TALIAFERRO COUNTY, GA - COURT Edwards, Etheldred vs Thomas Edwards 1849 ***************** Copyright. All rights reserved. http://www.usgwarchives.net/copyright.htm http://www.usgwarchives.net/ga/gafiles.htm *********************** This file was contributed for use in the USGenWeb Archives by: Rhoda Fone RhodaFone@aol.com Tue, 30 Nov 2004 22:17:22 EST Re: Etheldred Edwards vs. Thomas Edwards The material below was sent to me by Mary Sue Kamen in 1995, author unknown, which I later passed along to Myra Maxwell and Terri Saturday in 2002. If anyone knows the identity of the author, please let me know so that I may give proper credit to the person who researched and wrote this wonderful genealogical piece. -----BEGIN QUOTE----- ETHELDRED EDWARDS VS. THOMAS EDWARDS. There is a tradition in the Thomas Edwards family that Etheldred was stern and forbidding, and something of a character. This image probably grew out of the suit between the two brothers over the estate of their sister, Salle (Edwards) Davis. As far as the Thomas Edwards family was concerned, relationship with Etheldred's family continued to be pleasant, even after the famous suit, for in the 1850's, Thomas' daughter Rebecca, then living in Pike County, Alabama, occasionally visited Bird, Edwards and Rhodes cousins in Georgia. Even in 1961, more than 100 years later, there is fond talk of the beautiful Zennie Edwards, daughter of Etheldred, who was visited by her cousin Rebecca from Alabama. On August 4, 1849, a bill of discovery and relief was filed in the Superior Court of Taliaferro County, John T. Bristow, Clerk, by Etheldred. This bill set forth that Etheldred and Thomas Edwards were the "only brothers of Salle Davis and the only person entitled to distribution of her estate upon failure of the legacy to the children of her sister Elizabeth Dunn." "Only brothers" may indicate that Micajah, born 1762 and Jesse, born 1766, were dead by 1849 or it may mean that Etheldred and Thomas were the "only brothers" in Georgia. The Etheldred Edwards vs. Thomas Edwards suit was a family controversy over property. Etheldred charged that Thomas, as executor of Salle's estate, had handled "divers tracts of land, the situation and quality of which are unknown unto your Orator," slaves, promissory notes and personal property without making proper inventory or report; also that Thomas had been negligent in trying to locate the children of Elizabeth Dunn in that he did not "cause advertisements of the legacy of said children to be run in the newspapers of the country." Stephens and Bird represented Etheldred at court; this was Alexander H. Stephens and (probably) a member of the Bird family into which Etheldred's daughters were married. The settlement of this controversy as of September 1, 1849, was in the handwriting of Alexander H. Stephens, then a young lawyer in Taliaferro County but later to be Vice President of the Confederacy, known and loved by thousands as Little Aleck." Terms of settlement were as follows: (1) slaves left by Salle and "their increase" in the 22 years since her death were to be divided by an appraisal committee into two even groups and Etheldred and Thomas were to draw for groups by lot; and (2) Thomas was to sell land owned by Salle Davis in Wilkinson County, Georgia, and proceeds were to be divided equally between the two brothers. Value of these nine slaves in 1849 was $3,200. There were two adults, Everett age 40 and Chloe between 35 and 40 years; and their seven children. Thomas drew: (1) Chloe the mother; (2) Stephen age 13; (3) Martha age 8 and a deaf mute; (4) Dolly age 3; and (5) Eli age 2. Etheldred drew: (1) Everett the father; (2) James age 11; (3) Catherine age 6 and (4) Olivia age four. James, age 11, had been a particular cause for contention. According to Etheldred, James had already "been taken away to Alabama" presumably by Thomas' sons, John and Benjamin, who were in Talladega County, Alabama, by 1849. A specific term of the settlement was that if James were drawn by Etheldred and the brothers could not agree to a trade in relation to him, "he is to be delivered to said Etheldred Edwards by the first of January next unless he should die before that time. Alabama was a long way off. One wonders if Etheldred ever reclaimed James, also why one small, 11 year old Negro was so important in the estate settlement. -----END QUOTE------ ADDENDUM: "Rem Edwards was kind enough to identify the unknown author as Mrs. Harriet Dickson Reynolds of Houston Texas who wrote it in 1967. It is an excerpt from her 172 page long document titled "Thomas Edwards, 1783-1853 of North Carolina, Georgia, and Alabama and Some of His Descentants."