William Whitson

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'''William Whitson''' (-1838)
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'''Major William F Whitson, Jr''' (-1836)
  
Founder of Whitsontown, Crawford County, Arkansas.  In Dec 1837, the Arkansas State Legislature created [[Franklin County, Arkansas]] out of the eastern half of Crawford. William Whitson was killed by John Lasater over a dispute as to where the county seat for Franklin should be located.
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Major William F Whitson was the founder of Whitsontown, [[Crawford County, Arkansas|Crawford County]], [[Arkansas]], a town which no longer exists. William Whitson was living by 1832 in Crawford County where he appears on a tax list.  In 1835 he was a representative to the State Assembly.  Whitson kept a store, and it's likely that the assets and debts listed in his probate are related to store accounts.
  
Lasater was acquited of murder and Harriet, William's widow moved back to Tennessee with her childrenWilliam died intestate and due to what I'm assuming to be Harriet's reluctance to administer and the minority of the heirs, Jesse Turner was called to be administrator "de bonis non" on the estate of William Whitson. The bond by Jesse Turner with Jesse Miller and Arthur Hicks was signed 17 Apr 1838.
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After an exchange of insulting letters published in the newspaper, William Whitson was killed by State Senator [[John Lasater]] on 5 Dec 1836 over a dispute as to where the county seat for Crawford should be locatedIt was then in Whitson's store and Lasater wanted it moved closer to his own property.
  
At the time of his death, William Whitson was in a business partnership with Charles Whitson.  Although Charles was of an age to possibly be his nephew, no firm documentation has yet come-to-light to specify how they were related.
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At the time of his death, William Whitson was in a business partnership with Charles Whitson.  Although Charles was of an age to possibly be his nephew, no firm documentation has yet come-to-light to specify how they were related.  The Whitson's, or at least William, had evidently come there recently from [[Louisiana]].
  
It seems that at the time of his death, William has not *yet* acquired clear legal title to his land, as the [http://www.glorecords.blm.gov/PatentSearch/Image.asp?Accession=AR0850%5F%5F%2E156&Format=SmallGIF&Page=1&Index=26&QryID=74508%2E87 land document itself] is dated [[Aug 26]], 1838 for the "West Half of the South East Quarter of Section Six" and also [http://www.glorecords.blm.gov/PatentSearch/Image.asp?Accession=AR0850%5F%5F%2E442&Format=SmallGIF&Page=1&Index=27&QryID=74508%2E87 this document] on the same date for the "South Half of the South West quarter of Section Seventeen"
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Lasater was charged with murder, but acquited on the grounds of self-defense. William's widow Harriet with her children, moved back to Wayne County, [[Tennessee]], near one of her brothers.  William had died intestate, and their children were all minors. At first Charles Whitson, his former partner, was appointed administrator on 4 Jan 1837 in the then-Crawford County. Although the probate documents from Crawford are destroyed, the notice of this appointment was published in the ''Arkansas Advocate'' newspaper on 10 Apr 1837.  In December 1837, the Western-half of Crawford County was split off to form Franklin County and the probate moved into this new court was one of the first handled in Franklin County.
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At the April 1838 term of the Franklin County probate court, that administration was transferred to [[Jesse Turner]] who was called to be administrator "de bonis non" on the estate of William Whitson, presumably because neither Charles, nor Harriet, wished to do it.  Harriet may have already moved by this time. The new bond in the amount of $800, by Jesse Turner with Jesse Miller and Arthur Hicks as guarentors, was signed 17 Apr 1838 in Franklin County, Arkansas which had just formed a few months earlier out of the Western half of Crawford County.
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It seems that at the time of his death, William had '''not yet''' acquired clear legal title to his land, as the [http://www.glorecords.blm.gov/PatentSearch/Image.asp?Accession=AR0850%5F%5F%2E156&Format=SmallGIF&Page=1&Index=26&QryID=74508%2E87 land document itself] is dated 20 Aug 1838 for the "West Half of the South East Quarter of Section Six" and also [http://www.glorecords.blm.gov/PatentSearch/Image.asp?Accession=AR0850%5F%5F%2E442&Format=SmallGIF&Page=1&Index=27&QryID=74508%2E87 this document] on the same date for the "South Half of the South West quarter of Section Seventeen".. Perhaps his surviving partner Charles Whitson completed the paperwork, as [http://www.glorecords.blm.gov/PatentSearch/Image.asp?Accession=AR0860%5F%5F%2E031&Format=SmallGIF&Page=1&Index=2&QryID=74508%2E87 this document] for Charles for the North West quarter of the South West quarter of Section seventeen" might seem to indicate, since it was also done on the same day.  Also see [http://www.glorecords.blm.gov/PatentSearch/Image.asp?Accession=AR0860%5F%5F%2E366&Format=SmallGIF&Page=1&Index=15&QryID=74508%2E87 this document] for "John Witherspoon Whitson" for the West half of the NorthEast quarter of Section Six and [http://www.glorecords.blm.gov/PatentSearch/Image.asp?Accession=AR0850%5F%5F%2E444&Format=SmallGIF&Page=1&Index=17&QryID=74508%2E87 this one] for "the North West quarter of the North East quarter of Section seven and [http://www.glorecords.blm.gov/PatentSearch/Image.asp?Accession=AR0860%5F%5F%2E190&Format=SmallGIF&Page=1&Index=18&QryID=74508%2E87 this one] for "the East half of the North West quarter of Section eight".
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On 10 Oct 1838, John Witherspoon Whitson, came back to Arkansas (or had never left with his mother) and killed Lasater.  He was charged with murder and ran, apparently to Tennessee, where he told his family that they'd never be able to see him again.  His surviving sister would tell the story that he changed his name to Johnson and she never heard from him again.  His trail however has now been traced by  Cathleen Sato a descendent of that sister, and she has writen up her research [http://www.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~arcrawfo/doc/Shootings1836.html here].
  
 
===Primary documentation===
 
===Primary documentation===
 
*[http://search.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/sse.dll?db=arcen&so=2&rank=0&tips=0&gsfn=William&gsln=Whitson&sx=&gs1co=1%2cAll+Countries&gs1pl=1%2c+&year=&yearend=&sbo=0&sbor=&ufr=0&wp=4%3b_80000002%3b_80000003&srchb=r&prox=1&db=&ti=0&ti.si=0&gss=angs-c&o_iid=21416&o_lid=21416&o_it=5910 ''Arkansas Census, 1819-70''], at Ancestry showing that William Whitson was on the Tax list of Crawford County, Arkansas 1832, 1833, 1834, and 1835
 
*[http://search.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/sse.dll?db=arcen&so=2&rank=0&tips=0&gsfn=William&gsln=Whitson&sx=&gs1co=1%2cAll+Countries&gs1pl=1%2c+&year=&yearend=&sbo=0&sbor=&ufr=0&wp=4%3b_80000002%3b_80000003&srchb=r&prox=1&db=&ti=0&ti.si=0&gss=angs-c&o_iid=21416&o_lid=21416&o_it=5910 ''Arkansas Census, 1819-70''], at Ancestry showing that William Whitson was on the Tax list of Crawford County, Arkansas 1832, 1833, 1834, and 1835
 
*[http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~wjhonson/FranklinARK/ProbateWilliamWhitson.html Loose Probate Packet of William Whitson]
 
*[http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~wjhonson/FranklinARK/ProbateWilliamWhitson.html Loose Probate Packet of William Whitson]
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*[http://archiver.rootsweb.com/th/read/AFHA/2005-07/1120886359 Posting] showing a few newspaper accounts regarding the murder.
  
 
===Secondary sources===
 
===Secondary sources===
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*[http://www.webbercreek.com/foot2.html A Compendium of Arkansas Community Place Names], note 6 : "The probable reason for the removal of the county seat from "Whitson's Place" was the death of William Whitson. On December 15, 1836, "State Representative John Lassiter killed Wm. Whitson in a dispute over the re-location of Crawford Courthouse to Whitson's Store at Whitsontown... Although the court ruled it to be a case of self-defense, John W. Whitson, son of the deceased, killed Lassiter on October 10, 1838, in revenge... Lassiter and his wife Mary, who died in 1840, are buried in the southeast section of Fairview Cemetery in Van Buren." (From:Crawford County Arkansas Notebook: A History in Chronological Form, 1820-1920, By Clovis E. Miller. 1991, Page 96)"
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*[http://content.ancestry.com/iexec/?htx=view&r=an&dbid=7931&iid=HistBenton-AR-0615640&rc=1281,740,1416,773;1436,740,1576,774&fn=william&ln=whitson&st=d&ssrc=&pid=615 ''History of Benton, Washington, Carroll, Madison, Crawford, Franklin, and Sebastian Counties, Arkansas.''] Chicago, IL, USA: Goodspeed Publishing, 1889. "History of Franklin County", Page 611 where in a "list of persons who entered land in Franklin County before 1840" we find "...William Whitson, 1834, 6-10-28..." which means that in 1834, he entered on Section 6 of Range 10 North in Township 28 West.
 
*[http://content.ancestry.com/iexec/?htx=view&r=an&dbid=7931&iid=HistBenton-AR-0615640&rc=1281,740,1416,773;1436,740,1576,774&fn=william&ln=whitson&st=d&ssrc=&pid=615 ''History of Benton, Washington, Carroll, Madison, Crawford, Franklin, and Sebastian Counties, Arkansas.''] Chicago, IL, USA: Goodspeed Publishing, 1889. "History of Franklin County", Page 611 where in a "list of persons who entered land in Franklin County before 1840" we find "...William Whitson, 1834, 6-10-28..." which means that in 1834, he entered on Section 6 of Range 10 North in Township 28 West.
  
 
*[http://content.ancestry.com/iexec/?htx=view&r=an&dbid=7931&iid=HistBenton-AR-0514640&rc=863,856,1026,897;1039,856,1211,897&fn=william&ln=whitson&st=d&ssrc=&pid=514 ''History of Benton, Washington, Carroll, Madison, Crawford, Franklin, and Sebastian Counties, Arkansas.''] Chicago, IL, USA: Goodspeed Publishing, 1889. "History of Crawford County", Page 511 mentioning that in the Eighth Arkansas Territorial Assembly (1835), William Whitson was Representative from Crawford County.
 
*[http://content.ancestry.com/iexec/?htx=view&r=an&dbid=7931&iid=HistBenton-AR-0514640&rc=863,856,1026,897;1039,856,1211,897&fn=william&ln=whitson&st=d&ssrc=&pid=514 ''History of Benton, Washington, Carroll, Madison, Crawford, Franklin, and Sebastian Counties, Arkansas.''] Chicago, IL, USA: Goodspeed Publishing, 1889. "History of Crawford County", Page 511 mentioning that in the Eighth Arkansas Territorial Assembly (1835), William Whitson was Representative from Crawford County.
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*[http://www.rootsweb.com/~arcrawfo/doc/Shootings1836.html "The Shootings of Col. William Whitson and State Senator John Lasater, 1836-1838, in Crawford/Franklin Co., Arkansas : And the escape of John Witherspoon Whitson : The true story of a 70 year old secret and a 166 year old family mystery"] by Cathleen M. Sato
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[[Category:Arkansas]]
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[[Category:California]]
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[[Category:Tennessee]]

Latest revision as of 13:32, 7 May 2008

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