Published October 06, 2006 11:38 pm - When my cousin's Shoun-Shown-Shawn Family Association Newsletter arrived this week, I read with interest abo...
Sharing family lines strengthens family ties
The Norman Transcript
When my cousin's Shoun-Shown-Shawn Family Association Newsletter arrived this week, I read with interest about the 2006 family reunion.
The 2006 SH-N Cousins Roundup was in Prineville, Ore., with an attendance of more than 136 family members from Oregon, Maryland, Washington, Tennessee and other states.?
If a prize were given to those who traveled the greatest distance, then it would have gone to the two family members who came from England.
This association is very special to me because it was started in Duncan in 1987 by my brother and sister-in-law, Curtis and Linda Shawn.
As a Shawn family researcher I made contact with the Tennessee branch and supplied my sister-in-law with some names; she contacted them. They in turn contacted others. When we all gathered we had family members from many states.?
The first business meeting was held in Duncan. From there it grew into this family association that holds reunions every year.
As an avid Shawn family researcher, I research all lines including Shoun and Shown, but mainly collect anything pertaining to Andrew Baker Shown, the grandson of the founder of the Tennessee Shouns, Leonard Shown and my husband's great grandfather.
Leonard Shown (Shoun) and Barbara Schlemp walked into eastern Tennessee in 1792. Leonard and Barbara had married in Wythe County, Va., (now Washington County, Va.) on Aug. 14, 1792.?
John S. Shown was born June 28, 1793, in what is now Johnson County, Tenn. John's oldest son, Andrew Baker Shown, who moved to Texas after having moved his family to Blount County, Tenn., established the family in Texas.?
Other members of this large Tennessee family also moved to Texas. Today you will find those who spell the surname Shown, Shawn and Shoun. It was the descendants of Andrew who have been credited with changing the surname spelling to Shawn.?
The association has accomplished many things since its formation in 1987. We have our own Web site at shoun.net/index.html.
The Web site contains a history of the family association from its formation in 1987 to about 1999 and a list of all the places we have had reunions through 1999. But it needs to be updated.?
By accessing the Leonard Shoun section you will find a listing for all 17 children, including the names of their spouses. The forms section includes a membership form and a form for the applicable reunion. The 2007 reunion information has not been included to date. There also is a link to the genealogical society of Johnson County.
The Johnson County society Web site, www.jctcuzins.org, contains the original Johnson County, Tenn., genealogy page for those who have ancestors in the area. It is a great site and fun to just browse through to see what is offered.?
It has 303 cemeteries listed, with new ones periodically added. Obituaries are listed on the site and a search engine is provided for the site as well as the Web.