Name |
Josiah Stuart Doak [1] |
Birth |
1788 |
Guilford Co, North Carolina |
Gender |
Male |
Other-Begin |
5 Sep 1807 |
Guilford Co, North Carolina |
father's will |
|
Doak, William Transcript of will - Will Book A, Page 103, Guilford County, North Carolina
(copy handwritten will attached to William Doak)
Thanks to Robert Edward Oakley and Ralph Doak for the document.
|
Residence |
1812 |
Doaks Stand, Madison Co, Mississippi |
Residence |
1820 |
Doaksville, Indian Territory, Oklahoma |
Census |
1830 |
Yazoo Co, Mississippi |
- Name: Josiah S Doak
Home in 1830 (City, County, State): Yazoo, Mississippi
Free White Persons - Males - 20 thru 29: 2
Free White Persons - Males - 30 thru 39: 2
Free White Persons - Females - Under 5: 1
Free White Persons - Females - 15 thru 19: 1
Free White Persons - Females - 20 thru 29: 1
Slaves - Males - 10 thru 23: 1
Slaves - Males - 36 thru 54: 1
Slaves - Females - 10 thru 23: 1
Slaves - Females - 24 thru 35: 1
Slaves - Females - 36 thru 54: 1
Free White Persons - Under 20: 2
Free White Persons - 20 thru 49: 5
Total Free White Persons: 7
Total Slaves: 5
Total - All Persons (Free White, Slaves, Free Colored): 12
|
Other-Begin |
7 Feb 1833 |
Arkansas Weekly Gazette |
ad |
- Arkansas Weekly Gazette March 20, 1833; By May 16, 1833, Ephraim had been sold again, this time to Samuel M. Rutherford?see Arkansas Weekly Gazette, May 29, 1833, p. 4
(ancestry.com)
|
|
Doak, Josiah Stuart Ad placed in Arkansas Weekly Gazette offering rewrd for runaway slave Ephraim; published 20 Mar 1833. |
Census |
Between 1841 and 1845 |
Marshall Co, Mississippi |
state census |
- Name: Josiah Doak
State: MS
County: Marshall County
Township: Northern Division
Year: 1841
Database: MS 1841 State Census Index
Name: Josiah Doak
State: MS
County: Marshall County
Township: Northern Division
Year: 1845
Database: MS 1845 State Census Index
|
Census |
1850 |
Nueces Co, Texas |
- 1850 Nueces Co, Texas
Joseph L. (Josiah) Doak 1789 North Carolina farmer
William H. Doak 21 Missouri
|
Census |
1850 |
Nueces Co, Texas |
Slave Schedule |
- Name: Josiah Doak
State: TX
County: Nueces County
Township: No Twp Listed Ss
Year: 1850
Page: 219
Database: TX 1850 Slave Schedule
|
Other-Begin |
Between 1854 and 1858 |
Nueces Co, Texas |
- The Nueces County slave records 1846-1854,Vol B, on reel 1012697 indicate that on September 5, 1854 Milford P. Norton obtained a deed of Henry Kinney for a Negro woman whose name cannot be determined on the documents and her son Harrison, both of whom were living with J. S. Doakes (sp) in Nueces County at that time. According to other records, Norton practiced law and later became a Texas state judge in Refugio, TX. Prior to or at the same time of his judicial appointment, he managed the business affairs of Kinney while Kinney was out of the country in Nicaragua. On the same reel, records 4 years later in August and September of 1858 indicate that Kinney did not own the two aforementioned slaves but instead only held them in trust for Josiah Doaks and that Doaks was their legal owner. Therefore they could not be conveyed to Norton. In these documents, it is stated that Doak requested the release from the trust of "the yelllow boy," Harrison, whose mother Susan, was now dead. Norton and Kinney agreed to give up any legal rights to Harrison. A 14 year old Mulatto male is listed on the slave census of 1860 as belonging to J.S. Doak (sp).
It is not known how or why Harrison assumed the surname of Mays.
http://trees.ancestry.com/tree/73954/person/-1046101046/media/1?pgnum=1&pg=0&pgpl=pid%7cpgNum
|
Census |
1860 |
Motts, Nueces Co, Texas |
- 269 Randolph J 40 1820 Male Virginia merchant personal estate: 6,000
269 Randolph Louisa 18 1842 Texas
269 Doaks Josiah 73 1787 Virginia real estate: $2000, personal estate: $1800
|
Death |
Abt 1873 |
Nueces Co, Texas |
- Family tree chart of September 3, 1988 of the late Dr. Edmond King Doak li st his middle name as Stuart and that he died in Granbury, Hood County, Texas, rather than in the Choctaw Nation.
(Family Ties @ Rootsweb.com)
---
Ancestry BoardL
Re: Josiah S. Doak b. abt. 1788 and his son Jonathan b. abt. 1835 Choctaw Nation
mckinseytyson Posted: 27 Nov 2009 1:32PM
Classification: Query
Surnames: Doak
I just found the Applications for Enrollment of the Commission to the Five Civilized Tribes, 1898-1914 on Footnote and found the application for Josiah Doak's son, Alexander V. Doak. In it some of the questions and answers regarding Josiah Doak are as follows:
Q "When did Jo Doak die?" A "About 1873".
Q "Where did he die, do you know?" A "He died about twelve miles above Corpus Christi."
Q "In Texas?" A "yes sir."
Q "You don't remember exactly the date of his death?" A "No sir."
Q "Is that in any of your papers?" A "No sir."
Q "What was his age when he died?" A "About eighty six."
So now I am convinced that Josiah Doak, father of William H., Malvina Doak (she is mentioned in one of the applications, too), A. V. Doak, Joseph D. Doak and Jonathan Doak, was living in Nueces County, Texas in 1850 and 1860 and probably through to his death around 1873, according to his son Alexander.
|
Notes |
- "Family tree chart of September 3, 1988 of the late Dr. Edmond King Doak li st his middle name as Stuart and that he died in Granbury, Hood County, Te xas, rather than in the Choctaw Nation."
http://wc.rootsweb.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=familyties&id=I25413
---
"Josiah took over his (Trader William Doak, Doaks Stand) business with the Choctaw's following his death and later opened Doaksville as a community in the Choctaw Nation, Indian Territory"....
clearly William's brother... "It is highly unlikely that the Choctaw's would have been so receptive to William's cousin (which Josiah would have been if William was the son of James Wilson Doak). Wiliam, however, was considered a kinsman by the Choctaw due to the wife or concubine he had taken, who was the daughter or niece of Mingo Apukshunnubbee. Therefore, his brother, although having just one wife who was white, would still be accepted. A cousin is doubtful."
http://wc.rootsweb.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=familyties&id=I06019
-----
"Josiah, son of William & Ann and a younger bro of Trader William Doak, is named in his father's will as Josiah (no middle name/initial)
He was also very much involved with the Choctaw.
The Feds paid for him (and family) to accompany the Choctaw on their 'Trail of Tears'
He was 'conductor of the Choctaw delegation' for the Treaty of Dancing Rabbit Creek'
He (co-)founded Doaksville
He fathered the first white child born in Indian Territory
He was almost certainly Josiah S(tuart) Doak
His son, William H Doak, was a Captain in Clarkson's Battalion during the (un)Civil War - the Union regarded him as one of the two most dangerous men operating in Indian Territory on the Confederate side."
(from Ralph Doak)
[2, 3]
|
Person ID |
I51723 |
Roots |
Last Modified |
4 Apr 2013 |
Family |
Elizabeth Annie Dresser, b. 1810, Virginia d. Aft 1850, of, McKinney, Collin Co, Texas (Age 41 years) |
Marriage |
27 Apr 1827 |
Madison Co, Mississippi |
Divorce |
11 Jun 1850 |
Texas [4] |
- Granted divorce from Josiah S Doak June 11 1850
|
Children |
+ | 1. Malvina Deluren Doak, b. 1826, Mississippi d. Abt 1864, Bexar Co, Texas (Age 38 years) |
| 2. William H. Doak, b. 16 Apr 1829, Madison Co, Tennessee d. 18 Feb 1911, Cleburn, Johnson Co, Texas (Age 81 years) |
| 3. Joseph Dudley Doak, b. 1832, Choctaw Nation, Indian Territory d. Between 1876 and 1880, of, Collin Co, Texas (Age 44 years) |
| 4. R. Doak, b. 1837, Mississippi d. Aft 1850, of, McKinney, Collin Co, Texas (Age 14 years) |
| 5. Alexander V. Doak, b. Jun 1842, Holly Springs, Marshall Co, Mississippi d. Aft 1900, of, Ardmore, Chickasaw Nation, Indian Territory (Oklahoma) (Age ~ 58 years) |
|
Family ID |
F16992 |
Group Sheet | Family Chart |
Last Modified |
4 Apr 2013 |