Departments



Articles

Less

Features: Candidate Q and A Hosted in Cedar Key
September 27th, 2012

Features: Coastal Clean-Up In Cedar Key
September 19th, 2012

Features: Did you hear the one about... The two comedians who “killed” on Dock Street ?
August 5th, 2012

Features: Candidates Forum - Jack Schofield
August 4th, 2012

Features: Old General
July 8th, 2012

Features: Trouble`s in Cedar Key
July 8th, 2012

Features: Candidates Forum - Bobby McCallum For Sheriff of Levy County
July 1st, 2012

Features: Debby Does Cedar Key Part 2 - 6:30 PM High Tide Monday 6/25/12
June 26th, 2012

Features: Debby Does Cedar Key Part 1
June 26th, 2012

Features: 1947 Hurricane -You just thought you had seen rain....
June 22nd, 2012

Features: The Royal Jubilee - In Cedar Key
June 14th, 2012

Features: Ask a Lawyer - DO I HAVE TO PAY $21,000 FOR A MEDIVAC HELICOPTER RIDE?
June 9th, 2012

Features: Small Town Teacher Goes Global
May 26th, 2012

Features: North Florida – Wild Florida: Buzzards
May 25th, 2012

Features: Photos of the Lion`s Candidate Forum
May 24th, 2012

More

Seeking Lost Relatives

Seeking Lost Relatives

Toni Collins

DESCENDANT OF LEVY COUNTY PIONEER ENOCH DANIELS SEEKS HELP

The 1830 Federal Census for the Territory of Florida shows father and son, Enoch Daniels Senior and Junior, living in the present day area of Levy County known as Rocky Hammock. At that time this area was part of Alachua County since Levy County was not formed until 1845.

The Daniels, father and son, served as scouts and guides to the US Troops who came into the area looking for Indians during the Second Seminole Indian War (1835 - 1842). The family`s block home is noted as a fort on early maps of the area.

Enoch Sr. died about 1838 and Enoch Jr. continued to live in Levy County and was elected to serve as a County Commissioner in 1845 and again in 1854. He fought in the Third Seminole War (1855), heading up his own company of men.

When the Indian hostilities ended, Enoch Jr. remained in the Charlotte Harbor area where he became a cattleman.

When the Civil War started in 1861, Daniels was one of the refugees who took up residence on Useppa Island.He wanted to play a part in the war so he recruited a band of loyal Floridians to serve in the Union army. Daniel proposed to use the refugee volunteers he recruited to halt the movement of Florida beef to Confederate troops fighting in Georgia and Alabama. He called his group the Florida Rangers.

A descendant of Enoch Daniels, Odessa Thrasher of Williston, is seeking your help. Mrs. Thrasher is looking for any pictures that might exist of Enoch or any other member of the Daniels family. The 1850 Federal Census of Levy County shows Enoch, age 50 and wife, Delilah, age 39. Their seven children are listed as: Rebecca, age 18; James, a laborer age 16; Nancy, age 14; Mary H., age 9; Martha, age 7; Minerva, age 3; and Charles B.H., age 8 months.

If you have any information, please contact Mrs. Odessa Thrasher by mail at 16151 NW 130th Street, Williston, FL 32696 or by telephone at (352) 528-4620.

Click for printer friendly version

Email this article to a friend

 

 

© 2013
Cedar Key News

cedarkeynews@gmail.com