Home | What's New | Photos | Histories | Sources | Reports | Cemeteries | Headstones | Statistics | Surnames

Print Bookmark

James David Ford

Male 1875 - 1905  (~ 29 years)


Generations:      Standard    |    Vertical    |    Compact    |    Box    |    Text    |    Ahnentafel    |    Fan Chart    |    Media    |    PDF

Less detail
Generation: 1

  1. 1.  James David Ford was born in Jun 1875 in Sullivan County, , , Tennessee (son of Andrew Riley Ford and Lucy Anna Johnson); died on 20 Jan 1905; was buried in Arcadia Umc Cemetery, , Sullivan County, Tennessee.

Generation: 2

  1. 2.  Andrew Riley Ford was born in Feb 1841 in Sullivan County, , , Tennessee (son of Thomas P. Ford and Mary (Ford)); died about 1907 in Sullivan County, , , Tennessee; was buried in Arcadia Umc Cemetery, , Sullivan County, Tennessee.

    Andrew married Lucy Anna Johnson on 9 Feb 1871 in Sullivan County, , , Tennessee. Lucy was born about 1845 in Sullivan County, , , Tennessee; died about 1883 in Sullivan County, , , Tennessee; was buried in Arcadia Umc Cemetery, , Sullivan County, Tennessee. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  Lucy Anna Johnson was born about 1845 in Sullivan County, , , Tennessee; died about 1883 in Sullivan County, , , Tennessee; was buried in Arcadia Umc Cemetery, , Sullivan County, Tennessee.
    Children:
    1. William B. Ford was born about 1873 in Sullivan County, , , Tennessee.
    2. Thomas Ford was born about 1874 in Sullivan County, , , Tennessee.
    3. 1. James David Ford was born in Jun 1875 in Sullivan County, , , Tennessee; died on 20 Jan 1905; was buried in Arcadia Umc Cemetery, , Sullivan County, Tennessee.
    4. Samuel Millard Ford was born on 18 Feb 1878 in Sullivan County, , , Tennessee; died on 28 Nov 1928; was buried in Arcadia Umc Cemetery, , Sullivan County, Tennessee.
    5. Mollie Ford was born about 1879 in Sullivan County, , , Tennessee.
    6. Robert N. Ford was born about 1880 in Sullivan County, , , Tennessee; died about 1881 in Sullivan County, , , Tennessee; was buried in Arcadia Umc Cemetery, , Sullivan County, Tennessee.


Generation: 3

  1. 4.  Thomas P. Ford was born about 1803 in Baltimore, , Baltimore County, Maryland (son of Loyd Ford, Jr. and Mary Ann Wood).

    Notes:

    This gedcom was downloaded from Roots.com or Ancestry.com from the files of Sandra Selph-Hunter. Should you find errors or wish to make new contributions please contact Sandra at her e-mail: sandyspiritwalker@hotmail.com.

    Thomas married Mary (Ford) about 1825 in Sullivan County, , , Tennessee. Mary was born about 1807 in Sullivan County, , , Tennessee. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 5.  Mary (Ford) was born about 1807 in Sullivan County, , , Tennessee.
    Children:
    1. Elizabeth Ford was born on 21 Feb 1830 in Sullivan County, , , Tennessee; died on 28 Feb 1909 in Sullivan County, , , Tennessee.
    2. Ruth Ford was born about 1832 in Sullivan County, , , Tennessee.
    3. James Ford was born about 1833 in Sullivan County, , , Tennessee.
    4. Sarah Ford was born about 1834 in Sullivan County, , , Tennessee.
    5. Mary Ford was born about 1836 in Sullivan County, , , Tennessee.
    6. Nathaniell Ford was born about 1839 in Sullivan County, , , Tennessee.
    7. 2. Andrew Riley Ford was born in Feb 1841 in Sullivan County, , , Tennessee; died about 1907 in Sullivan County, , , Tennessee; was buried in Arcadia Umc Cemetery, , Sullivan County, Tennessee.
    8. Bainey Ford was born about 1843 in Sullivan County, , , Tennessee.
    9. Rebecca Ford was born about 1848 in Sullivan County, , , Tennessee.


Generation: 4

  1. 8.  Loyd Ford, Jr. was born in 1748 in Baltimore, , Baltimore County, Maryland (son of Lloyd Ford and Mary Grant); died on 18 Nov 1843 in Missouri Or Tennessee, , , .

    Notes:

    Lloyd Ford was a private in the American Revolutionary War

    FORD V. FORD
    1846
    This significant decision of the Tennessee Supreme Court provides a valuable understanding of the Tennessee judiciary's peculiar relationship with the institution of slavery. The case arose after the death in 1842 of Loyd Ford of Washington County. Ford, a yeoman farmer, owned several slaves whom he regarded with particular affection. He drafted a will that freed the slaves and bequeathed them his real property. Before Ford's death, his children attempted to force him to destroy the will and even offered money for its destruction to the person holding the document for safekeeping. After Ford's death, his slaves presented the will to the Washington County courts for probate. The executors of the will, however, appeared and contested it. A jury found that the will was valid and the contestants appealed.

    While the Tennessee Supreme Court remanded the case for retrial on evidentiary grounds, the court's opinion, authored by Justice Nathan Green, affirmed the legal right of the slaves to bring suit to probate the will. Ford's children argued that "the devisees in this case are slaves, and have no rights, either perfect or inchoate, until the will manumitting them shall be proved." Justice Green rejected this argument, which would obviously frustrate Ford's intent. More significantly, however, the court also found the legal rights of Ford's slaves to be worthy of protection. Green wrote: "A slave is not in the condition of a horse or an ox. His liberty is restrained, it is true . . . . But he is made after the image of the Creator. He has mental capacities, and an immortal principle in his nature, that constitute him equal to his owner but for the accidental position in which fortune has placed him. . . . [T]he laws under which he is held as a slave have not and cannot extinguish his high-born nature nor deprive him of his many rights which are inherent in man." (1) On retrial, a jury found in the slaves' favor a second time, and in 1850 they were finally freed and granted the property that Ford had bequeathed them.

    Ford v. Ford demonstrated the tensions inherent in a system of civil law grounded on the notion of individual liberty operating in the context of a slaveholding culture. The antebellum Tennessee Supreme Court at least acknowledged the humanity of slaves, treating them as being "in the two-fold character of persons and property." (2) More than the U.S. Supreme Court and many other southern courts, the Tennessee courts, for the most part, acknowledged and protected the legal rights of slaves. The progressive nature of this approach becomes more evident when contrasted with the opinion of U.S. Chief Justice Roger Taney in the Dred Scott case, decided eleven years after Ford v. Ford. In that case, Taney found that, under the U.S. Constitution, even free blacks "had no rights which the white man was bound to respect." (3)

    G. Brian Jackson, Nashville

    (1) Ford v. Ford, 26 Tenn. (7 Hum.) 92 (1846).

    (2) Jones v. Allen, 1 Head 636 (1858).

    (3) Dred Scott v. Sandford, 19 How. 393 (1857).


    Suggested Reading(s): Arthur F. Howington, "Not in the Condition of a Horse or an Ox," Tennessee Historical Quarterly 34 (1975): 249-63.

    See Also: NATHAN GREEN; LAW; SLAVERY
    ...................................................................................................................................................................
    In the book: Fathers of Conscience By Bernie D. Jones

    "...Loyd Ford of Washington County, Tennessee made a Will in 1840 directing that "John Ford and other salves" be emancipated and given real property. They were alleged to have been his illegitmte enslaved children"... it does not mention how many children there were.
    ...................................................................................................................................................................

    This gedcom was downloaded from Roots.com or Ancestry.com from the files of Sandra Selph-Hunter. Should you find errors or wish to make new contributions please contact Sandra at her e-mail: sandyspiritwalker@hotmail.com.

    Loyd married Mary Ann Wood on 20 Feb 1780 in Saint Paul's Parish, , Baltimore County, Maryland. Mary was born in 1760 in Saint Paul's Parish, , Baltimore County, Maryland; died in 1842 in Washintgon County, , , Tennessee. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 9.  Mary Ann Wood was born in 1760 in Saint Paul's Parish, , Baltimore County, Maryland; died in 1842 in Washintgon County, , , Tennessee.

    Notes:

    This gedcom was downloaded from Roots.com or Ancestry.com from the files of Sandra Selph-Hunter. Should you find errors or wish to make new contributions please contact Sandra at her e-mail: sandyspiritwalker@hotmail.com.

    Children:
    1. Bettie Ford
    2. Elizabeth Ford
    3. Malinda Ford
    4. James Ford was born between 1782 and 1784 in Baltimore, , Baltimore County, Maryland; died in Apr 1860 in Sullivan County, , , Tennessee.
    5. Loyd Ford, III was born about 1786 in , Giles County, Tennessee, ; died on 1 Feb 1863 in Hawkins County, , , Tennessee.
    6. Alexander Ford was born between 1788 and 1789 in , Giles County, Tennessee, ; died in 1863; was buried in Oak Grove Cemetery, , Jackson County, Tennessee.
    7. Grant Ford was born between 1786 and 1792 in Washintgon County, , , Tennessee; died in Jun 1860 in Washintgon County, , , Tennessee.
    8. Nancy Jane Ford was born in Nov 1795 in Washintgon County, , , Tennessee; died on 1 Jun 1880 in Monroe County, , , Kentucky; was buried in Harlan Crossroads, , Monroe County, Kentucky.
    9. Benjamin W. Ford was born between 1795 and 1798.
    10. William Ford was born in 1797 in Washintgon County, , , Tennessee; died on 30 Jul 1858 in Monroe County, , , Kentucky; was buried in Ford Cemetery, Located On the Farm of Gaynelle Gee Foley, Monroe County, Kentucky.
    11. Enoch Ford was born about 1800 in , Giles County, Tennessee, .
    12. 4. Thomas P. Ford was born about 1803 in Baltimore, , Baltimore County, Maryland.