Showing posts with label Thomas. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Thomas. Show all posts

Friday, March 29, 2019

Holy Ground

More than once, while looking for something totally different, I find a piece of genealogical treasure, quite wonderfully, and very accidentally. Today was one of those days.

My Rocky River

I've been working on a post, several actually, that is requiring a great deal of research and legwork. Which is fine, I've never aimed to set speed records. When I began blogging, I would write entire posts on minimal information. Later, I sought to pack them full. One small tidbit of information can take long weeks of digging and hunting, verifying and cross-referencing, at times. And time is one thing I have precious little of. But this one came about rather quickly.

Old Lee Lands in Upper Anson

I had set out to the Anson County Historical Society on Wade Street in the County Seat of Wadesboro, North Carolina. I often refer to Anson County as "Mother Anson". She once streached from the coast all the way West as we knew it in the earlies days of North Carolina. She gave birth to Rowan and Montgomery, Stanly and Union, among others. She's rich both in history and earth and the land near the Rocky River, on both the Stanly and Anson sides, is God's Country, beautiful rolling green hills, hardwood forests and multiples creeks snaking through the pastures and between the hills.

I've been researching the Lee family of Upper Anson.They were among the very early arrivals to the Rocky River area and in the bunch with Virginia roots. I read somewhere that Jacob Efird was thought to be the first settler in what is now Stanly County, settling on Bear Creek near where St. Martin's Lutheran Church now stands. But these Virginians who settled along the Pee Dee and Rocky Rivers were here a very long time, and the records I've seen are contemporary with, or predate Mr. Efird. He may have been the first of the Dutch Creek German settlers of the Cabarrus and Rowan County bunch who settled into Stanly, but the Virginians were already lay out properties in Anson and around the Fork area where the Pee Dee and Rocky intersect. The Lee's were one of those.


Rocky Mount

As far as I know, so far, I am not a direct Lee descendant, but I could run into them at some point. I have not fully researched my Turner line, my paternal Grandfather's mother's line. Her mother, Sarah Frances "Fanny" Faulkner Turner Thompson, has remained a bit of a mystery. I do know she was from Anson County, and she married a Turner , and the Turners lived very near the Lees along the Rocky River just south of the Stanly/Anson County line. So, who knows? Also, my Ramsey's were from the same area and research with them has been a bit difficult. So, to Anson I went and in a Family file on the Lee's I found treasure.



Old and new stones rising up out of the hill at Rocky Mount Cemetery.
John Lee is a name often seen while digging in Davis records. The bought land and other things from each other, witnessed legal proceedings from wills to weddings and his daughter, Rowena, married James M. Davis, the second son of Job Davis, whom this blog is named for. I'd heard of the "John Lee Cemetery", but never had an idea of where it might have been, except somewhere in Upper Anson, most likely, where he lived and farmed.

Then, behold, there in the file was a paper labeled, "John Lee Cemetery". It gave the below most marvelous information.

Old Cemetery Near John Lee Home
Burnsville Township

Located about 200 yds. from east side of Richardson Cr. about 150 yds. from Highway leading to Rocky Mount Church

Rowena Davis - In Memory of Rowena Davis  Bornes -------(illegible) 
                           Died Feb. 27, 1887
B (or E) Lee = Br Sept       1778  - Died Sept 8, 1856
John Lee - Born Sept 7 1777 - Departed this life Sept. 28 1858 (this incorrect as his estate was probated before this. I believe the 58 was incorrectly read and is really 1853). 

R Lee - Born .......(illegible) 23, 1835 Departed this life  August 5, 1854
S Lee - Br Mar ll ........Departed this life Sept 6, 1854
Winiferd Lee - Was born Oct. 28, 1809 - Died April 11, 1856


And then the clincher......Drum Roll Please.....


Image result for drum roll gif


Henry Davis - Born in 1806 ..... Died 7 June 1862

Carpenter Tombstones with Church in the background at Rocky Mount

Henry Davis was the oldest son of Job Davis and the 5th child of his wife, Sarah Winfield Howell Davis. Henry was my 3rd Great Grandfather. He was the reckless one, the 'exception' when his Godly mother's obituary was printed in "The Southern Christian Advocate" in 1856, when it detailed that she was the mother of 8 children, all good Christians, except ONE.

Henry Davis vacilated greatly between Saint and Sinner in his life. In his early years, he was rising to greatness, he was described as being a bit of a preacher in his 20's and 30's, helping to found churches. He was instrumental in the founding of Stanly County and the town of Albemarle. He is one of the men mentioned in the earliest records of the county, setting up the government, courts and bylaws. He served a Ranger, a Jurist and a Justice of the Peace, performing marriages and other duties. He held the title of "Major", although, I am not sure in what function, but most likely the local Militia.
Major Henry Davis -



In 1848, he ran for a seat in the House of Commons. He was well-educated, although I don't know from where at. I do know his father owned property and a Townhouse in Fayetteville/Cross Creek in Cumberland County.


 -

He held set up an office in the County Seat of Montgomery, in the town of Lawrenceville, before Stanly was formed. In 1840, Henry performed the marriage of Shepherd Lee, one of the Anson County Lee's to Caroline Crump, of the Cottonville Crumps, another very prominent Rocky River family.


Henry Davis, Esq. -
The North-Carolinian 
(Fayetteville, North Carolina)
01 Feb 1840, Sat  •  Page 3


Henry Davis was a very well respected man, in his early days, from a prominent plantation family, was going places, buying land near the new town of Albemarle, and becoming a mover and shaker in the early days of the county, and before. But at some point things changed. Alchohol got the best of him. He began getting in fights, drunken brawls, insulting persons in court, not paying his debts. His father and younger brothers kept bailing his out of debt and trouble. His father-in-law, James Palmer, as well. In the Palmer family records is a story of Henry being drunk and disorderly and disrupting a wedding, is recorded. He had married well, twice. The first time to Sarah Kendall, daughter of Reuben Kendall, another wealthy Rocky River planter, and the second time to the shy Martha Palmer, daughter of James Palmer of the Palmer Mountain Palmers, the Palmer Stonework Palmers, the town of Palmerville Palmers, which is now no longer a town. By 1852, 10 years before his death, his family had him declared an "idiot", no longer capable of taking care of his own affairs, or his family. His parents made provisions for him and his in their will's and put his brothers in charge of a trust to ensure his wife and children were cared for.

I knew he died in 1862, intestate, because of his estate and probate papers, but I did not have an exact date, or where he was buried exactly. Now I did. With the exact date, I have hopes I can find somewhere, somehow, exactly how he died. The family legends are that is was not from natural causes. Two stories, with a similar theme, arose. One was that he became depressed when all of his sons, except the very youngest one, Job, who was 13 or 14 at the outbreak of War, were drafted into the Civil War and that he went off to a little Island in the Rocky River and drank himself to death. Another was that he drowned while drunk, in the river. Both bore the tale of depresssion and self-destruction. He was 56 years old. He lost none of his sons in the War, however. His oldest, Benjamin Franklin Davis farmed and has his own cemetery not far from the Rocky and the old homesite of his grandparents, Job and Sarah. The second, John Edward Davis, married Emmeline Staton, daughter of Rev. Uriah Staton, became a minister himself, and lived in Burnsville, on the Anson side of the river.

The third, Hampton, also lived in Anson and married Ann E. the widow of Anderson High. His son Edgar, however, moved back to Stanly to Albemarle. The fourth, my direct ancestor, Haut (Horton Hampton Davis), lost a leg in the Civil War and replaced it with a wooden one. He lived down on the Old Davis Homesite, the old Plantation grounds, with his Uncle Edward Winfield Davis, who was next to the youngest of Job's boys and a successfull businessman, a bit of a lawyer, and the second Sheriff of Stanly County. Haut (or Hawk) served as a bit of surrogate son to E. W. , as he did not marry until he was 56 years old, to a much younger woman, and eventually were born 3 children who bore his name (there's a story behind this). Haut also married late, at 48. He had children before he married, first with a "housekeeper", who appears to have been his lover, and second with a young orphaned girl, who was having children out-of-wedlock already, and after he and Francis Julina Aldridge were charged with fornication, which I was recently shocked to discover while searching old Court records on CD's I ordered, they married. My Great Grandfather was born two years after they married, but a number of his siblings were born before.

Youngest son, Job, named for his grandfather, followed an older sister and her husband to Missisippi and lived a fairly quiet life, and I just recently discovered, died in Texas.

The tombstone for Martha Aldridge, wife of Josiah Aldridge, another member of my family tree

Josiah Aldridge tombstone. They lived in Stanly County.

Vander Boone Aldridge
Coming back from Wadesboro, I could not wait. I had to try to get at least a general idea of where the John Lee Cemetery was. I had two very good clues. One, it was 150 yards from the Rocky Mount Church Road and 2) it was very near Richardsons Creek. So, to Rocky Mount Baptist Church I went.


Having just recently been pouring through deeds and wills involving John Lee, I knew that his not only was his property alond Richardson's Creek, I also knew that it bordered the Rocky River. Knowing the cemetery was near Richardson's Creek and not that far off of the road, I looked for the place where the road crossed Richardson's Creek. I also knew from the description, that is was on the east side of the creek, so looking at the sun, I determined which side of the creek was East. Knowing a little bit about old cemeteries, I knew that it would have been set upon a high spot above the creek, on a hill or ridge, so as not to have been washed away during flooding.


Tombstone of Martha Hill McIntyre, a GGG Aunt of mine, daughter of Julius and Mary Hill, my ancestors and wife of Isaiah McIntyre, son of Stokes and Elizabeth Murray McIntyre, Elizabeth being the sister of my 3rd Great Grandmother Priscilla Murray Aldridge. I love that I know who these people are when I see their tombstones.





Broadway Tombstones, another name in my Family Tree
I rode up and down the road, once there, I decided to make a stop at the Rocky Mount Baptist Church Cemetery. Both the church and the cemetery sit atop a very steep hill, or small mountain, on opposite sides of the road. The church is very modern-looking and the cemetery a mix of new and old stones. I knew Stokes McIntyre and his wife Elizabeth Murray McIntyre were buried there, a 3rd Great Aunt of mine, but I found more. After looking for the John Lee with no luck, I saw a gentleman with a tractor, mowing the church grounds. I decided to stop and ask him if he knew. He was not that old, and didn't know the location, but he said he knew a gentleman who would. He gave me the name and location of one Eddison Parker, an octogenarian who has lived in the area for his entire life. He told me the amazing story of how Mr. Parker and his both, live near the church, in different directions, she in her 90's and he in his 80's, both self-sufficient and able, both still driving and farming. Amazing, salt-of-the earth people whose knowledge and experiences would be priceless. After making contact with Eddison, I learned more in a few minutes than an entire semester in any history class. We discussed ancestors and are no doubt related distantly somewher along the Turner lines. His mother was a Turner, as was my Great Grandmother, both descending from George Turner, whose cemetery is also just off this road, not far from the Rocky River.
The impressive Efird family monument
Eddison Parker told me that the old George Turner cemetery was off the old Efird Mill Road, which leads from Rocky Mount Baptist Church Road to the Rocky River, just below its confluence with Richardsons' Creek. The home, he said, of the Efird family, was at one time impressive, but no longer exits. The mill is gone as well, only the road remains.


Thomas is another common surname in the cemetery
This was also the area of the Thomas family, as well as Lee's, Allens and Turners. One road off of Rocky Mount is called Thomas Road.


Not all of my Aldridge kin are buried at Rehobeth. Some ended up at Rocky Mount

Non-native ferns in the area, near the cemetery

Eddison described the turns of the creek and how closely by it runs back into the Rocky River. This is where John Lee lived and farmed. He remembers the cemetery and described a few more in the area, just off this road, one being the Turner cemetery.


A view of Rocky Mount Church from across the road at the cemetery


Over Richardson Creek, one dirt road heads back down to the creek, and just beyond that is Midway Road. On the other side of the road, Richardson winds its way down out of the hills to meet back up with the Rocky River.



Looking down toward the bridge across Richardson Creek
An old driveway runs off toward the creek and used to be the road to the "Old Allen Place". Four generations of Allens had lived there.


 George Washington AllenThe first was George Washington Allen. He was born in 1849 and was just a little boy when John Lee died.


Picture of



He married Lavina "Vinie" McIntyre, daughter of, you guessed it, Uncle Malachi Stokes McIntyre and Elizabeth Murray McIntyre. George was the son of Drury Allen, of the Southside Virginia Allens. One of his sisters married a Parker, Eddison's Parkers. There were several deeds between John Lee and Drury Allen and in some way, the old John Lee homeplace had ended up in the hands of the Allens.


Somewhere in there lies the bones of Henry Davis

 Lavinia “Vinie” <I>McIntyre</I> Allen

Lavinia "Vinie" McIntyre Allen and her sister. Both Vinie and George are buried at Rocky Mount with her parents. His father, Drury Allen, is one of the oldest burials there. His mother was most likely buried there, too, but her grave is unmarked, probably the stone lost to time. She was Catherine Rowena Baucom, whom after widowed married Shepherd Lee, mentioned above in his first marriage to Caroline Crump, officiated by Henry Davis.

One of Drury Allen's sisters married into my Ramsey family.


 Drury Allen
Tombstone of Drury Allen, son of John and Polly Allen, Grandson of Drury and Nellie Jarrott Allen.


The next in line to the Old John Lee/now Allen estate was "Elleck" Allen. It's odd how Alexander transforms smoothly to Elleczander in the old country dialect, with no detectible change in the vowel sound. James Alexander Allen married first to a Thomas and second to an Edwards. They became the third generation to be buried at Rocky Mount.

 James Alexander “Alec” Allen
James Alexander Allen






Picture of

Wooded hill above Richardson's Creek.



Elleck had a son named Chester with his first wife, Minnie Thomas. Chester became the third generation of Allens to occupy the Allen place, formerly the Lee Plantation.

At it's end, Richardson Creek is nearly as large as the Rocky river. 
 Minnie Lou <I>Thomas</I> Allen
Elleck and Minnie with infant

Chester Allen lived into my lifetime, having died in 1967. His full name was William Chester Allen, born in 1902 and he married Mittie B. Godwin, born in 1903.


 William Chester Allen

This picture of Chester and Mittie show the house. It was not a big one. At some point they would tear in down and build a bigger one that Albert would live in. Two of Chester's sisters married Turners.



East side of Richardson Creek at the Bridge over Rocky Mount. 
Albert was the fourth and last Allen to live on the property. He was of Eddison's generation and a friend of Eddison. He would be 87 had he lived, Eddison said.


 Thomas Albert Allen

Thomas Albert Allen was born in 1931 and died in 2010. He is also, like generations of Allen's before him, buried at Rocky Mount. 


Picture of

Some lady, Eddison said, owns the property now. She doesn't live there. Alberts house no longer stands, just the road to it. The road that goes past the old John Lee cemetery, where Henry Davis lies. The field is still plowed.  



Rocky River from the Low Water Bridge, crossing on Rocky Mount Church Road. 



The above topography map shows the forks of Richardson Creek and Rocky River. This was John Lee's land. The little curving white line is Rocky Mount Church Road. Just after crossing this bridge, before the two rivers join, on the East Side of the Creek, is where the cemetery lies.



The red dot is Rocky Mount Baptist Church. Richardson Creek snakes in from the left (west) and the Rocky is running veritcally on the right (east). Where they meet are fields. Eddison said he used to plow these fields. In the far reaches of time, an "Indian Camp", or Native American campground, had to have been there. The fields were teaming with arrowheads and spearheads. A friend of his would stalk the fields after he plowed collecting them. He had the best ones framed. He had tubs of not so perfect, and damaged ones.


Rocky Mount Chruch Road where it crosses the creek.

But back to the cemetery, I knew exactly who the other people buried there were. Most of them were together in the 1850 census.


Name:John Lee
Age:69
Birth Year:abt 1781
Birthplace:North Carolina
Home in 1850:Cedar Hill, Anson, North Carolina, USA
Gender:Male
Family Number:693
Household Members:
NameAge
John Lee69
Elizabeth Lee69
Wineford Lee39
Rosannah Lee15
Sarah Lee13
John Lee8

And then compare to the tombstone inscriptions:

Rowena Davis - In Memory of Rowena Davis  Borned -------(illegible) 
                           Died Feb. 27, 1887
B (or E) Lee = Br Sept       1778  - Died Sept 8, 1856
John Lee - Born Sept 7 1777 - Departed this life Sept. 28 1858 (this incorrect as his estate was probated before this. I believe the 58 was incorrectly read and is really 1853). 

R Lee - Born .......(illegible) 23, 1835 Departed this life  August 5, 1854
S Lee - Br Mar ll ........Departed this life Sept 6, 1854
Winiferd Lee - Was born Oct. 28, 1809 - Died April 11, 1856

At this time, Rowena Lee, daughter of John Lee, was married to James M. Davis, brother of Henry, already. "E." Lee was Elizabeth "Betty" Lee, John's wife. The years match close enough (census records were often wrong by a year or two, sometimes more) and her estate was settled last. Then John, of course, who died first of the group, as they are mentioned in his estate. "R Lee" was granddaughter Rosannah Roena Lee, "S Lee" was Sarah Ann Lee. These children, along with their little brother John, were mentioned in the will of James B. Lee, Sr., as being the children of his deceased son, John B. Lee, Jr., and therefore heirs to his share of his father, and their other grandfather's estate. Winiferd (or Winifred) was his daughter Winnie. According to a newspaper announcement of the deaths of the children, Winnie had married twice. Once was to James B. Lee, Jr. Being a Lee marrying a Lee confused people later on. I've seen family trees with the children listed as being Winnie's siblings, not her children, which looking at Elizabeth's age made no sense. I've seen others deem them illlegitimate. They were not. I've not dove into the Lee's sufficiently enough to determine the relationship between John Lee and James B. Lee to declare it, but I believe at this point that they were brothers and the marriage betwen Winnie and Jr was a first cousin marriage, which was not unusual in those days.


Obituary - Sarah Lee -

From the Pee Dee Star.....


The children died within a short time of each other. I wonder what illness took them. It seemed to have wiped out the entire family, except for their Aunt Rowena Lee Davis, in short procession. Their mother and grandmother died shortly after. I also wonder who Winny's other husband was.







In the above view, the gray road that dead ends at the river, is the old Efird Mill Road and at the end is where the old mill stood.

Clump of Trees on Old Allen Place where house stood.

The above is the location of the John Lee Homeplace and cemetery.

So know I know where Henry Davis lies. Why did his brother bury him with his (James M. Davis's) father-in-law and mother-in-law? It seems quite odd to me that they would carry him all the way across the river, when his last known home was near the fledgling village of Albemarle, on Cloverfork Creek. Was he in Anson when he died? His parents graves were just across the river in the Old Davis Cemetery. Why did they not bury him with Job and Sarah? Had Henry done something so grievously wrong that his brothers did not want to bury him with the family?

 That, I do not know. But when I have someone to accompany me, and maybe even someone who knows about divining, I will make another trip down.

But here lies Henry Davis, for better or worse.




Saturday, February 21, 2015

It's Never Really Over: More on Joseph Marshall Herring aka Marshall Elmer Harwood






Joe or Joseph or Jocephus Marshall Herrin, son of Eli Ransom Herrin, was the subject of my post:

He had married into my family with his 1893 marriage to Daisy Herrin, which went immediately sour. Why had F. F. Starnes, planter, miller and businessman, allowed his 15 year old daughter to marry the troubled and trouble that was 23 year old Joe Herrin?

1893-1896 was a very busy time for Joe Herrin.
He got married.
He got thrown on the chaingang for theft in Stanly County.
His young bride ran off with her cousin's husband.
He escaped jail.
He eluded capture.
He was injured in a fight and swore to return to jail.
He returned and did his time.
He started dating a Miss Sloop to be turned down.
He then courted a widow with 8 children and married her.
He was arrested for bigamy as his first wife was still living.
His second marriage was anuled so he remarried her.
She died. It looked like Joe might be in serious trouble, but the medical examiner determined her death an aneurism.
He then married his third wife, and this would be his longest lasting relationship and she would be the mother of his 4 children.
 And, most concerting of all, he changed his name to Marshall Elmer Harwood.




In looking through the Stanly County land records, I discovered that something else had happened in Joe's life the year he married Daisy. - His maternal grandfather, Ransom Motley passed away. And Joe sold his one fifth share of his mother's inheritance.

Eli Ransom Herrin had married 2 of the daughters of Ransom Motley.

On August 22, 1861, he married Sarah Motley.

They had 2 daughters, Christena "Teena" and Eva Elizabeth.

Sarah Motley Herrin passed away prior to 1870 and on April 9, 1871, he marrried Jemima Motley, by whom 5 children were born: Sarah, Joseph, Mary, Martha and Laura.

"Indenture dated April 12, 1894 between Joseph M. Herrin and Sarah E. Hathcock and her three sisters, Mary J Herrin, Martha A. Herrin and Laury G. Herrin..."

"$154.....being the land that I inherited from my mother's estate.....one fifth interest in said lands known as the Ransom Motley lands."


Running Creek Primitive Baptist Church

This property served Joe well. At this time, he may have needed fine money or bail money as he had acquired some legal problems.

The second deed dealing with this property gives to a bit a confusion.

Newspaper accounts show that the man formerly known as Joseph M. Herrin, was now using the name of Marshall E. Harwood.   And even that last name could get a little skewed.

Below is shown record of his May 21, 1896 Rowan County marriage to Mary Catherine Rogers Pethel, a widow with 8 children. He gave his name as "Marshall E Howard", son of "E B and Elizabeth Howard" of Stanly County.



In his last marriage to Jenny Nora Harris Hall, in 1928, after his third wife, Mary Ellen Thomas (Harwood?/Herrin?) passed away, he gave his name as "Marshall E Harwood", son of C. M. and Jemima Harwood, with mother dead and father living, a resident of Mt. Pleasant, Cabarrus County, NC.  At this time Joe/Marshall was truthfully a resident of Kannapolis, NC and his bride was from Thomasville in Davidson County, NC and her parents from "Chandlers", which is near the area we now know as "Tuckertown", near the Stanly/Montgomery/Davidson/Rowan county corner and very close to Randolph, along the north border of the Granville line. Its in the modern Badin Lake/Uwharrie Point area.






When Joe alias Marshall married his longest term wife, and mother of his 4 children, Mary Ellen Thomas, from the New Salem community of Union County, he proffered yet another set of parents "Frank and Laura Harwood", and was using the name "Marshall E. Harwood". 


Name:Marshall E. Harwood
Birth Date:1873
Age:25
Spouse's Name:Mary E. Thomas
Spouse's Birth Date:1875
Spouse's Age:23
Event Date:11 May 1898
Event Place:New Salem, Union Co., North Carolina
Father's Name:Frank Harwood
Mother's Name:Laura Harwood
Spouse's Father's Name:James Thomas
Spouse's Mother's Name:Mary Thomas


The year was 1898, so in the following deed, when "Mary E. Herrin", was interviewed, it was this third wife, Mary Ellen Thomas "Harwood".  This shows, that a decade after using the Harwood moniker, that he would switch back over to Herrin when the event called for it, or suited him, and his wife knew about it. Mary Ellen also had to know that they were living under an assumed name, and giving their descendants a false heritage. They were not biological Harwoods, they were Herrins.

Book 32, Page 230  Deeds  Stanly County, North Carolina

Joseph M. Herrin to Sarah E. Blackwelder et. al, .. Anson County....this deed, made this 19th day of  May, 1904 by Joseph M. Herring and wife M. E. Herrin of the County of Anson and State of NC, of the first part, and the four daughters of Eli R. Herrin, to wit, Sarah E. Blackwelder, of Cabarrus County and Mary J Rowland, Martha A. Crayton, and Laura G. Plott, of Stanly County, for $500.....1/5 interest in a certain tract of land in Almond township.....both sides of Running Creek, adjoining Wiley Lambert, J. F. Herrin, Frank Dunn, Daniel Page, Whit Page, H. D. Crayton and others, known as the Ransom Motley lands willed to his daughter, Jemima and to her bodily heirs......H. M. Baucom, Anson County, Lanesboro Township.

M. E. Herrin, being interviewed separately. 
18th of May, 1904
Thomas Robbins, Clerk of Superior Court, Union County

Filed for Registration, W. T. Hudson, Register of Deeds, May 24, 1904.

Running Creek, Almond Twnshp, Stanly County, NC

So, what was with the juxtaposition of names? Did Joseph M. Herrin actually think he was an actual Harwood? Did he think that Eli R. Herrin was not his biological father? Could there be any truth in that theory?

Several articles ran on the long-lived Eli R. Herrin in the Stanly and Cabarrus newspapers. In all of the articles, the grand and endearing old man claimed to be the father of 7 children. He and his last wife, Iva Eudy Biggers, a widow of Wiley Biggers, had an infant son who died a few months after birth, and is buried at Herrin's Grove, where much of this family is buried. The 7 children he was father of in his 1920's and 30's interviews were his two daughters by Sarah Motley and 5 children by Jemima Motley, including Joe.


Daniel F. Herrin Gravestone

The four sets of parents given on his four marriages were:

1) February 23, 1893  Eli R Herrin and Jemima Herrin
2) May 21, 1896 E. B. and Elizabeth Howard
3) May 11, 1898 Frank and Laura Harwood
4) Oct. 5, 1928 E. M. and Jemima Harwood

I looked to see if there was a Mr. Harwood living near Mt. Pleasant in 1928. who could have been the E. M. that Joe/Marshall was referring to.

There was one, Emsley Harwood, who spent most of his life in Stanly County in the Almond Township, and lived in later years with his son Jonas, near Concord. Emsley was the son of Reddin and Elizabeth Hatley Harwood and was married to Sarah Furr. But then there's that whole "Frank and Laura" thing he threw out during his marriage to Mary Ellen Thomas. Was there a Frank and Laura?

The answer was "NO"! There was not a Frank and Laura Harwood anywhere near Joe Marshall Herrin when he was born.

For any other theory other than Eli R. Herrin being the father of Joe Herrin, I believe Joe aka Marshall was full of:


Image result for bull poop

He fabricated his name, and apparently four times, he fabricated his parents. He did get his mother's given name correct, one time.

And passed on to his children, a false identity and incorrect family name.  The children of Joe/Marshall and Mary Ellen Thomas Harwood (Herrin) were:

1) James Franklin Harwood. Born September 26, 1900 in Union County, North Carolina.
     Died Sept. 23, 1981 in Concord, Cabarrus County, NC.  Married Dezzie Lee Holt on June 24,
     1922. Gave his parents names as M. E. and Mary Ann Harwood. Four children:

          A.) David Marshall Harwood  1923-2001 married Katherine
          B.)  Jewel A. Harwood Williams 1926-1998  
          C.)  Ruby C. Harwood Tyson 1929-2011
          D.)  Patricia A. Harwood Aycock 1934-2012

2) Lula Mae Harwood Born July 30. 1902 in Union County, North Carolina.
    Died May 8, 1978 in Cabarrus County, North Carolina. Buried at Herrin's Grove in Stanly County.     Married Vernie Talmadge Guinn on Feb 5, 1927, Gave her parents names as David M. Harwood
    and Mary Harwood. Two children:

        A.) Johnson Aaron Guinn 1929-1995 married Lennie Cornelia.
        B.) Lula M. Guinn  1934-2013 married 1st, Billy Lee Poole  5 children. Married 2nd Charlie
              McClure.

3) Mary Alice Harwood Born July 30 1904 in Union County, North Carolina
    Died July 4, 1982 in Cabarrus County, North Carolina
    Married Robert Otto Gurley 4 children:
         A.) Alice Louise Gurley 1924-2010 Married John Adam "BlackJack" Ridenhour, Jr. 5 children
         B.) Mary Agnes Gurley  1925
         C.) Robert Aaron Gurley Mar. 1932-Dec 1932
         D.) James Robert Gurley 1934-1987 Married Mildred Jackson Rhyne

4) Lundy Lee Harwood Born January 3, 1908 in Union County, North Carolina
    Died August 10, 1978 Stanly County, North Carolina. Married George Tom Chewning.
    Gave parents names as J. W. and Mary Harwood.
    4 children
     A) George Preston Chewning 1927-2013 Married Frances Becky Bell
     B) James Edward Chewning 1934
     C) Bobby Lee Chewning Strikeleather 1937
     D) Betty Sue Chewning Wilson 1939