no image
Privacy Level: Open (White)

Samuel Youngblood Sr (1754 - 1812)

Samuel Youngblood Sr
Born in Edgefield, Province of North Carolinamap
Ancestors ancestors
Husband of — married 1773 in Province of South Carolinamap
Descendants descendants
Died at about age 58 in Abbeville, Abbeville County, South Carolina, USAmap
Profile last modified | Created 14 Jun 2011
This page has been accessed 2,261 times.

Contents

Biography

Name

Name: Samuel Youngblood

Birth

Date: 1754
Place: Province of North Carolina

Death

Age at Death: 58
Date: 05 Oct 1812
Place: Abbeville, Abbeville County, South Carolina, USA

Burial

Date: 07 Oct 1812
Place: Cedar Springs, Abbeville, South Carolina, USA
Cemetery: Cedar Springs A.R.P. Church Cemetery
FAG URL: https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/71996085

Residence

Residence:
Date: 1790
Place: Abbeville, South Carolina, USA
Relation to Head of House: Head
Total Number of Slaves: 0 (zero) [1]
Residence:
Date: 1800
Place: Abbeville, South Carolina, USA
Relation to Head of House: Head
Total Number of Slaves: Slaves: 0 (zero)

[2]

Residence:
Date: 1810
Place: Abbeville, South Carolina, USA
Relation to Head of House: Head
Total Number of Slaves:

[3]

Event

Event: Revolutionary War
Type: Served as soldier
Place: Edgefield, South Carolina, USA
Event: Moved to Kentucky to join a daughter, Peggy, and her husband Thomas Baker
Type: Moved
Date: Aft 1811
Note: Samuel and sons John Wilson and Ephraim went to Tennessee on their way to Kentucky. Samuel and John Wilson stayed in Tennessee but they sent Ephraim on to Kentucky to live with the Bakers.

Sources

  1. Source: First Census of the United States, 1790 NARA microfilm publication M637, 12 rolls. Series M637, Roll 11, Page 468, Image 279.
  2. Source: Second Census of the United States, 1800. NARA microfilm publication M32, 52 rolls. Series M32, Roll 47, Page 10, Image 25.
  3. Source: Third Census of the United States, 1810. NARA microfilm publication M252, 71 rolls.


  • Source: S-260997258 Ancestry Family Trees Publication: Online publication - Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com. Original data: Family Tree files submitted by Ancestry members. Record Collection 1030Ancestry Family Tree




Is Samuel your ancestor? Please don't go away!
 star icon Login to collaborate or comment, or
 star icon contact private message private message a profile manager, or
 star icon ask our community of genealogists a question.
Sponsored Search by Ancestry.com

DNA Connections
It may be possible to confirm family relationships with Samuel 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 Samuel:

Have you taken a DNA test? If so, login to add it. If not, see our friends at Ancestry DNA.



Comments: 3

Leave a message for others who see this profile.
There are no comments yet.
Login to post a comment.
Brother of Jacob Youngblood [half], Isaac Youngblood, Joseph Youngblood, Elizabeth Lydia (Youngblood) Gentry, Rebecca Youngblood, Lewis Youngblood, Mary C (Youngblood) Staggs, Margaret (Youngblood) Cone, Susannah Youngblood and Sarah Youngblood.
      • Note*** 'Not" Jacob is the son of Peter YB c1725-1795 of Edgefield...not this Peter YB c1732-1788...not half brother but a close cousin.

Isaac is also not a brother of this Samuel...but a close cousin. Isaac is the son of the Peter YB c1740-c1794 of Charleston. Jacob and Isaac YB descendants do not have a specific YDNA mutation that descendants of Samuel YB Sr and Jr have. I do not know who this David c1792 is??? unless you have confused David YB of Charleston, SC the son of the other Peter YB c1740-1794. Understand there are three Peter YBs in SC that have been totally confused over the years before YDNA cleared it ....all have different wives, kids, dobs and dods...and locations. My research indicates that they all have different fathers so these were likely 1st or 2nd cousins. Enjoy Larry

Below is a portion of a letter written by John Wilson Youngblood listing his family....

Translation/transcription of John Wilson Letter to E D YB (I have the cursive)

I added the PURPLE/35 ...other than John Wilsons birth year...the rest are hearsay and +/- 5 years if I have no good date

Page 1 March 27 1877 Ind Warick County Yankeetown post office Dear Sir, I Seat my Self this morning to answer your kind letter of inquiry that I received last evening, of the date of March the 17 1877. I was glad to receive a few lines from you that by some correspondence we might know whether we were near relatives or not. Mr Ire bennet when up in our Country told me some about you and I told him to git you to rite me a few lines and after reading yours I could not recognize any of them that you named in your letter tho I have never seen any of the name of youngbloods but what were in some way connected in as much as you were very young when your father died. I will try to give you some sketches of my relationship tho it may be very imperfect. I was born in South Carolina Abbeville District in the year 1796 my fathers name was Samuel (c1754 PURPLE/35 YDNA profile ) he was a revolutionary soldier in the war and suffered much from the stories I have heard him tell of his survings when I was a little boy it still makes me hate the name of a tory . My father had two brothers Joseph (c1762 sb PURPLE/35 ) and Lewis (c1760 PURPLE/35) he was of the German


Page 2 decent some called him a dutchman he had 7 sones and 3 daughters I will give you the names of his sones that kept up the name the oldist was Andrew next Samuel & Henry which were twin brothers next Peter next Joseph he died when a boy next John my self and Ephraim the youngest of the family and of this large family none of them are living but my self and I am in my eighty first year of my age and now permit me to go back to my boyhood when I was about 12 years Sons.... Andrew Samuel Henry Peter Joseph John Ephraim old my mother died and my father brokeup some years previous to the death of my mother my father got in the notion of the western country and made a sail and sold of every thing that he could not move at this time he was what was called a tolerabl liver in the Slave States but owned no slaves he then then gave out moving to the west and then my mother died and as I have stated above that my father concluded to take me and younger brother to my oldest brother who had moved to the state of Tennessee and accordingly did and then returned back and on his way he died and we both boys with out father or mother or means to lean on we concluded to come to Kentucky and stayed their

posted by Larry Youngblood
edited by Larry Youngblood
South Carolina, one of the original 13 colonies, ratified the Constitution, Friday, May 23, 1788, prior to that it was referred to as Province of South Carolina
posted by Sandra Scarborough
Samuel Youngblood is a proved DAR Patriot, his Patriot # is A130302

http://services.dar.org/Public/DAR_Research/search_adb/?action=full&p_id=A130302

posted by Sandra Scarborough

Y  >  Youngblood  >  Samuel Youngblood Sr