Wednesday, March 2, 2016

Loose Ends

     I need to talk about Joseph Hacker’s other children. You will recall that in my last post I talked about John and Cyntha Beeler Hacker. John was Joseph’s oldest son. He and his brother Julius were born between 1802 and 1810—that mysterious time between the dates of two marriage bonds that were filed by Joseph Hacker and Priscilla Haggerty.
     George Washington Hacker, b. 1811, was the first son born to Joseph and Priscilla after their 1810 marriage. He was probably born in Roane County, Tennessee as that is where his parents were living in 1810.  The 1830 Federal Census for Roane County, TN lists the Joseph Hacker household with one son between 10 and 15, two sons between 15 and 19,  one daughter between 10 and 15, one daughter between 15 and 19, a male and female both between 50 and 59, and two elderly ladies between 80 and 89.  The two sons between 15 and 19 would be George W. and his brother, Joel.  The name of the son under 15 is not known. The two young girls were Margaret and her sister Elizabeth.  Joseph and wife Priscilla were the two adults between 50 and 59. 
     The identity of the elderly ladies is not known. My speculation is that they might have been the mothers of Joseph and Priscilla. If so, one of them would have been Martha Beeler Hacker. However, the 1840 Federal census shows seven elderly ladies between 80 and 89 living in Joseph’s household. These are not the same ladies that were shown on the 1830 census, because those two ladies would be 10 years older by 1840 and would be counted in the 90-99 age range. So, was Joseph Hacker running a home for elderly women?  Did this give employment to his two daughters?  We don’t know.
     Getting back to George Washington Hacker, he married Rebecca Hollingsworth on May 10, 1838 in Grainger County, Tennessee. George Washington’s brother, Julius C. Hacker lived in Grainger County by then. Was George visiting his brother when he met Rebecca, whose mother was married to a prominent farmer in Grainger County? 
     We should take a little time to explain some family relationships here. Rebecca Hollingsworth was the daughter of Anna Parker Hollingsworth Beeler. Anna’s first husband was “Somebody” Parker, and she had children by him. He died, and she married Mr. Hollingsworth and had children by him. Rebecca came from the second set of children.
     After Mr. Hollingsworth died, Anna married Joseph Beeler, a wealthy farmer whose wife, Katy, had died. Joseph had several children by Katy.  He and Anna did not have any children, but Anna’s daughters lived with her in Joseph’s household from time to time.
     Joseph Beeler was the son of John Valentine Beeler who, in turn, was the son of Ulrich Buehler who had come to the New World from Switzerland in 1734.  Ulrich and wife, Maria Elizabeth, had several children; four of them were baptized and, therefore, proven to be Ulrich’s children. Four others have been attributed to Ulrich and Maria Elizabeth, but there is no documentation to absolutely prove these family relationships. One of the latter was Martha Beeler who married Julius Hacker, a German immigrant who became acquainted with Ulrich Buehler in Fredericks Co., Virginia in the 1750s-1760s. It appears that Julius married Ulrich’s daughter.
     When Ulrich Buehler’s sons began to move from Virginia into these untamed Indian territories that were, theoretically, part of the North Carolina Colony, Julius and Martha Beeler Hacker moved right along with them. Around 1775, Julius settled his family on land located on Beaver Creek near land claimed by John Valentine Beeler.*  Between 1770 and 1780, there was no legal way for white settlers who began moving into Indian territories to purchase land, although some Indians tried to sell land to them. These sales were often declared illegal later. During that same decade, the Revolutionary War was also fought, and won, by the rebels. After 1776, the area was considered to be part of the new United States.
     I am shortening a long, complicated history here, but I want to explain some things while talking about George Washington Hacker’s marriage to Rebecca Hollingsworth in Grainger County—where Rebecca’s mother was married to the prominent and wealthy Joseph Beeler. George Hacker was presumably Joseph’s distant cousin. As a child, Joseph Beeler would certainly have known Julius Hacker, George’s grandfather, because the Hacker farm was near his father’s large farm in Sullivan County. Julius Hacker and John V. Beeler acquired their respective farms through North Carolina Land Grants issued in the early 1780s. In Sullivan County, Julius Hacker and John V. Beeler had served together on at least one committee that oversaw the construction of an important road. 
     The 1840 Federal Census for Grainger County lists the George Hacker family with an adult male 20-30, a female 15-19, and a child under 5.  The listing is at the top of the page; these people would have been George, Rebecca, and their first child, Joseph Jerome. Four lines down from George’s name, we find a listing for Joseph Beeler, Sr., a man between 70 and 79 years old.  The household also contains a woman, 40-49, a male teenager between 15 and 20, and two females between 10 and 15.  The woman would be Anna Parker Hollingsworth, Joseph’s wife.  The teenage children were probably hers from former marriages. This listing suggests that George W. Hacker and his wife were living close to Rebecca’s mother and stepfather, and were included in Joseph and Anna’s family circle.
     Julius Hacker, George’s older brother, was listed at the bottom of the previous page, meaning that he lived close to his brother, George. In the listings above Julius’ name, we find several other Beeler households:
Daniel Beeler, Jr.
Jacob Beeler
John Beeler
Daniel Beeler
Peter Beeler
Joseph Beeler, Jr.
Some of these men were sons of Joseph Beeler, Sr. One—Daniel—might have been a brother; Daniel Jr. might have been this brother’s son.  So, we see George W. Hacker, and his brother Julius Hacker, living among the Beelers, their probable cousins.
     Another connection would come from Julius’s wife, Elizabeth Beeler, who was a great granddaughter of Ulrich and Maria Elizabeth through her grandfather, Jacob Beeler. This Jacob Beeler was one of the “probable” sons, and one Beeler researcher has questioned whether or not he was a “son.” I am assuming that he was. I am also explaining how the Hackers and Beelers living close to each other in Grainger County lends weight to the possibility that they were related.
     Here is another illustration of this relationship. From 1802 to 1810, John Hacker---who was a brother of Joseph Hacker (George’s father)--also lived in Grainger County. He moved there around the same time that John Valentine Beeler did. One of his descendants told me of her family’s claim that John Hacker had a close relationship with his “Uncle” John Valentine Beeler. In fact, John Hacker named one of his sons Valentine after his uncle.  Again, John V. Beeler would have known John Hacker as the son of his friend, Julius Hacker who was married to his “presumed” sister. He may have wanted to help his nephew get started in life.
     I want to point out that all of those people back then knew to whom they were related.  It is only some researchers, now, who say that they are not sure about these relationships because they can’t find a piece of paper, or a record, that tells them who was related to whom.
     George W. and Rebecca had four children rather quickly.  They are:
Joseph Jerome Hacker, b. 12 Mar 1838; d. 1 Mar 1912
Julius C. Hacker; b. 1840, d. 31 Jul 1902
William A. Hacker, b. 1843; d. AFT Jul 1880
George W. Hacker, b. 1844; d. 1867
George, himself, died in 1844 leaving his widow with four young children.  Rebecca Hacker is listed as Head-of-Household on the 1850 Tennessee Federal Census for Grainger County.  Her four sons are listed with her on that record.
     Rebecca learned lessons from the way her mother managed to survive in a male-dominated world where women only held property if they inherited it from a father or a husband.  By 1851, she had married again to Henry Soard, a widower with young children who needed to be cared for. Henry had first married Malinda Taylor about 1835 in Claiborne Co., and had five daughters before she died in 1841.  She might have died in childbirth.
     In 1842, Henry Soard married Jane Rogers in Grainger County.  She took over the care of his daughters, and had four children of her own. She died in 1849.  Jane Rogers was from Grainger County, and Henry Soard may have met Rebecca and George Hacker when he married Jane there.  But George was still very much alive in 1842.  Two years later, Rebecca was a widow.  When Henry’s wife died in 1849, he might have thought about Rebecca as a possible mother for his children.  So he came calling.  Eventually, he and Rebecca married in 1852.
     Pinkney L. Soard was Henry’s and Rebecca’s first child.   According to the 1900 Census record, Pinkney was born in September, 1851.  However, Tennessee marriage records show that Henry and Rebecca were married in November, 1851.  Henry and Rebecca must have taken a little too long to think it over, and the inevitable happened. They made it right in the end, and Rebecca took over the care of Henry’s older children while he supported this large family with farming. Rebecca gave birth to five more Soard children which were added to the household. The 1860 Census shows the Henry Soard household with three older Hacker children, two older Soard children, and the five younger Soard children born to Henry and Rebecca. 
     Henry Soard died in 1865. His last child was Samuel Brown Soard who was born in 1861.  His widow, Rebecca, married one more time to John Runnolds on November 26, 1867. She did not have any children by him.  She lived out her life as his wife, and died in 1880.


* The 1775 date is derived from the fact that Joseph Hacker, Julius and Martha’s fourth son, was born in 1775, according to his 1850 Federal Census record. He was 75 years old in 1850, and was born in North Carolina. This listing suggests that, by 1775, the family had moved into this area that was part of the North Carolina Colony, according to its charter from the King of England. The area would soon be called Washington County; much later a portion of that county would be broken off to form Sullivan County.

Friday, May 29, 2015

JOSEPH HACKER and DESCENDANTS PT. 2

I want to devote this essay to one of the sons of Joseph Hacker, other than our direct ancestor, Julius C. Hacker. I have mentioned before that Joseph and Priscilla had two sons between the dates of the two marriage bonds. The proof that these two sons existed became known when a law suit relating to the settlement of Joseph Hacker’s modest estate was found. I will discuss that law suit in my next installment. 

The sons were John Hacker b. 1806 and Julius C. Hacker b. 1808. The two brothers married sisters, Cyntha and Elizabeth Beeler, daughters of Daniel Beeler of Claiborne County.  They were grand-daughters of Jacob Beelar of Sullivan County. The marriages probably took place in Claiborne County, but there is no surviving record of them. The two couples left a trail of records, however, of the children born to them and the places where they lived. So we know that the marriages did take place.

Both John and Julius are listed as head of households on the 1830 Federal Census for Claiborne County, Tennessee. John’s household contained, besides himself, a male 15-19, a female under 5, and a female between 20 and 29. He was also between 20 and 29.  The teenage male might have been one of his younger brothers, or a young man hired as a farm hand. John did not own any slaves. The young female would have been daughter Malinda. (I learned about her from a biograph that was written years later for John M. Hacker, a son.) His wife, Cyntha, was the female who was between 20 and 29.

How do we know Cyntha’s name? She is named on the 1850 Federal Census for Jefferson County, Missouri where she is living as a widow with her’s and John’s children. How do we know she was a Beeler? They named one of their sons Conrad Beeler Hacker. Cyntha and Elizabeth had a maternal grandfather and a brother named Conrad, and the Beeler part came from her maiden name. Her given name was spelled (and misspelled) Cynthia, Sinthia, Syntha, along with Cyntha. Her headstone says Cyntha so I have assumed that this was the actual spelling. 

John Hacker is listed four names from the bottom of p. 123 of the 1830 Claiborne Co. census book.  Julius Hacker’s household is found at the bottom of the page, on a line where two households are squeezed onto one line because the top line of the page was used for carrying forward totals for each column from the previous page. This was true of every page in that census book.

Daniel Beeler’s household is found at the top of p. 124 of the 1830 Fed. Census for Claiborne County. It is a large household with his wife and children of several ages living in the home.  He is the father of Cyntha and her sister Elizabeth. Presumably, they were all living in close proximity to one another in Claiborne County when this census was taken. Finding Daniel Beeler’s household close to John’s and Julius’s households helped to corroborate the fact that they had a relationship to each other—through Daniel’s daughters.

John and Cyntha left Claiborne County later in 1830 and moved to Indiana. How do we know this?  The main source of information was the 1850 Federal Census for Jefferson County, Missouri. As I said, Cyntha (now named Cynthia) Hacker, 43, was listed as a widow with several children living with her. Her age suggests that she was born in 1807. There is no Malinda, so she must have married, or died, by then.  Joseph D. is 20, born in Indiana. That would make him b. 1830. So we know that his parents had moved to Indiana some time after the 1830 census was taken in Claiborne County. Indiana was a common destination for many Tennessee families who were seeking cheap land and a new life. We can use the 1850 census to trace the movement of the John Hacker family because the children’s ages and birthplaces were listed. They are as follows:
  • ·      Joseph D. – b. 1830 in Indiana
  • ·      John M. – b. 1833 in Indiana
  • ·      Margaret A.  – b. 1835 in Indiana
  • ·      George – b. 1838 in Illinois
  • ·      Mary E. – b. 1841 in Illinois
  • ·      Conrad B. – b. 1843 in Missouri
  • ·      James K. – b. 1846 in Missouri
There were two children named Theodore and Frederic Loney living in the home, but I do not know who they were.

I could not find a death record for John Hacker, but the family story is that he died in 1848.  The family was living on a farm in Jefferson County.

Sometime after the census was taken, Joseph D. and John M. Hacker traveled to California to join the Gold Rush that began in 1849 when gold was discovered near Sutter’s Mill. They lived in El Dorado County. This story was told in a biograph written about John M. Hacker published in the Goodspeed’s  Biographical and Historical Memoirs of Eastern Arkansas which I learned about from Ken Smith, a Hacker researcher. The biograph provides a great deal of information about John M. Hacker, including who his parents and siblings were, his story about the gold rush, his marriage, and his life as a fruit farmer in Eastern Arkansas. He must have come back from California with some profits from the gold mining, because he was able to buy a farm in Franklin County, Missouri, and also developed three fruit farms in Arkansas.


John M. Hacker was living in his mother’s household in 1850 and in 1860, and I would not have known about the gold rush years without the biograph. His brother, Joseph D. is listed on the 1860 Federal Census for El Dorado County, along with Nancy Hacker (wife) and five-month-old Joseph Hacker (possible son). But John M. probably lived in California from 1853 to 1858, so was listed in his mother’s household in 1850 and 1860.

Cyntha Beeler Hacker also made changes during that decade. In March, 1851 she married Isaac Loller. The marriage record actually spells his surname “Lawler” and his given name was transcribed as “Jesse.” His given name is hard to read and could be Isaac, which would agree with Beeler family published pedigrees. David Cosper, a Beeler researcher, recently re-examined a microfilm of the original and determined that it was “Isaac” instead of “Jesse.” I could find no other information about this person, although searches turned up several men named “Isaac Loller or Lollar.” He apparently died about 1859—about the time that John M. Hacker returned from California.

Cyntha Beeler Hacker Loller also moved to Franklin County, Missouri during that decade, and operated a hotel in a town called “Pacific” in Franklin Co., Missouri. I found the story of Cyntha and her hotel business in the Pacific section of a multi-county history. She ran the hotel for at least 10 years; eventually her son, Conrad Beeler Hacker (C. B. Hacker) joined her in the business. C. B. held positions in several Pacific civic organizations. John M. Hacker, by then the owner of a large farm in Franklin County, was also listed as a member of a civic organization. John M. married Martha F. Johnson in 1862, and they had one daughter.

According to the biograph, John M. also owned three large farms in Eastern Arkansas on which he grew fruit. He was active in his church and other organizations in Arkansas. The biograph implied that he and his family lived primarily in Arkansas, but he was listed on the Franklin County, Missouri 1880 Federal Census, and was never listed on an Arkansas census record that I could find.

Cyntha Beeler Hacker Loller opened the American Hotel in Pacific in 1855. She ran it herself until 1861 when her son, C. B. Hacker, became her partner. She and C. B. ran the hotel until May 1881 when it burned to the ground. The property was purchased by George Curry who rebuilt the hotel and called it the New American. C. B. Hacker purchased another local hotel a few years later and ran it for several years.

Cyntha died in 1888 and is buried in the Pacific, Missouri cemetery.  C. B. Hacker died in 1896 and is buried under a large monument in the Pacific, Missouri cemetery.  His wife and one of his daughters are buried nearby.  His mother’s grave is a little behind his.  George Curry, the fellow hotelier, is buried under a similar monument that is behind, and to the right, of C. B.’s monument. He is clearly situated to be part of the Hacker grouping so must have been a friend.  John M. Hacker died in 1893 and is also buried there, probably beside the George Curry monument. His headstone information is carved on the side of the Curry monument. 

John and Cyntha Beeler Hacker, and their family, fascinated me because their lives were so much different than the lives of Julius and Elizabeth Beeler Hacker—their sister and brother. I do not know if Cyntha maintained contact with her sister, Elizabeth. They both had sons named John M. Hacker, and both young men went to California during the gold rush.  I do not know if the two John M.s knew each other in California. They did not live in the same place. 

In my next installment, I will talk about George Washington Hacker, and the two sisters—Margaret and Elizabeth—who remained in their father’s house until he died.



Monday, January 26, 2015

Joseph Hacker, Our Ancestor, Part I


We can finally talk about our direct ancestor, Joseph Hacker.  He was the fourth son of Julius and Martha Beeler Hacker, and was born in 1775.  We know this birth year is certain because he is listed as being 75 years old on his 1850 Federal Census record.  The census record showed that he was living in Roane County, Tennessee, and that he was born in North Carolina.  His age of 75 in 1850 tells us that he was born in 1775.  His place of birth in North Carolina suggests that his family had moved to the area that became Washington County, North Carolina Colony by then.  

It is likely that his younger sisters, Susan and Catherine, were also born in Washington County.  The family moved to the area around the same time that members of the Beeler family were settling there.  Joseph would have known his Beeler uncles and cousins, since his father, Julius, obtained a grant in 1784 for 640 acres on Beaver Creek in Sullivan County.  This tract was located near land owned by Beeler family members.

The Julius Hacker family was named as one of the families that took refuge in Shelby’s Fort in 1780 while the men of the community went off to fight a battle at King’s Mountain, South Carolina.  This battle took place in September of 1780 when Joseph was five years old. It was necessary for families to live in the fort for safety while the men of Sullivan County were away because Cherokee Indians living in the vicinity frequently attacked unprotected families.

We know nothing about the childhood and teenage years of Joseph.  Presumably, he lived with his family on the 640 acre farm, and he probably worked with his father and brothers on that land.  The area was originally part of North Carolina Colony, and the Julius Hacker land grant was awarded under North Carolina’s authority.  Washington County was organized around 1775.  But in 1779, a portion of that county was broken off to form Sullivan County.  Around 1790, North Carolina relinquished control of this area and it became part of the Virginia Colony.  Then, in 1796 Washington and Sullivan Counties were included in land that became the State of Tennessee. 

Sullivan County, Tennessee published its first Tax list in 1796.  Julius Hacker, Julius Hacker Jr. and John Hacker are listed on it.  Julius Hacker (the father) was taxed for 640 acres of land.  Julius Jr. and John did not own land, but were taxed for one white poll each.  The white poll was assessed on male citizens aged 21-50, and gave them the right to vote.  Joseph’s name is absent from this tax list, indicating that he was no longer living in his father’s house.  He was about 21 years of age so would have been taxed if he had lived in Sullivan County..

So where was he?  We know that his brother Jacob was married and living in Greene County,  Tennessee.  But we don’t know where he was.  In 1798 his father, Julius Hacker, sold his 640 acre farm and moved to an area on the Clinch River.  This area eventually became Roane County, Tennessee.  It appears that Julius Jr. moved to Roane County with him, but John was married about then and might have moved to Grainger County with his new wife. 

The next record we have for Joseph Hacker is a marriage bond dated dated 8 June 1802, and issued in Roane County.  His bride was to be Priscilla Haggerty.  However, the marriage bond is part of a strange story that we cannot completely tell.  You see, there was a second marriage bond for Joseph Hacker and Priscilla Haggerty filed in 14 July 1810 also in Roane County.  So, did they get married in 1802, and then again in 1810?  We don’t know.  The filing of a marriage bond does not mean that the marriage actually took place; it just serves as a surety to be used if something goes wrong with the wedding plans.  Now, it would be simple enough to say that they did not get married in 1802, but did remain involved with each other and got married in 1810.  The thing wrong with that theory is that there were two sons born during the eight years between those bonds.  John Hacker was born in 1806 and Julius C. Hacker was born in 1808. Were they born out of wedlock?  We don’t know. But we know that  Joseph and Priscilla were married for sure in 1810.  They soon had more children.

I should note that there is no documentation for the birth of these two sons.  We know about them, their age and their parentage, from later records that have been found.  Their identity as sons of Joseph Hacker was finally proven through litigation that took place over Joseph Hacker’s estate after he died.  I will discuss that litigation .in another post

Hacker researcher Alexis Scholz, who is descended from Joseph, has found evidence that he might have been living in Russell County, Virginia (an area that had originally been in Washington County) around 1806-1807.  If so, he was probably living near his sister Catherine who had married Jacob Peters.  Jacob had purchased land that, according to the deed, was formerly owned by Joseph Hacker.  However, a deed record for his purchase of the land has not been found.  This information serves to show where Joseph might have been at that time.

The families of John and Julius Hacker, the sons, were both listed in the 1830 census for Claiborne County, Tennessee.  John had a daughter between five and 10 years old and a wife.  Julius had a  son under five years old and a wife.  The two households were listed at the bottom of P. 38 of the census record.  The household of Daniel Beeler was listed at the top of P. 40.  The intervening page is blank.

Daniel Beeler, son of Jacob Beeler (1750-1843), was the father of Cyntha Ann and Elizabeth, the sisters who married John and Julius Hacker in approximately 1827.  Jacob Beeler was named as a probable son of Ulrich and Maria Elizabeth Buehler for many years.  Recently, however, one Beeler researcher has asserted that there was no proof of his being a son of Ulrich and has questioned the whole relationship.  Actually, four of the children attributed to Ulrich Buehler have no documentation; they are George, Martha, Jacob and Ulrich.  The older children of Ulrich and Maria Elizabeth were baptized in Lutheran churches in Pennsaylvania, and can be proven to be his offspring.  They are John Valentine, Maria Elizabeth Susannah, and Joseph.

If Jacob Beeler is a son of Ulrich Buehler, he would also be a brother of Martha Beeler, wife of Julius Hacker.  Martha was the grandmother of John and Julius Hacker; she would be the great aunt of Cyntha and Elizabeth Beeler if she is Jacob's sister.  We will cover details about these two families in our next installment. 

The Beeler story is fascinating, but it should be fully told in its own blog post. 

Getting back to Joseph, he and Priscilla were married for sure on July 4, 1810 in Roane County, Tennessee. Joseph’s father lived on a farm located on the Clinch River; the date of his death is uncertain, but he was listed on tax records until 1808.  Joseph’s brother, Julius Jr. had married Sarah Haggerty, Priscilla’s sister in 1809, and they were living in Roane County.  In addition to John and Julius C. Joseph and Priscilla had the following children: 
  • George Washington, b. 1811 d. 1844
  • Joel, b. 1815 d. 1865
  • An unknown son, b. 1817
  • Margaret, b. 1818
  • Elizabeth, b. 1825
Joseph did serve in the military during the War of 1812.  He was enlisted as a private in Brown’s Regiment, Tennessee Volunteers.

Joseph Hacker received a land grant for 100 acres from Roane County, Tennessee in 1827.  He applied for it on January 2, 1824, and the grant was registered on January 23, 1827.   He must have purchased 75 acres at an earlier date because he is taxed for two tracts—75 acres and 100 acres respectively—in 1837.  He apparently sold this 75-acre tract to his son, Joel, at a later date.

Joseph Hacker is listed on the 1830 Roane County Federal Census with the following household members:
  1. one son between 10-15, 
  2. two sons between 15-20, 
  3. an adult male between 50-60 (which would be Joseph, himself), 
  4. a daughter between 10-15, 
  5. a daughter between 15-20, 
  6. an adult woman between 50-60 (which would be wife Priscilla), 
  7. two adult women between 80-90.  With regard to the elderly women, I do not know for sure who they were, but it is possible that they were the mothers of Joseph and Priscilla—Martha Beeler Hacker, and the mother of Priscilla and Sarah Haggerty.  
The children listed above can easily be matched to the age ranges of children shown on the census record.   In 1830, George Washington Hacker was the oldest son still living at home.

Joseph Hacker appears on the 1837 Roane County Tax List.  He was taxed on 75 acres (worth $350), and 100 acres (worth $150).  His son Joel is listed under him but he did not own land.  This tax list did not show the poll tax for anyone on it.  I should explain that Joel Hacker was the one son who stayed close to his father, and is shown as living next to him on subsequent tax lists.  George Washington is not listed on the tax list.  Since he was married in 1838 in Grainger County, Tennessee, he had probably left his father/s home by 1837 and was living near his brother Julius Hacker and family, who had moved to Grainger County by then.

Joseph Hacker next appears on the 1840 Roane County Federal Census.  Some changes had occurred in the intervening 10 years.  Priscilla had evidently died because there is no woman of her age on the record.  None of Joseph’s sons were left in the home.  The two daughters were still there, and were 10 years older.  Then, we find that seven females—80-90—were living in the home.  I do not know who these women were, but they were not the two women who were living there in 1830.  Those two women would have been 90-100 years old if they were still living.

Joseph’s son Joel Hacker is listed just under him on the census record.  He is living with a young wife, and a small female child.  At some point, Joseph sold Joel 75 acres of land—the 75 acres shown on the 1837 tax record—and Joel established his own household.  He probably worked with his father, however, as they continued to farm the land.  Joseph did not own slaves and also did not have farm laborers living with him.  He would need the help of his son if he continued to farm.

For the first time in 1850, Federal Census Records listed all members of a household by name, age, and place of birth.  As I said above, Joseph Hacker is listed in 1850 as being 75 years old, born in North Carolina.  Joseph’s daughters, Margaret and Elizabeth are also listed in the household.  Margaret is 33 and Elizabeth is 25.  In addition, some children are living there which have not been fully explained.

I am going to stop at this point, although there is much more information about Joseph to talk about.  But there is too much for one post, so I am dividing it into two.  I will post the second part of the Joseph Hacker story within a few weeks.




Wednesday, November 19, 2014

We Move on with Julius Hacker, Jr.

These blog essays have been about the origins of the Julius Hacker family in America, and how family members moved from the east to the west over two or three generations.  We have dealt with “history” based on stories presumably passed down word-of-mouth about the origins of Julius Hacker, the founding father, and his wife Martha Beeler (Buehler).  We have discovered a reference here and there, and the 1784 Land Grant for land in Sullivan County, N. C. that Julius Hacker received. 

The first record of Julius Hacker’s son, Julius Hacker, Jr., was his presence on the 1796 Sullivan County Tax List.  This was the first tax list created for the new state of Tennessee.  Before that, Sullivan County had been part of North Carolina, then part of Virginia.  It had also been part of Washington County, N. C. Colony before a large area was broken off in 1779 to form Sullivan County.  The earliest pioneers who moved into this area came from Virginia Colony, for the most part.  And that was true for the Hacker family, as well.

Julius Hacker, Jr. was born abt 1765 in Virginia Colony.  When his father moved the family from wherever they were living (possibly in Fredericks/Dunmore County, VA) to the new area on the Holston River in North Carolina, he came along as a child of about 10.  This move might have occurred about 1775.  There was no government in the area, no authority from which a family could legally buy land.  So, it is probable that they found someplace to “squat” and staked out a claim to some land. 

The Wautauga Asociation had been formed by then, and they negotiated a treaty with the Indians to buy a large tract of land.  But this was later declared to be illegal.  The Beeler family, with which the Hackers were associated, were part of something called the Loyal Company.  John Valentine Beeler, Julius’s uncle, had surveyed tracts of land in 1774 for himself and his brothers Joseph and George.  But these were never registered and purchase of the land was never completed.

Meanwhile, the Revolutionary War was raging in the coastal areas.  Pioneers in this “Overmountain” area, however, dealt mainly with Cherokee Indians who were sometimes hostile.  The “Overmountain Men”, as they were called, formed militias and fought the Indians.  The British supplied the Indians with food and weapons, asking them to fight the white pioneers.  The British hoped to keep these men busy so that they would not join the rebel armies fighting in Virginia and Pennsylvania.

Julius Hacker, Jr. would have been an observer of all of this activity, for he was too young to participate.  He would have witnessed the excitement when men, young and old, gathered with their families at a certain place.  Col. Isaac Shelby and Col. John Sevier were selecting men from Sullivan and Washington Counties respectively that would form two regiments.  These would join with regiments commanded by Col. Campbell, Col. McDowell, and a few others, to travel to King’s Mountain in South Carolina.  British Col. Patrick Ferguson had been leading his regiment on several skirmishes and battles in the general area.  There weren’t many revolutionary forces that could protect the common citizens who lived there.  The two colonels, Shelby and Sevier, selected 240 men for each of their regiments.  A local Sullivan County company commanded by Captain Pemberton formed part of Col. Isaac Shelby’s regiment.  These two regiments set out on the journey, but in doing so, they left many families of women, children, and the elderly behind with no protection from the Indians who would often attack without warning.

A “fort” had been built on Shelby land.  Years later in 1856, John Hacker—Julius’s brother—wrote an affidavit, which was certified, about how he had helped guard this old fort, known as Shelby’s Fort or the Old Block House.  Several families took refuge in this structure for protection while the men were gone to fight the Battle of King’s Mountain.  Among them was the Julius Hacker family.  Julius Hacker, Jr. was about 15 years old in 1780 when that battle took place.

The Overmountain Men were victorious against British Col. Patrick Ferguson, and he was killed during the battle.  Gradually, the men returned from South Carolina, and picked up their lives.  Some of them continued to fight in various battles and skirmishes that were fought in this area for a few years.  But the Revolutionary War wound down after the King’s Mountain battle embarrassed the British.  There was one more major battle, and then the British surrendered.   Many years later, historians decided that the Battle of King’s Mountain was the last major battle of the Revolutionary War, and it helped convince the British that they had lost.

Another major thing happened in 1780.  North Carolina, which had originally claimed this Overmountain area as part of its colony, decided to step back into some sort of governance of the area.  The state set up land offices and began to process land grants for people that enabled them to legally buy land.  Many of the land grants were made to soldiers who had fought in the Revolutionary War.  But, just as many were made to men who had been living on certain tracts, and had built improvements on them.  Improvements included a house or cabin, a barn, fencing, and the like.  In May, 1784 Julius Hacker, Sr. was awarded Land Grant #266 for 640 acres.  The grant included a legal description of the land, which was located on two sides of Beaver Creek, a tributary of the Holston River.  This land would have been located in Sullivan County, North Carolina at the time.  But sometime in the early 1790s, North Carolina ceded its claim on this area to Virginia, and Sullivan County was then part of Virginia.

In 1793, the name of Julius Hacker is found on the rolls of the “Sullivan County Militia, Southwest Territory,” Colonel Gilbert Christian’s Command, Captain Andrew Beatty’s Company.  The term of this list was from Sep 1 to Dec 1, 1793.  He was paid $9.30 for three months of service.  This listing indicates that Julius, Jr. was ready to take his place in the community and be a part of the local militia. 

Sullivan County, Washington County, Hawkins County, and other nearby counties were placed in the new state of Tennessee when it was formed in 1796.  During all of these changes of jurisdiction, the Julius Hacker family continued to live on the 640 acre farm that Julius Hacker, Sr. had acquired in 1784.  Sullivan County created its first tax list under Tennessee jurisdiction in 1796.  The following sequence of names is found on the list:

Hacker, John, 1 white poll
Hacker, Julius Sr., 640 (acres)
Hartleroad, Martin, 1 white poll
Julius Hacker, 1 white poll

A white poll was a fee that a male individual who was from 21 to 50 years of age paid for the privilege of voting.  Male citizens over 50 years of age did not pay the white poll.  This listing indicates that John Hacker and Julius Hacker were 50 years or younger, but they did not own property.  (Actually, Julius was about 31 and John was about 28.)  Julius Hacker Sr. paid taxes on 640 acres, but did not pay a white poll.  He was well over 50 years of age.  It also suggests that John and Julius were still living with their father and mother on their father’s farm.  Jacob and Joseph, the other two sons were not on this list, so they were living somewhere else.  I have already discussed Jacob’s life in Greene and Monroe Counties.  I will discuss Joseph in another essay.

In 1797, Julius Hacker, Sr. began selling off his land in Sullivan County—mainly to James King—and prepared to move to an area on the Clinch River near Knox County.   It appears that Julius, Jr. followed him. 

In 1802, Julius Hacker is shown on a list of Col. Hugh Francis’s company in Roane County.  The list is found in the The History of Roane County by Emma Middleton Wells.  This may have been a tax list rather than a military list, as taxing districts were usually placed under the authority of someone with the rank of Colonel.  This would prove his residence in Roane County by that year.  I do have a land record for his father’s purchase of land on the Clinch River in an area that later became Roane County.  But I have no record of land owned by Julius Hacker, Jr.

The next record of note was the marriage record of Julius Hacker to Sarah Haggerty on 29 Oct 1809 in Roane County.  The marriage bond for $1,250 was signed by Julius Hacker and Samuel M. Caul.  In those days, marriage bonds were purchased to cover any loss if something occurred to prevent the marriage from taking place.  They were void if no objections were raised to the marriage.  Apparently there were no objections and the couple was duly married!

No Hacker researcher has ever found information about Sarah Haggerty’s family.  She was, however, the sister of Priscilla Haggerty who married Joseph Hacker, Julius’s younger brother in either 1802 or 1810.  The surname was sometimes spelled Hagerty.  Both couples were married at different times in Roane County, Tennessee but there was no one else by the name of Haggerty or Hagerty living there at that time.


Julius Hacker, Jr. left very few records to tell us much about his family.  There were military records, and I believe he fought in the War of 1812.  His name also appears in a few court records for Roane County.  His name does not appear, however, on the first real Federal Census for Roane County in 1830.  Rather, Sarah Hacker is listed as Head of Household with six young boys living with her.   These are presumed to be sons of Julius Hacker, Jr. but Hacker researchers have had quite a time identifying who they were.

As of now, I have three sons I am fairly sure about listed as follows:
  • Alford M. Hacker, Sr., b. 1810 in Roane Co., Tennessee; d. 28 Apr 1863 in Jackson, Mississippi.  (Died during Civil War)
  • Eli Hacker, b. 28 Jan 1811, Roane Co., Tennessee; d. abt 1900, Sacramento, California
  • Julius “Pete” James Hacker, b. 30 Jul 1815, Roane Co., Tennessee; d. abt 1872, Linn Co., Missouri.
A Hacker researcher (and distant cousin) named Alexis Scholz has identified two more possible sons of Julius and Sarah:
  • Cyrus Hacker, found on the 1850 Fed Census in Arkansas
  • John C. Hacker, m. Margaret (Brown?), d. probably in California 
Identity of the sixth son is uncertain.  Both Eli Hacker and Julius James Hacker have been well-researched, and I could write an essay about each of them, or one essay that covers both of them.

With these sons of Julius, and Sarah Hacker, we can see that members of the Hacker family begin to move west.  They were leaving Virginia and Tennessee which had nurtured the Hacker beginnings, and were seeking opportunity in Illinois, Arkansas, Missouri, and California.  Other families were moving to these places—especially to Missouri.  The movement occurred as cheap land opened up when it was vacated by Indian tribes that were forced to move further west, especially into Oklahoma, Indian Territory.  We will learn more about  Hackers moving into Cherokee Indian Territory later.