It is not proved that Hardeman is a son of Francis Hughes.
Is Rachel Ann Hughes born about 1814 a daughter of Hardeman???
1830 United States Federal Census
Name: Shipley, Benjamin (son of Richard Shipley, Sr. and Hannah Retta
Hughes)
Township: Not Stated
County: Hamilton
State: Tennessee
Year: 1830
Roll: 180
Page: 81
1000100000000
0011100000000
1 male under age 5, Nathan Pascal Shipley
1 male age 20-29, Benjamin Franklin Shipley
1 female age 10-14, unknown but not a child of this family
1 female age 15-19, unknown but not a child of this family
1 female age 20-29, Sarah Burkett Shipley
On same page: , Hamilton, Tennessee, Page: 81; NARA Roll: M19-180; Family History Film: 0024538.
Name: Hardy Hughs
Home in 1830: , Hamilton, Tennessee
View Map
Free White Persons - Males - 10 thru 14: 1 Thomas abt. 15
Free White Persons - Males - 15 thru 19: 1 Hardy abt. 20
Free White Persons - Males - 50 thru 59: 1 Hardeman
Free White Persons - Females - 10 thru 14: 1
Free White Persons - Females - 15 thru 19: 1 Rachel Ann abt. 16 (no proof she belongs)
Free White Persons - Females - 40 thru 49: 1 Cynthia abt. 45
Free White Persons - Under 20: 4
Free White Persons - 20 thru 49: 1
Total Free White Persons: 6
Total - All Persons (Free White, Slaves, Free Colored): 6
next residence:
Name: George Hughs
Home in 1830: , Hamilton, Tennessee
View Map
Free White Persons - Males - Under 5: 3
Free White Persons - Males - 20 thru 29: 1
Free White Persons - Females - 20 thru 29: 1
Free White Persons - Under 20: 3
Free White Persons - 20 thru 49: 2
Total Free White Persons: 5
Total - All Persons (Free White, Slaves, Free Colored): 5 oh
on previous page:
Nathan Shipley
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Hardeman (Hardy) Hughes)
Date and place of birth: 1770/1780 NC
Date and place of death: 1830/1840 Hamilton Co, TN
Marriage date and place: 27 Feb Grainger Co, TN
Names of children: William Hughes b 1805
Names of parents: Francis Hughes b c1759 VA d 1841 Bledsoe Co, TN & Rebecca Allen
Siblings: John Hughes b 1779 d 1871 sp Jane Skiles b c1780 ; Margaret Hughes d aft 1841 ; Clarissa Hughes b 1760/1770 sp-John Lovelady s/o John Lovelady and Sarah Morgan ; Ingebo Hughes sp-William Hixson md 6 Sep 1795 Greene Co, TN ; Rebecca Hughes sp-Timothy S Hixson
Name of spouse: Sinthia Cook
Comments:
Use carefully the following names, which appear in some Hughes family outlines follow. Documentation for them as sons of Hardy Hughes and Sinthia Cook has not been found.
* George Hughes, b. abt. 1805 (25)
* Thomas Hughes, b. abt. 1805 (25)
* Hardy Hughes, b. abt. 1794, NC (26) or 1810, Claiborne Co TN (25)
Memories and Stories
No county has been identified as the birth place of Hardeman Hughes. It is not known if the birth place refers to the area covered by the current state of North Carolina, or the area that was the part of western North Carolina that later became Tennessee.
One source suggests that Hardeman Hughes married in Greene Co TN, and that his wife's name was Cynthia Church.
Various researchers have looked for records which might reveal one or more additional offspring for Hardy Hughes and Sinthia Cook. Candidates include George Hughes b. 1800-1810, Hardy Hughes (see below), and Thomas Hughes b. 1815-1820.
Speculation on the Namesake of Hardeman, the Given Name
If Hardeman is a surname that married into the Hughes or Allen lines, an instance of such marriage remains to be identified. What has been found, however, is documented service at the Battle of King's Mountain in the Revoutionary War for both Thomas Hardeman and Francis Hughes, father of Hardeman Hughes. Thomas Hardeman and his sons proved themeselves as leaders in both Tennessee and Texas, as noted below.
The following summary for the life of Thomas Hardeman appears on a web site of Frances Casstevens:
"Thomas Hardeman and wife Mary Harding Perkins moved to NC, the 'Watauga Country' in 1777. He fought at the Battle of King's Mountain, and was Capt. of a company that marched against the Cherokees in the Nicojack War of 1794.
"In 1783, the Hardemans moved to Davidson County, TN to Hardeman's crossroads near Nashville. In 1788 he served in the NC House of Commons as a representative from Davidson Co. He was a member of the NC Constitutional Convention, and was a delegate to the Convention which adopted the first Constitution of Tennessee.
"He served as a Senator in the TN General Assembly in 1797. For his Revolutionary War Service, Thomas received 640 acres on the Little Harpeth in Davidson Co., TN (later Williamson Co.). His home was called "Sugar Hill" and was about 5 miles S of Franklin. He later moved to Missouri and remained until 1830, returned and died in TN in 1833)." (23)