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Burial of Nancy A. Hill

Privacy Level: Open (White)
Date: 1802 to 1884
Location: Green Township, Brown, Ohio, United Statesmap
Surnames/tags: Hill Blackburn
This page has been accessed 153 times.

Contents

Burial of Nancy A. Hill

 Who was Nancy A. Hill buried at Five Mile Cemetery in Green Township, Brown County, Ohio?

This research focuses on two women, as follows:

Background

Find A Grave Memorial ID #130313806 was created for Nancy A. Blackburn Hill on 24 May 2014 by Phyllis Townsley.[1]

It claims that Nancy A. Hill, who was buried at Five Mile Cemetery, is identified as Nancy A. Blackburn Hill.[1]

Also, it says that Nancy A. Hill died on 11 August 1802 in Ohio and died on 19 August 1884 (aged 82) in Brown County, Ohio.[1]

It lists her children as follows:

  • William Hill (1825–1886)
  • Dorcas (Hill) Dumford (1827–1905)
  • Sarah (Hill) Crone (1829–1899)
  • Matilda Eleanor (Hill) Graybill (1829–1910)
  • Rebecca (Hill) Laymon (1831–1903)
  • Keziah (Hill) Cramer (1833–1899)
  • Clorinda (Hill) Dumford (1835–1913)
  • John H. P. Hill (1840–1924)
  • George C. Hill (1846–1899)

Who is really Nancy A. Hill, who was buried at Five Mile Cemetery in Green Township, Brown County, Ohio?

Primary Sources

We need to focus on the primary sources, and they can lead us to identify which one of two women was enumerated in the census records between 1830 and 1880 in Clermont County and Brown County, Ohio, because her gravestone at Five Mile Cemetery itself cannot give us more information regarding her maiden name. Combining the primary sources and census records can identify her and her family and determine which one of two women was buried at Five Mile Cemetery.

Let us focus on Nancy Blackburn. Who was Nancy Blackburn?

We have only two sources that identify her full name as Nancy Blackburn.

1. Nancy Blackburn's marriage. She married Samuel Hill on 11 August 1828 in Brown County, Ohio.[2]

2. Matilda Helen Graybill's death certificate. It identifies her mother as Nancy Blackburn.[3]

It proves that they are a mother-daughter relationship.

Secondary Sources

We have three secondary sources that identify Nancy Blackburn's propinquity with five persons.

1. Matilda Hill's marriage. She married Thomas W. Graybill on 19 July 1846 in Brown County, Ohio.[4]

This proves this was a son-in-law/father-in-law relationship and proves Samuel Hill died in 1865. We can infer that Nancy Blackburn's relationship to Samuel Hill was that he was her husband because he was the father of Matilda E. (Hill) Graybill, who married Thomas W. Graybill.

We can infer that Samuel Hill died sometime before June 26, 1865, so he cannot be identical to Samuel Hill, who died in 1855 and was buried at Five Mile Cemetery.

2. Jane Hill's will. She signed her will on 25 September 1862 in Union Township, Brown County, Ohio, and her will was proved on 6 April 1864 in Brown County, Ohio.[5]

Jane Hill mentioned her heirs in her will, as follows:

  • Samuel Hill was her brother.
  • Matilda E. Graybill was her niece and the daughter of Samuel Hill.
  • Thomas W. Graybill was Matilda E. Graybill's husband.
  • Alexander K. Hill was her nephew and the son of Samuel Hill.

Jane Hill said that her heirs were Matilda E. Graybill and Alexander K. Hill and proved they were the children of her brother, Samuel Hill. Nothing else in her will said that Samuel Hill had any other children.

We can infer from Matilda Helen Graybill's death certificate that Samuel Hill was the husband of Nancy Blackburn, and they had only two children as follows:

  • Matilda E. Graybill
  • Alexander K. Hill

Therefore, it shows Nancy Blackburn's relationship to Jane Hill that she was her sister-in-law.

Evidently, it conflicts with Find a Grave profile's claim that Matilda E. Graybill had eight siblings. Therefore, Matilda E. Graybill was not the sister of eight children of Samuel and Nancy A. Hill, but she was the only sister of Alexander K. Hill.

Another evidence is that Samuel Hill was still alive in 1862 and 1864, so Samuel Hill cannot be identical to Samuel Hill who died in 1855 and was buried at Five Mile Cemetery in Green Township, Brown County, Ohio.[6]

3. The probate record of Samuel Hill. The probate record reveals that Samuel Hill died intestate in 1865. Thomas W. Graybill, A. J. Graybill, and William H. Robinson paid the bond for Samuel Hill's estate, and the Brown County probate court appointed Thomas W. Graybill as administrator for his estate on 26 June 1865.[7][8]

This proves this was a son-in-law/father-in-law relationship and proves Samuel Hill died in 1865. We can infer that Nancy Blackburn's relationship to Samuel Hill was that he was her husband because he was the father of Matilda E. (Hill) Graybill, who married Thomas W. Graybill.

We can infer that Samuel Hill died sometime before June 26, 1865, so he cannot be identical to Samuel Hill, who died in 1855 and was buried at Five Mile Cemetery.

We can infer that Samuel Hill died sometime before 26 June 1865, so he cannot be identical to Samuel Hill who died in 1855 and was buried at Five Mile Cemetery.[9] Also, he can not be the husband of Nancy A. Hill who died in 1884 and was buried at Five Mile Cemetery in Green Township, Brown County.

It is important to remember that Matilda Helen Graybill's death certificate says her mother Nancy's maiden name was Blackburn. Let us focus on Matilda E. Hill's husband, Thomas W. Graybill's relationship with Samuel Hill, and it can lead us to identify the location of Samuel Hill's estate on the map because the probate record of Samuel Hill is the key to know when he died, where his estate was and how close his estate was to either one of two cemeteries, Five Mile Cemetery in Green Township or Pisgah Ridge Cemetety in Union Township.

Now, look at the probate record of 1865 for Samuel Hill's estate in Brown County. It shows that three men signed their names on the record, and they paid the bond for it. It shows that Samuel Hill died intestate (without will) in 1865. Three men who signed it were as follows:

  • Thomas W. Graybill
  • A. J. Graybill
  • William Robinson.

It shows where Samuel Hill died intestate and where his estate was in 1865. It is feasible to find three men, who signed it, in the 1860 census, and the evidence shows that two men did live in Union Township and one man did live in Lewis Township, so it proves they did not live near Five Mile Cemetery in Green Township.

A. J. Graybill, who signed his name and paid the bond for Samuel Hill's estate, is identified as Andrew Jackson Graybill, and he lived in Union Township in 1860.

The next signer is William Robinson, who was 30 years old and was enumerated in Lewis Township in 1860. Interestingly, his fourth next-door neighbor was Benjamin Blackburn! He was in Lewis Township, so the circumstantial evidence shows that William Robinson knew Benjamin Blackburn's family. It seems that Samuel Hill and Nancy Blackburn knew him as the neighbor of Benjamin Blackburn in Lewis Township. Matilda E. Graybill's age was the same as William Robinson's age in 1860. It seems that Nancy Blackburn and Benjamin Blackburn could be the siblings.

The last signer is Thomas W. Graybill, who was the husband of Matilda E. Hill, the daughter of Samuel Hill and Nancy Blackburn. Thomas W. Graybill was also known as T. W. Grayble, who was enumerated with his wife, Matilda E. Grayble and six children lived in Union Township in 1860. Interestingly, their next-door neighbor was Samuel Hill, who was 78 years old and lived with two household members, and one of them was his son A. K. Hill, also known as Alexander K. Hill, who was the sister of Matilda E. Graybill. Also, their sixth next-door neighbor was Jane Hill, who later willed her estate to her brother, Samuel Hill, and her niece and nephew, Matilda E. Graybill and Alexander K. Hill in 1862. It is direct evidence that they were family oriented group in Union Township in 1860. The evidence is that two separate probate records describe the relationship between them, so Samuel Hill and Nancy Blackburn were the parents of a married daughter, Matilda E. Graybill.

It is evident that Samuel Hill's estate had to be in Union Township, based on the 1860 census, and it was near where Pisgah Ridge Cemetery or Hill Family Cemetery are now in Union Township.

The signers usually live near the decedent and the estate, and they know the decedent well, so they offer the money to pay the bond for taking care of the decedent's estate.

The 1860 census records prove that the residences of three men were not in Green Township, so we can infer from this that Samuel Hill and Nancy Blackburn never were in Green Township, so they had to be in Union Township.

Look at the names of the neighbors of Thomas W. Grayble in the 1860 census and compare them with the names on the 1876 map of Brown County. We find several of them from the map to tie with them in the 1860 census. It gives us the idea of where the location of his estate was, so Samuel Hill and Nancy Blackburn's residence was at the southwest corner of Union Township near Levanna. It would make sense if they were from that area, they were brought to be buried at either Pisgah Ridge Cemetery or Hill Family Cemetery.

Probate records and census records are helpful to lead us to pinpoint where Samuel Hill and Nancy Blackburn were buried. They were buried at either Pisgah Ridge Cemetery or Hill Family Cemetery.

Indirect Evidence

Finally, there is indirect evidence to show where Samuel Hill and Nancy Blackburn were buried.

There is a physical cenotaph or memorial monument that has the engraving of her full name, Nancy Blackburn, along with Samuel Hill on it in Pisgah Ridge Cemetery.[10] Their descendants built the cenotaph for them in 1989 because they knew where they were buried somewhere nearby. We can infer that Samuel Hill and Nancy Blackburn's burials had been destroyed or lost sometime before they built the cenotaph for them in 1989.

There is no burial record of them in Pisgah Ridge Cemetery, which was created in 1859. However, it is speculated that Samuel Hill and Nancy Blackburn possibly were buried at Hill Family Cemetery. Pisgah Ridge Cemetety is a seven-minute walk or 1,000 feet away from Hill Family Cemetery, which was created in 1826.[11] It is clear that it was on the Hill ancestral farm.

The last visit to Hill Family Cemetery was in 1933 when someone transcribed all the burials, but only seven burials existed at that time.[12] We can infer that there were more burials, but they were missing before 1933.

Also, one important clue is found in the cemetery records of Hill Family Cemetery that Samuel Hill had a wife named Amanda Hill, age 75, who died in 1845 and was buried at Hill Family Cemetery.[12] It seems she might have been his second wife when she married him in 1844 in Brown County.

We can infer that Nancy Blackburn died sometime before 1840 because she was not enumerated with her husband, Samuel Hill in Lewis Township, Brown County in 1840 according to the 1840 census. Nancy Blackburn must have been buried sometime between 1831 and 1840 in Hill Family Cemetery, but her burial is now lost.

The relationship between Graybill family and Hill-Blackburn family is familiar in the southern area of Union Township.

Circumstantial Evidence

Now, we can turn to examine the census records to locate where Samuel Hill was in 1830, 1840, 1850, and 1860.

Samuel Hill lived in Lewis Township, Brown County, in 1830, 1840, and 1850, but he changed his residence from Lewis Township to Union Township in 1860. Lewis Township is at the west of Union Township in Brown County. The distance between them is a five-hour walk or 26 miles apart.

1. 1830 census record. In 1830, Samuel Hill, age between 30 and 40, was enumerated as the head of household and lived in Lewis Township, Brown County, Ohio. Also, in his household were six persons as follows:[13]

  • one free white male, age 10 thru 15 (unknown male)
  • one free white male, age 30 thru 40 (himself)
  • one free white female, age under 5 (daughter, Matilda E. Helen Hill, age 1)
  • one free white female, age 10 thru 15 (unknown female)
  • one free white female, age 15 thru 20 (unknown female)
  • one free white female, age 20 thru 30 (wife, Nancy Blackburn)

2. 1840 census record. In 1840, Samuel Hill, age between 40 and 50, was enumerated as the head of household and lived alone in Lewis Township, Brown County, Ohio.[14] However, his 11th next-door neighbor was his brother, James Hill.[15]

It indicates his wife was deceased sometime before 1840 because she was not enumerated with him.

3. 1850 census record. In 1850, Samuel Hill, age 62, farmer, born in Ohio, was enumerated as the head of household, and lived in Lewis Township, Brown County, Ohio. Also in his household were as follows:[16]

  • Martha Hill, age 21, born in Ohio
  • Alexander Hill, age 19, born in Ohio

It implies that Samuel Hill was a widower because his wife was not enumerated with him.

4. 1860 census record. In 1860, Samuel Hill, age 78, farmer, born in Pennsylvania, was enumerated as the head of household, and lived in Union Township, Brown County, Ohio. His next-door neighbor was T. W. Grayble and his wife, Matilda E. Grayble. Also, in his household were as follows:[17]

  • A. K. Hill, age 29, born in Ohio
  • Adaline Hill, age 28, born in Ohio
  • Nancy J. Hill, age 4, born in Ohio
  • Ebla Hill, age 2, born in Ohio

The 1860 census shows that their nearest post office was Ripley in Union Township, so it is near Pisgah Ridge Cemetery and Hill Family Cemetery about one-hour walk or 8 miles away. We can infer that the Hill-Blackburn family and the Graybill family lived next door to each other within the boundary of Union Township. The evidence is that they had moved from Lewis Township to Union Township sometime between 1850 and 1860.

Sometime before 1840, Samuel Hill would prefer to have his wife, Nancy Blackburn's body to return from Lewis Township, Brown County, to be buried at Hill Family Cemetery on his ancestral farm in Union Township, Brown County. Eventually, Samuel Hill died in 1865 in Union Township and was buried next to Nancy Blackburn in Hill Family Cemetery. That's how their descendants built the cenotaph or memorial monument for them at Pisgah Ridge Cemetery after they found out their burials were lost. We learn that they were not allowed to build the new cenotaph for them on the small parcel of Hill Family Cemetery, so they put it there at Pisgah Ridge Cemetery.

Direct Evidence

The next important clue is found in the 1860 census. It is the best source because it can identify the relationship between the Graybill family and the Hill family.

It is important to remember that Matilda E. Graybill's death certificate identifies her mother as Nancy Blackburn. Now, the 1860 census shows Samuel Hill, age 78, born in Pennsylvania, with Alexander K. Hill and four family members at the family dwelling #134. His next-door neighbor was Thomas W. Grayble at family dwelling #133. Next to him on the list were his wife, Matilda E. Grayble, and his children. They all lived in Union Township, Brown County, in 1860.[17]

This is the best evidence of the proximity and propinquity between them. Grayble is the result of the misspelling of Graybill, but it is clear that we can infer that Matilda E. Graybill's next-door neighbor was her father, Samuel Hill, who married her mother, Nancy Blackburn, in 1826, but his wife, Nancy Blackburn, died sometime before 1840. We can infer that Nancy Blackburn was not buried at Five Mile Cemetery in Green Township, Brown County, and she had never lived in Wayne Township, Clermont County, in 1850 and did not move to Green Township in Brown County, Ohio, in 1860.

Identification of Nancy A. Hill

Who was Nancy A. Hill (1802–1884) buried with Samuel Hill (1792–1855) at Five Mile Cemetery in Green Township, Brown County?

Primary Sources

We have three important sources that can identify Nancy Prickett.

1. Nancy Prickett's marriage. She married Samuel Hill on 16 November 1823 in Clermont County, Ohio.[18] 

2. Clarinda Dumford's death certificate. It identified her mother as Emma Prickett.[19] The informant was Mrs. James Davis, who supplied the information on her death certificate. Perhaps the name "Emma" was the result of misremembering on her part, so Emma Prickett was also known as Nancy Prickett. We made the identification for Mrs. James Davis as Mary Dumford, who married him, and she was the daughter of Benjamin Dumford and Dorcas Hill and the niece of James Dumford and Clarinda Hill, so Emma Prickett was Mary Dumford's maternal grandmother.

3. John H. P. Hill's death certificate. It identified his mother as Nancy Pricket.[20]

Secondary Sources

We have three secondary sources, as follows:

1. 1850 census record. In 1850, Nancy Hill, age 48, born in Ohio, was enumerated in the household of Samuel Hill, age 55, a farmer, born in North Carolina and lived in Wayne Township, Clermont County, Ohio. Also in his household were, as follows:[21]

  • Rebecca Hill, age 19, born in Ohio 
  • Keziah Hill, age 17, born in Ohio (twin)
  • Hope Hill, age 17, born in Ohio (twin)
  • Clarinda Hill, age 15, born in Ohio 
  • John Hill, age 10, born in Ohio 
  • George Hill, age 2, born in Ohio

2. 1860 census record. In 1860, Nancy Hill, age 50, widow, born in Ohio, was enumerated as the head of household and lived in Green Township, Brown County, Ohio. Also in her household were, as follows:[22]

  • Hefey Hill, age 29, born in Ohio
  • John Hill, age 20, born in Ohio
  • George Hill, age 12, born in Ohio
  • Sarah Crone, age 30, born in Ohio 
  • Rebecca Crone, age 11, born in Ohio
  • George F. Crone, age 5, born in Ohio

Sarah Crone, age 30, was the daughter of Samuel Hill and Nancy Hill. Her two children were their grandchildren. She, as the widow of Isaiah Crone, gave her support to her widowed mother, Nancy Hill.

3. 1870 census record. In 1870, Nancy A. Hill, age 67, a housekeeper, born in Ohio, was enumerated as the head of household and lived in Green Township, Brown County, Ohio. Also in her household were, as follows:

  • Hope Hill, age 37, helper, born in Ohio

4. 1880 census record. In 1880, Nancy A. Hill, age 77, born in Ohio, was enumerated in the household of her son, George C. Hill, age 32, minister of gospel, born in Ohio, and lived in Green Township, Brown County, Ohio. Also in his household were, as follows:[23]

  • Her daughter-in-law, Lucy H. Hill, age 29, housekeeper, born in Ohio
  • Her grandson, Irvie N. Hill, age 8, born in Ohio
  • Her daughter, Hope Hill, age 47, born in Ohio

The census records reported her age as follows:

  • Age 48 in 1850
  • Age 50 in 1860
  • Age 67 in 1870
  • Age 77 in 1880

We can infer that she was born in 1802, and it is consistent with her burial information at Five Mile Cemetery.

Circumstantial Evidence

Only three of her eight children were buried with Samuel Hill and Nancy A. Hill at Five Mile Cemetery, as follows:

  • Dorcas (Hill) Dumford (1827–1905)
  • Clarinda (Hill) Dumford (1835–1913)
  • George C. Hill (1846–1899)

The circumstantial evidence is the burial of Clarinda Dumford's proximity and propinquity to the burial of Nancy A. Hill as her mother, so we can infer that she was Nancy Prickett according to the death certificate of her daughter, Clarinda Dumford.

Why was Samuel Hill buried at Five Mile Cemetery in 1855?

What was the reason to bring him to be buried at Five Mile Cemetery in Wayne Township, Clermont County? We don't know. Perhaps Samuel Hill and his family moved from Wayne Township, Clermont County, to Green Township, Brown County, sometime before 1855. We know his daughter, Sarah Crone, moved to live with her widowed mother, Nancy Hill, from Stonelick Township in Clermont County to Green Township in Brown County sometime before 1860.

Five Mile Cemetery itself is actually within the boundary of Green Township. We can infer that Samuel Hill died in 1855 in Green Township, Brown County, so that his family would bring his body to be buried at Five Mile Cemetery.

However, Samuel Hill's wife, Nancy Hill, and her children did appear in Green Township, Brown County, in the 1860, 1870, and 1880 censuses. Her last residence was in Green Township in 1880. Eventually, Nancy Hill died in 1884 and was buried at Five Mile Cemetery in Green Township, Brown County, Ohio.

We can infer that Samuel Hill's wife was Nancy Prickett based on the propinquity and proximity principles derived from her two children's death certificates and the location of their three children's burials in Five Mile Cemetery in Green Township, Brown County, Ohio.

Conclusion

Samuel Hill's wife, Nancy A. Hill, who was buried at Five Mile Cemetery, is identified as Nancy A. Prickett.

The correct children are as follows:

  • William Hill (1825–1886)
  • Dorcas (Hill) Dumford (1827–1905)
  • Sarah (Hill) Crone (1829–1899)
  • Rebecca (Hill) Laymon (1831–1903)
  • Keziah (Hill) Cramer (1833–1899)
  • Clorinda (Hill) Dumford (1835–1913)
  • John H. P. Hill (1840–1924)
  • George C. Hill (1846–1899)

Nancy Blackburn's name is on the cenotaph at Pisgah Ridge Cemetery, and she is identified as the wife of Samuel Hill, who died in 1865.

The correct children are, as follows:

  • Matilda Eleanor (Hill) Graybill (1829–1910)
  • Alexander K. Hill (1831)

Sources

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/130313806/nancy-a-hill: accessed 06 June 2023), memorial page for Nancy A. Blackburn Hill (11 Aug 1802–19 Aug 1884), Find a Grave Memorial ID 130313806, citing Five Mile Cemetery, Upper Fivemile, Brown County, Ohio, USA; Maintained by Debbie (contributor 46911311).
  2. "Ohio, County Marriages, 1789–2016", database with images, FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:XZ88-TVW : 29 September 2021), Samuel Hill and Nancy Blackburn, 1828.
  3. "Ohio Deaths, 1908-1953," database with images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:X88Q-95Q : 8 March 2021), Matilda Helen Grayble, 25 Apr 1910; citing Georgetown, Brown, Ohio, reference fn 18836; FHL microfilm 1,927,359.
  4. "Ohio, County Marriages, 1789-2016", database with images, FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:XZ4V-W7C : 13 October 2021), Thomas W. Graybill and Matilda Hill, 1846.
  5. Ohio County, District and Probate . Will Records, 1817-1902; General Index, 1817-1974; Probate Place: Brown, Ohio. Ancestry.com. Ohio, U.S., Wills and Probate Records, 1786-1998 [database on-line]. Lehi, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2015, https://www.ancestry.com/discoveryui-content/view/15915786:8801.
  6. Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/9719210/samuel-hill: accessed 06 June 2023), memorial page for Samuel Hill (1792–11 Jun 1855), Find a Grave Memorial ID 9719210, citing Five Mile Cemetery, Upper Fivemile, Brown County, Ohio, USA; Maintained by N J Penny (contributor 48573920).
  7. Court Records, Record of Bonds, Vol. 3. 1862-1871; Probate Place: Brown County, Ohio, page 295. Ancestry.com. Ohio, U.S., Wills and Probate Records, 1786-1998 [database on-line]. Lehi, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2015, https://www.ancestry.com/discoveryui-content/view/14765374:8801.
  8. Ohio County, District and Probate Courts. Notes: Journal, Vol 5-6, 1864-1867. Ancestry.com. Ohio, U.S., Wills and Probate Records, 1786-1998 [database on-line]. Lehi, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2015, https://www.ancestry.com/imageviewer/collections/8801/images/005439937_00159.
  9. Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/11120151/alexander-hill: accessed 06 June 2023), memorial page for Alexander Hill (1749–1826), Find a Grave Memorial ID 11120151, citing Pisgah Ridge Cemetery, Levanna, Brown County, Ohio, USA; Maintained by Life's a garden. Dig it! (contributor 48018962).
  10. Find a Grave, database and images, (https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/41422/hill-family-cemetery : accessed 1 Jan 2000), Find a Grave Cemetery ID: 41422. Hill Family Cemetery Also known as Hill Cemetery. Union Township, Brown County, Ohio, USA.
  11. 12.0 12.1 Cemeteries in Brown County, Ohio, 1933-1934, p. 17.
  12. Fifth Census of the United States, 1830. (NARA microfilm publication M19, 201 rolls). Records of the Bureau of the Census, Record Group 29. National Archives, Washington, D.C. Year: 1830; Census Place: Lewis, Brown, Ohio; Series: M19; Roll: 127; Page: 451; Family History Library Film: 0337938. Ancestry.com. 1830 United States Federal Census [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2010, https://www.ancestry.com/discoveryui-content/view/268149:8058.
  13. Sixth Census of the United States, 1840. (NARA microfilm publication M704, 580 rolls). Records of the Bureau of the Census, Record Group 29. National Archives, Washington, D.C. Year: 1840; Census Place: Lewis, Brown, Ohio; Roll: 379; Page: 300; Family History Library Film: 0020159. Ancestry.com. 1840 United States Federal Census [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2010, https://www.ancestry.com/discoveryui-content/view/1660718:8057.
  14. Sixth Census of the United States, 1840. (NARA microfilm publication M704, 580 rolls). Records of the Bureau of the Census, Record Group 29. National Archives, Washington, D.C. Year: 1840; Census Place: Lewis, Brown, Ohio; Roll: 379; Page: 300; Family History Library Film: 0020159. Ancestry.com. 1840 United States Federal Census [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2010, https://www.ancestry.com/discoveryui-content/view/1660707:8057.
  15. The National Archives in Washington D.C.; Record Group: Records of the Bureau of the Census; Record Group Number: 29; Series Number: M432; Residence Date: 1850; Home in 1850: Lewis, Brown, Ohio; Roll: 662; Page: 445a. Ancestry.com. 1850 United States Federal Census [database on-line]. Lehi, UT, Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2009, https://www.ancestry.com/discoveryui-content/view/13261045:8054.
  16. 17.0 17.1 1860 U.S. census, population schedule. NARA microfilm publication M653, 1,438 rolls. Washington, D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, n.d. The National Archives in Washington D.C.; Record Group: Records of the Bureau of the Census; Record Group Number: 29; Series Number: M653; Residence Date: 1860; Home in 1860: Union, Brown, Ohio; Roll: M653_939; Page: 246; Family History Library Film: 803939. Ancestry.com. 1860 United States Federal Census [database on-line]. Lehi, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2009, https://www.ancestry.com/discoveryui-content/view/43688568:7667.
  17. "Ohio, County Marriages, 1789–2016," database with images, FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:XDP9-SHG : 29 September 2021), Samuel Hill and Nancy Prickett, 1823.
  18. "Ohio Deaths, 1908-1953," database with images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:X8XC-7RJ : 8 March 2021), Clorindia Dumford, 15 Sep 1913; citing Green, Brown, Ohio, reference fn 55634; FHL microfilm 1,953,759.
  19. "Ohio Deaths, 1908-1953," database with images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:XD1Y-3ZG : 8 March 2021), John H P Hill, 11 Jan 1924; citing Blanchester, Clinton, Ohio, reference file no. 6122; FHL microfilm 1,992,490.
  20. The National Archives in Washington, D.C.; Record Group: Records of the Bureau of the Census; Record Group Number: 29; Series Number: M432; Residence Date: 1850; Home in 1850: Wayne, Clermont, Ohio; Roll: 667; Page: 85b. Ancestry.com. 1850 United States Federal Census [database on-line]. Lehi, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2009, https://www.ancestry.com/discoveryui-content/view/13358430:8054.
  21. The National Archives in Washington, D.C.; Record Group: Records of the Bureau of the Census; Record Group Number: 29; Series Number: M653; Residence Date: 1860; Home in 1860: Green, Brown, Ohio; Roll: M653_938; Page: 136; Family History Library Film: 803938. Ancestry.com. 1860 United States Federal Census [database on-line]. Lehi, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2009, https://www.ancestry.com/discoveryui-content/view/43667270:7667.
  22. Tenth Census of the United States, 1880. (NARA microfilm publication T9, 1,454 rolls). Records of the Bureau of the Census, Record Group 29. National Archives, Washington, D.C. Year: 1880; Census Place: Green, Brown, Ohio; Roll: 995; Page: 81A; Enumeration District: 005. Ancestry.com. 1880 United States Federal Census [database on-line]. Lehi, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations Inc., 2010, https://www.ancestry.com/discoveryui-content/view/17301145:6742.




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