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From
“Family History of the Joseph Taylor, Jr. and Sarah Best Family”
By Shari H. Franke
Hezekiah
White was born 6 July 1824 to William Lawson White and Charlotte Taylor at Warren
County, Kentucky.
He
married 6 September 1849, Mary Ann Elizabeth Hudnall, at Warren County.
Hezekiah
or "Hez" as he was more commonly known, "owned 254 acres of valuable well-improved
land, on which he raised wheat, corn, oats, tobacco and stock. He was a Mason
and a member of the Cumberland Presbyterian Church. He was also a Democrat."
R.
Spencer Drake, tells a good story about Hezekiah: "Hezekiah White copied his
father in supplying water for his family's needs. A granddaughter of George
Washington Cherry, father of the nine Cherry boys, said her grandfather would
tell stories about White, saying with disgust: 'Anybody too lazy to tote a bucket
of water...' Of course, Cherry had nine sons to tote water. White had nine girls
and only three sons. Cherry also would wonder how White accumulated so much
of the world's goods and never worked. White also took up trading from his father
and grandfather, going from farm to farm buying or trading for their produce..."
Hezekiah White owned some slaves and was quite supportive to the confederate
side during the War, according to his granddaughter, Frances Bradsher, who is
still living (1993). Hezekiah White was present at the 1909 Taylor Family Reunion
at Richardsville, Warren, Kentucky. He died about one year later, on 13 September
1910 at Woodbury, Butler, Kentucky.
Mary
Ann Elizabeth Hudnall was born 20 September 1831 at Warren County, Kentucky,
a daughter of Reverend John Wesley Hudnall and Rachel Upton (who was the daughter
of Elijah Upton and Elizabeth Ford). Mary Ann was born and raised in Warren
County. She had a religious upbringing, being the daughter of a minister. She
was a devoted wife and mother of 12 children. Mary Ann Elizabeth "had quite
poor health in her later years, so her girls learned to keep house early, and
nowhere were there better managers. It was rumored that nobody in that section
could make biscuits like the White sisters. There were only three boys out of
the twelve White children, and young men in the neighborhood had a preference
for the Whites' house on Sunday afternooons (which was the established courting
time). Most of the daughters were red-headed too." Mary Ann Elizabeth died 24
November 1904 at Warren County, Kentucky. She and Hezekiah were both buried
at the Mount Pisgah Church Cemetery below Riverside, Warren, Kentucky.
Hezekiah
White and Mary Ann Elizabeth Hudnall's children were: Mary Columbia, Elijah
Upton, Charlotte Belle, Leona Celeste, Charles Allen, Rachel Thomas, Fannie
Anne Elizabeth, Lucy L., Nancy ("Nannie"), Connie Larue, Sallie Carson and James
Hezekiah White.
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