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Ahnentafel № 278 · The compiler's 6× great-grandparent

Andrew Jackson Attribute Find a Grave Uploaded by D. Warmuth

ANDREW Harryman Jackson

1754–1837 · of Loudoun Co., Virginia ("on the waters of Goose Creek")

Paternal — Grandfather's lineprobable

Birth

30 May 1754
Loudoun Co., Virginia ("on the waters of Goose Creek")

Death

30 Apr 1837
Brookville, Franklin, Indiana, USA

Biography

From the Hyten family archive; subject is Andrew Harryman Jackson (1754–1837), a 6× great-grandparent of the compiler on the paternal-grandfather (PP) line. This entry covers his Virginia birth on the waters of Goose Creek, parentage, marriage to Elizabeth Nancy Sargent, daughter Rachel, removal to Indiana, and Revolutionary-era context. Notable: born in Loudoun County, Virginia; died in Brookville, Franklin County, Indiana on the Whitewater frontier.

Andrew Harryman Jackson (1754–1837) was born on the thirtieth day of May 1754 in Loudoun County, Virginia, on the waters of Goose Creek, a region of rolling Piedmont country then being opened to settlement along the western edges of the colony. He was the son of Thomas Jackson (1728–1766) and Patience Harryman (1733–1763), from whom he received the middle name by which the family long remembered him. Both of his parents died while he was yet a young boy — his mother when he was nine years of age, and his father only three years thereafter — leaving him orphaned at twelve in the unsettled years preceding the American Revolution.

Andrew came of age in the very season of independence. The Loudoun country in which he had been born was, by the 1770s, alive with the political ferments of the colonial cause, and Virginia furnished men and provisions in great measure to the Continental effort. It was in these years that he was united in marriage to Elizabeth Nancy Sargent, and of this union was born a daughter, Rachel Sargent Jackson (1774–1856), through whom the line is here continued.

In the decades following the Revolution, the Jackson family was carried westward upon that great tide of migration which bore so many Virginia households across the Alleghenies and into the Ohio Valley. Andrew ended his days in Brookville, Franklin County, Indiana — a town situated upon the Whitewater River and among the earliest organized seats of the new state of Indiana, admitted to the Union in 1816. There, on the thirtieth day of April 1837, he died in his eighty-third year, having lived through the colonial, revolutionary, and early national eras of the Republic.

Andrew Harryman Jackson was the compiler's sixth great-grandfather on the paternal-grandfather (PP) line.

Family

Children

Sources

Source citations and original documents will appear here as research progresses. Currently sourced from Ancestry tree hints — to be verified.

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