For 2020, I’ll Be Writing A Series Of Short Articles About 52 Members Of The Sams Family; 52 Sams In 52 Weeks.
These articles will be announced each week via email to DatawNet, and the articles themselves will be posted on our redesigned website every Tuesday morning. I was inspired by professional genealogist Amy Johnson Crow and her “52 ancestors in 52 weeks” project. She has suggested inspirations for picking an ancestor to write about, and I’ll loosely follow some of these.
Almost Forgotten – Of the seven sons of William and Elizabeth, four belong on our ‘almost forgotten’ list. Robert and William because they never married, and we are not sure where they are buried; maybe Datha. Francis also never married. So little is known about him, but he does have a headstone in the Sams Family Cemetery on Datha. And lastly, the wanderer, Edward. With your help, maybe someday their stories will be told.
Disaster – The Story of One Family -Disaster is relative and can mean many different things to many people. And of course, the period of the conflict between the states is rife with stories of disaster. The SAMS family had several members die in that conflict. But today I’m going to concentrate on just one Sams family; James Edings Lawrence Fripp (1816 – 1864) and his wife Evelina Edings Sams (1822 – 1861), who last so many, so young.
Francis William ‘Frank’ Sams, Jr. (1846-1921) was one of four children born to Dr. Frank Sams and his wife, but the only one to live to adulthood. He was born in Palatka, Florida and died in New Smyrna Beach, Florida – where he was “discovered” last year by Joe and Diane Roney on their road trip. From the research Joe Roney and I have done, it’s clear he was a very successful man; Confederate soldier at 15, State senator in Florida at 53.
Sarah Stanyarne Sams Sams (1840-1902) was the daughter, and last child, of Dr. Berners Barnwell Sams (1787 – 1855) and his second wife Martha Edwards (1799-1857). Married her 1C1R John Hanahan Sams (1839-1924) in 1865 and had 8 children. They stayed in the Charleston area for a while after the war, but eventually started new lives in Brevard County, FL.