YourRoots by Genomelink
banner

Sign up to explore more

Create a free account to navigate family trees, view ancestors, and discover connections.

Clark Powers Rogers 1800–1842 – Genealogical Records

Birth Date: 1800-03

Birth Location: Buncombe County, North Carolina

Death Date: 1842-50

Death Location: Welches, Macon, North Carolina, United States

Father: Hugh REV

Mother: Nancy Thornton

Spouse(s):

Children(s):

In 1800, Clark Powers Rogers entered the world in Buncombe County, North Carolina, born to Hugh Willard Rogers Sr Rev And Nancy Augusta Thornton. Clark Powers Rogers passed away in 1842 in Welches, Macon, North Carolina, United States.

Find more search results for Clark Rogers
CR

Reliability Score

This score reflects the reliability of the source family tree. A high rating indicates a trustworthy source with strong data consistency.

Reliability Score:
B
Criteria:
  • A 3 criteria (Strong)
  • B 2 criteria (Medium)
  • C 1 criteria (Basic)
  • N/A 0 criteria (Insufficient)

This tree's reliability score:

  • Record available
  • Descendant's record available
  • Star tree owner

Biography

  • In 1800, Clark Powers Rogers entered the world in Buncombe County, North Carolina, born to Hugh Willard Rogers Sr Rev And Nancy Augusta Thornton.
  • Clark Powers Rogers passed away in 1842 in Welches, Macon, North Carolina, United States.

Immediate Family

Parents

Spouses(s)

Children(s)

Clark Rogers's Ancestors

Self
Clark Rogers
1800–1842
Birth Place: Buncombe County, North Carolina
Parents
Hugh Willard Rogers Sr REV
1760–1848
Philadelphia, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Nancy (Augusta) Thornton
1763–1843
Mecklenburg, North Carolina
Grandparents
Robert (David Rogers) Sr.
1741–1819
Rathone, County Mayo, Ireland
Francis (Jackson) Russell
1744–1828
Cork Ireland
Great-Grandparents
Robert ROGERS
2nd-Great-Grandparents

Clark Rogers's Timeline

2 Records

1800
1800-03
Birth of Clark Powers Rogers in Buncombe County, North Carolina
Buncombe County, North Carolina
1842
1842-50
Age 42
Death of Clark Powers Rogers in Welches, Macon, North Carolina, United States
Welches, Macon, North Carolina, United States

Sources

    Genealogy Event 1
    Event Type: Birth
    Event Date: 1800-03
    Event Place: Buncombe County, North Carolina

    Genealogy Event 2
    Event Type: Death
    Event Date: 1842-50
    Event Place: Welches, Macon, North Carolina, United States

About YourRoots

Family Tree Map

Explore your family tree geographically

Import your GEDCOM file to transform your family tree into an interactive global map. See your roots laid out visually and understand your true geographic heritage.

Powerful tools like "Trace Back To Me" instantly map your family's migration paths from a chosen ancestor all the way back to you.

LEARN MORE
AI Genealogy Research

Discover ancestors beyond "end-of-line" automatically

Import your family tree and let AI expand it for you. AI Ancestor Finder scans "end-of-line" ancestors to uncover their parents across hundreds of family lines at once. AI Deep Research analyzes selected ancestors and family clusters, suggesting relevant records and next steps.

Turn on Auto Research Mode to get new discoveries daily or weekly, so your tree keeps growing even while you're away.

LEARN MORE
DNA Match

Find more DNA matches across all DNA tests

Combine your DNA data with your family tree to unlock the full power of YourRoots DNA Match. Connect with relatives across major testing services — Ancestry, 23andMe, MyHeritage, and more.

View your matches' maps and trees to identify shared ancestors, and soon you'll be able to add them directly to your own tree and map.

LEARN MORE
Ancestry Reports

Ancestry DNA analysis that goes deeper than others

Unlock exclusive reports that reveal your deeper origins.

  • Deep Ancestry Report — Analyze 130+ ethnicities, sub-regions, and 1,800+ communities in one detailed view.
  • Global & Native American Reports — Developed with Stanford researchers to uncover hidden ancestries across all 22 chromosomes.
  • Ancient DNA Series — Compare your DNA with 1,000+ ancient genomes from Viking, Celtic, and early American civilizations.
LEARN MORE