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Samuel Shepherd Strickland

Male 1835 - 1908  (72 years)


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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Samuel Shepherd Strickland was born on 27 Dec 1835 (son of Abel Strickland and Sarah Ligon); died on 7 Oct 1908 in Franklin County, Alabama.

    Family/Spouse: Naomi Elizabeth Johnson. Naomi was born on 26 Oct 1841; died on 12 Jul 1881 in Franklin County, Alabama. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. Thomas Benton Strickland was born on 7 Nov 1858 in Pickens County, Alabama; died about 1945.
    2. Luther D. Strickland was born about 1861; died about 1892.
    3. John Abel Strickland was born about 1863; died about 1945.
    4. Matthew Andrew Strickland was born about 1864; died about 1943.
    5. Sarah Frances Strickland was born on 10 Oct 1866; died on 19 Feb 1945.
    6. James Richard "Dick" Strickland was born on 18 Nov 1868 in Alabama; died on 12 Jun 1947 in Franklin County, Alabama; was buried in Cedar Creek Cemetery, White Oak, Franklin County, Alabama.
    7. William J Strickland was born on 16 Aug 1870; died on 30 Jun 1945.
    8. Mary Ozella Strickland was born on 10 Jan 1872; died on 12 Apr 1946.
    9. Edward W Strickland was born on 15 Jan 1874; died on 12 Oct 1931.
    10. Doskie Strickland was born on 5 Jan 1876; died on 19 Aug 1961.
    11. Pernina P. Strickland was born on 6 Nov 1877; died on 31 Dec 1894.
    12. Bose Strickland was born in 1879; died about 1963.
    13. Sidney A. Strickland was born on 4 Jan 1881; and died.

Generation: 2

  1. 2.  Abel Strickland was born about 1803 (son of Obediah Strickland and Winney ???); and died.

    Abel + Sarah Ligon. Sarah was born before 1815; and died. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  Sarah Ligon was born before 1815; and died.
    Children:
    1. 1. Samuel Shepherd Strickland was born on 27 Dec 1835; died on 7 Oct 1908 in Franklin County, Alabama.
    2. Lucy A Strickland was born about 1837; and died.
    3. John Ruskin Strickland was born about 1849; and died.


Generation: 3

  1. 4.  Obediah Strickland was born between 1740 and 1765 (son of Sampson Strickland and Christina ???); died about 1842.

    Obediah + Winney ???. Winney was born before 1770; and died. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 5.  Winney ??? was born before 1770; and died.
    Children:
    1. Brinkley Strickland was born about 1785; and died.
    2. Claria Strickland was born about 1792; and died.
    3. 2. Abel Strickland was born about 1803; and died.


Generation: 4

  1. 8.  Sampson Strickland was born about 1710 (son of Matthew Strickland, Jr. and Anne Bracewell); died about 1782.

    Notes:

    From STRICKLAND SCENE Vol 7, No 2, Second Quarter 1986:

    "Sampson Strickland of Revolutionary Wake County, N.C.: A Tale of Tory Determination" Contributed by Franceine Perry Rees

    "A great may tragedies, and perhaps as many tales of courage and sacrifice, could be written if those of us who dig into our family's "roots" could learn the complete stories behind the written records of events in our ancestors' lives! We can only wonder about what motivated Sampson Strickland, Sr., middle-aged husband and father, solid citizen and prosperous farmer, to stand up in the Wake County Court of Pleas and Quarter Sessions in December, 1777, and steadfastly refuse to swear the Oath of Allegience to the State of North Carolina. By his refusal, Sampson placed himself with the despised Loyalists and was therefore ordered to leave the state. In some parts of North Carolina, "Tories" were numerous and could support each other against revolutionary pressure; such was not the case in Wake County.

    The Oath, devised as part of the state's Treason Act of 1777, was unequivocal; "I will bear faithful and true Allegience to the State of North Carolina, and will to the utmost of my power support and maintain, and defend the independent Government thereof, against George the Third, King of Great Britain, and his Successors . . . . "

    Unlike other British sympathizers, Sampson Strickland was not a recent immigrant to these shores; as youngest son of Matthew Strickland, Jr. and his wife Anne Bracewell, he descended from several generations of Viriginia colonists. His nearest tie to the pro-British Anglican clergy appears to have been nor nearer than a maternal great-grandfather, Rev. Robert Bracewell, parson of the Lower Parish, Isle of Wight County, Virginia, whose death preceded Sampson's birth by more than fifty years. Neither was he a merchant who profited from trade with the British. For whatever cause, even in the face of overwhelming opposition, this Strickland found himself unable to renounce his loyalty to the English crown.

    Born in 1723 in Isle of Wight County, Virginia, Sampson Strickland moved south as a young man, receiving a Granville grant patent May 24, 1756 for 275 acres of land in what was then Johnston County, North Carolina. (The Powell Creek area where he settled was divided in 1770 to create Wake County.) Court records include more than a dozen references to Sampson thereafter; he recorded deeds, witnessed others' land transactions, registered his cattle brand. In addition to his agricultural pursuits, he accepted a number of civic responsibilities, serving as juror, caretaker of an orphan, road committee member and road overseer.

    By the time colonial fervor for independence rose high, Sampson Strickland must have been quite thoroughly settled among his Wake County neighbors, doubtless cherishing hopes that eventual reconciliation with the mother country might be achieved. But as the strife between England and her colonies increased, it became impossible for North Carolinians to remain tacit royalists. A rather mild loyalty oath in which persons suspected of sympathizing with the crown swore not to bear arms against or otherwise oppose the rovolutionary government "during the present unhappy contest between Great Britain and America" was ultimately replaced by a much more stringent avowal; all who lived within the colony that had proclaimed itself a state were to be compelled to declare their allegiance to it.

    As 1777 drew to a close, Sampson Strickland may have already refused the oath in a muster of men in his militia district, or he may have been singled out and summoned to court as a suspected British symphathizer. At any rate, two other men appeared in court the same day as Sampson; they each swore the oath and were given certificates as evidence that they had "complyed with the law."

    Sampson Strickland, however, defied the court, the law, and popular opinion: "...being Cited to appear at this Court to take the Oath of Allegience to this State came into Court, and on said Oath being offered to him her refused taking the same, whereupon the Court Pronounced his Banishment agreeable to Law."

    It is probable that Sampson was banished as ordered, but where he went remains a mystery. Did he go to the West Indies or to Nova Scotia, as did other Loyalists? Did any of his family go with him? Was any of his property confiscated?

    The records do not offer such information. In fact, he must have died in exile, because his name does not appear in the court minutes from the time he was sentenced until after his death, when his widow Christina reported his estate inventory in July, 1781. In March of the next year, she received fromthecourt persmiisio to act as her husband's administratix, posting bond for 700 pounds. In June the court accepted an account of the estate sale from the deputy sherriff (buyers included Christina, Obediah, Abel, and Hardy Strickland, along with Sampson Strickland, Jr. In March, 1783, Christina sought guardianship of her younger children--Obediah, Abel, Mary Anne, Lot, Braswell, and Matthew, for which she was required to enter bond of 1,200 pounds. In May 1784, Obediah achieved his majority and purchased 250 acres of what had doubtless been his father's land fromthe deceased Tory's eldest son and namesake, Sampson, Jr. Christina, their mother, co-signed the deed with her mark. One of the witnesses, Joseph Strickland, may have been another older son with Sampson the elder and Christina. Lot Strickland's December, 1784, will names his mother and brothers, Braswell and Matthew, with Obediah as executor and Abel and Joseph as witnesses.

    It is unlikely that many of Sampson Strickland's legion descendants would agree that his refusal to support the new state was justified; history has certainly shown that the American Revolution was not only inevitable but beneficial. However, those of us who descend from this stubborn Wake County Tory should take some pride in his bravery, and hope we might have inherited a modicum of that quality in his charater which resulted in this sacrifice of home and a comfortable future for principle and loyalty.

    The loyalist tendencies of Sampson Strickland Sr did not descend to his namesake. The younger Sampson served two tours of active duty with the Wake County militia, according to documents in a pension claim filed by his children.

    Sampson + Christina ???. Christina was born between 1710 and 1720; and died. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 9.  Christina ??? was born between 1710 and 1720; and died.
    Children:
    1. Lott Strickland was born between 1740 and 1765; died about 1785.
    2. Sampson Strickland was born between 1740 and 1765; died on 16 May 1839 in Franklin County, North Carolina.
    3. 4. Obediah Strickland was born between 1740 and 1765; died about 1842.
    4. Abel Strickland was born between 1740 and 1765; died about 1801.
    5. Mary Ann Strickland was born between 1740 and 1765; and died.
    6. Braswell Strickland was born between 1740 and 1765; and died.
    7. Matthew Strickland was born between 1740 and 1765; and died.