Wrights & Maxeys of Monroe County, Mississippi - Person Sheet
Wrights & Maxeys of Monroe County, Mississippi - Person Sheet
NameMAXEY, Walter Grenada , 6G Grandfather
Birth Date12 Sep 1775
Birth PlaceWashington County, Tennessee
Death Date17 Aug 1839 Age: 63
Death PlaceItawamba County, Mississippi
FatherMAXEY, Jesse (1750-ca1808)
MotherSCOTT, Elizabeth (~1748-~1810)
Misc. Notes
Walter married one of Rhoda Allen's daughters, a sister to his brother William's wife.

Missing his brothers who moved to Illinois he sent the following letter:

Alabama State, Marion County
Sipsey Creek, October 6th, 1820

To Mr. William Maxey
Illinois State, Jefferson County,
Near Mt. Vernon.

Dear Brothers and Sisters:

I now undertake to write to you all; not the first time. I have wrote twice and never received the first scrape of a pen from any of you since you crossed the Ohio River. I don't know whether my letters reach you or not. I concluded would try writing one time more, as I am anxious to hear from you by letter to know everything particular; how you are satisfied and how you are doing as to religion and your temporal affairs. About the situation of your country and your trade and health. I have hear many times from you verbally by the work of mouth. I heard several times that father Allen was very much dissatisfied with his move which I expected he would be. I also have hear of his death and am very much surprised that you have not wrote to none of us to let us know of the fixing of affairs. As the children is all desirous to hear how the balance of you is satisfied. I think any of you would be much better satisfied in this country.

Reason teaches me that you would be for I think that I can make five dollars here easier than I or you can make one in your country. Trade is so much better; it is obliged to be. Just look at the distance of water carriage and you market every year as to flour and pork, owing to the extensive bounds of your water trade, and ours so short. Our crops are very good generally. Corn will be 30 cents per bushel from the heap. My family is all well satisfied with our move.

We have had our healths very well generally. Sally is now under some complaints as she is frequent, since she had that hard spell on Blue Water. Embly and Alfred has been sick by going into the water too much as we suppose. There has been more sickness in our country this year than there has been before. A kind of an influensy cold.

There is a good deal of land in our country to enter and it would not be a hard matter to move from your country here; down the Ohio, and up the Tennessee river and then 70 miles land carriage which I would assist any of the connection if they see proper to move to this country. I would be glad to live by my friends but wish them to be satisfied, as I feel perfectly satisfied with my country. Brother John's family was all well about two weeks ago. He yet lives on Blue Water. He is building a mill but very probable the next time you hear from him he will be living here and they all appear willing. So I add no more but remain your affectionate brother till death.

Walter Maxey

To William and Edward Maxey and families
P.S. Also Henry and Rhodam's families as well.


From the Itawamba History Review, issue of 16 June 2008 and posted by Bob Franks:

“When the Federal government surveyed the Chickasaw lands acquired by the Treaty of Pontotoc (1832), only two roads were mentioned in the survey field notes in what later became Itawamba County. They were listed as the Old Natchez Road (Natchez Trace) and the Wagon Road. The Wagon Road entered what is now Itawamba County near the site of the State Highway 25 running north out of eastern Monroe County into present-day eastern Itawamba County. From reading the survey field notes from 1833, it is evident the road ran northward basically along present-day State Highway 25, the veering basically onto present-day Clay-Tilden Road running northward into the Clay community (nearly 13 miles).

The surveyors documented four white families in the area along this old road. The Benjamin Wise family living north of Bull Mountain Creek on the line between Sections 29 and 30 was discussed in Thursday’s post and the Eliba Allen family living on the line between Sections 11 and 14, Township 10 South, Range 9 East was discussed in yesterday’s post.

Less than one-half mile west of the Eliba Allen farm, the Walter Maxey family lived west of the old wagon road. Walter Maxey was probably related to Eliba Allen, being his wife was an Allen. Research indicates that his wife Sarah, was Nathaniel N.G. Allen’s sister. This would make Walter and Sarah Maxey the uncle and aunt of Eliba and Zachariah Allen.

Walter Maxey, the son of Jessee and Elizabeth Loving Maxey, was born September 12, 1775 in Washington County, Tennessee. He grew up near Gallatin, Tennessee and married Sarah Allen on September 26, 1795 in Sumner County, Tennessee.

Like his father, Walter was on the move. He was listed in the 1804 tax list of Wilson County, Tennessee with 140 acres of land. Walter and Sarah were in Lauderdale County, Alabama during 1817 when their son Henry was born and it was in this county during 1818 that their son Edward, served as a lieutenant in the militia. On May 8, 1818 Walter assigned all his interest in 159 acres of land in Township 1 of Lauderdale County to his brother-in-law, Henry D. Allen.

A letter from Walter to his brothers in Illinois dated October 6, 1820 stated that he had settled at last on Sipsey Creek, Marion County, Alabama. However, Walter and Sarah’s youngest child John, was born in adjoining Monroe County, Mississippi the following year.

Walter Maxey later appears in 1828 on a tax list of the area that later became Pulaskie County, Missouri, and it was here that four of his children were later to settle. By 1830 Walter and his family appear back in Marion County, Alabama and are enumerated on the 1830 census there. By 1833 the Chickasaw Cession surveyors found Walter and family in the Chickasaw Nation cession lands (later Itawamba County) west of the wagon road.

Walter Maxey died in Itawamba County on August 17, 1839 and was buried along the west side of the old wagon road on his farm. A monument marking his grave is found in the dense woods. The old Maxey settlement of pre-county days continued to be a settlement in Itawamba County until the early 1900’s. The old Maxey cemetery is located on the original lands and at one time the Maxey Schoolhouse was located adjacent to the cemetery.”
Spouses
1ALLEN, Sarah , 6G Grandmother
Birth Date8 Apr 1777
Birth PlaceEdgecombe County, North Carolina
Death Date18 May 1853 Age: 76
Death PlaceItawamba County, Mississippi
Burial PlaceItawamba County, Mississippi
FatherALLEN, Rev. John Rhodam Sr. (1742-1820)
MotherRANSOME, Mary Emily (~1742-1807)
Misc. Notes
Sarah's headstone is the only Maxey marker in the cemetery that has been identified as a Maxey.
Marr Date26 Sep 1795
Marr PlaceSumner County, Tennessee
ChildrenAllen (1796-<1866)
 Edward (1798-1860)
 Elizabeth P. (1800-~1850)
 Mary N. (1803-1873)
 William M. (1805-1843)
 Emily G. (1808-~1850)
 Alfred (1810-~1860)
 Sarah Melissa (1812-)
 Letha M. (1814-~1870)
 Henry D. (1816-1870)
 John Walter G. (1821-1877)
Last Modified 8 Jul 2021Created 11 Apr 2023 by Robert Avent