Fred Sewall Camp1
M, b. circa 1849
Fred Sewall Camp|b. c 1849|p68.htm#i13027|Talcott Hale Camp|b. 17 Jan 1816\nd. 7 Feb 1897|p68.htm#i13023|Ann Elizabeth Sewall|b. 4 Aug 1824\nd. 3 Jun 1888|p404.htm#i955|George Camp|b. 8 Aug 1790|p68.htm#i15691|Elizabeth Hitchcock||p223.htm#i20581|Henry D. Sewall|b. 21 Aug 1786\nd. 8 Jun 1846|p420.htm#i121|Mary C. Norton|b. 1789\nd. 30 Dec 1840|p326.htm#i122|
Fred Sewall Camp was living in Norwich, Connecticut, and has interest in a large cotton-mill there.1 He was born circa 1849 in New York.2 He was the son of Talcott Hale Camp and Ann Elizabeth Sewall.1 Fred Sewall Camp married Harriet B. (Unknown).2
Children of Fred Sewall Camp and Harriet B. (Unknown)
- Walter T. Camp2 b. c 1866
- Talcott H. Camp2 b. c 1878
Citations
- [S34] Unverified internet information, http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~twigs2000/…
- [S107] 1880 US Census.
George Camp1
M, b. 8 August 1790
George Camp was born on 8 August 1790 in Glastonbury, Connecticut.2 He married Elizabeth Hitchcock.2
Child of George Camp and Elizabeth Hitchcock
- Talcott Hale Camp+1 b. 17 Jan 1816, d. 7 Feb 1897
George Van Santvoord Camp1
M, b. 9 December 1860, d. 2 February 1915
George Van Santvoord Camp|b. 9 Dec 1860\nd. 2 Feb 1915|p68.htm#i13029|Talcott Hale Camp|b. 17 Jan 1816\nd. 7 Feb 1897|p68.htm#i13023|Ann Elizabeth Sewall|b. 4 Aug 1824\nd. 3 Jun 1888|p404.htm#i955|George Camp|b. 8 Aug 1790|p68.htm#i15691|Elizabeth Hitchcock||p223.htm#i20581|Henry D. Sewall|b. 21 Aug 1786\nd. 8 Jun 1846|p420.htm#i121|Mary C. Norton|b. 1789\nd. 30 Dec 1840|p326.htm#i122|
George Van Santvoord Camp was born on 9 December 1860 in Watertown, New York.2 He was the son of Talcott Hale Camp and Ann Elizabeth Sewall.1 He was cashier of the Jefferson County National Bank for a number of years.2 George Van Santvoord Camp died on 2 February 1915 at the age of 54.2 He was buried in Brookside Cemetery, Watertown.2
Citations
- [S34] Unverified internet information, http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~twigs2000/…
- [S511] Harry F. Landon, The North Country, Vol. 2, pp. 700-750.
Talcott H. Camp1
M, b. circa 1878
Talcott H. Camp|b. c 1878|p68.htm#i15690|Fred Sewall Camp|b. c 1849|p68.htm#i13027|Harriet B. (Unknown)|b. c 1850|p5.htm#i15688|Talcott H. Camp|b. 17 Jan 1816\nd. 7 Feb 1897|p68.htm#i13023|Ann E. Sewall|b. 4 Aug 1824\nd. 3 Jun 1888|p404.htm#i955|||||||
Talcott H. Camp was born circa 1878 in Connecticut.1 He was the son of Fred Sewall Camp and Harriet B. (Unknown).1
Citations
- [S107] 1880 US Census.
Talcott Hale Camp1
M, b. 17 January 1816, d. 7 February 1897
Talcott Hale Camp|b. 17 Jan 1816\nd. 7 Feb 1897|p68.htm#i13023|George Camp|b. 8 Aug 1790|p68.htm#i15691|Elizabeth Hitchcock||p223.htm#i20581|||||||||||||
Talcott Hale Camp was born on 17 January 1816 in Uthica, New York.3 He was the son of George Camp and Elizabeth Hitchcock.2,3 Talcott Hale Camp was christened on 28 December 1817 at First Presbyterian Church, Utica, New York.2 He married Ann Elizabeth Sewall, daughter of Henry Devereaux Sewall and Mary Catherine Norton, on 3 June 1847 in Watertown, New York, the marriage was conducted by the Rev. J.R. Boyd.4 "This genial and well-known gentleman, now at the age of 73 years, may regularly be found at his desk at the Jefferson County National Bank of Watertown, attending to his duties as president of that institution, which responsible position he has held for 34 years, for 25 years having had the entire management of its financial operations, under advice of an able body of directors. He has discharged his trust with conspicuous ability and success, and may well derive satisfaction from the knowledge that during these years the policy of the bank has been helpful, by its financial aid and personal encouragement, in developing the resources of Jefferson County; the stock-holders, meanwhile, having received regular and liberal dividends.
Mr. Camp was born in Utica, N. Y., and soon after his father, George Camp, removed with his family to Sackets Harbor, a place of activity and prosperity, where, in 1817, he printed the first newspaper of that village, called the Sackets Harbor Gazette. Sackets Harbor, however, failed to fulfill the prophecy of its friends in regard to its growth and prosperity, and this led many young men of that place to seek homes and occupation elsewhere. Mr. Camp was offered important positions elsewhere, but selected Watertown as a place of advancing growth and influence, and located there in the spring of 1840. He opened a drug and paint store in Loveland Paddock’s block, on Washington Place, and this prosperous business established by him has continued in the same locality for 50 consecutive years, for the last 25 years being conducted by George B. Massey and Mr. Camp’s son, Walter Hale.
Mr. Camp has been identified with numerous enterprises and corporations which have been influential in advancing the material, educational, and moral growth of his chosen residence. At an early day he advocated and assisted in the arduous attempt to build the railroad from Rome to Cape Vincent, and in 1863 was chosen one of the directors of the road, which office he held about 25 years, during seven of which he was its vice-president. The office of the treasurer of the corporation was located in Watertown, and its financial transactions were largely under the care and direction of Mr. Camp, and were so well supervised by him as to meet the hearty approval of the directors and stockholders. He has been connected with several manufacturing enterprises, but more intimately associated with the Watertown Steam Engine Company, continuing as one of its trustees for many years, and has aided in its growth until it has now become a large and flourishing concern, with one of the most extensive plants in the United States.
The Jefferson County Institute, an academy founded in 1837 by the Presbyterians and Congregationalists of the county, and for many years affording advanced educational advantages to the youth of both sexes, found in Mr. Camp a friend and supporter. For 40 years he has been one of its trustees, and is now its president; but the building, library, apparatus, etc., are leased to the city, and used by the High School, in the system of graded schools under the direction of the board of education. Mr. Camp is one of the trustees and officers of the Jefferson County Savings Bank, an institution eminently useful in encouraging persons of moderate income to deposit a portion of their earnings to accumulate and become a sure source of supply for future wants. This bank has paid no salaries to its trustees, their only compensation being the satisfaction they enjoy from the knowledge that the institution has become strong, popular, and helpful.
Mr. Camp has not been desirous of political preferment. As a patriotic citizen he has always sustained the laws and institutions of his native land; but in no sense has he been a narrow-minded partisan. Although eminently qualified, by business and executive ability and unimpeachable integrity, to fill positions of trust and responsibility in the gift of the people, he has left the race for office to be run by others. From the time of his coming to Watertown he has been a member of the First Presbyterian Church, a Christian institution recognized for its beneficient influence and generous charities, to which Mr. Camp has been a liberal contributor.
Mr. Camp is still not only active and engaged in many business pursuits, but is also prominent in social and literary circles. He is a charitable and kind-hearted Christian gentleman, and is ever ready to offer counsel and substantial aid to the numerous deserving ones who seek his advice. His physical and mental activity warrant the belief and hope that he has many more years of usefulness yet before him".5
Talcott Hale Camp died on 7 February 1897 at the age of 81.3
Mr. Camp was born in Utica, N. Y., and soon after his father, George Camp, removed with his family to Sackets Harbor, a place of activity and prosperity, where, in 1817, he printed the first newspaper of that village, called the Sackets Harbor Gazette. Sackets Harbor, however, failed to fulfill the prophecy of its friends in regard to its growth and prosperity, and this led many young men of that place to seek homes and occupation elsewhere. Mr. Camp was offered important positions elsewhere, but selected Watertown as a place of advancing growth and influence, and located there in the spring of 1840. He opened a drug and paint store in Loveland Paddock’s block, on Washington Place, and this prosperous business established by him has continued in the same locality for 50 consecutive years, for the last 25 years being conducted by George B. Massey and Mr. Camp’s son, Walter Hale.
Mr. Camp has been identified with numerous enterprises and corporations which have been influential in advancing the material, educational, and moral growth of his chosen residence. At an early day he advocated and assisted in the arduous attempt to build the railroad from Rome to Cape Vincent, and in 1863 was chosen one of the directors of the road, which office he held about 25 years, during seven of which he was its vice-president. The office of the treasurer of the corporation was located in Watertown, and its financial transactions were largely under the care and direction of Mr. Camp, and were so well supervised by him as to meet the hearty approval of the directors and stockholders. He has been connected with several manufacturing enterprises, but more intimately associated with the Watertown Steam Engine Company, continuing as one of its trustees for many years, and has aided in its growth until it has now become a large and flourishing concern, with one of the most extensive plants in the United States.
The Jefferson County Institute, an academy founded in 1837 by the Presbyterians and Congregationalists of the county, and for many years affording advanced educational advantages to the youth of both sexes, found in Mr. Camp a friend and supporter. For 40 years he has been one of its trustees, and is now its president; but the building, library, apparatus, etc., are leased to the city, and used by the High School, in the system of graded schools under the direction of the board of education. Mr. Camp is one of the trustees and officers of the Jefferson County Savings Bank, an institution eminently useful in encouraging persons of moderate income to deposit a portion of their earnings to accumulate and become a sure source of supply for future wants. This bank has paid no salaries to its trustees, their only compensation being the satisfaction they enjoy from the knowledge that the institution has become strong, popular, and helpful.
Mr. Camp has not been desirous of political preferment. As a patriotic citizen he has always sustained the laws and institutions of his native land; but in no sense has he been a narrow-minded partisan. Although eminently qualified, by business and executive ability and unimpeachable integrity, to fill positions of trust and responsibility in the gift of the people, he has left the race for office to be run by others. From the time of his coming to Watertown he has been a member of the First Presbyterian Church, a Christian institution recognized for its beneficient influence and generous charities, to which Mr. Camp has been a liberal contributor.
Mr. Camp is still not only active and engaged in many business pursuits, but is also prominent in social and literary circles. He is a charitable and kind-hearted Christian gentleman, and is ever ready to offer counsel and substantial aid to the numerous deserving ones who seek his advice. His physical and mental activity warrant the belief and hope that he has many more years of usefulness yet before him".5
Talcott Hale Camp died on 7 February 1897 at the age of 81.3
Children of Talcott Hale Camp and Ann Elizabeth Sewall
- Fred Sewall Camp+5 b. c 1849
- Walter Hale Camp5 b. c 1851
- George Van Santvoord Camp+5 b. 9 Dec 1860, d. 2 Feb 1915
Citations
- [S153] Charles Nelson Sinnett, The Sewall genealogy, p.11.
- [S89] LDS Record, Records of the First Presbyterian Church of Utica in Oneida County, N.Y., 1813-1852 Vosburgh, Royden Woodward.
- [S511] Harry F. Landon, The North Country, Vol. 2, pp. 700-750.
- [S352] Fred Q. Bowman, 10,000 Vital Records of Central New York, p. 40.
- [S34] Unverified internet information, http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~twigs2000/…
Walter Hale Camp1
M, b. circa 1851
Walter Hale Camp|b. c 1851|p68.htm#i13028|Talcott Hale Camp|b. 17 Jan 1816\nd. 7 Feb 1897|p68.htm#i13023|Ann Elizabeth Sewall|b. 4 Aug 1824\nd. 3 Jun 1888|p404.htm#i955|George Camp|b. 8 Aug 1790|p68.htm#i15691|Elizabeth Hitchcock||p223.htm#i20581|Henry D. Sewall|b. 21 Aug 1786\nd. 8 Jun 1846|p420.htm#i121|Mary C. Norton|b. 1789\nd. 30 Dec 1840|p326.htm#i122|
Walter Hale Camp was living in Watertown and is of the firm Camp & Massey.1 He was born circa 1851 in New York.2 He was the son of Talcott Hale Camp and Ann Elizabeth Sewall.1
Citations
- [S34] Unverified internet information, http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~twigs2000/…
- [S209] 1870 US Census.
Walter T. Camp1
M, b. circa 1866
Walter T. Camp|b. c 1866|p68.htm#i15689|Fred Sewall Camp|b. c 1849|p68.htm#i13027|Harriet B. (Unknown)|b. c 1850|p5.htm#i15688|Talcott H. Camp|b. 17 Jan 1816\nd. 7 Feb 1897|p68.htm#i13023|Ann E. Sewall|b. 4 Aug 1824\nd. 3 Jun 1888|p404.htm#i955|||||||
Walter T. Camp was born circa 1866 in Connecticut.1 He was the son of Fred Sewall Camp and Harriet B. (Unknown).1
Citations
- [S107] 1880 US Census.
Adelaide Constance Campbell1
F
Adelaide Constance Campbell married Lord Arthur Lennox, son of Charles Lennox 4th Duke of Richmond and Charlotte Gordon.1
Child of Adelaide Constance Campbell and Lord Arthur Lennox
Citations
- [S132] Gary Boyd Roberts, The Royal Descents of 600 Immigrants, p. 15.
Alexander Campbell1
M, d. 1872
Alexander Campbell|d. 1872|p68.htm#i1173|Lt. Col. Patrick Campbell||p68.htm#i1174||||||||||||||||
Alexander Campbell was the son of Lt. Col. Patrick Campbell.1 Alexander Campbell married Jane Ann Sewell, daughter of Stephen Sewell K.C. and Jane Caldwell, on 13 April 1849 in Craven Cottage, Hamilton, Lanarkshire, the service was conducted by the Rev. Mr. Henderson.2 Alexander Campbell died in 1872 in Tours, France.1
Child of Alexander Campbell and Jane Ann Sewell
- Patrick Edward Campbell+1 b. 1850
Anne Campbell
F, b. 1594, d. 14 June 1649
Anne Campbell|b. 1594\nd. 14 Jun 1649|p68.htm#i9650|Archibald Campbell 7th Earl of Argyl||p68.htm#i9652||||||||||||||||
Anne Campbell was born in 1594. She was the daughter of Archibald Campbell 7th Earl of Argyl. Anne Campbell married George Gordon 2nd Marquess of Huntly, son of George Gordon 1st Marquess of Huntly and Henrietta Stewart, circa February 1607. Anne Campbell died on 14 June 1649.
Children of Anne Campbell and George Gordon 2nd Marquess of Huntly
- George Gordon Master of Huntly d. 2 Jul 1645
- James Gordon Viscount Aboyne d. 1648
- Charles Gordon 1st Earl of Aboyne d. Mar 1681
- Lewis Gordon 3rd Marquess of Huntly+ b. c 1626, d. Dec 1653
- Henry Gordon b. 1634, d. 1667
Annie Campbell1
F, b. 1881
Annie Campbell|b. 1881|p68.htm#i1608|Patrick Edward Campbell|b. 1850|p68.htm#i1175|Marie Sontag||p462.htm#i1607|Alexander Campbell|d. 1872|p68.htm#i1173|Jane A. Sewell|b. 23 Aug 1816\nd. 3 Jan 1890|p447.htm#i932|||||||
Annie Campbell was born in 1881.1 She was the daughter of Patrick Edward Campbell and Marie Sontag.1
Citations
- [S5] William Darcy McKeough, McKeough Family Tree.
Archibald Campbell 7th Earl of Argyl
M
Child of Archibald Campbell 7th Earl of Argyl
- Anne Campbell+ b. 1594, d. 14 Jun 1649
Benjamin Campbell1
M, b. circa 1858
Benjamin Campbell|b. c 1858|p68.htm#i15739|Dr. Farquahard Campbell|b. 10 Dec 1818\nd. 30 Apr 1884|p68.htm#i12187|Gabriella (Ella) Harriet Singleton|b. 26 Feb 1827\nd. 31 Mar 1878|p455.htm#i12188|||||||Robert Singleton||p455.htm#i19720||||
Benjamin Campbell was born circa 1858 in Alabama.1 He was the son of Dr. Farquahard Campbell and Gabriella (Ella) Harriet Singleton.1
Citations
- [S154] 1860 US Census.
Elizabeth Campbell1
F
Elizabeth Campbell married William Foye.1
Child of Elizabeth Campbell and William Foye
- Mary Foye+1 b. 8 Sep 1721, d. Aug 1773?
Citations
- [S25] Samuel Sewall, Diary of Samuel Sewall (1973 ed.), p. 1089.
Elizabeth Louise Campbell1
F, d. 1984
Elizabeth Louise Campbell married Terrence Blackwood Martin, son of Selby Blackwood Martin and Florence Erie Temple, in 1944.1 Elizabeth Louise Campbell died in 1984.1
Citations
- [S5] William Darcy McKeough, McKeough Family Tree.
Farquahard Campbell1
M, b. circa 1863
Farquahard Campbell|b. c 1863|p68.htm#i15740|Dr. Farquahard Campbell|b. 10 Dec 1818\nd. 30 Apr 1884|p68.htm#i12187|Gabriella (Ella) Harriet Singleton|b. 26 Feb 1827\nd. 31 Mar 1878|p455.htm#i12188|||||||Robert Singleton||p455.htm#i19720||||
Farquahard Campbell was born circa 1863 in Huntsville, Texas.2 He was the son of Dr. Farquahard Campbell and Gabriella (Ella) Harriet Singleton.2
Dr. Farquahard Campbell1
M, b. 10 December 1818, d. 30 April 1884
Dr. Farquahard Campbell was born on 10 December 1818 in North Carolina.2,3 He married Gabriella (Ella) Harriet Singleton, daughter of Robert Singleton, on 26 February 1846 in Marengo County, Alabama.3 Dr. Farquahard Campbell died on 30 April 1884 in Waverly, Walker County, Texas, at the age of 65 and is buried in the cemetery there.2,3
Children of Dr. Farquahard Campbell and Gabriella (Ella) Harriet Singleton
- Sallie Singleton Campbell+1 b. 5 Oct 1851, d. 30 Jan 1879
- Gabriella Harriet (Ella) Campbell+1 b. 23 Nov 1855, d. 22 Oct 1901
- R.J. Campbell4 b. c 1857
- Benjamin Campbell4 b. c 1858
- Farquahard Campbell5 b. c 1863
- Maggie Campbell5 b. c 1865
- Martha Campbell5 b. Dec 1869 or Jan 1870
Gabriella Harriet (Ella) Campbell1
F, b. 23 November 1855, d. 22 October 1901
Gabriella Harriet (Ella) Campbell|b. 23 Nov 1855\nd. 22 Oct 1901|p68.htm#i12189|Dr. Farquahard Campbell|b. 10 Dec 1818\nd. 30 Apr 1884|p68.htm#i12187|Gabriella (Ella) Harriet Singleton|b. 26 Feb 1827\nd. 31 Mar 1878|p455.htm#i12188|||||||Robert Singleton||p455.htm#i19720||||
Gabriella Harriet (Ella) Campbell was born on 23 November 1855 in Monroe County, Alabama.2 She was the daughter of Dr. Farquahard Campbell and Gabriella (Ella) Harriet Singleton.1 Gabriella Harriet (Ella) Campbell married Edward Wailes Sewall, son of Dr. Francis Lewis Sewall and Sarah Angelica (Ann) Singleton, on 20 May 1880.1 Gabriella Harriet (Ella) Campbell and Edward Wailes Sewall appear on the census of 16 June 1900 at Houston, Texas.3 Gabriella Harriet (Ella) Campbell died on 22 October 1901 in Houston, Texas, at the age of 45 and is buried in the cemetery at Waverly.2
Children of Gabriella Harriet (Ella) Campbell and Edward Wailes Sewall
- William Cleveland Sewall1 b. 29 Jul 1881, d. 25 Dec 1942
- George Goldthwaite Sewall1 b. 22 Apr 1883, d. 28 Mar 1885
- Sarah Ella (Sallie) Sewall+1 b. 6 Jan 1886, d. 7 Sep 1940
- Singleton Campbell Sewall1 b. 18 Nov 1887, d. 19 Nov 1950
Helen Campbell1
F, d. after 1434
Helen Campbell married Duncan Earl of Lennox.1 Helen Campbell died after 1434.1
Child of Helen Campbell and Duncan Earl of Lennox
- Elizabeth of Lennox+1 d. 1429
Citations
- [S34] Unverified internet information, Foundation for Medieval Genealogy. Graphical Index to the Ancestry of Charles II.
Isabella Campbell1
F
Isabella Campbell||p68.htm#i16053|Rev. John Campbell||p68.htm#i17448||||||||||||||||
Isabella Campbell was the daughter of Rev. John Campbell. Isabella Campbell married Josiah Wolcott on 13 February 1751.
Child of Isabella Campbell and Josiah Wolcott
- Edward Kitchin Wolcott+1 b. 30 Apr 1754, d. 11 Sep 1815
Citations
- [S34] Unverified internet information, http.wolcottfamily.com/henryjr.html.
Janet Campbell1
F
Of the parish of Glenbervie, Kincardineshire.2 Janet Campbell married Alexander Webster on 26 November 1796 in Fordoun, Kincardineshire.1
Children of Janet Campbell and Alexander Webster
- James Webster+1 b. 30 Sep 1797, d. 15 Apr 1869
- Janet Campbell (Jessie) Webster+1 b. 9 Oct 1801, d. 23 May 1882
- Alexander Webster3 b. 14 Mar 1805
- William Webster4 b. 11 Apr 1808
- Elizabeth Webster5 b. 16 Jun 1810
- Margaret Webster6 b. 20 Jul 1813
- Mary Webster7 b. 15 Jun 1816
Citations
- [S91] Www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk, Parish Records Index (1553-1854).
- [S470] Scotland, Old Parish Registers, 261/ 0010 0238.
- [S470] Scotland, Old Parish Registers, 259/ 0030 0159.
- [S470] Scotland, Old Parish Registers, 259/ 0030 0188.
- [S470] Scotland, Old Parish Registers, 259/ 0030 0205.
- [S89] LDS Record, Parish registers for Fordoun, 1693-1854.
- [S470] Scotland, Old Parish Registers, 259/ 0030 0236.
Maggie Campbell1
F, b. circa 1865
Maggie Campbell|b. c 1865|p68.htm#i15741|Dr. Farquahard Campbell|b. 10 Dec 1818\nd. 30 Apr 1884|p68.htm#i12187|Gabriella (Ella) Harriet Singleton|b. 26 Feb 1827\nd. 31 Mar 1878|p455.htm#i12188|||||||Robert Singleton||p455.htm#i19720||||
Maggie Campbell was born circa 1865 in Huntsville, Texas.1 She was the daughter of Dr. Farquahard Campbell and Gabriella (Ella) Harriet Singleton.1
Citations
- [S209] 1870 US Census.
Martha Campbell1
F, b. December 1869 or January 1870
Martha Campbell|b. Dec 1869 or Jan 1870|p68.htm#i15742|Dr. Farquahard Campbell|b. 10 Dec 1818\nd. 30 Apr 1884|p68.htm#i12187|Gabriella (Ella) Harriet Singleton|b. 26 Feb 1827\nd. 31 Mar 1878|p455.htm#i12188|||||||Robert Singleton||p455.htm#i19720||||
Martha Campbell was born in December 1869 or January 1870 in Huntsville, Texas.1 She was the daughter of Dr. Farquahard Campbell and Gabriella (Ella) Harriet Singleton.1
Citations
- [S209] 1870 US Census.
Mary Wilhelmina Campbell1
F
Mary Wilhelmina Campbell married Robert Robertson-Glasgow.1
Children of Mary Wilhelmina Campbell and Robert Robertson-Glasgow
- Robert Bruce Robertson-Glasgow1 b. 3 Apr 1842, d. 4 Dec 1895
- Colonel John Campbell Robertson-Glasgow+1 b. s 1844, d. Mar 1913
Citations
- [S34] Unverified internet information, http://www.electricscotland.com/history/nation/…
Lt. Col. Patrick Campbell1
M
Lt. Col. Patrick Campbell. Of the 48th Regiment.1
Child of Lt. Col. Patrick Campbell
- Alexander Campbell+2 d. 1872
Patrick Edward Campbell1
M, b. 1850
Patrick Edward Campbell|b. 1850|p68.htm#i1175|Alexander Campbell|d. 1872|p68.htm#i1173|Jane Ann Sewell|b. 23 Aug 1816\nd. 3 Jan 1890|p447.htm#i932|Lt. Col. Patrick Campbell||p68.htm#i1174||||Stephen Sewell K.C.|b. c 25 May 1770\nd. 21 Jun 1832|p450.htm#i418|Jane Caldwell|b. c 1781\nd. 19 Oct 1847|p65.htm#i918|
Patrick Edward Campbell was born in 1850.1 He was the son of Alexander Campbell and Jane Ann Sewell.1 Patrick Edward Campbell married Marie Sontag.1 Patrick Edward Campbell was living in Dresden, Germany.1
Child of Patrick Edward Campbell and Marie Sontag
- Annie Campbell1 b. 1881
Citations
- [S5] William Darcy McKeough, McKeough Family Tree.
R.J. Campbell1
M, b. circa 1857
R.J. Campbell|b. c 1857|p68.htm#i15738|Dr. Farquahard Campbell|b. 10 Dec 1818\nd. 30 Apr 1884|p68.htm#i12187|Gabriella (Ella) Harriet Singleton|b. 26 Feb 1827\nd. 31 Mar 1878|p455.htm#i12188|||||||Robert Singleton||p455.htm#i19720||||
R.J. Campbell was born circa 1857 in Alabama.1 He was the son of Dr. Farquahard Campbell and Gabriella (Ella) Harriet Singleton.1
Citations
- [S154] 1860 US Census.
Sallie Singleton Campbell1
F, b. 5 October 1851, d. 30 January 1879
Sallie Singleton Campbell|b. 5 Oct 1851\nd. 30 Jan 1879|p68.htm#i12186|Dr. Farquahard Campbell|b. 10 Dec 1818\nd. 30 Apr 1884|p68.htm#i12187|Gabriella (Ella) Harriet Singleton|b. 26 Feb 1827\nd. 31 Mar 1878|p455.htm#i12188|||||||Robert Singleton||p455.htm#i19720||||
Sallie Singleton Campbell was born on 5 October 1851 in Alabama.2,3 She was the daughter of Dr. Farquahard Campbell and Gabriella (Ella) Harriet Singleton.1 Sallie Singleton Campbell is also recorded as Sarah S. Campbell.4 She married Edward Wailes Sewall, son of Dr. Francis Lewis Sewall and Sarah Angelica (Ann) Singleton, on 10 December 1873 in Walker County, Texas.5 Sallie Singleton Campbell died on 30 January 1879 at the age of 27.3 She was buried in Old Waverly Cemetery, New Waverly, Walker County, Texas.3
Children of Sallie Singleton Campbell and Edward Wailes Sewall
- Ella Sewall1 b. 3 Oct 1874, d. 25 Oct 1875
- Edward Wailes Sewall1 b. 12 Feb 1878, d. 4 Jan 1880
Citations
Samuel Campbell1
M
Samuel Campbell married Ruth Briery.1
Child of Samuel Campbell and Ruth Briery
Citations
- [S24] Sarah Elizabeth Titcomb, Early New England People, p. 173.
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