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Amanda and Her Cousins: A genealogy
of the Landrum family in Kentucky
is a study of the original Landrum family of Kentucky and
descendants through the current generation, with a special focus on
Amanda Landrum Wilson. It will be of interest to Landrum descendants
and associated families in America, as well as historical and
genealogical organizations and libraries. Landrum family researchers
with ties to Breathitt County, Kentucky, will find this book an
especially valuable resource.
The author briefly outlines the
origins of the Landrum family name in Scotland and describes
Scottish migrations to Ireland and America. Hundreds of
descendants of James Landrum (Scotland, mid-1600's) are listed,
with a variety of biographical details and genealogical data.
The book is divided into two parts:
Part One is a detailed history pertaining to Amanda Landrum and
Obed Wilson of Cincinnati. Amanda grew up in Augusta, Kentucky,
where her father was a Methodist minister. She later moved to
Cincinnati and worked briefly as a teacher. She was a major
contributor to the original first three issues of the McGuffey
Readers; in fact, the children's characters in the 1857
edition are named after her own nieces and nephews.
Amanda married Obediah J. Wilson, who became wealthy in the
publishing business; their world travels and philanthropic
contributions are covered in some detail. Also included is a
transcription of Amanda's personal diary for the year 1861,
offering her unique perspective on the Civil War and much
information about her brother, a Union lieutenant who was killed
in the Battle of Chickamauga.
Amanda and Obed had no children; with no direct descendants,
their important legacy is in danger of being lost. Documented here
by a descendant of her first cousin, Amanda would surely be
pleased to know she is so honorably remembered by family.
Part Two contains many details about the first Landrums in
Kentucky - the family of Martha 'Patsy' Bibb and Reuben Landrum,
and hundreds of their descendants. Reuben and Patsy lived at
Boonesborough for a short time (Reuben's name is inscribed on the
monument to the early settlers at today's reconstructed fort), and
settled in Clark County, Kentucky, in 1810-1811.
Reuben’s
transcribed will, photos of pages from his Bible, and a map to his
homeplace and unmarked family cemetery are included.
Reuben and his family were devoted to the early Methodist church;
two sons became influential circuit-riding ministers. The Reverend
Reuben Washington Landrum - great-great grandfather of the author
- moved to Breathitt County, Kentucky, and still has many
descendants there. The Rev. William Bibb Landrum wrote a book in
1878 about his life and travels.
The genealogical data in Part Two will be invaluable to family
researchers.
Names and
dates, brief biographical sketches, photographs and personal
anecdotes about hundreds of Landrum descendants from all over the
U.S. offer a unique glimpse of American culture.
This is the first publication by the book's author, James A.
Landrum, a Kentucky native currently residing in North Carolina.
Early in his research he collaborated with a cousin and fellow
Landrum researcher, Charles M. Landrum Jr. - author of another
Landrum genealogical work called A Kentucky Family
(privately published in 1990 - out of print and very hard to
find). That book contained an interesting introduction by Dr.
Thomas D. Clark, Historian Laureate of Kentucky, which is
reproduced in Charlie's honor in this new book, Amanda and Her
Cousins. The genealogical appendix contained in A Kentucky
Family was contributed directly from the family records of
James A. Landrum; that data is included and expanded upon in Amanda
and Her Cousins.
The
book is 8.5" x 11" in size and more than 300 pages long
with a soft-cover binding. It contains
over 30 photographs and
illustrations, is thoroughly indexed, and contains an extensive
bibliography. Edited by the author's sister, Mona Landrum Proctor,
it was privately published in 2005, available only
by direct order from the author.
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ABOUT THE AUTHOR
James Alan Landrum was born July 22, 1945,
the first child of
Ollie James and Blanche (Haddix) Landrum - representing two
prominent families of Breathitt County, Kentucky. His maternal
grandfather was Arthur Haddix, son of William Washington Haddix of
Lost Creek.
The Haddixes were among the very first settlers of Breathitt
County. James is a great-great-grandson of the Rev. Reuben
Washington Landrum, a Methodist circuit-riding minister.
James attended the early grades in
Breathitt County, then moved to Clark County, Kentucky; in 1963,
he was a member of the last graduating class of Clark County High
School (before George Rogers Clark High School opened).
He
was married twice before finally reuniting with his college sweetheart
of thirty-eight years before at the University of Kentucky, Anne
Alexander Cooley, in 1998.
James worked
thirty-one years for General Motors in Dayton, Ohio, and
Rochester, New York; he was a Senior Corporate Buyer in Worldwide
Purchasing at the time of his retirement.
He holds a Business Administration degree in
Industrial Management from the University of Dayton and belongs to
several historical organizations. He is a veteran, a Shriner and a Kentucky
Colonel.

James and Anne
Landrum
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William Lendrum
d. Scotland
James Lendrum
b. Aberdeenshire, Scotland, ca. 1659
James Lendrum
b. Essex Co., Va., 1703
The Rev. Francis Lendrum Sr.
b. Essex Co., Va., 9/19/1739
Reuben Landrum
b. Fluvanna Co., Va., 5/31/1777
The Rev. Reuben Washington
Landrum
b. 3/15/1811, Clark Co., Ky.
Reuben Samuel Landrum
b. 6/10/1837, Breathitt Co., Ky.
Albert Sidney Landrum
b. 1/9/1880, Breathitt Co., Ky.
Ollie James Landrum
b. 7/8/1912, Breathitt Co., Ky.
James Alan Landrum
b. 7/22/1945, Richmond, Ky.
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