Timothy Joseph Cone

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Timothy Joseph Cone

Birthdate:
Birthplace: East Haddam, Middlesex, Connecticut
Death: February 05, 1864 (86)
East Haddam, Middlesex, Connecticut
Immediate Family:

Son of Joseph Cone and Martha Cone
Husband of Sarah H. Howard Cone
Father of Deborah Packard Slocomb; Joseph Spencer S Cone; George Cone; Ellen Peck; Charles Cone and 3 others
Brother of Conant Cone; Alice Sparrow and Martha E. (Patty) Cone

Managed by: Charles Leufroy Powell
Last Updated:

About Timothy Joseph Cone

[117] TIMOTHY CONE, son of Joseph Cone [61] and Martha Spencer, b. East Haddam May 20, 1777, m. Sarah Howard Bailey, dau. of Seth Bailey of Wood county, Va., Nov. 29, 1806. She was b. Mar. 9, 1790, in Easton, Mass., her father being a soldier in Revolutionary War under Col. James Williams. Mr. Cone re­moved to Wood county, Va., in 1802, and to Marietta, 0., soon after he was married, being a very early settler of that place. She d. Jan. 1870, aged 80 years. He d. in Marietta, Ohio., Feb. 5, 1864, aged 87 years.

Ch.

243."DEBORAH P., b. Feb. 20, 1808, m. Silas Slocumb; d. April 15, 1863.

244."MARTHA S., b. Dec. 20, 1810, m. John B. Blankinton; d. Feb. 6. 1896.

245. MARY, b. March 17, 1813. She was a writer of marked ability. Was the author of a number of books, viz.: " Life of Rufus Putnam," " Two Years in California," etc. She greatly aided me in the preparation of the records of this branch of the family. She d. unm. at Marietta, 0., Jan. 24, 1898.

246.* GEORGE, b. June 9, 1815, m. Hattie A. Sublette; d. Nov. 11, 1883. 247." CHARLES, b. Oct. 23, 1817, m. Almira Jones; d. Sept. 13, 1895. 248. SARAH, b. May 9, 1820; d. unm. 1871.

249." JosErli S., b. Aug. 26, 1822, m. Anna R. Reppart; d. Sept. 12, 1894. 250. TIMOTHY, b. Nov. 9, 1825; d. unm. 1888.

251."ALICE S., b. Nov. 17, 1827, m. Edmund Brush. Res. Zanesville, 0.

252."ELLEN, b. March 14, 1830, m. Hiram A. Peck; d. March 15, 1862.

Sarah Bailey father - Seth Bailey fought with Col James Williams

Col James Williams (1740–1780) was an American pioneer, farmer, and miller from the Ninety-Six district in South Carolina. During the Revolutionary War, he was Colonel of his area's regiment of militia. He was killed gaining the American victory at the Battle of King's Mountain.

James was born in Hanover County, Virginia and orphaned before he was twelve. He moved into the home of his brother John Williams in Granville County, North Carolina. John, being a lawyer, gave him a basic, yet good for those days, education before James set out on his own to settle on the Little River in South Carolina.

By 1773 Williams had started a farm and built a mill, in what was then called the Ninety Six District on the Carolina frontier. (Today the area he settled in is in Laurens County, South Carolina). He had also become an officer in the local militia. As tensions rose before the revolution, and many of his neighbors took a Loyalist position, James supported the American cause. He joined the local Committee of Safety, and in 1775 and 1776 was elected to the state's provisional Assembly.

By 1776, the back-country militia was becoming split into Loyalist and Rebel factions. Williams was named Lt. Colonel of a regiment, but he had to identify, recruit, and (partially) train the men. He succeeded in organizing a militia group, but pressure from the other side meant that he always had to leave some at home for defense. Nevertheless, he led bodies of local men into action at Briar Creek, and Stono Ferry, and as far afield as the expedition against Savannah, Georgia.

On August 19, 1780 he led his detachment into the engagement of the Battle of Musgrove's Mill. Their success, even in that limited engagement, coming so soon after the disaster of Camden earned him a promotion to Colonel. His next action was a much greater success, but cost him his life.

Williams led a 100 man detachment from his regiment to meet other militia detachments in pursuit of Cornwallis' western force, led by Major Patrick Ferguson. He joined the other units at the Cowpens on October 6. The next day he joined them in the major victory at the Battle of King's mountain. The Americans overwhelmed an 1,100 man force, losing only twenty eight killed, one of whom was Colonel James Williams, killed in action, October 7, 1780.

William's original hasty grave was replaced with a more prestigious memorial, and he was re-interred. He is buried on the lawn in front of the Cherokee County Administration building, on Limestone street in Gaffney, South Carolina.

Under the South Carolina Provincial Congress, Williams was to be promoted to the rank of Brigadier General but succumbed to his battle wounds before the commission could be delivered. In 2005 the South Carolina General Assembly confirmed the rank originally bestowed upon him 225 years before. In the Same act, General James Williams was further honored by renaming the Little River Bridge, "James Williams Memorial Bridge", marking the Northeast corner of his plantation.

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Timothy Joseph Cone's Timeline

1777
May 20, 1777
East Haddam, Middlesex, Connecticut
1808
February 21, 1808
1810
December 20, 1810
1815
June 9, 1815
1817
October 23, 1817
1822
August 26, 1822
Marietta, Washington, Ohio, USA
1825
March 1, 1825
1827
November 17, 1827
1830
March 14, 1830
1864
February 5, 1864
Age 86
East Haddam, Middlesex, Connecticut