Richard S. Hickman, Lydia Veal, and Their Descendants

Richard S. Hickman, Lydia Veal, and Their Descendants

Author:

Publisher:

Published: 1990

Total Pages: 298

ISBN-13:

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The earliest known ancestor of this family was Richard S. Hickman, born ca. 1811-1815 probably in Craven Co., North Carolina. He was a son of Shadrack Hickman and Charlotte Brothers. He married Lydia Veal (d. 1884) 1831 in Craven County, N.C. All ten children of Richard S. and Lydia Veal Hickman were born in Georgia according to Bibbs County, Georgia census. Descendants live in Georgia, North Carolina, Tennessee and elsewhere.


William Wells and the Struggle for the Old Northwest

William Wells and the Struggle for the Old Northwest

Author: William Heath

Publisher: University of Oklahoma Press

Published: 2015-03-11

Total Pages: 636

ISBN-13: 0806151471

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Born to Anglo-American parents on the Appalachian frontier, captured by the Miami Indians at the age of thirteen, and adopted into the tribe, William Wells (1770–1812) moved between two cultures all his life but was comfortable in neither. Vilified by some historians for his divided loyalties, he remains relatively unknown even though he is worthy of comparison with such famous frontiersmen as Daniel Boone and Davy Crockett. William Heath’s thoroughly researched book is the first biography of this man-in-the-middle. A servant of empire with deep sympathies for the people his country sought to dispossess, Wells married Chief Little Turtle’s daughter and distinguished himself as a Miami warrior, as an American spy, and as an Indian agent whose multilingual skills made him a valuable interpreter. Heath examines pioneer life in the Ohio Valley from both white and Indian perspectives, yielding rich insights into Wells’s career as well as broader events on the post-revolutionary American frontier, where Anglo-Americans pushing westward competed with the Indian nations of the Old Northwest for control of territory. Wells’s unusual career, Heath emphasizes, earned him a great deal of ill will. Because he warned the U.S. government against Tecumseh’s confederacy and the Tenskwatawa’s “religiously mad” followers, he was hated by those who supported the Shawnee leaders. Because he came to question treaties he had helped bring about, and cautioned the Indians about their harmful effects, he was distrusted by Americans. Wells is a complicated hero, and his conflicted position reflects the decline of coexistence and cooperation between two cultures.