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History
The Murrells &
Hunter’s Home
George
Michael Murrell was born to a prominent family in Lynchburg, Virginia, in 1808. He moved to the Athens, Tennessee, area as a young man to pursue
mercantile interests with his brother, Glenmore O. Murrell, and future
father-in-law, Lewis Ross. There, in 1834, George Murrell met and
married Minerva Ross. Minerva was the oldest daughter of Lewis and
Fannie (Holt) Ross, members of a wealthy and influential Cherokee
family. Lewis was a merchant, planter, and National Treasurer of the
Cherokee Nation. His brother, John, was Principal Chief of the Cherokee
Nation from 1828 until his death in 1866.
When the Cherokees were forced to leave their homes in the East during the
"Trail of Tears" in 1838-39, Murrell chose to move with his wife's
family to the new Nation in the West. In Park Hill, Indian Territory, he established a plantation and
built a large frame home similar to those he remembered in Virginia. He called the Greek
Revival-style house "Hunter's Home" because of his fondness for the
fox hunt. A rock building was added beside the creek branch over a cold
spring to preserve food. Outbuildings included a barn with stables for
his horses. Other buildings probably added were a smokehouse, grist
mill, blacksmith shop, corn cribs, and small cabins for slaves and
employees. Murrell and his father-in-law also established a mercantile
business in Park Hill, later moving it into Tahlequah, the capital of the
Cherokee Nation.

George M. Murrell
Minerva (Ross) Murrell
(1808-1894) (1819-1855)
In 1855, Minerva (Ross) Murrell died, probably of
malaria. She was buried in the nearby Ross family cemetery. The Murrells had no
children, but in 1845, two of Minerva's young cousins came to live with
them. Joshua and Jennie P. Ross were educated by the Murrells and
remained close to them throughout their lives.
In 1857, George married Minerva's youngest sister, Amanda, probably at his
late wife's request. George and Amanda would have six children.
The first child died as an infant. The second, however, was born in
"Hunter's Home" at Park Hill in 1861. George Ross Murrell was
only ten months old when troop movements and guerilla warfare began during
the Civil War, and his parents left the Park Hill area. Eventually,
George was to serve the Confederacy back in his native Virginia.

Amanda
Murrell
(1830-1896)
George, Amanda, and their family never returned to live in "Hunter's
Home" after the war. Park Hill was devastated from repeated raids,
and most of the homes were damaged or destroyed. Various members of
Amanda's large extended family lived in the home during the war and through
the rest of the nineteenth century.
(Source: Shirley Pettengill, Murrell Home, June
2004)
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