Brief Summary:
This web page is the result of much work on the part of many people. Your webmaster merely typed in the information given him by a group of friends on the internet, all of whom are descendents of two Carson families who first settled in South Carolina after arriving from the British Isles. One family is that of Thomas Carson, Jr., who arrived in Charleston, South Carolina in 1773 with his wife, 6 sons, and a daughter. They had sailed from the port of Newry, County Down, Ireland, and sailed for about 6 weeks. Needless to say, they arrived tired and weary. The other family is that of John Carson Sr., who is believed to have lived in Abbeville County, South Carolina. Very little is known of John Sr., but research on this branch of the family is intense. The two families merged when Joseph Richard Carson, descendent of Thomas Carson Sr. married a daughter of Nathan Franklin Carson, a descendent of John Carson Sr., then a second daughter of Nathan's when the first died. DNA testing was conducted in 2007 that established conclusively that the two families are kin, probably with Alexander Harvey Carson as the common ancestor. The two men who had their DNA tested were (2115) .William Waller Carson IV (chapter 2) and (478) Alan Barrow Carson (chapter 8).
Shortly after arriving in Charleston, The Thomas Carson family moved on to the South Carolina up-country, and after participating in the Revolution, they received land in Northeastern Georgia, where most of them then moved. Subsequently, they migrated then to Alabama, and one (Joseph Richard) moved on to Brazos County, Texas, where he met the Nathan Franklin family. The John C. Carson family moved to Alabama for the first half of the 19th century, then to Mississippi, and finally on to Texas in the mid 1850's. Some of the John C. Carson family settled in Leon County, which is adjacent to Brazos County on the north, but the majority lived in or around Bryan, Texas, and took part in the development of the area as well as Texas A & M.
In this saga, every person has received a unique
sequential number. When a plus sign (+) is shown before a name, it
indicates that there is a subsequent narrative on that person. In the
"Cast of Characters", each person's number is given, along with the
chapter they appear in, which will be in parenthesis. The numbers are
permanently assigned, and may not be in a logical sequence, as new family
members are constantly being discovered.
A note on sources of material: Sources not listed are censuses, data bases
from Ancestry.com or from the Broderbund series of CD's, or from personal
contacts with various interested contributors - which usually are by
e-mail.
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Brazos County was originally formed as Navasota County on January 30, 1841, from
parts of Robertson and Washington Counties. The names was changed to
Brazos County on January 28, 1842
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The following is another version of the Carson saga, as related by William Lee
Carson (see "Cast of Characters"). There is a substantial amount
of fact in this story, but the relationship to George Washington may be a little
exaggerated (opinion of Alan B. Carson, website editor).
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