Lawson D. Franklin Explained

Lawson D. Franklin
Birth Date:January 19, 1804
Death Date:April 8, 1861
Occupation:Planter
Spouse:
  • Elizabeth Rogers
  • Catherine Smith
Children:3 sons, 3 daughters
Parents:Owen Franklin
Elizabeth Roper
Relatives:William Allen Montgomery (son-in-law)

Lawson D. Franklin (January 19, 1804 – April 8, 1861) was an American planter, slave trader and businessman in the antebellum South. He was the first millionaire in Tennessee.

Early life

Lawson D. Franklin was born on January 19, 1804,[1] the son of Owen Franklin and Elizabeth "Betsy" Franklin (née Roper).[2] On his paternal side, he was a descendant of one of Benjamin Franklin's brothers.[3]

Career

Franklin was a large landowner and businessman.[1] He traded animals and black slaves.[1] [4] He funded the Bank of East Tennessee,[4] a bank based in Rogersville, Tennessee.[1]

Franklin became the first millionaire in Tennessee.[4]

Personal life

Franklin married Elizabeth Rogers (1809–1846). They had three sons, Isaac W. Rodgers (1827–1866), Robert O. Franklin and Lawson D. Franklin (1841–1847), and three daughters, Elizabeth Caroline (1831–1909), Jane June and Louisa. He married a second time to Catherine Smith.

Franklin resided at the Lawson D. Franklin House in White Pine, Tennessee.[1] He built Fairfax in White Pine for his son Isaac, and Bleak House in Knoxville, Tennessee for his daughter Louisa.[1]

Death

Franklin died on April 8, 1861.[1]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Finding Aid for the Lawson D. Franklin Papers MS.0780 . University of Tennessee Libraries. Special Collections Online . November 22, 2015.
  2. Web site: Lawson D. Franklin. genealytreemaker. 24 November 2015.
  3. News: Fairfax: Old South Reborn . The Kingsport News . Kingsport, Tennessee . August 4, 1966 . 18 . Newspapers.com. November 25, 2015 .
  4. Book: Stewart, Bruce . 2012 . Blood in the Hills: A History of Violence in Appalachia . Lexington, Kentucky . University Press of Kentucky . 178–179 . 9780813134277. 724674678.