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Charles A. MCCAUGHEY was born in Iowa. He died in California.

Spouse: Kathleen Antoinette MAIER. Charles A. MCCAUGHEY and Kathleen Antoinette MAIER were married in Jul 1964 in San Leandro, Alameda, California. They were divorced. Children were: Robin Ann MCCAUGHEY, Kerry Ann MCCAUGHEY, Virginia Ann MCCAUGHEY, Kimberly Ann MCCAUGHEY, Teresa Ann MCCAUGHEY.


Kerry Ann MCCAUGHEY. Parents: Charles A. MCCAUGHEY and Kathleen Antoinette MAIER.


Kimberly Ann MCCAUGHEY. Parents: Charles A. MCCAUGHEY and Kathleen Antoinette MAIER.


Robin Ann MCCAUGHEY. Parents: Charles A. MCCAUGHEY and Kathleen Antoinette MAIER.


Teresa Ann MCCAUGHEY. Parents: Charles A. MCCAUGHEY and Kathleen Antoinette MAIER.


Virginia Ann MCCAUGHEY. Parents: Charles A. MCCAUGHEY and Kathleen Antoinette MAIER.


Amanda P. MCCHRISTIAN.

Spouse: John Terrell FERGUSON. John Terrell FERGUSON and Amanda P. MCCHRISTIAN were married on 7 Nov 1871.


Ida B. MCCLELLAN was born on 4 Sep 1882 in Mississippi. She died on 17 Nov 1970 in Ellis Co., Texas.

Spouse: Jessie Thomas COLSTON. Jessie Thomas COLSTON and Ida B. MCCLELLAN were married between 1902 and 1904 in Texas. Children were: Lorene COLSTON, Cleo COLSTON, Robert B. COLSTON.


Gretchen Ann MCCLELLAND.

Spouse: Gregory Howard GALE. Children were: James McClelland GALE.


Twila F. MCCLESKY.

Spouse: Fred Thomas , Jr. FERGUSON.


James Martin MCCLURE.

Spouse: Rebecca Lorene ROBINSON.


Mary Virginia MCCORMACK was born on 25 Nov 1880. She died on 12 Feb 1939.

Spouse: Harley Bascom FERGUSON.


Horace MCCRACKEN.

Spouse: Rachel Eleanor FERGUSON.


M. Jane MCCRACKEN.

Spouse: Winfield G. FERGUSON. Winfield G. FERGUSON and M. Jane MCCRACKEN were married on 22 Mar 1877 in Upper Crabtree, Haywood County, North Carolina. Children were: Robert FERGUSON, Ebed FERGUSON, John FERGUSON, Elizabeth FERGUSON, Lillie FERGUSON, Thomas FERGUSON.


Sarah MCCRACKEN.

Spouse: Thomas Josiah FERGUSON. Thomas Josiah FERGUSON and Sarah MCCRACKEN were married on 26 Jan 1858. Children were: David Philetus FERGUSON, Sarah A. FERGUSON, Champ Seymour FERGUSON, Rachel Eleanor FERGUSON, Dora Lee FERGUSON.


W.C. MCCRACKEN.

Spouse: Mollie FERGUSON.


Charles MCCUEN.

Spouse: Mary Thelma Elizabeth FERGUSON.


Jeannine MCDONALD.

Spouse: Don Wayne COULSTON.


Henry Troy MCDUFFIE.

Spouse: Julia Anne SMITH.


Sarah Wilson MCELROY was born in Dec 1831.

Spouse: Andrew Fitzpatrick FERGUSON. Andrew Fitzpatrick FERGUSON and Sarah Wilson MCELROY were married on 13 Aug 1868 in Haywood County, North Carolina.


Mabel A. MCINTOSH.

Spouse: Freddie Major JOHNSON. Freddie Major JOHNSON and Mabel A. MCINTOSH were married on 24 Feb 1912.


Dorothy Fay MCMILLAN.

Spouse: Johnny Lee STEWART. Children were: Teresa STEWART.


Amelia MCMINN.

Spouse: Russell FERGUSON. Russell FERGUSON and Amelia MCMINN were married on 6 Oct 1868. Children were: Addie Mary FERGUSON, James F. FERGUSON, William H. FERGUSON, Thomas J. FERGUSON, Edward FERGUSON.


Archibald MCNEILL was born in 1716 in Argyll, Scotland. Archibald McNeill who married Jenny Bahn Smith was from an
estate called Scribbling, in Kintyre, Argyle just above Campbeltown. He immigrated in 1739 to Brunswick Co., North Carolina. Archibald accompanied his parents on the "Thistle" He signed a will on 17 Apr 1801 in Cumberland Co., North Carolina. In the name of God Amen.

I, Archibald McNeill of Cumberland County and State of North Carolina now considering myself frail in body though perfect in mind and memory and well knowing that it is appointed for all men to die do make this my Last Will and Testament. I assign my soul to it's creator in all humble hope of it's future happiness as in the disposal of and being infinitely good. As to my body, my will is that it be buried decently beside my spouse in our old buring place.

I hereby make and appoint my son-in-law John McNeill and my son Neill McNeill, or whichever of the two survives the othr Executor of this my Last Will and testament. As to my wordly estate, I dispose thereof as follows:

I give and bequeath to my son John and his wife during their lifetime the Plantation now occupied by them and after their decease if no lawful heirs of John's own body survive him or his wife, I order said plantation to be the property of my son Donald and his heirs. I also bequeath to said John and his wife during their lifetime two negtro wenches named Tilla and Nell and after their deaths if said negros survive them I order and devise said negros with their issue to be given to my daughter Margaret McNeill and her heirs. Item: I give and devise to my son Donald 323 ac in Chatham County near the mouth of New Hope also a tract of land on McKay's creek in Cumberland County and in case my son Donald or any of his heirs in Nova Scotia should never claim the said Plantation I order the said plantation to be equally divided betwixt my son Hector's son Donald and my Grandson, John McNeill's son also named Donald. My son Hector 100 ac joining his on Trantruns Creek and 50 ac on said Creek the Black Smiths on field. Margaret 200 ac on Cape Fear River below Sproll's Ferry, and to her son Donald, Plantation on Jone's Creek and all lands adjoining it which I now own. Her son Archibald, Plantation in Moore County also Hord's Old Field and 100 ac in Cumberland County Lofton's Island and Hoidges Survey on Anderson's creek. My son Neill 450 ac of James Patterson's grant and all lands on Lower Little River. My daughter Janet Shaw. My grandson John McNeill, John S. Kirbibly's son 100 ac on bear Branch Peggy ???'s old field, and land with Things Schol House on it. Hector's son Donald and Neill's son Laughlin a lot in Fayetteville. Hector 250 Ac of land reaching from the Meadows to the old home place also 250 ac of Roger's property and 150 ac on Blue Branch, 50 ac on trantruns Creek and 50 ac between McKay's and McNair's property. Grandson Coll McNeill 200 ac on Stewart's creek. My son John 200 ac on Anderson Creek joining old plantation, 50 ac on rooty ford carver's Creek. My son Neill the plantation of Robert McKay and all land adjoining it. Grandaughter Malcom's daughter Janet, Flora, Isabel 5 shillings sterling. Executors son in law John McNeill and son Neill. Witnesses Reverand Angus McDermid and Hector McNeill, both of the Little River.
He died on 26 Jun 1801 in Cumberland Co., North Carolina. He had his estate probated in Mar 1822 in Cumberland Co., North Carolina. Parents: Daniel "Taynish" MCNEILL.

Spouse: Jennet "Jennie Bahn" SMITH. Archibald MCNEILL and Jennet "Jennie Bahn" SMITH were married about 1748 in Bladen Co., North Carolina. Children were: Neil MCNEILL.


Daniel "Taynish" MCNEILL was born between 1700 and 1710 in Argyll, Scotland. Dates are estimated. He immigrated in 1739 to Brunswick Co., North Carolina. He established himself near Brown Marsh Church in Bladen County, NC, where it is said that he managedhis plantation, "Tweedside".

He landed in the Port of Brunswick in September 1739 on the 'Thistle" with approximately 350 other Scottish Immigrants. They had sailed in July from Campbeltown, Argyll, Scotland following a recommendation of a committee of leading citizens. An advance trip, encouraged by Governor Gabriel Johnston, also a Scot, had occurred in 1736. Free land grants and exemption from taxation for a set time period were the incentives that were designed to counter the dismantling of the tacksmen system and a depression in cattle prices in Scotland.

From:
THE NORTH CAROLINA SETTLEMENT OF 1739
A.I.B. Stewart (http://www.ndirect.co.uk/~iforshaw/Mag15/page2.html)
The first entry in the Books of the Customs House at Campbeltown is dated 6th June 1739 and notes the presence in the port of the ship "Thistle" of Saltcoats, (Robert Brown, Master) to take aboard emigrants for Cape Fair in America (1).

The first indication of the identity of the leaders of the 1739 venture is given in a petition presented by Dugald Macneal and Coll McAllister to the General Assembly of North Carolina in 1740 seeking financial assistance for certain "Scotch Gentlemen and several poor people brought into this province". Tax remissions were given for ten years and the Upper House proposed that "£1000 be given to Duncan Campbell, Dugald McNeal, Daniel McNeal, Coll McAllister and Neal McNeal, Esqrs to be by them distributed among the several families". The Lower House deferred payment but in June 1740 grants of land were given to these 5 and some 17 others out of some 80 or so heads of families in the 350 emigrants. The leaders appear to have claimed and been given large plots on the basis of the number of followers they had brought. Duncan Campbell for instance was given a total of 2643 acres.

At the same time all five were appointed magistrates for Bladen County. (4) He died after 1774 in Cumberland Co., North Carolina. Stewart: One of his descendants was "Whistler's Mother" painted by her son James McNeill Whistler. Stewart also states that Daniel survived until at least 1774.

Place is assumed.
Daniel is said to have had many children by his two wives It is believed that Archibald is the son of Daniel and his first wife, whose name is not yet known. His second wife's name was Margaret McTavish. Another of Daniel's sons was Col Hector McNeill, who was the British officer in the Revolutionary War who captured Hillsboro, NC with David Fanning in Sep 1781.

Daniel also held land on Gigha Island in Scotland (Ardminish Farm on its eastern shore facing Kintyre).

From:
THE NORTH CAROLINA SETTLEMENT OF 1739
A.I.B. Stewart (http://www.ndirect.co.uk/~iforshaw/Mag15/page2.html)

Daniel (or Donald) McNeill (the third mentioned) is designed in contemporary letters as "of Taynish". He was the second son of the marriage between Neil McNeil of Taynish and Elizabeth Campbell, daughter of Mr Alexander Campbell, Advocate, Commissar of the Isles. Like Duncan Campbell and Neil McNeill he was a direct descendant of Patrick Dow, grandson of the third laird of Auchinbreck, and was related to Hector of Losset.

Daniel of Taynish also prospered. Of his numerous stock the best known, in this country at least, is "Whistler's mother" who in reproduced form graced many a late Victorian parlour in company with the companion portrait of Thomas Carlyle painted by her son James McNeill Whistler. Daniel survived till at least 1774.
Parents: Neil MCNEILL and Elizabeth CAMPBELL.

Children were: Archibald MCNEILL.


Hector MCNEILL was born between 1670 and 1675 in Ardelay, Scotland. Dates are estimated. He died between 1720 and 1760 in Ardelay, Scotland. Date and place are assumed. Hector is said to have controlled the valuable lands of Ardelay in Gigha

Spouse: Elizabeth MCTAVISH. Hector MCNEILL and Elizabeth MCTAVISH were married between 1695 and 1699 in Scotland. Date and place are assumed. Children were: Neil Dubh MCNEILL.


Jennett (Betsy) MCNEILL was born about 1777 in Cumberland Co., North Carolina. She appeared in the census in 1820 in Cumberland Co., North Carolina. 1820 Cumberland Co. NC census: Dashu Shaw 2-0-1-2-0-1 0-1-3-0-1 2M 0-10, 1M 16-18, 2M 16-26, 1M 45+, 1F 10-16, 3F 16-26, 1F 45+ She appeared in the census in 1830 in Lawrence Co., Alabama. She is believed to be living in the household of her daughter, Jennet, and her son-in-law, Thomas R. GREEN (See census notes for Thomas). She appeared in the census in 1840 in Lawrence Co., Alabama. She is believed to be living in the household of her daughter, Jennet, and her son-in-law, Thomas R. GREEN (See census notes for Thomas). She died in 1855 in Itawaba Co., Mississippi. Parents: Neil MCNEILL and Grisella STEWART.

Spouse: Dushee SHAW. Dushee SHAW and Jennett (Betsy) MCNEILL were married about 1800 in Cumberland Co., North Carolina. Date and place are assumed. Children were: Jennet SHAW.


Negalena MCNEILL was born in 1740 in Brunswick Co., North Carolina. She died between 1791 and 1825 in North Carolina. Date and place are assumed. Parents: Neil Dubh MCNEILL and Grisella CAMPBELL.

Spouse: Robert B. STEWART. Robert B. STEWART and Negalena MCNEILL were married about 1760 in Cumberland Co., North Carolina. Date is estimated. Children were: Grisella STEWART.


Neil MCNEILL was born between 1675 and 1685 in Argyll, Scotland. Dates are estimated. He died between 1725 and 1765 in Argyll, Scotland. Date and place are assumed. He was also known as Neil of Taynish. Neil was the last chief of the name to hold the old family property of Taynish (on the western coast of the Argyllshire mainland.)

Spouse: Elizabeth CAMPBELL. Neil MCNEILL and Elizabeth CAMPBELL were married between 1695 and 1705 in Argyll, Scotland. Date and place are assumed.

Neil had two wives. After his first wife, Elizabeth Campbell died, he married Margaret Campbell, eldest daughter of George Campbell of Airds, a sept of the House of Cawdor. Children were: Daniel "Taynish" MCNEILL.


Neil MCNEILL was born in 1751 in Cumberland Co., North Carolina. He appeared in the census in 1820 in Cumberland Co., North Carolina. District 6
MacNEILL, Neill 0-1-0-1-0-1 2-1-0-1-0 (ferry)
He died on 30 Mar 1830 in Cumberland Co., North Carolina. Place is assumed. He was a Ferryman. From http://www.electricscotland.com and http://www.macneilgroup.com
Clan MacNeil
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Motto: Vincere vel mori - "To conquer or die" (MacNeil of Barra).
Badge: A rock.
Tartan: There are two Clan Macneil tartans recognized by the Chief of the Clan, who by custom and in Scotland by law, determines what the clan tartans or clan tartans are. These are: 1. Macneil of Barra . The tartan of the Macneils of Barra is the familiar black, green, and blue tartan with narrow alternating white and yellow (encased in black) stripes. (Donald C. Stewart, the Setts of the Scottish Tartans, No. 166.) This has been that standard Macneil of Barra tartan for well over a century. 2. Macneil of Colonsay. The tartan of the Macneils of Colonsay, which has also been in use for a very long period is somewhat similar, but has two white stripes quite close together rather than alternating yellow and white equidistant stripes (Stewart No. 168)

The Clan MacNeil claims descent from "Niall of the Nine Hostages", King of Ireland who settled in Barra about 1040 and founded the Scottish Clan Niall or MacNeil. However it was not until 1427 that Gilleonan MacNeil received from Alexander, Lord of the Isles a charter of the island of Barra and the lands of Boisdale in South Uist. After the downfall of the Lordship in 1493, they were confirmed by James IV in favour
MacNeil of Barra (Modern) of Gilleonan MacNeil of Barra, but from then the MacNeils of Barra and those of Gigha acted quite independently; the former becoming allies of the MacLeans of Duart and those of Gigha following the MacDonalds of Islay and Kintyre. The seat of the chiefs of Barra was at Kisimul Castle on a rock at the South of Barra where they lived in a great manner, trumpeting the end of their dinners from the tower. In 1688, Roderick MacNeil was "out" with Bonnie Dundee for King James VII and after the '45 Roderick 39th chief and "Dove of the West" was imprisoned for his Jacobite sympathies. General Roderick MacNeil of Barra was the last of the direct line having sold Barra in 1838. The history of the MacNeils of Colonsay is less stable. Torquil McNeil of Taynish and Gigha was keeper of Castle Sween in 1449, his grandson, Neil had two sons, Neil of Taynish and John Og ancestor of Colonsay. Donald McNeil descendant of John Og acquired Colonsay and Oronsay from the Duke of Argyll in 1700 in exchange for Crerar. This line then went onto buy the lands of Gigha in 1780 that had been repurchased by Hector of the Taynish line from Campbell of Cawdor in the late 16th century. In the early 19th century the islands prospered under a new form of crofting but were later sold to pay off debts. Kisimul Castle has been restored to a habitable condition and is the seat of the present chief of the Clan MacNeil of Barra, Professor Ian R. MacNeil, who lives in America. The representative of the Colonsay MacNeils is Alexander Carstairs McNeill, a resident of New Zealand.


A lot of family names which originated here are not tied to one particular area as such. There are Cunninghams from Scalpay but also from Ayrshire. McDonalds are scattered in small groups throughout the Highlands and Islands. Morrisons are everywhere. Those of the Clan MacNeil, however, are tied intrinsically to the island of Barra and can trace their lineage back to the O'Neils of Ulster who came to Barra from Ireland around the turn of the last millennium.

There are also McNeils (generally spelt "MacNeill" there) on the Inner Hebridean islands of Colonsay and Gigha who, while paying allegiance to the Barra chieftain, have their own crest and tartan. These two branches of MacNeils supported different sides in the feud that developed in the 1400s between the MacDonalds and MacLeans. Barra MacNeils sided with the MacLeans of Duart and the Gigha/Colonsay MacNeils with the MacDonalds of Islay. These differences of opinion are generally forgotten today, though centuries ago they would have happily killed one another (and did).

When Niall (Neil) of the Nine Hostages became High King of Ireland in 379, he also became the first clan chief of the clan that would be known by his name. His son, Eoghan, was baptized by St. Patrick. The fourth chief, Muirceartach, gave the Stone of Destiny to his grand-uncle Fergus, King of Dalriada, Scotland. The High Kingship of Ireland passed largely from father to son from 379 until 1033, when the 20th chief, Aodh Aonrachan, resigned the kingship to his brother, Domhnall. The 21st chief, Neil of the Castle, had moved to Barra three years earlier, and began construction of Kisimul Castle in Castle Bay. Construction was continued by the 22nd chief, Aodh, and completed by the 23rd chief, Donald, and is one of the oldest of its type in Britain. It is the ancestral seat of the MacNeils and has been a keystone to both the family and island since construction began. The 25th chief, Neil MacNeil, was the first in a series of famous and infamous chieftains, and fought with King Alexander III to finally defeat the Norse at the Battle of Largs in 1263. His son, Neil Og MacNeil, the 26th chief, fought with Robert the Bruce against Edward II at the Battle of Bannockburn in 1314.

The MacNeils have a long history of seamanship, both honest and dishonest. The 35th chief, Ruari (Roderick) MacNeil, became known as "Ruari the Turbulent" and was basically a pirate who, after raiding ships, retreated safely to Kisimul. In 1610 he was forcibly deposed by the Government, imprisoned in Edinburgh, succeeded by his son, Neil Og MacNeil, and eventually exonerated of piracy by King James VI. During the 1715 uprising, the 38th chief, Roderick Dhu, led the MacNeil clan into battle on the side of the Jacobites. After the second rebellion, Redcoats landed on Barra in their search for Charles Edward Stuart. The 39th chief, Roderick, Dove of the West, was arrested in 1746 and taken, via Inverness, to London. Not until May, 1747 was his discharge ordered, and he was free to return home. The 40th chief, Roderick the Gentle, fought in several battles of the American Revolution.

In 1838, the 41st chief, Roderick the General, was forced to sell the island of Barra due to financial hardship, and 800 years of direct MacNeil rule finished. The clan chiefs had been a mixed bunch, and the clansmen of Barra had a similarly mixed time. However, the end of MacNeil rule coincided with the time when the Clearances began. The people of Barra, and countless MacNeils, were forced to emigrate.

In 1937 most of Barra and Kisimul was purchased by Robert Lister MacNeil, a descendant of the 41st chief, and an American citizen. After nearly 100 years, Barra was back in the hands of the MacNeils, and Robert Lister MacNeil spent the rest of his life restoring Kisimul. Today his son is Clan Chief Ian Roderick MacNeil of Barra, 46th Chief of Clan Neil. The next chief in line lives in Hong Kong, and his first-born son is half Chinese.
Parents: Archibald MCNEILL and Jennet "Jennie Bahn" SMITH.

Spouse: Grisella STEWART. Neil MCNEILL and Grisella STEWART were married in 1776/77 in Cumberland Co., North Carolina. Place is assumed. Other source shows date of marriage as 1/19/1770, but Grisella would have been 9 years old then. Children were: Jennett (Betsy) MCNEILL.


Neil Dubh MCNEILL was born about 1699 in Ardelay, Scotland. Alma McKethan McBride puts his date of birth as 1680, in Scotland...other sources say 1699 which makes since because his daughter, Negalena was born in 1740. He immigrated in 1739 to Brunswick Co., North Carolina. He landed in the Port of Brunswick in September 1739 on the 'Thistle" with approximately 350 other Scottish Immigrants. They had sailed in July from Campbeltown, Argyll, Scotland following a recommendation of a committee of leading citizens. An advance trip, encouraged by Governor Gabriel Johnston, also a Scot, had occurred in 1736. Free land grants and exemption from taxation for a set time period were the incentives that were designed to counter the dismantling of the tacksmen system and a depression in cattle prices in Scotland.

Neil was one of the committee members.

From:
THE NORTH CAROLINA SETTLEMENT OF 1739
A.I.B. Stewart (http://www.ndirect.co.uk/~iforshaw/Mag15/page2.html)
The first entry in the Books of the Customs House at Campbeltown is dated 6th June 1739 and notes the presence in the port of the ship "Thistle" of Saltcoats, (Robert Brown, Master) to take aboard emigrants for Cape Fair in America (1).
He died about 1749 in Brunswick Co., North Carolina. Stewart, in "The North Carolina Settlement of 1739": Neil McNeill of Ardelay in Gigha['s]...wife was Grizel Campbell, a cousin of Kilduskland and of Hector's [McNeill of Losset] widow...sold Ardelay in 1738 to John McLachlan in Daill in Islay." Here it is stated that Neil was dead by 1749.
He was a Tavern Keeper in Brunswick Co., North Carolina. He was Presbyterian. Dubh is Gaelic for black or swarthy.
Neil was considered to be wealthy

From:
THE NORTH CAROLINA SETTLEMENT OF 1739
A.I.B. Stewart (http://www.ndirect.co.uk/~iforshaw/Mag15/page2.html)

Neil McNeill of Ardelay in Gigha is the fifth named. His wife was Grizel Campbell, a cousin of Kilduskiand and of Hector's widow,while his daughter Florence married Alexander, Coll's youngest son and Dugald Lossett's nephew. He sold Ardelay in 1738 to John McLachlan in Daill in Islay.

Neil du of Ardelay also succeeded in his new country. His son, Hector McNeill of the Bluff, who married Coll McAllister's daughter Mary, was the first Sheriff of the newly created Cumberland County in 1754. Another son Duncan married Loveday, daughter of the Rev. James Campbell, and they left many descendants. Neil himself was dead by 1749.


Parents: Hector MCNEILL and Elizabeth MCTAVISH.

Spouse: Grisella CAMPBELL. Neil Dubh MCNEILL and Grisella CAMPBELL were married in 1739 in Brunswick Co., North Carolina. 1739. Neill McNeill married Grissella Campbell, aunt of Ferquhard Campbell,
and they were the parents of Duncan, Flora, Negalena and Grissella McNeill.
Duncan, son of Neill & Grisella, married Lovedy Campbell, daughter of the
Rev. James Campbell, Minister of Bluff Presbyterian Church Children were: Negalena MCNEILL.


Elizabeth MCPHEATERS was born about 1750. She has Ancestral File Number 23HF-D74.

Spouse: Thomas CAMPBELL. Thomas CAMPBELL and Elizabeth MCPHEATERS were married before 1772. Children were: Reverend Thomas CAMPBELL.


Margarie Lee MCREA was born between 1910 and 1920. Dates are estimated. She died on 18 Sep 1999 in Springtown, Texas.

Spouse: James Oliver HUKILL. James Oliver HUKILL and Margarie Lee MCREA were married between 1935 and 1940. Dates are estimated. Children were: Jimmie Ray HUKILL.


Donald MCTAVISH was born between 1645 and 1655 in Dunardry, Scotland. Dates are estimated. He died between 1695 and 1735 in Scotland. Date and place are assumed.

Children were: Elizabeth MCTAVISH.


Elizabeth MCTAVISH was born between 1670 and 1675 in Dunardry, Scotland. Dates are estimated. She died between 1720 and 1760 in Ardelay, Scotland. Date and place are assumed. Parents: Donald MCTAVISH.

Spouse: Hector MCNEILL. Hector MCNEILL and Elizabeth MCTAVISH were married between 1695 and 1699 in Scotland. Date and place are assumed. Children were: Neil Dubh MCNEILL.


Jane MCWILLIAMS was born on 31 May 1792 in Pickens County, South Carolina. She died on 8 Aug 1857 in Gaston Co., North Carolina.

Spouse: Andrew II FERGUSON. Children were: Elizabeth FERGUSON, Mary (Polly) FERGUSON, James FERGUSON, Thomas Warren FERGUSON, William FERGUSON, Eliza Jane FERGUSON, Sarah Ann FERGUSON, Robert Andrew FERGUSON, Nancy FERGUSON.


Lela MCWILLIAMS was born on 16 Nov 1914 in Smithfield, Texas. She died on 20 Aug 1973 in Denton, Texas. She was buried on 22 Aug 1973 in Denton, Texas.

Spouse: Nat HARWELL. Nat HARWELL and Lela MCWILLIAMS were married. Children were: Donna Bess HARWELL.


Polly MCWILLIAMS.

Spouse: John FERGUSON. Children were: Selina FERGUSON, Betsy FERGUSON, Calvin FERGUSON, Harvey FERGUSON, Greene FERGUSON, Robinson FERGUSON, Lucundy FERGUSON, Jennie FERGUSON, Sallie Ann FERGUSON.


Robert MEANS was born in 1815. He died in 1909 in Lawrence County, Missouri.

Spouse: Mary Erixeny FERGUSON. Robert MEANS and Mary Erixeny FERGUSON were married on 19 Nov 1849 in Lawrence County, Missouri.


Flora MEDFORD.

Spouse: Joe Dunn FERGUSON.


Arthur Riddle MEEK was born on 26 Nov 1910. He died on 24 Jun 1983 in Gaston Co., North Carolina. Parents: Payton Andrew MEEK and Adeline Wilder FERGUSON.

Spouse: LOUISE.


Beauford Richard MEEK was born on 8 Feb 1911. He died on 2 Mar 1991 in York County, South Carolina. Parents: Samuel Thomas MEEK and Emma Catherine FERGUSON.

Spouse: Annie Mae JENKINS. Children were: Richard Norman MEEK, Frieda Mar MEEK, Marvin Thomas MEEK, Vernon Grier MEEK.


Billy Stewart MEEK. Parents: William Richard MEEK and Robbie Lee STEWART.


Carolyn Jean MEEK. Parents: James Carl MEEK and Martha Ethel MOSS.


Catherine MEEK. Parents: James Frank MEEK and Nettie JENKINS.


Clyde Turner MEEK was born on 6 Jan 1904. He died on 15 Aug 1992 in Gaston Co., North Carolina. Parents: Payton Andrew MEEK and Adeline Wilder FERGUSON.

Spouse: Pearl Elizabeth HARPER. Clyde Turner MEEK and Pearl Elizabeth HARPER were married on 27 Dec 1927. Children were: Margaret Elizabeth MEEK, Dorothy Harper MEEK, Jackson Turner MEEK, Larry Clifton MEEK.


David Pressley MEEK. Parents: Payton Andrew MEEK and Adeline Wilder FERGUSON.

Spouse: Wilma Lorene FISCHER.


Dessie Lucille MEEK. Parents: Payton Andrew MEEK and Adeline Wilder FERGUSON.

Spouse: Joseph Herbert HARGRODER.


Dorothy Harper MEEK. Parents: Clyde Turner MEEK and Pearl Elizabeth HARPER.


Edith Eleanor MEEK was born on 14 Aug 1916. She died on 8 Mar 1990. Parents: Samuel Thomas MEEK and Emma Catherine FERGUSON.

Spouse: Neville H. OLIVER. Children were: Norman Lewis OLIVER, Agnes Faye OLIVER.

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