George Abraham SHELTON, born Feb 21, 1790, and his wife,
Jane JOHNSTON-SHELTON, born Dec 17, 1803, were both born in
Virginia. They were married in 1820 and three of their children
were born in Virginia before the family moved to Alabama. There
is a record of George A. SHELTON first buying land in Fayette County on
Apr 12, 1824, with Polser (Paulson or Palser)
INGLE. The first time that the SHELTON family was seen on the
Fayette County census was in 1830. George A. SHELTON died Sept
21, 1857, and a few years later, Jane and her family moved to Logan
County, Arkansas, where she died Jan 20, 1888. She is buried in
the Paint Rock Cemetery in Driggs, Arkansas.
Jane JOHNSTON-SHELTON’s sister, Olleva (or Ollie), married John
KIRKLAND from
Fayette County. Another sister, Nancy JOHNSTON married a PRESTIGE
(or PRESTIDGE)
and moved to Louisiana. Jane and George SHELTON’s daughters, who
married
into the MORRIS, SOUTH, and BRYANS families, all moved to Arkansas.
The first letter below was written
by my
g-g-grandmother, Missouria HUMPHRY (1840–1933), to my
grandmother, Selma MACGUIRE, in 1917. Missouria
(called Maudie) was in Arkansas when she wrote this letter.
George and Jane had a son, George R. SHELTON (1829–1863), who
fought for the
Confederacy and died in the
Civil War. The second letter below, which George wrote to his
mother and sisters in 1862, includes numerous references to
friends and neighbors from Fayette
County.
LETTER 1
from
Missouria Agnes SHELTON HUMPHRY
to Selma Shelton CORLEY MACGUIRE
(1917)
The
Cedars,
January 4, 1917
Dear Selma,
My father,
George A. SHELTON, was the
son of Abraham SHELTON, and
was
born in Virginia, February 21, 1790; my mother, Jane JOHNSTON SHELTON,
was also born in Virginia, December 17, 1803. They moved to
Alabama, where I was born. My father died there in 1857, and
after his death, my people became dissatisfied and wanted to
move. We had an uncle living in Kansas, and they wanted to go
there, so brother George and Pink MORRIS (your Aunt Laura Ann’s
husband) began to wind out their business to go west. Your Uncle
(great) Edward and Aunt
(great) Mary BRYANS (Tenie’s mother) had
already come to Arkansas. George sold the place in the fall, and
as soon as they could all get ready, we began our long trip.
There were three families of us; your great-uncle, Pink MORRIS, your
great-uncle, Lige SOUTH and
their families with several small children
to each family, my mother, George, myself and a young man, Lee
HOPKINS. We had two wagons, with two yoke of cattle to
each
wagon. All of us walked but the little children, who were too
small to walk. We had two big tents that we would put up at night
to sleep in. I do not know how many days we traveled by land, but
I know it was not but a few; then we got on a boat on the Tennessee
River; we landed in Cairo, Illinois, and from there went to Saint Louis
by land. At Saint Louis we took a boat and traveled part of the
way; we left the boat somewhere in Missouri and went by land to Uncle John KIRKLAND’s in Kansas;
he married my mother’s sister.
I remember
one
time in Missouri, we camped and the well water was salt
water; it would not make coffee, so we made coffee out of water that
stood in the wagon ruts. And one time we crossed a stream of
water that was swollen; the men had brother George to wade in to see
how deep it was; it was not too deep to cross, but the men made a
“pack-saddle” and carried me across, but your grandmother (great) and
my sisters would not let them carry them across, so waded the stream
too.
We stayed
two
weeks at Uncle John’s, but the men did not like, so we
came on to Arkansas; we landed in Carroll County, a mile of
Berryville. We had been on the road three months. Pink
rented land and made a crop, but the others hired out. After the
crops were made, Pink and George started out to hunt a location; they
went down in Logan County, which was then called Scott County.
Pink bought land on a creek called chigger creek, three miles east of
where Magazine now is; then they came back where we were, and in
September we left for our new home. George bought land a mile
north of Magazine, on the Prairie branch. Lige settled near
Waldron, and Edward and Mary BRYANS on the place now owned by Jim H.
LEE, Della’s
father. George made one crop, then he had to go back
to Alabama to collect and finish settling up his business. He
went horseback; it seemed like I could hardly bear to see him go, that
was the last time I ever saw him. He could not collect anything
at the time, so he got him a school in Mississippi. The war came
on, he went into the army and was killed. Now your
great-grandmother had four brothers and two sisters: one of her
brothers was a bachelor, named Harding;
he owned a ship and sailed the
waters, and was lost at sea; or at least, it was supposed that he and
his ship went down, for the last trip he was never heard of any more.
The
breast-pin
I gave you was given to me by Aunt Nancy
PRESTIGE, who
lived in Louisiana; that was in 1858, or about that time. She was
my mother’s sister. The linen chest I gave you, we brought from
Alabama with us. The bureau belonged to your great-grandfather HUMPHRY, and he bought it
when your grandfather was a little boy, and
got it second-hand. My clock, “Tennessee”, that is still keeping
time, was bought before the war; the little chair was brought from
Alabama, and my little brother Albert, died in it. When mother
died, her feet were in the chair, you know she had dropsy and could not
lie down. She was sitting in the rocking chair with her feet in
the little chair. I never want it to go out of the family.
With much
love, your grandmother,
~
Missouria
Shelton Humphry
NOTES:
Pink MORRIS is Berry MORRIS,
who married Laura Ann SHELTON (daughter to George & Jane); Lige SOUTH is Elijah SOUTH, who
married Elizabeth Jane SHELTON (daughter to George & Jane). George is George R. SHELTON (son to
George & Jane). Edward
BRYANS married Mary SHELTON (daughter to George &
Jane). Uncle John KIRKLAND
married Olleva JOHNSTON (sister to Jane).
LETTER 2
from George
R. SHELTON to
his mother, sisters, and brothers-in-law in Arkansas
(1862)
Cornersville,
Mississippi
March 2nd,
1862
Dear
Mother,
brothers and sisters:
The sweet
moments have once more offered me this favored opportunity of
submitting you a short missive, which leaves me well at this time, and
all of Uncle Sam’s except
himself, who is very sick with
pneumonia. Uncle And has
moved up here, he and family are all
well, and I hope these few lines may reach you and find you enjoying
the same.
As for
news,
I have nothing more than you might expect, if you have not
so much as heard it; the northern armies are gaining greatly the
advantage over ours. Roanoke N.C., with several other towns in
there, have fallen with the loss of two or three thousand men.
Fisher’s
Creek, Bowling Green, Fort Henry, Fort Donaldson and Nashville
are all in the hands of the north, with a terrible loss of men and
public property; --many of our acquaintances were at Fort Henry and
retreated back to Fort Donaldson, where they were killed or
captured — some whom I will name — Andrew
MORRIS; Bill KIZER; L. HOPSON
(that is Lee); Ben PAPASIN; Pleas KIZER; Dock LAURY; Bill RICHARDS, and
many others whom I will not name; if I were back in Alabama I could
tell more about them; there were twelve or fourteen thousand taken
prisoner there. The Yankees run up to Florence and Tuscumbia in
Alabama; there are seven hundred prisoners in Tuscaloosa; I went to see
them.
I will now
give you some of the deaths in Alabama — all but one being
volunteers: Lee ESPY; two RUMSEYs’ sons; Will FREEMAN, (Boswells’ son); Tim RICE’s son; Cramps’ son, and others that are not
on my mind at
present. There were many out on sick furlough when these battles
were fought.
Times are
hard here and in Alabama. Money hard to get; but I have
had better luck than I expected; Bill
WAMMACK has paid me some money on
his, and has also let me have 240 bushels of corn at 75 cents per
bushel; I do not know whether I have made a good trade or not, but my
reasons for taking corn was, that he paid me all the money he could,
and is enlisted as a volunteer for three years, and wanted to pay all
he could, so I thought that corn was as sure a chance for money as a
man in the army.
I landed
here yesterday and met your letter dated the 12th of February,
containing an unnecessary uneasiness. It troubles me to hear your
discontentment, but I am happy to inform you that I am neither killed
nor robbed, and hope to avoid such a calamity.
You
inquire
if R.N. DOUGHTY married; --he
married Zeptha RICE’s
daughter, Paltiah.
I can say to you that I have not collected any of my school money yet;
I do not know whether I will get anything or not till I see
them — payment of debts has almost stopped.
I can say,
also, that I have had a sly notion of joining the army, as
it seems that we all have got to take a part; I was offered the
captaincy of a company, but you see that I have not accepted it; there
is a company making up now in Alabama, among our acquaintances; they
are very anxious that I should go with them as captain or Lieutenant,
but I have thought that I would never take a part in this war if I
could avoid it, and I do not feel right on the question yet, so I have
not fully got my consent to go yet. There is one thing you may
rest assured of, that I am not going as a private as long as I can
avoid it.
I can
inform
you that I have to go back to Alabama of loose, I have a
bale of cotton there that I hold good for a debt, and my corn to
dispose of in some way; I would like to send you all some money if I
thought it would be safe, for I have three hundred dollars in paper
money and cannot get the gold for less than twenty or thirty per cent,
and I would rather you had it than myself.
Write
soon,
and write all the news; content yourself, and do not get
uneasy, there war times about me, for we must submit ourselves to the
emergency of the times.
Great
excitement prevails here; Tennessee is threatening to go back to
the Union, so is North Carolina.
We all
send
our very best love and respect to you. Direct your
letters here; let all read this.
~
G.R.
Shelton
NOTES:
George R. SHELTON, son of
George A. and Jane SHELTON, was born in
Fayette County, Alabama, on Apr 23, 1829. George lived briefly in
Arkansas just prior to the Civil War, but came back to
Fayette where he enlisted in the Confederacy on May 8, 1862 (for 3
years or the period of the War). He went in as 3 Corporal,
Company I, 32nd Regiment, Alabama Infantry. He was elected 3rd
Lt.
Aug 18, 1862. He was captured as a prisoner of war as
indicated on one muster roll dated Jan & Feb, 1863. His rank
was then 2 BVT Lt. and it was noted that he was absent without leave
and was being dropped from the roll. On the "Roll of Prisoners of
War," at Camp Morton in Indianapolis, Indiana, his date of capture is
reported as Jan 5, 1863, and date of death as Feb 2, 1863 [image]. On a
"Prisoners of War" report that followed, Lt. J.R. (sic) SHELTON's place of
capture was given
as Stone's River (which is near Murphreesboro, Tennessee) and indicates
that he was first sent to Nashville after his capture and was then sent
to Camp Morton [image].
The battle at Stone's River claimed 23,000
casualties and was the second bloodiest battle fought west of the
Appalachians during the Civil War. Many died from wounds, and
many died as results of the freezing weather and disease. One
report says George R. SHELTON died in the City Hospital at
Indianapolis, so he did not have to go through the horrible experiences
that many of Camp Morton's prisoners endured.
George R. SHELTON was initially buried in Greenlawn Cemetery in
Indianapolis. In 1912, the federal government erected a
27-foot-tall Confederate monument in Greenlawn Cemetery, featuring the
names of 1,616 persons who perished at Camp Morton and were buried at
Greenlawn. However, Greenlawn Cemetery closed in 1928, and the
Confederate monument was relocated to the city's Garfield Park.
Five years later, the railroad wanted a right-of-way through Greenlawn
Cemetery and the remains of the Confederate soldiers were exhumed and
moved to Crown Hill Cemetery where they were buried in a mass
grave. Several years later, a granite monument was erected on
top
of the mound, commemorating the unknown Confederate dead. The
Crown Hill Confederate Plot is located in Section 32, Lot 285, of Crown
Hill Cemetery in Indianapolis, Indiana.
The letter that George wrote in 1862 mentions his ambivalence about the
war, which would eventually claim his life [see sample of his
handwriting here].
The identity of “Uncle Sam” in
this letter is a family mystery. “Uncle And” is either Andrew or
Anderson JOHNSTON, both of whom were brothers to Jane JOHNSTON-SHELTON.