Matching family tree profiles for Longshore Lamb
Immediate Family
-
wife
-
daughter
-
wife
-
daughter
-
son
-
son
-
daughter
-
daughter
-
son
-
son
-
daughter
-
son
About Longshore Lamb
From William F. Medlin, Quaker Families of South Carolina & Georgia, Ben Franklin Press, Page 31.
Between 1799 and 1830, the overwhelming majority of Quakers left South Carolina and Georgia for territory where they could rear their children free from the influence of slavery. The exodus began in 1799 when a few Friends left Georgia for the Miami Valley of Ohio. In 1801, Friends began leaving Bush River for the same area. (A few Bush River Quakers had removed much earlier to Tennessee, where slavery had much less influence than in other Southern states.) By 1810 that once large Meeting was decimated. Cane Creek Meeting in Union County removed almost as one body to Ohio, forming up there Caesar's Creek Meeting a few miles from the present city of Wilmington. After 1822, Charleston was the only Monthly Meeting left in either South Carolina or Georgia.
From http://familytreemaker.genealogy.com/users/f/i/n/Art-Wilson-Finch/F...
In 1766 Longshore Lamb, a young boy of about 11 years of age, arrived in South Carolina with his parents and siblings. The Quaker records indicate Thomas Lamb (1721), Alice Longshore Lamb, and their six youngest children were granted a certificate to join Wateree MM, Kershaw County, South Carolina. This information is consistent with the 1790 Census for South Carolina.
The Bush River MM, Newberry County, South Carolina, disowned Longshore Lamb on October 30, 1779, for marrying a person who was not a Quaker. A deed dated October 7, 1807, and recorded in Spartanburg County, South Carolina, indicates Longshore Lamb married Sally in 1779. Longshore was about age 23-25 years when he married. Longshore Lamb served on a jury in South Carolina in 1796. Longshore Lamb purchased 163 acres on Frenchman’s Creek of the Enoree River in Union County, South Carolina. The will of Richard Chesney of Spartanburg County, South Carolina, refers to land in North Carolina once owned by Longshore Lamb. Longshore Lamb served under Colonel Brandon during the Revolutionary War and was present at the fall of Charleston in 1780. This was another reason the Quakers disowned Longshore Lamb.
We know little about Sarah, except that she was born about 1758-1763.
Longshore Lamb was the father of the following children. “Decree of Court in John Lamb vs. Martin Lamb”, Legal Document, Courthouse, Caldwell County, Kentucky, March 01, 1848.
- Martin Lamb
- Moses Lamb
- Levi Lamb
- Elizabeth Lamb Vaughn
- William Lamb, deceased
- Peggy Lamb Farmer, deceased
- Jensey Lamb Clayton, deceased
- Polly Lamb Crow, deceased
- John Lamb, Sr.
Notes
- Pvt SC Second Spartan Regiment of Militia. Revolutionary War. 1748-1828
- DAR Ancestor #: A134761 Links
- http://trees.ancestry.com/tree/19358283/person/792679414
- http://dycusburg.blogspot.com/2009/10/lamb-family-dedicates-memoria...
Edited 10 13 16 from the Files of Matthew Patton Ginnie Hopper Oldham
GEDCOM Source
@R-1198722379@ Web: Kentucky, Find A Grave Index, 1776-2012 Ancestry.com Ancestry.com Operations, Inc. 1,70633::0 1,70633::336268
GEDCOM Source
@R-1198722379@ Web: Kentucky, Find A Grave Index, 1776-2012 Ancestry.com Ancestry.com Operations, Inc. 1,70633::0 1,70633::336268
GEDCOM Source
@R-1198722379@ Web: Kentucky, Find A Grave Index, 1776-2012 Ancestry.com Ancestry.com Operations, Inc. 1,70633::0 1,70633::336268
GEDCOM Source
@R-1198722379@ 1790 United States Federal Census Ancestry.com Ancestry.com Operations, Inc. 1,5058::0 Year: 1790; Census Place: Union, South Carolina; Series: M637; Roll: 11; Page: 48; Image: 47; Family History Library Film: 0568151 1,5058::394539
GEDCOM Source
@R-1198722379@ U.S., Quaker Meeting Records, 1681-1994 Ancestry.com Ancestry.com Operations, Inc. 1,2189::0 1,2189::9062065
GEDCOM Source
@R-1198722379@ Ancestry Family Trees Online publication - Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com. Original data: Family Tree files submitted by Ancestry members. Ancestry Family Tree http://trees.ancestry.com/pt/AMTCitationRedir.aspx?tid=62913121&pid...
Longshore Lamb's Timeline
1755 |
1755
|
Fairfax Monthly Meeting, Fairfax, Virginia
|
|
1780 |
1780
|
Kentucky, United States
|
|
1782 |
1782
|
Union, South Carolina, United States
|
|
1784 |
1784
|
Union, Union County, South Carolina, United States
|
|
1785 |
1785
|
Craven District, South Carolina, United States
|
|
1785
|
|||
1790 |
1790
|
Union County, South Carolina, United States
|
|
1790
Age 35
|
Union, South Carolina, United States
|