When we are stuck on a "brick wall" ancestor, it's time to chip away at any bit of information we can find on the family, and that includes exploring collateral lines. While I don't yet know that the Townsend men who moved from South Carolina to settle in Madison County in territorial Florida were Delaney Townsend's brothers, I'm thinking my third great-grandmother Delaney—unmarried at the time of her arrival in Florida—could possibly have hitched a ride to the Florida panhandle with one of those Townsend men in town.
This week, we'll start off by focusing on everything we can find on the older of the two Townsend brothers in Madison County: Allen. Since Allen is easily found in the 1850 census, we can see he was born in South Carolina about 1801. Along with Sarah, his presumed wife and mother of his six named children, all but one family member were also born in South Carolina. After a daughter they named Florida—a telltale sign of their intentions—their youngest child, Josephine, was born in Florida in 1840, marking the approximate end of their journey southward.
Since many people of that time period moved for the purpose of seeking suitable land, I checked the General Land Office Records at the website for the Bureau of Land Management. Sure enough, there were entries for someone named Allen Townsend who had acquired several parcels of land in Madison County, Florida. Earliest of those entries was dated July 28 of 1838.
It was from Allen's death in Madison County that we gain our best clue about his origin. His 1880 headstone, placed in the Townsend Family Cemetery in Madison, Florida, informs us that he was born on November 21, 1801, in Marlboro County, South Carolina. While that headstone looks a bit too pristine to trust it to be contemporaneous with his passing, it is still worth our while to consider that information as at least a hint.
Now that we have a date of death for Allen Townsend, the next stop will be to search court records for a will and probate procedures, in the hopes that perhaps a witness to his will might be one of his own brothers—a handy clue for our purposes.
In the meantime, as I've done for so many others whose family connection still stirs lingering doubts, I'll make an entry in my family tree for Allen, but mark it with a big yellow triangular warning sign. In this case, being unsure of the connection, I'll also make Allen's entry in my tree the start of a "floating branch," cutting him off from any indication of relationship to Delaney until I've found documentation to assure me of the connection. The sooner we can find trustworthy records, though, we'll hopefully be able to reconnect Allen Townsend to the correct spot in the Townsend family tree.
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