Descendants of Robert Parker

 

 

Generation No. 1

 

1. ROBERT6 PARKER (DANIEL5, RICHARD4, RICHARD3, RICHARD2, WILLIAM1) was born Abt. 1735 in NC. He married ?.

 

Steven Charles Kratz April 23, 2015 at 12:28pm

1807 Livingston Co KY tax list has 2 Robert PARKER. One I believe is the father of Jesse PARKER, need further proof. And the other is the father of Isaac PARKER. This Robert could also be a son of Robert, the Robert who is a father of Isaac PARKER. I believe there are 2 Robert PARKER in the Halifax co nc and VA area. And some of these PARKER, Charity PARKER who married MR Jones went to Franklin co GA. Whether halifax county connects to Robert PARKER in Livingston Co Ky, I don't know. Also, someone had Laurens co SC as a place for the Isaac PARKER, Robert PARKER people at one time. Many PARKERs in Laurens co SC if you look at the Census.

 

Children of ROBERT PARKER and ? are:

2. i. ROBERT7 PARKER, b. 1750; d. Bet. 1820 - 1830, Copiah Co., MS.

3. ii. ISAAC PARKER, b. Abt. 1765, NC or SC; d. Abt. 1841, Poss. Leake Co., MS.

4. iii. WILLIAM PARKER, b. 1767.

 

Generation No. 2

 

2. ROBERT7 PARKER (ROBERT6, DANIEL5, RICHARD4, RICHARD3, RICHARD2, WILLIAM1) was born 1750, and died Bet. 1820 - 1830 in Copiah Co., MS.

https://parkerheritage.ning.com/

Steven Charles Kratz September 2, 2021 at 7:29am

I think this is the father of Jesse Parker, YDNA group 7. Robert Parker of Franklin County, Georgia. Here is the deed. Georgia State. These Indentures made this twenty ninth day of August one thousand seven hundred ninety nine. Between Robert Parker of the County of Franklin of the one part and Tryon Patterson of the County aforesaid of the other part Witnesseth that the said Robert Parker for an inconsideration of the sum of forty two pounds current money to him in hand paid the receipt whereof is hereby Acknowledged hath sold and Delivered and by these presents doth sell and deliver unto the said Tryon Patterson his heirs and assigns forever all that tract or parcel of land containing two hundred acres Be the same more or less situated in the County of Franklin lying on Thrasher Creek a South Branch of Toogaloe River and bounded as followseth North by old lines Northeast by corners land and southeast by unknown land and on the other side Vacant To have and to hold the said tract of land and promises to him the said Tryon Patterson and his heirs. Forever and the said Robert Parker doth for himself his heirs executors administrators and assigns covenent and aggree with the said Tryon Patterson to warrant and defend the said land and promises to and for the said Tryon Patterson his heirs or assigns forever. Free from all claims rights titles or Demands of the said Robert Parker doth for himself his heirs executors administrators and assigns covenent and aggree with the said Tryon Patterson to warrant and defend the said land and promisses to and for the said Tryon Patterson his or assigns forever. Free from all claims, rights, titles or Demands, of the said Robert Parker his heirs or assigns or any other claiment whatsover In Witness whereof the said Robert Parker doth hereunto set his hand and seal the day and year above written

 

Thomas Moore Robert Parker

Thomas Cocks

 

This day come Thomas Moore before me and being sworn sayeth that he saw Robert Parker sign and Deliver the witten with in Deed unto Tryon Patterson

sworn to before me this 29th day of August 1800

Recorded 13th February 1800 or 1801 hard to read.

 

Steven Charles Kratz March 9, 2022 at 1:18pm

Wayne, I believe we have found Jesse, William, Benjamin and Isaac Parker father or uncle. Robert Parker of Livingston County, Kentucky. You are correct, they were in Greenville County, South Carolina, see 1790 Census. Also notice that Martin, Jacob, and Michael Purtle are close by Robert and Isaac Parker in the 1790 Census. The same thing is true in the Livingston County, Kentucky Tax List for the years 1803, 1804, and 1806 the same Parkers and Purtles. Benjamin Parker Junior, son of Benjamin Parker born in 1803 has his birth state listed as Kentucky. No other state is listed except Kentucky. The 1850 Census for Alabama and Louisiana list very few Parker born in Kentucky. I am sure Mississippi will be the same, very few Parker listed born in Kentucky.

 

Name: Robert Parker

Home in 1790 (City, County, State): Greenville, South Carolina

Free White Persons - Males - Under 16: 2 1774-1790

Free White Persons - Males - 16 and over: 2 bef 1774

Free White Persons - Females: 3

Number of Household Members: 7

Year: 1790; Census Place: Greenville, South Carolina; Series: M637; Roll: 11; Page: 113; Image: 83; Family History Library Film: 0568151

 

Robert Parker

Curtis Holliday (View posts)

Posted: 15 Dec 1999 12:00PM GMT

Classification: Query

Surnames: Holliday, Anderson, Parker, Boyanton, Hall

I need help with Parkers in Copiah County, MS. I believe Robert Parker b.ca.1750 was in St.Helena Parish, LA 1808 until 1825. He probably had sons Benjamin, William, Jessie, Isaac, and at least one daughter Eurydice. She married Abraham Anderson ca.1796.

 

Curtis Holliday

 

 

NOTE: I (Wayne N. Parker) on March 23, 2022 made a decision to connect this Parker family to Robert Parker the son of Daniel.

 

Surnames: Parker, Anderson

 

Looking for info on Robert Parker who appears on the 1801 Jackson County, GA tax list. I believe he is the same Robert Parker that appears on the 1790 census of Greenville Co. SC. I also believe he was somewhere in Kentucky in 1805 and in St. Helena Parish, Louisiana in 1809.

 

Abraham Anderson

Curtis R. Holliday

Surnames: Anderson, Parker, Holliday

 

Abraham Anderson b.ca.1776 married Eurydice Parker (NC or SC). About 1800 they settled in Jackson County for 2 or 3 years before moving to Kentucky. Can anyone share info on this couple?

 

https://myallredfamily.com/front-page/what-states/georgia/ga-time-line/

June 8, 1797

Deed dated 26 July 1796, rec. 8 June 1797, from Joseph Box of Franklin Co. to William Allred of aforesaid. In cons. of 100 pds., conveys 75 acs on waters of Leatherwood Creek., being part of a grant to Jacob Pennington by Gov George Matthews 31 Dec 1795, and conveyed by Pennington to Duncan Camron, and by Camron to said Box., adj Spencer and Dunnagin. Wit: Robert Parker, Thomas Cox, John Dickerson. Sworn to by Parker before James Terrill, JP, 11 April 1797. Franklin County, GA, Deed Book LL, pages 22-23.

 

Jan 10, 1801

Deed dated Ga. 28 Sept. 1799, rec. 10 Jan 1801, from Robert Parker of Franklin County to John Holcom of same. In cons. of $100, conveys 75 ac. In Franklin Co. on the south branch of Leatherwood Creek on a conditional line made between William Alred and Joseph Box, granted originally to Jacob Pennington, and conveyed to Joseph Box, and by said Box to said Robert Parker. Signed Rob’t Parker. Wit: Martin Gollerthan, Nancy Gollerthan. Sworn to by Martin Gollerthan before Jerre Sparkes, JP, 30 Aug. 1800. Franklin County, GA, Deed Book NN, pages 42-43.

 

April 9, 1801 Deed dated 21 Oct. 1799, rec. 9 April 1801, from William Allred of Franklin Co., to Patrick Tylor of same. In cons. of $300 conveys 470 acres in three adjoining tracts in Franklin County on both sides of the south fork of Leatherwood Creek as follows: 105 ac granted to Ahram Spencor, and conveyed by him to George Henning, and conveyed by Henning to said Allred; 20 ac. Adj. land of John Holcomb, being part of a tract granted to Jacob Pennington, and conveyed by him to Joseph Box, and by Joseph Box to said Allred; 300 ac., being part of a survey granted to said Allred, 100 ac. Of which were previously sold to James Henson, “according to a line laid out in presence of John Dark; adj. Echols, Spencor, Pennington, Williams and Henson’s part. Wit: Mal. Jones, Grant Taylor. Sworn to by Mal Jones before Jerre Sparkes, JP, 6 April 1801. Franklin County, GA, Deed Book NNN, pages 1617.

 

More About ROBERT PARKER:

Census 1: 1790, Year: 1790; Census Place: Greenville, South Carolina; Series: M637; Roll: 11; Page: 113; Image: 83; Family History Library Film: 0568151

Census 2: 1820, 1820 U S Census; Census Place: St Helena, Louisiana; Page: 358; NARA Roll: M33_30; Image: 72

Tax Digest: 1801, Jackson County, GA

 

Children of ROBERT PARKER are:

i. BENJAMIN8 PARKER, SR., b. Bet. 1770 - 1774, NC; d. Bet. 1841 - 1849, Ouachita Parish, LA; m. NANCY ANDERSON; b. Bet. 1776 - 1779, NC; d. Bet. 1841 - 1849, Ouachita Parish, LA.

 

Notes for BENJAMIN PARKER, SR.:

A great BIG thanks to Patricia Ross Parker researcher for P11 for all the help and encouragement you have provided to me over the years.

Words can not express what your friendship means to me as a Parker researcher for FG#7.

 

P11 and P35 match on 24 of 25 markers. The earliest confirmed ancestor of P11 is Benjamin PARKER, born in North Carolina 1770-79; his wife was Nancy ANDERSON, born NC or SC 1770-79. They both died in Ouachita Parish, Louisiana 1841-1850.

 

Re: Information on FG#7 of Parker Y-DNA Project 1of 2

Posted by: Patti Parker (ID *****9504) Date: August 31, 2013 at 10:01:26

In Reply to: Information on FG#7 of Parker Y-DNA Project 1of 2 by wayne parker of 26318

 

Hello, Wayne - I've reviewed your latest post re: FG#7 lines. If I read it right, I wonder about the P11 section. You have much of the Benjamin Parker (Sr.) part right, dates, places and all. However, Benjamin Sr.'s wife was Nancy Anderson. They had six known children, including Mary, Nancy, Benjamin Jr., Lydia, Anderson, and Isaiah. Records indicate that the Eurydice Parker who married Abraham Anderson was maybe a sister of Benjamin Sr. Parker, maybe a cousin. Whatever her relationship, it remains unclear.

 

I hope this is helpful. Your website material will benefit many researchers.

 

Patricia Ross Parker

 

Re: Parker Family Book "Pioneers of the South"

Posted by: Patricia Ross Parker (ID *****9504) Date: August 20, 2010 at 07:15:29

In Reply to: Re: Parker Family Book "Pioneers of the South" by Christy of 26231

 

In answer to your question, available information follows on some of those Parker men in birth order:

 

ROBERT PARKER

Various men named Robert Parkers are often named as Benjamin's father. These are often found on the internet,

in descendant printings written before ydna, etc. However, discerning Parker researchers have found nothing to document or confirm such parentage. In fact, Fouts in Following The Land has clearly established that at least one of the Roberts –- the Robert Parker who died by 1797 in Gates Co. NC (first wife Priscilla Riddick, second wife Abigail Unknown) – was not the father of Benjamin. Robert Parker Sr. left a detailed will, and no Benjamin was

mentioned. Still, many researchers, seeking to tidy up the Parker family tree, insist on making that Robert and Priscilla the parents of Benjamin and others, but no.

 

Some other Robert Parker could have been Benjamin's father, but there is still no proof which one he was. An older Robert did migrate with Benjamin and was found on census listings in various states for twenty-five years. No one knows anything about him or his lineage. So, a parent of Benjamin remains to be found.

 

BENJAMIN PARKER SR,

Jane McManus’ Pioneers West of Appalachia, Revised, 1984, tracks the Parkers from colonial times through the 1970s. Chapter One discussed Benjamin Sr. in depth, including certain land purchases. McManus also gives his birth date as 1771-1780 in North Carolina, but both are stated as possible. Beyond this and similar suppositions, no documentation or confirmation exists on those points. A Benjamin Parker was listed on tax, census, and passage papers in Georgia, Kentucky, and Tennessee between ca. 1798 to 1808, and many of us who research this line accept that this man was our Benjamin.

 

Although not listed by name, children of ages/genders appropriate to be Benjamin’s children appear on repeated census listings. For example, see the St. Tammany, Louisiana Federal Census, page 26, line 19 which enumerates the family of Benjamin Parker Sr., his wife, and children. The male son 16-18 would have been Benjamin Jr. Benjamin Parker Sr. had six known children who survived to adulthood: Mary, Nancy, Benjamin Jr., Lydia, Anderson, and Isaiah. James Elisha Parker was about the right age and was always around, but there is no proof that he was one of their children. Benjamin Sr. did not name any of his sons ‘Robert’ although Parker men commonly named a son after the paternal grandfather. None of his children gave the name Robert to any of their children to my knowledge.

 

About 1838, Benjamin Sr. and Nancy left Hinds Co., Mississippii and returned to Ouachita Parish in northwest Louisiana. Several adult children and their families moved with them, including Benjamin Jr. and Dempsey Clark. Benjamin Sr. died after 1840 in Ouachita Parish, Louisiana, just south of Monroe. He owned land, but how much and where are unknown; he owned two female slaves who were house servants. No will is extant. It appears that the widow Nancy Parker went to live with Benjamin and Dempsy. Nancy died before the 1850 census and had no known will. Family lore suggests that both Benjamin Sr. and Nancy Anderson Parker were buried in the Indian Village Cemetery. The settlement is there today and something of a cemetery, but no evidence of Benjamin and Nancy has ever been found there.

 

BENJAMIN PARKER, JR.

The third Parker child, Benjamin Parker (Jr.), was born in Kentucky in 1803, probably in today’s Livingston County on the Mississippii River. Most genealogy books I use refer to the son as Benjamin Parker Jr. and the father as Benjamin Sr., just to keep the reader straight, but the two Benjamins did not label themselves that way.

 

Benjamin Parker Sr. was the bondsman for Benjamin Parker Jr. and Dempsey Clark in 1825, Copiah Co. Mississippii. Their marriage license is extant. Benjamin Jr. is found with, next door, or close by Benjamin and Nancy on repeated census and tax listings in Louisiana, then Mississippii, then back to Louisiana between 1820-1840 until the elders’ deaths. The family was in Claiborne Parish where Benjamin Jr. was the Justice of the Peace in 1847. After the formation of Bienville Parish from the southerly part of Claiborne Parish, they remained in then Bienville where Benjamin Jr. was appointed the first sheriff of Bienville Parish. They were there on the 1850 census. By the 1860 census they were living in Imperial Calcasieu Parish. He died 1873. I have no record of a will.

 

Benjamin Jr. and Dempsey Parker had eight known children, including Major Ellis Parker born in Hinds Co., Mississippii in 1830.

 

 

MAJOR ELLIS PARKER

He was born in Raymond, Hinds Co., Mississippii in April, 1830. Major Ellis is found on the 1850 Bienville Parish, Louisiana Federal Census with his parents on page 249, line 21. Major Ellis Parker was shown as 18.

 

Of his eight siblings, Major Ellis and three others married spouses from two closely related Walker families. In 1854, Major Ellis Parker married Martha Ann Walker who was a daughter of Asa George Washington Walker and his wife Susan Loraney Carpenter. This pattern of intermarrying was continued in the next generation in East Texas. Because of the family ties, the siblings tended to migrate and settle as a group.

 

After serving in the Confederate Army, Major Ellis Parker returned to Louisiana where he was in Calcasieu Parish on the 1870 censuses. By the 1880 census he had moved his family to Montgomery County, Texas.

 

I have carefully reviewed the findings of several Walker/Parker researchers, and they do not mention the presence of a will for Major Ellis Parker. He died Montgomery County, Texas in 1902, and she died in 1908. You may wish to investigate further at the Montgomery County courthouse in Conroe, Texas.

 

Yes, you are right on track. The data you have will be a nice addition to the results of ydna testing which I hope you are planning. All the paperwork you can assemble cannot compare to the information and validation you will gain from a ydna match into a family group.

 

I hope these details and my conclusions about them are helpful. Please advise if more is needed.

Patriica Ross Parker, Benjamin Parker researcher, P11, FG#7

 

Patricia Ross Parker January 16, 2015 at 9:32pm

Wayne, good for you about this SC study.

The best data I have in Georgia was a Daniel Parker b. 1799 SC, father of Daniel Parker b. 1822 SC who was father of Cicero Parker Ga. A Cicero Parker later married Mary Jane Dickard. I suggested these to Mike many years ago, but he concluded that they were not his line.

 

P11 lore suggests that Nancy Anderson (see James Anderson above whose wife was supposedly a Mary) was born in SC, but I have no proof. I know so little about any time P11 Parkers spent in SC that I cannot begin to track them there. I can give you some info about when and where they were thereafter.

 

I have some records that might identify allied familes or traveling partners from Kentucky on. Advise if you have possible surnames and I'll see. If it helps, great. If not, ignore it.

 

Benjamin and Nancy married ca. 1796 or so. They had their first known child Mary in NC? 1798.

 

Their second child Nancy was born in Georgia in 1801. Do not know where in Georgia.

 

Benjamin, Robert, and a Jesse Parker all lived along Livingston Creek, Livingston County, Kentucky ca. 1802. It is an act of faith to consider them of FG#7, but I do. An Isaac Parker lived among them, but he is not known to me.

 

Benjamin and Nancy Parker's third child was Benjamin Jr. born 1803 in Kentucky.

 

Benjamin and Nancy Parker's fourth child was Lydia born 1805 in Kentucky.

 

Benjamin and Nancy Parker's fifth child was Anderson Parker born in Tennessee ca. 1808.

 

The Parker clan migrated before 1812 from Tennessee down the River to Mississippii, possibly Amite Co.

 

Benjamin and Nancy's sixth child Josiah was born Mississippii in 1812.

 

After 1814 the Parkers then migrated west across the Mississippii to St. Tammany Parish, Louisiana area where they remained until ca. 1823. Then, the Parker clan went back to Mississippii and settled in Copiah County.

 

Confused yet?

 

Sorry, but this is all I have that looked promising.

 

Patricia Ross Parker.

Wayne N. Parker January 18, 2015 at 4:38pm

Hello Patricia,

I was just looking at my file and found this Isaac Parker in my file (this family in file because of Parker-Dunn connection to my home county of Montgomery Co., MS.)

Isaac son Robert born in Livingston Co., KY, Isaac moved to TN, Bibb Co. AL and then to MS.

Wayne

 

 

 

Name:

Benjn Parker

Home in 1820 (City, County, State):

St Tammany, Louisiana

Enumeration Date:

August 7, 1820

Free White Persons - Males - Under 10:

2 1810-1820

Free White Persons - Males - 10 thru 15:

1 1805-1810

Free White Persons - Males - 16 thru 18:

1 1802- 1804

Free White Persons - Males - 45 and over:

1 bef 1775

Free White Persons - Females - Under 10:

1 1810-1820

Free White Persons - Females - 10 thru 15:

1 1805-1810

Free White Persons - Females - 26 thru 44:

1 1776-1794

Number of Persons - Engaged in Agriculture:

5

Free White Persons - Under 16:

5

Free White Persons - Over 25:

2

Total Free White Persons:

7

Total All Persons - White, Slaves, Colored, Other:

7

 

Source Citation

1820 U S Census; Census Place: St Tammany, Louisiana; Page: 26; NARA Roll: M33_31; Image: 183

 

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  • Land Patent Details
    Accession Nr: MS0120__.040 Document Type: State Volume Patent State: Mississippii Issue Date: 7/20/1826 Cancelled: No
    Names On Document Miscellaneous Information
    PatenteePARKER, BENJAMIN
    Land Office: Jackson
    US Reservations: No
    Mineral Reservations: No
    Tribe: ---
    Militia: ---
    State In Favor Of: ---
    Military Rank: --- Authority: April 24, 1820: Sale-Cash Entry (3 Stat. 566)
     
    Document Numbers Survey Information
    Document Nr: 1985 Total Acres: 78.19
    Misc. Doc. Nr: --- Survey Date: ---
    BLM Serial Nr: MS NO S/N Geographic Name: ---
    Indian Allot. Nr: --- Metes/Bounds: No
    ========================================================================== ===================================================================
    Land Descriptions
    State Meridian Twp - Rng Aliquots Section Survey # County
    MS Washington 009N - 008E W½SW¼ 7 Copiah
    Land Patent Details
    Accession Nr: MS0210__.096 Document Type: State Volume Patent State: Mississippii Issue Date: 6/4/1833 Cancelled: No
    Names On Document Miscellaneous Information
    PatenteePARKER, BENJAMIN,
    PatenteePARKER, ANDERSON
    Land Office: MT. Salus
    US Reservations: No
    Mineral Reservations: No
    Tribe: ---
    Militia: ---
    State In Favor Of: ---
    Military Rank: --- Authority: April 24, 1820: Sale-Cash Entry (3 Stat. 566)
     
    Document Numbers Survey Information
    Document Nr: 6374 Total Acres: 82.01
    Misc. Doc. Nr: --- Survey Date: ---
    BLM Serial Nr: MS NO S/N Geographic Name: ---
    Indian Allot. Nr: --- Metes/Bounds: No
     
    Land Descriptions
    State Meridian Twp - Rng Aliquots Section Survey # County
    MS Choctaw 016N - 007W E½NW¼ 24 Washington
    ========================================================================== ====================================================================
    Land Patent Details
    Accession Nr: MS0150__.385 Document Type: State Volume Patent State: Mississippii Issue Date: 4/1/1829 Cancelled: No
    Names On Document Miscellaneous Information
    PatenteePARKER, BENJAMIN
    Land Office: MT. Salus
    US Reservations: No
    Mineral Reservations: No
    Tribe: ---
    Militia: ---
    State In Favor Of: ---
    Military Rank: --- Authority: April 24, 1820: Sale-Cash Entry (3 Stat. 566)
     
    Document Numbers Survey Information
    Document Nr: 3638 Total Acres: 79.60
    Misc. Doc. Nr: --- Survey Date: ---
    BLM Serial Nr: MS NO S/N Geographic Name: ---
    Indian Allot. Nr: --- Metes/Bounds: No
     
    Land Descriptions
    State Meridian Twp - Rng Aliquots Section Survey # County
    MS Choctaw 005N - 002W W½NE¼ 19 Hinds
    ========================================================================== ==================================================================
    Land Patent Details
    Accession Nr: MS0210__.095 Document Type: State Volume Patent State: Mississippii Issue Date: 6/4/1833 Cancelled: No
    Names On Document Miscellaneous Information
    PatenteePARKER, BENJAMIN,
    PatenteePARKER, ANDERSON
    Land Office: MT. Salus
    US Reservations: No
    Mineral Reservations: No
    Tribe: ---
    Militia: ---
    State In Favor Of: ---
    Military Rank: --- Authority: April 24, 1820: Sale-Cash Entry (3 Stat. 566)
     
    Document Numbers Survey Information
    Document Nr: 6373 Total Acres: 79.60
    Misc. Doc. Nr: --- Survey Date: ---
    BLM Serial Nr: MS NO S/N Geographic Name: ---
    Indian Allot. Nr: --- Metes/Bounds: No
     
    Land Descriptions
    State Meridian Twp - Rng Aliquots Section Survey # County
    MS Choctaw 005N - 002W E½NE¼ 19 Hinds
    ========================================================================== ===================================================================
    Land Patent Details
    Accession Nr: MS1000__.191 Document Type: State Volume Patent State: Mississippii Issue Date: 2/27/1841 Cancelled: No
    Names On Document Miscellaneous Information
    PatenteeJOHNSON, LYDIA,
    PatenteePARKER, BENJAMIN
    Land Office: Columbus
    US Reservations: No
    Mineral Reservations: No
    Tribe: ---
    Militia: ---
    State In Favor Of: ---
    Military Rank: --- Authority: April 24, 1820: Sale-Cash Entry (3 Stat. 566)
     
    Document Numbers Survey Information
    Document Nr: 7262 Total Acres: 160.15
    Misc. Doc. Nr: --- Survey Date: ---
    BLM Serial Nr: MS NO S/N Geographic Name: ---
    Indian Allot. Nr: --- Metes/Bounds: No
     
    Land Descriptions
    State Meridian Twp - Rng Aliquots Section Survey # County
    MS Choctaw 008N - 009E SE¼ 8 Scott
    ========================================================================== =====
    =============================================================
     
    https://www.genealogy.com/forum/surnames/topics/parker/21743/
     
    Home > Forum > Surnames > Parker
    Re: Patty, what counties did Benjamin live in Kentucky &Tennessee
    By Jack Parker May 05, 2008 at 12:13:40
     
    In reply to: Patty, what counties did Benjamin live in Kentucky &Tennessee
    Steven Kratz 4/09/08
     
    Hello, Steven - I am not clear just what you are asking about the Roberts, but at least two -a Robert who married Priscilla Willis, may have married an Abigail Unknown second, was also father of Unmarried Robert (see Gates Co. wills mid 1820s) are in question.On tax, land, and census records, another pair of Roberts with many of the same characteristics were with our migrating Parkers before 1800 to Copiah MS and disappeared before the 1830 MS census.Are these the same men?Did they die in MS and have their wills probated in Gates Co. NC? Along with an older William Parker, a third Robert, younger with a wife and family, lived several doors fromthe older Robert and old wife in Copiah MS, see census. Who was he? Ray Fouts' book doesn't clear these ? up for me.
     
    I would like to tell you that Benjamin and family were in such and such a county and when, but despite differing opinions from researchers, that is largely unconfirmed until later decades.Although some related Parkers* settled in many places and can neatly be traced there to date, Benjamin continued to move around for forty years, leaving a confused trail.Here is what I do know:
     
    He and family were in Georgia 1801-1802, county unconfirmed;they were in Kentucky by ca 1803, same;they were in Tennessee by ca 1808, same.Certain records in these states list a Benjamin Parker, but it is unclear which one.Benjamin and family were in MS by 1812, Amite, then LA, Washington/St. Tammany/St. Helena, then back to Copiah/Hinds by ca 1820, then back in LA by mid-1830s, Ouachita/Claiborne Parishes where Benjamin and Nancy died 1840-50 and were buried unknown.As to KY and TN, does this help you locate them there?
     
    *Aside - With research like Ray Fouts', family lore and recent ydna, it seems possible (if unoriginal) to hold that many of the male Parkers who appear in proximity 1700s to date descended from Richard Parker III of Nansemond as a common ancestor.He had nine known sons and more than thirty grandsons, all in the same general geographical area.Despite migrations, that so many Parker males today 1) test with the same ydna and 2) have family lore going back to VA and northern NC point to this prolific Richard.Your thoughts on this will be appreciated.
     
    Patricia Ross Parker
    Re: Patty, what counties did B - Genealogy.com
    Parker: Hello, Steven - I am not clear just what you are a... Read more on Genealogy.com!
    • More About BENJAMIN PARKER, SR.:
      Census 1: 1820, 1820 U S Census; Census Place: St Tammany, Louisiana; Page: 26; NARA Roll: M33_31; Image: 183
      Census 2: 1830, 1830; Census Place: Hinds, Mississippii; Series: M19; Roll: 70; Page: 213; Family History Library Film: 0014838
      Census 3: 1840, Year: 1840; Census Place: Ouachita, Louisiana; Roll: 127; Page: 130; Image: 268; Family History Library Film: 0009689
      Y-DNA: Parker Family Group 7 P11
       
      Notes for NANCY ANDERSON:
      " Benjamin Parker of County of Copiah, State of Mississippii, sold to William A. Cain Property described as West Half of Southwest Quarter of Section 7 of Township 9 Rangr 8 East containing78 and 19/100 acres for a sum $300 Nancy Parker, wife of Benjamin Parker voluntarily relinquishes title which was acquired by dower or otherwise on the above stated property."
       
      ii. JESSE PARKER, b. Abt. 1775, NC; d. 1849, Near Huntsville, Walker Co., Texas; m. (1) SARAH WILEY, Abt. 1798; d. Abt. 1828, Near Huntsville, Walker Co., Texas; m. (2) ELIZABETH BARKER, January 1829; b. January 12, 1812; d. March 03, 1898, TX.
       
      Notes for JESSE PARKER:
      Thank you Steven Kratz for all the help you have provided to all the researchers for FG#7 and to many other Parker researchers.
       
       
      P120 matches the modal values for Family Group 7 on all 32 markers available for comparison. He descends from Jesse PARKER, born about 1775 in the Carolinas, died in 1849 near Huntsville, Texas. His first wife was Sarah (last name maybe Wiley), second wife Elizabeth Barker.
      P296 was added to this group in February 2011.  He descends from Jesse PARKER born 1775 in North Carolina, died 1849 in Huntsville, TX. Jesse married Sarah WILEY.
      Selena Mosley
      Jesse Parker (b.1776) in the Carolinas
      Posted by: Shirley Parker Date: August 14, 1998 at 15:55:23
      of 26465
       
      Looking for the parents of Jesse Parker. Have no proof where he was born. Know he lived in Nails Creek,Franklin Co., Ga. in 1798. His first wife's name is Sarah. They had 6 children probably born in GA - Sara Elizabeth, Mathew Arnold, Wiley, Rebecca, and 2 daughters who died young. In 1809, the family relocated to St.Tammany Parish, LA. Then in 1822, they moved to east Texas near Hemphill. Any help would be greatly appreciated. Be glad to share info. I do have.
       
      Jim Parker December 9, 2010 at 2:50pm
      Hi folks, I am James Powell (Jim) Parker. I am a descendant of Jesse Parker who was born about 1775 in North or South Carolina and died in 1849 near Huntsville, Texas. My wife Shirley and I have been looking for Jesse's parents for the Last 20 years. This led us to try the DNA analysis. I am sample p120 in Family Group 7 of the Parker DNA Project. The DNA analysis proved that we are closely related to Benjamin Parker (about Jesse's age) through DNA sample p11. If you are not familiar with the Parker DNA Project, please google it and look for Family Group 7 - they are all our relatives. The line from Jesse to me is Mathew Arnold, Wiley Jefferson, Wiley Moore (Bonner Parker's brother), Gordon Powell and my dad Wylie Ross. I have recently submitted the family tree from Jesse down to Gordon Powell to Parker DNA Project coordinator Mr. Dennis West. It should be posted on the web site under p120. As more males have gotten their DNA analysis done it gives us a greater chance of finding our unknown ancestors.
       
      Jesse was a real pioneer - he was in the battle of New Orleans in 1815, he was a delegate to the Texas Convention of 1832, he received a Spanish Land Grant in 1835 of + or - 5000 acres, he was in the Texas Revolution in 1836. We should be proud to be his descendants.
       
      Jesse, isaac, Elisha parker all fought in war of 1812, same company
      Posted by: Steven Kratz (ID *****0447) Date: October 23, 2013 at 12:16:49
      In Reply to: Re: Information on FG#7 of Parker Y-DNA Project 1of 2 by Patti Parker of 26353
      My jesse PARKER along with Elisha and isaac PARKER fought in war 1812, 12 and 13th consolidated regiment LA Militia.
       
      Birth: 1776
      Death: 1849
       
      From "The Handbook of Texas":
       
      PARKER, JESSE (ca. 1776-1849). Jesse Parker, soldier, pioneer, and early Texas colonist, was probably born in North Carolina around 1776. He moved around 1798 to Georgia and then in 1809 to St. Tammany Parish, Louisiana, where he volunteered for ninety days' service in the Thirteenth Louisiana Regiment in the War of 1812. In 1822 he moved his family to Texas and farmed a Spanish land grant near the site of Huntsville as a member of Vehlein's colony (see VEHLEIN, JOSEPH). He attended the Convention of 1832 at San Felipe de Austin as a representative of the Sabine District. He received a land grant of one league, approved on February 11, 1835. He was on the Old Three Hundred original tax list of Washington County in 1837. On December 15, 1837, he was elected by the Republic of Texas legislature to be associate land commissioner for Montgomery County, the last public office he held. His name is on a monument at Franklinton, Washington Parish, Louisiana, for the War of 1812, and on a monument at the courthouse in Hemphill, Texas, honoring prominent men of the area. A Texas Historical Commission marker was dedicated on his grave on March 17, 1981. Jesse Parker married a woman named Sarah around 1798, and they had seven children. She died in the spring of 1828 in East Texas. There he married Elizabeth Barker in January 1829, and they also had seven children. The eldest son, Mathew (Matthew) Arnold, was in the Texas army during the Texas Revolution and served as the first county judge of Sabine County. Wiley, the second son, served in the Texas army and was in Wier's detachments at Harrisburg during the battle of San Jacinto. Parker died on May 27, 1849. His wife died on March 4, 1898. Both were buried in a family cemetery near their home. On October 20, 1979, their graves were moved to the lot of their youngest son, Samuel David, at Oakwood Cemetery, Huntsville, Texas.
       
       
      Name:
      Jesse Parker
      Home in 1820 (City, County, State):
      St Tammany, Louisiana
      Enumeration Date:
      August 7, 1820
      Free White Persons - Males - Under 10:
      1 1801-1820
      Free White Persons - Males - 16 thru 25:
      1 1795-1804
      Free White Persons - Males - 45 and over:
      1 bef 1775
      Free White Persons - Females - Under 10:
      1 1810-1820
      Free White Persons - Females - 10 thru 15:
      1 1805-1810
      Free White Persons - Females - 45 and over :
      1 bef 1775
      Number of Persons - Engaged in Agriculture:
      4
      Free White Persons - Under 16:
      3
      Free White Persons - Over 25:
      2
      Total Free White Persons:
      6
      Total All Persons - White, Slaves, Colored, Other:
      6
       
      Source Citation
      1820 U S Census; Census Place: St Tammany, Louisiana; Page: 26; NARA Roll: M33_31; Image: 183
       
       
      https://parkerheritage.ning.com/
      Steven Charles Kratz September 2, 2021 at 7:29am
      I think this is the father of Jesse Parker, YDNA group 7. Robert Parker of Franklin County, Georgia. Here is the deed. Georgia State. These Indentures made this twenty ninth day of August one thousand seven hundred ninety nine. Between Robert Parker of the County of Franklin of the one part and Tryon Patterson of the County aforesaid of the other part Witnesseth that the said Robert Parker for an inconsideration of the sum of forty two pounds current money to him in hand paid the receipt whereof is hereby Acknowledged hath sold and Delivered and by these presents doth sell and deliver unto the said Tryon Patterson his heirs and assigns forever all that tract or parcel of land containing two hundred acres Be the same more or less situated in the County of Franklin lying on Thrasher Creek a South Branch of Toogaloe River and bounded as followseth North by old lines Northeast by corners land and southeast by unknown land and on the other side Vacant To have and to hold the said tract of land and promises to him the said Tryon Patterson and his heirs. Forever and the said Robert Parker doth for himself his heirs executors administrators and assigns covenent and aggree with the said Tryon Patterson to warrant and defend the said land and promises to and for the said Tryon Patterson his heirs or assigns forever. Free from all claims rights titles or Demands of the said Robert Parker doth for himself his heirs executors administrators and assigns covenent and aggree with the said Tryon Patterson to warrant and defend the said land and promisses to and for the said Tryon Patterson his or assigns forever. Free from all claims, rights, titles or Demands, of the said Robert Parker his heirs or assigns or any other claiment whatsover In Witness whereof the said Robert Parker doth hereunto set his hand and seal the day and year above written
       
      Thomas Moore Robert Parker
      Thomas Cocks
       
      This day come Thomas Moore before me and being sworn sayeth that he saw Robert Parker sign and Deliver the witten with in Deed unto Tryon Patterson
      sworn to before me this 29th day of August 1800
      Recorded 13th February 1800 or 1801 hard to read.
       
      https://damoore.tripod.com/bio1.html
       
      Moses, Morris, and Nathaniel Moore each had children born in Georgia, Moses beginning around 1795, Morris by the mid-to-late-1790's, and Nathaniel in 1802. They appear to have stayed in Georgia until about 1805, probably in Franklin County. The names of Moses, Nathaniel, Morris and Matthew Moore all appear in the records of Franklin County, Georgia, around the turn of the 19th Century. The following mortgage deed, dated 15 Nov 1795 and recorded 30 Nov 1795, is found in the Franklin County, Georgia, Deed Book KKK, page 27 (Martha Walters Acker, Deeds of Franklin Co, GA, 1784-1826, p 75):
       
      . . . From THOMAS MOORE (X) of Franklin Co. to MOSES MOORE of same. In cons. of 20 pds., "sells on the open market" one bay horse, three cows & calves, three heifers, six head of hogs, 15 bushels of corn, two feather beds and furniture, one dish and bason, ten plates, a pot and dutch oven, a "fallin" ax, one hogshead of cotton, a bridle and saddle. The condition of the obligation is such that if THOMAS MOORE before 1 Sept. ensuing, pays to said MOSES MOORE one likey young horse, valued at 20 pds., then the obligation is to be void. Wit: WILLIAM HOBGOOD, MARY MOORE, THO'S MOORE, J.C.
       
      Thomas Moore was also shown as a J.P. in a 1794 deed in Franklin County. A William Moore, J.P., witnessed a deed dated 9 September 1793. This may have been the same William mentioned in Deed Book C, page 6 (Acker, p 1):
       
      Deed dated Ga. 20 Jan 1787, recd 19 Feb 1787, from WILLIAM MOORE of Spartanburg Co SC to THOMAS HAYNES & THOMAS GLASCOCK of Richmond Co. GA. In cons. of 200 pds, conveys 287 1/2 ac in Franklin Co. on waters of North Fork Oconee Riv, granted to said MOORE 29 July 1785. Wit: WILL STITH . . .
       
      Among the early tax lists for Franklin County, Georgia, we find the following Moores: Norris Moore (1800, p 4); Thomas Moore (1800, p 13); William More (1801, p 7); Thomas More (1801, p 9); Mathew More (1801, p 11); Mathew More (1802, p 19); Morris More (1802, p 19); and Thomas Moore (1803, p 9).
       
      In order to register for Georgia's 1805 land lottery, one must have been a married man (or head of household) with a wife and/or child, one year residence in Georgia, and U.S. citizenship. In Franklin County, there were four Moores who registered for the draw. Proximity of certificate numbers could indicate that the registrants applied at the same time, suggesting that they lived near each other or were friends or relatives. Since Moses Moore appears to have had two sons with the middle name of Walker, it is possible that he was related in some way to some Walkers. The following is a list of Moores and Walkers (along with their certificate numbers) who registered to draw in Georgia's 1805 land lottery: Morris Moore (# 718), Moses Moore (#731), Nathaniel Moore (# 732), Mathew Moore (# 739), David Walkins (# 542), Jesse Walker (# 543), Jeremiah Walker (# 544), Randall Walker (#553), John Walker (# 558), Andrew Walker (# 570), William Walker (# 578), Elizabeth Walker--widow (# 579), and Joseph Walker (# 619). Of these, only Elizabeth Walker received land.
       
      After 1805, our Moores seem to have moved north into Tennessee, perhaps into Roane County. There we find that four Moores signed a petition for a road on 18 June 1807: Thomas, Morriss, Matthew, and Nathaniel. Whether these were the same Moores as were previously in Franklin County, Georgia, is uncertain but seems likely. Some time after 1807, but before October of 1811, we find another Roane County road petition which included the following names: Thomas Moore, Morriss Moore, Nathaniel Moore, John Moore, and William Moore. This seems to be the last mention of Nathaniel, Morris, or Matthew in Roane County. We find, too, that on 6 Nov 1806 a Morris Moore married Dianah Adams in Roane County; surety was provided by Thomas Moore and James Neal (or Nail). This appears to have been the same Morris Moore who later died in Lawrence County, Arkansas, in 1823.
       
      Meanwhile, by about 1807, Moses Moore had traveled on up to Livingston County, Kentucky. Order Book C (page 78) contains a road order apparently made between August 1807 and April 1808, though it may have been as early as April 1806:
       
      Ordered that John Dunnah be appointed surveyor of a road from ferry where Dunnah now lives to David Caldwells with the following hands Jeremiah Walker, Moses Moore, Absalom Stokes, John Hannah, Wm Parker, Jas Axley, Jesse Parker, Thos Bennett, & Coleman Bennett.
       
      Could the Jeremiah Walker mentioned in this order have been the same Jeremiah Walker who registered for the 1805 land lottery in Franklin County, Georgia? Also in this order, mention is made of Jesse Parker. A Jesse Parker (same one?) who was born around 1770-1775 in North Carolina is known to have had children born from about 1799 to 1809 at Nails Creek, Franklin County, Georgia. He later moved to Louisiana and on to Texas. One of his sons, Matthew Arnold Parker (born 1801 in Franklin County, Georgia) had a son born in Texas in 1827 named Morris Moore Parker. Were these Parkers related somehow to the Moores of Franklin County, Georgia?
       
      https://www.genealogy.com/forum/surnames/topics/parker/25462/
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      Since 2001 we have been researching and celebrating Parker family history and genealogy.
      • WILLIAM PARKER, b. Bet. 1785 - 1790, SC or NC; d. Bet. 1840 - 1850, Copiah Co., MS; m. SARAH ANDERSON, August 18, 1806, Livingston County, Kentucky; b. 1790, SC; d. Bet. 1870 - 1880, Copiah Co., MS.
         
        Notes for WILLIAM PARKER:
        A great big thanks to Kelly Parks for her research on this and many other Parker families in Mississippi.
         
         
        https://parkerheritage.ning.com/forum/topics/william-parker-married...
         
        William Parker married Sarah Anderson, Livingston County, Kentucky, August 18, 1806, Abraham Anderson helped pay the marriage bond.
        Posted by Steven Charles Kratz on September 23, 2019 at 1:13pm
        Benjamin Parker married Nancy Anderson.  Had a child born in Kentucky.  Jesse Parker married Sarah, maybe maiden name of Wylie.  Euridice Parker married Abraham Anderson.  Robert Parker also in Livingston County, Kentucky.  Isaac Parker also in Livingston County, Kentucky.  Benjamin Parker in Livingston County, Kentucky.  Jesse Parker in Livingston County, Kentucky.  Let's solve this once and for all.    
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        • Steven Charles Kratz September 24, 2019 at 1:30pm
        I believe it is the Nolin William Parker because Nolin is around that Isaac Parker and I think other Parkers, including Benjamin and Jesse Parker. Also, Jones is the name in which Isaac Parker Land was entered in Livingston County, kentucky, as per Tax Record. Looking at that information are we even sure we have 2 William Parker, the information is so similar, do we 2 Censuses in the same year, or other information for sure letting us know that these are indeed 2 different William Parker. If not this scary and very very confusing. I have more information, not much, but do want to put this together better for everyone. Thanks for all the great research from Parker researchers. Also one other clue is that Jesse Parker in his Georgia Passport, their is mention of South Carolina, and thru other research, South Carolina does seem to enter the picture.
        ?
        Elizabeth Graydon Peery September 24, 2019 at 11:16pm
        I have seen before that Isaac Parker who married Nancy Jones in South Carolina, moved to Livingston KY. Isaac Parker was born around 1765 and was in the 1800 Greenville Co SC census next to an older Robert Parker. They lived on the border of Greenville and Laurens Counties in SC. This is right where my Graydon's (Y DNA tested to Parker Group 7) lived at that time. I have autosomal DNA matches to Isaac Parker.
         
         
        More About WILLIAM PARKER:
        Census 1: 1830, 1830; Census Place: Copiah, Mississippii; Series: M19; Roll: 70; Page: 126; Family History Library Film: 0014838
        Census 2: 1840, Year: 1840; Census Place: Copiah, Mississippii; Roll: 213; Page: 113; Image: 230; Family History Library Film: 0014840
        Y-DNA: Need male Parker from this family willing to be y-DNA tested.
         
        Notes for SARAH ANDERSON:
        William Parker married Sarah Anderson, Livingston County, Kentucky, August 18, 1806, Abraham Anderson helped pay the marriage bond.
        Posted by Steven Charles Kratz on September 23, 2019 at 1:13pm
        Benjamin Parker married Nancy Anderson.  Had a child born in Kentucky.  Jesse Parker married Sarah, maybe maiden name of Wylie.  Euridice Parker married Abraham Anderson.  Robert Parker also in Livingston County, Kentucky.  Isaac Parker also in Livingston County, Kentucky.  Benjamin Parker in Livingston County, Kentucky.  Jesse Parker in Livingston County, Kentucky.  Let's solve this once and for all.    
         
        More About SARAH ANDERSON:
        Census 1: 1840, Year: 1840; Census Place: Copiah, Mississippii; Roll: 213; Page: 113; Image: 230; Family History Library Film: 0014840
        Census 2: 1850, Year: 1850; Census Place: Gallatin, Copiah, Mississippii; Roll: M432_371; Page: 214B; Image: 15
        Census 3: 1870, Copiah Co., MS page 244 living near her daughters Martha and Nancy
        Census 4: 1870, Year: 1870; Census Place: Townships 9 and 10 east of RR, Copiah, Mississippii; Roll: M593_727; Page: 244B; Image: 354360; Family History Library Film: 552226
         
        More About WILLIAM PARKER and SARAH ANDERSON:
        Marriage: August 18, 1806, Livingston County, Kentucky
         
         
        3. ISAAC7 PARKER (ROBERT6, DANIEL5, RICHARD4, RICHARD3, RICHARD2, WILLIAM1) was born Abt. 1765 in NC or SC, and died Abt. 1841 in Poss. Leake Co., MS. He met NANCY JONES 1785 in Greenville Co., SC, daughter of WILLIAM JONES and LYDIA. She was born 1767, and died 1827 in AL.
         
        Notes for ISAAC PARKER:
         
         
        NOTE: I (Wayne N. Parker) on March 23, 2022 made a decision to connect this Parker family to Robert Parker the son of Daniel.
         
         
        After Isaac Parker and Nancy Jones marriage, the family lived near the Greenville-Laurens County border. They lived near Little Horse Creek, a branch of the Reedy River and very near Nancy Jones Parker's sister, Mary Jones Story, wife of John Story.
         
        About 1796-7 Isaac Parkers and Nancy Jones and family moved from South Carolina to western Kentucky where they first settled in Christian County, Kentucky. Many families moved to western Kentucky at the same time, securing land grants averaging 200 acres or more. Among these were Nancy Jones Parker's sister, Mary Jones Story and her brothers, John Jones, Jesse Jones, and Samuel Jones. Her mother, Lydia Jones Fowler, and stepfather, Richard Fowler, Jr., as well as half-brother and sisters, moved also, but settled near Nashville in Davidson County, Tennessee.
         
        Isaac Parker served as Lt. in the Kentucky Militia in 1801. Captain of the Regiment was his brother-in-law John Jones. Isaac and Nancy and their family left Kentucky around 1806 for Tennessee. The family resided in Lincoln County (1800-16). Later, members moved to Alabama then to Hardeman County, Tennessee and then to Bibb County, Alabama. in the 1830's many in the family headed west and settled in Leake County, Mississippii.
         
        http://archiver.rootsweb.ancestry.com/th/read/YEAGER-SOUTH-US/2003-... 037366
        Amanda Parker Tafolla March 21, 2015 at 11:57pm
        Wayne, I went back through our ancestry matches and found several more than I was expecting:
         
        Match 1:
         
        John Parker (son of Moses Parker & Nancy Sands) b. 1775 Marlboro, SC; d. 1856 in Bibb, AL; m. 1795 to Sara Sally Brown in Marlboro District, SC.
         
        Matches 2, 3, and 4: All descended from Nancy Parker, daughter of the above John... with distinct matches through three of her children:
         
        John Pinkney Cottingham b. 10 Jun 1824 in Bibb, AL; d. 28 Jun 1888 in Bibb, AL; m. Mary Amanda Cochran 18 Sep 1845 in Bibb, AL.
         
        Moses Lambert Cottingham b. 07 Jun 1828 in Bibb, Alabama; d. 29 Aug 1911 in Bibb, AL. m. Nancy Catherine Woods 6 Dec 1849 in Bibb, AL.
         
        Charlotte Cottingham b. c 1817 in TN; d. in AR. m. David A. S. Walker 14 April 1831 in Bibb, AL.
         
        Match 5:
         
        Isaac Parker b. 1765 in SC; d. 1841 in Leake, MS; m. Nancy Jones 1785 in SC;
         
         
        Here are some other matches we've got in SC. Not sure if they fit anywhere:
         
        Anna Parker b. 1790 in SC; d. 04 May 1844 in Newberry, SC; m. William R. Davenport 1817 in Newberry, SC.
         
        Theresa Martha Parker b. 29 Oct 1811 in Edgefield, SC; d. 1880 in Carroll, GA; m. John Bryant.
        YEAGER-SOUTH-US-L Archives
        Archiver > YEAGER-SOUTH-US > 2003-01 > 1044037366
         
         
        From: Betty <jjandbj11@comcast.net>
        Subject: Note #40: Children of John and Ann Render Yager: Elizabeth
        Date: Fri, 31 Jan 2003 13:35:26 -0500
         
        Note #40: Children of John and Ann Render Yager:
         
        Elizabeth Yeager (b. 1793, Laurens Co., SC, d. aft. 1860, Leake Co., MS)
         
         
        =========================
         
        Elizabeth Yeager as a child of John Yeager and the wife of John Parker
        is listed in the Hugh B. Yeager biographical sketch cited here so often.
         
        Her year of birth is probably 1793 or 1794, estimated on the basis of
        three censuses. The 1800 Laurens Co., SC census for the household of
        John Yager shows 3 females: 1 over age 45 and 2 under 10. Elizabeth
        would be one of those under 10. The 1840 Leake Co., MS census gives her
        age as between 50-60. The 1860 Leake Co., MS census gives her age as
        66.
         
        Researchers Johnny James Lane, Jonelle Aaron, Cecil C. Cammack, Jacque
        Otts and Charles Thomas Cammack have generously provided information
        about the Parker families. Johnny Lane and Cecil Cammack (author of
        "John and Margaret Purtle Cammack, Their Descendants and Connecting
        Lines," Tyler, Texas, 1983) in particular have helped identify John
        Parker who was born in South Carolina about 1792, son of Isaac Parker.
        (We won't get into the pro's and con's here of identifying the many
        Isaac Parkers.)
         
        JOHN PARKER
        In my opinion, the John Parker who married Elizabeth Yeager is the uncle
        of Anna Cammack, who married Lewis Yeager, Elizabeth's brother. This
        John Parker is the brother of Mary "Polly" Parker, born about 1787, who
        married John Cammack, Jr., on 22 Jun 1806 in Livingston Co., KY. Anna
        Cammack Yeager is the daughter of Polly Parker and John Cammack, Jr.
         
        Cecil Cammack's letter to me dated 8/10/93 lists him as: "John
        [Parker], b. 1791-1800 Greenville Co. SC. Settled in Bibb Co. AL." The
        1840 Leake Co., MS gives his age as between 50-60.
         
        Children of Isaac Parker, b: abt. 1765, SC, d: 1841, Leake Co., MS
        --Mary "Polly" Parker, b: abt. 1787 Laurens Co., SC, d: after 1851 AL
        --Martha "Patsy" Parker, b: 17 May 1789 Laurens Co, SC, d: 1841
        --Elizabeth "Betsy" Parker, b: abt. 1790 SC
        --John Parker, b: 1792 Greenville Co., SC, d: Bef. 1860
        --Cecilia Parker, b: 1795-1796
        --Jesse Parker. b: 1805
        --Mathew Parker, b: abt. 1810 KY or TN
        --M. Giles Parker, Sr., b: 14 Aug 1811 Rutherford Co TN, d: 05 Oct 1860
        Nevada Co., AR
        --Alford Parker b: 12 Sep 1814 TN, d: 06 Apr 1890 Leake Co., MS
        --Robert Parker b: 27 Dec 1799 Livingston Co., KY, d: 1872-1873
         
        Many Parkers were closely associated with the Yeager and Cammack
        families in Lincoln Co., TN and Bibb Co., AL. For example, in Lincoln
        Co., TN, in 1816 in the estate of Elizabeth's brother Reuben Yager,
        deceased, Isaac Parker and John Yager provided bond for Augustine Yager
        to be administrator. A few months later Isaac Parker was appointed
        guardian of four of Reuben's children.
         
        The Cammacks, Parkers, and Yeagers of Lincoln Co., TN made their way
        into Bibb County, AL in the 1820s.
         
        Though I have not found a marriage record for Elizabeth Yeager and John
        Parker, her sister Mary's marriage record (found among loose papers in
        the old Bibb County courthouse) shows that Mary married Lewis Lee in
        Bibb County in 1822. Elizabeth probably married some time close to
        1822, as the two sisters were evidently not far apart in age.
         
        The 1830 Census for Bibb Co., AL, shows a number of Parker families, as
        follows:
         
        On p. 158:
        --Isaac Parker, age 60-70, 17th line;
        -- Jiles Parker age 15-20, line.
         
        On p. 160:
        --Partially blocked first name M__hew (Matthew) Parker age 20-30, 2nd
        line;
        -- Jesse Parker age 20-30, 5th line.
        (Hopkins Lee, Samuel Pirtle, and Ezekiel Yeagar are on the same page.)
         
         
        On p. 161:
        Robert Parker, either age 20-30 or 30-40.
         
        I could not find John Parker in Bibb Co AL in 1830, but nearby Greene
        Co. AL has a John Parker family which fits what we know of John and
        Elizabeth. (No other near counties list a John Parker.)
         
        1830 Greene County, AL:
        John Parker: 1 m 30-40; 1 f 5-10; 1 f 30-40.
         
        Old Isaac Parker, his descendants agree, moved his extended family into
        Leake County, MS, in the 1830s. His sons are found there in court
        records in the 1830s, as well as in the 1840 federal census and the 1841
        state census. Thus, John and Elizabeth Yeager Parker were living in
        Leake Co., MS, in 1840.
         
        1840 Leake Co., MS Census, p. 29, Line 19:
        Jno Parker
        1 m 10-15
        2 m 20-30
        1 m 50-60 = John b. 1791-1800
        1 f under 5
        1 f 10-15
        1 f 20-30
        1 f 50-60 = Elizabeth b. 1791-1800
         
        On the same page are the families of Isaac Parker age 20-30, and E.
        Yager age 30-40 (Elijah West Yeager, probable son of Ezekiel). Joshua
        J. Parker age 30-40; Giles Parker age 20-30; and Jessie Parker age 30-40
        are on the following page.
         
        Note that it's possible that Elizabeth's nephew Bartholomew M. Yager
        (son of Reuben), his wife and children could have been living with
        Elizabeth. Bartholomew Maclin is not on the 1840 Bibb Co. AL nor Leake
        Co., MS census, but he is found in court records in Leake Co. in the
        late 1830s.
         
        Johnny Lane wrote me last year that John and Elizabeth Parker moved
        around a lot, lived in Louisiana not long after they married, then
        probably back to TN, AL, and MS. Elizabeth was living with her son
        Miles, back in Leake Co., MS, in 1860. John was probably dead by then.
        John's brother Matthew Parker and his wife Lucinda Hill lived in Leake
        Co, MS 1840 and 1850, then in DeSoto Parish LA with 10 kids.
         
        Following these leads from Johnny, I found Parkers in the 1850 Louisiana
        federal census, as well as in Amite Co., MS, near the LA line -- but not
        the right ones. Several of the names matched, but the ages were far
        too young.
         
        Again following Johnny's advice, I checked the 1860 Leake Co., MS Census
        and found the household of Miles Parker, born in Louisiana in 1812-1813,
        and his 66-year-old mother Elizabeth is living with them
         
        1860 Leake Co., MS Census, P. O. Carthage, p. 589, enumerated 7 Sep
        1860:
        #926/926
        Miles Parker, 47, m, Farmer, $400/$312, LA
        Mary C. -----, 35, f, AL
        Nancy A. -----, 17, f, MS
        Mary -----, 14, f, MS
        Madison M. -----, 11, m, MS
        Emma O. -----, 8, f, MS
        Ganeva -----, 5, f, MS
        Vyola -----, 1, f, MS
        John L. -----, 8/12, m, MS
        Elizabeth Parker, 66, f, SC
         
        The same Miles Parker was enumerated in Leake County, MS 10 years
        earlier without Elizabeth in his household:
        1850 Leake Co MS
        #406/452
        Miles Parker 34, m, Farmer, b. LA
        Mary C. 23, f, AL
        Nancy A., 11 f, MS
        George W., 7, f, MS
        Mary M, 6, m, MS
        Madison M., 4, f, MS
        Note: the census-taker got genders switched on George, Mary and Madison.
         
        Probably Elizabeth moved in after her husband died, evidently between
        1850-1860.
         
        Miles is the only child of Elizabeth that I have identified. In the
        1860 Leake Co. MS census, p. 153, is a Parker family headed by P. G.
        Parker, age 20, b. Louisiana, who might also be a son of Elizabeth.
         
        I have no further information on Elizabeth, when she died, where she is
        buried.
        William Parker married Sarah Anderson, Livingston County, Kentucky, August 18, 1806, Abraham Ander…
        Benjamin Parker married Nancy Anderson.  Had a child born in Kentucky.  Jesse Parker married Sarah, maybe maiden name of Wylie.  Euridice Parker marr…
      • Jesse Parker FG#7, signature
        By Shirley Parker April 25, 2012 at 09:36:07
         
        This past week, my husband Jim Parker (FG#7 , P120) and I went to Huntsville, Texas to look for evidence that Jesse Parker could read or write. In the Huntsville,Texas Public Library, Johnnie Jo Sowell Dickenson Genealogy Room Archives we found numerous vertical files on our Jesse Parker.We found a photocopy of his Mexican Land Grant application from October 25, 1834.The document was hand written in Spanish.Jesse Parker's bold signature is on the lower right of the first page - in an obvious different written hand than the text of the document.Also shown in the file is a complete English translation of the document, including the grant of one league of land (+or_ 4400 acres) on February 11, 1835.This tract of land is just Northeast of Huntsville, Texas.
         
        More About JESSE PARKER:
        Burial: Oakwood Cemetery, Huntsville, Walker Co., Texas
        Census: 1820, 1820 U S Census; Census Place: St Tammany, Louisiana; Page: 26; NARA Roll: M33_31; Image: 183
        Y-DNA 1: Parker Family Group 7 P120 and P296
        Y-DNA 2: Kit # 188331,182231
         
        Notes for SARAH WILEY:
         
         
         
        This may or may not be Sarah Wiley family.
         
        Name: John Wiley
        Home in 1790 (City, County, State): Greenville, South Carolina
        Free White Persons - Males - Under 16: 5
        Free White Persons - Males - 16 and over: 1
        Free White Persons - Females: 4
        Number of Slaves: 4
        Number of Household Members: 14
        Year: 1790; Census Place: Greenville, South Carolina; Series: M637; Roll: 11; Page: 105; Image: 79; Family History Library Film: 0568151
         
        More About JESSE PARKER and SARAH WILEY:
        Marriage: Abt. 1798
         
        Notes for ELIZABETH BARKER:
        Birth: Jan. 12, 1812
        Death: Mar. 3, 1898
         
         
        Family links:
        Children:
        Isaac Newton Parker (1841 - 1916)*
         
        *Calculated relationship
         
        Burial:
        Oakwood Cemetery
        Huntsville
        Walker County
        Texas, USA
         
        Edit Virtual Cemetery info [?]
         
        Maintained by: Johna Johnson Armistead
        Originally Created by: Mary Ann Tarkington John...
        Record added: Nov 17, 2009
        Find A Grave Memorial# 44474448
         
        More About ELIZABETH BARKER:
        Burial: Oakwood Cemetery, Huntsville, Walker Co., Texas
        Census: 1850, Year: 1850; Census Place: Walker, Texas; Roll: 916; Page: 274b
         
        More About JESSE PARKER and ELIZABETH BARKER:
        Marriage: January 1829
         
        iii. EURYDICE PARKER, b. Abt. 1778; d. Abt. 1822, LA; m. ABRAHAM ANDERSON, Abt. 1795; b. Abt. 1776; d. April 18, 1847, Rankin Co., MS.
         
        Notes for EURYDICE PARKER:
        Re: Information on FG#7 of Parker Y-DNA Project 1of 2
        Posted by: Patti Parker (ID *****9504) Date: August 31, 2013 at 10:01:26
        In Reply to: Information on FG#7 of Parker Y-DNA Project 1of 2 by wayne parker of 26318
         
        Hello, Wayne - I've reviewed your latest post re: FG#7 lines. If I read it right, I wonder about the P11 section. You have much of the Benjamin Parker (Sr.) part right, dates, places and all. However, Benjamin Sr.'s wife was Nancy Anderson. They had six known children, including Mary, Nancy, Benjamin Jr., Lydia, Anderson, and Isaiah. Records indicate that the Eurydice Parker who married Abraham Anderson was maybe a sister of Benjamin Sr. Parker, maybe a cousin. Whatever her relationship, it remains unclear.
         
        I hope this is helpful. Your website material will benefit many researchers.
         
        Patricia Ross Parker
         
        More About EURYDICE PARKER:
        Fact: Note: Eurydice Parker may be the sister of Benjamin Parker, Sr. or a cousin.(?)
         
        Notes for ABRAHAM ANDERSON:
        http://wc.rootsweb.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=zelma... 4
         
        Possibly named "Abraham"(shown in 1820 census as "Abraham"). Date of death and names of children from "Record of Petitions, Book B", Rankin Co. Chancery Clerk, Brandon, MS, pp 416 and 607 (March term 1855). Birth from Bob Ham, Lufkin, TX.. Bob Ham includes another child, Asa, possible the eldest.
         
        Family in Copiah Co., MS in 1830 census and Rankin Co., MS in 1840 census.
         
         
        James Anderson, father of Abraham Ander.
        Posted by: Curtis R. Holliday
        Date: February 05, 2000 at 22:11:02
         
        of 26726
         
        Please help with James Anderson b.ca.1750 who married Mary (?). They had a son Abraham b.ca.1776 who married Eurydice Parker ca.1796. They also had daughter Nancy b.ca.1772 who married Benjamin Parker. They were in Jackson County, GA in 1800 and Kentucky by 1803. They wound up in St. Helena Parish, LA in 1808.
         
        Re: James Anderson, father of Abraham Ander.
        Posted by: patty childress
        Date: September 26, 2000 at 15:47:07
        In Reply to: James Anderson, father of Abraham Ander. by Curtis R. Holliday
        of 26726
         
        my line is out of the benjamin parker and nancy andersonson family of south carolina. their daughter nancy married samuel williams. their son lorenzo dow married martha elizabeth conerly, in sabine parish. will email you a hunch.
         
        Re: James Anderson, father of Abraham Ander.
        Posted by: Curtis R. Holliday
        Date: September 28, 2000 at 19:49:12
        In Reply to: Re: James Anderson, father of Abraham Ander. by patty childress
        of 26726
         
        Hi, I believe they were in either Pendleton or Greenville Districts ca.1795. By 1801 I think they were in Jackson County, GA. By 1803 they were up in Kentucky. By 1808 they came south to St. Helena Parish, LA. I cant prove anything before 1800.
         
         
        Abraham Anderson (ca.1776-1847)
        Posted by: Curtis R. Holliday
        Date: January 23, 2000 at 21:27:38
         
        of 21779
         
        Abraham Anderson b.ca.1776 (NC?) married ca. 1796 Eurydice Parker. They were in Jackson and Franklin Counties in GA 1799-1802. They went to Kentucky (county unknown) and stayed there 1803-1807. They then went to St. Helena Parish, LA. Eurydice died ca.1820 and Abraham married Mrs. Jemimah West Chance. They moved to Copiah Co., MS ca.1826 and then Rankin Co., MS ca.1835. They both died there. Any help appreciated.
         
        Abram Anderson
        Posted by: Carolyn Taylor (ID *****1229)
        Date: May 23, 2006 at 16:15:31
        In Reply to: Re: ANDERSON SIDNEY LA, YAZOO MS by Curtis R. Holliday
        of 21779
         
        Hi Curtis,
        Is this the Abram ANDERSON who md. Jemima WEST, the widow of Vincent CHANCE? I'm trying to fill out my WEST family tree. Jemima's father was my ancestor's brother.
        Carolyn
         
        Re: James M. Anderson of Sumner Co., TN
        Posted by: Curtis Holliday
        Date: January 07, 2001 at 22:29:41
        In Reply to: Re: James M. Anderson of Sumner Co., TN by Barbara
        of 21779
         
        Barbara, Thanks a million! I am trying to connect my Abraham Anderson b.ca.1776 to them. He married ca.1796 Eurydice Parker in either NC or SC. They lived in SC,GA, Kentucky (1802-1807), St. Helena Parish, LA (1808-1825), Copiah County, MS (1826-1835), and finally settled in Rankin Co., MS. His daughter Mary Ann Anderson married Harmon Vick and went to Montgomery Co., TX.
         
        Abraham Anderson - 02/12/98 06:48:48
        My Email:jwfarrar@iamerica.net
        Your Name: Jean Williams Farrar
        State of Residence of soldier: Louisiana
        Company in which soldier served: Combined 13th & 14th
         
        Comments:
        Abraham Anderson was living in St. Helena Parish, LA. He migrated from the Carolinas, thru KY, down the Miss. River to the Natchez District and into West Florida. (1st) wife was Euradice Parker. (2) Jemima Chance West. After 1824, families moved to Mississippii.
         
        More About ABRAHAM ANDERSON:
        Census 1: 1820, 1820 U S Census; Census Place: St Helena, Louisiana; Page: 358; NARA Roll: M33_30; Image: 72
        Census 2: 1830, Copiah Co., MS page 130 lmg 57
        Census 3: 1840, Year: 1840; Census Place: Rankin, Mississippii; Roll: 217; Page: 194; Image: 842; Family History Library Film: 0014841
         
        More About ABRAHAM ANDERSON and EURYDICE PARKER:
        Marriage: Abt. 1795
         
        • Betty Johnson
          List Administrator
          jjandbj11@comcast.net
           
           
          William stated on 17 May 1813 that he had made improvements on the land in Oct 1810, land which lay on Cary Branch of Darling's Creek in the present Washington Parish, Louisiana. His land was adjacent to the land of Benjamin Parker to the north and adjacent to Abraham Anderson on the south. The northern line of Benjamin Parker's land was the Louisiana/Mississippii line.
           
          DNA
          P11, 36/37 Benjamin PARKER Sr 1770-79 NC
          P120, 37/37 Jesse PARKER abt 1775 NC/SC
          P183, 36/37 Isaac PARKER BORN 1794 GA
          P296 36/37 Jesse Parker born 1795 NC
           
           
          Steven Charles Kratz April 23, 2015 at 12:28pm
          1807 Livingston Co KY tax list has 2 Robert PARKER. One I believe is the father of Jesse PARKER, need further proof. And the other is the father of Isaac PARKER. This Robert could also be a son of Robert, the Robert who is a father of Isaac PARKER. I believe there are 2 Robert PARKER in the Halifax co nc and VA area. And some of these PARKER, Charity PARKER who married MR Jones went to Franklin co GA. Whether halifax county connects to Robert PARKER in Livingston Co Ky, I don't know. Also, someone had Laurens co SC as a place for the Isaac PARKER, Robert PARKER people at one time. Many PARKERs in Laurens co SC if you look at the Census.
          Reply Delete
           
          Steven Charles Kratz January 26, 2015 at 12:42pm
          James Sartain, James Jones, Tignal Jones, Jesse Parker are all of Nails Creek, Franklin Co GA. Isaac PARKER connected to a Jones Family, and Charity PARKER connected to Tignal JONES. More probable connections if you also add Robert PARKER.
           
           
          GREENVILLE COUNTY, SOUTH CAROLINA
          Created in 1798 from Washington District
           
           
          Patricia Ross Parker January 16, 2015 at 9:32pm
          Wayne, good for you about this SC study.
          - - - - - -
          P11 lore suggests that Nancy Anderson (see James Anderson above whose wife was supposedly a Mary) was born in SC, but I have no proof. I know so little about any time P11 Parkers spent in SC that I cannot begin to track them there. I can give you some info about when and where they were thereafter.
           
          I have some records that might identify allied familes or traveling partners from Kentucky on. Advise if you have possible surnames and I'll see. If it helps, great. If not, ignore it.
           
          Benjamin and Nancy married ca. 1796 or so. They had their first known child Mary in NC? 1798.
           
          Their second child Nancy was born in Georgia in 1801. Do not know where in Georgia.
           
          Benjamin, Robert, and a Jesse Parker all lived along Livingston Creek, Livingston County, Kentucky ca. 1802. It is an act of faith to consider them of FG#7, but I do. An Isaac Parker lived among them, but he is not known to me.
           
          Benjamin and Nancy Parker's third child was Benjamin Jr. born 1803 in Kentucky.
           
          Benjamin and Nancy Parker's fourth child was Lydia born 1805 in Kentucky.
           
          Benjamin and Nancy Parker's fifth child was Anderson Parker born in Tennessee ca. 1808.
           
          The Parker clan migrated before 1812 from Tennessee down the River to Mississippii, possibly Amite Co.
           
          Benjamin and Nancy's sixth child Josiah was born Mississippii in 1812.
           
          After 1814 the Parkers then migrated west across the Mississippii to St. Tammany Parish, Louisiana area where they remained until ca. 1823. Then, the Parker clan went back to Mississippii and settled in Copiah County.
           
          Confused yet?
           
          Sorry, but this is all I have that looked promising.
           
          Patricia Ross Parker.
           
           
          Re: Livingston Co, KY Tax record, whole family listed,
          Posted by: Patti Parker (ID *****2255)
          Date: September 05, 2008 at 11:37:40
          In Reply to: Re: Livingston Co, KY Tax record, whole family listed, by Patti Parker
          of 26465
           
          With the arrival of the Livingston Co. KY tax roll 1800-02, I can answer my own question about where in the county certain Parkers lived and were assessed: Skin Frame was a community on the border of Illinois that built up around a way-tavern, a salt lick, and a waterway; it was on an ancient Native American trail and later was followed by the Army escorting Cherokees on the Trail of Tears.
           
          The KY tax roll lists Robert, Isaac, William, Benjamin, and Jesse Parkers. Although I cannot confirm that they were the ancestors of our modern Group #7 Parkers or why they were that far west in KY, that collection of Parker men seems beyond coincidental. Horses and male slaves were also counted. Patricia Ross Parker
           
           
          Robert Parker
          Curtis Holliday (View posts)
          Posted: 15 Dec 1999 12:00PM GMT
          Classification: Query
          Surnames: Holliday, Anderson, Parker, Boyanton, Hall
          I need help with Parkers in Copiah County, MS. I believe Robert Parker b.ca.1750 was in St.Helena Parish, LA 1808 until 1825. He probably had sons Benjamin, William, Jessie, Isaac, and at least one daughter Eurydice. She married Abraham Anderson ca.1796.
           
          Name: Robert Parker
          Home in 1820 (City, County, State): St Helena, Louisiana
          Enumeration Date: August 7, 1820
          Free White Persons - Males - 45 and over: 1 bef 1775
          Free White Persons - Females - 45 and over : 1 bef 1775
           
          Number of Persons - Engaged in Agriculture: 2
          Free White Persons - Over 25: 2
          Total Free White Persons: 2
          Total All Persons - White, Slaves, Colored, Other: 2
          Source Citation
           
          1820 U S Census; Census Place: St Helena, Louisiana; Page: 358; NARA Roll: M33_30; Image: 72
           
           
           
          Name:
          Robert Parker
          Home in 1790 (City, County, State):
          Greenville, South Carolina
          Free White Persons - Males - Under 16:
          2 1774-1790
          Free White Persons - Males - 16 and over:
          2 bef 1774
          Free White Persons - Females:
          3
          Number of Household Members:
          7
          Year: 1790; Census Place: Greenville, South Carolina; Series: M637; Roll: 11; Page: 113; Image: 83; Family History Library Film: 0568151
           
           
          Name:
          Isaac Parker
          Home in 1790 (City, County, State):
          Greenville, South Carolina
          Free White Persons - Males - 16 and over:
          1
          Free White Persons - Females:
          3
          Number of Household Members:
           
          Year: 1790; Census Place: Greenville, South Carolina; Series: M637; Roll: 11; Page: 113; Image: 83; Family History Library Film: 0568151
           
          More About ISAAC PARKER:
          Census 1: 1790, Year: 1790; Census Place: Greenville, South Carolina; Series: M637; Roll: 11; Page: 113; Image: 83; Family History Library Film: 0568151
          Census 2: 1830, 1830; Census Place: Bibb, Alabama; Series: M19; Roll: 2; Page: 158; Family History Library Film: 0002329
           
          More About ISAAC PARKER and NANCY JONES:
          Other-Begin: 1785, Greenville Co., SC
           
          Children of ISAAC PARKER and NANCY JONES are:
          i. MARY "POLLY"8 PARKER, b. 1787, Laurens Co., SC; d. Aft. 1851, AL; m. JOHN CAMMACK, JR, June 22, 1806, Livingston Co., KY.
           
          More About JOHN CAMMACK and MARY PARKER:
          Marriage: June 22, 1806, Livingston Co., KY
           
          ii. MARTHA "PATSY" PARKER, b. May 17, 1789, Laurens Co, SC; d. August 24, 1841, AL.
          iii. ELIZABETH "BETSY" PARKER, b. 1790, SC.
          iv. JOHN PARKER, b. 1792, Greenville Co., SC; d. Bef. 1860; m. ELIZABETH YEAGER; b. 1793, Laurens Co., SC; d. Aft. 1860, Leake Co., MS.
           
          More About JOHN PARKER:
          Census: 1840, Year: 1840; Census Place: Leake, Mississippii; Roll: 216; Page: 30; Family History Library Film: 0014841
           
          More About ELIZABETH YEAGER:
          Census: 1860, Year: 1860; Census Place: Leake, Mississippii; Roll: M653_586; Page: 589; Image: 145;
           
          v. CECILIA PARKER, b. Bet. 1795 - 1796.
          • vi. ROBERT PARKER, b. December 14, 1799, Livingston Co., KY; d. September 18, 1871, Bibb Co., AL; m. EDNA SEABERRY, March 07, 1829, Bibb Co., Alabama; b. 1810, NC; d. Aft. 1880, Bibb Co., AL.
             
            Notes for ROBERT PARKER:
             
            http://www.algw.org/bibb/court/minutes/1834circuitmin.html
             
             
            John M. Wilson vs James M. Powell? - Spring Term 1834 (pages 323-329)
             
            Action brought by Wilson to recover sum of $1,000 damages because Powell had accused him of stealing his hogs. Lewis Kennedy attorney for plaintiff. R. Parker Sheriff. On 29 March 1832 Powell told Justice of Peace Ransom McElroy that plaintiff had stolen his hogs. Wilson was arrested and found not guilty. Judgment rendered 25 March 1834. Wilson to recover damages in the sum of $8.00 and his costs.
             
            http://www.algw.org/bibb/court/deedbka.html
            A:43 -- 8 Feb 1826 - Lewis HENDERSON to Robert PARKER - $100 - Mortgage in return for Parker signing as his security. Wit: J. HUNT. Rec: 27 May 1826
             
            More About ROBERT PARKER:
            Census 1: 1830, 1830; Census Place: Bibb, Alabama; Series: M19; Roll: 2; Page: 161; Family History Library Film: 0002329
            Census 2: 1840, Year: 1840; Census Place: Bibb, Alabama; Page: 116
            Census 3: 1850, Year: 1850; Census Place: W C River, Bibb, Alabama; Roll: M432_2; Page: 22A; Image: 48
            Census 4: 1860, Year: 1860; Census Place: East Side Cahaba River, Bibb, Alabama; Roll: M653_2; Page: 847; Family History Library Film: 803002
            Census 5: 1870, Year: 1870; Census Place: Scottsville, Bibb, Alabama; Roll: M593_2; Page: 274B; Image: 59734; Family History Library Film: 545501
            Occupation: 1850, Sheriff of Bibb Co., AL
             
            Notes for EDNA SEABERRY:
             
             
            http://genealogytrails.com/ala/bibb/deaths_various.html
            Eady Velvina Stacy abt 1839 4 Aug 1921 Bibb, AL Robert Parker, Edney Sobey
             
            More About EDNA SEABERRY:
            Census: 1880, Year: 1880; Census Place: Hallman, Bibb, Alabama; Roll: 1; Family History Film: 1254001; Page: 276B; Enumeration District: 002
             
            More About ROBERT PARKER and EDNA SEABERRY:
            Marriage: March 07, 1829, Bibb Co., Alabama
             
            vii. JESSE PARKER, b. 1805; m. NANCY SEABERRY, February 25, 1829, Bibb Co., AL; b. June 11, 1813; d. March 02, 1843, Leake Co., MS.
             
            More About JESSE PARKER:
            Census 1: 1830, 1830; Census Place: Bibb, Alabama; Series: M19; Roll: 2; Page: 160; Family History Library Film: 0002329
            Census 2: 1840, Year: 1840; Census Place: Leake, Mississippii; Roll: 216; Page: 30; Family History Library Film: 0014841
             
            More About JESSE PARKER and NANCY SEABERRY:
            Marriage: February 25, 1829, Bibb Co., AL
             
            viii. MATTHEW PARKER, b. 1807, TN; m. LUCINDA HILL, July 04, 1829, Bibb Co., Alabama; b. 1810, SC.
             
            Notes for MATTHEW PARKER:
            View Patent Image AL0260__.389 Patentee PARKER, MATTHEW 7/1/1831 6498 AL St Stephens 022N - 009E W½NE¼ 8 Bibb
             
            More About MATTHEW PARKER:
            Census 1: 1830, 1830; Census Place: Bibb, Alabama; Series: M19; Roll: 2; Page: 160; Family History Library Film: 0002329
            Census 2: 1850, Year: 1850; Census Place: Western District, De Soto, Louisiana; Roll: M432_231; Page: 165B; Image: 11
            Census 3: 1860, Year: 1860; Census Place: Kaufman, Kaufman, Texas; Roll: M653_1299; Page: 26; Image: 56; Family History Library Film: 805299
             
            More About LUCINDA HILL:
            Census 1: 1860, Year: 1860; Census Place: Kaufman, Kaufman, Texas; Roll: M653_1299; Page: 26; Image: 56; Family History Library Film: 805299
            Census 2: 1850, Year: 1850; Census Place: Western District, De Soto, Louisiana; Roll: M432_231; Page: 165B; Image: 11
             
            More About MATTHEW PARKER and LUCINDA HILL:
            Marriage: July 04, 1829, Bibb Co., Alabama
             
            ix. GILES PARKER, b. August 14, 1811, Rutherford Co TN; d. October 05, 1860, Hempstead Co., AR now Nevada Co., AR; m. ELIZABETH ISOM, October 31, 1828, Hardeman Co., TN; b. July 27, 1813, SC; d. July 11, 1874, Nevada Co., AR.
             
            More About GILES PARKER:
            Census 1: 1830, 1830; Census Place: Bibb, Alabama; Series: M19; Roll: 2; Page: 158; Family History Library Film: 0002329
            Census 2: 1840, Year: 1840; Census Place: Leake, Mississippii; Roll: 216; Page: 30; Image: 509; Family History Library Film: 0014841
            Census 3: 1850, Year: 1850; Census Place: Jackson, Louisiana; Roll: M432_231; Page: 362A; Image: 403
            Census 4: 1860, Year: 1860; Census Place: Carouse, Hempstead, Arkansas; Roll: M653_42; Page: 831; Image: 319; Family History Library Film: 803042
            Fact: M. Giles Parker
             
            More About GILES PARKER and ELIZABETH ISOM:
            Marriage: October 31, 1828, Hardeman Co., TN
             
            x. ALFRED PARKER, b. September 12, 1814, Lincoln, TN; d. April 06, 1890, Leake Co., MS; m. ELIZABETH; b. Abt. 1816, SC.
             
            More About ALFRED PARKER:
            Census 1: 1850, Year: 1850; Census Place: Beat 5, Leake, Mississippii; Roll: M432_376; Page: 38A; Image: 80
            Census 2: 1860, Year: 1860; Census Place: Leake, Mississippii; Roll: M653_586; Page: 495; Image: 51; Family History Library Film: 803586
            Census 3: 1870, Year: 1870; Census Place: Leake, Mississippii; Roll: M593_736; Page: 351B; Image: 196404; Family History Library Film: 552235
            Census 4: 1880, Year: 1880; Census Place: Walnut Grove, Leake, Mississippii; Roll: 653; Family History Film: 1254653; Page: 457B; Enumeration District: 052; Image: 0920
            Fact: Alford
             
             
            4. WILLIAM7 PARKER (ROBERT6, DANIEL5, RICHARD4, RICHARD3, RICHARD2, WILLIAM1) was born 1767. He married SARAH (ANDERSON ?).
             
            Notes for WILLIAM PARKER:
             
             
             
             
            NOTE: I (Wayne N. Parker) on March 23, 2022 made a decision to connect this Parker family to Robert Parker the son of Daniel.
            I also now believe that this William Parker wife may or may not be Sarah Anderson.
             
            Patricia Ross Parker August 6, 2015 at 11:52am
             
            Hello, Irene Morris and welcome to Parker Heritage.
             
            It appears to me that the line of your post may connect either by marriage or blood to that of YDNA Parker Project P11 of Family Group #7. My husband Jack Clark Parker P11 is a direct male descendant of Benjamin Parker bca. 1770 and his wife Nancy Anderson.
             
            Benjamin was the oldest known Parker ancestor in this particular family line. Although unconfirmed, it is thought that this Benjamin Parker was a brother or cousin of William Parker (see below).
             
            In my database, I have that William Parker b. 1767 who married Sarah Anderson? One of their children was Isaac Parker b. 1794 who married Mary Noland.
             
            A son of Isaac Parker and Mary Noland was a Henry Isaac Seaborn Parker bca. 1832? who married Delilah Robinson. They had many children, including several sets of twins and a son Benjamin Noland Parker b. 1855. Benjamin N. Parker married 1) Cassie Graham then 2) Susan Quimby (sp?)
             
            If any of these people or places are familiar, it will be great to hear from you here at Parker Heritage. And you can reach me by email at jandpparke@msn.com
             
            Patricia Ross Parker, Ed.D.
             
            Parker Heritage moderator and co-administrator
             
            Researcher for P11 of Parker YDNA Project Family Group #7
             
             
             
            More About WILLIAM PARKER:
            Y-DNA: FG #7 Kit # 115865 P183
             
            Child of WILLIAM PARKER and SARAH ?) is:
            i. ISAAC M.8 PARKER, b. 1794, NC/GA; d. Abt. 1860, MS; m. MARY F. NOLAND, November 10, 1815, Amite Co., MS; b. Abt. 1799; d. 1853, MS.
             
            Notes for ISAAC M. PARKER:
            P183 was added to this group on 16 April 2008. He matches the modal values on 36 of 37 markers. P183 descends from Isaac PARKER, born in Georgia about 1794. Isaac was in Louisiana by the early 1800s, moved to Mississippii around 1825, living there until he died about 1860. He married Mary NOLAND in Amite Co., MS. in 1815.
             
            Re: Littleberry Parker Theories
            park64 (View posts)
            Posted: 26 May 2011 3:10PM GMT
            Classification: Query
             
            Pearson Parker is an older brother of John Wesley Parker, sons of Isaac and Mary Noland Parker. Pearson and John had both been conscripted into service. The family story is that Isaac asked them not to fight against the flag he fought for (War of 1812). Another story is that John and his nephew Henry Underwood were shot when Confederate forces were trying to round them up, Henry Killed and John left for dead. Maybe a case of "Rich man's war, poor man's fight"?
             
             
            Re: Littleberry Parker Theories
            park64 (View posts)
            Posted: 28 Oct 2013 2:12PM GMT
            Classification: Query
            I just saw your query and can shed light on two of the Parkers. John W. and Pearson are brothers, son of Isaac and Mary Noland Parker. They both survived the war, married and had children. John is buried in Zion Cemetery near Georgetown, La. and his stone has "Co E, 1 New Orleans Inf." August 31, 1841 - Nov 20, 1921. Pearson is buried in Thomas M. Jones cemetery in Washington Parish, La. and his stone has Oct. 5, 1829 - Feb. 22, 1913. These men are in Parker Family Group 7
             
            More About ISAAC M. PARKER:
            Census 1: 1820, 1820 U S Census; Census Place: St Helena, Louisiana; Page: 356; NARA Roll: M33_30; Image: 071
            Census 2: 1830, 1830; Census Place: Copiah, Mississippii; Series: M19; Roll: 70; Page: 119; Family History Library Film: 0014838
            Census 3: 1840, Year: 1840; Census Place: Newton, Mississippii; Roll: 216; Page: 142; Image: 735; Family
            Census 4: 1850, Year: 1850; Census Place: Scott, Mississippii; Roll: M432_381; Page: 257A; Image: 14
            Y-DNA: Parker Family Group 7 P183 Kit # 115865
             
            More About MARY F. NOLAND:
            Census 1: 1820, 1820 U S Census; Census Place: St Helena, Louisiana; Page: 356; NARA Roll: M33_30; Image: 071
            Census 2: 1830, 1830; Census Place: Copiah, Mississippii; Series: M19; Roll: 70; Page: 119; Family History Library Film: 0014838
            Census 3: 1840, Year: 1840; Census Place: Newton, Mississippii; Roll: 216; Page: 142; Image: 735; Family
            Census 4: 1850, Year: 1850; Census Place: Scott, Mississippii; Roll: M432_381; Page: 257A; Image: 14
             
            More About ISAAC PARKER and MARY NOLAND:
            Marriage: November 10, 1815, Amite Co., MS
             
             
            NameBright - Coming Soon
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