Caroline Matilda Rawls

b. 16 December 1833, d. 3 March 1858
  • Caroline Matilda Rawls was born on 16 December 1833.
  • She married Willie Walker say 1854.
  • Caroline Matilda Rawls became a widow at the say 1855 death of her husband Willie Walker.
  • She married Philemon Tracy, son of Edward Dorr Tracy and Susan Griffin Campbell, on 10 March 1857 in Bibb County, Georgia.
  • Caroline Matilda Rawls died on 3 March 1858 at age 24 in Vineville, Bibb County, Georgia.
  • She was interred at Rose Hill Cemetery, Macon, Bibb County, Georgia.
  • The following appeared on 6 March 1858 in The Columbus Enquirer: [Died] In Vineville, near Macon, March 3d, Mrs. Caroline, wife of Mr. Philemon Tracy, and daughter of the late John Rawls; aged 24 years.
  • Her husband Philemon Tracy became a widower at her death.
  • The following appeared on 17 March 1882 in Georgia Weekly Telegraph: . . . Similar to this was my feeling in Rose Hill Cemetery when I came to read the inscription to the memory of: Caroline Matilda, Wife of Philemon Tracy, and Daughter of John and Caroline Rawls, Born December 16th, 1833, Died March 3d, 1858. Her Infant Sleeps Beside Her. . . . /P/ As stated in the inscription, Mrs. Tracy was the daughter of John and Caroline Rawls. The father, John Rawls, was a wealthy planter, having large estates in the counties of Pulaski and Baker. He, together with James Everett and Hartwell Tarver, owned much of their property in common, and so acted in concert that the name of one suggested the other. Jointly or severally they had a financial status in commercial circles such as was seldom enjoyed by planters. Mr. Rawls died while the oldest of his children had not emerged from the condition of childhood. There were three of them and he left property enough to make his widow and each of his children wealthy. Mrs Tracy was the middle one in point of age. She soon grew to womanhood and was marked for her beauty, grace and amiability. She was known as Miss Carrie Rawls, and was one of the belles of Macon. . . /P/ She first married Willie Walker, a very bright, talented and fascinating young man, the "first born" of Mrs. Governor H. V. Johnson. Their married life did not reach beyond a long honeymoon, when Walker died. She then married Philemon Tracy, a companion of her childhood, but a little her senior, and the duration of her married life was only another long honeymoon, when death "stole her awya," and all, (as will be seen by the inscription) happened before she had attained her twenty-fifty year. In a little more than four years therefrom, her handsome, brilliant and brave young husband, as Major Tracy of the Sixth Georgia Regiment (Colquitt Brigade) received his death wound on the fatal field of Sharpsburg. And thus poor Phil after "laying his darling down to sleep," with her baby "beside her," gave his own life for his country. Of him and her and their posterity, not one is left to tell the sad story of their early marriage and early death. . . .
  • Last Edited: 26 Mar 2012

Family: Willie Walker b. say 1833, d. say 1855