Concerned Members of The Kentucky Historical Society

Home
Walter Baker Dead
2006 Goals
Issues
Legislative Watch 2006
What's Your Concern?
Our Mission
About Us
Donation
Join Us
Book a Speaker
Links

THE KENTUCKY HERITAGE OF
BARACK OBAMA

Much has been made of the multi-cultural, ancestral heritage of Barack Obama.
 
Research to date has all but ignored the Kentucky heritage
of this candidate for the presidency of the United States.
 
Barack Obama's roots reach back into pioneer Kentucky,
as well as into the American Revolution.
 

Barack Obama is about as American as one can get, if one looks at his ancestry from colonial Virginia and the Kentucky frontier.

Obama’s 7th great grandfather is Col. James Lewis Hickman. Born March 3, 1724 in Culepeper County, Virginia. He served in the military during the War of the American Revolution. America gave Obama’s 7th great grandfather a grant of land grant in Kentucky for his service. He settled in Paris, in Kentucky’s Clark County.

Col. Hickman married Hannah Lewis of Virginia on March 14, 1744. Hannah was the daughter of an 8th great grandfather of Obama, Maj. Davis Lewis 1695-1779, of St. Peter’s Parish, New Kent County, Virginia, who also served in the War of the American Revolution.

Hannah Lewis & Col. Hickman had a number of distinguished children, who are great grand uncles of Barack Obama. Capt. Davis Lewis Hickman served in the Revolutionary War, as did his brothers, Capt. Joel Hickman 1761-1852, and Capt. James Lewis Hickman Jr. 1759-1828.

Another brother Gen. Richard Hickman 1757-1832 who served the Revolution entered Kentucky with his parents. After serving in the Revolution, Gen. Hickman was a member of Kentucky’s Second Constitutional Convention at Frankfort in 1799. He served in the Lower House for five years, and then sixteen years in the State Senate. Elected in 1812, Richard Hickman was the 4th Lt. Governor of Kentucky under Gov. Isaac Shelby, and acted as Governor when Shelby went to war in the War of 1812.

Obama’s 8th great grandfather, who sired this distinguished family of American patriots, is Edwin Hickman. Edwin Hickman was Lord High Sheriff of Spotsylvania County in 1729, and Lord High Sheriff in Thomas Jefferson’s Albemarle County in 1740. In 1744 Edwin Hickman became Chief Justice for the Virginia Colony, that stretched from the Atlantic seaboard to the Mississippi River.

While many Americans can trace their ancestry to participation in the American Revolutionary War, few who are African-American can claim such privilege. Barack Obama is unique, in that he can. It should not be surprising that he has devoted himself to public service for his country.

Here’s the Obama pedigree to his 8th great grandfather, Chief Justice Edwin Hickman.

Barack Hussein Obama

Parents: Barack Hussein Obama Sr. & Stanley Ann Dunham

Grandparents: Stanley Armour Dunham & Madelyn Lee Payne

Great Grandparents: Ralph Waldo Emerson Dunham & Ruth Lucille Armour

2nd Great Grandparents: Harry Ellington Armour & Gabriella Clark

3rd Great Grandparents: Christopher Columbus Clark & Susan C. Overall

4th Great Grandparents: George Washington Overall & Louisiana Duvall

5th Great Grandparents: Robert Overall & Annie Browning

6th Great Grandparents: Col. James Browning & Susannah Hickman

7th Great Grandparents: Col. James Lewis Hickman & Hannah Lewis

8th Great Grandparents: Maj. David Lewis Sr. & Betty Ann Terrell

Chief Justice Edwin Hickman & Elender Webber

Obama's complete ancestral heritage

______________________________________________________________

Franklin Court Delivers a TKO to Concerned Members
June 15, 2006 - Concerned Members of the Kentucky Historical Society (KHS) received a temporary setback when retiring Judge Roger L. Crittenden quashed the effort of KHS members to obtain membership roles for the purposes of electing KHS officers. The Concerned Members previously had obtained a legal opinion from the Kentucky Attorney General stating members of the KHS are entitled to the membership roles. Fearing an unfavorable ruling of the Court, the KHS took the extraordinary step of suing its own members to quash lawful disclosure. The ruling was made on a technicality of procedural process, leaving the members of the KHS to seek membership roles by means other than the Open Records Act request it had made. See the stories below for MORE.
_________________________________________________________________________________________
Judge tells Concerned Members
You're entitled to membership roles.
But you can't have them.

MORE


KHS Executive Committee Members
who voted to sue its own members

MORE

State blocks web site
of Concerned Members

ORDER & OPINION of Judge Crittenden

Preceding OPINION of the Attorney General

History & Documents of Concerned Members' Open Records Act Request


2006 Legislative Season
The Results Are In

MORE

Meet The Candidates for 2007

MORE

Copyright 2010 Concerned Members of the Kentucky Historical Society All Rights Reserved