The purpose of this work is to document the
connection between Nancy Carlisle and her Powhatan ancestors,
and to highlight some of the issues and questions concerning the
connections. There are many, many descendants who claim a
connection to Opechancanough through his child Nicketti. Though
this link is extended over multiple generations and is not alone
sufficient to apply for membership in recognized nations, still
it is real and those in Wayne County who connect to certain
Ellis, Smith, Davis, Floyd, Cabell and many other lines, may
find pride and satisfaction that they too have a link to
Jamestown, the Powhatan, Pocahontas and her niece Nicketti.
.. +Cleoparta
1590 - 1641
........
8 Nicketti
1638 -
............ +Trader
Hughes 1636 -
................... 7
Elizabeth Hughes
1655 - Unknown
....................... +Nathaniel Davis
1655 -
............................. 6
Nathaniel Robert Davis 1676
- 1771
.................................
+Abadiah Lewis 1680 -
1750
........................................
5 Robert Davis
1722 - 1780
............................................
+Jane Jopling 1735 - 1842
..................................................
4 Hannah Davis
1764 - 1851
...................................................... +William
Calmes Smith 1761 - 1810
............................................................. 3
Elizabeth Smith
1785 - 1820
.................................................................
+James Smith 1777 - 1850
........................................................................
2 Hannah Smith
1812 - 1848
............................................................................
+John Carlisle 1807 - 1877
..................................................................................
1 Nancy
Carlisle 1840 - 1885
......................................................................................
+Charles Rawlings Ellis 1832 - 1885
History, Musings, and
Background
Wahunsenacawh, was the Werowance (literally "commander") of the
Powhatan nation) and as the principal chief was called Powhatan.
Each subsequent principal chief was called Powhatan and
generally inherited the right to rule from his mother. After the
death of Wahunsenacawh the Werowance title went to his next
eldest brother (or half brother) Opitchapam, then to
Opechancanough, an ancestor of Nancy Carlisle. All of these
leaders married many times as was required by their culture.
Leaders were expected to cement alliances with other villages by
marrying women from the village and fathering a child. Powhatan
leaders were, according to Helen Rountree, "prodigiously
polygynous" and "had a horde of wives and children". She also
noted that these women did a great deal of the work. Rountree,
Helen C., "Pocahontas, Powhatan, Opechancanough", University of
Virginia Press, 2005.
Wahunsenacawh was the father of Pocahontas who was also called
Amonute. Her secret name was Matoaka. She was born about
1596. A good deal of the Pocahontas and John Smith story is
actually myth and is probably part of Smith's ability to rewrite
history in his favor, a characteristic of the winners in
colonization. Also, he made money selling the books and using
his story to influence investors in his exploration ventures. In
any event Pocahontas is the niece of Opechancanough, the half
brother of Wahunsenacawh.
Opechancanough was born about 1545 in the Powhatan Nation and
died in1646 in Virginia at the age of "near upon 100 years.". He
had been captured and was imprisoned. An English guard
bravely shot this aged, frail old man in the back because he
"didn't like Indians". Opechancanough became Principal
Chief in 1629 at the age of eighty of so.
According to oral traditions and some written sources
Opechancanough had a daughter named Nicketti. Many researchers
believe Nicketti's parents were Opechancanough and an Indian
woman named Cleoparta (1590-1641). However, we do not know for
certain whom Nicketti's parents were. The Powhatan did not
maintain written records so vital in English inheritance and
land laws, and appeared to think the idea that one could own
land was rather silly. This lack of documentation requires one
to rely on historical sources, family histories, Native Oral
traditions and a certain amount of faith.
Building the case one can begin with Pocahontas, husband John
Rolfe, and son Thomas Rolfe. (Pocahontas b. 17 September 1595
Werowocomoco, York River, Virginia; d. 21 March 1617 Gravesend,
Kent County, England of smallpox or one of the other plagues of
the day. John Rolfe b. 6 May 1585 Heacham, Norfolk, England.
Died 22 March 1622. Son Thomas Rolfe b. 30 June 1615 Smith's
Fort Plantation, Varina, Virginia.). Thus Pocahontas had a son
named Thomas Rolfe.
N. J. Floyd wrote a family history of the Nicketti connection
and believed that Cleopatre was the sister of Pocahontas and the
mother of Nicketti. Incidentally this name is not Cleopatra but
the English wrote it to look like Egyptian Royalty. So be it.
They won the war. It is to be noted that the social consequences
of having Indian blood were considerable and could result in
enslavement and death. For this reason many family histories
written a hundred years or so ago "revised" history to make
their ancestry more acceptable. Many even today speak of their
ancestor as an "Indian Princess."
Note: There are no Indian Princesses or royalty of any kind in
Indian societies. This was an English invention so various
Indians could be presented to the court. They had to have
status.
Alexander Brown and others hide the Indian/ White relationship
by claiming a "clandestine marriage" kept secret to avoid shame.
(Brown, Alexander, "The Cabells and Their Kin") I'm not sure
which side should be ashamed. In reality most early pioneers
were involved in trade with the Indians. It was perfectly
acceptable to marry a daughter of the village where one was
doing business and this tended to keep one's hair growing on top
of one's head. Hunters and traders who spent many years in the
bush would marry someone and given the choice of a Native woman
or a bear the woman won. Not surprisingly this resulted in many
children who generally could move in White as well as Indian
societies.
Several authors have said "It is hard to come out of the
American South and not have some Indian blood." I can personally
vouch that at least some of the Terry, Lowry, Morgan, Ellis,
Smith, Davis and Harris lines in Wayne County IL have Indian
connections however tenuous.
N. J. Floyd presented the Floyd family perspective in this
abstract from his book:
Floyd, N. J., "Biographical Genealogies of the Virginia-Kentucky
Floyd Families", Williams & Wilkins Co, Baltimore, 1912
"WILLIAM FLOYD, the progenitor of the Virginia-Kentucky branch
of the family, was born in Accomac County, Virginia, about the
year 1720. He was a son or grandson (more likely the latter) of
John Floyd, the wealthy owner of over two thousand acres of fine
tobacco land in Accomac and Northampton Counties. He received
the rudiments of a substantial education, which was completed
only in the line of mathematics. He commenced active life as a
surveyor working in the James River Valley from the settlement
at Richmond up to the foothills of the Blue Ridge Mountains. In
a region which was little more than a primeval forest, now known
as Amherst County, he patented a body of land on which he made a
home for himself. A dozen miles distant was the commodious
Bungalow of Nathaniel Davis, a Welshman by descent, and one of
the very early settlers in that region. He had made quite a
large fortune by trading with the Catawba and other Indians, and
by locating choice river-bottom lands from the present site of
Lynchburg up to the Balcony Falls. Mr. Davis had among other
children a beautiful daughter named Abadiah, whom the young man
fell in love with and won for his bride. She was of excellent
Welsh ancestry on her father's side, and one fourth of her blood
on her mother's side, was derived from the most distinguished
Indian ancestry. Her mother's mother, Nicketti-Indian equivalent
for "Beautiful Flower"--was a granddaughter of the noted
Powhatan (the daughter of his youngest daughter) while the
father of Nicketti was a chief of the small but warlike Cayuga
tribe. Nicketti, whom the white people dubbed "Princess Nicketti,"
married a noted Scotch hunter and fur trader by the name of
Hughes who made his chief headquarters near the beautiful
Balcony Falls of James River, where Nathaniel Davis met and
married a daughter of his who was the mother of Abadiah.
Floyd Page 11
Children of Nathaniel Davis and His Wife Elizabeth Hughes
1. ROBERT DAVIS who became, when quite young, his father's agent
and assistant in business. On account of his densely black hair
and eyes, and his dark Indian complexion he was nicknamed "the
black Davis" to differentiate between him and his fair-haired
father. He married quite young, and removed to Georgia with his
bride. After the Floyds went to Kentucky several of the Davises
removed there from Georgia and settled in the eastern part of
Christian County, which part was named Todd after the division
of the county. One of the descendants, born in Todd County and
carried to Mississippi as a weanling, lived to become the
President of The Confederate States of America.
2. MARY DAVIS, who married Samuel Burkes, of Hanover County, the
ancestor of several prominent Virginia families.
3. MARTHA DAVIS, who married Abraham Venable, another prominent
family whose descendants number many prominent persons
4. ABADIAH DAVIS, who married William Floyd.
Nathaniel Davis' granddaughter, Elizabeth Burks, married Capt.
William Cabell, and they became the ancestors of the
distinguished Virginia family of that name.
Another granddaughter, Martha Venable, married General Evan
Shelby, of Maryland, and they became the ancestors of the noted
family of Shelbys in the West. A list of the more or less
distinguished members of these families would be very lengthy.
It may be well to state, out of its proper chronological order,
that many years after the period of the marriages of the young
people noted above, the truth of the tradition concerning the
ancestry of Princess Nicketti was denied in Kentucky. The cause
of this denial originated at the battle of Point Pleasant in
1774, when the allied tribes, the Shawnees, the Guyandottes and
Delawares, under the great war-chief, Cornstalk, were defeated
by the Virginians and the Kentucky pioneers under General Andrew
Lewis. Cornstalk was regarded as a ferocious and vindictive tool
of the Lieutenant-Governor of Canada and no Indian could have
been more thoroughly detested. Prisoners taken in that
epoch-making battle stated that he was a descendant of Powhatan,
through his youngest daughter.{It is quite probable that
Cornstalk's tradition was a fact. Although he was the great
war-chief of the Shawnees he was not a member of that tribe, but
was by birth a chief of a small tribe which, giving way before
the advance of civilization, had straggled westward and become
nomadic-a "tramp" tribe, which eventually disintegrated. A scrap
from old memoirs of the Preston family says that in 1767
Colonels William Preston and Thomas Lewis were appointed to hold
a treaty with the Indians at the mouth of Big Sandy on the Ohio
river. Though other chiefs were present, Cornstalk made the
treaty and seven years later led the allied tribes which broke
it. Several histories of that period speak of him as "the
masterful Cayuga chief." In that treaty he posed as a
representative of the Shawnees and the Delawares.} The
Virginians and Kentuckians who admired the character of the
gentle Pocahontas as cordially as they despised Cornstalk,
indignantly denied the tradition, and asserted that Pocahontas,
if not the only daughter of Powhatan, was certainly the
youngest, and the child of his old age. When the Floyds removed
to Kentucky and heard the denial, being no longer in touch with
those who knew the facts in Virginia, and therefore not prepared
to discuss the point, they simply ignored the matter and "let it
go at that." Hence it came about that later generations of
nearly all the descendants of Nicketti ultimately came to doubt
the perfect accuracy of the old tradition, as no historical or
other writing known to them credited Powhatan with a younger
daughter than Pocahontas; nor had any name been heard as that of
such daughter. The descendants of Charles Floyd, however, at
whose home in Kentucky his mother, Abadiah Davis Floyd, died,
never for a moment doubted the entire accuracy of the tradition.
Alexander Brown--member of the Virginia Historical Society; the
American Historical Association; and Fellow of the Royal
Historical Society of England--the distinguished author of "The
Genesis of the United States," and a high authority on
historical and genealogical subjects, did much to add to the
confusion of the old tradition. In his genealogical work "The
Cabells and their Kin" (descendants of Princess Nicketti, and
himself an honored kinsman) he gives the genealogies and
traditions of the descendants of Nathaniel Davis as they are
known to the Floyds with the exception that, by a supposed error
in the use of numerals to designate generations, he makes the
ancestor of Jefferson Davis appear as the uncle instead of the
brother of Abadiah. And when he came to speak of the Indian
blood he shied at the tradition of a younger sister of the
gentle Pocahontas, and said:
"Opechancanough
had a lovely daughter, the child of his old age, the Princess
Nicketti, which name means 'She sweeps the dew from the
flowers.' A son of one of the old cavalier families fell in love
with Nicketti and they married and had a daughter who married a
Welshman, Nathaniel Davis by name."
Floyd Page 13
The author evidently entertained some misgivings regarding the
exact accuracy of that version of the tradition, but quietly
passed on with the assertion that the fact could not be denied
that no lovelier women ever "swept the dew from the flowers"
than many of the descendants of Princess Nicketti.
This perversion of the old tradition gives a lively fancy room
to imagine that some one of the Indian-blood branches--other
than the Floyds--that is to say, the Burkses, the Venables, the
Shelbys, the Cabells or the Jefferson Davis branch, might have
held a family meeting, after the batile of Point Pleasant, and
have recorded the result somewhat after this style:
"WHEREAS: The wise genealogists residing in the primeval forests
of Kentucky have ascertained that the gentle Pocahontas never
had a younger sister, if any sister at all, therefore,
RESOLVED: That the Princess Nicketti was, and of right ought to
have been heralded, not the grandniece and ward, as has been
taught, by tradition, of her uncle, Opecancanough, but in very
fact his own queenly daughter--the child of his very old age."
The writer, feeling confident that the original tradition was
correct, made an exhaustive search for information on that and
many similar matters, and finally found, in the old library of
the Maryland Historical Society, an item of three lines in a
fragment of Jamestown records covering eleven years--1630 to
1641-which furnished in a positive and indisputable form the
proof sought. During the period, covered by the fragment,
matters became so bad between the Whites and Indians, that
Opechancanough was induced to agree upon a line being
established which neither White nor Indian, excepting
truce-bearers, should cross under penalty of being shot on
sight. To insure strict obedience to the compact a law was
passed at Jamestown imposing a heavy penalty on any of the
people crossing the line without a special permit from the
Governor's Council and the General Court. This accounts for the
item alluded to, which is given verbatim et literatim. In the
Council record it reads:
"Dec. 17th, 1641.--Thomas Rolfe petitions Governor to let him go
see Opechankeno to whom he is allied, and Cleopatra, his
mother's sister." The record of the General Court was evidently
intended to be a verbatim copy, though they differ somewhat in
phraseology and spelling:--"Dec. 17th, 1641.--Thomas Rolph
petitions Gov. to let him go to see Opechanko, to whom he is
allied, and Cleopatre, his mother's sister."
Floyd Page 14
It is a well known fact that when Pocahontas died in England in
1616 her husband, John Rolfe, left their infant son, Thomas, to
be reared and educated in England by an uncle. Twenty-five years
had elapsed; the young man had finished his education, and
naturally desired to look upon the face of his mother's younger
sister. That she was younger--seventeen years or more, younger
--her name proves. Neither Pocahontas nor her father had ever
held communication with a white person until the two had a
little controversy as to the future fate of Captain John Smith.
Pocahontas was then twelve years old, and it is not possible
that she or Powhatan could have previously heard the name of the
Egyptian queen; and it is not likely that either of them had an
opportunity to be "coached" upon Egyptian history for a number
of years later. Indeed it is more than probable that Powhatan
and his people first heard of the fascinating Cleopatra from
John Rolfe, after he had married Pocahontas. What could be more
likely than that the young Englishman himself made selection of
the name, and with his own lips pronounced the difficult foreign
syllables when the gentle-savage infant received her baptismal
dip into the purling water of the James River, near where
Richmond city now stands?"
(It is granted that this supports a link between Pocahontas,
Cleopatre, and Opechancanough but does not identify Nicketti.
Other resources make this claim.
Nicketti b. about 1615 m. Unknown Hughes b. 1620. Sources:
Kegley, "The Virginia Frontier")
Many abstracts from these references and pertinent discussion
can be viewed at "The Steven and Allied Families,"
pat@patmstevens.com. Pat Stevens has collected
information from many researchers and has published data
supporting many different view points pertaining to the
descendants of Opechancanough. Many researchers have contributed
independent verification and interpretation, sometimes using the
same sources, but the reader is encouraged to visit Pat's site.
It really is an excellent source. Always do your own
verification.
Ancestors of
Nancy Carlisle
Generation No.
1
1. Nancy Carlisle, born February 03, 1840 in
Orange County, Indiana; died August 20, 1885 in Johnsonville,
Illinois Wayne County. She was the daughter of 2. John
Carlisle and 3. Hannah Smith. She married
(1) Charles Rawlings Ellis August 08, 1854 in Orange Co,
Indiana. He was born January 21, 1832 in Washington
County, Indiana, and died August 14, 1885 in Wayne County
Illinois.
Joseph B Scudamore was adminstrator of her estate.
Burial: Thomason Cemetery, Wayne City Johnsonville IL
Notes for Charles Rawlings Ellis:
Reference Alma Geradine Morgan Mayfield notes: Conversation with
grandmother Martha Jane Ellis Close. (Compiled Sept 9 1987, 202
Fairway Dr, Bloomington, IL)
"History of Wayne and Clay Counties Illinois 1884 (Four Mile
Township)
Charles Ellis was a miller. He lived in Indiana, Newton CO MO,
Wayne CO IL, Clay CO IL, and Johnsonville IL. He was a member of
the Christian Church and A.F> and A.M. Lodge 713. He was born
near Hardinburg, Washington CO IN. He died intestate in Wayne
City IL. Estate administrator was Joseph B Scudamore. Burial:
Johnsonville Cemetery
In 1855 Charles and Nancy moved to Newton County MO but because
of raiders in the Civil War problems they moved back to Wayne
County then Clay County IL. (Re: Euil W Morgan "Comments Along
The Way"). Charles owned and operated several (at least five)
grist mills in Clay and Wayne Counties, IL. He lost an arm in a
mill accident.
1860 Newton Co MO census, Jackson Twp, p 162
Line 39 (1114) Charles Ellis
25 M
Farmer
$600
Indiana
Nancy
20 F
Indiana
P
163 Line 1
Martha
3 F
Missouri
Mary
1 F
Missouri
1870 Wayne Co IL census Indian Prairie Twp Aog 2 1870 p 2
Johnsonville P.O. Line 26 (14) (14)
Ellis, Charles R 38 M W Miller
$4500 $400 Indiana
Nancy 30
F W Keeping House
Indiana
Martha J 13 F W
Missouri
Mary E 10
F W
Missouri
John D 9
M W
Missouri
Nancy M 2 F
W
Illinois
Effie P 2/12
F W
IL
Generation No.
2
2. John Carlisle, born September 11, 1807 in
Kentucky; died December 11, 1877 in Flora, Clay County, IL.
He married 3. Hannah Smith Bet. 1830 - 1831.
3. Hannah Smith, born April 28, 1812 in KY;
died Abt. 1848 in Orange Co., IN. She was the daughter of
6. James Smith Jr and 7. Elizabeth Smith.
Notes for John Carlisle:
Census: 1850 Indiana, Orange County Stamper's Creek Township
name is spelled Carlile.
John (42, M, farmer, $200, KY); Amelia (46, F, VA); John R (16,
M, Farming, IN); Franky J (12, F, IN);
Nancy (10, F, IN); Mary Ann (8, F, IN); James M (5, M, IN);
Thomas G Green (2, M, IL)
Census: 1870 Illinois, Clay County, Harter Township.
John Carlisle (63, M, W, Carpenter, $300, $140, KY, Father
foreign born); Tabitha (43, F, W, Keeping House, North
Carolina); Crawford Carlisle (0, M, W, IL); Moore, William (23,
M, W, Farmer, IN); John M Carlisle (26, M, W, Farmer, IL)
John moved April 10, 1848 to the SWSE acreage (T1N R2E Section
20) of Stamper's Creek Township.
John was reported to have been a captain in the Blackhawk war
(unproven). (History of Wayne and Clay Counties, Illinois,
1884-Four Mile Township).
The 1870 census records that John's father is foreign born is a
key reference supporting the possibility that his parents were
Irish immigrants.
Elizabeth Carlisle was born 14 Nov 1827 in Flora, Clay County IL
according to an Ancestry.com reference (Schiffer, Tony). She is
listed as the child of John Carlisle and Hannah Smith. This
would argue for an earlier marriage date for John and Hannah.
More About John Carlisle:
Burial: Brush Creek Cemetery Wayne County IL
Census: 1870, Harter Twp., Clay Co., IL
Notes for Hannah Smith:
1830 Orange County IN (Family Group In Census)
SMITH, James
10001
00001 p46
1
M <5; ` M 20-30; 1 F 20-30 (James was married)
SMITH, James
00000011 0001001
p47
1
M 50-60, 1 M 60-70; 1 F 15-20; 1 F 40-50 (M 50-60?, 60-70 James;
F 15-20 Anna?, 40-60?)
(The other adult couple may have been staying w James, or not
CARLILE, William 00002
0001
2
M 20-30; 1 F 15-20 (John and William; Hannah)
SMITH, Martin
00001
10001
1
M 20-30; 1 F <5; 1 F 20-30 (Martin was married)
Children of John Carlisle and Hannah Smith are:
i. John Rawls Carlisle, born 1834; died WFT Est.
1869-1927.
ii. Frances J. Carlisle, born December 12, 1838 in
Orange County Indiana; died August 06, 1856 in Orange County
Indiana; married William F. Faucher August 06, 1856.
iii. Elizabeth Carlisle, born November 14, 1831 in
Orange Co IN; died November 28, 1890 in Clay Co IL; married
James Thomas Shore March 14, 1849 in Orange County, IN; born
April 05, 1823 in Winston Salem, Forsyth City NC; died March 07,
1903 in Flora, Clay City IL.
iv. Mary Ann Carlisle, born 1842 in Orange Co IN;
died WFT Est. 1870-1936.
1 v.
Nancy Carlisle, born February 03, 1840 in Orange County,
Indiana; died August 20, 1885 in Johnsonville, Illinois Wayne
County; married Charles Rawlings Ellis August 08, 1854 in Orange
Co, Indiana.
vi. Sarah C Carlisle, born October 13, 1834 in
Orange Co IN; died April 02, 1892 in Clay Co IL; married Bennett
Vandeveer May 07, 1849 in Orange Co IN. Burial: Onstott Salem IL
or Xenia Clay County
vii. James Madison Carlisle, born 1846 in Illinois;
died 1895 in Illinois; married Mary Ann Rebecca Stokes November
12, 1871 in Orange Co IN. Burial: Bunker Cemetery Rinard Wayne
Co IL
viii. Thomas G Carlisle, born 1848 in Orange County
IN; married Mary Hannah Smith April 18, 1861; born May 14, 1847
in Songer Twp., Clay Co., IL; died February 02, 1930 in Flora,
Clay Co., IL.
Generation No.
3
6. James Smith Jr, born 1777 in Greenbrier
CO VA; died Bef. December 24, 1850 in Orange Co IN. He
married 7. Elizabeth Smith April 09, 1801 in Lincoln CO
KY.
7. Elizabeth Smith, born 1785 in Lincoln CO
KY; died Bef. 1820 in Orange Co IN. She was the daughter
of 14. William Calmes Smith and 15. Hannah Davis.
James m 1) Elizabeth Smith in KY 1801 and 2) Elizabeth Allgood
in Orange Co IN 1834
Orange County IN census data records:
1820 Greenfield Twp p 129 M33-14
James Smith 011210
21000 0400
1
M 10-15 (Martin) 1 M 16-18 (James) 2 M 18-25 (Wm + ?) 1 M 26-44
(James) 2 F <10 (Hannah , Anna?, Mary?) 1 F 10-15 (Sarah) Four
Engaged in Agriculture
1830 Orange County IN
SMITH, James
10001
00001 p46
1
M <5; ` M 20-30; 1 F 20-30 (James was married)
SMITH, James
00000011 0001001
p47
1
M 50-60, 1 M 60-70; 1 F 15-20; 1 F 40-50 (M 50-60?, 60-70 James;
F 15-20 Anna?, 40-60?)
(The other adult couple may have been staying w James, or not)
CARLILE, William 00002
0001
2
M 20-30; 1 F 15-20 (John and William; Hannah)
SMITH, Martin
00001
10001
1
M 20-30; 1 F <5; 1 F 20-30 (Martin was married)
1840 Stampers Creek TWP p 41A
Smith, James _ _ _ 1 _ _ _ _ 1 _ _ _ _ _ _ 1 _ _ _ _ 1
1
M 15-20 (?) 1 M 60-70 (James 63) 1 F 10-15 (?) 1 F 50-60
(Elizabeth Allgood?)
According to the Orange Co IN website:
Smith James Allgood
Elizabeth 06-12-1834
1850 Stampers Creek (all family names; Hannah died and John
remarried)
94-94 CARLILE John 42
Farmer KY
Amela 46
VA
John R. 16 Farmer IN
Franky J. 12
IN
Nancy 10
IN
Mary Ann 8
IN
James M. 5
IL.
GREEN Thomas J. 2
IN
95-95 SMITH James
73 Farmer 500 VA
Elizabeth 62
NC
BLALOCK Elhanon
30 Farmer TN
Elizabeth C. 22
IN
John W. 4/12
IN
96-96 VANDEVER John
67 Farmer 500 VA
Susannah 63
VA
Lewis 25 Farmer
TN
Joel 21 Farmer
IN
Tandy 17 Farmer
IN
Children of James Smith and Elizabeth Smith are:
i. William Smith, born December 04, 1801; married
Jane Fortney July 12, 1821 in Orange Co IN.
ii. James Smith, born February 25, 1804; married
Mary Ann Denbor September 07, 1830.
iii. Sarah Sally Smith, born July 07, 1806 in KY;
died July 1849; married John Totten in Crawford IN. iv.
Martin VanBuren Smith, born December 06, 1808 in KY; died August
03, 1879 in Clay County Illinois; married (1) Ellender Totten
July 10, 1828 in Crawford Co IN; married (2) Sarah Ann Spenser
Aft. 1834. Burial: Smith Cemetery Marion County IL
1830 Orange County IN Census
SMITH, Martin
00001
10001
1
M 20-30; 1 F <5; 1 F 20-30 (Martin was married to Ellender
Tottent; Martha was the daughter living in 1830)
3 v.
Hannah Smith, born April 28, 1812 in KY; died Abt. 1848 in
Orange Co., IN; married John Carlisle Bet. 1830 - 1831.
vi. Anna Smith, born March 19, 1815; married Rueben
Bundy April 24, 1834 in Orange Co IN.
vii. Mary Polly Smith, born July 09, 1817; died
1826.
Generation No.
4
14. William Calmes Smith, born July 15, 1761
in Virginia; died October 09, 1810 in Lincoln County KY.
He married 15. Hannah Davis January 29, 1785 in Lincoln
County Kentucky.
15. Hannah Davis, born January 01, 1764 in
Amherst County Virginia; died October 10, 1851 in Lincoln County
KY. She was the daughter of 30. Robert Davis and
31. Jane Jopling.
Marriage Records of Lincoln County, Kentucky 1781-1792:
Name: William Calmes Smith Spouse: Hannah Davis Marriage
Date: 29 Jan 1785
Children of William Smith and Hannah Davis are:
7
i. Elizabeth Smith, born 1785 in Lincoln CO KY; died
Bef. 1820 in Orange Co IN; married James Smith Jr April 09, 1801
in Lincoln CO KY.
ii. Robert D Smith, born 1786 in KY; died May 29,
1888 in Marion IL; married Catherine Eastman February 16, 1819.
iii. Delilah Smith, married Ralph Bailey January 08,
1806 in Lincoln KY.
iv. Mary Smith, born 1793; died in Marion IL;
married Terry Crutchfield February 25, 1807 in Lincoln County
KY.
v. William Calmes Smith, married Polly.
vi. Mary Jane Smith, born April 02, 1794; died
February 08, 1890; married Daniel C. Goode March 19, 1811 in
Lincoln CO KY or IL; born April 02, 1794 in VA.
vii. John C Smith, born October 19, 1804 in KY; died
May 19, 1887 in Newton County MO.
viii. Ann Smith, married Alexander Johnson 1826 in
Lincoln CO KY.
Generation No.
5
30. Robert Davis, born Abt. 1722 in Amherst
Co VA; died May 18, 1780 near Cumberland Ford KY. He was
the son of 60. Nathaniel Robert Davis and 61. Abadiah
Lewis. He married 31. Jane Jopling Abt. 1750.
31. Jane Jopling, born Abt. 1735; died Bef.
1842.
Robert Davis b c 1722 d May 1780 was killed by Indians near
Cumberland Ford. He was a planter.
Mary Davis was the youngest daughter of Robert Davis and Jane
Jopling. Mary Davis married Edward McCown. Her brother Thomas
deeded land in Bullitt Co, KY (part of the original 900 acres)
to Edward and Mary, "for the love and affection Thomas has for
his sister Polly". They later moved to Harrison County, Indiana.
Robert Davis is mentioned in 1842 Casey County Circuit court
papers: "Robert Davis was many years ago killed by the Indians
and Jane the mother of the children Robert, Landon, and Hannah,
has departed this life many years ago." The eleven children of
Robert Davis and Jane Joplin as listed in the Casey County, Ky
Circuit Court Records were: John, Thomas, Hannah, Abigail, Jane,
Robert, Patsey, Anne, Landon, Lucy, and Polly.
"In the neighborhood of Cumberland Ford, Fleming and his fellow
travelers met three white men and a Negro - the survivors of a
party of twelve men from Lexington ambushed five miles ahead. In
silent marching order, Fleming and his men rode on to the scene.
They found the bodies of John and Robert Davis of Amherst lying
scalped and mangled on the road. Two war clubs lay by the
bodies, and on one of them was the figure of a lizard, which
Colonel Fleming believed belonged to Chief Spring Lizard of the
Chickamauga. The travelers buried the bodies and continued their
journey across Cumberland Gap."
Ref: Kinkead, Robert, "The Wilderness Road", Bobbs-Merrill
Company, Kingsport, Tennessee, Kentucky, 1947, p156.
The Robert Davis who married Jane Jopling was the Robert who
bought land in 1779 in Lincoln County, KY (later Jefferson,
later Bullitt). This land is now reported to be part of Fort
Knox. The land was purchased with a Virginia Treasury Warrant
with Robert's name and one that Robert bought from William Deal
for a total of 900 acres, but Robert did not live long enough to
claim the land. The actual patent was acquired by Robert's son,
Thomas, as "heir at law" in 1787. In 1782, Thomas gave his
grandfather, Thomas Jopling, his power of attorney to settle his
father's estate and lay claim to Robert's land in Montgomery Co,
VA. In this power of attorney, Thomas Davis listed all of his
siblings. Thomas Jopling is also listed in the Amherst court
records asking to be appointed administrator of Robert's estate
and it mentions Robert's wife, Thomas Jopling's daughter Jane.
Hannah Smith is Robert daughter, sister to Thomas Davis. She
married in William Calmes Smith, 29 Jan 1785 in Lincoln County,
Kentucky.
Children of Robert Davis and Jane Jopling are:
15 i.
Hannah Davis, born January 01, 1764 in Amherst County Virginia;
died October 10, 1851 in Lincoln County KY; married William
Calmes Smith January 29, 1785 in Lincoln County Kentucky.
ii. Thomas Davis, born 1765; married Susannah
Johnson February 14, 1786 in Lincoln KY.
iii. John Davis, born Abt. 1752; died Abt. May 18,
1780 in Cumberland Ford KY. Killed by Indians near Cumberland
Ford May 1780.
iv. Abigail Abadiah Davis, born Abt. 1764; died
1825; married John Tuley November 23, 1790 in Lincoln KY.
v. Jane Davis, born Abt. 1768.
vi. Patsy Davis, born Abt. 1772.
vii. Ann Davis, born Abt. 1774; married Richard
Mason March 26, 1793 in Lincoln CO KY; born Abt. 1774.
viii. Landon Davis, born Abt. 1778 in Amherst Co VA;
died January 03, 1854 in Casey Co KY; married Priscella Taylor
Abt. 1796; born Abt. 1782; died Bef. 1850. Landon is given in
the Casey County Vital Records, 1854, as dying at age 72, a
widower, and born in Va. His father is given as Robert Davis.
ix. Lucy Davis, born Abt. 1780; married Andrew Potts
April 08, 1797 in Jefferson Co KY; born 1771 in MD.
x. Mary Polly Davis, born Abt. 1780 in VA; married
Edward McCown Abt. 1799; born Abt. 1778.
xi. Martha Davis, married Thomas Kay January 06,
1791 in Lincoln KY.
xii. Robert Davis, born Abt. 1771; died Bef. January
1847 in Casey KY; married Sarah Sally Smith November 15, 1796 in
Lincoln KY; born 1778. This is Robert Davis III, a tie to
Nathaniel Davis m Elizabeth Hughes Residence: August 16, 1842,
Living in Casey County Kentucky
Generation No.
6
60. Nathaniel Robert Davis (or Robert Davis),
born 1676 in Virginia; died 1771 in Fla. He was the son of
120. Nathaniel Davis and 121. Elizabeth Hughes.
He married 61. Abadiah Lewis Abt. 1693.
61. Abadiah Lewis, born 1680; died Bef.
1750. She was the daughter of 122. Hugh Ap Lewis
and 123. Elizabeth.
The ancestry and history of Nathaniel Robert Davis (or Robert
Davis) is the subject of much lively debate and the researcher
will find many interpretations of the same data in genealogy
records. The reader is encouraged to do their own verification.
Robert had three wives. His children ranged over decades, and he
lived to be very old. While his will was dated in 1771, it was
not proved until 1790.
Will of (Nathaniel) Robert Davis of Georgia
The Natchez Court Records, 1767-1805, Abstracts of Early Records
Compiled by May Wilson McBee, Reprinted for Clearfield Company
Inc by Genealogical Publishing Co,. Inc. Baltimore, Maryland
1994 p 182
5
September 1771
In the name of God, Amen, I Robert Davis of the Province of
Georgia, Planter, being very sick and weak of body but of
perfect memory thanks to be given to God, calling unto the
mortality of my body and knowing that it is appointed for all
once to die, do make and ordain this my last Will and Testament
that is to say; principally and first of all I give and commend
my soul unto the hands of Almighty God who gave it, and my body
I recommend to be buried with a decent christian burial at the
discretion of my Executors.,
First; I give and bequeath to my well beloved son Lewis Davis
two negro slaves, Bowling and Phobe, with a feather bed and
furniture. Secondly; I give and bequeath unto my well beloved
son Landon Davis, two negro slaves, Samson and Sarah, with a
feather bed and its' furniture. Thirdly; I give and bequeath
unto my well beloved son Hugh Davis, three negro slaves, Roger,
Joe, and Cochena, with a feather bed and its' furniture.
Fourthly; I give and bequeath unto my well beloved wife Grace
Davis, one negro girl, Hannah, forever, with a feather bed and
furniture. Fifthly; I lend unto my well beloved Grace Davis,
four negro slaves with their increase, named as follows;
Charles, Peg, Harry and Ivy, during her widowhood, and out of
the income of the four negroes, Charles, Peg, Harry, and Ivy, to
maintain, clothe, school, and bring up my son Hugh Davis till he
comes to the age of twenty years. If the said Grace Davis should
marry or die, then the said four negroes, Charles, Peg, Harry,
and Ivy, with their increase shall be equally divided between
Lewis Davis, Landon Davis, and Hugh Davis share and share alike;
and if either of my three sons, Lewis, Landon, and Hugh shall
die before the said four slaves with their increase are divided
among the survivors that shall be then living; Sixthly; I give
unto my well beloved son Nathaniel Davis, twenty Shillings
lawful money of Great Britain, likewise I give unto my well
beloved son Isom Davis, twenty Shillings lawful money of Great
Britain, also I give unto my well beloved son Robert Davis,
twenty Shillings lawful money of Great Britain, I also give to
my beloved daughter Abediah Floyd twenty Shillings lawful money
of Great Britain, I also give to my beloved daughter Sarah Burks
twenty Shillings lawful money of Great Britain, I also give to
my beloved daughter Elizabeth Sexton twenty Shillings lawful
money of Great Britain. Seventhly, I give and bequeath unto my
three sons Lewis, Landon, and Hugh all the remaining part of my
estate real and personal to be equally divided among them share
and share alike when the youngest child reaches the age of
twenty one years. Lastly, I do hereby constitute, nominate, and
appoint my two sons Lewis Davis and Landon Davis or the
survivors of them Executors and Executor of this my last Will
and Testament, to pay all my lawful debts and to will out all
legacy or legacies as is above mentioned in this my last Will
and Testament. In Natchez whereof I have set my hand and seal
the fifth day of September in the year of our Lord one thousand
Seven hundred and Seventy One
Witness Thomas Spell, Mager Spell, Starling Spell
Nathaniel Robert Davis lost his land in Amherst Co., Va.
in a disputed filing by a Nicholas Davies. Robert acquired a
large amount of land in Amherst county, but failed to patent it
correctly. Nicholas Davies entered the patents on Robert Davis'
land. Because it was not properly patented before, the courts
awarded all of Robert's land to Nicholas. He moved to Georgia
with his third wife Grace and his sons and daughters and in
July, 1759, he petitioned for a Spanish land grant on the south
side of the Sapala river known as Cedar Point. Other entries for
Thompson Creek and the Homochitto River are found in the Natchez
Court Records which include French and Spanish records. (Natchez
was included at various times in Florida, West Florida, Georgia,
and Mississippi.) Those in his will to whom he leaves money are
the children who remained behind in VA or KY.
Children of Nathaniel Davis and Abadiah Lewis are:
i. Phillip Davis, born 1693; died Bef. 1771; married
Hannah Bendy; born 1705.
ii. Samuel Davis, born Abt. 1695.
iii. Isham Davis, born Abt. 1697.
iv. Nathaniel Davis, born 1720 in Amherst Co VA;
died November 01, 1779 in Amherst VA; married Elizabeth Atkins
1752 in VA; born Abt. 1730; died Aft. 1779 in Amherst Co VA.
30 v.
Robert Davis, born Abt. 1722 in Amherst Co VA; died May 18, 1780
in Near Cumberland Ford KY; married Jane Jopling Abt. 1750.
vi. Abadiah Davis, born 1728 in Accomac Co VA; died
Abt. 1823 in Beargrass Creek KY; married William Floyd January
1746/47 in Amherst CO VA; born Abt. 1720 in Accomac Co VA; died
Abt. 1800 in Amherst Co VA.
vii. Elizabeth Davis, born 1728; married Unknown
Sexton; born Abt. 1720.
viii. Sarah Davis, married Burke.
Generation No.
7
120. Nathaniel Davis, born April 17, 1655 in
St. Michael's Parish, Devonshire England; died in Possibly
Hanover Co VA. He married 121. Elizabeth Hughes
Abt. 1675 in Jamestown Virginia.
121. Elizabeth Hughes, born 1655 in
Virginia; died Unknown. She was the daughter of 242.
Trader Hughes and 243. Nicketti.
THE COMPENDIUM OF AMERICAN GENEALOGY. THE FIRST FAMILIES
OF AMERICA. VOLUME VII. 1942. Page 684 - Nathaniel
Davis, from Wales; an Indian trader in Virginia said to have
married Hughes, a daughter of the Indian Princess Nicketti,
niece of Powhatan.
"Cabells
and Their Kin"
"....(It is said that) Elizabeth Cabell was descended from an
Indian princess of the Powhatan tribe (some accounts have it 'of
the Catawba tribe,' but this is not tenable), and that it was
the knowledge among the neighboring Indians of this descent
which protected her husband while locating these lands, and
herself when she was managing them in his absence. It was more
probably owing to her relationship to members of the Society of
Friends, with whom the Indians were on friendly terms. However,
the story is interesting, and "the evidences of its truth" are
said to "have been carefully collected" in several branches of
the Breckinridge, Floyd, and other families. I cannot vouch for
it, but I will give it as I find it in the Floyd tradition.
"Opechancanough,
the celebrated chief of the Powhatans, who was brutally
murdered, while a prisoner, in 1644, left a lovely young
daughter, the child of his old age, the Princess Nicketti --
'she sweeps the dew from the flowers.' Some years after this
graceful Indian maiden had reached the years of mature
womanhood, a member {the name is not given} of one of the old
Cavalier families of Virginia 'fell in love with her and she
with him,' and the result was a clandestine marriage, and a
half-breed Indian girl who married about the year 1680 a
Welshman (others say a native of Devonshire, England,) named
Nathaniel Davis, an Indian trader, and, according to some
accounts, a Quaker; and from this alliance many notable people
in the East and in the West have descended. Their daughter, Mary
Davis (born about 1685), married Samuel Burks of Hanover (the
ancestors of the Burks family of Virginia), and their daughter,
Elizabeth Burks, married Capt. William Cabell, the ancestor of
the Cabells; Martha Davis, another daughter, married Abraham
Venable, the ancestor of the Venables. Robert Davis, Sr., a son
(the ancestor of 'the black Davises' of Kentucky, and from whom
Jefferson Davis descended), had a daughter, Abadiah (or Abigail)
Davis, who married William Floyd, the ancestor of the Floyds of
Virginia and of the West. A daughter, or granddaughter, of the
Quaker, married Gen'l Evan Shelby of Maryland, the ancestor of
the Shelbys of the West. Samuel and Philip Davis of the Blue
Mountains were sons, and there may have been other sons and
daughters.
"William Floyd left the eastern shore of Virginia, went up the
country as far as the present Amherst County, which was then a
very wild region, where he met with this family of Davis, who
had traded with the Indians and had gotten much property in that
way. (The Quakers were much given to friendly trading with the
Indians.)
"William Floyd and his wife's brother, Robert Davis, Jr., with
their families, emigrated to Kentucky with the first settlers,
and finally located in the Bear-grass region, near Louisville,
where the kinsmen (Floyds and Davises) had a fort, called
Floyd's Station.
"But it is not necessary to follow the Floyd narrative farther.
It seems well to say, however that I have seen a Davis pedigree
which asserts that 'the Indian blood first entered the family
through the marriage of Abby Davis with William Floyd, a half
breed Indian.' Other Davis pedigrees and traditions do not deny
the Indian blood, while every Floyd with whom I have
corresponded has asserted positively that 'it was through Abby
Davis the Indian blood came.'
"The Princess Nicketti's name (it may be because the
marriage was clandestine) has not been popular among her
traditional descendants. The first Governor, John Floyd of
Virginia, named one of his daughters for her. I know of no other
namesake; but if the tradition is true, no more lovely women
than some among her descendants ever "swept the dew from the
flowers." (Note: There are many Floyd daughters named Nicketti.)
"I don't think that there is any doubt that there was Indian
blood in the Davis family, for James John Floyd a son of Abadiah
was described by a contemporary as 'somewhat slender, straight
as an Indian, and almost as dark as one,' and had 'brilliant
black eyes, and straight black hair.' A brother of his, Robert
Floyd, once took a woman to court because she was alleged to
have said the Floyd's were "of the mustic breed" and Robert
Davis, a brother of Abadiah was known as the Black Davis,
because of his dark complection, high cheekbones, black eyes,
and dark skin, (which) occurred in various members of the family
for generations." (Note: Robert Davis went to court in Kentucky
to prove his ancestry was Indian because of allusions by
neighbors who coveted his holdings. By Kentucky law at the time
he could be part Indian and still be white with all rights but
if he had even a small amount of African blood he lost all
rights and his land. He proved his ancestry to the satisfaction
of the court.)
"....(It is said that) Elizabeth Cabell was descended from an
Indian princess of the Powhatan tribe (some accounts have
it 'of the Catawba tribe,' but this is not tenable), and that it
was the knowledge among the neighboring Indians of this descent
which protected her husband while locating these lands, and
herself when she was managing them in his absence. It was more
probably owing to her relationship to members of the Society of
Friends, with whom the Indians were on friendly terms. However,
the story is interesting, and "the evidences of its truth" are
said to "have been carefully collected" in several branches of
the Breckinridge, Floyd, and other families. I cannot vouch for
it, but I will give it as I find it in the Floyd tradition.
"Opechancanough,
the celebrated chief of the Powhatans, who was brutally
murdered, while a prisoner, in 1644, left a lovely young
daughter, the child of his old age, the Princess Nicketti
-- 'she sweeps the dew from the flowers.' Some years after this
graceful Indian maiden had reached the years of mature
womanhood, a member {the name is not given} of one of the old
Cavalier families of Virginia 'fell in love with her and she
with him,' and the result was a clandestine marriage, and a
half-breed Indian girl who married about the year 1680 a
Welshman (others say a native of Devonshire, England,) named
Nathaniel Davis, an Indian trader, and, according to some
accounts, a Quaker; and from this alliance many notable people
in the East and in the West have descended. Their daughter, Mary
Davis (born about 1685), married Samuel Burks of Hanover (the
ancestors of the Burks family of Virginia), and their daughter,
Elizabeth Burks, married Capt. William Cabell, the ancestor of
the Cabells; Martha Davis, another daughter, married Abraham
Venable, the ancestor of the Venables. Robert Davis, Sr., a son
(the ancestor of 'the black Davises' of Kentucky, and from whom
Jefferson Davis descended), had a daughter, Abadiah (or Abigail)
Davis, who married William Floyd, the ancestor of the Floyds of
Virginia and of the West. A daughter, or granddaughter, of the
Quaker, married Gen'l Evan Shelby of Maryland, the ancestor of
the Shelbys of the West. Samuel and Philip Davis of the Blue
Mountains were sons, and there may have been other sons and
daughters.
"William Floyd left the eastern shore of Virginia, went up the
country as far as the present Amherst County, which was then a
very wild region, where he met with this family of Davis, who
had traded with the Indians and had gotten much property in that
way. (The Quakers were much given to friendly trading with the
Indians.)
"William Floyd and his wife's brother, Robert Davis, Jr., with
their families, emigrated to Kentucky with the first settlers,
and finally located in the Bear-grass region, near Louisville,
where the kinsmen (Floyds and Davises) had a fort, called
Floyd's Station.
Children of Nathaniel Davis and Elizabeth Hughes are:
i. Mary Davis, born 1680 in Albemarle Co VA; married
Samuel Burks Abt. 1703 in Albemarle Co VA; born Abt. 1680; died
February 1756 in Albemarle Co VA.
ii. Martha Davis, born July 14, 1703; died February
13, 1765 in Louisa VA; married Abraham Venable 1723 in Hanover,
VA; born April 27, 1701 in New Kent County, Virginia; died
December 16, 1768 in Louisa County, Virginia.
60 iii.
Nathaniel Robert Davis, born 1676 in Virginia; died 1771 in Fla;
married (1) Abadiah Lewis Abt. 1693; married (2) Anna Atkins
Abt. 1700 in Virginia; married (3) Grace 1756.
Generation No.
8
242. Trader Hughes, born 1636 in Wales.
He married 243. Nicketti.
243. Nicketti, born 1638 in Powhatan Nation
Virginia. She was the daughter of 486. Opechancanough
Powhatan and 487. Cleoparta.
Notes for Nicketti:
From Kegley's "Virginia Frontier," reprinted from an earlier
version in 1937, page 23: The Settlements Along the James Move
West: ...up to this time (1721), the land from the Falls of the
James to the mountains belonged to the Indians. In advance of
the settlements there lived in this region a noted Scotchman by
the name of Hughes who hunted and traded with the Indians and
finally married one of their number, the Princess Nicketti, a
daughter of a younger sister of Pocahontas and granddaughter of
Powhatan. A child of Nicketti's, Elizabeth Hughes, married
NATHANIEL DAVIS and her children and grandchildren became the
ancestors of many prominent families of middle and Southwest
Virginia. Her daughter, Mary, married Samuel Burks, her
daughter, Martha, married Abraham Venable, Jr.; another
daughter, Abadiah, married William Floyd and became the mother
of John Floyd, asst. to Col. William Preston of Fincastle and
Montgomery Counties."
Johnson, Patricia Givens, "Irish Burks of Colonial Virginia and
New River", p 19: " All following is proven: Samuel Burk of
Goochland/ md. Mary Davis; Mary was daughter of Nathaniel
Davis/Elizabeth Hughes; Elizabeth Hughes was daughter of
_____Hughes/Nicketti; Nicketti was daughter of Cleopatre/Cayuga
Chief. Cleopatre was living with Opechancanough, who Brown, "Cabells
and Kin," says is Nicketti's father. Kegley, "Virginia
Frontier," says Nicketti is the granddaugher of Powhatan.
Cleopatre was sister of Pocahontas." The children of Elizabeth
Hughes and Nathaniel Davis are named as Martha Davis md. Abraham
Venable, Mary Davis b. 1685 md. Samuel Burk, Robert Davis, Sr.
md. Abadiah Lewis (*Note says "Venables of Virginia", p. 19,
says she is the daughter of Hugh ap Lewis and their son is
Robert Davis, II. Other genealogies differ in this.)"
Child of Trader Hughes and Nicketti is:
121 i.
Elizabeth Hughes, born 1655 in Virginia; died Unknown; married
Nathaniel Davis Abt. 1675 in Jamestown Virginia.
Generation No.
9
486. Opechancanough Powhatan, born 1545 in
Powhatan Nation; died 1644 in VA. He married 487.
Cleoparta.
487. Cleoparta, born 1590 in Powhatan
Nation; died 1641.
Child of Opechancanough Powhatan and Cleoparta is: