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Mary Walton[1]

Female Bef 1773 - Yes, date unknown


Personal Information    |    Sources    |    All    |    PDF

  • Name Mary Walton 
    Born Bef 1773 
    Gender Female 
    Died Yes, date unknown 
    Person ID I14630  My Reynolds Line | Descendants of Giles Carter of Henrico
    Last Modified 21 Oct 2015 

    Father Robert3 Walton, Jr.,   b. 1741, Prince Edward County, Virginia Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. 12 Jul 1797, Augusta, Georgia Find all individuals with events at this location  (Age 56 years) 
    Mother Frances 'Fannie' Carter,   b. Abt 1739, Henrico County, Virginia Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. 2 Feb 1786, Augusta, Georgia Find all individuals with events at this location  (Age ~ 47 years) 
    Family ID F518495472  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart

  • Sources 
    1. [S86] Our Southern Cousins, http://oursoutherncousins.com/walton5.html.
      John Carter Walton. In June 1789, John Carter Walton was second lieutenant in the Richmond County militia, when the governor requested a troop of horse be formed. It was under the leadership of Col. James Stallings and Capt. Robert Watkins. 1792-93, John C. Walton was among the list of men authorized to issue and sign subpoenas.

      To understand some of the dynamics at work in Richmond County, GA at this time, we must take into account the actions of John Carter Walton?s cousins, Robert and George Watkins (sons of Sally Walton and Thomas Watkins). Robert and George Watkins were commissioned by the state legislature to write the first ?Digest of the Laws of Georgia.? The scandal of the Yazoo Act touched every politician in the State, and Robert and George included this infamous act in their ?Digest,? at the same time noting its repeal. The governor and the legislature refused to pay Robert and George for their work; they would have preferred that the Yazoo Act had never been mentioned at all! The angry response of Robert Watkins led him to be engaged in several duels with other prominent men in the area.

      In the papers of Gen. Thomas Flournoy (1775-1857), it states that in 1800 he was among those lawyers who subscribed to the Watkins ?Digest.? July 25, 1799, there is a a "strongly worded" letter arguing with Watkins over the outcome of a lawsuit in Columbia County. Flournoy closed his letter by challenging Watkins to a duel. Also included are a number of letters from Flournoy to GEORGE WALTON, covering the period of July of 1803 to January of 1804. In March of 1804, however, the correspondence was between Flournoy and JOHN CARTER WALTON, and led to a duel between the two men. These letters were "highly charged in their language" and concerned an argument over the cases Thomas Flournoy vs. George Walton, and Matthias Maher vs. George Walton. In one document Flournoy challenged John Carter Walton to a duel.

      "On 6 March of that year the seconds for the two men signed the following document, "Rules for duel between Thomas Flournoy and JOHN CARTER WALTON, signed by the seconds. Apparently JOHN C. WALTON, a relative of George Walton, whose honor he claimed to be upholding by the duel, died as a result, and the challenge was annotated,

      "We met, we fought, Walton fell. T. Flournoy."