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Rev Aaron Pinson

Birth
Death
1794 (aged 68–69)
Burial
Burial Details Unknown. Specifically: Laurens County, South Carolina, USA Add to Map
Memorial ID
View Source
Note to descendants: Reverend Aaron Pinson is often confused with Aaron Pinson Sr of Lunenburg County Virginia (Pinson-63) and his son Aaron Pinson Jr (Pinson-574) who married Delilah Stovall and died 1801 in Granville County, North Carolina. There is no need for such confusion as long as one constructs a detailed time line of their life events with times and places, and remains mindful of their differences in ages and associates. At no time is there ever a record of the Reverend Aaron Pinson being in the same county as the other two, who are most probably his uncle and first cousin (this theory supported by abundant DNA evidence showing the descendants of the two Pinson lines have shared ancestry). As another researcher previously pointed out:

a) Aaron Pinson of this profile was married to an Elizabeth (M.N.U.) moved from Fairfax Co. Va to Orange Co. N.C. as a young man. Then moved to Ninety-Six (later Laurens) district S.C., then during the Revolution lived in the area that is now northeastern Tennessee, then back to Laurens District, South Carolina, where he executed his will in 1794 in Laurens District, South Carolina. He signed his own name and was a judge, minister and in his younger years, a mill owner and militia officer.
b) Aaron Pinson-574 was married to Delilah Stovall. He was raised in Brunswick Co. Va (later Lunenburg, later Mecklenburg) on the North Carolina border. He executed his 1801 will in Granville County, North Carolina on the Virginia border listing his children.
c) Aaron Pinson Sr. moved from Spotsylvania County Va in the Northern part of the state to Brunswick County Va on the North Carolina border in 1732 and remained there the rest of his life. He was a generation older than the other two who were his nephew and son, respectively.
Obviously, the three men were different individuals. The younger two had wives with different names. From 1732 until the early 1750's, the Reverend Aaron Pinson lived on the opposite border of Va from the other two. After his move to Orange Co. N.C. the Reverend Aaron Pinson never lived in the same state as the other two. G. Pinson (Pinson-796)

More information on this Aaron Pinson can be found at https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Pinson-48
Note to descendants: Reverend Aaron Pinson is often confused with Aaron Pinson Sr of Lunenburg County Virginia (Pinson-63) and his son Aaron Pinson Jr (Pinson-574) who married Delilah Stovall and died 1801 in Granville County, North Carolina. There is no need for such confusion as long as one constructs a detailed time line of their life events with times and places, and remains mindful of their differences in ages and associates. At no time is there ever a record of the Reverend Aaron Pinson being in the same county as the other two, who are most probably his uncle and first cousin (this theory supported by abundant DNA evidence showing the descendants of the two Pinson lines have shared ancestry). As another researcher previously pointed out:

a) Aaron Pinson of this profile was married to an Elizabeth (M.N.U.) moved from Fairfax Co. Va to Orange Co. N.C. as a young man. Then moved to Ninety-Six (later Laurens) district S.C., then during the Revolution lived in the area that is now northeastern Tennessee, then back to Laurens District, South Carolina, where he executed his will in 1794 in Laurens District, South Carolina. He signed his own name and was a judge, minister and in his younger years, a mill owner and militia officer.
b) Aaron Pinson-574 was married to Delilah Stovall. He was raised in Brunswick Co. Va (later Lunenburg, later Mecklenburg) on the North Carolina border. He executed his 1801 will in Granville County, North Carolina on the Virginia border listing his children.
c) Aaron Pinson Sr. moved from Spotsylvania County Va in the Northern part of the state to Brunswick County Va on the North Carolina border in 1732 and remained there the rest of his life. He was a generation older than the other two who were his nephew and son, respectively.
Obviously, the three men were different individuals. The younger two had wives with different names. From 1732 until the early 1750's, the Reverend Aaron Pinson lived on the opposite border of Va from the other two. After his move to Orange Co. N.C. the Reverend Aaron Pinson never lived in the same state as the other two. G. Pinson (Pinson-796)

More information on this Aaron Pinson can be found at https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Pinson-48


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