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Documents from James Craig to George Nevills, a chair of Jackson's committee, evidently convinced Jackson that his birthplace was George McKemey's house, present Union County in North Carolina (Henderson 43).
It also claimed that the mother of Jackson, Elizabeth, named him Andrew and baptized him in Waxhaw church, in North Carolina. The mother is then claimed to have taken permanent accommodation under Crawford's roof in South Carolina (James 10). The dictionary of American biography claims that Andrew Jackson was born in South Carolina, in the lean settlement of Waxhaw (Abernethy 526). Andrew Jackson may have been born in either Crawford's house, in South Carolina, or McKemey's house in North Carolina. The documents show that the exact spot was George McKemey's house in the north, but the people of the South of Carolina could be appropriate to believe that he was born at Crawford house as Andrew grew up in that house. The claims above have one thing in common: Andrew Jackson's place, Carolina.