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This petition documented the marriage of Charles Bradford, Sr., to Sarah Kirkland, as well as the names of seven living children. “That the following persons are entitled with your Oratrixes and Orators to distribu-tive shares, or parts of said tract of land, and in the following proportions, to wit:…, five Kirkland children, two Kirkland grandchildren] …“and Charles Bradford, Junior, Joshua Bradford, Spencer Bradford, William Bradford, Abigail Bradford, Robert Bradford and Francis Bradford, children of Sarah Bradford, the late wife of Charles Bradford, to two third parts of one sixth part of two third parts thereof….” 1 “To the Honorable the Judges of the Court of Equity of the said State Humbly Sheweth, That your Oratrixes and Orators, Mary Kirkland, Charles Bradford, Mary Yarborough, Abigail Kirkland, Constant Kirkland, Charles Bradford, Junior, Joshua Bradford, and Spence Bradford, of the District of Fairfield, that Francis Kirkland on the day of in the year of our Lord one thousand seven hundred and ninety two, departed this life without legally disposing of his real estate and at the time of his death was seized and possessed in fee simple of a tract of land containing one hundred and forty three acres, situate on the west side of little river in the District aforesaid. Bradford-from Wilkes County to Gwinnett County, Georgia, Genealogy or Mythology?Ībstracted below is Fairfield District, South Carolina, Court of Equity, “Bill for Partition” dated June 16th1821, recently obtained from the South Carolina Archives, which proves the names of Charles Bradford, Sr.’s wife and children. Bradford,” which this writer disproved in her previous article, Part 1: Richard J.
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It is therefore no particular surprise that the quoted paragraph contained very few verifiable facts. That is all that is known of their lives….”ĭavis, the late first cousin of this writer’s husband, based his statements on research he conducted in the 1950s, without access to the wealth of genealogical data available today. Nancy Bradford, his wife, joined the New Hope Methodist Church in October of 1829, and it is believed that they are buried at the New Hope Church. Charles Bradford died about 1829 or 1830. The Land Lottery of 1832 shows that the orphans of Charles Bradford drew land. 161, of Muscogee County and was living in Whorton’s District of Gwinnett County. 47 of Carroll County and in the Twenty-second District, Lot No. Charles Bradford drew land in the First District, Lot No. The Land Lottery of 1827 shows that Joshua Bradford drew land in the Fifth district, Lot 81, of Coweta County and was recorded as living in Robertson’s District of Gwinnett County. Richard Bradford and his family came to Gwinnett County about 1850 and settled in Harbin’s District where he was a blacksmith. 244, of Gwinnett County and was living in Wilkes County, Georgia. Bradford, eldest son of Charles Bradford, drew land in the fifth Land District, Lot No. The land Lottery of 1820 shows that Richard J. Joshua Bradford, his second eldest son, and his wife settled in Ben Smith’s District. Charles Bradford, his wife, and younger children settled in the section around New Hope Methodist Church. Several of their children were married and had families. Charles Bradford and his wife, Nancy, had thirteen children. “The first member of the Bradford family to come to Gwinnett County was Charles Bradford and his family who migrated to Georgia from Fairfield County, South Carolina, in 1823. 2, page 422, published by the Gwinnett Historical Society in 1960, second great grandson Gerald Davis (1927-1998) wrote: Joshua Bradford in History of Gwinnett County, Georgia, Vol. In the first paragraph of his article on Rev. With the elements of the "Genealogical Proofĭeveloped by the Board for Certification of Daniel Foundation to be operated as an educational park and museum.” Now an historic archaeological site owned today by Gwinnett County and leased to the Ft. Namesake of Gwinnett County’s historic Fortĭaniel, built in the Hog Mountain area in 1813 and Granddaughter of Major General Allen Daniel, the Settler, Diane Carrington Bradford is a 4th great Joshuaīradford, a Gwinnett County “First Family” pioneer
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“Genealogy Without Verified Documentation Is Mythology.” Part 2: The Parents and Siblings of Rev.