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RUSSELL Thomas

Male Abt 1869 -


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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  RUSSELL Thomas was born about 1869 in WV (son of RUSSELL Charles W. and COLLETT Mary Ellen).

Generation: 2

  1. 2.  RUSSELL Charles W. was born on 19 Dec 1819 in Winchester, Frederick Co., VA; died on 05 Aug 1885 in Beverly, Randolph Co., WV.

    Charles married COLLETT Mary Ellen on 27 Oct 1848 in Cumberland, Allegany Co., MD. Mary (daughter of COLLETT Solomon and DAVISSON Edith) was born on 12 Sep 1830 in Beverly, Randolph Co., WV; died on 29 Apr 1912 in Beverly, Randolph Co., WV. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  COLLETT Mary Ellen was born on 12 Sep 1830 in Beverly, Randolph Co., WV (daughter of COLLETT Solomon and DAVISSON Edith); died on 29 Apr 1912 in Beverly, Randolph Co., WV.
    Children:
    1. RUSSELL Perry was born about 1851 in VA.
    2. RUSSELL William was born about 1854 in VA.
    3. RUSSELL Idella was born about 1861 in VA.
    4. RUSSELL Luta L. was born about 1863 in VA or WV.
    5. 1. RUSSELL Thomas was born about 1869 in WV.


Generation: 3

  1. 6.  COLLETT Solomon was born in 1788 in Beverly, Randolph Co., WV; died in 1838 in Beverly, Randolph Co., WV.

    Solomon married DAVISSON Edith about 1818 in Beverly, Randolph Co., WV. Edith (daughter of DAVISSON Maj. Daniel and IZARD Prudence) was born in 1782 in Clarksburg, Harrison Co., WV; died in 1862 in Beverly, Randolph Co., WV. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 7.  DAVISSON Edith was born in 1782 in Clarksburg, Harrison Co., WV (daughter of DAVISSON Maj. Daniel and IZARD Prudence); died in 1862 in Beverly, Randolph Co., WV.
    Children:
    1. COLLETT Edmund Davisson was born in 1818 in Beverly, Randolph Co., WV.
    2. COLLETT Edgar Davisson was born about 1819 in Beverly, Randolph Co., WV.
    3. COLLETT Hugh Phelps was born in 1824 in Beverly, Randolph Co., WV; died after 1880 in Calhoun Co., WV.
    4. COLLETT John Sutton was born in 1827 in Beverly, Randolph Co., WV; died after 1880 in Taylor Co., WV.
    5. COLLETT Charles C. was born about 1829 in Beverly, Randolph Co., WV.
    6. 3. COLLETT Mary Ellen was born on 12 Sep 1830 in Beverly, Randolph Co., WV; died on 29 Apr 1912 in Beverly, Randolph Co., WV.
    7. COLLETT William Blackburn was born in 1832 in Beverly, Randolph Co., WV; died in 1860 in Beverly, Randolph Co., WV.
    8. COLLETT George Caplinger was born in 1835 in Beverly, Randolph Co., WV; died after 1880 in Beverly, Randolph Co., WV.


Generation: 4

  1. 14.  DAVISSON Maj. Daniel was born in 1748 in Millstone River, Middlesex Co., NJ (son of Sr. Obadiah Davisson and Elizabeth); died in 1819 in Clarksburg, Harrison Co., WV.

    Notes:

    In 1773, Daniel and Prudence built a log cabin on Elk Creek in Harrison County, VA on the present day site of Clarksburg, WV. Their claim on 400 acres of land was recognized when the land commissioner sat in Clarksburg in 1781. By 1778, Davisson had permitted a number of settlers to build cabins adjacent to his. One cabin joined another to form a wall that made the little village a fort. In that time of Indian raids, a fort was a necessary consideration.

    At its first meeting near Buckhannon in 1784, the Harrison County Court decided to place the county buildings on Daniel Davisson’s. George Jackson asked permission at the same meeting to build a dam and grist mill on Elk Creek about a hundred yards from the edge of the village. Daniel is everywhere in the court records of the 1780’s. He viewed the road “to Levi Shinn’s”, filled and order to “to build stocks, whipping post, and pillory” in 1785 and collected a shilling for candles he furnished the justices in 1786. He accepted a place on the committee to superintend construction of a building for Randolph Academy in 1788 and proved to the court that he worked 20 days in 1788 and 30 days in 1790 as a commissioner helping to cut a road from the State Road near Kingwood to the mouth of the Little Kanawha River. In 1788, he presented the court his commission as a Captain in The Virginia militia.

    The Harrison County court ordered a courthouse erected in 1787 and by 1790, Daniel had built a residence and “ordinary” across the street. This establishment functioned as a store, hotel, restaurant and meeting place. In 1790, the county court accepted Hezekiah Davisson in place of Daniel “to keep the road in repair from for of Elk in Clarksburg to Limestone Creek and from the courthouse to the mouth of the Elk”.

    Apparently the Davisson establishment served an an unofficial adjunct to the Courthouse. By 1795, the court authorized Daniel to “keep the courthouse key and to sweep the courthouse clean for a year at 15 shillings.” By 1800, the court allowed Daniel $12.50 for his room to hold court for 1 year.

    In 1799, Daniel was commissioned a Major in the 11th Regiment of the Virginia Militia. That year the governor received Daniel’s name as a man likely to be a justice of Harrison County. Daniel was voted a delegate to thwe Virginia Assembly in 1801 and in 1802. In 1817, Daniel was appointed High Sheriff of Harrison County for 1 year. Prudence (Izzard) Davisson died in 1806 and Daniel in 1818.

    BIBLIOGRAPHY:
    "Clarksburg, A Bicentennial Album"
    "History of Harrison County WV" p.153

    From:
    A History and Genealogy
    The Davissons
    Twelve Generations
    1630-1992
    Davidson-Davison-Davisson Families
    By Russell Lee Davisson published 1993.

    Major Daniel Davisson (Obadiah, Josiah, Daniel) was born in the Millstone Valley of New Jersey, circa 1748; he died at Clarksburg, Virginia, in 1819; Daniel Davisson is buried at the Hopewell Baptist Grounds, near West Main and Chestnut streets, at Clarksburg, Harrison County, Virginia (West Virginia), now the Daniel Davisson DAR Cemetery. He was probably married in 1772, at Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, to Prudence Izzard, daughter of George Izzard of South Carolina; said to be a niece of Aaron Burr; she died circa 1806(?) (deed 1808). Her name was variously spelled as Izzard and Izard, but the later spelling is used by her Davisson progeny.

    His 400-acre settlement right made in 1773, and certified in 1781, included the principal part of Clarksburg between Elk Creek and the West Fork River. His cabin was allegedly located on Chestnut Street between Pike and Main streets. From being the first settler, he is known as the "Proprietor of Clarksburg." He later built a large stone building on the northwest corner of Second and Main streets where he live for many years. For a long time he kept an ordinary, a tavern or eating house serving regular meals, which was authorized by the county court held 18 September 1787. The author's grandfather told him that next to Daniel Davisson's ordinary was a large livery where he also provided stall hay and oats for the horses of his customers.

    Major Davisson was one of the leading men of the county. He took part in the revolutionary struggle being commander of Nutter's Fort. His revolutionary service is referred to in the pension affidavit of his brother Isaac mentioned previously. At the court held on 18 March 1785 he was awarded a contract for the erection at Clarksburg of stocks, a whipping post and pillory. At the following April court he was named surveyor of a highway in "Monongalie," Harrison and Ohio counties, Virginia. Daniel and Hezekiah Davisson were appointed to a commission to locate the road. In 1788, these same Davissons were named trustees for Randolph Academy, then authorized by the General Assembly of Virginia. He was a delegate to the House of Burgesses in 1801-1803. At the age of sixty-nine years, in 1817, he was named high sheriff for Harrison County by the governor of Virginia.

    The earliest record of the building of a church in Clarksburg is contained in a deed from Daniel Davisson dated June 21, 1790, which convenes to the "Congregation of Regular Baptist member of Hopewell Church and their successors, in consideration of ten shillings, a lot containing three rods and seven perches." This lot is located on the south side of what is now Main Street, just west of Chestnut Street, and was used a a burial ground from 1788 until shortly after the close of the Civil War. The Daniel Davisson Chapter of the DAR was named in his honor. The chapter currently maintains the burial grounds as a historic site; the church and most grave markers have long disappeared.

    Died:
    Interment: 1818 Hopewell Baptist Church (now Daniel Davisson DAR Cemetery)

    Maj. married IZARD Prudence in 1772 in Philadelphia, Philadelphia Co., PA. Prudence was born in 1750 in Philadelphia, Philadelphia Co., PA. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 15.  IZARD Prudence was born in 1750 in Philadelphia, Philadelphia Co., PA.
    Children:
    1. DAVISSON Henry was born in 1774 in Clarksburg, Harrison Co., WV; died after 26 Aug 1824.
    2. DAVISSON Catherine was born about 1776 in Clarksburg, Harrison Co., WV; died in Clarksburg, Harrison Co., WV.
    3. DAVISSSON Lemuel Edward was born about 1778 in Clarksburg, Harrison Co., WV; died about 1832 in Clarksburg, Harrison Co., WV.
    4. DAVISSON Elizabeth was born on 02 Feb 1779 in Clarksburg, Harrison Co., WV; died in Beverly, Randolph Co., WV.
    5. DAVISSON Nathaniel was born in 1780 in Clarksburg, Harrison Co., WV; died in 1806 in Harrison Co., WV.
    6. 7. DAVISSON Edith was born in 1782 in Clarksburg, Harrison Co., WV; died in 1862 in Beverly, Randolph Co., WV.
    7. DAVISSON Martha Louise was born in 1784 in Clarksburg, Harrison Co., WV; died in Beverly, Randolph Co., WV.
    8. DAVISSON George Izard was born on 29 Apr 1786 in Clarksburg, Harrison Co., WV; died on 04 Apr 1836 in Harrison Co., WV.
    9. DAVISSON Prudence Izard was born on 07 Feb 1788; died on 03 Jan 1876.