1765 - 1824 (59 years)
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Name |
Gabriel Maupin |
Born |
1765 |
Albemarle County, Virginia [1] |
Gender |
Male |
Died |
1824 |
Madison County, Kentucky [1] |
Person ID |
I1721 |
Dabneys of Virginia |
Last Modified |
23 Feb 2019 |
Father |
John Maupin, b. Abt 1725, Hanover County, Virginia , d. 1806, Albemarle County, Virginia (Age ~ 81 years) |
Mother |
Frances (Fanny) Dabney, b. 1733, d. Bef 24 Aug 1806 (Age < 73 years) |
Married |
1745 [2, 3] |
Family ID |
F326 |
Group Sheet |
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Notes |
- Gabriel Maupin was born to John and Frances (Dabney) Maupin in 1765 in Albemarle County, Virginia.
He married Susannah Bailey February 16 1792. They had 12 children: Dabney, born about 1792, married Polly Shifflett April 17, 1817; Margaret Harris, born about 1793, married Joshua Shifflett June 30, 1814; Betsy, born about 1795, unmarried; Jennings, unmarried; Sallie C, born about 1801, married Abraham Emarine July 10, 1822; Susan, born about 1803, married Mr. Stifner of Fayette County, Kentucky; Polly, married Will P. Gilbert July 19, 1826; Frances Dabney, born about 1805, married John R. Wright July 4, 1826; William Overton, born about 1806, married Susannah Cooper October 6, 1831; John, died in Panola, Kentucky, married first to Miss Thompson, second to Rachel Green; Callam/Callum, died in Little Rock, Arkansas, unmarried; Cynthia, born in 1810, married first to Covington Cooper October 27, 1831, Covington died December 22, 1851, leaving 8 children, married second to widower Jacob D. Lowery, who had 9 children, subsequently had 3 more children, crossed western plains by ox team during 1852/53, wintering at Fort Bridger in southwestern Wyoming, settled first near Sutter’s Fort, California, then moved to Sonoma County, finally to Mendocino County, where Cynthia died at Yorkville, January 16, 1895, aged about 85.
Gabriel first appeared in the Albemarle County tax lists in1792 and continued to be listed through 1806 with 0-2 slaves and 1-4 horses. In the latter part of 1806 or early 1807, he and Susannah with their children moved to Madison County, Kentucky, where they settled on Drowning Creek on rented or loaned land. He continued to be charged with taxes on 0-2 horses and no slaves through 1823. He probably died before the 1824 tax assessment and Susannah remarried to Basil Pinkston June 21, 1825. [1, 5, 6]
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