Larry Anderson - Families and Individuals

Notes


Samuel T. TIPTON

Line in Record @I7121@ (RIN 289442) from GEDCOM file not recognized:
EVEN Union Army, Corporal, Company "C" 8th Kentucky, Infantry


Samuel was a Corporal in company "C" 8th Kentucky Infantry Union Army.


Samuel Jackson TIPTON Jr.

Line in Record @I7126@ (RIN 289447) from GEDCOM file not recognized:
RESI

Line in Record @I7126@ (RIN 289447) from GEDCOM file not recognized:
OCCU Farmer, Blacksmith

Schuyler, MO 1850 Federal Census
28 317 317 Tipton Samuel 46 M Blacksmith 200 Kentucky
29 317 317 Tipton Sally 44 F Virginia
30 317 317 Tipton Elizabeth 20 F Missouri
31 317 317 Tipton Wm. 18 M farmer Missouri
32 317 317 Tipton Talbot 16 M Blacksmith Missouri
33 317 317 Tipton Mary F. 14 F Missouri
34 317 317 Tipton Sarah 12 F Missouri
35 317 317 Tipton Harrison 9 M Missouri
36 317 317 Tipton Samuel 7 M Missouri
37 317 317 Tipton James 3 F Missouri REMARKS: * states James is female

He was not only a successful farmer for about five or six years but also did blacksmithing while in Missouri.
Migrated: 1828, Moved to Boone County,Missouri, probably from his home of Kentucky.
Moved to Macon County in 1837, and lived in Bloomington until 1846 when thay moved to Schuyler County Missouri
Note:: 1846, From 1846 until the war, he resided in Shuyler, County, Missouri , but the first year of the Rebellion, was taken prisoner by the Union Army, and disappeared.
This family move to Iowa & Missouri

Died in Fort. Delaware, Delaware, in Civil War POW Camp.


William Henry TIPTON

Line in Record @I7128@ (RIN 289449) from GEDCOM file not recognized:
EVEN Democrat

Line in Record @I7128@ (RIN 289449) from GEDCOM file not recognized:
RELI Baptist

Line in Record @I7128@ (RIN 289449) from GEDCOM file not recognized:
RESI

Line in Record @I7128@ (RIN 289449) from GEDCOM file not recognized:
OCCU Blacksmith, Farmer

Line in Record @I7128@ (RIN 289449) from GEDCOM file not recognized:
EVEN Civil War Vet., Confederate Army under Capt. McCullough

Line in Record @I7128@ (RIN 289449) from GEDCOM file not recognized:
OCCU Miner, Farmer, Blacksmith


Biographical and Historical Memoirs of Northeast Arkansas
RANDOLPH COUNTY
Copyrighted and Published 1889 by Goodspeed Publishing Company

W. H. Tipton, blacksmith and farmer of Little Black Township, Randolph County, Ark., was born in Boone County, Mo., June 26, 1832, and is one of nine surviving members of a family of ten children born to Samuel and Sarah (Lynch) Tipton, whose native States were Kentucky and Virginia, respectively. The father removed to Missouri about 1828, and was a successful farmer of Boone County for six or seven years, but the most of his attention was given to the trade of blacksmithing. In 1837 he moved to Macon County, and settled in Bloomington, where he worked at blacksmithing for several years, and then bought a farm on which he settled. From 1846 until the breaking out of the war he resided in Schuyler County, Mo., but in the first year of the Rebellion he was taken prisoner by the Union army, and since that time no knowledge of him has ever come to the family. He was a member of the Baptist Church, and his marriage occurred in 1827. His widow resides in Iowa, and their children are as follows: W. H., John T. (in Virginia), Samuel (in Iowa), James (in Nebraska), Harrison (deceased, whose family reside in Montana), Elizabeth (the deceased wife of Ezariah Padgett, of Texas), Mary F. (wife of H. C. Grimes, a traveling salesman, who resides in Plattsmouth, Mo.) and Sarah (wife of James Van Cleve, a farmer). W. H. Tipton started out to struggle with the world at the age of eighteen years, and although his early education was neglected he is accounted one of the intelligent and well-posted men of the county. He first went to California, where he was engaged in mining three years, but returned in 1854 via the Gulf of Mexico, and landed in New York City. From there he proceeded to Schuyler County, Mo., and began assisting his father in the blacksmith shop, continuing this until the breaking out of the Rebellion, when he joined the Confederate army under Capt. McCullough, but was on detail the most of the time, being engaged in shoeing horses. After the close of hostilities he went to Illinois with Judge J. H. Richardson of this county, and remained there until 1866, when he moved to Randolph County and settled in Little Black Township, where he went to farming and blacksmithing, and has continued these occupations up to the present time. He owns 240 acres of land, and has given two of his sons eighty acres each, besides much personal property. May 31, 1855, he was married to Miss Harriet E. Wadsworth, of Illinois, and their nine children were as follows: three died in infancy; Mary E., deceased wife of B. J. Norris, of Texas; Claiborne W., who was accidentally killed, being fatally crushed by a log while he was working in a saw-mill, his death occurring January 30, 1888, in his twenty-fourth year; S. C., residing in Pocahontas; Robert E. S., at home; B. S. and Antoinette. Mr. and Mrs. Tipton are members of the Baptist Church, and [p.438] he is a member of the A. F. & A. M., his children, S. C., B. S. and Antoinette, also being members of the Baptist Church. He is a Democrat. Robert E. S. Tipton was born in Randolph County, Ark., September 26, 1867, and married, November 8, 1888, Miss Amelia A. Smith, whose birth occurred in Marshall County, Ky., December 11, 1867.


Moved:: After the end of the Rebellion, he went to Illinois with Judge J.H. RICHARDSON of Randolph Co., AR. Stayed until 1866
Note:: Member of the A.F & A.M


Property: 1889, Owned 240 acres of land in Randolph Co., and had already given two of his sons 80 acres each, and a large amount of personal property as well,


Harriett E. WADSWORTH

Children:: By 1889 five of her nine children had died. Three of their nine children had died in infancy. One, Mary Elizabeth had died a young woman of 30.Their son, Claiborne W. was killed in a sawmill accident at age twenty four.


Harris Bradford COPE

Line in Record @I14150@ (RIN 296471) from GEDCOM file not recognized:
OCCU Farmer


Information on this family was found on the Warren County, Tennessee 1850 Census.


James Madison EVANS

Line in Record @I7136@ (RIN 289457) from GEDCOM file not recognized:
OCCU Farmer


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