Take from the Find a Grave for Jeremiah Hughes:
Two headstones in the cemetery read, J H on it and the other one T H . Genealogist Stokes Bailey believes this to be Jermiah Hughes, and his wife "Two Horse". Two Horse was a Sioux Indian from Oklahoma according to N.C Archive records concerning a "Will" dispute with William Hughes. It is believed by family members Jeremiah Hughes helped in the Cherokee removal from NC to Oklahoma. Sioux family members came to NC to visit "Two Horse" on several occasions. Jermiah Hughes kept "Two Horse" restrained for a certain lenght of time as he was afraid she would run away. After the birth of two children he allowed her total freedom. Information courtesy of (Becky Garrou), Rebecca Ann Moody.
Click the links above and it will direct to records collected so far. If anything has a source it is notated; anything without a documented source may or may not be specified. Do not take anything for exact proof without doing the research even census or government records; these can be misread, deleted, and misconstrued over time.
Click on the Facebook icon above to connect with the researchers and cousins working on this. If you are a descendant of this particular branch of the Hughes family in Western North Carolina, please get in contact with us.
Two headstones in the cemetery read, J H on it and the other one T H . Genealogist Stokes Bailey believes this to be Jermiah Hughes, and his wife "Two Horse". Two Horse was a Sioux Indian from Oklahoma according to N.C Archive records concerning a "Will" dispute with William Hughes. It is believed by family members Jeremiah Hughes helped in the Cherokee removal from NC to Oklahoma. Sioux family members came to NC to visit "Two Horse" on several occasions. Jermiah Hughes kept "Two Horse" restrained for a certain lenght of time as he was afraid she would run away. After the birth of two children he allowed her total freedom. Information courtesy of (Becky Garrou), Rebecca Ann Moody.
Click the links above and it will direct to records collected so far. If anything has a source it is notated; anything without a documented source may or may not be specified. Do not take anything for exact proof without doing the research even census or government records; these can be misread, deleted, and misconstrued over time.
Click on the Facebook icon above to connect with the researchers and cousins working on this. If you are a descendant of this particular branch of the Hughes family in Western North Carolina, please get in contact with us.