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George Frederick Burckhartt
1782 --- 1864 Married to Ruth Dorsey 1780 -- 1846 George was the son of Christopher F. Burckhartt and Elizabeth Hobbs. George Frederick Burckhartt (b.4 Oct 1782-Fredericktown,MD;d.29 Mar 1864-New Franklin,Hwd,MO) sp: Ruth Dorsey (b.17 Jul 1780-MD;m.4 Jan 1803;d.3 Sep 1846-Randolph,MO) Sally Hobbs Burckhartt (b.25 Dec 1803-Elizabethtown,Hardin,KY;d.9 Sep 1854-MO) sp: Jacob Whittenburg (m.1 Nov 1821) Christopher Frederick Burckhartt (b.24 Dec 1805-Hardin,KY;d.25 Jan 1875-Jacksonville,Randolph,MO) sp: Elizabeth Hill (m.21 Dec 1837) Elizabeth Hobbs Burckhartt (b.2 Mar 1808-KY;d.4 Oct 1815) Brenetta Walters Burckhartt (b.8 Aug 1810-Hardin,KY;d.27 Dec 1885-Salt Lake City,salt lake,UT) sp: William Adams Hickman (b.16 Apr 1815-Warren,KY;m.12 Apr 1832;d.21 Aug 1883-Lander,Fremont,WY) Greenberry Dorsey Burckhartt (b.8 Mar 1813) sp: Elenor C. Whittenburg (m.14 Jun 1833) Mary Catherine Burckhartt (b.16 Feb 1817-Huntsville,Randolph,MO) sp: Benjamin Haley (m.6 Mar 1849) Nicholas Miller Burckhartt (b.16 Feb 1817-Huntsville,Randolph,MO;d.21 Aug 1831) Julia Ann Burckhartt (b.7 Apr 1820-MO) George Hobbs Burckhartt (b.11 Sep 1823-Huntsville,Randolph,MO;d.21 Apr 1890-Huntsville,Randolph,MO) sp: Amanda McCampbell (m.16 Oct 1849) sp: Sarah M. Pierce (m.16 May 1848) The following history is of George F. Burckhartt's son: Description: Biographical sketch of Judge George Burckhartt, a judge in Huntsville, Missouri, in Randolph County who was born there in 1823 and became a teacher and then lawyer. The "Mother of Counties" Howard County was created under an act of the general assembly, approved on January 13, 1816. It was named for Benjamin Howard, first Missouri Territory governor. Howard County was the ninth organized county in the Missouri Territory and was created from the counties of St. Louis and St. Charles. Although it is much smaller today, when originally organized, Howard County comprised nearly 22,000 square miles - about one-third as large as the present state of Missouri. Obviously, Howard County is not that large today. The following counties (or parts of counties) were at first part of Howard County: Adair; Boone; Caldwell; Carroll; Chariton; Clay; Clinton; Cole; Cooper; Daviess; DeKalb; Gentry; Grundy; Harrison; Henry; Johnson; Lafayette; Linn; Livingston; Macon; Mercer; Moniteau; Morgan; Pettis; Putnam; Randolph; Ray; Saline; Sullivan; Worth; the northern parts of Benton, Miller, and St. Clair; and possibly parts of Audrain, Monroe, and Shelby. Also, the following counties (or parts of counties) in Iowa were at first part of Howard County: Clarke; Decatur; Ringgold; Union; Wayne; parts of Adams and Taylor; and probably parts of Appanoose, Lucas, and Monroe. The following history of Howard County is from The History of Howard and Cooper Counties, St. Louis: National Historical Company, 1883, pp. 88-99. INTRODUCTION History, we are told, "is but a record of the life and career of peoples and nations." The historian, in rescuing from oblivion the life of a nation, or a particular people, should "nothing extenuate, nor set down aught in malice." Myths, however beautiful, are but fanciful; traditions, however pleasing, are uncertain, and legends, though the very essence of poesy and song, are unauthentic. The novelist will take the most fragile thread of romance, and from it weave a fabric of surpassing beauty. But the historian should put his feet upon the solid rock of truth, and turning a deaf ear to the allurements of fancy, he should sift with careful scrutiny, the evidence brought before him, from which he is to give the record of what has been. Standing down the stream of time, far removed from its source, he must retrace with patience and care, its meanderings, guided by the relics of the past which lie upon its shores, growing fainter, and still more faint and uncertain as he nears its fountain, oftimes concealed in the debris of ages, and the mists of impenetrable darkness. Written records grow less and less explicit, and finally fail altogether as he approaches the beginning of the community, whose lives he is seeking to rescue from the gloom of a rapidly receding past. Memory, wonderful as are its powers, is yet frequently at fault, and only by a comparison of its many aggregations, can he be satisfied that he is pursuing stable-footed truth in his researches amid the early paths of his subject. It cannot then be unimportant or uninteresting to trace the progress of Howard and Cooper counties, from their crude beginnings to their present proud position among their sister counties. To this end, therefore, we have endeavored to gather the scattered and loosening threads of the past into a compact web of the present, trusting that the harmony and perfectness of the work may speak with no uncertain sound to the future. Records have been traced as far as they have yielded information sought for; the memories of the pioneers have been laid under tribute, and every available source has been called into requisition from which we could obtain reliable material, out of which we could construct a truthful and faithful history of these counties. The French settled Canada and the northwestern part of the United States, as well as the country about the mouths of the Mississippi river. They came into the upper Mississippi and Missouri valleys in 1764, under the lead of Pierre Laclede Liguest, who held a charter from the French government, giving him the exclusive right of trade with the Indians in all the country as far north as St. Peter's river. Laclede established his colony in St. Louis in 1764, and from this point they immediately began their trading and trapping excursions into the unbroken wilderness. Their method of proceeding was to penetrate into the interior and establish small local posts for trading with the Indians, whence the trappers and hunters were outfitted and sent out into the adjacent woods. In this way, the country west and northwest of St. Louis was traversed and explored at a very early day, as far west as the Rocky mountains. But of the extent of their operations, but little has been recorded; hence, but little is known of the posts established by them. That these daring Frenchmen had explored that portion of Howard county lying contiguous to the Missouri river, even prior to the year 1800, there can be no doubt; that there existed within the present limits of the county a trading post, for several years before its settlement proper, there can be no doubt. The names of the streams, such as Bonne Femme, Moniteau, etc., attest the fact that they were of French origin, and had been seen and named by the French pioneers. Levens and Drake, in their condensed but carefully prepared history of Cooper county, say: "While Nash and his companions were in Howard county (1804), they visited Barclay's and Boone's Licks, also a trading post situated about two miles northwest of Old Franklin, kept by a white man by the name of Prewitt. The existence of this trading post, and the fact that 'Barclay's and Boone's Licks' had already received their names from the white persons who visited them, show conclusively that this portion of the country had been explored, even before this, by Americans. But no history mentions this trading post, nor does any give the name of Prewitt; hence, we are unable to determine when he came to the Boone's Lick country, how long he remained, and where he went; he evidently left before the year 1808, as Benjamin Cooper, who moved to Howard county in that year, said there was then no settlement in this part of the state." Boone's Lick, from which this region of country took its name, is situated about eight miles northwest of New Franklin, in Boone's Lick township, on section 4, T. 49, R. 17, on land owned by William N. Marshall. This place was visited by Daniel Boone at an early date, - the time not known. Here he found several salt springs, and as such places were frequented by deer and other game, he not only often hunted in the neighborhood, but, according to John M. Peck, who visited the old hunter at his home in St. Charles county, a few years prior to his death, pitched his camp there for one winter and put up a cabin. Mr. Peck does not give the date. The presumption is that he got his information from the lips of the old hunter himself, and he would further suppose that he camped there between the years 1795 and 1807; nearer the former than the latter date, for the reason that he was at that time younger and more robust, and more inclined to enjoy sylvan sports. The first authentic record we have upon the subject of a settlement, in what is now known as Howard county, dates back to the year 1800 (see first deed, chap. III, this book), when Joseph Marie deeded a tract of land described by survey to Asa Morgan. Joseph Marie settled upon said land in the year 1800, where he made improvements. This land was situated near what is known as "Eagle's Nest," about one mile southwest of where Fort Kincaid was afterwards erected, in what is now Franklin township. In 1800, Charles Dehault Delassus, lieutenant-governor of Upper Louisiana, granted Ira P. Nash a large tract of land in the present limits of Howard county. This land was surveyed on the 26th of January, 1804, and certified to on the 15th day of February, of that year. The next Americans, of whom we have any definite knowledge, as to the date of their coming to Howard county, were Ira P. Nash, above named, a deputy United States surveyor, Stephen Hancock and Stephen Jackson, who came up the Missouri river in the month of February, 1804. These men located a claim on the public lands of Howard county, nearly opposite to the mouth of the La Mine river. They remained there until the month of March, in the same year, employing their time in surveying, hunting, and fishing; and during that month they returned to their homes, which were situated on the Missouri river, about twenty-five miles above St. Charles. In July, 1804, Ira P. Nash, in company with William Nash, James H. Whitesides, William Clark, and Daniel Hubbard, again came into what is now Howard county, and surveyed a tract of land near the present site of Old Franklin. On this second trip, Mr. Nash claimed, when he came up the river the February before, he had left a compass in a certain hollow tree, and started out with two-companions to find it, agreeing to meet the remainder of the company the next day at Barclay's Lick, which he did, bringing the compass with him, thus proving, beyond a doubt, that he had visited the country before. Lewis and Clarke, on their exploring expedition across the Rocky mountains, and down the Columbia river to the Pacific ocean, arrived at the mouth of the Bonne Femme, in Howard county, on the 7th day of June, 1804, and camped for the night. When they arrived at the mouth of the "Big Moniteau creek," they found a point of rocks covered with hieroglyphic paintings, but the large number of rattlesnakes, which they found there, prevented a close examination of the place. Continuing their way up the river, they arrived at the mouth of the Lamine on the 8th of the same month, and on the 9th at Arrow Rock. When they returned from their journey in 1806, after having successfully accomplished all the objects for which they were sent out, they passed down the Missouri river, and camped, on the 18th of September, in Howard county, opposite to the mouth of the La Mine river. And, as they journeyed down the river on that day, they must have passed the present site of Boonville and Franklin early on the morning of the 19th of September, 1806. The next evidence we have of any white persons being in the Boone's Lick country, is the following: -In 1807, Nathan and Daniel M. Boone, sons of old Daniel Boone, who lived with their father in what is now St. Charles county, about twenty-five miles west of the city of St. Charles, on the Femme Osage creek, came up the Missouri river and manufactured salt at Boone's Lick, in Howard county. After they had manufactured a considerable amount, they shipped it down the river to St. Louis, where they sold it. It is thought by many that this was the first instance of salt being manufactured in what was at that time a part of the territory of Louisiana, now the state of Missouri. Though soon after, salt was manufactured in large quantities - "salt licks" being discovered in many parts of the state. Although these were the first white persons who remained for any length of time in the Boone's Lick country, they were not permanent settlers, as they only came to make salt, and left as soon as they had finished. Previous to the year 1808, every white American who came to the Boone's Lick country, came with the intention of only remaining there a short time. Three parties had entered it while on exploring and surveying expeditions; two parties had been to its fine salt licks to make salt; and no doubt, many of the adventurous settlers living in the eastern part of this state, had often, on their hunting expeditions, pierced the trackless forest to the Boone's Lick country; but, of course, there is no record of these, hence, those expeditions of which there is no record, are placed as being the first to this part of the country, when, in reality, they may not be. But in 1808, in the spring, one adventurous spirit determined to forsake what happened to him to be the too thickly settled portion of the state, and move farther west to the more pleasant solitudes of the uninhabited forest. In the spring of that year, Colonel Benjamin Cooper and his family, consisting of his wife and five sons, moved to the Boone's Lick country, and located in what is now Howard county, about two miles south west of Boone's Lick, in the Missouri river bottom. Here he built him a cabin, cleared a piece of ground, and commenced arrangements to make a permanent settlement at that place. But he was nor permitted to remain long at his new home. Governor Merriwether Lewis, at that time governor of the territory, issued an order directing him to return below the mouth of the Gasconade river, as he was so far advanced into the Indian country, and so far away from protection, that in case of an Indian war he would be unable to protect him. So he returned to Loutre island, about four miles south of the Gasconade river, where he remained until the year of 1810. The rich territory, however, was not destined to be left forever to the reign of wild beasts and savage Indians. Aside from the fact that the character of the men of the early days caused them continually to revolt against living in thickly settled communities, they Boone's Lick country presented advantages, which those seeking a home where they could find the richest of lands and the most healthful of climate, could not, and did not, fail to perceive. Its fertile soil promised, with little labor, the most abundant harvests. Its forests were filled with every variety of game, and its streams with all kinds of fish. Is it a wonder, then, that those seeking homes where these things could be found, should select and settle first the rich lands of Cooper and Howard counties, risking all the dangers from the Indians, who lived in great numbers close around them? Two years after the settlement of Benjamin Cooper, and his removal to Loutre island, the first lasting settlement was made in the Boone's Lick country, and this party was but the forerunner of many others, who soon followed, and in little more than one-half of a century, have thickly settled one of the richest and most attractive parts of the state of Missouri. The names of the parties who settled north of the river, in Howard county, were: From Madison County, Ky.: - Lieut.-Col. Benjamin Cooper Francis Cooper William Cooper Daniel Cooper John Cooper Capt. Sarshall Cooper Braxton Cooper, Sr. Joseph Cooper Stephen Cooper Braxton Cooper, Jr. Robert CooperJames Hancock Albert Hancock William Berry John Berry Robert Erwin Robert Brown Joseph Wolfskill William Thorp John Thorp Josiah Thorp James Thorp Gilead Rupe James JonesJohn Peak William Wolfskill Adam Woods From Estill County, Ky.: - Amos Ashcraft Otho Ashcraft Jesse Ashcraft James Alexander From Tennessee: - John Ferrell Henry Ferrell Robert Hancock From Virginia: - James Kile From South Carolina: - Gray Bynum From Georgia: - Stephen Jackson From Ste. Genevieve: - Peter Popineau Previous Residence Unknown: - John Busby, James Anderson, Middletown Anderson, William Anderson. The women belonging to these families did not arrive until the following July or August. We do not pretend to say these men were all of the early settlers who came in 1810. There were perhaps, a few others, but the names we have given embrace nearly the entire number who migrated in the colony with Colonel Benjamin Cooper, in the spring of that year. After their arrival in this "land of promise," they immediately began the erection of their houses, all of which were single or double log cabins, and to prepare for farming by clearing and fencing small "patches" of ground. As a general thing, they settled in and near the Missouri river bottom. They knew that the country was full of Indians, and that these were liable at any time to begin their murderous assaults upon the whites; hence, they located in neighborhoods, where, in case of danger, they could render each other timely aid. that portion of Howard county, which is now embraced in Franklin and Boone's Lick townships, was the first settled. When the settlers first came to this county, wild game of all kinds was very abundant, and so tame as not to be easily frightened at the approach of white men. This game furnished the settlers which all their meat, and, in fact, with all the provisions they used, for most of the time, they had but little else than meat. There were large numbers of deer, turkeys, elk, and other large animals, and, to use the expression of an old settler, "they could be killed as easily as sheep are now killed in our pastures." They settlers spent most of their time in hunting and fishing, as it was no use to plant crops to be destroyed by wild game. Small game, such as squirrels, rabbits, partridges, etc., swarmed around the homes of the frontiersmen in such numbers that when they did attempt to raise a crop of any kind, in order to save a part of it, they were forced to kill them in large numbers. Not only were the settlers and their families thus well provided with food by nature, but also their animals were furnished with everything necessary to their well being. The range was so good during the whole year, that their stock lived without being fed by their owners. Even when the ground was covered with snow, the animals, taught by instinct, would in a few minutes paw from under the snow enough grass to last them all day. Their only use of corn, of which they planted very little, was to make bread, and bread, and bread made of corn was the only kind they ever had. During the two succeeding years (1811 and 1812), quite a number of emigrants had taken up their line of march for the Boone's Lick country. Many of these included families of wealth, culture, and refinement, who left their well furnished homes and life-long friends in the east, to take up their abode among the savages and wild beasts of the western wilderness. Scarcely, however, had they reached their destination, when they heard the dim mutterings which foreshadowed a long and bloody conflict with the Indians, who had been induced by the emissaries of the British government to unite with Great Britain in her attempt to defeat the United States of America. OLD SETTLERS ERECT FORTS Being fully convinced that the Indians were making preparations to attack the settlements along the Missouri river, they determined to be ready to receive them properly when they did appear, and to this end, began the erection of three forts in Howard county, bearing the names respectively, of Fort Cooper, Fort Hempstead, and Fort Kincaid. Fort Cooper was located about two miles southwest of Boone's Lick. Fort Kincaid was east southeast, about nine miles distant, and about one mile north of the present Boonville railroad bridge. Fort Hempstead was about one and a half miles north of Fort Kincaid. Each fort was a series of log houses, built together around an enclosure. In each house lived a family, and the stock was corralled, and the property of the settlers secured at night in the enclosure. There were other smaller forts, but the above were the most important. Immediately after the erection of these forts, the pioneers organized themselves into a military company, which Sarshall Cooper as captain; first lieutenant, William McMahon; second lieutenant, John Monroe; ensign, Benjamin Cooper, Jr. Sergeants - 1st. John McMurray, 2d. Samuel MacHanan, 3d. Adam Woods, 4th. Davis Todd, 5th. John Mathis. Corporals - 1st. Andrew Smith, 2d. Thomas Vaughan, 3d. James McMahan, 4th. John Busby, 5th. James Barnes, 6th. Jesse Ashcraft. The above were the officers chosen by their comrades and neighbors, to command the company, which consisted of 112 men, who were able to bear arms. The following list comprises all the men and boys who were in the different forts: - FORT COOPER James Alexander James Anderson Middleton Anderson William Anderson Gray Bynum John Busby Robert Brown Samuel Brown Benjamin Cooper Sarshall Cooper Frank Cooper William Cooper David Cooper John Cooper Braxton Cooper Joseph Cooper Stephen Cooper Robert Cooper Henly Cooper Patrick Cooper Jesse Cox Solomon Cox John Ferrill Henry Ferrill Edward Good Harmon Gregg William Gregg David Gregg Robert Heath Robert Hancock Abbott Hancock Josiah Higgins Frederick Hyatt Robert Irvine David Jones John Jones Jesse Jones George Jackson Stephen Jackson James Jackson Samuel McMahan Thomas McMahan James McMahan William McMahan John O'Bannon Judiah Osmond Samuel Perry William Read Benoni Sappington John Sappington James Sappington Daniel Tillman John Thorp William Thorp Samuel Turley Stephen Turley Ezekiel Williams Thomas Wasson Joseph Wasson Adam Woods William Wolfskill Joseph Wolfskill William Wolfskill, Jr. FORT HEMPSTEAD George Alcorn James Alcorn William Allen John Arnold Price Arnold Joseph Austin John Austin Robert Austin William Baxter Big Berry John Berry William Berry David Boggs Joseph Boggs Muke Box Joseph Boyers Robert Brown Samuel Brown William Brown Townsend Brown Christopher Brown Christopher Burckhartt Nicholas S. Burckhartt Andrew Carson Lindsay Carson (father of Kit Carson) Moses Carson Charles Canole William Canole Isaac Clark Joseph Cooley James Cooley Ferrin Cooley Braxton Cooper, Jr. James Cockrell Thomas Chandler James Creason John Creason Peter Creason William Creason Daniel Crump Harper Davis James Douglas Daniel Durbin John Elliott Braxton Fugate Hiram Fugate Reuben Fugate Sarshall Fugate Simeon Fugate Reuben Gentry Samuel Gibbs Abner Grooms John Grooms William Grooms Alfred Head Moses Head Robert Hinkson John James James Jones Abner Johnson Noah Katew Joseph McLane William McLane Ewing McLane David McQuitley William Monroe (called Long Gun) Joseph Moody Susan Mullens Thompson Mullens John Peak William Pipes Michael Poage Robert Poage Joseph Poage Christopher Richardson Jesse Richardson James Richardson Silas Richardson John Rupe Henry Simons Reuben Smith Andrew Smith Thomas Smith John Snethan James Snethan Joseph Still John Stinson Nathan Teague Solomon Teters David Teters John Teters Isaac Thornton John Thornton Davis Todd Elisha Todd Jonathan Todd Levi Todd James Turner Philip Turner Jesse Turner Thomas Vaughan Robert Wilds William Wadkins James Whitley Benjamin Young John Yarnell FORT KINCAID Amos Ashcraft Jesse Ashcraft Otho Ashcraft Amos Barnes Aquilla Barnes Abraham Barnes James Barnes John Barnes Shadrach Barnes Robert Barclay Francis Berry Campbell Bolen Delany Bolen William Brazil David Burris Henry Burris Reuben Cornelius Pryor Duncan Stephen Fields John Fields Cornelius Gooch Thomas Gray John Hines Daniel Hubbard Asaph Hubbard Eusebius Hubbard Joseph Jolly David Kincaid Matthew Kincaid John Kincaid John McMurray Adam McCord Daniel Monroe John Monroe John Mathis William Nash John Pursley William Ridgeway William Robertson Edward Robertson Gilead Rupe Enoch Taylor Isaac Taylor William Taylor Enoch Turner Giles Williams Britton Williams Francis Wood Henry Weeden Life in the forts was not one of idleness and ease. it was one of vigilance and activity for two or three years. The settlers were deprived of many of the comforts and pleasures which are enjoyed by the people of to-day. They had but little labor-saving machinery, and what they had was imperfect and inefficient. School was taught, and religious services were held in the forts. The forts were also supplied with mills and looms. The first cog-wheel horse-mill erected in the county was at Fort Kincaid in 1815; the next one was put at Fort Hempstead. After the Indian troubles were over, people came twenty miles to these mills. The first cloth made in the county (in the forts) was manufactured from a poisonous plant, which was indigenous to the country, and known as the nettle, which was covered with sharp, brittle hairs. This cloth was used for pants and shirts for summer wear. In the winter, buckskin hunting-shirts and pants were worn. The low flats along the river, creeks and branches were covered with a thick growth of nettles about three feet high, sometimes standing in patches of twenty acres or more. These were permitted to remain standing until they became decayed in the winter, when they were gathered. They were then broken up, spun into long strings, and woven into cloth, from which the garments were made. This would be a very tedious job at the present day, when a lady's dress requires from thirty yards of cloth; but in those old times five or six yards was a much as was ever put into a dress. Little children usually wore a long leathern shirt over their tow shirt. For several years during the early settlement of this country, the men and women wore garments made out of the same kind of material. The first dry goods were sold by Robert Morris, at the forts, in 1815. The number of men, as we have already stated, able to bear arms, was 112, which represented a population of between 500 and 600, who were then living within the present limits of Howard county. A few, perhaps, had returned to their former homes, or had moved further down the river in the direction of Loutre island and St. Louis, upon the eve of the anticipated Indian hostilities, but the great majority of the pioneers, had come to stay, and not a few of these attested their devotion to their new found homes by the sacrifice of their property and their lives to the cupidity and ferocity of savage foes. Description: Biographical sketch of Judge George Burckhartt, a judge in Huntsville, Missouri, in Randolph County who was born there in 1823 and became a teacher and then lawyer. Item Type: Citation - Book Date: 1878 Volume: 3 Pages: 570-571 Illustrations: No Location: q920.07 U59 Subjects: Burckhartt, George H., Judges, Item Record: # 110187 Cemetery Information Barnes, James S. {Rev.} -- 18 Sep 1788 Madison Co., KY-1875, m. Elizabeth Hobbs (d\o Christopher Burckhartt d. 26 Apr 1863); g-dau. Julia Barnes m. Willis Fountain; "Our Old Settlers" NMH 7 Sep 1870 = James Barnes Cem Burckhartt, Amanda (McCampbell) -- w\o George Hobbs Burckhartt; (d\o Wallace McCampbell); Ref: OFR p. 58 Burckhartt, C. F. {Dr.} -- [c1815]-25 Jan 1875 aged 60y = Eads Chapel Cem Burckhartt, C. Fred {Dr.} -- [c14 Jan 1854]-19 Oct 1882 aged 28y 9m 5d at Vandalia, brother-in-law of Judge Polson of Huntsville = 20 Oct 1882 Eads Chapel Cem; MDM Friday 20 Oct 1882 Burckhartt, Elizabeth A. -- [c16 Feb 1818]-27 Aug 1879 aged 60y 11m 11d, w\o Dr. C. F. = Eads Chapel Cem Burckhartt, George Dorsey -- d. 13 Oct 1920 Marceline, aged 66y, [s\o {Judge} George Hobbs & Amanda (McCampbell) Burckhart]; children: (1) Sam of Butte, MT, (2) Rhoades of Higbee, (3) Dorsey of Huntsville, (4) Mrs. William Patton of Huntsville = Huntsville Cem; OB HN 15 Oct 1920 Burckhartt, George Fredrick -- 1782 Frederick,MY-1864 Howard Co.; war of 1812, to Rand. in 1820; [s\o Christopher Frederick (1756-1827) of Howard, Co.]; m. 1803 Ruth (Dorsey), 9 children: (9) {Judge} George Hobbs; Ref: OFR p. 57, HRM84 p. 451 Burckhartt, George Hobbs {Judge} -- 11 Sep 1823 Rand.-1890; [s\o George Fredrick & Ruth (Dorsey)]; m. 16 Oct 1849 Amanda (McCampbell) children: (1) Maria Jo m. John Adam Heether, (2) Ella m. Eugene Jackson, (3) John (d. 5 Sep 1878], (4) Wallace, (5) Ofon, (6) Guitar, (7) George Dorsey = Huntsville Cem; Ref: OFR p. 58, HRM84 p. 451 Burckhartt, Jennie (prob. Clarkson) -- 21 Jan 1852-27 Jan 1853, prob. w\o Wallace Burckhartt = Eads Chapel Cem; MDM 13 Nov 1885 Burckhartt, John -- d. 5 Sep 1878 from injuries from a accident while coupling cars at Centralia, aged 21y, [eldest s\o of Judge George H. Burckhartt]; MDM Friday 6 Sep 1878, funeral 6 Sep 1878 by Rev. S. Y. Pitts = Huntsville Cem; MDM Saturday 7 Sep 1878 Burckhartt, N. S. -- dec'd, Final Settlement of Estate on 4th Monday in Nov 1870, C.F. Burchartt, Adm'r; NMH 26 Oct 1870 The 1835 Road Petition The following document might not seem so unusual. A group of neighbors petitioning the county commission to build a road to make transportation easier. However, some of those neighbors included some members of the Hickman family, and the petition provides us with examples of their signatures. In addition to Edwin Temple Hickman, the document was signed by his sons William Adams Hickman, James Barton Hickman, and Josiah Harvey Hickman. Another signer was George Burckhartt, who being an attorney probably also wrote it, and whose daughter Brenetta eloped with Bill Hickman, causing a major rift in the family that didn't heal for many years. It is not known if the road was constructed, or if it was the same road down which Bill and Brenetta later traveled on their way to Nauvoo after having become Mormons. |
Christopher Frederick
Burckhartt
was born on 19 Dec. 1756 in Frederick, MD. He was the son of George Burckhartt. He was Christened on 11 Jan 1757. He married Elizabeth Hobbs on 16 Nov 1780 in Fredericktown, Frederick, MD. Elizabeth Hobbs was born on 31 Dec 1765 in Frederick, MD. She was the daughter of Joshua Hobbs. The following children were born to this union:
Served as an interpreter for George Washington at the Crossing of the Delaware, Battle of Trenton 26 Dec 1776. Christopher F. Burckhartt, was a native of Maryland, and a gallant soldier under Washington during the War of the Revolution. He immigrated to this State with his family in 1811 and settled first in St. Louis county, where he lived until his death, one of the worthy and respected old pioneers of that county. He was well advanced in years when he came to Missouri, and most of his family of children had grown up and become themselves the heads of families. Among these was George Burckhartt, who became the father of Judge George H., the subject of the present sketch. Born: 1756-12-19 in Middletown, Frederick, Maryland, USA Died: 13 Oct 1828 in St. Louis, MO Married Elizbeth Hobbs B:1765-12-31 in Frederick, Maryland George Burckhartt was born on 6 Jun 1725 in Germany. He married Maria Catherine Miller on 19 Nov 1749 in Lancaster, PA. Mary was born 19 Dec 1728 in Germany. George died on 10 Aug 1805 in Fredericktown, Frederick, MD and Mary died 3 Aug 1806. The following children were born to this union:
George Frederick Burckhartt Sr. and his wife Maria Miller were born in Rhenish, Germany. Rhenish is the Rheinprovinz (Rhine Province) of former Prussia. In present Germany, this area can be found in both Nordrhein-Westfalen (North Rhine-Westphalia) and Rheinland-Pfalz (Rhineland-Palastine). He and his family, along with the Millers, came to Pennsylvania on Sept. 25, 1732. They settled in Lancaster, Pennsylvania and George married Maria there on November 19, 1749. When he first came from Germany, his name was most likely Georg Burghart. They moved to the Frederick, MD area. Maria and George had nine children: Peter, Maria, George Jr., Catherine, Margareta, Johanis, Philipine, and Daniel. George Sr. was a soldier in the Revolutionary war. Submitted - November 19, 2010 Boonslick Clio George F. Burckhartt of Burckhartt Fields by Joe Barnes There should be a Randolph County Hall of Fame. Other counties within Boonslick country such as Boone have them. Cooper County has a small downtown park in Boonville with a full-size statue of Hannah Cole and several busts of historic persons. Rather than wait for such deliberation and decision, I shall proceed with my own Randolph County Hall of Fame and begin with “wise and honest” George Frederick Burckhartt, said to be “one of the best educated men” of the infant state of Missouri. Within our local history, the best way to describe the Burckhartt family is “prominent.” The entire clan is notable. Later you will learn about his father Christopher Frederick Burckhartt, and George’s son George Hobbs Burckhartt — both highly laudable in their own right. George H. is worth at least two future articles. Early LifeGeorge F. Burckhartt of Rhenish German stock was born Oct. 4, 1782, at Frederick, Md., the eldest son of Christopher F. — a Revolutionary War hero — and Elizabeth (Hobbs) Burckhartt. He was baptized into the Lutheran Church. The clan migrated from Maryland to Louisville, Ky., in 1802. There young George married Ruth Dorsey on Jan. 4, 1803, at Elizabeth. The couple would have nine children. During the War of 1812 George, now 29, enlisted in the Kentucky Militia and served as a major. He fought in the 3rd Regiment under Brig. Gen. William Henry “Old Tippecanoe” Harrison at the Battle of the Thames. Following the war, he, Ruth and kids moved from Kentucky to the Missouri Territory. Traveling west on the Ohio by keel boat with slaves and gold, in 1816 they settled near the soon-to-be organized community of Chariton (near the present Glasgow) in the newly organized Howard County. As the Lutherans were not established in Missouri until 1839, the family joined the Methodist Episcopal Church, the denomination in which they stayed — as did later generations of Burckhartts. Both George and Ruth were devout Methodists. The Burckhartt name is found in the records of Huntsville United Methodist Church. When in 1844 the Methodist Episcopal Church split over slavery and other issues, they became members of the Methodist Episcopal Church, South. The Burckhartts owned among the largest populations of slaves in Boonslick country. George soon entered politics. Known as “an honest man and a man of great learning,” on Mar. 23, 1818, he became the first justice of the peace for Chariton. He was a Whig, but, though Boonslick country was strongly Democratic, this affiliation never affected his political career. The interests of his constituents always overrode party concerns. One biography states he “would discharge his whole duty to his country and state.” Burckhartt FieldsFrom Chariton the family moved to the eastern edge of Chariton County, now a part of Randolph County, where he established a 1400-acre plantation, Burckhartt Fields. He was among the leading farmers of the period. There he raised tobacco with the labor of his slaves. His stock consisted of cattle, horses and swine. His horses were said to be among the finest in northern Missouri. Burckhartt was fond of racing, and had several excellent steeds. However, as a good Methodist, racing on the Lord’s Day was forbidden. One Sunday while George and Ruth were away, his neighbors “borrowed” one of his horses and raced it. On his return he commented, “Well, Ruth, it is hard for one to preserve his Christian integrity and own race stock when away from home…”. Milton, Mo., was organized by him within Burckhartt Fields in 1836. Burckhartt donated ground for the Methodist Episcopal Church there in 1840. He also donated walnut lumber and himself hew the logs from which the new preaching house was built. Among the oldest of Missouri Masonic Lodges is at Milton, but that story must wait. Within Burckhartt Fields was a stop on the Hannibal-Glasgow Road, Burckhartt’s Station. This is important in another story, that of the Trail of Death. Political CareerIn 1821 Missouri became a state. Burckhartt was elected to the Missouri House of Representatives in 1822 for Chariton County, making him the first elected representative for this area. (Chariton County was separated from Howard County in 1820. The county at that time included the present Chariton and Randolph counties.) He was re-elected in 1824 and 1826. He was returned to the House by the election of 1838, now as the representative for Randolph County (organized in 1829). He was elected again in 1840, serving a total five two-year terms in the lower house. In the House he proved a knowledgeable and effective legislator. He was influential in the early construction and maintenance of Missouri’s roads. He was chair of the standing (permanent) committee on “the Salines.” He sat on many significant select committees. The Burckhartt law was enacted in 1822. This statue — and the controversy concerning it — is worthy of its own article. Read about this later in “The Mirror.” About 1854, he moved to the Franklin area from Burckhartt Fields. He retired from politics in 1858 at the age of 76. As war approached, he became a Unionist. On Mar. 29, 1864, at 81 years he died at his home in the third Franklin, the current New Franklin. (The original Franklin had been obliterated by the meandering wide Missouri. The replacement town proved prone to flooding, so the citizens finally wised up in 1828 and built on the bluff instead of the flood plain.) His body was buried on the grounds of the farm he loved in Randolph County. In 1931, his and Ruth’s bodies were moved to the Mount Pleasant Cemetery at New Franklin. A monument to his many accomplishments and memory was erected by the Daughters of the American Revolution on the square in Fayette. In Randolph County not only do we fail to remember and honor George Frederick Burckhartt, some can’t even spell the name right. (Burkhart St. in Moberly is named for his son.) George F. Burckhartt lived here near the community of Milton. Randolph County was his home. Though Christopher Burckhartt, the pater familias, was never a Randolph County resident, he does play a role in a local mystery which involves the Moberly Public Library, a true mystery which may only be resolved with the help of you readers. Cutline: George F. Burckhartt / 1782–1864 Cutline: D.A.R. monument to George F. Burckhartt at Fayette, Mo. Credit: Liz Morales. |