Yesterday I posted a blog about my great-grandfather Dale Seymour. Today's post is going to be about his grandfather, Bird (or Byrd) Seymour.
As mentioned in the previous post, a young Englishman by the name of John Granderson Seymour had sailed across the Atlantic and eventually settled in North Carolina. This couple had thirteen children (seven boys, six girls). All were born in North Carolina (Person County). One of these boys was Bird, born August 28, 1808. When the family moved to Illinois in 1831, Bird would have been in his early twenties (Note: the Seymour family history listed below states the family moved to Morgan County in 1829 but the Old Settler's of Morgan County documents state 1831).
If the family did arrive in Illinois in 1831, then Bird was a young married man. He took as his bride Sarah Austin (born 13 February 1809) of Person County, NC. Her parents were John and Elizabeth (Barrett) Austin. They were married 28 July 1830. I imagine the trip to Illinois was very arduous. We complain of sitting too long and our butts hurting after riding for hours in a car that speeds along on a modern highway on rubber tires and a strong suspension. Can you imagine walking for hours a day along a rough road, or if you rode in the wagon, how much your butt would hurt after sitting for hours on wooden planks?! Twenty miles in a day would have been exceptional; today we usually drive that distance in less than twenty minutes! And instead of checking into a hotel room where you flick a light switch or turn a faucet handle, you would have to light lanterns and gather water from a stream in a bucket! I can hardly imagine.
When Bird and Sarah arrives in Illinois they established a farm and started to raise a family. The family records we have list William Seymour as the first born (1838), although that could be incorrect. The couple had a total of nine children. Below are scans of photos shared by another descendant of Bird and Sarah.
It was normal for families to have their own burial plots and there are numerous family cemeteries all over Morgan County. The final resting places of Bird and Sarah Seymour is the Seymour Cemetery out towards Nortonville (NE 1/4 SW 1/4, Section 11, Twp. 13N, Range 9W, Morgan County, Ill.). There are also many Austin's buried in this cemetery, again demonstrating how it was family groups that moved rather than individuals or small families. This cemetery is fairly well preserved, mainly through the efforts of dedicated genealogists and family historians. Here is a link to a website with some photos (http://www.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~ilmaga/morgan/cemetery/seymour.html ). Some of my own photos are posted below I took in 2006 during a visit to Morgan County. Cousin Jay Toler was the guide to this cemetery and so many others. That was a fun visit and I hope to do it again soon.
Sources:
The Descendants of John Granderson and Agnes Allen (Pulliam) Seymour, also A Short History of James Pulliam by Esther (Seymour) Atwood, 1960.
http://www.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~ilmaga/photoalbm/pa_seymour_byrd.html
http://www.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~ilmaga/photoalbm/pa_seymour_sarah.html
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