Person:Gideon Howard (2)

m. Est 1748
  1. Gideon HowardAbt 1746 - Abt 1827
  2. Elizabeth HowardEst 1750 -
  3. Catherine HowardEst 1751 -
  4. John HowardEst 1753 -
  5. Benjamin Howard1755 -
  6. Joseph HowardEst 1765 -
  • HGideon HowardAbt 1746 - Abt 1827
m. 1775
  1. Lydia Howard
  2. Jacob HowardAbt 1781 - 1817
  3. Polly HowardAbt 1783 -
  4. Henry William Howard, SrAbt 1783 - Abt 1842
  5. Catherine HowardAbt 1786 -
  6. Gideon HowardAbt 1792 -
  7. Joshua HowardAbt 1794 -
  8. Sarah (Sally) HowardAbt 1794 -
  9. Eli HowardAbt 1796 -
  10. Matthew HowardAbt 1797 -
  11. John J. HowardAbt 1799 -
Facts and Events
Name Gideon Howard
Gender Male
Birth[1] Abt 1746 Anne Arundel or Frederick County, Maryland, United States
Marriage 1775 to Unknown
Death? Abt 1827 Rowan County, North Carolina, United States
Alt Death? 1827 Fleming, Kentucky, USA
Alt Death? Nov 1827 Fleming, Letcher, Kentucky, USA
Questionable information identified by WeRelate automation
To check:Born before parents' marriage

The name Gideon Howard was identified for Nicholas County, Kentucky, for the years 1800, 1804, 1805, 1808, 1809. His name appeared in the 1810 census for Nicholas County. In the 1820 census, he was listed in Fleming County.

References
  1. Anne Arundel Gentry : a genealogical history of some early families of Anne Arundel County, Maryland
    357, 1971/1990.

    Mathew Howard, son of Gideon Howard by his first wife, Hannah, was born about 1727 in Anne Arundel County. As early as the year 1748 he had married his kinswoman, Catherine, the daughter of Benjamin and Catherine (Buck) Howard. ...

    He settiled in Frederick County, where on June 20, 1753, he purchased from Solomon Sparks, of that county, Cold Friday" on the draft of the Linganore called Beaver Dam Branch.

  2.   Newman, Harry Wright. Anne Arundel Gentry: A Genealogical History of Some Early Families of Anne Arundel County, Maryland. (Annapolis [Maryland]: H.W. Newman, 1970-1979)
    358, 1971/1990.

    After having disposed of his property in Maryland and after November, 1764, he removed to Rowan County, North Carolina, and joined his brother and other kinsmen along the Yadkin..... He died shortly after his arrival, leaving a widow and young children.