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Who was NOT the 'right' Temperance Russell

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When looking for a lady named Temperance or "Tempy" Russell in a certain limited location during the sparse population of the Civil War era, you would think it would not be that difficult when finding a person of that name, but in the 1800's of the Yadkin River Valley and Uwharrie Mountain area of North Carolina, there were a great number of Tempie Russell's, apparently, within two or three generations of them. So many, in fact, it is very very likely that an older ancestress, could be to blame, a Matriarchal Tempy whom multiple grand-daughters and great-grand-daughters were named for.



Researchers who have the Temperance Russell, who lived in Albemarle and had a son named John who married Sallie Carter, and a son named William Henry, who moved to Georgia, have her linked to two other Tempie's that she could not have possibly been. I will attempt in this post, to weed out the other Tempies, to show who she could not have possibly been, in hopes that might lead us to where she may have actually came from. It takes a little look into the Russell family tree.

Names like Mary and Martha were pretty insignificant during the 1800's as far as every family had one, but Tempy, Tempie or Temperance, the Quaker origined-name it sprang from, was less popular, but well-represented among the Russell's and families related to the Russells.

For instance:
1) Tempie Caroline Russell. This Tempie was born December 29, 1863 and died August 11, 1941. She was the daughter of Emmanuel Russell and Elizabeth Rowland Hearne Russell. Her father Emmanuel was one of the Montgomery County Russell's. Seems the Russell's pretty much migrated to Stanly from the Montgomery side of the river and into surrounding counties like Randolph as well.  This Tempie married Leonard Franklin Russell, son of Newton John Russell and Ruthie Jane Hearne. Repetition in surnames. Things that make you go hmmm. Leonard Franklin Russell was the son of John Russell and  Alice Elizabeth Cranford and the grandson of Leonard and Ann Russell and Nathan Christopher "Kidd" Cranford and his wife Sarah Elizabeth Lackey Coggins. These all had Montgomery County origins and these families were all involved in early mining operations. Ruthie Jane Hearne was the daughter of William Hearne and Rutha Skein. Rowan County citizens who had relocated to Montgomery.

2) There was a Temperance Russell , daughter of  Eli H. Russell and his wife Elizabeth. She seems to disappear, or does she? They have her birthdate as around 1837 and her death as November 11, 1850.

3) There was a Temperance Louisa Russell, daughter of David Manson Russell and Elizabeth Brown of Haywood County, NC, who married Edward Clayton Kenyon. These Russells seem to have a common origin with our Montgomery County Russell's.

4) There was Temperance Caroline Hearne Russell, born May 12, 1843 and married to Leonard Whitson Russell. Again, another intermarriage between the Russell and Hearne families. This was probably who the younger Tempie Caroline was named after. This Tempie was the daughter of  Joel Hearne and Nancy Harris Hearne. She also had a son named Eli. Leonard Whitson Russell was the son of Leonard Russell and Polly Brewer. He floated around between Randolph, Montgomery and Stanly Counties, and Tempie was his second wife.


5) Temperance Adeline Clodfelter Russell, born Feb. 13, 1854  wife of  Lemuel Russell and daughter of  Phillip (or Philemon) Clodfelter and Rachel Sanders.

6) In Davidson County, there was a Temperance Corneliuson Russell, who married John Q. Russell. She was born in 1874.

7) There was a Tempie Davis Russell b 1884 who married Cicero Artie Russell, son of Julian Russell and Adeline Bean. This family lived in the southern part of Davidson County, near Denton, not far from the Montgomery County and Randolph County borders.

The next two are a little more interesting, in reference.

8) There was a Temperance Cranford Russell who married Brantley R Russell. She was born in 1829 and died in 1901, daughter of Claiborne Crandford and Martha Patsy Russell, Patsy being daughter of Leonard and Ann Russell, mentioned above. Her husband Brantley R. Russell, b 1830 in Randolph County and died in 1903 in Montgomery County, was the son of Ransom Russell and Elizabeth Jones and and the grandson of Capt. John Russell and Elizabeth Hobbs. This Brantley Russell not to be confused with William Brantley Russell, circa 1855, son of Elias Russell and Elizabeth Betsy Bean Russell.
Miners from the Coggins Mine in Montgomery County, NC
9) Now, this next Tempy Russell is the one that many people seem to connect our Albemarle seamstress and mother of William Henry and John Russell to. Tempy Russell, born about 1803.
ame:Tempy Russell
Age:47
Birth Year:abt 1803
Birthplace:North Carolina
Home in 1850:Montgomery, North Carolina
Gender:Female
Family Number:791
Household Members:
NameAge
Davis Russell50
Tempy Russell47
Hillary Russell22
Joel Russell19
Elisha Russell13
Williams Russell12
John H Russell6
Ann Russell86
She also had a son named John and a son named William, who would have been in at least a 5 year range of William Henry and John A Russell. She was married to Davis Russell, who was not the only Davis Russell around either, by the way. The above census shows that she was also the mother of a Joel, Hillary and Elisha, and they had an elderly Ann living with them. This family lived in the El Dorado community of Montgomery County. The problem is, in 1860, when our Tempy is solidly in Albemarle with 13 year old John, Tempie, wife of Davis (who the transcriber had wrong as David), is home in Montgomery with her husband, her John and her William and her Elisha.


Name:Tempy Russell
Age in 1860:58
Birth Year:abt 1802
Home in 1860:Fork, Montgomery, North Carolina
Gender:Female
Value of real estate:View Image
Household Members:
NameAge
David Russell60
Tempy Russell58
William Russell20
Elisha Russell22
John H Russell16
Davis was the son of Gabriel Russell and Candis (perhaps last name Bell, this is unverified). His wife Tempie was born a Russell. Her father was Leonard Russell, mentioned above several times.

The following is the will of Leonard Russell, mentioning Tempie.
No Carolina, Montgomery county, In Equity, Fall Term 1853

To the honorable, the Judge of the Court of Equity of said County, the Bill of complaint of Hillory Russell, John Russell, Davis Russell & wife Tempe, Clavy Cranford & wife Patsey, John Wasinger & wife Polly against Curtis Russell, John D. Wasinger, Curtis Wasinger, Wm. J. Howell & wife Letitia, Eliza J. Wasinger and David W. Wasinger, the last two named are infants of Tender years (see note 1 below), under the age of twenty one, humbly complaining, yours orators & oratrices shew unto your Honor that Leonard Russell late (already dead) of Montgomery county, by his last will & testament, which was duly executed to pass both Real & personal Estate, devised among other things, that a certain tract of land hereinafter described, after the death of his wife Anna, should be equally divided among his children. They shew unto your Honor, that said last will & testament was duly admitted to probate at (no date, see note 2 below) Term of the Court of Pleas & Quarter Sessions of Montgomery County. The said Anna, wife of testator survived him and departed this life in (no date of the month) June AD 1853. Your orators and oratrices further complaining, shew unto your Honor that Testator left him surviving the following children, Hillory Russell, John Russell, Tempe Russell, who intermarried with Davis Russell, Patsey who intermarried with Clavy Cranford, Polly who intermarried John Wasinger and Elizabeth who intermarried with David Wasinger, and Curtis Russell, each of whom were entitled to one undivided seventh part of the remainder in said land after the life Estate of Anna Russell Expired (Note: word "Expired" is lined through). They shew your Honor that Elizabeth Wasinger departed this life about 1849 and her interest has descended to her children John D. Wasinger, Curtis Wasinger, Letitia who intermarried with W. J. Howell, Eliza J. and David W. Wasinger and who are defendants in this suit.
They shew your Honor that the tract of land above referred to, lies in Montgomery County on the wates (waters)of McLean & Buffaloe creeks, adjoining the land of John Wasinger & Wm. Russell and contains about 200 acres.
They shey shew your Honor that said land cannot be partitioned (divided in 7 parts) among the tenants in common without material injury. That gold has been discovered on said tract and if a vein exists, it would be impossible to make an equal division among tenants in common. Your orators & oratrices believe that it would be beneficial to all parties interested to have said land sold and it's proceeds divided among the said tenants in Common. To All which acting's & doings are contrary to Equity, & good conscious & tend to the manifest injury of petitioners. Plaintiffs Forinas? muclius? (Possibly Latin), Plaintiffs are seniei? lep? by the strict rules of Common Law, and only achievable in this honorable Court where matters of this nature are properly cognizable (means recognizable in the law- as in by a Court of equity) to the end therefore that defendants may upon their several corporal oaths, full true and perfect answer make to all singular the premises as much as if the same were here again repeated and they thereunto especially interrogated. May it please unto your Honor to grant unto your orators & oratrices, your states writ of subpoena, directed to the Sheriff of Mecklenburg county conisv?. and authorize him to summon A John D Wasinger, Curtis Wasinger, W.J. Howell & wife Letitia, Eliza J. & David W. Wasinger, and that publication (see note 3 below) be made as to Curtis Russell, who is an inhabitant of another state, that said defendants may appear at the next Court of Equity to be held for Montgomery, and demur (see note 4 below) plead to, or answer this Bill of complaint and they pray your Honor to order & decree a sale of said land, upon such terms as to your Honor may seem meet & right, and they pray your Honor to grant unto them such other & further relief as the nature of their case may require or unto your Honor, may seem meet & right. and as duty bound they will ever pray (There is a principle in Equity that he who seeks equity must be willing to do equity -- this language says the plaintiffs invoke the Court's equitable powers and they bind themselves to the Court to do equity, i.e., what is fair and reasonable).

A. H. Caldwell Solr for Plaintiff 

This is the 1850 census for the family of Eli Russell, with daughter Tempie. The age here is 13, but on the actual form, it looks like it could be 18.


Name:Temply Russel
[Temply Russell
Age:13
Birth Year:abt 1837
Birthplace:North Carolina
Home in 1850:Albemarle, StanlyNorth Carolina
Gender:Female
Family Number:941
Household Members:
NameAge
Eli Russel46
Elizabeth Russel39
Alxe Russel24
Henry Russel21
Caroline Russel18
Isiah Russel15
Temply Russel13
Elizabeth Russel8
Gabriel Russel5
Catharine Russel3
 Then there were several families from North Carolina, who took the naming trends to Tennesee:
Name:Pompey Russell
[Tempey Russell
[Tempey Russell
Age:37
Birth Year:abt 1813
Birthplace:North Carolina
Home in 1850:District 21, Wilson, Tennessee
Family Number:632
Household Members:
NameAge
Elijah Russell38
Pompey Russell37
Wilie Russell15
John Russell13
Stephen Russell12
Candis Russell10
Sarah Russell2
Name:Tempe Russell
[Temperance "Tempy"Russell
Age:37
Birth Year:abt 1813
Birthplace:North Carolina
Home in 1850:District 11, Gibson, Tennessee
Gender:Female
Family Number:2234
Household Members:
NameAge
Elijah Russell38
Tempe Russell37
Pinkney Russell15
John Russell14
Stephen Russell13
Candis Russell10
Sarah Russell3
Notice the almost identical family in two different counties. Census takers made errors. They were also slow. Many folks were missed, others were counted twice. Sometimes in two different places as they moved around. Some young men in Stanly County, were counted with their families, and then counted again in the households of people they worked for.

Then there was this little Temperance, born around 1863, daughter of E. Manuel Russell. Much too young, of course, to be our Tempy, but still, another Temperance in the Russell realm.

Name:Temperance Russell
Age in 1870:7
Birth Year:abt 1863
Birthplace:North Carolina
Home in 1870:Eldorado, MontgomeryNorth Carolina
Race:White
Gender:Female
Post Office:Wind Hill
Value of real estate:View Image
Household Members:
NameAge
E M Russell43
Elisabeth Russell41
William Russell17
Martin Russell16
Linsay Russell14
Minna Russell12
Temperance Russell7
Elisabeth Russell2
Nancy Hearn65
Notice a Hearne in the household. Probably a grandmother, I have not looked into it.

Tempy bought her little acre in Albemarle from Davidson Hearne, and her neighbor, Henry W. Spinks, married Lucy J. Hearne, daughter of Davdison Hearne. There seemed to be a great deal of intermarriage in Mother Montgomery between the Hearne and Russell families. Were Davidson Hearne and Tempy Russell related? Cousins perhaps?

Then there is this Temperance Russell. They were living in southern Davidson County and some of them definately were found later in Montgomery and Stanly Counties. This Tempy, daughter of James and Rebecca, is within the correct age range for our Tempy, as she had a different age in each census, that averages to about 1826. This Tempy shows up in no other census, or married to anyone else, unless she is our Tempy. The William below shows up in no other census with the rest of the family, although at his age, he should, and none of the family trees has him listed as a sibling, although he is clearly living with the family in 1850. But there is no John. Perhaps John was actually born after the 1850 census. There was a tendency to never get the years right. This might take some more investigation.

Researchers into the early origins of the Russell family in this area claim they came from Ireland, via England, via Maryland, four brothers who escaped, or opposed, Lord Baltimore. If this can be discovered, certainly we can discover the origins of Temperance Russell of early Albemarle, NC.

Will we find the true Tempie? Only time will tell.



The Irrepressible Nealie Shepherd

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Today I am putting the cart before the horse, so to speak, while waiting on records, which can take more than a little time. The subject of this post was so interesting, however, and led me to such a surprising twist in the family tree, I had to feature her.

At the risk of throwing out another old, worn-out aphorism, they say that actions speak louder than words. In such, the actions and traces of Lundy Cornelia Shepherd Mauldin Dawkins have left an intriguing trace into her personality.

Lundy Cornelia Shepherd (often seen misspelled as 'Shepard') was born about 1872, and probably on June 27th, as her death certificate attests to, as far as the month and the day. She was the daughter of William Edmund Deberry Shepherd and Frances C. "Fanny" Carter, and was born and died in Richmond County, North Carolina. She is buried in the Dawkins Cemetery in Rockingham, Richmond County, North Carolina.
Lundy Cornelia Nealie <i>Shepherd</i> Dawkins
I first came across L C Shepherd as a little girl in the 1880 census, living with her grandparents, Marcus Princeton and Nancy Marks Carter. Nancy was a sister to my third great-grandmother as well as their daughter Sarah, an aunt to Nealie, marrying into the Melton family of my constant research.

ame:L. C. Shepard
Age:8
Birth Year:abt 1872
Birthplace:North Carolina
Home in 1880:Albemarle, Stanly, North Carolina
Race:White
Gender:Female
Relation to Head of House:Granddaughter
Marital Status:Single
Father's Birthplace:North Carolina
Mother's Birthplace:North Carolina
Neighbors:View others on page
Occupation:At Home
Cannot read/write:

Blind:

Deaf and dumb:

Otherwise disabled:

Idiotic or insane:
Household Members:
NameAge
M. P. Carter59
Nancy Carter63
Lucy J. Carter24
J. T. Shepard10
L. C. Shepard8

Her brother, James Thomas Shepherd, was easy to be found and easy to trace, as to who they were. Only 3 of Marcus Carter's daughters lived to adulthood and his daughter Fanny, mother of these two children, died young. There was even an article in the Stanly News and Press about Tom Shepherd and his place out in the trace of the Uwharries on the Stanly side of the river. He is who named his grandfather as Marcus Princeton Carter and told of how, after being born in Richmond County, he was sent as a small child to Stanly County, to live with his grandparents in the shadow of Naked Mountain, what is now called Morrow Mountain, near the State Park. 
Mary Cassett's 'The Young Bride'
Tom Shepherd, as he became to be known, also told of how, after his grandparents died, he as a young boy fell into a hardscrabble existence of having to stay where he could and barter work from local farmers and businessmen. It must have been more difficult still for his younger sister. 

At first, she was just named as an 8 year old "granddaughter" in the 1880 census with the initial "L. C.". I wanted to know, 'did she live', to make it to adulthood, to make another census. To make more than a ripple in the waves of the world, and she did. 

The next sign of Nealie is in the Stanly County, North Carolina
marriage records. On November 20, 1887,  Lundy C 
Shepard, age given as 18, daughter of Edward and 
Fannie Shepard, both deceased is married to Joseph I Maulden, aged 40
son of Arch and Mary Maulden, father deceased and mother living, 
by W. B. Almond, no title given.  

If her age on the 1880 census was correct, Nealie would have been only 15 years old on her wedding day, not 18. She may have given her age as 18 to appear older. From the latter details of Nealie's life, I would not have put it past her.  From the difference in the age of the bride and groom, it would appear to have been a marriage of necessity, or survival, on the part of young Nealie, and just a pleasant opportunity for her middle-aged groom. 

Joseph I Mauldin (the correct spelling) was born about 1850 in Stanly County to Archibald C and Mary Smith Mauldin. He first shows up as an infant in the 1850 census. He never marries until he married Nealie. 

Nealie's only child, son Patterson, is born June 10, 1891. 

My dear cousin in a dozen distant ways, Ervin Mauldin, wrote a book, Ye Mauldins, published in 1993. In it he mentions this family in this way:
"Joseph I Mauldin b 1850 d. before 1900 Richmond Co. NC
  m. (middle of the road) Nov. 19, 1882 Lundy C. Shepard [dau. of: Edward Shepard & Fannie Carter]
This family moved from Stanly Co. - Lundy Cornelia Mauldin states they were living in Richmond Co. when her grandfather, Marcus Carter's will was probated in Stanly Co. 1895. 
  (9) Patterson Mauldin b 1890."
The next time I've found Nealie in documents was in this deed, from Lunda C Mauldin to W. W. Kearns, W. W. Kearns being her uncle by marriage, husband of Lucy J Carter Kearns. 

This Indenture made this 26th day of August, 1895 between Lunda C. Mauldin of the County of Richmond and W. W. Kearns of the County of Stanly.......the sum of ten dollars in hand paid to the said Lunda C. Mauldin by the said W. W. Kearns....all her undivided interest in ....it being one sixth part of the lands belonging to the heirs of Marcus Carter, deceased.....J. M. Parker's corner.....W. M. Forrest line....Gorden line....containing 75 acres more or less. 

The deed is then witnessed and certified by two Justices of the Peace and finally registered in 1898 by the Register of Deeds, W. T. Huckabee. 

After selling her share of her grandfather's land for a song to her uncle, Nealie shows up next in the 1900 census with her young son Patterson:

ame:Nealie Maulden
[Neal Maulden] 
Age:25
Birth Date:Jun 1874
Birthplace:North Carolina
Home in 1900:Rockingham, Richmond, North Carolina
Race:White
Gender:Female
Relation to Head of House:Head
Marital status:Widowed
Father's Birthplace:North Carolina
Mother's Birthplace:North Carolina
Mother: number of living children:1
Mother: How many children:1
Occupation:View on Image
Neighbors:View others on page
Household Members:
NameAge
Nealie Maulden25
Patterson Maulden11
They are living in the town of Rockingham , District 89, Nealie is listed as the mother of one child with one living. Her birth month and year is given as June 1874 and that of her son as June 1888. This would place her as only 14 at his birth. As she exaggerated her age in 1887 (or 1882, depending on which source used), in order to marry, as a young widow, she has decreased her age. Possibly on the lookout for a husband. 
They are renters, of a house, and both can read and write. 

Name:Jonelia Mouldine
[Jonelia Mauldin] 
[Conelia Mauldin] 
Age in 1910:40
[30] 
Birth Year:abt 1870
[abt 1880] 
Birthplace:North Carolina
Home in 1910:Rockingham, Richmond, North Carolina
Race:White
Gender:Female
Relation to Head of House:Housekeeper
Marital status:Widowed
Father's Birthplace:North Carolina
Mother's Birthplace:North Carolina
Neighbors:View others on page
Household Members:
NameAge
Lewis Dawkins54
Jonelia Mouldine40
[30] 
Patterson Mouldine20
By 1910, Cornelia (managled by the transcriber, but Cornelia on the actual document) has found herself a job as a housekeeper with a farmer named Lewis Dawkins. Her age is given as 30, marked out and corrected as 40. Her son Patterson is listed as a Farm Laborer on a General Farm and Lewis is listed as owning his own farm, a 54 year old single man. Under a column next to marital status, where Cornelia is given as a widow, it asks number of years of previous marriage, and Nealie answered 26 years. 

And then we encounter a locked door. There is no trace of Nealie Mauldin in the 1920 census, no death certificate, tombstone or other sign of existence or nonexistence. The same went for her son Patterson. And at that I gave up, but just for a little while. Nealie and Patterson were both young enough to have lived for awhile longer. Certainly both did not die before 1920. Patterson was the right generation to have qualified as a soldier in the Great War. Did he serve and perhaps die for his country? No record. 

Patterson was the kind of name to have perhaps been a middle name, with something more common and less identifiable as a first name. Perhaps John or James or William. .....nothing. 
But as a river, when it finds a blockage in it's path, must find its way around it, something told me the story of Nealie Shepherd Mauldin did not end here. Where did she go. 

So then, I began to look into the man she worked for in the last census of 1910. Nealie was a survivor. She did what was necessary to survive after the death of her parents and grandparents by marrying an older man as a very young girl. She found a job to support her child. What then would Nealie do next. 

So, I looked for Lewis Dawkins in Richmond County, and I found him. 

Lewis Thomas Dawkins was born May 17, 1848. He was the son of an Eli Dawkins and Mary Polly Terry. He was a farmer who had spent his entire life in Richmond County. And on January 20, 1913, 64 year old Lewis married the now middle-aged widow, Nealie Shepherd Mauldin. The document is recorded in Rockingham, Richmond County. 

They show up together in the 1920 census. 
Name:Nealie Dawkins
Age:48
Birth Year:abt 1872
Birthplace:North Carolina
Home in 1920:Rockingham, Richmond, North Carolina
Race:White
Gender:Female
Relation to Head of House:Wife
Marital status:Married
Spouse's Name:Lewis Dawkins
Father's Birthplace:North Carolina
Mother's Birthplace:North Carolina
Neighbors:View others on page
Household Members:
NameAge
Lewis Dawkins77
Nealie Dawkins48
But what of her son Patterson? There is no Patterson Mauldin to be found in the census. But by an odd coincidence, there is a young family with 3 children, living right next door to Lewis and Nealie, headed by a young man named Patterson. But he's not a Mauldin. 

Name:Patterson Hudson
Age:31
Birth Year:abt 1889
Birthplace:North Carolina
Home in 1920:Rockingham, Richmond, North Carolina
Race:White
Gender:Male
Relation to Head of House:Head
Marital status:Married
Spouse's Name:Luella Hudson
Father's Birthplace:North Carolina
Mother's Birthplace:North Carolina
Neighbors:View others on page
Household Members:
NameAge
Patterson Hudson31
Luella Hudson33
Lewis Hudson5
Allen Hudson3
[3 3/12] 
John C Hudson0
[4/12] 

Lewis Dawkins lived long enough to obtain a death certificate. He died on April 24, 1927 of Paralysis from a stroke. His age was given as 79 and he was buried in Dawkins Cemetery in Richmond County. But what of Nealie? Did she make it to the 1930 census? 

She certainly did. 
Name:Nealnie Dawkins
Gender:Female
Birth Year:abt 1872
Birthplace:North Carolina
Race:White
Home in 1930:Rockingham, Richmond, North Carolina
Map of Home:View Map
Marital status:Widowed
Relation to Head of House:Mother
Father's Birthplace:North Carolina
Mother's Birthplace:North Carolina
Occupation:

Education:

Military Service:

Rent/home value:

Age at first marriage:

Parents' birthplace:
Neighbors:View others on page
Household Members:
NameAge
Patterson Hudson41
Ellen Hudson33
Lewis Hudson15
Allen Hudson13
John Hudson10
Mary Hudson8
Guss Hudson4
[4 4/12] 
Nealnie Dawkins58
58 year old Nealie Dawkins is living with the family of 41 year old Patterson Hudson, a Junk Dealer,  who was her next door neighbor in 1920. And she was listed as his mother. But how could that be? Was her son not named Patterson Mauldin?

And then a revelation occured. 

Patterson was indeed a middle name. His first name was Marion, and sometime between 1910 and 1920, Marion Patterson had changed his name and reclaimed his birthright, by assuming the surname of his real, biological father. 

Patterson also did register for the draft. 
His World War I draft card gives his name Patterson Hudson and his date of birth as June 10, 1891. 
He is a natural born citizen, born in Stanly County, North Carolina. He gives Lewis Dawkins as the person who will always know how to get in touch with him. He has a wife and 2 children under the age of twelve. He is tall and of a medium build with gray eyes and brown hair. 

Less than a year after his mother's marriage in 1913, on December 13, 1913, Patterson himself, at age 22, took a child bride by marrying 16 year old Lou Ellen or Luella Harrington. 

The couple ended up having 6 children:

Lewis Thomas Hudson was born Dec 26, 1914, the day after Christmas. He married Evie Smith and had 3 children of his own and passed away in Rockingham on Dec. 7, 1950.

Allen Patterson Hudson was born September 12, 1916 and passed away on Feb. 12, 2004.

Third son John Calvin Hudson was born July 13, 1919.He died June 15, 1996 at the US Consulate in Frankfurt, Germany. 

Twins Marion Morrison Hudson and only daughter Mary Cornelia Hudson, were born February 1, 1922.
Son Marion, named for his biological grandfather, did not make it to his first birthday. He died at age 11 months on January 9, 1923, of Bronchial Pneumonia.

Last child, William Augustus "Gus" Hudson, was born October 3, 1925 and died June 24, 1970 in Elizabeth City, Pasquotank County, North Carolina. He named his oldest son Marcus William, perhaps for Marcus P Carter. 

So...that looks pretty cut and dried, except for the name change...but - what was the big surprise?

There were two when it came to Patterson. First the father. Second the Marriage License.

Patterson's death certificate made my jaw drop. Literally. 





Name:Marion Patterson Hudson
Gender:Male
Race:White
Age:77
Birth Date:10 Jun 1888
Birth Place:North Carolina, United States
Death Date:28 Mar 1966
Death Location:Rockingham, Richmond
Spouse's Name:Lou Ellen Hudson
Father's Name:Marion Hudson
Mother's Name:Cornelia Sheppard
Residence:Rockingham, Richmond, North Carolina
He began life as a Mauldin, and as an adult changed his surname to Hudson. He gave his father as Marion Hudson. Could it be the same one? Indeed it was. 

Naming his infant son the same name of his biological grandfather cemented it. 

Name:Marrion Marrison Hudson
Gender:Male
Race:White
Age:0
Birth Date:Feb 1922
Birth Place:North Carolina, United States
Death Date:9 Jan 1923
Death Location:Rockingham, Richmond
Father's Name:Patterson Hudson
Mother's Name:Lowella Harrington

Marion Patterson (Mauldin) Hudson was the son of Marion Morrison Hudson, the brother of my Second Great-Grandmother, Caroline Hudson, of whom I wrote about in my post "Sunday Black Sheep: The Abashing Story of Marion Hudson and his Aunt Polly".


Marion and his three sisters were Civil War orphans. Their mother had died while they were children, and their father lost his life during the coarse of the war. Marion would marry at age 19 to Mary Margaret Rummage, daughter of  Thomas Alexander and Nancy Ross Rummage on December 15, 1874.
They would have 3 children before Marion would father a son, James Franklin Hudson, by his father's much younger half-sister, Mary "Polly" Hudson. William Joshua Hudson, known for his longevity, proclivity, and progeny, was the grandfather of Marion Hudson through his son Burrell, and father of Mary Polly Hudson through his second wife, Amy Kendall. 

Marion and his wife Mary Margaret apparently remained together, having 4 more children after the birth of James Franklin Hudson. Now I discover that he had also a son by Lundy Cornelia Shepherd Mauldin, born before the birth of his last son with Mary Margaret, Alfred Douglas Hudson. 

While I have not determined YET, where Lundy's first husband, Joseph I Mauldin is buried or when, I can not tell if she was a young widow when her only son was born in 1891, or whether she was still married to the decades older Joseph. However, I do know that Marion was still married to his wife Mary Margaret. 

What was the draw to this obvious lady's man, Uncle Marion? Did he have that fatal 'bad boy swag' that some poor, unfortunate women are drawn to? Did he have an irresistible charm? That, I don't know, but this is the second proven time he sway from the bonds of matrimony. Did his wife know? Or was she one of the long-suffering wives of her generation who had no way to make it in this world without his support. The economy of the era was not kind to women. 

Nealie learned to make her way. 

Then there was the marriage certificate. 

Nealie had married her second and last husband, Lewis Dawkins on January 20, 1913. Soon afterwards, on December 3, 1913, her son Patterson would marry Flossie Richardson, daughter of Frank and Lou Richardson. Then, not long after that, on January 30, 1914, Patterson would marry Louella Harrington, daughter of  Tom and Minnie Harrington. In this record, "Shepherd" is also notated as part of his surname, as if acknowledging the confusing status of his parentage. So what happened to Flossie Richardson? Did she die? Did they get a quickie divorce? That I will address in my post "What Happened to Flossie Jane?"

Name:Patterson Hudson (Shepherd)
Birth Date:1891
Birthplace:
Age:23
Spouse's Name:Louella Harrington
Spouse's Birth Date:1895
Spouse's Birthplace:
Spouse's Age:19
Event Date:30 Jan 1914
Event Place:Rockingham, Richmond, North Carolina
Father's Name:Marion Hudson
Mother's Name:Nealie Dawkins
Spouse's Father's Name:Tom Harrington
Spouse's Mother's Name:Minnie Harrington
While the facts and records can only show that Nealie was a survivor, the base of her personality came out in land records. Perhaps after realizing the fact that the $10 she received from her share of the land of her grandfather's estate was no where near the value she should have recieved, she never let that lesson go. 

I will address that in my next post "This Land is My Land". 

The rolling hills of old Stanly County held many stories. Many folks traipsed up and down that old river. Lundy Cornelia "Nealie" Shepherd Mauldin Dawkins was just one of them. 


Marcus Princeton Carter

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I first made mention of Marcus P Carter in my post "The Letters of Henry H. Melton".  Marcus Carter and Henry Melton were apparently friends. Henry had made it a point to write to Marcus when he was away at war and  also to have Marcus watch after his family when he was away. Henry did not make it back home.  Marcus would purchase the land that Henry lived on from the executor of his estate, Parham Kirk. They were obviously already neighbors, according to the letters. The questions arise of how Marcus P. Carter was related to the other Carters in the area, if at all. His daughter Sarah, would grow up to marry John A. Russell, son of James Roberson Melton and Temperance Russell, all who resided in the small town of Albemarle, North Carolina during its early years. Still out there is the determination of how James R Melton ties in to the other Meltons, he definately is related, due to close dealings with them, but just exactly how? And also to the origins of Tempie Russell, and how both James and Tempie were closely associated with the founding family of Albemarle, the Hearnes. 


In census records, Marcus and his young family first shows up in Montgomery County, living near several Tolbert families. A Whitson Tolbert is next door. 

Marcus Carter
Age:26
Birth Year:abt 1824
Birthplace:North Carolina
Home in 1850:Montgomery, North Carolina
Gender:Male
Family Number:798
Household Members:
NameAge
Marcus Carter26
Nancy Carter28
Francis C Carter9
Kinchen Carter4
Sarah A E Carter2
His oldest three children have been born, his wife is two years older than he. Francis Caroline, at age 9, declares her parents 17 and 19 at her birth. Marcus's profession is simply given as "Laborer". Perhaps he worked for the Tolberts.

In the 1860 census, Marcus and his family were enumerated 3 times. In each one, they had different neighbors. Many families were left out, The Carters were well accounted for. 

Name:Marcus P Carter
Age in 1860:40
Birth Year:abt 1820
Home in 1860:Stanly, North Carolina
Gender:Male
Post Office:Albemarle
Value of real estate:View Image
Household Members:
NameAge
Marcus P Carter40
Mancy Carter45
Frances Carter18
Kinchen Carter14
Sarah Carter12
Lundey C Carter10
Lucy J Carter8

This 1860 version has  Lucy as the youngest child.  This one was taken on August 1, 1860, by J. McCorkle, and lists him in the area of the Albemarle Post Office with several Millers as neighbors. His occupation is 'Farmer'. 


Name:Marcus Carter
Age in 1860:39
Birth Year:abt 1821
Home in 1860:Stanly, North Carolina
Gender:Male
Post Office:Albemarle
Value of real estate:View Image
Household Members:
NameAge
Marcus Carter39
Nancy Carter37
Fanny Carter16
Lunda Carter14
Kinchen Carter12
Lucy Carter10
Julia Carter8
John Carter5
On this one, two children younger than Lucy, a Julia and a John is listed. Lunda's shown as older than Kinchen. This version gives Marcus's age as 39 and Nancy's as 37, and his profession as a shinglemaker. The Post Office was still Albemarle, and the census taker was the same, except this one was a bit earlier, on June 30th. Perhaps Mr. McCorkle did not realized he had already enumerated this family. Sarah has been left out. His neighbors were all Thompsons, Ben, John, William and George. Which makes sense, as the location of the Thompson cemetery is not far from that of the Carter Cemetery. 

Name:Marcas Carter
Age in 1860:36
Birth Year:abt 1824
Home in 1860:Stanly, North Carolina
Gender:Male
Post Office:Albemarle
Value of real estate:View Image
Household Members:
NameAge
Marcas Carter36
Nancy Carter35
Frances Carter18
Kenchie Carter13
Sarah Carter9
Lundy Carter7
Caroline Carter5
In this last one, at an even earlier date, June 22, Marcus is younger still, as is his wife. Frances is Frances again, instead of Fanny, but Kinchen has become "Kenchie", which may have been his nickname. Sarah and Lundy are there, in the correct order, but there is no 8 year old Julia or 5 year old John. Instead, there is a 5 year old Caroline. Same Mr. McCorkle doing the counting and the post office is in Albemarle. 

His neighbors in the last one are given as J.M McLester, Parham Smith, J M Bivens, Guilford Harris, and Clementine Melton, with her younger sons Atlas and Preston. Her husband, Joseph Melton and older son Green J. Melton are missing from this census. I've wondered where they were and what they were doing.
Name:Marcus Carter
Age in 1870:50
Birth Year:abt 1820
Birthplace:North Carolina
Home in 1870:Albemarle, Stanly, North Carolina
Race:White
Gender:Male
Post Office:Albemarle
Value of real estate:View Image
Household Members:
NameAge
Marcus Carter50
Nancy Carter40
Lucy Carter16
By 1870, Fanny and Sarah are married, leaving only Lucy at home. The other children have died. Marcus and family are still in the area of the Albemarle Post Office. Their neighbors being Frank Melton, with wife Martha and daughter Fannie, Martha Melton, widow of his friend Henry H Melton, several Forrests and the Green Ross family and David Rummage family. Marcus is just a family. 

The last census Marcus Princeton Carter will appear in is the 1880. He is by then an old man, Lucy is still at home and he and Nancy have gotten custody of the living children of daughter Fannie, James Thomas Shepherd and his sister Lundy Cornelia Shepherd. 
Land records show that his lands were split in 6 shares. I know that John Russel and wife Sarah Carter Russel were one share and daughter Lucy. J. Carter Kearns recieved another share, while Tom and Nealie Shepherd, children of Fannie were two other shares. 


Marcus Carter and members of his family are buried near the area called "Green Top" in Stanly County, east of Albemarle, not far from the Swift Island bridge across the Yadkin-Pee Dee River. There are 6 marked graves and 4 not legible. Perhaps the 4 are the mysterious children, "Julia, Caroline and John" and one other who did not make a census. The markers read:

Nancy Ann Carter wife of Marcus Carter age 96

Marcus P Carter born Nov 4, 1820 and died Nov 15th 1880 age 60 Y 11 D

William W Shepherd born Sept. 18, 1873 Age 2 M 17 D

Francis C. Shepherd was born Dec. 20 1842 and died Sept 23, 1873 Age 30Y 1m 3D

Kinchin Carter  Born May the 22, 1845 and died July 13, 1865 Age 20 Y 1 M 21D

Lundy C Carter Born Dec 16 the 1850 and died July 24, 1865 Age 14 Y 9 M 8 D

The proximity of the dates of the death of Kinchin and Lundy lead me to believe they may have died from a contagious disease. 

Kinchin Carter was 20 years old at his death. He was the right age to have been drafted into the Civil War, however, there are no records that he enlisted or was conscripted. I looked into records concerning health, mental status or dependency in Stanly County and found nothing that would give a reason that he was not a soldier.  That does not mean he did or did not have a mental or physical handicap that may have precluded him from serving. Finding tales of men literally forced and blackmailed into joining the army, it is hard to see how he just missed it, was overlooked, or just chose not to serve. 

The toddler, William W Shepherd was no doubt the son of Fannie Carter and husband William Edmond Deberry Shepherd. His father was named William Wilson Shepherd, and likely, the baby William's name was William Wilson also. 

The following is the family tree downward of Marcus Princeton Carter and his wife, Nancy Ann Marks Carter. Unknown is his family tree from himself upward. Was he a member of the Carter family that here existed, a descendant of the esteemed Revolutionary War soldier, Samuel Carter? Or did he migrate from somewhere else? Perhaps someone will find the name of Marcus in a record that gives a hint toward this information. 

He named his only son Kinchen. There was an old citizen in the county called Kinchen Pennington. A Carter daughter married Nelson Pennington, a son of Kinchen. Could there have been an overlooked daughter of Kinchen Pennington who married a Carter, perhaps even a first wife of a well-recorded Carter?

Marcus Princeton Carter b 7 Nov 1820 in North Carolina d 15 Nov 1880 near Albemarle, Stanly County, NC. 
Wife, Nancy Ann Marks, born about 1817 to 1822. Died in Stanly County.

I. Francis C. (Fannie) Carter, born 20 Nov 1843 married on 24 Dec 1868 in Richmond County to Willima Edmund (or Edwin) Deberry Shepherd (sometimes seen as Sheppard), son of William Wilson and Emeline Shepherd. 

Name:Edwin Shepherd
Birth Date:
Birthplace:
Age:
Spouse's Name:Fannie Carter
Spouse's Birth Date:
Spouse's Birthplace:
Spouse's Age:
Event Date:24 Dec 1868
Event Place:Richmond, North Carolina
She was the mother of 3 children: James Thomas (Tom) Shepherd, Lundy Cornelia "Nealie" Shepherd Mauldin Dawkins, and William W (probably Wilson) Shepherd. 

Fannie Carter
Mother
Nort
Fannie Carter
Mother
North Carolina, Deaths, 1931-1994
spouse:Edwin Shephard
child:Nealie Dawkins
h Carolina, Deaths, 1931-1994
spouse:William Edmund Shepherd
child:James Thomas Shepherd
other:Lucy Rosa Morton
II. Kinchen Carter, born 22 May 1845, died 13 July 1865

III Sarah A. E. (Sallie) Carter born 18 April 1848 died 9 May 1917. 
     Married 1 Nov 1874 to John A. Russell, son of James R. Melton and Tempie Russell




IV Lucy J Carter, born 7 May 1854  died 23 Feb 1918

Lucy J. Carter
North Carolina, Marriages, 1759-1979
birth:1853
marriage:1 November 1883Albemarle, Albermarle Township, Stanly, North Carolina
father:Marcus Carter
mother:Nancy Carter
spouse:William Kearns
other:Hubbard Kearns, Nancy Kearns
Other possible children: Laura (1852), John (1855) and Carolina (1855). These may have died as small children and could account for the unmarked, unreadable stones in the family cemetery.

So where did Marcus P Carter live before his appearance in the 1850 census? Were he and Nancy married in Montgomery County? Who were Nancy Ann Marks Carters parents? Why was this family not polled for the war effort? What saved Kinchen, at least from going? Was there a epidemic about in 1865 that took the lives of both Lundy and Kinchen that summer?

These are questions there may never be an answer to, now that Tom Shepherd and his sister Nealie, both who lived with their grandparents for awhile, have passed.



Major Henry

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Sometimes, when looking for one thing, you come across something else. Recently I was searching for old newspapers from surrounding towns, prior to the first Stanly County newspaper coming into existence. One of the best of these is "The Carolina Watchman", out of  Salisbury, in Rowan, North Carolina. Salisbury was a very early town, in what was considered then, the western part of the state, the wilderness, so to speak, so she was a little head of the game when it came to civilization and newsprint.

Major Henry Davis


What a surprise to find this ad from the June 22, 1848 existence. In a moment, I knew it was my Great-Grandfather's Grandpa, Henry Davis, son of Job. However, I had never seen him referred to as "Major" and this was over a decade prior to "The War".

A little history, for those first stumbling upon this blog. Stanly County was not established until 1841, when she broke off of from Montgomery County, due to the problems and danger citizens encounter trying to cross the Yadkin-Pee Dee River trying to get to the Courthouse to conduct business. In her inception, Henry Davis was one of the founders of the early government, serving in several capacities, including Justice of the Peace, Jugdge and Ranger. Along with his brothers, his name shows up many times in the early records of the county. His younger brother, Edward Winfield Davis, served as the second sheriff and was the most prominent and legalistic of the Davis brothers. James M. and Marriott Freeman Davis show up occasionally, but not as much as Henry and E. W. and E. W. certainly had it nailed as the most active and recorded brother.

The following paragraph is from this link: http://www.carolana.com/NC/Counties/stanly_county_nc.html

On January 11, 1841, a new county was founded in North Carolina’s Piedmont region – Stanly County. Created out of the western portion of Montgomery County, Stanly County’s eastern borders were determined by the Yadkin and Pee Dee Rivers. The names of Stanly County’s first Justices of the Peace remain prominent among Stanly County citizens today –William Swaringen, chairman, Edmund Lilly, Eldridge Parker, Henry Davis, Joshua Hearne, Jacob Austin, Richmond Snuggs, James Allen, John Stone, Francis Kron, John Miller, Daniel Palmer, Thomas Rowland, Mathias Moose, and John Furr. The county court elected D. Hearne, Clerk of Court; S.P. Morton, Register of Deeds; and Eben Hearne, High Sheriff. The Hearne family donated fifty-one acres of land to establish Albemarle, the new county seat. The County Commissioners accepted the deeded property, and a section of what had been the great Hearne Plantation became the heart of the new town.

But Major!!!

What war or service could this ancestor of mine participated in to recieve the rank of Major? He was too young to have served in the war of 1812, and even his father, Job, was too young for Revolutionary War service. It would have had to been a position in a local militia, the Mexican War, or one of the Indian wars.

This calls for more research into the possibilities. Off in a new direction...in the meantime, I will be posting on information I have already dug up.

There are so many records I am waiting on to be delievered.

Amazing...Cousin Connections

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Marthadv

This blog has brought many blessings to me. One of the biggest blessings has been the connections and communications with distant cousins. Every generation seems to have had its share of 'stayer's and 'goers'. I seem to descend primarily from the 'stayers', those who rooted themselves in this little spot in North Carolina and stayed there for generations. Of course, there were 'goers' before them, the ones who came from another state, or country, to here.

And then there were the migrants, the siblings of my ancestors who went south and west, South Carolina, Georgia, Alabama, Tennessee, Arkansas, Mississippi, Missouri and Texas were the primary destinations.

Just now, I found that one of them who descended from the older sister of my second great-grandfather Hawk Davis, portraits, not only of their mother, Martha Palmer Davis, but also of her parents, James Palmer and Martha Atkins Palmer.

Martha was born on June 1, 1815 and died on July 16, 1879. Her death was mentioned in the Fayetteville Observer. She was the second wife of Major Henry Davis, son of Job and Sarah Winfield Davis. She was the mother of 9 children and stepmother to John Edward Davis and Benjamin Franklin Davis, Henry's sons by first wife Sarah Kendall Davis, daughter of Reuben Kendall.

Her children with Henry were:

Nancy Baldwin Davis Wall, who migrated to Mississippi (1835-1880)
Sarah "Sallie" Davis Crump, b 1837 d in Stanly County prior to 1900.
Henry Hampton Davis b 1840 died in 1864, Civil War
Mary "Mollie" Davis b 1842 died after 1860. Spouse and fate unknown.
Martha Jane Davis Ingram b 27 Dec. 1844 - died 20 Mar 1885 in Texas.
Horton H. "Hawk or Haut" Davis b 6 Oct 1846 and 30 Oct 1906 in Stanly County.
Job Davis b 1848 - turns up in Mississippi with sister. Dies after 1880.
Laura Davis b 1850 - never married died after 1910 in Stanly County.
Margaret Victoria Davis Crump b April 5, 1852 d 28 Sept 1934.

I can see her in the face of her son, my great-great Grandfather H. H. Davis.


Haunting.


This Land is My Land: The Irrepressible Nealie Shepherd Part II

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North Carolina is a beautiful and historic state. The rolling hills and multiple rivers and streams of the land between the Yadkin and Catawba afforded its early citizens a workable way of life. By the early twentieth century, however, farms had been divided and subdivided to a point wherein not everyone could own their own.

Lundy Cornelia Shepherd was a woman born into the South during the devasting and deadly years of reconstruction. After the death of her mother, she and her brother, who were born in Richmond County, came to Stanly County to live with her aging maternal grandparents, Marcus P Carter and wife Nancy.

The grandparents did not live until the children were grown, however, and Tom Shepherd was left to try and survive on his own, begging work and board from neighboring farmers, and local business people, in order to survive. Imagine how much harder it must have been for his younger sister.

In 1887, Nealy whose age was given at 18 at the time, married a 40 year old bachelor, Joseph I Mauldin. I am very much a Mauldin, my maternal grandmother being one, and both of her parents being Mauldins. Joseph seemed to have led a pretty quite existence. He did not make many waves.

Nealie's age seemed to change to suit her purposes in every record. In the first census she shows up in, 1880, her age is given as 8, birth year 1872. On her marriage license in 1887, it is given as 18, which would have given her a birth year of  1869. As she did not appear in the 1870 census, and was not yet born, I believe her age was elevated in the instance to suit the purposes of her being a bride. She was more likely about 14 or 15. Her second census, as the 1890 is forever lost, was in 1900, where she is listed as 25, with an 11 year old son, and a birth year of 1874. Her son Patterson, in records, steadfastly has a birth year of 1891, from military records, marriage licenses to death certificate and tombstone. He should have been about 9.

By 1910, Nealie's age was written as 30, striked out, and over written as 40. Patterson's as 20. This would have given her a birth year of 1870. On her marriage license to Lewis Dawkins in 1913, her age again is given as 40...3 years later, giving her a birth year of 1873, and Lewis is given as being 55.
Name:Lewis Dawkins
Birth Date:1858
Birthplace:
Age:55
Spouse's Name:Nella Shepherd
Spouse's Birth Date:1873
Spouse's Birthplace:
Spouse's Age:40
Event Date:20 Jan 1913
Event Place:Richmond, North Carolina
By the 1920 census, Nealie is 48, with a birth year of 1872, the same as in her first census, but Lewis's age has jumped 22 years in the 7 years since his marriage license, with his age being given as 77.

Lewis did not live until the next census, passing away in 1927 with an age of 79 on his death certificate, so he got a little younger before his death, only aging 2 years in 7 years time. On the 1930 census, however, Nealie is living with her son and his family, and is 58, corresponding with a birth year of 1872 on the 1880 and 1920 censuses.

Name:Nealie Dawkins
Age:68
Estimated Birth Year:abt 1872
Gender:Female
Race:White
Birthplace:North Carolina
Marital status:Widowed
Relation to Head of House:Head
Home in 1940:North-West and South Rockingham, Richmond, North Carolina
Map of Home in 1940:View Map
Street:Extension Of North Lee Street Or Honeytown
House Number:344
Farm:No
Inferred Residence in 1935:North-West and South Rockingham, Richmond, North Carolina
Residence in 1935:Same House
Sheet Number:21B
Number of Household in Order of Visitation:2
Occupation:Laundress
Industry:Own Home
House Owned or Rented:Rented
Value of Home or Monthly Rental if Rented:4
Attended School or College:No
Highest Grade Completed:Elementary school, 2nd grade
Hours Worked Week Prior to Census:32
Class of Worker:Working on own account
Weeks Worked in 1939:52
Income:52
Income Other Sources:Yes
Neighbors:View others on page
Household Members:
NameAge
Nealie Dawkins68
Louis Hudson25

The last available census is that of 1940. In it, Nealie is now 68, which is right on target with a birth year of 1872, and living with her is her oldest grandson, Louis Hudson, probably named for his generous step-grandfather, Lewis (sometimes seen as Louis) Dawkins. This census infers that she was a simple laundress and that she worked 32 hours a week, 52 weeks a year, and I don't doubt she was taking in laundry. Nealie was a smart, insightful and opportunistic individual. The previous census records revealed that she could read and write. She was proud of that and never denied it. On this one, she claims to have only made it to the second grade. School must have been the one on Stony Hill, nearest to her grandfather, Marcus Carter's place.

Her grandson Louis is a welder, and a widow next door, (in a house that Nealie owned, by the way, Fannie Hinson, was also a laundress.


The 1940 census tells us the family lived on an "extention of North Lee Street or HoneyTown".

John Dubose, a Rockingham native who moved to Florida, shared the following photo in his "Collection of Memories"

John Dubose Collection, Rockingham

R37-Five Points of years ago...coming into Five Points on N Lee St from Honeytown. My input: This photo was taken in the early 50s. That is Five Points - road that the picture was taken from does run from Honeytown - Lee St. Walked those roads many times during my youth. Leftys was in the middle - my uncle John Heavner ran Five Po...ints Barber Shop on the right. Use to be a little store on the right also above that black car. Seagos on the left on old 74 after you would make the turn off of N Lee St . Homer Benoists Five Points Grocery across from there. That main road in view was US 74 - before they diverted it behind Homer's place. That area beside and behind Homers is where Lane Hudson and Mike, Billy and Keith McKenzie grew up. Lot of good memories and glad so many remember that part of Rockingham.
R37-Five Points of years ago...coming into Five Points on N Lee St from Honeytown. My input: This photo was taken in the early 50s. That is Five Points - road that the picture was taken from does run from Honeytown - Lee St. Walked those roads many times during my youth. Leftys was in the middle - my uncle John Heavner ran Five Po...ints Barber Shop on the right. Use to be a little store on the right also above that black car. Seagos on the left on old 74 after you would make the turn off of N Lee St . Homer Benoists Five Points Grocery across from there. That main road in view was US 74 - before they diverted it behind Homer's place. That area beside and behind Homers is where Lane Hudson and Mike, Billy and Keith McKenzie grew up. Lot of good memories and glad so many remember that part of Rockingham.




What the census records fail to reveal, was that Nealie was more than a simple laundress, she was also a land barren, a wheeler-dealer, perhaps a bit manipulative and very ambitious. She went to work as a housekeeper for Mr. Lewis Dawkins, who had a piece of land. Factories were growing up on either side of his property, and she Nealie was the one who obviously saw an opportunity and took it. Lewis owned the property in the beginning, but later turned it all over to Nealie. The most telling document was this one"


 Map showing location of Lewis Dawkins Farm near Honeytown

" 1924   Deed between Lewis Dawkins and Nealie Dawkins

Document 140  Page 511   This 10th day of April, 1924 between Lewis Dawkins of Richmond County of the first part and Nealia Dawkins, his wife of Richmond County of the second part....Witnesseth that Lewis Dawkins, for the love and affection he bears towards his wife, the said Nealy Dawkins, and in consideration of $5.00 paid in hand by the said Nealy Dawkins...tract or parcel of land in Richmond County...viz..

Seven tracts...west of the town of Rockingham by way of the Pee Dee Cotton Mill #2....on public highway leading from Rockingham by way of the Great Falls Cotton Mill.....1 mile west from the center of town....Lots, 1, 2, 3, 4, 4, 5, 6, and 7 being part of the land known as Richardson Park....Also, lots 1, 2, 3, and 4 of the Dawkins Development....having been conveyed to Lewis Dawkins by Carolina Land & Exchange Co. ......also Lots 5 & 6 in Block A of the Lewis Dawkins development...having been conveyed from J F Swink and wife Bessie...Feb. 11, 1924... TO HAVE AND TO HOLD. 

Up until his marriage to Nealie, Lewis had been a simple farmer. He had made one or two purchases of large tracts of land. After his marriage to Nealie, however, their names exploded in the land records, with Nealie clearly in charge. She saw an opportunity.

From "Rockingham Remembered Scrapbook", Men in front of Pee Dee Mfg. No 1

The Lewis Dawkins farm was located just west of the turn-of-the-century town limits of Rockingham. There were two roads that either ran along side his property or through it. One was called "The Rockingham -Wadesboro Road, and passed by the Great Falls Factory. The other was called "The Blewitt Falls Road" and passed by the Pee Dee Manufacturing Company. Lewis Dawkins and Nealie , also either owned or purchased property in Longwood Park, in Hamlet, as that is mentioned as well.

Shortly before 1920, Lewis and Nealie probably saw the value in families wanting to settle near the growing factories, to be able to walk to work. They hired a surveryor named J. V. Thrower to stake their property into Blocks and Lots. Other parts were left wooded and the timber rights sold. Lewis and Nealie, themselves, mortaged some of the property, and sold other tracts. Some of the mortgages fell through and so they were selling the same lots over and over, each time with a considerable profit due to the rising cost of real esate. Patterson and wife Louella continued the same course in a smaller way than Nealie, afterwards.

Listed below are some of the transactions found involving Lewis and Nealie, Patterson and wife Louella, as grantees, grantors, or mortgages lent.

The records begin in Stanly County, after the death of Marcus P Carter, and the settlement of his estate. W. W Kearns, husband of Lucy Carter and son-in-law of Marcus Carter, bought the undivided interest in the property from the other heirs. Thomas Shepherd, undoubtedly kept some portion of the land, or either bought it back.

1895  Book 22 Page 122  W. W. Kearns to John A. Russell (husband of Sallie Carter Russell)
1898 Book 22 Page 562  W. W. Kearns to J. T. Shepherd (son of Fannie Carter Shepherd).
1895 Book 23 Page 339  W. W. Kearns to Lunda C. Mauldin (Nealie's name prior to her marriage to Lewis Dawkins, she was the widow of Joseph Mauldin. J. T. Shepherd was her brother.

W. W. Kearns transactions with J. T. Shepherd were a bit confusing. On November 11, 1898, W. W Kearns and wife Lucy J. Kearns sold 11 9/10 acres of land to Tom Shepherd for $15.00

On the same day, Thomas Shepherd and wife, Rosana, sold 59 8/10 acres to W. W. Kearns for $15.
On the same day, Nov. 11, 1898, Book 22 Page 566, W. W. Kearns sells the same 59 8/10 acres to Mrs. E. J. Shankle.

McNeil Rd, Albemarle, NC 28001

The cemetery and lands of Marcus Carter were in between McNeil Road and Indian Mound Road, near the Pee Dee River.

On Lewis Dawkins part, he shows up pre-Nealie in the land records in a transaction on April 25, 1896, purchasing a tract of land from Solomon Ford, of Richmond County and N. A. and Elizabeth Harmon, of Guilford County. The tract was "on the waters of Naked Creek" and adjoining the Pee Dee River and the Ingram estate, near a "Boswick's Mill."

On the 10th Day of December, 1912, not long before he married Nealie, Lewis Dawkins purchased property from E. F. Richardson and his wife Lula, that ran the "edge of the road from Rockingham, NC via Great Falls Factory, to a spring at the head of the Dawkins Spring Branch. This may have been property that had been in his family for a long time, as the spring bore his surname.

From then onward, all the transactions involving Lewis bore both his name and Nealie's, or just Nealie's alone, before and after his decease. 1920 and 1921 were the big action years. The years Nealie decided to turn this farm into a development, and she became a real estate wizard, basically creating her own Mill Hill, and leaving this earth in a much better financial situation than she had been born into.

A view of Dawkins Street in Rockingham, North Carolina

1915 Oct 29 Lewis and Nealie - Henry Morse - road leading from  Rockingham by Pee Dee Mills to Blewitt Falls .

1917 Mar 11 - Lewis and Nealie to M B Thomas adj Pee Dee Mill Village conse. McIntosh Bros. brick building.
1917 Mar 11 Lewis and Nealie to Mary Luther - eastern edge of Wall's Ferry Road to Pee Dee Mfg.

1919 Oct 29  Lewis and Nealie to B C Ussery adj. Jeter Richardson and the late Annie Cole 5 2/10 acres on road to Blewitt falls by way of Pee Dee Mill # 2.

1919 Dec 16  Lewis and Nealie to T. E. Cox  Timber Deed  107 acres- "all timber on this tract on which Lewis Dawkins now lives".

1920 Nov 8 Lewis and Nealie - Neal Henry McQueen Lots 48 & 49 of L. Dawkins property near Pee Dee Mfg. property.

1920 Nov 8 Lewis and Nealie - John and Grace McQueen Lots 50 & 51 Lewis Dawkins Property in Rockingham Heights near Pee Dee Mfg.

1920 Nov 8 Lewis and Nealie - Mason P. McIntosh Lots 100-103 & 86 - 89 Lewis Dawkins Property in Rockingham Heights.

1920 Nov 8  Nealie Dawkins 1st part, Pee Dee Mfg 2nd part, for $5069.50 Lots 5 - 8, 22-43, 70-85 of Lewis Dawkins Property Known As Rockingham Heights.

" D C Hinson from Lewis and Nealie Lots 14-18 Rockingham Heights
Same day, same person Lots 19, 20, 52,53,54

1920 Nov 8 L & N - S R Davis Lots 44-45

1920 April 9 L & N -Hiram Thomas Baldwin  East side of the Rockingham - Wadesboro Road.

1921 Apr 5  Pee Dee Mfg. to Lewis and Nealie Lots 56-60

1920 Nov 8  L & D to Clyde Swink and wife Lots 2,3,4 Dawkins Prop. Rockingham Heights.

1920 Nov 22 L & D - W T Hinson  Lots 9 -12

1921 Oct 24 J V Thrower to  Lewis and Nealie Tract 1 lots 5 & 6 Block B, Tract 2 Lot 10 Block B, Tract 3 Lot 4 & 5 of of six choice homesites.

1920 Nov 8 J P Patterson - L & D, Lots 46 & 47 L. D property in Rockingham Heights.

1921 Oct 13 L & N - J. E. Jarman Ltos 1 - 4 Block B of the L. Dawkins development.

1921 Oct 13 L & D - E J Morse Lots 11-13 Block B L. D development.

1920 Nov 24  L & D - Nancy Hinson Lots 61-63 Rockingham heights.

1921 Nov 12 Carolina Land and Exchange Co.  to L & D. Lots 90-98 Lewis Dawkins property West of Rockingham, Lots 90-98 L. D property west of Rockingham, lots 1-4, 13 - 21 Block A, Lots 3,5,6, 21-39 Block B, Lots 1-17 Block C, Lots 1-4 Lots D.

Also in 1921, 24 more transactions, involving Lewis and Nealie and the following individuals: J. F. Swink, T. R. Nichols, Willis A. McIntyre, John R. Lavin, Lorena Barrington, Nancy L Hinson, B C Ussery, Will Long, W. A. McDonnell, H. T. Allen, and D. A. McSwain, among others. There are so many, I've grown tired of typing. 

1920 - Dec 31 Nealie Dawkins to Will Long  Lots 77, 78. 84, 85

1921 -Nov 22  W T Hinson to Nealie Dawkins for $1500 in West Rockingham, Lots 77 & 78, 84 & 85, once known as the property of W. A. McDonald, 77 & 78 being the J. M. Downer lots and 84 & 85 being the Billie Williams lots.

1921- Nealie Dawkins to D L Hinson  Book 139 Page 186


1922 Nealy to J B & Bell Richardson, land in West Rockingham, intersecting with road from said town (Rockingham) by way of Pee Dee Cotton Mill, No 2. and public road leading west by way of Great Falls Cotton Mill...Lot 4 in Block D of Richardson Development, being present homeplace of J. B Richardson and family.
1922- Nov. 13 Carolina Land and Exchange Co., Principal Office in Forsyth County, to Lewis and Nealia Dawkins for $1620 land in Rockingham Township adj. Lewis Dawkins and others.  Lots 1 - 4, Block A  of the Lewis Dawkins Development, surveyed and made by J. L. Thrower Sept 15, 1914 (note: Lewis and Nealie were married in 1913).

1923 - Neila to Will Long  Mortgage Deed, Will Long son of Elisha T. Long Same Lots in West Rockingham.



1923 - Lewis Dawkins - J B Richardson Lots 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7 "Richardson Park"

1924 Nealy and Lewis Dawkins  7 tracts West of Town of Rockingham by way of Pee Dee Cotton Mill # 2 and public highway leading from Rockingham by way of  Great Falls Cotton Mill, one mile west of center of town Lots 1 - 7 land known as Richardson Park. Also Lots 1 - 4 of the Dawkins Development coveyed from. Carolina Land and Exchange Co.

1924- Lewis - J. T. Cox  Lewis buys from J. T. Cox and wife 'Milner' and T. E. Cox and wife Mattie a tract of land next to the Cox Planing Mill.

Also Lots  5 + 6 in Block A of the Lewis Dawkins Development having been conveyed from J. F. Swink  and wife Bessie. Feb. 11, 1924 to have and to hold.

1924 Louis Dawkins ux - H. W. Sneed ux

1927- Aug 3 Lewis and Nealie FROM H. W. Sneed, orginally T. E. Cox- part of property of Cox Planing Mill on Mortgage Deed.

1927 Nealie to Carolina Land and Exchange

Jan 1 1927 Mrs. Nealie Dawkins bought from E. L Sanford, Mortgage Deed, Mark's Creek Township, on half of the unsold, undivided interest in Longwood Park, Hamlet, NC Lots 36.37,42,80,81,84-86,128,130,132,133,140-145.

1927 Aug 10 - Patterson and Luella Hudson to T P Seago Lot 31 Block B of the Dawkins Deveopment.

Mar 8, 1928  Nealie - J. L. Gordon Lots 36 & 37 Longwood Park addition near Hamlet.

May 21, 1928 Nealie to John and Maggie Perkins Mortgage Deed Lots 1 - 6 Block A, Dawkins Development.

Nealie to T. E. Cox  North side of Blewitt Falls Road thru Pee Dee Village running with Nealie Dawkinss line.

Feb 9 1928 Nealie Dawkins to Patterson Hudson- North side of Blewett Falls Road thru Pee Dee Village, lot adjoining his mother. (Note: Lewis had passed in 1927).

263-15 and 254-193 Louella Hudson (Mrs. Patterson Hudson) as trustee for New Hope Baptist Church.

1962 Nov 16 - John R MacCaskell, John W Davis, Allen P Hudson, Trustees of Rockingham Weslyn Methodist on road leading from Rockingham to the Pee Dee Hill to Blewitt Falls conveyed to (Church) by J. R. Norse and wife Cassie.

1964 Sept 16 Patterson and Luella - Harry C. Carroll Lot 5 Block A Dawkins Development.

19 Feb 1965 Patterson and Loella Hudson Lot 5 Block a of the Dawkins Development same conveyed to them by Boyce and Lenna Martin on Dec. 21, 1953 to Willie and Bettie Tyne.

1965 Nov 9 Patterson and Louella  to Harry C. Carroll Deed of Trust Lot 5 Block A Dawkins Dev.

2 Feb 1967 Luella as trustee for New Hope to Ollie Mae Maske Lot 9 and part of Lot 8 Block A of the Dawkins Development.

1969 May 20 Louella H. Hudson to John Calvin Hudson (subject to a life estate reserved by grantor) Lot 5 in Block A of the Dawkins Development, the same property conveyed to Patterson and Louella by Willie E. and Bettie C Tyner. "Patterson is now deceased and Luella reserves and excepts to herself a life estate in said property".

1970 Apr 14 Allan Patterson Hudson - Paul and Hazel Jenkins Lots 9, 10, 11 in Block C of Hillcrest Subdivision

1972 Mar 1 - Luella and New Hope (notice the spelling of Louella Hudson's name keeps changing)
Lot 37 Block B Dawkins Development and Lot 9 and half of Lot 8 of Lewis Dawkins Development.

1973 Aug 16 Marcus W Hudson (single) Lots 3 & 4 Bermuda Meadows. - T Berry Liles
Marcus Hudson and Harry C. Carroll.

Could this early deed have been related to how Nealie met her "Sugar Daddy", Mr. Lewis Dawkins, who was a simple farmer until Lundy Cornelia Shepherd Mauldin came into his life?

82-99 J. R. Sheppard  (related?) from Lewis Dawkins and wife adjoining J B Richardson and John McNair for $300 Lot 5 of the W. S. Thomas lands via Great Falls Factory to a sping at the head of Dawkins Spring Branch.  One acre more or less.

Nealie became a supreme land baroness, an orphaned girl who came from nothing. She saw opportunities and she took advantage of them. The Irreprssible Nealie Shepherd Mauldin Dawkins.


The Hudson Discovery

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William Joshua Hudson was not the only Hudson in the area in the 1800's, but his lifetime certainly spanned nearly the entire decade and his genes run through a tremendously large group of people living today due to his many children.William Joshua  Hudson memorial

He was born in June of 1796, near the Virginia/North Carolina line and died in Stanly County in January of 1896. Within months, he would have been 100 years old.

I have posted several times concerning my line of Hudson descendants, first Caroline Hudson, daughter of Burrell, one of Joshua's sons by his first wife, who died during the war between the states, my grandmother's grandmother. And another post concerning Caroline's brother, Marion.

Sweet Caroline   This is the link to the story of Caroline Hudson Singleton

The Sad Estate of Burwell Hudson  This is the link to Burwell Hudson's estate papers.

Marion Hudson's story  This is the shocking story about Marion M. Hudson, Caroline's brother.

Recently, I have came across more Hudson that are not to be found in the "Hudson Book".

The first one is Marion Patterson Hudson.

Patterson, as he was known, was the son of Lundy Cornelia Shepherd and Great-Great Uncle Marion Hudson, mentioned above.

Nealie Shepherd was the daughter of William Edmund Deberry Shepherd of Richmond County, and Francis C "Fanny" Carter. Nealie was born in Richmond County on June 27, 1872. Her mother and younger brother, are buried with her grandparents in the old Marcus Carter cemetery near the Green Top area of Stanly County, not far from the Swift Island bridge. Fanny died December 23, 1873 and little William W. Shepherd died September 18, 1873. So Nealie was only about a year and a half old when she lost her mother. It is unknown exactly when their father died, but prior to 1880, Nealie and her older brother, Tom Shepherd, came to live with their grandparents, Marcus Princeton Carter and Nancy Marks Carter.

The grandparents did not survive until the children were grown and Nealie ended up marrying very young, on November 19, 1887, at the age of 15, to 40 year old Joseph I Mauldin. It is not yet known when Joseph Mauldin died, but prior to the estate settlement of Nealie's grandfather Marcus's estate in 1895.

Nealie gave birth to her only child, Patterson on June 10, 1891.


Name:Patterson Maulden
Age:11
Birth Date:Jun 1888
Birthplace:North Carolina
Home in 1900:Rockingham, Richmond, North Carolina
Race:White
Gender:Male
Relation to Head of House:Son
Marital Status:Single
Father's Birthplace:North Carolina
Mother's name:Nealie Maulden
Mother's Birthplace:North Carolina
Occupation:View on Image
Neighbors:View others on page
Household Members:
NameAge
Nealie Maulden25
Patterson Maulden11
Nealie and Patterson show up in the 1900 census back in Rockingham, where she was born. Nealie was listed as a widow having had one child with one living, and Patterson's birthday was increased to June of 1888, three years ahead of his actual age, with his employment as "Farm Labor". These two had it hard in the early years.
Name:Patterson Mouldine
[Potterson Mauldin] 
Age in 1910:20
Birth Year:abt 1890
Birthplace:North Carolina
Home in 1910:Rockingham, Richmond, North Carolina
Race:White
Gender:Male
Relation to Head of House:Hired Man
Marital Status:Single
Father's Birthplace:North Carolina
Mother's Birthplace:North Carolina
Neighbors:View others on page
Household Members:
NameAge
Lewis Dawkins54
Jonelia Mouldine40
[30] 
Patterson Mouldine20
By 1910, Nealie and Patterson had found employment with a bachelor farmer named Lewis Dawkins. Nealie was a housekeeper, and Patterson, a Hired Hand.  This is when their luck turned. But also, when they fell off the map of any prior research. They disappeared. 

However, they did not die. I felt there was more to discover about these two, so I started looking at the employer, Lewis Dawkins. And found them. 

Sure enough, Lewis and Nealie were married in 1913 and appear together as husband and wife not only in the 1920 census, but in numerous land records and transactions. 

Patterson also found love and married in Rockingham in 1913, to a next door neighbor. Many land records mention the Richardson's as having property adjoining that of the Dawkins. But it was not Patterson Mauldin who married Flossie Richardson, it was Patterson Hudson. 
ame:Patterson Hudson
Birth Date:1890
Birthplace:
Age:23
Spouse's Name:Flossie Richardson
Spouse's Birth Date:1898
Spouse's Birthplace:
Spouse's Age:15
Event Date:03 Dec 1913
Event Place:, Richmond, North Carolina
Father's Name:... Hudson
Mother's Name:Nealie Dawkins
Spouse's Father's Name:Frank Richardson
Spouse's Mother's Name:Lou Richardson

Patterson gave his father's name as "Hudson" when he married 15 year old Flossie Richardson, and his mother as Nealie Dawkins and instigated two mysteries. One of these mysteries was cleared up when he married his second wife, Louella Harrington. He told who his real father was, and went by Hudson from there on. The other mystery was what happened between he and Flossie Richardson? She did not die, but went on to several marriages and a family of her own. Was their marriage annuled because of her age? So far, I've not been able to discover a divorce record, but one month later, in January of 1914, Patterson married Louella Harrington, who became the mother of his children, and named Marion Hudson, my GGG Uncle Marion, and a grandson of William Joshua Hudson, as his father. One month is no time for a divorce. There must have been some drama, some lack of parental permission from Flossie's end, or an annulment for some other reason, as one month is too quick for a divorce. 
ame:Patterson Hudson (Shepherd)
Birth Date:1891
Birthplace:
Age:23
Spouse's Name:Louella Harrington
Spouse's Birth Date:1895
Spouse's Birthplace:
Spouse's Age:19
Event Date:30 Jan 1914
Event Place:Rockingham, Richmond, North Carolina
Father's Name:Marion Hudson
Mother's Name:Nealie Dawkins
Spouse's Father's Name:Tom Harrington
Spouse's Mother's Name:Minnie Harrington
On his marriage record to Louella, Patterson's name is followed with Shepherd, his mother's maiden name, in parenthesis. Perhaps this nod toward his illegitimacy was the reason for his brief and quickly ended marriage to Flossie. Perhaps Frank Richardson did not approve of the marriage after finding out Patterson was the result of an adulterous affair. It seems likely that Joseph Mauldin was deceased prior to Patterson's birth. Marion Hudson was very solidly married to his wife Mary Rummage Hudson, and Patterson was born prior to his last son with her. Patterson is never seen as a Mauldin or a Shepherd again. He apparently cherished his father, and must have had a good relationship with him, as he named one of his own sons, Marion Morrison Hudson, Uncle Marion's full name. 

Patterson's own entire name was "Marion Patterson Hudson", as we see in his death certificate.
Name:Marion Patterson Hudson
Titles and Terms:
Event Type:Death
Event Date:28 Mar 1966
Event Place:Rockingham, R'Ham. Twp., Richmond, North Carolina
Birth Year:1888
Birth Year (Estimated):
Burial Date:29 Mar 1966
Burial Place:Rockingham, N. C.
Cemetery:Richmond Memorial Park
Funeral Home:
Residence Place:Rockingham, Richmond, N. C.
Address:N. Lee St.
Gender:Male
Age:77
Marital Status:Married
Race (Original):White
Occupation:Laborer, Junk Dealer
Birth Date:10 Jun 1888
Birthplace:N. C.
Father's Name:Marion Hudson
Father's Titles and Terms:
Father's Birthplace:
Mother's Name:Cornelia Sheppard
Mother's Titles and Terms:
Mother's Birthplace:
Spouse's Name:Lou Ellen Hudson

Name:Patterson Hudson
Event Type:Draft Registration
Event Date:1917-1918
Event Place:Richmond County, North Carolina, United States
Gender:Male
Birth Date:10 Jun 1891
Birthplace:Stanley, North Carolina, United States
Nationality:United States
Affiliate Publication Title:World War I Selective Service System Draft Registration Cards
The Richmond County Directory for 1916 - 1917 shows:
Da\\kins, Louis Farmer  (Lewis Dawkins as a Farmer)
Hudson, Patterson Farmer (Patterson Hudson as a Farmer - Note: He is listed as Hudson, not Mauldin.)
Patterson and Louella had the following children:
Louis Thomas Hudson (1914-1950)
Allen Patterson Hudson (1916-2004)
John Calvin Hudson (1919-1996)
Twins: Born Feb. 1, 1922
Marion Morrison Hudson, named after Patterson's father, Marion Morrison Hudson, 
who died as an infant on January 9, 1923 of "Teething" at age 10 months. 
and only daughter, Mary Cornelia Hudson, named obviously for her grandmother, 
Nealie. 
And the youngest son: William Augustus Hudson 1925 - 1970, seen most of the time as "Gus" W. Hudson, who attended the Univerisity of North Carolina, Class of 1954 and died in New Bern, North Carolina. 
Patterson Hudson's occupation, after being a farmer, was also given as "Junk Dealer".















ame:Patterson Hudson
Age:31
Birth Year:abt 1889
Birthplace:North Carolina
Home in 1920:Rockingham, Richmond, North Carolina
Race:White
Gender:Male
Relation to Head of House:Head
Marital Status:Married
Spouse's Name:Luella Hudson
Father's Birthplace:North Carolina
Mother's Birthplace:North Carolina
Neighbors:View others on page
Household Members:






NameAge
Patterson Hudson31
Luella Hudson33
Lewis Hudson5
Allen Hudson3
[3 3/12] 
John C Hudson0
[4/12] 



















Name:Patterson Hudson
Gender:Male
Birth Year:abt 1889
Birthplace:North Carolina
Race:White
Home in 1930:Rockingham, Richmond, North Carolina
Map of Home:View Map
Marital Status:Married
Relation to Head of House:Head
Spouse's Name:Ellen Hudson
Father's Birthplace:North Carolina
Mother's name:Nealnie Dawkins
Mother's Birthplace:North Carolina

Occupation:

Education:

Military service:

Rent/home value:

Age at first marriage:

Parents' birthplace:




Neighbors:View others on page
Household Members:









NameAge
Patterson Hudson41
Ellen Hudson33
Lewis Hudson15
Allen Hudson13
John Hudson10
Mary Hudson8
Guss Hudson4
[4 4/12] 
Nealnie Dawkins58































Name:Patterson Hudson
Age:52
Estimated birth year:abt 1888
Gender:Male
Race:White
Birthplace:North Carolina
Marital Status:Married
Relation to Head of House:Head
Home in 1940:North-West and South Rockingham, Richmond, North Carolina
Map of Home in 1940:View Map
Street:Cox Avenue
House Number:317
Farm:No
Inferred Residence in 1935:North-West and South Rockingham, Richmond, North Carolina
Residence in 1935:Same House
Sheet Number:19B
Occupation:Manger
Industry:Jimk Dealer
Value of Home or Monthly Rental if Rented:5
Attended School or College:No
Highest Grade Completed:Elementary school, 4th grade
Hours Worked Week Prior to Census:40
Class of Worker:Wage or salary worker in private work
Weeks Worked in 1939:45
Income:540
Income Other Sources:No
Neighbors:View others on page
Household Members:






NameAge
Patterson Hudson52
Luella Hudson43
Gus Hudson14
John Calvin Hudson20
Mary Hudson18


Marion Patterson Hudson and wife Louella Harrington Hudson are buried at Richmond County Memorial Park in Rockingham, Richmond County, North Carolina. 
Listing his grandchildren would carry over into living persons, so I will leave his family tree with this. Descendants should be able to find their way to William Joshua Hudson, who is well documented, from here.
Lineage from William Joshua Hudson to Patterson Hudson and his children:

Generation One:
William Joshua Hudson 1796-1896
Elizabeth "Betsy" Smith 1798-1858 (first wife)

Generation Two: 
Burwell Hudson 1832-1862 (Civil War)
Sally Ann Lee 1829-1860 (first wife)
Generation Three:
Marion Morrison Hudson (1855-1921)
Lundy Cornelia Shepherd (Mauldin, Dawkins) 1872-1951

Generation Four:
Marion Patterson Hudson (1891-1966)
Louella Harrington (1897-1976)

Generation Five: 
Louis Thomas Hudson
Allen Patterson Hudson
James Calvin Hudson
Marion Morrison Hudson II
Mary Cornelia Hudson
William Augustus "Gus" Hudson

William Joshua Hudson Homesite where he raised 22 children .


          Mary Elizabeth Hudson

Mary Elizabeth Hudson was one of those lost family members that
showed up in two censuses as a young girl and is included in family trees, often with an incorrect surname, but the buck stopped there. No one had her date of death, or marriage, or children, but she had them all. No one connected to her on the bottom end, through her husbands family tree, has her connected to any parents or above. I found her 

Mary's story begins with the story of the Murray family and the records of Green Wesley Simpson in the Tyson Community of Stanly County. Through mentions in his family bible and through letters, Wesley Simpson records the removal of the family of Benjamin Murray, his wife Martha, his son Jesse and Jesse's wife MaryAnn Poplin Murray, his daughter Rebecca Ann Murray Hudson and possibly Rebecca's husband Henry Hudson, his nephew, Wesley Murray, son of Mariah Murray and his nephew "Wash" Turner, or James Washington Turner, son of Ben's sister Phoebe Murray Turner and John C Turner to Arkansas. There may have been others with them. An 18 year old Eldridge Murray reappears in the 1870 Census with Martha Murray, who has returned to North Carolina, with daughter Rebecca Hudson, now a widow and her young daughter Mary Hudson. 












ame:Mary Dadur
[Mary Hudson
Age in 1870:8
Birth Year:abt 1862
Birthplace:Arkansas
Home in 1870:Tyson, Stanly, North Carolina
Race:White
Gender:Female
Post Office:Albemarle
Value of real estate:View image
Household Members:





NameAge
Martha Murray45
Eldridge Murray18
Rebecca Murray29
Mary Dadur8


Rebecca Ann Murray had married Henry Hudson, brother of Burwell Hudson and son of William Joshua Hudson. Henry was a twin of Archibald Hudson, and like their older brother Burwell, both perished in the Civil War. Henry H. Hudson died of disease, listed as 'moribund', in a report from the Richmond, Virginia hospital, on October 24, 1862 and died the next day, October 25.
The Murrays may have set off for Arkansas after the death of their son-in-law, Henry. Maybe Ben Murray was trying to get his small family away from the war, or perhaps they were looking for greener pastures in Arkansas. 
It is assumed that Jesse, his wife Mary Ann and old Ben all died in Arkansas, as Martha, also seen as "Patsy" Murray, Rebecca's mother, returned without him. 
The neighborhood around her was interesting as well, and all family. The transcriber of the census misspelled Mary's name as "Dadur", but it is clearly Hudson in the actual handwritten census. 
Next to Martha and family in the 1870 census is P J Aldridge, age 19, and his wife, Mary , The Edmund "Coley" family, the elderly George Coley, next to them with W. W. Aldridge, (actually W. H. Aldridge), Rebecca's future husband living with George and wife as farm labor, Josiah Aldridge, whose brother Garner had married Ben Murray's sister Priscilla and had also perished of disease while enlisted in the war, and next to him, 80 year old Caleb Aldridge and his second wife, 49 year old Elizabeth. All of these are my ancestors and family. 
P J Aldridge, was actually James Pinkney Aldridge, son of Josiah.(Don't you just love how first and middle names were interchangable.) Josiah was the son of Caleb. Pink Aldridges daughter , Judie would marry James Robert Hudson, son of Caroline, the sister of Marion Hudson mentioned above in the section on Patterson Hudson. James Robert Hudson and Judie Aldridge Hudson were the parents of my grandmother, Hattie Helen Hudson Thompson. 
Edmund "Coley" mentioned above, went interchangeably between Edmund Coley and Edmund Murray, as far as his surname went. He was the son of Ben Murray, prior to his marriage to Martha, as Martha was not quite a decade older than Edmund. Still, they were dear to each other as Edmund took care of Martha in her later years, like a son, and inherited part of her property, as she and Ben had not disposed of it prior to leaving for Arkansas. Edmund was also the grandson of George Coley. He also took care of them in their old age and George and his wife signed all of their property over to Edmund prior to their decease. As Edmond, and his children afterwards, swung back and forth between the surnames Murray and Coley, it can easily be assumed that a marriage did not take place between Ben Murray and Miss Coley, daughter of George. (Her name may have been Fanny, but that has not been proven). 
The other grandchildren of Martha Murray, Mary Ann, Ben and John; went to live with their mother's brother, Alsey Poplin, after first staying with their maternal grandmother, Mary Poplin.












John Murray
Age in 1870:8
Birth Year:abt 1862
Birthplace:North Carolina
Home in 1870:TysonStanlyNorth Carolina
Race:White
Gender:Male
Post Office:Albemarle
Value of real estate:View image
Household Members:





NameAge
Mary Poplin65
Wesley Poplin20
Mary Murray14
John Murray8


The one thing that stands out with Mary Elizabeth's 1870 appearance is that her birthplace is given as Arkansas. 
On August 22, 1869, a marriage is record in Stanly County for William H Aldridge, son of Henry G. and Priscilla Aldridge and Rebecca Hudson, daughter of Benjamin and Martha Murray, performed by W.H.D. Green, Justice of the Peace. 
It is curious then, why Rebecca's name was not recorded as "Aldridge" and her husband was working for the Coley's, a neighbor. Perhaps, it was her mother, Martha, who had been asked who lived there, and she said her daughter Rebecca, giving no surname at all. 
















Home in 1880:Lilesville, Anson, North Carolina
Race:White
Gender:Female
Relation to Head of House:Daughter
Marital Status:Married
Father's Name:William Aldrich
Father's Birthplace:North Carolina
Mother's name:Ann Aldrich
Mother's Birthplace:North Carolina
Neighbors:View others on page

Cannot read/write:

Blind:

Deaf and Dumb:

Otherwise disabled:

Idiotic or insane:




Household Members:










NameAge
William Aldrich30
Ann Aldrich31
Mary Aldrich20
Lena Aldrich10
Julia Aldrich9
Lula Aldrich7
Thomas Aldrich4
Nora Aldrich6m
Martha Murray60


By 1880, the family, including Martha Murray, has moved to Lilesville in Anson County.  


The census taker recorded all of the offspring in the home as "Aldrich" for Aldridge, including Martha, who has been joined by seven younger siblings. 

Family Search gives the marriage of Mary Elizabeth Hudson to W. M. Sanders on November 5, 1891, at the home of William Henry A. Aldridge in Burnsville, North Carolina. W. M. was the son of John W and Mary Ann Sanders, while Mary's parents were given as "Hudson" and Becky A. Aldridge. 


By the turn of the century, William and Mary have moved to Cabarrus County. Mary has had 3 children, but only two of them are living, "Ona" and Henry. 






















ame:Mary E Sanders
[Mary Sanders] 
Age:38
Birth Date:Jul 1861
Birthplace:North Carolina
Home in 1900:Baptist Church, Cabarrus, North Carolina
Race:White
Gender:Female
Relation to Head of House:Wife
Marital Status:Married
Spouse's Name:William Sanders
Marriage Year:1892
Years Married:8
Father's Birthplace:North Carolina
Mother's Birthplace:North Carolina
Mother: number of living children:2
Mother: How many children:3
Occupation:View on Image
Neighbors:View others on page
Household Members:





NameAge
William Sanders42
Mary E Sanders38
Ona A Sanders7
Henry A Sanders6







Name:
W. M. Sanders


Birth Date:
1859


Birthplace:
 


Age:
32


Spouse's Name:
Mary E. Hudson


Spouse's Birth Date:
1861


Spouse's Birthplace:
 


Spouse's Age:
30


Event Date:
05 Nov 1891


Event Place:
At Wm. Henry A. Aldridge'S, Burnsville Twp., Anson County, North Carolina


Father's Name:
John W. Sanders


Mother's Name:
Mary Ann Sanders


Spouse's Father's Name:
Hudson


Spouse's Mother's Name:
Becky A. Aldridge


Race:
White
















Name:Mary E Saunders
Age in 1910:49
Birth Year:abt 1861
Birthplace:North Carolina
Home in 1910:Township 11, Cabarrus, North Carolina
Race:White
Gender:Female
Relation to Head of House:Wife
Marital Status:Married
Spouse's Name:William Saunders
Father's Birthplace:North Carolina
Mother's Birthplace:North Carolina
Neighbors:View others on page
Household Members:






NameAge
William Sanders53
Mary E Saunders49
Oner A Saunders17
Edward D Saunders9
Margaret L Frinn48


By 1910, another child has arrived, Edward D Saunders and they have taken in a boarder, whose occupation is a "Cook".



Ed is the last child to arrive, but young Henry A Sanders has passed away. It shows Mary as being the mother of 4 children with 2 surviving and these two, Ed and Leona, will survive to adulthood. 




The 1920 census was Mary's last one. She is living with her two children and her half-sister, Nora B Aldridge Bryant and her family is living with Mary as the Head of Household.  

















Name:Mary Saunders
Age:59
Birth Year:abt 1861
Birthplace:North Carolina
Home in 1920:Center, Stanly, North Carolina
Race:White
Gender:Female
Relation to Head of House:Head
Marital Status:Widowed
[Widow] 
Father's Birthplace:North Carolina
Mother's Birthplace:North Carolina
Neighbors:View others on page
Household Members:








NameAge
Mary Saunders59
Ona Saunders25
Edward Saunders17
Wilbur Bryant40
Nora Bryant38
Bessie Bryant16
James Bryant3






Mary died on June 21, 1920 of Breast Cancer. Her death certificate lists Henry Hudson as her father and Rebecca Murray as her mother. The informant was son Ed Saunders. 


Norwood CemeteryMary is buried at the Norwood town cemetery in Norwood, Stanly County, North Carolina. Her birth date is given as November 14, 1860.

After her death, Mary's two children, Ed and Leona, move to Thomasville, in Davidson County. Ed is listed as being a spooler in a Cotton Mill. Ona, his sister, is his housekeeper. 















Name:Edward Saunders
[Edward Sowders] 
Gender:Male
Birth Year:abt 1903
Birthplace:North Carolina
Race:White
Home in 1930:Thomasville, Davidson, North Carolina
Map of Home:View Map
Marital Status:Single
Relation to Head of House:Head
Father's Birthplace:North Carolina
Mother's Birthplace:North Carolina

Occupation:

Education:

Military service:

Rent/home value:

Age at first marriage:

Parents' birthplace:




Neighbors:View others on page
Household Members:



NameAge
Edward Saunders27
Leona Saunders30





































Name:Edward B Saunders
Age:39
Estimated birth year:abt 1901
Gender:Male
Race:White
Birthplace:North Carolina
Marital Status:Single
Relation to Head of House:Head
Home in 1940:Thomasville, Davidson, North Carolina
Map of Home in 1940:View Map
Street:Rockwell Street
House Number:506
Farm:No
Inferred Residence in 1935:Thomasville, Davidson, North Carolina
Residence in 1935:Same House
Sheet Number:9B
Number of Household in Order of Visitation:171
Occupation:Run Breakers
House Owned or Rented:Rented
Value of Home or Monthly Rental if Rented:3
Attended School or College:No
Highest Grade Completed:Elementary school, 5th grade
Hours Worked Week Prior to Census:24
Duration of Unemployment:26
Class of Worker:Wage or salary worker in private work
Weeks Worked in 1939:26
Income:312
Income Other Sources:No
Neighbors:View others on page
Household Members:



NameAge
Edward B Saunders39
Annie L Saunders47



In 1940, the siblings are still in Thomasville. 


Name:Edward Brower Saunders
Race:White
Birth Date:8 Jan 1901
Birth Place:Concord, North Carolina
Residence:Norwood, Stanly, North Carolina
Registration Year:1942
Relationship:Self (Head)
Household Members:
Name
Edward Brower Saunders
Leona Saunders



By 1942, the siblings have moved back to Norwood, probably to their old homeplace, and Edward Brower Saundersigned up for the draft for WWII.  




Ed Saunders passed away of cardiac arrest on March 3, 1975 at the age of 74. Informant was Cline J. Aldridge of Mt. Pleasant, a cousin. His sister had predeceased him on January 5th, 1967, of a cerebral hemorrhage. She was 68.

Norwood CemeteryBoth siblings are buried in Norwood at the town cemetery with their parents. With the passing of Ed Saunders, the lineage of Mary Elizabeth Hudson Saunders came to an end. Yet, they were descendants of old William Joshua Hudson. A grandchild and great grandchildren to add to his large number of descendants, beforehand, unrecognized as such in the family trees. 


The Memories of an Old Man: James Thomas Shepherd

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A Shepherd Family Reunion in Richmond County, North Carolina.

Shepherd Edwin Carter Fannie 24 Dec. 1868 T. Covington JP
From:Early Marriage Bonds of Richmond County 1783 -1872

The story of James Thomas Shepherd began with the above marriage record. On Christmas Eve in the dark days of Reconstruction in the Sandhills of Richmond County, North Carolina, William Edmund Deberry Shepherd (sometimes seen as Edwin or Edward, the names seemed interchangeable), son of William Wilson and Emaline Shepherd; married Francis "Fanny" C. Carter, daughter of Marcus Princeton and Nancy Marks Carter. Marriages normally took place in the brides county of residence, but not this one.

James Thomas Shepherd, known as Tom, would be the firstborn.

In a nutshell, the following is the family tree of William Edmund Deberry Shepherd, a Civil War vet, as was his father Wilson.

Edmund Shepherd 1848- bef 1920  married Dec. 23 1868

1st wife: Fannie Carter born Nov. 20  1843 to Dec. 23 1873.

James Thomas Shepherd born Nov 7, 1869 to Dec 11, 1965
Lundy Cornelia Shepherd born Jun 27, 1872 to Mar 6, 1951
William W. Shepherd born Jul 1, 1873 to  Sept 11, 1873.

2nd wife Martha C. Ussery  1867 - 1932

Mary Shepherd  1890 - ?
Willie F Shepherd 1892 - ? Did grow up to register for draft.
Martha Emma Shepherd 1897 - married George Robinson
Nellie Shepherd 1899 - ? married William Roy Lee
James D Shepherd 1910 - likely died as an infant. 

In the old Stanly News and Press, a column was featured called "Fred Morgan's Musings".  Mr. Morgan often touched on local history and characters in that history, in his columns. In a latter issue in 1900, his subject was concerning a now defunct Post Office in a long abandoned community called "Rest".




This portion of a 1940 map of Stanly County shows the general area of Rest. It is said to have been located near the modern day area called "River Haven", south of Morrow Mountain and close to the Swift Island bridge.

According to Mr. Morgan, a post office for Rest was set up about 1890 in the home of Mr. Eli A. Forrest, a crippled man. Mr. Forrest, had with difficulty, tried to farm land in the rolling hills of the area that he had inherited from William Forrest, his father. As many families did in the hard times, Mr. Forrest sent his children to work in the growing cotton mills of the times, once they were old enough, to support the family. They moved to Concord in Cabarrus County for this purpose and left Rest without a post office.

After Mr. Forrest, Rest had a chain of postmasters and locations:

Next came the home of Dick Harris, who moved to Spencer for railroad work. The ball was then passed to John Frank Lilly. Mr. Lilly lived on the north side of Mountain Creek, while most of his patrons lived on the south side. Any rise in the water of the creek made it difficult to cross for the patrons to get their mail, so again they wanted a different location for the post office.

After that meeting, Mrs. Mary Hinson was chosen as postmistress and her home was located at the Crossroads where the Norwood - Palmerville Road crossed the Salisbury- Rockingham Road.  The Norwood - Palmerville Road probably ran the route of Valley Drive, picking up around Green Top, or the current Indian Mound Road.

This link to a 1916 soil survey map shows a school called "Forrest School" near a crossroads which may have been the two roads they referred to near the Swift Island Ferry.

1916 Stanly County Map

After Mrs. Hinson gave up the position of Postmistress, the job was taken over by a Mrs. Louise Underwood. The article concludes "Mr. James Thomas Shepherd was appointed to suceed her. He served as postmaster until  the establishment of Albemarle R. F. D.  number 1, which from then on until the present day has supplied mail services for the community. "

James Thomas Shepherd is buried at Anderson Grove Church cemetery, along with his wife and a son.

Anderson Grove Baptist Church Cemetery


Land records show interactions with W. W. Kearns, his uncle by marriage, of his portion of an inheritance of land from his grandfather, Marcus P. Carter. The Marcus P. Carter cemetery is located south of Hwy 24/ 27 between Indian Mound Road and McNeil Road. Marcus P. Carter purchased the land from Parham Kirk, administrator of the estate of Henry Harrison Melton (I). Henry Melton and Marcus Carter were good friends and neighbors, as proven in Henry's letters to him during the War between the states. It was in this area of the county that the Melton's all dwelled.



This picture, from an article in the Stanly News and Press  about 1954, shows Tom Shepherd looking much more like a Postmaster than a farmer. A distinguished looking fellow, donned in slacks and sweater, sitting in a rocking chair reading a book, on the porch of an old house that looks like it may have matched the Kron house in archetecture, is a back drop. The article explains Tom's early years, as well as his notice of the change of time.

The article states that Tom was living in the Stony Mountain section of the eastern side of the county and that he did not go to school until he was over 15 years old, and then he only attended the Ingram school for 3 winters. The article then proceeds, "Tom was born on that day in the year 1869 on a farm in the upper edge of Richmond county in the vicinity of Little River. His father was Edmund Deberry Shepherd and his mother was the former Fanny Carter of Stanly County. When he was 4 years old, his mother died and his father remarried in Richmond County. Tom came to Stanly County to live with his mother's people. His grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Marcus Princeton Carter reared him until Mr. Carter died in 1880. For the next 11 years, Tom was a hireling among the public."


Name:Thomas Sheppard
Age in 1870:1
Birth Year:abt 1869
Birthplace:North Carolina
Home in 1870:Mineral Springs, Richmond, North Carolina
Race:White
Gender:Male
Post Office:Rockingham
Value of real estate:View image
Household Members:
NameAge
Edmund Sheppard21
Fannie Sheppard25
Thomas Sheppard1
The 1870 census shows a year old Tom with his parents in Mineral Springs, Richmond County. His mother and infant brother were buried in Stanly County with his grandparents.

Name:J. T. Shepard
Age:10
Birth Year:abt 1870
Birthplace:North Carolina
Home in 1880:Albemarle, Stanly, North Carolina
Race:White
Gender:Male
Relation to Head of House:Grandson
Marital Status:Single
Father's Birthplace:North Carolina
Mother's Birthplace:North Carolina
Neighbors:View others on page
Occupation:At Home
Cannot read/write:

Blind:

Deaf and Dumb:

Otherwise disabled:

Idiotic or insane:
Household Members:
NameAge
M. P. Carter59
Nancy Carter63
Lucy J. Carter24
J. T. Shepard10
L. C. Shepard8
The 1880 census shows Tom and his sister Lundy Cornelia or "Nealie" in the home of his grandparents, along with their aunt Lucy Jane, who married W. W. Kearns. 
Name:Edmond Shepard
Age:52
Birth Date:Jan 1848
Birthplace:North Carolina
Home in 1900:Black Jack, Richmond, North Carolina
Race:White
Gender:Male
Relation to Head of House:Head
Marital Status:Married
Spouse's Name:Martha C Shepard
Marriage Year:1889
Years Married:11
Father's Birthplace:North Carolina
Mother's Birthplace:North Carolina
Occupation:View on Image
Neighbors:View others on page
Household Members:
NameAge
Edmond Shepard52
Martha C Shepard28
Mary Shepard10
Willie F Shepard7
Martha E Shepard2
Nellie Shepard6/12
Edmond Shepherd disappears in the 1880 census, but reappears in 1900 and 1910 with his new family. He married Martha C Ussery on November 10, 1888. Martha, 20 years his junior, is a widow in the 1920 census, so he must have died in that decade between 1910 and 1920. No death certificate is to be found. 

The article continues: "For an 11 year old thrown out for hire among the money-shy public of 1880, it was a tough life to live. Farming was the only thing of  any economic importance going on in the county, and it was farming Tom did from then on. .........Some of the farmers he worked for during that time were John Underwood, Fannie Howell widow of Kearn Howell, Tom Laton, Whit Marks, A. J. Russell and Sid Smith. In 1891, the year he married, he said he was only being paid about $9.00 a month".

Name:J Th* Sheppard
[J Maud Shephard] 
Age:30
Birth Date:Nov 1869
Birthplace:North Carolina
Home in 1900:Albemarle, Stanly, North Carolina
Race:White
Gender:Male
Relation to Head of House:Head
Marital Status:Married
Spouse's Name:Rose Sheppard
Father's Birthplace:North Carolina
Mother's Birthplace:North Carolina
Occupation:View on Image
Neighbors:View others on page
Household Members:
NameAge
J Th* Sheppard30
Rose Sheppard25
Beula C Sheppard8
Virgil C Sheppard5
Alice Sheppard3
Wm E Sheppard1

Tom married Lucy Rosa Morton and by 1900, they had had 4 children, Beulah, Virgil, Alice and William E. Virgil is the son buried at Anderson Grove with them. 

In the article he states: "He was married to the former Rosa Morton, daughter of the late Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Morton (John Allen Morton and Dovie Caroline Biles Morton). She was 17 at the time, he was 22. Her parents objected to the union and her father had forbidden the register of deeds to issue a marriage license to Tom. Through a friend in Mt. Gilead, Tom had sent the necessary information by mail to Troy, the county seat of Montgomery County and secured a marriage license from that county. 

"Cost me three dollars, " Tom said with a chuckle, "I don't know what they cost now."

Since the license was issued in Montgomery County, the marriage had to be performed in that county, too, Tom said. And so it was performed within the statutory boundaries of Montgomery County, but not on dry land. 

On the day of the marriage, June 14, 1891, Tom got his bride-to-be and took her down to the old Swift Island Ferry, where the minister, Alec Whitlock, and a crowd of other folks were waiting. Everybody boarded the flat and it started across the Pee Dee River. A little over half way across, Mr. Whitlock told the ferryman that we were in Montgomery County and  asked him to stop the flat. Tom said, "So the flat stopped there, less than two-thirds of the way across the river and we were married right there on the flat."

"To this union 11 children were born".

The 11 children of Tom and Rosa (sometimes seen as Rosina or Rosana) were:

Beulah Catherine 1892-1961
Virgil Clarence 1894 - 1940
Alice 1897 - 1985
William Edward 1899 - 1943 
Fannie Caroline 1903 - 1988
Vera May 1905 -1983
Arabella 1907 -1997
Lorena 1910 - 1989
Martin Van Buren 1912 -1985
James Thomas Jr. 1915 - 1989
Alexander Louis 1917 - 1986

The newspaper lists them as "Mrs. Ben Hall, Virgil Clarence, Mrs Fred Hall, William Edmund, Mrs Louis Joiner, Mrs. Reid Harris, Mrs Homer Still, Mrs. Jack Covington, Van Buren, J. Tommy and Alexander. 

All of his children reached adulthood and he he married off all of his daughter. At the time of the article, Tom estimated his grandchildren at 35 to 40. I suppose he had lost count. 

In the early days of the marriage, Tom continue to work as labor on other people's farms. At one point, he borrowed the money from his employer, Tom Laton, and bought the farm on which he raise his children and still lived. The old Laton cemetery in on a hill adjacent to the Marcus Carter cemetery, across the highway. All of the old cemeteries in the area, including the two Solomon cemeteries, have stones adorned with ferns and scrolls and other artistry. Being so near to one another, perhaps the same artist decorated these, or either it was a trend on the east end of the county. 

Tom Laton had offered to send Tom Shepherd to college along with his son, who became a doctor. It was an opportunity Tom knew he should have taken, but he was concerned with an unpayable debt, and had continued to farm. 

In the article he recalled the early days of farmers using oxen to pull plows and the first bicycle he ever saw. "It was ridden by Lawrence Fesperman of Wadesboro.....and it created a sensation among the folks at church." The church mentioned was Anderson Grove. 

He recalled keeping that fourth-class post office in his home, with mail being delivered twice weekly, and at 85, Tom Shepherd was still walking the mile from his home to the mailbox by the road. His home sat that far back from the street. Although Tom had lived through the great depression, he recalled the most difficult era in his lifetime as being from 1892-1896, when Grover Cleveland was in office. 

"Men were walking the roads and streets begging for work to do in return for food." This was also the era of the last great migration out of Stanly County and surrounding areas to Arkansas and Texas, or people congregating to the towns where mills and factories were being established. 

Tom ended his interview by revealing his love of reading, radio, hunting and fishing. He had no use for television and watched only one movie in his lifetime. 

Like his sister Nealie, whom I've posted on recently, Tom, the young boy who fought to survive in the difficult era of the end of the 19th century, succeeded in making his way in the world. And with the old man's memories, I end this tale of the grandson of Marcus Carter. 




Flossie Richardson Did Not Die

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As another sun sets over the Yadkin, and its waters travel down to marry the Rocky and become the PeeDee, the lives of the many persons who traveled up and down her banks and traverses, became entangled, like the droplets of water themselves, all becoming one. 

Rockingham is known in modern times for its raceway, "The Rock", made famous more by the movie "Days of Thunder", portraying her glory days of Nascar.



But in the latter half of the 19th Century, Rockingham and Richmond County proved more of draw from their mills and factories, pulling population in from up and down the Pee Dee River.



The search for Flossie Jane began with one document and the river.


Name:Patterson Hudson
Birth Date:1890
Birthplace:
Age:23
Spouse's Name:Flossie Richardson
Spouse's Birth Date:1898
Spouse's Birthplace:
Spouse's Age:15
Event Date:03 Dec 1913
Event Place:, Richmond, North Carolina
Father's Name:... Hudson
Mother's Name:Nealie Dawkins
Spouse's Father's Name:Frank Richardson
Spouse's Mother's Name:Lou Richardson




What happened next, after that fateful day on December 3, 1913 is what makes this record such an interesting mystery.

On December 22, 1913, just 19 days later, Flossie Jane Richardson, daughter of Frank and Louella Richardson, married Walter Stancill Cole. Then, just weeks  later, on January 30, 1914, Marion Patterson Hudson marries Louella Harrington, his wife for the remainder of his life. 

My first thought when finding his two marriages, was that Flossie Richardson must have died. But she did not, she quickly married another man, lived a long life, moved to Albemarle and actually connects to my family tree.

Flossie was born during the season of ugly names, when folks were apt at taking the beautiful, classic names of the 18th and 19th centuries and turned them into shortened, demur versions or "nicknames" turned names. Flossie was originally the dimunitive of the name "Florence". It became very popular after the advent of the "Bobsy Twins". Flossie reminds me of the old children's tale, "Peter Cottontail", with his siblings, "Flopsy, Mopsy, Cottontail and Peter." 

Flossie Jane Richardson was the daughter of Edward Franklin Richardson and Louella Mauldin. Edward Franklin Richardson was the son of John Zebedee Richardson and Lavinia Simmons Richardson. He was born in Montgomery County and died in Stanly County. Louella Mauldin was the daughter of Frank Mauldin and Martha Russell, and the granddaughter of Thomas Alexander Mauldin and Mary Polly Blalock. A sister of Louella Mauldin was Wincie Ann Mauldin, my great-grandmother. 


This would make Flossie Jane Richardson and my maternal grandmother, Annie Maude Mauldin Davis, first cousins. 
Jonah Mauldin and Wincie Ann Mauldin and their family. 
Flossie Jane was born dead center in the middle of E. F. Richardson and Louella Mauldin Richardson. 

1881 - Emma
1884- Jeter Baxter 
1893- Platt
1898- Flossie Jane
1899- May
1911- Earl
1912- Anna

*Note: Due to the age difference, I believe Emma and Jeter were probably by E. F.'s first wife, Mary Ussery. 

Flossie and Patterson probably knew each other from several different sources: Patterson's mother Nealie was married to Louella Mauldin Richardson's relative, Joseph I Mauldin. Nealie and her second husband, Louis Patterson's property bordered a family of Richardson's. Mentioned in land records are J. B. Richardson; Richardson Park, a housing development bordering Lewis Dawkins development, and Jeter Richardson, Flossie's older brother. 

The Ussery's were also intermarried into both families, and both families seemed to travel back and forth between Stanly and Richmond counties quite freely. The Richardsons and Dawkins had both stumbled upon a fortune by owning farms just outside the early 20th century borders of the town of Rockingham, in Richmond County during the advent and growth of the Cotton Mill industry. People needed to live close to these factories, in order to make it to work for their shifts. No one owned cars. This was foot traffic. Like the Dawkins, the Richardson had also surveyed a portion of their farm into lots in which factory workers could live in small cottages on small lots of land, with a tiny garden patch and walk to work 5 or 6 days to work. Patterson and Flossie were probably not only neighbors, but "step-relatives" in a way, as Patterson went by the surname of Mauldin growing up. 


I do not know what happened between Patterson and Flossie. I do know there was no time for a divorce. Their marriage had to have been immediately annulled or either just simply ignored like it had never happened, but that would have made them both bigamists. I tend to think that something may have happened at the wedding, the marriage was never sanctified or consummated, and that the two youngsters had simply went to the courthouse with their parents, possibly, and had it dissolved. 

The speed at which they both remarried tends to suggest that they both had other marriage partners lined up, other people that they were interested in. Perhaps because of the closeness of the land and families, that the union of Patterson and Flossie had not been one of love, but one of familial pressure. Maybe the families had forced the marriage, and both young people were so unhappy about it, they consented after the fact to then allow them both to marry for love. But this is just speculation. 

The first child of Flossie and her first husband, Walter Stancill Cole, Sr. was Ella, born the day after Christmas in 1914, a full year after their marriage. 

The first child of Patterson and Luella Harrington was Lewis Thomas Hudson, also born on December 26, 1914. What a coincidence for these two to have had their firstborn children on the same day. But it proves that neither party was expecting when the second marriages occurred, so that was not a factor. I simply believe that Patterson and Flossie were so close, perhaps like siblings in relationship, that they simply could not function as a married couple, or either that they married only under pressure from their families, and both were secretly, or obviously, in love with someone else. Patterson with Louella Harrington and Flossie with Walter Stancell "Joe" Cole. 

So who was it that Flossie was in love with?

Walter Stancill Cole was born on June 5, 1896 to Eli Marshall Cole and Mary Lee Thomas Cole. At the age of 4, he lived in Montgomery County, North Carolina.

They would marry on December 22, 1913 in Richmond County, North Carolina. As before mentioned, their first child, Ella Lee Richardson Cole, was born a year later, on December 26, 1914. I am not sure why the surnames of both parents were included with her name. Perhaps some legal transaction concerning the two marriages in one month were still in limbo.


Name:Ella Lee Richardson Cole
Gender:Female
Race:White
Event Type:Birth
Birth Date:26 Dec 1914
Birth County:Scotland
Parent1 Name:Walter S Cole
Parent2 Name:Flossie Jane Richardson Cole
Roll Number:NCVR_B_C088_66001

According to Ella's birth record, the young family was living in neighboring Scotland County in 1914. The poor little girl did not live long. She passed away of a digestive disorder in Laurenburg, Scotland County. Oddly, her grandfather, E. F. Richardson was the informant and the undertaker was "Walter Cole". Was her father also the undertaker?

Name:Ella Lee Cole
Gender:Female
Race:White
Age:2
Birth Date:25 Jan 1913
Birth Place:North Carolina, United States
Death Date:6 May 1915
Death Location:Laurin Burg, Scotland
Father's Name:Walter Cole
Mother's name:Flossie Richardson


The family was also living in Scotland County when the second child, James Edgar Cole, was born.

Name:Cole
Gender:Male
Race:White
Event Type:Birth
Birth Date:24 Feb 1916
Birth County:Scotland
Parent1 Name:Walter Cole
Parent2 Name:Flossie Richardson Cole
Roll Number:NCVR_B_C088_66001

He was quickly followed by brothers Platt Dewitt Cole in 1918, Walter Stancill Cole, Jr. in 1919 and finally, sister Ruby Louise Cole in 1923.

The 1920 census finds Flossie back in Richmond County, living with her parents, and her two little boys. It was probable that her husband, who was a WWI vet, was on active duty at this time, and Ruby was born upon his return.
Name:Flossie Cole
[Flossie Richardson] 
Age:23
Birth Year:abt 1897
Birthplace:North Carolina
Home in 1920:Rockingham, Richmond, North Carolina
Race:White
Gender:Female
Relation to Head of House:Daughter
Marital Status:Married
Father's Name:Frank Richardson
Father's Birthplace:United States
[United States of America] 
Mother's name:Luellen Richardson
Mother's Birthplace:United States
[United States of America] 
Neighbors:View others on page
Household Members:
NameAge
Frank Richardson66
Luellen Richardson38
Earl Richardson9
Anna Richardson8
Flossie Cole23
Eden Cole3
[3 10/12] 
Plat Cole1
[1 4/12] 

Walter Stancill Cole maintained a career in the military before settling back down in North Carolina with a second family. His divorce from Flossie may have been in effect before Ruby was born, and he remarried his second wife, Bertha, in 1931, while stationed in Virginia. But things were not that simple for Flossie Jane. Oh, No, not simple at all.

Walter Stancell Cole and his second wife, Bertha. 

Ruby Louise Cole, the youngest child of Flossie and Walter S. Cole, was born on November 3, 1923.
The youngest child of Millard Fillmore Hathcock and his first wife Helen Sanders Hathcock was Nellie Arlene Hathcock on August 19, 1922.

Helen Sanders Hathcock died December 30, 1926.

The first child of Millard Fillmore Hathcock and Flossie Richardson, Blanceh Ella Hathcock, was born in 1924. A second child is recorded as arriving in 1926, and must have died as an infant.
The third child of Millard Fillmore Hathcock and Flossie Richardson Hathcock was Millard Frank Hathcock on  September 12, 1929.
Name:Lassie I Hathcock
[Lossie J Hathcock] 
Gender:Female
Birth Year:abt 1901
Birthplace:North Carolina
Race:White
Home in 1930:Harris, Stanly, North Carolina
Map of Home:View Map
Marital Status:Married
Relation to Head of House:Wife
Spouse's Name:Milerd F Hathcock
Father's Birthplace:North Carolina
Mother's Birthplace:North Carolina
Occupation:

Education:

Military service:

Rent/home value:

Age at first marriage:

Parents' birthplace:
Neighbors:View others on page
Household Members:
NameAge
Milerd F Hathcock38
Lassie I Hathcock29
Walter S Hathcock10
Platte S Hathcock12
Lonnie Hathcock12
Robert L Hathcock11
Raeford H Hathcock9
Ruby G Hathcock6
Nellie A Hathcock7
Blanche E Hathcock5
[5 6/12] 
Millard F Hathcock0
[7/12] 
Daisy M Hathcock17

The 1930 census finds Flossie living in Stanly County. The family is located in the Harris District, which is in Northeast Stanly County.  Walter, Jr., Platt and Ruby, are mistakenly listed as Hathcock in this his, hers and theirs family. Lonnie, Robert, Raeford and Nellie are Millard's children by his first marriage. Then Blanche and  Millard Frank are Millard Fillmore and Flossie's children together. Daisy M. Hathcock, listed at the bottom, is also Millard's by his first wife, Helen.

The 1940 census finds the family still in Harris. It was difficult to find due to the nearly illegible handwriting of the census taker. And it presents a bit of a mystery.

Name:Clossie Huthbeer
Age:37
Estimated birth year:abt 1903
Gender:Female
Race:White
Birthplace:North Carolina
Marital Status:Married
Relation to Head of House:Wife
Home in 1940:Harris, Stanly, North Carolina
Map of Home in 1940:View Map
Inferred Residence in 1935:Harris, Stanly, North Carolina
Residence in 1935:Same Place
Sheet Number:4B
Attended School or College:No
Highest Grade Completed:Elementary school, 4th grade
Income Other Sources:No
Neighbors:View others on page
Household Members:
NameAge
Millard T Huthbeer50
Clossie Huthbeer37
Daisy Huthbeer27
Rasford Huthbeer18
Nells Huthbeer17
Ruby Huthbeer14
Brant Huthbeer10
Frank Huthbeer14
Bain Huthbeer8
Carl Huthbeer6
Iney Huthbeer2
Robert Huthbeer21
Baisy Huthbeer20
The "Huthbeers" are really the Hathcocks. Millard T. is Millard F. and Clossie is obviously Flossie. Daisy is Millard's oldest daughter Daisy, Rasford is Raeford and Nells is Nellie. Ruby is Ruby Cole, but then there is Brant, who is listed as a male. Then Frank (Millard Frank), Bain (Donald Bain) has joined the family along with Carl (Carl Phillmore Hathcock), and Iney is actually the Rev. Ivey Richard Hathcock. Robert is Robert Lee Hathcock, Millard's  son and "Baisy" is Robert's wife Daisy.

There are no records of any kind concerning Millard and Flossie having a son "Brant" or "Brantley". There is that birth record of a child being born in 1926, but no further record of that child. While it says "10" on the transcription, the ages for "Brant" and Ruby on the actual form look more like 15 and 17. The piece of the puzzle missing is Blanche. Her future husband Adam Claude Hinson, is securely recorded as living with his parents, age 18.


ame:Adam Hinson
Age:18
Estimated birth year:abt 1922
Gender:Male
Race:White
Birthplace:North Carolina
Marital Status:Single
Relation to Head of House:Son
Home in 1940:East and Southeast Albemarle, Stanly, North Carolina
Map of Home in 1940:View Map
Street:County Road Left State Highway 740
Inferred Residence in 1935:East and Southeast Albemarle, Stanly, North Carolina
Residence in 1935:Same Place
Sheet Number:16B
Occupation:Laborer
Attended School or College:No
Highest Grade Completed:Elementary school, 6th grade
Hours Worked Week Prior to Census:40
Class of Worker:Wage or salary worker in private work
Weeks Worked in 1939:12
Income:156
Income Other Sources:No
Neighbors:View others on page
Household Members:
NameAge
Philus H Hinson49
Lois Hinson47
Adam Hinson18
Billie Hinson17
Robert Hinson13
Taking my best guess, I would say the census taker got more than her name wrong in the 1940 census, and also wrong on her gender. Brant is probably Blanche, as Blanche is missing and there was no child called Brant. If so, he should have also showed up in the 1930 census, being older than Frank, and he did not. 

Both Flossie and Millard had been the parents of 5 children each coming into the relationship, but of course, Flossie's first daughter had died. 

The children of Millard Fillmore Hathcock and his first wife Helen Sanders were:

Daisy Mae Hathcock   17 Dec 1912 - 3 Nov 1999  married William Clay Ingram
Lonnie Green Hathcock 4 Aug 1916 - 25 Jul 1975 married Ruby Lee Smith
Robert Lee Hathcock  3 Sept 1918 - 17 Oct 2006 married Daisy AddieMae Faircloth
Raeford James Hathcock 8 May 1920 - 24 Feb 1991 married Velvet Faircloth, sister of Daisy. 
Nellie Arlene Hathcock 19 Aug 1922 - 9 Feb 1994 married Marlon Lee Furr

The children of Flossie Jane Richardson and Waler Stancell Cole, Sr. were:

Ella Lee Richardson Cole  26 Dec 1914 - 6 May 1915
James Edgar Cole  24 Feb 1916 - 7 Oct 1945 married Margie Lunsford. Died in an Airplane Crash. 
Platt DeWitt Cole 30 Aug 1918 - 24 Nov 1990 Florida married 1st Linnie Louise Coleman 2nd Clarissa Mae Huneycutt. 
Walter Stancil Cole, Jr. 2 Aug 1920 - 29 April 1993 
Ruby Louise Cole   3 Nov 1923 - 7 Aug 2011 married Rayvon Barbee

Ruby Barbee: Newspaper Obituary and Death Notice

Stanly News and Press, The (NC) - Wednesday, August 10, 2011

Deceased Name: Ruby Barbee

Wednesday, August 10, 2011 — Mrs. Ruby Cole Barbee, age 87, of 315 Park Ridge Road, Albemarle, died at 7:22 p.m. Sunday, Aug. 7, 2011 in Spring Arbor of Albemarle.
Her graveside service will be at 10 a.m. Wednesday, Aug. 10 in Stanly Gardens of Memory, Albemarle.
Born November 3, 1923 in Stanly County, she was the daughter of the late Millard Filmore and Flossie Richardson Hathcock.
Mrs. Barbee was a retired employee of American and Efird Mills and was a member of East Albemarle Church of God. In her later years, she was a caregiver working with many of the elderly in the community.
She was married to the late Rayvon Barbee, who preceded her in death December 30, 1991. One son, Thomas Ray Barbee, also preceded her in death.
Survivors include one son, Paul E. Barbee and wife Deanna of Albemarle; two daughters, Deloris B. Cody and husband Dewayne of Richfield and Doris B. Herlocker of Albemarle; one sister, Blanch Hinson of New London; seven grandchildren; and 13 great-grandchildren.
Friends may pay their respects at Stanly Funeral Home anytime between the hours of noon-8 p.m. on Tuesday, Aug. 9.
The family requests in lieu of flowers that memorials may be made to Hospice of Stanly County, 960 N. First St., Albemarle, NC 28001.
Stanly Funeral Home is serving the family.
Children of Flossie Richardson and Millard Fillmore Hathcock were:
Blanche Ella Hathcock b 1924 married Adam Claude Hinson
Millard Frank Hathcock b 12 Sept 1929 - 14 Apr 1990 married Patsy Delphia Cranford.
Donald Bain Hathcock b 31 July 1931 - 8 Nov 2007 married Pauline Burleson, Betty Sue Drye
Carl Phillmore Hathcock b 6 Aug 1933 - 13 Dec 2010 married Edith Coble
Ivey Richard Hathcock b 14 Aug 1937 - 31 Mar 1994 married Virginia Lilly Miller. 

Of course, Flossie Jane Richardson Cole Hathcock eventually did die. Preceded in death a few years by husband Millard, Flossie was laid to rest on November 8, 1971. 

Flossie R Hathcock




She is buried at the Palestine Cemetery near Albemarle, North Carolina.

Flossie R Hathcock

Link to the Obituary of youngest son, Rev. Ivey Richardson Hathcock


Flossie Richardson did die, but not in 1913. She lived a long and full life. This first cousin of my Grandmother, has many descendants today. What happened between her and first husband Patterson Hudson and second husband Walter S. Cole can only be guessed upon, but Flossie was not afraid to move on with her life and that she did. 

Church Record Sunday: Concord Church is not in Concord

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"Church Record Sunday" is a blogging prompt used by Geneabloggers.com, of which I am a member.

Concord Methodist Church is not located in Concord. You'll find it listed as being in "Ansonville", but it's not in Ansonville, either. In fact, the name "Concord" has nothing to do with the city of Concord in Cabbarus County, North Carolina, and everything to do with traditional church naming of the 19th century. Within a 40 mile radius of Concord Church, you'll find a Philadelphia Presbyterian Church, in Mecklenburg County, North Carolina, a long way from Philadelphia, PA and Miami Church, in Cabarrus County, NC, that in no way ties in to Miami, Florida.

The name "Concord", as in a word once used in the naming of churches, Means: Concord means "harmony." The word is derived from two Latin words and is translated literally as "with one heart."

There is a "Book of Concord" that is associated with Lutheran Churches, but this one is a Methodist Church. It's location is in the fertile area near the fork of the Rocky River and Yadkin/PeeDee river, and just happens to be on the Anson side of the county line. 

Concord Methodist Church is located on part of what used to be the Winfield plantation, prior to 1805, and is one of those churches where several folks in my family tree were laid to rest. 


This Map shows the "Boot" of the Rocky River, which I usually refer to as the "Davis Boot". At the top slightly left of center of the map you see "Boone-Caudle Road". This area is the location of the Benjamin Franklin Davis cemetery and was part of his section of the lands. He was the son of Henry Davis by first wife Sarah Kendall and was the grandson of Reuben Kendall and Job Davis. Bottom center of the map, you see a section of the "Old Winfield Road" which dead-ends now at the Rocky River. There is a section of the Winfield road still in use in Stanly County. It was once a very long and major thoroughfare, and crossed at the point where it now dead ends. There was a "Davis Ford" that was previously "Winfield Ford" around the 1790's -early 1800's. Winfield road formerly followed the northern route similar to Plank Road. Follow Plank Road across the river and you will see first Howell road, and then Kendall Road. Keep going and you will see on the left of the screen, Concord Church Road and Springer Road. Near this intersection is the current location of Concord Methodist Church. The cemetery is actually located around the corner from the church on Springer Road. Howell Road is the vicinity of the  location of the land of Peter Howell, who inherited and repurchased portions of the property that had passed on from his grandfather Peter Winfield, to his father Richard Howell, through daughter Sarah Elizabeth Winfield Howell. The area furthest right, that the church occupies was also part of the Winfield plantation, as it had passed on to Griffin Nash, husband of Winfield daughter Jemima. On the Stanly side of the river, Sarah Winfield, once widowed, had retained that portion of her inheritance that she and her second husband, Job Davis, would farm and reside upon and the "boot" would become the Davis plantation. At one time, the area on both sides of the river, had belonged to Peter Winfield, and upon his death in 1802, had been divided among his four children, Edward Winfield, Sarah (Richard Howell and later Job Davis), Jemima (Griffin Nash) and Ancena (James Morrison and later Thomas Avett).
The Family of James Edward Howell and wife Sarah Frances "Fannie" Andrews Howell


Upon the death of Peter Howell, his portion of the land would be further divided, and as some of his descendants would migrate west, his youngest son Jim Howell, would purchase his siblings portions of the land, including that of his unmarried sisters. So Jim Howell became the steward of the Howell lands. A portion would remain in the hands of Florence Howell McSwain, grand-daughter of Peter Howell though his desceased son Richard II, as she and her brother Robert, who passed away young, would become wards of her grandparents, Peter Howell and Elizabeth Floyd Howell.

Concord Church is the final resting place for most members of the Howell family who remained in Anson and Stanly Counties.

Concord United Methodist Church as is appeared in 1906


This is a rendition of how the church looked in 1906. It is a photograph of a painting hanging in the entrance hall of the church taken by Jerry T. Kendall on April 16, 1994.

The Kendall family was a large part of the Concord Congregation as well as the Howells and there was intermarriage among the families.

Mr. Jerry T. Kendall has done extensive research on the origins of the church and the cemetery, which was a community cemetery in use prior to the building of the first church.

Concord is said to be one of the oldest churches in Anson County. As many churches did in those days, the church started at a site where old-timey "Camp Meetings" were held.

Concord Church was established in 1805, but it was not until 1810 that the first building was built, a log structure located conveniently near a spring. The congregation had the building moved in 1823, however, due to what was seen as 'the devil's work', as some local entrepreneurs had decided to use the spring as a source for a still in which to make alchohol. Although the building moved, the congregation still grew thirsty for more than the Word, and they retained the right to use the spring to quench their thirst for water.

On the same day, November 27, 1830, two deeds were recorded for the Church.

Deed Book X, Page 439, Anson County, North Carolina     10 and 1/4 acres

Avert Verhine to The Trustees of Concord Church

This Indenture.......between Avert Verkine of the State of North Carolina & County of Anson on one part & Richard Randles, Thomas Avitts, Freeman Winfield, Peter W. Nash & John Beard, trustees of the Methodist Episcopal Church at Concord Meeting House of the other part Witness the Said Avert Verhine....3 black oak pointers in Nashes line.. Avert Verhine doth further grant unto the said Church privlege to & use of the spring near where the old meeting house now stands &  Avert Verhine doth warrant and forever defend the right and title of said land & premises unto the said trustees or their successors against the lawful claim, right or title or any person or persons whatsoever. 

Deed Book X, Page 507, Anson County, North Carolina    1 3/4 acres

Griffin Nash to the Trustees of Concord Meetinghouse


This Indenture made this 27th day of November in the year of our Lord 1830, between Griffin Nash of the State of North Carolina and the County of Anson of the one part & Richard Randle, Thos. Avett, Freeman Winfield, Peter W. Nash, and John Beard Trustees of the Methodist Episcopal Church at Concord Meeting house on the other part.....runs with Verhines line....signed sealed and delivered in the presence of Griffin Nash (Seal) Witnesses Thomas Carpenter, William Dean. 

The above documents list mostly persons in my family tree. I am a direct descendant of Thomas Carpenter.
Griffin Nash and Thomas Avett were both sons-in-law of ancestor Peter Winfield. Freeman Winfield was Arthur Freeman Winfield, who served in the War of 1812 and would migrate to Alabama. He was the son of Edward Winfield and grandson of Peter Winfield. Richard Randle was the brother of Martha Randall Howell, who had married Jordan Howell, the brother of Richard Howell. Peter Winfield. Nash was the son of Griffin Nash and was named for his grandfather, Peter Winfield. John Beard, son of Michael Beard, was a grandson-in-law of Peter Winfield. He married Anabelle Morrison, daughter of Ancena Winfield Morrison and her first husband, James Morrison. John Beards sister Eliza, was married to John Milton Winfield, grandson of Peter Winfield and brother of Freeman Winfield.

So you can see, the properties were adjacent. The spring was on the land of Verhine, no known relation, but the trustees, and Griffin Nash, were all Winfield relatives. This Church was attended and founded by my family.



In 1860, a new church was built, just before the advent of war in Anson County. The building committee consisted of David Carpenter, John A Tyson, B. I. Dunlap, and Jerry Ingram. The community had changed a little in 30 years.

Rocky River Baptist Church was 5 miles away from Concord. Several of Griffin Nash's family attended this church, including his daughter, Sarah Avett.

It is said that the Church was built on the land belonging to Verhine, and the cemetery was on the land belonging to Griffin Nash. The cemetery is divided into two parts, the old part and the new part. The old part is bound by a rock wall, similar to the stones used to build the above monument. The oldest readable marker is that of John Beard, trustee and grandson-in-law of Peter Winfield, with a date of 1837. There are older, unmarked stones or  fieldstone or slate markers that are no longer legible. It may have been in use as early as 1805 to 1810. That is uncertain. It is also very likely that Peter Howell and his wife Elizabeth Floyd Howell are buried here, and also possible that Peter and Charlotte Winfield and even Richard Howell the first are buried here.

The entire cemetery is now on 5 and a quarter acres. The old section has a spooky, intense look and feel to it. The wall is made of  stone with an  intermix of colors of rock, known as iron rock, glacial stones that give this section its unique look.
In an interview with a reporter in 1936, a lady named Charlotte Frances Kendall Knight stated that her father, Dr. John S. Kendall, built the stone fence around the cemetery. Mrs. Knight was 99 years young at the time of the interview.
Charles A. Kendall, on the other hand, in a 1964 church bulletin, stated that the wall was built in cooperation between community citizens from miles around. The stones, of various weights, colors and sizes, show that they originated in multiple places, and were probably brought in by wagon. Slaves may have also taken part in the construction.

The view of the cemetery area from the driveway of the church. 
The new section of the cemetery began in 1899 when Mr. and Mrs. W.E. and Charlotte Hendley donated 2 acres to the church. The predominance in this area of the name "Charlotte" only shows how the grand-daughters and great-grand-daughters of Charlotte Freeman Winfield, carried her name down the line.

The chronology of the church follows:

1785 Great Pee Dee Circuit formed. It extended from 10 miles south of Salisbury, North Carolina to Georgetown, South Carolina. It was also around this time that Peter Winfield and family, along with many of his inlaws, the Freemans and their spouses, including Richard Meanly and Keziah Freeman Meanley, Drury Robertson, Sr. and sons James Roberson who married Martha Winfield, daughter of Peter's brother Joshua Winfield who married Charlotte Freeman Winfield's sister Jemima Freeman , Drury Robertson, Jr, who married Mary, the sister of Martha and also a double-niece of Peter and Charlotte Freeman Winfield, Henry Freeman, and Booth Robertson, and Robertson (or Robinson) Carloss, stepson of Joshua Winfield who married widow Rebecca Thrower Carloss, daughter of Hezekiah Thrower, when Jemima passed away.

1788  Anson Circuit formed
James Edward Howell and wfie Sarah Francis "Fannie" Howell, the son who stayed. 

1805 Rocky River Circuit formed

1810 First actual building built near the spring, which is in the back of the location of the new part of the cemetery.

1813 Concord congregation first mentioned in the Circuit records as having a membership of 61 members of European descent  and 17 members of African descent.

1823 The Church moved from the area of the spring to its current site, away from the still.

1830 The land finally deeded to the trustees of the Church, all members of or inlaws to the Peter Winfield family.

1834 The Circuit now referred to as the Wadesboro Circuit.

1859 Concord considered one of the nine churches in the Wadesboro circuit.

1860 A new building constructed.

1864 The last camp meeting held at Concord "meeting place".

1871 Area transferred from the South Carolina to the North Carolina Conference.

1891 Western North Carolina Conference formed.

1906 Another new Building constructed for the Church

1955  Present building dedicated

1960  Albemarle District formed.

Feb. 21, 1871J. E. Howell, s. of Peter & E. Howell, and S. F. Andrews, d. of Seth & E. Andrews.


Worms for The Bird

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One year, we had worked particularly hard to have nice flower beds, and to keep the weeds from burrowing through and drowning out the flowers.

 To achieve this, we had placed mulch all around, a deep red color of bark and so forth, and the flower bulbs had pushed their way through the soil and bark successfully. But every morning there for a spell, we found hard work had been for naught, as something or someone would come in the night and toss all of the bark outside of the flower beds. Replace it, and the next morning arise to the same discovery. It was frustrating to say the least.
The first victim of blame was a neighbors cats. They had to be coming in earnest to use the freshly turned earth as an outdoor litter box. There was no other sensible explanation.
Then one morning, the true villain was discovered. The guilty party was a brown thrush, very intensely and methodically tossing the bark out of the bed in search of a breakfast of worms and grubs, which may have been sheltering beneath. With each piece of bark flung, new and exciting discoveries were made, and the thrush became so enthused with his flingings, and the pieces flew so far, the Yankees could have sent a scout to interview him as a prospective pitcher.

Well, that is the way I get when I make a new genealogical discovery. At present, I have tons of stuff, records, information, etc. just waiting and begging to be blogged. Some of them, promised to be blogged, but this new stuff is so exciting, I just have not had the time to get around to it.
I'll admit, I'm an addict.

So the secret to keeping up this blog is self-discipline. For the next few, whenevers, I will be attempting to post various information that I have found already, but in my off-moments, I will digging in this new and exciting direction I have found.

Without revealing what it is, I had decided to take on this challenge, because I had wondered. And I'm not the only one who has wondered. Times are different now and things we take for granted or do not really think much about, people could not take for granted back in the day. So there were inaccuracies in records, put there on purpose. Things were  not always what they seemed. But there are hints, and signs, and court cases, etc. that do and will reveal the truth.

I knew it was there. You can look and see the obvious in some places and some faces. Just finding it was the challenge.

The biggest surprise was the distance. How far back our roads can take us into who we are.

I started at the right place, but didn't know it at the time. I decided to start at the bottom and go up. For awhile, it was the same old boring, same ol, same ol. Over and over. Nothing new, no discoveries. Where did this come from? It seemed to come from nothing. So I put it down.

After awhile, and it usually is the second time up, I was successful. I decided to use a little common sense. It needed to be down this road as this other road don't appear to be the place to look.

And then things started to come together. And the rumors must have been true. Think about the era. Times were different. What would it have gained them? If nothing, then the stories would not be there.

It's going to take a lot of work and a lot of time. But I've found enough information to be exhilarated. Like that brown thrush, I've been tossing the bark left and right and far and wide, and I'm waiting on that Yankees Scout.


Wordless Wednesday: The Estate Sale Notice of H. H. Davis

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Sale of estate of Horton H. Davis by Francis Julina Aldridge Davis

This notice of the sale of the property of my Great-Great Grandfather, Horton Hampton Davis, appeared in the Stanly Enterprise, April 18, 1907 edition. Haut or Hawk, as he was called, was born on October 6, 1846, in Stanly County, North Carolina to Henry Davis, eldest son of Job and Sarah Winfield Davis and Henry's second wife, Martha Palmer Davis. He married Francis Julina Aldridge September 10, 1889. This ad refers to her as "Julia F. Davis". I love how first and middle names were interchangeable in those days. It makes research..interesting, to say the least. Two years later, Julina is having to sell off the property, for money to live on, as her "Year's allowance" would have ran out. 

Here's a question for those who might know. At what point in history did counties stop with alloting widows a year's allowance as a right of inheritance? 

This shows that H. H. Davis's property did reach to the Rocky River. It adjoined to the most part, relatives. C. H. Aldridge stood for Caleb Hampton "Hamp" Aldridge, his brother-in-law. J T Crump was John T. Crump, the man who married widow Rebecca Hathcock Davis, the widow of Edward Winfield Davis, Hawk's uncle and guardian after the death of Henry in 1862. J. P. Aldridge was Pink Aldridge, another Great Great-Grandfather of mine down another line, and a first cousin of Julina and Hamp's. 

The "Carron" mentioned as in "Carron's Corner", that one is an unknown. 

The ad even explains that Hawk owned two tracts of land, the 25 acres on the Rocky River, which was probably his share of the property after Henry died, as his Uncle, E. W. Davis had sold most of Henry's property for debts and his own expenses and other claims. Neddy was a good man, but some of his business dealings were questionable, at best. 

The other tract of land was originally a 37 acres tract that H. H. bought from E. W. (or Hawk from Ned, as they were called). Then, at a later date, Hawk had sold 17 acres of that tract to his wife's brother Hamp. 

Hawk and Julina raised 11 children together. Not all of them were Hawk's. At least two of them were Whitley's. 




Things that make you go Hmmm.....

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Old Newspaper articles make for wonderful research clues. After discovery the Estate sale of the property of my Great-Great Grandfather, H. H. Davis by my Great-Great Grandmother Julina Aldridge Davis, I just happened to glance a little bit down the page. And I found this little gem:

John Teeter Davis shown as J. T. Crump

See, I new immediately all the actors in this play. George T Farmer was a neighbor of my Rocky River Davis ancestors. His daughter Eliza June, had married George W. "Gus" Davis,  the brother of my Great-Grandpa, Will Davis. In fact, all of George Farmer's children had married into the Davis/Aldridge family tree somehow.
He and wife Sarah Elizabeth "Bettie" Watkins had one son and 4 daughters. Marina (1871-1940), Adam (1875-1953), Nannie (1879-1911), Lilla (1881-1957), and Eliza June (1886-1914).

Marina had married Thomas Deberry Greene in 1887. He died in 1895, and then in 1897 she married William Crowell Aldridge, a first cousin of Gus Davis and a nephew of my Great-Great Grandmother, Julina Aldridge Davis.

Adam Huston Farmer married Julia Adeline Boone, younger sister of John F Boone, who married Gus Davis's sister, oldest daughter of Julina Aldridge Davis, Mollie Aldridge Boone.

Lila W. Farmer married George Henry Boone, another brother of Julia and J. F. Boone. The Boones were the children of William Boone, the one son that Andrew Boone had left behind when he took off to Alleghany County. Another connection to the Boones was through the Murrays. Andrew had married Martha "Patsy" Murray when his wife Jane Hobbs Boone died, in Stanly County in 1850. The mother of Julina Aldridge Davis was Priscilla Murray Aldridge.

And then Nannie (sometimes seen as Nancy) Farmer married John Teeter Davis, youngest son of Edward Winfield Davis and Rebecca Hathcock Davis, who later married John T. Crump. John T. Davis was a first cousin of Horton Hampton Davis, husband of Julina Aldridge Davis.

And then comes this pesky newspaper article.
Now, Rilla and G. H. Boone, that would be a typo of Lilla and George Henry Boone. A. H. Farmer, is of course, only son, Adam Huston Farmer.

But Nanny Crump and J. T. Crump? Nanny Farmer, daughter of George T. Farmer of Tyson married J. T. Davis, not J. T. Crump. J. T. Crump was the stepfather of J. T. Davis.

Now, if it had not been for another document I have seen, I would have been really confused.
Name:Nannie Crump
[Davis
Age in 1910:30
Birth Year:abt 1880
Birthplace:North Carolina
Home in 1910:Tyson, Stanly, North Carolina
Race:White
Gender:Female
Relation to Head of House:Wife
Marital Status:Married
Spouse's Name:J T Crump
Father's Birthplace:North Carolina
Mother's Birthplace:North Carolina
Neighbors:View others on page
Household Members:
NameAge
J T Crump29
Nannie Davis30
Dewey Davis5
When I first began researching the children of E. W. Davis, I could not find his family in the 1910 census, the year before Nannie died. Then, while looking at the actual document, I came across J. T. Crump Jr. living right next to J. T. Crump, his daughter Vinia, and Ouisa Stewart, daughter of Sarah Hortense Davis Stewart.

This J. T. Crump Jr. was the same age as J. T. Davis. His wife was Nannie Davis, the same age as Nannie Farmer Davis, and they had a five year old son, Dewey, who was George Dewey Davis, born Oct 1, 1904.

This was clearly John Teeter Davis and family, but why had he given his name as Crump? I just brushed it off as an enumerator error, but secretly began wondering, and actively seeking, what did the "T" in John T. Crump stand for?
Edward Winfield Davis was born on December 3, 1811. He was the second sheriff of Stanly County, North Carolina, and a most eligible bachelor for most of his life.

He must have decided one day, later in life, that he wanted an heir, or a young wife to take care of him. He had hired servants until then, and probably had not felt the need. So at the tender age of 56, E. W. Davis took his first and only bride, Rebecca, daughter of Solomon Hathcock and wife Lavinia Rummage Hathcock.
Edwin Winfield Davis and Rebecca Hathcock Marriage Certificate

Rebecca was only 18 years old. It was not unusual in those days,  post-war, and reconstruction of 1868, for young girls to marry old men, as there were a shortage of men. What war had not taken, many had lunged West, looking for peace, fate and betterment. And E. W. Davis, a land owner, businessman, politician and merchant, was a good catch for a lady. She would be well-suited and would live comfortably. Before his death on October 30, 1882, Ned Davis, as he was known, watched his wife bring three heirs into the world. Sarah Hortense Davis was born on January 26, 1869, a year after the marriage.

Son Edward Thomas Ashley Davis, or Thomas A. Davis, was born on August 16, 1871.

But youngest son John Teeter Davis came along 6 years later, on May 30, 1877, five years before Col. Ned Davis's death.

HPIM6790
Now John T. Davis would marry 3 times.

He and Nannie only had the one son, Dewey.

He and his second wife, Jennie Lenora McSwain would be married the longest and have 7 children: Ray, Christine, Maxine, William Wooten, Esau and Jewel.

When Nora died, Dewey and Ray were old enough to be on their own and take care of themselves. Baby Jewel would grow up with her uncle, Travis Crump's family and the 4 middle siblings, Christine, Maxine, Woot and Esau were sent to the Barium Springs orphanage.

John T. Davis would meet a boarder at the home of his younger brother, Travis Crump, Valedia Kinney of Davidson County, and enjoy a brief marriage with her before his death. She would bear a set of twins, James T and Jennie Lee Davis, born 4 months posthumously past their father's death.

Backing up to Rebecca Hathcock however, she was widowed on October 30, 1882. She married neighbor, John T. Crump on September 3, 1883, nearly a year later, at the age of 33.

Afterwards, she would have 2 more children: Travis Millard Crump on September 24, 1884, a year after her marriage and a daughter she named for her mother, Lavina, in 1889.

Rebecca Hathcock Crump

In no other census, but the 1910 one, does John Teeter go by the surname "Crump". His marriage licenses and death certificates all designate him at "Davis".

JT Davis & Jenny Lenora Hooks marriage license
So, why did John Teeter Davis, at times, go by John Teeter Crump?

Was it because he was only 4 when E. W. Davis died and J. T. Crump raise him? Or was it because he was really a Crump, and not a Davis at all? Was he named for J. T. Crump? What does the "T" in John T. Crump stand for?

E. W. Davis was 66 when John Teeter Davis was born. His wife was 27. She had not had a child in 6 years. Was this last one a result of a young wife married to an old man, who falls in love with someone more her age? Or just a stepchild being raised by a stepfather and taking that surname at times?

The other two children of E. W and Rebecca, Thomas and Hortense, are never seen as anything but "Davis".

Then there is the fact that John T. is also seen as John T. Crump Jr. One article I had seen had him and his brother as "Tom Davis and J. T. Crump of Rocky River Springs".

Behind every answer is more questions.


The Beauty

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The young woman gazes wistfully into the camera. She is dressed in an elegant light floral print lace dress. A lace rose adorns her left shoulder and the high collar climbs uncomfortably to her chin. A black belt with a jeweled broach clasp adorns and accentuates her miniscule waist. Proper ladies of the day were covered head to toe, but the "Barbie Doll" physique was still the ideal.

In the black and white photo, her hair appears to be a light brown, but it could have been an auburn. Her eyes are clear, and not dark, meaning they were blue or a light green or gray. All girls and women of the day, after hitting their mid to late teens wore their hair up, no matter their class or status. Hers was in a unique roll, perhaps a local fad of the day.

Perhaps she was a bride-to-be, or perhaps her father commissioned the portrait in hopes that she would become a bride.

With her right hand placed demurely behind her back, her left one hangs loose at her side. At first glance, the hand appears odd, wooden or strange. Upon examination, it appears that is only the lace cuff of the dress, covering most of her hand, her hand clinched closed, only the knuckles show.

The embellishment at the bottom of the paper frame states that the photographer was Preble of Waterville, Maine. There is quite a bit to be found on the internet about S. L. Preble and his photograpy studio, and photos across the country attributed to him, but the vast majority in Waterville.

This young beauty in unnamed, only the initials "JAF" are on the back. Were these her initials? Perhaps she was a Jane, or a Julia or a Janette. Her mother's generation bore the elegant names of Susanna and Tabitha, but by her generation, Clementine had became "Tiney", Florence had become "Flossie" and Harriett had became "Hattie". Her daughters, if she would have any, would be the generation of Myrtle and Ethel and Pearl. Her sons, should she be blessed with any, could have been Walter, or Harvey, or anything ending in "bert".

The family this photgraph was in the possesion of was centered in the gold-belied area of where Stanly, Rowan and Cabarrus Counties all come together. It was suggested she was a member of the Mauney family, who were also members by marriage of the Davis family.

Valentine and Ephraim Mauney were brothers who were born near King's Mountain in Lincoln County, and then came first to Mecklenburg and Cabarrus Counties, and married McMackin sisters in Rowan. After the McMakin sisters had passed away, leaving both Mauney brothers widowers with young children, the apt merchants and businessmen both took daughters of James M. Davis and Rowena Lee Davis as their second wives. Ephraim married Elizabeth Jane Davis and Valentine married Winifred Catherine Davis, often seen as "W. C." or "Winnie". Jane and Winnie were grand-daughters of Job.

The beauty in the photo was not a common girl. She was without a doubt a member of an elite family. She did not work on a farm or a mill. She may have been in college, or about to attend. By this age, she would have no doubt received a good education, perhaps in a girls academy.

Was this young lady a member of the Mauney or Davis families? Had she maybe made a trip to Maine for a vacation or tour or educational opportunity, or had Mr. Preble, renowned photographer toured the South and came maybe, to Salisbury or Charlotte, looking for models for his art?

It was also suggested that she was a Misenheimer, or a Huneycutt that married into the Misenheimer family. But did the Misenheimers have the money and prestige that the Mauney's had?

The names of Ephraim and Valentine are all over the court records and land records of Stanly and Cabarrus Counties, and Rowan and Mecklenburg as well. Valentine was an unscrupulous businessman. He used his money to make money. He had it. He loaned it. And if he was not repaid in a timely manner, he took no pause in calling to collect what was legally his. He showed no mercy.

Ephraim appeared to be a shade less ruthless, however, both brothers invested in several mining companies within the three counties and in Gold Hill, in Rowan County in particular.
The restored Merchantile Store of Ephraim Mauney in Gold Hill, NC

The family of Ephraim Mauney is buried at the Gold Hill cemetery in Gold Hill, North Carolina, while Valentine and W. C. Mauney are buried just down Hwy 52, a little ways in New London, Stanly County, North Carolina.

It has been suggested at some point that the brothers may have had a falling out, as the Rowan County Mauneys (descendants of Ephraim) pronounce their name "Maw-ney" (rhymes with tawny), while the Stanly County Mauney's pronounce the name "Moon-ey", (rhymes with looney), at a distance of maybe 5 miles.

Was the Beauty in the picture a member of this enigmatic family and a descendant of Job Davis? Or was she somehow a girl from Maine, whose picture mysteriously ended up in North Carolina? Did she put on her best frock and get her "hair did" at a bid to snare a wealthy husband from a mining mogul or his son?

Perhaps she will remain anonymous. If anyone recognizes this young woman, leave a comment. I'd love to know who she was.


The Citizens of Davis

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I've been having a little fun with newspapers lately, and finding all kinds of things within my family spider web.

Several years ago, while scanning microfilm at our local library, I found a little gem under "Community News" where it listed the gossip of the small community called "Davis".

The except said that Mr. and Mrs. Lewis T. Davis and family, from Albemarle,  had been visiting family down in Davis. This was in the year 1939, when my mother had been a baby.

Unlike some named communities named in the papers of those days like "Rest" and "Silver", I did not have to ask anyone where Davis was. It was centered around what remained of the old Davis plantation that once belonged to Job. It was near Cottonville and probably took in the current Old Davis Road, Aldridge Road and where Mt. Zion Church road hits Plank Road and down to the river.

The old road that had been the Winfield road had once cut past Rehobeth, and crossed at the old Ford into Anson County. There was a school there well into the 1930's and 1940's. My paternal grandmother, and her sisters, who were not Davis's, attended there. E. W. Davis had had a store there prior to the turn of the century. Along the paths that were at one time roads are the remains of several buildings and old houses. Some were existence as late as the 1970's.
Abandoned House freed from the woods photographed by Stanly County's talented photographer, Cindi Mullis Poole


But like many communities of old, where railways did not cross, the village of Davis has ceased to exist. The two cemeteries remain and the memories of the community dies along with those old enough to remember. The last person to show me where the schoolhouse once stood was my great-aunt Dorothy, who passed away in 2010.
Aunt Dorothy 001
Dorothy Burris Luther as a young woman. She attended the old Davis School. 
It is exciting to find mention of the old community from which pieces I was constructed, in old newspapers.

The Citizens of Davis

Of the above mentioned persons, Mr. and Mrs. T. A. Davis was referring to Thomas Edward Ashley Davis and wife Elizabeth Ann Deese Davis, son of E. W. "Ned" Davis and Rebecca Hathcock Davis. Z. V. Deese, would have been her brother, Zeb Vance Deese and his wife Lillia Lee Deese. 

Numerous Stanly County baby boys were named for the beloved Governor. 

Zebulon Baird Vance - Brady-Handy.jpg
Zebulon Baird Vance, twice Governor of the State of North Carolina
To quote his contemporary and fellow Governor, Thomas Jordan Jarvis:
"He was the Mount Mitchell of all our great men, and in the affections and love of the people, he towered above them all. As ages to come will not be able to mar the grandeur and greatness of Mount Mitchell, so they will not be able to efface from the hearts and minds of the people the name of their beloved Vance."


Mr. and Mrs. Joe Holt mentioned above was Martha "Mattie" Davis and her husband, Tom Davis and wife, was her brother, Thomas Parrish Davis and his wife Nealie Howard Davis.  Mrs. H. H. Davis was my great-great grandmother, Frances Julina Aldridge Davis, the mother of Tom and Mattie, and they were visiting Jesse Filmore Aldridge, Julina's son and Tom and Mattie's half-brother. All of these were cousins to the T. A. Davis mentioned in the first article. 

And of course, the J. F. Aldridge who went to Oakboro with his son Marvin, is the same Jesse Filmore Aldridge. 

Davis Family
Standing from left: Barefoot girl Carrie, Will, tall Filmore, George aka Gus, Titus, Becky, Mattie. Seated H. H. Davis and wife Julina. Tom leaning on his father's knee, Cora sitting on her mother's lap and Ritchie, to the right of his mother. Ritchie would die at the age of three. All of the others lead long lives and had families. Carrie and Becky both nearly made it to the 100 mark and I was able to meet them. Will, the first little boy from the left, was my great-grandfather and I had the pleasure of his company until I was about 14 or 15 years old.


 

The Short and Sweet Obituary of Hawk Davis

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Obit of H H Davis
The Enterprise
(Albemarle, North Carolina)
1 November 1906 • Page 3

Horton H. Davis
My Great-Great Grandfather, Horton Hampton Davis
Details:

Born: October 6, 1846 in Stanly County, North Carolina.
Father: Henry Davis (1806-1842) and Martha Palmer Davis (1815-1879)

Married on September 10, 1889 to Francis Julina Aldridge, daughter of Henry Garner Aldridge and Priscilla Murray Aldridge.

Father and Stepfather to the following children:

 1) Mollie Eliza Aldridge/Davis born February 6, 1877 died June 14, 1945 
     married first: John Frank Boone Sr. (widowed)
     married second: Samuel Parsons "Sampie" Morton (divorced) 

2)  Jesse Filmore Aldridge born March 9, 1879 died Sept. 18, 1946
      married first Daisy Simpson
      married second Mary Jane Hudson (Huneycutt) a widow

3) George W "Gus" Davis born 6 Nov 1881 died 20 March 1924
     married first: Eliza June Farmer
     married second: Lilla S. Austin

4) Titus Henry Davis born 19 March 1887 died December 30, 1956
     married Bessie V. Lowder

5) Rebecca Jane "Becky" Davis born 6 Oct 1888 died 10 October 1987
    married Robert Edward Thompson

6) Martha Priscilla "Mattie" Davis born 1 Feb 1890 died 29 April 1955
    married Joe Allen Holt

7) William Hampton Davis born 12 April 1891 died 31 July 1973
     married Penny Wayne Turner

8) Carrie Julina  Davis born 4 March 1893 died 21 March 1984
    married William Roberson Jenkins

9) Thomas Parrish Davis born 16 Sept 1895 died 30 Sept 1961
    married Lizzie Nealie Howard

10) Ritchie Clark Davis born 28 March 1897 died 23 Aug 1900

11)  Cora Victoria Davis born 23 Jul 1898 died 16 Jan 1962
        married Charles Beatty Mann. 
      


Thriller Thursday: The Murder of John Murray

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Murder of John Murray of Aquadale




The Newspaper articles tell the story. John R Murray (sometimes seen as John Coley) was murdered by two teenagers named Brown.

John Murray was a member of the Murray family I've written of before. He was the great nephew of my third great-grandmother.

John was one of the sons of Edmund Murray/Coley and Catherine Ledbetter Murray. Edmund was the son of Benjamin Murray, son of Stanly County Murray patriarch Jesse Murray and a daughter of George Coley. I believe her name to be Francis or Fannie, but that is not for certain. What is certain is that Edmund Murray was a good man, and his surname, and that of his children, swung back and forth as easily as a horse's tail swatting flies in the summer between the surnames of Murray and Coley. Edmund's estate papers reflect as much.  I've documented Edmund in my post "The Man With Two Names".

Edmund and "Katie" had 7 children together, with firstborn daughter Caroline, most likely dying as a child.

They were:

1847  Caroline
1850  Alexander (or "Ellick" or "AC")
1851  Francis
1853 Benjamin
1855 Sarah
1863 John R.
1865 Margaret

Benjamin died prior to his father, Edmund, leaving the two brothers, John and Alex, in the county to dislike each other. Edmund had also had children by a mistress, Beadie Carpenter, and Alex disliked them even more.

A mean streak ran in the Murray line, and sometimes it skipped a generation. As such, it also traveled down the lines of the families who intermarried with and were descended from the Murrays, like the Aldridges, and they were affected by it too.

It ran well through the blood of Old Ben Murray, son of Jesse I, and father of Edmund and it skipped Edmond and went straight to Alex.

Alex referred to his brother roughly and in insultory terms in a few lawsuits. John R. Murray remained just a simple farmer. Although he and his wife Maggie seemed to have some problems. (They married, split and remarried), John did not seem to be the angry sort. Not like A. C.

So it came as a shock to the community when the following newspapers hit the stand. The next article is from:The Concord Times  29 March 1917 • Page 6

The others are from Stanly County newspapers: "The Enterprise" and " The Albemarle Post".



Greensboro Daily News Account, April 4 1917 Edition

The story of John Murray's murder was reported in all of the local newspapers. The above is the link to the Greensboro paper.

This is the link to the Charlotte version.


E
Murray-Brown

So who were these "Brown" boys, teenagers, only 16 and 18, who were the murders, and what was their motive?

It begins, in a way, with this advertisement:

AC Murray et all vs John Carpenter

To explain the characters who played a role in the above drama, they are all descendants of Edmund Murray/Coley. A. C. Murray, was of course, Alexander, the oldest son. Maggie Hooks, was the youngest daughter, and sister of A. C. Murray. Millard, James, Adam Aldridge, Lula Aldridge and Cornelia Sinclair, were the children of deceased sister Francis Murray who had married William Edward "Will Ed" Aldridge. The name "John Aldridge" was an error on the part of the newspaper. In the actual court papers, it is referring to "John Sinclair", the husband of Cornelia Sinclair.

The problem appeared to lie in the fact that Edmund Murray/Coley, had not one, but two families. In his estate papers there was a division of property concerning a tract of land of 77 acres referred to as "the Patsy Murray lands." The division was set out as "A. C. Murray  1/4, Maggie Hooks 1/4, John Carpenter 1/4, Millard Aldridge, Adam Aldridge, James Aldridge, Lula Aldridge and Cornelia F Sinclair with John Sinclair 1/5 of 1/4 or 1/20th.

To explain the Patsy Murray lands, we have to go back another generation. In 1863, Benjamin Murray had conveyed this same 77 acres to James A. Ross. He then, according to the records of Green Wesley Simpson, went to Arkansas, along with his children Rebecca Ann Murray Hudson, her husband Henry, his son Jesse and wife Jane, his wife Martha, and at least a few of his nephews, Wesley Murray, son of Mariah, and James Washington Turner, son of Phoebe. There may have been others.



 In 1867, Martha Murray had returned, and claimed the same 77 acres as homestead. At her decease, the property was transferred to the hands of Edmund Murray. Now, she was not the mother of Edmund Murray/Coley. She was less than a decade older than he, and he would not outlive her long.

Edmund Coley/Murray seems to be the son of Benjamin Murray and a daughter of George and Mary Coley. Ben Murray would have been 21 at the birth of Edmund, far before his marriage to Martha, so there was no apparent animosity between the two families. Edmund, by all signs left, appears to have been a good man, taking care of Martha aka Patsy, like a son, and taking care of George and Martha Coley in their old age. For love and respect, they had signed their property over to him for a nominal fee, before they died, under condition they live on it and he take care of them, which a later deed proves he did.

So Edmund Murray was a good man. However, he had apparently strayed upon his wife Katie. A single neighbor, Beadie Carpenter, daughter of Thomas Carpenter, had two children, John A. Carpenter and Nellie  Ann Carpenter. John A. Carpenter is the son Edmund Murray Coley, who being illegitimate himself, saw no difference in his legitimate and illegitimate heirs.  Nellie Carpenter, like her mother, also had a child out of wedlock. That child was a daughter, Nezzie Elizabeth Carpenter who would marry Mitchell Calvin Brown and be known otherwise, as "Bettie Brown".

There would be more lawsuits to follow between the 'legitimate' heirs of  Edmund Murray/Coley and Bettie Brown. The above list of grandchildren would be joined by Sarah Coble Broadaway and Amos Coble, children of Edmond's deceased daughter Sarah, who had been the first wife of Israel S. Coble.

Several suits dragged through the courts for years. One of the last was "J. R. Murray and others vs. Bettie Brown and others" recorded on page 467 in the minutes of the July 1904 session.

The Case is a study of it's own, and I will go into it no further here, except to present this long, nearly 20 year arguement as perhaps the motive for the affray at Rocky River Springs.

Betty Brown was the daughter of Nelly Carpenter. Nelly Carpenter was the sister of John A. Carpenter. The suit provides evidence that Betty Brown and her children believed themselves heirs of Edmund Murray. They brought the point home when referring to Alex and John in the suit as "A. C. Murray alias Coley and John R. Murray alias Coley", as if trying to make the case that the right to the name of Murray was up in the air for John, Alex and their whole siblings,  as well, because Edmund, their father, had always had to swing back and forth between both.

Rocky River Springs, in the early part of the century was a popular resort.

Image of 2007.38.654, Photograph, Cabinet: Guests Stroll at Rocky River Springs Resort
Images Courtesy of the Stanly County Museum


A deed dated November 11, 1911 from John R. Murray to his wife and children, describes his property as "adjoining Rocky River Springs land, John A. Carpenter and others".  So John R Murray's farm was neighboring Rocky River Springs and his half-brother, John A. Carpenter, who was living on the property given him by Edmund Murray-Coley.
Rocky River Springs Resort
Rocky River Springs Resort, Courtesy of  Stanly County Museum


This family entanglement, arguement, lawsuits and feud, I believe, was at the core of the "quarrel, probably the outcropping of an old family grudge" that began the violence between 55 year old John R Murray and the two oldest sons, Paul and Sam, of Mitchell and Nezzie E. "Bettie" Brown. Biologically, John Murray was their great-uncle.

Nellie Ann Carpenter may have only had one child, but her daughter Bettie made up for it by having a very large family. Beadie Carpenter, grandmother of Bettie and mother of Nellie and John A., was listed in several papers as recieving county money for her old age and disability.





Mitchell and Bettie Brown had 16 children between them. Paul and Sam were the oldest. 

1901 Paul Lee
1902 James Samuel
1903 Lonnie Mathew
1904 Barney Baxley B & D in 1904
1905 Noah Benton
1907 Fannie JoAnn
1908 Carrie Alberta
1909 Jesse Thomas
1911 George Washington
1912 Mary Estelle
1913 John Henry
1914 Frank Wilson
1916 Fronie Ann
1918 William Grover
1920 Barney Baxley II
1923 Virgie Mae





calvin mitchell brown and lizzie carpenter his wife
Mitchell Calvin Brown and wife Nezzie Elizabeth Carpenter Brown in their old age.


John Coley/Murray murder


To summarize the whole affair, from all available information, about noon, on Tuesday, March 27, 1917, 53 year old John R. Murray ran into his great-nephews, Paul and Sam Brown, at Rocky River Springs. A heated argument ensued, with colorful language flying back and forth. The quarrel stemmed from an old family grudge, which could have been the lawsuits that had went back and forth between John and others vs the Browns mother and others, the final judgement of which had been settled in 1903 and 1904, when the Brown brothers would have been toddlers.

Paul, admitted to shooting John Murray, whose small son stood witness and took off home. He told his mother, and then disappeared. Paul was eventually found and was sentenced to 10 years. His younger brother Sam,16,  who was just present, was sentenced to 4 months on a local chain gang.



The Brown family removed themselves from Stanly County, first settling in Columbus County, North Carolina, in the Southeastern part of the state, near Wilmington, where they were found in the 1920 census. The Columbus County census stated that the Browns owned their farm. In July of 1917, just months after his sons arrest, M. C. Brown sells Lots 6 and 7 known as cottage sites at Rocky River Springs, to one W L and Mabel D Mann and R L and Ora B Smith, located on block one, on the east side of Albemarle Street 50 feet wide and running 175 feet back to Lee Avenue.

History of the Rocky River Springs from Fish House website


Name:Elizabeth Brown
Age:41
Birth Year:abt 1879
Birthplace:North Carolina
Home in 1920:Fair Bluff, Columbus, North Carolina
Race:White
Gender:Female
Relation to Head of House:Wife
Marital Status:Married
Spouse's Name:Mitchell Brown
Father's Birthplace:North Carolina
Mother's Birthplace:North Carolina
Neighbors:View others on page
Household Members:
NameAge
Mitchell Brown41
Elizabeth Brown41
Sam Brown18
Lonnie Brown16
Noah Brown14
Fannie Brown11
Albertie Brown10
Tommie Brown9
George Brown8
Mary Brown7
John Henry Brown6
Frank Brown5
Franie Brown3
[3 5/12] 
William Brown1

The Brown family is shown buying property in Quewhiffle, Hoke County, North Carolina in 1925, 1926 and 1929. Here they are seen in the 1930 census, and where they remained.

Name:Elizabeth Brown
Gender:Female
Birth Year:abt 1877
Birthplace:North Carolina
Race:White
Home in 1930:Quewhiffle, Hoke, North Carolina
Map of Home:View Map
Marital Status:Married
Relation to Head of House:Wife
Spouse's Name:Michell C Brown
Father's Birthplace:North Carolina
Mother's Birthplace:North Carolina
Occupation:

Education:

Military service:

Rent/home value:

Age at first marriage:

Parents' birthplace:
Neighbors:View others on page
Household Members:
NameAge
Michell C Brown53
Elizabeth Brown53
Noah B Brown24
Thomas Brown20
George Brown18
John Brown16
Nilson Frank Brown15
In 1940, they are seen with some of their children and a few of their grandchildren, Pauline Davis and Louis Silverblat, along with Hugh Reynolds Aldridge of Stanly County, son of George, so they still kept in touch with Stanly County people. Other Stanly Countians, like the family of John Teeter Davis, had also moved to Hoke to farm tobacco.
Name:M C Brown
Respondent:Yes
Age:63
Estimated birth year:abt 1877
Gender:Male
Race:White
Birthplace:North Carolina
Marital Status:Married
Relation to Head of House:Head
Home in 1940:Quewhiffle, Hoke, North Carolina
Map of Home in 1940:View Map
Farm:Yes
Inferred Residence in 1935:Quewhiffle, Hoke, North Carolina
Residence in 1935:Same Place
Sheet Number:17A
Number of Household in Order of Visitation:258
Occupation:Farmer
House Owned or Rented:Owned
Value of Home or Monthly Rental if Rented:1000
Attended School or College:No
Highest Grade Completed:Elementary school, 5th grade
Hours Worked Week Prior to Census:40
Class of Worker:Working on own account
Weeks Worked in 1939:52
Income:0
Income Other Sources:No
Neighbors:View others on page
Household Members:
NameAge
M C Brown63
Elizabeth Brown62
Barney Brown19
Virgia Brown16
Louis E Silverblat12
Pauline Dais8
Hue Aldrege28
Nezzie Elizabeth Carpenter Brown would die in Hoke County in 1947. Her Husband Mitchell lived another 20 years, dying in 1967 at the grand old age of 90 in Aberdeen, Moore County.

Sam Brown would marry and have his own family and remain in Hoke County, passing away in 1959.

Paul Lee Brown did not stay in North Carolina, but seems to have hit the road as soon as he was free. He only served a fraction of the time he was given for taking the life of John Murray and by 1920 was found in Nashville, Tennesee. He left there and shows up in St. Louis, Missouri, where he obtained his social security number, and married Mary Alice Eldridge in September of 1924.
Name:Alice M Brown
Gender:Female
Birth Year:abt 1899
Birthplace:Colorado
Race:White
Home in 1930:St Louis, St Louis (Independent City), Missouri
Map of Home:View Map
Marital Status:Married
Relation to Head of House:Roomer
Father's Birthplace:Missouri
Mother's Birthplace:Kansas
Occupation:

Education:

Military service:

Rent/home value:

Age at first marriage:

Parents' birthplace:
Neighbors:View others on page
Household Members:
NameAge
Allie Gibbs39
Virginia Gibbs15
Paul Gibbs12
Elmore Gibbs9
Fred Gibbs39
Clyde Estes26
Gladys Estes26
Dan Nichol27
Clarabelle Nichol22
Walter Suit19
Irene L Suit18
Bertha Blackburn39
Wade Blackburn33
Howard Lombard20
Paul L Brown29
Alice M Brown31
Louis Larsen42
Minnie E Larsen38
Ruth Suit17
Russell Kinder31
Mildred Kinder24
Delores Kinder0
[3/12] 
Bert C Suit39
Marie Suit29
Elenaor Nichols20
Mary Webling52
Elijah Nichols25
Maxine Nichols3
H C Melton61
By 1935, the couple had made their way to L. A., where they settled in for the duration.


Name:Mary L Brown
Age:32
Estimated birth year:abt 1908
Gender:Female
Race:White
Birthplace:Oklahoma
Marital Status:Married
Relation to Head of House:Wife
Home in 1940:Los Angeles, Los Angeles, California
Map of Home in 1940:View Map
Street:Elmwood
Inferred Residence in 1935:Los Angeles, Los Angeles, California
Residence in 1935:Same House
Sheet Number:10A
Attended School or College:No
Highest Grade Completed:H7
Weeks Worked in 1939:0
Income:0
Income Other Sources:No
Neighbors:View others on page
Household Members:
NameAge
Paul L Brown34
Mary L Brown32

Paul died in L. A. in 1966 and his wife Alice in 1990. They had one daughter named Pauline. 

John Murray left a widow, Maggie Lingerfelt Murray. Together, they had 6 children:

Jessie Lou Murray 1904-1918
Charles G. Murray 1907-1937
Alexander Erson Murray 1909-2004
Pinky Lee Murray 1911-1929
Minnie Louise Murray 1914-1999
John Lander Murray 1919-1996

Daughter Jessie, just one of many descendants of old Jesse Murray named for him and son Pinky Lee Murray are buried in the old Rehobeth Cemetery with many others of the Murray and Aldridge families. 

So that is how a multi-generational and decades long family feud ended in tragedy. The hills of the Tyson community in Southern Stanly County was full of stories, and the one of John R. Murray and the Brown brothers was just one of many. 


Sunday Black Sheep: The Six Wives of Israel Coble or "Israel Coble has too Many Wives".

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Israel Coble


And so it was reported in the Tuesday, January 24, 1911 edition of the Charlotte Observer, Charlotte, North Carolina, newspaper.

Who was this over-married Israel Coble and how does he tie in to the family tree?

Anyone who has dipped their toe into the genealogical or historial pool of Stanly County has had to encounter the name of David Coble. David Coble was the overly productive progenitor of 32 or 33 children. The exact number has long been debated, due to children who died as infants. Like William Joshua Hudson, David Coble lived a long life and married three times. Israel S. Coble was the firstborn of his third wife, Malinda Hinson.

Israel S. Coble was a traveling man, very hard to track, with more than a little bit of history. He married into the family tree on December 31, 1882, when at the age of 16, he married Sarah, the 27 year old daughter of Edmund Murray (aka Edmund Coley) and wife Catherine Ledbetter Murray. The wedding was in Stanly County. Two children were born to this marriage: Sarah Coble, born 1886 who married William David Broadway,  and Amos Ozell Coble, b 1891 who married Carrie Jordan. According to Israel's later testimony, this first wife, Sarah Murray, died of consumption.

In 1880, Israel is a 14 year old boy in his parents household.

Household Members:
NameAge
David Coble66
Malinda Coble33
Julia Coble19
Isral Coble14
Alvey Coble13
Millort Coble11
Titus Coble9
Nettie Coble8
L Coble6
Eli Coble4
Dolley Coble2
Isabell Coble1

It is unsure exactly when Sarah Murray Coble died. However, Israel married his second wife,  Sara Eugenia Lee, on April 29, 1895 in Burnsville, Anson County, North Carolina. Eugenia was the daughter of  William and Caroline Lee, of Anson County, and the granddaughter of Wright Lee and Sarah, for whom she may have been named. Born in 1875, Eugenia also did not live long after her marriage to Israel Coble. She bore his third and last son, Israel Lorenzo Coble and died prior to 1900.

ame:Israel Lorenzo Coble
Titles and Terms:
Event Type:Death
Event Date:02 Jun 1983
Event Place:Salisbury, Rowan, North Carolina
Birth Year:1897
Birth Year (Estimated):
Burial Date:
Burial Place:Charlotte, North Carolina
Cemetery:Forest Lawn Cemetery
Funeral Home:
Residence Place:N. Myrtle Beach, Horry, South Carolina
Address:517 21st Ave North
Gender:Male
Age:85
Marital Status:Married
Race (Original):White
Occupation:Painter
Birth Date:04 Jun 1897
Birthplace:Stanly Co., North Carolina
Father's Name:Israel Coble
Father's Titles and Terms:
Father's Birthplace:
Mother's Name:Eugenia Lee
Mother's Titles and Terms:
Mother's Birthplace:
Spouse's Name:Geneva Fincher
Spouse's Titles and Terms:
 Eugenia Lee Coble was apparently the second "dead wife" referred to in the newspaper accounts.

The third marriage license found for Israel S Coble was on January 8, 1900, when he married Benona Angeline Furr Hartsell, the widow of Doctor Franklin Furr.  Benona was the mother of three children with Franklin Furr, Jennie Elizabeth (1876), Houston Monroe (1878), and  William Franklin (1890). The 1900 census finds the household of Israel as:
Name:Angeline Coble
Age:40
Birth Date:abt 1860
Birthplace:North Carolina
Home in 1900:Johns River, Cabarrus, North Carolina
Race:White
Gender:Female
Relation to Head of House:Wife
Marital Status:Married
Spouse's Name:Israel Coble
Marriage Year:1900
Years Married:0
Father's Birthplace:North Carolina
Mother's Birthplace:North Carolina
Mother: number of living children:3
Mother: How many children:3
Occupation:View on Image
Neighbors:View others on page
Household Members:
NameAge
Israel Coble35
Angeline Coble40
Sarah Coble14
Ozell Coble8
Lorenzo Coble1

View original image

At an uninformed peruse, it would appear that Angeline, being the mother of 3 children, and the 3 children alive, that Sarah, Ozell (Amos) and Lorenzo would be the three children, but they were not. Lorenzo was only a year old, so his mother had to have died around 1899.

Name:William Hartsell
Age:10
Birth Date:May 1890
Birthplace:North Carolina
Home in 1900:China Grove, Rowan, North Carolina
Race:White
Gender:Male
Relation to Head of House:Brother in Law
[Brother-in-law] 
Marital Status:Single
Father's Birthplace:North Carolina
Mother's Birthplace:North Carolina
Occupation:View on Image
Neighbors:View others on page
Household Members:
NameAge
Ephram Hinson29
Jennie Hinson24
Charlie Hinson7/12
William Hartsell10
Sherman Watters22

Angeline's own young son, William F. Hartsell is living with his married sister in China Grove, in Rowan County, while Angeline is caring for step-children on John's River in Cabarrus County. Her oldest son, Houston, at 22, is already married with 2 children of his own. His bride, Dovey, is none other than the sister of Israel S. Coble. Perhaps that is how he met Houston's widowed mother.


Name:Hurtis R Hartsell
[Heston R] 
Age:22
Birth Date:abt 1878
Birthplace:North Carolina
Home in 1900:Tyson, Stanly, North Carolina
Race:White
Gender:Male
Relation to Head of House:Head
Marital Status:Married
Spouse's Name:Dony F Hartsell
Marriage Year:1897
Years Married:3
Father's Birthplace:North Carolina
Mother's Birthplace:North Carolina
Occupation:View on Image
Neighbors:View others on page
Household Members:
NameAge
Heston R Hartsell22
Dony F Hartsell21
Kaerry B Hartsell2
Rosy E Hartsell2/12
Between 1900 and 1910, something happened, and the two, Angeline and Israel, go their separate ways. The 1910 census finds Angeline living in the household of her oldest son, Houston Monroe, accompanied by her baby boy, William F. This may have been the reason for the split. 

Name:Ansaline Hartsell
Age in 1910:55
Birth Year:abt 1855
Birthplace:North Carolina
Home in 1910:Big Lick, Stanly, North Carolina
Race:White
Gender:Female
Relation to Head of House:Mother
Marital Status:Widowed
Father's Birthplace:North Carolina
Mother's Birthplace:North Carolina
Neighbors:View others on page
Household Members:
NameAge
Monroe Hartsell31
Donia P Hartsell31
Fairabel Hartsell12
Ozeller Hartsell10
Grover L Hartsell7
Charley L Hartsell5
Dallie E Hartsell3
Malinsa A Hartsell1
[1 2/12] 
Ansaline Hartsell55
William F Hartsell19
While Angeline is with her children in Big Lick, Stanly County, North Carolina. Israel Coble, ever the traveler, has been on the move again. On January 3, 1907, Israel and a young widow from Stanly County, Rosa Almond Bunting, go to Bessamer City in Gaston County and get married. They give the correct names for their parents, David and Malinda Coble and William and Minta Almond, but they give their birthplace and residence as Bessamer City.

By the 1910 census, Israel and Rosa are living in Charlotte with the 4 youngest of her 6 children. The children were listed in the census as Coble's, but they were not. They were Buntings or "Bunton"s. The name is seen both ways. Rosa was the widow of Calvin Bunton (Bunting). 
Name:Isrial S Cofle
[Isrial S Coble] 
Age in 1910:50
Birth Year:abt 1860
Birthplace:North Carolina
Home in 1910:Charlotte, Mecklenburg, North Carolina
Race:White
Gender:Male
Relation to Head of House:Head
Marital Status:Married
Spouse's Name:Rosie Cofle
Father's Birthplace:North Carolina
Mother's Birthplace:North Carolina
Neighbors:View others on page
Household Members:
NameAge
Isrial S Cofle50
Rosie Cofle45
Grace Cofle14
Allamica Cofle15
Luther Cofle9
James Cofle6
The Charlotte City Directory has Israel working at Elizabeth Mills as a machine operator. 


ame:Israel S Coble
Gender:Male
Residence Year:1910
Street address:400 E 15th
Residence Place:Charlotte, North Carolina
Occupation:Mill Opr
Spouse:Rosa Coble 
Publication Title:Charlotte, North Carolina, City Directory, 19

Of his own children, Amos was boarding with a Whitley family in Cabarrus County, 

Name:William Whitley
Age in 1910:59
Birth Year:abt 1851
Birthplace:North Carolina
Home in 1910:Township 1, Cabarrus, North Carolina
Race:White
Gender:Male
Relation to Head of House:Head
Marital Status:Married
Spouse's Name:Molly Whitley
Father's Birthplace:North Carolina
Mother's Birthplace:North Carolina
Neighbors:View others on page
Household Members:
NameAge
William Whitley59
Molly Whitley53
Varchey Whitley16
Amos Cable18

The other two are not to be found in 1910. Perhaps they were together. Somewhere they may be in a transcription error waiting to be recognized. 

And then, by January of 1911, Israel has taken his new wife Rosa and his stepchildren, and has moved to Greensboro. 

Tuesday, Jan. 17 1911 edition of the Greensboro Record, Greensboro, NC


January 1911, The Greensboro Record, Greensboro, NC

Israel got in trouble. He had married Rosa without divorcing Angeline, but said he thought she was dead. As much traveling from mill to mill as he was doing, how could anyone have gotten word? The two living wives found out about each other and bam! Israel is in jail for bigamy. He claimed that his first wife (Sarah Murray/Coley) had died of consumption, and the second (Sarah Eugenia Lee) had died suddenly. The Tuesday, January 12, 1911 edition of the Greensboro Record reported that "Wife No 2 got onto his game and was instrumental in causing his arrest...Sheriff Jones from Stanly County says Coble not only has a wife living in that county, but has two wives dead, the intimation being that he put them out of the way". Basically, the assumptions were that Israel may have killed his wives, or some other kind of foul play was involved. 
Jan. 24, 1911 The Evening Chronicle, Charlotte, Israel Coble

The papers do not go on to report the outcome of this event, or the determination of any judge, but clearly, Israel did not serve any time, wife Rosa went her own way and Angeline continued to live in Stanly County with her children until her death in 1945. This report of Angeline is from her Find-a-Grave memorial:

Birth: Nov. 5, 1855
Stanly County
North Carolina, USA
Death: Jun. 20, 1945
Stanly County
North Carolina, USA

Jason Hartsell, 79, of Stanfield has fond memories of his great-grandmother, Benona Anceline Hartsell, whom he stayed with when he was young.

Benona's health declined following a fall which resulted in a broken hip. She died June 20, 1945.

The mother of Benona was a Whitley. The old Whitley records indicated that Benona and her older sister, Rebecca, were buried next to their mother.

Elizabeth Carolina Whitley was the 11th child of George Whitley III and Rebecca Cagle. She married Daniel Monroe Furr and with him had eight children, including Rebecca Furr, who was born in 1848, and Benona Anceline Furr, born in 1855.

While Rebecca never married and her date of death is unknown, her sister Benona married Franklin Hartsell. Rebecca was buried closest to her mother, Benona buried next to her sister.

At 9 a.m. Aug. 27, Jason and Virginia Hartsell, their granddaughter, Anita Hartsell Stevens, and Eldridge Furr, trustee treasurer of Liberty Hill Primitive Baptist Church, gathered at the grave site as the markers for Benona and her sister were placed.

"It pleases me that we can put up a monument," Furr said."

Backing up a bit, Rosa was a bit of a traveler on her own.

Rosa was the second of three children of William C Almond and Minta JuliaAnn Sides. They were married in Stanly County on June 3, 1860.

Name:William C Almond
Age in 1860:21
Birth Year:abt 1839
Home in 1860:StanlyNorth Carolina
Gender:Male
Post Office:Albemarle
Value of real estate:View image
Household Members:
NameAge
William C Almond21
Minta Almond20

The Civil War came and went and Minta Sides Almond joined the ranks of many other widowed women in the county, but she was fortunate more than most, before the end of the decade, she had found another husband, marrying John F. Hatley on Oct 23, 1869.
Name:Monty Hatley
[Minty Hattley
Age in 1870:29
Birth Year:abt 1841
Birthplace:North Carolina
Home in 1870:Almond, Stanly, North Carolina
Race:White
Gender:Female
Post Office:Albemarle
Value of real estate:View image
Household Members:
NameAge
John F Hatley25
Monty Hatley29
Henry Almond8
Rosanna Almond5
Olivia Almond3
Minty would also have 3 children by her second husband, giving Rosa 3 half-siblings, Lawrence, Lillie and Ella Hatley, in addition to her older brother Henry Almond and younger sister Olivia.


Sandy SidesBarbaAlmonds, Stanly, North Carolinaabt 1824North CarolinaSelf(Head)
View RecordBarba SidesSandyAlmonds, Stanly, North Carolinaabt 1825North CarolinaWife
View RecordMinty HattleyAlmonds, Stanly, North Carolinaabt 1841North CarolinaSelf(Head)
View RecordLorance HattleyMintyAlmonds, Stanly, North Carolinaabt 1870North CarolinaSon
View RecordLillie HattleyMintyAlmonds, Stanly, North Carolinaabt 1873North CarolinaDaughter
View RecordElla HattleyMintyAlmonds, Stanly, North Carolinaabt 1875North CarolinaDaughter
View RecordHenry AlmondAlmonds, Stanly, North Carolinaabt 1861North Carolina
View RecordRosa AlmondAlmonds, Stanly, North Carolinaabt 1865North Carolina
View RecordJane Almond

Almonds, Stanly, North Carolinaabt 1867North Carolina

1880 would find Mintie again a widow, living beside her parents with all 6 of her children. Henry would be counted twice in this census, however, as on another day, he was working for the neighbors and was enumerated a second time with them.

On September 23, 1889, Rosa would become a bride herself, and marry Calvin Bunton, sometimes seen as Bunting, son of Wiley and Sarah. The relationship obviously began prior to the wedding as firstborn Mary J. Bunton (later Mrs. Thomas Holshouser), was born in May of 1885 and William B Bunton was born January 13, 1889. Addia B would follow in 1890, Gracie M in 1895 and Luther was most likelly the infant counted in the 1900 census. Youngest son James would come along in 1904. Rosa is alone with her children in the 1900 census, Mary already married and William missing, and is called a widow. If Calvin was dead, he could not possibly have been the father of James.

Name:Rose Bunton
Age:35
Birth Date:Jun 1864
Birthplace:North Carolina
Home in 1900:Poplar Tent, Cabarrus, North Carolina
Race:White
Gender:Female
Relation to Head of House:Head
Marital Status:Widowed
Father's Birthplace:North Carolina
Mother's Birthplace:North Carolina
Mother: number of living children:6
Mother: How many children:7
Occupation:View on Image
Neighbors:View others on page
Household Members:
NameAge
Rose Bunton35
Addia B Bunton9
Gracie M Bunton4
Bunton0
Mary J Holsouser18
Thomas Holsouser20
Crofford Holsouser60
So, sometime in between this 1900 census, and the first of the year, January 3, 1907, Rosa ran into Israel Coble. Growing up in Western Stanly County, they may have known each other as children. As the papers said Israel traveled from Cotton Mill to Cotton Mill, maybe Rosa went to work in the cotton mills as well, putting her children to work there, as families in need often did in those days. They took off to Bessamer City, in Gaston County, got married, and then moved to Charlotte, and in 1911, just 4 years later Rosa found out about all Israel's wives and that Angeline was still living and contacted the police.

1920 finds Rosa still using the surname "Coble" and living in Forsyth County with her sons, Will, Luther and James and a young couple boarding with them. The occupation for all of them - Cotton Mill workers.

Name:Rosa Cobb
Age:55
Birth Year:abt 1865
Birthplace:North Carolina
Home in 1920:South Fork, Forsyth, North Carolina
Race:White
Gender:Female
Relation to Head of House:Head
Marital Status:Widowed
[Widow] 
Father's Birthplace:North Carolina
Mother's Birthplace:North Carolina
Neighbors:View others on page
Household Members:
NameAge
Rosa Cobb55
William Bunton31
Luther Bunton21
James Bunton15
Jetus Johnson24
Lizzie Johnson21


Rosa, despite now being in her middle years, did not remain single. In 1926, she married widower John Cabin Ayers.

Name:Rosa Coble
Gender:Female
Birth Date:abt 1871
Age:55
Race:White
Spouse:John C Ayers
Spouse Gender:Male
Spouse Age:50
Spouse Race:White
Marriage Date:3 Jul 1926
Marriage County:Forsyth
Marriage State:North Carolina
John C Ayers was from Virginia and so was his parents. Somehow the census taker got it wrong for Rosa in 1930, shown with John, a widower, and his two youngest sons.

Name:Rosa Ayers
Gender:Female
Birth Year:abt 1865
Birthplace:Virginia
Race:White
Home in 1930:South Fork, Forsyth, North Carolina
Map of Home:View Map
Marital Status:Married
Relation to Head of House:Wife
Spouse's Name:John C Ayers
Father's Birthplace:Virginia
Mother's Birthplace:Virginia
Occupation:

Education:

Military service:

Rent/home value:

Age at first marriage:

Parents' birthplace:
Neighbors:View others on page
Household Members:
NameAge
John C Ayers53
Rosa Ayers65
Victor Ayers21
Arther Ayers10
Rosa did not live long after this, she passed away in Forsyth County in 1933, however, she was brought to Stanly County to be buried in the cemetery with her Almond family.

Name:Mrs Rosa Ayers
[Mrs Rosa Almond] 
Gender:Female
Race:White
Age:63
Birth Date:20 Jun 1870
Birth Place:Stanley, North Carolina, United States
Death Date:15 Jul 1933
Death Location:High Point, Guilford
Spouse's Name:J C Ayers
Father's Name:William Almond
Mother's name:Mintie Almond
Her children disregarded her last two changes of name and buried her with theirs.
Name:Rosa Bunton
Birth Date:29 Jun 1864
Age at Death:69
Death Date:15 Jul 1933
Burial Place:Albemarle, Stanly County, North Carolina, USA
URL:http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-...

But what about Israel?

He remained the marrying man. On March 24, 1919, Israel S. Coble, now 53, married Lucy A. Kerr, 46, the daughter of Richard F. Kerr and Mary Alice Dunlap Kerr from Charlotte. They were married in Mecklenburg County, but swiftly made for Concord in Cabarrus County, where they showed up in the 1920 census. Israel was again working in a Cotton Mill. 
Name:Lucy A Coble
Age:46
Birth Year:abt 1874
Birthplace:North Carolina
Home in 1920:Concord Ward 1, Cabarrus, North Carolina
Race:White
Gender:Female
Relation to Head of House:Wife
Marital Status:Married
Spouse's Name:Isreal S Coble
Father's Birthplace:North Carolina
Mother's Birthplace:North Carolina
Neighbors:View others on page
Household Members:
NameAge
Isreal S Coble53
Lucy A Coble46


Did he divorce Benona Angeline Furr Hartsell and was his marriage to Rosa declared null and void? Or did he commit his third case of polygamy? In any case, his marriage to this fifth wife did not last long either. 

On December 21, 1922, 49 year old Lucy Kerr Coble passed away. By this time, the state was issuing death certificates and Lucy's said she died of tuberculosis. Her address was given as 407 East 13th Street in Charlotte, so in two years time, Israel had moved again. 



At age 56, Israel was single again, but did not remain so long. I did not locate a marriage license for Israel and his sixth wife, Rinda Ruth Smith, but in the 1926 Charlotte City directory, he is listed as single, an employee of Elizabeth Mills, and living near his youngest son, Israel Lorenzo Coble, and wife Geneva.

The 1930 census finds Israel and his sixth wife living in the Mallard Creek area and Israel employed as farm labor on a "General" farm. So the marriage must have ocured between 1926 and 1930. They may have went across the border from Charlotte into South Carolina. Marriages were easy to obtain there and many North Carolina couples did. Records for South Carolina are hard to obtain, however. Rinda or Rindy A. Smith was from Georgia and the daughter of Elijah and Susan.

Name:I S Coble
[J S Coble] 
Gender:Male
Birth Year:abt 1865
Birthplace:North Carolina
Race:White
Home in 1930:Mallard Creek, Mecklenburg, North Carolina
Map of Home:View Map
Marital Status:Married
Relation to Head of House:Head
Spouse's Name:Ruth Coble
Father's Birthplace:North Carolina
Mother's Birthplace:North Carolina
Occupation:

Education:

Military service:

Rent/home value:

Age at first marriage:

Parents' birthplace:
Neighbors:View others on page
Household Members:
NameAge
I S Coble65
Ruth Coble58

Rinda Smith Coble died in 1936, leaving Israel a widower once more. 

Name:Mrs Rinda Coble
[Mrs Rinda Smith] 
Gender:Female
Race:White
Age:64
Birth Date:6 Mar 1872
Death Date:16 Nov 1936
Death Location:Derita, Mecklenburg
Spouse's Name:Israel Coble
Father's Name:Elija Smith
Mother's name:Susanne Abbie

View original image
She had breast cancer and Lucy Kerr Coble had died of TB, so there was no question as to whether Israel played a part in it. 

1940, the last available census, finds Israel alone and boarding with the Philemon family.
Name:Israel Coble
Age:75
Estimated birth year:abt 1865
Gender:Male
Race:White
Birthplace:North Carolina
Marital Status:Widowed
Relation to Head of House:Lodger
Home in 1940:Charlotte, Mecklenburg, North Carolina
Map of Home in 1940:View Map
Street:N Davidson Street
House Number:1206
Inferred Residence in 1935:Charlotte, Mecklenburg, North Carolina
Residence in 1935:Same Place
Resident on farm in 1935:No
Sheet Number:4B
Attended School or College:No
Highest Grade Completed:None
Weeks Worked in 1939:0
Income:0
Income Other Sources:Yes
Neighbors:View others on page
Household Members:
NameAge
Charlie Philemon51
Lillie Philemon47
Ellis Philemon19
Ruby Philemon17
Ruth Philemon15
Israel Coble75

I have not found a death certificate for Israel. There is no record of him after the 1940 census, but I am certain he is not still around. But he left us a mystery in more ways than one. 

Israel Coble supposedly is buried in the old family cemetery of the Rehobeth Church with many of the Aldridge and Murray families. The mystery is in the date of his demise. 
Israel Coble
His birth year of 1866 is correct, but he clearly did not die in 1926. So who is buried in the grave of Israel Coble? Is it Israel? If so, where did the date of 1926 come from. When did Israel actually die? And where? Did he marry again, perhaps, at age 80? And what manner of man WAS Israel? Was he really a black widower as the newspapers suggested, or was he just that unlucky in love? He clearly loved women and he clearly skipped from city to city and mill to mill. 

A quick synopsis of the life and loves of  Israel S. Coble: 

Born: January 6, 1866 in Big Lick, Stanly County, NC

Married 1st: December 31, 1882 Sarah Murray-Coley , age 16
1886  Daughter Sarah Coble born
1891 Son Amos Ozell Coble born

Married 2nd: April 20, 1895 Sarah Eugenia Lee
1897 Son Israel Lorenzo Coble born

Married 3rd January 6, 1900 Benita Angeline Furr Hartsell

Married 4th January 3, 1907 Rosa Almond Bunton

Arrested for Bigamy: January, 1911

Married 5th: March 24, 1919 Lucy Kerr

 Widowed upon death of Lucy Kerr: December 1, 1922

Married 6th: Rinda Smith (between 1926 and 1930

Widowed upon death of Rinda Smith on November 16, 1936

Boarding with the Philemon family, April 1940

Buried (maybe) in Rehobeth Church Cemetery: Death unknown. 

The advent of the twentieth century brought greater mobility to the citizens of the Carolina Piedmont and allowed men like Israel Coble, born in a family so large they were lost, to travel from city to city on a whim, apparently. First trains, then cars, opened up a world where women, as well, now able to find jobs and support themselves, without the benefit or burden of a husband. Women like Rosa Almond, a child during the Civil War, were a world away from their mothers and grandmothers in their dependence upon men and their willingness to accept the abuses of a roving one. 
There were many stories in the hills of Stanly County, and that of Israel S. Coble was just one. 

Descendants of Israel Coble:

Sarah Coble married William Daniel Broadway (brother of the husband of Israel's sister Isabell). 
      One child: Lillian E. Broadway married Wilborn A Foster

Amos Ozell Coble married Carrie Leona Jordan
      Three Children: Roy Ozell, Evelyn, Francis

Israel Lorenzo Coble married Geneva Reid Fincher
      Two children: Boyce Fincher Coble, Eugenia Coble.
          



Amos Acts Out.

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From the Concord Daily Tribune, Feb. 8 1911


Amos Coble was the only son of Israel S. Coble and his first wife, Sarah Murray/Coley. He is mentioned in the estate records of his grandfather, Edmund Murray (aka Coley), along with his sister, Sarah Coble Broadway.  Edmund Murray had out-lived his daughter Sarah, and her two children were nearly adults, when his estate papers were brought to court and questioned by the division of his heirs. Some believed others were not entitled to a share.  This dispute eventually led to the murder of Edmund's son John by two of his teenaged Great Grandsons. This story is featured in the post: The Murder of John Murray.

At the age of 27, Sarah, daughter of Edmund, had married a teenaged boy named Israel Coble. Both families were from Stanly County, North Carolina, located in the Southwestern Piedmont section of the state. I featured Israel in the recent post:The Six Wives of Israel Coble.

These families existed in the Victorian Era/turn of the century North Carolina. They lived in a time when suddenly travel had become quicker and easier, 'The Train Age", and industries were springing up, some relocating from the industrialized north, to take advantage of the South's abundance of cotton and displaced farm families aka 'cheap labor'.

Amos Coble's father was said to have skipped from Cotton Mill to Cotton Mill and his movements show he skipped from town to town. According to a later interview in court, Israel Coble stated that his first wife, Sarah Murray Coble, had died of 'consumption'. Consumption is what we now refer to as tuberculosis, or "TB" and it was rampant in that era.

By the time young Amos shows up in his first census, Israel has married his third wife, Angeline Furr, as his second wife, Eugenia Lee died after having her only child, Lorenzo. Amos is seen by his middle name "Ozell", here.


Name:Ozell Coble
Age:8
Birth Date:abt 1892
Birthplace:North Carolina
Home in 1900:Johns River, Cabarrus, North Carolina
Race:White
Gender:Female
Relation to Head of House:Daughter
Marital Status:Single
Father's Name:Israel Coble
Father's Birthplace:North Carolina
Mother's name:Angeline Coble
Mother's Birthplace:North Carolina
Occupation:View on Image
Neighbors:View others on page
Household Members:
NameAge
Israel Coble35
Angeline Coble40
Sarah Coble14
Ozell Coble8
Lorenzo Coble1

By 1910, young Amos has moved to Cabarrus County and working as a laborer on a farm. He was on his own and his sister Sarah Coble Broadway had already passed away after having only one child, Lillian.


Name:Amos Cable
[Amos Coble] 
Age in 1910:18
Birth Year:abt 1892
Birthplace:North Carolina
Home in 1910:Township 1, Cabarrus, North Carolina
Race:White
Gender:Male
Relation to Head of House:Brother
Marital Status:Single
Father's Birthplace:North Carolina
Mother's Birthplace:North Carolina
Neighbors:View others on page
Household Members:
NameAge
William Whitley59
Molly Whitley53
Varchey Whitley16
Amos Cable18

Although the transcriber lists the relationship as "brother", that is an incorrect translation. The actual document says "boarder".

So about the time of the above incident in 1911, Amos was on his own, and his father was in a great deal of trouble legally. It seems he and his third wife Angeline had parted ways and Israel and his fourth wife, Rosa Almond Coble, were living in Charlotte. Rosa discovered that Israel had not taken the time nor trouble to divorce his third wife and went to the police. This event may have put an additional stress on young Amos, and lead to the above reported incident with the gun.

But Amos and his troubling gun were no strangers to the courts or police. Just two years prior, in 1909, he'd had other problems.
Amos Coble
From the Concord Daily Tribune, May 2, 1909


It could have very well have been family problems that was at the source of young Amos Ozell Coble's woes. He'd lost his mother at a young age, and seemed displaced by the gypsy existence and multi-marrying existence of his father. There were orphanages about, but not a safety net for children as we have in existence today. Many fell through the cracks and several were on their own to fend for themselves and find work at young ages, especially teenagers. Intact families usually had hefty broods of their own and did not need another mouth to feed. A youngster was fortunate if they found someone to take them in.

After his first run-in with the law, Amos would be forced to mature.

Amos Coble  Event Type:Draft Registration  Event Date:1917-1918  Event Place:Charlotte City, North Carolina, United States   Gender:Male  Birth Date:08 Aug 1891   Birthplace:Stanley, North Carolina, United States Nationality:United States Affiliate Publication Title:World War I Selective Service System Draft Registration Cards Affiliate Publication  Number: M1509GS Film number :1765627 Digital Folder Number:005152102 Image Number:05715

World War I forced a lot of young men to mature.


Amos became a painter and settled in Charlotte, Mecklengurg County. He married Carrie Leona Jordan, the daughter of Thomas and Carrie Fisher Jordan of South Carolina and became the father of 8 children, 3 whom died as infants:

1920 Roy Ozell Coble
1923 Evelyn Marjorie Coble
1926 Twin: Carroll Helen Coble (lived 1 month)
1926 Twin: Harold Amos Coble (lived 7 months)
1929 Francis Pauline Coble
1932 Patsy Ruth Coble
1934 Alvin Leon Coble (died as child)
1936 Catherine Ann Coble


Today's strict laws concerning guns and teenagers would have unfolded into an entirely different story for Amos Coble. Fortunately, he was born at the turn of the century, when he was still given a chance to grow up, become a mature, contributing member of society, have a family and live out his life.

Amos passed away on July 22, 1944, of a cerebral hemorrhage, at the age of 52. He is buried in Rock Hill, South Carolina. His death certificate states that he was the son of Israel S. Coble and Sarah Coley. Even after all of those years, no one could cement the name of Murray to the descendants of Edmund Murray (aka Coley).  His widow Carrie, lived to be 72, and is buried in Charlotte, Mecklenburg, North Carolina.


Amos Coble
Concord Daily Tribune, May 24, 1909



MECKLENBURG

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After about 3 years of 'serious' research and traveling to many North Carolina counties, and a few in South Carolina and Virginia, I finally broke down last week and made it into Mecklenburg County to do research, just an hour away. I've not made it to the register of deeds or any history room at any library yet, just to the guilds of the Olde Mecklenburg Society, an organization of which I recently became a member.

Link to The Olde Mecklenburg Society
My Grandmother as a girl: Bertha Virginia Lemmonds
Roughly 25% of my heritage comes from families who settled in Mecklenburg County, some spilling over into Cabarrus, where I've been multiple times doing research, or into Union, where I've been once. You would think I would have made it there by now, but Mecklenburg is a monster county, with a county seat called Charlotte that has infected counties all around and even seeping into South Carolina with her urban sprawl. Charlotte is protected by a loop of roads traveled by people imagining themselves as immortal and driving like participants in the Coca-Cola 5000, 100 miles an hour in a 45 zone, weaving in and out of traffic faster than a ping-pong ball in a professional game. I've never been trained to drive Nascar, so I avoid Charlotte and roads like Independence Motor Speedway at all cost.

This time however, in an effort to peruse the Lemmonds files, I braved that cursed road for the 5 or 10 minutes I had to endure it to make it to the Archives. It was well worth the wait.

Lemmonds, or Lemmons, or Lemons, all have the same origin, was the family name of my paternal grandmother. They were a family of movers and shakers, therefore rather easy to trace, as they married persons of their same ilk, the kind who've left their footprints in the sand, so to speak. I really have had to do no research with them. It's been done. All I have to do is read what is already there and follow my own path to the origin. A road already cleared.

They are interested, none-the-less. Very. They married into Whites, Walkers, Lattas, Alexanders, Pfifers, McCoys,  Means, Query's and Starnes's, among others. Those firstborn and revolutionary families who helped  shaped Olde Mecklenburg, and ultimately, the fate of North Carolina. A noble heritage.

But what can I post of them? Any information has been pre-discovered by someone else. How can I post anything of my ancestors when 5 or 6 other people have assembled it, using their own words. What new words are there to use, that will not resemble plagiarism?
Flora Adeline Lemmonds (Mrs. Willaim Davies)
There aren't any. That is why I haven't posted on them, excluding the story of Leavy Starnes Lemmons and her 6 black hogs or her husband Bob being the walking, dancing mailman of the Clear Creek community. Those stories were strictly our branch, and no, that I've discovered, had posted anything of our branch, after the turn of the century.

But prior to the year 1900 or so, our branch runs into that mighty river of 'everyone else's research. I might post some of it, the facts, but it will cross over into all of this 'already been there/done that' kind of thing. So, it will have to be facts only. Black and White. The facts belong to us all.

Hats off to all of the distant cousins who've paved this road for me and made it a bit unnecessary to have to fight my way in and out of Charlotte.

The grand Queen of Carolina cities is a noble lass...but she has too many knights and bees.




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