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Rebecca Brashear Hoagland

Birth
Kentucky, USA
Death
1850 (aged 42–43)
Bullitt County, Kentucky, USA
Burial
Burial Details Unknown Add to Map
Memorial ID
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Information I have reason to believe is/may be accurate, but have no proof of, is preceded and/or followed by a question mark: thus "James Houghland. b. ?1781" means I'm making an informed guess at his birth date. If you take my information elsewhere, please, please, also take my doubt.

Child by them named after her father Ignatius 1768-1827 -- (Robert) Ignatius "Nace" Hoagland, m. Mattie Poshenail Smith

"Bullitt County strays" m. 4 March 1826 to James D. Hagan? Hoglan or Hoagland
Bond: 1 Apr 1826, Robert F. Samuels; reverse: by cert [certificate] filed in due form. Consent, 1 Apr 1826: The Clark of the Cort Bullitt County will ishue license for the marrig of James Holan and Rebecker Brashear, Ign's Brashear.
Minister's Return: James Hoagland & Rebekah Brashear, married 4 Mar 1826, Isaac Taylor (list of marriages "solemnized by me in Bullitt County;" last marriage on list, 7 Sep 1826). [Also on microfilm, "Marriage Licenses,
1824-1846" (filmed Nov 1966 at Shepherdsville by The Genealogical Society, Salt Lake City, Utah)] Original Marriage Record, page 66: James Hoglan & Rebecca Brashear. License 1 Apr 1826; married 4 Mar 1826, Isaac Taylor. Marriage Register, Book 1, page 45: James Hoglan & Rebecca Brashear. License 1 Apr 1826; married 4 Mar 1826, Isaac Taylor.

I have a book called "Brashear Families of the Ohio Valley, Vol. 4". There are many Brashear, Broshears, Brasseur burials near the Ohio River in Warrick, Gibson, Spenser, Vanderburgh as well as other nearby counties in the southwestern Indiana and northwestern Kentucky. Interesting read and vital information! Can't put them all in here.

A large number of Beshear(s) families, descendants of Jeremiah and Elizabeth Brashears, lived in Hopkins, Christian, and Caldwell Counties, Kentucky, beginning about 1800. They are not to be confused with the large number of Brasher families living in the same area at the same time, who are descendants of John and Aquilla Brasher, sons of Thomas Brazier, who migrated from Greenville CO, South Carolina, about 1805. Both families used familiar names like John, Thomas, and Henry, but both also used unusual names like Emanuel, Hampton and Larkin. Beshear(s) is a fairly common corruption of Brashears, and the family seems to have stemmed from Jeremiah and Elizabeth Brashears, of Spartanburg CO, South Carolina.
……..
Information I have reason to believe is/may be accurate, but have no proof of, is preceded and/or followed by a question mark: thus "James Houghland. b. ?1781" means I'm making an informed guess at his birth date. If you take my information elsewhere, please, please, also take my doubt.

Child by them named after her father Ignatius 1768-1827 -- (Robert) Ignatius "Nace" Hoagland, m. Mattie Poshenail Smith

"Bullitt County strays" m. 4 March 1826 to James D. Hagan? Hoglan or Hoagland
Bond: 1 Apr 1826, Robert F. Samuels; reverse: by cert [certificate] filed in due form. Consent, 1 Apr 1826: The Clark of the Cort Bullitt County will ishue license for the marrig of James Holan and Rebecker Brashear, Ign's Brashear.
Minister's Return: James Hoagland & Rebekah Brashear, married 4 Mar 1826, Isaac Taylor (list of marriages "solemnized by me in Bullitt County;" last marriage on list, 7 Sep 1826). [Also on microfilm, "Marriage Licenses,
1824-1846" (filmed Nov 1966 at Shepherdsville by The Genealogical Society, Salt Lake City, Utah)] Original Marriage Record, page 66: James Hoglan & Rebecca Brashear. License 1 Apr 1826; married 4 Mar 1826, Isaac Taylor. Marriage Register, Book 1, page 45: James Hoglan & Rebecca Brashear. License 1 Apr 1826; married 4 Mar 1826, Isaac Taylor.

I have a book called "Brashear Families of the Ohio Valley, Vol. 4". There are many Brashear, Broshears, Brasseur burials near the Ohio River in Warrick, Gibson, Spenser, Vanderburgh as well as other nearby counties in the southwestern Indiana and northwestern Kentucky. Interesting read and vital information! Can't put them all in here.

A large number of Beshear(s) families, descendants of Jeremiah and Elizabeth Brashears, lived in Hopkins, Christian, and Caldwell Counties, Kentucky, beginning about 1800. They are not to be confused with the large number of Brasher families living in the same area at the same time, who are descendants of John and Aquilla Brasher, sons of Thomas Brazier, who migrated from Greenville CO, South Carolina, about 1805. Both families used familiar names like John, Thomas, and Henry, but both also used unusual names like Emanuel, Hampton and Larkin. Beshear(s) is a fairly common corruption of Brashears, and the family seems to have stemmed from Jeremiah and Elizabeth Brashears, of Spartanburg CO, South Carolina.
……..

Gravesite Details

Due to many graves and entire cemeteries being destroyed by progress, growth, lost, or unmarked, many locations of graves of this age and time have been lost to us. The majority of the deceased were buried in unmarked graves.



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