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Notes for Winefred STARLING | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Marriage 1 Winfred Starling b: 1720 in Halifax County,Virginia Children Edmund Camp b: 3 MAY 1738 in Halifax County,Virginia.Mary Camp b: 5 JAN 1740 in ,Orange,Va Joseph Camp b: 1741 inCulpeper,Culpeper County,Virginia Lucy Camp b: 1742 in Orange County,Virginia John Camp b: 13 OCT 1743 in Orange County,Virginia Alfred Camp b: 1744 in Culpepper County,Virginia Nathanial Camp b: 1745 in Orange County,Virginia Thomas Camp b:1747 in Halifax County,Virginia Starling Camp b: 1749 in Halifax County,Virginia Hosea Camp b: 25 FEB 1751 in Culpepper County,Virginia William Camp b: 1753 in Culpeper,Culpeper County,Virginia Benjamin Camp b: 1756 in Culpeper,Culpeper County,Virginia Elizabeth Camp b: 1759 in Culpeper,Culpeper County,Virginia Joel Camp b: 1761 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Notes for Thomas (Spouse 1) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
The National Society of the Daughters of the American Revolution Volume 162 page 43 Mrs. Lettie Abercrombie Harding. DAR IDNumber: 161140 Born in Douglas County, Ga. Wife of Samuel Coleman Harding. Descendant of Thomas Camp and of Benjamin Camp, as follows: 1. Thomas S. Abercrombie (1849-1919) m. 1869Martha V. Camp (1847-1900). 2. Thomas Camp (1800-57) m. 1820 Letitia Lindley (b. 1803). 3. Joseph Camp (1777-1850) m. 1799Elizabeth Camp (b. 1781). 4. Thomas Camp (b. 1765) m. 1780Susan Wagoner; Benjamin Camp m. 1776 Elizabeth Dykes (parentsof Joseph). 5. John Camp (1743-1813) m. 1764 Mary Tarpley (b.1746). 6. Thomas Camp m. 1st 1739 Winifred Starling (d. 1761).Thomas Camp (1717-98) was a patriot of the Revolution. He had five sons at the Battle of Kings Mountain. He was born in Culpeper County, Va.; died in Ireland Ford, N. C. Also No.158267. Benjamin Camp (1757-1832) served as private in the North Carolina troops at the Battle of Kings Mountain. He was born in Halifax County, Va.; died in Walton, Ga. Also No.151645. The National Society of the Daughters of the AmericanRevolution Volume 98 page 80 Miss Neva Riley Selman. DAR IDNumber: 97237 Born in Douglas County, Ga. Descendant of ThomasCamp, Benjamin Camp, James Selman, Jeremiah Selman, and Capt.William Scott, as follows: 1. James Wilson Selman (1843-1908)m. 1867 Lucinda Catherine Riley (1850- 1908). 2. William C.Selman (1811-91) m. 1836 Nancy Camp (1821-79); James Riley(1811-61) m. 1834 Lucinda Willingham (1812-99). 3. Thomas Camp(1800-57) m. Lettie Lindley (1803-72); James Selman m. 2nd 1804Elizabeth Covington; Charles Hardeman Willingham m. 1805 Annie Scott (1785-1850). 4. Joseph Camp (b. 1777) m. Elizabeth(Camp) (cousins); Jeremiah Selman m. - -; 5. Benjamin Camp m.Elizabeth Dykes (parents of Joseph); William Scott m. 1784 JaneThomas; Thomas Camp, Jr. m. Susie Wagner (parents of Elizabeth).6. Thomas Camp m. 1st Winnifred Starling. Thomas Camp (1717-98)was a patriot of the Revolution. He was born in Virginia,removed to Ireland Ford, N. C., before the Revolution, and isburied in the burying ground of the homestead. He had five sons at the battle of Kings Mountain. Benjamin Camp served as a private in Capt. Nathaniel Welch's company, 2nd Virginiaregiment. He was born, 1757, in Virginia; died in NorthCarolina. James Selman (1761-1847), when acting as scout, 1781,was captured by the Tories and Indians, who scalped him and left him for dead. He was born and died in Spartanburg, S. C.Also No. 32807. Jeremiah Selman served as militiaman in Colonel Roebuck's South Carolina regiment. He died, about 1817, in Spartanburg, S. C. William Scott (1754-1806) commanded acompany in the 3d Georgia battalion, under Lieut.-Col. John McIntosh, 1779. He was born in Louisa Parish, Va.; died in Monroe County, Ga. John Camp & his father Thomas, as well as many of Thomas' other sons were patriots of the American Revolution. Thomas was much to old to fight but it was said that he and his wife of the time, Margaret Carney gave supplies and rendered aid to the patriots of the revolution. There is a story circulating that Thomas Camp's home and grist mill in Rutherford were burned by the British Army for these acts. John Camp was a Lieutenant if the Continental Army and he and several of his brothers and other relatives, fought in the Battle of King's Mountain. A key battle in the victory of the war. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Last Modified 13 Aug 2004 | Created 29 Dec 2011 using Reunion for Macintosh |