Showing posts with label Mint Hill. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mint Hill. Show all posts

Friday, May 29, 2020

30 Mothers In 30 Days: Margaret Mary


Margaret M. Buchanon, along with her mother Mary (Ryan or Keys) and grandmother, Catherine Black, represent the Scotch- Irish branch of my family tree. They were a unique group of their own, and followed nearly the same path to the Carolinas as my German ancestors, but they were a fiercely different group and although they may have taken the same route, their story was vastly different.

In his book, The Scotch-Irish: The Scot in North Britain, North Ireland and North America", Charles A. Hanna reaccounts the travels of a Presbyterian minister, Alexander Craighead, who came as a minister to the scattered and widely spread Scotch-Irish families in frontier America.

"Mr. Craighead removed to the frontiers of Virginia between the years 1749 to 1752; and then a few years later to North Carolina, where he settled on Rocky River, in Mecklenburg County. (This area is now in Cabarrus County), "In Carolina he found a race of people remote from the seat of authority, among whom the intolerant laws of the English colonies were a dead letter................A race of men that feared neither the labor and hardships of a pioneer life, not the dangers of a frontier which was the scene of frequent bloody attacks by the savages."

"Under the teachings of Craighead, it is not strange that these people should be among the first to concieve the idea of Independence."

My Scotch-Irish ancestors were the most patriotic and rebelious of them all. First in fight and first in freedom, and from a son of Mary M. Buchanon came my entrance into the D.A.R.



The Great Valley Road used by settlers in the 1700s America.  __________________________ See Google map of this area.
The Great Wagon Road


Margaret Mary Buchanon was the oldest child of Samuel Buchanon and his wife Mary. I've seen Mary's name as both Ryan or Keys. Margaret, was born in Lancaster, Lancaster County, Pennsylvaniaa in 1728


In 1728, residents living in the backwoods of Chester County complained that “thieves, vagabonds, and ill people” had infested the rural areas of what is now Lancaster County and petitioned for the creation of a new county.  Residents also had to travel great distances to reach the Courthouse.  Lancaster County was formed May 10, 1729 to address these concerns and bring a new seat of government to residents that were settled in this vast wilderness.  It was the first county created beyond the original three counties of Bucks, Chester, and Philadelphia.     
https://www.co.lancaster.pa.us/195/Lancaster-History

So Margaret was born the year the County was established. Her father, Samuel Buchanan had been born in Omagh, Tyrone, Ulster Ireland in 1705 and her mother in Tyrone as well. But Samuel's roots were not Irish.

His father, John Buchanon, was born in Tyrone in 1676 and died there in 1728, but had married his mother, Catherine Black, in 1703 in Mains Branshogle Killearn Ayre, Scotland.

John Buchanon's father, George Buchanon, was the son of Sir John Buchanon Laird Van Blairlusk, who first escaped Scotland for Holland, before having to seek refuge in Ireland. George's wife and John's mother, Elizabeth Mayne, hailed from Stirlingshire, Scotland.

The below link is on the Buchanans of Tyrone and shows portraits of some of them, including one  U.S. President, James Buchanon.

http://aminports3.blogspot.com/2011/08/buchanan-family.html


Counties of Ireland - Tyrone | Ireland


So Margaret Mary Buchanon was of true Scottish and Irish stock.

In Pennsylvania her parents would bring 8 children into this new world. Margaret was followed by 6 brothers: 1730 John, 1732 James, 1734 George, 1736 David, 1737 Samuel Jr., 1738 William and the family ended with daughter Mary in 1739. Can you imagine how tough a woman Margaret must have been growing up with all of those little brothers? Her mother died in Lancaster County, PA in 1866 and the family removed to the Carolinas with several other Ulster Scots. They settled in what was to be known as the Waxhaw Colony. With them was grandmother, Catherine Black Buchanan and several other members of the Black family.


Amazon.com: Posterazzi Glenelly Valley County Tyrone Northern ...
Beautiful County Tyrone



In 1752, Margaret would marry William Marr Lemmond.  The Lemmonds were truly Irish. William Marr hailed from Belfast and most likely met Margaret in Pennsylvania. The Lemmond line is less known, but between the two a family of Patriots were born. The Scotch-Irish who settled in Mecklenburg NC and Lancaster SC were greatly intermarried, including the families of the McCoys, McKays, Whites, Blacks, Alexanders, Walkers, Orrs, Queries, and so forth. I have nearly all of these families in this branch of my family tree.


In his book, "World of Toil and Strife: Coming Transformation in BackCountry South Carolina", Peter N. Moore writes;

"A note appended to the 1755 Anson County militia census, which liste sixty-one able bodied adult men, speaks volumes;" guns - 14 - wanting". ............"The Methodist families who settled along Waxhaw and Twelve Mile Creeks after the Revolution also married within their group"........In fact, many of these unions were confined  to single congregations; Waxhaw Presbyterians tended not to marry Six Mile or Shiloh Presbyterians and vice versa."

So they were very tribal, this leads me to believe the Lemmonds, and there were two in this early group, William and John, were of the same Presbyterian Group as the Buchanans. This means they may have lingered for awhile in the Washington and Augusta county area of Virginia before coming to the Carolinas.



Waxhaw Indians Before 1750
The Waxhaw Settlement




My branch of Lemmonds seemed primarily settled around the area that is now Mint Hill and the part of Union County that once belonged to Mecklenburg. Many are buried at the old Philadelphia Presbyterian Church in Mint Hill. Several lived across the state line in Lancaster County, South Carolina.


Both Samuel Buchanan and William Lemmmond appear in the Mecklenburg County deeds quite often. On February 9, 1771, William recieved a grant from Justina and Abner Nash (Book 6 Page 25) for 100 acres on Coddle Creek. He would also acquire land on Goose Creek and Clear Creek.

In 1783, Samuel Buchanon was appointed Constable in place of James McComb. He held the job of Constable for several years. I tend to believe this was Margarets brother, Samuel Jr., instead of her father. A Samuel Buchanon served on a jury in 1795 and their father was deceased by then.


The long, long path for one Charlotte greenway | UNC Charlotte ...



William and Margaret Buchanon Lemmonds would raise 6 children in this area that is now within Union and Cabarrus Counties of North Carolina.

1753: John Lemmond
1755: Robert Lemmond
1756: William Marr Lemmond, Jr.
1758: Margaret Jane Lemmond
1763: Eleanor "Ellen" Lemmond
1765: Joseph Lemmond

I descend from the oldest, John. John would marry Martha Elizabeth Query, daughter of John Query, a signer of the Mecklenburg Declaration of Independence. Martha Query Lemmonds is another mother in my Family Tree. Both John and William Marr Lemmonds served in the Revolutionary War.

The British had never seen the likes of these fiercly independent Scotch-Irish and refereed to them as a "Nest of Hornets". That is why Charlotte and Mecklenburg County is oftern referred to as the 'Hornets Nest'.

William Marr Lemmonds served in the war as a Surgeon. I can only imagine he may have been more a butcher than a physician.



samuel buchanan land
Samuel Buchanan Lands




Samuel Buchanon would settle lastly in Ebenezer, Florence County, South Carolina, where he is buried. His mother, Catherine Black Buchanan, lived to see 1774 and the onset of American Freedom. My 8th Great Grandmother, I can feel her in my bones as a cantakerous, spirited old Scott.



Philadelphia Presbyterian Church Cemetery in Mint Hill, North ...
Philadelphia Presbyterian in Mint Hill


Margaret Mary Buchanon Lemmonds died in 1788 in Mecklenburg County, North Carolina. The place of her burial is unknown, but could be at Philadelphia Presbyterian Church. This part of Mecklenburg is now in Union County. The mother of Patriots and daughter of Scotch-Irish pioneers, I honor my 6th Great Grandmother.






Tuesday, October 30, 2012

Where They lived and Died: Starnes and Lemmonds


 The Goose Creek Community, Union County, North Carolina was the original home of the  Lemmonds family from which Robert Lemmonds descended. Goose Creek is situated in the North of Union County and bordering Mecklenburg, Cabarrus and the southwestern corner of Stanly County. Union was formed in 1842, one year after Stanly County in 1841, from portions of Anson and Mecklenburg counties. The progenitors of the Lemmonds family, and the branch from which my family came, William Marr Lemmonds and his son John, are listed in records in Mecklenburg County. They likely lived in what was later Goose Creek, the Clear Creek Community of Mecklenburg and modern Mint Hill. William Marr Lemmond was a clerk and a surgeon and served in the Revolutionary War as such. His son John entered as an Ensign and was later promoted to Lieutenant. John's son Robert would have a son named Cyrus Q Lemmonds.

The following is from Lemmonds records.




Cyrus Q. LEMMOND
Cyrus Q. LEMONS, Bugler, Discharged July 31, 1848 by expiration of service. Listed on Muster Roll of Capt. Green W. Caldwell’s Troop (A) of the Third regiment of the U.S. Dragoons, Army of the United States, Colonel E. G. W. Butler. Organized 1847, discharged July 31, 1848.
-C. Q. LEMMOND became a lawyer in 1852 after serving in the Mexican War with his two brothers. He practiced law in Monroe and served in the Legislature from 1858 to the end of the Civil War. His speech to the legislature urging secession was a masterpiece and was widely quoted, even in other states. (Source: Looking Back at Monroe's History, by Virginia A. S. Kendrick, p.11-12.)
-MONROE JOURNAL, Union County, N.C., Tuesday, March 29, 1904: Mr. C. Q. LEMMOND, a Mexican war veteran of this county, living in Goose Creek township, has been granted an increase in his pension of four dollars per month, making [?page torn?] which he now gets.  The increase came from Congress by the aid of Senator SIMMONS.
-Index to Mexican War Pension Files by Virgil D. White: Cyrus Q. LEMMMOND. Widow Eliza. Widow’s Certificate (WC-14706l) filed on Apr 8, 1907 & Soldier’s Certificate (SC-8843) both filed in NC; Served in Co. A 3rd US Dragoons as Bugler.
-Died abt.1906/1907. See mention of his widow (Mrs. Eliza LEMMOND) in the Monroe Journal, Tues. Dec. 2, 1924, p.5, col. 3. Article mentions he was a Mexican War veteran and that his wife was one of the few remaining widows to be receiving pension.






Cyrus would later live in Goose Creek and then Mint Hill. He and Robert Lemmonds are buried at Philadelphia Presbyterian Church within the modern town of Mint Hill. 


Frederick Fincher Starnes with his wife Mary L. Byram Starnes first show up in the 1860 census of Union County, North Carolina living in the community of Brief, with their young daughters Alice and Leavy, or Sarah Alice Starnes Linker and Margaret Leavy (or Olivey or Arleavis) Starnes Lemmonds, and next to F. F. Starnes parents Fred and Elizabeth (Betty) Starnes. 

The community of Brief in Northern Union County
West Corner of Brief Road and Cabarrus Road near marker labeling area as " Brief".


The Community of Brief within Goose Creek Township is aptly named. It is very brief. Just a crossroads and nothing more. Two businesses and no more than a dozen homes. It is however, surrounded by beautiful rolling hills of farmland where cattle graze and cotton, corn and soybeans are grown. This is where Frederick Fincher Starnes and his first wife Mary Byram Starnes first began housekeeping and where my Great-great grandmother Leavy was born. 



Log House in Brief. Could it have belonged to a Starnes family?
East Corner of Brief Road and Cabarrus Road
Street sign at Intersection of Concord Highway and Brief Road


After Mary's death, and the death of several children, Fred F. Starnes would marry the widow of his cousin John S Starnes and  they would move into the growing metropolis of Charlotte. Fred was older than his bride, who was childless, and perhaps wanted to please her by moving her to a more populated area with arts, parks, operas, society events, a variety in shopping opportunities and trolleys.  Their first residence was on Sunnyside Drive in the Elizabeth section of Charlotte.  Fred and Abbie lived in Elizabeth from at least 1905 until 1915, according to the Charlotte Ciry Directories. They may have moved there immediately after their wedding in 1894.  The Elizabeth community was named for  Anne Elizabeth Watts, whose husband, G. S. Watts had made his fortune in tobacco in Durham.  Her son-in-law, Charles King, chose Charlotte as the location for a Lutheran College for Women that opened in 1897.  Because the Watts provided a majority of funding for the college President King named it for his mother-in-law.

The Charlotte Evening Chronicle in its April 16, 1910 edition stated the following concerning the Elizabeth community.  "The breezes of heaven blow their freshest, the light of the sun is at its brightest, in this favored neighborhood." There is no wonder in why Abbie would have coerced Fred into selling the farmland and move to this neighborhood.

Elizabeth College stayed in Charlotte until 1915, the year the twice widowed Abby would move to Arlington Avenue. It then relocated to Salem, Virginia. The neighborhood had began outside of the Charlotte town limits, but had been annexed in by 1907. It is said elegant Victorian ladies played tennis on the college grounds. The Elizabeth neighborhood, named for the College, became one of the most fasionable and elite sections of Charlotte.  Community leaders such as William Henry Belk, founder Belk's Department Stores lived there.  A great-granddaughter of Job Davis, whom this blog is named for, Minnie, married into this same Belk family.  In December of 1902, a trolley line had been completed that ran from McDowell to Elizabeth College. In 1907, Independence Park, the first Charlotte City Park, opened in the Elizabeth neighborhood.  The streetcar line was extended to run down Hawthorne and to the park entrance.  Presbyterian Hospital would have her start in this area.
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Victorian home on modern Sunnyside Drive 
2012 view of Sunnyside Drive
Sunnyside Drive Victorian, where Fred and Abbie relocated to. 



Rocky River Presbyterian Church was the final resting place of Mary Byram Starnes, and the children who died young, Martha, Georgia and perhaps even little John, who only shows up at age 2 in the 1860 census. Rocky River was a very old church and near the river on the Cabarrus side. The range of area where Fred and Mary had raised their family were in several different counties, but not altogether far apart. Brief was in the Northernmost part of Union County, as pictured on the above map. The Rocky River community was just across the river from the Clear Creek Community of Mecklenburg County, but on the Cabarrus County side. Meadow Creek Primitive Baptist Church near Locust, Stanly County is so close to the Cabarrus County line that many of the families buried there were enumerated in both counties in censuses. John S Starnes and his brother Nathan Monroe Starnes, both sons of Nathan T Starnes are buried there. They married sisters, Abigail D Furr and Elizabeth Furr, daughters of Frederick Furr and his wife Christina "Chrissie" Little Furr. Frederick Furr is buried there and this is how Frederick Fincher Starnes, who married his cousin John's widow Abigail Furr Starnes, ended up buried on there. John is buried on one side of Abigail, who would marry a third husband after Fred's death and Fred is buried on her other side.
Martha's tombstone, daughter of F. F. Starnes and Mary.
Rocky River is an ancient and beautiful cemetery
The Restore Session House
The Starnes are buried just the second row  past this rock wall
Tombstone of John Wesley Starnes and wife
Fallen Tombstone of Geogia Ann, who lived to be 7. 
The view of the Cabarrus section of Rocky River, on which the Starnes family lived and farmed. 
Present view of the farmland of this area
Beautiful rolling hills of Southern Cabarrus and Western Stanly
The fertile Rocky River Valley and her amber waves of grain.
Green pastures as fall sets in. 
Home in the Rocky River community
Historic structures remain
A creek winding through former family property
In rural Stanly, Union and Cabarrus Counties, Cotton is still King. 
Striking red barn beyond a snowy field of cotton. 
Restored Home on Sunnyside in Charlotte where Fred and his second wife  Abigail  moved to after their marriage.
Valley in Stanly County, where Fred and Abbie made their final resting place.
Rocky River Presbyterian Cemetary, founded in 1736
First page of John Starnes estate papers, first name to appear, Fred Starnes
Charlotte area home where Abbie moved after she was widowed a second time. 
View of Arlington Ave, only one block of which is left, where  Abigail Furr Starnes Starnes Misenheimer moved after her remarriage to her third and final husband, Marion H. Misenheimer.
Arlington Ave off of South Boulevard is nothing more than a one block alley now.  In the time of Abbie and her husbands, it led to a Trolley station and was a growing business area.




South Boulevard, and Arlington Avenue, during the later years of  Abigail Starnes time there.

Abbie Sterns
Gender:(Female)
Residence Year:1905
Street Address:Sunnyside
Residence Place:Charlotte, North Carolina
Spouse:Fred F Sterns 
Publication Title:Walsh's Charlotte, North Carolina City Directory
After the death of Frederick Starnes, Abigail was no longer a childless lady in her middle years hungry for the arts and cultures, but an elderly lady looking for the easiest way  and shortest distance to get where she needed to go. She and her third husband, Marion H. Misenheimer, whom she probably had known since childhood, due to growing up in the same area of Cabarrus County, moved out of the beautiful Elizabeth community into the Southern part of Charlotte, at the time, known then as the 6th ward.
Abagail D Misenheimer
Gender:(Female)
Residence Year:1917
Street Address:1500 Arlington av
Residence Place:Charlotte, North Carolina
Spouse:Marion Misenheimer 
Publication Title:Charlotte, N. C. City and Suburban Directory

During the early part of  the 1900's and into the 1920's, this area was a growing area of industry. In 1901, Charlotte Pipe and Foundry opens on South Boulevard between Park and Renselaer. In 1905, the first Pepsi bottling franchise begins there. In 1906, the first air conditioning manufacturing plant, Parks & Cramer opens there. By 1911, Edward Dilworth Latta has invited Frederick L Olmstead, Jr. to design the area called Dilworth, and Myers Park, using a new idea in  landscape design called naturalistic suburban planning. In 1914, the Charlotte Machine Company is founded by Egbert Gribble. Into the 1920's, hosiery mills and other manufacturing ventures, as well as the new Lance Snack Packaging company has been built along South Boulevard. Young farm kids, disenchanted with life on the farm, and looking for the excitement, nightlife and mass transit of the city, flock into this area of Charlotte to find work in all of the available factories. Abigail, however, may have just wanted to be close to the trolley's and streetcars. 

Present view of Abigail's last neighborhood in Charlotte, one she could never have imagined. 
Mathews. 
Robert Lemmonds, known as Bob, would marry Leavy Starnes, daughter of Frederick F and Mary Byron Starnes. Moving away from the Clear Creek and Mint Hill area, he would settle in the tiny town of Mathews, a point between Monroe and Charlotte. Mathews began as a community called Stumptown, because farmers who first invaded the area cut the thick timber so fast, they left a sea of stumps. In 1825, a man named John Miles Fullwood established the first post office in Stumptown and the Postal Service addressed mail sent there to Fullwood Station. Soon the town would be known simply as Fullwood. By 1874, the first train would come to Fullwood and the Railroad would rename the stop Mathews in honor of company director, Edward W. Mathews. 

Renfrow-Lemmonds house, one of the oldest original homes in Mathews. 
Historic Renfrow Hardware Building, Mathews
Mathews Town Hall
Lemmonds land near Mint Hill. 
The original plantation of  the Lemmonds family was located near the modern community of Mint Hill on the Cabarrus Road, that crossed through the tiny community of Brief, in Union County. There is now a modern housing development along this road called Lemmond Acres. 


Philadephia Presbyterian Church in Mint Hill, where Cyrus Q Lemmonds and Robert Lemmonds are buried. 
Area near the old Lemmonds Homesite. 
Another shot of near the Mint Hill area of the Lemmonds farm. 
Just outside Mint Hill, North Carolina
Charlotte home in the years Fred and Abbie lived there. 
Post card of Charlotte , NC near the Turn of the Century. 
Old postcard of North Tryon Street in Charlotte during the years Fred and Abbie resided there. 
Cyrus Q Lemmonds in his later years with one of his sons. 
Another view of Old Charlottetown
Charlotte as Fred and Abby saw it. 
Bird's eye view of Old Charlotte