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George Samuel "Golden Hawk" Sizemore new article content ...
George Samuel "Golden Hawk" Sizemore (1783-1864). Some say he was born in Hawkins
County, Tennessee and died May 6, 1864 in Floyd County, Kentucky. Others say he was born in
1781 in North Carolina. He was also known as Gullen or Gulden early in life.
Contents[hide]
• 1 Parents and Ancestors
• 2 Kentucky Pioneer
• 3 Sizemore Indians struggle for survival and acceptance
• 4 Wives and Children
• 5 Notes
• 6 References
• 7 Bibliography
• 8 External links
[edit] Parents and Ancestors
George was the 4th of 9 children born to George "All" Sizemore (1750-1822) and Agnes
"Aggie" Cornett Shepherd (1753-1833)
[edit] Kentucky Pioneer
Several statues were erected in his honor. The latest was in 1999 in Magoffin County, Kentucky.
He has three markers at his gravesite near the old R.C. Salyer and Finley Arnett home. He lived
in the meadows section of Magoffin County, KY near the mouth of Oakley Creek. George
Sizemore and his son William "Blackhawk" Sizemore were both reported to be legendary
figures in the region of Kentucky in which they resided. [1] George was a Cherokee later a
member of the Whitetop Laurel Band of Cherokees. He escaped Trail of Tears. His family had
to avoid the Indian census to avoid having their lands stolen. DNA links him to the Melungeon
Indians. [2]
From Thousandsticks a Leslie County, KY newspaper "The family history of the Sizemore
family, among the first settlers of Leslie County, is taken from our files of February 1938. It was
written by Judge L. D. Lewis, deceased. 'John "Rockhouse" Sizemore was the first man that
ever had a residence at the mouth of Rockhouse Creek of the Middle Fork of the Kentucky
River where the town of Hyden is now. He came here….about 1817, his wife was Nancy
Bowling. He had a sister that married William Begley…..John Sizemore died about 1850. His
wife …died about the year 1870. John Sizemore was related to George Golden Hawl Sizemore.
George Golden Hawk lived and died somewhere in or near the Floyd County line. John
Sizemore the ancestor of all these people was perhaps half Cherokee born in North Carolina ca.
1781; died in KY on 6 May 1864; married first Sallie Anderson who reportedly died ca. 1842.
Researcher Judy Salyer has reported on the Magoffin Co, KY Sizemore genealogy website that
Perry Co, KY records show the marriage of a George Golden Hawk Sizemore to Mary Ann
Womack on 15 May 1826. George is reported to have fathered 13 children by Polly Womack,
but Eastern Cherokee Applications indicate that he and wife Sallie Anderson had children as late
as ca. 1837. He also was the father of at least six Sizemore children by Alethia (Richardson)
Goodman, and in one court case is reputed to have said that he was the father of a total of 55
children. He is referred to in different records as "Gulden", "Golden", "Goulden", "Golden" and
"Goldenhawk". I am not aware of the source of his nickname Goldenhawk or Golden, nor have
I determined the source of the nickname of his son William "Blackhawk" Sizemore. This
George Sizemore and his son Blackhawk were both reported to be legendary figures in the
region of KY in which they resided." [3]
[ edit] Sizemore Indians struggle for survival and acceptance
A group of Indians escaped the Trail of Tears. They were taken in by a family named Sizemore
in the Whitetop Mountain area of Virginia, North Carolina, and Tennessee. They took the last
name of Sizemore. The Indians now known as Sizemore intermarried with the Cherokee Indians
in the area. Sixty years after the Trail of Tears they became known as the Whitetop Laurel Band
of Cherokees. They were never registered in the Eastern Band of Cherokee Census. The Eastern
Band of Cherokee Indians denied the applications of 2175 Whitetop Sizemores to apply for
Cherokee Nation funds. Some said they belonged in the Muscogee (Creek) Indian nation. They
avoided the Indian census both to avoid having their farms stolen and because they were
passing for white in Kentucky. [2] Other Sizemores joined the Metis and the Melungeon.
Many Sizemores applied for government funds with Eastern Cherokee enrollment applications
ECAs. Most were denied because they were not on previous a census. More detail is on ECA
#10133, #12477, #5113
The last name Sizemore comes from the English name Sismore
[edit] Wives and Children
George was 1/4 Cherokee and fathered 52 children. [4]
Brought before a Floyd County, Kentucky circuit court for having too many wives, told the
judge "If I was as pretty a man as you I'd of had more."
Different researchers allocate the children differently among the wives.
George and Mary Ann Womack (1806-xxxx) on May 15, 1826 in Perry Co., Hazard, KY. 13
children:
Edward Sizemore; Jenny Sizemore b: 1828 in Kentucky; Catty Sizemore b: 1833 in Kentucky;
Henry Sizemore b: 1835 in Clay, Kentucky; Syrena Sizemore b: 1858 in Kentucky; Mary
Sizemore b: 1862 in Kentucky, USA
George married Sally Sarah Anderson (1792-1850) in 1810 in Hawkins County, TN.
Elizabeth "Betsy" Sizemore b: 1813 in Floyd, Kentucky, married 1. Goodman, 2. Reuben Salyer
Morgan 3. William Wiley Arnett; John Sizemore(1815-1862) born in Floyd, Kentucky, maarried
Esther; William "Black Hawk" Sizemore (1818-1874) born in Kentucky, married 1. Martha
Milum, 2. Rebecca Griffey; Nancy J. Sizemore(1821-1902) born in , Floyd, Kentucky, married
John M. Hoover; Susannah Sizemore (1823-1882) born in , Floyd, Kentucky, married Jacob
Wireman; Malvina Sizemore (1825-1869) born in , Floyd, Kentucky; Florence Sizemore (1826-
1911) born in , Floyd, Kentucky, married John B. Wireman; Sarah Sizemore 1828-1913) born in
, Kentucky, married Fielding Wireman; Jake Sizemore b: 1832 in Floyd, Kentucky; Catherine
Sizemore (1835-1907) born in , Floyd, Kentucky, married Samuel Montgomery; Granville
"Poke" Sizemore b: 1835 in Magoffin, Floyd, KY, married Tracy Taza Minix; Amanda
Sizemore b: 1835 in Floyd, Kentucky;