Oglethorpe Co. GA Patrick Family ==================================================================== USGENWEB ARCHIVES NOTICE: In keeping with our policy of providing free information on the Internet, data may be used by non-commercial entities, as long as this message remains on all copied material. These electronic pages may NOT be reproduced in any format for profit or for presentation by other persons or organizations. Persons or organizations desiring to use this material for purposes other than stated above must obtain the written consent of the file contributor. The submitter has given permission to the USGenWeb Archives to store the file permanently for free access. This file was contributed for use in the USGenWeb Archives by: Dianne Conaway Blankenstein blankenstein@prodigy.net ==================================================================== John C. Patrick married first Peggy Nicholson 2 Nov 1801 Oglethorpe County, Georgia. Gone to Georgia 9975.85 page 304 #303. PATRICK: JOHN C. PATRICK was on an 1808 jury in Randolph (now Jasper County, Ga. Along with Elijah Cornwell and several others who had moved in from Jackson and Oglethorpe Counties. On Nov. 6, 1810, a marriage license was issued in Jasper county to PATRICK and Lovie Stewart (who may have been related to James and his wife Olive Stewart of Jackson County). JOHN C. PATRICK bought of John Montgomery Jan 24, 18ll (Jasper Deed Book 1, p. 516) lot 143, 19th district, witnesses being Jesse Drummon, Jonathan Patrick and Justice of Peace David Neel. In the following year both JOHN C. and John M. Patrick appear as witnesses to deeds, one of them a sale from Abel Pennington t Samuel Wyatt. JOHN C. was dead in 1815, his inventory Oct. 27 showing slaves: Vicy worth $350, Ede $400, Roy $200, etc., for a total of $2,000. Ephriam Heard, Larkin Clark, Henry Johnson and Burwell Brown were appraisers. Notes of David Pennerston (Pennington?), Peter Hagler, James Wyatt, Valentine Mooney, Richard Leonard and Ephriam Heard were mentioned in the estate. Joseph Heards report as administrator, (Will Book 2, p. 194) mentioned the widow Olive. James Heard, as administrator, sold slaves Vicey and Peter and by consent of Cornelius Atkinson enumerated in Jackson County in 1820 -- $975 was allotted JOHN C. PATRICKs orphans, Susan and Martha (Will Book 2, 214). Eady and other slave were hired out in 1817 for the orphans support. Mrs. Stuart P. Atkinson was paid $120 and payments were made into the estate from the estate of Andrew Patrick and also from Stephen Heard and Carter Harrison in 1818, when Georgia pension of $30 payable either to Andrew of JOHN D. was listed. Jonathan Patrick was dead by 1816, with Robert Patrick as administrator, and Jonathans slave Sukey was sold for $250. In 1820, John M. Patrick was enumerated 300101-12210 and I. And J. Patrick, each aged 18-25, the latter perhaps being Joshua, who was living in Jasper county in 1827. A Robert and a William Patrick were enumerated 1820 in Morgan County. William Patrick, the Revolutionary soldier who in Newton County 1827 drew Lee county land granted 1831 was perhaps of the Jasper branch, or he may have been the William who was living in Emanuel County in 1820 a veteran William there drew Cherokee land in 1832. Peggy Patrick married in Jasper, June 13, 1816 Jesse Baker. The appraisers of Jonathan Patrick (her father?) met at Bakers house Oct 11, 1816 to appraise Jonathans estate. Susan and Martha, the orphans of JOHN C. PATRICK, were living in Kites district, Henry County, Ga., in 1827, and drew Lee County land. (See Atkinson, No. 578; also No. 303 in Part 3).