Sarah Boone
F, b. 30 November 1799, d. 23 November 1876
Sarah Boone was born on 30 November 1799 at Carter Co., TN.1 She was the daughter of Solomon Boone and Lavinia Wells. Sarah Boone married Robert Abercrombie on 30 August 1821 at Orange Co., IN. Sarah Boone was buried in November 1876 at St. Patrick's Catholic Cemetery, Trowbridge, Shelby Co., IL. She died on 23 November 1876 at age 76.
Children of Sarah Boone and Robert Abercrombie
- Elizabeth Abercrombie+1 b. Apr 1832
- Mary Malanda Abercrombie+ b. 4 Jun 1839, d. 8 Mar 1899
- Perry A. Abercrombie+1 b. Feb 1851
Citations
- [S1381] 1850 Federal Census, Shelby County, Illinois. Microfilm Image, NARA Series M432, Roll 128.
Sarah Boone
F, b. 1754
Sarah Boone was also known as Sally. She was born in 1754. She was the daughter of Israel Boone and Martha (?) Sarah Boone died at Davie Co. (now), NC, Died young.
Sarah Boone
F, b. 1822
Sarah Boone was born in 1822 at Burke Co., NC. She was the daughter of John Boone and Isabella Kincaid.
Sarah Boone
F, b. 24 November 1763, d. 31 December 1848
Sarah Boone was born on 24 November 1763. She was the daughter of Samuel Boone and Sarah Day. Sarah Boone died on 31 December 1848 at age 85.
Sarah Boone
F, b. 26 September 1774, d. 1847
Sarah Boone was born on 26 September 1774. She was the daughter of Squire Boone and Jane Van Cleve. Sarah Boone died in 1847.
Sarah Boone
F, b. 1764
Sarah Boone was born in 1764 at Exeter, Berks Co., PA. She was the daughter of Joseph Boone and Elizabeth Warren.
Sarah Boone
F, b. circa 1786, d. before 1805
Sarah Boone was born circa 1786. She was the daughter of Jacob Boone and Mary DeHart. Sarah Boone married Solomon Froman on 30 September 1800 at Maysville, Mason Co., KY. Sarah Boone died before 1805.
Sarah Boone
F
Sarah Boone was born at Hunting Creek, west of Mocksville, Davie Co., NC. She was the daughter of John Boone and Rebecca (?) Sarah Boone died at Lincoln Co., TN.
Sarah Boone1
F, b. circa 1850
Sarah Boone was born circa 1850 at Sprigg Twp., Adams Co., OH.1 She was the daughter of Jacob Boone and Margaret Blythe.1
Citations
- [S1378] 1860 Federal Census, Adams County, Ohio. Microfilm Image, NARA Series M653, Roll 928; FHL #803928.
Sarah Boone
F, b. 5 July 1782
Sarah Ann Boone
F, d. 1968
Sarah Ann Boone was born at Adams Co., OH. She was the daughter of John Boone and Margaret Cooper. Sarah Ann Boone died in 1968.
Sarah Cassandra Boone
F, b. 7 June 1724, d. 1815
Sarah Cassandra Boone was born on 7 June 1724 Converted from Quaker (old style) date notation. She was the daughter of Squire Boone and Sarah Morgan. Sarah Cassandra Boone married John Wilcoxson in July 1742.
Note: John and Sarah Wilcoxson first lived on a land grant located near the present Cooleemee, in Davie County, North Carolina. The family relocated to Kentucky about 1779. Sarah Cassandra Boone died in 1815 at Bryant's Station, KY.
Note: John and Sarah Wilcoxson first lived on a land grant located near the present Cooleemee, in Davie County, North Carolina. The family relocated to Kentucky about 1779. Sarah Cassandra Boone died in 1815 at Bryant's Station, KY.
Children of Sarah Cassandra Boone and John Wilcoxson
Schuyler C. Boone1
M, b. 3 February 1857
Schuyler C. Boone was Methodist Episcopal. He was born on 3 February 1857.1 He was the son of Philip Boone and Susan (?)1 Schuyler C. Boone married Emma Jeanette Fisher, daughter of Jacob Fisher and Sarah Ann Moomaw, on 24 September 1879 at South Bend, St. Joseph Co., IN, Ceremony by Rev. N. D. Williamson.1 Schuyler C. Boone lived in 1926 at P.O. Box 243, Heartwell, Kearney Co., NE.1
Children of Schuyler C. Boone and Emma Jeanette Fisher
- Grace Blanche Boone+1 b. 17 Apr 1881
- Hattie Lillith Boone1 b. 8 Jul 1884, d. 6 Jun 1889
- Helen Lillian Boone2 b. 3 Jun 1891, d. 10 May 1907
- Jeanette A. Boone+2 b. 12 Nov 1893
- Gertrude B. Boone2 b. 27 Nov 1896
- Schuyler Jacob Boone2 b. 18 Aug 1898
- Ruth Adina Boone2 b. 30 Jan 1905
Schuyler Jacob Boone1
M, b. 18 August 1898
Schuyler Jacob Boone was born on 18 August 1898.1 He was the son of Schuyler C. Boone and Emma Jeanette Fisher.1
Citations
- [S82] Price Genealogy, 544.
Simon B. Boone1
M, b. October 1880
Simon B. Boone was born in October 1880 at Brown Co. (probably), OH.1 He was the son of Daniel Boone and Elizabeth Cummins.1
Citations
- [S476] 1900 Federal Census, Brown County, Ohio. Microfilm Image, NARA Series T623, Roll 1242; FHL #1241241.
Simon E. Boone1
M, b. October 1871
Simon E. Boone was born in October 1871 at Sprigg Twp., Adams Co., OH.1,2 He was the son of Henry Harrison Boone and Nancy J. Tucker.1 Simon E. Boone married Maude C. (?) circa 1893.
Children of Simon E. Boone and Maude C. (?)
- Milburn F. Boone2 b. Apr 1894
- Nellie M. Boone2 b. Dec 1896
- James R. Boone2 b. Jan 1899
Solomon Boone
M, b. 20 June 1768
Solomon Boone married Lavinia Wells. Solomon Boone was born on 20 June 1768 at Culpeper Co., VA. He was the son of Hezekiah Boone and Rebecca Freelove.
Child of Solomon Boone and Lavinia Wells
- Sarah Boone+ b. 30 Nov 1799, d. 23 Nov 1876
Squire Boone
M, b. 25 November 1696, d. 2 January 1765
Squire Boone was born on 25 November 1696 at Bradninch, Devonshire, England. He was the son of George Boone and Mary Milton Maugridge. Squire Boone married Sarah Morgan, daughter of Edward Morgan and Elizabeth Jarman, in September 1720 at Gwynedd MM Meeting House, Oley Twp., Berks Co., PA, date Old Style: 23 7mo., 1720. Squire Boone lived at Davie Co. (now), NC, On April 11, 1750, Squire and Sarah Morgan Boone sold their land in Berks County and left with their family, travelling southwest down the Great Valley of Virginia. The family stopped for a year or more in Linville Creek, six miles north of Harrisonburg, Virginia. It was not until the late autumn of 1751, or some time in 1752, that Squire Boone and his party reached the Yadkin Valley in North Carolina. For his first home site Squire chose a hill overlooking the Yadkin River in the area which soon became a part of Rowan County but which is now in Davidson County. At the first County Court held in Salisbury in June, 1753, Squire Boone was listed as one of the fourteen justices. His residence was given as Boone's Ford. Later in that year, on December 29, Squire acquired land on the western side of the Yadkin River in what is now Davie County, but Rowan County at that time. The grant was for 640 acres on Bear Creek from the Earl of Granville. He was Quaker, Exeter Monthly Meeting.
The births of the first nine children were recorded at Exeter Monthly Meeting in Old Style date notation. He died on 2 January 1765 at Forks of the Yadkin, Davie Co., NC, at age 68. He was buried in January 1765 at Joppa Cemetery, Mocksville, Davie Co., NC.
The births of the first nine children were recorded at Exeter Monthly Meeting in Old Style date notation. He died on 2 January 1765 at Forks of the Yadkin, Davie Co., NC, at age 68. He was buried in January 1765 at Joppa Cemetery, Mocksville, Davie Co., NC.
Children of Squire Boone and Sarah Morgan
- Sarah Cassandra Boone+ b. 7 Jun 1724, d. 1815
- Israel Boone+ b. 9 May 1726, d. 26 Jun 1756
- Samuel Boone+ b. 20 May 1728, d. 1805
- Jonathan Boone+ b. 6 Dec 1730, d. c 1808
- Elizabeth Boone+ b. 5 Feb 1732
- Daniel Boone+ b. 22 Oct 1734, d. 26 Sep 1820
- Mary Boone+ b. 3 Nov 1736, d. 1819
- Nathaniel Boone b. c 1738, d. c 1738
- George Boone+ b. c Jan 1739, d. c 11 Nov 1820
- Edward Neddy Boone+ b. 19 Nov 1740, d. 6 Oct 1780
- Squire Boone+ b. 5 Oct 1744, d. 15 Aug 1815
- Hannah Morgan Boone+ b. 24 Aug 1746, d. bt Apr 1828 - May 1828
Squire Boone
M, b. 5 October 1744, d. 15 August 1815
Squire Boone was born on 5 October 1744 at Berks Co., PA. He was the son of Squire Boone and Sarah Morgan. Squire Boone married Jane Van Cleve, daughter of Aaron Van Cleve, on 8 August 1765. Squire Boone died on 15 August 1815 at Mauckport, Harrison Co., IN, at age 70
Biography -- (Findagrave.com):
Younger brother of Daniel Boone. He and his older brother, Daniel, found a cave in southern Indiana one time in 1787. One day three years later while Squire was running from Indians, he jumped for a vine and landed in the opening of the secret cave that the Indians did not know about. Since they did not find Squire, he believed the cave was holy and expressed his wish to be buried in the cave one day. Daniel and Squire were the frontiersmen who opened up what is now known as Kentucky. Of the first eight white men who dared to enter "the dark and bloody ground," as Kentucky was known in the early 1770s, only two returned alive: Daniel and Squire Boone. After his close encounter with the Indians in 1790, Squire would often return to the cave to pray, meditate and carve designs and verses of gratitude. In 1804, Squire moved his wife, Jane Van Cleve, and his daughter and four sons to the area and built a village and a gristmill. Squire spent the last 11 years of his life there - the longest he had stayed in one place. As his death neared - Squire suffered from heart failure - he built his own coffin from walnut trees growing near the cave. On his deathbed, he asked his sons to bury him in the cave where his life had been spared. On Aug. 15, 1815, Squire's four sons fulfilled their father's request. Squire was buried in his beloved cave, and a boulder sealed the entrance. More than 150 years passed while the walnut coffin decomposed in a hidden section of the cave. Squire's bones rested on the cave's floor and were gradually covered by silt. The exact whereabouts of his remains would not be known until 1973 when two guides of the cave decided to dig out the section of the cave that was filled with silt and debris and find the carvings. Instead, they found Squire himself. A new walnut coffin was crafted, and a Boone descendant knitted a shroud for the bones. Squire Boone's remains were placed in the coffin, the lid was sealed with wax and the casket was carried deep into Squire Boone Caverns. Today, the casket is on view at the end of the tour through the Squire Boone Caverns in Mauckport, Indiana and a headstone has been erected at the foot of the casket inside the cave at the end of the tour given by the cave guides.
He was buried in August 1815 at Squire Boone's Cave, Mauckport, Harrison Co., IN, Findagrave #18853.
Biography -- (Findagrave.com):
Younger brother of Daniel Boone. He and his older brother, Daniel, found a cave in southern Indiana one time in 1787. One day three years later while Squire was running from Indians, he jumped for a vine and landed in the opening of the secret cave that the Indians did not know about. Since they did not find Squire, he believed the cave was holy and expressed his wish to be buried in the cave one day. Daniel and Squire were the frontiersmen who opened up what is now known as Kentucky. Of the first eight white men who dared to enter "the dark and bloody ground," as Kentucky was known in the early 1770s, only two returned alive: Daniel and Squire Boone. After his close encounter with the Indians in 1790, Squire would often return to the cave to pray, meditate and carve designs and verses of gratitude. In 1804, Squire moved his wife, Jane Van Cleve, and his daughter and four sons to the area and built a village and a gristmill. Squire spent the last 11 years of his life there - the longest he had stayed in one place. As his death neared - Squire suffered from heart failure - he built his own coffin from walnut trees growing near the cave. On his deathbed, he asked his sons to bury him in the cave where his life had been spared. On Aug. 15, 1815, Squire's four sons fulfilled their father's request. Squire was buried in his beloved cave, and a boulder sealed the entrance. More than 150 years passed while the walnut coffin decomposed in a hidden section of the cave. Squire's bones rested on the cave's floor and were gradually covered by silt. The exact whereabouts of his remains would not be known until 1973 when two guides of the cave decided to dig out the section of the cave that was filled with silt and debris and find the carvings. Instead, they found Squire himself. A new walnut coffin was crafted, and a Boone descendant knitted a shroud for the bones. Squire Boone's remains were placed in the coffin, the lid was sealed with wax and the casket was carried deep into Squire Boone Caverns. Today, the casket is on view at the end of the tour through the Squire Boone Caverns in Mauckport, Indiana and a headstone has been erected at the foot of the casket inside the cave at the end of the tour given by the cave guides.
He was buried in August 1815 at Squire Boone's Cave, Mauckport, Harrison Co., IN, Findagrave #18853.
Children of Squire Boone and Jane Van Cleve
- Jonathan Boone b. 30 Aug 1766, d. 1837
- Moses Boone d. 1852
- Isaiah Boone b. Mar 1772, d. a 1846
- Sarah Boone b. 26 Sep 1774, d. 1847
- Enoch Morgan Boone+ b. 16 Oct 1777, d. 8 Feb 1862
Squire Boone
M, b. 13 October 1760, d. 20 June 1817
Squire Boone was born on 13 October 1760. He was the son of Samuel Boone and Sarah Day. Squire Boone married Anna Grubbs, daughter of William Grubbs and Susanna Hearne, on 1 September 1784 at Fayette Co., KY. Squire Boone died on 20 June 1817 at Todd Co., KY, at age 56.
Stephen Boone
M, b. 1838
Susanna Boone
F, b. 1801, d. after 1860
Susanna Boone was born in 1801 at Burke Co., NC. She was the daughter of Thomas Boone and Elizabeth Wilson. Susanna Boone died after 1860.
Susannah Boone
F, b. 2 November 1760, d. 19 August 1800
Susannah Boone was born on 2 November 1760. She was the daughter of Daniel Boone and Rebecca Bryan. Susannah Boone married William Hays. Susannah Boone died on 19 August 1800 at St. Charles Co., MO, at age 39.
Susannah Boone
F, b. 17 March 1738
Susannah Boone was born on 17 March 1738. She was the daughter of Samuel Boone and Elizabeth Cassel.