Samuel Jackson Hays (–November 3, 1866) was an American militia officer, lawyer, slave owner, plantation owner, and railroad investor in west Tennessee. His father was
Robert Hays
Robert Blakely Hays (born July 24, 1947) is an American actor, known for a variety of television and film roles since the 1970s. He came to prominence around 1980, co-starring in the two-season domestic sitcom ''Angie (TV series), Angie'', and ...
and his uncle was President
Andrew Jackson
Andrew Jackson (March 15, 1767 – June 8, 1845) was the seventh president of the United States from 1829 to 1837. Before Presidency of Andrew Jackson, his presidency, he rose to fame as a general in the U.S. Army and served in both houses ...
; Jackson's wife
Rachel
Rachel () was a Bible, Biblical figure, the favorite of Jacob's two wives, and the mother of Joseph (Genesis), Joseph and Benjamin, two of the twelve progenitors of the tribes of Israel. Rachel's father was Laban (Bible), Laban. Her older siste ...
and his mother Jane Donelson Hays were sisters. The extended Donelson clan, with Jackson serving as patriarch (founder
John Donelson
John Donelson (1718–1785) was an American frontiersman, ironmaster, politician, city planner, and explorer. After founding and operating what became Washington Iron Furnace in Franklin County, Virginia for several years, he moved with his famil ...
was killed in 1785), is credited with being exceptionally efficient at using kinship networks as profit centers and engaging in what has been described as
vertically integrated
In microeconomics, management and international political economy, vertical integration, also referred to as vertical consolidation, is an arrangement in which the supply chain of a company is integrated and owned by that company. Usually each ...
family-business imperialism: "They fought the native peoples, negotiated the treaties to end the fighting and demanded native lands as the price of war, surveyed the newly available lands, bought those lands, litigated over disputed boundaries, adjudicated the cases, and made and kept laws within the region that had been carved out of Indian lands."
Historian Lorman Ratner described Andrew Jackson as a boy without a father, and a man without sons, which may have motivated him to accept guardianship of dozens of young people who lived with him at various times or whom he assisted legally, financially, or socially. Hays, as a nephew and
ward of Andrew Jackson, was one of the several early participants in and beneficiaries of this system. Hays was one of several wards whom Jackson sent to West Point, and he brought Hays to Washington, D.C. in the first year of his presidency, and then sent him away, considering Hays and his son
Andrew Jackson Jr. to be bad influences on one another. For the remainder of Jackson's life he continued a correspondence with Hays, who served as a key outpost in his social–political network across the U.S. South.
Nominally a lawyer, Hays' income seems to have come from cotton planting and slave ownership, and his power base was his authority as a local militia leader in west Tennessee, which was brought to bear during the American colonization of Texas and the subsequent
Mexican-American War
Mexican Americans are Americans of full or partial Mexican descent. In 2022, Mexican Americans comprised 11.2% of the US population and 58.9% of all Hispanic and Latino Americans. In 2019, 71% of Mexican Americans were born in the United State ...
. He was considered the richest person in
Madison County, Tennessee
Madison County is a county located in the western part of the U.S. state of Tennessee. As of the 2020 census, the population was 98,823. Its county seat is Jackson. Madison County is included in the Jackson metropolitan area.
History
Madis ...
before the American Civil War, and was among the top one percent of slave owners nationwide. Hays died shortly after the end of the war, and his heirs were said to have been impoverished.
Early life
Hays was born at
Haysboro, Tennessee; after his father Robert Hays died in 1819, his mother Jane Donelson Hays moved away from Nashville, and he became
Andrew Jackson's ward, one of several nephews and nieces and children of friends who were taken in at
the Hermitage. Hays was sent to the
U.S. Military Academy
The United States Military Academy (USMA), commonly known as West Point, is a United States service academy in West Point, New York that educates cadets for service as commissioned officers in the United States Army. The academy was founded ...
, entering 1823. This was the same class as
Pierce B. Anderson,
Leonidas Polk
Lieutenant-General Leonidas Polk (April 10, 1806 – June 14, 1864) was a Confederate general, a bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of Louisiana and founder of the Protestant Episcopal Church in the Confederate States of America, which separat ...
,
Abraham Van Buren
Abraham Van Buren (February 17, 1737 – April 8, 1817) was an American businessman and local public official from Kinderhook, New York. A Patriot and militia veteran of the American Revolutionary War, he was the father of Martin Van Buren, t ...
, and
Philip St. George Cooke
Philip St. George Cooke (June 13, 1809 – March 20, 1895) was a career United States Army cavalry officer who served as a Union General in the American Civil War. He is noted for his authorship of an Army cavalry manual, and is sometimes calle ...
. According to a letter Andrew Jackson wrote to another ward, Anthony Wayne Butler (brother of
Edward G. W. Butler), Jackson had paid to outfit Hays for West Point, which was part of why Jackson's finances were tight and he could not lend or give Butler more money. Jackson, who was always preoccupied with the education of his male wards, and who deemed West Point the "best school" in the country, sent several of his charges to the U.S. Military Academy in the 1810s and 1820s.
At West Point he was involved in an alcohol infraction in 1825, along with fellow cadets
Jefferson Davis
Jefferson F. Davis (June 3, 1808December 6, 1889) was an American politician who served as the only President of the Confederate States of America, president of the Confederate States from 1861 to 1865. He represented Mississippi in the Unite ...
, Theophilus Mead, James Allison, and James F. Swift. They were all court-martialled but Davis and Hays were pardoned and returned to duty by
John Quincy Adams
John Quincy Adams (; July 11, 1767 – February 23, 1848) was the sixth president of the United States, serving from 1825 to 1829. He previously served as the eighth United States secretary of state from 1817 to 1825. During his long diploma ...
.
[Fleming 1920] Hays may not have graduated, according to the editors of the ''Papers of Jefferson Davis'' Hays had been
absent without leave and thus resigned in 1826; he later wrote that he had three years at the military academy.
Hays became a lawyer at the
Davidson County, Tennessee
Davidson County is a county in the U.S. state of Tennessee. It is located in the heart of Middle Tennessee. As of the 2020 census, the population was 715,884, making it the 2nd most populous county in Tennessee. Its county seat is Nashville, ...
bar in 1828.
Hays moved at an unknown date with his kinship network of brothers and in-laws and were amongst the earliest settlers of what became Madison County in the Chickasaw lands opened by the
Treaty of Tuscaloosa
A treaty is a formal, legally binding written agreement between sovereign states and/or international organizations that is governed by international law. A treaty may also be known as an international agreement, protocol, covenant, convention ...
, which had been negotiated by Andrew Jackson and
Isaac Shelby
Isaac Shelby (December 11, 1750 – July 18, 1826) was an American politician and military officer who was the List of governors of Kentucky, first and fifth Governor of Kentucky and served in the state legislatures of Virginia and North Ca ...
. Hays' widowed mother lived with him at Hays Hill in Madison County, in what was originally a double log house. The Hays family later bought a house known as Miller Hill, or Bellwood, from Hays' sister's husband,
Robert I. Chester. The town was named Jackson in honor of "Old Hickory," to whom many early settlers had personal ties.
During the no-holds-barred
1828 U.S. presidential campaign, Andrew Jackson's former aide-de-camp
William P. Anderson published letters written by the surgeon on hand during the Jackson–
Dickinson duel of 1806; S. J. Hays wrote a public letter attacking Anderson's character, and Anderson's son Rufus K. Anderson in turn published a rebuttal, criticizing Samuel J. Hays specifically and other Jackson campaign committee members generally. The Jackson papers at
Library of Congress
The Library of Congress (LOC) is a research library in Washington, D.C., serving as the library and research service for the United States Congress and the ''de facto'' national library of the United States. It also administers Copyright law o ...
include a draft of Hays' statement against Anderson.
Hays met his future wife, Frances Pinckney Middleton, at Jackson's 1829 inaugural ball; her uncle was
Arthur Middleton
Arthur Middleton (June 26, 1742 – January 1, 1787) was a Founding Father of the United States, signer of the United States Declaration of Independence, and a representative from South Carolina in the Second Continental Congress.
Life
Middlet ...
, one of the signers of the
United States Declaration of Independence
The Declaration of Independence, formally The unanimous Declaration of the thirteen States of America in the original printing, is the founding document of the United States. On July 4, 1776, it was adopted unanimously by the Second Continen ...
. Jackson brought Samuel Jackson Hays with him to the White House and then sent him away for misbehavior. On March 19, 1829, President Jackson wrote
John Coffee
John R. Coffee (June 2, 1772 – July 7, 1833) was an American planter of English descent, and a state militia brigadier general in Tennessee. He commanded troops under General Andrew Jackson during the Creek Wars (1813–14) and the Battle ...
describing the troubles of two of his wards and his adopted son, now all three young adults:
Shortly thereafter Jackson wrote Coffee that he was sending Hays to "Judge Tuckers law school in few days," meaning the private school run by
Henry St. George Tucker at
Winchester, Virginia
Winchester is the northwesternmost Administrative divisions of Virginia#Independent cities, independent city in the Commonwealth (U.S. state), Commonwealth of Virginia, United States. It is the county seat of Frederick County, Virginia, Frederi ...
. Toward the end of the summer Jackson wrote to Andrew Jackson Jr. that "Saml Hays has been absent a month,
n upstate New Yorkwith
young Mr Van Buren; I have expected him for a fortnight, but I find his mind too unstable to profit here by reading, he cannot nor will not confine himself to his Book, his mind wandering on other & trivial subjects, unprofitable to improvementHe will permit the year to pass without benefit to his mind, & with an purse." Hays proposed to Frances Middleton in August 1829. Andrew Jackson wrote to Middleton's guardian, Congressman
James Hamilton Jr., about the planned marriage. Hamilton mentioned his approval in a separate letter to
Martin Van Buren
Martin Van Buren ( ; ; December 5, 1782 – July 24, 1862) was the eighth president of the United States, serving from 1837 to 1841. A primary founder of the Democratic Party (United States), Democratic Party, he served as Attorney General o ...
, mentioning his appreciation of the message from the president. Hays and Middleton were married in
Charleston, South Carolina
Charleston is the List of municipalities in South Carolina, most populous city in the U.S. state of South Carolina. The city lies just south of the geographical midpoint of South Carolina's coastline on Charleston Harbor, an inlet of the Atla ...
on November 24, 1829. He eventually became "owner of one thousand slaves, three hundred of whom had been a marriage dower" to his wife, Frances Pinckney Middleton.
The couple had 13 children but only four survived long into adulthood.
The Hays newlyweds may have set up housekeeping in Madison County in 1830.
West Tennessee commerce, politics, and patronage jobs
A letter from Jackson to Hays, written in April 1830 and rediscovered in an old trunk in the 1950s, suggests that the President partially relied on Hays to maintain
the Hermitage in his absence.
Jackson requested that Hays provide him with an
index of all his mares and colts, and asked Hays to make sure that the
family slaves Betty and Hannah maintained the plantings around Rachel Jackson's tomb and garden the way he wanted them to be.
Jackson also wrote to Hays at the height of the
Nullification crisis, enclosing a newspaper that reprinted his presidential message on that question:
An 1830 letter from Jackson to Hays complained about Congressman
Davy Crockett
Colonel (United States), Colonel David Crockett (August 17, 1786 – March 6, 1836) was an American politician, militia officer and frontiersman. Often referred to in popular culture as the "King of the Wild Frontier", he represented Tennesse ...
's votes in favor of appropriations for
internal improvements
Internal improvements is the term used historically in the United States for public works from the end of the American Revolution through much of the 19th century, mainly for the creation of a transportation infrastructure: roads, turnpikes, can ...
(infrastructure) and against the
Indian Removal Act
The Indian Removal Act of 1830 was signed into law on May 28, 1830, by United States president Andrew Jackson. The law, as described by Congress, provided "for an exchange of lands with the Indians residing in any of the states or territories, ...
, and urged Hays to inform Crockett's constituents that he had been seen walking in company with New Englander
Daniel Webster
Daniel Webster (January 18, 1782 – October 24, 1852) was an American lawyer and statesman who represented New Hampshire and Massachusetts in the U.S. Congress and served as the 14th and 19th United States Secretary of State, U.S. secretary o ...
.
Jackson also chided Hays for talking with his cousins about the so-called
Petticoat Affair
The Petticoat affair (also known as the Eaton affair) was a political scandal involving members of President Andrew Jackson's Cabinet and their wives, from 1829 to 1831. Led by Floride Calhoun, wife of Vice President John C. Calhoun, these wo ...
, with Jackson writing, "
Major Eaton was so enraged at the treatment of
Emily to
his wife that it was with some difficulty that I prevented Major Eaton from making it a serious matter with
Andrew
Andrew is the English form of the given name, common in many countries. The word is derived from the , ''Andreas'', itself related to ''aner/andros'', "man" (as opposed to "woman"), thus meaning "manly" and, as consequence, "brave", "strong", "c ...
. My dear Samuel you ought to have had more prudence than to communicate anything that would have giren any pain to that amiable old lady."
In 1831 Jackson wrote Hays with orders to electioneer hard against the Congressional candidacy of Crockett, who was both an anti-Jacksonian generally and who specifically opposed the nomination of Hays' brother
Stockley D. Hays to a government land office job. Samuel J. Hays was 14 years younger than his brother Stockley D. Hays and has this been mistakenly described as his son. In the first two decades of the 19th century Stockley D. Hays had been a crucial satellite in Jackson's orbit, but Davy Crockett suggested in 1831 that S.D. Hays had been debilitated for many years with alcoholism and thus he may have fallen out of rotation. As part of a larger controversy over Jackson's use of the so-called
spoils system
In politics and government, a spoils system (also known as a patronage system) is a practice in which a political party, after winning an election, gives government jobs to its supporters, friends (cronyism), and relatives (nepotism) as a rewar ...
, it was at this time that "A Corn Planter of Madison County" called out the political appointments and government-funded salaries of Hays' brother Stockley and brothers-in-law R. I. Chester and
Robert Butler, as well as those of John Coffee,
John C. McLemore, and
A. J. Donelson, asking, "Have we, sir, no high minded and honorable men amongst is, who are qualified to offices of honor, profit, and trust, but the nephews of President Jackson?" As one history of public administration explained, "By the time Andrew Jackson came into power, merit was only secondary in executive department appointments. During Jackson's administration the policy of political patronage and nepotism in federal employment was intensified, partly because of his belief that rotation of government jobs was an essentially democratic process. What this actually implies is that political nepotism is not corruption, but one of the principles of sound democracy. This is, of course, ridiculous!" As another history framed the "nephews of Andrew Jackson" problem: "With Jackson...many
ublic officeswere filled with individuals who were ill-equipped for the responsibilities demanded of them. Jackson did not regard this as a problem, but instead believed that an individual needed no particular training or education to succeed in politics or government."
An 1832 letter from Jackson mentioning that Samuel J. Hays was going to transport a dog and a "gator" (misspelling of guitar) from Washington back to Tennessee is considered evidence that
Sarah Yorke Jackson owned a guitar, which is possibly the reason the Hermitage driveway is shaped like a guitar. In 1833 Hays wrote a public letter to the militia electorate of Madison County stating that he had no ties to the South Carolina
Nullifier movement even though his wife hailed from that state.
Hays was one of three candidates for the
Tennessee House of Representatives
The Tennessee House of Representatives is the lower house of the Tennessee General Assembly, the state legislature of the U.S. state of Tennessee.
Constitutional requirements
According to the state constitution of 1870, this body is to consis ...
from Madison County in 1835. In 1839, Jackson wrote Hays, "You must not permit that...scamp
ohn WesleyCrockett to be electedhe is the mere tool of
ohnBell & J. Q. Adams, without principle or talents & has become a good Whig by learning of Lying & Slandering good & honest men." This enmity was apparently a carryover from Jackson's pre-existing fury toward the late Davy Crockett, who had opposed both Indian Removal and the appointment of Hays' late brother S. D. Hays to high office. In 1843, by act of state legislature, Hays was named trustee from Madison County for the
Memphis Conference Female Institute.
American colonies in Texas
In 1835, Hays, brother-in-law Chester, and another brother-in-law,
William Edward Butler, bought land to farm in
Mexican Texas
Mexican Texas is the historiographical name used to refer to the era of Texan history between 1821 and 1836, when it was part of Mexico. Mexico gained independence in 1821 after winning its Mexican War of Independence, war against Spain, whi ...
and moved 40 slaves there for that purpose but "feared that the Mexican government would...free their slaves and this would mean that they were ruined financially...so they decided to return to Tennessee." In the telling of a descendant in 1998, "They managed to get in a crop before the...war started, but they didn't get it out. They left for home."
After the
Texas Revolution
The Texas Revolution (October 2, 1835 – April 21, 1836) was a rebellion of colonists from the United States and Tejanos (Hispanic Texans) against the Centralist Republic of Mexico, centralist government of Mexico in the Mexican state of ...
started, Hays was named captain of the Jackson Blues, a company organized in Tennessee to support the Texian side of that war. He was captain of a company "called out for the protection of the Sabine Frontier 1836 under authority of the General Gaines approved by the War Department."
Edmund P. Gaines
Edmund Pendleton Gaines (March 20, 1777 – June 6, 1849) was an American Army officer who served for nearly fifty years, and attained the rank of major general by brevet. He was one of the Army's senior commanders during its formative years ...
was responsible for "protecting the Western Frontier of the United States from attack by Mexicans and Native Americans, who
ere
Ere or ERE may refer to:
* ''Environmental and Resource Economics'', a peer-reviewed academic journal
* ERE Informatique, one of the first French video game companies
* Ere language, an Austronesian language
* Ebi Ere (born 1981), American-Nigeria ...
fighting the Texans." Hays' company was one of those formed when Gaines "called on the governors of Louisiana, Mississippi, Tennessee, and Alabama to furnish 2500 volunteers each to help police the border." Hays assignment was to "muster the troops to Memphis for maneuvers and then to New Orleans to
Winfield Scott
Winfield Scott (June 13, 1786May 29, 1866) was an American military commander and political candidate. He served as Commanding General of the United States Army from 1841 to 1861, and was a veteran of the War of 1812, American Indian Wars, Mexica ...
,"
and the elites of Madison County were said to be in a state of "considerable excitement, owing to the recruiting of soldiers for the frontier. This County will furnish a company, of the bravest and best." Sometime between 1837 and 1838, Hays, Chester, and William Butler all signed a document relating to
Robertson's colony
Robertson's Colony was an empresario colonization effort during the Mexican Texas period. It is named after Sterling C. Robertson, but had previously been known by other names. It has also been referred to as the Nashville Colony, after the Ten ...
in Texas.
In 1845 Hays signed an open letter urging
Sam Houston
Samuel Houston (, ; March 2, 1793 – July 26, 1863) was an American general and statesman who played a prominent role in the Texas Revolution. He served as the first and third president of the Republic of Texas and was one of the first two indi ...
to visit the city of
Memphis, Tennessee
Memphis is a city in Shelby County, Tennessee, United States, and its county seat. Situated along the Mississippi River, it had a population of 633,104 at the 2020 United States census, 2020 census, making it the List of municipalities in Tenne ...
. Letters written by S. J. Hays in 1845 to
Lyman Draper
Lyman Copeland Draper (September 4, 1815August 26, 1891) was a librarian and historian who served as secretary for the State Historical Society of Wisconsin at Madison, Wisconsin. Draper also served as Superintendent of Public Instruction of Wis ...
are a primary source on the biographies of Hays' father and mother. Hays was a major general of the Tennessee militia at the time of the
Mexican-American War
Mexican Americans are Americans of full or partial Mexican descent. In 2022, Mexican Americans comprised 11.2% of the US population and 58.9% of all Hispanic and Latino Americans. In 2019, 71% of Mexican Americans were born in the United State ...
, 4th Division, Second Army of Tennessee, thus the honorific Gen. Hays followed him through life in the South.
Bertram Wyatt-Brown wrote that it was common for ambitious antebellum southern lawyers to seek grant themselves titles and emoluments: "The title of ''Major'', ''Colonel'', or best of all, ''General'' did wonders for reputation in that very hierarchical society."
One account states that Hays was once selected by the Tennessee state legislature to be a U.S. Senator but he declined to accept, and at another time turned down the job of
postmaster
A postmaster is the head of an individual post office, responsible for all postal activities in a specific post office. When a postmaster is responsible for an entire mail distribution organization (usually sponsored by a national government), ...
of Charleston.
In 1845 the ''Nashville Union'' published a letter urging the state Democratic Party to nominate Hays for Tennessee Governor. Andrew Jackson wrote to Samuel J. Hays just 11 days before "the Old Hero" died, describing his
dropsy
Edema (American English), also spelled oedema (British English), and also known as fluid retention, swelling, dropsy and hydropsy, is the build-up of fluid in the body's tissue. Most commonly, the legs or arms are affected. Symptoms may inclu ...
symptoms, discussing his religious beliefs as he approached the end of life, and celebrating that Hays had gotten free of a financial obligation in Mississippi, with Jackson urging Hays to stay out of debt as much as possible.
In 1849 Hays listed his city house for sale. This was probably the house called Bellwood, which was "sold to George Miller, president of the Bank of Madison in the 1850s, and after several other owners, still stands today on Liberty Street."
1850s: Slavery, cotton, construction
Slaves owned by Hays grew cotton for sale to international fabric and garment markets. Sometime after the Mexican War, Hays moved to a new-built house "which was long remembered as one of the most magnificent of the homes of Jackson, with its lawn adorned with statuary imported from Italy, its furnishings of
rosewood
Rosewood is any of a number of richly hued hardwoods, often brownish with darker veining, but found in other colours. It is hard, tough, strong, and dense. True rosewoods come from trees of the genus '' Dalbergia'', but other woods are often ca ...
and
mahogany
Mahogany is a straight- grained, reddish-brown timber of three tropical hardwood species of the genus ''Swietenia'', indigenous to the AmericasBridgewater, Samuel (2012). ''A Natural History of Belize: Inside the Maya Forest''. Austin: Universit ...
, its liveried Guinea slaves. The house was built on what is now Preston street, the gate to the long driveway opening on what is now Hays Avenue." The Hays place reportedly cost about to build.
At the time of the
1850 U.S. census, Hays owned slaves that were attached to two separate properties in Tennessee: 10 on one, and 127 on another. At the time of the
1860 U.S. census, Hays had 50 slaves living in 10
slave houses in Tennessee, and 50 slaves in Duncan Township,
Monroe County, Arkansas
Monroe County is located in the Arkansas Delta in the U.S. state of Arkansas. The County (United States), county is named for James Monroe, the fifth President of the United States. Created as Arkansas's 20th county on November 2, 1829, Monroe ...
held "in trust" for him by Moses Moore. In 1860, owning more than 100 slaves would have put him in the top 0.1 percent of American slave owners. Only six percent of Madison County, Tennessee households owned 20 or more slaves in 1860. Hays also owned real property in
Shelby County and across the
Mississippi River
The Mississippi River is the main stem, primary river of the largest drainage basin in the United States. It is the second-longest river in the United States, behind only the Missouri River, Missouri. From its traditional source of Lake Ita ...
in
Arkansas
Arkansas ( ) is a landlocked state in the West South Central region of the Southern United States. It borders Missouri to the north, Tennessee and Mississippi to the east, Louisiana to the south, Texas to the southwest, and Oklahoma ...
. His Shelby County land holding was 4,000 acres, some of which was used for railroad development. As summarized by an agricultural historian, the class structure of antebellum western Tennessee meant that "the well-to-do of Madison County immersed themselves in a market-based form of commercial agriculture. They focused on the cash crop of cotton and the unique requirements of marketing this profitable fiber, enjoying a lifestyle which did not require the ceaseless toil of family members on small plots but rather the labor of slaves on large tracts of improved acreage. In the decade preceding the Civil War, Madison County planters increased their already disproportionate share of the area's land, cotton, and slaves."
In the 1850s, Hays was a slave labor contractor for the
Mobile and Ohio Railroad
Mobile may refer to:
Places
* Mobile, Alabama, a U.S. port city
* Mobile County, Alabama
* Mobile, Arizona, a small town near Phoenix, U.S.
* Mobile, Newfoundland and Labrador
Arts, entertainment, and media Music Groups and labels
* Mobile ...
through west Tennessee. He was also a commissioner of the
Lexington and Knoxville Railroad and the
Mississippi Central and Tennessee Railroad.
American Civil War, death, and legacy
In 1860, Hays' son Robert Hays shot and injured two people with a double-barreled shotgun in the Jackson town square over a misunderstanding.
Confederate President Jeff Davis reportedly offered Hays, his old West Point companion, a generalship in the
Confederate States Army
The Confederate States Army (CSA), also called the Confederate army or the Southern army, was the Military forces of the Confederate States, military land force of the Confederate States of America (commonly referred to as the Confederacy) duri ...
, but Hays declined due to old age; four of his sons and two sons-in-law reportedly volunteered for the Confederacy. Hays was said to have paid to outfit a company of Confederates from Madison County.
There was a Union Army encampment on Hays' land sometime between June 1862 and June 1863. According to Tennessee writer
J. G. Cisco, Hays was "probably the wealthiest man in Madison County but the civil war and other misfortunes left his descendants poor." Among his descendants involved in the war and aftermath were Middleton "Mid" Hays, of the 6th Tennessee (Confederate), Company H, who was wounded at the
Battle of Shiloh
The Battle of Shiloh, also known as the Battle of Pittsburg Landing, was a major battle in the American Civil War fought on April 6–7, 1862. The fighting took place in southwestern Tennessee, which was part of the war's Western Theater of the ...
. Mid Hays refused to take the oath of allegiance to the United States, and was later a local organizer of the
Ku Klux Klan
The Ku Klux Klan (), commonly shortened to KKK or Klan, is an American Protestant-led Christian terrorism, Christian extremist, white supremacist, Right-wing terrorism, far-right hate group. It was founded in 1865 during Reconstruction era, ...
, reportedly recruited by
Nathan Bedford Forrest
Nathan Bedford Forrest (July 13, 1821October 29, 1877) was an List of slave traders of the United States, American slave trader, active in the lower Mississippi River valley, who served as a General officers in the Confederate States Army, Con ...
himself.
Hays reportedly prepared for his death by buying a metal casket for himself in Memphis and storing it in his attic until the time came. He died in 1866 and is likely buried in Riverside Cemetery in
Jackson, Tennessee
Jackson is a city in and the county seat of Madison County, Tennessee, United States. Located east of Memphis, Tennessee, Memphis and 130 Miles Southwest of Nashville, it is a regional center of trade for West Tennessee. Its total population wa ...
.
Hays was predeceased by his wife, who died in 1865; his will mentioned real estate in Tennessee and Arkansas, four surviving children, and Abraham and Amy, who had been enslaved by him before the war.
His house was later purchased by the Dominican Sisters of St. Agnes in Memphis for use as a nunnery and school.
Jefferson Davis' first speech after his release from prison was meant to be at St. Luke's Episcopal Church in Jackson but the crowd was so large the event was relocated to "the grove in front of General Samuel J. Hays's home near the corner of Preston and Hays Avenue." The Academy of the Immaculate Conception, formerly the Hays house, burned down on February 27, 1873.
According to local folklore, a student was helping burn leaves in the yard, and when her dress caught fire she ran into the house for help.
The girl was saved but the building caught fire and was gutted.
This land eventually became the site of a
Piggly-Wiggly Corporation plant.
The five acres of land on which the town of
Arlington, Tennessee
Arlington is a town in the U.S. state of Tennessee. It is one of the seven municipalities in Shelby County. The town was officially incorporated as Haysville in 1878 and again as Arlington in 1900. The population was 2,569 at the 2000 census, 1 ...
was built, on the
Louisville and Nashville Railroad
The Louisville and Nashville Railroad , commonly called the L&N, was a Class I railroad that operated freight and passenger services in the southeast United States.
Chartered by the Commonwealth of Kentucky in 1850, the road grew into one of ...
, was originally donated by Hays in 1856. One of Arlington's early names was Haysville, after S. J. Hays' role in the founding. Hays Avenue is East Jackson, Tennessee was so named because it was the site of his "palatial" house.
In 1894, two of Mid Hays' sons were involved in Christmas Eve shooting of an African-American man; their "prominent family" background was mentioned in the news coverage:
See also
*
*
Eggnog Riot, another incident at West Point involving alcohol and Jeff Davis
*
Andrew Jackson and the slave trade in the United States
*
List of children of presidents of the United States
The following people are children of List of presidents of the United States, U.S. presidents, including biological children, confirmed and alleged extramarital children, adopted or abducted children, stepchildren, and legal wards. Status of pate ...
Notes
References
Sources
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
External links
Samuel J. Hays Letter, 1842 November 16 to Jacksonregarding Hays's conversion to Christianity by
Daniel Baker. University of Alabama collection
{{DEFAULTSORT:Hays, Samuel J.
1800s births
1866 deaths
Donelson family
United States Military Academy alumni
American slave owners
People from Madison County, Tennessee
American militia generals
American cotton plantation owners
Andrew Jackson