Hall family
HALL FAMILY
Tennessee and Virginia records.
Bible Records and Marriage Bonds by Acklin.
p-1 Marriages solemnized by Robt. Boyle C. Howell, Norfolk, Va. (In the country)
Feb. 9, 1830, Cornelius Hodges to Miss Ellen Hall.
p-4 Marriages solemnized by Robt. Boyle E. Howell. 1834 through Dec. 1849, in Nashville, Tennessee.
Dec. 4, 1844, Edward Hall to Miss Mahala Craig.
p-6 Marriages solemnized by Robt. Boyle C. Howell. May 1850 through July 1859 in Richmond, Mo.
Nov. 20, 1851, Ambrose F. Ransom to Miss Ethel Hall.
p-9 Nov. 14, 1856, D. L. Hall to Miss Elizabeth M. J. Butler.
p-45 Records from David Young, Sr. Bible in possession of great-grandson, Mr. Ben Young, Shop Springs, Wilson County, Tenn.
Wm. Dewitt Clinton Gwynn and Mary Blanche Hall, married Feb. 22, 1872.
Wm. Dewitt Clinton Gwynn died July 15, 1879. Mary Blanche Hall, wife of W. D. C. Gwynn died July 22, 1907.
Mary Blanche Hall, wife of W. D. C. Gwynn, b. Nov. 11, 1860, Harris County, Texas.
p-130 Steele Family History.
Nancy Steele, who married Charles Hall.
p-190 Eve (family records)
Oswell Bones, married Ann Helen Hall; issue, Ben Hall, John P., Robert C., and Oswell.
p-213. The following records have been copies at various times by members of the family prior to the destruction by fire, of the original Barnwell family Bible, and have been placed in more recent Bible where they may be found at the present time. Mrs. Rainey I. Hall, Rebecca Jane Barnhill to Rainey I. Hall, Nov. 11, 1886.
p-223 Abstract of will of Thomas Lenoir I 14th day of May 1765, Dated probated, July court, 1765. Testee: James Hall. Parish of St. Mary’s in the province of North Carolina Brunswick County, Va., abstract of Will of Robert Lenoir. Date of will: Oct. 30, 1792: date probated, June 24, 1793, Leah Hall was a dau.
p-236 From Diary of Rev. John Beard circuit rider.
Father of James Newton Beard, married John Hall and Mary Pillow, April 21, 1833, married Richard D. Curd and Emily Hall, Dec. 12, 1833.
married Charles Hall and Polly ___ [sic]
p-276 Family records of Capt. William Alexander.
Mary Brandon Alexander married Gov. William Hall.
p-278 Same record as above.
Mary Brandon, b. Nov. 11, 1749; died Sept. 1834 in Tennessee.
See record in Bible now in possession of the son of Judge William Hall, deceased. Wm. Hall V Brandon Family Records.
Mary Brandon, b. Nov. 11, 1749; died Sept 1834; married Jan. 21, 1769, to William Alexander, b. Dec. 25, 1746, died Aug. 4, 1830. She was a dau. of Richard Brandon, died (will dated April 15, 1770, probated 1790 Rowan County, N. C. field in will book C, page 14); married Margaret Locke.
p-280 Doaks of Virginia
John Doak moved to North Carolina, married, His daughter, Thankful baptized June 30, 1743, married Major William Hall and became mother of William Hall, b. 1775, seventh Governor of Tennessee. He married Mary B. Alexander, oldest dau. Mary Hall married Capt. John Morgan. Elizabeth Doak, baptized May 14, 1747, married Nathaniel Hall, son of William and Janet Hall.
Hall Family Record.
The Hall family is one of the most distinguished in Tennessee and North Carolina records. Several members of this family made the supreme sacrifice in the endeavor to open the New Country which we now call Tennessee. One son of the family became a Governor of Tennessee, and many served in the Revolution. It has been difficult to follow the early history of the family as some historians have confused the history of the Major William Hall family with that of Robert Hall, who was an early settler and a prominent citizen of Pennsylvania. Major William Hall was however a son of Richard Hall, who was born in Ireland and emigrated to Virginia.
Richard Hall
Richard Hall, born in Ireland, emigrated to Virginia. He served in Virginia in 1751 in the French and Indian War and in 1771 in the militia in North Carolina. He is said to have had eleven children, but the record preserved in the family Bible of one descendant gives the names of four children only. They were:
William Hall and Sarah Hall. [sic]
p-281. The Virginia State census from 1782 to 1785 gives his residence in Fluvarra County. Major William Hall was born in Virginia about 1740. He married Thankful Doak, also of a Virginia family some members of which removed to North Carolina. major William Hall and Thankful Doak lived in Surry Co., N. C. for several years before the Revolution. Major Hall was appointed major of Surry County militia by the Provincial Congress of North Carolina. Sept. 9, 1775. This is a colonial record. He was member of the provincial congress from Surry County, 1776. He was a member of the Committee of Safety, Sept. 20, 1775, and Dec. 18, 1776. In 1779 he sold his possessions in Surry County and removed to what is now upper East Tennessee and was then New River, Virginia, settling at a place called Hall’s Bottom. He lived on this place for five years, when he received for military service during the Revolution a grant of land I Sumner County, Tenn., and removed to that county in 1784. His oldest son, James Hall, was killed by Indians shortly after the arrival of the family in Sumner County. Major William Hall and another son, Richard Hall, were killed by the Indians Aug. 6, 1786. The husband of his daughter, Mary Hall, Capt. John Morgan, father brother were killed, other members of the family barely escaped with their lives and the record is one of the most heroic and sacrificing in Tennessee’s history. Major William Hall was pierced by thirteen wounds when he was killed and scalped; his two youngest children, Prudence and John, escaped; William Jr., the future Governor after fighting desperately, and the escaped mother, Thankful Doak Hall, escaped in a strange manner. She was riding a large and powerful horse at the time of the attack, and frightened by the noise and fighting, he ran a mile with her, thus saving her life. At the time of the attack the family were in route from their home to the fort for protection. They had gone only half mile from their house when the massacre took place.
Reference for the foregoing statements: For appointment as major 1775. North Carolina records, Vol. V, page 206; for service in Provincial congress, North Carolina, North Carolina Records, Vol V, page 931; for service on Committee of Safety, North Carolina Records, Vol. V, page 974, Indians, Ramsey’s Annals, page 394, 463, also History of Sumner County, Tenn., and statement of Governor William Hall, son of Major William Hall. The children of Major William Hall and Thankful Doak Hall were:
Mary Hall, married Captain John Morgan.
James Hall killed by Indians 1785; the first white person killed in what is now Middle Tennessee.
Richard Hall, killed by Indians when his father was killed Aug. 5, 1786.
Sarah Hall married Andrew Lynum and James Anderson.
William Hall married Mary Alexander, and was Governor of Tennessee; born 1773.
John Hall and Prudence Hall.
Thankful Hall II, married Charles Morgan. (These names may not be given in exact order of birth.)
p-281 Capt. John Morgan, who married Mary Hall, daughter, of Maj. William Hall and Thankful Doak Hall, He and famiy moved to Sumner County, Tenn. in 1784 wit his father-in-law, Major Hall. He had married was a fine young man and very popular with the settlers, was killed from ambush at Southwest Pass, while piloting a party of emigrants from Knoxville. Capt. John Morgan or Capt. Charles Morgan, husband of Thankful Hall, was wounded by the Indians at the time Major Hall and his son Richard were killed. His son, James, had been killed shortly before this. The children of Capt. John Morgan and Mary Hall Morgan are:
Nancy, married James Bright.
Patsy, married George Gillespie; lived near Franklin, Tenn.
Malinda, married Francis Porterfield, of Fayetteville, afterwards of Nashville.
Susan, married Dr. Davis.
Polly, married James Fulton.
Thankful, married John Cage, son of Maj. William Cage and Elizabeth Douglass Cage, of Sumner County.
These daughters were said to be quite handsome and sensible.
His sons were: Hiram, John H., Dan (who died young) and Charles A., prominent citizen of Sumner County. Capt. Morgan’s eldest daughter, Nancy’s husband, James Bright, was a surveyor of Kentucky, but settled at Fayetteville, Lincoln County, Tenn. Capt. Morgan at Mulberry, near Fayetteville. He died in 1820 as reported by one of his descendants. Although “Historic Sumner County” by Cisco, was buried in his garden at Mulberry, on the breaking out of the Creek War, Capt. Morgan raised a company of mounted troops and joined Gen. Jackson at the rendezvous at Huntsville, Ala. He was a large, handsome man, with noble features and gray hair that hung down his shoulders, and when he rode through Fayetteville at the head of his company his appearance and the occasion was never forgotten by those who witnessed it, and is one of the traditions of the town.” He was well advanced in years, but he said: “A man should never get too old to fight the British and Indians.” His wife Mary Hall Morgan, had black eyes that flashed at the mention of either, but could one expect differently of her whose father (Maj. William Hall) and two brothers (James and Richard), father-in-law (Esquire John Morgan) two brothers-in-law (Charles and Armstead Morgan) were all killed by Indians? Mary Hall Morgan died in 1850, about 90 years of age, at the home of her daughter, Polly and her husband, Col. James Fulton, in Fayetteville, and was buried in the old Fayetteville Cemetery at the Presbyterian church.
p-288 Ancestors of Thankful Berry Harsh (Mrs. George Harsh) who was the great-great-grandson? (dau) [sic] of Maj. Hall and Thankful Doak Hall, before leaving North Carolina moved with the Halls to Sumner County but later settled in Mulberry near Fayetteville, Tenn. Capt. Morgan died in the 30's and was buried near Mulberry. His wife Mary Hall Morgan, survived him until 1850 and was buried in the old cemetery at Fayetteville, where their grandson Gen. John and Mary Hall Morgan Bright lived.
John Cage, son of Maj. Wm. and Elizabeth Douglas Cage, married Thankful Morgan, daughter of Capt. John and Mary Hall Morgan. Mary Priscilla Cage, daughter of John and Thankful Morgan Cage, married Daniel Berry.
p-292 Dugger Records.
Julius Dugger, Jr. b. Sept. 9, 1760. His wife, Mary Hall, formerly of Rockbridge County, Va., married 1779. Mary Hall Dugger died March 1838.
Julius Dugger d. July 1838.
Children of Julius Dugger, Jr. and Mary Hall Dugger:
John Dugger, Sr. b. Oct. 1, 1780, Wilkes County, N. C. where Wilkesboro is located; died Aug. 2, 1869. His wife Mary Engle, b. Dec. 22, 1785; d. Feb. 7, 1869.
Nancy Dugger, b. Oct 31, 1782; husband, James George.
William Dugger, b. Sept. 7, 1784; d. unmarried. Jan. 13, 1875.
Abel Dugger, b. Dec. 29, 1786; wife Jennie Jenkins.
Julius Dugger, b. 1789; died Jan. 10, 1850. husband, Elisha Rainbolt, married 1817.
Charlotte Dugger, b. Nov. 6. 1791; husband, Thomas Anderson.
Margaret (Peggy) Dugger, b. May 22, 1798; died April 20, 1876; unmarried.
Polly or Mary Dugger B. Aug. 18, 1800; died Sept 13, 1875; husband, Michael Pierce, d. March 4, 1876.
p-317 Crockett and Nelson Bibles. Family Bibles owned by Mrs. Stella Nelson, 221 Oak St., Murfreesboro, Tenn.
Allen Battle Crockett and Louisa Hall married April 17, 1851.
p-223 Genealogical Register of Births, Marriages, and Deaths of James and Elizabeth Hall and their family. Taken at his home on the banks of the Watauga River one-half miles from Holston River in Washington County, Tenn., on this Tuesday October 6, 1818.
Nathaniel Hall married Elizabeth Doak. James, son of Nathaniel and Elizabeth Hall, was born in Rockbridge County, Virginia, on the North Fork of James River, now Virginia on Feb. 25, 1776, Elizabeth Biddle, daughter of Thomas and Sallie Biddle, was born in North Chucky River, a water then called Big Limestone, in Washington County, Tennessee, Dec. 15, 1783.
James Hall and Elizabeth Biddle were married by Samuel Doak, a Presbyterian minister in Jonesboro and its vicinity at her father’s home on Nolathucky River, Washington County, Tenn., Nov. 13, 1800.
Their offspring:
Sallie Hall, b. Oct. 13, 1801; married William King.
John Hall, born July 17, 1803; died while young.
p-324.
Thomas Hall, born June 1, 1804; married his cousin, Peggy Hall.
Jane Hall, born Mar. 16, 1806; married Mr. Baird.
Nathaniel Hall, b. Nov. 18, 1807; married Rachel Nelson; moved to Ohio.
Samuel Doak Hall, born Sept. 8, 1809; married Janet Stephens.
Nancy Hall, b. May 20, 1811; married Mr. Odell.
Polly Hall, born Feb. 19, 1813; married Amos Holoway.
Elizabeth Hall, b. Jan. 9, 1815; died young.
Peggy Hall, b. June 6, 1817; died young unmarried.
Lucinda Hall, bo. June 15, 1819; married Edward Hodge.
James Hall, born Sept. 13, 1821; married Elizabeth Snyder.
William Hall, b. June 15, 1823; died young.
Eliza Ann Hall, b. June 9, 1826; died young.
Edmon Hall, b. Feb. 2, 1828.
p-358 Beesley Family Bible
marriages –
Charles Beesley to Mary Hall, Nov. 28, 1900.
p-372 Marriages Records of Knox County, Tenn.
James Crippin to Patsey Hall, Mar. 28, 1808
p-374 Stephen Childness to Sally Hall; June 10, 1810.
p-376 David Hall to Rebecca Wilkerson; Feb. 10, 1813.
p-377 Phillip Edington to Betsey Hall; Feb. 12, 1814.
p 382 Obadiah Hall to Sarah Bayles; April 29, 1818.
p-387 James Hall to Elizabeth Pensley; June 24, 1822
p-289 Samuel Hackworth to Polly Hall; June 16, 1824.
p-393 M. S. Hall to Adaline McCampbell; Jan. 20, 1836
p-397 Marriage Records of Dickson County, Tennessee 1838 - 1849
Clayton T. Hall to Martha S. White.
p-399 Oct. 23, 1839, Henry Hall to Sarah Ferrell. Ex. Oct 23, H. W. Joslin, M. G.
p. 402 Nov. 24, 1841 Harvey Nesbitt to Mary V. Hall, Jan 27, 1842, N. M. Hall to Martha J. Cunningham, Ex. Jan 27, M. B. Sturt, J. P.
p-404 Moses A. Sutton to Emeline M. Hall, Ex. Sept. 5, 1843. John Eubank, J. P.
p-407 July 17, 1845, William Hall to Nancy Carroll, Ex. C. Roaker, L. E. M. E. Church, July 17, 1845
p-409 June 23, 1847 Mathew P. Hall to Sarah C. Jackson, Ex. C. Roaker, June 30, 1847.
p-411 April 13, 1848. James H. Hall to Louisiana T. Richardson. Ex. April 15, J. T. Paschall, J. P.
p-429 Marriage Bonds - Lebanon, Wilson County, Tennessee
Nov. 10, 1812 John Morrow to Sally Hall, Test John Allcorn, Surety, John Morrow & Charles Fox.
p-431 Dec. 19, 1814, William Hall to Martha Willard, Surety, William Hall and James Willard.
p-436 Jan. 14, 1816 Drury Hall to Sally Thrower, Test. John Allcorn, Surety, A. Harris, J. P.
p-441 Feb. 11, 1817, Joseph Hall to Rebecca Archer, Test. F. G. Crutcher, Surety, Joseph Hall and Prescot Mitchel.
p-444 April 8, 1818 Thomas Marlow to Lucy Hall, Surety, T. M. & Peyton Marlow.
p-451 Sept. 8, 1819, Bennett W. Hall to Malinda Bradshaw, by James Cross, J. P., Surety Bennett W. Hall & C. ___ Lewis.
p-456 Lebanon County Marriage bonds.
Jno. M. Hall Surety at marriage of Abraham Keeton to Jane Hughes, Sept. 4, 1820.
p-461 Sept. 8, 1836, William Hall to Polly Hall, Surety James Ramsey.
p-466 Jno. N. Hall Surety at marriage of Larkin Keeton to Mary Willard, Dec. 8, 1825.
Tennessee and Virginia records.
Bible Records and Marriage Bonds by Acklin.
p-1 Marriages solemnized by Robt. Boyle C. Howell, Norfolk, Va. (In the country)
Feb. 9, 1830, Cornelius Hodges to Miss Ellen Hall.
p-4 Marriages solemnized by Robt. Boyle E. Howell. 1834 through Dec. 1849, in Nashville, Tennessee.
Dec. 4, 1844, Edward Hall to Miss Mahala Craig.
p-6 Marriages solemnized by Robt. Boyle C. Howell. May 1850 through July 1859 in Richmond, Mo.
Nov. 20, 1851, Ambrose F. Ransom to Miss Ethel Hall.
p-9 Nov. 14, 1856, D. L. Hall to Miss Elizabeth M. J. Butler.
p-45 Records from David Young, Sr. Bible in possession of great-grandson, Mr. Ben Young, Shop Springs, Wilson County, Tenn.
Wm. Dewitt Clinton Gwynn and Mary Blanche Hall, married Feb. 22, 1872.
Wm. Dewitt Clinton Gwynn died July 15, 1879. Mary Blanche Hall, wife of W. D. C. Gwynn died July 22, 1907.
Mary Blanche Hall, wife of W. D. C. Gwynn, b. Nov. 11, 1860, Harris County, Texas.
p-130 Steele Family History.
Nancy Steele, who married Charles Hall.
p-190 Eve (family records)
Oswell Bones, married Ann Helen Hall; issue, Ben Hall, John P., Robert C., and Oswell.
p-213. The following records have been copies at various times by members of the family prior to the destruction by fire, of the original Barnwell family Bible, and have been placed in more recent Bible where they may be found at the present time. Mrs. Rainey I. Hall, Rebecca Jane Barnhill to Rainey I. Hall, Nov. 11, 1886.
p-223 Abstract of will of Thomas Lenoir I 14th day of May 1765, Dated probated, July court, 1765. Testee: James Hall. Parish of St. Mary’s in the province of North Carolina Brunswick County, Va., abstract of Will of Robert Lenoir. Date of will: Oct. 30, 1792: date probated, June 24, 1793, Leah Hall was a dau.
p-236 From Diary of Rev. John Beard circuit rider.
Father of James Newton Beard, married John Hall and Mary Pillow, April 21, 1833, married Richard D. Curd and Emily Hall, Dec. 12, 1833.
married Charles Hall and Polly ___ [sic]
p-276 Family records of Capt. William Alexander.
Mary Brandon Alexander married Gov. William Hall.
p-278 Same record as above.
Mary Brandon, b. Nov. 11, 1749; died Sept. 1834 in Tennessee.
See record in Bible now in possession of the son of Judge William Hall, deceased. Wm. Hall V Brandon Family Records.
Mary Brandon, b. Nov. 11, 1749; died Sept 1834; married Jan. 21, 1769, to William Alexander, b. Dec. 25, 1746, died Aug. 4, 1830. She was a dau. of Richard Brandon, died (will dated April 15, 1770, probated 1790 Rowan County, N. C. field in will book C, page 14); married Margaret Locke.
p-280 Doaks of Virginia
John Doak moved to North Carolina, married, His daughter, Thankful baptized June 30, 1743, married Major William Hall and became mother of William Hall, b. 1775, seventh Governor of Tennessee. He married Mary B. Alexander, oldest dau. Mary Hall married Capt. John Morgan. Elizabeth Doak, baptized May 14, 1747, married Nathaniel Hall, son of William and Janet Hall.
Hall Family Record.
The Hall family is one of the most distinguished in Tennessee and North Carolina records. Several members of this family made the supreme sacrifice in the endeavor to open the New Country which we now call Tennessee. One son of the family became a Governor of Tennessee, and many served in the Revolution. It has been difficult to follow the early history of the family as some historians have confused the history of the Major William Hall family with that of Robert Hall, who was an early settler and a prominent citizen of Pennsylvania. Major William Hall was however a son of Richard Hall, who was born in Ireland and emigrated to Virginia.
Richard Hall
Richard Hall, born in Ireland, emigrated to Virginia. He served in Virginia in 1751 in the French and Indian War and in 1771 in the militia in North Carolina. He is said to have had eleven children, but the record preserved in the family Bible of one descendant gives the names of four children only. They were:
William Hall and Sarah Hall. [sic]
p-281. The Virginia State census from 1782 to 1785 gives his residence in Fluvarra County. Major William Hall was born in Virginia about 1740. He married Thankful Doak, also of a Virginia family some members of which removed to North Carolina. major William Hall and Thankful Doak lived in Surry Co., N. C. for several years before the Revolution. Major Hall was appointed major of Surry County militia by the Provincial Congress of North Carolina. Sept. 9, 1775. This is a colonial record. He was member of the provincial congress from Surry County, 1776. He was a member of the Committee of Safety, Sept. 20, 1775, and Dec. 18, 1776. In 1779 he sold his possessions in Surry County and removed to what is now upper East Tennessee and was then New River, Virginia, settling at a place called Hall’s Bottom. He lived on this place for five years, when he received for military service during the Revolution a grant of land I Sumner County, Tenn., and removed to that county in 1784. His oldest son, James Hall, was killed by Indians shortly after the arrival of the family in Sumner County. Major William Hall and another son, Richard Hall, were killed by the Indians Aug. 6, 1786. The husband of his daughter, Mary Hall, Capt. John Morgan, father brother were killed, other members of the family barely escaped with their lives and the record is one of the most heroic and sacrificing in Tennessee’s history. Major William Hall was pierced by thirteen wounds when he was killed and scalped; his two youngest children, Prudence and John, escaped; William Jr., the future Governor after fighting desperately, and the escaped mother, Thankful Doak Hall, escaped in a strange manner. She was riding a large and powerful horse at the time of the attack, and frightened by the noise and fighting, he ran a mile with her, thus saving her life. At the time of the attack the family were in route from their home to the fort for protection. They had gone only half mile from their house when the massacre took place.
Reference for the foregoing statements: For appointment as major 1775. North Carolina records, Vol. V, page 206; for service in Provincial congress, North Carolina, North Carolina Records, Vol V, page 931; for service on Committee of Safety, North Carolina Records, Vol. V, page 974, Indians, Ramsey’s Annals, page 394, 463, also History of Sumner County, Tenn., and statement of Governor William Hall, son of Major William Hall. The children of Major William Hall and Thankful Doak Hall were:
Mary Hall, married Captain John Morgan.
James Hall killed by Indians 1785; the first white person killed in what is now Middle Tennessee.
Richard Hall, killed by Indians when his father was killed Aug. 5, 1786.
Sarah Hall married Andrew Lynum and James Anderson.
William Hall married Mary Alexander, and was Governor of Tennessee; born 1773.
John Hall and Prudence Hall.
Thankful Hall II, married Charles Morgan. (These names may not be given in exact order of birth.)
p-281 Capt. John Morgan, who married Mary Hall, daughter, of Maj. William Hall and Thankful Doak Hall, He and famiy moved to Sumner County, Tenn. in 1784 wit his father-in-law, Major Hall. He had married was a fine young man and very popular with the settlers, was killed from ambush at Southwest Pass, while piloting a party of emigrants from Knoxville. Capt. John Morgan or Capt. Charles Morgan, husband of Thankful Hall, was wounded by the Indians at the time Major Hall and his son Richard were killed. His son, James, had been killed shortly before this. The children of Capt. John Morgan and Mary Hall Morgan are:
Nancy, married James Bright.
Patsy, married George Gillespie; lived near Franklin, Tenn.
Malinda, married Francis Porterfield, of Fayetteville, afterwards of Nashville.
Susan, married Dr. Davis.
Polly, married James Fulton.
Thankful, married John Cage, son of Maj. William Cage and Elizabeth Douglass Cage, of Sumner County.
These daughters were said to be quite handsome and sensible.
His sons were: Hiram, John H., Dan (who died young) and Charles A., prominent citizen of Sumner County. Capt. Morgan’s eldest daughter, Nancy’s husband, James Bright, was a surveyor of Kentucky, but settled at Fayetteville, Lincoln County, Tenn. Capt. Morgan at Mulberry, near Fayetteville. He died in 1820 as reported by one of his descendants. Although “Historic Sumner County” by Cisco, was buried in his garden at Mulberry, on the breaking out of the Creek War, Capt. Morgan raised a company of mounted troops and joined Gen. Jackson at the rendezvous at Huntsville, Ala. He was a large, handsome man, with noble features and gray hair that hung down his shoulders, and when he rode through Fayetteville at the head of his company his appearance and the occasion was never forgotten by those who witnessed it, and is one of the traditions of the town.” He was well advanced in years, but he said: “A man should never get too old to fight the British and Indians.” His wife Mary Hall Morgan, had black eyes that flashed at the mention of either, but could one expect differently of her whose father (Maj. William Hall) and two brothers (James and Richard), father-in-law (Esquire John Morgan) two brothers-in-law (Charles and Armstead Morgan) were all killed by Indians? Mary Hall Morgan died in 1850, about 90 years of age, at the home of her daughter, Polly and her husband, Col. James Fulton, in Fayetteville, and was buried in the old Fayetteville Cemetery at the Presbyterian church.
p-288 Ancestors of Thankful Berry Harsh (Mrs. George Harsh) who was the great-great-grandson? (dau) [sic] of Maj. Hall and Thankful Doak Hall, before leaving North Carolina moved with the Halls to Sumner County but later settled in Mulberry near Fayetteville, Tenn. Capt. Morgan died in the 30's and was buried near Mulberry. His wife Mary Hall Morgan, survived him until 1850 and was buried in the old cemetery at Fayetteville, where their grandson Gen. John and Mary Hall Morgan Bright lived.
John Cage, son of Maj. Wm. and Elizabeth Douglas Cage, married Thankful Morgan, daughter of Capt. John and Mary Hall Morgan. Mary Priscilla Cage, daughter of John and Thankful Morgan Cage, married Daniel Berry.
p-292 Dugger Records.
Julius Dugger, Jr. b. Sept. 9, 1760. His wife, Mary Hall, formerly of Rockbridge County, Va., married 1779. Mary Hall Dugger died March 1838.
Julius Dugger d. July 1838.
Children of Julius Dugger, Jr. and Mary Hall Dugger:
John Dugger, Sr. b. Oct. 1, 1780, Wilkes County, N. C. where Wilkesboro is located; died Aug. 2, 1869. His wife Mary Engle, b. Dec. 22, 1785; d. Feb. 7, 1869.
Nancy Dugger, b. Oct 31, 1782; husband, James George.
William Dugger, b. Sept. 7, 1784; d. unmarried. Jan. 13, 1875.
Abel Dugger, b. Dec. 29, 1786; wife Jennie Jenkins.
Julius Dugger, b. 1789; died Jan. 10, 1850. husband, Elisha Rainbolt, married 1817.
Charlotte Dugger, b. Nov. 6. 1791; husband, Thomas Anderson.
Margaret (Peggy) Dugger, b. May 22, 1798; died April 20, 1876; unmarried.
Polly or Mary Dugger B. Aug. 18, 1800; died Sept 13, 1875; husband, Michael Pierce, d. March 4, 1876.
p-317 Crockett and Nelson Bibles. Family Bibles owned by Mrs. Stella Nelson, 221 Oak St., Murfreesboro, Tenn.
Allen Battle Crockett and Louisa Hall married April 17, 1851.
p-223 Genealogical Register of Births, Marriages, and Deaths of James and Elizabeth Hall and their family. Taken at his home on the banks of the Watauga River one-half miles from Holston River in Washington County, Tenn., on this Tuesday October 6, 1818.
Nathaniel Hall married Elizabeth Doak. James, son of Nathaniel and Elizabeth Hall, was born in Rockbridge County, Virginia, on the North Fork of James River, now Virginia on Feb. 25, 1776, Elizabeth Biddle, daughter of Thomas and Sallie Biddle, was born in North Chucky River, a water then called Big Limestone, in Washington County, Tennessee, Dec. 15, 1783.
James Hall and Elizabeth Biddle were married by Samuel Doak, a Presbyterian minister in Jonesboro and its vicinity at her father’s home on Nolathucky River, Washington County, Tenn., Nov. 13, 1800.
Their offspring:
Sallie Hall, b. Oct. 13, 1801; married William King.
John Hall, born July 17, 1803; died while young.
p-324.
Thomas Hall, born June 1, 1804; married his cousin, Peggy Hall.
Jane Hall, born Mar. 16, 1806; married Mr. Baird.
Nathaniel Hall, b. Nov. 18, 1807; married Rachel Nelson; moved to Ohio.
Samuel Doak Hall, born Sept. 8, 1809; married Janet Stephens.
Nancy Hall, b. May 20, 1811; married Mr. Odell.
Polly Hall, born Feb. 19, 1813; married Amos Holoway.
Elizabeth Hall, b. Jan. 9, 1815; died young.
Peggy Hall, b. June 6, 1817; died young unmarried.
Lucinda Hall, bo. June 15, 1819; married Edward Hodge.
James Hall, born Sept. 13, 1821; married Elizabeth Snyder.
William Hall, b. June 15, 1823; died young.
Eliza Ann Hall, b. June 9, 1826; died young.
Edmon Hall, b. Feb. 2, 1828.
p-358 Beesley Family Bible
marriages –
Charles Beesley to Mary Hall, Nov. 28, 1900.
p-372 Marriages Records of Knox County, Tenn.
James Crippin to Patsey Hall, Mar. 28, 1808
p-374 Stephen Childness to Sally Hall; June 10, 1810.
p-376 David Hall to Rebecca Wilkerson; Feb. 10, 1813.
p-377 Phillip Edington to Betsey Hall; Feb. 12, 1814.
p 382 Obadiah Hall to Sarah Bayles; April 29, 1818.
p-387 James Hall to Elizabeth Pensley; June 24, 1822
p-289 Samuel Hackworth to Polly Hall; June 16, 1824.
p-393 M. S. Hall to Adaline McCampbell; Jan. 20, 1836
p-397 Marriage Records of Dickson County, Tennessee 1838 - 1849
Clayton T. Hall to Martha S. White.
p-399 Oct. 23, 1839, Henry Hall to Sarah Ferrell. Ex. Oct 23, H. W. Joslin, M. G.
p. 402 Nov. 24, 1841 Harvey Nesbitt to Mary V. Hall, Jan 27, 1842, N. M. Hall to Martha J. Cunningham, Ex. Jan 27, M. B. Sturt, J. P.
p-404 Moses A. Sutton to Emeline M. Hall, Ex. Sept. 5, 1843. John Eubank, J. P.
p-407 July 17, 1845, William Hall to Nancy Carroll, Ex. C. Roaker, L. E. M. E. Church, July 17, 1845
p-409 June 23, 1847 Mathew P. Hall to Sarah C. Jackson, Ex. C. Roaker, June 30, 1847.
p-411 April 13, 1848. James H. Hall to Louisiana T. Richardson. Ex. April 15, J. T. Paschall, J. P.
p-429 Marriage Bonds - Lebanon, Wilson County, Tennessee
Nov. 10, 1812 John Morrow to Sally Hall, Test John Allcorn, Surety, John Morrow & Charles Fox.
p-431 Dec. 19, 1814, William Hall to Martha Willard, Surety, William Hall and James Willard.
p-436 Jan. 14, 1816 Drury Hall to Sally Thrower, Test. John Allcorn, Surety, A. Harris, J. P.
p-441 Feb. 11, 1817, Joseph Hall to Rebecca Archer, Test. F. G. Crutcher, Surety, Joseph Hall and Prescot Mitchel.
p-444 April 8, 1818 Thomas Marlow to Lucy Hall, Surety, T. M. & Peyton Marlow.
p-451 Sept. 8, 1819, Bennett W. Hall to Malinda Bradshaw, by James Cross, J. P., Surety Bennett W. Hall & C. ___ Lewis.
p-456 Lebanon County Marriage bonds.
Jno. M. Hall Surety at marriage of Abraham Keeton to Jane Hughes, Sept. 4, 1820.
p-461 Sept. 8, 1836, William Hall to Polly Hall, Surety James Ramsey.
p-466 Jno. N. Hall Surety at marriage of Larkin Keeton to Mary Willard, Dec. 8, 1825.