James SEVIER, son of John SEVIER and Sarah HAWKINS , was born October 25,1764 in Augusta, Rockingham County, VA.. He married Nancy CONWAY . He died February 21, 1847. Nancy CONWAY, daughter of Henery CONWAY and Sarah HUNDLEY , .


Children of James SEVIER and Nancy CONWAY are:
1. Sarah Hundley SEVIER, b. abt. 1792 See Hugh Douglas HALE & Sarah Hundley SEVIER

Notes for James SEVIER:


JAMES SEVIER, according to the 1835 Pension Roll, Washington County,
Tennessee, had served as a Private in the Virginia [sic] State Troops:
$33.33 Annual Allowance, $99.99 Amount Received, January 15 1833 Pension
Started, Age 70. According to his pension application, made 11 Dec 1832
in Washington County, Tennessee, he was born in 1764 in Virginia, and
enlisted in the North Carolina troops while living in that part of North
Carolina which became Tennessee in 1780, in his uncle Capt. Robert
SEVIER'S company and was in the battle of King's Mountain where Capt.
Robert SEVIER was mortally wounded. Other officers were Col. John SEVIER,
Maj. Jesse Walton and Maj. Jonathan Tipton. He enlisted again in the
company of Capt. Landon Carter and was in the battle of Boyd's Creek. He
also enlisted for the South Carolina campaign and his officers were Col.
John SEVIER, Lieut. Col. Charles Robertson, Maj. Valentine SEVIER and
Maj. Jonathan Tipton. They joined Gen. Greene and were sent on to join
Gen. Francis Marion. He was with a party that captured 100 British
soldiers near Monk's Corner. He enlisted again in 1782 in Col. John
SEVIER'S Cherokee Indian Campaign, serving in Capt. Alexander Moore's
Company. Other Captains in this campaign were Capt. Samuel Wear and Capt.
Robert Bean.

Note: The above information was extracted primarily from Armstrong who
adds that "James SEVIER was the second son of Gov. John SEVIER and his
first wife, Sarah HAWKINS Sevier. He married Nancy CONWAY, daughter of
Col. Henry CONWAY.

Sources for James SEVIER:

  1. World Family Tree Vol. 2, Ed. 1,
  2. Sevier Family History,

Notes for Nancy CONWAY:


Excerpt from "The Lost State of Franklin", 1927
by Samuel Cole Williams (former Justice of the Supreme Court of Tennessee)
The Franklinites, p.310-311

"HENRY CONWAY

Henry Conway was born in Virginia, and removed to the lower part of the
Nolachucky settlement before 1783, in August of which year he was
appointed one of the tax-assessors of Greene county, and at the November
term of court was on the grand jury.

He served as treasurer of the State of Franklin (1787); as one of the
commissioners who signed the treaty of Coytoy (1786) and as speaker of
the senate of 1786.

Two of the sons of Governor Sevier married his daughters. James Sevier's
wife was Nancy Conway; Major John Sevier's first wife was Elizabeth
Conway. A third daughter married John Sevier, son of Colonel Valentine
Sevier, II, and became the mother of Senator Ambrose Hundley Sevier, of
Arkansas. The wife of Henry Conway was Sarah Hundley of Virginia.

Through his son, Thomas, Henry Conway was progenitor of other grandsons
who rose to eminence in the State of Arkansas. Henry W. Conway served
with distinction under General Jackson in the War of 1812, and was member
of Congress from Arkansas, from 1823 to 1827, when he was killed in a
duel with Robert Crittenden. James Sevier Conway was founder of the city
of Little Rock, Arkansas, and first governor of that State, 1836-1840.
Elias Nelson Conway was the fifth governor of Arkansas.

George Conway, a brother of Henry Conway, was of the commission that laid
out the town of Greeneville. He served as colonel on the Cherokee
expedition of 1793, and was first major-general of the State of
Tennessee. [Editor Note: Mr. Williams is reported by some to be
incorrect, in that George Conway, Maj. Gen., was actually George, son of
Henry Conway's brother, William] Joseph Conway, another brother, served
the State of Franklin.

Without doubt, the Conway family produced more men of ability than any
other Greene county family.

Henry Conway remained throughout all vicissitudes firmly attached to the
State of Franklin. Not until the February term, 1789, of the Greene
county court did he take the oath of allegiance to the State of North
Carolina.

There is more than a hint of record that Henry Conway was a man of full
habits. He lived well, and extended a gracious hospitality. Bishop Ashury
was his guest on one of his visits to Tennessee, and Governor Sevier made
the Conway home a stopping place in his frequent journeying between
Washington county and Knoxville."

Sources for Nancy CONWAY:

  1. World Family Tree Vol. 2, Ed. 1,
  2. Sevier Family History,

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