From 2013...a repost for James Moore PowellJames Moore Powell (1791-1868) has a marker in Texas. He had been born in North Carolina.
Here's an 1850 census report from Louisiana, giving his wife's name, Nancy, and various children. Mary Ann Powell had already married Richard Bass, so doesn't appear in her parents' census. (I spoke of Mary Ann in yesterday's post.)
I noticed the neighbors (all farmers) were a family by the name of Traylor. I didn't think much of it until I saw 2 Traylor children listed as living with the Powells. Then as I noticed one of the Powell children grew up (over various census reports) and she married a man named Richard Bass, there were still these one or two Traylor children being part of the household.
Then when they moved to Texas and I again saw Traylors in the neighborhood as well as the household I went Ah Ha!!
The wife, Nancy, must have been a Traylor. And by looking at the originals of many census reports back and forth, there she was. Alabama, Louisiana, and finally Texas, she was Nancy Jones Traylor Powell (1804-1881). I guessed the neighbors to be her brothers, the ones who had all these other children...and one must have lost his wife or maybe some of the children were orphaned, so the Powell and the Bass families took them in. This was the way families took care of their own in the old South, and many still do.
I also have guessed some other neighbors might have had a sister Traylor marry and raise her family named Hill. Haven't got anything that connects these famlies for sure yet. This mystery solving has certainly attracted my attention.
It wasn't until I was telling a friend how I spent yesterday, that I realized the name sounds like trailer, so these days it might have the new-South connotation of trailer-trash. I wonder
And Nancy Jones Traylor Powell was listed with a surname (Jones) for her middle name. Doesn't that make me think her mother might have been a Jones? NJ Powell was my grandfather's great-grandmother.
I know these people have been gone for over a hundred years. But their bones that lie in those graves carry the same DNA as I have, and they have given me the gift of curiosity as well as creativity. Don't you know that's carried genetically? Why not? So this is where I'll be for a while.
Repost #2
Thursday, February 27, 2014
GG grandfather Powell in NC
James Moore Powellborn Feb 27, 1791 in Bertie County, North Carolina, USA
Also lived in Warrentown, Warren County, NC when 29
Then he married Nancy Jones Traylor on 20 Sept when he was 31 in Perry Alabama.
Then they moved with various family members to Dallas County, Alabama, where the state capitol had been laid out at Cahaba. This census of 1830 has him at 39, married with 2 children, in a household with 22 slaves, 9 of whom were children under 10 years old.
Then more families moved together to Union District, LA, for the census of 1840 his household consisted of James, his wife, and 4 children, one had died in 1838. The census of that year doesn't list slaves. Ten years later, Census of 1850, this is the same location of the family.
My great great grandmother, Mary Ann (Mae) Powell, had married Richard Bass by the time of the 1850 Census, so the children at home still are Travis 19, John 17, Wm 14, and Emily 1. Sons Lewis, John and Dr. William Pentecost POWELL have also moved out as they became adults.
The 1860 census finds the family living in Walker County, Texas, which is also where my GG grandmother was now living.
James Moore Powell died at age 77 in Old Waverly, Walker County, Texas.
Repost #3
Tuesday, February 27, 2018
James Moore Powell
Great great great grandfather James Moore Powell has a birthday on Feb 27, 1791 in Bertie County, North Carolina.
He was a soldier in the War of 1812, for the Seventh Company of the Warren County Regiment of North Carolina. He served in 1812, according to the muster rolls.
I covered his life, and that of his wife, Nancy Traylor Powell HERE, and here and Here! especially about their daughter, Mary Ann Elizabeth Powell Bass.
Incidentally, when I was 69 years old, I discovered my great grandmother after whom I was named, had been born 69 years before I was. And Nancy Traylor Powell had been born 69 years before she had, though she was on my father's side of my nuclear family.
This is NOT the home of the Powell family. Hope Plantation, built in 1803 near Windsor, Bertie County, North Carolina. The plantation house was built by David Stone, a member of the coastal Carolina planter class, later Governor of North Carolina and a United States Senator. I'm sharing it here because it was restored in the 1960s from a derelict condition and the property has other old buildings also restored.
The Powells were farming people who moved from one community to another throughout their lives. James Powell died on the same date as his birthday, Feb. 27 in 1868 in Walker County, Texas. So he and his family lived through the Civil War.
Walker County Texas also has some great historic sites to visit. The Texas on Line link is Here.
Ada & George Rogers Sr. and granddaughters Mary Elizabeth and Barbara Booth Rogers 1948 Houston TX. I'm adding this photo to posts in the George Rogers Family Tree.
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