Lackey
John S.
Lackey was born in Iredell Co., N.C. in 1814 and moved to
the former Cherokee Nation around 1840 with his growing
family. His wife was Lucinda Martha (Patsy) Weaver, the
granddaughter of a Cherokee woman and trader Enoch Jordan.
In 1866, the Lackeys were living in Twp. 6 R8E next door to
the Wilson Fossetts (a Quaker family) in what was then
called Rawlingsville, now named Rainsville, Sand Mountain.
John Lackey had also bought land in S1 T10 R7 in DeKalb Co.,
August 25, 1852 (the same month John Cooper bought his land
on Sand Mountain). Jim Lackey (1861 -1952) was later the
descendant on the land and a friend of Dolph Cooper. He is
buried in Harmony Church Cemetery on the mountain. The
Lackeys were a numerous clan, originally from a barony in
Sterling, Scotland, on the north side of the Lennox
Mountains, and it is not surprising to find many of them
settled nearby. William Lackey, b. 1753 in Lancaster,
Penna., married Elizabeth White, a Cherokee, and settled in
Iredell Co., N.C., then moved to Lawrence Co., Ala. William
Lackey, born in N.C., 1794, married Nancy Spears, later
Lavinia Smith, and died 1884 in DeKalb/Etowah Co.,
Ala. Lovina (Dovey) Adeline Lackey married Samuel G.
Shankles, and they are the author’s great-great
grandparents. An Adam Lackey was also in the area. Lucinda
Lackey is reported to have died by being flung into the
Mississippi River.
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Melmuth Lackey
(1839-1905) served in the 9th Alabama Cavalry,
Company "F" (formerly Co. "B," 2nd/19th Battalion),
with four Sizemore men, several Lowreys, Henegars
and Davenports, Richard Blevins, Milligan Fossett,
Abner Palmer, Richard Potter, and Jesse Shankles,
among others. Captain Davenport was the highest
ranking officer. Melmuth was in Malone's Confederate
Cavalry before joining the Vidette in the Fall
of 1863. Notice the Melungeon “skunk strip,” high
cheekbones and rangy frame. The Davenports were
among Sand Mountain’s First Families. Robert
Rodolphus Davenport came to Valley Head from
Tennessee and built a much-admired home designed by
an English architect, Oak Lawn (Elizabeth S. Howard,
A Partial Who Was Who in DeKalb County, 1978).
Courtesy Lackey Family. | Maj. George Lowrey, Jr.,
also known as Rising Fawn, Agin'-agi'li (1770-1852),
Assistant Principal Chief of the Cherokee Nation and
member of the Executive Council. He was a courier,
banker, soldier, translator, law enforcement
officer, planter, breeder, and political leader. He
wears a turban, saltire sash, and medal he received
from the President of the United States, holds a
wampum belt symbolic of his high office in tribal
government, and has silver nose and ear ornaments of
a Sephardic Jewish design, probably workshop of
Francis. His father came from Scotland and his
mother was the daughter and granddaughter of Echota
Cherokee chiefs. Attributed to George Catlin.
Gilcrease Institute. |
Lowrey
George
Lowrey was born in Scotland about 1740 and married Nannie
Watts, daughter of Ghi-go-neli (father: Oconostota)
and Rising Fawn (Agiligina Kenoteta). He was a trader,
miller and man of many far-ranging activities who made his
home in Battle Creek valley in the Sequatchie Country, which
housed the fleet of war canoes of the Chickamauga Nation.
Their daughter Aky Lowrey married Chief Arthur Burns.
Another daughter, Jenny, was the wife of Chief
Tah-lon-tee-skee. Yet another daughter married a Sevier. In
fact, it can be said that none of the marriages in the
Lowrey clan were taken lightly. Col. John Lowrey married
Elizabeth Shorey, and Maj. George Lowrey married Lucy Benge.
As in the case of the Browns and Keyses, some Lowreys
remained in the Valley Head area without being forced west.
They were known for maintaining a “free loan association” to
aid poor farmers, widows and other needy individuals.
The
meaning of the surname Lowrey is “Levite” (WSWJ).
Riley
The Riley
family of Sand Mountain has been traced back to Sean
O’Reilly of Northern Ireland in the 1500s. The emigrant
Samuel Riley (about 1720-1792) married Nell Wallace in
Maryland. Their children were named Samuel, Eliphas,
Elizabeth, David Moses, Milcah, Margaret, Darby, Susanna,
Edward, George, and James. Samuel Riley, Cherokee Indian
merchant and interpreter, married two daughters of Chief
Doublehead and received a 640 acre reservation on south side
of the Tennessee River opposite Southwest Point, Roane Co.,
“by right of wife” in 1817, but when Tennessee took back all
Indian reservations, he moved to Sand Mountain in Alabama.
Doublehead had important connections with the area around
Yahoo Falls on the Cumberland River in Kentucky. He was born
in Stearns, in what is now McCreary Co. Tuckahoe Doublehead,
his son, married Margaret Mounce, and he himself took as one
of his wives Nannie the Pain Droomgool, the daughter of
Scots trader Alexander Droomgool, whose extensive
possessions appeared on the list of valuations as published
by an act of Congress, 1837. Many years later, Alexander
Droomgool’s descendant, a Nashville journalist, invented, or
at least popularized, the term Melungeon at a time when her
cohorts among New York travel writers were inventing
“hillbillies” (Benjamin Albert Botkin, A Treasury of
Southern Folklore [New York: Crown Publishers,
1949], pp. 85-86). She placed the last remnants of the
Melungeons on Newmans Ridge in Tennessee, oblivious of their
migrations to other parts of the country during Indian
Removal.
Riley is a corruption of Raleigh/Ralegh and is French Jewish
in origin (WSWJ).
Redwine
Frederick
Augustus Redwine (1767-1859) moved from Rowan/Montgomery
Co., N.C., where he was counted in the 1790 and 1800 census
in Salisbury District, to the Lexington, Kentucky, area
around 1814, when he and his family (including son Wiley and
wife) were apparently counted in the census (also in 1820).
The Russell Co., Va. tax list has a Frederick A. Redwine in
1810. The family originally came from Prussia to Pittsburgh
and was named R(h)eutweil/R(h)iedweil. In 1805 the family
was in Sequatchie (across the river from the northern
part of Sand Mountain), where Frederick was the third
settler to penetrate the cornbrakes of that fertile valley.
It is believed that his wife was from that region; she is
the only American Indian in the family before 1800 and has
been claimed to be Tihanama. In 1812, Wiley moved to Powells
Valley, where he volunteered in the War of 1812. He served
in the military from 9-23-1813 to 1-1-1814, enlisting in
Jacksboro, Tenn. He was in Capt. Doak's regiment. After the
war he moved to Lexington, Ky., and later to the headwaters
of the Kentucky River. In 1823 Wiley moved to the Cumberland
Mountains and settled near Grassy Cove where he died and is
buried, with his wife, Avis Morrely, or Pickard. Wiley
Redwine was thus a soldier in the Creek Indian wars under
Jackson. He later became a Methodist minister. He is listed
in U.S. Census for Bledsoe Co., Tenn., 1830; Bent Co., Ky.,
1840 & 185. As one of Jackson's soldiers, he receiving land
warrants of 40 and 80 acres. He applied for a pension in
Valley Head in 1871, with James Bundren (his son-in-law) as
his character witness. He was a colorful character about
Grassy Cove, where he moved in 1826. He was referred to as
"Father Redwine" and had a place near the old ford on Whites
Creek. He lived near Reelfoot when it suddenly turned into a
lake. Many of the Redwine Indians have blond hair and blue
eyes. Descendants through his daughter Sarah Redwine, who
married James Bundren (the author’s great-great
grandparents), still identified themselves as Redwine
Indians. Wiley went back and forth between Grassy Cove and
Sand Mountain, and in the 1850 census he was counted in both
places.
Shankles
Not
only was Scotland the source of many Jews, who often threw
off their Christian guises in the New World, but it was also
a magnet for Jews from the rest of Europe during the
religious persecutions of the Spanish Inquisition and
Counter-Reformation. For these reasons, Avold Shenkel
migrated from Oldenburg, Germany, through the Netherland to
Berwick, Scotland, in the early 1700s. He continued to New
Jersey and Pennsylvania around 1750. From there, like so
many others, he gravitated to Tennessee. Sand Mountain
residents George Shankle, born about 1808 in Franklin Co.,
Tennessee, and John Shankle (born about.1814) raised large
families around Maynards Cove, intermarrying with Ashberry,
Byrd, Dawson, Holland (Cherokee), Lackey (Cherokee), Minor
(Melungeon), Musgrove (Creek), Proctor (Cherokee), Sizemore,
White (Choctaw-Cherokee) and Wooten (Choctaw). John Shankles
(about 1814-1885) married Clarissa Proctor, the
granddaughter of William Davis and Mary Ann Black. The
Proctors came from Canada and were to become a prominent
Cherokee family. Samuel G. Shankles (about 1846-1902)
married Lovina (Dovey) Fossett (nee Lackey). Like many
non-slave-holding Southerners, he fought on the Union side
during the Civil War, serving in Company D, First Alabama
Tennessee Vidette Cavalry. Their daughter, the author’s
great-grandmother, Lucinda, married James Lafayette (Fate)
Goble, the son of Cornelius Goble, whose father was a former
Indian agent, and Ellen Wooten. Lucinda Goble was reported
to be “three-quarters Cherokee Indian,” a blood quantum that
proves fairly accurate if you add up the blood lines in her
genealogy. Her mitochondrial DNA is a rare form of U2.
Family tradition says Fate Goble was raised an orphan
and that the Gobles were well to do. According to
grandchildren, Fate Goble became a banker and owned land on
what is now a corner of the highway in central Rainsville on
Sand Mountain. The legal description is SE 1/4 of SE 1/4,
Section 24, Township 6, Range 7, DeKalb Co., Ala. Jacob's
Bank and McDonald's Restaurant are now located there. Mrs.
E. E. McCurdy owned the land in 1975, when she sold it to
Rainsville Bank, later Jacobs Bank. Courthouse records at
Ft. Payne could not be located despite persistent efforts by
the author around 1990. It is said that Fate Goble was
struck by lightning and killed in his bed in Hog Jaw, on
January 22, 1918. He is buried in the Goble Plot of the
Langston (Old Davis) Cemetery.
Sizemore
Richard
Sizemore came from Spartanburg District, S.C.and moved to
Habersham Co., Ga. by 1822 and to Dade County, Ga. about
1845, where he joined a group of other mixed breeds avoiding
removal near Rising Fawn. To credit descendants and
relatives in Eastern Cherokee claims 1906-1924, which
comprise two entire volumes of the Guion Miller Commission’s
Report, the family came from North Carolina and Virginia and
were Cherokee. The name is cognate with Cismor and other
Portuguese Jewish surnames, deriving from Sis(a)mai, a
Judahite of the descendants of the daughter of Sheshan and
Jarha, a Phoenician god's name, meaning water crane or
swallow, in Sephardic tradition applied to “tax farmers.”
"Sheshan had no sons, only daughters; Sheshan had an
Egyptian slave, whose name was Jarha... Eleasah begot
Sisamai, and Sisamai begot Shallum" (1 Chronicles 2:34-40).
They were Portuguese Jews who came from London to Barbados
and Jamestown, where they blended with the Saponi, Powhatan,
Mattaponi, Cherokee and Creek on the frontier.
Georgia.
Dade County. In the name of God, Amen. I, Richard Sizemore
of said state and county, being of advanced age and knowing
that must shortly depart this life, deem it right and proper
both as respects my family and myself that I should make a
disposition of my property with which a kind providence has
blessed me; do therefore make my last will and testament
hereby revoking all others heretofore made by same.
1st item. I design that my body be buried in a decent and
Christian-like manner suitable to my condition in life. My
soul, I trust, shall return to rest with God who gave it.
2nd item. I design and direct that all my just debts be paid
without delay by my executors hereinafter appointed, as I am
unwilling my creditors should be delayed in their right.
3rd item. I give, bequeath and devise to my son Andrew
Jackson and Thomas Benton and James Clayton and my daughter
Malinda Elizabeth part of lot of land number two hundred and
nineteen in the eleventh district of formerly Cherokee, now
Dade County, containing one hundred and ten acres with all
the rights, members and privaliges (sic) to said lot of land
in any wise appertaining or belonging forever.
4th item. I give and bequeath to my son John one sorrel
horse and two cows and calves and their increase and six
head of sheep and their increase, one yoak (sic) of stears
(sic) and cart, one hundred bushels of corn and ten head of
hogs, and one rifle gun, and three feather beds and
furnature (sic).
5th item. I hereby appoint my son John executor of this my
last will and testament this April 18th, 1850.
Richard Sizemore
Registered this 20th of April 1850.
John B. Perkins, Clerk
(Thanks to Winona Jones of Weatherford, Tex..)
Richard
Sizemore was buried in Pea Ridge Cemetery, DeKalb Co., Ala.
on top of the mountain. This cemetery also contains the
graves of Coopers and Bundrens. His widow Elizabeth moved to
Fraction Township in the area known as Shraders Mill, where
her neighbors were the Coopers and Shraders (Alabama 1866
State Census). She was the daughter of Francis Forester and
a Chickahominy woman and died May 01, 1879.
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