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Elizabeth Kelly

Elizabeth Kelly

Female 1811 -

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

Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Elizabeth Kelly was born on 24 Feb 1811 in Franklin County, TN (daughter of Sims Kelly and Mary Camp).

Generation: 2

  1. 2.  Sims Kelly was born on 11 Mar 1784 in Wake County, NC.

    Sims married Mary Camp on 29 Jun 1808 in Warren County, GA. Mary (daughter of Samuel Camp and Mary Banks) was born on 20 Jan 1788 in Wilkes County, GA; died on 1 Sep 1864 in Calhoun, AL; was buried in Mt. Zion Church, Calhoun, AL. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  Mary Camp was born on 20 Jan 1788 in Wilkes County, GA (daughter of Samuel Camp and Mary Banks); died on 1 Sep 1864 in Calhoun, AL; was buried in Mt. Zion Church, Calhoun, AL.
    Children:
    1. Frances Kelly was born on 27 Jan 1813 in Franklin County, TN.
    2. James Sims Kelly was born on 2 Sep 1828 in Franklin County, TN.
    3. Martha Kelly was born on 11 Feb 1823 in Franklin County, TN.
    4. Mary Kelly was born on 25 Jan 1821 in Franklin County, TN.
    5. Nancy G. Kelly was born on 7 May 1819 in Franklin County, TN.
    6. Samuel Camp Kelly was born on 25 Mar 1825 in Franklin County, TN.
    7. Sarah Kelly was born on 29 Jul 1817 in Franklin County, TN.
    8. William Clark Kelly was born on 9 Jan 1815 in Franklin County, TN.
    9. Albert Gallatin Kelly was born on 17 Apr 1809 in Clarke County, GA.
    10. Ara Ann Byrd Kelly was born on 4 May 1830 in Franklin County, TN.
    11. Benjamin Gerard Kelly was born on 11 Dec 1826 in Franklin County, TN; was buried in Vernon, Wilbarger County, TX.
    12. 1. Elizabeth Kelly was born on 24 Feb 1811 in Franklin County, TN.
    13. Emmeline Amanda Kelly was born on 20 Apr 1832 in Franklin County, TN.


Generation: 3

  1. 6.  Samuel Camp was born on 14 May 1752 in Durham, Middlesex County, CT (son of Ichabod Camp and Content Ward); died on 18 Aug 1827 in Warren County, GA; was buried in Aug 1827 in Jewell, Warren County, GA.

    Notes:

    BURIAL: Directions to grave: Leave Warrenton, GA on Hwy. 16 going towards Sparta. Turn left on Road 123. Go appx. one mile. On the left will be an old farmhouse once painted green with several old trees in the side and back yards. Directly acrosss the road from the old house is a narrow farm lane lying between a pasture and a stretch of woods. The grave is about 100 yards west of Hwy. 123. Tombstone inscription: Revolutionary soldier, Samuel Camp, 1752-1827.

    Samuel married Mary Banks on 12 Nov 1776 in Amherst County, Virginia, USA. Mary (daughter of Gerrard Banks and Ann Stanton) was born on 5 Jun 1754 in Durham, Culpepper County, VA; died on 6 Jul 1800 in Warren County, GA; was buried in Jewell, Warren County, GA. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 7.  Mary Banks was born on 5 Jun 1754 in Durham, Culpepper County, VA (daughter of Gerrard Banks and Ann Stanton); died on 6 Jul 1800 in Warren County, GA; was buried in Jewell, Warren County, GA.

    Notes:

    Ray H Banks
    Birth info from D.A.R. Magazine, vol 43, p 545. The Intl Genealogical Index, batch 8330402, p 59 has b. 5 Jun 1753

    In the 20 Mar 1776 will of her father, Mary was left one or more slaves (Amherst Co., VA Will Book 1, p 315)

    On 12 Nov 1776, Mary married Samuel Camp. (Tyler's Quarterly Magazine, vol 15, p 244, quoting Amherst Co., VA Marriage Bonds)

    In Jul 1779, Mary's husband Samuel Camp wrote a letter from Albemarle Barracks (near Charlottesville VA where he was serving with the Amherst Co VA milita) in which he stated that his wife had lived all along with her father [presumably in Amherst Co..this probably indicates she was with him during Samuel's trip to Georgia in Nov 1778 and subsequently.] (Nell Jones Carter, Camp, Jones and Related Families, 1977, p 74)

    Mary is believed to be buried next to her husband in the sw corner of Warren Co., GA (Nell Jones Carter, Camp, Jones and Related Families, 1977, p 70.. She visited the grave site.)

    Death info from records of Margaret Grace Nuttall.

    Children:
    1. Cecellius Camp was born on 25 Nov 1779 in Amherst County, Virginia, USA; died on 10 Jun 1824 in Hancock County, GA.
    2. Claudsley Camp was born on 14 May 1781 in Amherst County, Virginia, USA; died on 10 Nov 1814 in Hancock County, GA.
    3. Elizabeth Camp was born on 10 Mar 1786 in Henry County, VA; died on 1 Aug 1810.
    4. Gerard Camp was born on 5 Dec 1794 in Warren County, GA; died on 5 Dec 1861 in Newton County, GA; was buried in Covington, GA.
    5. Hypsiphile Camp was born on 4 Feb 1792 in Wilkes County, GA; died in Putnam County, GA.
    6. 3. Mary Camp was born on 20 Jan 1788 in Wilkes County, GA; died on 1 Sep 1864 in Calhoun, AL; was buried in Mt. Zion Church, Calhoun, AL.
    7. Nancy Camp was born on 6 Feb 1784 in Henry County, VA.
    8. Sarah Camp was born on 1 Dec 1782 in Amherst County, Virginia, USA; died in Putnam County, GA.
    9. Sextus Camp was born on 16 Feb 1798 in Warren County, Georgia, USA; died on 25 Sep 1832 in Campbellton, Jackson, Florida, USA.
    10. Telemachus Camp was born on 15 Jan 1790 in Wilkes County, GA; died on 24 Oct 1849 in Edwardsville, Cleburne County, AL.
    11. Thaddeus Camp was born on 15 Nov 1777 in Amherst County, Virginia, USA; died on 29 Jun 1845 in Warren County, GA.


Generation: 4

  1. 12.  Ichabod Camp was born on 15 Feb 1725 in Durham, Middlesex, Connecticut, USA (son of John Camp and Phebe Canfield); died on 20 Apr 1786 in Kaskaskia, Fayette, Illinois, USA.

    Notes:

    He was a graduate of Yale College from which he received a B.A. and M.A. degree. He studied theology and was licensed to preach by the New Haven Association, 27 May 1746 and in the next year was preaching in Sharon, Connecticut. By the last of May 1748, however, he had abandoned the Congregational Ministry and was acting as Lay Reader to the churchmen of Wallingford and Middletown, until encouragement was given him by the Society for the Propagation of the Gospel to cross the ocean, which he did late in the year 1751. On 22 March 1752 he was ordained to the office of Deacon, and three days later to that of Priest, in London by Dr. John Thomas, Bishop of Lincoln. On March 26th he was licensed to execute his office in America by Dr. Sherlock, Bishop of London. He immediately returned to this country with a commission from the Propagation Society as Missionary to Middleton, Wallingford and Cheshire. The first service he held was at Wallingford, July 12. He had already been married to Content Ward, on the 26th of November 1749; and in August of 1754, he established his family in his own home in Middletown. His wife died there on the 29 December 1754. On the 6th of June 1757 he married in Boston, by the Rev. Henry Caner to Ann Oliver of Boston, who was probably the daughter of Antoine and Marie Olivier (French Huguenots) and was born at Annapolis, NS, 31 December 1727.

    He continued in Middletown until June, 1760, when he was induced by Gov. Dobbs of North Carolina to remove to Wilmington in that Province. his health, however, was impaired by the change, and he would have been glad to return to Middletown, but his old parishioners were so displeased at his having left them, that they declined to invite him back again. In June, 1761, he settled in Cornwall Parish, Lunenburg County in southern Virginia. In March of the next year he moved to Amherst Parish in Amherst County, Virginia, fixing his residence in the Glebe House, near the present village of New Glasgow.

    After 16 years in this parish he was attracted by the proposals for establishing an English Colony in the neighborhood of Natchez and left Amherst on the first of June, 1778, for Mississippi. He took with him his wife, one son seventeen years of age, and five daughters, aged from fifteen to eight years, besides a number of Negro slaves, some of whom were sent in advance to the Monongahela to build flatboats for the journey. The family proceeded down the Monongahela to Fort Pitt, and thence down the Ohio and Mississippi, for part of the way in company with Colonel George Rogers Clark's expedition against the British at Kaskaskia, the former Capital of the French during their occupancy of the Illinois country. On arriving at Natchez they found the situation unhealthy and the land company not as prosperous as had been represented. The oldest daughter [Mary Ann] sickened and died in February 1779, and after that Mr. Camp determined to leave the settlement and ascend the River to Kaskaskia, in the southern part of the present state of Illinois. On account of danger from the Indians, the family was obliged to wait for a military convoy from New Orleans, but they reached the village of Kaskaskia about the 1st of May 1779 and there made a pleasant home for themselves. One of Mr. Camp's daughters [Catherine] married early in 1785, a Canadian Frenchman named Guion, who proved to be very passionate and unkind to his wife. She sought refuge from him in her father's home, whither Guion followed her; and while Mr. Camp stood in the doorway remonstrating or preparing to remonstrate with the infuriated man, Guion shot and killed him. This tragedy occurred on the 20th of April, 1786. Another daughter had recently married in St. Louis, and thither the rest of the family, consisting of the widow and three daughters, immediately removed, Mrs. Camp resided in St. Louis until her death in October, 1803; though a Protestant, she was interred in the Roman Catholic Cemetery on the 27th of the month.

    Nothing is known about Ichabod's journey to England except that he went there under the patronage of the Society for the Propagation of the Gospel, and received ordination and his license to preach in the Church of England. His license and ordination papers have survived and photocopies of them have been passed around among his descendants. The trip must have been a momentous occasion in the life of a young man. He was twenty-six years old at the time. His wife and young daughter were obviously left at home, and his son, Samuel, was probably born before his return. There being no bishop here to ordain Ministers. Ordination could only be had by going to London.

    Ichabod married Content Ward on 26 Nov 1749 in Wallingford, New Haven County, CT. Content (daughter of Meacock Ward and Hannah Tyler) was born on 10 Oct 1727 in Meriden, New Haven County, CT; died on 29 Dec 1754 in Middletown, Middlesex County, CT. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 13.  Content Ward was born on 10 Oct 1727 in Meriden, New Haven County, CT (daughter of Meacock Ward and Hannah Tyler); died on 29 Dec 1754 in Middletown, Middlesex County, CT.
    Children:
    1. 6. Samuel Camp was born on 14 May 1752 in Durham, Middlesex County, CT; died on 18 Aug 1827 in Warren County, GA; was buried in Aug 1827 in Jewell, Warren County, GA.
    2. Sarah Camp was born on 30 Sep 1750 in Middletown, Middlesex County, CT; died about 1792.

  3. 14.  Gerrard Banks was born about 1705; died in 1780.

    Gerrard married Ann Stanton before 1730. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  4. 15.  Ann Stanton
    Children:
    1. 7. Mary Banks was born on 5 Jun 1754 in Durham, Culpepper County, VA; died on 6 Jul 1800 in Warren County, GA; was buried in Jewell, Warren County, GA.