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Davidson's Fort A living history site dedicated to telling the true story of the families of Western North Carolina during the 18th Century and the American Revolution.

Family Tree

George Davison
Samuel Davidson, 1705-1766 Col George F. Davidson, Jr. 1711-1760 John Davidson, abt 1709-1749
Family 1 Margaret ? Family 1 Rachel Jones, 1731 Family 1 Jane Tucker, 1712,
George Davidson, Sr, 1738 Mary Jones Davidson, 1731 Col. George Davidson, 1728 A
John Davidson, 1740 George Davidson, 1731-43 Rachel Davidson, 1730
James Davidson, 1741 Daughter Davidson, 1743 Thomas Davidson, 1733
Benjamin Davidson, 1742 Samuel Davidson, 1736-1814 B
Jesse Davidson, 1745 Family 2 Margaret Ware, 1743 Major William Davidson, 1736 VA C
William Davidson, 1747 General William Lee Davidson, 1746-1781 Elizabeth Davidson, 1741
Mary Davidson, 1749 Samuel Davidson, 1748 Margaret Davidson, 1742
Rebecca Davidson, 1760 John One Eye Davidson, 1744
Virginia Davidson Rowan County, NC Davidson's Samuel Davidson, 1736-1784 B
Family 1 Ann Dunlop 1755
John Davidson, 1757
Family 2 Mary Smith, 1735
Ruth Davidson, 1765
Mary Ruth Davidson, 1767
Major William Davidson, 1736-1814 C
John Davidson, 1764
Hugh Davidson, 1768
George Davidson, 1768
William Mitchell Davidson, 1780
Col. Samuel Winslow Davidson, 1781
Col. George Davidson, 1728-1814 A
Judge John D. Davidson, 1750
William Lee Davidson, 1755
George Davidson, Jr. 1757
Gen Ephraim Davidson, 1762 A.a
Thomas Davidson, 1770
Gen Ephraim Davidson, 1762-1842 A.a
George Samuel Franklin Davidson, 1805-1893
GSFD sold Davidson's Plantation 1871

 

Davidson's Fort and Old Fort area History Timeline, click here to open PDF document

 

Brandon Family History and Genealogy

Josiah Brandon, a Revolutionary War Soldier

If you are a researcher working on any of these lines or know of other Brandon Web Sites, please contact Pat Geary.

The Reverend Josiah Brandon was born in Burke County, North Carolina on June 26, 1761. Josiah has an elusive, if interesting background - he has the distinction of having one of the largest pension files for a Revolutionary Veteran.

When Josiah was between fifteen and sixteen years old, he enlisted under Captain Samuel Davidson to fight against the Cherokee Indians. He participated in the building of "Old Fort" and in 1779; he joined in the pursuit of Captain Cunningham serving in Captain Boykin's Company of Light Horse Cavalry.

He enlisted again in 1780 to fight the Cherokees who had recently butchered the John Davidson family, close neighbors to the Brandon family. However, on the eve of King's Mountain, Josiah's father (identified only as Captain in the Loyalist militia), "partly by persuasion and partly by menace" (to use Josiah's terms in a Testimony for a pension), forced him to join his father's company under Colonel Ferguson in charge of the troops of the crown.

During the battle at King's Mountain, Josiah's father was killed and Josiah was captured though released shortly afterwards by Major McDowell, who knew the family well since Josiah had served under him on several of the earlier excursions against the Indians. He was released to the custody of his widowed mother (also not identified by name) but shortly re-enlisted under Captain Boykin to march against Captain Cunningham who was marauding the settled areas of South Carolina near Ninety-Six.

Josiah's war record shows service under the Americans for some three years, and he was ultimately awarded a pension. Never the less, when he applied for the pension in 1832, his service under the crown at King's Mountain became an issue, which involved negotiations among his sons to correct the wrong impression that he, was sympathetic to the royalist cause.

Shortly after King's Mountain, Josiah married Rachel Brown, a childhood friend and neighbor, the daughter of Thomas Brown, a noted Quaker in western North Carolina. She was fifteen when they married and lived to eighty years of age after giving birth to some fifteen children.

Josiah was a landowner in North Carolina and in the 1790's could be found in Georgia where his son, William, was born. This is according to William's tombstone located at Maple Hill Cemetery in Huntsville, Alabama.

About 1805, Josiah decided to bring his family into Tennessee and by 1812, he had settled near Lynchburg in Lincoln County, Tennessee. Josiah died 5 Nov 1842 and both he and his wife are buried on the hill opposite his church, Brandon Chapel, near Lynchburg.

In 1981, the North Carolina Genealogical Society Journal published an article written by William Bennett "Josiah Brandon's Burke County, NC, 1777-1800." This was an in-depth study, using land grants, to determine the name of Josiah Brandon's father. A successful study it was, as Thomas Brandon, Loyalist, emerged.

Some of the information for this narrative came from the James Record Collection found in the Madison County Public Library, Huntsville, Alabama.