SKETCHES By Wilson
H.
Barker
Birth and Native State:
I was born in Princeton,
Gibson County, Indiana, February 19, 1819. My father's name was William Barker;
my mother's maiden name was Abiah Hopkins. They married in Kentucky about the
beginning of the last century.
Immigration:
About the same time my father and three of his
brothers and two of his full sisters and one half brother and one half sister
immigrated to Indiana, Gibson County. His brothers names, John, Elias, and
Jesse; his sisters, Mary who married Joseph Skidmore who subsequently moved to
White County, Indiana; and Mrs. Grishem, her given name I have forgotten; his
half brother, James Stewart; his half sister, Polly, married William Hanks, a
Primitive Baptist preacher. About the same time two of my mother's brothers
moved to Indiana in Warrick County, their names Frank and Henry Hopkins. She had
a cousin in William Hopkins, who came with them. He died soon after. His widow
married Charles Juco.
Family Record:
John Barker, the
oldest, I know but little about his family. He moved to the lead mines in
Missouri as far back as I can remember. He had three sons, William, Allen, and
Jackson who came back to Indiana. Uncle John froze to death in Missouri.
Elias Barker
married Miss Polly Fitzgerald. They had five sons, James, John, Jesse, Stewart,
and William. I remember but two daughters - their names forgotten. The oldest
married Long John Woods as he was called. The other married Will Lagrange.
Financially Uncle Elias was just a good liver. He died in Gibson County at a
ripe old age.
Aunt Polly
Stewart and William moved to Illinois about 1841 and settled on the Little
Wabash where they were in 1846. William was cross-eyed; James had but one eye.
John moved to Texas in 1844 or 5 and he saw a moccasin track, it was said, and
he loaded his wagon and went back to his old neighborhood where he was last
heard from, an influential citizen and successful farmer. He said he left Texas
to save his wife and children from the scalping knife of the Indians.
William, John
Barker's son, moved to Texas from Missouri in 1848 and was drowned in Little
River.
Jesse Barker, the
youngest of the four brothers, married Miss Elizabeth Kee, by which was born
four sons, and as many or more daughters. The boys were William, Stewart,
Jackson, and Hiram; the youngest, was in Mount Vernon on the Ohio River, county
forgotten, and a banker and rich when I last heard
from him. The
other two boys I know nothing about. Uncle Jesse lived 12 miles S.W. of
Princeton, Gibson County, Indiana. He was a successful farmer and a lover of
fine stock of all kinds, and did much in improving the same in that country. He
and wife died on the place where I first knew them at a ripe old age. I will say
here that Aunt Betsy as we called her had a brother, William Kee, who was
employed in building the first steam mill at Princeton when he lost his balance
and fell from the top of the building and broke his back from which he recovered
but he could never walk. He learned the shoemaker's trade.
At the beginning
of my sketch, I spoke of William Barker, my father, his marriage, etc. He and my
mother had twelve children, nine girls and three boys.
Girls names:
Eliza [m. 1) Isaac Banta,
2) McDaniel]
Pamelia [m. Grant Clutter]
Annie [m. 1) Samuel Hart,
2) Ira Baldwin]
Manerva
Silistina
Abiah [m. 1) William Dyer,
2) ?Philip Jackson]
Pauline [Pauline m. John
Embree]
Elizabeth [sickly all her
life and died in TX with consumption]
Mary [Polly m. James
Crowder in TX]
Sons:
Wilson Hopkins [m. 1) Mariah
Mills, 2) Eliza Jane Brumley]
William Washington [m. Almire
Harlo]
Henry Clay
They were all born and raised
in Gibson County, Indiana except the three younger, Washington, Mary and Henry,
they attained their majority in Texas.
Mary Barker, my father's
sister, married Joseph Skidmore. They moved from Kentucky to Indiana before I
could remember and settled in White County. They had 22 children...One son,
named William, lived in Warrick County. They had a daughter her name, I have
forgotten, she married Moses McKinney.
My father had another sister,
name forgotten. She married Thomas Grishem in Kentucky and moved to Warrick
County, Indiana in about 1836 or 7. They had a large family, mostly girls; names
forgotten, except 3 boys, James, Thomas and David.
James Stewart, my father's
half brother, had 5 boys and 2 girls -- William, John, James, Harrison and
Robert; the girls names forgotten. One married Jacob Johnson, the other a Mr.
Simpson. William sold goods and shipped produce at Mt. Vernon, on the Ohio,
Indiana. He was a cripple.
Supporting Marriage Records:
Mary Sarah Barker
m. Joseph Skidmore, 6 Apr 1795, Madison County, KY
Elias Barker m.
Mary Polly Fitsjarel, 25 July 1798, Madison County, KY
Jesse Barker m.
Betsy Key, 20 Mar 1812, Gibson County, IN
Eliza Barker m.
Isaac Banta, 22 Sep 1822, Warrick County, IN
Lucinda Barker m.
John Woods, 26 May 1825, Gibson County, IN
Pamelia Barker m.
Grant Clutter, 16 Sep 1826, Warrick County, IN
Annie Margaret
Barker m. Samuel Hart, 19 Aug 1827, Gibson County, IN
Virginia Barker
m. William Lagrange, 20 Jan 1831, Gibson County, IN
Mary (Polly)
Barker m. Jas Crowder, 3 Jan 1842, Lamar County, TX
Transcribed, Contributed and
Copyright © 1998 by
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