.comment-link {margin-left:.6em;}

McLaughlin's Valley

Love American History? Come On In! Dedicated to preserving the history of the McLaughlin family, wherever they may be! Historical documents, photos, family histories, and more. To add your family history to the site, email here. Please SEARCH this site from the search bar above left or BROWSE topics listed in sidebar.

My Photo
Name:
Location: Maryland, United States

Saturday, June 25, 2005

John McLaughlin Deposition for Hugh McLaughlin, Greer vs Given, 1806, Bath County Court

For transcription, click here

  • Click to enlarge

  • Part 1 of 4 Posted by Hello


    Part 2 Posted by Hello


    Part 3 Posted by Hello


    Part 4 Posted by Hello

    Chancery Causes; Bath County, Virginia. Greer vs Given. LVA Microfilm Reel 99; Image 0496. Library of Virginia, Richmond. [Index #1806-001, original case #J113, local reel 078]

    UPDATE 1: I will work on a transcription of this document. Please leave a comment below about the readability of these images on your screen.

    Thursday, June 23, 2005

    Supreme Court Decision


    From the Institute for Justice

    Homeowners Lose Eminent Domain Case

    Institute for Justice Warns: Supreme Court Leaves Homeowners Vulnerable To Tax-Hungry Bureaucrats & Land-Hungry Developers

    ..."Any property may now be taken for the benefit of another private party, but the fallout from this decision will not be random. The beneficiaries are likely to be those citizens with disproportionate influence and power in the political process, including large corporations and development firms.” Justice O'Connor, Supreme Court Decision, 23 June 2005, Kelo et al v. City of New London, 04-108


    ------------------------------------------------------
    Okay, I know it seems off the subject for a McLaughlin family genealogy blog, but this decision is a blow to the stability of families and family histories everywhere. Please visit the Institute for Justice website.

    Tuesday, June 21, 2005

    Will of John McLaughlin, Bath County, Virginia, 1838.


    Click to enlarge. Part 1 of 4 Posted by Hello


    Part 2 of 4 Posted by Hello


    Part 3 of 4 Posted by Hello


    Part 4 of 4 Posted by Hello

    Monday, June 20, 2005

    Marriage Certificate of John McLaughlin and Anne Wiley, Augusta County, Virginia, 1790


    Click to enlarge. Copy of original. Posted by Hello

    On Genealogy—Lessons in Finding Your Past


    by Joan M. Kay
    from The Kaitlyn Mae Book Blog



    Your ancestors made history.

    Wherever your folks hail from—Virginia, Jamaica, England, China—they were the very fabric of that culture. They belong in a history book, somewhere, somehow. For figures such as George Washington or Napoleon Bonaparte, scholarly biographies are easy to come by and are worthwhile reading for any student of history. But what about your ancestors? In which book do you read about their contributions to history? Unless you are a descendent of, say, Patrick Henry or Thomas Jefferson, you won’t find one.

    You must research and display your family’s history yourself. This can be done in the form of a novel, or alternatively, a (non-fiction) thesis, or study of a town or county where your family lived. Your non-fiction work will prove invaluable to many future generations of family historians, while your fiction will provide pleasure to history lovers everywhere, though will be thoroughly distrusted by other fact-searchers, and rightfully so.

    On the fiction side, if you’ve read or seen Alex Haley’s Roots, you’re familiar with the concept of putting obscure ancestors into history and letting them roam free there. It’s a fascinating hobby. And for the late Alex Haley, an extremely lucrative one—though the rest of us might just have to settle for fascinating, which is more than fine with me.

    To that end, I break genealogy down into two labors of love, first assembling your family tree and then—using fiction or non-fiction as you prefer—placing the family members in history.

    The latter is my current passion, though the former, a family tree, is where we must start.

    As an Afterword to my novel, God’s Mountain, McLaughlin’s Valley, I show how family research led to the creation of two of MY most beloved characters in history, Hugh McLaughlin and Nancy Gwin.

    Never heard of them? Until 1999, neither had I.

    I’ve been tracing my McLaughlin ancestors for over a decade now and a lot of those years I have literally been at it as a full-time job, researching for the novel based on my Revolutionary War ancestors. Quite a bunch they were, enough to convince me to write a novel, something I had no experience in. But we muddled along together and finally managed to get the amazing story of Hugh and Nancy McLaughlin out there. It’s the story that won my heart; that I had found, piece by piece, long forgotten on courthouse shelves and archivists’ microfilm.


    Your Ancestors—They’ve apparently gone missing… So how do you find them?

    Primary Sources

    The U.S. Census—your most basic search, and sometimes your most fruitful.

    For research on American ancestors, your first stop in genealogy should be census records. Microfilmed reproductions of the U.S. Census (taken every ten years since 1790) are stored at the National Archives in Washington, DC; at Archives repositories across the country; through inter-library loan at your local public library (ask your librarian for help; she’s a gem, I assure you), through LDS Family History Libraries, and online genealogy services, such as Ancestry.com, which offers an invaluable search engine to locate your ancestors in the census records, though you must pay a fee to access their online census images.

    Privacy laws govern the availability of census records. They are not available to researchers until more than 70 years after the enumeration, so the most recent records you may research are from 1930. If you have information on your ancestors from before 1930, you’re in excellent shape to begin your search. If you can, always begin with 1930. Don’t skip back to 1870 because your great-aunt May swears that your great-great grandfather Alphonse lived in New York, New York then—find out for yourself. (If you’ve yet to reach your pre-1930 ancestors, I’ll deal with your particular stumbling block in a future column.)

    Different challenges and opportunities come along with each decade’s census. The enumerations of 1790, 1800, and 1890 are generally unavailable for many areas; 1810 to 1840 include the names of only heads of households, not individual family members. All you will find in these years on dependents is an age range (0-5 years, 6-10 years, etc.) and a designation of male or female. Beginning in 1850 each family member was enumerated separately, with name, age, race, relation to head-of-household, etc. Records are broken into counties and usually several counties within the same state will appear on each roll of microfilm produced by the National Archives.

    In research for my current novel-in-progress, about the Civil War, I am relying heavily on census records from 1860 in Pocahontas County, Virginia (now West Virginia). Useful to me in the 1860 records is the listing of occupation, schooling, and worth of personal and real property of each citizen. You may also find there the boundaries of neighborhoods, which is particularly useful because, historically, many families stuck close together, and the mother of the Smith family next door to your Jones relations may actually be that long-lost aunt you’ve been trying to find. Even unrelated but close neighbors hold clues to your family’s history. For example, neighbors very often emigrated together in groups. If your family were to suddenly disappear from an area and prove hard to find elsewhere, a quick search of their previous close neighbors may give you a clue to where they have moved, or moved from.

    So, using a “family group sheet” to keep your records on (download available at http://www.ancestry.com/save/charts/familysheet.htm) and starting with the 1930 enumeration, document carefully (roll numbers, page numbers, repository, etc) each fact that you find there, working backward in time through the US Census Records as far as they will allow. I’ll check back in on you soon—with more Lessons for your search.




    God’s Mountain, McLaughlin’s Valley - Joan M Kay.

    Hugh McLaughlin never knew he changed the world.

    His story begins when, as a young man, Hugh loses his father, is forced into servitude, and in order to regain his freedom, marches into the Revolutionary War.

    Join Hugh and the Continental Army at Valley Forge; accompany him through the ordeals of war as he is surrounded by death, infected with smallpox, wounded and finally taken prisoner. Witness how these experiences shape the character of a man.

    But this story encompasses more than the Revolutionary War; it delves into the personal wars tormenting each of the major characters. When Hugh returns home to the mountains of western Virginia, he falls in love with Nancy Gwin, the daughter of a wealthy planter. They marry against her family's objections and for the next decade, Hugh and Nancy battle through the estrangement of her family and prejudice from their neighbors. Finally, the full power of his life and spirit is discovered.

    This is a story you can get lost in.

    2005, 5½x8½, paper, 340 pp. $33.00
    K3280 ISBN: 078843280X


    Books are also available from the author at 30% off and at Amazon.com

    John Carpenter and Nancy McLaughlin, Married 1810, Bath County, Virginia

    Family Group Record for John CARPENTER

    =========================================
    Husband: John CARPENTER
    =========================================
    AKA:
    Born: Abt 1784(1)
    Died: Between 4 Jul and Oct 1862 - Pocahontas County, (W)VA(2)
    Buried:
    Father: Joseph CARPENTER (Abt 1746- )
    Mother: Martha WILEY ( - )
    Married: 27 Dec 1810 Place: Bath County, VA(3)
    =========================================
    Wife: Nancy McLAUGHLIN
    =========================================
    AKA:
    Born: Abt 1788 - Bath County, VA(1)
    Died: After Oct 1862 (4)
    Buried:
    Father: John McLAUGHLIN (1764-1838)
    Mother: Anne WILEY (1769-Aft 1841)
    =========================================
    Children
    =========================================
    1 M John M. CARPENTER
    Born: 1816(6)
    Died: 1862
    Buried:
    Spouse: Rachel Alcinda ( - )
    Marr. Date:
    Spouse:
    Marr. Date:
    -----------------------------------------------------------
    2 F Margaret CARPENTER (7)
    Born: Abt 1818 - Pocahontas County, (W)VA(1, 8)
    Died: 19 Oct 1876 (8)
    Buried:
    Spouse: Never Married
    Marr. Date:
    -----------------------------------------------------------
    3 M William W. CARPENTER
    Born: 1821 (6, 9)
    Died:
    Buried:
    Spouse: Minerva (Abt 1832- )(9)
    Marr. Date:
    Spouse:
    Marr. Date:
    -----------------------------------------------------------
    Events
    -----------------------------------------------------------
    1. Occupation (9) , Farmer, 1880 - Green Bank, West Virginia, USA
    -----------------------------------------------------------
    4 F Sidney CARPENTER (10, 11)
    Born: Aug 1822 (12)
    Died: After Jun 1900 (13)
    Buried:
    Spouse: John McLAUGHLIN (1817-Bet 1841)(14)
    Marr. Date: 20 Jul 1840 - Pocahontas County, (W)VA(15, 16)
    Spouse: Thomas H. GALFORD (Abt 1819-Bef 1900)
    Marr. Date: 26 Feb 1856 - Thorny Creek, Pocahontas County, WV (17, 18)
    Spouse:
    Marr. Date:
    -----------------------------------------------------------
    Events
    -----------------------------------------------------------
    1. Residence(13) , Lived on farm with only living son, Randolph, Jun 1900 -
    Green Bank, West Virginia, USA
    -----------------------------------------------------------
    5 M Hugh M. CARPENTER
    Born: 1825(6, 19)
    Died:
    Buried:
    Spouse: Margaret M. (1825- )
    Marr. Date:
    Spouse:
    Marr. Date:
    -----------------------------------------------------------
    Events
    -----------------------------------------------------------
    1. Military Service, 19 th Virginia, Civil War
    -----------------------------------------------------------
    6 M Peter W. CARPENTER
    Born: Abt 1827 (20, 21)
    Died:
    Buried:
    Spouse: Sarah (Abt 1839- )(21)
    Marr. Date:
    Spouse:
    Marr. Date:
    -----------------------------------------------------------
    7 F Mary J. CARPENTER
    Born: 1828-1829(9)
    Died:
    Buried:
    Spouse:
    Marr. Date:
    -----------------------------------------------------------
    Events
    -----------------------------------------------------------
    1. Residence(9) , Lived with brother, William Carpenter, 1880 - Green Bank, West
    Virginia, USA
    -----------------------------------------------------------

    =========================================
    General Notes (Husband)
    =========================================

    Testee: Carpenter, John

    Witness: Hugh McLaughlin Sr.

    Hugh McLaughlin Jr.

    Jacob McLaughlin

    Devesee:

    John Carpenter-son

    Hugh M. Carpenter-son

    Wm. W. Carpenter-son

    Margaret A. Carpenter-daughter

    Mary J. Carpenter-daughter

    John Lewis-grandson

    7/4/1861 Probated10/1862

    Will Book 3

    Last Modified: 11 May 2004

    =========================================
    Source Citations
    =========================================
    1. John Carpenter 1860 Census.

    2. Clerk of the County Court, Pocahontas County Will Books, Will of John
    Carpenter; Book 3, Page 291; 4 July 1862. Probated Oct 1862. Repository:
    Pocahontas County Courthouse, 900 C Tenth Street, Marlinton, WV 24954.

    3. Methany, Constance Corley and Eliza Warwick Wise, Bath County Marriage Bonds
    and Ministers' Returns, 1791-1853, (Baltimore, Gateway Press for the Bath
    County Historical Society, 2nd Printing, 1998). Repository: Joan M. Kay.

    4. Clerk of the County Court, Pocahontas County Will Books. Repository:
    Pocahontas County Courthouse, 900 C Tenth Street, Marlinton, WV 24954.

    5. Bruns, Jean Randolph, Abstracts of the Wills and Inventories of Bath County,
    Virginia, 1791-1842, (Baltimore, Clearfield Company, 1995), Will of John
    McGlaughlin; Page 186. Repository: Joan M. Kay.

    6. Virginia, Commissioner of the Revenue, "Personal Property Tax Lists
    [Pocahontas County, VA], 1822-1850". Repository: Family History Library,
    Salt Lake City, Utah, Call Number:FHL US/CAN Film [1905686 Item 1].

    7. Pocahontas Death Records.

    8. Pocahontas County Death Notices. Reporter P.H. Carpenter, brother.

    9. Bureau of the Census, "Pocahontas County, WV, Census of Population; Tenth
    Census of the United States, 1880", Entry for the Family of William
    Carpenter; written pg 176 D, printed page 6, Enumeration District 116, Green
    Bank, WV. Repository: National Archives , Washington, DC, Call
    Number:Microfilm Publication M244, roll.

    10. Entry for the family of James McGlaughlin; p. 6, line 28, Enumeration
    District 116, Pocahontas County, WV Census of Population; (National Archives
    Microfilm Publication , roll ) Tenth Census of the United States, 1880

    11. Pocahontas County, WV, Clerk, "Pocahontas County, West Virginia, Marriage
    Book No. 3".

    12. Entry for the family of Randolph Galford; sheet 7 B., line 67, Pocahontas
    County, Virginia Census of Population; (National Archives Microfilm
    Publication M242, roll ) Census of the United States, 1900; Records of the
    Bureau of the Census, Record Group.

    13. Bureau of the Census, Pocahontas County, West Virginia, Census of
    Population; (National Archives Microfilm Publication M242, roll );
    Twelfth Census of the United States, 1900;, Entry for the family of Randolf
    Galford; house #107, sheet 7 B, line 70. Repository: National Archives ,
    Washington, DC.

    14. Price, William T., Historical Sketches of Pocahontas County, West Virginia,
    (Bowie, MD, Heritage Books, 1990). Repository: Joan M. Kay.

    15. County Clerk's Office, "Pocahontas County Marriage Books", John McLaughlin
    to Sidney Carpenter, 20 July 1840; Book 1, Page 27. Repository: Pocahontas
    County Courthouse, 900 C Tenth Street, Marlinton, WV 24954.

    16. Personal collection of vital records, Marriage Certificate, John McLaughlin
    to Sidney Carpenter, 20 July 1840. Repository: Joan M. Kay.

    17. County Clerk's Office, "Pocahontas County Marriage Books", Thomas A.
    Galford to Sidney McLaughlin, 26 February 1856; Book 3, Page 2, Line 72.
    Repository: Pocahontas County Courthouse, 900 C Tenth Street, Marlinton, WV
    24954.

    18. Personal collection of vital records, Certificate of Marriage, Thomas A.
    Galford to Sidney McLaughlin, 26 February 1856. Repository: Joan M. Kay.

    19. Bureau of the Census, "Pocahontas County, WV, Census of Population; Tenth
    Census of the United States, 1880", Entry for the Family of Hugh M.
    Carpenter; written pg , Enumeration District 116, Green Bank, WV.
    Repository: National Archives , Washington, DC, Call Number:Microfilm
    Publication M244, roll.

    20. Entry for the family of John Carpenter; p. 289, line 10-12; p. 290, line
    1-6; Pocahontas County, VA Census of Population; (National Archives
    Microfilm Publication M432, roll 969) Seventh Census of the United States,
    1850; Records of the Bureau of the Census.

    21. Bureau of the Census, "Pocahontas County, WV, Census of Population; Tenth
    Census of the United States, 1880", Entry for the Family of Peter W.
    Carpenter; written pg , Enumeration District 116, Green Bank, WV.
    Repository: National Archives , Washington, DC, Call Number:Microfilm Publication M244, roll