He was born on 04 April 1801 in Stafford County, Virginia and his parents were Sarah (Kendall) and Enoch Harding (c1768-1849) of Virginia, USA.
Henry Wildy Harding furst married about 1826 to Nancy Hansbrough (1809–1831).
Henry Wildy Harding married about 1834 to Elizabeth English.
Henry Wildy Harding married secondly on 02 Oct 1834 in Hardin County, Kentucky, USA to Elizabeth English (1818–1900), daughter of Nancy (Richards) and Noah English. They had about 15 children.
He died on 27 Sep 1878 and was buried at Harding Cemetery in Penny, Calloway County, Kentucky, USA. [1]
His widow Elizabeth died on 02 Sep 1900 in Calloway County, Kentucky, USA.
Children
Lewis Augustus Harding (1827–1865)
William Elijah Harding (1829–1904)
Boswell Harding (1830–1878)
Harriet Ann (Harding) Thompson (1836–1861)
Richard Montgomery Harding (1838–1872)
John Robert Harding (1840–1915)
Henry #1 Clay Harding (1841–1843)
Enoch Harding, Sr. (1843–1913)
Noah Harding (1844–1914)
Nancy Elizabeth (Harding) Graves (1845–1930)
Charles Strother Harding (1847–1858)
Henry Wildy Harding, Jr. (1850–1933)
Signoria Harding (1851–1851)
Victoria Harding (1851–1851)
Clarence Harding (1853–1854)
Clarrissa Harding (1853–1857)
Lucy Bert (Harding) Irvan (1858–1897).
Sources
↑ Find A Grave: Memorial #19489058 for Henry Wildy Harding, b: 01 Apr 1801 Stafford County, Virginia, USA; d: 27 Sep 1878 USA; buried: Harding Cemetery, Penny, Calloway County, Kentucky, USA; with gravestone photo
1860 USA Census of Kentucky; for Henry Harding with wife Elizabeth & 6 children
Is Henry 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 Henry 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 Henry: