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Vol. 39, No. 4 Summer 2004 k e n t u c k y a n c e s t o r s genealogical quarterly of the KentuckyHistoricalSociety Kentucky Abstracts from the The Alvey Family of African American Kentucky Statesman, England, Maryland, Immigrants to March 20, 1850 and Kentucky, Liberia, 1820-43 Part Five Vol. 39, No. 4 Summer 2004 k e n t u c k y a n c e s t o r s genealogical quarterly of the KentuckyHistoricalSociety Thomas E. Stephens, Editor kentucky ancestors Dan Bundy, Graphic Design Kent Whitworth, Director James E. Wallace, Assistant Director administration Betty Fugate, Membership Coordinator research and interpretation Nelson L. Dawson, Team Leader management team Kenneth H. Williams, Program Leader Doug Stern, Walter Baker, Lisbon Hardy, Michael Harreld, Lois Mateus, Dr. Thomas D. Clark, C. Michael Davenport, Ted Harris, Ann Maenza, Bud Pogue, Mike Duncan, James E. Wallace, Maj. board of Gen. Verna Fairchild, Mary Helen Miller, Ryan trustees Harris, and Raoul Cunningham Kentucky Ancestors (ISSN-0023-0103) is published quarterly by the Kentucky Historical Society and is distributed free to Society members. Periodical postage paid at Frankfort, Kentucky, and at additional mailing offices. Postmas- ter: Send address changes to Kentucky Ancestors, Kentucky Historical Society, 100 West Broadway, Frankfort, KY 40601-1931. Please direct changes of address and other notices concerning membership or mailings to the Membership De- partment, Kentucky Historical Society, 100 West Broadway, Frankfort, KY 40601-1931; telephone (502) 564-1792. Submissions and correspondence should be directed to: Tom Stephens, editor, Kentucky Ancestors, Kentucky Histori- cal Society, 100 West Broadway, Frankfort, KY 40601-1931. The Kentucky Historical Society, an agency of the Commerce Cabinet, does not discriminate on the basis of race, color, national origin, sex, age, religion, or disability, and provides, on request, reasonable accommodations, includ- ing auxiliary aids and services necessary to afford an individual with a disability an equal opportunity to participate in all services, programs, and activities. KentuckyHistoricalSociety contents vol. 39, no. 4/summer 2004 Kentucky African American Immigrants to Liberia, 1820-43 Dr. Adell Patton Jr...........................................................................................................................174 Abstracts from the Kentucky Statesman, March 20, 1850 Transcribed by Thomas H. Appleton Jr................................................................................... 182 The Alvey Family of England, Maryland, and Kentucky, Part Five Robert Lee Alvey Sr...........................................................................................................................189 Queries .......................................................................................................................................... 203 Book Notes................................................................................................................................... 205 Announcements ............................................................................................................................. 207 Mystery Album............................................................................................................................. 208 Surname Index, Volume 39........................................................................................................... 209 on the cover: This detail of an 1870 map by “D. McClelland” shows the settlement sites of freed Kentucky slaves in Liberia. The state sent 193 immigrants to Liberia in 1833 and 1840-41, one of whom—Alfred Francis Russell—served as president of the republic in 1883 and 1884. The sites, shown at center, came to be known as Kentucky and Clay-Ashland. The entire map can be viewed on the American Memory portion of the Library of Congress Web site, www.loc.gov. The article Kentucky African American Immigrants to Liberia, 1820-43, begins on page 174. (Courtesy Geography and Map Division, Library of Congress) Kentucky African American Immigrants to Liberia, 1820-43 By Dr. Adell Patton Jr. Dr. Patton, a 1959 graduate of Kentucky State University in Frankfort, received his Ph.D. in African History from the University of Wisconsin-Madison in 1975. He is a professor of history at the University of Missouri-St. Louis. Dr. Patton wishes to acknowledge the assistance of Dr. Henry E. Cheaney, along with Jennifer Spearman- Simms and Paul Wilmarth, staff members at University of Missouri-St. Louis Faculty Resource Center. The African diaspora remains a neglected theme the first avowed purpose of the ACS was to provide in the genealogy of Kentucky African American support for the removal of free born and the newly immigrants to Liberia, West Africa, from 1820 to emancipated from the various slave states to Liberia, 1843. “Diaspora” refers to a scattering or dispersal of which formed auxiliary societies to the ACS. people from their “homeland.” It has three parts: This restructuring of the Haitian social classes and The voluntary or forceful immigration from the its resulting shock waves undermined the confidence “homeland” (some 15 million slaves taken from of the financial systems of Europe in regard to Africa to the Western Hemisphere), the assimilation investing in slavery. The first avowed purpose of the and identity in the alien and oftentimes hostile ACS was to provide support for the removal of the territory, and the “return” to the “homeland,” which free born and newly emancipated from the various can be either psychological or actual physical move- U.S. slave states to Liberia, which formed auxiliary ment. Through time the Kentucky African American societies to the ACS. The Kentucky Colonization immigrants to Liberia experienced all of these Society was formed in 1829, and three years later manifestations. had 31 affiliates, a number exceeded by only Virginia It all began with the formation of the American and Ohio. Colonization Society (ACS) at Washington, D.C., in One Kentucky emigrant to Liberia was Milly 1816. As one may recall, the Haitian Revolution Crawford, an “octoroon” (one-eighth black) from from 1790-1804 not only freed some 500,000 slaves Lexington, who passed through Frankfort on March that resulted in not only the restructuring of the 10, 1833. An example of what has been called the social classes, but in creating the second republic in “Scandalous Paradox,” Crawford wrote that many the Western Hemisphere, it sent shock waves and women were serving as heads of the families that undermined the confidence of the financial systems included children of slave owners.1 of Europe in regard to investing in slavery. Hence, Crawford followed a circuitous route from Ken- tucky to Liberia. From Frankfort, she and her four children—Sinthia, Gibert, George, and Henry—set out for Louisville, where they boarded the river boat Mediterranean. Upon arriving in New Orleans, they were joined by 27 other immigrants, “6 from TN, 19 from OH, 2 from New Orleans.” The group boarded the brig Ajax on April 20, 1833, for Liberia. White missionaries A.H. Savage and H.D. King, agents for the Tennessee Coloniza- tion Society, spearheaded their embarkation: “The cost of the expedition ($5,000) was defrayed by the American Colonization Society with a donation of $2,300 from KY Colonization Society. Cholera, Cartographic Laboratory, University of Wisconsin-Madison West Africa in the Eighteenth and Nineteenth whooping cough, or a bowel disorder forced the brig Centuries to put for many days at a West Indian island and 30 2004 Kentucky Ancestors V39-4 174 Kentucky African American Immigrants to Liberia, continued_______ (mostly children) died during the passage.”2 Ship records show that 119 passengers from Kentucky arrived in Liberia on July 11, 1833: “16 born free, the rest manumitted—24 by Richard Bibb (a white clergyman from Logan Co. who gave them clothes & $400); 12 by William O. Dudley (a planter in Adair Co.); and 7 by Mary O. Wickliffe of Lexington, Kentucky. The settlers were put under quarantine upon arrival by Dr. Mechlin who then sent them to Caldwell & Millsburg on the St. Paul’s River (formerly Bassa country) where 26 soon died, 2 others returned to the US, and 1 migrated to [Freetown] Sierra Leone.”3 Much of this data is reflected in the list. By 1832, Kentucky had a slave population of 170,130, which amounted to 25 percent of the total population.4 The state sent 193 immigrants to Liberia in 1833 and 1840-41, which amounted to Cartographic Laboratory, University of Wisconsin-Madison 4.3 percent of the total.5 Languages and Ethnic Groups in Liberia Although 4,571 emigrants arrived between 1820 and 1843, mortality had reduced the population to left bank of the St. Paul River and Millsberg on the only 1,819 by the latter year, giving the settlement right bank and later at Bassa and Monrovia. its reputation as the “Black Man’s Grave.”6 Monrovia became the capital of Africa’s first republic The Kentucky groups settled at Caldwell on the when Liberia was founded in 1847. Wickliffe-Preston Family Papers, Box 39, University of Kentucky Special Collections and Archives Milly Crawford on her way to Liberia from Lexington Kentucky A letter to Mary Owen Todd Russell Wickliffe March 10 1833 Saterday night My Dear Misstress we have all arrived at frankfort in safety and health little George Lucy and all the chil- dren are well. My dear Misstress how shall we thank you for all your kindness too us. We sometimes despond being all females and children haveing no male protecter of our own. but we try to put our trust in the Al- mighty and go on in his srength. whatever betide us. My Dear Mystress you have done your whole duty. and may the [Almighty] bless and reward you a thousand fold. Lucy all love and thanks to you for your goodness care and kindness to us all. the children all desires me remember them to Mystress. Mystress we all desire you thank Mayster for his goodness and kindness to us. I hope the Lord will bless him give our love to miss Margaret miss Mary Mys Sally Wooly [Robert Wickliffe’s three living white children] and all our friends. the Lord has raised up manny friend to us in fankford we are treated with so much kindness by all who see us. the gentleman at whose house we now lodge Mr Gray trets us with the utmost kindness - he had us all in his dining room prayed with and for us - the gentleman you wrote too received your letter recommending us to him he took us home with him gave us supper and we returned again mr grays you will hear again from us att Louisville May the bless preserve and reward you for all kindness is the prare of your unworthy but affecunate servant Milly C 175 2004 Kentucky Ancestors V39-4 Kentucky African American Immigrants to Liberia, continued_______ In 1853, J.D. Simpson founded a new settlement on the right bank of the St. Paul River. It came to be called Clay Ashland and attracted both New York and Kentucky emigrants.7 Augustus Houston, the first person to jump off the boat at Clay Ashland said, “Well, I’m free.”8 The settlement was also an attraction for native Africans, who took advantage of their relationships with settlers from the United States. One man, asked if he would return to his former country in Africa, replied: “No, if I go back to my country, they make me slave—I am here free—no one dare trouble me. I got my land—my wife—my children learn book—I am here a white man.”9 The purpose of this document is to provide a list of those Kentucky African Americans who dared to make this risky “return” to Liberia between 1833 and 1841. 1 Wickliffe-Preston Family Papers, Box 39, University of Kentucky Special Collections and Archives. Milly Crawford’s Cartographic Laboratory, University of Wisconsin-Madison letter appears on the website: www.uky.edu/LCC/HIS/scraps/ St. Paul River Settlements in the Nineteenth Century, liberia. See also Evans, William McKee. “From the Land of including Clay-Ashland Canaan to the Land of Guinea: The Strange Odyssey of the 5 Shick, Tom W., “A Quantitative analysis of Liberian “Sons of Ham.” The American Historical Review. Vol. 85:1 colonization from 1820 to 1843, with special reference to (February 1980), pages 19-20. mortality.” Journal of African History, Vol. XII, No. 1, pages 2 Wickliffe-Preston Family Papers. 45-60. 3 Wickliffe-Preston Family Papers. 6 Patton, Adell Jr., “Firestone Rubber, Little Rock, And the 4 Lucas, Marion B. A History of Blacks in Kentucky. Vol. 1: Evolution of Racists Ideas In Liberia, West Africa: The First From Slavery to Segregation. Frankfort: Kentucky Historical Civil Rights Law In Africa and Neglected Theme in African Society, 1992. See also KAAHT. Kentucky’s African American History” :1-46 (forthcoming). Heritage A Timeline. Kentucky Historical Society An agency of 7 Lucas, Marion B. A History of Blacks in Kentucky. Vol. 1: the Education, Arts & Humanities Cabinet, 100 West From Slavery to Segregation. Frankfort: Kentucky Historical Broadway, Frankfort, KY 40601, (502) 564-1792. Society, 1992., pages 5-9. 8 Shick, Tom W. Behold the Promised Land: A History of Afro-American Settler Society in Nineteenth-Century Liberia. Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins University Press, 1980, p. 77. 9 Shick, Tom W. “A Quantitative analysis of Liberian colonization from 1820 to 1843, with special reference to mortality.” Journal of African History. Vol. XII, No. 1, p. 59. Cartographic Laboratory, University of Wisconsin-Madison Liberia Settler Enclaves, 1843. Note Kentucky Immigrants Sites at Monrovia, and Millsburg and Caldwell on the St. Paul River. 2004 Kentucky Ancestors V39-4 176 Kentucky African American Immigrants to Liberia, continued_______ Source: Liberian Studies Research Working Paper No. 2 Emigrants to Liberia 1820 to 1843 An Alphabetical Listing By Tom W. Shick Published by the Department of Anthropology University of Delaware By Liberian Studies Association in America, Inc. An Explanation of the table by column ARR PT: This column gives the name of the particular settlement in Liberia to which the emi- Name: Each emigrant is listed by name in alpha- grant first arrived: betical order. Bassa Cv Bassa. Cove In all cases where possible I have listed the emi- Millsbrg Millsberg grants with their last name first and first name last. N. Georgia North Georgia There are, however, cases where only one name was Edina, G. B. Edina, Grand Bassa recorded. Children with no recorded first name are listed with their last name followed by infant or unk. GD Bassa: Grand Bassa (unknown) Literacy: This column gives information regarding Age: Ages are listed as given in the table. Wher- ever 99 is found it means that the age of the particu- lar emigrant is unknown rather than 99 years of age. Origin: This column refers to the place that the emigrants were recorded as being from before their emigration to Liberia. In most cases this means the state in the United States. Some abbreviations were necessary in this column: Louis. Louisiana N. C. North Carolina S. C. South Carolina Tenn. Tennessee N Y New York Miss. Mississippi Wash.DC Washington, D.C Status: This column refers to the personal status of the individual emigrants: freeborn: emigrants that were not born into slavery. Alfred Francis Russell, president of emancipated: emigrants that were generally freed Liberia from 1883 to 1884, was born in for the expressed purpose of deportation to Liberia. Lexington and died on 4 April 1884. 177 2004 Kentucky Ancestors V39-4 Kentucky African American Immigrants to Liberia, continued_______ the extent of literacy for each emigrant where digits of the date holds in this case as it did in the known: case of listing the date of death. Again, 99 is used to Illitrat: Illiterate denote that no information is available. Librl Ed: Liberal Education Place: This column gives the place of removal for Occup: This column refers to the occupational those emigrants that left the settlements. skills of each emigrant. No abbreviations are used U. S. United States here. Sierra L Sierra Leone C Palmas Cape Palmas Death: This designation refers to the year in Br. Accra British Accra which each emigrant died where such information is Frndo Po Fernando Po known. All deaths would have occurred in the 1800’s, therefore only the last two digits are shown: Ship: In this column the name of the ship on 37 would then mean 1837. All cases where 99 which each emigrant was brought to the Liberian appears means that the date of death unknown. settlements is listed. No abbreviations are used here. Cause (D): This category gives the stated cause of Date (A) : This last column gives the date of death where known. No abbreviations are used here. arrival in the Liberian settlements for each emigrant. DT (R): This column gives the date of removal For example: 8/22/26 would mean August 22, 1826. for any emigrants known to have left the Liberian Whenever 99 is found in the date of arrival it means settlements after arriving. that that particular part of the date is unknown. The same procedure of showing only the last two Name Age Origin Status Arr*pt Occup Death Cause/(D) DT/(R) Place/(R) Ship Date (A) Adams, George 17 Ky Freeborn Caldwell Farmer 37 Consumption 99 Unknown American 6/26/33 Adams, George 9 Ky Freeborn Caldwell Unknown 37 Anasarca 99 Unkown America 6/26/33 Adams, Hannah 11 Ky Freeborn Caldwell Unknown 38 Consumption 99 Unknown American 6/26/33 Adams, Rachel 7 Ky Freeborn Caldwell Unknown 37 Fever 99 Unknown American 6/23/33 Adams, Sarah 50 Ky Freeborn Caldwell Unknown 33 Fever 99 Unkown American 6/23/33 Anderson,Ameila 4 Ky Emancipated Caldwell Unknown 37 Diseased Brain 99 Unknown American 6/26/33 Anderson,Elizabeth 3 Ky Emancipated Caldwell Unknown 99 Deranged Brain 99 Unknown American 6/26/33 Anerson, Martin 25 Ky Emancipated Caldwell Unknown 39 Diseased Brain 99 Unknown American 6/26/33 Anerson, Rachel 0 Ky Emancipated Caldwell Unknown 33 Fever 99 Unknown American 6/26/33 Baker, Eleanor 37 Ky Emancipated Caldwell Unknown 38 Diseased Brain 99 Unknown American 6/26/33 Baker, Lewis 35 Ky Emancipated Caldwell Unknown 39 Disased Brain 99 Unknown American 6/26/33 Baker, Thomas 30 Ky Emancipated Cladwell Unknown 33 Fever 99 Unknown American 6/26/33 Bates, Allen 57 Ky Unknown Caldwell Farmer 33 Fever 99 Unknown American 6/26/33 Bates, Andrew 14 Ky Unknown Caldwell Unknown 33 Fever 99 Unknown Americaan 6/26/33 Bates, Clarinda 5 Ky Unknown Caldwell Unknown 99 Whooping cough 99 Unknown American 6/26/33 Bates, Evander 2 Ky Unknown Caldwell Unknown 33 Fever 99 Unknown American 6/26/33 Bates, James 6 Ky Unknown Caldwell Unknown 33 Fever 99 Unknown American 6/26/33 Bates, Jane 25 Ky Unknown Caldwell Unknown 99 Unknown 99 Unknown American 6/26/33 Bates, Marshall 12 Ky Unknown Caldwell Unknown 99 Consumption 99 Unknown American 6/26/33 Bates, Martha 47 Ky Unknown Caldwell Unknown 33 Fever 99 Unknown American 6/26/33 Bibb, Adam 3 Ky Emancipated Cladwell Unknown 36 Pleurisy 99 Unknown American 6/26/33 Bibb, Amanda 6 Ky Emancipated Caldwell Unknown 99 Unknown 99 Unknown American 6/26/33 Bibb, Anderson 8 Ky Emancipated Caldwell Unknown 34 Unknown 99 Unknown American 6/26/33 Bibb, Anderson 38 Ky Emancipated Caldwell Farmer 38 Diseased Brain 99 Unknown American 6/26/33 2004 Kentucky Ancestors V39-4 178 Kentucky African American Immigrants to Liberia, continued_______ Name Age Origin Status Arr*pt Occup Death Cause/(D) DT/(R)Place/(R) Ship Date (A) Bibb, Catherine 25 Ky Emancipatd Caldwell Unknown 99 Unknown 99 Unknown American 6/26/33 Bibb, Charity 6 Ky Emancipatd Caldwell Unknown 36 Unknown 99 Unknown American 6/26/33 Bibb, Eleanor 5 Ky Unknown Caldwell Unknown 99 Unknown 99 Unknown American 6/26/33 Bibb, Elizabeth 24 Ky Eamancipatd Caldwell Unknown 38 Diseased Brain 99 Unknown American 6/26/33 Bibb, George 5 Ky Emancipatd Caldwell Unknown 39 Pleurisy0 99 Unknown American 6/26/33 Bibb, Hannah 28 Ky Unknown Caldwell Unknown 99 Unknown 99 Unknown American 6/26/33 Bibb, James H. 3 Ky Unknown Caldwell Unknown 99 Unknown 99 Unknown American 6/26/33 Bibb, Jane 7 Ky Emancipatd Caldwell Unknown 99 Unknown 99 Unknown American 6/26/33 Bibb, John 13 Ky Emancipatd Caldwell Farmer 99 Unknown 99 Unknown American 6/26/33 Bibb, lavinia 15 Ky Emancipatd Caldwell Unknown 99 Unknown 37 C Palmas American 6/26/33 Bibb, Lucretia 12 Ky Emancipatd Caldwell Unknown 99 Unknown 99 Unknown American 6/26/33 Bibb, Lydia 10 Ky Emancipatd Caldwell Unknown 99 Unknown 99 Unknown American 6/26/33 Bibb, Mary 31 Ky Emancipatd Caldwell Unknown 99 whooping 99 Unknown American 6/26/33 Bibb, Oscar 1 Ky Emancipatd Caldwell Unknown 33 Fever 99 Unknown American 6/26/33 Bibb, Patience 21 Ky Emancipatd Caldwell Unknown 99 Unknown 99 Unknown American 6/26/33 Bibb, Phillis 28 Ky Emancipatd Caldwell Unknown 99 Unknown 37 C Palmas American 6/26/33 Bibb, Thomas 2 Ky Eemancipatd Caldwell Unknown 35 Unknown 99 Unknown American 6/26/33 Bibb, Wesley 8 Ky Emancipatd Caldwell Unknown 38 Pleursiy 99 Unknown American 6/26/33 Bibb, William 24 Ky Emancipatd Caldwell Farmer 37 brain disease 99 Unknown American 6/26/33 Bibb, William 8 Ky Emancipatd Caldwell Unknown 99 Unknown 99 Unknown American 6/26/33 Blackburn, Clara 42 Ky Emancipatd Caldwell Unknown 33 Fever 99 Unknown American 6/26/33 Blackburn, Joseph 42 Ky Emancipatd Caldwell Unknown 39 Decline 99 Unknown American 6/26/33 Blair, Catherine 5 Ky Unknown Bassa CV Unknown 99 Unknown 99 Unknown Saluda 3/30/40 Blair, Jesse 26 Ky Unknown Bassa CV Unknown 99 Unknown 99 Unknown Saluda 3/30/40 Caldwell America 21 Ky Unknown Caldwell Unknown 99 Unknown 33 U.S. American 6/26/33 Caldwell, Catherine 3 Ky Emancipatd Caldwell Unknown 33 Fever 99 Unknown American 6/26/33 Caldwell, Chaney 43 Ky Emancipatd Caldwell Unknown 33 Fever 99 Unknown American 6/26/33 Caldwell, Jacob 27 Ky Emancptd Caldwell Unknown 99 Unknown 33 U.S. American 6/26/33 Carroll, Charles 5 Ky Unknown Caldwell Unknown 33 Fever 99 Unknown American 6/26/33 Crawford, Amelia 30 Ky Emancptd Monrovia Unknown 99 Unknown 99 Unknown American 6/26/33 Curd, Clara 23 Ky Emancptd Monrovia Unknown 99 Unknown 99 Unknown Barque Union 7/1/41 Curd, Frederick 22 Ky Emancptd Monrovia Farmer 99 Unknown 42 U.S. Barque Union 7/1/41 Curd, Jennett 16 Ky Emancptd Monrovia Unknown 41 Anasarca 99 Unknown Barque Union 7/1/41 Curd, John L. 17 Ky Emancptd Monrovia Unknown 43 Disease Lungs 99 Unknown Barque Union 7/1/41 Curd, Margaret 20 Ky Emancptd Monrovia Unknown 99 Unknown 99 Unknown Barque Union 7/1/41 Curd, Matilda 13 Ky Emancptd Monrovia Unknown 99 Unknown 99 Unknown Barque Union 7/1/41 Curd, Nicholas 18 Ky Emancptd Monrovia Farmer 99 Unknown 99 Unknown Barque Union 7/1/41 Curd, Susan 50 Ky Emancptd Monrovia Unknown 99 Unknown 99 Unknown Barque Union 7/1/41 Curd, Thomas 20 Ky Emancptd Monrovia Farmer 99 Unknown 99 Unknown Barque Union 7/1/41 Curd, Unk. 12 Ky Emancptd Monrovia Unknown 99 Unknown 99 Unknown Barque Union 7/1/41 Curd, Unk. 21 Ky Emancptd Monrovia Farmer 99 Unknown 99 Unknown Barque Union 7/1/41 Curd, William 13 Ky Emancptd Monrovia Farmer 99 Unknown 41 CPalmas Barque Union 7/1/41 Curd, Yorick 28 Ky Emancptd Monrovia Farmer 99 Unknown 99 Unknown Barque Union 7/1/41 Dixon, Ann 15 Ky Emancptd Caldwell Unknown 33 Fever 99 Unknown Barque Union 6/26/33 Dixon, Moses 38 Ky Emancptd Caldwell Unknown 33 Fever 99 Unknown American 6/26/33 Dixon, Peter 10 Ky Emancptd Caldwell Unknown 33 Fever 99 Unknown American 6/26/33 Dudley, Alfred 11 Ky Emancptd Caldwell Unknown 33 Whooping cough 99 Unknown American 6/26/33 179 2004 Kentucky Ancestors V39-4 Kentucky African American Immigrants to Liberia, continued_______ Name Age Origin Status Arr*pt Occup Death Cause/(D) DT/(R) Place/(R) Ship Date (A) Dudley, Flora 33 Ky Emancptd Caldwell Unknown 33 Whooping cough 99 Unknown American 6/26/33 Dudley, Francis 3 Ky Emancptd Caldwell Unknown 99 Unknown 99 Unknown American 6/26/33 Dudley, Malisa 2 Ky Emancptd Caldwell Unknown 33 Unknown 99 Unknown American 6/26/33 Dudley, Martha 9 Ky Emancptd Caldwell Unknown 33 Whooping cough 99 Unkown American 6/26/33 Dudley, Moses 34 Ky Emancptd Caldwell Unknown 33 Whooping cough 99 Unknown American 6/26/33 Dudley, Sarah 5 Ky Emancptd Caldwell Unknown 33 Whooping cough 99 Unknown American 6/26/33 Fletcher, Abraham 34 Ky Freeborn Caldwell Unknown 37 Diseased brain 99 Unknown American 6/26/33 Fletcher, Isaac 4 Ky Emancptd Caldwell Unknown 33 Whooping cough 99 Unknown American 6/26/33 Fletcher, John 8 Ky Eamancptd Caldwell Unknown 33 Fever 99 Unknown American 6/26/33 Fletcher, Leonard 6 Ky Emancptd Caldwell Unknown 33 Fever 99 Unknown American 6/26/33 Fletcher, Malinda 2 Ky Emancptd Caldwell Unknown 33 Whooping cough 99 Unknown American 6/26/33 Fletcher, Rachel 31 Ky Emancptd Caldwell Unknown 33 Fever 99 Unknown American 6/26/33 Granville, Arther 4 Ky Emancptd Caldwell Unknown 99 Worms 99 Unknown American 6/26/33 Green, Henry 39 Ky Emancptd Bassa CV Unknown 99 Unknown 99 Unknown Saluda 3/30/40 Greenfield, William 1 Ky Emancptd Caldwell Unknown 99 Worms 99 Unknown American 6/26/33 Guess, Charles 22 Ky Emancptd Bassa CV Plasterer 99 Unkown 99 Unknown Saluda 3/30/40 Harden, Amelia 1 Ky Emancptd Caldwell Unknown 99 Worms 99 Unknown American 6/26/33 Harden, Edith 26 Ky Unknown Caldwell Unknown 99 Cholera 99 Unknown American 6/26/33 Harden, Martha 3 Ky Unknown Caldwell Unknown 37 Unknown 99 Unknown American 6/26/33 Hobson, John 35 Ky Unknown Caldwell Farmer 33 Fever 99 Unknown American 6/26/33 Jacobs, Jane E. 4 Ky Emancptd Caldwell Unknown 33 Fever 99 Unknown American 6/26/33 Jacobs, John N 2 Ky Emancptd Caldwell Unknown 33 Whooping cough 99 Unknown American 6/26/33 Jacobs, Susan 22 Ky Emancptd Caldwell Unknown 36 Decline 99 Unknown American 6/26/33 Jones, Alvin 23 Ky Emancptd Caldwell Unknown 33 Cholera 99 Unknown American 6/26/33 Jones, James 2 Ky Emancptd Caldwell Unknown 33 Cholera 99 Unknown American 6/26/33 Jones, Samuel 35 Ky Emancptd Caldwell Farmer 99 Unknown 33 U.S. American 6/26/33 Markee, Alexander 20 Ky Unknown Bassa CV Unknown 40 Fever 99 Unknown Saluda 3/30/40 Markee, George 18 Ky Unknown Bassa CV Unknown 40 Fever 99 Unknown Saluda 3/30/40 Markee, H. 26 Ky Unknown Bassa CV Unkown 99 Unknown 99 Unknown Saluda 3/30/40 Morton, Harriet 4 Ky Emancptd Caldwell Unknown 99 Unknown 99 Unkown American 6/26/33 Morton, James 12 Ky Emancptd Caldwell Farmer 99 Unknown 99 Unknown American 6/26/33 Morton, Janes S. 2 Ky Emancptd Caldwell Unknown 40 Unknown 99 Unknown American 6/26/33 Morton, Lewis 6 Ky Emancptd Caldwell Unknown 99 Unknown 99 Unknown American 6/26/33 Morton, Lorinda 8 Ky Emancptd Caldwell Unknown 37 Brain Diseased 99 Unknown American 6/26/33 Morton, Lucinda 1 Ky Emancptd Caldwell Unknown 99 Whooping Cough 99 Unknown American 6/26/33 Morton, Richard 0 Ky Emancptd Caldwell Unknown 99 Unknown 99 Unknown American 6/26/33 Nelson, Cyrus 39 Ky Freeborn Millsbrg Unknown 99 Unknown 99 Unknown American 6/26/33 Nelson, Joseph 5 Ky Freeborn Millsbrg Unknown 99 Unknown 99 Unknown American 6/26/33 Nelson, Lucinda 13 Ky Freeborn Millsbrg Unknown 99 Unknown 99 Unknown American 6/26/33 Nelson, Mary 10 Ky Freeborn Millsbrg Unknown 99 Unknown 99 Unknown American 6/26/33 Nelson, Nancy 7 Ky Freeborn Millsbrg Unknown 99 Unknown 99 Unknown American 6/26/33 Nelson, Rachel 37 Ky Freeborn Millsbrg Unknown 43 Decline 99 Unknown American 6/26/33 Nelson, Robert 1 Ky Freeborn Millsbrg Unknown 99 Unknown 99 Unknown American 6/26/33 Nelson, Sarah 56 Ky Freeborn Millsbrg Unknown 42 Decline 99 Unknown American 6/26/33 Whitaker, Hannah 17 Ky Unknown Bassa CV Unknown 40 Fever 99 Unknown Saluda 3/30/40 Whitaker, Harriet 12 Ky Unknown Bassa CV Unknown 40 Fever 99 Unknown Saluda 3/30/40 Whitaker, Harriet A. 14 Ky Unknown Bassa CV Unknown 99 Unknown 99 Unknown Saluda 3/30/40 2004 Kentucky Ancestors V39-4 180

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The Alvey Family of England, Maryland, and Kentucky, Part Five. Robert Lee Alvey Sr 4 Lucas, Marion B. A History of Blacks in Kentucky. Vol. 1: From Slavery
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