Anderson Ferrell 1831

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John "Baptist" Ferrell
Father
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"F.A.J." Anderson Ferrell
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Jane Taylor
Mother
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Phoebe Hatfield
Spouse


"F.A.J." Anderson Ferrell Ferrell
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Name "F.A.J." Anderson Ferrell    Ferrell
Gender Male
Family Search: L4WJ-T37
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Birth and Death Information
Born Aug 1831
WV
United States of America
Deceased Abt 1914


Family Relationships
Father John "Baptist" Ferrell
Mother Jane Taylor
Spouse Phoebe Hatfield
Marriage Date 1850
Children John Ferrell 5
Jane Ferrell
Martha Ferrell
Anna Ferrell
Aly Ferrell
Andrew Ferrell
Levicy Ferrell
Robert E Lee Ferrell
Leander Ferrell
Floyd Madison Ferrell
Taylor Ferrell
William Tiffany Ferrell
Siblings Nancy Ferrell
Polly Ferrell
Sarah Ferrell
William S Ferrell 4
Lydia Ferrell
Rebecca Ferrell
Jacob Ferrell
Lewis Ferrell
James Ferrell
Amanda Ferrell
James Vance
Nancy Vance
Service and Honorary (DAR/SAR)
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Civil War
Spanish American
Korea
Vietnam
Gulf War
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BC:     DC:     MC:     Obit:     Will: 
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1950 Census
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1850 Census Green-check-mark-in-a-circle.jpeg 1850 Census
1840 Census
Children below: \/ \/ \/ \/ \/ \/ \/ \/ \/


Male-ICON.jpg John Ferrell 5
Woman-ICON.jpg Anna Ferrell
Woman-ICON.jpg Jane Ferrell
Woman-ICON.jpg Martha Ferrell
Woman-ICON.jpg Anna Ferrell
Male-ICON.jpg Aly Ferrell
Male-ICON.jpg Andrew Ferrell
Woman-ICON.jpg Levicy Ferrell
Male-ICON.jpg Robert E Lee Ferrell
Male-ICON.jpg Leander Ferrell
Male-ICON.jpg Floyd Madison Ferrell
Male-ICON.jpg Taylor Ferrell
Male-ICON.jpg William Tiffany Ferrell

Discussed in various books, his house is where Ellison Hatfield died after being attacked by the McCoys. He married Phoebe Hatfield 1830 and inherited a good sized farm that eventually became the town of Matewan, WV, and subject of litigation with his son Floyd and the WV Supreme Court of Appeals case Ferrell v. Ferrell (1903) [1] , and mentioned prominently in the popular book Matewan Before the Massacre [2] .

Much more to fill in later.


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References

  1. Ferrell v. Ferrell, 53 W. Va. 515 (1903), West Virginia Supreme Court of Appleals
    Floyd Ferrell, son, versus F. A. J. "Anderson" Ferrell, father, over his estate (during his lifetime).
    Appeal from Circuit Court, Logan County, Submitted February 13, 1903.
    Disposition - Reversed.
    Where there are only two defendants to a bill in equity, one adult, the other infant, and after summons issued, though not served, the bill is filed in term, with the consent of the adult, and the court appoints a guardian ad litem for the infant, and his answer is filed, there is thus a cause for the action of the court and it has jurisdiction to decree upon the matter of the hill, and its decree is neither void nor erroneous for the mere cause of want of service of the summons, or that the bill was not filed at rules, (p. 519).

    We reverse the decree pronounced upon the bill of review on the 1st day of November, 1901, and dismiss the bill of review^.
  2. Page 61-62, Matewan Before the Massacre, by Rebecca J. Bailey, 2008 (📖 Buy at Amazon)
    As an example of what this kind of economic stress can do, consider the tale that haunts Matewan of a family torn asunder by a son’s greed. Through marriage to Phoebe, the sister of Devil Anse Hatfield, Anderson Ferrell acquired ownership of the farm that became Matewan. After Phoebe’s death, Ferrell married Mary Chambers and started a second family. Seeking to provide financial stability for all of his children by capitalizing on the railroad’s proximity, Ferrell divided his land. To his children by Phoebe Hatfield, Ferrell deeded small farms, and he sold the remaining land in lots, thus founding the town of Matewan. Among the entrepreneurs who purchased property from Ferrell was his nephew boy marriage E. B. Chambers. Years after the Hatfield-Ferrell farm had grown into a thriving village, one of Anderson Ferrell’s sons from this first marriage challenged his father’s dispensation of the land. (Note 89).

    Aided by Henry Clay Ragland, the attorney who had originally served his illiterate father, Floyd Ferrell brought suit to gain a larger portion of the family property, which now encompassed the town of Matewan. When the local circuit court judge granted the son’s claim, Anderson Ferrell appealed to the West Virginia Supreme Court of Appeals. The court chastised the younger Ferrell by asking, “What right had this son to the property?” When it would lead to the bankruptcy of the father. The court also questioned Floyd Ferrell’s motives in pursuing the suit, which at one point he had withdrawn in order to “let the second wife and little children of his aged father have something for home and bread.” The court extended its reprimand to include lawyer Ragland for encouraging Floyd Ferrell to take action against his father. The acrimony generated by Ferrell v. Ferrell survived for decades and may have contributed to a rivalry between the Hatfields and the Chambers, who struggled against each other for decades for control of Matewan. (Note 90)