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Family
Marriage: Children:
  1. Herbert Fletcher Taylor: Birth: 1848 in Franklin Co, Ohio, USA. Death: 15 Dec 1851 in Franklin Co, Ohio, USA

  2. Mary Ellen Taylor: Birth: 1850. Death: 1851

  3. Clara Taylor: Birth: A bt. 1853 in Ohio.

  4. Albert Vinton Taylor: Birth: Abt 1857 in Kentucky, USA. Death: 9 Nov 1907 in Cincinnati, Hamilton, OH

  5. Frances Langworthy Taylor: Birth: 1862 in Ohio.

  6. Perley Taylor: Birth: 1866 in Illinois, USA. Death: 13 Feb 1888 in Cincinnati, Hamilton, OH


Notes
a. Note:   Groom's Name: Peter W. Taylor Groom's Birth Date: Groom's Birthplace: Groom's Age: Bride's Name: Francis Langworthy Bride's Birth Date: Bride's Birthplace: Bride's Age: Marriage Date: 13 Oct 1845 Marriage Place: Columbus, Franklin, Ohio Groom's Father's Name: Groom's Mother's Name: Bride's Father's Name: Bride's Mother's Name: Groom's Race: Groom's Marital Status: Groom's Previous Wife's Name: Bride's Race: Bride's Marital Status: Bride's Previous Husband's Name: Indexing Project (Batch) Number: M02269-7 System Origin: Ohio-EASy Source Film Number: 285167 Reference Number: 28A Collection: Ohio Marriages, 1800-1958 name:�Ctab�DPerley Taylor estimated birth year:�Ctab�D1865 gender:�Ctab�DMale age in 1870:�Ctab�D5y color (white, black, mulatto, chinese, indian):�Ctab�DWhite birthplace:�Ctab�DIllinois home in 1870:�Ctab�DIllinois, United States �Ctab�DHousehold�Ctab�DGender�Ctab�DAge Peter Taylor�Ctab�DM�Ctab�D48y Francis Taylor�Ctab�DF�Ctab�D46y Clara Taylor�Ctab�DF�Ctab�D17y Albert Taylor�Ctab�DM�Ctab�D13y Francis Taylor�Ctab�DF�Ctab�D8y �Ctab�D Perley Taylor�Ctab�DM�Ctab�D5y Source Citation "United States Census, 1870," index and images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.1.1/M6HQ-LQJ : accessed 15 April 2012), Perley Taylor in household of Peter Taylor (Illinois, United States). Peter W. Taylor, the third child and oldest son. was born about 1825, and about 1850 he was married to Miss Frances Lang- worthy. He became a major in one of the Ohio regiments and served in the War of the Rebellion. After the war he removed to Illinois, and after that, to the State of Kansas, where he died about 1895. He left a widow and three children, two of whom survive. They all now reside in Cincinnati, Ohio. Peter W. Taylor[1] ~1822 - <1888 Individual Ancestors Descendants Relationship Timeline Suggest Personal Information | Sources | All | PDF Born �Ctab�D~1822 �Ctab�DOH Gender �Ctab�DMale Died �Ctab�D<1888 Notes �Ctab�D He was a lawyer in Akron, Ohio. Census Tracking: 1850 - Truro, Franklin Co., Ohio. 1860 - Union, Madison Co., Ohio. 1870 - Decatur, Macon Co., Illinois. 1880 - Decatur, Macon Co., Illinois. Person ID �Ctab�DI11371324 �Ctab�DBurdick Last Modified �Ctab�D19 Jan 2013 Father �Ctab�DAbiathar Vinton Taylor Mother �Ctab�DMartha ? Family ID �Ctab�DF13371324 �Ctab�DGroup Sheet Family �Ctab�DFrances Langworthy, b. 14 Apr 1824 Married �Ctab�D16 Oct 1845 �Ctab�DColumbus, OH Children �Ctab�D �Ctab�D1. Clara Taylor, b. ~1853, OH �Ctab�D2. Albert Vinton Taylor, b. ~1858, OH , d. ~1907 �Ctab�D3. Frances Taylor, b. ~1862, OH �Ctab�D4. Perley Taylor, b. ~1865, IL , d. 13 Feb 1888 Family ID �Ctab�DF11371324 �Ctab�DGroup Sheet Sources �Ctab�D [S1137] Family line extension, Hal.Langworthy (hal.langworthy@gmail.com), (2012).
b. Note:   HI5224
Note:   (Research):March 20, 1862 J[onathan] Cranor, Colonel, 40th Regiment, Ohio Volunteer Infantry, Camp Brownlow, Kentucky. To Governor David Tod. Letter stating that the accompanying petition had been placed in his hands to be forwarded to Tod, that in forwarding it, he thought it perhaps proper to acquaint Tod with what he supposed to be the cause of the dissatisfaction so plainly manifested therein, that three companies of the 40th Regiment, Ohio Volunteer Infantry were gotten up in Madison County, that there was an agreement between Governor William Dennison and those who had gotten up the companies that Madison County should furnish one field officer for the regiment, that this officer was to be selected by the members of the several Madison County companies as soon as they were organized, that [Lieutenant] Colonel [Peter W.] Taylor, being advised of these facts, hastened at once to hold an election (over which he presided in person during most of the voting) when the companies numbered only about sixty men and had not yet organized, that the election had not been announced publicly in any way, but solicitors were sent out to gather in such and only such as they thought most likely to support Taylor, leaving those who would have supported any other candidate without the slightest knowledge that there was an election going on, that the consequence of this was that there was no opposing candidate, that on this election return, Taylor received his appointment before there was a minimum number for an organization in a single company in the regiment, that soon after taking his position in the regiment, the fact became so manifest that Taylor was not qualified to discharge the duties of his office that the company commanders of the Madison County companies called upon the Governor in person and asked him to substitute some other man in place of Taylor, that when the Governor failed to act upon their request, a petition was signed by the majority of the Privates and all of the commissioned officers present and offered for the Governor's consideration, that when this failed to produce the desired effect, other petitions of the same tenor were handed to him, some of which he sent to the Governor and others he did not send, that finding entreaties and petitions alike unavailing, it was concluded to bear the Governor awhile longer, trusting that a more intimate acquaintance with him might prove their first opinion to have been erroneous, that as the regiment took the field and the duties of the several officers became more arduous and complicated, the dissatisfaction increased until at present it threatened to prove fatal to the very life of the regiment if something was not shortly done to rid them of their present Lieutenant Colonel, that this being the true state of feeling towards the Lieutenant Colonel, he felt that he was acting in promotion of the welfare of the regiment when, in common with the company officers who had signed the within petition, he requested that the Lieutenant Colonel be removed either by transfer or otherwise, and that he hoped Tod would take immediate measures to satisfy their demands. 3 pp. [Series 147-30: 118]


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