In the 1860 Census of Surry Co.,North Carolina, William and Emmazette . He were living in the household next door to William & and Sarah McHone (Mahone). William and Emmazette were married in 1858 and she was just 17. He was 20, and they had no children yet. Emmazetta may be related to William and Sarah. William was also a young man. William came from the line of John McHone, son of Archelous McHone. Check on his line for Emmazetta.
Sackville McHone of Bedford County, whose name was often spelled Mahone in records. He died in 1760s and two of his children were boarded in New Kent County, Virginia, and paid for by the Blisland Parish for about ten years after his death, until they became bound out. His son Archibald McHone, born 1745 in New Kent County, VA; and died Jan 6, 1842 in Stokes, North Carolina, son of Sackville McHone and Mary McHone. He married Magdelina Bridgeman, of New Kent Co., Va, and had eleven children (descendants):
1. Micajah McHone, born 1770; d. 1858; marriage : Spouse: Nancy McHone. Had two children: John McHone and Thomas McHone.
2. Zachachariah McHone, b. 1772 in Stokes Co.,VA; d. Apr. 1850 Howard, Indiana; spouse: Mary McHone. They had two children: Millington McHone and Micajah McHone.
3. Frances Fry (daughter) m. Benjamin Fry, b. 1826 in VA, son of George Washington Gunter and Elizabeth Gunter; they had a daughter: Elizabeth (Fry) Gunter, b. 1828; d. 1862, married Houston Gunter, b. 1826 VA; d. Carroll, VA. They had : George Washington Gunter b. 1861 North Carolina (Stokes); m. Mary Ann Gunter. and they had Flora (Gunter) Myers.
The McHone come from Islay with Lachlan Campbell in 1739-1741. Family legend says we came to New York first, leased out land there for 100 years, and came south to Virginia/Kentucky. First found Sackville McHone in 1745 in New Kent County, Virginia. His father may have been William, his son was /.
www.electricscotland.com/history/highlands/chapter7.htm. "Settlements of Scotch Highlanders in America"
Chapter 7.
"Mahone, William Surry Co., Will 1795, Will Book 1, 1792-1804, p. 113-115. Mahone, William Inv. 1808, Wills, etc. 2, 1804-1815 p. 226-227"
"Vestry Book of Blisland Parish, New Kent and James City Counties 1721-1786" Mahone (M'cHone) Sackville, pages 142, 156, 161, 165, 167, 171, 174, 177.
According to Ancestry.com, Sackfield/Sackville McHone, born in New Kent Co., Va 1708, married Mary, born 1710-died ?. They had two children:
Archibald McHone/Mahone born 1745 in Virginia; died 1842 in Stokes Co., North Carolina. and Major Mahone (Major was his given name, not a Title), born unknown, and died 1806 in James City County/York County, Virginia.
On www.wikitree.com, Sackville McHone, born 1730 in New Kent County, Virginia; died in Halifax
County, Virginia.
On myheritage.com/, Sackfield/Sackville McHone, born 1727 in New Kent County, Virginia; died 1765 in Halifax Co.,VA at age 38. His wife was Mary ? There eldest son, Archibald McHone.
On Ancestry.com, "Paynes of Virginia", "John Payne traveled to Virginia in 1620"; "Mr. Payne (perhaps John) who left New Kent County, Virginia, for a plantation in Bedford or Lunenburg County, Virginia in 1747. Ancestor Sackville McHone/Mahone was an overseer for him. Traced him (also spelled Sackfield) to Halifax County, Virginia in 1765, in some reports, killed in the last Indian raid.
On werelate.org/ Sackville McHone, born 1721 in New Kent Co.,VA; died 1765, killed in the last Indian raid.
tribalpages.com/family-tree/hhmays12 "Mays and Shelton Family Tree"
Sackfield/Sackville McHone, born in 1708; died 1756.
His eldest son, Archibald McHone, born in 1745 in New Kent County, Virginia; died 1842 in Carroll County, Virginia.
Frances "Fanny" McHone, b. 1791, d. 1850
Archiver.rootsweb.ancestry.com/McHone-L Archives
Major W. Mahone in 1810 James City County Tax records and 1820 Census James City County, VA
Willi Mahone found in Census 1830 and 1850 James City County, Virginia.
Archiless (prob. Archibald) in Patrick Co., Va in 1840.
"Major Mahone was head of the family in 1840 in James City County, Virginia.- It states: :The tax lists for land in James City County, Va, show the earliest name of Mahone as Major Mahone, with 110 acres, 1782-1800; in 1881, he cut this acreage to 106 acres. In 1802 he must have died for his estate of 108 acres by 1805 is divided between Major Willis Mahone and Daniel Mahone, 59 and 49 acres, respectively. This is the first time the name of Daniel Mahone appears."
The following is quoted from an article published Sunday Feb 18, 1906 on the page 4 of the Times Dispatch Genealogical Column by Miller,
"Mahone- It is difficult to trace the Mahones, as so many records of them have been destroyed. Daniel Mahone and his brother Willis came from England when quite young men. They married sisters, the Misses Hatton. Daniel had six children, four boys- Major, John, Daniel, and Jim and two girls. He thereafter married a Miss Buffin, whose family came from England, were reported as being very wealthy. By this marriage were six children also: four sons: George, William, Willis, and Walker. George married a Miss Mahone; William married ______[sic: wife apparently unknown)l Willis married Miss Donroella; and Walker married Miss Ann Vaughn. Daniel had a farm on the upper part of York County, Virginia. All of his sons died during or before the war. [sic: the Civil War], except William and Daniel. The latter died only a few years ago in Hampton." The article continues with other information which did not appear to be of direct interest to our family. Mr. Miller was not kidding about the difficulty in tracing the genealogy, but we do find interested tidbits here. I always assumed an Irish descent but this says English, but this does not mean that they did not start in Ireland and moved first to England and eventually America. What is confusing is that the article says that John was the child of Daniel's first wife rather than Miss Buffin. Could the writer's source have reversed one or more of the children's names since it is reported that both [wives] produced equal numbers of children with the same breakdown of boys and girls. Why would he give his son a middle name of a wife he had not yet married? But assuming that a Miss Buffin did married Daniel Mahone, then that is very strong evidence that any ancestor with Buffin for a middle name would have Daniel for a father." Another Mahone researcher added the following information,"In checking through my husband's records, most records we've gotten from others have listed Elizabeth (Betsy) Buffin as John Buffin Mahone's mother, with Daniel as his father;" John Buffin Mahone is my 4th great-grandfather. His son, Cornelius Walter Mahone is my 3rd Great-Grandfather.
Another ancestor, Francis Kinloch, born March 6, 1755 in Charleston, SC; m. Martha Rutledge (1764-1816). Francis Kinloch, was "a United States Congressman, During the Revolutionary War, he served as Capt. in the Continental Army. He served in the South Caroling State House of representatives in 1779 and was elected a member of the 2nd Continental Congress in 1780. From 1786 to 1788, he was a member of the State House of Representatives, State Legislative Council in 1789 and the State Constitutional Convention in 1790. Their children:
Eliza Kinloch
Anne Cleveland Kinloch (1788-1857)
Frederick Rutledge Kinloch (1791-1856)
The surname Kinloch is linked to the Nelson and Mahone families. The Massies is connected to the Nelson families of Nelson County, Virginia.
"A brief sketch of the Gilmer family is prouded because they were of their aristocratic scottish backfround as owners of Craigh Millar Castle near Edinburgh. The castle was historically invoved, along with other prominent Scots loyal to Mary, Queen of Scots, in the plot to murder Lord Darnley, her English
husband. Whatever the history of the period, the Gilmers kept a genealogy record that connects with the Taliferro and Brown families, as recorded in a book given to my sister Kate on her visit to Uncle Joe Brown's family in Montana. In the long and detailed record of the Gilmer's family history we can skip to Dr. George Gilmer the first of the family to visit America. He was b00 and graduatedorn near Edinburgh in 1700 and graduated in medicine from the University of Edinburgh. When he went to London to practice with the well-established Dr. Ridgeway, he fell in love with Dr. Ridgeway's daughter, Mary Peachy, an only child. The name Peachy was thought to have been the maiden name of Mrs. Ridgeway, a French woman. When the Royal Land company employed Dr. Gilmer to go to Virginia and report on the extensive properties, a year's absence from England would be required in addition to the two long and hazardous crossings of the Atlantic Ocean under sail. He was privately married to Mary Peachy Ridgway and he arrived alone in Williamsburg in 1731. When he returned to London a year later he received the sad news of his border's death. On his remarriage, Dr.Gilmer named his first Peachy Ridgeway Gilmer, and to the present day the combination of names has come down through generations of the family connections in Virginia, Georgia, Alabama and Mississippi linking the Gilmer genealogy with that of the Merriweather/Merriweather, Taliaferro, and Brown families. Kipling used the combination in his story of "The Man who would be King." Since the family had provided a missionary to India in the time of Kepling". Except from narrative written y Edwin Rice Brown III."
(source: familytreemaker.genealogy.com/users/s/n/i/Robert-M-Smith-AP/WEBSITE-0001/UHP-0327.html)
www.parks.ky.gov/parks/historicsites/thomas-walker/history.aspx
"Dr. Thomas Walker History" (established Jun 20, 1931)