19th-century American planter and letter writer
Eliza Van Benthuysen Davis
Davis circa 1859
Born Eliza Jane Van Benthuysen
(1811-01-23 ) January 23, 1811Died October 24, 1863(1863-10-24) (aged 52) Resting place Brierfield Plantation Spouse Joseph Emory Davis (1827–1863; her death)Parent(s) Benjamin Van Benthuysen Catherine Freeman Relatives Jefferson Davis (brother-in-law)Varina Davis (sister-in-law)
Eliza Jane Van Benthuysen Davis (January 23, 1811 – October 24, 1863) was an American planter, letter writer , and the châtelaine of Hurricane Plantation . She was married to Joseph Emory Davis , the older brother of Confederate President Jefferson Davis .
Biography
Davis was born Eliza Jane Van Benthuysen on January 23, 1811, to Benjamin Van Benthuysen and Catherine Freeman Van Benthuysen, both Dutch Americans from New York.[ 1] [ 2] Her widowed mother owned a shoe and boot store and later ran a boarding house in New Orleans .[ 4]
Hurricane Plantation, the Davis family home
In 1827, When she was sixteen years old, she married the forty-three-year-old Joseph Emory Davis in Natchez .[ 5] [ 6] Her husband, a planter and retired lawyer, was the older brother of Confederate President Jefferson Davis .[ 6] She and Davis had no biological children together,[ 1] but they took in his three illegitimate daughters from premarital relationships and adopted two children, Joseph D. Nicholson and Martha Quarles.[ 7] [ 8] The Davis family owned Hurricane Plantation , a 5,000-acre plantation along the Mississippi River in Davis Bend, Mississippi .[ 9] They enslaved over three hundred and sixty people on the plantation.[ 10]
Davis wrote letters throughout her married life, many of which are now kept in the library collection of the University of Alabama .[ 5] In 1859, Davis traveled to the United Kingdom and wrote letters, from London and Glasgow , to members of her family.[ 11] [ 12] [ 13]
In 1862, during the American Civil War , the Davis home at Hurricane Plantation was burned to the ground by Union forces .[ 14] The plantation was looted multiple times by both the Union Army and the Confederate States Army during the Vicksburg campaign .
Davis died on October 24, 1863.[ 1] She was buried in the cemetery at Brierfield Plantation .
References
^ a b c "Genealogy of the Davis Family" . The Papers of Jefferson Davis . Rice University . 1991. Retrieved April 29, 2024 .
^ The Van Benthuysen Genealogy by A. S. Van Benthuysen and Edith McIntosh Hall (1953) p 45
^ "Joseph Emory Davis" . The Papers of Jefferson Davis. Archived from the original on 2 July 2013. Retrieved 2013-08-08 .
^ a b "Eliza Van Benthuysen (Wife of Joseph Davis) Letters" . University of Alabama Libraries . University of Alabama . Retrieved April 29, 2024 .
^ a b "Eliza Van Benthuysen Davis (1811-1863)" . The Papers of Jefferson Davis . Rice University . Retrieved April 29, 2024 .
^ Biography of Joseph Emory Davis Archived 14 October 2010 at the Wayback Machine , Rice University
^ Rosen, Joel Nathan. "Davis Bend Plantation" . Mississippi Encyclopedia . Retrieved April 29, 2024 .
^ Davis, Varina (1890). "Jefferson Davis, A Memoir" . New York: Belford Company. Retrieved June 21, 2012 .
^ Blake, Tom (compiler) (February 2002). "Davis, J.E." ". Warren County, Mississippi; Largest Slaveholders from 1860 Slave Census Schedules . rootsweb.com. p. 306. Retrieved 23 January 2016 .
^ Davis, Eliza (July 29, 1859). "Eliza to Brother (Jefferson). London., 1859 July 29" . University of Alabama Libraries . University of Alabama . Retrieved April 29, 2024 .
^ Davis, Eliza (July 29, 1859). "Eliza to Mother. London., 1859 July 29" . University of Alabama Libraries . University of Alabama . Retrieved April 29, 2024 .
^ Davis, Eliza (July 15, 1859). "Sister to Brother (Jefferson). Glasgow., 1859 July 15" . University of Alabama Libraries . University of Alabama . Retrieved April 29, 2024 .
^ McMillen, Neil R. (February 2007). "Isaiah T. Montgomery, 1847-1924 (Part I)" . Mississippi History Now . Mississippi Historical Society. Retrieved April 29, 2024 .
Works cited