Genealogy Kittrell » Adam Wideman sKsZmcFgmcSCBu 8 (1761-1842)

Personal data Adam Wideman sKsZmcFgmcSCBu 8 

  • He was born in the year 1761 in at sea on the Atlantic ocean.Source 1
  • He died in the year 1842 in Abbeville District, South Carolina, he was 81 years old.
  • He is buried in Wideman-Harris-Wilks Cemetery, McCormick County, South Carolina.Source 2
  • This information was last updated on February 15, 2015.

Household of Adam Wideman sKsZmcFgmcSCBu 8

He is married to Millie Harris.

They got married in the year 1785 at Abbeville District, South Carolina op, he was 24 years old.


Child(ren):

  1. Elizabeth Wideman  > 1785-< 1840
  2. Lucenda Wideman  > 1785-< 1800
  3. David Wideman  > 1785-< 1800
  4. Polly Wideman  > 1785-< 1800
  5. Henry Wideman  1789-1835 
  6. Samuel Wideman  1800-1849 
  7. John Harris Wideman  1795-1870 
  8. Rachael Wideman  1800-???? 
  9. Joshua Wideman  1809-???? 
  10. Adam Wideman  1810-1879 
  11. Uel Wideman  ± 1812-1857 


Notes about Adam Wideman sKsZmcFgmcSCBu 8

Old Wideman Cemetery - MCCORMICK COUNTY, SOUTH CAROLINA

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Contributed to The SCGenWeb Archives by:
John Hofman ((XXXXX@XXXX.XXX))
28 Aug 2000

----------------------------------------

Old Wideman Cemetery, McCormick County, South Carolina, USA

location: Go north from McCormick on Highway 28 to road S-33-38.
Turn right and travel approx. 2 miles to dirt road FAP S-530, old
house. "Ivy Gates," on left at this intersection. Follow dirt
road, cross creek, then turn sharp right on first main dirt road.
Go 1 mile. Cemetery located approx. 100 yards from right side of
road.

Evidence can be seen of approx. 150 to 200 burials in this
cemetery. Exact line numbers of graves cannot be determined.

John Harris, South Carolina, PVT 1 Regt. S.C., Continental Line,
Revolutionary War

Sacred to the memory of Thomas J. Willis, who departed this life
20 July 1843, Aged 20 years 7 months & 22 days. Cut down in the
bloom of youth to bloom in immortal glory. Cherished and loved
by all who knew him. Blessed are the dead to die in the Lord.

Adam Wideman, SC. Pvt. SC Militia, Revolutionary War, 1761 - 1842

In memory of Lucy Carolin, wife of Adam Wideman, Born March 15,
1812, Died April 27, 1848, Aged 36 years 1 month and 12 days.
The righteous shall be had in everlasting remembrance.

M. E. McK, 1852

E. W., 1840, 1---- (illegible)

W. M. W., 1840

J. H. W., 1832

F. C. W., 1835

M. W., 1834

F A H G

E. W., 1829

J. K. W., 1837

J. L. W., 1846

In memory of Sarah Ann Cowan, consort of Wade Cowan, Born Febr.
3rd 1818, Died Dec. 10th 1854, Aged 36 years and 10 months,
Precious in the sight of the Lord is the death of his saints

W. H., 1844

J. H., 1850

In memory of Margaret Cowan, consort of Wade Cowan, Born
Sept. 14, 1824, Died Oct. 4, 1852, Aged 28 years & 20 days,
Precious in the sight of the Lord is the death of his saints

August 11, 2000

The information above was copied with permission from
"McCormick County Cemeteries" prepared by the McCormick County
Historical Society in 1987, whose members I deeply thank.

John Hofman
(XXXXX@XXXX.XXX)

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USGENWEB NOTICE: These electronic pages may NOT be reproduced in
any format for profit or presentation by any other organization or
persons. Persons or organizations desiring to use this material,
must obtain the written consent of the contributor, or the legal
representative of the submitter, and contact the listed USGenWeb
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From: "Lee Y. Ponder" <(XXXXX@XXXX.XXX)-net.com > Subject: Re: [WIDEMAN] Adam Wideman - 931 Date: Sun, 2 Jul 2000 21:04:54 -0400
Al,The Rev War Pension application of George McFarlin included the statementthat Adam Wideman was a blockade runner during the Revolution in addition tomentioning the service in fighting Indians that is in the records for AdamWideman. The British would have declared him a pirate as he was attackingEnglish Ships. My sons got quite excited to think one of their ancestorswas a pirate.As for where Millie Harris, Adam's wife was buried, I have no firminformation on that. Two people have told me she died in 1841 in Abbeville,SC but I have found no record of a grave. Perhaps she is in one of theWideman cemeteries we have not found. I always suspected that she might beburied in then Troup, now Coweta Co, GA in the Hogansville area. Some ofthe family were frequent visitors there and some are buried in Longe Oak,now Meriwether Co Ga.Lee-----Original Message-----From: Al Franklin <(XXXXX@XXXX.XXX) >To: (XXXXX@XXXX.XXX) >Date: Sunday, July 02, 2000 3:28 PMSubject: [WIDEMAN] Adam Wideman>>>I'm looking for Adam Wideman Sr.'s grave.<<>>I would like to know more about Adam Wideman:>(1) he record as a pirate>(2) his wife's ( Emellia "Millie" Harris ) grave location>(3) anything about her past>>Thanks>>Captain Al Franklin>Florida Down Under, Inc.>6735 S Lockwood Ridge Rd>Sarasota, FL 34231 USA>800-779-3483 Fax 941-922-5118>www.fdu.com (XXXXX@XXXX.XXX)

Do you have supplementary information, corrections or questions with regards to Adam Wideman sKsZmcFgmcSCBu 8?
The author of this publication would love to hear from you!

Ancestors (and descendant) of Adam Wideman

Adam Wideman
1761-1842

1785

Millie Harris
> 1770-1841

Elizabeth Wideman
> 1785-< 1840
Lucenda Wideman
> 1785-< 1800
David Wideman
> 1785-< 1800
Polly Wideman
> 1785-< 1800
Henry Wideman
1789-1835
Adam Wideman
1810-1879
Uel Wideman
± 1812-1857

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Visualize another relationship

Sources

  1. GenForum [database online], via http://genforum.genealogy.com/cox/messag..., December 12, 2011
    From: (XXXXX@XXXX.XXX): John Harris of Abbeville/McCormick, S.C.Date: Fri, 14 Jul 2006 22:01:51 EDTThe John Harris / Rachel Milly Kittrell Family of Abbeville District, S. C.We can offer information that may help Kittrell and Harris researchers of John Harris and Rachel Milly Kittrell Harris's line.For genealogists exploring Abbeville District, S. C., during the years 1780 to 1835 there is confusion of identities because multiple residents are namedJohn Harris, William Harris, Milly Harris, and Elizabeth Harris. Yet it is possible to identify and separate them, although the records are sparse and the repetition of names muddles an easy search.Rachel Milly Kittrell's husband John Harris served South Carolina in the Revolutionary War, having migrated to the Abbeville area before war erupted. His record ("Pvt., 1 Regt. S. C. Continental Line, Rev. War") is noted on histombstone. He and Rachel Milly were among the small enclave who came to Old Ninety Six from Granville County, N. C., in the pre-war years.According to Granville County Deed Book I (Eye), p. 167, John Harris and his wife Rachel sold land to John Waldrop on December 24, 1770. Deed Book H states that Richard Harris had made a deed of gift to his son John Harris onNovember 23, 1766. Thus around 1770 the Harrises likely moved to what would become the Abbeville District of Old Ninety Six. They would reside in the old Hillsborough township at the fork of the Little River and Long Cane Creek.John Harris died in 1831 and is buried in the ***Harris-Wideman*** Cemetery, formerly designated in Abbeville, now in McCormick County. His will (Box 43, Pack 959, Abbeville Probate Court) mentions his wife Milly, his sons William,Robert, John, and Thomas S., and his daughters Elizabeth, Polly, Sarah, Caroline, Peggy, Milly, and Leuisa Catherine. At the time he died some of these childrenwere under the age of 21. The will mentions also Robert and James McCaslan, termed "friends." Witnesses include Patrick Gibson and Joseph S. Wideman.John Harris's son William [Stoutly] Harris and James McCaslan are the executors.He leaves his widow a plantation of 100 acres plus "three other small pieces attached to said tract, amounting to ninety-one acres, making in all 191 acres," plus "one other tract of land containing 160 acres" in Abbeville "on Bold Branch whereupon Henry Wideman now resides on adjoining lands of Robert McCaslan, George McFarland and others."This John Harris's name, as well as that of the Reverend John Harris, is included in Deed Plats: Plat Book A. Ninety Six District, South Side of Saluda River. Commissioner of Locations, 1784-1785. This volume of original drawings from the surveys shows an annotated diagram of land assigned to Rachel Milly Kittrell's husband, described thus:"John Harris as a citizen 86 acres of land situate on a branch of Little River bounding NW on land laid out for David Black & Andrew Kerr, E end and land out for John Dickey. Surveyed by Thomas Findley D. S. on the 30th of May inst. as per platt thereof recorded this 29th of May 1785. Robert Anderson, C. L. B. O."John Harris seems to be the first to have title to this particular acreage, but the deed records of Granville signal that this evidently was not his earlliest Abbeville home. The war, begun in the late 1770s, would continue through the mid -1780s. Likely John and Rachel Milly, along perhaps with a young child or children, settled on other Abbeville land before 1780. The 1785 grant was made to "citizen" John Harris in wartime. The 86 acres are within the old Hillsborough settlement, established in 1762. Comprised in the 28,000 acres of Hillsborough are the Huguenot town of New Bordeaux and farmlands along LongCane Creek, Bold Branch, Buffalo Creek, and Little River. Page 116 of Robert L. Meriwether's The Expansion of South Carolina, 1729-1765, Philadelphia:Porcupine Press, 1974, features a map of Old Ninety Six showing the locations of the townships of Hillsborough, Boonesborough, and Londonborough (or Belfast) settlements.South of Hillsborough (the largest of the three) and just north of the Edgefield District boundary is the Barksdale Ferry Road, stretching from Saluda to the Savannah River. In southern Abbeville it is the main east-westthoroughfare of the time. The region's post office is at Longmire's Store (established 1809 in the north of Edgefield District), the first postmaster being JohnLongmire.Among the many residents in Hillsborough enumerated as heads of households in the earliest census reports are John Harris, Will Stoutly Harris, ***Henry Wideman***, ***Adam Wideman***, Cornelius Collier, Edward Collier, Joshua Hill, Uel Hill, William Hill, Robert Foster, Drury Breazeal, Patrick Gibson, James McCaslan, Robert McCaslan, Charles Brit, Hickerson Barksdale, John McCullough, PierreRoger, Peter B. Roger, Peter Delishaw, Lazarus Covin, Peter Belote, and Peter Moragne. In the 1800 census of Abbeville the names of John Harris, Edward Collier, Lazarus Covin, Peter Belote, William Stoutly Harris, Peter Moragne, and Joshua Hill appear on the same page. In 1820 Uel Hill, Peter Delishaw, Charles Brit, Joshua Hill, and Isaac Moragne are clustered together, as are John Harris,***Adam Wideman***, and Edward W. Collier. Listed together also are Peter B. Roger(s), ***Henry Wideman***, ***John Wideman***, Samuel Wideman***, and Robert McCaslan. TheAbbeville plat books likewise signal that some of these are near neighbors. The family of John Harris and Rachel Milly Kittrell lives among settlers who inthe main are Huguenot and Scots-Irish immigrants, although the Harris family is of neither group. The dominant religious faith in the settlement is Presbyterianism.Perhaps the most notable of the Abbeville men named John Harris is a prominent Presbyterian minister. He is of no kinship to the husband of Rachel Milly Kittrell. He too has a son named John, a Revolutionary War soldier who served under General Pickens and who married the general's daughter. The Reverend John Harris established and pastored various Abbeville churches, including Hopewell, founded in 1750 as Lower Long Cane Church, but his ministry was based mainly in the northwest of the county around Rocky River. He was educated at Princeton and was married to Mary Dashiell Handy. Their children, in addition to the soldier John, are Handy Harris, a Revolutionary War soldier who became a physician; Elizabeth Harris, who married Joseph Irving; Ann Handy Harris, who married Elijah McCurdy and settled in Lincoln County, Tenn.; and Thomas Harris, who settled in DeKalb, Ga. The Reverend John Harris's will was proven on April 5, 1791. Several plats assigned to him are represented in the Ninety Six plats book. Most are along the Savannah River.In Abbeville genealogy the recurring of the Harris names John, Milly, Elizabeth, and William offers a punishing problem. Here, with our identifications, is a list of the children of John Harris and Rachel Milly Kittrell, along with grandchildren and some great-grandchildren, many of them sharing the family given names:William Stoutly Harris m. (1) Mary S. Paul, m. (2) Sarah J. BakerElizabeth Harris m. (1) Cornelius Collier, Jr., who d. 1790 (Box 20, Pack 442; he left 14 slaves), m. (2) Solomon Alston Hunter, d. 1799 (Box 47, Pack 1063). Elizabeth and her brother "Will Stoutly Harris" served as Hunter's co-administrators. Elizabeth is listed in the 1790 Abbeville census as "Elizabeth Colyer," owner of the 14 slaves mentioned in Collier's estate settlement. Hersecond husband, whom she married ca. 1792, was the brother-in-law of her uncle, Isham Kittrell (b. 1762, N. C.), who was married to Ann Alston Hunter of Granville Co./Warren Co., N. C.>>>Milly Harris m. ***Adam Wideman***. Milly's name (probably Emilia) can be confused with that of her mother and of her sister-in-law Milly Stanfield Link, whomarried John Harris, Jr.Robert A. Harris m. (1) Theresa Cason, m. (2) Mary Susan Wideman. Moved to Mississippi.Polly Harris m. William TatumJohn Harris (d. 1817) m. Milly Stanfield Link (b. 1788), daughter of Robert Link. Their children: Elizabeth Harris (b. 1814 Abbeville, d. 1884, Lee Co., Miss.) m. Braxton Cason; William Harris (d. 1839 Abbeville) m. Elizabeth (Betsy) Glover, daughter of Wiley Glover and Jemima Satterwhite. The children of William Harris and Elizabeth Glover are John C. Harris (d. 1844) and Henrietta A. Scott of Savannah; Mary F. Harris (d. before 1839), wife of James F. Herten; Rebecca Satterwhite Harris m. George Alexander Addison; Wiley Glover Harris; Sarah A. Harris m. Col. Marshall Fraser, whose daughter is Mary Elizabeth Fraser; William Harris m. Mary Ann Caldwell, whose children are Wiley Harris and Mary Frances Harris; Jemima Harris m. Nathan Lipscomb; and Elizabeth Ann Harris.Sarah (Sally) Harris m. Joshua WidemanCaroline Harris m. Tinsley RuckerPeggy (Margaret) Harris m. Wade CowanLeuisa Catherine Harris m. William Edwin LinkThomas S. Harris listed in the 1830 Abbeville census as 30-40, wife 20-3-, 2 sons, 2 daughtersOur ancestors are John Harris, Rachel Milly Harris, Elizabeth Harris Collier, and Solomon Alston Hunter. Having researched Abbeville records for a numberof years, we offer this as our interpretation of the Harris-Kittrell genealogy. It is, of course, subject to evaluation and comment and perhaps to correction.Hunter McKelva ColeMartha Cole ResterJuly 2006
  2. Find A Grave, via http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi..., January 29, 2013
    Pvt Adam Wideman
    Birth: 1761
    Death: 1842

    Adam Wideman,
    SC. Pvt. SC Militia,
    Revolutionary War,
    1761 - 1842

    Family links:
    Children:
    Adam Wideman (1810 - 1879)

    Burial:
    Wideman-Harris-Wilks Cemetery
    McCormick County
    South Carolina, USA

    Created by: Bev
    Record added: Nov 16, 2004
    Find A Grave Memorial# 9908022

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When copying data from this family tree, please include a reference to the origin:
Wm. Samuel McAliley II aided by foundation built by Henny Carlisle in 2003, "Genealogy Kittrell", database, Genealogy Online (https://www.genealogieonline.nl/genealogy-kittrell/I29833.php : accessed June 20, 2024), "Adam Wideman sKsZmcFgmcSCBu 8 (1761-1842)".