Longshore Lamb died about 1828. The exact location of his grave is unknown. But a memorial stone was erected in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Princeton, Caldwell County, Kentucky.[1]
Event
Event:
Type: Military
Date: 1780
Place: Union County, South Carolina
Note: Served in the Second Spartan Regiment of Militia during the Revolutionary War under Col. Brandon after the fall of Charleston, SC
Event:
Type: Misc
Date: 1845
Object:
This is a copy of the original document pertaining to the 1845 lawsuit in Caldwell County, Kentucky having to do with the land that Longshore Lamb owned at the time of his death about 1828. All nine of the children of Longshore and Sarah Lee Lamb and many of the children of their children who were deceased by 1845 are named on the various documents of this 1845 to 1850 lawsuit. Children of Longshore Lamb and Sarah Lee: Mary (Polly) Lamb Crow, Elizabeth Lamb Reaves Vaughn, Levi Lamb, William Lamb, Margaret (Peggy) Lamb Farmer, Jane (Jensey) Lamb Clayton, John Lamb, Sr., Moses Lamb, and Martin Lamb. Posted by: Linda Lamb Monticelli
Sources
↑ Find A Grave: Memorial #47621122 accessed 22 April 2020), memorial page for PVT Longshore Lamb (1748–1828), citing Cedar Hill Cemetery, Princeton, Caldwell County, Kentucky, USA.
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DNA Connections
It may be possible to confirm family relationships with Longshore by comparing test results with other carriers of his Y-chromosome or his mother's mitochondrial DNA.
However, there are no known yDNA or mtDNA test-takers in his direct paternal or maternal line.
It is likely that these autosomal DNA test-takers will share some percentage of DNA with Longshore: