The Carson Family

From Washington County, Virginia 
To Rockcastle County, Kentucky
To Jellico, Tennessee
To Davie, Broward County, Florida

 

 

 

James Holman (Holdman, Holeman)
Born: about 1814 in Madison County, Kentucky
Died: about 1886 in Crab Orchard, Lincoln County, Kentucky



James Holman (Holdman, Holeman) was born about 1814 in Madison County, Kentucky. He lived in the area of Brodhead and Crab Orchard, Kentucky, which are on the border of three Kentucky counties: Lincoln, Garrard, and Rockcastle. (At one time part of Garrard County was the western part of Madison County.)

On June 4, 1835 in Garrard County, Kentucky, James Holman was married to Martha Ramsey, the daughter of Alexander Ramsey, by Baptist minister Benjamin Polston

 

 

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I have been unable to find the parents of James Holman (born about 1814 in Madison County, Kentucky) in or around Madison County. The Holeman/Holman Newsletter shows just one Holman family in Madison County - Joseph Holeman, a son of Thomas Holeman of Wilkes County, North Carolina (d. ca 1798). Hardin County, Kentucky is located west of Madison County, Kentucky.

Hardin County, Kentucky was created in 1792 from Nelson County, the fourth county created in what is now Kentucky. Nelson County was created in 1784 from Jefferson County, one of the the three original counties in Kentucky (Fayette, Jefferson and Lincoln). Grayson (1810) and Larue (1843) counties were originally part of Hardin County.


 

 

 

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Jacob Van Meter (1723-1798) was the fourth and youngest son of John Van Meter and his second wife, Margaret Mulinar. Around 1768, Jacob Van Meter (1723-1798) and his wife Letitia Strobe sold their land in Frederick County, Virginia and relocated to the southwestern part of Pennsylvania (which was also claimed by Virginia). In 1779, Jacob Van Meter (1723-1798) again relocated. This time he loaded twenty-seven houseboats with his extended family and floated from Pittsburgh down the Ohio River to near Louisville, Kentucky. They joined a settlement in the part of Nelson County, Kentucky which later became Hardin County, Kentucky. (Letitia Strobe was a sister of the Captain John Strode who founded Strode Station in Clark County, Kentucky, and a first cousin of the William Bryan who married Mary Boone, the sister of Daniel Boone.)

Elizabeth Van Meter (born 1752 in Frederick County, Virginia and died 1803 in Elizabethtown, Hardin County, Kentucky) was the daughter of Jacob Van Meter (1723-1798) and Letitia Strobe. Elizabeth Van Meter (1752-1803) married first John Swan (1744-1783), married second Thomas McNeil (1749-1790), and married third John Vertrees (1741-1803).

 

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The Daniel Holeman mentioned in this article spent most of his life in Hardin County, Kentucky, He did have a son James, but this is not the James Holman who married Martha Ramsey, the daughter of Alexander Ramsey. For more information on the Daniel Holeman who married Rebecca Johnson, click here.

Counties of
MORGAN, MONROE & BROWN, INDIANA
Historical and Biographical.
CHARLES BLANCHARD, Editor.
CHICAGO: F. A. BATTEY & CO., PUBLLSHERS.
1884.

Pages 360-361
Green Township - Biographical Sketches
SARAH RADCLIFF, widow of John Radcliff was born in Madison County, Kentucky, on April 1, 1824, and is a daughter of Daniel
and Rebecca (Johnson) Holman, natives of Virginia. Daniel Holman was married in Virginia in an early day, and then moved to Kentucky,
where he died. Mrs. Holman afterward moved to this county, and died here. Their children were Alfred, Joel, Abel, Harden, James, Harrison,
Tarleton, Jackson, Madison, Perlina, Parmelia, Amanda, Minerva and Sarah. Sarah Holman, our subject, was married in Anderson County,
Ky., on August 15, 1844, to Edward J. Rice. The couple settled in Mercer County, Ky., and in 1848 came to Morgan County, Ind. , where
Mr. Rice died November 18, 1867. In 1869, Mrs. Sarah Rice married John Radcliff, who died on January 25, 1879. She owns 175 acres of
very fine land. Mrs. R. has no family.

 

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Holemans in Grayson County, Kentucky

 

Grayson County, Kentucky is located west of Madison and Woodford Counties, Kentucky. Grayson County was created in 1810 from Hardin and Ohio Counties.

The Holman connection to the Van Meter (Van Metre) family is the September 18, 1805 marriage in Hardin County, Kentucky of Rebecca McNeil (1785-1808) to James Burton Holeman (1780-1876).
* James Burton Holeman (1780-1876) is the son of John Holeman (1736-1837) and Elizabeth Burton (1738-1828) of Virginia, and the great grandson of Capt James Holman of James River, Henrico County, Virginia.
* Rebecca McNeil (1785-1808) is the daughter of Elizabeth Van Meter (1752-1803) and her second husband, Thomas McNeil (1749-1790).
* Elizabeth Van Meter (1752-1803) is the daughter of Jacob Van Meter (born 1723 in Somerset County, New Jersey; died Nov 16, 1798 in Hardin County, Kentucky) and his wife Letitia Strode (1725-1789).

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Captain James Holeman of James River, Henrico County, Virginia

These Holemans in the 1810 census for Grayson County, Kentucky appear to be descendants of Capt James Holeman (1667-1759). 

John Holman     Grayson County, Kentucky     (Three persons including one slave) 
This is the John Holeman (1736-1837) who married Elizabeth Burton.  Grandson of Capt James Holeman (1667-1759) of Virginia

James Holman     Grayson County, Kentucky     (Six persons including one slave) 
This is James Burton Holman (son of John Holeman (1736-1837) and Elizabeth Burton) who married Rebecca W Tong

--

Elizabeth Burton (1738-1828) is the daughter of Robert Burton (1687-1748) and Priscilla Farrar (1690-1768).
Robert Burton (1687-1748) is the son of Robert Burton (abt 1660-1724) and Mary Nowell (1665-1772).
Priscilla Farrar (1690-1768) is the daughter of William Farrar (1657-1721) and Priscilla Baugh (abt 1659-abt 1706)
(See Virginia Surnames)


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John Holeman (1736-1837)

John Holman married Eliz. Burton May 20, 1770 in St James Northam Parish, Goochland County, Virginia. He and Elizabeth are in the 1810 census for Grayson County, Kentucky [Free White Persons - Males - 45 and over: one; Free White Persons - Females - 45 and over : one; Numbers of Slaves: one]

Revolutionary War Pension and Bounty-Land Warrant Application Files, 1800-1900
Name: John Holman
Pension Year: 1833
Application State: Arkansas
Applicant Designation: Survivor's Pension Application File
Archive Publication Number: M804
Archive Roll Number: 1312
Total Pages in Packet: 32
Source Information:
Ancestry.com. Revolutionary War Pension and Bounty-Land Warrant Application Files, 1800-1900 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2010.
Original data: Revolutionary War Pension and Bounty-Land Warrant Application Files (NARA microfilm publication M804, 2,670 rolls). Records of the Department of Veterans Affairs, Record Group 15. National Archives, Washington, D.C.

United States of America
Territory of Arkansas County of Hempstead Sct.
Be it remembered that on the 12th day of October in the year of our Lord 1832 personally appeared in open Court before the Honorable Thomas P Eskridge one of the Judges of the Superior Court of the Territory of Arkansas aforesaid and sole Judge now sitting and presiding in the Circuit Court holden in and for the County of Hempstead aforesaid John Holman a resident of the County of Hempstead and Territory of Arkansas about ninety-six years old who being first duly sworn according to law doth on his oath make the following declaration in order to obtain the benefit of the act of Congress of June the 7th 1832, to wit,
That from the best information in his possession, he was born on or about the twenty fifth day of December 1736 in Goochland County State of Virginia where he was raised and lived until he was about forty-two years old he then removed to North Carolina where he resided two or three years from thence he removed to Powell's Valley in the State of Virginia where he resided about two years thence he removed to Kentucky to a place called the Crab Orchard where he made to crops thence he removed down Kentucky to a place within 6 or 8 miles of Bairds town where he resided about seven years, thence he removed about twenty miles to a place called rough creek where he resided about twelve years, from thence he removed lower down towards a place called Hartford where he resided about eight years, from thence he removed West of the Mississippi River to a place called St. Michael where he resided about twelve years from thence he removed to Hempstead County Arkansas Territory now his present place of residence where he has resided upwards of seven years.
That from lapse of time he finds himself unable to state all the particulars that occurred during the revolutionary war. That he entered the service of the United States in the latter part of the year 1777 as a militia man in the State of Virginia and belonged to a company of infantry commanded by Captain Stokely Tols, that he marched up the country about two hundred and fifty miles to someplace the name of which he does not recollect in the latter part of the year of 1777 or the early part of the year 1788 where he was employed in guarding prisoners that were surrendered by General Burgoyne for several months, that he served upwards of six months as a militia man and obtained a discharge of his Captain which is now lost or mislaid.

Dec 25, 1736 Born in Goochland Co., Virginia
c. 1778 After the Revolution, he continued to live in Goochland County, Virginia for another year
c. 1779-1780 then moved to North Carolina for two or three years
c. 1780-1783 then moved to Powell's Valley, Virginia for about two years
c. 1783-1784 then to Crab Orchard, Lincoln County, Kentucky, where he raised two crops
c. 1785-1792 thence further down in Kentucky, within six or eight miles of Bairdstown, Nelson Co., Kentucky where he resided about seven years
c. 1793-1805 thence twenty miles further on to a place called Rough Creek, Hardin County, Kentucky where he resided about twelve years
c. 1806-1814 thence lower down to Hartford, Ohio County, Kentucky where he lived for eight years
c. 1815-1826 then crossed the Mississippi River to Saint Michaels Township, Madison County, Missouri, where he lived for twelve years
1826 to Hempstead County, Arkansas

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John HOLEMAN, Tyre Glen and Henry Hall witnessed a deed (Written: May 20, 1794; Recorded: October 28, Hardin Co., KY Deed Bk A, p. 50) 
John Glen and Abigail his wife sold 250 acres (on the Bank of Nolin, adjacent to VanMeters line, being a part of an 2000 acre survey patented in the name of William Montgomery) to Thomas Gillilins [Gilleland] for one hundred and twenty pounds Kentucky Currency.

Thomas McIntire, John Holman, Thomas Gilleland witnessed a deed (dated July 3, 1794, Hardin Co., KY Deed Bk A, p. 49)
John Glen and Abigail his wife sold 173 acres (on south side of Nolan being the waters of Green River, a part of Robert Montgomery's 2000 acre survey bounded by McIntire's line) to Jacob Vertrees for forty pounds.

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Bits and Pieces
of Hardin County History
Published by tht Hardin County Historical Society
Vol. III No. 2 Robert Beimdick, Editor April, 1982
page 18

COURT ORDER BOOK, HARDIN COUNTY, KENTUCKY , 1795
At a Court held for Hardin County on Tuesday the twenty seventh of January one thousand seven hundred and ninety five...
Present Patrick Brown John Vertrees Robert Hodgen & Bladin Ashby Gentlemen Justices Robert Hodgen and Bladin Ashby Gentlemen Produced a commission under the hand and seal of his Excelency Isaac Shelby appointing them Justices of the peace for the County of Hardin
which was openly read in Court together with a Certificate there on endorsed by Patrick Brown Esquire that the aforesaid Hodgens and Ashby were qualified to the said commission according to Law...

A Deed from John Glen and Abigail his wife to Thomas Gilliland for two hundred and fifty acres of Land was acknowledged by the said John and ordered to be recorded the said Abigail being privately Examined as the Law directs relinquished her right of Dower in the above mentioned Land...

A Deed from John Glen and Abigail his wife to Jacob Vertrees for one hundred and seventy acres of Land was acknowledged by the said John and was ordered to be recorded. The said Abigail being privately Examined as the Law directs relinquished her right of Dower in the said tract of Land...

A Deed from John Glen and Abigail his wife to Adam Ester for Eighty Eight acres of Land was acknowledged by the said John and ordered to be recorded the said Abigail being privately Examined as the Law directs relinquished her right of Dower in the said tract of Land...

A Deed from John Glen and Abigail his wife to Joseph VanMeter son of Nathan VanMeter for two hundred and sixty two acres of Land was acknowledged by the said John and ordered to be recorded the said Abigail being privately Examined as (the Law) directs relinquished her right of Dower...

Ordered that Conrod Walters be appointed over seer of the Road from Mr Hodgenses Bridge to Mr Pairpoints Mill in the room of John Holeman and all the tithebles that were to assist said Holeman do assist him the said Walters in Clearing and "keeping the said Road in repair...


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Rough Creek also known as No Linn or Nolin Creek. Edward Holeman (1760-1842) [the son of Henry Holeman and his wife Elizabeth. Edward Holeman married Abigail Williams in 1785 in Kentucky.] received a Kentucky Land Grants on this watercourse.

Notes on The Kentucky Land Grants by Willard Rouse Jillson
page 189 Old Kentucky Grants (1793-1856)

Edward Holeman: 2524 3/4 acres; 09/18/1798; Hardin County; Nolinn

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John Holman, veteran, was pensioned at the rate of $20 per annum commencing March 4th, 1831, for service as a private for 6 months in the Virginia militia.
John Holman is buried in the Old Pioneer Cemetery (Old Washington State Park) in Hempstead County, Arkansas.

(See Holmans in southwest Arkansas)

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James Burton Holman

James Holman was in the 1810 Grayson County, Kentucky Census [Free White Persons - Males - Under 10: two; Free White Persons - Males - 26 thru 44 : one; Free White Persons - Females - Under 10: one; Free White Persons - Females - 16 thru 25: one; Numbers of Slaves: one]

James Holman first married Rebecca Mcneil on September 18, 1805 in Hardin County, Kentucky; then Rebecca Tong on April 14, 1809 in Ohio County, Kentucky; and finally the widow, Esther Court Mack, on January 19, 1858 in Lamar County, Texas.

Biographical and Historical Memoirs of Southern Arkansas. Chicago, IL, USA: Goodspeed Publishing, 1890.
p. 415 "... James Holman, was a Kentuckian, who became an emigrant to Missouri, and in 1818 settled in Hempstead County, Ark. Still later he removed to Paris, Tex., and at one time owned nearly all the land on which the town is situated, dying near that place a few years since at quite an advanced age. He was also a member of the Arkansas Legislature, it being a Territory at that time, and he was closely connected with the early history of the State."
p. 539 "William T Holman....was born in Madison County, Missouri, August 9, 1815, the second of ten children reared to maturity by James and Rebecca Tong Holman. The former was born in Kentucky in 1781, and departed this life in Texas in his ninety-eighth year. In early life he emigrated to Madison County, Mo., where he resided until 1824, when he moved to Hempstead County, Arkansas, and there made his home for two years, subsequently coming to Sevier County. He was among the earliest settlers of this county, and took a prominent part in its affairs, representing it one term in the State Legislature. His first marriage was consummated in Kentucky, Miss Elizabeth McNeil becoming his wife, and they became the parents of two children. After her death he married Miss Rebecca Tong, a native of Maryland, who passed to her final home in Paris, Tex., about 1858."

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Other Holmans in Hardin County

 

Who are Daniel and Sally Holman of Washington County, Kentucky?


Title: 1776-1976 TWO CENTURIES IN ELIZABETHTOWN AND HARDIN COUNTY, KENTUCKY
Author: Daniel Elmo Mclure, Jr.

"Robert Nall, born July 1, 1804, died April 6,1876, married Elizabeth Holman, born in 1805, a daughter of Daniel and Sally Holman of Washington County, who had migrated to that place from Virginia and later moved to Hardin County;"

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This appears to be the Robert Nall who married Elizabeth Holman:

Robert Nall
Birth: July 1, 1804 Nelson County, Kentucky
Death: April 6, 1876 Hardin County, Kentucky

He was the son of:

William Nall
Birth: Oct 25, 1770 Courthouse, Sussex County, Virginia
Death: July 17, 1837 Allisons Precinct, Hardin County, Kentucky, 

Susannah Batsel
Birth: Jan 7, 1774 Culpepper, Virginia
Death: May 1810 Nelson County, Kentucky

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Notes on Daniel Holman and his wife Rebecca Johnson from 
Bits and Pieces of Hardin County History
A Publication of Hardin County Historical Society
Mary Jo Jones, Editor
Vol XXI No. 1 Spring 2002 

Blue Ball Baptist Church:
* In 1849 Daniel Holman sold 2-1/4 acres of land to church trustee for one dollar.
* Church was organized at the home of Daniel Holman on June 20, 1849.
* Charter members: Daniel Holman; Francis Hill; Henry Willyard; Robert Nall; Elizabeth Nall; Mary E Nall; Daniel W Nall; Harrison Holman; Isaac Richardson; Mary Wortham; James Holman; Lucy Holman; Lucy Hobbs; Martin S Hill; Mildrew Hill; Nancy Hicks; Jacob Woodring; Thomas Morrison; Lucinda Morrison; William Hicks; Leticia Richardson; Ellen Holman; Thomas H Thomas; and William Tarpley.

[Note: Is this the Daniel Holman who married Rebecca Johnson, or the Daniel Holman who married Sally, the parents of Elizabeth (Holman) Nall?]

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Robert Nall (age 46, born Ky); Elizabeth Nall (age 45, born Ky); and their six children are in the 1850 census for District 3, Hardin County., Kentucky.
neighbors:
Martin (age 48, born Ky) and Elizabeth (age 45, born Ky) Nall household (including John Nall, age 77, born Virginia).
Lucy Hobbs (age 52, born Ky) household

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Robert Nall (age 55, born Ky) and Elizabeth Nall  (age 53, born Ky) and their family were in the 1860 census for District 2, Hardin County, Kentucky
neighbors:
three different Nall households
Charles Woodring (age 45, born Ky); Matilda (Hartley) Woodring (age 43, born Ky); and their children, including Amanda Woodring who married James W Holeman, and Naomi Woodring who married Bryant Woodford Holeman (two of the sons of Thomas J Holeman and Lucinda "Lucy" Hartley).

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The Robert (age 66, born Ky) and Elizabeth (age 64, born Ky) Nall household was in the 1870 census for Allisons Precinct, Hardin County, Kentucky.
neighbors:
son, Cyrus Nall
son-in-law, Luke C Miller
other Nall households

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The widow, Elizabeth Nall (age 76, born Ky, parents born Virginia) was in the 1880 census for Allison, Hardin County, Kentucky.
neighbors:
many Nall households
Harrison Holman (age 66, born Ky, parents born Virginia), including his widowed sister, Mary Wortham.

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Blue Ball Baptist Cemetery
Rineyville, Hardin County, Kentucky

Nall, Robert, b. 1 Jul 1804, d. 6 Apr 1876
Nall, Elizabeth, b. 1806, d. 1892

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Were the Holman and the Nall families connected prior to the marriage of Robert and Elizabeth (Holman) Nall?

William Nall (father of the Robert Nall who married Elizabeth Holman)
Birth: Oct 25, 1770 Courthouse, Sussex County, Virginia
Death: July 17, 1837 Allisons Precinct, Hardin County, Kentucky

Note: Information from Nall Families of America by Sally Nall Dolphin:

William moved with his family to Kentucky about 1786. Following his marriage in 1792, William farmed a portion of his father's land in Nelson County, Kentucky. Following his second marriage, he moved his family across the river (Beech Fork), into Washington County, Kentucky. William purchased 1850 acres of land in October 1828 in Hardin County, Kentucky from John L Helm. This land later became know as Nall's Valley. He deeded portions of his land to his sons in March 1833.

Marriage 1 Susannah Batsel b: Jan 7, 1774 in Culpeper County, Virginia 
Married: Nov 6, 1792 in Nelson County, Kentucky

Marriage 2 Elizabeth (Nall) Nalle b: ABT 1775 in Augusta County, Virginia 
Married: April 4, 1814 in Washington County, Kentucky. (Elizabeth is the daughter of Martin Nall & Winnefred Yancey. She is also the widow of William's second cousin, John Nalle.)

William Nall, Sr., accumulated a very large estate for his time. When he died in 1837, his estate of lands and personal property was distributed among his children and was sufficient to leave all of them rather wealthy.

[See Daniel Holeman who married Rebecca Johnson.]

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Who is Thos J Holeman?

 

The following family was closely associated with the family of Daniel and Rebecca (Johnson) Holeman

Thomas J Holman (born about 1809 in the part of Hardin County, Kentucky that became Larue County) and his wife, Lucinda "Lucy" Hartley (born April 9, 1824 in Hardin County, Kentucky). Lucinda "Lucy" Hartley was the daughter of John Hartley (born Jan 22, 1788 in Fayette Co., Pennsylvania and died August 22, 1829 in Hardin Co., Ky) and Nancy Dougherty (born Dec 24, 1797 in Hardin Co., Ky).

Matilda Hartley (born Jan 05, 1817 in Hardin Co., Ky), the sister of Lucinda "Lucy" Hartley, married Charles Woodring. These are parents of Amanda and Naomi Woodring, who married two of the sons of Thomas J Holman (born about 1809): James W Holeman (born Dec 31, 1847 in Ky) and Bryant Woodford Holeman (born Apr 26, 1856 in Hardin Co., Ky).


1 Thomas J Holeman b: 1809 in the part of Hardin County, Kentucky that became Larue County, d: Nov 12, 1873
Census: 1850 in Hardin County, Kentucky; District 3
Census: 1860 in Hardin County, Kentucky; District 2
Census: 1870 in Hardin County, Kentucky; Allisons Precinct (neighbor was Harrison Holeman)

    + Lucinda "Lucy" Hartley b: Apr 09, 1824 in Kentucky, d: Jun 27, 1876

...2 Ada Ann Holeman b: 1847 in Kentucky

...2 James W Holeman b: Dec 31, 1847 in Hardin County, Kentucky; Elizabethtown, d: Dec 10, 1915 in Hardin County, Kentucky
Census: 1850 in Hardin County, Kentucky; District 3
Census: 1860 in Hardin County, Kentucky; District 2
Census: 1870 in Hardin County, Kentucky; Allisons Precinct
Census: 1880 in Hardin County, Kentucky; Allison, 
Census: 1900 in Hardin County, Kentucky; Elizabethtown
Census: 1910 in Hardin County, Kentucky; Magisterial District 4

    + Amanda Woodring b: Aug 19, 1843 in Kentucky, m: Oct 19, 1869 in Hardin County, Ky, d: Dec 14, 1922 in Hardin County, Ky
Census: 1850 in Hardin County, Kentucky; District 3
Census: 1920 in Hardin County, Kentucky; St John

......3 William Holeman b: 1870
......3 George Holeman b: 1872 in Kentucky
......3 Charley Holeman b: Jul 22, 1877 in Kentucky, d: Mar 26, 1948
        + Lillie b: Jun 16, 1886, d: Nov 24, 1945

...2 Sally Ann Holeman b: 1850 in Kentucky

...2 Mary H Holeman b: Nov 21, 1851 in Kentucky, d: Sep 1920, 
Census: 1880 in Jasper County, Missouri; Marion
    + Louis H. Willyard b: 1844 in Kentucky, m: Dec 20, 1873

...2 Dianna Holeman b: 1854

...2 Bryant Woodford Holeman b: Apr 26, 1856 in Hardin County, Kentucky, d: May 26, 1920 in Hardin Co., Ky
Census: 1860 in Hardin County, Kentucky; District 2
Census: 1870 in Hardin County, Kentucky; Allisons Precinct
Census: 1880 in Hardin County, Kentucky; Allison
Census: 1900 in Hardin County, Kentucky; Elizabethtown
Census: 1910 in Hardin County, Kentucky; Magisterial District 4
Census: 1920 in Hardin County, Kentucky; St John

   + Naomi Woodring b: Aug 24, 1853 in Hardin County, Kentucky, m: 1878, d: May 14, 1936 in Hardin Co., Ky
......3 Silas Holeman b: Jan 1879 in Kentucky, d: 1957
      + Lucy C b: 1884, d: 1923
.........4 Clyde Holeman b: 1923, d: 1930
......3 Ruth Holeman b: Oct 1881 in Kentucky
......3 Fannie Holeman b: Feb 1883 in Kentucky
......3 Minnie Holeman b: Dec 1885 in Kentucky
......3 Thomas Holeman b: Sep 16, 1891, d: Jan 18, 1896
......3 Eva Belle Holeman b: Nov 29, 1896 in Hardin County, Kentucky
        + John Meredith b: Mar 04, 1890 in Hardin County, Kentucky , m: Mar 29, 1919

...2 Susan Holeman b: 1860 in Kentucky

...2 Nancy W Holeman b: 1864



The Blue Ball Baptist Church (Hardin County) was organized at the home of Daniel Holman on June 20, 1849. One of the Charter members was Lucy Holman. [I believe this was the Daniel Holman who married Rebecca Johnson.]

Thomas J Holman (age 41, born in Kentucky), his wife Lucy (age 26, born in Kentucky) and their three children (Ada Ann, age 3; James, age 2; and Sally Ann, age 5 months) were in the 1850 census for District 3, Hardin County, Kentucky.

Thos J Holman (age 56, born Ky); his wife Lucy (age 35, born Ky); and their seven minor children are in the 1860 census for District 2, Hardin, Kentucky.

Thos Holeman (age 66, born Kentucky); his wife, Lucy (age 38, born Ky); their five minor children; and their son, Jas W Holeman (age 22, born Kentucky) and his wife, Amanda (Woodring) Holeman (age 28, born Ky) are in the 1870 census for Allisons Precinct, Hardin County, Kentucky. Their neighbor was the household of Harrison Holeman (age 54, born Ky) which included Mary Wortham (age 60, born Ky).

Thomas J Holman and his wife Lucy are both buried in the Blue Ball Baptist Church cemetery (Hardin County).

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