Now that we've outlined research plans for 2026, it's time to launch into our January focus. Selected for the first of my Twelve Most Wanted for this year is an ancestor with an admittedly plain name: John Carter. Fortunately, there are additional details to help fix him within time and place. My fifth great-grandfather was born in the early 1700s in colonial Virginia and died there about 1783. Fortunately he left, as a family history road map, a will—and, thankfully, a codicil in 1783, adding baby of the family Elizabeth Matilda Carter to her father's written wishes, as well as helping pinpoint his own actual date of death.
Admittedly, I haven't done much family history research on this particular ancestor. I last explored his relationship two years ago, when I was seeking further information on his daughter, Margaret Chew Carter, wife of Zachariah Taliaferro. As it turned out, there were plenty of errors out there in printed material to lead even those with the best of intentions astray. And it also became apparent that Margaret had multiple siblings, especially sisters, thanks to her father's three marriages.
The fact that my fourth great-grandmother, John's daughter Margaret Chew Carter, had so many sisters may turn out to be helpful in solving a research problem: determining which line of descent leads to which of John Carter's wives. For such a question, I've already gotten a jump on this January research project by building out the collateral lines of this Carter family, specifically seeking to document the daughters of these Carter daughters. We'll explore how this may be helpful as we delve into more detail about John Carter in tomorrow's post.