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Our Genealogy & History

Our family's historical journey through time.

Dora E Yates

Female 1872 - 1873  (1 years)


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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Dora E Yates was born in 1872 (daughter of Joseph J Yates and Nancy Elizabeth Sudbury); died in 1873.

    Other Events:

    • Reference Number: 3798

    Notes:

    _______________________________________________________________________
    From the Valdo James Smith Research document, The Sudburys of Virginia and Tennessee.
    DORA E. YATES had a short life. She was born June 30, 1872, in Dyer County,
    Tennessee, and died just over a year later on August 28, 1873. She may have been
    the namesake for one of her older sister Tina's daughters.
    _______________________________________________________________________


Generation: 2

  1. 2.  Joseph J Yates was born on 7 Sep 1840 in Wake County, North Carolina (son of William B Yates and Elizabeth); died on 28 Mar 1907 in Okmulgee Cemetery.

    Other Events:

    • Reference Number: 3688

    Joseph married Nancy Elizabeth Sudbury on 14 Nov 1867 in Dyer County, Tennessee. Nancy (daughter of John Barney Sudbury and Susan E Jackson) was born on 16 Nov 1847 in Williamson County, Tennessee; died on 26 Sep 1923 in Okmulgee, Okmulgee, Oklahoma. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  Nancy Elizabeth Sudbury was born on 16 Nov 1847 in Williamson County, Tennessee (daughter of John Barney Sudbury and Susan E Jackson); died on 26 Sep 1923 in Okmulgee, Okmulgee, Oklahoma.

    Other Events:

    • FSID: 9KDZ-1CN
    • Name: Bettie Sedberry
    • Reference Number: 3687
    • Residence: 1850, Madison county, Madison, Tennessee
    • Residence: 1850, Madison county, Madison, Tennessee
    • Residence: 1880, District 1, Dyer, Tennessee, United States
    • Residence: 1880, District 1, Dyer, Tennessee, United States
    • Residence: 1900, ED 58 Township 14 N. Range 13 E., Creek Nation, Indian Territory, United States

    Notes:

    _______________________________________________________________________
    From the Valdo James Smith Research document, The Sudburys of Virginia and Tennessee.

    NANCY ELIZABETH SUDBURY (1847-1923) and her husband, JOSEPH J.
    YATES (1840-1907) were remarkable individuals. They were true pioneers, who
    faced great hardships and suffered personal tragedies in their quest for a better life
    for themselves and their family, and who, with hard work, ultimately achieved their
    goal.

    Nancy was born on November 16, 1847, in Williamson County, Tennessee, to
    parents who were only 22 years of age. In 1848, while Nancy was still an infant,
    her parents joined her grandfather, Shadrack Sudbury, in relocating to Dyer
    County, Tennessee. There Nancy spent her childhood and adolescence.

    On November 14, 1867, two days short of her twentieth birthday, Nancy married
    Joseph J. Yates ("J.J."). The ceremony, which took place in Dyer County, was
    performed by the Reverend Thomas D. Harwell. J.J. and Nancy were an attractive
    couple. Tintypes in the possession of the Smith family show him to have been tall
    and lanky, with a long, thin face, but ruggedly handsome. She, on the other hand,
    was pretty and petite.

    J.J. had begun life in Wake County, North Carolina on September 7, 1840. (The
    family Bible kept by Valdo Yates Smith lists the year of birth as 1841, but 1840 is
    the year given by J.J.'s obituary and is more consistent with census and military
    records.) At age 10, according to the 1850 census index, he was living with his
    parents, WILLIAM B. and ELIZABETH YATES, in Madison County,
    Tennessee.

    By 1860, he had apparently left home and was living on his own. The 1860 census
    index locates him (age 20) in either Sumner or Sullivan County. One wonders what
    prompted him to venture out on his own at a relatively young age, when his older
    brother William was still living at home. Military records indicate that J.J. "joined
    for duty and enrolled" for state service with the Tennessee Infantry on July 22,
    1861, at Trenton, Tennessee, in Gibson County, just east of Dyer County where his
    mother was then living.

    After enrollment (by C.H. Williams, for an initial period of twelve months), he
    reported to Camp Brown, where he was listed on a muster roll dated August 10,
    1861. He was a 3rd Corporal assigned to Captain William A. Dawson's Company,
    22nd Regiment, Tennessee Infantry. About his company and regiment, the muster
    roll gives the following information:

    This company was known at various times as Captain Dawson's Company,
    Company D and Company I [the "Bell Grays"], 22d Regiment Tennessee
    Infantry. The 22d (also known as Freeman's) Regiment Tennessee Infantry
    was organized for State service July 24, 1861, with nine companies, A to I,
    transferred to the service of the Confederate States August 9 and 10, 1861,
    and reorganized in May 1862. * * * [The regiment, with the exception of
    Companies F and K,] was consolidated with the 12th Regiment Tennessee
    Infantry June 16, 1862, and formed the 12th Regiment Tennessee Infantry
    (Consolidated).

    J.J. most certainly was with the 22nd Regiment when it was engaged at the Battle
    of Belmont on November 7, 1861. He also fought with the Regiment and the Army
    of Mississippi at the Battle' of Shiloh, April 6th and 7th, 1862. The 22nd suffered
    heavy casualties in both of these engagements.

    On June 16, 1862, J.J. became part of the 12th Regiment as a 2nd Sergeant. By
    September 1, 1862, he had been promoted to 1st Sergeant. He participated in the
    Kentucky Campaign with the 12th, now a part of the Army of Tennessee, under the
    command of Edmund Kirby Smith. While there, during the autumn of 1862, he
    was captured by Federal forces. His name appears on a list of prisoners of war sent
    from Lexington, Kentucky, to Louisville, Kentucky, by Colonel Casement, on
    October 23, 1862.

    Although the circumstances of his capture are unknown, it does not appear likely
    from the record of Kirby Smith's maneuvers in Kentucky that J.J. would have been
    taken prisoner during battle. A footnote on page 274 of Thomas Lawrence
    Connelly's book, Army of the Heartland, may hold a clue to this puzzle. Refer
    -ring to the casualties suffered by the Army of Tennessee at Munfordville,
    Richmond, and Perryville, Kentucky, Connelly notes that "Bragg's casualties also
    included some two thousand sick, part of whom were captured at Harrodsburg".

    By January 1863, J.J. had been released as part of a prisoner exchange, but how
    and when this was accomplished is not entirely clear, because his name appears on
    two prisoner exchange records near that time, which may or may not be mutually
    exclusive. The earlier of these two records is a receipt given on November 15,
    1862, for prisoners of war received on board the Steamer Maria Denning near
    Vicksburg, Mississippi. Receipt was given for the Confederate soldiers by Major
    F.W. Hoadley, C.S.A., Acting Agent for Exchange, to Captain E. Morgan Wood,
    Agent for the U.S.

    The other record is a list, undated, of paroled Confederate prisoners, captured and
    paroled by the U.S. forces in Kentucky in September, October, and November,
    1862, who reported to General Bragg and were placed in camp at Chattanooga,
    Tennessee. According to this record, the prisoners were declared exchanged by
    Colonel Robert Ould by telegram to Major Fairbanks, A.A.I.G., January 11, 1863.
    Given this last date, it is unlikely that J.J. was with his regiment at the Battle of
    Murfreesboro, although it is possible that he had returned prior to the date of the
    telegram. The 12th Tennessee had casualties of 56 percent at Murfreesboro.

    On the Company Muster Roll for January and February 1863, J.J. is listed again as
    a 2nd Sergeant, and remained at this rank at least through February of 1864. His
    record again indicates that he fought with his regiment at Chickamauga in
    September 1863, and possibly at Missionary Ridge in November. During the
    period from November 1863 through February 1864, he was listed as being in the
    "Pioneer Corps." for the Division.
    The 12th Regiment fought throughout the retreat to Atlanta, the return to
    Tennessee, the Battles of Franklin and Nashville in 1864, and the final battle at
    Bentonville, North Carolina, on March 19, 1865. Unfortunately, J.J. 's military
    records after February 1864 are incomplete, making it difficult to confirm his
    participation in the major battles near the end of the war. He may have fought in
    some or all of them.

    The last record on which J.J. 's name appears is a Muster Roll of officers and men
    paroled in accordance with the terms of a Military Convention entered into on April
    26, 1865, between General Joseph E. Johnston, Commanding Confederate Army,
    and Major General W.T. Sherman, Commanding United States Army in North
    Carolina. The Roll is dated near High Point, North Carolina, April 28, 1865, and
    the soldiers were paroled at Greensboro, North Carolina on May 1, 1865.

    At the time of his parole, J.J. was a member of Company D, Second Consolidated
    Regiment, Tennessee Infantry. The Second Consolidated Regiment had been
    formed about April 9, 1865, from what was left of the 11th, 12th, 13th, 29th, 47th,
    50th, 51st, 52nd, and 154th Regiments. At the date of the surrender, only 50
    officers and men remained from the original 12th, 22nd, and 47th Tennessee
    regiments. Sergeant J.J. Yates was one of those men.

    Not much is known about J.J. and Nancy's first twenty-five years of marriage other
    than that they remained in Dyer County and engendered nine children, three of
    whom died in relative infancy. The only family document which dates from this
    period is a five-year policy of tornado insurance issued to J.J. on September 21,
    1891, by the Continental Insurance Company. The policy indicates that J.J. and
    Nancy owned their own home on 114 acres situated two miles west of Friendship,
    Tennessee, on Dyersburg and Jackson Roads.

    According to oral tradition passed down to Valdo Yates Smith, J.J. and Nancy later
    moved westward and settled somewhere in Texas, where they homesteaded land and
    tried to make a living as farmers. Probably they left Tennessee sometime in 1893
    or 1894.

    Life in Texas was hard for the Yates family. The area in which they lived was a
    relative wilderness, and Valdo Yates Smith remembered his mother, Hattie Belle,
    telling him that they would occasionally hear "the Comanche squall". From the
    location of the routes of the Comanche Indians at that time, we can speculate that
    they were living in the western part of the state, possibly in or near the Choctaw
    Nation. It was in Texas in 1895 that J.J. and Nancy lost their remaining sons,
    James and John, probably to typhoid fever. At the time of their deaths, the two
    boys were 25 and 21, respectively.

    Sometime between 1895 (when their sons died) and 1900, J.J. and Nancy gave up
    on their pioneer efforts in Texas. Valdo Yates Smith remembers being told that
    they had been "burned out". From Texas they migrated northward by covered
    wagon with at least two of their four remaining daughters, Hattie Belle and
    Mildred, to settle in what was then Indian Territory, and is now Oklahoma. For a
    couple of years, they farmed in an area known as "Bald Hill", on land leased from
    the Indians. Here there was nothing but prairie grass, and no laws or law
    enforcement. The nearest marshal was located in Fort Smith, Arkansas.

    The Yates family left the farm in 1900 (according to J.J. 's obituary) and moved to
    Okmulgee, a small town of a few hundred residents. In Okmulgee, they established
    the Yates Hotel, which became a well known and respected hostelry. About the
    hotel, Nancy's obituary gives the following information:

    To the new blood which has settled in Okmulgee since the first oil boom, the
    Yates hotel means nothing, but to a few pioneer citizens who are left to write
    the history of the one-time Indian trading post, this one-time famous hostelry
    brings back memories of a few log cabins, general store, and perhaps three or
    four hundred settlers. The old Yates hotel was located at Sixth street and
    Grand avenue. It was a one-story frame structure, but was looked upon with
    pride by the citizenship of a thriving hamlet of 400 inhabitants. It was the
    nicest hotel west of Muskogee. * * * Later the old wooden structure was
    torn down and the Severs building which now graces the spot was built.

    J.J. and Nancy operated the hotel "for many years", probably from about 1900 to
    1907, when J.J. died. He fell victim to typhoid fever on March 28, 1907, at 1:30
    a.m., after an illness of several weeks. He was 66 years of age. Funeral services
    were held the same afternoon at his residence, and were conducted by the Masons,
    with Reverend Rippey preaching the sermon. His obituary recites that "[h]e was a
    man of upright character, a member of the Methodist church and of the Masonic
    order." He is buried in the Morton Street Cemetery in south Okmulgee.
    Unfortunately the locations of all gravesites at this cemetery have been lost.

    Some time after M.'s death, Nancy went to live at the home of her daughter,
    Hattie Belle, where she resided for the rest of her life. Valdo Yates Smith
    remembered her as being fastidious in her personal habits; she never came out of
    her room in the morning until she was impeccably dressed, with every hair in
    place. Nancy died on September 26, 1923, at age 77, after having been in failing
    health for some time. Funeral services were held at the Trawick home, with the
    Reverend New Harris, pastor of the Methodist Episcopal church, officiating.
    According to Nancy's obituary, she had been an active member of the "Methodist
    Episcopal church, South" until the time she was bedridden. She is buried in the
    main Okmulgee Cemetery, operated by the Okmulgee Cemetery Association, on
    Highway 75 South.
    _______________________________________________________________________

    Children:
    1. Susan Maseltine Yates Yates was born in 1868; died in 1942.
    2. James Edgar Yates was born in 1870; died in 1895.
    3. 1. Dora E Yates was born in 1872; died in 1873.
    4. John Burrough Yates was born in 1874; died in 1895.
    5. May Centennial Yates was born in 1876.
    6. Ninna E Yates was born in 1878; died in 1883.
    7. Walter Gray Yates was born in 1881; died in 1883.
    8. Hattie Belle Yates was born in 1883; died in 1927.
    9. Mildrid V Yates was born in 1886.


Generation: 3

  1. 4.  William B Yates

    Other Events:

    • Reference Number: 7851

    William married Elizabeth. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 5.  Elizabeth

    Other Events:

    • Reference Number: 7852

    Children:
    1. 2. Joseph J Yates was born on 7 Sep 1840 in Wake County, North Carolina; died on 28 Mar 1907 in Okmulgee Cemetery.

  3. 6.  John Barney Sudbury was born in 1826 in Nottoway County, Virginia (son of Shadrack R Sudbury and Elizabeth Jackson); died in 1880 in Milam, Sabine, Texas.

    Other Events:

    • FSID: LZJX-BBJ
    • Reference Number: 1345
    • Census: 6 Sep 1850, Dyer County, Tennesse
    • Census: 5 Jul 1860, Dyer County, Tennesse
    • _MILT: Dec 1861; 47th Regiment, Tennessee Infantry, Company B
    • Residence: 1880, Precinct 4, Milam, Texas, United States
    • Census: 22 Jun 1880, Milam County, Texas

    Notes:

    CONFEDERATE TENNESSEE TROOPS
    47th Regiment, Tennessee Infantry

    Overview: 47th Infantry Regiment completed its organization in December 16, 1861, at Camp Trenton, Gibson County, Tennessee. The men were from the counties of Obion, Gibson, and Dyer. For a time it remained at Camp Trenton, then was involved in the conflicts at Shiloh and Richmond.

    Reorganized May 8, 1862; and later it was attached to P.Smith's, Vaughan's, and Palmer's Brigade, and during October, 1862, consolidated with the 12th Regiment. The unit participated in the campaigns of the Army of Tennessee from Murfreesboro to Atlanta, endured Hood's winter operations in Tennessee, and fought its last battle at Bentonville. It sustained 67 casualties at Shiloh, 32 at Richmond, and more than thirty percent of the 263 engaged at Murfreesboro. The 47th reported 87 killed and wounded at Chickamauga, and the 12th/47th totalled 373 men and 220 arms in December, 1863. Only a remnant surrendered in April, 1865. The field officers were Colonels Munson R. Hill and William M. Watkins, Lieutenant Colonels W.E. Holmes and Vincent G. Wynne, and Major Thomas R. Shearon.

    Formed part of Company "D", 2nd Consolidated Tennessee Infantry Regiment. Paroled at Greensboro, North Carolina May 2, 1865.

    FIELD OFFICERS

    Colonels-Munson R. Hill, William M. Watkins.
    Lieutenant Colonels-B. E. Holmes, Vincent C. Wynne.
    Major-Thomas R. Shearon
    The 47th Regiment was a West Tennessee organization, organized at Camp Trenton, Gibson County, December 16, 1861, from 10 companies which had been enrolled during November and December.

    CAPTAINS
    James R. White, William Stacy, Thomas B. Moffat, Co. "A". Enrolled at Troy, Obion County.
    James H. Sinclair, Robert B. Patterson, Co. "B". Men from Gibson and Dyer Counties.
    Vincent C. Wynne (to lieutenant colonel), Peter Marchant, Co. "C". Enrolled at Dyersburg, Dyer County.
    W. M. Watkins (to colonel), James N. Watkins, Co. "D". Enrolled at Dyersburg, Dyer County.
    George B. Miller, Franc C. Sampson, Co. "E". Enrolled at Dyersburg, Dyer County.
    Jesse L. Branch, George R. Booth, Co. "F" Enrolled at Humboldt, Gibson County.
    Thomas J. Carthel, James O. January, Co. "G". Enrolled at Camp Trenton, Gibson County.
    John A. Duncan, B. E. Holmes, W. H. Holoman, Co. "H". Men from Obion and Gibson Counties.
    W. S. Moore, James R. Oliver, Co. "I". Enrolled at Troy, Obion County.
    T. E. Cummings, Co. "K". Enrolled at Camp Trenton, Gibson County.

    At the reorganization Captain Vincent C. Wynne replaced Holmes as lieutenant colonel. Colonel Hill resigned in 1863, and Captain William M. Watkins succeeded him as colonel.

    The regiment remained at Camp Trenton, unattached to any brigade, until just before the Battle of Shiloh, April 6-7, 1862. The action report for that engagement stated the 47th, unattached, arrived on the field April 7. No reports of its activity were found, but the West Tennessee Whig, of Jackson, Tennessee, dated April 25, 1862, published a list of casualties from the 47th Regiment in the Battle of Shiloh totaling five killed, 61 wounded, one missing, so the regiment must have done some fighting after its arrival.

    On May 26, at Corinth, Mississippi, it was reported in Lieutenant General Leonidas Polk's Corps, Brigadier General Charles Clark's Division, Brigadier General Bushrod R. Johnson's Brigade, composed of the 12th, 13th, 22nd and 47th Tennessee Infantry Regiments, and Bankhead's Battery. On June 15 Brigadier General Preston Smith was reported in command of the brigade; June 30, Colonel R. M. Russell, with the 22nd Regiment merged into the 12th, and the 154th Senior Regiment added; but on July 8, General Preston Smith was again reported in command of the brigade, in Major General B. F. Cheat-ham's Division. These four regiments remained together for the rest of the war; first in Preston Smith's Brigade; later with Brigadier General Alfred J. Vaughan in command.

    The regiment left Corinth May 29 for Tupelo, Mississippi where it remained until July 25. Company reports show much sickness in the regiment while at Tupelo. It left Tupelo via Mobile, and Chattanooga, for Knoxville, to join Major General E. Kirby Smith for his invasion of Kentucky. From Knoxville, it marched on foot, many of the men barefoot, over the Cumberland Mountains to Barbourville, to London, to Richmond, Kentucky, where it was engaged in the battle on August 30, 1862. Here the 47th reported eight killed, 24 wounded.

    From Richmond it marched to Lexington, Paris, Cynthiana Frankfort, to Hays Pond, 30 miles from Cincinnati, Ohio; to Shelbyville, 28 miles from Louisville, Kentucky; to Perryville, where it was present but not engaged in the battle fought at that place on October 8, 1862. From Perryville it retreated through Harrodsburg, Kentucky, and Cumberland Gap, Tennessee, to Knoxville, where it took the railroad to Chattanooga. It left Chattanooga November 1, 1862, marching via Bridgeport, Alabama to Manchester, to Tulla-homa, to Murfreesboro, where it arrived December 5, 1862.

    It did picket duty at LaVergne for about two weeks; returned to Murfreesboro December 22, and was engaged in the Battle of Murfreesboro. In this battle the 47th was commanded by Captain W. M. Watkins, and reported 86 casualties out of 263 engaged.

    Following this battle, the regiment retreated to Shelbyville, arriving January 14, where it was on Provost Guard duty. On April 1, 1863, the l2th/47th was reported as one unit under Colonel T. H. Bell of the 12th Regiment, and from this time on the two regiments acted as one field unit, although separate muster rolls were maintained. It left Shelbyville June 27 for Tullahoma; left Tullahoma July 1 for Chattanooga, where it arrived July 7. Company reports describe this as a very fatiguing march, with heavy rain every day, and only half rations. On July 31, Colonel W. M. Watkins, of the 47th, was reported in command of the l2th/47th, and he remained in command until July, 1864.

    On September 7, the regiment left Chattanooga for LaFayette, Georgia; to Rock Spring Church on the 14th; back to LaFayette on the 17th; crossed Chickamauga Creek on the 19th, and attacked the enemy in the Battle of Chickamauga, September 19-20, 1863. Here the 12th/47th reported the expenditure of 14,350 rounds of ammunition, and the loss of 87 killed and wounded, including two captains and three lieutenants killed.

    Following the battle it remained in Chattanooga Valley until October 29, when it moved to Sweetwater, but returned to Missionary Ridge November 7, 1863, where the brigade was transferred to Major General T. C. Hind-man's Division. The regiment was engaged in the Battle of Missionary Ridge November 25, and retreated to Dalton, Georgia, where it arrived November 27, and went into winter quarters with no tents, and scanty rations. Crude shelters were erected, which were not as comfortable as they might have been made, "due to a shortage of axes." On December 14, the l2th/47th reported 281 effectives, 373 present, and 220 arms. On January 18, 1864, the 47th re-enlisted for the war, along with Strahl's Brigade, and the 13th and 154th Regiments, which moved General Hiudman to issue a proclamation, reading in part: "The spirit in which these brave men enlisted is an eloquent rebuke to the despondent.* * * With men who thus prefer duty to ease and comfort nothing is impossible in war.

    On February 20, the brigade was transferred back to Cheatham's Division, where it remained for the duration. The regiment was part of an expedition which started to reenforce General Polk, in Mississippi. It left Dalton, Georgia, on February 16, reached Demopolis, Alabama, and was ordered back to Dalton. The last company report was dated aboard the train at Atlanta, Georgia, on February 29, where the regiment was awaiting shipment to Dalton. It stated "The men regretted the return to Dalton to eat poor beef and cornbread, having been assured by General Polk there was plenty of pork and bacon in the Confederacy if commissaries would do their duty."

    No further details of regimental activities were found, but as part of Cheatham's Division, the regiment went through the Atlanta Campaign under General Joseph E. Johnston, the return to Tennessee under General John B. Hood, and the final move to North Carolina and the Battle of Bentonville, North Carolina.

    On July 31, 1864, the 12/47th was reported commanded by Captain William S. Moore, of the 12th; on August 31, by Lieutenant Colonel Josiah N. Wyatt, of the 12th; on September 20, by Lieutenant Colonel V. C. Wynne, of the 47th; on December 10, by Captain C. N. Wade, of the 12th; and finally, at Smithfield, North Carolina on March 31, 1865, by Captain James R. Oliver of the 47th. On this date the llth/29th/12th/47th/l3th/51st/ 52nd/154th Tennessee Regiments were all consolidated into one unit under Captain Oliver.

    In the final reorganization of General Joseph E. Johnston's Army April 9, 1865, the 47th was reported in the Second Consolidated Tennessee Infantry Regiment, under Lieutenant Colonel George W. Pease, composed of the llth/l2th/l3th/29th/47th/50th/51st/ 52nd/154th Tennessee Infantry Regiments. As part of this regiment it was paroled at Greensboro, North Carolina May 2, 1865.

    1880 Census
    Name: John B. Sudberry
    Residence: Milam, Texas
    Birthdate: 1826
    Birthplace: Virginia, United States
    Relationship to Head: Self
    Spouse's Name: Susan Sudberry
    Spouse's Birthplace: Tennessee, United States
    Father's Name:
    Father's Birthplace: Virginia, United States
    Mother's Name:
    Mother's Birthplace: Virginia, United States
    Race or Color (Expanded): White
    Ethnicity (Standardized): American
    Gender: Male
    Martial Status: Married
    Age (Expanded): 54 years
    Occupation: Farmer
    NARA Film Number: T9-1319
    Page: 251
    Page Character: B
    Entry Number: 1698
    Film number: 1255319
    Household Gender Age
    John B. Sudberry M 54
    Spouse Susan Sudberry F 55
    Child Millie Sudberry F 28
    Child John W. Sudberry M 21
    Child Virginia Sudberry F 16

    _______________________________________________________________________
    From the Valdo James Smith Research document, The Sudburys of Virginia and Tennessee.

    JOHN B. SUDBURY was born about 1825 in Nottoway County, Virginia, the son of
    Shadrack Sudbury and his first wife, Elizabeth. The first several years of John's life
    were spent in Virginia. Glenn Boyd suggests that John's family was probably still
    living there as late as November 23, 1829. In any event, John moved with his family
    to Williamson County, Tennessee, sometime before the 1830 Tennessee census.

    John spent the remainder of his childhood and adolescence in Williamson County. It
    was there that on December 17, 1846, he married SUSAN E. JACKSON, who had
    been born in Tennessee in 1825. The ceremony was performed by M.W. Gray,
    minister of the Gospel, and John's brother, Jeremiah, served as bondsman. In a
    document dated December 1846, transcribed by Glenn Boyd (presumably from the
    personal collection of Helen O'Kelly), Shadrack Sudbury lists items of personal property he had given to John, perhaps as wedding gifts. These included a horse and
    saddle, a rifle, and "one bed waying 44 lbs."

    Between 1847 and 1850, John and Susan moved to Dyer County, Tennessee. Their
    move probably coincided with John's father Shadrack's resettlement from Williamson
    County to Dyer County in 1848. The listing for John and Susan in the 1850 census
    index for Dyer County shows that they already had two children, Nancy (referred to
    by her middle name, Elizabeth), age 2, and William, age 11 months. John and Susan
    are shown in the 1860 census index for Dyer County with six children, including
    Nancy E. (age 12), William H. (age 10), Milly E. (age 8), James (age 6), Robert
    (age 4), and John W. (age 2). More information on John and Susan could probably
    be obtained by looking up the census records for 1850 and 1860.

    John's father, Shadrack, died in 1859, leaving John and his brother Jeremiah and
    sister Sarah a reversionary interest in 275 acres of land which Shadrack owned, on
    which Shadrack had operated a mill and a carding factory, among other things. On
    October 3, 1859, John's stepmother, Susannah, gave Jeremiah, John, and Sarah's
    husband, Benjamin Farmer, a quitclaim deed to her life estate in Shadrack's property,
    in exchange for their agreement to make annual payments to her of $100.00 each.
    The relationship between Jeremiah and John after Shadrack's death seems to have
    involved some economic interdependence. Documents transcribed by Glenn Boyd
    indicate that in January 1861, John sold Jeremiah four cords of wood, and worked six
    days for his brother on the gin wheel and boiler, and sawing wood. Most of the total
    payment of $6.50 was given in the form of "credit by lumber".

    Late in 1861, John's life was disrupted by the Civil War. According to Glenn Boyd,
    John was enrolled in the Confederate Army on December 8, 1861, in Dyer County,
    by W.P. Rice, Justice of the Peace. He joined Company "B" of the 47th Tennessee
    Infantry regiment at the rank of private. Glenn gives the following information about
    John's regiment and his apparently brief military career:

    [The 47th Tennessee Infantry] regiment was organized December 16, 1861, at
    Camp Trenton, in Gibson County, Tennessee. Unattached to any brigade, the
    regiment remained at Camp Trenton until just before the battle of Shiloh, April 6-
    7, 1862. The 47th arrived on the [battlefield] on Monday, April 7.

    In a Jackson, Tennessee newspaper [the West Tennessee Whig] dated April 25,
    1862, a list of casualties from the 47th was published -- 5 killed, 61 wounded, 1
    missing. It is highly likely that John B. Sudbury fought in the Battle of Shiloh
    with the 47th. It is possible, how-ever, that he may have been at home in Dyer
    County at this time. He is listed as "absent at home" or "absent sick" or "absent
    without leave" on all of the roll sheets from May 1862 to April 1863, when he
    was dropped from the roll for being absent.

    Glenn Boyd observes that in the years after 1862, John appears to have been engaged
    primarily in farming. Glenn has transcribed the following 1865 note from John to his
    brother, Jeremiah: "Brother I have got a little cotton picked and I want some money.
    I will send you what I have got picked if you will pay the money when I send the
    cotton at 8 cents. October 7 /65 J.B. Sudbury."

    Unfortunately, Jeremiah was killed in a mill accident in 1866, and with his death it
    seems safe to say that one of the primary stabilizing forces in John's life was gone.
    Over the next few years, John, in the words of Glenn Boyd, "ran up a considerable
    debt and had to put up all his land and goods to cover it". By 1868, John had
    apparently failed to make certain of the payments due his stepmother, Susannah,
    under his contract for purchase of his share of her life estate in Shadrack's property.

    On June 26, 1868, Susannah filed an Attachment Bill (No. 477) against John,
    addressed to the Honorable John L. Williamson, Chancellor, presiding over the
    Chancery Court for Dyer County in Dyersburg. In the Bill, which also named John's
    children and certain transferees of John's property as defendants, Susannah sought to
    have the Court seize and hold John's property until the dispute between them could
    be settled. The Bill is a fascinating document, and is worth quoting in its entirety:

    Your Complainant [Susannah Sudbury] respectfully represents and shows to your
    Honor [Chancellor Williamson] that on the 3d day of October 1859, she sold to
    John B. Sudbury and Benjamin F. Farmer her life interest in the real & personal
    property of her late husband, Shadrack Sudbury, who died [in] 1859, leaving to
    Complainant call of his real & personal property during her natural life or
    widowhood, and at Complainant's death or marriage, the same to be divided
    between his three children Jeremiah W. Sudbury, John B. Sudbury & Sarah
    Frances Sudbury (now Farmer) wife of said Benjamin Farmer, and in
    consideration of the deed executed by Complainant to them conveying the before
    mentioned life estate which is here filed, marked Exhibit "A" as part of this bill
    (which need not be copied) they each executed their several bonds by which they
    bound themselves to pay to your Complainant, the sum of one hundred dollars
    each annually, the first payment to be due the 1st of January 1860, and on the
    same day of each succeeding, the like amount during her natural life.

    Complainant states that by the terms of the before mentioned sale of her life
    interest to the said parties as shown by said deed she reserved a lien on the
    property conveyed to secure the payment of the said lien of one hundred each
    annually, and further that afterwards the said Jeremiah Sudbury as executor to
    said Shadrack Sudbury deceased filed a bill in this Honorable Court against John
    B. Sudbury et al. for the purpose of dividing said property among the children of
    the said deceased husband of the Complainant.

    That at the January Term 1861 of said Court a final decree was rendered in the
    cause, by which 91 1/3 acres of the land consigned free to J.W. Sudbury &
    children & the title [vested?] in him and his children, according to the terms of
    said [bill?], by which J.B. Sudbury had only a life estate, but a lien was also
    reserved in the decree on said land in favor of Complainant to secure the payment
    of the before mentioned annuity to Complainant.

    She also states that the Bond executed to her by John B. Sudbury here filed
    marked Exhibit "B" (which need not be copied) has not been complied with, and
    that the sum for which he is thus bound has not been paid to Complainant
    annually, and that a large sum of money is due her on said bond, [say?] between
    six hundred and one thousand dollars remains due and unpaid, that Elizabeth
    Yates, William H., Milly [Emeline?], James, Robert, John and Virginia are the
    Christian names of the children of John B. Sudbury, and that they are minors,
    that on the 3d day of December, 1867, the said John B. Sudbury did fraudulently
    make a conveyance of the before mentioned land (on which Complainant has a
    lien for the payment of said annuity) as well as part of a cotton gin and [press?],
    hogs, mules, cattle and sheep, and a growing crop of cotton and corn, to the
    Defendant, A.M. Roberts, for the ostensible purpose of securing the defendant
    James B. Powell, the beneficiary in said deed of trust, a copy of which deed is
    herewith filed marked Exhibit "C", made a part of this bill (but which need not
    be copied), that said conveyance was fraudulent, and made for the purpose of
    delaying Complainant from collecting her annuity, and to hinder and delay
    creditors generally in the collection of their debts, and that the same contains
    provisions which render it void upon its face.

    In consideration of the premises, Complainant prays that John B. Sudbury,
    William H. Sudbury, Milly E. Sudbury, James Sudbury, Robert Sudbury, John
    Sudbury and Virginia Sudbury, be made parties defendant to this bill, the last
    mentioned seven of whom are minors, as designated and described in the caption
    thereof, that copy and [?] be issued to them requiring them to answer each and all
    of the allegations in this bill, as if specially interrogated thereto (answer under
    each being hereby waived) returnable to the august rules of this Court, that cost of
    attachment, issue directing the land described in Exhibit "C" to be attached and
    held subject to the order of this Court, that Guardian ad-litem to answer for the
    minor defendants above named [sic], that at final hearing of this cause, your
    Honor will decree said deed of trust to be void and of no force, and will direct the
    lien of the Complainant to be enforced upon it, that your Honor will direct an
    account to be taken [to] ascertain the amount due her, and that you will direct a
    sale on a credit of seven months, of the land in question, or of so much of it as
    may be necessary to pay Complainant the sums due her and for general relief your
    Complainant will ever pray. This is the first application for writ of attachment.
    -- Moss & Skeffington, Solicitors

    It's a humble truth that there are two sides to every story, and at present the author of
    this history does not have the benefit of John's response to Susannah's allegations.
    However, the bill quoted above raises some interesting issues, and prompts some
    speculation as to how John found himself in such an unpleasant situation. Clearly
    John was not the businessman that his brother Jeremiah was. However, it seems odd
    that the court decree of 1861 would have vested Jeremiah with free and clear title to
    his share of the inherited land, while leaving John with only a life estate, for which
    he was obligated to pay Susannah a substantial annuity. The Civil War undoubtedly
    complicated John's financial life, with his brief service in the Army of Tennessee.

    Susannah's lawsuit against John, which began in 1868, lasted almost nine years.
    Glenn Boyd has indicated that more than 50 pages of documents related to this
    proceeding are to be found in the Dyer County Courthouse in Dyersburg. Certainly
    the dispute must have been a terrible emotional and financial drain on John and his
    family. In any event, Glenn tells us that the Supreme Court of Tennessee on
    February 13, 1877, brought an end to the lawsuit by issuing a decree that John's life
    estate be sold. The sale in fact took place on May 7, 1877 (with an official report of
    the sale being issued on August 8, 1877).

    Within a few months after the sale of his property in May 1877, John and his wife
    Susan, together with most of their children, left Tennessee for good and moved to
    Milam County, Texas. John and Susan are listed as living in Milam County in the
    records of the 1880 U.S. census, with three of their children, Millie, John W., and
    Virginia, still at home. John is identified as a farmer, while Susan is said to have
    been keeping house. (The property on which they were living at the time was
    situated next to property occupied by Joseph Gabriel Sudbury and his wife, Jane.
    Joseph (entry 1632-2) was the son of John's cousin, James Anthony Sudbury.) On
    November 6, 1879, according to Glenn Boyd, John registered his cattle brand in
    Milam County and listed his post office box as Rockdale. (The brand was "JBS",
    with the J and B sharing the same vertical line.) By 1881, John had acquired some
    land in the Rockdale area.

    Although nothing further is really known about the lives of John and Susan in the
    1880s, it is clear that by late 1888, John and Susan had died. This is indicated by a
    deed, housed in the records of the Milam County courthouse in Cameron, evidencing
    the purchase of John's land by his son, Robert J. Sudbury. The deed recites that
    Robert has purchased the inherited interests of each of his siblings for the collective
    sum of fifty dollars, and describes the land as follows:

    The first tract being a part of the original A. Carter Sr. original [sic] survey contain
    -ing 901A acres conveyed [Simon?] E. Sudbury by the deed of H. Tocket
    bearing date 17th day of December 1878 and recorded in book E 1 vol. Record of
    Deeds of Milam County Texas pp. 328 & 329. The other of said tracts being part
    of Jose Leal 6 league survey containing 40 & 47/100 acres conveyed to J.B.
    Sudbury by the deed of Mary E. Allbee and her husband Bernard Allbee bearing
    date 29th day of August A.D. 1881 recorded in the records of Milam County
    Texas in Vol. 9 on pages 41 & 42.

    In addition to describing the nature and extent of John's land, and the date he
    acquired the smaller 40-acre parcel, the deed raises some interesting questions. Who
    was the "Simon E. Sudbury" who acquired the 90-acre parcel from H. Tocket in
    1878? Was there actually some real (and to the author of this history unknown)
    individual by that name? Or was it possibly an assumed name by which John sought
    some anonymity from the inquiries of Tennessee creditors? Glenn Boyd is of the
    opinion that the word which appears to be "Simon" is almost certainly "Susan",
    John's wife, whose middle initial was "E".

    Unfortunately, the burial places of John and Susan are unknown to us today. Glenn
    Boyd's best guess is that they died and were buried in Milam County, near Rockdale,
    possibly in the Sandy Creek Cemetery, in graves that are now unmarked.
    _______________________________________________________________________

    John married Susan E Jackson on 17 Dec 1846 in Williamson Co., Tennessee. Susan was born in 1825 in , Williamson, Tennessee; died in in Milam, Texas. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  4. 7.  Susan E Jackson was born in 1825 in , Williamson, Tennessee; died in in Milam, Texas.

    Other Events:

    • FSID: K41S-T9W
    • Reference Number: 1491
    • Census: 5 Jul 1860, Dyersburg, Tennessee
    • Residence: 1880, Precinct 4, Milam, Texas, United States
    • Census: 22 Jun 1880, Milam County, Texas

    Children:
    1. 3. Nancy Elizabeth Sudbury was born on 16 Nov 1847 in Williamson County, Tennessee; died on 26 Sep 1923 in Okmulgee, Okmulgee, Oklahoma.
    2. William Henry Sudbury was born about 1850 in Dyer County, Tennesse; died in 1900 in Cleburne,, Arkansas.
    3. Marcella E Sudbury was born about 1852 in Dyer County, Tennesse; died in 1900 in , Stephens, Texas.
    4. James A Sudbury was born in Oct 1854 in Dyer County, Tennesse; died on 16 Dec 1924 in Dyer, Tennessee, USA.
    5. Robert Jackson Sudbury was born on 5 Jun 1856 in Dyer County, Tennesse; died in 1891 in Milam, Texas, USA.
    6. John W Sudberry was born about 1858 in Dyer County, Tennesse; died before 1889.
    7. Virginia Elizabeth Sudbury was born on 18 Dec 1863 in Dyer County, Tennesse; died on 1 Apr 1923 in Waco, Mclennan County, Texas - Bruceville, Tx; was buried in Bruceville-Moore Cemetery.
    8. Millie Sudbury was born about 1852 in Tennessee, USA; died in in Stephens, Texas, USA.


Generation: 4

  1. 12.  Shadrack R Sudbury was born on 28 Sep 1786 in Amelia, Virgina (son of Simon Wiliam Sudbury and Frances Darnavant); died on 18 May 1859 in Crockett Tennessee.

    Other Events:

    • Reference Number: 3576
    • Census: 1830, Williamson County, Tennessee
    • Census: 1840, Williamson County, Tennessee
    • Military: 21 Mar 1865, Louisvill, Kentucky; Rank of 2 LT
    • _MILT: 21 Mar 1865, Louisvillle, Kentucky; Civil War. Transfer of prisoners

    Notes:

    _______________________________________________________________________
    From the Valdo James Smith Research document, The Sudburys of Virginia and Tennessee.

    SHADRACK R. SUDBURY (1786-1859) was a patriarchal figure and landowner
    reminiscent of his grandfather Ezekiel. Both acquired extensive landholdings over a
    period of years, probably with a great deal of hard work. Each suffered the loss of his
    first wife, and went on to marry and have additional children with a second wife.

    One uncertainty about Shadrack is the date of his birth. Gladys Sudbury Alison gives
    the date as September 28, 1786, but the accuracy of Gladys' information in this regard
    is subject to question, since she also states that he was born at sea, en route to
    America, while it is clear that he was born in Amelia County, Virginia. However,
    some support for the birthdate of late 1786 is given by the 1850 Tennessee census, in
    which Shadrack is listed as being 73 years of age.

    It is interesting to speculate why William and Frances would name their first son
    Shadrack, and their second son Ezekiel. It might have been expected that the name
    "Ezekiel", after William's father, would have been given to their first born son. Was
    "Shadrack" also a family name, perhaps that of William's grandfather, or Frances's
    father or grandfather? Glenn Boyd has also done some thinking about this subject, and
    writes:

    One speculation I have just come across about Shadrack's name is that there was a
    Shadrack Dunnivant contemporary with Shadrack Sudbury. Was this his maternal
    grandfather or maybe an uncle? Certainly it would make sense to have the first
    son named after Frances's father (Shadrack), the second son named after
    William's father (Ezekiel) and then the third son named after William (William
    D.).

    Another question about Shadrack is the spelling of his first name. Sources for the
    spelling which would be expected to be somewhat reliable, namely his will and
    headstone, give different spellings. Whereas his will appears to record his name as
    "Shadrach", the spelling on his headstone is "Shadrack". Although the author of this
    history is not entirely convinced that "Shadrach" is not the proper spelling, the prepon-
    derance of available sources seem to spell the name with a "k", and that will therefore
    be the spelling used here.

    The earliest discovered record of Shadrack's existence is the 1820 census index for
    Virginia, where he is listed as living in Nottoway County. (The census record
    underlying this entry needs to be looked up.) By 1822, when his first child, Jeremiah,
    was born, Shadrack had married a woman named whose last name we
    do not know. In 1825, a second son, John, was born to Shadrack and Elizabeth.

    In late 1829 or early 1830, Shadrack and his family left Virginia and migrated to
    Tennessee, where they settled in Williamson County, near Nashville. (Glenn Boyd
    says Shadrack is listed in a Buckingham County, Virginia deed book, in an entry dated
    November 23, 1829. Most likely the entry reflects Shadrack's sale of his property in
    preparation for his move to Tennessee.) Shadrack was probably joined in his migration
    to Tennessee by his younger brother, William D. Sudbury. Shadrack and William are
    the only Sudburys listed in the index to the 1830 Tennessee census.

    Following the 1830 census, the next public record in which Shadrack's name appears is
    related to his brother William's death in early 1836. After William died, an estate sale
    of his personal property was held, and purchases by approximately 50 individuals are
    recorded. Shadrack is one of three Sudbury family members listed among the
    purchasers. He bought, among other things, a workbench and grindstone, an oil stone,
    a compass, and a tub.

    Shadrack's wife, Elizabeth, died on August 1, 1838, according to the book Early
    Obituaries of Williamson County, Tennessee, by Louise Gillespie Lynch. The following year, on October 31, 1839, Shadrack remarried. His new bride, SUSANNAH
    POYNOR, was also from Virginia, having been born there in 1801. A daughter,
    Sarah, was born to Shadrack and Susannah in 1843.

    Shadrack and his family apparently remained in Williamson County until about 1848,
    when they relocated to Dyer County in western Tennessee, near what is now the town
    of Friendship, in Crockett County. Over the next ten years, Shadrack acquired at least
    275 acres of land, on part of which he operated a mill. He also had a partnership
    interest in a ginning and carding factory. These business ventures are briefly
    mentioned in his will. Some of the labor for these operations was undoubtedly supplied
    by the numerous slaves Shadrack owned. Gladys Sudbury Alison's history lists the
    names of his slaves: Monroe, Mary and two children, Lucinda and Tom; Jane and
    child Philip; Marion, Jeff, Eliza, Parthena and her four children, Rebecca, Mary, Mark
    and Jim; Charles, Azey and her two children, Ann and Luke; Nancy, Sally and Bytha.

    As the 1850s drew to a close, Shadrack's health declined until he was, as he stated in
    his will, "sound of mind but frail in body". According to Gladys Sudbury Alison's
    history, Shadrack died on May 18, 1859, at the age of 73. He is buried in the Mt.
    Zion Cemetery east of Friendship, Tennessee, and his gravesite and tall white
    headstone can still be visited today. (To reach the cemetery, take the Friendship-Eaton
    Road east from downtown Friendship, past old Highway 20. After a short drive, the
    road forks. Take the left fork until it crosses Mt. Zion Road. Turn right on Mt. Zion,
    which curves around to the left and into the cemetery.)

    Shadrack's will is dated February 28, 1857, with a codicil having been executed on
    May 10, 1859, eight days before his death. In his will, Shadrack left his real and
    personal property to his three children, but bequeathed to his "beloved wife Susan" a
    life estate in the property. Gladys Sudbury Alison's history refers to a quitclaim deed
    dated October 3, 1859, by which Susan relinquished her life estate to Shadrack's

    children in exchange for their promise to pay her an annuity of $300.00 per year for
    the rest of her life.

    The date and place of Susan's death are unknown at this time. Although she is listed in
    the 1860 census as living alone somewhere in Dyer County, she does not appear in the
    1870 Tennessee census. Sudbury family tradition holds that Susan's only child, Sarah
    Sudbury Farmer, and her husband eventually left Tennessee to settle in Arkansas.
    Research may reveal that Susan joined them there.
    _______________________________________________________________________

    Shadrack married Elizabeth Jackson. Elizabeth was born on 7 Jun 1802 in Halifax, Virginia, United States; died on 1 Aug 1838 in Williamson, Williamson, Tennessee, United States. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 13.  Elizabeth Jackson was born on 7 Jun 1802 in Halifax, Virginia, United States; died on 1 Aug 1838 in Williamson, Williamson, Tennessee, United States.

    Other Events:

    • Reference Number: 3577

    Children:
    1. 6. John Barney Sudbury was born in 1826 in Nottoway County, Virginia; died in 1880 in Milam, Sabine, Texas.
    2. Jeremiah William Sudbury was born in 1822; died in 1866.
    3. William Sudberry was born in 1823.




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If you have questions or problems with this site, please email me. Every effort has been made in order to document all sources. In some areas we have made speculative inclusions based on the best information available.