Il est marié avec Elizabeth Cassidy.
Ils se sont mariés le 5 décembre 1785, il avait 18 ans.
Enfant(s):
(Montgomery County Loos Papers, April 1779, Virginia State library, Archives).
For the purpose of evidence in a lawsuit, Samuel Ingram, Sr. vs. James McCorkle and Daniel Trigg, David Crouch filed a deposition of interest on May 30, 1789. He stated that in 1779 he was at the house of Samuel Ingram, Sr., when Ingram asked him to go to his smokedhouse and "drink a dram;" once there Ingram lifted up "something like a bee gum and took out a large bundle of counterfeit paper money" and asked Crouch what he thought of it. When asked what he intended to do with it, Ingram stated he planned to take a cart with some skins and furs and go "towards the Northward and try to traffic it off for something or other."
Crouch advised him not to do that or he would be hanged and bring his family to scandal, but Ingram replied "it was as good as any, for it was all good for nothing." Crouch stated that the money was made on Ingram's plantation and there appeared to be several more bundles of the same kind shown to him. Crouch heard that Ingram had passed some of the money to James Millar and when Sheriff Bell came, the money was returned. The money Ingram received in payment for land he sold to Captain James McCorkle, he offered to pass to Colonel William Ingles who disputed taking it but finally accepted it as payment for the round glade tract of land that Colonel Ingles at Crockett's blacksmith shop.
Les données affichées n'ont aucune source.