Showing posts with label New London. Show all posts
Showing posts with label New London. Show all posts

Monday, March 24, 2025

Gentleman Jim

 


James M. Davis

Sometimes during a northbound trajectory, it doesn't hurt to double-back, especially if the trip has been long. In my decades long family search, people preceded me, but people have also came after. There are relatives who find the path that I have already tread, and they may have came in from a different angle, and brought with them different knowledge. Some have been very precipitous, but others have been far more diligent and meticulous than I have. Together, and in time, I hope mysteries can be brought to light.

So this happened yesterday. I revisited some of my earliest research, the Davis family, to look at matches. I'm still seeking more straight-line male Davis descendants to add to the Y-DNA database, so I look for Davis descendants who are already researching their family lines. I've learned to not ignore the ladies, although searching for a Y-DNA contributor. One might find someone willing to approach their 80 year old father-in-law or DNA test their 9 year old son. I made a major discovery, treasure chest wise, if not document or information wise. One of my distant Davis cousins had in their possession a picture of James M. Davis, the second son of Job and Sarah Davis. And there he is right up there. The westward cousins are a real gems, because they took tokens of their past with them, knowing they would not see their family often, if at all. 

They're also quite adament that his middle name was Marshall, however, in all the documents I find, I only see him as either, "Jim", which is what his father and brothers called him, James M. or even "J. M. Davis".

Although I have posted several times concerning various times in his life and about several, but not all of his children, even about the family of his wife, Rowena, I've never really taken a constrictive look at his nuclear family. So lets break it down. 

Census Records

Jim was born in 1808, so his first appearance would be noted by age in his father's 1810 Montgomery County record. They lived in West Pee Dee, now Stanly. 



NameJob Davis
Residence Date6 Aug 1810
Residence PlaceCapt Cage, Montgomery, North Carolina, USA
Free White Persons - Males - Under 102 Henry, 4 and James, 2.
Free White Persons - Males - 10 thru 152 John W and Jordan 14 & 12
Free White Persons - Males - 16 thru 251 Peter 16
Free White Persons - Males - 26 thru 441 Job 37
Free White Persons - Females - Under 101 Charlotte, 9 
Free White Persons - Females - 26 thru 441 Sarah 37
Number of Enslaved Persons6
Number of Household Members Under 165
Number of Household Members Over 252
Number of Household Members14


Job Davis had married a widow, Sarah Elizabeth Winfield Howell. She had 4 children by her first husband, Richard Howell. The four were Peter, Jordan, JohnW. and Charlotte Howell and were born between 1794 and 1800. Henry Davis, Job and Sarah's oldest together, was born in 1806, and James came along two years later. 


NameJames Davis
Home in 1830 (City, County, State)Montgomery, North Carolina
Free White Persons - Males - 20 thru 291 James 22
Free White Persons - Females - Under 51 Elizabeth Jane 11 months old
Free White Persons - Females - 15 thru 191 Rowena 17
Slaves - Males - Under 101
Slaves - Males - 10 thru 232
Slaves - Females - Under 101
Slaves - Females - 24 thru 351
Free White Persons - Under 202
Free White Persons - 20 thru 491
Total Free White Persons3
Total Slaves5
Total - All Persons (Free White, Slaves, Free Colored)8


The 1820 Census for Montgomery County was lost or destroyed, so the next census, 1830 is a 20 year jump. By this time, James has started his own family and own enterprise. He has married Rowena Lee, daughter or John Lee and wife, Elizabeth Coppedge Lee and their first child, Elizabeth Jane Davis is an infant. Rowena was a teenager still, as was not uncommon. James also had five enslaved people in his household, that appears to also have been a young family.



NameJames Davis
Residence Date1840
Home in 1840 (City, County, State)West Pee Dee River, Montgomery, North Carolina
Free White Persons - Males - Under 53  John lee 8, Job Pinkney 5, William E 3
Free White Persons - Males - 5 thru 91 Edmund Milton 10 *
Free White Persons - Males - 30 thru 391 James 32
Free White Persons - Females - Under 51 Winnifred Catherine 1
Free White Persons - Females - 5 thru 91 Charlotte W.    9
Free White Persons - Females - 10 thru 141 Elizabeth Jane 11
Free White Persons - Females - 20 thru 291 Rowena 27
Slaves - Males - Under 102
Slaves - Males - 10 thru 232
Slaves - Males - 55 thru 991
Slaves - Females - 24 thru 351
Persons Employed in Agriculture4
Free White Persons - Under 207
Free White Persons - 20 thru 492
Total Free White Persons9
Total Slaves6
Total All Persons - Free White, Free Colored, Slaves15


By 1840, James and family have been productive in more ways than one. During this time, James has been buying property and receiving grants in both Stanly and Anson Counties. He and Rowena are now the parents of seven children, that is not up for debate. Family records of direct descendants, as I am a niece descendant, record the name of the oldest son as Edmund or Edward Milton Davis. That would make sense as Sarah's grandfather was Edward Winfield and she had a nephew named Milton. I'm not sure where in the family dynamic that name came from. By the time that the children start showing up in records in Stanly County, this son is not there. It is proposed that he struck out as a young man to Illinois and died there in 1901.



By 1850, Montgomery County has been  split in two, divided by the Pee Dee River and the Davis family shows up in Stanly County, what was the western side of Montgomery. They had not moved. The names of all freeborn members of a household are now shown, and the James M Davis family has grown by six, taking the count to twelve. George W., David D., James W., Mary Arranah, Sarah Elizabeth and Louisa Irena have joined the family.

In the above list, one can see the Davis family all living close to each other, with the exception of the oldest son, Henry Davis, who had moved closer to the future county seat, on Cloverfork Creek. At the top of the page is 70 year old James Crump, with Stephen Crump Jr. 27 and his young bride, Jane Crump 20, and their little daughter. 6 month old Charlotte. This was James M. Davis's oldest daughter, Elizabeth Jane, and his first grandchild. If you wonder about all the "Charlottes" in the family, it was because James M. Davis's mother, Sarah, was the daughter of Charlotte Freeman Winfield, who had several Granddaughters and Great Granddaughters named for her. 

They are followed by Daniel Crump and his family, then by Josiah G. Floyd, and his wife, a descendant of Josiah and Mary Tillman Floyd whom Job had arrived from Virginia with. After the Floyds is Merritt F. Davis, the youngest Davis son, then James' household with his multitude of children, an miller named Abram Kimmer, then Job, Sarah and third son, Edward Winfield Davis, listed as a Merchant. The page is finished out by the James Ludlow Carpenter household, who is also an ancestor of mine. 

James will appear in three more census records, 1860, 1870 and 1880. In this one, he appears in the Manufacting Schedule as a Miller and Sawyer. 




He also appears in the slave schedule with 7 slaves, a 40 year old woman and 14 year old girl, and three men, 60, 35, 22, and three boys, 18, 16 and 13, again, possibly a family, names unknown. 

The 1850's is when James experienced his greatest growth in his estate. How he must have needed it to feed his large, growing family. James had land grants issued in three counties. 

His first was in 1835 in Montgomery, when he was granted 100 acres on the Rocky River adjoining Job. This was in what is now Stanly but before the separation of the two counties.

The second, in 1844, was in Stanly County, 100 acres on Rocky River adjoining William Nash, Tye and Ludwell Carpenter.

The third was in Anson County, for 68 acres on the Rocky River and Richardsons Creek, adjoing the lands of the estate of John Lee, his father-in-law.

The fourth was in 1884 for 45 acres on the Rocky River and Meeting House Branch.

The fifth was about the same time for 50 acres on Coopers Creek adjoingin his own lands, W. F. Crump and his brother, M F Davis.

In the 1850's, however, he had picked up inheritances when his father, Job Davis, passed away in 1852, and again when his mother passed in 1856. He also inherited property from his father-in-law, John Lee, in lieu of his wife Rowena in 1853. Having gained property, he made several strategic purchases among neighbors both of land and livestock and other purchases, including business ventures. Jim helped his brothers operate a gold mine, and he had a Mill on Richardsons "Creek. Jim's Mill would become known as Efirds Mill and is partially still standing today. 


Exploring the site of James M Davis's old home on Richardsons Creek near the Mill.


Gentlemen Jim was a man of the plantation, and not into politics the way his brothers Henry and E. W. were. Still, his name appears quite frequently in the Stanly County court records. He posted a bond in 1842, along with Job, Henry, Eben Hearne, Joshua Hearne and Parham Smith, for his brother Edward Winfield Davis's Sheriff's Bond, when E. W. was elected Sheriff. He served on many juries and committees, and did his Civic Duty. He served on the Board of Superintendants of the Common Schools.

With James Floyd and Alexander Crump, he served as a Manager for District 8 for the Congressional Election. He recieved some property from his father in 1847. He served again as an Election Manager for his District in 1848 for the Govenors Election and the General Assembly.

Sadly, he had to stand with his brothers and give bond in 1849, when Edward W. Davis, Exparte, filed a petition to declare oldest brother Henry, a lunatic. Heny's alcholism had gotten so bad, his behavior had become eratic, and his business decisions unwise. Although he is shown in census records as the head of his household, his family took over his financial dealings in order to protect his wife and children. 

"Henry Davis found to be incapable from mutual infirmity to transact ordinary business of life. Ordered that a writ issue to sheriff to summon a jury to inquire into the state of Henry Davis's mind and sheriff to report to court". E. W. Davis, James M. Davis, Marriott F. Davis and Benjamin Ivy entered into a bond of $2000. 

James served on a few more election committees, and gave bond to family endeavors, but he never ran for office, like Henry, who served as a Magistrate, Justice of the Peace, Ranger and ran for State Senate, or Edward, who served as Sheriff and was a very involved Whig.


Rehobeth Church today

Jim was, however, a very religiously devout man. Two deeds dated 1852 and 1854 show that Benjamin Murray, another Uncle from a different family branch, sold to James M. Davis, John Poplin, William Hendley, William R. Randles, and Caleb Aldridge, as Trustees of Rehobeth Episcopal Church South, a tract of land containing by estimation, nine acres in one deed and six and 3/4 acres in the other in order to establish Rehobeth Church. James is also recorded in church records as being one of the owners of a cabin or wooden "tent" of about 4 rooms that were built in a circle around an arbor, orginally made of brush, that would serve as temporary shelter during the camp meetings, held outside, usually during times of the least activity for the farmers, when visiting ministers would come to stir the crowd with energetic sermons and songs and worship services. 


A camp meeting photo among my grandmother's collectio. She grew up near Cottonville and was born in 1898, so it was probably in the same area, although I don't know where this one was held. Circa 1930 perhaps.

1860

By 1860, Jim has become very established and is still living in Stanly County, although among very different neighbors. 


NameJames M Davis
Age52
Birth Yearabt 1808
GenderMale
RaceWhite
Birth PlaceNorth Carolina
Home in 1860Stanly, North Carolina
Post OfficeAlbemarle
Dwelling Number1153
Family Number1169
OccupationFarmer
Real Estate Value3250
Personal Estate Value17000
Inferred SpouseRowena Davis
Inferred ChildWilliam E Davis; George Davis; David Davis; Wesley Davis; Arranna Davis; Louisa J Davis
Household members
NameAge
James M Davis52
Rowena Davis47
William E Davis23
George Davis20
David Davis18
Wesley Davis16
Arranna Davis14
Louisa J Davis9


He's in his early 50's, Rowena, her later 40's and they still have six children at home. The older daughters have all married and married well. Some of the sons had struck out on their own. There had been losses, and would be more to come. James and Rowena, as was typical, but tragic for the time, would outlive several of their children. The name of the Post Office indicates James had moved the family away from the Davis Plantaion, where most of his land holding till lay, and closer to Albemarle. His real estate value was $3250 and his personal estate $17,000. That's about $775,000 today. He owned 17 slaves, as reported in the 1860 schedule. This schedule, broken down in sections puts James in the neighborhood of William P Palmer, Geroge W. Crowell, Daniel Freeman,  Richmond Pickler and Eben Hearne. I wonder if he was not living on Henry's Cloverfork Creek property. His brothers, E. W .and M. F and Henry's oldest son, Benjamin F. Davis, were all living still close together, with the expected neighbors, Floyd, Carpenter and such, on the old Davis Plantation. Henry, even though his mental and behavioural issues due to alchoholism had already been well recorded, seems to have been located in the northern part of the county, at this time. He was not destitute, his property values were $2000 in real estate and $1000 in personal

In the agricultural scheudule, Jim was said to own 200 improved acres and 400 unimproved. That meant that 200 acres were tilled, worked or lived upon while 400 acres were wooded and wild. In the manufacturing schedule, he and his brother Edward were down as mechants, as well as millers, turning wheat and corn into meal and flour. 

The War came and there were losses. James lost a son, I believe and a brother. Legend has it that  Henry was found on the Island in the Rocky River, that at the time, belonged to James. Fact is that James buried Henry in the family cemetery in Anson County of his father-in-law, John Lee. Why Henry was not buried in the Davis family cemetery, where his parent were buried ten and six years earlier, is unknown and can only be guessed upon. 

James returned from close to Albemarle, in 1860, back to the Davis plantation area and rejoined his surviving brothers, E. W. and M. F. Living among them were former slaves, to whom they had awarded the heads of those households their own small plats of land to work and others, still worked as household help or sharecroppers. They even had their own church built upon the property. Descendants of those people still live in this county until this time. 



James is seen as a 60 year old farmer, Rowena 55 is keeping house in the 1870 census. Four adult children are still at home. David, at 27, is in school. The name of the school is not given, and may be the reason for the move. His age in mind, it seems more likely that it is a college or training school, perhaps the Bilesville Academy, or something akin to it. Wesley, 25, is just 'at home', as is Mary Arranna, 22, and Louisa, 19. Two boarders,  live with them, Louis Gaines, 17, is a farm hand and Delaney Hinson's role is unknown, she is just seen as 'at home'. She had an interesting and mysterious life as rogue women often do, however.





A decade later, James and Rowena are seen in their last census, 1880. They have now moved across the Rocky River to Anson County, probably to the mill site on Richardson's Creek, or to John Lee's old place. Jim is now 72 and Rowena, 67. Only the youngest two daughters remain. They will soon be married. All were born in North Carolina, but parents birthplaces are given in this census, and James parents were born in Virginia, which we know, and for Rowena, her father, John Lee, was born in North Carolina, while his wife, Elizabeth Coppedge, was born in Viriginia. Two young farm hands are living with them and helping them out. Henry Howard is 18, white, and a tenant while Louis Harris is 16, black and listed as a servant.




This last census reveals the family in Burnsville, Township, Anson County.




Neighbors, like freedmen Johnson Davis, before Jim's household listing and Elisha Davis, after, were probably former slaves. Eliza Turner, the last surving daughter of George Turner, is a near neighbor and knowing where both John Lee and George Turner lived, it makes sense that James is know living on the old Lee place that Rowena inherited. Richard Poplin is also a Stanly County resident who had moved south across the river. 




According to Jim's estate papers, he died in December of 1883 at the age of 75. The executor of his estate was his son-in-law, Valentine Mauney, and was probated in Stanly County, despite his last known location as Anson. In 1889, it shows his estate still holding 631 acres in Anson County. Jim did not leave a Will, which is odd, for a man of his age not to do, especially when holding as much property as he did, with as many heirs. James had outlived several of his children. Valentine Mauney listed the surviving heirs as Rowena Davis, widow, daughters C. W. Shankle, Aranna Perry and Lou Blaylock and sons, W. E., G. W., D. D. and J. W. Davis. 

A Division of Property is found in the Stanly County Registry of Deeds, Book 14, Page 175. Jim's property was divided into 9 lots. Although only 7 of his children survived him, two of those that predeceased him left heirs. 

December 18, 1885

Lot 1 that started at the mouth of the Throughfare, followed the Rocky River to the mouth of the 1st hollow and followed a road to Coopers Creek, contained 108 acres alotted to Charlotte Davis Shankle.

Lot 2 began at the mouth of the Upper Hollow and went down river to the old field, down the road to 20 steps from the Shop, from there to the creek, and followed the old line to the center of the road, contained 76 acres alotted to George W. Davis.

Lot 3 ran from the above lot to the bank of the Rocky River, to 20 steps from the Shop and was alotted to M. R. H. Perry and wife 'Arena'. 

Lot 4 was 85 acres alotted ot Valentine Mauney and wife, W. C. 

Lot 5 ran down the Rocky River opposite the Island, to the mouth of Scalybark Branch and was 66 acres, "including the Island" and was alotted to James Varker and wife, Sophronia and L. A. Heilig and wife. These two being granddaughters and their husbands, their mother, Jim's daughter, being deceased. 

Lot 6 began on the bank of the Throughfare, followed the Throughfare to the river, down river to the Meeting House Branch, ending at a Pear Tree and contained 70 acres alotted to W. E. Davis.

Lot 7 began at Meeting House Branch, ran along W. F. Crumps line, and was alotted to D. D. Davis.

The next lots were noted to be located in Anson County. 

Lot 8 was located on Richardson Creek' just below the ford'. It contained 143 acres bordering the Rocky River and excepted 8 acres belonging to the Davis Mill tract and alotted to James Wesley Davis.

Lot 9 began at J. H. Perry's corner on Richardson Creek below the ford and contained 137 acres alotted to Charles Blalock and his wife Lou. 




Rowena Lee Davis, widow, recieved the standard alottment of  land and property following her husbands death as Dower.  She would outlive him for a few years, passing away at age 74. Rowena would die in Anson County and her son, James Wesley Davis, a single man who probably lived with her, was the executor of her estate, apparently Valentine Mauney was appointed first, but J. W. took over. 

Having taken a hint from her husbands death, Rowena had written a will on April 28, 1884. It was filed in Anson County. She would live three more years after. Her Will was simple and direct. She requested a proper burial and her debts to be paid, after the usual statements about soundness of mind and weakness of body. She then devised One dollar each to her children Charlotte Shankle, 'J Monia', meaning Jane Mauney, Catherine "Monia" aka Mauney, Arannah Perry, George Davis, William E. Davis, David D. Davis, J Wesley Davis and 'youngest' Lew I Blaylock. 

"I give and bequeath all the rese and residue of my estate real personal & mined which I shall or may be seized of and present of or heir to at my death to be equally divided with my youngest son J. Wesley and my youngest daughter Lew I Blalock." J. Wesley and Lew were to see that their brother David D. Davis did not suffer. He may have came down with an ailment or handicap. Life was hard. She then nominated her son-in-law, Valentine Mauney and son James Wesley Davis, to be the executors of her estate. J. M. Broadway and W. L Kendall were witnesses. 


Wesley became the executor and within the Probate papers, her exact date of death was given as February  27, 1887. The papers also stated, " the other one Valentine Mauney has not decided to qualify as one of her executors. " 

Among her property was 200 acres in Burnsville Township in Anson County bordering Wilson P. Turner, M. F. Edwards, Thomas Birmingham, and others, one cow and yearling, household and kitchen furniture and other personal items worth about $500. Rowena's estate file is 22 pages and typically repetitive. Her list of heirs were:

  • Charlotte Shankle of Anson County
  • The heirs of Jane Mauney of Rowan County
  • Catherine Mauney of Stanly County
  • Arranah Perry of Anson County
  • George Davis who lives in Texas
  • W. E. Davis of Anson County
  • David D. Davis of Stanly County
  • J Wesley Davis of Anson County
  • Lew J Blaylock of Anson County
The Rowena Lee Davis estate was probated on March 7th, 1887. Beside her land, she owned a buggy, a few cows, blacksmith tools, typical farm implements and a great deal of furniture, including 4 tables and 12 chairs, a bookcase and lots of books, indicating the house was of a good size. 

James M. Davis and wife, Rowena lived a typical and successful life that streached most of the middle years of the 19th century. They were enterprising, pious and resourceful and raised a large family of the same. The family bible was passed from Rowena into the hands of the Belk family of Mecklenburg County,  whom one of her granddaughters married into. They started a string of string of stores still thriving throughout the southeast today. 

Below is as complete a list of their heirs of Jim and Rowena,  to the grandchildren, as I can determine.

A) Elizabeth Jane Davis  Born July 12, 1829, Also seen as "Eliza Jane" or just "Jane".  Married 1st: Stephen Crump Jr. or Stephen James Crump, son of James Crump and member of a large cotton farming family of Cottonville, Stanly County. One child, Charlotte Sophronia Crump, born in 1850. Stephen Crump passed away in 1858. Sophronia Crump married James Barker. 

Jane married second, Ephraim Mauney (1812-1899), on September 16, 1858, a widower with children. They would have one child together, Tallulah Lee Mauney Heilig. She is the "Lula Heilig" in her grandmother's estate records. The family moved to Gold Hill, NC where Ephriam was a merchant and industrialist. Jane died and is buried in Gold Hill, Rowan County on January 1, 1880. Elizabeth Jane Davis Crump Mauney died when a physician accidentally gave her an overdose of morphine.



B) Edward Milton Davis born about 1830. I don't doubt that he existed, as a son of this birth order is shown in the 1840 census and his name is written in the Family Bible. He supposedly migrated to Illinois before the 1850 census. Others have him connected to a doctor that died there in 1901, but there is no mention of him or his heirs in the estate records of Jim or Rowena. He was born, but when or where he really died keeps Milton a mystery.

C) Charlotte W. Davis born February 9, 1831 She married Dr. Abraham Joseph Shankle on May 6, 1851 at the age of 20. He was a member of the Forks area Shankles, the fertile pennisula between the Pee Dee and Rocky River forks. They had three children: 

1)Josephine J. Shankle (1852-1925) 

2) Cains M. Shankle (1855-1930) Married Mary Kathleen Swaringen 7 children: Caroline "Carrie", Grover, Charles, Charlotte "Lottie", Josephine "Josie", Paul and Robert. Settled in Ellis County, Texas.

3) Talola Lee Shankle (1860-1942) Married Charles Augustus Maynor or Maner. 4 children: Tyler Bennett, June Postell, Fannie Andrews Maynor Smith, Valentine B. Maynor.

D) John Lee Davis was born about 1832. By 1860, he was running his own farm in Burnsville District, Anson County. He was listed next to George Turner, and it seems like he was on the old John Lee property on Richardson Creek. He enlisted in the Confederate Army in July of 1862 and mustered with Co. K 44th Infantry in Anson County, NC. He was often sick, wounded and captured as a POW. He is last recorded as alive in 1864, but as he never returned, it is assumed he died that year, possibly at Elmira, his last known location.

E) Job Pinkney Davis was born about 1835. His death was reported in the January 12, 1855 issue of The North Carolinan, as having died in December of 1854 at age 20. Reason unknown.


F) William Edward Davis was born in 1837. He married at 23,  in late 1860 to Eliza Ann Kendall Crump, daughter of John Spillman Kendall and Winifred Harrison Turner, and the third wife and  widow of  Stephen Crump, Sr. (1788-1857). This Stephen was the uncle of Stephen Crump Jr. that W. E. Davis's sister Eliza Jane had married. In 1857, Crump Sr.'s real estate was the second highest value in Stanly County. He had 15 heirs and 45 slaves when his property was divided. He had served in The War of 1812 and was locally, "The King of Cotton". When Eliza married him in 1848, she was 18 and Crump was 59, older than her own father. William Edward Davis married a wealthy young widow.

Eliza brought 5 children with her when she married W. E. Davis. He helped raise them. They were 1850: Lucy Ann Crump, 1852: Winifred Florence "Wincy" Crump, 1854: Robert Alfred "Bob" Crump, 1856 Walter Stephen Crump and 1858: Charlotte Helen Crump, who was born posthumously on April 15th of that year.

W. E. Davis and Eliza Kendall Crump Davis would have three daughters. Some show a son, Lee Davis, as well. The 9 year old child in the 1870 census, Lee, is marked as a male, however, Lila, who would have been 9 that year, is missing. I believe it was a mistake on the part of the census taker the the child "Lee" was actually Lila.

1) Lila Pauline Davis Smith (1861-1934)

2) Harriet "Hettie" or "Hattie" Davis (1863-1895)

3) Annie L Davis (1867-1884) 

William Edward Davis died in 1891. His family are buried at the Concord United Methodist Church Cemetary in Anson County, NC, on part of the old Winfield Plantation, with the exception of Lila, the only child to have her own family.

G) Winnifred Catherine "Winny" Davis was born July 12, 1839. She married at age 20 to Valentine Mauney, 43, a brother of her sister Jane's husband, Ephraim Mauney, as his second wife. Hon. Valentine Mauney was a buisnessman, farmer, industrialist, merchant and politician. He served in the State Legistlature and owned a mining operation in Gold Hill with his brother, Ephraim. Although the family settled in Harris Township in Stanly County, records of Valentines business ventures can also be found in Rowan, Cabarrus, Davidson, Mecklenburg, Anson, Union,  Richmond and Lincoln Counties, where he was born. He had two children before his marriage to Winny Davis; John and  Virginia. Valentine and Winnifred Catherine Davis Mauney had five children together that they raised in the New London, Stanly County vicinity.


1) Mary Cora Mauney (1861-1939) Married 1st Madison Badget. Married 2nd Curtis W. Stokes of the Newsome Community, Davidson County, NC "Stokes Ferry Stokes". 

2) James Monroe Mauney (1866-1942) Married Nolie F. Burt.

3) Minnie Lee Mauney (1867-1958) Married James Lee Crowell.

4) Charles Julius Mauney (1871-1927) Married Marjorie Burns Atkins.

5) David Valentine Mauney (1872-1954) Married Delia Caudle.


Winnifred Catherine, "W.C." or "Winny" Davis Mauney died on August 4, 1906 of Dropsy, at the age of 67. She is buried in the New London, NC town cemetery.

H) George Washington Davis was born about 1841. George helped work for his father until the Civil War, when, at the age of 20, he enlisted as a Private with Co. D. 28th Infantry. He later transferred to Unit K. In 1864, he was imprisoned at Spotsylvania Courthouse, but made it home alive. After the War, George would go West, and ended up in the Red River Valley of Texas, where, on October 5, 1867, he would marry Mary Ellen Puett. Her family had Burke County, NC roots. They would afterwards settle in Ellis County, Texas where they would raise their 6 children;

1) James Puett Davis (1868-1927) His documents state he was born in North Carolina on June 12, 1868, depite his parents marrying in Red River, Texas. Married Emmma A. Felton. No children.

2) John Wesley (JW) Davis (1870-1943) Married Hattie Alzada Southern. 5 children.

3) George Davis II (born 1873- died young)

4) Anna Rowena Davis (1876-1938) Married Edward E. Lane. 3 children

5) Joseph Alexander Davis (1879-1935) Married Delilah Sutphen. No children.


6) Charles Washington Davis (1884-1946) Married Isla Mildred Griffith. 4 daughters.

George Washington Davis died on May 10, 1910 in the town of Toyah, Reeves County, Texas. He is buried at the Toyah Old Cemetery.


I) David Daniel Davis was born on November 14, 1842. He worked for his father until the War. Like his brother, George, David enlisted on July 29, 1961 in Company D, 28th Infantry and later changed to Company K. He was wounded at Gettysburg, PA and was imprisoned there.He was exchanged in a prisoner swap a year later and made it home alive. He remained single and in the family home for some time after. Finally, on May 10, 1880, David, 36, married 18 year old Ann Elizabeth (Ann Eliza) Thompson, daughter of George and Mary Ann Morton Thompson of Norwood, NC. There were three children born to this marriage.

1) Carrie Davis (1883-1915) Married William Thomas Mauldin, Jr. Carrie died in childbirth with her 3rd child at age 30.

2) Mattie Irene Davis (1886-1968) Married Merritt Filmore Mabry, 5 children.

3) Edward David Davis (1888 - 1971) Married 1st Nettie Mae Jordan of Iredell County, Married 2nd Biddie Cordelia Seagle Kessler. Five children by 1st wife.


David D. Davis died on November 20, 1887. He never met his son, who was born posthumously. His widow, Annie Thompson Davis remarried on March 7, 1888 to John Riley Eddins, by whom she had 6 more children. Some of the Davis children are at times shown as Eddins or Eddings.

David Daniel Davis was buried at Cedar Grove UMC Church near Norwood, NC.

J) James Wesley Davis was born about 1845. I have blogged about Wesley before. He never married and took over the running of his fathers Mill on Richardson Creek upon his death. Wesley also enlisted in the Civil War in Company D, 28th Infantry. He was imprisoned after being injured at Gettysburg. Some of his military records have been merged with a man with the same initials as Wesley made it back home alive.He would sell the Mill and move to Wadesboro, living for awhile with his nephew, David Valentine Mauney.

Wesley died on May 14, 1921. He is buried in the Mauney plot at the New London Town Cemetery with his sister, W. C. Davis Mauney.

K) Mary Arranah Davis was born November 12, 1846. She married on February 3, 1881 to the Rev. Marion Robinson Perry. As was opposite of the usual, Arranah was 30 and M. R. W. Perry was 22. The couple first settled in Burnsville, in Anson County, then moved to Monroe, in Union County, before finally settlling in Marshville. There were two children.

1) Minnie Josephine Perry (1881-1967) Married John Thomas Belk. The family settled in Charlotte, NC. 6 children.

2) James Heyward Perry ( 1885-1931) Married Alma James of Marshville. Settled in Charlotte,NC, returned to Marshville. One child.

Mary Arranah Davis passed away on August 22, 1923. She is buried at the  Marshville City Cemetery.  Rev. Perry outlived her and moved to Tampa, Florida.



L) Sarah Elizabeth Davis was born about 1846.  She died as a child in about 1860.

M) Louisa Irena (Arena) "Lew" Davis, the youngest of the Jim and Rowena Davis children, was born about 1849. She married on December 19, 1880, to Charles James Blalock, son of Mastin Crawford Blalock and Sarah McSwain Thompson, as his second wife. Louisa is shown living with him in Burnsville in 1900, her brother, Wesley, with them. He remarried on July 19, 1903 to Mary Edwards. This gives Lew a year of death between 1900 and 1903. Her place of burial is unknown, but perhaps the John Lee cemetery near where she lived. There were no children born in any of Charles Blalocks marriages. 

The final resting place of Gentleman Jim Davis and wife Rowena are unknown. It's thought to be the old John Lee Cemetery, where his brother, Henry is buried, but their markers not surviving or illegible. His family made an impact on the area in several counties. 





Thursday, April 26, 2018

Finding Fred: And the Walls Came Tumbling Down

A few years ago, I acquired a substantial group of disks from the State Archives, that contain old court records from Stanly and Anson Counties. One day soon, I intend to transcribe the entire things, to make them more accessible to needed information.




More recently though, I've picked a few cases of possible genealogical interest to research, for people who may be a descendant of these individuals and stuck behind a brick wall.

Such is the case of this entry from the Fall Term of the 1891 Superior Court of Stanly County:

"State and Sarah Ann Pickler  vs Hezekiah Morton   - Bastardy"

These two individuals had created a child outside of the bounds of marriage, which was a crime in those days. The County wanted to ensure the child would not be a burden on society, as women in those days typically had no means of support available to them unless they were married, or lived with a parent or other relative. Hezekiah Morton was held on a bond to pay the Victorian era version of child support to begin with $15 up front for Sarah Ann Carter, and $20 the next term of court (a month away) and then a regular sum after that. Usually the sum was only paid until the child was old enough to be "bound out", or old enough to work for their own keep, typically about the age of seven. It was an archaeic practice, intended to teach a child a trade, and also intended to punish, or defer, the guilty parties from repeating  the immoral behavior. Sometimes the child ended up with a relative, sometimes a neighbor. As in todays foster system, sometimes the child was treated and loved as a family member, other times mistreated and overworked. I've seen where bound children were beloved and left property in wills by their guardians, and other times where they never made it to adulthood for being 'worked to death'. Othertimes, in the instance of girls, I've seen where the bound girl became an unwed mother as a teen, by her guardian or his sons, and the cycle continued all over again. This happened in my own family tree. Othertimes, the courts have shown cases of the bound children on the docket, requesting a change in guardians as they report mistreatment.



Other children fared better by being allowed to remain with their mother, if her father or brother paid the bond, and sometimes later, the mother married and the stepfather took on the responsibility. This became the case of  the child of Sarah Ann Pickler and Hezekiah Morton.

To discover the individual involved in this court case, I first looked for Sarah Ann Pickler. Of course, there were several in the county.

There was Sarah Ann Pickler, who was born a Palmer and married RGD Pickler (Richmond Gates Davidson). She passed away in 1854, far before this court case appeared, but was the matriarch of the Sarah Ann Picklers.

She had a daughter, Sarah Ann Pickler, who appears to have died as a child. There was an African-American Sarah Ann Pickler, who was born a Delamothe or Dillamont, and this Sarah was not. There was Sarah Ann Pickler, born in 1882, a daughter of Dock Franklin Pickler and a granddaughter of the Sarah Ann Palmer Pickler who was born in 1821 and died in 1854, but she would not have been old enough in 1891 to have been the mother of this child.

Image result for 1900 girl

Then there was her cousin, Sarah Ann Francis Pickler, daughter of RGD Pickler Jr. of the family who favored three first names.

Sarah Ann Frances Pickler was born on January 12, 1874 in the Ridenhour Township of Stanly County, North Carolina as the third child and first daughter of Richmond Gates Davidson Pickler, Sr. and his wife, Talitha Jane Miller Pickler.


Name:Sarah A. Pickler
Age:6
Birth Date:Abt 1874
Birthplace:North Carolina
Home in 1880:Ridenhours, Stanly, North Carolina, USA
Dwelling Number:7
Race:White
Gender:Female
Relation to Head of House:Daughter
Marital Status:Single
Father's name:B.J.D. Pickler
Father's Birthplace:North Carolina
Mother's name:Tillitha J. Pickler
Mother's Birthplace:North Carolina
Attended School:Yes
Neighbors:View others on page 
Household Members:
NameAge
B.J.D. Pickler28
Tillitha J. Pickler29
John W. Pickler10
Levi J. Pickler8
Sarah A. Pickler6
Gorge W. Pickler4




Image result for kendalls baptist church new london



Kendall's Baptist Church is a beautiful old white church that sits on a knoll above a branch of Town Creek just off of the Old Salisbury Road in the Kendall Valley area. It was established about 1830 for the Baptists in the Northern part of Stanly County in the Kendall Valley area. Sarah Ann Picklers family were members of this church. Her parents, however, are buried in the old Pickler family cemetery closeby at the intersection of Poplin and Kendalls Church Roads.

Despite, no doubt, a strict Baptist raising, Sarah Ann Pickler found herself in court in 1891, at the age of  17, having to answer to the judge about who the father of her child was.

The loss of the 1890 census is a huge one as it gives this 20 year gap that we have to rely on other documentation to fill in. So from 1880 to 1900, we find Sarah Ann Frances Pickler go from a 7 year old child to a 27 year old woman. What makes things even more difficult in her case, is that she can not be found in the 1900 census, so we have to jump all the way to 1910, to find her in her 30's.


Name:D E Ridenhour
Gender:Male
Marriage Date:18 Nov 1896
Marriage Place:Stanly, North Carolina, USA
Spouse:Sarah A Pickler
Spouse Gender:Female
Event Type:Marriage


The one document that can be found that gives a hint of what happened to her in these years, aside from her 1891 court appearance, is that she became a bride in 1896, at the age of 22, so in the 1900 census, she would have been Mrs. Davidson Edward "Ed" Ridenhour. A newspaper clipping near to this time gives the report that Mr. Ridenhour lived in Gold Hill in 1901.


 - Mr. D. E. Ridenhour, one of Gold Hill's...
Salisbury Evening Sun
(Salisbury, North Carolina)
  • Page 1

So who was D. E. Ridenhour, the man who would marry Sarah A. F. Pickler?

Davidson Edward Ridenhour was born August 5, 1836, rather fittingly, in the Ridenhour section of Stanly County, which is the northwestern corner, near the Cabarrus and Rowan County lines. He was the third of the nine children of Phillip and Elizabeth Harkey Ridenhour.


Name:Elizabeth S or L Moose
Gender:Female
Spouse:Davidson E Ridenhower
Spouse Gender:Male
Bond Date:7 Dec 1855
Bond #:000009805
Marriage Date:11 Dec 1855
Level Info:North Carolina Marriage Bonds, 1741-1868
ImageNum:005644
County:Cabarrus
Record #:02 166
Bondsman:Alexander Misen
Witness:John Wilkinson
Performed By:John D Scheck, Lutheran Minister


On December 12, 1855, at the age of 19, he would marry 20 year old Elizabeth Sarah Moose, daughter of George and Mariah Peck Moose. Ed was a man on the move. Farming was apparently not his gig.

His military stint was peppered. Documents at Fold3 indicate he was conscripted on August 8, 1862 by Colonel Davis, who would have been my Great, Great, Great Uncle Edward Winfield Davis.

On the 19th of Novembert of 1862, he was in Richmond, Virginia signing for his $11 a month pay for the time of August 8 to November 19. It was mentioned on the receipt that he recieved $30.43 and was going on furlough.

In the January and February muster he is shown as Absent Without Leave.

A Muster Roll for Company F, 5th Regiment, North Carolina Infantry at a Camp near Orange Courthouse dated December 29, 1863, over a year later, states D. E. Ridenhour, Stanly County, 7th congressional district was a "Deserter, at home, fit for duty, can't be gotten back".  He was listed as being in the hospital in Richmond at one point.

There is no record of any charges related to his desertion, however, this time was a very sad time for his family.

Ed and his first wife, Sarah Moose had 4 children. The first two were born before he was conscripted, evidentally with protest, into the Confederate Army.

Julian Adolphous Ridenhour was born March 24, 1857

Martha Alice Ridenhour was born August 14, 1859

 Julien A. Ridenhour


Sadly, his oldest son lived barely a year and Ed and Sarah buried him at Bear Creek Church, near the Stanly County, Cabarrus County line.

When Ed was conscripted, he and his wife Elizabeth Sarah, had their 3 year old daughter, Mattie and a brand new son, George T. B. Ridenhour, who was born on June 10, 1862. George was only 2 months old when his father was conscripted. Sadly, little George passed away shortly after his father was marched away on October 13, 1862.

 George T. B. Ridenhour
Tombstone of George T. B. Ridenhour

Perhaps Ed had heard of his second sons demise when he claimed his pay and took off on furlough. And never came back.


Name:D E Ridenhour
Residence:Northampton County, North Carolina
Age at Enlistment:26
Enlistment Date:8 Aug 1862
Rank at enlistment:Private
Enlistment Place:Northampton County, North Carolina
State Served:North Carolina
Survived the War?:Yes
Service Record:Enlisted in Company F, North Carolina 5th Infantry Regiment on 08 Aug 1862.Mustered out on 29 Dec 1863.
Birth Date:abt 1836
Sources:North Carolina Troops 1861-65, A Roster

Oddly, a roster list of NC Confederate Soldiers has D. E. Ridenhour enlisting on August 8, 1862 in Edgecomb County, 10 days before the actual Fold3 records have him being conscripted in Stanly County, in the same Company, Co F 5th NC Infantry and had "Mustered Out" on the same date that Fold3 copies said that he was deserted, at home and "can not be gotten back".

To add to their sorrow, a third and last son was born to Ed and Sarah on December 31, 1863 and passed away on February 22, 1864. He was named John E. Ridenhour and laid to rest at Bear Creek Church with his two brothers.

 John E. Ridenhour
Tombstone of John E. Ridenhour

Davidson Edward Ridenhour, wife Elizabeth Sarah and daughter Martha Elizabeth, are shown in Stanly County, as a Merchant.

Name:D E Ridenhour
Age in 1870:55
Birth Year:abt 1815
[abt 1835] 
Birthplace:North Carolina
Dwelling Number:1
Home in 1870:Ridenhour, Stanly, North Carolina
Race:White
Gender:Male
Occupation:Merchant (Retail)
Male Citizen over 21:Y
Personal Estate Value:2500
Real Estate Value:800
Inferred Children:Elizabeth Ridenhour 
Martha Ridenhour
Household Members:
NameAge
D E Ridenhour55
Elizabeth Ridenhour35
Martha Ridenhour11

 But the families experience for the next 10 years is told best in the obituary of their only daughter, Martha Alice Ridenhour Wallace, aka "Mattie".


Image result for gibson county tennessee

According to her obituary, the small family migrated to Gibson County, Tennessee in the fall of 1873. Mattie joined the church there. Three years later, in December of 1876, they moved again, this time to the town of Hillsboro in Lawrence County, Alabama. Mattie married there on Valentine's Day in 1878 to William Calvin Wallace.  Her happiness was short-lived as she passed away just 6 months later at the age of 19 on September 10, 1878. She said she would be meeting her "three little angel brothers" in heaven.

 - OBITUARY. On September 10. 1878, a few minutes...
The Moulton Advertiser
(Moulton, Alabama)
  • Page 2

Image result for hillsboro, lawrence county, alabama

In the 1880 census, now completely childless, D. E. and E. S. Ridenhour are shown in the Lawrence County, Alabama census, living in Hillsboro.

Name:Sarah E. Ridenhour
Age:46
Birth Date:Abt 1834
Birthplace:North Carolina
Home in 1880:Lawrence, Alabama, USA
Dwelling Number:27
Race:White
Gender:Female
Relation to Head of House:Wife
Marital Status:Married
Spouse's Name:D. E. Ridenhour
Father's Birthplace:North Carolina
Mother's Birthplace:North Carolina
Neighbors:
Household Members:
NameAge
D. E. Ridenhour46
Sarah E. Ridenhour46


At some point between 1880 and 1889, Ed and Sarah returned to North Carolina.


 - Copal Grave Items : Mr. Ed. Ridenhour has the...

It was reported in 1889 that Ed had the mail route from Bilesville (now known as New London in Stanly County) to China Grove, in Rowan County.


 - in the common jail of our county. Salisbury...
The Wilmington Morning Star
(Wilmington, North Carolina)
  • Page 3

They were reported to be living in the Unity community in Rowan County, when Sarah passed away in her sleep in 1891. Elizabeth Sarah Moose Ridenhour was laid to rest with her sons at Bear Creek Church, the old meeting house, just inside the Stanly County line.

Name:D E Ridenhour
Gender:Male
Marriage Date:18 Nov 1896
Marriage Place:Stanly, North Carolina, USA
Spouse:Sarah A Pickler
Spouse Gender:Female
Event Type:Marriage


D. E. Ridenhour was still in North Carolina, and probably in Gold Hill, Rowan County, when he married Sarah Ann Frances Pickler on November 18, 1896 in Stanly County. He was 60, she was 22.

 - New London. Miss Vida Cotton, of Richfield,...

The Enterprise
(Albemarle, North Carolina)
  • Page 2


Name:E Ed Ridenhour
[D Ed Ridenhour] 
Age in 1910:73
Birth Year:abt 1837
Birthplace:North Carolina
Home in 1910:Harris, Stanly, North Carolina
Race:White
Gender:Male
Relation to Head of House:Head
Marital Status:Married
Spouse's Name:S A F Ridenhour
Father's Birthplace:North Carolina
Mother's Birthplace:North Carolina
Native Tongue:English
Occupation:Landlord
Industry:Boarding House
Employer, Employee or Other:Own Account
Home Owned or Rented:Own
Home Free or Mortgaged:Free
Farm or House:House
Able to Read:Yes
Able to Write:Yes
Years Married:13
Out of Work:N
Neighbors:
Household Members:
NameAge
E Ed Ridenhour73
S A F Ridenhour35
Pearl E Ridenhour6
J B Spencer53
Thomas Spencer57
Garrett Pickler26


While the family is not found in the 1900 census, the 1910 census is the only one in which Ed and Sarah Ann Francis Pickler Ridenhour are shown together. By this time their only child, a daughter named Pearl Elizabeth, has been born. She arrived on November 12, 1903.

Image result for new london, north carolina

At this time, Ed and Annie, as I will refer to S. A. F. Pickler Ridenhour, are operating a boarding house in the town of New London, which was formerly Bilesville, from which he had ran a mail route. Living with the in the Boarding house, besides their 6 year old daughter, are J. B. Spencer, a carpenter, and Thomas Spencer, a Gold Miner. New London was still a very active Gold mining town at this point. These two men may have been brothers, considering their ages. Also boarding was Garrett Pickler, Annie's little brother, who was a mail carrier.

Name:Annie Ridenhour
Age:44
Birth Year:abt 1876
Birthplace:North Carolina
Home in 1920:Harris, Stanly, North Carolina
House Number:8
Residence Date:1920
Race:White
Gender:Female
Relation to Head of House:Head
Marital Status:Widowed
Father's Birthplace:North Carolina
Mother's Birthplace:North Carolina
Able to Speak English:Yes
Occupation:None
Home Owned or Rented:Rent
Neighbors:
Household Members:
NameAge
Annie Ridenhour44
Pearl Redenhour16


Things get a bit confusing and interesting by 1920. Annie and Pearl, now 16, are living at what appears to be the corner of Main and Church Streets in the town of New London. While her house is listed on Main Street, she is right next door to her brothers Garrett and George W. Pickler, who both live on Church Street. She is listed as a widow, which would not be surprising as Ed is now in his 80's. But.....he is not dead, so she is not widowed.


Image result for bilesville, stanly county, nc
Old Map of Bilesville and the Parker Gold Mines

D. E. Ridenhour is listed as living on Depot Street, in the "Village of New London". He is now 84 and his occupation is given as "An Ex-Confederate Soldier." It is likely he was drawing a pension. He is also listed as "Widowed", despite living just around the corner from his wife and daughter. Something major must have happened to cause this split. That would require  more intense research into the Stanly County court records of the years 1910 to 1920. That, I have not done. It could have meant they were divorced,

Name:Davidson Ridenhour
Age:84
Birth Year:abt 1836
[abt 1866] 
Birthplace:North Carolina
Home in 1920:Harris, Stanly, North Carolina
Street:Depot Street
House Number:51
Residence Date:1920
Race:White
Gender:Male
Relation to Head of House:Head
Marital Status:Widowed
Father's Birthplace:North Carolina
Mother's Birthplace:North Carolina
Native Tongue:English
Able to Speak English:Yes
Occupation:Ex Confidents
Industry:Soldier
Home Owned or Rented:Rent
Able to Read:Yes
Able to Write:Yes
Neighbors:
Household Members:
NameAge
Davidson Ridenhour84

Annie was referred to as "Mrs. D. E. Ridenhour in 1919, when her brother Levi came to visit.


 - NEW LONDON ITEMS. Mr. and Mrs. Carrett iPckler...
The News
(Albemarle, North Carolina)
  • Page 2


Ed did not make it to the 1930 census. Shortly after the 1920 one was taken, he was transported to the Old Soldiers Home in Raleigh. Despite being a deserter, a reputation that had most likely faded away with time, he appears to have recieved military benesits and was honored in the papers as a "Surviving Confederate Hero", with other living soldiers.


 - Ordered, that C. A. Pidenhour be allowed $24.40...

The Stanly News-Herald
(Albemarle, North Carolina)
  • Page 1

Davidson Edward Ridenhour passed away on January 3, 1923, at the Soldier's Home in Raleigh, Wake County, NC of pneumonia, stemming from influenza. He was 87 years, 5 months and 4 days old. His death certificate states he was buried in Richfield, NC, not with his first wife and sons at Bear Creek.

But before progressing further with the life of Annie Pickler Ridenhour, we must return to the beginning of this post. Who was the other party in the court case, Hezekiah Morton, and what of the child the court case was concerning?

Like there were multiple Sarah Ann Picklers who lived in Stanly County, there were also multiple Hezekiah Morton's. Even these unusual names, like Hezekiah, can become common in an era when multiple members of younger generations are name in honor of a common ancestor.

First there was the Rev. Hezekiah Morton, who was born in 1836. He was the son of Jesse G Morton and Elizabeth Burris Morton. He was born and married the first time in Stanly County, but after his young bride died, he married a second time in Montgomery County and was found there in 1870, by the 1880 census, he was listed as a minister and was living in Harris Township in Stanly County, but by 1881, he had moved to Thomasville in Davidson County, where he was a Minister, Inventor and active in the community, until he moved to Greensboro in Guilford County by 1914, where he died in 1922. It is unlikely this Hezekiah was the guilty Hezekiah, due to his age, status and location.


Captain John Morton of Viriginia, Morton family Patriarch

Then there was Jacob Hezekiah Morton, the son of Jesse Allan Morton and Sarah Efird Morton. He was born in November of 1878, so would have been only twelve years old approaching 13 when this court case took place, so I believe he was far to young to be the Hezekiah we were looking for.

And then there was Hezekiah Alexander Morton. He was the son of Rev. William Green Morton and Sophia Lowder Morton.

To explain the Morton connections a bit, Rev. William Green Morton was the son of an even older Hezekiah Morton who married Susannah Hathcock and died in 1846. This Hezekiah was the son of Ezekial Morton and Elizabeth Brumbelow.

The above mentioned Jacob Hezekiah Morton, who was the son of Jesse Allan Morton, was also a grandson of Hezekiah Morton and Susannah Hathcock. Jesse Allan Morton and William Green Morton were brothers.

Jesse G. Morton, who was the father of the Rev. Hezekiah Morton who resided in Thomasville and Greensboro was a brother of the Hezekiah Morton who married Sussanah Hancock. Both were sons of Ezekial Morton who married Elizabeth Brumbelow. This line leads even further back into Virginia into more Hezekiah's, Ezekials and Jesse's, with plenty of Johns, Josephs and James to match.

Hezekiah Alexander Morton was born on January 28, 1869 in the shadow of Lowder's Mountain in the Poplin's Grove area.

Name:H. Morton
Age:11
Birth Date:Abt 1869
Birthplace:North Carolina
Home in 1880:Albemarle, Stanly, North Carolina, USA
House Number:3
Dwelling Number:134
Race:White
Gender:Male
Relation to Head of House:Son
Marital Status:Single
Father's name:W. G. Morton
Father's Birthplace:North Carolina
Mother's name:S. J. Morton
Mother's Birthplace:North Carolina
Occupation:At Home
Neighbors:
Household Members:
NameAge
W. G. Morton40
S. J. Morton41
Adam Morton13
H. Morton11
S. L. Morton9
John Morton7
Henry Morton7
Ezekiel Morton5
A. E. Morton2
E. F. Morton6/12

His actions between the 1880 and 1900 census are not clear, but a few things are.

1) At the time of the court appearance in 1891, he was 22 years old to Sarah Ann Pickler's 17 years. A more likely age to be the Hezekiah in the case, than his 12 1/2 year old cousin.

2) Sometime shortly after the court appearance, he managed to go to Arkansas. A common destination for young Stanly County men who were running from responisibilities, trouble, or just looking for greener pastures during this period of time.

3) He married Alice Mazona Diffee about 1895, who was born in 1878 in Bizamark, Arkansas County, Arkansas and was found living with her parents, Samuel Diffee and Sarah Amanda Faulkner Diffee in 1880.

4) By 1900, he had returned to Stanly County, North Carolina. The family had not been there long, as daughter Jesse Alice Morton Smith, was born on September 29, 1898 in Bismark, Garland County, Arkansas.


Name:Alex H Morton
[Alex K Morton] 
Age:31
Birth Date:Jan 1869
Birthplace:North Carolina
Home in 1900:Albermarle, Stanly, North Carolina
Sheet Number:8
Number of Dwelling in Order of Visitation:131
Family Number:135
Race:White
Gender:Male
Relation to Head of House:Head
Marital Status:Married
Spouse's Name:Alice M Morton
Marriage Year:1895
Years Married:5
Father's Birthplace:North Carolina
Mother's Birthplace:North Carolina
Occupation:Farmer
Months not employed:0
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:
NameAge
Alex H Morton31
Alice M Morton23
Wm H Morton3
Jessie Morton1
France Turner39

The Frances Turner living with them in 1900 was Hezekiah's aunt,  Mary Frances Lowder Turner, sister of his mother Sophia and widow of Isaac Turner.

H. A. Morton would become the adminstrator of his father's estate, when William Green Morton died in December of 1900.

On November 9, 1901, Hezekiah's Aunt Mary Frances Lowder Turner deeded property to him "for and in consideration of  the support, care and maintenance through sickness and health during her natural life to be rendered by said H. A. Morton, party of the second part hereto in the same plight, way and manner as becomes or is his duty, according to his station in life to care for, maintain, support and provide for the members of his own family, including food, clothing, all medicine and medical attention necessary for the proper care of her during her natural life, with the express agreement and understanding that the said M. F. Turner is to continually live with the said H. A. Morton the remainder of her natural life', with the addition of $ 75.00 paid to Frances by Hezekiah, a tract of land in Albemarle township that bordered the property of John S. Efird, Lindsey Hathcock and others that lie on the Albemarle Road and also bordered a creek. This tract was 58 and 1/2 acres and part of an inheritance left to her by her father and Hezekiah's grandfather, Samuel Lowder. On the same day, she also signed over her personal property, including cattle and furniture, to Hezekiah, in addition to the property.

Name:Hesikiah Marton
[Hezekiah Marton] 
[Fredrick Marton] 
Age:50
Birth Year:abt 1870
Birthplace:North Carolina
Home in 1920:Albemarle, Stanly, North Carolina
House Number:Farm
Residence Date:1920
Race:White
Gender:Male
Relation to Head of House:Head
Marital Status:Married
Spouse's Name:Alice Marton
Father's Birthplace:North Carolina
Mother's name:Sophia Marton
Mother's Birthplace:North Carolina
Able to Speak English:Yes
Occupation:Farmer
Industry:General
Home Owned or Rented:Own
Home Free or Mortgaged:Free
Able to Read:Yes
Able to Write:Yes
Neighbors:
Household Members:
NameAge
Hesikiah Marton50
Alice Marton42
Homer Marton18
Gladys Marton16
Sophia Marton80
Francis Turner79
Fairly Holt27
Anna Holt22
Hubert Holt4
Wade Holt0
Lula Ruth Curlee21
Martha M Curlee3
Evelyn S Curlee1


H. A.  appears to have kept his end of the bargain, because 20 years later in the 1920 census, his Aunt Francis is still living with him, along with his mother Sophia and other boarders.

Mary Frances Lowder Turner died on February 12, 1929 and was buried at Old Freedom Cemetery off of the St. Martin Road with many of her Lowder relatives. Her sister Sophia was buried at Poplins Grove Cemetery.

Over the next few years, Hezekiah would add to his land holdings by buying land around him. In 1905, he bought a 57 1/2 acres tract bordering George Foreman on the west bank of Long Creek, that was a part of Lot 3 of the Samuel Lowder division from William Sidney Kimrey and wife Julia Ann Holt Kimrey, William C. Thompson and his wife, Mary Ann Kimrey Thompson, and Jacob A. Hudson and his wife Rebecca Caroline Poplin Hudson. William Sidney Kimrey, Mary Ann Kimrey Thompson and Jacob A Hudson were all children of Araminta Lowder Kimrey Hudson, daughter of Samuel Lowder and wife Nancy, and therefore relatives of Hezekiah.

In 1907, he bought another 51 1/2 acres also bordering George Foreman and also on the west bank of Long Creek, from A. M. Morton, guardian of Walter and Alonzo Hudson.






Hezekiah Alexander Morton and wife Alice Diffee Morton, would raise their family on this property, on the banks of Long Creek. The 1940 census gave their address as the Oakboro, St. Martin Road in Albemarle.  They would have 4 that lived to adulthood:

1) William Washington Morton (1897-1970) Born in Hot Springs, Arkansas and died in Albemarle.
2)  Julia A. Morton Smith (1898-1984) Born in Bismark, AK and died in Winston-Salem, NC.
3) Homer Rufus Morton (1901-1964) Born and died in Stanly County, NC.
4) Gladys Viola Morton (1903-1949) Born and died in Albemarle, Married Wayne Burelson

A fifth child, Edgar Diffee Morton, died as a toddler.

 - the fourth to the second Edgar Diffee, the...
The Enterprise
(Albemarle, North Carolina)
  • Page 2

Alice Mazona Diffee Morton would die first, on March 31, 1947 and was buried at Poplin's Grove.
Hezekiah Alexander Morton followed on August 21, 1956 and was buried beside her.


But finally, who was the child, the product of this union that would end the young couple in court, facing charges of bastardy. Could he be found and could he be named?

I discovered he could.

Frederick Hamilee Pickler was born on March 5, 1891 in New London, NC. He could not be found in his first census, that of the 1900, but neither could his mother. He may have been living with her and his step-father, as he was not to be found among his other Pickler relatives. Or, he could have been in one of the several orphanages around in neighboring counties.

The 1910 census was telling. The 1900 and 1910 censuses are the only two that asked the questions of how many children a woman had given birth to, and how many of those were still living. It was an excellent, but sad way to have a view of the child mortality rate, which was terrible at the time. It was not uncommon to see families with more children deceased than living.

In 1910, Sarah Ann Pickler Ridenhour informed that she had given birth to two children, but stated that only one was living. Her answers were 2 and 1. Her daughter Pearl was living with her, so it made it look like her other child was deceased. He was not. It could have been that she misunderstood it to mean, how many were living with her.

Name:Fred Pickler
Age in 1910:18
Birth Year:abt 1892
Birthplace:North Carolina
Home in 1910:Jerusalem, Davie, North Carolina
Street:Salisbury Road
Race:White
Gender:Male
Relation to Head of House:Nephew
Marital Status:Single
Father's Birthplace:North Carolina
Mother's Birthplace:North Carolina
Native Tongue:English
Occupation:Laborer
Industry:Odd Jobs
Employer, Employee or Other:Wage Earner
Attended School:No
Able to Read:Yes
Able to Write:Yes
Out of Work:N
Number of weeks out of work:0
Neighbors:
Household Members:
NameAge
Levi J Pickler38
Mary J Pickler29
Fred Pickler18



Frederick Hamilee Pickler was living with Levi Pickler, his uncle, in 1910 and working odd jobs as an 18 year old. Jerusalem is just a little spot on the road now, on Highway 601 between Salibury and Mocksville, just above the crossing of the South Yadkin. Daniel Boone family territory.

I looked to see where Levi John Calhoun Pickler was in 1900. He and his young bride were already in Davie County by then, but Fred Pickler was not with them.

Name:Frederick H Pickler
Residence Year:1915
Street address:313 E 5th
Residence Place:Charlotte, North Carolina, USA
Occupation:Salesman
Publication Title:Charlotte, North Carolina, City Directory, 1915

Fred next shows up in the Charlotte City Directory in 1915, working as a Salesman. As a young man of the early years of the 20th century, footloose and fancy free, public transportation was expanding to make the world his oyster. He did not have to be stuck in a farming community for life and he didn't.

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Military records indicate he served in the Navy for a time.

He would marry Anna Augusta Kerr, whose family originated in Pennsylvania and the 1920 census found the young couple living in Hillsdale, Michigan, where Fred was working as a foreman in a construction company.

Name:Frederic Pickles
[Frederick Pickler] 
Age:28
Birth Year:abt 1892
Birthplace:North Carolina
Home in 1920:Hillsdale Ward 2, Hillsdale, Michigan
Street:Manning-St
Residence Date:1920
Race:White
Gender:Male
Relation to Head of House:Head
Marital Status:Married
Spouse's Name:Anna Pickles
Father's Birthplace:North Carolina
Mother's Birthplace:North Carolina
Able to Speak English:Yes
Occupation:Foreman
Industry:constructin Co
Employment Field:Wage or Salary
Home Owned or Rented:Rent
Able to Read:Yes
Able to Write:Yes
Neighbors:
Household Members:
NameAge
Frederic Pickles28
Anna Pickles23


In the years between 1920 and 1930, several interesting things happened.


Name:Frederick Pickler
Birth Year:abt 1892
Gender:Male
Race:White
Birthplace:North Carolina
Marital Status:Married
Relation to Head of House:Head
Home in 1930:Chicago, Cook, Illinois, USA
Map of Home:View Map
Street address:Lawler
Ward of City:37
Block:421
House Number:547
Dwelling Number:35
Family Number:54
Home Owned or Rented:Rented
Home Value:66.00
Radio Set:Yes
Lives on Farm:No
Age at First Marriage:25
Attended School:No
Able to Read and Write:Yes
Father's Birthplace:North Carolina
Mother's Birthplace:North Carolina
Able to Speak English:Yes
Occupation:Contractor
Industry:Building
Class of Worker:Working on own account
Employment:Yes
Veteran:Yes
War:W.W
Household Members:
NameAge
Frederick Pickler38
Anna Pickler32
Blair Male28
Lawson Miller19
Pearl Ridenhaur26


Fred and Anna were living in Chicago, Cook County, Illinois where Fred was working as a building contractor. They had take in several boarders including Blair Male, an electrical contrator from West Virginia, Lawson Miller, Anna's nephew, the son of her sister Hazel and Pearl Ridenhour, Fred's half-sister, the daughter of Sarah Anna Pickler and Ed Ridenhour. Pearl was working as a school teacher and Lawson was working for an electrical contractor. It's possible that Fred, Blair and Lawson all worked for the same company.

Name:Frederick Pickler
Age:49
Estimated Birth Year:abt 1891
Gender:Male
Race:White
Birthplace:North Carolina
Marital Status:Married
Relation to Head of House:Head
Home in 1940:Chicago, Cook, Illinois
Map of Home in 1940:View Map
Street:Lockwood
House Number:950
Inferred Residence in 1935:Chicago, Cook, Illinois
Residence in 1935:Same Place
Sheet Number:1A
Number of Household in Order of Visitation:4
Occupation:Carpenter
House Owned or Rented:Owned
Value of Home or Monthly Rental if Rented:6000
Attended School or College:No
Highest Grade Completed:College, 1st year
Hours Worked Week Prior to Census:40
Class of Worker:Wage or salary worker in private work
Weeks Worked in 1939:21
Income:1020
Income Other Sources:No
Neighbors:
Household Members:
NameAge
Frederick Pickler49
Anna Pickler41
Frederick J Pickler6
Lawson J Miller29
Pearl Miller35
Mildred Brown41
Roy Brown7


Pearl would marry her brothers brother-in-law, Lawson Miller, and 10 years later the combination of siblings were still living together. Fred was working as a carpenter and Pearl was still a School teacher, while her husband, Lawson was a relay adjuster. In the meantime, Fred and his wife Anna had welcomed their first son into the fold, Frederick James Pickler. A second son, Ronald W. Pickler, was somehow missed, but should have also been in this census.

Frederick Hamilee Pickler, son of Sarah Ann Frances Pickler and Hezekiah Alexander Morton, would move from Chicago to L. A. and there he died on January 19, 1952. He is buried at Roosevelt Memorial Park in Los Angeles, California.

His wife Anna Augusta Kerr Pickler died on October 17, 1954 and was buried beside her husband.

Their oldest son, Frederick James Pickler, would marry Virginia Lauricella in the 1952, the year his father died. Frederick James would remain in California and died there on August 16, 1996 in Fresno. He was buried at the San Joaquin Valley National Cemetery

Ronald W. Pickler, second son, would marry in California, but returned to Illinois. He died there on December 23, 1981, in Cook County, Illnois.  He was buried at Hillcrest Memorial Gardens in Bradley County, Tennesee.


 - KENDALLS NEWS The Woman's Missionary Society...
The Stanly News-Herald
(Albemarle, North Carolina)
  • Page 3


Sarah Ann Pickler's daughter, Pearl Elizabeth Ridenhour Miller, would return to Stanly County. She passed away on July 4, 1979. Her husband Lawson (or Losson) J Miller passed away on December 30, 1984. Both are buried in the New London town cemetery in New London, NC where Pearl grew up.




As for Sarah Ann "Annie" Pickler Ridenhour, she would remain in New London, Stanly County, NC.


Name:Annie Ridenhor
[Annie Ridenhour] 
Age:66
Estimated Birth Year:abt 1874
Gender:Female
Race:White
Birthplace:North Carolina
Marital Status:Widowed
Relation to Head of House:Head
Home in 1940:New London, Stanly, North Carolina
Map of Home in 1940:View Map
Farm:No
Inferred Residence in 1935:New London, Stanly, North Carolina
Residence in 1935:Same House
Resident on farm in 1935:No
Sheet Number:1B
Number of Household in Order of Visitation:23
House Owned or Rented:Owned
Value of Home or Monthly Rental if Rented:1500
Attended School or College:No
Highest Grade Completed:Elementary school, 6th grade
Income Other Sources:Yes
Neighbors:
Household Members:
NameAge
Annie Ridenhor66
Josephine Pickler39
James B Spence83


The 1940 census found Annie in the same house she had lived in for decades, with her younger sister Josephine Pickler. Josephine had been living with their brother Levi in 1930, who had slid a little closer to home down Hwy 601, and was found in Franklin, in Rowan County, just south of Jerusalem, and on the southern bank of the South Yadkin. Living with the sisters was James B Spence, who had been boarding with Annie for decades.

Sarah Ann Frances Pickler Ridenhour passed away on November 29, 1962 in Concord, North Carolina, where she was hospitalized. She had been living in a nursing home there. She was 88 years old. The informant on her death certificate was her daughter Pearl, who was still in Chicago at the time. It might have been the inheritance of property that caused Pearl to retire back to New London.

Annie was also buried in the New London Town cemetery.

Obituary for Sarah Ann Pickler Ridenhour


Descendants of Frederick Hamilee Pickler seem lost as to his origin. There are some who have his mother correct and his father as D. E. Ridenhour, seemingly not concerned with the different surname. Others have his mother listed with no surname, as if Pickler were her married name, and then his father as "Pickler" with no first name. Most just have no parents for him at all. My hopes is that his living descendants will be able to find this post in their research and be able to fill out their trees a little more and connect with their Stanly County roots.