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Elizabeth Catherine <I>Brown</I> Pardue

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Elizabeth Catherine Brown Pardue

Birth
Madison County, Tennessee, USA
Death
25 Jun 1898 (aged 68)
Jackson, Madison County, Tennessee, USA
Burial
Jackson, Madison County, Tennessee, USA Add to Map
Memorial ID
View Source
United States Census, 1850
Name: Elizabeth C Moore
Event Place: Madison county, Madison, Tennessee
Household
Adam Brown 58 Virginia
Aquilla Brown 50 Georgia
Andrew T Brown 27 Tennessee
Nathan Moore 30 North Carolina
Elizabeth C Moore 20 Tennessee
Aquilla E Moore 01 Tennessee
Ann Moore 0 Tennessee

“November 6, 1871. ADAM BROWN died 1864. Son A. F. BROWN had "settled up estate" and moved to Ark. Assets of about $1000 have come into estate, and Elisha P. Lowrance appointed administrator of this estate. His tombstone at Brown's Cemetery off Highway 412 bears death date November 19, 1864. In a letter dated August 13, 1945, Nashville, Tenn. written to Emma Inman Williams, Jackson, Tenn. (Emma Inman Williams Collection, Tenn. Room, Jackson-Madison Co. Library), Laura Brown Pardue Pace, wife of Rev. Joseph C. Pace, granddaughter of Adam Brown, mentions that her grandfather, ADAM BROWN was born in Richmond, Virginia. His wife was AQUILLA TEASLEY BROWN, born in Georgia. Their children were:1. NANCY BUCHANAN BROWN /wife of Elisha P. Lowrance./; 2. MARY BROWN, nicknamed Polly, married a Mclntosh; 3. HENRY BROWN, whose wife's name was Sally; 4. GEORGE BROWN; 5. EMILY BROWN, married an Autrey; 6. ANN BROWN, married a Mason and a Dallom; 7. JAMES BROWN; 8. (Dr.) ANDREW BROWN; 9. ELIZABETH CATHERINE BROWN, 1830-1898, married Nathan Moore, 1820-1853, three children and Joseph John Pardue, two children, including Mrs. Pace.”

https://tngenweb.org/records/madison/misc/gmmc/gmmc1-12.htm

“J. J. Pardue, merchant at Claybrook, was born in this State in 1833; is the son of Isaac H. and Sarah (Davis) Pardue. The parents are natives of North Carolina and Tennessee, respectively, the father coming to Tennessee about 1815. He was a life-long farmer, being moderately prosperous, and supported a family of twelve children, four daughters and eight sons; five of the children are yet living. The father moved to Mississippi in 1847, where he lived until his death, which occurred in 1870, being sixty-eight years of age. Our subject was reared on a farm, and was a first-class farmer. He went to Mississippi with his father in 1847, and remained until 1861, when he returned to Tennessee and enlisted in the Confederate service, Sixth Tennessee Regiment, and remained until after Hood's raid to Nashville, and then returned home. May 7, 1861, he married Mrs. Catherine (Brown) Moore, widow of Nathan Moore, by whom she had three children: Ellen, Mary and Lucy. She was born in this State in 1829, and is the mother of two children by her last marriage, namely: Rosa L. and Laura. Rosa L. died in 1881, being eighteen years old. At the close of the war, our subject remained in Tennessee, and resumed farming, continuing until 1879, when he began merchandising in this village, and commands a large and remunerative trade. He has two good farms - one of 112 acres, and one of 172 acres - and owns the property in which he does business and in which he lives in this village. He and family are members of the Methodist Episcopal Church South. In politics he is strictly Democratic.”

http://www.tngenweb.org/goodspeed/madison/bios.html#pardue
United States Census, 1850
Name: Elizabeth C Moore
Event Place: Madison county, Madison, Tennessee
Household
Adam Brown 58 Virginia
Aquilla Brown 50 Georgia
Andrew T Brown 27 Tennessee
Nathan Moore 30 North Carolina
Elizabeth C Moore 20 Tennessee
Aquilla E Moore 01 Tennessee
Ann Moore 0 Tennessee

“November 6, 1871. ADAM BROWN died 1864. Son A. F. BROWN had "settled up estate" and moved to Ark. Assets of about $1000 have come into estate, and Elisha P. Lowrance appointed administrator of this estate. His tombstone at Brown's Cemetery off Highway 412 bears death date November 19, 1864. In a letter dated August 13, 1945, Nashville, Tenn. written to Emma Inman Williams, Jackson, Tenn. (Emma Inman Williams Collection, Tenn. Room, Jackson-Madison Co. Library), Laura Brown Pardue Pace, wife of Rev. Joseph C. Pace, granddaughter of Adam Brown, mentions that her grandfather, ADAM BROWN was born in Richmond, Virginia. His wife was AQUILLA TEASLEY BROWN, born in Georgia. Their children were:1. NANCY BUCHANAN BROWN /wife of Elisha P. Lowrance./; 2. MARY BROWN, nicknamed Polly, married a Mclntosh; 3. HENRY BROWN, whose wife's name was Sally; 4. GEORGE BROWN; 5. EMILY BROWN, married an Autrey; 6. ANN BROWN, married a Mason and a Dallom; 7. JAMES BROWN; 8. (Dr.) ANDREW BROWN; 9. ELIZABETH CATHERINE BROWN, 1830-1898, married Nathan Moore, 1820-1853, three children and Joseph John Pardue, two children, including Mrs. Pace.”

https://tngenweb.org/records/madison/misc/gmmc/gmmc1-12.htm

“J. J. Pardue, merchant at Claybrook, was born in this State in 1833; is the son of Isaac H. and Sarah (Davis) Pardue. The parents are natives of North Carolina and Tennessee, respectively, the father coming to Tennessee about 1815. He was a life-long farmer, being moderately prosperous, and supported a family of twelve children, four daughters and eight sons; five of the children are yet living. The father moved to Mississippi in 1847, where he lived until his death, which occurred in 1870, being sixty-eight years of age. Our subject was reared on a farm, and was a first-class farmer. He went to Mississippi with his father in 1847, and remained until 1861, when he returned to Tennessee and enlisted in the Confederate service, Sixth Tennessee Regiment, and remained until after Hood's raid to Nashville, and then returned home. May 7, 1861, he married Mrs. Catherine (Brown) Moore, widow of Nathan Moore, by whom she had three children: Ellen, Mary and Lucy. She was born in this State in 1829, and is the mother of two children by her last marriage, namely: Rosa L. and Laura. Rosa L. died in 1881, being eighteen years old. At the close of the war, our subject remained in Tennessee, and resumed farming, continuing until 1879, when he began merchandising in this village, and commands a large and remunerative trade. He has two good farms - one of 112 acres, and one of 172 acres - and owns the property in which he does business and in which he lives in this village. He and family are members of the Methodist Episcopal Church South. In politics he is strictly Democratic.”

http://www.tngenweb.org/goodspeed/madison/bios.html#pardue


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