He was 5 in 1850.
He was 15 in 1860.
He was 27 in 1870 single living with his parents.
He was 5 in 1850.
He was 15 in 1860.
He was 27 in 1870 single living with his parents.
She was 27 in 1880.
He was 24 in 1870 and said his father was of foreign birth.
He later changed his name to SOWASH according to Margaret Duncan of Grand Rivers, Kentucky.
She was 1 in 1850.
She was 11 in 1860.
She was 24 in 1870 married and living next to her parents in Lyon County, Kentucky.
He was 3 in 1850.
He was 13 in 1860.
He was 25 in 1870 single living with his parents.
He was 31 in 1880.
She was 27 in 1880.
He was 8 in 1880.
She was 5 in 1880.
She was 2 in 1880.
He was 11 months old in 1880.
CENSUS RECORDS: 1840 Livingston County, Kentucky page #14
W. W. LASSATER 1 male 20 to 30 and 1 female 20 to 30 and 10 slavesHISTORY: My great-great-grandfather, William Warren Lassiter born April 1810. He is said to have been an only child. He moved from Livingston County, Kentucky to Mississippi in 1842. He and his future father-in-law, William Elder operated the first ferry accross the Ohio River at Maysville. William Elder moved to Helena, Arkansas and William Lassiter married his daughter, Margaret and they lived across the Mississippi River in Jonestown, Mississippi. His mother remarried a Mr. Harper in Livingston County. I am trying to identify William Lassiter's father. William died at Jonestown, Mississippi leaving two children, Arnette and Francis Marion (my great-grandfather). William's father went off on horseback and never returned and was thought to have been taken by the Indians. Marion Lassiter at email: marionlass@aol.com (This was posted on the web at Genforum.com)
She was in the 20 to 30 age bracket in 1840.
She was 14 in 1850.
She was 44 in 1880.
She was 18 in 1880.
In 1880, he was 11 years old and was attending school.