Clan Munro USA
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Emily White

Emily White

Female Abt 1869 - Yes, date unknown

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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Emily White was born about 1869 (daughter of Dr. James E. White and Pocahontas Rebecca Abell); and died.

    Notes:

    Emily may not belong to this family.

    Ref: Clan Munro files - Stroud, Anna Margaret

    Compiled and edited by Allen Alger, Genealogist, Clan Munro Association, USA

    Birth:
    Estimate: This birth date is an estimate based on the birth dates of nearest relatives or contemporaries, or based on other clues such as christening date, marriage date, birth order, etc.


Generation: 2

  1. 2.  Dr. James E. White was born about 1844; and died.

    Notes:

    Compiled and edited by Allen Alger, Genealogist, Clan Munro Association, USA

    Birth:
    Estimate: This birth date is an estimate based on the birth dates of nearest relatives or contemporaries, or based on other clues such as christening date, marriage date, birth order, etc.

    James married Pocahontas Rebecca Abell in 1861. Pocahontas (daughter of Peter Thompson Abell and Emily Monroe Cabell) was born on 4 Aug 1846; died in 1925. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  Pocahontas Rebecca Abell was born on 4 Aug 1846 (daughter of Peter Thompson Abell and Emily Monroe Cabell); died in 1925.

    Notes:

    Pocahontas' first husband was Dr. James White and her second husband was Rev. Joseph King, a minister of the Methodist Episcopal Church South.

    Ref: Clan Munro files - Stroud, Anna Margaret

    Compiled and edited by Allen Alger, Genealogist, Clan Munro Association, USA

    Children:
    1. 1. Emily White was born about 1869; and died.


Generation: 3

  1. 6.  Peter Thompson Abell was born on 29 Jul 1813 in Bardstown, Nelson Co., Kentucky, USA; died on 16 Jan 1874 in Atchison, Atchison Co., Kansas, USA.

    Notes:

    Peter founded Atchison, Kansas in 1872 and served as a lawyer there.

    Compiled and edited by Allen Alger, Genealogist, Clan Munro Association, USA

    Peter married Emily Monroe Cabell on 19 May 1835 in , Chariton Co., Missouri, USA. Emily (daughter of Dr. Edward Blair Cabell and Harriett Forbes Monroe) was born on 12 Apr 1818 in Bardstown, Nelson Co., Kentucky, USA; died in in Atchison, Atchison Co., Kansas, USA. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 7.  Emily Monroe Cabell was born on 12 Apr 1818 in Bardstown, Nelson Co., Kentucky, USA (daughter of Dr. Edward Blair Cabell and Harriett Forbes Monroe); died in in Atchison, Atchison Co., Kansas, USA.

    Notes:

    Ref: Clan Munro files - Stroud, Anna Margaret

    Compiled and edited by Allen Alger, Genealogist, Clan Munro Association, USA

    Children:
    1. Susan Emily Abell was born on 1 Nov 1836; and died.
    2. Harriet M. Abell was born about 1838.
    3. Elizabeth J. Abell was born about 1839.
    4. Edward Cabell Abell was born on 4 Dec 1841; and died.
    5. Addison Slye Abell was born on 21 Apr 1844; and died.
    6. 3. Pocahontas Rebecca Abell was born on 4 Aug 1846; died in 1925.
    7. Harriet J. Abell was born on 10 Feb 1849; and died.
    8. Pamela Davis Abell was born on 2 Jul 1851.
    9. Adela T. Abell was born about 1853.
    10. Ellen Abell was born on 5 Aug 1856; and died.
    11. Peter Thompson Abell was born in 1858; and died.


Generation: 4

  1. 14.  Dr. Edward Blair Cabell was born on 29 May 1788 in Repton, , Virginia, USA (son of Col. Joseph Cabell, Jr. and Pocahontas Rebecca Bolling); died on 29 Aug 1850 in , , Missouri, USA; was buried in Keytesville, Chariton Co., Missouri, USA.

    Notes:

    Edward was a descendant of King Powhatan through Pocahontas and John Rolfe.

    After Edward and Harriett married, they settled in Barren County, Kentucky. In 1818, they moved to Missouri and settled in what is now Chariton County, 200 miles north of St. Louis at a place 60 miles west of Daniel Boone, the great pioneer, and immediately upon the borders of the Indian tribes, with whom they established the most friendly relations.

    The Indians settled their small causes among themselves, but their hard ones they brought to Edward. Edward said, "I never would act except at the request, and in the presence, of the head chief and his councillors, who would stand by and witness the proceedings with the utmost gravity. Without the shadow of legal authority, I would take my seat under the shade of some large tree, surrounded by 50 to 100 Indians. The matter of dispute was brought to the spot,--whether an ox, horse, bows, arrows, or guns, etc. The plaintiff came forward, or some one for him, and set forth his claims, etc.; then his witnesses were called and examined first by him, then by the defendant. Next the defendant came forward, made his statement, and gave his reasons for holding the property; then his witnesses were called and examined, first by him, then by the plaintiff." He said they all spoke with such brevity, and so directly to the point, that he rarely ever found any difficulty in giving judgment. He always wrote his decision down on paper and read it aloud three times in the hearing of all present, and then handed it to the head chief, who would hold it up and repeat its contents word for word, although he did not know a letter of the alphabet; then he would announce it in the Indian language, and have the property delivered to the right owner. Then there would be signs of satisfaciton: "Ough! ough! good man! good judge! good heart! good head! He wise: he talk to Great Spirit!" The Indians may have known that he was descended from King Powhatan, the father of Pocohontas.

    He was elected first clerk of Chariton County, and soon after, clerk of the circuit court.

    The following letter was written by Major Charles Yancey, of Traveller's Rest, Buckingham County, Virginia to "His Excellency President Tyler":

    "February 18, 1842. Dear Sir,--Permit me to introduce to your notice Mr. Edward B. Cabell, of Missouri, who, I presume, is now in the city of Washington, having left here a few days since. Mr. Cabell seeks the office of Register of the Land Office, which is contemplated to be established in what is called Platte country in Missouri. I think I can say he is a man of integrity, which is hazarding much to say in these days of great moral depravity. You know the Cabell family, and, I presume, the Bolling; his mother was sister to Powhatan and Senacous, and he married a daughter of Joseph J. Monroe. You now have his heraldry; and I rate people very much by their stock, as I do the blooded horse. He is honest, moral, sober, and of business habits. If you cannot do better, take him."

    Harriett and Edward were members of the Methodist church for many years. Edward was known as "Uncle Ned" by nearly everyone he knew. He was the friend of the friendless, and his house was the well-known home of the stranger. They took charge of several children whose parents died in extreme want, and raised them from infancy as tenderly as they did their own and finally provided them with comfortable homes.

    Ref: Clan Munro files - Stroud, Anna Margaret - Printout of graves at
    Keytesville Cemetery at Keytesville, Missouri

    Compiled and edited by Allen Alger, Genealogist, Clan Munro Association, USA

    Buried:
    Edward was buried at Keytesville Cemetery. His tombstone inscription says he was born 29 My 1788 and died 29 Aug 1850 - 62 years.

    Edward married Harriett Forbes Monroe on 10 Apr 1812 in Charlottesville, Charlottesville (city), Virginia, USA. Harriett (daughter of Joseph Jones Monroe and Elizabeth Kerr) was born on 15 Apr 1794 in , , Virginia, USA; died on 22 Mar 1857 in Keytesville, Chariton Co., Missouri, USA; was buried in Keytesville, Chariton Co., Missouri, USA. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 15.  Harriett Forbes Monroe was born on 15 Apr 1794 in , , Virginia, USA (daughter of Joseph Jones Monroe and Elizabeth Kerr); died on 22 Mar 1857 in Keytesville, Chariton Co., Missouri, USA; was buried in Keytesville, Chariton Co., Missouri, USA.

    Notes:

    Ref: Clan Munro files - Stroud, Anna Margaret

    References:

    (1) "Munro Eagle" - #26 - 1996 - p. 28-29

    Ref: Clan Munro files - Stroud, Anna Margaret - Printout of graves at
    Keytesville Cemetery at Keytesville, Missouri

    Compiled and edited by Allen Alger, Genealogist, Clan Munro Association, USA

    Buried:
    Harriett was buried at Keytesville Cemetery. Her tombstone inscription said she died age 62 years, 11 months and 7 days - wife of E.B.

    Children:
    1. Charles Joseph Cabell was born on 26 Apr 1813 in , Fayette Co., Kentucky, USA; died on 10 Oct 1882 in , Chariton Co., Missouri, USA; was buried in Brunswick, Chariton Co., Missouri, USA.
    2. 7. Emily Monroe Cabell was born on 12 Apr 1818 in Bardstown, Nelson Co., Kentucky, USA; died in in Atchison, Atchison Co., Kansas, USA.
    3. Dr. Jane Browder Cabell was born on 14 Jul 1823 in , Chariton Co., Missouri, USA; died on 21 Jan 1849 in Keytesville, Chariton Co., Missouri, USA; was buried in Keytesville, Chariton Co., Missouri, USA.
    4. John Linneus B. Cabell was born on 7 Nov 1825; died on 29 Jan 1846; was buried in Keytesville, Chariton Co., Missouri, USA.
    5. Pocahontas Rebecca Cabell was born on 29 Nov 1830 in , Chariton Co., Missouri, USA; died in Nov 1881 in , Chariton Co., Missouri, USA.
    6. Dr. Robert Harvey Cabell was born on 13 Dec 1832 in , Chariton Co., Missouri, USA; died in in , Grundy Co., Missouri, USA.