The
Trivettes of
This website is copyrighted 2004
||||| Introduction |||||
The Earliest
Trivettes ||||| North
Carolina Political Boundaries ||||| Whose Child Is Whose?
|||||
||||| How Do You Spell
Trivette? ||||| Sorting Out
the William Trivettes ||||| Trivettes in the Civil War |||||
||||| Descendants of John and Richard Trivette ||||| What Was It Like
As An Early Trivette? |||||
|||| What
Happened To Nathaniel C. Tribet?
|||| Works Cited
||||
Introduction
This website is about John and Richard Trivette and their
direct descendants. John and Richard
were brothers who came to
I qualify my discussions to North Carolina Trivettes because
there are certainly Trivettes in
I also discuss what I know and don’t know about the spelling of the Trivette name since there have been numerous variations over the years. Whenever I refer to the Trivette name in general, I spell it Trivette. Whenever I refer to an individual or family mentioned in documentation, such as the U.S. Census, I provide the spelling used in that instance.
Almost all of the information provided on this website was taken from publicly available documents. The exceptions are the Levi Trivitt family bible, the Nora Trivette Smith letter, and one or two private, personal conversations which I note as such. One other is the South Fork Baptist Church minutes. While they were microfilmed by the North Carolina State Division of Archives and History and the microfilm is housed there, it cannot be viewed without written permission of South Fork Church. The administration of such materials by the state is governed by North Carolina statute. Of the publicly available information, the large majority of it comes from the United States census. For Americans whose ancestors were here as early as 1790, the year of the first federal census, it is probably the single most important source of genealogical information. This website would not have been possible without it. The census also contains many errors, some due to careless enumerators and some due to illiterate reporting populations, as the earlier Trivettes largely were.
Throughout this website there are numbers shown in parentheses. These identify the source of the preceding information and are detailed in the Works Cited section.
Finally, a critical part of my ability to produce this site was my local public library. I live in a medium-size city and there is a genealogy room at my nearest branch with microfilm readers, all census microfilm, many books, and access to subscription genealogy websites such as ancestry.com and heritagequest.com. They also have several wonderful people who work there who know a lot more than I do and are very helpful. I have benefited greatly from that facility and those people.
It is my uneducated guess that 90% of the people who have ever walked the face of this earth have no written record of their existence and no living person with memories of them. From the perspective of history, it’s as if they never existed. Don’t let that happen to your family. The choice is yours.
I have formally copyrighted this website. While history itself cannot be copyrighted, there are parts herein that are applicable to copyright statutes. I hope you will find this site informative and perhaps even use it as a basis for your own research. If you have comments on this website or additional information on the Trivettes, please contact me at trivettehistory@yahoo.com.