Josiah Jackson Dinkins
The beautiful place called Dinkins Bayou is named for a
little man who lived a big life.
Josiah Jackson Dinkins was born in 1849 and grew up in the
“Magnolia Midlands” region, in Tattnall County, Georgia, the son of Martha and
Joshia Jenkins. As a teenager, Josiah worked
as a machinist – most likely, an apprentice -- on the Central of Georgia
Railroad during the Civil War. In that
job, his small stature may have served him well.
After the war, in 1868, he moved to Florida
and became a steamboat engineer, licensed in Apalachicola. He was then addressed as Captain Josiah Dinkins.
By 1870, he’d moved on down to Tampa, and then on to Fort
Myers in 1873. He eventually met a
charming young woman who was said to have worked as a “Fat Lady” in the
circus. Her name was Susan Roxann
Jeffries Langford. She was 9 years
younger than Josiah.
Although a couple of Sanibel historical accounts say that
Captain Dinkins’ wife had worked for the circus, I honestly don’t know how she
had time. She was married in 1877 at age
19 to James Wilford Lankford in Tennessee.
They had seven children together!
The last of those seven, Grover Lankford, was born in 1893.
James Wilford Lankford died in 1894, at age 39.
In 1894, when Susan Roxann Jeffries Lankford was 36 and
Josiah was 45, they married -- a first marriage for him, and a second for her. They had a son in either 1894 or 1895 (the
records are not clear) named Edward Jackson “E.J.” Dinkins. (As a young man, E. J. moved to Tennessee,
then Michigan, and finally California, where he lived until his death in 1958.)
Then Captain Dinkins took advantage of an opportunity; in
1888, homesteading had begun on Sanibel.
Captain Dinkins homesteaded at Wulfert on Sanibel beginning in
1898. He partnered with another
homesteader, Thomas Holloway. They grew
citrus and vegetables until the surges caused by the Big Storm of 1910, the Key
West hurricane of 1919, and the hurricanes of 1921 and 1926 finally ruined the
land for farming. Farming on Sanibel was
a tough way to live. But in the 28 years
he worked that homestead, Josiah was a dedicated, community-minded farmer. He donated an acre of his land for the Wulfert cemetery (now
between 5615 and 5645 Baltusrol Court).
Sunrise over Dinkins Bayou, looking from Porpoise Point toward land once owned by Josiah Dinkins. |
By 1900, Josiah and Susan were divorced. She was living in Fort Myers, and he was on
Sanibel. In 1907, she married Henry
Kratz and moved to Tampa.
After the divorce, Josiah met and married Louise, a woman
who was described as having “held a warm place in the affections of people with
whom she came in contact.” Perhaps she was the wife who had worked for the
circus?
Josiah’s beloved Louise died from a heart attack in December
1924, when she was 56 years old. Captain
Dinkins erected a monument to his wife at the Wulfert cemetery, although he and
his wife were buried in Fort Myers.
Josiah lived to be 92 years old. He spent his final years living at the home
of his niece, Mrs. D. D. Humphrey, in Tampa.
His obituary states that he was one of the incorporators of the City of
Tampa.[1]
Now when you are kayaking, boating, fishing, paddle
boarding, or daydreaming on Dinkins Bayou, you know something about the man for
whom it is named.
Sources: Obituaries
of Josiah Jackson Dinkins and Louise Dinkins, Ancestry.com, Findagrave.com
[1] On
August 11, 1873, citizens held a town meeting to vote to re-incorporate as Town
of Tampa. Source: https://www.tampagov.net/city-clerk/info/archives/city-of-tampa-incorporation-history
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