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Terry Mason's Family History Site

55,914 names. Major lines: Allen, Beck, Borden, Buck, Burden, Carpenter, Carper, Cobb, Cook, Cornell, Cowan, Daffron, Davis, Downing, Faubion, Fauntleroy, Fenter, Fishback, Foulks, Gray, Harris, Heimbach, Henn, Holland, Holtzclaw, Jackson, Jameson, Johnson, Jones, King, Lewis, Mason, Massengill, McAnnally, Moore, Morgan, Overstreet, Price, Peck, Rice, Richardson, Rogers, Samuel, Smith, Taylor, Thomas, Wade, Warren, Weeks, Webb, Wodell, Yeiser.

 

Notes


Col. Charles Magill

Was a distinguished officer in the Revolution.


Capt. Charles Magill Fauntleroy

Was Lt. U.S. Navy, & Captain Confererate States Navy. Was inspector-general in Confederate army for J.E. Johnston's army. Was executive officer of Confederate States steamer, Nashville, and was her commander on her return voyage, when he ran her through the large blockage squadron and brought her into Beaufort with 80,000 stand of arms. Received commendation from General Johnson and Beauregard for services at First Manassas.


Capt. Charles Magill Fauntleroy

Was Lt. U.S. Navy, & Captain Confererate States Navy. Was inspector-general in Confederate army for J.E. Johnston's army. Was executive officer of Confederate States steamer, Nashville, and was her commander on her return voyage, when he ran her through the large blockage squadron and brought her into Beaufort with 80,000 stand of arms. Received commendation from General Johnson and Beauregard for services at First Manassas.


Capt. Charles Magill Fauntleroy

Was Lt. U.S. Navy, & Captain Confererate States Navy. Was inspector-general in Confederate army for J.E. Johnston's army. Was executive officer of Confederate States steamer, Nashville, and was her commander on her return voyage, when he ran her through the large blockage squadron and brought her into Beaufort with 80,000 stand of arms. Received commendation from General Johnson and Beauregard for services at First Manassas.


Dr. Archibald Magill Fauntleroy

Graduate of Virginia Military Institute, assistant surgeon U.S. navy, chief surgeon at Danville and Staunton, mention in U.S. Surgical History of War, superientendent of Western Lunatic Asylum at Staunton.


Sally Harrison Conrad

RESEARCHER: Information sent to T.Mason on 28 Oct 2004 by Carole Burnett [burnettpc@verizon.net].

The home of Dr. and Mrs. Archibald Magill Fauntleroy is located in Staunton, Virginia. In 1963 it was owned by a private girls' school, Stuart Hall, and was being utilized as a residence hall.

In 1891, Mrs. A. M. Fauntleroy (Sally Harrison Conrad Fauntleroy), now a widow, wrote and published a cloth-bound book of recipes and household hints, entitled THE HOUSEKEEPER OF STAUNTON, VIRGINIA. A copy of this book survives in the possession of Carole C. Burnett.


Marriage Notes for Dr. Archibald Magill Fauntleroy and Sally Harrison Conrad-2060

The wedding was performed by the Rev. J. R. Graham, an ordained minister of the Presbyterian Church, who gave Sally a Bible as a wedding gift. This Bible, as well as Rev. Graham's handwritten note and a newspaper clipping about the wedding, is in the possession of Carole C. Burnett.


Anne Magill Fauntleroy

Never married. Lived for many years in Washington, D.C.


Dr. Archibald Magill Fauntleroy

Unmarried.

He graduated from the University of Virginia and the Medical College of Virginia. Was a surgeon and Captain in U.S. Army, retired in 1921. He was a physician and officer in the U.S. Public Health Service. His duty stations included the following locations:
Hong Kong;
the Mississippi River delta south of New Orleans;
Puerto Rico;
Ellis Island (New York harbor);
Cologne, Germany;
Goteborg, Sweden;
and Charleston, South Carolina.