Lineage


The Thompson · Hoffmann · Kipp Book

James Kipp of Tennessee

The deepest provable date.
1810 — 1875
Sourced fact

James Kipp was born on January 14, 1810, in Fentress County, Tennessee.1 This is the earliest date for which a primary genealogical record survives in the family's own keeping.

Sourced fact

He married Nancy Jane Glayebrooks (the records use that spelling; the binder writes "Nancy Jane Glaybrook"), born April 18, 1818, in Virginia.2 The binder records the marriage date as January 28, 1836.3

Sourced fact

They raised five sons: John A. (b. February 18, 1837), Pleasant DoC (b. February 13, 1839), Alvin Kalo (b. March 8, 1841 — through whom this descent line runs), James K.P. (b. June 5, 1844), and William O.B. (b. June 29, 1848).4

Sourced fact

In 1857, James Kipp moved the entire household from Tennessee to Metcalfe County, Kentucky — roughly 130 miles north — settling near Edmonton.5 He died in 1875. The exact place of his death is not recorded in this archive.6

Historical context

The Tennessee that James Kipp was born into was a state only fourteen years old; the United States itself was thirty-four years old, with a population of seven million. Fentress County, where he was born, had been organized only in 1823 — so for his first thirteen years he was technically born in a county that did not yet have its name. Family lore preserved in the binder says the Kipps had come down from West Virginia; the binder's author wrote, "as far as it is possible to trace back, our paternal forefathers first lived in West Virginia." That deeper claim is family memory, not a record, and is treated here as context rather than as a sourced fact.7

Historical context

On the spelling. The family Bible — photographs of which are in the binder — recorded the surname as Knip. By the 1900s, written records were settling on Knipp. The form Kipp, used in the prose of these chapters, is a 20th-century family preference. All three appear in the surviving record; they are the same family.8

Author's framing

Of the five sons, the binder follows only Alvin Kalo's descendants in detail. The other four — John, Pleasant, James K.P., William — have their own branches in the wider Kipp tree, which this chapter does not attempt to follow. The Tennessee Kipps are a much larger family than the page Benjamin descends from.

How this chapter was made
Method: AI-drafted under editorial review · AI involved: Claude (Anthropic), via Cowork mode · Author: Benjamin Thompson · Reviewed by: Benjamin Thompson · Reviewed: 5/17/2026
Drafted by Claude (Anthropic) from the Ancestry GEDCOM export and the 70-page Knipp/Hofmann binder. Specific son names and birth dates come from the binder's typed register; primary birth/death dates come from the GEDCOM where present. Where the two sources disagree on spelling (Glayebrooks vs. Glaybrook, Knipp vs. Knip), both are noted.
Paragraphs are tagged at the left margin: FACT = sourced and cited; CONTEXT = general historical background; AUTHORIAL = the writer's framing, not a factual claim. Numbered superscripts link to the citations at the bottom of the page.

Artifacts

Photos, scans, and documents that back this chapter. Each carries a SHA256 fingerprint so the file can be independently verified as unchanged since upload, and a short code — the tiny adjective-noun pair below each card — for compact reference (e.g. lineage.sent.li/a/sage-pine).

pdf
descendants-of-alvin-kalo-knipp-family-binder.pdf
Click to open
The 70-page family binder previously cited 44 times across the chapters but never with an attached binary. 26.6 MB scanned PDF; SHA256 087749c8…03a9365. Source title: "Descendants of Alvin Kalo Knipp — the 70-page family binder." Uploaded via temp-GitHub-branch source_url because the PDF exceeds Vercel's direct-multipart body limit but fits Supabase's project-level upload ceiling.
From Descendants of Alvin Kalo Knipp — the 70-page family binder
SHA256: 087749c8…3a9365 · 25.4 MB · uploaded 5/18/2026
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