The DNA Perdue/Pardue Surname Project conclusively confirms that the spelling variations of this surname do not all share genetic kinship. This site was created for researching the variations which first appear in Colonial Virginia in the Henrico Parish Records in 1730 and 1732. Welcome and hoping that information posted here will be of value to you in your research. Thanks for coming by!
Showing posts with label Pardue Census Records. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Pardue Census Records. Show all posts
Sunday, January 30, 2011
1820 Georgia Census for P*rdue
1820 Census Jefferson County, Georgia
It is unknown who was the father of this William Pardue. He appears to have been born before 1760 from other records that appear to pertain to him. He lived close to Richard Pardue, the son of John Pardue, who died 1769 in Bute County, North Carolina, but a birth year prior to 1760 would likely rule him out as a son of Richard, though, a story of one of his descendants seems to indicate that William lived on or near the Pee Dee River in North Carolina at some point, seemingly in the area that Richard lived in Anson County in 1790. So he may be younger than he appears to have been from the few references for him. Richard's move to Edgefield County, South Carolina also puts him near Richard in the 1790s.
Genealogy is never done; it is always a work in progress!
Friday, October 8, 2010
1820 Tennessee and Kentucky Census Records For P*rdue
1820 Montgomery County, Tennessee and the Monroe County, Kentucky P*rdue Census Records
1820 census records in Montgomery County, Tennessee for Howel and Jarret Perdue, the sons of Richard Pardue born circa 1743 in Amelia County, Virginia and died 1811 in Montgomery County, Tennessee.
1820 census of Francis Perdue in Monroe County, Kentucky, the son of Joseph Pardue who died in 1790 in Warren County, North Carolina.
To see record click on center of image which will take you to the picasa website to view.
Genealogy is never done; it is always a work in progress!
Thursday, October 7, 2010
1820 South Carolina Census Records For P*rdue
1820 South Carolina Census for P*rdue in Edgefield, Chester, Lancaster, and Sumter Counties
1820 Edgefield County, South Carolina census for Adams Pardue, son of John Pardue, who died in 1769 in Bute County, North Carolina.
1820 Edgefield County, South Carolina census' for Margaret Pardue, Stephen Pardue, and Sarah Pardue.
1820 Chester County, South Carolina census records for Joseph Pardue and his son, John.
1820 Lancaster County, South Carolina census records for William Pardue.
1820 Sumter County, South Carolina census records for Leroy Pardue.
To see the captions, click on lower left icon, then rectangle, then right arrow.
To see record click on center of image to take you to the picasa website for viewing.
Genealogy Is Never Done; It Is Always A Work In Progress!
Sunday, November 22, 2009
1820 North Carolina Census Records For P*rdue
1820 North Carolina Census for P*rdue in Granville, Warren, Wilkes, and Nash Counties
To see the captions, click on lower left icon, then rectangle, then right arrow.
To see record click on center of image.
Genealogy Is Never Done: It Is Always A Work in Progress!
Sunday, September 6, 2009
1810 Census P*rdue in North and South Carolina
1810 Pardue Census Records in North and South Carolina
The 1810 census records for all variations of the Pardue name in North
and South Carolina.
To view, click icon in lower left, then rectangle next to it, then right arrow.
To view image click center of picture that will take you to the picasa website for viewing.
Genealogy is never done; it is always a work in progress!
Saturday, September 5, 2009
1800 Census P*rdue in North and South Carolina
1800 P*rdue Census For North and South Carolina
1800 census records for all variations in North and South Carolina
as recorded by the census taker.
To view click icon in lower left corner, then click rectangle next to it, then click
right arrow.
To view image, click center of picture to take you to the picasa website for viewing
Genealogy is never done. It is always a work in progress!
Monday, December 31, 2007
1790 Federal Census Records For Pardue And Various Other Spellings
1790 Census Records
The above images are the originals of the 1790 census' records for the sons of John Pardue who died in 1769 in Bute County, North Carolina. A click on the small rectangle in the lower left corner of the screen will bring up captions that designate the columns in which each name appears and each county and state, as well as the page number of the original census.
The slideshow can be downloaded to your computer. A click inside the frame will take you to the Picasa website where the pictures are located; click on the download to send the pictures to your computer.
In 1790 in the first Federal Census of the new United States, all of John's sons who were alive were enumerated except two, Blackman, who may have not been recorded or recorded in another household, and Morris, who was shown in the 1790 Georgia tax records and who was most probably enumerated in the 1790 Georgia census which was lost. John's enumerated sons were William, Fields, Adams, Richard, Bevel, Liliston, and Joel. His eldest son, John, died in 1783, and his third son, Joseph, died sometime within the year previous to the August 1, 1790 date that began the enumeration of the census.
On the census page in Warren County, North Carolina showing the enumerations for William and Bevel, there also appear three other enumerations bearing the surname who were not John's sons - only one who can be identified - John's grandson, also named John, the son of Joseph, John's third eldest son.
The remaining two households in Warren County record enumerations for a Patram Pardieu and a Joseph Pardieu. Combining information for both Patram and Joseph from later census records show they each were born previous to the year 1765 and combined with tax records, they each were born prior to 1762. Who was the father, or were the fathers, of Patram and Joseph has not been determined, but it appears from various other records, that William, born about 1731, the second of John's sons, is the more likely choice, though, another choice includes John's eldest son, John, who died in 1783, though, there is nothing that indicates that he had any wife or family.
John's third son, Joseph, had a son named, Joseph, also, who at the writing of the elder Joseph's will in 1789, was not yet nineteen years old and the younger Joseph was very probably one of the males under sixteen enumerated in the household of his brother, John, who was appointed administrator of the elder Joseph's estate at the time the first census was being enumerated, thus making the younger Joseph born no earlier than 1774.
Because a legatee in a will was excluded from being a witness, the Joseph Pardue who witnessed the elder Joseph's will was most probably the Joseph Pardue who was enumerated in both the 1790 census and 1800 Warren County census records. After 1800 he moved to Chester County, South Carolina where he was enumerated in the 1810 census. He died in Chester County, SC in 1845.
Other possibilities of the father, or fathers, of Patram and Joseph in the 1790 census' include one, or the other, of those who held the P*rdue surname who remained in the Appomattox River area of Virginia of which DNA testing has shown descendants of those who remained there to have had a recent common ancestor with the John Pardue who moved to North Carolina in 1761. But, as noted in the post on the Perdue/Pardue DNA Project, while DNA can prove kinship, further documentation is needed to confirm the degree of kinship.
HAPPY NEW YEAR!
Genealogy is never done, it is always a Work in Progress!
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)