Susan was 20 years old when she married the 34-year old lawyer and politician, Kenneth Rayner of Bertie Co, NC, on July 12, 1842. The marriage resulted in 8 known children being born: Mary Brown Rayner(1843-1844); Sallie Polk Rayner (1844-1905), who married Col. Joseph Henry Hyman of Tarboro and moved to Texas; Henry Albert Rayner (1847-1859); Kenneth Rayner Jr. (1849-1885); Fannie Polk Rayner (1851-1855); Susan Polk Rayner (1855-1910), who married Arthur Glennan; William Polk Rayner (1857-1885); and Hamilton Polk Rayner (1860-1932).
At one point, the Rayners lived in Col. William Polk's house who had died in 1834. The house, which was a grand residence in those days, had built by the Colonel just out of the city limits, fronting Blount Street. Later, in 1872, this house, after being owned by Hon. Kenneth Rayner for many years, was moved to one side to allow for the extension of Blount Street in Raleigh.
After the Civil War, her husband's political prospects had wained, and he removed the family to Memphis, Tennessee and from there to Mississippi (much to Susan's dismay, as she hated country life), where he owned cotton plantations as he did in Arkansas. These ventures went belly up, and Rayner, ill and depressed, declared bankruptcy in 1868.
Although for almost 30 years, Susan Polk Rayner had refused to spend Summers on the NC plantations they owned, after Rayner went bankrupt, she boldly checked out land without consulting her husband. In 1869, she used the remainder of her own legacy to purchase a farm south of Memphis in Desoto Co, MS, where she moved the family. This moved helped the family recoup their finances, and but she was delighted when her husband received the political appointment in 1874, and they could move to Washington, DC.
The Hon. Kenneth Rayner died in Washington, DC in 1888, at the age of 75. His remains were returned to Raleigh where he was interred at Old City Cemetery in Raleigh, NC, near 3 of his children: Mary Brown Rayner, Henry Albert Rayner, and Fannie Polk Rayner.
His widow, Susan Polk Rayner, moved to Texas, as did her surviving children. She died 25 years after her husband, passing in 1909 at age 87.
His sons seemed to have inherited is fiery temper and penchant for brawling. While deputy US revenue collector in Fort Worth, William Polk Rayner, killed the proprietor of a gambling hall in a conflict over a woman of dubious character. He pleaded self-defense at his trial and was acquitted. He was a Deputy US Marshal in Dallas, then moved to El Paso where late one night in 1885 while he was gambling in a saloon with Wyatt Earp, a brawl erupted among the patrons during which Rayner was shot in the arm and abdomen. He died over a month later of his wounds.
Son, Hamilton Polk Rayner, was appointed the town Marshal of Hunnewell, Kansas, a rough cattle town where at the age of 23 he cleared out a gang of ruffians, six-guns blazing. Later served as deputy sheriff in Tarrant and Hood counties, Texas. He was the last surviving son (died 1939) and moved to El Paso to be special agent for the Southern Pacific Railroad and a Texas Ranger.
Susan was 20 years old when she married the 34-year old lawyer and politician, Kenneth Rayner of Bertie Co, NC, on July 12, 1842. The marriage resulted in 8 known children being born: Mary Brown Rayner(1843-1844); Sallie Polk Rayner (1844-1905), who married Col. Joseph Henry Hyman of Tarboro and moved to Texas; Henry Albert Rayner (1847-1859); Kenneth Rayner Jr. (1849-1885); Fannie Polk Rayner (1851-1855); Susan Polk Rayner (1855-1910), who married Arthur Glennan; William Polk Rayner (1857-1885); and Hamilton Polk Rayner (1860-1932).
At one point, the Rayners lived in Col. William Polk's house who had died in 1834. The house, which was a grand residence in those days, had built by the Colonel just out of the city limits, fronting Blount Street. Later, in 1872, this house, after being owned by Hon. Kenneth Rayner for many years, was moved to one side to allow for the extension of Blount Street in Raleigh.
After the Civil War, her husband's political prospects had wained, and he removed the family to Memphis, Tennessee and from there to Mississippi (much to Susan's dismay, as she hated country life), where he owned cotton plantations as he did in Arkansas. These ventures went belly up, and Rayner, ill and depressed, declared bankruptcy in 1868.
Although for almost 30 years, Susan Polk Rayner had refused to spend Summers on the NC plantations they owned, after Rayner went bankrupt, she boldly checked out land without consulting her husband. In 1869, she used the remainder of her own legacy to purchase a farm south of Memphis in Desoto Co, MS, where she moved the family. This moved helped the family recoup their finances, and but she was delighted when her husband received the political appointment in 1874, and they could move to Washington, DC.
The Hon. Kenneth Rayner died in Washington, DC in 1888, at the age of 75. His remains were returned to Raleigh where he was interred at Old City Cemetery in Raleigh, NC, near 3 of his children: Mary Brown Rayner, Henry Albert Rayner, and Fannie Polk Rayner.
His widow, Susan Polk Rayner, moved to Texas, as did her surviving children. She died 25 years after her husband, passing in 1909 at age 87.
His sons seemed to have inherited is fiery temper and penchant for brawling. While deputy US revenue collector in Fort Worth, William Polk Rayner, killed the proprietor of a gambling hall in a conflict over a woman of dubious character. He pleaded self-defense at his trial and was acquitted. He was a Deputy US Marshal in Dallas, then moved to El Paso where late one night in 1885 while he was gambling in a saloon with Wyatt Earp, a brawl erupted among the patrons during which Rayner was shot in the arm and abdomen. He died over a month later of his wounds.
Son, Hamilton Polk Rayner, was appointed the town Marshal of Hunnewell, Kansas, a rough cattle town where at the age of 23 he cleared out a gang of ruffians, six-guns blazing. Later served as deputy sheriff in Tarrant and Hood counties, Texas. He was the last surviving son (died 1939) and moved to El Paso to be special agent for the Southern Pacific Railroad and a Texas Ranger.
Family Members
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Lucius Junius Polk
1802–1870
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Lucinda Davis Polk
1804–1805
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Leonidas Polk
1806–1864
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Rev William J Polk
1806–1864
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Mary Brown Polk Badger
1808–1835
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Alexander Hamilton Polk
1810–1830
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John Hawkins Polk
1812–1813
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Rufus King Polk
1814–1846
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George Washington Polk
1817–1892
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Andrew Jackson Polk Sr
1824–1867
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Charles Junius Polk
1828–1831