Joseph Hanks


Joseph Hanks was the great-grandfather of United States President Abraham Lincoln. It is generally accepted that Joseph was the father of Lucy Hanks, the mother of Nancy Hanks Lincoln. There is also a theory that Joseph and his wife, Ann, had a son named James who married Lucy Shipley, sired Nancy Hanks, but died before Lucy and Nancy came to Kentucky.
Joseph Hanks' children and grandchildren figure prominently in Abraham Lincoln's youth.

Biography

Early life and marriage

Joseph Hanks was born the second son of Catherine Hanks and John Hanks on December 20, 1725 in North Farnham Parish, Richmond County, Virginia. He was a tenant farmer and oversaw a plantation. Joseph and his family lived in Richmond County until 1782 when they moved to what was then Hampshire County, Virginia.
One theory about the Hanks family's westward movement was that Joseph Hanks was concerned about his daughters' access to returning Revolutionary War soldiers in the "lax environment" following the war. There are also records that show that Joseph Hanks' mother, Catherine, died in 1779. Joseph, executor of the will, inherited monies from her estate and it was after this in 1781 that the Hanks moved from Northern Neck of Virginia to a place between the forks of Mike's Run off of Patterson's Creek in Hampshire County, Virginia. The land there had just become available with "cheap prices," proper surveys, and clear titles.

Marriage and children

Joseph married Ann, also known as Nancy and Nannie. She was born about 1742 and died about 1794.
Joseph and Ann Hanks' children are:
Joseph Hanks lived on on a fork of Mike's Run, alongside Patterson Creek, Hampshire County, VA. Joseph Hanks is on the 1782 census for Hampshire County, Virginia. The census showed that there were 11 white people living in the household. This would have included Joseph, Ann and his 9 children, including Lucy Hanks.
Joseph Hank's home, now in Mineral County, West Virginia, is considered Nancy Hanks's birthplace and contains a memorial to her from the state of West Virginia.

Kentucky

In March 1784 Joseph Hanks sold his property via a mortgage and moved with his wife, eight children, and granddaughter Nancy to Kentucky, having traveled on the Wilderness Road through Cumberland Gap. The family then lived on land purchased February, 1787 about 2 miles north of the mouth of Pottinger's Creek and Rolling Fork, in a settlement called Rolling Fork or Pottinger's Creek settlement in Nelson County, Kentucky until the death of patriarch Joseph Hanks in 1793.
Pottinger Station "Site of one of the forts which protected the early settlement of Bardstown. Built by Samuel Pottinger, soldier in Revolution, who first saw the land in 1778 which he came from Maryland with troops of Capt. James Harrod. In 1781 Pottinger returned with his family and built station. It was often used as a refuge for other settlers migrating to Kentucky.
A man named Zachariah Riney bought Nancy's grandfather, Joseph Hanks, Sr. property off of Rolling Fork in Kentucky. After Nancy and Thomas Lincoln were married and had children, Riney, with Caleb Hazel, taught Nancy's children at the Knob Creek school. The Hanks property purchased by Riney was situated "on the Rolling Fork near the moth of Knob Creek and Pottinger's Creek".

Death and will

Joseph Hanks died in 1793. Nancy's grandmother, also named Nancy but generally called Ann, decided to return to the homeland of her youth and much of her adulthood in old Farnham parish in Virginia.
His home and property were to be given to his wife during her lifetime and then their youngest son, Joseph, Jr. In 1794 Nancy and her son, Joseph Hanks, Jr., sold the property along Rolling Fork near Pottinger's Creek to her son William. Ann then returned to the Farnham area in Virginia with Joseph and died there. William and his wife lived in the home and any unmarried children they were married. Joseph and Ann's grandchild, Nancy, went to live with her mother, Lucy Hanks Sparrow.

Abraham Lincoln

Abraham Lincoln's great grandparents are commonly believed to be Ann and Joseph Hanks of North Farnham Parish, Richmond County, VA.
Joseph and Ann's children and grandchildren figured prominently in Abraham's life, including: