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Ida Jones

Female 1896 - 1982  (85 years)


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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Ida Jones was born on 19 Nov 1896 in Texas (daughter of Henry Cochran Jones and Sarah Jane Jones); died on 20 Oct 1982 in Newton County, Texas; was buried in Bleakwood Cemetery, Bleakwood, Newton County, Texas.

    Notes:

    A daughter of a daughter a Ida Jones, who would be a direct female descendant of Mary, the wife of Daniel Morgan, served as an mtDNA donor to determine if Mary was indeed native american, as had been widely rumored. The mtDNA proved to be HV, or Helena, a primarily European haplogroup, most prevalent in Western Europe. The single difference from the Cambridge Reference Sequence was CRS 16311 C. The HV results preclude Native American ancestry on the matrilineal track -- the haplogroup would have to be A, B, C, D or a variety of X to show matrilineal ancestry as Native American. Therefore it appears that Mary Morgan's mother WAS NOT a full blooded Native American. It is still possible, however, she had native american ancestors, but if so it was not through her direct maternal line.

    Ida married Charles "Charlie" Gibson on 6 Jul 1913. Charles was born about 1888 in Texas; died on 18 Oct 1940 in Newton County, Texas; was buried in Bleakwood, Newton County, Texas. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. Living
    2. Living
    3. Living
    4. Living
    5. Living
    6. Glyne Gibson was born on 12 Apr 1930 in Newton County, Texas; died about 1930 in Newton County, Texas.
    7. Living

Generation: 2

  1. 2.  Henry Cochran Jones was born on 8 Nov 1858 in Newton County, Texas; died on 15 Sep 1931 in Newton County, Texas; was buried in Bleakwood Cemetery, Bleakwood, Newton County, Texas.

    Notes:

    The son of David JONES and Mary BENNINGTON, and not related to his wife, Sarah Jane JONES.

    Henry married Sarah Jane Jones on 8 Feb 1882 in Newton County, Texas. Sarah (daughter of Sion Jones and Elizabeth Morgan) was born on 12 Aug 1859 in Decatur County, Georgia; died on 15 Apr 1929 in Newton County, Texas; was buried in Magnolia Springs Cemetery, Magnolia Springs, Jasper County, Texas. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  Sarah Jane Jones was born on 12 Aug 1859 in Decatur County, Georgia (daughter of Sion Jones and Elizabeth Morgan); died on 15 Apr 1929 in Newton County, Texas; was buried in Magnolia Springs Cemetery, Magnolia Springs, Jasper County, Texas.

    Notes:

    Ruby Burkett writes that at her request, Sarah was bured beside her mother, Elizabeth Morgan Jones in the Magnolia Springs Cemetery. Bonnie Jones Smith placed markers on their graves.

    Children:
    1. Sion Hampton Jones was born on 20 Jun 1884 in Texas; died on 16 Mar 1967 in Newton County, Texas; was buried in Bleakwood Cemetery, Bleakwood, Newton County, Texas.
    2. David Franklin Jones was born on 19 Feb 1887 in Texas; died on 13 Oct 1964 in Newton County, Texas; was buried in Bleakwood Cemetery, Bleakwood, Newton County, Texas.
    3. Henrietta Jones was born in May 1889 in Texas.
    4. Jesse James "Dock" Jones was born on 24 Dec 1890 in Newton County, Texas; died on 15 Sep 1975 in Newton County, Texas; was buried in Newton City Cemetery, Newton, Newton County, Texas.
    5. Harry Tracy "Tom" Jones was born on 12 Oct 1892 in Texas; died on 4 Mar 1957; was buried in Sam Herrin Cemetery, Newton County, Texas.
    6. Everett Jones was born in Oct 1894 in Texas.
    7. 1. Ida Jones was born on 19 Nov 1896 in Texas; died on 20 Oct 1982 in Newton County, Texas; was buried in Bleakwood Cemetery, Bleakwood, Newton County, Texas.
    8. Mittie Jones was born on 17 May 1899 in Texas; died on 31 Aug 1918.


Generation: 3

  1. 6.  Sion Jones was born in 1825 in Pulaski County, Georgia (son of Matthew Jones and Elizabeth Wester); died on 14 Aug 1864 in Georgia; was buried in Atlanta, Fulton County, Georgia.

    Notes:

    Per the article entitled LOCKHART ADDS TO HAWTHORN HISTORY "Sion Jones (was the) son of Matthew Jones and grandson of Robert....He served in Campbell's County CSA which patrolled the coast of Florida and also served in Atlanta. Sion died in August 1864, leaving Elizabeth with seven children. She was 36 years old. She moved to Texas in 1868....The Morgans and Jones's are both Welsh." In a subsequent letter to Melinda Strong, Carolyn Powell Lockhart adds that Sion Jones had died in the Battle of Atlanta. Bonnie Jones notes that he actually died of an illness contracted during the fighting of the Civil War.

    Sion married Elizabeth Morgan on 3 Feb 1853 in Decatur County, Georgia. Elizabeth (daughter of Daniel Morgan and Mary ???) was born on 31 Dec 1830 in North Carolina; died on 13 Dec 1902 in Kirbyville, Jasper County, Texas; was buried in Magnolia Springs Cemetery, Magnolia Springs, Jasper County, Texas. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 7.  Elizabeth Morgan was born on 31 Dec 1830 in North Carolina (daughter of Daniel Morgan and Mary ???); died on 13 Dec 1902 in Kirbyville, Jasper County, Texas; was buried in Magnolia Springs Cemetery, Magnolia Springs, Jasper County, Texas.

    Notes:

    Said by some to have been born in Surry County, NC, but no proof cited. This seems unlikely as the family was listed in Sampson County as of the 1830 census.

    Carolyn Lockhart wrote that after the death of Sion Jones in Georgia "Elizabeth sold her land in Decatur County (ca 1868) and came to Texas. She and [her widowed sister] Dorcas Lee had about 9 children with them. Someone met them in Galveston and it was the first time she had ever seen an iron cook stove. She instructed her kids not to mention their Indian ancestry. She herself never mentioned it even though she always wore fringes on her dresses to remind her own self of her heritage. She was 61 when she died, never remarried and never filed a pension from Sion Jones CSA record."

    In a letter from Carolyn Lockhart, she states that Elizabeth died in the home of her oldest son, Newton B. Jones. Like the Morgan's, the Jones family were also of Welsh ancestry. The Hawthorne family were neighbors in Georgia and also in Jasper County.

    Ruby Boyett showed she died in 1897, but this can not be correct as (1) she had a daughter born in 1899 (2) she can be found on the 1900 census with her husband and children and (3) her tombstone is said to be inscribed 13 Dec 1902.

    Notes:

    Married:
    Per www.rootsweb.com/~gadecatu/marriage

    Elizabeth Morgan m Sion Jones on 3 Feb 1853

    Children:
    1. Newton B. Jones was born on 31 Dec 1853 in Decatur County, Georgia; died on 20 Jul 1925 in Winn Parish, Louisiana; was buried in Kirbyville City Cemetery, Kirbyville, Jasper County, Texas.
    2. Mary Matilda Jones was born on 13 May 1855 in Decatur County, Georgia; died on 20 Mar 1936 in Roganville, Jasper County, Texas; was buried in Friendship Cemetery, Roganville, Jasper County, Texas.
    3. Martha Ann "Babe" Jones was born on 18 Aug 1856 in Georgia; died on 23 Mar 1913 in Bon Wier, Newton County, Texas; was buried in Ford Cemetery, Bon Wier, Jasper County, Texas.
    4. Elizabeth Jones was born on 22 Feb 1858 in Georgia; died on 10 Mar 1930.
    5. 3. Sarah Jane Jones was born on 12 Aug 1859 in Decatur County, Georgia; died on 15 Apr 1929 in Newton County, Texas; was buried in Magnolia Springs Cemetery, Magnolia Springs, Jasper County, Texas.
    6. Henrietta Jones was born on 13 Jul 1861 in Georgia; died on 21 Nov 1903 in Newton County, Texas; was buried in Newton City Cemetery, Newton, Newton County, Texas.
    7. George Sion Jones was born on 6 Feb 1863 in Georgia; and died.


Generation: 4

  1. 12.  Matthew Jones was born about 1795 in Georgia; and died.

    Notes:

    Carolyn Lockhart wrote (in an undated letter) that "Most all of the Jones boys, Matthew (Sion's dad), William Jones and Matthew J. Jones, John Jones, Jr (sic) fought in the Creek War of 1836 in Georgia. " In another letter, she wrote that Matthew was the father of Matthew, Silas, Sion, and Robert, and that he had owned 1000 acres in lower Georgia.

    Listed in the "1840 Decatur County Georgia Census Index " (Frances T. Ingmire, Mountain Press). Other Jones head of households at the time of this census were John (Sr and Jr), Robert, James, Seaborn.



    (Research):

    Census Listings:

    And in the online 1850 Decatur Co., Georgia Census, the family is listed as follows:


    498-498
    Jones, M 55 M Farmer 1,000 GA
    Jones, Elizabeth 50 F Ga
    Jones, Sion 25 M Laborer Ga
    Jones, Mary 20 F Ga
    Jones, George 13 M Ga
    Jnes, Missouri 15 F Ga

    Matthew married Elizabeth Wester. Elizabeth was born about 1800 in Georgia; and died. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 13.  Elizabeth Wester was born about 1800 in Georgia; and died.
    Children:
    1. Matthew Jones was born before 1825 in Georgia; and died.
    2. 6. Sion Jones was born in 1825 in Pulaski County, Georgia; died on 14 Aug 1864 in Georgia; was buried in Atlanta, Fulton County, Georgia.
    3. Mary Jones was born about 1830 in Georgia; and died.
    4. Missouri Jones was born about 1835 in Georgia; and died.
    5. George Jones was born about 1837 in Georgia; and died.

  3. 14.  Daniel Morgan was born about 1800 in North Carolina (son of Rueben Morgan and Dorcus Newton); died before 1886 in Roganville, Jasper County, Texas; was buried in Morgan Cemetery, Jasper County, Texas.

    Notes:

    MINUTES of the ANTIOCH HARDSHELL BAPTIST CHURCH BUNA, TEXAS 1862 - 1874 (Transcription courtesy of Bonnie Smith)

    "at an Association at Antioch Sept. 25, 1868 Simon William joined Church by Experance also Daniel Morgan..."

    June Conferance 1872, "Church met and after Divine servise set in conferance the Church taken up the subject of Brother Daniel Morgans non attendance as a Church member, it was unanimously resolved that Brothers Amos Richardson J.R. Davis visit the Brother and know the cause of his non attendance at Church and to report the same to the Church as early as convenient....."

    July Conferance, 1872 "Church met and after Divine servise set in conferance. Community caled on to report the case of Defaulting Brethren D. Morgan and E. Shepherd and the Brethren being present themselves made their own excuse it was received as good..."

    Nan located a copy of a deed from the Heirs of Daniel Morgan to John McLemore. The heirs were deeding the "160 acres of land granted by the state of Texas to said Daniel Morgan by Patent No. 550, Vol 41, and dated Feb 3, 1874 said 160 acres being community property of said Daniel and Mary Morgan to John McLemore." This deed was dated May 1886.

    The heirs listed, "being the only surviving heirs of said decedents....(were) James Morgan, Elizabeth Jones, Owen Morgan, heirs at law....(and also) the following named persons who are the grandchildren of the said decedents, viz: J.F. McLemore and Mary Ann Horn and her husband Elma Horn, Jesse Morgan and Allie Morgan, Ebenezer B. Lee, Timothy Lee, Angelina Watson and her husband John Watson." (Vol P, Page 367)

    In a letter to Melinda Strong dated September 4, 1999, Carolyn Lockhart indicated that she had heard "that all he had was 160 acres and a member of the family tried to contest the will."

    (Research):Census Information:

    1830 Census, Sampson County, North Carolina (p. 186)
    Daniel Morgan
    Males 1 under 5 (James)
    [Note: No male listed between 10-15 on this census, but an older male, between 15 -20, DOES appear on the subsequent census]
    1 between 30-40 (Daniel b. ca 1800)
    Females
    2 under 5 (Sarah, Elizabeth)
    1 between 30-40 (Mary b. ca 1800)

    1840 Census, Sampson County, North Carolina (p. 9)
    Danl Morgan
    Notes: Why isn't there a listing for a male, under the age of 5? (Daniel/David, born ca 1838)
    1 male between 5-10 (Owen)
    1 male between 10-15 (James)
    1 male between 15-20 (Note: this is likely to have been JOHN McLEMORE, son-in-law of Daniel, who married his eldest child, Sarah. The date of their wedding is not known, so John may have either already been married to Sarah, or been living with the family as a farmhand prior to his marriage)
    1 male between 40-50 (Daniel)
    2 females between 5-10 (Dorcus, Elizabeth)
    1 female between 10-15 (Sarah)
    1 female between 40-50 (Mary)


    1850 Census, Decatur County, Georgia
    518/518
    Morgan, D.,50,M, Farmer,50 Ga.
    Morgan, Mary,50,F Ga.
    Morgan, Elizabeth,21,F Ga.
    Morgan,Reubin,18,M,Laborer Ga.
    Morgan, Oliver (sic),16,M,Laborer Ga.
    Morgan,Dorcas,14,F Ga.
    Morgan,Daniel,12,M Ga.

    The state of birth are listed in error as Georgia, whereas the Morgan's were actually all born in North Carolina.

    Daniel and Mary's two oldest children had left home prior to the above census. Son James was already in Jasper County, Texas, listed as a laborer in the home of 74 year old Elijah ISAACS of South Carolina. Elijah ISAACS is said to be the son of Samuel ISAACS and Mary MORGAN of Lincoln Co., TN; Pendleton Co, S.C, Wilkes Co, N.C. and Lincoln Co, TN.

    Daughter Sarah, along with her husband John McLemore, lived two households away (516/516) from her parents in Decatur County. Also living nearby was Daniel's nephew, Malachi Morgan.

    The family moved westward, as in 1860, they could be found in Jasper County, Texas:

    1860 Census Jasper County, Texas
    #352-352
    Daniel Morgan 61 M Farmer $160 $200 NC
    Mary Morgan 61 F NC
    Owen Morgan 24 M Domestic NC Can't Read or Write
    David (???) Morgan 22 M Domestic NC

    Ruby Boyett Burkett reports that two of Daniel and Mary's two youngest daughters, Elizabeth and Dorcus, stayed behind in Georgia. Both of them were widowed during the Civil War, and they journeyed from Georgia to Texas by boat. Daniel met the boat in Galveston, taking his daughters and grandchildren back to Jasper by wagon. Daniel himself was widowed at the time of the 1870 Federal census, and can be found living with this daughter Elizabeth Jones:

    1870 Federal Census, Jasper County, Texas
    Morgan, Daniel,68,Farmer, $600 $300North Carolina
    Jones, Elizabeth,40, Keeping House, $--- $100 North Carolina
    Jones, Newton,16,Farm Labor, Georgia
    Jones, Mary Matilda,15, Georgia
    Jones, Martha A.,13,Georgia
    Jones, Elizabeth,11, Georgia
    Jones, Sarah J.,10, Georgia
    Jones, Henrietta,8, Georgia
    Jones, George S,7,Georgia
    Morgan,Owen,38,Farm Labor, North Carolina , Idiot

    According to the FamilySearch 1880 Census, Daniel is living with another of his widowed daughters, Dorcus Lee:

    Census Place:Precinct 3, Jasper, Texas
    Source:FHL Film 1255313 National Archives Film T9-1313 Page 15 RelationSexMarrRaceAgeBirthplace
    Darcus LEE Self F W W 43 NC Occ:Keeping House Fa: NC Mo: NC
    Ebenezer LEE Son M S W 22 GA Occ:Works On Farm Fa: GA Mo: NC
    Daniel MORGAN Father M W W 79 NC Occ:Retired Farmer Fa: NC Mo: NC
    Owen MORGAN Brother M S W 45 NC Occ:Idle Fa: NC Mo: NC
    Alley MORGAN Brother M S W 18 TX Occ:At Home Fa: NC Mo: GA

    Daniel married Mary ??? before 1826. Mary was born about 1800 in North Carolina; died after 1860 in Roganville, Jasper County, Texas; was buried in Morgan Cemetery, Jasper County, Texas. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  4. 15.  Mary ??? was born about 1800 in North Carolina; died after 1860 in Roganville, Jasper County, Texas; was buried in Morgan Cemetery, Jasper County, Texas.

    Notes:

    The McDaniel/Scarborough/Lutman tree on WorldConnect INCORRECTLY shows her as Susan Mary McShan of Union, South Carolina.

    Several member trees on Ancestry.com have this incorrect information as well.

    The maiden name of Daniel's wife, Mary, has currently NOT been proven.

    In an undated clipping titled LOCKHART ADDS TO HAWTHORN HISTORY from the JASPER NEWS BOY, provided to me by Kenneth Morgan, Carolyn Lockhart writes:

    "...DANIEL (born 1802 in North Carolina) and MARY MORGAN....were Cherokee Indians and are buried in the woods at Roganville in Jasper County... "

    In a letter to Melinda Strong, dated 4 September 1999, Carolyn further speculates that Mary Morgan could be "a Proctor because the Jone's witnessed a will in the adjoining county to Decatur for a Thomas Proctor. It is my personal belief (I never researched) that ...it was not feasible to register White-(Native) American marriages...they were frowned upon." It is interesting that marriage records can be found for all of Daniel's brothers, but no record can be located for his marriage to Mary. Carolyn added that "when Elizabeth was born in North Carolina in 1830--the family in North Carolina were running from the government who was about to push all the Indians to Oklahoma in 1836, so they packed up & headed for Georgia---because the Jones took part in running the Creek Indians out of Georgia in 1838."

    Jo Ann Lee Gartig wrote, on 12 September 1999, that "All of my life I have heard that there was an Indian somewhere in the Lee family, but none of my aunts or uncles knew which branch. It was a surprise to hear it was not on the Lee side, but the Morgan side, which I had never suspected. I learned from Bonnie Jones Smith (great granddaughter of Elizabeth Morgan and chairperson of the Newton County Historical Commission) that it was Mary, wife of Daniel. Bonnie's older sister, Verbal, who died in an auto accident about 1995, told Bonnie that Mary was an Indian. It seems that when Verbal was in her early teens, her grandmother Sara Jane told her about her Cherokee Indian grandmother." Robert Wall of Pearland was also told tales by his grandmother of the Morgan's Cherokee ancestry while he was growing up.

    In order to attempt to help prove the numerous family stories that Mary was a full blood Native American, a direct female descendant of Mary's volunteered to take an mtDNA test.The test was done by FamilyTreeDNA in Houston. They tested the mtDNA for HVR1 (16001 to 16569). The test was designed to show her mtDNA, any differences from the Cambridge Reference Sequence, and the meaning of probability between matches. The test would pinpoint which of the "The Daughters of Eve" Mary and her direct female descendant could be traced back too, as well as identifying the ethnic and geographic origins, both recent and far distant. Among other features, this test would indicate matrilineal Native-American Ancestry, and which of the 5 major groups that settled in the Americas were the most probable ancestors.

    The volunteer had the following line of descent from Mary:

    Mary* (Unknown), wife of Daniel Morgan
    Elizabeth* Morgan, wife of Sion Jones
    Sarah Jane* Jones, wife of Henry Cochran Jones (not related)
    Ida* Jones, wife of Charles Gibson
    DAUGHTER of Ida and Charles (private)
    GRANDDAUGHTER of Ida and Charles (private)

    The mtDNA results came back as HV, or Helena, a primarily European haplogroup, most prevalent in Western Europe. The single difference from the Cambridge Reference Sequence was CRS 16311 C. The HV results preclude Native American ancestry on the matrilineal track -- the haplogroup would have to be A, B, C, D or a variety of X to show matrilineal ancestry as Native American. Therefore it appears that Mary Morgan's mother WAS NOT a full blooded Native American. It is still possible, however, she had native american ancestors, but if so it was not through her direct maternal line.

    We do now know that Mary's maternal line reaches back to the Helena Clan. Helena is from the Greek and means "light." This clan's descendants are the most numerous in Europe, having started 20,000 years ago from a hunting family in the Dordogne region of the ice-capped Pyrenees in southern France. As the climate warmed, Helena's descendants trekked northward to what is now England, some 12,000 years ago. Members of this group are now present in all European countries.

    Prof. Sykes and Oxford University researchers in England have identified seven ancestral matriarchal groups from which all Europeans appear to be descended. Every European can trace his or her evolutionary history back to the seven ancestral mother groups, also referred to as the Seven European Daughters of Eve. Sykes et al obtained buccal cells from 6,000 individuals and analyzed the samples using the mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) analysis. It is known that mtDNA mutates at a very slow rate, such as 1 mutation in every 10,000 generations or 20,000 years. So they figured that the women would have lived between 8,000 and 45,000 years ago. What is amazing is that all seven of the genetic groups appear to be descended from the Lara clan, one of three clans that still exist today in Africa. This is called the African Eve theory. It was proposed in the late 1980's by Allan Wilson, Mark Stoneking and others. The African Eve theory states that all humans share a common African ancestor. Migration routes of the 7 daughters are at this site:

    http://www.oxfordancestors.com

    As of 2002, there are believed to be 36 distinct genetic groups worldwide. From Patrick Guinness, "In mtDNA, there are a maximum of 14 mutations between all humans (so far)."

    Notes:

    Married:
    Unable to locate a marriage record for them, even though the marriage records for his siblings were located.

    The McDaniel/Scarborough/Lutman tree on WorldConnect INCORRECTLY shows her as Susan Mary McShan of Union, South Carolina.

    http://wc.rootsweb.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=bigdocmcd&id=I184136

    The maiden name of Daniel's wife, Mary, has currently NOT been proven.

    Children:
    1. Sarah Morgan was born about 1826 in North Carolina; died before 1859 in Texas.
    2. James M. Morgan was born on 23 Jan 1828 in North Carolina; died on 8 Aug 1888 in Jasper County, Texas; was buried in Withers Cemetery, Jasper County, Texas.
    3. 7. Elizabeth Morgan was born on 31 Dec 1830 in North Carolina; died on 13 Dec 1902 in Kirbyville, Jasper County, Texas; was buried in Magnolia Springs Cemetery, Magnolia Springs, Jasper County, Texas.
    4. Rueben Morgan was born about 1832 in North Carolina; died before 1870.
    5. Owen Morgan was born about 1834 in North Carolina; died after 1886.
    6. Dorcus Morgan was born about 1836 in North Carolina; died before 1886.
    7. Daniel Morgan was born about 1838 in North Carolina; died before 1886.