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Martin Davenport Sr. (M)
b. c 1682, d. b 2 Oct 1735
Pedigree
Fatherc 1660Davis Davenport
Mother wife of Davis Davenport
Birthc 1682VA, most likely at Pamunkey Neck in King William County
Notec 30 Mar 1704King William County, VA, Martin Davenport was on the 1704 Quit Rent Rolls list for King William County, assessed for 100 acres.
Marriageb 1706First wife of Martin Davenport; VA, It appears that Martin had at least two wives. For research purposes the first three children are ascribed to a first wife.
Marriageb 1716Dorothy [Glover?] Davenport; prob King William County, VA, Dorothy was likely a second wife and mother of only some of Martin's children. She may have been a Glover, and possibly a daughter of William and Mary Glover of King William County.
Residence8 Nov 1721St. Margaret's Parish, King William County, VA, Fragments of a lease and release executed by Martin Davenport identify his residence as of 1721. (Source: John Scott Davenport, 'The Pamunkey Davenport Chronicles')
Note24 Mar 1724Hanover County, VA, A survey of land at this time for one Captain Thomas Carr located that tract by reference to land of Martin Davenport along the North Anna River in Hanover County. That land wasn't patented to Davenport at the time but must have been surveyed and marked in order to be used as a benchmark for someone else's survey. (Source: John Scott Davenport's 'Pamunkey Davenport Chronicles')
Residence7 Feb 1726/27Hanover County, VA, Martin Davenport's patent for 400 acres along the south side of the North Anna River was issued. (Source: John Scott Davenport's 'Pamunkey Davenport Chronicles')
Will24 May 1735St. Martin's Parish, Hanover County, VA, Martin Davenport executed his will in Hanover County. (Source: John Scott Davenport's 'Pamunkey Davenport Chronicles') The will only named five sons and did not leave property to all of them (several were contingent beneficiaries only). This strongly suggests that other arrangements had been made during Martin's lifetime for other older children and the children benefiting from the will were only his youngest.
Deathb 2 Oct 1735Hanover County, VA, Martin's will was executed on May 24th 1735 and offered for probate on October 2 1735. (Source: John Scott Davenport's 'Pamunkey Davenport Chronicles')
 
CoParent First wife of Martin Davenport
Daughterc 1706Mary Davenport+
Sonc 1711Thomas Davenport+
Sonc 1715William Davenport
 
CoParentc 1685Dorothy [Glover?] Davenport
Daughter2 Nov 1716Dorothy Davenport+
Sonc 1717John Davenport
Sonc 1719James Davenport
Sonc 1719Glover Davenport
Sonc 1720Martin Davenport Jr.
Sonc 1721David Davenport
Daughterc 1727Crotia ('Crosha') Davenport

William Baker (M)
b. 20 Jul 1735
Pedigree
Father8 Jan 1711Thomas Baker
Mother2 Nov 1716Dorothy Davenport
Birth20 Jul 1735prob Hanover County, VA
Marriagec 1758Ann Gambill; Culpeper County, VA

Ann Gambill1 (F)
b. c 1758
Pedigree
Father Henry Gambill
Motherc 1706Mary Davenport
Marriagec 1758William Baker; Culpeper County, VA
Birthc 1758Hanover County, VA

Note:
  1. Baker family information shows that William Baker married a Gambill cousin. The name of this Gambill daughter, according to Culpeper County land records, was Ann. Davenport family researchers say the name was Elizabeth. There is no record support for that.

Thomas Baker Jr. (M)
b. 6 Apr 1737
Pedigree
Father8 Jan 1711Thomas Baker
Mother2 Nov 1716Dorothy Davenport
Birth6 Apr 1737prob Hanover County, VA

Mary Baker (F)
b. 5 Apr 1739
Pedigree
Father8 Jan 1711Thomas Baker
Mother2 Nov 1716Dorothy Davenport
Birth5 Apr 1739prob Hanover County, VA
Marriagec 1759William Mallory; prob Culpeper County, VA
 
CoParent William Mallory
Daughter Ann Mallory
Daughter Dorothy Mallory
Daughter Elizabeth Mallory
Daughter Mary Mallory

Martin Baker (M)
b. 23 Jan 1741, d. b 9 Aug 1781
Pedigree
Father8 Jan 1711Thomas Baker
Mother2 Nov 1716Dorothy Davenport
Marriage Phoebe Snodgrass; Martin's brother Charles stated around 1845 that Martin had married a Snodgrass.
Birth23 Jan 1741prob Hanover County, VA
Deathb 9 Aug 1781Martin's estate was probated in Botetourt County VA; his wife Phoebe was named administrator.

Crotia Baker (F)
b. 12 May 1743
Pedigree
Father8 Jan 1711Thomas Baker
Mother2 Nov 1716Dorothy Davenport
Birth12 May 1743prob Hanover County, VA
Marriagec 1763Joseph (or James) Gouge; prob Culpeper County, VA

Josiah Baker (M)
b. 23 Jan 1745
Pedigree
Father8 Jan 1711Thomas Baker
Mother2 Nov 1716Dorothy Davenport
Birth23 Jan 1745poss Spotsylvania County, VA, A 1746 land transaction listed Josiah's father Thomas Baker as 'of Spotsvlvania County'.

Henry Baker (M)
b. 10 May 1747, d. b Apr 1806
Pedigree
Father8 Jan 1711Thomas Baker
Mother2 Nov 1716Dorothy Davenport
Birth10 May 1747prob Louisa or Orange County, VA
Marriageb 1779Nancy Ann Menafee; Henry and Nancy Baker served as witnesses to the will of Jonas Menafee, dated 23 February 1779 and probated 18 November 1782 in Culpeper County.
Deathb Apr 1806Burke County, NC, Henry's will was proved in the Court Minutes for April 1806.
 
CoParent  
Son John Menafee Baker+

Dorothy Baker (F)
b. 11 Feb 1751
Pedigree
Father8 Jan 1711Thomas Baker
Mother2 Nov 1716Dorothy Davenport
Birth11 Feb 1751Culpeper County, VA
Marriagec 1775James Baxter; prob Culpeper County, VA

Richard Baker (M)
b. 23 Dec 1753, d. 26 Dec 1776
Pedigree
Father8 Jan 1711Thomas Baker
Mother2 Nov 1716Dorothy Davenport
Note Richard's name appears in some accounts, particularly those relying on Elma Baker's 'The Rugged Trail,' as 'Ruben' or 'Rubin' or 'Reuben.' This is clearly incorrect. David Baker's pension application, in which he names the brother who died at the Battle of Trenton, quite clearly identifies that brother as Richard. The handwriting may be misunderstood by those unfamiliar with early script; however, the last letter is without question a 'D'.
Birth23 Dec 1753Culpeper County, VA
Death26 Dec 1776Trenton, Hunterdon (now Mercer) County, NJ, according to the pension application of his brother, David Baker, Richard was killed at the Battle of Trenton. David stated in his pension application: 'I had a brother by the name of Richard killed in that action.' Richard Baker was just three days past his 23rd birthday. Particularly tragic is the fact that few if any American soldiers died due to enemy fire in the engagement. According to David McCullough in his masterful 1776 (Simon & Schuster, 2005), no American troops died in the fighting, but two froze to death in the terrible winter conditions. If true, then Richard Baker was one of those two. But other sources do not accept the no-battle-casualties conclusion. In Rebels & Redcoats by George F. Scheer and Hugh F. Rankin (Da Capo Press, copyright 1957, paperback reprint), the authors quote a relatively contemporaneous account attributed to an aide to General George Washington, probably Col. John Fitzgerald, as stating that there were 'two killed and three wounded' and the wounded included Captain William Washington and Lieutenant James Monroe - both assigned to the 3rd Virginia Regiment, the regiment in which David Baker did serve and in which Richard Baker most likely served (there are no extant records to establish for certain Richard’s regiment). David Hackett Fischer, author of Washington’s Crossing (Oxford University Press, 2004), cites a similar count by Washington aide Tench Tilghman and contends that the bulk of the evidence supports a finding that two privates were killed in action and another four or five died of illness or exposure. If these other sources are correct, then David Baker’s choice of the word 'killed' to describe his brother’s death (as opposed to a more passive word such as 'died') would suggest that Richard was one of those killed in action.

James Baker (M)
b. 18 Feb 1755
Pedigree
Father8 Jan 1711Thomas Baker
Mother2 Nov 1716Dorothy Davenport
Birth18 Feb 1755Culpeper County, VA

John Baker (M)
b. 4 May 1758
Pedigree
Father8 Jan 1711Thomas Baker
Mother2 Nov 1716Dorothy Davenport
Birth4 May 1758Culpeper County, VA
Marriage24 Jun 1787Urcilla White; Burke County, NC, Urcilla was probably a cousin or niece of John's cousin William White (cousin by marriage to Sophia Davenport, daughter of Thomas Davenport).

Charles R. Baker (M)
b. 2 Feb 1762, d. 26 Apr 1850
Pedigree
Father8 Jan 1711Thomas Baker
Mother2 Nov 1716Dorothy Davenport
Birth2 Feb 1762Culpeper County, VA
Death26 Apr 1850Cass County, GA

Davis Davenport (M)
b. c 1660, d. b 1735
Noteb 1660According to John Scott Davenport of the Pamunkey Davenports website: 'The major problem relative to identification of Pamunkey Davenport ancestry before Davis Davenport today lies in the family having emerged from a Seventeenth Century record limbo of an Indian reservation into a Twentieth Century Virginia records void. The [... early] records of New Kent, King & Queen, King William, Caroline, and Hanover counties, crucial to Pamunkey Davenport identification, have largely been destroyed by courthouse fires of one sort or another. ... Yet we know, by Virginia Patent records, that there was a Davenport presence (female) in the Pamunkey Neck as early as 1650, ... that as soon as the Neck ceased to be Indian in 1701 and King William County was created, there was a Davenport Path of some antiquity noted in several surveys, and that Davis and his son Martin were listed as small acreage freeholders (land owners) there in 1704. ... [T]he evidence is that Davis Davenport and his son Martin, whose presence in the Neck are proven, were of the pioneer yeomanry, who achieved by their own labor, and not of the Cavalier, great planter aristocracy who had indentured servants and slaves to do their work.'
Birthc 1660According to John Scott Davenport's Pamunkey Davenport Chronicles (see website: '[T]he two Davenports appearing by Time and Place in Virginia records most likely to have been Davis' immigrant parent were apparently single women, namely Hannah, transportee of 1650, or Anne, transportee of 1658. ... As uncomfortable as the thought might be -- although the America of the Twenty-First Century is more amenable in its judgmental morality to accepting such a possibility -- the Pamunkey Davenports may descend from a female immigrant ancestor, whose son became the patriarch of a family bearing the Davenport surname although his father may have had the surname of Davis. ... The possibility that Davis Davenport was the bastard child of either Hannah Davenport or Anne Davenport, given the lack of a male parental candidate, is real. If Martin was age 21 in 1704 (his appearance on a Quit Rent List was prima facie evidence that he was an adult), he was born 1683 or before. If Davis is accorded the same minimum of 21 years of age (25 years is accepted in formal genealogical estimates) before fathering Martin, then Davis himself was born c1662 or before. This scenario would fit Anne of 1758 comfortably. Assume older ages for both Davis and Martin, and the scenario would fit Hannah comfortably. The problem with both of the most viable male candidates for the honor of having been Davis' father is that each appears in the records uncomfortably late for either of the Davis-Martin age scenarios of John Davenport in 1668, Richard in 1677. Labored rationalization is required to force a fit for either. ...[T]he practice of giving bastard sons their fathers' surnames as given names also existed -- particularly where the father acknowledged the child. Hence, Davis Davenport, if born out of wedlock, may well have had a Davis father (there were a number of Davis possibilities early in or near the Neck in proximity to Hannah and Anne). ... We would note that Graves Family descendants claim Anne Davenport, born c1696, and who married Thomas Graves, as their matriarch, and believe and claim that Anne was a daughter of Davis Davenport. (Thomas Graves and his wife Anne play major roles in the Pamunkey Davenport chronology that follows.). Then too, Anne Davenport, transportee of 1758, was associated with land no more than four miles from where Davis Davenport first appeared in Virginia records thirty-eight years later (1696). The Bar Sinister scenario is speculative, but must be advanced as one hypothesis of Pamunkey Davenport origin.'
Marriageb 1682wife of Davis Davenport; VA, most likely at Pamunkey Neck in King William County
Note29 May 1696King & Queen County, VA, According to 'The Pamunkey Davenport Chronicles,' 'James Taylor, surveyor of King & Queen County, made a survey of 939 acres for Major John Waller and an adjoining 100 acres for Thomas Baker, which identified Davis Davenport’s Plantation and Landing on the Mattaponi River.' Note that this Thomas Baker is not the same Thomas Baker who fathered David Baker but the possibility of some connection is very strong.
Notec 30 Mar 1704King William County, VA, Davis Davenport was listed on the 1704 Quit Rent Rolls for King William County VA, assessed for 200 acres.
Deathb 1735VA, The exact date of Davis Davenport's death is unknown. The last known reference to him was in a will by his son Martin in 1735.
 
CoParent wife of Davis Davenport
Sonc 1682Martin Davenport Sr.+
Sonc 1688Thomas Davenport
Sonc 1694Richard Davenport
Daughterc 1696Ann Davenport
Sonc 1698Elias Davenport
Sonc 1705John Davenport

William Wiseman (M)
b. 2 Feb 1736, d. b Mar 1823
Birth2 Feb 1736St. James' Clerkenwell Parish, London, England, According to the English Heritage, the area of William Wiseman's birth was: 'the historic centre of the old parish of St James, including the districts around Clerkenwell Green, Clerkenwell Close and St John's Square. 'Clerkenwell's origins lie in the Middle Ages. The name derives from a well (still visible on Farringdon Lane) where mystery plays were performed by the London parish clerks. Clerkenwell's position on the outskirts of the City, and its natural supply of fresh water, also made it a convenient location for two great monastic houses founded in the mid-12th century: the Nunnery of St Mary, and the Priory of the Order of St John. With the exception of two notable monuments - St John's Church and St John's Gate - little monastic fabric survives, but both foundations have left their mark on the present street-pattern. 'After the Dissolution, Clerkenwell evolved into a fashionable suburb, with many aristocratic residents, but by the 18th century most of the old fabric had been rebuilt and the area colonized by merchants and tradesmen. Some good Georgian houses in Britton Street and St John's Square survive from this period. Clerkenwell also became an important centre for civic administration and justice, home to the County of Middlesex's Sessions House and two large county prisons.'
Emigrationc 1750According to Wiseman descendant and researcher Thomas C. Chapman, William Wiseman came to America as a young teenager in the 1750's. There is a family story -- undocumented in any way -- that he came to America as a stowaway and was sold as an indentured servant to pay for his passage. After working for a cabinetmaker he earned his freedom. There is some support for the notion that he was a cabinetmaker. In the 1956 book 'The Story of Caldwell County NC - Here Will I Dwell,' Nancy Alexander wrote that he was 'one of the earliest and most skilled cabinet makers of this county. William made the legs of his furniture with a claw, clutching a ball that would roll.'
Marriagec 1761Mary Davenport
Census1790Burke County, NC, with four males over the age of 16 (William Sr., William Jr., Davenport and Martin), four males under the age of 16 (James, John, Robert and ?) and five females (Mary Davenport Wiseman and daughters Dorothy, Mary, Celestial and Susannah). Thomas Wiseman is listed directly beneath his father, and Martin Davenport and Samuel Bright are nearby.
Marriageb 1799Lydia Bedford; prob Burke County, NC
Deathb Mar 1823NC, According to Wiseman descendant and researcher Thomas C. Chapman, William Wiseman is buried near his home at Sunny Brook Farm on the Toe River, near the present Mitchell-Avery (N.C.) county line. Although his gravestone gives his date of death as 1830, he probably passed away in the winter of 1822-1823. His widow, his second wife Lydia, filed estate papers for his estate in March 1823 in Morganton.
 
CoParent17 Jun 1741Mary Davenport
Son30 Apr 1763Thomas Wiseman
Daughter5 Feb 1765Dorothy Wiseman+
Son5 Aug 1767William Wiseman
Daughter11 Apr 1769Mary Wiseman
Son25 Aug 1771Davenport Wiseman
Son24 Aug 1773Martin Wiseman
Son18 Aug 1775James Wiseman
Son21 Feb 1777John Wiseman
Daughter22 Oct 1779Celestial Wiseman
Daughter16 Dec 1781Susannah Wiseman+
Son14 Jul 1784Robert Wiseman
 
CoParent Lydia Bedford
Son1 Oct 1799Bedford Wiseman
Son28 Mar 1802Alexander Wiseman
Daughter6 May 1804Jemima or Jennie Mae Wiseman
Son31 Jul 1806Josiah Wiseman
Daughter25 Apr 1809Elizabeth Wiseman
Daughter25 May 1812Lydia Wiseman
Son9 Feb 1814Anthony Senter Wiseman

Mary Davenport (F)
b. 17 Jun 1741, d. 17 Jun 1796
Pedigree
Fatherc 1711Thomas Davenport
Motherc 1712Dorothy [--M?--] Davenport
Birth17 Jun 1741Hanover County, VA
Marriagec 1761William Wiseman
Death17 Jun 1796Burke County, NC
 
CoParent2 Feb 1736William Wiseman
Son30 Apr 1763Thomas Wiseman
Daughter5 Feb 1765Dorothy Wiseman+
Son5 Aug 1767William Wiseman
Daughter11 Apr 1769Mary Wiseman
Son25 Aug 1771Davenport Wiseman
Son24 Aug 1773Martin Wiseman
Son18 Aug 1775James Wiseman
Son21 Feb 1777John Wiseman
Daughter22 Oct 1779Celestial Wiseman
Daughter16 Dec 1781Susannah Wiseman+
Son14 Jul 1784Robert Wiseman

Thomas Davenport (M)
b. c 1711, d. 10 Nov 1809
Pedigree
Fatherc 1682Martin Davenport Sr.
Mother First wife of Martin Davenport
Birthc 1711VA, most likely in King William County
Marriagec 1732Dorothy [--M?--] Davenport; prob Hanover County, VA
Death10 Nov 1809Burke County, NC, Note that what was that part of Burke County in 1809 is now Caldwell County.

The Wiseman-Davenport book puts the date of death as Dec. 10, 1809 and quotes the following obituary from The Star of Raleigh, Thursday March 10, 1810:

'Died on the 10th. of December, 1809 at the home of Martin Davenport, Burke County, Mr. Thomas Davenport, in the 98th. year of his age. Mr. Davenport was remarkable for a cheerful disposition and for benevolence of heart; it is said he never was involved in a law suit but once and then by being security for a debt. He was sued and compelled to pay the money.

In the latter part of his life he appeared to enjoy the comforts of religion in a high degree. He raised six daughters and one son. His eldest daughter, Sophia, the wife of William White, Esq. of Mulberyy in the County of Burke, hath at this time upward of 100 of her posterity and it has been ascertained that from Thomas Davenport, counting him as first, there are more than 40 of his posterity now living in the fifth generation.

Thomas Davenport's five youngest children each raised large families, and it is computed that the posterity of those now living amounts to more than 300.'
 
CoParentc 1712Dorothy [--M?--] Davenport
Daughterc 1733Sophia Davenport
Daughterc 1735Lucy Davenport
Daughterc 1737Dorothy Davenport
Sonc 1739Martin Davenport+
Daughter17 Jun 1741Mary Davenport+
Daughter1744Jerusha Davenport
Daughterc 1747Rachel Davenport

William Buchanan (M)
b. 23 Aug 1765, d. a 1850
Pedigree
Father24 Jan 1742/43Arthur Buchanan
Mother26 Jan 1738Mary Boswell
Note See the note at the entry for James Buchanan as to the general status of documentation on the link between the Charles County MD Buchanans and the North Carolina Buchanans.
Birth23 Aug 1765MD, Place of birth taken from 1850 Yancey County NC census

Other family researchers are not quite so certain that William's parents were Arthur Buchanan and Mary Boswell, nor that Arthur's parents were James Buchanan and Isabella Wilson. The information is offered here as a theory only.
Marriage16 Apr 1793Elizabeth Jones; Rutherford County, NC, The original marriage bond itself is dated April 8, 1793 in Rutherford County NC.

Note: Baumbach website has the date as June 16, 1793 rather than April.
Note29 Mar 1808Rutherford County, NC, William Buchanan sold an estimated nine acres of land to Daniel Rinehart(Deed Book 25, pp36-37, recorded 12 May 1809). Together with the land William sold to Daniel Rinehart in 1807 and Arthur sold to him in 1808, this may mark the end of the Buchanan residence in Rutherford County and the beginning of their residence in nearby Burke County.
Census1810Burke County, NC, shown on the 1810 Burke County Census with six sons (four under age 10 and 2 aged 10-15) and five daughters (three under age 10 and two aged 10-15), one adult male and one adult female. The family is on the same page as the families of William Wiseman Jr., Arthur Buchanan Sr. and Jr., John Gouge, David Baker and Thomas Baker.
Deatha 1850prob Yancey County, NC
Census26 Aug 1850Yancey County, NC, Shown as age 85, farmer, born in MD, with wife Elizabeth, 79, born in VA, and daughters Sarah, 39, and Martha, 37, born NC.
 
CoParent14 Nov 1774Elizabeth Jones
Daughter20 Oct 1794Mary J. Buchanan
Son26 Nov 1795George B. Buchanan
Daughter6 Mar 1797Elizabeth Buchanan+
Son19 Apr 1799William Buchanan
Son18 Nov 1800James Buchanan
Daughter7 Mar 1802Annie Buchanan
Son16 May 1803John Buchanan
Son16 Nov 1804Arthur Buchanan
Daughter3 Aug 1806Sally Buchanan
DaughterJan 1808Patsy Buchanan
Son24 Oct 1809Leonard Buchanan
Son15 Aug 1811Clement Buchanan
Son21 Feb 1813Lewis Buchanan
Daughter1 Nov 1814Nancy Buchanan
Daughter9 Oct 1816Ruth Buchanan
Son7 Jul 1818Joseph Alexander Buchanan

Elizabeth Jones (F)
b. 14 Nov 1774, d. 21 May 1861
Pedigree
Father19 Feb 1750John Jones
Mother1750Elizabeth Pettypool
Birth14 Nov 1774Mecklenburg County, VA, See also 'Descendants of James Buchanan,' linked to Mitchell County Rootsweb site
Marriage16 Apr 1793William Buchanan; Rutherford County, NC, The original marriage bond itself is dated April 8, 1793 in Rutherford County NC.

Note: Baumbach website has the date as June 16, 1793 rather than April.
Census26 Aug 1850Yancey County, NC, Shown as 79, born in VA, with husband William, age 85, farmer, born in MD, and daughters Sarah (Sally?), 39, and Martha (Patsy?), 37, born NC.
Death21 May 1861Mitchell County, NC
 
CoParent23 Aug 1765William Buchanan
Daughter20 Oct 1794Mary J. Buchanan
Son26 Nov 1795George B. Buchanan
Daughter6 Mar 1797Elizabeth Buchanan+
Son19 Apr 1799William Buchanan
Son18 Nov 1800James Buchanan
Daughter7 Mar 1802Annie Buchanan
Son16 May 1803John Buchanan
Son16 Nov 1804Arthur Buchanan
Daughter3 Aug 1806Sally Buchanan
DaughterJan 1808Patsy Buchanan
Son24 Oct 1809Leonard Buchanan
Son15 Aug 1811Clement Buchanan
Son21 Feb 1813Lewis Buchanan
Daughter1 Nov 1814Nancy Buchanan
Daughter9 Oct 1816Ruth Buchanan
Son7 Jul 1818Joseph Alexander Buchanan

Juanita June Price (F)
b. 8 Dec 1934, d. 27 Jan 2006
Birth8 Dec 1934Columbus, Franklin County, OH
Marriage Jerry LaStone Cottrell
Death27 Jan 2006Covington, Sr. Tammany Parish, LA, COTTRELL Juanita Jane Cottrell of Covington, LA, on Friday January 27, 2006. Beloved mother of: Gary L. Whitmer, Mark Allen Whitmer, Chris Cottrell, Larry Cottrell, Laura L. Chichester and Sherry Ann McDonald. Sister of Clifford Price. Survived by 9 grandchildren. Aged 71 years, a native of Columbus, OH and a resident of Covington, LA for the past 40 years. Relatives and friends of the family are invited to attend the visitation on Monday, January 30, 2006, from 5:00PM until 8:00 PM in the parlors of E. J. FIELDING FUNERAL HOME, 2260 W. 21st. Ave., Covington, LA. Interment will be private. Guestbook may be signed at www.ejfieldingfh.com.
Published in The Times-Picayune on 1/30/2006.
 
CoParent  
Son Gary Lee Whitmer
Son Mark Allen Whitmer
 
CoParent Jerry LaStone Cottrell
Son Chris LaStone Cottrell
Son Larry Jay Cottrell
Daughter Laura Lynn Cottrell
Daughter Sherry Ann Cottrell+

Thomas W. Antley (M)
Divorce Sherry Ann Cottrell
Marriage Sherry Ann Cottrell
 
CoParent Sherry Ann Cottrell
Daughter Haley Michele Antley
Son Logan Clayton Antley

Haley Michele Antley (F)
Pedigree
Father Thomas W. Antley
Mother Sherry Ann Cottrell

Logan Clayton Antley (M)
Pedigree
Father Thomas W. Antley
Mother Sherry Ann Cottrell

Robert M. Taylor (M)
Divorce Sherry Ann Cottrell
Marriage Sherry Ann Cottrell
 
CoParent Sherry Ann Cottrell
Daughter Ashleigh Nicole Taylor


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