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Facts and Events
Name[1] |
John Ritchie Inman |
Gender |
Male |
Birth[2] |
5 Jul 1788 |
Dandridge, Jefferson County, Tennessee |
Marriage |
22 Jul 1807 |
Jefferson, Tennessee, United Statesto Jane Patterson Walker |
Death[2][4] |
5 Mar 1837 |
Huntsville, Madison County, Alabama |
Burial[3] |
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Inman Cem., Possum Hollow, Madison, Alabama, United States |
Other[1] |
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Occupation listed as 10 Warrens |
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Overview
John was born three months after...Col. Tipton with a number of troops were on the 16th of March 1788 collected at Abednego Inman's. [5]He grew up on the frontier settlements of Tennessee. Shortly after marriage in 1807, John and Jane moved to Madison Co., Alabama (then a part of Mississippi) in the company of interrelated families. On Dec. 24, 1811 their home burned to the ground and his three oldest children lost their lives.
Footnotes
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 Http://www.surnameweb.org/centers/i/inman/index.htm.
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 Inman Family in DuBois, IN" by Alma Chattin Lindbergh.
- ↑ Woodruff, Audrey Lee. Tall trees in the forest: the Woodruff family of Virginia, Alabama, and Missouri, and the related families of Walker and Inman. (Manuscript, distributed within the family., 1966, 1985)
1965.
- ↑ From: Possum Hollow Cemetery, by Audrey Lee Woodruff, undated Online as of March 2010. Annotation notes that this work is on-file at Mid-Continent Public Library, Genealogy Department, Independence, MO.
- ↑ This needs to be explained. Who was Col Tipton, why were troops collected at Abednego Inman's. What is the significance of this?
Bibliography
- 1. Source:White, 1902 "The Descendants of John Walker of Wigton, Scotland", by Emma Siggins White.
- 2. Notebook:Jane Inman
- 3. Source:Woodruff, 1966, Tall Trees in the Forest
- 4. Source:Woodruff, 1985, Tall Trees, revised edition
- 4. Source:Ramsey, James Gettys McGready. Annals of Tennessee to the End of the Eighteenth Century, p. 415
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