Individual Page


Family
Marriage: Children:
  1. Francis "Frank" Lytle: Birth: 29 Jul 1796 in Randolph Co., NC. Death: 29 Dec 1880 in Shenandoah, Page Co., IA

  2. Elizabeth "Betsy" Lytle: Birth: 2 Dec 1799 in Randolph Co., NC. Death: 12 Mar 1831 in Randolph Co., NC

  3. Albert "Bird" Lytle: Birth: 1802 in Randolph Co., NC. Death: 15 Feb 1879 in Madison Co., AR

  4. Catherine "Kate" Lytle: Birth: ABT 1805 in Randolph Co., NC. Death: 1885

  5. Alfred Lytle: Birth: ABT 1806 in Randolph Co., NC. Death: 1841 in Duplin Co., NC

  6. Deborah "Deb" Lytle: Birth: ABT 1809 in Randolph Co., NC. Death: 1839 in Randolph Co., NC

  7. Dorcas Lytle: Birth: 1810 in Randolph Co., NC. Death: 1884 in Randolph Co., NC

  8. Mary "Polly" Lytle: Birth: 1811 in Randolph Co., NC. Death: 1885 in NC

  9. Rebecca Lytle: Birth: ABT 1820 in Randolph Co., NC. Death: 1865


Notes
a. Note:   e else, I am the original source [Rik Vigeland].
  The first name Mary is based on an 1817 document where a Mary Lytle appears as a witness for Francis Lytle Jr. There is no other Mary Lytle who could testify. Neither Francis Jr. nor his brothers were married at this time. Francis Jr.'s sister Mary would be only about six years old in 1817. Frank Sr. had four granddaughters named Mary. The slave Esther Lytle had a daughter Polly (Mary?) who would have been in her early teens, and also a slave. About the same time, a Mary Lytle also appears as a buyer at an estate sale. This must have been Frank Lytle's wife.
  Mary Lytle is named again in 1823 in a case against Francis Croker for assault against Elizabeth Walden and Mary Lytle. Albert Lytle is also a witness, William Walden the "prosecutor."
  As for the name Moore, it appears as a middle name for Francis (the third) Lytle. Also Francis Jr.'s sister had a son Franklin M. Lytle. Francis Jr.'s daughter had a son, Francis M. Brown. Moore was passed on as a middle name to the son of Francis Moore Lytle. The Moore's land was quite close to Lytles in the late 1700's. John Moore had five females the right age to be daughters in 1790, but only four in 1800. John Moore's marriage to Jean (or Jane) Thornburg in 1773 means they could have had a daughter the right age to marry Frank Lytle. John Moore's son, Edward, ended up moving to Grant County, Indiana, after the Lytles' early arrival there, and several of Edward's children lived near, Lytles, and one or two lived right next door according to the census of that county. The name Jane was given to one of Francis Jr.'s daughters, also to Deborah (Lytle) Robbins oldest daughter, and Mary Jane was one of Albert's daughters. One of Edward's sons was Francis A. Moore. Several of Edward's sons or sons in law served in the same Civil War regiments as the Lytles.
Note:   Please note: The name Mary Moore is complete conjecture on my part. If you see it anywher


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