about 1709, (of) Essex, Virginia, British Colonial America
Above is just a quick reference to the couple, as entered on Family Search.
Below is web page linked, which is attached to Joseph Callaway, Jr., as a source:
A. D. Gedge pages on Rootsweb:
Callaway and Langhorne, etc. Rootsweb Page with Joseph Callaway Lineage
https://freepages.rootsweb.com/~adgedge/genealogy/ourresearch/aqwn68.htm#3448
Page was cited by researcher, Alice Gedge.
Of interest in this lineage:
Capt. Thomas Callaway (mentioned only, in a source, as brother of Col. William Callaway, son of Callaway and Browning).
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Some descendants, per research of others:
Currently attached in online family trees (wiki, with sourcing in progress)
not mentioned in Gedge page, but could be correct:
Captain Thomas S. Callaway (b. 1712 Essex Co., VA; died 1800, Jefferson, Ash Co., NC) is currently attached in the Callaway - Browning family group, as a son.
His wife is currently shown as Sarah Baker (marriage, 1735, Brunswick County, Virginia).
Next, currently added to the family group of Thomas S. Callaway and Sarah Baker, as a son (needs further research):
Thomas Callaway (1753-1819) + Jude Ann Farrar (m. 1768, Bedford, Virginia);
Next, currently added to the family group of Thomas Callaway + Jude Ann Farrar, as a son (needs further research):
Joseph Callaway (14 April 1779 – 28 October 1832) + Nancy Howard
Marriage: 24 Feb 1807, Wilkes County, North Carolina, United States
Joseph and Nancy, above, are currently entered as the parents of Nancy Elvira Callaway, Thomas Howard Callaway, Lucinda Frances Callaway, and Rebecca Callaway. There may be others.
Nancy Elvira Callaway married Charles C. Campbell and was the mother of Callaway Campbell, long-time resident of Murray County, Georgia. Thomas Howard Callaway, Nancy's brother, was president of the East Tennessee and Georgia Railroad. He moved from Monroe County, Tennessee, to Cleveland, Bradley County, Tennessee, briefly lived in Murray County, Georgia (where he helped his nephew, Callaway, start a farm), and then moved up to Polk County, Tennessee. His sister, Lucinda Frances Callaway, was the first wife of Dr. Pleasant John Graves Lea, of Tennessee, mentioned in the Myra Inman diary and in the Charles Campbell papers. P.J.G. Lea was killed in Missouri by marauders during the Civil War. The other sister, Rebecca, married a Donaho, and later, a Lea.
This is a quick clip from various sources. I have researched some of it personally – mainly Thomas H. Callaway and siblings. I cannot verify everything as entered in the tree, but the families appear in several old family histories – I pulled selected data and the link to the Rootsweb page to keep it as a reference..