Samuel Kerr Green (1790-1860): The Natchitoches Parish, Louisiana, Years, 1835-1848 (1)

U.S. Congress, American State Papers: Documents of the Congress of the United States in Relation to the Public Lands from the First Session of the Eighteenth to the Second Session of the Nineteenth Congress, Inclusive: Commencing December 1, 1823, and Ending March 3, 1827, vol. 4 (D.C.: Cornelius Wendell, 1859), p. 114

Or, Subtitled: “Claiming, by virtue of occupation, habitation, and cultivation, a tract of land lying wwithin the late neutral territory

As my previous posting about Samuel Kerr Green indicates when it wraps up discussion of the period in the early 1830s that Samuel spent working as an overseer on the plantation of James Hopkins in New Orleans, by 1835 Samuel had settled in Natchitoches Parish some 250 miles northwest of New Orleans. On 1 October 1835, Samuel purchased from Dr. John Sibley 640 acres of land in Natchitoches Parish.[1] The conveyance record states that both Samuel K. Green and John Sibley were residents of Natchitoches Parish, and that Samuel was purchasing land Sibley had acquired by Rio Hondo claim #124. The tract was fifteen miles west of the town of Natchitoches near the village of Adayes on the road from Natchitoches to the Sabine River. The price of the land was $3,750, of which Samuel paid $1,550 at the purchase. Both John Sibley and Samuel K. Green signed the conveyance, with witnesses Robert S. Chadsey and William Ferguson.

Mary Ann Green (1861-1942) and Husband Alexander Cobb Lindsey (1)

Death certificate of Mary Ann Green Lindsey, Louisiana Department of Health, Division of Vital Records, Red River Parish #1620, 194

Or, Subtitled: A Family History Full of Twists, Turns, and Confusion

When I began Begats and Bequeathals back in January 2018, I stated that my goal here would be to share some 40+ years of research on my family lines, in the hope of providing accurate documentation to anyone who might be researching these families and looking for good documentation and not the junk genealogy too often found in various places. My initial posting also says that I wouldn’t be following any logical plan in choosing a particular family line to work on at any given time, but would be skipping from line to line.