Notes


Note    N1336         Index
Source says died after the 1820 census of Mercer Co, Ky.

Notes


Note    N1337         Index
According to Dawood, Jackman was on the 1782 tax list of Fauquier county, Va. He was still living there in 1788. In 1790, Thomas and wife Hannah sell to Samuel Porter 150 acres on Carter Run, Fauquier Co, Va. Thomas is found on the Lincoln Co, Ky tax list 10 Aug 1791 and is there until 1 April 1795.

Thomas is found on "a roster of Captain William Edmonds' company of Virginia troops in the French and Indian War. Captain Edmonds lived in Fauquier county, and it is believed that most of the men in his company were from the same county. A List of W. Edmonds' Company -- 1761...Thomas Jackman, Jnr...Richd. Jackman.."--Pages 305-6, Virginia Magazine of History and Biography, Vol 7, No. 3, (1900)

Notes


Note    N1338         Index
Alternate burial site is Jackman Bottom (Jackman Cemetery), Russell County, Kentucky. His tombstone reads "Possessing a strong and well-informed mind." Per Riherd, location of cemetery is on Highway 379, on the Frank Campbell Farm in Russel Co, Ky.

Notes


Note    N1339         Index
Per Dawood, William received from his father's estate as indicated in his will of 1776 "100 acres where he now lives on Popular Spring Branch near Miller line" and a negro named Charles but had to pay his sister Mary Jackman Walker 50 shillings. In 1776, William did not have children, but the 1796 tax list of Lincoln Co, Ky indicates he had a son born between 1776 and 1781. According to the 26 Nov 1781 Court Records of Fauquier Co, Va, the Court ordered the children wardens of Leeds Parish to bind Samuel Gregory to William Jackman to learn from him the trade of shoemaker. William, Joseph and Thomas Jackman are on the 1789 tax list of Fauquier Co, Va. William, John, Edward and Robert Jackman are among the petitioners for Petition #8 for inhabitants of Yohogania and Monongalia areas to be laid before the Virginia Assembly in 1792, dated 22 June 1782 (Dawood doesnt' know if this is the William Jackman, son of Thomas Sr.) William Jackman in 1787 replaced Joseph Jackman as road surveyor of Fauquier Co, Va. In 1791 William Jackman and wife Judith sold to John Porter their tract on Carter's Run, part of the patent by Thomas Jackman, Sr. divided between William Jackman and Joseph Jackman in 1790. Witnesses included Thomas Porter. In "Early Kentucky Householders 1787-1811" William is found listed 29 Nov 1792, 21 April 1794, 12 May 1795 and 1796. In 1796 a male between the age of 16 and 20 was living in the household. In contrast, William is not found in "Early Kentucky Landowners 1787-1811" indicating he was not a landowner during this time frame. William is on the 1801 tax list of Wayne Co, Ky but is not being taxed on land. In 1820 census of Cumberland Co, Ky, William Jackman Sr, William Jackman Jr, James Jackman, John Jackman and Mary Jackman are all found.

"Jackman-Campbell The Cumberland River bottoms around Creelsboro were settled in the late 1700s and early 1800s. Some of the first settlers in the Creelsboro botom were the Jackmans: Thomas, Elijah and William; their descendants are still living on the eastern end of the bottom which is known as Jackman Bottom. William Jackman (1750-1838) was given 1700 acres as a military grant for serving in the Revolutionary War. He is one of the few soldiers that lived and was buried on his land. The Jackman lineage is as follows: William Jackman, Adam Jackman, Fetnah Jackman Helm, Joe Ella Helm Campbell, Frank Edwin Campbell, Joe Frank Campbell, Katherine E Campbell Gosser, Mary Jo Campbell Meadows and Megan N Meadows." - From Russell Co, Ky History and Families by the Russell County Historical Society.


Notes


Note    N1340         Index
Schmidt cites 1783-1785 Henry Co, Va Tax records, St Louis Co, Mo Probate File 81, and 1788-1802 Madison Co Ky.

"n 1786 to 1789 no records have provided any information on Joseph. However, in 1790 he and his family left the confines of Virginia plantations and moved out to Madison county, Kentucky. At the same time Joseph's in-laws, Eusebius Hubbard and his family, left Henry co., VA. and settled in Madison county and then went on to St. Louis, MO. in 1800 with his son-in-law, Jameson. For whatever reason Joseph is neither listed in Virginia or Kentucky during the 1790 census, though he was a taxpayer on October 1, 1800 in Madison county, Ky. Of interest, too, is that Thomas Jamison Jr. a son of Thomas and Hannah Jamison Sr. removed some time before 1800 to Garrard co., KY.(the county west of Madison co.) and prior to 1810 had settled in Madison co., KY. Besides Alexander, his brother, Thomas Jamison, resided in Garrard county in 1800 as well. Records for Alexander and Joseph Jamison appear frequently in Madison co., KY. In the year 1800, though, Joseph decided to make a last move. While Alexander and Thomas Jamison decided to go north to Indiana, Joseph headed into the sunset reaching St. Louis county, Missouri.
The Jamisons and Hubbards settled first on the south bank of the Missouri River approximately 45 to 50 miles west and north of St. Louis. About a year later, Joseph had settled in present day Pike county along the Salt River Settlement some 130 miles north west of St. Louis and thirteen miles dues west of the Mississippi River. An original claim made by Jamison and many of the other settlers were subsequently rejected by the Mexican government. The issues of ownership were also clouded by Louis Lamalice, alias Louis Lemonde, "a good Catholic" who claimed over 11,200 arpents.*(2) His stake was eventually rejected like the others. However, on February 2, 1802, Joseph Jamison's claim came up in Spanish court in St. Louis, Class #2, No. 139 on an 800 arpent tract along the Salt River. Made to the Lt. Governor of Upper Louisiana, Don Carlos Dehault Delassus, the grant was confirmed in St. Louis on January 1, 1833. In the meantime Joseph remained on the land tilling it, "which land is situated at about 130 miles to the northwest of this town(St. Louis), and 13 miles to the west of the river Mississippi, bounded to the north and cast by vacant lands of the Royal domain; to the south by lands of Dorresto Flubbert, and to the west by lands of Daniel Quick." On February 9, 1802 in St. Louis, Joseph Jamison claimed on 600 arpents, wherein a survey was conducted on February 10, 1804, and a deed of transfer issued December 5, 1803. This land lay on the Missouri River and contained also an additional 200 arpents he was claiming. Unfortunately for Jamison the Board that settled Joseph's claims rejected the 800 arpents tract on August 25, 1835.
Mr. Jamison was a private in the Revolutionary War. One record cites the following: "in the latter part of the winter or early part of spring in 1779 the Militia was drafted in classes 1 through 10, and said Choice was drafted in No. 6 and Thomas Jamison in No 1, in Henry county, VA. William Choice exchanged classes with Thomas Jameson and marched under Capt. Frederick Reeves and his brother Tully Choice." On December 26 of that year members also included Joseph Jemison, Elisha Estes, and William Jamison.
Mr. Jamison died in 1810. While no will and testament has been discovered for him, probate records dated October 19, 1810 in St. Louis, Missouri provide for Letters of Administration and an accounting of the estate. On November 2, 1810, a record of the sale of personal and real property shows to whom beside the children the monies were allocated."--Find-a-grave