Saturday, June 23, 2012

Yes, We Are Cousins with the Looney's Tavern Guy!

A cousin asked if we are related to the William Bauck Looney of the "Incedent at Looney's Tavern" fame in Winston County, Alabama, where Alabama delegates who were for the Union gathered to make a statement against confederate secession, and proposed making Winston County an independent state.

In fact, we are cousins of Looney's Tavern! An article from the Huntsville Times shows we are cousins with William Bauck Looney (I am his 2nd cousins 4x removed). His ancestor listed below, Absalom Looney, Jr., is the son of my ancestor Absalom Looney (and brother of my ancestor Michael Looney), described in the previous post.


THE HUNTSVILLE TIMES

The following article is part of our archive

Looney family tree has many great stories

Wednesday, September 10, 2008
Madison Spirit
A double stone marks the burial plots of William Henry Looney and his wife, Ora Lelia Abernathy, in the northwestern corner of the old section of the Madison City Cemetery south of Mill Road. Looney is an unusual family name, but I also encountered it while researching the pioneer families of Redstone Arsenal lands. Some of that land was owned by John Warren Looney and his brother Absolem. Absolem was the third generation with that name.
His father Absolem Jr. is buried on his land at the old airport site in Huntsville. Absolem Jr. was a Revolutionary War veteran who brought his wife, Margaret Warren, and their children to Madison County in 1811 by flatboat from Tennessee. He had obtained land here in 1809. The first Absolem (Sr.) was born in 1729 and lived in Virginia. He had a brother who married a Rhea, like the county in Tennessee, and became a great-grandfather of William Bauck Looney, owner of Looney's Tavern in Winston County from Civil War-era fame. Absolem Sr. had another brother who married a Lauderdale, like the county in Alabama. Their father was Robert Looney, who came to Virginia before 1735, having been born in 1692 on the Isle of Mann in the British Isles.
The youngest Absolem Looney's brother, John Warren Looney, was a great-grandfather of Madison's William Henry Looney. John owned land with a mill and riverboat landing on the west side of Indian Creek's confluence with Huntsville's Spring Branch Creek. He sold it to Thomas and George Fearn in 1834 for their project to transport cotton to the Tennessee River from Huntsville via the Indian Creek Navigation Co.'s canal from Big Spring.
John began a move to Goliad, Texas, in 1848, but he died near Nacogdoches, leaving his wife and children to continue the journey. One of John's sons, Tuberville, in 1841 married Martha Bailey, a daughter of Madison pioneers James and Sarah Bailey. They had sons William, John, James Bailey and Henry. Martha died soon after Henry's birth, which is possibly a reason that Tuberville left in 1850 for Texas to be with his widowed mother. When he left, Tuberville took his son William but he left John, James Bailey and Henry to be raised by their grandmother Sarah Bailey. When she died, they were kept by an aunt, Sarah Bailey Blackburn, wife of David, on Rainbow Mountain....



Friday, June 22, 2012

Our Looney Ancestors


Top Ten Things a Hamby Should Know
#5 WE DESCEND FROM THE LOONEYS OF EARLY AMERICA WHO KNEW GEORGE WASHINGTON AND DANIEL BOONE

Grandma Hamby was a Williams, and my 3rd great grandfather was Corp. Sherrod Williams, buried at Williams Cove in Winchester. Sherrod married Polly Looney, known for a smoking pipe that has been passed down among descendants. Many Looney relatives are buried nearby.

The Looney family story begins in 1724, when Robert and Elizabeth Looney (my 6th great grandparents) came to America from the Isle of Mann, Great Britain. They settled in Philadelphia and later moved to colonial Maryland. Soon after, they moved to the "new frontier" and settled on the James River in Virginia in what was to be Augusta County. There on Looney Creek, they raised their family and established the first ferry crossing of the James River. They built a mill, grew crops, and raised livestock.

Due to territorial conflict with France as well as the threat of attack from Native Americans, a fort was built in 1755 around the Looney homesite to protect English settlers. Fort Looney was at the junction of Looney Creek and the James River and was visited in 1756 by Col. George Washington. The Looney children were frontiersman and pioneers. Some were killed by Native Americans in raids and others helped explore and expand frontier boundaries into Virginia and eventually Tennessee. One son was Absalom, our ancestor. In 1770 he had discovered what is now called Abb's Valley on a hunting and scouting expedition in Virginia, now Tazwell County. The family story is that he founded this settlement at least four years before the noted frontier explorer, Daniel Boone, arrived in the same area to build a fort six miles from Absalom's homestead. During the Revolution, the families abandoned this valley and returned to Fort Looney. Absalom served under General Washington in his brother Joseph's company and provided beef for the continental army. He then went to survey lands in the "wilderness" of Tennessee that were to be set aside for continental soldiers. He was appointed Justice of the Peace for Hawkins County, TN.

Absalom and his wife, Margaret Moore Looney, had a son named Michael Looney. Michael also fought in the Revolutionary War and married Temperance Cross, purchasing 250 acres in 1780 in Hawkins County for 2 and 1/2 cents an acre. He is buried at the homestead in Looney Cemetery. Michael is our ancestor and the mother of Polly Looney Williams buried in Williams Cove.

Friday, June 15, 2012

We Descend from Scottish Highlanders Escaping Persecution

Top Ten Things a Hamby Should Know:
#4 - WE DESCEND FROM SCOTTISH HIGHLANDERS ESCAPING PERSECUTION


Our Clark ancestors tell a fascinating story of religious persecution among Scottish Highlanders and their escape to America. Grandpa C.P. Hamby’s mother Laura’s family originates with Alexander Clark, her third great grandfather who came from the island of Jura in Argyll County off the coast of Scotland. He arrived in the Cape Fear area of North Carolina in 1736.


Alexander’s family, particularly his grandfather who endured the Battle of the Boyne, had suffered much in wars that desolated Scotland with persecution heaviest against Presbyterians. Returning to Scotland by ship after escaping to Ireland during the conflict, Alexander’s grandfather ascended a hill that overlooked his residence and gazed in sadness on desolation below, saying “but three smokes in all Jura could be seen.” All his family had perished. He eventually remained in Jura, having for his second wife one whose infant had been taken from her arms, its head severed in her presence and used to beat the mother until she was left for dead.


Gilbert, the only surviving son from his first wife and our ancestor, also remained on the island of Jura and reared a family. His son, named Alexander after his grandfather, moved to North Carolina seeking freedom from the type of religious persecution his family had faced. He settled in Cape Fear with what is referred to as the Argyll Colony. They were instrumental in forming the famous Barbecue Presbyterian Church there in 1757.

Friday, June 8, 2012

The Lugene Hamby Window at Trinity UMC

One of the large stained glass windows at Trinity UMC in Tuscaloosa, adjacent to the campus of the University of Alabama, is named after my Grandpa Hamby's brother Lugene Bryant (Gene) Hamby. In the memorial information on my grand uncle, it makes note of our Taylor legacy.

The memorial information on the window and the life of Gene Hamby is below. Trinity UMC was once called Brandon Memorial Methodist Church. To see the window and the original memorial, check out the Glastonbury Thorn window.  

The Glastonbury Thorn Window

The Nativity
The first window nearest the back of the church contains Glastonbury thorn blossoms, a peculiarly English symbol which represents the events attending our Lord's birth.  According to tradition, the ancient thorn-tree which stands just within the gates of the ruined abbey at Glastonbury, Somersetshire, is a descendent of the thornwood staff planted by St. Joseph of Arimathaea, who is said to have introduced Christianity into England in the Year A.D. 63.  The Glastonbury thorn bursts into bloom about Christmas Day each year, and the blossoms have become a symbol of our Lord's Nativity.

This window was given by the Log Cabin Bible Class of Brandon Memorial Methodist Church in memory of Lugene ("Gene") Bryant Hamby.

Lugene Bryant Hamby
1879 - 1942

Lugene Bryant Hamby was an active member of Brandon Memorial Methodist Church for many years.  He was a member of the Board of Stewards and served as Chairman of the Board.  He was proprietor of the Hamby Barber Shop on Greensboro Avenue in Tuscaloosa.  Mr. and Mrs. Hamby and their eight children lived on 10th Street, right across from Brandon Memorial, and the whole family was involved in the work of the church.

Lugene Bryant was born October 20, 1879, one of seven sons of George Hamby, a Confederate veteran, and Laura Clark Hamby.  There was also one daughter. His parents were also members of Brandon Memorial.  His great-grandfather, Isaac Taylor, was a Methodist Circuit Rider, and two of his brothers, William T. and Charles P., were ministers in the North Alabama Methodist Conference.  His father-in-law John Alexander was a Methodist Circuit Rider in Mississippi, and his son Gene Malcolm (Mack) Hamby was a minister and conference evangelist in the North Alabama Conference.  Many other family members served the Methodist Church, both as ministers and as lay people.

Mr. and Mrs. Hamby were the parents of four sons and four daughters.  The tragedy of their lives was the death of their youngest son Bobby in 1937 at the age of 15.  Bobby was an honor student and an active member of the church youth group.  A scrapbook made by one of  Bobby’s sisters showed the love and support the family received at that time from the good members of Brandon Memorial. 

On March 24, 1942, Lugene Bryant Hamby died unexpectedly of a heart attack while visiting a neighbor near his home on 10th Street, and is buried with other family members at Evergreen Cemetery.   Honorary pallbearers were the members of the Board of Stewards of Brandon Memorial Methodist Church.