Advertisement

Thomas Carson McDonald

Advertisement

Thomas Carson McDonald

Birth
Greensboro, Hale County, Alabama, USA
Death
10 Apr 1923 (aged 68)
Birmingham, Jefferson County, Alabama, USA
Burial
Birmingham, Jefferson County, Alabama, USA GPS-Latitude: 33.4917367, Longitude: -86.8405679
Plot
Block 15, Lot 49
Memorial ID
View Source
THOMAS CARSON McDONALD, of Birmingham, Ala., was born Nov. 2, 1854, at Greensboro, Ala., and is the son of William Jackson and Cynthia Ann (Madison) McDonald, and the grandson of William Jackson and Betsy (Perlcins) McDonald, and of Peyton and Hannah (Webster) Madison. All the parties were residents of Greensboro. Ala. The elder William J. McDonald was brought when an infant by his parents from Edinboro, Scotland, to Virginia. In 1812 he settled in St. Stephens. Ala. Peyton Madison came with his parents from England to Nova Scotia, thence to Virginia, where he married and moved to Greene county, Ala., after the close of the Creek War of 1813. William J. McDonald. Jr., was a Confederate soldier, serving first at Fort Morgan, afterwards in the Army of Northern Virginia. He lived at Greensboro until 1871, when he moved to Birminghnm. Thomas C. McDonald received all his education from the schools of Greensboro. He is a Democrat and a Baptist. He was married Jan. 20, 1881, in Sumter county. Ala., to Annie Brackett, the daughter of James B. and Elizabeth Ann (Branch) Isbell, of Sumter county, Ala.

(Alabama official and statistical register By Alabama. Dept. of Archives and History, Legislative Department, page 119)
THOMAS CARSON McDONALD, of Birmingham, Ala., was born Nov. 2, 1854, at Greensboro, Ala., and is the son of William Jackson and Cynthia Ann (Madison) McDonald, and the grandson of William Jackson and Betsy (Perlcins) McDonald, and of Peyton and Hannah (Webster) Madison. All the parties were residents of Greensboro. Ala. The elder William J. McDonald was brought when an infant by his parents from Edinboro, Scotland, to Virginia. In 1812 he settled in St. Stephens. Ala. Peyton Madison came with his parents from England to Nova Scotia, thence to Virginia, where he married and moved to Greene county, Ala., after the close of the Creek War of 1813. William J. McDonald. Jr., was a Confederate soldier, serving first at Fort Morgan, afterwards in the Army of Northern Virginia. He lived at Greensboro until 1871, when he moved to Birminghnm. Thomas C. McDonald received all his education from the schools of Greensboro. He is a Democrat and a Baptist. He was married Jan. 20, 1881, in Sumter county. Ala., to Annie Brackett, the daughter of James B. and Elizabeth Ann (Branch) Isbell, of Sumter county, Ala.

(Alabama official and statistical register By Alabama. Dept. of Archives and History, Legislative Department, page 119)


Sponsored by Ancestry

Advertisement