White 
County Courthouse in 1903
White County Historical Society
White County, Arkansas

(title3)

Descendants of Samuel Tapscott

Researched and compiled by Gary Telford

Family Roots Genealogy Research

wgt@centurytel.net

Generation No. 1

 

1.  SAMUEL1 TAPSCOTT was born 1777 in Virginia         (See notes for his will), and died 1858.  He married WINIFRED HILL December 14, 1812 in Franklin County, Virginia.

 

Notes for SAMUEL TAPSCOTT:

Note: Lived in Rockingham County, North Carolina. 1850 US Census NC Rockingham Co page 40B: Samuel Tabscott        59 b VA farmer unable to read and write

Winfred Tabscoot       52 b VA unable to read and write

George Tabscoot       27 b VA laborer

James Tabscoot        20 b NC teacher

S. T. Tabscoot            17 b NC laborer male

A. B. Tabscoot            14 b NC male attended school

Amanda Tabscoot      12 b NC attended school

 

Note: Received a legacy of two slaves from the will of his uncle, John Tapscott, written 17 September 1839: one negro boy the name of Silas; one negro Girl by the name of Hannah

 

Note: The will of Samuel TAPSCOTT was written 10 May 1857 and was probated in the March 1859 court session of Alamance Co NC. It names  "my wife Winefred"; sons John & Henry Tapscott; "my five younger children, namely George, James, Thomas, Byron & Amanda"; and "my dec'd brother James".

 

Note: "Know all men by these presents that I Samuel Tapscott being of sound & disposing mind do make and declare this to be my last will and testament. Ist. I bequeath to my wife Winefred four negros & their increase, Julius, Mario, Sina, & Eliza to have and to hold so long as she remains a widow but in case she marries or dies the foursaid property is to be divided equally among my five younger children, namely George, James, Thomas, Byron & Amanda.  I also give and bequeath to my wife the interest I own in the estate of my dec'd brother James together with my carriage, wagon, household & kitchen furniture, farming utinsils, Stock of every discription and two

horses, all of which I wand divided at her death equally among my children whose names appear above.

   2nd.  I give and bequeath to my daughter Amanda my girl Cornelia & claybank mare to own during her natural life but if she marry & die without issue the property must revert to my four sons above named.

   3rd. I give to my son George at his mother's death all the land lying west of the crop road running from Zion church in the section of Hatchie river embracing the houses in which I now live, to have and to own so long as he shall live, but in the event that he should die, I want it divided equally between my three sons and daughter, namely, James, Thomas, Byron and

Amanda. The remainder of the tract which lies east of the above named road I wish my son Byron to have & to use after her death it must be divided among his three brothers & Sister himself to wit: George, James, & Thomas.

   4th. In consideration of the kindness of my son Thomas in nursing & administering medicine to a sick negro, I give him fifty dollars, extra.

   5th. My two other sons, John & Henry Tapscott have already rec'd more than their proportions of my estate, I therefore give them one hundred dollars.

   6th. I appoint my wife & Son George executrix & Executor of my estate

May 10 1857 [Signed]

Samuel Tapscott [X his mark]

Witnesses: John B. Thomas, Allsen Harris MD."

 

Notes for WINIFRED HILL:

Note: Found in the 1860 Census, Haywood County, Tennessee, District 4; item 809; household 721, in the household of George H. Tapscott, 39, farmer, born in Virginia.

 

       

Children of SAMUEL TAPSCOTT and WINIFRED HILL are:

2.                i. JOHN HILL2 TAPSCOTT, b. September 16, 1811, North Carolina; d. December 30, 1877, Mississippi.

                  ii. HENRY C. TAPSCOTT, b. Abt. 1813, Virginia.

                 iii. GEORGE H. TAPSCOTT, b. February 1821, Virginia; d. April 13, 1886, White Co., AR  Buried West Point Cemetery*, West Point, AR.

 

Notes for GEORGE H. TAPSCOTT:

Name: 1860 Census, Haywood County, Tennessee

Occupation: Farmer 1

Note: An Allen Brice, age 33, physician, born in Tennessee was found living in the household of George H. Tapscott in 1860. 1

_____________________________________________________________________________

West Point Cemetery

West Point, White Co., AR

 

Tapscott, G.H. – February ?, 1821 – April 13, 1986 – stone is broken

 

 

                 iv. JAMES W. (DR.) TAPSCOTT, b. February 17, 1830, North Carolina     (See notes, Civil War Vet. Honored); d. May 19, 1862, White Co., AR  Buried West Point Cemetery*, West Point, AR.

 

Notes for JAMES W. (DR.) TAPSCOTT:

Note: Three brothers attended, at the same time, Richmond Medical College, in Richmond, VA., sometime before 1860.

 

Note:

A brother James W. Tapscott settled in White County, AR. I recently found a Land Patent for James W.Tapscott in White County, AR, in 1861. James W. Tapscott died in 1862, in the Civil War, "Battle of Whitney's Lane", around West Point, AR

___________________________________________________________________________.

West Point Cemetery

West Point, White Co., AR

 

Tapscott, James W., M.D. - February 17, 1830 – May 19, 1862 – marker erected by MDs of White County, May 1999

______________________________________________________________________________

 

Civil War Doctor Honored

By SCOTT AKRIDGE

 

Author and Civil War authority Scott Akridge of Bradford is an active member of the White County Historical Society.  He was instrumental in the achievement of this event.

   On May 23, 1999, a ceremony was held in the West Point Cemetery in honor of Dr. James Tapscott, a physician killed at the Battle of Whitney’s Lane on May 19, 1862.  Also included was the dedication of a heritage trail panel marker installed in the West Point Cemetery which interprets the Civil War in that community.  More than 100 persons were on hand for the dedication.

 During Samuel Curtis’ foray into North-central Arkansas in May 1862, the first significant resistance encountered by the Federal troops occurred when a detachment of the 12th Texas Cavalry and William Hicks’ Arkansas Cavalry (later the 32nd Arkansas Infantry) surprised a Federal forage party along a portion of the Searcy toWest Point Road locally known as Whitney’s Lane.  The hour-long action resulted in at least 55 Federal casualties but only four known Southern casualties.  One of the Confederate casualties was Dr. James Tapscott of West Point.

 According to oral tradition, Tapscott was killed when he attempted to mount a horse belonging to one of the Federal soldiers.  Just as he thrust his foot into the stirrup, a Federal soldier ran from behind a wagon where he had been hiding and slashed Tapscott with a sword.  Captain Francis Chrisman of Searcy, who served as guide to the Texans that day, wrote to the assistant adjutant general in Little Rock on the evening of the battle stating, “Dr. Tapscott … fell fighting with great gallantry.”

 Tapscott was buried in the West Point Cemetery and a small marker placed on his grave. Over the years the cemetery became inundated with forest growth and the Tapscott marker was broken in time.  In the 1980s, the citizens of West Point cleared the cemetery and in 1995 the surviving portion of Dr. Tapscott’s stone was discovered.

 Dan Davidson, M.D., of Searcy read about the broken Tapscott headstone in A Severe and Bloody Fight: The Battle of Whitney’s Lane & Military Occupation of White County, Arkansas, May & June, 1862 (published in 1996 and in part made possible by an AHPP grant).   Being a fellow physician, Davidson decided to take on the task of replacing the Tapscott monument.  Meanwhile, the White County Historical Society and the White County Civil War Round Table had both sought to begin installing Civil War markers in the county.  The initiative of Dr. Davidson was seen as an opportunity that could be “piggybacked” to install the first panel marker in the county as well.   A grant from the American Battlefield Protection Program was obtained through the AHPP to partially fund the project.  Additional funding came from Dr. Davidson, area physicians, the White County Historical Society and the White County Civil War Round Table.

 With an enormous amount of initial assistance from Don Hamilton of the CACWHT, Scott Akridge and Emmett Powers designed the layout for the panel. The decision was made to follow closely the example set by the CACWHT in designing their Little Rock Campaign markers.

 The panel interprets primarily the two major events affecting the town of West Point during the war.  The first occurred in late May of 1862 when Colonel Peter J. Osterhaus, commanding Curtis’ Third Division at Searcy, took some 1,000 Federal troops to West Point to thoroughly scour the town and beyond for food and forage.  The locals resisted and heavy cannonading was reported.  The second event interpreted on the panel was the shelling of the town and surrounding area by the U.S.S. Cricket and the U.S.S. Lexington in August of 1863 during Fredrick Steele’s Little Rock campaign.

 The Tapscott monument, which was originally only about 18 inches tall, was replaced with an eight-foot obelisk.  Tapscott was from a family with a long history of physicians and the new monument was designed in a style similar to theirs.  The original inscription was retained on the new monument; the only words added on the front were, “He died risking his life for his patients.”  These words reflect the idea of community service which all doctors share.

 The West Point Cemetery is now a beautiful, well-kept cemetery located along the Little Red River about one-half mile north of the town of West Point.  The dediction ceremony opened with Dr. Davidson explaining his inspiration for the project.  Akridge spoke on the history of the Civil War in the area.  The National Guard provided a color guard for the event and Tom Ezell of the 6th Arkansas Infantry fired a salute in honor of Dr. Tapscott.

 --photo courtesy Gerald Torrence

Colorful marker explains why West Point is historically significant. 

 A Severe and Bloody Fight, written by Scott H. Akridge and Emmett E. Powers, is available for $13 postage paid from the White County Historical Society, P.O. Box 537, Searcy, AR 72145.

 

 

3.               v. SAMUEL THOMAS (DR.) TAPSCOTT, b. December 25, 1832, North Carolina; d. May 14, 1919, White Co., AR  Buried Oak Grove Cemetery*, Searcy, AR.

4.              vi. ARLEN BYRON "IRA" (DR.) TAPSCOTT, b. October 17, 1835, North Carolina      (Surgeon in Forrest's cavalry); d. January 15, 1882, or 1887 per Goodspeed, White Co., AR  Buried West Point Cem.*.

                vii. AMANDA TAPSCOTT, b. Abt. 1838, North Carolina; d. December 11, 1912; m. JAMES DECATOR SHERMAN, Brownsville, Haywood, Tennessee.

 

Notes for AMANDA TAPSCOTT:

Note: Was attending school in Caswell County for the Census of 1850

 

 

Generation No. 2

 

2.  JOHN HILL2 TAPSCOTT (SAMUEL1) was born September 16, 1811 in North Carolina, and died December 30, 1877 in Mississippi.  He married MARY ELIZABETH HOBSON May 28, 1835.

 

Notes for JOHN HILL TAPSCOTT:

Note: 1860 Surry County, NC Census shows that John Hill Tapscott and family lived in Surry County, North Carolina.

 

Note: Resided in Lee County, Mississippi

       

Children of JOHN TAPSCOTT and MARY HOBSON are:

5.                i. LUCIUS LICURGUS3 TAPSCOTT, b. July 15, 1838; d. August 13, 1905, Nettleton, MS  Buried Providence Cemetery, Lee County, MS.

                  ii. SARAH ANN "SUSANNA" FOSTER TAPSCOTT, b. September 1842, Caswell County, North Carolina; d. June 24, 1887, Rienzie, Mississippi; m. WILLIAM IRA TARPLEY, June 16, 1858.

 

Notes for WILLIAM IRA TARPLEY:

Occupation: CSA Service; Honorably Discharged 30 Sept. 1862 For Illness

Note: Also reported as in Lee County, Mississippi in the 1860 Census as living adjacent to John Hill Tapscott. Daughter Manerva Tarpley was in the Tapscott household when the census was taken.

 

3.  SAMUEL THOMAS (DR.)2 TAPSCOTT (SAMUEL1) was born December 25, 1832 in North Carolina, and died May 14, 1919 in White Co., AR  Buried Oak Grove Cemetery*, Searcy, AR.  He married ELIZABETH A. MCPHERSON 1866 in White Co., AR.

 

Notes for SAMUEL THOMAS (DR.) TAPSCOTT:

Oak Grove Cemetery

Searcy, White Co., AR

 

Tapscott, S.T., Dr. December 25, 1832 May 14, 1919 Husband of Elizabeth M. Tapscott

__________________________________________________________________________

Note: Dr. S.T. Tapscott, his house located in Searcy, AR. It was a big house for it's day. Dr. S.T. donated part of the house, for awhile, as a public Library in Searcy. It is now an Historical Landmark.

 

Notes for ELIZABETH A. MCPHERSON:

Oak Grove Cemetery

Searcy, White Co., AR

 

Tapscott, Elizabeth A. McPherson September 15, 1848 June 16, 1905 Wife of Dr. S.T. Tapscott

McPherson, Elizabeth A. (2) – September 15, 1848 – June 16, 1905

_____________________________________________________________________________

       

Children of SAMUEL TAPSCOTT and ELIZABETH MCPHERSON are:

                   i. CORA3 TAPSCOTT, b. January 07, 1867; d. April 22, 1916, White Co., AR  Buried Oak Grove Cemetery*, Searcy, AR; m. WILLIAM M. WATKINS.

 

Notes for CORA TAPSCOTT:

Oak Grove Cemetery

Searcy, White Co., AR

 

Watkins, Cora Tapscott January 07, 1867 April 22, 1916 Wife of W.M. Watkins; Daughter of S.T. & Elizabeth Tapscott

_______________________________________________________________________________

 

Searcy Female Institute(1891-1907)

From the White County Historical Society

 

   Searcy Female Academy had existed before the Civil War but was gone and almost forgotten when the Searcy Female Institute was founded in 1891.  A 100-year-old yearbook from the Searcy Female Institute made its way to the White County Historical Society in the summer of 2002, providing a rare glimpse at this sophisticated institution that failed to complete its second decade of existence.  The publication is owned by Libby Bassham of Royse City, Texas, whose great grandmother Kate (Russell) Sears was a senior in the Class of 1903. 

 

   According to the book, the term began September 18, 1902, ended with graduation June 8, 1903, and was not under the control of any religious denomination, “but we do insist that every pupil shall regularly attend all these services in some one of the churches here – Methodist, Baptist, Presbyterian, Cumberland Presbyterian and Episcopalian.”   Tuition for the day pupils that year was $60; tuition and board “including heating, servant’s attention and access to bath-room with hot and cold water” was $200.  Other fees included:  German, French or Greek $10; Elocution $20 or $50 for “special lessons’; Vocal Training, Piano, Harmony or Typewriting $50; Use of Library $1, and Laboratory $5.  “When any young lady expects a visit from friends or relatives … she must consult the head of the boarding department, who will, if convenient, entertain them at a reasonable charge per day.” 

 

    Searcy Female Institute was founded by Mary Jasper Willis, wife of Presbyterian minister Richard B. Willis, and Miss Cora Tapscott, daughter of Dr. S.T. Tapscott.

 

   Mrs. Willis was principal and proprietor of the institution that was often called by her name.  The daughter of John Holmes Bocock, a scholarly and eloquent Presbyterian minister in Virginia, was fired with cultural ambition.  Her brother, John Paul Bocock, was a famous contributor to Harper’s Monthly, the North American Review, Cosmopolitan and other periodicals of note.  Another brother, Kemper, was editor of the Philadelphia Standard, and her youngest brother, Willis H., a graduate of the University of Berlin, was a Greek professor at the University of Georgia.  It is little wonder that Mrs. Willis wished to train the minds of Searcy’s young women.  According to historian Ray Muncy, she was thorough and possessed a luminous gift of expression and enthusiasm that she was able to pass along to her students.  The late Mrs. Bertie K. Benson and Mrs. S.K. Davis, women of unusual grace and charm, remembered her fondly.  The newest wrinkle in education then was “unpretentious teaching,” in which the students were actively involved, rather than passive auditors.  Heavy emphasis was placed also on balanced instruction in both the liberal and fine arts.  The curriculum of the Searcy Female Institute consisted of English, French, history, Bible, piano, voice, violin, psychology and expression.  There was no emphasis on technical studies of mathematics and science, which were regarded generally as more masculine pursuits.  The school was located on the north end of Second Street (now known as Apple Street) on the hill south of where the Searcy Junior High School gymnasium would be built. 

 

   Miss Tapscott resigned in 1901 and married William Watkins.  Her sister Winnie returned to teach there after her graduation from Ole Miss in 1904.  Three years later the school ceased operation and the building was sold to Doctors J.M. Jelks, L.E. Moore and J.B. Grammer for the purpose of opening a sanitarium.   

 

  The White County Historical Society has placed a photocopy of the 1902-03 publication in the Arkansas Room of the Searcy Public Library.   The Historical Society may be contacted at P.O. Box 537, Searcy, AR 72145.

 

 

Notes for WILLIAM M. WATKINS:

Oak Grove Cemetery

Searcy, White Co., AR

 

Watkins, William M. July 22, 1850 November 03, 1920 Husband of Florence Cypert Watkins

___________________________________________________________________________

 

                  ii. JENNIE TAPSCOTT, b. 1871.

                 iii. WINIFRED "WINNIE" TAPSCOTT, b. 1873, White Co., AR; d. 1942, White Co., AR  Buried Oak Grove Cemetery*, Searcy, AR.

 

Notes for WINIFRED "WINNIE" TAPSCOTT:

Oak Grove Cemetery

Searcy, White Co., AR

 

Tapscott, Winifred 1873 1942 Daughter of Dr. S.T. & Elizabeth M. Tapscott

____________________________________________________________

 

                 iv. MAMIE TAPSCOTT, b. Abt. 1875.

                  v. ANNIE TAPSCOTT, b. 1879, White Co., AR.

                 vi. SAMUEL THOMAS JR. TAPSCOTT, b. 1884, White Co., AR; d. 1936, White Co., AR  Buried West Point Cemetery*, West Point, AR.

 

Notes for SAMUEL THOMAS JR. TAPSCOTT:

 

 

Tapscott, S.T. Jr., MD – 1884 – 1936

 

4.  ARLEN BYRON "IRA" (DR.)2 TAPSCOTT (SAMUEL1) was born October 17, 1835 in North Carolina      (Surgeon in Forrest's cavalry), and died January 15, 1882 in or 1887 per Goodspeed, White Co., AR  Buried West Point Cem.*.  He married MARY L. JONES May 21, 1866 in Gibson Co., TN*   (See Source).

 

Notes for ARLEN BYRON "IRA" (DR.) TAPSCOTT:

West Point Cemetery

West Point, White Co., AR

 

Tapscott, A.B. – October 17, 1835 - January 15, 1882 (Goodspeed says he died in January, 1887)

 

Notes for MARY L. JONES:

West Point Cemetery

West Point, White Co., AR

 

Tapscott, Mary L. – March 25, 1843 – March 25, 1892

 

Marriage Notes for ARLEN TAPSCOTT and MARY JONES:

IGI Individual Record FamilySearch™ International Genealogical Index v5.0

North America

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A. B. TAPSCOTT 

  Male   Family

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Marriages:

  Spouse:  MARY JONES  Family

  Marriage:  21 MAY 1866   , Gibson, Tennessee

 

 

 

       

Children of ARLEN TAPSCOTT and MARY JONES are:

                   i. ARLEN BYRON JR. (DR.)3 TAPSCOTT, b. 1868, Tennessee             (See Goodspeed).

 

Notes for ARLEN BYRON JR. (DR.) TAPSCOTT:

Goodspeed

 

A. Byron Tapscott, M. D., although a young man, is one of the leading physicians of West Point, and has a large practice, enjoying a reputation of which many older in the professional experience might well be proud. Dr. Tapscott is a native of Tennessee, and a son of Ira and Mary (Jones) Tapscott, natives of North Carolina and Tennessee, respectively. Ira Byron was also a physician, and a graduate of the Medical College of Richmond, Va. He was a surgeon in Forrest's cavalry, in the late war, and after that struggle practiced in Tennessee until 1872, when he removed to Arkansas, continued his professional duties at West Point. He was a strong Democrat, a member of the Methodist Episcopal Church, and also of the I. O. O. F., and died in January, 1887, at the age of fifty-one years. Mrs. Tapscott is still living in West Point, and is the mother of five children, all living: A. Byron (our subject), Charles V. (an attorney), Emma J., Mary G. and Samuel F. At the age of fifteen Byron Tapscott commenced the study of medicine under his father's instruction, and in 1887 and 1888 attended the Missouri Medical College, at St. Louis. After graduating. he returned to West Point and embarked upon a career as a physician, also opening up a drug store, which he continued until October, 1889. Then he sold out, and has since devoted his whole attention to his rapidly increasing practice. He is firmly Democratic in his preferences, and a member of the Methodist Episcopal Church, South.

 

 

 

 

 

6.               ii. CHARLES VOUGHT (DR.) TAPSCOTT, b. January 12, 1869, Humbolt, TN        (See 1920 Census, Kensett, AR); d. July 03, 1921, White Co., AR  Buried West Point Cemetery*, West Point, AR.

                 iii. EMMA J. TAPSCOTT.

                 iv. MARY ISABELLA TAPSCOTT, b. White Co., AR; d. White Co., AR  Buried West Point Cemetery*, West Point, AR.

 

Notes for MARY ISABELLA TAPSCOTT:

West Point Cemetery

West Point, White Co., AR

 

Tapscott, Mary Isabella – died at age 1 years, 28 days – child of A.B. and F.L. Tapscott – DS with Frank Tapscott

 

                  v. SAMUEL FRANK TAPSCOTT, b. White Co., AR; d. White Co., AR  Buried West Point Cemetery*, West Point, AR.

 

Notes for SAMUEL FRANK TAPSCOTT:

West Point Cemetery

West Point, White Co., AR

 

Tapscott, Frank – died at age 3 years, 4 mos., 14 days – DS with Mary Isabella Tapscott – children of A.B. and F.L. Tapscott

 

                 vi. ANNIE DEENER TAPSCOTT, b. White Co., AR; d. White Co., AR  Buried West Point Cemetery*, West Point, AR.

 

Notes for ANNIE DEENER TAPSCOTT:

West Point Cemetery

West Point, White Co., AR

 

Tapscott, Annie Deener – August 11, 1898 – age 2 years, 9 mos. – daughter of A.B. and A.M.

 

 

Generation No. 3

 

5.  LUCIUS LICURGUS3 TAPSCOTT (JOHN HILL2, SAMUEL1) was born July 15, 1838, and died August 13, 1905 in Nettleton, MS  Buried Providence Cemetery, Lee County, MS.  He married (1) ELIZABETH CASON November 29, 1865.  He married (2) NARCISSA CASON December 07, 1871.

 

Notes for LUCIUS LICURGUS TAPSCOTT:

Note: According to descendant Cyrus Tapscott Roberts, Lucius was born on July 15, 1838 in North Carolina, and moved with the family some years prior to the Civil War to Tishomingo County, Mississippi.

 

Note:

"The records of the National Archives and Records Service, Washington, D.C. show that Lucius Lycurgus Tapscott enlisted as a volunteer in the Second Mississippi Infantry Regiment, Confederate States of America." Lucius participated in the Battle of Gettysburg, " where he was injured and taken prisoner by the Army of the United States and held as a prisoner of war on David's Island, New York, for the remainder of the war."

 

       

Children of LUCIUS TAPSCOTT and NARCISSA CASON are:

                   i. LUCIAN LEWIS4 TAPSCOTT, b. December 07, 1881; d. February 02, 1905, Mississipp  Buried Providence Cemetery, Lee County, MS.

7.               ii. ANNIE LENORA TAPSCOTT, b. October 01, 1883.

 

6.  CHARLES VOUGHT (DR.)3 TAPSCOTT (ARLEN BYRON "IRA" (DR.)2, SAMUEL1) was born January 12, 1869 in Humbolt, TN        (See 1920 Census, Kensett, AR), and died July 03, 1921 in White Co., AR  Buried West Point Cemetery*, West Point, AR.  He married FLORA LOUISE FOSTER.

 

Notes for CHARLES VOUGHT (DR.) TAPSCOTT:

West Point Cemetery

West Point, White Co., AR

 

Tapscott, C.V., MD – January 12, 1869 – July 3, 1921

__________________________________________________________________________

 

1920 Census White County Arkansas

 

Kensett

 

January 2 by Joe Lyon

 

81-89  Tapscott, Charles, physician, m, w, 50, Tn

 

                           Flora L., wife, f, w, 44, Ar

 

                           Charles E., son, m, w, 22, Ar

 

                           Clinton, son, m, w, 17, Ar

 

                           Mollie, daughter, f, w, 14, Ar

 

                           Bedford, son, m, w, 10, Ar

 

                           George S., son, m, w, 5, Ar

___________________________________________________________________________

 

 

Notes for FLORA LOUISE FOSTER:

West Point Cemetery

West Point, White Co., AR

 

Tapscott, Flora L. – 1875 – 1950

       

Children of CHARLES TAPSCOTT and FLORA FOSTER are:

                   i. CHARLES E.4 TAPSCOTT, b. Abt. 1898.

 

Notes for CHARLES E. TAPSCOTT:

Individual Record FamilySearch™ U.S. Social Security Death Index

30 September 2000

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   Charles TAPSCOTT  

    Birth Date: 20 Jan 1897 

    Death Date: Mar 1974 

    Social Security Number:  573-14-0426 

    State or Territory Where Number Was Issued:  California

 

  Death Residence Localities

    ZIP Code: 63110 

    Localities:  Saint Louis, Saint Louis City (City), Missouri

_________________________________________________

 

Individual Record FamilySearch™ U.S. Social Security Death Index

30 September 2000

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   Charles TAPSCOTT  

    Birth Date: 18 Aug 1898 

    Death Date: Oct 1978 

    Social Security Number:  493-09-4320 

    State or Territory Where Number Was Issued:  Missouri

 

  Death Residence Localities

    ZIP Code: 33432 

    Localities:  Boca Raton, Palm Beach, Florida

 

 

                  ii. CLINTON TAPSCOTT, b. Abt. 1903.

 

Notes for CLINTON TAPSCOTT:

Individual Record FamilySearch™ U.S. Social Security Death Index

30 September 2000

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   Clinton TAPSCOTT  

    Birth Date: 17 Apr 1902 

    Death Date: Jan 1984 

    Social Security Number:  453-07-2953 

    State or Territory Where Number Was Issued:  Texas

 

  Death Residence Localities

    ZIP Code: 79930 

    Localities:  El Paso, El Paso, Texas

 

 

 

                 iii. MOLLIE TAPSCOTT, b. Abt. 1906.

                 iv. BEDFORD TAPSCOTT, b. Abt. 1910.

 

Notes for BEDFORD TAPSCOTT:

Individual Record FamilySearch™ U.S. Social Security Death Index

30 September 2000

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   Bedford TAPSCOTT  

    Birth Date: 29 Dec 1909 

    Death Date: 15 Apr 2003 

    Social Security Number:  440-10-6831 

    State or Territory Where Number Was Issued:  Oklahoma

 

  Death Residence Localities

    ZIP Code: 79904 

    Localities:  El Paso, El Paso, Texas

 

 

 

                  v. GEORGE S. TAPSCOTT, b. Abt. 1915.

 

Notes for GEORGE S. TAPSCOTT:

Individual Record FamilySearch™ U.S. Social Security Death Index

30 September 2000

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   George TAPSCOTT  

    Birth Date: 6 Aug 1914 

    Death Date: 1 Sep 2002 

    Social Security Number:  440-01-9295 

    State or Territory Where Number Was Issued:  Oklahoma

 

  Death Residence Localities

    ZIP Code: 73162 

    Localities:  Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, Oklahoma

 

 

 

Generation No. 4

 

7.  ANNIE LENORA4 TAPSCOTT (LUCIUS LICURGUS3, JOHN HILL2, SAMUEL1) was born October 01, 1883.  She married ROY THOMAS ROBERTS December 24, 1908.

       

Child of ANNIE TAPSCOTT and ROY ROBERTS is:

                   i. CYRUS TAPSCOTT5 ROBERTS, b. September 22, 1918, Monroe Co., MS; d. December 21, 1975, Buried Mullins Cemetery*, Nettleton, Monroe Co., MS.