Showing posts with label Martha TIMMERMAN Averett (1847-1927). Show all posts
Showing posts with label Martha TIMMERMAN Averett (1847-1927). Show all posts

Monday, May 26, 2014

War Service Records for David Averett

Civil War service papers for David Averett were found on Fold3.com and are displayed below. Collectively, they demonstrate several facts about his service in the Confederate Army. David F. Averett (1837—1927) enlisted on 3 July 1861 and served through the surrender of the Army of Northern Virginia at Appomattox Court House on 9 April 1865. The records documented here begin in May 1863 and end in March 1865. There are gaps but they contain information that is new to me in my genealogy research.

According to the FamilySearch.org website,
"Service records were kept for each Confederate soldier. Those records, or their abstracts, were compiled into individual files. Each envelope/jacket contains information and cross references to original records relating to the soldier … The records are in individual files, which usually include the following: a jacket-envelope for each soldier; a card or cards with abstracts of entries from original muster rolls, returns, rosters, payrolls, [etc.]; the originals of any papers relating only to the particular soldier."
The first part of this blog post summarizes what was found in that jacket-envelope for D.F. Averett.

1. The first card records that D.F. Averett, 1st Sergeant, Company A, 15th Alabama Infantry Regiment enlisted July 3, 1861 at Ft. Mitchell, Alabama for the duration of the war by a Captain Lawther. This information was repeated on most of the cards found in this file.

(Click images to enlarge.)

2. The first card also indicates that Averett appeared on company muster roll for May — June, 1863. Prior to that time there is no information in this file. He was last paid through April 30, 1863 by a Captain Furrentine [surname difficult to read]. He was shown as "present" on that muster roll.

3. The second card indicates that he appeared on the company muster roll for July — August, 1863. He had been paid through June 30, 1863 by a Captain Dawson. Again, the muster roll shows him as "present".

4. The third card records that he appeared as "present" on the company muster roll for September — October, 1863. He had been paid through August 30, 1863 by a Captain Feagin.

5. There were no records in this file for November — December, 1863.

6. The fourth card records that he was "present" on the company muster roll for January — February, 1864. He had not been paid since August 31, 1863.

7. There were no records in this file for March — April, 1864.

8. Card 5 indicats that his name had been recorded as "absent" on the company muster roll for May — June, 1864 because he was wounded in action on 6 May 1864 and was recovering in the "general hospital". Unfortunately, the record does not show where this hospital was located. He had still not been paid since 31 August 1863.

9. Card 6 showed that his name had appeared on company muster roll as "absent" for July — August, 1864. He was apparently released from the hospital on or about 6 August 1864 and received a 20-day furlough from that date. He had still not been paid since 31 August 1863.

Two furloughs are documented in this material on cards six and seven (check this), covering a total of fifty days and it is likely that there were more. He apparently went home to Alabama during his furloughs, possibly starting the journey as early as 6 August 1864, and may have returned to duty as late as March 1865. 

10. His name appeared on company muster roll as "absent" on the seventh card for September — October, 1864. He had been given a 30-day furlough either starting or ending on 28 October 1864. He was at last paid, presumably including his back pay, through 31 August 1864 by a Captain Sanford. 

11. The eighth card documented that Averett had received a "severe" head wound on 6 May 1864 and that his name had appeared on a 5 March 1865 list from 6 May 1864 to 5 March 1865 documenting casualties sustained by the 15th Alabama Infantry Regiment.

This implies that his recovery took ten months and it seems obvious that he was lucky to have survived. From other sources of information, we know that he married Martha Ann Rebecca Timmerman (1845—1927) on 8 December 1864 while home on furlough.

In an earlier post on this blog, I discussed having found, I believe, the specific area at the site of the Battle of the Wilderness in Virginia at which he received this wound. I also showed two pictures taken later in his life in which the wound to his forehead is clearly shown. The story that I heard growing up indicated that the skin healed and covered the hole in his forehead but that the bone did not. He is said to have allowed one of his very young grandsons sitting on his lap to probe the skin over the hole with his finger.


In the his wife's 1927 obituary, Martha Averett was quoted:
"Mrs. Averett in speaking of her marriage, the war, and her life, said to a friend a few months ago that she was proud of that scar in her husband's forehead for it showed that he was facing the enemy."
Her obituary will appear in a future post on this blog. If only there were some way to know what else she talked about during that conversation. Perhaps someone kept a diary and wrote down what he or she recollected from that day. Perhaps someone reading this blog some day will have old letters or family stories that might give more information about what she thought.

12. According to the ninth card, Averett was detailed, via S.O. [Standing Order?] #68/12, to the “Dept.” [?] and Army of Northern Virginia under General Robert E. Lee. on 16 March 1865. 

According to Averett's obituary in 1927, which also appeared in my earlier post, he role was a sharp shooter until he received his wound, and was afterward attached to General Lee’s headquarters as a courier. Based on the ninth card, we now know that that assignment occurred on 16 March 1865. He would be so employed for not quite a month, because Lee surrendered at Appomattox Court House on 9 April 1865.


Parenthetically, I have questions about some of the information in this newspaper article. First, he was born in Georgia, not in Coosa County, Alabama. Second, Averett was wounded at the Battle of the Wilderness, although battles were often called different names by the two sides (e.g., Manassas versus Bull Run). In fact, four different battles were fought in the area: Fredericksburg (December 1862, Confederate victory); Chancellorsville (May 1863, Confederate victory); The Wilderness (May 1864, inconclusive result); and Spotsylvania Court House (May 1864, also inconclusive). The first “Battle of the Wilderness” might have been referring to the 1863 Battle of Chancellorsville. I may be able to assess this with more certainty as my knowledge of Civil War history increases with reading and time. Third, Averett and his family moved to Louisiana from Alabama in 1877, instead of immediately after the end of the war. Still, he lived in Louisiana for fifty years, which is almost the same.

The documentation and transcription supporting the information in the summary above are displayed below. Some portions of the images downloaded from Fold3.com are overexposed and are difficult to read. I did the best I could by attempting to "enhance" the images with photo processing software. Although I am not an expert in doing this, I was eventually able to read most of the handwriting. 

According to Fold3.com, the information and the service record images shown below are from Publication No. M311, Compiled Service Records of Confederate Soldiers Who Served in Organizations from the State of Alabama, National Archives Catalog ID 586957, Carded Records Showing Military Service of Soldiers Who Fought in Confederate Organizations, compiled 1903—1927, documenting the period 1861—1865, Record Group 109, State of Alabama, Roll No. 0240, Fifteenth Alabama Infantry Regiment.

Image 1 of 11: Envelope/jacket.


76
Averrett, D.F.
Co. A, 15 Alabama Infantry.
(Confederate.)
1st Sergeant 1st Sergeant
Card numbers.
1. 44582574
2. 2638
3. 2702
4. 2763
5. 2820
6. 2877
7. 2929

Image 2 of 11 (Card 1): May—June 1863.


Confederate A 15 Ala.
D.F. Averrett
1st Sgt., Co. A, 15th Reg’t Alabama Infantry.

Appears on Company Muster Roll of the organization named above, for May & June, 1863.

Enlisted:
When: July 3, 1861
Where: Ft. Mitchell, Ala.
By whom. Capt. Lowther Period: War

Last paid:
By whom: Capt Furrentine[?]
To what time: Apl 30., 1863
Present or absent: Present

Image 3 of 11 (Card 2): July—August 1863.


Confederate
A 15 Ala.
D.F. Averrett
1st Sgt., Co. A, 15th Reg’t Alabama Infantry.

Appears on Company Muster Roll of the organization named above, for July & Aug., 186.

Enlisted:
When: July 3, 1861
Where: Ft. Mitchell
By whom: Capt. Lowther
Period: War.

Last paid:
By whom: Capt. Dawson
To what time: June 30, 1863.
Present or absent: Present

Image 4 of 11 (Card 3): September—October 1863.


Confederate.
A 15 Ala.
D.F. Averrett
1st Sgt., Co. A, 15th Reg’t Alabama Infantry.
Appears on Company Muster Roll of the organization named above, for Sept and Oct., 1863.

Enlisted:
When: July 3, 1861.
Where: Ft. Mitchell
By whom: Capt Lawther
Period: War

Last paid:
By whom: Capt Feagan
To what time: Aug 31, 1863

Present or absent: Present

Image 5 of 11 (Card 4): January—February 1864.


Confederate
A 15 Ala.
D.F. Averrett
1st Sgt., Co. A, 15th Reg’t Alabama Infantry.
Appears on Company Muster Roll of the organization named above, for Jany & Feby, 1864.

Enlisted:
When: July 3, 1861.
Where: Ft. Mitchell
By whom: Capt Lawther
Period: War

Last paid:
By whom: Capt Feagin
To what time: Aug. 31, 1863

Present or absent: Present

Image 6 of 11 (Card 5): May—June 1864.


Confederate
A 15 Ala.
D.F. Averrett
1st Sgt., Co. A, 15th Reg’t Alabama Infantry.
Appears on Company Muster Roll of the organization named above, for May & June, 1864.

Enlisted:
When: July 3, 1861.
Where: Ft. Mitchell
By whom: Capt. Lowther
Period: War

Last Paid:
By whom: Capt Feagin
To what time: Aug. 31, 1863.

Present or absent: Absent
Remarks: General Hospital. Wounded in action May 6, 64.

Image 7 of 11 (Card 6): July—August 1864.


Confederate
A 15 Ala.
D.F. Averrett
1st Sgt., Co. A, 15th Reg’t Alabama Infantry. Appears on Company Muster Roll of the organization named above, for July & Aug., 1864.

Enlisted:
When: July 3, 1861
Where: Ft. Mitchell
By whom: Capt. Lawther
Period: War

Last paid:
By whom: Capt. Feagin
To what time: Aug. 31, 1863.
Present or absent: Absent.
Remarks: Furlough from Hospital for 20 days from Aug. 6, 64.

Image 8 of 11 (Card 7): September—October 1864.


Confederate.
A 15 Ala.
D.F. Averrett
1st Sgt., Co. A, 15th Reg’t Alabama Infantry. Appears on Company Muster Roll of the organization named above, for Sept & Oct., 1864

Enlisted:
When: July 3, 1861.
Where: Ft. Mitchell, Ala.
By whom: Capt. Lawther
Period: War

Last paid:
By whom: Capt. Sanford
To what time: Aug. 31, 1864.
Present or absent: Absent
Remarks: On furlough for 30 days 28 Oct. 64.

Image 9 of 11 (Card 8): List of Casualties for May 1864 — March 1865.


Confederate
A 15 Ala.
D.F. Averrett
1st Sgt., Co. A, 15th Reg’t Alabama Infantry.
Appears on a List of casualties, of the 15th Ala. Reg’t., from May 6, 1864 to March 5, 1865.

List dated: Mar 5, 1865.
Date of reception of wound: May 6, 1864.

Place and character of wound: head, severe

Series 1, Vol. 36, part 1, page 1060 A.[?] Tillman, Copyist
1371

Image 10 of 11 (Card 9): Detailed to Lee’s Army of Northern Virginia.


Annett, D.F.
Sgt. Co A,
15th Ala. Reg.

Detailed

S.O. #68/12
Dept. & Army No. Va. Lee
Mar. 16/65 

Image 11 of 11: Envelope/jacket.

77
Averitt, D.F.
Co. A, 15 Alabama Infantry.
(Confederate.)
1 Sergeant 1 Sergeant

Reference Envelope.
Cards file with
Averrett, D.F.

Friday, May 23, 2014

David and Martha Averett Family in the 1870 US Census

David Franklin Averett (1837-1927) and Martha Ann Rebecca Timmerman (1847-1927) married in December 1864 while David was at home recovering from wounds suffered in the Battle of the Wilderness in May 1864. He survived the war and returned to Martha after Lee's Army of Northern Virginia, of which he was a part, surrendered at Appomattox in April 1865.

David and Martha Averett appeared in the 1870 US Census in Elmore County, Alabama, along with their first two children, John Averett (1865-1956) and Mary Maude Averett (1867-1948).

(Click images to enlarge.)
Source citation:  Year:  1870; Census Place:  Township 19, Elmore, Alabama; Roll: M593_15; Page: 109A; Image: 410; Family History Library Film: 545514.

Information having to do with their family is transcribed as follows.

Page 135
Schedule 1. — Inhabitants in Township 19, in the County of Elmore, State of Alabama, enumerated by me on the 28th day of July, 1870.
Post Office: Chanahatchee
[signed] J.B. [Kerwin?], Ass’t Marshal.

  • Line 25: D.F. Averette; age: 32 years; sex: male; race: white; occupation: farmer; value of real estate: $500; value of personal estate: $480; place of birth: Georgia; parents not of foreign birth; could read and write; was a male citizen of the U.S. of 21 years of age and upwards; his right to vote was not denied on other grounds than rebellion or other crime. [Did he have the right to vote at this time? Confederate soldiers were presumably allowed to regain their U.S. citizenship after having sworn to uphold the Constitution and abide by the results of the war, to include recognition that the former slaves had been legally and permanently freed. Are there records that might list his name?]
  • Line 26: M.A.R. Averette; age: 24 years; sex: female; race: white; occupation: keeping house; place of birth: Alabama; parents not of foreign birth; could read and write
  • Line 27: John Averette; age: 4 years; sex: male; race: white; place of birth: Alabama
  • Line 28: Mary Averette; age 2 years; sex: female; race: white; place of birth: Alabama. [Mary Maude Averett (1867-1948) was my 2nd great grandmother.]
Names and occupations of their neighbors can be seen from nearby pages of the census. Almost all households appear to be farming families or people hired to work on those farms. And it turns out that David and Martha Averett lived near relatives and probable relatives.
  • Page 133:
    • Family 937: Benjamin Mason (farmer), Nancy Mason (keeping house), Rody Mason, Elizabeth Mason, Charles Mason (farm laborer), William Mason (farm laborer), Sarah Mason, Benjamin Mason, John Mason, Abraham Pullen, Leddie Pullen
    • Family 938: J.E. Anderson (farmer), Elezabeth Anderson (keeping house), J.P. Anderson (teaching school), Mary Anderson, Willie Anderson, Salina Anderson, James Anderson
    • Family 939: Isham Pollard (farm laborer), Rachel Pollard (keeping house), Louisa Pollard (farm laborer), Ellen Pollard, John Pollard, Eb Goss [This family was a black family. Were they former slaves? Were they the former “property” of some of the white people listed on these census sheets? Possibly of J.E. Anderson above or Burton Todd below?]
    • Family 940: Burton Todd, Elizabeth Todd, Thomas Todd, Hattie Todd, Charley Todd, Benjamin Todd, Budar Todd, Pinkney Todd
    • Family 941: James Averett (farmer, real estate $600 — equivalent to $10,700 dollars in 2014, personal estate $500 ($8900)), Mary Averett (keeping house), Nancy Averett, Webster Averett (farm laborer), Rebecca Averett, Romulus Averett (farm laborer), Charley Averett [I think Nancy Averett, Webster Averett, Rebecca Averett, Romulus Averett, and Charles or Charley Averett were siblings of David Averett. Mary Averett may have been the mother of David Averett. According to this census, she was 50 years of age in 1870, which means she was born about 1820. My data currently shows David’s mother, Mary Averett, as born around 1815. But I have also seen the birth year given as 1812. But who is James Averett?]


  • Pages 134—135:
    • Family 942: Jeremiah McCissick (farmer, real estate $1200 ($21,400), personal estate $1000 ($17,800)), Sarah McCissick (keeping house), Ida McCissick, Lula McCissick, Annah McCissick, Fletcher McCissick, Minnie McCissick, N.B. McCissick [McCissick or McKissick may have been related to Martha TIMMERMAN Averett, the wife of David Averett. The reason it might be true is tenuous: She had a brother named James McKissick Timmerman (1835-1863) who died of wounds suffered at the Battle of Chickamauga, Georgia, a Confederate victory.]
    • Family 943: Green Teal (farmer), Matilda Teal (keeping house), Julia Teal, Amanda Teal, Margaret Teal, Charley Teal, Mallery Teal
    • Family 944: F.W. Timmerman (farmer, real estate $800 ($14,300), personal estate $300 ($5400)), Timnah (keeping house) [F.W. and Timnah Timmerman are the parents of Martha TIMMERMAN Averett.]
    • Family 945: John Redin (farmer), Sarah Redin (keeping house), John Redin (farm laborer), Mary Redin, William Redin, Frances Redin, James Redin, Louilla Redin
    • Family 946: John Manning (farmer), Nancy Manning (keeping house), Mallissa Manning
    • Family 947: Ellis Harden (farmer), Eliza Hardin (keeping house), Theressa Harden, Hiram Harddn, Martha Harden, John Harden, Susan Harden, William Harden, George Harden
    • Family 948: T. Tinsley (farmer), Elizabeth Tinsley (keeping house), Alonza Tinsley (farm laborer), Narsissus Tinsley, Tarply Tinsley, Lougenia Tinsley, Gardner Tinsley, Ida Tinsley, Thomas Tinsley, Stella Tinsley




  • Pages 135—136:
    • Family 949: S. Canterburg (keeping house), Fitesque Canterburg (farm laborer), Marcus Canterburg, Elizabeth Canterburg, William Canterburg, James Harris (farm laborer), Caroline Harris, Quinn Richardson, Louis Mitcheal (farm laborer) [Richardson and Mithceal were also black. Again, were they former slaves? Were they formerly the “property” of the Canterburg’s?]
    • Family 950: Evans Chatman (farmer), Roma Chatman (keeping house), Henry Chatman (farm laborer), James Chatman (farm laborer), Ewan Chatman, Minnia Chatman, James Wallace (farm laborer), Martina Wallace (keeping house)
    • Family 951: D.F. Averette (farmer, real estate $500 ($8900), personal estate $480 ($8600)), M.A.R. Averette (keeping house), John Averette, Mary Averette
    • Family 952: M.J. Ray (keeping house), Emily Ray, Lourena Ray, Margaret Ray, Druward Ray, J.M. Burson, Sarah Burson
    • Family 953: C. Buckner (farmer), Sarah Buckner (keeping house), Elizabeth Buckner, William Ferren, Charles Ferren, M.E. Patterson


  • Pages 136—137:
    • Family 954: William Wood (farmer), Elvira Wood (keeping house)
    • Family 955: J.E. Patterson (farmer), Margaret Patterson (keeping house), Charles Patterson (farm laborer), William Patterson, Margaret Patterson, George Patterson, Lucy Patterson
    • Family 956: B. Martin (farm laborer), Mary Martin (keeping house), Elizabeth Martin, Benjamin Martin, Sarah Martin, John Martin
    • Family 957: Elija Taylor (farm laborer), Rachel Taylor (keeping house), Jefferson Taylor (farm laborer), Elija Taylor (farm laborer), Louisa Taylor, Lovic Gibson, Emiline Gibson [Also a black family and also possibly emancipated slaves. Were they hired by the Martin family or by the Brown family, which could be implied by their geographical proximity?]
    • Family 958: Miles Brown (farmer), Sarah Brown (keeping house), Jane Brown, Fannie Brown, Emma Brown, James Brown, Susan Brown, Almira Powers, Nancy Powers
    • Family 959: K.H. Scogin (farmer), Margaret Scogin (keeping house), Sarah Scogin, Mary Scogin, Catherine Scogin, Barton Rush
    • Family 960: F. Chrietzberg (farm laborer), Mary Chrietzberg (keeping house), Alonza [Alonzo?] Chrietzberg, Henry Chrietzberg
  • Pages 137—138:
    • Family 961: Louis Williams (black, farm laborer), Harriet Williams (black, keeping house), Williams Williams (black, farm laborer), James Williams (black, farm laborer)
    • Family 962: David James (farmer), Nancy James (keeping house), John James, Mary Ann James, Quinn James
    • Family 963: Miles Wallace (farmer), Annie Wallace (keeping house), D.A. Buchner, John Buchner (farm laborer)
    • Family 964: George Pullin (farmer), Mary Pullin (keeping house), Charlotte Pullin, Emily Pullin, James Pullin (farmer laborer), Thomas Pullin (farm laborer), Alex Pullin, Abram Pullin, Charley Pullin
    • Family 965: Richmond Ferrel (farmer), Fannie Ferrel (keeping house), Martha Ferrel, Joseph Ferrel, Stanly Ferrel
    • Family 966: M.A. Terrel (farm laborer), Agnes Terrel (keeping house), Hiram Terrel
    • Family 967: E.B. Ward (farmer), Rachel Ward (keeping house)
    • Family 968: John Tucker (farm laborer), Polly Ann Tucker (keeping house), Mary Ann Tucker
    • Family 969: Vina Mote (keeping house), Hiram Honey (farmer), Catherine Honey (keeping house), William Honey, Mary Honey, Wm Goodson (farm laborer), Texana Goodson, Baker Thomas (farm laborer), Ben Goodson (farm laborer)
  • Page 138
    • Familes 970—971...
    • Family 974: Nathan Ledbetter (miller, value of real estate not shown, value of personal estate not shown), Massouri Ledbetter (keeping house) [Possible relatives of Mary LEDBETTER Averett (~1815—unknown), the mother of David Averett (1837—1927).]


So, where is Chanahatchee, the location of the nearest post office? It is not easy to find on Google. A person named Vicky Schuller queried the message boards on Genealogy.com in the year 2000 about the location of "Township 19, Chanahatchee, Tallapoosa County in the 1850 US Census.”


A person named Margaret Stearns Payne replied a couple of days later, saying that “Chanahatchee is now a part of Elmore County. It is more commonly referred to as Chana Creek. It is a small community close to the town of Eclectic Alabama. Elmore County was formed in [the] 1860s from Tallapoosa, Coosa, Autauga, and Montgomery Counties. Not much there now except some small Primitive Baptist Churches, their adjoining cemeteries, farms, and residences."


One of the very few resources that gives location information about Chattahatchee is a weather forecast page for Chana Creek, Alabama. It has a small map that looks like this:


The town of Electric, Alabama (32.6416606 deg N -86.0409 deg E) is, according to Google Maps, a part of the Montgomery, Alabama Metropolitan Statistical Area. I was also able to find the Chana Creek Primitive Baptist Church in Elmore County, Alabama (32.619669 deg N -85.98923 deg E), which is 3.2 miles from the town of Eclectic.


So far, this is my best estimate of where the Chanahatchee Post Office mentioned in the 1870 US Census was located. This is what the area looks like in the satellite photo from Google Earth (on 22 May 2014). It seems to match the description of "some small Primitive Baptist Churches, their adjoining cemeteries, farms, and residences” fairly well. The location of Chana Creek relative to Dadeville (the county seat of Tallapoosa County where the Tallapoosa Times, the Dadeville Banner, and the Dadeville Banner and Times newspapers were published) and to Montgomery (the state capital of Alabama, the first capital of the Confederate States, and the location where the Daily Confederation and the Daily Montgomery Ledger, and the Daily Advertiser were published at the time). It will be shown in a future post on this blog that the part of Elmore County in which Chana Creek is located was part of Tallapoosa County until 1866, until the new county of Elmore was founded and that this change is reflected in the 1860 and 1870 US Census data for David Averett and his family.


The next screenshot from Google Earth shows the location of Chana Creek Primitive Baptist Church relative to the town of Eclectic and a second, nearby Primitive Baptist Church.


The last screenshot shows what the land around Chana Creek looks like on 11 September 2012, according to Google Earth data displayed.

Sunday, April 27, 2014

Speculation: "Rodney Ferry" Route from Alabama to Louisiana

While scanning through some of the issues of the Jacksonville Republican newspaper printed in Jacksonville, Alabama in 1860, I came across the following clipping. It is from the 2 February 1860 issue, was originally placed on 15 December 1859, and was to run for two months.


NOTICE
TO
Emigrants moving to Louisiana and Texas.
 
WE beg leave to state, that there is a NEW and SUBSTANTIAL Ferry Boat at Rodney, and that the route by this “Ferry” is the best of all seasons, and nearer by 180 miles. We have been requested by persons travelling this “route” to publish a “Way Bill” for the convenience of those who intend moving west — which we furnish over the card of Mr. S.W. Davitte.
THOS. M. REA & CO.
 
WAY-BILL. 
Vanwert, Geo.
Jacksonville, Ala.
Greensport, Ala.
Ashville, Ala.
Elyton, Ala.
Gainesville, Ala.
Scooba, Ala.
DeKalb
Big Oak
Union
Brandon
Monterey
Dear’s Ferry on Pearl River
Ferry on N.O. And Jackson R.R.
Port Gibson
Rodney Ferry.
 
Rodney Ferry, Nov. 12, 1859. 
I HAVE just travelled the route to this “Ferry,” and recommend it to all persons intending to move West. The roads are perfectly good, affording an abundance of all necessary supplies — accommodations at the Ferry are also very good. The boat is new and safe; and the proprietors attend to it themselves and are accommodating.
S.W. DAVITTE
December 15, 1859. 2m.
Click to enlarge

My 3rd great grandparents, David Averett (1837–1927) and Martha TIMMERMAN Averett (1847—1927) moved their family to Louisiana in 1877 (seventeen years later, admittedly) from the Reeltown/Tallassee, Alabama area. Stories my mother collected during her lifetime indicate that David and his family had intended to move to Texas. Instead, when they stopped to visit his sister in Claiborne Parish, Louisiana on the way to Texas, they decided to stay there. This is one possible route they may have taken.


John William Jackson (1856–1926), my 2nd great grandfather, and the son of John O. Jackson (1834–1861) who I have mentioned in other posts as having lived in Kirk’s Grove, Alabama in Cherokee County, also ended up in Louisiana, although it was later in the 19th century. John William’s son, William Joseph Jackson (1881–1956), married David Averett’s granddaughter, Monnie Ethel Watts (1885-1985), in Winnfield, Louisiana (Winn Parish) in 1908. William Joseph and Monnie Ethel WATTS Jackson were two of my great grandparents.


If David and Martha Averett followed this route, they probably would have joined it after leaving the Reeltown/Tallassee area somewhere west of Elyton, Alabama and east of Scooba, Mississippi — subject to the availability and condition of the roads, of course. The goal of this post is to show which of the way points I was able to locate on the advertised route.

  • Van Wert, Georgia
    • According to the Polk County Chamber of Commerce Historic Sites website, Van Wert, Georgia is located in what is now Rockmart, Georgia. It has been designated a historic township by the State. The geolocation is 33.986641N -85.040874E.
  • Jacksonville, Alabama
  • Greensport Alabama
    • Greensport was a bit more difficult to find. According to a person named Rick Wallace responding to a query on Genealogy.com, "Greensport and Greensport Ferry were located on the Coosa River, South of Gadsden and about 5 miles northwest of Ohatchee. On a present day map find the Henry Neely Lake on the Coosa River, south of Gadsden. Greensport was on the north bank of the river in St Clair County. Greensport was about where the Henry Neely Dam is and pretty well sitting on top of the point where St Clair, Calhoun and Etowah Counties all join.” The following map shows where I believe it is (geolocation 33.848190N -86.079126E).


According to Wikipedia, "The Coosa River is the major tributary when it joins the Tallapoosa River near Wetumpka, Alabama to form the Alabama River.” These locations are important to the story of David Averett, which is why I include the detail here and I intend to return to the subject in more depth in the future. Wikipedia also provides a very nice map that was created by Wikipedia user “pfly":


  • Ashville, Alabama
    • Ashville, Alabama still exists in St. Clair County. Geolocation 33.843611N -86.266111E.    
  • Elyton, Alabama
  • Gainesville, Alabama
    • Gainesville, Alabama still exists in Sumter County, near the border of Mississippi. Geolocation is 32.817317N -88.158026E.
  • Scooba, Alabama
    • The advertisement in the 2 February 1860 newspaper says this is a town in Alabama but I believe it is a misprint. Scooba, Mississippi, on the other hand, is in Kemper County, near the border with Alabama. Geolocation 32.830382N -88.474783E.
  • DeKalb, Mississippi
  • Big Oak, Mississippi
    • I have not been able to find any information about Big Oak, Mississippi. The closest items that I have found are Big Oak Methodist Church (32.721977N -88.765469E) and Big Oak Church (32.684782N -88.843395E) in Mississippi. They are about five miles apart, but they appear to line up nicely on the route defined by the other geographic locations specified in the advertisement.


  • Union, Mississippi
    • Union, Mississippi still exists and is located in Neshoba and Newton counties. Geolocation 32.571320N -89.118118E.
  • Brandon, Mississippi
  • Monterey, Mississippi
  • Dear’s Ferry on the Pearl River
    • “Dear’s Ferry” or “Dears Ferry” is a historic site and is a crossing of the Pearl River in Hinds County. Geolocation 32.0918189N -90.2411994E. For future reference, the linked “iTouchMap” web site contains other useful geographic and historical information about Mississippi and other states: Various place types (arroyos, basins, crossings, etc.), including many river crossings.   


  • Ferry on N.O. And Jackson R.R.
    • I haven’t been able to find this. Searching on this in Wikipedia connects to the page on the “New Orleans, Jackson, and Great Northern railroad” which connected Chicago with New Orleans and was completed just before the start of the war. One site on the Internet indicates that it was considered one of the best Confederate Railroads. The Federal Army captured New Orleans in 1862 and spent the rest of the war trying to disrupt the railroad, which they apparently largely succeeded in doing.
  • Port Gibson
    • Port Gibson, Mississippi is a city in Claiborne County near the Mississippi River. Geolocation 31.956243N -90.983124E.
  • Rodney Ferry
    • According to Wikipedia, Rodney, Mississippi doesn’t exist as a town anymore because the Mississippi River changed course. Carolyn Jean Adams Switzer indicates that the town was incorporated in 1828, was a “thriving boomtown” in the 1830s, and had become a “struggling ghost town” in the 1840s. Some buildings are still there and Wikipedia relates an interesting story (unsourced, alas) from the Civil War about how several Union officers were taken prisoner while attending services at the Presbyterian Church in 1863. But the population is now apparently zero, although Switzer indicates that the Baptist Church is still in use. The geolocation is, according to Wikipedia, 31.861389N -91.199722E.


If one wanted to go to Texas, would the idea have been to reach the Mississippi River and then ride a boat down to New Orleans, and then another boat to Texas? But where in Texas? Galveston? What cities existed on the Texas Gulf Coast in 1859? Or would one have crossed Louisiana by road to arrive in Texas?

My 2nd great grandfather, John William Jackson ended up in Hico, Texas before doubling back to Louisiana. The following Wikipedia map of Hico, Texas is by Seth Anthony.

Unless one traveled up a river to reach Hico (I have no idea if this is possible), it might have been easier to simply cross Louisiana to get there.

It seems likely that there was more than one route commonly taken from Alabama to Louisiana but it will take a lot more research to determine just how many routes were taken and how many ferries across rivers, especially the mighty Mississippi river, were available and able to accommodate wagons carrying the personal effects of entire families. Families such as that of David and Martha Averett, my 3rd great grandparents and John William Jackson and his wife, Carrie Eliza Michael (1860–1910).

I might start by plotting the locations of all the historical river crossings in Alabama and then Mississippi using the data from the iTouchMap site. This might identify a few choke points through which all traffic had to be funneled. The topic is worth revisiting in the future.

Wednesday, September 7, 2011

David Averett Obituaries

The following photo is of my great-great-great grandparents David Franklin Averett (25 February 1837 - 11 November 1927) and Martha TIMMERMAN Averett (27 November 1847 - 30 July 1927). I don't know the date it was made but David was 90 years old when he died in 1927 and his wife, Martha, was 79. An estimate of his apparent age in this photograph might be 60 years, which means that she would have been about 50. If true, the photograph would have been made around 1907.

The material in this post was given to my mother by a relation in Louisiana. My mother died in 1992 and I inherited her genealogy research after beginning to take an interest a few years ago. But I unfortunately have lost contact with anyone from my maternal grandfather's family (which includes David and Martha Averett). I have a couple of names that I am going to use to try to track them down after I have developed this blog. My theory is that it is easier to get potential genealogy research partners to collaborate if I have a body of work already assembled. Either way, I'm hoping to reestablish contact with one or more of them soon.

One other point:  The Internet being what it is, I am being careful to avoid naming living relatives or relatives who may still be living. For this reason, I am not going to supply information about people more recent than my maternal and paternal grandparents, all of whom passed away more than twenty years ago. But if the person who provided the material in this post to my mother recognizes his or her work, please let me know if it's okay if I add your name here.


David died about four months after the passing of his wife. Unfortunately, I do not have a copy of her obituary (yet).  But here is the first of two of his obituaries, probably published in a newspaper from the Winnfield, Louisiana area.


"PIONEER CITIZEN OF WINN PARISH DIES AT 90 YEARS. Winnfield, Nov. 17 (Special) -- D.F. Averett, 90 years old, died here at his home last Friday night. Mr. Averett was one of the oldest residents of this section of the state. He was born in Coosa county, ala., and served throughout the Civil war in the Confederate army, being attached to various branches of Lee's army in Virginia. In the second battle of the Wilderness he was wounded. Up until that engagement he was a sharpshooter. On recovering from his wounds he was attached to General Lee's headerquarters as a courier. Mr. Averett was the only Confederate soldier living in this section that served directly under Lee and knew the great general personally. Immediately after the Civil war he moved to this state and raised a large family. He is survived by nine children, five sons and four daughters, Rufus Averett, Hallsville, Texas; Mrs. J.R. Watts Sr., Winnfield, W.O. Averett, Winnfield; Early Averett, Gilmer, Texas; Mrs. W.A. Stamper, Natchitoches; Mrs. Emile Somparac [sic:  Sompayrac], Winnfield; Mrs. W.H. Baker, Pocahontas, Miss.; W.W. Averett, Shreveport, and Clarence Averett, Dallas, Texas. Funeral services were held at the First Baptist church, with interment in the Winnfield cemetery."
Here is the second, also probably published in a newspaper in the Winnfield area.


“Prominent Aged Citizen Is Claimed By Death Friday - D.F. Averett, Confederate Veteran, Dies Nov. 11, at Family Home. The sad death of David Francis Averett occurred at his home last Friday morning, November 11th, at 9:45 o’clock, thus closing the last chapter of a long and useful life. At the time of his death Mr. Averett had reached the advanced age of 89 years, 9 months and 16 days and up until a few weeks prior to his death he was unusually hearty and energetic. He was born in Thomas County Georgia but was reared in Alabama and it was from that state that he entered the Civil War, serving in the Fifteenth Alabama Infantry during the entire period of the war. In 1864 he was wounded in battle and while at home on furlough for recuperation he was married to Miss Martha Timmerman, who preceded him in death only three months ago, having lived together in happy companionship for over 62 years and rearing a large and useful family. The life of Mr. Averett has ever been outstanding because of his uprightness and desire to help his fellow men. His gentle influence will be greatly missed in this community. Funeral services were conducted at the Baptist Church Saturday morning at 10 o’clock by Rev. A.H. Cullen with interment in the Winnfield cemetery. He is survived by nine children, five sons; John Rufus of Halleville, Texas; D.E. of Gilmer, Texas; W.O. of Winnfield; Walter W. of Shreveport, and Clarence of Dallas, Texas; and four daughters; Mrs. J.R. Watts Sr., and Mrs. C.E. Sompayrac of Winnfield; Mrs. W.A. Stamper of Natchitoches, and Mrs. William Baker of Pocahontas, Miss. Also many grandchildren and other relatives and friends who mourn the passing of this splendid character.