Notes |
- !NOTE:Many names and dates for this family are thanks to Ernest Cribb;
!CENSUS:1840;
!CENSUS:1850 Marion Dist., SC # 1014/1019
Anthony Cribb 50 Farmer $1000 Marion
Mantha 34
William 17 "
Dempsey 13
Tally 10 m
Emma 8
Mary 6
Sarah 4
Tinna 2/12 f;
!CENSUS:1860 Marion Dist., SC Marion, Floydsville PO # 1183/1171
A. Cribb 55 m (no occupation listed) $-/- SC
M. 44 f
G. F. 19 m
M. 15 f;
!CIVIL WAR:Company F. Gregg's First Regiment SC. George Tally CRIBB, Pvt, enl Aug 1, 1861. Discharged or retired, timed unknown. Lost leg at Fredericksburg, Living (1898-1902);
!MARRIAGE:18 Mar 1869 from Diary of Rev. Simeon Campbell: pg 58 G.T. CRIBB married to Miss Aseneth OWENS;
!CENSUS:1870 Marion Co., SC Reeves, Mullins Depot PO # 117/117
Tally Cribb 24 Farm Laborer $-/- SC
Sineath 25
Alifar 3
Julia 12;
!CENSUS:1880 Marion Co., SC Reaves # 549/549
Geo T. Cribb 36 M Farmer SC-SC-SC
Zenith 33 wife
Alice 14 dau
Henry 6 son
Kate 4 dau
Prince 1 dau;
!CENSUS:1900 Marion Co., SC Reaves # 161/161
George T. Cribb head Feb 1842 58 M 32 SC-SC-SC
Cenith wife Oct 1842 57 M 32 7-5
Boyd son Nov 1877 22
Princie dau Nov 1879 20
George E. son Mar 1882 18
May dau Apr 1885 15;
!DEATH:12 Jan 1906 from Diary of Rev. Simeon Campbell: pg 55 George Tally CRIBB died suddenly on Friday Night Jan the 12 1906;
!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. 167-170
...
There was another old Ford, by name of George, who lived just below Tabernacle Church, on the road leading from Bear Swamp to Allen's Bridge, on Little Pee Dee ; he was related to those other Fords, at least collaterally ; he was a very energetic man and accumulated some property.; I never knew much of him; he was not a very old man when he died. I know that he left two sons, William and Nelson Ford, and know that he had three daughters, if no more, to wit; second wife of William Goodyear, Sr.- her name was Elizabeth ; also the wife of the late Benjamin Shooter-her name was Mary ; she was the mother of the Shooter family, a numerous family, and among them the gallant Colonel W. P. Shooter, who was killed in the severe battle of Spottsylvania Court House, in May, 1864. A family noted for its gallantry in the war. Colonel Wm. P. Shooter and two of his brothers (names not remembered) fell on the same day and in the same fight. Another daughter was the wife of Anthony Cribb, and became the mother of our W. T. Cribb and of Dempsy Cribb, Jr. ; the latter is dead. W. T. Cribb is a respectable and good citizen, a brave soldier in the struggle for the "Lost Cause," and so was his brother, George T. Cribb. He lost a leg in the contest, and yet lives. Of the sons of George Ford, William (familiarly called "Little Bill Ford"), as now remembered, married, first, a Miss Lupo; he raised some family by her, the names and number not now known to the writer. "Little Bill Ford" has been dead some years, and perhaps his Butler wife. Nelson Ford lived to an advanced age, eighty or more, has not been dead many years; he was a most excellent man and worthy citizen ; he married a Miss Lupo, and raised a family, how many is not known; one of his sons, named Hardy, lives near Nichols, and is a most excellent man and one of our best citizens. The Ford family, as a whole, were good people, and extend down two or three generations further than herein traced ; for the want of information and personal acquaintance, the writer can go no further. They did their duty fully in the war, and demonstrated to their country a patriotism and courage of which the present and coming generations may be proud. Their connections are extensive. ;
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