The Third Generation

The children of Hiram and Charity Hall:

Mary Elizabeth Hall (1821 or 1822)

Eliza Hall married Asa A. Ayers in Carroll County, Georgia, on December 21, 1837.
He died sometime between 1847, when Clarissa was born, and 1850, when the census was taken. They had the following children:
    Jonathan (11) b. 1839
    Ursula L. (9) b. 1841
    Martha C. T. (7) b. 1843
    Henry C. (5) b. 1845
    Clarissa W. (3) b. 1847

Arminda Hall (1823-1915)

Arminda was born in Carroll County in 1823, and died in Walker County, Alabama,
in 1915. She married Thomas S. Herron on November 25, 1847. Thomas was born December 29, 1812, and died July 19, 1899. They left Georgia in 1857 with five children and moved to Walker County, Alabama. Only three of the children survived the trip, and they located in the area of Carbon Hill or Eldridge. Armindy and Thomas are buried in the Pisgaugh Cemetery of Carbon Hill, Alabama.
    James Herron (1848-1935, Carroll Co., GA)
    Hiram Herron (1850-1909, Carroll Co., GA)
    Charity Herron (1852-1857, Carroll Co., GA)
    D. F. Herron (1854-1857, Carroll Co., GA)
    Jane Herron (1857, Haralson Co., GA)
    Pierce Herron (1860-1902, Walker Co., AL)
    Green Herron (1862-1925, Walker Co., AL)
    Missouria Herron (1864-1945, Walker Co., AL)

Murry John Hall (1824-1898)

John Hall was the first son of Hiram and Charity Hall. He was born October 1, 1824,
in Carroll County, Georgia, and died in Childress (Childress County), Texas, on August 3, 1898. He married Nancy Hamilton, the daughter of John Lewis Hamilton and Margret Ann Reid, on January 20, 1848, at Nancy's home two miles northeast of Bremen, Carroll County, Georgia. Nancy was born April 3, 1828, in Gwinnett, Georgia, and died in Childress, Texas, on March 6, 1914. In 1851 they moved with one or more of John's brothers (and families) to Searcy County, Arkansas. There they had Madison Monroe. By 1854 they were living in Frederickstown, Madison County, Missouri, where Richard LaFayette and the last four children were born.
Eventually, sometime after the Civil War, they moved to Springtown, Texas. Delilah
Emeline moved to Texas at the same time, not far her parents.In 1890 John Hall visited the scenes of his young manhood, in Carroll County, Georgia. He had not been back there since he left in 1851.
    Delilah Emiline Hall (1848-, GA)
    Robert Jefferson Hall (1850-1944; GA-OK)
    Madison Monroe Hall (1852-1928; MO-TX)
    Richard Lafayette Hall (1854-; MO-CA)
    Janette Ardelia Hall (1856-; MO-TX)
    Mary Ann (Lee) Hall(?-?) (d. TX)
    Nancy Lanore Hall (1859- MO-TX)
    Margret Charity Hall (1861-1936; MO-TX )
    Mary (Maty ) Ann Hall (1866-)

Nancy Hall (1829-)

Nancy was born in Carroll County, Georgia, in 1829. She married Jefferson Dean, of
South Carolina, and they moved to Haralson County, Georgia. In 1883 she died in Buchannon, Haralson Co., of smallpox. They had six children:
    Susan Dean (?)
    Loucinda Dean (?)
    Charity M. Dean (?)
    Martha Joe Dean (?)
    Vianna Dean (?)
    Jefferson Savannah Dean (?)

William Newton Hall (1831-1923)

William Newton Hall was the first son of Green Berry (1805) and Charity (1815) Hall.
He was born near Charleston, South Carolina, in 1831 and died near Konawa, Oklahoma, in the fall of 1921. [Some records give 1923 as the date of his death.] He is buried in Egypt Cemetery, near Ada, Oklahoma (Pontotoc County), in an unmarked grave. It is possible that he married a woman named Darcas when he was a young man; but if he did we have no record of this marriage. Darcas was born in 1836 in Dawson County, Georgia, and was on the census rolls as the wife of a William Hall (born in Florida in 1830. [There was also a Green B Hall (b. 1823) living in the county at this time.] In the 1860 Dawson County census record, Darcas and William had four daughters:
    Sarah Hall (1851, Dawson Co., GA)
    Susan Hall (1853, Dawson Co., GA)
    Mary Hall (1856, Dawson Co., GA)
    Margaret Hall (1859, Dawson Co., GA)

According to one of William Newton's daughters, Cordelia, after he left Georgia and
moved to Arkansas, he made more than one trip back to Georgia searching for a lost son named Sid. It is possible, of course, that Darcas bore William a son after the 1860 census was taken; however, no evidence of this has been found. With the Civil War she seems to have disappeared, along with the children.
In 1868 William Newton Hall married Susan Woods in Haralson County, not far from Dawson County. This would seem to suggest that if, in fact, he had been married to Darcas, he had some knowledge of her whereabouts. It is possible that she did not survive the war. Again according to William Newton's daughter Cordelia, he had become acquainted with Susan while he was hiding out in her family's residence in Atlanta, a deserter from the Confederate cavalry. It has been substantiated that Will-iam Newton remained in the Georgia Cavalry until the spring of 1865 (The war ended April 15), was indeed the Company Commander of Company E, Second Battalion, Fifth Regiment, of the Georgia Cavalry. At any rate, Susan Elizabeth Woods was born in Atlanta, Fulton County, Georgia, in 1851, making her twenty years younger than William Newton. She died in Seminole County, Oklahoma, in 1918. She and Will had eight children:
    Archie Brooklyn Hall (1871-1955; Waldron, AR-Nowata, OK)
    Dock Walter Hall (1873-1951; Waldron, AR-Dinuba, CA)
    Greeley Teeman Hall (1877-1965; Madison Co., AR-Kern Co., CA)
    Ulysses S. Grant Hall (1880-1964; Madison Co., AR-Tipton, CA)
    Sidney William Hall (1882-1972; Madison County, AR-Cecil, AR)
    Cordelia May Hall (1884-1982; Huntsville, AR-Lodi, CA)
    Charity Hall (1885-1964; Madison County, AR-Madison Co., AR)
    Green T. (Tyree) Hall (1887-1967; Madison Co., AR-Lodi, CA)

Emeline Hall (1836-191l)

Emeline Hall was born in Carroll County, Georgia, in 1836, and died in 1911. She
married Graves Eaves, who died in 1912. They were buried in the Piney Woods Cemetery. in Haralson Co. Hiram Hall left a will in Haralson County. Unfortunately, the old Will Book A is missing. Only the index is still there. It lists Graves Eaves as administrator of Hiram's estate with the year 1884 after his name. According to the 1880 Haralson County, Georgia, census they had four children, all born in Haralson County, Georgia:
    Ava E. (Elander Ally) Eaves (1858-)
    Gracy L. Eaves (1868-)
    James Grant Eaves (1871-)
    Amanda C. Eaves (1873-)

Tyre (Tyree) Hall (1838-)

Tarry was born near in Carroll County, Georgia, the fifth child of Hiram(1795-) and
Charity (1802-) Hall. He was called Tarry and was very likable. In the 1860 census records for Bullock County, Georgia, he was listed as having been born in South Carolina in 1838. He married a woman named Arcina N. Merett in Dawson County on January 20, 1859. She was born in Georgia in 1838 (Occasionally, her name was written Arcenia or Arcena, and, once, on the Dawson County marriage list it was Arseeney Merett). During the Civil War Tarry was a private in Company G., 40th Georgia Infantry Regiment (called the Haralson Defenders). He was drafted on April 10, 1862, but sometime later deserted and was captured on October 24, 1864, near Dallas, Georgia. He was released on May 12, 1865, and the following remarks were written on his release papers: "Claims to have been loyal. Was conscripted into Confederate Army. Deserted to avail himself of amnesty proclamation.
In 1880, according to the Madison County, Arkansas, census, Tarry and Arcenia had
nine children:
    David Hall (1860, Dawson Co., GA)
    Lenora Hall (1862, Dawson Co., GA)
    Charity E. Hall (1867, Dawson Co., GA)
    Mary A. Hall (1870, Dawson Co., GA)
    James W. Hall (1871, Dawson Co., GA)
    Lucy A. Hall (1872, Dawson Co., GA)
    Margaret Hall (1875, Madison County, AR)
    Arcina Hall (1878, Madison Co., AR)
    George W. Hall (1879, Madison Co., AR)

When Tarry was fifty-eight, he married Annie Cox, who was twenty-five at the time.
She was born in May, 1875, in Alabama; her father was born in Georgia, and her mother was born in Alabama. Theodore S. Cox, her brother, was staying with them in 1900. Theodore was born in Alabama in June, 1870.

Green Berry Hall, Jr. (1842-1930)

This Green Berry was the son of Hiram (1795-) and Charity (1802-)Hall, of South
Carolina. He born on August 12, 1842, in Carroll County, Georgia. According to his tombstone in the Ledbetter Cemetery near Japton, Arkansas, he was born August 12, 1842, and died January 5, 1930, in Madison County, Arkansas.
During the War Between the States he was a private, like his brother Tyree, in
Company G, 40th Georgia Infantry Regiment, made up entirely of Carroll County men. He was captured at Vicksburg, Mississippi, on July 4, 1863, but released two days later (July 6), with no explanation given on his release papers. He was reported absent without leave from November 23 to December 31, 1863, after which there was no further record.
He married Sarah Elender Bradley April 15, 1866. She was born January 12, 1850, in
Georgia, and died July 23, 1911, in Madison County, Arkansas.
Although he is buried beside his first wife in Ledbetter Cemetery, Madison County, Arkansas, Green B. married twice again after Sarah died. His second wife was Virginia Anderson, twenty-five years younger than he, whom he married the year following Sarah's death, on November 26, 1912. She was born in 1869, and the wedding took place in Madison County, Arkansas. In 1928, just two years before he died, he married Nancy Leievenia Magnolia (Nola) Burell.
According to a National Archives document (Order for Photocopies Concerning
Veteran), Green B. Hall, Jr., enlisted as a private ("Joined for duty and was enrolled") in the 11th Battalion of the Georgia State Guards on July 14, 1863, at Dawsonville (Dawson County), Georgia.
In the Haralson County, Georgia, census for the year 1860, Green B. and
Sarah, twenty-five and twenty years old, respectively, had two children: William, 3, and Mary, 1. [There little no doubt that these Halls are closely related to Hiram and Charity Hall, of that county.] In the 1880 Madison County, Arkansas, census records, in addition to William and Mary, they had Liza A., 7, and Jessica, 2. On this record, William and Mary were born in Dawson County, Georgia, and Liza (Elizabeth) and Jessica were born in Madison County, Arkansas.

On the Madison County, Arkansas, census roll for 1900, Green B. and
Sarah had the following children: Angus, 16, Rena, 13, Green M., 11, Hyram, 8, and Olga, 5. [The name Hyram here is another indication that this family is related to Hiram and Charity Hall, of Haralson County, Georgia.]
Finally, then, Green B., Jr., and Sarah E.(Bradley) Hall, who moved from Dawson
or Haralson County, Georgia, to Madison County, Arkansas around 1872 had at least eight children [Note the gap in years between Jessica and Rena.]:
    William Hall (1867, GA)
    Mary E. Hall (1869, GA)
    Elizabeth A. Hall (1873, AR)
    Jessica Hall (1878, AR)
    Rena Hall (1887, AR)
    Green M. Hall (1888-1985, AR)
    Hyram Hall (1892, AR)
    Olga Hall (1895, AR)

Elander (Ailey) Hall (1843-)

Ailey was the daughter of Hiram and Charity Hall. She was born in Carroll County,
Georgia, in 1842. According to the census roll for 1860, she had a child named Delia Sandford who was nine months old. According to another census record, Ailey was born in 1836, married to William Sandford, who was born in 1842 in Georgia, and had three children:
    Delilia Sandford (1848, GA)
    Frances Sandford (1851, GA)
    Rebecca Sandford (1859, GA)

The children of Green Berry and Charity Hall:

Nancy Hall (1843-)

Nancy was the first child of Green Berry, Sr. (1805-), and Charity Hall (1815-). She was born
in 1843 in Dawson County, Georgia.

John Wesley Hall (1844-) John Wesley was born in 1844 in Bullock County, Georgia.

James Hall (1846-) James was born in Bullock County, Georgia, in 1846.

Mary Anne Hall (1848-) Mary was born in Bullock County, Georgia in 1848.

Charity Hall (1849-) Charity was born in Bullock County, Georgia, in 1849.

Froni R. Hall (1852-) Froni was born in Bullock County, Georgia, in 1852.

Isom R. Hall (1852-) Isom R. was Froni's twin.