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My grandmother Gertrude's parents were Peter "Pete" Belton and Angeline Bass. Pete was born around 1880 in Warren County, Mississippi. Angeline was born around 1879 also in Warren County. They had two children: Jake Belton (1903) and my grandmother, Gertrude. I believe Pete Belton died shortly before or after Gertrude was born because Angeline was a widow by 1910, according to the 1910 Warren County census. Angeline later had another daughter, Pearlie Mae Weakley. Angeline later married a man named Henry Dennis, and they moved to the Nitta Yuma community of Sharkey County, Mississippi.
Great-Great Grandparents: In the 1870 and 1900 Warren County census, I found a man named Peter Belton. He was born in or around 1845 in Mississippi. Peter was the only Belton in Warren County in 1870. He's very likely the father of my great grandfather, who was also named Peter Belton. In 1900, this Peter Belton was married to a Bettie Belton (age 30), and their children included: Henry Belton, Martha Belton, Alexander Belton, Sarah Belton, and Frank Belton. Based on research findings, it is believed that Peter Belton was born into slavery on one of the Ross Plantations in Jefferson County, Mississippi. He and a relative named Jack Ross likely migrated to Warren County shortly after the Civil War.
One or both of Peter
Belton's parents were likely once enslaved by a wealthy planter, Capt. Isaac
Ross, of Jefferson County, Mississippi. Further research found that all of
the Beltons residing in southwest Mississippi right after slavery had either
been enslaved by Capt. Isaac Ross, or one or both of their parents had been
slaves of Ross. Isaac Ross migrated to Jefferson County, Mississippi in
1808, transporting approximately 200 slaves with him from Kershaw County,
South Carolina. His slaves built Prospect Hill Plantation, located several
miles north of present-day Alcorn State University. Before joining the
exodus of planters from the East, Isaac Ross purchased a number of his
slaves from the Belton family of Kershaw County. Those slaves were the
ancestors of the Belton families of southwest Mississippi after slavery.
Some of them were also the grandparents of my great-great grandfather, Peter
Belton. During their time of enslavement on Prospect Hill Plantation, those
slaves held on to the Belton surname, and their offspring who were fortunate
to survive slavery carried on this surname.
Great-Great-Great Grandparents: According to John Bass's Freedman's Bank application, his parents were named Tom Bowden & Beady --. They were from somewhere in North Carolina. Research is being done to determine what happened to John's parents, and why he chose the Bass surname rather than Bowden. A man named Thomas Bowden was found in the 1880 census in Richmond County, North Carolina. There is evidence that he may have been John Bass's father, but more research is being done. Other children of Beady probably included Eliza Newman, Oscar Hatcher or Oscar Birdsong, and Mimy Hatcher. Their names were listed on John Bass's Freedman's Bank application as being his sisters and brother. They were all living in Warren County, Mississippi after 1865. Eliza was married to a man named George Newman, and they relocated to Issaquena County, Mississippi by 1900. Eliza's children included Senaker Potter, Belle Potter, and Susan Potter Summerville/Somerville. It is uncertain why Oscar and Mimy chose the Hatcher surname.
It is
believed that John Bass and his siblings were sold away from their father in North
Carolina and transported to Mississippi, and thus took the surname of their last
enslavers. Mimy Hatcher migrated to Cairo, Illinois with her daughter
and her family. There is evidence that John Bass and his siblings were
related to Senaker Hatcher and Jackson Bass, who lived
next-door to each other in Hinds County, MS in 1870. Senaker Hatcher
migrated to Cairo, Illinois by 1880. There is evidence that Senaker
Hatcher and Jackson Bass were brothers, but it is unknown why they took
different surnames, like Grandpa John Bass and his siblings.
E-mail
Melvin J. Collier
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