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Journeys Through Jackson 2003 Vol.13 No.01-02

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  • Journeys Through Jackson is the official journal of the Jackson County Genealogical Society, Inc. The journal began as a monthly publication in July 1991, was published bimonthly from 1994 to 2003, and continues today as a quarterly publication. The journal issues in this digital collection are presented as annual compilations.
  • 3 '" K, Ky J o u r n e y s T h r o u g h J a c k s o n K, T h e O f f i c i a l J o u r n a l of t h e J a c k s o n C o u n t y G e n e a l o g i c a l S o c i e t y , Inc. V o l . XIII, N o . 1 - 2 J a n u a r y - F e b r u a r y 2 0 03 JACKSON COUNTY GENEALOGICAL SOCIETY, INC. 2003 Officers Resident Dorris D. Beck Vice President L Roy Shuler Secr<*«ry Lynn Allen Treasurer E. Lawrence Morton Librarian Dorris D. Beck Office Manager Ruth c Shuler Computer Coordinator Deanne G. Roles Chair, Publications (Editor) R. Larry Crawford Journeys Through Jackson is the official publication of the Jackson County Genealogical Society. Members and non-members are invited to submit genealogical materials for publication, with the understanding that the editor reserves the right to edit these materials for genealogical content, clarity, or tasie. The Society assumes no responsibility for errors of fact that may be contained in submissions, and except where noted, the opinions expressed are not those of the editor or of the Jackson County Genealogical Society. The Society accepts no advertising for this publication except for notices for other non-profit groups. From the Editor We begin a new year in the Jackson County Genealogical Society, one that we trust will bring us good health, happy hunting, and much work being done for the Society. Already one of our new members for 2003 has volunteered his time to help at the Society office, and we would encourage any others to follow that good example. We finally are able to offer again the reprints of our past journals. This is a time - consuming task, but a very rewarding one, since we can never seem to be caught up with demand. Our waiting list for Volume II of our Heritage Book continues to inch along in growth, and our goal is, of course, to be able once again to offer that fine publication for the public to purchase and enjoy. In this first issue of our lucky thirteenth year, catch up on the Trantham family of the Savannah community as submitted by JCGS member R.O. Wilson; enjoy the further delineation of the Fullbright family by JCGS member Danny Jones; notice the familiar official records, with particular thanks to Ruth Shuler for her transcriptions of both court minutes and marriage bonds; and finally, build up the fire and be entertained by the first segment of an interview conducted by local historian George Frizzell. We believe you will see much to whet your winter genealogical appetite in these pages. V i s i t u s a t o u r W e b s i t e : h t t p : / / w w w . j c n c g s . c o m/ y Journeys Thrpugh Jackson January - F e b r u a r y 2003 Ky T a b l e o f C o n t e n t s Expressions of Sympathy 1 JCGS Photo A l b um 2-4 The T r a n t h am Family of R.O. Wilson 5-7 Anne Goodwin Responds to t h e Crawford Chronology Article 8 Jackson County C o u r t of Pleas a n d Q u a r t e r Sessions 9-12 The Fullbright Ancestry of D a n n y Jones.... .... . .....—.. 13 - 1 6 1955 Jackson County Death Certificates...... ........................ . 17 - 20 NC M a r r i a g e Bonds for the Surname " S h u l e r " 21 - 24 JCGS T r e a s u r e r ' s R e p o r t for 2002 24 Interview with Selma Lewis Frizzell 25 - 31 JCGS L i b r a r y Acquisitions 32 Items for Sale by J C G S '. 32 Index 33-34 We offer our sympathy to JCGS members Bruce Jones, Betty Foxx, and Ida Trantham, all of whom have lost family members or in-laws since our last publication. May our few words assure you that we have thought of you and your families, and be assured also that your loss is only temporary. J C G S m e e t s o n t h e s e c o n d T h u r s d a y o f e v e r y m o n t h at t h e o f f i c e a t 4 2 A s h e v i l l e H i g h w a y . W h y n o t j o i n us t h e r e ? A n d w h y n o t b r i n g a f r i e n d t o j o i n J C G S , or i n t r o d u c e s o m e o n e t o t h e f a s c i n a t i n g w o r l d o f t r e e - c l i m b i n g ? Journeys Through Jackson January - F e b r u a r y 2003 J C G S P h o t o A l b u m v J \ J This wonderful old p i c t u r e dates only from 1951, b u t it shows lots of folks decked out in t h e i r centennial finery. Submitted by J C G S member Linda Hughes Collins, the following persons have been identified: Linda is a t the far left, followed by an unidentified woman with hands on the shoulders of a little boy, t h e L i n d a ' s father Glenn Hughes, her mother Margie Hughes, her brother Bascombe Hughes, then Jessie Fisher, several unidentified children, an unidentified man, then Dennis Fisher, a n unidentified woman, Wimpy Hyatt, Wimpy's son L a r r y , Lenore Bryson, Polly Queen, David P a r k e r , Frances Parker, Theodore Snyder, Mae Snyder, two more unidentified, J u a n i t a Ferguson (?), Dillard Robinson, Mrs. Dillard Robinson, Charlie Snyder, an unidentified little boy, and Eleanor Snyder. Several persons at the JCGS office have had a hand in these identifications. Any other help forthcoming? KJ Journeys Through Jackson January - F e b r u a r y 2003 J C G S P h o t o A l b u m t *i*v+* *** w^qy^yA K*Q't*lii>ft<mw>^i^ c^yg^-y^w r o c , u , f . / < j g a ^ J U t Above, another of t h e photographs shared by J C G S member Carl Sutton. This one shows Nolin Manson Buchanan, born 18 Nov 1918, son of Benjamin Evans Buchanan and Isabelle Thompson. ' T h e photograph is f u r t h e r identified by writing at the bottom as a C C C camp in t h e 1930's. , Ky Journeys Through Jackson January - F e b r u a r y 2003 J C G S P h o t o A l b u m KJ y i JCGS member Betty Foxx submits these "mystery photos" for help in identification. Both are in Sylva, but who are these folks? Help, members? KJ Journeys Through Jackson January - February-2003 T h e T r a n t h a m F a m i l y o f R . O . W i l s o n David Trantham enlisted in Confederate service (Company H of the North Carolina 62nd) July 14, 1862, at Webster for a period of three years, and was last paid by Captain Johnston October 31, 1862. His name appears on a list of prisoners captured and paroled under the command of Brig. Gen'l. S.P. Carter in. the expedition to East Tennessee. David Trantham died 31 Dec 1862 from a wound received at Carters Station on the East Tennessee and Virginia railroad while trying to escape. David Trantham is buried at Cumberland Gap on the border of Tennessee and Kentucky. The photograph above shows Clara Clercy Green Trantham McMahan, wife of David Trantham and great-grandmother of R.O. Wilson. She was one of the daughters of Silas Green and Lucy Ann Sutton. She was born on Greens Creek in 1838 and died 17 Mar 1910 at age 72. She had two sons, Burton and William, with David Trantham. Burton, R.O.'s grandfather, was born 26 Dec 1859, William 16 Aug 1861. After the war, she married Neddie McMahan, with whom she had four more children: Curtis, b. 9 Jun 1867; Warren, b. 16 Dec 1869; Arch, b. 29 Aug. 1873; and Avilon; b. 20 Nov 1875. The family lived in Roane County, Tennessee for eighteen years, 'and Neddie' McMahan died while they were there. Sometime in the spring of 1880 she moved her family back to Jackson County on Greens Creek. All of them lived here in the Savannah community, oh Greens Creek and Pumpkintown. Clercy and four, of her children are buried at Old Savannah Baptist Church. Curtis is buried at New Savannah, Arch at Greens Creek. Many of her descendants still live in Jackson and Macon counties. Ky Journeys Through Jackson January - February 2003 Children of Clercy Green Trantham McMahan Burton Trantham (26 Dec 1859-7 Jan 1944) m. Mariah Bradley ( 1 8 7 2 - 7 Apr 1926) Will Trantham (16 Aug 1861 - 12 Jan 1942) m. Matilda Pangle (15 Nov 1861 - 15 Aug 1920) Curtis McMahan (9 Jun 1867 - 5 Sep 1945) m. Lara McMahan (11 May 1867 - 14 Dec 1928) Warren McMahan (16 Dec 1869 - 4 Apr 1950) m. Josephine McMahan (23 Aug 1862-8 Jun 1938) Arch McMahan (29 Aug 1873 - 22 May 1934) m. Doshia Beasley (8 Dec 1880-4 Mar 1953) Avilon McMahan (20 Nov 1875 - 22 Mar 1960) m. Merritt Annis Green (29 May 1870 - 29 Jan 1955) KJ ...**, .K^*^r^rvf" The photographs above are of R.O.'s grandparents, Burton Trantham and his second wife Mariah Bradley. Burton had first been married to Ida Raby, daughter of Elijah Raby of the Cowee community in Macon County. Ida died in the 1880's, and Burton married Mariah in 1893. His children with Ida Raby were Lillie, Sally, and Fred. Mariah Bradley was the daughter of John H. Bradley and Mandy Sylvania Hall. Their children were Charlie, who died at age 11; Minnie, who married George Shytles; Mamie, who married Burton Webb; Roy, who married Nola Harris; Lela Laurzonia, who married Thomas Cleveland Wilson. All of the children were raised on Pumpkintown. \ y Journeys Through Jackson January - February 2003 C |BJ«gJ3i»'«* " ." 'J*1S*J"PI ' ' The photograph above is of the Will Trantham family of Greens Greek. At the far left is Arthur, who married Octa Buchanan; second from the left is Estes, who married Ivalee Buchanan; the father William in the center of the photograph; Coleman, who married Lillian Brooks; and at the far right Estella, who married David Buchanan. Ky Journeys Through Jackson January - F e b r u a r y 2003 A n n e G o o d w i n ' s R e s p o n s e t o t h e C r a w f o r d C h r o n o l o gy A r t i c l e o f S e p t e m b e r - O c t o b e r 2 0 0 2 | ^j Crawford Chronology in Journeys through Jackson XII:9-10, especially pages 143 and 144 Upon reading the article in JtJ, I realized I have a James M. Hooper, bom about 1847/8, who died before 1850 ... and whose mother has the right name and age to be the Elizabeth Jane Crawford born 6 December 1830, who married 12 August 1847 (page 143). I believe my James M. Hooper will prove to be the James Madison Hooper, grandson of James Crawford, who died 14 July 1852 (page 144). I have not looked for the Crawford/Hooper marriage in Macon County marriage records. The same family was in Jackson County 1860-1880, but I don't know where afterwards. However, notice that the child James M. Hooper of 1850 never again appears with the family on the later census enumerations. 1850 Macon Co., NC #791 Wm. D. Hooper 25 Haywood laborer Eliza Jane 19 James M. 2 1860 Jackson Co., NC # 157 W D Hooper 35 NC $0/$250 E J. Hooper 28 T. R. Hooper 3 m NC [initials, age very dim] D. Z. Hooper 2 m NC 1870 Jackson Co., NC Webster twp andP.O., page 15/307, 13 August, hh#98/102 Wm. D. Hooper 47 NC fanner $200/325 E. Jane 38 NC keeping house R. 14 at home i> D. Z. 11 at home male M. T. 6 at home female 1880 Jackson Co., NC Webster township, v 12, ed 104, sheet 22. line 36 (page 272B) William D. Hooper 50 NC NC NC Farmer Elithebeth J. Wife 48 NC NC NC Keeping House David Z. Son 22 NC NC NC Farm Labor Margrett Dau 15 NC NC NC Ass[t]. In House L.0. GranddaulNCNCNC • {the other son, Thomas R. Hooper, was in a household of a relativc.which turns out to be quite significant in showing the parentage of William D. Hooper] 1880 Cullowhee, Jackson, North Carolina Page 294A Colemon C. Hooper 29 NC NC NC Farmer Pollie A. Thomas H. Benjiman H. George C. Thomas R. Hooper Wife Son Son Son Cousin 30 NC NC TN Keeping House 6NCNCNC 4 NC NC NC 2 NC NC NC 24 NCNCNC Laborer I have written an article (volume 3 of Hooper Compass) showing that William D. Hooper very likely was a child of James and Mary Emeline (Chastain) Hooper,and a grandson of my ancestor Absalom Hooper. Eventually, will I will revise that article and submit it to Journeys through Jackson. Regards, Anne Goodwin \ <agoodwin@fscompass.com> http://www.fscompass.com \y Journey's Through Jackson January - F e b r u a r y 2003 J a c k s o n C o u n t y C o u r t o f P l e a s a n d Q u a r t e r S e s s i o ns [Ed. We continue in this issue with the court minutes as transcribed by JCGS member Ruth C. Shuler.] North Carolina, Jackson County: I David Rogers, Clerk of the County Court of Pleas & Quarter Sessions for Jackson County, do certify that on the 30th day of September 1853 William Johnston, John B. Allison, R. V. Welch, Felix Axley, and William L. Graves personally appeared before me and duly acknowledged the execution of the above articles of agreement for the purposes therein contained. The same is admitted to recosp (?). (end of page 20) Special Minutes Fisher's Store, October 1st 1853 Whereas the select court failed to draw the j u ry for next term of this court, it has become necessary that three Justices of the Peace assemble on this day for that purpose. Present and presiding, the worshipful Allen Fisher, Wm. Tatham, Wm. H. Thomas W. H. Thomas was appointed Chairman pro tern. The following named persons were drawn to serve as Jurors at December term 1853, to wit: D. G. Bryson S. B. McMahan George Barnes John H. Shuler R. V. Hicks Jesse Jones J. W. Conley Jason Hughs John R. Queen Ralph Hughs John N. Crawford George Buchhanan B. F. Allison John Middleton W. R. Buchhanan Thomas Gribble D. G. Birchfield Thompson Wilson Isom Anderson Wm. F. Brown Isreal Carver B. N. Queen Jesse Ash Wm. Wood Thomas Henson, Jr. Hudson Coward Amos Ash Hezekiah Jones James H. Wiggins John Shuler Asa Patterson D. L. Dillard Edward Hooper John Stewart George Bumgarner Elijah Dill September Session 1853 North Carolina, Jackson County: The execution of a deed of conveyance from Rodrick Norton to Evan Pearson was duly proven in open court by the oath of E. D. Davis & ordered to be registered. The execution of a deed for lands from Andrew J. Wood to Daniel Bryson was duly proven in open court by the oath of J. N. Bryson, the subscribing witness thereto, & ordered to be registered. The execution of a deed for lands from James Reed to John A. (Bieson?) was duly proven before the court b y the oath of G. W. Boyd & ordered to b e registered, (end of page 21) Ky Journeys Through Jackson January - February 2003 The execution of a deed for lands from Samuel Higdon to John Parker was duly proven in open court by the oath of F. Hoffman & ordered to be registered. The execution of a deed for lands from J. B. Allison to Wm. N. Dills was duly acknowledged in open court by J. B. Allison and ordered to be registered. The execution of a deed for lands from John C. Wilson to Daniel Bryson was duly proven before the court by the oath of J. N. Bryson, the subscribing witness thereto, & ordered to be registered. The execution of a quit claim deed for lands from G. W. Floyd to Israel Carver was duly proven in open court by the oath of W. N. Enloe, one of the subscribing witnesses thereto, & ordered to be registered. End of minutes for September, 1853. Hunter Library 30 Jan 2003 Minutes of December Term 1853 North Carolina: Jackson County: Be it remembered that on the 3rd Monday and 19th day of December 1853, a County Court of Pleas and Quarter Sessions is opened and held for the County of Jackson at Allen Fisher's store, being the place fixed by law for holding one of the terms of said court. When and where the Worshipful J. B. Allison, Peter King, Bedford Sherrill, Jacob Wike, and William Tatham, were ^y present and presiding. Of the jurors summoned (to this court) (the following named to this court) the following named persons were drawn, sworn, and charged as Grand Jurors. To wit: 1. W.R. Buchanan 6. Amos Ash 11. George Bumgarner 2. Wm. Wood 7. B.N. Queen 12. Isreal Carver 3. George Bukham 8. Elijah Dill 13. Hezekiah Jones 4. John Stewart 9. T. B. McMahan .14. Wm. H. Brown 5. Thos. Henson 10. Jesse Jones 15. John H. Shuler Who was charged by A. S. Merrimon, Solicitor, B. N. Queen forman. D. G. Bryson, John R. Queen, Jason Hughs were sworn of the original panel. The remainder of the original venire were excused or had removed out of the county. State vs. Andrew Jones, T.D. No. 5 The defendant pleads not guilty," whereupon the following named persons were sworn and empanneled. To wit: Ky 10 Journeys Through Jackson January - February 2003 State vs. John Fox, Pet. Lar., T. D. No. 6 The defendant pleads not guilty, whereupon the following jury was sworn and empanneled, to wit: Jesse Hall A. K. Taylor J. M. Hooper John B. Queen Tho. Ash Rufus Floyd Silas Green Wilson Putnam J. Beck Wiley Parris Cain Ashe Ellis Shelton Who found the defendant not guilty in manner and form as charged in the Bill of Indictment. See T.D., page 3, No. 6. Court adjourned to meet tomorrow 10 o'clock, (end of page 25) Wednesday morning. Court met according to adjournment. Present,: J. B. Allison, Peter King, J. B. Sherrill, Jacob Wike. Jabal H. Parks vs. Arch(iba)ld Henderson, T.D. No. 10 Whereupon the following j u ry was sworn and empannelled: D. G. Bryson Jackson Beck Joseph Strutton John R. Queen Eli Fullbright Thos. Fisher Jason Hughes Wm. Garrett Charles Bumgarner Coleman Bryson James Nations Joseph Martin The plaintiff introduced in evidence and declared upon a judgment purporting to be rendered by J. L. Moore, J. P. of the County of Macon. The Defendant objected to the reading of the record because the judgment was not certified or that there was no certificate from the Clerk of Macon County that J. L. Moore was a Justice of the Peace. The court sustained the objection and ordered a nonsuit to be entered. It is therefore ordered that the Defendant have and secure of Plff. his costs in this behalf incurred. Also judgt. against security for the cost from which judgment the Plff. prayed and obtained an appeal to the Superior Court. State vs. Robert Sellers, A. B., T.D. No. Plea not guilty. Whereupon the following jury were sworn and empanneled, to wit: Charles Bumgarner Thos. Fisher James Nations Joseph Martin D. G. Bryson John R. Queen William Garrett Joseph Strutton Jackson Beck Coleman Bryson Jason Hughs Eli Fullbright. Jurrors withdrawn and mistrial ordered, (end of page 26) 12 Journeys Through Jackson January - February 2003 D. G. Bryson Emanuel Shuler James Queen John R. Queen Benjamin Harris John Watson K^y Jason Hughs I. H. Davis Thos. Watson John Montieth G. W. Bryson D. L. Shelton Who found the defendant guilty in manner and form as charged in the bill of Indictment. See T.D. Page 3, No. 5. (end of page 23) Ordered by Court that Samuel Sherrill's Negro boy Andrew b e exemted from working on public roads. Emanuel Shuler and Samuel Parris came into court and exhibited the last will and testament of Jacob Shuler deceased which was duly proven by the Court by the oath of two of the subscribing witnesses thereto, to wit: Ruben Blanton and Thomas R. Brooks. The codicil to the same was duly proven by the oath of Thomas Arrington and James Crawford and ordered to be recorded. Court adjourned to meet tomorrow 10 o'clock Tuesday Morning. Court met according to adjournment. Present and presiding: J. B. Allison, Peter King, B. D. Sherrill, Jacob Wike State vs. A. Henry, E. Henry, Robert Lany: A&B; T. D. #4 The defendants plead not guilty, whereupon the following jury were sworn and V-> empanneled, to wit: D. G. Bryson John R. Queen Jason Hughs H. T. Wood Rufus Floyd Josiah Watson Henderson Bryson Wily Parris G. W. Bryson Simpson H. Brooks Gilbert Jones J. B. Love Who found the defendants not guilty in manner and form as charged in the bill of Indictment. See T.D., page 3, No. 4. (end of page 24) Tuesday Morning. Court met according to adjournment. Emanuel Shuler came into court and was duly qualified as Executor of the last will and testament of Jacob Shuler Dec'd. Samuel Parris, one of the executors of the last will and testament of Jacob Shuler Dec. came into court and refused to qualify as executor, whereupon it is ordered that letters testamentary issue to Emanuel Shuler. Ordered by court that Benjamin Tilley be exempted from working on public roads for twelve months. F. W. Potts came into court and filed his bond as constable with F. P. Allison, J. H. Parks, and Henry Jackson as securities, whereupon he took the oaths prescribed for constables and which bond was excepted by the following Court, to wit: R. V. Welch, J. B. Allison, J. B. Sherrill, John Wilson, Peter King, and Jacob Wike. y 11 Journeys Through Jackson January - F e b r u a r y 2003 <r C T h e F u l l b r i g h t A n c e s t r y o f D a n n y J o n e s [ Ed. We continue in this issue with the work of JCGS member Danny Jones.] 10. WILLIAM WILSON7 FULBRIGHT (JOHN WILLIAM5, JOHN WILHELM VOLPRECHT, HANS HIOB4, DANIEL NIKOLAUS3, SIMON2, HANS1) was bom January 08, 1785 in Buncombe County, North Carolina, USA, and died September 22, 1843 in Walnut Hill, Greene County, MO, United States. He married RUTH HOLLINGSWORTH. She died April 30,1874. Children of WILLIAM FULBRIGHT and RUTH HOLLINGSWORTH are: i. WILLIAM8 FULBRIGHT. 25. ii. EPHRAIN ROBERTSON FULBRIGHT, b. January 13,1809; d. August 26,1898. iii. LEVI COALTER FULBRIGHT. iv. RHODA FULBRIGHT, m. SAMUEL WEAVER. v. HENRY F. FULBRIGHT. vi. JOHN LAWSON FULBRIGHT. vii. ALEXANDER C. FULBRIGHT. viii. ELI FULBRIGHT, b. May 20,1820; d. August 16,1839. ix. DAVID L. FULBRIGHT. x. WILSON FULBRIGHT. xi. SAMUEL FULBRIGHT. xii. DANIEL N FULBRIGHT. t , Generation No. 4 a « £ > Z ^ S , S f GEORG* J0HN mLHBUf VOLPRECHT' ^ W °* Child of JACOB FULLBRIGHT is: 26. L HENRY LEE9 FULLBRIGHT. 12. MARY (POLLY)8 FULBRIGHT (JACOB1 FULLBRIGHT JP JACOB6 JOHN WTTHFTlJ> VOLPRECHT HANS HIOB4, DANIEL NIKOLAUS3, SIMON2, HZ1) VS b o * 3 L £ S ? m i * £ S S T i ^ i " £ 12,1884 m C a p e G i r a r d e a u C o u n ty> Missouri2. She married JOHN DRUM January 09, 1831 . He was bom May 17 1808 in Lincoln County, North Carolina2, and died January 13 1897 in Cape Girardeau County, Missouri. Child of MARY FULBRIGHT and JOHN DRUM is: 27. i. MARTHA JANE9 DRUM, b. August 05, 1850, Cape Girardeau County, Missouri; d. February 17,1905, Cape Girardeau County, Missouri. 13. SARAH8 FULBRIGHT (JACOB7 FULLBRIGHT, JR., JACOB6, JOHN WILHELM' VOLPRECHT, HANS HIOB , DANIEL NIKOLAUS3, SlMON2, HANS1) was born April 20, 1810 in NC5 , and died March 29 1903 in Bollinger County Mo5 . She married PETER STATLER November 07, 18305, son of PETER STATLEIL He was born September 18, 1803 in Mo5, and died November 19, 1861 in Bollinger 13 Journeys Through Jackson January - February 2003 Children of SARAH FULBRIGHT and PETER STATLER are: LMARY ANN ELIZABETH9 STATLER, b. 1832J ii. BARBARA ANN STATLER, b. 1833J iii. ALVIN JONAS STATLER, b. December 14,18383 KJ iv. MARTHA J STATLER, b. August 05,18395 v. JAMES COVINGTON STATLER, b. 1841* vi. DAVID EMTL STATLER, b. 18435 vii. SARAH C STATLER, b. 18465 viii. FRANCES CERILDA STATLER, b. February 22,1848J ix. PEGGY STATLER, b. WFT Est. 1825-1851* 28. x. PETER AMOS STATLER, b. August 07, 1850, MO; d. October 26, 1930, Bollinger County Mo. 14. AARON8 FULLBRIGHT (BARNETf, JACOB5, JOHN WILHELM VOLPRECHT, HANS HIOB4, DANIEL NIKOLAUS3, SIMON2, HANS1) was born 1812. He married ISSABELLA HAYNES December 28, 1836 in Haywood County, North Carolina, USA. She was born Abt. 1817. Children of AARON FULLBRIGHT and ISSABELLA HAYNES are: i. ALFRED CALOWAY9 FULLBRIGHT, b. 1839. ii. MARY T. FULLBRIGHT, b. 1842. iii. MARCUS L. FULLBRIGHT, b. 1844. iv. MARTHA M. FULLBRIGHT, b. 1846. v. RHODA ANN FULLBRIGHT, b. 1847. 15. EVA8 FULLBRIGHT (BARNETf, JACOB5, JOHN WILHELM VOLPRECHT, HANS HIOB4, DANIEL NIKOLAUS3, SIMON2, HANS1) was bom 1816. She married NOAH WOODRING May 05, 1840 in KJ Haywood County, North Carolina, USA. He was bom 1814. Children of EVA FULLBRIGHT and NOAH WOODRING are: i. JOHN9 WOODRING, b. 1842. ii. AMANUEL WOODRING, b. 1844. iii. BARBARA WOODRING, b. 1845. iv. MARY WOODRING, b. 1846. v. MILAS WOODRING, b. 1849. 16. MARIAH8 FULLBRIGHT (BARNETf, JACOB6, JOHN WILHELM5 VOLPRECHT, HANS HIOB4, DANIEL NIKOLAUS3, SIMON2, HANS1) was bom 1817. She married ANDREW WIKE February 15, 1838 in Haywood County, North Carolina, USA. Children of MARIAH FULLBRIGHT and ANDREW WIKE are: i. JERRY MARR (JEREMIAH)9 WIKE, b. October 03,1845; d. March 08,1920. 29. ii. MERIAH WIKE. 17. ELI8 FULLBRIGHT (BARNETf, JACOB5, JOHN WILHELM VOLPRECHT, HANS HIOB4, DANIEL NIKOLA US3, SIMON2, HANS1) was born October 26,1818 in North Carolina, USA, and died April 23, 1902 in North Carolina, USA. He married ELIZABETH ASH, daughter of JESY ASH and MARY HUFFMAN. She was bom May 04,1812 in North Carolina, USA, and died in USA. , Children of ELI FULLBRIGHT and ELIZABETH ASH are: 14 Ky Ky Journeys Through Jackson January - February 2003 i. BARBANY9 FULLBRIGHT, b. February 17,1837. ii. MARY FULLBRIGHT, b. March 12,1839. iii. DAVJXJ MERSON FULLBRIGHT, b. July 26,1841. (page 16, North Carolina Troops: 1861-1865, Private, Resided in Jackson County where he enlisted at age 19, April 27, 1861. Present or accounted for until wounded at Mechanicsville, Virginia, June 26, 1862. Reported Absent wounded until transferred to l" Company A, Infantry Regiment, Thomas Legion, October 5,1862.) 30. iv. DANTEL MONROE FULLBRIGHT, b. March 18, 1844, Webster, Jackson County, North Carolina, USA; d. November 01, 1915, Webster, Jackson County, North Carolina, USA. v. JOHN (JTAMSON) FULLBRIGHT, b. May 27, 1846, Webster, Jackson County, North Carolina, USA. vi. JESSEE ALLEN FULLBRIGHT, b. March 11, 1849, Webster, Jackson County, North Carolina, USA; m. DORCAS E. (?); b. May 30,1845. vii. NANCY M. FULLBRIGHT, b. January 16, 1853, Webster, Jackson County, North Carolina, USA; d. December 06,1928. 18. JACOB8 FULBRIGHT (BARNETf FULLBRIGHT, JACOB6, JOHN WILHELM VOLPRECHT, HANS HIOB4, DANIEL NIKOLA US3, SIMON2, HANS1)4 was bom March 31, 1821 in North Carolina', and died Aft. 1870 in Haywood Co., N. C.'. He married MARTHA ANN RANDLE". Notes for JACOB FULBRIGHT: [Brederbund WFT Vol. 7, Ed. 1, Tree #0549, Date of Import: Jun 16,1998] Jacob Fulbright was listed as a wheelwright in the 1860 census of Haywood Co., N. C. In the 1870 census of Haywood Co. he is listed as a farmer. The dates and names of the members of the family are contained in a Bible in the possession of Mrs. Laura Moody Russell of Haywood Co.,N. C. Children of JACOB FULBRIGHT and MARTHA RANDLE are: 31. i. WILLIAM WESLEY9 FULBRIGHT, b. March 24, 1864, North Carolina; d. January 06,1947, Americus, Sumter County, Georgia, USA. ii. CORDELIA JANE FULBRIGHT', b. January 11,1849". iii. ZILPHA ELVIRA FULBRIGHT', b. August 15,185l". iv. JOHN BARNETT FULBRIGHT', b. October 19,1853'". v. LOUISE EMALINE FULBRIGHT', b. June 20,1856". vi. INFANT SON FULBRIGHT", b. November 25,1858". vii. JAMES P. FULBRIGHT", b. January 08, I860", viii. MARY LUSINDA FULBRIGHT", b. December 31,1861". ix. AUGUSTUS M. FULBRIGHT", b. August 20,1867"". x. SARAH F. FULBRIGHT", b. July 15,187l". 19. SARAH LOUISE8 FULLBRIGHT (BARNETf, JACOB6, JOHN WILHELM5 VOLPRECHT, HANS HIOB4, DANIEL NIKOLAUS3, SIMON2, HANS1) was bom 1823. She married NICHOLAS MEDFORD September 13, 1840 in Haywood County, North Carolina, USA. He was bom 1816. Children of SARAH FULLBRIGHT and NICHOLAS MEDFORD are: i. JAMES RANDALL9 MEDFORD, b. 1844. i i . LAWSON HENDERSON MEDFORD, b . 1 8 4 6. i i i . NAOMA A . MEDFORD, b . 1 8 4 7. i v . CHARLOTTE MEDFORD, b. 1 8 4 8. 15 34. 35. 36. 37. 38. 39. Ifi i. ii. iii. IV. v. VI. vii. viii. ix. X. xi. xii. xiii. KJ Journeys Through Jackson January - February 2003 20. CATHERINE RHODA8 FULLBRIGHT (BARNETf, JACOB5, JOHN WILHELM VOLPRECHT, HANS HIOB4, DANIEL NIKOLAUS3, SIMON2, HANS1) was bom 1828. She married DILLARD E. JONES August 17,1843 in Haywood County, North Carolina, USA. He was bom 1820. Children of CATHERINE FULLBRIGHT and DILLARD JONES are: i. WILLIAM E.9 JONES, b. 1844. ii. PINKNEY L. JONES, b. 1847. iii. JULIUS A. JONES, b. 1848. 21. MILES W.8 FULLBRIGHT (BARNETf, JACOB6, JOHN WILHELM VOLPRECHT, HANS HIOB4, DANIEL NIKOLAUS3, SIMON2, HANS1) was bom 1830. He married ADALINE WOODS September 10, 1854. She was bom February 27,1834. Children of MILES FULLBRIGHT and ADALINE WOODS are: i. TELITHA JANE9 FULLBRIGHT. ii. MARGARET FULLBRIGHT. iii. MARY JANE FULLBRIGHT. iv. IVA ANN FULLBRIGHT. 32. v. JOHN MILES JACK FULLBRIGHT, b. September 30, 1865, North Carolina, USA; d. September 30,1895, Haywood County, North Carolina, USA. 22. WILLIAM DANIEL8 FULBRIGHT (DANIEL1, JOHN WILLIAM, JOHN WILHELM VOLPRECHT, HANS HIOB4, DANIEL NIKOLAUS3, SIMON2, HANS1) was bom April 05, 1834 in Crawford Co., MO5, and died September 28, 1909 in Dallas Co., TX5. He married MARY ABIGAIL BROCK February 04, 18565. She was bom November 08,1841 in Marion Co., IN5, and died October 23,1923 in Dallas Co., TX5. Child of WILLIAM FULBRIGHT and MARY BROCK is: 33. i. LUCY JANE9 FULBRIGHT, b. November 22,1873, Laclede Co., MO; d. September 18,1936, Dallas Co., TX. 23. MAHALA KATHERINE8 FULBRIGHT (DANIEL1, JOHN WILLIAM5, JOHN WILHELM VOLPRECHT, HANS HIOB4, DANIEL NIKOLAUS3, SIMON2, HANS1) was bom February 07, 1834 in Lebanon, Missouri, United States. She married DAVID MCCLURE June 14, 1857 in Lebanon, Missouri, United States. He was bom March 03,1835 in Tennessee, United States. Children of MAHALA FULBRIGHT and DAVID MCCLURE are: MOLLDX9 MCCLURE. LUCY MCCLURE. JESSE MCCLURE. JACKSON MCCLURE. JOHN MCCLURE. WILLIAM MCCLURE. JAMES D. MCCLURE, b. April 29, 1858, Laclede County., Missouri, United States; d. August 16,1935, Stoutland, Missouri, United States. DAVID MCCLURE, b. 1859, Lebanon, Missouri, United States. DELLA MCCLURE, b. February 11,1867. ALICE MCCLURE, b. May 10,1871. JOSEPH MCCLURE, b. March 01, 1872, Lebanon, Missouri, United States; d. July 24,1955, Lebanon, Missouri, United States. Ky R o s s MCCLURE, b. May 01,1876. OLLIE MCCLURE, b. M a y 0 7 , 1 8 7 9. KJ Journeys Through Jackson January - F e b r u a r y 2003 C 1 9 5 5 J a c k s o n C o u n t y D e a t h C e r t i f i c a t e s o f P e r s o n s B o r n P r i o r t o 1 9 0 0 [Key to reading the following: Name of deceased; date of birth; place of birth; date of death; township of death; father's name; mother's name; informant's name and address; cemetery. * denotes a known error on the certificate. Abstracted by Larry Crawford in the Jackson County Register of Deeds Office February 2003] Ahlin, Johan Adolf; 24 Feb 1876; Uppervd, Sweden; 27 Jun; Sylva; Per Adolf Ahlin; Albertine Lrestina Mullenhoff;.Bjorn Ahlin; Sylva; Macon, GA Alexander, Alice; 16 Feb 1888; Argura; 2 Mar; Canada; John Alexander; Margaret Shelton; Walter Alexander; Tuckasegee; Sols Creek Allison, Etta Walters; 3 Oct 1880; NC; 30 Oct; Sylva; Edward Walters; Mary J. Newton; Edwin Allison; SylvajKeener Anderson, Gertrude Ensley; 5 Feb 1899; NC; 26 Dec; Sylva; Cole Ensley; Rebecca Henson; Albert Anderson; Sylva; Old Field Banks, Ollie Deitz; 30 Jun 1887; NC; 27 Jan; Sylva; T.F. Deitz; Mary Cowan; W.G. Phillips; Hayesville; Keener Barnes, Bessie Morgan; 23 Dec 1880; SC; 10 Mar; River; Richard Morgan; Elizabeth Hampton; Hampton Barnes; Tuckasegee; Tuckasegee Baptist Beck, William Jackson; 25 Nov 1873; NC; 11 Jun; Barkers Creek; John Beck; Arminta Harper; Dewey Beck; Whittier; Beck (Dillsboro) Bishop, Docia Higdon; 27 Mar 1891; NC; 5 Feb; Savannah; Bill Young; Charity Higdon; Kewnneth Bishop; Gay; Zion Hill Blythe, Nannie; 6 Jul 1872; NC; 27 May; Qualla; John Jackson; Sallie Hornbuckle; Jack C , Jackson; Whittier; Family.. .Cherokee Boone, Colman Gossett; 2 Oct 1886; NC; 24 Sep; Qualla; CC. Boone; Drucilla Holde; Mrs. CC. Boone; Whittier; Keener Brooks, Mary Ardelia; 12 May 1875; NC; 9 May; Greens Creek; William R. Dills; Ann Rogers; Sam Brooks; Sylva; Old Savannah Brown, Nancy Wilson; 23 Feb 1869; NC; 23 Aug; Cullowhee; B.G. Wilson; Phoeb Bracken; Mrs. Carl Smith; Cullowhee; Cullowhee Methodist Brown,-Neppie Jane; 14 Aug 1868; Sevierville, TN; 23 Mar; Qualla; George Fox; not given; Mrs. Bob Bumgarner; Whittier; Bumgarner Brown, Robert Victor; 24 Jun 1876; NC; 6 Jul; Sylva; Albert Brown; Lou Coats; Mrs. R.V. Brown; not given; Cullowhee Brown, Jessie Boone; 23 Sep 1892; NC; 3 Feb; Caney Fork; W.W. Brown; Haseltine Parker, not given; not given; Queen (Caney Fork) Bryson, James Remus; 10 Dec 1869; NC; 23 Dec; Cullowhee; J.R. Bryson; Dorcas Buchanan; Davis Bryson; Cullowhee; Cullowhee Bryson, Laura Morrow; 17 Dec 1871; NC; 6 Dec; Scotts Creek; Andy Morrow; Matilda Massie; Mrs. Lawrence Hooper; Waynesville; Balsam Baptist Bryson, Lucretia Ethel; 10 Jun 1881; Jackson Co.; 25 Feb; Sylva; Henry Hooper; Sara Wike; Grace Gentry; Sylva; Big Ridge Bryson, Laura Henson; 27 Oct 1873; Jackson Co.; 26 Mar; Sylva; William T. Henson; Mary E. Snyder; Berdell Lloyd; Sylva; Old Field Buchanan, Lillie Nora; 22 Apr 1869; NC; 31 Jan; Savannah; Thomas Tatham; Artie Bryson; Julia Bradley; Sylva; Wesleyanna Buchanan, William Jackson; 27 Aug 1892; NC; 27 Mar; Hamburg; Bert Buchanan; Catherine i ^ Tillson; Mrs. Will Buchanan; Cullowhee; Stewart 17 Journeys Through Jackson January - February 2003 Buchanan, Silas Nelson; 6 Dec 1889; NC; 9 May; Greens Creek; Silas Buchanan; Eva Brooks; Clifford Buchanan; Sylva; Old Savannah Buchanan, Leona Lenoir; 29 Jun 1872; Sylva; 1 Oct; Barkers Creek; William Bumgarner; Sarah i Allen; Cashes Buchanan; Whittier; Bumgarner ^-^ Bumgarner, Mary Louise; 30 May 1862; NC; 10 Feb; Sylva; A.J. Long; Jemima Cathey; Lucy Bumgarner; Sylva; Love Chapel Cable, Calvin Daniel; 15 Dec 1884; NC; 15 Oct; Savannah; John B. Cable; Tiney Jones; J.F. Cable; Sylva; Love Field Carroll, Mary Elrnira; 30 May 1875; Jackson Co.; 17 Mar; Cullowhee; Thomas Ashe; Sarah Dills; Cordelia Ashe; Speedwell; Taylor Chapman, Mae Penley; 19 Dec 1870; NC; 18 Mar; Scotts Creek; Adam Penley; Jane Mrs. Robert Shuler; Sylva; Addie Coggins, Victor L.; 8 May 1888; NC; 21 Oct; Cullowhee; M.L. Coggins; Tennie Moody Freeman Coggins; Cullowhee; Double Springs Coward, Matt Ransom; 5 Jul 1894; NC; 27 Jan; Sylva; Oscar Bauman Coward; Emma Long Elda Coward; not given; Webster Crawford, James Avery; 18 Mar 1894; NC; 1 Aug; Scotts Creek; Samuel Crawford; Mary Hoyle; Mrs. James A. Crawford; Sylva; Norman Dalton, Buell Columbus; 15 Jul 1879; NC; 21 Sep; not given; J.M. Dalton; Margaret Boyd; Mrs. Laura Brown; Sylva; Ridgecrest (Franklin) Davis, Johnny; 22 May 1888; NC; 4 Apr; Sylva; Pink Davis; Cordelia McMahan; Mary Davis; Whittier; Barkers Creek Dean, Julius Thomas; 30 Jul 1873; NC; 19 Sep; Scotts Creek; Razor Dean; Tine Carson; Cary Dean; Sylva; Old Field Dorsey, Estella; 1884; NC; 19 Aug; Sylva; Nelson Love; Martha Jane Love; F.C. Dorsey; Sylva; t j Old Field Dunn, Laura Hannah; 24 Sep 1896; Haywood Co.; 6 Feb; Scotts Creek; James A. Hannah; Margaret Coggins; Albert Hannah; Sylva; Hannah (Mount Sterling) Fox, Martha Ida; 11 Apr 1875; NC; 8 Dec; Cullowhee; Clingman Pressley; Matilda Mathis; Harley Fox Mathis; Cullowhee; Hooper-Speedwell Frady, Wilburn M.; 6 Mar 1881; NC; 7 Dec; Sylva; Mack D. Frady; Sara Smith; Mrs. W.M. Frady; Sylva; Wesley Chapel Franks, Lula Jane; 4 Apr 1867; NC; 1 May; Hamburg; John L. Owen; Mary Ann Wilson; C.W. Paxton; Glenville; Glenville Fullbright, Bertha Magdelena; 1 Apr 1881; NC; 5 Feb; Cullowhee; Albert Painter; Nellie Bryson; Mrs. F.F. Jones; Cullowhee; Cullowhee Gilliland, Martha Mason; 1 Sep 1878; NC; 16 Jul; Scotts Creek; R.H. Mason; Mandy Brendle; Rosie Bradley; Sylva; Love Green, Meritt Annas; 29 May 1889; NC; 29 Jan; Greens Creek; Joseph Green; Parthena Brooks; Sam Green; Conty, WA; Old Savannah Guilliams, James Bryson; 19 Apr 1867; TN; 28 Jan; Cullowhee; not given; Martha Lindsey; Mrs. Guilliams; Cullowhee; Cullowhee Baptist Hall, Thomas Judson; 19 Aug 1874; NC; 26 Jun; Cullowhee; Crate Hall; Polly Dills; Grady Hall; Waynesville; Cullowhee Holcombe, Joeaner (?); 21 May 1877; Yancey Co.; 22 Jan; Sylva; George Way Coster (Waycaster?); Ritta Campbell; Alvin Allen; Sylva; Cane River (Burnsville) KJ 18 Journeys Through Jackson January - February 2003 ' Hooper, Hester Melton; 15 Dec 1878; NC; 2 May; Caney Fork; Granville Melton; Cynthia Mills; W.A. Hooper; Cullowhee; Brasstown ^ / Hooper, Belle; 11 May 1864; NC; 9 Jun; Caney Fork; Albert Woodring; not given; John Hooper; Sylva; Hooper (Caney Fork) Hurst, Mary Lou; 26 Nov 1888; NC; 29 Dec; Sylva; Thomas R. Hurst; Marie Miller Gray; Horace Hurst; Franklin; Woodlawn (Franklin) Inderhees, Edward J.; 24 Jun 1894; Cincinnati, OH; 26 Oct; Qualla; Edward Inderehees; Anna Cremering; Mrs. E.J. Inderhees; Cincinnati; City (Cincinnati, OH) Jones, Jahu Thomas; 16 Sep 1887; Barkers Creek; 17 Jan; Barkers Creek; A.D. Jones; Plestine Gibson; Ira Jones; Sylva; Moody (Barker's Creek) Jordon, Joe Mitchell; 20 Sep 1871; NC; 10 Aug; Qualla; William Jordon; not given; O.W. Jordon; Whittier; Bryson City Lewis, Oscar, 15 Jun 1889; Webster; 23 Jan; Sylva; John L. Lewis; Lucy Green; Mrs. Oscar Lewis; Sylva; Lovedale Mathis, George W.; 29 Sep 1877; NC; 19 Nov; Scotts Creek; Bill Mathis; Martha Hall; Cordelia Mathis; Balsam; Addie Mathis, Walter; 24 Jul 1897; NC; 13 Jan; Sylva; Joe Mathis; Rebecca Ashe; Virgie Mathis; Argura; Mathis Melton, Margaret Mull; 30 Nov 1861; NC; 29 Oct; Sylva; Baxter Mull; Minervia Davis; Lambert Melton; Sylva; Melton Moffitt, Daniel Hustin; 5 Aug 1862; NC; 5 May; Caney Fork; Thomas Moffitt; Margaret Hooper; Elsie Moffitt; Cullowhee; Coward Monteith, Thomas Clingman; 23 Sep 1883; NC; 12 Nov; Cashiers; Thomas Monteith; Mary Burress; Richard Monteith; Cashiers; Hamburg Monteith, Artie Davis; 16 Apr 1871; NC; 25 Apr; Webster; Alps Davis; Didane Parris * Mrs. N.A. Norton; Sylva; Old Field Moss, Lambert Allison; 25 Sep 1889; NC; 8 Jun; Sylva; J.J. Moss; Lura Stewart; Mrs. Lambert Moss; Erastus; Pine Creek McLaughlin, Thomas Woodfin; 1 Sep 1879; NC; 15 Feb; Sylva; William Mclaughlin; Myra Howell; Nell Meyers; Washington D.C; Shoal Creek Nichols, Abraham Lincoln; 12 Dec 1879; not given; 5 Feb; Sylva; Billy Nichols; Nancy Shuler; Wade Nichols; Sylva; Jenkins (Bryson City) Norman, Mary Cabe; 15 Feb 1883; NC; 16 Jun; Sylva; Manuel Cabe; Kate Haynes; Mrs. Jewel Thompson; Sylva; East Fork Peyatt, Lydia Ellis; 7 Mar 1872; NC; 11 May; Cullowhee; John W. Ellis; Rebecca J. Welch; Luther R. Taff; Cullowhee; Liberty, NC Phillips, James M.; 3 Mar 1873; NC; 21 Sep; Caney Fork; Jack Phillips; Margaret Cunningham; Margaret Coward; Sylva; Balsam Grove Potts, John Hamilton; 26 Jun 1890; Norton; 25 Sep; Hamburg; Robert Potts; Stacy Stewart; Nichols Potts; Cullowhee; Potts Powell, Thompson Jeason; 10 Mar 1886; NC; 14 Feb; River; Ashley Powell; Nancy Shed; Tillman Powell; Canton; Tuckasegee Pressley, Mack Monroe; 19 Jan 1871; Speedwell; 9 Apr; Cullowhee; Clingman Pressley; . Mildetha Mathews; Lee Freeman; Cullowhee; Cullowhee Baptist Ky 19 Journeys Through Jackson January - February 2003 Queen, Bessie Elberta; 15 Apr 1891; Macon Co. GA; 26 Oct; Dillsboro; James M. Tallent; Margaret Wild; W.C. Queen; Dillsboro; Locust Field Queen, Lucy Letta; 12 Jun 1892; NC; 25 Jan; Caney Fork; R.A. Nicholson; Martha E. Hooper; , Mrs. Steve Queen; Cowarts; Cowarts ^—/ Ray, Homer; 26 May 1880; NC; 23 Aug; Sylva; George Ray; not given; Mrs. Clyde Ray; Webster; Lovedale Reagan, Joseph Albert; 20 Mar 1880; NC; 1 Jul; Qualla; John Reagan; Sue Snyder; Howard Reagan; Whittier; Shoal Creek Rogers, William Walker; 14 mar 1880; NC; 27 Mar; Qualla; Melvin Rogers; Letha Belle Liner; W.P. Rogers; Oak Ridge, TN; Sherrill Seagle, Maggie Bradley; 7 Jan 1877; NC; 11 May; Barkers Creek; Thomas Bradley; Nancy Nations; Mrs. Tom Jones; Whittier; Hensley Sherrill, Retta Charlotte; 3 Oct 1894; NC; 5 Nov; Qualla; Charles E. Campbell; Mary Ella Caldwell; Mrs. Ed Nicholson; Sylva; Keener Springer, Hasten; 17 Feb 1885; Stanly Co.; 8 Mar; Qualla; W.R. Springer; Laura Furs; Clyde Springer; Galbreath Creek (Swain Co.) Stewart, Eara Dilphia; 16 May 1872; NC; 3 Mar; Hamburg; William Moss; Martha Owen; Hayes Stewart; Erastus; Stewart Styles, Hicks Columbus; 11 May 1871; NC; 4 Sep; Barkers Creek; Thomas Styles; Emanda Jones; Mrs. Hicks Styles; Dillsboro; Sherrill Styles, Jerdie Coward; 22 May 1887; NC; 4 Nov; Sylva; James Coward; Mary Jane Hooper; Dillard Coward; Sylva; Lovedale Sutton, Alice Daretha; 1 May 1867; NC; 18 Feb; Dillsboro; John McMahan; Ruth Dillard; Hermie Dryman; Franklin; Locust Field Sutton, Andrew Jack; 27 May 1880; Jackson Co.; 1 Dec; Barkers Creek; Lewis Sutton; Lucinda Parton; Fred Sutton; Whittier; Bradley Tallent, James Monroe; 15 Feb 1861; NC; 17 Jul; Dillsboro; Ephram Tallent; Sallie Roper; Mrs. W.C. Queen; Dillsboro; Hills (Clarkesville, GA) Turpin, Mamie Eleanor; 10 Apr 1893; NC; 20 Aug; Greens Creek; James Bryson; Sarah Tatham; Mrs. Wilma Hood; Goldsboro; East Fork Warren, Walter Dean; 23 Apr 1891; NC; 11 Mar; Sylva; Western Warren; Sarah Bumgarner; Mrs. W.D. Warren; Sylva; Keener Watson, Elbert Jackson; 12 Oct 1876; NC; 28 Jul; Cullowhee; Newton Watson; Sallie Phillips; Gertrude Moss; Cullowhee; Cullowhee West, James William; 1 Jun 1868; NC; 31 Dec; Sylva; Will West; Cloria Barnes; Mrs. J.W. Ashley; Asheville; Tuckasegee Wood, Benjamin Franklin Sr.; 17 Oct 1883; VA; 8 Feb; Sylva; James Robert Wood; not given; Robin H. Burnette; Sylva; Keener y y 20 Journeys Through Jackson January - F e b r u a r y 2003 Ky M a r r i a g e B o n d s f o r t h e S u r n a m e " S h u l e r " [Ed. The Society recently purchased the microfiche set An Index to Marriage Bonds Filed in the North Carolina State Archives. The eighty-eight microfiche are available for research at the JCGS office. Ruth Shuler abstracted the following for Journeys.'] Grooms Shular, Andrew and Katarine Matida Fulks, 03 Aug 1849, Surry County; Bondsman Thomas S.Fulks, Bond #147361 Shular, Daniel and Lucinda Ticeinger, 28 May 1840, Davidson County, Bondsman Solomon Clodfe, (Clodfelter?) Bond #37321 Shular, David and Eliza Ball, 28 Oct 1838, Davidson County, Bondsman Solomon Shular, Bond #37320 Shular, Edmondson and Margarett Newton, 18 Feb 1843, Macon County, Bondsman J. H. Hunter, Witness J. K. Gray, Bond #78063 Shular, H. P. and Narcissus Newton, 03 Feb 1852, Macon County, Bondsman D. G. Burchfiel, Witness T. P. Siler, Bond #78064 Shular, John and Eliza Byrely, 11 Mar 1858, Davidson County, Bondsman R. S. Green, Bond #37319 Shular, John F. and Sophrona Shope, 02 Aug 1845, Macon County, Bondsman John (x) Shuler, Witness J. K. Gray, Bond #78065 Shuler, Andrew and Barbara Fouts, 21 Dec 1829, Davidson County, Bondsman Jonas (x) Myers, Witness D. Mock, Bond #39553 Shuler, Daniel and Deborah Ledford, 16 Apr 1824, Davidson County, Bondsman Joseph (x) Myers, Witness J. Conrad, Bond #39554 Shuler, David and Demeris Berry, 11 Apr 1840, Macon County, Bondsman Ja(me)s H. Wigg, (Wiggins?), Witness John Hall, Clerk, Bond #78066 Ky Shuler, David and Margaret Pattison, 06 Jun 1829, Stokes County, Bondsman William Cosner, Witness D. Stockton, Bond # 141475 Shuler, E. F. and Margaret J . Edwards, 15 Sep 1855, Guilford County, Bondsman Williamson M. Ed, Witness L. Swaim, Bond #59610, married 18 Sep 1855 b D. W. Edwards, J. P. Shuler, E. F. and Mollie E. Hunt, 5 Sep 1859, Guilford County, Bondsman A. M. Burch, Witness H. C Willis, Bond #59595, married 6 Sep 1859 by B. J. Bobbitt Shuler, John and Louisa J . Alberson, 5 Nov 1866, Davidson County, Bondsman Bennett Nooe, Bond #37322 21 Journeys Through Jackson January - February 2003 Shuler, John and Louise J. Alberson, 5 Nov. 1866, Davidson County, Witness J. K. Perryman, Bond #39544, married 6 Nov 1866 by W. H. Hammer Shuler, John and Mary Hagea (Hager?), 12 Feb 1822, Lincoln County, Bondsman Peter ^ Shuler, Witness Sol. Davis, Bond #131797 Shuler, Nickolas and Polly Everhart, 2 Feb 1848, Davidson County, Bondsman Alfred Everhart, Bond #37323 Shuler, Philip L. (or Sharar) and Easter E. Gallehan, 3 Nov 1857, Ashe County, Witness John F.Greer, Bond #2212 Shuler, Price and Nancey Bradshaw, 10 May 1835, Haywood County, Bondsman Merrill Bradshaw, Witness Samuel Gibson, Bond #66292 Shuler, Price and Elizabeth L. Battle, 1 Dec 1842, Macon County, Bondsman E. Dowdle, Witness J. K. Gray, Bond #78067 Shuler, William G. and Elizabeth Jane Lawless, 21 Aug 1847, Macon County, Bondsman David Burchfiel, Witness J. K. Gray, Bond #78068 Brides Shulahr, Rosie and Jacob Mitchell, 29 Oct 1788, Lincoln County, Bondsman Thomas Fisher, Witness Joseph Steel, Bond #74570 Shular, Aveline and David Burchfield, 18 Apr 1846, Macon County, Bondsman M. C Bums, Witness J. K. Gray, Bond #77001 Shular, Elizabeth and Ambrose Myers, 13 Jun 1854, Davidson County, Bondsman John A. Long, Witness Jacob Berrier, Bond #39154 Shular, Malenday and William Black, 7 Jan 1857, Davidson County, Bondsman F. A. Myers, -Witness B. F. Stone, Bond #37858 Shular, Mary S. and David Yokley, 8 Mar 1836, Davidson County, Bondsman Thomas James, Bond #37745 Shular, Rebecca and Marcus Hutson, 27 Dec 1847, Davidson County, Bondsman Samuel (x) Bates, Witness Jacob Berrier, Bond #38643 Shuler, S. A. and Milton T. Battle, 31 Mar 1865, Macon County, Bondsman G. W. Battle, Witness R. C Slagle, Bond #76857, married 2 Apr 1865 by E. Collins, J. P. Shuler, Ann and Nathan Lamb, 3 Dec 1867, Randolph County, Witness J. M. Hancock, Clk., Bond #112822 (additional information on bond) Shuler, Anna and Lewis Tucker, 17 Jul 1832, Davidson County, Bondsman Andrew Shuler, Bond #37605 y y 22 Ky Ky Ky Journeys Through Jackson January - February 2003 Shuler, Anna (dau. of George) and John Bradshaw, 12 May 1834, Haywood County, Bondsman James Bradshaw, Bond #64927 Shuler, Betsey and Martin Woods, 23 Dec 1817, Rowan County, Bondsman Adam Shuler, Witness Silas Peace, Bond #130634 Shuler, Caroline and Jacob Leonard, 7 Nov 1866, Davidson County, Witness J. K. Perryman, Bond #38898, married 8 Nov 1866 by George Riley, J. P. Shuler, Catherine and Joseph Weaver, 21 Nov 1866, Davidson County, Bondsman Albert H. Parks, Bond #37661 Shuler, Catherine and Emanuel Everhart, 27 Mar 1866, Davidson County, J. K. Perryman, Witness, Bond #38189, married 27 Mar 1866 by Geo. Riley, J. P. Shuler, Catherine and Emanuel Everhart, 27 Mar 1866, Davidson County, Bondsman Lewis Everhart, Bond #36657 Shuler, Catherine and Jacob Leonard, 7 Nov 1866, Davidson County, Bondsman Michael Everhar(t?), Bond #36915 Shuler, Elizabeth Ann and Jacob Shope, 8 Mar 1852, Macon County, Bondsman B. L. (x) • Duval, Witness T. P. Siler/Bond #76059 Shuler, Ellen and Christian Weaver, 30 Jun 1859, Davidson County, Bondsman Alex. Hill, Witness S. A. Mock, Bond #39789 Shuler, Elrnira and Thomas Porter, 20 Sep 1859, Davidson County, Bondsman G. W. Williams, Witness BennetNooe, J. P., Bond #39448 Shuler, Luezer and Allen R. Albertson, 24 Feb 1862, Guilford County, Bondsman Amos Regans, Witness C. Tomlinson, Bond #52944 Shuler, Marah and Ambrose Sechrist, 13 Oct 1860, Davidson County, Bondsman Allen Sechrist, Bond #37285 Shuler, Martha C. and Jacob H. R. Beck, 25 Dec 1862, Davidson County, Bondsman A. G. Hamilton, Witness J. K. Perryman, Bond #37852, married 28 Dec 1862 by Peter Riley, J. P. Shuler, Mary and Lewis Everhart, 25 Nov 18565, Davidson County, Bondsman Henry Medlin, Bond #36660 Shuler, Mary and Wesley Lowey, 5 Jul 1859, Davidson County, Bondsman George Kipley, Bond #37061 Shuler, Mary and Lewis Everhart, 25 Nov 1865, Davidson County, Witness J. K. Perryman, Bond #38190, married 20 Nov 1865 by George Riley, J. P. Shuler, Mary and Daniel Kepley, 2 Sep 1845, Davidson County, Bondsman David Hunt, Witness C F. Lowe, Bond #38799 23 Journeys Through Jackson January - F e b r u a r y 2003 Shuler, Nancy and William Nickles, 19 Mar 1850, Macon County, Bondsman Daniel Nickles, Witness J. K. Gray, Bond #77823 Shuler, Rebecca J. and David A. Jenkins, 21 Apr 1866, Davidson County, Bondsman W. F. Henderson, Bond #36764, married 29 Apr 1866 by Wm. H. Hamner Shuler, Ruth and Joseph Veach, 28 Dec 1831, Davidson County, Bondsman Joseph Jones, Bond #39705 Shuler, Sofrony E. and Henry Medlin, 14 May 1865, Davidson County, Bond #37067, married 14 May 1865 by A. Williams, MG ' The two names listed below are included because of their similarity to Shuler and the possibility that an error in transcription could have occurred: Shules, Martha and Calvin Osborne, 12 Mar 1853, Ashe County, Bondsman Jasper Osborn, Witness Nathan Weaver, Bond #1981 Shules, Mary and Jasper Rickard, 18 Aug 1787, Rowan County, Bondsman Beacham Hilton, Witness Jno. Macay(?), Bond #28978 KJ J C G S T r e a s u r e r ' s R e p o r t f o r 2 0 0 2 JC GENEALOGICAL SOCIETY Net Cash Flow January 01 through December 31, 2002 INFLOWS Income DEPOSITS • VARIOUS ITEMS INTEREST INCOME Total Income Investment income CD INTEREST Total Investment income TOTAL INFLOWS $ $ $ $ $ 13,671.40 27.56 13,698.96 22.10 22.10 13,721.06 Expense BANK FEES • NSF CHECKS CHARGE BACKS - NSF CHECKS DUES/MEMBERSHIPS Insurance • Property/liab Journeys Newsletters Misc • Awards ceremony MISC • DONATIONS Misc • Library Purchases Misc • Purchases/Resale MISCELLANEOUS EXPENSE Office Equipment/furnitur Office Supplies Petty Cash Post Office Box Rent Postage Program/Presentation Fees Program/Presentation Meal Rent Office SalesTax Paid Utilities Electric Utilities Telephone Total Expense TOTAL OUTFLOWS INCREASE(DECREASE) IN CASH BALANCE AT START OF PERIOD END OF PERIOD BALANCE $ $ $ $ $ $ 10.00 40.00 35.00 350.00 2.237.50 120.15 75.00 967.94 1,070.00 90.00 4.809.57 707.71 1,800.00 50.00 38.93 150.00 49.74 2,400.00 394.75 535.59 783.54 16,715.42 16,715.42 (2,994.36) 1 5 ' ° W 12,091.73 24 Journeys Through Jackson January - F e b r u a r y 2003 Ky I n t e r v i e w w i t h S e l m a L e w i s F r i z z e l l Ky [Ed. The following interview is graciously shared with us by George Frizzell, who conducted the interview with his paternal grandmother in 1980. For those members who are not familiar with George, he is one of the leaders of the Jackson County Historical Association, and he is the archivist at Western Carolina University's Special Collections in Hunter Library.] GF: Do you remember much about your grandparents? GMo: John Lewis and Lucy? He come here and married Lucy Green. Him and her separated, and then he married again. I didnt really ever know who he married noway. Margaret was her name though. GF: You said your grandfather Lewis fought in the CMl War. GMo: Yeah. "He never did talk about it. GF: Did he fight for the South? GMo: I think he did. But now, I don't know. He done that fighting before he come to this part of the country. I never did hear him talk about it. See, I was just a youngin - just a child - and I didn't pay no ' tention to nothing like that back then. No, all I remember him talking about was they killed a hog. And this here man that was in service too, he wouldn't eat none of the meat, but he'd eat the gravy. And they told him, "Well what was the difference in eating the gravy and eating the meat?" And said, "Well as eat the devil as to drink his broth." GF: Did you know your mother's family? GMo: My grandmother was a Barker before she married Emmanuel Frady. My mother's name was Alva . . . Alva Frady. I went to my grandmother's house, but Lord I was just a little old thing. I remember, though, that they lived in a Jog house, and they had a dirt floor because they just built it and they still hadn't had the floor put in it. Now that's how people had to live back then. GF: Do you know how they made their living, all your grandparents? Gmo: Well, they just farmed. GF: What did your father do for a living? GMo: He farmed. Raised corn and wheat. And law, we used to get out and pick peas. Just had great big old barrels of peas. Then he'd sow peas1 and plant them in the corn. He just raised a lot of stuff. And always had these big old hogs, weigh 500 pounds. They'd be so big they couldn't turn around in the pen. And had awful side a-meat. Momma used to raise a lot of cabbage, and get these great big old barrels. And Aunt Dorthy Allen ~ she was raised up here on the mountain - why, —. 25 1 Peas or beans? Journeys Through Jackson January - February 2003 she'd come down and chop cabbage till she'd get that barrel full of cabbage, and make kraut. Pickled beans. Big old wooden barrel. You seen these big old beer ^j barrels out at A & P? big barrels like that. Put a weight on it, and we'd have kraut and pickled beans all winter long. And they would keep. My daddy used to hire people to help him farm. I know that Homer Buchanan that married my sister, he used to sleep in the smoke-house, because I reckon my daddy and mother didn't want him to sleep in the house where the girls all was [laugh]. So he slept in the smokehouse, but he would eat, and washed his clothes, and everything, and he helped my daddy farm. GF: How many were in your family? GMo: Oh Lord, I'd have to count' em, I guess They's fourteen in all. They's two of them died though. Little Norman they called him. He was small. He died. And then another little baby. They all didn't live through. Pearl that married that Hall, she died. GF: Where did you live? GMo: Right over there [points to Harley Lewis' barn]. You seen that little hump over there? Well they's a house built right there [near Harle/s bam]. That's where I grew up l till my daddy bought that from Zeke Gribble down there, where Alec and KJ Edna lives now. I was still young when he bought it. I was just a child, a -growing up. It was just a box house. Just blocked up, and a chimney. Had just two big rooms in it. Two rooms and two outside doors. And a chimney for heat. My daddy had a lot of work done on It. It wasn't finished upstairs or nothing like that, and so he finished it. The same frame is there yet. Just the inside work done on it GF: When you grew up, was it always sort of like it is now? Sort of a big family community, everybody related to everybody else? GMo: They wasn't then. They wasn't many houses then. But after my family - my brothers and sisters - married , a lot o f x em just married and settled down. Like now, Julius Buchanan, he come over here and he married Carrie and took her over there. Well, John Green come. He's from Greens Creek. Why, he got Nannie, and he settled down. And you see they just built houses. But when I growed up they wasn't many houses. They sure wasn't many houses then. Harley, he lived up on the hill after he went to East Fork and brought Georgie over here. He settled down and built a house up there, and now i f s a bam [soft laugh]. And Roscoe, he went up to Highlands and got Devola and married her, settled down and built up there. KJ 26 Journeys Through Jackson January - February 2003 And then the closest house, I guess, was up at Jim Buchanan, up there where Tom ^ Buchanan lived. And then Fide! Cabe, that"s Alvin and Arthur's daddy and Eddar"s. GF: Did you know most everybody around here though? GMo: Yeah. GF: Did you go visit a lot? GMo: Yeah, we'd visit. What people used to do. But they don't do it no more now. They go somewhere else. My aunt that married Fah Deitz lived across the mountain. I made lots of trips across the mountain to visit my aunt and stay all night with her. GF: Did you get to travel much? GMo: No. No, if we went to Sylvie, we'd have to go In the surrey. I f s something like a hack. You know, a pulled by h o r s e s . . . by mules. We first, when we went to the fair, we went in a wagon. But then my daddy bought him a buggy and we'd go to town, we'd have to ride in that, pulled by the mules. GF: Did you travel much other than to Sylva? GMo: Well, over on Savannah and about No, we never went away off no where. I don't think we ever went to Asheville. Just go from one community to the other. Go over to East Fork and Savannah and Cullowhee and places like that. Back to East LeePort and up to Uncle Huet Moffit's. After we moved down there [Gribble house], we went to the fair lots of times. My daddy had to have the very best mules. He went to Tennessee and picked out his mules. They generally always got the blue ribbon. That was the first prize, the blue ribbon was. He'd take them to the fair. He'd'fatten them up and he'd broach * em, you know the mane. Shear their tails [laughs] and take them to the fair and they'd get the blue ribbon. Well, he'd get a little 'money too. Every time they'd get the first prize, get a little money. But I don't remember how much. One time when he sold a team he got five hundred dollars for that team of mules. And it was all in gold. In pure gold. I f s in gold coins. And Lord, a little five dollar piece was smaller than a penny [laugh]. I know my mother kept it locked up in a machine drawer. Later they put it in a bank. And the first car was ever owned, why my daddy owned i t People didnt know what in the world was coming up Little Savannah, them headlights. Course, K, 27 Journeys Through Jackson January - February 2003 he couldn't drive. Earnest done the driving. Yeah, my daddy never could learn to drive. And old Earnest was the oldest boy, so he leam hisself. They didnt have nobody to teach him, he just learned it hisself. They built a garage right down there where you used to turn up the Henry's. A little house to run the car in there and keep it locked up [soft laugh]. Couldn't get it up to the house. Just rough road and had no way of making a good road. No grave! nor nothing then to put on the road, so they'd just build them a little garage there and parked it, where i f d be handy to get to the road. GF: How are things different now from when you were growing up? GMo: They's just a lot of difference. I don't know exactly how the difference is, but then seem like the parents used to be stricter on the children then they are. They used to be more careful where they went and what they done than they do now. Why, they wasn't much to toiled2 m em off like they is now. Like going to the movies, and things like that. And never used to have even a radio. If you had radio, you had to hook it on a battry. Didnt have electricity. GF: Were your parents strict with you and your brothers and sisters? GMo: Yeah. Yeah, they was. They wouldn't let us go nowhere much. If we went, we had to walk and we didnt do much pretty long walking. We just stayed around home and visited neighbors. GF: Who kept you in fine most? GMo: Mommy was stricter. Mommy was more stricter than Daddy was. She'd do more whipping than my daddy would [soft laugh]. Yeah, she told the young-ins what to do. Well, my daddy and her, got along all right. You know he just left everything up to her . . . I mean to control the children. Yeah, if they's any whipping, why she done the most of it. He didnt. GF: Did she sort of run the home? GMo: Well, no. She'd tell the children what to do and what not to do. Course we had to get out in the field, and my daddy'd tell us what to do there too [laughs]. Hoe corn, and pick beans and peas. Boys, we sure did have a rough time. But then, when we got married, we know'd what to do. We didnt have to leam what to do. We already know'd. KJ Ky KJ 28 Journeys Through Jackson January - February 2003 GF: If you were comparing the way things are today and the way they used to be, like ^ for women, how would you say things are different? Is it better for women today than it used to be? GMo: Well, I dont know. They's a lot of difference in women today and they was back then. They're just more . . . they don't pick up a man and live with him back then, like they do now, and then get married [laughs]. But now they're doing that in this day and time, but they never used to do that. GF: What about girls going to coUege, or the Equal Rights Amendment, or things like that? GMo: Oh Lord, I don't know. Well, women's out on jobs and never used to that a woman had a job . . . a public job. GF: Around here? GMo: Never used to Be. They wasn't nothing to do. They's enough to run t h e . . . like working ih a doctor's office, or being a clerk or anything like that. There's women worked then. But now, they wasn't much a going on no how. Never used to be. V / GF: What do youWnk about women getting out and working nowadays? GMo: Well, f think if they're gonna raise a family, the best thing is to stay at home and raise the family. I think thaf s one reason that so many children gets into things/because other people takes care o f ' em. Yeah, not their mother. I think a mother needs to be at home with the family. But, I reckon they t h i n k . . . I believe in the long run if it keeps on, the man's going to have to stay at home and take care of the family and let the woman get out and make a living. GF: How did you all make a living. Keep animals? GMo: Yeah, we had cows and hogs and chickens and milk cows. And a team of mutes so we could farm a little. GF: Did the boys generally do one thing and girls another? GMo: No, they worked together. Course, the boys done all the plowing, and such as t h a t And the girls, they'd hoe com and make the gardens andwash and cooking [low laugh]. Ky 29 Journeys Through Jackson January - February 2003 GF: Who did the milking? GMo: Well, one time - since we moved here [present house] - why, Dad give one ^ of the girls some money to milk the cows while he was gone fishing. They'd go down here and put a trout line across the river and put the hooks on it and bait it. You didnt have to have a license then to fish in the river. And they didnt know how to milk, and it wore a blister on her hand a-milking those cows [laughs] cause she never had milked none. Lord, I dont remember whether she ever got that cow milked or not, but he'd give her money if she'd milk while he was gone. GF: Was it we boys that generally milked the cows? GMo: Yeah. Your grandpa milked most of the time. GF: Was anything expected different from the girts and the boys? GMo: The girls had to work in the fields just the same as the boys did. Hoe com. And Lord, whenever I'd walk to Webster school and come back of a evening from school, why I'd have to get out and pick beans, or peas, or pull fodder and shuck off shucks for the cattle, and pick out nubbins f o r ' em to eat. Why, we had a rough time. Had so much outdoors work to do. GF: What do you remember about the kind of games you used to play? GMo: We'd just play ring . . . tap hand. You just catch hands and march around, and . . . oh, I forgot how you play it right now. But we'd just catch hands and march around. And we'd play games. Hide and seek. You know what that is [laughs]. They wasnt much to do. Weren't no church to go to, but up on River Hill and that was a long ways off. The Baptist church on this side of the river over yonder at River Bridge in Webster. Me and my Aunt Callie ~ Callie Morgan, my aunt married Claude Morgan's brother - we'd go with them. We'd walk to River Hill to church of a night. When they run a revival, we'd walk. We'd start In time to get there for preaching. We'd go through the Laney field down there at Dan's. They used to be a road through there. It went plum on and we would go down above that church to the main road, go across a bridge and walk up to the old Webster school. No wonder they wadn't many got an education. After I got married, to build this church down here, we'd hold box suppers and sell% em. We'd bake and fry chicken and we'd make up a box and take it and sell it. The men would buy the boxes and sit down. And whoever the box belonged to, they'd eat with them. Eat together [laugh]. My daddy and mother gave the land for the church. y•j KJ KJ 30 Journeys Through Jackson January - February 2003 GF: When did you say you walked to Webster school, when was that? t GMo: Oh,... that was before they build the little school over here. GF: So you went to school at Webster for a while? GMo: Yeah. I first went to school down where Neal's [Lewis] bam js now. The little school building was on my daddy's land. They didnt make a deed and it just fell back to them. I t was grades one to seven. Thaf s where the church was first organized. They'd run revivals. It was a little old graded school. Thaf s where the first Sunday school was Held: The school was just one big room. I t had a stage. They used that for everything. And a stand for the preacher; but it was removed when school was going on. The benches were made out of slats and had slat backs. We had to use oil lamps. And just had a wood stove for heat. But they finally did get gasoline lamps. Carmie Tatham was the teacher. She stayed with Grandma and Grandpa Frizzell when she was teaching. Just one teacher was all. She taught all the grades. There's a pretty good little crowd in school. All my brothers and sisters, and Cabes and the rest, Jim Buchanan's family and all. About thirty or thirty-five in all different grades. When you took up the eighth grade, you had to go to high school. Ky GF: Would you have liked to gone on to more school if you could have? GMo: Well, you s e e , I didn't e v e n finish high school. I think I w e n t to about the eighth or ninth grade. GF: Did you like school? GMo: Not too much. I didn't leam fast like I would if r d studied like I ought to. But they didnt give you homework. What you learnt, you leamt at school. You didnt bring no homework home to do. And I always had to work when I come home anyways. Aint' like children now. They have a lot of homework and cant do nothing, cause they got a good excuse - "I got to do my homework." [Ed. We will continue with the Frizzell interview in our next issue.] Ky 31 Journeys Through Jackson January - February 2003 J C G S L i b r a r y A c q u i s i t i o n s Call No. 929.3 929.3 929.3 9293 975.2 286.1 975.6 975.6 Author Riddle, Merrell J. Taft, Katharine H. Haywood Co. Genealogical Society Haywood Co. Genealogical Society Coldham, Peter Wilson Allen, W.C. Title Graham County, North Carolina Marriages Polk County, North Carolina Cemeteries Directions to the Cemeteries of Haywood County Haywood County Deaths and Burials 1986-1995 Settlers of Maryland, 1679-1783 Caney Fork Baptist Church Minutes 1836-1899 The Annals of Haywood County, NC The Heritage of Alexander County, NC, Volume 1-1986 Donor Merrell Jenkins Riddle Purchase Purchase Purchase Purchase Walter Middleton Purchase Purchase KJ I t e m s f o r S a l e b y J C G S Title Jackson County Heritage, Volume I The Cemeteries of Jackson County Jackson County Superior Court Docket Book Jackson County Delayed Births, Volume 1(M) Jackson County Delayed Births, Volume II(M) Swain County Delayed Births (M) Graham County Delayed Births(M) The Cemeteries of Swain CountyfS) Swain County Marriages(S) The Wike FamUy (W) Journeys Through Jackson, VoL 1,1991 Journeys Through Jackson (any other VoL) Local Price $64.00 $35.00 $15.00 $21.20 $21.20 $21.20 $21.20 $45.40 $34.75 $64.00 $10.00 $15.00 Postpaid Price $69.00 $38.50 $17.00 $23.50 $23.50 $23.50 $23.50 $48.00 $37.50 $68.00 $12.00 $17.50 KJ Letter Codes Above: M= Merrell Jenkins Riddle, author S= Swain County Genealogical Society publications W= Monte and Noma Wike, authors Note: Our second Volume Heritage Book is temporarily sold out. We are compiling a waiting list of interested persons. y 32 Journeys Through Jackson January - F e b r u a r y 2003 Ky I n d e x f o r JTJ, V o l . X I I I , N o s . 1 ,2 Ky Ky Ahlin 17 Alberson 21,22 Albertson 23 Alexander 17 Allen 18, 32 Allison 9,10,11,12,17 Anderson 9,17 Arrington 11 Ash 9, 10, 12,14 Ashe 12, 18,19 Ashley 20 Axley 9 Ball 21 Banks 17 Barker 25 Barnes 9, 17,20 Bates 22 Battle 22 Beasley 6 Beck 12,17,23 Berrier 22 Berry 21 Bieson 9 Birchfield 9 Bishop 17 Black 22 Blanton 11 Blythe 17 Bobbitt 21 Boone 17 Boyd 9, 18 Bracken 17 Bradley 6, 17,18,20 Bradshaw 22,23 Brendle 18 Brock 16 Brooks 7,11,17, 18 Brown 9,10, 17, 18 Bryson 2, 9,+10, 11, 12, 17, 18, 20 Buchanan 3, 7, 10, 17, 18, 26, 27,31 Buchhanan 9 Bukham 10 Bumgarner 9,10, 12, 17, 18, 20 Burch 21 Burchfiel 21,22 Burchfield 22 Burnette 20 Burns 22 Burress 19 Byrely21 Cabe 19,27,31 Cable 18 Caldwell 20 Campbell 18,20 Carroll 18 Carson 18 Carter 5 Carver 10 Carver 9 Cathey 18 Chapman 18 Clodfe21 Clodfelter 21 Coats 17 Coggins 18 Coldham 32 Collins 2,22 Conley 9 Conrad 21 Cosner21 Coster 18 Cowan 17 Coward 9, 17,18, 19,20 Crawford 8,9, 11,17,18 Cremering 19 Cunningham 19 Dalton 18 Davis 9,11, 18,19,22 Dean 18 Deitz 17,27 Dill 9,10 Dillard 9,20 Dills 10,17,18 Dorsey 18 Dowdle 22 Drum 13 Dryman 20 Dunn 18 Duval 23 Edwards 21 Ellis 19 Enloe 10 Ensley 17 Everhart 22,23 Ferguson 2 Fisher 2,9, 12, 22 Floyd 10, 11,12 Fouts 21 Fox 12, 17, 18 Foxx, 1,4 Frady 18,25 Franks 18 Freeman 19 Frizzell 25, 31 Fulbright 14,15,16 Fulks21 Fullbright 12,13,14,15, 16, 18, Furs 20 Gallehan 22 Garrett 12 Gentry 17 Gibson 22 Gilliland 18 Gobson 19 Goodwin 8 Graves 9 Gray 19,21,22,24 Green 5,6,12,18,19,21,25,26 Greer 22 Gribble 9,26 Guilliams 18 Hagea 22 Hager 22 Hall 6, 12,18,19,21 Hamilton 23 Hammer 22,24 Hampton 17 Hancock 22 Harper 17 Harris 6, 11 Haynes 14,19 Henderson 12, 24 Henry 11 Henson 9,17 Hicks 9 Higdon 10,17 Hill 23 Hilton 24 Hoffman 10 Holcombe 18 Holde 17 Hollingsworth 13 Hood 20 Hooper 8, 9,12, 17, 19,20 Hornbuckle 17 Howell 19 Hoyle 18 Huffman 14 Hughes 2, 12 Hughs 9, 10, 11 Hunt 21, 23 Hunter 21 Hurst 19 Hutson 22 Hyatt 2 Inderhees 19 Jackson 11,17 James 22 Jenkins 24,32 Johnston 9 Jones 1,9,10,11,13,16,18,19, 20,24 Jordon 19 33 Journeys Through Jackson January - February 2003 King 10,11,12 Kipley 23 Lamb 22 Lany 11 Lawless 22 Ledford 21 Leonard 23 Lewis 19, 25,26,31 Lindsey 18 Liner 20 Long 18,22 Love 11, 18 Lowe 23 Lowey 23 Macay 24 Martin 12 Mason 18 Massie 17 Mathews 19 Mathis 18,19 McClure 16 McLaughlin 19 McMahan 5,9, 10,18,20 Medford 15 Medlin 23,24 Melton 19 Melton 19 Middleton 9, 32 Mills 19 Mitchell 22 Mock 21,23 Moffitt 19,27 Monteith 11,19 Moody 15,18 Moore 12 Morgan 17,30 Morrow 17 Moss 19,20 Mull 19 Mullenhoffl7 Myers 21,22 Nations 12,20 Newton 17,21 Nichols 19 Nicholson 20 Nickles 24 Nooe21,23 Norman 19 Norton 9 Osborne 24 Owen 18,20 Painter 18 Pangle 6 Parker 2,10, 17 Parks 11,12,23 Parris 11,12,22 Parton 20 Patterson 9 Pattison 21 Paxton 18 Peace 23 Pearson 9 Penley 18 Perryman 22,23 Peyattl9 Phillips 17,19,20 Porter 23 Potts 11,19 Powell 19 Pressley 18, 19 Putnam 12 Queen 2,9,10,11,12,20 Raby 6 Randle 15 Ray 20 Reagan 20 Reed 9 Regans 23 Rickard 24 Riddle 32 Riley 23 Robinson 2 Rogers 9,17,20 Roper 20 Russell 15 Seagle 20 Sechrist 23 Sellers 12 Shed 19 Shelton 11,12,17 Sherrill 10,11,12,20 Shops 21,23 Shulahr22 Shular 21,22 Shuler 9, 10, 11, 18, 19,21,22, 23,24 Shules 24 Shytles 6 Siler21,23 Slagle 22 Smith 17,18 Snyder 2, 17,20 Springer 20 Statler 13,14 Steel 22 Stewart 9,10,19,20 Stockton 21 Stone 22 Strutton 12 Styles 20 Sutton 3,20 Swaim21 TaffI9 Taft32 Tallent 20 Tatham 9,10,17,20,31 Taylor 12 Thomas 9 Thompson 3,19 Ticcinger 21 Tilley 11 Tillson 17 Tomlinson 23 Trantham 1, 5,6,7 Tucker 22 Turpin 20 Veach 24 Walters 17 Warren 20 Watson 11,20 Waycaster 18 Weaver 13,23,24 Webb 6 Welch 9,11,19 West 20 Wigg21 Wiggins 9,21 Wike 10,11, 12,14,17,32 Williams 23,24 Williamson 21 Willis 21 Wilson 5, 6,9,10,11,17,18 Wood 9, 10,11,20 Woodring 14,19 Woods 16,23 Yokley 22 Young 17 Ky KJ KJ 34