Crockett was born about 1753 in either MarylandorFrederick County, Virginia.[1] "Davy" Crockett said in his autobiography that John Crockett was born either in Ireland or during the journey from Ireland to America;[2] but later scholars disagreed, saying this had been John's father, also named David.[1][3] His ancestors were of Scotch-Irish and possible Huguenot backgrounds. The Crockett/Crocketague name is a Registered Lineage with the Huguenot Society of the Founders of Manakin in the Colony of Virginia (FMCV) [4] though "Davy" Crockett does not mention it in his autobiography.[1][5]
In 1775 or 1780, Crockett married Rebecca Hawkins, from Maryland.[1]
[edit]Gathering of Overmountain Men at Sycamore Shoals, a black and white reproduction of Lloyd Branson's 1915 depiction of the Patriot militias joining up.
A respected man in the area, Crockett later became a magistrate, a farmer, and an unsuccessful land speculator.[1][8] The family lived in what is now Greene County, Tennessee, close to the Nolichucky River and near the community of Limestone. It was here, at a location now commemorated as Davy Crockett Birthplace State Park, that David "Davy" Crockett was born in 1786. He was the fifth of the nine Crockett children, and was named for his grandfather. At the time of his birth, the area was part of the autonomous State of Franklin. In 1788, Crockett was justice of the court when a young Andrew Jackson received his law license according to some genealogies.[9]
In 1798, when David was 12, Crockett hired him out to Jacob Siler to drive cattle.[3] After young David fulfilled his original obligation to Siler, he returned to his father's home. The family sent Davy to a school that had been established nearby, but he did not like school and quit attending after a few days. The elder Crockett was drunk when he learned his son was avoiding school and he punished Davy severely, leading him to flee and stay away for years.[8] David Crockett returned in 1802 and helped pay off his father's debts.[8]
^ abPrice, Henry, Old Rogersville: An Illustrated History of Rogersville, Tennessee. Vol. I. (Rogersville: 2001) chs. 1-2. Price claims he may have been one of the founders of Rogersville.