CALLAHAN AND PHILLIPS FAMILY LINES IN ARKANSAS, TEXAS AND OKLAHOMA
A true history of Itawamba County predates
the organization of the county by nearly 300 years. Most all of the published
histories of Itawamba County claim that settlers first came to Itawamba County
during the 1830s. It is true that the 1830s saw the largest influx of settlers
to this country, but according to historical research, many settlers were here
as early as the 18th century.
According to historical research, the
first Europeans to come into present-day northeast Mississippi were the
Spanish, when in 1540, Hernando Desoto entered this area near Columbus. He and
his men spent the winter of 1541 near present-day Pontotoc.
The next record of Europeans in northeast Mississippi
was in 1736 when the French, under the leadership of Bienville, came to this
area. He and 600 soldiers passed through Cotton Gin Port, on their way to the
Chickasaw town of Ackia, three miles northwest of Tupelo. When the French
arrived at Ackia, the British flag was displayed by the Indians. This shows
that the British were here as early as the 1730s, most probably British traders
who had commerce with the Chickasaws.
In the later 1700s, middle Tennessee and
the Natchez area were quite settled. An old Indian trail was used by the
settlers as a link between the two areas. This trail was cleared in 1802 by the
Federal government and became known as the Natchez Trace. This link between the
two settlements cut through much of Itawamba County. The Federal government
encouraged stands (inns) to be constructed along the trail in the Chickasaw
lands, to make traveling easier.
Prior to the organization of Itawamba
County, the Chickasaw Nation was divided into four districts. Present-day
Itawamba County was in William McGilvray's district. McGilvray, known as
Coahoma, lived six miles southwest of present-day Fulton. In a letter from J.N.
Walton to Harry Warren, dated Aberdeen, Mississippi, 5 May 1881, Mr. Walton
wrote: "McGilivray was a very old man, had served under Washington, and
was commissioned by him as a captain in the United States Army and stationed at
Fort Pitt - now Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, in the old war (American
Revolution)."
Another prominent English name in the
pre-county days was Colbert. James Logan Colbert came into the Chickasaw Nation
with British traders around 1736. He married a Chickasaw. One of his sons,
Levi, became the acting chief of the Chickasaws sometime after 1750.
When Levi was a young man, some Indians
from other tribes (possibly the Choctaw) intended to invade the Chickasaw
country. Young Colbert heard about this and banded together some Chickasaw
warriors. They surprised the enemy and defeated them. Upon returning, a council
of the nation was called and a new name and crown were awarded to Levi. Instead
of sitting him flat on the ground (as was the custom), they furnished him with
a small bench, and the new name Itte-wamba Mingo, or "Bench Chief"
was given to him.
The Colbert family became quite prominent
in the Chickasaw Nation. Most of the Colberts moved with other Chickasaws west
to the new Chickasaw lands in 1835-36 but some stayed after Itawamba County was
organized.
Atop Baptist Church Hill in present-day
Mantachie, a gentle breeze blows through the granite monuments in Mantachie
Cemetery. These monuments stand watch over the fertile Mantachie Creek bottom
lands to the west where the monuments to Itawamba's first people have been
located for hundreds of years. The monuments to the mighty Chickasaws are in
the form of burial mounds in the rich bottom lands covered in cotton and
soybeans.
In these rich bottom lands, one of the
largest Chickasaw villages in northeast Mississippi was settled hundreds of
years ago. This village was located near a creek, which was named Man-at-chee,
in honor of a Chickasaw chieftain. Nearly a mile below the village, a creek ran
into Man-at-chee from the hills to the east. This creek was named Ches-ta-na,
in honor the the Chickasaw who farmed the land in 1832 when the Federal
government surveyed the Chickasaw Nation.
Who were these first inhabitants of
Itawamba County? One European observer in the 18th century called the
Chickasaws the "Spartans" of the lower Mississippi valley, for "martial
virtue, and not riches." Before exposure to European ways, Chickasaw
men were fighters and hunters. Only occasionally did they take part in
agriculture. Their slaves and the women performed the menial work of clearing
the land, caring for crops and gathering firewood. These people were "tall,
well-built people with reddish-brown skin, dark black hair and large dark
eyes." The older men and women wore their hair long. The warrior
shaved the sides of his head, leaving a crest which the wearer soaked in bear
grease. Both women and men plucked all hair from their faces and bodies with
tweezers made of wire, the color and design indicating their family
association. They wore nose and ear ornaments and decorated their heads and
shoulders with eagle feathers.
The men in the village wore a breechcloth
and in the heat of the summer their only clothing was a shirt made of dressed
dear skin. Many of the hunters in the Mantachie Creek bottom lands wore
deerskin boots reaching to the thigh to protect against thorny thickets and
brambles. The women of the village wore dresses made from skins sewed together
with fish bone needles and deer sinews. After cloth was introduced to the
Chickasaw Nation, native women made a loose petticoat, fastened with a leather
belt and brass buckle.
The Chickasaw Nation population ranged between
3,500 and 4,500, making it a relatively small Indian community when compared to
the Choctaws to the south. Most of the Chickasaws lived near the headwaters of
the Tombigbee River where their settlement remained until the Federal
government removed the tribe to Indian Territory in the 1830s.
As early as the 1700s, white men including
traders and missionaries were pushing into the Chickasaw Nation of northeast
Mississippi. These white people introduced their culture to the Chickasaws and
this changed the lifestyle of the Chickasaw over a period of time. The new
Chickasaw society of the late 1700s and early 1800s consisted of Indians, white
and Negroes (African slaves were introduced to the Chickasaws during the 1750s
by British traders). By 1810, white settlers were entering the Chickasaw Nation
in staggering numbers. During the year of 1810, the Chickasaw agent reported
four to five thousand white intruders were scattered in settlements on
Chickasaw lands. For the next 20 years, the white man became more than a
problem to the Indian - he was a threat to actual existence. As late as 1830,
agents revealed that for several years intruders had planted corn and cotton on
Chickasaw land and that each winter they had pastured herds of cattle in the
Indians' territory. Intruders poached prime timber and were accused of stealing
Indian cattle, horses, slaves, and other property. They were also accused of
carrying on a whiskey trade with the Indians. Only occasionally did the Federal
government act to protect the Chickasaws. In 1828 a Chickasaw was tied to a
tree by several white settlers who "whipped him most unmercifully"
in a dispute over livestock. The situation was so bad that the Chickasaws
signed a treaty in 1830, but it was never ratified by the senate. This treaty
served as an entering wedge for the white people who began pressing into the
Chickasaw country of Mississippi. The government became impatient to meet the
wishes of the white man and to convince the Indians that their best interests
required immediate removal.
Finally, on 20 October 1832, the Treaty of
Pontotoc was signed at the Chickasaw Council House on Pontotoc Creek. The
preamble of the treaty showed the sentiments of the Chickasaws: "The Chickasaw
Nation find themselves oppressed in their present situation by being made
subject to the laws of the sates in which they reside. Being ignorant of the
language of the laws of the white man, they cannot understand or obey them.
Rather than submit to this great evil, they prefer to seek a home in the west
where they may live and be governed by their own laws."
The treaty called for all Chickasaw land
to be surveyed. The white people continued to overrun the Chickasaw country and
destroy the peace and happiness of the Indians long before the survey was
completed, or plans made for their removal. The United States Marshall for
Mississippi posted notices warning white squatters to remove from the Chickasaw
Nation by 15 November 1833. Not one person obeyed that command as no steps were
taken by the government to enforce the order, more settlers began moving to the
Chickasaw Nation.
James Colbert, brother of Chief Itawamba,
tried to induce the United States Secretary of War to protect the Chickasaws.
In his letter to Washington, DC, he wrote: "The fate of the Chickasaw
people requires that some person should interpose in their behalf...A host of
speculators are going over the country and have fired all the half breeds to
interpret for them and give them five or ten dollars for each contract they
make; they used every stratagem they can devise and practice every imposition
on their ignorance...they have signed deeds, most of them blank ones and
receive from five to ten dollars in advance...I beseech you to have care over
our red children; the white men are cheating them out of their land."
Before the Indian removal period of the
later 1830s, most Chickasaws continued to live on the tribe's drastically
reduced territory in northeast Mississippi. They relied upon agriculture for a
living. The full bloods seemed content to subsist from the production of beans,
corn, squash, pumpkins and melons tended by the women and children. An economic
survey of the Chickasaw Nation was taken in 1827. The survey revealed that the
typical full blood household contained five members and owned two horses, two
cows, five hogs and a small flock of poultry. The Chickasaws lived in frontier
log cabins, consisting of walls formed by hewed timbers placed horizontally and
sealed against the weather with mud daub, a puncheon floor, and gable roof
covered, with split shakes. The fireplace was located against an end wall. The
chimney was made of split sticks placed in a square and plastered inside and
out with clay found in the area.
The period 1834 to 1837 was a busy time
for the Chickasaws. Speculation companies were formed to negotiate for vast
blocks of tribal land. These companies bought most of the Chickasaw land,
paying anywhere from $1.25 to $1.60 an acre. By early 1837, when the Chickasaw
leaders finally made an decision about their people's new western home, much of
their lands were already occupied by white settlers, and the year before, the
state officials in Mississippi had organized Itawamba County, as well as nine
other counties from the Indian lands.
During the summer and autumn of 1837,
Federal officials enrolled 4,000 Chickasaws and concentrated them in four
emigration camps in northwestern Alabama and northern Mississippi. William
McGilvray's district, which included most of Itawamba County, was very much
opposed to removal.
Records reveal that the Chickasaw
migration to their new Indian Territory west of the Mississippi continued until
1850. As late as April 1841, Federal officials in Mississippi reported that
over 500 Chickasaws remained to be relocated in the new Indian Territory. Small
parties, sometimes consisting of a single family, continued to move into the
new Indian Territory as late as 1850.
The rattling of wagons, and voices of the
drivers announced the approaching caravan that was to take these native
Itawambians to their new homes in the west. Giving a last look at their humble
cabins and the beautiful hills and valleys of Itawamba, they turned towards the
caravan and loaded all of their meager belongings into the wagons. The women
and children mounted their ponies and with sad hearts the families joined the
procession leaving the land of their forefathers headed for a distant and
strange land. It was truly a trail of tears.
The land for Itawamba County and nine
other counties was secured from the Chickasaws by the Treaty of Pontotoc on 12
October 1832, but the Chickasaws were given time to move and could decide for
themselves when they would leave for Indian Territory. Most of them left during
the years of 1835 to 1839.
On February 9, 1836, the Mississippi
Legislature divided the land secured from the Chickasaws into counties. On
February 14, 1836, the Legislature appointed commissioners in each of the ten
newly created counties to get the counties organized. The commissioners
appointed for Itawamba County were James Rowland, William Coats, Lewis Gideon
and David Walker. As instructed by the Legislature, these commissioners called
for an election and five men were elected: James Spears Bourland, Alfred G.
Lane, John Beene, S.S. Spearman and Eliba Allen. These men were known as the
Board of Police.
The Board of Police called an election and
the following men were elected as officers for the new county of Itawamba:
Charles Warren, sheriff; C.H. Ritchie, probate judge; Lewis Gideon, probate
clerk and Russell O. Beene, circuit clerk.
With the organization of the county came a
large influx of trans-Appalachain settlers. The 1836 tax list of the county
shows there were approximately 280 families living in Itawamba County.
The Board of Police were empowered by the
Legislature to select the site of county government, which was to be in the
center of the county, if a suitable location, and to acquire this location
either by purchase or donation.
A deed recorded in Deed Book 1, Page 53,
shows that a Chickasaw sold Section 25, Township 9, Range 8 East to Kenneth
Clark, John Miller and Robert Miller, land speculators living in adjoining
Pontotoc County. They, in turn, donated 50 acres of this land to the Board of
Police for the site of county government on July 17, 1837. The new site of
county government was named Fulton and by 1838 lots were being sold in this new
town. John Thompson was the first postmaster for the site of county government.
Some of the first lot buyers in the new village of Fulton were John M. Cox,
David Patrick, Wiley W. Gaither, James C. Wright, Edward Moore, John R. Wren,
William Peacock, John L. Collins, David Files, William Files, Lemuel Beene,
Joseph Calvin Clark, William Eckford, Wiley D. Clifton and John Thompson.
Before Fulton was organized, county government affairs were conducted in
private homes and stores including the store house of Elisha Thomas at Van
Buren on the Tombigbee River and the home of James Spears Bourland in the
Cardsville community.. After Fulton was organized county government business
was conducted in private stores and residences in Fulton. As late as January of
1838, circuit court was held in the "ward house" of Duncan Clarke,
Esq. in the new village of Fulton. It is not known when the first courthouse
was built in Fulton, but records show that there was a courthouse in Fulton
before 1843. More than likely it was a typical pioneer wooden structure.
Most of the early settlers in Itawamba
County were from the hill regions of Alabama, Georgia, South Carolina and
Tennessee. These people were from places were slavery was practically
non-existent. Consequently few slaves were in Itawamba County. Circuit Court
records show a man being tried in 1837 for "bringing a Negro woman, Tabby,
into the county and selling her. He was not convicted because slavery, even
though unpopular with many Itawambians ns, was legal in Mississippi.
Upon entering Itawamba County from
long-settled areas, many people had a hard time adjusting to the new territory.
In 1839, Josiah Hinds of Itawamba County wrote in his diary: "We are
among strangers in a strange land, and in a wilderness, where but a short time
since, was heard the yell of the savage, and where the hoot of the owl and
prowl of the wolf is still heard. We are almost in the woods - one cabin only
to shelter us and our little ones and a rail pen for a smoke house and
kitchen...no churches for the worship of God."
Henry Wiygul came to Itawamba in 1832 from
Cotton Gin Port in neighboring Monroe County. On 11 November 1925, William
Wiygul wrote: "In 1832 Granpa Wiygul decided he would move up into the
wild woods where Itawamba County now is. He got him an ox and a sack of
something to eat and started on an ox to blaising out his road wright up the
ridge. He went back and got his family. He had a yoak of stears and a waggon
and put his household stuff on it. He was living in Monroe County then. It was
a county. In the early fall of 1832 he started. he soone got out of Monroe
County into the wilderness where no one lived but Indians. He got to the end of
his road and settled. He lived there in a Indian hut about two yeares. he then
built a house out of logs."
In 1841 members of the Tannahill family of
Scotland immigrated to the new county of Itawamba. After coming down the
Tennessee River they landed at Easport in the new county of Tishomingo. A
letter dated January 19, 1842 from Fulton to England recollects the journey to
Itawamba County: "...on a Sunday night we landed at the town of Easport
(containing four log cabins) and the next day we started through the Forest
Track for Fulton, Mary mounted on horseback and Robert and I on foot. I carried
my gun, but got no chance to shoot. We saw some deer, but they did not allow us
to get near them. It was a most awful night at Easport. By the help of poles to
steady us, Mary and I got up the bank and got lodging that night in a cabin.
The people said they had never seen such a thunderstorm. We did not sleep much.
There was in the same room, three men and two females. This is the universal
practice here -- no separate sleeping appartments. We lay and listed to the
thunder rolling overhead and the lightning flashing through a hundred chinks in
the cabin...When we got to Mr. T's (Joshua Toomer in Fulton), we found
all our people well except Mother... There is very little money current here.
Mr. T. is glad to have the yearly accounts of the farmers settled by the cotton
which can be turned into specie at Mobile...I wrote this in my own log cabin,
which barring a few chinks is not a bad one...The country here is but thinly
settled as it is only six years since the Indians left it...We live on bread of
Indian corn which is the only kind used here. Their hogs are excellent being
fed in the woods on nuts and acorns...All men here are not merely nominally but
really equal. The other day a man was taken up here for going to shoot a
neighbour. The sheriff allowed him to go at large about the town...he rode
about the town, whooping, crowing like a cock and dared the officer at the
point of a knife to lay a hand on him...Two men have been shot in Mr. Toomer's
store.
As illustrated above, life in pioneer
Itawamba County was indeed primitive and harsh. On October 21, 1843, Josiah
Hinds wrote in his diary: "Two of our candidates for representative
took a little too much firewater at court last week and one of them concluded
to call of the dogs and quit the drive and has left the field in disgust. One
of the drunken candidates took the sand in the courthouse on Monday, and after
abusing one of our preachers at a dreadful rate, left the courthouse and made
his way to the doggery and got as drunk as Bacchus." Hinds writes in
his diary three months later: "Was at Fulton yesterday. Had to wade
through Bigby Swamp. Got wet and don't feel well. They were swilling down the
devil's firewater; saw one poor drunken fellow with his face very much
scratched and bleeding. Had been fighting..."
Houses in pioneer Itawamba County were
generally built of logs and hewn with the broad ax after being raised.
Sometimes the logs were lined on the ground and hewn, if the builder wished to
make an extra nice house. Poplar trees were widely used for pioneer house
building in Itawamba County. The floors were made of puncheons, which were logs
split the whole width of the tree and then dressed off with the adz. The
coverings for the houses were usually four feet boards usually made of cypress
or oak.
Lighting in the home during pioneer days
was very primitive. Lights for the kitchen and dining table were made by
dipping a piece of cloth cut into a string, into an earthen vessel with a small
lip, where the end of the wick rested. The vessel was filled with lard and the
end of the cloth was set afire. Tallow candles were also used for lighting.
During the 1840s very few pioneer women
worked in the fields. They worked in the house spinning thread, weaving cloth
and cooking for the usually large families. The women made all clothing for the
family. The men in the household worked in the fields, where everything needed
for home consumption was raised. Wheat was raised in abundance during the
1840s. Most farms during the early 1840s were subsistence crops and cash crops
like cotton were not raised on a wide scale until the later 1840s.
Social functions in pioneer Itawamba
County were very limited. Besides church, there were very few social functions.
"Corn Shuckings" were customary during the 1840s. It was customary for
each neighbor to make a "corn shucking." Neighbors were invited and
they would come in crowds, to shuck all the neighbor's corn. The women usually
quilted while the children played around the house. These functions usually
lasted well into the night.
During the early 1840s as more settlers
moved into the county, stores, blacksmith shops, doctor's offices and lawyer's
offices opened up, mainly in Fulton and in Van Buren on the Tombigbee River.
Also introduced during this time was the liquor traffic. Fulton and other
communities in the county had "groceries" as they were then called,
where liquor was sold by the drink or could be bought by the gallon. During
this era at many crossroads in the county, liquor was the only item sold.
During the early 1840s, a gallon on whisky cost forty cents in Itawamba County.
One institution in pioneer Itawamba County
was the stage coach. A stage line ran through Itawamba County from Aberdeen
through Fulton, continuing north through the present-day Ryan's Well community.
When the stage coach arrived in Fulton, it created quite a stir among the
people. As the driver neared the Fulton village square, he would sound his
bugle, crack the whip and make a fast and grand entrance into the town. The
driver would stop the stage at the town inn or tavern where fresh horses would
be supplied by the innkeeper as the driver took his drink and meal in the inn.
By 1845, Fulton had become the center of
commerce in Itawamba County, surpassing the town of Van Buren on the Tombigbee
River. The town square in Fulton was used for many public events and
celebrations. A description of one such celebration is found in a copy of the
10 July 1845 edition of the Fulton Herald: "The celebration was for the
purpose of doing honor to the memory of General Andrew Jackson, seventh
president of the United States, who died on June 9, 1845 and also in
recognition of the day. It came off in a highly creditable manner. There were
about 2,000 persons present, and fully one-third of the number were ladies. All
stores were closed until after three o'clock in the afternoon and the doors
were hung with mourning. At ten o'clock the procession formed on the public
square where there was a stand erected for the speakers. Seats were provided
for the ladies and Revolutionary soldiers, also for other soldiers who had
served under General Jackson. The order of the day was then read by Mayor Cayce
after which the Rev. S. Adair, chaplain of the day, offered the prayer. Russell
O. Beene delivered the eulogy on the death of General Jackson. The flag was
stripped of its mourning and the celebration in honor of the Fourth, a day of
remembrance by all Americans, was opened with appropriate address by Mayor
Cayce after which, the Declaration of Independence was read by G.B. Gaither.
Thomas E. Wren was then introduced and he delivered the oration of the day. Mr.
Wren was a young hand at the blacksmith's bellows, but judging from his speech,
one would have taken him to have been an orator of many years' practice. The dinner
was then announced and if you had been there and cast your eyes over the tables
and had seen the luxuries in the way of pound cakes, pies, tarts, prepared by
the ladies of the town and county, and the abundance of everything else that
was palatable, you would no longer be heard to cry 'if we do not have rain in a
few days we will not have anything to eat.' In fact, after all present had
satisfied their appetites plenty was left for many more."
Fulton developed socially during the
1840s. The trappings of harsh pioneer life in the wilderness was slowly
replaced by order and organization. As early as 1843 Fulton boasted a Methodist
and Baptist Church, more than a dozen businesses and several organizations. One
such organization in early Fulton was the Fulton Temperance Society. Its
officers during 1844 were: Josiah Hinds, president; Mr. Ellis, first
vice-president, E.G. Thomas, second vice-president; Jeptha Robbins, secretary
and Will Cage, treasurer.
By the end of the 1840s decade, Itawamba
County had begun to lose most of her pioneer characteristics as more settlers
came into the county. However, during the 1850s the majority of Itawamba County
citizens were small farmers who were proud, upstanding and independent. These
hard working Itawambians had immigrated, for the most part, from the southern
highlands of Appalachia. Because of the hilly terrain of the county, Itawamba
County was not suited for large plantations, therefore there were few large
slave owners in Itawamba County. The majority of the larger farms during the
1840s and 1850s were "middle class" plantations, which did not
produce enough surplus for the owners to travel or reside elsewhere. These
plantations had from 100 to 400 acres under cultivation and from 10 to 40
slaves. Usually, these Itawamba County planters were self-made pioneers,
ex-overseers or professional men.
By 1850 Fulton had developed to become the
center of commerce in Itawamba County. Fulton boasted several businesses during
1850 including: Francis Jones Carriage Maker, Abel Warren Merchantile, B.J.
Morris Saddlemaker, Zachariah Phillips Blacksmith Shop, Tannahill Merchantile,
Garrett Christopher Grocery, Joseph & Andrew Brown Grocery, James C. Wright
Tailor, John G. Kohlheim Merchantile, Joshua Barnard Brick Mason, James Basham
Shoemaker, Mayburn Allen Carpentry, Josiah Harrison Merchantile, Thomas Rhea
Merchant and Gaither Merchantile, James Duggar Shoemaker, and The Fulton
Hearald Newspaper owned by John Massinger. The bustling village also included
five attorneys: Arthur B. Bullard, Jeptha Robins, Robert O. Maupin, John W.
Downs, and Benjamin Owen. The village was served by four physicians inlcuding
John Fletcher Booth, Samuel Vernon, John Moore, and George W. Booth. Fulton
boasted two private schools, the Fulton Female Academy run by Louisa Maupin
(located at present-day corner of Beene and North Cummings St.) and the Fulton
Male Academy (located on the present-day Fulton Cemetery lot). Fulton was
served by two inns run by Reubin Wiygul (present-day corner of Wiygul and Clifton
streets) and Albert James. The mayor of Fulton during 1850 was William Beachum
who served the village's 200 citizens.
During the early 1850s to 1860, an
Itawamba County planter class had developed. During this era, more social
functions were held, usually in the town of Fulton. Socials took the form of
barbecue picnics. Men in the town would hunt in the Tombigbee bottom lands
below the town for squirrel and wild turkey. After a day of hunting they would
bring their game back to the town square where slave men and women would
prepare the food for the scores of people who attended the social.
The members of Itawamba County's planter
class enjoyed much more leisure time than other settlers in the county. Their
spare time was devoted to hunting, reading and writing. During the 1850s, fox
hunts were popular in Fulton. The head of Itawamba County's planter class was
probably Malachai Crawford Cummings. He was a self-made planter who lived about
one mile north of the Fulton town square. He had interests in farming, milling,
stock raising and trading. Cummings and his wife, Sarah, immigrated to Itawamba
County during the 1830s and in 1839 he was elected probate judge. In 1841 he
was elected to the State Legislature and was a member of the Secession Convention
of 1860. In 1861 he represented his district in the state senate. Cummings'
home was a large two-story Greek Revival mansion that featured a large gallery
and an open balcony. During Cummings' lifetime in Itawamba County, his estate
grew to include more than 10,000 acres.
Other members of Itawamba County's planter
class included the Dabbs, Clifton, Owen, Trice, Traylor, and Taylor families,
among others.