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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Orr (child of Henry Singleton Orr and Malvina Gamble).

    Notes:

    ----------
    Reference:
    McTeer - Mateer Families of Cumberland County Pennsylvania, Frances Davis
    McTeer, 1975, p 125.


Generation: 2

  1. 2.  Henry Singleton Orr

    Notes:

    Of Blount County, Tennessee.
    ----------
    Reference:
    McTeer - Mateer Families of Cumberland County Pennsylvania, Frances Davis
    McTeer, 1975, p 125.

    Henry married Malvina Gamble 1902. Malvina (daughter of William Houston Gamble and Elizabeth Ann McTeer) was born 16 Dec 1878, , Blount County, Tennessee. [Group Sheet]


  2. 3.  Malvina Gamble was born 16 Dec 1878, , Blount County, Tennessee (daughter of William Houston Gamble and Elizabeth Ann McTeer).

    Notes:

    Living in Detroit, Michigan in 1938.
    ----------
    Reference:
    McTeer - Mateer Families of Cumberland County Pennsylvania, Frances Davis
    McTeer, 1975, p 125.

    Children:
    1. Orr
    2. Orr
    3. Orr
    4. Orr
    5. Orr
    6. 1. Orr
    7. Orr
    8. Orr


Generation: 3

  1. 6.  William Houston Gamble was born 21 Dec 1848 (son of John E. Gamble and Malvina Williams); died 21 Nov 1891; was buried , Blount County, Tennessee.

    Notes:

    Buried in Eusebia Cemetery.
    ----------
    Reference:
    McTeer - Mateer Families of Cumberland County Pennsylvania, Frances Davis
    McTeer, 1975, p 124-125.

    William married Elizabeth Ann McTeer 23 Dec 1869. Elizabeth (daughter of Andrew Bogle McTeer and Nancy Gamble) was born 9 Sep 1845, , Blount County, Tennessee; died 1 Sep 1880, , Blount County, Tennessee; was buried , Blount County, Tennessee. [Group Sheet]


  2. 7.  Elizabeth Ann McTeer was born 9 Sep 1845, , Blount County, Tennessee (daughter of Andrew Bogle McTeer and Nancy Gamble); died 1 Sep 1880, , Blount County, Tennessee; was buried , Blount County, Tennessee.

    Notes:

    Buried in Eusebia Cemetery.
    ----------
    Reference:
    McTeer - Mateer Families of Cumberland County Pennsylvania, Frances Davis
    McTeer, 1975, p 124.

    Children:
    1. Sarah Jane Gamble was born 5 Sep 1870, , Blount County, Tennessee.
    2. Rachel Lutitia Gamble was born 6 Dec 1872, , Blount County, Tennessee.
    3. Mary Ellen Gamble was born 1 Apr 1875, , Blount County, Tennessee; died 20 Jan 1959, , Blount County, Tennessee.
    4. 3. Malvina Gamble was born 16 Dec 1878, , Blount County, Tennessee.
    5. Gamble was born , Blount County, Tennessee; died See Notes.


Generation: 4

  1. 12.  John E. Gamble

    Notes:

    ----------
    Reference:
    McTeer - Mateer Families of Cumberland County Pennsylvania, Frances Davis
    McTeer, 1975, p 124.

    John — Malvina Williams. [Group Sheet]


  2. 13.  Malvina Williams

    Notes:

    ----------
    Reference:
    McTeer - Mateer Families of Cumberland County Pennsylvania, Frances Davis
    McTeer, 1975, p 124.

    Children:
    1. 6. William Houston Gamble was born 21 Dec 1848; died 21 Nov 1891; was buried , Blount County, Tennessee.

  3. 14.  Andrew Bogle McTeer was born 5 Sep 1820, Ellejoy, Blount County, Tennessee (son of William McTeer and Mary Bogle); died 13 Jun 1885, Ellejoy, Blount County, Tennessee; was buried Ellejoy, Blount County, Tennessee.

    Notes:

    Andrew Bogle McTeer was a blacksmith by trade and a farmer. He was an officer
    in the militia of Tennessee, holding ranks from lieutenant to colonel. During
    the Civil War he served as Quartermaster of the 3rd Tennessee Cavalry, U. S.
    Volunteers. After the war he was a Postmaster at Ellejoy, Tennessee.

    In 1850 Andrew McTeer aged 30 years was a resident in the 13th district, Blount
    County; his household included his wife Nancy aged 27 and four children,
    William aged 6, Elizabeth aged 5, Hetty aged 3 and Mary aged 7 months.

    On 18 September Andrew B. McTeer enlisted at Maryville, Tennessee as a private
    in Company A 3rd Tennessee U. S. Volunteers; on 16 November 1863 he was
    promoted to 1st Lieutenant and Regimental Quartermaster, a position he held
    until his discharge on 26 September 1864. But on 24 September 1864, two days
    before the date of his official discharge, while he was with a detachment under
    Colonel Wallace Campbell, Lieutenant McTeer was captured at Athens, Alabama, by
    Major N. B. Forrest; from that time until he was exchanged on 6 December 1864,
    he remained in Confederate hands, and it was the first of the next year before
    he was able to get back home. The receipt of his discharge at regimental
    headquarters while he was a prisoner-of-war together with the loss at the time
    of his capture of all the quartermaster's records, invoices, vouchers and
    overdue reports, created such a snafu that Lieutenant McTeer was obliged to
    spend all of 1865 and most of 1866 in correspondence with government agents in
    an effort to collect his final military pay (from September through December
    1864) and to satisfy their inquiries regarding various discrepancies in his
    lists of properties, animals (mules and horses), harness, forage, clothing
    (down to canteens, shirts and boots) and general supplies (such as inkstands,
    camp desks and foolscap paper).

    The Invalid Pension Declaration of Lt. Andrew B. McTeer, dated 29 April 1882
    reports disability as a result of "Poison and did not get it out of my system.
    It occurred in the Barracks at Covington, Kentucky, on or about the last of
    November 1862 and rendered me a good portion of my time unfit for service,
    sometimes better, sometimes worse ... he rendered me unable for labor and
    still growing worse from pains and stiffness of limbs and inward suffering."

    Then after the War while the late lieutenant was still struggling with ill
    health, arguing with the government over his back pay, and trying to reconcile
    his confused accounts, he was receiving also vague threats from the Freedmen's
    Bureau citing some alleged mistreatment of the "Col'd people that have been
    engaged in working your Mother's farm." A letter of 1 September 1865
    continues, "These people will be protected by all the force at the disposal of
    the agents of the Bureau in their just rights. ... I am authorized to seize
    and rent for the use of the aged, infirm and the young, all Estates from which
    the late masters drive away the poor and destitute Col'd people. This
    authority I shall use as circumstances demand therefore be carefull what you
    do."

    Considering the very general rapport between the McTeers and their slaves, both
    before and after emancipation, the whole affair now seems a ridiculous display
    of bureaucracy, but at the time it must have been one more distressing,
    disturbing and frustrating harrassment to the ailing Union veteran.

    On 7 September 1885 William A. McTeer was appointed Administrator of the Estate
    of Andrew B. McTeer, who had died on 13 June 1885, Nancy McTeer the widow
    having declined to act as Administratrix. Bond was set at $2000 with A. B.
    McTeer, J. G. McTeer and S. J. McCulloch as sureties.

    On 21 October 1885 a committee appointed by the Court set off for Nancy McTeerthe widow's "one year's provisions" as follows: three horses, one milk cow,
    two steers, two heifers, one calf, five sheep, four "fatning" hogs, seven
    shoats, wheat on hand, present corn crop, hay and fodder on hands, one turning
    plow, two small plows, two pair of gearing (harness), one harrow, two
    cultivators, one wood saw, all household and kitchen furniture, $25 cash.

    A sale notice of 4 September 1886 listed four parcels of land in the 13th Civil
    District, Blount County, being "all the real estate owned by Andrew B. McTeer
    at the time of his death", to wit: 91 acres adjoining J. A. McTeer, Cal Davis
    and others; 84 acres adjoining J. A. McTeer, Gillespie, Graves and perhaps
    others (this title in dispute); also revisionary interest of dower to Nancy
    McTeer, S. A. McCulloch, Samuel Cameron, Robert Murrin's heirs and perhaps
    others. All four tracts were sold to Nancy McTeer for $1605 and conveyed to
    her 17 September 1886 by Ben Cunningham, Clerk and Special Commissioner.

    After a law suit in April 1888 to quiet title in the case of James A. McTeer
    and Nancy McTeer versus Samuel Gillespy, James Gillespy and Ann E. Blackburn,
    James A. McTeer and Nancy McTeer (his widowed sister-in-law) divided certain
    lands held as tenants in common; Nancy's residual part was 170 acres near the
    foot of Chilhowee Mountain.

    This last named property known as the "Mountain House Land" together with 84
    3/4 acres on Ellejoy near Chilhowee Mountain (the second tract mentioned in the
    estate sale above) was deeded on 25 January 1895 from Nancy McTeer to her son
    Will A. McTeer. On that same date she deeded to her son Josias G. McTeer and
    Alexander B. McTeer, 135 acres more or less, all the remaining land from her
    husband's estate. Actually the finincial considerations specified in these
    deeds constitute the settlement of Nancy McTeer's estate.
    ----------
    Reference:
    McTeer - Mateer Families of Cumberland County Pennsylvania, Frances Davis
    McTeer, 1975, p 91-93.

    Andrew married Nancy Gamble 1 Dec 1842, Little River, Blount County, Tennessee. Nancy (daughter of Alexander Breckinridge Gamble and Elizabeth Ransbarger) was born 25 Apr 1823, Little River, Blount County, Tennessee; died 15 Jan 1896, Ellejoy, Blount County, Tennessee; was buried Eusebia Cemetery, Blount County, Tennessee. [Group Sheet]


  4. 15.  Nancy Gamble was born 25 Apr 1823, Little River, Blount County, Tennessee (daughter of Alexander Breckinridge Gamble and Elizabeth Ransbarger); died 15 Jan 1896, Ellejoy, Blount County, Tennessee; was buried Eusebia Cemetery, Blount County, Tennessee.

    Notes:

    In 1850 Andrew McTeer aged 30 years was a resident in the 13th district, Blount
    County; his household included his wife Nancy aged 27 and four children,
    William aged 6, Elizabeth aged 5, Hetty aged 3 and Mary aged 7 months.

    On 7 September 1885 William A. McTeer was appointed Administrator of the Estate
    of Andrew B. McTeer, who had died on 13 June 1885, Nancy McTeer the widow
    having declined to act as Administratrix. Bond was set at $2000 with A. B.
    McTeer, J. G. McTeer and S. J. McCulloch as sureties.

    On 21 October 1885 a committee appointed by the Court set off for Nancy McTeer
    the widow's "one year's provisions" as follows: three horses, one milk cow,
    two steers, two heifers, one calf, five sheep, four "fatning" hogs, seven
    shoats, wheat on hand, present corn crop, hay and fodder on hands, one turning
    plow, two small plows, two pair of gearing (harness), one harrow, two
    cultivators, one wood saw, all household and kitchen furniture, $25 cash.

    A sale notice of 4 September 1886 listed four parcels of land in the 13th Civil
    District, Blount County, being "all the real estate owned by Andrew B. McTeer
    at the time of his death", to wit: 91 acres adjoining J. A. McTeer, Cal Davis
    and others; 84 acres adjoining J. A. McTeer, Gillespie, Graves and perhaps
    others (this title in dispute); also revisionary interest of dower to Nancy
    McTeer, S. A. McCulloch, Samuel Cameron, Robert Murrin's heirs and perhaps
    others. All four tracts were sold to Nancy McTeer for $1605 and conveyed to
    her 17 September 1886 by Ben Cunningham, Clerk and Special Commissioner.

    After a law suit in April 1888 to quiet title in the case of James A. McTeer
    and Nancy McTeer versus Samuel Gillespy, James Gillespy and Ann E. Blackburn,
    James A. McTeer and Nancy McTeer (his widowed sister-in-law) divided certain
    lands held as tenants in common; Nancy's residual part was 170 acres near the
    foot of Chilhowee Mountain.

    This last named property known as the "Mountain House Land" together with 84
    3/4 acres on Ellejoy near Chilhowee Mountain (the second tract mentioned in the
    estate sale above) was deeded on 25 January 1895 from Nancy McTeer to her son
    Will A. McTeer. On that same date she deeded to her son Josias G. McTeer and
    Alexander B. McTeer, 135 acres more or less, all the remaining land from her
    husband's estate. Actually the finincial considerations specified in these
    deeds constitute the settlement of Nancy McTeer's estate.
    ----------
    Reference:
    McTeer - Mateer Families of Cumberland County Pennsylvania, Frances Davis
    McTeer, 1975, p 91-93.

    Children:
    1. William Anderson McTeer was born 16 Sep 1843, Blount County, Tennessee; died 7 Nov 1925, Maryville, Blount County, Tennessee; was buried Magnolia Cemetery, Blount County, Tennessee.
    2. 7. Elizabeth Ann McTeer was born 9 Sep 1845, , Blount County, Tennessee; died 1 Sep 1880, , Blount County, Tennessee; was buried , Blount County, Tennessee.
    3. Hetty Caroline McTeer was born 8 Jan 1848, , Blount County, Tennessee; died 10 Jun 1927, , Blount County, Tennessee; was buried , Blount County, Tennessee.
    4. Mary Martin McTeer was born 31 Aug 1850, , Blount County, Tennessee; died 20 Mar 1928; was buried Knoxville, Knox County, Tennessee.
    5. Alexander Breckinridge McTeer was born 15 Aug 1857, , Blount County, Tennessee; died 12 Aug 1933, , Blount County, Tennessee; was buried Maryville, Blount County, Tennessee.
    6. Josias Gamble McTeer was born 1 Jul 1860, , Blount County, Tennessee; died 9 May 1937; was buried , Blount County, Tennessee.