Family Tree Welborn » Anna Nash (1722-> 1801)

Persönliche Daten Anna Nash 

Quellen 1, 2, 3, 4
  • Sie ist geboren im Jahr 1722 in Middlesex, Virginia, United States.Quellen 1, 3, 4
  • Alternative: Sie ist geboren rund 1725 in Middlesex, Virginia.Quelle 5
  • Wohnhaft vor 1753: Welsh Neck Settlement, South Carolina.Quelle 6
  • Sie ist verstorben nach 1801 in Chatham County, North Carolina.Quellen 1, 3
  • Alternative: Sie ist verstorben nach 1801 in Chatham county, North Carolina.
  • Ein Kind von John Nash und Ann Nash Brewer
  • Ein Kind von John NASH und Ann Brewer
  • Diese Information wurde zuletzt aktualisiert am 17. Juni 2022.

Familie von Anna Nash

Sie ist verheiratet mit James Michael Younger.


Marriage
Date: 1745
Place: Beaver Creek, Jones, North Carolina, USA
Marriage
Date: 1754
Place: Middlesex, Virginia
Marriage
Date: 1760
Place: Middlesex, Virginia, United States
Marriage
Date: 1750
Place: Middlesex, Virginia, USA
Marriage
Place: Middlesex, Virginia

Gene Welborn writes:

"Abbotts Creek was the first Baptist church in northeast Davidson County.
In 1753, the small group of pioneers who had made their homes on the
headwaters of Abbotts Creek welcomed into their settlement James Younger,
the Baptist preacher, and his wife, Anna, and little daughter, Anna, from
the Welsh Neck Settlement in South Carolina.

"It is believed that Younger was the first Baptist to preach in Piedmont
North Carolina. He was certainly preaching at Abbotts Creek in 1755,
when Sheubal Stearns came to Sandy Creek and when Benjamin Miller came to
Jersey. [ Note: These individuals and events are not known by this
writer. Gene Welborn is presumed to hold this information and their
details. MLW 980905.] Younger was not an ordained minister, so as soon
as he heard of the coming of Sheubal Stearns to Sandy Creek, thirty miles
south, he went at once to get a pastor for Abbotts Creek. There he
enlisted Daniel Marshall, brother-in-law of Stearns, who was ordained in
1756. Marshall came with his wife to give a successful five years of
ministry.

"The organization of Abbotts Creek took place sometime between 1755 and
1758. In June, 1758, three churches--Abbotts Creek, Deep River, and
Sandy Creek--formed themselves into the Sandy Creek Association, which
continues to exist as a missionary Baptist Association. This was the
fourth Baptist association to be organized in America and the first
association in North Carolina.

"The congregation built a log church building in 1756 and met there for
many years. Later they built a larger frame building on a foundation of
native stone.

"In March, 1832, the church, led by the pastor, Ashley Swaim, declared
non-fellowship against the Baptist State Convention, Bible Societies,
Sunday Schools, and all aids to the Baptist State Convention. The vote
was 34 to 11. The minority tried to get the majority to change their
mind, but to no avail.

"Therefore, fifteen members withdrew from the church conference and began
to form themselves into an organized church.

"During this period of church history, the anti-mission forces, being in
the majority, owned most of the churches. In later years, these anti-
mission churches lost membership; and many of them died. They came to be
called 'Hardshells' or 'Primitive' Baptist Churches. At Abbotts Creek,
the majority held the church and burying ground.

"The two divisions worshipped in the same building until April, 1834,
when the minority (pro-missioners) were locked out by the majority
(anti-missioners). The minority soon bought land across the road and
built their own log church and laid out their cemetery. Later, as their
numbers grew, they built a larger frame church.

"Now Abbotts creek Missionary Baptist Church worships in a brick church
building, across the road from the Abbotts Creek Primitive Baptist
Church. Each has its own burial ground containing the remains of many
who have been active in Davidson County's [ Note: Then Rowan County. MLW
980905. ] development.

"Today, both churches co-exist, facing each other. They are commonly
called the Upper (Missionary) Church and Lower (Primitive) Church, simply
because of different elevations of the church building and their
cemeteries. (Early A. Hegecock, Abbotts Creek Township; submitted by his
wife, Mrs. Louallen Hedgecock, [sic] Kindergarten Teacher, Wallburg
School.)

"(from "Colonial Soldiers of the South 1732-1774) [sic] North Carolina
Militia muster roll of Captain John Montgomery's company...#76 Rank
Private, James Younger.

"South Carolina Militia accounts of the pay due the companies is Colonel
George Gabrial Powell's Battalion in the 1759 Cherokee Expedition, signed
by the commanding officers, Jan 15, 1760. Muster roll of Captain
Butlers's company, Jan 15, 1760...#31 Sergeant, James Younger deserted,
Nov 10, 1759."2 SOUR S60
3 PAGE pages 196-198.

From Gene Welborn:
Bk 10, p. 171 - James Younger and wife, Ann, of Chatham Co., NC, let Wm.
Marlowe of Rowan Co. have 300 A, being the tract upon which the said
Marlowe now lives, on the east side of Cool Run of Abbot's Creek, for 200
lbs. Wit: thomas Younger, Henry Dvis, Joe Evans. Proved Feb 1785.

Gene Welborn writes:
"James Younger born c. 1720, Essex County, VA, married Anna Nash,
(daughter of John Nash and Ann Brewer). (from HOMESPUN DAVIDSON COUNTY,
NORTH CAROLINA, March, 1975, Volume II, No. 3) Abbotts Creek Baptist
Church.

Sie haben geheiratet im Jahr 1760 in Abbots Creek Baptish Church, Davidson County, North Carolina, sie war 38 Jahre alt.Quellen 1, 3


Kind(er):

  1. Mary Younger  ± 1747-????
  2. John Younger  1749-1776
  3. Anne Younger  1753-1843
  4. William Younger  1757-????
  5. James Younger  1761-1834
  6. Thomas Younger  1761-1834 
  7. Betsy Younger  1763-????
  8. Susannah Younger  1765-1843
  9. Joseph Younger  1770-1823
  10. Polly Younger  1778-1850
  11. Charles Lee Younger  1779-1854

Ereignis (Residence1) am 21. Januar 1784 in Chatham County, North Carolina .Quelle 7

Ereignis (Marriage1) rund 1745 in Beaver Creek, North Carolina .Quelle 8


Notizen bei Anna Nash



Anna Younger (Nash) is your fifth great grandmother.
You
¬â€  ·Üí Marvin "Toad" Henry Welborn, Jr.
your father ·Üí Heny Marvin Welborn, Sr.
his father ·Üí Calhoun H. Welborn
his father ·Üí GM Younger Welborn, II
his father ·Üí William "Billy" Welborn
his father ·Üí Elizabeth Wellborne
his mother ·Üí Anna Younger (Nash)
her mother

https://www.geni.com/people/Anna-Younger-Nash/3938880174380037254

Anna Younger (Nash)
Gender:
Female
Birth:
circa December 1721
Middlesex County, Virginia
Death:
Chatham County, North Carolina
Immediate Family:
Daughter of John Nash and Ann Nash
Wife of James Younger
Mother of Joseph Younger; Mary Green; Thomas James Younger; Elizabeth Wellborne; Rebecca Elizabeth Welborn; Betsy Younger; John Younger; Susannah Younger and Anna Younger ¬´ less
Sister of Henry J. Nash; (No Name); (No Name) and John Nash

U.S. and International Marriage Records, 1560-1900
Name: Ann Nash
Gender: Female
Spouse Name:James Younger
Spouse Birth Place: VA
Spouse Birth Year: 1720
Number Pages: 1
Source Citation
Source number: 715.000; Source type: Electronic Database; Number of Pages: 1; Submitter Code: MAT
Source Information
Yates Publishing. U.S. and International Marriage Records, 1560-1900 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations Inc, 2004.
Original data: This unique collection of records was extracted from a variety of sources including family group sheets and electronic databases. Originally, the information was derived from an array of materials including pedigree charts, family history articles, querie.
================

Letter written to Ellen Younger by Her Father
Posted 16 May 2013 by Janswillie

Ellen Younger
Loretto Hotel
Santa Fe 67501
April, 1977

Dearest Ellen,

I promised to write you some family history. I am sorry to have been
delayed so long in getting started.

Your ggggg grandfather was Alexander Younger who came to Virginia (York
County) in the 1680's from Worcester England. At that time there were other Youngers
in Worcester and in other places in England. But the Youngers abounded in
Scotland, and Alexander's brother Andrew lived in Scotland. Scottish Youngers were
prominent in the upper Chesapeake Bay trade and along the Rappahannock River, even above
Fredericksburg. As a 12 yr. old boy, John Paul Jones was apprenticed to one of these
Younger Scottish sea captains.

Our Alexander made his way up along the Rappahannock from around Williamsbay
and Yorktown through King and Queen County in Essex County. Before 1700 he
married Rebecca Mills, daughter of John and Sarah Mills of Essex County. Eventually
they settled down on a farm at or near the town of Tappahannock, county seat of
Essex, located on the Rappahannock where it begins to narrow down but is still
pretty wide.

Alexander and Rebecca had 8 children: Thomas (1700), John (1702),
Elizabeth (1704), Susannah (1706), Mary (1712), Anne (1715), Jannetta (1717), andJames
(1725). In 1725 Alexander made his will and died in 1727. I have a copy of his will, no
doubt, written by a professional copyist, which reveals dramatically the fancy longhand of
that day.

Alexander was a tobacco farmer and seems to have acquired some 300-400 acres
of land. I have the impression that they were pious folk. Although everyone in those
days was under the jurisdiction of the Anglican Church, I suspect that Alexander was
not an Anglican but a member of one of the evangelical denominations. His will
reveals him to be charitable. The will indicates that he owned only one slave, perhaps an
aging personal servant. So Alexander was a yeoman farmer whom Thomas Jefferson, many years
later, would call "the chosen people of God."

After a year or two Rebecca married Timothy Driscoll, and they left most of
their property to Anne Younger, who married John Price of Middlesex County, VA.

In those days the "fustest got the mostest"" it would be many years before
Thomas Jefferson would get the laws of primogeniture repealed. So the oldest child
(male) got the most. Poor 7-year old James, the youngest of the 8, got the least.
James is your gggg grandfather. He is also a mystery man, somewhat intriguing, perhaps because
of what we do NOT know about him.

James in time married Anna Nash, and they settled down in Spotsylvania
County which is adjacent to and lies to the southwest of Fredericksburg. Anna's family
were originally from Middlesex County. In these Northern Neck Counties along the
Rappahannock the Youngers were acquaintances of families bearing such names as Pruitt,
Durrett, Robinson, Minor, Carter, Nalle, and Newton. You will remember that Blake
Newton is Toot's granddad. Watch out for the name Nalle which will again show up in
this story. As late as 1750 James Younger was in Spotsylvania County. Soon the scene
would shift.

On a "joyful day" in 1753, a small band of hardy settlers in the back county
of North Carolina "welcomed into their midst James Younger, the Baptist preacher",
and his wife Anna and a little daughter Anna. The settlement was on Cool Run of the
headwaters of Abbotts Creek in Rowan County, now DavidsonCounty. Lacking a formal
education James Younger influenced people by his "pious life and earnest exhortations:
and led them to establish Abbott's Creek Baptist Church. One of the mysteries:
where had James come from? Not from Spotsylvania County, VA, but from the Welsh Nook
Settlement in Craven County, SC, which is said to have been peopled by Welshmen
from Delaware. There is no Craven County, SC today but there was then.
Details on Welsh Nook?

James was not an ordained minister; so he brought in the zealous Elder Daniel Marshall
from a nearby congregation to take over. James continued to live in the Abbott's Creek
Community and procured the land on which the church now stands. His daughter Anna
Evans lived to be 97 and is buried in the church cemetery.

On the eve of the American Revolution the people in the back country of the colonies
seethed with discontent. In North Carolina, their grievances were directed not so much
against King George Third as against the seaboard gentry in alliance with the Royal
Governor and his hand-picked council composed of an inner ring which ruled the colony.
Taxes and fees were too high, court houses were too inaccessible, and local government
impotent and exclusive. In North Carolina the antagonisms were strong and exaggerated
and culminated in the organization of the Regulator Associations. In 1770 violence
broke out along the frontier. Governor Tryon called out the militia and marched into the
back country. In 1771 a battle at Alamance led to total defeat of the Regulators; some
of the leaders were hanged; hundreds of the rank and file took the oath of allegiance to
the government; thousands fled across the mountains to the fertile lands along the
Watanga and Holstone rivers.

James Younger was a participant in these stirring events. Along with more than 200
others he signed Regulators' Advertisement No. 9 which petitioned the Governor and
Council for smaller fees for deeds and protested the "exactions and extortions" of several
officers, but when he resistance was broken he joined 21 others in a petition for clemency.

Evidently his plea for clemency was granted. He continued to purchase bits of land now
and then and in 1783, the Revolution now ended, he moved into Chatham County, North
Carolina just south and west of Durham and Chapel Hill. What happened to
him the rest of his life, where he lived precisely, where he died and is buried, is not
known. He lived on until perhaps 1805, or more accurately he died sometime before1805. In
1801, "for the affectionate love (he) bore and do have for my (his) son Thomas Younger"
he willed to that son 300 acres of land in Chatham County.

This Thomas Younger, born in 1762, is your ggg grandfather. Other children
of James and Anna Nash Younger were Anna who married James Evans, T. James married
Anne Teague, John Married Rebecca McCaslin, Elizabeth married Aaron Welbourn, and
Rebecca married James Welbourn.

Our Thomas is a greater mystery man than his father James. He married Mary
Nalle, daughter of John Nalle of Spotsylvania County, Va. He had many children,
said to be 13. One of the sons, Thomas, is your gg grandfather who moved to the
Tomahawk community near St. Joe,AR. Another son, Alexander, went from North
Carolina to Tennessee to MO to Corsicana, TX, where there is a Younger cemetery. Mary
Nalle's husband, Thomas, disappears in Williamson County, TN. Mary Nalle Younger is
said to be buried in Stockton, MO, 96 yrs. old. This will have to be checked out.
(Note: added in pencil to the letter by DY...Checked-this is right)

Have to end this installment. Will pick up the next installment with our
mysterious Thomas who disappears in Williamson County, TN. For most of this
information I am indebted to a good friend, Mattie Ellen Trube of Houston, Texas. Ask a lot
of questions which occur to you and someday, hope to fill in the gaps. Mother and I are
fine but hard put to keep things going at the Pavilion and farm too. You can be sure that
the two Palomino mares get more attention than I do.

Love,

Dad
(Edward Eugene Younger)

January 16, 1978

There is mystery surrounding the death of Thomas Younger, husband of Mary
Nalle, son of James Younger of North Carolina, and grandson of Alexander Younger of
Essex County, VA. People who have worked carefully on Younger family history
have been unable to ascertain when this Thomas died (perhaps in the late 1830's),
where he died, nor where buried. Several years ago my father, William Randolph Younger,
may have given me the answer as to how he died.

In April 1955, WRY in conversation, passed on to me this bare story which
had come down to him from his father, John London Younger, and his mother, Minerva
(Skelton) Younger.

My father's great grandfather of TN gathered up herds of horses and mules
and sold them down South. (This fits in with my understanding of the history of the area
and the period: Central TN and KY abounded with mules and horses, the main source of energy
in those days, and supplied the markets of the plantation deep South in such states
as MS and AL)

He had collected his herd and for the trip his wife made him a suit of clothes, with "large,
new Eagle buttons." He departed, somewhere sold his herd, received the money,
disappeared, and was never heard from. But later bones were found in a cave near
where he had sold the herd; with the bones were several "eagle" buttons.

The ostensibly murdered man seems to have been the Thomas identified above in the
first paragraph, formerly of NC, then of Williamson and Maury counties, TN. My great
grandfather, his son also named Thomas, was born in NC in 1791, marred (a second
wife) Ellen London, born in NC in 1805, lived in TN and KY, and in 1854
migrated to the Tomahawk community, Searcy, Arkansas. To confuse matters somewhat more,
it seems that the seemingly murdered Thomas had still another son named Thomas
born in 1798, married Sarah Church, migrated from Williamson-Maury Counties, TN to
Cedar County, MO, and is buried in the Younger cemetery of Stockton, MO (Note from
Brownie: this is why the list of Youngers appeared in the Maury County newsletter...HAH!)

by Ed Younger

END
======================

U.S., Census Reconstructed Records, 1660-1820
Name:James Younger
Gender:M (Male)
State:North Carolina
County:Rowan County
Residence Year:1780
Household Remarks:"Cap Davis" District"
Source Citation
Document: Tax List - 1779 [NC State Archives]; Call Number: C.R. 085.701.5; Page Number: 29; Family Number: 30
Source Information
Ancestry.com. U.S., Census Reconstructed Records, 1660-1820 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2011.
Original data: Census Publishing. State Census Records. West Jordan, Utah: Census Publishing, 2003-2009.
======================

U.S., Revolutionary War Rolls, 1775-1783
Name:James Younger
Gender:Male
Military Date:1777
[1777 ]
Military Place:Virginia, USA
State or Army Served:Virginia
Source Information
Ancestry.com. U.S., Revolutionary War Rolls, 1775-1783 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2007.
Original data:
Revolutionary War Rolls, 1775-1783; (National Archives Microfilm Publication M246, 138 rolls); War Department Collection of Revolutionary War Records, Record Group 93; National Archives, Washington. D.C.
================

Virginia, U.S., Land, Marriage, and Probate Records, 1639-1850
Name:James Younger
Date:5 Jan 1749
Location:Spotsylvania Co., VA
Property:100 a.
Notes:This land record was originally published in "Virginia County Records - Spotsylvania County, 1721-1800, Volume I" edited by William Armstrong Crozier.
Remarks:Mark Wheeler and Sarah, his wife of Spts. Co., to Joseph Carter of same county. 28 curr. 100 a. conveyed to sd. Wheeler by Henry Goodloes, Gent., Decd., as by Deeds, 3 Jun 1735. 3 Apr 1750.
Description:Witness
Book:D
Source Information
Ancestry.com. Virginia, U.S., Land, Marriage, and Probate Records, 1639-1850 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2004.
Original data:
Chalkley, Lyman. Chronicles of the Scotch-Irish Settlement in Virginia, 1745-1800. Extracted from the Original Court Records of Augusta County. Baltimore: Genealogical Publishing Co., 1965. Originally published in 1912.
Crozier, William Armstrong, ed. Virginia County Records - Spotsylvania County Records, 1721-1800. Being transcriptions from the original files at the County Court House of wills, deeds, administrators' and guardians' bonds, marriage licenses, and lists of revolutionary pensioners. New York, NY: Fox, Duffield & Co., 1905.
The will abstracts for Isle of Wight and Norfolk counties were taken from microfilmed copies of the original Will Books. Some of these records may be found at the Family History Library as well as other libraries and archives. The originals may be found at the appropriate county courthouses.
For individual sources please see the Notes section listed with each record.
===========

List of taxable property in the county of Rowan, North Carolina, anno 1778
Source Information
Ancestry.com. List of taxable property in the county of Rowan, North Carolina, anno 1778 [database on-line]. Provo, UT: Ancestry.com Operations Inc, 2004.
Original data: Osborne, Adlai.. List of taxable property in the county of Rowan, North Carolina, anno 1778 : transcribed from several lists returned by the August term anno 1778 : (also see page 30 for tax lists of 1784). Washington: unknown, 1979.
===========
Colonial Soldiers of the South, 1732-1774
Source Information
Ancestry.com. Colonial Soldiers of the South, 1732-1774 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations Inc, 2006.
Original data: Clark, Murtie J. Colonial Soldiers of the South, 1732-1774. Baltimore, MD, USA: Genealogical Publishing Co., 1999.
=============

North Carolina, U.S., Compiled Census and Census Substitutes Index, 1790-1890
Name:James Younger
State:NC
County:Orange County
Township:No Township Listed
Year:1755
Database:NC Early Census Index
Source Information
Ancestry.com. North Carolina, U.S., Compiled Census and Census Substitutes Index, 1790-1890 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations Inc, 1999.
Original data: Jackson, Ron V., Accelerated Indexing Systems, comp.. North Carolina Census, 1790-1890. Compiled and digitized by Mr. Jackson and AIS from microfilmed schedules of the U.S. Federal Decennial Census, territorial/state censuses, and/or census substitutes.
===========

1 NAME Anny Eave Eve/Younge/
2 SOUR S60
3 PAGE page 198.
1 NAME Anna/Nash/
1 NAME /YOUNGER/
2 SOUR S219

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Quellen

  1. http://trees.ancestry.com/rd?f=sse&db=genepool&h=5075198&ti=0&indiv=try&gss=pt
    Birth date: 1720 Birth place: Essex Co, VA Death date: 1805 Death place: Marriage date: 1754 Marriage place:
  2. Name: Ancestry.com Operations Inc; Location: Provo, UT, USA; Date: 2004;
  3. http://trees.ancestry.com/rd?f=sse&db=genepool&h=4971426&ti=0&indiv=try&gss=pt
    Birth date: 1720 Birth place: Essex Co, VA Death date: 1790 Death place: Marriage date: 1760 Marriage place: Middlesex Co, VA
  4. http://trees.ancestry.com/rd?f=sse&db=genepoolb&h=3231243&ti=0&indiv=try&gss=pt
    Birth date: 1743 Birth place: Middlesex, VA, USA
  5. Unknown
  6. 1994
  7. 1994
  8. Unknown

Über den Familiennamen Nash

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  • Überprüfen Sie im Register Wie (onder)zoekt wie?, wer den Familiennamen Nash (unter)sucht.

Die Family Tree Welborn-Veröffentlichung wurde von erstellt.nimm Kontakt auf
Geben Sie beim Kopieren von Daten aus diesem Stammbaum bitte die Herkunft an:
Marvin Loyd Welborn, "Family Tree Welborn", Datenbank, Genealogie Online (https://www.genealogieonline.nl/family-tree-welborn/I2407.php : abgerufen 2. Mai 2024), "Anna Nash (1722-> 1801)".