SECTION B

CHAPTER IV

WILLIS BISHOP HICKS

MARTHA ANN CATHERINE HICKS

ANGELINE JETER HICKS

WILLIAM NIELSEY HICKS

ROBERT NANCE HICKS

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Odom, Mena, Arkansas.

Before his wife's death, W. B. Hicks was given a land grant of 40.29 acres in Clarke County in October of 1852.

On May 11, 1855, Susan M. Garrick became the second wife of W. B. Hicks. Susan may have been the daughter of Daniel Garrick whose wife, name unknown, died in Georgia. Garrick family members say that Daniel settled in Clarke County, probably in the same vicinity as the Hicks family, which was in Scyrene. Daniel Garrick is buried in Amity Cemetery, Old Line Road near Scyrene.

Susan Garrick was 33 years younger than her husband, having been born December 7, 1831. She was the mother of his last six children.

The 1870 Clarke County Census listed the W. B. Hicks family as follows:

W. B. and Susan's 4th child was Robert Daniel Hicks, born in 1864. He died eighteen months later, in 1865, so that accounts for his absence in the 1870 Census.

The three Vickers children listed in the 1870 Census were children of W. B. and Dorothy's daughter, Nancy Talbert who married George Vickers. As far as I know at this time, Georgia never appeared again in any records, so she may have died early. There was another Vickers daughter, Alabama Virginia, who was listed in the home of Mary C. Benson in 1870. Mary was of course, Mary Calviss Hicks, daughter of W. B. and Dorothy. Nancy Talbert Hicks and her husband, George Vickers, apparently died between 1860 and 1870, and the children were scattered among her relatives, a common practice in those days.

The W. B. Hicks family was listed in the 1880 Clarke County Census, Gates Beat, as follows:

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SOURCES FOR WILLIS BISHOP HICKS

Clarke County Alabama and Its Surroundings by Rev. T.H. Ball

Clarke County, AL Census Records

Clarke County, AL Marriage Records

Newspaper clippings

Cemetery records and tombstones

509A

 

CHAPTER V

BENJAMIN FRANKLIN HICKS>

509B

Note: there appear to be several pages missing here (510 & 511)

Rebecca Sue Hicks Williams, granddaughter of Daniel Lee Hicks, furnished me with all the information on her grandfather and his descendants.

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Following the death of Julia Ann Allen Hicks, Benjamin Franklin Hicks married Emma Jane Coleman, daughter of Harriet Baugh and William Coleman. Emma was born February 14, 1863, which made her 36 years younger than her husband.

The wedding took place on February 24, 1887 at the home of Charlie Smith, Emma's stepfather, who was married to her mother after the death of William Coleman.

Benjamin was 60 years old when he married for the second time, and before he died on May 28, 1910 he and Emma had eight children. He was buried in Old Salem Cemetery.

 

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I have been unable to get addresses on the remaining five chidren of Ben Hicks abd his second wife, Emma Jane Coleman. They are listed below as given to me by Lester Hicks, Conrad, MT.

 

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SOURCES FOR BENJAMIN FRANKLIN HICKS

Clarke County, AL Census Records

Clarke County, AL Marriage Records

Records of Rebecca Sue Hicks Williams

Cemetery records and tombstones

Old family letters

Family Group Sheets completed by family members

Willis Bishop Hicks Family Bible

 

530A

 

 

 

CHAPTER VI

MARY CALVISS HICKS

 

Mary Calviss Hicks, sixth child and third daughter of Willis Bishop Hicks and his first wife, Dorothy B. Nance, was born on May 27, 1829 in Georgia. Mary married James A. Benson on December 25, 1855, according to Clarke County Marriage Records. John T. Odom says that James was called "Jonas".

James and Mary C. Benson were listed in the 1860 Clarke Co. Census, along with their son, Ripley Benson, age 4.

The 1870 Clarke County Census listed Mary as head of her household, so James was evidently deceased by that date.

Mary C. Benson age 40

Ripley Benson 13

Alabama Vickers 11

The eleven year old Vickers girl was the daughter of George and Nancy Hicks, Nancy being Mary Calviss Benson's sister. Apparently both Nancy Hicks and George Vickers were deceased by 1870 as the children were scattered. Alabama was with her Aunt Mary C. Benson; two of her brothers and her only sister were with grandparents, Willis Bishop and Susan Hicks: Lorenzo, William and Georgia. Bama's other brother, John Jefferson Vickers, was evidently with some other relative.

For a full account of Alabama Virginia Vickers and her husband, see chapter on Susan Davis McCoy in the Davis Section of this book.

Virginia was the daughter of James T. Bradford and Mary E. Walker. She had a brother, James Marcellus Bradford, who married Mary Lavinia Thomas, daughter of Susan McCoy Thomas (see chapter on Susan Davis in Davis Section). Virginia had another brother, Zebedee Bradford, who was married to Mary Ella/Ellen Davis, daughter of Howard Covington Davis (see chapter on Enoch Davis Jr. in the Davis Section).

 

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In his book, Clarke County Alabama and Its Surroundings, Rev. T. H. Ball stated that Rip Benson and his wife resided in Township 8, west of Bassett's Creek.

During the Depression of the 1930's after Daddy lost his job with the A T and N Railroad in Mobile, my parents, sister Miriam and I moved back to Clarke County and resided with my paternal grandparents. Grandpa and Grandma often spoke of "Cousin Rip Benson" and the fact that he was a minister. Historical Sketches of Clarke County, Alabama by the Clarke County Historical Society states that Rip was one of three ministers who helped organize the Dickinson Baptist Church in May of 1907. He also served the Peniel Baptist Church in the Nealton Community, now called the McVay Community.

Dorothy Allen Rutledge, whose husband Grady Rutledge is a descendant of Ripley Kissiah Benson, gave me the photo of Rip which you will see on the following page.

on November 12, 1912, Fabius Haywood Hicks, brother of Mary Calviss Hicks, wrote a letter to his cousin, Robert Covington Hicks in Sulphur Springs, Texas, in which he stated that Willis Bishop Hicks had a grandson who was a Baptist preacher: R.K. Benson. A copy of the letter may be seen in the chapter on Jeter Hicks.

For a long time it was my belief that Rip's middle name was "Kennedy". By the time he was born in 1856, his mother's older sister, Martha Ann Hicks, was married to Neal Kennedy. It was a common practice to give one's child the name of one's in-laws. However, on October of 1990, I located one of Rip's granddaughters (Minnie Dell Dawson Peoples) in Birmingham and she told me that the "K" stands for "Kissiah". So I stand corrected!

In the attached copy of Virginia Bradford Benson's obituary the statement is made that she and Rip had ten children. Dorothy Allen Rutledge (whose mother was Mary Caroline Davis - see chapter on Johnson Davis in the Davis Section of this book) confirmed that there WERE ten children born to Rip and Virginia. Dorothy listed the ten children in the following order:

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SOURCES FOR MARY CALVISS HICKS

Clarke County, AL Marriage Records

Clarke County, AL Census Records

Newspaper clippings

Cemetery records and tombstones

Clarke County Alabama and Its Surroundings by Rev. T.H. Ball

Historical Sketches of Clarke County, Alabama by The Clarke County Historical Society

Old family letters

Personal knowledge

Family Group Sheets completed by family members

Willis Bishop Hicks Family Bible

550A

 

 

CHAPTER VII

NANCY TALBERT HICKS

 

Nancy Talbert Hicks, seventh child and fourth daughter of Willis Bishop Hicks and his first wife, Dorothy B. Nance, was born in Alabama on July 30, 1831. She married George Vickers October 5, 1848.

The 1850 Clarke County Census listed the family as follows:

You will note that George hadn't aged much in the last ten years! Also, in 1860 he claimed he was born in South Carolina. Nancy took a few years off her age also.

In the 1870 Clarke County Census William, Lorenzo and Georgia were listed in the home of their maternal grandparents,Willis Bishop Hicks and his second wife, Susan M. Garrick. Another daughter, Alabama V., was listed in the home of her Aunt Mary C. Benson, who was of course, Mary Calviss Hicks.

Since Georgia was born around 1862 we can assume that her parents died sometime between 1862 and 1870. Perhaps Nancy died from complications following the birth of their last child. George possibly died during the War Between the States.

There is a tombstone in Old Salem Cemetery for Nancy Leona Vickers, born in 1873 and died in 1897. She was the the first wife of Thomas Arthur Larrimore(see Davis Section). I was told by members of the William Russin Thomas family that Nancy Leona was the daughter of William Vickers, and that Nancy Leona died soon after the birth of hers and Arthur's twins, who also died.

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SOURCES FOR NANCY TALBERT HICKS

Clarke County, AL Census Records

Clarke County, AL Marriage Records

Records of Helen Clanton Smith

Records of Mary Vickers McGee

Records of Gladys Donaldson

Family Group Sheets completed by family members

Willis Bishop Hicks Family Bible

 

 

562C

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