Military History (Goodspeed)

The following is from The Goodspeed History of Tennessee, Crockett County, published by the Goodspeed Publishing Co., 1887.

Owing to its organization, Crockett, as a county, has no military annals. During the late civil war, however, three companies of infantry were organized and sent out from what now constitutes the county, as follows:

In April, 1861, a full company was organized at Bellís Depot, of which John P. Burns was elected captain; F. J. Wood, first lieutenant; W. N. Beasley, second lieutenant and A. C. Allen third lieutenant. The company joined the Twenty-seventh Regiment of Tennessee Infantry, as Company G, and with that regiment passed through the entire war, taking part in the many engagements in which it participated. After the battle of Shiloh the company was reorganized, when F. J. Wood, was chosen captain; W. N. Beasley, first lieutenant; W. B. Jones, second lieutenant; Lafayette Edwards, third lieutenant. In the reorganization of the regiment Lieut. A. C. Allen was elected major, and was killed at Atlanta, Ga., July 22, 1864. At the general surrender of the army in 1865, but three men out of the company of 107 were present, and they surrendered in different States, Lieut. W. B. Jones surrendering at Jonesboro, N. C., Frank Brigance in Mississippi, and Capt. F. J. Wood at Macon, Ga., where he was serving as provost-marshal at the time of surrender.

Of the other two companies but little can be learned. In 1861, Capt. James M. Collingsworth, took out a company which was organized at Gadsden, and was named the Gadsden Spartans. The Spartans joined the Sixth Regiment of Tennessee Infantry and remained with that regiment throughout the war. Capt. Collingsworth was succeeded as commander of the company, by William McKinney. During the same year a company was organized in the county, which was known as the Forked Deer Rangers. Under command of Capt. Clem Clay, the Rangers joined the First Regiment of Tennessee Infantry, and subsequently the Seventh Regiment of Tennessee Infantry, remaining with that organization until the close of the war. [For history of above regiments, see war chapter of State history.]

More Crockett County History

CROCKETT COUNTY AREA FIRST SETTLED IN 1824: FORMED IN 1871

Crockett County is bounded on the north by Gibson County on the east by Madison County, on the south by Haywood County and on the west by Lauderdale and Dyer Counties, and has an area of about 284 square miles. The county is situated between the south and middle forks of Forked Deer River, and the surface is level or gently undulating, with rich, fertile soil, being a yellow loam, of an average depth of about two feet.

The country around the county seat is level from three to five miles in every direction. Going north from Alamo the country is level to the county line; going south the same; going west, level for about three miles, and thence it is hilly and broken to the county line; going east it is level until Madison fraction is reached, about three miles from Alamo, when the surface becomes quite hilly. There are no hard rocks to be found on the surface, or under it, and in most sections sand is reached at a depth of about thirty-five feet. The best lands are found in the Eighth, Tenth, Twelfth and Thirteenth Districts. The color of the soil in these districts is very dark, and has no mixture of sand. The poorest lands are found in the eastern districts, near the town of Gadsden, the soil found there being a reddish color. The lands of the districts numbered above, are better than those of the eastern part and yield very well. The products of the county are corn, wheat, cotton sweet and Irish potatoes, the grasses and fruits and strawberries; of this last product upward of $80,000 worth were shipped from the county in 1885 of which $60,000 worth were shipped from Gadsden, and $20,000 from Bell’s Depot. In 1886 the shipment from berries from the county to upward of $100,000 of which $75,000 worth were shipped from Gadsden and $25,000 from Bells. The streams of the county are as follows: The south fork of Forked Deer River forms the southern boundary line of the county, and the middle fork of Forked Deer River forms the northern boundary line. Pond Creek rises about 300 yards north of Alamo, flows southwest and empties into the main Forked Deer River, at about twenty-five miles from the town. Cypress Creek rises in Madison County, flows northwest, and empties into Forked Deer River, about ten miles north of Alamo. Other streams of the county are Beech, Elliott, Sugar, Mill, Nelson, Beaver Dam and Black Creek. There are but few springs in the county, and but one mineral spring exists, and that, situated two and one-half miles west from Alamo, is of small consequence.

It was not till about the year 1824 that the territory now embraced within Crockett County was first settled. At about that time a settlement was made near the Haywood County line, south of the present town of Bells by a number of Middle Tennesseans and North Carolinians, who were attracted to the county by the large growth of yellow poplar, hickory and oak timber. Among the above settlers were Francis M. Wood and Charles Wortham, the former coming from North Carolina and the latter from Middle Tennessee. At about the same time, Gen. Blackman Coleman, who lived at Murfreesboro, purchased a tract of land in the neighborhood of what afterward became Lanefield, and sent out a party of laborers in charge of Thomas Ferguson, to open up a farm and put in a crop. The following year William Johnson and son, Isaac and Timothy Parker, came from Rutherford County, Tenn. and settled in the same neighborhood. Other settlers of the neighborhood were Wyatt Kavanaugh . In 1826 Thomas Ferguson moved from Lanefield neighborhood and settled what afterward became Ferguson Landing on the Forked Deer River, and in a short time James Wylie and Abram Eason came from North Carolina and settled near him. A few miles farther down the river, a settlement was formed by Cornelius and Albert Buck, Edward Williams and Capt. Moody, and at about the same time David Nunn, Parson Koonce, William Antwine and Henry Powell settled about five miles north of the Lanefield settlement. Other pioneers of the county were John F. and C.H. Felts, Stephen Booth, Spencer Payne, John Burnett, Thomas Young, Solomon Hunter, David Wilson, Zachariah Hobson, Richard Coop, Miles Jennings, Dinwiddie, Solomon Shaw, Samuel Wilkins, Newton Mayfield, Thomas Tucker, Wilson Wyann, James Carter, B.G. and H.B. Avery, Moses Cox, John Tatum, Levin James, B.F. Collingsworth, Robert Edmundson, James McClary, Sugars McLemore, J.B. Boykin, Henry Pearson, H. B. Wilson, R.W. Sims, G.H. Mason, E.B. Mason, Anthony Swift, John McFarland, Solomon Rice, Joseph Clay, John Bowen, Issac H. Mason, Hugh Raines, John Hill and Bently Epperson.

The face of the country, when first viewed by these hardy pioneers, was most beautiful to behold. The woods stretched away into vasts forests of poplar, hickory, oak and ash timber, while in the river and creek bottoms the cypress and tall cane were seen. The face of the earth was covered with pea vines, so high and thick that man or beast could be easily followed by their trail through it. The woods abounded with deer, bear, wolves, catamounts, panthers, wild turkey and the smaller game, and upon this game the first settlers were, to a great extent, compelled to subsist, as food was indeed a scarce article. For a number of years afterwards, in fact, until they were all killed off, the stock of the settlers was destroyed, in fact, until they were all killed off, the stock of the settlers was destroyed to an alarming extent by the wolves and bears, scarcely a night passing but a young calf or shoat was carried off.

The first settlements were in the nature of small clearings. One pioneer, more bold than the others, would push forward into the forest, make a clearing and build a cabin, and in a short time, others would follow and settle near him. The homes of the settlers were small log cabins, notched up a little higher than a man’s head and covered with oak boards. Each cabin, when sufficiently high, received a cave-bearer, on which rested the butting poles for the boards to rest against as well as the knees to hold the weight poles to their places,on which was put on each course of boards. An opening of six or seven feet made in the end of the roof for a chimney, which was built of sticks and clay, the backjambs and hearth being made out of dirt dug up and pounded with a maul till it became solid. The floor was a poplar puncheons, and the cracks of the house were daubed with mortar made of dirt and water. The house consisted of but one room, and that answered for parlor, bedroom and kitchen. The furniture was usually of the settler’s own make, but little, if any, articles being brought from the old State. In those days the settlers were more neighborly and sociable than now, and would think nothing of walking six and eight miles to help a neighbor build a house or roll logs, asking nothing in return but a similar lift in time of need.

There was so such thing as mills in the county at that time, and the grain was crushed for bread and hominy by means of the mortar and pestle. A few years later, however, John Warren put up a horse-power mill in Dyer County, to which a great many went from Crockett County for grinding, paying one-sixth of their grain for toll. One of the first mills built in Crockett County was a water-power corn mill on Middle Forked Deer River, at the crossing of the Brownsville and Trenton Road, which was owned by Solomon Shaw. Several years afterwards, Mr. Shaw built a large steam spinning factory, at what was known as Quincy, in the Seventh District, to which he subsequently, added flour and corn attachments. The mills was in active and successful operation until during the late war when Mr. Shaw was murdered, and the property destroyed by fire. Other early mills were owned by Charles Clay, Squire McDonald and William Harpole. The mills and cotton gins of the county, at the present, outside of the town, are as follows: First District, Bunker Sherrod’s steam saw mill; Third Disctrict , J.R. Bowle’s cotton gin; Fourth District, R.J. Williams. steam corn and saw mill and cotton gin combined, and Patterson Bros. steam corn mill and cotton gin; Seventh District,W.A. Cooper’s and Cooper & Nance’s cotton gins; Eighth District, David Mayo’s cotton gin and John Tipkins’s steam corn and saw mill. Ninth District, E.L.Jetton’s and G.W. Vaughn’s steam corn mills and cotton gins; Eleventh District, John Brewer’s cotton gin; Twelfth District, Wm. King’s, Obedah Vernon’s and A.T.Fielder’s cotton gins; Thirteenth District, J.L. Parker’s and J. H. Farmer’s corn, saw mill and cotton gins; Fourteenth District, James Ward’s steam saw and grist mill, wool factory and cotton gin, W.W.Sharron’s steam saw mill and cotton gin and Bailey & Bros. steam saw mill.

The inconvenience of reaching their respective county seats induced the people living in the fractions of Haywood, Gibson, Madison and Dyer Counties, lying between the Middle and South Forks of Forked Deer River, to take steps looking to the formation of a new county as early as 1832-1833, and a petition was circulated, and receiving numerous signatures, was forwarded to the constitutional convention of 1834, praying that body to grant them authority to form a new county out of the above fractions. The petition, however, was not presented to the convention, and consequently nothing came of the efforts, much to the disgust and dissatisfaction of the people.

The agitation of the question was continued, however, and resulted in the passage on December 20, 1845, of an act by the General Assembly, entitled as follows: “An act entitled and act to establish the county of Crockett in honor of and to perpetuate the memory of David Crockett, one of Tennessee’s distinguished sons.” The act provided that the county Madison and Dyer, and appointed Isaac H. Johnson, David Whitaker,Joel Nunn, Willis L. Rivers, Kinchen Hathaway, Isaac H. Mason, Alfred T. Fielder and Noah Perry as commissioners to run the boundary lines, designated the house of Issac M. Johnson, near where the county seat now stands, as the place of holding the various courts, until the selection of a county site and the erection of a court house.

In the spring of 1846 the above commissioners marked off the boundary lines of the county and selected the present county site, where a town was laid out and named Cageville, in honor of Lycurgus Cage, one of the first merchants of that vicinity.

The magistrates of the new county met at the designated place in June, 1846 and organized the county. Officers were elected as follows: Clerk, Isaac M. Johnson; sheriff, John R. Jelks; Registrar, N.W. Mayfield; Trustee, Joel Nunn.

In October of the same year the circuit court met in session at Mr. Johnson’s house. The court was presided over by Judge J. C. Reed, and John Manning was appointed Clerk. The new County had its enemies among the citizens of the old counties, who sought to throw every obstacle in the way of and prevent, if possible, its organization. The question of the new county’s constitutionality was raised, and being presented to Judge Reed, that gentlemen decided adversely to the county, adjourned his court and returned to his home. This action on the part of Judge Reed, in whom the people had great confidence, demoralized the citizens and friends of Crockett County, and the organization, then completed, was abandoned, the several fractions returning to the parent counties. Thus matters rested for awhile, but it was not long before the people began anew their effort to secure a new county, and their incessant labors resulted in the enactment of a similar law to the one of 1845, granting them the desired new county. This second act was passed by the General Assembly November 23, 1871 and authorized the formation of Crockett County out of fractions of the counties of Haywood, Gibson, Madison and Dyer, the same territory before incorporated in the new county.

The act appointed William N. Beasley and John F. Sinclair of Dyer County; J.Frank Robertson and David H. James of Gibson County; Thomas J. Hicks and John C. Pearson of Madison County; Asa Dean and Francis J. Wood of Haywood County as commissioners to survey and mark off the boundary lines of the new county,locate the county seat and hold an election for county and district officers.

The Act further provided for the naming of the county seat, Alamo, in commemoration of the spot where the illustrious Crockett, for whom the county was named. The commissioners met at Cageville on December 19, 1871 and were sworn in, in accordance to law, by Isaac M. Johnson, acting justice of the peace in Haywood County. They then organized by unanimously electing John F. Sinclair as president and F.J.Wood, secretary. On motion, the commissioners were ordered to take the census of the qualified voters of their respective fractions, and report the same on January 15, 1872, after which the commissioners adjourned, to meet again on that date. On the above day the commissioners met at Cageville and received the following report of the census: Madison Couty fraction, 374 votes; Haywood County fraction, 799 votes; Gibson County fraction, 354 votes; Dyer County fraction, 403 votes. The commissioners then ordered an election held in the several fractions of the counties, to take the census of the voters upon the question of the proposed new county. The election was held on February 17, 1872 and resulted in more than two-thirds rate in favor of the new county.

Cageville was selected as the county seat, and the name changed to that of Alamo in accordance with the provisions of the act. The commissioners met with much opposition in the organization of the county from E.B. Mason, Esp. of Madison County, who filed an injunction suit in the chancery courts of Haywood, Gibson, Madison and Dyer. While the suit was pending, however, the organization was proceeded with, and an election for county and district officers was called, and held on March 9, 1872, at which the following officers were elected: Sheriff, R.G. Harris; circuit court clerk, William Best; county court clerk, R. J. Wood; registrar, R.T.D.Fouchee; trustee, Asa Dean; tax collector, John Smothers; surveyor, W.H. Johnson; coroner, A.G. Norville; magistrates, John E. Pearson, Thomas B. Casey, F.M. Thompson,Robert W. Mason, Samuel S. Watkins, John R. Roseman, David H. James, Shady De Harper, John J. Farron [Farrow?], Lewis W. Daniel, Isaac M. Johnson, George W. Bond, John C. Best. Zachary P. Warren, John F.Robertson, Dennis Tatum. Henry Buck, Henry Wyse, Benjamin H. Harmon, James H. Perry, Jonathan H Davis, John F. Sinclair, Isaac H. Nunn and William H. Beasley.

The sessions of the courts were held in the Odd Fellows and Masonic Hall until sometime in 1873, when the records were removed to a large frame carriage factory on the corner of West Main Street, where they were held until the completion of the court house in 1875. This building is a large two-story brick, with four entrances and cross halls. On the first floor are the offices of the county court clerk, sheriff, registrar and two additional offices. On the second floor are the offices of the circuit court clerk and the clerk and master of the chancery court, and also the building is surmounted with an observatory, guarded by iron railings, the same having been constructed with a view of placing them in a tower clock. The court house cost about $25,000 and is claimed to be the finest building of the kind in West Tennessee.

The county jail was completed in 1874 at a cost of about $10,000. The building is of brick, two-story, and is a sheriff’s and jailer’s residence and jail combined. The jail is fitted up with substantial cells, and considered safe as any in the country.

In 1879 the county court purchased ninety acres of land in the Sixth District, two miles west from Alamo, and converted the same into an asylum for the poor. The farm and frame buildings thereon cost the county about $2,000


Source: The Crockett Times 50th Anniversary Edition – Wednesday, March 2, 1983, Page 9 A. There is NO AUTHOR NAME GIVEN.

Thank you to Sister Mary Francis Cates, who transcribed this article, and contributed it for use on this web site.

Goodspeed’s History of Crockett County

FIRST SETTLERS

The first settlement in this area was about 1824 near the Haywood County line, south of the present town of Bell’s Depot. Among the first settlers was Francis M. WOOD, Charles WORTHAM, William JOHNSON, Timothy PARKER, Wyatt F. TWEEDY, Wiley DODD, William DYER, Thomas TWEATT, and William KAVANAUGH. About 1825, Thomas FERGUSON came to Crockett in charge of a party of laborers to open up a farm and put in a crop for Gen. Blackman COLEMAN, who had purchased a tract of land in the area now known as Lanefield.

A year or so later, Ferguson moved from the Lanefield neighborhood and settled what became known as Ferguson’s Landing on the Forked Deer River. A short while later, James WYLIE and Abram EASON came from North Carolina and settled near him. A few miles farther down the river, a settlement was formed by Cornelius and Albert BUCK, Edward WILLIAMS, and Capt. MOODY settled. About the same time David NUNN, Parson KOONCE, William ANTEWINE, and Henry POWELL settled. Other pioneers of the county was John F. and C. H. FELTS, Stephen BOOTH, Spencer PAYNE, John BURNETT, Thomas YOUNG, Solomon HUNTER, David WILSON, Zachariah HOBSON, James HENDRICKS, Richard COOP, Miles JENNINGS, ____ DINWIDDIE, Solomon SHAW, Samuel WILKINS, Newton MAYFIELD, Thomas TUCKER, Wilson WYNN, James CARTER, B. G. and H. B. AVERY, Moses COX, John TATUM, Levin JAMES, B. F. COLLINGSWORTH, Robert EDMUNDSON, James McCLARY, Sugars McLEMORE, J. B. BOYKIN, Henry PEARSON, H. B. WILSON, R. W. SIMS, G. H. MASON, E. B. MASON, Anthony SWIFT, John McFARLAND, Solomon RICE, Joseph CLAY, John CLAY, John BOWEN, Isaac H. Mason, Hugh Raines, John HILL and Bently EPPERSON.

The first settlements were in the nature of small clearings. One pioneer, more bold than the others, would push forward into the woods, make a clearing and build a cabin, and in a short time the others would follow and settle near him.

How Crockett Came To Be….

The inconvenience of reaching the county seat of the counties that created Crockett induced the people that lived in the fractions of Haywood, Gibson, Madison and Dyer counties to take steps to form a new county as early as 1832-33. A petition was circulated and recieved numerous signatures before being forwarded to the constitutional convention of 1834, praying that body would grant them the authority to form a county out of the above fractions. The petition was not presented and nothing came of the efforts.

The request continued and resulted in the passage, on December 20, 1845 of an act by the General Assembly, entitled as follows: “An act entitled to establish the county of Crockett in honor of and to perpetuate the memory of David Crockett, one of Tennessee’s distinguished sons. The act provided that the county should be formed out of the counties of Haywood, Gibson, Madison, and Dyer, and appointed Isaac M. JOHNSON, David WHITAKER, Joel NUN, Willis L. RIVERS, Kinchen HATHAWAY, Isaac H. MASON, Alfred T. FIELDER and Noah PERRY as commissioners to run the boundary lines, organize the county and select a location for a county seat. The act also designated the house of Isaac M. JOHNSON, near where the county seat now stands, as the place of holding the various courts, until the selection of a county seat and the erection of a court house.In the spring of 1846, the above commissioners marked off the boundary lines of the county and selected the present county site, where a town was laid out and named Cageville, in honor of Lycurgus Cage, one of the first merchants of that vicinity.

In the spring of 1846, the above commissioners marked off the boundary lines of the county and selected the present county site, where a town was laid out and named Cageville, in honor of Lycurgus Cage, one of the first merchants of that vicinity.

The magistrates of the new county met at the designated place in June, 1846,, and organized the county. Officers were elected as follows: clerk, Isaac M. JOHNSON; sheriff, John R. JELKS; register, lonN. W. MAYFIELD; trustee, Joel NUN.

In October of 1846 the circuit court met in session at Mr. Johnson’s house. The court was presided over by Judge J. C. REED, and John MANNING was appointed clerk. The new county had its enemies among the citizens of the old counties, who sought to throw every obstacle in the way of and prevent, if possible its organization. The question of the new county’s constitutionality was raised, and being present to Judge REED, that gentlemen decided adversely to the county, adjourned his court and returned to his home. Each fraction returned to their original county until 1845.

The New Act

But before long people began to renew their efforts of a similar law as the one in 1845 granting a new county. The new act was passed by the General Assembly November 23, 1871 and authorized the formation of Crockett County out of fractions of the counties. The act appointed William N. BEASLEY and John F. SINCLAIR of Dyer County; J. Frank ROBERTSON and David H. JAMES of Gibson County; Thomas J. HICKS and John C. PEARSON of Madison County; Asa DEAN and Francis J. WOOD of Haywood County, as commissioners to survey and mark off the boundary lines of the new county, locate the county seat and hold an election for county and district offices.

The act further provided for the name of the county seat as Alamo for the spot where David CROCKETT fell. The commissioners met at Cageville on December 19, 1871 and were sworn in by Isaac M. JOHNSON, acting justice of the peace of Haywood County. They organized as a commission and elected John F. SINCLAIR as president and F. J. WOOD as secretary.

A motion was ordered to take the census of the qualified voters of their respective fractions. On January 25, 1872 they met again and received the following report of the census: 
Dyer Section – 403 votes 
Gibson Section – 354 votes 
Haywood Section – 799 votes 
Madison Section – 374 votes

An election was held on February 17, 1872 and more than two-thirds of the voters favored the new county forming. The commissioner divided the county into districts: 
No. 1, 2, 3 = Madison section 
No. 4, 7, 9 = Gibson section 
No. 11, 12, 13 = Dyer section 
No. 5, 6, 10, 14 = Haywood section 
No. 8 – divided in the Gibson/Dyer section

On March 9, 1872 the following was elected: 
R. G. HARRIS – Sheriff 
William BEST – Circuit Court Clerk 
F. J. WOOD – County Court Clerk 
R. T. D. FOUCHEE – Register 
Asa DEAN – Trustee 
John SMOTHER – Tax Collector 
W. H. JOHNSON – Surveyor 
A. G. NORVILLE – Corner

Magistrates: John E. PEARSON, Thomas B. CASEY, F. M. THOMPSON, Robert W. MASON, John W. ROSEMAN, David H. JAMES, Shady D. HARPER, John J. FARRON, Lewis W. DANIEL, Isaac M. JOHNSON, George W. BOND, John C. COOK, Noah F. STALLINGS, John C. BEST, Zachary P. WARREN, John F. ROBERTSON, Dennis TATUM, Henry BUCK, Henry WYSE, Benjamin H. HARMON, James H. PERRY, Jonathan H. DAVIS, John F. SINCLAIR, Isaac H. NUN, William N. BEASLEY.

The sessions of the courts were held in the Odd Fellows and Masonic Halls until 1873 when the records were moved to a large carriage factory. The court house was completed in 1875 at a cost of $25,000.

The county jail was completed in 1874 at a cost of about $10,000. The building is a two story brick with the sheriff or jailor’s residence combined with the jail. In 1879 the county purchased 90 acres in the 6th District, two miles west of Alamo. This area was converted into an asylum for the poor. The farm and frame building cost the county about $2,000.

Crockett County had a population of 14,000 in 1886. The voting population in 1872 was 1,900; in 1878, 2,300; in 1882, 2,500; in 1886, 2,800. Of the 2,800 – 2550 voted for the Democratic party. The average value of land per acre was $9.72 in 1885. In 1886 the county tax was 20 cents and the state tax 10 cents on $100.

The main crops was corn, oats, rye, and wheat. The yield of cotton in 1885 was about 800 bales and of that 1886 was 900 bushels.


Source: The History of Crockett County TN by Goodspeed [1886]

They Own Davy Crockett

by Bobby Sims

As our country stars aghast at thousands of coon-skinned marauders bearing down with gunsights lowered and banshee yells of “Davy Crockett, Davy Crockett, Kind of the Wild Frontier” forming on their lips, the one sheltered section which has been faithful to the newest national idol for more than a hundred years sits by calmly waiting for the world to return to normal.

Little Crockett County, pieced together from four West Tennessee counties in 1845, appears to be taking the Davy Crockett boom in stride, without effort to capitalize on a commercial enterprise which will realize merchants about $100 million in the month of June, as guitars, pajamas, jigsaw puzzles, buckskin suits and power horns retail across the counter.

He’ll still be their Davy when the rush is over.

Back in 1845, the rugged frontiersman was already well on his way to becoming a fictional hero. His death at a Texas fortress nine years earlier was retold and gained imaginative momentum as that state was admitted to the Union. Tennesseans living between the middle and south forks of the Forked Deer River were quick to take advantage of popular sentiment. In an effort to form a new county, with a county seat closer to their homes, citizens of fractions of Haywood, Gibson, Madison, and Dyer Counties asked to name a proposed new division Crockett County. The agitation continued and finally resulted in the passage, on December 20, 1845, of an act of the General Assembly to “establish the county of Crockett in honor of and to perpetuate the memory of David Crockett, one of Tennessee’s distinguished sons.”

The new county lasted only one year before and adverse judicial decision called it unconstitutional. Twenty-five years lagged by before Crockett County was again authorized by the state. In 1872 all opposition was at last overcome, and the infant county felt that it had “Killed a bar.”

After countyhood was attained, Crockett Countians rested. They farmed and fished during the week and went to Church on Sunday. Never in a hurry, Crockett County just kept existing, snug and comfortable. Today, it is almost completely agricultural in economy and philosophical outlook, waxing warm in politics, as did the original Crockett at times, and stable in religion, with Baptist, Church of Christ, Methodist, Christian and Presbyterian predominating.

The County seat, located close to the center of the 284 square miles of fertile and rolling Crockett County, is appropriately named Alamo, in commemoration of the spot where the illustrious defender of the independence fell. It was renamed in 1871 from its full maiden name of Cageville – which had applied out of respect for an early merchant, Lycurgus Cage. Additional sections have adopted the magic names. Crockett Mills is a hamlet about six miles from Alamo, and Crockett High School of Maury City is some eight miles from the county seat. Other town names include Bells, Gadsden, and Friendship.

Alamo itself is a modest 1,702 in population, with a typical court square arrangement–and no statue of David Crockett. In fact, the only reminders of the county’s namesake are a pair of markers put up two years ago by the Tennessee Historical Society on the county boundary lines which state: “Established 1845, named in honor of David Crockett, Tennessee frontiersman. He represented Tennessee in Congress from 1827 to 1831 and from 1833 to 1835. Moving to Texas, he was killed in the Alamo Massacre in 1836.”

That’s all there is, just a couple of historical markers. But Theo J. Emison, former mayor of Alamo, speaks for many of his fellow citizens for when he says that he considers the whole of Crockett County as a memorial to the famous hunter and warrior. “We could make Alamo a David Crockett shrine,” he agrees, “but Crockett himself would probably have preferred a living monument to a piece of marble.”

Crockett County, he thinks, still typifies much of the way of life evident in West Tennessee when the first settlements were anchored in small clearings. “Oh, no,” he hastens to say, “we don’t still live in log cabins. Our town has excellent school plants, both Negro and White, a recently constructed modern sewage disposal system and soon it hopes to have natural gas facilities to encourage industrial development. Yet there is still that trait of individualism here that was here when the first pioneer, more bold than the others, would push forward into the forest, make a clearing, and build a home.”

Colonel Crockett would probably have admired Emison’s position. When Davy first moved to West Tennessee, settling in Weakly County on the Obion River, he was seven miles from the nearest neighbor. And that neighbor lived on the other side of the river! Although the famous Indian fighter never actually lived in the area now bearing his name, it is probable that his numerous for bears (he once killed 47 in a month) let him through the Forked Deer River bottom section many times.

Crockett’s individualism was almost unrestrained. After being beaten for Congress by the combined political forces of President Andrew Jackson and Adam Huntsman, a one-legged Indian war veteran, Crockett was in a bitter mood. Seventeen West Tennessee counties made up the congressional district which Crockett represented in Washington. Sixteen of the counties voted in favor of Davy. The other one, Madison County, voted so strongly against him that Huntsman won the election. The people of the section now known as Crockett County stood by the tall Tennessean, backing him even in defeat. But Davy wasn’t satisfied. He was furious. He resolved to go to Texas where there was more breathing space and a cause for which he would fight. To use the Colonel’s own words of his final talk to West Tennesseans, as presented in his autobiography: “I concluded my speech by telling them that I was done with politics for the present, and that they might all go to hell, and I would go to Texas.”

Despite this rash statement, it seems likely that Crockett held highest in his respect the people of Tennessee. The people he disliked were those who tried to force down his throat, “to make him do!”

The Alamo weekly newspaper, the Crockett Times, has as its motto the well-known quotation fromCrockett: “Be sure you are right, then go ahead.” Evidently, the ex-congressman considered well his change of scenery before going to Texas. ” I have a new row to hoe,” he said, “and a long and rough one, but come what will, I’ll go ahead.”

That is the attitude Crockett Countians are taking about the Davy Crockett craze of today. They will go ahead with the same row they have been hoeing since 1845, the row they are sure is right.

R.L. (Bob) Ronk, owner of Ronk’s Variety Store, the only five and ten cent store in Alamo, comments that he isn’t being swept off his feet by the rush for Crockett souvenirs. “Sure, we are selling all the billfolds, belts, and comic books we have with Crockett emblems on them, but we are not making Davy Crockett a commercial specialty, No, sir!”

probably, the group most excited by the Davy spurt to popularity is the Alamo first grade, which has learned all of the “Ballad” verses by heart and has heard a life story of the bear hunter read to them by their teacher, Miss Robbie Craig.

Dr. H.E. McDaniel, former Alamo Dentist, had incorporated Davy into his practice. “I used to ask the kids whether they wanted Roy Rogers, Hopalong Cassidy, or Gene Autry fillings for their teeth,” he smiles. “Now I have added Davy Crockett to the list. And they say “Davy flavor” doesn’t hurt nearly as bad as the others.”

There is no family in Crockett County which claims to have descended from David Crockett. In fact, there is not a person residing in the county with the name Crockett. So, as far as these people are concerned, he belongs to them all; just as much to the youngest as to the oldest, to the poorest as well as the richest.

Yes, the Walt Disney-Fess Parker combination has through television and moving pictures sent the whole youth of America in a desperate hunt–not for bears, but for coon-skin caps. Still, the folks between the forks of the river are not swept too far by the tide. They have gotten out their histories and checked the newspaper stories about Davy. They had hoped, but would never admit it, that a movie star would visit their county. They have let every school child in the forty-eight states talk about their longtime hero. They have let coon-skin caps top scrubby heads, and statues appear at various places.

He’ll still be their Davy when the rush is over.

The article was printed in the Crockett Times 50th Anniversary Edition on Wednesday, March 7, 1983. Transcribed by Sister Mary Francis Cates, 2001

1820’s Haywood County Petition

From Crockett Times, Thursday, July 7, 1977
A Petition From 1820’s by Maxine Mayo (A historian for Crockett County)

The original copy of this petition is in the State Library and Archives at Nashville; a Xerox copy of it was brought by this writer for the Historical Society files. There is no date on the petition, and the staff at the Library and Archives has assigned the date 1825 to it. I think however, that it should be dated sometime between 1828 and 1834 for this reason: one of the signers, John Nunn, first bought land in this area in 1828 and died in 1834. If anyone has any information that would enable the Society to date this document more precisely, please let us know.

Those who signed this petition were living in the portion of Haywood County that became Crockett County district numbers 5, 6, 8, 10 and 14.

These counties of Tennessee were not divided into civil districts until 1836; prior to that, they were divided according to the military districts, with the captains of the various militia companies performing duties similar to those performed by the magistrates of the districts today. (Note: I found a Captain McMillan listed in 1834 but had no first name for Haywood County.)

Every male resident from 16 to 45 years of age who was in good health was required to serve in the militia and to provide his own firearms. There were regularly scheduled muster days for the militia to assemble and be drilled in military maneuvers.

PETITION

“To the Honourable Senate and House of Representatives of the State of Tennessee Your petitioners humbly represent that they reside on the north side of the south fork of the Forked Deer River in Haywood Co., that the people on that side of the river have had a battalion ever since the organization of the County and they compose the second Battalion of the Eighty-Sixth Regiment, that they have heretofore had to cross the swamp of the aforesaid river to attend all regimental musters, that the swamp is something like three miles wide and that it is often times wholly impassable. They therefore pray your honorable body to relieve them in the premises by dividing the regiment, giving to them a separate regiment on the north side of said river.”

SIGNERS OF 1820 PETITION

  • John M. Farland
  • Major) A.W. Thompson
  • Joel Parker
  • David S. Wilson
  • Joseph Babett
  • Jas. H.Taylor
  • Jesse Embrey
  • Crockett ? Hamner
  • W.H. Hamner
  • Bird B. Smith
  • Wm. Johnson Jr.
  • W.R. Blackerd
  • Josiah Leake
  • Nath G. Perkins
  • George ? ?
  • William F. Thompson
  • James P. Kavanaugh
  • Wm. Wagner
  • Western Harris
  • B.H. Strange
  • Britton whitley
  • Samuel Conner
  • John N. Stewart
  • Sam’l (?) Green
  • Alfred Kennedy
  • James M. Henderson
  • John V. Henderson
  • Robert Jennings
  • James Wyse
  • Jno. P. Wimberly
  • H.H. Davidson
  • Levi Wooten
  • John F. Felts
  • Thomas Furgerson
  • Milam ? Antwine
  • Joseph Ferguson
  • S. J. Henderson
  • John Nunn
  • Thomas Thweatt
  • Archibald I. McMillan
  • Stephen Cox
  • James Pigg
  • Joseph E. Powell
  • Broadwaters Matney
  • William M. Matney
  • John Matney
  • Jas. F. Wortham
  • Samuel Scott
  • Moore L. Moss
  • Chas. Wortham
  • John Sandlin
  • Walter Bell
  • Elisha Roberds
  • Joel Whitfield
  • Neal McMillan
  • John Parker
  • John W. Wortham
  • Obadiah Carson
  • T.T. ? Maben
  • Walter A.Bell
  • B. Whitfield
  • James N. Parker
  • James A. Harris
  • William Johnson
  • A. Thompson
  • Franklin Buck
  • John Wainwright
  • Enos Norville
  • Benj. May
  • Joseph Bridger
  • Jacob Helmanisly
  • (?) Ro.
  • F. Pigg
  • Isaac M. Johnson
  • John N. Branch (?)
  • R.W. Jones
  • Henry Edwards
  • W.F. Tweedy
  • Thomas Yancy
  • Isaac Koonce
  • Charles R. Johnson
  • Stephen Milbern
  • Tobias Beter ?
  • M. Clanton
  • Alexander Henry
  • Wm. Parker
  • John Oneal
  • Wm. M. Wood
  • Kinthen Hathaway
  • M. Pugh
  • Brehon Hawkins
  • C.B. Porter (?)
  • David Nunn
  • Carter B. Harris
  • John Sluder
  • A. M. Sluder
  • B. H. Sluder
  • William Dixon
  • William Antwine
  • Corencie Miller (?)
  • B. J. Harget
  • Jno. A. Johnson
  • Wiley Avery
  • Nathan (?) Parker
  • John Smith
  • T. Shearin
  • James Johnson
  • James W. McFarland
  • Francis E. Mahan
  • John Booth
  • Parker Embrey
  • A. Hawkins
  • William Boling
  • Cornelius Buck
  • Robert Burns
  • Daniel B. Boling
  • John C. Parker
  • Seth Williams
  • Alfred R. ???
  • Wm. Shearin
  • Thomas Boling Jr.
  • Thomas Boling Sr.
  • Phil Banford (?)
  • Benjamin Booth ?
  • James P. Mabin
  • R.W. May
  • G. Coleman
  • James W. Hawkins
  • Asbury Freeman
  • George P. Hargat
  • Lorenzo Dow Mitchell
  • T.F. Thompson
  • Henry Buck
  • Cornelius Ralls
  • G. Wortham
  • Stephen Childers
  • Joseph Hargett
  • E. Thomas
  • Alfred Freeman
  • Stephen Johnson
  • Walter A. Bell
  • George O. Bell
  • John H. Bell
  • Wm. Jenkins
  • Hugh Mathis
  • Ephraim Mitchell
  • William Mathis
  • David Bolin
  • Daniel H. Burnett
  • G.B. Bolin
  • Amma Killet
  • John H. Prescott
  • Malale Gentry
  • Solomon Hinton
  • Stephen S. Booth
  • William M. Yancy
  • James Munndy
  • Gearly Jones
  • Stephen H. Whitley
  • Newt Edwards
  • Henry A. Powell
  • Jesse Eason
  • Isaac Jones
  • Francis M. Wood
  • Edmond Howard
  • James Moore
  • Felin G. Whitley
  • Asriah Mabin
  • Ralph Williams
  • Kenneth McIver
  • Laboren Jones
  • August McIver
  • John McIver
  • Robert Boles Sr.
  • Benjamin Boles
  • Benjamin W. Perry
  • Jackson Warrin
  • Thomas R.(?) Harlow
  • Brown B. Moran
  • Jackson Moran
  • R. Boles
  • John S. Reddick
  • Benjamin King
  • Edward Williams
  • Edwin D. Stokes
  • Richard Brown
  • John B. Williams
  • Reuben Raules
  • Cornelius Raules
  • Theophilus Reddick
  • Allen Stokes
  • Benjamin Branch
  • William Burnett
  • Jacob McFarland
  • Jefferson Wilson
  • W.R. Wortham
  • William Smith

Thank you to Sister Mary Francis Cates, who transcribed this article, and contributed it for use on this website.

1868 Election Roster

Friendship, Dyer, TN
Records dated March 7, 1868, regarding an election held in Friendship, TN – District #14. This was a part of Dyer County which would become a part of Crockett County District #12 in 1872. This is taken from a handwritten record found in the notebook of Robert Lee Williams 1838 – 1905, who was one of the Clerks. The notebook is the property of his gr-gr grandson, Jerry Williams, of Friendship, TN.

W. J. Davis
A. J. Harpool
O. V. Vernon
W. T. Mays
J. H. Williams
J. N. Davis
Frank Davis
J. T. Colman
B. Robinson
W. N. Woodside
A. B. Eason
W. E. Curtis
James Cochran
J. T. Sinclair
Wm. Nash
W. L. Curtis
C. F. Curtis
R. L. Williams
A. M. Woodside
J. T. Slayton
Kindric Woods
J. W. Manly
Tapley Mays

We the undersigned Clerks and Judges do certify that the above copy is a true statement of the votes poled at Friendship District No. 14 Dyer Co. Tenn this March 7th, 1868.

Judge Clerks
E. B. Curtis                                                   R. L. Williams
Joseph Green                                               J. B. King
B. Robinson

Candidates for Sheriff
Wesson
Smith
Shaw
Straton
Murphy

Tax col
York

Trustee
McCoy
Pierce
Hall

Const
J. H. Williams