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Mary Elizabeth McLemore

Female 1846 - 1919  (72 years)


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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Mary Elizabeth McLemore was born on 26 Dec 1846 in Kentucky (daughter of John McLemore and Caroline Stevenson); died on 3 Jun 1919 in Fort Worth, Tarrant County, Texas; was buried in Grapevine Cemetery, Grapevine, Tarrant County, Texas.

    Notes:

    Name Mary Elizabeth Smith
    Event Type Death
    Event Date 03 Jun 1919
    Event Place Grapevine, Tarrant, Texas, United States
    Gender Female
    Marital Status Married
    Birth Date 03 Jun 1846
    Birthplace , Kentucky
    Father's Name John Macklemoore
    Mother's Name Caroline
    Certificate Number 19761
    GS Film number 2073634
    Digital Folder Number 005145729
    Image Number 01352

    Citing this Record:
    "Texas, Deaths, 1890-1976," index and images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.1.1/K386-268 : accessed 21 Nov 2013), Mary Elizabeth Smith, 03 Jun 1919; citing certificate number 19761, State Registrar Office, Austin; FHL microfilm 2073634.

    On the 1910 census she indicated she had given birth to 13 children in total, but only 7 were still living. Daughter Lue Ella died in 1899, the names of her other deceased children are unknown. They appear to have died at a very young age as their are only 9 children that have been identified through census or vital records.

    Mary married Samuel Henry Smith on 16 Jan 1861 in Logan County, Kentucky. Samuel was born on 18 Dec 1840 in Russellville, Logan County, Kentucky; died on 3 Mar 1923 in Fort Worth, Tarrant County, Texas; was buried in Grapevine Cemetery, Grapevine, Tarrant County, Texas. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Notes:

    Married:
    Descendant Sherilyne "Sam" Palmer noted that a family letter puts their date of marriage as Jan 16, 1861, as opposed to a website source indicating Jan 15, 1862.

    Children:
    1. Thomas Obediah Smith was born on 14 Mar 1867 in Kentucky; died about 1939.
    2. Florence Bell Smith was born on 14 Dec 1869 in Franklin, Simpson County, Kentucky; and died.
    3. Lue Ella Smith was born on 19 Sep 1872 in Kentucky; died on 6 Oct 1899 in Renner, Collin County, Texas; was buried in Grapevine Cemetery, Grapevine, Tarrant County, Texas.
    4. William "Will" Hester Smith was born on 5 Feb 1875 in Kentucky; and died.
    5. Jane "Jennie" Ann Smith was born on 24 Aug 1878 in Bowling Green, Warren County, Kentucky; died on 11 Aug 1959 in Fort Worth, Tarrant County, Texas.
    6. Emma Roe Smith was born on 4 Nov 1882 in Bowling Green, Warren County, Kentucky; died on 17 Apr 1956 in Fort Worth, Tarrant County, Texas; was buried in Mount Olivet Cemetery, Fort Worth, Tarrant County, Texas.
    7. Carrie Myrtle Smith was born on 18 May 1885 in Bowling Green, Warren County, Kentucky; died on 1 May 1955 in Austin, Travis County, Texas; was buried in Austin Memorial Park Cemetery, Austin, Travis County, Texas.
    8. Leslie Burr Smith was born on 24 Jun 1888 in Bowling Green, Warren County, Kentucky; died on 3 May 1960 in San Bernadino County, California.
    9. Tate Lyle "Tatie" Smith was born on 29 Dec 1892 in Collin County, Texas; died on 18 Dec 1946 in Montague, Montague County, Texas; was buried in Montague Cemetery, Montague, Montague County, Texas.

Generation: 2

  1. 2.  John McLemore was born about 1815 in North Carolina (son of Joel McLemore, Jr. and Temperence "Tempe" Goodwyn); died before 1860.

    Notes:

    Assumed to be part of the "large family" raised by Joel and Temperence McLemore based on his age and census location. Not proven.

    John and Caroline and their four children can be found on the 1850 census, but as of 1860 the family is no longer together. It appears likely that John and Caroline died prior to this date, and that their children were scattered among differing families in Logan County. Hiram D, the oldest, was a boarder in the Lamb home. John, the next eldest, was living with his first cousin, David J. McLemore. The two youngest, Mary and James, were living in the home of their presumed uncle, Goodwin McLemore.

    (Research):Census Information

    1850 Census
    Kentucky, Logan, District 1

    463-473
    John McLemore 35 M Blacksmith $300 N. Carolina
    Caroline McLemore 27 F Ky
    Hiram D. McLemore 7 M Ky
    John McLemore 5 M Ky
    Mary E. McLemore 3 F Ky
    James A. McLemore 1 M Ky

    John married Caroline Stevenson on 13 Dec 1841 in Logan County, Kentucky. Caroline was born about 1823 in Kentucky; and died. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  Caroline Stevenson was born about 1823 in Kentucky; and died.

    Notes:

    Married:
    From the "Marshall-Corn3" tree on WorldConnect at Rootsweb. Submitter, Porter L. Marshall, pmarshall3@cox.net

    Children:
    1. Hiram D. McLemore was born about 1843 in Kentucky; and died.
    2. John Fielding McLemore was born on 30 Dec 1844 in Kentucky; died on 19 Oct 1932 in Jennings, Jefferson Davis Parish, Louisiana; was buried in Oaklawn Cemetery, Welsh, Jefferson Davis Parish, Louisiana.
    3. 1. Mary Elizabeth McLemore was born on 26 Dec 1846 in Kentucky; died on 3 Jun 1919 in Fort Worth, Tarrant County, Texas; was buried in Grapevine Cemetery, Grapevine, Tarrant County, Texas.
    4. James A. McLemore was born about 1849 in Kentucky; and died.


Generation: 3

  1. 4.  Joel McLemore, Jr. was born about 1776 in South Carolina (son of Joel McLemore and Elizabeth Wyche); and died.

    Notes:

    "Moved to Tennesse where he raised a large family."

    Joel married Temperence "Tempe" Goodwyn. Temperence was born before 1778; and died. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 5.  Temperence "Tempe" Goodwyn was born before 1778; and died.
    Children:
    1. James Howell McLemore was born about 1797 in North Carolina; died in Oct 1869 in Logan County, Kentucky.
    2. Joel McLemore, III was born about 1801 in North Carolina; died about 1871 in Logan County, Kentucky.
    3. Goodwin McLemore was born about 1810 in North Carolina; and died.
    4. 2. John McLemore was born about 1815 in North Carolina; died before 1860.


Generation: 4

  1. 8.  Joel McLemore was born on 7 Jan 1739 in Albemarle Parish, Sussex County, Virginia (son of John Macklemore and Faith ???); died about 1795 in Richland County, South Carolina.

    Notes:

    He was born, according to the ALBEMARLE PARISH REGISTER, on the "7th day of the 11th month, 1739" (February 23, 1739/40), and was baptized on the "23rd day of the 12th month, 1739" (February 23, 1739/40). (James L. McLemore, III, p. 55).

    First Sheriff of Richland Co., Feb 12, 1787-89. Justice of the Peace in 1787. Inquirer and Collector of Taxes 1784-1785.

    He served two hundred eighty-four days as a captain and thirty days as a commissary under Lt. Col. Taylor and Col. Sumter during 1780 and 1781. In addition, he supplied flour during 1782. He was captured at Fishing Creek, but escaped, S.C.H.& G., XXVII, 207; A.A.5124; V219. (From "Roster of South Carolina Patriots in the American Revolution" by Bobby Gilmer Moss, Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc. Baltimore, 1983, p. 636).

    James L. McLemore III notes that his Revolutionary War File number was 5124.

    Will in Richland Co., SC, Feb. 1794 to Apr. 6, 1795.
    (Transcription below courtesy of Mark Freeman)

    Will of Joel McLemore, Will Book "C", p. 105, Box 21, Package # 504. In The Name Of God Amen. I Joel Mclemore of Richland County & State of South Carolina, being in health of body & of Sound sence & Memory Thanks be to Almighty God for the same, but calling to mind the Mortality of my body & Knowing it is appointed unto all men once to die do make and ordain this my last will & Testament in Manner & form following. That is to say principally & first of all I give & Recommend my Soul into the hands of Almighty God who gave it and my body I recommend to the Earth to be buried at the Discretion of my Executors hereafter Named. And as touching such worldly Estate Wherewith it hath pleased God to bless me with in this life. I give devise and dispose of the same in the following Manner & Form. Imprimis, it is my desire that all my just debts be paid. Item -- I lend unto my beloved wife Elizabeth McLemore during her natural life, the plantation and house in which I now live with one seventh part of my Riverswamp plantation.

    Item -- I lend unto my beloved wife Elizabeth McLemore during her Natural life, The use of my five Negroes by Name Tom, Will, Jude, young Lucy & Millie, but with this restriction that should she marry my children Shall not be constrained to pay for their board, but the profits arrising from the labour of those five Negroes Shall go towards the Support of my Children as well as herself.

    Item -- I give & bequeath unto my beloved Nephew Joel McLemore Son of John McLemore Deceased (after my debts are fully paid) one horse, or Mare, to the value of Ten pound Sterling.

    Item -- I give & bequeath unto my beloved Brother Burwell McLemore (after my debts are paid) thirty Silver Dollars.

    Item -- I give and bequeath unto my beloved neice Elizabeth Edmunds (after my debts are paid) One cow & calf & one Sow & Piggs together with the feather bed & furniture which I have already given her before witnesses, & which she has already got in possession.

    Item -- I give & bequeath unto my beloved Children John, Sarah, James, Mary, Joel & Jesse Claiborne all my Estate both real and personal to be Equally divided between them, at the discretion of my Executors as they come of Age or Marry, but with this restriction, my field Slaves not to be Sepperated, before my debts are fully paid, & I give and bequeath the Same to them & their heirs, legally begotten of their body forever.

    Item -- It is my desire that if either of my children should die before they come of Age or Marry, or before they have an heir legally begotten of their body, that the Estate of the deceased should be Equally divided between the Survivors. Item it is my Desire that Each of my children Should have a Sufficient Share of Education, as Much as their interest will admit, or as much as it is thought necessary by my Executors.

    Item I also lend unto my beloved wife Elizabeth McLemore During her Natural life the use of one Seventh part of my Stock and household furniture. Item & Lastly, I do hereby constitute Nominate & Appoint my worthy & well beloved friends Claiborne Clifton, John Hopkins Joel Adams & John Hamilton, my lawful Exaectors & Guardians of my Children, Revoking, disannuling and making voyd all former Wills & Executors, by me in anywise Named or Made, Ratifying & confirming this & no other to be my last will & Testament, in Witness Whereof, I the Said Joel McLemore have hereunto set my hand & seal, this ___ day of February 1794.

    Signed Sealed & Acknowledged in presents of Thomas Edmunds, James McLemore (The two words use & My, which are interlined Observed before Signed as Witnwsses). Proven in Open Court April 6 1795 on the testimony of both Witnesses. Martyn Alkins C.C.

    In an April 4, 2002 email to McLemore cousin researchers, McLemore cousin Thelma Hayes provides information from the Daughters of the American Revolution's Library which genealogist James McLemore III later confirms is the "Rosetta Stone" as to the lineage of Nanny's grandfather, Joel McLemore. Both of their emails follow. The man below, Captain Joel McLemore, is Emma McLemore's (Nanny's) grandfather's grandfather - her great great grandfather. A big thank you to Thelma Hayes for providing this to us!

    Hi McLemore Cousins,
    Yesterday, I received a photocopy of the following McLemore document taken from a file located at the DAR Library in Washington DC:

    The McLemore Family in Richmond

    Captain Joel McLemore came to South Carolina before the Revolution (his wife was Miss Wyche, the same family of Mrs. T. Taylor). He planted on the Congaree Swamp about twelve miles below Columbia. He was an officer in Colonel Taylor's command and served him all through the war. He was a brave honest and upright man. He left John, James, and Joel. John married his cousin, the Widow Patrick, sister to Claiborne Clifton. The Widow Patrick had one son Curtis Clifton, and a daughter Sarah. Curtis died unmarried; Sarah married Andrew Wallace.

    Major John McLemore had by his only one wife, John and Joel and a daughter Eliza. John married a Miss McMorris who had two sons, John and Mark, and one daughter Victoria. Eliza married William Meyer, and died childless. Captain McLemore had a daughter married to William Smart who left a large family.

    Captain Joel McLemore came from Virginia, a young man, about the same time that Colonel Thomas Taylor did. He was highly educated and had property. He bought lands on the Congaree River below Columbia where he lived and died. He had four children, Major John McLemore, Joel McLemore, James McLemore, and Mrs. Smart. His son Major John McLemore lived and died on the land he inherited from his father, his descendants are now three grandchildren and their families. His son Joel McLemore moved to Tennessee where he raised a large family.

    (Note by Thelma: the following is on the second page)
    I hereby certify that the attached is a true and correct copy of original document written by Andrew Wallace, written about the year A. D. 1854.
    (Signature) Elise Wallace Hebb
    Sworn to and subscribed before me, this 21st day of November, A. D. 1925.
    (Signature) G. C. Bills, Notary Public
    My Commission expires: 12/10/1928
    (Copied from the following website:

    http://groups.msn.com/MaddoxMcLemoredescendants/general.msnw?action=get_message&mview=0&ID_Message=147&LastModified=4675452110803208613)

    McLemore genealogist James McLemore III responds to the above, also in an email of April 4, 2002:

    Eureka! I think you have found the Rosetta Stone for your branch, the proof we have been looking for that your Joel (b. 1801-02) was Joel III, son of Joel Jr. and wife Temperence (Goodwyn)McLemore, and so grandson of Capt. Joel McLemore who moved from Virginia to South Carolina before the death of his father John Mackelmore in 1767 back in Virginia. Since Logan County, Tn site where Temperence and her large family are found, is immediately north of the Tennessee/Kentucky State line, I am not bothered at all by the document's reference to Tennesee rather than Kentucky as the place where he (Joel Jr, Nanny's great grandfather - note by EC) settled with his "large family," nor do I consider it a problem as to where - Tennesee or Kentucky - Joel Jr. died or whether his family's move into Kentucky came before or after his death. He left South Carolina for Tennessee, and his "large family" shows up later without him just over the line in Logan Co., and this document to me is the nail in the coffin that confirms my conclusions previously stated to y'all. I now consider the matter proved and resolved, especially because the document is a notarized copy of an 1854 statement made apparently by Capt. Joel's step-grandson-in-law, the husband of his son Major John's step-daughter, and so written by the hand of one who should have had some degree of familiarity with Major John's family and therefore presumably with Capt. Joel's family too.

    What does bother me is the reference by this Andrew Wallace to Major John's "only one wife". It lists three children by her, but aside from Eliza(beth) who married William Meyer, who was probably the daughter of Cressy or Crissy Clifton Patrick (the "Widow Patrick"), daughter of his father Joel's older sister Sarah who married Thomas Clifton, the two boys had to have been born before Cressy or Crissy was widowed by her first husband Mr. Patrick and she had married Major John - or they themselves had to have married and began producing their own children while they were still pre-teen boys! The chronology just won't admit of enough time for her to have been their mother. In addition, I have other children for Capt. Joel McLemore besides the three boys and one girl mentioned by Wallace, including a possible one named Matthew who after Joel's death appears along the Georgia/South Carolina border on or near land Joel supposedly held there, and who numbered among his own descendants (like your Joel III) issue named Joel and Howell, a strong indicator of the connection.

    That is why, in addition to "the Group" I have copied in Mr. Robbie Robertson (whose e-mail address is the last in the listing above). Robbie is most interested in the Clifton Family descended from Joel's sister Sarah and her son (Crissy's brother) Claiborne Clifton (I think!). But as he has done a great deal of research into both families, I hope he can help me - us - unravel some of the confusion surrounding Capt. Joel and his family in South Carolina. That is why I also begin by sending him a copy of Thelma's find for his comment as well as his valuable instruction to us all on the actual structure of Joel's family.

    I therefore anxiously await his, and each of your, comments on Thelma's find and my comments above thereon.

    Jim McLemore

    (Research):Adam Ivey left a lengthy will in Sussex County dated 3 August 1789 and proved 7 May 1792.[327] The will left 100 acres "whereon he now lives" to son Ephraim Ivey, and 110 acres "whereon he now lives" to son Peebles Ivey. (The will mentions that the 110 acres to Peebles Ivey was the tract purchased of Joel McLEMORE less 40 acres reserved for the homeplace, meaning that it was the 1725 patent to McLEMORE while the 100 acres devised to Ephraim Ivey was the 1749 patent to McLEMORE.)

    Source: http://www.genfiles.com/ivey/AdamIvey.htm

    (Medical):A direct male descendant of Joel McLemore, along with two direct male descendants of his brother Burwell, were participants in the Morrison yDNA study.

    The main purpose of this study was to prove that the immigrant founders of this family in America, James Macklemore and Abraham Macklemore, were brothers. If brothers, then the y-DNA of the direct male descendants of both men would match. However, instead of confirming this, it appears that we have AT LEAST two distinct yDNA groups, with three additional potential lines. The first cluster of matching yDNA has ten members, who are part of the R1b1a2 haplogroup . The R1b DNA haplogroup, is the most common in Western Europe. Two of the ten participants can trace their lines back to the immigrant Abraham Macklemore, the husband of Mary Young. Another member can trace himself back to Moses McLemore b. ca. 1738 who is thought to be a son of Wright McLemore, grandson of William Macklemore, and great-grandson of the immigrant James Macklemore. If both these members are correct in their paper trails, AND if Amos can be proven to be a great-grandson of James Macklemore, then the assumption that James and Abraham have a common paternal ancestor is correct as descendants of both men share the same yDNA. The other six members of this first cluster all have the McLemore surname, and all can trace their lineages back to McLemore men who predate the Civil War, but have not conclusively linked themselves back to either James or Abraham.

    The second cluster in the study have three members to date. They are all in the E1b1 Haplogroup, which is rare in Western Europe. All of them match each other, but do not match any other McLemores yet tested. All three of these members can trace their ancestry to John Macklemore of Virginia, the husband of Faith. Two of them descend from his son Burwell, and the third from his son Joel. But, as discussed above, IF we have also proven that the immigrants Abraham and James Macklemore are brothers, then it follows that John Macklemore could not be the biological son of the immigrant James, as the yDNA of these two clusters is very different.

    Our current thinking is that John was likely a son of Fortune's and a stepson of James Macklemore, who raised him as his own. Alternatively, it may still be proven that James and Abraham were not brothers. They may share the same surname, but not the same paternal ancestry. More proven descendants of James and Fortune Macklemore will need to be tested to confirm or refute either theory.

    See Morrison/McLemore DNA study results for Group AJ.



    See Morrison/McLemore DNA study results for Group AJ.

    http://www.geneticousins.com/morrison/

    Joel married Elizabeth Wyche. Elizabeth was born after 1739; died after 1795 in Richland County, South Carolina. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 9.  Elizabeth Wyche was born after 1739; died after 1795 in Richland County, South Carolina.
    Children:
    1. James McLemore was born after 1755 in Virginia; died about 1796 in Richland County, South Carolina.
    2. Sarah McLemore was born after 1766 in South Carolina; and died.
    3. Jesse Claiborne McLemore was born after 1771 in South Carolina; and died.
    4. Mary McLemore was born after 1771 in South Carolina; and died.
    5. Major John McLemore was born about 1776 in South Carolina; died after 1837 in South Carolina.
    6. 4. Joel McLemore, Jr. was born about 1776 in South Carolina; and died.