Friday, June 19, 2009

Who:  Freeman Boyd 

Again on my never ending search to crack or at least make a chip in this little bit of a brick wall.  As mentioned earlier, I have a bit of an attention problem.  Distractable would be a mild way of putting it, so I have lots of loose ends all over the place.  One way I try to pull myself back around is to do a day of  organizing: aka cleaning my junkie project room.  Mostly what's lying around lately is gen stuff, so lots of papers and the sort.  Not to get too deep into my filing system, I will say that I notebooks assigned to each family name I research.  Now that I have the Smith family to add, I had to find another binder.  In doing so, a large stack of papers fell on the floor.  This forced me to go through each page to sort properly because I just bought a stapler last week and the whole stack was loose.  

This was the end to my organizing.  Going through each page  full of names and info from censes (is that the right plural?) and ancestry.com copies was like having the internet lying at my feet.  I couldn't pull my self from this one handwritten page of unsourced and poorly sourced notes (I tell myself  never slough the sources everytime I run across pages like this). Close to the top underneath a theory on the meaning of a strange aunt name was:

John Boyd- Green Co GA -1790 Reconstructed GA Census.  

So I went on Ancestry.com and found this, but not from doing the search.  I had to limit my search terms to find the specific reference.  It is a scanned book that goes through all the GA counties in 1790 and lists the names of people mentioned in Land deeds and Wills.  This includes not just the primary names, but anyone who may have given witness or used as some sort of reference to the legal proceeding.

John Boyd was listed under people who were witnesses or were owners of adjoining lands of property mentioned in the Deed Book 1 of Green County Georgia.

How is this relevant?  Green county GA is the place of record of the marriages of Reddick Smith, Freeman Boyd's father in law,  in 1811 and 1816.  Freeman was born in 1814 in GA so possibly, the Smith family knew the Boyds from their time in Greene Co.  

Over the years, parts of Greene county was broken into other surrounding counties, and frequently records are scattered among the different places.  Next step, I guess.

Sunday, June 14, 2009

Who?  Freeman Boyd, indirectly-- Richard Simmons, somewhat directly.

What is chasing down rabbit holes and what is following a lead?  I guess if you get a result.  But with my deficit of attention, I really blur the lines for myself.  

Take my latest quest, to find information about Freeman Boyd, a long ago ancestor. I'm trying to investigate all possible avenues before I quit flogging this horse, so last weekend I sat down to really pour over the facts.  This is a set of interesting circumstances that don't necessarily relate directly to Freeman, but are an interesting side note to my ancestry Richard Simmons.  Jokes concerning the more known and living R Simmons aside, Richard's family and the Boyd/Smith families were closely allied during the early years of Jasper county.  All families purchased or obtained land near the others in the Montrose/Mt Vernon area and they all ran small farming operations.  Several family members married within the other's ranks further solidifying the bonds.

This leads me to my case at hand:  William Simmons, son of Richard marries Elmira Smith, daughter of Reddick Smith.  Possibly around 1857, I don't have a date.  It is the life of William that most interests me at this point.  In 1860, he and wife Elmira are on the census rolls in Jasper county with two kid, James and Martha.  In 1861, William and his brother James enlist in the Allahoma Hardshells, the Jasper volunteer force of the Confederacy.  According to military records, by the end of 1861, William was ferlowed for medical reasons in Florida.  At some point, he returned to Jasper County where he and Elmira parted company, probably a legal divorce since 3 years later, he married  Nancy Mitchum in Jackson County Alabama and had two more children over the next four years.

Here are my questions, and interest:  What made William go to Jackson County Alabama?  I do know that land records show that  A Richard Simmons obtained land in Jackson county Alabama back in 1835, but I have no way of knowing if this is the same Richard.  Jackson county is near by Cherokee county where I have information that Richard married Sarah Huff and was possibly living there according to the 1840 census. Also in that same census, there were a Cage(?), Jane and William Simmons living in Jackson county with all the male being of similar age to Richard.   It is likely that these people still lived in Jackson county at least until 1860 because land records show them obtaining land around that time.

Could Richard still have had land and relatives in that area, so young William moved there?  

By the 1866 Mississippi census, former wife Elmira and brother James's newly widow Caroline Rush Simmons were listed in households next to Richard. 

Ok, here's the MOST interesting part: According to public records,  Andrew J Mitchum, Nancy Mitchum Simmons's brother, was allegedly murdered by a Peter Simmons in 1869 in Madison County AL.  According to a quote from "Marriages, Deaths, and Legal Notices from Early Alabama Newspapers 1819-1893"  "Andrew J Michum was killed by Peter Simmons in Madison County last Thursday week, Difficulty grew out of settling some business affairs"  Madison Co court records show two charges against B C Mitchem for assault with intent to commit murder, under the two charges are  penciled in Peter Simmons and Thompson G Simmons.  Also listed is the charge of murder against Peter Simmons.  Researchers couldn't find any records as to whether these men were found guilty of the charges because of missing court documents in Madison Co AL.  

I have no indications as to whether these Simmons's are related to our Simmons, but investigations show that Peter and Thompson were the sons of A William Simmons b VA 1793 who resided in Franklin TN in 1850 with his wife, Bearsheba and 5 children.  This William died sometime in the 1850's because wife Bearsheba is remarried to a Banks fellow and has other children in addition to sons James Simmons and Thompson.  In the 1860, these teen aged boys are listed with assets so possibly they inherited some wealth from their father.  Peter isn't listed with the family at that time.  

How did these brothers wind up in Madison County? 

Also, what does that have to do with our young family, William and Nancy.  Well according to reseachers's birth records, their youngest child, William Barkley was born in Lauderdale county MS in 1867.  Seems the young family was making their way back down south.  William again parted with this family at some point over the next couple of years because by 1874, both Nancy and William were remarried.  Nancy married an Underwood and is buried in the Louin Cemetery.  William remmarried and eventually settled in Louisiana were he had three confirmed and possibly five other children.  

Now rabbit hole or lead... still some chasing to do.