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 Stephen Hart Website Hart GenForum   | Background Almost all the information on this website is
    extracted verbatim from "Joseph Hart and His Descendants," a genealogical record
    compiled by Rev. Charles Coffin Hart, published in 1901, and permanently on file at the
    Library of Congress in Washington, D.C. (LOC catalogue number CS 71 H326 1901). The book
    is a history of a family descended from a man known only as "Mr. Hart," who
    emigrated to the United States around 1735 in search of religious freedom. Mr. Hart's
    grandson Joseph, the primary subject of the book, served in the Army of the Revolution and
    was wounded in battle near Guilford Courthouse, South Carolina in 1777. After the war he
    moved from Loudon County, Virginia to Greene County, Virginia, and then to Maryville,
    Tennessee, seeking to live in an area where slavery was not tolerated. Joseph Hart
    believed that human slavery was "a wrong to his fellow-man, and therefore a sin
    against God." When slave owners entered East Tennessee, Joseph and his family left
    Maryville and moved to the wilderness around Columbus, Indiana. The Harts were devout
    Presbyterians, and Joseph and a number of his descendants served as Presbyterian
    ministers. Rev. C. C. Hart's book is a tribute to a loving family in which Christian faith
    never wavered through the most challenging times. The book is also a personal history of
    some of the early settlers of the South and Midwest. 
 I visited
    the Library of Congress on February 24, 1996, specifically to find this book. I was
    somewhat familiar with the book, because at one time (and perhaps still) a copy of it was
    in the possession of my family. At the time of the death of my
    paternal  grandmother,
    Savannah Ora (Hill) Anderson in 1959, I learned about the existence of a so-called
    "Anderson family history," which, it turns out, the book really is not. It's a
    Hart family history, and my great grandfather James Anderson married into that family
    rather late. But he and my grandfather Frank Eagleton Anderson are mentioned
    in the book. I examined the book for the first time in the early
    1970's. It had been stored in my uncle Frank Hill Anderson's attic since my grandmother's
    death. I was so fascinated by the tales in the book that I made some notes detailing my
    genealogy, and I kept them for years in my wallet until the paper they were written on
    virtually disintegrated. I remember returning the book to my Uncle Hill after I made the
    notes, and what happened to the book after it was in my possession is unclear to me. Maybe
    another cousin borrowed it -- I don't know. I am confident, however, that our Uncle Sam
    will not misplace his copy.  If you want to read the book in its original form,
    go to Washington and look it up. Believe me, you'll enjoy your visit to the Library of
    Congress. The book is stored in the Library's Jefferson Building, one of the most
    magnificent edifices in the world. The book's a handsome old volume, cloth-bound in
    two-tone brown with gold lettering on the cover. Inside the front cover is the photograph
    of Rev. C. C. Hart shown above, in which he appears for all the world to be the stern
    Presbyterian preacher that he must have been. The book is holding up well; only a few
    pages are crumbling. The book cannot be removed from the Library of Congress, for which I
    am thankful. I was permitted to make a Xerox copy, though, and I have scanned that copy to
    produce this website. I hope you enjoy reading it at least half as much as I've enjoyed
    creating it. Bill Anderson
 Washington, DC
 
       billanderson601@yahoo.com    
 
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