Huff/Swier Family Tree

Genealogy of Steven Huff and Dana Swier and Allied Families

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John B. JENNINGS

John B. JENNINGS

Male 1837 - 1875  (38 years)

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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  John B. JENNINGS was born on 21 Jan 1837 in Virginia, USA (son of Christopher Henry JENNINGS and Mary); died on 26 Jun 1875 in Russellville, Franklin County, Alabama.

    Other Events:

    • Occupation: Blacksmith

    Notes:

    Member of the Masonic Order, Russellville, Franklin County, Alabama.
    From the Memorandum page in the John B. Jennings & Lucinda Fannie Curry Jennings' family Bible: "The earliest record of the Jennings started with them in Virginia and Georgia. The John B. Jennings family lived at Russellville, Alabama. John was murdered over an election argument. Mrs. J.B. Jennings and children moved to Honey Grove, Texas in 1880. The family came to Swisher County, Texas December 1890."
    From the Births page in the John B. Jennings & Lucinda Fannie Curry Jennings' family Bible: "J.B. Jennings brothers were: Dick Jennings, Jim Jennings, George Jennings" Next to the 3 names, it is noted that Jim and George were half- brothers.
    TIME LINE
    1850 Census, Franklin County AL--there is a Joseph Jennings as head of household, born VA; he has a son John, age 14, born VA, making John's birth year 1835 1859 Land Patents, Franklin County AL--John B. Jennings makes two purchases: #29665 Township 07-S, Range 13-W, Section 26 SWNE and #29665 Township 07-S, Range 13-W, Section 26 NWSE [Bureau of Land Management]
    John B. Jennings: total acres: 80.25; Dec 1, 1859; land office: Huntsville; acres: 80.25; act or treaty: April 24, 1820; sale-cash entries; 1SWNE Huntsville No 7S 13 W 26; 2 NWSE Huntsville No 7S 13W26.
    1860 Census, Frankfort, Franklin County AL, Western Division, dwelling 26
    John B. Jennings, 23 years old, born VA 1836, occupation: "gent of service".
    Living two dwellings from John (#28) was the family of R.J. Jennings, 33 born 1828 VA, minister of the Gospel, $1000 real estate, $200 personal estate; M.J. 26 born 1833 AL; Theadoria, 4 born 1855 AL [Roll M653-10, page 671].
    1862, June 13--John B. Jennings enlisted at Tupelo, Mississippi for Alabama Confederate service, Co. E, 16th Regiment, infantry for 3 years, private [Military Records from the National Archives. NOTE: This is may or not be our John B. Jennings; the 16th Regiment companies were raised in Franklin and Lawrence Counties. The record gives little information, does not mention where the company fought, and, evidently, he was not wounded.] John's granddaughter "heard that he was in the Civil War." [Letter to Jan Jennings in Tulsa OK from Mrs. H. (Annie) Cunningham in Lockney TX (c1976)] In the possession of Bobby Joe Jennings, Lorenzo TX, is a small framed photograph; on the back is written--
    John Jennings, Florence AL, United Confederate Veteran, 19th Reunion, Albert Sidney Johnston. [information from Worth Alston Jennings III]
    1865, May 7--married Fannie Lucinda Curry in Frankfort, Franklin County AL by Rev. Joseph White, Molton, AL
    1866, June 2--daughter Alpha born; dies 20 days later
    1867, September 29--daughter Daisie Z. born AL
    1869, September 17--son Veto Curry born, AL
    1870 Census, Colbert County AL, Cherokee post office, township 3, range 14, page 105b, #8: John Jennings, 33 years, dry goods & grocery merchant, $1500 personal real estate, born VA Francis Jennings, 29 years, keeping house, born AL
    Daisey Jennings, 2 years, born AL
    Veto Jennings, born Oct., AL
    James Jennings, 16 years, works on farm, born AL [could this be John's half- brother Jim?]
    1871, July 15--Transferred from the Masonic Order, Cherokee Lodge, to the Russellville Lodge; his name was in the minutes of meetings until the time of his death.
    1871, October 14--son Richard Otto born, Birmingham, Jefferson County AL
    1873, April 26--Franklin County AL Deed, town of Russellville. John B. Jennings paid $309 for lots 8, 9, 10 in the town of Russellville. [Originally recorded in the Franklin County AL Deed Book V, page 120, but a courthouse fire destroyed this public record; however, Lucinda Curry Jennings kept her copy of the deed in family records; the deed is in the possession of Arthur H. Jennings, grandson of John B. Jennings.]
    1873, December 6--son Worth Alston born in Russellville, Franklin County AL
    1875, June 26--John B. Jennings shot and killed, Russellville, Franklin County AL The first record of John B. Jennings in Franklin County, Alabama occurred in January 1859 when he made a cash entry purchase of 80.25 acres. In the few years before his death, John B. Jennings moved his family from Cherokee, Colbert County, Alabama where he was a dry goods merchant to the newly established town of Birmingham. Although son Richard Otto Jennings was born there, they may have stayed only during the year 1871. In July 1871, John transferred his Masonic membership from the Cherokee Lodge, to the Russellville Lodge where his name remained in the minutes of meetings
    until the time of his death. In April 1873, John B. Jennings purchased three town lots for $309 in Russellville.
    ................................................................................................................................
    .
    "THE QUIET OF OUR LITTLE TOWN WAS DISTURBED . . . A MAN IS KILLED"
    [On 1 July 1875, John B. Jennings' death in Franklin County AL was reported in the North Alabamian newspaper published in Tuscumbia, Alabama; parts of the following were published by Jan Jennings in "The Source: Historical and Adventure," 7, no. 2: 21-25.]
    The Reconstruction Period in northern Alabama lasted longer than elsewhere in the state, due in part to the region's geographic isolation from the seat of government, its sometimes vehement disagreement
    with southern Alabama politics, and a close identity with Tennessee. The North Alabamian newspaper, published in Tuscumbia, reported throughout 1875 about volatile politics, burglaries, and farms being burned out. On June 24, 1875, 93 degree heat and a drought contributed to frayed tempers; two men shot at each other with pistols on the street of Tuscumbia. Two days later, in nearby Russellville, G.C. Allman shot and killed John B. Jennings. The North Alabamian reported that "Jennings was struck with four large buckshot and expired in half an hour after receiving his fatal wounds. The sad affair grew out of an old grudge, a newspaper article that appeared in the Alabamian during the canvass last summer." Allman surrendered himself promptly to the sheriff. His trial began just two days following the shooting on June 28 and 29 and resulted in acquittal, holding that Allman acted in self-defense.
    This true story illustrates on a local level, and at a personal scale, Franklin County's continuing difficulties and political upheavals following the Civil War. Although the North Alabamian reported the story, no Russellville paper remains extant, and public records of the trial burned in a courthouse fire.
    In the late 1930s, Dr. Shaw, formerly of Russellville, a friend of John B. Jennings, gave an oral history account of the killing to Jennings' grandson, Veto Curry Jennings in Tulia, Texas: " . . . they were having a political rally. John went and made a speech for the candidate he was interested in. But it did not suit the opponent who was there. As John was walking home this fellow waylaid him and was going to give him a whipping because of the things he had said in his speech. Instead of giving John a whipping, he had to take one. John was a blacksmith and was a strong and active young man. It seems as if he went on home. The next morning the man went into a hotel just across the street from John's shop and asked if they had a gun, and told them there was a mad dog out
    in the street. Someone got a gun for him and he walked over to the door and shot across the street killing John."
    The account in the Tuscumbia paper, posted by an anonymous reporter (a "Russel Villian") found fault with both men, Jennings for insulting Allman and Allman for acting with southern chivalrous behavior. Unfortunately, Russel Villian failed to state the nature or substance of the disagreement that ended in
    Jennings' death. [Evidently both were southerners; Allman was born in Alabama, Jennings in Tennessee or Alabama.]
    This was not necessarily a quarrel stemming from Reconstruction, but it had something to do with the general unease and outright lawlessness that defined the period in northern Alabama. In 1877 the Moulton Advertiser reported that "blood continues to flow in old Franklin County, and there seems to be a mania among the people to kill and cut each other to pieces. Only one moon has passed since a man was shot down in his field near Russelville and last week S.F. Williams shot and seriously wounded a Mr. Normere without the least cause." In 1888, the newspaper reported seven men killed in Franklin County the previous year, and a local pundit dubbed it "Bloody Franklin." (Moulton Advertiser 12 Jan 1888) [http://www.lawrencecounty.ala.nu/FranklinCoF.htm]
    When Veto questioned Dr. Shaw about the trial, he said that "he didn't suppose that they had one because "the country was so badly torn up just after the Civil War that anyone could get by with any crime if they could get out of the country without getting caught." [oral history interview Veto Curry Jennings and Dr. Shaw (date unknown)].
    Who was this Dr. Shaw? Veto Jennings stated that Shaw was an elderly man when he moved to Tulia in the late 1920s or early 1930s and had known John Jennings when he was a young man. Shaw told Veto that he had visited in John's home many times before John was married. Dr. Shaw may be Dr. Marshall J. Shaw who was on the 1925 Tax Roll in Swisher County TX and on the 1930 Census in Tulia as a 77 year old man. Shaw would have been twelve years old when John Jennings married so his account is from his memory, or what he heard, as a boy. His young age may account for his not knowing about the trial.
    On June 26, 1875, Jennings' wife, Lucinda Fannie Curry Jennings, was probably at home with her children when she learned that her husband had been shot. We don't know if Fannie was able to see John in the thirty minutes he lived after the shooting. Fannie became a widow at age thirty-five and from that fateful moment when her husband was shot, her life was turned upside down. In the ensuing days, with children aged two, four, six and eight, she turned her thoughts from housekeeping to settling their affairs. We don't know if she had any help from her family or John's in arranging his funeral and burial. As a young man of thirty-eight, John probably had not made a will or bought a cemetery lot. There is no tombstone for John B. Jennings in Franklin County. Fannie appeared in Franklin County's Probate Court (probably in 1875) to take guardianship of their children: Daisie Z., Veto Curry, Richard Otto, and Worth Alston Jennings. Living in town, Fannie was probably well aware of the speedy trial of her husband's killer and his acquittal. [Fannie retained her copy of the Guardianship papers; the Courthouse fire destroyed the public record.]
    We will never know what John and Allman quarreled about, but Allman prospered. [variant spellings--Allman, Almon] George C. Allman would have been twenty-five years old when he murdered John Jennings. In 1880, five years after the shooting, Allman was practicing law in Russellville; he, his wife and three-month old daughter boarded in the household of James E. Wilson. Their presence in Russellville may have been doubly bitter for Fannie, as was his growing popularity. [See 1880 Census, Franklin Co AL for Allman].
    "At the age of twenty years George C. Almon entered the law department of the
    University of Mississippi, at Oxford, having been thoroughly prepared for the
    University under private tutors in his native county. He graduated from the law
    department mentioned, in. 1873, and at once entered upon the practice of law at
    Franklin, Franklin county, where he was meeting with a promising patronage. A
    year later, however, the seat of justice was removed to Russellville, and his
    business being with the courts, he of course followed the court house, this
    event occurring in 1875, success following him as he had followed the court
    house. In 1879 the court house was again removed, this time to Bel Green, the
    present county seat. Having, in the meantime, been appointed probate judge, Mr. Almon also removed to Bel Green, where he remained till 1887, when he returned to Russellville to resume his private practice, and Russellville has been his home ever since. In 1886 he was elected to the state senate from the twelfth
    senatorial district, his popularity as a citizen equalling his reputation as a
    lawyer. The marriage of the judge took place in 1876, to Miss Modena Burgess,
    daughter of William Burgess of Alabama, and there has been born to them one
    child, Susie B. The judge and family are members of the Methodist Episcopal
    church, south, and he is a K. of P. In politics the judge is a stanch democrat,
    and takes great interest in the party, especially in its election of candidates
    who are fully qualified to fill the positions for which they may be nominated."
    ["Memorial Record of Alabama," Vol. I, (Madison, Wisc.: Brant & Fuller, 1883), 1027-1028.] George C. Almon and his wife Modena are buried in the Knights of Pythias Cemetery in Franklin County, Alabama.
    Dr. Shaw's account of John's death gave his occupation as blacksmith, although Fannie told some of her children that John was a lawyer. Although these occupations seem incongruous today, in the nineteenth century it was not uncommon for a laborer to also "read law." John B. Jennings' granddaughter thought that he was a District Attorney . . . One of my sisters said she also thought that Grandpa was a D.A. but was running for Sheriff at the time he was killed." [Letter to Jan Jennings in Tulsa OK from Mrs. H. (Annie) Cunningham in Lockney TX (c1976)].

    Died:
    Murder

    John married Lucinda Fannie CURRY on 7 May 1865 in Frankfort, Franklin County, Alabama. Lucinda (daughter of John Leman CURRY and Frances Ellener JANE) was born on 18 Oct 1840 in Frankfort, Franklin County, Alabama; died on 18 Sep 1912 in Tulia, Swisher County, Texas; was buried in 1912 in Rose Hill Cemetery, Tulia, Swisher County, Texas. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. Alpha JENNINGS was born on 2 Jun 1866 in Alabama, United States; died on 22 Jun 1866.
    2. Daisie Z. JENNINGS was born on 29 Sep 1867 in Alabama; died on 18 Aug 1895 in Alabama.
    3. Veto Curry JENNINGS was born on 17 Sep 1869 in Madison, Alabama, USA; died on 3 May 1934 in Matador, Motley, Texas, USA; was buried on 4 May 1934 in Rose Hill Cemetery, Tulia, Swisher County, Texas.
    4. Richard Otto JENNINGS was born on 14 Oct 1871 in Alabama; died on 8 Jan 1941 in Canyon City, Randall, Texas, United States.
    5. Worth Alston JENNINGS was born on 6 Dec 1873 in Alabama; died on 7 Dec 1949 in Canyon, Randall County, Texas, United States.

Generation: 2

  1. 2.  Christopher Henry JENNINGS was born on 17 Dec 1812 in Halifax, Halifax, Virginia, USA (son of William JENNINGS and Martha L Patsy GLASS); died on 26 Jul 1882 in Halifax, Halifax, Virginia, USA; was buried in Volens, Halifax County, Virginia, United States of America.

    Christopher married Mary. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  Mary
    Children:
    1. 1. John B. JENNINGS was born on 21 Jan 1837 in Virginia, USA; died on 26 Jun 1875 in Russellville, Franklin County, Alabama.


Generation: 3

  1. 4.  William JENNINGS was born on 5 Aug 1777 in Amelia Co, VA (son of William JENNINGS and Mary Ann BILLUPS); died on 25 Sep 1849 in Halifax, Virginia, USA.

    Notes:

    Died:
    Bible record of his death refers to him as Captain.

    William married Martha L Patsy GLASS on 27 Jan 1812 in Halifax, Virginia. Martha (daughter of John GLASS and Mary CHANDLER) was born on 14 Sep 1794 in Halifax, Halifax, Virginia, United States; died on 17 Jul 1867 in Halifax, Halifax, Virginia, United States. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 5.  Martha L Patsy GLASS was born on 14 Sep 1794 in Halifax, Halifax, Virginia, United States (daughter of John GLASS and Mary CHANDLER); died on 17 Jul 1867 in Halifax, Halifax, Virginia, United States.
    Children:
    1. 2. Christopher Henry JENNINGS was born on 17 Dec 1812 in Halifax, Halifax, Virginia, USA; died on 26 Jul 1882 in Halifax, Halifax, Virginia, USA; was buried in Volens, Halifax County, Virginia, United States of America.


Generation: 4

  1. 8.  William JENNINGS was born in 1757 in Amelia Co, Va; died on 09 Sep 1815 in Halifax, Halifax, Virginia, United States.

    William married Mary Ann BILLUPS in 1776. Mary was born in 1764 in Amelia, County, VA; died in in Pickens, Alabama, United States. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 9.  Mary Ann BILLUPS was born in 1764 in Amelia, County, VA; died in in Pickens, Alabama, United States.
    Children:
    1. 4. William JENNINGS was born on 5 Aug 1777 in Amelia Co, VA; died on 25 Sep 1849 in Halifax, Virginia, USA.

  3. 10.  John GLASS was born on 15 Mar 1751 in Colony, Laurel, Kentucky, United States; died on 24 Jan 1825 in Halifax, Virginia, USA, .

    John married Mary CHANDLER. Mary was born on 3 Feb 1756 in Halifax, Halifax, Virginia, United States; died on 24 Jan 1825 in Halifax, Halifax, Virginia, United States. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  4. 11.  Mary CHANDLER was born on 3 Feb 1756 in Halifax, Halifax, Virginia, United States; died on 24 Jan 1825 in Halifax, Halifax, Virginia, United States.
    Children:
    1. 5. Martha L Patsy GLASS was born on 14 Sep 1794 in Halifax, Halifax, Virginia, United States; died on 17 Jul 1867 in Halifax, Halifax, Virginia, United States.



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