Husband: John Crawford |
Born: 16 FEB 1746/1747 in Craven Co, SC (now Marion Co, SC) Married: Died: about SEP 1771 in St. Davids Parish, Craven Co, SC Father: James Crawford Mother: Kesiah Saunders Spouses: |
Wife: |
Born: Died: Father: Mother: Spouses: |
Children |
01 (M): James Crawford Born: 1755/1774 in Georgetown Dist, SC (now Marion Co, SC) Died: before 07 JAN 1804 in Marion Dist, SC Spouses: Mary Tart |
John Crawford:
Notes:
!NOTES:Marty Grant's 5th Great Grand Uncle.;
!REFERENCE:
http://www.martygrant.com/
http://www.martygrant.com/genealogy/crawford/
!NOTES:Baptism, B/D and Parents.
5 Oct 1749 John Crawford Son of James Crawford and Cassiah his wife Born Febry 16th 1746/7.
* From "The Register Book for the Parish Prince Frederick Winyaw. Ann: Dom: 1713", Elizabeth W. A. Pringle, 1916. The National Society of the Colonial Dames of America. p. 27.;
!REFERENCE: A History of Marion County, South Carolina From Its Earliest Times to the Present, 1901, by W. W. Sellers, Esq., of the Marion Bar. 1902. pp. 142-147
- Bishop Gregg, p. 71, says : "Of the settlers at Sandy Bluff, the Murfees, Sanders, Gibsons and Crawfords accumulated the largest properties, and became most prominent. John Crawford, the first of that name, had three sons —James, John and Hardy. James, the eldest of them, amassed a large fortune for that day, and maintained through life a high character for integrity. He was a Captain in the Revolution, and a valiant soldier in the cause of liberty." In a note, the Bishop says : "He was the grand-father of the late Chapman J. Crawford, of Marion." Thus we have the origin of the once extensive family of Crawfords, so far as Marion County is concerned —to whom they married and what children they had, we are pretty much in the dark. Bishop Gregg says, on p. 75 "About the same time, two families of James and Lucas, came down the river, and settled on Catfish. With the latter of these, the Crawfords and Evans intermarried." Who of the Crawfords intermarried with the Lucas family, and whether they were males or females, is now unknown, and perhaps past finding out, and the same may be said of the Evans and James.
...
We have traced one branch of the family pf old John Crawford, who was one of the first settlers at Sandy Bluff (afterwards called Solomon's Landing, and perhaps later called Bird's Landing) . Old John Crawford had three sons, James, John and Hardy. We have traced it through James, the eldest; of John and Hardy's posterity we know not how they ran. There have been other Crawfords here, but whether from John or Hardy, or both, we can't say ;
Revised: June 27, 2024
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