Delilah Wallace

Is your surname Taylor?

Connect to 185,824 Taylor profiles on Geni

Share your family tree and photos with the people you know and love

  • Build your family tree online
  • Share photos and videos
  • Smart Matching™ technology
  • Free!

Delilah Wallace (Taylor)

Also Known As: "Delilah Taylor"
Birthdate:
Birthplace: Tenn or Edgecombe Co., NC
Death: May 24, 1879 (92-93)
Warren Co., Kentucky ?
Place of Burial: Stewart County, Tennessee, United States of America
Immediate Family:

Daughter of Joseph H. Taylor, Sr and Sarah Elizabeth Taylor
Wife of John Wallace and John Cherry
Mother of James Evans Wallace, Sr; William H Wallace; Riley Wallace; Reuben Wallace; Susannah (Susannah) Beard Ahart and 6 others
Sister of Frances "Frankie" Cherry; Amy Temperance Wallace; William Warren Taylor, I; Allen Taylor; John Taylor and 10 others
Half sister of Charity Pitman

Managed by: Private User
Last Updated:

About Delilah Wallace

GEDCOM Note

Delilah Taylor Biography

1786/7 - 1853?

Submitted by Laura Winder

Delilah Taylor was the third child and third daughter of Joseph Taylor Jr. (cal.1751-1819) and Sarah Best (cal. 1764-1834). We believe Delilah was born about 1786/7, when her family was still living on Conetoe Creek, Martin/Edgecombe County, North Carolina.

There is no known photograph of her as yet, but according to stories that came down to her descendant Frances Wallace Marino, she was tall and slender with dark hair and blue eyes. As a girl she was undoubtedly taught the many skills required of a planter/farmer wife: meal preparation and food production, which meant keeping a large garden and often an orchard, and preserving as much food as possible for the coming winter, as well as making cider for the family’s use. She would probably have been taught to run a home dairy, which meant taking the milk after each milking and making butter, buttermilk, and possibly cheese. In the garden along with a variety of vegetables and herbs, she probably grew flax and cotton. She would have been taught how to harvest flax and take it through the grueling process to produce linen thread, and how prepare the cotton for spinning into thread. Then, if the family had its own loom, she was taught how to set up a loom and set the warp and run the shuttles to make cloth. After all that, the finished cloth still had to be made into clothes. (When one reads of the process of making cloth, one realizes why even an inch of usable cloth was never discarded!)

About 1805, she married John Wallace, the brother of her sister Amy’s husband Etheldred Wallace, probably at Martin/Edgecombe Co., North Carolina. John Wallace’s grandfather, William Wallace Sr., is known to have been a Baptist minister from the “Kehukee Association.” Their marriage was possibly under the auspices of this group, for which no records have been located.

To this marriage were born ten children: Amy, who probably died young (1806), Evans (1807), William (1810), Riley (1812), Reuben (1813), Susannah (1819), Amy (1821), Caswell (1822), Eaton (1825), and Agnes (1830).

Family tradition is that John and Delilah loved each other and were very happy together.

When Joseph Taylor Jr. and Sarah Best moved their family from North Carolina to Kentucky in 1808/9, Delilah and John apparently went with them. Later, they moved to Stewart County, Tennessee, where Delilah’s sister Amy and her husband Etheldred Wallace were already living. And still later they moved to Trigg Co., Kentucky.

John Wallace and his son Evans were both doctors who had a healing touch. Neither had formal medical education, as far as is known, but were known to be very good caring for wounds and fractures and other maladies of rural life.

In 1853, some kind of pestilent epidemic hit the area where they were living (possibly smallpox). John and Delilah’s son Eaton and his family were stricken with the disease. John and Delilah lived next door, and undoubtedly went to the little family’s aid. It is possible that John and Delilah both died of the terrible disease, as did Eaton and his wife Milbry, and at least three of their children. No formal documentation has yet been found for the deaths of John and Delilah, and their burial place is unknown. However, no other mention is found of them after 1853.

At one time it was questioned whether Delilah was a child of Joseph Taylor Jr and Sarah Best. She has not yet appeared as Delilah Taylor in any surviving official document of the time. She is recorded as Delila Wallace, age 63, in the 1850 Trigg Co., KY, census, with her husband John Wallace, age 68, with both listed as born in North Carolina. (Remember that many records were burned in North Carolina, Kentucky and Tennessee during the Civil War, and many other records have disintegrated from lack of proper storage, especially in rural counties.) However, the oral tradition about Delilah and her connection with this Taylor family is so strong, we feel certain that she is “ours,” and love and admire her for her hard work and kindness during her life.


GEDCOM Note

!Most information for Delilah Taylor from desc. Nelda
WallaceSaunders, Dover,
TN family records.
Info from "History of the Taylor Family", given at Joseph Taylor, Jr.
Family Reunion, at Richardsville, Warren, Ky, Oct. 15-17, 1909.
Nora Young Ferguson's records, Warren Co. Genealogist.
Much information also on the children and desc. of Delilah (called
Amyin book)
Taylor-John Wallace in the book "History of Stewart Co, Tenn."
Note: Delilah was not listed on her father's Will, dtd Dec. 1815.
It is possible that her father could have also given her land
inEdgecombe Co.
about 1805 when she and John married, although I haven't found
arecord to
back that up. (He did that for sister Frances Taylor and William
B.Cherry.)
Info from 1850 Census, Trigg Co, KY, Delilah Wallace, age 63 yrs,
bornin NC,
residing with husband John and children at Household #528.

!Note: Delilah may have died ca. 1853, when her son Eaton
Wallace,his wife and
family, died of the smallpox.

view all 20

Delilah Wallace's Timeline

1786
1786
Tenn or Edgecombe Co., NC
1807
1807
Tarboro, Edgecombe County, North Carolina, United States of America
1808
1808
Edgecombe County, North Carolina, United States
1810
1810
Richardsville, Warren, Kentucky, USA
1812
1812
1813
May 8, 1813
Richardsville, Warren, Kentucky, United States
1819
1819
Tennessee, USA
1819
Tennessee
1822
1822
Stewart Co., Tennessee, United States