Is your surname Warr?

Connect to 1,067 Warr profiles on Geni

Share your family tree and photos with the people you know and love

  • Build your family tree online
  • Share photos and videos
  • Smart Matching™ technology
  • Free!

Adam Warr

Birthdate:
Birthplace: Tennessee, United States
Death: Fayette County, Tennessee, United States
Immediate Family:

Son of unknown unknown; Harriet Warr and Emily E Warren
Husband of Sarah Warr
Father of Melissa Warr; Eaton Warr; Sarah Warr; Donnie Warr; Benjamin Warr and 6 others
Brother of Jacob Warr; Grant Warr; William Warr; Haywood Warr; Charles Warr and 1 other

Occupation: Farmer
Managed by: Erica Howton
Last Updated:

About Adam Warr

https://www.familysearch.org/tree/person/details/LRY5-4LC

Harriet Warr

It had not been determined, at this time, who Harriet's Husband was. She was born in North Carolina in 1815 and her children were Jacob (1839), Grant (1844), Adam (1845), William (1846), Charles (1849), Haywood (1848) and Daniel (1849.)

Adam married Sarah Mike and their children were Melissa (1864), Eaton (1866), Sarah (1868), Donnie (1870), Benjamin (1871), and Mary (1878.)

notes

From The Warr Family History Researched and Submitted by Lena M. Towner July, 1992

Hampton County, North Carolina. The county is located in the Northeast section of the state just south of the Virginia line and is bordered on the west and south by the Roanoke River which empties into Albemarle Sound just below the Chesapeake Bay. It was through the Chesapeake that many African slaves were brought into North Carolina, Virginia and Maryland.

The key figure in the migration of the subjects of this research is a North Hampton County slaveholder whose name was James Warr (1800-1876). In 1825, Warr left North Carolina and moved to Wayne County, Tennessee near the town of Clifton. After spending considerable time in this area, he moved to Fayette County, Tennessee, in 1855 and settled two miles northwest of Rossville. James Warr brought a number of slaves with him to Tennessee among them were the ancestors of the African American Warr Families who have spread throughout the United States.

The plantation of James Warr in Fayette County consisted of 1,443 acres by 1860 and it was here that 58 slaves (11 adult males, 11 adult females, and 22 female children) toiled, in servitude prior to the end of the Civil War. The principle labor performed by these slaves involved the production of corn, peas, sweet potatoes and cotton. After James Warr died in 1876, his son Americus V. Warr, who had become a physician, expanded the Warr land to 4,000 acres, and to the extent that, by 1885, it included most of the town of Rossville.

Of the number of slaves who were brought to Tennessee from North Carolina by James Warr, only Harriet (1815), John (1824). Sampson (1805). Shadrack (1823), Esther (1815) and Jane (1820) survived the cruel ordeal and realized freedom.


view all 14

Adam Warr's Timeline

1845
1845
Tennessee, United States
1846
1846
1864
1864
Tennessee, United States
1866
1866
Tennessee, United States
1866
1868
1868
1869
1869
1870
1870
1871
1871
1875
1875