Quantcast
Channel: Job's Children
Viewing all 495 articles
Browse latest View live

The Estate of Joseph Jordan

$
0
0

Sources state that Joseph Jordan was born in Edgecomb County, North Carolina, around about 1756 to 1761. He died in Anson County, North Carolina, where he had a 100 acre farm.

In the 1800 census of Anson County, there were 3 listings for Joseph Jordan. One is clearly listed for Joseph Jordan, Jr. I have still to try to discern any possibly relation between the other two.

Joseph Jordan was a descendant of a Richard Jordan who had settled around the Isle of Wight and Surry counties in Virginia.

I fully believe it is through this line and group of families who migrated into Anson County that Richard Howell, the first husband of my 4th Great-Grandmother, Sarah Elizabeth Winfield Howell Davis, and his brother, Jordan Howell are descended. Richard had a son named Jordan and Jordan had a son named Richard. The two names crisscross through the family line.
Name:Joseph Jordan
Home in 1800 (City, County, State):Fayetteville, Anson, North Carolina
Free White Persons - Males - Under 10:1
Free White Persons - Males -10 thru 15:1
Free White Persons - Males - 45 and over:1
Free White Persons - Females - Under 10:1
Free White Persons - Females - 10 thru 15:1
Free White Persons - Females - 45 and over:1
Number of Household Members Under 16:4
Number of Household Members Over 25:2
Number of Household Members:6
Joseph Jordan Number One has a household of 6 members. One male and one female over 45. Probably he and his wife. They have 4 children, one son and one daughter between 10 and 15 and one son and one daughter under 10.

Name:Joseph Jordan
Home in 1800 (City, County, State):Fayetteville, Anson, North Carolina
Free White Persons - Males - Under 10:2
Free White Persons - Males - 26 thru 44:2
Free White Persons - Males - 45 and over:1
Free White Persons - Females - Under 10:3
Free White Persons - Females - 16 thru 25:2
Free White Persons - Females - 26 thru 44:2
Free White Persons - Females - 45 and over:1
Number of Household Members Under 16:5
Number of Household Members Over 25:6
Number of Household Members:13

Joseph Jordan Number Two had a much larger household of 13 people. It shows one Male over 45 and one Female over 45. This may have been a married couple. There were two males and two females between 26 and 44. This could have been children, children and their spouses combinations, or employees or a combination of children and employees. There were 2 females aged 16 to 25. These were most likely daughters, but possibly not. The two males under 10 and 3 females under 10 could be children, but probably grandchildren, as there are no individuals listed in the 10 to 15 age gap, the continuity is lost. 

Name:Joseph Jordan Jr
[Joseph Jordan Junior] 
Home in 1800 (City, County, State):Fayetteville, Anson, North Carolina
Free White Persons - Males - Under 10:1
Free White Persons - Males -10 thru 15:1
Free White Persons - Males - 26 thru 44:1
Free White Persons - Females - Under 10:2
Free White Persons - Females - 26 thru 44:1
Number of Household Members Under 16:4
Number of Household Members Over 25:2
Number of Household Members:6
The third Joseph Jordan is designated as a "Junior", most likely a son of one of the older Jordans, but not necessarily so. He also has a family of four, One adult male and one adult female between the ages of 26 and 44, one boy 10 to 14, one boy under 10 and 2 females under 10. 

ame:Joseph Jordan
Home in 1820 (City, County, State):Bennet, Anson, North Carolina
Enumeration Date:August 7, 1820
Free White Persons - Males - 10 thru 15:1
Free White Persons - Males - 16 thru 25:1
Free White Persons - Males - 45 and over:1
Free White Persons - Females - 16 thru 25:1
Free White Persons - Females - 45 and over :1
Number of Persons - Engaged in Agriculture:3
Free White Persons - Under 16:1
Free White Persons - Over 25:2
Total Free White Persons:5
Total All Persons - White, Slaves, Colored, Other:5

There was no 1810 census available. By 1820, only one Joseph Jordan remained. Most likely, this was Joseph Jordan, Jr. 

There was a thriving family group of Jordans in Montgomery County, NC as well, that was a part of Anson until 1799. It was highly likely that they were all related. 

The above document is from July of 1835. Joseph Jordan did not leave a will, therefore, his property was divided among his surviving heirs. 
 
Names and areas mentioned in the division are: John Jordan, Robert Tanner's line, bank of Lick Creek, lot 2 allotted to Seth Butts and wife Polly Butts, Robert Tanner's line, Richard Jordan, William Howell in right of his mother, Hannah Howell, Edmund Lilly's line. Given under our respective hands and seals this 6th day of May, 1835.

Grey Ledbetter
Jesse Bruton
Stephen Williams
Richard Crowder
John Sturdivant




Edmund Lilly is the key to where this property was located, as his holdings have been solidly researched and located. 


The property was where modern Anson, Montgomery and Stanly counties all come together. As Peter Winfield, Sarah Howell's father, settled on the Rocky River (both Stanly and Anson sides), near the fork of the Rocky and PeeDee, and this same area was not far from the known lands of Edmund Lilly, there is no doubt this set of Jordans and Howells were mostly likely the family of Richard Howell and his brother Jordan. Jordan married Martha Randall (of the Randalls Church Randalls). They had sons Richard, John Randall and James G. Howell. 

Hardy Creek was historically known as "Ugly Creek" and the land on the Stanly County side of the Rocky River in the "boot" between Jacks Branch and Ugly Creek was where the lands of Job Davis, Sarah's second husband lived. Some of it was a grant to Job, other parts of it were Sarah's portion of her father Peter Winfield's lands, other parts, still Job purchased of neighbors. 

While no direct evidence may ever be found due to Courthouse fires and documents being lost to time. Circumstantial evidence and commonality of locale can often point to a reasonable assumption of familial connections. And that may be as good as it ever gets. 





A Soldiers Letter: Joseph Honeycutt

$
0
0
I was scrolling through The Monroe Journal, when I found this article concerning a Civil War Soldier from Stanly County. He had been caught attempting to go home to see his family and was sentenced to death, apparently by his own side. Its a melancholy goodbye to a wife and children he would never get to see again, and it was his love for them that was the catalyst of the actions that led to his execution.



Joseph Honeycutt (or Huneycutt) was the brother of R. H. G. Huneycutt, who had been mentioned in this blog before, and will be mentioned again, as he plays a part in some other lives I've been researching.

Below is the 1850 census, showing his twin daughters Mary and Martha, whom he mentioned in his letter, and probably the children he wanted sermons preached for.
Name:Joseph Honeycutt
Age:27
Birth Year:abt 1823
Birthplace:North Carolina
Home in 1850:Almonds, Stanly, North Carolina
Gender:Male
Family Number:434
Household Members:
NameAge
Joseph Honeycutt27
Nancy Honeycutt28
Martha Honeycutt5
Mary Honeycutt5
Julius Honeycutt3
Ephraim Honeycutt1

By 1860, the twins had passed away, perhaps falling ill to the same ailment as twins are close. Another little girl, Adelaide, had joined the family. As she was not mentioned in her father's letter, she probably passed away as an infant, and probably before her father was executed.
Name:Joseph Honeycut
Age in 1860:39
Birth Year:abt 1821
Birthplace:North Carolina
Home in 1860:Stanly, North Carolina
Gender:Male
Post Office:Albemarle
Value of real estate:View image
Household Members:
NameAge
Joseph Honeycut39
Nancy Honeycut39
Julius Honeycut12
Ephraim Honeycut10
Hazelton Honeycut8
Joel Honeycut4
Adelaid Honeycut9/12
The 1870 census shows the widowed Nancy Allman Honeycutt with her 4 surviving children living next to Daniel Lefler and his family, whom Joseph mentioned in his letter. She may have been a tenant on his property and he appears to have perhaps helped to take care of the family, although he had a large one of his own.

Below, Daniel and Jane Lefler family, friends of the Burlesons and deliverer of the letter, in 1860
Name:Daniel Lefler
Age in 1860:49
Birth Year:abt 1811
Birthplace:North Carolina
Home in 1860:StanlyNorth Carolina
Gender:Male
Post Office:Albemarle
Value of real estate:View image
Household Members:
NameAge
Daniel Lefler49
Jane Lefler36
Colemon Lefler22
Elizabeth Lefler19
Susan Lefler17
Monroe Lefler14
John Lefler9
Green Lefler7
Julia A Lefler6
Rufus Lefler4
And then the Daniel Lefler familly in 1870. The family is listed in a strange order and Jack Rowland, no doubt a relative of Margaret Jane Rowland Lefler.

Name:Daniel Lefler
Age in 1870:59
Birth Year:abt 1811
Birthplace:North Carolina
Home in 1870:Ridenhour, StanlyNorth Carolina
Race:White
Gender:Male
Post Office:Albemarle
Value of real estate:View image
Household Members:
NameAge
Daniel Lefler59
Coleman Lefler35
John Lefler20
Gaeen Lefler19
Rufus Lefler16
James Lefler10
Frank Lefler5
Jefferson Lefler1
Jane Lefler44
Susan Lefler26
Julia Lefler17
Jack Rowland25

By 1880, widow Nancy Allman Honeycutt, had moved across the border into Cabarrus County with son Julius, whom his father worried "had no chance". 

Name:Nancy Honeycutt
Age:59
Birth Year:abt 1821
Birthplace:North Carolina
Home in 1880:Reed Misenheimers, Cabarrus, North Carolina
Race:White
Gender:Female
Relation to Head of House:Mother
Marital Status:Single
Father's Birthplace:North Carolina
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
Julius C. Honeycutt32
Louisa F. Honeycutt24
William A. Honeycutt5
Joseph P. Honeycutt2
Nancy Honeycutt59
But Julius fared as well as any in the area, working as a farmer and shoemaker, raising a family and living a long life, passing away at the age of 82 in 1929.

In 1900, Nancy was still alive, now living with daughter Rebecca Hazeltine Honeycutt Sides and family. She passed away about 1908, in Cabarrus County. This census shows her as the mother of 8 children, 4 living, so there was another child besides Mary, Martha and Adelaide who had passed away, that did not make a census. Perhaps it was a son, and had all passed away prior to their fathers' demise as he refers to them as "children" and not just girls or daughters.

Name:Nancy Honeycutt
Age:79
Birth Date:abt 1821
Birthplace:North Carolina
Home in 1900:Johns River, Cabarrus, North Carolina
Race:White
Gender:Female
Relation to Head of House:Mother in Law
[Mother-in-law] 
Marital Status:Widowed
Father's Birthplace:North Carolina
Mother's Birthplace:North Carolina
Mother: number of living children:4
Mother: How many children:8
Occupation:View on Image
Neighbors:View others on page
Household Members:
NameAge
J Wesley Sides50
Rebecka Sides49
Mathew Sides25
Marshal Sides21
Howard B Sides15
Florence Sides12
Charlie B Sides9
Chist Eury24
Derk Slough25
William Murr21
John Shive23
Gramper Major21
Lawson Brown30
Nancy Honeycutt79
Daniel Pool22

View
Original
Record

View original image

Mark Jones

$
0
0
While researching Lawrenceville, and the early days  of Stanly County, around the time the two counties were separated, I came across the name of Mark Jones again.

I first 'met' Mr. Jones while doing family research, and began to wonder what connection he had to them. Was he just an early 'mover and shaker' who had his hand in many changes of the time, land and politics, or was the connection deeper?

As in my research on the Kernachan's, the Jones family played a critical role in tracing migration of a group of families from Virginia south and west. As common a name as Jones was, one would not think that this would be the case, but with Vinkler Jones and his descendants, they left a mark and a great deal of intermarriage with the Booths, and the Kernachans, that their trail from Virginia to North Carolina to South Carolina, Alabama and Mississippi was undeniably beneficial in that research.

The Uwharrie River near El Dorado, North Carolina


Mark Jones was a resident of Stanly County. In the 1840 census, it seems that the enumerators were very knowledgeable about the separation that was to take place, and enumerated "East PeeDee" or the later Montgomery and "West PeeDee", or the side that was to become Stanly, as two separate entities already. They gave their numbers separately, which was:

"The number of persons within my Division consisting of 3692 free white persons, 52 free colored persons, and 1157 slaves, total 5171, appears on the foregoing schedule subscribed by me this 24 day of October in the year one thousand eight hundred and forty. 

James Allen

We certify that a correct copy of the above schedule signed by the  said James Allen  has been put up at  two of the most publick places within the Division open to the Inspection of all concerned. 

E. F. Lilly
G. J. Allen

As opposed to West Pee Dee, East Pee Dee was enumerated by John L. Christian, Assistant Marshall to the District of North Carolina. He counted for the east side of the river, the modern day county of Montgomery, 4259 free whites, 20 free persons of color and 1330 slaves, a total of 5609 people, trumping West Pee Dee (or present Stanly County), by 438.

Mr. James Allen was the enumerator and I had came across his name before. He, himself, eventually migrated to   , and married the widow of William Lilly, who had married Eliza Ann Winfield, daughter of Great, Great Uncle Edward Winfield. The Allen family was a very old name along the PeeDee River near the forks, having established one of the earliest towns in this area, and indeed, likely the very earliest in what is now Stanly County, Allenton. The area that was Allenton is primarily underwater due to the building of the dams across the Pee Dee. A street in Norwood, which began as center, Allenton Road, leads to the river where the town would have been and is now a river, or resort area. An early Revolutionary War battle, or skirmish, known as the Battle of Colstons Mill, was fought at a mill near this ancient little town.

But back to Mark Jones.

Mark Jones appeared in 3 census records. The last, 1850, gives us his nearest exact age or year of birth, about 1800 or 50 years of age. He is listed here as living alone.


Name:Mark Jones
Age:50
Birth Year:abt 1800
Birthplace:North Carolina
Home in 1850:Freemans, StanlyNorth Carolina
Gender:Male
Family Number:180
Household Members:
NameAge
Mark Jones50

His nearest possible neighbors, of those counted in the listing nearest to him were Ferdinand Morton, Sarah and Ann Fooks, Nathan Carter, Edmund Lilly, John Fesperman, Alexander Kirk, Eldridge Hall, John Calloway, Henry Pence, Michael Fersperman, Phillip A. Fesperman, Henry Pence, Lurena Huckabee, Arthur F. Atkins and John Calloway. This was his 'neighborhood', so to speak. You can already tell he was 'on the river' or near present day Badin.

Eldridge Hall turned out to be a relative, having married his niece. Eldridge Hall was the son of William "Billy" Hall. The Hall plantation was located near the present location of the old Alcoa Aluminum plant on Badin Lake.
site of hall plantation

Other neighbors of Mark Jones are called 'citizens of Palmerville', an old community located on the river between Old Whitney and Badin near Palmer Mountain, or attended Ebenezer Baptist Church, which is now Badin Baptist, and predated the town of Badin by more than a hundred years. The township in 1850 was known as Freemans, which seems to, in my research, have become Harris Township. I could be wrong, so don't take that as fact. Just my speculations.

The other 2 census's that Mark Jones appeared in are the 1830 and 1840, and pique my curiosity.

Name:Mark Jones
Home in 1830 (City, County, State):West Side Pee Dee River, Montgomery, North Carolina
Free White Persons - Males - 20 thru 29:1
Free White Persons - Males - 30 thru 39:1
Free White Persons - Females - Under 5:1
Slaves - Females - Under 10:4
Slaves - Females - 24 thru 35:2
Free White Persons - Under 20:1
Free White Persons - 20 thru 49:2
Total Free White Persons:3
Total Slaves:6
Total - All Persons (Free White, Slaves, Free Colored):9

In 1830, Mr. Jones had a household of 9 people. There was one male 30 to 39. In using the 1850 census, he would have been 30 and as Head of Household, this oldest male would likely have been Mark Jones. There is a younger man, aged 20 to 29, in his home and a little girl, under 5 years old. 
He also owned 6 slaves, all female, 2 young women, aged 24 to 35 and 4 little girls. 

Name:Mark Jones
Home in 1840 (City, County, State):West Pee Dee River,MontgomeryNorth Carolina
Free White Persons - Males - 40 thru 49:1
Free White Persons - Females - 10 thru 14:1
Free Colored Persons - Females - 24 thru 35:1
Slaves - Males - Under 10:4
Slaves - Males - 10 thru 23:5
Slaves - Males - 36 thru 54:1
Slaves - Females - Under 10:3
Slaves - Females - 24 thru 35:1
Slaves - Females - 36 thru 54:2
Persons Employed in Agriculture:10
Free White Persons - Under 20:1
Free White Persons - 20 thru 49:1
Total Free White Persons:2
Total Free Colored Persons:1
Total Slaves:16
Total All Persons - Free White, Free Colored, Slaves:19
By 1840, his household had grown to 19 persons. The younger male had disappeared. Was this perhaps and employee? But the young white female was still in his household, now between the ages of  10 and 14. Very likely to be the same girl. There was another unusual person in his household, a free female of color, aged 24 to 35. Was this one of the female slaves in the 1830 census that he had set free? Or perhaps a Native American nanny that he had hired to care for the young girl, as Native Americans were noted either as mulatto, or as FPOC's in these early census records. The 1850 census gives no hint as to whom this lady may have been, as the nearest female FPOC to where he lived in 1850 was Selena Shankle, a daughter of Tildy Shankle, a free black woman of the Fork area of Stanly County, who had a large family and a close relationship to the Biles family. In 1850, her daughter Selena was living with Isaac Biles, which would make sense as far as the Biles family connection. Selena was 19 in 1850, which would mean she was too young to have been the adult woman in Mr. Jones househole in 1840. There were also 16 slaves and 10 persons employed in agriculture. To break it down, there were 2 females 36 to 54, which seems to have been the adult females in 1830. There is also an adult male aged 36 to 54, who was not there in 1830, and 5 males 10 to 23. These men/boys were also not in the household in 1830. It appears Mr. Jones expanded his farming pursuits between 1830 and 1840 and needed the help. There is also a young woman between the ages of 24 and 35 and 7 children under 10, 3 girls and 4 boys, who were born during the decade between the census records. 
In the 1850 census, Mark Jones has 15 slaves, one less than in 1840, and the Free Woman of Color is gone. Also gone is the young white girl who grew up in his household. Was this his daughter? Three courthouse fires destroyed records in Montgomery County, so if Mark Jones was ever married, say, in the 1820's, had a daughter and her mother passed away by 1830, the records to prove it had been lost. 

In 1850, the men in the Jones household were 65, 35,30, 25, 20, 20, 18. The women were 45, 45, 25 and 18. There were also 4 children between 11 and 13, two boys and two girls. 

If Mark Jones had a daughter, and she was married by 1850, she predeceased him by 1858 and left no heirs, as all of the heirs mentioned in his estate records are nieces and nephews, no daughters, no grandchildren.


There were two marriages of Jones ladies in the very early marriages of Stanly County, the early 1850's, that did not give names of their parents. 

Mary Jones married widower Nathan Safely in 1851, but she moved with him to Mecklenburg County and is buried there with him, having died in 1905.

The other, Sarah Jones, married Lewis Smith in 1854, but she too, survived past 1858, and died prior to 1879, when Mr. Smith remarried Talitha Griffin. 

So the young woman in Mark Jones household remains a mystery. 

I thought maybe early court records may give a hint unto his life. 

He shows up fairly frequently during the early records of Stanly County. 

In the earliest most entries, he is posting as security for Samuel P. Morton, a direct ancestor of mine, in his bid for the office of clerk, as the new county is being organized.

In 1844, he was appointed to a commitee, along with Francis Locke and John F. Miller, to alot one year's provisions for Barbara Lefler and her family, the widow of Mathias Lefler.  Then later, he gave security for David  Kendall to be appointed the guardian of the orphans of Benjamin Cagle, Rebecca, Martha and David. In November session, this same year, he was appointed the administrator of Winny Shankle, and gave security with Travis Carter. The next mystery is to discover the identity of Winny Shankle. She is not easily found in the records or in any Shankle family tree.


In February, 1845, Mark Jones along with A. F. Atkins and Francis Locke were on a committee to settle with Samuel P. Morton as the executor of Job Calloway. Samuel P. Morton and Job Calloway are both direct ancestors of mine, Samuel P. Morton having married Job Calloway's daughter Vashti. Therefore, making him Job Calloway's son-in-law.  Later that spring, Mark Jones again posted bond in Morton's bid as Register.

Mark Jones served on the jury in November of 1845, and again soon after.

In his close relation with Francis Locke, he posted bond along with John Calloway, when Mr. Locke was appointed guardian of the orphans of George Carter, namely, Matilda, Mary, William, Clinton, James and Letitia.

In May of 1846, Mark Jones was again on a jury in the case of Solomon Hathcock vs Joshua Hearne. Solomon Hathcock, being the father of Rebecca Hathcock who married Job Davis's son E. W. Davis and Joshua Hearne being a member of the founding family of Albemarle.

The next entry gives more than a little rise. In May of 1856 still, this entry appeared "Francis Locke, E.L. Parker, and Samuel P. Morton appointed a committee to settle with Mark Jones, admin. of Winny Shad and report to next term. And then, before the name Winny, the name Lucretia is marked through. Then, later in the same session of court " Mark Jones permitted to amend his inventory as Admin of Winny Shad by returning a bond due from himself to said estate for $270.93, $50 having been mentioned by mistake on former return.

In August session of 1846, Mark Jones is mentioned several times. He stands security for E. L. Parker as guardian for the heirs of John Parker, namely, Eliza, Oney, Nicey Ann, Martha Orathy, Charlotte Francis, and Howell Alexander Parker.

He is again mentioned twice as the administrator of Winny Shad. So Shad, not Shankle, must have been Winny's correct surname, however, there were no Shad's in the county or anywhere near by on record.

The following census record from 25 years later however, may provide a link to the identity of Winnie Shad. With the close relationship between Mark Jones and the Parkers of Stanly County, and the Mauney family, which became a prominent family in both Stanly and Rowan County's, especially in the mining operations of Gold Hill, the occurance of these 4 young Gold miners in Cleveland County, might not be a coincidence.



Name:W Shad
Age in 1870:22
Birth Year:abt 1848
Birthplace:North Carolina
Home in 1870:Township 4, Cleveland, North Carolina
Race:White
Gender:Male
Post Office:White Planes
Value of real estate:View image
Household Members:
NameAge
G W Shad22
Joseph Parker26
E H Parker20
Harvey Mauney30

I took a few weeks to look into the Shad family of Stanly and surrounding families. There was a John Shad who arrived in the area with a railroad company from up north around the turn of the century (1900). Prior to that, the only Shad in late 1800 Stanly and Cabarrus counties were people of color. These persons stem from a female-led family who appear in Burke County in the 1850 and 1860's. They were denoted as "FOP's" or Free People of Color, prior to the Civil War. Therefore, Winny Shad was likely the female FOP in Mark Jones household in 1840.

The later mentions of Mark Jones in the court sessions were typical of the day:

In November of 1847, a deed from Michael Fesperman to Mark Jones was ordered to be registered and was proved by his friend, Samuel P. Morton.



In August of 1848, Mark Jones was a witness who gave testimony in the case against Ursula Forrest.
The verdict: "Ursula Forrest is an idiot or lunatic and is incapable of attending to her business and liable at any time to be imposed upon." This was on a petition entered by John G Forrest stating that she was of weak mind and non compos mentis.

A little research shows that this Ursula Forrest was the daughter of John Gresham Forrest and Mary Bailey Forrest. She was born about 1800 and would have been in her latter 40's at the time of this court hearing. She is only shown in one census, the 1850. She is shown as having died about 1857.

NAME:Urula Forrest
AGE:50
BIRTH YEAR:abt 1800
BIRTHPLACE:North Carolina
HOME IN 1850:Freemans, Stanly, North Carolina
GENDER:Female
FAMILY NUMBER:136
HOUSEHOLD MEMBERS:
NAMEAGE
Mary Forrest72
Urula Forrest50

In this census, she is shown living with her mother, Mary Bailey Forrest. As her father passed away prior, the John G Forrest who set up the petition was likely her brother, John Gresham Forrest, Jr. Her father also had a sister named Ursula Forrest who married Jeremiah Adderton. The younger Ursula then being her namesake.


Afterwards, Mark Jones just appeared in the records serving on juries or posting bonds with his associates. The next posts will be concerning his land records and 117 page estate settlement, which delineates and connects a lengthy Jones family spread out over several counties.



A Stanly County Christmas

$
0
0

I've not been posting much lately, as the Christmas Season leaves little free time for me. I did want to share a few mentions of Christmas traditions in my little part of the world, Stanly County, North Carolina.




Christmas would always begin when the big cedar Christmas Tree would be placed in the corner of the Church santuary, right behind the piano.

Next, trees would go up at home and at my grandparents. When I was small, these metalic aluminum trees in various colors were popular.

My grandparents loved these and they looked particularly good with blue balls and decorations.





Another favorite part of Christmas for me was when the upper room at Lowder's Hardware on the corner of First and Main Streets in Albemarle, became Toy Land. Old-fashioned Toy Stores held the most delight and artful decor. Nothing like them.



I would always gravitate towards the offerings of  Ceramic Toy Horses. Some of them came with books.

There was Black Beauty:

              Misty of Chincoteague.





Trigger, Roy Rogers horse



The story of the Morgan Horse:




There was Silver, or the whole Lone Ranger set complete with the Lone Ranger and Tonto and his Pinto, Scout.



Seabisquit.



And Mr. Ed, everyone's favorite Palomino.





And the menage of horse families and different breeds and I wished for them all.









Next, I would gravitate toward the captivating doll houses:



Gumby and Pokey dolls

 which also involved a horse, by the way.

Then the Easy Bake Ovens and Lite Brights:



And slinkys of all kinds:



Then the dolls. The obvious Barbie, Ken and Skipper:


But there were also Tammy dolls and her little sister Pepper, and Dawn dolls, a bit smaller.




But in the end, Barbie won the Fashion Doll war and Tammy and Dawn and their minions faded into memory and ebay.

There was the Mrs Beasley doll, made famous by the charactor of Buffy on the TV show, Family  Affair, and her counterpart, a Buffy Doll.


And who could forget the influence of Batman?
Everyone at daycare was either Batman or Batgirl.  Apparently no one wanted to be Robin.


There were also Trolls,
Munsters
And Caspar the Friendly Ghost with his pals Windy and Nightmare, another horse.


But it wasn't all about toys, even though at 4 and 7 and 10, toys are a major deal.

There were churchs, and still are, that would offer live Nativity scenes on Christmas Eve and Weekends.










Nearly everyone would decorate like the Griswolds.





As electricity bills have soared, the decor has became milder, except for a few holdouts.

Another tradition began as malls became popular, is the Annual Albemarle Downtown Christmas, where downtown merchants get to offer their best, with carolers, lights and food.




Albemarle becomes a scenic wonderland during this time of year. Several of the towns around hold Christmas parades, with bands, floats and the ever popular Santa's sleigh at the end. I remember best the years that Fred Kirby rode in the parade, a Charlotte, NC cowboy and Joey the Clown, also from Charlotte, nicer and less scary than Bozo.




The small community of Palestine, which is hardly more than a 5 Point Crossroads, also holds an annual Christmas parade.





Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year to Everyone!

Mark Jones

$
0
0
While researching Lawrenceville, and the early days  of Stanly County, around the time the two counties were separated, I came across the name of Mark Jones again.

I first 'met' Mr. Jones while doing family research, and began to wonder what connection he had to them. Was he just an early 'mover and shaker' who had his hand in many changes of the time, land and politics, or was the connection deeper?

As in my research on the Kernachan's, the Jones family played a critical role in tracing migration of a group of families from Virginia south and west. As common a name as Jones was, one would not think that this would be the case, but with Vinkler Jones and his descendants, they left a mark and a great deal of intermarriage with the Booths, and the Kernachans, that their trail from Virginia to North Carolina to South Carolina, Alabama and Mississippi was undeniably beneficial in that research.

The Uwharrie River near El Dorado, North Carolina


Mark Jones was a resident of Stanly County. In the 1840 census, it seems that the enumerators were very knowledgeable about the separation that was to take place, and enumerated "East PeeDee" or the later Montgomery and "West PeeDee", or the side that was to become Stanly, as two separate entities already. They gave their numbers separately, which was:

"The number of persons within my Division consisting of 3692 free white persons, 52 free colored persons, and 1157 slaves, total 5171, appears on the foregoing schedule subscribed by me this 24 day of October in the year one thousand eight hundred and forty. 

James Allen

We certify that a correct copy of the above schedule signed by the  said James Allen  has been put up at  two of the most publick places within the Division open to the Inspection of all concerned. 

E. F. Lilly
G. J. Allen

As opposed to West Pee Dee, East Pee Dee was enumerated by John L. Christian, Assistant Marshall to the District of North Carolina. He counted for the east side of the river, the modern day county of Montgomery, 4259 free whites, 20 free persons of color and 1330 slaves, a total of 5609 people, trumping West Pee Dee (or present Stanly County), by 438.

Mr. James Allen was the enumerator and I had came across his name before. He, himself, eventually migrated to   , and married the widow of William Lilly, who had married Eliza Ann Winfield, daughter of Great, Great Uncle Edward Winfield. The Allen family was a very old name along the PeeDee River near the forks, having established one of the earliest towns in this area, and indeed, likely the very earliest in what is now Stanly County, Allenton. The area that was Allenton is primarily underwater due to the building of the dams across the Pee Dee. A street in Norwood, which began as center, Allenton Road, leads to the river where the town would have been and is now a river, or resort area. An early Revolutionary War battle, or skirmish, known as the Battle of Colstons Mill, was fought at a mill near this ancient little town.

But back to Mark Jones.

Mark Jones appeared in 3 census records. The last, 1850, gives us his nearest exact age or year of birth, about 1800 or 50 years of age. He is listed here as living alone.


Name:Mark Jones
Age:50
Birth Year:abt 1800
Birthplace:North Carolina
Home in 1850:Freemans, StanlyNorth Carolina
Gender:Male
Family Number:180
Household Members:
NameAge
Mark Jones50

His nearest possible neighbors, of those counted in the listing nearest to him were Ferdinand Morton, Sarah and Ann Fooks, Nathan Carter, Edmund Lilly, John Fesperman, Alexander Kirk, Eldridge Hall, John Calloway, Henry Pence, Michael Fersperman, Phillip A. Fesperman, Henry Pence, Lurena Huckabee, Arthur F. Atkins and John Calloway. This was his 'neighborhood', so to speak. You can already tell he was 'on the river' or near present day Badin.

Eldridge Hall turned out to be a relative, having married his niece. Eldridge Hall was the son of William "Billy" Hall. The Hall plantation was located near the present location of the old Alcoa Aluminum plant on Badin Lake.
site of hall plantation

Other neighbors of Mark Jones are called 'citizens of Palmerville', an old community located on the river between Old Whitney and Badin near Palmer Mountain, or attended Ebenezer Baptist Church, which is now Badin Baptist, and predated the town of Badin by more than a hundred years. The township in 1850 was known as Freemans, which seems to, in my research, have become Harris Township. I could be wrong, so don't take that as fact. Just my speculations.

The other 2 census's that Mark Jones appeared in are the 1830 and 1840, and pique my curiosity.

Name:Mark Jones
Home in 1830 (City, County, State):West Side Pee Dee River, Montgomery, North Carolina
Free White Persons - Males - 20 thru 29:1
Free White Persons - Males - 30 thru 39:1
Free White Persons - Females - Under 5:1
Slaves - Females - Under 10:4
Slaves - Females - 24 thru 35:2
Free White Persons - Under 20:1
Free White Persons - 20 thru 49:2
Total Free White Persons:3
Total Slaves:6
Total - All Persons (Free White, Slaves, Free Colored):9

In 1830, Mr. Jones had a household of 9 people. There was one male 30 to 39. In using the 1850 census, he would have been 30 and as Head of Household, this oldest male would likely have been Mark Jones. There is a younger man, aged 20 to 29, in his home and a little girl, under 5 years old. 
He also owned 6 slaves, all female, 2 young women, aged 24 to 35 and 4 little girls. 

Name:Mark Jones
Home in 1840 (City, County, State):West Pee Dee River,MontgomeryNorth Carolina
Free White Persons - Males - 40 thru 49:1
Free White Persons - Females - 10 thru 14:1
Free Colored Persons - Females - 24 thru 35:1
Slaves - Males - Under 10:4
Slaves - Males - 10 thru 23:5
Slaves - Males - 36 thru 54:1
Slaves - Females - Under 10:3
Slaves - Females - 24 thru 35:1
Slaves - Females - 36 thru 54:2
Persons Employed in Agriculture:10
Free White Persons - Under 20:1
Free White Persons - 20 thru 49:1
Total Free White Persons:2
Total Free Colored Persons:1
Total Slaves:16
Total All Persons - Free White, Free Colored, Slaves:19
By 1840, his household had grown to 19 persons. The younger male had disappeared. Was this perhaps and employee? But the young white female was still in his household, now between the ages of  10 and 14. Very likely to be the same girl. There was another unusual person in his household, a free female of color, aged 24 to 35. Was this one of the female slaves in the 1830 census that he had set free? Or perhaps a Native American nanny that he had hired to care for the young girl, as Native Americans were noted either as mulatto, or as FPOC's in these early census records. The 1850 census gives no hint as to whom this lady may have been, as the nearest female FPOC to where he lived in 1850 was Selena Shankle, a daughter of Tildy Shankle, a free black woman of the Fork area of Stanly County, who had a large family and a close relationship to the Biles family. In 1850, her daughter Selena was living with Isaac Biles, which would make sense as far as the Biles family connection. Selena was 19 in 1850, which would mean she was too young to have been the adult woman in Mr. Jones househole in 1840. There were also 16 slaves and 10 persons employed in agriculture. To break it down, there were 2 females 36 to 54, which seems to have been the adult females in 1830. There is also an adult male aged 36 to 54, who was not there in 1830, and 5 males 10 to 23. These men/boys were also not in the household in 1830. It appears Mr. Jones expanded his farming pursuits between 1830 and 1840 and needed the help. There is also a young woman between the ages of 24 and 35 and 7 children under 10, 3 girls and 4 boys, who were born during the decade between the census records. 
In the 1850 census, Mark Jones has 15 slaves, one less than in 1840, and the Free Woman of Color is gone. Also gone is the young white girl who grew up in his household. Was this his daughter? Three courthouse fires destroyed records in Montgomery County, so if Mark Jones was ever married, say, in the 1820's, had a daughter and her mother passed away by 1830, the records to prove it had been lost. 

In 1850, the men in the Jones household were 65, 35,30, 25, 20, 20, 18. The women were 45, 45, 25 and 18. There were also 4 children between 11 and 13, two boys and two girls. 

If Mark Jones had a daughter, and she was married by 1850, she predeceased him by 1858 and left no heirs, as all of the heirs mentioned in his estate records are nieces and nephews, no daughters, no grandchildren.


There were two marriages of Jones ladies in the very early marriages of Stanly County, the early 1850's, that did not give names of their parents. 

Mary Jones married widower Nathan Safely in 1851, but she moved with him to Mecklenburg County and is buried there with him, having died in 1905.

The other, Sarah Jones, married Lewis Smith in 1854, but she too, survived past 1858, and died prior to 1879, when Mr. Smith remarried Talitha Griffin. 

So the young woman in Mark Jones household remains a mystery. 

I thought maybe early court records may give a hint unto his life. 

He shows up fairly frequently during the early records of Stanly County. 

In the earliest most entries, he is posting as security for Samuel P. Morton, a direct ancestor of mine, in his bid for the office of clerk, as the new county is being organized.

In 1844, he was appointed to a commitee, along with Francis Locke and John F. Miller, to alot one year's provisions for Barbara Lefler and her family, the widow of Mathias Lefler.  Then later, he gave security for David  Kendall to be appointed the guardian of the orphans of Benjamin Cagle, Rebecca, Martha and David. In November session, this same year, he was appointed the administrator of Winny Shankle, and gave security with Travis Carter. The next mystery is to discover the identity of Winny Shankle. She is not easily found in the records or in any Shankle family tree.


In February, 1845, Mark Jones along with A. F. Atkins and Francis Locke were on a committee to settle with Samuel P. Morton as the executor of Job Calloway. Samuel P. Morton and Job Calloway are both direct ancestors of mine, Samuel P. Morton having married Job Calloway's daughter Vashti. Therefore, making him Job Calloway's son-in-law.  Later that spring, Mark Jones again posted bond in Morton's bid as Register.

Mark Jones served on the jury in November of 1845, and again soon after.

In his close relation with Francis Locke, he posted bond along with John Calloway, when Mr. Locke was appointed guardian of the orphans of George Carter, namely, Matilda, Mary, William, Clinton, James and Letitia.

In May of 1846, Mark Jones was again on a jury in the case of Solomon Hathcock vs Joshua Hearne. Solomon Hathcock, being the father of Rebecca Hathcock who married Job Davis's son E. W. Davis and Joshua Hearne being a member of the founding family of Albemarle.

The next entry gives more than a little rise. In May of 1856 still, this entry appeared "Francis Locke, E.L. Parker, and Samuel P. Morton appointed a committee to settle with Mark Jones, admin. of Winny Shad and report to next term. And then, before the name Winny, the name Lucretia is marked through. Then, later in the same session of court " Mark Jones permitted to amend his inventory as Admin of Winny Shad by returning a bond due from himself to said estate for $270.93, $50 having been mentioned by mistake on former return.

In August session of 1846, Mark Jones is mentioned several times. He stands security for E. L. Parker as guardian for the heirs of John Parker, namely, Eliza, Oney, Nicey Ann, Martha Orathy, Charlotte Francis, and Howell Alexander Parker.

He is again mentioned twice as the administrator of Winny Shad. So Shad, not Shankle, must have been Winny's correct surname, however, there were no Shad's in the county or anywhere near by on record.

The following census record from 25 years later however, may provide a link to the identity of Winnie Shad. With the close relationship between Mark Jones and the Parkers of Stanly County, and the Mauney family, which became a prominent family in both Stanly and Rowan County's, especially in the mining operations of Gold Hill, the occurance of these 4 young Gold miners in Cleveland County, might not be a coincidence.



Name:W Shad
Age in 1870:22
Birth Year:abt 1848
Birthplace:North Carolina
Home in 1870:Township 4, Cleveland, North Carolina
Race:White
Gender:Male
Post Office:White Planes
Value of real estate:View image
Household Members:
NameAge
G W Shad22
Joseph Parker26
E H Parker20
Harvey Mauney30

I took a few weeks to look into the Shad family of Stanly and surrounding families. There was a John Shad who arrived in the area with a railroad company from up north around the turn of the century (1900). Prior to that, the only Shad in late 1800 Stanly and Cabarrus counties were people of color. These persons stem from a female-led family who appear in Burke County in the 1850 and 1860's. They were denoted as "FOP's" or Free People of Color, prior to the Civil War. Therefore, Winny Shad was likely the female FOP in Mark Jones household in 1840.

The later mentions of Mark Jones in the court sessions were typical of the day:

In November of 1847, a deed from Michael Fesperman to Mark Jones was ordered to be registered and was proved by his friend, Samuel P. Morton.



In August of 1848, Mark Jones was a witness who gave testimony in the case against Ursula Forrest.
The verdict: "Ursula Forrest is an idiot or lunatic and is incapable of attending to her business and liable at any time to be imposed upon." This was on a petition entered by John G Forrest stating that she was of weak mind and non compos mentis.

A little research shows that this Ursula Forrest was the daughter of John Gresham Forrest and Mary Bailey Forrest. She was born about 1800 and would have been in her latter 40's at the time of this court hearing. She is only shown in one census, the 1850. She is shown as having died about 1857.

NAME:Urula Forrest
AGE:50
BIRTH YEAR:abt 1800
BIRTHPLACE:North Carolina
HOME IN 1850:Freemans, Stanly, North Carolina
GENDER:Female
FAMILY NUMBER:136
HOUSEHOLD MEMBERS:
NAMEAGE
Mary Forrest72
Urula Forrest50

In this census, she is shown living with her mother, Mary Bailey Forrest. As her father passed away prior, the John G Forrest who set up the petition was likely her brother, John Gresham Forrest, Jr. Her father also had a sister named Ursula Forrest who married Jeremiah Adderton. The younger Ursula then being her namesake.


Afterwards, Mark Jones just appeared in the records serving on juries or posting bonds with his associates. The next posts will be concerning his land records and 117 page estate settlement, which delineates and connects a lengthy Jones family spread out over several counties.



The End of Another Hampton: The Remarkable Hampton Rhodes West

$
0
0
Today, I begin with the end, the obituary of Hampton Rhodes West. He was not a descendant of Job Davis, nor even one of my own ancestors, but the ancestor of my youngest child. As she is soon to present me with my third grandchild, I endeavored to dig deeper into her family tree, down her father's lines, and not far then did I discover an incredible character named Hampton Rhodes West.


The following is his obituary and it is one of the most detailed and endearing memorials I have ever read, especially when taking into account that it was written in the year 1864. Although that year was one of the deadliest of the Civil War era, it was not due to that horrible event that Hampton R. West ended his days. Instead he was beleaguered with the dread plaque of that century, Typhoid Pneumonia, also seen as Typhoid Fever or just Typhus.

Hampton Rhodes West was a businessman, a politician, and a devout Christian. He is one of those ancestors whose greatness rises off the pages of time and endures. I will spend more posts on this interesting and intriguing man, but in brief summary, here is his place in our family tree.

Up my daughters line, to her father and then to his father and to his grandfather, Arthur Lee Hudson, Sr, who was born in Stanly County in 1899 and passed away in 1968.

His parents were;

Henry Marhall Hudson  1872 -1931 who married Sarah Jane "Sallie" West Hudson 1877-1941.

From here we pick up the maternal "West" line. Sallie was the daughter of:

Charles W. West 1848-1898 and Geroldine Eugenia Lowder West 1858 - 1930.

Charles W. West was one of the 3 children of  Hampton Rhodes West to survive childhood.  He was obviously named for his grandfather, the father of Hampton Rhodes West, Charles W. West the first, who was born about 1760 in Virginia and to migrated to Anson County to with his own father, John, the first postmaster of Anson County. The postal service runs deep in this family line as Hampton Rhodes West was the postmaster of  "Alpine" in Stanly County and both Arthur Lee Hudson's also worked for the post office at some point.


Hampton Rhodes West


Hampton R. West was born on Christmas Day, 1811 and died on April 3, 1864. He was the son of Charles W. West and Sarah Dunn West and married Elizabeth A. Meachum on May 2, 1842. The article mentions 6 children, 3 that died young, but the names of only 5 are known.

-1848 - 1898 Charles W. West. Married Geraldine Eugenia Lowder
-1852 - bef 1900 Martha Ella West. Married Lemuel Pines Crump
-1954 - 1922 Dr. Rufus B West. Migrated west and ended up in Fort Worth, Texas. Married Newtie Elizabeth Boden, from Canada.
-1857 - died as child - Lena West
1860 -1860 Samuel J West.

Fayetteville Semi-Weekly Observer

25 Apr 1864, Mon • Page 3
 



A Needle in a Haystack: In Search of Mary Davis

$
0
0
You would think that the more recent to the present the generation, the easier it would be to discover and find records of. But not necessarily.




Job Davis has understandably been hard to trace prior to his arrival in this area around 1794 or 1795, . He was born in 1773 in Virginia, in a county that lost its 1790 census. His children for the most part, have not been hard to trace either, with Henry, my line, being the most difficult. But his grandchildren, some surviving into the era of documented marriages and deaths, have proven much more difficult to trace than their forebears. Such is the case of Mary Davis.

One of the daughters of Henry Davis, Job's oldest son and his wife Sarah's fifth child, Mary was born about 1842 and shows up clearly in two census records. She was the daughter of Henry and his second wife Martha Palmer.

The 1850 census:


NAME:Mary Davis
AGE:8
BIRTH YEAR:abt 1842
BIRTHPLACE:North Carolina
HOME IN 1850:Albemarle, Stanly, North Carolina
GENDER:Female
FAMILY NUMBER:947
HOUSEHOLD MEMBERS:
NAMEAGE
Henry Davis42
Martha Davis33
Sarah Davis13
Nancy Davis12
Hampton Davis10
Mary Davis8
Martha Davis5
Aughton Davis4
Job Davis2


And the 1860 census:

NAME:Mary Davis
AGE IN 1860:18
BIRTH YEAR:abt 1842
HOME IN 1860:Stanly, North Carolina
GENDER:Female
POST OFFICE:Albemarle
VALUE OF REAL ESTATE:View image
HOUSEHOLD MEMBERS:
NAMEAGE
Henry Davis54
Martha Davis44
Mary Davis18
Martha J Davis16
Laua Davis10
Victoria Davis7

These are the two census records that we know for sure Mary is our Mary. We know that Henry was married to Sarah Kendall, daughter of  Reuben Kendall, prior to his marriage to Martha Palmer, daugther of James Palmer. 

Henry's oldest son, Benjamin Franklin Davis, was born in 1829 and his other known son by Sarah Kendall Davis, was John Edward Davis, born in 1831. There was a third son, in all likelihood, with Sarah Kendall, and he may have died as a child. Possibly of an ailment that also took his mother. We will never know. 

In Henry's first appearance in the census records in 1830, his wife was still just a teenager, between 15 and 19, and Henry would have been about 24, and Benjamin Franklin Davis would have been the one child, and an infant at the time.
NAME:Henry Davis
[Henry Paus] 
HOME IN 1830 (CITY, COUNTY, STATE):West Side Pee Dee River, Montgomery, North Carolina
FREE WHITE PERSONS - MALES - UNDER 5:1
FREE WHITE PERSONS - MALES - 20 THRU 29:1
FREE WHITE PERSONS - FEMALES - 15 THRU 19:1
SLAVES - MALES - 10 THRU 23:1
SLAVES - MALES - 24 THRU 35:1
SLAVES - FEMALES - UNDER 10:1
SLAVES - FEMALES - 10 THRU 23:1
FREE WHITE PERSONS - UNDER 20:2
FREE WHITE PERSONS - 20 THRU 49:1
TOTAL FREE WHITE PERSONS:3
TOTAL SLAVES:4
TOTAL - ALL PERSONS (FREE WHITE, SLAVES, FREE COLORED):7

In the second census, the wife must have been Martha. Other researchers indicate a marriage year of 1834 for them, but I've not found any record of this. The male between 15 and 19 could have been Benjamin F. Davis,  He was 11 at the time. The two males between 5 and 9 would have been John Edward, and perhaps an unknown son who died as a child.  It was not one of Henry's younger brothers, because James M. Davis was already set up in his own household and married with children in both the 1830 and 1840 census and Edward W. and Marriott F. Davis were shown living in the home of their parents, Job and Sarah Davis. 

Or, the two males between 5 and 9 could have been B. F and John Edward, and the one male under 5 would have been Henry Hampton Davis, oldest son with Martha Palmer Davis, if the teenager were a hired hand.  There was no mention of an 11 year old male in the household, so B. F. would have been counted as younger (5 to 9) or older (15 to 19), than he actually was.


So, now, let's look at where the older boys were in 1850, and who was missing between 1850 and 1860. 

I can't be certain of Benjamin Franklin Davis's location in 1850. He may have been off at college, as the Davis familly, prior to the War, were well educated, as indicated by their written documents and achievements. He was not married yet and his future wife, Julia Ann Sibley, was still very young and living with her mother.
NAME:Julia Sibley
AGE:11
BIRTH YEAR:abt 1839
BIRTHPLACE:North Carolina
HOME IN 1850:Cedar Hill, Anson, North Carolina
GENDER:Female
FAMILY NUMBER:670
HOUSEHOLD MEMBERS:
NAMEAGE
Eliza K Sibley42
Alexr Sibley19
Harlark Sibley16
George D Sibley15
Jeremiah Sibley12
Julia Sibley11
Eliza Sibley8
Henry C Sibley9
John F Sibley6
Sarah Sibley3
The couple were married about 1855,  and their oldest son, Henry Edward "Hollum" was born in    , and by 1860, they are found as a family in the 1860 census. 

He may be the Benjamin Franklin Davis found as a student in Columbia, South Carolina, born in 1829, or he may be the Benjamin F. Davis living with a Randle family, as there were several Randles in the South Stanly area, some who migrated out. 

John Edward Davis was living with his grandfather, Reuben Kendall, in 1850 and working for him.

AME:John Davis
AGE:20
BIRTH YEAR:abt 1830
BIRTHPLACE:North Carolina
HOME IN 1850:Ross, Stanly, North Carolina
GENDER:Male
FAMILY NUMBER:785
HOUSEHOLD MEMBERS:
NAMEAGE
Reuben Kendall66
Lucy Kendall42
Clement Kendall20
John Davis20

By 1860, both of the older sons were married, and so were older daughters, Sarah "Sallie" Davis and Nancy Baldwin Davis. 


NAME:B F Davis
AGE IN 1860:30
BIRTH YEAR:abt 1830
BIRTHPLACE:North Carolina
HOME IN 1860:Stanly, North Carolina
GENDER:Male
POST OFFICE:Albemarle
VALUE OF REAL ESTATE:View image
HOUSEHOLD MEMBERS:
NAMEAGE
B F Davis30
Julia Davis20
Holum Davis3
Mathew Davis1


NAME:J E Davis
AGE IN 1860:39
BIRTH YEAR:abt 1821
BIRTHPLACE:North Carolina
HOME IN 1860:Burnsville, Anson, North Carolina
GENDER:Male
POST OFFICE:Ansonville
VALUE OF REAL ESTATE:View image
HOUSEHOLD MEMBERS:
NAMEAGE
J E Davis39
Emeline Davis24
Wm P Davis7
Alexander Davis4
Ada Davis2
Infant Davis1/12

Nancy Baldwin Davis had married the widower, James Wall and was young enough to be his daughter.

NAME:N B Wall
AGE IN 1860:22
BIRTH YEAR:abt 1838
BIRTHPLACE:North Carolina
HOME IN 1860:Police District 3, Carroll, Mississippi
GENDER:Female
POST OFFICE:Black Hawk
VALUE OF REAL ESTATE:View image
HOUSEHOLD MEMBERS:
NAMEAGE
James Wall41
N B Wall22
Mary E Wall20
A S Wall14
E J Wall11
S H Wall8
Caroline Wall6
James O Wall3
C D Wall8/12
Sarah Davis had married Woodsonn Crump and remained not too far from her family, just across the river in Anson County.

NAME:Sarah Crump
AGE IN 1860:23
BIRTH YEAR:abt 1837
BIRTHPLACE:North Carolina
HOME IN 1860:Cedar Hill, Anson, North Carolina
GENDER:Female
POST OFFICE:Ansonville
VALUE OF REAL ESTATE:View image
HOUSEHOLD MEMBERS:
NAMEAGE
Woodson Crump38
Sarah Crump23
William Crump13
John Crump12
Benjamin Crump12
Joseph Crump9
Jere Crump5
Woodson Crump8/12

Henry Hampton Davis was living with his uncle, Edward Winfield Davis
NAME:Hampton H Davis
AGE IN 1860:20
BIRTH YEAR:abt 1840
HOME IN 1860:Stanly, North Carolina
GENDER:Male
POST OFFICE:Albemarle
VALUE OF REAL ESTATE:View image
HOUSEHOLD MEMBERS:
NAMEAGE
E W Davis48
Hampton H Davis20
Allen Carpenter18

But where were Hawk (shown as "Aughton", as mispronunciation of "Horton", in 1850) and Job?

They were not deceased. Horton H. Davis, my second great-grandfather, lived to marry and died in 1906 and Job ended up in Carroll County, Mississippi, with his sister Nancy B. Davis Wall.

NAME:Jobe Davis
AGE:30
BIRTH YEAR:abt 1850
BIRTHPLACE:North Carolina
HOME IN 1880:Bright Corner, Carroll, Mississippi
RACE:White
GENDER:Male
MARITAL STATUS:Single
FATHER'S BIRTHPLACE:North Carolina
MOTHER'S BIRTHPLACE:North Carolina
NEIGHBORS:View others on page
OCCUPATION:Day Hand
CANNOT READ/WRITE:

BLIND:

DEAF AND DUMB:

OTHERWISE DISABLED:

IDIOTIC OR INSANE:
HOUSEHOLD MEMBERS:
NAMEAGE
Jobe Davis30

Horton H. "Haut or Hawk", shows back up in Stanly County, living with his uncle, Edward W. Davis.
I know this is Hawk, instead of Hampton, as both held the "H. H." intials because of the year of birth, as Hampton was born in 1840, and also because of land records and estate records. Hawk was very closely involved with his uncle in those days and even became guardian of E. W.'s minor children in his passing. 


NAME:H H Davis
AGE IN 1870:22
BIRTH YEAR:abt 1848
BIRTHPLACE:North Carolina
HOME IN 1870:Tyson, Stanly, North Carolina
RACE:White
GENDER:Male
POST OFFICE:Albemarle
VALUE OF REAL ESTATE:View image
HOUSEHOLD MEMBERS:
NAMEAGE
E W Davis58
Rebecca Davis20
Sarah Davis1
H H Davis22
Mary Hartrick30
Priscilla Legrand45
George Cump16
It is the other people in this census that are interesting to this post. Rebecca is Uncle Neddy's wife, Rebecca Hathcock Davis and Sarah is Sarah Hortense, their only daughter. Priscilla LeGrand and George Crump are African-American and employed by the family. 

And then there is Mary Hartrick. She is the correct age to be Mary Davis.


The only accounting I have found in records of Mary Davis, daughter of Henry stated that she may have married a Smith,and then later married the husband of her deceased sister, Martha J Davis Ingram, who lived in Kenedy, Karnes County, Texas.


While Joseph A Ingram did return to North Carolina to marry, he married a girl from Charlotte, NC, Mary Katherine McCormick, known as Katie, whose father is plainly named on their marriage license and who was much younger than Mary Davis, and who was young enough to be J. A. Ingrams's granddaughter. She outlived him by many decades and long enough to have made it to the age of death certificates, which again, plainly gives her parents and maiden name. She was not Mary Davis
NAME:Mrs Mary Katherine Ingram
[Mrs Mary Katherine McCormick] 
BIRTH DATE:1864
BIRTH PLACE:Rockingham, North Carolina
GENDER:Female
RACE:White
RESIDENCE:Kenedy, Karnes, Texas
FATHER:John McCormick
AGE AT DEATH:92
DEATH DATE:11 Nov 1956
DEATH PLACE:Kenedy, Karnes, Texas, USA




I thought Hartwick may have been a translation error of Hathcock, and while Rebecca did have a sister named Mary, she is accounted for in 1870, She married William M. Hinson on January 23, 1859. In 1870, she was living with her husband and children.
Mary M. Hinson
NAME:Mary Hinson
AGE IN 1870:30
BIRTH YEAR:abt 1840
BIRTHPLACE:North Carolina
HOME IN 1870:Big Lick, Stanly, North Carolina
RACE:White
GENDER:Female
POST OFFICE:Albemarle
VALUE OF REAL ESTATE:View image
HOUSEHOLD MEMBERS:
NAMEAGE
William Hinson40
Mary Hinson30
Caroline Hinson10
Irving Hinson8
Ellen Hinson7
Malinda Hinson6
Rufus Hinson4
Doctor Hinson1
So, could Mary Hartwick be Mary Davis? I will have to look into the Hartwick family.



The search for Alcey West Boggan

$
0
0

I recently posted the very complementary obituary composed by "A. J. G.", and published in the April 25, 1865 edition of The Fayetteville Observer, out of Cumberland County, North Carolina, for Hampton Rhodes West.

The End of Another Remarkable Hampton

Hampton R. West was the son of Charles W. West and also the father of Charles W. West the second.

He is mentioned well in his father's will, as seen below.


Last Will and Testament of CHARLES WEST, State of North Carolina, Ansoncounty
In the name of God, Amen. I CHARLES W. WEST, being in my usual state of
health and sound disposing mind, and memory, do make and ordain this my
last will and testament in names as follows:
1st: I will to my daughter FANNY five hundred dollars (being her portion
due of my land). Also a bed and furniture.
2nd: I will to my daughter POLLY six hundred dollars, being her portion
of my land. Also a bed and furniture.
3rd: I will to my daughter NANCY HENRY five hundred dollars, being a
portion due of the land.
4th: I will to my daughter ALCY BOGGAN five hundred dollars, , being her
portion of my land.
5th: I will to my son EMORY M. WEST two hundred dollars of the land.
6th: It is my will that my son HAMPTON R. WEST shall not have any of the
proceeds of the land, only his legal part after the legacies herein have
been paid off, having already given to him his portion.
7th: I will to granddaughter CAROLINE four hundred dollars, being her
mothers portion. Also bed and furniture.
8th: It is my will that my land which I own at the time of my death and
all the rest of my property personal and real shall be sold in a credit
of one and two years, with interest, from date and after the above
legacies have been paid off. Then the balance should be equally divided
amongst my legal heirs with the exception of the part which my
granddaughter CAROLINE would inherit through her mother out of which
part it is my will that fifty dollars shall be set apart in the hand of
my son HAMPTON R. WEST for the purpose of erecting tombstones at the
grave of my wife, son, daughter and myself. The balance of said part I
will to my son in law RUEBEN R. HENRY.
9th and lastly: I do appoint and constitute my son, HAMPTON R. WEST,
MARTIN C. LONG, AND JOSEPH I. COXE, executors to my last will and
testament. In witness whereof I hereunto affix my hand and seal. This
the 15th day of July, in the year of our Lord, 1857.S/ CHARLES W. WEST (Seal)
Witnesse sNELSON P. LISLES, .G. LISLES    May 16, 1857


Given this will, I have been attempting to research and generally make heads or tails of the siblings of Hampton R West. For the most part, it has been going fairly easily, without a great deal of twists and turns or brick walls. Until I hit the name of his sister, "Alcey" (or also seen as Alsie) West Boggan.

I will soon post on the other siblings of H. R. West, but for now, I am absorbed with Alsie.

I always look to see what other research has been done on individuals I find difficult to find. And there has been in the past, a deal of involved research on the West family. One individual in particular, who has been copied by later descendants, had made the following resolve on Alsie. They had determined that she was the Adeline that married a George D Boggan, who began in Anson and later migrated to Mississippi.


NAME:George D Boggan
AGE:40
BIRTH YEAR:abt 1810
BIRTHPLACE:North Carolina
HOME IN 1850:Dumas Shop, Anson, North Carolina
GENDER:Male
FAMILY NUMBER:1025
HOUSEHOLD MEMBERS:
NAMEAGE
George D Boggan40
Adline A Boggan37
Stephen L Boggan16
Thomas L Boggan14
Patrick R Boggan12
Ann Boggan9
Mary E Boggan4
George B Boggan2
Patrick B Thredgell40
Charles B Coppedge24


Above, the family is living in Anson, and below, the same family in Mississippi.

1870

NAME:G D Boggan
AGE IN 1870:60
BIRTH YEAR:abt 1810
BIRTHPLACE:North Carolina
HOME IN 1870:Range 5, Marshall, Mississippi
RACE:White
GENDER:Male
POST OFFICE:Byhalia
VALUE OF REAL ESTATE:View image
HOUSEHOLD MEMBERS:
NAMEAGE
G D Boggan60
Adaline Boggan59
Fannie Boggan14
Mary Boggan22
Brasston Boggan21



And 1880


NAME:G. D. Boggan
AGE:70
BIRTH YEAR:abt 1810
BIRTHPLACE:North Carolina
HOME IN 1880:Lake Comerant, DeSoto, Mississippi
RACE:White
GENDER:Male
RELATION TO HEAD OF HOUSE:Uncle
MARITAL STATUS:Widower
FATHER'S BIRTHPLACE:North Carolina
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
A. B. Caruthers43
Robt W. Caruthers19
Emma W. Caruthers15
Annie Caruthers13
Ruth Caruthers11
G. D. Boggan70
P. W. Smith45

The problem with this theory, although Adeline A. Boggan is near the same age as Alsie Boggan, is that following the younger children of George D. and Adeline Boggan on out, is that they have records in agreement, that the maiden name of their mother is Adeline A. Alsobrooks, who was born in South Carolina.


NAME:Annie Boggan Koen
BIRTH DATE:19 Oct 1842
BIRTH PLACE:North Carolina
AGE:76
DEATH DATE:8 Mar 1918
DEATH PLACE:Collierville, Shelby, Tennessee
BURIAL DATE:9 Mar 1918
CEMETERY NAME:Magnolia Cemetery
GENDER:Female
RACE:White
MARITAL STATUS:Widowed
OCCUPATION:At Home
FATHER'S NAME:George D Boggan
FATHER'S BIRTH PLACE:North Carolina
MOTHER'S NAME:Adeline A Alsbrook
MOTHER'S BIRTH PLACE:South Carolina
FHL FILM NUMBER:1299695

So, in discovering that this information was incorrect, and realizing that the early researchers did not have the tools and amazing technology available to us today, to have records readily at our fingertips through online sights like Familysearch.org, Ancestry.com, and Fold3.com.

Another amazing tool I use is Newspapers.com, which has an admirable database of old newspapers on archive from all over the nation. They even have archives of the small towns of Albemarle, North Carolina and Troy, North Carolina, although not complete collections. And their collections are growing all the time. For serious researchers, it's well worth the small investment.

It was through this site that I found the following gem, which gave the name of Alsey West Boggan's husband.





So, this tells me Alsey West and her husband "Newell" lived out of state.

Another hint was in the 1870 census, that shows Alsey West Boggan, complete with transcribers error, living in the home of her nephew and son of Hampton Rhodes West, Charles W. West II, along with her unmarried sister, Mary aka "Polly" West.

NAME:Nelsy Boggan
AGE IN 1870:55
BIRTH YEAR:abt 1815
BIRTHPLACE:North Carolina
HOME IN 1870:Tyson, Stanly, North Carolina
RACE:White
GENDER:Female
POST OFFICE:Albemarle
VALUE OF REAL ESTATE:View image
HOUSEHOLD MEMBERS:
NAMEAGE
Charles West22
Mary West67
Nelsy Boggan55

In fact, this is the only census record I've been able to find for Alsey, and it gives her year of birth.

So the next step was to try to find "Newell Boggan", and I did.

He was incorrectly listed as "Hewitt" Boggan in the 1840 census of Butler County, Alabama. In other Butler County records, he is shown as "Newitt" Bogan or Newell Boggan. He suffered greatly on variations of both names.

Although I haven't found him in the 1850 Federal census of Butler County, he appears in several Alabama State Census records.

NAME:Newett Boggan
COUNTY:Butler
CENSUS YEAR:1850

And in Non-census Agricultural Schedules:

NAME:Newit Boggan
LOCATION:Southern Division, Butler, Alabama, USA
ENUMERATION DATE:19 Sep 1850
SCHEDULE TYPE:Agriculture
OS PAGE:23
LINE NUMBER:38


And in the 1855 State Census. He has now moved to Macon County, Alabama.


NAME:Newel Bogan
COUNTY:Macon
CENSUS YEAR:1855

Macon County, Alabama is now a very different place than it was in 1855, and the Boggan family is particially responsible.



He is always seen near family and was the son of a Jonathan Boggan. What cinches the fact that "Newell" and "Newitt" is the same guy, are the records attached to his father, Jonathan.

A history of the Boggan family provides verified links.

The Boggan family : Patrick, Benjamin, James and their sister Jane including pertinent facts of North Carolina history



Jonathan Boggan - Elizabeth Drew
Jonathan Boggan was born at Wadesboro, Anson, North Carolina 15 Feb 1779. His parents were James Boggan and Jennie .He married Elizabeth Drew 9 Feb 1804 .
Jonathan Boggan died 1857 .


Below is the will of Jonanthan Boggan dated November 25, 1857. In this, he names his son as Newitt, instead of Newill, so I am going with that spelling. This also shows that Newitt was alive in 1857, but likely deceased before his wife moved back to North Carolina by 1870 to live with her nephew. There is no indication they had any children, but I am sure there is more to discover about Newitt and Alsey. And who ran the Boggan and West Distillery in Butler County, Alabama in 1880.

I, Jonathon Boggan of the County of Butler and the State of Alabama do hereby make my last will and testament in the manner and form Following that is to say:
First, I give and devise to my beloved wife Elizabeth the property hereinafter named, to wit, my negro slaves Jacob, Siller and Lency to use and dispose of as she may think proper. I also give and devise unto my said wife Elizabeth the eighty acres of land and interest, I reside on, it being the West half of the North East quarter of Section Twenty, Township Eleven and Range Twelve, reserving five acres of land as to include the house where Newet Boggan now resides for the use of the said Newet Boggan during his natural life and at his death to go to Holden and John Boggan. Also I give and devise unto my wife Elizabeth the South East quarter of Section Seventeen Township Eleven and Range Twelve, reserving twenty acres of said tract of land lying on the west of said tract so as to include the piece of land now in cultivation by Newet Boggan for the use and benefit of said Newet Boggan during his life and at his death to go to my son John Boggan and at the death of my wife !
Elizabeth the last described tract of land willed to her to go to my son John Boggan.
I also give and devise unto my said wife Elizabeth my stock of hogs, sheep, cattle, and horses, waggon, Plantation tools, household and kitchen furniture, except as is otherwise disposed of to her use and benefit during her natural life and at her death to her sons Holden and John.
I also give and devise to my said wife Elizabeth the following named slaves, to wit: Pube, Peggy, Hannah and Mary to use and to benefit during her natural life then to be divided as follows, to wit: to my sons Holden, James and John and to my Daughters Rutha and Eliza and my daughter Mary Jane Thigpen to share alike.
I also give and devise to my son Holden M. Boggan, negro boys Mack and Sharper, one feather bed and furniture, one cow and calf. Also the West half of the North East quarter of Section Seventeen Township Eleven and Range Twelve.
Also, I give and devise to my son James D. Boggan, negro boys Joseph and Hampton, one feather bed and furniture, one cow and calf. Also the West half of the South East quarter Section Sixteen Township Eleven and Range Twelve.
Also, I give and devise unto my son John Boggan, negro boys, Mike and Jackson, one feather bed, and furniture, one cow and calf.
Also, I give and devise unto my grand daughter Mary Jane Thigpen, two negro boys, Peter and Solomon and two negro girls Marie and Martha, one cow and calf.
Also, I give and devise unto my daughter Rutha, negro slaves, George Ellen, Adaline and Allice.
Also, I give and devise unto my daughter Eliza, negro slaves Ellick, Aaron and Julia and the first living child that my negro woman, Mary has and in the event of said child not being born then. and in that event, my other legatees are to make up the amount
that such a child would be worth to my said daughter Eliza. Also one cow and calf, one feather bed and furniture and one side saddle.
Also, I give and devise onto my son Newet Boggan, one negro boy named Allen. Also the East half of the North West quarter of Section Twenty four, Township Eleven and Range Twelve, involving five acres of land so as to include the Spring, where my family gets water on said tract of land which I gave to my sons Holden and John Boggan.
Also, I give and devise unto my son Norfleet D. Boggan, Ten Dollars. Also, I give and devise unto my daughter Jane Ferguson, Ten Dollars.
My will is that there shall be no division of my estate until two years after my death and that the incomes to be divided among the legatees that has force engaged in proportion to said force employed, my crop and bands. I wish disposed of as follows, to wit: After my debts are all payed [sic], the balance of my cotton crop is to be divided with my wife Elizabeth and my sons Holden and John Boggan equally. After the balance of my crop is to be used for the support of my family.
And lastly, I do hereby constitute and appoint James D. Boggan and James Thigpen my Executors of this my last Will and Testament, by me heretofore made. In Witness where of, I have hereunto set my hand and affixed my seal this thirteenth day of July, A.D. Eighteen hundred and Forty six. Signed, sealed, published and declared as and for the last will and testament of the above Jonathon Boggan in the presence of us. Daniel W. Coleman, William Smith, Joseph L. Wood, Silas M. Wooton, Thomas Scott.
Johnathon Boggan (Seal)

The State of Alabama, Butler County. Before me S.J. Bolling, Judge of the Court of Probate for said County, personally appeared in open Court, William Smith who having been by one first duly sworn, examined do depose and say on oath that he was a subscribing witness to a paper purporting to be the last Will and Testament of Jonathan Boggan, late of said County deceased, sometime in the year 1846. That sometime during the same year, said deceased died in said County and that he affirmed was one of the Witnesses upon whose testimony said Will was admitted to Probate in the County Court of said County, that said Johnathon Boggan was at the time of the signing the same, of sound and disposing mind and memory and over the age of Twenty one years. That said Will at the time it was established in the County Court of said County was proven by himself Thomas Scott and Joseph L. Wood. That said testator signed, published and declared said instrument to be his last Will and Testame!
nt in the presence Daniel Coleman, Thomas Scott, Joseph L. Wood, Silas M. Wooton and ______ of each of them with himself signed the paper as witnesses in presence of said deceased that the affiant has been informed and believes it the original Will aforesaid was designated by him in the Court house of said County that he affiant examined the paper now shown to him purporting to be a copy of said original will destroyed as aforesaid and that he believes the paper now shown to him is a copy in substance and effect of said destroyed Will. Sworn to and subscribed before me Nov. 25, 1857.






NAME:Bogan and West
LOCATION:Distilleries, Butler, Alabama, USA
ENUMERATION DATE:31 May 1880
SCHEDULE TYPE:Industry
LINE NUMBER:07




Where was Silver?

$
0
0
Where was Silver? That is a question I have been asking for quite some time now. I found the name of the place mentioned in marriage licenses of some of my ancestors, and also in old newspapers, mentioning "so and so of Silver".

I know it was in Stanly County and thought perhaps Silver Springs Church may have gotten its name from there.

But finally, I have found an article that gives the location of Silver by placing a known location into it.


Rocky River Springs was in Silver. Rocky River Springs in just south of present day Aquadale and just north of the Davis lands of my ancestors. John T. Davis, son of Uncle E. W. Davis, esquire, was said to have lived in Silver before he made his move to near Vass, North Carolina.

This clipping also gives some interesting information about an early school in the area, Rocky River Springs Institute.



An early photo from Rocky River Springs resort.


Find Me!

$
0
0


She stood in a dusty yard looking down a rutted road. Her long dress fit tight to the waist and then blossomed out filled with petticoats. The hem of her gray garment was tattered from wear, her dark blonde hair beginning to gray. She looked to be a weathered 45, still beautiful, but weary. She turned to look my way. Tendrils of hair coming loose in the breeze, her brow furrowed with concerned.

"Find Me," she pleaded though her lips did not part and no sound came from them.

Then I awoke.




I had been trying to research the West family, and concentrating on Alsey West Boggan. So, I began a little creative researching and made an amazing discovery. Found hidden by transcription errors in the 1850 census of Butler County, Alabama, I found her.

NAME:Newitt Began
AGE:37
BIRTH YEAR:abt 1813
BIRTHPLACE:North Carolina
HOME IN 1850:Beat 4, Butler, Alabama
GENDER:Male
FAMILY NUMBER:677
HOUSEHOLD MEMBERS:
NAMEAGE
Newitt Began37
Alriy Began34
Sarah Began16
John Began7



In my last post on this family, I stated that there was no indication that they had any children.


I stand corrected. In the 1850 census, two children appear in their home, 16 year old Sarah and 7 year old John. But this opens the door for a world of more questions.

Were Sarah and John Alsey's children? Did they live to have their own families? Where was the family in 1860? When did Alsey return to North Carolina? Why was she living with her nephew in 1870?

Newitt Boggan, her husband, is counted as living in Butler County in 1840 and 1850. In the 1855 census, he is counted in Macon County, Alabama.

NAME:Newel Bogan
COUNTY:Macon
CENSUS YEAR:1855

Still, another researcher has placed Newitt and his siblings as having been, for the most part, buried in PineApple, Wilcox County, Alabama.

Location of Butler County

Location of Macon County

Location of Wilcox County



Other members of the family that had settled in Butler County would later migrate to Mississippi, or Texas, or even to Tennessee.

NAME:Anderson Boggan
AGE IN 1870:52
BIRTH YEAR:abt 1818
BIRTHPLACE:North Carolina
HOME IN 1870:North East Beat, Jasper, Mississippi
RACE:White
GENDER:Male
POST OFFICE:Paulding
VALUE OF REAL ESTATE:View image
HOUSEHOLD M

EMBERS:
NAMEAGE
Anderson Boggan52
Ally C Boggan49
Margaret J Boggan18
Robert N Boggan11
Suffrand F Boggan13
Curtis A Boggan11
Emma C Boggan3




So I've been able to find one more clue as to what happened to alsie, but it led to a number of other doors. 

The search for Alsie west boggan , as well as sarah and John, is not over. the common names of the two children do not help any. there are so many possibilities out there of who they could be in the following years. through a process of elimination, maybe they can be pinpointed. 

stay tuned.






The Early Roads of Albemarle

$
0
0
I have a fascination for old maps. Something intrigues me. I love to look at them and try to determine where exactly the roads and areas led pertaining to the modern landscape.


In 1841, when the county of Montgomery in North Carolina had been severed by the Yadkin/PeeDee River in order to form the new County of Stanly, a group of men got together, including my Davis ancestors, to determine the placement of the County Seat, a center for justice, a place to build a Courthouse and Jail.

The place was eventually decided to be 50 acres of part of the Hearne lands, "within 8 miles of Eben Hearne" and taking into account the dower of his mother Nancy, and the shares of minor "infant" heirs Mary Frances Hearne, who was unmarried and still at home and of her nephew Alexander, whose mother had passed away and who was in the custody and guardianship of his grandmother Nancy.

And it was to be called "Albemarle".




Page0005

The description of the site in 1841 was as follows, "the situation is central and healthy, being on a high and dry ridge, with fine and suitable soil for a county town, having a beautiful grove of forest trees, large oaks + hickories......having advantage of good public roads leading to it, the road from Fayetteville to Morganton, and the road from Cheraw to Salisbury pass directly by it, and two other roads unite with them at the spot."


So Albemarle, before she was Albemarle, was an intersection of the Fayetteville to Morganton road, which I believe was at least in its eastward streach, the reasonable trajectory of East Main Street leading to the Troy Road, or 24/27 and that the Salisbury to Cheraw road was pretty much the same path that Highway 52 runs today, off a little as "The Old Salisbury Road" from Albemarle to Richfield runs parallel to 52 and is closer to the original path in all likelihood.



On this old map, the Cheraw to Salisbury Road was probably the one through Centre (now Norwood) to the South and through Narrows (Richfield/Misenheimer) to the North. The Fayetteville to Morganton Road was probably the one leading east from Albemarle to Lawrenceville (now in the Uwharrie Forest) and to Mount Pleasant and Concord to the West.  The other southbound road out of Albemarle looks to have led to Cottonville and then down to the Ford, with one westward from there. But I'd like to know the other roads they were talking about. There is one from "Narrows" which follows the river all the way down into Anson, with another that crosses at what was probably a Ferry near present day Badin, maybe Lowders Ferry or Kirks. The road might follow somewhat, current 741, then picking up along Valley drive and the now nonexistant road that led from Morrow Mountain to Rest, which is now River Haven and maybe following close to "Indian Mound Road" or "Greentop", down to Randalls and old Allenton, below Norwood.

If anyone has any more information on these old roads, please contact me.



Where John Fletcher Capron Rests his Traveling Bones

$
0
0
I thought I had discovered everything there was to know about John F. Capron. I was wrong.

I had not covered every resource in the hunt for this interesting and well-traveled gentleman.

In Stanly County, we are blessed to have had several cemetery surveys, some from maintained and existing church and community cemeteries, another from the abandoned and hard-to-find family cemeteries that dot the countryside. We amazingly  have two books on a survey that was done in 1936, before my parents were born. I am grateful that individuals were interested in family history and preserving it at that time.

As oftentimes happens, while looking for one thing, I will find another. I did not think that I would be able to find the final resting place of the Caprons, with the exception of youngest son Edward O Capron, who is buried at Concord Methodist Church in Anson County. This is the final resting place of his grandparents, and his parents, too probably, I thought, among those ancient graves whose stones are either no longer legible or are missing entirely.

But my assumptions were wrong. While browsing through the 1936 book, I found the listing for John F Capron, his wife Julia Howell Capron and son John F Capron, Jr. I wondered about the third son, Peter Howell Capron, who died just a few years before his mother and brother, if his grave was here, but already illegible, or if he were buried somewhere else.


The family was interred at Bethel United Methodist Church near New London, Stanly County, North Carolina. The stone sign for the church, now encased in brick, says that it was established in 1790. I would love to discover more history on this church, as I am sure it must have an amazing one, with a birthday that old.

The church is still a vital and active congregation, and the church sits back off the highway between present day New London and Badin, which in their day would have been the road from Bilesville to the River road and the ferries along the Yadkin and probably to Ebenezer Baptist Church, which is now Badin Baptist, and existed long before the town of Badin came into existence.

I did not walk the cemetery in depth, but I checked out most of the older stones and could not find the graves of the Caprons. The yard had visibly unmarked graves, however, and others marked with fieldstones that are not decipherable with the naked eye. I did not spend a great deal of time there, however, so a trip back is in order.

In his agreement with his neighbor Miller, in 1887, to take care of him in a good manner and to have suitable, durable tombstones mounted for himself and his family, in exchange for his land, a contract surviving son, E. O Capron, would later challenge, John F. Capron described in great detail the structure and quality he required for his gravemarkers, so I hope they still stand and I don't imagine they would be of fieldstone, but more likely the old mildewed white marble kind.

The location of the church makes a good deal of sense when looking at land records from the final decades of the Caprons lives. They were in the Harris Community and neighbors to William Biles, Daniel Ritchey, Levi Parker,  and others. He is listed as a Mechanic in 1870 and 1880, living next to brickmasons, miners and farmers.

John F. Capron always followed mining operations, although there is no record of him ever mining.

The families final resting place is not the only recent discovery, however. I also found this excerpt from The Southern Chrisitian Advocate, September 5, 1851 issue, concerning the first Mrs. John F. Capron:

"Died, in San Francisco, California, on the 19th of May, Mrs. Matilda Capron, wife of John F. Capron, formerly of Warsaw, Alabama. Reported by Jesse Boring. "

Somehow, I know there is more on this family to discover.


Just Like Us

$
0
0
The Civil War is the first that we really have actual images of that have survived and can give an actual visual impression of.  Most of us have a very limited opinion and imagery of this time, but the more I delve into it, the more I am fascinated by the actuality of it.

We have heard of the battles, the commanders, the causes, the flags, the strategies and the results, but it is the people that intrigue me. The flesh and blood, just like us human beings that were caught up in this earth-shattering event that nearly tore our country in half, and effected every ancestor of any American who had one arrive here prior to this time. The faces tell the tales. Of people just like us.

The above Union soldier had his "Swag" going on. His cockiness comes across in his photo.



Belle Boyd, a confederate spy. Attractive and tempting, she was considered successful in her operations and aims. She reminds me a little of a young Susan Sarandon.


Frances Hook, one of over 400 documented women who fought in the Civil War. Some entered under the guise of being male. Others wore a partial uniform and did not disguise their femininity, like Frances.


A pretty young Civil War nurse. She reminds me of a young girl I know today.



A Civil War pin-up girl. No, Mae West and Betty Grable were not the first pinup girls that wooed men on through a War. No, they were not considered proper for Antebellum ladies, but there were always those young widows,  fatherless girls, and disenfranchised misses who "had to do what they had to do".

Another female soldier. They took all of the same risks that the men did. It was reported that there were two unidentified female bodies found dead at the Battle of Gettysburg, both Confederate. Why they fought would be as varied as who they were. Perhaps they could not bear to be away from their husband, fiance, brothers or father. Perhaps they had nowhere to go or nothing to do when the men in their families marched off to war. Maybe they posed as male soldiers because they needed the money.

Don't this guy look a little like the kid you just ran into at the Speedy Mart?



Another chick, this one in Union garb. She had a bit of a flair going on, didn't she?

Edmund Ruffin. He was 65 years old when he joined the Confederate Army in Virginia. At first glance, he looks a little like a Native American. I don't know his genetics, however, he was known as a Virginian planter, and a agriculturalist. His studies and findings on soil conservation and use would peg him as "The Father of Soil Chemistry". He is also identified as one of 3 people who may have fired the first shot at Fort Sumter. He was a supporter of states rights and left Virginia and joined the Palmetto Guards in South Carolina.


Civil War doctor, Mary Edwards Walker.

General Eli S. Parker. He was a Seneca Indian and was appointed by U. S. Grant as Commissioner of Indian affairs.





Another Native American who fought in the Civil War.


Parker with his daughter. She shows little of her Native American heritage. The family passed into the European-American community.

Many Native Americans married into African-American families as well as families of Caucasian-European descent. As a result, Native Americans could range in appearance to a broad spectrum of phenotypes.


A very young soldier. This war took in young boys, old men, women, and actually anybody who would pick up a gun and fight.

I believe I just saw this handsome young man skateboarding down by the YMCA. Looks a little bit like Justin Bieber.

A Civil War soldier and Native American Scout.



Below, the First Louisiana Native Guard. Enough Said.



Next, another team of Soldiers that would not normally come to mind.


These two young friends liked to show off their weaponry like most teenaged boys. However, the times and era make this photo highly unusual. They are identified as Sgt. Andrew Martin Chandler and Silas Chandler.


This soldier likely has an interesting family tree.

As does this gentleman. Both appear to be multi-racial. It is unknown how they would identify or be identified, in a census record, say.


The above photo is of Nate Love, who was also know as Deadwood Dick. A Civil War vet, he would become a Cowboy of reknown in the old West after the war. He was born in 1854 and died in 1921. He had some Swagger in his pose, too.


Soldiers were often family men, like the below unidentified Union soldier and his daughter.




The following soldier had a very young bride. I wonder if he made it through the war to come back home to her.




This fellow was obviously a musician, and posing with his wife and daughters.


Sometimes entire families of brothers would enlist, often with their father as well.




What became of these poor children? Did daddy come home?








And the brotherly bonds would last a lifetime.

And in time, the wounds of the scarred country, would begin to heal.


These were not unrelated persons in an ancient, unrelevant time. They were people....just like us.



Below, a Civil War era family that followed their father into war.


The Nurse

$
0
0
When you think of nurses during the Civil War, you probably imagine a scene like this:



But when it comes to my 3rd Great-Grandfather, Thomas Alexander Mauldin, I am fairly certain the scene did not look like that.

I haven't spent a great deal of time in my family tree, because it has been done, and a book written, by my diligent and entertaining distant cousin, Ervin Mauldin of Norwood, NC. I thought, there really isn't any research to do, because its all there already. All  I have to do is look in the book.

But when it came to my post, Bits and Pieces of Men, I realized I didn't really know my Mauldin ancestors involvement in that important time in American History.

So I turned to the best source I've found for information of that kind, Fold3.



And there, I found the Civil War records of my double-ancestor, Thomas Mauldin. And what I found was intriguing.

First, let me explain the 'double ancestor' comment. My maternal grandmother was named Annie Maude Mauldin. She was the daughter of Jonah and Wincie Ann Mauldin. Wincie's maiden name was Mauldin. My grandmother often said her mother was born a Mauldin, she married a Mauldin and when he died she married another Mauldin. And this was true.

Walter Jonah Mauldin was the son of James Duncan Mauldin born 1842, died 1909.
Wincie Ann Mauldin was the daughter of Frank Washington Mauldin, born 1850, died 1925.

Jonah and Wincie were married December 29, 1900. Jonah died in 1930 and Wincie then married James Williams Mauldin, son of Franklin Mannasseh Mauldin.

Jonah Mauldin Family 001
Jonah and Wincie Mauldin and family. My grandmother was the girl in between her parents.


James Duncan Mauldin and Frank Washington Mauldin were both the sons of Thomas Alexander Mauldin and wife Mary "Polly" Blalock, meaning, they were brothers and Jonah and Wincie first cousins. First cousin marriages were not unusual in small towns and country communities during this time, whether in the North or the South, East or West. Many family trees reveal this common secret.

James Duncan Mauldin married Margaret W. Solomon, daughter of Rev. William S. Solomon and wife Tabitha Marks, and Frank Washington Mauldin married Martha Margaret Russell, daughter of Aaron Russell and wife Senith or "Sena" Elizabeth Swaim Russell.


The following information is in a folder on Fold3:

Thomas Mauldin, Private Co. K, 28th regiment, North Carolina Troops

April 8, 1864

During M fitness for field service is detailed for Hosp. or other light duty. 

April 13, 1864

Refer'd to Surgeon Hancock in chg Jackson Hospital for assignment.

------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Muster Roll

Thomas Maulding
Pvt. Company K, 28th Reg't NC Calvary
Enlisted: Sept 10, 1863

Where: Albemarle
By Whom: Col. Simpson
Period: War

Absent
Detail Service Richmond, VA
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Thos Moulden
Private  28  NC  

Appears on a report of Paroles given prisoners of War by DM Evans

May 1, 1865
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Roll of Prisoners of War captured in Hospitals, Richmond, Va. 

Where captured: Richmond, Virginia   April 3, 1865

Paroled May 3, 1865

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Jackson Hospital, Richmond, VA    List of Employees

Thomas Mauldlin, Co K  28th Regt NC T

Attached to Hospital: April 13, 1864
When detailed: April 8, 1864

By Whom: GENERAL LEE

Now, wait a minute! General Lee? As in General Robert E Lee?  THE GENERAL LEE?

No way...Yes way....G, G, G Grandpa Mauldin was assigned to duty by General Lee. Wow. Just Wow.


Jackson Hospital, Richmond, Virginia


---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Later installments would show that Thomas Mauldin was employed as a Nurse.

On Christmas Eve, 1864, Thomas Mauldin is issued a Passport from Jackson Hospital, Richmond, VA. Destination:Stanly County. 

Then later, on a Return slip of "Medical Officers, Hospital Stewards, Detailed Men and Attendants on Duty, for August of 1864, Thomas Mauldin has returned to Jackson Hospital and assigned again as a Nurse. 




Thomas Alexander Mauldin shows up in 4 census records:

1850, Harris Township, Stanly County, where he is listed as a miner, living near Howell Parker and David Biles, which places him in the present New London area.

NAME:Thomas Mauldin
AGE:28
BIRTH YEAR:abt 1822
BIRTHPLACE:North Carolina
HOME IN 1850:Harris, Stanly, North Carolina
GENDER:Male
FAMILY NUMBER:292
HOUSEHOLD MEMBERS:
NAMEAGE
Thomas Mauldin28
Mary Mauldin27
James Mauldin7
Martha Mauldin2
Mary Mauldin1

1860, now a farmer, living near Samuel Lilly, Almond Boysworth and some Kirks. This places him on the Yadkin/PeeDee, near the area of Swift Island or between there and Stony Hill Church. 

NAME:Thomas Maulden
AGE IN 1860:40
BIRTH YEAR:abt 1820
BIRTHPLACE:North Carolina
HOME IN 1860:Stanly, North Carolina
GENDER:Male
POST OFFICE:Albemarle
VALUE OF REAL ESTATE:View image
HOUSEHOLD MEMBERS:
NAMEAGE
Thomas Maulden40
Mary Maulden38
James D Maulden18
Martha J Maulden13
Mary A Maulden11
Washington Maulden10
Laura Maulden8
Nancy Maulden7
Leny Maulden5
William Maulden3
Henry Maulden1
1870, still a farmer, living near Kirks, Forrests and David Melton. Probably the same spot as 1870. Definitely the Swift Island/ "Rest" (Now River Haven) area. 

NAME:Thos Maulden
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
Thos Maulden50
Mary Maulden47
Mintie Maulden31
Mary Maulden21
Laura Maulden18
Nancy Maulden15
William Maulden13
Henry Maulden12
Lancy Maulden11
Thomas Maulden7
Mary Maulden41
1880, now a Carpenter, The family has crossed the river to the Montgomery side, but staying near it in the Pee Dee area. All the children have grown up and left the nest, but grandson James lives with them.
NAME:Thomas Maldin
AGE:56
BIRTH YEAR:abt 1824
BIRTHPLACE:North Carolina
HOME IN 1880:Pee Dee, Montgomery, North Carolina
RACE:White
GENDER:Male
RELATION TO HEAD OF HOUSE:Self (Head)
MARITAL STATUS:Married
SPOUSE'S NAME:Mary Maldin
FATHER'S BIRTHPLACE:North Carolina
MOTHER'S BIRTHPLACE:North Carolina
NEIGHBORS:View others on page
OCCUPATION:Carpenter
CANNOT READ/WRITE:

BLIND:

DEAF AND DUMB:

OTHERWISE DISABLED:

IDIOTIC OR INSANE:
HOUSEHOLD MEMBERS:
NAMEAGE
Thomas Maldin56
Mary Maldin50
James Maldin4

It is not known when Thomas died, but before the 1900 census. His place of burial is unknown as well, whether in Stanly or Montgomery. I may try to find some sort of information on this, but it may be impossible.

In "Ye Mauldins"by Ervin Mauldin, he has included this information on Thomas Alexander Mauldin. "Thomas Alexander Mauldin was the second son of James and Mary Smith Mauldin, born in 1822. He helped his father farm until he married Mary Polly Blalock, daughter of William David Blalock and Martha Dennis. Thomas continued to farm until he moved to North Albemarle township where he went to work in the gold mine. He worked there until just before 1880, then moved to Montgomery County, NC."  

"There Mary Blalock Mauldin died before 1882, when he applied for a marriage license to wed Mary E. Blalock of Montgomery County. They were married in 1885.......The Montgomery County Blalock records state they are both buried in Sharon Cemetery, Mt. Gilead, NC. The second Mary E. was the daughter of Simeon and Harriett Williams Blalock. "

"Thomas was ordered by the court of Stanly County to go to service. At that time Thomas had a wife and eleven children. Shortly after he joined the regiment in Virginia, the 28th fought with Stonewall Jackson at the Battle of Chancelorville. It fought at Gettysburg, where it took part in Pickett's charge. It fought with Lee at Mine Run and at Spotsylvania Courthouse and made its final assault on Petersburg. Thomas Mauldin was in the same company as his brother James Mauldin, Jr. He was assigned to the hospital in Virginia as a nurse. He was judged unfit for fighting. Orders signed by General Robert E Lee. 


The Complimentary Obituary of Sarah Elizabeth Winfield Howell Davis

$
0
0
My Fourth Great-Grandmother, Sarah Elizabeth Winfield Howell Davis, known affectionately as Sallie, was born on Feb 7, 1773 in Mecklenburg County, Virginia. She arrived in what was then Anson County, North Carolina, in the area near the forks of the Rocky and Yadkin/PeeDee rivers, in the mid-1780's, with her parents, 3 siblings, and other Southside Virginia Methodist Episcopals, most of them related to the Winfield or Freemans in some manner. Some of the family would migrate on to Marlboro County, South Carolina, just across the state line, a decade or later.
U
She was the daughter of Peter Winfield, born in 1745 in Sussex County, Virginia, youngest son of Edward Wingfield and Mary Harris Wingfield and grandson of Jarvis Wingfield. Her mother was Charlotte Freeman, daughter of Arthur Freeman and Agnes Stokes (daughter of Sylvanus Stokes).
Her siblings were:

Edward Winfield 1766 - 1836 married Sussanah Lee
Ancena Winfield 1771- Uncertain, married 1) James Morrison 2) Thomas Avett
Jemina Winfield  1780- between 1840 & 1850, married Griffin Nash

In early Anson, 17 year old Sally would meet Richard Howell, who had connections to the Randall and Jordan families who had arrived in the area possibly twenty years prior. They would marry in 1790 and become the parents of 4 children. Those children were:

1) Peter Howell 1794-1866 married Elizabeth Floyd, daughter of Josiah and Mary Tillman Floyd.
2) Jordan Howell 1796-1835 married Mrs. Hannah Handy maiden name possibly Hall, who later married Shipman Jones of Cumberland County, NC.
3) John Winfield Howell 1799-1854, married Clarrisa Harlow Phelps Pearce, widow of Nathan Pearce, possibly married to Carolina Allen, prior to marriage with the widow Pearce.
4) Charlotte 1800-1877 married Rev. Levi Stancill

Richard Howell passed away in 1802, sometime shortly after the death of his father-in-law, Peter Winfield. In 1804, Sallie would married Job Davis, who was also born in 1773 in Mecklenburg County, Virginia  and migrated to the same area about 1794 in the accompaniment of the Josiah and Mary Tillman Floyd family.  They were married in Marlboro County, South Carolina by Joel Winfield, Ordinary and Clerk, Sallies' cousin. This marriage would also produce 4 children:

1) Henry Davis 1806- 1865 married 1) Sarah Kendall 2) Martha Palmer
2) James M. Davis 1808- 1883 married Rowena Lee
3) Edward Winfield Davis 1811 - 1882 married Rebecca Hathcock
4) Marriott Freeman Davis 1815 - 1885 married 1) Elizabeth Turner 2) Mary Ann Pickler Winfield, widow of his cousin Milton Winfield.

Sallie would survive her second husband by about 4 years.


Davis, Sarah
The Southern Christian Advocate was a newspaper published in South Carolina in the 1800's, that was the official publication of the Methodist conferences in many of the Southern States.

The August 21, 1856 issue gave the following obituary for Grandma Sallie:

Mrs. Sarah Davis - formerly Winfield - was born in Meclenburg Co., (sic), Va., Feb. 7 ,1773 and died in Stanley (sic) Co., N.C. July 10, in the 83rd year of her age.  Joined the M. E. Church when 13 years old. About 1790 she married Richard Howell, and was left a widow in 1802. She married a second time in 1804, to Job Davis, and a second time was left a widow in 1833 (incorrect as Job passed away in 1852), mother of 8 children, two of whom have died in the faith, and the rest, but one, are members of the church. 

The two children who predeceased her where Jordan Howell and John W. Howell. And the one who was no longer "In the Faith", had to be my direct ancestor, Henry Davis, as he was in and out of court with problems by the time his mother had passed away. Jim, E. W., M. F. , Charlotte and Peter, were continually devout and pious.

We remember you Grandma Sallie, and your 242nd birthday.



Searching for Lawrenceville

$
0
0



I have been fascinated with the lost and ancient civilization of Lawrenceville ever since discovering that several of my direct ancestors lived, visited and did business there.

Lawrenceville was at one time the County Seat of Montgomery County, North Carolina, when it included Stanly County. It was located in "East Pee Dee", or the current Montgomery side of the river, and the risks and encumbrances of crossing the river for business, court and other reasons, prompted the split of the one county into two, creating Stanly.


Below are a few mentions of Lawrenceville and its citizens from the Carolina Observer, out of Rowan county:

 13 Feb 1823, issue
10. Montgomery County NC Court of Equity Fall Term 1822. Alfred Randle vs. Parham Kirk and others. "James Hodges and wife Tempy are to appear at the nest Supperior Court at the Court house in Lawrenceville.

25 Dec 1832
171. William Allen vs. John B. Billingsly. John B. Billingsly does not live within the state.

2 Jun 1835, issue
201. Montgomery County NC P & Q Sessions, 1835. Priscilla Hancock vs. Ethelred Clemmons and wife Betsy, Spencer New and wife Sally, Wily Harris amd wife Nancy, John Andrews and wife Patsey, Wiley Scarborough and wife Lucy, Kenneth Hearne and wife Tabitha, Wilson Scarborough and wife Piety, Elisha, Frances and Eli Jancock, Heirs at law of John Hancock Deceased. All out of state.

20 Jan 1825, issue
43. Lawrenceville, Montgomery County NC, 5 Jan 1825. Announcement of Letters of Administration on the estate of Andrew Wade, Esq. by Edward Legrand.

3 Dec 1835, issue
202. Montgomery County NC P & Q Sessions, Daniel Freeman vs. Richmond Billingsly. Original attachment levied on defendants interest in a tract of land in which Christian Billingsly now lives.
28 Apr 1836, issue

According to resources, the original town plat was dated 1817, and the streets and lots were laid out in a grid system. A post office was established in 1818 and county movers and shakers began to build homes and businesses and settle there. Local politians, peace officers, county officials, businessmen and craftsmen and their families made up the populace. 

An estimate of the average population of Lawrenceville was 500, not much for a town today, but in those days of a much smaller population, and scattered villages, 500 was a sizeable community. 

Lawrenceville was located along Woodrun Creek and far enough from the Yadkin/Pee Dee River to avoid the fate of its predecessor across the river, Tindallsville, which had suffered an epidemic of Yellow Fever due to its proximity to water.  The old Fayetteville to Morganton market road ran through the village and off toward the ferry acoss the Pee Dee. The road ran off course and intertwined with todays' 24/27 from Albemarle to Troy and beyond, which in its present coarse is East of the village location and the old road.
One of the merchants who had settled in Lawrenceville was Daniel Freeman, whose ledger of that time, his customers and their purchases survive. In the old plat map, drawn up by Lockey Simmons and certified by Edmund F. Lillly, two of the major players in the area at that time, the town is mention as bordering "a stake in Henry Freeman's line". Daniel Freeman would relocate to the newly formed county of Stanly and to its new county seat of Albemarle. His contributions to Albemarle's origins were invaluable. Others of the citizenry would locate to the new Montgomery County seat, Troy, a more central location when the counties were separated.

Knowing that several members of the Freeman family of  Southside Virginia migrated here at the same time as my direct ancestors, Peter and Charlotte Freeman Winfield, I wonder if any attempts have ever been made to connect these Freemans, as I know she had a brother named Henry and that there were both Daniels and Henry's in the family tree. Her father was Arthur Freeman and her mother Agnes Stokes Freeman and both the Stokes and Freeman families left their marks in the early settlement of the Rowan/Stanly/Montgomery/Anson/Davidson/Randolph county areas.

A biography of Edmund Deberry states that he was born in Lawrenceville, Montgomery County in 1787, was educated at High Shoals, and served as a US Senator from North Carolina for three terms, 1829-1831, 1838 - 1845, and 1849 - 1851. He retired to his plantation in Pee Dee Township and is buried in the family cemetery near Mount Gilead. Lawrenceville did not exist in 1787, but Edmund Deberry did own property there, and perhaps lived there. His plantation still exists, is beautifully maintained and occupied. It is near the communities of PeeDee and Wadeville, not far from Mount Gilead, and not close enough to Lawrenceville to have been considered a part of it.




The remains of the village are difficult to be detected by the untrained eye and are scattered across a pretty large area. Recently, my daughter and I attempted to find the remains during a hike from the trailhead that leads to the old location. 




Bear with me in the following photos. The terrain is not as observable in these shots as they are with the naked eye.  The above indentations and trenches in the earth are an old road bed. It was on a determined route to or through the town. Due to the level spots and rock piles around we found at this location, we were pretty sure we had arrived in Lawrenceville. 



Another shot of the road, this time going up the hill. This may or may not have been the original Morganton to Fayetteville road. Due to the direction it was coming from and heading toward, and its proximity to the modern highway that follows pretty much the same coarse, I would bet that it is. 





Leveled off spots and the location and growth of the vegetation belie old home places or building locations. This area was near the road. These old places make for good camping areas and sadly, modern day campers make use of the old chimney remains to set up campfires. These rocks could have once formed a chimney to a house or the foundation posts of a store. But there was definitely some man-made structure once located here. 


An old and well-used creek crossing. There appears to have once been a bridge or some other structure located here, due to the arrangement of the rocks. I would not be surprised if it was once the location of a mill. 



Another overgrown area around a former structural location. 


The sun eerily shining through the trees over the ghosts of homestead passed. 


This is another one of those shots, where it is hard to tell by the picture, what you can more readily observe with the eye. This was evidently a dug-out area made to be flat, where some small house or structure was located, maybe a barn or storage shed. 

A chimney stood here and the trees and other foliage took over. There was one area where the rocks appeared like tombstones in an old and abandoned cemetery. I don't know, but it could possibly have been, as the town was occupied from at least 1817 to 1842, and I am sure not all families abandoned it immediately. The Cochrans were the last known family to have owned the land and they donated it, not too long ago, to the National Forest Service. 



In this shot "signs of man" are more easily seen. A possible homesite or business, not far from the old wagon rut. 



Another area that speaks of human habitation. Piles of rocks and obvious use by campers. But the area is leveled and shows signs of a building site. 


At some areas, campers have not relocated the moss covered piles of rocks that used to be chimneys or footings to a wooden structure. 

Here a narrower road veres off the "Main Road" and past several possible homesites. This is a very hilly area and most of the homeplaces were on leveled off spots and very near a creek. This one appears to have maybe been one of the created "gridded" streets as appears on the plat. 

Another possible building location just 'down the street' from the above lane. 


Again, campers have taken the remains of Lawrenceville to make campfires on top of old homesites. 

From this angle, looking toward the center of the photo, I hope the reader can envision the cabin that sat here. 
The ghosts of Lawrenceville and the old Morganton to Fayetteville road say goodbye in the twinkling of the setting sun, as the road leads into emptiness, forests and infinity. 

One day soon, I hope to walk the entire trail, but on this day, we had constraints of responsibilities and the setting sun. Rangers have before taken groups on hiking tours of this beautiful and historic area. I hope they schedule another soon. I'll be there. 


The Joining of Mrs. Martha B.

$
0
0
Oftentimes, a bit of our heritage can be found in short blurbs in old books. Church histories make excellent references to our ancestors and offer invaluable insight into their way of life.

Rocky River Presbyterian Church is an old and well documented congregation located in Southwestern Cabarrus County, along the Rocky River, from which so much of my heritage sprang.

Several books of been written on it, and with mention of it, among the best and most thorough, one called "The Presbyterian Congregation on Rocky River". The author was Thomas Hugh Spence and it was published in 1954 by Rocky River Presbyterian Church of Concord, North Carolina.

The book in it's entirety is available online at this link :  https://archive.org/details/presbyteriancong00spen

through the Univeristy of North Carolina Chapel Hill library.

It includes over a paragraph on and an extensive review of the career and family of my 5th Great-Grandfather, Rev John McKemie Wilson. His middle name can be found spelled any number of ways, from McClema to MaKemie to McKamy and so forth. But it is not the reknowned Rev. Wilson that this post is on.

Instead, it's on a singular mention of an elderly and blind lady who had joined the church. That lady was my mysterious Fourth Great-Grandmother, Martha.

Now, I hesitate to give Martha's surname, even her married one, as I am not altogether positive what it was.

I have been researching it as "Byram", because the available information seemed to point in that direction. I also have only been able to find Martha in one census, the 1880 one, living with her daughter and son-in-law, Mary Louise and Frederick Fincher Starnes, my third Great-Grandparents.

NAME:Martha Byram
AGE:70
BIRTH YEAR:abt 1810
BIRTHPLACE:South Carolina
HOME IN 1880:Rocky River, Cabarrus, North Carolina
RACE:White
GENDER:Female
RELATION TO HEAD OF HOUSE:Mother-in-law
MARITAL STATUS:Widowed
FATHER'S BIRTHPLACE:South Carolina
MOTHER'S BIRTHPLACE:South Carolina
NEIGHBORS:View others on page
OCCUPATION:Boarding
CANNOT READ/WRITE:

BLIND:

DEAF AND DUMB:

OTHERWISE DISABLED:

IDIOTIC OR INSANE:
HOUSEHOLD MEMBERS:
NAMEAGE
F.F. Starns51
Mary L. Starns43
Margaret A. Starns23
Thomas M. Starns19
Dalphia A. Starns10
Georgia A. Starns7
Fredrick L. Starns5
Dasie L. Starns2
Martha Byram70


This census, luckily, gives quite a bit of information on her. First, it identifies her as being 70 years old, having been born in South Carolina and her parents being born in South Carolina. It also names her as the mother-in-law of F. F. Starnes, meaning she was Mary L.'s mother. 

I do know that prior to F. F. Starnes showing up in Union County, NC in the 1860 census, living next to his father, Fred Jr. (son of Fred Sr.), he had purchased land along the Rocky River Road in Lancaster County, South Carolina and that his Civil War records identify him as being from both Union County, NC and Lancaster County, S.C. 



The documentation I've found on the children of Mary Louise Starnes seemed to corroborate the information in the census that her maiden name is Byram, or something very close, as the spellings vary. 

And now, I've found this mention of her in the Rocky River Presbyterian records. 

"A special meeting of the session was held at the residence of Frederick Starnes in February of 1875, at which time Mrs. Martha Bryson, "a blind and aged  lady" was recieved into the membership of the Church on confession of her faith. " pages 113-114, The Presbyterian Congregation at Rocky River. 

This was without any doubt, my Martha. First, at this time, Grandpa Finch was the only Fred Starnes living in that area, and he did live very near the church. Second, his wife and Martha's daughter, Mary Louise, is buried there, along with several of the children who died young. I am sure they were members of the church. 

Third, the 1880 census also identifies Martha as blind and her 7 year old granddaughter, Georgia, who would die young, as having rheumatism.  



I should be able to find Martha in an earlier census record, as the 1850, 1860, and 1870 census records all list women and children. By 1860, her daughter Mary Louise was married to F. F. and in 1850, we find a 14 year old girl, Mary L. Byrum, living with a 33 year old Elizabeth Byrom, a 70 year old Mary Byrom, and 28 year old laborer, Ephraim Starnes. Further research on Ephraim Starnes shows quite a bit of earlier interaction with a Willliam Byram, who was more than likely related to these 3 ladies. But no Martha, born around 1810. Was her name reallly Byram, as is shown in the census, or could it have been Bryson, as shown in the book?


On Mary L. , in the 1880 census, it reveals that she was born in North Carolina, as was her father, and verifies that her mother was born in South Carolina.

NAME:Mary L. Starns
[Mary L. Starnes
[Mary L. Byram] 
AGE:43
BIRTH YEAR:abt 1837
BIRTHPLACE:North Carolina
HOME IN 1880:Rocky River, Cabarrus, North Carolina
RACE:White
GENDER:Female
RELATION TO HEAD OF HOUSE:Wife
MARITAL STATUS:Married
SPOUSE'S NAME:F.F. Starns
FATHER'S BIRTHPLACE:North Carolina
MOTHER'S NAME:Martha Byram
MOTHER'S BIRTHPLACE:South Carolina
NEIGHBORS:View others on page
OCCUPATION:Keeping House
CANNOT READ/WRITE:

BLIND:

DEAF AND DUMB:

OTHERWISE DISABLED:

IDIOTIC OR INSANE:
HOUSEHOLD MEMBERS:
NAMEAGE
F.F. Starns51
Mary L. Starns43
Margaret A. Starns23
Thomas M. Starns19
Dalphia A. Starns10
Georgia A. Starns7
Fredrick L. Starns5
Dasie L. Starns2
Martha Byram70

The Death Certificate of Frederick Lafayette Starnes, known as "Fate", and shown as a 5 year old in the above census record, gives his mothers maiden name as "Brooms". Of course, the informant was son Silas Grier Starnes, who may not have been completely familiar with his Grandmother's maiden name, just the sound of it, and he also gave both of his father's parents as having been born in South Carolina.



In contrast, the death certificate of daughter Della (or Delphia) A. Starnes McAnnulty, gives her parents as "Fred Starnes" and "Mary Barren", the informant being her daughter, Stella.  This 1948 death certificate is in typed print, so there is no mistaking the lettering and granddaughter Stella gives the birthplace of her grandparents as "North Carolina". 

The 1936 Death Certificate of their brother, Thomas Mellon Starnes, gives his mother's maiden name as "Mary Byrums" and birthplaces for both parents being in "N. C." with the informant being his son Herbert Phillips Starnes. 




The death certificate for eldest daughter, Sarah Alice Starnes Linker, or Mrs. Wiley Monroe Linker, names her parents as F. F. Stearns and Mary Byron. 

Oddly, although my Second G-Grandmother Leavy, lived the longest other than one brother, passing in 1939, I've yet to locate a death certificate for her. Either the year is wrong on her tombstone, her name was horribly mangled on the certificate, or she just slipped by without one. 

Also missing is daughter Daisy L Starnes who married Joseph M. Herrin. I can not locate her past her 1893 marriage license, but her story does not end there. 

So what was Grandma Martha's last name? Byron, Bryson, Byram, Barren?

......the search goes on. 





Sickness on the Edge of Town

$
0
0
The following clip from The Carolina Watchman, a ancient and invaluable publication from Salisbury, NC, was included in a column entitled, "Albemarle and Stanly County".

It informs of an illness that was sweeping the community. I include it due to its genealogical value. Sometimes, descendants can find a tombstone or record that tells when an ancestor died, but never knowing how or why they died, especially if they were young.

In the article, members of the community, including Howell Harwood, have taken ill with symptoms of a disease mimiciing typhoid fever. This article was from the October 14, 1908 issue.

Mr. Harwood, a Civil War vet, and son of Absalom Harwood and Dovey Burleson, survived this illness and passed away at the ripe old age of 83 on September 5, 1925





The Mystery of the Mischievous Daisy Starnes

$
0
0
My Great, Great Great Aunt, Daisy Starnes, left a bit of a mystery. For certain, she appears in one census record as a child.
Name:Dasie L. Starns
[Dasie L. Starnes
Age:2
Birth Year:abt 1878
Birthplace:North Carolina
Home in 1880:Rocky River, Cabarrus, North Carolina
Race:White
Gender:Female
Relation to Head of House:Daughter
Marital Status:Single
Father's name:F.F. Starns
Father's Birthplace:North Carolina
Mother's name:Mary L. Starns
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
F.F. Starns51
Mary L. Starns43
Margaret A. Starns23
Thomas M. Starns19
Dalphia A. Starns10
Georgia A. Starns7
Fredrick L. Starns5
Dasie L. Starns2
Martha Byram70



Then, barely more than a child, she marries a Stanly County scoundrel, Joseph Marshall Herrin, at the young age of 15. Her father, F. F. Starnes, signed a consent for her to marry the man, and this has puzzled me. It does not appear something he would do.


Daisy Starnes Herrin Death Certificate


After that, Daisy's story is told by way of newspaper articles.




First, they announce her marriage, then shortly afterwards, how it goes sour.







Daily Concord Standard
(Concord, North Carolina)6 Jun 1894, Wed • Page 2



According to the above article, the marriage of Joseph Marshall Herrin and Daisy Starnes really did not last very long. Young Daisy, who was only 15 when she married Joe Herrin, was tired of waiting on a convict husband to get out of jail and took off with her cousin Josephine Starnes Wallace's husband James.

The Evening Visitor
Raleigh, North Carolina)7 Jun 1894, Thu • Page 3


The Story was reported around the state.

Two years later, in 1896, the couple went to court and were found "Not Guilty".


The Concord Times
(Concord, North Carolina)
30 Jul 1896, Thu • Page 3

And that is the last I've found of Daisy Starnes Herrin. Her wayward husband, however, left more of a trail, and mentions her in abstract.


In the following article, it mentions that Joe Herrin had a living wife in either Mecklenburg County or Township 10, where Frederick Fincher Starnes lived, in Cabarrus County.


The Standard
(Concord, North Carolina)28 May 1896, Thu • Page 2

In this last off-handed mention of Daisy, she was "leading a life of ill fame" and at least alive in 1897. Joe Herrin divorced her and went on to marry 3 more times and his is a story of its own.



And what about Jim Wallace, the man Daisy took off to Gaston County with?

He at least went back to his wife Josephine "Josie " Starnes Wallace by 1900.
Name:Josie Wallace
[Jora Wallace] 
Age:28
Birth Date:Apr 1871
Birthplace:North Carolina
Home in 1900:Poplar Tent, Cabarrus, North Carolina
Race:White
Gender:Female
Relation to Head of House:Wife
Marital Status:Married
Spouse's Name:James Wallace
Marriage Year:1887
Years Married:13
Father's Birthplace:North Carolina
Mother's Birthplace:North Carolina
Mother: number of living children:1
Mother: How many children:2
Occupation:View on Image
Neighbors:View others on page
Household Members:
NameAge
James Wallace40
Josie Wallace28
Beulah B Wallace1/12
The census record tells us that the couple had a newborn daughter Beulah, and that Josie had been the mother of a second child that had already passed away. So Josie took him back. She was the daughter of Allen McDaniel (or A. M. D.) Starnes, son of Nathan T. Starnes. Josie, like her cousin Daisy, married early, and was only 14 when she married Jim Wallace. The marriage did not last long.

I have not yet discovered whether or not she divorced Jim Wallace or whether he died. He is hard to trace. Their marriage license gives his year of birth as 1867 and his parents as Robert D. and Elizabeth Wallace. The 1900 census gives his year of birth as 1850 and his place of birth as South Carolina and his parents as South Carolina. Wallace was a very common name in Cabarrus, Mecklenburg, Union Counties, NC and the northern counties of South Carolina. With the wide range of his possible birth date, it is difficult to determine which James or Jim Wallace he was.

What we do know is that Josephine married again, to the Rev. William H. Willeford on June 21, 1906. She may have been a widow, and her daughter had also passed away, because there is no other record of Beulah B. Wallace.

Name:Josie Willeford
Age in 1910:38
Birth Year:abt 1872
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 Willeford
Father's Birthplace:North Carolina
Mother's Birthplace:North Carolina
Neighbors:View others on page
Household Members:
NameAge
William Willeford32
Josie Willeford38


Willeford_RevWH


The couple lived in Burke County in 1920. The Rev. Willeford is buried in Davie County and passed away in 1927. 

Name:Josephine Willeford
[Josephine Williford] 
Age:47
Birth Year:abt 1873
Birthplace:North Carolina
Home in 1920:Lovelady, Burke, North Carolina
Street:South Main Street
Race:White
Gender:Female
Relation to Head of House:Boarder
Marital Status:Married
Father's Birthplace:North Carolina
Mother's Birthplace:North Carolina
Able to Speak English:Yes
Occupation:Cook
Industry:Boarding House
Employment Field:Wage or Salary
Neighbors:View others on page
Household Members:
NameAge
Ula Biggerstaff36
[26] 
William H Willeford37
Josephine Willeford47
Josie returned to Cabarrus County to live with family  and passed away in 1938.

Name:Josie Willoford
[Josie Willaford] 
Birth Year:abt 1873
[abt 1893] 
Gender:Female
Race:White
Birthplace:North Carolina
Marital Status:Widowed
Relation to Head of House:Aunt
Home in 1930:Township 2, Cabarrus, North Carolina
Map of Home:View Map
Dwelling Number:187
Family Number:187
Age at First Marriage:25
Attended School:No
Able to Read and Write:No
Father's Birthplace:North Carolina
Mother's Birthplace:North Carolina
Able to Speak English:Yes
Neighbors:View others on page
HoJosephine Josie <i>Starnes</i> Willeford
NameAge
Lawson C Carter37
Maggie Carter33
James Carter16
Raymon Carter14
Louise Carter11
S Francis Carter3
Bertha M Carter0
Josie Willoford57
[37] 
Birth: Apr. 16, 1872
Stanly County
North Carolina, USA
Death: Jun. 21, 1938
Cabarrus County
North Carolina, USA


Josie's Starnes fate was fairly clear, but what of her cousin, the mysterious and mischeivous Daisy?

The Search Continues. 


I'm An American, and that is a Wonderful Thing to be.

$
0
0
This post is not going to deal with the past, but the present.

It breaks my heart when I see individuals in the media and public eye, who try to divide our very unique population by ethnicity or who use this device to prejudge or categorized someone.

But I am not blind to the fact that most Americans have no idea who they are.

But I do. I am an American mutt. My roots are ALL Southeastern Coastal USA. My most recent of ancestors arrived in America between 1720-1750. That's the most recent. Others have occupied this land for thousands of years. That why I can proudly and truthfully claim my inheritance as American.

These are the most recent results of my admixture testing.

Population
North_Atlantic45.74%
Baltic24.99%
West_Med15.36%
West_Asian3.67%
East_Med5.51%
Red_Sea0.83%
South_Asian0.52%
East_Asian0.98%
Siberian-    
Amerindian1.34%
Oceanian0.24%
Northeast_African0.48%
Sub-Saharan0.34%


I went with Eurogenes on this one as I am, as is  visually evident, primarily of European decent.

My biggest block is nearly 46% North Atlantic


This incorporates the British Isles and theNordic/Viking countries.



My next largest block is "Baltic", at nearly a quarter. Some people don't realize that their ancestors traveled from Eastern Europe to Western Eurpoe, England, France, etc., and maybe lived there for a while, generations even, before seeking passage to America.





So, From there its about 15% West Mediteranian, which I have found mention of "Portugeuse" in my research.



After that, the percentages become smaller, 3% or less, but I've found several Great-Great Grandparents who carried multiple ethnicities by the mid --1800's.

Nearly 1% Red Sea

And over 5% West Mediterranean.


And I have been able to trace my Solomon ancestors to a Jewish merchant from Revolutionary Era New Jersey who changed his identity and came to North Carolina and started a new family.

After that it is 1.34 % Amerindian, , .52% South Asian, nearly 1% East Asian and .24% Oceanian.
These are my Native American roots. And maybe an Island girl picked up on a pirate voyage who was delivered to America.



Then there are my African roots. .48% North East African and .34% Subsaharan. These come from my Native American roots who intermarried with both Africans and Europeans.



These results are a little different from the more generalized test I had earlier. But they are also more in depth and specific. But the results are still relatively close and reveal the fact that I am truly an American mutt.


But my point is, if your ancestors have been here for more than a generation or two, you are probably a mutt as well. And we are one country and one people. Support your motherland, America,



Viewing all 495 articles
Browse latest View live


<script src="https://jsc.adskeeper.com/r/s/rssing.com.1596347.js" async> </script>