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Monday, May 30, 2016

Our Ancestors Are Solicitous for Our Welfare

Our Ancestors Are Solicitous for Our Welfare


As we remember on this Memorial Day!

Provo City Center Temple

Fillmore Cemetery - Iris, Sue, Mark



         "I believe we move and have our being in the presence of heavenly messengers and of heavenly beings. We are not separate from them. We begin to realize more and more fully, as we become acquainted with the principles of the Gospel, as they have been revealed anew in this dispensation, that we are closely related to our kindred, to our ancestors, to our friends and associates and co-laborers who have preceded us into the spirit world. We cannot forget them; we do not cease to love them; we always hold them in our hearts, in memory, and thus we are associated and united to them by ties that we can not break, that we can not dissolve or free ourselves from. 

          If this is the case with us in our finite condition, surrounded by our mortal weaknesses, shortsightedness, lack of inspiration and wisdom from time to time, how much more certain it is and reasonable and consistent to believe that those who have been faithful, who have gone beyond and are still engaged in the work for the salvation of the souls of men, the opening of the prison doors to them that are bound and proclaiming liberty to the captives who can see us better than we can see them; that they know us better than we know them. They have advanced; we are advancing; we are growing as they have grown; we are reaching the goal that they have attained unto; and therefore, I claim that we live in their presence, they see us, they are solicitous for our welfare, they love us now more than ever. For now they see the dangers that beset us; they can comprehend better than ever before, the weaknesses that are liable to mislead us into dark and forbidden paths. They see the temptations and the evils that beset us in life and the proneness of mortal beings to yield to temptation and to wrong doing; hence their solicitude for us and their love for us and their desire for our well being must be greater than that which we feel for ourselves.

          I thank God for the feeling that I possess and enjoy and for the realization that I have, that I stand, not only in the presence of Almighty God, my Maker and Father, but in the presence of His Only Begotten Son in the flesh, the Savior of the world; and I stand in the presence of Peter and James, (and perhaps the eyes of John are also upon us and we know it not); and that I stand also in the presence of Joseph and Hyrum and Brigham and John, and those who have been valiant in the testimony of Jesus Christ and faithful to their mission in the world, who have gone before. When I go I want to have the privilege of meeting them with the consciousness that I have followed their example, that I have carried out the mission in which they were engaged as they would have it carried out; that I have been as faithful in the discharge of duty committed to me and required at my hand as they were faithful in their time, and that when I meet them I shall meet them as I met them here, in love, in harmony, in unison and in perfect confidence that I have done my duty as they have done theirs."

  (Conference Report, April 1916, p.3, Joseph F. Smith)







Sunday, May 15, 2016

The Power of Words

Dedicated to Zachary Hunsaker as he heads to the 
Scripps National Spelling Bee.


THE POWER OF WORDS












Words are powerful. 

They can create and destroy,

build and burn down,

save and condemn. 

Michael Horton, Westminster Seminary California










WORDS CAN INSPIRE.
AND WORDS CAN DESTROY.
CHOOSE YOURS WELL.
Robin Sharma










WISE WORDS OR WOUNDING WORDS?











BASEMENT PEOPLE VS. BALCONY PEOPLE

Keith Miller, in his book Passionate People, which he co-authored with Bruce Larson, describes two kinds of people -- "basement people" and "balcony people."

"Basement people" are the discouragers in our lives. They may be people from our past, or present, but their words go with us everywhere we go. They are the negative influences in our lives and their words go something like this: "You can't do that." "That's a stupid thing to do." "When are you going to get it right?" "You will never get it right." "You will never amount to anything." Basement people divert us from our hopes and dreams. They constantly point out what is wrong, rather than what is right with us. Basement people cause a room to light up when they leave.

In contrast to them are the "Balcony People." They are people who are full of love and cheer us on. They encourage us to be loving, courageous followers of Christ. They sit in the balcony of our lives like a heavenly cheering section, saying, "You can do it." "We believe in you." "You are special to us." Balcony people are the great encouragers in our lives and we all need them!

The question for all of us is who will we be? Will we be basement people or balcony people? The choice is ours to make. Balcony people try to lift people up to where they are, but basement people try to drag people down where they are. 

There is no question who God wants us to be. He wants us to be balcony people, and He will help us to be balcony people.

(From a sermon by David Owens, Encourage One Another, 11/3/2009)




Book of Mormon - Alma Chapter 5

30 And again I say unto you, is there one among you that doth make a mock of his brother, or that heapeth upon him persecutions?
 31 Wo unto such an one, for he is not prepared, and the time is at hand that he must repent or he cannot be saved!















Zachary's Radio Interview







Saturday, May 14, 2016

The McGaughey Family

The McGaughey Family

How We Are Related:
Willliam McGaughey 1686?-1750
William McGaughey 1738-1804
Samuel Alexander McGaughey 1763-1841
Sarah McGaughey Ewing 1800-1857
Rebecca Ewing Dulaney 1820-1894
Elizabeth Buenvista Dulaney Brewer 1848-1935
Holland Nathaniel Brewer 1871-1950
Ina Beatrice Brewer Johnson 1900-1978
Marion Allan Johnson Speakman 1923-1998

Like the other Irish or Scots-Irish families in our ancestral tree, there is some confusion of names in the written accounts, probably, as mentioned in previous posts, because of the Irish naming patterns.

While researching your Irish ancestry, it's helpful to be aware of Irish customary naming patterns regarding given names:

  • First born son named after his father's father
  • Second born son named after his mother's father
  • Third born son named after his father
  • Fourth born son named after his father's oldest brother
  • Fifth born son named after his father's 2nd oldest brother
    or his mother's oldest brother


  • First born daughter named after her mother's mother
  • Second born daughter named after her father's mother
  • Third born daughter named after her mother
  • Fourth born daughter named after her mother's oldest sister
  • Fifth born daughter named after her mother's 2nd oldest sister
    or her father's oldest sister

The book "History of New Haven County, Connecticut," edited by J. L. Rockey, published in 1892, contains some of the earliest history of the McGaughey Clan in America.



From the website:  "Sons of DeWitt Colony Texas" by Wallace L. McKeehan, ed.

"William McGaughey was the first of our line to settle in America. No primary records have been found concerning his birth and parentage; we only have information handed down that he was born in Northern Ireland and sailed from Glasgow, Scotland for America about 1738.

 The first record of William is found in Delaware where the Wilmington Court records show he was executor for Patrick Cannon who had recently arrived in this country from Ireland. New Castle, Delaware was the disembarkation point for the colonists from Ireland going to the northern part of Pennsylvania. The next record of William's early activities in this country is a court indenture dated 1741 when land was purchased from Abigail Cannon of New Castle Co., Del. William apparently left Delaware sometime between 1741 and 1745 and moved on west into Pennsylvania."



          A descendant of William applied for membership in the "Son's of the American Revolution."           The membership record can be seen on Ancestry.com.  A clip of the Ancestry index is below:
U.S., Sons of the American Revolution Membership Applications, 1889-1970


We are descended from William and Margaret McGaughey's son William who was born about 1738.

Margaret's maiden name is listed on some records as Margaret Boyd, born 1695, died 1804.

Check this website for more detailed information about the family:



Most records list Willliam's birthplace as Scotland, but the FindAGrave website lists the birthplace as Ireland and gives the following account of his origins:



A timeline from "Sons of DeWitt Colony Texas"  website follows William's family:


"On 28 Aug. 1757 a size roll of Col. Washington's Company was taken. On this roll was No. 68, Wm. McGaugh (possibly William McGaughey), 30 years old, 5' 7" in height, from Ireland, a planter, who enlisted Aug. 1756 in Frederick Co., VA.


In 1760 William was living in York Co., PA at the time of his marriage to Elizabeth Lackey.


In 1771 William lived in the Turkey Cove in Powell's Valley in present Lee Co., VA.


In 1774 William lived on Head Sugar Tree Draft in Washington Co., VA.


On 11 Aug 1775 the Provincial Convention of Virginia ordered Col. John Neville to march with his company and take possession of Ft Pitt (to later become Pittsburg, PA). William Magahey (McGaughey) was a soldier in this company. His name is on a list of troops paid at Rommey, VA.


On 10 Jun 1776 Wm. McGaughy was the 55th signer of a Fincastle Co., VA, petition.


The 1783 Tax List of Greene Co., NC (later TN.) had Wm. McGaughy listed.


On 1 Nov 1786 Wm. McGaughey received a land grant No. 1657 from the State of North Carolina of 200 acres on Limestone Fork of Lick River, Greene Co., NC (later TN).


In 1788 Wm. McGaughey provided provisions for the militia under General Joseph Martin for their expedition against the Chickamauga Indians for which he was paid 10 14 6.


On 26 December 1791 the State of North Carolina issued grant No. 952 to Samuel Mcgahey, William McGahey (McGaughey), and John McCroskey, 3,000 acres on Loyd's (Boyd's) Creek, according to Greene Co. records.


The earliest settlers of the Sevier Co area settled in the Boyd's Creek area along the Indian War Path which led to Knoxville. William McGaughey was one of these early settlers. He built a stockade on Boyd's Creek which the settlers used for protection against the Indians, known as McGaughey's Station. This station was built as early as 1785 and was still a strong station in 1793.





On 12 Apr. 1798 in Blount Co., TN, Wm. McGaughey was the bondsman when his son James McGaughey married Margaret McCain.

William's wife, Elizabeth Lackey, died in 1804 at Boyd's Creek. William moved to Maury County, Tennessee with two of his sons, George Washington McGaughey and James Harvey McGaughey. He died sometime after 1812 and was buried on the Duck River


Much of the above information was found in the DAR application of Nellie Head Fox, Nat No 293677."


Another story about William's military service in the Revolution comes from the Wiki Tree website:

http://www.wikitree.com/wiki/McGaughey-70
          "Part of William M McGaughy service during the American Revolution was in the Army under General George Washington. At one point of the campaign Washington camped near Abingdon, Virginia. McGaughy was home to be with his wife during childbirth. According to family tradition, William sent word to General Washington of the birth of his namesake, George Washington McGaughy. Not having a more fitting gift Washington sent a little iron camp kettle to William as a gift for his new son. The kettle is no longer in existence.
          For many years the family used the kettle as a ceremonial bath to welcome new babies. -book of William and Margaret McGaughey 1740- 1983 by Polly Rachel McGaughey Sutton, copyright 1984."

Location of where William McGaughey is buried in Maury Co., TN is unknown.


The oldest child of William and Elizabeth Lackey McGaughey was Samuel Alexander McGaughey.

Samuel married Jane Laughlin in 1784 in North Carolina."

Some biographical information about Samuel is found in "History of New Haven County, Connecticut, Volume 1, ed. John L Rockey.





A private Family Tree on Ancestry.com contains this information:

Capt Samuel McGaughey

.Samuel was living with his parents, William and Margaret, when the American Revolution began. When his father was called out for military service against the Indians on Clinch River in the Spring of 1778, Samuel, age 15, substituted for his father and served under Captain John Shelby. He served in the same capacity in August 1778 under Captain James Mongomery. On March 1, 1779 he volunteered for service in his own name. The pension record shows he served 12 months as a private in the North Carolina and Virginia Militia; 4 months as Lieutenant; and was promoted to Captain in 1781. At this same time his son George Washington McGaughy was born, and the camp kettle incident occurred. His total time of military service appears in the record as 35 months. He states that he was in the battle of Tiger River, Pacolat River, Eutaw Springs, and Kings Mountain.



"Samuel McGaughey (1760-1841) served at the battle of Kings Mountain in Capt. James Pemberton's company, Col. John Sevier's regiment at Eutaw Springs.  He was born in Pennsylvania; died in Lawrence Alabama."


North America, Family Histories, 1500-2000 for Samuel McGaughey
D Daughters of the American Revolution Lineage Book : NSDAR : Volume 097 : 1912


Samuel and Jane collected a government pension for a number of years because of his military service.

U. S. Pensioners, Alabama 1835-1850






"...at 55 years of age, with his entire family, with the possible exception of 2 daughters who had already married in Greeneville and his son John, he joined his 2 brothers in Maury County for the long trek to Alabama, going by way of the Natchez Trace, opened in 1806 and over the Tennessee River at present day Muscle Shoals, into the fertile, rolling lands off Lawrence Co, Alabama."

Samuel died in Lawrence County, Alabama, on the 5th of January, 1841.

Samuel's daughter Sarah married John Mose Ewing on December 2, 1816 in Blount County, Tennessee.  They were the parents of 8 children.  Margaret, the oldest was born in Tennessee. The next five were born in Lawrence County, Alabama.  The two youngest were born in Itawamba County, Mississippi, where Samuel and Sarah are buried.

Their daughter Rebecca Ewing, married Gilbert Dulaney in 1838 in Itawamba and they were the parents of 7 children.  Elizabeth married John Mead Lesir Brewer in 1870 in Itawamba County, but by 1877 they were living in Johnson County, Texas.  They are buried in the Cleburne Cemetery along with many of our relatives.



How We Are Related:
Willliam McGaughey 1686?-1750
William McGaughey 1738-1804
Samuel Alexander McGaughey 1763-1841
Sarah McGaughey Ewing 1800-1857
Rebecca Ewing Dulaney 1820-1894
Elizabeth Buenvista Dulaney Brewer 1848-1935
Holland Nathaniel Brewer 1871-1950
Ina Beatrice Brewer Johnson 1900-1978
Marion Allan Johnson Speakman 1923-1998

Other sources:



Thursday, May 5, 2016

The Laughlin Family

The Laughlin Family of Ireland and Virginia


"Family legend says that the Duncans, Sharps, Laughlins, Porterfields, and others all came together to America from Belfast, Ireland. If so, they probably came at the urging of Thomas Sharp's brother-in-law, Thomas King, who came much earlier. This was the pattern for later generations. One or two families would go first, followed by the rest of the clan over later generations."
Putative Ancestry of John Laughlin
http://lawlib.samford.edu/laughlin/genealogy/maclachlan/maclachlan.html



Some of the excerpts from biographies which I have included in this blog post are a little hard to follow without a family tree to look at because of the Irish naming patterns that repeat the names generation to generation, so I am including our decendancy at both the top and the bottom.  For a fuller family pedigree, see my Ancestry.com tree.  I'm including more than you may want to read because they give such a wonderful picture of the people and the times.  Family histories such as these are notoriously unreliable as to names, dates, and places, but they do give a starting point to begin looking for documentation in putting together a reliable family record..
How We Are Related:
John Luke Laughlin 1710-1783
John Luke Laughlin 1736-1812
Jane Laughlin McGaughey 1764-1847
Sarah McGaughey Ewing 1800-1857
Rebecca Ewing Dulaney 1820-1894
Elizabeth Buenvista Dulaney Brewer 1848-1935
Holland Nathaniel Brewer 1871-1950
Ina Beatrice Brewer Johnson 1900-1978
Marion Allan Johnson Speakman 1923-1998


The first of the Laughlins to come to America was the family of John Luke Laughlin who was born in County Down, Ireland in 1710 and died 1783 in Washington County, Virginia.

From the diary of John Laughlin:
My great grandfather John Laughlin, of the date of whose death I have no knowledge, is represented by Mr. Benjamin Sharp in his cor-respondence, who knew him well, and by my father and grandfather-all of the same name-as having been a most exemplary man. He was a native of, and came from the County Downe, Ireland. My grandfather, John, as I have him repeat often, was sixteen years old when they arrived in the United States, then colonies. My grandfather, as his father was before him, was a man of remarkable piety, benevolence, and active cheerfulness. They were both of the branch of the Presbyterian Church denominated Seceders. In the latter years of my grandfather's life, he contributed himself nearly the entire support of the Rev. Mr. Harper, a clergyman of his own sect-but his charity, as was that of his father, was universal for all sincere christians. I have a full recollection of the person and character of my excellent grandfather. Up to extreme old age, he had all the cheerfulness and vivacity of a boy. My father is of the same temperament.


http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=122662722

Part of the extensive writings of Samuel Hervey Laughlin are quoted below.
Samuel is my 1st cousin 6x's removed.

http://www.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~varussel/families/samuelherveylaughlindiary.html


A Diary of Public Events and Notices of My Life and Family and Of My Private Transactions including Studies, Travels, Readings Correspondence, Business Anecdotes, Miscellaneous Memoranda of Men, Literature, Etc From January 1st, 1845 to August, 1845 and Sketch of my Life from Infancy by Samuel Hervey Laughlin
This diary was transcribed by Anabel Easley Tidwell, a direct descendant of Samuel Hervey Laughlin, and her daughter-in-law, Janet Malone Tidwell. It is their hope that in reading these pages their children and grandchildren, and any other interested parties, will have a greater understanding and appreciation for the life and times of this illustrious gentleman.

A Diary, Etc. for the year 1845-

These reminiscences, hastily and promiscuously inserted here, before I commence my brief journal of passing events, I have deemed it proper to enlarge by the following miscellaneous souvenirs of the same kind, mostly in relation to my own past life, and my ancestors and family, in the hope that they may hereafter not be wholly uninteresting to such of my children as may not remember, or who may, perhaps, never see my memoranda formerly made, in a less permanent diary, which has a printed title page, with names of months, days, etc. I therefore think proper here to add the following memoranda in regard to my ancestors and myself.

From my grandfathers, John Laughlin, and John Duncan(who sometimes spelled his name properly, Dunkin, being a Scottsman by descent) and from my father, my mother in her lifetime, and from my Great Uncle Benjamin Sharp, of Warren Co., Missouri, I have learned the following particulars concerning my forefathers.

John Laughlin, my great grandfather, came from Ireland, with his family, consisting of three sons, John, James, and Alexander, James being the eldest, and Alexander the youngest, and three daughters, Jane, Elizabeth and Margaret, and on arriving in the then Colonies, at Philadelphia, about the year 1740, removed first to Chester County and then to the vicinity of where Harrisburg now stands in Pennsylvania, now Dauphin County I believe. About the year 1760, as Benjamin Sharp, my great uncle believes, (see his letter to me in my books of letters of 4 January, 1845, written from Warren County, Missouri) and about the year 1764, as my father remembers from family tradition, my great grandfather and his family, and many of his connections, intermarriages with the Sharps, Duncan's, etc. having been formed, removed from Pennsylvania to Virginia. My grandfather John Laughlin had married Mary Price in Pennsylvania, removed to what is now Bote Tounte County, near the place where the town of Fincastle stands previous to the year 1766, for in that year his second son, John who is my father, was born at that place.


They must have found pristine wilderness, because Fincastle, not founded until 1772, was something of the last outpost before the Western frontier, serving as a supply station for settlers heading West. From its inception until the Revolutionary war, Fincastle oversaw a massive governmental district that stretched to the Mississippi River and included parts of modern-day Wisconsin. Town lore says that folks who lived more than 500 miles away were excused from jury duty. Fincastle's courthouse was designed by Thomas Jefferson and today still houses county government functions.


Mary Polly Price Laughlin
Birth: 1745
Death: 1810

This information comes from a letter sent Sept. 1893 by Adelaide Berry Duncan to her grandchildren.

A gal named Polly Price, before she was married to that weaver, Luke Laughlin. When she was a little girl, this Polly rode a fine young mare that was a great favorite in the family some miles to a neighbor's, and as she was coming home, a bull was roaming in the woods and took after her. She ran the mare and got home safe and she wanted to keep the mare put up until the bull left, but no, her husband would turn her out, saying the mare could keep out of the bull's way; but the next day they found the mare dead, gored to death by the bull. I tell this so his great grandsons may know to heed their wives.


All the others, on removing, settled near the same place, or went on farther west and settled in what is now Russell County. My grandfather and great grandfather afterwards also removed to what is now Russell County and before the commencement of the Revolutionary war two or three years, to what is now Washington County, Virginia near Abingdon. There my great grandfather died before I was born. My grandfather, John, finally settled on the head of a creek under the Knobs, as a chain of mountains are called, called I believe, Sharp's Creek. He lived there until his death about 1813 or latter part of 1812.

Washington County, Virginia


My father, John Laughlin, was born on November 4th, 1766.

My mother, Sarah Duncan, was born on Sept. 3rd. 1773 in what is now Russell County, Virginia.

My great grandfather's son, John, married Mary Price, as has been stated, and had a numerous family of children. His final residence, about nine miles southwest of Abingdon, the farm having been inherited by his youngest son, Alexander now (1845) being a citizen of Coles Co. Illinois, is now, with the old farm of 7 or 8 hundred acres the property of John Thomas of Sullivan Co. Tennessee; and on the final adjustment of the boundary lines, by Mr. Taylor and other commissioners on the part of the States of Tennessee and Virginia, was ascertained to lie in the former state. In the time of the excise taxes of Washington's and Adams' administrations, it was claimed by both states, and lay in a strip of country a few miles between different lines, run by different boards of commissioners and neither state by law having exclusive jurisdiction, and even the Acts of Congress being enforced in neither between these lines because of some defect, the whole country, and every farm where water could be procured, was the site of a distillery. The repeal of the excise laws put an end to this state of things.

*For an account of the hardships of the first settlers on Holston and Clinch, and where Abingdon now stands, see Benj. Sharp's letter of June 15th 1842, in 1 Vol. Williams ' American Pioneers, published at Cincinnati, page 333.

The sons of my grandfather were Thomas, who died in June 1844 in Whitley Co. Kentucky at an advanced age, and married my mother's elder sister, Elizabeth Duncan who is yet living. They reared a numerous family of children. Thomas, their eldest son, is a citizen of Philadelphia, Monroe County East Tennessee, who has a numerous family of sons and daughters-one of whom, his son, Marshall Ney, a graduate of East Tennessee University is now (March 1845) a student of law at my house and in my office at Hickory Hill, Warren Co. Tennessee. My uncle's second son, John Sharp, is an old batchelor of my age, and lives with his mother in Kentucky. He was a member of the Kentucky Assembly in 1823, in Old and New Court times. His other sons, Alexander, Joseph etc. live in Missouri. His eldest daughter married Andrew Craig of Knox Co. Ky. about 1808 or 1809, and is now dead. His second daughter, Jane, married Isaac King, and lives in Whitley Co., Kentucky. His daughter, Eliza, and other children, have emigrated and settled in the west after marriage, but where, I do not know.

My Uncle Thomas fought gallantly in the Revolution at Kings Mountain, and commanded a Battalion in Col. Micah Taul's Regiment of Kentucky volunteers at the Battle of the Thames in the late war.

Alexander, the third son of my grandfather, married Lavinia King, daughter of the late venerable William King of Sullivan Co., Tenn., and with a numerous family, lives in Illinois. Many letters from him will be found in my bound books of letters from friends.

My grand uncles, James and Alexander, died, the former about 1811 in Washington Co. Virginia, at the place at the mouth of Spring Creek where Jonathan King, Esq. now lives. His children married and removed West. His two sons, James and Alexander, died in Rutherford Co. Tenn. many years ago. The latter, Alexander, died in Sullivan Co. Tenn. near Paperville, about the year 1816. Of my grandfather's sisters, Jane, Elizabeth and Margaret, Jane married Richard Price of Russell, Va. (Note by Michael A. Dye: I believe this to actually be Thomas Price, brother of Richard Price. Richard Price is known to have married Priscilla Crabtree and names her in his will which can be viewed here. Thomas Price has been reported to have been married to Jane Laughlin and names his wife as Jane in his will which can be viewed here.); Margaret married Samuel Vance, a remarkable man who survived her some years, after rearing a numerous family, and died about the year 1834, aged about 90 years, near Abingdon, Virginia. His sons, Robert, Samuel and Andrew were merchants of Clarksville, Tennessee, now all dead. James, one of his sons, lives near Abingdon. John another, lives near Memphis, Tennessee.

Elizabeth, my grandfathers’ sister married John Sharp of Sullivan, Co. Tennessee. They were married early after or about the time of the removals of the families from Pennsylvania. He was a soldier of the Revolution, fought at Kings Mountain, and was with my grandfather, John Duncan (properly Dunkin), a member of the Convention of North Carolina for ratifying the Constitution of the United States in 1788. The place where they then lived, was at that day, believed to be in what is now, and which then included all East Tennessee, Washington Co. Tennessee, then North Carolina. By an honorable life of frugality and industry as a farmer, he made a large fortune. His wife, who died before him, was deranged for some years before her death. He had a number of daughters-Sally, married to Thomas McChesney of Washington, Va. now both dead; Ann, married to Dreron Longacre of Sullivan Co., Tenn., both alive and surrounded by a numerous family of married and prosperous children; Margaret, married to the late Col. George W. Craig of Knox Co. Ky.; Marianne, married to Thomas McConnel of Washington Co. Va. now dead though her husband survives and is married again; Clarrissa, married to Mr. Cowan, of Sullivan Co. Tenn, who is, I believe also dead. He had no sons.


* * * * * * * * * * * *

One of my father's sisters, Hannah, the youngest, married Wm. Easley, a worthy man, who died soon after the late war, in Whitley Co. Ky., leaving his widow, still living, and a number of children. His son, James Hervey Easley, was a member of the Kentucky legislature (of the H. of R.) from Whitley in 1855-45 (see letters from him in 1844-5 in my bound collections).

My father's sister, Jane, I think, married Maj. Samuel McGaughey, of North Alabama. A lame son of his named William visited me several times while I lived in Rutherford, Tenn. His son, Maj. McGaughey, lives in Greene Co. Tenn. and has often represented that county in the Assembly. In 1832-3, I drew up for him, which he introduced and had passed, perhaps it was 1831, strong resolutions against the United States Bank, and approving General Jackson's policy.  
(Our Ancestor)

My father's sister, Sally, married a man named Robert Boyd, also of Blount Co. Tenn. She died early, perhaps childless, and I have never hear of what became of Boyd. I can just remember to have seen him at my grandfather's when I was an infant.

Martha, another sister of my father, married Maj. George Singleton, who removed at an early time from Sullivan Co. Tenn. to Wayne Co. Ky. He lived there many years, much esteemed, and represented the District in which Wayne County was included, one term of four years in the State Senate, at, or before the close of which, about the year 1809 or 1810, he removed to Louisiana, Parish of Oppeloosas or Attakapos. He succeeded well there, on the Lafourche I think as a sugar planter, but he and his wife both died soon after the late war. He was a Philadelphian by birth, and inherited from an uncle, a batchelor of Blountville, Tennessee, who was all his days a merchant's clerk, a good property and a fine library of the best old English standard works. The uncle's name was John Williams. From this library, in those day a rare thing in Western Virginia, East Tennessee, or Kentucky south of Green River, he became a cultivated and well informed man. He left several sons, with whom I have no acquaintance. One named George, I think is still in Louisana. Another, Owen I believe to be his name, came back to Wayne, and possibly still lives there. He married a daughter of John Laughlin, a son of my father's uncle Alexander L. who married a Miss Newton in Virginia or East Tennessee and removed to Knox Co. Ky. first, and then to Wayne, and finally perhaps to Red River, Louisana.

In this tedious, desultory, and confused way, I have gone through "the books of generations" of many, but not half, the numeous kindred of my family; a matter which may, possibly, some day to some of my children, or to myself in old age, be of some interest in taking a retrospect of old things. There is a good deal more to be added, for I have not come home to my own immediate family yet- nor to some of the Kings, Porters, Berrys, McFerrins etc. who will yet be in some way noticed according to the best recollections I have.


Jane Laughlin and Alexander McGaughey married in 1784 in North Carolina, and both died before the 1850 Census.  More about the McGaugheys and their life in Alabama in an upcoming post.


Their daughter, Sarah married John Mose Ewing on the 12th of December 1816 in Blount County, North Carolina.



They are listed on the 1850 US Census of Itawamba County, Mississippi, with 3 sons: Henry, Moses, and Gilbert, their five older children having already left home.


Their second daughter, Rebecca, married Gilbert Dulaney in Itawamba County on the 13th of November 1838.  They lived in Arkansas and Texas before returning for good to Mississippi.

Rebecca Ewing Dulaney

Rebecca's daughter Elizabeth Buenvista Dulaney, who was born in Texas, married John Mead Lesir Brewer in Itawamba, Mississippi, on the 10th of October 1870, but within 5 or 6 years they uprooted their family and went to Texas, settling in Johnson County, where they are buried.





Other Resources:
Joel Hager on Rootsweb World Connect


How We Are Related:
John Luke Laughlin 1710-1783
John Luke Laughlin 1736-1812
Jane Laughlin McGaughey 1764-1847
Sarah McGaughey Ewing 1800-1857
Rebecca Ewing Dulaney 1820-1894
Elizabeth Buenvista Dulaney Brewer 1848-1935
Holland Nathaniel Brewer 1871-1950
Ina Beatrice Brewer Johnson 1900-1978
Marion Allan Johnson Speakman 1923-1998