Individual Details
David Luckie Knox
(25 Mar 1801 - 2 May 1854)
Birth: Mar. 25, 1801
Death: May 2, 1854
Age 53 yrs, 1 mo, 18 days
There is a brief biography of him found in The Knox family: a genealogical and biographical sketch of the descendants of John Knox. I have provided the excerpt on David Knox below if you would like to add it to his grave:David Knox was the only son of James Knox. In 1820 he married Elizabeth Montgomery, sister to his uncle Samuel Knox's wife. They were daughters of Col. Hugh Montgomery, a state Senator of Jackson County, Georgia and the last Cherokee Indian agent prior to their removal west. Knox and his family moved from Georgia to McMinn County in 1830 and settled on the Hiwassee River. Two years later they moved into the Cherokee nation on the the south side of the river in what is now Bradley County.He was a prosperous farmer owning at his death one of the best farms on the river, also sixty-three slaves. He was politically a Whig. A few years prior to his death, he began the erection of a splendid brick residence on his farm and completed it just before his death.
Children:
James Montgomery Knox (1822 - 1894)
Christopher Columbus Knox (1827 - 1899)
Juliett E. Knox McKamy (1834 - 1922)
Death: May 2, 1854
Age 53 yrs, 1 mo, 18 days
There is a brief biography of him found in The Knox family: a genealogical and biographical sketch of the descendants of John Knox. I have provided the excerpt on David Knox below if you would like to add it to his grave:David Knox was the only son of James Knox. In 1820 he married Elizabeth Montgomery, sister to his uncle Samuel Knox's wife. They were daughters of Col. Hugh Montgomery, a state Senator of Jackson County, Georgia and the last Cherokee Indian agent prior to their removal west. Knox and his family moved from Georgia to McMinn County in 1830 and settled on the Hiwassee River. Two years later they moved into the Cherokee nation on the the south side of the river in what is now Bradley County.He was a prosperous farmer owning at his death one of the best farms on the river, also sixty-three slaves. He was politically a Whig. A few years prior to his death, he began the erection of a splendid brick residence on his farm and completed it just before his death.
Children:
James Montgomery Knox (1822 - 1894)
Christopher Columbus Knox (1827 - 1899)
Juliett E. Knox McKamy (1834 - 1922)
Events
Birth | 25 Mar 1801 | Jackson County, Georgia | |||
Marriage | 9 Mar 1820 | Jackson County, Georgia - Elizabeth Betsie Montgomery | |||
Death | 2 May 1854 | ||||
Burial | Benton Cemetery, Benton, Polk County, Tennessee |
Families
Spouse | Elizabeth Betsie Montgomery (1800 - 1859) |
Child | James Montgomery Knox (1822 - 1894) |
Child | Christopher Columbus Knox (1827 - 1899) |
Child | Juliett E. Knox (1834 - 1922) |
Notes
Burial
Inscription: Here Repose the Remains of David L. Knox. As a Citizen, his many Virtues and Integrity of Character commended him to the Confidence and Esteem of all who knew him. As a Husband, Tender and Affectionate. As a Father, Kind and Indulgent. As a Master, Considerate and Humane. As a Christian, Pious and Consistent. True to his God & Fellowman. Full of Grace and many Virtues. He has been gathered like ripe fruit into the Garden of the Lord, Giving full Assurance in his last Hours of his Acceptance with his Redeemer. His Widow and Children, who deeply feel their irreparable Loss have Raised this Stone to his Memory.Endnotes
1. Find A Grave Memorial# 8102611.