Mount Etna Tacket

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The [http://content.ancestry.com/iexec/?htx=View&r=an&dbid=8057&iid=ARM704_19-0167&fn=William+S&ln=Hardin&st=r&ssrc=&pid=1412319 1840 Census of Mooney Township, Phillips County, Arkansas] shows on line 10 "Mountetna Tacket 1112-00001".  It would seem that the tally mark for him is missing. The slave census shows for line 10, 1 male 24-36 and 1 female 10-24.
 
The [http://content.ancestry.com/iexec/?htx=View&r=an&dbid=8057&iid=ARM704_19-0167&fn=William+S&ln=Hardin&st=r&ssrc=&pid=1412319 1840 Census of Mooney Township, Phillips County, Arkansas] shows on line 10 "Mountetna Tacket 1112-00001".  It would seem that the tally mark for him is missing. The slave census shows for line 10, 1 male 24-36 and 1 female 10-24.
  
On the same page we see his probably brother on line 17 "Posy Tackett 100042-30002", living next to his probably brother-in-law on line 18 "William L Hardin 10001-0001"
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On the same page we see his probable brother on line 17 "Posy Tackett 100042-30002", living next to his probable brother-in-law on line 18 "William L Hardin 10001-0001" who had married Cindila Tackett on 23 Apr 1835 in Phillips County.
  
 
In the land office of Helena, as "Mount Etna Tackett of Phillips County", he entered 80 acres by Cash Entry, at E1/2SW S21-T6S-R2W. This land sits a quarter-section above E P's land, but a year later in 1861, Mount Etna came back and bought that intermediate quater-section as well.
 
In the land office of Helena, as "Mount Etna Tackett of Phillips County", he entered 80 acres by Cash Entry, at E1/2SW S21-T6S-R2W. This land sits a quarter-section above E P's land, but a year later in 1861, Mount Etna came back and bought that intermediate quater-section as well.

Revision as of 12:14, 4 May 2007

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