Individual Page


Family
Marriage: Children:
  1. Uriah Bass: Birth: 1806 in Wayne Co, Nc. Death: 23 SEP 1872 in Union Parish, LA

  2. Mary Jane Bass: Birth: AFT 1806.

  3. Sarah Bass: Birth: AFT 1806.

  4. Elizabeth Bass: Birth: 9 OCT 1810.

  5. Molsey Ann Bass: Birth: 18 JUN 1811 in Wayne Co, Nc. Death: 17 MAY 1850 in Union Parish, la

  6. Keziah Bass: Birth: 1819.

  7. Richard Bass: Birth: 5 JAN 1819 in Wayne Co, NC. Death: 5 MAY 1880 in Walker County, Texas


Family
Marriage:
Notes
a. RecordIdNumber:   MH:N414
Note:   Julia and John Bass appear in the 1816 Census of Monroe County Alabama, Mississippi Territory. In 1816 Monroe county included parts of and all of 35 present day counties in Alabama. All of Perry county Alabama was one of the counties that was included in Monroe county.
 Julia and John Bass were the parents of: Uriah Bass, Mary (Polly) Bass Larkin, Elizabeth Bass Barton, Mosley Ann Bass George, Sarah Bass Johnson, Keziah Bass Taylor and Richard Bass.
 Julia's husband John Bass died intestate in Perry Co., Alabama in 1822. Julia and M. Holliman were the administrators of John Bass' estate.
 Julia married her second husband, Jetson Green on the 14th of February, 1825, in Perry Co., Alabama.
 Julia was involved in a lawsuit over the a promissory note signed by Jetson Green regarding the purchase of part of John Bass' estate. The case eventually was heard by the Alabama Supreme Court. Thetext of the case states that on the 6th of May, 1825 the letters of administration held by Julian and her husband Jetson Green, were revoked by the Orphan's Court of Perry County, and were surrendered. M. Holliman also surrendered his letters of administration. The court appointed George C. King, sheriff of Perry County, the administrator de bonis non of the estate of John Bass.
 Julia and Jetson Green were in Caldwell Parish, Louisiana in the 1840 Federal Census.
 Julia's was widowed in December, 1849, when Jetson Green died in Union Parish, Louisiana, of pneumonia.
 Julia is listed as the head of household in the 1850 Federal Census of Union Parish, Louisiana.
 Julia is living with her daughter and son-in-law, Elizabeth and Claude Barton, in Morehouse Parish, Louisiana, in the 1860 Federal Census.
 Julia died sometime after the 1860 Federal Census and before the 1870 Federal Census.
 ''Can you add any information on Julie Holliman? Please help grow her WikiTree profile. Everything you see here is a collaborative work-in-progress.''
 == Sources ==
 * Tentative dates of birth and place of birth from the 1850 Federal Census, Union Parish, Louisiana, Julia A. head of household. National Archives and Records Administration microfilm M432, Roll 241,page 383A.
 * 1860 Federal Census, Morehouse Parish, Louisiana, household of C. T. Barton. National Archives and Records Administration microfilm M653, Roll 413, page 363.
 * 1810 Federal Census, Wayne Co., North Carolina, John Bass head of household. National Archives and Records Administration microfilm M252, Roll 43, page 813.
 * 1816 Monroe County Census Records. US GenWeb Archives Project - Alabama at: [http://www.usgwarchives.net/al/monroe/census.htm]
 * Marriage to Jetson Green recorded Perry Co., Alabama, Marriage Book 1820-1832, page 175.
 * King v. Green, et al., Reports of Cases Argued and Determined in the Supreme Court of Alabama, Second Edition, Containing A Verbatim Reprint of Vols. 2 & 3, Stewart's Reports, published by West Law,West Publishing Co., St. Paul, MN, 1911.
 * 1830 Federal Census, Perry Co., Alabama, household of Jetson Green. National Archives and Records Administration microfilm M19, Roll 3, page 43.
 * 1840 Federal Census, Caldwell Parish, Louisiana, household of Jetson Green. National Archives and Records Administration microfilm M704, Roll 127, page 86.
 * U.S. Federal Census Mortality Schedule 1850-1880. 1850 schedule for Union Parish, Louisiana. National Archives and Records Administration microfilm T655, Roll 21, page 728.
  Julia and M. Holliman were the original administrators of John Bass' estate. It is only when a woman married that she lost her rights, and when Julia married Jetson Green, as the court stated: ".. .that Julian Bass intermarried with Jetson Green, one of the obligors, who thereby became also an administrator in right of his wifeJulian,and entitled to the administration jointly with Holliman . . ." The court revoked the right of administration to both Julia and Jetson Green on the 6th of May, 1825, and M.Holliman also surrendered his letters of administration. The court appointed the then sheriff (J.B. Nave) of Perry County as the administrator de bonis non. The current sheriff, a Mr. King, brought the suit that resulted in the appeal to the Alabama Supreme Court. The legal definition ofthe term "de bonis non" in case your not familiar with it is: phrase is used in cases where the goods of a deceased person have not all been
 administered. When an executor oradministrator has been appointed, and the estate
 is not fully settled, and the executor or administrator is dead, has absconded, or from any
 cause has been removed, a second administrator is appointed to to perform the duty
 remaining to be done, who is called an administrator debonis non, an administrator
 of the goods not administered and he becomes by the appointment the only representative
 of the deceased.


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