Finding Southern Ancestors

Rachal Mills Lennon, M.A., CG

Certified Genealogist

 

Work Samples

 

Case Studies: Peer-Reviewed Journals

“A Proposed English Ancestry for Henry2 Ball (circa 1676–1735) of Middlesex County, Virginia.” [Establishes birth-family and place of origin for a yeoman immigrant who left no record attesting any birthplace or kin.]

“Jonathan Turner—More Than a Name: A Carolina Case Study in Dissecting Records.” [Separates three same-name individuals through the analytical use of Revolutionary War Stub Indents and contextual records. Winner of NGS Quarterly Award of Excellence, 2010.]

 “Mother, Thy Name is Mystery! Finding the Slave Who Bore Philomene Dorat.” [The research reported in this article identified the three generations of female slaves immortalized now in Lalita Tademy’s Cane River, an Oprah’s Book Club Selection and New York Times Best Seller.]

“Rachael ‘Fanny’ Devereaux/Martin of Alabama and Florida, a Free Woman of Color: Discovering a Name Change through the Federal Census.” [Demonstrates how to effectively correlate pre-1850 censuses for poor households that left few public records.]

 “The Wives of Jonathan Turner: Identification of Women in Pre-Twentieth-Century South Carolina.” [Uses the FAN Principle to identify three wives of a backcountry farmer in a place and time that did not record marriages. Winner of NGS Quarterly Award of Excellence, 2005. The subject of the article is a different Jonathan Turner from the three Revolutionary-era men.]

 

Papers & Theses: Unpublished

“An Architectural and Social Analysis of Beverley Manor, Virginia, 1745–1770.” [Reconstructs the earliest structures of Beverley Manor—internally and externally—by merging genealogical, historical, and architectural methodologies; includes biographical information about the earliest Manor landowners. M. A. Thesis, University of Virginia.]

“The Slave Trade in Microcosm: Natchitoches Parish, Louisiana, 1850-1855.” [A targeted study of all slave sales in a prosperous cotton-plantation regionits nature and participants, its economic triggers and restraints, and its impact on the individuals whose lives were bartered, mortgaged, and sold. Doctoral seminar paper, University of Alabama.]

 

Reports

 

Focus: Burned Counties and Same Name Individuals:

“Herringtons of Greene County, Mississippi, and Barnwell District, South Carolina” [Analysis and research designed to separate the identities of many same-name individuals across three states in the 1770–1825 periodincluding multiple burned counties.]

            Map Link:

“Barnwell District, South Carolina … 1818” [Mills Atlas], David Rumsay Map Collection http://www.davidrumsey.com/luna/servlet/s/il5yxa

 

Focus: Military Service

“William Cooksey of Georgia’s Continental Line: Finding Clues to Origin and Service” [Analysis and extensive development of two scant military records left by a North Georgia frontiersman of unknown birth and kin.]