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Col. Weir Boyd ~ Sarah J. Sitton
Dahlonega, Lumpkin County, Georgia
Weir Boyd, Colonel, Fifty-second Georgia Volunteer Infantry. Born September
14, 1820, in Hall County, Georgia, Boyd comes to Dahlonega in the 1830s. He
is a student at the Old Academy, a private school in Dahlonega. He marries
Sarah J. Sitton on February 9, 1843. (born in 1824, Sarah outlives her
husband and sons Augustus Boyd and Marion Boyd, living until 1905.) Boyd is
elected clerk of the Superior Court in 1850, and moves to Dahlonega. He is
admitted to the bar in 1856, and later represents his county and district in
both branches of the Georgia legislature. At the beginning of the Civil War,
Boyd reads the governor's proclamation, and calls for volunteers to fill the
requisition of the state upon Lumpkin County. Though the required number of
volunteers is only 110 men, 150 men volunteer, including Boyd. He is soon
elected colonel of the Fifty-second Georgia Volunteer Infantry. He resigns
later in 1862, due to typhoid fever. His son
Augustus
Franklin Boyd also serves in the Fifty-second Georgia Regiment, as
captain of Company B, and is tragically killed while rallying his men on May
16, 1863, during the battle at Baker's Creek, Mississippi. The Gus Boyd
Chapter of the Daughters of the Confederacy, organized in 1905, is named for
Augustus, at the suggestion of Colonel William Pierce Price. After the Civil
War, Boyd is chosen to be a member of the Georgia Constitutional Convention,
which drafts the state constitution in 1877. An attorney in Dahlonega, Boyd
forms a partnership with his son
Marion G. Boyd,
and acts as a broker, collector and liaison for a number of clients. He is
also a member of the Masonic Lodge, and a minister, and is instrumental in
establishing the post offices in Jay and Dahlonega. Although Weir Boyd is
originally a Presbyterian, and on the board of trustees of the Presbyterian
Church, the Boyds become Methodists and are among the prominent "tent"
holders at the Cedar Mountain Campground, ten miles north of Dahlonega. In
the early part of October each year, the most enthusiastic and devout
members of the Methodist Church (along with some Baptists and unaffiliates)
assemble for a series of religious services continuing for a week or more.
Boyd is one of the preachers at these camp meetings. At its height, the
campground features around thirty "tents" constructed of wood and supplied
with a rude chimney, beds, benches, and the like. A whole family and several
guests moves into each tent to live, eat, and sleep there during the
meeting. Another of Boyd's sons, J. W. Boyd, becomes a professor of
mathematics, first at Young Harris College, and then at North Georgia
College. J. W. Boyd later becomes a minister, and is elected without
opposition as state senator to represent the Thirty-second District from
1907 to 1908. He introduces legislation to pave roads between counties,
laying the foundation for the present highway system. Mattie Boyd, who
marries Professor B. Palmer Gaillard, is Weir Boyd's daughter. Born in 1854,
she lives until 1925. She serves as president of the Corona Hedaera Society,
a society for young ladies. Boyd serves as defense attorney for the Augusta
& Dahlonega Mining Company in the case Oats v. Early, 1867. When the main
building of North Georgia College, the old Mint building, burns down, Boyd
and other members of the board of trustees meet to plan rebuilding the
college. The Signal acknowledges in 1892 that Boyd is one of the seven known
soldiers of the Indian wars prior to 1843 in Lumpkin County. He died
November 8, 1893 in Dahlonega.
Source: Library of Georgia - Dahlonega, Lumpkin Co., Georgia
NOTE: Use this data as a finding tool, just as you would any other
secondary source. When you find the name of an ancestor
listed confirm the facts in original sources.
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