Genealogie Wylie » Samuel McAliley [McMrt 4DNA] (1770-1834)

Persoonlijke gegevens Samuel McAliley [McMrt 4DNA] 

Bronnen 1, 2, 3
  • Hij is geboren in het jaar 1770 in Chester District, South Carolina.
  • Hij is overleden op 13 augustus 1834 in near Highlands, Madison County, Illinois, hij was toen 64 jaar oud.
  • Een kind van John McAliley en Elizabeth Martin
  • Deze gegevens zijn voor het laatst bijgewerkt op 27 september 2023.

Gezin van Samuel McAliley [McMrt 4DNA]

Hij is getrouwd met Janet Johnson.

Zij zijn getrouwd rond 1787 te South Carolina.


Kind(eren):

  1. John McAliley  ± 1795-± 1872 
  2. Samuel McAliley  ± 1790-± 1852 
  3. William McAliley  -1852 
  4. James Johnson McAliley  1799-1852 
  5. Jennie McAliley  1801-1872 
  6. Elizabeth McAliley  ± 1800-???? 
  7. Mary McAliley  ± 1800-????


Notities over Samuel McAliley [McMrt 4DNA]

M12

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from http://riverweb.cet.uiuc.edu/Archives/TravNarr/Suppiger.htm
Joseph Suppiger's Journey to New Switzerland
From Joseph Suppiger, Salomon Koepfli and Kaspar Koepfli, Journey to Switzerland (Carbondale, IL: Southern Illinois University Press, 1987).
p. 126
FRIDAY, AUGUST 26
We continue to enjoy the ever-changing spectacle as we proceed. The soil seems to be getting somewhat darker. The trees are not so gigantic as along
p. 127
the New York canal. There, almost all of the trees had straight trunks eighty to one hundred feet high up to where the crowns began, and this is all the more impressive when one considers that they were deciduous trees.
Toward 5:00 P.M. we reached the Mississippi. Before this the Ohio had spread out in some places like a large lake, but here at the confluence of these two great rivers the width was even more impressive. Quietly and gently they merged, much as if the arms of the Ohio–separated by islands–had united again. Our progress now changed in that we were traveling upstream and through far murkier water. Just as beautiful to my mind had been the mingling of waters at the junction of the Cumberland and Tennessee rivers with the Ohio, where the clear waters of the tributaries delayed mingling with the murky waters of the main stream. For almost six miles the muddy water of the Ohio had been visible suspended in the clearer waters of the tributaries.
SATURDAY, AUGUST 27
At 8:00 A.M. we passed Cape Girardeau, as yet an unimportant place. Above this point the west bank begins to grow higher. The woods in this area are very dense, but the tree trunks are smaller, so they cannot be old. The soil is still like that along the Ohio.
SUNDAY, AUGUST 28
Last night we strayed from the channel twice. On the Mississippi, as on other rivers, it is always necessary to know exactly where the channel is in order to be sure of deep water. It flows just as gently and smoothly as the Ohio and the Hudson. At one place this morning where our boat had to back up for some distance in order to find another channel, the river formed a lake-like basin more than two leagues wide. For Swiss eyes today's journey offered much charming scenery. The west bank is bordered by fifty- to one-hundred-foot-high cliffs whose rock formations are not unlike old stone walls, fortifications, and knights' castles, with niches, windows, and doors. Herculaneum has a pleasant location just above these rock formations. There are several foundries and ammunition factories here but it is an unimportant place.
From this point the hills along the river begin to spread out more, and
p. 128
only small thickets cover the ground. A beautiful spot on the river above Herculaneum, but probably one the most fertile, has been chosen for the military school of the state of Missouri. It is equipped with fine buildings. Here, as in every other state of the Union, are regular troops that have enlisted voluntarily. The soldiers receive six dollars per month in addition to food and clothing. The military exercises take the smallest part of their time, the greatest part of which they must spend working the land belonging to the military school. Incidentally, in the United States too [as in Switzerland] every citizen from his twenty-first to his fiftieth year is subject to militia service, with the difference that in the spring and the fall he is called to an inspection that sometimes lasts two days. In Missouri they are called for review only once a year. The younger the state, the less exacting it is in this respect, as well as in the observance of many laws that in Switzerland are regarded so literally that if it were forbidden to play with three or nine ninepins, ten would be used.
Carondolet, six miles below St. Louis, seems to be a pleasant place. It is a settlement of French who planned to lay out a large city here. The streets are actually laid out and if St. Louis had not won the lead, the project would have been successful. Nevertheless in time it may become an important place, for the location is wonderful.
At 3:00 P.M. we finally glimpsed the long-awaited St. Louis. I cannot describe the impression this place first made on me. We expected a small town something like Sursee, but it exceeded Lucerne in every respect. "Here," my heart spoke, "must I remain. Here it is good to live; let us build here." No, it is not prejudice. The really beautiful and healthful location on a magnificent, gentle slope leading to a great, beautiful plain, the charming greetings in French and German, the activity–in short, everything was so pleasant that we could not have wished for anything more except to have all of our dear ones here with us. After our long journey through many American cities we find that we are not in the least disappointed, but happy and contented that we have come this far. This is saying a great deal! But it is really true that our expectations have been exceeded.
p. 129
It would be hasty and presumptious if I should now try to advance my judgment of this country and the state of Missouri in particular. These notes are intended to serve as nothing more than a mere account of our journey. If anyone should decide from this account that this land is the place for him, I wish him luck, for in my heart I firmly believe it. But it is not my intention to be urging immigration at this early stage. What I have seen has been good and beautiful, but I saw it only in passing. I have seen the flower and the bud, but I have not yet had occasion to feel the thorn, so I will live in the land for awhile and see how things work out. I must confess that all my investigations and everything I have seen with my own eyes agree with Duden's reports, except that in the short time since his writing many things have progressed substantially, but that is nothing against him and only confirms his account.
Everywhere when we asked an immigrant how he was getting along and whether he would not like to go home, we got as an answer: "I am satisfied now that I am doing well. The first two years after coming here were sometimes hard for me, but after having become accustomed to the country, its customs, and its language, I have long forgotten my old homeland." This is the kind of talk one customarily hears, and it is no wonder, for the most ordinary man lives well here! I have seen no beggars in America.
MONDAY, AUGUST 29
We rented a house on the hillside and moved into it. This will give us time to look around and make proper assessments. With this I end my diary except to add some information about money, weight, and measures in order to show how they compare with those at home.
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The Koeptli family in New Switzerland to that [of Kaspar Mauris Koepfli] in Sursee
[by Salomon Koepfli].
NEW SWITZERLAND, DECEMBER 11, 1831
Dear Brother!
We have heard nothing from you since we left Havre, but when I look back on the route we took, I am not surprised at the delay. We have received no German newspapers up to now, but the Schweizerbote probably will be forwarded to us in the future from New York through Mr. Iselin. He wrote us quite briefly in his last letter: "In your fatherland things really are happening." His words cause us worry, for we do not know how they are meant, although they obviously do not indicate that things are going well. We hate to think of unsettled conditions in Switzerland, which is still so dear to us. Would to God that you and yours and your friends and ours were here. All of you would find far greater opportunities here, and New Switzerland would soon become a colony that definitely would be a credit to the homeland.
But you still do not know what a heavenly area we have found in which to settle. Some time before I sent you my last letter from St. Louis, a young man from the state of Illinois [Ross Houck] offered to sell us his 4so-acre farm twenty-seven miles east of St. Louis, consisting mostly of woods. Later we learned that this young man, who had made a good business as a bookseller, had been planning to marry. He had bought a beautifully situated farm to please his prospective bride [a daughter of a farmer near Edwardsville], but unfortunately he had been turned down most emphatically by his intended. Not wishing to settle on the land by himself and knowing that he could put capital to good use in his book business, he offered to sell us the land for the exceedingly low price of nineteen hundred dollars cash.
Not wishing to act impulsively, we decided to look at a number of tracts before making a decision. Father, Suppiger, and Bernard accepted the invitation of a native Hanoverian who happened to be in St. Louis, to look
p. 136
at some land near Vandalia. Some ten years before, he had come to Vandalia, capital of the state of Illinois, with three hundred florins and through small investments had accumulated a fortune of at least sixty thousand dollars.
He showed them some apparently acceptable places to settle, but they learned later that the area was quite unhealthful and that the soil was not particularly good. So they went to look at the land they originally had planned to examine and found it to be located in a surprisingly pleasant region. The man who had the land for sale was not there, but he had just put it in charge of a German near Edwardsville named Barnsback,3 who had been a university student in Germany (at Sand's time),4 had settled near Edwardsville and had been named a justice of the peace some years before. He turned out to be most helpful and spent a good deal of time on our behalf.
When Father Koepfli, accompanied by Joseph Suppiger and Bernard Koepfli, returned to St. Louis he spoke to our assembled group as follows:
"At last, my dear ones, we believe we have found what we were looking for, namely, a new home, an answer to our needs. Thirty miles from here lies a lovely district, richly endowed by nature, where a domain awaits you. You will find it has good, fertile soil in which most products can be raised at a profit. There is prairie as far as one can see, with sufficient grazing for herds of a thousand cattle, and no doubt enough will remain to support large herds for the next century. Also, there is enough wood in the forests for building a large number of farms.
"The region has good water, with springs in the woods. The woods also contain limestone and there are indications of coal deposits which we will leave for future generations to develop. Furthermore, it is near enough to the Mississippi so that produce can be hauled to St. Louis without great expense.
"So you see, the region we have selected has all the qualities that are necessary for a new settlement. Yet, I do not wish that any one of you should have illusions regarding your future life.
p. 137
What awaits you is not much better than a wilderness now, and your life will be full of privation and hard work. With this choice we will be separated from the rest of the world for many years, and we will be entirely dependent on ourselves for entertainment.
"What will provide peace of mind and cheerfulness for us is the satisfaction we will find in our own accomplishments, and we must rejoice in the fruits of our labors. Not only your fortune depends on your resolve but that of many other families who undoubtedly will follow us.
"Now once more consider everything. If you think you are not equal to it, stay away. Look instead for an easier life for yourself and a more certain living close to an already established city. For after the land is bought from Mr. Houck you cannot change your mind. When the work is started, it must be continued in a firm and vigorous way. If your strength and endurance, of which I have no doubt, permit it, you will be successful. God almighty, who has led us safely here, will also in the future not withdraw His hand from us, for what we are striving todo is in harmony with His law of creation."
The transaction was completed on October 5. The seller agreed to leave us all of his harvest, comprising four hundred bushels of corn, sixty bushels of wheat, and some oats. (A bushel is approximately the size of a Sursee viertel.)
An even more important consideration, for us, led to our decision to purchase this acreage. The great National Highways the government is having constructed from Baltimore, one of the nation's principal cities, west through the entire country, has been laid out as far as Vandalia and will be extended to St. Louis, and this vital highway is to pass within a mile or two of the acreage in question.
On the same day we went to the land office at Edwardsville (fifteen miles distant) to purchase three [additional] well-situated tracts through which the highway also is scheduled to pass...
$I.Z5 per acre for the z4o acres, which adjoin our property. (We estimate an acre to be somewhat larger than a jachharte.)
The week following the purchase we prepared to make the move to our beloved New Switzerland (as we have named our new homeland). Up to now it had been known

as McAlilly's Settlement, inhabited by Samuel McAlilly, an Irishman who came here from Tennessee; his son

John and his large family; and Joseph Howard, his son-in-law.
All of us were looking forward to living in such a surprisingly pleasant little fatherland, all the more attractive because we had been homeless for such a long time. On the acreage are twelve American [log] buildings, two wells with excellent water, approximately 150 beautiful fruit trees, more than eighty acres of cultivated land enclosed by fences, and the rest of it in good woods through which flows Silver Creek with several little tributaries.
There are some springs and, comparatively rare in this area, a limestone formation adjacent to bituminous coal strata. The many trees include varieties of nut and oak, acacia, sassafras, ash, linden, mulberry, maple (not sugar maple), red and white elm, wild apple, plum, cherry, and grape, in addition to a good number of others with which I am not familiar.
After making necessary preparations of all kinds we left St. Louis with four heavily laden rented wagons and a horse we had bought. We crossed the Mississippi River on a ferry set in motion by skinny, blind horses, and at an ill-kept place called Illinois Town we separated from the two oxen-drawn wagons with which our workmen were traveling. In two horse-drawn wagons we took the Edwardsville road to Mr. Barnsback's farm where we settled for the night.
We bought two cows with calves which were led alongside our wagons. After making our way through woods and across creeks to Marine Settlement we felt we had left civilization. We crossed another stream, and at the edge of a prairie we were pleasantly surprised to come upon German-speaking men building a log cabin. We learned that it was for a man called Deck and his two sons who recently had come from Virginia.
We pushed on through dense young woods to Silver Creek
where we had to get off the wagons during a difficult crossing. Leaving Silver Creek we came eventually to the farm of James Reynolds, who lived just north of the land we had bought from Houck. We met his family and, with Barnsback serving as interpreter, learned that the members of this household made their own clothes, either of home-tanned deerskin or of wool from their sheep which they had dyed, spun, and woven. We were served a fine meal which included, among other things, wild turkey, venison, homemade hominy with milk, and honey from wild bees.
Leaving the hospitable Reynolds, we reached the crest of a long shoulder separating Silver and Sugar Creek valleys, and here the lack of woods permitted us a bird's-eye view of the area in which we were to live.
I can state unequivocally that in our entire travels we have come across no other place to which we could more aptly apply the biblical words, "Here let usbuild."
All around for a distance of several miles beautiful, gentle hills rise from the luxuriant prairie, and all of this is a part of Looking Glass Prairie, stretching more than forty miles westward and southward, and it in turn is part of a three hundred-mile-long stretch of prairie enlivened here and there by a hill, stream, or patch of woods.
What Duden says on pages 48 and 49 about the 111inois prairies is correct on the whole, but not in all respects. We have not yet found the [acrid] drinking water he claims to have come across.8 On the other hand, the advantages of prairie land to a farmer can be appreciated only by one who knows the difference between readying prairie, as against woodland, for farming.
[Fortunately the mother recovered, and Salomon was able to write:]
Our mother is again in her element. She misses church, but the Sunday reading of religious works serves to make up for it in large part. Father could do well for himself here as a physician if he wished to devote himself to it properly. The principal ailments here are an ague which, we are told, attacks most of the new settlers. However, all of us except Suppiger are as well as or better than we were at home in Switzerland. Anton was ill with the ague for a while in St. Louis, which is known as a place where such diseases–as well as mosquitoes–are prevalent, due to its location on a river which often floods. We had experience with these pests last summer. Even more hazardous to health may well be the rapid variations in temperature, which we have not experienced to date.
Father had assembled quite an assortment of well-selected drugs while we were still in Switzerland. He kept them in a black, lacquered box fastened to the rear of our coach when we traveled to Havre. The old doctor could not be parted from his pharmacy.
Here in New Switzerland a place had to be found in the log cabin for the drugs. Curiosity about the little, old gentleman with spectacles probably prompted the first visits we received from neighbors. They had often seen him, book in hand, walking with vigorous steps through the woods and over the prairie.
When they first learned that he came from the Catholic canton of Lucerne in Switzerland they imagined him to be a Jesuit, who as such could spend as much money as he desired, for shortly before we had withdrawn several hundred dollars from New York through the Bank of the United States in St. Louis. It was said that we had brought $50,000 along from St. Louis, and we were warned about criminals in Illinoistown [East St. Louis].
When visiting neighbors found the apothecary open and saw the many bottles in it, they were happily surprised to learn that Father was a physician. The news soon spread over the entire area. One might well wonder how it was possible for news to travel so quickly. The inhabitants did not spend their free time sitting in armchairs. Their fields were small and their wants were few, and much of their time was spent hunting and visiting. Women with two or three children on a horse, or a man in the saddle, with a child on his lap and his wife sitting behind him on a piece of cloth, frequently could be seen riding about the countryside. In that way close contact was maintained among neighbors living as far as six miles apart.
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II
Approximate Geographical Location of Our Area, Its Architecture, Drinking Water, Roads. Advantages of Prairie and Woodland Compared. The Outlook for Settlements Along the Large Streams.
Our general area is below 39° N.L., 8Z° W.L. (Fero).4 It is located in western Illinois, twenty-seven English miles (approximately nine leagues) east of the well-known city of St. Louis on the Mississippi River.
Fog is rare, and rainy or snowy spells never last for more than several days at a time. The wind frequently changes direction, and there are abrupt changes in temperature, especially in the spring and fall, from beautiful warmweather to raw cold. The wind is especially noticeable on t he open prairie, to the dismay of some. These winds, which often blow hard, make the winters somewhat raw, but they keep the summer heat from being as oppressive as might be expected in this latitude.
Our first winter here (I83I-3Z), unusually cold for this latitude (roughly that of Lisbon), was much like winter in Switzerland. The spring was too wet and the following summer too dry, but the temperature never rose so high as to interfere with farm work, and it did not affect our health adversely as we had feared before leaving Europe that it might. The fall was very pleasant until well into November, when there were some cold, windy days. Then it soon turned pleasant again, and except for a few days of snow and some very cold days in February, which called for a more efficient heating system than the local fireplaces, there was no snowfall that did not melt away by noon. It froze at night throughout the winter. Old-time residents termed it in general a mild, dry winter.
During the rest of the year there was at least one thunderstorm a month, but the thunderstorms here are not so frequent or violent as one might fear, although the rains often are heavy. It rarely hails. Thawing progresses
much more rapidly than in Switzerland. In general the area may be described as healthful. Some find it more healthful here than in Switzerland. Fevers, expecially the ague,5 occur mostly along flooding streams and woodland. Where we live there are no swamps or stagnant water.
The most common ailment is the common cold, which is aggravated by careless people through the use of poorly chosen home remedies such as calomel, which is used in alarmingly large doses. The physicians follow similar methods for the most part, helping many a patient to an early grave.
Duden claims that drinking water in Illinois contains an iron vitriol taste, but this certainly does not hold for our region, if indeed it does for any area in the state. Ours is pure and free of any unpleasant taste. The common source of drinking water here is what one would term a shallow well, which is easy to dig. After choosing a site free from surface rocks, one digs through two feet of black topsoil, after which one hits on a yellowish, clayey soil which breaks up into a fine quicksand wherever there is water underneath it. These wells vary in depth from fifteen to thirty feet. (Incidentally, in digging a well on even a good-sized hill, one often can hit water as quickly as at the foot of the hill.)
The soil is so firm that nothing need be done to shore up the walls of the well with boards, and the well will remain in serviceable condition for several years before collapsing. If one prefers a more permanent type of well, one lines it with bricks, or better, with limestone. The water in our well is clearer and fresher than that found in most springs, and it is virtually inexhaustible. During last summer's dry weather forty-six drain oxen were watered from it three times a day, and the water never failed to return to the same level. The total cost of constructing such a well would come to approximately sixty Swiss francs.
Brief mention now will be made of the architecture here. Most Americans build a log house when they first settle somewhere. They [sic] are constructed of tree trunks that have been adzed on two sides and grooved near each end so as to provide a good fit for the logs placed at right angle to them. The logs are placed one above the other to the desired height, and
the spaces between them are plastered with clay. Four-foot-long shingles are used in constructing the roof. Not until the building is up is provision made for doors and, if desired, windows. These structures, lacking homelike qualities, tend to serve the basic needs of newcomers. If they want to continue living on the spot they originally chose for their first dwelling, and feel up to it, they can have a better house built, using wood or brick, keeping in mind that construction involving the use of hired labor is expensive and that money invested in almost any other way would bring a far better return. Each laborer demands at least thirty-six batzen a day, plus room and board.
A brick house is more difficult to build. The layer of clay immediately below the top soil is utilized in various mixtures for the making of bricks After it has been worked thoroughly by oxen, it is put into wooden molds; dried in the sun, and then fired. A worker can produce twenty-five hundred bricks a day if the material is readily at hand. The houses in most United States cities are built of brick.
Another style of home, more common in rural areas, is the so-called frame house. It is constructed on a wooden framework much like that of Swiss houses which are to be half-timbered. The outside of the framework there is covered with thin, narrow boards (overlapping one another like shingles on a roof), and inside, instead of straw and clay as in half timbering, bricks are used to fill in the framework.
The framework of the roof is lightweight because it needs to bear only the weight of shingles. The exterior of these houses, including the roof, should be painted. We built a frame house last summer, using walnut wood throughout. We consider this type of construction the most sturdy, the most effective against the cold, and the most attractive.
Why did we not carry out our original plan of settling in Missouri on a navigable stream? We had come to the Mississippi Valley with the intention of farming and raising livestock, and we found after investigation that Illinois with its prairies was more suitable than Missouri. We found the prairie land of Illinois not only more practical for growing crops but better suited for raising cattle than the woodland, which first would have had to be cleared, as would have been the case in Missouri. Who would not prefer to prepare eighty acres of prairie for cultivation to twelve acres of woodland? On such woodland, stumps and roots continue to create problems for years for they can be eradicated only with great difficulty at the very beginning.
What influenced us the most was the richness of the soil on the prairie as compared with that of land in Missouri, which is wooded, and its greater suitability for the growing of important crops like wheat. But each Swiss immigrant must decide for himself whether he would find it more desirable to live in the woods. Even if Missouri with its woodlands possessed all of the advantages of Illinois as regards trade and the raising of crops and livestock, the prairies of Illinois still would be preferable to the dark, somber; and definitely less healthful woodlands. To be sure, Missouri also has its savannas, but they are not so numerous or extensive, and the soil of high-lying savannas there is definitely inferior to that of the Missouri wooded land as well as that of the Illinois prairies.
We did not settle on a navigable stream, because the rivers in the Midwest do not have steep banks, and there are frequent floods. For this reason there are few farms along the Ohio, Mississippi, and Missouri rivers. The disadvantages of these river valleys (bottoms) outweigh their advantages, even in places that do not flood, for the air is filled with the harmful mists of nearby swamps or pools of stagnant water, which from spring to fall also harbor millions of mosquitoes. These pests, which lurk in the shade during the day, spend the night robbing people of sleep by biting exposed parts of their bodies so that they become swollen and even infected. These pests are not to be found on our sunny prairies.
The stories told in Europe about the difficulties of marketing one's products if one lives inland are very erroneous. If only the new arrival had enough products to sell during his first years here, he would find a ready market. Of course, if he considered it too much trouble to take the two or three days' time to load a wagon with his products and have his horses or oxen haul it to the daily market in St. Louis, where such products can be sold readily and profitably, he could find persons willing to do it, of course for pay. We have learned already how the principal products, wheat, salted meat, etc. find a ready market.
.......
May 13 1833 to brother Salomon
It only serves the interest of St. Louis to demean this state. Between our state and St. Louis, Missouri, flows the Mississippi, which at this point is more than a mile and a half wide. Most of the foodstuffs for this city come from Illinois, but the Illinois farmer is by no means solely dependent on the St. Louis market. Efforts are being made to develop Alton, an Illinois town above St. Louis, near the mouth of the Missouri River.
In the winter it sometimes happens that ice interrupts the steamboat service connecting us with St. Louis, causing a significant rise in prices of
commodities there because the Missouri side cannot yet supply the city's needs. Now St. Louis is trying to influence all settlers to proceed up the Missouri River by discrediting Illinois, primarily by pointing to the Mississippi [American] Bottom as swampy and unhealthful. Such propaganda can sway credulous persons and keep them from investigating properly on their own. Far be it from me to attempt to lure anyone to our area to serve our own interests.
I have written you these truths as a well-meant warning. Equally true is the fact that we are doing very well. The first difficult years are behind us, our hopes have been furfilled, and we are looking to a bright future. In short, we are feeling more at home all the time, and gradually we are beginning to develop some aptitude in the language, which seemed so difficult to us at first. There is always more than enough work for everyone, which leaves little time for getting bored.

++++from ancestry.com
War of 1812 Service Records
Viewing records 1-2 of 2 Matches

Surname Given Name Middle Initial Company Unit Rank - Induction Rank - Discharge MISC ROLL-BOX ROLL-EXCT
MCALLILLY SAMUEL RAYEN'S REGIMENT, OHIO MILITIA. PRIVATE PRIVATE 135 602
MCALLILLY SAMUEL 2 REGIMENT (HINDMAN'S), OHIO MILITIA. PRIVATE PRIVATE 135 602

Viewing records 1-2 of 2
++++end from ancestry.com
This may have been Samuel Jr. and probably occurred while they were in Kentucky.

HAB
McALILEY. He married Jennet/Jane JOHNSON (cir.1770 - 17 Aug 1834Highland IL) and reportedly had eight children; however, onlyseven have been identified. This family changed spelling toMcALILLY in IL. Samuel and Janet reportedly died of cholera.On 2 Aug 1798, in Chester Co SC, Samuel McALILEY and Hance HAMILTON, with their wifes, Jennet and Mary, respectively, are heirs of Nathaniel McCLINTOCK. The relationship between their wives and Nathaniel is unknown.In the 1800 Census of Chester Co SC, page 91, the following persons are in Samuel's home:1 male born 1755 - 1774 - Samuel1 male born 1784 - 1790 - probably John4 males born 1790 - 1800 - probably Samuel, William, James & unknown.1 female born 1755 - 1774 - Janet JOHNSON1 female born 1790 - 1800 - probably JennieSamuel McALILEY reportedly moved from Chester Co SC after his father died in about 1806. According to the "History of Madison Co., IL", page 545, Saline Township, Samuel married in Chester Co SC, and moved to TN where he lived until 1818. At that time two of his sons, John and Samuel, were married. He arrived at thecabin of Archibald COULTER in the fall of 1818, where his family remained until a cabin could be erected in the south-east part of Section 30. This is the present site of Highland Cemetery. He dug two wells about 60 feet deep, but found no water. The place was later abandoned and a new cabin was built on what was the Frank LORENZO place, where they lived until 1832. He then moved to the M. JOURNEY place, now the Charles CHIPRON farm, where he died in 1834 of cholera. Four days later, his wife also died of cholera.From the "History of Madison Co, IL", comes the following story: In 1818 Samuel McALILLY went up to the COULTER's place one afternoon, and returning just after nightfall discovered some dark object in a tree, around which his dogs were barking. He dismounted to investigate. Having his rifle with him, and not being able to tell what it was, he fired his rifle, and the object came crashing to the ground. He attempted to get the animal on his horse, but was unable to do so. He rode down to the HOWARD cabin and Joseph and Abraham returned with him. Theyinformed him that he had killed one of the largest panthers ever slain in that settlement, measuring nine feet from tip to tip.In the 1820 Census of Madison Co IL, page 90, in the community of Silver Creek, the following persons were in the home of Samuel McALILLY, Sr.:1 male born before 1775 - Samuel, Sr.1 female born before 1775 - Janet JOHNSON1 female born 1802 - 1804 - probably Elizabeth1 female born 1804 - 1810 - probably MaryIn the 1820 Census of Madison Co IL, page 90, in the community of Silver Creek, the following persons were in the home of John McALILLY, son of Samuel, Sr.:1 male born 1775 - 1794 - John1 female born before 1775 - probably his mother-in-law1 female born 1794 - 1804 - Elizabeth McDOWELL3 females born 1810 - 1820 - Sophia, Mary Ann, & ClarissaIn the 1820 Census of Madison Co IL, page 90, in the community of Silver Creek, the following persons were in the home of Samuel McALILLY, Jr.:1 male born 1794 - 1804 - Samuel, Jr.1 female born before 1775 - probably his mother-in-law1 female born 1802 - 1804 - his wife, Nancy IVY1 female born 1810 - 1820 - ElizabethIn the 1830 Census of Madison Co IL, page 171, the following persons are in the home of Samuel McALILLY, Sr.:1 male born 1770 - 1780 - Samuel1 male born 1815 - 1820 - unknown, probably a grandson1 female born 1760 - 1770 - probably JanetIn the 1830 Census of Madison Co IL, page 171, the following persons are in the home of John McALILLY:1 male born 1790 - 1800 - John1 male born 1820 - 1825 - unknown male1 male born 1825 - 1830 - John D.1 female born 1790 - 1800 - Elizabeth McDOWELL1 female born 1815 - 1820 - Sophia1 female born 1820 - 1825 - probably Clarissa2 females born 1825 - 1830 - possibly Nancy, Eveline In the 1830 Census of Madison Co IL, page 171, the following persons are in the home of Samuel McALILLY, Jr.:2 males born 1790 - 1800 - Samuel, Jr. & unknown brother1 male born 1815 - 1820 - could be William C. or John H.1 female born 1800 - 1810 - Nancy IVY2 females born 1820 - 1825 - Elizabeth & Matilda1 female born 1825 - 1830 - MalindaIn the 1840 Census of Madison Co IL, pages 75 & 76, the following persons are in the home of Samuel McALILLY, Jr.:1 male born 1800 - 1810 - Samuel, Jr.2 males born 1810 - 1820 - possibly William C. & John H.In the 1840 Census of Madison Co IL, pages 75 & 76, the following persons were in the home of William McALILLY:1 male born 1800 - 1810 - William3 males born 1825 - 1830 - James J & two stepsons, Oswald & John 1 male born 1830 - 1835 - Stepson Thomas1 female born 1800 - 1810 - Mary Elizabeth KYLE2 females born 1835 - 1840 - Elizabeth & stepdaughterIn the 1860 Census of Montgomery Co IL, Family 338/348, Anderson B. WALKER, cir.1828 TN, with wife Celia, cir.1827 TN, and three children: Alfred F., Jesse, and Nancy.Samuel and Jennet (JOHNSON) McALILLY's children are as follows: A. A son born about 1788 is unknown.B. John McALILLY (cir.1790 Chester Co SC - 1872 Fayette Co IL) married Elizabeth McDOWELL (cir.1795 NC - 8 Nov 1859 Fayette Co IL) about 1816 and had at least seven children. One court record listed him as John D. McALILLY. John and Elizabeth are reportedly buried in the Sharon Cem.1. Sophia McALILLY (2 Jan 1818 KY - 9 Feb 1900 Moultrie Co IL) married Washington Jones WREN (30 Nov 1814 KY - 14 Oct 1863 Moultrie Co IL) on 24 Sep 1837 in Madison Co IL by Levi LOWRY, MG. They had at least ten children. Washington joined the 126th Reg IL Volunteers in 1862 and was stationed at Pine Bluff AR when he fell ill and was sent home on sick leave where he died. Sophia lived in poverty with four minor children still at home after he died. Washington is buried in the KELLER Cemetery just south of Lovington IL, with a head stone. Sophia's grave is in the Turner Cem. Washington's parents were Binns Jones WREN (14 Nov 1790 - 17 Nov 1863) and Betsy DEPEW (30 Sep 1793 - 20 May 1862). The newspaper obituary for Sophia referred to her as "well-known as 'Grandma Wren', a 'good woman' whoacknowledged her Savior early in life." She had a "strong character, exemplified habits, she was a kind mother, and she was held in high esteem by those who knew her." Another reported birth date for her is 2 Jun 1818.a. John Binns WREN (24 Jul 1839 IL - 1862 or 1863) married Mary Ellen ZOOK (cir.1842 IN - ) on 9 Dec 1860 inFayette Co IL and had at least the following threechildren which were listed in the 1870 Census ofMoultrie Co IL. He was a farmer.(1) Sarah Martha WREN (cir.1862 IL - ).(2) Hannah S. WREN (cir.1866 IL - ).(3) Amasa W. (male) WREN (cir.1868 IL - ).b. Lucretia Ann WREN (8 Jan 1841 IL - ) married Obannon K. ZOOK on 28 Oct 1858 in Moultrie Co IL. They may beburied in Lyndon KS or Homewood KS.c. Elizabeth Evaline WREN (3 Nov 1842 IL - 20 May 1914Jacksonville IL) is buried in the TURNER Cemetery inLovington IL. According to John HOOK's records, she had a daughter, Rhoda (Mrs. Charles) BALDWIN, who had four children, including a son, Jesse, and daughter May.d. Edward Miles WREN (23 Nov 1844 Fayette Co IL - 3 Nov 1923 Moultrie Co IL) married Mary Ellen BROWN (1852 IL - 1884) and had at least five children. They are buried in the HEWETT Cemetery in Lovington IL. Her parents were Horace and Mary Ann (BRADLEY) BROWN.(1) Perry E. WREN (Sep 1869 Moultrie Co IL - ).(2) Frank L. WREN (cir.1872 Moultrie Co IL - ).(3) Allie M. WREN (1874 Moultrie Co IL - 1926 MoultrieCo IL).(4) Mary Alma WREN (cir.1878 Moultrie Co IL - ).(5) Cora . WREN (Sep 1879 Moultrie Co IL - ).e. Nathaniel Greene WREN (10 Mar 1847 Fayette Co IL - 28 Jun 1916 Moultrie Co IL) first married Mary Ann Moulton TURNER on 17 Oct 1867 in Moultrie Co IL and had three children. He then married Sarah BALDWIN on 22 Feb 1885 in Moultrie Co IL and had at least one more child, Maude. Mary and Nathaniel are buried in the Turner Cemetery in Lovington IL. Mary's parents were Stephen & Barbary TURNER.(1) William Thomas WREN (cir.1869 IL - 18 May 1929Moultrie Co IL) first married Juretta C. OSBORNE (18Jun 1873 - before 1894) in Sullivan IL and had atleast one child. He then married Margaret TRIGG on18 Nov 1894 and reportedly had five more children.Margaret was reported to be half American Indian.(a) Othor Karl WREN (3 Nov 1891 IL - 8 Jun 1960 Moultrie Co IL) married Viola Mae KITE (14 Mar 1893 - 17 Dec 1946 Moultrie Co IL) on 21 Dec 1912 in Lovington IL and had at least three children.(aa) Faythe Hope WREN (23 Dec 1913 near Lovington IL - 22 Sep 1968 Decatur IL) married James Joseph RYAN, Jr. (12 Aug 1903 Arthur IL - 27 Dec 1986 Macon Co IL) on 26 Oct 1936 in Shelbyville IL and had two children. He was an operating engineer and his father was a farmer. Faythe and James are buried in the Greenhill Cemetery in Moultrie Co IL. She was raised in the Christian Church and joined James in the Catholic Church when they married.(aaa) Shirley Joan RYAN (1 Sep 1937 Decatur IL - ) married John William BROWN (9 Aug 1931 Decatur IL - ) on 19 Jul 1962 at St Thomas Catholic Church in Decatur IL and had four children. Bill is a farmer.(aaaa) Timothy Joseph BROWN (6 Nov 1963 Decatur IL - ) married Shari Dawn BARTON (14 Sep 1965 Booker TX - ) on 9 Mar 1991 in Grapevine TX and have one child. Tim is a farmer with his father, and he and Shari are divorced.(aaaaa) Sara Katlin BROWN (11 Jul 1992 Decatur IL - ).(aaab) Jacqueline Linda BROWN (17 Mar 1966 Decatur IL - ) is a physician, practicing in Chicago IL.(aaac) Jonathan William BROWN (12 Nov 1968 Decatur IL - ) is a teacher.(aaad) Katrina Joan BROWN (28 Jul 1972 Decatur IL - ) is a grad student.(aab) Linda Lou RYAN (21 Sep 1940 Cadwell IL - ) first married Leonard Lee CAIN (5 Feb 1927 Argenta IL - 1981 Decatur IL) on 20 Jun 1959 at St Thomas Catholic Church in Decatur IL and had six children. After Leonard died, she married Everett Alan SCHROAT (5 Mar 1944 Decatur IL in Dec 1980 in Decatur IL.(aaba) Lynn Linet CAIN (9 Feb 1960 Decatur IL - ) married Jeffrey Doyle PHILLIPS (15 Dec 1958 Salt Lake City UT - ) in 1985 in Warrensburg IL. His parents were Doyle and Jane PHILLIPS, both deceased.(aabb) Leonard Lee CAIN, Jr. (6 May 1962 Decatur IL - ) married Donna SMITH (26 Mar 1966 Decatur IL - ) in Jun 1984 in Warrensburg IL and had two daughters.(aabba) Leslie CAIN (12 Dec 1986 Decatur IL - ).(aabbb) Hannah CAIN.(aabc) Lawrence Lyle CAIN (20 Feb 1965 Decatur IL - ).(aabd) James Joseph CAIN (26 Nov 1966 Decatur IL - ) married Rebecca BLOCK in Jul 1996 in Clinton IL.(aabe) Leah Lorraine CAIN (14 Aug 1968 Decatur IL - ) married Roger Gaines ELDER, Jr. (5 May 1968 Canton OH - ) in 1993.(aabea) Deckard Cain ELDER (19 Dec 1995 Rapid City SD - ).(aabf) Leslie Lynn CAIN (16 Aug 1971 Decatur IL - 29 Jul 1973 Argenta IL) is buried in Friend's Creek Cemetery.(ab) Olive Hester WREN (24 May 1913 IL - c1967 CO) first married Floyd DYER and then married PARKER. She had no children. (ac) Virginia Mabel WREN (28 Apr 1921 IL - c1976 CO) first married Harold WILSON, then Kenneth HINTON, then BLACKWELL, and finally McCOMBS. She had no children.(b) Female (c) Female(d) William L. WREN (5 Sep 1901 - 19 Feb 1943 Moultrie Co IL) married Nola (30 Jan 1904 - ). They are buried in the Jonathan Cem in Moultrie Co IL.(2) Anittia WREN died young on 14 Oct 18?? and is buriedin the Turner Cem. (3) Viola E. WREN died young on 14 Nov 1862 and isburied in the Turner Cem in Moultrie Co IL.(4) A daughter who married Artie KITE.f. William Thomas Carl WREN (10 Dec 1849 IL - 16 Oct 1896) is buried in the Turner Cem in Moultrie Co IL.g. Sarah Jane WREN (11 Sep 1851 Moultrie Co IL - 22 Sep1851 Moultrie Co IL) is buried in Turner Cemetery.h. George Washington WREN (5 Oct 1853 Moultrie Co IL - ) married Mary Ann BALDWIN on 4 Apr 1883 in Moultrie Co IL and had at least six children. They may be buried in MT.(1) Roy WREN.(2) Otto WREN.(3) Floyd WREN.(4) Ed WREN.(5) Icy? WREN.(6) Ivy WREN.i. Sophia Josephine WREN (5 Oct 1853 Fayette Co IL - 26 Jul 1930 Richfield IL) married William Daniel HOOK (15 Jan 1848 Moultrie Co IL- 21 Nov 1913 Lovington IL) on 1 Jul 1873 in Moultrie Co IL and had at least eight children.(1) Dona Belle HOOK (10 May 1874 Moultrie Co IL - )married Joseph HACHAT on 23 Nov 1916(2) George Marion HOOK (13 Nov 1875 - Dec 1875).(3) Myrtle Alice HOOK (17 Nov 1877 - ) married JosephJACKSON on 25 Apr 1897.(4) Edna Allen HOOK (10 Mar 1879 - 31 Aug 1882 MoultrieCo IL) and is buried in the Turner Cem.(5) Estella Ethna HOOK (18 Jan 1881 - ) married PerryElton DAWSON on 20 Mar 1901.(6) Ida May HOOK (22 Dec 1883 - ) never married.(7) Susan Sophia HOOK (24 Dec 1885 - ) married VandiverMONTGOMERY who died in 1942. They had four children.(a) Donald MONTGOMERY lived in Arthur IL.(b) Leonard MONTGOMERY lived in Arthur IL.(c) Edna MONTGOMERY married RUNGE.(d) Mary Elizabeth MONTGOMERY married McNAMARA and lived in Chicago IL.(8) Charles William HOOK (10 Jan 1890 Lovington IL- 7Apr 1976 San Luis Obispo CA) married Mabel LoreneWHITE (15 Sep 1896 IN - 26 Sep 1974 San Luis ObispoCA) on 3 Mar 1917 Paris IL and had four children.(a) Mary Jane HOOK (13 Feb 1918 Lansing MI - ) firstmarried Clyde E. PULLIAM and they had children.She then married Willis GRIMMER and then RalphT. MILLER.(aa) Charles Eugene PULLIAM (1944 Peoria IL - ).(ab)(ac) Terrill Kent PULLIAM (1948 Peoria IL - ).(b) David William HOOK (1 May 1920 Port Huron MI - )first married Irene BACON and had two children.He then married Gertrude and then Mickie.(ba) James Francis HOOK.(bb) Thomas William HOOK.(c) Ruth Elizabeth HOOK (27 Sep 1923 Terre Haute IN- ) never married and was a nurse.(d) John Henry HOOK (18 Mar 1931 Lima Twp IL - )married VAN Wai Fong who is Chinese and was bornin Viet Nam.(da) Lorenej. Mary Catherine WREN (10 Mar 1855 Moultrie Co IL - 13 Feb 1902 Moultrie Co IL) first married John BROWNING and had at least four children. They divorced and she married Thomas Albert BOOKER (1 Aug 1858 Moultrie Co IL - 2 Dec 1891 Moultrie Co IL) on 26 Jun 1887 in Moultrie Co IL and had three more children. Tom's parents were: Thomas Jefferson & Charlotte Ann (BELL) BOOKER. He was previously married to Laura A. HUFFMAN on 21 Mar 1880 and had two children: Ethel Charlotte and Edward or Edgar. She is buried in the Keller Cemetery in Moultrie Co IL.(1) Bertha BROWNING.(2) Etta BROWNING.(3) Frank BROWNING.(4) Olive BROWNING.(5) Oral Thomas BOOKER (11 Apr 1888 Moultrie Co IL - )married Clara and had at least one son.(6) Elsie BOOKER (6 Dec 1889 Moultrie Co IL - ) marriedGOREN.(7) Floyd BOOKER (27 Nov 1891 Moultrie Co IL - ).2. Mary Ann (Polly) McALILLY (cir.1819 Madison Co IL - before 1866) married John Hillary BUCKMASTER (24 Dec 1817 MD - 21 Oct 1910 Fayette Co IL) on 5 aug 1840 in Fayette Co IL and had at least eight children. He then married Mary BENNETT (20 Nov 1816 Guilford Co NC - 22 Jan 1901 Fayette Co IL) and is buried in the Union Cem. John mustered into the 97 IL Infantry at Camp Butler in 1862 and mustered out in Galveston TX in 1865. His parents were Gideon & Ann (WILLIAMS) BUCKMASTER.a. Gideon BUCKMASTER (? Fayette Co IL - 8 Sep 1843 Fayette Co IL).b. Frances Jane BUCKMASTER (cir.1845 Fayette Co IL - cir. Oct 1893 Fayette Co IL) married Levi J. BROWN (cir.1840 IL - 30 Mar 1907 Fayette Co IL on 31 Mar 1865 in Fayette Co IL.c. Joseph J. BUCKMASTER (cir.1848 Fayette Co IL - 28 May 1853 Fayette Co IL).d. Elizabeth A. BUCKMASTER (1850 Fayette Co IL - ) married Jonas Peter JEPPERSON (cir.1843 Denmark - 2 May 1920 Fayette Co IL) on 4 Nov 1869 in Fayette Co IL.e. Gideon D. BUCKMASTER II (1853 Fayette Co IL - 29 Jul1936 Ramsey IL) first married Mattie M. TUTTLE (cir.1856 Fayette Co IL - ) on 9 Nov 1881 in Fayette Co IL. Her parents were Sirus & Jane (LOMAN) TUTTLE. He then married Rebecca L. NORTHAM (1850 NC - 1937 Fayette Co IL). Her parents were Henry & (SHORT) NORTHAM.f. Isabell BUCKMASTER (cir.1855 Fayette Co IL - ).g. Luther B. BUCKMASTER (cir.1858 Fayette Co IL - 28 Jan 1863 Fayette Co IL).h. Benjamin F. BUCKMASTER (cir.1860 Fayette Co IL - ).3. Clarissa McALILLY (cir.1820 Madison Co IL - ) nevermarried.4. Unknown male (cir.1823 Madison Co IL - ).5. Eveline McALILLY (3 Apr 1825 Madison Co IL - 9 Nov 1852 Fayette Co IL) married James A. WILLIAMS (23 Jan 1821 MD - 21 May 1873 Fayette Co IL) on 2 Nov 1843 in Fayette Co IL and had at least three children. They are buried in the Williams Cemetery. James then married Deborah LARIMORE (12 Feb 1829 VA - 30 Nov 1893 Fayette Co IL) on 24 Oct 1854 in Fayette Co IL and had at least seven more children.a. Walter WILLIAMS (cir.1845 Fayette Co IL - ).b. Jefferson WILLIAMS (cir.1849 Fayette Co IL - ) marriedSarah E. DENTON on 12 Jan 1873 in Fayette Co IL.c. Caroline WILLIAMS (cir.1852 Fayette Co IL - ).d. Ephraim B. WILLIAMS (cir.1854 Fayette Co IL - ) married Mary B. (cir.1860 IL - ) and had at least one child.(1) Daisy WILLIAMS (cir.1879 IL - ).e. Mary WILLIAMS (cir.1856 Fayette Co IL - ).f. Paralee WILLIAMS (cir.1858 Fayette Co IL - ).g. Unah A. WILLIAMS (cir.1858 Fayette Co IL - ).h. Louis F. WILLIAMS (25 Dec 1863 Fayette Co IL - 18 Oct1894) is buried in the Williams Cem.i. Amelia (Lillie) M. WILLIAMS (17 Apr 1866 Fayette Co IL -24 May 1881) is buried in the Williams Cem.j. James Ira WILLIAMS (cir.1870 Fayette Co IL - ).6. Nancy McALILLY (cir.1828 Madison Co IL - before 1857) first married William McKINNEY on 7 Nov 1844 in Fayette Co IL and had at least one child. He died before Feb 1846 and she married Elijah PRITCHETT on 29 Jul 1847 in Madison Co IL and had at least two children. William was brother to Frances Emiline McKINNEY.a. Frances McKINNEY (7 Oct 1845 Fayette Co IL - 5 Apr 1928 Bowler, Carbon Co MT) married Samuel Wood OSBORN (25 Dec 1844 Scott Co VA - 16 Feb 1934Powell, Park Co WY) on 15 Sep 1864 in Fayette Co IL.b. Emma Jane PRITCHETT (6 Jul 1848 Madison Co IL - 4 Dec 1912 Padtoka, Marion Co IL) married John Willard BRIGHT on 1 Nov 1865 in Madison Co IL.c. John H. PRITCHETT (1849 - ?).7. John D. McALILLY (cir.1830 Madison Co IL - 1 Nov 1859 Fayette Co IL) married Frances Emiline McKINNEY (12 Dec 1833 IL - 21 May 1890 Fayette Co IL) on 18 Mar 1855 in Fayette Co IL and had one child. She then married James A. DEPEW (cir.1839 IL - ) on 9 Feb 1860 in Fayette Co IL and had one child, James A. Jr. James Sr. was killed in the Civil War. She then married Jefferson KALEY (cir.1828 PA - 28 sep 1907 Fayette Co IL) and had five children: Frances, Daniel, Thomas, Rosa, and Alburtus. Jeff is buried in the Sharon Cem.a. Elizabeth Elvira McALILLY (Mar 1856 Fayette Co IL - 1929 Fayette Co IL) married John Calvin ENGLAND (Oct 1856 Fayette Co IL - 24 Dec 1926 Fayette Co IL) on 5 Jan 1873 in Fayette Co IL and had at least eight children.(1) Thomas H. ENGLAND (Sep 1874 - ) married Eva or Eraabout 1899.(2) Clara E. ENGLAND (cir.1875 - ) married David F.RADCLIFF on 19 Oct 1896 in Vandalia IL. His parentswere: Daniel & Ellen (GRANDFIELD) RADCLIFF. Davidwas first married to Rosa A.(7 Mar 1873 - 15 Oct 1894).(3) Viola ENGLAND married COOK.(4) William J. ENGLAND.(5) Walter ENGLAND.(6) Eva ENGLAND married CORSON.(7) Robert C. ENGLAND died before 1926, but had a sonRobert.(8) Joseph M. ENGLAND died before 1926, but had a sonOra.C. Samuel McALILLY, Jr. (cir.1792 Chester Co SC - 1852 Madison Co IL) married Nancy IVY (cir.1800 TN - after 1882) about 1820 and had at least four children.1. Elizabeth McALILLY (9 Oct 1820 Madison Co IL - 1 Nov 1873 Clinton Co IL) first married Thomas BRYANT on 29 Jul 1836 in Madison Co IL. She then married Robert MEANS and then John R. WHITE (4 Mar 1811 PA - 15 May 1867 Clinton Co IL) on 14 Aug 1856 in Bond Co IL. John WHITE had also been married to Mary A. HAZZARD (1826 PA - ) and had the following children from another marriage: James M. born cir.1837 OH, Margaret A. born cir.1839 OH, and David R. born cir.1843 OH. Mary had a son, John J. HAZZARD, born cir.1845 IL.2. William Carroll McALILLY (cir.1820 Madison Co IL - 2 Mar 1888 Madison Co IL) married Catharine WREN (26 Dec 1819 Edwards Co IL - ) on 10 Feb 1842 in Fayette Co IL and had at least three children. They lived in Jacob's Township. Her parents were Binns Jones and Betsy (DEPEW) WREN.a. Mary L. McALILLY (cir.1848 IL - ) married William Thomas BRYANT (cir.1860 Clinton Co IL - ) on 28 Aug 1887 in Madison Co IL. He was a farmer. This was his second marriage. His parents were Thomas & Betsy (DODSON) BRYANT.b. Martha A. McALILLY (cir.Feb 1850 Madison Co IL - before 1888).c. Marquis Lafayette McALILLY (cir.1852 Madison Co IL - ) married Alice Irene STEWART (cir.1858 Bond Co IL - ) on 5 Jun 1875 in Madison Co IL and had at least twochildren. He was a physician.(1) ?(2) Catherine Alice McALILLY (26 May 1890 Madison Co IL - ).3. Matilda McALILLY (cir.1823 IL - ) married Edward Dee WREN (17 Feb 1822 Fayette Co IL - ) on 2 Mar 1843 in Madison Co IL and had at least three children. Edward was the son of Binns Jones and Betsy (DEPEW) WREN.a. William W. WREN (cir.1846 - ).b. Martah A. WREN (cir.1848 - ).c. Louisa J. WREN (cir.1849 - ).4. Malinda McALILLY (cir.1829 Madison Co IL - ) first married Joseph KYLE on 9 Dec 1847 in Madison Co IL and had at least two children. She then married James RETHERFORD on 17 Mar 1864 in Madison Co IL.a. George KYLE (cir.1850 Fayette Co IL - ).b. Charles KYLE (cir.1853 Fayette Co IL - ).D. William McALILLY (cir.1795 Chester Co SC - Feb 1852 or 1853 Madison Co IL) first married Potamia MATTHEWS (? - cir.1831 Madison Co IL) on 24 Mar 1825 in Madison Co IL and had one child. He then married Mrs. Mary Elizabeth KYLE on 28 Jul 1836 in Madison Co IL and had five children, three growing to maturity. Mary had the following children by Mr. KYLE: Oswald R. born cir.1827 IL, John D. born cir.1830 IL, and Thomas born cir.1832 IL. There was also a Malinda KYLE born cir.1831 ILliving in their house in 1850. She was probably MalindaMcALILLY who married Joseph KYLE on 9 Dec 1847 in Madison Co IL.1. James J. McALILLY (13 Mar 1828 Madison Co IL - 23 Apr 1897 Clinton Co IL) married Mrs. Mary L. (DUGGER) KIRKHAM (? Madison Co IL - 24 Jul 1854 Bond Co IL) on 6 Sep 1853 in Bond Co IL. (The marriage is recorded in Madison Co IL.)She was the daughter of Alfred DUGGER. James sold his farm in Bond Co IL and joined John W. DUGGER in sellingmercantile goods throughout the country. In Mar 1857, he became a partner with John W. DUGGER and Alfred GUYOT in the John W. Dugger & Co. James operated the store in Aviston IL until 1869, when the firm was dissolved. He was also post-master at Aviston. After the War he became a Republican.2. Elizabeth Jane McALILLY (cir.1837 Madison Co IL - before 1878) married William A. BOOKER on 10 Dec 1857 in St Clair Co IL and lived in Aviston, Clinton Co IL.3. Sarah Tomazin McALILLY (28 Jul 1842 Madison Co IL - 30 Sep 1916 Clinton Co IL) married William W. TWISS (5 Oct 1832 IL - 2 May 1918 Clinton Co IL) on 13 Oct 1864 in Clinton Co IL and lived in Aviston, Clinton Co IL. They had at least one child.a. James C. TWISS (24 Aug 1866 Clinton Co IL - 22 Jan 1939 St Louis MO) married Ina M. PHILLIPS (11 May 1873 IL - ) on 25 Nov 1897 in Clinton Co IL and had at least one child. Ina was a teacher.(1) Thelma A. TWISS married Clarence J. TSCHUDY.4. Mary Melinda McALILLY (22 Feb 1846 Madison Co IL - )married Lyman T. WATKINS (22 Feb 1844 IL - ) on 7 apr 1864 in Madison Co IL and lived in Assumption, Christian Co, IL. They had at least one child.a. Edna Blanche WATKINS (20 Mar 1881 IL - ).E. James J. McALILEY (cir.1799 Chester Co SC - cir.1854) married Esther BIDDLE. and had at least five children.1. Jane McALILLY (cir.1826 - ) married David GREEN and had at least one child.a. Nellie GREEN married CLARKE and they had at least one child.(1) Nellie CLARKE.2. Samuel J. McALILLY (cir.1826 KY - before 1860) married Mary A. (cir.1826 OH - ) and had at least three children.a. James J. McALILLY (1850 Warren Co IN - ).b. Anna McALILLY (cir.1852 Warren Co IN - ).c. Lizzie McALILLY (cir.1854 Warren Co IN - ).F. Jennie McALILEY (4 Feb 1800 Chester Co SC - ) married Rev. Joseph HOWARD (9 Mar 1796 Jefferson Co TN - 2 Feb 1875 Lucas Co IA) on 23 Mar 1819 in Madison Co IL. They moved to IA and were in Lee Co IA in 1850. They had at least six children.a. John Todd HOWARD (4 Nov1826 IL - ) married Emily Catherine STEWART (9Sep 1829 - ) and had at least one child.(1) James Newton HOWARD (4 Jul 1859 - ) married Rachael Catherine SHERBONDY (6 Oct 1860 - ) and had at least one child. She was the daughter of George & Priscilla (AUKERMAN) SHERBONDY.(a) Ivan Claude HOWARD (24 Apr 1891 Cuba, KS - ) married Bessie Leona TRIMMER (4 Dec 1895 Republic KS - ) and had six children. She was the daughter of George F. and Aldie (HAWKINS) TRIMMER.(aa) Aldie Evelyn HOWARD (25 Jan 1920 Hardy NE - )b. Mary A. HOWARD (cir.1829 IL - ).c. Joseph HOWARD (cir.1834 IL - ).d. James B. HOWARD (cir.1837 IA - ).e. Francis HOWARD (cir.1839 IA - ).f. Martha HOWARD (cir.1841 IA - ).G. Elizabeth Mary McALILEY (cir.1802 Chester Co SC - before Dec 1835 Fayette Co IL) married Alfred M. WALKER on 12 Jun 1823 in Madison Co IL and had at least five children.1. Anderson B. WALKER (cir.1828 TN - ) married Celia J.WILLIAMS (cir.1827 TN - ) on 13 Nov 1842 in Montgomery co IL and had at least six children.a. Mary WALKER (9 May 1844 - 29 Aug 1845 N. Hurricane Twp.) is buried in the Craig Cemetery.b. Thomas WALKER.c. Sarah E. WALKER (? - 25 Aug 1850) is buried in the Craig Cemetery.d. Alfred F. WALKER (cir.1852 IL - ).e. Jesse WALKER (cir.1854 IL - ).f. Nancy WALKER (cir.1856 IL - ).2. Mary Padfield WALKER (25 Feb 1827 IL - 21 Feb 1914 Volcano CA) married Alfred Bethel COTTINGHAM (25 Mar 1821 - 12 Jan 1902) on 15 Feb 1843 in Fayette Co IL and had at least eleven children.a. Hilliard Pinkney COTTINGHAM (11 Jun 1845 - 2 Jun 1903).b. Mary Elizabeth COTTINGHAM (29 Mar 1848 - 13 Jan 1908) married Alonzo Waddams KIMBALL (Apr 1844 - ) and had at least nine children.(1) Ella Etta KIMBALL (27 Apr 1867 - ).(2) Albert A. KIMBALL (26 Sep 1868 - ) married and hadat least two childrn.(a) Alford P. KIMBALL (cir.1912 - ).(b) Goldie KIMBALL (cir.1915 - ).(3) Grace KIMBALL (18 Oct 1872 - ) first married FrankSCOTT and had three children. She then married FrankFERRY and had one child.(a) Harvey SCOTT.(b) Edna SCOTT (cir.1894 - ) married HumbertCENCIRULO (cir.1891 - ) and had at least threechildren.(ba) Roy K. CENCIRULO (cir.1915 - ).(bb) Elton Ralph CENCIRULO (1 Aug 1917 - 16 Mar 1984) married Cynthia.(bc) Louis CENCIRULO (cir.1925 - 31 Jul 1981) married Ethel REISWIG (cir.1922 - 31 Jul 1981) and had two children.(bca) William CENCIRULO.(bcb) Cindy CENCIRULO married BUSTAMANTE.(c) Laurence W. SCOTT (cir.1897 - ).(d) Frances FERRY.(4) Fountain Alonzo KIMBALL (28 May 1874 - 1956) married Maude Irene BARNHARDT.(5) Myrtle KIMBALL (8 Jul 1878 - 1947) married Lloyd A.BEARCE (26 Feb 1873 - 10 Jan 1945) and had thefollowing children:(a) Edith BEARCE (28 Oct 1897 - 12 Apr 1985) firstmarried Ellsworth DENNIS (? - 1928) and had three children. She then married Neil C. GARDNER(29 Nov 1901 - 1978) in 1930.(aa) Lorene DENNIS (4 Feb 1920 - 1930).(ab) Vivian DENNIS (24 Apr 1921 - ) first married Don HERSEY on 31 Dec 1948 and had three children. She then married James WHITLOW (10 Jun 1923 - ) on 4 Oct 1958. James adopted the two younger children.(aba) Debra Jeanne HERSEY WHITLOW (27 Apr 1951 - ) married Eugene VANDERPLAATS on 12 Oct 1979 and had two children.(abaa) Elizabeth Ann VANDERPLAATS (11 Jun 11 1981 - ).(abab) Daniel James VANDERPLAATS (11 May 1984 -).(abb) Marta Lynne HERSEY WHITLOW (5 Jun 1953 - ) married Malcolm CARLING-SMITH on 17 Oct 1987.(abc) Neil Paul HERSEY (1 Mar 1954 - ).(ac) Richard DENNIS (24 Feb 1925 - ) married Marilyn KERN in 1947 and had two children.(aca) Richard DENNIS, Jr. (1 Apr 1950 - ) married Lynn and had two children.(acaa) Deryck DENNIS (19 Jun 1971 - ).(acab) Matthew DENNIS (21 Apr 1976 - ).(acb) Janet DENNIS (1953 - ) married Glenn HUGHES and had two children.(acba) Kyle Dennis HUGHES (10 Apr 1983 - ).(acbb) Kimberly Beth HUGHES (8 Feb 1988 - ).(b) Austin BEARCE (12 May 1899 - ).(c) Floyd E. BEARCE (25 Aug 1900 - 5 Jun 1979).(d) Alonzo BEARCE (9 Dec 1902 - May 1984).(e) Byra B. BEARCE (5 Mar 1904 - 29 Mar 1904).(f) Kermit R. BEARCE (1906 - 1981) first marriedMarcelle (26 Jul 1908 - Sep 1972) and then married Juanita. He had six children.(fa) Joan BEARCE.(fb) Tom BEARCE.(fc) Debra BEARCE.(fd) Lee Allen BEARCE.(fe) Vicky BEARCE.(ff) Sherri BEARCE.(g) Allan BEARCE (1918 - ).(6) Olive KIMBALL (2 Nov 1878 - ) married Oscar HulseyNORRIS and had four children. (a) Zella NORRIS (Dec 1897 - 1989) married ErnestOLSEN and had two children.(aa) Olive OLSEN first married Jimmy BOGGS andthen married LYON and had three children.(aaa) Jimmy LYON (cir.1944 - ).(aab) Jeff LYON (cir.1952 - ).(aac) Tim LYON (cir.1957 - ).(ab) Aubrey OLSEN.(b) Benny NORRIS.(c) Aubrey NORRIS.(ca) Katherine Nora NORRIS.(7) Harvey KIMBALL (20 Apr 1882 - 1941) married CarrieA. COUCH.(8) Lavirgne E. KIMBALL (16 Apr 1884 - 21 Apr??).(9) Oliver KIMBALL (cir.1887 - cir.1970).c. Richard Fountain COTTINGHAM (9 Jan 1850 - 13 Nov 1885).d. Sarah Jane COTTINGHAM (3 Apr 1852 - 4 Dec 1852).e. Celia Ann COTTINGHAM (14 Oct 1853 - 2 Feb 1921) firstmarried Robert STEWART on 2 Jul 1876 and had threechildren. She then married John W. GOTHIE.(1) Robert STEWART.(2) Lenore STEWART.(3) Alice STEWART.f. Eliza Alice COTTINGGHAM (4 Dec 1855 - 28 Apr 1877).g. Harriet Evaline COTTINGHAM (13 Jan 1858 - 23 Nov 1947) married John Kent Cleveland WALKER (3 Oct 1851 - 3 Apr 1897) on 30 May 1875 and had at least eight children.(1) Ethel Melvina WALKER (16 Mar 1876 - 18 Dec 1961)first married Charles A. LUNDGREN and had one child.She then married Thomas R. JAMES on 25 Jan 1909. Shethen married John Joseph CEREGHINO.(a) Alta Luella LUNDGREN (1 Dec 1899 - 27 Feb 1972)first married James MACK and had one child. Shethen married Jason Joseph THOMAS on 25 May 1925.She then married Charles WERNER on 12 Sep 1944.She then married Donald W. ELLIOTT on 18 Sep1948.(aa) Alma (Sally) Lucille MACK (5 Mar 1921 -198?) first married Herbert E. MEARS on 11Jan 1947. She then married James ClintonCOLEMAN (23 Jul 1914 - ).(2) Susie May WALKER (7 Jan 1879 - 21 Jun 1934).(3) Ellen Matilda WALKER (14 Nov 1880 - 14 Aug 1984)married Sylvester King CARLILE (25 Aug 1880 - 7 Jan1963) on 14 Aug 1910 and had at least three children.(a) Elva Inez CARLILE (5 May 1911 - 24 May 1990)married Howard Colby NELSON (1 Jun 1912 - 15 Jul1987) and had one child.(aa) Howard Carlile NELSON (16 Apr 1938 - ) first married Charlene JONES and had three children. He then married Loretta KIRK. (aaa) Denise Ellen NELSON (18 Nov 1958 - ) married Keith MACINALY and had one child. She already had a child.(aaaa) Gary NELSON.(aaab) Trenton MACINALY.(aab) H. Christopher NELSON (24 Feb 1961 - ) married Frances PASCUA.(aac) Troy Lynne NELSON (13 Jun 1962 - ) married Ross ERICKSON in 1987 and had one child.(aaca) Michael ERICKSON born in 1989.(b) Naurine CARLILE (20 Oct 1915 - ) married GeneWallace SMITH (28 Sep 1913 - 8 Mar 1988) on 16Jun 1936 and had one child.(ba) Gerald Carlile SMITH (15 Mar 1938 - ).(c) Sylvester C. CARLILE (30 Sep 1920 - ) marriedLorene Lela WORRELL (16 Aug 1920 - cir.1986) on5 Feb 1955.(4) Clarence Victor WALKER (11 Nov 1882 - 14 Nov 1918).(5) Lena Belle WALKER (25 Sep 1884 - 5 Dec 1978) married William J. ROWE (1 Jan - 23 May 1955) on 11 Sep 1910 and had two children.(a) William Earl ROWE (31 Oct 1914 - ) married BetteVirginia BOZARTH (8 Apr 1918 - ) and had three children.(aa) Patricia Ann ROWE (2 Mar 1945 - 15 Aug 1995) first married William Hampton BARTEE on 10 Jun 1962 and had at least two children. She then married Jimmy and had another child.(aaa) Frances Dianne BARTEE (1963 - ) married Keith.(aaaa) Zachary BARTEE.(aaab) Taylor.(aab) Sharon Deanne BARTEE (1966 - ).(aac) Boo.(ab) William James ROWE (12 Apr 1949 - ) married Debra Lea MOBLEY (1950 - ) and had two children.(aba) Corrinna Lea ROWE (1967 - ).(abb) William Robert ROWE.(ac) Sharon Irene ROWE (8 Nov 1951 - ).(b) Marvin Everett ROWE (24 Oct 1915 - 19 Jul 1971)married Ellen LYMAN and had two children.(ba) Judith Nadine ROWE (8 Feb 1938 - ) marriedClarence E. DUNSTON, Jr. and had three children.(baa) Annette DUNSTON (1958 - ).(bab) Sheilah DUNSTON (1962 - ).(bac) Bobbie DUNSTON (1966 - ).(bb) Nancy Laverne ROWE (27 Aug 1947 - ) marriedKlaus POPP and had two children.(bba) Lorna Louise POPP (1966 - ).(bbb) Cheryl POPP married Daniel BULLIS on8 May 1994.(6) Clovis Cleveland WALKER (3 Jun 1887 - 24 Jan 1960)married Clara Luella MOUNTER (? - 20 Jan 1968) on 26Jan 1913 and had three children.(a) Clara Evaline WALKER (9 Aug 1915 - ) marriedThomas William McDOLE (1916 - ) and had twochildren.(aa) James Dennis McDOLE (1941 - ) married Patricia Marie COHOON (1944 - ) and had three children.(aaa) Lee James McDOLE (1965 - ).(aab) Todd Charles McDOLE (1968 - ).(aac) Casey Devin McDOLE ( 1974 - ).(ab) Charlene Evaline McDOLE (1945 - ) marriedDennis Michael MANCEBO (1948 - ) on 14 Apr1973 and had two children.(aba) Kevin Michael MANCEBO (1976 - ).(abb) Mark William MANCEBO (1980 - ).(b) Anita May WALKER (7 Jun 1917 - ) married Frank L. FARY (26 Oct 1915 - ) on 23 Aug 1940 and had three children.(ba) Richard Clovis FARY (1942 - ) had two children.(baa) Sandy Suzanne FARY.(bab) Eric Frank FARY.(bb) Robert Arthur FARY (1944 - ) married Barbara Marie SHEALOR on 12 Oct 1968 and had two children.(bba) Brenda Luella FARY (1975 - ).(bbb) Brady Shealor FARY (1977 - ).(bc) William Allen FARY (1948 - ) married Margaret Ann WARD (1950 - ) and had one child.(bca) Kimmery Lee FARY (1980 - ).(c) Clovis Robert WALKER (27 Apr 1919 - ) marriedAudre Camille BIRD and had two children.(ca) Camille Adel WALKER (1948 - ) first married Edgar MUNN and had two children. She then married Rodney TAYLOR and had one child.(caa) Audre Theresa MUNN (12 Apr 1972 - ).(cab) Melanie Lynn MUNN (4 Jul 1974 - 3 Jul 1975).(cac) Matthew Ryan TAYLOR (1979 - ).(cb) Robert Dean WALKER (1953 - ) married Judith Lynn VISS on 30 Dec 1977 and had one child.
(cba) Craig Robert WALKER (1983 - ).(7) Lauren Walter WALKER (27 Jun 1891 - 4 Aug 1949).(8) Laurence Lester WALKER (27 Jun 1891 - 10 May 1971) married Beulah Evelyn ELLIS (1 Jun 1906 - 17 May1963).h. Henrietta Caroline COTTINGHAM (13 Jan 1858 - 15 Dec1912) married Levi P. BICKNELL who died before 1912.They had at least two children.(1) Raymond B. BICKNELL (Jan 1883 - ).(2) Hilliard C. BICKNELL (Aug 1885 - ).i. Ellen Matilda COTTINGHAM (19 Jan 1860 - 30 Sep 1928) married William B. BARNES.j. Albert Walker COTTINGHAM (29 Jan 1863 - 28 Jul 1893).k. Emily Ella Charlotte COTTINGHAM (1 Sep 1866 - 19 Aug 1867).H. Mary McALILEY (cir.1804 Chester Co SC - ) married John JOURNEY on 8 apr 1824 in Madison Co IL. John served as guardian for Elizabeth & Alfred WALKER's two children after they died.
He was a farmer and he reportedly died of cholera.
M12

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Tijdbalk Samuel McAliley [McMrt 4DNA]

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Voorouders (en nakomelingen) van Samuel McAliley

John? McAliley
± 1700-????
John McAliley
< 1740-± 1804
Elizabeth Martin
± 1740-± 1824

Samuel McAliley
1770-1834

± 1787

Janet Johnson
± 1770-1834

John McAliley
± 1795-± 1872
Samuel McAliley
± 1790-± 1852
Elizabeth McAliley
± 1800-????
Mary McAliley
± 1800-????

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Bronnen

  1. Joseph Suppiger's Journey to New Switzerland, Joseph Suppiger, Salomon Koepfli and Kaspar Koepfli
  2. The Stewart's, Van Hooser’s and Howard's of Madison County, Illinois1809from the History of Madison County, Illinoi, Georgenia Stewart, author and compiler
  3. War of 1812 Service Records, Public Records

Historische gebeurtenissen

  • De temperatuur op 13 augustus 1834 lag rond de 27,0 °C. De wind kwam overheersend uit het zuid-westen. Typering van het weer: omtrent helder. Bron: KNMI
  • De Republiek der Verenigde Nederlanden werd in 1794-1795 door de Fransen veroverd onder leiding van bevelhebber Charles Pichegru (geholpen door de Nederlander Herman Willem Daendels); de verovering werd vergemakkelijkt door het dichtvriezen van de Waterlinie; Willem V moest op 18 januari 1795 uitwijken naar Engeland (en van daaruit in 1801 naar Duitsland); de patriotten namen de macht over van de aristocratische regenten en proclameerden de Bataafsche Republiek; op 16 mei 1795 werd het Haags Verdrag gesloten, waarmee ons land een vazalstaat werd van Frankrijk; in 3.1796 kwam er een Nationale Vergadering; in 1798 pleegde Daendels een staatsgreep, die de unitarissen aan de macht bracht; er kwam een nieuwe grondwet, die een Vertegenwoordigend Lichaam (met een Eerste en Tweede Kamer) instelde en als regering een Directoire; in 1799 sloeg Daendels bij Castricum een Brits-Russische invasie af; in 1801 kwam er een nieuwe grondwet; bij de Vrede van Amiens (1802) kreeg ons land van Engeland zijn koloniën terug (behalve Ceylon); na de grondwetswijziging van 1805 kwam er een raadpensionaris als eenhoofdig gezag, namelijk Rutger Jan Schimmelpenninck (van 31 oktober 1761 tot 25 maart 1825).
  • In het jaar 1834: Bron: Wikipedia
    • Nederland had zo'n 2,9 miljoen inwoners.
    • 1 januari » De Duitse Zollverein treedt in werking. Deze economische vereniging is de eerste aanzet tot de Duitse eenheid.
    • 27 mei » Heroprichting van het Bisdom Brugge in België, dat eerder bestond van 1559-1801.
    • 14 juni » Isaac Fischer, Jr. verkrijgt vier patenten voor schuurpapier.
    • 14 oktober » Onder leiding van Hendrik de Cock scheiden de Gereformeerden zich af van de Hervormde Kerk.
    • 27 november » Uitvinding van de elektromotor, door Thomas Davenport.
    • 3 december » Oprichting van het Bisdom Ceylon.


Dezelfde geboorte/sterftedag

Bron: Wikipedia


Over de familienaam McAliley

  • Bekijk de informatie die Genealogie Online heeft over de familienaam McAliley.
  • Bekijk de informatie die Open Archieven heeft over McAliley.
  • Bekijk in het Wie (onder)zoekt wie? register wie de familienaam McAliley (onder)zoekt.

De publicatie Genealogie Wylie is opgesteld door .neem contact op
Wilt u bij het overnemen van gegevens uit deze stamboom alstublieft een verwijzing naar de herkomst opnemen:
Kin Mapper, "Genealogie Wylie", database, Genealogie Online (https://www.genealogieonline.nl/genealogie-wylie/I490.php : benaderd 3 mei 2024), "Samuel McAliley [McMrt 4DNA] (1770-1834)".