http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~dmorgan/berryhill/beryh1.txt
 
 
BERRYHILL FAMILY, Richmond, Jefferson, Jasper, Pike, Montgomery Cos. GA,
Chambers, Tallapoosa, Randolph Cos. AL, Mecklenberg Co. NC, Creek Nation (OK),
Nacogdoches, Rusk Cos. TX, Amite? Co. MS
The Story of John Berryhill and Elizabeth Derrisaw and Their Descendants
 
This is an unpublished manuscript done by Thelma Nolen Cornfeld before
her death in 1996. Her daughter Barbara gave me permission to put her
research online.
 
Submitted by David Morgan dmorgan@efn.org
 
I believe John Berryhill was born about 1763, if he was born in the Creek 
Nation; but it is more likely he was born in 1754 if he was born in the 
Carolinas. Then he would have been about sixteen years old when his family moved 
to the Province of Georgia, where he served in the Georgia Militia in the Line 
sometime during or shortly  after the American Revolution.
 
About 1781, John Berryhill married Martha Elizabeth Derrisaw. She was the 
daughter of James DuRouzeaux, an interpreter in the Creek Nation, and his Creek 
Indian wife of Broken Arrow Tribal Town. Elizabeth is said, by some 
grandchildren, to have been a full-blood Creek Indian, but I believe she was 
only half Creek and half French. It is said that Elizabeth was closely related 
to the mother of Chief General William McIntosh of the Creek Nation.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
STATE OF GEORGIA
By the Honorable GEORGE WALTON Esquire,
Captain General, Governor and Commander in Chief in and
over the said State
 
To all to whom these Presents shall come, GREETINGS:
 
KNOW YE, That in Pursuance of the Act for opening the Land Office, and by virtue 
of the Powers in me vested, I HAVE, by and with the Advice and Consent of the 
Honorable the Executive Council, given and granted, and by these Presents in the 
Name and Behalf of the said State, DO give and grant unto JOHN BERRYHILL, his 
Heirs and Assigns forever, ALL that Tract or Parcel of Land, containing FOUR 
HUNDRED Acres, situate, lying, and being in the County of BURKE in the said 
State, and butting and bounding NORTH WESTWARDLY BY THE COUNTY LINE AND ON THE 
OTHER SIDES BY VACANT LANDS ---
               having such Shape, Form, Marks as appear by a Plat of the same hereunto 
annexed; together with all and singular the Rights, Members, and Appurtenances 
thereof, Whatsoever, to the said Tract or Parcel of Land belonging, or in any 
wise appertaining; and also all the Estate, Right, Title, Interest, Claim and 
Demand, of the State aforesaid, of, in to, or out of the same: TO HAVE AND TO 
HOLD the said Tract or Parcel of Land, and all and singular the Premises 
aforesaid, with their and every of their Rights, Members, and appurtenances, 
unto the said JOHN BERRYHILL his Heirs and Assigns to HIS and their own proper 
Use and Behoof, in FEE SIMPLE.
 
                                       GEVEN under my Hand in Council, and the
                                       Great Seal of the said State, this EIGHTH
                                       Day of AUGUST in the Year of our Lord, One
                                       Thousand Seven Hundred and EIGHTY NINE and
                                       in the FOURTEENTH Year of American Independence.
 
Signed by his Honor the Governor in Council the 8th Day of Augt. 1789
 
Following are the children of John and Elizabeth (Derrisaw) Berryhill:
 
The children may not be in strict order of birth. I have the birth dates of the 
first three children from Bible Records, and Census Records for children No.'s 
5, 6, 8, and 11, and an obituary of the death of No. 9, which gives his birth 
date. I have placed the sons of John and Elizabeth (Derrisaw) Berryhill in the 
order that No. 9's son, Samuel Newton Berryhill, left in his Bible.
 
1. THOMAS S. BERRYHILL was born in the Creek Nation in 1782; he married Sarah 
Deacle in 1804. They stayed in the Old Creek Nation when John and Elizabeth went 
west with the McIntosh Party in 1827.
 
2. NANCY BERRYHILL was born in the Creek Nation in 1784. She married (Uriah? 
Benjamin?) Posey about 1800. Nancy went to the Western Creek Lands with the 
McIntosh Party in 1827.
 
3. MARTHA "PATSY" BERRYHILL was born in the Creek Nation in 1785. Patsy married 
Benjamin McGaha. She and Benjamin went to the Western Creek Lands with the 
McIntosh Party in 1827.
 
4. ELIZABETH "BETSY" BERRYHILL was born in the Creek Nation about 1787. She 
married William I. Wills about 1804. Betsy and William went to the Western Creek 
Lands with the McIntosh Party in 1827.
 
5. JOHN DALLAS BERRYHILL was born in the Creek Nation about 1789. He married 
Mary Rutledge in 1809. John and Mary went to the Western Creek Lands with the 
McIntosh Party in 1827.
 
6. WILLIAM "BILL" BERRYHILL was born in the Creek Nation in 1791. He married 
Elizabeth Nixon in 1809. William and Elizabeth stayed in the Old Creek Nation 
when William's parents went to the Western Creek Lands. William later moved to 
Rusk County, Texas.
 
7. ALEXANDER "ALEC" BERRYHILL was born in the Creek Nation about 1793. Alec 
married Huldey Willson in 1819. Alec and Huldey went to the Western Creek Lands 
with the McIntosh Party in 1827.
 
8. CATHERINE "KATY" T. BERRYHILL was born in the Creek Nation in 1795. She 
married John Self in 1820. Katy and John went to the Western Creek Lands with 
the McIntosh Party in 1827.
 
9. SAMUEL BERRYHILL was born in the Creek Nation in 1798, in the part that later 
became Jasper County, Georgia. About 1820 Samuel went to Columbia, Mississippi, 
where he married Margaret Portman in 1821.
 
10. PLEASANT BERRYHILL was born in the Creek Nation in 1800, in the part that 
later became Jasper County, Georgia. He married, first, Martha Right in 1823. He 
went to the Western Creek Lands with the McIntosh Party in 1827. Pleasant 
married a second time to Winnie, a full-blooded Creek Indian girl.
 
11. SUSANNA "SUKEY" BERRYHILL was born in the Creek Nation in 1802, in the part 
that later became Jasper County, Georgia. In 1819 or 1820, she married Baxter 
Self, brother of John Self, who married Catherine. Susan and Baxter went to the 
Western Creek Lands with the McIntosh Party in 1827.
All of John and Elizabeth Berryhill's children were living in the Creek Nation 
by 1820.
 
In 1827, 
John and Elizabeth and most of their children went to the Western Creek Lands, 
West of Arkansas Territory. They arrived there in February 1828 and settled in 
the fork of land between the Arkansas and Verdigris Rivers, near the Creek 
Agency. Sons, Thomas S. Berryhill and William "Bill" Berryhill, stayed in the 
Old Creek Nation and are on the 1832 Census of the Creek Nation East. These two 
sons were given allotments of land in what is now Chambers County, Alabama.
 
In 1834 the Berryhill sons and sons-in-law put in claims to the Indian 
Department for wages for this work and the expense of sending their families by 
land. I don't know if these claims were ever paid.
 
He refused to sign the Creek Memorial, of 7 March 1829, 
but was made to sign by the chiefs. (See Pages 12-14.) John's and Elizabeth's 
sons and sons-in-law did sign the Creek Memorial.
 
In 1832 there was much sickness in the Indian lands in the West, the "fevor." 
The United States government sent a doctor to vaccinate the Indians. There 
wasn't enough medicine sent to vaccinate all the Creeks, and a lot of the 
medicine was spoiled by the time the doctor received it. Many Creek Indians died 
at this time, many of them children. It was during this sick spell in 1832 and 
1833 that John Berryhill and his wife, Elizabeth, died.
 
In 1832, Washington Irving traveled through the Western Creek Lands with a 
Ranger expedition. They were joined by Henry Ellsworth, a special commissioner 
sent by the United States. Below is a passage from Irving's journal:
 
 
--- towards dusk we arrived at a frontier farm-house, owned by a settler of the 
name BERRYHILL. It was situated on a hill-- The master of the house received us 
civilly, but could offer us no accomodations, for sickness prevailed in his 
family. He appeared himself to be in no thriving condition, for though bulky in 
frame, he had a sallow, unhealthy complexion and a wiffling double voice, 
shifting abruptly from a treble to base-- finding his log house was a mere 
hospital crowded with invalids, we ordered our tent to be pitched in the farm-
yard.
 
 
Irving called this Berryhill man a "white man." Ellsworth called him a half-
breed. I believe this was our John Berryhill and that he died in 1832, instead 
of 1831, as George W. Berryhill said in his letter to Monroe Jasper Berryhill. 
Elizabeth (Derrisaw) Berryhill, John's wife, died the next year, in 1833.
 
The following letter from Sub-agent Thomas Anthony to Colonel David Brearley, is 
in reference to the Creek Memorial of 7 March 1829:
 
 
                                                      Western Creek Agency March 23'd 1829
               Sir:
At the request of the Officers of Cantonment Gibson I beg have to state they 
wish it to be distinctly understood by the President of the United States that 
they were only witnesses to the acknowledgement of the signatures of the Creek 
Indians who signed the Memorial respecting their grievances; as & also to 
disavow any participations, approval or belief that their charges and 
speculations are correct; they disapproved of the charges but could not refuse 
to sign as witnesses to the signatures -- Whereas Mr. [William?] Lott, OLD SAM'L 
BERRYHILL and many others refused to sign - OLD JOHN BERRYHILL OPPOSED THE 
MEMORIAL IN COUNCIL BUT WAS FORCED TO SIGN BY THE CHIEFS --
Note! "Old John Berryhill" was John Berryhill, Sr., who signed the Memorial and 
is our John Berryhill, who married the Creek Indian girl, Martha Elizabeth 
Derrisaw. The "Old Samuel Berryhill," I believe, was a nephew of our John 
Berryhill and a son of our John's older brother, Andrew Berryhill. TNC.
 
 
 
Note! John Rutledge Berryhill married America Beckett. John R.'s brother, Andrew 
Jackson Berryhill, Sr., married America Beckett's sister, Mariah Beckett, so 
their children were double first cousins. TNC.
 
Before 1870, America (Beckett) Berryhill divorced John R. Berryhill and married 
a man named Malone or Maloney and they had two sons.
 
In the Fall of 1881, after Vardy Wills had died, Georgianna (Berryhill) Wills, 
with her children, went to the Creek Nation, Indian Territory, and settled in 
Eufaula. Georgianna's sister, America Sophronia (Berryhill) Self, and their 
cousin, who was also America's brother-in-law, Eli Alfred Self, were in the 
group who went to the Creek Nation.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Georgia
Jasper County                  I certify that JOHN SELF and CATHERINE BERRYHILL were 
duly joined in Matrimony by me this 9th day of November 1820.
 
                                                                                                      P. Lindsey, 
 
 
 
 
J.P.
Registered 19th January 1821
John C. Gibson C.C.O.
 
----*** <*> ***----
 
 
John Self was born in Georgia in 1793. I haven't found proof of who his parents 
were, but the story told to Huber and Melvin Self, by their father, John Henry 
Self, son of Eli Alfred Self, is that they were William N. and Mary Self.
 
John Self's brother, Baxter Self, married Catherine Berryhill's younger sister, 
Susanna Berryhill.
 
After their marriage, John and Catherine Self settled in the Old Creek Nation 
near Catherine's family. Four children were born to them while living in the Old 
Nation. In 1827, John and Catherine went to the Western Creek Lands with the 
first Party of McIntosh Creeks. I believe they traveled by land with members of 
Catherine's family. They arrived in the Western Creek lands in February 1828. 
John helped with the emigration of the Creeks to the Western Creek Lands. He 
transported baggage for the emigrants to the boats that were to take the Creeks 
down the rivers to Arkansas. He also worked on the flat boats. John hired a 
teamster to drive his wagon and sent his family by land, while he worked on one 
of the boats. John and Catherine settled in the fork of the Arkansas and 
Verdigris Rivers near the Creek agency, with Catherine's parents, and brothers 
and sisters.
 
John Self was active with helping the Creek Indian to settle in their new land, 
but being a white man he wasn't allowed to participate in the Councils. The 
McIntosh Creeks had problems with the Agents appointed by the United States to 
settle the Indians. They were being cheated on rations and were given spoiled 
food. The tools for building and farming, promised by the United States in the 
Treaty, were not supplied. On the 7th of March 1829, the Creek Chiefs and 
headmen wrote a Memorial to the President of the United States, complaining of 
this. John Self signed as one of the witnesses to this Memorial. (See Pages 12-
14.)
 
In 1833 there was a flood that swept away the Creek Agency, and some of the 
Indians' crops and homes. John and Catherine Self and Catherine's brothers and 
sisters, moved across the Arkansas River and settled where Muskogee, Oklahoma, 
now is. In 1834 the families who had helped with the Creek emigration put in a 
claim to the Indian Department for money owed them. Following is a copy of John 
Self's claim.
 
 
               The United States Indian Department                      No. 7
                              To JOHN SELF  Dr.
 
1827        To services of one wagon, four horses and
               one teamster, employed in transporting
               baggage for Creek Emigrants, 13 days
               furnishing forage for the horses at $4.00
               per day...                                                                                              52.00
 
1827        To furnishing rations for 6 Persons for
               30 days commencing in March and ending in
               April 1827, being 180 rations at 6 cents
               per ration...                                                                            10.80
 
1827        To 40 days work on board a flat boat at
               75 cents per day                                                                                  30.00
 
1827        To one horse stolen valued by Capt. Walker
               at $50                                                                                                 50.00
                                                                                                                   _______
                                                                                                                   $142.80
 
I do hereby certify upon my word and honor that the foregoing account amounting 
to $142.80 is justly due me from the United States and that I have never 
received payment for the same or any part thereof.
               Given at the Creek Agency this tenth day of December, 1834.
 
Witness                                                                                         his
John Wade                                                                                               John X Self               
                                                                                            mark
 
 
I don't know if John Self ever received his pay for this claim. He and Catherine 
continued living in the Western Creek Lands. There was a lot of illness there 
from the swamp lands near by. Some of the Indians died and in 1832 and 1833, Dr. 
Weed was sent in to vaccinate the Indians, but the matter sent to him had lain 
in the sun waiting to be shipped and it spoiled, and on the replacement 
shipment, there wasn't enough to vaccinate very many of the people.

 

 

 

Following is the listing of Catherine Berryhill Self, and her descendants on the 
1857 Payroll:
 
 
Creek Old Settlers Payment 1857
Broken Arrow Tribal Town
 
 
No of               Names of Heads of                No of               Amount                            Families & Children               Individuals
               Paid
 
84               Samuel Self
               Elizabeth, Martha &
               C. S.               4                      $80.40
 
195               CATHERINE SELF
               Wm. Self, A.M. Self
               & J. M. Self     4                      $80.40
 
196          Betha A. Lee
               M. A. Lee & A. M. Lee               3                       60.30
 
197               Amanda Mooney
               M. A. Mooney, C. E. Mooney &
               Alfred, Samuel Mooney, 
               L. E. Mooney, E. J. Mooney    7               $140.70
 
198               Dorinda Menasco
               J. N. Menasco, I. J. Menasco
               & W. J. Menasco, M. E.
               Menasco, Clarke Menasco,
               T. J. Menasco R. R. Menasco & 
               E. V. Menasco  9               $180.90
 
199          Alfred Self
               M. J. Self, M. A. Self
               & S. A. Self     4                      $80.40
 
200          J. C. Self
               I. Self & C. Self  3                      $60.30
http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~dmorgan/berryhill/beryh9.txt
J
ohn Robert Self was born in Rusk County, Texas, in November 1854. He was the 
first child born to John Clarke and America Sophronia (Berryhill) Self. John's 
parents were in Polk County, Texas, in 1860. Before 1862 his parents had moved 
to Sabine Parish, Louisiana, where John grew up. In 1880, John Robert Self was 
in Wood County, Texas, with his widowed mother. In the Fall of 1881, John moved 
with his mother to the Creek Nation. They settled in Eufaula, Indian Territory, 
after arriving in the Creek Nation. John R. Self, with his brothers and sisters, 
moved to Sapulpa, Indian Territory, by 1891.
 

John Robert Self married Jennie Hittler in Muskogee, Indian Territory, in 1894

 

John Robert Self enrolled himself, his sister Martha and his brother Samuel 
Clark Self on the 1895 Creek Roll. Following is the listing from this Roll:
 
 
1895 Creek Roll
Broken Arrow Town
 
                              342 John Self                 Signed by
                              343 Mattie Self                       John Self
                              344 Clark Self
 

 

M
artha "Mattie" Self was born in Sabine Parish, Louisiana, in June 1872. She was 
the fourth child born to John Clarke and America Sophronia (Berryhill) Self. 
Mattie spent much of her childhood in Sabine Parish. She was with her widowed 
mother, America Sophronia Self, in Wood County, Texas, in 1880. In the Fall of 
1881, Mattie went with her mother, and brothers and sisters to the Creek Nation, 
Indian Territory. Mattie stayed in Eufaula, Indian Territory, until about 1890, 
then moved with her brothers and sisters to Sapulpa, Indian Territory. Mattie 
Self never married, but lived most of her adult life with her sister America Ann 
(Self) Stewart. Her nieces and nephews called her "Aunt Mat". In 1910 Mattie was 
in Jefferson County, Texas, with her sister, America Stewart and America's 
family. I believe she later moved back to the State of Oklahoma. Martha "Mattie" 
Self died in Oklahoma in 1933 and is buried in the Twin Mounds Cemetery at 
Glenpool, Oklahoma.
 
AMERICA ANN SELF
America Ann (Self) Stewart
 
 
A
merica Ann Self was born in Sabine Parish, Louisiana, 22 May 1864. She was the 
fifth child born to John Clarke and America Sophronia (Berryhill) Self.
AMANDA SELF
 
 
A
manda Self was born in Sabine Parish, Louisiana, in 1868. She was the sixth 
child born to John Clarke and America Sophronia (Berryhill) Self.
 
M
innie Self was born in Sabine Parish, Louisiana, in 1872.
 
SAMUEL CLARK SELF
 
S
amuel Clark Self was born in Sabine Parish, Louisiana, in February 1874. He was 
the eighth and last child born to John Clarke and America Sophronia (Berryhill) 
Self. He was called "Clark Self." He moved with his family to Wood County, 
Texas, then in the Fall of 1881, he went with his mother, brothers and sisters 
to the Creek Nation.
 
Samuel Clark Self was granted citizenship into the Creek Nation and is on the 
Final Rolls of that Nation. Following is his Creek Census Card:
 
 
Dawes            Name                       age            sex            DIB            Father            Mother
No.
              Card No. 1106  P.O. Mounds  8 Nov 1899
3584      Self, Samuel C.            25            M            1/8            John C. Self            Sophronia
 
NOTE: On the 1891 Omitted Roll and 1895 Roll, he is listed as Clark Self.
 
 
Samuel Clark Self married Florence (-?-) in Oklahoma in 1908. On the 1910 Census 
of Oklahoma, Clark and Florence Self had a newborn son, who had not been named 
at that time. They were living in Beggs, Okmulgee County.
 
 
 
 
 
http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~dmorgan/berryhill/beryh7.txt
John J. Wills Case No. 184
                                                                                                      Okmulgee, I.T.
                                                                                                      August 5, 1896
 
 
NOTE! "Sophronia Self" was America A. Sophronia (Berryhill) Self, widow of John 
Clarke Self, son of Catherine (Berryhill) Self. Eli Alfred Self was a brother of 
John Clarke Self, Tom Self was son of Samuel, brother to John C. & Eli Alfred 
Self. (See Chapter Eight.)

 

*NOTE! This is JOHN ROBERT SELF, son of John Clarke Self and America Sophronia 
(Berryhill) Self. T .J. SELF, in the first paragraph, was the son of Samuel and 
Clarinda Sophronia (Berryhill) Self, brother to John Clarke Self. Thomas J. 
married a daughter of Eli Alfred Self, a brother to Samuel and John C. Self. 
These three Self brothers, Alfred, John C. and Samuel, were all sons of John and 
Catherine T. (Berryhill) Self. TNC.
 

 

 

A
merica M. Sophronia Berryhill was born in Randolph County, Alabama, in 1836. She 
was the tenth child born to William and Elizabeth (Nixon) Berryhill. I believe 
America's mother, Elizabeth, died either at her birth or while America was a 
young child. Before 1850, America's father moved the family to Rusk County, 
Texas. America married her first cousin, John Clarke Self, in Rusk County. 
Following is a copy of their marriage license:
 
 
----*** <*> ***----
 
The State of Texas - County of Rusk --
            To any Judge of a court of record, Justice of the Peace, or regularly 
ordained Minister of the Gospel - GREETINGS:
            You are hereby authorized to solemnize the rites of Matrimony between JOHN 
C. SELF and AMERICA M. S. BERRYHILL the consent of all parties interested having 
been made known to me, in conformity to the law, and make due return known 
within sixty days from the date of this License, with your indorsement, showing 
how you have executed the same.
 
                                           given under my hand and seal of the
                                           County Court at office
                                           in Henderson, this 24th
                                           day of Jan, A D 1853
                                         J. S. Swan, Clerk
 
> * <
 
Endorsed:
               Solemnized the rites of Matrimony between the above named parties Jan 25th 
A D 1853
                                                                                       Ben[?] Southers, J.P.
 
----*** <*> ***----
 
 
John Clarke Self was the son of John and Catherine T. (Berryhill) Self. (For 
John's family, see Chapter Eight.)
 
America was called "America" on some records, and "Sophronia" on others. She had 
a cousin, Clarinda Sophronia Berryhill, who married John C. Self's brother, 
Samuel Berryhill. Clarinda was also called "Sophronia" on some records.
 
In 1856, America and John went to the Creek Nation, with John's parents and 
they, with their children are on the Old Settlers Roll. In 1860 John and America 
were in Polk County, Texas, with John's parents, brothers and sisters. In 1870, 
John and America were living in Many, Sabine Parish, Louisiana, near 
Natchitoches Parish where John's family had lived since 1838. In 1880, America 
and her children were in Wood County, Texas. America was a widow.
 
America M. Sophronia (Berryhill) self and her children, with America's sister, 
Georgianna (Berryhill) Wills, and Eli Alfred Self, went to the Creek Nation in 
the Fall of 1881. America and her children applied for citizenship in the Creek 
Nation. America Sophronia (Berryhill) Self died in Eufaula, Creek Nation, in the 
1880s. Her children were granted citizenship into the Creek Nation and are on 
the Final Rolls.
 
John Clarke and America Sophronia (Berryhill) Self's children:
 
1. John Robert Self was born in Rusk County, Texas, in November 1854. John 
married, first, Jennie L Hittler in Muskogee, Indian Territory, 12 May 1894; and 
second, Sarah E. about 1898.
 
2. Mary "Mollie" Self was born in Polk County, Texas, in 1858. Mollie married 
William H. Province.
 
3. William J. Self was born in Polk County, Texas, in 1860. William first 
married Lou Katey; then second, Deliliah; and third, Ivy.
 
4. Martha "Mattie" Self was born in Sabine Parish, Louisiana, in June 1862. 
Mattie never married.
 
5. America Ann Self was born in Sabine Parish, Louisiana, 22 May 1864. America 
married William H. Stewart in 1887.
 
6. Amanda Self was born in Sabine Parish, Louisiana, in 1868.
 
7. Minnie Self was born in Sabine Parish, Louisiana, in 1872.
 
8. Samuel Clarke Self was born in Sabine Parish, Louisiana, in February 1874.
 
For extended information on the family of John Clarke and America Sophronia 
(Berryhill) Self and their Creek Indian records, see Chapter Eight, Catherine 
(Berryhill) Self.