Harriet Byron McAllister


Harriet Byron McAllister Blanton Theobald was an American philanthropist and is referred to as the "Mother of Greenville", Mississippi. She deeded much of her land and right of ways to what would become the new site of Greenville, Mississippi after 1865.

Biography

Early life

Harriet Byron McAllister was born to John Keith McAllister and Mary Smith on April 17, 1798, in Georgia. J.K. McAllister is native of Lisburn, County Antrim, Ireland and had eventually migrated to the colonies through joining the British Legion during the American Revolutionary War. He served as a captain under the command of famed General Banastre Tarleton. During the route of Tarleton's forces, McAllister was captured at the Battle of Cowpens in 1781. He was paroled after the war and remained in Dinwiddie County, Virginia where he married Mary Elizabeth Smith, and became a citizen of America. He entered the mercantile business in Charleston, South Carolina and then moved his family to Greene County, Georgia, where Harriet was born April 17, 1798. Four children were born to the family; Thomas Keith; Augustus William, Harriet Bryon, and Charlotte. In 1810 McAllister would move his family to the old town of Washington, Mississippi near Natchez.

Blantonia and Greenville

William Whitaker Blanton married Harriet Byron McAllister in Walnut Hills, Mississippi on March 26, 1818. This was a time when the region was being established as a United States territory through the selling of lands by the Choctaw; during December 1817 Mississippi had been admitted as the 20th state in the union. Washington County, Mississippi was established in January 1827 and the couple settled there in 1828 where they obtained a plantation through land grants under Andrew Jackson’s administration. William and Harriet were to eventually have ten children but only two survived. The town of Greenville, Mississippi was originally established in 1846 as the third seat of government in Washington County. The community has shifted location twice and present day Greenville is located just slightly southwest of the first settlement. The original town site fell victim to flood waters of the Mississippi River.
Their plantation, was located on and around the current city of Greenville, Mississippi. This plantation is not to be confused with the plantation of the same name in Lorman, Mississippi also named Blantonia but owned within the same families. William Whitaker Blanton's parents John Blanton and Martha Belton "Patsy" Whitaker, originally from Virginia, moved to Kentucky but eventually the family established the near Red Lick/Lorman, Mississippi just south of Vicksburg. Just before the start of the Civil War, Washington County’s population was 15,679, with 14,467 of those residents enslaved to plantations such Blantonia.
After William Whitaker Blanton's death in 1838, Harriet Byron McAllister Blanton married Samuel Theobald on June 27, 1841. McAllister would also outlive her second husband as Theobald would die in 1866, they also had two children together but both did not survive. In total, she was the mother of 12 children, 10 by William and 2 by Samuel with only 2 that would survive.

The destruction of Greenville

was a pivotal town for General Ulysses S. Grant's northern operations in Mississippi during the Siege of Vicksburg campaign. Beginning at the end of March 1863, Greenville was the target of General Frederick Steele's C.S.A. soldiers. The design of this operation was to do reconnaissance of Deer Creek as a possible route to Vicksburg and to create havoc, cause damage to confederate soldiers, guerrillas and loyal landowners. Highly successful, Steele's men seized almost 1000 head of livestock and burned 500,000 bushels of corn during their foray. In addition to the damage done, the Union soldiers also acquired several hundred slaves, who would cross the Union lines and become U.S. soldiers. The first black regiments were formed during the Siege of Greenville; by the end of the operation nearly 500 ex-slaves were learning the "school of the soldier."
In early May 1863, as retaliation for Confederate artillery firing on Union shipping on the Mississippi River, Commander Selfridge of the U.S. Navy ordered ashore 67 marines and 30 sailors, landing near Chicot Island. Their orders were to "put to the torch" all homes and buildings of those citizens guilty of aiding and abetting Confederate forces. By the end of the day of May 9, the large and imposing mansions, barns, stables, cotton gins, overseer dwellings and slave quarters of Harriet Blanton's and another plantations were completely destroyed. The destruction of Greenville was completed on May 6 when a number of Union infantrymen slipped ashore from their boats and burned every building in the town but two.

Donation of ''Blantonia''

Greenville today is in its third location, three miles from the original site. At the end of the American Civil War, returning Confederate Mississippi regiments found their homes gone and their families scattered among area plantations. Following that destruction of Greenville, Mississippi by Federal Troops, on September 1, 1865 Harriet Theobald and her two sons Orville and William donated 47.5 acres of the Blantonia Plantation to rebuild Greenville then earning her the nickname “Mother of Greenville.” In 1867 Major Richard O’Hea, who had planned the wartime defense fortifications at Vicksburg, was hired to lay out the new town; Theobald Street serves as the eastern boundary. The citizens erected a courthouse, a public school, and a library, and provided spaces for churches. Greenville was incorporated on June 24,1870. By this time, the burned-out site of old Greenville was crumbling into the Mississippi River. The Blanton/Theobalds also sold off other portions of land for new home owners.

Later life

Later on Harriet Theobald would survive through other hardships the city of Greenville faced. In 1874, the citizens of Greenville suffered a city-wide catastrophe: the Great Fire of 1874, which destroyed 45 homes and 62 businesses, reducing the population of 890 to about 500. A second major fire would hit the city a year later. Despite warnings of fire hazards, wood had been used as the major material for the construction for the new, post-Civil War Greenville. In 1877, a Yellow fever outbreak decimated the community and surrounding areas that would stretch all the way up to Memphis, Tennessee. A third of the population died in Greenville, including the mayor and four of five councilmen. Soon after the new city was chartered in 1886, a group of cotton planters, factors, buyers, and merchants organized a cotton exchange. Due to the fertile soil, cotton farming and processing became a huge boon to the economy and growth of Greenville during and after Harriet Theobold's lifetime in that city.
While in Monteagle, Tennessee in 1886 Harriet Byron McAllister tripped over a croquet wicket and fell suffering a fractured hip. She never fully recovered and died in Greenville on January 23, 1888 at the age of 89. Numerous sites bear her name in contemporary Greenville to include streets and parks.

Descendants and relations

Harriett McAllister's son Orville Martin Blanton became a medical doctor and prominent apiarist. Blanton and his wife Smith settled on Belle Air Plantation, Washington County, a gift from Harriet Byron McAllister. Blanton served in the Civil War as a medical surgeon with the C.S.A. 1st Louisiana Artillery. Her other son William Campbell Blanton settled with his wife Georgie Smith on Greenway Plantation which had also been part of the original Blantonia Plantation. He would serve as a private in the C.S.A. Company D, of the 28th Mississippi Cavalry and died in 1869. McAllister's granddaughter married Herbert Eustis who was part of the family of George Eustis and James B. Eustis who were prominent in the Louisiana legislature and State Supreme Court. Other prominent descendants have been noted over the years through public records and obituaries.