Person:Elizabeth Kilgore (3)

Watchers
Elizabeth Kilgore
m. Bef 1712
  1. Elizabeth Kilgore1718 - 1793
  • HJohn YatesAbt 1712 - 1779
  • WElizabeth Kilgore1718 - 1793
m. 1748
  1. William Yates1749 - 1844
  2. Thomas Yates1752 - 1834
  3. John Yates1754 - 1835
  4. Keziah YatesEst 1756 -
  5. Milly YatesEst 1758 -
  6. Joyce YatesAbt 1761 -
  7. James Yates1762 - 1844
  8. Elizabeth YatesEst 1764 -
Facts and Events
Name Elizabeth Kilgore
Gender Female
Birth? 1718 Pennsylvania
Marriage 1748 Prob. Virginiato John Yates
Death? 3 Feb 1793 Pittsylvania, Bedford County, Virginia

Birthdate estimates for Elizabeth range from 1712 to 1730 among many sites, more research is needed. Her father MAY be a Robert Kilgore, but this is questionable. Please provide sources with any updates.


It is speculated that the Thomas Kilgore listed below is a BROTHER to this Elizabeth Kilgore:

Some sources claim that Thomas Kilgore's wife was Lydia Yates. The John Yates and Thomas Kilgore family had an apparently close relationship from several land records listed below:


As an example, John Yates was a soldier in North Carolina’s Continental Line. The military warrant he received was dated 17 Oct 1783, bore warrant number 22, was written by North Carolina’s Secretary of State, and did not cite a specific location. “State of North Carolina No. 22. The Honorable James Glasgow, Esq. Secretary of this state to Col. Martin Armstrong. Greeting. You are hereby required to lay off and survey for John Yates a soldier in the line of this state six hundred and forty acres of land within the limits of the land reserved by law to the officers and soldiers. Observing the directions of the Act of Assembly in such case made and provided for running out lands, two just and fair plans thereof with a certificate to each annexed you are to transmit to my office within the time limited by law. Given under my hand at Hillsboro this 17 October 1783. [signed] James Glasgow.”25 John Yates relinquished his warrant by assigning it (probably selling it) to Thomas Kilgore. Kilgore held the warrant for some eight years and then assigned to John McCoy Alston. These assignments appear on the reverse side: “Sir, please to survey this warrant for Mr. Thomas Kilgore and make return in his name as he may obtain deed for the same as I have received full satisfaction for the same warrant. [signed] John Yates Mr. Martin Armstrong Surveyor Test this ___ [blank] day of ___ [blank] 1783. Witnesses: Thomas Killgore, Junr., Thomas Yeats, William Yeats.” “I do hereby assign over all my right and title to a warrant of six hundred and forty acres of land warrant now lodged in the land office at Nashville No. 22 to John McCoy Alston for value recd. as witness my hand this 29th day of August 1791. [signed] Thomas Killgore Test: James Drumgoole, William Harrison”26 The last assignee, John Mc Coy Alston, selected a tract of 640 acres on Red River, with Thomas Johnson, deputy surveyor, surveyed for him, with James Conyers serving as chain-carrier. Martin Armstrong’s signature appears on the document because he was the chief surveyor of the military reservation, not because he was present at the time of the survey. “Tennessee County, August 16th 1791 By virtue of a military warrant No. 22 Located 13th September 1784 I have surveyed for John McCoy Alston assignee of Thomas Kilgore assignee originally of John Yates six hundred and forty acres of land lying on Red River, beginning at a red oak on the bank of said river where the colony line crosses the same. . . crossing Spring Creek. . . to the beginning. [signed] Thos Johnson D. Sur.y [signed] Mart. Armstrong Sur.y [signed] Jams Conyers”27 In the resulting grant, note the following: The grant number, #2150, is not the same number as the warrant number, #222 John McCoy Alston is listed as the assignee of John Yates, the soldier. Thomas Kilgore is not mentioned. “State of North Carolina No. 2150 Know ye that we have granted unto John McCoy Alston assignee of John Yates a private in the Continental Line of said state six hundred and forty acres of land in our County of Tennessee28 on Red River beginning on the bend of said river where the county line crosses the same, runs east with the Virginia line 112 chains and 80 links to a stake on the barrons, thence south crossing Spring Creek... to the beginning. Date May 20th 1793. [signed] J. Glasgow Secretary Richd. Dobbs Spaight Warrant No 22. Thos. Johnson D.S. James Conyers, _______ [blank] Hinds C.C.” 29 It was normal procedure for warrants and entries to be assigned numerous times, and for the various assignees not to be listed on the actual grant. The above grant indicates Yates had been a private in the North Carolina Line and serves as the necessary proof that this is a military grant. A grant within the military reservation that was for service performed by a guardsman, commissioner, surveyor, chain-carrier, or hunter will name the person and describe the service rendered. 30 Few North Carolina Revolutionary War soldiers went to the western reserve to exchange their warrants for lands. Instead, they sold their warrants, usually for small sums, and, more often that not, to speculators. In the overwhelming majority of cases, it was the speculators who held the warrants and entries in the military reservation, not the soldiers. 31