Notes |
- !CENSUS:1800;
!CENSUS:1810;
!CENSUS:1820;
!NAMED-PROBATE ROLL # 684 Lot Rogers Marion Co., SC
Will 28 Mar 1829 pr 7 Apr 1829
Wife Ann
Sons: Elisha, David, Timothy, Robert, Noah, William and Phillip Rogers
dau Sally Legett
gr-ch now living: Martha and David Rogers
gr-ch William, Nathan and Elizabeth Ann Evans
...;
!CENSUS:1830 Marion Dist., SC pg 44
William Rogers age 30-39 (1790/1800)
220001-100001, slaves=000000-110000;
!CENSUS:1840 Marion Dist., SC pg 141
Willm Rogers Sr age 40-49 (1790/1800)
0100001-110001;
!CENSUS:1850 Marion Dist., SC # 1436/1442
William Rogers 50 Farmer $4000 Marion
Mary 48
Francis 21 m "
Phillip 19 "
Ann 13
Lot 12
Margaret 8;
!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. 148-157
...
- Henry was a man of family, and had lands granted to him on Little Reedy Creek in 1786; he married a Miss Hays, and settled on said Reedy Creek; he raised two sons, Dennis and Slaughter, and four daughters. Dennis and Slaughter married sisters, two daughters of David Miles, an old citizen of upper Marion. Of the four daughters, Elizabeth married Bryant Jones; Fama married Nathan Tart; Martha, called Pattie, married John M. Miles; and Mary married William Rogers. The father, Henry Berry, was a capital man and intelligent for his day and time; he served as Justice of the Peace for some years, evidenced by his official signature to the probate of deeds for record seen by the writer he accumulated a good property for his time; he founded or built the Catfish Baptist Church, not where it now stands, but back from its present location on Little Reedy Creek. In his old age he divided out his property among his children, and then lived among them himself till his death, about 1853 or 1854; he was over ninety years of age at his death. ;
!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. 178-183
...
Of the Dothan family, one Lot Rogers, from Virginia, came to South Carolina about the close of the Revolutionary War; he married a sister of old Buck Swamp John Bethea, named Nannie, whether before his arrival in South Carolina or after, is not now known; he settled and lived and died just above Dothan Church, on the road leading from Dothan to Little Rock, formerly called Harlleesville ; he raised a large family-think, mostly sons ; of these, only Timothy and William were known to the writer ; others of them went West ; one daughter only known to the writer; she became the wife of Nathan Evans, and the mother of the late General William and Nathan Evans, as hereinbefore mentioned.
...
Old Lot Rogers' youngest son, William, and perhaps his youngest child, born in 1799, inherited the old homestead of his father, and is now owned by his youngest son, our good fellow-citizen. Lot B. Rogers; he married the youngest daughter (Mary) of old Henry Berry, as hereinbefore stated; he and wife lived and died on his father's homestead at an old ageānot many years ago; the fruits of the marriage were sons, Charles, Evan, Frank, Philip B. and Lot B., and daughters, Elizabeth Ann, Mary Ann, Nancy and Margaret.
...
William Rogers died in 1874, at the age of seventyfive years ; his wife survived him a few years and she died. ;
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