MARY ADALINE
BANKHEAD MARCHBANKS
A STAUNCH SOUTHERN SPOUSE
by
Jim McDonald
PREFACE
Mary
Adaline lived with her parents in Union County in South
Carolina before the family migrated into Marion County,
Alabama. Some interesting facts about these areas - and
about the United States - in Mary Adaline’s time.
South
Carolina had become one of the richest of the 13 original
colonies when the American Revolution took place. Early
inland settlers were mainly farmers and traders who evolved
into a governing group of merchants and planters.
It was the 8th state to join the union, with its May 23,
1788 ratification of the American Constitution.
Union
County, although having originally been a food growing farming
area, had become a cotton producing area starting about
the time of Mary Adaline’s birth around 1802 - during
the years that Thomas Jefferson was the third
president of the still young United States.
The
soil began losing its fertility during the 1820’s,
a reality which may have been among the reasons that the
father of a teenage Mary Adaline decided to relocate in
Marion County, Alabama.
Marion
County, formed in the northwestern part of the state by
Alabama’s governing body in 1818, was just about two
years old when the Bankhead family arrived in the first
year of the new decade of the 1820’s when James
Monroe was in his second term as the country’s president.
PROLOGUE
Earlier,
I’d written a biography about my maternal great-great-great
uncle titled Elijah Marchbanks: A Southern Stalwart. Mary
Adaline was every bit as resilient as Elijah, her husband.
It is most appropriate, therefore, that this
essay about the life and times of my maternal great-great-great
aunt be titled Mary Adaline Bankhead Marchbanks: A Staunch
Southern Spouse.
______________________________________________________________
Mary
Adaline, along with her parents and siblings, trekked westward
from South Carolina’s northwestern Piedmont area into
the agricultural area of northwestern Alabama that was immediately
adjacent to their neighboring southern
state of Mississippi.
Great
joy must have resounded throughout the Union County, South
Carolina home of Jane Greer and George Bankhead when Mary
Adaline, their first child, was born in about 1802. Her
South Carolina grandparents, Elizabeth
Black and James Bankhead, surely also rejoiced - as did
George’s eight brothers and sisters, now the aunts
and uncles of Mary Adaline.
In 1820,
when Mary Adaline was about 18 years old, George Bankhead
and his family migrated from Union County to Marion County,
Alabama. (1)
One
of younger men residing in Marion County that Mary Adaline
met after the Bankhead’s arrival was the Tennessee
born Elijah Marchbanks, the first son of Jennie Jane Young
and William Marchbanks, Jr.
A courtship
developed between Mary Adaline and Elijah that culminated
in their marriage in about 1824 when the bride was about
22 years old and her husband was 27.
Pertinent
to this story is that parts of the Alabama counties of Marion,
Fayette and Pickens were used in February 1867 to form Jones
County - which was renamed Lamar County in 1877. (2)
In the
25 or so years that followed, Mary Adaline and Elijah’s
family had grown to somewhere between five and seven children.
(See Elijah Marchbanks: A Southern Stalwart for the names
of these children). Elijah enjoyed
great success as a farmer while also being elected to terms
in both the Alabama House of Representatives and Senate.
Sometime
after his term as Alabama State Senator ended in 1846, Elijah
and Mary Adaline decided to relocate just across the state
line as the 1850 Census for Monroe County, Mississippi lists
Elijah as 53 and a farmer; Mary A. age
48 and five children. (3)
The
greatest tragedy that could happen to a husband and wife
is the heart-breaking fact that these children died in a
malaria outbreak in about 1853. They are buried at The Marchbanks
Cemetery on Wolf Road in Monroe County. (4) and (5)
Despite
the loss of these children, Mary Adaline and Elijah continued
to prosper as a farming family with extensive landholdings
in Monroe County for another 14 years until his death on
or about December 16, 1867. (6)
All
known evidence indicates that Mary Adaline continued to
successfully operate the Marchbanks Farm or Plantation on
Wolf Road after Elijah’s death. (7)
One
verification of the above is a deed entered into on November
14, 1871 by which Mary Adaline bought approx. 1000 acres
of land for $2,498 from J. S. Bruton and his wife T. E.
Bruton. (8)
Mary
Adaline’s last will and testament was written May
20, 1869. James S. Barton, her grandson, is named her executor
along with Henry M. Dillingham. (9)
It’s
interesting to read that the valuation of Mary Adaline’s
will places her estate at about $9000 as follows:
a. 8 bales cotton weighing in the aggregate 500 pounds at
average of 20 cents per pound $3800
b. Eighteen hundred dollars in gold coin $1800
c. One lot of hogs at $75
d. Household and kitchen furniture $250
e. Proceeds of crop of 10 bales of cotton for year 1867
weighing 500 lbs.each at 20 cents per pound $1000
f. Proceeds of 700 bushels of corn at 50 cents per bushel
$350 Aggregate amount $9325. (10)
It’s
equally interesting to view the Appraisers Estate Report
Schedule A of Mary Adaline’s possessions:
a. One bureau 8.00
b. One bureau 5.00
c. One (unreadable word) 1.00
d. One bed bedstead counterpane sheet and twin pillows 20.00
e. One bed bedstead counterpane sheet bolster and pillows
20.00
f. One bed bedspread counterpane sheet and twin pillows
18.00
g. One clock 2.00
h. 13 quilts @ 1.00 13.00
i. 2 counterpanes @ 1.25 2.50
j. 4 coverlets @ 4.00 16.00
k. 2 checked counterpanes @ .50 1.00
l. 1 sidesaddle 5.00
m. 1 small table 1.50
n. 2 trunks @ .50 1.00
o. 1 looking glass .50
p. 1 Safe 3.00
q. Table ware 3.00
r. 1 cookstove and vessels 12.50
s. 2 tables @ .50 1.00
t. 1 wash pot 3.00
u. One mule 25.00
v. Cotton crop now growing 160.00
w. Six chairs @.50
3.00
______
$325.00 (11)
Elijah
and Mary Adaline were referred to as wealthy citizens of
Monroe County. (12)
Further
evidence that the Monroe County plantation of Mary Adaline
and Elijah resulted in their being among the prominent families
in the county was found in other documents dealing with
Mary Adaline’s estate:
*38 bales of cotton weighing 500 lbs. in the aggregate at
.20 per pound average totaling $3800.00
*Eighteen hundred dollars ($1800.00) in gold coin
*One lot of hogs @ $75.00
*Household and kitchen furniture $250.00
*Proceeds of crop of 10 bales cotton for year 1867 weighing
500 lbs. each @ 20 per pound totaling $1000.00
*Proceeds of 700 bushels of corn @ .50 per bushel totaling
$350.00 Aggregating $9325.00 (13)
EPILOGUE
Mary
Adaline died September 1877. Her burial in The Marchbanks
Cemetery on Wolf Road in Monroe County, Mississippi reunited
Mary Adaline with Elijah and their young children who died
in the malaria epidemic.
Jim McDonald
Austin, Texas
May 6, 2004
Copyright Jim McDonald May 2004
____________________________________________________________
Sources:
(1) September 20, 1956 letter from Alabama Department of
Archives to Jim McDonald
(2) A Lamar County History on the AlGenWeb of the USGenWeb
as downloaded by Jim McDonald on August 27, 2003
(3) Evans Memorial Library, Aberdeen, Monroe County, Mississippi
re Jim McDonald May 2003 research
(4) The date of this malaria epidemic was about 1853 according
to “The Heritage of Lamar County, Alabama biography
of Elijah Marchbanks re Jim McDonald May 2003 research at
Evans Memorial Library in Aberdeen,
Monroe County, Mississippi
(5) It is the catastrophic loss of these young children
that caused me to title their biographies as Elijah Marchbanks:
Stalwart Southerner and Mary Adaline Bankhead Marchbanks:
A Staunch Southern Spouse. As cousin Mary Barton
Posey, a descendent of Mary Adaline and Elijah, remarked
in an April 2004 email to Jim McDonald after visiting the
Marchbanks Cemetery: It was poignant to see the individual
markers for these young children.
(6) Inventory of Estate of Mary Adaline Marchbanks re September
1877 term of Chancery Court, Monroe County, Mississippi
re Jim McDonald research at Aberdeen, Monroe County
(7) Legal documents re September 1877 term of Chancery Court,
Monroe County, Mississippi re Jim McDonald May 2003 research
at Aberdeen, Monroe County
(8) Deed recorded in the Office of H. S. Gilleylen, Clerk
of Chancery Court of Monroe County, Mississippi on October
30, 1877
(9) Mary Adaline Marchbanks will re legal document that
witnesses of her will appeared before Clerk of Monroe County
Chancery Court on July 9, 1877 to verify their witnessing
the writing of her will
(10) Monroe County Mississippi legal documents pertaining
to Mary Adaline Marchbanks will
(11) Executors Bond. Estate of Mary A. Marchbanks deceased
in the Chancery Court of Monroe County. J. S. Barton, Executor.
Filed September 29, 1877
(12) Boling Feltz Marchbanks 1920 Family History
(13) Monroe County, Mississippi Chancery Court Document
Pertaining to Estate of Mary A. Marchbanks - Wife of Elijah
Marchbanks re Jim McDonald May 2003 research photos of the
Marchbanks Cemetery in Monroe Co., MS - and you All the
best. Jim e mail jim91429@msn.com
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