Search billions of records on Ancestry.com
   

Many Grandfathers

Mordecai Bozeman 



CARTER- Captain John to Thomas Randolph Carter 
 
http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/%7Ekc90853/BOZEMAN/1785PeterBosemanPaidForService.bmp
 
http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/%7Ekc90853/BOZEMAN/Transcription4JimmyRay.htm
 
http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/%7Ekc90853/BOZEMAN/GrannySarahBrownBozeman
 
http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/%7Ekc90853/BOZEMAN/HillsChapel5-2-07/1850.jpg
 
land sale needed to divide estate of W H according to Jesse
 
http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/%7Ekc90853/Lorena.bmp
 
http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/%7Ekc90853/BozemanCarterStokesCemeterySurvey.htm
 
 
http://www.hometown.aol.com/kathybrooks53/HOME.html The rest of us.
 
 
List
 
The above mentioned Thomas Randolph Carter had married Lacy Jane Bozeman, served in the Civil War, and lost his wife and some children to an epidemic.  He remarried to Mary Josephine Hereferd and they had a daughter named Sarah Elizabeth Carter.  
 
Sarah married one of his farm workers, Levi Benjamin Cooper and they had Susie Mae Cooper who we all knew as Mamaw.  Mamaw had married James Edgar Brooks Sr and their child was James E Brooks Jr. who was married to Mary Ella Thornton.
 
Mamaw's husband was the only child born to Annie Clark Ballard and John Edwin Brooks of Tennessee.
 
Mamaw's daughter Sissy helps me with the story about the Carters, saying that when Thomas died, his wife Mary, had him buried beside his first family then she went to live with her daughter.
 
Then later on census I found the widows Annie and Sarah living with Mamaw in the Oak Park area.   Families usually took care of the widowed, took them in and loved them.
 
That would seem the case with the above mentioned Martha Hill Bozeman.  While she had the writ of dower to protect her home, she probably felt very much alone living beside Jesse and had to move away to be near her own family to raise her children.



Kathy Cochran's ancestors in Kentucky http://freepages.history.rootsweb.com/~kc90853/Kentucky/Little-Handley-Douglass-Crigler-Roby-Wright-Weatherford.html


 

Father of Peter who also joined him in serving in the American Revolution as told and confirmed from the book Sketches - along with Mordecai's son John.
http://freepages.history.rootsweb.com/~kc90853/Mordecai.html
 
http://freepages.history.rootsweb.com/~kc90853/Sons0fMordecai.html
 
http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/%7Ekc90853/Bozeman-Mordecai.htm
 
Mordecai's payment 1 
http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/%7Ekc90853/BOZEMAN/HillsChapel5-2-07/PeterEBozemanb1834/pic26.jpg
 
http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/%7Ekc90853/BOZEMAN/HillsChapel5-2-07/PeterEBozemanb1834/pic24.jpg
 
Mordecai's payment 2 
http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/%7Ekc90853/BOZEMAN/HillsChapel5-2-07/PeterEBozemanb1834/pic23.jpg
 
http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/%7Ekc90853/BOZEMAN/HillsChapel5-2-07/PeterEBozemanb1834/mordecai1.jpg
 
http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/%7Ekc90853/BOZEMAN/HillsChapel5-2-07/PeterEBozemanb1834/mordecai.jpg
 
 
Paid /1779PeterBoseman.bmp 
http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/%7Ekc90853/1779PeterBoseman.bmp
 
1792 - 1793 Payments/117PeterBozemanByJimmyRay.jpg 
http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/%7Ekc90853/117PeterBozemanByJimmyRay.jpg
 
 
1789 deadline set /1001PeterBozemanByJimmyRay.jp 
http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/%7Ekc90853/1001PeterBozemanByJimmyRay.jpg
 
http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/%7Ekc90853/117PeterBozemanByJimmyRay.jpg
 
http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/%7Ekc90853/117a.jpg
 
http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/%7Ekc90853/117b.jpg
Treasury Dept 1810 /1001PeterBozemanByJimmyRay.jp Bounty Land Office/RevolutionaryWar-Peter8.- E Stephens 
http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/%7Ekc90853/RevolutionaryWar-Peter8.jpg
 
Letter about being captured/RevolutionaryWar-Peter9.jpg 
http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/%7Ekc90853/RevolutionaryWar-Peter9.jpg
 
 
Bounty Land Office/RevolutionaryWar-Peter8.- E Stephens 
http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/%7Ekc90853/RevolutionaryWar-Peter8.jpg
 
http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/%7Ekc90853/RevolutionaryWar-Peter7.jpg
 
 
Letter /1828PeterBozemanClaim2AmRevol 
http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/%7Ekc90853/1828PeterBozemanClaim2AmRevolution.bmp
 
 
http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~kc90853/Photos/BozemanLineage.html
 
Peter Bozeman 
 
 
Peter's bounty land in Darlington South Carolina was surveyed in 1826 as he began the long journey to the new lands in Alabama.  His brother John had already migrated to Mississippi with his indian bride.  Peter had married a widowed Sarah Brown and adopted her two little girls, and having more children. 
 
By 1826 all were grown and married with children of their own and they all loaded their wagons, every one of them but Peter's younger brother James, who remained in Darlington.
 
The South Carolina Archives on the web has many articles and documents regarding these families and the Alabama Probate Office records began in 1828 where Peter is having a dispute with the Treasury Office demanding his Bounty Land in Montgomery. One of the documents was signed by E Stephens.
 
Peter died in 1829.  His estate sale includes the names of his wife and children and many other names who came with him from Darlington SC.
 
There was a John Stacie listed and he might have been the husband of Sarah Bozeman.  Vincent Joiner's signature appears on the Estate of Peter so he must be connected.
 
Peter Bozeman and families were settled in a community named Hope Hull in Montgomery County Alabama, actually named by Abner McGee who lived nearby.
The Bozeman Plantation consisted of 160 acres in the beginning but McGee had purchased much more. The lots were sold at two dollars an acre in lots of 80 acres
 
Peter's son Jesse M  takes over the family business handling all documents which can be found in Alabama Probate Office because his parents could not read nor write and only signed their X mark when needed. 
 
 In the 1830 census of Alabama, all of Peter's children  are found and their spouses except Meedy who had died about 1827. In 1840 William Henry lived next to Jesse but William died in 1848 and the paper trail of his estate began.  In 1830 young Peter and Gilly are found living next to Anderson and the late Meedy's son Peter Henry moved into Mississippi near their Uncle John who had migrated from Darlington with his Cherokee bride in 1823 and started a vast lineage there.
 
 
Jesse's siblings are found further apart, perhaps trouble is brewing from Jesse's control.
 
Jesse's wife died and he married the widow of James Freeman, named Frances and he adopted her children and they had more.  The grave of James Freeman Bozeman was found beside Lacy's.  Jesse's son with his first wife was named Jesse A and he steps in  to take control when his father died.   Jesse A married Missouri Flinn and the Alabama History mentions her Flinn family moving into Alabama, living in a wilderness full of wild beasts and several tribes of indians.
 

The lands of Montgomery County were put up for auction at the Federal Land Office in Milledgeville, Georgia in 1816. Larger parcels were sold to developers who subdivided the land into lots for urban commercial and residential use, predetermining a major city on the banks of the Alabama River at Montgomery. A hardy and superior class of people penetrated the wilderness. Settlements and towns sprang into existence everywhere. The City of Montgomery, which became the county seat in 1822, was built on the side of the Indian town Ikanatchati (Econachatee), which means red ground, and Towasa on a high red bluff known to Alibamu Indians as Chunnaanaauga Chatty.

                                                    
[   ]
1830HenryBozeman-MustBeWilliam-byAndersonAndSellers                                        18-Apr-2007 18:25  126K 
[   ]
1830Meady-DallasAlabama                                                                    18-Apr-2007 18:35   85K 
[   ]
1830PeterInMontgomeryAlabamaCensus                                                         18-Apr-2007 18:23   35K  
                                                                     
[   ] 1840JesseMbozeman-WmHenry-WatkinsMcGeheeCallowayMillsToddCampbelll-MontgAL                 18-Apr-2007 18:37  218K 
[TXT]
1840MontgomeryAlabama.htm                                                                  19-May-2007 15:56   31K 
[   ]
1840NeighborsOfWilliamAndJesseRflinnMcGeHeeMcQueenGibson                                   18-Apr-2007 18:44  212K 
[   ]
1840PeterByAnderson                   
 
http://www.hometown.aol.com/montgomerygenweb/  1840 Montgomery census
 
In 1848 Jesse petitions the court on behalf of William's orphaned children and asks for a Writ of Dower for land and the home to remain with the widow, Martha Hill Bozeman. He asks for everything else to be sold and divided equally among the children, some grown and some minors, but he also begans to purchase some items for himself.
 
http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/%7Ekc90853/BOZEMAN/WilliamHenryEstate/
 
Orphans Court names Peter
http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/%7Ekc90853/BOZEMAN/WilliamHenryEstate/0012photo.jpg
 
T R Carter purchases land from WilliamHenryEstate/00
http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/%7Ekc90853/BOZEMAN/WilliamHenryEstate/0002photo.jpg
 
Tombstones of Jesse Bozeman, Lacy Jane Bozeman and her husband T R Carter were found recently on the property they once owned in Hope Hull - the property which Thomas Carter bought from William Henry Bozeman's estate, which was possibly once owned by William's father, Peter Bozeman,the American Revolutionary Soldier.

Plus knowing most of these fine young men served in the Civil War; and knowing that my great great great grandfather Peter Edward Bozeman was born on this piece of land is overwhelming.

http://www.hometown.aol.com/grandpatrcarter/photoList.html
 
In 1850 Martha is gone from the home place.  She has moved to another part of Montgomery which seems to be among her own siblings.  Her sons Peter Edward and John Thomas stay with her, and her daughter Martha M.
 
She is listed on the census as Mrs. Martha Bozeman so she is hard to locate so it might be easier for researchers to search for whom I believe is her sister's husband next to her, Moses Rushton.  Note that all of the women listed on this census page were born in South Carolina and could be more of her family.
 
1850.jpg 
http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~kc90853/1850.jpg
 
Martha's sons served in the Civil War.  Peter Edward Bozeman married Nancy Jane Anderson and their son John Thomas Bozeman married Alice Lorena Stephens.
Martha's daughter married Norman Campbell and her other son, Meady married a widowed Sarah Brewer, adopted her children and moved to Birmingham Alabama.
Martha's son John Thomas Bozeman married Nancy Kizar Hill - yes another Hill in the family tree.  The wives applied for confederate pensions in Montgomery.
 
There was a witness John A Hill on the application of Nancy Jane - yes another Hill and his father was John H. Hill who had also moved his family from Darlington
 
Confederation Pension Application by /NancyJaneBozeman.bmp  
http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/%7Ekc90853/BOZEMAN/NancyJaneBozeman.bmp
 
Conf Pension Application witnessed by John A Hill 4/NancyJaneBozeman1.bmp 
http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/%7Ekc90853/NancyJaneBozeman1.bmp
 
 
 
In fact Peter Edward Bozeman's grave has been found on the property previously owned by John A Hill.    John's son R L Hill is buried beside Peter along with Alice Lorena Stephens Bozeman nearby.
 
http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/%7Ekc90853/000_3199.jpg  R L Hill
 
http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/%7Ekc90853/BOZEMAN/HillsChapel5-2-07/PeterEBozemanb1834/peter.jpg  Peter Edward Bozeman
 
John Hill founded the Hills Chapel Church in 1872 and provided a public cemetery in front of it away from his own private family cemetery behind the church.
All along the Meriweather Trail.

 

Old Family Cemetery is behind the church deep in the woods
http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/%7Ekc90853/BOZEMAN/HillsChapel5-2-07/PeterEBozemanb1834/pic1.jpg


My recent visit in May 2007 to Hills Chapel to join other descendants of Peter Edward Bozeman revealed they knew nothing about his father William Henry nor Martha Hill Bozeman.  They never knew they were related to the Bozemans of Hope Hull which was only a few miles down the road.  Maybe Martha never told her children because she left Jesse and his controlling behavior behind her when she moved.
 
They knew that Peter Edward was the father of John Thomas Bozeman but did not realize Alice Lorena Stephens ( John's first wife and our grandmother ) was buried on this Hill property.   Finding her tombstone was so exciting !  She was the indian in our family tree.   Alice had named two of her daughters Lorena and Ethel, to whom we all connected.  However, John's second wife was Sarah Ellen Bean ( yes kin to the hanging Judge Roy Bean )  and her son was Bob, and some of Uncle Bob's children were there with us.
 
Index of /~kc90853/BOZEMAN/HillsChapel5-2-07/HillFamily Photo Album -
 
http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/%7Ekc90853/BOZEMAN/HillsChapel5-2-07/
 
Ethel
http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/%7Ekc90853/BOZEMAN/HillsChapel5-2-07/PeterEBozemanb1834/pic30.jpg
 
http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/%7Ekc90853/BOZEMAN/HillsChapel5-2-07/PeterEBozemanb1834/pic29.jpg
 
 
Ethel Mae Bozeman Gibson 
http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/%7Ekc90853/BOZEMAN/Notes/ETHEL.html
 
 
Peter Edward also had a son named Peter James Bozeman who married Dora Ann Dillard, who came from the nearby Dillard Plantation - their granddaughter Dora also attended our gathering and we enjoyed her family stories.
 
Peter James and John Thomas are buried with their wives in the public cemetery out in front of the Hills Chapel Church, as well as Ethel's family.  Ethel Mae had married Jace Gibson, son of Clopton Gibson and Rebecca Broadway, a daughter of Abner.
 
New Cemetery at Hills Chapel is in front - across the street 
 
Ethel's sister Lorena had married Charles Allen McClain in 1908 in Ramer and they lived along Hickory Grove.  Charles was the son of Elizabeth Broadway and Josiah Marion McClain who's ancestors came from Spartanburg, SC.  Parents of Elizabeth were Mary Stephens and Abner Broadway who also had grandfathers in the War.
 
http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~kc90853/CharlesMcClain.html
 
http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/%7Ekc90853/AbnerBroadway2Elizabeth.htm
 
 http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/%7Ekc90853/GrannyElizabethBroadwayMcClain.htm
 
 
 
Abner's parents were "Mary" and Abner Broadway of Sumter South Carolina and bought land in Alabama in 1837.  Grandfather William Pool Broadway served in the American Revolution.
 
 
Lorena Bozeman McClain's daughter, Alice Emma, married Cecil Earl Fenn Carter in Montgomery Alabama about 1931.  They had a daughter named Anne Alice Carter who married Frankie Lavern Cochran.  Their daughter Kathy Lorena married Charles Brooks.  The Cochrans were found on the 1920 census of Chelsea, Rogers, Oklahoma living near Will Rogers.  They had come out of Kentucky to Arkansas to OK.
 
 
http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~kc90853/Cecil.html
 
http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/%7Ekc90853/1.html List of Ancestors
http://www.hometown.aol.com/cochrangenealogy/Kathy.html
 
 
Charles is buried at the Dublin Church of Christ Cemetery but Lorena is buried at Memorial Cemetery along the Bozeman Drive in Montgomery, Alabama just off Mobile Road ( Mobile Road goes back to Hope Hull ).  Lorena's uncle Robert Bozeman owned all that land along Bozeman Drive and donated some for that cemetery.  Robert also named a street after each of his daughters when they got married. 
 
Uncle Robert was another son of Peter Edward and his full name was Robert Henry Bozeman.
 
Peter Edward's son George M. died young of yellow fever. Walter "Wattie" was a streetcar motorman who Lorena wrote about, died during cotton pickin time. 
 
Millard Milton, another son of Peter, married Nettie Barrow and named a son "Clyde"
< go figure>
 
The name George has not been in the family lineage thus far, however, there was a George Hill, large plantation owner, who could possibly have a part in this work later on.
 
Peter's daughter Alice Lucy married W S Wilson and moved to Jefferson County, taking along her mentally disabled sister Martha Jane Francis Bozeman.
 
Peter's son Mead married Leila Campbell ( cousin? ) but he died in 1920 and is buried by his mother Nancy Jane Anderson Bozeman in a large Bozeman family plot at Greenwood Cemetery, close to the entrance on the left.
 
http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/%7Ekc90853/BOZEMAN/Notes/
 
The Andersons also came from the Carolinas and connect to Edward Doty of the Mayflower and our first Thanksgiving.
 
http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/%7Ekc90853/ANDERSON/
 
Nancy Jane's parents were Lavinia Jane Sellers ( of the Carolinas ) and Seaborn Anderson.  Seaborne Montgomery Anderson served in the Civil War while his great grandfathers had served in the American Revolution.
 
 
Elisha Anderson's Will was probated in Montgomery Alabama.  His mother was Lavinia Brack.  She was the daughter of Eleazor Brack and Hester Doty - Eleazor had served in the American Revolution and the Doty family had native american blood
 
 
Lavinia .
Patriots and Soldiers  
 
 
Lavinia Sellers' parents were William Calvin Sellers Jr and Levinia Anderson, a sister of Seaborn ( cousins married cousins ) . Calvin had served in the War of 1812 and his father had served in the American Revolution.  Calvin's brother Alfred Sellers had married Elizabeth Anderson, another sister of Seaborn.
 
Calvin's great grandparents were Elisha Sellers ( Am Rev Soldier ) and Sarah Jane Peeples of the Cherokee Nation East.  Elisha's mother was also native american, Mary Willis born 1710 in North Carolina.
 
Many of our cousins and ancestors played a part in the growth of the east coast in the 1600s and 1700s among many nationalities and tribes who also existed there and they fought to protect our country.
 
They also learned the English Language !  Indians were overwhelmed with the Bible stories about the Creator.  Many took on Biblical names when baptized.
 
Storytelling has been a fascinating part of our heritage and it must continue.
 
 
When I try to research the possible parents of Mordecai Bozeman, it is logical to think of Mary White,  who married Samuel Bozeman, and she also had a brother named Mordecai White, so she would be my first choice.  Yet we may never know the name of Mordecai Bozeman's wife, perhaps she was also native american.
 
Very few others before us have attempted to research this family tree in Alabama.  Jimmy Ray was kind enough to help me realize which Peter Bozeman connected to Ramer.  Wayne Bozeman found records on our family in Hope Hull and Wayne is married to my husband's cousin.   The Gibsons assisted with the lineage of Ethel Mae and joined us at Dublin when we discovered the grave of Peter Edward Bozeman.  Visits, interviews, phone calls, letters, emails, have brought us all together.  I really hope that the younger generation of the Bozeman Clan will carry on with our labor of love.    Jimmy Ray's daughter is currently working with DAR to get the name of Peter Bozeman established in their book, so the rest of us can join or at least appreciate his history.
 
 
Kathy Lorena
Made in America!
From Broken Arrow, Tulsa, Oklahoma to Montgomery Alabama.
 
Alabama Families


Kathy Lorena beside Hazel, the daughter of Uncle Bob Bozeman 
 
Cousin Dora told us there were once at least 50 or so tombstones behind Hills Chapel and here is one small stone being uncovered
http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/%7Ekc90853/000_3201.jpg
 

Bozeman Descendants gather at Hills Chapel_3202.jpg 
 
grandchildren and greats of John T Bozeman 
Founded 1872/HillsChapel5-2-07/PeterEdwardBozeman 
Old Family Cemetery is behind the church deep in the woods 
 
Perhaps the family could not locate the original headstone of Peter so they ordered another
PEB has a second stone put in place by a relative some years ago 

ditto_3203.jpg 
ditto _3206.jpg 
Sharing Research_3207.jpg 
Hill Cemetery 3198.jpg 
 
Tombstone of Alice Lorena Stephens Bozeman  
http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/%7Ekc90853/BOZEMAN/HillsChapel5-2-07/PeterEBozemanb1834/alb.jpg
 
PEB1 ALB 
 
Tombstone of Peter Edward Bozeman b 1834 
PEB cleaned by KC with water and brush 
 
 
Elisha Anderson 1834 Will/1.gif 
 
John Murphy to Elisha Anderson Will/11.jpg 
Anderson Estate Sale-Brack-Sellers-McCool-Freeman/16.jpg
Anderson Will - in the presence of James Freeman/3.bmp
http://www.hometown.aol.com/kathycochran2/9.html List of my Bozemans
 
http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~kc90853/StephensMapOfFarmsAroundRamer 
John Stephens had served in the American Revolution in South Carolina and married a full blood Cherokee and they migrated to Ramer Alabama.

http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~kc90853/BrokenArrow.html 

Kathy Cochran in Alabama.

http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~kc90853/Frankie.html 

Frank Cochran of Kansas in Alabama.

http://freepages.history.rootsweb.com/~kc90853/Kentucky/Little-Handley-Douglass-Crigler-Roby-Wright-Weatherford.html 

Cochran and Coonfield descendants inAlabama.




 

Tombstone of Jacob Benjamin Cochran
http://www.hometown.aol.com/spiritwalkintall/page1.html
http://www.hometown.aol.com/kc90853/Jacob.html
Article written by his daughter Elzira Cochran:
 
 
 
 
Mom:  Anne Carter Cochran
Her grandfather MOON
Her grandfather Stone
 
Her grandfather McClain
 
 
Dad:  Frankie Lavern Cochran
 
His grandmother Douglass
 
His Grandfather Charles Weatherford
 
His mother's Mom
 and her great great grandfather George Little
 
x
 
 
Mamaw Susie Cooper Brooks' grandfather
 
 
Mary Ella Thornton Brooks' grandmother Partridge
 
 
 




http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~kc90853/JohnBROOKES.html 

John Brooks of Holland descendents in Alabama.

 

 

 

My grandfather Frank Delbert Cochran's parents were Jacob Benjamin Cochran born in 1822,  and Clora Jane Miller who had married in Iowa after Jacob's first wife Mariah White had died.  Both had children by their previous marriage.

Jacob's parents were Martha Henderson and William Cochran, a son of Alexander.

Jacob Cochran was one of the very first families to homestead in
Hill City, Kansas after they left Iowa.  His daughter Clora kept my Aunt Bernice
informed of their history.  The Cochrans had some awesome sky blue eyes and the men never went bald like we see some families like the Brooks men who had lost their hair before the age of 30.

Alexander Cochran raised his family in Pennsylvania and soon settled into Ohio, possibly Quakers, with several sons joining the Civil War and even living in California during the Gold Rush.  Later these young men moved to Iowa to farm the new land, and after several years, Jacob Benjamin Cochran moved to Kansas with second wife Clora Jane Miller, a daughter of Mary Clara Parker and James Madison Miller.  The Millers were Irish from Rockingham Virginia.


Many of these mixed migrations were referred to as Pennsylvania Dutch.

 Family lore is that Mary Parker shared medicine with the indians and research shows that her ancestors were in the 1600s and 1700s New York Indian Country as well as Mass  and Rhode Island, with one cousin, Joshua Tefft was killed by King Phillip.  One Mr Sweete was banned from England as a Catholic Priest and lived in exile in France. These cousins from the 1600s do not really count but it is really touching to know they had something to do with our being on this earth.


As far as documenting the Cochran lineage, I have none beyond Jacob to prove the names of his parents or grandparents.  Locating a census record or a will or more would help  to prove this lineage.

 Perhaps Jacob told his children about his parents but reading the census records, I can safely say there were dozens of Williams, Alexanders, and Jacob Cochrans in Pennsylvania and Ohio and even those who migrated to Iowa Territory. Apparently William Cochran married Martha Henderson in Ohio and had Jacob but this author has not located a marriage record.  Several Cochrans came out of Pennsylvania and Maryland into Ohio and causes a bit of confusion in tracing our own, because they used the same names for their sons over and over.
 
Frank Delbert Cochran married Luella Ellen Coonfield in Arkansas 1914;  he had met her while he was in Arkansas looking for work and he had worked in mines and in the farm during his life. Luella's parents were Lattie Cedonia Little and Benjamin Wallace Coonfield. 
 
All of these families supported our country in the military services and several are found listed in the Rosters of the Civil War.
 
As far as my own family heritage goes, I know that Lattie and Luella said they were Cherokee, some write to me rejecting that, but it is so, my father and his sisters said so, so that is enough for me.


Fortunately for many other lineages, those before us have done a lot of research that I can go back and verify for myself leaving reason to believe most of what I can see.


Isaac and Barsheba Clark Coonfield spent many years in early Kentucky and then moved to Indiana with their grown children. She was found widowed on the 1830 census. Her son Isaac Benjamin Coonfield moved his family to Arkansas. This family is mentioned in the book of the Early History of Morgan County Indiana.

There was a John Martin Coonfield born about 1795 in Pennsylvania following Isaac who could have been a brother, surely not his son,  but also found in KY and OH.  There was a John McMasters Coonfield born 1796 Kentucky who might be the son of Isaac and Barsheba but at this point, it is so confusing.  Those early 1800 census records did not give age nor location of birth, and it did not list the number nor names of the children, so we really do not know when nor where Barsheba Clark married Isaac Coonfield and thus far we can only guess at the names of their parents and surely Barsheba would have at least one son named after her own father which was the custom.

One of their daughters married an Obediah Clark, and one married Arch Clark,  and I am thinking of how royalty preferred to keep it in the family. Both Clarks followed Barsheba to Indiana.

Now I wonder why the move?  They leave their established homes and farms in Kentucky to start over and this is before 1830.

Grandma Barsheba also had a son named Isaac who married Lydia Epperson, named his son Isaac, while that John Coonfield named a son Isaac and Barsheba's other son James, also named a son Isaac, so we must be careful reading those census images.

Lydia died young and her sister Mary Epperson married Isaac and they moved to Arkansas having more children, and may have lost three sons in the civil war.

Lydia's son Benjamin Wylie Coonfield married Martha Frances Young in Indiana and moved to Arkansas, having a son named Ben.  My Aunt Deloris Cochran said that Ben's hair was so black that it looked blue.

Martha's parents were possibly Minerva Evans and James Young of Kentucky and there was a George Young on the 1860 census in their household, probably a brother of James.  Martha named sons George and James so this is only my theory of her genealogy.  Martha's father and uncle appear to have been born in Pennsylvania while her mother if from Kentucky.  Then the 1850 census shows us that the Uncle George was bron in New Jersey and that the first son of James, named Edward, was born in Iowa so now we get to research that state as well.  There was only one James Young found in 1840 Iowa Territory, and he was in Des Moines.

When I look into 1820 Clark County Kentucky there are several Youngs and Evans families close together and even an Epperson family.

1810 shows Eddward, 2 James, William, Robert, John and Mr Original Young !!  Original seems to the the elder and with no children in household.  Also finding Peter, James, Abrahama nd a Mabra Evans.  Then 1800 M Evans is in South Carolina.

Name: Original Young
State: VA  
County: Fauquier County  
Township: Rental Rolls  
Year: 1777  
Record Type: Rent Role  
Database: VA Early Census Index  

Name: Original Young
State: KY  
County: Clark County  
Township: No Township Listed  
Year: 1800  
Record Type: Tax list  
Database: KY Early Census Index  

Name: Original Young
State: OH  
County: Army Lands  
Township: VA Millitary Dist  
Year: 1801  
Record Type: Tax list  
Page: 111  
Database: OH Early Census Index  

Great Grandpa Benjamin Wallace Coonfield married Lattie Cedonia Little and they had Amy, Ruth and Luella Coonfield, Harrison and several other children.  Amy married Joe Gray and I had corresponded with their daughter Verna, who forwarded copies of her late sister's research ( Dorline Gray Teegardin ) who was trying to connect this lineage to Chief Powhatan. Cousin Verna even sent me a p;icture of my dad, Frankie Cochran, when he was very young. On the phone she was very sweet and glad that I was working on our lineage, saying that much of Dorline's work had been loaned out and there was not much she could copy for me to learn from, but thought that her sister, Dorline had joined a Pocahontas Club.  Ruth married Bates and Harrison married Inez Gray.


 Dorline had also been corresponding with our cousin Martha Hawes in Arizona, who also shared a great amount of research with me regarding L P Little.  L P Little had a great way of leaving a trail of his elders by giving each child a middle name of one of his ancestors and I am honoring him and his work by writing about him on the Kentucky webpage. In fact Lucius had written articles about others that he knew and I would love to find a copy to add to my little collection of things in our genealogy.


Arkansas land records indicate that Isaac Coonfield bought land in 1856.


Hiram Lucius Little, was the father of our John Little and the son of Betsy Douglas and Jonas Little, had lost his wife, Catherine Wright, in Kentucky and moved to Texas.  His son John Little served in the Civil War as a blacksmith, married, had several children, lost his wife and then moved his family into Arkansas.

  Our grandma Betsy was found widowed and living with her daughter Betsy Roberts on the 1850 census.


Hiram Little married Rebecca Isabella Adams in Bosque County Texas and had more children including a Hiram jr.  Most are buried at the Meridian Cemetery. Hiram's headstone refers to him as a doctor and a mason.  Rebecca was from Tennessee and they lived beside her sister Kissiah Brooks and Rebecca named one of her sons Brooks Little.  It is also quite possible that Hiram was visiting his Uncle John Little ( brother of Jonas ) in Tennessee when he met Rebecca.
 
Uncle John's family also went to Texas.  John and Jonas had left other brothers behind in Newberry South Carolina so we do not know where they migrated.


Apparently some of the brothers of grandpa Jonas had already removed to Texas by 1800 and our Hiram had joined them.  Our Texas migration needs further study.


Betsy Douglass Little had another son named Douglass Little who married Martha Ann Wright, his sister in law. Martha named her first son, Powhatan and he was a lawyer, and a judge, who was a great writer and did a lot of research on his lineage;  as did his daughter, Laura Simmons Little.

  They traced Mary Handley to parents Martha Mason and George Handley of Ireland, noting that Mary was born asea, on the trip over. Mary's brother was Captain John Handley.  Their notes also chart a Thomas Jones settling in the 1600s on James River in Bermuda Hundred, Henrico County, Virginia and wrote about a Polly Jones who may have been the wife or companion of Charles Weatherford, but then again their work was blurred and Polly could have been related to L P's mother instead.



Mother of the Wright sisters was Catherine Weatherford, a daughter of Charles Weatherford in Charlotte VA.  Alabama land records indicate land sold to a Charles in 1841 if this is his grandson by Red Eagle. So far records only indicate one Charles Weatherford born in this time period and it is quite possible that he had more than one wife than history would like for us to believe and if he was indian trader, he probably had many children that have not been noted.

 History also indicates that the father of Red Eagle was from Scotland, and a his grandson on the creek indian mailing list says that Charles fathered many children with many women and then went back to Scotland but we may never know the facts.  Some family trees indicate that Charles was the son of Martin Weatherford and an indian woman called Mary in Charlotte Virginia who migrated to Georgia and I did find documentation in the Georgia Archives onlne that show Martin was a wealthy planter and it mentions nothing at all about Scotland.  Martin was a loyalist, very outspoken and the state of Ga banned him so he moved his family to the Bahamas and more documentation is found to prove that.

Hopefully something will surface to resolve the mystery.



Laura  Little joined the DAR and had a monument dedicated to her great grandfather, Captain George Little in Kentucky.  Laura's granddaughter, Martha, in Arizona has assisted with this research. Laura had studied the Weatherfords, Wrights and Chief Powhatan.  Laura had joined the American Genealogical First Families. leaving a fantastic paper trail for her descendants to follow.



Parents of Betsy were Mary Handley and Alexander Douglass who were married in PA. MMary's brother Captain John Handley became a surveyor like Davy Crockett and on one trip to the new land in Kentucky, before 1800, his brother in law, Alexander Douglass went with him and never returned.  Alexander was murdered by indians on his way back home.  His wife took her girls and moved into a scottish settlement in South Carolina, where her daughter married Jonas little. Later the father of Jonas, George Little, married his son's mother in law.  Both had become widowed but they had no children together that we know of.


 Ironically there was an older Jonas Little in South Carolina, who's descendants moved southward and into Alabama and we can only suspect there may be some connection to George.  The 1790 census of Newberry, Union, South Carolina shows George with a housefull of children but it also shows others around his home named Jonas, Joseph, William and John who could also be his Scottish siblings.  Some of those came through Alabama and Texas but it is hard to configure.




Hiram Little's son was John Wright Little who married a Mary Catherine Crigler. John lived with her family before the marriage, with her parents Catherine Roby and Abraham Crigler.  


Abraham's parents were Lydia Carpenter and Owen Crigler.  Catherine's parents were Kitty Simmons and Reason Roby.  These families left Virginia to settle in the new land of Kentucky about 1800 among friendly indians who were also migrating westward.


John and Mary were beautiful, dark complected, had black eyes and black hair and they had Cherokee blood.

 
  • Will of Abraham Crigler, 1847
  • Slave Appraisal of Abraham Crigler, 1848
  • Estate Appraisal of Lawrence Roby, 1817
  • Will of Owen Roby, 1838
  • Will of Reason Roby, 1844
  • Estate Sale of William Roby, (deceased), 1834
  • Estate Settlement of Edward Rogers, 1829
  • Will of Jesse Simmons, 1819

  • ----------
     
     
    little521gph.txt
    little521gph.jpg
    News article - Capt. George Little and Sgt. Anthony Thompson - REV WAR Ceremony 1k
    225k
    5 July 05 Kathy Cochran



    The Battle of Alamo lists a soldier named Hiram Little and there is a possible connection to our lineage as some of the decendants are found in Texas census records. and one receiving a land grant in Texas.



    Much of my research is being added to usgenweb.com


    Descendant of all of these was Frankie Lavern Cochran born 1927.and Kathy Cochran who was born in Broken Arrow, Tulsa, Oklahoma later moved to Montgomery Alabama after spendng a few years in Arizona.  Frankie had dark hair and blue eyes like his father and his younger pictures resemble his father, but as Frankie aged, he resembled his grandpa Coonfield very much.

      Pictures of Catherine Crigler and then those of the Coonfield women show us they all had long dark hair in braids and dark eyes.  Luella Coonfield and her mother in law Clora Jane both smoked pipes.  The pipes are in the possession of cousin Stanley.


    Aunt Irma talked of granny Clora Jane Miller Cochran being a sweet old lady who stayed with them for a while when grandpa Jacob died.  Clora stayed with each of her children, taking turns, as she had no place to go.  She taught them about corn and how to pop it.  She mysteriously read the ashes of her pipe.  Aunt Irma was the child born with a veil over her face.  The doctor removed the veil twice as it seemed to grow back and on the third veil, her mother Luella took it and placed it in the Bible where it still exists to this day.


      Frankie's sisters have assisted with this research.  There are many documents, pictures, census records, letters marriage licenses, death certificates, land records, wills, and our other research  posted on Kathy's webpage at

    http://www.hometown.aol.com/cochransgenweb/Lorena.html
     
     
     
     
    Cochran Lineage Introduction
    http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~kc90853/FrankieLavernCochran.htm
    http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~kc90853/Frankie.html
     
     
    Jacob Cochran family group sheet
    http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~kc90853/FILES/CochranJacob-fgs.htm
     
    http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~kc90853/Photos/1860MariahinOhiowithdaughtersandnexttoAlexCochran.jpg
     
    http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~kc90853/Photos/1860JacobCochrannexttobrotherJohninCaliforniawhilehiswifewashomeinOhionexttoAlex.jpg
     
    Jacob's father William on census
    http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~kc90853/Photos/1840oxfordwithbriceandwilliam.jpg
     
    http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~kc90853/marthahendersoncochran.txt
     
    1870 Jacob and Mariah moved to Iowa Territory
    http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~kc90853/Photos/1870JacobinIowawithMariah.jpg
    http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~kc90853/1850JosephWhitenexttoRobertHendersoninOxford.jpg
     
     
    Family Photo Jacob and Clora Jane
    http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~kc90853/cloraandjacob.jpg
     
    http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~kc90853/HILLCITYCEMETERY-GrahamCounty-COCHRAN.htm
     
    Clora Jane's Obituary
    http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~kc90853/clorasobit.jpg
     
    Clora Jane Miller Cochran's family with Mary Clara Parker
    http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~kc90853/parker.txt
    http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~kc90853/miller.txt
     
    My Dad http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~kc90853/frankielaverncochranusaf.bmp
    Benjamin Coonfield, father of Luella Cochran, looked very much like my Dad
    http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~kc90853/Photos/auntamy.bmp
     
    http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~kc90853/marriagelicensebenandlattie.bmp
    http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~kc90853/ben-lattiecoonfield.jpg
     
    http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~kc90853/luella.jpg
    Son of Luella http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~kc90853/freelon.jpg
    http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~kc90853/daddy.jpg
    http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~kc90853/fl.jpg
    http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~kc90853/frankie.jpg
    http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~kc90853/1933cookschool.jpg
     
     
    Frank and Luella
    http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~kc90853/frankd.jpg
     
     
    Coonfield listed in Morgan County Indiana History
    http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~kc90853/MorganCountyIndianaFamilyTrees.htm
     
    http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~kc90853/coonfield1918.jpg
     
    http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~kc90853/unclejohncoonfieldwithellie.jpg
     
    http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~kc90853/Coonfield.html
    http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~kc90853/bencoonfieldandmartha.jpg
    http://www.hometown.aol.com/spiritwalkintall/Isaac.html
     
     
    http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~kc90853/GrannyLattieCedoniaLittleCoonfieldBorn1872.htm
     
     
    Lattie Little's brother Sam  
    Uncle Sam Little and his guitar.jpg http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~kc90853/samlittle.jpg
     
    http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~kc90853/hiramlittle.jpg
    http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~kc90853/hiram.bmp
     
    http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~kc90853/PENSION-JohnWlittle.jpg
     
     
    Catherine Crigler,wife of John Wright Little and the daughter of Catherine Roby and Abraham Crigler
    http://carter.rootschat.net/1cathcrigler.jpg
     
    http://carter.rootschat.net/Crigler.txt
     
    http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~kc90853/roby.txt
    http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~kc90853/johnsimmons.txt
     
    http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~kc90853/johnlittlephoto.jpg
     
    http://carter.rootschat.net/pictures/johnhandley.txt
    http://www.rootsweb.com/~usgenweb/ky/mclean/photos/documents/johnhand3455gph.jpg

    http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~kc90853/handley.txt
    http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~kc90853/johnhandley1.jpg
     
    http://www.hometown.aol.com/spiritwalkintall/George.html
    http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~kc90853/CaptainGeorgeLittle.html

    LITTLE (L340) at ROOTSWEB
    http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~kc90853/johnlittleofbullittkentucky.wps.htm

    Ohio County, Kentucky USGenWeb Genealogy Archives, Table of Contents
     
    Harrison Coonfield and bride Inez Gray
    http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/%7Ekc90853/1inezwedding.jpg
     
     
    Miscellaneous  http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~kc90853/surnames.htm
     
    Smorgasbord
    http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~kc90853/CochranGenealogy.htm
     
     
    http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~kc90853/sisters.jpg


    Caroline Bond to Charles Wayne Brooks
    http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~kc90853/carolinebond.txt
     
    Andrew Cooper of South Carolina to Charles Brooks
    http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~kc90853/cooper.txt
     
    http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~kc90853/JohnBROOKES.html

     
    http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~kc90853/FirstFamiliesOfAmerica-InstituteOfAmericanGenealogy-LauraLittle
     
     
    Alabama History of Indians and Pioneers
    http://freepages.history.rootsweb.com/~kc90853/Flinn-Bozeman


    http://familytreemaker.genealogy.com/users/l/o/r/Kathy-Lorena-AL/


    Grandpa Captain George Little

    Just Pondering....

    My Family!!!

    My Research

    My Webpages

    Next Page

    Alabama Genealogy

    Kansas Genealogy

    Kentucky

    My Family in Alabama!!!

    Iowa Genealogy

    Indiana

    Arkansas

    Mississippi

    Kansas

    Tennessee

    Pennsylvania

    Kentucky

    Rootsweb Family Tree

    Charlie and Kathy

    Miscellaneous

     

    http://kathybrooks.com

     

    http://freepages.history.rootsweb.com/~kc90853/FamilyJewels.html