I just came across the
below paragraph again (I forgot I have it).
The paragraph mentions several
parts of history (Trail of Tears, Civil War, etc) that our relatives had a part
in; This Samuel Hunter (1793-1852) is not an ancestor but an ancestor’s
nephew. Samuel married Catherine Poteat and they had eleven
children.
Samuel was born in the
Hunter Homestead at the mouth of Big Ivy on the French Broad River. Samuel and two of his sons are said to
have assisted in the removal of the Cherokee Indians in 1838. Part of the "Ocoee Purchase"
of Cherokee land south of the Hiwassee River was organized in 1838 into Meigs
County, Tennessee. It was there, near
the old post office in Limestone, that Samuel Hunter received a grant of land
for a farm in 1838, and in the following
year, December 11, 1838, he received an additional grant, No. 911 of Ocoee
Grants, listed in Book B-430 of the
Tennessee State Archives. Two of
his sons served as officers in the Union Army during the Civil War; one of
these sons was killed by bushwhackers at the close of the war, and the other
died in a Confederate prison camp. Two
other sons of Samuel became ministers of the Gospel and held pastorates in the
Methodist Episcopal Church.
PS. I don't know where the Big Ivy's mouth is on the French Broad River, but I do know the French Broad River flows through Buncombe County, and in Buncome it flows through the Biltmore Estate. it is feasible that Samuel Hunter's farm was on what would become the Biltmore property.
PS. I don't know where the Big Ivy's mouth is on the French Broad River, but I do know the French Broad River flows through Buncombe County, and in Buncome it flows through the Biltmore Estate. it is feasible that Samuel Hunter's farm was on what would become the Biltmore property.
No comments:
Post a Comment