| Name Variation | | Mary Ann F. Woodall was also known as Howe.2 |
| Birth* | 27 Mar 1822 | She was born on 27 Mar 1822 at Georgia.1,2,3 |
| | She was the daughter of (?) Woodall and Sarah (?).2 |
| Marriage* | 6 Jul 1837 | She married James A. Hough at Talbot Co., Georgia, on 6 Jul 1837. They were married at her mother Sara Woodall's home by Justice of the Peace William Robbins..1,2,3 |
| Married Name | 6 Jul 1837 | As of 6 Jul 1837, her married name was Hough.1 |
| 1840 Census | 1 Jun 1840 | Mary was probably a free white female, age 15 and under 20, in James A. Hough's household, on the 1840 Census on 1 Jun 1840 at Talbot Co., Georgia.4 |
| 1850 Census | 1 Jun 1850 | Mary, Nancy, Joseph, Sarah, James and William listed as a household member living with an unknown person on the 1850 Census on 1 Jun 1850 at Talbot Co., Georgia.5 |
| Will | circa 1857 | In an unknown person 's will, Mary was named by an unknown person to handle an unknown person estate circa 1857 at Talbot Co., Georgia. (In his will, James Hough arrranged for his estate to be kept together until his children reached the age of adulthood, at which time they were each to receive $2000. He had already given Nancy A. Youngblood property worth $1700, so he willed that she was to receive $300 more. His son Joseph A. was to receive two negroes, Sanford and Little Ben, and if their appraisal did not come to $2000, he was to receive the difference. His daughter Sarah F. was to receive Harriett and Susan under the same conditions, his son James D. was tp receive Big Sam and Willis, tec; his son William T. was to receive Little Sam and Thomas, etc; his son Robert A. was to receive Moses and Sim, etc; and his son Charles A. was to receive John and Cicero, etc. His wife was to receive $2000 if she wished to draw out of the estete before his children were all adults. His estate was to be equally divided among his wife and children when the youngest child was of age. He appointed his wife, Mary A. F. Hough to be joint executrix with his brother-in-law James D. Woodall. They were to manage the estate as James Hough would have done if he had been alive and to educate the children. James Hough signed and sealed his will in the presence of Isaac Cheney, John B. McCoy, and Robert Brooks. (Will Book D, page 31, 1857)).2 |
| 1860 Census* | 1 Jun 1860 | Mary was listed as the head of a family on the 1860 Census at Centre, Talbot Co., Georgia.6 |
| 1870 Census* | 1 Jun 1870 | Mary was listed as the head of a family on the 1870 Census at Pleasantville, Talbot Co., Georgia.7 |
| 1880 Census* | 1 Jun 1880 | Mary was listed as the head of a family on the 1880 Census at Talbot Co., Georgia.8 |
| Death* | 6 May 1893 | She died at Talbot Co., Georgia, on 6 May 1893.2,3 |
| Burial* | | Her body was interred at Evans Chapel Cemetery, Woodland, Talbot Co., Georgia.3 |