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 LEWIS AT LOTT'S CREEK  as sent to Ruth Hester by Sherry Sullivan

JOHN LANIER  m. Elizabeth Bird, dau of Thomas and Mary Bird.

BIRD THOMAS LANIER, b. abt. 1703,Surry Co., Va.
Son of John And Elizabeth Bird Lanier.
m. Mary (?Madison?)
It is believed Bird Thomas went to Ga. with his brother, Lemuel,
as THE ORIGINAL SETTLERS OF GEORGIA, by ?White, lists Bird
Thomas among the eighteen original settlers of Georgia.

LEMUEL LANIER, son of Bird Thomas and Mary Bird b. abt. 1729
Brunswick Co., Va.  d. abt. 1770 in Duplin County. VA? or GA?
m. Sarah Hardy? Found two sons Lewis and John

LEWIS LANIER,  son of Lemuel and Sarah Hardy(?)
b. 1753  Lotts Creek., N.C. moved to Bulloch County, Ga. He
was a Cornet in the Revolution. m. Margaret ? b. Bulloch Co., Ga.
1760. Still living in 1830 on their Homestead they settled in 1788
on Lotts Creek in Bulloch Co.
Children:
1.John b. 1778 d. between 1850 & 1860Bulloch Co., Ga
m. Nancy FitzPatrick, dau of William  FitzPatrick and Lucy Brown.
The family dropped the Fitz prefix and may be found  as Patrick.
2.   Fredrick Lanier , b. 1780 N.C., d. Sept. 13, 1845, Bulloch Co. Ga.
3.   Margaret, b. 1782, m. Sherrod McCall
4. Elizabeth b. 1784 m. Joseph Fletcher
5. Benjamin, 1786 m. Sarah Pridgen - they had a son, Louis (or Lewis Lanier)

LEWIS/LOUIS
http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~crackerbarrel/Lanier.html
- (Website of Spessard Stone)
1860 Florida Census, Hillsbough County, Household #230, Fort Meade
1880 Florida Census, Polk County, 3rd, 2nd & 6th Election Precincts,
page 44, Household #273/274


His name is also spelled "Lewis".  He was a Pioneer settler of Fort Meade.
Spessard Stones websites states the following:

Louis Lanier, a pioneer settler of Fort Meade, Florida, was a cattle
rancher, merchant, and founding father of Fort Meade.

Benjamin Lanier, father of Louis, was born in 1786 in Duplin County,
North Carolina; subsequently, he migrated to Bulloch County, Georgia
where for many years he was a justice of the peace. Later he removed
to Madison County, Florida where he died in August of 1854. In Bulloch
County on September 24, 1805, he had married Sarah Pridgen, daughter
of Luke and Amelia (Bowen) Pridgen. Louis, the subject of this sketch,
 was the third of twelve children. His siblings were: Nancy Ann (Mrs.
 John R. Miller), Gibson S., Luke Pridgen, Andrew Jackson, David S.,
 Lucinda (Mrs. Robert McKinney), Harriet (Mrs. Lawrence Farrell), Rowan J.,
 Jane (Mrs. Joshua J. Kemps), Frederick S., and Francis.


Louis Lanier, whose given name also is spelled as Lewis, was born August
9, 1809, probably in Screven County, Georgia. About 1830, he married Mary
Lucretia Ross, born ca. 1810 in Georgia. By 1843,the couple was living in
Columbia County, Florida as Louis' name appeared on a voter registration
list at Moses Barber's Precinct, dated May 1, 1843.

About 1848, the Laniers moved to Hillsborough County, Florida where they
first lived on the Alafia River. In September of 1848, Louis was appointed
as a road commissioner of District 4, Alafia. He was an inspector and voted
at the Alafia Precinct on October 2, 1848. In April 1849, Louis, William
B. Hooker, and James Whidden, Sr. were designated as commissioners to open
a road from "Lanier's to the Indian agency on Peas Creek."

When on December 13, 1849 Gen. David E. Twiggs accepted Lt. George G.
Meade's selection of the site of an old Indian ford to build a fort to
be named after Lt. Meade as Fort Meade, there was in the region only one
white family, James W. Whidden, living (illegally) on Whidden Creek (named
for James W.), south of Fort Meade. Before October 1851, the families of Francis
M. and John R. Durrance (brothers) had settled four to six miles northwest of
 Fort Meade.

Then in late 1852, Francis A. "Berry" Hendry and his wife Ardeline, younger
daughter of Louis, moved to Fort Meade. Soon after, Louis, too, relocated there.
 Hendry and Lanier first lived in the garrison. The former homesteaded later one
 and one-half miles north of Fort Meade, on what became known as the "Berry Hendry"
 branch of the Peace River. September 1853 opened with Louis erecting a
 dwelling 800 yards from the post on the river.

Others followed. James L. Whidden, son of James W., by March 1853 was living
two miles west of the fort. Cuthbert, older daughter of Louis, and her husband,
John I. Hooker, came with John purchasing the fort property, abandoned in
November- December 1854.

During the summer of 1854, Louis and Francis A. Hendry served as scouts for
Lieutenants Benson and Hartsuff to find a site for a new fort, Fort Thompson.
That he knew the land can be proved as a letter by Lt. A. J. Cook, dated Fort
Myers, June 16, 1853, in which Cook in mentioning "Lanier the beef contractor,"
stated that Louis had about May 17 come down with a drove of cattle.

From October 22, 1855 to June 1, 1856, Louis held a contract for surveying from
John Westcott, Surveyor General of Florida. An official record shows that he
surveyed slightly over 210 miles, for which he was paid $843.30. This same document
 noted by his name, "Four townships sent up, obliged to quit the field on account
 of Indian hostilities."

The Third Seminole War had commenced, and Louis served in Capt. Hooker and
Kendrick's companies. On July 8, 1856, he chaired a meeting at Fort Meade,
in which protection was sought. John I. Hooker, his son-in-law, allowed the
military to use the facilities of the fort and the settlers to seek refuge
there.

Louis was at this time a perennial candidate for public office. In October
1851, he lost a county commission seat by one vote to Joseph Howell. In 1853,
he placed fourth for a county com mission seat. 1855 found him losing a race
for county surveyor as a Know Nothing, but on October 5, 1857, as a Democrat,
he finally triumphed when his fellow citizens elected him county surveyor.
On January 7, 1861, he was appointed as a school trustee at Fort Meade.
April 1861 saw his third place finish for county surveyor.

He engaged in various activities. In 1858, he opened a general store. On
March 16, 1860, he was appointed as the first postmaster of Fort Meade and
served until 1862 with the postoffice being in his store. In September 1859,
he acquired 160 acres on the bridge. In 1860 he was operating a sawmill,
which he had built by his neighbor, C. Q. Crawford. The Peas Creek correspondent
for the Florida Peninsular of February 4, 1860 lauded Louis for his energy and
enterprise as formerly plank had to be hauled from Tampa.

The 1860 Hillsborough County Census enumerated the Laniers in household 230,
Fort Meade. Living with the couple was Louis' 37-year-old sister, Harriet Farrell,
a seamstress. Close neighbors included the families of Edward T. Kendrick, John I.
 Hooker, C. Q. Crawford, D. Waldron, George W. Hendry, Francis A. Hendry. A
 distant neighbor was Mary Lanier, the 34-year-old widow of Luke P. Lanier.
 In February 1861, county division resulted in the creation of Polk County,
 in which Louis now lived.

During the Civil War, Louis continued his acquisition of property, buying
several tracts. The death of his son-in-law, John I. Hooker, on January 2,
1862, led to his appointment as administrator of the estate, which included
5,000 cattle and eight slaves. The 1863 Polk County Tax List showed that Louis
 was the master of eight slaves. From late 1863 to war's end, he was one of
 the large cattlemen who assisted in the procuring and shipment of South Florida
 cattle to the Confederate Army. Francis A. Hendry, his son-in-law, was captain
 of a cow cavalry company based at Fort Meade.

After the war, Louis moved to Fort Ogden, Manatee County (now DeSoto County).
On April 2, 1866, he sold part of his Fort Meade property for $3,000 to Francis
 A. Hendry. At Fort Ogden, he continued in the cattle business. 1872 Manatee
 tax records listed Louis with 1,000 cattle.

The Florida Peninsular of October 27, 1869 stated: "We learn that Capt.
Lewis Lanier, a large stock owner, living near Ft. Ogden, has gone to New
Orleans to purchase a large schooner to be engaged in carrying cattle from
Ft. Ogden to Havana. Success to the enterprise."

Frederick S. Lanier, a brother of Louis, had after the war moved from Madison
County to Fort Ogden. As related in South Florida Pioneers 7, he owned half-interest
 in the schooner, Laura Whether or not this was the one Louis contemplated
 purchasing hasn't been learned at this time, but in late 1875 the Laura
 returned from a cattle shipping expedition from Key West without Frederick,
  its captain. The crewmen reported that he had fallen off ship on October
  17, 1875, near Key West. Suspicion of foul play seemed to be thereafter
  confirmed when one seaman committed suicide while another went insane.

Having presumably disposed of his cattle, Louis and Lucretia relocated
in the late summer of 1873 to Fort Myers where Ardeline and Francis A.
Hendry now lived. Louis purchased the stock of Manuel A. Gonzalez's small
store and opened a general store. He thrived with customers, not only with
new settlers and cowboys passing to and from Punta Rassa, but also the Seminoles,
with whom he traded goods for alligator hides, deer skins, and bird plumes.
 Lt. R. H. Pratt in an August 1879 report on the condition of the Seminole
 Indians in Florida cited Louis Lanier of Fort Meade as being particularly
 interested and informed in regard to the Seminoles. Mrs. Lanier had a
 boarding house, the first in Fort Myers.

The only personal description of Louis Lanier that this writer found was
given by Ida English (1866-1948), a niece of Francis A. Hendry in The
Story of Fort Myers:

"He was a big, gruff man and all us children were afraid of him. One day
my mother [Mrs. Jehu J. Blount nee Mary Jane Hendry] sent me over to his
store to buy some flour. There was a fence around his place with a gate
at the walk. When I entered, I forgot to close the gate behind me.
Mr. Lanier was standing in the door of his store and when he saw the open
gate he yelled, "Shut that damn gate and shut it damned quick!" That was
the first time I had ever heard such terrible profanity and I was shocked
to death. I ran home crying and sobbing in my mother's arms for hours.
 Weeks passed before she could persuade me to go to the store again."

Ida's father, Jehu J. Blount, later bought Louis' stock, and Louis and
Lucretia returned to Fort Meade. The moved was realized, probably in 1879,
 as Harriet Stroud (Louis' remarried sister) in a letter, dated April 15,
 1879, to her sister, Nancy Miller of Ellaville, Fla., wrote that Louis
 and his wife were in Fort Meade where he'd bought a place and thought
 he would stay there. The 1880 census of Polk County, dated 23rd day of
 June, 1880, page no. 44, 3rd, 2nd, and 6th Election Precincts, which
 included the Village of Fort Meade, listed in household 273/274 Louis
 and Lucretia Lanier. His occupation was given as farming; hers as
 keeping house.  Noted of her was she had erysipelas. Living with them
 was Matilda Byrd, a white 19-year-old servant.

Louis Lanier died of congestive chill, apparently, on November 23, 1884
and was buried in Evergreen Cemetery, Fort Meade. A Mason, he was an 1865
charter member of Bartow Lodge No. 9. Sara Nell Gran, a descendant of the
Laniers, in a telephone conversation with this writer on April 8, 1989
related that the family had been unable to locate the grave of Lucretia Lanier.

Issue of Louis and Lucretia Lanier:

1. Frederick Lanier, born 1831; died in childhood.

2. Cuthbert Wayne C. Lanier, born March 8, 1833; died February 16,
1894, Tampa; married (1) on February 1, 1849 John Irving Hooker (1822-62);
(2) October 13, 1864, Julius Rockner (1839-77). By her first marriage
she had two sons and a daughter, Mary Ellen Hooker (1858-1912),
 whose husband was Stephen M. Sparkman, U. S. Congressman from 1895-1917.

3. Ardeline Ross Lanier, born May 10, 1835; died September 6, 1917, Fort Myers;
married on March 25, 1852 Francis Asbury Hendry, son of James Edward and Lydia
(Carlton) Hendry.


References: Canter Brown, Jr., who provided most of the research data used
 to compile this profile; Karl Grismer, The Story of Fort Myers; miscel.
  data from South Florida Pioneers including "Frederick S. Lanier 1829-1875,"
   # 7, pp. 33-34, January 1976.

This profile is adapted from The Herald-Advocate, June 28, 1989.




6. Lewis___

LEWIS LANIER, b. 1789 Lotts Creek, Bulloch County, Ga.
m. Celete Pridgen. They were both buried on their old Homestead
on Old Savannah Road, on the west side of Ogeechee River(From Ga. Mortality Records)
Children were:
1. Mitchell Lanier b. Bulloch Co., Ga d. before 1880
     married Lavinia Lee b. 1812, Ga.
2. Thomas Carlton b. July 4, 1814 d. Mar. 28, 1900
     married Frances Ann Newton g-grand daughter of Benjamin Lanier.
3.  Hardy Lanier b. June 16, 1817 m. Mary Ann Gay b. May 2, 1834.
      He was a Justice of Peace in Bulloch County, Ga for many years

(Anyone look familiar?)





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