William M. Whaley (1789-1880)
N 35° 52.127 W 083° 33.922
17S E 268382 N 3972434
A member of the family which established the Baptist Churches in the area.
Waymark Code: WM11R2
Location: Tennessee, United States
Date Posted: 12/17/2006
Views: 46
One of the many volunteers of the War of 1812 which earned Tennessee its nickname, William Whaley came to Sevier County in 1810. A farmer and later Baptist Minister, Whaley married in 1811 Mary Ann Ogle (1793-1880) A resident of the White Oak Flats area, now known as Gatlinburg, Miss Ogle was the daughter of William Ogle (1756-1803) and Martha Huskey Ogle (1760-1826), who chartered White Oak Flats Baptist Church with the Whaley's and others in 1817 to become an arm of the "Church in the Forks." The Whaley's in 1830 settled in Greebriar along the banks of the Middle Prong of the Little Pigeon River near the current boundary of the Great Smoky Mountains National Park. Their ten sons and five daughters produced many descendants of Sevier County.
Marker Name: William M. Whaley
Marker Location: City
Type of Marker: Person
Marker Number: March 7, 1986
Group(s) Responsible for placing Marker: Sevier Museum of History and Art
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