StewartThe 5 Children of JOHN STEWART & HANNAH (BOONE) STEWART (1746-1828)
I?edI
STEWART, SARAH
b MM/DEC 1765 Rowan County, North Carolina
I w5 natzm G . 1 S"w"c,� P,-
STEWART, MARY
b 1761 Rowan County, North Carolina
IV%O auo,)STEWART,
b
d
WILLIAM BOONE
1767 Rowan County, North Carolina
STEWART, RACHEL
b 1768 Rowan County, North Carolina
d
STEWART,4&WELIZABETH Yj'N{'N
b 25 FEB 1770 Rowan County, North Carolina
d Mat QkpaT C0 -
The 4 Children of RICHARD PENNINGTON & HANNAH
married: c 1785 WilkesCo,NC
JOHN OBSORNE
b A,,•J IL,11433,
married: c 1785 WilkesCo,NC
SAMUEL OSBORNEC
b dtn Cc• , Uu .
d
married: c 1790
TABITHA BRAINE
b
d
married: c 1786 WilkesCo,NC
JAMES KING
b
d
married: pp c 1791 KY
ANr4�n..d}wt6 ..... .
b q-6. 1167 Cn&,,L16 1-•• r1 -C,
d Igyo s NIA Le. C1ts5s,.ni
(BOONE) STEWART PENNINGTON
PENNINGTON, JOSHUA�t�y•.��O`A6.z , 1 -1 -Ig r„,,,,,, Cfv.ljmmarried: (I) CIe�-"OiC•KY
b 23 DEC 1781(?) S}i or'�Car i.na (1) MARY (POLLY) GIST
c- T White + T """S' b �ny*^K Gr. 15r��•
d • IQGG - IA>�*M Co • , \uw�,..ls�.t d Io - to
married:(2) kzAwv„&.TN 141it1
(2) SARAH HOWARD
b
d
PENNINGTON, DANIEL
b 03 DEC 1781 Wilkes County, North Carolina
d c i•8U7 White County, Tennessee
�i - 7,1, 1$6'5 1 Ni ~t (a - K"1
PENNINGTON, JOHN STEWART eVtv-45a, Co. Vra
b 10 JUN 1784 W ,r lina
d 20 SEP 1859 (-�` p{� C . 3%A %,
PENNINGTON, ABIGAIL , Co• VA
b 21 JAN 1787win-ezrxri� htor-torna•rffi•i•na
married: 26,)4549
( p?) M"~*d
ESTHER FRAfLEY,
4`t. -\5,- \'i Q b
6'c'% sjn U • va�
(1�vw1 4 , 14154
r% ..,w6 �+ K►
married: 5- 2.41807
JEMIMA HOUSER
b J,y. LI . 118g
kti.b,.
d 5111. L21 185L
0,00-4
married: 12 ^26- 1$NKY'� �0
WILLIAM GIST,
b CYvtvw �. 1l+�swYt
d
OR.VIE CO. PUBLIC LJBRARY
MOCKSVILLE. N4
Compiled November 1983 with information available as of that date
Howell Boone
Sunday, October 7, 1984
Dear Howell Boone,
Your letter and information about the events to celebrate
Daniel Boone's 250th birthday came in the mail October 4th.
What a good, kind man Mr. Johnson is, and how thoughtful to
share my letter with you and bring us together. Now I have
written him to enter the Turkey -shoot on October 20 as the
representative of the descendents of Hannah oone ( Stewart )
penning6on.
To answer your questional Yes, the " P " does .stand for
Pennington; yes, I am a descendent of Hannah oone ( Stewart )
ennington, and yes, am able to furnish you information of
our family. We are known as the Boone-renningtons.
Allow me to tell you of our family and myself for you have a
right to know how I happen to have so much knowlidge of our
family.. To begin, my great -great grandfather, ohn Stewart
Pennington, always known as Stewart, was named for Hannah's
first husband, John Stewart, because he had no sons. He was
an educated man as were his two older brothers and they kept
records.. Stewartgave the records to his second son, my great-
grandf�her Thos. Jefferson -Pennington ( we were Jeffersonian
Democrats and he gave them to my grandfather, the first child
of his second marriage, and grandpa gave them to my father, his
youngest son. On my father's 90th birthday in 1970, he entrusted
the recDvds to me. My father had always intended to write a
history of our family and he hoped I would locate as many members
of the family as possible to be able to write a good history.
I have been trying and so far have located kin in eighteen states
and it has been a joy for them and me to be in touch with one
another, knots what happened, feel the pleasure of being a family.
There is that I began accompanyying my grandfather and father as
they tended the graves in the Pennington Point and the Industry
cemetaries ( founded by,Stewart and Thos. Jefferson ) when I was
four. My father had a �' ord, the model T touring car, to take us.
Going t. the cemetaries was a great treat for me because Grandpa
told me stories about those whose graves we were tending. He
liked best to tell me of his grandfather, Stewart, and to tell me
the stories of he family Stewart told him. My grandfather was
seventeen when Stewart died and he told me the one place he always
wanted to be was with his grandfather, doing as he did, and
listening to him. Grandpa would sit back on his heels to rest
a bit and say " We are keeping their memory green ".
There is that, when my father moved us to Madison, 4is cons in,
we were lonesome for our family and my father often repeated
the stories to keep our family fresh in our minds. And the high
point} of the year was when we went back 11 home " to visit and
take grandpa to tend the old graves. My grandfather died in
1933 when I was twenty-one and he, ninety-one years of age.
I remember one day asking Grandpa where the Penningtons lived
2.
in England before coming to this country and he answered
" Cumberland ". Since, I have learned he was right and that
Penningtons lived in now Cumbria Co., gagland, since the 1200s.
I remember being _thrilled the first time I crossed the Cumberland,
Clinch, Powell, Holston and New Rivers, the rivers in Grandpa's
stories. Two years ago, when I went " home " , a fourth cousin
took me to visit the Pennington Point cemetary and. as I stood
beside the graves of my great -great-grandparents, looked back
to the east and thought how far they had come, how much the had
done, he, Stewart, born in 1784 on the New River at Grassy reek
just ncrth of the Carolina border in Virginia, and she,TJemima,
born in 1788 in the rolling wooded hills of White Co., Tennessee.
I hoped but knew I could never measure up to them.
To begin the information I have for you: John Stewart marf1ied
Hannah Boone Feb. 14, 1765, in Rowan Co. North Carolina. He is
said to have been born in 1744 in Pennsylvania. He and Hannah
had four children, Sarah, Mary, Rachel and Elizabeth Ann, all
born in Rowan County,
Sarah, always spoken of as Sally, was born in December, 1765,
and in 1782, she married John Osborn, born April 16, 1763, in
Shenandoah in Valley Co., Virginia. He served in the same militia,
the Montgomery Co., Va., militia under his uncle, Ca tain Enoch
Osborn, as did Richard enninf;ton and his brothers, Kshua, Robert
and Timothy. Sally and John had six sons and four daughters.
They migrated to the North Fork of the New River with Richard and
Hannah, and then migrated with them to Kentucky in 1?97t settling
with them in Monroe, then Barren, Co., Ky. I will mention Monroe
is bordered on the south by Tennessee and on the east by the
Cumberland River before it makes its great bend towards Nashville.
Later, they farmed across the border in now Macon Co., Tennessee,
where Sally is buried having died in 1815. John went first to
Indiana and then to Iowa where he died in 1854. He has a monument
as a veteran of the Revolution at Center Point, Linn Co., Iowa.
I"lany of his and Sally's descendents live today in Linn Co. and the
surrounding cowry -side.
Mary ( bunt Polly ) was born in 1767. We don't have the date of
her marriage to Soloman Osborn but we know he was older than she
and born in Lee Co., Va., and that he was first cousin to John
Osborn. They, too, had six sons and four daughters, and they went
with Richard and Hannah to now Ashe Co. North Carolina and then to
now Monroe Co. Ky. When they were old, the went with their
children to Vermillion Co., Illinois where all died in 1812,
Some of her children settled around karietta in Yulton Co., llinoi q..
which is adjacent to eastern McDonough Co. where we settled.
Our family has always known these Osborns well. My father went to m ,
school with Robert and called him cousin. Others of Aunt Polly's :3 Z'
children and grandchildren migrated to Idaho, Oregon and Washington.0
M
I don't know much of Rachel. My grandfather didn't speak of her. �
There is a letter my great-grandfather wrote for his father to 0
Dr. Draper ( Draper Mss.) in 185. stating Rachel married a man Z30.
aed King and he thought she had two children, Sally and Samuel, :s:,
.
A
3•
and he thought they lived in Missouri.
Elizabeth Ann ( Aunt Betsy ) was born as your records show, on
February 25, 1770, after her father was killed in Kentucky.
You may not know this story so I will tell it to you. John
Stewart, described by Joshua Pennington in a letter written to
Dr. Draper in 1854, as an excellent woodsman and hunter, was
Daniel's companion into Kentucky in the fall of 1769• He went
off hunting and never returned and Daniel searched for him to
no avail. Some years later, a skeleton was found in a hollow
sycamore tree on the south-east side of Big nock Castle in the
Rock Castle River area where Daniel and John had been exploring.
The upper left bone of the arm was broken and in thetree was a
saddle, bridle and a powder horn, the latter with a brass band
with the initials " J. S. " Since John Stewart was known to
have such a powder horn, it is believed the skeleton was his.
We feel he had flesh wounds from a fight with Indians, took
refuge in the tree after turning his horse loose, and bled to
death. John Stewart had also been Daniel's companion on an
exploratory trip to klorida, and he led explorers on one occasion
all the way to the Mississippi River.
Betsy's life has alwa s seemed romantic to me. When she was
sixteen, she married ames Lewis who was born Sept 6, 1767 in
Granville Co., worth Carolina, cousin of Meriwether Lewis.
They had nine sons and three daughters. All of their children
were very tall, the three girls very dark and the nine bo s with
reddish -gold hair. The lived in now Ashe Co., close to iXchard
and Hannah and went with them to Monroe Co., Ky. with them, then
to Indiana and by 1800er-tea, they were in Boone C0.9 Missouri,
and we know they went to visit Daniel since this was the summer
he died. They then went south to Oaage - Co. , Missouri, and then
to Platte Co., where they settled outside Platt City on the river.
There is record of them as members of the Ashland church, the oldest
Christian church in Missuuti, and record that James willed land
for a school. Bath Aunt Betsy and James Lewis died in the 18400
and were buried outside Platt City but a cousin wrote a highway
had been put through the eemetary and the graves of many of their
children gone along with theirs. Many of their descendents still
live in and around Platt City while others are in Nebraska, Kansas
and California. This family seems to have always done things
with flags flying; they have more war heroes and more community
leaders than the rest of us. I like to think of James Pennington
Lewis III, born in 18.7, and so resolute in his ambition, he
walled close to a hundred miles from his home in Plattsmouth,
Nebraska, to Oregon, Missouri, to go to school and become a teacher.
Nowhere in our records is there mention of a William Boone Stewart
or a Tabitha as your records show. A few years ago, I had a
letter from the Vice chancellor of the university at Boone who
sent information he had of Richard Wennington. He mentioned there
was a Tabitha Pennington in the reaches of his family but she
DAVIE CO. PUBLIC LIBRARY
MOCKSVILLE, NC
4•
was not of our Penningtons but, as I recall, the Benedah
Wennington family, didtant cousins of Hichard and his brothers.
You will tell me, won't you, where there is record of Hannah's
giving birth to a son. It is disturbing as you are well able
to imagine since we have no record of a son born to John Stewart.
Also there is that Richard named his son for John Stewart because
John had no sons to carry his name forward and in every branch of
our family, there has been a Stewart since.
By now, you understand why I wrote Mr. Johnson you would need
to find a comfortable chair meaning there is a great deal to tell
you even in a short version of our family.
Richard Pennin ton and Hannah Boone Stewart were married in 1777
in Rowan Co., orth Carolina. ( In the first letter their son,
Daniel Pennington, wrote to Dr. Draper in 1853, he writes " they
were married nine miles of Shallow Ford, above the ford on the
Yadkin River, Rowan City, North Carolina ". I hope you nV someone
will be able to tell me where that is since I have looked and looked.
I have liked to think the were married at the ome or Mary Boone
and her husband, William ryan, known to us as Col. Billy Bryan,
since Stewart told my grandfather these sisters.were especially
close. ) Richard and Hannah had three sons and a daughter,
Joshua, born in 1778; Daniel born in 1781; John Stewart born in
1784, and Abigail born in 1787. From 1777 to 1794, they lived,
farmed and raised livestock in now Grayson Co., Va., on the New
River " at the mouth of Grassy Creek " according to tax records.
In 1794, they moved to the North Fort of the New River in now
Ashe Co., North Carolina, land john sborn is said to have seen
when he was charged with rooting out Tories after the Revolution.
I will mention there was a log church used as a school on both of
Richard's and Hannah's farms. On J1zxzmJDrr August 7.9 1797 , they
set out for Kentucky going first to Hryan's Station, the home of
Marg Boone and her husband, Col. Hilly Bryan, a few miles north
of Lexington.
Let's pause for a light touch, something to bring a smile.
I have photo -co ies of the letters, Joshua, Daniel, Stewart and
Stewart s son, Thos. Jefferson Pennington wrote to Dr. Draper in
1853 and 1854 from their farm homes in Tennessee, Aentucky and
Illinois when they were old men the brothers, that is. Dr. Draper
was secretary of the Wisconsin Historical Society. He wanted to
write a biography of Daniel Boone and wrote lists of questions to
everyone he could locate who knew Daniel including the brothers.
Daniel Pennington was sick in 1854 and had his neighbor, Phillip
Emmert write for him. Apparently, Lr. D
Draper asked if Daniel knew
his uncle and what his uncle had said* his is what Daniel Pennington
responded: 11I was in company with Col. Boone in 1798 in the month
of February in Lexington, Kentucky, and had much conversation with
him on matters of minor importance. If I could see you and
converse with you perhaps you might gather something from it, but
I could not write the little social conversations i had with him.
DAVIE CO. PUBLIC LIBRARY
MOCKSVUE, NO
5.
It would look too simple. I would be wasting time and paper to
no profit, " One day when my father was old here in Florida,
a history buff he didn't know was 11 pumping " him for details of
our family. When he left, I asked my father why he hadn't told
more. Bland as a summer's day, he said " Why honey, I told him
everything I wanted him to know.
In Sepptember, 1798, Richard and Hannah went to Barren, now Monroe
Co., Ky. Richard and his brothers, Robert and Timothy, took up
adjoining land of a hundred acres each on Line Creek as did Richard s
son, Joshua, now twenty years of age. Richard was dissatisfied with
his deed and went to Indiana, likely to his cousin, Dennis
PenninKniel
on, to inquire about land there but soon returned. In
timmp., Pennington bought land on Line Creek to add to his land
on "ill Oreek and then sold his Line Creek land to Stewart. Three
months after their arrival, two missionary friends from the Yadkin
country, Phillip and John Mulkey, joined them and they set about
building a church. This church burned but a second was built and
is still standing outside Thompkinsville and is known as the Old
Mulkey Meeting House, the oldest log church west of the mountains.
As was usual, the church was used as a school house and I found
record of Richard's contributing to the school master's ry in 1808.
Also, in a book about Old Mulkey, 11Cross in the Road��, found
mention of Richard's and Hannah's hospitality and his fine hunting
hounds and suppose the hounds were the red -bone hounds Stewart told
my grandfather about. Richard died on Dec. 21, 1813, when he was
on a visit to White Co., Tennessee, and we believe he was buried in
Bethlehem cemetary outside Sparta, though no one has located his
grave. Possibly his marker was of wood. Hannah lived out her life
in the home of her son, Daniel, and died April 9, 1828, eighty-two
years of age. ( Richard was but sixty-one. ) She was buried in
Mill Creek cemetary. Her grave was moved and is now a tourist
attraction in Old Mulkey cemetary which, with the church, is part
of a Kentucky state park.
Joshua Pennington was born Feb. 23, 1778, in Montgomery Co., now
Grayson, Va. On Feb 20, 1806, he married Mary ( Polly.) Gist who
was born in Greene Co. Tennessee, the daughter of Wk. Gists Sr.
Joshua and Polly had six sons and five daughters, the last, a
daughter, died a young child. Joshua owned 100 acres of productive
land which he kept as he and Polly moved after their marriage to
White Co. Tennessee and settled in the part that is now Warren Oo.,
near McMinnville. He was a respected young man for he served on
juries in 1811 and 1812 and he was industrious for, in 18160 he
paid taxes on 2222 acres. Poll died October 101 1839, after thitty-
three years of marriage. By 184, all of Joshua s children were
married and gone from home save for one married son and one married
daughter who lived near him. He married Sarah Howard on Aug. 25, 1844e
In 1853 and 1854, he wrote long letters to Dr. Draper in a beautiful
even flowing hand and he comes off the page as so amiable a man,
feel I know him. He wrote his own Will in 1802 and revised it twice.
( /I have a copy. ) Joshua died in 1866, aged eighty-eight years
and is buried in Concordia cemetary. Tov of his older sons,
o VIE Co. PUBLrc UBRW
MOCKSVUE6 HQ
6.
Richard and John, and I think it was his daughter, Elizabeth,
migrated early to eastern Texas in Houston Co. A descendent in
Oklahoma sent me a copy of Richard's w$B: obituary from the
Galveston newspaper, a rather flowery one, which indicates he and
his family were highly respected church members, esteemed in the
community and prosperous. Many of these three's descendents still
live around Grapeland and College Station. Joshua's son,
Uranderson, was a farmer as well as a trader and he brought his
family to live near his uncle, Stewart Wennington, from 1838 to
1841, and then returned to Tennessee. Granderson must have been
a man of great charm for I gfew up hearing my grandfather speak
of Cousin Granderson from White Co., Tennessee and was surprised
Granderson left the year before Grandpa was born and he had only
heard of Granderson from Stewart.
Please do send to Clyde Alley Pennington the same mailing you
sent me. He is the great -great grandson of Joshua's son,�oshuT,
and he has helped me wonderfully though we have never met, and
have come to love him dearly. If he could attend, my guess is he
would enter the Turkey -shoot. He is a real Boone -Pennington.
Address him Clyde A. Pennington
Route 10, Box 272
McMinnville, Tennessee 37110
Just say Margaret knew he'd want to attend if he could.
Daniel Pennington was born December 3, 1781, in Willkes Co. Horth
Carolina. On Aug. 20, 1805, he married Esther Frailey in Aonroe
Co., Ky. She was born May 5, 1788, in Augusta Co., Va., daughter
of Christian and Elizabeth Harding Frailey. He and Esther had
five sons and six daughters all of whom lived near them or in
adjacent Clay Co., Tennessee, many near Moss. I give credit to one
of his descendents, David Trimble, Ph. D., of San Antonio, Texas,
for his thirty-five year labor to chronicle this family since our
family knew best, Daniel's descendents in Monroe Co. and Illinois.
Daniel enlisted for six months as a private in the War of 1812
and received a bounty of 40 acres to add to his 200 acres.
Otherwise, he seems to have been a home body devoted to his family
and friends. He was a kind and faithful man for he took Esther's
widowed mother into his home as well as his own widowed mother,
uannah, and I like to think of the two old ladies keeping one
another company. After Esther died April 4. 1854, Daniel's daughter,
Esther and her husband, Benjamin Marshall cared for him until he
died Feb. 21,1865, eighty-four years of age. He is buried in
Concordia cemetary outside Moss, Clay Co. Tennessee. He has five
descendens.-ts in Thompkinsville that I know of, others in Texas,
New Mexico, Arizona, Oklahoma, Illinois and Minnesota.
John Stewart Pennington was born as your records show on June 100
1784 but in now Grayson Co., Va. On March 24, 1807, he married
Jemima Hauser in Monroe Co. Ky. She was born Feb.21, 1788 in
White Co., Tennessee, a daughter of Nicholas and Jane Hauser.
( I have a copy of the court proceedings to settle Nicholas Hauser's
OAVIE CO. PUBUFC LIBRARY
MOCKSVfLLE, NO
7•
estate which included six negro slaves. His principill income
seems to have been f om raising and trading livestock. ) Stewart
bought land on Line reek from his brother, Daniel, and was a
successful farmer. He and Jemima had eight sons and five daughters,
the last three children born in Illinois for, in 1828, after his
mother died, Stewart accompanied his second son, Thos. Jefferson
Pennington, his youn wife and two infant children, to Salem Tnp.,
in extern McDonough o., Illinois. He helped them settle and, the
following year, went back home to Monroe Co., Hy. In 1831, he returned
to Salem Tnp, with all of his family save for his oldest son,
Nicolas Hauser Pennington ( later killed on the 'Natchez Trace )
and his oldest daughter, Nancy, newly married to James Llkany D.
Hammer of Washington Co. Tennessee, In 1833, Stewart built a school
and church on the western boundary of his
land,
iand
a 1840sandnextnext to the church in 1835. he church
Stewart built another; in 1855, he deeded the church, rectory and
land to his daughter, I`�ancy and her husband, J.E.D. Hammer, who had
come from Kentucky and the church became the mother church of the
H
Methodist churches in the area. a also deeded his land to Nancy
and her husband and took up another 100 acres in the township.
On Sept 89 1838, his ten-year old son, Joshua Jordan, died and
Stewart set off land for a cemetary known since as the Pennington
Point cemetary and administered today by trustees. The community
which grew up around Stewart was named Pennington Point and was the
third settlement in McDonough co., Illinois. He was elected the
first county commissioner. The town had a blacksmith shop and a
small store, the school, church and rectory. Jemima was famous
for her hospitality and my grandfather loved to tell of the table
she set and he had a small boy's memory of her jams, jellies, pies
and cakes. Jemima died September 22, 1852, and is buried in
Pennington Point cemetary. The same year, Stewart was kicked by
a horse at the annual horse fair in nearBby Industry; his spine
was broken and he was unable to stand or walk. From a strong man
who broke the Illinois prairie with a double yoke
oaotook
f oxenp he
became a helpless invalid. His son, my great-grandfather,
over the operation of tewart's farm and supervised his brothers,
Leander and Tandy, and his sister, Mary Melinda, still at home.
He always my grandfather told me, consulted Stewart and deferred
to him. Ltewart died Sept. 20, 1859 and is buried in Pennington
Point cemetary next to Jemima. Many of his children and their
spouses, children and grandchildren are buried there. Many of
his descendents live in eastern McDonough county and others are
Iowa,in Nebraska, Kansas, Oklahoma, Missouri, Texas, North
Dakotas Coloraao,�Oregon and California and I am here in Florida.
His large house is still standing and is owned with his land by
a trustee of the cemetary and we are grateful
l a and
le bohis
wife
maintain the house so well and have kept the
stairway towards the back of the house, put there for the children.
Januar 27 1787, in Grayson Co. � VK•
Abi ail Pennington was born y , I_
On December 20, 180., she married WilliamJGist, Pr. in onroe , y/
He was brother to Polly Gist who married oshua ennington and
born in Greene Co., Tennessee. In 1806, Joshua and Polly, Co.*Abigail and William and William Gist, Sr. set out for White C
t)AVIE CO. PUBLIC LIBRARY
MOCKS%LLEm NO
80
Tennessee. There is still a feeling of sorrow that the beloved
little sister then becomes lost to history though it is said she
and William returned to liacon Co., Tennessee near Aunt Sally
Osborn, that Abigail died young and is buried in Macon County.
Neither is there further trace of William Gist, jr. not even in
the extensive Gist family records though some believe he went to
Alabama and thence to Mississippi.
Now I have worn you out and myself, too. But I am glad to tell
you of Hannah Boone Stewart Pennington's family, where they lived,
what they did . I like to tell that, wherever the first three
generations moved, they built churches and schools and took on
community advancement. There is not a Brigadier General or United
States Senator among them. They were modest and durable, the
men and women who cleared the wilderness and broke the wide prairies
for those who came after them.
You will tell me where the records you sent came from, won't you?
And when all of the grand events for Daniel's 250th birthday are
concluded and you are rested, you will tell me of yourself and
your family.
I enclose a small amount towards the cost of the bronze memorial
plaque. With every best wish,
Sincerely,
f"Oolchn
Margaret P• Addison
9315 North 18th Street
Tampa, Florida 33612
GAVIE CO. PUBLIC UBPM
MOCKSVILLE, NO
N
Ga
O 14
N
'D L
w In
0
r �
00 I
0
o v
v G
� N
T N
P
00
Id
L
03 TO
W U
CAn
L L
G N N
0 Q w
" u u
=—u' V)
a
3
In G
A O
Y u
Sa G
a..G
H v
• n w
N
CJ `/1i
FAMILY RESEARCH RECORD
MUSEAND. John Stewart
DORM—
1744/45
,t,,C/ _
Could have lived in Virginia, than on.Ya*dkin River
N.,Carolina
WIFE Hannah Boone
Descendants - Bess
L. Hawthorne
James Lewis and Ann
1AII
August 1746
CMYICM UP
MARRIED
14 Feb 1765
IIACI
'County, Pennsylvania
C"1111CN AnLo
Home of son Danie
PLACE Pen�on, Monroe Co.
and Missouri - P.
d Lewis
Daniel cone. Back-,
ono
1770
PIACI _
•
07"11 M0I11AM0, Richard Pennin
d 21 Dec 181
ton b 1752 Pa. m ca 1777 Ro
W ite Co. Tenn
n Cit , N. C. -
1111110 AT
CHILDREN
"11 APT.
iCentuck
Pa?
•+DOD IIA..
c
Y9� LP
Eleanor Wheeler
`1!5V Silverado 'frail
922, Napa, Ca
ADCs IS
DAII
O1ICIIITION OI SO111CA
The Boone Familv -
b Del?
0T"1111 wire/
—_.;
Hannah Stracker
Hannah Boone 6, Her
Could have lived in Virginia, than on.Ya*dkin River
N.,Carolina
WIFE Hannah Boone
Descendants - Bess
L. Hawthorne
James Lewis and Ann
DOD"
August 1746
PLACEOtey, Exter Twp, Berks
Elizabeth Stewart
of North Carolina
,AIT
DIED
9 April 1828
'County, Pennsylvania
C"1111CN AnLo
Home of son Danie
PLACE Pen�on, Monroe Co.
and Missouri - P.
d Lewis
Daniel cone. Back-,
Kentucky
111011110 AT Old Mulkey Meeting House, T%ompkinsville, Ky.
•
IAININ Squire Boone Sarah Morgan
woodsman - The Van
No ens
I
•
07"11 M0I11AM0, Richard Pennin
d 21 Dec 181
ton b 1752 Pa. m ca 1777 Ro
W ite Co. Tenn
n Cit , N. C. -
"Au
D.
IIMAI
CHILDREN
BORN DIED
.1V "OMI. ,I. .1 YON1.
•ACI ',Ace
IIA.
MARRIED
DA, YOMIN I...
IO w..Y
I.
Sarah
-
—
Car
John 0 born
_—_-
1
Mary
--���
-- -�
-
-Sainuel Usborn' —.
N. Car
Rachel
1768
---
James Rini:
4. *
Ann ElizabethN.
25 Feb 1770_
ca 1_7_86 _
Car
Janes Lewis
Joshua
3 ec 178 —
1)Mary _11Po11
2 Sarah Howard
N. Car'
e
Daniel Pennington
3 Dec 1781
N. Car
Esther Fraelev
John Stewart
LU June 1784
Jewima Houser
N. Car
41
Abi ail
g
24 an 1787
William Gist ,Jr.
v
QAVIF Co- Fel BUC-LWMW