Newton King

Brief Life History of Newton

When Newton King was born in 1820, in Shelby, Kentucky, United States, his father, Thomas W. King, was 52 and his mother, Mary Ann Sharp, was 31.

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Family Time Line

Thomas W. King
1768–1836
Mary Ann Sharp
1789–1856
Deborah King
1805–1881
Thomas Osborne King
1808–1852
Margaret Esther King
1808–
Allen King
1811–1906
Daniel William King
1811–
King
1813–
Benjamin Allen King
1814–
King
1815–
Mary Ann King
1816–1843
Dorothy Isabella King
1818–
Newton King
1820–
Washington Allen King
1824–1902
Samuel Newton King
1824–
Greenup King
1827–1865
Pvt Enoch James King
1842–1909

Sources (0)

    There are no historical documents attached to Newton.

    World Events (3)

    1820 · Making States Equal

    The Missouri Compromise helped provide the entrance of Maine as a free state and Missouri as a slave state into the United States. As part of the compromise, slavery was prohibited north of the 36°30′ parallel, excluding Missouri.

    1820 · Making Land more affordable

    "The United States law requiring full payment at the time of purchase and registration of any land. to help encourage sales and make land more affordable, Congress reduced the minimum price of dollar per acre and the minimum size that could be purchased. Most of this land for sale was located on the frontier which was then ""The West"". This Act was good for many Americans, but it was also over used by wealthy investors."

    1830 · Louisville and Portland Canal Opens

    The Louisville and Portland canal opened in 1830. It was a 2 mile canal. It helped with the barrier caused by the Falls of the Ohio River at Louisville by making a route around them.

    Name Meaning

    English: nickname from Middle English king ‘king’ (Old English cyning, cyng), perhaps acquired by someone with kingly qualities or as a pageant name by someone who had acted the part of a king or had been chosen as the master of ceremonies or ‘king’ of an event such as a tournament, festival or folk ritual. In North America, the surname King has absorbed several European cognates and equivalents with the same meaning, for example German König (see Koenig ) and Küng, French Roy , Slovenian, Croatian, or Serbian Kralj , Polish Krol . It is also very common among African Americans. It is also found as an artificial Jewish surname.

    English: occasionally from the Middle English personal name King, originally an Old English nickname from the vocabulary word cyning, cyng ‘king’.

    Irish: adopted for a variety of names containing the syllable (which means ‘king’ in Irish).

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

    Possible Related Names

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