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  1. Colonel Robert Johnson and his wife, Jemima Suggett, of Orange County, Va., with their three children emigrated into Kentucky in 1781 and settled in the Blue Grass region. Soon afterward, Colonel Johnson was forced to return to Virginia and left his wife and family in the fort at Bryant station. On the night of August 14, 1782, the fort was ...

  2. When Jemima Suggett was born on 29 June 1753, in Orange, Virginia, United States, her father, James Suggett, was 31 and her mother, Jemima Spence, was 27. She married Robert Johnson in June 1771, in Orange, Virginia, British Colonial America. They were the parents of at least 9 sons and 2 daughters.

    • Female
    • Robert Johnson
  3. May 14, 2023 · Jemima (Suggett) Johnson is a DAR Patriot Ancestor, A063334. Mother of the 9th Vice President of the United States. Jemima Suggett Johnson, daughter of James Suggett, Sr and his wife Jemima Spence Suggett, was born about 29 Jun 1753 in Orange County, Virginia. [1]

    • Female
    • June 29, 1753
    • Robert M. Johnson
    • February 23, 1814
  4. Apr 28, 2022 · "Jemima Suggett Johnson was the first to suggest bringing water, and led the brave women to the spring when it was surrounded by Indians in ambuscade, thus making possible the defense of Bryant Station. With her was her daughter, Elizabeth, aged ten, who carried a pig in.

  5. Added: Mar 22, 2009. Find a Grave Memorial ID: 35076512. Source citation. Jemima Suggett Johnson was the first to suggest bringing water, and led the brave women to the spring when it was surrounded by Indians in ambuscade, thus making possible the defense of Bryant Station. With her was her daughter, Elizabeth, aged ten, who carried a pig in.

  6. When Jemima Suggett was born about 1731, in Culpeper, Virginia, British Colonial America, her father, Edgecombe Suggett, was 23 and her mother, Lucy Smith, was 19. She married Francis Slaughter on 2 March 1752, in Culpeper, Virginia, British Colonial America. They were the parents of at least 3 sons and 3 daughters.

  7. Dec 10, 2020 · Jemima Suggett Johnson (1753-1814) Tradition holds that she led women at Bryan’s Station to nearby spring for water just before siege, 1782. Three sons served in U.S. Congress in 1825: Rep. James & John T. and Sen. Richard M. Johnson, who became U.S. vice president in 1837. Charter members & land donors of Great Crossing Baptist Church.

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