Rev Berryman Hicks

Advertisement

Rev Berryman Hicks

Birth
Death
11 Jun 1839 (aged 60)
Burial
Cherokee County, South Carolina, USA Add to Map
Memorial ID
View Source
Husband of Elizabeth Durham Hicks. Son of William and Edith Hicks.

They had a least 11 Children born to this Union: *date born
1. 1st Dau: Anna, *April 28, 1801- March 1, 1848 at 46 she married circa 1822, William Cleary
2. 1st Son: Durham, *Feb 28, 1803, married Margaret Young.
3. 2nd Son: Hazzael, *1805, married Elizabeth Martin
4. 3rd Son: John Martin, *1806, married Elizabeth Dobbins.
5. 4th Son: Drury D. *April 13, 1809, married Elizabeth Hines.
6. 5th Son: Berry Allison, *April 13, 1809, twin of Drury D.
7. 6th Son: Charles A. "Green" *May 13, 1811 - April 5,
1879
8. 2nd Dau: Artimency, *Jan 6, 1813, married Abraham Lovelace.
9. 7th Son: Richard Henry, *Oct. 27, 1815 - Jan. 29, 1863, married Myra Lewis Simmons.
10 3rd Dau: Didamie Emiline, *Jan. 31, 1819, married George Adam Fike.
11 8th Son: Joseph Martin, *Fev. 2, 1822 - Dec. 24, 1892 died at 70 years old

... Elder Berryman Hicks was born in Spartanburg County (now Cherokee County) July 1, 1778. He "intermarried" with Elizabeth Durham in 1799 and "reared a large and interesting family." He joined the State Line Church in 1800 and was soon licensed to preach. "He was a great revivalist and went far and near with his great co-worker, Elder Drury Dobbins....
Hicks possessed poetical talent and composed numerous hymns and spiritual songs -- adapted to revival occasions, which found wide use at that period...
George Pullen Jackson, White Spirituals in the Southern Uplands, New York, NY, 1965, p. 204.
Quotes from John R. Logan, Sketches of the Broad River and King's Mountain Baptist Associations, Shelby, NC, 1887, pp. 400 ff.

According to Jackson, the lyrics first appeared on page 19 of William Walker's Southern Harmony, 1835, with the note,
The song [poem] was composed by the Rev. B. Hicks, a Baptist minister of South Carolina, and sent to his wife while he was confined in Tennessee by a fever of which he afterwards recovered.1
ibid., p. 203.

According to George Pullen Jackson (p. 205), Hicks died at Little Buck Creek, Spartanburg County, SC, on Jun 11, 1839.
Husband of Elizabeth Durham Hicks. Son of William and Edith Hicks.

They had a least 11 Children born to this Union: *date born
1. 1st Dau: Anna, *April 28, 1801- March 1, 1848 at 46 she married circa 1822, William Cleary
2. 1st Son: Durham, *Feb 28, 1803, married Margaret Young.
3. 2nd Son: Hazzael, *1805, married Elizabeth Martin
4. 3rd Son: John Martin, *1806, married Elizabeth Dobbins.
5. 4th Son: Drury D. *April 13, 1809, married Elizabeth Hines.
6. 5th Son: Berry Allison, *April 13, 1809, twin of Drury D.
7. 6th Son: Charles A. "Green" *May 13, 1811 - April 5,
1879
8. 2nd Dau: Artimency, *Jan 6, 1813, married Abraham Lovelace.
9. 7th Son: Richard Henry, *Oct. 27, 1815 - Jan. 29, 1863, married Myra Lewis Simmons.
10 3rd Dau: Didamie Emiline, *Jan. 31, 1819, married George Adam Fike.
11 8th Son: Joseph Martin, *Fev. 2, 1822 - Dec. 24, 1892 died at 70 years old

... Elder Berryman Hicks was born in Spartanburg County (now Cherokee County) July 1, 1778. He "intermarried" with Elizabeth Durham in 1799 and "reared a large and interesting family." He joined the State Line Church in 1800 and was soon licensed to preach. "He was a great revivalist and went far and near with his great co-worker, Elder Drury Dobbins....
Hicks possessed poetical talent and composed numerous hymns and spiritual songs -- adapted to revival occasions, which found wide use at that period...
George Pullen Jackson, White Spirituals in the Southern Uplands, New York, NY, 1965, p. 204.
Quotes from John R. Logan, Sketches of the Broad River and King's Mountain Baptist Associations, Shelby, NC, 1887, pp. 400 ff.

According to Jackson, the lyrics first appeared on page 19 of William Walker's Southern Harmony, 1835, with the note,
The song [poem] was composed by the Rev. B. Hicks, a Baptist minister of South Carolina, and sent to his wife while he was confined in Tennessee by a fever of which he afterwards recovered.1
ibid., p. 203.

According to George Pullen Jackson (p. 205), Hicks died at Little Buck Creek, Spartanburg County, SC, on Jun 11, 1839.