{"id":399,"date":"2022-02-14T18:46:21","date_gmt":"2022-02-14T18:46:21","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.tngenweb.org\/hickman\/?p=399"},"modified":"2022-02-14T18:46:21","modified_gmt":"2022-02-14T18:46:21","slug":"hickmans-fourth-district","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.tngenweb.org\/hickman\/hickmans-fourth-district\/","title":{"rendered":"Hickman&#8217;s Fourth District"},"content":{"rendered":"\n<p><strong>From &#8220;A History of Hickman County Tenn.&#8221;&nbsp;<\/strong><br><strong>Published by Gospel Advocate Publishing Co. 1900<\/strong><strong><\/strong><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><strong>Written by W. Jerome &amp; David L. Spence<\/strong><br><strong>Beginning on Page 149<\/strong><strong><\/strong><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><strong>CHAPTER VII<\/strong><br><strong>THE FOURTH DISTRICT<\/strong>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The Fourth District is bounded on the north by Dickson County; on the east, by Williamson and Maury Counties;<br>south, by the Thirteenth District; and west, by the Second and Fifth Districts. It includes the valley of Lick Creek,<br>from the mouth of Hassell&#8217;s Creek up to the lines of Dickson and Williamson Counties, which lie beyond the head<br>waters of the northwestern tributaries of this creek. The line of the Fourth District, however, does not cross Lick<br>Creek until it reaches the mouth of Dog Creek, where it crosses and embraces in the Fourth District all of this<br>creek, save a small tributary, Sugar Creek, which lies in the Thirteenth District.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><strong>Zebulon Hassell<\/strong> the First, from whom the creek took its name, settled at the Lambert place, on Hassell&#8217;s Creek, a<br>short time after the Indian treaties of 1805 and 1806. The next tributary of Lick Creek above Hassell&#8217;s Creek is<br>Morrison&#8217;s Branch, named for a family which lived on it at an early day. <strong>Jesse Peeler<\/strong> who died a few years ago in<br>the Eleventh District, lived on this branch in 1836. <strong>Frank Killough<\/strong> lived here in 1835. A fork of Morrison&#8217;s Branch<br>is Jones&#8217; Branch, upon which <strong>John Groves<\/strong> now has a mill and dry goods store. It received its name from <strong>Alston<br><\/strong>Jones, father of <strong>O. A. Jones<\/strong>, who settled upon it about 1825. At its mouth <strong>Harvey Giles<\/strong> lived in 1835. <strong>Ned Carver<\/strong>, a<br>noted gunsmith and blacksmith, had a mill at the Tatom place in 1835. <strong>Ferdinand B. Russell <\/strong>owned the Little Rock<br>Mills, now owned by Groves, in 1858.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Above Morrison&#8217;s Branch is Gin Branch, which received its name from the fact that <strong>Frank Worley<\/strong> had a gin here in<br>1825. Col. <strong>Alfred Darden<\/strong> lived here in 1836, and from this place he went, ten years later, to Mexico as a member<br>of Whitfield&#8217;s company. <strong>J. H. Nichols<\/strong>, of the Fourth District, was also in the Mexican War. On this branch, in 1846,<br>lived <strong>William Jefferson Bond<\/strong>, who was born at Hillsboro, Williamson County, on July 26, 1826. He was a son of<br><strong>William Bond<\/strong>, of Virginia. He married <strong>Clara Mayberry<\/strong>, a daughter of <strong>Gabriel Mayberry<\/strong>, who was born in June,<br>1828. <strong>William J. Bond<\/strong> was the father of <strong>John T. Bond<\/strong>, who was born on January 9, 1851, and of <strong>Albert J. Bond<\/strong>,<br>who was born on January 29, 1863. In 1867 a negro woman, <strong>Nancy Mayberry<\/strong>, was shot and killed by unknown<br>parties in Gin Hollow. The shot was fired through a window one night. The gin has long since disappeared, and only<br>the name recalls the fact that here the farmers of the upper portion of Lick Creek brought their cotton to have it<br>ginned, preparatory to passing it into female hands to be, by the cards, the spinning wheel, the reel, and the loom,<br>transformed into clothing for the family.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Just below the mouth of Gin Hollow (or Branch), near a good spout spring, lives <strong>Jerome Reeves<\/strong>, one of Hickman<br>County&#8217;s best citizens. He is a son of <strong>John Reeves<\/strong>, who was born in Kentucky on August 13, 1800. <strong>John Reeves<\/strong> was<br>a son of <strong>James Reeves<\/strong>, who was born in Greene County, Tenn., in 1778, and who married <strong>Peggy Ayres<\/strong>, of Kentucky.<br><strong>John Reeves<\/strong> came with his father to Maury County in 1805. He came to the Fourth District in 1836 and settled on<br>the <strong>John Overbey<\/strong> place, which he bought from <strong>Robert Oakley<\/strong>, who had bought it from <strong>Henry Potts<\/strong>, who had located<br>here about 1815. <strong>Hugh Hill<\/strong> then owned the place where <strong>Jerome Reeves<\/strong> now lives. Hill afterwards sold it to <strong>James<br>Oliver<\/strong>, father of <strong>Captain Oliver<\/strong>, C. S. A. Sons of <strong>John Reeves<\/strong> were <strong>S. Jerome Reeves<\/strong> (born on September 28,<br>1829), and <strong>Leonard Reeves<\/strong> (born in 1839). His daughter, <strong>Cleander,<\/strong> married <strong>William Dean<\/strong>, of Dog (or Cedar)<br>Creek. <strong>Ophelia Reeves<\/strong> married <strong>Joseph Holmes<\/strong>, who, while a soldier in the confederate Army, was killed at<br>Marietta, Ga. <strong>Garrett Turman, Jr.<\/strong>, lived at the <strong>W. T. Wariff<\/strong> place in 1836, and about the same date <strong>James Anglin<\/strong><br>lived at the <strong>Blount Turman<\/strong> place. At what is now known as Martin&#8217;s shop, <strong>Phelps Martin<\/strong> lived in the long ago, and<br>his near-by neighbor was <strong>Benjamin Vaughn<\/strong>. <strong>Turman Parker<\/strong> lived on this, the Barren Fork, about 1835. <strong>George W.<br>Hicks<\/strong>, who lives at the mouth of the Barren Fork of Lick Creek, was born on April 22, 1835, on Lick Creek. He is a<br>son of <strong>William M. Hicks<\/strong>, who was born in Virginia on January 9, 1804, and who married <strong>Margaret<\/strong>, the daughter of<br><strong>Josiah Davidson<\/strong>, who was a North Carolina soldier in the Revolutionary War. <strong>Margaret Davidson<\/strong> was born in<br>Rutherford County, Tenn. The Hicks family came to Lick Creek in 1815. <strong>Jerre Ingram<\/strong> laid a soldier&#8217;s warrant at<br>the Hicks place in 1815. The land upon which <strong>W. T. Warff<\/strong> lives was granted to <strong>Butler<\/strong>, the grant embracing 640<br>acres. An adjoining grant of the same number of acres was to <strong>Grant<\/strong>. The <strong>Grant<\/strong> lands are on the Trace Fork, and<br>have since been known as the <strong>Tidwell<\/strong> or <strong>Dean<\/strong> lands, and lie adjoining to the <strong>Ingram<\/strong> lands. The <strong>Butler<\/strong> lands, which<br>were also for military service in the Revolutionary War, were located about 1810. The <strong>Tidwell<\/strong> above referred to<br>was <strong>Eli Tidwell<\/strong>, father of the late<strong> Levi J. Tidwell,<\/strong> who for many years one of the Fourth District&#8217;s magistrates.<br><strong>Levi J. Tidwell<\/strong> was a man of determination, firm in his views upon all questions, whether personal, political, or<br>religious. He was a Missionary Baptist, having joined that church at Union Hill, Henderson County, Tenn. In<br>politics he was an unflinching Republican, and was at one time a candidate for Representative. He was beaten by<br>only eighty-four votes by <strong>Col. Vernon F. Bibb<\/strong>, who was considered the strongest Democrat in the county. <strong>Tidwell<\/strong><br>was born on March 14, 1825. He lived in what is called &#8220;The Barrens.&#8221; above the head waters of Lick Creek, on<br>the <strong>Tannehill<\/strong> entry, which was made in 1826. This entry embraced several thousand acres. A near-by entry was<br>one made by <strong>John Stone<\/strong> in 1820. <strong>Alfred Tidwell<\/strong>, a son of <strong>Levi J. Tidwell<\/strong>, was a deputy under <strong>Sheriff John V.<br>Stephenson<\/strong>, and another son, <strong>Johnson Tidwell,<\/strong> is at present one of the magistrates of the Fourth District. The<br><strong>Tidwells<\/strong> came from North Carolina in 1843. There is a large family of them in the flat country along the county line,<br>and they have built up a thrifty settlement, known as the &#8220;<strong>Tidwell Settlement<\/strong>.&#8221;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>At the <strong>Hicks <\/strong>place Lick Creek forks. The Barren Fork, already referred to, rises near <strong>Martin&#8217;s<\/strong> Shop. The other<br>fork, known as Trace Fork, rises in Williamson County and runs about twelve miles before entering the Fourth<br>District of Hickman County.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The first place on Lick Creek in Hickman County was settled by <strong>John Mayberry<\/strong>, who came from Virginia, near the<br>Peaks of Otter. He was here as a hunter as early as 1800, and made a permanent settlement here about 1806,<br>being the first settler on Lick Creek in Hickman County. He was a farmer and blacksmith, and has hundreds of<br>descendants throughout Hickman, Maury, and Williamson Counties. He was the father of a large family, all of<br>whom were older than the present century. His sons were <strong>Mike, Job, John, George<\/strong>, and <strong>Gabriel<\/strong>. He was the<br>grandfather of <strong>Walker<\/strong> and <strong>Sim Mayberry<\/strong>. A daughter of <strong>John Mayberry<\/strong> married a <strong>Kinser<\/strong>; another married <strong>Alston<\/strong><br><strong>Jones<\/strong>, and was the mother of <strong>O. A. Jones<\/strong>; and another married <strong>Pleasant Russell<\/strong>, and was the mother of <strong>Ferdinand<\/strong><br><strong>B.<\/strong> and <strong>Washington B. Russell<\/strong>. <strong>Gabriel Mayberry<\/strong>, after the death of his father, lived at the old <strong>Mayberry<\/strong> place,<br>where <strong>John T. Morton<\/strong> now lives. It is said that when an old man he kept as one of his most valued treasures a pair<br>of trousers which his mother had made. These he kept folded carefully and laid away in an old-fashioned chest.<br>Occasionally he would take them out, gaze on them reverently, and say: &#8220;Mother made these for me, and I want to<br>be buried in them.&#8221; When he died, friends granted his wish.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Farther down the creek, on the lands entered by <strong>Grant<\/strong>, <strong>Stockard<\/strong> settled at an early date. <strong>Hardin<\/strong>, a soldier of the<br>Revolution, lived here a few years later. This is the place at which <strong>Tidwell<\/strong> and <strong>Dean<\/strong> later lived.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>In 1807 <strong>Robert E. C. Doughtery<\/strong> settled on the creek below the <strong>Stockard<\/strong> place. He was a school teacher and was<br>one of the early magistrates of the county. In 1819 he resigned his seat in the State Legislature and removed to<br>West Tennessee. At the place where <strong>Doughtery<\/strong> settled there now lives <strong>Garret Turman Overbey<\/strong>, who knows much<br>of the history of the Fourth District.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><strong>Daniel Overbey<\/strong>, early in the present century, emigrated from North Carolina to Sumner County, Tenn., and in the<br>autumn of 1814 he came to Hickman County, settling in the following spring at the head of one branch of the Barren<br>Fork of Lick Creek. His wife was <strong>Emily Tyler,<\/strong> who was related to <strong>President John Tyler<\/strong>. <strong>Overbey<\/strong> and his wife both<br>died in 1869. <strong>Daniel Overbey, Jr.<\/strong>, a son of <strong>Daniel Overbey, Sr<\/strong>., on March 15, 1832, married <strong>Sarah Parker,<\/strong> and they<br>became the parents of eight children. He died on February 2, 1865, his wife living until December 15, 1890. <strong>Sarah<\/strong><br><strong>Parker<\/strong> was a daughter of <strong>Elisha<\/strong> and <strong>Rebecca Parker<\/strong>. <strong>Rebecca Parker<\/strong> was a daughter of <strong>Garrett Turman, Sr.<\/strong>, who<br>was a soldier in the Revolutionary War, and who was at one time held a prisoner by the Indians for six months. This<br>was during the Revolutionary War, when North Carolina and Georgia were overrun by the Tories and the frontiers<br>devastated by the Indians. <strong>Garrett Turman Overbey<\/strong>, a son of <strong>Daniel Overbey, Jr.<\/strong>, was born on October 13, 1834,<br>and, on December 23, 1858, married<strong> Emily J. Moss<\/strong>, who was born on September 11, 1837. He is the father of six<br>children\u2014<strong>John T., W. W., America L., James D., T. F.,<\/strong> and <strong>Annie C<\/strong>. The wife of <strong>G. T. Overbey<\/strong> is a descendant of<br>the <strong>Foote<\/strong> family, of Virginia, a member of which was at one time Governor of Mississippi.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>No portion of Hickman County is more closely connected with the early history of Middle Tennessee than is the<br>Lick Creek country. &#8220;Lick Creek of Duck River&#8221; was one of the first streams of Middle Tennessee to receive a<br>name. It derives its name from the black sulfur spring on the south side of the creek, on the old <strong>Russell<\/strong> (and later<br><strong>Beale<\/strong>) place, now owned by <strong>John T. Overbey<\/strong>. Here buffaloes, deer, and other wild animals congregated in large<br>numbers. Such places as this were called, in the pioneer days, &#8220;licks.&#8221; The buffaloes coming from across Duck<br>River to this lick crossed at the mouth of Leatherwood Creek, and the path they made was used by the Chickasaws<br>when they came into the Cumberland settlements. According to the late <strong>Maj. Bolling Gordon<\/strong>, the route of the<br>Chickasaw Trace, the path by which the whites and Indians traveled to and from the Chickasaw country, was as<br>follows: &#8220;Up Trace Creek in Lawrence County, down Swan Creek, and across Blue Buck somewhere near the<br>residence of <strong>Jo. M. Bond<\/strong>; then over to the spring on Robertson&#8217;s Creek, where <strong>Mark Robertson<\/strong> was killed by<br>Indians; then over to Lick Creek, near <strong>Mrs. Beale&#8217;s<\/strong> residence; thence to Nashville by way of <strong>Johnson&#8217;s<\/strong> Lick, on<br>Richland Creek near <strong>Charles Bosley&#8217;s<\/strong>; then on to French Lick, now Nashville.&#8221; The Chickasaw Trace ran for<br>several miles up the Trace Fork of Lick Creek. When <strong>James Robertson<\/strong>, in 1780, made the first expedition from the<br>Bluffs against the Indians, he came upon them near this lick on Lick Creek. When the Coldwater Expedition went<br>out from Nashville in 1787 to avenge the death of <strong>Mark Robertson<\/strong>, it went west from Nashville to the mouth of<br>Turnbull Creek, and up that creek to its head. They then went to the head of Lick Creek, and traveled several<br>miles along the ridge, leaving the creek to their right. They then, turning into the creek valley, came down Trace<br>Fork to the lick on the <strong>John T. Overbey<\/strong> place, described as &#8220;an old lick as large as a cornfield.&#8221; They then crossed<br>Dog Creek, went up the <strong>Gee<\/strong> Hill, over to Leatherwood Creek, and down this creek to it&#8217;s mouth, where they<br>crossed Duck River. Then leaving the Chickasaw Trace, which ran up <strong>Robertson&#8217;s<\/strong> Creek, to the right, they went to<br>the head of Swan Creek. From this point they went the route described in preceding pages.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><strong>John Dean<\/strong>, father of <strong>William, Robert, Ephraim<\/strong>, and <strong>Mark Dean<\/strong>, came to Hickman County on March 24, 1844, and<br>located at the old <strong>T. J. Oakley<\/strong> place. Soon after locating here he commenced the manufacture of plug tobacco, the<br>first industry of the kind ever operated in the county. The factory was near the <strong>Oakley<\/strong> place. The reputation of the<br>&#8220;Dean Tobacco&#8221; as a high-grade tobacco is yet remembered by many, and this reputation was sustained by<br><strong>William Dean<\/strong>, who in 1857 erected a factory at the mouth of Dog (or Cedar) Creek. <strong>John Dean<\/strong> was born in East<br>Tennessee on August 7, 1803, and in 1825 married <strong>Eliza Andrews<\/strong>, of Williamson County. Dean died at the <strong>T. J.<\/strong><br><strong>Oakley <\/strong>place, and is there buried. His father was <strong>William Dean<\/strong>, who married <strong>Alice Woodward<\/strong>, of East Tennessee,<br>from which place <strong>Dean<\/strong> came, in 1811, to Maury County. <strong>William Dean<\/strong> died in 1819 on his return from Missouri,<br>where he had been to locate land. <strong>Robert Dean<\/strong>, son of <strong>John Dean<\/strong>, was thrown from a mule and killed near Little<br>Lot on February 25, 1880.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>In 1836 <strong>Josiah Davidson<\/strong> lived at the<strong> John W. Mayberry<\/strong> place. Here, during and after the Civil War, lived <strong>Joseph<\/strong><br><strong>Bizwell<\/strong>, a hospitable man and a Christian gentleman. Before the war he was tax collector for Hickman County, and<br>was at one time deputy sheriff.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>At the <strong>John T. Overbey<\/strong> place, in 1835, lived the widow of <strong>Pleasant Russell<\/strong>, the father of <strong>F. B.<\/strong> and <strong>W. B. Russell<\/strong>.<br>This place is frequently called the <strong>Beale<\/strong> place, as it was once owned by <strong>Capt. Charles Wesley Beale<\/strong>, who<br>commanded a company in the Twenty-fourth Tennessee Infantry, and who died at Bowling Green, Ky., in the later<br>part of 1861. In 1836 <strong>Vincent Irwin<\/strong> lived where <strong>H. G. Primm<\/strong> now lives and later sold the lands to <strong>F. B. Russell<\/strong>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>In 1830 <strong>John T. Primm,<\/strong> who was born in Maryland on September 22, 1790, located at the place so well known as<br>the Primm place. Primm married <strong>Cecilia C. Gannt<\/strong>, also of Maryland, who was born on May 6, 1803. Other<br>daughters of <strong>Mrs. Elizabeth Gannt<\/strong> married <strong>Alten Massey<\/strong>, <strong>Captain Clagett<\/strong>, and <strong>Rev. George Hicks<\/strong>. In 1834 <strong>Hicks<\/strong><br>went to Mississippi, where he died. <strong>Primm<\/strong> was a school-teacher, and taught here as did also his brother-in-law,<br><strong>Gannt<\/strong>. He was also a merchant, and was one of the first to sell goods on the creek. This place, noted as one of the<br>earliest settled in this vicinity, was first owned by <strong>William Lytle<\/strong>, who laid a soldier&#8217;s warrant here in 1811. The<br><strong>Primms<\/strong>, <strong>Smoots<\/strong>, <strong>Smiths<\/strong>, <strong>Gannts<\/strong>, <strong>Clagetts<\/strong>, <strong>Tylers<\/strong>, and <strong>Berrys <\/strong>came here from Maryland at an early date and<br>formed a Maryland colony near the lines of the Second, Fourth, and Thirteenth Districts, where they had schools of<br>their own. They had two doctors, <strong>Smith<\/strong> and <strong>Smoot<\/strong>; two teachers, <strong>Gannt<\/strong> and <strong>Primm<\/strong>; and one merchant, <strong>Primm<\/strong>.<br>They brought no preacher with them, but the eldest son of <strong>John T. Primm<\/strong>\u2014<strong>Oliver Hazard Perry Primm<\/strong>, who was<br>born on October 24, 1819\u2014became a preacher. Another son is <strong>Hinson Groves Primm<\/strong>, who was born in August,<br>1839. There were nine other children. <strong>Hinson G. Primm<\/strong>, who married <strong>Emma V. Rooker<\/strong>, is also the father of eleven<br>children. Another son, <strong>Clagett Primm<\/strong>, now lives on Hassell&#8217;s Creek.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>In 1825 a man named <strong>Cox<\/strong> lived on Dog (or Cedar) Creek, on a portion of the lands now owned by <strong>William Dean<\/strong>.<br>He had no children, and he willed the lands to <strong>Stephen (or Jesse) Harper<\/strong>, a boy whom he had reared. At times <strong>Cox<\/strong><br>would become violently insane, and his neighbors would be forced to confine him. After he would recover he would<br>take revenge upon those who had confined him by refusing to allow their children to have any apples out of his fine<br>orchard. The other children of the neighborhood would be given access to the orchard. Finding that his fine flock of<br>sheep was decreasing in numbers, he commenced to keep a close watch for wolves, which infested the hills near by.<br>One day a large &#8220;dog wolf&#8221; pursued his sheep to within a few steps of his house. Snatching his rifle from the<br>rack\u2014two forked sticks nailed to the wall\u2014he killed the wolf. The report of killing of this pest spread throughout<br>the neighborhood, and from the killing of the &#8220;dog wolf&#8221; the creek took its name\u2014Dog Creek. According to<br><strong>William Dean, Edward Mahon<\/strong>, of Maury County, bought land on the creek from <strong>Malugin<\/strong> and erected a mill on it.<br><strong>Mahon<\/strong> became tired of telling his old neighbors in aristocratic Maury County that he lived on Dog Creek; so, when<br><strong>Colonel Bibb<\/strong> was in the senate, <strong>Mahon<\/strong> had him to introduce a bill changing the name to &#8220;Cedar Creek.&#8221; This bill<br>passed both houses, and was approved by the Governor, and became a law &#8220;from and after its passage, the public<br>welfare requiring it.&#8221;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><strong>Primm&#8217;s<\/strong> Springs are at the head of this creek. These springs were almost unnoticed until 1831, when <strong>Alten Massey<\/strong>,<br>a brother-in-law of <strong>John T. Primm<\/strong>, entered the land surrounding them. He had married a <strong>Miss Gannt<\/strong>, and, not<br>having any children, he willed the springs property to the children of <strong>Primm<\/strong>. The springs in 1836 were fitted up for<br>visitors, and since that time this has been a popular resort. It is said that <strong>Matilda<\/strong>, the wife of <strong>J. W. Stephenson<\/strong>, and<br>an aunt of <strong>William Dean<\/strong>, gained a pound a day while staying here in 1837. <strong>Primm<\/strong>&#8216;s Springs are now principally the<br>property of Maury County parties. Hickman Countians who have interests here are: <strong>O. A. Jones, John A. Jones<\/strong>,<br>and <strong>R. A. Smith<\/strong>. These springs, like almost all others of their character, were, before they were fitted up for<br>guests, considered public property, and hither in the early days resorted hunters, trappers, and explorers. They<br>came when it suited them, and departed when they pleased.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><strong>William Dean<\/strong> came to this creek from the <strong>Oakley<\/strong> place in 1857 and erected a tobacco factory. The first plug of<br>tobacco he made was at the <strong>Oakley<\/strong> place, on August 5, 1846. Here on Dog (or Cedar) Creek he had also a tan<br>yard, which he operated, together with the tobacco factory, until 1861. The &#8220;Dean Tobacco,&#8221; the trade being then<br>unlimited by taxes or by laws, was carried in wagons and sold in either large or small lots throughout Middle<br>Tennessee and portions of Mississippi and Alabama. <strong>Dean<\/strong> bought part of his lands from a man named <strong>Helms<\/strong>, who<br>had bought from <strong>Asa Shute<\/strong>, a pioneer land locator. That <strong>Shute<\/strong> was here as early as 1811 is evidenced by the fact<br>that a beech tree on the creek was marked: &#8220;<strong>Asa Shute<\/strong>, 1811.&#8221; Another, which stood near by, was marked: &#8220;<strong>Asa<\/strong><br><strong>Shute, Thomas Ingram<\/strong>, 1811.&#8221; These trees stood about halfway between <strong>Primm&#8217;s<\/strong> Springs and the mouth of the<br>creek, about one-fourth of a mile above where <strong>Dean<\/strong> now lives, and near the foot of <strong>Gee&#8217;s<\/strong> Hill. These inscriptions<br>were cut in the bark of these beech trees, which, as they stood near the creek, have washed away. They were once<br>important landmarks. <strong>Gee&#8217;s<\/strong> Hill takes its name from a man named <strong>Gee<\/strong>, who once lived here, and from whom the<br>ford at the mouth of Dog (or Cedar) Creek and the road leading over to the head of Leatherwood Creek take their<br>names\u2014<strong>Gee&#8217;s <\/strong>Ford and <strong>Gee&#8217;s<\/strong> Road, respectively. This <strong>Gee<\/strong> was probably the one who killed so many deer while<br>herding cattle in the Cow Hollow, in the Ninth District. On Dog (or Cedar) Creek a house built by <strong>John Irwin<\/strong> in<br>1809 is still used as a residence. There is a hewn-log house on the place where <strong>G. W. Malugin<\/strong> now lives which was<br>also built in 1809. This place is known as the &#8220;<strong>Billy Malugin<\/strong> place.&#8221; There is yet another house built in 1809 on<br>this creek. This is situated on a tributary of the creek, and is within the limits of the Thirteenth District. This house<br>was built by\u2014<strong>Mattock<\/strong>, and from it <strong>John G. Malugin<\/strong> once ran in great fright to the home of <strong>Gee<\/strong>. He ran down the<br>creek valley and through a dense canebrake, thinking that Indians were in close pursuit. His hasty arrival and<br>terrible news he brought caused <strong>Gee<\/strong> to also become frightened. They made arrangements to resist the savages as<br>best they could and to fight them to the last. After hours of weary waiting and of suspense, they concluded that it<br>was a false alarm, and such it was. <strong>Robert Dean<\/strong>, an uncle of <strong>William Dean<\/strong> and a brother of <strong>John Dean<\/strong>, located on<br><strong>Bell&#8217;s<\/strong> Branch, in the Seventh District, in 1820, and taught school there.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>As early as 1830, and probably earlier, <strong>Pleasant Russell<\/strong> lived at the <strong>John T. Overbey<\/strong> (or <strong>Beale<\/strong>) place. His son, the<br>late <strong>Hon. W. B. Russell<\/strong>, was a great hunter. In 1840, after a long chase, he lost the trail of a deer in the Dog (or<br>Cedar) Creek bottoms. A few hours later he went to the sulphur springs at the head of the creek for water, and<br>there found the deer on a like errand. The deer was slain.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>During the Civil War this district furnished its quota of brave men for the Southern army. They were led by<br><strong>Captains Beale, Oliver,<\/strong> and <strong>Campbell<\/strong>. <strong>Capt. Thomas Campbell<\/strong> was badly wounded in the leg during the war. After<br>the war he was elected tax collector, defeating <strong>Robert Green<\/strong>, a one-armed ex-Confederate. In another race for the<br>same office <strong>Green<\/strong> defeated <strong>Campbell<\/strong>, and thus Hickman County gave this, the most responsible county office, to<br>these two wounded heroes. The majority each time was very small, and it seemed that the voters wanted to elect<br>both men.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><strong>Ferdinand B. Russell<\/strong> was at one time one of the leading mill men of the Fourth District. He lost his eyesight while<br>blasting rock near his mill on<strong> Jones<\/strong>&#8216; Branch. His father was born in Williamson County on March 10, 1822.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><strong>Felix Cockrum<\/strong> was drowned at the mouth of Lick Creek, in the Second District, in 1851. His body was recovered at<br>or near the <strong>O. A. Jones<\/strong> (or <strong>Nunnelly<\/strong>) place. At Inkstand Point\u2014so called on account of its peculiar shape\u2014near<br>the mouth of Lick Creek, the body of a man named <strong>Ashworth<\/strong> was recovered in 1887. He was drowned at Gordon&#8217;s<br>Ferry, and lived in Maury County. In Lick Creek, in the Fourth District, at what is called the Pine Bluff Hole, little<br><strong>Charlie Haley<\/strong>, of Maury County, was drowned in 1888. He was in bathing with other boys.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The early physicians here were <strong>Drs. Smoot<\/strong> and <strong>Smith<\/strong>, already mentioned. They lived near the mouth of Fort<br>Cooper Hollow. Physicians here at a recent date <strong>Drs. Daniel, Capps,<\/strong> and <strong>Shacklett<\/strong>. On <strong>Jones<\/strong>&#8216; Branch <strong>Elder J. P.<br>Litton<\/strong> lived in recent years. He by his upright course made many friends and gained the esteem of even those who<br>differed from him on doctrinal points.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>From &#8220;A History of Hickman County Tenn.&#8221;&nbsp;Published by Gospel Advocate Publishing Co. 1900 Written by W. Jerome &amp; David L. SpenceBeginning on Page 149 CHAPTER VIITHE FOURTH DISTRICT. The Fourth District is bounded on the north by Dickson County; on the east, by Williamson and Maury Counties;south, by the Thirteenth District; and west, by the <a class=\"read-more\" href=\"https:\/\/www.tngenweb.org\/hickman\/hickmans-fourth-district\/\">Read More<\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":2,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"advgb_blocks_editor_width":"","advgb_blocks_columns_visual_guide":"","_monsterinsights_skip_tracking":false,"_monsterinsights_sitenote_active":false,"_monsterinsights_sitenote_note":"","_monsterinsights_sitenote_category":0,"footnotes":""},"categories":[4],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-399","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-history"],"author_meta":{"display_name":"Darlene Anderson","author_link":"https:\/\/www.tngenweb.org\/hickman\/author\/darlene-anderson\/"},"featured_img":null,"coauthors":[],"tax_additional":{"categories":{"linked":["<a href=\"https:\/\/www.tngenweb.org\/hickman\/category\/history\/\" class=\"advgb-post-tax-term\">History<\/a>"],"unlinked":["<span class=\"advgb-post-tax-term\">History<\/span>"]}},"comment_count":"0","relative_dates":{"created":"Posted 4 years ago","modified":"Updated 4 years ago"},"absolute_dates":{"created":"Posted on February 14, 2022","modified":"Updated on February 14, 2022"},"absolute_dates_time":{"created":"Posted on February 14, 2022 6:46 pm","modified":"Updated on February 14, 2022 6:46 pm"},"featured_img_caption":"","series_order":"","_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.tngenweb.org\/hickman\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/399","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.tngenweb.org\/hickman\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.tngenweb.org\/hickman\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.tngenweb.org\/hickman\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/2"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.tngenweb.org\/hickman\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=399"}],"version-history":[{"count":3,"href":"https:\/\/www.tngenweb.org\/hickman\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/399\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":402,"href":"https:\/\/www.tngenweb.org\/hickman\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/399\/revisions\/402"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.tngenweb.org\/hickman\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=399"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.tngenweb.org\/hickman\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=399"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.tngenweb.org\/hickman\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=399"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}