 |
|
11 December 1826 |
|
Phineas Massey |
Mary Ann Mills |
7 November 1811 |
Lost Creek, |
1884 |
Belton, |
12 October 1825 |
|
1)Matthew Massey 2) Joseph Thompson |
Aaron L. Mills [2] |
19 November 1812 |
Lost Creek, |
3 January 1852 |
|
5 November 1832 |
|
Pamelia Samuels |
Kinsey M. Mills |
13 May 1814 |
Lost Creek, |
16 June 1834 |
|
|
|
|
Enos Mills |
29 February 1816 |
|
9 November 1849 |
|
14 June 1838 |
|
|
Henry Mills |
22 May 1817 |
|
14 November 1848 |
|
abt. 1840 |
|
Millie Reed |
Sarah (Sally) |
8 October 1819 |
|
|
|
18 December 1845 |
|
John Camp |
Jacob Mills [3] |
6 February 1822 |
|
1862 |
|
18 December 1845 |
|
Edith (Edy) Lewis |
Seth Thornburg Mills |
2 February 1824 |
|
during Civil War |
|
14 October 1852 |
|
Minerva Strain |
Rachel Mills |
1 March 1826 |
|
13 January 1886 |
|
abt. 1841 |
|
John Jackson van Hoose |
Lettie Elizabeth Mills |
20 December 1829 |
|
14 March 1913 |
|
6 November 1845 |
|
George Washington Lewis |
John Kindley Mills |
29 December 1829 |
|
2 March 1832 |
|
|
|
|
Lucinda Mills |
4 March 1834 |
|
4 March 1834 |
|
|
|
|
[1] Seth Mills is mentioned in the History of Wayne Co (1872) as building the second grist-mill in Dalton Township about 1826.
[2] Aaron L and Pamelia Samuels
Mills had a son, their 3rd child, named Enos (perhaps
with middle initial "L") b. 1835-40 in
[3] Jacob and Edith "Edy"
Lewis Mills also had a son, their 4th child, named Enos
Plesant Mills b. abt. 1852
in Washington County, AR. NOTE: From Roy
L Carter (click on his name to contact him): My great grandfather was Enos Plesant Mills. His parents
were Jacob Mills and Edy Lewis. Enos
married Rebecca Jonnes;
from this marriage he had four children: Willy C, Audie,
Humphrey, Emma Gertrude (my grandmother). Rebecca passed away from unknown
causes. Then Enos P. remarried to Sarah Rozella Ramsey; from this marriage was born Waco Plesant, Flossy, Dewy, Zena. Enos Plesant Mills during his time in
Family of Enos Mills and Edith Mankins
NAME |
BIRTH |
LOCATION |
DEATH |
LOCATION |
MARRIAGE |
LOCATION |
SPOUSE |
29 February 1816 |
|
9 November 1849 [2] |
|
14 June 1838 [1] |
Paintsville,
|
||
Martha Jane Mills |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
1841 |
|
|
|
abt. 1859 |
Barry County, Missouri |
Johnathan McClintock/ McClinton/McClinch? [5] |
William Riley Mills [6] |
1842 |
|
10 September 1863 |
Union Army, |
~ |
~ |
~ |
Henry M. Mills [7] |
1 June 1843 |
|
|
|
~ |
~ |
~ |
21 September 1847 |
|
25 January 1917 |
|
15 October 1861 |
|
||
Enos Mills, Jr. |
May 1850 |
|
Before 1860 |
Likely |
~ |
~ |
~ |
[1] one researcher lists the date as 14 June 1834,
but offers no source.... LDS Temple Film # 1761123 shows the above date and a
location of
[2] Enos (and brother Henry) both show up in a book of Dade County, MO Abstracts of Wills and Admrs. "A" 1841-1867 in 1971 published by Mrs. Howard W. Woodruff as follows:
"MILLS, ENOS, died intestate. Admr. Silvester C. Massey, 9 Nov. 1849
(A-74)" (note: Massey is son of Enos' sister
Mary Ann Mills Massey)
"MILLS, HENRY, died int. Admr. Jacob Reed, 14
Nov. 1848 (A-65)" (note: Reed was Henry's wife's maiden name, thus this is
a relative of hers)
[3] Click on Edith's name to see her ancestry charts
[4] Martha Jane is listed as "1 female under 5"
in 1840
[5] The 1860 census shows Lidia as a Mc Clinto?? and a marriage between John McClintock and
a Lidia is found in
[6] On a trip into
[7] There is a record in the 15th Regiment, Veteran Reserve Corps for a Pvt. Henry M. Mills, Company E, but no proof that this is the same man, nor any information on whether he survived the Civil War.
NOTES on the family of ENOS and EDITH/EDA MANKINS MILLS:
The couple first shows up in
Enos MILLS; 1 white male 20-30 years, 1 white female under five years, 1 white female 15-20 years
1. this Census puts Enos' birth in a range of 1810-1820
matching the known information for Enos Mills, son of
Seth and /Charity Thornburg Mills - this is important because there were four Enos' in this family and some researchers have them all
grouped as one person:
#1 Enos as listed above ( I have
never seen a middle name or initial associated with this Enos)
#2 Enos L., b. abt. 1836-40, son of Aaron L. and Pamelia
Samuels Mills (grandson of Seth & Charity and nephew to #1 Enos - Aaron was brother to #1 Enos)
#3 Enos P., b. after 1845, son of Jacob and Edith/Edy Lewis Mills (another grandson of Seth & Charity and
also nephew to #1 Enos - Jacob was also brother to #1
Enos)
#4 Enos, Jr., son of #1 Enos born May 1850,
Dade County, MO after #1 Enos had died.
2. this Census puts Edith's birth in a range of 1820-1825 which is important
because there were TWO Edith Mankins born in Floyd
Co., KY and some researchers seem to have them confused:
#1 Edith Mankins, b. 1810, Floyd County, KY, daughter
of Peter and Rachel Bracken Lewis Mankins
#2 Edith Mankins, b. 16 Oct. 1821, Floyd County, KY, daughter of
John Bracken and Mary "Polly" Sloan Mankins.
John Bracken Mankins was the son of Peter
and Rachel Bracken Lewis Mankins and also the brother
of #1 Edith Mankins. The dates for this
Edith match the information on all the censuses from 1840 to 1860, whether
she was married to Enos Mills, on her own as a widow, or married to John R.
Williams.
A letter written by Jacob Mills, brother of Enos,
5 June 1843 mentions the marriage of Enos and Edith
and the date of the marriage. You can read the letter here.
It also lists the following children's names: Martha Jane,
I found Edith listed as EDA MILLS in the 1850
1850 Census -
LN |
HN |
FN |
LAST NAME |
FIRST NAME |
|
SEX |
|
OCCUP. |
|
BIRTHPLACE |
|
|
R/W |
DDB |
1 |
578 |
589 |
MILLS |
Eda |
28 |
F |
W |
None |
500 |
KY |
|
|
|
|
2 |
578 |
589 |
MILLS |
Martha |
10 |
F |
W |
|
|
AR |
|
|
|
|
3 |
578 |
589 |
MILLS |
Lidia |
9 |
F |
W |
|
|
AR |
|
|
|
|
4 |
578 |
589 |
MILLS |
William |
8 |
M |
W |
|
|
AR |
|
|
|
|
5 |
578 |
589 |
MILLS |
Henry |
5 |
M |
W |
|
|
AR |
|
|
|
|
6 |
578 |
589 |
MILLS |
Lucinda |
2 |
F |
W |
|
|
MO |
|
|
|
|
7 |
578 |
589 |
MILLS |
Enos |
5/12 |
M |
W |
|
|
MO |
|
|
|
|
8 |
578 |
589 |
MILLS |
Samuel |
12 |
M |
W |
|
|
AR |
|
|
|
|
1 |
592 |
603 |
MILLS |
Milly |
28 |
F |
W |
None |
1000 |
IN |
|
|
|
|
2 |
592 |
603 |
MILLS |
Seth |
9 |
M |
W |
|
|
MO |
|
Y |
|
|
3 |
592 |
603 |
MILLS |
Cristenia |
6 |
F |
W |
|
|
MO |
|
Y |
|
|
4 |
592 |
603 |
MILLS |
Rebeca |
5 |
F |
W |
|
|
MO |
|
|
|
|
5 |
592 |
603 |
MILLS |
Thomas |
3 |
M |
W |
|
|
MO |
|
|
|
|
Next, I read the letter from Seth T. Mills, another brother of Enos (you can read it here) written 24 February 1852, which includes the following statement: "Out of seven brothers there is but two of us left." I went back and looked at the material on the children of Seth and Charity Thornburg Mills and was able to ascertain that by 1852, only Seth T. Mills and Jacob Mills survived. Of the sisters, Mary Ann Mills Massey, Sarah (Sally) Mills Camp, Rachel Mills Van Hoose and Lettie Elizabeth Mills Lewis did live full lives. Both of the remaining two brothers had died by the end of the Civil War. Jacob was "killed by bushwhackers" and Seth contracted measles and died. Seth and Charity Thornburg Mills lived until 1876 and 1875, respectively. Shortly after all this was sinking in, I found the information regarding the Intestate Deaths of Henry and Enos.
So, I am now up to 1852. Edith, at age 28 is a widow with 6 children aged 2-12.
So far, I have been unable to find any further record of this root family.
However, by 20 February 1855, my Martha Jane Mills, age 15-17 has given birth
to son Francis Marion out of wedlock in
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
This has been a long chilly summer both in terms of actual weather and progress! I suspect I am still on the right track and the Fall offers new promise. If my aunts are able to find documentation, I will have all kinds of collateral data to add to these charts. The good news is that IF this is right, the rest is very well documented!
I noticed that 1)Enos' brother Aaron L. Mills named a son Francis Marian Mills and 2) Enos and Edith's daughter Lucinda married a man whose middle name is Marion...... perhaps all this somehow explains why Martha Jane Kirwin named her first son Francis Marion Kirwin??? I also note that Aaron L. Mills and his brother Jacob Mills both named sons "Enos" after their brother.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
WINTER 2002 - The plot thickens or thins; depends on your outlook!
My aunt and her new hubby have made a major breakthrough! They have discovered that Edith Mankins Mills married her neighbor, John R. Williams after Enos died. In 1850, Edith and John were enumerated as follows:
MILLS - DATE:22 Oct 1850 1. Eda ,28,F,W,None,500,KY,0,0,0,0,None,M420 2. Martha ,10,F, 3. Lidia ,9,F, 4. William ,8,M, 5. Henry ,5,M, 6. Lucinda ,2,F, 7. Enos ,5m,M, 8. Samul ,12,M, |
WILLIAMS - DATE:17 Oct 1850 1. John R. ,37,M,W,Farmer,0,KY,0,0,0,0,None,W452 [1] 2. Sarah ,33,F, 3. Eliza J. ,14,F, 4. Emaline ,11,F, 5. Jasper ,9,M, 6. Francis ,7,M, 7. George ,5,M, 8. Sarah An ,1,F, |
[1] John was born 3 March 1813 in Floyd County,
In 1860, the MILLS/WILLIAMS family shows up in Barry County, Missouri as
follows (note adjacent Williams families):
Flat Creek Twn,
Barry Co, John R Williams age 47 KY |
Flat Creek Twn, Barry Co, John Williams age 39 TN |
Flat Creek Twn, Barry Co, J.L. Williams age 38 KY |
[1] Children of John R. Williams with Sarah Russell; Eliza J., b. 1836; Emmaline N. b. abt. 1839; Jaspar Newton Williams was b. 17 Octobe 1840 and d. 11 January 1916 - he did not marry. Francis M. b. abt. 1843; George W. Williams b. 29 June 1845, d. 28 May 1919 - he did not marry; Sarah Ann b. abt. 1849
[2] This child would have to be the issue of John and Edith, b. about 1855. UPDATE April 2015: Narcissa Clementine Williams b. 19 October 1854 Cassville, Barry, Missouri, USA, m. Alvoree Davidson Lamberson 4 November 1877 in Brooklyn, Green Co., Missouri. Issue of this couple: Myrtle Lamberson b. 1878, Carrie Lamberson b. 1800, Everet Lamberson 1881, Jessie Lamberson b 1886, Ova E Lamberson b. 1889, Ray Lamberson b 1893. By 1900, the couple had moved to Seward, KS, then by 1930 to Gore, GRant Co., OK. Narcissa died 17 November 1931 and is buried In Banner Cemetery, Seward County, KS.
[3] So far this is the last trace I can find of Henry M. Mills - did he die in the Civil War along with William Riley? There is a record in the 15th Regiment, Veteran Reserve Corps for a Pvt. Henry M. Mills, Company E, but no proof that this is the same man.
[4] a marriage between Johnathan McClinton and a Lidia is found in
Our Martha married Patrick Kirwin in 1855, so she would have moved on by the 1860 census and does not show up in this census with her mother. I am now looking to find the obituary of Edith listing there whereabouts of her children.
UPDATE 2004: I found John, but where is Edie??? Note that John has
a new wife. Since Edith already had a documented daughter named Martha, it
would be unlikely that she would give another daughter the same name. Thus,
the age and name of the five year old child "Martha" in this household
suggests Edith had died by 1862 and Martha* and Malinda are the issue of John
Williams and Elizabeth, wife #3.... this narrows
the field to find a likely death notice for Edith in Barry
1870;
ENUM# |
NAME |
|
SEX |
COLOR |
OCCUP. |
|
PERS. ESTATE |
BIRTH |
|
READ/WRITE |
CITIZEN |
1514/1515 |
Williams, George |
24 |
male |
white |
Farmer |
|
$750 |
MO |
|
|
X |
|
Martha |
23 |
female |
white |
Keeping House |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Cowden, Leonard |
26 |
male |
white |
Farm Hand |
|
|
TN |
|
|
X |
1515/1515 |
Williams, John |
56 |
male |
white |
Farmer |
$800 |
$1400 |
KY |
|
|
X |
|
|
40 |
female |
white |
Keeping House |
$5000 |
|
TN |
|
no |
|
|
Sarah |
20 |
female |
white |
|
|
|
MO |
|
no |
|
|
Narcissa |
17 |
female |
white |
|
|
|
MO |
X |
can't write |
|
|
Martha [2] |
5 |
female |
white |
|
|
|
MO |
|
|
|
|
Malinda [3] |
1 |
female |
white |
|
|
|
MO |
|
|
|
[1] Marriage of John and Elizabeth performed by William Cliborne, JP and is on page 282 of book B: 5 Feb 1863, to "Elizabeth Roberson" aka Elizabeth Hagewood Robertson (information contributed by Megan Zurawich - email her for more info).
[2] Martha E.* was born 20 Dec 1865 and died 4 Jul 1906 - she is buried next
to her father in
[3] Malinda Cordelia Williams was b. 28 October 1869, m. Samuel Edward McCrosky, d. 28 March 1965 in Greene County. This couple had five children; Bertie, Edith, Lillie, George and Flo.
FALL 2004: The death of John R. Williams from an article in the History
of Greene County, Missouri - 1883; R. I. Holcombe, Editing Historian;
Chapter 23 -
Brookline Township:
ITEMS: "February 25, 1878, John R. Williams, living a few miles south
of
A look at the 1880 Census record for Elizabeth Williams shows that she and John added two sons, James A. and Josefhus (sic) to their family before John's death. This likely explains why contact between the Williams and Mills families was lost over time. Daughters Sarah (now 30) and Narcissa (now 27) had by 1880 moved on. This makes John, at his death, the father of 11 children.
Bio of Jaspar: History of Greene County, Missouri - 1883; R. I. Holcombe, Editing Historian; Chapter 31 - Resume of the City's History from 1876 to 1883; Part 2 - Biographies:
J. N. WILLIAMS (Jaspar Newton Williams): Mr. Williams is the son of
John R. Williams, who came to this county about 1833, and was born here in October,
1840. He lived in Dade County,
Still be found is an obit for Edith ... If you have anything to add to our search, do email!
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!!! DISMISSED INFORMATION !!! ~ from FALL 2000
WINTER 2005
Correspondence from Harold Curryer in