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Campbell, William

männlich 1793 - 1886  (93 Jahre)


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  • Name Campbell, William 
    Geburt 12 Nov 1793  , Fayette County, Kentucky, USA Suche alle Personen mit Ereignissen an diesem Ort  [1
    Geschlecht männlich 
    Tod 2 Dez 1886  ,, California, USA Suche alle Personen mit Ereignissen an diesem Ort  [1
    Personen-Kennung I27732  Zimbelmann
    Zuletzt bearbeitet am 7 Aug 2011 

    Vater Campbell, Unbekannt,   geb. geschätzt 1767   gest. Datum unbekannt 
    Familien-Kennung F9451  Familienblatt  |  Familientafel

    Familie 1 McNary, Sarah,   geb. geschätzt 1796   gest. 16 Nov 1821 (Alter 25 Jahre) 
    Eheschließung 24 Sep 1816  ,, Kentucky, USA Suche alle Personen mit Ereignissen an diesem Ort  [1
    Notizen 
    • G-Bachmann-wwwrootsweb.ancestry:
      EHESCHLIEßUNG EREIGNIS:
      1. #357, Lewis Publishing Company 1888. 1 TYPE Book
      1 EDTR H.S. Foote
      1 PERI "Pen Pictures from the Garden of the World
      1 LOCA http://www.santaclararesearch.net/.
    Kinder 
     1. Campbell, Ann,   geb. geschätzt 1817   gest. Datum unbekannt
    Familien-Kennung F9452  Familienblatt  |  Familientafel

    Familie 2 Hancock, Agnes,   geb. geschätzt 1796, , Bourbon County, Kentucky, USA Suche alle Personen mit Ereignissen an diesem Ortgest. 30 Nov 1846, ,, California, USA Suche alle Personen mit Ereignissen an diesem Ort (Alter 50 Jahre) 
    Eheschließung 24 Sep 1822  ,, Kentucky, USA Suche alle Personen mit Ereignissen an diesem Ort  [1
    Notizen 
    • G-Bachmann-wwwrootsweb.ancestry:
      EHESCHLIEßUNG EREIGNIS:
      1. #357, Lewis Publishing Company 1888. 1 TYPE Book
      1 EDTR H.S. Foote
      1 PERI "Pen Pictures from the Garden of the World
      1 LOCA http://www.santaclararesearch.net/.
    Kinder 
     1. Campbell, Sarah,   geb. um 1823   gest. 28 Jun 1869, , Kern County, California, USA Suche alle Personen mit Ereignissen an diesem Ort (Alter 46 Jahre)
    +2. Campbell, David,   geb. 23 Jan 1825, Muhlenberg, Muhlenberg County, Kentucky, USA Suche alle Personen mit Ereignissen an diesem Ortgest. 12 Mai 1912, Porterville, Tulare County, California, USA Suche alle Personen mit Ereignissen an diesem Ort (Alter 87 Jahre)
    +3. Campbell, Benjamin,   geb. 16 Okt 1826, Muhlenberg, Muhlenberg County, Kentucky, USA Suche alle Personen mit Ereignissen an diesem Ortgest. 27 Mrz 1907, Campbell, Santa Clara County, California, USA Suche alle Personen mit Ereignissen an diesem Ort (Alter 80 Jahre)
     4. Campbell, William G.,   geb. geschätzt 1828   gest. Datum unbekannt
     5. Campbell, Elizabeth,   geb. geschätzt 1830   gest. Datum unbekannt, ,, Missouri, USA Suche alle Personen mit Ereignissen an diesem Ort
     6. Campbell, John F.,   geb. 1839   gest. 9 Okt 1879, , Mendocino County, California, USA Suche alle Personen mit Ereignissen an diesem Ort (Alter 40 Jahre)
     7. Campbell, Susan A.,   geb. 1843   gest. 9 Dez 1869, , Santa Clara County, California, USA Suche alle Personen mit Ereignissen an diesem Ort (Alter 26 Jahre)
    Familien-Kennung F9407  Familienblatt  |  Familientafel

  • Ereignis-Karte
    Link zu Google MapsGeburt - 12 Nov 1793 - , Fayette County, Kentucky, USA Link zu Google Earth
    Link zu Google MapsEheschließung - 24 Sep 1816 - ,, Kentucky, USA Link zu Google Earth
    Link zu Google MapsEheschließung - 24 Sep 1822 - ,, Kentucky, USA Link zu Google Earth
    Link zu Google MapsTod - 2 Dez 1886 - ,, California, USA Link zu Google Earth
     = Link zu Google Earth 
    Pin-Bedeutungen  : Adresse       : Ortsteil       : Ort       : Region       : (Bundes-)Staat/-Land       : Land       : Nicht festgelegt

  • Notizen 
    • G-Bachmann-wwwrootsweb.ancestry:
      GEBURT:
      1. #357, Lewis Publishing Company 1888. 1 TYPE Book
      1 EDTR H.S. Foote
      1 PERI "Pen Pictures from the Garden of the World
      1 LOCA http://www.santaclararesearch.net/.
      TOD:
      2. #357, Lewis Publishing Company 1888. 1 TYPE Book
      1 EDTR H.S. Foote
      1 PERI "Pen Pictures from the Garden of the World
      1 LOCA http://www.santaclararesearch.net/.
      The Russell/Boggs train, which William Campbell and his party joined, was one of the last trains to depart from Independence; they seem to have embarked on or about 5 May 1846. Bernard DeVoto, the principal historian of the 1846 migration estimates that about twenty wagon trains had departed before the Russell/Boggs train. Due to the size of the wagon train, shortly after embarkation, it was deemed prudent to subdivide the train into a number of travel groups. Some sources have indicated that, initially, William Campbell was elected captain of his travel group, hereinafter referred to as the "Campbell party" or the "Campbell group." This group, in addition to the Campbells (the families of William, Thomas and James), included members of the Aram, Finley, West and Whisman families, almost 50 people in all.
      William Campbell was also a clergyman (as was his brother rev. Charles Campbell) and he preached the first Methodist sermon ever preached in California. This was in November, 1846.
      WILLIAM CAMPBELL, deceased. The subject of this sketch was one of  California's earliest settlers, and no history of Santa Clara County and of its pioneers would be complete without more than a passing mention of him. He was born in Fayette County, Kentucky, November 12, 1793, and was the son of David Campbell. Reared on the frontier, his educational advantages were exceedingly limited, but the experience of a life which covered the history of three wars, in two of which he was an active participant; a life beginning in the commonwealth of Kentucky and ending in the Golden State, --- this rich experience, combined with a keen observation and a retentive memory, more than compensated him for the lack of youthful opportunities. He was reared where they made men, physically and mentally. During the War of 1812 he served in a regiment of Kentucky volunteers, commanded by Colonel Caldwell. Little is known of his record as a soldier, but tradition has it that none were ever more ready for duty, none possessed more of the spirit of adventure, none bore the hardships of the march or of camp life more cheerfully than he.
      On the twenty-fouth of September, 1816, Mr. Campbell wedded, in his native State, Miss Sarah McNary. She was not spared to him long, her death occurring November 16, 1821. Mrs. Ann L. Lovell, residing in Moreland District, in this county, is her daughter. For his second wife Mr. Campbell married Miss Agnes Hancock, September 24, 1822. She was a native of Bourbon County, Kentucky.
      Mr. Campbell led the quiet life of a farmer of moderate means for nearly a quarter of a century after this marriage, in Kentucky and Missouri. Still the spirit of adventure was at times upon him, and finally, under its influence, he determined to remove to California. With his wife and children he made the long Journey, being almost three years in advance of the men of 1849. He settled in what is now Santa Clara County, and took an active part in the conquest of the country, participating in all the conflicts that took place in Santa Clara Valley. Naturally, he became one of the leaders in the work of developing the resources of this wonderful new country. Assisted by his two sons, David and Benjamin, he erected the first saw-mill within the limits of the county, for cutting the mighty redwood trees. He was a natural mechanic, being able to handle any kind of a tool, in working wood and iron. In 1847 Mr. Campbell, wishing to expedite the work of threshing grain, built for his own use a threshing-machine, probably unlike any other that was ever constructed. It not only threshed, but it separated the grain from the straw and chaff, having a capacity of ten to twelve bushels an hour. If not the first separator ever operated in the State, certainly it was the first one ever built in the State.
      The foresight and prophetic predictions of the subject of this sketches to the future of this State will be remembered by numbers of the early settlers, many of whom paid but little heed to him at the time. Coming two years before the discovery of gold, he lived to see the wilderness changed to a garden, the deserts to an empire, and all the other great changes which time and civilization have wrought in the State of California. Mr. Campbell was a typical pioneer, possessed of a remarkably vigorous constitution, and a brave, undaunted spirit. He did fully a man's part in subduing the wilderness.
      He was greatly bereaved by the death of his wife, which occurred November 30, of the year that he removed to California. She was the mother of seven  children, of whom only three are now living. Their names are: David, [Ed note- Narrative of Crossing the Plains by David Campbell] a resident of Tulare County; Benjamin, whose history follows this sketch; and William G., whose home is in San Francisco. The names of those deceased are; Elizabeth, who died in Missouri, in infancy; Mrs. Sarah Findley, who died in Kern County, this State, June 28, 1869, in her forty-sixth year; Mrs. Susan A. Hargis, who died at Santa Clara, December 9, 1869, at the age of twenty-six years; and John F., who died in Mendocino County, October 9, 1879, in his fortieth year.
      Fully ripe, like the grain for the reaper, William Campbell passed peacefully to the better life December 2, 1886. For years before his death he made his home with his son Benjamin, but he died while on a visit to his son David, in Tulare County. He was a consistent member of the Methodist Episcopal Church, and he passed from this earth in the faith and hope of the Christian.

  • Quellen 
    1. [S75] Gwen Bachman, (www.rootsweb.ancestry).