Mary Elizabeth Clark

Brief Life History of Mary Elizabeth

Mary Elizabeth Clark was born about 1813, in Georgia, United States as the daughter of John Sevier Clark. She had at least 3 sons and 6 daughters with Jessie A Hall. She lived in Pickens, Pickens, South Carolina, United States in 1850 and Pickens, South Carolina, United States in 1860.

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Family Time Line

Jessie A Hall
1797–
Mary Elizabeth Clark
1813–
Harriet Hall
1834–
Catharine Hall
1836–
Mary B. Hall
1838–
John V Hall
1840–
Lent Hall
1842–1913
Mandaline Hall
1845–
Elizabeth C. Hall
1849–
Sarah Hall
1852–
Lawrence O. Hall
1854–

Sources (2)

  • Elizabeth Hall in household of J A Hall, "United States Census, 1860"
  • Elizabeth Hall in household of Jessie A Hall, "United States Census, 1850"

Parents and Siblings

World Events (8)

1819 · Panic! of 1819

With the Aftermath of the Napoleonic Wars the global market for trade was down. During this time, America had its first financial crisis and it lasted for only two years. 

1832 · Worcester v. Georgia

In 1830, U.S. President Andrew Jackson signed the Indian Removal Act which required all Native Americans to relocate to areas west of the Mississippi River. That same year, Governor Gilmer of Georgia signed an act which claimed for Georgia all Cherokee territories within the boundaries of Georgia. The Cherokees protested the act and the case made its way to the U.S. Supreme Court. The case, Worcester v. Georgia, ruled in 1832 that the United States, not Georgia, had rights over the Cherokee territories and Georgia laws regarding the Cherokee Nation were voided. President Jackson didn’t enforce the ruling and the Cherokees did not cede their land and Georgia held a land lottery anyway for white settlers.

1846

U.S. acquires vast tracts of Mexican territory in wake of Mexican War including California and New Mexico.

Name Meaning

English: from Middle English clerk, clark ‘clerk, cleric, writer’ (Old French clerc; see Clerc ). The original sense was ‘man in a religious order, cleric, clergyman’. As all writing and secretarial work in medieval Christian Europe was normally done by members of the clergy, the term clerk came to mean ‘scholar, secretary, recorder, or penman’ as well as ‘cleric’. As a surname, it was particularly common for one who had taken only minor holy orders. In medieval Christian Europe, clergy in minor orders were permitted to marry and so found families; thus the surname could become established.

Irish (Westmeath, Mayo): in Ireland the English surname was frequently adopted, partly by translation for Ó Cléirigh; see Cleary .

Americanized form of Dutch De Klerk or Flemish De Clerck or of variants of these names, and possibly also of French Clerc . Compare Clerk 2 and De Clark .

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

Possible Related Names

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