Notes
Note for: William McNUTT, ABT 1769 - 3 APR 1841 Index
Burial:
Date: 1841
Place: Onslow (Burial Island), Colchester County, Nova Scotia
Notes
Note for: Margaret McNUTT, 1757 - Index
Burial:
Place: Phillips Cemetery
Notes
Note for: Elizabeth McNUTT, ABT 1785 - Index
Note: Probably not a daughter of John Ewing, but likely closely related (she
was named in the will of John's son John).
Notes
Note for: Elizabeth [Betty] GRIGSBY, 10 MAR 1776 - 13 DEC 1842 Index
Burial:
Date: 1842
Place: Falling Spring Churchyard, Hickory Hill, Rockbridge County, Virginia
Notes
Note for: John McNUTT, ABT 1755 - BEF 6 JUL 1818 Index
Burial:
Place: Congregational Burying Ground, Nova Scotia
Note: -----------------
1817
-----------------
John McNutt's Will (Abstract)
Made 29 Nov 1817
Proven in Court 6 July 1818
Well beloved wife, Mary
Brother Joseph McNutt's sons
Brother benjamin McNutt's sons
Brother William McNutt
Neice, Kithern McNutt, Alexander McNutt's daughter
Elizabeth Edmondson, Thomas' wife
William McNutt's son, John
William McNutt and Rubin Grigsby executors
Signed: John McNutt
Witnesses:
David Edmondson
Wm. Paxton
Polly L. Edley
Notes
Note for: John Dickson McNUTT, 21 MAY 1810 - 15 JAN 1887 Index
Burial:
Date: 1887
Place: Robie Street Cemetery, Truro, Colchester County, Nova Scotia
Notes
Note for: Benjamin McNUTT, 3 FEB 1847 - 4 OCT 1921 Index
Burial:
Date: 1921
Place: Robie Street Cemetery, Truro, Colchester County, Nova Scotia
Notes
Note for: William McNUTT, 25 APR 1794 - 26 DEC 1874 Index
Burial:
Date: 1874
Place: Robie Street Cemetery, Truro, Colchester County, Nova Scotia
Notes
Note for: Mary JOHNSON, 22 AUG 1801 - 2 JAN 1866 Index
Burial:
Date: 1866
Place: Robie Street Cemetery, Truro, Colchester County, Nova Scotia
Notes
Note for: William [Capt.] JENKINS, - 1859 Index
Note: Cabell County Annals and Families, Hull and Jenkins Families, Page
416-417 (Available Online at Genealogy Library.com):
William Jenkins lived in Tidewater, Virginia, and operated a line of
ships from the James River to South America. He lived for a time in
Rockbridge County, Virginia, where in 1824 he married Jeannette G.
McNutt, daughter of Alexander and Rachel Grigsby McNutt. In 1825 he
moved, with his wife and infant daughter, to Greenbottom. Here he
erected a temporary home and here his three sons were born, all of whom
were graduated in the same year, 1848, from Jefferson College, then
located in Canonsburg, Pennsylvania. In 1835, Captain Jenkins built the
brick house which now stands near Clover Station on the Baltimore and
Ohio Railroad, now known as the General Jenkins house. The house has a
stone foundation and the bricks were made on the place. The timbers are
hand-hewn, and put together with wooden pegs and are in a good state of
preservation to this date. The house fronts on the river and in the rear
there was a brick kitchen and an office, built apart from the house but
these buildings have been taken down in the past twenty years.