Ann (Gowan) Easley
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Ann (Gowan) Easley (1750 - aft. 1801)

Ann Easley formerly Gowan
Born in Granville County, North Carolinamap
Ancestors ancestors
Wife of — married [date unknown] in District 96, South Carolina, United Statesmap [uncertain]
Descendants descendants
Died after after age 51 in Greenville District, South Carolinamap
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Profile last modified | Created 27 May 2011
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Biography

U.S. Southern Colonies Project logo
Ann (Gowan) Easley was a South Carolina colonist.
U.S. Southern Colonies Project logo
Ann (Gowan) Easley was a North Carolina colonist.

Ann Gowen was born around 1750, probably in Granville County, NC where her father William Gowen was found on tax lists. [1] In 1767, her husband was granted 250 acres of land on the Tyger River in Ninety Six District, South Carolina [2] where he served in Roebuck's Regiment of the SC Militia during the Revolutionary War. [3] After John's death, Ann received a land grant in Ninety Six District, SC on the Reedy River, west of the Indian Boundary (now Greenville Co) on 29 Jun 1784.[4] She sold that land to Edmund Bearden in 1790. [5]She inherited land on the Sink Hole Fork of the Middle Tyger River in Greenville District from her father William Gowen who died in 1792. [6] [7] Ann died sometime after 21 Jul 1801 when she executed a deed to her daughters Ann Easley Barton and Mary Easley Grayham. The deed indicated she lived in Greenville District, and it was witnessed by John Easley, likely her son John Easley Jr. [8] Note: A SC treasurer's report submitted on 23 Nov 1801 indicates she was a pensioner in Spartanburg Dist SC however, under the column "for time paid," it indicates it was for the year 1800.[9]

Ann likely died living with her son John Easley Jr on the land she inherited from her father. [10] When her brother John Gowan drafted his will in 1809, he bequeathed to his daughter Letty "a plantation known by Ann Easley's place."[11] On 3 Apr 1818 Street Thurston sold to Frances Adams a tract of land on both sides of the Sink Hole Fork of the Middle Tyger River. Per the deed, it was part of a tract originally granted to William Gowen conveyed to Ann Easley, that Ann Easley conveyed it to John and William Easley (presumably her sons) who then conveyed it to John Gowen. [12] Ann was shown on the 1790 US Census for Greenville Dist SC living next to Thomas Barton,[13] the father-in-law of her daughter Ann "Nancy" Easley Barton. Barton purchased the land on the Sink Hole Fork originally granted to Edmund Bearden next to William Gowen's tract. [14] Ann's household on the 1790 census consisted of 1 male over 16, 1 male under 16 and 3 females. The 1800 census for Greenville Dist SC shows John Easley Jr and William Easley living next to each other. There was one female in John Easley Jr's household over the age of 45 who was likely his mother according to historian and long-time Easley researcher Virginia Easley DeMarce. She noted that Ann Gowen Easley was still living at the time and not otherwise accounted for on the 1800 census.[15] [16] The most logical explanation would be that they were all living on the land she conveyed to her two sons - that she inherited from her father.

Research Notes

RE: Death place of Ann Easley A report submitted by the state treasurer on 23 Nov 1801 includes Ann Easley, Spartanburg Dist. However, a closer look at the record shows in her entry under the column "for what time paid" that it was for the year 1800. This is an important point because this only documents Ann in 1800, not on the date the report was submitted by the treasurer. The next year, on 21 Jul 1801, Ann executed a deed to daughters Ann Barton and Mary Grayham which states she was "of state of S. Carolina and of Greenville Dist." This is the last record showing Ann alive. This researcher believes she most likely died while living on the property she inherited from her father William Gowen, located on the Sink Hole Fork of the Middle Tyger River in Greenville Dist SC. When he her brother John Gowan drafted his will in 1809, he bequeathed to his daughter Letty "a plantation known by Ann Easley's place."[17] On 3 Apr 1818 Street Thurston sold to Frances Adams a tract of land on both sides of the Sink Hole Fork of the Middle Tyger River. Per the deed, it was part of a tract originally granted to William Gowen conveyed to Ann Easley, that Ann Easley conveyed it to John and William Easley who then conveyed it to John Gowen. [18] I cannot find the deeds showing where Ann conveyed it to John and William Easley, presumably her two sons, and where they in turn conveyed it to her brother John Gowen. Ann was shown on the 1790 US Census for Greenville Dist SC living next to Thomas Barton,[19] the father-in-law of her daughter Ann "Nancy" Easley Barton who purchased the land on the land on the Sink Hole Fork originally granted to Edmund Bearden that was next to William Gowen's tract. [20] Ann's household consisted of 1 male over 16, 1 male under 16 and 3 females. The 1800 census for Greenville Dist SC shows John Easley Jr and William Easley living next to each other. There was one female in John Easley Jr's household over the age of 45 who was likely his mother. [21] The logical explanation would be that they were living on the land she conveyed to them - that she inherited from her father. Also of note: On 21 May 1824, John and Winn B Gowan and Street Thurston, executors of John Gowen's estate, sold a tract of land to Frances Adams on the Middle Tyger River in Greenville District SC "beginning at a stake corner of a tract of land known by Nancy Easley's place" and also included part of "362 acres originally granted to Anna Easley." [22] The grant referenced is a different tract of land than the one she inherited. It was for land surveyed for Ann Easley in 1785 for 362 acres in Ninety Six District SC on "north side of Saluda on a fork known by the name of Elisha Thompson's Beaver Dam of Middle Tyger River" but was certified for her brother John Gowen. [23] So although this land was originally surveyed for Ann, it was granted to her brother. The only other land Ann owned was a granted to her on 29 Jun 1794 on for 287 acres on Reedy River in Ninety Six Dist SC, west of the old Indian Boundary (what became Greenville Dist SC). [24] However, she sold that land to Edmund Bearden on 16 Jul 1790. [25] Turner-44718 22:08, 31 August 2023 (UTC)

PARENTS:

William Gowen Jr. (abt.1704-abt.1790) and Sarah (Allen) Gowen (1726-1785)

CHILDREN:

Millington Easley born about 1767
John Easley born about 1768
James Easley born about 1769
Virginia Elizabeth “Betsy” Easley born in 1770
Mary Easley born about 1772
William Franklin Easley born about 1774
Ann “Nancy” Easley born in 1778

SIBLINGS:

Joseph Gowen (abt.1737-bef.1796) (not in will, but listed as son in tithes in Granville NC. May have predeceased his father)
William Gowen III (abt.1740-abt.1815) (not in will, but listed as son in tithes in Granville NC)
James Gowen (abt.1743-abt.1789) (presumed, records indicate he predeceases his father)
John Gowen (abt.1743-abt.1810) (listed in will)
Ann (Gowan) Easley (1750-1801) (listed in will)
Christiana Elizabeth (Gowen) Rains (1755-1826) (presumed)

Anne Gowen, daughter of William Gowen and Sarah Allan Gowen, was born about 1750, probably in Granville County, North Carolina. Her family later lived in Stokes County, North Carolina where she met John Easley who became her husband about 1766. He was born before 1741, according to the research of Dr. Virginia Easley DeMarce, a descendant.


John Easley served in the South Carolina militia during the Revolutionary War following the fall of Charleston, South Carolina to the British in 1780. On June 18, 1781 Thomas Farrar, brigade major, gave a receipt to John Easley for “a bay mare imprest for Publick Service–Appraised to forty-five pounds to be paid in gold or silver or the value thereof in Continental money. By Order of General Pickins.” [26]Miss Miriam Dozier, a descendant of Austin, Texas wrote October 27, 1961 that John Easley was a first lieutenant in Lt. Col. Benjamin Roebuck’s Regiment. Both he and his son, Millington Easley were killed fighting the British, apparently about 1783.

On June 29, 1784 Anne Gowen Easley, a widow, was granted land on Reedy River in the Old Indian Apex Cession. Ac­cording to District 96 Deed Book 2, page 347 her land was bounded on the northwest “by Hawkins.” Later she sold this land to Edmund Bearden. She was mentioned in the will of her father written March 10, 1785, as the recipient of “two cows and calves” and “275 acres of land, more or less, it being part of a survey of 395 acres run for me on the Sink Pot Fork of Tyger River,” according to District 96 will records.

On May 28, 1785 Gov. Guerrard of South Carolina granted land in District 96 to Anne Gowen Easley, according to Greenville County Deed Book B, page 28.

Anne Gowen Easley appeared in the first state census of South Carolina taken in 1786 as the head of a household in Greenville County. According to”Heads of Households, South Carolina, 1790,” the family was enumerated as:

“Easley, Ann white female
white male over 16
white female
white female
white male under 16”

No slaves were reported. The enumeration showed her to be a neighbor to Samuel Easley, William Easley, “Allen Gowin” and Gowen Clayton. Sometime between October 14, 1805 and March 14, 1808 Gowen Clayton of Spartanburg District was witness to a deed of Austin Clayton which transferred 50 acres of land “on both sides of the Tygar River” which had been granted to Augusten Clayton, according to Deed Book L, page 208.

In 1786 Ann Gowen Easley petitioned the government for mil­itary pay for her deceased husband and son, requesting that the compensation be tendered to “Capt. John Gowen.” The docu­ment read:

“To the Commissioners of the Publick Treasury: Gen­tlemen: Please to send me by Captain John Gowen In­dent for the amount of the account of John Easely & Millington Easely against the Public of South Carolina, they being both deceased, and I, the administratrix of their estates, being the widow of John Easely and Mother of Millington Easely. Your Complyance with Much Oblige.
Your humble Servant
Ann Easley
Acknowledged the 24th of May, 1786 before
Bayliss Earle, J.P.”

Apparently the affidavit was written by Bayliss Earle, an old friend of the Gowen family who should have known how to correctly spell “Easley.” The resulting indents bore the fol­lowing endorsements:

“John Easely, Lieutenant for Militia duty in Roebuck’s Regiment since the fall of Charleston, £44, 10 shillings. Received August 5, 1786 Full Satisfaction for interest for the within.
C. C. Schutt”

“Millington Easely, £14, 7 shillings and one penny, half penny. Received September 1, 1786 three years interest on the within Indent.
C. C. Schutt”

On December 22, 1786 John “Buck” Gowen signed a receipt for full satisfaction for compensation from the Commissioners of the Treasury “in the purchase of land for Ann Easley.” Apparently Ann Gowen Easley settled for land, feeling that getting payment from the hard-pressed government would be difficult and long in coming.

On January 1, 1787 Ann Gowen Easley was granted additional land on Reedy River. When that area formally became a state May 23, 1788 she and other members of her family had been in residence there for 14 years.

On July 16, 1790 Ann Gowen Easley sold land on Reedy River that had been granted to her in 1785 to Edmund Bearden, according to Greenville County Deed Book B, page 253.. About 1790 Edmund Bearden sold the land “to Jamison, land on both sides of George’s Creek of Saluda River.” The deed was witnessed by Winn Bearden, son of Edmund Bearden. This tract of 340 acres in Washington District was afterwards granted to Maj. John “Buck” Gowen of District 96 by Gov. Charles Cotesworth Pinckney who was a brigadier-general in the Continental Army and a delegate to the constitutional convention.

Maj. John “Buck” Gowen sold this land July 5, 1792 as recorded in Pendleton County, South Carolina Deed Book D, page 3. The deed was witnessed by James Easley, son of Ann Gowen Easley and Jesse Moss. Although Pendleton County no longer exists, its records are maintained by South Carolina Historical Commission, Columbia, South Carolina.

On May 2, 1793 Ann Gowen Easley sold the land that had been granted to her in 1785 on Reedy River to Bayliss Earle, according to Greenville County Deed Book C, page 372. John Easley was a witness to the transaction.

On November 24, 1794 Ann Gowen Easley was mentioned as an heir of James I. Hunt whose will was probated on that date. She received a deed from the Hunt estate in 1798.

It is believed that Ann Gowen Easley was the “white female, over 45” living in the household of her son, John Easley in the 1800 census of Greenville County.

Anne Gowen Easley deeded January 21, 1801 a slave woman to her daughters, Ann Easley Barton and Mary Easley “for love and affection,” according to Greenville County Deed Book F, page 251. John Easley and William Easley witnessed the deed. They are believed to be her sons.

Anne Gowen Easley “of Greenville County” was referred to as “the widow Easley” in the estate account of her father-in-law Millington Easley in 1806, according to Greenville County records. She was mentioned in the will of her brother John “Buck” Gowen written August 20, 1809. It is believed that Anne Gowen Easley died shortly afterward and was buried in Greenville County.

Children born to John Easley and Anne Gowen Easley include:

Millington Easley born about 1767
John Easley born about 1768
James Easley born about 1769
Virginia Elizabeth “Betsy” Easley born in 1770
Mary Easley born about 1772
William Franklin Easley born about 1774
Ann “Nancy” Easley born in 1778

Millington Easley, son of John Easley and Ann Gowen Easley, was born about 1767 probably in Stokes County, North Car­olina. He was killed at about age 16, along with his father, while serving in Roebuck’s Regiment of the South Carolina militia. His mother received military pay of “14 pounds, 7 shillings, one penny, half penny” for his services September 1, 1786.

John Easley, son of John Easley and Ann Gowen Easley, was born about 1768, probably in Stokes County. He was brought to South Carolina by his parents about 1774. It is not believed that he was enumerated in the 1786 census of his mother’s household. He was married about 1791 and was enumerated as the head of Household 544 in the 1800 census of Greenville County. A “white female, over 45” recorded in his household is possibly his mother. “John Easley” was a witness in 1801 to a deed of his mother in which she gave a slave to her daughters. John Easley “was temporarily in Warren County and Allen County, Kentucky, but disappears from the record by 1820,” according to the research of Virginia Easley DeMarce.

James Easley, believed to be a son of John Easley and Ann Gowen Easley, was born about 1769, probably in Stokes County. He was brought to South Carolina by his parents about 1774. He is believed to be the “white male, over 16” who appeared in his mother’s household in the South Carolina state census of 1786. “James Easley” was a witness to a deed of Maj. John “Buck” Gowen July 5, 1792 in which he conveyed land that had once been owned by Anne Gowen Easley, according to Pendleton County, South Carolina Deed Book D, page 3.

Virginia Elizabeth “Betsy” Easley , daughter of Lt. John Easley and Anne Gowen Easley, was born in 1770 in South Carolina. She was married October 11, 1786 at age 16 to William [Pleasant?] Anderson of Greenville County. He was born in 1765 in Augusta County, Virginia to John Anderson and Ann Erwin Anderson, according to a letter written by Miss Miriam Dozier, a descendant of Austin, Texas.

In 1789 William Anderson was living in Newberry County, South Carolina, according to “Newberry County, South Carolina Deed Abstracts, 1751-1794,” Volume A, pages 707-710, by Brent H. Holcomb:

“Lease and release. January 26 & 27, 1789, William Anderson of Newberry County and wife Elizabeth to John Floyd of same, for £300 sterling, 60 acres, part of 100 acres granted to John Lucas September 16, 1774, on a branch of Little River called Sandy Run adjoining Andrew Erwin, Robert Johnston, John Sims, James Goggans, William Anderson, also 150 acres, a part of a tract of 250 acres granted to William Anderson January 10, 1770 on south side of south fork of Sandy Run ad-joining William Pitts, making out 210 acres.
William Anderson
Elizabeth [X] Anderson
Witnesses:
John Anderson
William [X] Anderson
George Goggans”
Proved in Newberry County by the oath of George Goggans March 2, 1789 before Robert Rutherford, J.P. Recorded July 10, 1789.”

On October 1, 1794 Allan Gowen deeded property on the South Pacolet River to William Easley, his niece’s husband, according to Greenville County Deed Book D, page 72. John “Buck” Gowen, William Gowen and William Anderson were witnesses to the deed.

In 1811 William Anderson lived in Kentucky.

They removed to Sumter County, Alabama. She died there October 27, 1843, according to her obituary:

“Died Mrs Elizabeth Anderson, consort of William Anderson Sr. Esq. in the 73rd year of her age. She was married to Mr. Anderson at the age of 16, having been born in South Carolina in 1770.

Elizabeth Easley was the daughter of John Easley, 1st Lieutenant in the Revolutionary War and his wife Ann Gowen. John’s father was John Easley and his mother was Joyce Easley; this John’s parents were Warham Easley and his wife Sara Barnes; Warham’s father and mother were Robert Easley and Ann Parker. Warham Easley’s will is in Book 1 page 84 and mentions sons Creed T, Samuel W, Christopher B, daughter Martha Easley Foreman, wife Emily, minor heirs: Catherine, Maria, Elizabeth Jane and Virginia Noble. Warham Easley lived near Belmont.”

William Easley died February 11, 1848 at age 80.

Children born to them include:

John Erwin Anderson born in 1796
Caroline N. Anderson born in 1798
Dorcas Anderson born about 1799
Marian Burns Anderson born January 28, 1800
Bailey Washington Anderson born March 17, 1803
Huldah Virginia Anderson born April 19, 1805
William Gowen Anderson born in 1811
Albert Gallatin Anderson born in 1814

John Erwin Anderson, son of William Anderson and Virginia Elizabeth “Betsy” Easley Anderson, was born in 1796 in Greenville County. He was married August 10, 1816 in Clark County, Alabama to Cynthia D. Harper. She was born in 1798 in Georgia. He died in 1848 in Panola County, Texas and she died after 1870.

Children born to them include:

Mary Caroline Anderson born about 1820

Mary Caroline Anderson, daughter of John Erwin Anderson and Cynthia D. Harper Anderson, was born about 1820. She was married about 1841 to Patrick C. Shahan in Harrison County, Texas.

Children born to them include:

Michael Lucian Shahan born about 1842

Michael Lucian Shahan, son of Patrick C. Shahan and Mary Caroline Anderson Shahan, was born about 1842. He was married about 1866 to Georgia Ann Pyle.

Caroline N. Anderson, daughter of William Anderson and Virginia Elizabeth “Betsy” Easley Anderson, was born in 1798 in Greenville County. She was married about 1816 to Henry Walker. She was remarried to Elisha Lacy.

Dorcas Anderson, daughter of William Anderson and Virginia Elizabeth “Betsy” Easley Anderson, was born about 1799 in Greenville County. She was married September 24, 1819 in Clark County, Alabama to Eli Davis.

Children born to them include:

Huldah Davis born about 1821
Amanda Davis born about 1823
Franklin W. Davis born about 1824
John E. Davis born about 1826
Elisha L. Davis born about 1829
William B. Davis born about 1831
Jane Davis born about 1834
Eli Davis born about 1837
Dorcas Davis born about 1840

Marian Burns Anderson, daughter of William Anderson and Virginia Elizabeth “Betsy” Easley Anderson, was born January 28, 1800 in Greenville County. She was married February 18, 1819 in Marengo County, Alabama to Alexander Birdsong. He was born in 1799 in South Carolina to James Birdsong and Elizabeth Gratsy Birdsong. She died April 8, 1878 in Hunt County, Texas, and he died there in 1879.

Children born to them include:

Laura Gratsy Birdsong born in 1819

Laura Gratsy Birdsong, daughter of Alexander Birdsong and Marian Burns Anderson Birdsong, was born in 1819 in Marengo County. She was married about 1842 to William K. Elliott in Fayette County, Tennessee.

Children born to them include:

[daughter] born about 1848

A daughter born about 1848 to William K. Elliott and Laura Gratsy Birdsong Elliott, was married about 1867 to Stephen Bailey Dozier in Panola County, Texas. He was born in West­moreland County, Virginia.

Children born to them include:

William Allen Ward Dozier born about 1870

William Allen Ward Dozier, son of Stephen Bailey Dozier, was born about 1870. He was married about 1893 to Ella Nance who was born in Gainesville, Alabama.

Children born to them include:

Miriam Dozier born about 1900

Miriam Dozier, daughter of William Allen Ward Dozier and Ella Nance Dozier, was born about 1900. In 1961 she lived in Austin, Texas. She had a great love of her family and spent many years in researching her ancestry.

Bailey W. Anderson, son of William Anderson and Virginia Elizabeth “Betsy” Easley Anderson, was born March 17, 1803 in Greenville County. He was married January 18, 1823 in Marengo County to Olive Crook. He was remarried March 17, 1832 in Sumter County, Alabama to Louise Burton.

Huldah Virginia Anderson, daughter of William Anderson and Virginia Elizabeth “Betsy” Easley Anderson, was born April 19, 1905 in Greenville County. She was married February 17, 1821 in Marengo County, Alabama to Stephen Lacy Davis. She died October 10, 1863 in Panola County, Texas.

William Gowen Anderson, son of William Anderson and Virginia Elizabeth “Betsy” Easley Anderson, was born in 1811 in Kentucky. He became the first probate judge in Sumter County, Alabama, organized in 1832 from the Choctaw Cesssion of 1830, according to a letter written October 27, 1961 by Miss Mariam Dozier. He was married there August 20, 1833 to Isabel Corlin. He was remarried about 1846 in Texas to Mrs. Elizabeth Taylor. He died in Orange County, Texas in 1866.

After his death, Elizabeth Taylor Anderson removed to Johnson County, Texas.

Children born to William Gowan Anderson are believed to include:

Mary Leona Anderson born about 1835
Laura Jane Anderson born about 1837
Isabella H. Anderson born about 1840
Isadora M. Anderson born about 1848
John Erwin Anderson born about 1852

Mary Leona Anderson, daughter of William Gowen Anderson and Isabel Corlin, was born about 1835. She was married about 1853 to Preston Floyd. After their deaths, their fourth children were brought to Johnson County, Texas.

Children born to them include:

Richard Erwin Floyd born about 1855
Matlock Floyd, M.G. born about 1859
Kate Henrietta Floyd born about 1864

Laura Jane Anderson, daughter of William Gowen Anderson and Isabel Corlin, was born about 1837. She was married about 1857, husband’s name Ramsey. A daughter of Laura Jane Anderson Ramsey was “married to Dr. Nifong.”

Albert Gallatin Anderson, son of William Anderson and Virginia Elizabeth “Betsy” Easley Anderson, was born in 1814 in Kentucky. He was elected tax collector in Sumter County. He was married there July 23, 1834 to Mary Ann More. He was remarried there February 9, 1844 to Mrs. Mary Devlin Drummond.

Mary Easley, daughter of John Easley and Anne Gowen Easley was born about 1772. She was mentioned in a deed written January 21, 1801 in which her mother conveyed a slave woman to her and her sister Anne Easley Barton, according to Greenville County Deed Book F, page 251.

William Franklin Easley, son of John Easley and Anne Gowen Easley, was born in South Carolina about 1774, according to Sally Ann Easley Boswell, a granddaughter. He was married about 1799, probably in Greenville County, wife’s name Sarah “Dillie” Dillingham].

On May 6, 1799 “William Easley,” Elizabeth Malin, Masse Arrasmith and John Dillingham posted bond as administrators of the estate of John Malin, deceased.

He was enumerated as the head of Household 545 in the 1800 census of Greenville County, adjoining the household of his brother John Easley. In 1801 he was a witness to the deed of his mother conveying a negro slave woman to his sisters. He was discharged from the administration of the estate of John Malin January 5, 1807, having “surrendered up the whole of the business unto Elizabeth Malin, executrix of the said estate.”

The research of Virginia Easley DeMarce traces the move­ments of William Easley and Sarah “Dillie” Easley from Greenville County to Warren County, Kentucky where he appeared as a taxpayer from 1806 to 1810. Later they removed to Allen County, Kentucky and thence to Boone County, Missouri. She stated that he died in 1844 in Boone County or in Barry County where some of their children had removed.

Dr. Virginia Easley DeMarce, an accomplished genealogist, in 1990 lived in Arlington, Virginia where she was president of the National Genealogical Society.

Children born to William Franklin Easley and Sarah “Dillie” Easley include:

Mahulda “Hulda” Easley born about 1801
Greenberry Easley born September 20, 1805
John Easley born about 1808
Edward Easley born April 4, 1810
Elizabeth Easley born about 1816
Mary “Polly” Easley born April 12, 1822

Greenberry Easley, son of William Franklin Easley and Sarah “Dillie” Dillingham Easley, was born September 20, 1805 in Greenville County, South Carolina. He was brought by his parents to Warren County, Kentucky in 1806. Later he lived in Allen County, Kentucky and Boone County, Missouri.

He was married about 1828 to Eveline Johnson, according to the research of Gina Myers Easley.

Children born to Greenberry Easley and Eveline Johnson Easley include:

Robert Easley born about 1831

Robert Easley, son of Greenberry Easley and Eveline Johnson Easley, was born about 1831. He was married about 1856 to Katie Froley, according to Gina Myers Easley.

Children born to Robert Easley and Katie Froley Easley include:

John Tim Easley born about 1860

John Tim Easley, son of Robert Easley and Katie Froley Easley, was born about 1860. He was married about 1890 to Ivonnie Smith.

Children born to John Tim Easley and Ivonnie Smith Easley include:

Ray Easley born about 1900

Ray Easley, son of John Tim Easley and Ivonnie Smith Easley, was born about 1900. He was married about 1928 to Opal Cash.

Children born to Ray Easley and Opal Cash Easley include:

John Easley born about 1932

John Easley, son of Ray Easley and Opal Cash Easley, was born about 1932. He was married about 1956 to Gina Myers. Children born to John Easley and Gina Myers Easley are unknown.

Anne “Nancy” Easley, daughter of John Easley and Anne Gowen Easley, was born in 1778, according to the research of Jason E. Barton, a descendant of Hagerstown, Maryland. She was married about 1796 to Thomas Barton, son of David and Nancy Barrett Barton. Anne “Nancy” Easley Barton was the recipient of a slave woman deeded to her by her mother January 21, 1801, according to Greenville County Deed Book F, page 251. They lived in the area of Gowensville, South Carolina where Thomas Barton was a farmer.

Thomas Barton died there about 1862, at age 85, and was buried in Glassy Mountain Baptist Church Cemetery, according to Hope Coslett Pees of Seguin, Texas in a message dated April 12, 2001. Anne “Nancy” Easley Barton lived to be 88 and died “after May 15, 1866.” She was buried beside her husband.

Children born to Thomas Barton and Ann “Nancy” Easley Barton include:

O’Hara Barton born about 1798
John Milton Barton born about 1799
Shapley Barton born about 1804
Joseph Barton born about 1807
Millington Easley Barton born about 1811
Kindness Barton [twin] born about 1818
Pleasant Barton [twin] born about 1818
Frank Barton born about 1820
Rebecca Barton born about 1823

Sources

  1. William Gowen, Granville Co NC Tax Lists, 1755-1935, FHL#8132497.
  2. John Easeley, SC Colonial Plat Books, Series S213184 Volume 0015 Page 00020 Item 02, SC Dept of Archives and History.
  3. John Easley, Accounts Audited of Claims Growing Out of the Revolution, S108092, Reel 39, Frame 304. "Please to send me by Capt. John Gowan indents for the amount of the account of John Easley and Millington Easley against the publick of S. Carolina, they being both deceased and I being the administratrix of their estates, being the widow of John Easley and mother of Millington Easley..." 24 May 1786.
  4. Ann Easeley, SC State Plat Books, Charleston Series, S213190, Vol. 5, p. 285, SC Dept. of Archives and History
  5. Greenville Co SC Deed Book B, pp. 253-254.
  6. William Gowen estate, File 1093, Spartanburg Co SC Estate Papers, 1787-1900, FHL#008623908 [1]
  7. William Gowen, SC State Plat Books, Charleston Series, S213190, Vol. 6, p. 48.
  8. Greenville Co SC DB F, pp. 151-152.
  9. SC Treasurer Report, 23 Nov. 1801, S165009, Message 810, p. 7, Revolutionary War Pensioners paid at Columbia, SC Archives. Note: shows Ann Easley living in Spartanburg District. However, it indicates the year 1800 under the column "for time paid."
  10. William Gowen estate, File 1093, Spartanburg Co SC Estate Papers, 1787-1900, FHL#008623908 [2]
  11. John Gowen Will, Series S108093 , Reel 24, frame 15, South Carolina Department of Archives and History.
  12. Greenville Co SC Deed Book K, p. 201.
  13. Ann Easley household, 1790 US Census, Greenville Dist SC, p. 101, Series M637, Roll 11.
  14. Greenville County SC Deed Book L, p. 300.
  15. John Easley Jr. and William Easley households, 1800 US Census, Greenville Dist SC, p. 257, Series M32, Roll 47.
  16. DeMarce, Virginia Easley, "A Tenative Outline of US Easley Lines Primarily to the Year 1800," 1974, p. 44.
  17. John Gowen Will, Series S108093 , Reel 24, frame 15, South Carolina Department of Archives and History.
  18. Greenville Co SC Deed Book K, p. 201.
  19. Ann Easley household, 1790 US Census, Greenville Dist SC, p. 101, Series M637, Roll 11.
  20. Greenville County SC Deed Book L, p. 300.
  21. John Easley Jr. and William Easley households, 1800 US Census, Greenville Dist SC, p. 257, Series M32, Roll 47.
  22. Greenville Co SC Deed Book N, pp. 263-264.
  23. John Gowen, SC State Plat Books, Charleston Series, S213190, Vol. 9, p. 432, item 1.
  24. Ann Easeley, SC State Plat Books, Charleston Series, S213190, Vol. 5, item 285.
  25. Greenville Co SC Deed Book B, pp. 253-254.
  26. John Easley, Accounts Audited of Claims Growing Out of the Revolution, S108092, Reel 39, Frame 304, [3]
  • William Gowen, Granville Co NC Tax Lists, 1755-1935, FHL#8132497.
  • John Easeley, SC Colonial Plat Books, Series S213184 Volume 0015 Page 00020 Item 02, SC Dept of Archives and History.
  • SC Treasurer Report, 23 Nov. 1801, S165009, Message 810, p. 7, Revolutionary War Pensioners paid at Columbia, SC Archives. Note: shows Ann Easley living in Spartanburg District. However, it indicates the year 1800 under the column "for time paid."
  • Greenville Co SC DB F, pp. 151-152. Deeds a female slave to daughters Ann Barton and Mary Graham.
  • John Easley, Accounts Audited of Claims Growing Out of the Revolution, S108092, Reel 39, Frame 304. "Please to send me by Capt. John Gowan indents for the amount of the account of John Easley and Millington Easley against the publick of S. Carolina, they being both deceased and I being the administratrix of their estates, being the widow of John Easley and mother of Millington Easley..." 24 May 1786.
  • William Gowen estate, File 1093, Spartanburg Co SC Estate Papers, 1787-1900, FHL#008623908 [4]
  • DeMarce, Virginia Easley, " A Tentative Outline of US Easley Primarily to the Year 1800," 1974, pp. 37-37.
  • John Gowen Will, Series S108093 , Reel 24, frame 15, South Carolina Department of Archives and History.
  • Greenville Co SC Deed Book K, p. 201.
  • Greenville Co SC Deed Book N, pp. 263-264.
  • John Gowen, SC State Plat Books, Charleston Series, S213190, Vol. 9, p. 432, item 1.
  • Ann Easeley, SC State Plat Books, Charleston Series, S213190, Vol. 5, item 285.
  • Greenville Co SC Deed Book B, pp. 253-254.
  • John Gowen Will, Series S108093 , Reel 24, frame 15, South Carolina Department of Archives and History.
  • Ann Easley household, 1790 US Census, Greenville Dist SC, p. 101, Series M637, Roll 11.
  • Greenville County SC Deed Book L, p. 300.
  • John Easley Jr. and William Easley households, 1800 US Census, Greenville Dist SC, p. 257, Series M32, Roll 47.
  • John Gowen, SC State Plat Books, Charleston Series, S213190, Vol. 9, p. 432, item 1.
  • Ann Easeley, SC State Plat Books, Charleston Series, S213190, Vol. 5, item 285.
  • Greenville Co SC Deed Book B, pp. 253-254.




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It may be possible to confirm family relationships with Ann by comparing test results with other carriers of her mitochondrial DNA. However, there are no known mtDNA test-takers in her direct maternal line. It is likely that these autosomal DNA test-takers will share some percentage of DNA with Ann:

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Gowan-92 and Gowan-5 appear to represent the same person because: Looks like same info
posted by Rodney Williams

G  >  Gowan  |  E  >  Easley  >  Ann (Gowan) Easley

Categories: South Carolina Colonists | North Carolina Colonists