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Georgia Genealogy Trails "Where your Journey Begins" |
(We are indebted chiefly
to Mrs. Hortense W. Baker, of Valdosta, for the data given below. Her
interesting sketches on the early history of Lowndes county published
in a recent issue of the "Valdosta Times" are valuable.)
The lands which now
comprise Lowndes county were originally a part of Irwin county and were
ceded by the Indians through a treaty made at Fort Jackson, August 9th,
1814. This was the same treaty whereby the lands now comprising Ware
county (mentioned in the last issue of this magazine) were ceded.
Irwin county was created
by the same legislature which created Appling county, the particular
act being approved Dec. 15, 1818. Appling and Irwin counties are the
parent counties of practically all Southeast Georgia,
In 1821, four settlers
moved to what is now Lowndes county. It was then a wilderness and they
were the first settlers of the present county of Lowndes. These
settlers were James Rountree, Lawrence Folsom, Drew Vickers and Alfred
Belote and their families.
Numbers of other settlers
soon followed these, and by 1825 it had become sufficiently
populated to petition the legislature for the creation of a new county.
By an act approved Dec. 23rd, 1825, Lowndes county was created and
carved out of Irwin county.
As is well known, the
county was named for Hon. William Lowndes, a distinguished statesman of
South Carolina.
At the time of its
creation, the county was sixty-two miles long, north and south, and
forty miles wide, east and west. It contained 2080 miles, and was
bounded on the north by Irwin county, on the east by Ware, en the South
by the State of Florida and on the west by Thomas county.
After the creation of the
new county, the matter of holding court and having elections was to be
decided. For the first few times, court and elections were held at the
home of Sion Hall, one of the well known residents of the county. The
first court held in the county was on a log in a section which is now
in Brooks county. This was early in the year 1826. The next year court
was held at the home of Franklin Rountree, and in 1828 the village of
Franklinville was founded and made county-site.
The first officers of the
county were not elected until May, 1 at which time the following were
elected and commissioned on May, 29th, 1826; William Hancock, sheriff;
Samuel M. Clyatt, surveyor; Henry Blair, clerk of the Superior and
Inferior courts, and Malachi Monk, coroner. The first state senator
from Lowndes was William A. Knight and the first representative was
Jonathan Knight.
In 1828 Malachi Monk was
elected sheriff, William Smith clerk of the Superior and Inferior
courts, Samuel M. Clyatt re-elected surveyor, William Blair state
senator and Jesse Carter representative. Randal Folsom succeeded
William Blair as senator the following year while Benjamin Simians was
elected representative.
As stated above, the
first town was named Franklinville and was made the county -site in 18
28. It was located a few miles east of the present town of Hiram, and
was made up of only a few small houses and a store or two where the
settlers came together to do a bit of exchanging goods and where they
met and talked of matters in general. However, they v/ere forced to do
most of their trading at Tallahassee, Fla., St. Marks and Newport. The
county-site remained at Franklinville until 1833, when it was changed
to Lowndesville, a small settlement about a mile above the junction of
the Little and Withlacoochee rivers. The town's name was a few years
later changed to Troupeville and as such continued until 1859, when the
court house and most of the other buildings there were removed to the
new county-seat, Valdosta, on the railroad.
Troupville grew rapidly
and soon became a prosperous little village. Stores, residences,
mechanics' shops, churches and a court house were soon built, and the
town soon came to be the principal trading center of this section. In
1842 there were about 500 people inhabitants of the town, and there
were two churches, the Methodist and the Baptist. The Baptist church
was constituted June 21st, 1840, with James O. Goldwire, Rev. Alexander
Mosely, Marion C. Goldwire and "Old Monday," a slave of James O.
Goldwire, as its charter members. In 1861 this church was moved to
Valdosta.
The only newspaper
published at that time in this section of the state was "The South
Georgia Watchman." It became the official organ of not only Lowndes but
of Ware, Clinch and other counties. Col. Leonoreon de Lyon was the able
editor of the paper. It was decidedly Whig in its politics and played
no small part in the campaigns of its day.
Troupville was
incorporated by an act of the legislature approved December 14th, 1837,
and the following commissioners were named to govern the town until an
election could be had: Jonathan Knight, Sr., Jared Johnson, K. Jameson,
Francis H. McCall and William Smith.
In "White's Statistics,"
published by Dr. White in 1849, the statement is made that there were
still standing near Troupville at that time, the ruins of an old town
whose origin probably dated back to prehistoric times. Large live oaks
were flourishing and the idea of spontaneous growth was precluded by
the straight and uniform rows in which the trees were planted, but who
could have set them out is a mystery. No one in Troupville at that time
could explain.
Near Troupville, was a
sparkling spring called "Morgan's Spring." It was only a short distance
from the public road and near the bridge which the stage crossed in
going over the Withlacoochee river. As the Morgans lived near the
spring, it was called Morgan's Spring, and it was famed far and wide
for its purity and refreshing qualities. The passengers on the old
stage coaches always wanted to get out and see the noted spring and
many refreshed themselves with its cooling waters.
In 1845 the first census
of the county was taken and it was found to have 4,475 white people and
1662 slaves. There were also several saw mills run by water-power, rice
mills, grist mills and a good many stores. The taxable property was
well over two million.
As above stated, the
county seat remained at Troupville until 1859, when it was removed to
the present town or city of Valdosta. It was on July 4th of that year
that the first train over the new railroad and the first train ever in
that station, came over the new road to the then terminus of the road
now known as Valdosta. The event had been announced weeks in advance
and monstrous preparations had been made to make the date a gala
occasion. A barbecue dinner was prepared and crowds gathered from the
entire section to take part in the demonstration. As the crowds watched
and waited, the train came putting down the track and many a spectator
felt his or her knees give way and an almost irresistible desire to run
seized many of them, for this was the first train most of them had ever
seen.
When the people of
Troupville saw that the railroad was going to miss their town by some
three or four miles, they began discussion about the removal of the
county-seat to a point on the new road. There had been some discussion
when the building of the road was first commenced out of Savannah, but
when it was definitely seen that it would miss Troupville, residents of
the town voted to move the town to the railroad, always keeping before
them the progress of their town and the good of the county.
The railroad was in
process of building when residents of Troupville began to move. William
Smith, one of the pioneers, and known as "Uncle Billy" Smith, the day
the deed was signed by Mr. Wisenbaker giving the railroad six acres of
land on which to build the first station, tore off the wing of his
hotel at Troupville and moved it to Valdosta, where he operated his
hotel several years. The first house moved to the new town was owned by
Judge Peeples and it was rolled from Troupville to Valdosta, being
placed on pillars on the lot on Troup street where it now stands.
Several other houses were also moved bodily and some few of them are
yet standing. In a few weeks time Troupville as a town was no more.
As is generally known,
Valdosta received its name from the plantation of Governor George M.
Troup in Laurens county. In selecting the name, the residents of the
new town still remembered the old General, and it was decided not to
name the new town Troupville, as that would take away some of the
sentiment attached to the old town. Several names were suggested, but
it remained for Col. de Lyon, the editor of the "Watchman," to have the
honor of suggesting the name which was definitely adopted. The name
"Valdosta" was acceptable from a standpoint of euphony as well as
sentiment.
Valdosta was selected as
the county-site by four commissioners who were appointed for that
purpose by an act of the legislature assented to Nov. 21st, 1859. These
commissioners were James Harrell, Dennis Worthington, John R. Stapler
and William H. Goldwire. The town was subsequently incorporated by an
act of the legislature approved Dec. 7th, 1860, and was located on 140
acres of lot of land 62 in the 11th district of Lowndes county.
The Indians were a source
of constant dread and trouble to the white settlers. The last war with
the Indians in this section was in 1836-183 8 when the Indians were
removed west. Part of them chose to go to Florida, where they joined
the Seminoles. The last battle of any consequence occurred at Brushy
Creek in the southwest part of the county, July 10th, 1936. The
following narrative of an engagement with the Indians is given by Bryan
J. Roberts, a wealthy pioneer citizen of the county:
"Sometime in the fall of
1836 a squad of Indians raided the home of Mr. William Parker, not far
from where Milltown now is. They carried his feather beds out in the
yard, cut them open, emptied the feathers and appropriated the ticks.
They also robbed him of provisions, clothing and money in the sum of
$308. Capt. Levi J. Knight, in whose command Mr. Roberts was, was seen
on trail of the squad and overtook them near the Allapaha river, not
far from the Gaskins mill-pond. The sun was just rising when the
gallant company opened fire on the savages. A lively fight ensued, soon
terminating in the utter rout of the Indians, who threw their guns and
plunder into the river and jumped in after them. A few were killed and
a number wounded. One Indian was armed with a fine shotgun. This he
threw into the river. He also tried to throw a shot-bag into the
stream, but it caught in the limb of a tree and suspended over the
water. Strange to say, it contained Mr. Parkeer's money, every cent of
which was recovered. The fine shotgun was fished out of the river and
later sold for $40, a tremendous price for a gun in those days.
"Having driven the
Indians from the dense swamp beyond the river, Capt. Knight marched his
company as rapidly as possible in the direction of Brushy Creek in the
southwest part of the county. In the distance they heard a volley of
small arms. On arrival they found that a battle had already been fought
and the volley was only a last tribute of respect over the grave of a
comrade-in-arms, Pennywell Folson. Mr. Robert Parrish, who later became
quite prominent and lived near Adel, had his arm broken in this fight.
Edwin Henderson was mortally wounded and died near the battlefield, and
there were two others killed. The battle was fought in a swamp, where
Indian cunning was pitted against Anglo-Saxon courage, and in five
minutes after the engagement opened, there was not a live redskin to be
seen."*
Capt. Levi J. Knight
commanded the troops in this section as major and colonel.** The
company mentioned above to which Mr. Roberts belonged was on duty 105
days, and was engaged in two bloody fights with the Indians.
Georgia Landmarks, by
Knight, Vol. 1. p. 596.
** History of Clinch
County, by Huxford, p. 13.
Dr. White mentions in his
White's Statistics, in 18 50, the following original settlers of
Lowndes: Rev. William A. Knight, Benjamin Sirmans, Bani Boyd, William
Smith, John Bryan, Jacob Bryan, John J. Underwood, Henry Parrish,
Fisher Gaskins, Jesse Carter, H. Colson, J. Jemison, J. Hall, S. Hall,
G. Hall, John Hill, Rev. Mr. Alberton, James D. Shanks, James Matthews,
Samuel E. Swilly, Major Simmons, William Dias, John Dias, William
McMullin, Francis Rountree, Jesse Goodman, Captain Burnett, L. Roberts,
Captain Bell and Jesse Lee.
In addition to these
might be mentioned William Peters, who was a soldier of the Revolution,
and who was granted a Federal pension in 1846 while a resident of
Lowndes. His descendants are today to be found in this county.
Rev. William A. Knight,
mentioned above, was the ancestor of the Knights of this section, most
of his descendants of that name now living in Berrien and Lanier
counties. He came to Lowndes from Wayne county. He was born Feb. 8th,
1778, and died Dec. 8, 1859, and together with his wife, is buried at
Burnt Church on the Alapaha river, in Lanier county.
Jesse Lee, mentioned
above, together with his brother Joshua Lee, settled in this section
about 1820. Jesse Lee was born in 1780 In South Carolina, and had a
large family, and to-day his descendants are very numerous in Lanier
and Berrien counties.
Joshua Lee, his brother,
settled where Milltown now is, and began the construction of the now
famous Banks Pond, in 1821. He employed a big number of slaves besides
free labor on the job. After he sold it in 1848 to William Lastinger,
the new owner considerably enlarged the pond. Joshua Lee was born in
1782 and his wife's name was Martha Ford, a native of North Carolina.
They had several children, whose descendants are to-day numerous in
Clinch, Lanier and Berrien counties. Joshua Lee moved to Clinch from
Milltown in 1848, and died at his home near Prospect church in that
county in 1856.
John Mathis was another
old settler of the county, and was born in North Carolina in 177 4.
Together with his brothers, Edmund Mathis (b. 1776) and James Mathis
(b. 1778) they settled first in this state in Bulloch county, and after
living there a few years they came to Lowndes about the some time the
Lee brothers did. They settled in that part of the county now in
Berrien and Lanier counties. Edmund Mathis later moved to Clinch
county, where he died.
Griffin Mizell, another
old citizen of the county, died at his home in Lowndes, Nov. 23rd,
1846. He was born in 1767.
Barzilla Staten, an old
settler of the county, is the progenitor of the Statens in this county.
He fought in the Indian wars and was wounded. He owned a good deal of
land in the section around Stockton, then in Lowndes but now in Lanier
county. He also owned lands in Florida, where he had big droves of
cattle. He was born in 177 6, and his wife, who was Catherine Watson,
was born in 1801. They had eleven children. The elder Staten died about
1846, and three of his sons-in-law, Jesse W. Carter, William S. Roberts
and Jonathan Knight, were the administrators of his vast estate. An old
legal advertisement of some of the property of the estate, published in
December, 18 46, advertises three lots of land near the present town of
Stockton for sale, and describes them as "well improved," and "fourteen
likely Negroes" are also advertised for sale.
Ashley Lawson moved into
the county about 1827 and settled near the present town of Hahira.
Around him settled several other families, and in the course of time
the town of Hahira sprang up. When the G. S. & F. railroad came
through, years later, the little town was moved about a half mile, so
as to be on the railroad.
Benjamin Sirmans, one of
the earlier representatives from the county in the legislative halls,
was the son of Josiah Sirmans and his wife, Artie Hardeman, and was
born in Emanuel county Feb. 6th, 1792. The elder Sirmans was born in
1767 and died Jan. 6th, 1830, at his home in what was then Lowndes, but
now Lanier county. Josiah Sirmans had four sons and three daughters and
their descendants are to-day very numerous in Clinch, Lanier and
Berrien counties.
The Sirmans' settled the
place near the home place of Mr. J. B. Strickland in the Mud Creek
district of Lanier county, on Dec. 22, 1822, and the place has ever
since remained in the family. Benj. Sirmans died May 1st, 1863, leaving
a valuable estate, which was divided among his heirs without any
administration.
Malachi Monk, elected
coroner of the county in 1826, and sheriff in 1828, was born April 22,
1805, and died in Clinch county, near DuPont, in 1886. His wife,
Mehala, was born in 1814 and preceded her husband to the grave only a
few months.
The following early
settlers of the county were elected justices of the peace in their
respective districts in 1829, which was the regular election year for
justices of the peace: James Robinson and David Mathis in the 658th
district; Levi J. Knight and Abner Sirmans in the 664th district; John
S. Whitfield and Cornelius English in the 659th district; Jarvis J.
Frier and Wm. Dowling in the 663rd district; William Hall and John
Blackshear in the 660th district, and James Walker and David Gillett in
the 661st district. Jared Johnson was later in the year elected a
justice in the 659th district, succeeding Cornelius English.
Other early justices of
the peace were James M. Bates, Samuel E. Swilly, Samuel M. Clyatt,
Roderick Morrison, John Lindsey, Nicebud Raulerson, Samuel Paulk, Isaac
B. Calton, Seaborn Rainey, Joseph Yates, Simeon Strickland, John Dean,
William Stone. Durham Hancock, Benjamin Cornelius, Benj. Grantham, John
Knight, John Mathis, Jr., Edwin M. Henderson, Nathan Gornto, Samuel G.
Norman, Bryan J. Roberts, John J. Underwood, John Edmondson, Benj.
Miller, Joshua Sikes, Daniel Humphreys, H. W. Sharpe, Randol Folsom and
William G. Henderson.
The Southern Georgia
Historical and Genealogical Quarterly 1922
Copyright © Genealogy Trails