! Died at age 15.
! Died unmarried 13 Nov 1857.spouse:
! Married a Bolton after death of sister.spouse: Bolton, Unknown (*1801 - )
Anne Fuller McDaniel Stubbs married William Stubbs. She was the widow of hisspouse: Stubbs, William (1748 - 1839)
nephew Joh Stubbs. They were married in 1830 when William was 81 and Anne was
58. The Rev. Campbell Stubbs performed the cememony. After his death, she
continued to draw his Revolutionary Soldier's pension. She was still living
when the War Between the States broke out, and her pension stopped. After the
war, she was restored to the pension roll.
! Died young.
Died at Emory University Hospital in Atlanta.spouse: Price, Lillian Drew (1900 - 1965)Married 2nd Evelyn Shelton Lord, daughter of John Lord and Evelyn Gertrude Dant
Shelton, born Sept 24 1904 and died July 5 1998.
! Married a doctor near Atlanta.
! Married Rosa Lee Bussey.spouse: Bussey, Mary Rosalie (1865 - 1935)
! Married Cornelia Lord and had the following children: (1) Cora, (2) Evelina,spouse: Lord, Cornelia Frances (1868 - 1944)
(3) Julian, and (4) Clifford.
! Died young.
John Stubbs of The London Company.spouse:
! A soldier of teh Revolutionar War.spouse: Bridges, Mary (*1755 - )
! Married (1) Newman Smith (2) M E Wheeler.spouse: Smith, Daniel Newman (1851 - 1887)
! Married John H. Wales.
In a letter from Rev. Charles William Stubbs, D.D., Dean of Ely:spouse:
" In 1620 Mr. Stubbs bought of Mr. Thomas Maddox for L25 two shares in the
Virginia Company in London. Mr. Stubbs was also a member of the London Company
in London in 1622 (Brown's Genesis of U.S., page 940).
! A traveling salesman.
‚! Moved to Simpson County, Mississippi, and no dependable record of childrenspouse: Hubbard, Peter (*1786 - )
found.
! Died young.
! Alive in 1909.
! Buried in cemetery on Highway 441 outside of Irwinton, Georgia.spouse: Bush, Martha Ann (1834 - 1922)
! Marriedspouse: Spence, Cornelia Nellie (*1868 - )
Cornelia Spencer and had the following children: (1) Clyde, (2) Leo, (3)
Hannah, (4) Herbert, and (5) Ruth.
Married Selina Brannon who died in 1856 and then remarried to Elizabethspouse: Ivey, Elizabeth (1838 - 1909)
Ivy in 1857. Selina and Seaborn had the following children: Benjamin and
Tallulah.
Owned Bibb Land and Lumber Company at Cox, Gerogia; afterwards, the Williamsspouse: Clements, Mary Elizabeth (1875 - 1903)
Company at Eastman, Georgia. Owned home in Vineville, Georgia.According to "MEN OF MARK IN GEORGIA", a complete and elaborate history of
the state from its settlement to the present time, edited by William J.
Northen, ex-governor of Georgia, Volume VI covering the period of 1733 to 1911,
Sidney Johnson Stubbs biography reads as follows:The Stubbs family is one of the old families of England. The name is a
peculiar one, and it is probable it sprang from a French stock, as the prefix
de is connected with the name Stubbs.
Little is known od Stephen Stubbs. He was born in Cheraw District, South
Carolina, but dates are unknown. Hw served as a private in the 3rd Continental
Army Regiment during the Revolutionary War, according to Revolutionary War file
#7507 in the South Carolina archieves. He died either during the war or
shortly thereafter --before 1875. His brother John Stubbs was administrator of
Stephen's estate. Shortly after John's death, William Stubbs made application
for letters of administration for Stephen's estate.
ORIGIN OF THE STUBBS FAMILY:spouse: Prewett, Thomas Michael (1952 - )Students of patronymics have claimed that the name Stubbs dates back in the
United Kingdom to at least 1000 A.D. Alphege Stybb (RIN 399) has been
identified by G. Tengvik, the Swedish genealogist, in his book "Old English
Bynames."
England is a country of heavy fogs that often obscure more than just the
landscape. Before the birth of Christ, Britian was a wild and desolate island
inhabitated by the Celts. As a result of the Roman, Anglo-Saxon, and Norman
conquests, the English people by the 11th century a conglomerate of races. Out
of these confusing mists a pattern can be traced faintly, but proof is missing
up until the 17th cwntury.
By the 13th century, members of the Stubbs family are found living in the
Forest of Knaresborough, Yorkshire, England. This Royal Forest of
Knaresborough was a range of country 20 miles in length and 8 miles in width.
It was diversified with mountains and moors, rocky eminences and fertile
valleys. Knaresborough Forest extended from the present town of Knaresborough
westward and southward to the heather-clad hills overlooking Bolton Abbey.
The Stubbs name is thought to be derived from "STOB" or "STUB;" the root end
of a broken tree. Such an object may have existed in the vicinity of the
family residence, and hence, the family members received the designation "DE"
making the name"OF STUBB" or "OF STUBBS."
From a poem entitled "The Hunt" found in "The LAys and Leaves of
Knaresborough Forest" by teh Reverend Thomas Parkinson, the following verses
can be read:
"John Jeffrey of 'The Trees' is there,
And Stubbs of Whitewall Nook--
Guy Palmes of Lidley th' sport to share
Hath come o'er moor and brook."
"But oft a root though hid away
By shoot is not unknown
And Fairfax, Stubbs, and Thackeray
Are names the world doth own."
Originally, Knaresborough Forest was a wild and rugged district with rich,
heavily wooded valleys and uplands covered with ferns and heathers. It was a
place admirably adapted as a refuge for the superstititions of the old British
and Saxon creeds.
In medieval times, Knaresborough Forest was surrounded by feutal strongholds
and ecclesiastical establishments of the first magnitude. At this time, there
were more Roma Catholic convents, monasteries, and abbeys in Yorkshire than in
any other section of England. It was within this setting that Henry de Stubbes
and Richard de Stubbes were named in the Hundred Roll of 1273.
According to William Carter Stubbs, the author of THE DESCENDANTS OF JOHNspouse: Tate, Betsy Wadsworth (*1774 - )
STUBBS OF CAPPAHOSIC, GLOUCESTER COUNTY, VIRGINIA 1652, written in New Orleans,
Louisiana, in 1902