Welcome to the trail!

This is a roundabout story of one family who's traveled the trails from dust, to dirt, to the fast lane. I happen to be the teller of our tales. Thanks for joining us for the trip.

Saturday, January 16, 2010

Sophie's Trail

I guess the most famous of all the characters along this hike is "Aunt Sophie"--

My great-great-great grandmother
 Lucy Ann Sophia Gilmer (Bibb)
or
Sophie Lucy Ann Gilmer Bibb (as she later referred to herself)
Daughter of Thomas Meriwether Gilmer and Elizabeth Lewis Gilmer
Married 1819
Judge Benajah Smith Bibb
<1796 – 1884>
Son of Captain William Bibb and Sally Wyatt (Bibb)

From my book and my archives:
"In 1819,  Lucy Ann 
Sophia Gilmer was married to Benajah Smith Bibb, youngest of the six distinguished sons of William Bibb, Gentleman, member of the House of Burgesses and Captain of Cavalry in the Revolutionary Army, and his wife, Sally Wyatt, both of Virginia, and later, of Georgia. Sally Wyatt was the great-great-great granddaughter of the Reverend Haute Wyatt, youngest brother of Sir Francis Wyatt, Colonial Governor of Virginia.

Soon after the marriage of Sophia Gilmer and Benajah Bibb, they moved to Alabama, settling in Montgomery County, where their ability and benevolence placed an indelible stamp upon the State and their community. Judge Benajah S. Bibb was an able and distinguished jurist, and had the distinction of being the first official removed from office by the Federal Government after the War Between the States, because of his devotion to the Confederacy."

The house in the photo is the one built by Sophie and Benajah in 1827 at 117 Moulton Street.  It has a story of its own and I'll tell it, partially as we move along.

Sophie gained her prominence during the Civil War in her efforts to aid in the care of wounded soldiers. This is also from my collection of writings on her:

"In 1861, after the quarters provided by a noble Montgomeryan would no longer house the ever-increasing number of sick and wounded soldiers being ministered to by Montgomery women, an organization known as the “Woman’s Hospital Association” was formed with Mrs. Sophie Gilmer Bibb as its President, and the building at the corner of Bibb and Commerce streets was rented as the quarters for what was known during the rest of the War as the Ladies’ Hospital, which won the commendation from President Jefferson Davis as being “the best ordered hospital in the Confederacy.” Here “Aunt Sophie” and her associates continued their labors throughout the duration of the war, ministering to the sick with their own hands, and Mrs. Bibb’s carriage attended, with herself or some of her associates, the burial of eight hundred soldiers who died in Montgomery, besides those who were brought to Montgomery later for interment. When a soldier-patient in the hospital reached the convalescent stage, he was removed to the home of one of the noble band of women and cared for tenderly. Sophie Bibb’s home always held several convalescents who were waited on by her personal servants under her supervision. One interesting and significant fact in connection with the “Ladies’ Hospital” is that the negro attendants who were employed there remained until it was closed, tho toward the last of the war the wages of these faithful people could not be paid."


There's Aunt Sophie, for a starter. I have more to say about her before I leave her, but that will have to wait. More to come on her life and legacy.









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