Jacob and Sarah Long were married about 1801 in Alamance County, North Carolina (this part of Alamance County became Orange County in 1849), as Jacob was disowned by the Cane Creek Quakers on 7 Nov 1801 for marrying outside the union of the Quaker meeting (congregation). It appears that Jacob must have been readmitted to the Quakers as he was recorded on 29 Dec 1804 at the Lost Creek Meeting in Tennessee again being disowned, this time for fighting and being "married contrary to discipline".
Jacob migrated to southeast Missouri about 1805. Jacob was recorded as residing in Black River Township from 1830 to 1850 (Census records). By 1860, he had moved to Iron Township in Iron County, where he lived with his son Elisha until he died about 1867.
See FamilySearch profile for sources.
CAUTION: This summary is provided for informational purposes; Memorials should not be considered a genealogical source, always verify information based on actual sources.
Jacob and Sarah Long were married about 1801 in Alamance County, North Carolina (this part of Alamance County became Orange County in 1849), as Jacob was disowned by the Cane Creek Quakers on 7 Nov 1801 for marrying outside the union of the Quaker meeting (congregation). It appears that Jacob must have been readmitted to the Quakers as he was recorded on 29 Dec 1804 at the Lost Creek Meeting in Tennessee again being disowned, this time for fighting and being "married contrary to discipline".
Jacob migrated to southeast Missouri about 1805. Jacob was recorded as residing in Black River Township from 1830 to 1850 (Census records). By 1860, he had moved to Iron Township in Iron County, where he lived with his son Elisha until he died about 1867.
See FamilySearch profile for sources.
CAUTION: This summary is provided for informational purposes; Memorials should not be considered a genealogical source, always verify information based on actual sources.
Family Members
Advertisement
Records on Ancestry
Sponsored by Ancestry
Advertisement