Julia Ann Holloman Bass Green (Julian?) was born on April 24 in 1785 in Wayne County, North Carolina, the mother of Col. Richard Bass. Death March 11, 1861 in Morehouse Parish, Louisiana,
What of Julia Ann's Holloman family?
Her father was Thomas Holloman (Holliman) - born in 1740 in Surry, Surry, Virginia, died in 1790 in Raleigh, Wake, North Carolina. Records on Ancestry.com show he lived in Johnston County, NC in 1784. These counties (Wayne, Johnston and Wake) are all in close proximity, and several were formed with shifting boundaries of neighboring counties.
Her mother is only known as Emaline, born in 1746.
Julia Ann is the youngest of 5 children in the family.
Julia Ann married John Bass on Oct. 8, 1805. John was born in 1784 in Wayne County, North Carolina, and died in 1822 in Perry, Alabama
His Bass family were early settlers in VA, with at least one marriage with a Nansemond Indian woman. I spoke of some of her Bass relations HERE. Of note is Dr. Andrew Bass (1698-1770) born in Norfolk Independent City, Nansemond County, Virginia, who donated the land for the court house of Waynesborough, Wayne County, NC. He was the great uncle of Julia Ann's husband, just as a note of interest as to the family's status in the community. However, history fluctuates a lot in a few generations, so perhaps that's a premature assumption of high standing of the Bass family.
Julia Ann had 8 children. The family moved to Perry County, Alabama between the births of Elizabeth on 9 Oct 1810 in Wayne County, NC and Molly Ann Moseley Bass on 18 Jun 1811 in Perry, Alabama. Julia Ann's youngest 4 children were born in Alabama.
My grandfather's mother's father was Richard Bass, Julia Ann and John Bass's youngest son.
I posted about Richard Bass earlier HERE. To quote myself:
His father's estate had a petition against it which gives Richard's birth as 1814. This date is not corroborated by his census data as well as his grave marker which all reflect an 1819 birth. So the legal petition in Alabama might have been wrong. Another source has him born in NC rather than AL. Wherever he was born, he was the youngest of 8 children of his parents, and his father died when he was very young, and he was raised by a step-father. His mother was Julia Ann Holloman Bass Green. Father was John Bass, both from Wayne County, NC, which is near where I currently live. His step-father was Jetson Green, who raised him from when he was around 6 years old.When John died in 1822 (or maybe earlier) the widow remarried to Jetson Green who petitioned the courts to settle the debts. The estate was inventoried at which time apparently there were slaves, household goods, land and 7 children. Jetson Green says he'd been married to 'Julian' since 1821. This is an interesting collection of documents to have survived, dated 1823 to 1830, regarding the debts on John's estate, how the widow needed guardianships for the young children, and another person (last name Holloman) signed Julian's name spelled that way, to one petition or letter. Julia Ann had two brothers and 2 sisters, and I cannot make out the first name of the signature.
Julia Ann was now Mrs. Green, and she didn't stay in Alabama. There was another westward move to Caldwell Parish, Louisiana where the Jetson Green family lived for the 1840 Census.
By 1850 she lived in Union Parish, LA as head of her own household with an overseer, L. Freeman and his family, but no Green family members listed. However, also noted is that on the 1850 Slave census, Mrs. Julia A. Green is listed as owner of 8 slaves, of whom 2 were females over 55 years old.
At a stated 70 years of age in the 1860 Census, Julia Ann lived with the Barton family (her daughter Elizabeth, known as Lizzie?) in Morehouse Parish, LA. She died there March 11, 1861.
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More Late April birthdays like Mark Symonds' death date on Apri 28, 1659. I'll share my earlier post about him tomorrow.
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