Old Times There Are Not Forgotten...

Captain Al Franklin

I have always loved hearing my mother tell tales of my  great-grandfather ( on my mother's side ), Elijah Olbert Linch, his brother Captain William David Linch,  my fourth great-grandfather, Patriot Lt. James Young; my fourth great grandfather Patriot Captain Fredrick Gray; my fifth great grandfather, Patriot Captain William Dawkins; my fourth great grandfather Patriot Adam Wideman;  my fifth great grandfather Patriot John Harris; my fourth great grandfather Patriot John Creagh; my fourth great grandfather, Patriot Owen Lee; my 5th great grandfather, Patriot William Carmichael; my second cousin six times removed, Patriot Captain Thomas Lynch, Jr , a Signer of the Decloration of Independence from the State of South Carolina; and on my fathers side my  fourth great grandfather, Patriot John McMullan, a tailor who made General ( President ) George Washington's first military uniform;  my fifth great grandfather, Patriot Mark Stowers; and my 4th great grandfather, Patriot William McKenzie; and my 6th great grand uncle, Patriot Benjamine Franklin, a Signor of the Decloration of Independence.

 A family tree of the predecessors and descents of this author is available. 

This feature will be mostly about my great-grandfather, Elijah Olbert Linch with links to the others.

Elijah and his brother William David Linch, were grandsons of Reverend Elijah Linch of Newberry, South Carolina. He began preaching in June, 1799.  The Reverend was the son of David Lynch and Ester Embry of Newberry, SC, and was born on June 28, 1773 and died August 10, 1842.  He married Elizabeth Chapman ( daughter of Joseph Chapman ) on  October 27, 1792. He and his wife are buried in Newberry, SC, in a cemetery known as Chapman- Summers cemetery ( Old Dunker ).

The reason the name is spelled Linch and not Lynch is due to the error of a surveyor making the deed to some property. To keep the property in the family, the name was thereon spelled Linch. This spelling confusion became evident when I visited the graves of Rev Elijah and his wife Elizabeth in Prosperity, SC; his marker is spelled Linch and hers is spelled Lynch.

Elijah and William David are sons of David Linch and his wife Mary Beam of South Carolina. David and Mary Linch were true pioneers of Georgia. They came by wagon and team, along the McIntosh Indian Trail, blazing their way through the virgin Georgia woods. My mother remembers tales of their piano falling from their horse drawn wagon into the Savannah River during the crossing. The piano ended up in their grandson David's home in Turin, GA, until age and use took its toll on the old instrument. They settled on a small rolling hill overlooking a creek in Coweta County near the town of Turin. Deer and wild turkey visited this pristine creek daily. It is here that they cleared the land ( with the help of a girl slave and two boy slaves they brought with them ), built their home, farmed  and raised their family. The old home is no longer standing; age and neglect took its toll and it was demolished in 1971. They were among the founders of the Harmony Univeralist Church near the town of Senoia, GA. This church still stands today.

Elijah joined the Phillips Georgia Cavalry Legion  Company D on August 2, 1861 in Marietta, GA.  Be sure to visit the Philips Legion web site to see Biographies - Photos - Reminiscences. Elijah  was mustered into the Confederate Cavalry in Lynchburg. VA , on September 11, 1861. He fought in many campaigns as a horse soldier.

On April 26, 1864, by Special Order 113/4 signed by R.E. Lee, General, Army of Northern Virginia, he was mysteriously transferred to the Confederate States Navy ( as were 13 other cavalry men, 2 were from the 1st NC Cavalry, 3 from the 2nd NC Cavalry, 3 from Cobb's Legion Cavalry, 3 from Jeff Davis Legion Cavalry, 1 from the 3rd VA Cavalry, and T J Moore and Elijah from Phillips Georgia Legion Cavalry ) at Richmond, VA, to Commander Fredrick Chatard. He served on the brigantine-rigged Confederate steamer, CSS Patrick Henry. It is here that the paper trail of his service seams to disappear. Strange that they would move veteran horse solders to the Navy. Apparently this practice was fairly common for the blockade-runners.

My mother, Martha Jeanette Linch Franklin, clearly remembers her grandmother, Jeanette Henrietta Tench ( Mammy ), Elijah's wife, tell her tails about his days as a confederate cavalry soldier and blockade-running quasi pirate.

Today, I fly the confederate battle flag on our charter boat, the Giant Stride, in memory of my Great grandfather and the pirate  flag in honor of my 4th g grandfather Adam Wideman.

Elijah never applied for a veteran's pension, however, his wife did apply for his pension in 1919. She had apparently lost her copy of his parole papers, but she does certify that "it was dated at Wilmington, NC and gave his height, weight, color of his eyes, also age and complexion". Another certification from her granddaughter Frances E Gray and she states " I am the grand-daughter of applicant and have visited her house often, before and after the death of my grandfather E.O. Linch, and frequently before the death of my grandfather and since I have been shown a paper discharging him from the Confederate Navy. I remember well that said discharge was dated at Wilmington, NC, and gave a description of my grandfather at the time of his discharge. I saw this discharge as late or later than the year he 1913, when my grandmother moved back to the farm from Newnan, GA,  but in the subsequent confusion of moving and straightening up again the paper was lost."

After the war ended, Elijah returned to his home in a tiny Coweta County, GA, town, Turin ( previously called Preston ). He then resumed farming the vast plantation land.

Elijah married Jeanette H Tench April 2, 1868, in Coweta County, GA and they produced the following offspring: Mary Eleanor, Harriet Fluellen, David Chapman, Clerance Montmorenci, Giles Fitzhugh, John Harry, William Fredrick Creagh (my grandfather, my mother's father).

Elijah died June 24, 1907, at his home in Coweta County, and was  laid to rest in the old family cemetery out in the ( once ) piney woods near Turin, GA, The cemetery is called the Elder-Linch Cemetery. It is named for the two families that started it. His wife Jeanette died on October 3, 1934, at the age of 87 and is buried there also. Her death date was somehow inadvertently omitted from the grave marker.

Elijah's grave is marked with a Veterans Administration marker indicating he served in the Civil War. This author obtained the marker and did its installation.

The records of the cemetery's location were not to be found. My mother did an excellent job of directing me to its general vicinity. This cemetery is located down a dirt trail past an old wooden barn ( a weathered old board from this  barn now holds Elijah's old 12 gauge, L C Smith shotgun that hangs on the wall in my den and other barn boards were hand cut into frames for photographs of Elijah, his brother and his ship ) not far from the intersection of Elder Mill Road and Hall Road in Turin, Georgia.  After a day searching with friends from Fayette County, GA, it was located about a half mile back in the thick Georgia piney woods. Note: Latitude: 33.295, Longitude: -84.6303.

Vandals have desecrated many of the graves. The ornamental iron fence and gate surrounding the cemetery has been stolen. Neglect and the forces of nature have harmed others. Elijah's parents, David Linch and his wife Mary's grave was destroyed by a falling tree, remains of the monument can still be seen. However, Elijah and Jeanette's is in excellent condition, with little destruction, as are several others.

Unnamed slave grave markers can still be found off in the thick woods and verdant underbrush in the woods to the South of the family plot.

Standing there in a March ( 1999 ) chill, peering at Elijah's final resting place in the pristine woods makes me wish that I had had the opportunity to 'climb up on his knee', as Jimmy Buffett sang about his grandfather, and listen to his many tales about the great war for southern independence and rural farming life in nineteenth century Georgia. I placed a small Confederate Battle Flag on his grave.

Let's not ever forget those who risked it all so that we can be free today. Don't let your forefathers take their knowledge of the past to the grave with them. We must study the past to better prepare for the future.

Look away, look away, Dixie's Land...


note: the background music lyrics are available

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