Bradshaw Family History

George Norman Bisanar

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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  George Norman Bisanar (son of George E Bisanar and Catherine Link).

    George married . [Group Sheet]

    Children:
    1. Edgar Alan Bisanar was born 29 Apr 1912; died 30 Jan 1972.

    George married Elizabeth Snyder. [Group Sheet]


Generation: 2

  1. 2.  George E Bisanar was buried , Catawba County, North Carolina, in Oakwood Cemetery.

    George married Catherine Link. Catherine (daughter of Amidas Crawford Link and Marietta Graham Ramsaur, daughter of Thaddeus Link and John W Raby) was buried , Catawba County, North Carolina, in Oakwood Cemetery. [Group Sheet]


  2. 3.  Catherine Link (daughter of Amidas Crawford Link and Marietta Graham Ramsaur, daughter of Thaddeus Link and John W Raby); was buried , Catawba County, North Carolina, in Oakwood Cemetery.
    Children:
    1. Edgar Alan Bisanar was born 29 Apr 1912; died 30 Jan 1972.
    2. 1. George Norman Bisanar


Generation: 3

  1. 6.  Amidas Crawford Link was born 16 Oct 1849 (son of Henry William Link and Catherine Rowe); died 6 Apr 1915; was buried , Catawba County, North Carolina, in Oakwood Cemetery.

    Amidas married Marietta Graham Ramsaur 16 Apr 1870. Marietta (daughter of William L Ramsaur and Catherine Loretz) was born 26 Jul 1854; died 20 Mar 1923; was buried , Catawba County, North Carolina, in Oakwood Cemetery. [Group Sheet]


  2. 7.  Marietta Graham Ramsaur was born 26 Jul 1854 (daughter of William L Ramsaur and Catherine Loretz); died 20 Mar 1923; was buried , Catawba County, North Carolina, in Oakwood Cemetery.

    Notes:

     

    When Amidas Link married he was not yet 21 and his bride was fifteen so consequently there were objections from his sweetheart's parents. Henry Link had an old mule named Beck, a fixture around Hickory Tavern for years. The intended bride made a trip to Catawba station. Dolph Abernethy took Henry's mule out by night and persuaded Andy Rowe to swap the use of his buggy horse for Beck. "Mite" Link drove through the county, while Esq. Henry Bruns went on the train with the license to Catawba and tied the knot good and fast.

    Children:
    1. Malcom Link
    2. Clarence Link
    3. Caroline Link
    4. 3. Catherine Link was buried , Catawba County, North Carolina, in Oakwood Cemetery.
    5. Kenneth Link
    6. Harry Link
    7. Marquerite Link
    8. Anna Link


Generation: 4

  1. 12.  Henry William Link was born 6 Jul 1808, Lincoln County, North Carolina, United States (son of Sarah Link and John Cline, son of Jacob Link and Catherine Rudisill); died 28 Jun 1884, Hickory, Catawba, North Carolina, United States; was buried Aft 28 Jun 1884, Longview, Catawba, North Carolina, United States.

    Notes:

     

    According to the book, Catawba County Heritage, Henry William Link, was a prominent citizen of the early Hickory Tavern time period of Catawba County. The town's name has since been changed to Hickory. It was Henry's son, Amidas "Mite" Crawford Link, early postmaster of Hickory Tavern who stirred interest among the townspeople to petition for changing the town's name.

    Henry Link was instrumental in the beginning of Bethel Reformed church. In 1847, during the pastorate of the Rev. John H. Crawford, who preached in churches in this area, a meeting was held to plan for the erection of a church edifice. During the gathering in the woods, tradition says a snow began to fall exceedingly fast. From this fact the place for a while was called "Snow Hill." The families had been attending worship at either St. Paul's or Grace churches. They lived mainly in the area between the Henry's Fork and the Jacob's Fork of the Upper South Fork of the Catawba River. On 2 September 1848 the deed to the land was made by Lazarus Deitz to Jacob Shuford and Henry Link. The first church was small, being thirty-two feet long and twenty-two feet wide. It was in this church that Henry served as an elder and attended services with his family.

    In 1859, the first dwelling house was built in a new town called "Hickory Tavern". This house was built by J. J. Sigmon for Henry William Link. Henry and his family resided in this house at its original location where the Bank of Granite now sits in downtown Hickory. The Link home had a long adjoining room at the rear of the house which was Link and Ellis's General Store. Mr. Link served as temporary postmaster for the town prior to the appointment of an official postmaster. The mail was brought by stagecoach to his house and upon arrival of the mail pouch, it was opened, the letters sorted and someone would stand on a box in front of the Link residence calling loudly the name that each letter bore. In the 1880's the Link house was taken down "board by board" and re-built on its present site at 443 2nd Avenue SW, Hickory. It now houses the 1859 Cafe.

    There was no suitable building in the village for religious services, so Henry W. Link and Adolphus L. Shuford built what was called in those days a "stand." During the summer worship was held in the "stand" and in the winter in the Link home. This practice continued until 1868 when Rev. Jeremiah Ingold took the initiative in building the "Free Academy," near the old cemetery on the present First Avenue, S.E. Here in this building the Reformed Church was organized May 22, 1869. Henry W. Link and Adolphus L. Shuford had approached Rev. Ingold in 1860 to come to Hickory Tavern to preach the first sermon. Henry W. Link and Peter L. Rowe served as the first elders of the church with A. A. Shuford and Amidus C. Link as reflected in an article in the Hickory Daily Record the trip she made as a child to Hickory Tavern with her parents from their home sixteen miles northwest of Lincolnton at the organization of Corinth Reformed Church. She stated that they spent Friday night at the home of Mr. & Mrs. Peter Rowe, who lived where a part of Brookford now stands. Just after supper a severe thunder storm came up and lightning struck a large weeping willow tree that stood at the kitchen door. She also said that they were entertained in the home of Mr. & Mrs. Henry W. Link in the first dwelling house ever built in the town of Hickory. She also remembered the delicious strawberry pie that Mrs. Link served.

    Prior to moving his family to Hickory Tavern, Henry owned a farm that was located off the old Shelby Road that leads from Longview to the Cooksville area. Interstate 40 now passes through part of this property. Henry set aside land for the Link family cemetery plus two surrounding acres on this property.

    Henry and Catherine Link were blessed with eleven children;, six sons and five daughters.

    Henry William Link was a loyal member of the German Reformed Church. Through his contribution to society a village began to form around a hickory tree and a lodging house called "Hickory Tavern" that was to become a major industrial hub of the foothills of North Carolina. Henry W. Link died June 28, 1884 and was buried in the Link cemetery with his other family members.

    Sources: Hickory Daily Record articles dated April 29. 1919, November 26, 1948, 100th Anniversary Booklet o Corinth Church 1969, Manuscript -prepared by Mrs Sophia McLaes Link on file in the Library of the 'Institute o American Genealogy in Chicago, Illinois: 'Link family cemetery tombstone inscriptions; family knowledge. - Mr. & Mrs. James W (Janell Marlowe) Miller, Jr

    Henry married Catherine Rowe 3 Dec 1828, Lincoln County, North Carolina. Catherine (daughter of Peter Rowe and Sabina Bost, daughter of Sarah Link and John Cline) was born 10 Jul 1808, Catawba County, North Carolina; died 13 Sep 1877. [Group Sheet]


  2. 13.  Catherine Rowe was born 10 Jul 1808, Catawba County, North Carolina (daughter of Peter Rowe and Sabina Bost, daughter of Sarah Link and John Cline); died 13 Sep 1877.

    Notes:

     

    She was born in her father's plantation house which still stands today on the Herman Sipe Road near Conover, Catawba County.

    Notes:

     

    The bondsman for the marriage was Henry R. Darr.

    According to records they had fifteen children total, of which five died during infancy. They raised their family on their large farm in the Henry River section of the county and south of what is now the town of Longview.

    Children:
    1. Calvin A Link was born 20 Oct 1829; died 22 Oct 1846.
    2. Elizabeth B Link was born 1832; died 1857.
    3. Julius Edward Link was born 1832; died 2 Jul 1862.
    4. Pauline Sophia Link was born 1 Nov 1833, Catawba, North Carolina, USA; died 16 Nov 1909, Catawba, North Carolina, USA; was buried , Catawba County, North Carolina, in Oakwood Cemetery.
    5. Peter Americus Link was born 1838; died 7 Jun 1862.
    6. Algernon Sidney Link was born 1839; died Oct 1864; was buried , Link Cemetery.
    7. Catherine S Link was born 1841.
    8. Emeline Delithia Link was born 6 Feb 1843; died 29 Oct 1909; was buried , Arney Cemtery.
    9. Saddis S Link was born 15 Apr 1845; died 26 Mar 1859; was buried , Link Cemetery.
    10. 6. Amidas Crawford Link was born 16 Oct 1849; died 6 Apr 1915; was buried , Catawba County, North Carolina, in Oakwood Cemetery.
    11. Thaddeus Link

  3. 14.  William L Ramsaur

    William married Catherine Loretz. [Group Sheet]


  4. 15.  Catherine Loretz (daughter of W Lafayette Abernethy and William L Ramsaur).
    Children:
    1. 7. Marietta Graham Ramsaur was born 26 Jul 1854; died 20 Mar 1923; was buried , Catawba County, North Carolina, in Oakwood Cemetery.