Showing posts with label Rocky River Springs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rocky River Springs. Show all posts

Thursday, December 23, 2021

Three Acres


 After all of my research on Laura Simpson and Bob Krider, I wondered exactly where the three acres were, that the newspapers had reported was owned by Krider, but was occupied by Laura and her illicit business called the Blind Tiger.

I knew from newspaper articles that it was located between Rocky River Springs and Cottonville. That gives us a good idea of the general vicinity, but doesn't nail it down too precisely, so I decided to give things a closer look. The likelihood of the original building still standing is pretty slim, since it was the turn of the century that we are talking about, but perhaps there exists some marker or border that can give us a more specific locale.

The newspapers said Bob Krider owned the property, and he was from another county, Rowan, so I went in search of a deed. I didn't find a single deed where he had bought the property, but I did find the one where he sold it, five years after the death of Laura, and just a year before his own demise. Fortunately, this deed also told of when he bought not one, but two parcels, that encompassed the three acres, and who he bought it from.



My guess is that in this excerpt from the 1910 census of Tyson, that the listing for Mamie Simpson and her children, and Bud Simpson and his young family, show them living on this exact three acre location. Laura was in jail at this time. Only one week later, Bud will be enumerated in Rowan County, living with Bob Krider and his family, and his wife, Pearl and their son John, living with her parents, whose property connected that of the Kriders in Providence Township, close to the old Trading Ford area.  Ten years earlier, Mamie and Bud were both living with the Kriders in Rowan County, and neither had become parents yet. 

Notice in the list, the family names are Wright, then Biles, then the Simpsons, then an Elijah Crump, then Jack Lilly, and lastly, Hampton Aldridge, who happens to be my Second Great Grandmother's older brother, and I know pretty much exactly where he lived. 


I wonder how Krider met Laura in the first place, but it appears he may have bought the property just for her. The clipping below stated that the place was near Cottonville, and was not cultivated. 


CLIPPED FROM










The below Clipping from the same article reveals what the place was used for, a Brothel and blind tiger, or bootleg joint. It also names some citizens of the area who were not happy about that. 








The Enterprise

Albemarle, North Carolina
20 Jan 1910, Thu  •  Page 1








The deed itself gives us more names to look into. Bob Krider bought the property in two sections, over the course of 10 years, the first parcel in 1899, of one and a third acres and the second part in 1909, of about 2 acres. It's a mystery as to why the two original deeds are not to be found. They may have not ever been filed with the Register of Deeds office. 

W R Krider and wife, Georgia Ann Krider of Rowan County, NC to J M West of Stanly County, NC

for $300 located in Tyson Township, Stanly County, NC.  Book 67 Page 87.


Adjoining the lands of J M West and Neal Duke, beginning at a stake in the East Bank of the Winfield Road and runs N. E. 4.20 chains to a planted stone, in W. R. Kriders line, there with his line. Reversed N. 87 degrees v 5.40 chains to a stake on the bank of said Road S. 54E 2 chains there with said road S. 47 E 4.90 chains to the beginning, containing one and one third acres, and being the same land conveyed by A. A. Thompson and wife D. M. Thompson to W. R. Krider by dee dated 23rd September 1899, and being one & one third acres more or less. 

Adjoining the above lands & beginnning at a pine stump on the southside of Winfield Road and following A. D. Deese's old original line east 140 yards to cornering on a stake, thence south with Biles line 72 yards back to the beginning, bounded on the north and east by July Colson, on the west by C.B. Duke and wife and on the South by W. R. Krider, containing 2 acres more or less, and being the same land conveyed by John W. Howard and Hattie Howard to W. R. Krider by deed dated April 27, 1909.


So, we know have a number of names and a few places to go by that could give some direction. In 1921, the property bounded J. M. West and Neal Duke, and it was being sold to J. M. West.

We also have the location of the Winfield Rd., which I have been studying for years. The deed refers to the East Bank and the Southside of the Winfield Rd. 

One and one third acre had belonged to A. A. Thompson and his wife D. M. Thompson in 1899, when W. R. Krider had purchased it from them.

A. D.Deese's old,original line is mentioned. Neighbors to this second portion of the property are named as July Colson, Biles, and C. B. Duke. This two acre portion had been sold to W. R. Krider in by John W. and Hattie Howard in 1909.



The above portion of the old C. M. Miller, of Salisbury, NC, map is supposedly dated between 1904 and 1910. Notice Rehobeth Church in the top left corner. Above that is a collection of Simpsons, and a triangle of roads. Just off screen, on the top left to the northeast was the town of Rocky River Springs, which was a resort, and is shown on the map as a grid of roads, a town. 

Near the bottom right corner of this excerpt of the map is a cluster of churches, schools and houses, with the letters, C, O, T, T, running off the page to the right. This was the location of the town of Cottonville. We know from the newspaper articles, that Laura's Place was located between Rocky River Springs and Cottonville. We know from the deed that it was on the South and East side of the Winfield Road. Above, we see a 'Mrs. Simpson ' and the black square chosen to designate a home was on the southwest side of the road between Rocky River Springs and Cottonville. Could this have been Laura? The neighbors are an A. F. Deese and below that, a David Deese, to the south and to the north, a P. A. Howard and a J. T. Thompson above that, with an M. F. Biles off to the side. 

So I am now posed with several questions to answer. Who were John W. and Hattie Howard who sold the property to Bob Krider in 1909, and how were they connected to P. A. Howard, if indeed they were and who was J. T. Thompson and was this Thompson related to the A. A. and D. M. Thompson family who sold a piece of property to Bob Krider in 1899? Was M. F. Biles related to the Biles family listed in the 1910 census living near Mamie and Bud Simpson ?

And of the triangle of roads in the top right corner, which was Winfield Road, which once went all the way to Albemarle and crossed over into Anson, heading down through Burnsville, but now has been greatly reduced, on both sides of the river. 

And who were July Colson and the two Dukes mentioned? No Dukes are shown closeby in this section of the map between Rocky River Springs and Cottonville. There were Dukes to the east of Cottonville, going toward Cedar Grove Church, which still stands, on the way towards Norwood and Porter, near the Hudson Hive on Ugly Creek, along with a bunch of Lees, Mortons, Blalocks and Thompsons. 



So, first things first, who was A. A. Thompson and wife, D. M. Thompson, who sold the lot in 1899?

A quick search for an A. A. Thompson in Tyson Township, Stanly County, NC around the turn of the century returned just one likely candidate who fit the bill perfectly, and that was Adolphus Addison Thompson and his wife, Dora M. Deese Thompson. A. A., who also went by 'Dolph' or 'Dolphus', was born in 1874, and would have been a young man of around 26 upon the sale of the property in 1899. His wife Dora aka 'Dollie', was born a Deese, and the deed had also mention that the second portion of property, which also adjoined this first acre and a half Krider had bought, adjoined 'A. D. Deese's old original line'. As Dollie was the daughter of one Atlas Durgin Deese, it appears the property was that of Dollie's, recieved or inherited from her father.



The above clipping, though not very legible, is an excerpt from the 1900 census, the closest one after the sale of the small, acre and a half sale, from A. A. Thompson to W.R. Krider. It shows 'Doffes' Thompson, Archie Deese, David Deese and Maston Thompson. On the below section of map, near the center, one can see these two, A. F. (Archibald Filmore) Deese, and David Deese, both brothers of Adolphus's wife, Dora Deese Thompson. Near them, just west of Cottonville, is R. W. Thompson, the father of A. A. Thompson.



The next names I looked for was Neal Duke and C. B. Duke, who turns out to be the same individual, Cornelius "Neal" B. Duke. He does not appear on this map, and I think that is because he didn't live in this exact area, but not far away. Like in the case of A. A. Thompson, it appears C. B. Duke came into this piece of land from his wife's inheritance. Duke was married to Flora Biles. She was the daughter of John Wesley Biles and had married George Genes before C. B. Duke. Her brother, M. F. (Millard Filmore) Biles, is shown on the map, as well as John Biles, which could be her brother John, or father, John. 

In Stanly County Deeds, Book 39, Page 307, I found a transaction between L. A. Biles (Lafayette), another brother, and Flora Duke. This tract was adjoining those of F. A. Duke, A. P (or A. F.) Deese, and M. F. Biles and was located at the forks of Davis and Cottonville Roads, and ran with the Cottonville Road and A. Deese's line.

By gazing at the section of the map below, I can only gather that the Cottonville Road is the one that ran straight out of Rocky River Springs into Cottonville. So the trick is now to determine which road was the Winfield Road and which one was the Davis Road. 


Knowing that Rehobeth Church was located on the Winfield Road, which is now reduced to a short span east of Aquadale, and has a drive that reaches the Plank Road, or 'Cottonville' Road and knowing Old Davis Road currently angles off of this road with Aldridge Road angling off further down and intersecting with Old Davis, it seems the road that M. F. Biles property on the map is at the beginning of Davis Road, and the one on down Where C. H. Aldridge (my Great GrandUncle Caleb Hampton Aldridge) and W.F. Crump lived, would be Aldridge Road. Now, I am not so sure. These current roads are based upon the location of Aquadale and Aqualdale was not on this map, it was yet to be born. These roads came out of Rocky River Springs and Albemarle to the north.



CLIPPED FROM

The Albemarle Press

Albemarle, North Carolina
08 Mar 1923, Thu  •  Page 3




Some other deeds show A. A. Thompson selling small lots in nearby, but different locations, as if he held several small landing holdings around Cottonville. On July 9,1902, A. A. Thompson sold to Henry and Hattie Kendall, a vacant lot, 'orginally part of the Cottonville Mill lots, better known as the Bill Watkins barn lot, " from the corner of the mill lot to the Winfield Road., of a quarter of an acre.

So, the map shows A. A. Thompson living on the southside of Cottonville near G. W. Davis, an Uncle of mine, but via his wife, he had inherited property to the west of Cottonville, towards Rocky River Springs, and that is the property sold to W. R. Krider.

Another neighbor mentioned as having lived to the northeast of the property was "July Colson'. I believe this was Julius C. :"Jule" Colson, shown below with his wife Francis and their two boys, Paul and Grover (Raven) and Etrie, Jule's daughter by a previous relationship.


Name:Jule Colson
Age:27
Birth Date:abt 1873
Birthplace:North Carolina, USA
Home in 1900:Center, Stanly, North Carolina
Sheet Number:15
Number of Dwelling in Order of Visitation:251
Family Number:258
Race:Black
Gender:Male
Relation to Head of House:Head
Marital Status:Married
Spouse's Name:Francis Colson
Marriage Year:1894
Years Married:6
Father's Birthplace:North Carolina, USA
Mother's Birthplace:North Carolina, USA
Occupation:Cotton Mill Fireman
Months Not Employed:0
Can Read:Yes
Can Write:Yes
Can Speak English:Yes
House Owned or Rented:Rent
Farm or House:H
Neighbors:
Household MembersAgeRelationship
Jule Colson27Head
Francis Colson22Wife
Paul Colson5Son
Raven Colson3/12Son
Ettrie Colson13Daughter


Jule is listed as being a Cottonmill Fireman, perhaps the Cottonville Cotton Mill that was mentioned in the Thompson deed. He was born in Anson County, the son of Abram and Delilah Colson and had married Francis Allen, daughter of Frank Staton and Laura Allen. They would have one more daughter, May Belle, and move to Albemalre and later, back to the Norwood area. Daughter Etrie would marry Wallace Cochran Stacy, son of Frank Stacy.


Then, there is that last portion of land, of two acres, sold to W. R. Krider by John and Hattie Howard in April of 1909. Who were the Howards and where were they on the map?

Name:John Howard[John Harward]
Age:21
Birth Date:Jul 1878
Birthplace:North Carolina, USA
Home in 1900:Tyson, Stanly, North Carolina
Sheet Number:6
Number of Dwelling in Order of Visitation:101
Family Number:103
Race:White
Gender:Male
Relation to Head of House:Head
Marital Status:Married
Spouse's Name:Hattie Howard
Marriage Year:1900
Years Married:0
Father's Birthplace:North Carolina, USA
Mother's Birthplace:North Carolina, USA
Occupation:Farmer
Months Not Employed:0
Can Read:Yes
Can Write:Yes
Can Speak English:Yes
House Owned or Rented:Own
Home Free or Mortgaged:F
Farm or House:F
Neighbors:
Household MembersAgeRelationship
John Howard21Head
Hattie Howard18Wife

I found John and Hattie as newleyweds in 1900, at the top of the same page I had found "Doffe" Thompson. By 1909, they were well on their way to creating a large farm family. 

John Wesley Howard, or Harward, as the spellings were interchangible at the time, was the son of Peter A. Harward, of the P. A. on the map, who lived near the Deese and Biles. He had married Hattie Kimrey.

The two acres section that joined the small section of property that W. R Krider had already purchased from the Thompsons, was probably a piece of the land got from his father, Peter A Harward in Book 30, Page 612, in 1904, that was located on the Winfield Road and contained 57 and 3/4 acres.

After digging through many deeds, and the individuals named in this one deed involving W. R. Krider, I am now convinced that the Winfield Road is the one that shows P. A. Howard, Mrs. Simpson and A. D. Deese, living along it and that Mrs. Simpson must have been no other than Laura Simpson herself, on the southeast side of the road, between Rocky River Springs and Cottonville.


Sunday, January 18, 2015

Where was Silver?

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

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

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


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

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



An early photo from Rocky River Springs resort.


Sunday, March 16, 2014

Thriller Thursday: The Murder of John Murray

Murder of John Murray of Aquadale




The Newspaper articles tell the story. John R Murray (sometimes seen as John Coley) was murdered by two teenagers named Brown.

John Murray was a member of the Murray family I've written of before. He was the great nephew of my third great-grandmother.

John was one of the sons of Edmund Murray/Coley and Catherine Ledbetter Murray. Edmund was the son of Benjamin Murray, son of Stanly County Murray patriarch Jesse Murray and a daughter of George Coley. I believe her name to be Francis or Fannie, but that is not for certain. What is certain is that Edmund Murray was a good man, and his surname, and that of his children, swung back and forth as easily as a horse's tail swatting flies in the summer between the surnames of Murray and Coley. Edmund's estate papers reflect as much.  I've documented Edmund in my post "The Man With Two Names".

Edmund and "Katie" had 7 children together, with firstborn daughter Caroline, most likely dying as a child.

They were:

1847  Caroline
1850  Alexander (or "Ellick" or "AC")
1851  Francis
1853 Benjamin
1855 Sarah
1863 John R.
1865 Margaret

Benjamin died prior to his father, Edmund, leaving the two brothers, John and Alex, in the county to dislike each other. Edmund had also had children by a mistress, Beadie Carpenter, and Alex disliked them even more.

A mean streak ran in the Murray line, and sometimes it skipped a generation. As such, it also traveled down the lines of the families who intermarried with and were descended from the Murrays, like the Aldridges, and they were affected by it too.

It ran well through the blood of Old Ben Murray, son of Jesse I, and father of Edmund and it skipped Edmond and went straight to Alex.

Alex referred to his brother roughly and in insultory terms in a few lawsuits. John R. Murray remained just a simple farmer. Although he and his wife Maggie seemed to have some problems. (They married, split and remarried), John did not seem to be the angry sort. Not like A. C.

So it came as a shock to the community when the following newspapers hit the stand. The next article is from:The Concord Times  29 March 1917 • Page 6

The others are from Stanly County newspapers: "The Enterprise" and " The Albemarle Post".



Greensboro Daily News Account, April 4 1917 Edition

The story of John Murray's murder was reported in all of the local newspapers. The above is the link to the Greensboro paper.

This is the link to the Charlotte version.


E
Murray-Brown

So who were these "Brown" boys, teenagers, only 16 and 18, who were the murders, and what was their motive?

It begins, in a way, with this advertisement:

AC Murray et all vs John Carpenter

To explain the characters who played a role in the above drama, they are all descendants of Edmund Murray/Coley. A. C. Murray, was of course, Alexander, the oldest son. Maggie Hooks, was the youngest daughter, and sister of A. C. Murray. Millard, James, Adam Aldridge, Lula Aldridge and Cornelia Sinclair, were the children of deceased sister Francis Murray who had married William Edward "Will Ed" Aldridge. The name "John Aldridge" was an error on the part of the newspaper. In the actual court papers, it is referring to "John Sinclair", the husband of Cornelia Sinclair.

The problem appeared to lie in the fact that Edmund Murray/Coley, had not one, but two families. In his estate papers there was a division of property concerning a tract of land of 77 acres referred to as "the Patsy Murray lands." The division was set out as "A. C. Murray  1/4, Maggie Hooks 1/4, John Carpenter 1/4, Millard Aldridge, Adam Aldridge, James Aldridge, Lula Aldridge and Cornelia F Sinclair with John Sinclair 1/5 of 1/4 or 1/20th.

To explain the Patsy Murray lands, we have to go back another generation. In 1863, Benjamin Murray had conveyed this same 77 acres to James A. Ross. He then, according to the records of Green Wesley Simpson, went to Arkansas, along with his children Rebecca Ann Murray Hudson, her husband Henry, his son Jesse and wife Jane, his wife Martha, and at least a few of his nephews, Wesley Murray, son of Mariah, and James Washington Turner, son of Phoebe. There may have been others.



 In 1867, Martha Murray had returned, and claimed the same 77 acres as homestead. At her decease, the property was transferred to the hands of Edmund Murray. Now, she was not the mother of Edmund Murray/Coley. She was less than a decade older than he, and he would not outlive her long.

Edmund Coley/Murray seems to be the son of Benjamin Murray and a daughter of George and Mary Coley. Ben Murray would have been 21 at the birth of Edmund, far before his marriage to Martha, so there was no apparent animosity between the two families. Edmund, by all signs left, appears to have been a good man, taking care of Martha aka Patsy, like a son, and taking care of George and Martha Coley in their old age. For love and respect, they had signed their property over to him for a nominal fee, before they died, under condition they live on it and he take care of them, which a later deed proves he did.

So Edmund Murray was a good man. However, he had apparently strayed upon his wife Katie. A single neighbor, Beadie Carpenter, daughter of Thomas Carpenter, had two children, John A. Carpenter and Nellie  Ann Carpenter. John A. Carpenter is the son Edmund Murray Coley, who being illegitimate himself, saw no difference in his legitimate and illegitimate heirs.  Nellie Carpenter, like her mother, also had a child out of wedlock. That child was a daughter, Nezzie Elizabeth Carpenter who would marry Mitchell Calvin Brown and be known otherwise, as "Bettie Brown".

There would be more lawsuits to follow between the 'legitimate' heirs of  Edmund Murray/Coley and Bettie Brown. The above list of grandchildren would be joined by Sarah Coble Broadaway and Amos Coble, children of Edmond's deceased daughter Sarah, who had been the first wife of Israel S. Coble.

Several suits dragged through the courts for years. One of the last was "J. R. Murray and others vs. Bettie Brown and others" recorded on page 467 in the minutes of the July 1904 session.

The Case is a study of it's own, and I will go into it no further here, except to present this long, nearly 20 year arguement as perhaps the motive for the affray at Rocky River Springs.

Betty Brown was the daughter of Nelly Carpenter. Nelly Carpenter was the sister of John A. Carpenter. The suit provides evidence that Betty Brown and her children believed themselves heirs of Edmund Murray. They brought the point home when referring to Alex and John in the suit as "A. C. Murray alias Coley and John R. Murray alias Coley", as if trying to make the case that the right to the name of Murray was up in the air for John, Alex and their whole siblings,  as well, because Edmund, their father, had always had to swing back and forth between both.

Rocky River Springs, in the early part of the century was a popular resort.

Image of 2007.38.654, Photograph, Cabinet: Guests Stroll at Rocky River Springs Resort
Images Courtesy of the Stanly County Museum


A deed dated November 11, 1911 from John R. Murray to his wife and children, describes his property as "adjoining Rocky River Springs land, John A. Carpenter and others".  So John R Murray's farm was neighboring Rocky River Springs and his half-brother, John A. Carpenter, who was living on the property given him by Edmund Murray-Coley.
Rocky River Springs Resort
Rocky River Springs Resort, Courtesy of  Stanly County Museum


This family entanglement, arguement, lawsuits and feud, I believe, was at the core of the "quarrel, probably the outcropping of an old family grudge" that began the violence between 55 year old John R Murray and the two oldest sons, Paul and Sam, of Mitchell and Nezzie E. "Bettie" Brown. Biologically, John Murray was their great-uncle.

Nellie Ann Carpenter may have only had one child, but her daughter Bettie made up for it by having a very large family. Beadie Carpenter, grandmother of Bettie and mother of Nellie and John A., was listed in several papers as recieving county money for her old age and disability.





Mitchell and Bettie Brown had 16 children between them. Paul and Sam were the oldest. 

1901 Paul Lee
1902 James Samuel
1903 Lonnie Mathew
1904 Barney Baxley B & D in 1904
1905 Noah Benton
1907 Fannie JoAnn
1908 Carrie Alberta
1909 Jesse Thomas
1911 George Washington
1912 Mary Estelle
1913 John Henry
1914 Frank Wilson
1916 Fronie Ann
1918 William Grover
1920 Barney Baxley II
1923 Virgie Mae





calvin mitchell brown and lizzie carpenter his wife
Mitchell Calvin Brown and wife Nezzie Elizabeth Carpenter Brown in their old age.


John Coley/Murray murder


To summarize the whole affair, from all available information, about noon, on Tuesday, March 27, 1917, 53 year old John R. Murray ran into his great-nephews, Paul and Sam Brown, at Rocky River Springs. A heated argument ensued, with colorful language flying back and forth. The quarrel stemmed from an old family grudge, which could have been the lawsuits that had went back and forth between John and others vs the Browns mother and others, the final judgement of which had been settled in 1903 and 1904, when the Brown brothers would have been toddlers.

Paul, admitted to shooting John Murray, whose small son stood witness and took off home. He told his mother, and then disappeared. Paul was eventually found and was sentenced to 10 years. His younger brother Sam,16,  who was just present, was sentenced to 4 months on a local chain gang.



The Brown family removed themselves from Stanly County, first settling in Columbus County, North Carolina, in the Southeastern part of the state, near Wilmington, where they were found in the 1920 census. The Columbus County census stated that the Browns owned their farm. In July of 1917, just months after his sons arrest, M. C. Brown sells Lots 6 and 7 known as cottage sites at Rocky River Springs, to one W L and Mabel D Mann and R L and Ora B Smith, located on block one, on the east side of Albemarle Street 50 feet wide and running 175 feet back to Lee Avenue.

History of the Rocky River Springs from Fish House website


Name:Elizabeth Brown
Age:41
Birth Year:abt 1879
Birthplace:North Carolina
Home in 1920:Fair Bluff, Columbus, North Carolina
Race:White
Gender:Female
Relation to Head of House:Wife
Marital Status:Married
Spouse's Name:Mitchell Brown
Father's Birthplace:North Carolina
Mother's Birthplace:North Carolina
Neighbors:View others on page
Household Members:
NameAge
Mitchell Brown41
Elizabeth Brown41
Sam Brown18
Lonnie Brown16
Noah Brown14
Fannie Brown11
Albertie Brown10
Tommie Brown9
George Brown8
Mary Brown7
John Henry Brown6
Frank Brown5
Franie Brown3
[3 5/12] 
William Brown1

The Brown family is shown buying property in Quewhiffle, Hoke County, North Carolina in 1925, 1926 and 1929. Here they are seen in the 1930 census, and where they remained.

Name:Elizabeth Brown
Gender:Female
Birth Year:abt 1877
Birthplace:North Carolina
Race:White
Home in 1930:Quewhiffle, Hoke, North Carolina
Map of Home:View Map
Marital Status:Married
Relation to Head of House:Wife
Spouse's Name:Michell C Brown
Father's Birthplace:North Carolina
Mother's Birthplace:North Carolina
Occupation:

Education:

Military service:

Rent/home value:

Age at first marriage:

Parents' birthplace:
Neighbors:View others on page
Household Members:
NameAge
Michell C Brown53
Elizabeth Brown53
Noah B Brown24
Thomas Brown20
George Brown18
John Brown16
Nilson Frank Brown15
In 1940, they are seen with some of their children and a few of their grandchildren, Pauline Davis and Louis Silverblat, along with Hugh Reynolds Aldridge of Stanly County, son of George, so they still kept in touch with Stanly County people. Other Stanly Countians, like the family of John Teeter Davis, had also moved to Hoke to farm tobacco.
Name:M C Brown
Respondent:Yes
Age:63
Estimated birth year:abt 1877
Gender:Male
Race:White
Birthplace:North Carolina
Marital Status:Married
Relation to Head of House:Head
Home in 1940:Quewhiffle, Hoke, North Carolina
Map of Home in 1940:View Map
Farm:Yes
Inferred Residence in 1935:Quewhiffle, Hoke, North Carolina
Residence in 1935:Same Place
Sheet Number:17A
Number of Household in Order of Visitation:258
Occupation:Farmer
House Owned or Rented:Owned
Value of Home or Monthly Rental if Rented:1000
Attended School or College:No
Highest Grade Completed:Elementary school, 5th grade
Hours Worked Week Prior to Census:40
Class of Worker:Working on own account
Weeks Worked in 1939:52
Income:0
Income Other Sources:No
Neighbors:View others on page
Household Members:
NameAge
M C Brown63
Elizabeth Brown62
Barney Brown19
Virgia Brown16
Louis E Silverblat12
Pauline Dais8
Hue Aldrege28
Nezzie Elizabeth Carpenter Brown would die in Hoke County in 1947. Her Husband Mitchell lived another 20 years, dying in 1967 at the grand old age of 90 in Aberdeen, Moore County.

Sam Brown would marry and have his own family and remain in Hoke County, passing away in 1959.

Paul Lee Brown did not stay in North Carolina, but seems to have hit the road as soon as he was free. He only served a fraction of the time he was given for taking the life of John Murray and by 1920 was found in Nashville, Tennesee. He left there and shows up in St. Louis, Missouri, where he obtained his social security number, and married Mary Alice Eldridge in September of 1924.
Name:Alice M Brown
Gender:Female
Birth Year:abt 1899
Birthplace:Colorado
Race:White
Home in 1930:St Louis, St Louis (Independent City), Missouri
Map of Home:View Map
Marital Status:Married
Relation to Head of House:Roomer
Father's Birthplace:Missouri
Mother's Birthplace:Kansas
Occupation:

Education:

Military service:

Rent/home value:

Age at first marriage:

Parents' birthplace:
Neighbors:View others on page
Household Members:
NameAge
Allie Gibbs39
Virginia Gibbs15
Paul Gibbs12
Elmore Gibbs9
Fred Gibbs39
Clyde Estes26
Gladys Estes26
Dan Nichol27
Clarabelle Nichol22
Walter Suit19
Irene L Suit18
Bertha Blackburn39
Wade Blackburn33
Howard Lombard20
Paul L Brown29
Alice M Brown31
Louis Larsen42
Minnie E Larsen38
Ruth Suit17
Russell Kinder31
Mildred Kinder24
Delores Kinder0
[3/12] 
Bert C Suit39
Marie Suit29
Elenaor Nichols20
Mary Webling52
Elijah Nichols25
Maxine Nichols3
H C Melton61
By 1935, the couple had made their way to L. A., where they settled in for the duration.


Name:Mary L Brown
Age:32
Estimated birth year:abt 1908
Gender:Female
Race:White
Birthplace:Oklahoma
Marital Status:Married
Relation to Head of House:Wife
Home in 1940:Los Angeles, Los Angeles, California
Map of Home in 1940:View Map
Street:Elmwood
Inferred Residence in 1935:Los Angeles, Los Angeles, California
Residence in 1935:Same House
Sheet Number:10A
Attended School or College:No
Highest Grade Completed:H7
Weeks Worked in 1939:0
Income:0
Income Other Sources:No
Neighbors:View others on page
Household Members:
NameAge
Paul L Brown34
Mary L Brown32

Paul died in L. A. in 1966 and his wife Alice in 1990. They had one daughter named Pauline. 

John Murray left a widow, Maggie Lingerfelt Murray. Together, they had 6 children:

Jessie Lou Murray 1904-1918
Charles G. Murray 1907-1937
Alexander Erson Murray 1909-2004
Pinky Lee Murray 1911-1929
Minnie Louise Murray 1914-1999
John Lander Murray 1919-1996

Daughter Jessie, just one of many descendants of old Jesse Murray named for him and son Pinky Lee Murray are buried in the old Rehobeth Cemetery with many others of the Murray and Aldridge families. 

So that is how a multi-generational and decades long family feud ended in tragedy. The hills of the Tyson community in Southern Stanly County was full of stories, and the one of John R. Murray and the Brown brothers was just one of many.