Shook, Margaret "Peggy"

Surname Shook
Given Name Margaret
Alias Peggy
Gender Female
Born 04-JUN-1794 in Haywood County, North Carolina
Died Before 1880 in Greene County, Arkansas
Father Johanne Jacob SHOOK (19-APR-1749 PA - 01-SEP-1839 NC)
Mother Elizabeth Isabella WEITZELL (1749 PA - 1834 NC)

Family Line

Margaret Shook-> Johanne Jacob Shook (f)-> Johanne Hans George Shook (Schuck) (gf)-> Johannes Shook (Schuck) (g-gf).

Marriage

20-NOV-1817 in Haywood County, North Carolina to Joseph HICKS; born: 14-APR-1797 in Georgia; died: Bef. 1850 in North Carolina; father: Jonathan HICKS.

Children

  • Nancy Isabell HICKS; born: 04-NOV-1818 in North Carolina; married: 09-JAN-1836 in Macon County, North Carolina to Asaph H. "Asa" BATTLE (~1814 NC - )
  • Jacob HICKS; born: 13-NOV-1820 in North Carolina; died: 23-MAR-1893 in Paris, Logan County, Arkansas; married: 08-JAN-1852 in Cherokee County, Alabama to Frances Matilda ISRAEL (FEB-1831 NC - 02-OCT-1877 AR)
  • Jonathon HICKS; born: 20-JAN-1823; died: Before 1850 in Alabama Volunteer Army
  • Mahalia HICKS; born: 18-AUG-1825 in North Carolina; married: Jarrel J. DACUS
  • Elizabeth Elveria HICKS; born: 02-MAY-1828 in North Carolina
  • Joseph Callaway HICKS; born: 24-MAR-1830 in North Carolina; died: ~1877 in Craighead County, Arkansas; married: Margaret C. DAVIS (22-OCT-1829 GA - 13-AUG-1895 AR)
  • Margaret Mercilla HICKS; born: 06-AUG-1832 in North Carolina; married: Robert C. DACUS

Story

The Margaret Shook Story

Contributed by Wilma Hicks Simpson and Doralyn Hicks Short

Margaret Shook was born 04 June 1793 in Haywood Co., NC, the daughter of Jacob Shook and Isabella Weitzel. On 20 November 1817 she married Joseph Hicks, the son of a neighbor and fellow farmer, Jonathan Hicks. The new couple lived and reared their children on their own hundred and forty-acre farm in Haywood County. They had seven children, four daughters and three sons. When Jacob Shook's personal property was sold after his death in 1839, Joseph Hicks purchased household furniture from the Shook estate. Joseph Hicks died sometime prior to 1850. We find in the Haywood County, NC. Courthouse Archives in Record of Deeds Book F, on pages 417 and 418 a record of Divestiture of Land by Coroner. The sale of Joseph Hicks' one hundred and forty acres of abandoned land was to pay debts and to clear the title of said land.

By 1850 Margaret was living with her unmarried children in Cherokee County, Alabama. Her nephew W.T. Shook, son of Peter Shook, had been appointed her guardian. We have 1850 census for Cherokee County, District 27, taken 7 Jan 1851, page 117 family # 777 showing Margaret, widowed head of household. Included in her household are Jacob, Elizabeth, Calloway, and Margaret. Also in District 27, page 68 family # 434 is listed the family of William T. Shook, a cabinet maker from North Carolina. According to the History of Craighead County Arkansas by Harry Lee Williams, 1930, page 410, in 1852, 13 families left Cherokee County Alabama in a wagon train headed for the Crowley Ridge area of North East Arkansas, to a settlement called Greensboro. These pioneer families settled here, carved homesteads, intermarried, and became steadfast citizens of the area. Their descendants are there to this day. At least five of these families included Margaret and her children; the remaining families were related to the spouses of those children.

A Marker is all that remains today of Craighead County's first settlement The government had opened this land for Military Bounty Location Warrants. Margaret Hicks, as mother and heir at law of Jonathan Hicks, deceased, fifer in Captain Thomason's Company Regiment, Alabama Vol., had been given Warrant # 72417. This is recorded in Craighead County's Deed Book 33 page 97 and in the US General Land Office Volume 139, page 204. This 162.5 acres became a portion of what came to be known as the Hicks Homestead. At this time, this property was in Greene County. When Craighead County was formed the county line divided the Hicks property and a portion of this land was located in Craighead County. Margaret's younger son, Calloway, made his home on the Craighead County property while Margaret and the elder son, Jacob, eventually lived on the remainder of the estate in Greene County. Apparently not all the men who came to Greensboro from Alabama in 1852 to purchase land immediately moved their families to the new frontier; Jacob and his mother, Margaret, being one of these families. Margaret's daughter, Mahalia, had married Jarrel J. Dacus and Margaret deeded four acres of her land to them. Jarrel J. Dacus's family had been on the wagon train from Alabama. Margaret Davis, who became Calloway's wife, was also on this wagon train with her sister and brother-in-law Frances Armanda Davis Kitchens and James H. Kitchens.

That Jacob Shook's involvement with the Methodist Church exerted a strong influence in Margaret's and her descendants' lives there can be no doubt. Although only two sons can be directly proven to be the children of Jonathan Hicks, father of Joseph, he reared a large family. Census records show several younger Hicks men living near him on the Buncombe/Haywood County line during the early part of the nineteenth century. Some of these men and their descendants became Methodist ministers as did descendants of Jacob. It seems significant that Margaret Shook and Joseph Hicks married in the month of November. Perhaps the two of them met and courted on the grounds behind Louisa Chapel during the Methodist Camp Meeting that year. There was no Methodist Church nearby when the Hicks family relocated to the Arkansas frontier but still the children were reared as devout Methodists. Margaret's grandson, James Ransom Hicks was a Steward in the first Methodist Church organized close to him in Burnt Hill.

Calloway Hicks, James Ransom Hicks and George David Hicks: Son, grandson and great-grandson of Margaret Shook Hicks. Margaret Shook Hicks died between 1870 and 1880; probably around 1877. We believe that she is buried in the Rutherford Cemetery in Craighead County in an unmarked grave. This cemetery is located about two miles from the Hicks' land. It is one of the two oldest cemeteries in the county and contains the graves of many of the early pioneers. The Dacus' of the wagon train are here. Calloway's wife, Margaret Davis Hicks, is buried there and her grave is marked. There are several unmarked and marked graves of allied families in this area. After Margaret's death, Jacob moved to Logan County AR where he died in 1893. He is buried in Antioch Cemetery in a grave marked only with a heap of stones.

The 1870 census is the last where Calloway is found. In 1880, Margaret Davis Hicks is shown as widowed, head of household. Land Records show that Calloway's land was divided among his son and five daughters by late 1882. We believe he may also be buried in an unmarked grave, along with his mother and near his wife, in the Rutherford Cemetery.

Grave of Margaret Davis Hicks, wife of Calloway Hicks in Rutherford Cemetery. This grave is in the center of one of the oldest cemeteries in Craighead County. Other Hicks family members are believed to be buried in the unmarked sites surrounding her grave.

The lay of the land where Margaret Shook Hicks came to live in Arkansas is hilly country. It is one beautiful rolling knoll after another. It must have looked much like her beloved countryside in Haywood County, NC. We wonder how she missed her old home, the place of her birth, the home of her father, mother and siblings. By now most of her siblings had migrated south and west, as she did. One never forgets the place of their birth. Was she homesick often? Were there occasional letters from her siblings? There is so much we long to know about her. What we do know now is only a drop in a pond of what we do not yet know, what we can never know.


1 1850 United States Census->Alabama->Cherokee County->District 27->Image 112/170 (Ancestry.com) Image ...

Name Age Sex Race Birthplace
Hicks, Margaret 55 Female White North Carolina
Hicks, Jacob 30 Male White North Carolina
Hicks, Elizabeth 22 Male White North Carolina
Hicks, Calloway 20 Male White North Carolina
Hicks, Margaret 18 Male White North Carolina

2 1860 United States Census->Alabama->Cherokee County->District 2->Image 74/85 (Ancestry.com) Image ...

Name Age Sex Race Birthplace Occupation
Hicks, Jacob 39 Male White North Carolina Mechanic
Hicks, Matilda 29 Female White North Carolina  
Hicks, Margaret E. 8 Female White Alabama  
Hicks, Marvel C. 5 Male White Alabama  
Hicks, Joseph L. 3 Male White Alabama  
Hicks, Margaret 67 Female White North Carolina Widow

3 1870 United States Census->Arkansas->Greene County->Salem->Image 12/17 (Ancestry.com) Image ...

Name Age Sex Race Birthplace Occupation
Hicks, Jacob 49 Male White North Carolina Miller
Hicks, F. M. 39 Female White North Carolina Keeping house
Hicks, M. E. 17 Female White Alabama  
Hicks, M. C. 14 Male White Alabama  
Hicks, J. L. 12 Male White Alabama  
Hicks, J. T. 9 Male White Alabama  
Hicks, N. R. 6 Male White Arkansas  
Hicks, N. R. 6 Male White Arkansas  
Hicks, S. A. 3 Female White Arkansas  
Hicks, E. C. 9/12 Female White Arkansas  
Hicks, Margaret 76 Female White North Carolina Widow