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Note: Breathitt County Breathitt County, the eighty-ninth county in order of formation, is located in eastern Kentucky in the mountainous Cumberland Plateau. The county is bordered by Lee, Wolfe, Magoffin, Knott, Perry, Leslie, Clay, and Owsley counties, and has an area of 494 square miles. It was formed in 1839 from Clay, Perry, and Estill counties, and named for Gov. John Breathitt (1832-34). Jackson is the county seat. The rugged foothill county is located on the edge of the Eastern Coal Field, where resources include coal, iron, and timber. Major rivers are the North and Middle forks of the Kentucky River and numerous tributaries, which include Quicksand, Troublesome, Lost, and Frozen Creeks. Stone artifacts found in the county indicate that prehistoric people lived there, often finding shelter under rock ledges and farming the Kentucky River bottoms. III The first penetration of white settlers into the area began in the 1780s and included such family names as Haddix, Neace, Noble, Strong, Turner, and Watts. Most of them settled in the vicinity of Lost Creek. By the 1790s, the North Fork of the Kentucky River and sections near Quicksand and Frozen creeks were settled. The isolated mountain county grew slowly. For most of the nineteenth century it was sparsely inhabited by subsistence farmers; the only industries were logging and salt making. In the 1860s the Civil War ignited a long-running tradition of violence in Breathitt County. No major battles were fought there, but bitter animosity between Northern and Southern sympathizers led to sixty-four deaths, mostly of Confederate and Union soldiers who had been discharged or were home on leave. Capt. Bill Strong led a pro-Union faction of guerrillas in cattle rustling. A dispute over the division of spoils led to the Strong-Amis feud, which lasted into the 1870s. Feuding between the Little and Strong clans caused Gov. Preston H. Leslie (1871-75) to send sixty members of the state militia to Jackson on September 16, 1874. By the time the soldiers were withdrawn in December of 1874, their numbers had increased to five companies. A narrow margin in a local election in November 1878 rekindled hostilities and caused Gov. James B. McCreary (1875-79, 1911-15) to order troops to the county from mid-December 1878 to February 1879. In the early twentieth century, the Hargis-Marcum feud gave the county the tag "Bloody Breathitt." The Kentucky Union Railroad (later the Louisville & Nashville) entered the county between 1888 and 1890, and on July 15, 1891, Jackson became the southern terminus of the road. The Ohio & Kentucky (abandoned in 1935) was extended from Jackson up the valley of Frozen Creek. The railroads opened up the county's timber and coal resources, and the population rose from 8,705 in 1890 to 14,320 in 1900 and 17,540 in 1910. By the 1920s, most of the timber had been cleared, and the last of the large companies, Mowbray and Robinson, left the county in 1925. Fifteen thousand acres of the Robinson property at Quicksand were donated to the University of Kentucky as the Robinson Agricultural Experiment Substation and Robinson Forest. In 1929 completion of KY 15 gave the county access to Winchester on the west and Virginia on the east. Other county roads were built during the Great Depression by the Public Works Administration. Breathitt County once had a strong agricultural economy. By the 1930s, however, much of the land had been damaged by erosion or soil depletion. In 1987 farms occupied only 14 percent of the county land area, and a mere 22 percent of the farmland was under cultivation. Crops included hay, corn, and tobacco. The largest employers in 1990 were coal and mining-related industries. The population of Breathitt County was 14,221 in 1970; 17,004 in 1980; and 15,703 in 1990. From The Kentucky Encyclopedia, edited by John Kleber. Copyright 1992 ****************************************************************************************************** Entries: Updated: Contact: Unknown -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Index | Descendancy | Register | Pedigree | Ahnentafel | Download GEDCOM -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- /Darby CALLAHAN b: 1655 d: 1687 /John CALLAHAN b: 1681 | | /John SIMPSON | \Jane SIMPSON b: 1660 | \Ann UNKNOWN /Darby CALLAHAN b: Abt 1720 d: Bef 29 Mar 1787 | | /Henry STOTT b: Abt 1600 | | /Bryant STOTT b: Abt 1630 | | | \Miss BRYAN b: Abt 1605 | | /John STOTT b: Abt 1684 | | | | /William SHIPP b: 26 Oct 1606 d: 1657 => | | | \Mary SHIPP b: Abt 1639 | | | \Sarah JULIAN b: Abt 1602 | \Mary STOTT b: 1689 | | /Stephen TOMLIN b: Abt 1615 | | /Stephen TOMLIN | | | \Elizabeth UNKNOWN b: Abt 1620 | \Jane TOMLIN | | /William STAININOUGH => | \Sarah STAININOUGH | \Hester UNKNOWN b: Abt 1616 /Edward CALLAHAN b: Abt 1743 d: Aft 1820 | | /Edward HARRIS b: Abt 1686 d: 17 Mar 1746/1747 | | /Nathanial HARRIS b: 1712 d: Abt 1773 | | | \Unity ??? b: Abt 1694 | \Unity HARRIS b: Abt 1720 d: Abt 1787 | \Ellendon SULLIVAN b: 1712 Jennie CALLAHAN | /Rueben BROCK | /Aaron BROCK b: Abt 1720 d: Abt 1820 | | \Christen PLACE \Mahalia Susan BROCK b: Abt 1749 d: Aft 1820 \Susan UNKNOWN b: Abt 1725 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ page 2 jason wolff Entries: 1195 Updated: Mon Aug 18 21:55:35 2003 Contact: jason wolff -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Index | Individual | Descendancy | Register | Ahnentafel | Download GEDCOM -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Display pedigree in table format /Henry STOTT b: Abt 1600 /Bryant STOTT b: Abt 1630 | \Miss BRYAN b: Abt 1605 /John STOTT b: Abt 1684 | | /William SHIPP b: Abt 1572 | | /William SHIPP b: 26 Oct 1606 d: 1657 | | | \Margaret BALLS b: Abt 1576 | \Mary SHIPP b: Abt 1639 | \Sarah JULIAN b: Abt 1602 Mary STOTT b: 1689 | /Stephen TOMLIN b: Abt 1615 | /Stephen TOMLIN | | \Elizabeth UNKNOWN b: Abt 1620 \Jane TOMLIN | /Lawrence STAININOUGH b: Abt 1575 | /William STAININOUGH \Sarah STAININOUGH \Hester UNKNOWN b: Abt 1616 ****************************************************************************************************** Doris Ross Johnston's Our Texas Family Entries: 48422 Updated: 2006-07-16 03:23:20 UTC (Sun) Contact: Doris Ross Johnston Home Page: OurTexasFamily -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- A Work in Progress ~ what you see is all I know, except for living people; if you don't see the parents of an individual who married into our family, it's useless to ask. Birthdates with (?) are guesstimates or uncertain. Also see my http://kywvbrocks.com website -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Index | Descendancy | Register | Pedigree | Ahnentafel | Add Post-em -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ID: I20179 Name: Jane "Jenny" Callahan Sex: F Change Date: 05 JUL 2003 Birth: ABT 1770 in Scott Co., VA Death: ABT 1815 in Lost Creek, Breathitt Co., KY Note: in childbirth with 10th child, Henry Strong Father: Edward "Ned" Callahan b: ABT 1743 in VA Mother: Mahala Susannah Brock b: 1749 in Cumberland Co., VA Marriage 1 William S. Strong b: 1768 in Fauquier Co., VA Married: APR 1790 in Scott Co., VA Note: or Rockingham Co., NC 1 Census: 1810 in Clay Co., KY Children Edward Strong b: 1791 in Rockingham Co., NC John C. Strong b: 1793 in Rockingham Co., NC Moses Strong b: 1795 in Holston Springs, Scott Co., VA Thomas Strong b: 1797 in Holston Springs, Scott Co., NC William Blackburn Strong b: 12 MAY 1800 in Holston Springs, Scott Co., VA Mary "Polly" Strong b: 1803 in Strongs Branch, Perry Co., KY Alexander Strong b: 1808 in Strongs Branch, Perry Co., KY Isaac "Pike" Strong b: 1810 in Strongs Branch, Perry Co., KY Isabelle Strong b: 1812 in Strongs Branch, KY Henry Harrison Strong b: 1814 in Strongs Branch, KY Sources: Title: Strong Family (copy of preface, 1st page, & index from Arlie Strong, Feb 2003) Abbrev: Strong Family Author: Mrs. J. C. Hurst Publication: Mrs. J. C. Hurst, Lexington, KY, 1958 Page: p. 1 ###################################################################################
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