![]() He married Polly Sandefur there Jan 1, 1849. "John Fogleman, a native of Virginia was in this area in 1846, a witness to his sister’s wedding in the St. Note: * Asterisk information inserted by author. (7) Solomon Northup, Twelve Years a Slave, edited by Sue Eakin and Joseph Logsdon (Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 1968), pp. Census of 18 correctly spelled their names as John Fogleman and George Fogleman. Day, Edward Willis, William Hargrove, Rueben Parks, S. Shaw, Martha Vernon, Matthew Vernon, Elisa Sap, Hartgraves, Elijah Johnson, Ann Ray, Joseph Black, Rueben Ray, Madam Green, George “Fogaman”, Samuel Dalton, Jacob Keller, N. ![]() Census of Avoyelles Parish listed the following names as being at “Bayou Boeuf”: Henry Slaughter, J. 256 Marriage licenses of James Armstrong-Sally Fogleman and Thomas Shaw-Elizabeth Fogleman, St. Allen (eds) American State Papers, documents of the Congress of the United States in Relation to the Publc Lands (Washington: 1859), Vol. Pierson, Louisiana Soldiers in the War of 1812, p. Hill, National Archives and Records Service, Washington, D. (4) Marriage licenses of James Armstrong-Sally Fogleman (1816) and John Fogleman-Polly Sandifer (1819), St Landry Parish. For years afterward members of the Fogleman family continued to live in that area, in both St. Landry Parish, a few miles down the bayou from the present town of Bunkie. *At some time they settled in the vicinity of Holmesville, a village on Bayou Boeuf near the southwest Avoyelles Parish border with St. The George Fogleman family had in the meantime been living in St. His claim to this land was rejected on evidence that he had abandoned it in February 1819. In 1817 George cleared and cultivated about five acres of a 640 acre tract on the west side of Calcasieu River about two miles above Charles Lake. George Fogleman and his son John were soldiers in the War of 1812. ![]() He cultivated some of this tract about 1808-09, but apparently moved to another place without taking further steps to establish ownership of it. George Fogleman settled on and claimed 160 acres of United States government Land on the west bank of the Atchafalaya River in St. They moved into Louisiana at least by 1805, the year in which Louis Fogleman, the father of Elijah, was born. George and Sarah Hoozers Fogleman, the grandparents of Elijah Louis, had lived in Pennsylvania, Virginia and probably North Carolina before settling in Louisiana. From Pennsylvania to some of the Foglemans moved south and southwest. The Foglemans were of German origin (the name meaning Birdman in that language) and some of them came to Pennsylvania in the German migration to that colony in the eighteenth century. “The Lord and Fogleman Families” by Clyde W. This is a short history of the man for whom the Fogleman Cemetary was named. Among the early pioneers that settled in “Bayou Boeuf” were George and John Fogleman who were living there in 1820. ![]()
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