The
Greenwood Legacy
Jacquelyn Cook
$16.95
September 2009
ISBN:
978-0-9841258-1-4
Faith, Love, Family and Courage on the Southern Frontier
In 1827, newlyweds Lavinia and Thomas
Jones moved into a cabin in the vast pine forests of South Georgia. Over
the decades to come, their magnificent home, Greenwood, rose among the
pines, and their family grew and prospered. But their faith, love and
future were tested by the joys and sorrows of a turbulent era, including
the war that nearly destroyed their beloved homeland.
In the authentic storytelling
tradition of Eugenia Price and Gilbert Morris, author Jacquelyn Cook
turns the true story of the Jones family into a rich drama. The
Greenwood Legacy is a sweeping epic covering three generations of
one of the most unforgettable families of the American South.
Jacquelyn Cook is the nationally
acclaimed author of historical and inspirational fiction with a strong
dedication to research, vivid drama and biographical accuracy. With
sales of nearly 500,000 copies, her books are well-known and loved by
readers of fiction that chronicles the lives of real people and places.
THE GREENWOOD LEGACY is the third novel in her trilogy about
fascinating Civil War families and the legendary estates they created.
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"Jacquelyn Cook writes with such an
eloquent tone and attention to detail, the reader is enthralled." --
Kaye's Penquin Posts
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Chapter I
“It feels mysterious!” Lavinia
gazed out of the phaeton window at the towering trees whispering in the
March wind. “It’s as if we’re in a secret world hidden in pines.”
“Don’t be afraid. Look up.” Thomas
Jones pointed at the treetops one hundred-twenty feet above, where long
needles filtered sunlight in shining shafts. “They’re like cathedral
windows directing light from heaven.”
“I will conquer my fear,” she
promised; but she thought, How far this is from our cultured homes, how
different from the eastern coast of Georgia!
Thomas dropped the reins of the
sporting carriage between his knees and took her in his arms. “I’ll keep
you safe. Now that Spain has ceded the Florida Territory to the United
States and Andrew Jackson has defeated the Creek Confederacy and moved
Chief Neamathla and his Fowltown village into Florida, the Indians and
outlaws shouldn’t . . .”
Lavinia shivered. The imaginary
line that proclaimed them protected inside Georgia was a walk away. The
nearest help was at the budding village of Thomasville, three miles
east. Hostile Seminoles roamed the thirty-six miles to Tallahassee.
Savannah floated like a mirage on the gray Atlantic, two hundred miles
away.
They had ridden through thousands
of acres of Pine Barrens growing on flat ground that bore no other
vegetation except stiff clumps of wiregrass. Suddenly agitation seized
her. Her leg, pressed against his on the short seat, gave her away with
a violent trembling.
Hurt washed over Thomas’s face. “I
doubt I’ll ever make you love this isolated place as I do. You shouldn’t
have married a fourth son whose entire inheritance is risked on a spot
of land and a year’s supplies.” He gestured behind them at the oxcarts
following their carriage through the narrow cut that served as a
roadway. “I know you could’ve had your pick of first-born sons who would
inherit a grand plantation.”
My pick? Lavinia’s soul
leaped. She clasped her hands over her cheeks. She had always seen
herself as horse-faced. Doesn’t he realize I’m not beautiful enough
to be a belle? She looked at him in awe. She thought his thick black
hair and blue eyes made him the handsomest man she had ever seen. His
own man at twenty-four, he was so tall that she could stand to her full
height and not slouch as she had done with boys her own age.
Misunderstanding her
attitude, Thomas flung out. “I know the Pine Barrens seem wasteland to
you. Even the Georgia legislature refuses to build roads here,” he
mocked sarcastically. “‘We won’t spend the state’s money to develop a
country that God almighty left in an unfinished condition.’”
Lavinia’s sudden happiness at his
appraisal of her charms overcame her apprehensions. Still shy, she
caught her lower lip between her teeth and grinned. “Perhaps the Lord
intends for you to help finish it,” she said, stroking the bristling
brows that dominated his strong features, smoothing his face into a
smile.
With the tension broken between
them, she felt encouraged to continue. “When our ancestors settled the
Georgia Colony nearly a hundred years ago, they faced Indians and
wilderness. I believe you—and I—can overcome this.”
Thomas kissed her, pouring out
relief, longing, anticipation, making her know she was wanted, loved.
The horse, unfettered, began to
run, sensing he was nearing oats, home.
“Keep your eyes closed until we
round the bend. I have a surprise.”
Lavinia obediently covered her
face.
“Whoa, Prince,” Thomas commanded
the sorrel. As he lifted Lavinia down from the seat, a ball of white fur
roused from sleeping on her silk pumps and whimpered.
“Shhh, Hamlet.” She scooped the
puppy into her arms and turned to look.
“Oh, Thomas!” She sighed in
pleasure.
A higher spot, which had been
concealed, was suddenly revealed. A tremendous oval space had been
cleared of pines. Beauty enclosed it into a sheltered haven with an
atmosphere of peace. Gleaming globes of magnolia trees dominated. Cherry
laurels and berried yaupon holly created an evergreen backdrop for
dogwoods, blooming snowy white. Farther out, various hardwoods, not yet
dressed for spring, were robed in swags of purple wisteria. Its heady
perfume made her giddy. She had not realized Thomas had such poetry in
his soul.
Thomas smiled. “I just moved in some native plants. You can add what you
like. I know how much you love live oaks. I intend to line both sides of
the road so their spreading arms can form a canopy. Visitors will know
they’re approaching a plantation of importance.” He tilted her chin so
that he could gaze into her face. “And when I make enough money, I’ll
build you a mansion that will endure.”
“I adore our home place,” she whispered. “I love what you have begun.”
She breathed the fresh spring air and listened to trilling mockingbirds
making soft music drift around them. Suddenly she set down the puppy and
ran around the house site, touching each tree and shrub, marveling. The
wind snatched her shawl, exposing the slim column of her Empire-waist
gown, making the silk cling. She could feel Thomas’s eyes upon her.
He loves me, she exhilarated. He
created this hidden beauty just for me.
Since their marriage six months
ago, Thomas had left her for such long periods that she had feared he
didn’t love her. He had come ahead with covered wagons loaded with
furniture, bringing his people and crates of chickens, ducks, and hogs,
preparing a place for her. When they were together, he talked only of
their land, and she had even wondered if he planned to hide her from
society because she wasn’t beautiful. Now she knew. The magnolias told
her even more. Hamlet yapped, running behind her, tumbling over his fat
stomach. Lavinia laughed, fears gone—at least for the moment.
“Thank you for the flowering
trees,” she said as she returned to a bemused Thomas. “I’ll design a
garden in front of them. When the house is built, it will nestle in as
if it had always been here and always will.”
Husky-voiced, Thomas replied, “For
now it will be make-believe.”
He kissed her to seal his promise
and then led her behind their future home site to a row of notched-log
cabins. Men were unloading supplies from the oxcarts that had been
driven by shining black twins, Micah and Nahum. She knew Augustus, the
giant of a man who had ridden ahead to announce their impending arrival.
Thomas introduced a young couple, Samuel and his wife Julie.
It was Julie who spoke up in a
sprightly voice. “I done fixed yo’ supper.”
“Thank you, Julie.” Lavinia felt
proud of the grown-up graciousness she displayed in greeting them. All
the while she struggled to fix her memory so she could call them by name
tomorrow.
Thomas showed her the dogtrot cabin
that was to be their temporary home. One shingled roof united two log
rooms that were joined by an open-ended porch.
“It’s like a dollhouse,” exclaimed
Lavinia, clapping her hands. “Perfect for two.”
She meant what she said, but she
envisioned her stepmother, standing in shock, her rope of pearls heaving
on her bosom, her fox fur shaking on her shoulders as she compared
Lavinia’s cabin with her own sprawling mansion. Lavinia’s lip protruded.
But this is mine. I like it. It will do fine.
She glanced at her confident
husband. Their servants stood behind him with idle hands, awaiting
commands. How would she manage all these new things? Maybe Mama’s advice
would have helped—occasionally.
Dusk was gathering, and Thomas
dismissed the group. He helped her up the step to the porch and opened a
door, letting cooking aromas entice her. Beef, turning on a spit over
the open fireplace, and biscuits, browning in a Dutch oven placed on the
hearth and packed in hot coals, smelled wonderful. She was hungry to her
toes. Thomas smiled and stopped her before she could enter. He lifted
her in his arms and carried her over the threshold.
He held her aloft as she gazed in
delight at her domain. Firelight twinkled over a table laid with damask
and set with her heirloom silver in colonial fiddle-thread pattern.
Lavinia smiled. Julie had unpacked barrels of their wedding presents.
She had placed porcelain treasures about the rough-walled room. How
incongruous, but they make it inviting.
“Our home,” Lavinia whispered.
Thomas kissed her, and she sensed
they both felt an excitement that this, rather than their time in her
parents’ home, was really their wedding night.
All he said was, “We’ll mark down
today, March 3, 1827.”
*
Thomas Jones stood surveying his
acres as dawn streaked a freshly washed sky. Satisfaction overflowed. He
had worried about Lavinia’s first glimpse of their solitude, but last
night a reticent girl had become a wife. He was ready to build her a
kingdom, a dynasty. The very air here filled him with vigor.
He had fallen in love with her when
she was only fourteen. He had waited, biding his time, knowing she was
the one he would give his life to win. The moment Lavinia finished her
schooling and was marriageable age, he had asked for her hand. They had
married last September, but he agonized that he had little to offer her
because his father, James Jones, had just died, willing him only $730.00
and five workers.
Thomas reflected on how the Jones’s
fortunes in Georgia had begun when his grandfather, Welshman Francis
Jones, had accepted a Royal Grant in Saint George’s Parish in 1769 when
Georgia was a colony. Others in the clan, including Thomas’s father,
James, had received additional land grants and had established their
homes up the Savannah River toward Augusta. Thomas knew these coastal
plantations would never have endured had it not been for the English
custom of keeping estates together for first-born sons. Nevertheless, it
hurt when the eldest inherited nearly everything.
When I have children, none will
feel second best, Thomas vowed. Everything I do will be different.
The difference had begun when he
looked to the newly available lands in the southwestern corner of
Georgia. This area had long been in dispute even after Andrew Jackson
broke the Creek Indian power at the Battle of Horseshoe Bend in 1814.
The general had to face Neamathla, who had touched off the Seminole War
by an “ils ne passerant pas” stand at Fowltown, Georgia. Finally, the
United States had paid the Indians for several tracts of land. It was
distributed to the citizens by the 1820 land lottery. Many who had won
the draw had taken one look and rejected these empty Pine Barrens. Last
January, Thomas had bought Land Lot 83 from one of those lottery
winners, and then, carefully, had purchased enough surrounding land to
make 2500 acres.
People laughed. No one wanted this
farm. It was landlocked, they said. How would anyone ever get a crop to
market through the wilds of Florida’s Indian Territory?
But Thomas had seen it, loved it.
He had put his hands in the soil and known it would grow cotton.
Excited, he suggested to his younger brother, Mitchell, that he also buy
a home place.
Now, exhilarated, he breathed the
sharp, clean pine scent. My land! My air!
He threw back his shoulders. On
rolling red hills, the evergreen trees were spaced six, ten, even twelve
feet apart. The Indians had known that long leaf pines would die without
sunlight, but they could stand fire and heat as other trees could not.
They had managed their woodland by control burning.
So they could maneuver. See game.
Enemies, Thomas thought. I’ll do that, too.
Interspersing the open pine stands
were dense hardwood hammocks where live oak and hickory grew along
creeks that bubbled up from springs, providing constant clear, cool
water. He could hear the calling of bobwhites, telling him that his land
abounded with the quail. He had seen turkey and deer and knew his family
would never go hungry. He owned only one spot that was swamp.
One day, he thought, my place will
stretch all the way to the black waters of the Ochlockonee River.
Daylight was breaking, and Thomas
offered a quick prayer for his good fortune as his workmen appeared,
yawning. He strode forward to meet them, ready to do twice what they
did.
What first? A proper house for
Lavinia and a crop to pay for it.
He directed the twins to the
sawpit. He showed Nahum how to climb down into the pit while Micah stood
astride the log. Muscles flexed and gleamed as the men drew the saw up
and down.
Thomas laughed and joked with
Augustus and Samuel as they harnessed the mules. Big Augustus had been
on Thomas’s father’s place as far back as he could remember. The newer
hand, Samuel was small and wiry, but he was a willing worker. They set
in to plow small fields, some tediously cleared, some merely patches
between ever-present pines, which had been girdled to kill them.
Thomas could hardly wait for spring
planting.
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