Whigham

Family Association

Whigham Family Association
6454 Village Park
San Antonio, TX 78250-5043

ph: 210-680-5701

The Whigham Family Chronicles

      There are only 14 copies of "The Whigham Family Chronicles" left.  Hard to believe that we started with 400 when we first printed it in 2003 and only so few are left.

    The Chronicles contains 1,087 pages of the history of the Whigham family whose ancestors came to America from their origins in Scotland in 1485 through their journey to Northern Ireland and later to the American colonies and the United States, culminating in their spread throughout the U.S. until today (though the book only covers to 2003) . 

     The books sell for $49.95 + $5.00 for shipping.  Once the 14 copies currently available are gone, there are no plans to print more in the near future.

     If you would like a copy, you may order one by sending a check for $54.95, payable to Whigham Family Association, and mailed to Joyce Whigham Dorrycott, 6454 Village Park, San Antonio, TX  78250-4053.

 

  • The Whigham Family Chronicles

       This book contains 1,087 pages of the history of the Whigham family whose ancestors came to America from their origin in Scotland in 1485, through their journey to Northern Ireland and later to the American colonies and the United States, culminating in their spread across the United States until  2003. 

         It was compiled by two Whigham "cousins" who organized data from other "cousins", adding information from a number of sources.

    • $49.95
    • In stock

 Preface

After years of collecting research from family members across the United States and Scotland and months of intense compiling and editing this information, I have finally reached the point of having this volume ready for the publisher. So many unexpected events have delayed me over these last two years particularly, forcing me to finally undertake the finishing of this work as a marathon - a night and day immersion in the preparing of all this data into a book that I hope will bring as much pride and joy to our family members as it has to me.

Coming to know so much about our very diverse and scattered family has instilled a deep affection and appreciation for all those who came before us. Whether it was the young Scot who grew up in the lowlands of Scotland, who traversed the Irish Sea to County Down in Ireland and thence crossed the Atlantic to the New World; or the first generation in the United States who courageously made lives for themselves in Georgia, Kentucky, New York or Pennsylvania or the future generations who spread across the United States, members of the Whigham family have personified a zest for life, a spirit of adventure, a commitment to country and a determination to succeed at whatever task they undertook.

I feel as if I know these people, having spent so many hours researching, writing and editing the information about their lives. I identify with the young wife and mother who must follow her husband as he moved from one county or one state to another. I find myself wanting to follow in their footsteps - to wish I could have been with Thomas Whigham at Queensborough; to join William and Thomas on their trek to Decatur County and to be with them as they created a new community - and ultimately a town in Whigham Georgia; to serve with Joseph Whigham in the General Assembly in Georgia; to experience the wandering spirit of a man like Joseph who to the very end was always seeking new frontiers; to live with William Whigham’s descendants in the beautiful Georgia town of Louisville; to go with James Barnett, Thomas Galloway and their siblings and cousins to Texas after the Civil War; to be there to share the grief of mothers who lost so many of their children and to have watched as they continually built new lives in new communities across this land. And, in the writing of this book about their lives and our heritage I have done so.

It would be very remiss of me to fail to mention my fellow helpers in this endeavor. In the naming of names, however, there is also the chance that I will leave someone out, so - if I do forget to mention someone who participated in any manner in putting this book together, please forgive me for it was not intentional.

There are so many who contributed to this endeavor. Without Robert Whigham’s dogged persistence in seeking to find our origins outside the United States, we would not have even the beginnings of an ancestry past Thomas. He was ably assisted in this research by our Scottish "cousin", John Cowie Whigham, who is committed to verifying information that we can now only speculate about. In addition, Robert had researched our family origins for more than twenty years, taking advantage of the immense efforts of Samuel J. Whigham, Jr. and Anna Ruth Williams. Each of these dedicated family members provided the foundation from which we have all begun our search

Joining the ranks of those who kept records and shared them with us were Whigham descendants across the United States, and I am immensely grateful to each of them. The following will be an incomplete list I am sure for there have been so very many of you, but I must make the effort to list as many of you as possible. Should your name not appear below, it is simply an error brought about by the pressures of time.

There are three other people without whom this book would not have been possible. The computer knowledge and expertise of my daughter-in-law, Anna Dorrycott, was a critical requisite in the final preparation of this book for the publisher. And, the editing skills of my daughter, Nancy Dorrycott Kasper, made it possible to finish on time. I am grateful to them both. However, my deepest gratitude is reserved for my husband, Donald F. Green, who spent innumerable hours on the internet, and taking me around the nation to state archives, cemeteries and libraries. The task of preparing this book would not have been the great adventure that it has been were it not a shared endeavor, and his name should truly be listed as one of the book’s authors.

 

Joyce Whigham Dorrycott

6454 Village Park

San Antonio, Texas April 18, 2003

Jan Allison, John Arnold, Donna Atwater, Oleene Benefield, Doris Whigham Baughman Boswell, Sandra Black, Christine Burton, Todd Case, Donna Clark, Norwood Cooper, Jeannie Dalrymple, Mary Dalton, Sue Dell, James Edmundson, Larry Evans, Elsie Farley, Frances French, Coraleigh Whigham Gassen, Carrie Gautreau-Hall, Jeannette Whigham Hayes, Barbara Hinton, Audell Jackson, David Johnson, Charles and Rebecca Johnson, Louise Jones, Marjorie Ruth Whigham Jones, Peggy Jones, Barbara Knotts, Andrew Lipscomb, Cathy Martella, Dr. Wayne McLaughlin, Brenda McNair, Robert L. Montgomery, Thomas "Mac" Morris, Dr. Quentin Price, Flogene Whigham Reynolds, W.H. Rudd, Lance Russell, Lynn Schechter, Steve See, Cathleen Smith, Patricia Stallings, Lackey Stephens, Sandra Whigham Strickland, Terri Tait, Harriet Thomas, Nell & J. L. Thompson, Judy Toy, Billie Jo Westby, Betty Barrett Whigham, Carl Leslie Whigham, Jr., Carol Whigham, David Keith Whigham, David Land Whigham, David Price Whigham, Edward L. Whigham, Faye Taylor Whigham, Fran Whigham, George Lenon Whigham, Sr., Gordon W. Whigham, Gregory E. Whigham, H. Gray Whigham, Ingrid Whigham, James Elliott Whigham, James L. & Lana Whigham, Jane Kennedy Whigham, Jeremy Whigham, John Cowie Whigham, Jr., John Stephen Whigham, Joseph Jerome Whigham, Joyce Holyfield Whigham, Mack Whigham, Marvin Whigham, Jr., Myron Whigham, Patricia Whigham, Robert E. Whigham, Jr., Ronald C. Whigham, Samuel J. Whigham, Shealy Olander Whigham, Stephen Whigham, Susan Whigham, John White, Annie Ruth Williams, Mrs. Meredith "Dodie" Wilson, Kathy Wilson and Malcolm Yaple.

The money from the sale of the books goes into a fund to help publish more media.  For instance photo albums, cd's etc.

Copyright 2009 Whigham Family Association. All rights reserved.

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Whigham Family Association
6454 Village Park
San Antonio, TX 78250-5043

ph: 210-680-5701