About Beth and Paul's Kinfolks
Almost all Paul's and Beth's kinfolks were southerners, whose families started
out in Virginia and the Carolinas and migrated south into Georgia and
Florida. A few went as far west as Alabama but our main lines stayed near the
east coast. Our immigrant ancestors were almost uniformly English and
Scottish, with a dash of Irish, Welsh, French and German. They arrived early
in the era of European settlement, from the late 1500s to the mid 1700s. They
were farmers and pioneers, and seldom stayed in one place for more than a
generation. They moved outward to the frontiers where new land and
opportunities were available. Many lines converged in Georgia after the
Revolutionary War, because of the land lotteries that gave an advantage to war
veterans. They had large families and cleared farmland, built and prospered
until the Civil War. Although few of our families owned slaves, all of our
eligible ancestors (some willingly, some who were drafted) fought for the
Confederacy. Almost every family lost sons or fathers, and land, in the war
and its aftermath. Almost all that had been gained in several hundred years of
hard work and enterprise was lost in a few tragic years. That might have been
regarded as just retribution by the Cherokee and Creek we had dispossessed and
driven out, and the Africans whose kidnapping and enslavement we had supported
and justified. Their tragedies had preceded and led inevitably to ours. Only
in the past couple of generations have most of our kin recovered the modest
prosperity and optimistic energy of our southern pioneer ancestors.
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