Home / Full timeline / Soldier Austin Dabney is born. Decades after his participation in the Revolutionary War, the Georgia legislature grants him 112 acres of farmland. He is considered by some to be Georgia’s only genuine Black hero of the Revolutionary War.
Soldier Austin Dabney is born. Decades after his participation in the Revolutionary War, the Georgia legislature grants him 112 acres of farmland. He is considered by some to be Georgia’s only genuine Black hero of the Revolutionary War.
1760
Austin Dabney is believed to have been born to a Virginia white woman and a Black father in North Carolina. Dabney was enlisted in the Georgia Militia by Richard Aycock. In February 1779, Dabney fought along with white men in the name of colonial independence. He was wounded in battle, ending his military career. Dabney was emancipated in 1786 by the Georgia legislature, and in 1821 he was granted 112 acres of choice farmland in Walton County. His prosperity grew from owning horses during the later years of his life. Dabney was, according to some, Georgia's only genuine Black hero of the American Revolutionary War. Dabney died in Zebulon, GA in 1834.
References:
- • Hornsby, Alton. Chronology of African-American History: Significant Events and People from 1619 to the Present. Detroit: Gale Research, 1995.