Thursday, October 8, 2015

Rhoda's Struggle to Find Happiness Again

Wally Waits
©2015


Rhoda Cope[1] seems to have had a happy marriage with Allen Waits from 1814 to 1832.  Then her husband’s sudden death disrupted her life.  The loss of companionship was compounded by the loss of financial security.  This is the story of Rhoda’s second marriage and her struggle to find happiness again. 
Allen’s death almost certainly forced Rhoda to think about the long term needs for herself and for the future of her children.  As the mother of eleven children, she would have naturally reflected upon her situation.  Rhoda had several strengths.  She was still young enough to attract the attention of suitors since she was only 31 years old at the time of Allen’s death.  It seems, however, that her grief prevented her from hastily remarrying.
Rhoda also had a farm.  In that regard, she had a home that was paid for.  There were, however, strings attached to the land.  She could not inherit the property herself.  The land legally became the property of her children.  The farm could thus be sold for the children’s benefit.  This would require long-term bonds to insure that the children would agree with the transaction when they became adults.  This obligation would last for at least eighteen years because the youngest Waits child was a daughter who was less than a year old.
There was an alternative option for the family.  This option was to lease the farm until the children all reached maturity.  Then they could legally execute a deed disposing to the farm.  The children would finally receive their inheritance.  It was this legal process that clearly outlined the connections of all of the Waits children.
Rhoda’s daughter, Mary or “Polly,” had married about age 15 to John D. Sanders, the oldest son of Drucilla Best and George Woodard Sanders, a respected, well-to-do farmer.  Mary and John opted to not make the journey with John’s parents and siblings when the George took his family to the northwest corner of Arkansas Territory in the fall of 1831.  Surveyor’s field notes document George Sanders living in Washington County on February 17th, 1832.
Mary and John Sanders opted to not emigrate to Arkansas with John’s parents remaining in Jackson County for two more years.  They followed John’s parents to Arkansas Territory about the fall of 1833, leaving Rhoda dependent on her oldest sons, James, Beth and Allen Jr.
Two years later, John’s mother, Drucilla Sanders, passed away on Nov. 17th, 1835.  George Sanders left Arkansas Territory in early spring on a journey back to northeast Alabama.  One suspects that his purpose was courtship, but he may have had business reasons as well.  The trip took a couple of months, but George’s arrival date is unknown.  He had to have arrived sometime in late spring because seasonal rains flooded creeks that blocked roads. 
George seems to have proposed to Rhoda shortly after his arrival and she seems to have agreed without much delay.  Their agreement was certainly made by early June as will shortly be apparent.  One family story that survived until the late 1900’s is that George and Rhoda had been lovers before marrying different mates.[2]  They then married following the deaths of their respective spouses.  The first part of this story is patently in error as Rhoda was barely five years old when George married Drucilla Best in 1805.  Rhoda knew George as a consequence of John and Mary’s marriage.  George and Rhoda had certainly met and become acquainted during their children’s courtship.  They would certainly have met at John and Mary’s wedding.
There is a gap of four years between the death of Allen Waits and the marriage of these two parents.  First of all, there is no hint that Rhoda was attracted to George before her husband’s death.  But, she was apparently quickly and fully committed to marrying George because she was nearly two months pregnant when she and George stood before the minister.  Rhoda’s head-strong nature about getting married did not turn out well a second time.
Rhoda’s pregnant condition is based on the birth of her first Sanders child, a son named Henry Newton Sanders.  Since she had given birth to eleven children in her first marriage, and all apparently healthy, full-term births, it is expected that she would have another healthy, full-term delivery.  It comes as a surprise to find that her first child by George was born on March 23rd, 1837.  This means that Rhoda must have become pregnant with Henry about the middle of June 1836.  This is nearly two months prior to her marriage with George. 
From the time of George’s arrival back in Jackson County in the spring of 1836, few records shed light on events.  Family records claim that George and Rhoda married on Aug. 9, 1836, the second Sunday of the month.  A Sunday wedding implies that their marriage was performed by a circuit rider. 
No description of the wedding survives.  George most likely saw that the celebration afterwards was a gala affair.  If George and Rhoda’s marriage was anything like his son Henry’s marriage in 1856, there were a couple of days of eating and imbibing to mark the occasion.  In 1856, George’s new daughter-in-law finally tired of their celebration and put her foot down after three days in an effort to end the feasting and drinking.
Preparations for traveling to George’s home in Arkansas commenced in earnest after the wedding.  Rhoda had moved to Alabama only a few years previously, so she knew what preparations had to be completed for the trek to Arkansas.  Possessions had to be packed or disposed of.  Rhoda had to plan meals for a minimum of two months for at least a dozen people.  She would decide which cooking pots would be used nightly for preparing meals over an open fire. 
 George oversaw the purchase of wagons and the examination of the teams of oxen to ensure that they could pull a wagon full of clothing, food, utensils, furniture, etc.   The spinning wheel and dresser would make the trip.  The mattresses would, too, but not the home-made bed frames.  Iron plow points would be removed from plows to join the other tools in the wagons.
They could only take what they could load onto the wagons.  One of the pieces that Rhoda insisted in bringing to Arkansas was her loom.[3]  This was probably the largest item they took.
Crops in the field had to be harvested and then sold.  Then one of the most important tasks needing attention was dealing with the Waits farm.  As long as the Waits family remained on the farm, there was no need to take legal action.  But the widow and children were migrating westward.  Because the father of the Waits household was deceased, an agreement was needed for a local farmer to take over the farm.  The Waits farm was not to be sold, but instead leased out until the youngest Waits child either became an adult or married.  Only then could the children collectively dispose of their inheritance.  The children gave John Sanders power of attorney to finally sell the farm in 1848 after Matilda’s tragic death.
            At last the final packing and preparation was completed and George Sanders, his pregnant new bride and the ten remaining Waits children left Jackson County bound for the Arkansas frontier.  It is said that the caravan arrived in Washington County in the very new state during the first snowfall of winter.  The journey had taken a long time and Rhoda was pregnant the whole trip.
Rhoda moved into George’s log cabin previously occupied by Drucilla.  The house was built only five years earlier.  No description of the structure survives, but it surely was a two-pen structure with a dogtrot between each pen.  George would build a framed house adjacent to the log house[4] probably during the 1840’s or the early 1850’s.  It was probably for Rhoda in an effort to keep her from separating from him.
 It is believed that Rhoda married George for money and status.  Well, she got the status, but Rhoda must have been unhappy with her marriage almost from the start.  Unfortunately for her, however, divorce was not an option.  These were only granted by the state legislature and her husband’s service as a Representative effectively blocked that avenue.
            George Sanders was elected to the Arkansas House of Representatives for Washington County on October 1st, 1838 in Fayetteville.  The new state’s second legislative session lasted from Nov. 2nd to Dec. 17th, 1838.  George spent time in Little Rock, in all probability without his wife.  This freed George to frequent the taverns in the state capitol where legislators bent elbows and argued on behalf of their pet acts they were hoping to enact. 
This was not George’s first drinking session.  Many of Arkansas’ candidates for office are said to have tapped kegs of liquor in order to buy votes.  The October 1st balloting in Huntsville would have been such a time.
 George would also serve in the third state legislative session in November and December, 1840.  During his absence from Madison County, Rhoda gave birth to their second son, Washington Jefferson Madison DeKalb Cope Sanders.  This time he represented Madison County that had just been carved out of Washington County.  He was not re-elected in 1842, but returned to Little Rock for the fifth General Assembly that lasted from Nov. 4th, 1844 to Jan. 10th, 1845.  This was his last term as a state representative.
            Rhoda may have been grateful that George was in Little Rock for each of the legislative session George attended.  Those couple of months the legislature was in session would have meant that it was peaceful at home. 
During these years that George served in public office, she had given birth to a son and a daughter who survived.  George and Rhoda’s second child was a daughter named Osina Malona Woodard Throckmorton Jackson Sanders.  There were three more children who must have been born between 1840 and 1846.   They were two girls and a boy who did not survive and were not named.
The settlement of the Waits estate in 1848 was possible because of one of the most tragic events possible.  In the spring of 1848, Matilda Jane Waits was the youngest child of Allen and Rhoda Cope Waits.  As the youngest unmarried daughter at home, she was the remaining roadblock to the estate’s settlement.  She was born November 5th, 1831, just a few months before her father’s sudden death.  She was walking past the wash pot that sat atop a log fire on a spring day.  Always cautioned to be careful around fires, Matilda’s dress hem ignited after a wind gust blew it against some hot coals.[5]  The burning dress, the frightful cries and the futile first aid effort afterwards were heart rending.  Matilda’s death removed the remaining blockage for settling Allen’s estate.
The 1840’s were a trying time for Rhoda.  During this decade, she suffered the deaths of three infants and an almost grown daughter.  Furthermore, James Cope Waits and Joseph Waits went to Texas rather than remain close to their mother.  Joseph told his daughter that he did not like the strict discipline of his step-father.[6]  This was also the period when her marriage completely broke down.
The lives of Rhoda’s two youngest children suggest that they suffered during the early years of their lives by living in a household with arguing and fighting parents robbed them of a sense of security.  Wash and Osina were victims of their environment.  The 1840-1845 years of marriage to George were rocky ones given the repressed anger expressed by Rhoda’s two youngest children. 
Wash was cantankerous in his disposition according to a nephew.  At one point, he caused a visiting half-sister to flee his home in tears after only a half hour.  Wash was described as a “bad actor,” but his may also have been a reference to his Civil War service.  It is believed that the recollection of an uncle’s behavior was illustrative of temperament.
Osina, on the other hand, grew up fearful of marriage after having seen her parents quarrel repeatedly.  She was so fearful that she lived with a pharmacist and bore him five children before finally marrying.  The pharmacist father repeatedly reapplied for Civil War pensions.  In sequential applications, he continuously back dated his marriage date to earlier and earlier years, finally covering all of their children’s births with a fictitious marriage date.
            One cannot say that there was a sexual conflict between George and Rhoda, but there are certainly elements that support the idea.  Rhoda probably entered menopause about 1845.  George may have turned to his slaves after intercourse with Rhoda ended.  This is suggested by the 1850 Slave Schedule that lists the presence of several mulatto children on the Sanders farm born after 1842.  These multiracial children may not be George’s offspring.  They could have been purchased, but he is recorded as being prolific father, having sired 20 children by his two wives. 
George was independently minded and maybe was ideologically incompatible with Rhoda.  Rhoda’s father was very religious in his beliefs and probably instilled a Christian belief of morality in his daughter.  Rhoda was likely religious as well because she named one of her Waits sons after a minor Tennessee evangelist.  Furthermore, her father was asked frequently to speak to misbehaving men and women in Warren County, Tennessee. 
There is a story about George that seems to date after his service as a state legislator.  A descendant related an account about concerned neighbors visiting George.  While the cause for the visit was not relayed, the story is telling in many ways. 
The visitors stopped their horses at the edge of the corn field where George was pulling weeds.  He stood up and walked over to the fence to learn why these men wanted to talk with him, though I imagine he guessed.  The visitors were upstanding members of the local community and were ardent church-goers.
Just like Rhoda’s father activities, these good brethren had come to talk to George about concerns worrying some of his neighbors.  The nature of George’s behavior that was so worrying is not recalled, but George was of no mind to bend to the community’s standards.  When the visitors raised the threat of turning George out of the local church, George reportedly said, “They need not be concerned about turning him out.  He would turn himself out.” That ended the discussion.  George Sanders then returned to his weed pulling in the corn patch while the pious neighbors departed.
Rhoda was probably unsatisfied with George’s behavior for years.  But public rebuke of her husband’s behavior may have been the final straw for her.  She would have been greatly displeased to say the least. 
The 1850 census reports Rhoda as still living with George W. Sanders.  But that is the same census that reports Isaac Murphy as living in Washington County, when in reality he was in the California gold fields.  So Rhoda could have been listed as still a being a member of George’s household when in reality she had already moved out.
The 1860 federal census clearly shows that she has moved out of George’s frame house and is living her son Newt Sanders and his wife and child.  There is no way of telling exactly when she left George’s home.  Such a move signaled her departure from high society.  She also left behind the help of at least one slave woman.[7]
In leaving her marriage, she literally moved from light to darkness in the process of taking up residence in a small log cabin.  But, in this cabin that was located in Beth Waits Hollow just south of the Dunaway Cemetery, she found the peace and a measure of happiness that had been absent for nearly two decades. 
Only the rock cornerstones of the cabin survive to mark its location.  This was her home for the remainder of her life.  Grandchildren, and some of her children as well, regularly checked on her to insure that she had enough food, water and fire wood.  She had several of her Waits children and a couple of her Sanders children living close by to assist her.
The years of the Civil war were the hardest for her because kin had to be careful about coming to Rhoda’s house.  She likely had to fetch her own water, a daily chore.  On 27 Oct 1862 that she got word that her husband had passed away of uremic poisoning.[8]  She might have traveled to the Wesley Cemetery for his burial. 
During the last years of the war, wild animals became a threat in Beth Waits Hollow.  At one point, Granny Waits had to “bar the door” to protect herself from wolves according to an uncle of Clayton Eubanks.
Women, especially elderly ones, were of little threat to combatants on both sides of the conflict.  They may have been robbed of food and livestock, but generally were not personally molested unless they were found aiding soldiers.  Rhoda had a son whose farm was nearby.   Because he had Southern sympathies and hid in the forest in order to stay near his family, Rhoda had to be careful about going to his farm.  It was very dangerous for him to work on his own farm, to be seen in the neighborhood or to visit kinfolk.
Union sympathizers finally observed her son at his farm one evening.  Word was passed to a local quasi-legal Union militia that soon rode up and surrounded her son’s cabin.  William S. Waits was shot down in the back yard when he ran out of his home in hopes of reaching the underbrush.  Rhoda probably heard the gunfire that killed him.  She probably feared the worse had happened.  She probably helped prepare the body and assisted in taking it to the Dunaway Cemetery for burial, chores she did not likely perform for her husband a year or two earlier because his death was miles away according to the filing of his probate.
Rhoda was recalled by the name of “Granny Waits” in the neighborhood for over a century.  Officially, she remained a Sanders and was listed on the 1860 census as such.  It is possible that she began using her former married name late in life.  She passed away on January 17th, 1868 in Newt Sanders’ home[9].  Her burial in the Dunaway Cemetery is marked by a casket-shaped stone laying on the ground.[10]  The Civil War had ended several years earlier, so many of her neighbors and relatives would have attended.  Close by is her son’s grave that is marked by a broken sandstone slab similar to Rhoda’s.  A granddaughter[11] recounted in 1972 that her grandmother was buried adjacent to a son.  The only child possible was William S. Waits, her fifth offspring.  Another stone of similar material is next to these two graves.  Rhoda, even after her death, is surrounded by family.




[1] This account is an attempt to recreate her life using the known facts and inferences that seem to make sense.  All errors are mine.
[2] Myrtle Waite Davis, interview 27 Mar 1972.
[3] Myrtle Waite Davis, interview 27 Mar 1972.
[4] Eugene Counts, interview 5 Sep 1976.
[5] Myrtle Waite Davis, interview 27 Mar 1972.
[6] Myrtle Waite Davis, interview 27 Mar 1972.  Her father did not like his step-father’s strictness.  His step-father threatened to beat her father if he stood on one foot.
[7] Myrtle Waite Davis, interview early March, 1972.
[8] Eugene Counts, interview 10 Aug 1976.
[9] Stoneleigh Parker Cummings, Newt’s grandson, interview on 5 Aug 1972.
[10] Stoneleigh Parker Cummings, interview 26 Feb 1972.
[11] Myrtle Waite Davis, interview Mar 1972.

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