Ada HOUSTON

Female 1860 - 1925  (65 years)


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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Ada HOUSTON was born in 1860 in Dougherty County, Georgia (daughter of George R HOUSTON and Elizabeth POSEY); died in 1925 in Worth County, Georgia; was buried in Oakfield Cemetery, Worth County, Georgia..

    Ada married Charles LIDDON before 1900 in Worth County, Georgia. Charles was born on 23 Apr 1825 in North Carolina; died on 27 Nov 1913 in Worth County, Georgia; was buried in Oakfield Cemetery, Worth County, Georgia.. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


Generation: 2

  1. 2.  George R HOUSTON was born on 24 Oct 1812 in Duplin County, North Carolina (son of Henry HOUSTON and Elenor STOKES); died on 26 Jul 1889 in Worth County, Georgia; was buried in Red Oak Cemetery, Doles, Georgia.

    Notes:

    Item1./
    History of Worth County
    Worth County was created in 1853 from Dooly and Irwin Counties. Worth County was named for Major General William James Worth, son-in-law of Zachary Taylor. Major William A. Harris, a leader in organizing the new county, served under General Worth in the Mexican War.

    The county's first known inhabitants were the Apalachee Indians. Their nation was destroyed in a war between the Florida Spanish and the Carolina English. When Oglethorpe arrived more 30 years later to establish the Colony of Georgia, the area was occupied by the Lower Creek Indians.

    San Bernard was the original County Seat. It's location was approximately where the Isabella Cemetery is now. The County Seat was moved a mile east from San Bernard and named Isabella in 1854. In 1872, the Brunswick & Albany (now the Seaboard Coast Line) Railroad was built, passing 3 miles south of Isabella. Towns began to be formed along the railway line, like Sumner, Poulan and Sylvester and in 1904, after a bitter power struggle, the County Seat was moved to to it's permanent spot: Sylvester.

    Item 2./ 1860 Daugherty County, Georgia census: 6-14-1860

    Name Home Age Est Birth Yr Birthplace Gender

    G Houston Not Stated, Dougherty, GA 45 1814 North Carolina Male
    E Houston Not Stated, Dougherty, GA 46 1813 Louisiana;Virginia Female
    James Houston Not Stated, Dougherty, GA 24 1835 Dooly Male
    Jane Houston Not Stated, Dougherty, GA 20 1839 Dooly Female
    John D Houston Not Stated, Dougherty, GA 19 1840 Georgia Male
    Lucy Houston Not Stated, Dougherty, GA 18 1841 Georgia Female
    E Houston Not Stated, Dougherty, GA 13 1846 Georgia Female
    George Houston Not Stated, Dougherty, GA 11 1848 Georgia Male
    Emily Houston Not Stated, Dougherty, GA 5 1854 Georgia Female
    Adia Houston Not Stated, Dougherty, GA 1 1858 Dougherty Female
    Martha Houston Not Stated, Dougherty, GA 18 1841 Georgia Female
    ((Note that this last Martha is not connected to any other Houston family yet, but is surely not one of John and Elizabeths children))

    Item 3./ 1870 Worth County, Georgia census: 8-29-1870 (With 2nd wife)

    Name Home Age EstBirthYr Birthplace Race Gender
    George Houston District 14, Worth, GA 54 abt 1816 North Carolina White Male
    Ann Houston District 14, Worth, GA 36 abt 1834 Georgia White Fem
    Emily Houston District 14, Worth, GA 13 abt 1857 Georgia White Fem
    Ada Houston District 14, Worth, GA 10 abt 1860 Georgia White Fem
    Sarah Houston District 14, Worth, GA 8 abt 1862 Georgia White Fem
    Malinda Houston District 14, Worth, GA 6 abt 1864 Georgia White Fem
    Thomas Houston District 14, Worth, GA 4 abt 1866 Georgia White Male
    Edward Houston District 14, Worth, GA 2 abt 1868 Georgia White Male
    Julia Houston District 14, Worth, GA 9/12 abt 1861 Georgia White Fem

    Item 4./

    Historical Note: Andrew Jackson was President in 1832 when he ordered all Indians east of the Mississippi, to be moved West. This was one of the sadest edicts of this and for all time in the History of the United States. Andrew Jackson imposed his will on the Presidency, the people, the banking industry and the landscape of America. He was not a good delegator, and fired the members of his Cabinet, in some instances several times, when they would not do his exact bidding. He was a born fighter and dualed several times, and had two lead balls in his body from these contests. Jackson was censured by his Democratic Party for firing 3 Secretary of the Treasurys in order to change the Federal Banking methods. He was the only President to be censured. He was given the name "Jackass" by his Party, which soon became the symbol assumed by his Democratic Party. He was the first and last President to leave the Government debt free at his parting. Andrew Jackson used the Presidential veto 12 times, supassed only by Andrew Johnson (25), who took over after the assassination of Lincoln. As a final note, Johnson later missed being impeached by only one vote, because he did not want to punish the South, after the Civil War.

    Item 5./

    History of Red Oak Baptist Church, Doles, Ga. Worth County, Georgia.
    Red Oak Baptist Church was founded November 5, 1864. Mike Champion gave the land for the Red Oak Baptist Church to be built upon. The church got its name because of the large Red Oak trees on this plot. The first church was made from hewn logs. It was 30 feet wide and 40 feet long. The hurch does not have the records when the second church was built, because of a fire in the clerk's home many ol records are gone forever. But the second church was a frame building with shutters for doors and windows and it had no ceiling. One service per month on the first Sunday was held then. The present church is the third one and it was built in 1890. The charter members include the BROWN family, as well as mention of DOWNS family; and many more surnames, Hobby, etc. Luerana Brown was a Charter Member. The church house was built near the southeast corner of Lot of Land # 90; in the 16th District of Worth County, Ga. Red Oak Baptist Church had had thirty-four pastors through the years. The cemetery has two parts; one enclosed in the fence and the second part next to the Creek that runs nearby for those families who had sharecroppers, etc. There were in the past both black and white church members attending this church. The first black members in 1855 (8) of them (this was before the Civil War). The first lights for the church were kereosene lamps, then in 1910 gas lights were added, and then 1940 the church added electricity. Red Oak Baptist Church celebrated its 100th Year Anniversary October 31, 1954.
    CEMETERY RECORDS:
    (this record is the best that could be obtained. There are numerous blank plots that the name was not known listed.) All records were burned in a Clerk's house that caught fire.

    George married Elizabeth POSEY about 1835. Elizabeth was born about 1816 in Georgia; died about 1860 in Worth County, Georgia. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  Elizabeth POSEY was born about 1816 in Georgia; died about 1860 in Worth County, Georgia.

    Notes:

    NOTE 1./ Historical Reference: The Year Was 1829

    In the U.S., Andrew Jackson became the seventh president of the United States. A hero of the War of 1812, he had also been a senator and representative for Tennessee, and Justice of the Tennessee Superior Court. Nicknamed "Old Hickory", he appealed to the common man and held a public reception at his inauguration at the White House.

    The U.S. had banned the importation of slaves in 1808, but unfortunately, it didn't stop the trade. In 1829, a boat assigned to patrol the African Coast looking for slavers, intercepted the "Feloz" and a group from the interceptor boarded the ship. A first-hand account of the horrific conditions from one of the group, Rev. Robert Walsh, can be found online at EyeWitness to History.com.

    That year, Eng and Chang Bunker, the original Siamese twins arrived in America where they traveled around in exhibitions. They went on to tour through England and other countries in Europe for the next ten years and later settled in a small town in North Carolina, where they married two sisters.

    In the world of technology, William Austin Burt invented and received the first American patent for the "typographer"--an early version of the typewriter. Burt also held patents for a number of other inventions and did extensive surveying in the areas that are now Michigan and Wisconsin.

    Children:
    1. CSA James Monroe HOUSTON was born on 01 Nov 1836 in Dooly County, Georgia; died on 05 Dec 1912 in District 1121, Worth County, Georgia; was buried in Red Oak Cemetery, Doles, Georgia..
    2. (Eleanor) Jane HOUSTON was born on 04 Jul 1839 in Dooly County, Georgia; died on 04 Oct 1912 in Early County, Georgia; was buried in Springfield Cemetery, Early County, Georgia..
    3. CSA John Dallas HOUSTON was born on 06 Jan 1842 in Macon, Bibb County, Georgia; died on 30 Jul 1926 in Worth County, Georgia; was buried in Smoke Cemetery, Crisp County Georgia..
    4. Lucy HOUSTON was born on 21 Jul 1844 in Dooly County, Georgia; died on 28 May 1903 in Worth County, Georgia; was buried in Red Oak Cemetery, Doles, Georgia..
    5. Elizabeth HOUSTON was born on 08 Feb 1848 in Dooly County, Georgia; died on 08 Nov 1916 in Worth County, Georgia.
    6. George Roman HOUSTON was born on 26 Oct 1850 in Dooly County, Georgia; died on 30 Sep 1903 in Worth County, Georgia; was buried in Red Oak Baptist Church Cemetery, Doles, Worth County, GA.
    7. Emilene HOUSTON was born on 14 Jul 1857 in Dooly County, Georgia; died on 06 Jun 1890 in Worth County, Georgia.
    8. 1. Ada HOUSTON was born in 1860 in Dougherty County, Georgia; died in 1925 in Worth County, Georgia; was buried in Oakfield Cemetery, Worth County, Georgia..


Generation: 3

  1. 4.  Henry HOUSTON was born about 1793 in Soracte, Duplin County, North Carolina (son of RS Edward HOUSTON and Mary MILLER); died in 1841 in Dooly County, Georgia.

    Notes:

    NOTE 1./ Recorded from Jacqueline B. Perrin Information: Notes for Henry Houston:

    1/ This Henry Houston was named for his Uncle Henry Houston, brother of Edward Houston, in our ancestry. Records in NC refer to him as "Jr".
    2/ This material comes from Sara Bryan Houston's father-in-law's file:
    Henry Houston and Elendor Stokes were married in Duplin, NC, in 1816. Three of their sons came to Georgia. Edward J., Henry, and George Houston came to Georgia after 1830. We find Edward J. Houston in Dooly County, there he married Lucy Royal, date not sure. After her death, he married her sister, Eliza Jane, September 11, 1860. They moved to Miller-Early County Line, where he died. He gave the land for the Houston Cemetery. He was a member of the new Hope Baptist Church and served in the Civil War. His brother, George, was living in Dooly County GA., in the 1850 census. Their mother, Eleanor Stokes, (born 1795, NC) was living with George at this time. We do not know where or when Henry, the father, died. We assume in Duplin County, NC.

    NOTE 2./ Historical Note: The Year Was 1818

    The year was 1818 and the Convention of 1818decided the northern boundary of the United States and the southern boundary of Canada as being the 49th parallel, between the Lake of the Woods in Minnesota and the Rocky Mountains. The land west of the Rockies was under joint control of the U.S. and Britain. That boundary was settled in 1846 with the Oregon Treaty.

    South of 49th parallel, Illinois was admitted as the twenty-first state. Initially the northern boundary was set just below the southern end of Lake Michigan, but at a population of around 36,000, Illinois was short of the necessary 60,000 minimum required for statehood. Illinois Congressional delegate, Nathaniel Pope, suggested that it would make better sense to move the boundary northward to include the City of Chicago and the area upon which the I & M Canal would be built, connecting the Great Lakes with the Mississippi River, and from there the Gulf of Mexico.

    In the South, the First Seminole War resulted from the escalation of conflicts between the Seminoles and settlers who were moving into Seminole territory. The Seminoles provided a sanctuary for escaped slaves and this provided additional fuel for the fire. Andrew Jackson pursued the Seminoles into Florida, which was then under Spanish control. His victory led to the accession of Florida to the U.S. the following year.

    In the Ohio River Valley, an epidemic of what was commonly called "milk sick" broke out and in October it claimed Abraham Lincoln's mother, Nancy Hanks Lincoln. At the time, the illness was attributed to many things, but only a few suspected the real culprit. It wasn't until the early 1900s that it was determined that milk from cows that had eaten snakeroot caused the illness. By then it had claimed many other victims, the majority of them infants.

    In literature, a young Mary Shelley's most famous book-- Frankenstein--was published. 1818 also marked the first time the Christmas hymn Silent Night was sung in the small Austrian village of Oberndorf.

    Henry married Elenor STOKES on 17 Jan 1816 in Duplin County, North Carolina. Elenor (daughter of Redden STOKES) was born in 1795 in Duplin County, North Carolina; died after 1850 in Dooly County, Georgia. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 5.  Elenor STOKES was born in 1795 in Duplin County, North Carolina (daughter of Redden STOKES); died after 1850 in Dooly County, Georgia.

    Notes:

    The spelling of her name is difficult to read. It may be spelled Eleanor. The grand daughter is named Eleanor. George's second child.

    Children:
    1. 2. George R HOUSTON was born on 24 Oct 1812 in Duplin County, North Carolina; died on 26 Jul 1889 in Worth County, Georgia; was buried in Red Oak Cemetery, Doles, Georgia.
    2. CSA Edward Joshua HOUSTON was born on 06 Apr 1818 in Duplin County, North Carolina; died on 02 Jan 1888 in Miller County, Georgia; was buried in Houston Cemetery, Miller County Georgia.
    3. Eliza Jane HOUSTON was born about 1820 in Dooly County, Georgia; died before 1880 in Dooly County, Georgia.
    4. CSA (William) Henry HOUSTON was born in 1833 in Dooly County, Georgia; died on 11 Apr 1870 in Worth County, Georgia; was buried in Gillis Cemetery in an unmarked grave..


Generation: 4

  1. 8.  RS Edward HOUSTON was born about 1755 in Soracte, Duplin County, North Carolina. (son of Doctor WilliamEsq HOUSTON and Anna JONES); died on 13 Dec 1824 in Duplin County, North Carolina.

    Notes:

    NOTE 1./
    During the Revolutionary War, Edward HOUSTON served in the North Carolina Continental Line from Wilmington District. (Roster of Soldiers from North Carolina in the American Revolution, p.219; Audit Vouchers #1334 and #1314, North Carolina Archives.)

    From census records of Duplin Co., NC, 1820- Edward HOUSTON, age 45+, has one male living in household, age 26-45 (Edward E. about age 35); 1830- Edward HOUSTON, AGE 40-50 (probably Edward E.); 1840- Edward A. HOUSTON, age 40-50; Edward E. moved to Barbour Co., AL.

    Sources:
    Text: DUPREE, Garland Monna Crowe, PEOPLE OF PURPOSE, VOLUME TWO, Walker Printing, 1990.

    Exerpts from the DUPLIN COUNTY DEED BOOK IA Page 1: William Houston, Senr. of Duplin Co. to Edward Houston, 13 May 1784, for $1, a tract of 360A on th ES of the Northeast River of Cape Fear, being part of 840A granted to HENRY McCULLOH, ESQR. 3 Mar 1745, & later granted to William Houston, Esqr. May 1780, beg. at a stake on the river Griffeth Houston's lower corner & runs with his line S & N to a water oak & gum in Bridle Branch. William Houston & his wife to have lifetime rights on sd. land. Wit: Charles Ward, Joseph Bray, Sen. July Ct. 1784.

    NOTE 2./ The North Carolina State Census,

    1784 - 1787, indicates that Edward Houston's household was recorded in Capt Hubbard's Militia District by Samuel Houston in April 1786. The household consisted of 1 White male between the age of 21 AND 60, 2 White males either below the age of 21 OR above the age of 60, 2 White females, 2 Black slaves between the ages of 12 and 50, and 9 Black slaves either below the age of 21 or above the age of 5 0. This indicates that Edward Houston was born
    between 1726 and 1765.
    Edward's household is recorded on line 46

    1790 Edward Houston household has 1 male over 16, 4 males under 16, 1 female, 6 slaves - Edward would have accounted for the Male over 16, His wife Mary the female - 4 sons under 16 Houston household has 1 male over 16, 4 males under 16, 1 female, 6 slaves A second 1790 census shows Edward Houston's household consists of 1 male over 16, 3 males under 16, 1 female, 6 slaves

    1800 Census shows Edward Houston's household to consist of 2 males under 10, 1 male 10-15, 2 males 16-25, 1 male over 45, 2 females under 10, 1 female over 45 and 4 slaves. In conclusion Edward and Mary at this point are over 45 and have 5 sons and 2 daughters still living with them.

    1810 Census show's Edward Houston's household consisting of 3 males 16-25, 1 male over 45, 2 females 10-15, 1 female over 45 and 3 slaves

    1820 Census with his household consisting of 2 males under 10 (James Lafayette 4 & Edward "Ned" 7), 1 male 26-45 (Edward E. age 32), male over 45 (Edward), 1 female under 10 (I do not have a record of this child), 1 female 16-26 (This could be Winneford), 2 females between 26 & 45 (Possibly Rebecca and Hannah). There is a mark for 1 person foreigners not naturalized. This could be a column error and should have been for 1 female over 45 for Mary and 5 slaves. This appears to be a combined household with Edward and Edward E.

    Research Notes: During the Revolutionary War, Edward HOUSTON served in the North Carolina Continental Line from Wilmington District. (Roster of Soldiers from North Carolina in the American Revolution, p.219 ; Audit Vouchers #1334 and #1314, North Carolina Archives.)

    NOTE 3./ Duplin Co and Sampson Co were formerly a part of New Hanover Co. Duplin was formed in 1749. In 1784, Sampson Co was made from Duplin

    NOTE 4./ By Jerome Tew: <> <>

    HOUSTON, Edward, Private, NC Militia
    Soldier is listed on Pierce's Register and lived in Duplin in 1790 with four males over 16. William Houston sold to (son) Edward Houston 360 acres in Duplin in 1784 for $1. Soldier was born in 1755 to Dr. William Houston and Anna Jones and died December 13, 1834. He married Mary Miller 1755-1818. Issue: 1-Henry Houston born 1795 in Duplin, moved to Dooly after 1830, and died 1841 in Dooly Co. GA. He married Eleanor Stokes. His son Edward Joshua b1818 in Duplin Co. NC married in Dooly Co. GA Lucy Ann Royal and 2nd Eliza Jane Royal, daughters of Raiford Royal born 1800 in Sampson Co. NC.
    2-Griffith Houston, 3-Rebecca Houston, 4-Winnifred Houston, 5-James Houston, and 6-Samuel Houston. Henry's widow Eleanor 1795- was living with son George Houston 1850 in Dooly.

    NOTE 5./ e-mail 1-12-2005 ; DAR Lookup Request ; Reply by CNelson at Roots Web.com
    http://boards.ancestry.com/mbexec/msg/rw/SM.2ADE/4886.1

    The DAR Patriot Index lists the following:

    HOUSTON, Edward
    Birth: NC Circa 1755
    Service: NC
    Rank: Sol
    Death: NC 13 Dec 1824
    Patriot Pensioned: No Widow Pensioned: No
    Children Pensioned: No Heirs Pensioned: No
    Spouse: (1) Mary Miller

    If you would like a copy of the application with the patriot's information, you may request a copy from DAR National Headquarters. Send the above information with a $10.00 check made payable to: Treasurer General NSDAR and mail to: REGISTRAR GENERAL NSDAR; Attn: Record Copy Dept.; 1776 D Street NW; Washington, DC 20006-5303.
    Please send only one check and one request per envelope. It may take 6 to 8 weeks to receive your copy as the office is very busy.

    The application may contain names, dates, locations, service and reference sources that may be of interest to you. If you or any member of your family is interested in joining the DAR or the SAR, please let me know. I will be happy to put you in touch with someone in your area who will help you with the application process.

    NOTE 6./ Historical Note: The Year Was 1789

    The year was 1789 and in the U.S. a young government was beginning to take shape. In its first nationwide election, the popular Revolutionary War general, George Washington, became the country's first president and was sworn in at the first capitol of the United States, Federal Hall in New York City.

    In France, a rebellion was underway and with the storming of the Bastille prison, the French Revolution began. In its reporting on the subject, The Times of London, England had the following to say of the conflict:

    The spirit of liberty which so long lay in a state of death, oppressed by the hand of power, received its first spark of returning animation, by the incautious and impolitic assistance afforded to America. The French soldier on his return from that emancipated continent, told a glorious tale to his countrymen--"That the arms of France had given freedome to thirteen United States, and planted the standard of liberty on the battlements of New York and Philadelphia." The idea of such a noble deed became a general object of admiration, the [facets?] of a similar state were eagerly longed for by all ranks of people, and the vox populi had this force of argument--"If France gave freedom to America, why should she not unchain the arbitrary fetters which bind her own people.

    Later that year, the Marquis de Lafayette, with the advice of Thomas Jefferson who was at the time the American ambassador to France, drafted the Declaration of the Rights of Man and of the Citizen. It was adopted by France's National Assembly in August and ratified by Louis XVI in October.

    There was unrest in other parts of the world as well. Sweden and Russia were at war, and briefly, Norway had joined the conflict, although a peace treaty was signed in July 1789.

    In a smaller, but well-known conflict, the mutiny on the H.M.S. Bounty was also in the year 1789. On April 28, part of the crew of the Bounty, led by Fletcher Christian, mutinied and set Captain William Bligh and eighteen crewmembers adrift. Bligh managed to get the boat some 3,600 miles to Timor. Some of the mutineers were captured and prosecuted--three were hanged, while others, including Fletcher Christian ended up on Pitcairn Island, where some of their descendants live to this day.

    In 1789, there was an epidemic of influenza in New England, New York, and Nova Scotia, which resulted in many deaths due to secondary cases of pneumonia. The new president was among those who fell ill. He caught a cold while visiting Boston, and later, was affected more seriously with influenza, which was dubbed Washington Influenza.

    NOTE 7./ Historical Note: The Year Was 1780

    The year was 1780 and the American Revolution wasn't going well for the Americans in the South. British forces captured Charleston and 5,400 American troops garrisoned there. During the siege, South Carolina Governor John Rutledge managed to escape and when word reached the British General Cornwallis, he sent Lt. Col. Banastre Tarleton to chase Rutledge and troops under Colonel Abraham Buford who were escorting him to North Carolina. Tarleton's men caught up with Buford's troops near the Waxhaws District six miles south of the North Carolina state line, as Governor Rutledge continued north. Buford's men put up a brief fight during which Tarleton's horse was shot from under him. As the American troops began to surrender, Tarleton's men, thinking he had been killed began renewed their attack on the surrendering Americans. More than one hundred men were killed outright and perhaps another hundred died of their wounds shortly after.

    Up to that point, most thought that the South was going to remain loyal to Britain, but the Waxhaws Massacre became a rallying point for the rebels, with "Tarleton's Quarter" becoming synonymous with "no mercy."

    The divisions in the South were apparent in the Battle of King's Mountain, which was fought between two American forces--Tories under the command of Major Patrick Ferguson, and the "Overmountain Men," American frontiersmen from what is now Tennessee and parts of Virginia. The Americans surrounded the Tories and this time it was they who gave "no quarter" to the surrendering Tory troops. Eventually American officers were able to reign in the troops and the battle was over. The defeat was a turning point in the Revolution in the South and forced General Cornwallis to retreat further south.

    To the north, a British spy was captured with correspondence revealing that Benedict Arnold, who had recently been given command of West Point, planned to surrender it to the British. When news that the spy had been caught reached Arnold, he fled to the safety of a British ship and became a brigadier-general for the British, siding with them for the remainder of the war.

    There was trouble in England as well. In 1778 a Catholic Relief Act had been passed, which reversed some of the Penal Laws of the late seventeenth and early eighteenth centuries. It allowed Roman Catholics to join the armed forces with an oath amenable to Catholics and gave them the ability to hold longer leases on land. It also ended the requirement that a Catholic distribute his lands evenly among his sons upon his death. The Catholic Relief Acts weren't popular with some Protestants though and in 1780 Lord George Gordon established the Protestant Association in 1780. In June of that year an estimated 60,000 people marched on the House of Commons demanding the Relief Acts be repealed. The huge crowd turned violent and a week of rioting left two hundred and ninety people dead, and devasted Roman Catholic churches and related buildings, as well as the homes of prominent Catholics and supporters of the legislation. Troops had to be called in to end the rioting. Twenty-five of the leaders of the riot were hanged, but Gordon was found "not guilty" of treason.

    May 19th was a dark day in New England--literally. A low-lying dark cloud that at times had a yellow and at times reddish hue descended on New England and was noted from Maine to as far south as New Jersey. It was darkest around northeastern Massachusetts and southern New Hampshire and Maine, where it became so dark that candles needed to be lit to see. The cause is thought to have been a combination of low clouds that mixed with smoke and ash from a forest fire, but at the time it wasn't known and the event caused panic for many.

    New England's dark day was a minor event though in comparison to the hurricane season of 1780. Eight storms struck in various parts of America and the Caribbean. British fleets off American shores took heavy hits during several storms. (Hurricanes in the 1780s were the cause of more British Naval losses than battle.) The worst storm struck on October 10th devastating Barbados and the Windward Islands, and claiming an estimated 22,000 lives.

    RS married Mary MILLER in 1771 in Duplin Co., North Carolina. Mary (daughter of George MILLER and Margaret MCCULLOH) was born about 1751 in North Carolina; died between 1818 and 1824 in Duplin County, North Carolina. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 9.  Mary MILLER was born about 1751 in North Carolina (daughter of George MILLER and Margaret MCCULLOH); died between 1818 and 1824 in Duplin County, North Carolina.

    Notes:

    NOTE 1./ Marriage 1771: (Age 16) Mary Miller <>

    This quite possibly was an arranged marriage, which was still common practice in this time with prominent families. Dr. William Houston's uncle was Henry McCulloch. Margaret McCulloch Miller ?(Mary miller's mother)? was probably a sister or daughter to Henry. Mary Miller would have been a 3rd cousin to Edward. The only daughter of Dr. William Houston married Henry McCulloch probably a son or grandson of his Uncle. Further research is necessary to prove this speculation.

    Children:
    1. James HOUSTON was born on 18 Aug 1782 in Duplin County, North Carolina; died in Apr 1852 in Duplin County, North Carolina.
    2. Rebecca HOUSTON was born about 1778 in Duplin County, NC.
    3. Edward E. HOUSTON was born on 31 May 1788 in Duplin County, NC; died in 1870 in Barbour County, Alabama.
    4. 4. Henry HOUSTON was born about 1793 in Soracte, Duplin County, North Carolina; died in 1841 in Dooly County, Georgia.
    5. Winiford HOUSTON was born about 1800 in Duplin County, North Carolina.

  3. 10.  Redden STOKES was born about 1757 in Pitt County, North Carolina (son of Samuel STOKES and Sarah UNKNOWN); died after 1815.
    Children:
    1. 5. Elenor STOKES was born in 1795 in Duplin County, North Carolina; died after 1850 in Dooly County, Georgia.