These are just my notes. Not meant to look fancy or even
coherent. They are here more for my convenience than anything
else.
In the 1880 Census record, William's father's birthplace is listed
as Pennsylvania, and his mother's, Virginia.
In an attempt to locate William's parents, I have focused on
finding Weeklys in Kentucky (where he was born), Missouri (where he married
Irene Skaggs), and Indiana (where I found a BLM land record for a William Elzy
Weekly). William was said to have been born "near" Louisville.
In an appllication for an Oregon donation land claim, William's
birth place is listed as Nelson County, KY. Assuming that William was born in
Nelson County, Abraham Weakley of Nelson County (1800 Tax List, 1810 and 1820
Censuses) is probably a close relative, if not his father. Nancy Marks (Weekley)
seems most likely to be his mother. I have found no other Weeklys in Nelson Co
between 1810 and 1820.
There are various spellings of the name Weekly. In genealogy you
will find that the spelling of a surname does not matter because, well, spelling
didn't matter much back then. You will find this to be true especially when the
name was written by someone other than the individual, such as in a
census.
Abraham Weekley and Nancy Marks
There is a record of a Nelson Co, KY marriage for Abraham Weekley
and Nancy Marks on 12 Apr 1802. That is ten years before William was born. I
estimate Abraham's birth year to be between 1775-1784, based on the fact that he
was in the 26-44 age range in the 1810 Census and the 26-45 age range in the
1820 Census. He could not have been older than 35 in 1810 if he was in the
26-45 age range in 1820 - so that actually makes his age range 26-35 in 1810.
He disappeared from census records after 1820, while Nancy apparently remained
in Nelson Co, KY until at least the 1840 Census (70-74 years of age at the
time). I estimate Nancy's birth year to be between 1766-1770. This is from
doing the math on the age categories from all of the Census records. I was able
to narrow it down quite a bit. She was at least 4-5 years older than
Abraham.
According to in an Oregon
history book (Pioneer History of Coos and Curry Counties, Dodge, 1898), William was said to have been the youngest of three children. This detail does not appear to fit, since Abraham and Nancy probably had five children together, for a total of nine. But since "Pioneer History" was published about 9
years after William's death, who knows where the detail of his being "the youngest of three children" came from. I have not ruled out the possibility of Abraham and Nancy being his parents based on that, especially since no other likely candidates have stepped forward.
Back to Abraham and Nancy. I think that this was a second
marriage for at least one of them. In 1810 there is 1 male, age 10-15, and
three females, age 16-25. Abraham and Nancy had only been married for 8 years
in 1810. Isaac Marks, Nancy's first husband, had died 10 Nov 1798, and a little
more than 3 years had passed between Isaac Mark's death and Nancy's marriage to
Abraham. Presumably, there would have been no children born to Nancy between
about August of 1799 and January of 1803. This would mean that Abraham and
Nancy had 5 children in 8 years of marriage, or that perhaps Abraham had a young
child or children at the time that he married Nancy. At any rate, there were
probably 5 children with the surname Weekley...Nancy had 4 children with Isaac
(according to Ancestry.com). They were married for a little over seven
years.
I have found a land record dated 27 Feb 1806 that says, "Abraham
Weekley and wife, Ann Weekley, of Nelson Co, KY" (Book 8, page 202) - land
record is also in the book, "Peyton-Quirk Families". Since I have found no
evidence of two Abrahams in Nelson Co, or any other Weekleys in Nelson Co during that time
period, it leads me to believe that Nancy used the name Ann, though it was her
middle name. Therefore, Ann Weekley very well may be the
same individual as Nancy Ann Marks.
The land that was sold in this transaction was partly in
Washington County, so they may have had dealings with individuals in Washington
County as well as in Nelson County.
Marks Family
It appears that Nancy got the last name of Marks from her first
husband. The presence of children who were born before Abraham and Nancy's
marriage suggests that at least one of them was married before.
Nancy lived next door to Isaac Marks and his family in the 1830
and 1840 Censuses. I believe that Nancy was Isaac's mother. Another researcher
(JoanneIkeda50 at ancestry.com) lists his mother as Nancy Ann Bull (his father
is also named Isaac Marks, born in 1767 Ireland, died 11-10-1798 in Washington
Co, KY.) and lists Isaac's birthdate as 10 Feb 1798, Nelson Co, KY. The senior
Isaac Marks had been dead for more than 3 years when
Nancy Marks married Abraham Weekley in 1802.
Additonally, a land record lists Abraham Weekley and wife Ann
Weekley, which suggests to me that she used the name Ann as well as Nancy (Nancy
Ann). I have yet to find any evidence of other Weekleys in Nelson County until
the Weekley children were grown, so it seems unlikely that there were two Abrahams. It also seems unlikely that "Ann" is anyone other
than Nancy. In my research, I have encountered several people who used both
their middle and first names, so this is not terribly unusual. Ann is also a nickname for Nancy.
Another clue to family relationships is the names of children. The youngest daughter of Isaac "Jr". was named Ann. One of his
sons was named Isaac Taylor. One of William Elze Weekly's sons was also named
Isaac Taylor. William's oldest daughter was named Nancy.
In 1853 William Elze Weekly moved to Oregon from Missouri. There
were several Marks families who did the same in 1853. Willam settled in TenMile
(Reston), while some of the Marks went to Glide. Both cities are in Douglas County. Other Marks settled in Linn
County. (see list of individuals below under the heading
"1853")
Tells the story of why certain members of the Marks family went to Oregon. It's
possible that William and Irene traveled with them, or perhaps it is just a
coincidence that they went to Oregon that same year.
Here is a photo of the Marks family in Oregon.
Bluford Marks
Bluford Marks was a nephew of the Isaac Marks (the Isaac who was married to Nancy Ann Bull). Bluford was the son of Isaac's brother, Benjamin Marks. It seems that there must have been a connection between Bluford Marks and William Elze Weekly, as they seem to live in the same general area at the same time, in three states: KY, MO and OR.
Bluford Brookins MARKS, born May 5, 1812, Bardstown, Nelson County,
KY (born in the same year and in the same city where William was born) - also came to Oregon in
1853.
Bluford Marks was living two counties away from William in Jackson
County, MO according to the 1850 Census. Bluford acquired land in three separate
transactions in 1849 in Jackson Co, according to http://glorecords.blm.gov.
William and Irene Weekly were probably married in Jackson County, MO, although they were
living in Benton Co, MO by 1850.
According to One World Tree, one of Bluford's daughters, Martha Jane, was born 14 May 1852 in Washington Co, Indiana, and at least one of the sons of Isaac Marks, Bluford's brother, was born in Parke Co, Indiana. (John Bluford Marks, 8 May 1831). (Just thinking about the marriage record for William E Weekly and Nancy Nevins in 1836 in Parke County, Indiana.)
Interestingly, it was the widow of this Isaac Marks (Bluford's brother), Elizabeth Parker Kays, who went to Oregon in 1853.
More Weekly/Marks Connections
There is another connection to the surname Marks, found in
District 2, Nelson Co, KY - 1850 Census. Household:
Daniel Weeky, 41, born in Kentucky
Mary Marks, 55, born in Virginia
Elizabeth Hall, 8, born in Kentucky
Daniel and Mary must have been related. I believe that they were
both living with Nancy Weekley in the 1840 Census. Though not listed by name in 1840,
the gender and ages are right. In the 1860 Census there is a Sam Weekly living
with Mary. It's possibly the same man listed as Daniel in 1850. (Ages are close, and Daniel and Samuel rhyme - Daniel maybe have been written in error. Additionally, I am not able to find a Daniel Marks in a later census.) See 1860
Census below... and 1870 Census for yet another Marks/Weekly
residence. Scroll down, it's in chronological order.
Are Daniel/Samuel Weekly and Mary Marks the children of Nancy Ann? It's possible that they were. Daniel/Sam would have been born in about 1809 and Mary in about 1795. Isaac Marks died in 1798 and Nancy married Abraham Weekley in 1802. If Mary is one of Isaac and Nancy's children, she is likely listed under a different name on Ancestry's One World Tree, since it lists only three girls named Betsy, Polly and Susannah. On the census records, there were only three girls who were born during the time that Nancy was married to Isaac. Perhaps Mary liked to switch her first and middle names like her mother did.
Shelby County, KY - A Whole Lotta Nothing
Another Weakley family is found in Shelby County, KY, perhaps
unrelated to Abraham from Nelson Co. Property owned by a Weakley was described
in 1840 as being three miles east of Shelbyville, Shelby County. Louisville, in
Jefferson county, is about 30 miles from Shelbyville, where there have been many
Weakleys. It appears that some Shelby County, KY Weakleys moved from Kentucky
to Indiana. I have done a lot of research on this family group and have not come across anything that suggests a connection.
_________________________________
Pennsylvania archives http://www.rootsweb.com/%7Eusgenweb/pa/1pa/paarchivesseries/series2/vol8/paarch2-8toc.html
Pennsylvania marriages 1785-1812 - church records, contains
several Weakleys http://www.rootsweb.com/~usgenweb/pa/1pa/paarchivesseries/series2/vol8/pass814.html
________________________________________
Kentucky formation map: http://www.mykentuckygenealogy.com/ky_maps/ky_cf.htm
________________________________________
http://www.rootsweb.com/roots-l/USA/files/SHELBY.TXT
Shelby County Kentucky Marriages 1792 - 1800 (a few
Weakleys)
________________________________________
1760: Philadelphia County, Pennsylvania Wills,
1682-1819
Name: Abraham Wegly
Description: Son
Date: 25 Sep 1760
Prove Date: 21 Oct 1760
BookPage: L:539
Remarks: George Wegly. Lower Salford, Co. of Philadelphia. Sept.
25, 1760. Oct. 21, 1760. L.539. Wife: No name given. Children: Abraham, Anne
Mary, Elizabeth, Catherine, George, Margaret and John. Son-in-Law: Frederick
Gable. Exec: George Schamback, Leonard Berkheimer.
(Too early to be the same Abraham I have been
searching)
1790 Census: Pennsylvania > Cumberland
> Hopewell, Newton, Tyborn, And Westpensboro
pg 12: Samuel Weakley (5 males over the age of 16, very large
family besides)
pg 13: Edward, James and Robt Weakley are listed all in a
row.
pg 36: Nathanial Weakly - one man, one woman in the
household.
Washington County, PA - Thomas Weakly is listed.
In the 1880 Census, William's father is listed as being born in
Pennsylvania. I believe that some of these individuals ended up living in
Shelby County, KY
________________________________
I checked the 1792-1795 "First Tax List" for Shelby County, KY -
no Weeklys or Weakleys, etc.
________________________________
Low Dutch Kentucky Marriages
1800- August 25. Shelby County
Threldkeld, Moses m. Weakley, Elizabeth d/o Thomas
Stephen Weakley Abraham Dale [witnesses]
_______________________________
Tithes for Nelson County, 1785-1791
Listed is:
Wickley John - see William Slack 12 Jno Hardin #1
1790
1800: Stephen and Thomas Weekly
are listed in the "Second Census" of Kentucky (which was reconstructed from tax
records), both living in Shelby County. There are no other Weeklys, Weaklys, or
Weakleys listed in Shelby, but there is a John Weakeley in Washington County,
and an Abraham Weakley in Nelson County (7/7/1800). Jeremiah Weakling in
Bourbon Co.
Ann Marks is on the "second census" as well. I believe that Nancy
Marks used the name Ann, which was probably her middle name. This would indicate that after Isaac Marks died, his widow did not move from the area, and had not remarried as of 1800.
Bourbon: Found at
http://www.imbris.net/~rsnale/EarlyNales.html: Some of the early settlers of
Nelson County were groups of whiskey makers who left Pennsylvania (1780s/90s) to
avoid a tax the government put on their products. They came to Nelson County,
KY, because the water in the area was unusually free of iron & other mineral
deposits, making for an excellent bourbon whiskey. Nelson County is the Bourbon
capital of the world. At its peak, there were at least 28 legal distillers in
the county before prohibition."
27 Feb 1806:
Land record, found in "Peyton-Quirk Families" by M.T.
Peyton
Abraham Weekley and wife, Ann Weekley, of Nelson Co,
KY
to
Philip Rizer, of Nelson Co, KY
Conveys: 106 acres of land.
Deed
Dated: 27 Feb 1806
Recorded: Book 8, page 202
Most of the land was in Nelson County, but a small portion in
Washington County.
I believe this "Ann" to be Nancy, with Ann being her middle name.
See "Marks Families" near the top.
War of 1812:
I have found two different records of men named Abraham Weekly
serving in the War of 1812. When I search Ancestry.com's "War of 1812"
database, from National Archives, only one Abraham Weekly is listed: 8 Regiment
(Wilcox's) Kentucky Militia.
On a bounty land grant issued 2/2/1819, Abraham Weekly obtains
land in Macon County, Missouri. (You can see it at http://glorecords.blm.gov. Search
for Weekly In Missouri.) 17th Regiment of Infantry is listed. There is a word
above 17th that looks like Irvine's or Irving's. It's difficult to tell whether
this is meant to be Abraham's middle name or the name of his Regiment. Warrant
# is 20041.
In One World Tree, there is an Abraham Weekly, (born about 1790 in Virginia, son of William Weekly and Susannah Grigsby) who does not appear to be the same Abraham that I have been searching for. Perhaps he was the one who obtained the land? It's difficult to tell with the information I have, though. It's possible that the land was obtained by "our" Abraham in Missouri, although he appears in Nelson Co, Ky in the 1810 and 1820 Censuses.
1820 Census:
Abraham Weakley is listed as living in Bardstown, in Nelson
County, KY.
1820 Census:Stephen Weakley and Thomas Weakly are listed as living
in Shelby County, KY in separate households.
The name Thomas (Weakley) shows up again in Shelby County,
District 2, KY in 1850. He is head of the household, age 36 (so he's not the
same Thomas as the 1820 Census) with sons named Stephen, William and John...
"my" William had sons named John and Stephen.
In 1860, Thomas and family are still there, this time with a 90-
year old Stephen Weakley who was born in VA.
Ancestry.com's tree says that Thomas's father is Stephen. The
line traces back to Enoch Weekly, b. 1720 in England.
There is a Weekley Village in
Northamptonshire, UK. The village was originally called wicleah, and was first
recorded in AD 956. The translation from the Anglo Saxon means Market Place by
the Meadow.
______________________________________
From the book History of Wayne
County, Indiana, from Its First Settlement to the Present Time: With Numerous
...
by Andrew White Young - 1872 -
459 pages
Page 323, Washington
Township:
The Methodists [Episcopal] are
said to have formed a society
about the year 1820, and built
a log meeting-house 7 miles
south-east from Milton. It is
probable, however, that a class
was formed there several years
earlier. Among the early
members of this church were
Philip Doddridge, John Dod-
dridge, John Spahr, and their
wives, Joseph Lower, Joseph
Williams, Thomas Beard, David
Way mi re; also, Michael
Helm and his wife, John
Henwood, and Isaac
Weekly and
their wives.
___________________________________
1830
Census:
In Eastern District, Nelson
Co, KY, a Mrs. Weakley is listed. (Probably the wife of Abraham, who was listed
in 1810 and 1820 in Nelson Co.) The name written actually says N Weakley, but
the transcript at Ancestry.com says Mrs. Weakley. The form says that there is
one female in the household, age 60-70. Two males, one is 10-15 years old, and
one is 20-30 years old. (William would have turned 18 in 1830. It's possible
he had left home or was incorrectly listed in the next column.)
Next door is Isaac Marks, who
I believe to be Nancy's son. He is 30-40 years old, with
family.
______________________
In Parke County, Indiana,
there is another Isaac Marks, 30-40, with family. This is the same county where
I found a marriage record of William E Weekly and Nancy Nevins in 1836. There
are Nevins in Parke Co and Vigo Co, Indiana.
______________________
In (not stated) Parke County,
Indiana (page 27) there is a John Wesely (? name as transcribed, is hard to
read). There are two males and 1 female in the household who are too old to be
the children of John and his wife.
On Page 13, there is a Samuel
and a James with a last name that could be Weekley. They are both 30-40 years
old, with families.. Page 75 has a Jacob Wee - - - Or Wu - -
.
______________________
In "Not Stated", Bartholomew
County, Indiana: John Weekly (50-60 and family) and John Weekly Jr, 20-30 years
old (page 29 of 42 on Ancestry.com).
______________________
In the 1830 Census, there is
an area in Shelby County, KY described as "North of the Road from Louisville to
Frankfort". (William's posthumous bio in "Pioneers and Incidents" stated that he was born
near Louisville in 1812 - while his Oregon land grant paperwork lists his birthplace as Nelson County, KY) In this list, the transcript reads "Mhlon" (probably
Mahlon), 20-30 year old male, and 1 unnamed female, 20-30 years. At
FamilySearch.net, I found several records of Mahlon Weakleys but I think that
he's probably the one born 26 DEC 1805, Shelby, Kentucky. Parents are listed as
Stephen Weakley and Elizabeth (Betsy) Arnold, part of the Shelby Co, Kentucky
clan.
Mahlon died in St. Joseph Co,
Indiana.
In the same 1830 Shelby Co
census record, there is a Weekly listed with an illegible first name. The
transcription reads "Tsner." I think it may be Tavaner (sometimes spelled
Tavner or Tavener).
At familysearch.net, Tavener
Weakley's is said to have been born in Fauguier co, Virginia. Parents are listed
as Enoch Weakley and Hannah Robinson.
At www.findagrave.com I found
a listing for Tavaner Weekly:
Birth: Jan. 25,
1797
Virginia, USA
Death: Nov. 7,
1865
Hendricks
County
Indiana, USA
Aged 68 years, 9 months and 13
days.
Husband of Lydia Tinder and
Sally Ann Dearman. Father of Samuel Weekly, Susan Weekly, Enoch Weekly, Eliza
(Weekly) Tharp, Andrew J. Weekly, Edward Weekly, Henry Weekly, Ann (Weekly)
Shirley and Jane (Weekly) Flynn, all by his first wife Lydia.
Inscription reads: "Our father
that's gone to a mansion of rest/ From a region of sorrow and pain/ To the
glorious land by Deity blest/ Where he never can suffer again"
Burial:
Tinder Cemetery
New
Winchester
Hendricks
County
Indiana, USA
The Tavaner Weakley/Weekly
family in the 1830 census entry consists of one male 5 years old or younger, one
male 30-40 years old, and one female 20-30 years old. The Tavaner who is buried
in Hendricks Co, Indiana would have been 33 at the time of the 1830
Census.
Since William was 18 in 1830,
he was not part of either of those households.
__________________________________
24 April 1836 - William E
Weekly, Marriage to Nancy Nevins, Parke County, Indiana, USA
Nothing but names and a
marriage date in this record, which was obtained at
http://208.119.135.17/db/in_marriages_1850/marriages_search.asp. This William
was most likely William Elzy Weekly, who obtained land in Vigo Co, Indiana in
1837. (If this is the same William I am researching, then Irene was wife
#2.)
Another
source:
Name: William E. Weekly
Spouse Name: Nancy Nevins
Marriage Date: 24 Apr 1836
Marriage County: Parke
Book: Family History Library,
Salt Lake City, UT
OS Page: 0849947
I finally sent for the original...The original record reads:
I do certify that I did join together as husband and wife William E Weekly and
Nancy Nevins on the 24th day of Apr 1836.
Robert Mitchell A.J.P.C.
Recorded May 2, 1836.
John G Davis, clk [clerk, his name is on every record.]
Robert Mitchell A.J.P.C.
Recorded May 2, 1836.
John G Davis, clk [clerk, his name is on every record.]
_________________________________
18 March 1837 - William Elzy
Weekly obtains property in Vigo County, Indiana, USA.
Name on record (at
www.glorecords.blm.gov) is William Elzy Weekly - it's not too unusual to find
phonetic spelling on records from this time period. Given the unusual middle
name it could possibly be the same William I am researching. The record states
that he is from Parke County, Indiana. That's why I think the marriage record
(above) may be the same person who obtained this land in Vigo
County.
From the Book,
An illustrated history of the state of
Indiana : being a full and
authentic civil and political history of the state from its first exploration
down to 1876 : including an account of the commercial, agricultural and
educational growth of Indiana : with historical and descriptive sketches of the
cities, towns and villages, embracing interesting narratives of pioneer life,
together with biographical sketches and portraits of the prominent men of the
past and present, and a history of each county separately
Indianapolis: J. W.
Lanktree & Co., 1876, 735 pgs.
Pg 400-401: Describes how
hundreds of acres of land were made available for settlement in 1837 by the
draining of Lost Creek, in an area east and south of Terra Haute, Vigo Co. [I'm
not sure of the location of the land that William obtained.]
_________________________________
10 OCT 1837, Hendricks,
Indiana
Harvey S Swindler and Nancy
Weakley are married.
____________________________________
The Indiana School Journal, by
Indiana State Teachers Association, pg 107-108, states: "An addition was made to
the Faculty [of Indiana Asbury University] in
the spring of 1838. Rev. John
W. Weakley, a graduate of
Augusta College, Ky., was
elected preceptor of the Preparatory
Department, who entered upon
the duties of his station at the
beginning of the summer
term". In 1839 he resigned.
_________________________________
1840 Census:
In Nelson County, KY, there is
a Nancy Weakly, (living next to Isaac Marks, 40-50). There is one male, 30-40,
one female, 40-50, and one female, 70-80. There are no other Weaklys listed in
Nelson Co. I believe Nancy to be the 70-80 year old. I think that Daniel (who may have actually been Samuel) Weekly
and Mary Marks were living with Nancy Weekley in 1840, as the ages of the man
and woman living with Nancy match those of Daniel Weekly and Mary Marks, in the
1850 in Nelson Co, KY Census (In 1850 they are living together with an 8 year
old girl, Elizabeth Hall). Daniel may be one of Nancy and Abraham's sons.
Mary, born in Virginia, is the right age to be one of Nancy and Isaacs children.
____________________________________
There is a William Weckley (as
the name is transcribed) in the 1840 Census of Saint Francois, Missouri; Roll:
230; Page: 58. I looked at the image on Ancestry.com and it is blurry but it
looks as much like Weekly as it does Weckley to me. The age of this William is
20-30 years, the right age range. There is also a woman, age 15-20. There are
no children in the household.
Probably is this
couple:
William Weakley and Naomi
Caroline Snead of St. Francois Co., Mo.; married on 17 April 1839 by W. H.
Andrews, JP at St. Francois Co., Mo.
(I found this record through
the Rootsweb page for Saint Francois County, MO marriage lookup
http://www.vienici.com/moabs/last.asp)
______________________________________
Other 1840 Census places I
checked:
I have not found any Weeklys
in Vigo County, Indiana in the 1840 Census, which I went though page by page,
and I also used Ancestry.com's search engine in case I missed something.
I also have not found any
Weeklys (or spelling variants) in Parke County, Indiana 1840.
This absence of Weeklys
suggests that, if my "Indiana" theory is correct, William had moved on in the
direction of Missouri by the time the 1840 census was taken. It also suggests
that there was perhaps not more than one William Weekly in Vigo County. I still
need to check maps to make sure that part of Vigo and/or Parke County didn't get
divided into another county.
There are probably some
Weeklys in Hendricks, Harrison and Marion County in 1840/1850, based on marriage
records found at
http://208.119.135.17/db/in_marriages_1850/marriages_search.asp.
1840 Census of Shelby County,
Kentucky - lots of Weakleys/Weaklys. Also notice the name Searce on the same
page as Margaret. (See book reference below.)
_________________________________
1 Aug 1849 - John S Weekly
obtains property (located in Benton County, MO) from the Government Land
Office. The only question I have is, are children allowed to get land from the
government? Because this is the name of William and Irene's son, 7 years old at
the time. In the 1850 Census, they are living in that spot. I compared the names of neighbors on the census with the names of people who obtained adjoining plots. It's definitely the same land.
________________________________
1850
Census
In District 2, Nelson Co, Ky,
there is an Isaac Marks, 57 years old, born abt 1799 in Kentucky. I believe he
is the same Isaac who lived next to Nancy Weakly in 1840 and 1830 Censuses.
Nancy does not live next door to him anymore and appears to have disappeared
from the record.
1850 Census of Ralls County,
Missouri includes a Nancy Weekly, born about 1795. Although this is probably
too young to be William's mother...will check it out later.
_______________________________
http://www.rootsweb.com/~kybullit/bcqnco.htm (under
C)
Cundiff,
James
1845 purchased steelyards at
the estate sale of John Weakly 17 Nov 1845
(Bullitt Co. Will Bk C p.
503)
1845 tax list of Bullitt Co.
KY with 1 white male over 21.
240 acres on Crooked Creek,
Bullitt Co. KY [just south of Nelson County]
_______________________________
http://www.rootsweb.com/~kybullit/bcqnqu.htm (under
W)
WEEKLY/WEAKLY
Weakey, Abraham & Nancy
(Marks)
1802 m. Nancy Marks 12 Apr
1802 in Nelson Co. KY
Weakly, Barney &
Delila
1845 purchased items at the
estate sale of John Weakly 17 Nov 1845 (Bullitt Co. Will Bk C p.
503)
1850 census Mississippi Co. MO
shows Barney Weakley age 25 b. KY with
wife Delila age 20 b.
KY
Weakly, John
1825 tax list of Bullitt Co.
KY, 1 white male over 21. No land.
1845 sale of the estate of
John Weakly returned to Bullitt Co. KY Court 17 Nov 1845 by
William
T. Lee Admr. and Robert M.
Lee, Admr. (Bullitt Co. Will Bk C p. 503)
Weakly,
Letitia
1845 purchased items at the
estate sale of John Weakly 17 Nov 1845 (Bullitt Co. Will Bk C p.
503)
Weakly,
Matilda
1845 purchased items at the
estate sale of John Weakly 17 Nov 1845 (Bullitt Co. Will Bk C p.
503)
____________________
1850 Census,
District 2, Nelson Co, KY
Household 381 - page 58 of
109,
Daniel Weekly, 41, born in
Kentucky (born abt 1809)
Mary Marks, 55, born in
Virginia (born abt 1795)
Elizabeth Hall, 8, born in
Kentucky
No other Weeklys listed in
Nelson Co. I think that Daniel and Mary were living with Nancy in the 1840
Census. The ages are right.
Household 391, page 59 of
109
Isaac Marks, 47, born in
KY
Elizabeth, 48,
"
Isaac, 19, "
Susan, 16, "
Ann E, 10, "
There are several Marks
families in District 2 in 1850.
___________________________________
1853 - Marks Families who
came to Oregon from Missouri:
http://www.oregonpioneers.com/1853.htm
MARKS, Alfred B. (1847- ): s/o
Bluford and Martha (Moore) Marks
MARKS, Benjamin (1840-1923):
m'd 1866 NYE, Elizabeth Druzilla; s/o Bluford and Martha (Moore) Marks; settled
Linn Co; farmer; died Wallowa Co, OR
MARKS, Bluford Brookins
(1812-1873): m'd 1836 MOORE, Martha W.; settled in Linn Co
MARKS, Elizabeth (1842- ): m'd
1861 CLARK, William S.; d/o Bluford and Martha (Moore) Marks; settled Linn Co
MARKS, James P. (1845- ): s/o
Bluford and Martha (Moore) Marks
MARKS, Jane (1852- ): d/o
Bluford and Martha (Moore) Marks
MARKS, John P. (1838- ): m'd
1867 WILLIAMS, Ellen; s/o Bluford and Martha (Moore) Marks; farmer, settled Linn
Co
MARKS, Sarah K. (1849- ): m'd
1865 JAMES, Thomas B.; d/o Bluford and Martha (Moore) Marks
MARKS, Sarah Jane (1824-1895):
m'd CHAPMAN, Andrew Jackson; d/o Isaac and Elizabeth (Parker) Marks
MARKS, William N.:
Shelby County Weakleys
- 10 May 1852: http://www.voy.com/155951/17.html -
This record is most likely not the same Mahlon from the 1830 Shelby County
Census, but probably related. Margaret Weakley mentioned. "Land situated on
Gist's creek, Shelby county, Ky., about three miles east of Shelbyville, on the
Benson road from that place to Frankfort." Shelbyville is approx. 30 miles
from Louisville.
____________________________________
1860 Census:
Kentucky, Nelson Co, District 1
Dwelling 598/Family
586
Sam Weakly, 52, born in
KY
Mary Marks, 66, born in
KY
(These are probably the same
individuals as in the 1850 Census, except that Sam is listed as Daniel in 1850.
Daniel and Samuel sound sort of alike - also possible that he was using his
first and middle names....perhaps Daniel and Samuel are the same
person?)
____________________________________
1870
Census: Indiana, Parke County,
Green
Source Citation: Year: 1870;
Census Place: Greene Township, Parke, Indiana; Roll: M593_349; Page: 73; Image:
146.
Ancestry.com, page 7 of
29.
We find a combined
Marks/Weekley household again!
In trying to find
Samuel/Daniel Weekley in 1870, I was unable to locate him or Mary Marks, who had
been living with him, in Kentucky. It's possible that he moved to Parke Co,
Indiana, perhaps after the death of Mary Marks - just a theory. The birth year
for the Samuel in Indiana is very close to that of Daniel/Samuel found earlier
in Kentucky.
Dwelling 59/Family
57:
Marks, John, 69, male, white,
farmer, born in PA
Marks, Rebecca, 69, female,
white, keeping house, born in KY
Marks, Mary, 35, female,
white, keeping house, born in Indiana
Marks, Elizabeth, 30, female,
white, keeping house, born in Indiana
Woodrain (?), Tales (?), 10,
male, white, born in Indiana
Weekley, Samuel, 60, male,
white, farm laborer, born in KY
John Marks is unlikely to be a
son of Isaac Marks and Nancy Ann Bull, since according to this record, he was
born about 1801 and Isaac Marks died in 1798. He is also born in PA, wrong state (VA or KY would have been likely locations if he was their son).
__________________________________________________
Abraham, Josiah and James Weakley move from Missouri to what was
to become Lincoln County, South Dakota.
Quotes from web page:
In May 1867 the Benjamin and William Hill, and the Jacob Sorter
families arrived from Missouri . The Hills each took claims near the trapper
shanty. In June the Hydes returned with their families, son William now filing a
claim on the property cultivated by his father and brother the previous year.
Joining the Hydes were the J.Q. Fitzgerald, William Craig, C.H. Swift, W.S.
Smith, and the Josiah, James and Abraham Weakley families. Five of these
families homesteaded on land near the trapper shanty in Canton Township , Sorter
and Craig took claims in Fairview Township .
County Commissioners, August J. Lindeman, Henry P. Hyde and
Benjamin Hill; sheriff, C.H. Swift; probate judge and county treasurer, J.Q. F
itzgerald; register of deeds, William Hill; justices of the peace, William Hyde
and Werter S. Smith; constable, James Weakley, coroner, Josiah Weakley.
__________________________________________________
Found this at:
http://freepages.family.rootsweb.com/~stellacotrill/james-weekley2.htm. The
son, unnamed, not in the will, fits the time period in which William was born.
Not too likely to be a match but some details are close.
RICHARD3 WEEKLEY (THOMAS JEFFERSON2, JAMES1) was born 1788 in
Green County,Pennsylvania, and died 1848 in Tyler County,WVA. He married
PRUDENCE WOOD 1808 in Tyler County,WVA. She was born December 03, 1792 in Green
County,Pennsylvania, and died March 22, 1863 in Tyler
County,WVA.
Children of RICHARD WEEKLEY and PRUDENCE WOOD
are:
24. i. THOMAS A.4 WEEKLEY, b. June 10, 1817, (was
Wood)Pleasants County,WVA; d. December 13, 1876, Pine Grove OR Hebron
Cemetery,Pleasants County,WVA (typhoid fever).
ii. RACHEL WEEKLEY, b. 1812.
iii. MALE WEEKLEY(NOT IN WILL), b. Bet. 1810 -
1820.
25. iv. LEVI WEEKLEY, b. 1815, Tyler County
,WVA.
26. v. RICHARD WEEKLEY, b. 1815, Tyler County ,WVA; d.
1864.
27. vi. JOHN WEEKLEY, b. 1822, Tyler County ,WVA; d.
December 23, 1889, Centerville Cemetery,Tyler County
,WVA(Bronchitis).
28. vii. ELIZABETH WEEKLEY, b. 1824, Tyler County ,WVA; d.
August 31, 1887, Doddridge County,WVA.
29. viii. ISAAC M. WEEKLEY, b. 1826, Tyler County
,WVA.
30. ix. DEIDAMIA WEEKLEY, b. January 27, 1829, Tyler
County ,WVA; d. January 29, 1895, Tyler County ,WVA.
31. x. JOSEPH " MARION" WEEKLEY, b. August 08, 1838,
Hebron,Tyler County ,WVA (obit said 1837); d. March 19, 1905,
Bellevue,Nebraska
______________________________________
http://genforum.genealogy.com/weakley/messages/192.html -
Bob Heck posts a photo of mystery Weeklys - I am assuming an Oregon reunion
photo, since there is a photo of Irene Jane Skaggs with others in the inset
photo on the corner....(photo link does not work but I have seen the photo on
Bob Heck's Rootsweb page, and I have it on my photos page). He says that he
wonders where the photo came from, found it with his grandmother's Weekley
photographs. He says that the grandmother was descended from Jacob Weekley, d
1916, b in Frederick Co, MD. Son of Charles Weakley, grandson of Thomas
Weakley.
Ancestry.com's tree says that Thomas' father is Leonard Weekley,
______________________________________________
There is a Weakley Cemetery in Shelby County (GenWeb Project) but
a listing has not been made available online yet. 8-22-07)
http://www.rootsweb.com/~kyshelby/cemetery.html
______________________________________________
Research Links:
Jacob Weakley, Shenandoah County, VA: http://mysite.verizon.net/wjp1949/weekley1.htm
William and John Weekly in VA mentioned: http://mysite.verizon.net/wjp1949/wilson1.htm
Another Shenandoah County, VA link: http://web0.greatbasin.net/~doranna/Huartson/page20.html
Weekly tombstones, one in Shelby Co, KY http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~weakley/Genealogy/pictures2.htm
Main page for same site http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~weakley/Genealogy/
Book Titles:
WEAKLEY, SEARCE and ARNOLD FAMILIES OF KENTUCKY by Elizabeth W.
McNamara
Library of Congress
80-66636: McNamara, Elizabeth W., 1911- Weakley, Scearce,
Arnold
families of Kentucky : their descendants and ancestral
families /
Baltimore : Gateway Press ; Arlington, VA : book orders to E.
W. McNamara,
c1980. xiv, 328 p. : ill. ; 29 cm.
LC CALL NUMBER: CS71 .W3595 1980
_____________________________
SHELBY COUNTY, KY MARRIAGES 1792-1833 copied and published by Eula
Richardson Hasskarl [Filson Historical Society, Louisville, KY]
_____________________________
Saunders, Sara Bradford, 1908-
Main Title: Salt of the earth / by Sara Bradford Saunders.
Published/Created: [Madison? Tenn. : S.B. Saunders, 1987?]
Description: 181 p. : ill. ; 22 cm.
Notes: Bibliography: p. 180-181.
Subjects: Bradford family.
Weakley family.
Tennessee--Genealogy.
_____________________________
Weakley, Francis J. (Francis Jordan), 1871-1904.
Main Title: The Weakley family in America.
Published/Created: [United States? : s.n., ca. 1982]
Description: 114 p. ; 28 cm.
Notes: Cover title.
Reprint. Originally published: The Weakley family in America,
1703-1904. [S.l. : s.n.], 1904 (Dayton, Ohio : Press of U.B. Pub. House)
Subjects: Weakley family.
______________________________
William Beard of Nelson County, Kentucky, and His Descendants By
Frank Cowles
from snippets on Google Books, it looks like there are some
Weakleys mentioned, although only a few.
_____________________________
Oregon records books: