Individual Page


Family
Marriage:
Family
Marriage: Children:
  1. Hubbard Williams: Birth: 1877 in Warren County,North Carolina. Death: Feb 1880 in Warren County,North Carolina

  2. Minnie Williams: Birth: 1879 in Warren County,North Carolina. Death: BEF 1900 in Warren County, North Carolina

  3. Robert Julius Williams: Birth: 18 Sep 1885 in Warren County,North Carolina. Death: 8 Sep 1970 in St.Albans, Queens County,New York

  4. Eddie Williams: Birth: 21 Feb 1890 in Warren County,North Carolina. Death: BEF 1956

  5. Lula Bell Williams: Birth: 21 Sep 1894 in Warren County,North Carolina. Death: 4 Jul 1913 in Warren County, North Carolina

  6. Frank Williams: Birth: 3 Oct 1897 in Warren County,North Carolina. Death: 10 Jun 1916 in Fork Township, Warren County,North Carolina


Family
Marriage:
Sources
1. Title:   Birth Records Other Locations
2. Title:   U.S. Federal Census
3. Title:   Death Certificate/or Death Record
Page:   NORTH CAROLINA DEATH COLLECTION 1908-1996 (Ancestry.com)
4. Title:   NORTH CAROLINA DEATH CERTIFICATES
Publication:   Ancestry.com
5. Title:   Marriage Index or License
Page:   WARREN COUNTY MARRIAGES-1871
6. Title:   Marriage Index or License
7. Title:   NORTH CAROLINA, MARRIAGE RECORDS, 1741-2011
Publication:   Ancestry.com
Text:   North Carolina County Registers of Deeds. Microfilm. Record Group 048. North Carolina State Archives, Raleigh, NC.

Notes
a. Note:   bers as JULIA DAVIS, was actually born with the name of JUDY, as can be seen in the Family Bible of Dr. THOMAS J. PITCHFORD, which recorded the Births and Deaths of slaves that were in his possession over the years. Since I've received that info, I have been researching that new previously unknown branch of the family and finding a lot of new family connections through both the PITCHFORD and DAVIS side.
 Julia Davis was a young dark skinned African American who grew up in North Carolina just at the end of slavery times. She met and fell in love with Pilot Green, who lived one house from her family at the time. But due to Judy's mother's, Mary Ann, opposition to a relationship with a much lighter skinned person, Pilot who was also born a free person of color, she was not allowed to marry him. Also during that time, there were laws in the state that forbade marriages between free blacks and slaves, and this would have been something engrained in Mary Ann's thinking. Judy left home and married a much older man, Hubbard Williams, who was a former slave who also lived in the neighborhood. She & Hubbard stayed together and raised a large family until his death shortly after 1900. At about the same time, Pilot's wife, Ann, also died, thus clearing the way for Pilot and Judy to finally marry. They spent their final years together in Warren County.
Note:   JUDY DAVIS, first listed in the 1870 Census as JANE DAVIS, and sometimes called by family mem


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