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Appendix XIV
The
Jackson Mountaineers
by
Dr. John F. Duckworth, DVM
with
Charles Ferdinand Carson, Jr.
Introductory Notes
Genealogy is said to be only second in numbers to Stamp Collection as
a hobby. Since childhood, "kin folks" has been an interest to
me. My father and Mother lived with Francis Marion Duckworth, Uncle Frank,
a number of years and he passed on to them much early history of the family.
And much of this history was passed on to me. All of which increased my
desire to know more about my ancestors.
About 1953 a serious research and study was begun. About all of my ancestors,
Duckworth, Jackson, Noblet, Goforth, Spivey, Collins, Sullivan, Williamson,
Cook, came from Burke and/or Rutherford Counties, North Carolina, to Georgia.
Unfortunately many of the County Records have been lost or never existed
and those records that existed were studied carefully and notes made of
all pertaining to my family. Also, contact was made with numerous older
people in search of information on my relatives. Where available, Church
Records were examined.
In this search and study I find these people were mostly farmers and very
much interested in Church attendance and education. The majority lived
comfortably, none were rich or beggars.
The internet contains much information on ancestors and some of it is
interesting and correct. But there is so much there that is guess work
and often inaccurate that one must be careful in accepting any of it as
fact. I am thankful that my research was nearly completed before the internet
appeared.
In 2001 I had a very severe stroke which has left me with a paralyzed
right leg and arm. Now, what to do with the notes on the Jackson Family?
I was not able to turn them into a readable form and just kept thinking
as what to do with them. Then one day while conversing with Ferd Carson
I told him of my problem and he volunteered to review the material and
see what could be done. He said it was a shame to let this data go unpublished
as it might be of value to others.
I then began sending Ferd my Jackson files and he has worked earnestly
with them and I believe others will find them valuable in their study
of the Jackson Family.
Now, what to do with all this information? There are many people now and
later who will be searching for their ancestors. It has been a problem
as what to do with or where to deposit this study. It seems publishing
it in book form and depositing the books in State Archives, Libraries,
and making them available to interested relatives is best.
Happy ancestor hunting and good luck.
John F. Duckworth
How to Read This Book
This book may be read from front to back, like any other book, or it may
be used as a reference work, in which case the index will be helpful.
Because of Dr. Duckworth’s careful, pre-internet research, this
book is probably more accurate than many genealogical studies being produced
today.
This book is divided into chapters. If we consider that Nathan Jackson
is the first generation, then Nathan Jackson, his son Edward (second generation),
and each of Edward’s children (third generation) are the subjects
of chapters. Within the chapters, sections about members of the fourth
generation are headed by bold print in the center of the page, and within
those sections, members of the fifth generation are noted by bold print
at the left margin.
Whatever information, if any, is known about the life of each individual
is presented in one or more paragraphs. After the paragraph is a list
of the individual’s children, usually in birth order. Following
the list are paragraphs containing whatever is known about the children,
each followed by a list of his or her children, and so on.
Names may have a variety of spellings, and I’ve often noted several
of the variations. It’s impossible to tell if the variations are
simply typographical or other errors, or if the spelling was not standardized
during the lifetime of the individual. I’ve noted alternate spellings
in parentheses.
Individuals were sometimes known by their formal, given names, and at
other times by a nickname. Wherever possible, I’ve noted nicknames
in quotation marks.
There are variations in some of the dates. It may sound odd, but an inscription
from a tombstone may give one date, an obituary another, a family Bible
a third, courthouse documents a fourth, and census records may have another
date – all for the same individual. However, dates for most individuals
are reasonably consistent from one source to another. So please don’t
be disturbed by small inconsistencies in dates and spelling.
Don’t overlook the References and the Index at the back of the book.
Enjoy!
Charles Ferdinand Carson
November 30. 2004
Chapter 1
Nathan Jackson
Nathan Jackson was probably born about 1730. Knowledgeable Jackson researchers
believe he was most likely born in Ireland, and they suspect he was the
brother or cousin of Charles Jackson who came to Rowan County, North Carolina
from Ireland and later went to Surry County, North Carolina. John and
William Jackson, also possible cousins or brothers, appeared in Surry
County about the same time.
Nathan was in Rowan County, North Carolina, by 1759, in an area that is
now southeastern Guilford County. The April 19, 1768 term of Rowan County
Court of Pleas and Quarter Sessions appointed Nathan Jackson “oversear
of the roade” from Peter Dick’s mill on Pole Cat Creek to
the county line. He was often called for jury duty.
In 1771, a Nathan Jackson and a number of others signed a petition seeking
the release of a prisoner, Jeremiah Field, who was involved in a riot
in Hillsboro, North Carolina, and it is possible that this was the same
Nathan Jackson.
Nathan Jackson appears on the 1773 Debtor List of Col. John McGee, a successful
merchant of an area which is present-day northeast Randolph County. Nathan
Jackson appears to have been illiterate.
Knowledgeable researchers say that Nathan Jackson was not related to the
Quaker Jackson family of Pennyslvania and Rowan County, nor was he part
of the Jackson family who came from Virginia into eastern North Carolina.
The name of Nathan’s wife is unknown, but we know that Nathan Jackson
had at least two sons, possibly three, of whom Edward Jackson was one.
The others may have been named John and Joseph Jackson.
Chapter
2
Edward Jackson
Edward Jackson, son of Nathan Jackson, was born ca. 1746 – 1752.
“Edward, son of Nathan Jackson,” is named in the tax rolls
of Rowan County, North Carolina, adjacent to present-day southeastern
Guilford County.
Some researchers say Edward Jackson was a member of the Sandy Creek Baptist
Church in Rowan County (now Randolph County), North Carolina, although
there is no evidence that he was a member of Sandy Creek or any other
church. If he had any religious affiliation, he was probably a member
of Centre Friends Meeting – it’s several miles closer to Peter
Dicks’ Mill. Like his father, Edward Jackson appeared on the debtor
list of Col. John McGee. Although he was of the right age, there is no
record that Edward Jackson served in the Revolutionary War on either side,
nor was he involved with the Regulators. Similarly, there is no evidence
that he was a Quaker, although he was in the right place.
The Tenor of the Times
Whether or not Edward Jackson was a member of Sandy Creek Baptist Church,
we ought to mention something about that church here. It will help describe
the tenor of the times.
Reverend Shubal Stearns was a Baptist from Connecticut. He and his wife
came to Rowan County, North Carolina, in 1755 with six other couples,
and they founded Sandy Creek Baptist Church. By 1771, the church had grown
to 606 members. Many missionaries were sent from this church, and many
other churches trace their roots to Sandy Creek. The Regulators used the
church as their headquarters.
Who were the Regulators? The Regulators were a group of settlers who organized
to protect themselves from unfair taxation and harsh treatment by the
representatives of the royal governor, who governed from his palace in
New Bern, NC. The Regulators met the governor’s troops at the Battle
of Alamance on May 16, 1771. The Regulators were soundly defeated, and
fourteen of them were taken to Hillsborough for trial. The settlers rioted
to get the prisoners released, and that’s how Jeremiah Field (see
previous page) got himself arrested.
Shubal Stearns died in 1771. After his death and the defeat of the Regulators
in the same year, many of the settlers lost all hope for a better life
in Rowan County and moved further west. By year’s end, the membership
of Sandy Creek Baptist Church was back to sixteen. Nevertheless, this
little-known country church survived, and some consider it the mother
church of the Southern Baptist Convention.
The Move West
Edward Jackson, son of Nathan Jackson, went to Burke County, North Carolina
(now McDowell County), between 1782 and 1790 where he died about 1820.
He married Susannah, probably Susannah Chaffin, daughter of Joseph Chaffin.
Joseph Chaffin was the son of John Chaffin and his wife Mary. Edward Jackson
lived on Jackson Branch of Crooked Creek south of Old Fort.
On September 13, 1792, Edward Jackson bought 185 acres of land from Edward
Vance. He received a grant of thirty acres of land in Burke County, NC,
on August 24, 1802. On January 14, 1815, Edward Jackson deeded 187 acres
of land to Amos Jackson.
Edward Jackson’s children were:
- John Jackson
- Joseph Jackson
- Elias Jackson
- Eli Jackson
- Amos Jackson
- Azeriah Jackson
- Polly Jackson
- Peggy Jackson
- possibly one other daughter
Chapter 3
John Jackson and His Descendants
John Jackson, eldest son of Edward Jackson, was born about 1772 in Guilford
County, North Carolina. He married first about 1796. Altogether, he married
two or three times; one of his wives was named Susannah.
John Jackson lived in Burke County, North Carolina, but moved to Rutherford
County, North Carolina, before 1810. He lived in the Broad River section
of Rutherford (now Buncombe) County with his brothers and his sons. The
other Jacksons in Rutherford County were not related and they resided
in that part of Rutherford County that became Polk County.
John Jackson bought 115 acres of land from John Gilliland on March 1,
1797. In 1809, he sold this 115 acres to James Hase. On May 13, 1807,
Stephen Morgan sold John Jackson of Burke County, North Carolina, 150
acres In Rutherford Co., N.C., west of Stone Mountain, on both sides of
the Main Broad River including the mouth of Rock Creek for $300. On April
19, 1808, John Jackson of Rutherford County, N.C. sold this land to Harris
Gilliam. Strangely, Harris Gilliam waited 27 years to record this deed.
In 1809, John Jackson sold 115 acres to James Hase.
By 1810, John had a new wife who was born before 1765. Apparently, she
brought two daughters by a previous marriage into the household, but nothing
more is known of them.
John Jackson received 100 acres of land in Rutherford County on February
22, 1819, another 50 acres on January 7, 1820, another 100 acres on March
6, 1827, and another 100 acres on October 17, 1827. Apparently, John Jackson
was a “squatter” on the 50-acre tract before he had a legal
claim to it.
About 1838 -1840, John moved to Union County, Georgia, where he became
a member of Choestoe Baptist Church on August 3, 1840. He probably lived
with his son, William Marion Jackson. John Jackson died before 1843 in
Choestoe District, Union County, Georgia.
Children of John Jackson were:
- William Marion Jackson Sr.
- Susannah Jackson
- Brinkley Jackson
- Hardy Jackson
- Levi Jackson
- Sarah Jackson
- James Jackson
- Mary “Polly” Jackson
William Marion Jackson, Sr., and His Descendants
William Marion Jackson, Sr., son of John Jackson, was born about 1798
in Burke County, North Carolina. He married Nancy (Elizabeth?) Owenby
(Ownsby) Stanley (1794-1861) on December 23, 1814, in Rutherford County,
North Carolina. Arthur Owenby was bondsman for the marriage. The Census
Records indicate they lived in close proximity to both John and Joseph
Jackson.
Family tradition is that Nancy Owenby Stanley was a young widow with one
infant son when she married William Marion Jackson on December 23, 1814,
in Rutherford County, North Carolina. Her maiden name was Owenby. Nancy
was born in 1793-94 in North Carolina, so she was a few years older than
William, and she died in 1861 in Union County, Georgia. She was a granddaughter
of John Owenby and Nancy “Nanney” Porter and in all probability
the daughter of Ambrose Owenby and Elizabeth Henson, who were married
January 1, 1793.
William Marion Jackson, Sr and Nancy Owenby Stanley spent the first few
years of their marriage in Rutherford County, North Carolina.
In the early 1820's there was a rather large migration of families from
Burke and Rutherford Counties, North Carolina, to Habersham County, Georgia.
At the time of the 1827 Land Lottery, Joseph and Amos Jackson, sons of
Edward Jackson, drew land, and to qualify to draw land they had to have
been residents of Georgia for two years. By 1830 the following with known
family ties to Edward Jackson in Burke County, North Carolina, were in
Habersham County, Georgia: Jehile, Joseph, Sampson, William, and Amos
Jackson, Leason Spivey, and Amos and Joseph Chaffin. William Marion Jackson,
Sr., and Nancy Owenby Stanley were in Habersham County, Georgia, by 1830.
At the time of the 1832 Gold Land Lottery, Joseph, Jehiel and Sampson
Jackson were residents in Chastain's Company and William Jackson and Leason
Spivey were residents in Brock's Company, Habersham County, Georgia. Family
tradition says there were four Jackson brothers who moved from North Carolina
to Mount Yonah.
William Marion Jackson, Sr., and Nancy Owenby Stanley moved to Mount Yonah
in Habersham County (now Cleveland in White County), Georgia, by 1828,
and on to Union County, Georgia, by 1833. It is not known for certain
the year William Jackson moved into Union County from Habersham County,
but fragments of information indicate that he may have actually been in
the area prior to 1832. They settled on lot #158, Town Creek, north side,
"lower", Choestoe District, Union County, Georgia. This was
later known as "The Ben Collins Place". Their log house was
not removed until the mid 1980's. Union County, Georgia, was created in
1832 from Cherokee County Indian Lands of the Gold Land Lottery.
In 1850 they were neighbors to David Duckworth, Leason Spivey, William
Sullivan, Miles Goforth, John Noblet, and Aaron Wimpey. Several of the
children who were married lived near by, namely, Susannah, Kimsey, Jehile,
Marion, Rebecca, and Mira. The population of Union County in 1850 was
6,958 people in 1,141 families. Real estate was valued at $485,688.
William Marion Jackson, Sr., was said to be a politician who wore a shoe
on one foot and a moccasin on the other foot. The shoe was for the Whites
and the moccasin was for the Indians. A Spanish Oak stood over William’s
grave on the Souther Farm in Choestoe District. The slabs for his coffin
were said to be made out of a poplar tree, and were three inches thick
and were fastened together with locust pins. Even, the lid of his coffin
was fastened down with locust pins. This story has been wrongly attributed
to Andy Jackson instead of William.
The Baptist Church of Christ at Choestoe, Union County, Georgia, was organized
before 1834, the first date in The Church Book being September 5, 1834
and the earliest extant list of the membership was that of April 7, 1838.
Among the sixty-nine members on this list were John, Joseph, and William
Jackson. However, the minutes show that John Jackson was received by letter
March 8, 1840, and on "12 June 1841 in Conference, The Church, took
up the letter from Sister Church in North Carolina praying the exclusion
of Brother John Jackson and still retain him in fellowship.” Nancy
was listed as a member on the 1839 membership list.
William Marion Jackson, Sr., and Nancy Owenby Stanley were members of
the Choestoe Church at the time of their deaths. Both are buried at the
small cemetery at the forks of the road east of Old Liberty Baptist Church
and less than two miles west of their home on Town Creek. Miles Goforth,
the grandfather of Thomas Kimsey Jackson, is also buried there.
William Marion Jackson, Sr., died in Union County July 27, 1859.
Children of William Marion Jackson, Sr., and Nancy Owenby Stanley were:
- Rebecca Jackson (see below)
- Amelia Jackson (see below)
- Jehile (Jehial) Jackson (see below)
- Susannah Jackson (see below)
- Mary Mira Jackson (see below)
- Kimsey Jackson (see below)
- William Marion Jackson, Jr (see below)
- Andrew William Jackson (see below)
Rebecca Jackson
Rebecca Jackson, daughter of William Marion Jackson, Sr., and Nancy Owenby
Stanley, was born May 26, 1816. She married Johnathan Cook February 18,
1837, and they lived together in Arkaquah District in Union County, Georgia.
They died died at an old age and were buried at Old Liberty Baptist Church.
They raised 2 boys and 4 girls. Among their children was Nettie Cook who
married William Brown. Nettie and William lived and died on Gum Log (Creek?)
in Union County and raised a large family.
Amelia Jackson
Amelia Jackson, daughter of William Marion Jackson, Sr., and Nancy Owenby
Stanley, was born August 3, 1820. She married William Neely (Neally),
and they moved to Tennessee.
Jehile (Johile) Jackson
Jehile (Johile) Jackson, son of William Marion Jackson, Sr., and Nancy
Owenby Stanley, was “borned” June 9, 1822. On January 18,
1844, he married Jane Duckworth, daughter of Johnathan Duckworth. They
lived in Arkaquah District, Union County, Georgia, where they were members
of Choestoe Baptist Church. Jehile Jackson requested a letter of dismissal
from the church on June 11, 1859. They both died at an old age. They raised
a family of four boys and four girls.
Susannah “Sucy” Jackson
Susannah “Sucy” Jackson, daughter of William Marion Jackson,
Sr., and Nancy Owenby Stanley, was born about 1824. She married John Williamson
Duckworth, son of David Duckworth and Mary Williamson , and twin brother
of Johnathan Duckworth. Mary Williamson was a daughter of Charles Williamson,
a Revolutionary War soldier who was born in 1755 in Virginia and died
in 1849 in South Carolina. Susannah and John lived and died in Choestoe
District in Union County, Georgia, where they died at an old age. They
raised a family of four boys and seven girls.
Kimsey Jackson
Kimsey Jackson, son of William Marion Jackson, Sr., and Nancy Owenby Stanley,
was born about 1826. He married Louicinda (Louisinda) “Sendy”
Thomas January 30, 1848. Loucinda Thomas was a daughter of John Thomas.
Kimsey and Lousinda lived in Choestoe District, Union County, Georgia,
where they raised three boys.
Kimsey Jackson was active in the Choestoe Baptist church, where he was
elected Clerk on December 8, 1855, and Deacon on August 8, 1857. He resigned
from the Clerk’s position in 1859, but was re-elected on June 10,
1865.
Kimsey Jackson got killed in an accident with a wagon about year 1869.
Loucinda continued as a member of Choestoe Baptist Church at least through
1879. Loucinda Thomas died near Blairsville, Georgia, about 1909.
Mary Mira Jackson
Mary Mira Jackson, , daughter of William Marion Jackson, Sr., and Nancy
Owenby Stanley, was born about 1827. She married John Jehew (Jehen) Wimpey
on March 27, 1858. They lived in Choestoe District in Union County, Georgia.
They raised five boys and eight girls. They died at about 75 years old.
They were buried at Old Liberty Church.
William Marion Jackson, Jr.
William Marion Jackson, Jr., son of William Marion Jackson, Sr., and Nancy
Owenby Stanley, was born May 9, 1829, in White County near the foot of
Yonah Mountain, two miles from Cleveland, Georgia. He moved to Choestoe
District, Union County, Georgia, with his family by 1830.
William Marion Jackson, Jr., married Rebeccah Jane Goforth December 19,
1850. He and Rebeccah lived in Choestoe District in Union County, where
they became charter members and Deacon and Deaconess of Liberty Baptist
Church, where they both lie buried.
Rebeccah Jane Goforth was born March 6th, 1833, a daughter of Miles Goforth.
Rebeccah was born in Buncombe County, North Carolina, and moved to Arkaquah
District, Union County, Georgia with her people while a girl. Rebecca
died June 5, 1901, at an age of 68 yrs, 3 mos. 1 day.
William Marion Jackson, Jr., was just one of many men and boys from the
mountains of North Carolina, Tennessee, and Georgia who slipped past the
Confederate guards and joined the Union Army because of their sincere
belief in the Union. He joined the Union Army as a private ca. October
3, 1863, in Knoxville, Tennessee, and was two years a Federal Soldier
in Company H, 2nd. Regiment (North Carolina Mountain Infantry, Volunteers).
His captain was named Ames and his Colonel was named Bartell. He was stationed
at Cumberland Gap, Tennessee, where his detachment guarded the Gap. He
was honorably discharged ca. August 16, 1865, physically unfit for service.
After the death of Rebecca Jane Goforth, William Marion Jackson, Jr.,
married Jane Davis in the year 1903. She died and he married third Marindy
Seabolt. She died in April, 1911. William Marion Jackson died in 1912.
William Marion Jackson, Jr., and Rebeccah Goforth had born to them eleven
children, three boys and eight girls, to wit:
- Nancy Elizabeth Jackson (see below)
- William Miles Jackson (see below)
- Sarah Catherine Jackson (see below)
- Larseary M. Jackson
- Mary Louise Jackson
- Marion Cicero Jackson (see below)
- Martha Ann Jackson
- Thomas Kimsey Jackson
- At least three more, possibly seven more
Nancy Elizabeth Jackson, daughter of William Marion Jackson, Jr., and
Rebeccah Goforth, was born November 21, 1851. She married John W. Souther
who came from North Carolina while a boy and lived with Johnny Souther,
his uncle, until he married in 1873. They moved to Colorado, stayed three
years, came back and stayed three years, and went back to Colorado, living
near Pueblo. Nancy Elizabeth Jackson died at about age 45 years.
Nancy Elizabeth Jackson and John W. Souther raised 7 or 8 children; 5
boys and 2 or 3 girls:
- Isabel Souther (died in Colorado only a few years after her marriage)
- Van Souther
- James Souther (died about age 21)
- Napoleon Souther (soldier in the Indian War, lived in Colorado)
- Sheridan Souther (lived in Colorado)
- “Dollie” Souther (lived in Colorado)
- Another daughter (very thin, lived in Colorado)
- Possibly another son
William Miles Jackson, son of of William Marion Jackson, Jr., and Rebeccah
Goforth, was born August 30th 1853. He married Nancy Souther, daughter
of Jessie Souther and his wife Lendy.
Sarah Catherine Jackson, daughter of William Marion Jackson, Jr., and
Rebeccah Goforth, was born Oct 2nd 1858. She married James M. Hood, son
of Earl and Sallie Hood. James M. Hood had one sister, Nancy, and five
brothers, Enic, Mac, Jess, Perry, and John W. Hood. They lived in Union
County Ga. Sarah Catherine Jackson died of tuberculosis about 1905 and
was buried at Old Liberty Baptist Church. James M. Hood, her husband,
moved to Lindale, married again, and died about the year 1914. He was
buried at Lindale.
Sarah Catherine Jackson and James M. Hood had born to them ten children,
three boys and seven girls. Among their children were:
- Marion Cicero Hood
- Allie Hood
- Melvin Corbin Hood
- Mattie Hood (lived at Barnesville, Georgia)
- Jess Hood
- Addie Hood
Marion Cicero Hood, son of of Sarah Catherine Jackson and James M. Hood,
was born January 1st 1873. He married Rendy Turner, daughter of William
Turner. They lived for a number of years in Choestoe District, and later
moved off to Dalton Ga. While there his wife died, and Marion Cicero Jackson
married again at Dalton.
Marion Cicero Hood and Rendy Turner had four children:
- Carollis Hood
- Ethel Hood
- Ader Hood
- Esco Hood
Allie Hood was the second child of Sarah Catherine Jackson and James M.
Hood. She married Wiley Roads in Union County. They had born to them two
or three children. They moved to a cotton factory at Dalton, Georgia.
While there, they separated. Afterwards, Allie moved to Barnesville, Georgia,
and married again.
Melvin Corbin Hood, third child of Sarah Catherine Jackson and James M.
Hood, was married in Union County to Emer Cook, daughter of J. Kimsey
Cook and his wife Mary. Melvin was a farmer for some time, a teacher in
the public schools, tax receiver of Union County, Georgia, for two years,
and a salesman in Arkaquah District, Union County, Georgia.
Melvin Corbin Hood and Emer Cook had born to them 2 children:
Baby (died in infancy)
Descie Hood (married Archie Jenkins, son of Pat Jenkins, at Young Harris,
Georgia)
Jess Hood, son of Sarah Catherine Jackson and James M. Hood, moved to
Arizona to take charge of some copper mines as he was an expert on smelting
copper ore. He died with pneumonia fever in Copperhill, Tennessee and
was buried in Arizona. He and his wife had born to them four children,
two boys and two girls.
Larseary M. Jackson, daughter of William Marion Jackson, Jr., and Rebeccah
Goforth, was born July 17, 1855. She died in infancy on September 9, 1856,
aged 1 yr. 1 mo. 22 days, and was buried at Choestoe Cemetery.
Mary Louise Jackson, daughter of William Marion Jackson, Jr., and Rebeccah
Goforth, was born January 14, 1861. She married A. Benjamin Collins, son
of Francis Collins and his wife Bertha. They lived in Choestoe District,
Union County, Georgia, where he was engaged in merchandising and farming.
A. Benjamin Collins died April 4, 1897.
Four boys and four girls were born to Mary Louise Jackson and A. Benjamin
Collins:
- Francis Author Collins (died at age nine months)
- Nina Idaho Collins
- Mauny Doc Collins
- Laura Elmer Collins
- Norman Vester Collins
- Callie Kate Collins
- Jean Benjamin Collins (born February 16, 1894, married Jessie Gravitt)
- Dora Dorthy Collins (born March 2, 1896, married b. George Sims)
Nina Idaho Collins, daughter of Mary Louise Jackson and A. Benjamin Collins,
was born September 9, 1881. She married Albert Dyer, oldest son of Bud
Dyer and his wife Sarah.
Mauny Doc Collins was born July 5, 1884. He married Winnie Byrd Braxton
in Coffee County, Georgia, and served as state school superintendent for
several years. He was also a Baptist minister.
Laura Elmer Collins, daughter of Mary Louise Jackson and A. Benjamin Collins,
was born January 29, 889. She married Edward Shuler, son of W. Jack Shuler.
Norman Vester Collins, son of Mary Louise Jackson and A. Benjamin Collins,
was born September 16, 1886. He studied medicine Atlanta Medical College
and practiced one or two years in Union County, Georgia. He was tax receiver
of Union County, Georgia, for two years. He married first Gardy Keys of
Ringold Georgia, and second Gladys Ward.
Callie Kate Collins, daughter of Mary Louise Jackson and A. Benjamin Collins,
was born January 24, 1893. She was a teacher and married Johnie Reed of
Oakwood, Georgia.
Marion Cicero Jackson, son of William Marion Jackson, Jr., and Rebeccah
Goforth, was born May 20, 1863 and died June 9th 1864. He lived 1 year
and 20 days.
Martha Ann Jackson, daughter of William Marion Jackson, Jr., and Rebeccah
Goforth, was born January 18, 1866. She married William Hunter, son of
John A. Hunter and his wife Elizabeth, in Choestoe District, Union County,
Georgia. He died in a short while leaving her with two young sons. Some
four or five years later she married John P. Collins, and three children
were born to them. Her second husband, John P. Collins, died, leaving
her so lonesome she was sent to the insane asylum at Milledgeville, Georgia.
She died there and was buried in Choestoe Cemetery, Union County, Georgia,
by her first husband's children.
Children of Martha Ann Jackson and William Hunter were:
- M. Vannis Hunter
- William Hunter
M. Vanus Hunter , elder son of Martha Ann Jackson and William Hunter,
was raised by his grandfather, William Marion Jackson, Jr., who gave him
liberal education. He studied dentistry and practiced in Commerce, Georgia.
He belonged to the Baptist Church and F & A.M. Lodge. He married Miss
Lonnie Miller, daughter of Bud and Jane Miller. Like his mother, he was
sent to the insane asylum at Milledgeville.
Children of Martha Ann Jackson and John P. Collins were:
- Rosey Collins
- Parker Collins
- Watson Collins
Rosey Collins. Parker Collins, and Watson Collins all worked at the New
Holland Cotton Factory near Gainsville, Georgia.
Thomas Kimsey Jackson, son of William Marion Jackson, Jr., and Rebecca
Jane Goforth, was born December 17, 1867 in Choestoe District, Union County,
Georgia. He was named for his uncle, Kimsey Jackson.
He married first, December 13, 1885, Mary Jane E. Collins. She was born
November 26, 1869, a daughter of John P. Collins and his wife Fronia.
They were married by Tompy Collins, N. P., her great uncle. They were
married for one year, one month, and four days, and she died of convulsions
caused by giving birth. She never was conscious any more, dying on January
17, 1887. She was buried at the Little Cemetery near Old Liberty Baptist
Church. She was a Christian woman and consecrated wife and was 17 years,
2 months, and 21 days old at her death. She had brother, Jasper M. Collins,
four sisters
Anner Collins, Margaret Collins, Olive Collins, and Verdy Collins. Thomas
Kimsey Jackson and Mary Jane E. Collins had one child, Therman Sylvester
Jackson, born January 15, 1887 and died January 19, 1922.
Thomas Kimsey Jackson married second, January 13, 1889, Mary Caroline
Collins (April 9, 1872-July 3, 1952), who was a first cousin to his first
wife and daughter of Elijah Kimsey Collins whose father was Archy Collins
and grandfather was Thompy Collins. Elijah Kimsey Collins had six brothers,
James N. Collins, I. Car Collins, John P. Collins, Thomas F.Collins, Marion
Collins, and Issom A. Collins, and four sisters, Caroline Collins (who
married Jack Sutton), Emiline Collins (who married General Duckworth),
Ollie Collins (who married James Nix of White County), and Lenda Collins
(who married Frank Wimpey).
Mary Caroline Collins also had two brothers, William Elisha Collins (who
married Sarah Turner and lived in Arkaquah District in Union County) and
Emery Speer Collins (who married Margaret Sullivan and lived in Texas).
Mary Caroline Collins also had three sisters, Sarah Collins (who married
George W. Thompson and lived in Dalton, Georgia), Lida Collins (who married
Sam Garrett and lived in Towns County, Georgia), Emily Collins (who married
Thomas Turner and lived in Canton, North Carolina), and a half sister,
Cordia Collins.
Thomas Kimsey Jackson and Mary Caroline Collins were the parents fifteen
children. Five children died young. Thomas Kimsey Jackson died February
2, 1951, and Mary Caroline Collins died July 3, 1952.
Thomas Kimsey Jackson was a man with many talents. Although he had a limited
education, he no doubt was most noted for his school teaching, which he
followed for seventeen years at Old Baptist Church in Choestoe District.
Some of his students became Ministers, Doctors, Dentists, Lawers, Teachers,
Busines Men, and others of note.
He also was a merchant, operating a general merchandise store which was
located adjacent to his home which was at the top of the hill above Town
Creek. He was also a carpenter and constructed well-planned homes over
Lower Choestoe District, some of which are standing today. He along with
other men read the Law Books of Col. Virgil Waldrop which prepared them
to be able to write deeds, settle estates, etc. Thomas Kimsey Jackson
was a very religous man. He attended Church and took a big hand in the
Church Services. He was always present at Association Meetings.
After some seventeen years teaching school at Old Liberty he sold his
home and moved to Young Harris, Georgia, so his children could attend
a school of higher education. Here he became involved in politics and
was elected Towns County Representative to the Georgia Legislature.
In later years he sold his property in Young Harris and removed to Danielsville,
Georgia, where he died February 21, 1951. He is buried at Old Union Baptist
Church in Young Harris, Georgia.
As noted earlier, Thomas Kimsey Jackson's first wife, Mary Jane E. Collins,
gave birth to one boy child whose name was Therman Silvester Jackson,
born Jan 15, 1887. He never knew what what a mother was until he was going
on 3 yrs old, when he was taken away by William Marion Jackson, Jr., and
Rebecca Jane Goforth, who raised him. Therman Silvester Jackson joined
Old Liberty Baptist Church in his teens and became one of the leaders
of his church and Sunday School. On December 27, 1900, when he was seventeen,
he married Lolia Souther (daughter of William A. Souther). They lived
in Choestoe District, where he was engaged in farming and merchandizing.
Children of Therman Silvester Jackson and Lolia Souther were:
- Emma Jackson
- Donald Jackson
- Worth Jackson
- Adell Jackson
Thomas Kimsey Jackson and his second wife, Mary Caroline Collins, had
born to them fifteen children, four boys and eleven girls:
- Rosettia Iowa Jackson
- Sarah Christine Jackson
- Thomas Watson Jackson
- Elmey Jackson
- Martha Nevada Jackson
- Fannie Jane Jackson
- Ollie Mary Jackson
- Lillie Bell Jackson
- Mary Leona Jackson
- Margaret Viola Jackson (attended Young Harris College)
- Pearl Jackson (March 23, 1909-July, 1909)
- Pat Jackson (born March 23, 1909, twin of Pearl Jackson)
- Anna Maud Jackson (born ca 1913)
- T.J. Jackson (born March 5, 1914)
- Hugh Dorsey Jackson (died with measles)
Rosettia Iowa Jackson, daughter of Thomas Kimsey Jackson and Mary Caroline
Collins, was born December 5, 1889. She joined the Bpatist Church at an
early age. She married B. Vasco Dyer (son of Bud E. Dyer and his wife
Sarah ) on December 22, 1905. They were farmers living in Choestoe District,
Union County, Georgia. They had five children:
- Ernest Dyer
- Greely Dyer
- Mary Dyer
- Luneda Dyer
- Vance Dyer
Sarah Christine Jackson, daughter of Thomas Kimsey Jackson and Mary Caroline
Collins, was born January 7, 1892. She joined the Baptiist Church at an
early age. She married Frank C. Duckworth (son of John F. & Lauria
Duckworth) April 19, 1908. They were farmers and lived in Arkaquah District,
Union County, Georgia. They had born to them two boys:
- Hoke Duckworth (died in infancy)
- Ansel Duckworth
Thomas Watson Jackson, son of Thomas Kimsey Jackson and Mary Caroline
Collins, was born Oct 21, 1893. He was an obedient, quiet, and loving
boy. He entered school at Young Harris with expectation of gaining an
education. He took typhoid fever and died on January 19, 1910 at 4 o'clock
A.M. He was buried in Union Cemetery at Union Baptist Church near Young
Harris, Georgia. He lived to be 16 years, 2 momths, and 29 days old.
Elmey Jackson, daughter of Thomas Kimsey Jackson and Mary Caroline Collins,
was born August 1, 1895, and died in infancy October 1, 1895. She lived
two months and was buried in Little Cemetery near Old Liberty Church,
Choestoe District, Union County, Georgia.
Martha Nevada Jackson, daughter of Thomas Kimsey Jackson and Mary Caroline
Collins, was born August 2, 1896. She joined the Baptist Church at an
early age. In December, 1915, she married Bob L. Jackson (son of William
A. Jackson and his wife Elizabeth). They lived in Young Harris, Towns
County, Georgia, where he was engaged in Merchandising. They had three
girls:
- Willie May Jackson
- R.C. Jackson
- Mozelle Jackson
Fannie Jane Jackson, daughter of Thomas Kimsey Jackson and Mary Caroline
Collins, was born March 14, 1898. She joined Union Baptist Church at an
early age. She was a freshman student at Young Harris College. She taught
public school one year at Gumlog. She married Earl Penland (son of Homer
Penland) in 1918. They lived 2 1/2 miles north of Young Harris. He was
a farmer and teamster. They had one child, Lucile Penland.
Ollie May Jackson, daughter of Thomas Kimsey Jackson and Mary Caroline
Collins, was born March 15th 1900. She joined the Baptist church at an
early age. She married Benjamin Frank Sargent (son of William A. Sargent
of Young Harris) March 12, 1818. They lived in Young Harris where he was
a blacksmith. They had two children born to them:
- William Sargent (who died in 1 or 2 hrs after birth)
- Virah Bell Sargent (born August 30, 1921)
Lillie Bell Jackson, daughter of Thomas Kimsey Jackson and Mary Caroline
Collins, was born September 22, 1902. She joined the Baptist Church in
August, 1919. She had rheumatism at 9 years old. She was in the Freshman
Class at Young Harris College when she had the measles which injured her
health. She had influenza followed by pneumonia and relapsed with it after
she had got up and returned to college, and never saw a well day after
that. The pneumonia set up tuberculosis. She passed from this earthly
life February 26, 1922, at 4:30 A.M. She was buried in Union Cemetery
by her brothers Watson Jackson and Dorsey Jackson.
Mary Leone Jackson, daughter of Thomas Kimsey Jackson and Mary Caroline
Collins, was born October 10, 1904. She joined Union Baptist Church in
August, 1920. She married McKinley Puett (son of Bent Puett and his wife
Julia) March 5, 1921. McKinley Puett was a farmer, and they lived three
and one half miles northwest of Young Harris. They had one baby boy named
after its father, J. McKinley Puett, born Dec 26th 1921.
Andrew William Jackson
Andrew William Jackson, the youngest child of William Marion Jackson,
Sr., and Nancy Owenby Stanley, was born in 1831. He married Margaret Minerva
Goforth on November 11, 1855. He was drafted into the Confederate Army
and, according to family tradition, he deserted or went AWOL, was caught,
arrested and placed in jail.
The story is told that Andrew requested another prisoner give him his
wooden leg so he could make a key to open the cell door. The man refused
and Andrew told him he would have no use for it after tomorrow as the
Confederates were going to shoot them all in the morning.
They escaped the jail and Andrew went home. The Confederates came looking
for him and he climbed up the chimney and hid for several hours until
he was sure they were gone. Shortly after this he and Minerva, his wife,
returned to the old home, gathered up what they could with the children
and headed for California.
The wife and children rode the horses and Andrew walked in the woods.
When they met anyone she would tell them that they were going to visit
someone. They crossed the Missisippi and on to Kansas and freedom. The
two middle aged children died on the way, the oldest was nine and able
to walk and take care of himself, and the youngest, a baby, was carried
and made the trip.
They reached California and settled on the Creasy plains and started farming.
Susannah Jackson and Her Children
Susannah Jackson, daughter of John Jackson, was born in 1800 in Burke
County, North Caroina. She married Powell Owenby January 19, 1821, in
Rutherford County, North Carolina. Powell Owenby owned land adjacemt to
Susannah’s father. Susannah joined Bill’s Creek Baptist Church
October 15, 1831, and was dismissed in 1835. Powell died, and Susannah
was in Union County, Georgia, by 1850, where she lived near her sister-in-law,
Mary Jackson. Powell Owenby was a son of Powell Stamper Owenby.
Children of Susannah Jackson and Powell Owenby were:
- Barbara Owenby (born in 1823 in North Carolina)
- John Owenby (born in 1825)
- Arther Owenby (born in 1827)
- William Owenby (born in 1830)
- Matilda Owenby (born in 1834)
- Ann Owenby (born in 1837 in North Carolina)
Brinkley Jackson and His Children
Brinkley Jackson, son of John Jackson, was born in 1802. He married twice.
His first wife is unknown; she died before 1860. His second wife was Sarah
Walters, whom he married on October 12, 1862 in White County, Georgia.
Brinkley Jackson drew lot 133 in the 5th District, 3rd Section, in the
Gold Land Lottery. He later sold land in Habersham County to Irby Jackson,
and the deed was witnessed by Levi Jackson.
Children of Brinkley Jackson and his first wife were:
- David Jackson (born 1844 in North Carolina)
- Nancy Jackson (born 1846 in Georgia)
- James Jackson (born 1849 in Georgia)
- Ely Jackson (born 1850 in Georgia)
- Jemima Jackson (born 1853 in Georgia)
- Caroline Jackson (born 1856 in Georgia)
Hardy Jackson and His Descendants
Hardy (or Harda) Jackson, son of John Jackson, was born in 1803 in North
Carolina. He was in Habersham County, Gerogia, by 1830, where he married
Violet Arthur, and they were still there in 1860. (Part of Habersham County
became White County in 1860). Violet Arthur was born in South Carolina.
Hardy and Violet had three sons killed in Civil War.
Children of Hardy Jackson and Violet Arthur were:
[The 1850 Habersham County census and the 1860 White County census give
conflicting information about these children. The following list is a
combination of information from both censuses, and should be read with
skepticism.]
- Mahaly Jackson (female, born1827 or 1837 in South Carolina)
- General M. Jackson (see below)
- Mary A. Jackson (born 1835 or 1837 in Georgia)
- William M. Jackson (born 1837 or 1839 in Georgia)
- M. W. (or Newman) Jackson (born 1839 in Georgia)
- Martha L Jackson (born 1841 or 1842 in Georgia)
- Possibly, Herman Jackson (born 1841 in Georgia)
- Alfred T. Jackson (see below)
- Possibly, L.J. Jackson (female, born 1843 in Georgia)
- Malinda Jackson (born 1844 in Georgia)
- Caroline Jackson (born 1848 in Georgia)
- Tennie Jackson (born 1851 in Georgia)
General M. Jackson
General M. Jackson, son of Hardy Jackson and Violet Arthur, was born in
South Carolina in 1830. He joined the Confederate Army as a private on
August 24, 1861, and died May 30, 1862, at Richmond, Virginia. “General”
was his given name, not a military title. He married Malinda -----, and
their children were:
- Cornelius Jackson (born 1858)
- M.M. Jackson (female, b. 1859)
Alfred T. Jackson
Alfred T. Jackson, son of Hardy Jackson and Violet Arthur, was born in
1842 in Georgia. He joined the Confederate Army as a private on August
24, 1861, and died at General Hospital #14 at Richmond, Virginia, February
6, 1863.
Levi Jackson and His Descendants
Levi (or Levie) Jackson, son of John Jackson, was born about 1808 in Rutherford
County, North Carolina. He married first Jemima -----and was in Habersham
County, Georgia, by 1849. (Part of Habersham County became White County
in 1860). Levi Jackson was the first Sheriff of White County. He married
second Saphronia Jay, and he died 1874 in McMinn County, Tenessee. Jemima
lived in Milton County, Georgia, in 1870.
Children of Levi Jackson and Jemima ----- were:
- William L Jackson
- Evan Calloway Jackson
- Curtis A. Jackson
- Francis Marion Jackson
- M.A. Jackson, (born 1842, died 1863 in the Civil War)
- Jordan Jackson (born 1844)
- Elizabeth Jackson, (born 1846)
- Kevu G. Jackson (born 1848)
- Levi H. Jackson (1848-1904).
- John Jackson (1852-1910)
- Erly (Irby) Jackson (b. 1852, married Keziah Vandergriff, on November
13, 1877, in Meiggs County, Tenessee)
- Lucinda Jackson (born 1856, living with Jemima ------ in Milton County
GA in 1870)
Children of Levi Jackson and his second wife, Saphronia Jay, were:
- Julia Alma Jackson (1867-1932, married Calvin Thomas in 1885 in Loudon,
Tenessee)
- Mary L. Jackson (born 1868)
- Victoria Jackson (born in 1870, married George Robinson in Loudon, Tenessee)
- Hattie Jackson
- Robert Jackson (born 1869 or 1872)
- James E. Jackson (1872-1920, married Molly)
William L Jackson
William L Jackson, son of Levi Jackson and Jemima -----, was born in Georgia
in 1834 and died in 1863. He married Elizabeth Morris (born ca. 1835),
and their children were:
- Martha Jackson, (born 1855)
- Lucinda “Adda” (or Octora) Jackson (1858-1944)
Lucinda “Adda” Jackson, daughter of William L. Jackson and
Elizabeth Morris, never married. She lived with her uncle, Francis Marion
Jackson, and after his death, she lived with her cousin, William Andrew
Jackson, former Sheriff and County Representative of White County, Georgia.
She was still living there at the time of her death, and she is buried
in the William Andrew Jackson Family Lot.
Curtis A. Jackson
Curtis A. Jackson, son of Levi Jackson and Jemima -----, was born in Georgia
in 1838. He joined the Confederate Army as a private on August 24, 1861.
He was captured at Cold Harbor, Virginia, June 1, 1864. He died of gangrene
at the Federal prison at Elmira, New York (sometimes called Hellmira)
on January 2, 1865, and lies buried in Grave #1505, Woodlawn National
Cemetery.
Curtis A. Jackson married Caroline ----- (born 1836), and their children
were:
- J.M. Jackson (born 1858)
- Wm. A. Jackson (born 1860)
Evan (or Evans) Calloway Jackson
Evan (or Evans) Calloway Jackson, son of Levi Jackson and Jemima -----,
was born in 1834 in Georgia. He married Rachel-----, born in 1836. In
1860, they lived at Mount Yonah, White County, Georgia. He joined the
Confederate Army as a private on August 24, 1861, and surrendered at Appomatox,
Virginia, on April 9, 1865. Children of Evan Calloway Jackson and Rachel
----- were:
- William H. Jackson (born 1858)
- James M. Jackson (born 1861)
- Julius L. Jackson
- Sarah Jane Jackson (married William Richard Parker)
- Henry A. Jackson (born 1868)
- Hannah Jackson (born 1870)
- John G. Jackson (born 1876)
- Jessie Jackson (born 1880, married Ruth Blalock)
Julius L. Jackson, son of Evan C. Jackson and Rachel -----, was born in
1862. He married first Canduce Stroud, second Saphronia Black, and third
Josephine Black, who was born in 1844. Josephine Black had an illegitimate
son named David who was adopted by Evan C. Jackson.
Francis Marion Jackson
Francis Marion Jackson, son of Levi Jackson and Jemima -----, was born
in Georgia in 1839 and died in 1870. On June 6, 1860, he married Sarah
Ann Nix (1840-1928) in White County, Georgia. He joined the Confederate
Army as a private on August 24, 1861. He was transferred to Company B,
Third Battalion Georgia Sharpshooters, and was appointed First Corporal
on June 8, 1863. The last roll on file, dated August 31, 1864, shows him
present. He died and lies buried in White County, Georgia.
Sarah Ann Nix was a daughter of William H. "Billy" Nix and Elvira
Smith. Sarah Ann Nix's brother, William Kinley Nix, married Minerva J.
Jackson on January 4, 1871. Minerva was the daughter of William Jackson
of Habersham and White Counties, Georgia.
Children of Francis Marion Jackson and Sarah Ann Nix were:
- Martha Jackson (1863-1962, married Wilburn K. Dean in White County)
- William Andrew Jackson (Sheriff of White County, Georgia, and member
of the State Legislature from White County)
- Johnny Jackson (born 1868)
- James Francis Jackson
William Andrew Jackson, son of Francis Marion Jackson and Sarah Ann Nix,
was born in 1866 and died in 1949. He married Frances Rachel Elizabeth
Freeman in 1884, and their children were:
- Icy Nora Jackson (1886-1886)
- John H. Jackson (1888-1910)
- George B. Jackson (1891=1891)
- Harriet Elvira Jackson (1892-1953)
- Toliver Lewis Jackson (1895-1940)
- William Marshall Jackson (1897-1898)
- Thomas Albert Jackson (1899-1899)
- Andrew Lester Jackson (1901-1989)
- Isaac Perry Jackson (1905-1984)
- Mary Lee Jackson (1907-2004)
James Francis Jackson, son of Francis Marion Jackson and Sarah Ann Nix,was
born in 1869 and died in 1940. His wife is unknown; their children were:
- Marion Wesley Jackson (1892-1983, married Minnie Nix)
- Charles Wilburn Jackson (1894-1984, married Bertie Stancil)
- Alice Melvina Jackson (1898-1992, married Lonnie D. Tyner in 1923)
- Nancy Lou Dora Jackson (1900-1990, married Oscar Arlington Whiting in
1919)
- Fannie Jackson (1902-1947, married James F. Mathis in 1926)
- William Carter Jackson (1905-1965, married Fannie Denson)
- Robert Henry Jackson (1911-1982, married first Clyde Grogan and second
Evelyn Rogers in 1940)
- Rosa Lee Jackson (1911-1981, married Robert Bascam Cox)
- Edward Norton Jackson (born 1915, married Pauline Genell King in 1936)
- Edna Jackson (born 1915, married Allen Freeman Smith in 1936)
- Joseph Andrew Jackson (born 1920, married Lela Chapman)
Sarah Jackson
Sarah Jackson, daughter of John Jackson, was born 1809. She was the only
one of John Jackson’s children who did not go to Georgia.
James Jackson and His Descendants
James Jackson, son of John Jackson, was born June 27, 1810, in Rutherford
County, North Carolina. He married Matilda Hartgrove Chastain November
24, 1831, in Hall County, Georgia. (Hall County adjoins White County on
the north.) James Jackson died in November 19, 1887 in Barrettsville,
Dawson County, Georgia, in a part of Dawson County that had been part
of Lumpkin County, and Hall County before that.
Children of James Jackson and Matilda Hartgrove Chastain were:
- Alfred Marion Jackson (born November 9, 1832, see below)
- William Chastain Jackson (born April 22, 1834, see below)
- Jasper N. Jackson (born April 27, 1835)
- Almarinda Jackson (born November 23, 1836)
- Asbury Ralph Jackson (born February 3, 1839)
- Robert H. Jackson (born 1841)
- Mary Arminda Jackson (born January 12, 1843)
- Madison Cleveland Jackson (born 1845)
- Sophronia Adeline Jackson (born March 12, 1847)
- Emila A. Jackson (born March 3, 1854)
Alfred Marion Jackson
Alfred Marion Jackson, son of James Jackson and Matilda Hartgrove Chastain,
married Arminda H. Hughes in Forsyth County, Georgia, and he died in Forsyth
County. Their children were:
- Lavinia Jackson
- D. D. Jackson
- Charles Jackson
- Linton Jackson
D. D. Jackson, son of Alfred Marion Jackson and Arminda H.Hughes, became
a merchant in Gainesville, Georgia. He was there in 1900 when he joined
the Mounted National Guard.
William Chastain Jackson
William Chastain Jackson, son of James Jackson and Matilda Hartgrove,
was born in 1798 and married Nancy Emiline Bond October 29, 1837.
Children of William Chastain Jackson and Nancy Emiline Bond were:
- Georgia Emma Jackson (born June 22, 1856)
- James Andrew Jackson (born September 20, 1858)
- Martha Eleslie Jackson (born January 5, 1861)
- India Iantha Jackson (born January 17, 1866)
- William Thomas Jackson (born August 18, 1868)
- Virginia Ophelia Jackson (born May 24, 1871)
- Mary Emiline Jackson (born August 31, 1873)
- Ann Elizabeth Jackson (born November 17, 1875)
- Harriett Matilda Jackson (born February 18, 1878)
- Madison Lee Jackson (born June 18, 1882)
Mary “Polly” Jackson and Her Children
Mary “Polly” Jackson, daughter of John Jackson, was born in
1811 in North Carolina, but moved to Georgia about 1849. No record of
her marriage can be found, and she always used the name, “Jackson.”
In 1850 and in 1860, she was in Union County, Georgia. Her children were:
Sarah Ann Jackson (born 1834 in North Carolina, maried Robert R.(or
B.) Saxton in Union County, Georgia, May 23, 1857)
- Martha Jackson (born 1838 in North Carolina)
- Possibly, Malinda Jackson
- Susan Jackson (born 1848 in North Carolina)
- John A.? Jackson (born 1849 in Georgia)
- Possibly, Hulda J. Jackson (born ca 1847)
- Possibly, James S. Jackson (born ca 1851)
Malinda Jackson
Malinda Jackson, possible daughter of Mary “Polly” Jackson,
was born in North Carolina March 7, 1841. She married Larkin H. Helton
(born April 9, 1835, in Lumpkin County, Georgia) on March 13, 1859, in
Union County, Georgia. Shortly thereafter (December 12, 1859), she was
dismissed from Choestoe Baptist Church. She died in Floyd County, Georgia,
on October 2, 1931. Their children were:
- Martin Alexander Helton (born May 23, 1861, in Lumpkin County, Georgia)
- Joseph Hamilton (Doc) Helton (born July 24, 1866, in Lumpkin County,
Georgia)
- James McCage Helton (born 1869)
- Sarah (Sallie) T. Helton (born April 10, 1871)
- William Robert Helton (born September 7, 1873)
- Lewis Calvary Helton (born September 14, 1877)
- John David Helton (born December 28, 1874)
Chapter 4
Joseph Jackson and His Descendants
Joseph Jackson, second son of Edward Jackson, was born about 1774 in North
Carolina. He appeared on the 1797 Tax List of Burke County, North Carolina,
listed with one poll, and no land, in Captain Hemphill's Company.
Joseph Jackson fathered an illegitimate child with Elizabeth “Betsy”
Hollingsworth in Burke County, North Carolina, in 1798. In Burke County,
North Carolina, Court January 1799 Term, Samuel Hollingsworth gave 250
pounds bond for the maintenance of a "base born" child begot
on the body of Betsy Hollingsworth by Joseph Jackson.
Joseph Jackson was married in Burke County, North Carolina, about 1798.
His wife was probably not Elizabeth Holingsworth, mentioned above. Her
name may have been Nancy, but this is by no means certain.
On October 10, 1804, Joseph Jackson received 50 acres of land in Rutherford
County, North Carolina. It bordered land he already owned.
On April 17, 1806, John Miller sold Joseph Jackson 100 acres of land on
both sides of the main Broad River near the mouth of Laurel Creek in Rutherford
County, North Carolina, for $125. The sale was witnessed by S. Morgan,
W. Graham, Willie Harris, and recorded March 2, 1811 in Book 24-26, p.
396.
According to the census, there was a young female living with Joseph Jackson
in 1810. This was most likely his sister, Polly Jackson.
By Grant 1221, Rutherford County, North Carolina, Joseph Jackson received
50 acres of land in on the Main Broad River, bound by Joseph Jackson on
the East. This grant was dated June 9th, 1815, and entered August 14,
1814, The chainbearers were Joseph Jackson and Jehiel Jackson. On July
26, 1817, Joseph Jackson received 100 acres of land in Rutherford County.
On January 14, 1819, Joseph Jackson and William Dalton received 400 acres
of land in Rutherford County. On October 20, 1820, Joseph Jackson received
100 acres of land in Rutherford County, North Carolina, including a place
called Alley’s Cabin.
In 1824 Joseph Jackson sold Hiram Jackson 150 acres on the Main Broad
River in Rutherford County. (Recorded in Book 38, P. 305.)
About 1825-1826, Joseph Jackson moved from Rutherford County,North Carolina,
to Chastain’s Company, Habersham County, Georgia, where he drew
land in the 1827 land lottery. Jehiel and Sampson Jackson were also there.
William Jackson and Leason Spivey were in Brock’s Company, Habersham
County. Joseph Jackson was still there at the time of the 1832 Gold Land
Lottery. Later in 1832 he moved to Union County, Georgia.
Each of them was entitled to two draws in the lottery, which indicated
that each was a married man with a wife and/or a minor son under eighteen
or an unmarried daughter, a three-year resident of Georgia, and a citizen
of the United States. Jehile (or Jehit) drew Lot 176, 26th District of
the Third Section.
Joseph Jackson was commissioned Clerk of the Inferior Court of Union County
when the first officers were commissioned on March 20, 1833. The other
officers commissioned at that time were James Crow, Sheriff; Arthur Gilbert,
Clerk of Superior Court; James Gaddis Sr., Coroner; Joseph Chaffin, Surveyor;
and John Thomas, Representative.
Joseph Jackson was in Union County, Georgia, when he sold land to Joseph
Smith on February 17, 1836. Joseph Jackson of Union County, Georgia, also
sold 250 acres (lot #19) in the second district of Habersham County, Georgia,
to Kitchen Corn for $300 (Book N, p. 598).
The earliest membership list of The Baptist Church of Christ at Choestoe
is of 1838 and among the members listed are John Jackson, Joseph Jackson,
William Jackson, Susannah Chaffin, and Leason Spivey.
Apparently, Joseph Jackson lived in the Coosa District, on Anderson Creek,
and was a leader in establishing The Arm of Choestoe Church at Anderson
Creek on June 10, 1843. Joseph Jackson is last mentioned in the Minutes
of The Baptist Church of Christ at Choestoe on October 7, 1843. Beside
his name on the 1843 membership list is the notation, "dead."
Children of Joseph Jackson were:
- Jehile (Johile) Jackson
- Anna Jackson (see below)
- Jane Jackson (see below)
- Sampson Jackson (see below)
- Susannah Jackson (see below)
- Possibly, Margaret Jackson (see below)
- Girl. Lost or died.
- Melinda Jackson (born 1812, married Jessee Nix August 7, 1837 in Union
County, Georgia, member of Choestoe Baptist Church 1856-1858)
- Elizabeth Jackson (see below)
- Jeremiah Jackson (see below)
Jehile Jackson
Jehile Jackson, son of Joseph Jackson, was born about 1799. In 1830 he
lived in Habersham County, Georgia.
Anna Jackson
Anna Jackson, daughter of Joseph Jackson, was born about 1800 in Burke
County North Carolina. She married Elijah Chaffin, son of Amos Chaffin,
November 18, 1820, in Rutherford County, North Carolina. Elijah was in
Habersham County, Georgia, in the 1830 Census, in Lumpkin County, Georgia,
in the 1834 Census, Cherokee County, Georgia, until 1855, and then in
Clark County, Alabama. He was in poor health for some time before his
death, having had a ulcer on his leg, and died of pneumonia February 5,
1863 in Clark County. Alabama.
Jane Jackson and Her Family
Jane (or Jean) Jackson, daughter of Joseph Jackson, was born 1802 or 1803
in Burke County, North Carolina, where she married Leason Spivey November
28, 1821. By 1830, they were living in Habersham County, Georgia, and
later they resided in Union County, Georgia, where they were members of
Choestoe Baptist Church and later Harmony Grove Baptist Church. They later
removed to a part of Union County that became Towns County in 1860, and
died there.
Children of Jane Jackson and Leason Spivey were:
- Amanda Spivey (1823-1907)
- Rhonda Spivey (1824-1905)
- Roena Spivey (born 1826)
- Adaniram Spivey (1827-1898)
- Lucretia Spivey (1830-1900)
- John Spivey (born 1833)
- William Humphrey Spivey (1834-1896)
- Joseph Newton Spivey (1835-1864)
- Nancy Caroline Spivey (1836-1906)
Sampson Jackson and His Family
Sampson Jackson, son of Joseph Jackson, was born in 1804 (or 1806) in
Burke County, North Carolina, and married Susannah Crook on November 18,
1829 (or December 16, 1823) in Rutherford County, North Carolina. He was
in Habersham County, Georgia, by 1830 and at the time of the Gold Land
Lottery in 1832. By 1850 he was in Tishomingo County, Mississippi, with
a new wife, Sarah (born 1806), where he was a farmer.
Children of Sampson Jackson and Susannah Crook were:
- Margaret Jackson (born 1829 in Georgia)
- Zilla Jackson (born 1830 in Georgia)
- Anna Jackson (born 1834 in Georgia)
- Elizabeth Jackson (born 1835 in Georgia)
- Elijah Jackson (born 1837 in Georgia)
- Jarrett Jackson (born 1839 in Georgia)
There may have been older children who had left the home by 1850.
Sampson Jackson and Sarah were the parents of:
- Martha Jackson (born 1846 in Mississippi)
- Lucinda M. Jackson (born 1847 in Mississippi)
- Rosanina Jackson (born 1849 in Mississippi)
Susannah Jackson
Susannah Jackson, daughter of Joseph Jackson, was born in 1805 in Burke
County, North Carolina. She married Joseph Chaffin, son of Amos Chaffin,
March 20, 1822, in Burke County. They went to Union County, Georgia, where
she was a member of Choestoe Baptist Church and he was the first County
Surveyor. By 1834 they were in Lumpkin County, Georgia. After the Civil
War they moved to Howard County, Arkansas. Later, he moved to McCullock
County, Texas, where he died.
Margaret Jackson
Margaret Jackson, possible daughter of Joseph Jackson, was born in 1812
(or 1807) in Rutherford County, North Carolina, where she married John
Westmoreland July 6, 1825. No documentation of her birth, parentage, children,
etc. has been found.
Elizabeth Jackson and Her Family
Elizabeth “Betsy” Jackson, daughter of Joseph Jackson, was
born about 1813-14 and married James Gaddis (born ca 1805) March 3, 1829,
in Burke County, North Carolina. By 1850 they were in Davis Creek District,
Lumpkin County, Georgia, and they were still there in 1860.
Children of Elizabeth Jackson and James Gaddis, all born in Georgia, were:
- William Gaddis (born 1832)
- Martha (or Marim) Gaddis (born 1841)
- Sarah Gaddis (born 1844)
- Margaret Gaddis (born 1846)
- Dennie (or Dovie) A. Gaddis (born 1848)
- Franksey (or Frankay) Gaddis (born 1850)
- Ellen S. Gaddis (born 1852)
There may have been other children. Documentation is lacking for much.
Jeremiah Jackson and His Family
Jeremiah (Jeriah, Pariah, Geriah) “Jerry” Jackson, son of
Joseph Jackson, was born in 1815 in Rutherford County, North Carolina.
He was a farmer, and he married Ginset Jane “Jinsey” Kittle
(born in Georgia) January 20, 1837 (or 1835), in Union County, Georgia.
They removed to Cherokee County GA after 1850.
Children of Jeremiah (Geriah) Jackson and Ginset Jane Kittle were:
- Joseph Jackson (born about 1838)
- Jeremiah Jackson (born about 1840)
- Lucretia Sarah “Cressie” Jackson (born about 1841)
- William Jackson (born about 1842)
- Elizabeth Sarah (or Sarah Elizabeth) Jackson (born about 1843, married
a Padgett)
- Ezekiel Pruett Jackson (born about 1845)
- Jehiel “Bud” Jackson
- Andrew James Jackson
- Washington Jackson
- Nancy Jackson (born about 1851)
- Mary A. Jackson (born about 1855)
- Freeman Brown Jackson (born April 13, 1859)
Jehiel (Bud) Jackson
Jehiel (Bud) Jackson, son of Jeremiah (Geriah) Jackson and Ginset Jane
Kittle, was born October 20, 1846, in Blue Ridge, Georgia. He married
Sarah Jane Goodman on August 8, 1873 (?), and he died on February 8, 1928,
in Seminole County, Oklahoma.
Andrew James Jackson
Andrew James Jackson, son of Jeremiah (Geriah) Jackson and Ginset Jane
Kittle, was born April 26, 1848, in Georgia, and died January 6, 1878,
in Georgia. He married Susan Hawkins on February 17, 1867, in Cherokee
County, Georgia.
Washington Jackson
Washington Jackson, son of Jeremiah (Geriah) Jackson and Ginset Jane Kittle,
was born in 1849 in Georgia. He married Elizabeth Blackstock on August
2, 1868, in Cherokee County, Georgia.
Freeman Brown Jackson
Freeman Brown Jackson, son of Jeremiah (Geriah) Jackson and Ginset Jane
Kittle, was born April 13, 1859, in Cherokee County, Georgia. He married
first Mary Hunt about 1878 in Mount View, Missouri, and second Annis Collins,
also in Mount View, Missouri. Freeman Brown Jackson died November 5, 1944,
in The Dalles, Oregon.
Chapter 5
Elias Jackson and His Descendants
Elias Jackson, third son of Edward Jackson, was born about 1776. He married
Edith Stanley (born ca.1775) in Guilford County, North Carolina, about
1795. He resided in Burke and Rutherford Counties North Carolina.
Elias Jackson was in Burke County, N.C. at the time of the 1800 Census
with a wife and a daughter who was under 10 years old. He owned land on
a branch of Crooked Creek joining the land of John Pitillo and Andrew
Clements. On March 1, 1809, Elias Jackson bought 50 acres of land on both
sides of the main Broad River in Rutherford County, North Carolina, from
Reverend Stephen Morgan for $75. This was near his brothers John, Joseph,
and Eli Jackson.
By 1810, Elias and Edith had two sons and four daughters.
On October 12, 1810, Elias sold the above described land to John Hood
for $25 and removed to Jackson County, Tennessee, before 1820 with his
brother Azeriah Jackson. Elias and Azeriah Jackson settled in the southeast
corner of the present day Jackson County only a few miles east and over
a ridge from Abner Chaffin who lived on Flyn's Creek. In 1840 Elias and
his brother Azeriah Jackson were living in the 11th Civil District of
Jackson County, Tennessee.
Elias Jackson died in Jackson County, Tennessee, before the 1850 census.
An internet source says he died in 1840.
Children of Elias Jackson and Edith Stanley included:
- Elizabeth Jackson (born 1800, married Nimrod Henley)
- Sarah Jackson (see below)
- Eli J. Jackson (see below)
- Edward S. Jackson (born 1806)
- Ephrium (or Ephriam) Jackson (see below)
- Amos Jackson (born 1820)
- Joseph Jackson (born 1821, lived in Putnam County, Tennessee)
- Charles Jackson (born 1822, married Nancy Billingsley)
- Elias Jackson (see below)
- Susannah Jackson (born 1823, married a Davidson)
- Other children, whose names have been lost. They may have died young.
Sarah Jackson
Sarah Jackson, daughter of Elias Jackson and Edith Stanley, was born October
30, 1802, and married William W. Hyde, son of Joseph Hyde, and went to
the Utah Territory.
Eli J. Jackson
Eli J. Jackson, son of Elias Jackson and Edith Stanley, was born in 1804.
He married first Hannah Davidson and second Nancy Davidson. Eli J. Jackson
lived and died in Jackson County, Tennessee.
Children of Eli J. Jackson and Hannah Davidson were:
- Edward B. Jackson (married Phebe Billingsley)
- Sarah Jackson (married James Mansell)
- Henry Jackson (married Nancy Mansell)
- Two other children
Children of Eli J. Jackson and Nancy Davidson were:
- Ramus Jackson
- Edith Jackson
- Mary Lucretia Jackson (married William Harrison Flat)
- Marian Jackson
- Warren D. Jackson (married Sarah Jane Bullington)
- Paracettta Jackson
- Eli Jackson (married Malissa Julian)
- James M. Jackson (married Mary Johnson)
- Sidney S. Jackson (married Melvina Birdwell)
- Gideon Jackson
- Grundy Jackson
- Martha Jackson (married Richard Sewell Edmonds)
Edward S. Jackson
Edward S. Jackson, son of Elias Jackson and Edith Stanley, was born in
1806. He married Elizabeth ----- (born ca. 1810), and they lived in Jackson
County, Tennessee, in 1850. Their children included:
- Lucinda Jackson (born ca 1830)
- Logan Jackson (born ca 1832)
- John Jackson (born ca 1836)
- James Jackson (born ca 1840)
- Susannah Jackson (born ca 1842)
- Dinah Jackson (born ca 1844)
- Amos Jackson (born ca 1848)
Ephrium Jackson
Ephrium Jackson, son of Elias Jackson and Edith Stanley, may be the same
person as Ephriam Jackson who was born March 24, 1801, in North Carolina.
This Ephriam married Elizabeth Black in Tennessee in 1821, had two children,
Mary Jackson and Elias Jackson, and was killed by Indians at Double Horn
Creek in Burnet County, Texas, on December 3, 1864.
Elias Jackson
Elias Jackson, son of Elias Jackson and Edith Stanley, was born in 1826
and married Mahalia -----. He went to Texas, and served three years in
prison for counterfeiting.
Chapter 6
Eli Jackson and His Descendants
Eli Jackson, fourth son of Edward Jackson, was born about 1777. He resided
in Burke and Rutherford Counties, North Carolina, and was still in the
household of his father at the time of the 1800 Census.
Eli Jackson married Tabitha Hodge of Burke County, North Carolina, probably
in the early 1800's. An internet source puts the year as 1808.
Eli Jackson was on the Burke County Tax Roll of 1805 with one poll and
no land. Perminter Morgan sold 200 acres of land on the west side of the
Main Broad River in Rutherford County to Eli Jackson for $67 on May 27,
1809. This land was near the land of Eli’s brothers John, Joseph,
and Elias Jackson and his brother-in-law, Alexander Hopson (or Hopkins),
on the headwaters of the Main Broad River and Laurel and Rock Creeks.
The 1810 Census of Rutherford County, North Carolina, lists Eli in the
neighborhood of his brothers and Eli had one daughter under 10 years of
age.
Alexander Porter sold two tracts of 50 acres each to Eli Jackson in April,
1812, and Eli Jackson was granted another 50 acres on Cove Creek of Crooked
Creek, Burke County, North Carolina, joining his own land on March 28,
1812. The 1815 Burke County, North Carolina, Tax List shows Eli Jackson
with 150 acres on Crooked Creek in Captain Hemphill's Company.
The April 1816 Burke County Court ordered Amos and Eli Jackson to work
the road from Thomas Lytle to the Blue Ridge. The January 1817 Burke County
Court ordered Amos and Eli Jackson to view, mark, and alter the Crooked
Creek Road from the town end of Amos Chaffin's plantation.
Eli Jackson joined Bill’s Creek Baptist Church at Crooked Creek
(Bethlehem) in Rutherford County in July, 1831. The Bill’s Creek
Church was an arm of the Crooked Creek Baptist Church, and became an organized
church on November 10, 1831.
On March 1, 1832, Eli Jackson paid Obed Dier $25 for 250 acres of land
in District 98 of Habersham Co., GA On June 28, 1832, he witnessed the
will of William England in Burke County, North Carolina.
Eli Jackson and Tabitha Hodge moved to Habersham County, Georgia, about
1835. They removed to Lumpkin County, Georgia, and, by 1850, to the Yahoola
District of Lumpkin County, where he died in 1853 at age 76, and a few
years later Tabitha died at the same age, 76.
Children of Eli Jackson and Tabitha Hodge were:
- Susannah Jackson
- David Jackson
- Amos Jackson
- Martha Jane Jackson
- Elias Jackson
- John Jackson
- Hodge Jackson (born in 1821)
- Andrew J. Jackson
- Zelley Jackson
- Eli F. Jackson
- Amintha Corintha Jackson
- Lidia Louisa Jackson (born November 4, 1831)
Susannah Jackson
Susannah Jackson, daughter of Eli Jackson and Tabitha Hodge, was born
June 11, 1809,in North Carolina. She married Lewis Madison Grizzle on
March 3, 1836, in Lumpkin County, Georgia.
David Jackson
David Jackson, son of Eli Jackson and Tabitha Hodge, was born August 1,
1811. He married Susannah Jackson, daughter of Amos Jackson. By 1860,
they were living in Lumpkin County, Georgia, where he was a farmer. David
Jackson died in 1880. Their children are listed with Susannah Jackson
in Chapter 7.
Amos Jackson
Amos Jackson, son of Eli Jackson and Tabitha Hodge, was born April 14,
1813, in Rutherford County, North Carolina. He married Sophia Birdwell.
Martha Jane Jackson
Martha Jane Jackson, daughter of Eli Jackson and Tabitha Hodge , was born
May 1, 1815, in Rutherford County, North Carolina. She married John Andrew
Jackson Grizzle, Jr.
John Jackson
John Jackson, son of Eli Jackson and Tabitha Hodge, was born in 1819 and
died in 1899. He married Sarah Elliot in Lumpkin County, Georgia, February
11, 1838.
Eli F. Jackson
Eli F. Jackson, son of Eli Jackson and Tabitha Hodge, was born in Georgia
ca 1826. He married Artemisa -----, born ca 1831 in South Carolina. In
1870, Eli F. Jackson was a gold miner (?), living in Dahlonega, Lumpkin
County, Georgia. Their children, all born in Georgia, were:
- Ellen F. Jackson (born ca 1854)
- John E. Jackson (born ca 1856)
- Martha Jackson (born ca 1860)
- Thomas Jackson (born ca 1863)
Andrew J. Jackson
Andrew J. Jackson, son of Eli Jackson and Tabitha Hodge, was born May
18, 1822 in Burke County, North Carolina. He was reared in North Carolina
until he was thirteen years of age when he and a brother went to Georgia
and settled in Raburn County. Andrew's parents, Eli Jackson and Tabitha
Hodge, and his sister and other brother remained in North Carolina.
He married first Mary M. Osborn on February 25, 1847, in Gilmer County,
Georgia. Mary M. Osborn was born Jun 23, 1824 in Gilmer county, Georgia,
the daughter of Newman Osborn and his wife Judith.
Newman Osborn was born February 9, 1791 in North Carolina. He settled
at an early day in Gilmer County, Georgia.
Newman Osborn was married twice - first to Elizabeth on December 21, 1809.
They probably had seven children and Elizabeth probably died when Elizabeth
M. Osborn was born May 18, 1822
The next year after Elizabeth died on May 19, 1822, Newman married Judith
July 28, 1823. It is believed that this marriage produced six children.
Judith died March 18, 1867 and Newman Osborn died September 10 (or September
19), 1867. They are buried in Glen Cemetery near Bluffdale, Texas. This
cemetery was first known as Osborn Cemetery and the name was later changed
to Glen Cemetery, so Judith and Newman must have been among the first
who were buried there.
Andrew J. Jackson and Mary M. Osborn had seven children - three boys and
four girls. Six of the children were born in Georgia and one in Texas.
In 1857 Andrew J. Jackson and family, accompanied by Newman and Judith
Osborn and their married daughters and son's families, left Georgia and
made the trek to Texas. They settled on Squaw Creek in Hood, County, Texas,
near what is now Glen Rose. A daughter, Susan, was born there November
2, 1859.
Mary M. Osborn died on January 8, 1860, leaving Andrew with seven children
to rear, one of them a mere infant. She was buried in Squaw Creek Cemetery.
There were very few graves in the Cemetery at that time.
A year or two later Andrew and his family moved again. This time they
settled on the Paluxy River about seventeen miles southwest of what is
now Granbury, Hood County, Texas. There he carved out a home in the wilderness.
Indians still were raiding the settlers at that time. There in that community,
which later became known as Rock Church, he reared his family and lived
the rest of his life.
The Indian raids were made to steal the settler's horses, so the horses
were always tied to the log cabin at night. Andrew Jackson had a big roan
horse that could smell an Indian, so it seemed, and he alerted the family
whenever Indians were about, especially on moonlit nights. One night the
Indians tried to steal this big horse but he was too much for them and
they went away.
In December, 1861, Andrew J. Jackson married again, a widow, Nancy Andrews
Ingle (born July 1, 1830). Nancy Andrews Ingle already had a son, Green
Ingle, who married Susan Jackson, Andrew Jackson’s sister. Andrew
Jackson and Nancy Andrews Ingle had one daughter, Mollie.
Andrew J. Jackson served with the Texas Guards during the Civil War and
had to be gone from home for long periods of time. During this period
Newman and Judith Osborn took care or helped to take care of his children
until his return home after the war.
He was one of the early Pioneers of Hood County, Texas, and also a pioneer
in the Masonic Lodge of Hood County. He was active in the Masonic Lodge
at Rock Church until his death. As a pioneer, he helped in establishing
the Rock Church Community and was active in all the affairs of the community.
He was a long time member of the Methodist Church.
Andrew J. Jackson died September 4, 1900, in Erath County, Texas, at the
age of 78 and was buried in Rock Church Cemetery. He was survived by his
wife, Nancy, and seven children and many grandchildren. One daughter,
Sarah Jackson, preceded him in death. Nancy Andrews Ingle died January
29 1908 and was buried in Rock Church Cemetery.
Children of Andrew J. Jackson and Mary M. Osborn, all buried in Rock Church
Cemetery, Hood County, Texas, were:
- Sarah T. Jackson (Dec 22 1847-Dec 16, 1893, married a Clark)
- George Jackson (April 23,1849-Dec 11, 1923)
- Jerry Jackson (Dec 6, 1850-Feb 3, 1926)
- Newman Osborn Jackson
- Nannie Jackson (married a Duckett)
- Judith Ann Jackson (1857-Mar 13, 1941, married a Dykes)
- Susan Jackson (Nov 2, 1859-Jan 25, 1924, married first Charles Crites
and second Green Ingley (Ingle). Green Ingley’s mother was Nancy
Andrews Ingle.)
Child of Andrew J. Jackson and Nancy Andrews Ingle was:
Newman Osborn Jackson
Newman Osborn Jackson, son of Andrew J. Jackson and Mary M. Osborn, was
born February 12, 1853 in Georgia. He was named after his grandfather
on his mother's side, Newman Osborn. He moved with his parents from Georgia
to Texas in 1857.
Newman Osborn Jackson got very little formal education as the schools
were only open three or four months of the year, but he was by no means
unlearned. He got his schooling by experience and hard work and the fact
that he liked to read. He put the knowledge that he gained from reading
to good use. He often talked about his school days, when he went to the
old log school house with the split log seats and the spring nearby which
furnished their drinking water and, also, a good place to keep their milk
for lunch.
In the Fall of 1869, the family of David M. Wood and his wife, Mary Elizabeth
Read, moved into the community and settled. In this family there were
five girls who were small at the time, but later Newman Osborn Jackson
wooed and won the hand of Mary Louise Wood. They were married March 2,
1876 and lived a long, happy married life of over 60 years. To this union
13 children were born, nine boys and four girls. Three of the boys preceded
them in death. Newman Osborn Jackson and Mary Louise Wood also reared
three grandchildren who received the same loving care as their own children.
Mary Louise Wood was born in Marshall County, Alabama, on September 5,
1859. Her father was a Confederate veteran. Her grandparents, who also
went to Texas, were Lorenzo Dow Wood and his wife Louesa Rhea Wood.
The trek from Alabama to Texas was made in covered wagons, some drawn
by oxen and others by mules and horses. Milk cows were brought along,
and many of the children in the families had to walk and drive the cows.
Mary Louise Wood was ten years old and she had to help drive the cows.
When they came to the Mississippi river, there was a ferry boat to move
the people, wagons, and stock across the river and it took quite awhile.
Of course, there were many other rivers and these had to be forded.
Mary Louise Wood’s first home in Texas was part dug-out and part
log cabin on the side of a little hill. Later her father built another
house. Wire fences had not come into use then so rock fences were built
around the farm land. Mary Louise Wood and her sister, Emma, helped their
father build these rock fences.
Like most children of pioneer families, Mary Louise Wood did not get much
education; she had to help make a living. The schools terms were short,
only three or four months in the winter time, so they did not provide
very much in the way of an education.
Mary Louise Wood was a member of the Methodist Church. For many years
she read the entire Bible through every year and her old Bible showed
that it was used very much. Through her suffering of later years, the
Bible was her Companion and Comforter.
Newman Osborn Jackson and Mary Louise Wood spent thirty years or more
of their married life in Rock Church Community where they were reared.
They did move to Buck Creek in Palo Pinto County and stayed two or three
years, and their daughter Elizabeth was born while they lived there. They
then moved back to Rock Church Community. In 1901, they moved from Rock
Church to Colony Community about three miles southwest of Tolar, Hood
County, Texas. In the winter of 1902, they bought a farm about two miles
north of where Tom Jackson was born. It was on this farm that Ida Lee
Jackson was born and where Newman Osborn Jackson and Mary Louise Wood
lived until their death.
Newman Osborn Jackson was always interested in music and he learned enough
music to teach singing in sabbath schools which were common in those days.
Many people said that Newman Osborn Jackson taught them their first music
lesson and how to sing -- this group included most of his children. He
did also taught his daughters, Buena, Elizabeth, and Naomi, how to play
the organ. He had his own quartet -- he, Joe, George, and Elizabeth --
who sang at home, church, and singing conventions. Newman Osborn Jackson
had a beautiful voice and he was the song leader in the church wherever
he lived. He was often asked to sing for funerals and he was always glad
that he could be of service to friends and neighbors. When he was getting
a little too old to sing, a woman of the community requested before she
died that he sing a solo at her funeral, and he fulfilled that request.
Mary Louise Wood passed on to her reward May 30, 1936, being almost 77
years old. She was preceded in death by three children - David, Walter
and Roy. She was buried in Rock Church Cemetery in the community where
she grew up and married and lived so many years.
Newman Osborn Jackson died July 19 (or 29), 1940.
Children of Newman Osborn Jackson and Mary Louise Wood were:
- David Andrew Jackson (Feb 12, 1877-Feb 10, 1893)
- Luther Lorenzo Jackson (March 12, 1878-May 3, 1960, married Callie Danley
October 10, 1900)
- Walter Jermone Jackson (Feb 5, 1880-Dec 3, 1882)
- Adrian Clyde Jackson (Oct 5 1883-May 20, 1961, married first Annie Thomason
December 6, 1903 and second Daisy Wood July, 1912)
- William Royal Jackson (Dec 22, 1885-Sept 29, 1902)
- Joel Ernest Jackson (born Oct 14, 1887, married Mae Mulkey August, 1916)
- George Pinkey Jackson (born May 9, 1889, married Ina Mulkey December
24, 1916)
- Buena Vista Jackson (Oct 17, 1891-Nov 9, 1970, married Earnest Griffith
July 29, 1939
- Mary Elizabeth Jackson (Sept 8, 1894-Nov 23 1977, born at Buck Creek
in Palo Pinto County, Texas. married Dow Wright January 15, 1920)
- Naomi Lou Jackson (born May 22, 1897, married Thomas Weeks Feburary
17, 1918)
- Thomas Jonathan Jackson (born May 28, 1901, Hood County, Texas, died
November, 1977)
- Ida Lee Jackson (born: Nov 2, 1902, Hood County, Texas)
Mary L. “Mollie” Jackson
Mary L. “Mollie” Jackson, daughter of Andrew Jackson and Nancy
Andrews Ingle, married J. Milton McClesky. They were both buried at Floyd,
New Mexico.
J. Milton McClesky was the son of Nathaniel Turk (or Tuck) McClesky, a
brother of Louisa Rhea Wood, Lorenzo Dow Wood's wife.
Zelley Jackson
Zelley Jackson, daughter of Eli Jackson and Tabitha Hodge, was born March
6, 1824 and died about 1886. She married James Arthur Grizzle.
Elias Jackson
Elias Jackson, son of Eli Jackson and Tabitha Hodge , was born April 8,
1817, in Rutherford County, North Carolina.
Eli F. Jackson
Eli F. Jackson, son of Eli Jackson and Tabitha Hodge, was born January
20, 1826, and died in 1911.
Amintha Corintha Jackson
Amintha Corintha Jackson, daughter of Eli Jackson and Tabitha Hodge, was
born January 17, 1828. She married Thomas Lee December 19, 1865, in Lumpkin
County, Georgia.
Chapter 7
Amos Jackson and His Descendants
Amos (or William Amos) Jackson, son of Edward Jackson, was born in February,
1781, in Burke County, NC. About 1799 he married first a Miss Snider (an
Irish seamstress according to family lore) in Burke County, and they had
eight children, all born in Burke County, NC. Amos Jackson received a
grant of fifty acres of land on the Broad River in Burke County in 1810,
and he also received land in Rutherford County, North Carolina, on January
16, 1805, October 13, 1807, and January 13, 1819. Amos Jackson bought
186 acres of land from his father on January 14, 1815. He also drew land
(Section 3, District 5, lot 148 in Troup County) in the 1827 Land Lottery
in Georgia.
In April, 1816, the Burke County Court ordered Amos Jackson and his brother,
Eli Jackson, to work the road from Thomas Lytle to the Blue Ridge, and
in January, 1817, the court ordered Amos and Eli to view, mark, and alter
the Crooked Creek Road from the town end of Amos Chaffin’s plantation.
Amos Jackson and his son Hiram Jackson sold 150 acres of land at the mouth
of Laurel Creek on the Main Broad River to Stephen Souther for $450 on
March 5, 1823.
After the death of his first wife, Amos Jackson moved his family to Habersham
County, GA, in 1823, along with his brothers Joseph and Eli. The Cherokee
Indians had ceded their land in Habersham County to the whites by treaty
in 1817 and 1819, and Clarkesville, the county seat of Habersham County,
was chartered in 1823. Amos Jackson bought land from Benjamin Cleveland
March 23, 1825, in Habersham County, Georgia.
On October 7, 1824, Amos Jackson married second Margaret Chaffin, born
1800, died 1890. They had three children, all three born in Habersham
County, Georgia. In 1850, Amos Jackson lived in the 18th District of Habersham
County. Amos Jackson died January 20, 1862 (An internet source says he
died in 1863.) in Habersham County, Georgia, and is buried in the Hazel
Creek Baptist Church Cemetery in Clarkesville, Georgia. Habersham County
experienced a gold rush in 1828 and 1829, and Clarkesville was a popular
summer resort for coastal Georgians in the 1830’s, but these events
do not seem to have affected Amos Jackson. Amos Jackson was sometimes
called upon to appraise estates in Habersham County.
Children of Amos Jackson and Miss Snider were:
- Hiram Henry Jackson (born Febuary 6, 1800,)
- Sarah Jackson (born February 11, 1802)
- Margaret Jackson (born December 30, 1804)
- Polly Jackson (born May 6, 1807)
- Edward Jackson (born May 6, 1807)
- Joseph Chaffin Jackson (born July 2, 1813)
- Susannah Jackson (born April 11, 1815)
- Catherine Jackson (born December 4, 1817)
Children of Amos Jackson and Margaret Chaffin were:
- Rosetta (or Rozilla) Jackson (January 21, 1825-January 15, 1878)
- Elizabeth Jackson (born December 18, 1827)
- Jasper Chaffin Jackson
Hiram Jackson, His Wives, and His Children
Apparently, Hiram Jackson, son of Amos Jackson and ------ Snider, lived
with Margaret “Peggy” Fitzgerald (born December 20, 1804,
died March 12, 1898, buried in Providence Baptist Church Cemetery), daughter
of William Fitzgerald and Sarah Nations Fitzgerald. “Peggy”
Fitzgerald was said to be part Cherokee Indian, and lived in the First
District of Habersham County, Georgia. Although there is some question
whether they ever married, they were the parents of three children. At
some point, Hiram Jackson left “Peggy”, vowing never to return.
In 1850, “Peggy” lived in the 1st District of Habersham County,
Georgia.
After abandoning Margaret Fitzgerald, Hiram Jackson may have married Mary
Whitaker, born July 24, 1799 in Hartford County, Maryland, the daughter
of William Whitaker and Mary Canada.
In 1823, Hiram Jackson and his father sold Stephen Souther 150 acres of
land on the Main Broad River in Rutherford Countyfor $450. In 1824, Hiram
Jackson purchased 150 acres on the Main Broad River in Rutherford County,
North Carolina, from Joseph Jackson.
Children of Hiram Jackson and Margaret “Peggy” Fitzgerald
were:
Mary Ann Jackson (born 1833, married Abner Keel February 5, 1851)
Calvin Charles Jackson (born April 15, 1834, died October 18, 1907,
served in Confederate Army, married Suzie Adeline Tatum February 10, 1867)
Alfred P. Jackson (born 1836, killed in the War Between the States June
15, 1862, married December 9, 1861)
Possible children of Hiram Jackson and Mary Whitaker were:
- Solomon Jackson
- Fidelia Jackson
- Andrew Jackson
- Lucinda Jackson
- Minerva Jackson
- Mary Ann Jackson.
Joseph Chaffin Jackson and His Descendants
Joseph Chaffin Jackson, son of Amos Jackson and Miss Snider, was born
July 2, 1813. In 1850, he resided in the 18th District of Habersham County,
Georgia, near his father. He married Milly (or Mary) Yearwood, and their
son was Jasper A. Jackson.
Jasper A. Jackson
Jasper A. Jackson, son of Joseph Chaffin Jackson and Milly Yearwood (Yarwood),
was born about 1848 in Habersham County, Georgia. He married “Manda”,
probably Amanda Kyle (Kile), and their children were:
- Mary A. Jackson
- Sarah J. Jackson
- Joseph Jackson
- Rosilla Jackson
- Harvey Jackson
- Willis Jackson
Joseph Jackson, son of Jasper Jackson, married twice. His first wife was
Josephine Herrin and his second wife was Sally Melissa Cross. Joseph and
Sally moved to Florida. Among Joseph’s children was Elsie Mae Jackson.
Elsie Mae Jackson, daughter of Joseph Jackson, married a Gabrels and lived
in Habersham County, Georgia.
Susannah Jackson
Susannah Jackson, daughter of Amos Jackson and Miss Snider, was born April
11, 1815.) She married David Jackson, probably the son of Eli Jackson
and his wife, on July 7, 1832, in Habersham County, Georgia. Sometime
between 1850 and 1860, Susannah and David moved to Lumpkin County, Georgia,
near Dahlonega. At that time, Dahlonega was a gold mining center with
a Federal mint, and it was also a summertime resort for wealthy citizens
who lived near the coast of Georgia. Children of Susannah Jackson and
David Jackson, all born in Georgia, were:
- Elias H. Jackson (See below)
- Roger J. Jackson (born ca 1837)
- Lyear L. Jackson (born ca 1839)
- Andrew M. Jackson (born ca 1843)
- Sarah L. Jackson (born ca 1845)
- Amos D. Jackson (born ca 1847)
- Susan A. Jackson (born ca 1852)
- Zilly C. Jackson (born ca 1858)
Elias H. Jackson
Elias H. Jackson, eldest son of Susannah Jackson and David Jackson, was
born in 1835. He served an apprenticeship as a cabinet maker, probably
with his namesake, Uncle Elias Jackson, who was also a cabinet maker.
Besides his apprenticeship, Elias received enough education in reading
and writing so that he was able to sign his name, even though he probably
lived much of his boyhood in Cherokee Indian lands which later became
Gilmer County, Georgia..
In 1861, when Elias was 26 years old, he married Elizabeth Gilbert, who
was 21 at the time. They were married in Clarkesville, Georgia, by Jasper
Chaffin Jackson, a Baptist minister, who was another of Elias’ uncles.
They remained married for more than fifty years, and all of their eight
children lived to adulthood.
Shortly after their marriage, the Civil War began. Elias H. Jackson enlisted
as a private in the Confederate Army at Dahlonega, Georgia, on March 4,
1862. He signed up for three years, at a pay rate of $22 per month. The
record shows that he was thought to be AWOL at one time, but later it
was discovered that he was sick. Elias was captured at Vicksburg, Mississippi,
on July 4, 1863, and held prisoner at Louisville, Kentucky. He was exchanged
on October 8, 1863. He was furloughed at Columbus, Georgia, in February,
1865.
After the war, Elias H. Jackson returned to Daholnega, Lumpkin County,
Georgia. At this time, he owned 50 acres of land in Habersham County,
Georgia.
By 1870, Elias H. Jackson and Elizabeth Gilbert had moved to Clarkesville,
Georgia, where he worked as a cabinet maker and their children grew up
and went to school. Their daughter Flona Jackson married James Henry Watson
there in 1887.
Not long after Flona’s marriage, Elias H. Jackson, aged 52 years,
was living in Knoxville, Tennessee. He purchased 125 acres of land in
Lumpkin County, Georgia, from his father, but there is no record that
he ever went back to Georgia.
By 1900,, Elias H. Jackson and Elizabeth Gilbert were in Sweetwater, Tennessee,
perhaps because work was available there. Elias worked as a cabinet maker,
capenter, and farmer. By this time, all of the children were grown and
out of the home except Lucinda Jennie Jackson, who lived with her parents
until they died.
Elizabeth Gilbert died in Sweetwater on June 10, 1911. After her death,
Elias H. Jackson went to live with thir son, Thomas M. Jackson, in Lenoir
City, Tennessee. Elias outlived Elizabeth by only six months, and died
on January 15, 1912, in Lenoir City. When he died, he had black eyebrows,
white hair, and a long, white beard. His funeral was held at the First
Baptist Church in Sweetwater, where he was a member. Both Elias and Elizabeth
lie buried in the Westview Cemetery in Sweetwater.
Children of Elias H. Jackson and Elizabeth Gilbert, in no particular order,
were:
- Flona Jackson
- Lucinda Jennie Jackson
- James Henry Jackson
- Laura Jackson
- William E. Jackson
- Suzie Jackson
- Thomas M. Jackson
- One other daughter
Flona “Flonnie” Jackson
Flona “Flonnie” Jackson, daughter of Elias H. Jackson and
Elizabeth Gilbert, married James Henry Watson II in 1887 when she was
just 16, and had her first child at age 17. Flona and James lived in Martel
in Loudon County, Georgia. Altogether, Flona and James had 12 children,
and ten of them lived to adulthood. One of their children was Flona Kathleen
Watson, who married a Blalock. Their last child was born when Flona Jackson
was 44 years old.
Lucinda Jennie Jackson
Lucinda Jennie Jackson, daughter of Elias H. Jackson and Elizabeth Gilbert,
lived with her parents while they were alive. She married and divorced
but had no children, and worked in a woolen mill in Sweetwater, Tennessee.
After the death of her father, she went to live with her brother, James
Henry Jackson, in Talladega, Alabama, where she died on May 8, 1912.
James Henry Jackson
James Henry Jackson, son of Elias H. Jackson and Elizabeth Gilbert, married,
but his wife’s name is unknown. He lived first in Sweetwater, Tennessee,
and later in Talladega, Alabama.
Laura Jackson
Laura Jackson, daughter of Elias H. Jackson and Elizabeth Gilbert, married
a Phillips and raised a family in Sweetwater, Tennessee.
William E. Jackson
William E. Jackson, son of Elias H. Jackson and Elizabeth Gilbert, married
Cora Lee Kyker, whose family owned a funeral home.
Suzie Jackson
Suzie Jackson, daughter of Elias H. Jackson and Elizabeth Gilbert, married
Willy McDonald and moved to Knoxville, Tennessee.
Thomas M. Jackson
Thomas M. Jackson, son of Elias H. Jackson and Elizabeth Gilbert, married
and lived in Loudon County near his sister, Flona Jackson, in Loudon County,
Tennessee.
Other Daughter
The unknown other daughter of Elias H. Jackson and Elizabeth Gilbert married
Will H. Robinson of Sheffield, Alabama.
Jasper Chaffin Jackson and His Descendants
Jasper Chaffin Jackson, son of Amos Jackson and Margaret Chaffin, was
born in Habersham County, Georgia, August 5, 1829. He married first Margaret
Ann Wilbanks (August 10, 1836-June 10, 1864) on January 10, 1856 in Habersham
County, Georgia. Margaret Ann Wilbanks joined Bethlehem Church in Habersham
County, Georgia, on August 29, 1852, and was baptized there on September
5th, 1852.
On September 12, 1865, Jasper Chaffin Jackson married second Susannah
Clarinda Smith (April 24, 1843-January 21, 1924). Susannah was a brother
of James Bruce Smith, who married Mary Antonette England in Habersham
County on May 18, 1885.
Jasper Chaffin Jackson was a farmer and a Baptist preacher. Jasper C.
Jackson lived in Clarkesville, Georgia, in 1860, and in 1864 he was elected
Assistant (Pastor?) of the Baptist Church of Christ at Camp Creek, Clarkesville.
He was also an early pastor of Mud Creek Baptist Church Jasper Chaffin
Jackson died April 5, 1910. Either Jasper Chaffin Jackson or Margaret
Ann Wilbanks was killed by lightning.
Children of Jasper Chaffin Jackson and Margaret Ann Wilbanks, all born
in Clarkesville, Georgia, were:
- William Washington Jackson
- Isabella Jane Jackson (August 20, 1859-January 1, 1901)
- Alpha Caroline Jackson (August 12, 1861-April 26, 1888)
- Infant boy (born January 17, 1864, lived just 23 hours)
Children of Jasper Chaffin Jackson and Susannah Clarinda Smith were:
- Henry Amos Jackson (born November 20, 1866, Clarkesville, Georgia)
- Arlene Leppeau Jackson (February 10, 1870-April, 1953)
- Emma Florence Jackson (February 7, 1872-February 7, 1926)
- Cora Lillian Jackson (November 15, 1874-February 12, 1875)
- Dexter Lamonte Jackson (born February 25, 1876)
- Justin Claude Jackson (Ocotber 3, 1877-October 21, 1948)
- Mark Pierre Jackson (February 25, 1880-February 20, 1953)
- Infant girl (born June 23, 1882, Mt. Airy, Georgia, died August 27,
1888)
William Washington Jackson
William Washington Jackson, son of Jasper Chaffin Jackson and Margaret
Ann Wilbanks, was born in Georgia October 7, 1856. He married Mary Devers,
also born in Georgia. William Washington Jackson was unemployed for three
months in 1880.
Children of William Washington Jackson and Mary Devers were:
- Mary A. Jackson, born August 20, 1858
- Vida I. Jackson, born May 16, 1875
- Ralph Jackson, born June 15, 1876
- Ida Polena Jackson, born November 22, 1877
- another son, born April 5, 1879
- William Elmer Jackson
- Ada Jackson, born December 11, 1882
- Jasper G. Jackson, born January 26, 1885
William Elmer Jackson, son of William Washington Jackson and Mary Devers,
was born in Athens, Georgia, December 7, 1880. When he was five years
old, he lived in Talapoosa, Georgia. He married Kathryne Carolyn Pierce
on May 24, 1903 in Bibb County, Georgia, and they had three daughters.
In 1910, William Elmer Jackson was a moulder in an iron works in Macon,
Georgia. Later, he became a fireman in Macon. In 1913 he was a member
of Auto Company No. 3, and by 1930 he had become an Inspector. He read
law, and passed the bar exam in 1917, but never practiced. He was a member
of the Church of Christ. Kathryne Carolyn Pierce divorced him and went
to New Jersey. William Elmer Jackson died September 25, 1963, and is buried
in Macon Memorial Park.
Children of William Elmer Jackson and Kathryne Carolyn Pierce were:
- Marie Elmer Jackson
- Kathryne Rosemond (or Rose) Jackson
- Dorothy Jackson
Marie Elmer, Dorothy, and Kathryne Rosemond Jackson were all confirmed
at St. Joseph’s Catholic Church in Macon, Georgia,on May 16, 1917.
Dorothy Jackson, daughter of William Elmer Jackson and Kathryne Carolyn
Pierce, was born March 26, 1905, in Macon, GA. She took her first communion
at St. Joseph’s Catholic Church in Macon on May 31, 1914. In1930
she married William Arthur Hazelton, a Presbyterian, in an Episcopal Church
in New York City. They had one son, Pierce C. Hazelton, born May 31, 1933.
Dorothy Jackson lies buried in Macon Memorial Park Cemetery in lot C274,
next to Barney L. Long, Marion Pierce Long, Lieutenant Commander Patrick
Henry Pierce, Henry M. Pierce, and William Elmer Jackson.
William Arthur Hazelton was employed by the New York Telephone Company.
He involved himself in church work and local school politics, and often
officiated at amateur football games.
William Arthur Hazelton was the son of Washington Elmer Hazelton (born
in 1874) and Ida May “Nan” Chandler (born in 1877). Both were
born in New York City. Washington Elmer Hazelton built a house in Teaneck,
New Jersey, about 1900, and moved there from New York.
Children of Washington Elmer Hazelton and Ida May “Nan” Chandler
were:
- John Hazelton (born 1895)
- William Arthur Hazelton (born 1902)
- Alice Hazelton (born 1912)
- Eileen “Peter” Hazelton (born 1916)
- Paul Hazelton (born 1924).
From America to Denmark
Pierce C. Hazelton, son of Dorothy Jackson and William Arthur Hazelton,
married first Birthe ----- in Denmark, and they had one son, Lars Hazelton.
Pierce Hazelton married second Lene Andreassen in Denmark. Lene Andreassen
was an artist who specialized in pictures of buildings, especially castles
and other old buildings. In 1974 she was invited to an audience with the
Queen at Fredensborg Palace to show her art, and she was commissioned
by the Queen to make a study of the art in the summer palace at Fredricksborg.
The study was published in book form.
Lars Hazelton, son of Pierce C. Hazelton and Birtha -----, was the father
of:
- Rasmus Hazelton
- Nanna Hazelton
- Jesper Hazelton
Kathryne Rosemond Jackson, daughter of William Elmer Jackson and Kathryne
Carolyn Pierce, was born February 14, 1907, in Macon, GA. She took her
first communion at St. Joseph’s Catholic Church in Macon on January
18, 1914. She entered college at Mercer University in Macon, but completed
her degree at Columbia University. In 1934 she married Bernard Lee Flynn
in New York City. She worked as a teacher in New Jersey until 1939, when
she and her husband moved to Cambridge, Massachusetts, where she taught
in the Cambridge Lower School.
After World War II, the family moved to Teaneck, New Jersey, where Kathryne
Jackson Flynn became a remedial reading specialist in the Demarest, New
Jersey, public schools.
Bernard Lee Flynn was born January 3, 1912, in West Virginia. He graduated
from Virginia Polytechnic Institute as a chemical engineer. He joined
Lever Brothers Company in 1933 and worked his way up to Vice-President
for Purchases. Kathryne Rosemond Jackson and Bernard Lee Flynn lived for
a time near Boston, Massachusetts, and then moved to Teaneck, New Jersey.
He died of cancer December 9, 1973.
The ancestry of Bernard Lee Flynn is as follows: Valentine Flynn was born
in Ireland about 1680 and immigrated to America in 1708. His son, Valentine
“Val, Jr.” Flynn II, was born about 1718 and died after 1789.
“Val Jr.’s” wife was Hannah. He lived most of his life
in Faquier County, Virginia, where he and Hannah raised at least five
sons. One of them, John Flynn, Sr., was born about 1740 in Faquier County,
Virginia, where he was a farmer. His wife’s name is unknown. Their
son, William Flynn (1773-ca. 1835), was born in Faquier County, Virginia,
where he became a farmer. William Flynn married his first cousin, Sarah
Flynn (daughter of Alexander Flynn), in 1796. James Flynn was was one
of their eleven children, born about 1804 in Faquier County, Virginia,
and died November 8, 1858. James Flynn married Ann Nancy Ball (daughter
of William Ball and Margery Creel) on December 22, 1828, and Benjamin
Willoughby Flynn was one of their seven children. Benjamin Willoughby
Flynn was born in Faquier County, Virginia, in 1837. He married twice,
first to Lydia Buncutter, and their son James Willoughby Flynn was the
only one of their children to reach maturity. Lydia was the daughter of
George Buncutter. After Lydia died in 1869, Benjamin Willoughby Flynn
married Mary R. Montgomery. James Willoughby Flynn was born March 13,
1861, in Preston County, Virginia, where he married Annie Klauser on March
16, 1886. They lived in the Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, area. Their son,
Benjamin Levi Flynn, was born in 1896. He married Mary (or Mamie) Dilworth.
Bernard Lee Flynn was one of their three children.
After her husband’s death, Kathryne Jackson Flynn continued to live
in Teaneck for several years, but about 1980, she moved to her husband’s
family farm in Astor, West Virginia, and in 1992, moved to Fort Meyers,
Florida, to be near Bernard Lee Flynn Jr. In Fort Meyers she volunteered
as a tutor at Cypress Lake Middle School and as a private volunteer teacher
in reading.
In addition to her teaching career, she served two terms on the Board
of Directors of Davis and Elkins College in Elkins, West Virginia, where
a library study room was named for her. She was active in the American
Association of University Women, and in her earlier years, in the Children
of the Confederacy and the Order of the Eastern Star. She was a lifelong
golfer, boater, and fisherman, and enjoyed pencil sketching, watercolor
painting, and writing poetry.
She died on March 17, 2004, in Fort Meyers, Florida. A memorial service
was held for her at Saint Luke’s Episcopal Church in Fort Myers
on April 6, 2004.
Kathryne Rosemond Jackson and Bernard Lee Flynn had one son, Bernard Lee
Flynn, Jr, who was born in Boston, Massachusetts in 1941. He and his wife
Barbara had two children, Kathryne Anne Flynn and Bernard Lee Flynn III.
Kathryne Anne Flynn married Steve Hayden and they adopted two children,
Dakota and Brittany. Bernard Lee Flynn III (born July 16, 1976) married
Erin Skiles (born March 11, 1979) on June 21, 2003. Erin Skiles was the
daughter of Paula Saling and Steven Skiles.
Marie Elmer Jackson, daughter of William Elmer Jackson and Kathryne Carolyn
Pierce, was born February 7, 1904, in Macon, Georgia. She was baptized
at St.Joseph’s Catholic Church in Macon March 26, 1904 by Father
John P. McDonnell, and took her first communion April 27, 1913. She always
used her middle name of Elmer, even from the first grade, and by the time
she graduated from Lanier High School in Macon she was using the name
William Elmer Jackson. She received a diploma from Georgia State Normal
School in 1922, obtained a Bachelor of Science Degree (using the name
William Elmer Jackson) in 1929, and obtained a Master’s Degree in
Education from Columbia University in 1933. She became a teacher at Bryant
Elementary School when it opened in 1926 in Teaneck, N. J, and later became
its principal.
She met Charles Ferdinand Carson in the Fall of 1930. They planned a big
wedding, but instead they were married at the courthouse in New York City
on December 27, 1930. After the brief ceremony, Elmer telephoned her mother,
and said, “Momma, I’m married!”
Her mother said, “Elmer, you come home right this minute!”
Of course, she didn’t.
In 1942, she moved with her husband to Arlington, Virginia, and immediately
after World War II, she continued her teaching career as the first reading
specialist with the schools in Arlington, VA. Until that time, the schools
in Arlington were controlled by a superintendant appointed by the governor.
Elmer probably could have been elected to the first elected school board
of Arlington, but her husband advised her not to run. Later, she taught
in Rockville, Maryland.
She moved with her husband again, this time to Reynolds, Georgia. She
taught in Crawford, Taylor, and other counties in Georgia, joined the
staff of the Macon County Area Instructional Serevices Center when it
was organized in 1967, and retired as a Language Arts Consultant in 1971.
She served a year as president of the Gordon-Carson Chapter of the United
Daughters of the Confederacy in Reynolds, GA., chaired the Woman’s
Missionary Union of First Baptist Church, Reynolds, GA, 1973-1974, and
served on the church’s Library Committee 1982-1983. Marie Elmer
Jackson died of a heart attack in Fort Valley, Georgia, on October 13,
1984, and is buried in the Carson Cemetery in Macon County, Georgia.
Chapter 8
Azeriah Jackson
Azeriah Jackson, youngest son of Edward Jackson, was born in 1783 in Burke
County, NC. He married Sarah Chaffin in Burke County, NC, April 10, 1809.
Apparently, Azeriah and Sarah left Burke County shortly after their marriage.
He served with General Andrew Jackson in the Creek War and the War of
1812, and by 1820, he was in Jackson County, Tennessee. The 1830 census
for Jackson County shows Azeriah Jackson with four sons and three daughters.
Azeriah Jackson died sometime after 1850 in Jackson County, Tennessee.
Chapter 9
Polly Jackson and Her Children
Polly Jackson, daughter of Edward Jackson, was born about 1789 (an internet
source says 1790) and died before 1817 in Burke County, North Carolina.
She may have lived with her brother, Joseph Jackson, in 1810 in Rutherford
County, North Carolina. She married Moses Noblet in Burke County on August
22, 1811, and their children were:
- Ann Noblet
- William Noblet
- John Littleton Noblet
Chapter 10
Peggy Jackson
Peggy Jackson, daughter of Edward Jackson, was born in 1792 (An internet
source says 1787.) in Burke County, North Carolina. She married Alexander
“Alex” Hopson on September 25, 1809, and .resided in Burke
and Rutherford Counties, North Carolina. She moved to Laurel County, Kentucky,
where she died (in 1870, according to an internet source).
References
The first group of references was provided by Dr. Duckworth, and are applicable
to this entire book:
01. 1800 Census Burke County NC
02. Land Records (sale) Burke County NC
03. 1810, 1820, 1830, 1840 Census Rutherford County NC
04. Land Recuords (entries and sales) Rutherford County NC.
05. Marriage Records of Rutherford County NC.
06. 1830, 1840, 1850 Census Reports of Habersham County GA
07. Land Records of Habersham County GA.
08. 1860, 1870, 1880, Census Reports of White County GA.
09. Muster Roll of Company C, 24th Regiment Georgia Volunteer Infantry
10. Death Record of Lucinda Jackson 1944
11. Family Notes by Thomas Kimsey Jackson written in 1922
12. Jackson Tombstones in White County GA
13. Jackson Family Genealogy by Lu Woods
14. Hall County GA Marriage Records
15. 1830 Census Hall County GA
16. 1850 Census Lumpkin County GA
17. 1860 Census Dawson County GA
18. Choestoe Baptist Church Minutes
19. 1840, 1850 Census Reports Union County GA
20. Crumey Letters. http://www.rootsweb.com/~gawhite/letters/index.htm
21. Dyer, Watson, Collins and Jackson
The second group of references are those used by Charles Ferdinand Carson
in the preparation of Chapters 1 and 2, and especially, Chapter 7.
1. Baptismal Certificate of Marie Elmer Jackson
2. The Crystal, State Normal School, Athens, Georgia, 1922
3. High school and college diplomas of Marie Elmer Jackson
4. Mrs. Elmer Carson, Language Arts Consultant Retires, Citizen and Georgian,
Montezuma, GA July 1, 1971
5. School No. 6 Teaches Self Control in the Child; Scientific Projects
“Make Life More Meaningful”, Newspaper article published about
1934
6. Bryant Year Book 1934, The Class of 1934, Bryant Elementary School,
Teaneck, New Jersey
7. Pamphlet, The Dedication of The Bernard L. Flynn Planetarium, Davis
and Elkins College, 1974
8. Cornell, Nancy J., 1864 Census for Re-Organizing the Georgia Militia,
Genealogical Publishing Company, Baltimore, MD, 2000
9. Monthly Report of Elmer Jackson, Grammar School Department, Bibb County
Public Schools
10. University of Georgia Alumni Questionaire completed by Elmer Jackson
Carson October 2, 1979
11. Kimzey, Herbert B., Habersham County, Georgia, Genealogical Records,
Volume IV, Camp Creek Baptist Church Minutes, 1834-1876, Unpublished,
in the collection of the North Carolina Department of Archives and History,
Raleigh, NC
12. Obituary of William E. Jackson, Macon Telegraph, September 27, 1963
13. Obituary of Mrs. Joseph S. Weekly, Macon News, June 13, 1960
14. Kimsey, Herbert B., and Dempsey, Nancy Kimsey, Early Genealogical
and Historical Records, Habersham County, Georgia, 1988
15. Duckworth, John F., The Jacksons on Crooked Creek, Burke (McDowell)
County, North Carolina – Edward Jackson Family, unpublished manuscript
in the files of the Burke County Public Library, Morganton, NC
16. Duckworth, John F., Old Rowan County, unpublished manuscript sent
by E-mail from Dr. Duckworth on July 28, 2001
17. Linn, Jo White, Rowan County, North Carolina, Tax Lists 1757-1800,
Jo White Linn, Salisbury, NC, 1995
18. Jackson, James R., Descendants of Nathan Jackson, unpublished manujscript
sent by James Jackson by E-mail July 31, 2001
19. Brandenburger, Evelyn Duke, and Martin, Clara Jackson, “The
Jacksons of Lower Virginia”, a serialized article in The Virginia
Genealogist, beginning with July – September, 1986, Volume 30, Number
3, and continuing through October – December 1989, Volume 33 Number
4.
20. Fries, Adelaide L., Records of Moravians in North Carolina,Volume
II 1752-1775, Edwards & Broughton Printing Company, Raleigh, 1925.
21. Hummel, Elizabeth Hicks, Hicks History of Granville County, North
Carolina, Vol. I Marriage Bonds, Coble Printing company, Oxford, NC, 1965.
Vernon, Lucille Jackson, Jackson Family, transcribed after her death for
the internet by Bob Jackson at Home.att.net/~wxjax
22. Triebert, H. Russell et al, The Heritage of Burke County, Burke County
Historical Society, Morganton, NC, 1981
23. Hazelton, Pierce, To Begin with the Beginning, unpublished autobiography
24. Duckworth, John F., email about Nathan Jackson dated August 20, 2002
25. E-mail from John Duckworth concerning Susannah Chaffin and her relatives
26. Email from John Duckworth dated 3/30/2004, concerning the children
of Edward Jackson
27. Obituary of Kathryne Jackson Flynn
28. Flynn Families of Faquier Co., Va., and Beyond, on the internet at
http://www.geocities.com/flynn1962/
29. Email from Jvmason@aol.com about Jasper A. Jackson
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