Elizabeth Price Buck was the ninth child of Thomas Buck V
and Anne Richardson. She was born on
September 5, 1794 in Shenandoah County, Virginia and died October 21, 1871 in
Paris, Tennessee at the age of 77.
Elizabeth Price Buck and George Neville Blakemore were
married on October 27, 1814. George Neville Blakemore, son of George Blakemore
and Elizabeth Mauzy, was born in 1791 and died in 1847 at the age of 56. George
Neville Blakemore was one of the original justices (1836) of Warren County,
Virginia and also a trustee of the Old School Happy Creek Church in Front
Royal.
George Neville Blakemore and Elizabeth Price Buck had seven children:
- Mary Rebecca Blakemore, born 1817; married Gustavus A. Williams, 1841; died 1897.
- Ann Elizabeth Blakemore, born 1815; married Presley Neville Helm, 1836.
- Thomas Luther Blakemore, born 1819; married Elizabeth Richards, 1839; died 1901.
- George William Blakemore, born 1821; died 1880.
- Lucy Virginia Blakemore was born 1824, died in 1859.
- Martha Letitia Blakemore, born 1826; married John Buck Helm, 1842; died 1854.
- Robert Newton Blakemore was born 1833; died 1917.
The family home of Elizabeth Price Buck and George Neville
Blakemore in Front Royal was called “Rose Hill”. Thomas Buck, Elizabeth’s father, had
purchased this land in 1820. Rose Hill
was sold to William Richardson in 1841.
George and Elizabeth Blakemore then moved Tennessee near their daughter,
Ann, who had married Pressley Neville Helm.
George died in Tennessee in 1847.
In 1860, Elizabeth Price Buck Blakemore was age 67 and
living with her son Thomas and his wife, also named Elizabeth, in St. Joseph,
Missouri. This dwelling place was a
hotel and probably owned by Thomas although he is listed as “bookkeeper” in
1870. A total of 34 people were living
there. Elizabeth Price Buck Blakemore
was not living at this hotel in 1870.
She had moved to Clay Brook, Tennessee and was living with her grandson,
James L. Blakemore, the son of Thomas.
Thomas Luther Buck had transitioned from farmer to clerk to
a partner in the hotel business with a hotel at Capon Springs, Virginia (now
West Virginia) called “The Mountain House”. The Mountain House was a luxurious, four-story
hotel completed in 1851 to take advantage of the medicinal spring in the area. At the time, The Mountain House was believed
to be one of the largest structures in the South. In addition to Thomas, the
partnership included John R. Richards, William Mason Buck and his brother John
Buck. Capon Springs had a 900 seat
dining room and was intended to entertain Congressmen and their families from
Washington, D. C. However, Capon Springs
was a business failure. In
1857, Thomas moved to St. Joseph, Missouri and again engaged in the hotel
business. According to the 1880 census,
Thomas was a farmer in Missouri so perhaps he had left the hotel business by
then.
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