Category Archives: Mississippi

Martin Family Newspaper Clippings

While this blog is primarily about my Hilbun ancestors, I am using this forum to post some old newspaper clippings of my maternal ancestors, the Martins, of Clarke County, Mississippi.

 LucyA_Martin_death1925      This is the death of Lucy Autrey Martin, wife of John Henry Martin.

mrsTomMartin_died_1933

Jan 1935__MartinReunion

1935_Martin_reunion

IS_Martin_Clarke_Co_1903

Martin_Reunion_1961

1966_Martin_Reunion

IS_Martin85_BD_1960

Will of F. A. Hilbun, 1872, Tunica County, Mississippi

1872 WILL of F. A. Hilburn– Tunica County, Mississippi.
Transcribed by Joy Hilbun Mohr from Microfilm copy of WILL from Mississippi Dept. of Archives and History, Jackson, MS. In addition, this will is now availabe on Ancestry.com.  That one appears to be a transcription of the original will and there is very little to no punctuation within the will.

The last will & Testament of one F. A. Hilburn being of sound mind but knowing the uncertainty of human affairs knowing that life is short & death certain I hereby direct that after my death all my just debts & funeral expenses be paid that my personality be first exhausted to the payment of my debts & if there be not sufficient therefore that my plantation on which I now reside be rented leased or cultivated as to my executors may seem best & the profits arising therefrom be appropriated to the payment of my said debts & after the same shall Have been thus paid I direct that my plantation be continued to be cultivated or rented as to my executors may seem best & that the profits arising there from be appropriated to the maintenance of my two daughters Susan F. Hilburn, Sarah A. M. Webster until they shall marry & to the education & maintenance of my three sons Andrew J. Hilbun, Fredrick A. Hilbun & Lemuel T. Hilburn until they respectively attain the age of 21 years & that after my youngest son attains the age of 21 years or in case of his death also then when my next youngest son attains the age of 21 years I will & direct that all my property both real and personal be equally divided among all of my children then living to wit Susan F. Hilbun Sarah AM Webster, Andrew J. HIlbun, Frederick A Hilburn, Lemuel T. Hilbun and William W. Hilburn I do hereby appoint DJ Richmond, JV Bridgforth, and George C. Summerwill as executors of this my last will and testament.
I do hereby nominate and appoint GC Summerwill as Guardian of my sons Andrew J Hilbun, Frederick A> HIlbun and Lemuel T Hilbun this the 9th day of November 1872.
F A Hilburn (seal)
Signed sealed published and declared by this said F A HILBURN as his last will and testament in the presence of us who in his presence and in the presence of each other & at his request have herewith set & subscribed our names & seals this the 9th day of November 1872.

GC Summerwell
F. J. Phillips
John O Donnell
J. V. Bridgeforth

State of Mississippi. Tunica County.
In the Chancery Court of Tunica County of said County. Jany. Term AD 1873
IN the matter of a certain instrument of writing purporting to be the last will & testament of F. A. Hilbun deceased. Be it remembered that at a term of the chancery court of the county & state aforesaid bequest and held at the court house in and for said county on the first Monday in January 1873 personally appeared in open court, GC Summerwell & J V Bridgeforth subscribing witnesses to the last will and testament of F. A. Hilburn, deceased late of said county who having been first duly sworn deposed and said that the said F. A. Hilbun signed published and declared said instrument as his last will and testament on the 10th day of November 1873 the day of the date of said instrument in the presence of those deponents and T. J. Philips, John O’ Donnell the other subscribing witnesses to said instrument that said testator was then of sound and deposing mind and memory and twenty one years of age and upwards and that they the said deponents and the said T.J. Philips John O Donnell subscribed and attested said instrument as witnesses to the signature & publication thereof at the special instance & request and in the presence of each other on the day and year of the date thereof
J V Bridgforth
Sworn & subscribed
This 8 day of
January 1873
Clb Dunaway??
My notes regarding this will…….  This will of F. A. Hilbun appears to be of Frederick Hilbun, son of Woodward Hilbun.  They both are found in the 1850 Census of Pontotoc County, MS.  Frederick is in Pontotoc in 1860 and in Tunica County, MS in 1870.

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William Hilbun 1831-1863- researched & written by great-grandson, Joel P. Hilbun.

NOTE:  Feel free to use this information but please acknowledge the source- manuscript by Joel P. Hilbun.

William Hilbun was the third child of Stephen Newberry Hilbun (1805-1888) who was the eighth child of Frederick Hilbun (1768-1850). William was born July 7, 1831 in Lowndes County, Alabama. He married Susan Elizabeth Beard July 3, 1855 in Monroe County, Alabama (Monroe County, AL Marriage Book A) and security was provided by Joseph C. Lambert. Susan was the oldest child of Moses Beard and was 22 years old when she married William. Moses Beard was found in the 1850 census of Monroe County, Alabama. Susan Beard’s sister, Martha married William’s younger brother, David Frederick Hilbun and they also moved to Wayne County and later to Laurel, Mississippi.

William and Susan Hilbun had three sons: Andrew Jackson, born in Alabama in 1856; Steven Filmore, born in 1858, and William P., born in 1860. The youngest boys were both born in Wayne County, Mississippi.

William purchased land in Wayne County, Mississippi, on September 8, 1857- 43.20 acres in Township 10 North, Range 7, Section 31, NE4 NW4, for $108, record # 13632. This land joined that of his father-in-law, Moses Beard. A certificate for a Land Patent was issued by the Augusta Land Office on November 10, 1859. On the certificate his name appears five times as “William Hilburn” with the “r” scratch through each time.

On January 9, 1861 Mississippi was the second state to secede from the Union, and on April 12 of that year the War Between the States began with the firing on Fort Sumter in South Carolina. As many men began enlisting to fight for the Confederacy, on March 8, 1862, William and his younger brother, John Wesley, enlisted in the Shubuta Guards of Clarke County, Company E with T. T. Howze, a Clarke County farmer, as captain. Organized March 1, 1862, the regiment was first called the 37th Mississippi Volunteers. Shubuta, the nearest enlistment station, was just a few miles from where he lived in Wayne County. On April 28, 1862, ten companies from the counties of Clarke, Jasper, Lauderdale, and Smith, rendezvoused at Columbus, Mississippi, and there they were mustered into the Army of the Confederate States of America as the 37th Mississippi Infantry Regiment with a total of 888 men, including field officers and staff. The date on William’s service record states that he enlisted on May 13, 1862, by Col. Orlando S. Holland, who had been editor of a newspaper in Enterprise.

William’s unit participated in the Battle of Iuka on September 19, 1862, after which his company was moved into position for the defense of Corinth as a major railroad center. On October 3 there began a three day siege by Federal armies. William’s service record dated October 13 records that he was absent from his company, the reason being that he was wounded in action at Corinth, Mississippi on October 3, 1862 and sent home. His Company Muster Roll for November and December recorded him “absent, wounded in action, Corinth, and in hospital.” The January and February records show “absent, in hospital.” There is a Hospital Muster Roll of General Hospital at Enterprise, Miss., that says “to February 28, 1863, dated February 28, 1863, listing William ”present” as a patient.
Sometime after February 28 William rejoined his regiment which was alreawm hilbun signaturedy engaged at Vicksburg. In the fierce fighting that led to the surrender on July 4, the casualties of the 37th were 17 killed and 56 wounded. One of those wounded was William. He was captured and taken as a Prisoner of War on July 4, 1863 but was paroled on July 6.

The Company Muster Roll for April 30 to October 31 states “Died in hospital, Vicksburg, Miss., July 15, 1863.” He was buried near Vicksburg in Cedar Hill Cemetery, in a section established in 1866 for Confederate Soldiers called Soldiers Rest, in the Mississippi Section. His grave marker is inscribed:

KnDad w Wm Hilbun

“PVT WILLIAM HILBURN
CO E MISS INF CSA
JUL 7 1831 – JUL 15 1863.”

(picture- author and daughter Kaye at William’s grave)

William’s younger brother, John Wesley, was discharged by order of General Johnston sometime between April 30 and October 31, 1863. After he returned from the war, he married William’s widow, Susan Elizabeth, probably in 1865. In about 1879 the family moved from Wayne County to Jones County, Mississippi. An oral tradition has it that they were intending to move on to Texas, but were caught in west Jones County by a very unexpected snow storm.  Stranded there for some days, they were treated so well by the Wade family that they decided to just settle in Jones County.

John Wesley Hilbun raised William’s sons and had more children with Susan- Lula, Theodocia, Mary Katherine, John T., and Daniel Benjamin.

William’s son, Stephen Filmore Hilbun grew up in the Big Creek area of Jones County and in 1881 married Mary Almedia Wade, daughter of Daniel Webster Wade and Cornelia Knight Wade. They had the following children- Doctor Franklin, Charles William, Nola Lavada, Persada, Bruce Sharp*, Daniel Wesley, and William Hobson.

*Bruce Sharp Hilbun married Cammie V. Miller and they had the following children, Billy S., John C., Charles C., Joel P., Robert B. and Thomas E.