Saturday, December 28, 2019
Wednesday, December 25, 2019
Saturday, December 21, 2019
Joseph Wallace
If any of you are connected to the Wallace Family you will find this interesting. Joseph Wallace lived in Ohio County during the 1830's and in 1830 was granted two Patents related to water-wheels. On the second image below you will find "Current water wheel, for mills" and on the third image you will find "Motion to mills communicated by a water wheel." I think Joseph's family owned a mill in Ohio County that was powered by a water-wheel. There is a Joseph Wallace in the 1820 census living in Ohio County. I found a Gazetteer from 1840 that says Ohio County had two flouring mills and seven grist mills
Wednesday, December 18, 2019
George Washington's Western Kentucky Lands
Note: We know that Grayson County, Kentucky was formed in 1810 from land taken from Hardin and Ohio Counties. So all or much of this land was part of Ohio County at one time.
Source: Register ofKentucky State Historical Society
Source: Register of
Vol. 29, No. 89 (October, 1931), pp. 379-384
(6 pages)
Published by: KentuckyHistorical Society
The above is my attempt to place
the Washington land on a current Google map.
My attempt is not accurate. It would be a good
for someone to make a better map for us.
I hope one of you will take that on as a project.
Monday, December 16, 2019
December 16, 1811
Dec. 16, 1811
On this
day in history the first of the multiple New Madrid Earthquakes strike. The
Mississippi River ran backwards in places, entire islands disappeared, and Reelfoot Lake
in Tennessee
was created. The quakes remain the most powerful to hit the contiguous United States east of the Rockies .
Saturday, December 14, 2019
Wednesday, December 11, 2019
Transportation and Mail Service in the Early Days
Transportation and
Mail Service in the Early Days
In pioneer days in Ohio County
(1790’s to about 1850) transportation was limited to walking, horse-back, wagon
or river travel. Most pioneer families
owned at least one horse or mule as these animals were also used to pull stumps
and other farm labor, and also to pull farm wagons. Almost all of the settlers in the region were
small farmers using two or three horses or mules, working to raise five to ten
cattle and grow corn. Tobacco, wheat,
hemp and flax were other crops in Ohio
County . Corn was ground into meal and also fed to
hogs or distilled into whiskey. About ¼
of the settlers owned no cattle, horses or mules. Pioneers thought nothing of walking a few
miles. River travel on the Green River
and Rough River was by flat-boat, keelboat or
canoe. As early as
1827 flatboat owners were hauling tobacco and other agricultural products, and
passengers, up and down the Green River for a
fee. Floating with the current was easy but against
the current was a problem. The first
known ferry operations across the Green River
began in the early 1800’s near Cromwell and was called Borah’s Ferry. We can assume that
most people traveled very little during the very early years.
STEAMBOATS:
Here is a portion of John
Filson’s map of the Green River drawn in 1784.
Steamboats first appeared
on the Ohio River in the 1820’s and became
more frequent in the 1840’s. Steamboats
first appeared on the Green River about 1828
and during the 1830’s improvements were started on the Green, such as locks and
dams, to facilitate steamboat operations.
These improvements were completed by 1842 at a cost of almost $900,000.
The projects were numbered consecutively, beginning at the Ohio
River . Number 1 was at Spottsville, Number 2 near Calhoun, with
five projects in all. By 1847 five steamboats were operating on the Green River
for passengers and commercial purposes and these boats went all the way to Bowling Green . The
steamboats brought goods and groceries in and took lumber and farm commodities
out, and carried passengers both ways.
Citizens from Ohio County could travel by steamboat to Evansville
(on the Ohio ) and then transfer to another
steamboat upriver or downriver to cities such as St. Louis
or New Orleans . Important shipping points in Ohio County
were Ceralvo, Rockport, and Cromwell.
The Rough River ,
which runs through Hartford , is the second
largest tributary to the Green River; it starts in Hardin
County and flows westerly through Ohio County
to the Green at Livermore .
It has an average depth of 15 to 25 feet but has several places where the depth
decreases to less than 7 feet. The
distance (on the river) from Hartford to Livermore , where it meets
the Green, is about 30 miles. Steamboats
were able to navigate the Rough River to and from Hartford .
Iron ore was discovered in the area in the early 1800’s and although the
first few ventures failed, a Scotsman built an iron ore furnace near Paradise , KY in 1855,
just 50 yards from the Green River . Coal was mined as early as the 1830’s. The terminus of the Green River is near Evansville , Indiana and
that town became an important trading town for Ohio County
citizens.
The first Green River steamboat, the McLean, reached Bowling
Green on January 26, 1828. These boats not only carried passengers but
also brought precious groceries and commodities to the towns up and down the
Green River and carried lumber and farm products from river communities to Evansville and
beyond. The operation of a steamboat was
very profitable. Eventually “showboats”
became popular up and down the Green.
The river was blocked by the Union Army for several years during the
Civil War (roughly Feb 1862-1865). This
closure of the river caused economic hardship in Ohio County
causing several businesses to fail.
Following the war steamboats reappeared but the emergence of the
railroads dampened the steamboats’ revenue and steamboats ultimately stopped
serving the Green River communities about
1931; the Rosa Belle, according to
the Hartford Herald, stopped running in 1885 “for want of sufficient
patronage.” The demise of the steamboat
caused several small towns to lose their reason for existence, such as
paradise, KY. The last steamboats to
travel the Green River were named the Bowling Green and the Evansville . The
railroad and the automobile (and trucks, of course) ultimately replaced the
steamboats. Coal shipment on the Green River did not begin until the 1950’s.
STAGECOACHES:
In other parts of Kentucky ,
east of Ohio County , stagecoaches became popular for
passenger travel. In the book, Stage-coach
Days in the Bluegrass, by J. Winston Coleman, Jr., which is an account of
stagecoach travel in Lexington and central Kentucky during 1800 to 1900, the author explains that
regular stagecoach lines were established in central Kentucky during the early 1800’s, and was
the principle mode of travel until 1852 when the railroads appeared. The last stagecoach operating out of Lexington closed in
1889. Roads were improved in the 1830’s
and 1840’s by individuals who charged a toll for their use. Stagecoaches ran from Lexington
to Frankfort , Louisville ,
Maysville, and as far as Cincinnati by 1818. By 1824 a person could ride from Lexington to Washington
by stage in six days. By 1834 there were
stagecoach routes from Lexington in every
direction and smaller stage lines were running “local” routes in central Kentucky , although towns in western Kentucky were not connected to any of these
lines. A line from Lexington went as far south
as Nashville by
the 1840’s. It is said that the roads in
the vicinity of Lexington
were the best in the state. The first
six miles of railroad line was completed in the Lexington
area during 1833 and by 1835 the line was completed from Lexington
to Frankfort .
Of course railroads were in their infancy and suffered from problems with
breakdowns and accidents for the first ten years of operation, so stage-coaches
were still the most important method for travel. But by the 1850’s the railroad
companies had improved their service to the point that the future of the
stagecoach business was dim; however, there was only 175 miles of track in
Kentucky by 1860 so stage-coaches continued to operate on a lesser scale until
the 1890’s when more track had been installed.
Below
are the average times the Stagecoach would take to travel within Kentucky :
.
•Lexington to Frankfort
→ 4
hours
.
•Lexington to Louisville→
11 hours
.
•Lexington to Covington→
11 hours
.
•Lexington to Paris→ 2
hours
.
•Louisville to Nashville→
33 hours
•Louisville
to Frankfort→ 7 hours
For about sixty years, 1800 to 1860, the
stagecoach served as the main mode of transportation in some areas, but
stagecoaches did not appear in Ohio
County because they would
not have been profitable and the roads were not suitable. But stagecoaches
delivered goods, mail, and passengers to cities and towns throughout the
eastern United States
and later out west. Up to nine people, including the driver, could fit in the
larger coaches, and some trips could take days or even weeks to reach their
destination. Stagecoaches could travel at about ten miles per hour. Riding horseback was much faster, but one
could not carry nearly as much cargo. Riding in a coach was much different than
our experience riding in cars today.
Coaches could not have glass windows, as the rocky and rough roads would
have broken them. Leather shades on the windows would block sunlight, but dust,
heat and cold would make the trip very unpleasant. Also, the lack of seat belts
would cause you to bump into the person seated next to you constantly. Windows lacked protection except for a piece
of leather. Because of this, you would get cold in the winter, hot in the
summer, and wet during storms. Many
times the stagecoach would get stuck in the mud and the passengers would have
to get out and push the coach out of the mud.
What is the difference
between a carriage and a stagecoach? A stagecoach is meant for long trips and are generally more rugged and
stronger than carriages. Carriages have thinner wheels and are primarily meant
for travel within a town or city, such as a trip to the grocery store. Think of the tires of a mountain bike versus
a street bike. The mountain bike has thicker tires and is more durable.
MAIL
DELIVERY:
In
the early days people from Ohio County simply handed mail to friends or strangers who
intended to travel back to Virginia or Maryland and hoped that
their letter would eventually be delivered – it was a hap-hazard and very slow
way to communicate but worked fairly well.
Although there was some official postal service in early colonial days,
it was limited to the New England states.
Benjamin Franklin was appointed Postmaster of Philadelphia in 1737, and at that
time it could take two weeks for a letter to travel from New
York to Philadelphia .
Following the Revolutionary War the pioneer era began as people started moving
into new territories such as Kentucky ;
of course there was no mail delivery system and people just asked friends,
traders and strangers who happened to be traveling to deliver letters for them.
In 1792 Congress passed an act establishing post offices and post roads within
the United States .
In 1806 a stagecoach/mail-coach was established from Pittsburg
to Lexington , KY , a distance of approximately 700 miles,
and took about 15 days each way. All mail from Kentucky
came through Lexington , except the mail that
came by steamboat down the Ohio River . The
Post Office Department operated stagecoaches in the northeast part of America . As
early as 1813 steam boats were used to carry mail from one town to another but
ponies and stage coaches (or mail coaches) were also in use. My guess is that
because of the proximity to the Green
River Ohio County citizens received mail via steam
boats from about 1820 until the railroad came in the 1860’s. Owensboro
started receiving mail by stagecoach by 1820 and this stagecoach came from Louisville – I do not know if this was any benefit to
people from Ohio County .
In 1838 Congress passed an act making railroads the preferred mail post
routes. These deliveries were to a post office in a town and people had to go
to their post office to pick up or to drop off mail to be sent out. In 1865 a law was passed giving cities with a
population of 50,000 or more free mail delivery. This was expanded in 1873 to all places
having a population of 20,000 or more.
Star Routes were established after the city delivery system and Star
Routes were for towns that not near a railroad; so under this system the post
office advertised for bids for carriers from the railroad drop-off to the city,
and the carrier would distribute and pick up mail to people that lived along
the route, at least to those that erected a mail box. Some rural areas had private mail delivery
but I have not found any evidence of that in Ohio County .
Free mail delivery in rural areas of Kentucky
(and the rest of the States) was not started until 1899 and did not spread
slowly across the entire state beginning in 1902 through about 1918. The term RFD stands for Rural Free
Delivery. I found an article in the Owensboro newspaper, the
Inquirer, dated Friday, January 20, 1899, which stated: “Stage Line Abandoned. The
roads are so bad between Owensboro and Hartford that the stage
line has been abandoned, and the mail is now carried on horseback. It is said
to be impossible for two horses to pull an empty wagon on some parts of the
road.”
RAILROADS:
Railroads changed
everything for travel and mail for Ohio
County . We
know that the first rail line to serve Ohio
County was a line from Elizabethtown to Paducah ,
which was built in the early 1860’s.
This line was eventually purchased by the Illinois Central Railroad
(IC). We also know that from time-to-time there were private rail lines, or
“short lines” that operated within the county, often operating as “feeder”
lines to the main lines, and most of these were related to the coal mines.
Railroads began serving Beaver Dam about 1870 and one article states that the
community of Beaver Dam “sprang up” because the railroad company placed a
station at Beaver Dam (and not at Hartford).* I found a map dated 1859 that did
not show any rail lines in Ohio County; the first map that did show rail lines
in Ohio County is dated 1865. Note that
the first map below does not show a rail line through Hartford and does not show a community named
Beaver Dam but Beaver Dam is shown on the 1874 map. There is an article in the 28 April 1899
issue of the Hartford Republican about the need for rail service to Hartford . Eventually a rail line ran through Hartford (Madisonville to Henderson ) but this line
was not established until about April 1910.
I think the line that ran through Hartford was owned by the M. H. &
E. Railroad Company (thought to be Madisonville, Hartford & Eastern
Railroad Company – see article in the 18 Jun 1909 issue of the Hartford
Republican) which was later was merged with the Louisville & Nashville
Railroad (L&N). Also, the Nashville , Chattanooga
& St. Louis Railroad System might have
served Ohio County at one time and that company was
merged with the L & N Railroad Company.
Of course the railroads caused the eventual death of the steamships.
Actually, the railroads and the riverboats competed for a few decades but the
railroads won the battle. Note on the
1865 map below that Beaver Dam is not shown but is shown on the 1874 map.
A newspaper advertisement from 1910 for the IC Railroad.
1865 map showing rail line
but the only depot shown in Ohio
County is Rockport. The
rail line is called “E & P RR” which stood for “Elizabethtown and Paducah RR.”
1874 map showing depots at
Horse Branch, Pigeon Roost, Elm Lick, Beaver Dam, and Rockport. Line was called “Elizabethtown and Paducah RR” and I think the
numbers are distances between the depots expressed in miles.
1876 map showing depots at
Horse Branch, Rosine, Elm Lick, Beaver Dam, Hamilton, McHenry, and
Rockport. Line was called “Paducah and Southwestern
RR.”
1880 map showing depots at
Horse Branch, Rosine, Elm Lick, Beaver Dam, McHenry, and Rockport. The line was called “Paducah and Elizabethtown RR.”
1870’s
to the 1930’s:
A man named John S. Vaught operated a stage coach between
the railroad depot in Beaver Dam and Hartford in
the late 1870’s – he would carry passengers back and forth for a fee and he
also carried the mail from the depot to the post office in Hartford . I suspect that the Vaught Stagecoach was the first
stagecoach to operate in Ohio
County . There are
advertisements in the Hartford Herald for Vaught
& Hudson Stagecoach and starting in September 1875 for the Vaught Stagecoach. In the 30 June 1899 issue of the Hartford
Republican there is an advertisement by Henry
Field & Son for passenger transfer from Beaver Dam to Hartford on a horse-drawn vehicle called an “Omnibus.” I suspect these stagecoaches operated until a
rail line came through Hartford ,
which was about 1910.
The first rail service from Ohio
County to Owensboro is traced to the Owensboro, Falls of Rough &
Green River Railroad, Inc. That company was incorporated in Owensboro in September
1887 by Lafe Green, Capt. R. S. Triplett, J. D. Powers, D. M. Griffith, S. M.
Dean, M. V. Monarch, W. J. Dean and R. G. Robertson, Sam E. Hill, J. F. Bennett
and a Mr. Woosley. The company entered receivership in 1884 and in May 1897 was
acquired by the Illinois Central Railroad.
One oddity is
that there were three railroad depots in Owensboro ,
one owned by The Owensboro & Nashville RR, one by the Louisville ,
Henderson & St. Louis RR, and one by the Illinois central RR – these depots were
several blocks apart which made it difficult for passengers to change
trains. It remained this way until 1906.
The earliest
recorded Owensboro
intercity passenger services was started by Frank Rice back in 1873. His Owensboro & Hartford
Stage Line ran until January 1885 when he sold it to C. C.
Bennett of Beda, Ohio County: “Mr. Rice was engaged for twelve years in making these tri-weekly round
trips, amounting to 180 miles per week, or 9, 360 per year, or 112,320 for the
twelve years. During this time he used only two mule teams and had three wagons.” Sam Sharpe had been operating the Owensboro & Hartford
Stage Line for a number of years when he discontinued
service in October 1907.
In April
1916 the Owensboro Motor Car Company made its first “auto
bus” trip between Owensboro
and Hartford-Beaver Dam, thereafter making two round trips daily. (Keep in mind
that back then a “motor bus,” or “auto-bus,” was often a large touring car.) O.
C. Williams was the owner/manager of the company. An interesting glimpse of
intercity bus travel was printed on page 3 of the Thursday evening Owensboro Inquirer for
April 27, 1916:
On its first trip out of Owensboro the
Owensboro Motor Car company, which is operating the line, sent a crew of men
out to work the roads at such places as were made difficult of passage by the
rains and heavy hauling of the winter months. O. C. Williams, manager of the
concern, headed the crew, of workers and when he was hauled back into Owensboro
in the evening, on the return trip of the bus, the coating of mud that covered
him from head to foot was real evidence that some road work had been done on
the Hartford road. Holes were filled, brush cleared away and bumps cut out. Mr.
Williams . . . says he can guarantee the road now to be in first class shape
and that his company is going to make itself an auxiliary of the road working
department of Daviess and Ohio counties and help keep all the roads it uses in
good shape. He would like to have the cooperation too of the people who live
along the road, and not the kind that he says was given in one instance
yesterday, when a road had been cleared to the right of a large stump that
stands in the middle of the road between Owensboro and Hartford. On the left of
this stump was a large mud hole, so forbidding looking that the workers thought
it would be easier to clear a new road to the right of the stump than to fill
up the hole. This was done. On the return trip it was discovered that someone
had felled a large tree across the new bit of road. Axes were again called into
use and the obstruction removed.
May 1917
saw Owensboro
Interurban Lines, Inc. running two round trips daily
between Owensboro and Hartford . J. N. Cecil Bus Line was
based in St. Joseph , Daviess
County , Kentucky in 1917 and
served West Louisville and Owensboro .
Three buses per day left St. Joseph with its
terminus at the courthouse in Owensboro ,
from whence it made a return trip.
In 1924 Tony
Hansford operated his Grey Goose Bus Line between Owensboro
and Hartford .
It also served Pleasant Ridge and Masonville and Buford, and during the late
1920’s the Owensboro
& Beaver Dam Bus Line, owned by F. T. Wright, and the Hartford-Beaver Dam Bus
Line provided passenger service between Hartford
and Owensboro . About 1928 the Greyhound Bus Line started
serving Owensboro and neighboring towns such as Hartford and Beaver
Dam. Another bus line was the Owensboro-Bowling Green
Bus Line, which was founded in 1932 by Joseph T. Fuqua
(1913-2006). The line served Hartford , Beaver Dam,
Morgantown and Bowling Green . By 1932 F. T. Wright had changed the name of
his Owensboro & Beaver Dam Bus Line to Gray Goose Bus Line, which
operated between Owensboro and Bowling
Green , Morgantown , Beaver Dam and Hartford .
* Note that a Baptist
Church was built in
Beaver Dam in March, 1798, so the town predated the first railroad depot.
Sources:
Stagecoach Days in the Bluegrass, by John
Winston Coleman pub 1935
Green River Steamboating - a Cultural
History, 1828-1931, by Helen Bartter Crocker pub 1970
Saturday, December 7, 2019
Descendants of Alonzo G. Crowder
Descendants of Alonzo G. Crowder
1 Alonzo G.
Crowder b: 25 Dec 1866 in Mt Pleasant Ohio County ,
Ky d: 07 Nov 1924 in Ohio County , KY
.. +Louella
M. Leach b: 17 Jun 1870 in Ohio County Ky d:
24 Aug 1953 in Jefferson County KY m:
02 Jan 1899 in Ohio
County KY
........ 2
Pearl Crowder b: 26 Feb 1887 in Ohio County , KY d: 26 Oct 1967 in Louisville ,
Jefferson County KY
............ +Floyd
Morris b: 02 Sep 1894 in Ohio County , KY d: 16 Jul 1972 in Ohio County ,
KY m: 18 Sep 1915 in Ohio County
KY
...................
3 Lavelle Morris b: 22 Aug 1916 in Ohio
County Ky
d: 12 Jun 1991 in Louisville , Jefferson County
KY
....................... +Nannie
Frances Poole b: 23 Jan 1920 in Hartford , Ohio County KY d: 21 Nov 2002 in Baptist
East Hospital ,
Louisville KY
m: 08 Jan 1938 in Hartford ,
Ohio County KY
.............................
4 Lavelle Morris Jr. b: 21 Nov 1938 in Louisville ,
Jefferson County KY
.................................
+Ruby Carol Pugh m: 24 Dec 1960 in Louisville ,
KY Jefferson Co.
.............................
4 Linda Ann Morris b: 11 Dec 1946 in Louisville ,
Jefferson County
KY d: 19 Nov 2006 in Louisville ,
Jefferson County KY
.................................
+Alan Ward m: 25 Jun 1965 in Louisville ,
KY Jefferson Co.
...................
3 Maurice Morris b: 25 Jun 1920 in Daviess County ,
KY d: 31 Jan 2000 in Jefferson County
KY
....................... +Mildred
Virgialeen Burden b: 04 Jan 1924 in McHenry , Ohio County KY d: 30 Jun 2003 in Mt.
Washington Bullitt
County KY
m: 30 Aug 1941 in Calhoun, McClean
County KY
.............................
4 Patricia Morris b: 03 Mar 1942
.................................
+Michael Dohoney m: 08 Apr 1961 in Jefferson
County , KY
.............................
4 Betty Lee Morris b: 04 Jan 1944 in Owensboro , Daviess County , KY
.................................
+Donald Owens
.............................
4 Edna Pearl Morris b: 18 Oct 1946
.................................
+Roscoe M. Patterson Jr. m: 26 Apr 1966 in Jefferson County , KY
.............................
4 Harold Wayne Morris b: 25 Aug 1951 in Louisville ,
Jefferson County KY
.................................
+Tresa Meisburg m: in Jefferson County ,
KY
.............................
4 Carol Lane
Morris b: 26 Aug 1955
.................................
+Charles Strange Jr. m: 12 Oct 1973 in Louisville ,
KY Jefferson Co.
...................
3 Harold C. Morris b: 21 Oct 1921 in Ohio
County Ky
d: 30 May 1924 in Ohio
County Ky
........ 2
Anna Murl Crowder b: 1901 in Rosine Ohio County Ky d: 10 Jan 1983 in Daviess County , KY
............ +William
Mack Allen b: 20 Jan 1893 in Ohio County Ky d:
27 Oct 1981 in Ohio County Ky m:
Bef. 1919 in Ohio
County KY
...................
3 Margaret Allen b: 1919 in Ohio
County , KY
...................
3 Delois Allen b: 02 Nov 1922 in Ohio
County , KY
...................
3 Wanda Allen b: 19 Sep 1924 in Ohio
County , KY
...................
3 Annie Allen b: 1927 in Ohio County ,
KY
...................
3 Vivian Allen b: 03 Nov 1933 in Ohio
County , KY
...................
3 Betty Lou Allen b: 02 Oct 1935 in Ohio
County , KY
........ 2
Carlos Crowder b: 12 Apr 1902 in Ohio County Ky d:
Aug 1972 in Jefferson
County KY
........ 2
Stoy Elliott Crowder b: 21 Feb 1904 in Ohio County ,
KY d: 30 Oct 1980 in Louidsville, Jefferson County KY
............ +Thelma
Morris b: 25 Oct 1917 in Ohio County Ky d:
19 Nov 2002 in Green Medows Nurseing Home, Mount Washington ,
KY m: 28 Jul 1939 in Horse Branch, Ohio
County , KY
...................
3 Jerold Elliott Crowder b: 30 Apr 1941 in Louisville ,
Jefferson County KY
.......................
+Brenda Sue Wilson b: 02 Jun 1942 in Ohio
County Ky
m: 31 Aug 1963 in Louisville ,
KY Jefferson Co.
.............................
4 Jeffrey Brian Crowder b: 17 Aug 1966 in Louisville ,
Jefferson County , KY
.............................
4 James Scott Crowder b: 17 Aug 1972 in Louisville ,
Jefferson County , KY
...................
3 Dianne Crowder b: 06 Feb 1947 in Louisville , Jefferson County KY
.......................
+Phillip Bradley m: 08 Mar 1968 in Louisville ,
KY Jefferson Co.
............................. 4 Kevin Lynn Bradley b:
25 Dec 1968 in Wednesday, December 4, 2019
Early Indiana Marriages
Sometimes people went to Indiana to get married - not sure why. But Indiana has a web site showing marriages up to 1850 and you can search by surname. I searched the Leach surname and found several hits for my Ohio County ancestors, as shown below. So just search your various surnames for anyone old enough to be married before 1850 and you'll probably get a few hits. Good luck.
INDIANA MARRIAGES thru 1850
The Index to Indiana
Marriages Through 1850 began many years ago through a project initiated by
Dorothy Riker the late former Editor of The Hoosier Genealogist, which
listed the name of the groom in county listings in this publication.
Later, brides names were added to the original card set of groom names in the
Genealogy Division. Volunteers expanded the card set to include all dates
through 1850 for counties where marriage records existed. This became a
database which contains approximately 330,000 records totaling 90.5 MB of
electronic data. In addition to the marriage listings which index the
county courthouse records, the database includes marriages which were noted
from the early Quaker monthly meetings in Indiana . These Quaker marriages were listed
in the Abstracts of the Records of the Society of Friends in Indiana compiled
by Willard Heiss, (Call Number Geneal. 929.102 F911h v. 7). In addition
the database includes listings for the St. Francis Xavier parish church in Vincennes , Indiana
which date from 1749.
Last Name
|
First Name
|
Spouse: Last
Name
|
Spouse: First
Name
|
County:
|
Date:
|
|
Abigail
|
Carter
|
John
|
1-26-1840
|
|||
Acell
|
Williams
|
Patsy
|
4-12-1849
|
|||
Adaline
|
Webb
|
William A
|
10-2-1850
|
|||
Albert
|
Hilliard
|
10-8-1848
|
||||
Alpha A
|
Dugan
|
Rebecca
|
Bartholomew
|
9-14-1844
|
||
Amos
|
Hall
|
Phoebe
|
2-21-1819
|
|||
Amy
|
Decker
|
James
|
Knox
|
9-13-1843
|
||
Anerson
|
Matilda
|
Hendricks
|
1-9-1834
|
|||
Ann
|
Rubbles
|
Philo E
|
4-20-1843
|
|||
Archibald
|
Rusk or Rush
|
Rush
|
3-5-1825
|
|||
Azdoc
|
Menefee
|
1-7-1847
|
||||
Benjamin A
|
Painter
|
Mary E (Mrs)
|
11-19-1850
|
|||
Calvin
|
Hise
|
Franky B
|
6-13-1839
|
|||
Cassandra
|
Anders
|
David A
|
5-19-1835
|
|||
Catharine
|
Frame
|
Neely
|
6-6-1845
|
|||
Last Name
|
First Name
|
Spouse: Last Name
|
Spouse: First Name
|
County:
|
Date:
|
|
Cattavinia
|
McReynolds
|
Robert
|
Gibson
|
12-22-1841
|
||
Cordelia
|
Johnson
|
Pleasant C
|
Gibson
|
1-1-1849
|
||
Daniel
|
Cooper
|
Milly
|
Warrick
|
10-18-1835
|
||
David
|
Balden
|
Mary
|
3-5-1838
|
|||
David
|
Mary Ann
|
4-7-1846
|
||||
Edmund
|
Brewer
|
Emily
|
Grant
|
6-6-1841
|
||
Eleanor
|
Boon
|
David
|
10-24-1839
|
|||
Elias
|
Leake
|
Susannah
|
Hendricks
|
5-17-1839
|
||
Eliza
|
Dulty
|
John
|
4-7-1845
|
|||
Beverlin
|
Robert
|
6-13-1833
|
||||
Gadberry
|
Nathaniel
|
3-21-1839
|
||||
Gullett
|
John
|
Floyd
|
11-3-1830
|
|||
Myers
|
Alfred
|
Gibson
|
11-14-1846
|
|||
Norton
|
Isaac N
|
Morgan
|
12-30-1846
|
|||
Wood
|
James D S
|
Owen
|
12-3-1841
|
|||
Last Name
|
First Name
|
Spouse: Last Name
|
Spouse: First Name
|
County:
|
Date:
|
|
Esom
|
Corn
|
Lucinda
|
Grant
|
8-28-1838
|
||
Eunice
|
Boyle
|
David
|
3-29-1842
|
|||
Evaline
|
Leak
|
John L
|
Boone
|
12-24-1850
|
||
Ezekiel
|
Black
|
Jane
|
4-1-1845
|
|||
Fidelia
|
1-9-1843
|
|||||
Plew
|
Abram
|
2-8-1850
|
||||
Francis
|
Johnson
|
Elizabeth Jane
|
Knox
|
2-4-1847
|
||
Francis
|
Musgrave
|
Benjamin
|
Warrick
|
9-10-1835
|
||
Francis A
|
Menesly
|
2-8-1844
|
||||
George
|
Lurana Ann
|
5-27-1843
|
||||
Hannah
|
Burget
|
William
|
Johnson
|
9-11-1834
|
||
Hester Ann
|
McKinsey
|
George W
|
12-4-1846
|
|||
Isabella
|
James
|
2-8-1843
|
||||
Isabella
|
Levi
|
Hancock
|
3-3-1836
|
|||
Jacob B
|
Hey
|
Martha
|
Floyd
|
5-15-1830
|
||
Last Name
|
First Name
|
Spouse: Last Name
|
Spouse: First Name
|
County:
|
Date:
|
|
James
|
Larus
|
Sarah Ann
|
1-10-1841
|
|||
James
|
Penward
|
Amanda
|
Allen
|
12-6-1848
|
||
James M
|
Nancy M
|
12-23-1847
|
||||
James S
|
King
|
Saah
|
Howard
|
3-15-1850
|
||
Jane
|
Brewer
|
Stephen
|
Grant
|
3-31-1842
|
||
Jane
|
Key
|
Thomas
|
Gibson
|
8-14-1817
|
||
Jane
|
Lucas
|
Oliver
|
Gibson
|
6-30-1825
|
||
Jane
|
James
|
5-8-1841
|
||||
John
|
Abigail
|
Hinman
|
Warrick
|
10-1-1829
|
||
John
|
Feare
|
Martha Ann
|
Grant
|
3-9-1843
|
||
John
|
Lewis
|
Mary
|
3-19-1848
|
|||
John
|
McFettridge
|
Cynthia
|
Gibson
|
5-4-1825
|
||
John
|
Miller
|
Abigal
|
10-21-1837
|
|||
John
|
2-7-1850
|
|||||
John H
|
Selby
|
Eleanor
|
1-31-1839
|
|||
Last Name
|
First Name
|
Spouse: Last Name
|
Spouse: First Name
|
County:
|
Date:
|
|
John Henry
|
Caroline
|
Morgan
|
3-16-1843
|
|||
John S
|
Churchman
|
Ann
|
Floyd
|
9-5-1839
|
||
Jonathan
|
Sally
|
Knox
|
9-30-1815
|
|||
Joshua
|
McLane
|
12-9-1819
|
||||
Joshua
|
Poake
|
Anna
|
9-9-1838
|
|||
Joshua
|
Smith
|
Matilda
|
6-18-1837
|
|||
katharine D
|
Murfin
|
Thomas Holland
|
Hancock
|
3-10-1836
|
||
Leonard S
|
Hey
|
Maria
|
Floyd
|
10-13-1826
|
||
Lewis
|
Slaughter
|
Rachel Mrs
|
Johnson
|
2-18-1847
|
||
Lewis W
|
Williamson
|
Mary J
|
11-8-1849
|
|||
Louisa
|
Lambert
|
Abiram S
|
12-22-1850
|
|||
Louisa Ann
|
Salkeld
|
John
|
Floyd
|
7-24-1842
|
||
Lucy
|
Cline
|
William
|
4-3-1848
|
|||
Macom
|
Smith
|
Margaret
|
11-26-1833
|
|||
Margaret
|
Bension
|
Wm
|
Gibson
|
4-27-1819
|
||
Last Name
|
First Name
|
Spouse: Last Name
|
Spouse: First Name
|
County:
|
Date:
|
|
Martha
|
Howe
|
Wm
|
Gibson
|
3-13-1828
|
||
Martha A
|
Smith
|
Thomas E
|
Grant
|
5-26-1852
|
||
Martha C
|
Wells
|
James
|
Floyd
|
10-10-1844
|
||
Mary
|
Byerly
|
Samuel B
|
2-17-1850
|
|||
Mary
|
Eaton
|
Leonard
|
2-14-1846
|
|||
Mary
|
House
|
John
|
2-12-1846
|
|||
Mary
|
McCreery
|
James
|
Grant
|
5-7-1846
|
||
Mary
|
Scott
|
Samuel L
|
Hendricks
|
1-6-1848
|
||
Mary A
|
Angel
|
Artamus W
|
5-23-1852
|
|||
Mary Ann
|
Roberts
|
Hezakaih
|
10-9-1840
|
|||
Mary Jane
|
Johnson
|
6-24-1847
|
||||
Mary Jane
|
Northcut
|
Dillard
|
Boone
|
3-21-1847
|
||
Meredith W
|
Woody
|
Caroline
|
12-21-1845
|
|||
Minerva
|
Graham
|
Zaza
|
11-171-1843
|
|||
John
|
12-16-1841
|
|||||
Last Name
|
First Name
|
Spouse: Last Name
|
Spouse: First Name
|
County:
|
Date:
|
|
John
|
4-20-1840
|
|||||
Nancy Jane
|
Henry
|
10-31-1850
|
||||
Owen D
|
Light
|
Owen
|
11-5-1848
|
|||
Peggy
|
Freeman
|
Stephen
|
Gibson
|
11-23-1823
|
||
Phebe
|
Wolf
|
Charles
|
9-14-1834
|
|||
Phlinda
|
Simpson
|
John J
|
12-5-1848
|
|||
Polly
|
Ring
|
Solomon
|
6-9-1846
|
|||
Mathis
|
Johnson
|
2-17-1844
|
||||
Rachel
|
Lawson
|
Moses
|
7-18-1833
|
|||
Reuben
|
Lee
|
Rush
|
7-29-1829
|
|||
Richard T
|
Electa
|
Warrick
|
5-7-1833
|
|||
Robert
|
Dyer
|
Susan
|
Greene
|
9-26-1847
|
||
Rodney
|
Doley
|
Owen
|
12-1-1847
|
|||
Sally
|
Hargrave
|
Seth
|
Warrick
|
7-26-1825
|
||
Samuel
|
Martin
|
Diana
|
Whitley
|
7-1-1849
|
||
Last Name
|
First Name
|
Spouse: Last Name
|
Spouse: First Name
|
County:
|
Date:
|
|
Sarah
|
Graham
|
James H
|
2-5-1846
|
|||
Sarah
|
Hunter
|
Henry
|
Gibson
|
1-15-1815
|
||
Sarah
|
Keters
|
Andrew
|
11-20-1844
|
|||
Sarah
|
Mathes
|
John
|
Johnson
|
10-6-1831
|
||
Sarah
|
Pearson
|
Enoch
|
Knox
|
3-17-1816
|
||
Sarah
|
Smith
|
Thomas
|
7-31-1839
|
|||
Sarah
|
Wright
|
Isaac
|
Howard
|
10-28-1849
|
||
Sarah Ann
|
Landrum
|
Leak
|
Boone
|
4-27-1847
|
||
Sarah Elizabeth
|
Knight
|
Thomas N
|
4-21-1846
|
|||
Sarah G
|
Leak
|
George W
|
Henry
|
1-10-1850
|
||
Sarah M
|
Russell
|
John S
|
10-15-1850
|
|||
Simon
|
11-16-1841
|
|||||
Simon
|
11-16-1841
|
|||||
Susan
|
Charles
|
McFarland
|
5-22-1836
|
|||
Susannah
|
Hill
|
Peter
|
10-3-1818
|
|||
Last Name
|
First Name
|
Spouse: Last Name
|
Spouse: First Name
|
County:
|
Date:
|
|
Thomas
|
Gillmore
|
Mary E
|
Putnam
|
2-17-1846
|
||
Thomas
|
Sarah
|
Johnson
|
7-12-1832
|
|||
Thomas W
|
Swvers
|
Carra Ann
|
Warrick
|
4-20-1846
|
||
Thompson
|
Stone
|
Catherine
|
Gibson
|
4-24-1824
|
||
Virlinden
|
Morgan
|
Adam
|
2-11-1823
|
|||
William
|
Byers
|
Mary
|
Johnson
|
9-13-1832
|
||
William
|
Miller
|
Ellenora
|
Owen
|
7-29-1848
|
||
William
|
Miller
|
Mary Ann
|
12-8-1842
|
|||
William
|
Stanfield
|
Gibson
|
11-28-1840
|
|||
Stroud
|
Sarah
|
11-19-1840
|
||||
Zelpha
|
Stephens
|
Baker
|
7-6-1842
|
|||
Levisa
|
Stroud
|
John
|
12-4-1845
|
|||
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