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Andrew Gardner Jackson

Andrew Gardner Jackson

Male Abt 1844 -

Generations:      Standard    |    Vertical    |    Compact    |    Box    |    Text    |    Ahnentafel    |    Fan Chart    |    Media    |    PDF

Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Andrew Gardner Jackson was born about 1844 (son of John Jay Jackson and Jane Elizabeth Beeson).

Generation: 2

  1. 2.  John Jay Jackson was born on 13 Feb 1800 in Wood County, WV (son of John George Jackson and Mary Coles Payne); died on 1 Jan 1877 in Wood County, WV.

    Notes:

    History of West Virginia and the People (The Lee Line). (IV) General John Jay Jackson, son of Hon. John George Jackson, was, like his father, eminent in both the law and the army. He was born in Wood county, Virginia. February 13, 1800. He passed his early life in Parkersburg, becoming identified with its village growth and its later municipal prosperity. His education was begun under Dr. David Creel, who subsequently resided in Chillicothe, Ohio, and was afterward conducted atone of the best schools in Virginia, taught by Dr. Tower at Clarksburg in Harrison county. Young Jackson was a very apt pupil, and at thirteen years of age was admitted to Washington College, Pennsylvania, where he remained for a year, when he was appointed by President James Monroe as a cadet to West Point, which institution he entered in 1815, graduating there from in 1818, in the nineteenth year of his age. He was at once commissioned as second lieutenant in the United States army and attached to the corps of artillery ordered to Norfolk, Virginia, where he performed garrison service until the latter part of the year 1819, being then transferred to the fourth infantry. In 1820 and 1821 he performed active service in Florida in the Seminole war, and while thus engaged was commissioned as adjutant and transferred to regimental headquarters at Montpelier, Alabama. At this place and at Pensacola he was a member of General Andrew Jackson's staff. In 1822 he visited Parkersburg on a six months' furlough, and about January 1, 1823, he resigned his commission in the army and turned his attention to law. He completed his preparatory course of study and was licensed to practice law in Virginia April 28, 1823. He soon reached the front ranks in his profession, maintaining his high position to the end of his career. He was in 1826 appointed prosecuting attorney of Wood county, in the county court, and in 1830 he was appointed to the same office in the circuit superior court, holding the position until 1852, when he retired. He was also prosecutor in the circuit supreme court of Ritchie county. For six several terms he served as representative from Wood county to the Virginia house of delegates, and in each of the legislatures to which he was returned he filled a prominent position. In 1842 he was commissioned brigadier-general of the twenty-third brigade of Virginia militia, remaining in this post until the outbreak of the civil war. In politics he belonged to the school of Clay and Webster, believing in the capability of the people for self rule. He was a member of the historic convention at Richmond in 1861 and eloquently upheld the Union, this being about his last public service, though he made various speeches during and after the war in which he advocated forbearance and reconciliation. He was active in every enterprise for the benefit of the community; when the Baltimore & Ohio railway sought right of way from the Potomac to the Ohio, he urged needed legislation, and was one of the earliest and largest contributors to the subscription stock toward the building of the Northwestern Virginia railroad. In later years his means and time were largely used to promote the improvement of the Little Kanawha river, forming a company which erected locks and dams to make it navigable the year round. He organized and was president of the Second National Bank of Parkersburg, and was at various times member of the municipal council and mayor of the city. He died January 1, 1877, leaving to posterity the memory of a fame which rested more upon his legal ability than his political successes. Like his cousin, "Stonewall" Jackson, he was a superb horseman; and like him was also temperate, persevering and purposeful, possessing unusual natural gifts. He was a member of the Episcopal church, and was for over forty years senior warden of Trinity parish. General Jackson married (first) Emma G. Beeson in 1823; she died in 1842; married (second) Jane E. B. Gardner in 1843. He was the father of five sons: Hon. Judge John Jay Jackson, United States District Judge James Monroe Jackson, Governor Jacob Beeson Jackson, Henry Clay Jackson and Andrew Gardner, of whom further. Also three daughters living at the time of his death: Mrs. William H. Small, Mrs. George W. Thompson, Mrs. William H. Smith.

    John married Jane Elizabeth Beeson on 17 Jul 1843 in Wood County, WV. Jane was born about 1820 in Pennsylvania. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  Jane Elizabeth Beeson was born about 1820 in Pennsylvania.
    Children:
    1. 1. Andrew Gardner Jackson was born about 1844.


Generation: 3

  1. 4.  John George Jackson was born on 22 Sep 1777 in near Buckhannon, WV (son of George Jackson and Elizabeth Brake); died on 29 Mar 1825 in Clarksburg, Harrison County, WV.

    Notes:

    History of West Virginia and the People (The Lee Line). (III) Hon. John George Jackson, son of Colonel George Jackson, was born near Buckhannon, Virginia, in 1774, died at Clarksburg, March 29, 1825. While he was still small he came with his father to Clarksburg. He received a liberal education for the times, and entered public life at an early age, being a member of the legislature by 1797. He was in 1793 appointed surveyor of government lands west of the Ohio, and was a member of all United States congresses from the eighth to the fourteenth inclusive, except the twelfth. Further he was a brigadier general of militia, and in 1819 he was appointed United States judge for the western district of Virginia, in which office he served until his death. His public career was one of marked ability, and it is said that he was the most remarkable man west of the mountains. In business, too, his interests were of the most varied character; he established many enterprises and developed the resources of the country to a degree truly surprising. He married (first) in the Executive Mansion, Washington, D. C., Mary, daughter of John and Mary (Coles) Payne, who was born about 1781, died February 13, 1808. Her sister was the wife of the president of the United States. the famous Dolly Madison, and this wedding was the first celebrated in the White House. John George Jackson married (second) Sophia, daughter of Return Jonathan Meigs (see Meigs). By his first marriage there was a daughter, Mary, who married Judge John Allen, of Virginia, and a son, John Jay, of whom further. By the second marriage there was a son, James Madison, of whom further.

    John married Mary Coles Payne in 1800 in Montpelier, Orange County, VA. Mary (daughter of John Payne and Mary W. Coles) was born in 1781; died on 13 Feb 1808. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 5.  Mary Coles Payne was born in 1781 (daughter of John Payne and Mary W. Coles); died on 13 Feb 1808.
    Children:
    1. Mary Elizabeth Payne Jackson was born on 7 Sep 1805 in Clarksburg, Harrison County, WV; died on 22 Mar 1881.
    2. 2. John Jay Jackson was born on 13 Feb 1800 in Wood County, WV; died on 1 Jan 1877 in Wood County, WV.
    3. Lucy Jackson was born in 1803 in Clarksburg, Harrison County, WV; died on 22 Jul 1806 in Clarksburg, Harrison County, WV.
    4. Dolly Jackson was born in Jul 1801 in Clarksburg, Harrison County, WV; died on 14 Jul 1806 in Clarksburg, Harrison County, WV.


Generation: 4

  1. 8.  George Jackson was born on 9 Jan 1757 in Cecil County, MD (son of John J. Jackson and Elizabeth Cummins); died on 17 May 1831 in Zanesville, Muskingum County, OH.

    Notes:

    19 Apr 1775, Entered service/Fought in the American Revolution
    Mar 1782, Indian Invasions of the Buchanan Valley-w/ Capt. White
    20 Jul 1784, Justice of the Peace
    1786-1790, Member of the Virginia Assembly
    Served 4-7th Congresses
    Built many schools and was Founder of Collins Settlement
    Trustee of Randolph Academy
    1795, Member of the Ohio Legislature
    Had slaves-Aaron, Cecilia, Malinda, Marg

    George married Elizabeth Brake on 13 Nov 1776. Elizabeth was born on 22 Feb 1757 in Moorefield, Hardy County, WV; died on 22 Mar 1812 in Harrison County, WV. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 9.  Elizabeth Brake was born on 22 Feb 1757 in Moorefield, Hardy County, WV; died on 22 Mar 1812 in Harrison County, WV.
    Children:
    1. 4. John George Jackson was born on 22 Sep 1777 in near Buckhannon, WV; died on 29 Mar 1825 in Clarksburg, Harrison County, WV.

  3. 10.  John Payne was born on 9 Feb 1739 in Goochland County, Virginia, USA (son of Josias Payne and Mary Anna Fleming); died on 24 Oct 1792 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA.

    John married Mary W. Coles in 1761 in Guilford County, NC. Mary (daughter of William Coles and Lucy Winston) was born on 14 Oct 1743; died on 20 Oct 1807 in Clarlsburg, Harrison, West Virginia, USA. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  4. 11.  Mary W. Coles was born on 14 Oct 1743 (daughter of William Coles and Lucy Winston); died on 20 Oct 1807 in Clarlsburg, Harrison, West Virginia, USA.

    Notes:

    Birth:
    "Coles Hill", Hanover, Virginia, USA

    Children:
    1. 5. Mary Coles Payne was born in 1781; died on 13 Feb 1808.
    2. John Coles Payne was born in 1782.
    3. Dorothea Dandridge (Dolley) Payne was born on 20 May 1768 in New Garden, Guilford, North Carolina, USA; died on 12 Jul 1849 in Layfayette Square, Washington, District of Columbia, USA; was buried in Madison Family Cemetery, Montpelier, Orange County, VA.
    4. Lucy Payne was born about 1777; died on 29 Jan 1846 in Megwillie, Jefferson, West Virginia, USA.
    5. Anna Payne was born on 11 Nov 1779 in New Gardens, Guilford, North Carolina, USA; died on 4 Aug 1832 in Washington City, District of Columbia, USA.
    6. William Temple Payne was born on 17 Jun 1766 in Guilford County, NC; died about Dec 1794 in Virginia, USA.
    7. Walter Payne was born on 15 Nov 1762 in Hanover County, Virginia, USA; died about 1785 in lost at sea.
    8. Philadelphia Payne was born after 9 Jul 1783 in Philadelphia, Philadelphia County, PA; died about 1786 in Philadelphia, Philadelphia County, PA.
    9. George Payne died in INFANT.
    10. Isaac Payne died about 1794 in Virginia, USA.