A female ancestor married her husband in Kentucky probably in the 1810s. By 1820, they are enumerated apparently as husband and wife, with some small children. They can be traced for the rest of their lives until they died in Shelby County, Indiana, in the later part of the 19th century.

It’s her that I cannot find–as if she was dropped off by a UFO at the county courthouse where she saw Enoch and they decided to get married right there, right then as the UFO was leaving Earth’s atmosphere.

Of course that’s really not what happened.

One possibility is that her family (property renters and not owners) moved into the county from somewhere when my female ancestor Nancy is in her late teens. Within short order she meets a young single neighbor man–Enoch. After the shortest engagement her parents will tolerate, Enoch and Nancy marry. Enoch’s family owns a farm and he likely helps his father on that farm. Nancy’s family moves further west. Maybe his father dies and her mother marries. Maybe both her parents die.

The possible problem is that her parents only lived in the area for a few years and then they head further west and take their other children with them. This leaves no families with the last name to be listed in the 1820 census and no one to be listed in property tax records either.

 

Categories:

Tags:

One response

  1. One of my 3x great grandmother’s was married in Kentucky in 1802. She lived until 1862 & was buried in Illinois where she & her husband & children immigrated over a number of years. I have found her marriage certificate, but her father was born & died in Virginia or North Carolina. A county history from Kentucky indicates that his whole family migrated to Kentucky in around 1800, but he didn’t like it so returned to the east coast. By that time two of his daughters & one of his sons were married in Kentucky. Since records for women in this era are so difficult to find, it is important to find clues wherever one can.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Get the Genealogy Tip of the Day Book
Archives