Joshua Barlett | |
Birth: Jan. 4, 1811 Dry Valley Putenam County Tennessee, USA
Death: Sep. 18, 1881 Buffalo Valley Putnam County Tennessee, USA
Joshua, known as Josh, was born on January 4, 1811 in Dry Valley, White
County, (now Putnam County) Tennessee, the seventh of nine children born to
Joseph and Millicent Rice Bartlett. When he was four his family moved to
Spring Creek, Overton County, Tennessee.
About 1832 Joshua married Anna Anderson whose family lived at Blackburn's
Fork, Jackson County, Tennessee which was close to Spring Creek. Both
families attended the Spring Creek Baptist Church. When each of his children
married, Thomas Anderson (Anna's father) gave them $10.00 to start
housekeeping and a cow and calf valued at $10.00
Anna, known as Annie, was born March 16, 1816 in the Blackburn's Fork
community of Jackson County, Tennessee, the sixth of ten children born to
Thomas Shirley and Judith Robinson Anderson. Anna was about 5 feet 2 inches
tall and very thin, weighing about 115 pounds. Anna had light hair, a fairly
dark complexion with blue eyes. She was quite pretty but never had a picture
taken as she didn't believe in it.
About 1834 Joshua and Annie moved to Buffalo Valley, Jackson County, which
became Putnam County in 1854. Buffalo Valley was a country of buffalo and
cane thickets. The last buffalo to be killed in the surrounding country was
killed in Buffalo Valley, and that is how Buffalo Valley got its name. The
exact place where the buffalo was killed was at Ned Anderson's (Anna's
brother) spring. Joshua likely went to Buffalo Valley because Anna had three
brothers living there - Gallant, Ned and Tom Anderson and because they could
buy land from the government at 35 cents an acre. Thomas divided out gold
which he gave to them to pay for the land. They lived there until Joshua died
in 1881.
Joshua and Snowden Maddux owned a water mill. Joshua had a grist mill (corn)
and later a wheat and corn mill with a saw mill attached and also a cotton
mill (gin). William Hoggard ran the grist, corn and wheat mills for Joshua
from about 1860 to1870.
Anna's father, Thomas Anderson, who as very wealthy, sent word for her to
come to his place and he would give her a slave or two. She selected a wench,
as the female slaves were called, named Aisley. When Aisley learned she was
selected, she cried because she didn't want to leave all of her children. Not
wanting to cause Aisley grief, Anna then selected Rainey instead (who helped
raise Anna's children) and her son Jerry (valued at $1400) . Everyone grew to
love Rainey. Not much is known about Jerry except that after he was freed
from slavery he attacked a white girl and was lynched. At the time of Thomas
Anderson's death all of his remaining slaves were sold at auction. One slave
named Ike, had been a kind of body servant for his master. The family did not
want him sold and subsequently sent someplace else in the South. The family
told Joshua that if he would bid on Ike, they would help pay for him. Ike
tried to make the debt lighter by pretending that his ankle was in a bad
condition. Nevertheless, he brought $1,500 at auction. He was brought to
Joshua's house in Buffalo Valley.
Joshua and Anna had thirteen children who were all born in Buffalo Valley:
William Edward (Ned), James Leonard, Gallant, Elizabeth (Betsy), Henry, John
Calvin, Milton (Mitt), Rebecca, Permelia, Minnie Gore, Josiah (Joe), Inga
(Sis), and Mary Frances.
Joshua was heavy set standing about 5 feet 5 inches tall and weighing about
170 pounds when he died. He had dark hair and brownish dark skin, dark eyes
and a large forehead and was very handsome. As a young man he was a hard
working, honest farmer but didn't do much as he got older. Being a very good
manager he was not at all wasteful. He had some dry humor but was not much
for foolishness. He was of the type that if he had a hired hand and he
learned about his being lazy he would put the heaviest load on him.
Joshua would read some in the Bible and in the Gospel Advocate, which he
subscribed to, but, otherwise he didn't read a great deal. Whiskey was kept
handy in his closet and he would drink about ¼ glass before breakfast; that
is all he would have during the day except when a very good old friend would
come around. During the latter part of his life he didn't drink any whiskey. Joshua
never had a blessing asked on the food except once when Dr. Samuel Demtron
came to visit. Joshua was a light eater enjoying ham, coffee, biscuits and
corn bread; however, he usually ate what was given him and never complained.
He was a healthy man but he had a chronic sore left leg and this caused him
to scratch it very often.
Being a friendly person Joshua had more company than most anyone else who
lived in that end of the valley. He was known for being a straight forward
good citizen. Joshua served as a Justice of the Peace in Buffalo Valley and
was a juror on several occasions.
Joshua Bartlett's outlook on the Civil War is more easily understood by
reading an article on the Civil War by Mitchell Jones which states:
""Aristocrats had led the South out of the Union in 1861, confident
that subsistence farmers and impoverished laborers would follow them in their
bloody campaign. Initially they were correct, but in time the realities of
deaths, wounds, and suffering families prompted the white under-class to
re-examine its role in a war fought so that aristocrats might own slaves and
exploit those who did not, thousands among the lesser whites then abandoned
the Confederate cause.
"The people that were loyal to the Union were forced to keep their
sentiments to themselves in most cases. . . . Nearly all the Union men in
this neighborhood stayed at home, not wishing to get into a brawl and deeming
it a hopeless cause.
"Supporters of the Union had to be silent about their sentiments, but
some individuals such as Joshua Bartlett did not remain silent about their
views. Joshua was the grandfather of Nora Jones Steele, also her grandfather
was Byrd Smith Jones, and both were Unionists opposed to the war. Nora wrote
that "Although Byrd was opposed to the war he had little to say about
it. On the other hand, Joshua Bartlett, my mother's father was very
outspoken. I don't know what Grandpa Bartlett did on the day of the vote for
secession but it was later said of him in comparing him to Byrd Jones, that
he said enough for both of them. Of course this got him in trouble with the
Rebels on several occasions.
"One day Grandma Bartlett heard there were Rebels in the area which is
now Silver Point, and that they were coming down the Valley. Grandpa was
grinding corn at his water mill on Indian Creek about two miles from his
home. Grandma sent my mother, then about fifteen years old [1861], to tell
him the Rebels are coming! Grandpa quickly left the mill and went down to the
Caney Fork River, a mile away, and on up the river and up the first hollow
[Happy Hollow]. Grandpa Bartlett had a maple grove near the house. These were
the trees they tapped to make maple syrup and candy . One time Grandpa had
been hiding in the maple grove for a week. The family took him food when they
were sure it was safe.
"No Rebels had been in the Valley for several days so Grandpa decided to
come home one morning. Grandma had fixed his breakfast and while he was
eating they heard horses running up the lane toward the house but they
thought it was their own horses coming up to the spring for water and paid no
attention until it was too late. Someone in the family just happened to look
out and saw the Rebel just about to enter the door. Grandpa started to crawl
under the bed which was in front of the fireplace so he could climb up the
chimney but he was too late. Just as he was half way under the bed the Rebels
entered the room and with an oath said ‘We've got you now'! At this point,
Anna's true grit surfaced. She stood up to her husband's captors demanding,
"Kill me instead. The children need their father more than they need
me." Nevertheless, the Rebels left with Joshua, leaving the children
crying and afraid they would never see their father again.They took him up
the Valley to where my grandfather Byrd Jones lived. Grandpa was gone all
day. Just before sundown they saw Grandpa coming down the road-bareheaded. He
said he thought sure they were going to kill him, so he had given his
pocketbook to Byrd Jones to take to his family. Grandpa didn't know why they
didn't kill him. They took his good hat and gave him an old one of theirs,
but when he started home and he was sure he was out of their sight he threw
the Rebel hat away."
Thinking the Civil War was uncalled for, Joshua advocated that his boys stay
out of it; consequently, neither his sons nor he fought in the war but all
hid out. They were summoned to go to Mc Minnville for duty, but instead went
north and found lots of other refugees doing the same thing. During the war
the Rebels confiscated 12 of his horses and only one was returned.
At one time during the Civil War, two men were passing through Buffalo Valley
on their way to get their families in order to move them to new homes in
Kentucky. While in the valley they were shot and seriously wounded by two
Rebel soldiers. The injured men were taken to the Garner home nearby. When
Anna heard of this she sent her 15 year old daughter, Rebecca, to see if
there were anything they could do to help the injured men. As Rebecca entered
the door where the two injured men lay, one of them looked up and asked her
for a drink of cold water. She started to the spring with a wooden bucket and
a gourd dipper when she was told that the Rebels had ordered them not to wait
on the injured men and that anyone who did would be killed. Rebecca hurried
on and said, "Let ‘em kill."
She brought the water and gave one of the injured men a drink. He asked her
to pour the water on his bowels as he was hot with fever. Rebecca stayed the
whole night pouring water on him. He died the next night. Three weeks later
his wife came to meet the people who had befriended her husband in his hour
of greatest need. She told the family that she would give them a half bushel
of salt if they would let Rebecca go with her to bring it back. Rebecca
started on the long journey, but five miles into the journey she lost her
courage and could not bear to think of going so far from home. She turned her
horse around and the much needed salt was forgotten.
Rebecca's courage in the face of armed Rebels, her tenderness in caring for
the injured man, along with her desire not to be so far from home, was a
reflection of how she had been raised and the atmosphere of the home in which
she was growing up.
Annie was very industrious. She inquired about the welfare of others and was
known to have been one of the most generous people who ever lived. She would
often go and work for the poor when they were unable to do their own and
would not let Joshua know about it.
She had a peculiar method of talking. She would say something like,
"That ar's a good principle." Anna was very opposed to the fiddle
thinking, it came from the dead. She liked to sing and had a good singing
voice.
In May 1880, Joshua and Annie gave a portion of their of land (about one
acre) for the purpose of building a school and church house in Putnam County
beginning at the Buffalo Valley Road.
During the last week of his life Joshua took a walk on his farm on a
Wednesday evening, possibly to look over the farm. He got too hot during the
walk, taking a chill that night, resulting in double pneumonia. He died on
Friday morning, September 16, 1881, and was buried on Saturday evening of the
same week.
Joshua was buried in a family plot on his farm. A subsequent owner of the
farm destroyed the cemetery and plowed over it.
Home where Joshua died in Buffalo Valley, Tennessee
After Joshua died, Annie and Aunt Rainey stayed on at the home. Annie later
broke up housekeeping and she and Aunt Rainey went to live with Annie's
daughter, Rebecca Bartlett Jones. Annie would visit her other children when
she was needed. Aunt Rainey later married a widower and reared his children,
and after her husband's death, lived with one of her step-sons. Bartlett
Roots 98
Joshua's, son, Milton (Mitt), bought his farm before he was married in 1865.
He also had a store there. Joshua and Annie lived with him where Joshua did
nothing. Mitt sold the farm in 1886. The Mitt Bartlett Farm was on the river
bottom.
In the spring of 1892 Anna left her home in Buffalo Valley, on the eastern
side of the Caney Fork River, crossed the river and went to the home of her
grandchildren, Sylvanus and Arzonie Vaughn Bartlett. Sylvanus and Arzonie
(Sylvanus's first wife) were cousins who had married each other and lived in
Lancaster, Smith County. Anna went there to be the midwife to Arzonie who was
expecting her first baby.
Becky Garrison, who had worked for Anna for a long time, went to the home to
help Sylvanus before Arzonie was confined and she stayed there. She cooked
some custard pies—cooked more than Sylvanus could eat—and they soured. Anna
was the type who didn't like to throw anything away and ate some of the
soured custard before breakfast even though Becky had cautioned her not to
eat it as it might make her sick It was only a short time until she began
vomiting and purging at the same time. She stayed at Sylvanus', which was on
Mitt Bartlett's farm, for some time. Mitt was Anna's son. She was finally
taken to Mitt's home because Arzona was sick. Anna was there only about two
weeks when she died. The cause of her death was cholera morbus. Joshua and
Anna Anderson Bartlett 99
A late spring flood came, backing up the creeks and rendering the river
impassible except by boat. Because there was no way to transport her body
across the river to her home in Buffalo Valley, she was buried in a small
family cemetery close to her son's home. It was called the Sadler Graveyard
on the bend of the Caney Fork River near a bridge on Mitt Bartlett's
farm.
Milton Bartlett at one time owned the land near Interstate 40 in Tennessee.
When construction on Interstate 40 began it crossed the river only a few
hundred yards from her grave. So her grave is at a rest stop on I-40 and is
maintained by highway officials. Joshua's tombstone stands beside Annie's grave
marker, but Joshua's body lies across the river in an unmarked grave. Family
members thought it appropriate to place Joshua's tombstone in the tiny but
well-kept cemetery.
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Thursday, August 29, 2013
Joshua Barlett (4th Great Grandfather)
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