BTRVETC-L Digest Volume 99 : Issue 13 17 Mar 1999 Today's Topics: Isaac BURNETT Family Thomas TURNER, Fayette & Polk Counties GA, 1850-1860 "Melungeon Roots: A Family Heritage Workshop" Berea College, KY GOODSON / HALL Search Administrivia: for the Burnett/Turner/Ross/Via/Etc Mailing List (BTRVETC-L) Post your queries to: btrvetc-l@genealogy.org (that's a lowercase ell, not a number one.) To unsubscribe, email btrvetc-d-request@genealogy.org with the SUBJECT: UNSUBSCRIBE. To subscribe to the regular list, email btrvetc-l-request@genealogy.org with the SUBJECT: SUBSCRIBE You can also use the web page at: http://www-personal.umich.edu/~cgaunt/BTRVETC/index.html ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 11 Mar 1999 15:43:46 EST From: GSubyak@aol.com To: BTRVETC-L@genealogy.org Subject: Isaac BURNETT Family Message-ID: <7c68b49d.36e82b02@aol.com> Content-type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII Content-transfer-encoding: 7bit Does anyone recognize this BURNETT family >From Jackson Parrish 1850 Louisiana census Burnett, Isaac 26 Farmer (b) GA Matilda 24 Wife (b) GA Nancy 4 Daugh (b) ALA Mary A 2 Daugh (b) ALA James W 1 Son (b) LA Please contact me if this connect to your family as it is my Burnett family Glenda ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 12 Mar 1999 07:32:40 -0500 From: "Jane Turner Strickland" To: Subject: Thomas TURNER, Fayette & Polk Counties GA, 1850-1860 Message-ID: <01be6c84$6b834340$fc6556d1@default> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1" Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit Seeking the family of Thomas TURNER, b 1811, SC, 1st appears in Fayette Co, GA ca 1821, with James TURNER as agent for Thomas and Silas on the tax rolls. There are many Turners in the area from SC, who came from the Marlboro District. Some married into the Wilkins family, also (Thomas m Lucinda WILKINS, 1830, Fayette Co), he appears Fayette Co, 1840, and 1850, Polk Co, 1860... Oldest son named Kinyon, others: Andrew J, George W, Francis M, Noah S,Thomas M, John, and daughter Sarah E.... After the War, when Andrew and George were killed, Kinyon returnes to Fayette Co with his family..there is no sign of the others...I haven't been able to find wills, no death certificates available until 1914 in Georgia, and no testate records (yet) this family had to go *somewhere* ideas welcomed, information praised! Thanks Jane ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 15 Mar 1999 07:14:03 EST From: WalkingEd@aol.com To: BTRVETC-L@genealogy.org Subject: "Melungeon Roots: A Family Heritage Workshop" Berea College, KY Message-ID: <8e270cf7.36ecf98b@aol.com> Content-type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII Content-transfer-encoding: 7bit Hi list, The name "Turner" has been associated with the Melungeons. Some of you might be interested in the below workshop. If you have any questions, please write me personally and not on this list. Thanks! Lisa Recent books and documentaries on Appalachia's mysterious Melungeons have led many people to search for their Melungeon roots. A genealogy workshop at Berea College may provide help for those who are seeking information about their families and possible Melungeon connections. "Melungeon Roots: A Family Heritage Workshop" will be held on the Berea College campus on Saturday, June 26. This event will feature sessions on beginning, intermediate, and Internet genealogy, as well as specific sessions to explore Native American and African-American connections. There will also be chat sessions for various family groups, a showing of a documentary film about the Melungeons, and a panel discussion featuring Brent Kennedy, Manuel Mira, and others.. The Melungeons are a multi-racial and multi-ethnic people who were first documented in the Appalachian mountains at the end of the 18th century. Since that time, they have become a part of Appalachian folklore - "sons and daughters of the legend." Prior to the Civil War, some were classified as "free persons of color." More recently, they have been identified by anthropologists and sociologists as "tri-racial isolates" - an amalgam of European, Native American, and African-American ancestry. They faced discrimination, both legal and social, and tended to settle in isolated communities such as Newman's Ridge in Hancock County, Tennessee, or Stone Mountain, Virginia. Over the years, Melungeons kept to themselves -- or moved to other areas where their heritage was not suspect. Oral history among Melungeon families was often not shared with succeeding generations. "Melungeon" had become an epithet, even if no one knew where the word originated. Jean Patterson Bible wrote in 1975 that generations of intermarriage has resulted in near racial dissolution: "They'll be gone in a generation or two, except for an occasional dark-complected [sic] child as a reminder of the past." Instead, many Melungeon descendants are coming to recognize and embrace the diverse heritage that is theirs. They've been encouraged and inspired by Dr. N. Brent Kennedy, author of the 1994 book The Melungeons: The Resurrection of A Proud People; An Untold Story of Ethnic Cleansing in America. Kennedy, in researching his own family background, concludes that the Melungeons were descended from groups of Spaniards, Portuguese, Turks, Berbers, Moors, Jews, and others who arrived on these shores between the arrival of Columbus and the establishment of Jamestown. Generations of intermarriage with Europeans, Native Americans, and African-Americans resulted in the people now known as Melungeons. Participants may pre-register before June 1, for "Melungeon Roots: A Family Heritage Workshop" by sending a check or money order to: Melungeon Roots, P.O. Box 4042, Wise, VA 24293. Admission to the event is $5 for each pre-registered participant (before June 1), and $10 for those who register after June 1 and for on-site registrants. On-site registration begins Friday, June 25, at 7:00 pm at the Alumni Building on the Berea campus. The Melungeon Heritage Association, Inc. will hold a mixer on Friday night at the Alumni Building from 7 to 9 pm. Workshops will begin on Saturday morning at 9:00 am at Phelps-Stokes Hall, with welcoming remarks by Audie Kennedy, president of the Melungeon Heritage Association, Inc., and Gordon McKinney of the Berea College Appalachian Center. Workshops will be held in the Frost Building and Phelps Stokes chapel. Chat groups will be running all day at various locations on campus. Throughout the day, "Melungeon Roots" will feature "how-to" genealogy sessions as well as sessions on Native American, African-American, and Portuguese-American genealogy. A panel discussion with a question-and-answer session will close the workshop. "Melungeon Roots: A Family Heritage Workshop" is sponsored by the Appalachian Center at Berea College, continuing the college's long tradition of commitment to Appalachia and to diversity. The event is organized by the Melungeon Heritage Association, Inc. (MHA), a non-profit organization formed in 1998. MHA was an outgrowth of the highly successful First Union: A Melungeon Gathering held in Wise in 1997. In 1998, MHA sponsored Second Union, an even larger gathering which featured sessions and lectures on history, social issues, and medical issues, as well as genealogy. The gatherings are only a part of the work of MHA. The organization is also dedicated to several other tasks, including continued research and writing, telling the story of the Melungeon people, and contributing to the mosaic of a past that has been hidden too long. At the same time, MHA plans to collect and preserve the research and artifacts of the past, forming the basis of a Melungeon Research Center to give these materials a permanent home. MHA^Òs mission is to document and preserve the heritage and cultural legacy of mixed- ancestry people of the Southern Appalachians. While the focus will be on those of Melungeon heritage, they do not restrict themselves to honoring only this group, but believe in the dignity of all such mixed ancestry groups. MHA is committed to preserving this rich heritage of racial diversity and harmony. MHA plans to hold Third Union in the summer of 2000. In the meantime, "Melungeon Roots" is the first of several planned smaller events which will focus on individual aspects of Melungeon heritage. ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 17 Mar 1999 10:16:57 -0500 From: "Eunice B. Kirkman" To: "BTRVETC List" Cc: "VA-ROOTS" , "ROOTS-L" , "Patrick County" Subject: GOODSON / HALL Search Message-ID: <000001be7096$9eb32b20$85ac99ce@ekirkman> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1" Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit Looking for any information re: the followqing two gentlemen: LEANDER GOODSON, b. 1796 in Chesterfield Co., VA d. ca 1900 in Grayson Co., VA at 104 years old. His father was from Mass, his mother born in Virginia. Was married twice: 1st Polly Miller in Wythe Co., VA 1826 2nd Nancy Brannock, 1837-38 in Surry Co., NC In the 1830 Cenus, he and Polly were in McMinn Co., TN, received land in Ohio for service in the war of 1812. Sold property in Ohio and moved back to this area, Surry Co., NC, then to Grayson Co., VA by 1850 census. Need the names of his parents. Will share information. ---------------------------- IRVIN F. HALL, b. ca late 1800s in either Patrick, Henry, or Pittsylvania Co. VA. Started State Capitol Insurance Company in Raleigh, NC around 1920. Moved to a midwestern state sometime in the 1940s. Died and is buried there. Had a daughter named Jane Hall who worked for an evening paper in Raleigh. Need any information at all. Thanks, Eunice B. Kirkman ***** ekirkman@swva.net -------------------------------- End of btrvetc-d Digest V99 Issue #13 *************************************