Anne Robertson Johnson Cockrill

Anne Robertson Johnson Cockrill
Born February 10, 1757
Wake County, North Carolina
Died October 13, 1821
Tennessee
Resting place Nashville City Cemetery
Occupation Landowner
Spouse(s) John Cockrill
Relatives James Robertson (brother)

Anne Robertson Johnson Cockrill (February 10, 1757October 13, 1821) was an American pioneer. She became the first woman to receive a land grant in Tennessee.

Early life

Anne Robertson Johnson Cockrill was born on February 10, 1757 in Wake County, North Carolina.[1] Her brother, James Robertson (1742-1814), founded Fort Nashborough alongside John Donelson (1718–1785).

Adult life

She moved to Fort Watauga in North Carolina, and later moved to Fort Caswell.[1][2] When it was attacked by Native Americans, she led a group of women to throw boiling water at them to ward them off.[2]

Her first husband was a justice of the peace in the Washington District of East Tennessee and was killed in an accident.[1][2][3] After he died, Cockrill and her three small daughters joined Colonel John Donelson in the migration of the first pioneers on a flatboat to go down the Cumberland River to Tennessee to the Cumberland settlements.[2] The exhibition was intended to bring families of the men who settled Nashville there.[4] During the journey, she taught the children in the boat to make small wooden boxes, filling them with river sand, and drawing letters and numbers in the sand.[3] She was later honored as Middle Tennessee’s first teacher.[5]

In 1784, she received a land grant for 640-acre from the North Carolina legislature; she was the first woman in this position.[2][4] The land was then known as Cockrill Springs and was situated on what is now Centennial Park in Nashville, Tennessee, near the campus of Vanderbilt University.[2] There is now a monument in her memory there.[2]

Anne and John married in 1784 and had eight children.[1][2]

Death

She died on October 13, 1821 in Tennessee. She was buried in the Nashville City Cemetery.[2]

Further reading

Lewis, Peyton Cockrill. A Perilous Journey: The Founding of Nashville, Tennessee, 1780-1781 (2005) Channing Press

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 Carole Stanford Bucy, Anne Robertson Johnson Cockrill, The Tennessee Encyclopedia of History and Culture, December 25, 2009
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Nashville City Cemetery
  3. 1 2 "Ann Robertson Johnston Cockrill | Entries | Tennessee Encyclopedia". tennesseeencyclopedia.net. Retrieved 2015-05-06.
  4. 1 2 "Cockrill Mayhew" (PDF). terpconnect.umd.edu. Retrieved 2015-05-06.
  5. "Leadership Giving". uwwc.org. Retrieved 2015-05-06.

External links

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