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Individual Page


Family
Marriage: Children:
  1. Cynthia Ann Johnson: Birth: ABT 1809 in Christian County, Kentucky, USA. Death: 1851 in Duck Creek, Stoddard County, Missouri, USA

  2. Wilson Thompson Johnson: Birth: ABT 1813 in Cape Girardeau District, Territory of Missouri, USA.

  3. Joseph Johnson: Birth: ABT 1816 in Cape Girardeau District, Territory of Missouri, USA. Death: 10 JAN 1865 in Regimental Hospital, Missouri, USA

  4. Benjamin Franklin Johnson: Birth: ABT 1818 in Cape Girardeau District, Territory of Missouri, USA. Death: 20 DEC 1871 in Bloomfield, Stoddard County, Missouri, USA

  5. David Green Johnson: Birth: ABT 1823 in Cape Girardeau County, Missouri, USA.

  6. Jonathan Calvin Luther Johnson: Birth: ABT 1825 in Tennessee, USA. Death: JAN 1859 in Stoddard County, Missouri, USA


Family
Marriage: Children:
  1. Martha "Patsy" McGinnis: Birth: 1832 in Stoddard County, Missouri, USA. Death: AFT 1870


Notes
a. Note:   H58
Note:   Jane McGehee [sometimes Jean] was born (1790-1800 according to the census data) 1789 in North Carolina according to mortality schedules and she died at sixty years of age in Stoddard County, Missouri, before July 7 of 1849, the date of the commencement of the administration of her estate. Shortly after moving in 1812 from Christian County, Kentucky, to Cape Girardeau County, Missouri, William and Jane Johnson became members of Bethel Baptist Church located in Jackson, and William became a messenger for Turkey Creek Baptist Church, sometimes referred to as Dry Creek Baptist Church, which was affiliated with Bethel Baptist Church in Jackson, Cape Girardeau County, Missouri. Other descendants of William McGehee also settled in Stoddard County after the move to Illinois.
  Some researchers believe that Jane McGehee, the daughter of William McGehee, married Frederick Graves but this is in error. Frederick Graves married Jane [nickname Jincy] Casey, the daughter of Levi Casey and Mary Sherrell, and they raised a well documented family while living in Johnson County, Illinois. However, in a petition to the House of Representatives to recover the pension benefits and bounty lands for the Revolutionary War service rendered by one William McGehee, it is reported that his heirs included a Frederick Greve and a Mary Lovera, perhaps Frederick Graves and Mary Tovrea.
  It will be remembered that the David Johnson ranch was located on the banks of Dry Creek and Cripple Creek and, together with the adjoining lands farmed by his sons, was collectively known as the Johnson Settlement. Dry Creek Baptist Church must have been established and located in the vicinity of the Johnson Settlement, and perhaps was actually located on the Johnson ranch.
  From a manuscript © 2019. All rights reserved


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