THE DESCENDANTS OF JAMES CARR VEALE SENIOR:
+ 1. JAMES CARR VEALE I (UNKNOWN), b. March 17, 1763 in Loudoun County, Virginia, d. January 14, 1839 in Veale Township, Daviess County, Indiana he m. LAVINA TOWNSEND of New York State in October 1782 in a Magistrate’s Court, she d. after 1846 in Daviess County, Indiana
More about JAMES CARR VEALE SENIOR:
Burial: Old Veale Family Cemetery, three miles south of Maysville, Indiana, just after you cross Veale Creek, traveling south on State Route #300 in a field around 60 yards to the left in a corn field. His grave stone marker is there and is on land that he homesteaded and later deeded this portion to his son James Carr Veale II
Land Transactions: On July 27, 1829, James Carr Veale & wife to James Carr Veale II and wife: SW quarter of Section 17, Township 2, Range 7, 18 acres. On this property is the location of the cemetery.
Military Service: He entered the War of Revolution 1780 in the 96th District, South Carolina, and he again reentered the service on September 18, 1782 in Maryland, serving a total of five years.
Pension: From Daviess County, Indiana Recorder’s Office, document #3358, Book D, Volume 9, page 198, on the 4th day of March 1831 he received $80.00 per annum with back pay of $160.00. This is recorded under the Revolutionary Claim Act of June 07, 1832
More about LAVINA TOWNSEND:
Burial: Old Clarksburg Cemetery (now Odon, Indiana). She is buried in the area of the Dr. John Townsend Memorial Monument. Dr. John Townsend, his wife Elizabeth and their daughter Elizabeth are buried in the Monument site. The burial site was confirmed by Mr. Robert Correll, 301 Main Street, Odon, Indiana. Mr. Correll is a member of the American Legion Post and they are the keepers of the cemetery.
Parents: JAMES & MARTHA TOWNSEND of New York State. They like our James moved to South Carolina, served in the Revolutionary war there, and are buried in Union County, South Carolina. She has two brothers, Dr. John Townsend, who married Elizabeth and they had at least one child, Elizabeth, her 2nd brother Dr. Amos Townsend marries ANN LEWIS of the Clark & Lewis fame. After the death of Amos she remarried to Mr. Caney, this was the 1st marriage in Clarksburg, Indiana (now Odon, Indiana)
Pension: From the Daviess County, Indiana Recorder’s Office, document #11079, dated July 18, 1846, she received $55.41 paid yearly in March and is recorded in Book D. Volume 1, page 198
Notes for JAMES CARR VEALE SENIOR:
THE VEALE-RAGSDALE FAMILIES
WRITTEN BY: RICHARD ALAN KEEFER
TAKEN FROM HIS “A GOODLY HERITAGE”
Note: This is taken from a rewrite by Richard Alan Keefer. He and my father, Charles C. Veale I spent many hours combing the old records of Daviess County, Indiana to improve his, Richard’s original The Veale-Ragsdale Families (RLV)
Richard writes:
Quote: “While James Carr Veale Senior was still a boy, his moved his family to Union County, South Carolina, where the Courthouse records have the following facts about him: In March of 1805 he purchased 270 acres portion of the Wright estate on the northwest side of Broad River in Union County. (Book O. pages157-158), At the same time Ann Veale bought 208 acres on the North Fork of Neals Creek (Book B. page 401). Was Ann James’ sister (no), (sister maybe) or other relative (probably). In 1807, after he made his first trip to Indiana Territory. He sold a portion of his land in Union County (Book I. page 130) In April of 1803 he sold 100 acres more for a consideration of $750.00, in which a dower for Lavina was executed. (Book M. page 160)”. (End of quote)
From Daviess County Recorders Office, Washington, Indiana, as found by my father, Charles C. Veale I
JAMES CARR VEALE SENIOR’S APPLICATION FOR THE REVOLUTIONARY WAR (DOCUMENT 3 11548)
STATE OF INDIANA SS
COUNTY OF DAVIESS SS
On the 18th day of November 1832 personally appearing in open Court before the Honorable Amory Kenny Presiding Judge of the circuit court of the said county, James Carr Veale, aged sixty nine years, and an old inhabitant of said County and State, who being duly Sworn according to law, does, on his oath make the following declarations: That agreeable to family registry he was born in March of seventeen hundred sixty three in Loudoun County. Virginia: That in his youth his father removed to what is called Chester District, South Carolina, and in the year of Seventeen hundred eighty, he volunteered in a Company of Militia in the said county under Captain Hollingsworth, of Colonel Brandon’s Regiment which was attached to Colonel Picken’s Command, and he marched with the said troops, to obstruct and harass the English and Tories under Farlton; then retreated, with General Morgan’s troops towards Cowpens; the regiment then turned and joined General Sumpter’s Command at Grandby, when the British surrendered; That he was detailed in a company sent to Buckhead, to aid Colonel Lee to that fort, which after a smart defeat General Sumter took possession of, and he was with the Regiment under Colonel Hampton were ordered to proceed to Dorchester were after some fighting the Americans retreated; That he joined the Army at Ninety-six, under General Green. After retreating from Ninety-six, he became affected with smallpox, and was unfit for duty for six weeks, when he joined his Company at Orangeburgh from then remained on duty for some months. That he afterwards kept in motion scouring the Country against Tories, when the said Regiment in company with Colonel Picken’s troops and joined others from Georgia in the Cherokee County Battles.
Signed in his own handwriting: James Carr Veale
Attested to by: Judge Amory Kenny
Filed by County Clerk (Signature unclear)
Note: The DAR records shows the he only served 18 months of service. Military Service Records shows that in August 1782 he reentered service in Maryland and continued to serve until 1785. The Thomas-Veale Ledger indicates that after talking with Carnaby Veale on October 14, 1782, he reenlisted in the War of Revolution on October 28, 1782 in Maryland an was sent back to South Carolina where he rejoined his Company. I have a copy of the Battle of Cowpens which supplied by Ralph C. Veale. Here the Americans entrapped the British General Cornwallis’ troops and reduced them to an ineffective fighting unit. (RLV)
The Veale’s were in Virginia as far back as 1654, when William Veale lived in Lancaster County, having 3 Tithables. James Carr Veale was born 1763 near Leesburg, Loudoun County, Virginia. This is as far back as he can be traced with any accuracy. Loudoun County was formed from Fairfax County in 1757, Fairfax from Prince William in 1742, it Prince William was from Stafford in 1731. Westmoreland and Lancaster are all from Northumberland formed in 1645.
There is a will for Morris Veale of October 03, 1695, the abstract reads. “My three sons Morris, John & William, when they are 21 years of age, my land”. There is a will of John Veale proved March 10, 1718, “Land in Stafford to sons John & Morris”. Other records correlated with the will of John Veale, Prince William County, Virginia (Deed Book B. pages 252/3. Bond Veale, Planter, sells land on March 20, 1733, bequeathed to John & Morris Veale of John Veale’s last will and testament of November 21, 1718 to be equally divided, in case they die without heirs, then descended to the next heir-at-law.
The two above paragraphs is from Professional Genealogist, Robert Lee Choates of Leesburg, Virginia. He was hired by my father, Charles C. Veale I, Mardenna Hunter, Richard Alan Keefer and Lucille Bernice Hewitt (Veale). In a letter dated July 27, 1976 he relates. “Bond Veale and his son John appears to have left the area. There are no wills or estate settlements and no indication of death. This John would have been of age to be the father of James Carr Veale”.
NOTE: It is this John Veale, whose son Elijah Veale that is the topic of the publication of “A Beginning at White Oak”. I’ve been unable to find a copy of this publication. We do know that Bond Veale and his son John Veale did end up in North Carolina. And from the documents on Elijah Veale we know that Bond Veale left his lands in Virginia in trust of William Ezell for his son John Veale. John Veale, in turn left these lands to Elijah Veale and his children. This information was gained in my writing on the Northern Neck of Virginia Veale’s which is going into our web site in the next day or so (August 18, 2007) (RLV)
The first application for Lavina Townsend, James Carr Veale I’S wife was disapproved. The following is a copy of the second application. NOTE: I have both copies (RLV)
In 1840, shortly after the death of James Carr Veale I, his wife Lavina applied for a pension: Quote: “State of Indiana, County of Daviess; On the 20th day of January Eighteen hundred and forty personally appeared before the undersigned Judge of Probate Court in and for the said County and in and for the said State, a court record, Lavina Veale, a resident of Veale Township, in the said County aforesaid, aged seventy-seven years, who being first sworn according to Law, does on her oath, make the following declarations, in order to obtain the benefit of the provision made by the Act of Congress, passed July 07, 1838, entitles “An Act granting half pay and pension to certain widows”. That she was the widow of James Carr Veale, who was a private in the Army of the Revolution; who was a pensioner of the United States at the rate of Eighty dollars per annum from the fourth of March 1831 during his natural life. That James Carr Veale resided in Union County in the State of South Carolina from the time he quitted the service in the Army of the Revolution until the Spring of the year Eighteen hundred and eight when he removed to the State of Indiana; that he arrived at Vincennes, Indiana on the 10th day of June eighteen hundred and eight; That on the 13th day the same month and year that he removed to his present residence of this dependant in Veale Township in Daviess County, Indiana where he continued to live during his natural life.; That she is now un-firm in mind and body; that her memory does not serve her sufficiently to state accurately the service of the said James Carr Veale performed in the Army of the Revolution but that reference, as to that, may be had to the documentary evidence on file in the War Department. She further declares that she married the said James Carr Veale, in the month of October, precise date she can not say, in the year of seventeen hundred eighty two, and that she knows of no documentary evidence by which to prove the said marriage, and the fact is stated to entitle her benefit or good testimony; That the aforesaid James Carr Veale died on the fourteenth day of January eighteen hundred thirty nine at the said County and State aforesaid; That she was not married to him prior to him leaving service, but her marriage to him took place previously to the first of January seventeen hundred and ninety four, viz, at the time above stated, and that she has not married since the death of the said James Carr Veale, but continues to be a widow” (End of quote).
SIGNED: her X Lavina Veale
No Sub signatures to be found (RLV)
Note: Her statements, as indicated are not the most firm. There are some later documents that will change some of her factors, but not many items are inaccurate. (RLV)
NOTE: Document #11029, Book D, Volume I, page 431, Daviess County Clerk’s Office, Washington, Indians shows: Lavina received her pension on July 18, 1846 for the sum of $55.41 per annum retroactive back to March 1836. (I have a copy of this Document) (RLV)
INFORMATION FROM SOUTH CAROLINA:
The 1790 Federal Census of South Carolina shows: JAMES C. VEAL, 96th District, Union County, South Carolina lists 2 free males 26 and older, 2 free white males under 16, and 3 white females living in the household.
In Curtis and Mardenna Hunter’s many trips back to Union County, South Carolina they found the following:
Quote: “On September 05 1785, James C. Veal was granted 370 acres by His Excellency, the Governor and Commander-in-Chief of South Carolina. On the same date the Index of State Grants shows: James C. Viel of 96th District as receiving 300 acres for his services in the American Revolution.
On June 21, 1980 writes: From Land Transactions in the Union County Courthouse showing: In 1806, James C. Veale deeded land to William JOHNSON. In1807. James C. Veal deeded 270 acres in Union County, South Carolina to William JOHNSON for $14.00 in hand paid. On April 14, 1807, J. C. Veal deeded 300 acres to William JOHNSON for $750.00 for land on the northwest side of Broad River and Ned’s Little Creek. Lavina Veal, wife of James C. Veal relinquished her dower rights”. (End of quote)
The Madison Agency Report into records of James Carr Veale, Revolutionary War Records #W 9586 shows that James C. Veale & Lavina Townsend were married in October 1782 in a Magistrates Court at Union County, South Carolina. It also lists his sister Sarah Veale married a MR HAWKINS in Daviess County, Indiana
EARLY INDIANA RECORDS:
A History of Daviess County, Indiana, by Fulkerson (1915) he writes: Quote “James Carr Veale II and his slave SAM traveled down the “Big Rivers” and located a settlement site just south of the Hawkins Fort on the west fork of White River. He, James II and SAM built the first saw mill on what is known as Veale Creek near where it empties into the White River, and so that James II was the first school teacher in Daviess County, Indiana. (It was hard to conceive that a father would send his teenage son James II into a wilderness with only a slave to establish a new home for the family”. (End of quote) Once the true date of birth was found for James II by a Memorandum found in the Daviess County, Clerk’s Office, the date was November 13, 1786, would make James II the age of 21 years. (More more understandable)
Note: Later records will show that James II was not the first school teacher in Daviess County, Indiana; it was James I. (RLV)
JAMES CARR VEALE SENIOR and his family arrived in the Indiana Territory Capital at Vincennes or Old Fort Sackville on June 10, 1808. He purchased one square mile or 640 acres at the sum of $640.00 (Now known as Veale Township, Daviess County, Indiana). The old Territorial Records shows this place of homestead as being 19 miles east of Vincennes, crossing White River just south of the sandbars, near Fort Hawkins. Turning strait south crossing a freshet (now named Veale Creek). The homestead was surveyed just after Indiana became a State in 1816 and is now surveyed as Section 17, Township 2 (Veale) Range 7. James II and family arrived in Daviess County, Indiana on June 13, 1808. This property is south of Maysville, Indiana, just off of US Highway #50 on State Route 300 West. Maysville was the hub then of all activities until the Railways came into being, then all activities were moved to the County Seat at Washington, Indiana. (RLV)
James Carr Veale Senior served on the County Commission 1821-1825 and was appointed with John COLEMAN, another Commissioner, as overseers of the poor in Veale Township (1825)
HISTORY OF THE OLD JAMES CARR VEALE BIBLE:
The old Bible was started by James I himself around 1812 while he was teaching the first school in the winter months. As he aged the Bible was turned over to James Carr Veale II and his wife Eleanor Veale (Aikman), Eleanor released this old Bible into the hands of William Alexander Veale and his wife Margaret Anne Pierce. William A. Veale died on March 23, 1879 from wounds of the Civil War in Newton, Kansas. His wife Margaret Anne Pierce died a short time later on November 11, 1881, leaving seven orphan children. Margaret Anne Pierces mother, Jane C. Pierce (Bratton) took in her grandchildren with her 2nd husband, William Thomas. With Jane and William having a large family of their own it became necessary to place the Veale children in the Soldiers and Sailors Orphanage in Knightstown, Indiana. Jane and William Thomas had a son named John E. THOMAS I, who had a son named John E. II. In or about 1901, Jane turned the old Bible over to John E. Thomas I who took the Bible back to Las Vegas, Nevada and onwards to Portland, Oregon, where it was found in the hands of John E. Thomas II in 1957. It is now called the “THOMAS-VEALE LEDGER”, I got to see this Ledger in October 2000, but it had been purchased by a publishing company for a sum of $50,000.00. It was necessary that I gain a Court Order to stop the Printing of our families own history, legally (RLV)
OTHER OLD RECORDS:
Copied from the ROSTER OF SOLDIERS AND PATRIOTS OF THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION, 1938 Edition: Collected by Mrs. Roy Bogner of Washington, Indiana
Note: Mrs. Bogner and my Mother worked together in family researching. Both were members of the White River DAR’S, and the Daviess County Genealogy Society. (RLV)
Quote: “VEALE, JAMES CARR
Born: March 1763 in Loudoun County, Virginia
Service: Volunteered in Chester District, South Carolina as a private in Captain Hollingsworth’s Company, Colonel Brandon’s regiment
Served to the close of the war: Proof: Pension Claim #W9568
Died: January 04, 1839
Burial: On a farm now owned by T. C, Singleton, Veale Township, Government marker placed by the White River Chapter of DAR
Married: In 1782
Children:
JAMES CARR VEALE II, b. 1786, m. ELEANOR AIKMAN
DANIEL VEALE, m. MARY COLEMAN
CATHERINE VEALE, m. 1st JAMES ARRELL, m. 2nd REUBEN KILGORE
ALSEY VEALE, m. JOSIAH WALLACE
NANCY VEALE, m. JAMES LETT
WILLIAM VEALE, m. ELIZABETH STEPHENSON”. (End of quote)
Note: Between the date of the above and the current date, many new items have been brought to light. (RLV)
HISTORY OF DAVIESS COUNTY, INDIANA by Fulkerson (1915), page 585
Quote: “When Daviess County was organized into Townships, Veale Township was named in the honor of James Carr Veale I, who built a mill on the creek to grind wheat and corn, and a saw mill to manufacture lumber. (Insert: Actually there were two mills erected on Veale Creek. The first one, the lumber mill was erected by James Carr Veale II and his slave SAM. It was washed away in the floods of 1822. The second mill was a grist mill built by James I.). He was married to Melvina Townsend, and to this union eight children were born as follows: WILLIAM T., who married Miss STEPHENSON, they had two children. WATIS & EMILY; WATIS migrated to Texas where he died at the age of Sixty-two (ERROR), and EMILY married MR. HELPENSTEIN. And is now living in Chico, California, at the age of eighty-three; DANIEL married Miss COLEMAN, and reared a family in Veale Township, this county. JAMES II, hereafter referred to, is the maternal grandfather of JOHN M. PEEK, JOHN T. VEALE married MISS HYATT of Washington, Indiana, a sister of ELISHA and JOHN HYATT, earlier merchants of that city. NANCY married MR LETT, reared a family of several children. ELSIE married MR WALLACE, KATHY married a man by the name of ARRELL, who died, and afterwards married a MR KILGORE” (End of quote)
VEALE, Source unknown (Probably Mrs. Bogner)
Quote: “James Carr Veale I, born March 17, 1763 in Loudoun County, Virginia of English background, moved to Union County, South Carolina. Owned 270 acres there, married Lavina Townsend (b. 1764) in 1782
Revolutionary War Veteran 1780-1785 in the Company of Militia in Union County, South Carolina under Captain Hollingsworth of Colonel Brandon’s Regiment which was attached to Colonel Picken’s Command and marched with said troops to harass the English and Tories under Tarlington, later joined General Sumter’s Command where the British surrendered. Had several more engagements with the British, had smallpox and was unable to serve for six weeks. He spent most of his service scouring the Country against the Tories. He was assigned as medicine man, applied for a pension for Lavina as wife of a Veteran in 1833. Pension for $80.00 full amount paid off yearly. James Carr Veale I died January 14, 1839. Lavina died in1844. He married on October 1782. James Carr Veale I and Lavina had eight children: JAMES CARR II, DANIEL, CATHERINE, ELSIE, NANCY, WILLIAM, JOHN T., and WATIS” (End of quote) (There are a few errors in these statements RLV)
The Veale’s are credited as being among the first pioneers to the Indiana Territory settling in what is now Veale Township. The name has carried on as we now have Veale Creek, Veale Elementary School, Veale Fire Station, Veale’s Creek Church, and Veale Creek Players. (RLV)
PROBATE OF JAMES CARR VEALE SENIOR:
VEALE, JAMES CARR SENIOR, February 16, 1839, Administrator: John T. Veale, son of James Carr Veale I and Wife Lavina Veale (Townsend)
SONS:
JAMES CARR VEALE II, m. ELEANOR AIKMAN
DANIEL VEALE, m. MARY “POLLY” COLEMAN
WILLIAM VEALE, m. ELIZABETH STEPHENSON
DAUGHTERS:
ALSEY (ELIZABETH) (?) m. WILLIAM WALLACE (Note: ELSIE not ELIZABETH) (Just this year 2008 there were errors found in her records; they will be corrected in her chapter) (RLV)
CATHERINE VEALE, m. JAMES ARRELL
m. REUBEN KILGORE
NANCY VEALE, m. JAMES LETT
James Carr Veale I served in the Revolutionary War with the Maryland Troops. (NOTE)
He reenlisted in Maryland but served with the South Carolina troops (RLV)
Burial: On Singleton Farm, Veale Township, Daviess County, Indiana
EARLY HISTORY OF DAVIESS COUNTY, INDIANA, page 156
Quote: “James Carr Veale I was according to legend, the first school teacher in Daviess County. Veale operated a subscription school near Maysville, Indiana in 1811. At this early date Maysville was an important settlement and years later the Wabash & Erie Canal made it, at least temporarily, the most important place of business in the county. Veale’s school had the following fifteen pupils: MARGARET and ELLA STEEN; JOHN, SAMUEL and WILLIAM RAGSDALE; ELIJAH and MARGARET RUSSELL; WATIS & JOHN VEALE, his sons; DANIEL HUSHIA; JOHN THOMPSON; JOSEPH HAWKINS; and SAMUEL and JOHN STEEN”. End of quote)
NOTE: The highlighted names are very important in finding out the real truth as to who was the first school teacher of Daviess County, Indiana. Fulkerson wrote in 1915 that it was James II, and his wife Eleanor Aikman did have a college education in Virginia. The most logic reasoning of that day and time. The key in saying it was James I is because James II did not have a son named Watis. (RLV)
VEALE FAMILY MARRIAGES:
KNOX COUNTY, TERRITORIAL CAPITAL, VINCENNES, INDIANA
DANIEL VEALE & MARY COLEMAN, June 19, 1813
JAMES VEALE II & ELEANOR AIKMAN, August 22, 1813
NANCY VEALE & JAMES LETT, January 05, 1813
MARGARET ANN VEALE & WILLIAM HOGSHEAD, October 22, 1833
Note: It has been found that these dates are more than likely the date of registration and not the actual date of marriage. In the case of Nancy Veale & James Lett the actual date of marriage was January 24, 1813 RLV)
DAVIESS COUNTY, INDIANA
ADA VEALE & JAMES COLEMAN, October 29, 1822
ALONZO VEALE & LAURA ENNIS, July 25, 1886
ANABY VEALE & FRANCIS EVERETT, March 26, 1870
ANALIZE VEALE & FRANCIS EVERETT, March 26, 1843
ANDERSON VEALE & MARY JANE ALLEN, December 24, 1856
ANGELINE VEALE & ANDREW HOLLINGSWORTH, August 17, 1843
ARENA VEALE & ANDREW PLIMBLETON, August 14, 1887
CATHERINE VEALE & ROBERT HAMILTON, February 09, 1829
CATHERINE VEALE & JAMES ARRELL, October 27, 1829
CATHERINE VEALE & REUBEN KILGORE, November 07, 1837
CHARLES A. VEALE & FLOSSIE TRAYLOR, October 27, 1920
ELIZA VEALE & JOHN ALLEN, February 12, 1857
ELIZABETH VEALE & DR. ALBERT WHITTON, February 10, 1852
ELIZABETH VEALE & SAMUEL G. WILSON, April 29, 1889
ELIZABETH VEALE & ELISHIA FITZGERALD, March 18, 1835
ELIZABETH VEALE & WILLIAM WALLACE, February 08, 187
ELLA VEALE & DOUGLAS TAYLOR, November 21, 1889
ELLIS VEALE & LAVERSA CRABB, October 12, 1870
EMILY VEALE & BENJAMIN HELPENSTINE, December 17, 1851
ETTIE VEALE & JESS MARMADUKE, November 06, 1888
FRANCIS A. VEALE & JOHN JONES, August 26, 1880 (REV. JAMES JONES)
GEORGE ELMER VEALE & MARGARET HARRIMAN, February 26, 1872
JAMES VEALE & MARY E. RAGSDALE, November 18, 1858
JAMES C. VEALE & NANCY ANN WILKERSON, November 05, 1868
JAMES C. VEALE & MARY COSBY, April 19, 1889
JAMES G. VEALE & RENA GLASSCLASS, June 14, 1888
JOHN ALLEN VEALE & CATHERINE BOEHLE, February 02, 1895
JOHN T. VEALE & LUCINDA HYATT, January 28, 1827
JOHN T. VEALE & DELILA THOMAS, February 24, 1841
LAURA VEALE & PETER SULTON, October 10, 1878
LORA M. VEALE & ELMER EMMONS, August 25, 1889
LUCINDA VEALE & JOHN ALLEN, October 29, 1860
LUCINDA VEALE & ANDREW HOLLINGSWORTH, September 03, 1833
MANERVA VEALE & GEORGE BARBER, April 24, 1867
MARGARET F. VEALE & GEORGE RAGSDALE, November 09, 1852
MARGARET A. VEALE & JAMES PULUM, September 17, 1881
MARTHA VEALE & HUNTLEY SINGLETON, December 28, 1848
MARTHA F. VEALE & GEORGE W. RAGSDALE, November 09, 1852
MARY VEALE & ALFRED WISE, December 11, 1851
MARY VEALE & RANDOLPH RAGSDALE, January 22, 1877
MARY JANE VEALE & ANDREW WARD, December 21, 1847
MARY M. VEALE & FIELDING JOHNSON, December 12, 1849
MURL C. VEALE & ARVIL LANE, June 14, 1889
NANCY E. VEALE & DAVID JACKSON, February 20, 1889
NANCY RIGHT VEALE & JESSIE PEEK, March 20, 1853
PLEASANT M. VEALE & RCHAEL CHAPMAN, November 21, 1855
RACHEL VEALE & ALBERT GROSS, October 01, 1862
SARAH VEALE & LEVI PEEK, March 20, 1853
SARAH VEALE & HEZEKIAH M. JACKSON, February 20, 1839
THOMAS VEALE & NANCY STEPHSON, December 13, 1826
THOMAS VEALE & INDIA DONALDSON, September 07, 1829
WALTER VEALE & MARY HARDING, March 10, 1880
WAITIS VEALE & LILLIAN BLANCHE THOMAS, July 03, 1901
WILLIAM A. VEALE & MARGARET A. PIERCE, February 28, 1864
WILLIAM THOMAS VEALE & SUSAN DICKERSON, October 01, 1876
WILLIAM VEALE & ELIZABETH STEPHENSON, December 13, 1826 or May 21, 1827 (two entries)
WILLIAM THOMAS VEALE & AMANDA MURPHY, March 22, 1857
NOTE: This listing of marriages were hand transcribed from the Daviess County, Indiana Records by Charles C. Veale and Myrtle L. Sheetz, my father & mother (RLV)
OTHER RELATED MARRIAGES: Same Source
DAVID PEEK & ISABELLA HERRINGTON, February 03, 1876
JACOB PEEK & PHEOBY ORELANDER, January 04, 1896
MARY PEEK & NORVAL BAKER, September 06, 1875
MARY PEEK & PETER FOWALD, September12, 1883
SARA JANE PEEK & GEORGE WEBBER, November 08, 1854
LUCINDA WISE & THOMAS HURRED, March 15, 1893
JOHN T. WISE & LILLIE THOMAS, March15, 1893 (brother & sister m. same day)
GEORGE HAWKINS & MARGARET BROWN, March 30, 1828
THOMAS RAGSDALE & MARY PALMER, August --, 1828
RICHARD HATTAWAY & MILLIE STONE, January 16, 1829
GEORGE BOGARD & BELAY BRADFORD, June 09, 1829
JOHN PEEK & WINNIE PALMER, November 17, 1830
JOSEPH HASKINS & MARTHA MINK, April 18, 1905
ALFRED JOHNSON & FRANCIS BATCHLOR, October 31, 1870
JOHN WARD & ETHEL BRUNNER, February 06, 1909
JOHN T. WARD & PRISCILLA CHAPMAN, October 14, 1869
JOHN LEWIS WARD & AMANDA MILES, September 17, 1857
JOHN R. WARD & MARY HENSLEY, August 22, 1869
JOHN R. WARD & SARAH WALLACE, February 12, 1880
JOHN R. WARD & MOLLIE CLARK, September 09, 1861
LAVINA WARD & ELIZA MILES, September 09, 1861
THOMAS TRAYLER & CATHERINE SHOUTS, February 18, 1836
PIERRE ALVA & WILLIAM KINNERON, September 18, 1875