Elizabeth is buried at Goodykoontz Cemetery in Floyd County, Virginia.
Slaves
In the 1860 census Elizabeth was a slave owner in Floyd, Virginia, United States.[1]
Name
Sex
Age
F
36 years
M
15 years
F
12 years
Sources
↑1860 Census:
"United States Census (Slave Schedule), 1860"
citing Page: 4; Line: 36;
FamilySearch Record: W2X2-WP3Z (accessed 25 July 2023)
FamilySearch Image: 33S7-9BSD-CHD
Elizabeth Harman in Floyd, Virginia, United States.
1810 Marriage: "Virginia Marriages, 1785-1940" citing FHL microfilm: 32633; Record number: 1186; FamilySearch Record: XR8N-8ZZ (accessed 16 October 2022) Elizabeth Slusher marriage to Solomon Harmon on 6 Mar 1810 in Montgomery, Virginia, United States.
1850 Census: "United States Census, 1850" citing family , NARA microfilm publication (Washington, D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, n.d.). FamilySearch Record: M8DM-C45 (accessed 16 October 2022) FamilySearch Image: S3HT-DBLB-M1 Image number 00411 Eliz Harman (64) in Jacksonville, Floyd, Virginia, United States. Born in Virginia.
1860 Census: "United States Census, 1860" citing Page: 156; Affiliate Publication Number: M653; Affiliate Film Number: 1345; FHL microfilm: 805345; Record number: 6095; FamilySearch Record: M41W-CV8 (accessed 16 October 2022) FamilySearch Image: 33S7-9BSF-95LL Image number 00160 Elizabeth Harman (72) in Floyd, Virginia, United States. Born in Virginia.
Memorial: Find a Grave (has image) Find A Grave: Memorial #54175891 (accessed 16 October 2022) Memorial page for Elizabeth Hancock Slusher Harman (14 Jan 1787-11 Nov 1869), citing Goodykoontz Cemetery, Floyd, Floyd County, Virginia, USA; Maintained by Family Roots Researcher (contributor 48449763).
Is Elizabeth your ancestor? Please don't go away! Login to collaborate or comment, or contact
the profile manager, or ask our community of genealogists a question.
Sponsored Search by Ancestry.com
DNA Connections
It may be possible to confirm family relationships with Elizabeth by comparing test results with other carriers of her mitochondrial DNA.
Mitochondrial DNA test-takers in the direct maternal line: