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William Banks Anthony[1]

Male 1775 - 1815  (40 years)


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  • Name William Banks Anthony 
    Birth 1775  Walnut Hill, Evington, Campbell, Virginia, USA Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Gender Male 
    Residence 1813  Gallatin, Sumner, Tennessee, USA Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Death 8 Jan 1815  New Orleans, Jefferson, Louisiana, USA Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Person ID I16947  Master
    Last Modified 23 Apr 2024 

    Father John Anthony,   b. 1746, , Albemarle, Virginia, USA Find all individuals with events at this locationd. 6 Sep 1825, Walnut Hill, Evington, Campbell, Virginia, USA Find all individuals with events at this location (Age 79 years) 
    Mother Susannah Austin,   b. 23 Oct 1751, , Hanover, Virginia, USA Find all individuals with events at this locationd. 3 Feb 1817, Walnut Hill, Evington, Campbell, Virginia, USA Find all individuals with events at this location (Age 65 years) 
    Marriage 1772  Evington, Campbell, Virginia, USA Find all individuals with events at this location  [2
    Family ID F2519  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart

    Family Susan McLean,   b. 1779, , Hanover, Virginia, USA Find all individuals with events at this locationd. 1839, , Washington, Arkansas, USA Find all individuals with events at this location (Age 60 years) 
    Children 
     1. Lavinia Anthony,   b. 1803
     2. Matilda Gabril Anthony,   b. 1804, , , Virginia, USA Find all individuals with events at this locationd. 1827, , Montgomery, Tennessee, USA Find all individuals with events at this location (Age 23 years)
     3. Amanda Malvina Anthony,   b. 22 May 1806, , , Virginia, USA Find all individuals with events at this locationd. 20 Feb 1855, Fayetteville, Washington, Arkansas, USA Find all individuals with events at this location (Age 48 years)
     4. Julia Anthony,   b. 1807
     5. Albert Banks Anthony,   b. 1807
     6. Harriet Austin Anthony,   b. 16 Aug 1809, Gallatin, Sumner, Tennessee, USA Find all individuals with events at this locationd. 15 Jan 1901, Herndon, Christian, Kentucky, USA Find all individuals with events at this location (Age 91 years)
     7. Elizabeth Madeline Anthony,   b. 9 Jan 1814, Gallatin, Sumner, Tennessee, USA Find all individuals with events at this locationd. 7 Jul 1893, , Montgomery, Tennessee, USA Find all individuals with events at this location (Age 79 years)
    Family ID F4381  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart

  • Event Map
    Link to Google MapsBirth - 1775 - Walnut Hill, Evington, Campbell, Virginia, USA Link to Google Earth
    Link to Google MapsResidence - 1813 - Gallatin, Sumner, Tennessee, USA Link to Google Earth
    Link to Google MapsDeath - 8 Jan 1815 - New Orleans, Jefferson, Louisiana, USA Link to Google Earth
     = Link to Google Earth 
    Pin Legend  : Address       : Location       : City/Town       : County/Shire       : State/Province       : Country       : Not Set

  • Notes 
    • http://files.usgwarchives.net/ar/washington/bios/stone281bs.txt

      Washington County ArArchives Biographies.....Stone, Lodowick Brodie
      ************************************************
      Copyright. All rights reserved.
      http://www.usgwarchives.net/copyright.htm
      http://www.usgwarchives.net/ar/arfiles.html
      ************************************************

      File contributed for use in USGenWeb Archives by:
      Robert Sanchez http://www.genrecords.net/emailregistry/vols/00027.html#0006574 July 19, 2009, 6:34 pm

      Author: S. J. Clarke (Publisher, 1922)

      LODOWICK BRODIE STONE.
      Lodowick Brodie Stone, a retired merchant and prominent farmer and stock
      raiser residing at Fayetteville, was born April 23, 1859, in the house which is
      still his home. He is a son of Stephen K. Stone, who was long one of the
      prominent, honored and valued citizens of Arkansas. He was almost a nonagenarian
      when death called him and had been a resident of Arkansas for nearly seventy
      years. His birth occurred in Oxford, North Carolina, September 25, 1819. The
      family is of English origin and was founded in America by Allen Stone,
      grandfather of Stephen K. Stone. He died in early life, survived by his son,
      Parker F. Stone, who was born in Richmond, Virginia, in 1788. When about
      fifty-seven years of age Parker F. Stone removed to Arkansas, settling on Lee's
      creek, near Van Buren, where both he and his wife died. They were married in
      1811, Mrs. Stone bearing the maiden name of Kindness Hicks. She was born in
      Granville county, North Carolina, in 1793. Mr. and Mrs. Parker F. Stone became
      parents of the following named: Dr. Robert Stone, who spent his life in Stewart
      county, Tennessee; Harriet, who became the wife of Nathaniel Daniels and died in
      Mississippi; Sillie, who married Thomas Word and died in Tennessee; Allen, whose
      death occurred near Van Buren, Arkansas; Mary, who after becoming the widow of
      James Phillips married a Mr. Miller and died in Tennessee; Stephen K.; and
      Sophie, who married James Gatlin and departed this life in Tennessee.

      The youthful training of Stephen K. Stone was that of the farm bred boy and
      his education was obtained in the military school at Bingham, North Carolina.
      When fifteen years of age he left home and started out to provide for his own
      support by clerking in a store at Murfreesboro, Tennessee, while subsequently he
      became bookkeeper in an auction store in New Orleans, Louisiana. He next
      proceeded northward by way of the Mississippi as far as Vicksburg and there he
      again was employed as a salesman and bookkeeper. The 11th of June, 1840,
      witnessed his arrival in Fayetteville, Arkansas, at which time his cash capital
      consisted of but four hundred and fifty dollars. Here he entered the employ of
      others and in 1850 he established a family grocery store, to which he constantly
      added other lines of goods until he was engaged in the sale not only of
      groceries but of dry goods, hardware and implements, his original establishment
      having thus been converted into a small department store. At one time ha retired
      from active business but later joined a son in another venture, becoming a
      partner of the firm of B. H. Stone & Company. He possessed marked ability as a
      financier and displayed sound judgment in everything that he undertook. In order
      to meet the demands of a constantly expanding business he erected buildings and
      he also improved vacant property around the square as an investment, realizing
      the growing importance of the county seat. From time to fine he made purchases
      of property which constantly increased in value as the district became more
      thickly settled.

      Stephen K. Stone was married September 22, 1842, to Miss Amanda Malvina
      Brodie, a daughter of Lodowick Brodie, who established his home near
      Fayetteville in 1835. Mr. Brodie left Clarksville, Tennessee, with his family
      and traveled by wagon to Arkansas in 1834, spending one year in Benton county.
      He afterward engaged in general merchandising at Fayetteville from 1840 until
      1842 and then took up the occupation of farming. Following the discovery of gold
      in California he made his way to that state and spent two years upon the Pacific
      coast, making the return trip by way of the Isthmus of Panama. While en route,
      however, he became ill and died, being buried at sea. His daughter, Mrs. Stone,
      was but twelve years of age when on horseback she accompanied her uncle and
      aunt, Mr. and Mrs. James Brodie, to Hopkinsville, Kentucky, where she attended
      school, returning in the same manner in 1840.

      The father of Mrs. Stone was Lodowick Brodie, who was born at Oxford, North
      Carolina, September 22, 1800, a son of Dr. John Brodie, a native of Edinburgh,
      Scotland, who was graduated in the University of Edinburgh and in young manhood
      came to the United States. He wedded Mary Taylor, a cousin of Zachary Taylor,
      who later became president of the United States. Dr. and Mrs. Brodie were
      parents of the following named: Dr. John Brodie, Jr.; Thomas; Lewis; David;
      Nancy, who became the wife of Dr. Kittrell; Mary; Dr. David; Lodowick;
      Alexander; and James. Dr. Brodie, Sr., resided for many years in Montgomery
      county, Tennessee, and there both he and his wife lie buried. Lodowick Brodie
      was active in many ways. He built the first Methodist church in Fayetteville,
      also the first schoolhouse in the town in 1835. This building afterward became
      the first female academy west of the Mississippi river. The structure was a
      brick building and was the first of the kind in the county, occupying the
      present site of the Fayetteville high school. Lodowick Brodie was married twice.
      In 1821 he wedded Miss Matilda Anthony, daughter of William B. and Susan
      (McClain) Anthony, the latter a sister of Charles McClain, a soldier of General
      Harrison's army in the battle of Tippecanoe, in which he captured an Indian
      tomahawk that is now an heirloom in the family at Fort Smith. Lodowick and
      Matilda Brodie became parents of the following named: Crispes, born in 1S22;
      William, in 1823; Mrs. Stephen K. Stone, born October 15, 1825; and John, born
      in 1827. After the death of his first wife Mr. Brodie wedded Miss Amanda Malvina
      Anthony, a sister of bis former wife, and their children were as follows:
      Prairie. Susan, Adelaide, Jane, Mary, Ella, James. Thomas, Albert and Lewis. The
      grandfather of Mrs. Amanda M. Stone in the maternal line was William B. Anthony,
      a gallant soldier of the War of 1812, who enlisted September 24, 1813, as a
      private in Captain George Smith's company of spies. Dyer's regiment of mounted
      gunmen, of the Tennessee volunteers. He was honorably discharged April 30, 1814,
      after which he returned to his home at Gallatin, Sumner county, Tennessee. He
      reenlisted September 28, 1814, in Captain Moore's company. Second Regiment
      Mounted Gunmen, as a private, and was killed December 28, 1814, at the battle of
      Lake Borgne, Louisiana, when in defense of New Orleans under General Jackson.

      There are many interesting events related in connection with the history of
      the maternal ancestry from which Stephen K. Stone sprang. His grandfather was
      Captain Robert Hicks, who was the father of Kindness Hicks. Captain Hicks
      married a Miss Raven, of French-Huguenot lineage, whose maternal ancestors
      journeyed to England from France in order to escape the persecutions of the
      Catholics. They came from England to America during the colonial epoch in the
      history of the new world. Robert Hicks was a son of John Hicks, who lived for
      many years on Long Island, and Hicks street in Brooklyn was named in his honor.
      Captain Hicks spent his youthful days in North Carolina, the family home being
      there established about the time of the outbreak of the Revolutionary war. He
      joined the militia troops of North Carolina and at the battle of Guilford
      Courthouse his company was placed in front of the trained Colonials. Being
      untrained militia, all fled from the assault of the British save Robert Hicks,
      who scorned to retreat and single-handed fought the enemy. He finally escaped
      from the Red Coats, according to the records in the war department at
      Washington, and shared the dangers and glories of the struggle for independence.
      The records of North Carolina concerning that period show that Captain Hicks was
      issued certain certificates in payment for services rendered as a soldier in the
      Revolutionary war.

      It was from such ancestry that L. B. Stone sprang in the maternal line. His
      parents. Mr. and Mrs. Stephen K. Stone, had a family of seven children: Mary,
      who became the wife of George S. Albright of Fayetteville; Stephen R., a
      merchant of Olathe. Kansas; Benjamin H., of Fayetteville; William C, of Altus.
      Oklahoma; Lodowick Brodie, of Fayetteville; Amanda M.; and Albert Brodie, who is
      engaged in the practice of law. The mother gave the block of ground where the
      City Hospital of Fayetteville now stands. it then containing only a small brick
      building. It was her wish and will that this ground be used for the sake of
      humanity and on the board of trustees she appointed one member from every
      denomination, both Jews and Gentiles, represented in Fayetteville.

      Stephen K. Stone was a man of splendid business ability, adaptable, ready,
      alert and possessed of broad information. He was characterized by a genial
      manner, affability and generosity and was constantly extending a helping hand
      where aid was needed. He made a notable record in the achievement of success,
      hut it was his straightforward and creditable business policy that gained for
      him the high regard and goodwill of all with whom he came in contact. A
      contemporary biographer said of him: "In his relation to the city and public
      generally Mr. Stone was simply a modest, quiet citizen without ambition for
      politics or for public office. The nearest he came to holding an office was when
      he was made deputy postmaster at Fayetteville to protect his interests as a
      bondsman for the postmaster. He was reared a whig but when that party dissolved
      he became a democrat. He was not a party to any of the events of the Civil war
      but was in sympathy with the southern cause and gave it his moral support. He
      was a devout member of the Methodist Episcopal church and fraternally he was
      affiliated with the blue lodge of Masons and with Washington Chapter, No. 1, R.
      A. M."

      Lodowick Brodie Stone was educated in the University of Arkansas and in the
      Emory and Henry College at Emory, Virginia, being thus well qualified for life's
      practical and responsible duties. He afterward returned home and he and his
      brother, Benjamin H. Stone, purchased the father's store and carried on
      mercantile pursuits from 1880 until 1891, winning substantial success during
      that period. In the latter year they disposed of the store and purchased the
      farm of David Walker, who had built a large brick house upon the place prior to
      the Civil war. When hostilities between the North and South occurred Mr. Walker
      and his family removed southward and after the battle of Prairie Grove the Union
      army used the house as a hospital. L. B. Stone still owns the farm and he has
      altogether five hundred and fifty acres, constituting the best and most highly
      improved farm property in the county. Hereon he raises full-blooded shorthorn
      cattle, Shropshire sheep and Duroc hogs and is one of the most prominent stock
      raisers of this section of the state. He has made a most thorough study of
      scientific methods of farming and stock raising and his wide understanding and
      unfaltering industry have been strong features in the attainment of his
      present-day success.

      In 1884 Mr. Stone was married to Miss Juliet Thurmond, who was born in
      Nashville, Tennessee, a daughter of James M. and Prairie (Brodie) Thurmond. Her
      mother was born in a log cabin in Fayetteville. then considered the finest house
      in the town. Mr. Thurmond was born in Nashville, Tennessee, and they were
      married near Clarksville, that state. Removing to Fayetteville, Mr. Thurmond
      engaged in contracting and building. He afterward took up his abode in Texas,
      where he died in 1906. He was considered a very wealthy man for his day, owning
      one thousand acres of land, and was also successfully engaged in merchandising
      To Mr. and Mrs. Thurmond were born three children, of whom two are living, Mrs.
      Stone and Mrs. Mary Whitcomb, a widow residing in Groesbeck, Texas. Mr. and Mrs.
      Stone have become parents of a son. Dudley, who is engaged in merchandising at
      Pierce City, Missouri. He married Marie Roberts and they have one daughter,
      Juliet Annette Stone.

      Mr. and Mrs. L. B. Stone are members of the Methodist Episcopal church, with
      which they have been identified for many years. The grandfather, Lodowick
      Brodie, gave the lot upon which the church now stands to the society and thus
      for several generations representatives of the family have been closely
      associated with the moral development of the community as promoted through the
      activities of the Methodist church. In politics Mr. Stone has always been a
      democrat and he belongs to the Anti Horse-Thief Association. He still owns and
      occupies the house in which he was born, his father having purchased this large
      brick residence from Judge David Walker in 1858, the judge having erected the
      building ten years before. Through various connections Mr. Stone is closely
      associated with the pioneer development and later history of Fayetteville and
      the western portion of the state. He has long taken an active and prominent part
      in public affairs and his labors have been so directed that the results achieved
      have been most gratifying to the public. His memory forms a connecting link
      between the primitive past and the progressive present and there are few events
      which have to do with the history of Fayetteville and northwestern Arkansas with
      which he is not thoroughly acquainted.


      Additional Comments:
      Citation:
      Centennial History of Arkansas
      Volume II
      Chicago-Little Rock: The S. J. Clarke Publishing Company
      1922


      File at: http://files.usgwarchives.net/ar/washington/bios/stone281bs.txt

      This file has been created by a form at http://www.poppet.org/arfiles/

      File size: 13.9 Kb
    • COLONEL THOMAS WILLIAMSON
      DESIGNATION: 2nd Regiment West Tennessee Volunteer Mounted Gunmen
      DATES: September 1814 - April 1815
      MEN MOSTLY FROM: Bedford, Davidson, Robertson, Rutherford, Sumner, Williamson, Wilson, Giles, and Smith Counties
      CAPTAINS: Giles Burdett, James Cook, John Crane, John Doak, John Dobbins, John Hutchings, William Martin, Anthony Metcalf, Robert Moore, James Nealy, James Pace, Thomas Porter, Thomas Scurry, Robert Steele, Richard Tate, Beverly Williams
      BRIEF HISTORY:
      Along with Colonel Robert Dyer's unit, this regiment was part of General John Coffee's brigade that fought at Pensacola and New Orleans. Marching from Fayetteville to Camp Gaines (30 miles from Fort Montgomery), they helped Jackson take the port of Pensacola from the Spanish on 7 November 1814. Williamson's men then participated in all of the engagements at New Orleans, where they were part of the left line of Jackson's breastworks. In March 1815 they returned to Tennessee via the Natchez Trace.

      http://www.tennessee.gov/tsla/history/military/1812reg.htm
    • COLONEL JOHN ALCORN

      DESIGNATION: 2nd Regiment of Volunteer Mounted Riflemen
      DATES: September 1813 - December 1813
      MEN MOSTLY FROM: Davidson, Rutherford, Sumner, and Wilson Counties (Winston's company from Madison County, Alabama)
      CAPTAINS: John Baskerville, Richard Boyd, Thomas Bradley, John Byrne, Robert Jetton, William Locke, Alexander McKeen, Frederick Stump, Daniel Ross, John Winston
      BRIEF HISTORY:
      Colonel John Coffee commanded this regiment until the end of October 1813, when Coffee was promoted to Brigadier General. John Alcorn took over as colonel and the unit was incorporated with Colonel Newton Cannon's Mounted Riflemen to form the Second Regiment of Volunteer Mounted Riflemen. The Second Regiment, along with Colonel Robert Dyer's First Regiment of Volunteer Mounted Gunmen, formed the brigade under John Coffee. Muster rolls reveal that the regiment went by various designations besides volunteer mounted riflemen: volunteer cavalry; mounted militia; or mounted gunmen.

      Many of the men from this unit were with Andrew Jackson on the expedition to Natchez (December 1812 - April 1813) and, consequently, felt their one-year's enlistment expired in December 1813. Jackson insisted that the time not spent in the field did not apply to the terms of enlistment. Hence, a dispute broke out between the troops and Jackson late in 1813. Most of the troops did leave by the end of that year, despite Jackson's strenuous efforts to keep them.

      The regiment participated in the battles at Tallushatchee and Talladega (3 November and 9 November 1813) and muster rolls show that practically all of the companies sustained casualties, the most being in Captain John Byrne's company. The regiment's line of march took them from Fayetteville (where the regiment was mustered in), through Huntsville, Fort Deposit, Fort Strother, to the battles, and back the reverse way.

      http://www.tennessee.gov/tsla/history/military/1812reg.htm

  • Sources 
    1. [S761] Yates Publishing, Ancestry Family Trees, (Online publication - Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com. Original data: Family Tree files submitted by Ancestry members.), Ancestry Family Tree.

    2. [S1162] Ancestry.com, Geneanet Community Trees Index, (Ancestry.com Operations, Inc.).