Notes


Note    N02263         Index
Found in the Hiatt book.

Notes


Note    N01418         Index
Sent by Paula Moore. Was living with son William Hiatt when the 1850
Census was taken, Greene Twnship, Jay Co., Ind. Also had 3 daughters, no further information.

Notes


Note    N01370         Index
Sent by Paula Moore, Dennis Logue and Arlene Lambard. LDS ANCESTRAL FILE NUMBER (AFN) 8S51-JB

Notes


Note    N02208         Index
Said to have been a widow, maiden name?

Notes


Note    N01700         Index
FOUND IN H-H BK
S/o Robert and Mary Comer.

Notes


Note    N01459         Index
Marriage and death information from Colleen Milbocker.

Notes


Note    N01739         Index
See HH book page 265.

Notes


Note    N03769         Index
See HH book, volume I, pg. 192. Two daughters, names unknown. Thomas HIETT resided in Jefferson Co. VA, now W. VA.

Notes


Note    N00265         Index
JOHN HIETT AND MARY LOCKE WERE SECOND COUSINS

Notes


Note    N01772         Index
Sent by Ruby Hiatt, Joyce Kindred, Darleen Peterson.

Note from Darleen Peterson. Documentation: Exact site where James Hiatt
and Wife, Elizabeth (Moore) Hiatt lived with their family in Clay County, Mo
before and after 1820. Today this site of land (Section 31-52-31) is in the
city of Liberty, Mo. and is located directly south of the Liberty Hospital.

History of Clay County

As to the first settlers in what is now Liberty township, it is probable
that they were Richard Hill, Robert Gilmore, James Gilmore, Samuel Gilmore,
Elijah Smith, who settled on Rush Creek, in the southeastern part of the
township, in 1820. The two frist named Gilmores, Hill and Smith, came first in the spring and built cabins and put out small corps, leaving their families down in the Petite Osage bottom (commonly called Tete Saw) in Saline County. In the Hill of the year they returned with their families.
Richard Hill settled on section 9, nearly two miles east of Liberty, the others were lower down the creek. All of these families were related. Samuel Gilmore was the father of Robert and James, and the who was the sister of Elijah Smith, and the mother-in-law of James and Robert Gilmore, came with the party and made her home with her brother. She raised Mary Crawford, an orphan, who became the wife of Cornelius Gilliam, and was the first white woman married Clay county.
Other settlers came in quite numerously and located in the southern
portion of the township in 1821, and in 1822, when the county was orginized and Liberty laid out and made the county seat, there were still other additions made to the settlements in what is now the Liberty municipal township - then about equally divided between Gallatin and Fishing River, the two original townships of the county Anthony Harsell says that is 1821 there was but one house north of Liberty - that of James Hiatt, who lived a little more than a mile from town, due north (section 31-52-31) now known as the Baker farm.

Notes


Note    N03124         Index
TYPE Get Certifcate to
DATE 30 SEP 1815
PLAC Surry County, North Carolina, Westfield MM.

TYPE Get Certifcate to
DATE 8 AUG 1822
PLAC Randoplh County, Indiana, White River MM.

TYPE Get Certifcate to
DATE 5 MAR 1831
PLAC Hendricks County, Indiana, Fairfield MM.

TYPE Moved to
DATE 1833
PLAC Hamilton County, Indiana, Richland-Carmel MM.

TYPE Appointed
DATE 11 MAR 1836
PLAC Committiee at Richland-Carmel MM.

TYPE Appointed
DATE 1 MAY 1824
PLAC Committiee at White River MM.