Jones-Williamson family of North Carolina
Note: This is just one of 643 family
groupings listed on The
Political Graveyard web site. These families each have three or
more politician members, all linked together by blood, marriage or
adoption.
Some families traditionally (and perhaps properly) considered
separately are joined together here if linked by marriage or
otherwise. These groupings — even the names of the
groupings, and the state or lists of states of main activity —
are the result of a computer algorithm, not the choices of any
historian or genealogist.
- John Gustavus Adolphus Williamson (1793-1840) — also
known as John G. A. Williamson — Born in Roxboro, Person
County, N.C., December
2, 1793. Son of James Williamson; married 1832 to Frances
Travis; half-brother of Mildred Williamson (who married Calvin
Jones). Member of North
Carolina state house of representatives, 1823-25; U.S. Consul in
La Guaira, 1827; candidate for U.S.
Representative from North Carolina, 1833; U.S. Charge d'Affaires
to Venezuela, 1835-40, died in office 1840. Scottish
ancestry. Died in Caracas, Venezuela,
August
7, 1840. Interment at English
Cemetery, Caracas, Venezuela.
- Calvin Jones (b. 1810) — of Somerville, Fayette
County, Tenn. Born in Person
County, N.C., July 8,
1810. Son of Wilson Jones and Rebecca (McKissack) Jones; married,
October
15, 1835, to Mildred Williamson (half-sister of John
Gustavus Adolphus Williamson); brother of Thomas
McKissick Jones. Democrat. University
professor; lawyer;
Chancellor, Western Division of Tennessee, 1847-54. Presbyterian.
Member, Freemasons.
Burial
location unknown.
- Thomas McKissick Jones (1816-1892) — of Pulaski, Giles
County, Tenn. Born in Person
County, N.C., December
16, 1816. Brother of Calvin
Jones. Member of Tennessee
state house of representatives; member of Tennessee
state senate; Delegate
from Tennessee to the Confederate Provisional Congress, 1861-62;
delegate
to Tennessee state constitutional convention, 1870; state court
judge in Tennessee, 1872-73. Member, Freemasons;
Knights
Templar. Died in Pulaski, Giles
County, Tenn., March 13,
1892. Interment at Maplewood
Cemetery, Pulaski, Tenn.
"Enjoy the hospitable entertainment of a political
graveyard."
Henry L. Clinton, Apollo Hall, New York City, February
3, 1872 |
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