From page 21:
(Information starts here)
gave me the following extracts from a story of the Colletts and
Ashbys, written by her father, James B. Nickerson, who was a
grandson of Silas and Sarah Collett Ashby. This was as he remembered
his grandmother telling it, for his grandfather died before
his grandmother left Kentucky. The story follows, in part:
"Sarah [Collett] Ashby was the daughter of Moses Collett, born Nov. 17, 1718. He lived in Virginia, probably Madison County. She was the youngest of eight children. She and her brothers John and Aaron, packed their small belongings on their horses, and started across the mountains, seeking a new home in Kentucky. Fortunately, they encountered no hostile Indians. They landed at a station or fort founded by Daniel Boone. Shortly after arriving in Kentucky, Aaron Collett was wounded by the Indians and he died Aug. 16, 1785. In Boone's Station, Sarah met a young white-haired man, named Silas Ashby. He was six feet two inches tall, and could outrun and outjump any Indian. He was from Maryland (family from Virginia) and was also seeking a new home in Kentucky. They were married April 21, 1789. There is no record of Grandfather Ashby's history."
"Our grandmother Ashby was a noble woman, of whom we her descendants, may be justly proud. Grandmother's oldest son, Hankerson, went with the Kentucky troops into the war of 1812. He was in the battle of the River Raisin in Michigan." (This Hankerson is our ancestor, great-grandfather of Samuel Ashby.)______
* Mrs. H. H. Smith, of New Burlington, Ohio, and Mrs. Edw. Inwood and Mrs. E. E.
Terrell, of Wilmington, Ohio, descendants of Silas Ashby, have been working to gather
family records; also Mrs. Roy G. Williams, of Versailles, Ky., has been very helpful.
From pages 42-43:
(Information starts here)
She is the granddaughter of Martha Ashby, who married Clark
Nickerson.
John P. Collett, of Indianapolis, has traced the Collett line back to England in the Sixteenth Century, and it is included here, although it does not agree with the traditions in the Sarah [Collett] Ashby family.
(Note: John D. Collett and his son John P. Collett, of Indianapolis, are descendants of the above John Collett, who married Elizabeth Stevenson. John P. Collett is a friend of Samuel R. Ashby and was his roommate at Harvard. The Indianapolis Colletts have their line in full to the present, and the Colletts in Ohio also have their line in full. In Maryland land records there is record of a survey for Richard Collett of 700 acres, called Collettstown, Sept. 15, 1659.)
(There are some handwritten notes on these pages that I have difficulty in reading. I will attempt to get the information on this later.)
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