Martha Boyd ~ Robert Thompson
Lake County, Tennessee
Robert Thompson, a farmer of Lake County, was the son of Robert and Sallie
(Tharp) Thompson. His father was born in Guilford County, N. C., in 1792,
his mother in Rockingham County, N. C., in 1790, They were married in
Guilford County in 1814, and had eight children, five boys and three girls.
They moved to Maury County, and lived there until 1847, when they moved to
Lake County, which was then called Obion, and his mother died in 1858 and
his father March 28, 1860. They were not connected with any church, though
Mrs. Thompson was raised a Quaker. Mr. Thompson was a Democrat. Our subject,
Robert Thompson, was of Irish descent on his father's side, and Scotch on
the mother's. He was born in Maury County, Tenn., July 5, 1827, was raised
on the farm, and when twenty-two years of age married Miss Martha Boyd, who
was born in Calloway County, Ky., in 1826, and she only lived seven months
after her marriage. Mr. Thompson then returned to his parents and remained
with them until 1857, when he married Miss Eleanor J. Davis, who was born in
Hickman County, Ky., October 17,1837. They had eight children - five boys
and three girls - all living except Robert T., who died March 19, 1886, in
his twenty-sixth year. Mrs. Thompson died December 31, 1884, and he married
July 5, 1885, Mrs. Martha J. Wood, who was born in North Carolina, in 1836,
was raised in Middle Tennessee, and belongs to the Methodist Episcopal
Church South. Mr. Thompson has been a resident of Lake County since 1847 and
in connection with farming has engaged in fishing, making from the latter
over $3,000 in one year. He is a stanch Democrat, casting his first vote for
Stephen A. Douglas in 1861, when only two others in the county did the same.
Mr. Thompson is not a member of any church; he is a clever, agreeable
gentleman, and has many friends.
Source: History of Tennessee from the earliest time to the present :
together with an historical and a biographical sketch of Gibson, Obion,
Dyer, Weaklely and Lake counties; besides a valuable fund of notes,
reminiscences, observations, etc., etc; Nashville, Tenn. : Goodspeed Pub.
Co., 1887. FHL Book
NOTE: Use this data as a finding tool, just as you would any other
secondary source. When you find the name of an ancestor
listed confirm the facts in original sources.
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