Tuesday, February 26, 2019

Armistead Family History #18

                                              A Decade of Uncertainty


Why has it been so long, since you have posted on this blog,?!,  you might be asking.  I have several good excuses prepared.

1.  I have been so busy with grand kids...
2.  I am a confirmed procrastinator....
3.  I am a little lazy at times....
4.  I have been hampered by a bad back....
5.  It's all my wife's fault...
6.  All of the Above.

I could say "All of the Above" but I am going to lay most of the blame on a bad back.  Have you ever had severe lower back pain?  If you have you have my sympathy and if you have not, please do your best to take care of your back.

I think my back problem has its origin in my knee replacement surgery and subsequent therapy over a year and a half ago, because it started right after that.  Last year was a mess with three rounds of shots and a round of therapy and lots of pain.  For now I am doing well and hope to post on a more regular basis.  Sever pain not only prevents you from doing things, (as in this instance, prolonged sitting and typing) but it also wears on your mind and prevents you from summoning the energy required to fight through pain to just get up and do anything.

OK, enough of that, let's get down to business....

And back to my poor ancestors whom I have neglected to write about for quite some time.  I took two posts off to write about Armistead cousins in Florida, and Simmons Jones Baker, who is a direct ancestor, but is not an Armistead.  All good information, I believe, and they are interesting people.  But for those of you that are just interested in following the line of Armistead, it has been a long time off topic.

I believe everyone reading this post knows a fair amount about US History during the years between 1850 and 1860.  This period of time is covered thoroughly in history class in high school and college.  I will hit a few highlights or maybe lowlights to help you remember and get a feel for the times.

This was a turbulent decade that ended up exploding in 1860.  Tensions were running high in Washington D.C. over slavery.  On Jan 29, 1850, debate was intense in congress over a bill  introduced by Henry Clay, known as the Compromise of 1850, and it brought about heated discussions in the Capitol and across the country.  Believing that the bill might avert a possible civil war, Senator Daniel Webster endorsed the bill on 7 March 1850.  This time compromise didn't exactly work out so well. (1)



Daniel Webster

By Unknown photographer - [1], Public Domain, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=661518



Henry Clay

By Julian Vannerson or Montgomery P. Simons - http://www.be-hold.com/themes/historical/henry-clay-salt-print/,  Public Domain, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=72047963


America was expanding in size with rapid population growth.  Remember the country now stretched from " sea to shining sea".  Population growth exploded by nearly 36% from 1840 to 1850 and in 1850 it reached a level of 23,191,876.  In July of 1850, President Zachary Taylor, who had just been sworn as president the year before, suddenly died. (2)



Zachary Taylor Mausoleum, Where the President is Buried.

By Bedford at English Wikipedia - Transferred from en.wikipedia to Commons by Igitur using CommonsHelper., Public Domain, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=10816945


Millard Fillmore was sworn in as the 13th president.  Hmmm.  Unlucky number 13 for Fillmore.  He was forced into the middle of this cauldron of burning emotions in the capitol and was not really equipped to handle it.  Right off the bat his policies regarding slavery were counter to both the expansionists and the slave-holders. (3)



Millard Fillmore 

Millard Fillmore (13th president of the United States). Image by Mathew B. Brady circa 1855-1865, and forms party of the Library of Congress Brady-Handy photograph collection.
https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Millard_Fillmore.jpg

In September California was admitted as the 31st state.  This action was included as a part of the compromise of 1850.  In addition to California becoming a state without slavery, the territories of Utah and new Mexico were created with no decision as to slavery, this allowed the occupants of the territories to decide the matter by their votes, as they organized their territories.  Another provision of the compromise strengthened the Fugitive Slave Law, and also ended the slave trade in the District of Columbia. (4)

And this was only the first nine months of the first year!

Meanwhile in Florida, the Armisteads were going about their daily lives.  In the 1850 United States Census, William Jordan (53 yrs. old) and Mary Eliza. E. (Baker) Armistead (48) were listed as living in the 4th Division, W. District in the County of Jackson.  The space in the column asking for "Occupation," listed "farmer", and the space in the column for "value of Real Estate Owned" was left blank.  This puzzles me because I would have thought he owned land or a home or both.  Also, in 1840 he had owned slaves.  Maybe he just did not want to answer the question or maybe he had a change in fortune over the last decade.  The 1850 Census provided for a separate schedule for listing slave names and slave owners.  I could not find W.J. Armistead in this schedule, which indicates he no longer owned slaves.  I can't say that definitively because it is possible I just did not find the evidence of it.


1850 United States Federal Census

Year: 1850; Census Place: Division 4, Jackson, Florida; Roll: M432_58; Page: 321B; Image: 629
Source Information:  Ancestry.com. 1850 United States Federal Census [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2009. Images reproduced by FamilySearch.
Original data: Seventh Census of the United States, 1850; (National Archives Microfilm Publication M432, 1009 rolls); Records of the Bureau of the Census, Record Group 29; National Archives, Washington, D.C.
Description:  This database is an index to individuals enumerated in the 1850 United States Federal Census, the Seventh Census of the United States. Census takers recorded many details including each person's name, age as of the census day, sex, color; birthplace, occupation of males over age fifteen, and more. No relationships were shown between members of a household. Additionally, the names of those listed on the population schedule are linked to actual images of the 1850 Federal Census.


Listed in the 1850 Census with their parents, were seven children still living at home: Ann P., (28), Mary S. (18), Sarah (16), Lawrence (14), Thomas S. (8), Emily B. (6), and Robert S. (2), (My great-grandfather.)  Also listed with the family, was Martha Baker (11), probably Marys niece.

So seven children are living at home and four are living elsewhere.  I have not been able to locate William Jordan Armistead, Jr. (26).  I would guess he was somewhere close by but I have been unsuccessful at locating him in 1850.  He will show up again in the next census, however.

Jordan (21) was living in the 3rd Division of Washington County, FL, in a boarding house, house number 127.  His occupation was listed as "Clerk." Others staying there included mostly laborers, but there were two mechanics and one engineer.  The first two men listed at this house do not show an occupation, so they probably owned the boarding house.  They each showed property value of $7,500.  Listed birthplaces of the men ranged from Georgia to Ireland, Germany, New York, and Delaware.  Jordan's uncle, Simmons Jones Baker Jr., was listed in this same census only eight houses away at house number 119.  The house number is the number assigned to a house by the census taker, assigned in order beginning with one, as he moves through his district. With these two houses being only eight houses apart, it suggests they were fairly close to each other.  Makes sense that Mary would like having her son living close to her brother.  Simmons J. Baker, Jr., was listed at 45 years old, a farmer, and had real estate valued at $10,000.  Washington County, where they both lived, was adjacent to Jackson County with a boundary on its east that shared a boundary line with Jackson County, they were not far from Marianna.  This was, at the time, a very large county with its southern boundary all the way down on the Andrews Bay and the Gulf of Mexico.  Through the years it lost land to other counties and is no longer that large. I will be mentioning Andrews Bay again later.


1850 United States Federal Census

Source Citation:  Year: 1850; Census Place: Division 3, Washington, Florida; Roll: M432_59; Page: 293B; Image: 564
Source Information:  Ancestry.com. 1850 United States Federal Census [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2009. Images reproduced by FamilySearch.
Original data: Seventh Census of the United States, 1850; (National Archives Microfilm Publication M432, 1009 rolls); Records of the Bureau of the Census, Record Group 29; National Archives, Washington, D.C.
Description:  This database is an index to individuals enumerated in the 1850 United States Federal Census, the Seventh Census of the United States. Census takers recorded many details including each person's name, age as of the census day, sex, color; birthplace, occupation of males over age fifteen, and more. No relationships were shown between members of a household. Additionally, the names of those listed on the population schedule are linked to actual images of the 1850 Federal Census.


Another brother living away from home was James Perry Armistead (20).  As mentioned before he was not listed at home and like his brother, W.J., I could not locate him in the census.  I have a strong feeling he was living in North Carolina when this census was taken, but I have not been able to confirm that.  Perhaps he was at school, or he may have been out of school and tutoring somewhere.  I will explain more about why I came to this conclusion a little later.

The last brother not living at home was Anthony Armistead (16). Anthony was listed in the 4th Division of Jackson County in the home of Frances R. Ely (38), a merchant who had real estate value of $14,156.  Anthony was a clerk and probably was training under John Hughes (25), also living in this home and listed as a clerk. Once again, an uncle was living nearby, James L. G,. Baker (51), a farmer with real estate valued at $6,000.  James L. G. Baker and his family lived in a home with Samuel C. Bellamy (40), a physician, (and land owner), who's column for real estate value was blank.


1850 United States Federal Census

Source Citation:  Year: 1850; Census Place: Division 4, Jackson, Florida; Roll: M432_58; Page: 316B; Image: 619
Source Information:  Ancestry.com. 1850 United States Federal Census [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2009. Images reproduced by FamilySearch.
Original data: Seventh Census of the United States, 1850; (National Archives Microfilm Publication M432, 1009 rolls); Records of the Bureau of the Census, Record Group 29; National Archives, Washington, D.C.
Description:  This database is an index to individuals enumerated in the 1850 United States Federal Census, the Seventh Census of the United States. Census takers recorded many details including each person's name, age as of the census day, sex, color; birthplace, occupation of males over age fifteen, and more. No relationships were shown between members of a household. Additionally, the names of those listed on the population schedule are linked to actual images of the 1850 Federal Census.


Besides the two Baker brothers listed above, Mary had at least two sisters living.  One sister, Laura Lucinda (Baker) Saunders, was married and living in North Carolina.  Mary's father, Simmons Jones Baker, Sr., (75), as I mentioned in my last post, was living in North Carolina in 1850.  He was a farmer in Gates County and had real estate valued at $12,000.  You can check online and get an estimate of how much $12,000 would be worth today.  As you can imagine, it would be a hefty sum.

Of course there are other important things to report that happened this decade.  Major book publications by American publishers included Herman Melville's "Moby Dick", and Nathaniel Hawthorne's "House of Seven Gables", published in 1851.  In 1852 Harriet Beecher Stowe's "Uncle Tom's Cabin", a major work on slavery, was published.  Over 300,000 copies were sold in just it's first few years of publication.  The Studebaker Brothers Wagon Company was established in 1852 and was quickly on its way to becoming the wolds largest producer of wagons.  My more "mature" readers, like myself, will recognize the Studebaker name from the car industry a few decades ago.

At the close of 1853, the Gadsden Purchase was completed, with the purchase by the US of 29,640 sq miles of land from Mexico for $10 million.  Addition of the land to the area that is present day Arizona and New Mexico, finalized our present day borders of the Continental United States. (5)


Gadsden Purchase

https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Gadsden_Purchase_Cities_ZP.svg
Date:  23 March 2008
Source:  Own work
Author:  XcepticZP


Back to the political side, both Senator Henry Clay and Daniel Webster passed away in 1852, which left a void in leadership in both the political and the slavery debates for the next few years.  On March 4, 1853 Franklin Pierce was inaugurated as our 14th president. (6)


Franklin Pierce

Portrait of Franklin Pierce (1804–1869) by Mathew Brady, between 1855-1865.The LoC describes this as "Copy neg. from original ink by Brady after Daguerreotype".
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Franklin_Pierce#/media/File:Mathew_Brady_-_Franklin_Pierce_-_alternate_crop.jpg


An inexperienced politician, Pierce's candidacy helps to illustrate how the country was so divided.  Pierce was nominated by the Democrats on the 49th ballot!  Can you imagine a replay happening next year?  His competition included the biggest leaders of the party- Cass, Douglas, Buchanan, Marcy, and Butler.  They managed to defeat each other during the nominating process and left Pierce the last man standing. (7)


Stephen A. Douglas

Author:  Mathew Brady  (1822–1896) Blue pencil.svg wikidata:Q187850 q:pl:Matthew Brady
Brady National Photographic Art Gallery (Washington, D.C.) (1858 - ?), Photographer (NARA record: 1135962)
Record creator:  War Department. Office of the Chief Signal Officer.(08/01/1866 - 09/18/1947)
Title :  Hon. Stephen A. Douglas, Ill
Date:  between circa 1860 and circa 1865
Collection:  National Archives at College Park  Blue pencil.svg wikidata:Q38945047
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stephen_A._Douglas#/media/File:Hon._Stephen_A._Douglas,_Ill_-_NARA_-_528297.jpg


Nebraska and Kansas

Artist:  J. H. Colton  (1800–1893) 
Title:  Nebraska and Kansas.
Description:   A beautiful 1855 first edition example of Colton's map of Nebraska and Kansas. This is most probably the rarest and most desirable of all Colton atlas maps. Covers territorial Kansas and Nebraska as well as parts of adjacent Minnesota, Iowa, Missouri and Utah. .
Date:  1855 (dated)
Dimensions:  Height: 13 ″ (33 cm); Width: 16 ″ (40.6 cm)
Accession number:  Geographicus link: NebraskaKansas-colton-1855
Source/Photographer:  Colton, G. W., Colton's Atlas of the World Illustrating Physical and Political Geography, Vol 1, New York, 1855 (First Edition).
This file was provided to Wikimedia Commons by Geographicus Rare Antique Maps, a specialist dealer in rare maps and other cartography of the 15th, 16th, 17th, 18th and 19th centuries, as part of a cooperation project.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kansas%E2%80%93Nebraska_Act#/media/File:1855_Colton_Map_of_Kansas_and_Nebraska_(first_edition)_-_Geographicus_-_NebraskaKansas-colton-1855.jpg

A year later, in 1854, the Kansas-Nebraska Act was passed.  The act, proposed by Stephen A. Douglas established the territories of Kansas and Nebraska and allowed for "popular sovereignty" to settle the issue of slavery in those territories and not Washington D.C.  An unintended consequence of the act was the rise of "Bleeding Kansas" over the next several years.  Opposition to the Kansas-Nebraska Act was so strong that it brought about the formation of the Republican party.  The party held its first convention in July of that year. (8)


"Reynolds's Political Map of the United States" (1856) 

Description:  US map 1856 shows free and slave states and populations; this is "Reynolds's Political Map of the United States" (1856) from Library of Congress collection[1]
Date:  1856
Source:  "Reynolds's Political Map of the United States" (1856) from the Library of Congress Geography and Map Division
Author:  Reynolds
Permission(Reusing this file):  This image is in the public domain due to its age.
https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Reynolds%27s_Political_Map_of_the_United_States_1856.jpg


Image from "Kansas State Board of Agriculture First Biennial Report" 

Text of document reads as follows:
The Day of Our Enslavement!! — To-day, September 15, 1855, is the day on which the iniquitous enactment of the illegitimate, illegal and fraudulent Legislature has declared commences the prostration of the right of speech and the curtailment of the liberty of the press. To-day commences an era in Kansas which, unless the sturdy voice of the people, backed, if necessary, by 'strong arms and the sure eye,' shall teach the tyrants who attempt to enthrall us, the lesson which our fathers taught the kingly tyrants of old, shall prostrate us in the dust, and make us the slave of an oligarchy worse than the veriest despotism on earth.To-day commences the operation of a law which declares:'SEC.12, If any free person, by speaking or by writing, assert or maintain that persons have not the right to hold slaves in this Territory, or shall introduce into this Territory, print, publish, write, circulate or cause to be introduced into this Territory, written, printed, published or circulated in this Territory any book, paper, magazine, pamphlet or circular, containing any denial of the right of persons to hold slaves in this Territory, such person shall be deemed guilty of felony and punished by imprisonment at hard labor for a term of not less than two years.'Now we do assert and declare, despite all the bolts and bars of the iniquitous Legislature of Kansas, 'that persons have not the right to hold slaves in this Territory,' and we will emblazon it upon our banner in letters so large and in language so plain that the infatuated invaders who elected the Kansas Legislature, as well as that corrupt and ignorant Legislature itself, may understand it, so that, if they cannot read they may spell it out, and meditate and deliberate upon it; and we hold that the man who fails to utter this self-evident truth, on account of the insolent enactment alluded to, is a poltroon and a slave — worse than the black slaves of our persecutors and oppressors.The Constitution of the United States — the great Magna Carta of American liberties — guarantees to every citizen the liberty of speech and the freedom of the press. And this is the first time in the history of America that a body claiming legislative powers has dared to attempt to wrest them from the people. And it is not only the right, but bounden duty of every freeman to spurn with contempt and trample underfoot any enactment which thus basely violates the rights of freemen. For our part we do, and shall continue to, utter this truth so long as we have the power of utterance, and nothing but the brute force of an overbearing tyranny can prevent us.Will any citizen — any free American — brook the insult of an insolent gag law, the work of a legislature enacted by bullying ruffians who invaded Kansas with arms, and whose drunken revelry and insults to our peaceable, unoffending and comparatively unarmed citizens were a disgrace to manhood, and a burlesque upon popular Republican government? If they do, they are slaves already, and with them freedom is but a mockery.

Description:  Image from "Kansas State Board of Agriculture First Biennial Report" (Rand, McNally & Co., Printers and Engravers, Chicago: 1878)
Date:  1855
Source:  Kansas State Board of Agriculture First Biennial Report
Author:  Rand, McNally & Co., Printers and Engravers, Chicago
This media file is in the public domain in the United States.
https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/a/ad/Bleeding_Kansas_Poster.jpg


A much lighter note from 1855 brings us a fun fact you can use for a trivia contest.  In 1855 the United States Camel Corps was created. The Civil War pretty much ended this experiment and the project was abandoned and the camels were sold at auction.

Also, in 1855, Booker T. Washington was born on April 5th.  Born to a slave on a tobacco farm in Franklin County, Virginia, Washington would become one of the foremost black leaders and educator of the 20th Century.

By the time four years had passed and it was time to nominate persons for president in 1856, the Democrats were so disappointed with President Franklin Pierce, they did not even re-nominate him as their candidate.  Instead, they nominated James Buchanan.  Buchanan would go on to defeat the Republican candidate, the first such candidate under the Republican Party banner, James C. Fremont, and the candidate from the American Know Nothing and Whig parties, previous president, Millard Fillmore.  Buchanan's election continued the string of lackluster presidents the country elected in this decade that tried to face the building storm over slavery that faced the American people. (9)



James Buchanan

Description:  James Buchanan (cropped from the original image)
Date:  photographed between 1850 and 1868, printed later
Source:  Library of Congress
Author:  From Brady daguerreotype (Mathew Brady) (1822-1896)
Permission(Reusing this file):  Work of the federal government or rights expired
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/James_Buchanan#/media/File:James_Buchanan.jpg


Well, I could say the year of  1857 was really up lifting or that it had its ups and downs for in that year the first elevator was installed!  It was installed by Elisha Otis in New York City.  Like I said, I could say that, but you know I would never stoop so low to get a laugh.....

Minnesota, (1858) and Oregon (1859) were admitted to the Union as the 32nd and 33rd states and the first productive oil well for commercial use was drilled by Edwin L. Drake in Titusville, Pennsylvania. (10)

Somehow I can't escape the dark cloud of inevitability of war that was hanging over the country.  As I read history and even study my ancestors it seems there is this backdrop of dread that fills the air.  Maybe it is just in my own mind, knowing how the story will unfold.  I started to say, "how the story ends", but the "story" has not ended.  The division during and after the Civil War continues through even to today and it seems there will never actually be an ending to this chapter in our country.  But the decade of the 1850s did end and it ended with these next events bringing us ever closer to the 1860s and the eventuality of war.

In an often cited and rightly maligned decision in 1857, the "US Supreme Court ruled in the "Dredd Scott" decision, 6-3, that a slave did not become free when transported into a free state.  It also ruled that slavery could not be banned by the U.S. Congress in a territory, and that blacks were not eligible to be awarded citizenship." (11)


Dredd Scott Portrait

Artist:  Louis Schultze (ca.1820, Berlin, Germany – 6 February 1901, St. Louis, Missouri), Obituary
Title:  Posthumous Portrait of Dredd Scott
Description:  Dred Scott (1795 – 1858), plaintiff in the infamous Dred Scott v. Sandford (1857) case at the Supreme Court of the United States, commissioned by a "group of Negro citizens" and presented to the Missouri Historical Society, St. Louis, in 1888.[1][2]
Date:  1888
Medium:  painting
Collection:  Missouri History Museum
Notes:  This portrait was painted decades after Dredd Scotts death, presumably based on the 1857 daguerreotype.
Source:  Photographer Original image New source
Permission(Reusing this file) Image Credit: Digital image ©1998 Missouri Historical Society, St. Louis.  https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:DredScott.jpg

In "Bleeding Kansas", troops were ordered in to try and restore order between the pro-slavery and anti-slavery forces in Dec 1857 and again in June 1858.  John Brown was a name that was well known in these territories, and in the country, during this time. (See the painting below of Brown.)  Brown was one of the most notorious of the many men fighting and killing over slavery in "Bleeding Kansas". (12)


John Steuart Curry: Tragic Prelude
 
Artist:  John Steuart Curry  (1897–1946)      
Object type:  mural
Description: Curry mural "The Tragic Prelude".
Depicted people:  John Brown
Date:  1938
Medium:  oil and tempera
Collection:  Kansas State Capitol   
Source/Photographer:  United Missouri Bank of Kansas City
Permission(Reusing this file) http://collections.si.edu/search/tag/tagDoc.htm?recordID=npg_225_UMB&hlterm=John%2BSteuart%2BCurry%2BTragic%2BPrelude
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Brown_(abolitionist)#/media/File:THUMBNAIL001L.jpg


In Oct of 1859 John Brown and his men seized the US Armory, located at the confluence of the Shenandoah and Potomac Rivers, at Harper's Ferry, Virginia, hoping to cause an uprising by slaves.  Colonel Robert E. Lee's federal troops stopped them when he killed several of Brown's raiders and captured Brown.  John Brown was tried and convicted of treason by the state of Virginia and he was hung on Dec 2, 1859. (13)


John Brown

Artist:  Ole Peter Hansen Balling  (1823–1906)   
Title:  John Brown
Object type painting
Depicted people John Brown
Date:  1872
Medium:  oil on canvas
Collection:  National Portrait Gallery   
Source/Photographer:  6wGTA-pgdPr_9w at Google Cultural Institute maximum zoom level
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Brown_(abolitionist)#/media/File:Ole_Peter_Hansen_Balling_-_John_Brown_-_Google_Art_Project.jpg


In the midst of all this the Armisteads (and Bakers) carried on their day to day lives.  What do you suppose they were thinking?  Were they concerned for their livelihood, indeed, for their very lives?

Just as there were in the other Southern states, there were slaves in Florida, but Florida held the fewest slaves of any state in the South, 31,483.  Of that number 4904 slaves were owned and held in Jackson County by 357 of the total of 5,305 white residents that lived in the county.  Together the total population of Jackson County was 10,209.  Although there was a relatively small number of slaveholders in the county, I expect that jobs, and the economy of the county, still depended on slave labor.  So, even though Florida and Jackson County had less slaves than the rest of the country, the gathering tensions, and hostilities affected them just the same.

Local events also kept emotions running high, such as attempts by slaves to escape their bondage on the plantations.  A few succeed, but most did not.  Some that did escape were able to stay away for a while, and were able to get away from the day to day drudgery, but they usually (if not caught first) would return a few days or weeks later.  They probably were jolted, once they escaped, with the realization that attempting to escape to the North from Florida was almost impossible. Escape became even more unlikely of course, after the "Dred Scott" decision of 1857.  Slave stealing accounted for some of the slave disappearances as well, according to Dale Cox in his book "The History of Jackson County, Florida: The Civil War Years."  Men worked to steal the slaves and then resell them somewhere else. You can check out the detailed accounts of such occurrences in Cox's book.

The slave escapes, and slave stealing, along with rumors of uprisings and rumors of what might happen to whites by escaped or rioting slaves, kept the white population on edge.  John Brown's attempt at Harper's Ferry to start a slave uprising, must have contributed to the uncertainty and fear in the county.  In 1859 and 1860 two fires occurred in Marianna.  At least one (and probably both) of these fires was caused by "an incendiary."  Cox's book, mentioned above, includes first hand accounts of the fires and estimated losses ($60,000 to $75,000), and the names of the owners who lost buildings.  The second fire occurred in the same location as the first, which prompted the conclusion that these fires were deliberately set, but the perpetrators were not found. This account is in Cox's book as well. (14)

As we move into 1851, I need to mention another sister (half-sister) of Mary E. Armistead.  Her name was Elizabeth S. (Baker) Dudley.  She was married to William H. Dudley and they lived in Wilmington, NC.  I mentioned before that I have reason to believe James Perry was probably already in North Carolina as of at least 1850.  I based this on the fact he was not in the 1850 census with his family.  James Perry Armistead was living with his aunt and uncle, Elizabeth and William at some point.  He may have just missed the census taker in both states.  I don't know if he was in school, or tutoring the Dudley's children, but he was definitely there.  The reason I know this is because of the entry below under Death Notices in the Fayetteville Weekly Observer, Fayetteville, N.C. newspaper, Tue, Nov 25, 1851:


James Perry Armistead death 1851

Fayetteville Weekly Observer at Newspapers.com.
www.newspapers.com/clip/1984471/james_perry_armistead_death_<br/>1851/?xid=637<br/>


As you can see, James Perry Armistead, died on 16 Nov 1851 in the home of Wm H. Dudley. He was 21. I can not explain to you for certain why he was living there, because I have not tried to research that.  Best I can do is to speculate as I did above.

Continuing with this sad theme, I stated earlier to remember Saint Andrews Bay.  A note in the Armistead Family Bible states simply, "Jordan Armistead was drowned in the Andrews Bay, Sep. the 23rd, 1851."  He turned 23 just 16 days before he died.  Again I have no further explanation.  Was he down there for fun and drowned in a swimming accident?  Or did he change jobs and start working along the Bay?  Did he die on a ship, during a storm?  Simmons Jones Baker, Sr., mentions his St Andrews Bay Land Company in his will, and divided it's land  holdings amongst his children upon his death.  Was Jordan working for his grandfather at the time of his accident?  So many unanswered questions. So tragic to lose two young sons in the span of only two months.


Letter Nominating Lawrence T. Armistead to Attend West Point.

Source Citation:  National Archives and Records Administration (NARA); Washington, D.C.; U.S. Military Academy Cadet Application Papers, 1805-1866; Series Number: M688
Source Information:  Ancestry.com. U.S. Military and Naval Academies, Cadet Records and Applications, 1800-1908 [database on-line]. Lehi, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations Inc, 2008.
Original data:  U.S. Military Academy Cadet Application Papers, 1805-1866; (National Archives Microfilm Publication M688, 1 roll); Records of the Adjutant General’s Office, 1780’s-1917, Record Group 94; National Archives, Washington, D.C.
U.S. Naval Academy Registers of Delinquencies, 1846-1850, 1853-1882, and Academic and Conduct Records of Cadets, 1881-1908, 1846-1908; (National Archives Microfilm Publication M991, 45 rolls); Records of the U.S. Naval Academy, Record Group 405; National Archives, Washington, D.C.
Military Academy Registers, 1867-1894; (National Archives Microfilm Publication M2061, 3 rolls); Records of the Adjutant General’s Office, 1780’s-1917, Record Group 94; National Archives, Washington, D.C.
Register of Cadet Applications, 1819-67; (National Archives Microfilm Publication M2037, 5 rolls); Records of the Adjutant General’s Office, 1780’s-1917; Record Group 94; National Archives, Washington, D.C.
Register of Cadets, 1803-1866; (National Archives Microfilm Publication M2124, 1 roll); Records of the Adjutant General's Office, 1762 - 1984; Record Group 94; National Archives, Washington, D.C.
Description:  The U.S. Military Academy, also known as West Point or Army, was founded in 1802 in West Point, New York. The U.S. Naval Academy, also known as Annapolis, was established in 1845 and is located in Annapolis, Maryland. This database contains various records from these two schools, including application papers, registers, and conduct records. 


In 1853 Lawrence Turner Armistead was nominated to attend West Point.  By law, Florida only had one candidate that could be nominated from the state each year.  His nomination was approved and in July, a month after his 16th birthday, Lawrence Turner Armistead enrolled in West Point.  He joined nine other Armisteads that attended the academy between 1819 and 1860.  Take a look at the Armisteads on the list below.  Very impressive list of names.  It appears, if I am reading the record correctly, (not shown here) that Lawrence graduated in 1857.


List of Cadets, Whose Names Started with "A", that Joined Between 1819-1860.

Source Citation:  National Archives and Records Administration (NARA); Washington, D.C.; Series Number: M688
Source Information:  Ancestry.com. U.S. Military and Naval Academies, Cadet Records and Applications, 1800-1908 [database on-line]. Lehi, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations Inc, 2008.
Original data:  U.S. Military Academy Cadet Application Papers, 1805-1866; (National Archives Microfilm Publication M688, 1 roll); Records of the Adjutant General’s Office, 1780’s-1917, Record Group 94; National Archives, Washington, D.C.
U.S. Naval Academy Registers of Delinquencies, 1846-1850, 1853-1882, and Academic and Conduct Records of Cadets, 1881-1908, 1846-1908; (National Archives Microfilm Publication M991, 45 rolls); Records of the U.S. Naval Academy, Record Group 405; National Archives, Washington, D.C.
Military Academy Registers, 1867-1894; (National Archives Microfilm Publication M2061, 3 rolls); Records of the Adjutant General’s Office, 1780’s-1917, Record Group 94; National Archives, Washington, D.C.
Register of Cadet Applications, 1819-67; (National Archives Microfilm Publication M2037, 5 rolls); Records of the Adjutant General’s Office, 1780’s-1917; Record Group 94; National Archives, Washington, D.C.
Register of Cadets, 1803-1866; (National Archives Microfilm Publication M2124, 1 roll); Records of the Adjutant General's Office, 1762 - 1984; Record Group 94; National Archives, Washington, D.C.
Description:  The U.S. Military Academy, also known as West Point or Army, was founded in 1802 in West Point, New York. The U.S. Naval Academy, also known as Annapolis, was established in 1845 and is located in Annapolis, Maryland. This database contains various records from these two schools, including application papers, registers, and conduct records.


Ann Penelope Armistead was the eldest of the Armistead children. She turned 33 in 1855 and in that same year she married widower, George Franklin Baltzell (46).  In the 1850 census Baltzell was living in Washington County, FL, with his first wife and five children.  They had their sixth child after the census taker came by, so it was not listed in the 1850 census.  I'm not sure what he did for a living.  The census lists his occupation as "Medical".  In the 1860 census he was listed as "Merchant".  He owned 10 slaves according to the 1850 Slave Schedule.

Now, as that fateful year of 1860 approaches, we know the family has lost two more children and there are only six children still living at home.  By this time the talk of war was certainly rampant in the South.  There are many, many topics I would like to discuss.  I probably delved a little too deep into the history aspect of this post and that made it pretty long, but you should see how many more things I wanted to include, but left out.

I am going to end this post now and start reflecting on how I want to present the time frame covering the Civil War.  I think I will mainly cover how the war affected the Armistead (and Baker, and Baltzell) families, and will not discuss the war itself, or at least, not in detail. Yes, the family was affected a great deal and the 1860s will bring loss, heartache, a battle in their own home town, and devastating changes to the family.

We will pick up next time with the 1860 Census and walk together with the Armisteads through the catastrophic Civil War Years.


References:
1) http://americasbesthistory.com/abhtimeline1850.html
2) http://lwd.dol.state.nj.us/labor/lpa/census/1990/poptrd1.htm
3) http://americasbesthistory.com/abhtimeline1850.html
4) http://americasbesthistory.com/abhtimeline1850.html
5) http://americasbesthistory.com/abhtimeline1850.html
6) http://americasbesthistory.com/abhtimeline1850.html
7) http://americasbesthistory.com/abhtimeline1850.html
8) http://americasbesthistory.com/abhtimeline1850.html
9) http://americasbesthistory.com/abhtimeline1850.html
10) http://americasbesthistory.com/abhtimeline1850.html
11) http://americasbesthistory.com/abhtimeline1850.html
12) http://americasbesthistory.com/abhtimeline1850.html
13) http://americasbesthistory.com/abhtimeline1850.html
14) Dale Cox, The History of Jackson County, Florida, The Civil War Years, Copyright Dale Cox, 2010, pg. 508, 538 (online edition)











Monday, October 15, 2018

Armistead Family History #17

                                                            Dr. Simmons Jones Baker (1775-1853)

Dr. Baker and his wife Mary Turner (Smith) Baker are my great-great-great-grandparents.  I wrote about them in my blog post Armistead Family History #14.  Their daughter, Mary Eliza E. (Baker) Armistead married William Jordan Armistead.  They are my two times great-grandparents.  Since the Bakers are so closely associated with the Armisteads in North Carolina and Florida, I decided I would use this post to give you more information about Dr. Simmons Jones Baker.

.

Dr. Simmons Jones Baker (February 15, 1775-August 18, 1853).

Description:  Portrait of Dr. Simmons Jones Baker (February 15, 1775 – August 18, 1853) Original hangs in the Masonic Lodge in Halifax, North Carolina.
Source:  Digital reproduction or scan of original portrait.Under US laws mechanical reproduction of a work does not create an additional copyright to that of the original.  
Author:  This file has no author information, and may be lacking other information. Files should have a summary to inform others of the content, author, source, and date if possible. If you know or have access to such information, please add it to the file page. Notify the uploader with: {{subst:add-author-I|1=SimmonsJonesBaker.jpg}}
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Simmons_Jones_Baker#/media/File:SimmonsJonesBaker.jpg

I found a very good article on NCpedia.com, written by Claiborne T. Smith about Dr. Baker.  Most of the information will be from his article.  Smith describes Baker as a "physician and legislator", but as it turns out, I think he was much more than that.  He was born in Hertford County, NC, 15 Feb 1775.  His parents were Lawrence and Anne (Jones) Baker.  After attending school in southeastern Virginia, he went to England in 1793 and attended lectures at the medical school in Edinburg.  At the time this medical school was "the most celebrated in the world". (1)


Certificate Given to Dr. Simmons J. Baker by St. Thomas Hospital.

Oversize Paper 1: Certificate in Latin, signed by Andreas Dalzel(?), 1795: Scan 1
Filename: 00042-z_OP0001_0001.jp2
https://finding-aids.lib.unc.edu/00042/#opaper_1#1

After Dr. Baker moved back to the US, he married Poly Smith on 24 Oct 1795.  Their marriage started out in comfort due to Poly having received a plantation from her grandfather.  They built a house on the plantation and called it Greenwood.  By 1820 Baker had sold Greenwood and moved to Martin County. (2)



Dr. Simmons J. Baker in the House of Commons and Senate in North Carolina.

Historical Sketches of North Carolina from 1584 to 1851, Vol. II [database on-line].
Description Section: Madison and Martin Counties
Source Information:
http://interactive.ancestry.com/48630/SketchesNCII-000626-251?backurl=http%3a%2f%2fsearch.ancestry.com%2fsearch%2fdb.aspx%3fdbid%3d48630%26path%3d&ssrc=&backlabel=ReturnBrowsing#?imageId=SketchesNCII-000628-253

While living in Martin County, Dr. Simmons Jones Baker was selected as the representative of the county to the House of Commons and later he served in the Senate. (3)



Dr. Simmons Jones Baker as Trustee of University of North Carolina

Catalogue of the trustees, faculty, and students of the University of North Carolina, for 1834-35.
Source:  Ancestry.com. U.S., College Student Lists, 1763-1924 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2012.
Original data:  College Student Lists. Worcester, Massachusetts: American Antiquarian Society.
The Digitized Content is licensed from the American Antiquarian Society (AAS) and may not be reproduced, transferred or commercially or otherwise exploited, in whole or in part, outside the terms and conditions of this service without the express written consent of AAS. All rights reserved.

He was appointed as a trustee of the University of North Carolina in 1812 and served there the rest of his life. (4)  Dr. Baker was always interested in education.  He served as a trustee of the Vine Hill Academy in Scotland Neck, NC, when it was chartered in 1809 and when the North Carolina Institute of Education was organized, 22 June 1831, he was unanimously elected as president.

Dr. S.J. Baker was "An active layman of the Episcopal Church."  He, along with other churchmen, organized Trinity Church, Scotland Neck, NC, in Feb of 1833.  Five years later, in 1838, he helped organize St Luke's Episcopal Church of Marianna, Florida.  He served as the first Senior Warden for the church.

If all this was not enough Baker was active in the Masons and was the Grand Master in 1832 and again in 1840 and "in that capacity laid the cornerstone of the present capitol building in Raleigh, NC 4 July 1833."

You may recall that I told of how William Jordan Armistead and his family and Simmons Jones Baker and some of his family moved to Florida in the late 1820s.  Smith put it this way. "In 1828 Baker moved to Jackson County, Florida, where he remained for several years, acquiring large tracts of land near the present town of Marianna and around St. Andrews Bay.  His plantation in Florida was Buckland.  For the next decade he lived in Florida intermittently, ..." 

Along with their father, James Laurence George Baker, and Simmons Jones Baker, Jr., owned large plantations in Jackson County, Florida.  The town of Greenwood is said to have been named after the old home in NC.  Greenwood, Florida is located a few miles north of Marianna.  Baker and his two son's plantations were located around this area. (5)


Large Plantations-Jackson County, 1850

The Red Hills of Florida, 1528-1865, by Clifton Paisley, copyright 1989, The University of Alabama Press, Tuscaloosa, AL 35487. pg 121.

Dr. Baker had large land holdings in Florida as well as large land holdings in North Carolina.  It is apparent that he made a lot of trips back and forth between Florida and North Carolina, but the interesting part is the census records only recorded him as living in North Carolina.  He never showed up in the Florida census but obviously was very involved in the state.  His two sons, James Lawrence George Baker and Simmons Jones Baker, Jr. had plantations in Florida as well.  S.J. Jr., shows up in Florida census records starting in 1840 and did every 10 years until his death.  For James L.G. Baker, he didn't show up in Florida census' until 1850 and after.  You can see in the map above from Clifton Paisley's book "The Red Hills of Florida, 1528-1865" where the Baker's plantations were located. (6) I am sure that the boys were in charge of overseeing their fathers plantation.

Dr Baker's first wife, Mary (Polly) Turner (Smith) Baker, died in 1812, his second wife, Ann C. (Seawell) Baker, died in 1843. In the 1850 North Carolina census Dr. Simmons J. Baker was listed as being 75 years old and living alone.  He died in 1853, age 78.

Dr. S.J. Baker Sr.'s obituary in the "Raleigh Register" dated 7 Sep 1853, is shown below.


Dr. Simmons Jones Baker, notice of his death. 07 Sep 1853, Wed

Source Information Title:  Newspapers.com - The Raleigh Register - 07 Sep 1853, Wed
Publisher:  The Raleigh Register
Publisher Date:  07 Sep 1853, Wed
Publisher Location:  Raleigh, North Carolina
Repository Information Name:  www.newspapers.com

Dr. Baker procured large amounts of property in his lifetime, including slaves, and as you would expect his will was long, 13 pages long.  I have included it below.  It is a fascinating read and I encourage you to read it.  It gives insight into the life of a large plantation owner of his time.  Not included below is the list that was filed with his will naming 119 slaves.














Dr. Simmons Jones Baker Will, 1853.

Source Citation:  Halifax County, North Carolina, wills and estate papers; Author: North Carolina. Division of Archives and History; Probate Place: Halifax, North Carolina
Source Information:  Ancestry.com. North Carolina, Wills and Probate Records, 1665-1998 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2015.
Original data: North Carolina County, District and Probate Courts.

Dr. Baker left behind four children, two sons and two daughters, James L.G. Baker, Simmons Jones Baker, Jr., Mary Elizabeth E. (Baker) Armistead, and Laura Lucinda (Baker) Saunders.  Four children and two wives preceded him in death.  It looks like his children were well provided for with land and slaves either loaned or given during his lifetime and in his will.

Widowed Laura Saunders was living in North Carolina and the other three were living in Florida around the Marianna area.  I will have more to say about these three in Florida as I continue with the Armistead history. 

Dr. Simmons Jones Baker is a very interesting ancestor.  He and my other Baker ancestors would be a great topic for future posts.  For now you can go to:

           http://www.lib.unc.edu/mss/inv/b/Baker,Simmons_J.html .     or
           https://www.ncpedia.org/biography/baker-simmons-jones 

The first url will take you to UNC University Libraries, The Southern Historical Collection at the Louis Round Wilson Special Collection Library.  You will find a good amount of information to research on Dr. Baker at that site.  The second will take you to NCpedia, another good site for research on Dr. Baker and North Carolina.

In my next post I will get back to the Armistead history starting in 1850.


References:
1)Smith, Claiborne T., Jr., Article reprinted from Dictionary of North Carolina Biography, 6 Vols., edited by William S. Powell, Copyright 1979-1996, University of North Carolina Press.  https://www.ncpedia.org/biography/baker-simmons-jones 
2)Smith, Claiborne T., Jr., Article reprinted from Dictionary of North Carolina Biography, 6 Vols., edited by William S. Powell, Copyright 1979-1996, University of North Carolina Press.  https://www.ncpedia.org/biography/baker-simmons-jones 
3) Historical Sketches of North Carolina from 1584 to 1851, Vol. II [database on-line], pg. 253.  
Description Section: Madison and Martin Counties
Source Information: http://interactive.ancestry.com/48630/SketchesNCII-000626-251?backurl=http%3a%2f%2fsearch.ancestry.com%2fsearch%2fdb.aspx%3fdbid%3d48630%26path%3d&ssrc=&backlabel=ReturnBrowsing#?imageId=SketchesNCII-000628-253
4) Source Information: Ancestry.com. U.S., College Student Lists, 1763-1924 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2012.  Original data: College Student Lists. Worcester, Massachusetts: American Antiquarian Society. The Digitized Content is licensed from the American Antiquarian Society (AAS) and may not be reproduced, transferred or commercially or otherwise exploited, in whole or in part, outside the terms and conditions of this service without the express written consent of AAS. All rights reserved.
5)Smith, Claiborne T., Jr., Article reprinted from Dictionary of North Carolina Biography, 6 Vols., edited by William S. Powell, Copyright 1979-1996, University of North Carolina Press.  https://www.ncpedia.org/biography/baker-simmons-jones 
6) Paisley, Clifton, "The Red Hills of Florida, 1528-1865", The University of Alabama Press, Tuscaloosa, AL 35487, 1989, pg 121.





Thursday, May 3, 2018

Armistead Family History #16

                                                            What Ever Happened To .......?

I really love writing this Blog.  I love putting my research out there for other people to read.  History in general is just so much fun and I can write about that as well.  Then there comes the really fun part, I can write about anything I like and can make my own rules.  Like this post today.  I am taking a zig zag away from writing about my direct line of Armistead Family History and catching you up on another family of Armisteads that are not my direct ancestors.  

In Blog post #14 I gave you some information about the Armistead brothers, Marcus A., Latinus, and Fabian, who I concluded were cousins of my direct line g-g-grandfather, William Jordan Armistead. William Jordan and the three brothers moved to Florida about the same time.  After getting them all to Florida, I sorta dropped the three brothers and continued on my way with William Jordan Armistead.  I will give you a little more information about the brothers in this post.

I assure you I will be picking up the Armistead family again starting in 1850, where I left off. I will bring their story forward through the decade of the 1850s leading up to the Civil War. So please bear with me and plan to catch that post a little farther down the line.

Now, as you may recall from “Armistead Family History #14”, the brothers, Marcus and Latinus, who were probably in their mid 40s when they traveled to Florida, purchased land, ran a ferry across the Apalachicola River, founded the town of Aspalaga, and opened a thriving store there.  Younger brother Fabian was appointed postmaster of the post office in Aspalaga.  They came in the late 1820s, about the same time as William Jordan Armistead and Simmons Jones Baker, and they were all early settlers of the Florida Territory. These three Armistead brothers apparently did quite well for themselves.  Besides the activities above, I also found a reference in the State Archives of Florida Online Catalog, (that unfortunately isn't digitized online), listing a ledger, kept by the brothers, stored in the Archives with the following statement about the ledger: “This ledger documents the business activity of a mercantile business in the Middle Florida area.  Because the end pieces list the land holdings of Latinus and Marcus Armistead, it is possible that the store was theirs.”  It lists Latinus Armistead and Marcus A. Armistead business records from 1828-1830, then lists Gadsden County, Leon County and Jefferson County as locations the business records covered.  So they either had some type of physical presence established in each county or people from those counties did business with them at their location in Aspalaga.   



1840 Census Dinwiddie County, VA, listing Marcus A. Armistead.


Source Citation

Year: 1840; Census Place: Petersburg South Ward, Dinwiddie, Virginia; Roll: 557; Page: 52; Family History Library Film: 0029686

Source Information

Ancestry.com. 1840 United States Federal Census [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2010. 
Images reproduced by FamilySearch.
Original data: Sixth Census of the United States, 1840. (NARA microfilm publication M704, 580 rolls). Records of the Bureau of the Census, Record Group 29. National Archives, Washington, D.C. 

An interesting aspect here is that Marcus A. Armistead never showed up in a census record for Florida. The 1820, 1830, and 1840 census records show him in Dinwiddie County, VA. I did not find Latinus in either the 1820 or 1830 census any where and Fabian was in Dinwiddie County, VA. in the 1820, 1840 and 1850 census'. In 1830 he was listed in Gadsden County, FL, apparently during the time he was postmaster there.


1830 Census Dinwiddie County, VA, listing Marcus A. Armistead. 


Source Citation

1830; Census Place: Petersburg, Dinwiddie, Virginia; Series: M19; Roll: 196; Page: 382; Family History Library Film: 0029675

Source Information

Ancestry.com. 1830 United States Federal Census [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2010. 
Images reproduced by FamilySearch.
Original data: Fifth Census of the United States, 1830. (NARA microfilm publication M19, 201 rolls). Records of the Bureau of the Census, Record Group 29. National Archives, Washington, D.C.

1830 Census Gadsden County, FL, listing  F Armistead.

Source Citation

1830; Census Place: Quincy, Gadsden, Florida; Series: M19; Roll: 15; Page: 140; Family History Library Film: 0006711

Source Information

Ancestry.com. 1830 United States Federal Census [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2010. 
Images reproduced by FamilySearch.
Original data: Fifth Census of the United States, 1830. (NARA microfilm publication M19, 201 rolls). Records of the Bureau of the Census, Record Group 29. National Archives, Washington, D.C.

I know there was movement back and forth from Virginia to Florida and back to Virginia. I found a delightful letter written by Marcus A. Armistead's daughter while they were living in Florida. The letter was written to a friend, Alice Vaughan, in Virginia and it was dated Jan. 21, 1830. Ann E. Armistad was about 16 years old at the time. She could have worked for the Chamber of Commerce for Florida if it had existed at the time. Take a few minutes and read the letter and you will see why I like it so much.

Aspalaga, Florida, Jan. 21, 1830
Dear Alice, 
     I would have written you before this time, but I did not know whether you were in Petersburg or whether you had gone to Alabama, until I received a letter from Harriet Shore, in which she told me you were still in town and as anxious to hear from me.
     I hope the excuse I have made above will extirpate me from the false idea of intended neglect or indifference towards you....  Although we may be so far distant from each other, yet I have not, and I hope I never can forget one that always I have loved and esteemed so much---
     ....I thought when I left Virginia for this country that I should have been very much dissatisfied but it is quite the reverse,.  I am charmed with my new situation.  I think this climate the most pleasant and agreeable one I ever was in.
     The summers are not as warm as they are with you.  We have no need of a fan during the warmest days in season; there is a sea breeze which fans you incessantly; nor are the winters as cold as you have them  We very seldom have a fire except of a morning and evening.
     Flowers are in full bloom, at this time all over the woods!  Among them are the woodbine and violet!  There are number of beautiful evergreens all around us.  The magnolia grows here in abundance.  Mamma has planted her yard full of magnolias, orange trees, lemon trees, lime trees and another species of fruit called the shaddock.
     I have visited Tallahassee since I came to this country, and was so much pleased, that I intend to return next month.  You can form no idea how fashionable the people are in Tallahassee; they are so much so as any in Petersburg!  Two of our belles, Miss Duval and Miss Gamble have gone to Washington City to spend some time I think they are superior in beauty and equal in intelligence to any young ladies in Petersburg.
     I am so much enchanted with this country, that if I had my choice, I would willingly spend the remainder of my life at this place, but I expect papa will return to Virginia sometime next summer, if not next fall.
     We expect to go down to Apalachicola Bay this winter, to feast on oysters, fish and every other good thing.  We get oranges and every other West Indies fruit in great plenty every week.
     There are steamboats always lying at the wharves of this place, the smallest that comes is much larger than the steamboat Comet that goes to Petersburg.  You may perhaps think that I speak extravagantly, but I can assure you that I do not, it's nothing but the strictest truth.  
     The society around here is as good as any in Virginia.  We have enjoyed the very best of health ever since we have been in this country.  Every one of the children are as fat as they can be. I have fattened so much I scarcely know what to do with myself. I am thinking I shall have to return to Virginia to get lean. You must answer this letter as soon as you get it. I am anxious to hear all the news of that place. I hope you will keep up the correspondence now that it has commenced: My love to your sister, Mrs. White and Dr. White, to your mamma, papa and sister when you write. Mamma sends her love to Mrs and Dr. White. She says your sister must write her. Tell Harriet shore to answer my letter, also Georgiana and Ann Mabry. Eugenia sends her love to you.

Ann E. Armistead
Direct your letters to me at Aspalaga, Fla., care of Mr. Marcus Armistead. (1)

I really love reading this letter. It is so descriptive and very well written. If you try reading it in your best imagined Southern Belle voice it is even better. Notice she said the family would be heading back to Virginia in the summer or fall. That is where I get my theory that Marcus Armistead traveled back and forth between his properties in Florida and Virginia and he must have been in Virginia each time the census was taken or just had his residency established in Virginia and was recorded each time in that census.

For a few years, between the late 1820s and early 1830s, the brothers seemed to have it all going for them. But in about August of 1833 everything changed. Latinus Armistead died in July or August of 1833.  His will, dated June 18, 1833, is shown below.  There is no mention of children, only his wife and a niece, the daughter of his brother Fabian Armistead.  For this reason I assume there were no children born to the couple or the children were deceased.  His wife, Harriet Frances Armistead, and Latinus' brother, Fabian Armistead, are named as the executors of the will, which was recorded 24 Aug 1833, in Gadsden County, Florida Territory. The will was probated on 11 May 1834.


Latinus Armistead Will.

Source Citation
Record of Wills, 1826-1930; Author: Gadsden County (Florida). County Judge; Probate Place: Gadsden, Florida

Source Information

Ancestry.com. Florida, Wills and Probate Records, 1810-1974 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2015.
Original data: Florida County, District and Probate Cou

For Marcus Armistead I would think losing his brother and partner was a big blow to him.  In addition to that he had already lost another brother, John Clayton Armistead in April of 1832.  He was the administrator of John's estate, which probably took up a lot of his time as there were two underaged children and a widow to take care of.  In addition John's oldest child, Adelia, had married and had a child but then she tragically died.  Her husband, William A. Johnson, filed suite against the estate on behalf of his son, John Evans Johnson, who he said should inherit Adelia's portion of the inheritance.  This case reached the Supreme Court in Virginia but I found documents also in the Supreme Court in Florida.  John Clayton had land in both states so that is apparently why the paperwork was also sent to Florida.  








Court Documents from the suit filed over John Clayton Armistead's estate. Filed in Virginia and Florida.

Florida Memory, State Library and Archives of Florida
Johnson vs. Armistead, Florida Supreme Court

https://www.floridamemory.com/items/show/260669?id=11

This case apparently took until 1838 to be settled.  There are 68 pages in this file.  I copied a couple pages from the front and three pages from the back, just so you could get a feel for this case.  You can find the site above if you are interested in checking this out further. 






Robert Alexander Documents from the Settlement of his Estate.

Source Citation
Records of Estates, 1840-1893; Author: Jackson County (Florida). County Judge; Probate Place: Jackson, Florida
Source Information
Ancestry.com. Florida, Wills and Probate Records, 1810-1974 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2015.
Original data: Florida County, District and Probate Courts.

The oldest brother in the family, whom I have not really talked about before, Robert Alexander Armistead, was a doctor, and an author of a work on English grammar.  He was born in 1780 in Virginia.  He married in Virginia in 1820 and he died in Florida, in 1844.  I copied three pages from the Records of Estates, as shown above, to give you some idea of his estate.  



1860 Census Petersburg (Independent City), Virginia lists Fabian Armistead and his family.

Source Citation
Year: 1860; Census Place: Petersburg South Ward, Petersburg (Independent City), Virginia; Roll: M653_1342; Page: 341; Family History Library Film: 805342

Source Information

Ancestry.com. 1860 United States Federal Census [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2009. Images reproduced by FamilySearch.
Original data: 1860 U.S. census, population schedule. NARA microfilm publication M653, 1,438 rolls. Washington, D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, n.d.

The 1840 Census lists Marcus Armistead back in Virginia and he apparently died there sometime before 1850.  I did not find his death information.  Fabian also returned to Virginia sometime after the 1830 census and died there in April of 1865.  He is buried in the Blandford Cemetery, Petersburg City, VA.


FABIAN ARMISTEAD

BIRTH: 26 Dec 1794
DEATH: 15 Sep 1865 (aged 70)
BURIAL: Blandford Cemetery, Petersburg, Petersburg City, Virginia, USA
PLOT: Ward B-OG, Square 22, Sec 1

MEMORIAL ID: 28513882 · 

Information posted by Web Virginia, Find A Grave, 1607-2012, for Fabian Armistead.

Source Information

Ancestry.com. Web: Virginia, Find A Grave Index, 1607-2012 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2012.
Original data: Find A Grave. Find A Grave. http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi: accessed 25 January 2013.

Even as this generation of Armisteads passed on, several members of the next generation continued to live and make their contributions in Florida for years to come.  I will end my research on this family at this point.

OK, now I feel better.  It didn't seem to fit in my post #14 or #15, but I thought it was important to give a little closure to this line of Armisteads before I continued forward. 

Next time, another side note so I can tell you a little bit about Simmons Jones Baker, Sr., my great-great-great-grandfather.

References:
1) Ancestry.com. Reuben Vaughan Kidd : soldier of the Confederacy [database on-line]. Provo, UT: Ancestry.com Operations Inc, 2005.
Original data: Pierrepont, Alice V. D.. Reuben Vaughan Kidd : soldier of the Confederacy. Petersburg, Va.: unknown, c1947., p. 58-60.https://search.ancestry.com/search/db.aspx?dbid=19740