1867 was a very busy year for the McQueen and Deaton families of Northeastern Montgomery County, North Carolina. I had been exploring Bastardy Bonds of the era, looking for one in particular and found out a great deal more about dealing with people I had came across in my research.
Looking for the father of Terry Smith's child, Sarah, who was Edmund Denson, I discovered a bastardy bond concerning Franey Jane Brewer (Deaton), who was Edmund Densons future wife. I blogged on her story here:
The Devil and Franie Jane
I wrote down a list of Bastardy Bonds that I had came across while searching, whose surnames connected to those I was researching.
I also found one in 1867 for Terry's sister. Margaret Smith McQueen, whose husband, Calvin McQueen had been killed in the Civil War in July of 1862, but who had given birth to a son, Larkin, on June 4, 1867.
The case of Frany Jane Deaton Brewer involved one William Deaton, who had been ordered to court and ordered to pay maintanence for the child of Frany Jane, her oldest daughter, Mary Emily. The clincher was that William Deaton was her grandfather. And he wasn't just signing a bond.
In the case of Margaret Smith McQueen, she refused to name the father, but a D. D. Deaton had came to her defense and paid her bond and court fees. Most of the time the man who paid these bonds, if not a relative of the woman or girl (as some of these were really young), getting her out of jail, were the actual fathers of the infants. Kindly neighbor?, maybe. Married man? Usually. And I blogged on Maggie here:
The Ballad of Maggie McQueen
But there was a third bond involving a McQueen and none other that William Deaton, that very same year. I wonder if I will find more bonds against William Deaton if I keep digging through the whole 2000 pages?
And this was the case of
State vs Nancy McQueen Montgomery County North Carolina.
Nancy McQueen, I would discover, was born Nancy Britt, daughter of William Britt (1793-1864) and his wife Catherine Deaton Britt (1784-1880). Yes, children, it appears we are still keeping it all in the family here.
It seems one Joseph Deaton, born in 1755 in Deatonville, Amelia County, Virginia who migrated to Montgomery County, North Carolina in its very early years, and married Elizabeth Jordan, daughter of Francis Jordan, was the founder of the Deaton Dynasty of Little River. It is said about Joseph, who was the son of Thomas Deaton Jr of Amelia County, that he settled down at the forks of the Little River, just a few miles east of the modern town of Troy. Francis Jordan was already here, supposedly, so Joseph married his daughter around 1873 or so.
People have claimed Joseph as a Patriot for providing food and supplies to the American army led by George Washington, himself, at the Battle of Guilford Courthouse.
Joseph Deaton and Elizabeth Jordan Deaton had 13 children -
1.) Elias Deaton 1783 - 1870 Married Elizabeth Yarborough.
2.) Elizabeth Deaton 1785 - ?. Married James Yarborough.
3.) James Deaton 1787 - 1850.
4.) Oliver Basil Deaton 1788 - 1840 Married Barbara Stewart. Migrated to McNairy County, TN.
5.) Adam Deaton 1790 -1876
6.) John Calvin Deaton 1793 - 1858 Married Catherine Stewart. Migrated to Hopkins County, TX.
7.) Joseph Deaton, Jr. 1796 - 1850 Married Mary McDonald.
8.) Catherine Deaton 1797 -1880 Married William Britt.
9.) Isbell "Ibbie" Deaton 1800 -1894 Married John James Yarborough.
10.) Francis Jordan Deaton 1801 - 1876 Married Rachael Holderness.
11.) William Deaton 1802 -?. Married 1st Nancy Allen, 2nd Elizabeth Lassiter.
12.) Reuben Jordaon Deaton 1805 -1861 Married Nancy Fox. Migrated to Oregon County, MO.
13.) Dison Deaton 1806 -1895 Married Elizabeth A. McQueen.
It is said that Joseph Deaton helped found Star Baptist Church and that Dison founded Laurel Hill Church. I'll let you make your own decision about William.
The fact was that Nancy Britt McQueen was the niece of William Deaton.
On July 7, 1847, Nancy Britt had married James Batten McQueen, son of Alexander Marcus McQueen and Sallie Ann Batten McQueen. They had 4 daughters:
1) Elizabeth A McQueen b 1848 - 1923. Married Archibald Leach
2) Mary Catherine McQueen b 1850-1910. Never married, had children, however.
3) Nancy E McQueen b 1852-1910 Married Henry Maners or Maness.
4) Sarah Jane McQueen b 1856 -1941 Married John Christian Deaton.
James Batten McQueen died March 11, 1855, at the age of 28. According to a family legend, he ostensibly died from the result of a tragic accident. James B. McQueen is buried at Laurel Hill Church.
Sarah Jane McQueen was born posthumously to James Batten McQueen's death. Her marriage was also a cousin marriage as John Christina Deaton was the son of Francis Jordan Deaton and Rachel Holderness Deaton, making him her mother's 1st cousin and her 1st cousin once removed.
The 1850 census showed a happy young family unit unaware that tragedy would strike in 5 years.
What did Nancy do after her husbands' death? Young and pregnant with 3 small daughters, she must have been in an awful state. It was the mid-1800's, what power did women have? Her husband died intestate, he was so young, how could he have known his days were numbered.
It must be noted that neighbors were Valentine Moore, James Poe, Batten's father Alexander McQueen and Wiliam Bruton and Thomas Shaw.
In 1860, Nancy heads her own household as a widow. Notably, she is living next door to her parents, William and Catherine Britt and her 3 single sisters, Talitha, Fanny and Carthena. Her brother, Merriman Britt is on the other side of her. Nancy has moved home to her father's property.
Discernibly missing from the 1860 census was Nancy and Batten's oldest daughter, Elizabeth. Oddly perhaps, she was living with the family of Wilson Wright Williams and his common law wife, Diza or Dicey Maners McQueen Williams. Now, Wilson Williams is a perplexing person himself. He had a connection to Edward Wright and is mentioned in his will. He is seen by both of the surnames Wright and Williams. Diza is the woman mentioned earlies as being the first wife of Calvin McQueen, or perhaps they never married, but they did have a daughter, Mary Ann. Calvin did later marry Margaret Smith, they have records and he did die in the Civil War.
The other McQueen in the household, 17 year old Margeret, was the sister of Calvin McQueen. A little confusing, perhaps? Yes, more than a little. To add another twist to the conumdrum, Wilson Wright Williams was not a white man, and is listed as Mulatto while Diza and the McQueen girls were white.
So that's where the McQueen family was before the Civil War and before Nancy McQueen and William Deaton were dragged into court. 1870 told a different story.
Nancy McQueen was now 43 years old and living with Sarah Jane, the youngest child of she and Batten and now she has a younger child, Flora.
Flora A. W. F. McQueen was actually born in 1867, acoording to later records, and was the daughter born to Nancy Britt McQueen and William Deaton, the subjects of the 1867 Bastardy Bond. Some family trees have her listed, nearly laughably, as the daughter of James Batten McQueen, who died 12 years prior to her birth. Now that would have been a long pregnancy.
As for Nancy's older daughters:
Elizabeth had married Archibald Leach and was living near the town of Troy in Montgomery County, still.
Mary McQueen was living with her grandmother, Catherine Deaton Britt. Her name was written in as "McQueen Mary". Her maiden Aunts, Valetta and Catherine II, was still in the home and the Greens were another transcription error, as they were an entirely different household and not living with the Britts.
Nancy Evangeline McQueen is missing from the 1870 census. She would have been about 15 or 16 and possibly living with other family members and misnomered.
However on Janeuary 14, 1877, she would marry Henry Maners or Maness ( the spellings were excruciatingly interchangeable). They would first live near Troy, then move to Sheffields in Moore County for a few decades, before finally settiling down in Randolph County, where Henry would die.
But what about William Deaton, the other person mentioned in the Bond?
He had been a married man, having married his first wife, Nancy Allen in 1823. Together, he and Nancy had 10 children:
1) Margaret 1820- after 1880. Married Aaron Brewer.
2) Elizabeth "Betsy" 1823-1900. Married Jackson Deaton, son of Burwell and Patience Melton Deaton.
3) Amanda "Mindy" 1825 -1912 Married Wesley Dunn.
4) Mary "Polly" 1828-1908 Never married. Did have children.
5) Joseph A. 1829-1913 Married Dorcas (or Darcus) Dunn.
6) Elias "Eli" 1830-1863 .Never married. Killed in Civil War.
7) Levi 1832-1893. Married Married Mary Lucinda Hogan.
8) Deborah 1834-1880 Married Martin Alfred Green.
9) Aaron 1835-1906 Married Wincy Hogan.
10) Jemima "Mima" 1837- aft 1900 Married Nathan Alexander Smith.
Nancy Allen Deaton died between 1860 and 1862. On May 8, 1862, William remarried to Elizabeth Lassiter.
His son-in-law, Aaron Brewer was bondsman. So, I wonder what happened between 1862 and 1867 for William Deaton to show up in court on two different bastardy bonds? One with his niece and one with his granddaughter.
In 1870, William Deaton seems happily settled and still living his second wife, Elizabeth, but we know better, don't we? Elizabeth had been born Elizabeth Allen, and I believe may have been his sister-in-law. She was the widow of a Joseph or Josiah Lassiter, and had been living in Richmond County before moving to Montgomery. Her husband died about 1856, so she's living in Diffies as a widow and farmer in 1860.
In 1870, she is living with William and her youngest daughter, who is shown as Jervey Deaton, but is really Virginia or "Jenny" Lassiter. Right next door is William Deaton's daughter, Jemima Deaton Smith and Jenny Lassiter ends up marrying Mima's son William Smith. I'm not sure who the 12 year old boy Owen or Oscar, is yet. Possibly one of her grandchildren.
The last census they both show up in is the 1880, and they have one of her grandsons, John Lassiter, living with them. In the same household, but not connected here, but shown as in the same household on the actual census, is Wilson Williams, as a hireling, who was mentioned earlier. The whole neighborhood surrounding them are family or people I've been blogging on lately. Near them is Williams grandson, William Smith and Elizabeth's daughter, Virginia and their family. Not far is her son Joseph Lassiter Jr, married to Williams granddaughter, Sydney and her mother Mary living with them. Next to them is Mary's daughter, Franie Jane and her husband Edmund Denson. There's Levi Deaton and a variety of Hogans and Freeman and Manuses, all intermarried with the Deatons and among themselves. It's a tribe.
1880 is also the last census for Nancy McQueen. She's 53 with a houseful of children. Living with her are her daughter, Mary Catherine and the 4 youngest children are Mary Catherine's.
F. A. W. F. McQueen is Flora and her many middle names unknown. She's 14 here. So what happened to Flora, the child of William Deaton and his niece, Nancy Britt McQueen? Her life wa short, but not without love.
Flora married at 19 to Frank Green, son of Anderson and Talitha Green.
Together, they had two children:
Malcolm A. Green and Fanny Jane Green.
Frank then married Margaret Leach and they had one child:
James Franklin Green in 1898. Frank then died young also, before 1900.
It is unknown where either he or Flora are buried.
As for Will Deaton, he supposedly lived until 1891 and is buried somewhere near Laurel Hill Church, if not in it.
Times were different. A man of his ilk today would be locked away. Not so with Will Deaton. He lived in a time and a place where it is said that poor families would send children packing during the winter to find someone to live with as their parents couldn't feed them. Children could be seen walking down the road with little bags of clothes.
And they call those the good old days...
Looking for the father of Terry Smith's child, Sarah, who was Edmund Denson, I discovered a bastardy bond concerning Franey Jane Brewer (Deaton), who was Edmund Densons future wife. I blogged on her story here:
The Devil and Franie Jane
I wrote down a list of Bastardy Bonds that I had came across while searching, whose surnames connected to those I was researching.
I also found one in 1867 for Terry's sister. Margaret Smith McQueen, whose husband, Calvin McQueen had been killed in the Civil War in July of 1862, but who had given birth to a son, Larkin, on June 4, 1867.
The case of Frany Jane Deaton Brewer involved one William Deaton, who had been ordered to court and ordered to pay maintanence for the child of Frany Jane, her oldest daughter, Mary Emily. The clincher was that William Deaton was her grandfather. And he wasn't just signing a bond.
In the case of Margaret Smith McQueen, she refused to name the father, but a D. D. Deaton had came to her defense and paid her bond and court fees. Most of the time the man who paid these bonds, if not a relative of the woman or girl (as some of these were really young), getting her out of jail, were the actual fathers of the infants. Kindly neighbor?, maybe. Married man? Usually. And I blogged on Maggie here:
The Ballad of Maggie McQueen
But there was a third bond involving a McQueen and none other that William Deaton, that very same year. I wonder if I will find more bonds against William Deaton if I keep digging through the whole 2000 pages?
And this was the case of
State vs Nancy McQueen Montgomery County North Carolina.
Nancy McQueen, I would discover, was born Nancy Britt, daughter of William Britt (1793-1864) and his wife Catherine Deaton Britt (1784-1880). Yes, children, it appears we are still keeping it all in the family here.
Name: | Joseph Deaton |
---|---|
Home in 1790 (City, County, State): | Montgomery, North Carolina |
Free White Persons - Males - Under 16: | 3 |
Free White Persons - Males - 16 and over: | 1 |
Free White Persons - Females: | 3 |
Number of Household Members: | 7 |
It seems one Joseph Deaton, born in 1755 in Deatonville, Amelia County, Virginia who migrated to Montgomery County, North Carolina in its very early years, and married Elizabeth Jordan, daughter of Francis Jordan, was the founder of the Deaton Dynasty of Little River. It is said about Joseph, who was the son of Thomas Deaton Jr of Amelia County, that he settled down at the forks of the Little River, just a few miles east of the modern town of Troy. Francis Jordan was already here, supposedly, so Joseph married his daughter around 1873 or so.
People have claimed Joseph as a Patriot for providing food and supplies to the American army led by George Washington, himself, at the Battle of Guilford Courthouse.
1869 painting of the Friends Meeting House at New Garden by John Collins. Battle of Guilford Courthouse nearby. |
Joseph Deaton and Elizabeth Jordan Deaton had 13 children -
1.) Elias Deaton 1783 - 1870 Married Elizabeth Yarborough.
2.) Elizabeth Deaton 1785 - ?. Married James Yarborough.
3.) James Deaton 1787 - 1850.
4.) Oliver Basil Deaton 1788 - 1840 Married Barbara Stewart. Migrated to McNairy County, TN.
5.) Adam Deaton 1790 -1876
6.) John Calvin Deaton 1793 - 1858 Married Catherine Stewart. Migrated to Hopkins County, TX.
7.) Joseph Deaton, Jr. 1796 - 1850 Married Mary McDonald.
8.) Catherine Deaton 1797 -1880 Married William Britt.
9.) Isbell "Ibbie" Deaton 1800 -1894 Married John James Yarborough.
10.) Francis Jordan Deaton 1801 - 1876 Married Rachael Holderness.
11.) William Deaton 1802 -?. Married 1st Nancy Allen, 2nd Elizabeth Lassiter.
12.) Reuben Jordaon Deaton 1805 -1861 Married Nancy Fox. Migrated to Oregon County, MO.
13.) Dison Deaton 1806 -1895 Married Elizabeth A. McQueen.
It is said that Joseph Deaton helped found Star Baptist Church and that Dison founded Laurel Hill Church. I'll let you make your own decision about William.
The fact was that Nancy Britt McQueen was the niece of William Deaton.
Name: | James B McQuean |
---|---|
Gender: | Male |
Bond date: | 7 Jul 1847 |
Bond Place: | Montgomery, North Carolina, USA |
Spouse: | Mancy Britt |
Spouse Gender: | Female |
Event Type: | Bond |
On July 7, 1847, Nancy Britt had married James Batten McQueen, son of Alexander Marcus McQueen and Sallie Ann Batten McQueen. They had 4 daughters:
1) Elizabeth A McQueen b 1848 - 1923. Married Archibald Leach
2) Mary Catherine McQueen b 1850-1910. Never married, had children, however.
3) Nancy E McQueen b 1852-1910 Married Henry Maners or Maness.
4) Sarah Jane McQueen b 1856 -1941 Married John Christian Deaton.
James Batten McQueen died March 11, 1855, at the age of 28. According to a family legend, he ostensibly died from the result of a tragic accident. James B. McQueen is buried at Laurel Hill Church.
Old Laurel Hill Church via http://www.wendtroot.com/wright/d0000/d0000notes/LaurelHill.htm |
Sarah Jane McQueen was born posthumously to James Batten McQueen's death. Her marriage was also a cousin marriage as John Christina Deaton was the son of Francis Jordan Deaton and Rachel Holderness Deaton, making him her mother's 1st cousin and her 1st cousin once removed.
John Luther Christian Deaton, known as "L. C", husband of Sarah Jane McQueen |
The 1850 census showed a happy young family unit unaware that tragedy would strike in 5 years.
Name: | James B McQueen | ||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Gender: | Male | ||||||||||
Age: | 24 | ||||||||||
Birth Year: | abt 1826 | ||||||||||
Birthplace: | North Carolina | ||||||||||
Home in 1850: | Montgomery, North Carolina, USA | ||||||||||
Occupation: | Farmer | ||||||||||
Industry: | Agriculture | ||||||||||
Line Number: | 16 | ||||||||||
Dwelling Number: | 399 | ||||||||||
Family Number: | 401 | ||||||||||
Household Members: |
|
What did Nancy do after her husbands' death? Young and pregnant with 3 small daughters, she must have been in an awful state. It was the mid-1800's, what power did women have? Her husband died intestate, he was so young, how could he have known his days were numbered.
It must be noted that neighbors were Valentine Moore, James Poe, Batten's father Alexander McQueen and Wiliam Bruton and Thomas Shaw.
Name: | Nancy McQueen | ||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Age: | 33 | ||||||||||
Birth Year: | abt 1827 | ||||||||||
Gender: | Female | ||||||||||
Home in 1860: | Diffies, Montgomery, North Carolina | ||||||||||
Dwelling Number: | 279 | ||||||||||
Family Number: | 279 | ||||||||||
Occupation: | Widow | ||||||||||
Personal Estate Value: | 50 | ||||||||||
Attended School: | Yes | ||||||||||
Household Members: |
|
In 1860, Nancy heads her own household as a widow. Notably, she is living next door to her parents, William and Catherine Britt and her 3 single sisters, Talitha, Fanny and Carthena. Her brother, Merriman Britt is on the other side of her. Nancy has moved home to her father's property.
Name: | Elizabeth McQueen | ||||||||||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Age: | 11 | ||||||||||||||||||||
Birth Year: | abt 1849 | ||||||||||||||||||||
Gender: | Female | ||||||||||||||||||||
Birth Place: | North Carolina | ||||||||||||||||||||
Home in 1860: | Brutons, Montgomery, North Carolina | ||||||||||||||||||||
Post Office: | Troy | ||||||||||||||||||||
Dwelling Number: | 241 | ||||||||||||||||||||
Family Number: | 241 | ||||||||||||||||||||
Attended School: | Yes | ||||||||||||||||||||
Household Members: |
|
Discernibly missing from the 1860 census was Nancy and Batten's oldest daughter, Elizabeth. Oddly perhaps, she was living with the family of Wilson Wright Williams and his common law wife, Diza or Dicey Maners McQueen Williams. Now, Wilson Williams is a perplexing person himself. He had a connection to Edward Wright and is mentioned in his will. He is seen by both of the surnames Wright and Williams. Diza is the woman mentioned earlies as being the first wife of Calvin McQueen, or perhaps they never married, but they did have a daughter, Mary Ann. Calvin did later marry Margaret Smith, they have records and he did die in the Civil War.
The other McQueen in the household, 17 year old Margeret, was the sister of Calvin McQueen. A little confusing, perhaps? Yes, more than a little. To add another twist to the conumdrum, Wilson Wright Williams was not a white man, and is listed as Mulatto while Diza and the McQueen girls were white.
Old House still standing in rural Montgomer County |
So that's where the McQueen family was before the Civil War and before Nancy McQueen and William Deaton were dragged into court. 1870 told a different story.
Name: | Nancy Mcqueen | ||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Age in 1870: | 43 | ||||||||
Birth Year: | abt 1827 | ||||||||
Birthplace: | North Carolina | ||||||||
Dwelling Number: | 58 | ||||||||
Home in 1870: | Little River, Montgomery, North Carolina | ||||||||
Race: | White | ||||||||
Gender: | Female | ||||||||
Post Office: | Troy | ||||||||
Occupation: | Keeping House | ||||||||
Personal Estate Value: | 20 | ||||||||
Inferred Children: | Sarah Mcqueen Flora Mcqueen | ||||||||
Household Members: |
|
Nancy McQueen was now 43 years old and living with Sarah Jane, the youngest child of she and Batten and now she has a younger child, Flora.
Flora A. W. F. McQueen was actually born in 1867, acoording to later records, and was the daughter born to Nancy Britt McQueen and William Deaton, the subjects of the 1867 Bastardy Bond. Some family trees have her listed, nearly laughably, as the daughter of James Batten McQueen, who died 12 years prior to her birth. Now that would have been a long pregnancy.
As for Nancy's older daughters:
Elizabeth A. McQueen Leach in her later years. |
Elizabeth had married Archibald Leach and was living near the town of Troy in Montgomery County, still.
ame: | Mclucene mary Britt [Nancy McQueen] [McQueen mary Britt] | ||||||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Age in 1870: | 17 | ||||||||||||||||
Birth Year: | abt 1853 | ||||||||||||||||
Birthplace: | North Carolina | ||||||||||||||||
Dwelling Number: | 98 | ||||||||||||||||
Home in 1870: | Troy, Montgomery, North Carolina | ||||||||||||||||
Race: | White | ||||||||||||||||
Gender: | Female | ||||||||||||||||
Post Office: | Troy | ||||||||||||||||
Occupation: | At Home | ||||||||||||||||
Cannot Write: | Y | ||||||||||||||||
Inferred Mother: | Catterina Britt | ||||||||||||||||
Household Members: |
|
Mary McQueen was living with her grandmother, Catherine Deaton Britt. Her name was written in as "McQueen Mary". Her maiden Aunts, Valetta and Catherine II, was still in the home and the Greens were another transcription error, as they were an entirely different household and not living with the Britts.
Henry and Nancy McQueen Manness |
Nancy Evangeline McQueen is missing from the 1870 census. She would have been about 15 or 16 and possibly living with other family members and misnomered.
Name: | Nancy S McQueen |
---|---|
Gender: | Female |
Race: | White |
Age: | 25 |
Birth Year: | abt 1852 |
Marriage Date: | 14 Jan 1877 |
Marriage Place: | Montgomery, North Carolina, USA |
Father: | James McQueen |
Mother: | Nancy McQueen |
Spouse: | Henry Maners |
Spouse Gender: | Male |
Spouse Race: | White |
Spouse Age: | 37 |
Spouse Father: | Louis Maners |
Spouse Mother: | Annie Maners |
Event Type: | Marriage |
However on Janeuary 14, 1877, she would marry Henry Maners or Maness ( the spellings were excruciatingly interchangeable). They would first live near Troy, then move to Sheffields in Moore County for a few decades, before finally settiling down in Randolph County, where Henry would die.
But what about William Deaton, the other person mentioned in the Bond?
He had been a married man, having married his first wife, Nancy Allen in 1823. Together, he and Nancy had 10 children:
1) Margaret 1820- after 1880. Married Aaron Brewer.
2) Elizabeth "Betsy" 1823-1900. Married Jackson Deaton, son of Burwell and Patience Melton Deaton.
3) Amanda "Mindy" 1825 -1912 Married Wesley Dunn.
4) Mary "Polly" 1828-1908 Never married. Did have children.
5) Joseph A. 1829-1913 Married Dorcas (or Darcus) Dunn.
6) Elias "Eli" 1830-1863 .Never married. Killed in Civil War.
7) Levi 1832-1893. Married Married Mary Lucinda Hogan.
8) Deborah 1834-1880 Married Martin Alfred Green.
9) Aaron 1835-1906 Married Wincy Hogan.
10) Jemima "Mima" 1837- aft 1900 Married Nathan Alexander Smith.
Nancy Allen Deaton died between 1860 and 1862. On May 8, 1862, William remarried to Elizabeth Lassiter.
Name: | William Deaton |
---|---|
Gender: | Male |
Spouse: | Elizabeth Lassater |
Spouse Gender: | Female |
Bond date: | 8 May 1862 |
Bond #: | 000084667 |
Marriage Date: | 8 May 1862 |
Level Info: | North Carolina Marriage Bonds, 1741-1868 |
ImageNum: | 004648 |
County: | Montgomery |
Record #: | 01 011 |
Bondsman: | Aaron Brewer |
Witness: | A A McCaskill J |
Performed By: | A A McCaskill |
His son-in-law, Aaron Brewer was bondsman. So, I wonder what happened between 1862 and 1867 for William Deaton to show up in court on two different bastardy bonds? One with his niece and one with his granddaughter.
In 1870, William Deaton seems happily settled and still living his second wife, Elizabeth, but we know better, don't we? Elizabeth had been born Elizabeth Allen, and I believe may have been his sister-in-law. She was the widow of a Joseph or Josiah Lassiter, and had been living in Richmond County before moving to Montgomery. Her husband died about 1856, so she's living in Diffies as a widow and farmer in 1860.
Name: | Elizabeth Deaton [Elizabeth Lassater] | ||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Age in 1870: | 65 | ||||||||||
Birth Year: | abt 1805 | ||||||||||
Birthplace: | North Carolina | ||||||||||
Dwelling Number: | 62 | ||||||||||
Home in 1870: | Hill, Montgomery, North Carolina | ||||||||||
Race: | White | ||||||||||
Gender: | Female | ||||||||||
Post Office: | Aumans Hill | ||||||||||
Occupation: | Keeping House | ||||||||||
Cannot Read: | Y | ||||||||||
Cannot Write: | Y | ||||||||||
Inferred Spouse: | Wm Deaton | ||||||||||
Household Members: |
|
In 1870, she is living with William and her youngest daughter, who is shown as Jervey Deaton, but is really Virginia or "Jenny" Lassiter. Right next door is William Deaton's daughter, Jemima Deaton Smith and Jenny Lassiter ends up marrying Mima's son William Smith. I'm not sure who the 12 year old boy Owen or Oscar, is yet. Possibly one of her grandchildren.
Name: | William Deaton | ||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Age: | 73 | ||||||||
Birth Date: | Abt 1807 | ||||||||
Birthplace: | North Carolina | ||||||||
Home in 1880: | Hill, Montgomery, North Carolina, USA | ||||||||
Dwelling Number: | 75 | ||||||||
Race: | White | ||||||||
Gender: | Male | ||||||||
Relation to Head of House: | Self (Head) | ||||||||
Marital status: | Married | ||||||||
Spouse's name: | Elizabeth Deaton | ||||||||
Father's Birthplace: | North Carolina | ||||||||
Mother's Birthplace: | North Carolina | ||||||||
Occupation: | Farmer | ||||||||
Neighbors: | |||||||||
Household Members: |
|
The last census they both show up in is the 1880, and they have one of her grandsons, John Lassiter, living with them. In the same household, but not connected here, but shown as in the same household on the actual census, is Wilson Williams, as a hireling, who was mentioned earlier. The whole neighborhood surrounding them are family or people I've been blogging on lately. Near them is Williams grandson, William Smith and Elizabeth's daughter, Virginia and their family. Not far is her son Joseph Lassiter Jr, married to Williams granddaughter, Sydney and her mother Mary living with them. Next to them is Mary's daughter, Franie Jane and her husband Edmund Denson. There's Levi Deaton and a variety of Hogans and Freeman and Manuses, all intermarried with the Deatons and among themselves. It's a tribe.
Name: | Nancy Mcquean | ||||||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Age: | 53 | ||||||||||||||||
Birth Date: | Abt 1827 | ||||||||||||||||
Birthplace: | North Carolina | ||||||||||||||||
Home in 1880: | Troy, Montgomery, North Carolina, USA | ||||||||||||||||
Dwelling Number: | 131 | ||||||||||||||||
Race: | White | ||||||||||||||||
Gender: | Female | ||||||||||||||||
Relation to Head of House: | Self (Head) | ||||||||||||||||
Marital status: | Widowed | ||||||||||||||||
Father's Birthplace: | North Carolina | ||||||||||||||||
Mother's Birthplace: | North Carolina | ||||||||||||||||
Occupation: | Farmer | ||||||||||||||||
Cannot Write: | Yes | ||||||||||||||||
Neighbors: | |||||||||||||||||
Household Members: |
|
1880 is also the last census for Nancy McQueen. She's 53 with a houseful of children. Living with her are her daughter, Mary Catherine and the 4 youngest children are Mary Catherine's.
F. A. W. F. McQueen is Flora and her many middle names unknown. She's 14 here. So what happened to Flora, the child of William Deaton and his niece, Nancy Britt McQueen? Her life wa short, but not without love.
Flora married at 19 to Frank Green, son of Anderson and Talitha Green.
Name: | Flora Mc Quean |
---|---|
Gender: | Female |
Race: | White |
Age: | 19 |
Birth Year: | abt 1867 |
Marriage Date: | 16 Jun 1886 |
Marriage Place: | Montgomery, North Carolina, USA |
Father: | Nancy Mc Quean |
Spouse: | Isham Franklin Green |
Spouse Gender: | Male |
Spouse Race: | White |
Spouse Age: | 20 |
Spouse Father: | Anderson Green |
Spouse Mother: | Talitha Green |
Event Type: | Marriage |
Together, they had two children:
Malcolm A. Green and Fanny Jane Green.
Frank then married Margaret Leach and they had one child:
James Franklin Green in 1898. Frank then died young also, before 1900.
It is unknown where either he or Flora are buried.
As for Will Deaton, he supposedly lived until 1891 and is buried somewhere near Laurel Hill Church, if not in it.
Times were different. A man of his ilk today would be locked away. Not so with Will Deaton. He lived in a time and a place where it is said that poor families would send children packing during the winter to find someone to live with as their parents couldn't feed them. Children could be seen walking down the road with little bags of clothes.
And they call those the good old days...