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Terry Mason's Family History Site

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Source Citations


Catharine Hickman

1Lewis, William Terrell of Perryville, Miss. 1893., Lewis Family in America, Genealogy of the (From the Middle of the Seventeenth Century Down to the Present Time), Higginson Publishing in Salem, Massachusetts, FHC 483707. Exerpts provided by Michael Lewis Monroe who has edited 1100 pages of William Terrell Lewis' original book. "OBITUARY:  Died on the 11th day of July, 1878, at her home, the residence of her son, R. H. Prewitt, Esq., in Clark county, Mrs. Kitty Prewitt, relict of General William C. Prewitt, in the 82d year of her age.  She survived her husband many years, and died on the forty-sixth anniversary of their marriage.  The deceased was a daughter of General Richard Hickman, of Clark county, and long survived his other children.  She was a native of Clark county and always resided there or in Fayette, and never more than ten miles from the place of her birth.  She was a true type of a Kentucky matron of the old school, distinguished alike for the kindness of her disposition, and the firmness, integrity and purity of her character; gentle and dignified in her bearing, plain, open and unostentatious in her manners, she inspired the confidence and respect of all with whom she came in contact.
    More than half a century before her death she made an open profession of her faith in Christ, and became a member of the Christian church at old Mt. Zion, in the neighborhood in which she lived, and was a faithful, pious, devoted and exemplary Christian.  She was gifted with a mind of uncommon strength, improved by reading, reflection and thought.  She was always the center of a gentle and happy influence in the social circle; quiet and unobtrusive, candid and true. She loved truth for its own sake, and utterly despised all sham, whether in morals, politics, religion or anywhere. Filled with womanly sympathy and affection, calm and equable in temperament, wise, discreet and judicious, she was ever the true and sympathizing friend, the reliable, considerate and trusted counselor of her family and friends. The writer has never met with any one whose character combined more of the virtues and graces that adorn the woman and the Christian.  Her unfaltering faith in the precious promises of the Saviour, which enabled her to meet and bear with cheerfulness the trials, the troubles, the afflictions v bodily and mental v of a long life, was indeed beautiful.  The serene resignation with which she contemplated her dissolution, is a priceless consolation to her kindred and friends in this great bereavement.
    She is gone to another and better world, but the example of her beautiful life remains to bless mankind, and its silent influence will be felt by those yet unborn."


Richard Hickman Prewitt

1Lewis, William Terrell of Perryville, Miss. 1893., Lewis Family in America, Genealogy of the (From the Middle of the Seventeenth Century Down to the Present Time), Higginson Publishing in Salem, Massachusetts, P 165, FHC 483707. Exerpts provided by Michael Lewis Monroe who has edited 1100 pages of William Terrell Lewis' original book. "Richard H., is a graduate of Bethany College, Virginia, and also graduated in the Law Class in Louisville, Ky., and in 1857 was engaged in the practice of his profession in Lexington, Ky."


David Prewitt

1Lewis, William Terrell of Perryville, Miss. 1893., Lewis Family in America, Genealogy of the (From the Middle of the Seventeenth Century Down to the Present Time), Higginson Publishing in Salem, Massachusetts, P 165, FHC 483707. Exerpts provided by Michael Lewis Monroe who has edited 1100 pages of William Terrell Lewis' original book. "David, was a soldier in the Confederate service under the command of General John H. Morgan.  He survived the war and is now married."


Richard Hickman Hanson

1Lewis, William Terrell of Perryville, Miss. 1893., Lewis Family in America, Genealogy of the (From the Middle of the Seventeenth Century Down to the Present Time), Higginson Publishing in Salem, Massachusetts, P 167, FHC 483707. Exerpts provided by Michael Lewis Monroe who has edited 1100 pages of William Terrell Lewis' original book. "Is a lawyer by profession, with fine talents and legal attainments; has represented Bourbon county in the Legislature.  He married Eveline Talbott, resides in Paris, Bourbon county, Ky., and has issue, viz.:."

21850 U.S. Census, M432_192 pg 269, 2 Aug 1850. "Eva Hanson 22 F Kentucky
Chs B Talbott 16 M Kentucky
Richard H Hanson 30 M Lawyer Kentucky."

31870 U.S. Census, M593_447 pg 436, 20 Apr 1870. "Hanson, Richard 51 MW Att at Law Kentucky
------, Eva 42 FW Keeping house Kentucky
------, Charles L 13 MW At School Kentucky
Hanson, Richard H 5 MW Kentucky
------, Jennie 2 FW Kentucky."

41880 U.S. Census, T9_403 FHF 1254403 pg 2.3000, 2 Jun 1880. "Hanson, Richard H WM 61 M Lawyer Kentucky Virginia Kentucky
------, Eva WF 52 Wife Keeping house Kentucky Virginia Virginia
------, Charles T. WM 23 Son S Kentucky Kentucky Kentucky
------, Dick WM 15 Son S Kentucky Kentucky Kentucky
------, Jennie WF 12 Daughter S Kentucky Kentucky Kentucky
------, Sam WM 9 Son S Kentucky Kentucky Kentucky
Griggs, Harrett BF 48 Servant Wd Kentucky Virginia Virginia."


Richard Hickman Hanson

1Kentucky Death Records, 1852-1953 (Ancestry.com). "Name: Richard Hickman Hanson
Death Date: 29 Aug 1927
Death Location: Fayette  
Residence Location: Fayette  
Age: 62  
Gender: Male  
Ethnicity: White  
Birth Date: 18 Sep 1864
Birth Location: Paris, Kentucky  
Spouse's name: Lenah Baird Hanson
Father's name: Richard Hanson
Father's Birth Location: Kentucky
Mother's name: Eveline Talbott
Mother's Birth Location: Kentucky." Image.


Capt James Clson Stone

1Lewis, William Terrell of Perryville, Miss. 1893., Lewis Family in America, Genealogy of the (From the Middle of the Seventeenth Century Down to the Present Time), Higginson Publishing in Salem, Massachusetts, FHC 483707. Exerpts provided by Michael Lewis Monroe who has edited 1100 pages of William Terrell Lewis' original book. "Served in the Mexican war as captain of an infantry company with much credit, and is now a farmer near Leavenworth, Kansas.  They have children, viz.:."

21860 U.S. Census, M653_350 pg 0, 26 Jul 1860. "J. C. Stone 37 M Atty at Law Kentucky
Matilda R. Stone 33 F Kentucky
Samuel E Stone 10 M Kentucky
Robert C. Stone 7 M Kentucky
Hannah White 20 F Servant Ireland."

31880 U.S. Census, T9_386 FHF 1254386 pg 351.2000, 3 Jun 1880. "Stone, James MW 57 M Farmer Kentucky Kentucky Kentucky
-----, Matilda R. WF 54 Wife M Keeping house Kentucky Kentucky Kentucky
Hanson, Kate WF 35 Sister Wd at home Kentucky D.C. Kentucky."


Charles Warfield Helm

1Lewis, William Terrell of Perryville, Miss. 1893., Lewis Family in America, Genealogy of the (From the Middle of the Seventeenth Century Down to the Present Time), Higginson Publishing in Salem, Massachusetts, P 167, FHC 483707. Exerpts provided by Michael Lewis Monroe who has edited 1100 pages of William Terrell Lewis' original book. "Was a soldier in the Confederate war.  He was a captain at first but was soon promoted for his gallantry to the office of major under General Roger W. Hanson, his brother-in-law."

2Lewis, William Terrell of Perryville, Miss. 1893., Lewis Family in America, Genealogy of the (From the Middle of the Seventeenth Century Down to the Present Time), P 168. " Major Helm died in 1888, when the following obituary appeared in a Dallas, Texas, paper:
DEATH OF MAJOR HELM, 1888.   A PROMINENT CITIZEN AND A MAN OF MARK IS GONE.

The announcement of the death of Major Charles W. Helm, which occurred this morning at 1 o5 CONC ock at the family residence, No. 937 Wood street, was received with feelings of general regret.  Many did not think him so low as until the past few days of his illness he continued to come down to his office.  Finally his strength became so exhausted that he was confined to his bed until he breathed his last.  He possessed all the noble qualities that went to make the man; was kind, considerate and generous.  He was a man that made friends and kept them.  The funeral will take place from the residence at 10 o5 CONC d a severe attack of fever last summer from which he never fully recovered.  He appeared to mend for a time and his friends thought he would regain his health, but he began to decline and gradually grew worse until the last.  The lamented was born the 16th day of July, 1834.  His full name was Charles Warfield Helm, and he graduated with honors at the University of Virginia at the age of twenty-three."


Roger Weightman Hanson

1Lewis, William Terrell of Perryville, Miss. 1893., Lewis Family in America, Genealogy of the (From the Middle of the Seventeenth Century Down to the Present Time), Higginson Publishing in Salem, Massachusetts, P 168, FHC 483707. Exerpts provided by Michael Lewis Monroe who has edited 1100 pages of William Terrell Lewis' original book. "Was a lawyer by profession. He was a lieutenant under Captain Williams in the Mexican war; was a general in the Confederate war of 1861, and was mortally wounded at Stone River, near Murfreesboro, Tenn., in January, 1863.  He married Virginia Peters in 1853, but left no children.  We clip the following from the Mississippian:

GENERAL ROGER W. HANSON.
[ For the Mississippian.]

Roger Weightman Hanson was a son of Samuel Hanson, Esq., a distinguished lawyer of Clark county, Kentucky.  His mother (Matilda) was the daughter of General Richard Hickman, of the same county.  Roger W. was born about the year 1827.  His life has been an eventful one.  At eighteen years of age he was elected lieutenant in a volunteer company raised in Clark county, Kentucky, for the Mexican war.  He distinguished himself by his bravery in the battle of Cerro Gordo and other places during said war.  While attending a law class in Lexington, Ky., he was forced into a duel, when he received a shot above the knee, breaking the bone badly and laming him for life. During this affair of honor he acted with the utmost coolness and deliberation.  As soon as he recovered from his wound he set out with the then emigrating tide for California.  During his journey there he underwent many privations and hardships losing his horse on the way, he walked the last two hundred miles with a stiff knee.  On his arrival in San Francisco broken down with travel, hungry, without means he spent his first night under a board shelter.  But the urbanity of his manners and suavity of his address soon made him friends and secured him employment.  He remained in California but a short time, returning to his native State the ensuring spring.

LOUISVILLE, MISS., February 7, 1863   WM. T. LEWIS.  [ From Louisville Courier-Journal, 1861.]
In 1853 he married Miss Virginia Peters, of Woodford county, Kentucky.  In 1854 he located in Lexington to practice his profession, when he soon rose to eminence as a lawyer.  Within a few years he was elected by his county to represent them in the State Legislature.  Soon afterward he was appointed as one of the Presidential electors for the State of Kentucky, after which he was nominated as a candidate for a seat in the United States Congress, but was defeated by James B. Clay.  In 1861 when the Southern States seceded from the United States he espoused the cause of the South, raised a regiment in Kentucky and joined the Confederacy, resolved to sink or swim with her.  He was taken prisoner at Fort Donelson, where he commanded the 2d Kentucky Regiment, of Breckinridge4 CONC r of Fort Donelson, remarked that I can not close this report without calling special attention to the gallant and able conduct of my brigade commanders, Colonel R. W. Hanson and others. After he was exchanged, his Kentucky friends in the South made up a purse of five hundred dollars, purchased a splendid war horse which they presented to him on his arrival as a token of their esteem for his distinguished heroism and moral worth. He was afterward promoted to the office of Brigadier-General and consigned to a command in Breckinridge,  fighting up to the 2d day of January, 1863, when he fell upon the battle-field, mortally wounded, at Murfreesboro whilst gallantly leading his brigade, unfaltering amidst an enfiladed hailstorm of shot and shell, upon the bloodiest and hottest contested portion of the battle field.  He expired soon after the army retreated from Murfreesboro.  In his death Kentucky has lost one of her noblest and bravest sons, and the Confederacy one of her intrepid and gallant officers.

LOUISVILLE, August 14.

Roger Hanson, heretofore classed as a quasi-submissionist, spoke at Lexington, denouncing the war, saying Southerners would lose their slaves, burn their cotton and sink their plantation, but never yield.

[ From American Rural Home.]

Mrs. Virginia Hanson, widow of Colonel Roger Hanson killed in the war, has been re-elected State Librarian by the Kentucky Legislature.  This is her third term, and it is said the State never had a better librarian.

The remains of General Hanson were buried in Tennessee, but in the fall of 1866 his widow had his body removed from Tennessee  to Lexington, Ky., where it was re-interred in the cemetery with all the honors due so gallant a soldier and the cause for which he died.

[ For the Sunday Advertiser and Register. ]
THE MARTYRS OF THE SOUTH.
BY A. B. MEEK.

General Hanson's cause.

Oh, weep not for the gallant hearts
Who fell in battle
They well performed their hero parts,
And passed from earth away.
They lie asleep on honor Young Freedom
For all that
For God and native land.

Weep not for Jackson, who laid down
His life in fullest fame;
Who always wore the victor
Now wears a deathless name.
O!  what a loss that day was ours,
When that great light grew dim;
We weep amid our darkened bowers,
But do not weep for him.

For Sidney Johnston whose high worth
Was Freedom
Who, like Elijah, passed from earth
In battle
Shed not a tear he is not dead
But UP from Shiloh gone !
Where wreaths ambrosial deck his head,
Beside great Washington.

Weep not for Garnett, his young brow
Among the earliest paled;
Though death compelled his form to bow,
His spirit never quailed.
Among Virginia
With Garland by his side,
And Starke they fought for ravished rights,
And for their country died.

Oh, for McCulloch, do not weep
The Marion of the West
Nor for Bartow, nor Bee but keep
Their memories in the breast.
They realized man
In victory
We all must die, or soon or late
How blest like them to die !

Fair Mississippi
Brave Barksdale, too, has gone,
And Zollicoffer
And Green and brave Mouton.
Kentucky
With Helm and Branch as well;
Pour not for them the stream of woe
With angels now they dwell.

A curse upon the felon foe
Freebooters of the West
Who hurled their red assassin blow
On gallant Gladden
Gregg, Griffith, Tilghman, Seymour, Cobb,
Now live with him in death;
The gaunt hyenas can not rob
The grave of its green wreath.

For Alabama
Though humbler be their names,
Why should the selfish tear be shed?
They now are God
Rest Irby, Webb, Jones, Hobbs and Hale,
Rest Jewett, Summers, Moore.
Inge, Garrett, Lomax, Pelham, Baine,
On death
What stars crowd out upon the sky,
Of history, as I write !
Would I could number them on high,
The planets of our night.
They live immortal, and for them
We need not drop the tear ;
Each wears a golden diadem
In a celestial sphere.

But we must weep - aye deeply mourn
For our ownselves bereft,
The priesthood from our altars torn,
Our homes in darkness left,
The widowed and the orphan band
On fate
Weep for the anguish-stricken land
That such great souls has lost."