RNT Family History

Bradshaw, Octavia[1]

Female 1828 -


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  • Name Bradshaw, Octavia 
    Born 13 Dec 1828 
    Gender Female 
    Person ID I19535  McClure-Harris
    Last Modified 8 Mar 2005 

    Father Bradshaw, Seath,   b. 25 Oct 1805, , Burke, North Carolina Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. 09 Mar 1873  (Age 67 years) 
    Relationship Birth 
    Mother White, Sarah G.,   b. 1809 
    Relationship Birth 
    Family ID F6718  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart

    Family McClure, Aaron Junior,   b. Abt 1832, , , Kentucky Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Married 19 Jun 1863  , Adair, Kentucky Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Last Modified 8 Mar 2005 
    Family ID F6717  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart

  • Notes 
    • Kentucky: A History of the State, Battle, Perrin, & Kniffin, 4th ed.,1887
      Adair Co.

      TIMOLEON and TARLETON T. BRADSHAW, the former a native of Russell, the latter of Adair County, are the sons of Seath and Sarah G. (White)
      Bradshaw. Seath Bradshaw, born October 23, 1805, was a native of Burke County, N.C. He was the eighth of ten children, and when only five years
      of age was brought by his father to Russell County, Ky., and shortly afterward to Adair. He always owned his own farm, and part of the time
      cultivated it with slave labor, being worth at one time nearly $20,000. He departed this life March 9, 1873. He had married, in 1828, Miss Sarah G. White, daughter of Thomas and Nancy (Abrell) White, natives of the Old Dominion. The names of the children born to Seath and Sarah Bradshaw are Octavia, wife of Aaron McClure; Casandra, wife of Charles F. Jones;
      Tarleton T.; Timoleon; Ann L., wife of J.G. White; Charlotta W.; andMillie
      F., wife of T.W. Montgomery, of whom all are living except Casandra. Mrs. Bradshaw died April 11, 1855, in the forty-eighth year of her age, and in life was a consistent member of the Methodist Episcopal Church. Seath Bradshaw, Sr., the grandfather of the gentlemen whose names head these lines, was a native of Virginia, from where he emigrated to North Carolina, and finally to Kentucky. He was married to Miss Ann Lowe, a native of
      Virginia, and the names of their children were William, Isaac, Isaiah,
      Elijah, Seath, Millie (Miller), Ann (Bradshaw), Mary (Wilson), and
      Charlotte (White). Of his sons, Isaac and Isaiah served in the war of
      1812, and he himself was a Revolutionary veteran. Mrs. Bradshaw, hiswife,
      was killed at the age of ninty-seven, being thrown from a horse. The Bradshaw family are of Irish origin, and sprang from one of two brothers
      who came from Ireland to America. William Bradshaw, the son of Seath Bradshaw, Sr., was a man of some celebrity in the history of the politics of this section, having served in the Senate of Kentucky. Tarleton T. Bradshaw, born April 2, 1832, was the third of Seath Bradshaw's children. He began life by farming with his father, and this has since been his
      vocation. He had no inheritance. but at present owns about 400 acres on the line of Russell and Adair Counties, of which 75 acres are in
      cultivation. He has never been married, but has kept house with his sister, Charlotta W. Bradshaw, a number of years. Mr. Bradshaw enlisted, October 4, 1861, in Company D, Fifth Kentucky Volunteer Cavalry,Federal
      service. He participated in many of the prominent battles without awound
      or being taken Prisoner. He was the first sergeant of the company,and was
      mustered out of the service and received an honorable discharge at
      Louisville, May 17, 1865. Mr. Bradshaw has a fair library and is a great
      reader. He is a member of the Masonic order, and has been a life-long Democrat. Timoleon Bradshaw in youth received a good businesseducation in
      the common schools of Adair County, and his occupation in life has been
      mostly in the line of merchandise. He was married to Miss Sally Wilson, a daughter of H.W. and Agnes A. (Johnston) Wilson, natives of Taylor
      County,and this marriage was blessed by the addition of four children:
      Betty C., Mary G., Effie T. and William E. He first sold goods atRussell
      Spring, but afterward and most of his life in Columbia, and does a flourishing trade in general merchandise. In connection with Mr. Bradshaw's business, Mrs. Bradshaw handles a finely selected stock of millinery, in which she does a thriving business. The stock is worth at least $6,000, including general merchandise and millinery. Mr. and Mrs. Bradshaw are both members of the Christian Church, and Mr. Bradshaw is one
      of the trustees of the Columbia Christian College. All of the children of
      Mr. and Mrs. Bradshaw are living except their eldest, Bettie C., who died
      July 25, 1883. She was born March 4, 1863. She was a bright,intelligent girl in her youth, and at the age of thirteen became a member of the
      Christian Church. Her education was very thorough, and was completed at
      Columbia Christian College, where she graduated in June 1881, and after
      graduation was connected with it as teacher of painting in the Art Department, which position she held until her death. She left a large
      number of friends who mourned her demise, among whom was Miss Delray Taylor, an associate teacher in the same institution, who followed in a few
      brief months.
      =========================================
      1880 United States Census
      Aaron MC CLURE Self M Male W 48 KY Farmer KY KY
      Octava MC CLURE Wife M Female W 51 KY Keeping House NY KY
      Mary E. MC CLURE Niece S Female W 16 KY At Home KY KY


      --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
      Source Information:
      Census Place Russell, Kentucky
      Family History Library Film 1254441
      NA Film Number T9-0441
      Page Number 524B

  • Sources 
    1. [S186] GEDCOM file imported on 14 Aug 2002., Shane Symes.