Sarah married Jacob Lewis in Frederick,[1] Maryland on January 1, 1769.[3]
Jacob and Sarah had at least three children (Pearce, Mary, and Jacob) before he died in 1812.[5]
Sarah (Noland) Lewis died in Ridgeville (Butler County), Alabama on November 20, 1841.[3]
This profile is a collaborative work-in-progress. Can you contribute information or sources?
Research Notes
DAR Magazine, July 1997 - A copy of Henry Peyton Noland's correspondence with Rose Bell (November 9, 1997) references her "entry in Daughters Magazine, July 1997, p 489, which mentions Sarah Avery Noland (m. Jacob Lewis in VA)" His notes on the copy of her phone call on November 19, 1997: "no dates on Sarah Avery Noland, except that she m. in 1769 in Frederick, MD."
Entry in magazine: LEWIS-MADDEN-JONES-PEAGLER: Need proof that David Lewis (b. 1770 in VA to Jacob Lewis and Sarah Avery Noland) d. ? in MS or AL, m. in GA ca 1790 Mary Madden; that David and Mary Lewis had daughter Parthenia "Patsy" Lewis, b. 1799 at Wilkes Co., GA, d. 1873 at Ridgeville, Butler Co., AL, m ca 1825 Mathias Jones, b. 1801-1810 in NC, d. before 1853 at Butler Co., AL; that Mathias and "Patsy" Jones had daughter, Sarah Ann Jones who m. 1839 in Butler Co., AL, John Peagler.
Birth Location: Merge brought in Cecil County, but no support for it found. A Sarah J. Lewis died before 6 April 1870 [1871?] in Cecil County - administrator was Merrith Trimble; bond was 30,000 (6 April was date of bond). Liber No. 15, folio 216. ~ Cecil County Will info (pdf, image 248 of 536), accessed 17 September 2022.
Sources
↑ 1.01.1 per Rose Bell, November 1997 phone conversation with Henry Peyton Noland; his notes showed "Sarah Avery Noland"
DAR records related to patriot ancestor #A069976, Jacob Lewis (her husband)
Acknowledgements
Thanks to Liz Shifflett, who started this profile on Friday, January 31, 2014 and to her father, Henry Peyton Noland, for keeping excellent notes.
Thanks to Charlie Varnell who created the Noland-595 profile through the import of Haynie-Line.GED on Nov 21, 2015.
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DNA Connections
It may be possible to confirm family relationships with Sarah 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 Sarah:
Daughters of the American Revolution, DAR Genealogical Research Databases, database online, (http://www.dar.org/ : accessed 26 Feb. 2019), "Record of John Lewis", Ancestor # A070016.
Noland-595 and Noland-450 appear to represent the same person because: Hi! Avery is a family name too... I think a misreading or mishearing of Awbrey. I don't know for sure whether Sarah's middle name was written Avery or Awbrey (or Aubrey), but these two profiles appear to be for the same person (Sarah Noland m Lewis, although 1841 death may be someone else's? Or not - the Nolands are fairly long-lived.)
Daughters of the American Revolution, DAR Genealogical Research Databases, database online, (http://www.dar.org/ : accessed 26 Feb. 2019), "Record of John Lewis", Ancestor # A070016.
Noland-595 and Noland-450 appear to represent the same person because: Hi! Avery is a family name too... I think a misreading or mishearing of Awbrey. I don't know for sure whether Sarah's middle name was written Avery or Awbrey (or Aubrey), but these two profiles appear to be for the same person (Sarah Noland m Lewis, although 1841 death may be someone else's? Or not - the Nolands are fairly long-lived.)
Cheers, Liz (nee Noland)