Major Alexander McCullochAge: 69 years1776–1846
- Name
- Major Alexander McCulloch
- Given names
- Major Alexander
- Surname
- McCulloch
Birth | 16 August 1776 39 32 |
Education | Yale University |
Death of a paternal grandfather | Alexander McCulloch 1798 (Age 21 years) |
Death of a mother | Sarah Montfort Stokes 1799 (Age 22 years) |
Marriage | Frances Fisher Lenoir — View this family 11 September 1800 (Age 24 years) |
Birth of a son #1 | Alexander McCulloch 1800 (Age 23 years) |
Birth of a daughter #2 | Sarah Montfort Stokes McCulloch 1801 (Age 24 years) |
Birth of a son #3 | John Stokes McCulloch 1803 (Age 26 years) |
Birth of a son #4 | Samuel McCulloch 1805 (Age 28 years) |
Birth of a daughter #5 | Mary Ann McCulloch 1807 (Age 30 years) |
Birth of a daughter #6 | Francis Olivia McCulloch 1809 (Age 32 years) |
Death of a father | Benjamin McCulloch 1809 (Age 32 years) |
Birth of a son #7 | Major General Benjamin McCulloch 11 November 1811 (Age 35 years) |
Military service | He served as Aide de Camp to General James Coffee, under Andrew Jackson in the Creek Indian War, and in the War of 1812. 1812 (Age 35 years) |
Birth of a daughter #8 | Harriet Maria McCulloch 1814 (Age 37 years) |
Birth of a son #9 | Brigadier General Henry Eustace McCulloch 6 December 1816 (Age 40 years) |
Birth of a son #10 | James Coffee McCulloch 4 February 1819 (Age 42 years) |
Residence | Since Muscle Shoals was a new country it abounded in all kinds of game and was a winter resort for the Choctaw Indians. While they lived there, his son, Benjamin, learned from the Indians to make blow guns and bows and arrows and how to use them. 1820 (Age 43 years) |
Birth of a daughter #11 | Elizabeth Julia McCulloch 1821 (Age 44 years) |
Birth of a daughter #12 | Adelaide Delia McCulloch 1825 (Age 48 years) |
Death of a son | Samuel McCulloch 1826 (Age 49 years) |
Birth of a son #13 | Andrew Jackson McCulloch 1829 (Age 52 years) |
Death of a brother | Benjamin McCulloch 1829 (Age 52 years) |
Residence | The family moved to a 10,000 acre land grant in Dyer County, Western Tennessee, which ran from the Forked Deer river near Dyersburg north to the Obion river. Their neighbours were the Crocketts. David Crockett and Benjamin McCulloch became good friends. 1829 (Age 52 years) |
Death of a son | Andrew Jackson McCulloch 1830 (Age 53 years) |
Death of a daughter | Sarah Montfort Stokes McCulloch 1839 (Age 62 years) |
Marriage of a child | Brigadier General Henry Eustace McCulloch — Jane Isabella Ashby — View this family 25 August 1840 (Age 64 years) |
Death of a daughter | Harriet Maria McCulloch 1840 (Age 63 years) |
Death of a daughter | Mary Ann McCulloch 1846 (Age 69 years) |
Death | 4 August 1846 (Age 69 years) |
Burial | He is buried three miles from Dyersburg, Tennessee, on a low hill not far from the main highway out to the Mississippi River. The stone of marble and 5 feet high, is still (1963) in very good condition, though wild honeysuckle vines have almost covered it. 4 August 1846 (on the date of death) |
Family with parents |
father |
Benjamin McCulloch Birth: 1737 22 21 — Halifax County, North Carolina, USA Death: 1809 — Edenton, Chowan, North Carolina, USA |
mother |
Sarah Montfort Stokes Birth: about 1744 — North Carolina, USA Death: 1799 |
Marriage: 1758 — |
|
3 years elder brother |
|
17 years himself |
Major Alexander McCulloch Birth: 16 August 1776 39 32 — Lunenburg County, Virginia, USA Death: 4 August 1846 — Dyer County, Tennessee, USA |
brother | |
sister | |
sister |
Sarah McCulloch Death: Europe |
sister |
Family with Frances Fisher Lenoir |
himself |
Major Alexander McCulloch Birth: 16 August 1776 39 32 — Lunenburg County, Virginia, USA Death: 4 August 1846 — Dyer County, Tennessee, USA |
wife |
Frances Fisher Lenoir Birth: 11 April 1780 — Dinwiddie County, Virginia, USA Death: 10 May 1866 — Ellis County, Texas, USA |
Marriage: 11 September 1800 — Nashville, Davidson, Tennessee, USA |
|
4 months son |
Alexander McCulloch Birth: 1800 23 19 — Nashville, Davidson, Tennessee, USA Death: 1866 — Weakley County, Tennessee, USA |
2 years daughter |
Sarah Montfort Stokes McCulloch Birth: 1801 24 20 — Davidson County, Tennessee, USA Death: 1839 |
3 years son |
|
3 years son |
Samuel McCulloch Birth: 1805 28 24 — Rutherford County, Tennessee, USA Death: 1826 — Florence, Lauderdale, Alabama, USA |
3 years daughter |
Mary Ann McCulloch Birth: 1807 30 26 — Rutherford County, Tennessee, USA Death: 1846 — Gonzales County, Texas, USA |
3 years daughter |
Francis Olivia McCulloch Birth: 1809 32 28 — Rutherford County, Tennessee, USA |
3 years son |
Major General Benjamin McCulloch Birth: 11 November 1811 35 31 — Rutherford County, Tennessee, USA Death: Noon on March 7th 1862 the battle opened, and raged most severely. Davis fought desperately with McCulloch, McIntosh and Pike. When the battle cleared the field was strewn with dead. The Confederates fled leaving their dead including General McCulloch. — 7 March 1862 — Pea Ridge, Ozark County, Missouri, USA |
3 years daughter |
Harriet Maria McCulloch Birth: 1814 37 33 — Rutherford County, Tennessee, USA Death: 1840 |
3 years son |
Brigadier General Henry Eustace McCulloch Birth: 6 December 1816 40 36 — Rutherford County, Tennessee, USA Death: 12 March 1895 — Rockport, Aransas County, Texas, USA |
2 years son |
James Coffee McCulloch Birth: 4 February 1819 42 38 — Rutherford County, Tennessee, USA Death: 16 January 1866 — Ellis County, Texas, USA |
3 years daughter |
Elizabeth Julia McCulloch Birth: 1821 44 40 — Lawrence County, Alabama, USA Death: 1891 — Dyer County, Tennessee, USA |
5 years daughter |
Adelaide Delia McCulloch Birth: 1825 48 44 — Laurence, Alabama, USA |
5 years son |
Andrew Jackson McCulloch Birth: 1829 52 48 — Dyer County, Tennessee, USA Death: 1830 — Dyer County, Tennessee, USA |
Note | Alexander McCulloch died in 1846 in Dyer County, Tennessee and the sterling character of the man is shewn in an obituary notice written by the Reverend G. M. D. Harris who was for many years a presiding elder in the Methodist Episcopal Church, a neighbour and intimate personal friend of Alexander McCulloch, and which appeared in the Nashville Christian Advocate ‘It is with mournful pleasure that I announce to you and the readers of your Journal, the death of my old, well tried friend, Major Alexander McCulloch. His death took place in Dyer County, Tennessee, on the night of the 4th of August 1846, after an illness of three weeks, during which period his sufferings were extreme. It, however, pleased a Gracious Providence to favour him all the time with his reason, and being confident, as he often stated, during his illness, that his sickness would be unto death, he deliberately arranged his temporal affairs, set his house in order, and waited the summons of the Lord, in the comforting assurance of a gracious immortality. His religion was both experimental and practical, uniting the power with the form of godliness. In the person of Major McCulloch, grace achieved much, for by nature he was not only high minded, but high tempered, impetuous, and a stern man, whose heart was never assailed by the passion of fear. But grace subdued the lion and gave a happy direction to the energetic mind, bringing in to captivity all to the obedience of Christ. As a neighbour, he was kind: as a friend, he was sincere: as a husband, he was affectionate: as a parent and a master, he was tender. But that which spread a serene lustre upon his whole life was his unshirking piety. He was born in Lunenburg County, Virginia, August 16th 1776 and was happily converted to God in Alabama in 1821. He soon after united himself with the Methodist Episcopal Church and to the day of his death exercised the joint office of class leader and circuit steward, and in the latter capacity he had but few equals and no superior. And in his advanced age, bad weather nor distance of place prevented his personal attendance at quarterly meeting. His religion was not only a principle, but a feeling. Though I have been connected with him in different periods for the last fifteen years, I cannot remember a single instance when he was not present at quarterly meeting. Love governed his soul, peace kept his heart and that sacred peace often kindled into holy joy especially during his last affliction, as he frequently remarked, that though his earthly tabernacle was fast dissolving he had a better house above, eternal in the heavens. To say that he had no faults would be to deny that he was human. But this we may safely affirm, that those who knew his faults, knew also his virtues. I yield to the truth of his death with a sorrowful heart, for I knew him well, and loved him much. But that sorrow is greatly moderated by the comforting hope that I shall soon see him again in that house whose maker and builder is God. |
Media object | Alexander McCulloch Headstone at plantation 001 Format: application/octet-stream Type: Other |
Media object | Alexander McCulloch Headstone at plantation 002 Format: application/octet-stream Type: Other |