• Andrew Hays - Son of Nashville pioneer
Samuel Hays, "a signer of the
Cumberland Compact, who was killed outside
John Donelson's house by Indians in 1793." These children were most likely raised by their surviving mother Elizabeth, but Jackson did manage the estate's finances and as attorney won a judgement in favor of the estate in a lawsuit decided in 1805. Hays was named a captain of the Madison County militia in 1822. Andrew Hays was later the prosecutor in the case of the death of
Gilbert, a slave owned by Andrew Jackson. In 1835 he participated in a Nashville committee supporting the nomination of Martin Van Buren to be president. • Campbell Hays - Son of Samuel Hays • Charles Hays - Son of Samuel Hays • Hugh Hays - Son of Samuel Hays • Jane Gillespie Hays - Daughter of another pioneer Hays, Nathaniel Hays. When her parents died, Jackson indicated a willingness to take her in. Jackson bought the Hermitage property from Nathaniel Hays. • Rachel Hays - Niece of the Jacksons, daughter of
Robert Hays and Jane (Donelson) Hays. Married to Robert Butler (see above); the couple settled in the newly opened
Florida Territory in 1824. • Narcissa Hays - Niece of the Jacksons, daughter of Robert and Jane (Donelson) Hays. Traveled with her sister Rachel and the Jacksons, never married. (1788–1831), an important nephew who married a ward •
Samuel Jackson Hays - Nephew of the Jacksons, son of Robert and Jane (Donelson) Hays. Robert Hays died in 1818. Jane Hays moved away leaving Jackson with legal guardianship of the three youngest of their children. Andrew Jackson already had a close relationship with one of the older sons,
Stockley Donelson Hays, and he had worked to pry the father out of debt. Jackson brought Samuel Jackson Hays with him to the White House and then sent him away for misbehavior. He entered West Point in 1823, Hays eventually served as a general during the
Mexican-American War and became exceedingly rich from plantation investments and inherited slaves. He died in 1866. (1815–1841) •
Andrew Jackson Hutchings - Son of Jackson's nephew-by-marriage and slave-trading business partner
John Hutchings. He was taken to the Hermitage at age six, grew up there as one of the "three Andrews," and elaborately carved his initials into the side of a wooden desk drawer which is on occasional display for Hermitage tours. Hutchings was expelled from University of Nashville, became a planter in northern Alabama, married a daughter of Jackson's other slave-trading business partner and brother-in-arms
John Coffee, got into some debt, and died of illness in 1841 == J ==