Sadie Long Cobb
Huston Cobb, Jr.
and his wife, Sadie Long, were married for 50 years prior to her death on
January 18, 1998. Sadie’s mother was
Mary Long; her father was Harry Long. Sadie’s siblings were Mable, Mildred, Pearl,
Dorothy, Bobbie Jean, Harry Jr., and John Lewis (Buddy) Long.
Sadie Long
initially went to Ricks School at The Oaks which was held in the Mother Church;
the black school finally closed in 1937.
After her school was closed, Sadie started to Leighton Training
School. Today, the picture below is all
that is left of the black school in Leighton, Alabama. Huston Cobb said that after desegregation,
the Leighton Training School was abandoned because it was in a predominately
black neighborhood in the Town of Leighton, Alabama.
Leighton or
Jeffrey’s Cross Roads
The Town of
Jeffrey’s Cross Roads was one of the early mixed settlements of Celtic Indian
people established prior to 1808; this mixed Cherokee and Scots Irish settler
town is one of many that were in North Alabama prior to the Indian removal from
the area. Many of the Jeffreys were
mixed blood Celtic Indians of Scots Irish and Cherokee ancestry; today, many of
the Jeffreys still reside in the area and are state recognized Indians; most
Jeffreys that are tribal members belong to the Echota Cherokee Tribe of
Alabama.
The area of
Jeffreys Crossroads was claimed by Doublehead’s Chickamauga faction of the
Lower Cherokees by 1770; however, the area was actually recognized by the
United States government as Chickasaw land by the Chickasaw Boundary Treaty of
January 10, 1786. The territory around
Leighton remained Indian land until the Turkey Town Treaty of 1816; the treaty
was ratified by congress in July 1817.
Shortly after the treaty, white settlers began buying up the land during
the 1818 federal lands sales and the town became Leighton, Alabama.
One early white
settler that moved to Jeffreys Cross Roads was the family of William Leigh;
therefore, the town became known as Leighton.
William Leigh came to Alabama from Amelia County, Virginia, about 1823
and purchased large tracts of land around the town. Hershel Leigh from the Town of Leighton
married Annie Frances Alexander a descendent of the Alexander Plantation just
southeast of Moulton.
The first
railroad west of the Appalachians came through the Town of Leighton; the rail
line was known as the Decatur to Tuscumbia Railroad. During the 1830’s, many Indian people that
were being removed west rode the railroad from Decatur through Leighton to
Tuscumbia Landing on the Tennessee River; the rail line was a route around the
Elk River Shoals, Big Muscle Shoals, and Little Muscle Shoals which were
barriers to navigation along the Tennessee River from Decatur to
Tuscumbia. The navigational water barriers
along the Tennessee River at the shoals were created by vast layers of
resistant chert (flint) rock; therefore the railroad was used to circumvent
these natural obstacles to water travel through the Muscle Shoals.
On our tour
through Leighton, Hutson Cobb pointed out the Westside Church of Christ he now
attends; he pointed out houses that were owned by the Claude King. The King Family came to the area with Abraham
Ricks of The Oaks and some 30 other families.
Originally, the east half of Leighton was in Lawrence County and the
west half was in Franklin County from 1816 until February 6, 1867; in 1867, the
west half became Colbert County and in 1895 the east half was annexed from
Lawrence County into Colbert County.
Bethel Colbert
Baptist Church
When he was
young, Huston Cobb, Jr. was a member of Bethel Colbert Baptist Church for 22
years; however, his family moved their membership to the Westside Church of
Christ in Leighton, Alabama. Huston has
been a member of the Westside Church of Christ some 56 years, but he still has
a copy of the deed for the Bethel Colbert Baptist Church where he attended
church in his youth.
The Bethel
Colbert Church property was bought on May 2, 1911, for the black folks in the
area and originally belonged to the slave owning white Shaw Family; Baldy Shaw,
who was born about 1820, owned land from Sixth Street to Second Street in
Colbert County. The road that runs past
the Shaw Farm and also Huston Cobb’s old home place is called Shaw Road. J. C. Shaw deeded one and three quarter acres
his property on Second Street to Huston Cobb, Jr.’s folks for the black church.
The deed is as
follows: “act of said corporation. Given
under my hand this 2 day of May 1911. John E. Delony, Jr., Notary Public. State
of Alabama) I, Oscar G. Simpson, Judge
of Probate in and for said State and County, Colbert County) Know all men by
these presents, That I, J. C. Shaw, an unmarried man, for and in consideration
of One Dollar to me in hand paid the receipt whereof is hereby acknowledged, do
hereby grant, bargain, sell, release, quit claim and convey unto Tom Cobb, Cole
Johnson, Ed Hill, Alex Stanley and Tom Carter as Trustees and Deacons of the
Bethel Colbert Baptist Church (Colored) of Colbert County, Alabama, and their
successors in office, the following described real estate lying and being in
Colbert County, Alabama, and more particularly described as follows: Commencing
at the N. W. corner of Section 35, thence running South 472-1/2 feet to a
stake, thence East 139-1/2 feet; thence North 472-1/2 feet to a stake, thence
West 139-1/2 to a stake in Section 35, Township 3, Range 9, in said Colbert
County, Alabama containing 1.3/4 acres.
To have and hold unto the said Tom Cobb, Cole Johnson, Ed Hill, Alex
Stanley and Tom Carter as Trustees and Deacons of the said Bethel Church
(Colored) and their successors in office forever. Witness my hand and seal on this the 4th
day of May, 1911. J. C. Shaw (Seal)
State of Alabama) Colbert County) I, John R. Ayers,
a Notary Public in and for said County in said state hereby certify that J. C.
Shaw whose name is signed to the foregoing conveyance, who is known to me, acknowledged
before me on this day that being informed of the contents of the conveyance, he
executed the same voluntarily on the day the same bears name. Given under my hand this the 4th
day of May, 1911. John R. Ayers, Notary
Public.
State of Alabama) Colbert County) I, Oscar G.
Simpson, Judge of Probate in and for said State and County, hereby certify that
the foregoing conveyance was filed in this office for record on the 4th
day of May, 1911, and recorded in Deed Record Vol. 15, page this 4th
Day of May, 1911. Oscar R. Simpson,
Judge of Probate.
Tom Cobb, Cole
Johnson, and Tom Carter were great uncles of Huston Cobb, Jr. They helped build and organize the black
church in the early 1900’s for the descendants of former slaves that remained
in the area after the Civil War. Across
the road and just west of Bethel Colbert Baptist Church was a one room school
that Huston Cobb, Jr. attended; the school was also on the south side of Second
Street only a quarter mile east of where Huston lives today. In 1938 at the age of 12, Huston Cobb, Jr.
transferred from the one room school near Bethel Colbert Baptist Church and
started to the all black Leighton Training School at Leighton, Alabama.
Huston and Sadie
At Leighton
Training School, Huston’s first teacher Carrie Pierce told the students to
write Ms. Sadie Long a letter telling her they missed her at school. Shortly after receiving the letters, Sadie
started back to Leighton School. At the
time Huston wrote his letter to Sadie, she was living with her family in Wooten
Field which was located approximately one and one half miles south of Second
Street and about three miles southeast of present-day Wise Metal Company (Reynolds). Sadie’s mother was Mary Mars Long and her
father was Harry Long; they were buried in the black Pearsall Cemetery on Ford
Road which connects Second Street and the River Road. Ford Road is just southeast of Stinson Hollow
on Wilson Lake in Colbert County, Alabama.
When Huston
wrote his letter, he did not know Sadie Long and had never met her. When Sadie started coming to Leighton in the
sixth grade, Huston Cobb claimed Sadie as his girlfriend after a class picnic
in the spring of the year. Finally, Huston
Cobb, Jr. married his long time sweetheart Sadie on October 2, 1947.
Shaw Plantation
During his
school days, Huston Cobb had to help on the family farm; as a young man, Huston
could pick 300 pounds of cotton per day.
He plowed mules with a turning plow, scratcher, and Georgia stock. His family planted cotton as the main cash
crop and would make 12 to 15 bales of cotton per year which sold for twenty
five to thirty cents per pound. Houston,
Sr. and his boys farmed the land where Huston, Jr. lives today near the corner
of Second Street and Shaw Road; Shaw Road was named after the white Shaw Family. After the Cobb Family gathered their cotton
crops, Huston and his family would hire out to pick cotton on the old Baldy Shaw
Farm; at the time, the Tidwell Family was renting and planting cotton on the
former Shaw slave owner’s property.
Huston and his family picked cotton on the Shaw Plantation and would be
paid fifty to seventy five cents per one hundred pounds of cotton they picked.
According to the
1850 Census of Lawrence County, Alabama, Bauldy Shaw is listed as being 30
years old from North Carolina, but according to his tombstone, he would have
been 56 years old in 1850. His tombstone
record indicates he was born in 1794 and was 59 years old at his death. In the 1830 Census, Baldy is listed as being
between 30 to 40 years old and in 1840 census, Baldey Shaw is listed as being
between 40 to 50 years old which is in line with his tombstone record.
According to the
1850 slave census, Baldy Shaw owned 15 black slaves; by 1860, he owned 24 black
slaves that would be divided among two heirs.
In the 1850 census, his family is listed as Lemenda, age 43, from
Kentucky; William H., age 19, Alabama; Martha F., age 17; Lemenda, age 15;
Jessee C., age five; and Henry, age 48, from North Carolina.
Many of the Shaw Family are
buried in the Shaw Cemetery which is on Sixth Street about one half mile west
of where the Shaw Road dead ends on Sixth Street. The Shaw Plantation home is between Second
Street and Sixth Street and some two miles south from Second Street. The north end of Shaw Road is Second Street
and the south end is Sixth Street.
This story will also be CONTINUED; stay in touch with my
blog on the black, Indian, and plantation history in our area as it unfolds in
my new book and on my blogs. Mr. Houston
Cobb, Jr.’s story will be included in my new book which will be called “Black Folk Tales of Appalachia: Slavery to
Survival.”
Hello Mr. Butch, I am currently researching my own family history and the Ed Hill that's mentioned in the church deed is my great-great-grandfather. If you find any more information about him please send me an email walker.crump.katelyn@gmail.com. Keep up the great work!
ReplyDeleteButch
ReplyDeleteI'm very interested in your book my mother was a Tidwell her father was James Bentley Tidwell his farm was on what is now Shaw road my Aunt lives in the old home its been remodled the original home was a log home .I would be very interested in buying your book as a young boy I spent many summers on the farm.
Thank you very Much.
Michael Bond
e-mail is mb2bb@att.net
Butch
ReplyDeleteI'm very interested in your book my mother was a Tidwell her father was James Bentley Tidwell his farm was on what is now Shaw road my Aunt lives in the old home its been remodled the original home was a log home .I would be very interested in buying your book as a young boy I spent many summers on the farm.
Thank you very Much.
Michael Bond
e-mail is mb2bb@att.net
Butch,
ReplyDeleteI'm interested in your book. I worked for the Stutts family that bought the Shaw Plantation. They moved there from Ford Road in Muscle Shoals. I spoke with an older black man that helped them drive their cattle from Ford Road down Second Street to Shaw Road.
This comment has been removed by the author.
ReplyDeleteWonderful writeup. I'm personal friends with Sadie Cobb's last remaining sister and will print this out and mail to her. God bless.
ReplyDeleteI live in a house that was built in 1818 on the outside of Leighton it was built by Harmon Hall my great great great grandfather
ReplyDelete