Henry Hitt, 17711830 (aged 59 years)

Name
Henry /Hitt/
Birth
1771 21 16
Marriage
Birth of a brother
1773 (aged 2 years)
Birth of a sister
1775 (aged 4 years)
Birth of a brother
1777 (aged 6 years)
Birth of a sister
Death of a maternal grandfather
1780 (aged 9 years)
Birth of a brother
1781 (aged 10 years)
Birth of a sister
1783 (aged 12 years)
Birth of a brother
Death of a paternal grandfather
after 1790 (aged 19 years)
Death of a paternal grandmother
after 1790 (aged 19 years)
Birth of a son
Residence
Birth of a daughter
Birth of a son
about 1805 (aged 34 years)
Birth of a son
about 1805 (aged 34 years)
Birth of a son
about 1810 (aged 39 years)
Birth of a son
Birth of a half-sister
1814 (aged 43 years)
Death of a brother
before 1823 (aged 52 years)
Death of a sister
before 1823 (aged 52 years)
Death of a mother
before 1823 (aged 52 years)
Death of a father
Death of a daughter
Burial of a father
Death
Family with parents
father
17501823
Birth: 1750 33 20 South Carolina
Death: August 2, 1823Laurens County, SC, USA
mother
himself
3 years
younger brother
3 years
younger sister
3 years
younger brother
3 years
younger sister
17791849
Birth: 1779 29 24 Fauquier, Virginia, USA
Death: September 15, 1849Laurens County, SC, USA
3 years
younger brother
3 years
younger sister
4 years
younger brother
17861850
Birth: August 15, 1786 36 31 Laurens County, SC, USA
Death: September 11, 1850Sumter County, AL, USA
Father’s family with Elizabeth
father
17501823
Birth: 1750 33 20 South Carolina
Death: August 2, 1823Laurens County, SC, USA
father’s partner
half-sister
Family with Elizabeth Stephens Ball
himself
wife
Marriage Marriage
son
17971864
Birth: December 14, 1797 26 26 Laurens County, SC, USA
Death: December 2, 1864Laurens County, SC, USA
4 years
daughter
18011826
Birth: 1801 30 30 Laurens County, SC, USA
Death: 1826Laurens County, SC, USA
5 years
son
18051866
Birth: about 1805 34 34 Laurens County, SC, USA
Death: April 6, 1866Montgomery, Ohio, USA
1 year
son
18051892
Birth: about 1805 34 34 Laurens County, SC, USA
Death: 1892
6 years
son
1810
Birth: about 1810 39 39 Laurens County, SC, USA
Death:
4 years
son
18131865
Birth: about 1813 42 42 Laurens County, SC, USA
Death: 1865Laurens County, SC, USA
Residence
Name
Residence

http://trees.ancestry.com/rd?f=sse&db=1800usfedcenancestry&h=502015&ti=0&indiv=try&gss=pt

Name

http://trees.ancestry.com/rd?f=sse&db=1800usfedcenancestry&h=502015&ti=0&indiv=try&gss=pt

Note

[Written by Lucile Hitt Hollingsworth around 1972, with minor editing by Leo Richard Hitt.]

Henry Hitt was a Baptist minister. He was ordained in 1801 and pastored the Bethabara Paptist Church in Laurens County, SC until his death in 1830. He was the only son of Lazarus Hitt who remained i n South Carolina. He left his estate to his wife "during her natural life or widowhood consisting of Negroes, horses
and other stock, household and kitchen furniture and plantation tools, land on which he lived, 390 acres, on north side of creek (Cain Creek) for her support if she does not marry until Benjamin becom es 21.'' (Sons Benjamin, Henry and Martin were under 21 when Henry wrote his will in 1828.) Elizabeth didn't marry again, and when she died followed Henry's instructions to the letter. I have trans cript of their wills - 12 pages including sale bill. The Negroes sold brought nearly $15,000. Most of them were bought by Henry's sons. As I have said before, it was customary to sell all the persona l property by public auction, giving the members of the family of the deceased preference in the bidding. Real property was allotted by will.

Descendants of Henry Hitt still live on the original farms in Laurens County, Miss Juanita Hitt (daughter of Jesse, son of Ranier, son of Benjamin) has written that she has in her keeping a little cha ir that her great grandfather Benjamin held onto and pushed along to learn to walk - and so did her grandfather, her father and she. Her father told her an old, odd story of Ben Hitt. He was an exten sive slave owner during that period and at a sale of slaves he bought quite a robust Negro girl. It is said that he told her that after she had given birth to 20 Negro slaves he would set her free. Sh e gave birth to the 20 (in fact 21), but this 20th child was called "Free Jack." Free Jack later became the blacksmith for the community. The signs of this blacksmith shop are still in the front yar d of the home of H.E. Hitt (son of Henry Lewis, son of Benjamin). H.E. Hitt's widow , Bessie Hollingsworth Hitt, wrote Joel Reuben Hitt in 1937 that the old Hitt home was a simple log and frame struct ure and still standing in a field near her home near Cross Hill, S.C.