It Began With Ira Proctor
While researching the Alabama Turners, it was quite evident, by proof of an 1853 Marriage document, that the only son from the home of Patience Turner to survive past 1860, William P. Turner, had married one Mary Carolina Proctor. However, there were two trains of thought running through the direct descendants of this family as to the maiden name of the wife of his brother James Turner, who had died proor to 1860, leaving a widow and 4 children. One son had named his mother as Elizabeth Threadgill, which was a lseanible possibility, as the youngest sister in the family, Chalotte, had married William H. Threadgill, son of Joshua Hull Threadgill of Anson County, whose property adjoined that of her grandfather, James Turner in the Red Hill Church area of Anson County along Jack's Branch.
To add to that connection, after the death of Mary Caroline Proctor Turner, her widower, William P. Turner, would marry Mollie Creps. Mollie Creps was the daughter of Eliza Jane Threadgill Creps, a sister of William H. Threadgill, so Mollie was the granddaughter of Joshua Hull Threadgill. So therefore, this theory seemed feasible.
However, the child of James and Elizabeth Turner of Sumter County, Alabama who lived the longest, their only daughter, Mary Louise, would have her mother named as Elizabeth Proctor on her death certificate. This was certainly a feasible theory too, as it was not uncommon for siblings to marry into another family of siblings in those days.
So I set out to discover which theory was true.
Name: | Joseph Proctor | ||||||||||||||||||
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Age: | 20 | ||||||||||||||||||
Birth Date: | Aug 1879 | ||||||||||||||||||
Birthplace: | Texas | ||||||||||||||||||
Home in 1900: | Justice Precinct 6, Houston, Texas | ||||||||||||||||||
Street: | F | ||||||||||||||||||
Sheet Number: | 4 | ||||||||||||||||||
Number of Dwelling in Order of Visitation: | 75 | ||||||||||||||||||
Family Number: | 74 | ||||||||||||||||||
Race: | White | ||||||||||||||||||
Gender: | Male | ||||||||||||||||||
Relation to Head of House: | Cousin | ||||||||||||||||||
Marital status: | Single | ||||||||||||||||||
Father's Birthplace: | Alabama | ||||||||||||||||||
Mother's Birthplace: | Alabama | ||||||||||||||||||
Occupation: | Farmer | ||||||||||||||||||
Can Read: | Yes | ||||||||||||||||||
Can Write: | Yes | ||||||||||||||||||
Can Speak English: | Yes | ||||||||||||||||||
House Owned or Rented: | O | ||||||||||||||||||
Home Free or Mortgaged: | F | ||||||||||||||||||
Farm or House: | F | ||||||||||||||||||
Neighbors: | |||||||||||||||||||
Household Members: |
|
I had one clue. In the 1900 census of Porter Springs, Texas, a 20 year old young man named Joseph Proctor was living in the home of William A Turner, oldest son of James and Elizabeth Turner, and his relationship was given as a cousin. If William A. Turners mother was a Proctor, this would easily explain how Joseph Proctor was his cousin.
I have not found a marriage license for James and Elizabeth. This does not mean there was not one. It could have been in another county. Also, some records from that era just did not stand the test of time. So many different circumstances and acts of nature have destroyed records over the decades, especially, over centuries, that it is nearly a miracle that anything survived at all.
Also, James was single in 1850 and living in the home of his mother. Therefore, Elizabeth should be single in the 1850 census as well. But I did not find her. Not in Sumter County, Alabama at any rate. There were Elizabeth Proctors in other places. Was she one of them? And would Mary Caroline be found with her? Were they sisters?
The first step would be to find out more about Joseph Proctor.
If Joseph Proctor was indeed born in 1879, as given in the 1900 census, then he should show up in the 1880 census as an infant. That would give us a clue of who his parents might be. If he was named Proctor, and a first cousin of William A. Turner, then it would make sense that his father would be the brother of William A. Turner's mother, Elizabeth, if she indeed was a Proctor, herself. But the census didn't say he was a first cousin. Just a cousin. He could be a first cousin once removed, a second or third cousin, for all we know. But it's a lead.
Before going backwards, however, I had to go forward, in order to know if I had the right person or not. Thankfully, Joseph Franklin Proctor married, had a family, and lived a long life into modern times. He moved around some, but remained in Texas.
CLIPPED FROM
Lubbock Avalanche-JournalLubbock, Texas04 Jan 1969, Sat • Page 18
He died in 1969 in Lubbock.
Name: | Joe F. Proctor | ||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Age: | 9/12 | ||||||||||||
Birth Date: | Abt 1879 | ||||||||||||
Birthplace: | Texas | ||||||||||||
Home in 1880: | Washington, Texas, USA | ||||||||||||
Race: | White | ||||||||||||
Gender: | Male | ||||||||||||
Relation to Head of House: | Son | ||||||||||||
Marital status: | Single | ||||||||||||
Father's name: | I. Proctor | ||||||||||||
Father's Birthplace: | Alabama | ||||||||||||
Mother's name: | M. T. Proctor | ||||||||||||
Mother's Birthplace: | Tennessee | ||||||||||||
Neighbors: | |||||||||||||
Household Members: |
|
I also found him as an infant in 1880. Joe was the son of an Ira Proctor, born 1825 in Alabama and died in 1890 in Washington County, Texas, and his wife, Myra T. Lewis Proctor Hendrick (1835-1922). If Joe was the first cousin of W. A. Turner, then it is time to focus on Ira. So, now it was time to go backwards in time.
1870 found Ira at 44, married to Myra, 33 in Washington County, Texas, where he remained in 1880, with no children yet. Myra was probably expecting William, their oldest son, at the time.
Name: | Ira Proctor | ||||||||||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Age: | 26 | ||||||||||||||||||||
Birth Year: | abt 1834 | ||||||||||||||||||||
Gender: | Male | ||||||||||||||||||||
Birth Place: | Alabama | ||||||||||||||||||||
Home in 1860: | Chappell Hill, Washington, Texas | ||||||||||||||||||||
Post Office: | Chappell Hill | ||||||||||||||||||||
Dwelling Number: | 330 | ||||||||||||||||||||
Family Number: | 330 | ||||||||||||||||||||
Occupation: | Overseer | ||||||||||||||||||||
Real Estate Value: | 1500 | ||||||||||||||||||||
Household Members: |
|
In 1860, he had arrived in Washington County, Texas, where he would remain. He was 26, single, and working as an Overseer for a merchant named Jethro Atkinson. Still, no sign of where Ira came from, except that he was born in Alabama. Could it have been Sumter County or thereabouts. The 1850 census was my only hope. He would have been a teenager. Hopefully, he could be found living with his parents..
Name: | Ira Procter | ||||||||||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Age: | 20 | ||||||||||||||||||||
Birth Year: | abt 1830 [Abt 1826] | ||||||||||||||||||||
Birthplace: | Alabama | ||||||||||||||||||||
Home in 1850: | Leon, Leon, Texas, USA | ||||||||||||||||||||
Gender: | Male | ||||||||||||||||||||
Family Number: | 55 | ||||||||||||||||||||
Household Members: |
|
I found Ira in 1850, as a teenager alright. And he was living with a Proctor family. He should have been 16, but he was labeled as 20. The adults in the home, Abner, 40 and Sarah, 36, could logistically be his parents. But something was amiss. Normally, from what I have seen, even in these census records before the relationship of the individual began being stated, children were listed in order of age in the census by the census takers. Not always, but usually. Any other persons who lived in the household, mother-in-laws, boarders, household employees, were always tacked on at the end. A big gap between older children and younger children, especially when the heads of the household were older, could even indicate grandchildren. If Ira was the oldest child, why was he tacked on at the end, instead of being listed in between Sarah and Mary?
It was time to now turn my attention to Abner Procter. He was, after all, a Procter or Proctor. And he had a daugther named Caroline! But there is no Elizabeth. 1850 is the census that Mary Caroline Proctor could be found, if she were to be found, before she married William P. Turner. The same with William A. Turner's mother, Elizabeth, before she married William P.'s brother James.
Name: | Abner Procter | ||||||||||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Age: | 40 | ||||||||||||||||||||
Birth Year: | abt 1810 | ||||||||||||||||||||
Birthplace: | North Carolina | ||||||||||||||||||||
Home in 1850: | Leon, Leon, Texas, USA | ||||||||||||||||||||
Gender: | Male | ||||||||||||||||||||
Family Number: | 55 | ||||||||||||||||||||
Household Members: |
|
And then I saw....that Abner Proctor had been born in 1810 in North Carolina... All roads leading back to NC? Perhaps to Anson County?
Name: | Abner Procktor |
---|---|
Home in 1840 (City, County, State): | Perry, Alabama |
Free White Persons - Males - 20 thru 29: | 1 |
Free White Persons - Females - Under 5: | 2 |
Free White Persons - Females - 20 thru 29: | 1 |
Slaves - Males - Under 10: | 4 |
Slaves - Males - 10 thru 23: | 2 |
Slaves - Males - 24 thru 35: | 1 |
Slaves - Females - 24 thru 35: | 1 |
Persons Employed in Agriculture: | 5 |
Free White Persons - Under 20: | 2 |
Free White Persons - 20 thru 49: | 2 |
Total Free White Persons: | 4 |
Total Slaves: | 8 |
Total All Persons - Free White, Free Colored, Slaves: | 12 |
The first census I actually find Abner Procter in is the 1840 one, in which he lived in Perry County, Alabama. Now, Perry County wasn't Sumter County, where the Turner's lived. But it is the county where some of my Winfield family, that I researched several years ago, ended up, after living in the same part of Anson County as my Turner family. Listed on the same page to be exact.
The above map shows the distance between Perry and Sumter. They don't connect, but they are not too far from each other.
And then, the names of some of the Turner grandchildren of my focus couple, Axom and Patience, began to make sense. There was an Abner Proctor Turner, who was born in 1885 (which turned out to be 5 years after Abner Proctor, himself, died). He was the son of William P. "Billy" Turner, Jr and Laura Corder Turner and a grandson of William P. Turner, Sr. and Mary Caroline Proctor.
And Willliam P. Turner Sr. and wife Mary Caroline Proctor Turner, actually had a son named Ira Proctor Turner, a brother to Billy, born in 1873.
So, it appeared that I was on the right path, so who was Abner Proctor?
I found that he was indeed born in North Carolina about 1810. He married Sarah Hulda Mahala Morris in Perry County, Alabama on January 13, 1834. He moved to Leon County, Texas fairly early on in its development, around 1836, and there remained, raising his family there and dying on September 5, 1880 in Centerville.
He left a will. He had Mahala had 8 children:
1836-1882 Mary Ann Proctor Reed
1838-1907 Lydia Caroline Proctor McLaughlin
1841-1902 John Thomas Proctor
1844-1927 Sarah J. "Sallie" Proctor McLendon
1846-1903 William Proctor
1847-1883 James Ira
1849-1915 Frances Evelyn "Fannie" Proctor Ellis
1851-1920 George K. Proctor
James Ira was not the 20 year old Ira Proctor in the 1850 census, instead, he left was left out it seems. He married and died young, at age 35. He was an entirely different person. But that name "Ira" was a popular one in the Proctor family.
So, Abner Proctor was not the father of Ira Proctor who was living with him in 1850. Plus, there was still no sign of Mary Caroline Proctor or an Elizabeth the age of the wife of James Turner of Sumter County, Alabama. Could Ira have been a younger brother? A 20 year age difference, a big gap there, but still quiet possible, especially if there may have been different mothers. So I had to go another generation back. And I found the source of all of the "Iras" in the Proctor family tree.
An Ira Proctor is found in the 1800 census of Anson County, and it appears he leads back to an Abner Proctor (his father?) found in the 1790 census of Beaufort County, NC.
Then in the Perry County, Alabama estate files, is one for Ira Proctor, suggesting a date of death of the year 1815.
Page from the Estate File of Ira Proctor. |
In this file are named his wife, Rebecca, who apparently followed him in death just two years later in 1817, and the following children: Mary Ann, Abner, Nanny, Penny, Lydia, Sarah and John.
Abner Proctor was the son of Ira Proctor the first. But there was no Ira Jr. nor was there a Mary Caroline or Elizabeth, and he died long before those 3 were ever born.
Abner Proctor was appointed guardians, being about 5 years old at the time:
"Solomon Lee and Ethelred Allen, Solomon Lee is appointed guardian for Abner Proctor, a minor of Ira Proctor, deceased.." dated September 1824. Signed by James C. Scott, Simon Williams and William Hornbuckle.
Ira Proctor also appeared on in the following Petition in Anson County.
http://www.angelfire.com/nc/benjthomasofansonnc/pet.html
It was then that I turned to the land records of Anson County, to see if they could shed any light.
There I found several deeds that provided as many questions as they did answers:
The above is the Dower laid off for Rebecca Proctor, 'widow and relict' of Ira Proctor along Gould's Fork in Anson County, North Carolina. "Beginning at an Ash (tree) standing in a fork of Gould's fork". This lot was surveyed in November of 1809 and neighboring properties were that of William Dabbs and a Teal. The Division was for 109 and 3/8 acres and was proved in court in Janurary of 1810. Ira Proctor died much earlier than the 1815 that I have seen given.The above is found in the deeds of Anson County, NC, Book NO Page 195.
In Book P Page 197, Dated the October Term of Court 1814, I found:
"In Pursuant of Order of Court October 1814 to lay off and allot to John Proctor real estate of his father Ira Proctor deceased 8 Nov 1814"
John Proctor was the brother of Abner Proctor, an older brother, as it appears. In this document I discovered 7 Lots more or less equally divided to the 7 children of Ira Proctor.
Lot 1 - 49 1/2 acres to Anne (I would discover that Anne and Nancy are the same daughter)
Lot 2 - 50 acres to Lydia
Lot 3 - 50 acres to Sarah
Lot 4- 50 acres to Ira (Jr. obviously. As this Ira is never mentioned in the later estate papers and this is many years before the other younger Ira is even born, I can only conclude he died as a child. The only two sons mentioned in the 1817 probate papers are Abner and John, so this Ira must have died between 1814 and 1817.
Lot 5- 44 acres to Abner Proctor
Lot 6- 51 acres to Mary Proctor
Lot 7 - 50 acres to John Proctor
As the lots were not completely even, the judge ordered leverage with the following:
"Guardian of Ira to pay John $14.66 and to Mary $8.68"
"Guardian of Ann to pay Mary $19.96"
"Guardian of Lydia to pay Sarah $2.16 and Abner $9.66 and Mary $22.35"
Witness Signatures were J. Holmes, Joseph Newsom and John Grace. "
Now, jumping ahead to 1832 - 8 years later to Book Y Page 150 in Anson County Deeds. If Abner Proctor was born in 1805, he was 27 in 1832 and as his father had to have died in 1809 or prior, he would have been 4 at most. He was raised by Guardians (Solomon Lee and Ethelred Allen) and/or his mother. His mother may have remarried. That, I haven't found.
Book Y Page 150 Anson County, North Carolina deeds:
"This indenture made this 21st day of March 1832 between Abner Proctor of the County of Perry and State of Alabama on the one part and William Grace of the County of Anson"
Abner Proctor made a sale to William Grace. Recall that a John Grace witnessed the 1814 Divison of Property of Ira Proctor to his heirs. William Grace and John Grace were most likely related and most likely neighbors of the Proctor family lands. Grace was not a name you found a kazillion of in Anson County, unlike Lee's or Allens.
For $600 Abner sold a tract on the "SE side of Goulds Fork and both sides of the Road leading from Wadesborough to Mecklenburg being the land formerly owned by Ira Proctor".
Just a short space above is a picture of a sign labeled "Gould's Fork". I made a picture of this sign while on my way to tour the old Turner Homeplace. The land sits right on Goulds Fork, a small branch not far from Brown Creek.
It continued: " beginning on the bank of Reedy Fork, Holmes Corner - except for Lot No 6, Lot 7, Lot 4, the balance to William Grace".
These lots were lots in the division of the lands of Ira Proctor. It was signed by Abner Proctor and witnessed by Rufus Johnson and John Grace.
Then, there is an addendum wherein 'Offy' Holmes and his wife Mary "have conveyed our part of Lot No 3 to William Grace". But it was signed Theophilus Holmes and Mary Holmes. I can then conclude that Offy Holmes and Theophilus Holmes are the same person, with Offy being a nickname for Theophilus like the nickname Bill is for William. I can also conclude that Theophilus Holmes and Mary Holmes were heirs of Ira Proctor. I'm no legal or real estate expert, but I've seen enough of these old deeds to understand if a male was an heir, the deeds name him only. If a married female was an heir, it would then name her and her husband, or even just her husband 'in right' of his wife.
So Mary Holmes would have been the daughter of Ira Proctor and she married Theolphilus Holmes. In the Divison of Lands in Deed P Page 197, Mary Proctor had been deeded Lot 6.
Also keep in mind, that while the land is in Anson County, NC, that Abner Proctor is named as a resident of Perry County, Alabama.
We continue on to Book Y Page 34 Anson County, North Carolina Deeds.
" Know all men by these presents that we William Lee, Lydia Lee formerl Lydia Proctor wife and consort of the said William Lee and John Proctor all of the County of Perry and State of Alabama in consideration of the confidence which we repose in our friend and relation Abner Proctor of the same state and County have nominated contributed and appoint him the said Abner Proctor our only true and lawful agent and attorney to convey and transfer all the right title of Estate......situated in the County of Anson and State of North Carolina on the waters of Goulds Fork, a parcel of land formerly belonged to Ira Proctor since deceased......."
It was dated the 27th day of October, 1830 It includes a codicil from the Governor of Alabama and an attorney in Alabama giving Power of Attorney to Abner Proctor, with a great deal more legal ramblings, but no more genealogical substance and is signed by William Lee, Lydia Lee, and John Proctor.
So, now we know that these individuals were Abner's brother John, his sister Lydia Proctor Lee and her husband William Lee. Keep in mind, that while the land was in Anson, all of the individuals are in Perry County, Alabama.
The V-E-R-Y N-E-X-T page is a deed that sheds a lot of mystery on the family. But not really. Coming from the roots up, without looking at any of the information from Alabama, it all fits together quite logically. It's just when I tried to find these individuals after this time in Alabama, that it is all over the place.
Book Y Page 35 Anson County, North Carolina Register of Deeds
'Know all men by these presents that we Benjamin Holmes Moses Holmes Solomon Lee David Lee and Asa Hinson ALL of the County of Perry and State of Alabama'.......
'for and in consideration of the natural love and affection we bear unto Abner Proctor of the same County and State as also for the sum of $1 to us in hand paid by the said Abner Proctor".
*Note that one dollar is the usual nominal legal amount used when a relative is actually giving a piece of property to another relative.
"piece of land in the County of Anson and state of North Carolina situated on Goulds Fork Creek bounded on the north by land formerly owned by James Holmes............being part of a tract formerly owned by Ira Proctor and " - This part is VERY IMPORTANT- 'and descended from him to John Holmes in right of his wife Nancy, formerly Nancy Proctor".
So, I now know that Mary Proctor married Theophilus Holmes, Lydia Proctor married William Lee, and Nancy Proctor married John Holmes AND that the property of Ira Proctor was 'bounded on the north' by the property of a James Holmes.
This deed was a QCD, or a quitclaim deed, which was used most often to transfer property between family members.
It ends with "we the said Benjamin Holmes, Moses Holmes, David Lee, Solomon Lee and Asa Hinson for ourselves, our heirs.......forever warrant this tract of land to Abner Proctor. "
It was Dated December 1831 and witnessed by Purvis Johnson and Gray Allen.
Benjamin Holmes, Moses Holmes, David Lee, Solomon Lee and Asa Hinson, by blood or marriage, were descended from Ira Proctor and closely related to Abner Proctor.
A Solomon Lee was made Guardian of Abner Proctor when he was a child.
Asa Hinson lived in Sumter County, Alabama in 1850, said to be right next door to Patience Turner, widow of Axum Turner, according to all evidence I have discovered. His son, William D. Hinson (sometimes seen as Henson) was the bondsman to the marriage of William P. Turner and Mary Caroline Proctor in Sumter County, Alabama in 1853.
See how the dots are connecting?
However, I found these 5 guys in Alabama. If you look at the family trees of descendants of them, you do not find these familial connections at all.
Benjamin Holmes was born in North Carolina about 1805 and died in Perry County, Alabama about 1869, leaving a will. Some of his descendants have him with unidentified parents, which is fine. They don't know. Others have him being the son of a William Holmes and Mildred Partin and being born in South Carolina, while the census records clearly state North Carolina.
The descendants of Moses Holmes have it even worse, tying him to an obviously very different Moses Holmes. And Asa Hinson? I'm not even going to go there....yet. This is all another post, not because I am a descendant of any of them, just related by marriage many generations back in my family tree, but just because so many people have such different ideas of who they were, when the land records of Anson County, NC, which they've never seen, lay it all out so clearly.
But, getting back on the right path. I had been looking for the parents of Mary Caroline Proctor, possibly of an Elizabeth Proctor as well. I had found an Ira Proctor whose son was labeled as a Turner cousin. I found Ira Proctor at 20, in the home of an Abner Proctor. I discovered Abner Proctor was born in Anson County, North Carolina and was the son of an older Ira Proctor, however, the younger Ira Proctor was not the son of Abner Proctor.
So, the question remains, Who was Ira Proctor?
Ira Proctor the first, who had owned land in Anson County, NC and had moved to Perry County, Alabama prior to 1810 and had died around 1809, had left a wife named Rebecca and children: John, Mary, Lydia, Nancy, Ira, Sarah and Abner. Ira, alive in 1814, was not mentioned in 1817 with the other children, the only logical conclusion being he died between those years, and as he had a guardian, he was a minor between those years. That left 2 sons: Abner and John. As Abner was not the father of Ira the younger who was alive in 1850 and beyond, it was time to take a closer look at John Proctor.
Name: | Jno Prooter [Jno Proctor] [John Proctor] |
---|---|
Home in 1830 (City, County, State): | Perry, Alabama |
Free White Persons - Males - Under 5: | 1 |
Free White Persons - Males - 20 thru 29: | 1 |
Free White Persons - Females - Under 5: | 2 |
Free White Persons - Females - 20 thru 29: | 1 |
Free White Persons - Under 20: | 3 |
Free White Persons - 20 thru 49: | 2 |
Total Free White Persons: | 5 |
Total - All Persons (Free White, Slaves, Free Colored): | 5 |
I don't know exactly how old John Proctor was, but he first appears in the 1830 census of Perry County, Alabama as a young man between 20 and 29, giving him an estimated birth year of 1801 and 1810. As his father died in 1809, I believe he had to be in the older end. This was suggested in the 1840 census. He appears to have had a wife also between 20 and 29 with two daughters under 5 and one son under 5.
Name: | John Pricktor [John Procktor] |
---|---|
Home in 1840 (City, County, State): | Perry, Alabama |
Free White Persons - Males - 5 thru 9: | 1 |
Free White Persons - Males - 10 thru 14: | 1 |
Free White Persons - Males - 40 thru 49: | 1 |
Free White Persons - Females - Under 5: | 1 |
Free White Persons - Females - 5 thru 9: | 2 |
Free White Persons - Females - 10 thru 14: | 1 |
Slaves - Females - 24 thru 35: | 1 |
Slaves - Females - 36 thru 54: | 1 |
Persons Employed in Agriculture: | 5 |
Free White Persons - Under 20: | 6 |
Free White Persons - 20 thru 49: | 1 |
Total Free White Persons: | 7 |
Total Slaves: | 2 |
Total All Persons - Free White, Free Colored, Slaves: | 9 |
His wife, name unknown (but children's records suggest she was born in North Carolina), seems to have died before 1840. He now appears to have 4 daughters, 2 sons and has acquired two female slaves, perhaps to look after the children.
John did not stay single long.In 1841, he married a lady named Mary Thompson. The marriage did not last long.
Name: | John Proctor |
---|---|
Spouse: | Mary Thompson |
Marriage Date: | 6 Jan 1841 |
County: | Perry |
State: | Alabama |
Performed By Title: | Justice of the Peace |
Performed by Name: | Wm Hornbuckle |
Source information: | Jordan Dodd, Liahona Research |
- There was another deed back in Anson County which may give a time frame as to when John Proctor arrived in Perry County.
Source divide between Goulds Fork and North Fork Jones Creek ⁃ location pond about 3 miles southwest of Wadesboro, North Carolina ⁃ coordinates 34°55′21″N 080°08′05″W[1] ⁃ elevation 510 ft (160 m)[2] Mouth Brown Creek ⁃ locationabout 2.5 miles south of Ansonville, North Carolina ⁃ coordinates35°03′41″N 080°06′10″WCoordinates: 35°03′41″N 080°06′10″W[1] ⁃ elevation207 ft (63 m)[2] Length 12.01 mi (19.33 km)[3] Basin size 25.32 square miles (65.6 km2)[4] Discharge ⁃ location Brown Creek ⁃ average 27.13 cu ft/s (0.768 m3/s) at mouth with Brown Creek[4] Basin features Progression north River system Pee Dee River Tributaries ⁃ left unnamed tributaries ⁃ right Culpepper Creek
Grindstone BranchBridges White Store Road, Avery Road, US 74, NC 742, Brown Creek Church Road, Lockhart Road - Anson county Deeds, Book U Page 137
- John Proctor to Duncan McRae
- Indenture dated Nov 16 1820
- Both of Anson
- " a parcel of land alotted to me by the jury when my father's lands were divided....lying in Anson on Gould's Fork. ....by the jury in 1814."
- Witnesses:
- L. Caraway
- Theophilus Holmes
- The very next deed was from Theophilus Holmes to Duncan McRae.
- Theophilus Homes to Duncan Mcrae
- 18th Day of Nov. 1820
- Between Theophilus Holmes
- and wife of Anson to Duncan McRae of same....on the waters of Goulds Fork being all the lot of land allotted to Mary Proctor of her fathers land by a jury in 1814.
- Mary Proctor Holmes being the sister of John Proctor.
- There was another deed between Theophilus Holmes and Duncan McRae, this one involving a tract in the "District of Illinois". It was for 160 acres in the Northwest Corner of Township 3 North in Range 7 West, "in the tract appropriated by an act of Congress for military bounties in the territory of Illinois, Warrant No 19749."
- This reminded me of a genetic block under ancestry dna that I am a member of called "Central North Carolina, Southeast Missouri and Southern Illinois Settlers. The map shows a great swath of migration from this area throught Tennesee into southern Missouri, down to Alabama, Arkansas and Texas, with this unconnected little blob in Illinois where a large group of genetically connected people inhabit.
- The estate of John Proctor was probated in 1843. His executor was his brother, Abner. Within, his heirs are named.
- :following are the heirs to wit
- Mary Palmer, late widow of the said deceased, Ira, Rebecca, Elizabeth, John and Mary Proctor are the children of the said John Proctor, deceased and that Ira, Rebecca, Elizabeth are over the age of 14 and have not chosen a guardian + John + Mary is (sic) under the age of 14 and they also have no guardians".
- Jno Cunningham, clerk Abner Proctor.
- Another page states:
- 'The State of Alabama Perry County Abner Proctor admin of the estate of John Proctor deceased who being 1st sworn, upon oath states that the following are the children and heirs of the said estate, to wit, Ira Proctor, Rebecca Proctor, Elizabeth Proctor, John Proctor, Caroline Practor and that they are all mnors underneath the age of 21 years.
- Signed Abner Proctor and John Palmer in right of his wife, Mary.
- Mary Palmer being Mary Thompson Proctor Palmer, widow of John Proctor who had remarried, but not the mother of the children.
- Notice that on the first page compared to the second, all of the named children are the same, except on the first page, a Mary is named and on the second a Caroline is named.
- This is Mary Caroline Proctor who married William P. Turner.
- Her sister, Elizabeth married James Turner, brother of William P. Turner.
- Ira Turner, father of "Cousin Joseph F. Proctor" was the brother of Mary Caroline and Elizabeth.
- Abner Proctor was their Uncle.
- Asa Hinson, father of William D Hinson who was the bondsman for the marriage of Mary Caroline Proctor and William P. Turner, was living right next door to the widow, Patience Turner and her children in the 1850 census of Sumter County, Alabama.
- Asa Hinson, along with Benjamin and Moses Holmes and Solomon and David Lee, are named as relatives of Abner Proctor and heirs of Ira Proctor the first, in an Anson County, NC deed.
- Solomon Lee was named as the guardian of Abner Proctor after the death of Ira Proctor, Sr.
- Ira Proctor Sr lived on Gould's Fork in Anson County, a branch of Brown Creek, sometimes known as Little Brown Creek.
- I crossed Goulds Fork as I approached the Turner family Homestead a few weeks ago, researching my Turner family origins.
- The Carpenters, Axoms and Threadgills were not the only families whose ties to my Turners extended back many generations and from this one section of Northwest Anson County to West Central Alabama.
- The Proctors held ties that went back generations, from Anson to Alabama, and perhaps further back than that.
- And it all began with Ira Proctor.
Name: | Mary Proctor |
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Spouse: | John Palmer |
Marriage Date: | 7 Oct 1843 |
County: | Perry |
State: | Alabama |
Performed By Title: | Justice of the Peace |
Performed by Name: | Wm Hornbuckle |