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My own life and my opinions are shared at When I was 69.

REMEMBER: In North America, the month of September 1752 was exceptionally short, skipping 11 days, when the Gregorian Calendar was adapted from the old Julian one, which didn't have leap year days.

Tuesday, May 25, 2021

Clack and Kindred Souls publication information

 A repost of a repost. The question that has come from "unknown" comments twice in the several years after I posted this, was "How do I get a copy of this document?"

Well I looked back at the 2015 resource which I'd saved to my Ancestry tree, and found it had come from another Ancestry member, who I don't know, nor believe I have any relationship to. RosalieBennettChruma

RosalieBennettChruma originally shared this on 25 Mar 2015


Look to the bottom of the original post which follows...I've added the introduction page which gives contact information for the authors.

 Thursday, August 16, 2018

One document explains it all

NOTE: a repost from my other blog...gathering the more recent blog posts into one place for access and organization!

My great times five uncle was Raleigh (Rolly) Robert Clack (1772-1842). His sister Catharine (Aunt Katy) Beulah Clack Rogers  (1778-1850) married Rev. Elijah Rogers, (1774-1841) who were my great times four grandparents, and they all lived in Sevier County, TN in its early settlement stages.

This week was the first time I looked at Great Uncle Rolly's family at all.  Maybe because it was so extensive!  He had 16 children, with two different wives at different times.  His first wife Mary Genieve Randles Clack (1770-1816) gave birth to 9 children.  He remarried within the year of her death to Martha Kerr Clack (1787-1858) who then gave birth to 7 more children of his.

Someone* wrote a book about his family, and most of those children spread out moving west to Missouri and Texas. The book is  Clack and Kindred Souls.  It has some good genealogical research including this one page which clarifies the marriages of Clack and Kerr family members in Sevier County in the early 19th century.  Without reading this page where the 4 Kerr/Clack marriages are laid out in simplicity, I would have just given up on understanding who was married to whom.



It is written with a bit of humor, which includes the various relationships of in-laws by having sisters and brothers of Great Uncle Rolly's wife marrying his older children.

I do wish I could find a document like this for many of the other families which married brothers/sisters etc.!! (That's a brother married a sister of the spouse of one person, not a brother married his sister!)

* Thanks to the authors of this book, Edna Clack Sacks and Joyce Kerr!


Sorry it's a bit blurry...Edna Clack Sachs of Spring City TN, and Joyce Kerr of Memphis TN...and they listed their email addresses as well...when they copyrighted the publication in June 2001.

Since I can't respond to any of these anonymous comments, I hope they look at this blog and get the information themselves.



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Looking forward to hearing from you! If you leave your email then others with similar family trees can contact you. Just commenting falls into the blogger dark hole; I'll gladly publish what you say just don't expect responses.