Family tradition says that Bryson Jackson was a cousin of General Andrew Jackson. They never mention that General Jackson was also the 7th POTUS. When looking at the family tree, he was not a first cousin, and I have just recently tracked down the connection. Family history is not always perfectly accurate, but sometimes very close. Bryson's father is Brice Sr. His father is Isaac Jr. His father is Isaac Sr. His brother is Hugh Jackson. Hugh's son is Andrew Jackson Sr. and his son is Andrew Jackson, 7th POTUS. This portion personal history from manager Gary Wofford
"Bryson Jackson was father of David Ray, W.M., George, Isaac, Armstrong, Martha Elizabeth, and Mary Jane, who was born in 1830. Upon Bryson's death, his wife and children moved to Texas. Later his wife married a Mr. Beavers. Her daughter Mary Jane Jackson married John Wylie Hendricks Nov. 23, 1858. They settled at Cedar Hill, Texas. They reared five children, Saphronia Annie, J.N., J.W., Mollie, and Sallie. Mary Jane Hendricks died Aug. 14, 1914 at Cedar Hill, Texas. John Wylie Hendricks died Aug. 23, 1914. They are buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery."
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"I notice that in recent editions of Burke's Landed Gentry, under the pedigree of ' Greer of Tullylagan,' not only is the descent from the Killingwold Grove (sic) Jacksons given, but it is added : ' To this family the late Gen. Andrew Jackson, President of the United States, and the late " Stonewall " Jackson, the celebrated Confederate General, belonged.' The origin of this latter statement is to be found in the preface to the American work on the descendants of Isaac Jackson already referred to. But the editor of that book, though painstaking, was no genealogist ; and starting with the idea that ' Jackson ' existed in England as a surname before the Conquest (!), he seems to have thought that all Irish Jacksons were necessarily related to one another. He did not, however, give any evidence to establish a relationship between the well-known President, or the General, and Isaac Jackson of Harmony Grove, nor indicate how that connection could be traced. I have not the book at hand, and 1 think that the relationship was only mentioned as ' a belief in the family.' It has, I think, no more substantial foundation than the myth concerning the Killingwoldgraves descent. EDMUND T. BEWLEY."
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