Nancy Freeman

Brief Life History of Nancy

When Nancy Freeman was born in 1834, in Georgia, United States, her father, Franklin Freeman, was 42 and her mother, Susannah Summers, was 44. She married Robert Green McKissack in 1856, in Tallapoosa, Alabama, United States. They were the parents of at least 2 sons and 8 daughters. She lived in Tallapoosa, Alabama, United States in 1860. She died in May 1914, in Terrell, Kaufman, Texas, United States, at the age of 80.

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Family Time Line

Robert Green McKissack
1830–1882
Nancy Freeman
1834–1914
Marriage: 1856
Georgia Anna McKissack
1857–1909
Alabama McKissack
1859–1890
Mary "Mollie" McKissack
1861–1890
Charles Green McKissack
1862–1947
Ada Lee McKissack
1865–1951
Maggie McKissack
1867–1885
Alice McKissack
1868–1870
Caroline Estelle McKissack
1869–1940
Robert Lee McKissack
1871–1936
Anna M. McKissack
1873–1910

Sources (15)

  • Mancy Mckissick in household of Charlie Mckissick, "United States Census, 1910"
  • Nancy Freeman, "Alabama County Marriages, 1809-1950"
  • Nancy Freeman in entry for Robert Lee Mckissack, "Texas Deaths, 1890-1976"

World Events (8)

1835 · Treaty of New Echota

A minority group of Cherokees including John Ridge, Major Ridge, Elias Boudinot, and Stand Waite, signed the Treaty of New Echota which ceded all Cherokee territory east of the Mississippi in exchange for five million dollars. The majority of Cherokees did not agree and 16,000 Cherokee signatures were gathered to protest the treaty. Boudinot and both Ridges were killed several years later by angry Cherokees for signing the treaty.

1836 · Remember the Alamo

Being a monumental event in the Texas Revolution, The Battle of the Alamo was a thirteen-day battle at the Alamo Mission near San Antonio. In the early morning of the final battle, the Mexican Army advanced on the Alamo. Quickly being overrun, the Texian Soldiers quickly withdrew inside the building. The battle has often been overshadowed by events from the Mexican–American War, But the Alamo gradually became known as a national battle site and later named an official Texas State Shrine.

1861

Civil War History - Some 11,000 Georgians gave their lives in defense of their state a state that suffered immense destruction. But wars end brought about an even more dramatic figure to tell: 460,000 African-Americans were set free from the shackles of slavery to begin new lives as free people.

Name Meaning

English: from Middle English freman, fremon ‘freeman, free-born man’ (Old English frēomann, frīgmann), used also occasionally as a personal name. As an African American surname it was in many cases adopted as a name denoting a man freed of slavery. See also Fryman and Free .

Irish: Anglicized (‘translated’) form of Gaelic Ó Saoraidhe (see Seery ).

Americanized form of French Lafrenière (see Lafreniere ).

Dictionary of American Family Names © Patrick Hanks 2003, 2006.

Possible Related Names

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