William Pullen

From Bhamwiki
Revision as of 09:55, 4 July 2011 by Dystopos (talk | contribs) (still working)
Jump to navigation Jump to search
William Pullen's headstone at Forest Hill Cemetery

William N. Pullen (born February 4, 1757 near Petersburg, Bedford County, Virginia; died April 4, 1845 in Jefferson County) was a Revolutionary War veteran and early settler of Jefferson County.

Pullen was the son of Justice Thomas Pullen and Margaret Adams Pullen of Virginia. He enlisted in Captain William Davies company of the continental army on January 1, 1777. He served in George Lambert's regulars, 14th battalion, 14th Virginia regiment of foot. That outfit later became the 10th Virginia Regiment under Colonel William Davies, and then merged with the 1st Regiment. Pullen fought under Washington's command at Brandywine, Monmouth, Germantown and Guilford C.H., and was encamped at Valley Forge, Pennsylvania in the winter of 1777-78. In his seven years of service, he attained the rank of Lieutenant.

After the war, Pullen first settled before 1786 in Wilkes County, Georgia, where he married the former Mary Haynes. He had two draws in the 1803 Georgia land lottery, but moved to the Pendleton District of South Carolina before the end of 1811. He participated in the War of 1812. In 1817 a number of families from the Pendleton District removed to settle in central Alabama. Pullen was listed in the 1820 census at his Carolina home, but is reported to have purchased property in what is now Avondale neighborhood of Birmingham from an "Indian Chief" in 1821.

Upon his death in 1845, Pullen was buried in what was then a family cemetery. By all accounts, he was the first man buried in Jefferson County with full military honors. He was remembered by his relative, P. A. Hickman, in the pages of the Alabama Baptist, as "an honest upright man; esteemed and beloved by all who know him, and doubtless a good Christian."

His wife was buried alongside him in 1851. They had 6 children: Clarissa (Hickman), Sarah (Rowan), William, Martha (Hickman), Mary (Rowan) and Elizabeth (Tankersley). Clarissa's son, W. P. Hickman, was a Jefferson County Commissioner.

Pullen's grave site lay in the path of the development of Avondale after 1887. The once-secluded family plot was soon surrounded by new houses, about 50 yards from the Avondale Streetcar (6th Avenue South) between 34th and 35th Streets. Pullen's grave was marked by a mound of brown stones at the base of an oak tree, capped with a flat tablet inscribed: "William Pullen, A Soldier of the Revolution, who died April 4th, 1845 aged 87 years."

In November 1925 Pullen's remains, and those of his wife, were moved to Forest Hill Cemetery. A new granite headstone was made with a bronze plaque provided by the General Sumter Chapter of the National Society Daughters of the American Revolution. On the testimony of his descendants, his new stone gave his birth year as 1749, but that date conflicts with the original marker and with the 1840 "Census of Pensioners", which gives his age as 82. More than 5,000 people attended the ceremonies at Forest Hill.


References