| 114 | i. | Pius Ignatius Hagan, born 1809; died January 10, 1902 in Cox's Creek, Kentucky; married Lucinda Rhodes April 23, 1839. |
| 116 | i. | William Goodrum Buckler, born July 30, 1816 in Washington Co., Kentucky; married Mary Ann Mills January 26, 1865 in Marion Co., Kentucky. |
| i. | Nancy Cambron, born October 09, 1801. | |||
| ii. | Matilda Cambron, born August 28, 1803. | |||
| iii. | Theresa Cambron, born January 28, 1805. | |||
| iv. | John Basil Cambron, born June 10, 1808 in Washington Co., Kentucky; died May 20, 1898 in Union Co., Kentucky; married Martha Pike January 16, 1849 in Union Co., Kentucky. | |||
| v. | Sarah Cambron, born September 09, 1810. | |||
| 118 | vi. | Edward Dominic Cambron, born January 28, 1812 in Marion Co., Kentucky; died 1856 in St. Charles, Marion Co., Kentucky; married Harriet Hamilton October 27, 1840 in Calvary, Marion Co., Ky. | ||
| vii. | Martina Cambron, born July 10, 1814. | |||
| viii. | Martha Ann Cambron, born July 08, 1816. | |||
| ix. | Marcellus Cambron, born January 05, 1818. | |||
| x. | Lucinda Cambron, born April 15, 1820. |
| i. | Anastasia Hamilton | |||
| ii. | Benjamin Patrick Hamilton | |||
| iii. | Charles Hamilton | |||
| iv. | Christina Hamilton | |||
| v. | Clement Austin Hamilton | |||
| vi. | George Hamilton | |||
| vii. | James Hamilton | |||
| viii. | Robert Hamilton | |||
| ix. | Samuel Hamilton | |||
| 119 | x. | Harriet Hamilton, born August 10, 1823; died January 07, 1883 in St. Charles, Marion Co., Kentucky; married Edward Dominic Cambron October 27, 1840 in Calvary, Marion Co., Ky. | ||
| xi. | Edward Hamilton, born May 10, 1836 in Marion Co., Kentucky; died 1914; married Mary Elizabeth Mudd May 04, 1858 in Holy Name of Mary, Marion Co., Kentucky. |
| 120 | i. | John Henry Lyddane, born Abt. 1780 in Ireland; died 1827 in Nelson Co., Kentucky; married Hannah Whelan Abt. 1822 in Maryland. |
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Notes for Dorothy Hill: Dorothy Hill, called "Dolly", is named as the fifth child of Thomas Hill and Rebecca Miles. She accompanied her father to Nelson County, Kentucky, in the spring of 1787, being then unmarried. She remained with her father up until her marriage, 12-24-1791 to John Thomas Jarboe. She was the mother of six children, one of whom became a Dominican Priest. Dorothy died at a very old age, at what is today known as the "old Jarboe farm," about three miles north of the town of Lebanon, Marion Co., Kentucky. She is buried at St. Rose's, near Springfield, Ky. John David Hill states, "During her life she was much loved and respected by all who knew her. She was kind, generous to a fault, and if the example set by her was lived up to and carried out by her numerous descendants, the other descendants of Thomas Hill would have reason to be proud of them." Since the tombstone inscription is worn with age, the date of Dorothy Hill's birth has been learned through the will of Jeremiah Herbert. |
| i. | William Smith Jarboe, born January 12, 1793; died July 15, 1868; married (1) Ann Hagan August 16, 1829; died 1856; married (2) Fannie Bickett 1864. |
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More About William Smith Jarboe: Residence: Lebanon, Ky |
| ii. | Theresa Jarboe, born October 23, 1796 in Nelson Co., Kentucky; died July 13, 1862 in Lebanon, Kentucky; married Benedict Patrick Hamilton September 22, 1820; born September 28, 1800 in Nelson Co., Kentucky; died March 14, 1879. |
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More About Theresa Jarboe: Residence: Lebanon, Ky |
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More About Benedict Patrick Hamilton: Residence: Lebanon, Ky |
| 122 | iii. | James Arnold Jarboe, born April 10, 1801 in Washington Co., Kentucky; died January 11, 1865 in Marion Co., Kentucky; married (1) Nancy (Ann) Thomas July 31, 1826 in Washington Co., Kentucky; married (2) Ann Harriet Luckett 1833. | ||
| iv. | John Thomas Jarboe, born June 08, 1804 in Washington Co., Kentucky; died November 01, 1856 in Washington Co., Kentucky; married (1) Martina Thomas September 07, 1825 in Washington Co., Kentucky; born January 30, 1801; died December 20, 1849; married (2) Cynthia Ann Turner February 05, 1850; died November 1852; married (3) Catherine Hamilton March 29, 1853; born February 20, 1816; died June 20, 1864. |
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More About John Thomas Jarboe: Burial: November 1856, St. Rose Cemetery, Springfield, Kentucky Residence: Lebanon, Ky |
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More About Martina Thomas: Residence: Lebanon, Ky |
| v. | Joseph Thomas Jarboe, born June 29, 1806 in Washington Co., Kentucky; died March 27, 1887. |
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Notes for Joseph Thomas Jarboe: The following account of the life of Father Jarboe is taken from the "National Catholic Register, 1962": "It was the day after the Battle of Shiloh (April 6-7, 1862), and Father Joseph T. Jarboe, O.P., a chaplain to Confederate troops, was being taken out to be shot by Union soldiers. He had crossed the Federal lines to administer the Last Rites to some dying Union soldiers when he was arrested as a spy." "But happening to ride by at that moment was General Phil Sheridan, who had served Mass for Father Jarboe in Ohio before the war. In language said to have been more vigorous than polished, he ordered the priest's immediate release. The account is carried by the Tennessee Register in connection with the Shiloh centenary, marked by a special U.S. postage stamp." " Father Jarboe distinguished himself not only as a chaplain, but as a great missionary in Ohio, Kentucky, and Tennessee. His health so poor at ordination in 1830 that he had to be supported by another priest to receive the sacrament, he yet outlived all his contemporaries and died in 1887 at the age of 81 after 57 strenuous years as a priest. It is generally accepted that only deafness prevented his becoming a Bishop." "A descendant of English Catholics from Maryland who had migrated to Kentucky, Joseph Thomas Jarboe was born near Lebanon, Kentucky June 29, 1806, the fourth child of John and Dorothy Hill Jarboe. He was enrolled in the recently opened Dominican school at St. Rose, Kentucky, where he was an apt pupil of marked ability. Even when he was 80 years old he could recite Horace and Virgil by the hour. He was ordained June 28, 1830, at St. Rose's by Bishop Edward Fenwick, O.P." "Father Jarboe was soon named sub prior at St. Rose's and did heroic work in the cholera epidemic around Springfield, Kentucky, in 1833. In October 1838, now prior of St. Rose's, Father Jarboe accompanied Bishop Richard Pius Miles, O.P. to Nashville and was one of the two priests present at his installation in the new diocese." "In 1839 at St. Rose's, Father Jarboe gave instructions in the Catholic faith to the Puritan Yankee, Henry Vincent Brown, who became one of the famous priests in Tennessee." "In the 1840's Father Jarboe was assigned to the missions in Ohio, and then became head of the college at Sinsinawa, WI. His name was among those submitted to Rome in 1859 by the Bishops of the St. Louis Province as recommended to be Bishop of one of the new dioceses to be erected." "When the Civil War broke out in April, 1861, Father Jarboe, again at St. Rose's, immediately volunteered to minister to the troops and was in some of the bloodiest battles of the war and distinguished himself in caring for the wounded, especially at the battle of Shiloh." "The fight was at its height and comrades of the chaplain were falling on all sides while he was busy administering to the dying. Finding a young soldier suffering from a mortal wound, Father Jarboe was preparing to cut away his boots for the anointing of the feet when a bullet shattered the knife he held in his hand. Before the priest recovered from this shock an exploding shell struck the injured soldier and hurled his body some distance across the field. As it did so, a penknife dropped from one of his pockets and was put to use by the chaplain. Father Jarboe always thought this second knife was sent to replace the one shot from his hand. He kept the knife as a memento of the war and would often show it to his friends." "During the latter part of the battle, solicitude for the spiritual welfare of the Union soldiers led Father Jarboe across the lines under a flag of truce. His mission of mercy ended, he tried to return to his regiment but was seized by pickets of the Federal army and brought before General William Nelson." "One account says the priest was recognized by Provast Marshall John G. Key, a Catholic, but Miss Lula Timmons, of Lebanon, KY, a lifelong friend (and relative) of Father Jarboe, writing in 1909, gives this account, "He was being taken out to be shot when the party was met by General Phil Sheridan, who recognized Father Jarboe, for whom he had served Mass in Somerset, Ohio. Sheridan immediately ordered his release and is said that the language used by the General on that occasion was more vigorous than polished." "From the end of the war in 1865 to 1884 Father Jarboe labored in Tennessee, and was Vicar General of the diocese from 1869 to 1884. In 1884 infirmities of age and deafness caused his retirement. He went to the Dominican monastery in Somerset, Ohio, where he died March 27, 1887." _____________________________________________________________________________________ Tennessee Register - Official paper of Diocese of Nashville 5-4-1962 Fr. Joseph Jarboe Experienced Two Escapes from Death At Shiloh (Editors Note: Father Jarboe’s narrow escapes from death are narrated in the second installment of the story Catholics played in the Battle of Shiloh April 6 & & 1862.) One man who held vivid memories of the Battle of Shiloh (April 6-7, 1862) at the end of his long life was the Rev. Joseph T. Jarboe, former superior of the Dominican priory at St. Rose, KY, and after the war Vicar General of the Nashville diocese. As chaplain of the Second Tennessee Confederate Regiment this exemplary priest had two brushes with death that he could never forget. Father Jarboe was not only a great missionary but a very remarkable man in every sense of the word. In all the history of Catholicity in Nashville the name of no priest is more mention and more revered as his. HIS HEALTH was so poor at the time of his ordination (1830) that he had to be supported by another priest to receive the sacrament, yet he outlived all his contemporaries and died (1887), at the ripe old age of 81 after 57 strenuous years in the priesthood. It is an accepted tradition in Tennessee that only deafness prevented Father Jarboe from becoming a Bishop. A descendant of the of English Catholics (his immigrant 4th great grandmother was English his 4th great grandfather French) who had emigrated to Kentucky. Joseph Thomas Jarboe was born near Lebanon Ky, June 29, 1806 the fourth child of John and Dorothy Hill Jarboe. His parents sent him to the rexently opened Dominican school at St. Rose, Ky He was a pupil of marked ability and even when he was80 years old he could quote Horace and Virgil by the hour. H was ordained June 28, 1830 at St. Rose by Bishop Fenwick. Shortly after his ordination he was made sub-prior at St. Roses and did heroic work in the cholera epidemic around Springfield, KY 1833. In 1837 he attend the first chapter of the Dominican in the American Province and was elected one of the four definitory (law makers). It was at this chapter that Richard Pius Miles, future Bishop of Nashville was elected Provincial of the Dominicans. IN OCTOBER 1838 Father Jarboe was now the Prior at St. Rose accompanied by Bishop Mile to Nashville and was one of the two priests who assisted at his installation in the Diocese. He wrote a long account of the historic event, which was published in the Catholic Advocate of Bardstown, KY, Nov. 14, 1838. Another connection Father Jarboe had with (turn to page 4) the infant Dioceses of Nashville was that in 1839 at St. Rose’s he gave instructions to the Puritan Yankee, Henry Vincent Brown, who later became one of the famous priest in Tennessee. In the 1840s Father Jarboe labored on the mission in Ohio. The he became head of the college at Sinsiawa, Wis. When the second St. Peter’s Church in Memphis was dedicated (Jan. 17,1858) Father Jarboe was selected to be the celebrant of the Mass. His name was on the team sent to Rome in 1859 by the Bishop of St. Louise Province as on of those recommend to be Bishop of one of the new dioceses to be erected. When the Civil War broke out (April 1861), Farther Jarboe was again at St. Rose’s. He immediately volunteered and received his appointment as chaplain of the Second Tennessee Regiment. He took part in some of the bloodiest battle of the war and distinguished himself for bravery in attending the wounded especially at the Battle of Shiloh. Shiloh: “The fight was at its height and comrades of the chaplain were falling on all sides while he was busy administering to the dying. Finding a young soldier suffering from a mortal wound, Father Jarboe was preparing to cut away his boots for the anointing of the feet when a bullet shattered the knife he held in his hand. Before the priest recovered from this shock and exploding shell struck the injured soldier and whirled his body some distance across the field. As it did do so a penknife dropped from one of his pockets and was put in use by the chaplain. Farther Jarboe always thought this second knife was sent to replace the one shot from his hand. He kept the knife as a memento of the war and would often show it to his friends.” DURING THE later part of the battle solicitude for the spiritual welfare of the welfare of the Union soldiers led Father Jarboe across the lines under a flag of truce. His mission of mercy ended the endeavor to return to his regiment but was seized by pickets of the Federal Army and brought befor General Nelson. One account says that, the priest was recognized by Provost Marshal John G. Key, a Catholic. But Miss Lula Timmons of Lebanon, KY, a life long friend of Father Jarboe writing in 1899, gives this account.” He was being taken out to be shot when the party was met by Gen. Phil Sheridan who recognized Father Jarboe, for whom he had served mass in Somerset, OH. Sheridan immediately ordered his release and it is said that the language used by the General on that occasion was more vigorous than polished.” FROM THE END of the war in 1865 to 1884 Father Jarboe labored in Tennessee. He was Vicar General of the diocese from 1869 to 1884. He was at various times stationed at the Cathedral at St. John’s in Edgefield, At St Cecilia’s academy, and St. Mary’s Orphanage. In 1884 infirmities of age and deafness caused his retirement. He went to the Dominican convent at Somerset, OH, where he died March 27, 1887. Father Jarboe will always be numbered among the first and greatest missionaries in Ohio, Kentucky and Tennessee. |
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More About Joseph Thomas Jarboe: Ordained as Priest: 1830, St. Rose Church, Springfield, KY |
| vi. | Eliza Jarboe, born March 22, 1810 in Washington Co., Kentucky; died October 22, 1881 in Fancy Farm, Kentucky; married William H. Thomas July 24, 1826 in Washington Co., Kentucky; born Abt. 1802. |
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