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Facts and Events
Name |
John C Hall |
Gender |
Male |
Birth[6] |
Abt 1750 |
England |
Marriage |
|
to Deborah Wilson (add) |
Property[3] |
22 Dec 1779 |
Kentucky, Virginia, United StatesPOSSIBLE MATCH - granted 1400 ac on Stoner's Fork of Licking |
Property[2] |
29 Jan 1790 |
Bourbon, Kentucky, United StatesPOSSIBLE MATCH - buys 83 ac on Huston's Fork |
Will[1][4] |
20 Oct 1807 |
Bourbon, Kentucky, United States |
Death? |
Bef Jan 1809 |
Bourbon, Kentucky, United States[probate] |
Probate[1] |
Jan 1809 |
Bourbon, Kentucky, United States |
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 Will Abstract of John Hall, in usgwarchives.net - VITALS-Deaths, Partial 1792-1815, Bourbon County, Kentucky[1].
HALL, John - Sons, Theophilus and John; daughter Hannah HUTCHINSON; her daughters, Polly HALL and Deborah. Written 20 Oct 1807. Proved Jan 1809. Witnesses: Joseph and Geo. CASE etc. (Will Book C, p. 461)
- ↑ POSSIBLE MATCH for review, in Bourbon County, Kentucky Deed Book B, 1790-1794.
Date: 29 Jan 1790 From: James Stark and wife, Susannah To: John Hall Type / pgs: Bargain and Sale B-6 Wit: Proven in Court Desc: 83 acres on Huston's fork, a branch of Licking; in the line of S. Licking Corwin's 2 acres, the Military Survey, corner to Douglass, down Corwin's line,
- ↑ POSSIBLE MATCH for review, in Virginia, United States. Certificate Book of the Virginia Land Commission, 1779-1780.
[page numbers needed]
22 Dec 1779 - Court held at Boonesborough:
John Hall, 1400, assignee of Samuel Tate by Richard Galloway, dividing ridge between waters leading to the Salt Spring Trace and the large creek running into the Rock Ford Fork of Stoners Fork of Licking Creek; corn 1775; improvements & marking Nov 1779.
- ↑ Will Abstract of John C Hall, in usgwarchives.net - WILLS: HALL Surname, Bourbon County, Kentucky [2].
319 HALL, JOHN C. Oct 20, 1807. C/461 Wife: not listed Sons: Theophilis (60a & negro), John (plantation from Henry Fields), Dau.: Hannah Hutchinson (38a tract bought frm. John Craig). to Polly, her eldest dau, Deborrah, 20 lbs. Polly to get land after Hannah’s death. Wit: Joseph & George Case. Exor. Friend, Richard Biddle and son John Hall.
- 9H2F-9G1, in FamilySearch Family Tree
includes sources, last accessed May 2022.
- ↑ Perrin, William Henry, ed. History of Bourbon, Scott, Harrison and Nicholas Counties, Kentucky. (Chicago, IL, USA: O. L. Baskin, 1882)
597.
M. C. HALL, farmer ; P. O. Georgetown ; was born in Bourbon County, Sept. 2, 1815, to Theophilus and Mary A. (Heathraan) Hall ; he was a native of England, and emigrated to America with his father, John Hall, and settled where now is the city of Louisville, Ky.; he died in 1850, aged eighty-four years ; she was born in Maryland, and died in Woodford County, Ky., in March, 1865, aged eighty-four years ; they were the parents of eleven children, M. C. Hall being the seventh child. His common school education was received in Bourbon County, and at the age of twenty-one attended the Bacon College, Georgetown ; he began business for himself by farming and trading in the South, the former he still continues. He is one of the largest land owners of Scott County, having 1,700 acres of land, 1,400 of which border Georgetown. Upon his farm he has a fine residence erected by his own design, situated in sight of Georgetown on the Lemon's Mill Pike; upon his farm he makes the breeding and raising of "Almont ' horses and short-horns a specialty.
He has been twice married ; in Woodford County, Aug 10, 1842, he married Mary Ann Sellers, who died in 1845 ; in Bourbon County, in 1858, he married a second time, Hannah E. Harris ; she died in 1879. By his first marriage they had two children, both of whom are dead ; and by his second marriage five children, -Joseph M., Mary A., Susie W., John T., and Charley.
Mr. Hall is a man of good moral character, and bears a name and reputation which is beyond reproach. He is a member of the order of A. F. & A. M.
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