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Fanny Hicks

Female Abt 1824 -


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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Fanny Hicks was born about 1824 in , Ashe County, North Carolina, (daughter of Cutliff Harmon Hicks and Nellie Tester).

Generation: 2

  1. 2.  Cutliff Harmon Hicks was born on 22 Feb 1802 in , Ashe County, North Carolina, (son of Samuel Hicks(Hix) and Sarah Nancy Harmon); died on 3 Mar 1892 in , Watauga County, North Carolina, .

    Cutliff married Nellie Tester on 13 Jul 1823 in , Ashe County, North Carolina, . Nellie was born on 28 Feb 1802 in , Ashe County, North Carolina, ; died on 16 Dec 1880 in , Watauga County, North Carolina, . [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  Nellie Tester was born on 28 Feb 1802 in , Ashe County, North Carolina, ; died on 16 Dec 1880 in , Watauga County, North Carolina, .
    Children:
    1. David Hicks was born about 1824 in , Ashe County, North Carolina, .
    2. 1. Fanny Hicks was born about 1824 in , Ashe County, North Carolina, .
    3. Elizabeth Hicks was born about 1825 in , Ashe County, North Carolina, .
    4. Presley Hicks was born about 1826 in , Ashe County, North Carolina, .
    5. Marilda "Rilda" Hicks was born in Dec 1826 in , Ashe County, North Carolina, .
    6. Charlotte Hicks was born about 1827 in , Ashe County, North Carolina, .
    7. Lewis Rector Hicks was born about 1828 in , Ashe County, North Carolina, .
    8. Nancy Hicks was born about 1837 in , Ashe County, North Carolina, ; died on 3 May 1918 in , Watauga County, North Carolina, .
    9. Thomas Hicks was born about 1850 in , Watauga County, North Carolina, .


Generation: 3

  1. 4.  Samuel Hicks(Hix) was born about 1755 in Goochland County, , , Virginia (son of David Hix and Mrs. (Hix)); died about 1835 in Ashe County, , , North Carolina.

    Notes:

    The following is taken from 'Harman Genealogy with Biographical Sketches'. Samuel HIX was the first to settle in Watauga County, North Carolina. He owned all of Valle Crucis and was there during the Revolutionary War. He concealed himself in his shanty, which he pointed out as his 'improvement'. Later, he sold Valle Crucis 'for a rifle, a dog and a sheepskin to Benjamin WARD', who sold it to Reuben MAST. Samuel then got land at the mouth of Cove Creek, but Ward also got this and sold it to a man named SUMMERS. SUMMERS, his wife and five children, were drowned one night in a freshet of Watauga River called the 'Summer Fresh'. In 1816, Samuel HIX obtained 126 acres. His gravestone is below St. Judes Post Office a quarter of a mile below Antioch Baptist Church. He seemed not to be reconciled to the American Government and continued to hide during the day, only going home at dark for supplies. His five sons were mischievious, and delighted in frightening him.

    Samuel married Sarah Nancy Harmon about 1776. Sarah was born about 1836. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 5.  Sarah Nancy Harmon was born about 1836.
    Children:
    1. William Hicks
    2. David Hicks was born about 1786 in North Carolina, , , .
    3. Goldner Hicks was born about 1789.
    4. Sarah Hicks was born on 7 Apr 1795 in , Watauga County, North Carolina, North Carolina; died about 1835 in Carter County, , , Tennessee.
    5. Sabra Hicks was born about 1795; died about 1865 in Rhea County, , , Tennessee.
    6. Samuel Hicks was born about 1800 in Valle Crucis, , Watauga County, North Carolina.
    7. 2. Cutliff Harmon Hicks was born on 22 Feb 1802 in , Ashe County, North Carolina, ; died on 3 Mar 1892 in , Watauga County, North Carolina, .


Generation: 4

  1. 8.  David Hix was born about 1719 in Goochland County, , , Virginia (son of Samuel Hix and Diane Willis); died about 1792 in Watauga Settlement, , , Territory South of the Ohio.

    Notes:

    The following is an excerpt from northwestern North Carolina historian Michael Hardy:

    About the same time that Samuel Bright was settling down near the present-day site of the Avery County Airport, near Ingalls, David Hix was settling in the Valle Crucis area of Watauga County. His home was surrounded by a palisade wall and was generally known as Hix's Fort. He was living there with his family, including his two sons, Samuel and David; his two sons-in-law, Thomas and Mikel Asher; two other men named Lucus and Asher, and a hired woman named Ireland, along with her daughter, Jenny.
    Born in Goochland County, Va., about 1719, Hix lived in Surry County, along Peters Creek for eight or 10 years prior to coming to Valle Crucis. A writer in 1885 described Hix as a "man of great strength and power of endurance, a skillful hunter and woodsman, simple in his habits, of a kind and accommodating disposition and possessed of many good traits."
    For a brief amount of time, the group moved further down the Watauga River, living near Dugger's Iron Works in what is present-day Carter County. It was here that Jenny was abducted, probably by the Shawnee; she lived for seven years near the Ohio River and married one of their warriors. She was later purchased by some "Indian traders" and was eventually able to return to her mother.
    Hix lived at Dugger's Iron Works for maybe a year before returning to Valle Crucis. One source puts him back on the upper section of the Watauga River about 1776 or 1777. As the American Revolution broke out on the frontier as well as in the more populated sections of the Colonies, Hix's position became more complicated and difficult. In fact, it is not even very clear where his loyalties actually were. One source considered Hix a Tory, while another considered him to be of a more neutral position. Clearly, Col. Benjamin Cleveland, Patriot leader and legendary foe of Tories in the backcountry, believed Hix was an enemy to the Patriot cause. At one point, Cleveland traveled from Wilkesboro and laid siege to Hix's Fort. After a few days, Hix believed that Cleveland had retreated, and when the settlers ventured forth, Cleveland ambushed them, killing Hix's son-in-law Mikel Asher and wounding David Hix. Cleveland's men then plundered Hix's Fort.
    Hix had additional problems not connected to the Revolution. In another instance, Hix allowed some cattle drovers to stay at his fort. Moving livestock through the backcountry to reach a market could be an arduous process. However, after the presumed drovers had left the fort, a group came from Wilkes County looking for them. It seems the cattle were actually stolen. The posse caught up with them and killed the cattle rustler, a man named Grimes.
    At some point, it appears that the Hix family fled their fort in Valle Crucis. The family came to the area near present-day Banner Elk, presumably at some point during the American Revolution. John Preston Arthur, in his history of Watauga County, tells us that Hix eventually "became uneasy and retired to the wilderness near what is now Banner Elk, where he made camp and supported himself by hunting and making maple syrup and sugar, thus avoiding service as an American or a Tory." Hix did manage to avoid swearing allegiance to either side during the war. Arthur goes on to tell us that people 100 years ago still plowed up coal "near the Lybrook farm, near the Grandfather Orphanage" and that local people knew the area as the Hix Improvement, "that being the place here Samuel Hix 'laid out during the Revolutionary War.'"
    It is possible that David Hix died in the Banner Elk area in 1792 or 1793. His will, drawn up by a resident from Washington County (now Tennessee), was probated in Wilkes County.
    John Preston Arthur tells us that there "were no clearings of any extent at Banner Elk, except those at the Hix Improvement, which was very small, and at Big Bottoms but there were two 'deadenings,' one called the Moses Deadening and the other the Lark Chopping." These last two were probably locations where trees had been cut in such a way where their death was certain, thus opening up new ground for cultivation.
    Arthur also tells us that David Hix soon had neighbors: Baker King and Ben Dugger. There are plenty of Duggers still in the area. Members of the Hix family are also still here in Avery County, but, over time, the name has morphed into the more familiar Hicks. Though there were others seeking to settle in the region well before the 1840s, it would be the Banner family whose name would stick to the community.

    David married Mrs. (Hix). [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 9.  Mrs. (Hix)
    Children:
    1. David Jr. Hix was born about 1750.
    2. 4. Samuel Hicks(Hix) was born about 1755 in Goochland County, , , Virginia; died about 1835 in Ashe County, , , North Carolina.
    3. Catherine Hicks was born about 1758 in North Carolina, , , ; died about 1825.
    4. Sarah Hix was born about 1760.
    5. Dianah Hix was born about 1765.
    6. A Daughter Hix was born about 1770.