Date: Thu, 25 Dec 1997 01:20:55 EST
From: NCreed1 <NCreed1@aol.com>
To: NCreed1@aol.com
Subject: Comp #277 - Burnett-Turner-Ross-Via-Etc/Etc

Continued from Comp 276.

9.  LARKIN4 TURNER (SHADRACK3, JOHN2, RICHARD1) was born
1757 in then Halifax Co., VA?, and died 1820-1830 in Cumberland Co., KY,
b. Heard's Burial Ground, Salt Lick Bend.  He married MARY ANN HICKEY
January 16, 1789 in Henry County, Virginia by Minister Joseph Anthony,
daughter of JOHN HICKEY and MARY MIDLETON.

Notes for LARKIN TURNER:
Note from Kay Walker Peterson:

I don't expect this chart will ever change much.  So many researchers
have worked on this line and early Turner family tradition from our Larkin
Turner and his son, James does no yield any other names.  The 1836
Cumberland Co., KY deed has 2 lists of "Heirs of Larkin Turner, Dec'd.." but
loss of punctuation in the text of the deed and dupication of the names
Ann[a],
Nancy and Mary cause confusion.  1992, from Sara Joan (Seib) Eccher.

------------------------------------------------------
226 So. Orr Dr.,                             Larkin Turner-Mary Hickey
Normal, IL 61761               by Linda Sue (Bell) Gartin
309-452-2522              (supplied by Kay Walker Peterson
Artesia, NM

Larkin Turner was born in Pittsylvania County, Virginia before 1765.  He
was the son of Shadrack and Ann Turner who lived near Town Creek. 
Shadrack was born in 1720 in Virginia and considerable infomation is given
about him in "Early Virginia Families" by E. Ruth Pyrtle, pg. 30-47.  He
married Ann about (blocked out).  According to this book and other
references, their children were Larkin, Jeremiah, William, John, Josiah,
Elizabeth, Mary, and Exony.  Of this family, Shadrack, William, John, and
Josiah all had Revolutionary War service.  Shadrack Turner died in Henry
County, Virginia, in 1784.  His will named his children and stated that he
desired for them to be educated out of the estate in order to be able to do
country business. 
     Larkin Turner married mary Ann Hickey 16 January 1789 in Henry
County, Virginia.  She was born 4 March 1771 in Pittsylvania County, the
daughter of  John Hickey and Mary Middleton.  In the "History of Pittsylvania
County,Virginia", by Maud Carter Clement, page 44, it is stated that
John Hickey made his home on Smith River in 1748 and opened a store. 
This was then in Lunenberg County, afterward Halifax, then Pittsylvania
and now Henry County.  Here he erected a fort, called Hickey's Fort.  He
operated a mil and maintained an inn for the accomodation of travelers. 
George Washington, on Oct. 11, 1756, on a tour of inspection of the frontier's
forts notes and expense of 21 shillings, 3 pence at Hickey's Ordinary.  In the
January 1932 issue of "National Geographic" in the editorial "The Travels of
George Washington," John Hickey is called a Merchant Prince.  His caravans
of covered wagons hauled goods in every direction.  Many roads were named
for him and are well-known highways today.  His career was one of the early
business romances of the Old Dominion.  When John Hickey died in 1784, he
willed plantation to his widow and one to each of his eleven children.  The
thousands of acres of creek bottoms which he owned have since been divided
into four counties.  John and Mary Middleton Hickey rendered material aid to
the establishment of American Independence and both are recognized
Revolutionary War Patriots.  In 1804 Larkin and Mary Ann Hickey Turner
were living in Franklin County, Virginia. However by 1805, the family had
begun its migration west and we find Mary's brothers Michael and Joshua
Hickey in Cumberland County, KY.  Larkin Turner bought a tract of land
containging 100 acres in Cumberland County for which he paid $300, on Sept
7, 1809.  He is listed in the 1810 Census with his wife, 2 sons, and 3
daughters. 
The 1820 Census lists him as being engaged in agriculture, living on the south
side of the Cumberland River in the Salt Lick Bend.  Due to the passage of
time, some records have been lost and knowledge about all the children of
Larkin and Mary Ann Turner are incomplete.  Their eldest son James Turner
was born in Henry County, Virgina, 2 August 1794 and died in
Obion County, Tennessee 10 April 1872.  He married Nancy Ray, daughter
of Nathaniel Ray and Darah O'Banion, probably in Cumberland County circa
1816.  Known daughters of Larkin and Mary were Nancy Turner, born 24 May
1797 in Virginia.  She became a member of the Church of Christ meeting
at Cumberland County and died unmarried 15 May 1866 in Obion County,
Tennessee.  Lucinda Turner born circa 1800 in Virginia and died 1 January
1858 in Barren County, Kentucky.  She married Benjamin Turner, her first
cousin and son of John and Elizabeth Price Turner.  Probable other children
were Anna, Mary, and another son, name unknown.  Larkin Turner died in
the 1820's and is thought to be buried with one of his daughters in Heard's
Burying Ground in Salt Lick Bend on the Cumberland River.  Neighbors on
the 1830 Cumberland County Census were his widow Mary and their daughter
Lucinda and Benjamin Turner.  On 27 August 1836, Larkin's heirs sold his 100
acres for $450 to Samuel Cloyd.
    In the 1840 Census, Mary Hickey Turner was living with son James and
in1850 she was in Barren County with Lucinda and Benjamin.  When James
Turner moved all of his family to Obion County, Tennessee in 1853, Mary
Hickey Turner went also.  She died there 14 February 1855 and is buried
in the Turner Family Cemtery which is located on Captain James Turner's
old farm in Housier Valley near Union City.  Nancy, her daughter, is buried
beside her.

Sept. 1990( this is F544, probably out of a County History book in
Kentucky or Tennessee)


More About LARKIN TURNER:
Fact 2: lived in Henry Co., VA
Fact 3: 1830-1850, was in Carroll County, GA censuses
Fact 4: 1811, was living in Kentucky
Fact 5: 1800-1804, lived in Franklin Co., VA
Fact 6: 1809, living in Cumberland Co., KY

More About MARY ANN HICKEY:
Fact 4: 1850, lived in Barren Co., KY in house of daughter Lucinda

	Children of LARKIN TURNER and MARY HICKEY are:
	i.	JAMES5 TURNER, b. August 02, 1794, Virginia(Henry Co.?);
d. April 20, 1872, Obion Co., TN b. James Turner Family Cem. near Union
City; m. NANCY E. RAY, Abt. 1816, Cumberland Co., KY?(records
destroyed).

Notes for JAMES TURNER:
CAPTAIN JAMES TURNER---NANCY RAY
by Linda Sue (Bell) Gartin
226 South Orr Drive
Normal, IL 61761

James Turner was born in Henry County, Virginia 2 Aug.ust, 1794.  In
1809, when he was about 15 years of age, he came to Cumberland County,
Kentucky with his parents, Larkin and Mary Ann Hickey Turner.  Their family
history is included in this book.
     In about 1816, James Turner married Nancy Ray, the daughter of
Nathaniel Ray and Sarah O'Bannion Ray of Cumberland County.  Nancy was
born 25 December, 1799 in Washington County, Kentucky.  They had the
following children, all of whom were born and probably married in Cumberland
County: 
1).  Marinda Turner (28 April 1817-10 August 1906) married Samuel Bell
Wilson 28 July 1836; 2). Phebe Turner ( 26 February 1818- 10 August 1906)
married Ferdinand Hamilton Wilson 8 November 1836; (3). Mary Ann Turner
(29 November 1820- 29 September 1886) married Edward hayden Wilson  15
September 1846; (4). Sarah J. "Sallie" Turner (27 September 1824-5 June
1858) married George H. Cary circa 1840; (5). Benjamin F. Turner (29 May
1826-2 Oct. 1854) married Louisa; (6). Nancy Ellen Turner (20 October 1830-
23 July 1853) married John E. King.  It is reported that after Marinda, Phebe,
and Mary Ann married the three Wilson brothers (sons of Colonel James and
Rebecca (Hamilton) Wilson), Captain James Turner gave out the word that if
any other Wilsons came courting around his house he would blow him up with
a cannon.
     Records tell us that James and Nancy (Ray) Turner owned land on
Salt Lick Bend on the Cumberland River and on Mud Camp Creek.  About
1835, they built a two-story log home which was still standing in 1940 when a
descendant wisited the area.  It was located about a quarter of a mile above
where Mud Camp Creek flows into the Cumberland River.  James Turner was
a farmer and also engaged in the navigation of rivers.  Census records bear
this
out.  In the early years of the nineteenth century considerable trade was
carried
on between points on the Cumberland River and New Orleans.  It was
customary to buy produce in a locality and transport it by flatboat down the
Cumberland and Mississippi Rivers, then sell it in New Orleans.  James
Turner did an extensive business in this line.  He stored tobacco and other
produce in his sheds and warehouses in Cumberland County until he could ship
it down river to New Orleans where he traded as a factor in cotton and
tobacco.  He was head of the firm Turner, Wilson, and Company at 75
Magazine Street for he had brought his sons-in-law into the business also.
     Captain Turner was a man of unusual ability and accumulated a
considerable fortune for his day doing business with Rothchild's of London,
England and the Bank of Paris, France.  In 1845, Edward Hayden and Mary
Ann Wilson removed to New Orleans in November 1850 and January 1851,
two deeds were recorded in Fulton Co., KY to Samuel B. Wilson of the firm
"Turner, Wilson, & Co. of New Orleans" for acreage near Hickman.  In
December 1852, james Turner, George H. Cary, and Ferdinand H. Wilson, for
the sum of $30,480 bought two tracts of land consisting of 2,540 acres on the
waters of Housier Creek about two miles southwest of Union City, in Obion
County, Tennessee.  In 1852, in order t be nearer the Mississippi River,
Samuel
B. Wilson moved his family to Hickman, KY, then an important shipping point
on the river.  These arrangements were preparations for a large exodus--some
seventy in number---most from Cumberland and Monroe Counties, all related
by blood or marriage, who left their homes and moved down river by 1853.
     Captain Turner erected a large classical style home for his wife
and family on his land in Obion County.  Furnished with fine furniture brought
up river from New Orleans, "Forest Home" as it was called, was ever a
center of attraction for happy occasions with the Cary cousins and thre
sets of Wilson double-first cousins; anticipated visits from the Edward
hayden Wilsons and Albert Turners of New Orleans and the families of
Ferdinand and Samuel Wilson of Hickman. There was always someone
meeting the boat, up and down the river awaiting messages or joyful reunions. 
Captain Turner also mantained a home in New Orleans but the family lived
mainly in Obion County, Tennessee and Fulton Co. KY.
     James and Nancy Turner were married over fifty-five years when she
died 25 February 1872.  In her obituary, it is written, "She lived a
Christian life for nearly half a century.  She embraced Chrisianity and became
a
member of the Christian Church at a time when it required some moral courage
to bea Christian yet she regarded not the opinion or scorn of men but the
word of God 'was the man of her counsel', and for over fifty yeaars she never
wavered, but always abounded in the work of the Lord.  She taught her
children and grandchildren the principles of Christianity and every one of her
grandchildren were members of the Christian Church.  The poor felt their
loss when she left them, for none ever left her door empty."  She was a
charter member of the First Christian Church in Union City.
     It was said that Captain Turner's munificient hand was always open
to the poor and needy. He died 20 April 1872, nearly two months after
his wife's death and was buried with Nancy in the family graveyard on
his farm.  There are approximately 65 family members buried in this
graveyard enclosed by an iron fence and gate on which is inscribed JAMES
TURNER 1870.  Today no family lives in Obion County with the names
Turner, Cary, or Wilson who are descended from those buried there.  Only a
few acres of the once extensive land holdings are still owned by ?
     An early business which had it's beginning in Cumberland County,
Kentucky was TURNER, WILSON, AND COMPANY, 75 Magazine Street,
New Orleans, LA.  it all began when James Turner became a tobacco freighter. 
He accumulated a great deal of land and was engaged in agriculture.  At one
time he owned all the land on both sides of Mud Camp Creek for several
mils and this is borne out by record.  Just when the business began is
unknown but one business paper belonging to James Turner, Exq. of
Burkesville, Kentucky and dated 8 June 1832 had to do with accounts for his
customers presumably in Cumberland County.  It is signed in New Orleans on
the 18th August 1832.  James Turner was 42 years of age at this time.  In the
early years of the nineteenth century, considerable trade was carried on
between points on the Cumberland River and New Orleans.  It was customary
to buy up produce in a locality and transport it by flatboat down the
Cumberland and Mississippi Rivers, then sell it in New Orleans.  On account of
snags, etc., in the river, the steamboats were unable to come up far on the
Cumberland, and for that reason the country was served by flatboats.  James
Turner lived about one-fourth of a mile above the mouth of Mud Camp Creek. 
Near his house and above high water, he had warehouses in which he stored
the tobacco and other produce until time to make the trip to New Orleans. 
In New Orleans, he did an extensive business trading as a factor in cotton and
tobacco and doing business with Rothchild's of London, England and with the
bank of Paris, France.  Captain James Turner was a man ;of unusual ability and
accumulated a conserable fortune forhis day.  He became known as the
"Tobacco King" of the Mississippi.  Later, Captain Turner brought his sons-in-
law Samuel B. Wilson, Ferdinand Hamilton Wilson, and Edward Hayden
Wilson into the business and formed Turner, Wilson, and Company.  The
customary wage for men Captain Turner employed to make the trip down river
was $50.00 and when they returned the men disembarked at the mouth of the
Salt River and walked across the country to the Cumberland.  It was related
that on one of these trips down river, Jim Turner told his men that they had
better land as there was going to be a storm, and they did so, and that night
Natchez, Mississippi was blownaway.  From what was said they must have
been near Natchez at the time.  The Natchez Tornado occured in 1840.  Many
other members of the family were connected with the business from time to
time.  Albert Turner, nephew of Captain Turner, was a clerk and signed many
of the letters and papers; George H. Cary, another son-in-law, as well as Ben-
jamin F. Turner, Captain Turner's son were affiliated.  Afterwards when
the snags, etc., were cleaned out antd the river made navigable, the
competition of the steamboats ruined the flatboat business and probably
induced the Turners and Wilsons to relocate on the Misissippi River at
Hickman, Kentucky in 1853. They sold out to another freighter by the name of
Cloyd and he afterwards built a warehouse on the river close to the mouth of
Mud Camp Creek known as Bluff Landing.  Captain Turner and his sons-in-
law continued their business in New Orleans and Kentucky into the 1870's. 
Edward Hayden Wilson, who lived at New Orleans, died 9 May 1880 and up
until that time of his death was a member of the New Orleans Stock Exchange.

Linda Sue Bell Gartin (Mrs. John P.)
New Orleans, LA
------------------------------------------------------
Kentucky   Cumberland County Deeds Capt. James Turner

Moses, John W., james H., Elias M. and Isaac Stalcup of McMinn Co., TN
to James Turner.  Land belonging to estate of James Heard, deceased:
5/6/1851:  361

James Turner and wife Nancy to William C. Collins land on Mudcamp Creek
1/13/1853   M402

James Turner and wife Nancy to John Cloyd, interest of Jack Heard,
Nathanial S. Heard, Moses Stalcup and wife Ann of late Heard real estate of
James Heard Sr. deceased:  1/11/1853   M 507

James Turner and wife Nancy of Obion Co., TN and F.H. Wilson and wife
Phebe of Fulton County, KY to James O'Banion of Cumberland Co. land of
Mudcamp Creek  4/26/1853  N383

James Turner and wife Nancy of Obion Co., TN to Andrew J. Garmon of
Cumberland County land on Mudcamp Creek.  12/31/1856       0  94

Captain James Turner, also signed by Nancy Turner, Anna Turner, Benjamin
Turner, Mary Turner, Lucinda Turner heirs of Larkin Turner, deceased to
Samuel Cloyd land on Bunts River   8/27/1836     J 146

James Turner made oath he bought slaves  4/12/1841  K  40
(James Turner swears he bought 3 slaves into Kentucky for his own use,
Hager, Henry, and Maryann  signed James Turner)

Beverly Sims to James Turner land on Mudcamp Creek  7/12/1841

James Turner and wife Nancy to Dorcas Collins land on Mudcamp Creek
4/9/1842  K 183

Solomon Whitlow to John B. Barker of New Orleans, LA by his agent Capt.
James Turner  slaves  10/6/1842     K 249

James Turner and wife Nancy to William C. Collins land on Mud Camp Creek
1/13/1853  M 402

Dorcas Collins, Rebecca Shaw, William C. Collins and wife Amanda, Alfred
O'Banion and wife Nancy  widow and heirs of John Collins deed to James
Turner land on Mudcamp Creek  1853.  M 404
(provided by Kay Walker Peterson, Artesia, NM)


More About JAMES TURNER:
Fact 2: 1870, Obion Co., TN Census
Fact 3: 1860, Obion Co., TN Census
Fact 4: 1850, Cumberland Co., KY Census
Fact 5: 1853, moved to Obion Co., TN
Fact 6: 1836, Smith, Cumberland Co., KY Deeds 1836, Heirs of Larkin
Turner

More About NANCY E. RAY:
Fact 3: 1836, Smith, Cumberland Co., KY Deeds 1836, Heirs of Larkin
Turner
Fact 4: Cumberland Co., KY Deed BK. F, p.415 heirs of Nat'l Ray, dec'd

	ii.	NANCY TURNER, b. March 24, 1797, Virginia; d. May 15,
1866, Obion Co., TN at home of brother James Turner b. J. Turner Cem., near
Union City.

More About NANCY TURNER:
Fact 2: 1860, Obion Co., TN Census
Fact 3: 1850, Cumberland Co., KY Census
Fact 4: never married

	iii.	LUCINDA TURNER, b. 1800, Virginia; d. January 01, 1858,
Barren Co., KY (assumed buried near Randolph, KY now Metcalfe County);
m. BENJAMIN TURNER, 1820-1824, Cumberland Co., KY?(records
destroyed).

More About LUCINDA TURNER:
Fact 2: record of 8 children
Fact 3: married 1st cousin
Fact 4: 1850, Barren Co., KY Census p. 419
Fact 5: Barren Co., KY Death Returns, KY Historical Society. Reg. V.43,
1945

	iv.	ANNE/ANNA TURNER, b. 1801-1810; d. tradition, buried
with father in Heard's Burial Ground, Salt Lick Bend, Cumberla.

More About ANNE/ANNA TURNER:
Fact 3: 1810, Cumberland Co., KY Census p. 174
Fact 4: tradition buried with dad in Cumberland Co., KY

	v.	MALE TURNER, b. 1805-1810; d. may have died between
1820-1830.

More About MALE TURNER:
Fact 3: 1820, Cumberland Co., KY Census p. 140
Fact 4: 1810, Cumberland Co., KY Census p. 174

	vi.	MALE TURNER, b. 1811-1820; d. may have died between
1820-1830.

More About MALE TURNER:
Fact 4: 1820, Cumberland Co., KY Census p. 140


10.  JEREMIAH4 TURNER (SHADRACK3, JOHN2, RICHARD1) was born
1759 in Henry County, Virginia, and died 1825-1830 in Cumberland County,
Kentucky (5-22-1852?).  He married RACHEL ROSS April 21, 1792 in
Franklin County, Virginia, daughter of DANIEL ROSS and ELIZABETH
GARTH.

Notes for JEREMIAH TURNER:
Jeremiah Turner was on the Tax list of Henry County, VA in 1810 with 3
white males over 16 and 4 horses.  The 1810 Henry Co. Census was lost in
the War of 1812, but it is thought that Jeremiah was younger than his brother
Larkin, who was over 45 in the 1810 census of Cumberland Co., KY.

The following deeds indicate that Jeremiah Turner moved to Cumberland
Co., KY in late 1818.

1.  Henry Co., VA Deed Book 8, p. 299:  Jeremiah Turner of Henry Co.
leaves  Lewis Turner of Patrick Co. attorney at law, March 28, 1818;
witness John Turner.
2.  Cumberland Co., KY Book C, p. 501:  11 Feb. 1819, Jeremiah Turner
was given a mulatto boy as an apprentice to blacksmith.
3.  Cumberland Co., KY Deed Book A, p. 559 Aug. 19, 1819.  Names
Jeremiah Turner, James O'Bannon and Jeremiah Black.
4.  Cumberland Co., KY Deed Book D, p. 32:  Jeremiah Turner bought 559
acres of land on Mudcamp from James O'Banion.
5.  Another deed between Jeremiah Turner and James O'Banion was dated
April 12, 1820.
6.  Cumberland Co., KY Book A, p. 631:  Jan. 1, 1823, Larkin and
Jeremiah Turner bought 50 acres on Mudcamp from James O'Banion.

Cumberland Co., KY 1820 Census (& Mary Ann Hicke

Jeremiah  (2)  Turner              Larkin (2)  Turner
2 M under 10   1 F under 10        	 M under 10   2 F 16-26
1 M 10-16 1 F 16-26           		M 10-16 1 F 45+
1 M 16-18 1 F 45+             		M 18-26
4 M 18-26                			 45+
1 M 45+

Deed Book B, 77:  Oct. 31, 1825, David Turner, assignee of Jeremiah
Turner, as of Samuel Stockton, Mud Camp Creek.

Cumberland Co., KY 1830 Census

Rachel Turner
2 M 15-20 1 F 20-30
2 M 20-30 1 F 50-60

It is thus assumed that Jeremiah Turner died between 1825-1830. 
However, his land was not sold until 1842 when a deed (July 25, 1842)
lists his heirs:   Larkin and wife Jane; Shadrack and wife Ann Eliza; Edmond
and wife Mary;  John Foster; George Pollard and wife Elizabeth; Lewis of
Patrick County, VA;  David and wife Elizabeth; Susan and husband John
Carter; Ann and husband Joseph Thomas of Patrick Co., VA; and Herod and
wife Jane.

1). George Pollard b. 1793; m. Eliza Fifer 11 July 1814, Henry County,
VA. moved to Cumberland Co., KY a farmer, and d. by 1854.
2).  Lewis; over 26 years in 1820 Patrick Co., VA Census wife age 16-26.
3).  Ann; m. 8 Dec. 1817 Joseph Thomas (Henry Co., VA) Living Patrick
Co., VA  in 1842.
4). Larkin; b. about 1798; d. by 1857; m. Jane Heard about 1821
5). David: b. 1800; m. Elizabeth Crews 1820+

6). Susan b. 1804; d. 4/3/1857 age 53 Cumberland Co., KY; m. John Carter
7). John Foster; b. 1808; living with brother Edmond 1870 Monroe Co.;
was a shoemaker.
8). Edmond; b. 1810; d. by 1878; farmer and miller in Monroe Co., KY
1870. m 1). Mary McBee  2). Martha J.
9). Shadrack; b. 1813; m). 1 Ann Eliza Hays  2). Rebecca; A farmer and
blacksmith in Cumberland and Monroe Cos., KY
10). Herod; b. 1801; m. jane H. b. IND 1811 m. 1835-6; iving Meade Co.,
KY 1850 children of Larkin and Jane Heard Turner in 1850 Cumberland Co.
KYCensus


More About JEREMIAH TURNER:
Fact 2: 1820, Cumberland County, KY Census
Fact 3: 1818-1819, moved to Kentucky
Fact 4: He was a blacksmith
Fact 5: 1810, Henry Co., VA Census and on Tax List
Fact 6: March 28, 1818, Henry County, VA Deed Bk. 8 p. 299: Jeremiah
Turner

More About RACHEL ROSS:
Fact 2: 1850, Cumberland County, KY Census; age 73?
Fact 3: 1830, Cumberland Co., KY Census; head of household
Fact 4: 1820, Cumberland Co., KY Census age 45?
Fact 5: additional info. "The Garth Family" by Davis

	Children of JEREMIAH TURNER and RACHEL ROSS are:
	i.	HENRY5 TURNER, d. 1856, Cumberland Co., KY.
	ii.	THOMAS TURNER.
	iii.	JOSEPH TURNER, m. RACHEL TURNER.
	iv.	GEORGE POLLARD TURNER, b. 1793, Henry County,
Virginia; d. November 09, 1854, Cumberland Co., KY; m. ELIZABETH
FIFER, July 11, 1814, Henry County, Virginia.
	v.	LEWIS TURNER, b. Abt. 1794, Henry County, Virginia; d.
1855, Cumberland Co., KY; m. CYNTHIA TURNER, May 05, 1817, Franklin
County, VA.

More About LEWIS TURNER:
Fact 4: lived in Patrick Co., VA

	vi.	ANN TURNER, b. Abt. 1796, Henry County, Virginia; m.
JOSEPH THOMAS, December 08, 1817, Henry County, Virginia.
	vii.	LARKIN TURNER, b. 1798, Henry County, Virginia; d.
September 26, 1857, Cumberland Co., KY; m. JANE HEARD, 1821,
Cumberland Co., KY.
	viii.	DAVID TURNER, b. November 15, 1799, Henry County,
Virginia; d. January 17, 1882, Jackson County, TN; m. ELIZABETH CREWS,
1825, Cumberland Co., KY.
	ix.	HEROD TURNER, b. May 18, 1801, Henry County, Virginia;
d. March 31, 1860, Rocky Bayou, Izard County, Arkansas b. Lunenburge
Cemetery; m. JANE H. BOONE, November 09, 1836, Cumberland Co., KY?.

Notes for HEROD TURNER:
Stephen Smith, att of John Smith of Green Co. Ill to Herrod Turner of
Cumberland County land on Mud Camp except for 16 acres of an older claim
of James O'Banion 9-17-1841 K-106.  info from Kay Walker Peterson.  (I
believe this Stephen Smith is actually the son of John M. Smith, who was
married to Rachel Packwood, daughter of Samuel and Elizabeth Turner
Packwood.  Elizabeth Turner married Samuel Packwood in Virginia.  Rachel
married John M. Smith Oct. 20, 1802 in Patrick County, VA.  They moved to
Scottsville, Green County, Illinois, having received a letter from Samuel and
Elizabeth.  John Smith died in Green County, ILL in 1858, and Rachel died in
Cumberland County, KY in 1835.


More About HEROD TURNER:
Fact 2: 1840, Cumberland County, KY Census
Fact 3: lived in Monroe & Meade Counties, KY before moving to Arkansas
Fact 4: 1851, left Kentucky for Izard Co., Arkansas
Fact 5: 1850, Meade Co., KY Census
Fact 6: 1860, Arkansas Mortality--typhoid fever

More About JANE H. BOONE:
Fact 2: 1840, Cumberland County, KY Census age 29; married to Herod
Turner,1 T. child, 2 Lucke
Fact 3: 1830, Harrison Co., IN age 19
Fact 4: 1820, Harrison Co., IN age 9
Fact 5: 1850, Meade Co., KY Census, age 39, 5 T. children, 1 Luckett
Fact 6: 1860, Izard Co., AR Census, age 49, 4 children still at home

	x.	SUSAN A. TURNER, b. 1804, Henry County, Virginia; d.
April 03, 1857, Cumberland Co., KY; m. JOHN CARTER, 1828, Cumberland
Co., KY.

More About JOHN CARTER:
Fact 4: 1850, Cumberland Co., KY Census p. 247

	xi.	JOHN FOSTER TURNER, b. 1808, Virginia.
	xii.	EDMOND TURNER, b. 1810, Henry County, Virginia; d.
Cumberland Co., KY; m. (1) MARY MCBEE, 1833; m. (2) MARTHA J.
YOUNG, Aft. 1833.

More About EDMOND TURNER:
Fact 4: 1850, Cumberland Co., KY Census p.227

	xiii.	SHADRACK TURNER, b. 1813-1819, Henry County,
Virginia; d. Aft. 1880; m. (1) ANN ELIZABETH HAYS, 1840; m. (2)
REBECCA PAGE, Aft. 1854.

11.  SHADRACK4 TURNER (MESHACK3, JOHN2, RICHARD1).  He
married ?.


	Child of SHADRACK TURNER and ? is:
	i.	RICHARD5 TURNER, m. ?.

12.  JAMES4 TURNER (MESHACK3, JOHN2, RICHARD1) was born 1772
in Halifax County, Virginia, and died in Cobb County, Georgia.  He married
SARAH COLEMAN.


	Children of JAMES TURNER and SARAH COLEMAN are:
	i.	SARAH W.5 TURNER, b. 1794, Wilkes County, Georgia; m.
FRANCIS B. BILLINGSLEA (BILLINGSLEY).
	ii.	JAMES TURNER, b. 1798, Wilkes County, Georgia.
	iii.	JOHN TURNER, b. 1800, Wilkes County, Georgia.
	iv.	DANIEL CALHOUN TURNER, b. 1802, Wilkes County,
Georgia.
	v.	MESHACK TURNER, b. Abt. 1804, Wilkes County, Georgia.
	vi.	MARTHA COLEMAN TURNER, b. 1812, Wilkes County,
Georgia.
	vii.	MANUEL TURNER, b. Abt. 1814, Wilkes County, Georgia.

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The end of this compilation.