Jemima Stallworth1

Female, #45196, (6 Sep 1783 - circa 1855)

Parent*William Stallworth Jr.1 (1745 - 9 Sep 1808)
Parent*Jemima Tripp1 (c 1755 - a 1819)
Jemima Stallworth|b. 6 Sep 1783\nd. circa 1855|p45196.htm|William Stallworth Jr.|b. 1745\nd. 9 Sep 1808|p46399.htm|Jemima Tripp|b. circa 1755\nd. after 1819|p46400.htm|William Stallworth|b. say 1695|p47228.htm|Elizabeth (?)|b. say 1720|p47229.htm|Nicholas Tripp|b. say 1722\nd. circa 1791|p47211.htm|Nancy King|b. say 1725|p47212.htm|

Birth*6 Sep 1783 Jemima was born at Edgefield District, South Carolina, on 6 Sep 1783. 
 She was the daughter of William Stallworth Jr. and Jemima Tripp.1 
1800 Census4 Aug 1800 Jemima was probably a free white female, age 16 and under 26, in William Stallworth Jr.'s household on the 1800 Census at Edgefield District, South Carolina.2 
Marriage*1 Jan 1808 She married Mark Butler Travis Sr. at Edgefield District, South Carolina, on 1 Jan 1808.3,4 
Married Name1 Jan 1808  As of 1 Jan 1808, her married name was Travis.1 
Relocationcirca 1818 Family member(s) Jemima Travis, Colonel William Barrett Travis, Nicholas Stallworth Travis, Sarah Ann Jemima Travis and Emily Katherine Travis, accompanying Mark Butler Travis Sr., relocated circa 1818 (The Creek Indians ceded much of South Alabama in 1814, and from part of this land, Monroe County was formed on 29 Jun 1815 by the Mississippi Territorial Governor. The Alabama Territory was created on 3 Mar 1817, and the AL Territorial legislature formed Conecuh County on 13 Feb 1818 from part of Monroe County.).5 
1830 Census1 Jun 1830 Jemima was probably a free white female, age 40 and under 50, in Mark Butler Travis Sr.'s household, on the 1830 Census at Conecuh Co., Alabama.6 
Death*circa 1855 She died at Conecuh Co., Alabama, circa 1855.1 

Family

Mark Butler Travis Sr. (6 Sep 1783 - 4 Sep 1836)
Children

Charts Warren Culpepper's Ancestry Chart
Last Edited 23 Mar 2005

Citations

  1. Texasnmyheart, compiler, e-mail address, From Dogwood to Bluebonnets, Rootsweb: WorldConnect (online family tree), 2000-2005.
    http://worldconnect.genealogy.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?db=bluebonnets20
  2. Lawrence E. Jarrell, Early Edgefield SC Census, High Point, NC: Alligator Creek Genealogy Pubs., 1998.
    page 20: William Stalsworth, 1M16-25, 1M26-44, 3F0-9, 1F10-15, 1F16-25, 1F45+, 3 slaves.
  3. Larry E. Pursley, 7500 Marriages from Ninety-Six & Abbeville Districts, SC, 1774-1890, Easley, SC: Southern Historical Press, 1980.
    p. 191: "Mary Travis of Edgefield md Jemina Stallworth, 1808 (Source: Margaret Watson, "Greenwood Co. Sketeches", 1970).
  4. Carlee T. McClendon, compiler, Edgefield Marriage Records, Edgefield SC, Columbia, SC: RL Bryan Co., 1970, Repository: Tomkins Library in Edgefield SC, Call No. F277.E2 C7M2 M4.
    Page 162: "Mark Travis, son of Barrett and Elizabeth Deloach Travis, and Jemima Stallworth, daughter of William Stallworth, Sr., January 1, 1808 (Family Record)."
  5. Chair, Conecuh Co. Heritage Book Committee Dorothy S. Crook, The Heritage of Conecuh County, Alabama Heritage Publishing Consultants: Clanton, AL, 2002.
    Page 211. "Travis Family" article by James Cary Travis, Route 1, Box 135, McKenzie, AL 36456. Ph 334-374-8197.
  6. 1830 Federal Census, United States.
    Unk Twp, Conecuh Co., AL, page 98, Ancestry.com image 19 transcribed by Warren Culpepper
    MarkeTravis, 2M0-4, 1M5-9, 1M15-19, 1M40-49, 1F0-4, 1F10-14, 1F15-19, 1F20-29, 1F40-49.
    Unaccounted for are 1F0-4 and 1F20-29. Perhaps this was Rosannah Cato, wife of William Barrett Travis, and a daughter. He abandoned his family early and by 1831 was living in Texas, never to return.