Elizabeth Thames1

Female, #46279, (circa 1808 - )

Parent*Rev. Cornelius B. Thames1 (c 1787 - 1876)
Parent*Susannah Carver1 (s 1787 - b 1860)
Elizabeth Thames|b. circa 1808|p46279.htm|Rev. Cornelius B. Thames|b. circa 1787\nd. 1876|p43321.htm|Susannah Carver|b. say 1787\nd. before 1860|p43322.htm|Rev. William Thames|b. before Oct 1759\nd. 10 Jan 1813|p43343.htm|Lucy (?)|b. 1761\nd. 23 Nov 1812|p43344.htm|Jesse Carver|b. say 1757|p46420.htm||||

Birth*circa 1808 She was born circa 1808 at Cumberland Co., North Carolina.1 
 She was the daughter of Rev. Cornelius B. Thames and Susannah Carver.1 
1810 Census6 Aug 1810 Mary and Elizabeth was probably a free white female under 10 years of age, in Rev. Cornelius B. Thames's household on the 1810 Census at Cumberland Co., North Carolina.2 
Relocation1817 Susannah Carver, Mary Ann Thames, Elizabeth Thames, Rev. Jesse T. Thames, Jonathan Thames, Maria Thames and Susan Thames was an accompanying familiy member in the relocation of an unknown person in 1817 at Monroe Co., Alabama; Other researchers have assumed that Cornelius B. Thames was the Cornelius Thames who was issued a passport through Indian Territory for himself, his wife, four children and seven negroes, all traveling from Beaufort District, SC. The 1810 census for the Beaufort District clearly enumerated this family with the passport as "Cornl. Tims, 1M0-9, 1M26-44, 3F10-16, 1F26-44, 7 slaves" The family with the passport appears to be the one referenced in "The Succession Records of St. Helena Parish, Louisiana 1804 - 1854": Cornelius Thames, February 22, 1821- Petition of Rachel Thames, widow of Major Cornelius Thames, who died February 1821, leaving no will and eight children. The children are all minors and their names are Reddin, Sarah, Mary, Rachel, Miss Hanson, Washington, Adeline, and Clementine. Dr. Timothy Thames, brother of the deceased, is appointed undertutor to the minors. October 16, 1827 - Petition of Mrs. Rachel Thames for a family meeting. October 16, 1827 - Family meeting recommending the sale of property it then names members whom attended. November 28, 1827 - The petition of Mrs. Rachel Thames shows she bought (this may mean she brought to the marriage) property consisting of one tract of land which was inherited from her grandfather in the State of SC. Her husband sold the land and purchased certain slaves. Her husband inherited $300 from his father's estate. She wishes the paraphernalia (pertains to parapherna or property brought to the marriage) property to be taken out of the succession etc.
The Monore County part of Alabama was not settled by white families until about 1817, and Cornelius is known to have started a church at Old Salem in Monroe Co. in 1817, it is assumed that is the year when Cornelius B. and family moved.3,4,5 

Charts Joseph Thames Descendants
Last Edited 16 Sep 2002

Citations

  1. , RootsWeb WorldConnect Project, Ancestry.com: Rootsweb.
    http://worldconnect.rootsweb.com/
    Larson/Morgan (Aug 2002), DB :2219623, David Larson. <e-mail address>
  2. 1810 Federal Census, United States.
    Capt Jackson's District, Cumberland Co., NC, page 247
    Transcribed from Ancestry.com image by Warren Culpepper
    Cornelius Thames, 1M16-25, 2F0-9, 2F16-25, 1 slave.
  3. 1810 Federal Census, United States.
    Prince Williams twp, Beaufort District, page 118. Transcribed from Ancestry.com image: "Cornl. Tims, 1M0-9, 1M26-44, 3F10-16, 1F26-44, 7 slaves."
  4. Passports Issued by Governors of Georgia, 1785-1809, Washington, DC: National Genealogical Society, 1962.
    Page 79: "Page 52--Thurs. 28th February 1811. On Application. ORDERED That passports be prepared for the following persons to travel through the Creek Nation of Indians--to wit, One for Mr. Job Rowley with his wife, four children and five negros, and one for Mr. Cornelius Thames with his wife, four children and seven negroes from Beaufort District..."
  5. Mary E. Brantley, From Cabins to Mansions: Gleanings from Southwest Alabama, Huntsville, AL: The Strode Pub., 1981.