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Sarah Sally Hickman Lincecum

Birth
Anson County, North Carolina, USA
Death
28 May 1848 (aged 73)
Catahoula, St. Martin Parish, Louisiana, USA
Burial
Burial Details Unknown Add to Map
Memorial ID
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Daughter of William Hickman and Marie (Hornbeck) Hickman
Wife of Hezekiah Lincecum
Mother of Grant Lincecum; Garland Lincecum; Gideon Lincecum; Rezin Bowie Lincecum; Green Lincecum; Thronton Lincecum; Mary Lincecum; Gabriel Lincecum; Emily Lincecum and Polly Lincecum
Sister of John Brona Hickman Sr and James Hickman.

Gideon Lincecum, Sarah Lincecum's son described his Mother:

There was nothing remarkable except that she could out run anybody was hansom healthy energetic ingenious industrious frugal but entirely illiterate.

He was at the 1830 Treaty of Dancing Rabbit Creek Choctaw Nation and It was Lincecum's testimony that "no treaty could have been made but for the solemn assurances of the commissioners that all might stay and keep their homes who did not wish to go, and the Indians distinctly understood that this was put down as part of the treaty." He wrote about seeing his friends the Choctaw Indians passing by his home on the trail of tears.
Daughter of William Hickman and Marie (Hornbeck) Hickman
Wife of Hezekiah Lincecum
Mother of Grant Lincecum; Garland Lincecum; Gideon Lincecum; Rezin Bowie Lincecum; Green Lincecum; Thronton Lincecum; Mary Lincecum; Gabriel Lincecum; Emily Lincecum and Polly Lincecum
Sister of John Brona Hickman Sr and James Hickman.

Gideon Lincecum, Sarah Lincecum's son described his Mother:

There was nothing remarkable except that she could out run anybody was hansom healthy energetic ingenious industrious frugal but entirely illiterate.

He was at the 1830 Treaty of Dancing Rabbit Creek Choctaw Nation and It was Lincecum's testimony that "no treaty could have been made but for the solemn assurances of the commissioners that all might stay and keep their homes who did not wish to go, and the Indians distinctly understood that this was put down as part of the treaty." He wrote about seeing his friends the Choctaw Indians passing by his home on the trail of tears.


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