![]() While traveling from Cincinnati to Pittsburgh by steamboat in the winter of 1845–1846, R. By 1845, his seed-sowing machines were so popular that he gave up all other occupations to focus on improving and selling these machines. Louis in 1844 and worked as a clerk in a dry-goods store. He also adapted his machine to sowing wheat in drills. Soon after, he invented a seed-sowing machine for sowing rice and received a patent for his invention. Richard Jordan Gatling invented the screw propeller used in steam-vessels, but when he applied for a patent in 1839, he found that a patent had already been granted to someone else for the same invention. took a position teaching school, but he soon abandoned this position to enter the realm of merchandising. Richard Jordan Gatling copied records in the office of the county clerk in Hertford County at age 16. Jesse Gatling (19 July 1826–6 August 1884), and Martha Sarah Gatling (29 September 1828–22 July 1846). Gatling (15 July 1816–2 September 1879), Richard Jordan Gatling, Wa. Jordan and Mary married on 30 October 1795, and had six children: Thomas Barnes Gatling (29 September 1811–), Mary Ann Gatling (29 September 1813–4 October 1838), James H. Jordan Gatling owned and farmed a large tract of land in Hertford County. Richard Jordan Gatling (12 September 1818–26 February 1903) was born in Hertford County, North Carolina, to Jordan Gatling (–13 April 1848) and Mary Barnes Gatling (30 October 1795–30 September 1868). No children were born to this marriage.ĭr. Dora Merrifield Winborne died in 1900, and Robert Warren Winborne married Rosa Vaughan, sister of Nellie Vaughan Winborne and daughter of Uriah Vaughan. Their sons were Roger Merrifield Winborne and Robert Warren Winborne Jr. Winborne's brother, Robert Warren Winborne, who practiced law with him in Murfreesboro until 1891, married Dora Merrifield (daughter of an Indiana judge), and moved to Virginia. Winborne, Rosa Vaughan Winborne, Vaughan Sharp Winborne, and Samuel Pretlow Winborne. Stanley Winborne married Frances Sharp Jernigan, (daughter of Thomas Roberts Jernigan) in April 1912, and to this marriage were born Stanley Winborne Jr., Mollie J. To this marriage were born Stanley Winborne who became an attorney, member of both the North Carolina House of Representatives and North Carolina Senate, and North Carolina Corporation Commissioner Benjamin Brodie Winborne Jr., who became a farmer and merchant, and Uriah Vaughan Winborne and Micajah Winborne who died in childhood. 1853 or 1854), the daughter of Uriah Vaughan, a wealthy Hertford County landowner. On 23 December 1879, Winborne married Cornelia (Nellie) Vaughan (b. 1879 to 1892), Winborne and Lawrence (1892 to 1909), Winborne and Winborne (1908 to 1919), and eventually Stanley Winborne. Winborne (1875 to c.1879), Winborne Brothers (c. During the years of Winborne's law practice, his firm was known successively as B.B. Winborne served in the North Carolina House of Representatives in 1895, 1905, 1907, and 1908 (special session), ran for Speakership of the House in 1905, and ran for North Carolina Attorney General in 1908. ![]() From 1891 to 1897 excluding the brief period that he served in the 1895 legislature, he served as judge of the Hertford County Criminal Court. In January 1880, he moved to Murfreesboro, North Carolina and practiced law there until his death in 1919. Two months after his admission to the bar, Winborne moved to Winton, North Carolina. Winborne then entered employment as a law clerk in the firm of Smith and Strong in Raleigh, North Carolina until he came of age on 14 April 1875 to be admitted to the North Carolina bar. He graduated from Columbia University's law school in June 1874. In 1871 he entered Wake Forest College and stayed until 1872. Picot, a school teacher of recent French ancestry. In his youth, he attended Buckhorn Academy near Como under the tutelage of J. 24 August 1900) and the grandson of Martha Warren Winborne, possibly the daughter of Robert Warren. He was the son of Major Samuel Darden Winborne and Mary H. Benjamin Brodie Winborne (14 April 1854–1919) practiced law in Hertford County, North Carolina.
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