The Shattles Connection

Shattles Cemetery Marker (photo courtesy of Amanda Johnson)

The Colliers and Shattles were both prominent families in Middle Georgia during the 1800s. In the early part of the century, as the counties were formed from Indian territory, these families were among the early settlers. In Upson County, Robert Collier settled near The Rock, while brother Isaac farmed west of Thomaston near the Flint River. A third brother, Cuthbert, claimed land in adjacent Monroe County, where he eventually built a rail station. The Shattles families lived in an area which, at the time, was near the Upson-Monroe county line. Much of that area in Monroe County was made part of Lamar County in 1920.

Historically, the Shattles line has only been traced back to about 1772 with the birth of George Washington Shattles.  Prior lineage is lost in the fog of time, possibly because, as family legend holds, Shattles may not have been the original name.  I find it interesting that an infant would be named George Washington in 1772, four years before the Declaration of Independence.  Of course, in 1772, the original George Washington was a hero of the French and Indian War and was part of the social and political elite of the colony of Virginia.   It is entirely possible the future Father of Our Country had his admirers before becoming President.  Still, it seems odd the Shattles line could only be traced back to a man named at birth for someone who had not yet achieved his greatest prominence.

The information about the Shattles family comes to CHF primarily from the work of Joel Shattles, Sr., who is now deceased.  Beginning in about 1998, Joel, along with his son, Joel, Jr., began tracing their family history.  A bound, unpublished history of the Shattles Family was produced in 2000.

Joel Shattles, Sr. Speaks at the Shattles Family Reunion 2003

There were at least two Collier-Shattles marriages.  It is not the intent here to discuss the entire Shattles line, but to focus on the Collier-Shattles connections.

The aforementioned George Washington Shattles was born in Pennsylvania.  He married his wife, Barbara (maiden name unknown), in about 1791 in North Carolina.  George died about 1859 in Upson County, Georgia.  Both are thought to be buried in a portion of Upson County that was later carved off and made a part of Pike County.

The first child of George and Barbara was John Richard Shattles, who was born in 1772 in North Carolina.  John Richard also took a “Barbara” for his wife in 1811.  John and Barbara had seven children; the first was born in North Carolina, the rest in Georgia.  Information from a page in a family Bible tells us John Shattles died May 13, 1869, and Barbara Shattles died the next month on June 15.

The fifth child born to John and Barbara Shattles was another George Washington Shattles.  This George Washington was born about 1821 in Monroe County, Georgia.   He married Lucinda Kennedy September 6, 1840 in Monroe County.  George died June 4, 1857 in Upson County.  Lucinda’s date of death is given as 1896.  Both are buried in the Shattles Cemetery in Lamar County.

George Washington Shattles Marker (Father of Francis Ann Shattles, Who Married Robert Terrell Collier)

Lucinda Kennedy Shattles Marker (Mother of Francis Ann Shattles, Who Married Robert Terrell Collier)

George and Lucinda had nine children. The eldest was Francis Ann Shattles, born July 18, 1841. On November 17, 1859, Francis Ann married Robert Terrell Collier, son of Williamson Collier and grandson of Vines Collier.

George Washington Shattles, Father of Francis Ann Shattles and Grandfather of Absalom Terrell Collier

About 1884, Robert Terrell and Francis Ann moved to Texas and settled in Nacogdoches County, founding the East Texas branch of Vines Collier descendants. Both Robert Terrell and Francis Ann or buried in Glenwood Cemetery, Upshur County, Texas.

Grave Markers of Robert Terrell Collier and Francis Ann (Shattles) Collier, Upshur County, Texas

John and Barbara Shattles’ six child was James Monroe Shattles, born February 25, 1823 in Monroe County, Georgia.  James, or Jim, as he was also called, married Ann Davidson on July 26, 1876.  James Shattles died June 15, 1883.  No death date is known for Ann Shattles, and no burial location is known for either spouse.James Shattles was an active farmer and landowner.  On the map of Land Districts, dated sometime around 1850, the “Shattles Bros.” place most likely refers to farms of brothers George Washington Shattles and James Monroe Shattles.

Eleven children were born to the union of James and Ann Shattles. The second born, and the first male, was given the family name of George Washington Shattles. This George Washington was born December 5, 1849 in Monroe County, Georgia. George married Mary Delonia Collier on April 24, 1871 in Upson County, Georgia. He died February 17, 1899 in Gordon County, Georgia. Mary Delonia passed away in 1916. Both George and Ann are buried in West Union Baptist Church Cemetery in Gordon County , Georgia.

Mary Delonia (Collier) Shattles at the Wedding of her Son, James Thomas Shattles, to Dorothy Irvin in 1902

Mary Delonia Collier was the daughter of Isaac Peterson and Martha (Dickens) Collier.  The military service of Isaac Peterson Collier is discussed further in this CHF post dated August 18, 2018 and entitled “Nothing But My Duty” (Click Here).  Mary Delonia’s paternal grandparents were Charles Vines and Rebecca (Owen) Collier.  More information on the Confederate service of the Sons of Charles Vines collier, Sr. and Rebecca Owen Collier and Rebecca is discussed in a post of September 14, 2015 (Click Here)   Vines and Elizabeth (Williamson) Collier were her great-grandparents.

Some interesting trivia:

The Shattles Cemetery is located in Lamar County, on a well-known historic farm known as Sugar Hill. Sugar Hill is now owned by Collier descendants.

The Shattles Cemetery is in a portion of Lamar County that was carved off from Monroe County when Lamar was created.  The area is known as the Redbone Community.  It is thought Native Americans referred to the area as Redbone because of the large number of red fox squirrels they found in the area.

William Merrill Collier, half-brother to Robert Terrell Collier, died sometime around 1870.  He was buried in the Redbone Community.

In 1925, J C Collier had the remains of William Merrill Collier exhumed and re-interred in the Collier Family Lot at Greenwood Cemetery in Barnesville Click here for related post.

The first born son of George Washington Shattles and Mary Delonia (Collier) Shattles was named Pascal Smith Collier.  For a discussion of the name of Pascal Smith see this post (click here).

Joel Shattles, Sr., was the grandson of George Washington and Mary Delonia (Collier) Shattles.  His great-grandfather was Isaac Peterson Collier.

This picture, taken in 2001, includes some of the Shattles family at the cleanup of the Isaac Collier Cemetery.  See the post about the event by clicking here.

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A Midwestern Collier Branch

Collier Family Cemetery, Monroe County Indiana

This is a combined genealogy study for Gloria Jean (Banderman) Collier and Michael Wayne Collier, who both hail from Higginsville, Missouri. Gloria’s ancestors arrived in the United States starting in the 1800s from the German Confederation, Scotland, and likely Ireland. Most of Gloria’s ancestors proceeded directly from their ports-of-entry to Missouri. Mike’s ancestors first arrived in British Colonial America with the 1607 Jamestown and 1620 Plymouth landings. Over the next two centuries, more of his ancestors arrived in British Colonial America and some eventually migrated from the U.S. Atlantic Coast (mainly Virginia); through Tennessee, Kentucky, and Indiana; arriving in Missouri starting in the early-1800s. Mike traces his Collier lineage to Frenchman Robert Coliere, who arrived in England around 1482, as do many others on the Collier Heritage Foundation site.

The study is presented in a general chronological order with Gloria’s and Mike’s family trees separated. The study concentrates on direct ancestors (parents, grandparents, great-grandparents, etc.) and only addresses aunts, uncles, and cousins when they are found to be interesting people–meaning those of historical note or having interesting life stories. A short life story is provided for each interesting ancestor, along with historical background to help understand the context for when the ancestor lived. Family tree branches are noted in each life story when the branch is not readily identifiable by an ancestor’s surname.

We hope you find this study both interesting and educational.

Click Here: Missouri Bound

Gloria and Mike Collier

(Originally Posted May 20, 2023)

One Thought on “A Midwestern Collier Branch

  1. Nothing to add, just I love to spend time in this website and read every word here.

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Cuthbert Collier and Collier Station

Cuthbert Collier, the sixth child of Vines and Sarah Elizabeth Williamson Collier, was born in Brunswick County, Virginia.  His tombstone has the year of his birth as 1772, so he would have been approaching his teenage years when his family settled in Georgia in 1785.  Researchers tell us he married Nancy Dickee in 1803 in Oglethorpe County, Georgia.  By 1816, Nancy apparently had died and Cuthbert married Rebecca Franklin.  In 1824, Cuthbert sold the Vines Collier plantation to Peachy R. Gilmer, brother of Governor George Gilmer.  In 1830, Cuthbert, Rebecca, and their family appear in the census for Monroe County.  By that time, at least three of Cuthbert’s siblings, Robert, Isaac, and Williamson, had settled in nearby Upson County.

From “The History of Monroe County, Georgia”, page 65, we see,

“Cuthbert Collier, a Virginian, who was here to strike his claim when Monroe County implemented the land lottery system, later added to his holdings. By the time plans to build the railroad were being formulated, he was in a bargaining position. He traded the lengthy right-of-way for the consideration of five dollars and a train station guaranteeing passenger service.”

Collier’s Station, not only allowed passenger service, but gave Cuthbert ready access to ship his goods and receive delivery of needed items.  This is a portion of an 1855 railroad map showing Collier’s Station.

A topographic map of the area shows that Cuthbert’s choice of property, if not by design, was extremely fortuitous.   His plantation spanned across a divide separating two major drainages.  For the railroad to have taken any other route than through his plantation would have been difficult and expensive.

Cuthbert Collier died in 1845 and Rebecca in 1872.  The two are buried in the cemetery by the railroad tracks on what was once their plantation.

The Collier name remains prominent in the area.  The cemetery is just off Big Collier Road and southwest of Little Collier Road.

In 2012, subdivision lots were being offered, marketed as “Collier Place”.

Cuthbert’s Collier Station today still has an active siding with signs marking No(rth) Collier and So(uth) Collier.   It can be seen on the road between Barnesville and Forsythe.

A large house house on Collier Road and adjacent to the railroad is reported to have been the home of Cuthbert and Rebecca Collier.

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Discovering the Grave of William Merrill Collier

In the summer of 2012, I, along with several family members from Texas, visited Cousin Virginia Collier Dennis in Barnesville, Georgia.  During our conversation I told her I had noticed there were two unmarked graves in the Collier Lot in the Greenwood Cemetery.  The graves are actually “marked” with a barren concrete slab but no formal marker.  She said I needed to know about the graves, that one might be “one of your people.”  She said she would write something down for me.  Several months later, I received a card from her in which she said she had promised herself to write me about the unmarked graves once she had paid her taxes and finalized her will, but that she had not yet done either as she had not been well.  Cousin Virginia passed away September 2013 and I never got the story of the unmarked graves.

A little background is needed.  I am descended from Williamson, one of the 13 children of Vines and Sarah Elizabeth Williamson Collier (see several posts related to Vines Collier).  The final resting places of several of the 13 are known, particularly in the counties of Upson, Lamar, and Monroe, Georgia.  Williamson moved into Upson County at about the same time as his brother Robert and is known to lived there, but his grave site is unknown.   I have long thought it might be one of the graves marked by a simple blank field stone in either the Robert Collier or Isaac Collier cemetery.  CHF has placed monuments in both of those cemeteries.

Williamson was married three times.  Little is known about his first marriage.  His second marriage was to Jemena Powell.  Jemena was the sister of Sallie Powell, wife of William Collier, one of Williamson’s brothers.  Williamson and Jemena had a son named William Merrill Collier.  Williamson later married Mary Ann Power.  They had one son, Robert Terrell Collier, my ancestor who moved his family from Upson County to Texas in the 1880s.

The papers of Jena Cuthbert (J C) Collier, Cousin Virginia’s grandfather, contain his efforts to tie together the extensive Collier lines.  His book, if it had ever been finished, would have had details of each of the 13 branches from Vines and Sarah Elizabeth.  As I went through the papers of J C Collier, I was pleased to find a reference to William (Merrill) Collier, son of Williamson.

I never found that Williamson’s family was “connected up” with much detail.  However,  I was astonished to find that some 50 years after William Merrill had passed away, J C had his body dug up and re-buried in the Collier Lot in Barnesville.  This statement was in a letter J C wrote soliciting genealogical information.

1935_11_29_JCC typed Collier Genealogy 2 hilite

The Collier Lot is not large and, at the time (1925), there were very few graves there.  I have not been able to discover why J C took this action.  At the time William Merrill Collier died, J C was only about six years old and would have barely known William Merrill.

Since there was no marked grave of William Merrill Collier in the Collier Lot, he had to be in one of the two graves marked with only a concrete slab.  But which one?  And why was it never marked?  I found the answer to the first question on a map attached to a letter.  It identified two graves marked with a concrete slab and identified one of them as being the grave of Junius Augusta Cason, Jr., the son of Junius and Evelyn Collier Cason and grandson of J C Collier.  This meant the other grave marked with only a concrete slab was the final resting place of William Merrill Collier, a man my great-grandfather would have called “Uncle William”!

 

Earlier this year, I asked Elaine Collier Neal to put together the genealogy  of William Merrill Collier so that CHF could properly mark the grave.  She worked diligently to document each of his four wives and any offspring.  We included text that makes the Georgia – Texas connection for Williamson Collier’s line.  On July 18, 2017, the following marker was placed on the grave of William Merrill Collier in the Collier Lot in Greenwood Cemetery, Barnesville, Georgia.

 

 

 

 

Assisting with the placement were (L to R) Josh Rhodes, Daniel Johnson, Glen Collier, and members of the local SCV Camp Al Medcalf, David Shepard, and Milo Wimberly. Photograph by Dillon Johnson, g-g-g-g-g-g- grandson of Vines Collier.

 

Glen A. Collier

 

 

One Thought on “Discovering the Grave of William Merrill Collier

  1. I’m very interested in some of the information on this website. I have a Williamson/Couch/Collier connection that I can’t seem to get past from AL in the mid-1800s. Please look at the 1850 Randolph Co., AL census for confirmation. You will find a William and Frances (Couch) Williams (s/b Williamson) William is shown as a Williams and Frances is shown beneath his name as Williamson. Their 3 toddler sons were of the right age and birth name or initials and birth order to validate their parents were indeed my Williamson gg-grandparents. Living beside them was a Huel and Susan Williamson. Huel’s first name was misinterpreted as Hud. The other neighbor was the Merrill and Malinda Collier family. Merrill was born in NC in what appears to have been the 1790s.
    His first wife was Lokie Williamson. She supposedly died in childbirth circa 1844, giving birth to twins. Merrill later married his GA-born first cousin whose name was Malinda Lokey. I can’t seem to match all of these folks up and determine who was related through whom. However, back in that era, folks who traveled together and clustered together were either blood relatives or very good friends.
    All three families might have been related for all I know, but it remains a mystery to me. I do know that my DNA shows that I have numerous Collier 3rd and 4th cousins.

    I’ve been trying to find the parents of my William Williamson, but I am clueless as to what their names were. Both he and his wife Frances show on the 1850 Randolph Co., AL census that they were born in GA, but where in GA is the mystery. I think Frances could have had family ties going back to Pike Co., GA, but I don’t know about William Williamson. There was a land filing found in Madison Co., AL for land in Randolph Co., AL owned by Robert Williamson and his son, whose name I don’t know. I’ve wondered if my William was a son of this Robert Williamson. Linking land-owning families in Randolph Co, AL, is the courthouse burned down multiple times and there are no records for the era when my Williamson/Couch/Collier relatives lived there. According to information shown on the 1850 Randolph Co, AL census, my Williamson/Couch gg-grandparents were both born in GA in the early to mid-1820s. My Couch lineage might have been in Pike Co, GA, and the same might have been true for the Williamson clan, but I have no proof of where in GA either of them were born.

    My grandfather always said his father told him that our Williamson lineage goes back to Isle of Wight, VA, but my links are too broken for me to find a connection. I hope by sharing this bit of info that someone else might be enlightened to find someone new in their family tree. If they do, and if it unearths knowledge of anyone new in my line, I hope the person who finds that info will share the information with me. I’ve about given up on getting my family links connected back in time. I’m in my 8th decade, so the old clock is ticking.

    I would love to hear your thoughts on what I’ve shared. Many of the Collier cousins that cropped up in my DNA live in Texas. My direct Williamson line, as well as one and possibly two, brothers, came to TX in the 2nd half of the 1870s.

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CHF Acquires Controlling Interest in Three Georgia Cemeteries

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CHF has obtained controlling interests to three important historical Collier sites in Georgia. They are the Robert Collier Cemetery Lot in Upson County, the Vines Collier Cemetery in Oglethorpe County, and the Collier Lot in Greenwood Cemetery in Barnesville, Georgia.  Through CHF the undivided interests of several heirs to the properties have been consolidated.

1) The Robert Collier Cemetery Lot is located on what was once the Robert Collier plantation.  According to the deed,

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