The Reeves Family and the Ewing Family Genealogies
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John
Moore Smith (About 1825 — About 1906) Mary
Elizabeth Conyers (About 1825 — After 1880)
In
Washington, the House of Representatives elected John Quincy Adams as the sixth
United States
president. It would be four more
years before John
and Mary[2]
married in Wilson County, Tennessee on James Smith, born about 1846; Susana Smith, born about 1848; Launean Smith (male), born about 1851; Laripa Smith (male) born about 1852; Laura
Francis Smith, born August 28, 1852
in Cumberland Gap, Octavia G.P. Smith, born about 1853; George M. D. Smith, born about 1854 in Tennessee; John Smith, born in Tennessee in about 1856; Martha J.D. Smith, born in Kentucky about 1857; Mary Smith, born in Tennessee in about 1858; Burton E. Smith, born in Tennessee in about 1861; Charles C. (Charley) Smith, born in Kentucky about 1864 and Mack Smith, born in Kentucky about 1868. In
addition, they had three other children whose birth dates are not known: Doc,
Lark and Malum. Some or all of these
last three may be nicknames for the ones listed above. Nannie
Maude Spears reported to Brian Reeves in July 1975 that John Smith was a
teacher. She said he first settled
on the Tennessee River in The
1860 census shows him living in the Sumner
County, Tennessee household of his father-in-law, John Conyers.
He was working as a farmhand, but also owned his own real estate valued
at $300, as well as personal property of $194.
Living with him were his wife, Mary Conyers Smith, and their children
James Smith, age 14; Susana Smith, age 12; Launean Smith (male), age 9; Laripa
Smith (male), age 8; George Smith, age 6; John Smith, age 4 and Mary Smith, age
2.[6] Sometime
in the mid-1860s, while the Civil War was raging, John moved his family from Tennessee, a southern state to
Kentucky,[7]
officially a neutral border state. This
is not to say he had no allegiances. Apparently,
he did. First, the move, though
across state lines, was only to an adjacent county.
Additionally, the papers of Nannie Maude Spears, contained an
By 1870, John’s living situation had reversed. Instead of living in his father-in-law’s household, his father-in-law now lived in John’s home. John had moved his family to Allen County, Kentucky and 84-year old John A. Conyers lived with them. John was a 46-year old farmer with real estate valued at $400 and personal property valued at $1,533. He could not read. His wife, Mary E. Smith, was a 46 and was "keeping house." The
children living with them in 1970 included: Laurean H. Smith, a 19-year old
farmhand; Octavia G. P. Smith, age 17; George M.D. Smith, age 16, a farm
laborer; John A. Smith, age 14; Mary E. Smith, age 12; Burton E. Smith, age 9;
Charles C. Smith, age 6; and Martha J. Smith, age 4.
Charles and Martha were born in Kentucky; the others in The
1880 census for the New Roe area of Allen County, Kentucky shows that John Smith
is still farming and the 55-year old head of a household including his wife,
Mary E. Smith, also 55. A census
section for disabling health issues, says that she had a "disease of
liver." Three children still
lived with them: Burton E. Smith,
age 18 (shown as "working farm"); Chas Smith, age 16; and Martha J.D.
Smith, a 13-year old female. John,
Mary and Burton
had been born in Returning
to the papers of John and Mary’s granddaughter, Nannie Maude Spears, there was
one note that said:
Click here to see the entire sheet.
The
papers for John Smith were used to get Dot's (Nannie Maude Spears' daughter
Dorothy Juanita Ewing) a scholarship because he served in Civil War."[10] Yet
another paper gives a list of John Smith's children.
There are two names shown there which are not shown elsewhere:
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Contact Brian@BrianReeves.com with any suggestions corrections, etc. Copyright Brian Reeves, 2005 — 2007.
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