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Jonathan Tipton II (1699 - 1779)

Jonathan Tipton II
Born in Anne Arundel County, Marylandmap
Ancestors ancestors
Husband of — married about 1727 [location unknown]
Husband of — married 1729 in Anne Arundel County, Marylandmap
Husband of — married 1735 [location unknown]
Husband of — married 1747 in Baltimore, Marylandmap
Descendants descendants
Died at age 80 in Shenandoah, Virginia, United Statesmap
Profile last modified | Created 19 Oct 2010
This page has been accessed 5,715 times.

Contents

Biography

BIRTH Date: 25 MAR 1699 [1]
PLACE: St James Parish, Anne Arundel County, Maryland [1]
DEATH: 1799 [1]
PLACE: Virginia USA [1]

Marriage

The following is what has been conclusively documented regarding the marriages of Jonathan Tipton as well as the names of his four wives: [1]

HUSBAND: TIPTON, JONATHAN
WIFE: EDWARDS ?, ELIZABETH
MARRIAGE DATE: 1726
MARRIAGE PLACE: BALTIMORE, MD USA
WIFE: ????, MARY
MARRIAGE DATE: 1735
MARRIAGE PLACE:BALTIMORE, MD USA
WIFE: ????, JULITHIA
MARRIAGE DATE: 1747
MARRIAGE PLACE: BALTIMORE, MD USA
 ????, ELIZABETH
MARRIAGE DATE: UNKNOWN
MARRIAGE PLACE: UNKNOWN

Discussion regarding the marriages, wives and children of Jonathan Tipton II

To the best of this student's knowledge, no evidence exists to establish the maiden names of any of the wives of Jonathan Tipton (II). Neither S. L. Boyd nor W. H. Tipton postulate family names for any of his wives. J. H. Bell suggests that Jonathan's first wife may have been Elizabeth Pierce; but, obviously, Bell had mixed up the wives of the first and second generations. Mrs. R. H. Stickley of Memphis, Tennessee, wrote that some records in the possession of Mrs J. Howard Baily of St. Louis indicate that Elizabeth's name was Adams, but this compiler has not seen any such evidence. E. C. Tipton lists the name of Jonathan's first wife as Elizabeth Edwards without giving any evidence for that identification. It is to be suspected the E. C. Tipton came up with this name on the assumption that the name given her firstborn was a family name. This may not be a bad guess, but students of the family should bear in mind that a guess is probably all that it was. Because the births of three of Jonathan's children appear in sequence in the St. Paul's register it seems certain that the births were recorded on the same date. Under those circumstances, there would seem to be little chance for error in entering the names of the mothers. Consequently, the given name of Jonathan's second wife and the approximate date of marriage seem to rest on firm ground. The 1747 deed by Jonathan and Julithia Tipton and the 1774 deed by Jonathan and Elizabeth Tipton make a reasonably good case for Jonathan to have married a third and a fourth time. The property that was the subject of the 1747 deed seems to make it fairly certain that the grantor in question was Jonathan Tipton . Similarly, "the mark" on the 1774 document is so similar to the marks that appeared on documents executed by Jonathan as to leave little question but that they are one and the same. Additionally, the date of the grant to Jonathan Tipton (1766) is early enough to eliminate most of the other Jonathans who might be candidates. Jonathan Tipton, a grandson of Jonathan, wrote to Lyman C. Draper: "I think grandfather married twice." The possible fact that two of Jonathan's wives were named Elizabeth may have led to confusion among his descendants and especially so if Jonathan had children by only one of the Elizabeths. The identity of four of Jonathan's children can be established by the St. Paul's Parish records. No birth records for Joseph or Jonathan have been found, but their bona fides were established by Jonathan in the letter to Draper referenced above when he wrote "I don't ever recollect seeing any of father's (Col. John Tipton's) brothers except Joseph and Jonathan." The date and place of Jonathan's birth were established from his pension application. The date and place of Joseph's birth shown in this study are estimates based on the assumption that one quick conception by Mary (tentatively assumed to be the mother of both William and Joseph) was apt to be followed by another one. Some of the students of the Tipton family have taken the Elizabeth Tipton who married Charles Reneau to be the daughter of Joseph Tipton. That line of descent for Elizabeth makes for some difficult genealogical arithmetic; it requires that Joseph marry very early, have a daughter as quickly as possible, followed by a large gap to the next child. Dollye Elliott of St. Louis, Missouri, suggested that it was more likely that Elizabeth was the daughter of Jonathan Tipton and a sister of Col. John. No records support this thesis, but the absence of documentation on females is commonplace; except for birth and marriage entries, records giving documentation on females is commonplace; except for birth and marriage entries, records giving the maiden name of women were few and far between in that day and age. Another unidentified person who might fit in this same niche is the Mary Tipton who married John McGuire in Virginia on February 15, 1771. Because she might have belonged to this family and because there is no more appropriate place to put her, she too is carried in this family, albeit as a questionable member, for accountability reasons. Jonathan Tipton seems to have been accompanied in his move to Virginia by all of his sons except Edward ) Edward remained in Maryland until after the birth of his son Luke in 1760 and sometime after this moved to Pennsylvania. Jonathan's daughter, Sarah, was presumably married to Mordecai Tipton by 1750 and did not make the move with the family. Jonathan later moved to the Watauga settlement with, or at about the same time, as his sons Joseph and Jonathan. Col. John Tipton deferred his move to Tennessee until late in 1783. The other son, William, almost surely moved to Virginia with his father since he was only 14 years of age at the time, but the indications are that he remained in Virginia when the rest of his family (except for Edward) moved on to Tennessee. [1]

Jonathan was born in 1699. He passed away in 1779.

Buried

Baptism: 25 APR 1699. St. James Parish, Anne Arundel County, Province of Maryland.

Christening: 25 APR 1699. 25 APR 1699. St James Parish, , Anne Arundel, Maryland. 25 APR 1699. Christened at St. James Parish, Ann Arundel, Maryland. 25 APR 1699. St. James' Parish,Anne Arundel County,Maryland.

Will: 26 NOV 1725. Jonathan Tipton witness to will of Richard Kemp.

Residence 1747 Jonathan Tipton moved his family to Frederick County, Virginia. 1775 Jonathan Tipton moved to Washington, Tennessee (then North Carolina).

Occupation: unknown. 1771 Jonathan Tipton appointed constable, Frederick County, Virginia.

Note: {geni:about_me} Baptism at St. James Parrish, Anne Arundel County, Maryland.


From [http:/books.google.combooks?id=QzsVAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA2596&lpg=PA2596&dq=Tipton,+The+First+Five+American+Generations&source=bl&ots=FY_8G3lwNW&sig=arRtOuTOfj7jvgtkwYPJur7pgKg&hl=en&ei=MVfKTNaNGYX6swPdqfjxDg&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=8&ved=0CC4Q6AEwBzgU#v=onepage&q=Tipton%2C%20The%20First%20Five%20American%20Generations&f=false A history of Tennessee and Tennesseans]: the leaders and ..., Volume 8 By Will Thomas Hale, Dixon Lanier Merritt Pg.2596-2608.

TIPTON FAMLY IN TENNESSEE.

All the early records show conclusively that the Tiptons were English, eminently so; tradition says three brothers came to Maryland; some say by way of Scotland, others by way of Ireland but ultimately from the city of Tipton, Staffordshire, England, centuries old and whose parish records date from 1513. The Land Office at Annapolis records the arrival of Edward Tipton as 1668 on the ship "Friendship" of London, while the Annapolis Gazette of January 27, 1757, recites the death of Jonathan Tipton in Baltimore county, early in that month at the age of one hundred eighteen years. It further states that he was "born in Kingston on Jamaica which place he left while young and has lived almost ever since in this Province"--his youngest sons being reckoned among the oldest men of Baltimore county. Here the land and church records for one hundred and fifty years attest convincingly the prominence and loyalty of this family.

The entry of the Tipton Family in Tennessee history dates back to the year 1775, when the name of Jonathan Tipton appears among the first patentees in the Watauga Settlement under the authority of Charles Robertson's purchases from the Indian. (Ramsey, page 129.) The same of following year Jonathan Tipton is one of the signers petitioning North Carolina to annex the Watauga Settlement. As early as 1784 three Tipton brothers--Colonel John, Joseph and Major Jonathan are settled in the district of Washington and identified actively as leaders in its military and political life. Colonel John Tipton, the eldest, was born in Baltimore county, Maryland, 1732-5, from which Province he removed with his father about 1750 to Frederick county, Virginia, and settled on Cear Creek five and one-half miles southeast of Woodstock. Here his brother Jonathan, was born, 1750. So far as the writer can learn there were four sons, Colonel John, Joseph, Mordecai and Major Jonathan, though the father was married twice, and there were doubtless other children (Joshua Tipton who was in Tennessee as early as 1786, and who was killed on the Little Pigeon River by the Indians, April 18, 1793, was another brother or the son of Mordecai, since his son Senator John Tipton of Indiana stated that Colonel John was his Uncle). While some authorities claim that the father died in Frederick county, Virginia, Mr. Nelson is of the opinion that the Jonathan Tipton the first to come to Tennessee was the father and not son, Major Jonathan. Be this as it may Major Jonathan and his brother Joseph were in the Watauga Settlement previous to 1777, but it was not until 1783 that Colonel John removed from Virginia."......

HIS CHILDREN.

"Colonel John Tipton was married 1750-1 to Mary Butler, daughter of Thomas Bulter, who was killed by the Indians on his farm on Cedar Creek, Shenandoah county, Va., at the beginning of the Revolutionary War. She bore him nine sons, to-wit; Samuel, Benjamin, Abraham, William, Isaac, Jacob, John, Thomas, Jonathan. Mary (Butler) Tipton died in Shenandoah coutny, June 8, 1776. July 22, 1777, Colonel Tipton was married to Marth (Denton) Moore, widow of Dr. James Moore, Shenandoah county. By her he had one son, who was killed in Clark's Expediton against the Indians 1782. Colonel Tipton is said to have had several daughters; whether by the first or second marriage is unknown, as are their names also. Col. John Tipton died, it is said, August, 1813, and, with his wife Martha, is buried on his farm on Sinking Creek, on the hill above the historic old house that still stands pratically unchanged since its erection before 1800. Here after the death of old Col. John Tipton, his son John Tipton of Sullivan county, lived until his death in 1831, after which the home was sold to David Haynes and became the home of Tennessee's silver-tongued orator, Landon C. Haynes.".....

Joseph Tipton, one of the pioneer brothers of that name is believed to have come to the Watauga settlement with his brother, Jonathan, about 1775. At any rate as early as September and December, 1774, Joseph and his wife, Elizabeth, had signed the lease and released deeds respectively of their lands in Shenandoah county. "About 1809, he sold his three large tracts of land, grants from North Carolina, subsequently went to Warren county, Tennessee, where he died, prior to 1842.".

The third of the pioneer brothers was Major Jonathan Tipton, soldier in the Revolutionary War, and second in command under General Sevier at King's Mountain. He was born in Frederick county, Virginia, 1750, but was early a member of the Watauga settlement." "His pension declaration further states that he lived in Washington county, in North Carolina, until seventeen years after the war, then moved to Buncombe county, North Carolina, and lived there about twenty-seven years, then moved to Overton county, Tennessee, where he lived at the time of his death, January 18, 1833. Major Jonathan was married in April, 1810, in Buncombe county, North Carolina, to Levina Stephens who in 1853 was in White county, Tennessee, aged sixty-seven years and was drawing a widow's pension. In Jonathan's declaration he mentions two sons of a former marriage--Samuel and John (who is said to have been the Tipton who married the widow of Robert Sevier)--and in 1832 he had a son, name not given, living in Buncombe county, North Carolina, Major Jonathan's first wife is said to have been a Robertson. How many children Major Jonathan had is not known; they are variously given as Samuel, John, Jonathan, Wiley, David, Jacob, Joseph, Betsy, Kennedy, William and Esau."...."Two grandsons, Jacob Tipton and a brother living 1908 in Mitchell, North Carolina county, were in the Mexican war; two grandsons, Jackson Tipton and Joe Tipton, four great-grandsons, Sid, David, of 3d North Carolina, Captain John D. in Geo. Kirk's Tennessee Regiment and Lafayette Tipton of Company D, 8th Tennessee Cavalry, and later Leieutenant of Company A, 3d North Carolina Mounted Infantry, all in the Federal army.".

Joshua Tipton, father of United States Senator John Tipton, Indiana's hero, soldier and statesman, was born in Maryland and came to Tennessee before 1786, settled in Sevier county, where his son John was born August 14, 1786. Joshua Tipton was killed by the Indians April 18, 1893, on Little Pigeon river; in 1807 John Tipton with his mother and two sisters and a half-brother removed to Indiana Territory, where among the pioneers of Indiana few did a greaterwork than John Tipton--a great man in council and in field. ..."to the time of his death, 1839, he was Senator in the United States Congress from Indiana.


Lord Dunmore's little war of 1774: his captains and their men who opened up ... By Warren Skidmore, Donna Kaminsky.

http:/books.google.com/books?id=12H2EVqQc2QC&pg=PA55&lpg=PA55&dq=Moses+Edwards+Tipton&source=bl&ots=VpRPEXn9ki&sig=5UsUJwr3Kl4YwHCIpilHTz6r-Zg&hl=en&ei=3SLLTOTULIa8sAOavMWMDw&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=1&ved=0CBIQ6AEwAA#v=onepage&q=Moses%20Edwards%20Tipton&f=false

Pg.55

Captain Tipton was born on 15 August 1730 in St. Paul's Parish at Baltimore, a son of JONATHAN & ELIZABETH (Edwards) TIPTON. He married firstly Mary Murray about 1747 at Baltimore, then Mary, a daughter of Thomas Butler in 1753 at Cedar Creek in Shenandoah County, Virginia, and lastly Martha, a daughter of Abraham Denton II (and the widow of James Moore) on 22 July 1777 in the same county. He was a Gentleman Justice and Vestryman for Beckford Parish, served on the Resolution Committee in June 1774, and the Virginia Contitutional Convention of 1776 for what is now Shenandoah County. He was also the Sheriff and County-Lieutenant, and represented it in the House of Delegates (when Dunmore) in 1776-7, and as Shenandoah in 1778-81. He went soon after to Washington County, Tennessee (then North Carolina) which he represented in the Jonesboro and Franklin Conventions in 1784 and 1785. He also served in the North Carolina Senate, and represented the county in the 1796 Tennessee Constitutional Convention. Colonel Tipton died on 9 August 1813 at his homestead on Sinking Creek in Washington County, Tennessee but was buried at Elizabethton, Carter County, Tennessee.


A deed documents that Jonathan gave property to at least one of his sons, and there are hints in the following transactions that he at least helped his other sons acquire property: 1. (See William) 2. (See Thomas) 3. (See John) 4. In 1733, Jonathan gave his third son, Jonathan, one-half (100 acres) of the tract he had named "Molly's and Sally's Delight." (This tract was probably named in honor of two granddaughters, Mary (Molly) and Sarah (Sally), who were 13 and 8 years of age respectively at the time of the purchase.

Reference: Tipton, The First Five American Generations by Charles D. Tipton, page 50.


The migration patterns of the Tipton families in the early days (i.e. pre-1800) are interesting because the movements tended to be rather sporadic and clannish although more so in some branches of the family than in others. Jonathan Tipton (b. 1659), the first of our line to reach this country, settled in Anne Arundel County, Maryland, sometime around 1680 (give or take 5 years). Thirty years or so later, in 1713, he moved his family to Baltimore County, and he and his descendants lived there for about another 30 years before some branches of the family began to disperse.

Jonathan married sometime around 1726, because records in St. Paul's Parish show that Jonathan and Elizabeth Tipton were the parents of Edward Tipton, born October 27, 1728. Subsequently, Elizabeth gave birth to two other children, John in 1730 and Sarah in 1734. Elizabeth Tipton died (possibly during or shortly after the birth of Sarah) sometime prior to 1736, because records document that Jonathan and Mary Tipton were the parents of William Tipton, born August 30, 1736. Jonathan had at least two other children subsequent to William: Joseph born 1738, and Jonathan born 1750. The identity of the mothers of these two latter children is uncertain because the evidence indicates that Jonathan Tipton married two more times. A deed executed by Jonathan signifies a third marriage for Jonathan, while still another deed executed by Jonathan Tipton and wife Elizabeth in 1774 in Virginia denotes yet a fourth marriage by this man. However, the dates of these marriages are too hazy to enable the identity of the mother of these children. Neither Mary nor Julithia can be eliminated as candidates for the mother of Joseph; similarly, neither Julithia nor Elizabeth can be discounted as the possible mother of Jonathan.

Jonathan Tipton moved from Baltimore County, Maryland to Frederick County, Virginia sometime prior to the birth of his son Jonathan in 1750. The most likely time for the move would appear to be in the last half of 1747, because Jonathan disposed of some of his Baltimore County assets and settled some other Baltimore County affairs in the first half of the year. The first document that verifies his residency in Virginia is a grant from Lord Fairfax in 1766. Jonathan and his wife Elizabeth sold this property in December of 1774 and moved shortly thereafter (1775 or 1776), in company with his son Jonathan, to the Watauga settlement in Tennessee (then North Carolina). A secondson, Joseph, either accompanied them or followed shortly thereafter for he appears in the 1778 Watauga tax list.

The last recorded transaction that can be attributed to Jonathan with any degree of confidence is the sale of his land in Washington County, Tennessee, in 1785. Carter County tax records show that a Jonathan Tipton, Sr., anda Jonathan Tipton, Jr., were residents of Carter County in 1796. Although it is possible that these two men were Jonathan and Major Jonathan, it is also possible and perhaps likely that Jonathan had passed away by this time (he would have been 97) and that Major Jonathan had assumed the use of "Sr." with some other descendant using "Jr." as a courtesy to Major Jonathan Tipton.

TIPTON - The First Five American Generations by Charles D. Tipton, page 75.

Jonathan Tipton seems to have been accompanied in his move to Virginia by all of his sons except Edward. Edward remained in Maryland until after the birth of his son Luke in 1760 and sometime after this moved to Pennsylvania. Jonathan's daughter Sarah, was presumably married to Mordecai Tipton by 1750 and did not make the move with the family. Jonathan later moved to the Watauga settlement with, or at about the same time, as his sons Joseph and Jonathan. Colonel John Tipton deferred his move to Tennessee until late 1783. The other son, William, almost surely moved to Virginia with his father since he was only 14 years of age at the time, but the indications are that he remained in Virginia when the rest of his family (except for Edward) moved on to Tennessee.

TIPTON - The First Five American Generations by Charles D. Tipton, page 79.


#N6000000000435900236. #N6000000000435900386. #N6000000004260598703. #N6000000006444293562. #N6000000004260598625.

Source:

23 AUG 2013. Occupation a farmer. File File: https:/s3.amazonaws.com/photos.geni.com/p13/9b/fc/63/7f/5344483b17b75d75john_tipton_tennessee__original.png. Format: png. Wikipedia, - John Tipton (Tennessee).

23 AUG 2013. First Name. Jonathan File File: https:/s3.amazonaws.com/photos.geni.com/p13/9b/fc/63/7f/5344483b17b75d75john_tipton_tennessee__original.png. Format: png. Wikipedia, - John Tipton (Tennessee).

23 AUG 2013. Last Name. Tipton File File: https:/s3.amazonaws.com/photos.geni.com/p13/9b/fc/63/7f/5344483b17b75d75john_tipton_tennessee__original.png. Format: png. Wikipedia, - John Tipton (Tennessee).

23 AUG 2013. Also Known As. husband of Elizabeth Edwards, parents of 8 children including John (m. Mary Butler), Jonathan, & Joseph Tipton. File File: https:/s3.amazonaws.com/photos.geni.com/p13/9b/fc/63/7f/5344483b17b75d75john_tipton_tennessee__original.png. Format: png. Wikipedia, - John Tipton (Tennessee).

Notes

Note N6000000000435900236 Ancestral File Number:<AFN> GJ2J-PL

Note N6000000000435900386 Ancestral File Number:<AFN> B53L-W4

Note N6000000004260598625 @S18025@

Many Researchers have generously shared their Family Histories with me. These files are offered with the hope they will provide new clues for your research. Would appreciate your help by offering corrections for errors or Omissions. EVERYTHING I HAVE IS ON THIS ROOTSWEB PAGE.

Note N6000000006444293562 [Tipton.FTW]

[MaryAnnTipton.GED]

++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ ++++++++++

Jonathan Tipton, third son of Johathan Tipton (b. 1659), seems to have been the one who started the exodus out of Maryland because, sometime around 1747, he and his family, except for his oldest son, Edward, moved to Frederick County, Virginia (near Winchester), in the upper Shenandoah Valley. This family stayed in Frederick County (subsequently Dunmore and then Shenandoah) for another of the 30-year periods before following the frontier southward and westward. Then, over the period between 1774 and 1784, Jonathan and his other sons, except for his third son, William, traveled down the Shenandoah Valley to what is now eastern Tennessee but what was then part of North Carolina. (Boundaries for the western regions of the several provinces were not well established and certainly not well surveyed in that era. In fact, many believed that time that what is now Washington County, Tennessee, belonged to Virginia.) Although Jonathan's descendants spread out over several counties, one son, Jonathan (b. 1750) even going into North Carolina, the family remained clustered in eastern Tennessee for yet another 30-year period before moving on. After the war of 1812, the descendants of Jonathan who were living in Tennessee began to move again; but this time the migrations were rather diverse. Although there was a tendency for branches of the family to move in groups, the pattern was starting to break up. Some of Jonathan's descendants remained in eastern Tennessee, but quite a larger number moved on to the greener pastures of Indiana, Illinois, Missouri, Alabama, Georgia, and western Tennessee.

Reference: Tipton, The First Five American Generations by Charles D. Tipton, page 59. ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ ++++++++++ Jonathan married sometime around 1726, because records in St. Paul's Parish show that Jonathan and Elizabeth Tipton were the parents of Edward Tipton, born October 27, 1728. Subsequently, Elizabeth gave birth to two other children, John in 1730 and Sarah in 1734. Elizabeth Tipton died (possibly during or shortly after the birth of Sarah) sometime prior to 1736, because records document that Jonathan and Mary Tipton were the parents of William Tipton, born August 30, 1736. Jonathan had at least two other children subsequent to William: Joseph born 1738, and Jonathan born 1750. The identity of the mothers of these two latter children is uncertain because the evidence indicates that Jonathan Tipton married two more times. A deed executed by Jonathan signifies a third marriage for Jonathan, while still another deed executed by Jonathan Tipton and wife Elizabeth in 1774 in Virginia denotes yet a fourth marriage by this man. However, the dates of these marriages are too hazy to enable the identity of the mother of these children. Neither Mary nor Julithia can be eliminated as candidates for the mother of Joseph; similarly, neither Julithia nor Elizabeth can be discounted as the possible mother of Jonathan. Jonathan Tipton moved from Baltimore County, Maryland to Frederick County, Virginia sometime prior to the birth of his son Jonathan in 1750. The most likely time for the move would appear to be in the last half of 1747, because Jonathan disposed of some of his Baltimore County assets and settled some other Baltimore County affairs in the first half of the year. The first document that verifies his residency in Virginia is a grant from Lord Fairfax in 1766. Jonathan and his wife Elizabeth sold this property in December of 1774 and moved shortly thereafter (1775 or 1776), in company with his son Jonathan, to the Watauga settlement in Tennessee (then North Carolina). A second son, Joseph, either accompanied them or followed shortly thereafter for he appears in the 1778 Watauga tax list. The last recorded transaction that can be attributed to Jonathan with any degree of confidence is the sale of his land in Washington County, Tennessee, in 1785. Carter County tax records show that a Jonathan Tipton, Sr., and a Jonathan Tipton, Jr., were residents of Carter County in 1796. Although it is possible that these two men were Jonathan and Major Jonathan, it is also possible and perhaps likely that Jonathan had passed away by this time (he would have been 97) and that Major Jonathan had assumed the use of "Sr." with some other descendant using "Jr." as a courtesy to Major Jonathan Tipton.

TIPTON - The First Five American Generations by Charles D. Tipton, page 75.

When Jonathan Tipton was born on March 25, 1699, in Anne Arundel, Maryland, his father, Jonathan, was 40 and his mother, Sarah, was 33.

He was Christened 25 April 1699 in St James Parish, Anne Arundel County, Maryland[1]

He married Mary Chilcoat and they had four children together. He then married Elizabeth Edwards and they had six children together. He died in 1779 in Shenandoah, Virginia, having lived a long life of 80 years.

Sources

  1. "Maryland Births and Christenings, 1650-1995," database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:F4ZJ-2ZT : 11 February 2018), Jonathan Tipton, 25 Mar 1699; citing Saint James Parish, Anne Arundel, Maryland; FHL microfilm 13,280.

1. Charles Dawes Tipton, Tipton the First Five American Generations: (Baltimore, MD Gateway Press ; Garland, TX (2009 West Shore, Garland 75043): Gateway Press, Inc.Baltimore, MD; Original is from the University of Wisconsin-Madison, WI, 1998).

Dewey Decimal Class # 929/.2/0973;
Library of Congress # CS71.T592 1998.
Copies of this book can be found in libraries throughout the US.

Note: Supplemented with Tipton military and patriotic services precis, a compilation of Tipton marriage records, abstracts of early Tipton-related records, census information.





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Comments: 19

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Tipton-1882 and Tipton-62 appear to represent the same person because: Same name, same father, same birth date
posted by Neal Parker
Working from William Tipton Jr. up and realize I am back to this profile again. I am putting the source I am looking at with the 'Mr. Edwards. and the children between Mr. Edwards and Elizabeth Mary Adams. It will be nice when all of Elizabeth's husband are revealed and applied so we can move on.
posted by [Living Trogstad]
I added a source link for review family.

I would like to know if the 'discussion' could possibly be put on a free space page. It is a lot of data to read, though I am certain very important. I have three brothers coming into my family tree. I would like to work on making sure the parents as we progress are accurate also. Thank you for your comments.

posted by [Living Trogstad]
I am going to see if there are better links for the books listed. They are not true and extend excessively.

There is a lot coming together on these profiles and many people to be commended. I read the discussion of the wives and it looks as though we still need maiden names. I will see what I can come up with. More people are working on profiles and maybe there is something new out there waiting to be inserted.

posted by [Living Trogstad]
Tipton-1693 and Tipton-62 appear to represent the same person because: These two profiles are duplicates; same birth and death dates and places. Please merge them thank you.
posted by John Atkinson
I have considered asking that this profile be protected due to so many incorrect suppositions about the Tipton family in general. Please, if you have cause to believe some information needs to be changed or added, be so kind as to contact me and we can discuss it. I don't know EVERYTHING, by all means. But I have worked very hard cleaning up Tipton-62 with documentation and we can certainly discuss it and exchange ideas and sources. Thanks and Happy Hunting.
posted by Saro (Scollon) Genova
Duplicate: Tipton-1170 and Tipton-62
posted by Saro (Scollon) Genova
Mr Roux, Evidently you are not aware of the purpose and goal of WikiTree. There should be NO DUPLICATE PROFILES OF INDIVIDUALS. the correct Jonathan Tipton is Tipton-62. Therefore this Tipton 1170 that you created is a duplicate and must be merged.

Please do not change information unless you have DOCUMENTED (PROVED) that information. This is a serious disservice to the dedicated and professional genealogists who have done their homework before placing it on WikiTree, Just because something is on your personal tree or someone else's tree does not mean it is fact. So do not place it on WikiTree which is a very serious endeavour toward leaving CORRECT information to future family members. The Tipton family is full of inaccurate trees and legends. Please use another site for that.

posted by Saro (Scollon) Genova
Please, let us discuss making the wives correct.
posted by Saro (Scollon) Genova
Sorry folks but this profile is a mess and needs to be cleaned up. I will attach PROVEN and debated information on this individual that has been thoroughly researched in the biography. Let's work together to correct the errors. There are so many individuals with the same first names in the Tipton pedigree that it is easy to confuse them. So we must look to the researchers who have painstakingly researched them for reliable information.
posted by Saro (Scollon) Genova
Tipton-716 and Tipton-62 do not represent the same person because: Nothing but their names seems remotely similar...
posted by Michael Hughes

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