Jesse Jonathan Walker

Male - UNKNOWN


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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Jesse Jonathan Walker (son of Daniel William Sr. Walker and Mary Tibbetts); died in UNKNOWN.

Generation: 2

  1. 2.  Daniel William Sr. Walker died in UNKNOWN.

    Daniel + Mary Tibbetts. Mary (daughter of Joseph Arthur Sr. Tibbetts and Elizabeth Porter) was born on 28 Dec 1864; died on 2 Apr 1929. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  Mary Tibbetts was born on 28 Dec 1864 (daughter of Joseph Arthur Sr. Tibbetts and Elizabeth Porter); died on 2 Apr 1929.
    Children:
    1. Verba Alice Walker died in UNKNOWN.
    2. Mary Pearl Walker died in UNKNOWN.
    3. Katherine Lavina Walker died in UNKNOWN.
    4. Caroline Elizabeth Walker died in UNKNOWN.
    5. 1. Jesse Jonathan Walker died in UNKNOWN.
    6. Ethel Walker died in UNKNOWN.
    7. Dixie Marguerite Walker died in UNKNOWN.
    8. Freeliming Clark Walker died in UNKNOWN.
    9. Hattie Ruth Walker was born about 1900 in Bloomington, Garrett County, Maryland; died on 24 Aug 1986 in Cumberland, Allegany County, Maryland.
    10. William Daniel Jr. Walker was born about 1902; died in UNKNOWN.
    11. Beulah Marie Walker was born in 1904; died in UNKNOWN.


Generation: 3

  1. 6.  Joseph Arthur Sr. Tibbetts died in UNKNOWN.

    Joseph married Elizabeth Porter on 22 Dec 1855 in Allegany County, Maryland. Elizabeth (daughter of Josiah M. Porter and Sarah Porter) was born on 11 Dec 1837 in Eckhart Mines, Allegany County, Maryland; died after 1890 in Birmingham, Jefferson County, Alabama. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 7.  Elizabeth PorterElizabeth Porter was born on 11 Dec 1837 in Eckhart Mines, Allegany County, Maryland (daughter of Josiah M. Porter and Sarah Porter); died after 1890 in Birmingham, Jefferson County, Alabama.
    Children:
    1. Caroline Tibbetts was born on 6 Jul 1858; died in UNKNOWN.
    2. Cecelia Tibbetts was born in 1862; died in UNKNOWN.
    3. Frelingheysen Tibbetts was born in 1863; died in UNKNOWN.
    4. 3. Mary Tibbetts was born on 28 Dec 1864; died on 2 Apr 1929.
    5. William Tibbetts was born on 17 Oct 1867; died in 1910.
    6. Katherine Tibbetts was born on 18 Dec 1872; died in UNKNOWN.
    7. Joseph Arthur Jr. Tibbetts was born on 2 Nov 1874; died on 23 Dec 1918 in Beryl, Mineral County, West Virginia.


Generation: 4

  1. 14.  Josiah M. PorterJosiah M. Porter was born on 1 Oct 1799 in Allegany County, Maryland (son of Gabriel McKenzie Porter and Rebecca Frost); died on 7 Nov 1880 in Claysville, Allegany County. Maryland.

    Notes:

    From Cumberland Times transcription:

    PORTER 15 Nov 1880 Josiah Porter died 07 Nov 1880 at his home in Eckhart. He was born 01 Oct. 1799, and was 81 years, one month and 6 days of age. He was born and died at the "Porter Settlement". From 1830-1840, he was disburser of appointments for the National Road. He was also a pioneer in the shipping of coal to the East via the Potomac flatboat system.

    The following excerpt is from John Marshall Porter's "Sketches of Maryland Porters", circa 1976. Scott Carter Williams brought it to the attenetion of Michael A. McKenzie in 2018.

    Josiah Porter... "Grandpap Si'

    As anyone who has Samuel D. Porter's genealogy can note, Grandpap Si was the son of Gabriel Porter and Rebecca Frost. Gabriel was a brother of the Samuel, who was father of John, who was the father of the Michigan Porters. So we learn that John and Grandpap Si were first cousins.

    All that I am writing about these early Porter ancestors comes form what Frank Porter wrote, and what I learned from my father. Gabriel had other sons and daughters, but I know of no account of their descendants such as was kept of Grandpap Si. Squire Mike and Grandpap Si were first cousins, and we shall learn that intermarriage of close relationship took place between some of their descendants.

    Grandpap Si married first, Mary Margaret Combs, who became mother of his first nine children. His second wife, Sarah was a daughter of his first cousin, Souire Mike. Sarah, whom he married in 1836 bore him twelve children over the next twenty five.years...three of whom died in infancy. In total, Grandpap Si was father of 21 children.

    Grandpap Si lived on a farm adjoining Rose Meadows which he rented from a mining company. It did not come into ownership of Porters until more than a century later when around 1930 three of his grandsons purchased it from the coal company that was selling their holdings in that area. Since then, Marshall Robert bought the shares of his brothers, and is now sole owner. He is nearly 80, and is still living there and farming the land.

    Grandpap Si and his sons mined coal from under the farm, paying a royalty to the coal company who owned the land. Much of that coal was hauled to Cumberland in wagons. There it was loaded on rafts that were built on the
    low tides of the Potomac River. The rafts were made from slim tree trunks, bound together with cables and ropes to make a flat platform about 30 x 30 feet. The coal was hauled to the river over the old National Pike by horse and ox teams, in wagons during summer, and sleds in winter. There it was loaded on the rafts whiFsei held around 50 tons. When the snow melted and spring rains came, the river arose to near flood stage, and the raft was ready to be unleashed from its moorings. Then four to six young, strong, fearless men loaded provisions of food and clothing and bedding, climbed aboard vrith only long poles to guide the cargo down the swift, treacherous waters of the Potomac to Washington. If they delivered the raft and coal intact to the destination, they received the money for it. Then they walked back to the farm near Frostburg, a distance of 150 miles. But it wasn't always that easy.

    I have heard my father say, and he knew only what he had heard from Grandpap Si and others, that many times those rafts would flounder on rocks in the middle of the river when the water current would recede. The raftsmen would have to abandon their cargo, and wade ashore and walk home in wet clothing with no money for the coal. Also, there were many raft loads of coal that would be washed ashore on a gravel bar that could not be moved back into the current, and had to be abandoned by the raftsmen. Then there were the rafts loaded with coal that would be torn apart by unseen rocks in the river. The coal would be lost, and the raftsmen barely escaping with their lives...and not all of them escaped with their lives. Some of these raftsmen drowned in the swift current. Others died of exposure when they were forced into the icy water. If they reached the shore, they didn't have a dry match to start a fire and they perished in their wet clothing.

    Rafting could be done only under treacherous conditions, when the water was deep enough to carry the rafts above the rocky river bed.

    The C&O canal, that ran from Cumberland, Md. to Georgetown, near Washington was completed and ready for transportation in 1850. That ended the rafting on the Potomac. After that coal was hauled to Cumberland and loaded on canal boats.

    Grandpap Si was a devoutly religious man, from all I have heard of him. Frank Porter spoke of him as "One of the few Saints of earth I have known." My father said he would not let one of his men nor horses work on Sunday nor Christmas. But that on New Years day, unless it fell on Sunday, he wanted every man and team to be working... a sort of omen or superstition that, if he began the New Year making some money it would be a prosperous year for him.

    It seems apparent that Grandpap Si's children, 15 of whom were girls married one by one until most of them were scattered and gone from the farm when his younger son M.M.T. (Doc.) Porter began taking over the management of the farm that had been home of the large family. Grandpap Si died in 1880. He is buried in the Porter graveyard, just up on the hill above the farm he spent his life on.

    I can find no dates of the deaths of either of his wives, Mary Ellen Combs and Sarah Porter.

    He died on 7 Nov 1880 at the age of 81 in Eckhart, Allegany Co., Maryland. Phyllis Rosley, in a note dated May 16, 2012, offers this information:

    Josiah Porter, "Grandpap Si" was the s/o Gabriel McKenzie Porter and
    Rebecca Frost was born Oct. 1, 1799 and died Nov. 7, 1882 (sic: 1880).
    He married first, Aug. 1, 1822, Mary Margaret Combs. She is the d/o John
    Combs and Mary Margaret Trimble and was born May 3, 1803. They had 9
    children. Josiah married, second, Oct. 4, 1836/37, Sarah Porter. She is the d/o Michael Porter and Elizabeth Devore, and was born Aug. 1, 1816. They had 12 children.

    Josiah Porter, "Grandpa Si", was the son of Gabriel McKenzie Porter and
    Rebecca Frost. He was twice married and was the father of 21 childre
    was first married to Mary Margaret Combs, b 1803. His second wife was Sarah Porter, born 1816 and daughter Michael R. Porter, "Squire Mike", and
    Elizabeth Devore b Aug. 19, 1816 d. Dec. 8, 1870. Buried Porter Cem., Eckhart Mines, Md. It is through Josiah's offspring, with his second wife, that the Carter family began marrying into the Porter family and two families soon became inter-twined. Children of the first marriage to Mary Margaret Combs are: John Wesley, b 1823 d. 1883; Rebecca b 1824; Sophia b 1825; Margaret Emily, b 1827; Gabriel, b 1830; Elisha, b 1832; Eleanor, b 1834; Helen; and Nancy Porter.

    He was buried in Porter Cemetery, Eckhart, Allegany Co., Maryland.

    Josiah married Sarah Porter on 10 Oct 1837 in Allegany County, Maryland. Sarah (daughter of Michael Porter and Elizabeth Devore, daughter of Michael G. (Squire Mike) Porter and Elizabeth Devore) was born on 19 Aug 1816 in Eckhart, Allegany County, Maryland; died on 8 Dec 1870 in Eckhart, Allegany County, Maryland. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 15.  Sarah Porter was born on 19 Aug 1816 in Eckhart, Allegany County, Maryland (daughter of Michael Porter and Elizabeth Devore, daughter of Michael G. (Squire Mike) Porter and Elizabeth Devore); died on 8 Dec 1870 in Eckhart, Allegany County, Maryland.
    Children:
    1. 7. Elizabeth Porter was born on 11 Dec 1837 in Eckhart Mines, Allegany County, Maryland; died after 1890 in Birmingham, Jefferson County, Alabama.
    2. Mary Jane Porter was born on 10 Jul 1839 in Eckhart Mines, Allegany County, Maryland; died on 25 Aug 1903 in Eckhart, Allegany County, Maryland.
    3. Maria Porter was born on 25 Oct 1842 in Eckhart Mines, Allegany County, Maryland; died on 21 Dec 1907 in Eckhart, Allegany County, Maryland.
    4. Josiah M. (Little "Si") Porter was born on 25 Jan 1848 in Maryland; died on 20 Jul 1918 in Eckhart, Allegany County, Maryland.
    5. Catherine Porter was born on 10 May 1849 in Eckhart Mines, Allegany County, Maryland; died on 6 Feb 1881 in Frostburg, Allegany County, Maryland.
    6. Harriett Porter was born on 30 May 1851 in Eckhart Mines, Allegany County, Maryland; died on 1 Apr 1910 in Eckhart, Allegany County, Maryland.
    7. Mary Porter was born on 16 Oct 1852 in Eckhart Mines, Allegany County, Maryland; died on 18 Oct 1854.
    8. Louise Porter was born on 27 Oct 1853 in Eckhart Mines, Allegany County, Maryland; died in 1860.
    9. Caroline Porter was born on 27 Oct 1853 in Eckhart Mines, Allegany County, Maryland; died in UNKNOWN.
    10. Matilda Porter was born on 17 Jun 1855 in Eckhart Mines, Allegany County, Maryland; died on 29 Jun 1927 in Eckhart, Allegany County, Maryland.
    11. Morris Miller Townsend Porter was born on 30 May 1857 in Eckhart Mines, Allegany County, Maryland; died on 2 Mar 1912 in Eckhart Mines, Allegany County, Maryland.
    12. William Andrew Porter was born on 20 Aug 1861 in Eckhart Mines, Allegany County, Maryland; died on 13 Dec 1890.


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