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McCormick Family History & Genealogy

31,819 biographies and 36 photos with the McCormick last name. Discover the family history, nationality, origin and common names of McCormick family members.

McCormick Last Name History & Origin

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Famous People named McCormick

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Early McCormicks

These are the earliest records we have of the McCormick family.

Thomas Mccormick of Australia was born in 1789, and died at age 68 years old in 1857.
Margaret Mccormick of Australia was born in 1789, and died at age 75 years old in 1864.
Catherine Mccormick of Australia was born in 1792, and died at age 88 years old in 1880.
Barney Mccormick of Australia was born in 1798, and died at age 78 years old in 1876.
Elly Mccormick of Australia was born in 1803, and died at age 55 years old in 1858.
Patrick Mccormick of Sandhurst Australia was born in 1805, and died at age 77 years old in 1882 in Sandhurst.
Edmund Mccormick of Australia was born in 1807, and died at age 60 years old in 1867.
Mat Mccormick of Watta Australia was born in 1807 to John Mccormick and Mary Brosnan Mccormick. He had siblings Edward Mccormick, James Mccormick, Helen Mccormick, John Mccormick, John Ellie Mccormick, Violet Mccormick, Margaret Mccormick, Patrick Ambrose Mccormick, Susan Kath Mccormick, Mary Veronica Mccormick, John Mccormick, John Elly Mccormick, John Patrick Mccormick, and James Louis Mccormick. Mat Mccormick died at age 85 years old in 1892 in Watta.
William Mccormick was born in 1807 at Co. Down, Ireland, and died at age 82 years old on December 12, 1890 at Kinflea, Dunaghy, Co, Antrim, Ireland. Family, friend, or fan, this family history biography is for you to remember William McCormick.
William Mccormick of Australia was born in 1810, and died at age 70 years old in 1880.
Archibald Mccormick of Kilmore Australia was born in 1810, and died at age 74 years old in 1884 in Kilmore.
Alice Mccormick of Australia was born in 1810, and died at age 56 years old in 1866.

McCormick Family Members

McCormick Family Photos

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McCormick Family Tree

Discover the most common names, oldest records and life expectancy of people with the last name McCormick.

Most Common First Names

Updated McCormick Biographies

Kevin Gregory McCormick was born on February 25, 1997 in West Chester, Chester County, Pennsylvania United States to Caroline Barbara McCormick and Nicholas Henry McCormick, and has siblings Caeley Margaret McCormick and Daniel Patrick McCormick. Family, friend, or fan, this family history biography is for you to remember Kevin Gregory McCormick.
Daniel Patrick McCormick was born circa 2003 in West Chester, Chester County, Pennsylvania United States to Caroline Barbara McCormick and Nicholas Henry McCormick, and has siblings Kevin Gregory McCormick and Caeley Margaret McCormick. Family, friend, or fan, this family history biography is for you to remember Daniel Patrick McCormick.
Caroline Barbara (Marshall) McCormick was born on February 25, 1969 in Philadelphia, Philadelphia County, Pennsylvania United States to John Anthony Marshall and Barbara Marie Marshall, and has siblings David Robert Marshall, John Anthony Marshall Jr., and Jeffrey Kenneth Marshall. Caroline McCormick married Nicholas Henry McCormick in 1994 in West Chester, Chester County, and has children Kevin Gerald McCormick, Caeley Margaret McCormick, and Daniel Patrick McCormick. Family, friend, or fan, this family history biography is for you to remember Caroline Barbara McCormick.
Caeley Margaret McCormick was born on May 12, 1999 in West Chester, Chester County, Pennsylvania United States to Caroline Barbara McCormick and Nicholas Henry McCormick, and has siblings Kevin Gerald McCormick and Daniel Patrick McCormick. Family, friend, or fan, this family history biography is for you to remember Caeley Margaret McCormick.
Nicholas Henry McCormick was born on September 5, 1967 in Philadelphia, Philadelphia County, Pennsylvania United States. Nicholas McCormick got married to Caroline Barbara McCormick in 1994 in West Chester, Chester County, and has children Kevin Gerald McCormick, Caeley Margaret McCormick, and Daniel Patrick McCormick. Family, friend, or fan, this family history biography is for you to remember Nicholas Henry McCormick.
Jane Agnes (McCormick) Tobias of Richmond, City of Yarra County, VIC Australia was born on October 29, 1898 in Eaglehawk, Greater Bendigo City County, and died at age 68 years old on February 26, 1967 in Richmond, City of Yarra County.
Edith (McCormick) Bowman
Edith Day (McCormick) Bowman of Ogdensburg, New York United States was born on September 30, 1889 in Oswegatchie, and died at age 99 years old on March 23, 1989.
Family, friend, or fan, this family history biography is for you to remember Diane Wawrzyniak .
Nettie Mccormick of Fort White, Columbia County, Florida was born on September 15, 1886, and died at age 89 years old in October 1975.
William Henry Mccormick of Newtown Australia was born in 1858 in Newtown. Family, friend, or fan, this family history biography is for you to remember William Henry Mccormick.
Kathleen Mccormick of Montgomery, Orange County, NY was born on October 5, 1897 to Hugh Mcneile Mccormick and Elizabeth Mart Craig Mccormick. She had siblings Elizabeth France Mccormick and Craig McCormick. Kathleen Mccormick died at age 77 years old in February 1975.
Joan Paula (McCormick) Gering was born in 1935, and died at age 86 years old in 2021. Family, friend, or fan, this family history biography is for you to remember Joan Gering.
Michael G Mccormick
Michael G Mccormick of Phoenixville, Chester County, PA was born on November 8, 1965, and died at age 38 years old on July 28, 2004.
Lois Madgie Tollison McCormick
Lois Madgie Tollison Mccormick was born on October 27, 1934. Family, friend, or fan, this family history biography is for you to remember Lois Madgie Tollison McCormick.
Sarah Ann McCormick of Altus, Arkansas United States was born on August 15, 2002 to Willie Harold Mccormick. Family, friend, or fan, this family history biography is for you to remember Sarah Ann McCormick .
Willie Harold Mccormick of Altus, Franklin County, Arkansas was born on September 28, 1933, and died at age 77 years old on May 15, 2011.
Walter M Mccormick of Sandston, Henrico County, VA was born on February 7, 1924, and died at age 81 years old on October 10, 2005. Walter Mccormick was buried on October 13, 2005 at Washington Memorial Park 6217 Memorial Dr, in Sandston.
Ralph L Mccormick of Sandston, Henrico County, VA was born on January 14, 1922, and died at age 86 years old on August 14, 2008. Ralph Mccormick was buried circa August 17, 2008 at Washington Memorial Park 6217 Memorial Dr, in Sandston.
David v. Mccormick
David V Mccormick of Grand Prairie, Dallas County, Texas was born on July 31, 1939. David Mccormick was married to Cassa J. (Dennis) Mccormick on November 14, 1980 in Wichita County, TX, and died at age 40 years old in July 1980.
James McCormick of Holyoke, MA was born in 1869, and died at age 70 years old in 1939 in Holyoke, Hampden County.

Popular McCormick Biographies

Julia Jarrells McCormick
Julia Jarrells Mccormick was born on January 15, 1885. Family, friend, or fan, this family history biography is for you to remember Julia Jarrells McCormick.
William McCormick
Family, friend, or fan, this family history biography is for you to remember William McCormick.
Tina was a Wild free spirit. Like everyone she had her up and downs but she wore a smile where ever she went. she lived with her father Fred McCormick. While in ELEM she lived with her father and wicked step mother Lula McCormick(webb). and two half siblings under the age of 6, Miach and David before the divorce. She then lived with her father and his current wife Amber McCormick until she was 18 and moved out. She was fondly close to two of her other half Siblings, Destry McCormick and Kiara Hairston McCormick. She was engaged to Chris Douglas before her passing. Tina was a bright and happy soul. Just as bright as she shined she had some inner demons that she battled with everyday. though the lord took his angel back early, she was a joy to have on earth. she will be loved and missed dearly. May heaven be filled with her laughter and her warm smiles as she lives within our hearts.
Craig Mccormick was born in 1902 at Co. Down, Irlenad. Family, friend, or fan, this family history biography is for you to remember Craig McCormick.
Fred Damer Mccormick
Family, friend, or fan, this family history biography is for you to remember Fred Damer Mccormick.
I was Curtis' principal at Felicity-Franklin High School. Curtis died, in a car accident, before he could be graduated. He was beloved by his peers, teachers, and counselor.
Hugh Mcneile Mccormick of Box Hill Australia was born to William McCormick and Ellen Johnson. Hugh Mccormick married Elizabeth Mart Craig Mccormick, and has children Kathleen McCormick, Elizabeth France Mccormick, and Craig McCormick. Family, friend, or fan, this family history biography is for you to remember Hugh Mcneile Mccormick.
Elizabeth France Mccormick of Box Hill Australia was born in 1897, and died at age 77 years old in 1974 in Box Hill.
Jane (White) Mccormick of Chowchilla, Madera County, CA was born on March 9, 1935, and died at age 59 years old on June 8, 1994.
Margaret (Swessel) McCormick was born in September 1949 in Louisville, Jefferson County, Kentucky United States, and died in Louisville. Family, friend, or fan, this family history biography is for you to remember Margaret (Swessel) McCormick.
She married Howard McCormick .They had 3 children Donald Ronald & April Rose whom is my mother
April Rose (McCormick) Bailey was born on May 27, 1947. Family, friend, or fan, this family history biography is for you to remember April Rose (McCormick) Bailey.
Family, friend, or fan, this family history biography is for you to remember Alan McCormick.
Michael Mccormick was born in 1949 at kennett,mo.. Family, friend, or fan, this family history biography is for you to remember Michael Mccormick.
Gaye McCormick was married to Alan McCormick. Family, friend, or fan, this family history biography is for you to remember Gaye McCormick.
Kevin Gregory McCormick was born on February 25, 1997 in West Chester, Chester County, Pennsylvania United States to Caroline Barbara McCormick and Nicholas Henry McCormick, and has siblings Caeley Margaret McCormick and Daniel Patrick McCormick. Family, friend, or fan, this family history biography is for you to remember Kevin Gregory McCormick.

McCormick Death Records & Life Expectancy

The average age of a McCormick family member is 72.0 years old according to our database of 25,118 people with the last name McCormick that have a birth and death date listed.

Life Expectancy

72.0 years

Oldest McCormicks

These are the longest-lived members of the McCormick family on AncientFaces.

Jessie Mccormick was born on December 25, 1881, and died at age 109 years old on July 16, 1991. Family, friend, or fan, this family history biography is for you to remember Jessie Mccormick.
109 years
Margaret A Mccormick of Chelmsford, Middlesex County, MA was born on August 14, 1880, and died at age 109 years old on December 3, 1989.
109 years
Nellie M Mccormick of Owosso, Shiawassee County, MI was born on May 22, 1880, and died at age 107 years old on January 15, 1988.
107 years
M Fern F Mccormick of Colorado Springs, El Paso County, CO was born on October 31, 1891, and died at age 108 years old on December 10, 1999.
108 years
Millie Alyne Mccormick of Dallas, Dallas County, Texas was born on July 28, 1903, and died at age 107 years old on March 23, 2011.
107 years
Irena B Mccormick of Charlottesville, Charlottesville City County, VA was born on September 13, 1886, and died at age 107 years old on March 24, 1994.
107 years
Jean I Mccormick of Smiths Creek, Saint Clair County, MI was born on November 13, 1902, and died at age 106 years old on June 7, 2009.
106 years
Glenn S Mccormick of Laguna Hills, Orange County, CA was born on May 30, 1898, and died at age 105 years old on January 22, 2004.
105 years
Montana Mccormick of Williamstown, Grant County, KY was born on February 1, 1882, and died at age 106 years old on April 7, 1988.
106 years
Mary M Mccormick of Webster City, Hamilton County, IA was born on December 5, 1890, and died at age 105 years old on January 16, 1996.
105 years
Helen Mccormick of Canoga Park, Los Angeles County, CA was born on April 1, 1901, and died at age 105 years old on August 24, 2006.
105 years
Eva Mccormick of Napa, Napa County, California was born on July 25, 1873, and died at age 105 years old in December 1978.
105 years
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We met on a double date and fell in love. But her goals were not my goals and she had family troubles that she could not solve. I promsed to come back to California but could not do so. It was a private affair May be for the best for both of us. If she had she would have been a very rich woman today.
History of Massac County
Chapter VIII.
Reminiscences
(By Joshua Copland)



Page 64-70
I was born in Sumner county, Tennessee, Nov. 27th, 1812, settled three miles southwest of Vienna, Johnson county, 1816. Indians came to my father's house on the old Wilkinsonville, Cape Girardeau and Kaskaskia trail. Wilkinsonville was the remains of a fort with no soldiers or houses. Graveyard hill stood near, an open field of sixty acres, was about one-half mile from the fort, which stood near the head of the upper dyke. In 1833, I moved near Sharp's Landing.
Among the old settlers were John W. Read, Jacob Kidd, Robert McCormick, Ebenezer and Jessie Simpson, the Lairds, Hamilton Mitchell, Mr. Boyles, James Kincaid, Benajiah Thompson. Read lived at Belgrade.
Hillerman was a village in 1835 named L.D. Hillerman, a river man, who purchased it of William Parker, and the latter went to New Orleans. Hats were made there.
Capt. Burt Sexton came to this county, 1837 and settled at Indian Point. Metropolis did not exist. There was Wilcox's ferryman cabin. D. May's father lived five miles out. Hardy Taylor lived under the bluff. Americus Smith lived four miles beyond New Colombia.
In 1854 rain fell June 14th, and no more fell until late in the fall. This was the "dry year."
I delivered my corn at Copland's Ferry (Joppa) and got a $1.20 a bushel. Wheat was 75 cents to $1.40 a bushel. Joppa had a store kept by Dick Venable for Sam Copland of Vienna.
There were bear, wolf, elk, deer, panther, otter and beaver. Near Tucker's Mills in Lower Massac, was an elk glade where an elk was killed in 1855, and a bear was killed by David Sherer at Indian Point.
I remember John Renfro, a Methodist preacher; Stephen Renfro, a protestant Methodist; Hezekiah West and William Stanley, also Methodists; William Standard, Presbyterian, and Peter Cartwright, the great pioneer Methodist preacher, dedicated the Methodist church at New Columbia. Numbers had the jerks, dancing mania, etc., at revivals in 1847, '48 and '49. Revs. Thomas Lopez, Jacob and Valentine Lingumgelter, Methodists, conducted these meetings, Rev. George W. Hughey came later.
William Humphreys, one mile from Hillerman, was called out of his house and killed in 1863. He was in good circumstances. Tracks showed three assassins; object robbery. J.R. Jones, keeping store at Fletcher's Landing, was also called, but his wife kept him in. Nathan Evans, father of Attorney H.A. Evans, was hanged by three robbers the same night until he gave up $211. Nobody was arrested.
Joseph P. Bowker was an early teach in the "50's." "Old Bethlehem" Methodist church and school house was used, built in 1845. Here in 1857 was fought a celebrated fist-fight between men on different sides of a debate. The decision was unsatisfactory. They fought until exhausted. No one was killed. I remember the old Cave Creek school house-a five cornered log, with dirt floor, stick chimney and split-poplar benches for seats. The first teacher was Elder Champion Wilson of near New Colombia. James Elliott succeeded him. The first schools were subscription schools.
Robert McCormick
Mr. McCormick was born in Davison county, Ky., Nov. 11, 1812. He moved to Illinois Jan. 1st, 1819. His father William, and mother, whose maiden name was Keziah Bennett, accompanied by George McCormick, William's father, and John McCormick, William's brother, and Alexander Douglas and their families, emigrated from Davison county, Tenn., in that early day on a flat boat, down the Cumberland river.
There was a little town where Smithland, Ky., stands, Joseph Daniels lived in a little log cabin where Paducah now is, and a family of negroes lived in a log cabin on the present site of Brooklyn, Ill. They landed at the site of Brooklyn. His father's family were, father and mother and children, Robert, Edmund and sister Jemina. The father, William McCormick, died in 1822, and the mother later. (This was twenty-one years before the organization of Massac county.) Edmund died in January, 1835, and Jemina is dead.
We moved near Unionville, Massac county, to a farm known as the Hamlet Ferguson farm, owned by a man of that name who lived at Hamlettsburg and it took his name.
With my uncle I visited Fort Massac about the time we came here, 1819. An embankment and ditch enclosed about an acre and strong log cabins at intervals with gates between were built around the walls of the fort. I went into an empty underground room about sixteen feet square in the east end of the fort in 1822. No guns or implements of war were there and no trees inside the fort. My grandfather, George McCormick cleared the land below the fort, cultivated it many times and died there in 1850. There was a cleared space of about five acres around the fort, traversed with gravel walks. The fort buildings soon burned down. There were no full-blooded Indians in Massac county in 1819, although many could be seen at Paducah.
Some men lived here who did nothing but hunt, among them John Simkins, who died near Bay City in the "50's." John Bennett, my mother's brother, was also a hunter, but did other work. A saddle of venison, the half with the hind-quarters, sold for three bits" (37 1/2 c.) Simkins often gave one deer to have another carried out of the woods for him. Wild turkeys were so abundant hunters never wasted ammunition on them but caught hundreds in turkey pens.
Many men wore buckskins suits. Women wore such clothes as they made at home, with carding, spinning, weaving and dyeing. The settlers tanned their own leather, made their own pegs, lasts and shoes. Some things were bought at Smithland and a village was at Golconda. Mr. Loroth kept a mixed store and Dr. Sims lived there.
Paths led from Fort Massac back into the country. Scarcely a wagon and no carriages were in the country. Sleds and wooden trucks were used to haul. Trucks had wheels sawed off a log. All houses were log, with puncheon floors. Some lumber was sawed for floors, lofts and doors with a whip-saw, on a scaffold about eight feet high, on which a log was placed. One man stood on the ground, the other on the log and could cut a 100 feet a day.
Reuben King or David Rossen built the first saw mill with water power on Seven Mile creek, at the Henly place. They also ground our corn. We raised no wheat. Before this we had to depend on horse power to grind our grain. It took a horse mill two hours to grind a bushel of corn. It was a rude contrivance. For motive power one or two horses were hitched to a long lever attached to an upright shaft in which were seven or eight arms extending outward about ten feet. In these were holes bored for pins, and a band worked around these pins, which could be tightened by moving the pins. The band passed over a trundle-head, which turned an iron shaft or spindle on which was fixed the upper mill-stone. In this way our corn was ground. We also used a hand-mill, a tin grater and pounder. The pounder was made of a solid log four or five feet high, sawed off square at the top and a fire built on the top-burning a hole to contain a peck of grain. Then a sweep was erected over it similar to the old well sweep. On the end of this sweep was made a wooden maul, to be pulled down upon the corn in the rude hopper by hand, the sweep raising it up each time until the corn was sufficiently pounded.
The hand mill was made by fixing up a small stone upon a steady platform, four feet high. Upon this stone an upper stone was fitted and held in place by frame work. To this upper stone a handle was fixed, and the stone turned by hand. The mill was operated by the right and fed by the left hand. A frame work steadied the mill. The meal descended through a miniature spout, and was sifted through a seive made of dried, deer skin, perforated. Biscuit were unknown. Corn bread was rough. The first wheat I ever saw was in 1822 on my grandfather's-George McCormick's-farm, near where Unionville now stands. There were about three acres, cut with a reap hook, a curved knife with saw teeth. The grain was grasped in one hand and cut while held, the reaper being in half recumbent position, advancing in a zig-zag line.
Only a few settlers lived here. Wesley Stubbs and family lived near Unionville. John Stubbs killed a deer on Sunday and John Bennett and George McCormick remarked in Wesley Stubbs' presence that they saw the deer killed, where-upon Wesley, a justice of the peace, issued a warrant for his kinsman Stubbs for breaking the Sabbath laws. Bennett and McCormick appeared as witnesses, but were forced to confess that they were also hunting, which accounted for their being in the woods. Each was fined $3.00.
Benjamin Tittsworth and family lived neighbors to Stubbs. Ebenezer Simpson, the leading citizen of the day, lived where New Liberty stood. John H. Smith and Reuben Smith lived near the mouth of "Big Bay."
Ebenezer Simpson was a shoemaker and married a "Weaver." Daniel McCawley put up the first horse mill in the county in the Black Bottom. James Kincaid, a good man, was also a resident of the Black Bottom. Adijah ("Bige") Dyer, was the famous pioneer hunter and trapper. Solomon Lytton came soon after my father. His sons, Barnett and Solomon, are residents of Massac county. Reuben King was a pioneer blacksmith and lived on the same farm where he died about five miles northeast of Metropolis. John Dye's father, William, was King's neighbor, also Chester Hankins, and a family named Fox, a relative of Lytton's.
Wesley Stubbs, the justice, was a preacher, I think a Methodist. No churches were in the county, and when any one was called to preach a meeting was held at a house selected for the occasion. John Lamar was an old pioneer reared by a family named Sisk.
My sister, Jemina, married Elijah Smith in 1836, near where Brooklyn now is. I obtained the license in Golconda. They were the parents of Judge R.N. Smith.
We had no school houses. My first teacher was a Mr. Haskins, who taught near the site of New Liberty, 1825. Eli Fletcher, an Indian teacher, also taught in an early day. Numbers enlisted for the Black Hawk war, but saw no service.
I remember Belgrade had two or three families of bad reputation for counterfeiting. Henry Toulson bought them out. The Turners lived on what is now my farm and they were counterfeiters.
I was married to Elizabeth Hagar in 1836. Esquire Soloman Lytton, Sr., performed the ceremony at my home on the Brooklyn road. I had bought so many marriage licenses of John Raum, the clerk of Pope county, that I told him when I got my own he ought to make a reduction and sure enough he did. By saving my pennies I have managed to do fairly well. Soon after my marriage a free-negro minister, Methodist, came to the county. He was a better preacher that the Rev. Stubbs.
HON. T.B. HICKS' REMINISCENCES
My father moved to Metropolis, December, 1842, when there were probably a dozen houses, the most of them log. John H. Wilcox, who owned and operated the ferry; Joseph Becker, Maurice Van, John W. Carmichael, a man named Booth and a German named Benchi, lived there then. Benchi had three grown sons, James, Thomas, and Andrew, and two grown daughters, Rachel and Jane. Benchi kept a small general store. Mr. Wilcox also kept a store in the old brick hotel, built in 1839, and destroyed by the water and storm, 1884. A Mr. Hudson and Mr. Tony also lived here.
Metropolis was laid out as a city April 18, 1839. Paducah was then a small village. Two families lived at Belgrade, three miles above Metropolis on the Ohio river. The heads of both families were widows-Mesdames Rich and Gifford. The latter had two of the prettiest "gals" that ever fished in the Ohio river.
There was not a two horse wagon in the county. Ox teams did the hauling and the ox wagons could be heard to squeak two miles. Whatever was bought, no cash was considered in the transaction, but was to be paid in trade at trade rates. An ordinary cow could be bought for $5.00 in trade and the best cow for $8.00. The best horse brought $40, while pork sold at 1 1/2 cents a pound. No wheat was raised. Corn was worth from 10 to 12 cents a bushel. Coffee could be had at 10 cents and sugar was cheap. Eggs bought 3 cents a dozen and butter 10 cents a pound. Domestics sold for 25 cents a yard, calico, 15 to 20 cents. Every house had its loom and every housewife manufactured what the family wore. The largest piece of open farm land contained less than thirty acres. Only one frame house was in the county and stood where Elliott's furniture store now stands.
Dr. Padgett was the first physician I remember. Drs. A. M.L. McBane and John Hanna came soon after.
One of the first preachers of this county was D. Lopez, and he was one of the ablest pioneer preachers who ever occupied a pulpit. Thos. L. Garrett of Kentucky, an early Baptist minister, father of the Garrett brothers of Paducah, preached one sermon in particular, I distinctly remember. Services were conducted in a frame building where the calaboose now stands. His text was, "Fear not little flock, for it is your Father's good pleasure to give you the kingdom." The elder did full justice to the text. The first Methodist preacher I remember was a Rev. Covington.




On to Chapter IX
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