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John Miller, The Quaker of Linville Creek
Facts and Events
John Miller was one of the Early Settlers of Augusta County, Virginia
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Early Land Records in Augusta County, VA
Miller Street in downtown Broadway, Virginia. It is a remnant of John Miller's lots in the Linville Tract.
Orange County Virginia Deed Book 10:
- Indenture 20 June 1745 between James Gill of Augusta County and John Millard of same.. for £20.. sells 200 acres, part of 400 acres James Gill purchased of Thomas Rutherford, situated on North River of Shanando River.. part of Orange County called Augusta.... (signed) James Gill (Seal). Witnesses: Peter Scholl, Valentine Sevier, Thomas Moore. Recorded Orange County Court 27 June 1745.
- Pg. 60-63. 20 June 1745 between James Gill of the part called Augusta County, now joyning to Orange County, and Thomas Moore.. for the sum of ___ pounds.. sells 200 acres being part of the 400 acres that James Gill purchased of Thomas Rutherford in Augusta on North River of Shenando a little above the Great Plain... (signed) James Gill (Seal), Eleanor Gill (Seal). Witnesses: Peter Scholl, Valentine Sevier, John (X) Millard. Payment of £60 for 200 acres. Recorded Orange County 27 June 1745.
From Chalkley’s Augusta County Records:
- Page 13.--4th September, 1747. John Millar (Millan) and wife Hannah to Francis Hughes, late of Lancaster County, Penna., part of 400 acres patented to Thomas Rutherford, of Frederick County, and by him sold to James Gill , late of Augusta; other part in possession of Thomas Moore Teste: Mathew Skeen, Thos. Milsap. Delivered to Abra. (?) Bird, January, 1754.
From Pennsylvania Lancaster Co Historical Society:
- Vol XXV, No. 6, Pg 150.--Francis Hughes, late of Lancaster County, Pa., bought from John Miller 200 acres of land on North River, in Augusta County, Va., Sept. 4, 1747. Deed Book 2, p. 11.
From Chalkley’s Augusta County Records:
- Page 5.--6th August, 1748. George Forbush, farmer, and wife Olive, farmer, to Jno. Miller, weaver, Beaver Dam Run, Barnard McHenry's line. Delivered: Jno. Miller, Jr., 3d February, 1755. [Note:Beaver Run Damn is also named Long Meadow Run]
- Page 437.--May, 1752. Linvell's Creek petitioners for a road leading from Brock's Creek to ye Market Road by Francis Hughes's and from thence to Fredericksburg: Jonathan Douglas, James Claypoole, Rees Thomas, William Smith, William Claypoole. John Miller, Robert Williams.
- 20 May 1752 O. S., p. 247 - On the Petition of Sundry the Inhabitants of Linvells Creek It is Ordered that Jonathan Duglass William Smith, John Miller, James Claypole, Willm. Claypole, Robert Williams & Rees Thomas Clear a Road from Brockes Creek to Francis Hughes & from thence to the Main Road that leads to Fredericksburg and that they keep the Same in repair According to Law. Augusta County Road Orders 1745-1769
- Page 502.--17th July, 1752. Robert Green, Gent., of Culpeper County, son and residuary legatee of Ro. Green, of Orange, to John Miller, 500 acres Linville's Creek, being lot No. 3. Sold in lifetime of Robert, Sr. Teste: G. Hume. (Perhaps cleaning up the deed records of his land for the major road from Brocks Gap, through John Miller's land in Broadway, VA to New Market, VA) [Note:see Miller Street in downtown Broadway, VA.]
- Book 2-13.--Delivered to Abra. Bird Jan 1754. 400 acres originally patented to Thomas Rutherford and by him sold to James Gill , late of Augusta County. The other part in possession of Thomas Moore. Francis Hughes, late of Lancaster County, PA. Grantor, John Miller [Note:Clearly shows John Millard from 1745 record is John Miller]
- 20 April 1761 - John Miller was conveyed 200 acres on Linville's Creek as listed in the Chalkley's record below:
- Page 131.--18th November, 1761. John, James and Moses Green, of Culpeper, to John Miller, £180, two tracts, 500 acres each, on Linvell's Creek known as lots No. 4 and 5, lot No. 4 conveyed to grantors by Jose (s/b Jost) Hite, et als, 5th February, 1746; lot 5 conveyed to Robert McCay, 11th February, 1746, both part of 7,009 acres patented to Hite, et als, MDCCXLXXXIX.
- Page 227.--18th May, 1762. John ( ) Miller and Hannah to Jonathan Robison, £45, 230 acres on Linvel's Creek, cor. John Miller's part of same tract; cor. William Mynter's part of same tract, Spiece's line, being parts of lote 4 and 5 conveyed by Green to John Miller, 18th November, 1761.
- Page 231.--18th May, 1762. John Miller and Hannah to Wm. Mynter, £45, 270 acres on Linvel's Creek; cor. Jonathan Robinson, part of same tract; cor. George Speice's land as above. Delivered: John Scott by your order.
- Page 4.---Feb 1762 John Miller, Quaker, (1762, February), Green's deeds to you;
- Page 105.---21 Jun 1763 Part of lots No. 4 and 5 conveyed by the Givens and Miller to William Myntors/Mintors, Nov 1751. Delivered to Geo. Speer, Nov 1764. 270 acres on Linvel's Creek; corner Jonathan Robinson's, part of the same tract; corner George Speer's land. [Note: a Givens marries Abraham Miller the younger of the Kentucky Supreme Court Case]
- Page 659.--11th August, 1764. Jonathan Roberson to William Dunlap. £100, 230 acres on Linville's Creek, purchased by Jonathan of John Miller, between said Miller's land and George Spears'; corner John Miller's part of same tract; corner William Bean's land. Teste: Alex Herring, Joseph Rutherford. Delivered: George Speirs, Decemmber, 1766. [Note: Same Property (This record establishes that John Miller, the Quaker, inthe 1762 transactions and who purchases Lot 2 of the Linville Tract is Jonathan Miller of John Miller. This record refercnes the same land as the 1762 transactions. It also establishes that Jonathan Miller/John Miller/John Millard are all the same people with his wife Hannah. Earlier deeds transfers listed here prove clearly that John Millard was also called John Miller]
- Page 177.--2d December, 1766. William Green, of Culpeper, son and heir of Robert Green. late of Orange County, deceased, to John Miller. There was a contract by Robert to sell to John for £75, lot now and then occupied by said Miller, being lot No. 3 on Linville's Creek, 500 acres, but Robert died before making conveyance, testate, but making no devise of this tract, whereby same descended to William (will recorded in Orange). Now conveys same. Memorandum--This tract is the same this day conveyed to Miller by Robert Green, the reason for which double conveyance may be seen by Robert's deed and is the same tract for which William and Robert formerly passed deeds to John Miller, but same was not properly proved. Teste: Francis ( ) McBride, James Wright, Daniel ( ) Murley.
- Page 184.--March, 1767. John ( ) Miller and Hannah ( ) to Cornelius Ruddle, £600, 500 acres, being lot No. 3 above, and also 200 acres, part of lot No. 2, lying on Linvel's Creek, part of 7009 acres patented to Hite, Green & Co., 26th March, 1739, and by McCoy and Hite conveyed to Robert Green, 5th August, 1746, who devised said 200 acres to son Robert, who conveyed same to John Miller, 20th April, 1753. Delivered: Cornelius Ruddle, July, 1775.
- March 1767 Augusta Co., VA Deed Book 13 page 184: John (his mark) Miller and Hannah (her mark) to Cornelius Ruddle, L600 (pounds), 500 acres being lot #3 above and also 200 acres, part of lot #2, lying on Linvel's creek, part of 7009 acres patented to Hite, Green & Co., 26 March 1747, who devised said 200 acres to son Robert who conveyed same to John Miller, 20 April 1761. Delivered: Obediah Monsey."
- Page 335.--17th May, 1768. Samuel Muncy and Mary ( ) Mousie (Monsey) to John Miller, Sr., £50, 75 acres, part of 150 acres conveyed by George Speere to Michael Hober, 3d February, 1760, and by Hober to Samuel Monsey, 20th May, 1765, on Linvell's Creek; corner Riddel's land, a part of same original tract. Delivered: John Miller, August, 1773. [Note: In 1773, it seems John Miller was in Kentucky. Therefore, John Miller listed here as delivered in 1773 is most likely John Miller Junior, as later references have him, or John Miller III in regards to the record here]
Quaker Records in Augusta County, VA
From Quaker Hopewell Monthly Meeting: Quaker Meeting Records, 1681-1994
- 5 Jan 1761.--The friends appointed to visit friends on Smith's Crick, Report they have not performed that Service and are of the opinion that Thomas Moore & John Miller's request of being joined in membership with friends may at this time be granted they being at variance between themselves & there being Some other Disorders in that place it is the opinion of this meeting that it lie under notice of friends till next monthly meeting & then to appoint another community to Endeavor to Reconcile things amongst them. [Note:Thomas Moore and John Miller, Quaker had many interactions together in these Quaker meeting records. Thomas Moore was witness to a Land transaction between John Millard (also Miller) as early as 1745.]
Other Records in Augusta County, VA
- July 17, 1752, John Miller (a farmer) purchased 500 acres on Linville’s Creek (about 30 miles north of Staunton in present-day Rockingham County) in Augusta County from Robert Green of Culpeper County. In 1753, John Miller acquired an additional 200 acres from Green and an additional 500 acres in 1761. On May 18, 1762, John Miller and his wife Hannah conveyed 230 acres on Linville’s Creek to their son-in-law Jonathan Robinson. On the same day John Miller and his wife Hannah conveyed another 270 acres on Linville’s Creek to William Mynter. In March 1767, John Miller and his wife Hannah sold another 500 acres on Linville’s Creek to Cornelius Ruddle.[84] Chronicles of the Scotch-Irish Settlement in Virginia (Volume 3) by Lyman Chalkley, Pages 307, 314, 384, & 449.
Court Case Records in Augusta County, VA
From Jefferson Papers' Memorandum Books 1769
- 17 Aug 1769.---William Shannon and John Millar (Augusta) v. John Grattan (Augusta). Enter petn. for 600 acres on Brocks gap waters Augusta. Patd. by Benjamin Burden about
- 17 Aug 1769.---William Shannon and John Millar (Augusta) v. Benjamin Kinley (Augusta). Enter caveat for 400 acres on the sinking spring Augusta. Works not retd
- 18 Aug 1769.---Wm. Shannon and John Millar (Aug.) v. John Grattan (Aug.). Enter petn. for 600 acres on Brock gap waters or the waters of Linwell’s creek Augusta. Patd. by Benjamin Burden about 7 years ago, for want of q. rents and cultivn. Recd. of Shannon 8/9. J. May sais Burden has no pat. since 1750. so give credit for this 8/9 in Shannon v. Green
- Vol. 1 pg 136---1 Nov 1769. Henry & John Ewen (Augusta) v. John Miller (Augusta). Petn. entd. for 500. acres on Linwell’s creek Augusta being part of 7009 grantd. to Joist Hite, Robt. Mccoy and Rob. Green Mar. 25. 1739. For pl.
Records in Virginia
- 23 June 1786, Page 513 "Virginia Supreme Court, District of Kentucky, Order Books 1783-1792: Upon the petition of James Davis and Deborah Davis his wife, and Abraham Miller the Younger, a minor, by the said James Davis his Guardian, it is ord'd that the Sheriff of Rockingham County summon to appear here on the ninth day of the next Supreme Court, John Thomas to prove the will of Abraham Miller the Elder, dec'd, and take upon himself the execution thereof, or show cause to the contrary. And also that the said Sheriff summon the said John Thomas and Jemima Thomas his wife, and that the Sheriff of Lincoln County summon Zachariah Isbell and Elizabeth Isbell his wife, Wm Field and Mary Field his wife, and Hannah Robertson, legatees under the said will, to appear here on the same day to answer the petition of the said James, Deborah and Abraham exhibited against them. And it is further ord'd that the present Admrs do not pay away any legacy or legacies or any part thereof to any person whatever claiming the same until the further order of this court. [Note: Jemima Thomas, Elizabeth Isbell, Mary Field and Hannah Robertson appear to be children of John Miller who were named in the will of their brother, Abraham Miller, per the record above].
The DNA EVIDENCE
There is a small group of Millers who have tested their y-DNA and conclude that John Miller is from the E-PF2341 Haplogroup. It is a very unique Y Chromosome for Europeans and its origins are North African. According to the phylogeny, this genetic family migrated to the Peak District of England during the mid to late Roman Period.
A descendant of Abraham Miller "the Younger", listed in the Kentucky Supreme Court case referenced here, has confirmed the Haplgroup and Price and Associates in Salt Lake City, Utah has confirmed the paper trial through their profession genealogical services. The other Miller families who connect genetically are Abraham Miller/Elizabeth Mann; Tyre Miller / Emily Tolson; Jonathan Miller / Sarah Harris; Abraham Miller / Givens and Blevins. All of these families trace their lineages to Rockingham County Kentuckty. Abraham Miller and Martha Mann were specifically from Borck's Gap which is evidenced by their daughter's written family history in which she states that she moved from Brock's Gap to Fort Boonesborough and then to Lulbegrud Creek.
Furthermore, this genetic line connects within recent history (roughly 1550 AD) to multiple Milward samples in The Peak District of England. One of the Milward family researchers has an old documented family tree with a wax seal. In 1748, this tree was used to confirm their family arms by the College of Arms in London. The arms were ermine on a fess, gulles and three bezants. This is the same arms as the Milwards of Eaton Dovedale whose oldest known ancestor is William Milward / Anne Kniveton. The fact that the earliest records in Virginia spell John Miller's as John Millard only adds to the evidence of the ancestral name of this family being Milward.
All Miller and Milward DNA samples are on FTDNA.com and part of the L-19 project therein.
References
- Genealogy.com.
John Miller (b. c1720-30?) & wife Hannah lived in Augusta Co./Amhearst Co., VA, moved to Lincoln Co., TN where he died intestate 1781 and wife Hannah died 1795 (will signed 1786). One researcher listed Hannah's name as Hannah Isbell, but that may be a mistake.
They had the following daughters: 1. Hannah b. c1743 Augusta Co., VA. who m. Isaac Robinson/Robertson (in Augusta Co. or Rockingham Co., VA)
2. Elizabeth Millerwho m. Zachariah Isbell
3. Mary Miller (probably the youngest) m.1 Wright, m.2 Wm. Field.
https://www.genealogy.com/forum/surnames/topics/miller/17636/
- ROOTS-L.
Who was Ann Miller, wife of Walter Crow?
By Sarah Barker
No one really knows. Nor do we know for a fact that her name was really Miller. The designation of Walter Crow's wife as Ann "Miller" has been attributed, somewhat circuitously, to John W. Wayland Ph.D, author of "A History of Rockingham County, Virginia," and similar books on Rockingham. How this came about is unclear, but the name Ann Miller seems to have stuck.
Assuming that Ann was truly Ann Miller, who was she? Where did she come from? One theory has been put forth that she was the daughter of John Miller and Sarah Hadley of Middlesex County, Virginia. This theory results from the single fact that a birth record for an Ann Miller exists in the Christ Church Parish register in the appropriate time frame. There is no marriage entry for this Ann Miller, nor any record in existence to indicate that Walter Crow ever met or married this particular Ann Miller. The existence of this birth record is simply a convenience seized upon to prove what is essentially unprovable. The name Miller was very common during Colonial times, and surviving church records few and far between - if, in fact, church records were kept. Literacy was not exactly rampant on the Colonial frontier, and the preachers who wandered from settlement to settlement ministering to the faithful often had other more pressing worries than writing down who they had just christened, married or buried. The fact that one church record survives from among thousands of colonial congregations cannot be taken as proof that the individual named therein is the ancestor in question without offering additional direct or indirect corroboration.
In his memoirs, John Finley Crowe, son of Benjamin Crow, names his grandmother as Mary Stuart from Scotland. While many researchers consider this recollection an aberration, his assertion should not be dismissed so lightly. It is significant that John Finley Crow never once mentions Ann Miller Crow in his memoirs, which is odd considering it's entirely possible he may have known her (she didn't die until 1811), and he certainly would have had ample opportunity to learn a good deal about her from his father as well as during the winter-long visit to his uncle William Crow in Kentucky circa 1819-1820. But again, he does not mention her. Rather, John Finley states quite plainly: "My grandfather raised a family of five sons: James, John, William, Benjamin and Jacob, and three daughters: Polly, Nancy and Rachel." Notice he does not say "my grandparents" - he clearly says "my grandfather."
My hypothesis is that John Finley Crow was correct, and that Mary Stuart died either shortly before or shortly after Walter Crow moved his family to Linville Creek, Augusta County, Virginia, where he met and married Ann Miller. She may even have been the mother of Walter's two youngest children born in Linville Creek, although that's pure speculation. That she survived Walter by some 20 years further suggests she may have been quite a bit younger than he.
So who was Ann Miller? The most logical answer is that she was a daughter of John Miller of Linville Creek. Nothing else quite explains the close ties that existed between the Crow and Miller families for nearly 40 years, beginning in Linville Creek and extending to subsequent generations in Lincoln/Mercer County, Kentucky.
The saga actually begins about 1742 along Linville Creek in Augusta County where the muster list name James Wright, James Robinson (Robertson on the list) and John Miller - names that will repeat over and over in conjunction with the Crows for the next 60 years.1 The lynchpin is John Miller whose daughter Hannah would eventually marry James Robinson's son Isaac Robinson, and whose daughter Mary would marry James Wright's son Capt. James Wright and later William Fields. These individuals will feature significantly later on in Kentucky.
In addition to Hannah and Mary, John Miller and his wife Hannah also had daughters Elizabeth (Isbell) and Jemima (Thomas). These four daughters are the only children mentioned in the Will of Hannah Miller written in 1786 and filed March 1795 in Lincoln County, Kentucky, with both John Crow and William Crow named as witnesses.2 John Miller, however, had other children by an earlier marriage (wife unknown). Among the known children are: Abraham, Henry, and John (Jr.). While there is no existing proof he also had a daughter Ann from that earlier marriage, it is not outside the realm of possibility. There may also have been other children as well; we just don't know who they are yet.
In 1747, John Miller was named one of the administrators for the estate of his Linville Creek neighbor William Skillern, and ordered to dispose of the estate for the benefit of Skillern's orphaned children.3 Apparently the administrators didn't sell Skillern's land, though, because 17 years later George and William Skillern sold the land - in 1764 - to Walter Crow.4 While that is the first land purchase recorded for Walter Crow, it's entirely possible he could have been in the area for several years before purchasing his land. That is one of the many unknowns.
What is known is that from about 1776 through 1779, John Miller's sons Abraham, Henry and John were very active in Yohogania County, Virginia, where they were joined by Walter Crow's sons John and William Crow.5 Mary Crow was there as well since we know her husband Benjamin Underwood died in Yohogania County on July 21, 1778.6 Mary Miller was most likely an inhabitant as well since court records for Yohogania County indicate both her first husband, Capt. James Wright, and her second husband William Fields, participated in a number of court cases along with John and William Crow, and Abraham and Henry Miller.7
By 1780, the scene shifted to Kentucky. In the spring of that year, Mary Crow Underwood and her five young children came down the Ohio River seeking the land Benjamin Underwood had marked in 1776, as did both John and William Crow, although it's not known whether they all came together in the famous Vanmeter flotilla, or separately. In the meantime time John Miller had moved to Lincoln County in 1779, entering a claim the following year for land that included a cabin built by William Fields. The series of land claims heard by the Virginia Land Commission in 1780 also included claims registered for Abraham Miller, Henry Miller, James Wright, William Fields, John Crow, William Crow on behalf of his nephew John Underwood, and William Crow on behalf of himself.8
In 1781 John Miller died intestate in Lincoln County, Kentucky.9 About the same time, John Miller's daughter Hannah Miller Robinson, a widow since 1773, contracted to buy 55 acres from her older half-brother Henry Miller adjoining the land of William Crow.10
The following year, in 1782, James Wright was killed by Indians at Blue Lick, and the administration of his estate was granted to Mary Miller Wright and her half-brother Henry Miller, with William Crow one of the designated appraisers.11 Mary Miller Wright subsequently married William Fields the following year.
In 1783, Henry Miller died, with his widow Sarah Miller designated administratrix, and surety bonds posted by his brother Abraham Miller and William Crow.12 In the same year, Sarah Miller and William Crow, in their capacity as witnesses, proved a power of attorney from John Miller (deceased) to Henry Miller giving him authority to collect a 1772 debt owed him by one Taverner Beal in Dunmore (now Shenandoah) County, Virginia.13 Later that same year, Abraham Miller was named administrator for the estate of John Miller.14
Two years later, in 1785, Abraham Miller died in Lincoln County, Kentucky, setting off a lengthy and contentious court battle that went all the way up to the Virginia Supreme Court (Kentucky didn't become a state until 1792). Both John Crow and William Crow gave testimony verifying the validity of the Will being contested by Abraham Miller's children as a forgery. 15 Unfortunately two of the original witnesses, including James Wright, were already dead, and the other was ill in Rockingham County and unavailable. William Crow accused the sole surviving executor John Thomas (husband of John Miller's daughter Jemima) of wasting the estate's assets, and the court appointed William Crow and William Eagan (Agun in the records) to replace Thomas as executors.16 At one point the court also ordered the sheriff to bring in Abraham Miller's half-sisters and their husbands John Thomas and Jemima Thomas, Zachariah Isbell and Elizabeth Isbell, William Field and Mary Field, and Hannah Robinson, to appear in court as "legatees under the said will, to appear here on the same day to answer the petition exhibited against them." The records for this case were destroyed during the Civil War so we don't know the particulars of what the fight was about, but in all probability the battle concerned Abraham Miller's disposition of the estate of John Miller.
Also in 1785, William Crow was appointed guardian to another Abraham Miller, this one the minor son of the late Henry Miller.17 When Henry Miller's widow Sarah Miller died in 1791, William Crow administered her estate, as well.18
In 1792, Hannah Miller Robinson died in Lincoln County, Kentucky, leaving a Will written a few days earlier on Oct. 20, 1792, and witnessed by Morias Hansbrough, second husband of Mary Crow, and her sister Mary Miller Wright Fields.19 Hannah named her son Luke Robinson and brother-in-law William Fields as executors. During a 1793 court hearing, Morias Hansbrough and William Crow were among those designated as appraisers. The following year, on December 7, 1793, her daughter Hannah Robinson married Jacob Underwood, son of Mary Crow, and her son Luke Robinson married Morias Hansbrough's daughter Susanna on April 24, 1794.
Hannah Miller, widow of John Miller, died in Mercer County, Kentucky, in 1795, leaving a Will that had been written in 1786 and witnessed by John Crow, William Crow and Elener Wright (daughter of Mary Miller Wright Fields) who married John and William Crow's brother Jacob Crow on April 28, 1787 - a year after her grandmother wrote her Will.20 William Crow and Elener Wright, now his sister-in-law, proved the Will in court. In her Will, Hannah names only her four daughters - Jemima Thomas, Elizabeth Isbell, Mary Fields, and Hannah Robinson. There is no mention of John Miller's other children. This exclusion may or may not have been in reaction to the court fight over Abraham Miller's Will then being handled by William Crow. However, the 1806 settlement of Hannah Miller's estate does include the curious notation: "By William Kennedy bond for this Sum (£164 9 2) received from William Crow on exchange of two bonds due the Estate of John Miller Deceased." 21
The death of Hannah Miller did not end the association between the Millers and the Crows, but the linkage did diminish as the younger generations grew, matured and moved on. While none of this proves that Ann Miller Crow was John Miller's daughter, it certainly demonstrates an unusual closeness between the two families that went well beyond the bounds of mere neighborliness, spanning two states, three counties and nearly 40 years.
https://freepages.rootsweb.com/~crow2000/genealogy/who_was_ann_miller.htm
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On July 17, 1752, another John Miller (a farmer) purchased 500 acres on Linville’s Creek (about 30 miles north of Staunton in present-day Rockingham County) in Augusta County from Robert Green of Culpeper County. In 1753, John Miller acquired an additional 200 acres from Green and an additional 500 acres in 1761. On May 18, 1762, John Miller and his wife Hannah conveyed 230 acres on Linville’s Creek to their son-in-law Jonathan Robinson. On the same day John Miller and his wife Hannah conveyed another 270 acres on Linville’s Creek to William Mynter. In March 1667, John Miller and his wife Hannah sold another 500 acres on Linville’s Creek to Cornelius Ruddle.[84]
By 1779, John Miller and his wife Hannah had relocated to Lincoln County (Kentucky) when John Miller died intestate in 1783 which resulted in a continuous legal battle between his three sons (Abraham, Henry, & John Jr) from a prior marriage and the husbands of his daughters. When Hannah Miller died in 1795 in Mercer County (Kentucky), the only children she named were their four daughters (Jemima Thomas, Elizabeth Isbell, Mary Fields, & Hannah Robinson). Their daughter Hannah married the son of Linvill Creek neighbor James Robinson (Isaac); daughter Mary married the son of James Wright (Captain James Wright) and then William Fields; daughter Elizabeth married Zachariah Isbell; and daughter Jemima married John Thomas (Notes for Anne Miller by Sarah Baker).
https://wilsonfamilytreealbumblog.wordpress.com/2019/03/29/tracing-millers-migration-from-pennsylvania-to-south-carolina/
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