Monday, August 27, 2007
Searching for Home
Sunday, August 26, 2007
Burton genealogy
Friday, August 24, 2007
Tracking the Burtons out of Virginia
Robert Burton's brother, William Allen married Mary Walthall. They had sons William Allen Burton, b 1751 and Walthall, b 1750, all from Virginia. The Wilkinson County MS Burtons apparently descend from this line. No Georgia passports were found for the Burton family; perhaps they came to Mississippi via the rivers. That notion is supported by the birth of Elizabeth Hamilton Burton, 1805, in Kentucky. It was expedient for migrating families to move inland near a waterway and construct a flatboat. The family, their belongings, and produce for market were loaded and they traveled down the tributaries to the Mississippi River. Down the river, they would sell their goods and set up housekeeping in their new home. A biographic sketch of Capt. Walthall Burton states that he was born in Nelson County, Kentucky, March 28, 1807 and his family moved to Wilkinson County, MS in 1811(Mike Miller. BIO: BURTON, Capt. Walthall, s/o Wilson & Eleanor (Bruce) Burton, from Rootsweb.com)
Research notes in the Burton and allied families GEDCOM (6/8/2007, Rootsweb World Connect) referenced William Allen Burton's will of 1767, and deaths often precipitate migration of family members. That mush have been William Allen Burton, Sr (b. 1727). It was also mentioned that William Allen Burton witnessed a deed, 1771, in North Carolina. I suspect that may have been the 20- year- old son, moved from Virginia; that deed was dated after the will. Searching for Burtons in South Carolina turned up some other interesting records. Direct associations were not documented, but there were Burtons in Camden District, where the Reily family lived (Lucas, S. E. 1989. Some South Carolina records. Vol. 2. Southern Historical Press. Easley, SC. 672 pp.). There was a deed in Craven County, made 6 December, 1784, between Daniel Price, Sr. and Walthall Burton. A deed of 4 October, 1786 also involved “Walthall Burton, planter of Camden District….” William Allen Burton witnessed a deed on 2 January, 1786 in Camden District. Daniel Price, a principal in the 1784 deed, appears to have been brother to Sarah “Sally” Price, wife of Walthall Burton (Bird/Byrd- a Gathering of the Flock. GEDCOM 1/7/2007. Rootsweb World Connect). These findings indicate that the Burton family may have migrated south from Virginia into South Carolina. Apparently they remained there for some time before moving west to Kentucky, then south to Mississippi. Walthall Burton ultimately moved to Saint Landry Parish, LA, where he had a sizeable plantation.
The King vs Margaret Reily
Thursday, August 23, 2007
Joseph Reily
Samuel Reily’s military service
Kentucky connections offer some possibility of associations between Samuel Reily and the Burtons of Tennessee, but the timing is not reasonable. By 1814, Samuel was already settled in Mississippi. General Jackson assembled his forces at Natchez, some marching overland and others transported via the Mississippi River. Perhaps Samuel joined that Kentucky unit there and never travelled to Kentucky; Natchez would have been readily accessible from Samuel’s home near Centreville.
In his application for membership in the Sons of the American Revolution, William B. Reily, Jr. LSSAR 0728B, listed Robert Reily as an ancestor, then Samuel Reily, Lieutenant in South Carolina Volunteers. This service of Samuel Reily is also listed on the application for James Weaks Reily, LSSAR 0717A. Both of these applications cite Stub Entries Book U- W, page 192. However, a review of this evidence (Salley, A. S. 1918. Stub entries to indents, Books U- W. The Historical Commission of South Carolina, Columbia, SC) raises some doubts. The stub entry, issued 13 September, 1785, shows Samuel Reiley received payment for duty as a lieutenant in 1781, 1782, 1783. Samuel was born in 1767; this would have placed him as an officer, a lieutenant, at ages 14- 16. That may be possible, but 14 seems very young for command. The William B. Reily application also lists Samuel as Captain 32nd Regiment of State SC militia under Lt. Col. John Moore 1810 Camden District, Clarendon County. That seems reasonable, considering Samuel’s age, the date, and the location, but supporting evidence has not yet been found… perhaps service records or unit histories may document this.This military information is interesting, but none of it can definitively tie Samuel Reily to close proximity to families of the Burton clan.
DNA test upgraded
Saturday, August 18, 2007
Backtracking the surnames and DNA from Mississippi
Isaac McDonald Reily, older than his brothers John Young and Robert Wesley, was born in 1791. When Samuel Reily came to Mississippi Territory in 1812, Isaac was with him and both were required to get passports. After the massacre at Fort Mims, August 30, 1813, Isaac and several cousins joined the Mississippi militia, Hind’s Battalion of Cavalry (Mississippi Dragoons). The unit was organized at Liberty, MS in September, 1813, under Lt. Colonel Thomas Hinds. This unit was involved in the capture of Spanish Pensacola, November, 1814 and the Battle of New Orleans, December, 1814- January, 1815. Isaac married Mary Browman [Bowman], Amite Co., MS in 1819(Casey, Amite County) and, 2nd, Amy Higginbotham in 1823, and lived in East Feliciana Parish, LA.
Another aspect that suggests investigation is that Tennessee units participated in Jackson’s expedition to Natchez. However, even if there were Burtons among them, those troops would not have brought their womenfolk along. A Reily offspring among the Burtons would hav been unlikely by those means. Conversely, 1813 was not early enough to introduce Burton genes into the Reily lineage to account for the Reily brothers, Robert Wesley and John Young.
Friday, August 17, 2007
Burtons and Reilys in the Mississippi Territory
The Reily family became well established in Wilkinson County during a similar timeframe. Samuel Reily lived in Sumter District, South Carolina and was on the census records there. Samuel received passports through the Creek Indian Nation in 1810 and again in 1812. He was named on the Mississippi Territory tax list for 1813. Early Wilkinson County was plantation country of forests and fields, but it was a big, empty land, with few towns and centers of commerce. Therefore, the Burtons and Reilys must certainly have been associated in Wilkinson County, through business and social occasions.
In Wilkinson County, both the Burton and Reily families seem to have been fairly wealthy, large, and well- enough supported to make adoption of children one direction or the other seem unlikely. Another possibility for crossing the DNA and/or surname would be premarital liaison or infidelity. John Young Reily was born 1798, SC and Robert Wesley was born 1814, MS. These two children of Martha McDonald Reily were born far apart in time and place, so it is logical that they were truly fathered by Samuel Reily. Looking at paternity from the other direction, Those boys were not old enough to father the Burton children. The Burton lines seem to run parallel back to Samuel’s time or earlier and Samuel was in SC. I must also look at Samuel’s other children; I think Isaac McDonald was older than John Young and, however unlikely, male siblings would carry the same y-DNA.
Burton/ Reily y- DNA mystery
My own line traces back to Robert Wesley Reily, son of Samuel Reily and Cousin Jack traces to John Young Reily, also son of Samuel Reily. As we share the same surname, with the same spelling, and our research has documented evidence for these lineages, I interpret this as confirming our pedigrees back to Samuel Reily, 5 generations, in my case. Samuel was apparently the son of Robert Reily, and in 1784 filed for administration of Robert’s estate, as nearest of kin. I have been unable to document Robert’s immigration to America or his marriage to Ann. Robert applied for and received a land grant in 1764- 65. Also, Robert Reily applied for a land grant in 1750, in the Welch Tract, where he had already begun clearing. That was located in the Pee Dee watershed, I believe. I am uncertain whether this was our Robert; our Robert’s later grants and home were on the Black River, in St. Mark’s Parish.
The Burtons who match DNA with us seem to be from Tennessee and West Virginia, with ancestral lineages that go far back, through early Virginia and to England. The DNA matches are from multiple Burton lines just as we are comparing two parallel Reily lineages. Timeline constraints make it unlikely that the surnames Burton and Reily could diverge from a single family after Samuel’s death in 1822, as both families were already well established and were branching out by that time.
If the DNA matches truly indicate a common ancestry, there were several possible scenarios. Samuel Reily or Robert or their ancestor could have been a Burton who changed his name, or was adopted into the Reily clan. It may or may not be significant that “Reily” is an English spelling of the name, although tradition holds that Robert was from County Cavan, Ireland. The Burton family was, apparently, of English extraction.
The alternative name change could have happened, as well: a Reily, related to Robert, could have become a Burton for any number of reasons. Another possibility is that Samuel or Robert sired a son who was adopted into the Burton family. Research to trace back the Burton lines from the DNA matches may be able to rule out these possibilities on the basis of time or proximity. However, this could not rule out involvement of Robert or his ancestors. Also, there were several other Reily families in South Carolina contemporary with Robert, and there were many Reily families in Pennsylvania at the time. We have not established that they were related to Robert but that certainly seems possible with the same name and same timeframe. Any of them could have had a child adopted by the Burtons.
The next research need seems to be a study of the Burton family in America and their interaction with the Reily family. That may not go back in time far enough, but it is a good starting point. In particular, tracing back from those DNA matches to a common Burton ancestor would be helpful. If those specific Burton lines converged before Samuel Reily was of reproductive age, he could be eliminated as ancestor of Burtons. Samuel would still need investigation as possible child of a Burton.
Sunday, August 12, 2007
West Feliciana Parish Map, McCausland
Monday, May 07, 2007
Anthony Doherty land purchase, Tunica, LA, 1809
Transcription 5/7/2007 from microfilm of Spanish
Richard King, of
[original written in Spanish]
January 26, 1809
Robert Percy
Land sale
To
Anthony Dougherty
No. 8
Be it known to all who may [p. 260] see this act that I, Robert Percy, attorney for Richard King, as appears by the power which accompanies this, depose that I sell, really and with effect, to Anthony Dougherty, a tract of land of five hundred arpents, situated in New Feliciana between the branches of Bayou Bingaman about four miles from the mouth of Bayou Tunica, bounded on the north by land belonging to the said Dougherty, on the south by land of John Eldergill, on the east by land of Machiel Dewitt and William Brown, and on the west by unappropriated land, as appears by the figurative plan, certification and formal title which I deliver to the purchaser, which five hundred arpents of land were given and bequeathed to my said constituent by John Eldergill, as appears by his will, executed in the territory of Mississippi, on November 2, 1807, and I sell it to the aforesaid Anthony Doherty, free of encumbrance or mortgage, for the price and sum of two thousand pesos, which I acknowledge, of my own free [p. 261] will, that he has paid to my constituent, and for which I execute a formal receipt; in virtue of which, I re___ for my constituent’s right of ownership, possession, use, dominion, and seigniory which he had and has in the said tract of land, which right I cede and transfer to the purchaser, or to whoever may represent him, in order that, as his own property, he may possess, sell, exchange, or dispose of it at his will, in virtue of this act of sale which I execute in his favor in token of a real transfer, by which his having acquired possession has to be seen without the necessity of other proof, from which I release him, and I obligate myself to the eviction, security, and guarantee of this sale, in due legal form, with my property, present and future. I hereby insert the guaranteeing clause, renouncing the laws in my favor with the general one which may prohibit it.
And I, the said Anthony Dougherty, being present at the [p. 262] execution of this act of sale, accept it in my favor, receiving as bought the said tract of land for the price, and on the conditions, for which it is sold to me. In testimony whereof, this act is executed at
I, Don Carlos Dehault Delassus, Colonel of the Royal Armies, provisionally charged with the civil and military command of this post and its district, certify that I know the grantors, who signed it with the witnesses, Antonio Crussat and Martin Visoso.
CARLOS DEHAULT DELASSUS RT. PERCY
ANTONIO CRUZAT Mark A
ANTO. DOUGHERTY
Saturday, October 28, 2006
Row's funeral announcement
The friends and acquaintances of J. A. Row, are respectfully invited to attend the funeral of his Wife at eleven oclock on Monday July 13th 1891
Procession from residence
Interment at the Wimbish GraveyardUnmarked graves in Tunica Cemetery
These notes are on a photocopy in my files. They are difficult to interpret.
“From: Mr. Bill Anderson 7/1/87”
Ed Porter
His boy Ed Porter, Jr. child swallowed a marble and choked [ that grave and others nearby were covered in concrete and his has a large blue marble embedded; I do not remember whether names and dates were engraved in the concrete; the graves were sunken and breaking open and in the 1950’s "Little Herndon" Reily filled them with river silt and marked the three with cypress crosses, painted white]
Glyn Reed little girl From Cape Gireadeau [sic]
Oral Burch Advance,
Died abt 1930
Reed, Glyn—little girl
Crosses left to right
Daniel Burks
Helen Clark
La Vern Porter
Ed Porter & Son
Oral Burch
Bellish family notes
Aunt Annie B. Robert in Gonzales will be 90 on 11/15/06. She is still doing very well…. Only Bellish left”.