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McCulloh, Loose Papers Folder 4.. ^7 y cGl4.r/E r CO CL ,ri✓ .� .� /lcLi�i�zsuac. ! J Q.u� DIu� � U j��,Jy �s� �j � CG�.✓�✓ �9oDff9 1�lsiDd'E�, � Cc�9.✓��� o.� C[sl�lve8/oy�4%.e �..izrel �Azn� EOGsYi9,d �t�E.�) Gii�s fRl�'r 4,13"A J Z i AL EXi9./Z)FX /ho e&ez Acct J g5A lA Sc 00 ///S { COUJI�/ Ci/sYo G/?J �p %j�l��yT�c,e OF sJ/9R�Er Oi �,(-0�,J S�c2E/T�I.e�j� of TsY�'` �A�dir/co v+- 7�.Ea Z7 dcT. /%r's•. n /;Psu- r ro ;eS ,w ,tr.�slx�..�c' c.., Cceze. baa, Cifoas.�rn!,=a7u/y�l=` fT� r / f .o'er er 10, ��J.7 •••-e. /%So ,eitd...�C�«u.. ,lad✓ � y U z iJfJOsEt d'o,J of �/c-,r/.P.v �lFA � /9So �,'N q _ x tel• �/Awer �G fTe IzWiEi'eW %)FC&,f rOz , C?) v cu ��A 3 or a- /Oft\ /sftN c�� �dw .ems.✓ , .r�w� ar��v- �.. Y- Mrs. John S. Lowery 209 Noland Street Falls Church, Virginia, 22046 Dear Mrs. Lowery: 1135 Kenwood Street Winston-Salem, N. C., March 3, 1982 Davie County Public Ubrarj W&Sville, NC 27103 Thank you for your letter of February 21 and your memorandum received today. Y thought I had sent to Betty Summers my lineage, but maybe not. I am enclosing more information for you - but there are discrepancies, so I have hesitated to show it to anyone. , I will tell you my latest findings. I hired a Genealogist in England to research for me. Told him there was confusion between the two Henry McCullohs - the old gentleman with 1,200,000 acres and the Henry who was, Secretary of the Province and who died in 1755. Older Henry died in -1779. He asked me for a copy of the will of Henry who died in 1755 - it -names, daughters Henrietta Mary, Dorothy Beniford, Elizabeth Margaret and Penelope Martha. He found two more, buried at St. Nicholas., Chiswick Jane Letitia, and Letitia Alice. I had thought that Alexander McCulloch who married Sarah Hill was a son of Henry, but he was born in 1715 and the girls 1746, 1749, 1750, 1751, 1752, and 1754. Even though Henry wad+ Secretary of the Province and his will was proved here Nov. 15, 1755,Perttlope 9:kzxzdsxkk was christened at Westminister (England) in 1754 and the two young children were buried there, Jane being christened at St. John' Smith Square, Westminster and buried .four days later and Letitia was christened in Nov. 1752 and buried there in June 1753. It sounds as if' there were a lot of commuting. I don't know where he is buried. I am dping this little comment from memory. There is a paper about three brothers-in-law. I just looked it up "Provincial Reminiscenses - The Three Brothers -In -Law" by W. H. Bailey, L. L. D. The three were Hon John Campbell, Col. Joseph Montfort, and Hon. Alexander McCulloch. "The father of Alexander McCulloch was a Scotchman and marrie& his coutin, a daughter of James McCulloch of Grogan in Ireland. The had issue, the subject of this sketch, who emigrated to the province of N. C. and settled in Halifax. He married Sarah Hill, daughter. of Benjamin Hill, of Bertie. She was a sister of Mrs. John Campbell and Mrs. Joseph Montfort. Mc. McCulloch retained the spelling with the ch which has come down to us. The Name was thus spelled by the Irish branch until changed to "McCullah" by old Henry, the great land grabber." Henry McCulloch, the father of Alexander was Secretary of the Province and a Councillor. He died October 27, 1755. (V. Col. Records, Rec. 440-1) During his time doubtless Z the "ch" was pronounced as "k", as'it is so written by the Clerk of the, ,Q ­. Council; it is even so spelled in his commission as Treasurer (id,617),.,'. '« ',A,, but the true spelling is shewn in a letter written by his cousin, who-" i k spells t McCulloch and signs his own name as McCulloh.. I keep thinking I am through with the "Provincial Reminiscerises"., i q,This source says Alexander's son Benjamin married Sarah Stokes, a sister, 4P% of Judge John Stokes and Governor Montfort Stokes. (I am inclined to believe this might be right - but my other source seemed just as positive 1� Q thus the confusion. He said Alexander's son Benjamin left 6 chi Ldren, A�- Alexander, Benjamin, Samuel, Mary, Sarah. If you want a copy, let me know. I got it from Interlibrary Loan, from Wilson Library, Drawer 870, University of N. C., Chapel Hill, N. C., 27514. Our Library got it for-,ine. .= Another paper from them from the William and Mary Quarterly "Private v Profits and British Colonial Policy: The Speculations of Henry McCulloh'i 4 by Charles..G. Sellers, Jr. (Sellers is a member of the Dept. of History a at Princeton University. Tn this paper, page 547, "McCulloh designated T' as went, his nephew, Alexander McCulloch." I have read somewhere that} the -rz.eh_ _ - a or The Irish McCullohs, descendants of James of Grogan spelled name McCulloh and that the Scotch descendants spelfed theirs Excuse me. I ramble. their McCulloch'.,;,.,. My English Genealogist charged me 250.00 - but the most significant thing he found and sent me was Old Henry s will. first I had told him about finding old Henry's marriage and Henry Eustace's marriage at the Mormon Library. He confirmed this. I told him where old Henry was supposed to be buried and he found his grave - though grown up a*bit. ;.�` 0lHenry's will was a shocker. Every abstract or reference I had seen here referred to Henry Eustace as Henry's dearly beloved son and only ;1`",'.. . surviving child. BUT over half of'Henry's will was what money and 'land to give to JAMES McCU1LOH of Duplin County and referred to an earlier agreement, part of which he had already received, and he was relying on Henry Eustace to carry out these requests. I am positive that James was an out -of -wedlock son of Old Henry - just like George McCulloh was .9. an out of wedlock son of Henry Eustace. Both James and''George had been sent back to England for education and given land, etc. You remember thos Lawrence papers from Tennessee said that "our" James was a lawyer— and educated at Oxford. I could not find that. My English Genealogist; .,,, did find when Henry Eustace graduated and when he was admitted to the bar. He found where he was buried. Henry Eustace fought until his deatW;, to get compensation from England for his losses over here (America Finally paid England 600,000 pounds -those letters are heartbreaking but only in one of them do I remember seeing Henry Eustace refer to George as my son. He made George power-of-attorney to try to act for • him over here and he exerted a lot of effort to try to help his fAther .,�,, � but all the time he was well liked, complimented in 'papers I have seen, and made a representative of Rowan. Henry Eustace did not mention George� or his grandchildren in his will - everything to his wife. You will notice also that it seems Old Henry didn't marry Miss Eustace until Henry Eustace was about eleven years old. I don't understand any of that. I know of three children - all born before 1749! The Genealogists,. believed that James who died in 1749 and Penelope who died in 1761 were born in America - but I have no reason to believe one wa.y or the -other. Do you think Penelope Eustace might have been over here and they had '`:: '�• their family here and then went back to England and got married -after their son James died? Henry Eustace said in one of his fetters that he + was born in England, but he did not say when or where and maybe he did-*.',,'.,,-,._ z not want the Englist to know otherwise when he was trying to get money = ,,, 1 ,-5 ai from him as a loyal Tory. Cn I thought I had really hit pay dirt when I found a "deed of G3.ft" ftom' 'A' +'`I a o James es McCulloh of Duplin to Penelope, Catharine and Henry. OUA James ,;, had children Penelope, Catharine and Henry. The Only THING is tha}: oux Henry Eustace was not born until 1806 and this was a gift of love .n, 170!, c before he was born. I still think there has to be a connection. 'f there were a James of Duplin (son of old Henry) who had a son Jame. who moved to Rowan, it would all fit together. + 11! If you read Harriet's letter again, she refers to James McCulloh who now resides in Tennessee. .; Your Independence County, Greenbrier Township census was our Charles Granville, wife Mary Josephine, daughter Victoria and daughter Kate. Charles Granville was married twice but Mary Josephine was the±' first. I don't know off hand -who Delia McCullough and Susan McCullough are. I will write a relative in this family. She might shed some ligh.J;' This is a busy timeof year with taxes, but what time isn't. I keep thinking when I retire I'll have time to work more intensively on my genealogy - but then I must keep working to support my "habit' genealogy,'''; .. .i` _d You may say I didn't get -too much from my English Genealogish for'my money, but James of Duplin would make Harriet s letter. solved. It would fit. I don't believe there a -re many Duplin papers left. There must have been a fire (think they told me). I have looked at our Library for Halifax, New Hanover, Sampson wilts, land transactions and at the State Archives for Duplin and Sampson. Henry Eustace had 18,000 acres of land personally in Duplin - he said in his papers. There is an English collection , in our State Archives with lots of letters to and from and papers recorded in London regarding lands in America. Guess North Carolina has them because so much of their holding;s was in N. C.. Hope all of this makes a little sense. Maybe you can help me fit the pieces together. Sincerely, ' March 41 1982 t If you have not already done so, please read "Life and Correspondence oaf James Iredell". Our Iredell County, N. C. was named for this family, maybe him, and we had a Governor. Iredell. Have to check to.�see .if•'it were he or his son. James was a cousin of Henry Eustace. There are lots of letters t6 And from. Older Henry got hi -m his ,job in the colonies, admonished him to send money monthly to his f)ar•ents - and they promised him fieni. y Eustac6' s job at the ports of Wilmington or Roanoke when Henry E. gave them up. Meanwhile there was the Revolution and Old Henry's and Henry E.' land.99 notes, mortgages, bonds, etc. were confiscated. This wax McRae who wrote the "Life and Correspondence of James Iredell" was a descendant out, of that branch. He has a lot of genealory in ttnis book, often referred to, but one writer 1 saw said it; was not entirely accurate, that he purposely made or wrote mistakes or untrno things. Anyway, he was bitter that the McCullohs had not made young ..lames Iredell rich when they were in. position to do it. I have read letters from James himself after the revolution trying to -regain some of their losses for them - to no avail+ - but they stayed in favor wit h the Colonies. James Iredell didn't sound batter or resentful but th:i.1: w1� i.tor• would have you believe thFkt he did much work for t.hp. two Hen.rys and was noi, ,3uf'1':i.c1ently :rewarded. ' Davie County Public Library, MocksvWe, NC 249 Noland Street Falls Church# Virginia 22046 January 24, 1980 Mrs. Bettye McCulloch Henry P. 0. Bcac 426 Hillsbcrro9 Missouri 63050 Dear *s. Henry: I write ycx at the suggestion of Walter J. McCulloch of Ardwall about my study of the McCulloughs. For years# I h�jve tried to find my NcCullaugh great -rest grandparent: without success. For my lineage, ;gee sheet attached which you =y keep. Since I have: been unable to find any positive ancestry# I'm truing to find it negatively,, but by eliminating families. At firsts I studied Ohio# and s cme in Illinois $ now- I am back in my own state of Missouri to ,gee if I can eliminate fanilies there, and eventually# peri-aps c cme up with some sort of ;possibility. I know from biograr )hy, Tennessee Cousins, cite. that you are of the line age of an Alexander llcCullough. I do not knot al;prcxx3mate birthdates, but this iO what I have: McCulloch, Alexander b, e. 17159 (Irelands er `�cotland?) md, c. 173. where..... HILL., Sarah# b. 1716, daughter of Cola Benjamin Hill (1697__,_„) and LATHM, Alexander d. c. 17989 and Sarah c. 1771. I have only one child listed: Benjarin# b. c. 1737, Halifax Co. N. Car. md. 19 DOC. " Sarah STGKES(23 foto 1.744,9 Iunenburg Co,, Va.-x-12 March 1799 Chowan Co.# I,dentont t.. Car.) daur-hter of WVITFaIs Sarah and David STOKES. 1. Were there other children? 2, If sop could one of them have been a James McCulloh whose will is recorded is Raw% - Co*,, N. Q r. McCUIZ,0E. Book G:410. 1 June 1814, pb, 1816, Fife: Elisabeth. Sons: Charlest Henry Iustacet Alfred# Daus. Catherine Burefieldp Betsy Mc Cull.ohp Penelope Mind% toy McCulloh# 16nrietta NeCulloh9 Rebecca McCulloh. Exr. Wife laizabot . Tditn: Henry Clement Sr. John Clements, Godfrey Clement. Mrs. Alice Eidson# 1135 Kenwood St. 9 Winston—Salems, E. Car. 27103 descends fyrc m the above James. Of the obildren listed in the above will, Rebecca McCullough (oh) moved to White River (towns I do not kn%j) in Arkansas. I grew up on the White River in Missom i. Mrs. Eidsen has a list of the descendents of Alfred. Malt md. �hn .- �-s June:-% ckr Lbe, 49 18220 They had a dau hter Elizabeth Lawrence who tad. Dr. Houston. Their children who were brought from Texas to live with Amy and John Lawrence were Hcci% Samuel and Texanna Houstcn. Umaay relate to Houston and Hale and Lawrence—my f7andmother iwas Nancy Arn Hale. John Lawrence's mother was a dale from the same area)* I have that son B najmin ricCaUoch, b. 1737, Halifax Co. V". Car. md. Sarah St Q& e,- : Cbildren: 1. Benjamin, b, 1760-1 md, lst. Sarah Lytle; md. 2de or just the reverse. 2. XLexander, b, 16 Atig. 1.7769 md. IM40IR5, Frances Fisher 3. Samuel md. Sallie Moore 4o twin to SamuelpMary who md. ; Benjamin Williamson 5,* Sarah and. Schneck 6. Elisabeth tad. William Boyland Davis County Public Library 3. who was the first wife of Ben jatd n McCulloch? Mooksviiie, NC 4. W -,at were the children'. names? a._ Since I do not know which one is ymw progenito rt do not know just where to p]Ace you. Howevers on f#lf Benjamin, son of Benjamin, I f cued a IAR, member who says she is the descendant of a 2d, marriage to Satah (Lytlet Little) Ceewellp a widow. through a son James who md. %sanna Pace, y listing cf the children of Benjami% until the aboves bad beans, 1. MCCULLOCHP Adelaidet b, Deco 309 1812 20 " 9 Henrys b. 14 May 1819 3• " t Nary Elizabeth, b. 22 Nov. 18169 md. Thr Xmas Hardt 3 April. 1834. 49 " s Armies b. 13 Octo 1818 5. " s Sarah# b. 25 Oct. 18211 (See Lee Coop Ark. 6, " 9 Phillip Doddridge McC. b. 10 Jan. 1825 70 " 9 Ellen, b. 26 Oct* 1829 ? 8. " 9 Johns b. 15 Sept. 1822 9. " 0 Richards b, 13 May 18297 This data I have obtained frac various sources. It looks to me 3.41ce it would have been through a first marriages unless I took darn the data in error. On the children of Alexander McCullaa*hs OW-ulloch) t I took the data from a biogyaphy of Henry Eusta ce Mc Cullough9 general CSA, and brother to Ben jamin9 General CSA. Welve children: A. McGtiillhohs Benjamin, 11 Nov. 1811# Rutherford Co., Tern. d. 7 March 18b2 v,2. " t Henry Eustaoes, 6 Dec. 18169 n " "s We 20 Aug, 18400 Julia (Jane Isabella?) Ashby Alexander V4. " John. S0 ,/5. " James Coffees b, 4 Feb, 18199 Ruthwfard Co., md, 27 March 1847, Minerva Jane Wilsont d. 16 June 1866. ✓6, " Samuel %/7. Sarah StoAes s ted. Albert &-able; she d. 1849 8." ✓s,}4 Mary Ann, and o Wi111 am L. Mitchell; she d. 1846 Frances Olives, who md. Charles Parish MAO County Public Libras ✓10. " %=iet Marian who md* Nat Benton Mocicsviiie, NC ..11. TM Elizabeth Julia who We R.ev. R, Be Tarrant ,42o " Adelaide }glias md. Albert G. Pierce This is all the data which I eves so you see it is sketcz w. Howevert I did have a letter same years back fram Donna Cummins, Rt, is Bmc 1.119, Toutchets, Washington 99360, who sails Fannde McCulloch,, b. 28 Feb. 1852 in Tenn. md. Dewitt Clinton Feasel (CSA) b. 18 Feb. i828 Union parish, Louisiana. No data on where cor when they were md.s, but first child Mary Jane Feiwl.t b, 26 Nov. 1869 in Files, Valleys, Ellis Cos, Tis. A granddaughter of this couple wrotet rGgn Ben and Henry McC l lochs, brothers. Fought with Sam Houston at the Ala=. Bd. at Austin in the Nati.-ria]. Cometery. Their mother who was, bd. at Files Valleys dame and moved and burr with the generals*' She gave no other inf armation on how these men might have been related to Fannie McCulloch Feasel. "khanie McCulloch had a sister named Sallie who was living �dth them ini the 1880 oensue of E1.11a Co. Teams. She was 14 at that time and was born in Texas. Their Father was born in Tenn* and their mothert in Obio.a Obviouslyys Mrs. Cummins is of the family of Alexander McCulloch. I have not heard fyrcm her of late; After `I read Mr. MaCullo©hts books, I recalled the Ru.sling family gensaclogys whioh I enclose for your files if you can use it. One of the first family histories of the McCullaughe which I found when I began my search was that of the Marren family. I enclose a portion of the data which t _ yped off before I finally found a descendant of that famil*q (once in Sprf.ngf#,e7�d� Missouri, I lived in the house built by one of them). The very first paragraph is of great interest. You will name that Crosier's General Armory (which I have never found) gives a register of Arms to Capt! Benjamin McQullcugh: 1740. This would mean therefore that the Rusling genealogists might be one generation off on when its Capt. Benjamin McCullough arrived.9 and that it was bis fatherp and that he might have had other brothers and sisters. Lots of possibilities for conjecture at this point. Houeverp what I am alluding tos is that if a. arms issued in Vew J,,rooair registered your family stray of James Iredellg and tiro to Amerieay might be brothers. I have not will note that Hannah Piatt is supposed to all these facts are taken together: in No J. ! to Capt. Benjamin McCullough; McC ul.loughs chart showing a Benjamin studied, it enoWh to know,, but you have taken the seal to Kentucky in 1799. I beep looking at Pyatt as being another possibility for my great grandfather William, for there were many Piatts or Pyatts in the area of Illinois where I found my first record of him. If you are interesteds or if you have another family member suf ficient2y, interested to work more on yaw lineagev if it has not been rublishad (and I haven't fcurA it) s, I have a lot of tithes, and genealogy is my vice-•-unf o rtunatelon my own line northingp and xdould like to work with you. Frca: Mr. Walter;Uullooh,, I hear you have a fami3 y association ar reunion each year. Its did not tell me where it meets. I SC b eus oatSte that or a br members, trying to togot a exchange usually spend two months each year in Missouri; and we usually spend a da . Genevieve when we are there—it is one of my favorite places. I I caAA stop to see you if it is ►)ossible foar me to go this year. men l.egv we did not go this year. Also* if you viant publicity for I am sure McCul.Yough Memos or Clan I�tlillaugh I�ewaletter (which we get established) would be willing to publish an announement. We wellpestablished group cf McCullough researchers who are willing to data# etc. I have beacme very interested in your li together these three or four families in or Ireland. I would like your opinions th :t we could get store information into lineages—there is a paucity of material tCr VUbt Because your are hope eage and the possibility of linking ,o ane faad.ly grouper peps in ScotlaW nd to know whether. there is emy possibility be general library circles on the and it must be searched out so laboriously. I enclose for your convenience a self-addres®ed stamped envelope. Yours sincerely, (Ws. John S. Lowery) Davie County Public Library, Mocksville, NC •'#` ' — - 's - Clan Munro Magazine — No. 12 — 1971 M acCU LLOCHS OF PLAIDS: A GENEALOGY NOTHING is known for certain of the origin of this family. Most of the landed MacCulloch families on record were established in Galloway, and there were others of the name in Argyll. If Ross -shire MacCullochs had a Galloway origin no details of it have been preserved, and it is at least possible that they, like the Vasses, may have come into Easter Ross from some other part of Scotland. Plaids, formerly spelt Plaidis, Pladdis, &c., and occasionally 'the Pladdis,' lies on the flat land beside the sea to the east of Tain. about three-quarters of a mile from the centre of the burgh. The estate gave a territorial designation to the chief family of MacCullochs in the North, whose land ownership for at least five generations is proved by record evidence from 1436 to 1552.' Skardy, which is named before Plaids in some early charters of the estate, although now obsolete as a place -name, has been equated with Hilton, two miles south of Plaids . z most of the other names can still be found on the map in and about the extensive sandhills and machair called the Morrich More. What became known as Paul McTyre's Hill lay near Plaids, and was one of the 'court places' used for centuries during the perambu- lations of the Tain burgh bounds.' Original spellings, where they have been retained in the follow- ing genealogy, indicate some -of the problems of identification. ALEXANDER MacCULLOCH of Plaids, first of the name bearing that designation, on record from 1436 to 1443. He was a person of importance in Easter Ross under Alexander. Earl of Ross and Lord of the Isles. By a charter dated at the castle of Dingwall on 6th January, 1436 7, witnessed by Hugh Ross of Balnagown, George Munro of Foulis and others, 'Alexander de Ile. Comes Rossie ' granted to Alexander McCullach the lands of Scardy. Pladds, Petnely, Petogarty, Balmaduthy and Ballechory. with the office of bailie of the immunity of Tain.4 He witnessed charters by the same earl dated at Inverness on 4th September. 1437, 24th October, 1439, and 20th July, 1440.5 On 22nd April. 1439 Alexander MacCulloch and George MacCulloch were members of an inquest which defined the trading privileges enjoyed by the citizens of Tain.e Alexander's last appearance is as a witness. with George Munro of Foulis and others. of another charter by the earl, dated at Dingwall on 24th October, 1443.7 A daughter of MacCulloch of Plaids (the Christian names have 40 not been preserved) was the second wife of George Munro of Foulis, killed at Bealach nam Brog probably in 1452.8 An elder t / son by a daughter of Ross of Balnagown having also died, their V son John succeeded as a minor, and through him the later Munro chiefs are descended from this MacCulloch family. JOHN MacCULLOCH of Plaids, on record between 1450 and 1466. He had a retour as heir to his father Alexander in the lands of Skardy, Plaids, &c., on 10th November, 1450.8 In 1458 John Earl of Ross and Lord of the Isles wrote to John MacCulloch 'bailie of the girth of Sanct Duthowis ' ordering him and the inhabitants of Tain to help and defend their neighbours of Inverness and to allow no impediment to them in carrying on trade as authorised by the King.10 John was among the witnesses to a charter by Thomas Dingwall of Kildun dated at Tain on 27th October, 1466.11 ANGUS MacCULLOCH of Plaids, on record from 1483 to 1498. In the absence of any retour, the date of his succession and his relationship to his predecessor are not known for certain.12 He first appears as ordering (presumably as bailie of the immunity of Tain) the production of his neighbour William McTeyr's charter of the lands of Achnaplad, which was produced on 27th February. 1483 at the ' usual place ' of the head court near Scarde with an explanation that it was done of William's owti free will and without prejudice."' In 1484 he was, along with John Rog of Balnagown and John Munro of Foulis, among the citizens of Tain who granted land in the town on behalf of the community.14 In the disturbances which followed the forfeiture of the Earl of Ross in 1475, the MacCullochs are'said to have been with the Mackenzie force which routed Alexander MacDonald of Lochalsh and his followers at the battle of Park15 (near Kinellan above Strathpeffer) : but they are not mentioned when, a few years later the Mackenzies drove Alexander out of Ross.ls It is related that the MacCullochs and the Dingwalls. who 'then haid bound ther dependance ' on William Munro of Foulis as the King's representative, lost their whole fencible men in an ambush by the Mackenzles at the south side of Drumchatt in the same area; 17 but there is no specific mention of MacCulloch of Plaids on any of these occasions. Angus's last two appearances on record show that he was no stranger to such events, for he was accused before the Lords of Council in July. 1498 with others of taking part in the ` spoliation ' of 30 cattle and two horses from the lands of Tordarroch, and three days later he and John Vass of Lochslin were among those who had to pay damages to a burgess of Dysart in Fife.18 Ell Davie County Public library Mocksville, NG r WILLIAM MacCULLOCH of Plaids, died in 1541. He had sasine of the lands of Pladys, Scardy, Petnely, Balma- duthy and Ballecarw in 150519 but was not retoured as heir to his father John MacCulloch in the lands and bailliary until 10th April, 1512.20 On 16th August, 1512 James IV granted him a charter of confirmation of the lands of Scardy, Pladdis, Petnely, Pettogarty, Balmoduthy and Ballecarew, with the office of bailie of the immunity of Tain.21 He was member of an inquest at Inverness in 1513 and 1514, when Thomas Paterson rector of Assynt was served heir to his uncle William Paterson, and Lady Elizabeth Gordon to her brother John Earl of Sutherland.22 In March, 1534 he brought an action against the Abbot of Fearn and others as to whether the lands of Easter Catboll belonged to him in heritage, and obtained a decreet in his favour -23 He sold two- thirds of Pitnely and half of Balmathothe to Walter Innes of Towchis (1533), and Pittocartye (1535) and one-third of Pitnele and half of Ballechuthe (1539) to William Dunnon of Arkbol1.24 On 1 st August, 1540 he had a letter of regress on part of Pitnele and Ballecouth from the King, and he died ` apud Folis ' (pre- sumably Foulis) on 15th October, 1541.25 William married Agnes, daughter of Sir David Ross of Balnagown (she lived at Catboll after his death. and died at Hilton on 24th April, 1572),26 and was succeeded by his son Thomas. THOMAS MacCULLOCH of Plaids, fell at Pinkie in September 1547. Retoured as son and heir of the late William MacCulloch of Plaids, he had the gift of the non -entry of lands of Pladdis, Skardy, Bellycarnich, with the office of bailliary of the immunity of Tain, on 1st November, 1541.27 He was among those on an inquest at Inverness on 2nd May, 1542 who found Robert Munro lawful and nearest heir of his father Hector Munro of Foulis.28 With the same Robert and others he was one of an assize at Inverness on 20th May, 1547,29 and it was probably with his Chief that he joined the Scottish army mustered to meet the English invasion under Somerset, and fell in the battle of Pinkie fought near Musselburgh on 10th September, 1547.30 Thomas married , sister of Alexander Innes of Catboll.31 and was succeeded by his son Robert. ROBERT MacCULLOCH of Plaids, last of the family to own that estate, on record from 1547 to 1552. He had a retour on 10th February, 1547,/8 as son and heir of 42 his father Thomas in the lands of Plaiddis &c. and office of bailliary of the town and immunity of Tain, being exempted from payment .of feudal taxes on succession on account of his father's death in the national cause; 30 he had sasine of his lands on 22nd March from Queen Mary as Countess of Ross.32 On 21 st April, 1550 he was a witness for Alexander Ross of Balnagown at Edinburgh.33 On 23rd January, 1551/2, at Elgin, Robert McCulloch of Plaidis sold to his uncle Alexander Innes of Catboll, captain of Orkney, and his spouse Elizabeth Innes, the lands of Plaidis, Pettogarte, Ballequich, Ballekere, Petneille, Scarde, with the bailliary of Tain : and on 20th February the Queen granted a charter to Alexander and his wife of these lands.31 Alexander appears thereafter as Alexander Innes of Catboll and Plaids,34 and the association of the name MacCulloch with these lands ceases. R. W. M. NOTES AND REFERENCES 1. There is a useful, but inadequate, genealogy in F. N. Reid, Earls of Ross, 67-8. 2. Sir Wm. Fraser, Earls of Cromartie, ii 460. W. J. Watson, Place -Names of Ross and Cromarty; 38. 3. Wm. Macgill, Old Ross -shire and Scotland (Tain and Balnagown documents), nos. 1229, 1239. R. W. and Jean Munro. Tain through the Centuries, 14, 87. 4. Cadboll Charters, in Walter Macfarlane's "Note Book", National Library of Scotland MSS., 35.4.12x. Revs. A. Macdonald, Clan Donald, i 527-8. 5. C. F. Mackintosh, hwernessiana, 109. Thanes of Cawdor, ed. C. Innes, 16. Family of Rose of Kilravock, 131-2. 6. Old Ross -shire, 935 (pp. 369, 407). Munros' Tain, 12, 35. 7. Reg. Mag. Sig. (Register of the Great Seal), confirmation 4 Aug. 1476. 8. G. Martin's Munro genealogy in W. Macfarlane, Genealogical Collections, i 37, and in Chronological and Genealogical Account of the Fancily of Fowlis, 5. S.R.O. Monro of Allan Papers, no. 291. A. Mackenzie. History, of the Munros, says she was Christian, dr. of John MacCulloch, but more likely to be a generation earlier. 9. S.R.O. Inverness Sheriff Court Book. 10. Origins Parochiales Scotiae, ii (ii) 431. Munros' Tain, 36. 11. Earls of Crontarties, ii 334. 12. Perhaps son of John preceding and brother of William following. Reid (Earls of Ross. 68) makes Wm. son of Angus, but I have omitted the four sons of Angus whom he names without quoting any authority. 13. Earls of Crontartie, ii 337. 14. S.R.O. Douglas Collection, x 72. Innes Revie►v, xiii 150. Munros' Tain, 26. 38. 15. James Fraser, Chronicles of the Frasers (Wardlaw MS.), 111. Clan Munro Afag.. xi 28. 16. D. Gregory, Histm.v of the Western Highlands and Islands, 92. 17. Earls of Crontartie, ii 484-5. 18. Acts of the Lords of Council (1496-1501), 273-4, 277, where he is twice referred to as of 'the Pladdis'. 19. Exchequer Rolls, xii 717. 43 C�,3uI-jty Public Library nc;4csviale, NG r 20. S.R.O. Inverness Sheriff Court Book. The relationship is left blank in the record. 21. Reg. Mag. Sig. Accounts of the Lord High Treasurer of Scotland, iv 168. R. C. Reid, Wigtownshire Charters, 166n. 22. Invernessiana, 191, 194. Sir Wm. Fraser, Sutherland Book, iii 55-6. 23. Reid, Earls of Ross, 68, from Inverness Court Book. A sentence by the same Abbot was witnessed by Wm. McCullo of Plaidis, Alexander McCullo and Walter McCullo, 27 March 1536 (Fraser, Chiefs of Grant, iii 101). 24. Reg. Mag. Sig., conf. 27 Aug. 1533, 16 Jan. 1535/6, 2 Dec. 1539. 25. Regr Sec. Sig. (Register of the Privy Seal), ii 3601, Kalendar of Fearn (per Mr. R. J. Adam). 26. Reid, Earls of Ross, 68. 27. Reg. Sec. Sig. ii 4284. 28. Munro of Foulis Writs, ed. C. T. McInnes, no. 53. 29. Reg. Mag. Sig., 4 May 1548 (footnotes). 30. Cadboll Charters (as in Note 4 above). The composition of the Highland contingent at Pinkie has not been studied in such detail as Sir James Fer- gusson's Ayrshire casualty list in The White Hind, 34-40. Ross of Balnagown may have missed Pinkie as he did the muster at Gladsmuir (Old Ross -shire, no. 672); Mackenzie of Kintail was present but escaped (Earls of Cromartie, ii 492); Munro of Foulis was killed (Munro Writs, no. 59). 31. Reg. May. Sig., 20 Feb. 1551/2. This Alexander was brother (probably half-brother, Family of Innes, 27) of James Innes of Cromie, who fell at Pinkie, father of Alexander, killed in a family quarrel in 1580, and ancestor of the line of Innes of that Ilk who inherited the dukedom of Roxburghe (ibid., and Scots Peerage, ed. Balfour Paul, vii 355-6). He was already designated `of Catboll and Plaids' in 1540 (Family of Innes, ed. C. Innes. 104.) 32. Exchequer Rolls, xviii 427. 33. Reg. Mag. Sig., conf. 24 April 1550. 34. Family of Innes, 117-8, 110-2. W. Cramond, Records of Elgin, i 119. Old Ross -shire, 677, 903. SOME OTHER MacCULLOCHS Cadboll There was probably a close connection between the MacCullochs of Cadboll and the Plaids family. who at one time owned part of the lands of Cadboll. in the parish of Fearn. No genealogy of them is known to exist. 'John Mackullach Laird off Catpoole ' had an only daughter Jean married to John Fraser. chamberlain at Nigg to his namesake James Fraser. bishop of Ross (died 1507). Catherine MacCulloch. wife of Farquhar Munro of Aldie near Tain (of the Coul and Balcony family). from whom she was separated in 1605 after complaints of his cruelty. is described in the principal Munro genealogy as daughter of 'Walter McCulloch of Cadholl ' (later versiolts 44 name him William of Badcall). She is described in the Privy Council records as ' heretrix of a portion of the lands of Kindeis' which he was alleged to have tried by violence to get her to infeft him with. Wardlaw MS. S.R.O. Monro of Allan Papers, no. 291. Reg. Privy Council, vol. vii. Kindeace and Glastulich The lands of Kindeace in Nigg parish and Glastulich in Logic Easter passed in the 17th century to two MacCulloch families descended from sons of John MacCulloch. Provost of Tain and merchant burgess there. who obtained Wester Kindeis from Andrew Munro of Culnald in 1621. From a birthbrief setting forth the *honourable descent' of a great- grandson. this John is said to have been a son of Andrew MacCulloch. merchant in Tain, by Elizabeth Ross of Tarrell, grandson of William. and probably great-grandson of Robert. the last MacCulloch of Plaids. Two of John's sons were. like himself. Provosts of Tain. and also commissioners for the burgh to the Scots Parliament. Thomas. the elder. who in 1644 had lands in Nigg parish valued at £466-13-4 and in Logie Easter at £33-6-8, carried on the Kindeace line through his sons James (first husband of Christian Munro of Obsdale, sister of Sir Robert of Foulis. 3rd Bart.) and David. served heir to his brother in 1652 in Kindeis Wester. which he conveyed in 1661 to his sister Janet's brother Malcolm Ross of Knockan (their son Alexander had the birthbrief quoted above). The name Kindeace. vahich comprised Bayfield. Balnabruach and Anker- ville. was later transferred to property in Kilmuir Easter. Andrew. the younger son, became the first of Glastulich and also had other lands in Easter Ross, where his 1644 reiftal in Logie Easter was £229-3-4. He was twice married, the eldest son John being minister of Ardersier. ' outed ' 1662 and returned 1690, and died in Edinburgh in 1705: the Glastulich line was continued by the eldest son of the second marriage Hugh. whose son David was served heir in 1704 and was father among others of Roderick, captain in Cromartie's regiment in 1745-6, estate forfeited but given a free pardon 1748, married 1752 Margaret Munro of Culrain with son Gustavus who died 1758. Roderick's son by a later ( Ross) marriage was David of Glastulich (they retained the style -but li . ed at ' Renie . or Rhynie near Lochslin Castle). who married and had a daughter. Glastulich returned to the family through Hugh Rose. son of Roderick's sister Mary. who bought it and other properties and eventually succeeded to the Cromarty estates on marriage with Catherine Ross Munro of Culcairn. Reid, Earls of Ross (birthbrief &c.) Acts Parl. Seet. Retours. Services of Heirs. Mackintosh, Antiquarian Notes, lst ser. Watson, Place - Names of Ross and Cromarty. Prisoners of the Forty -Five. Forfeited Estates Papers. Forbes, Journals of Episcopal Visitations. Session Papers, s.r. MacCulloch. Pilton i Pitneilies / Mulderg Sir Hugh MacCulloch of Pilton. knight, who died on 6 August 1688. in his 70th year. was described on his tombstone in Greyfriars Churchyard. Edinburgh. as 'ab antiqua familia McCullorum a Catboll oriundus ' (descended of the ancient family of MacCulloch of Catboll), and is on 45 Coul-ILY Public Library Mocksvgle, NO record as having been a writer or lawyer in Edinburgh. Having ' purchast to himself a splendid and opulent fortune,' he had a Crown charter in 1672 confirming possession of the lands of Easter and Wester Pilton with parts of Muirhouse, and in 1674 a grant of arms from the Lord Lyon in which his descent from the family of ' Cadboll in Rosse' was acknowledged. In 1688 his nephew James, eldest son of Sir Hugh's brother -german Angus of Ballacuith. was served heir to Sir Hugh in the lands of Nether Pitnealie, Bcllacuith. Nether quarter or Little Allan, and Innerethie ; Mr. James of Piltoun purchased the estate of Mulderg in Fearn parish in 1690, and secured the right of burial in the Douglas aisle adjacent to the Kirk of Fearn ; his widow married John Lord Lindores. Of James's three sons. David succeeded. sold Pilton in 1716, and on his death in March 1755 left a load of debt on Mulderg which passed to his uncle John and then in 1763 to his daughter Margaret, to whom her cousin Jean Ross of Pitcalnie was served heir in 1778. Eldest of James's three brothers. named in an entail of Mulderg in 1690, was Alexander of Pitneilies (died 1704). whose infant son James had as tutor his uncle John (a bailie of Tain, referred to as John MacCulloch of Pitneilies), and was served heir to his father in 1719 in Nether Pitnilzies. Brown, Greyfriars Epitaphs. Book of Old Edinburgh Club, �-ol. xxv. Macgill, Old Ross -shire. Laing Charters. Reg. Privy Council, 3rd ser., vol. xi. Retours. Services of Heirs. Reg. of Tailzies, vol. x. S.R.O. Monro of Allan Papers. Session Papers, s.r. MacCulloch. Tarrell The estate of Tarrell in Tarbat parish. which was held during most of the 16th century by a MacCulloch family (continued briefly through Munro descendants), was at one time the property of the Tarrells. John of Tarrell was chamberlain to William earl of Ross in the 14th century. and witnessed the earl's charter to Hugh Munro in Feb. 1370/1. Angus MacCulloch, who may have been a cadet' of Plaids, had sasine of. Meikle Tarrell in 1505 as heir to his grandmother Eufemia Tarrell. but an Angus • MacCulloch of Tarrell had already been recorded as a citizen of Tain in 1484. and among the landed gentlemen of Ross slain at Allt a' Charrais in 1486. Yet another Angus MacCulloch of Tarrell (or Meikle Tarrell) appears between 1534 and 1539. joined by a son and heir Alexander in 1537. but when Angus resigned the lands (reserving a liferent) they were granted by the King on 8 March 1541/2 to his repos (probably grandson) and heir apparent John MacCulloch and his heirs. whom failing to Angus's sons Hugh and Angus and theirs. On 14 Feb. 1543/4 Hugh MacCulloch of Hiltoun had the gift of marriage of 'John McCulloch nevoy and heir of umquhile Angus McCulloch of Terrell.' John MacCulloch of Tarrell. bailie of Tain. married Christina Mony- penny sister of Thomas Monypenny of Kinkell in 1553. and left a widow Elizabeth Ross on his death in April 1567. He had a son Angus, the ward of whose lands and marriage was given by Queen Mary to David Chalmer, and on his forfeiture to Andrew Monro of Newmore in 1568 ; the deceased Alexander MacCulloch was described as the last possessor of Meikle Tarrell in 1576; and on 30 July 1577 Mariota. McCullo, John's only surviving child, was served heir to her father. On 28 Npv. 1577 'Marion McCulloch Lady of Mekile Tarrell' entered into a 46 contract with Andrew of Newmore (with consent of her curators including Robert Munro of Foulis) in prospect of marriage with his son and heir George, and a Crown charter of 26 July 1578 confirmed the couple in the lands of Meikle Tarrell. George, who added Easter Tarbat (or Ballone) to his lands in 1610, became head of the Monros of Milntown next year, and sat in the Scots Parliament of 1621, died on 6 May 1623. after which his eldest son sold these lands in Easter Ross to Sir Roderick Mackenzie of Coigach : for him James VI erected them into the barony of Meikle Tarrell, with the manor place of that name as principal messuage or dwelling house. Munro of Foulis Writs. Fraser, Earls of Cromartie. Reid, Earls of Ross (cf. note 12 above). Gordon, Earldom of Sutherland, Wardlaw MS., Feuds and Conflicts of the Clans. S.R.O. Douglas Collection, vol. x. Exchequer Rolls, vol. xii. Reg. Mag. SiR.. vols. iii, iv. Reg. Sec. Sig., vols. iii, v, vi. Retours. Macgill, Old Ross -shire. George Monro of Knokfethie married Elizabeth McCulloch. whose testament was registered at Edinburgh on 24 Aug. 1607. Angus MacCulloch of Badferne (in Kilmuir Easter parish. 'now obsolete') is on record between 1615 and 1640, and Hugh of Badferne in 1650. _ George MacCulloch. son of George merchant burgess of Fortrose by a sister of George Dallas of St. Martins. W.S.. was portioner of Katewell in Kiltearn parish in 1693. when he and his wife Margaret Mackenzie were feuars on the Foulis estate. 'I was hunting elephant in French Equatorial Africa with a Frenchman called Vasselet from Alsace . . . ' was the intriguing beginning of a letter which sent us hunting some years ago for information about Munro septs in Easter Ross. There was a tradition in M. Vasselet's family. whose home has a cornerstone supposed to have been brought from Scotland. that their name was originally Vass. and that they were part of a Munro contingent who left Ross -shire in the seventeenth century to fight for Gustavus Adolphus. Although the story is quite possible. we were unfortunately not able to provide M. Vasselgt with a Highland pedigree. In view of the renewed interest in the Massacre of Glencoe (1692), which was the subject of a recent controversial film, it is worth noting that the report of the official inquiry into the slaughter, on which most subsequent accounts are based, may have been compiled by a Monro. The Commissioners, appointed by King William in 1695, chose Alexander Monro of Bearcrofts (ancestor of the Monros of Auchinbowie) as their clerk. Macaulay wrote of the report:— `It is a paper highly creditable to those who framed it, an excellent digest of evidence, clear, passicnless, and austerely just' (History of England, chapter xxi). 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Porn, 1.3 ®'I'ht• 17vertun Publishers, Sln Nurtt. Alain Silt—A-1. I e+ilan, Utah 'I! burial Baty IF known on rhild'"n and nut tk•aNt dale. write burial dale. 1111.1 S► (HUS 1. IIS • IVVt-rv4• vitt' lur adiil ita-I Intn (i ;i► n o (D 'o rto Y- to m n 's m o w O K O O C n c-.1 m x M C m a K a to to r• 0 G m a K K x M m 7 � n ° 'r1 1TJ O '1 cD to th r0 Ch� � V O• ems— " A W tv • .. - •' 4 " n o• m v ^ °• mos a D r o • (D oW 1?. p v a s. m �_ F - (n O r rY a r• m N ' o m 3 co n m. w a o r• w l --t H �•C ~ sl u z n • 110 M O ,7 1—t n O• m 1-1 "r' rt v: C m Y• m e W O O O ulm 0 �w w ° o ►•� M 0 � o G n P.- 0 cn w R m 7 w (� O w H :OD a m G [moi 9 0 'n m n K I `d ° g x <G a" n w n ►-� r r tx 0 lb � ' Co Cc G O bd r 00iLA H n a O C a p. O n l -� r tmn n G 0 m ��• y r oG C °c - !i~ Y G a 00 rOc �% !A l� ! H- fG ^y r F�'• I r? m G a 04 l -h O W cr, i0 i ! a G o G E M }'• ^ fl) w O , rt v Ic r? L E x' r O n m Y• a (ncn i'T r. I •� O cD m O ~ K 1011 m hx'•rh m m 00 KEn z r • a O n m ca a EEr Q 0 I O m C 17'rcr, ' Y a K phi N• 1..... r4 �• K %C a N 00 ►-� 00 00 00 n l «`r w h7 ° - 00 O'• 00 w W m }-► �y i o x a m .� r-1 •�. a m w wTs o W a ;am " z r• a r, a O m a V w G IT Om K 1-h Y m K m a r V m H n m g r (n n - w K n bd Y• w K rrE n O w rt ^ ry ` a rt m 0 y C8 m H H .7 lO 2 H C) En m m n O n o om U 'O • rT a Q • Y N O, U v' i U -1 01 -3 U► j 0 ►-1 v o3 b ►-3 0 a 0 -j 0 .3 ti -3 U 0 > W o P o P o P o W o W o O o P o P O w o a: o w o o w (D m (D m CD CL 0 r», CL r m m (D �m u • ._.. ca CD o iD N'cl�r- p �cs.a�.Z ": W N N 11 -. K:K�� �� �.� 0 Mwi H1�D O� 110 a 00 fli fD rr mm C•rr to ti w x. . :s=. 0• d o '7 e.2 m �. .* . 1 c:�cD rr c%0 £ �D r• r i I~' F'n 7 .. : ca' n cr 1.'t' �� O GIN C W �' f•► ty C ISO =r �IDi• 10 m N W :n :l •S7 ' :� t< O >b rf O 131 ► i I ! ITl 1 1 (i ;i► n o (D 'o rto Y- to m n 's m o w O K O O C n c-.1 m x M C m a K a to to r• 0 G m a K K x m 7 � n C O '1 cD to th 3 n O' S o• m v ^ °• mos a D -s o • (D oW 1?. p v a s. m z F - (n z r rY a r• I D m 3 co 7 • x n M O O n O• C K `C v: C K Z W O 0(D x 0 � o G m + ~• N cn CL to w G m m K K - x G ►-� tJ � w ' Co Cc 00 O bd F 00iLA G p. W r 00 r o r (i ;i► n o (D 'o rto Y- to m n 's m o w O K O O C n c-.1 m x M C m a K a to to r• 0 G m a K K x y bGd D M 7 z 0 t D 0 C t3f th 3 n O' S d a c N oW s. m a I D co N 3 r C �( Z O 0(D o m + ~• m m K K r x ►-� tJ � �. ' Co Cc 00 ~ bd co 00iLA W r 00 r r - u !A fG r i0 G M CD fl) (D (D , � Ic i'T I I cD m O K 00 z y bGd D M 7 z 0 t D 0 I'amll% Group Sheet. Form F2 ®The Overton Publishers. 526 North Main Street. Logan. Utah *11 hurial date to known on children and not death date, write (� j. t \,)3 but gal dau•, prefix (Ilur). Use reverse aide for additional Into. v� i In r o a ►s ° (D o. a v fy z N a G AP- m oo N 00 %0 Cr 00 m rt N P, w )--A QQ 03 r y m mm m O m m m m QQ CCD rt K � �+ 10-h O 0 w � H CD m n � o a rt o Ct p 1 �C 1 1 td 1 F'. 1 r 1 t-' 1 'DQ m N v fz g � O ti �" O rt UCD ri r rr b a1 A O A rtr ph 1b Kp• O h~+ tD O 0 A C W P4 OO 1 :X 041 O o O O R :► W N O O fD A c� A W N '' In c7' :3a. o O lid CL PA` ° � tD R C'1 m Cr a AP4 G rt w N 1-h o„ a0 Im r. 0 rt er �� O Cy 0 o � mC. a I~ QQ !�Ao a o CD v C C 00 ° �7- o z 00 00 LnA h r 0 0 0 Q r w 0 p C r v � °. o D 1-' K Ph 0 0-% r1 W of O 4 Z � a w g , a to rt m tD ►M! y eh t9 cD �7 fD ~ ° wK x0.� o u A A V K A O � • 0 r p rt 0 K CQ O o K p V JOR 11 �m rrt 7 K o K O z ^z a r CO r 00 t - oC p� b' W off% P I W O ct 0 -1 s ;m °" O �Z �z N w a o 050 Cu a ; G O QQ �0 N ON o { Cri A (D �.C 0 0 c Q 1 OD 000 M _ O J.-_ H 0: a a 0 -3 C -4 O-3 0 «� G -3 0-3 0 H G -1 0 ►H 0 -1 H C o w e lv o o w o w A o ry rt o ro re- o >v rt o y A o w rt o Wo Pr w0 lv o w rt 0" CD m rt m m CD m m m m x m tD p A K 00 m z o C co O A C 8 CK 01-A 00 1 O ap LA i In r o a ►s ° (D o. a v fy z N a G AP- m oo N 00 %0 Cr 00 m rt N P, w )--A QQ 03 r y m mm m O m m m m QQ CCD rt K � �+ 10-h O 0 w � H CD m n � o a rt o Ct p 1 �C 1 1 td 1 F'. 1 r 1 t-' 1 'DQ m N v fz g � O ti �" O rt UCD ri r rr b a1 A O A rtr ph 1b Kp• O h~+ tD O 0 H A C W J '�y N p V O N ' •'', `~�CD m. a o, a z O , fD A c� (m 00 3 c7' :3a. o O lid CL PA` ° � tD R C'1 m Cr a AP4 0 to ° 0 wCr 1-h o„ m rt 0 rt er �� O Cy 0 o � 0 a I~ QQ K a o CD v C C 00 00I r -h 00 00 LnA h r 0 0 0 Q r w 0 p C r v R o D K K o Q O � a g 1-4 tD ►M! y eh t9 cD �7 fD H A W a^ ~ O O t0-+ fD A c� (m 0 c7' :3a. o rt CL PA` h � tD C'1 pr a AP4 to p 0 wCr A m m rt 0 rt er �� M Cy 0 o � 0 a I~ QQ K a o CD v C r cc cc h r 0 0 Q r c v R D K o H X O 1» Pr rr o CL PA` AP4 to 0 wCr a er �� z x o K� I~ QQ a o CD v C Family Group Sheet, Form F2 OThe Everton Publishers. 526 Norft Main Street, Logan. 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Bowman -4JAe DAAY04 AJ/ae,0 <1d14r-' 40 Ss1e,2e:,, zW4 9415 Primrose Shreveport, LA 71118 59 McCULLOUGH CEMETERY RESEARCH by MARCUS VAND MER 22 Dellwood• Drive Little Rock; Arkansas 72249 April 24, 1960, my mother and father and I visited a family cemetery near old Elmo, Arkansas, now near Mack's Gin, on Highway 14 from Newport, Arkansas.:. -We found.the following markers piled against a walnut tree in a'horse lot. Now it is an open field. .James McCullough,; - d. ':1 Oct;-_ . 1877,t age 57 ' Mears e ( This was the first husband of my grandmother, whose maiden name was Susan Savanah Hudson.) •age Thomas McCullough. d, 2 March 1861, 70 years. (Father of James McCullough.) ---?--- -?---, d. 2 March 1888. Top of marker broken and gone. (Maybe the wife of Thomas -McCullough.) My mother told me that several of the children were buried there. 6917 N�f6k There is another family cemetery, known as Brooks -McCullough, located in the Black Lands, southwest of Oil Trough, Arkansas. y' ��-• Susan Hudson's second marriage was fo William H. McCullough, maybe , a cousin of her first husband; James McCullough.- My mother, her sister and I visited the cemetery in 1956. At the time of our visit the cemetery ry was in a pasture and all the markers were down. V. Y. Cook -had stopped burying when he became owner of the land by foreclosure of a mortgage from Dick Smith. In addition to the markers listed below, there are several other graves with only stone. markers. A. E. Woodson, dau. of W..& E. [William and Elizabeth] McCullough, b. 14 Jan. 1843, d,.,-9 Dec. 1879. (Married Dick Woodson.) Mary Jane Brooks, dau. of Wm. and Elizabeth McCullough, d. 6 a April• . 1884, age 43 yrs., 7 mos.; 20 days. (Married -,28 Nov. 1859 to Samuel D. Brooks.) 0 S. D. Brooks, b. 18 July 1857$', d. � Nov. * 15, 1879.Liu [Martha] Sturdavent, dau. of W.: & E. McCullough, b. -17 April z 18469 d. 21 Dec. 1881. - '� Elizabeth [wife of William H: . McCu11ough] , .dau.: of Thomas, and Courtney Billingsley, b. 16 March 1819, d.' 22 Jan. 1881. c William H. McCullough, b. 24 Feb. 18159 d, 18 Nov. 1888. cv .cV CU I have information on these families that no other person R' ,Z has. I will ' be glad to give information -:'t' those who are seeking for their ancestors. � � 7 Al ur V V r 0 C) 9 3 V 41. IJ r 0 �1 Lei 9415 Primrose Shreveport, La. 71118 14 July 1984 Dear Alice Your letter and enclosures came and I have been trying to decipher the deed from Henry to James. 11ith the help of a magnifying glass I can make out a great deal but not all. It appears that the land already had improvements and was not just raw land that was- deeded to James. Also, it seems that James paid Henry 100 pounds for it. According to old Henry's will, the land was to have been an outright gift . I notice that there was a page number on each sheet, written in a More modern style than 1772. Should I write the archives for a copy or do you think there would be one in Duplin County? Also, do you i-7ant this -copy back? From what you said, I am under the impression that it wouldn't copy and this is the one that was sent to you. I'LL hold onto it until I hear from you. I really did want to come to the reunion this year and Gene would have taken me if the weather had not been so hot. He said that maybe we could come some fall when the weather would be better. I was tempted to fly -and take you up on a _prior offer to stay with you but just couldn't seem to make up my mind to do it. When plans are put off from year to year, they have -a way of never coming to pass and I aril afraid that is what will happen. I think it would be so nice for the two of us to sit down and have a chat on the McCulloh genealogy and see where we should concentrate. I need suggestions from you so I will know what lines need work. Is Alfred's house not occupied? 'Kho actually holds title to it now? iother and I must have stayed at James' house. I remember a large dining table - long - with a lot of people seated. Also, it seemed that the dotmstairs bedroom was large, and it may have been a relative size since I was small. I can remember walking across a field of red clay to the mailbox and how the clay stuck to ray shoes. Also, I spent one night with one of the Daniels who had a girl my approximate -age. 14ho? Are there any old pictures -of -Alfred's house? Sure wish I could see it and walk through the cemetery. it is so bad about the cousins. Sadie was such a good person and so good to write to Mother. I have some recipes she sent me - one for a "pig pickin cake". Apparently she was the correspondent in the family as I did not find anything from any of the others, except Doc McCulloh. Xnow hoer you feel about the McCulloh markers. gather. none at all than ones too 11sn1de" (as Gene's gramdmother used to say); then to insult it by spelling the name wrongs She sounds like a very deter- mined person who will have it her own way. Have you heard any more about a book of hers. Let me know what you learn at the reunion. Davin %ounty�Public library -2 - Alice, I think the enclosures will be self-explanatory. It was such a shock to hear from Earl Barfield and it took my brain a while to get in gear to talk sensibly to him. He is so nice on the phone. There was no discussion of -any generation past James lic-Culloh and apparently there was nothing in his records that gave any hint or he would have indicated it in some manner. He was..confused over the intermarriages between Barfield and McCulloh and that is why he thought Elizabeth might have been a Barfield. I will see Tuesday when Nancy and I go to the library again whether I can locate any- thing on his Charles or Hopkins Barfield. He has Charles'es will naming Hopkins as an heir and feels this is his line of Hopkins but cannot find proof positive. He is very involved in the research, I can tell; and says that he thinks it is great. He is a mature - sounding man and I would figure somewhere around 55 or so Hard to tell. He did not mention a wife or any children other than the one son Ann O'Hare sent for the Warnock DAR papers for me and one did list the marriage of Joseph Vlarnock and Fannie Alston. No supporting documents attached. Just dates. One form was dated 1905 and the other 1916. Dubba Burks told me that Charles G. 1.1cCulloh was, first, a 3rd Lt. under Maj. Franklin W. Desha, Infantry Dattn. , in 1861. I have sent for the record and will let you have a copy if and when. It will take so long; according to the instructions between two and three months. Desha's descendant had the original document under a glass table top and showed it to Bubba when they had a Civil War Roundtable meeting at Betty's house. He is going to try to get it photocopied if Betty gill let him borrow it. I have been trying to help some Trimble and Hankins folks lately and that is why it took me a while to get McCulloh back on the brain when Earl Barfield called. The Trimble one is just getting started and the Hankins one just recently learned that she had Hankins lineage. I found the wife's parents on 1850 microfilm - they were overlooked in the index printouts No answers yet to Glenden 114cCulloh letter or one to a Trimble desc. As you can see, b1m. M. Warner was no help. I didn't keep the daughter's address in Pine Bluff. If you will send it to me, name and address, I will try one more shun. Perhaps their lineage is too exalted to bother with us. I've sent for Jackson Trimble's probate hoping it will contain some papers which should have been in James Trimble's packet. According to those in the know, Skip, Charles' son, occupies himself by doing nothing. I don't know what his source of livelihood is. Charles was so friendly that it is hard to under- stand the attitude of his family. I don't think Earl Barfield is tied to the MIcCullohs . Ann O'Hare referred to the aunt as a "newly found cousin". Ann is related to us by the half blood. Perhaps she will uncover something else when she has time to dig into her Barfield records. Davi'9 County Public l i A1ocksville, NC bCa CM -3- The papers on the murder of William Taylor are really interesting- as nterestingas are the others. Cali you imagine going through life with the scars of a murderer burned into each cheek:' Like the scarlet letter A women here forced to wear when convicted of adultery. The man should have had to wear one, too. lie who causes one t*omrnit adultery is also considered an adulterer. It must have been some shock to 1illiam's family. I wonder where they were when it happened. Cr what he did to bring it about. Some people are born mean and don't need a reason. "ell, Alice, this has been the next best thing to a person-to-person visit. I find it hard to correspond with others and try to keep our opinions unmentioned as to the origins of James ircCulloh. Just keep hoping someone will come up with the information and let us know. Lille to help without giving away your ace and that is why 1 send you copies of correspondence so you will know what is going on. Hope you have a lovely day at the reunion tomorrow. Doo -Hoo. 1.9ish I were there. Love, Sncls . ' Ad-I4..c1— �T Davie County Public U ,$ MmVsville, NC Cf.�xi �/2C� .fie_ V O y G�z✓.� rlzfA; J — • �-4U. __�--�Grox.Gm� �fT,c�-ea/_lit✓_ �,Gy�iz�v� . 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Like you, the birth date for Alexander McCulloch (Sarah Hill) does not seem to go with the other children of Henry, S.F. Also, my chart reveals that both Alexander and Benjamin McC. were shown to be married to the same woman. This has not been a very cheerful week. Starting off, our little dog died a week ago today. She was 14 years old and had been on three kinds of heart medicine for a little over 2 years. A letter from Adilou then told of the death of one of Mother's long-time friends in Covington, one that I had become fond of during the years. On Monday. Anna Dene called to say that her husband had died that morning. Bill had his left lung removed several months ago due to--acancerous tumor and had been receiving the usual treatments that were so hard on him. The cancer spread to his chest and nothing further could be done. He requested im- mediate cremation as he hated wakes and did not want to put his family through that. He was cremated Tuesday. It was too late for me to go so we sent her some money to help out on the several things she wilave to have, copies of documents, etc. I told her that if sh preferred, she could put some of it back and later when she and her daughter felt like it they could have a nice dinner out. He had been ill so long and she and Bun are exhausted. While I was on the phone with Anna Dene, or Mason to let him know about Bill, the husband of Gene's cousin in Florida tried to call to say he was flying through on his way to Tyler, Tx. to his brother's funeral. We take the Batesville, Ark. paper and during this time there was an obit on Jess Peebles who was married to Gene's second cousin on his mother's side. We had met Betty and the girls but not Jess when we took Judith to visit Betty's dad in Cave City year before last. For your records, Bill Schuler died June 6, 1983, and was cremated June 7. 1983. Fie family hoped to bury him beside his parents if there was enough room, as close as possible if not. I want to call her in a day or two. Before Bill had become so ill toward the last, Anna Dene was interested in the 1dcCulloh reunion this year. I told her about Sadie being ill, that it was held in the sisters' yard and that I didn't know whether Sadie's condition would prevent them having it there. Would you let me know if it is being held this year, when and where? Will appreciate it. I don't know that any of us will make it; also, I would like to let Mason know about it. Mason was 75 on May 8th and Iris had open house for him. We went for the weekend and Flora and her daughter flew down for the celebration, just for the weekend, also. Iris had the most un- usual cake made for him. It was a sheet cake and the woman who made it painted a picture of the snagboat Arkansas from a snap- shot. Mason was standing on ice behind the boat - this was done from a snapshot that I had located and sent him a copy. On the right side was a full -face portrait of mason copied from a picture taken when he was elected president of the Pine Bluff Home Builders Association. I wouldn't have had the heart to cut it! Davie County Public Library MMSville, NO -2- I 2- I know you have been puzzled about the father of our James and whether he may have been an illegitimate son of Henry, L.G. I ran across a McCulloch (think Georgia) who had posted a bastardy bond and it gave the name of the female. Right now I can't find my note but it made me wonder whether any of the ',,cC's we are researching had ever appeared on any bastardy bonds, especially Henry E. as he acknowledged George as his son. I also understand that the man responsible was bound to support and educate the child until it reached 21 years of age. So far, I have not run across any such bonds in the North Carolina, or South, records. Back to Henry, S.P. and Alexander: an item in Hathaway's North Carolina Hist. and Gen. Register asks whether Henry's wife, Mary, may have been the daughter of John Moncrie£ who died 1712 X-1 as he a a daug er name ry an Henry McCulloch was name as an executor. If this is right, then Henry, S.P. would not have been married to a daughter of James of Grogan. GUIDE TO THE MANUSCRIPT COLLECTION IN THE WILLIAM L. CLEMENTS LIBRARY, Comp. William S. Ewing, Curator of Manuscripts, Sec. Ed., Ann Arbor: Clements Library, 1953: Shows the following: McCulloch, Alexander (flourished 1774) McCulloh, Henry (died c. 1779) Henry Eustace (flourished 1778) James W. (flourished 1844) Robert (flourished 1780) The memoirs we have - are they the memoirs mentioned in Harriet's letter to William and perhaps passed on to Alfred? Her letter would seem to indicate so. I still would like to have a photocopy as I wonder if my typed copy is correct. There are differences in the lineage on the two pages and that is what bothers me. I typed it when I was quite young and I may not have reviewed it a s thoroughly as I should. Did it while on a visit to Texas, just learning to type and did it on an old typewriter in Lowell's office, c. 1941. Lately, I have been concentrating on the Warnock line, father of '-Iariah Warnock McCulloh, and have run into the usual a discrepancies there. Two families are credited with the identical R g.. children! Rats, Rats, Rats! Letters requesting help in getting 0 �,IdK :Js it straightened out have not been answered so will try again later. 5'g A65D g I sent an article on John 'aarnock, father of Mariah, to Wilson n�ido oa` thatlhelhadamysvilland permissionttodhim includeait1inhe felt it a Chronicleaiit ssue /bpo(ri' Sent an SASE but have not heard as yet. He is an experienced ao newsman and my inexperienced effort just may have been too much �A� G for him. He has resigned as Pres. of Batesville Gen. Soc. and �k has declined to hold any other office. I think he is tired and OF JSP ��5� nearing retirement, although he has a financial interest in the D� SIS' i Batesville Guard. The Chronicle is about 2 years behind with Soo theyear. fd issues uThey t it shaveed to startedva monthly newsletterschedule toyprintthe ein �f eieymeetings, , think this we 1Pgo/agreataddtiiontotheir services. Contestendsthismonthto cfi name the newsletter and I sent in 4 suggestions. Prize is a year's subscription. Davie County Public Ub(afy Mocksville, NC .. -3- Now, about your offer to collaborate on a book, or I would do the book and you would send my your information: Gene hopes to take early retirement this year, or next spring, I should say, with the idea of selling the two houses and relocating in the Jamestown, Ark. area. We have looked at land but the place Gene and his dad would like is not yet for sale. It lies across the road from the Jamestown Missionary Baptist Church, on high ground, with no danger of flooding. We would each have our own place, plus room for a trailer for two of Gene's elderly aunts and a retarded son of one. The one with the retarded son has no other children; she is 90, he is 65. The other aunt has been practically abandoned by a son and daughter who loved her dearly so long as she was on her feet, could cook scrumptious meals and hand over the folding green any time a mouth opened to say, "I want". The poor thing made the mistake of falling and breaking her hip but when it looked as though she planned to return to the trailer on her son's property the daughter-in-law flipped her wig, the daughter who lives in Shreveport refused to let her live with her so now she is in a house, I won't say home, with a younger sister who has her only for the extra income. All this for a woman who opened her home to anyone for as long as they wanted to stay and gave them the best in the house. Both of us (our two families) have offered to have her live with us but if she can't live with, or even be invited to visit with the daughter here, she does not want to be in the same town. Easter weekend we took Gene's parents to Tulsa and Ponca City to visit with their sisters and hoped to go on to Ark. for a couple of days but the bad weather would not allow it. Gene went to the eye doctor the day before we left as he has been having trouble with a "flashing" and spots in one eye. The doctor was quite dis- �J��°r' r5 I turbed and sent him to a retina specialist who said that for now he is all right but that if he noticed any change, especially a sudden one, to come in immediately. The first doctor thought that the retina was becoming detached which could cause blindness so that was the reason for his concern. Gene does very close work in his drafting line and the years have taken their toll on his vision and that is why he hopes to take early retirement, and early social security. It will depend upon whether his company makes the same offer to those who will be 62 by the first of the year, and i4hether Regan will mess up soc. sec. at 62. We will not be able to afford it otherwise and even with this it will be a tight squeeze. That is why I am trying to do as much genealogy as possible this year as we both know it IS expensive any way it is done and, too, if we do relocate then my research facility is gone. Batesville has a small library and the work would have to be done in Little Rock. I don -"t see the possibility of being able to get away with 4 older ones to tend, and the transportation factor as I don't drive, nor would I be able to take the car and leave the others stranded. All of this is to say that if you want to continue with your plans for a book, that I will help you in any way possible and that any information you share will be kept between the two of us. I can help on securing probates, microfilm reading, making charts, and pouring over materials to help straighten out lines. If this is all right with you, then we are "on". If not, I certainly under- stand and will still be available for help. I, too, have run into those who want all I have collected but do not wish to share any- thing ny-thing they have. I have dropped those from my list. Bubba Burks has asked for my help on many things, one in getting proof of our -4- relationship to Robert Trimble and proof of his Rev. War service so his sister, Wanda, could join DAR. I spent a lot of time, wrote letters, etc., and it has gone unacknowledged by them. True, I hoped that with membership she could get some grandparent forms, etc. that are not available to me as a non -member, but can see now that once my usefulness is over, that is the end. I have not heard one word from her; Bubba is the go-between. He has made many copies of photos available to me but I have paid for each and every one plus ordering extras for the sisters and brothers. A correspondent who lives in San Antonio and has relatives in the Locust Grove-Jamestown area has been by with her husband to see me. They were on their way home from Alabama,so called and came out for a nice visit and lunch. Katie and I are not related but one of her Barnes married one of ray Pates and Katie had lost them in the census. I knew that Pate had died and Barnes had re- married to S . L. Howerton (this is the Howerton that is related to the children of Charles G. McCulloh by his first marriage). Katie's inquiry reached me in a round-about way. She has eye problems and I looked up some information for her in our micro- film. We have exchanged information. I have a book on our Trimbles that is now out of print and recently copied a good number of pages out of it for a Trimble descendant who lives in California. Letter came yesterday to say how thrilled she was. She had sent me money to pay for the copies and postage so yesterday's letter had a $4.00 book of stamps as a thank you. I knew-she would like it as the book is excellent and contains a good section on the historical background. As Paul said, "see what large letters I write". I am just getting acquainted with my brand new typewriter and trying to locate the changes of the characters. They are out to get me as it has been over 26 years since I typed on an electric typewriter and many, many years since I have done any serious typing. Maybe I will get the hang of it one day, Anyway, I am happy to have it as my handwriting has deteriorated so and that may be the reason my handwritten letters to others have not commanded respect. The enclosures will be easy for you to understand. Joe Baker got them for me since I was not able to get up there as planned. I sent him some money for copies, gas, etc. and some he included were bonuses as in the case of the letter written by my Uncle John McCulloh asking that Daddy be appointed his guardian. Mason said this was because Uncle Albert Johnson wanted him to quit school. I thought you might like to have the copies for your files as it brings life to the individuals in addition to documentation. An added benefit to the typewriter is that it gives me a copy so I will know what I have sent and asked. That way, maybe I won't repeat so much.-Say, perhaps that is the answer - maybe I have bored everyone to death! If you have survived the letter this far, then it is time for a cup of coffee and a snack to get yourself together. I hope the enclosures help you. I'm sorry about all of the illness in your family and can appreciate how exhausting it can be, both emotionally and physical- ly, You are truly the Florence Ni%2gale (?) Nightingale (?) in your family and I hope they act at je st a little appreciative. -5 - Alice, my sister Flora wishes not to be included in any book. Her first husband was not the husband and father he should have been. She was finally able to secure a divorce and her son later changed, legally, his name to Pate on his lawyer's advice as he was going into business for himself and the lawyer said his father could cause problems. I want to respect her wishes and request that you delete her from any manuscript that you prepare for publication. Flora is a great mother and sister, and grand- mother and I don't want to go against her wishes or possibly cause her any problems. I've tried to answer everything in your letter and just now see that I failed to mention the copies of Alfred and Jincy pictures. Please let me know how much they are and I will send you the money _ makes me happy to think that I will have pictures of both sets of great-grandparents:, I am glad that you alerted me about the interest of some of the other 1:cC women who possibly are planning a book. Now if they should happen to contact me I will know what the score is. Good luck on your gum work - sounds extremely painful. As I told the doc last year when I was entertaining broken ribs and a punctured lung, "better you than me", when he gave a wall -cracking sneeze as he en-ttered my room. They must get allergic to all the flowers in the rooms. I continue sending occasional notes to Sadie and birthday cards to all three but no=longer hear from any of them. Sure hate it about Sadie as she was so sharp and so good to write. I simply must stop and try to get this in the mail. Ate _ r V Davio aunty public U'VO moroksville., NO