Selena Adeline Porter
&
James A.Thadeus Sappington

Jane McClain Porter
1850-1858
John
Hamilton Porter (1790-1857) married Jane
McClain in 1811 in Buncombe
County, North Carolina. Their first 2
children were born in
Buncombe County, North Carolina. By
1815 the growing family had
moved to McMinn County, Tennessee. By
1822 the family was living
in Alabama.
William Garrett, one of the first settlers
in White Plains, Tennessee wrote in his "Reminiscences
of White Plains
that 3 wealthy brothers - John H., Danford
and William Calvin "Bumkum
Billy" Porter - came from Nashville,
Tennessee to White Plains,
bringing "their saddle bags full of silver
and bought much of the rich
land in and near White Plains." John
H. and his wife, Jane, built
what is known for a later occupant, the
Chitwood house.
In the late 1700s the center of the Creek
Nation was at the
intersection of the Coosa and Tallapoosa
Rivers near present
Montgomery, Alabama. The 1790 Treaty of New
York gave the U.S.
government permission to use and improve the
Indian trail through
Alabama to facilitate American settlement
following the Louisiana
Purchase. In 1805 Lower Creeks
allowed the U.S. to build a
horse path by which mail could be
carried. By 1811 the
horse path became a federal road and was
filled with settlers heading
into Alabama. ("History of the Coosa:
Flow Back in Time."
Coosa Riverkeeper. c2023. Viewed January 20,
2023) The Creeks
were allowed to establish businesses along
the Indian trails through
Alabama, which became the Federal Road, the
major trail for settler
immigration. Some settlers decided to stop
within the Creek Nation with
the intention of settling on Creek land.
Tensions rose between the
Creeks and the settlers as well as within
the tribe itself.
John was a large landowner with some old
deeds showing that he bought
land in 1824 from Coosa Creek
Indians. Other existing
papers belonging to John Porter records
lands purchased from settler in
the 1830s. John Porter died in 1857
and was buried at White
Plains. Danford Porter settled on land
that is now called Clark
Morgan place. After the War Between
the States, Danford refused
to take the oath of allegiance to the U.S.;
instead he moved to
Brazil. Billy built his large
residence where the school house
now stands. (Garrett, William. Reminiscences
of Public Men in Alabama for 30 years.
Atlanta,
Ga.: Plantation Publishing Company's Press,
c1872.
https://catalog.hathitrust.org/Record/001264101.
Viewed
January 20, 2023)
One daughter, Mary Ann married Peter
Johnson; another daughter, Salina Adeline
Porter - the 3rd daughter
and 4th child, married a Mr.
Sappington and moved to Texas.
Salina's
siblings were:
 |
Christopher
Columbus "C.C."
Porter, Dr. (1811-1882), married 1)
Roseanne Lowery, 1846; 2) Melinda
M. Montgomery, 1850; 3) Margaret
Atkins, 1856
In August 1870 Dr. C.C.
Porter was among the best
known dentists in Gadsden, Etowah
County, Alabama; he lived on the
Jacksonville Road just east of Rock
Springs but spent most of his years
in practice at Gadsden as well as
having offices in Jacksonville, and
Oxford. (Gadsden Times,
unknown date. ancestry.com.
Viewed
January 20, 2023)
|
Mary Ann Porter
(1813- ), married Peter JohnsonJames Newton
Porter (1815 - )
Isabella
Narcissa Porter (1817-1902), married
Henry Hickerson Mallory
Robert
Felix Grundy Porter (1819-1865),
married Mary Jane Montgomery
Margaret Jane
Porter (1821- )
Sarah Ann
Porter (1823-1885), married Thomas Emerson
Montgomery
Elizabeth
Catherine Porter (1824-1897), married
Wiley Hulsey
Salina Adeline Porter (1828, Rhea Co., TN -
1880, Jackson Co., TN) (Gadsden Times,
unknown date. ancestry.com. Viewed
January 20, 2023)
Joseph Porter
(1828-1880)
By 1851 Elizabeth Catherine Porter was
living in Texas where she
married her first husband, John A. Walker
(1829, TN - ), in Cherokee Co.,
Texas on November 20, 1851. By 1860
John A. Walker is deceased and Elizabeth,
his
widow, is boarding in Sherman, Grayson Co.,
Texas.
On March 7, 1867 Elizabeth C. Porter Walker
married Wiley Hulsey in
Sherman, Grayson Co., Texas. Three
years later Elizabeth, Wiley
and children are living in Precinct 4,
Fannin Co., Texas
The
1850 census for Benton County, Alabama,
taken on January 2, 1850, lists
John H. Porter and wife, Jane in the
household with one of their
children, Selina A. [sic], aged 19 years.
The family lived on a 26 acre
farm where they raised enough Indian corn
and oats to feed his
stock. About 6 months later Salina
"Sarah" married Dr. James A. Thadeus
Sappington (1826-1878) on June 23, 1853 in
Calhoun County,
Alabama. Dr. Sappington is listed as
"physician" at Middleton,
Calhoun County, Alabama. By 1860 they
were the parents of:
Jenny Lenora Sappington, 1854 - 1883
John Sappington, 1856 -
Christopher "Sip" Sappington, 1859 -
Other children born to them were:
Elizabeth Josephine, 1864 - 1930
Minnie, 1865 - 1908
Alena Clyde, 1868 - 1943
Dr. James A.T. Sappington (1827-1878)
enlisted in 1861 and is listed as "Captain"
in a muster roll dated September 23,
1861. He served in
the Co. A, 50th Alabama Infantry,
Confederate Army; he was elected for
a period of 3 years as a Captain July 20,
1861 and commissioned July
25, 1861 of the Independent Co. Calhouns
Beauregards, Calhoun Co.,
Alabama (Fold3).
As a POW J.A. Sappington, private in Co. G,
10th Alabama, he was
captured at Gettysburg and housed in the
U.S. General Hospital at
Gettysburg, Pennsylvania. He was
transferred Baltomore, Maryland
jail to be exchanged on August 22,
1863.
In June 1867, after being examined by V.B.
Gilbert, a surgeon, Dr.
Sappington requested an honorable discharge
from the Army being unable
to perform the duties from disease of the
liver and spleen.
The 1870 census for Etowah, Alabama lists
the E. Sappington, 40 year old teacher,
household with children:
Lanora, age 16
John, age 14
Sip, age 10
C, age 8
Elizabeth, age 6
Alley, age 4
J H Sappington, aged 42, is listed as a
physician in Liberty, Amite
Co., Mississippi, boarding in the home of
David and Dora Wilson.
Dr. James A.T. Sappington was listed as a
City Physician for Vicksburg, Missouri in
the Vicksburg
Herald,
dated June 5, 1878. He died about 3
months later on September 10,
1878 at Vicksburg, Warren Co.,
Mississippi. At the time of his
death, Dr. Sappington was living with his
son, John and wife Mattie, in
Vicksburg, caring for patients in the Yellow
Fever epidemic. Both
James and
Salina Adeline are buried in Jacksonville
City Cemetery, Jacksonville, Calhoun
Co., Alabama.
The Denison
Daily News,
Holiday edition, of January 6, 1880 carried
a notice of J.H. Porter
owning one of the most complete grocery
houses in Denison, stating that
he embarked on the business July 3,
1876. His two employes
were E. Spencer and M.R. F. Owen.
Salina died
January 2, 1880 at the age of 51 years,
Point Rock, Jackson
County, Alabama (Jacksonville Republican,
Calhoun County, Alabama, February 21, 1880,
pg.3) and was buried in
Jacksonville City Cemetery,
Jacksonville, Calhoun County, Alabama,
leaving her children
orphans. Her last words were: "Tell my
brother and sister to meet
me in heaven." Minnie and her sister,
Allie Clyde were sent to
live with their Porter relatives in Grayson
County, Texas from Alabama
in 1880 after the death of their mother.
After
her
mother's death in February 1880, 13-year-old
Elizabeth "Lizzie"
Sappington boarded in the home of Elias and
Jane Keller along with her
widowed
aunt, Elizabeth Catherine Porter Hulsey,
whose husband had died April
1879 near Honey Grove, Fannin Co., Texas (Christian
Messenger, April 9, 1879, pg.8)
According to the 1880 Fannin Co., Texas
census, dated June 25, Salina's
youngest child, Elena [sic], aged 13, was
living with her maternal
aunt, Elizabeth Catherine Porter Hulsey,
aged 53, and cousin S.I.
Hulsey, aged 11, in the household of David
and S.B. Linn

Minnie Sappington, left, with her
cousin, Mary Ellen Gowdy, age 7
ca1880
The
1880 Precinct #5, Grayson Co., Texas shows 17
year old Minnie J. B.
Sappington (1868-1908) living in the household
of her aunt and uncle, J.S. and Sallie
Gowdy, along
with their daughter Mary, age 6.
Minnie
married widower, George W. Walker (1857-1905),
on July 5, 1883 in
Ragsdale, Fannin Co., Texas; George had a son,
Clarence W. Mac Walker,
born 1878. George W., Sr. was the son of
Garner McConnico Walker
and Jane Dowden.
Minnie and George's children were born at
Caddo, Indian Territory/Oklahoma:
T
Clarence Mac
Walker (1884-1971), married Virgina "Virgie"
F. Allen, May 21, 1905, Oklahoma
Addie Walker (1885- )
Jenora Addaline Walker (1887 - )

Macon George Walker (1891-1954)
Wendell W. Walker (1893- ), married
Alice Sparks, 1911 Oklahoma
Macon George
Walker married Mayme Agnes Platte, June
16, 1919, Oklahoma
The
George
M. Walker family went back and forth between
Tennessee, Illinois
and north Texas. There is a descendant
of one of the wives of
George M.C. Walker who recalls the family
moving to Paris, Lamar Co.,
Texas.

After the death of George W. Walker June 10,
1905 at Atoka, Oklahoma, Minnie married Dr.
Frank J.
White on October 18, 1906 in Atoka, Oklahoma
(Book 3/Page 309).
Minnie died on April 7, 1908 and was buried
in Center Cemetery, Center, Pontotoc Co.,
Oklahoma (FAG
#205224887)

Alena
Clyde Sappington married Hiram Jackson
Gunter on Christmas Eve,
December 24,1885, in Fannin Co., Texas;
they had one son, Collie Gunter
(1887-1928).
Allie's
second marriage
was to Ed T. Lee, aged 29, at Boggy
Depot, Indian Territory on June
21,1896. Together they had 5 children:
Edward
Michael Lee (1897 - 1955)
Jesse Page
Lee (1900 - 1970)
Cecil A. Lee
(1903 - 1945)
Minnie J. Lee
(1906 - )
Dorothy D.
"Dottie" Lee (1909 - )
By 1920
Allie, widow, and 2 of her
children were living on Stewart St., in
Cochise, Wilcox Co.,
Arizona. Allie died November 4,
1943 in Benson,
Cochise Co., Arizona.

Biography
Index
Susan Hawkins
©2025
If you find any
of Grayson
CountyTXGenWeb links inoperable,
please send me a
message.
|