Individual Page


Family
Marriage: Children:
  1. J. J. Joyner: Birth: ABT 1847 in Henry Co., Georgia. Death: Jan 1850 in Henry Co., Georgia

  2. Sarah Frances Joyner: Birth: 5 Mar 1850 in Henry Co., Georgia. Death: 30 Jun 1930 in Clayton Co., Georgia

  3. William H. (Henderson) Joyner: Birth: 25 May 1852 in Henry Co., Georgia. Death: 25 Feb 1926 in Turner Co., Georgia

  4. Mary F. Joyner: Birth: ABT 1855 in Henry Co., Georgia.


Sources
1. Source:   1850 Census - Henry Co., GA
2. Source:   Family Bible of John C. Cates & Sarah Frances (Joyner) Cates
3. Source:   Georgia Marriages to 1850

Notes
a. Note:   Henry Co., GA formed in 1821 from Indian Lands & Walton Co. The county seat is McDonough.
 Clayton Co., GA formed in 1858 from Fayette Co. & Henry Co. The county seat is Jonesboro.
  1850 Census--42nd Dist, Henry Co, Georgia; pg. 263A, #1074-1074; lines 12-14
 Enumerated on the 22nd day of Oct. 1850 Wm. Moseley
 Joiner, D., 40, M, Farmer, $500, SC, cannot read/write
 Joiner, N. J., 27, F, Ga, cannot read/write
 Joiner, S. F., 3 mos, F, Ga
 - - - Is this their son??
 1850 Mortality Sch - 42 Dist, Henry Co. Ga; pg. 307
 Enumerated by William Mosely
 J. J. Joiner, 2, male, b. GA, d. Jan 1850, cause- worms, ill 4 days
  The dates would work since they were married in 1846.
  I say yes - in 1900 Census, Nancy states 2 of 4 children living
 *
 The following text is from The University of Georgia and the Carl Vinson Institute of Government Web Page
  "Greene County was created from Washington County on Feb. 3, 1786 by an act of the General Assembly (Marbury and Crawford's Digest, p. 162). Georgia's 11th county was named for Revolutionary War hero Maj. Gen. Nathaniel Greene. A few months earlier, Greene and wife Catharine had taken residence near Savannah at the Mulberry Plantation, which was a gift from the Georgia legislature in appreciation for his victorious campaign against British forces in the southern theater of war. Unfortunately, on June 19, 1786, General Greene died from overexposure to the Georgia sun.
  Portions of Greene County were used to help create Taliaferro County in 1825. Additionally, areas of Greene County were transferred to Oglethorpe, Clark and Taliaferro counties between 1794 and 1877.
  County Seat: Greensboro [originally spelled Greensborough and named for Maj. Gen. Nathanael Greene]. Settled in 1780s, designated county seat by the General Assembly in 1787, designated permanent county seat in 1802, incorporated Dec. 10, 1803."



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