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of Alabama,
Mississippi, and Tennessee
According
to family legend, Hugh Dale was
born in Belfast, Ireland around
1799. He arrived in America in 1818. He
joined an uncle, John Dale, in
Washington Co, AL. This information,
written by Mrs. Clara Sansom Mabry,
granddaughter of Hugh Dale, appears to be
correct, although John C. Dale may
have actually been Hugh's brother. Hugh
Dale and John C. Dale lived in Old
St. Stephens, an early settlement in Washington
Co, AL.
"The
town of St. Stephens developed around
the Spanish fort. Franklin,
Rodney, and Carrollton were three small
towns settled near the fort in 1807
by Americans who did not wish to live in
what was then a Spanish town.
These three towns were eventually incorporated
into the town of St.
Stephens. In its prosperous days,
St. Stephens boasted a theater, several
taverns, hotels and other places of entertainment"
(Matte, pp. 49-50,
"History of Washington County").
John
C. Dale owned The St. Stephens Hotel
(probably lot 139 on High Street),
a tavern, and a plantation in Washington
Co, AL. He purchased 158.12 1/2
acres of federal land in Washington County
on September 1, 1804 (Patent No.
453, Northwest Quarter of Section 31 in
township 9 of Range 3 West). He
later purchased 161.32 1/2 acres of federal
land at the Land Office in St.
Stephens on April 10, 1818 ("NW Quarter
Section No. 28 in Township No. 11 of
Range No. 10 in the district of lands offered
for sale at St. Stephens",
Certificate 2802).
..
According to Jacqueline Anderson Matte,
"people had bought this land by
putting down only one-fourth of the cost
as required by the Land Law of
1800, promising to pay the balance to the
federal government over three
years. The smallest amount one person
could buy was 160 acres. But when
the bottom dropped out of the cotton market,
few could meet their payments. Many of them packed up their
families and
moved further west to Mississippi
or Texas.
By
1820 Alabamians owed the federal government
$11 million, more than half
of the national land debt. By 1820
and 1821 Congress passed new laws to
deal with this problem. Those already
in debt were aided by the Relief Act
of 1821 which permitted them to keep part
of their land and return the rest
to the government or buy it all on the installment
plan at reduced rates."
On
May 13, 1822, John C. Dale applied for
a "Certificate of Further Credit,
Under the Act of the 2d of March, 1821".
This certificate is located with
John C. Dale's estate papers at the Washington
County courthouse in Chatom
(Relinquishment No. 588).
John
C. Dale was married to Sarah Dupree.
She was either the daughter of
David Dupree and Sarah Chaney or the widow
of David Dupree. In January 1820,
John and Sarah Dupree Dale sold land inherited
by Sarah Dupree from the will
of David Dupree.
Information
in John C. Dale's estate papers
indicates Hugh Dale worked for
him, "learning the business of running a
plantation". It appears that John
C. Dale eventually lost his hotel, and possibly
other property. He is found
in an 1821 tax record in Mobile, AL, Captain
Tutle's Beat. John C. Dale died
in 1823 in Wilcox Co, AL. His obituary was
printed in the Mobile Commercial
Register on October 2, 1823 and reads: "In
Washington County, Col. John C.
Dale, a native of Ireland".
It
appears that John C. Dale had a significant
amount of debt at the time of
his death. Hugh Dale was the administrator
of his estate. In the estate
papers located at the Washington County
courthouse, there are many receipts
of payment made by Hugh Dale to various
individuals to satisfy John Dale's
debts. There is no mention of John
Dale's wife, Sarah, or any children. One
of the items in the Washington Co, AL estate
papers referred to Hugh Dale as
the brother of John C. Dale.
According
to the estate papers, Hugh Dale
was reimbursed money owed to him
by John Dale for "services as a laborer
from the first of December1820 to
the last of February 1821" at $15.00 per
month. He was also reimbursed for
two months in 1821 and from 1822 through
February 1823. In addition, Hugh
Dale was reimbursed for $48.00 for a loan
to John Dale made in June 1822 and
for a horse sold by John Dale. Hugh Dale
traveled to Mobile, Jackson,
Camden, and Claiborne on business of the
estate. There may be other estate
papers located in Wilcox County.
On 14
Oct 18 (26?), Hugh Dale sold John C.
Dale's property located in
Township 9, Range 3 West to John Worsham
for the sum of twenty five dollars.
This was probably done to satisfy a debt.
This deed is located with John
Dale's estate papers.
After
their marriage, Hugh and Catherine
Dale moved to Marengo Co, AL.
According to Mrs. Clara Sansom Mabry, they
settled in Bluff Port, which was
located in Section 26, Township 19 North,
Range 1 West. "The name originated
from the high bluffs on the Tombigbee on
which were built warehouses for
river freight" ("The Names of Sumter County,
Alabama" by Virginia O. Foscue,
1978).
The
Dales are listed in the 1830 census with
1 male under 5, 1 male 30-40, 1
female under 5, 1 female 20-30, and 2 slaves.
In 1832, they either moved to
Sumter County or the county lines changed,
and their property became part of
Sumter County. According to "Goodspeed's
History of Tennessee, 1887", their
son, John Clanton Dale, was the first white
child born in Sumter County
(1832).
In
1837, Hugh Dale purchased a total of 545
acres of federal land in Sumter
County (Section 1, Range 2W, Township 19N
and Section 36, Range 2W, Township
20N). According to Mrs. Clara Sansom
Mabry, a story is told as to how he
acquired his first land. He was urged
by a wealthy friend to attend a land
sale. As Hugh had no money, he was
alarmed to hear the land bid in his
name. His friend bid the land for
him and let him pay it as he could,
without being bound by notes of security.
Hugh Dale's home ("The Old Dale
Plantation") was standing and in good condition
in 1883 when Mrs. Mabry
visited it.
In
the 1840 census of Sumter Co, AL, the
family included 1 male under 5, 1
male 5-10, 1 male 10-15, 1 male 15-20, 1
male 20-30, 1 male 30-40, 2 females
under 5, 1 female 5-10, 2 females 10-15,
1 female 30-40, and 31 slaves. The
1841 poll list for Sumter County indicates
Hugh Dale lived in Livingston.
According
to information written by Mrs.
Clara Sansom Mabry, Hugh Dale's
brother (John) and family planned to leave
Belfast, Ireland about 1845, to
join Hugh in America. The brother
was detained so he put three daughters on
a ship and he, his wife, and one daughter
took the next ship. The brother,
his wife, and daughter died with ship fever
and were buried at sea. The
three surviving daughters were met by Hugh
Dale and taken back to Sumter
County. Matilda, lived with her uncle
Hugh. One daugher lived with a Mr.
Gillespie, and another lived with Martha
Hand Cusack (Catherine Dale's
sister). There is conflicting information
concerning the names of the other
two daughters, but the names Sarah, Mary,
Eliza, and Elizabeth were
mentioned.
Matilda
married Lewis Pinknum Haupt (or Hauk),
and had two children, Erin
Anna, who married William H. Wells and Lela
Dale, who married Stepe Smith.
One of the other daughters married John
Brandon and had four children: Mary
(married Dr. P. N. Wells), John, William (married
Viola Knox), and Charles
(married Blanch Pigford). The other sister
married John White, who died, and
married a second time to Wilse Lawer.
She did not have children.
The
1850 Sumter Co, AL census lists Hugh
Dale and family as living in
Payneville. Hugh is listed as being
49 years of age, born in Ireland.
Catherine is 46 years old, born in North
Carolina. The children's names and
ages are: Matilda (17), John (18), Martha
(16), Adam (12), Elizabeth (9),
Catherine (8), Bolivar (5). Payneville is
now an abandoned town that was
located in Section 13, Township 19N, Range
4 West.
According
to Mrs. Clara Sansom Mabry, Hugh
Dale took his son Adam, who was
about 14 years old, to meet a boat at Demopolis.
It was late in the evening
and Adam was last seen on the gangplank.
It was assumed that he fell off
and drowned. His mother never quit
grieving for him as long as she lived.
Mrs.
Mabry also stated, "Hugh Dale was a
life long planter, a member of the
Presbyterian Church, a man of fine education
and character". He was a man
of great energy and thrift. He was
a stockholder in the Mobile and Ohio
Railroad in its early days. He was
elevated to a high rank in the Masonic
Order. In 1854, he moved his family to Kemper
County, MS and is listed in
the Land Roll as having 320 taxable acres
in Sections 2 and 3, Range 18,
Township 11. He is included in the
1860 census for Kemper County. His home
was known as "The Dale Plantation" and was
located near Scooba.
Hugh
Dale died on February 15, 1867 in Kemper
County, MS. He is said to be
buried near Scooba, MS in an old churchyard
cemetery on property he donated
for a church, a community school, and a
community burial ground. His grave
is enclosed with a wrought iron fence with
the name "Dale" in the arch of
the gate. His death notice was published
in the "Mobile Times", February 23,
1867 and reads, "Died near Scooba, Kemper
County, Mississippi Friday morning
the 15th inst. At about 20 minutes after
12, Hugh Dale, Esq. In his 67th
year."
Mrs.
Mabry stated that, "after her husband's
death, Catherine Clanton Dale
divided her time with her children, Martha
Sansom, Bolivar E. Dale, and John
C. Dale. She was converted early in
life and joined the Methodist church,
to which she remained faithful to the day
of her death. For several years
before her death, she was an invalid, resulting
from a fall, injuring her
hip; but she remained cheerful and happy.
She loved to smoke her pipe (as
all old ladies in that day), sing the old
Hymns and read her Bible. Her
favorite passage of Scripture was the 23rd
Psalm. She died in a calm and
peaceful sleep on Sept. 25, 1889 (age 84
years), at the home of her son John
Clanton Dale, near Kerrville, Tenn. and
was laid to rest there." She is
buried in Bethel Cemetery (by the Methodist
Church), on property owned by
her son. Kerrville is now extinct but was
located in Shelby Co, TN, north of
Memphis.
Children
of Hugh Dale and Catherine Clanton
were:
1.
Sarah A. Dale was born about 1830, probably
in Marengo Co, AL. She
married Dewitt Clinton (D. C.) Greenwood
on 22 Nov 1849 in Sumter Co, AL.
Dewitt Greenwood was the son of Thomas and
Lydia Greenwood. He was the
editor and publisher of a newspaper, "The
Weekly Independent" in Aberdeen,
MS during the early 1850's. Sarah Dale Greenwood
died on 5 April 1894 in
Monroe Co, MS. Their children were:
Edward E., Thomas D., Kate, Beulah,
Sallie, Dewitt, Calpurnia
2.
John Clanton Dale was born in 1832 in
Sumter Co, AL. He graduated from La
Grange College in Alabama in 1851 and married
Elizabeth (Bettie) Mayes in
1852 in Franklin Co, AL.
She was the
daughter of Drury Mayes and Martha Ann
McGreggor. John C. Dale was a farmer
who owned a sawmill and 960 acres of
land in Shelby Co, TN. He died on 3 Oct
1903, in Kerrville, Shelby Co, TN
and is buried in Bethel Cemetery.
Their
chidden were: William Hugh (m. Amelia
Tharpe), Emma (m. Daniel
McIntyre Stewart), Julia, Drury Mayes (m.
Lizzie Dale), Kate, Thomas J. (m.
Jessie Rogers), Sally Greenwood (m. Robert
M. Walker), and Nelly.
3.
Martha Hand ("Matt") was born on 16 Jul
1834 in Sumter Co, AL. She
married William Carter Sansom on 14 Jan
1857 in Scooba, Kemper Co, MS.
He
was the son of John L. Sansom and Sarah
Ann Carter. Martha Sansom died on 7
Sep 1910 in Okolona, Chickasaw Co, MS and
is buried in Old Union Cemetery,
Monroe Co, MS. There is no marker, but she
is next to her husband.
Children
of William Carter Sansom and Martha
Hand Dale were: Sara Catherine
(died in childhood), John Dale (m. Lucy
Roberta Haughton), William Carter,
Jr. (died in childhood), Clara (m. W.G.
Mabry), Mary (m. Gilbert Ivy), James
Lamar (m. Elzie Word), Daisey Dean (m. Ervin
Jay Henson), Martha Beatrice
(m. W.C. Stone, Sr.), and Sallie Estelle
(m. Elbert Tomlinson).
4.
Adam was born about 1838 and died when
14 years old.
5.
William died in infancy (unproven). He
is not in the 1850 census.
6.
Mary was born about 1840 in Sumter County
(unproven). She is not listed
in the1850 census.
7.
Elizabeth was born in 1841 and supposedly
died at boarding school in
Macon, MS after 1850. In the 1850 census,
she is listed as being 9 years
old.
8.
Catherine ("Kate") was born about 1842
in Sumter Co, AL. According to
Mrs. Mabry, "Kate Dale made the presentation
address and presented the Flag
to the 1st Company formed at Scooba, Miss.,
in 1861. W.S. Patton was Captain
of this Company. This was the Confederate
unit William Carter Sansom and
Bolivar Dale were in.
There
was a steamboat that went from Demopolis,
Ala. to Columbus, Miss.,
named for Kate Dale. Her father, Hugh
Dale, presented this boat a very fine
piano. She was quite a talented musician.
Kate
Dale was married to Prof. Oscar Hadley.
Prof. Hadley taught in the
public school in Okolona, MS in 1875-76.
Mrs. Hadley taught music. They
then moved to Alexandria, La., where Prof.
Hadley died. Mrs. Kate Dale
Hadley died on Jan. 12, 1912, in Bergman,
Arkansas, and was buried there.
They had one child, Alice Bennett Hadley,
who married Walter So-Relle in
Alexandria, LA."
9.
Bolivar Edmund was born about 1845 in
Sumter Co, AL. He was said to have
married Mary Bartee of Columbus, MS in 1868.
According to Mrs. Mabry,
Bolivar left school in LaGrange, AL at age
16 to join the Confederacy under
Capt. Steel and Capt. Giler in November
1864. When his father, Hugh Dale,
was notified, he immediately sent a young
slave and furnished each with a
horse. Bolivar was too young to go
into battle and he and the slave were
detailed to hold the army horses.
In a
letter dated 11 Nov 1864 from William
Carter Sansom to his wife Martha
during the Civil War, William states, "Bolivar
is well, he is on the Col's
staff, and has a very easy time. He has
sent Henry home". Henry must have
been the slave who was sent by Hugh Dale.
According
to Mrs. Mabry, Bolivar and Mary
Dale's children were: Mary Matilda
"Mattie" (m. William Haley in Livingston,
AL), Julia (m. Mr. Hawkins and
lived in Epes, AL), Kate, Hugh, Neil, Bolivar,
Jr., Frank, Willie, Robert,
and a set of twin girls who died in infancy.
10. Male who died in infancy
(unproven).
References
"Articles
of Agreement By and Between the
Heirs of Nancy Clanton", Sumter
County, Alabama Deed Book F (1840-1842),
pp. 68-69, at the Sumter County
courthouse in Livingston, AL (photocopy
in possession of Nancy S. Bell).
Betty
Couch Wiltshire, Marriages and Deaths
from Mississippi Newspapers
Volume 1: 1837-1863 (Bowie, Maryland, Heritage
Books, Inc., 1987), p. 207.
Clara
Sansom Mabry, unpublished family history
of the Sansom family,
photocopy in possession of Nancy S. Bell.
"Dale"
surname index at the Alabama State
archives, Montgomery, Alabama.
"D-Goodspeed,
History of Tennessee, 1887,
Shelby County, Tennessee" located
at
(www.rootsweb.com/~tnshelby/).
Dewitt
Clinton Greenwood family group sheet
(undocumented); ancestral file
number AFN: MW7F-GF, Family History Library,
Salt Lake City, Utah.
Edward
L. Clanton loose estate papers at
the Washington County, Alabama
courthouse in Chatom, Alabama, photocopied
by Nancy S. Bell.
Goodspeed
Brothers, Goodspeed's Biographical
and Historical Memoirs of
Mississippi, Volume I, Part 2 (Chicago,
Illinois, 1891), pp. 838-839. (Dale
and Greenwood families)
Gwendolyn
Lynette Hester, Sumter County,
Alabama Wills: 1829-1872 and
Mortality
Schedules: 1850-1880,Willbook l - 1828-1851
(Dallas, Texas, Southern Roots,
1998), p.15.
Jacqueline
Anderson Matte, The History of
Washington County, First County in
Alabama (Chatom , Alabama, Washington County
Historical Society, 1982), pp.
412, 415.
Jacqueline
Anderson Matte, Doris Brown, and
Barbara Waddell, Old St.
Stephens Historical Records Survey (St.
Stephens, Alabama, St. Stephens
Historical Commission, 1999), pp. 48, 49,
51, 55, 126.
Jean
Strickland and Patricia N. Edwards,
Residents of the Southeastern
Mississippi Territory, Book Five: Washington
and Baldwin Counties, Alabama:
Wills, Deeds, and Superior Court Minutes
(Moss Point, Mississippi, Ben
Strickland, 1996), p. 30.
John
C. Dale loose estate papers at the Washington
County, Alabama
courthouse in Chatom, Alabama, photocopied
by Nancy S. Bell.
John
C. Dale obituary, Mobile, Alabama, Mobile
Commercial Register, October
2, 1823, p. 3, col. 3 (on microfilm at the
Mobile Public Library, Mobile,
Alabama).
Kathleen
Paul Jones and Pauline Jones Gandrud,
Marengo County (Alabama):
Marriage Records; Wills and Estates; Deeds;
Revolutionary War Pensions;
Tombstone Inscriptions; Family Records,
Alabama Records, v. 186 (Blewett
Company, Columbus, Mississippi, 1980), p.
6.
Kathleen
Paul Jones and Pauline Jones Gandrud,
Sumter County (Alabama):
Formation of County and Records; Newspaper
Extracts 1866-1870; Miscellaneous
Notes, Alabama Records, v. 44 (Blewett Company,
Columbus, Mississippi,
1980), p. 24.
Kathleen
Paul Jones and Pauline Jones Gandrud,
Alabama Records (Sumter
County), v. 164 (Blewett Company, Columbus,
Mississippi, 1980), pp. 26, 86.
Land
records for Hugh Dale, Bureau of Land
Management General Land Office
Records website, (www.glorecords.blm.gov/search.asp).
Marilyn
Davis Barefield, Records of Wilcox
County, Alabama (Easley, South
Carolina, Southern Historical Press, 1988),
pp. 89, 91.
Nelle
Morris Jenkins, Sumter County, Alabama
Records (publisher unknown,
1961), pp. 22, 30.
Virginia
O. Foscue, The Place Names of Sumter
County, Alabama (Tuscaloosa,
Alabama, University of Alabama Press, 1978),
pp. 1, 22, 23, 51.
"Washington
County, Alabama Records in Early
MS Territory", microfilm
#1993358, pp. 360-361, Family History Library,
Salt Lake City, Utah.
(Guardianship papers of Edward Clanton's
children).
Washington
County Marriage Record Book "A"
1826-1837 located at the
Washington County courthouse in Chatom,
Alabama.
1830
United States Census, Southern District,
Marengo County, Alabama, p.
338, ID# AL558459276, on microfilm at the
Mobile Public Library, Mobile,
Alabama.
1840
United States Census, no township listed,
Sumter County, Alabama, p.
135, ID# AL54a659919, on microfilm at the
Mobile Public Library, Mobile,
Alabama.
1850
United States Census, Payneville Township,
Sumter County, Alabama, p.
297, ID# ALS5a422675, on microfilm at the
Mobile Public Library, Mobile,
Alabama.
1854
Land Roll of Kemper County, Mississippi,
p. 67, at
(www.rootsweb.com/~mskemper).
The
Family of Edward and Nancy Clanton
of North Carolina, Georgia, Alabama, and
Mississippi
by
Nancy Bell
nb7020@hotmail.com
Hugh
Dale married Catherine Clanton on 14
Mar 1828 in Washington Co, AL.
Catherine Clanton was the daughter of Edward
and Nancy Clanton. Although no
official verification has been found concerning
the parents of Edward and
Nancy, many researchers presume that he
was the son of Edward Clanton and
Frances Carter. Nancy is thought to be the
daughter of Green Duke and Mary
Parham. These families were from Warren
Co, N.C.
From
inspecting census and other records,
it appears that Edward and Nancy
Clanton left North Carolina around 1804
and possibly moved to Georgia. There
are records of an Edward Clanton in Jones
County and Hancock County Georgia
during the period between 1805 through 1814.
In
the "Farmer's Gazette", an early newspaper
in Hancock Co, GA, there was
an article written in 1805 about the murder
of a Capt. Michael Rogers by
another soldier. There is mention
of a Capt. Edward Clanton, who testified
against the accused soldier. It appears
that these men were in a militia
unit, but this has not been verified. Edward
Clanton is also listed in "The
Farmer's Gazette" (April 4, 1807 and July
1807) under lists of individuals
with letters remaining in the Sparta Post
Office. An Edward Clanton is
included in the 1811, 1813, and 1814 Jones
Co, GA Tax Digests. He also paid
taxes in Hancock Co, GA.
It is
not known at the present time if this
Edward Clanton was the same man
whom later lived in Washington Co, AL. The
information does correlate with
the family history written by Mrs. Clara
Sansom Mabry, which states, "Their
journey to Georgia took about two months.
They camped out in the forests,
wherever nightfall caught them. They
settled on the banks of the Ocmulgee
River, near Athens, Georgia. They again
moved to Washington Co., Ala".
It is
not known when Edward Clanton moved
his family to Alabama. He is not
listed in the 1816 Petition of Citizens
of the Mississippi Territory, as
were other residents of Washington County.
The guardianship papers of his
children are dated 22 Sep1817 (Town of Rodney).
It appears that he may have
died shortly after arriving in Washington
County. The guardianship and
estate papers name wife Nancy, guardian
of Catherine, Elizabeth, and Mark.
Robert Caller was appointed guardian of
Patsey and Lewis D. Clanton. James
Caller was reimbursed for funeral services.
Robert Caller Jun. was the
administrator of the estate.
There
is a deed dated 17 Sept 1821 in which
Lewis D. Clanton received
$-50.00 from Nancy Clanton for "NE quarter
section 18 and NW quarter section
47, Township 9, Range 4W, being one equal
and undivided part of the land of
Edward Clanton, dec'd, purchased by the
administrators".
Nancy
Clanton eventually moved to Marengo
Co, AL (which later became Sumter
County) with her children. She is listed
in the 1830 census for Marengo
County as head of the household with 1 male
15-21, 1 female 20-30, 1 female
50-60, and 4 slaves. She later moved
to Lauderdale Co, MS, as did her son
Mark and daughter Elizabeth Ratliff. Nancy
Clanton appears in the 1839 and
1840 tax rolls for Lauderdale County, MS.
She died in Lauderdale County, MS
prior to 16 Oct 1840, at which time an agreement
concerning the division of
property between the heirs of Nancy Clanton
was recorded in Sumter Co, AL
(Deed Book F, pages 68-69). Nancy's children,
Lewis D. Clanton, Martha
("Patsey") Cusack, and Catherine Dale were
living in Sumter County at the
time.
Edward
and Nancy Clanton's children:
1.
Lewis D. Clanton was born about 1801 in
N.C. and married Jemima. Their
children were: Martha, Harriet, Erasmus
Collier (married Isabelle Gibson),
Henry, James, Mary E., Wesley, Sarah C.,
and Charles. Lewis D. Clanton is
included in the 1830 Rankin Co, MS census
and the 1840 Sumter Co, AL census.
In 1835, he purchased 39.68 acres
of federal land in Marengo Co, AL
(Section 24, Township 17-N, Range 2-E).
He later moved to Lauderdale Co, MS
and is listed in the 1846 and 1848 Tax Lists,
the 1850 census, and 1860
census (Lauderdale Springs). In 1852 and
1859, he purchased federal land in
Lauderdale Co, MS (Section 9, Township 7-N,
Range 18-E). His date of death
is unknown, but is thought to be between
1860-1863.
2.
Martha ("Patsey") was born about 1802
in N.C. She first married Obediah
Hand on 26 April 1832 in Marengo Co, AL.
Obediah Hand was a citizen from
Clarke Co, AL who fled to St. Stephens shortly
before the massacre at Fort
Mimms (30 Aug 1813) during the Creek Indian
Wars. He supervised the
construction of a citizen's stockade fort
("Fort Republic") and was elected
captain of the fort. According to
George Strother Gaines, Capt. Hand was a,
"worthy member of the Methodist Church and
a grand uncle of Vanderbilt".
Obediah Hand was a Revolutionary War Veteran.
Martha Clanton was his fourth
wife. They had one son, Samuel Patton Hand.
After
Obediah Hand's death in 1837, Martha
married Thomas Cusack, from
Ireland, on 22 Jan 1838 in Sumter Co, AL.
They had no children. In 1850,
they lived in Sumterville. In 1860-1870's,
Thomas and Martha Cusack lived in
Livingston. Thomas Cusack died in
1871. It is not known when Martha Cusack
died.
Prior
to 1843, Sumterville was known as "Patton's
Hill", named for three
brothers, James W. Patton, Dr. William Samuel
Patton, and Arthur Patton. The
Patton family must have been associated
with Obediah and Martha Hand,
because they named their son named "Samuel
Patton Hand".
3.
Catherine Clanton was born in N.C. in
1804. She married Hugh Dale on 14
Mar 1828 in Washington Co, AL. Soon after
their marriage, they moved to
Marengo Co, AL. See article "The Family
of Hugh Dale and Catherine Clanton"
for more information.
4.
Elizabeth Clanton married James Ratliff
in Washington Co, AL on 22 Dec
1826. It appears that they, too, moved to
Marengo County, for a James
Ratliff is in the 1830 and 1837 census for
that county. James Ratliff
purchased federal land in Sumter Co, AL
in 1837. There is a listing for a
James Ratliff in the 1840 census for Lauderdale
Co, MS (3 males under 5, 1
male 5-10, 1 male 20-30, 1 male 30-40, 2
females 5-10, 1 female 30-40). His
name is directly above Mark Clanton's name
on the original record. James
Ratliff is also included in the 1841 and
1845 census for Lauderdale County.
A
James Ratliff purchased federal land in
Rankin Co, MS on 10 Dec 1840. The
property was in the same township and range
as property purchased by Hugh
Dale on the same day. A James Ratliff is
included in the 1850 census records
for Rankin Co, MS, with wife Elizabeth (age
45, born in Georgia) The
children were: Mary, Martha, John, James,
Samuel, and Zachariah. It is
possible that this is Elizabeth Clanton,
but the matter needs further
investigation.
5.
Mark Clanton was probably the 15-21 year
old male listed in the 1830
Marengo Co, AL census with his mother. A
Mark Clanton purchased federal land
with Joseph McDowell on 2 Nov 1837 in Marengo
Co, AL. A Mark Clanton is
listed in the 1840 census for Lauderdale
Co, MS with a wife and 2 female
children. He is also listed in the 1841
and 1845 census records for
Lauderdale County. It is not known when
Mark Clanton died.
References
"Articles
of Agreement By and Between the
Heirs of Nancy Clanton", Sumter
County, Alabama Deed Book F (1840-1842),
pp. 68-69, at the Sumter County
courthouse in Livingston, AL (photocopy
in possession of Nancy S. Bell).
Ben
and Jean Strickland, Lauderdale County,
Mississippi 1835-1848 Tax Rolls
and 1853 State Census (Moss Point, Mississippi,
1986), pp. 31, 41, 49, 60,
61, 109, 129, 143.
Clarence
Edwin Carter, The Territorial Papers
of the United States, Volume
XVIII, Alabama Territory 1817-1819 (Washington,
D.C., G.P.O., 1934), p. 522.
Clara
Sansom Mabry, unpublished family history
of the Sansom family,
photocopy in possession of Nancy S. Bell.
Elizabeth
Pittny Bentley, 1810 North Carolina
Census Index (Baltimore,
Maryland, Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc.,
1978), p. unknown.
Edward
L. Clanton loose estate papers at
the Washington County, Alabama
courthouse in Chatom, Alabama, photocopied
by Nancy S. Bell.
Faye
Stone Poss, Hancock County, Georgia
Early Newspaper Abstracts "Farmer's
Gazette" 1803-1804, 1806-1807 (Snellville,
Georgia, Poss, 2001), pp. 40, 85,
108.
Ginger
L. Christmas-Beatie, Warren County,
North Carolina Minutes to the
Court of Pleas and Quarter Sessions Volume
V, 1801-1805 (Forest Grove,
Oregon, Ancestral Tracks, 2000), pp. 11,
13, 18, 40, 42, 84, 85, 102, 104.
Gwendolyn
Lynette Hester, Sumter County,
Alabama Wills: 1829-1872 and
Mortality
Schedules: 1850-1880,Willbook l - 1828-1851
(Dallas, Texas, Southern Roots,
1998), p.15.
Jacqueline
Anderson Matte, The History of
Washington County, First County in
Alabama (Chatom , Alabama, Washington County
Historical Society, 1982), pp.
412, 415.
Jacqueline
Anderson Matte, Doris Brown, and
Barbara Waddell, Old St.
Stephens Historical Records Survey (St.
Stephens, Alabama, St. Stephens
Historical Commission, 1999), pp. 48, 49,
51, 55, 126.
James
P. Pate, The Reminiscences of George
Strother Gaines, Pioneer and
Statesman of Early Alabama and Mississippi,
1805-1843 (Tuscaloosa, Alabama,
The University of Alabama Press, 1998),
p. unknown.
Jean
Strickland and Patricia N. Edwards,
Residents of the Southeastern
Mississippi Territory, Book Five: Washington
and Baldwin Counties, Alabama:
Wills, Deeds, and Superior Court Minutes
(Moss Point, Mississippi, Ben
Strickland, 1996), p. 30.
"Jones
County, Georgia Tax Digests, 1811-1819",
microfilm # 0007139, Family
History Library, Salt Lake City, Utah.
Kathleen
Paul Jones and Pauline Jones Gandrud,
Alabama Records (Sumter
County), v. 164 (Blewett Company, Columbus,
Mississippi, 1980), pp. 26, 86.
Ken
Clanton, Sr., descendent of Lewis D.
Clanton, [(kenzbox@yahoo.com)],
e-mail message to author, 2 January 2002.
Kim
May, North Carolina census look up volunteer
( DEANANDKIM@bigpond.com),
e-mail message to author, 2 June 2001 (Warren
Co, NC census)
Land records for James Ratliff, Lewis D.
Clanton, and Mark Clanton, Bureau
of Land Management General Land Office Records
website,
( www.glorecords.blm.gov/search.asp).
Nelle
Morris Jenkins, Sumter County, Alabama
Records (publisher unknown,
1961), pp. 22, 30.
Tom
Goldrup, Clanton researcher, [(skyla@sasquatch.com)],
e-mail message to
author, 2 August 2001.
Virginia
O. Foscue, The Place Names of Sumter
County, Alabama (Tuscaloosa,
Alabama, University of Alabama Press, 1978),
pp. 1, 22, 23, 51.
"Washington
County, Alabama Records in Early
MS Territory", microfilm
#1993358, pp. 360-361, Family History Library,
Salt Lake City, Utah.
(Guardianship papers of Edward Clanton's
children).
Washington
County Marriage Record Book "A"
1826-1837 located at the
Washington County courthouse in Chatom,
Alabama.
"1816
List of Taxable Property of Washington
Co, MS Territory", compiled by
Lisa Franklin from original documents at
the Alabama State Archives, at
(www.census-online.com/links/Al.html).
1830
United States Census, Southern District,
Marengo County, Alabama, p.
338, ID# AL558459276, on microfilm at the
Mobile Public Library, Mobile,
Alabama.
1840
United States Census, Lauderdale County,
Mississippi, on microfilm at
the Mobile Public Library, Mobile, Alabama.
1840
United States Census, no township listed,
Sumter County, Alabama, p.
135, ID# AL54a659919, on microfilm at the
Mobile Public Library, Mobile,
Alabama.
1850
United States Census, Lauderdale County,
Mississippi, p. 368, on
microfilm at the Mobile Public Library,
Mobile, Alabama.
1850
United States Census, Rankin County,
Mississippi, on microfilm at the
Mobile Public Library, Mobile, Alabama.
1860
United States Census, Lauderdale Springs
Township, Lauderdale County, Mississippi located at
(www.us-gen.com/ms/lauder/census/1860/1860cenpg61.htm).
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