Jeff found a lineage of Alex Murdaugh’s mother Elizabeth “Libby” (Alexander) Murdaugh (b. 1939) on FamilySearch (this profile, which had repeated the hoax of her death, has since been deleted , but we will summarize the sources below, and the profiles of her parents remain). Jeff found Libby’s great-great-grandparents: Stephen/Stevens and Nancy (Ripley) Simmons were a couple that married at Swansea, Massachusetts in 1810 and moved to Charleston, South Carolina, with purported descents to the Alden, Bradford, Brewster, Mullins, and Warren families on the Mayflower!
Nancy Ripley6 (Margaret5 Bradford, Abner4, Israel3, William2, William1) appears in our Mayflower AncestTREES database as a sixth generation Bradford descendant, with additional descents to the Alden, Brewster, Mullins, and Warren families. Stevens Simmons was born at Kingston, Massachusetts, 21 February 1787, son of Noah and Molly Simmons, and Noah Simmons6 (Hopestill Stetson5, Abigail4 Brewster, Wrestling3, Love2, William1) is in our Mayflower AncesTREES database as a sixth generation Brewster descendant. Descendants of six of Noah’s other children have joined the Mayflower Society.1
Stevens Simmons of Somerset married Nancy Ripley of Swansea on 22 March 1810 (Nancy’s father Calvin Ripley was enumerated in the 1800 census in Kingston, but had moved to Swansea by the 1810 census where he was recorded). There is a “Stephen Simmons” enumerated at Somerset, Bristol County, Massachusetts in 1820, in a household consisting of one male and one female aged 26 through 44, and three males and two females under ten, although no births of any children of Stephen Simmons are found in Somerset Vital Records during this period. Noah Simmons of Kingston left a fairly detailed will dated 13 May 1824 , and while Noah leaves land to his other sons (as well as grandsons of deceased children), he leaves his son Stevens Simmons one hundred dollars, to be paid out twelve months after the death of Noah’s widow. This language could mean that Stevens Simmons had left the area.
Okay, so Stevens/Stephen and Nancy (Ripley) Simmons married in 1810, were possibly still in Massachusetts in 1820, but were out of state by 1824. Were they the couple that went to Charleston, South Carolina?
Stevens/Stephen Simmons frequently uses the title “Captain,” and appears in Charleston newspapers with the first name Stephen or Stevens somewhat interchangeably. The earliest reference to him we have found in Charleston was a list of people who had letters remaining at the Charleston post office on 1 February 1824, as “ capt Stevens Simmons .” In 1830, “ Capt. Stephen Simmons ” was living at 3 Water Street in Charleston (I walked right by this house when I was in Charleston last year!). On 8 October 1834, an announcement was made for “friends and acquaintances of Mr. Zenas and Mr. Stephen Simmons, are requested to attend the Funeral of the former, from his late residence …” While Zenas is not directly indicated as a son of Stephen, it is worth it to note that Nancy (Ripley) Simmons had a brother named Zenas Ripley.
Jeff and I have identified four other children of Stephen/Stevens and Nancy with specific information of note, summarized below:
While migrations from New England to the South were not particularly common in the early nineteenth century, they certainly did occur. Capt. Stevens/Stephen and Nancy (Ripley) Simmons either moved to South Carolina right after their marriage in 1810, or within a decade or so. The below chart outlines the five Mayflower descents (with passengers in bold) of the Murdaugh family of South Carolina, followed by sources for the last five generations. More information about the Simmons family of Charleston is certainly welcome!
Sources: Gravestones of J.C. Alexander and Sarah Elizabeth Alexander (with linked images of Joseph’s obituary and death certificate); Biographical Directory of the South Carolina Senate, 1776-1985 (Columbia, S.C.: Univ. S.C. Press, 1986), 46 (biography of Joseph Carson Alexander, who served as a private in the Greenville Regiment for the Confederacy in the Civil War, and later in the South Carolina State Senate); gravestones of Richard Henry and Emma Elizabeth (Knox) Alexander; Death Certificates of Richard H. Alexander and Emma Knox Alexander; gravestones of Milton Donald Alexander and Nelle Jones Alexander Arant (and linked obituary); engagement announcement of Milton Donald Alexander and Nelle Blanche Jones; 1950 Census entry of Elizabeth J. Alexander ; marriage announcement of Elizabeth Jones Alexander and Randolph Murdaugh III; gravestones of Randolph Murdaugh III, Maggie Murdaugh and Paul Murdaugh (and linked obituaries).
1 There was also a Stephen Simmons, born at Dighton, Massachusetts, 15 October 1785, son of Seth and Abigail (Brown) Simmons, who married Nancy Hix at Rehoboth, Massachusetts, in May 1813, with the marriage record describing both of them as both from Rehoboth. This Stephen likely died young, as Nancy married Nathan Bowen at Rehoboth on 19 March 1825 . A findagrave memorial for this Stephen has his death given as May 1823 but also indicated as between 1823 and before 1825. Some online trees have confused this Stephen with Capt. Stevens/Stephen Simmons of Massachusetts and South Carolina.
2 There may have been a second Capt. Stephen Simmons of Charleston, or Margaret’s marriage notice is in error regarding her father as deceased in 1848, as a funeral notice for Capt. Stephen Simmons of Charleston appears on 6 September 1852 .