This post was originally entered in the North Carolina Research Group which is no longer active
January 30 edited January 30
I am searching for Reddick in Perquimans County in North Carolina. Also, interested if the name was changed at some point to Riddick in the 1700's. I am interested in the line of Jacob Reddick, born about 1769 (not definite on this date) married Nancy Wiggins around1794. Jacob died about 1808 in Burke County, Ga. Jacob was said to have 4 brothers. Frank, Peter, John and one other brother. They later moved on to Florida and Georgia. Nicholas Moses Reddick was the son of Jacob. This is the line that I am in. Thank you for any information you can give me.
Commenti
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Jamie:
In FamilySearch there is a Jacob Reddick (GZDJ-QBD) with a birth date of 1756 and no sources given married to a Nancy Wiggins (LHKF-6J6) however there are no confirming sources listed.
In this particular Family Tree it also lists a number of children including Nicholas Moses Reddick (K2J1-7RM) and a number of siblings including a Frank (KK1L-8QK), three different Peters (LT9L-MTB, KK1L-8SL, MS1X, W9T) a John (L78X-VCC) and additional siblings.
I noticed some earlier information posted on Ancestry.com at the following link. Jacob Lewis REDDICK - LifeStory (ancestry.com) This link lists several brothers as well. Additional information on Jacob’s parents, aunts/uncles and siblings can be found at the following link. Ancestry Person Also, there is a source listed that you could message and possibly gain additional information from regarding your ancestors.
The following link lists some additional Reddick Family Trees along with the Owners who you could possibly gain additional information from as well: Family Trees : Ancestry.com
I also noticed similar information and citations listed at the MyHeritage website under Jacob Reddick at the following link. Jacob Reddick - Scheider Web Site - MyHeritage
You may have already come across most of this information but perhaps some of the sources listed may be able to provide you with additional insight. Good luck with your continued research.
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