Table 4
Various Names of Male Crawfords with Dates of Mention in Effingham
County, Georgia
Names
Year Carter Thomas Charles John William Alexander James Henry
1769 X X
1771 X
1775 X
1785 X X
1790 X X
1791 X
1793 X X
1794 X X X
1795 X X
1796 X
1798 X X
1799 X
1800 X X
1804 X
1806 X X
1807 X
1808 X X
1811 X X
1812 X,X X X
1813 X
Note: The arrangement of the evidence in this table is not meant to
suggest that all of the noted occurrences of the name are
necessarily
for the same individual Crawford.
Crawfords, Neighbors and Witnesses
From the information appearing in Table 3, it is possible to make
some
inferences about persons who were frequently associated with the
Crawfords. These inferences are based on an analysis of the names
that
appear in conjunction with some of the Crawfords. This analysis is
summarized in Table 5, which shows the names of persons who appear
as
neighbors,
witnesses, or otherwise in conjunction with the Crawfords, the
number
of times that each name appears, and the years in which the
appearances
are made.
In Table 5, James Brewer is the non-Crawford name that most
frequently
appears. This name also appears over a long period of time -- 1790
through 1806. An additional association between the Crawfords and
James
Brewer is that the marriage license for William Crawford and Patsey
Bailey was
directed to a Reverend Brewer [80]. James Brewer is identified
elsewhere
[34, p. 93] as a minister, so he is probably the Reverend Brewer
mentioned. There are a number of other instances in which Crawfords
and
Brewers interacted. From this data, a long and close association
between James Brewer, the Brewer family, and the Crawford family can
be
inferred.
In addition to the Brewers, all of the following persons had two or
more
documented contacts with the Crawfords while in Effingham County:
Christopher Bailey, William Beal, Henry Cook, Robert Hughes, Clement
Lanier,
Thomas Morgan and Richard Touchstone. Christopher Bailey was a
neighbor
of James Crawford, and may have been related to Martha Bailey, who
married
William Crawford. William Beal witnessed a transaction for James
Crawford,
and John Crawford held a mortgage for William Beal. Henry Cook was
also
a neighbor of James, and bought James' land in 1813. Robert Hughes
bought the land occupied by John and James in 1795. Later, John
Crawford owned land next to Robert Hughes . Clement Lanier was a
governmental official,
so his appearance in conjunction with land transactions is not
significant. Thomas Morgan purchased land from both John and James,
perhaps when John and James left Effingham County. Thomas Morgan
also
married Lucretia
Crawford, who was probably a daughter of John and Priscilla
Crawford.
The marriage of Richard Touchstone and Martha Crawford, the widow of
William Crawford, has already been discussed.
Table 5
SOURCES
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DALE CRAWFORD
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