Thursday, January 23, 2025

Captain Philemon Hodges

 

Revolutionary War Soldiers

Captain Philemon Hodges

 

Captain Philemon Hodges was born in Cumberland County, North Carolina on October 25, 1757. His parents were William and Patrice Hawkins Hodges. 

In 1776 he joined the North Carolina line and served in Colonel William Thompson’s Regiment. He participated in the Battle of Sullivan’s Island near Charleston, SC. He served in various regiments throughout 1777-1780.  In August 1780 he participated in the Battle of Camden also near Charleston. In the fall of 1781, he joined Troop of Horse (beginning of the Calvary) and was appointed Captain of Light Horse. He served as captain for almost two years. 

He married Winifred Kittrell in Granville, North Carolina on September 18, 1783. They had three children: John (1787), Samuel (1793), and Penelope (1796). In 1784 he was granted 100 acres in Cumberland County. In 1809 he was granted 1,000 acres in Bedford County, Tennessee.  Winifred died in 1825 in Granville.

 By 1830, Captain Hodges had moved into Muscogee County in the Double Churches area. In 1832 he applied for a Rev. war pension. In his application he stated that the record of his age couldn’t be established because his home had burned. A number of prominent Columbusites including Seaborn Jones, James Bethune, John Bethune and James Watson testified on his behalf. Hodges was awarded a pension of $380 a year (about $15,000 today). He also won land in the 1832 Land Lottery (about 40 acres). He died in Muscogee County in 1848 and was buried in the Shiloh Methodist Church Cemetery. (Today the cemetery is known as the Shiloh Cemetery and is located on Double Churches Road.)  

 
Winifred Kitrell Hodges is buried in the Hodges Family Cemetery in Granville, NC.


Hodges Family Cemetery

Pension application


Seaborn Jones Testimony



Pension awarded 

References

Findagrave.com 
Ancestry.com/ U.S. Revolutionary War Pension and Bounty-Land Warrant Application Files, 1800-1900 (National Archives, Washington, D.C.
Tennessee State Library and Archives; Early Tennessee/North Carolina Land Records, Book B
1832 Georgia Land Lottery 
Georgia Revolutionary War Soldier's Graves, Ross, Arnold H., Iberian Publishing Co., Athens, GA, 1993







Thursday, January 16, 2025

Richard Christmas


Richard Christmas


Richard Christmas
was born in Bute County, North Carolina* on January 4, 1764.  His parents were Thomas and Sarah Whitlock Christmas. (Richard's ancestors immigrated to Virginia from England in the mid 1600’s.) Richard’s father Thomas died in 1768 when Richard was only four. His mother died in 1770, leaving him an orphan at the age of six. There are no records to indicate who became Richard’s guardian, but he remained in the Franklin, NC area. He joined the North Carolina militia and served as a private during the Revolutionary War. His brother, Captain John Christmas, also served in the Rev War. John died in 1781. After the war, Richard married Ann Butler and they settled in Orange County, NC. After her death, he married Mary Roberson in Franklin County, NC in 1790. They moved to Edgefield County, SC and then to Greene County, GA.  In the 1827 Land Lottery** he drew land lottery property in Harris County. 


Bethel Baptist Church


Richard moved his family to the Columbus area before 1830 and built a home off County Line Road in Midland, GA.  He became a founding member of Bethel Baptist Church along with my maternal 3rd great grandfather Rev. James Rees and my paternal 3rd great grandfather Osborn Eley.  Bethel Baptist church was formed on June 29th,1829 on Flat Rock Road near Columbus, Georgia. The congregation met once or twice a month using the services of part time pastors.

Richard and Mary had four children:

1)Temperance (1792-1856) married Robert Simmons

2) Mary (1800-1865) married Daniel Huff

3) Martha (1802-1821) married James Ferguson

4) Nathaniel (1805-1848) married Ann Harrison

Richard and his son Nathaniel executed their wills together in Muscogee County in 1847, both of whom established their wishes for the division of property among family members. Richard willed his estate to his son Nathaniel and daughters Temperance and Mary, appointing Nathaniel and Temperance as executors. Nathaniel's will bequeathed property to his wife Ann and daughter Martha, along with other assets, while also ensuring debts are settled from his estate. Both wills were proven in court in November 1848.

Richard died on September 13, 1848 and his son one month later on October 14th. They are buried in the Christmas Family Cemetery in Midland along with family members and descendants.


*On January 20, 1779, the North Carolina General Assembly abolished Bute County less than 15 years after establishing it. The legislature established the northeastern county in June 1764 and named it in honor of John Stuart, 3rd Earl of Bute. a Scottish nobleman. Bute was the tutor of Great Britain’s Prince George. After the prince became King George III in 1760, Bute served as the king’s advisor and eventually became prime minister. By the late 1760’s the Earl of Bute was so unpopular because of the Stamp Act, that the county was abolished and absorbed into Warren and Franklin County and ceased to exist.

**The 1827 Land Lottery was the fifth lottery of the Georgia Land Lotteries, a  system used by Georgia between the years 1805 and 1833 to distribute Cherokee and Muscogee land to settlers. The 1827 lottery was authorized by the Georgia General Assembly by an act of June 9, 1825. On February 18, 1825 a treaty was signed by Chief William McIntosh at his home in Indian Springs, GA.  The treaty signed by McIntosh led to his death by Creek chief Menewa.  The lottery lands from the treaty signed were located in Carroll, CowetaLeeMuscogee, and Troup counties.  The lots were 202.5 acres in size. Drawers of  previous Georgia land lotteries were excluded, as well as draft resisters who refused to fight in the War of 1812 or the Indian Wars, people who deserted from military service, imprisoned convicts, tax defaulters, or those whose debt had not been settled

References

"United States, Rosters of Revolutionary War Soldiers and Sailors, 1775-1966", , FamilySearch

 (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:7FY2-YVMM :  Entry for Richard Christmas and Richard Christmas, 1 June 1840. 

"Muscogee, Georgia, United States records," image 73 of 551; Georgia. County Court (Muscogee County). www.familysearch.org

http://www.ancestry.com/family-tree/person/tree/101642040/person/360009971970/facts

Ross, Arnold H., Georgia Revolutionary War Soldier’s Graves, Iberian Publishing Company. Athens, Georgia, 1993

Knight, Lucian Lamar Georgia's roster of the Revolution Baltimore, Maryland, Genealogical Publishing Co., 1967 

http:// www.dncr.nc.gov/blog/2016/01/20/ 

http://www.findagrave.com/memorial/21552370/richard_christmas

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