Today’s episode of Research Like a Pro is about the Georgia land lottery, how it worked, and how it was used as part of a case showing that Thomas Beverly Royston was the son of John Royston. Join us as we talk about the historical context of the Georgia land lottery and the Royston case.
Transcript
Nicole Dyer (1s):
This is Research Like a Pro episode 268 John Royston Orphan Welcome to research Like a Pro a genealogy podcast about taking your research to the next level. Hosted by Nicole Dyer and Diana Elder accredited Genealogist Professional Diana and Nicole are the mother daughter team at FamilyLocket dot com and the authors of Research Like, a pro A Genealogist guide with Robin Wirthlin. They also co-authored the Companion Volume Research Like a Pro with DNA, Join, Diana and Nicole as they discuss how to stay organized, make progress in their research and solve difficult cases. Let’s go. The sponsor of today’s episode of Research Like a Pro is Newspapers.com, the largest online newspaper archive.
Nicole Dyer (42s):
Hi everyone. Welcome to research Like a Pro.
Diana Elder (44s):
Hi. Nicole. how are you today?
Nicole Dyer (47s):
I’m good mom. How are you?
Diana Elder (48s):
I’m doing well.
Nicole Dyer (50s):
So what have you been doing lately?
Diana Elder (52s):
Well, I’ve been working on getting some proposals in for speaking at Roots Tech 2024 and the National Genealogical Society Conference in 2024. So it’s always fun to think about what topics I want to discuss and think of fun titles and descriptions for those And I always like to do a lot of case studies and examples that I draw from my own research So. I’ve had some fun figuring those out.
Nicole Dyer (1m 20s):
Yeah, it is fun to think of different topics and titles for our announcements today. We have our Airtable quick reference guide available. If you’ve heard us talking about Airtable, we use it for Genealogy Research Logs and you may wanna try it too. So if you’re new to Airtable, you might wanna look into getting our Airtable quick reference guide, a four page P D F you can download and learn about Airtable next month. Our Research Like a Pro Webinar series will feature Heidi Mathis, one of the researchers on our family Locket Genealogist team, and she will be teaching about Burkhard Schlag, a mid 19th century German case with indirect evidence. And this one is about the parents of Burkhard Schlag, a mid 19th century immigrant And.
Nicole Dyer (2m 4s):
it talks about using indirect documentary evidence that points to the parents. She also will talk about if D N A will provide evidence to support the hypothesis. So, it should be great. We hope to see you there for regular updates about our classes and products. Join our newsletter so you can get that every Monday and learn more about the podcast and blog posts and different things that are come out. There’s a few upcoming conferences, the Utah Genealogical Association Summit of Excellence, which is Virtual Diana, will be presenting two lectures there, one about problem solving with the pre 1850 census and then another one about using ethnicity estimates and locality research to shed light on A D N A project.
Nicole Dyer (2m 45s):
And that’s in September of the CR 2023. Then Diana And I will both be presenting prerecorded classes at the East Coast Genetic Genealogy Conference. Diana’s is about pedigree triangulation and I’ll be teaching about Confirming an ancestral line with D n a. We would love to see you in person at the Professional Management Conference by the Association of Professional Genealogists, which is going to be virtual and in person at Salt Lake City. So we’ll be talking about incorporating multiple income streams to increase your company’s revenue and also creating user-friendly client reports that incorporate D N A analysis and that one will be live streamed. So we look forward to seeing you at these upcoming conferences.
Diana Elder (3m 24s):
Wow, there are some fun conferences coming up. I am really excited for the in-person P M C, that Professional management conference and to get to present with you, so that’ll be awesome. Yeah, well we have a listener spotlight. This is from Arch stand to nine 1-821-AND-THIS was about episode 2 67, the Pennsylvania Germans that we shared about my Eisenhower family. And the review said I visited the Eisenhower home in Kansas and the tour guide told me that the Eisenhower’s lived in Elizabeth feel Pennsylvania before they moved to Texas and Kansas. Elizabeth feel is not far from Harrisburg, so that’s fun.
Diana Elder (4m 4s):
I am assuming that the Eisenhower home was for perhaps the president, Dwight Eisenhower, who is our fourth cousin. So it’s always fun to get a little bit more information about the family. And I definitely want to do the research and see, you know, what they have found about the Eisenhower origins there in Pennsylvania. I know that’s been heavily researched, but I would love to review it and and learn more about them and maybe visit that area.
Nicole Dyer (4m 36s):
Yeah, that was a fun review Thank you today we’re talking about John Royston s Orphan and the lottery that he won. Do you have Ancestors that were lucky? Maybe things always went their way or maybe they really did win a lottery? John Royston s Orphan was lucky he won a lottery but not your typical lottery that we think of today. This was a land draw. We were also lucky that this record that mentions John Rosten’s Orphan was created because it became a key piece of evidence in linking generations. So he was part of the Georgia 1827 Land Lottery and Georgia is a state land state and that means that the state was responsible for distributing land.
Nicole Dyer (5m 19s):
It was coming available because of the Creek Nation land treaties. So when a land session occurred, Georgia would hold a lottery to distribute the land. Land lotteries occurred eight times between 1805 and 1833. The Georgia archives holds these records and details a general pattern for the lotteries. The General assembly passed an act authorizing the lottery and detailed who was eligible and the fees that would be associated with the land grant. Then surveyors laid out the land in districts and lots and sent these numbers to the governor’s office. Next, eligible citizens would then register their names in their county of residents. The names were sent to the the governor’s office where they were copied onto tickets and placed in a large container called a wheel.
Nicole Dyer (6m 2s):
This wheel started with the second lottery, a second wheel held the district and lot numbers before 1820 blank tickets were added so the numbers of both wheels would be equal. Then governor appointed commissioners drew a ticket from each wheel. If the ticket was blank, the person received nothing. If the ticket named a district or a lot number, the person received that land parcel. This was known as a fortunate draw after 1820 when the blank tickets were not added to the wheel, any person’s ticket remaining in the wheel was considered a blank. The fortunate drawers could then pay a fee and take out a grant lot for his land parcel. If the person did not take out the grant, the land reverted back to the state to be sold to the highest bidder.
Diana Elder (6m 46s):
Thanks for going through that. It’s really fun to review the history of of the Land lottery And I. Love that the Georgia archives puts it all out there and really helps us understand how this lottery worked. What we have to understand of course, is that as in any lottery, not every entry was awarded land, but the land lottery lists of applicants have been preserved and those can give important Genealogical information, especially when we combine it with the eligibility requirements. So as we have already hinted at a fortunate draw of the 1827 Land lottery was known as John Roys son’s Orphan. When we abstract the information from the official land grant, which was dated 21 December, 1831, we get this information, it was granted into John Royston s Orphan of Gaines District Morgan County.
Diana Elder (7m 40s):
It was for 202 and a half acres in the 20th district first section in Lees County lot 18. So you know, that’s some great information, but it does raise more questions as in who was John Royston and what was the eligibility requirement for an Orphan in the 1827 land lottery. So who could be John Royston s Orphan? Well, the 1827 Land lottery was authorized by the Georgia General Assembly by an act of nine June, 1825. And this was for land located in five counties created from the western part of the state.
Diana Elder (8m 21s):
These were known as Indian Lands And. it made up Carol Cota Lee Muskogee and Troop Counties. Each lot was to be 202 and a half acres and the fortunate draws were to pay the grant fee of $18 per land lot. Now the 1827 lottery had 17 categories for a person entitled to a draw and each was very specific. So if you were a married man with a wife or son under 18 years or an unmarried daughter, if you had a three year residence in Georgia and you were a citizen of the United States, you would have two draws. Single women were not allowed to draw.
Diana Elder (9m 2s):
But if you were a widow or a wife or a child whose husband or father had been absent from the state for three years, you were entitled to a draw. If you were a physically or mentally disabled male or female, you were entitled to a draw. Several of the categories provided for children under 18 who were illegitimate or whose father was dead or absent from the state. And these generally included the requirement of either birth in the state or a three-year residence in Georgia. Now we have military service in the Revolutionary War war of 1812 or Indian Wars that was recognized with veterans widows or orphans of veterans named in several of the eligibility requirements.
Diana Elder (9m 44s):
But the act of 1825 also had exclusions any fortunate draw in a previous lottery, anyone who refused service in the war of 1812 or Indian War and anyone who deserted for military service a tax defaulter or any convict in the penitentiary for the 1827 land lottery, the most applicable requirement for the Orphan of John Roon was this one. The wife or children of any man who is absent from Georgia for three or more years. And these were treated as widows and orphans and any lots one were vested in them as though the absent husband were deceased.
Nicole Dyer (10m 21s):
Yeah, that’s really cool that they had all these different people that could be included in the lottery.
Diana Elder (10m 28s):
Right, and the amount of detail in those categories, I mean I just noted a few, but there were 17 categories and this is the same for each of the years of the lotteries. There’s a lot of lotteries and if you have someone who was an unfortunate draw, even if they didn’t get a draw or got a blank, they still felt like they were, they were able to receive this. And so you could still draw some Genealogical information from them as to, you know, if they’re a resident of the state or whether they were an Orphan or married or widowed. These really are great records to dive into and understand. Yeah,
Nicole Dyer (11m 5s):
That’s such a good point that even if our Ancestors didn’t win the drawing, they were still maybe listed here And, it can help us to understand more about them. Right. Well let’s talk more about John Royston. Why do we think this is so applicable to him? Did he leave Georgia? Well, no. 1810 census returns exist. So John’s household with Polly cannot be examined sadly, but he disappeared from the records until 1814 when Polly petitioned the Georgia assembly for a divorce. And on what grounds did she list while desertion of herself and three children. She also suspected that John had another wife in South Carolina. In the petition, Polly gives the following information regarding the family showing that John had abandoned his Green County family.
Nicole Dyer (11m 50s):
It says John hath for the last six years without any kind of just reason or provocation, withdrawn himself entirely from the bed and board of your petitioner leaving her with three small children to support and educate without any kind of aid or assistance from him. John had another wife living in the state of either North or South Carolina. And lastly, Polly swore that having made inquiry and caused inquiry to be made by her friends and acquaintances in different parts of the state of Georgia, she has been entirely unable to learn anything of the said Royston or his residence. So after this petition, the state legislature granted the divorce and John doesn’t appear to have contested it. He applied for a land patent in Bullock County Georgia in 1814.
Nicole Dyer (12m 31s):
So he does seem to have moved from Green County, but he doesn’t appear on any census or any other record after 1814 until his name appears on the 1827 Georgia land lottery in connection with the Orphan of John Royston.
Diana Elder (12m 44s):
Well one thing I should mention here is that there is a marriage record for John Royston and Polly Cessna in 1803. you know, we didn’t really introduce Polly but there is a marriage record for them and then we have this divorce record for them. And so he has apparently taken off And I think he died because I think he was born about 1750 based on other records tracing him back to Virginia and So. it just makes sense that he probably had died by then or perhaps he, he was out somewhere in the woods and they never found him.
Nicole Dyer (13m 17s):
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Diana Elder (13m 24s):
But let’s talk a little bit about Polly. She is an important part of this as well. Polly had a marriage before John Royston. So at least 10 years before her marriage to John Royston, she had married Samuel Cessna of Green County Georgia. So this is all taking place right in Green County. No marriage is extant for this marriage, but we do have a court record and this was dated 21 March, 1793 and this gives us the indirect evidence for the marriage. And in the document, Samuel Cessna is relinquishing two negro women who were assigned to Polly Baker by the will of Robert Baker. And when I first got this record I really had to read it several times to understand what was going on.
Diana Elder (14m 5s):
It just has a lot of legal aids and it’s a lot of people and it’s kind of confusing but it does give us some really good information. So I’ll just read it and our listeners can can try to decipher it. Maybe somebody will write us a comment with some additional ideas. So, it says, I Samuel Cessna of Green County for the consideration of one negro boy named Isaac give up all the right and title to a negro woman named Ag and her daughter Hannah, which negroes it is presumed I have held in reversion by virtue of the will of Robert Baker deceased, which Negroes instead Will was assigned to Polly Baker by said Robert Baker deceased, which right in reversion I do hereby relinquish for myself and my heirs to Thomas Baldwin.
Diana Elder (14m 50s):
In consideration of the above, Negro Isaac signed Samuel Cessna, witnessed James Taylor received of Thomas Baldwin on account of his being guardian for Polly Baker. Now Polly Cessna full satisfaction for bonds, bills, debts due and demands from the beginning of the world to this day being the 21 March, 1793. So you can see why that when I first read it was confusing but I pulled out some important details that Polly Baker is probably the daughter of Robert Baker. Since she is assigned two negro women in his will, it makes sense that he would be leaving his daughter these enslaved women.
Diana Elder (15m 32s):
And sadly that will is nowhere to be found. Sometimes we have that case where the original is gone, but then we have these court records later that hint at a record. Thomas Baldwin was appointed the guardian of Polly Baker indicating a close relationship. So I’m not sure what that is, but her daughter, who we think is her daughter has the middle name of Baldwin. So I’m wondering if perhaps it was maybe her mother’s maiden name and this was an uncle still work to be done on that. But Thomas Baldwin is definitely an important person and Polly Baker is now Polly Cessna and that gives us the indirect evidence of the marriage to Samuel Cessna by 1793 When this record is dated So, it was a fun record to really understand what was going on.
Diana Elder (16m 20s):
Now following the divorce from John Royston Polly moved her family west to neighboring Morgan County. Georgia And. I believe that she reverted to Cessna as her surname because there are records for her as a Mary Cessna or an M Cessna and they’re all connected to either Robert and Samuel Cessna who are her sons or to her son by John Royston who is Thomas Beverly Royston. So this is a cluster of people, the Cessnas and Royston that all end up in Morgan County.
Nicole Dyer (16m 54s):
What a helpful usage of cluster research to be able to see those connections between Mary Cessna and then come to the conclusion that it’s Mary Polly Cessna Royston who got rid of the surname Royston because her husband deserted her and she didn’t like that name anymore, I’m guessing.
Diana Elder (17m 10s):
And you know a fun thing is this idea of Polly being a nickname for Mary and that was a common nickname but And I believe it’s the divorce record. She actually goes by both Mary and Polly within the record referring to the same woman. So that was good direct evidence. This is actually the same woman going by these two different names in the same document.
Nicole Dyer (17m 34s):
Oh funny. Yeah, I’ve seen that several times before as well. Where the individual has either several spellings of his name or goes by different versions of the name while Polly’s divorce petition stated that John had fathered three children with her. So there would be three possibilities as any one of these three children could have been the Orphan of John Royston. So which of the three was it to date only two children have emerged from the records as John and Polly’s progeny, Thomas Beverly Royston who was born in 1806 and Sarah Baldwin Royston Irwin born 1808. The third sibling probably died young, maybe moved away from that area or married and left.
Nicole Dyer (18m 18s):
No connection to her Royston maiden name if it was a female. John Royston s Orphan resided in Gaines district, Morgan County Georgia and that’s what it said on the land lottery record. Well where were Thomas and Sarah residing in 1827. Can we pin either of these two people to being that Orphan? Sarah married David Irwin in Morgan County in 1830. Thomas paid taxes in the same county in 1831 Morgan County, neighbors Green County. And perhaps after the divorce Polly moved her family to this new area. Thomas likely moved west because of his fortunate draw in the 1827 land lottery. He probably sold the Lee County land as no record shows his residence in that county.
Nicole Dyer (19m 1s):
He lived to the rest of his life in Alabama, first in DeKalb County, then in Chambers County where he died in 1868 with his wife Cynthia Dillard. He had 14 children and one named Robert Cessna Royston tied to his half-brother Robert Cessna. Perhaps the luck of the draw enabled Thomas to strike out on his own and established his own family. Sometimes our Ancestors just got lucky as a researcher. The Land Lottery record gave us a key piece of evidence tying Thomas to his father, John Royston. So tell us how did you decide that Thomas was the lucky drawer?
Diana Elder (19m 35s):
I really felt like that was what took him west because in Lee County there unfortunately was a courthouse fire and there are no deeds showing any of the sale of that land that could put him there for sure. But in neighboring Muskogee County, just to the north of it, we have a record for Thomas b Royston and you know one of those notices that there are letters at the post office for you come get your letters. And so you know, that puts him in that location right at that time. And then of course we have him showing up in DeKalb County and he has another piece of land and he just finishes living in Alabama.
Diana Elder (20m 22s):
Well Sarah gets married to this Irwin and he becomes a judge and they go to Cobb County and So, it felt like the lucky drawer would probably have been Thomas. Unfortunately I don’t have one piece of a record that really tells me for sure, but it just makes more sense. Or maybe even she assigned it to him, I don’t know. But we do have that he paid his I think it was $18 he had to pay to have that granted to him. And so somebody did something to get that actual land grant rather than just turning it back to the state if they didn’t want to pay up for it.
Diana Elder (21m 3s):
Yeah, it was $18 per land lot So it. He paid the grant fee and you know, he was, it seemed like they were all there in Morgan County by this time. So, it definitely was one of those children. Yeah,
Nicole Dyer (21m 18s):
So both Sarah and Thomas lived in Morgan County where the Orphan supposedly lived in that in 1827. Yep. But we don’t know exactly who was there in 1827. We just know who was there in 1830. Right. In 1831.
Diana Elder (21m 32s):
Exactly. Now there are tax records that put the Cessnas, so the Cessna boys, Samuel and Robert were half siblings to the Royce and children, you know, by virtue of Polly being the mother of both and we have them moving out there, they were obviously older siblings and they are in the tax records and so we have them And. it is my belief that probably, you know, whether they all lived in the same household or not, they were all there in the same area with their mother for a bit of time, so that’s great. Yeah, yeah, yeah. you know it’s that era where you have such little pieces that you have to fill in the rest of the story So, it is really purely locality and situational that Thomas Beverly Royston was probably the Orphan that moved west because he moved west, you know, he got the Lee County land.
Nicole Dyer (22m 30s):
So what was the record that you have that says he paid $18 for the grant?
Diana Elder (22m 36s):
It’s just the land grant. You don’t have a record that says that he paid, but if he had not received the actual grant, I have the actual little piece of paper from the Georgia State, you know his land grant that gives that information. It’s an official land grant.
Nicole Dyer (22m 54s):
Is there anything on that land grant that ties him back to the, the record that says John Royston s Orphan?
Diana Elder (23m 1s):
Yeah, it says that it doesn’t say Thomas Beverly, it says John Royston s Orphan granted unto John Royston s Orphan of Gaines district, Morgan County. So we have the location of Morgan County who received the grant. So we have the residents at the time of 1827 there in Gaines district. Got it.
Nicole Dyer (23m 19s):
Oh
Diana Elder (23m 20s):
Okay. And that correlates to the Cessnas who are all living in that area at that time being taxed
Nicole Dyer (23m 28s):
On land. Yeah. So that kind of gives us the clue that Polly and her three younger children along with her older children who were cessnas we’re probably all living there. Nice.
Diana Elder (23m 37s):
Exactly. And there is another record we didn’t talk about where we’re, we learn more about these exact names of the children and it’s more of the Samuel Cessna’s estate in the court records And, it gives the actual names of the children as Robert and Samuel and Elizabeth Cessna who are the children of Samuel Cessna. And it’s showing that Mary Royston is providing for the bed and board of Elizabeth Cessna. I mean, you know, it’s her mother, but in the court records it, it sometimes can be worded kind of funny. So there’s some very direct evidence there of the names of these children. And then out in Morgan County we’ve got this Robert Cessna who is the son of Mary Polly Cessna Royston.
Diana Elder (24m 26s):
And he is connected to her in the tax records. you know, it says something like Robert Cessna, agent for Mary Cessna, which is why I think 99% sure that that is Mary Royston who just got rid of her Royston name ’cause she divorced John Royston. She wanted to be done with that connection. Good old cluster research putting all these different family members together from two separate husbands.
Nicole Dyer (24m 54s):
Yeah, that was great research. Now I love that you were able to infer that Polly Cessna’s maiden name was Baker from the record that we had talked about earlier. Was that a probate record?
Diana Elder (25m 7s):
It was a court record. It was part of probate but not, not necessarily probate, you know, just more of a part of the courts trying to decide what to do with these enslaved people.
Nicole Dyer (25m 19s):
Yeah. So have you been able to trace Polly’s Baker line back at all?
Diana Elder (25m 23s):
I haven’t. That’s another one to start working on. It would be fun. This era in Georgia is kind of scanned in records pre 1800, but there are things there, And I definitely want to look at The Bakers, the Baldwins, interestingly those names also show up in Virginia. you know where the Royans were. So perhaps this was a common migration down from Virginia down to this area in Georgia. Yeah,
Nicole Dyer (25m 52s):
That’s a good clue. And you have a good fan club built up for Polly, like you said with the Thomas Baldwin who we don’t know how he’s related, but he was a namesake of one of Polly’s children, so. Right. It’ll be fun sometime to trace her back a little bit further. This has just been such an interesting part of your research, this Georgia land lottery. So hopefully people listening who have Ancestors in Georgia at this time got some ideas for if your ancestor could have been in the land lottery.
Diana Elder (26m 20s):
Right. And even if they did not have a lucky draw, you can still read the requirements and see which one might fit with them. We don’t know which requirement each person had or used, but you can read those and pretty much infer some information based on all the other details you have about their lives. So, it can give you some really good clues.
Nicole Dyer (26m 43s):
Right. It’s, it reminds me of tax records where it doesn’t always spell everything out, but you can put it together with other indirect evidence to build a pretty good profile of an ancestor once you gather up these little hints and clues here and there. Exactly. Alright everyone, well thanks for listening and we hope you enjoyed this episode. We will talk to you all again next week. All right, bye-bye everyone. Bye. Thank you for listening. We hope that something you heard today will help you make progress in your research. If you want to learn more, purchase our books, Research Like, a Pro and Research Like a Pro at d a on amazon.com and other books sellers. You can also register for our online courses or study groups of the same names. Learn more at FamilyLocket dot com slash services.
Nicole Dyer (27m 24s):
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John Royston’s Orphan: Lucky Winner of the 1827 Georgia Land Lottery
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