, one of Emmons's children Emmons's daughter Louisa Charlotte married Francis Webb, a free black man in Pennsylvania, and was the mother of
Frank J. Webb, an American novelist who wrote
The Garies and Their Friends (1857), the second novel by an African American to be published. Emmons's son, John Pierre Burr, married Hester (Hetty) Elizabeth Emery and was very active in the abolitionist movement. An organizer of the
Pennsylvania Anti-Slavery Society, John Pierre operated a barbershop that became a station on the
Underground Railroad. Aaron Burr never acknowledged the fact that he had a relationship or children with Emmons during his lifetime – nor did he mention his children with Emmons in his will, even though he did mention two of his other illegitimate children in it. Additionally, the death certificates of both Louisa Ann and John Pierre both leave the slots for "Mother" and "Father" blank. However, according to a descendant of Burr and Emmons, historian Dr. Allen Ballard, Emmons married Burr shortly after his first wife Theodosia's death, which would have legitimized their two children. == Legacy ==