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Note: ancestry.com tennessee marriages to 1825 Jackson, Abraham Melvin, Jeney 12 Nov 1817 Davidson County Tennessee Jackson, Abraham Hager, Nancy 23 Jan 1825 Davidson County Tennessee 1820 census Wilson co tnabraham jackson 1830 census for Wilson Co., TN Abraham Jackson 2 males under 5 (Woodson abt age 3, William abt age 4) 1 male 5-10 (Andrew abt age 8) 1 (him) male 20-30 1 female under 5 1 female 10-15 (elizabeth) 1 female 20-30 (Nancy Hager) 1840 census for St Clair Illinois Abraham Jackson 2 males under 5 (Obadiah abt age 4) 2 males 5-10 (John abt 7) 2 males 10-15 (Woodson abt 13, William abt age 14) 1 male 15-20 (Andrew, abt 18 here) 1 male 40-50 (abraham) 1 male 50-60 (father or father-in law? who is this) 1female under 5 1 female 5-10 1female 30-40 (Nancy Hager) 1850 have had difficulty tracking his children placed in other households (this is what happens when you are slaughtered by Indians). Cannot find many of the younger children. Were they too killed? Those living in Twelve Mile Prarie with his older married children were easy. rjl@fone.net joyce emailed me (vrsconsulting) she is doing this line as well I know there is a Clampett/Jackson connection, I just wish I knew what. Also there is a land connection bewteen Edmund Melvin and William Jackson, but I don't know how William fits in: Mar 17, 1832 - Edmond Melvin Sr sells 100 ac in Davidson Co to Moses T Brooks for $600. A tract of land on the small S fork of Stones Creek which runs in at Stones Lick and 1 mi east of said creek, bonded. Signed Edmond (X) Melvin. Witness: A Glelard?, William Jackson, William Marshall. (recorded Oct 9, 1832, Book U, Pg 677) 1839; William Jackson sells 16 acres in the 25th Dist of Wilson Co, TN to Edmund Melvin part of land deeded to William Jackson by heirs of Obediah Jackson, Deceased. 1817, Nov 12; Marriage record reads: Know all men, that we Abraham Jackson and James Clampett of the county of Davidson and state of Tennessee, are held and firmly bound unto the govenor of the said state, for the time being, in the sum of $1250.00, to be paid to his excellency, his successors in office, or assigns; to which payment well and truely to be made, we bind ourselves, our hiers, executors and administrators, and each and every of us and them, both jointly and severally, firm;y by these presents.--Witness our hands and seals the 12th day of Nov, 1817. The Condition of the above obligation is such, that whereas Abraham Jackson hath prayed and obtained license to marry Jeney Melvin. Now if the said Jeney Melvin be an actual resident in the aforesaid county, and there shall not hereafter appear any lawful cause why the said Abraham Jackson and Jeney Melvin should not be joined together in Holy Matrimony, as husband and wife, then this obligation to be void and of no effect; otherwise to remain in full force and virtue. Abraham Jackson, James Clampett. (this almost looks like a dowery, but why come from James Clampett?) William Clampitt married Polly Jackson 27 Sep 1810 Tennessee, Davidson County James Clampett Married Susannah Jackson 1807 Davidson County (obadiah's daughter)
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