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Elizabeth W. <I>Gentry</I> Dalton

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Elizabeth W. Gentry Dalton

Birth
Rockingham County, North Carolina, USA
Death
1853 (aged 70–71)
Williamson County, Tennessee, USA
Burial
Williamson County, Tennessee, USA Add to Map
Memorial ID
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"On June 12, 1812, Watson Gentry came forward at the Wilson Creek Meeting House with a letter from a Baptist Church called Sardis in the County of Rockingham, State of North Carolina and was received in full fellowship. He built an unusually fine log house about one mile west of College Grove, TN.

Watson and Theodosia Poindexter Gentry were the parents of eleven children. Eight he named in his will the others are identified by their gravestone in the family cemetery. The seven sons were Joseph, Thomas, William, Theophilus, Charles, James, and Meredith Poindexter Gentry. Of the daughters there were Elizabeth Dalton, Mary Rogers, Jemima Scales and Tabitha who married Dr. John M. Watson."

Taken from the book, Historic Williamson County Old Home and Sites by Virginia Bowman and submitted by Linda Moore Mora
"On June 12, 1812, Watson Gentry came forward at the Wilson Creek Meeting House with a letter from a Baptist Church called Sardis in the County of Rockingham, State of North Carolina and was received in full fellowship. He built an unusually fine log house about one mile west of College Grove, TN.

Watson and Theodosia Poindexter Gentry were the parents of eleven children. Eight he named in his will the others are identified by their gravestone in the family cemetery. The seven sons were Joseph, Thomas, William, Theophilus, Charles, James, and Meredith Poindexter Gentry. Of the daughters there were Elizabeth Dalton, Mary Rogers, Jemima Scales and Tabitha who married Dr. John M. Watson."

Taken from the book, Historic Williamson County Old Home and Sites by Virginia Bowman and submitted by Linda Moore Mora


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