Tuesday, April 7, 2026

Aunts & Uncles~The Life of Dempsey Rivers (1830 – 1861)

The “Aunts & Uncles” series of biographical sketches are Artificial Intelligence (AI) compiled narratives of selected individuals from my Genealogical database.  The selected AI will used the RootsMagic Individual Summary from my Genealogical Software, Roots Magic. All genealogical data is my research material acquired over the past 46 years of research. Today's Biography of The Life of Dempsey Rivers (1830-1861) was compiled with the assistance of Claude Sonnett 4 and is entitled: 

"The Life of Dempsey Rivers"

1830 – 1861

Chesterfield County, South Carolina

 

 

Introduction

Dempsey Rivers was born in 1830 in Chesterfield County, South Carolina, into a farming family with deep roots in that corner of the state. His life was brief — barely thirty-one years — but it was full enough to leave a paper trail that tells us something real about the man: a son, a husband (twice over), a father, a farmer, a neighbor who co-signed a debt, and finally a soldier who never came home. His story is inseparable from the turbulent era he lived through, from the cotton-belt world of antebellum South Carolina to the opening months of the Civil War.

This biography draws on census records, military service records, probate files, and courthouse documents to piece together the arc of Dempsey's short life and the family he left behind.

 

Parents and Early Family

Dempsey was one of several children born to William Rivers (born about 1776) and his wife Elizabeth "Betsy" Rivers (maiden name unknown, died before 1847). William Rivers was an aging farmer by the time Dempsey came along — already in his mid-fifties at the time of Dempsey's birth — and the household he ran was a busy one.

The 1850 federal census gives us a snapshot of the Rivers home in Chesterfield District. At that point, William Rivers was 75 years old and still listed as head of household. Living with him were several of his children, including:

Nancy Rivers, age 26

William A. Rivers, age 22

Dempsey Rivers, age 20

James Rivers, age 15

Also living in the household were a Sarah Davis (age 31) and her children Frederick, Hannah, and Elijah Davis — likely a widowed sister or relative who had moved in. The Rivers were a typical Chesterfield farming family, working the land and looking out for one another the way rural Southern families did.

Dempsey's mother, Elizabeth "Betsy," had died by 1847, so she was not around to see her son grow into adulthood.

 

The World Dempsey Grew Up In

Antebellum Chesterfield County

Chesterfield County in the 1830s–1850s was a world of small farms, pine forests, and red clay soil. Cotton was king across much of the Carolina Piedmont, and families like the Rivers worked hard to carve a living out of the land. The county seat of Chesterfield (also known as Chesterfield Court House) was a small but active community with a courthouse, churches, and the social rhythms of rural Southern life.

The 1850s were a decade of mounting political tension across the South. South Carolina, in particular, was a hotbed of states' rights sentiment and fire-eating secessionist politics. The Compromise of 1850, the publication of Uncle Tom's Cabin in 1852, and the violent battles over slavery in "Bleeding Kansas" (1854–1858) kept the country on edge. By the time Dempsey was a young man, secession was a topic discussed in every courthouse and church in the state.

A telling note survives from family correspondence: Dempsey co-signed a document with his brother William Alfred in 1855, agreeing to pay Edward Malloy $36.00 for the hire of a enslaved boy. This single detail confirms that, like many Chesterfield County families of modest means, the Rivers were part of the slave economy even without being large planters — hiring enslaved labor for seasonal work was common.

 

First Marriage: Eliza Ann Dozier

Around 1854, Dempsey married Eliza Ann Dozier, born on April 8, 1836, in Chesterfield County. Eliza Ann had been living in the household of John Isaac Huntley as a young girl, as shown in the 1850 census, where she appears at age 13. She was the daughter of James Dozier (died 1848) and Britten Dozier (died 1852), and had likely been taken in by the Huntley family after losing both parents.

The marriage produced one child, a daughter named Georgia Ann Rivers, born around December 1855. Tragedy followed swiftly. Eliza Ann died on December 11, 1856, at only 20 years, 8 months, and 3 days of age — her tombstone in Kite Cemetery records this with precision. Family notes suggest it is quite possible that both mother and infant daughter died as a result of childbirth complications. Georgia Ann survived her mother by just two days, dying on December 13, 1856. She is buried beside her mother at Kite Cemetery in Chesterfield County. Her tombstone reads: "age 1 year, daughter of D. R. and E. A. Rivers."

Dempsey found himself a widower at around age 26, having lost both his wife and his only child within the span of two days. It was a devastating blow, and one that makes his decision to start again — and the family he built with Sarah Ann Massey — all the more poignant.

 

Second Marriage: Sarah Ann Massey

About 1858, Dempsey married for the second time, this time to Sarah Ann Massey, who was born in 1844 in Chesterfield County — making her about 14 or 15 years old at the time of their marriage. Child marriages of this kind were not unusual in mid-19th-century rural South Carolina, particularly when a family was comfortable with the match.

Sarah Ann was the daughter of William Lawrence Massey (1815–1862) and Huldah Elizabeth Meadows (1811–1886), a large and well-connected Chesterfield family. Sarah had numerous siblings, including sisters Mary Ann (who married into the Rivers family herself, wedding a Phillip Rivers) and Lydia (who married a William J. Rivers). It seems the Massey and Rivers families were closely intertwined.

The 1860 federal census — taken just a year before the war — gives us our clearest picture of Dempsey's household. He appears there under the name "Duncan Rivers" (likely a census taker's error or a nickname), listed as a 30-year-old male born in South Carolina. Living with him are Sarah, age 16, and their infant son James W. T. Rivers, listed as just six months old.

1860 Census, Chesterfield, South Carolina: Duncan Rivers, 30, male, SC; Sarah Rivers, 16, female, SC; James W. T. Rivers, 6/12, male, SC.

It was a young, growing family. By all appearances, life was going along as expected for a Chesterfield farming couple — until April 1861 changed everything.

 

Children

Georgia Ann Rivers (abt. December 1855 – December 13, 1856)

Georgia Ann was the only child of Dempsey's first marriage, to Eliza Ann Dozier. She was born around December 1855 and lived for approximately one year. She died on December 13, 1856 — just two days after her mother — and is buried alongside Eliza Ann at Kite Cemetery in Chesterfield, South Carolina. Her small tombstone, recorded in the Chesterfield County Cemetery Survey, identifies her simply as "age 1 year, daughter of D. R. and E. A. Rivers." She never had the chance to know her father, and Dempsey never had the chance to watch her grow up. Both mother and child are memorialized on Find A Grave (Memorial #40202633 and #40202722).

James William Thomas "Catfish" Rivers (1859–1931)

James was born on November 19, 1859, making him just a baby when his father left for the war. He grew up in Chesterfield County, raised by his widowed mother and later in the household of his uncle Phillip Rivers (as shown in the 1880 census, where he appears as a nephew). Despite losing his father so young, James built a full life. He married Mary Eliza Davis on March 23, 1879, and they had eight children together, six of whom survived to adulthood. He was a faithful member of Zoar United Methodist Church for fifty years, serving thirty years as a church steward.

His obituary in The Chesterfield Advertiser, February 4, 1932, remembered him warmly: the son of Dempsey and Sarah Massey Rivers, a churchman, a husband, a father. He died on December 7, 1931, and was buried at Zoar United Methodist Church Cemetery in Brocks Mill, Chesterfield County.

Sarah Elizabeth "Lizzie" Rivers (1861–1926)

Sarah Elizabeth was born on September 4, 1861 — just months before her father died in November of that year. She never knew him. She was raised by her mother and, after her mother's tragic death in 1871, came under the guardianship of her uncle Phillip Rivers.

Lizzie married James Hampton Tucker around 1878 and eventually made her way to Union Parish, Louisiana, where she and James raised their family. She appears in the 1900, 1910, and 1920 censuses in Louisiana, building a life far from Chesterfield. She died on June 26, 1926, and was buried at Brantley Cemetery in Union Parish, Louisiana.

 

Civil War Service and Death

Enlisting in Company B, 8th South Carolina Infantry

On April 13, 1861 — just two days after Confederate forces opened fire on Fort Sumter in Charleston Harbor — Dempsey Rivers enlisted as a private in Company B of the 8th Regiment, South Carolina Infantry. The timing was nearly simultaneous with the very opening shots of the war, reflecting the intense wave of enlistment that swept through South Carolina in the spring of 1861.

South Carolina had been the first state to secede from the Union, doing so on December 20, 1860. By April 1861, war fever was running high, and thousands of young men across the state rushed to enlist. For Dempsey, who was 30 years old and the father of a baby boy with another child on the way, the decision to enlist may have been a matter of community pressure, personal conviction, or both.

Disease in the Confederate Army

Dempsey's military service was heartbreakingly brief. He never saw a major battle. On October 29, 1861 — just six and a half months after he enlisted — he was admitted to a hospital suffering from chronic dysentery. He was transferred to Union Hills on November 1, 1861.

Disease was by far the greatest killer of Civil War soldiers on both sides. In the Confederate Army, for every soldier who died in combat, roughly two died of illness. Typhoid fever, dysentery, pneumonia, and measles swept through the camps with devastating efficiency. Dempsey had barely been in the army long enough to fire a shot before disease caught up with him.

Death

Dempsey Rivers died of typhoid fever, somewhere around Petersburg, Virginia, in November 1861. The exact date is recorded slightly differently across sources — the Confederate States Treasury document gives November 9, 1861, while his Civil War Service Record states November 13, 1861. The book Broken Fortunes: South Carolina Soldiers, Sailors and Citizens Who Died in the Service of Their Country (compiled by Randolph W. Kirkland Jr. and published by the South Carolina Historical Society) lists him among the Roll of the Dead for Company B, 8th South Carolina Infantry.

He was 31 years old. His son James was not yet two years old. His daughter Sarah Elizabeth would be born just weeks later, in September — meaning Dempsey died before he ever knew he had a daughter.

 

The Widow Sarah Ann Massey Rivers

Sarah Ann was barely 17 years old when she became a widow with an infant son. The years that followed were hard ones for South Carolina families left behind by the war. She raised her two young children — James and the newborn Sarah Elizabeth — through the chaos of the war years and Reconstruction.

At some point between 1861 and 1867, Sarah Ann remarried, this time to a man named Leander Sweat (also written as Sweatt). The 1870 census shows the family in Chesterfield Court House: Sarah Sweat, age 28; J. Sweat (James Rivers), age 11; S. Sweat (Sarah Elizabeth Rivers), age 9; and H. Sweat (Henry Sweat), age 4 — the last name, Henry, likely being a child of her second marriage.

The legal records from Dempsey's estate are complicated and tell their own story of the chaos that followed wartime death. William L. Massey — Sarah's own father — had been named administrator of Dempsey's estate after the latter's death, but Massey himself died in May 1862. A second administrator, Thomas P. Davis, was eventually named on August 10, 1866. The estate wasn't sorted out for years.

A Tragic End

Sarah Ann's story ended in violence on February 4, 1871. She was found dead in her yard at sunrise, and a coroner's inquest was immediately convened: "The State vs. The Dead Body of Sarah Sweat." The official finding was death "by the visitation of Providence," but the testimony gathered at the inquest painted a much darker picture.

Multiple witnesses reported that a man named Stephen Talbert had been terrorizing Sarah for more than a year. He had shot at her, grabbed her, threatened to kill her, and told her repeatedly that she should not marry anyone else — that if she did, he would kill any man he saw talking to her. Sarah had reportedly told witnesses she was afraid to go to the authorities because she feared he would kill her. The perpetrator named in the inquest record is Stephen Talbert.

Sarah Ann Massey Rivers Sweat died at approximately 27 years of age, leaving behind her two children from her first marriage and at least one child from her second marriage. She is remembered in the probate records of Chesterfield County as Estate Folder #535.

 

Legacy

Dempsey Rivers lived for only about 31 years, and his direct impact on the world around him was necessarily limited by that brevity. But the family he helped bring into existence carried on. His son James — nicknamed "Catfish" — lived to 72 years of age and built a full life as a churchman and family man in Chesterfield County. His daughter Sarah Elizabeth crossed state lines to Louisiana and raised a family there.

The documents that survive about Dempsey — census pages, a military service record, probate folders, a courthouse lawsuit — are the quiet traces of an ordinary life caught in an extraordinary moment in American history. He was not a general or a politician. He was a farmer from Chesterfield County who enlisted in the opening days of a catastrophic war and was dead within seven months, taken not by a bullet but by disease.

His widow and children struggled through a generation of upheaval — war, Reconstruction, a violent death, legal battles over an estate that took years to settle. And yet the family persisted. That persistence is Dempsey Rivers's real legacy.


Dempsey Rivers is my 3rd Great Grand Uncle. 


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1. 1850 U. S. Census, Chesterfield County, South Carolina, population schedule, Chesterfield District, South Carolina, Page 179B, Line 16, family  1242, dwelling 1242, Household of William Rivers; digital images, Ancestry.com (http://www.ancestry.com : accessed 2010); citing  National Archives Microfilm M432 Roll 851.

3. 1860 U. S. Census, Chesterfield County, South Carolina, population schedule, Chesterfield, South Carolina, Page: 115 (stamped); Line 27, Dwelling 299, Family 299, Household of Duncan RIVERS; digital images, Ancestry.com (http://www.ancestry.com : viewed 31 July 2013); citing National Archives Microfilm M653_1217.

4. Randolph W. Kirkland Jr., Broken Fortunes: South Carolina Soldiers, Sailors and Citizens Who Died in the Service of Their Country and State in the War for Southern Independence, 1861-1865 (Columbia, South Carolina: University of South Carolina, 1997), page 298.

5. Ancestry, "Civil War Service Records" database, Military Service Records (https://www.fold3.com/ : accessed 31 July 2013), entry for Dempsey RIVERS, Private; Co. B, 8th Infantry, South Carolina Volunteers; Confederate.

6. William J. Rivers, Roll of the Dead: South Carolina Troops, Confederate States Service (Columbia, South Carolina: South Carolina Department of Archives and History, 1994), Dempsey Rivers.

7. Kirkland, Broken Fortunes, page 298.

8. James C. Pigg, Cheraw/Chesterfield District Wills, 1750-1865: Abstracts from the Court of Common Pleas 1823-1869 (Tega Cay, South Carolina: Self-published, 1995), page 133.

9. "South Carolina Probate Records, Files and Loose Papers, 1732-1964," Church of Jesus Christ of the Latter Day Saints, Family Search (https://www.familysearch.org/ : viewed 3 August 2011), images, "Dempsey RIVERS, Probate Folder #11," Images 159-172.

10. Find A Grave, Inc., Find A Grave, database and digital images, (http://www.findagrave.com : accessed  5 June 2012); Memorial page for Eliza A. Rivers; (8 April 1836–11 December 1856); Find a Grave memorial # 40202633, Citing Kite Cemetery; Chesterfield, Chesterfield County, South Carolina, USA.

11. 1850 U. S. Census, Chesterfield, Chesterfield County, South Carolina, population schedule, Chesterfield, Chesterfield County, South Carolina, Page: 175B; Line 11, Dwelling 1182, Family 1182, Household of  John HUNTLY; digital images, Ancestry.com (http://www.ancestry.com : viewed 14 February 2015); citing  National Archives Microfilm M432 Roll 851.

12. Find A Grave, Inc., Find A Grave, database, "Record, Eliza A. Rivers (8 April 1836–11 December 1856), Memorial # 40202633.

13. James C. Pigg, Chesterfield County Cemetery Survey; Chesterfield County Genealogical Services, 1995, page 1129. Tombstone of Georgia A. RIVERS; Unk. - Dec. 13, 1856., Kite Cemetery, Chesterfield County, South Carolina.

14. Find A Grave, Inc., Find A Grave, database, "Record, Georgia A. Rivers (Unk. - Dec. 13, 1856), Memorial # 40202722.

15. Chesterfield County, South Carolina, Probate Files & Loose papers, Dempsey Rivers; digital images, Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, FamilySearch (http://www.familysearch.org: online November 2024); 11.

16. Pigg, Cheraw/Chesterfield District Wills, 1750-1865, page 133.

17. 1870 U. S. Census, Court House, Chesterfield County, South Carolina, population schedule, Court House, Chesterfield, South Carolina, Page 30/302B(stamped); Line 5, Dwelling 294, Family 294, Household of S. SWEET; digital image, Ancestry.com (http://www.ancestry.com : viewed 31 July 2013); citing National Archive  Microfilm M593, Roll 1491.

18. Chesterfield County, South Carolina, Estate Folder #535, Sarah [Massey Rivers] Sweat; SC Archives & History, Columbia, South Carolina.

19. Chesterfield County, South Carolina, Corners Inquest https://csidixie.org/inquests/4092, THE STATE VS. THE DEAD BODY OF SARAH SWEAT, Death of Sarah Sweat, 4 February 1871; South Carolina Department of Archives & History, Columbia, Richland, South Carolina.

20. Chesterfield County, South Carolina Estate Folder #535.


Saturday, April 4, 2026

52 Cousins~Abraham Dry & Wife, Mary Catherine "Polly" Harkey

The “52 Cousins” series of biographical sketches are Artificial Intelligence (AI) compiled narratives of selected individuals from my Genealogical database.  The selected AI will used documents and data from my RootsMagic Genealogical Software. All genealogical data is my research material acquired over the past 49+ years of research. Today's Biography of Abraham Dry (1804-1865) was compiled with the assistance of Claude Sonnett 4 and is entitled:

Abraham Dry

19 October 1804 – 3 April 1865

Cabarrus County, North Carolina

Overview

Abraham Dry was a farmer and landholder who spent his entire life in Cabarrus County, North Carolina — a community of German-descended families who had settled the Piedmont region generations before him. He was born in 1804, grew up during the era of westward expansion and early American nationhood, married young, raised a large family, and died just weeks after the Civil War's final battles. His story is woven into the fabric of small-town, rural North Carolina life, shaped by hard work, land, family ties, and the turbulent events of the mid-nineteenth century.

Parents and Family Origins

Abraham was born on October 19, 1804, in Cabarrus County, North Carolina, the son of Phillip Wiley Dry (1759–1837) and Catherine Köppel (1771–1830). His parents were part of the wave of German Lutheran and Reformed immigrants — often called the Pennsylvania Dutch — who settled the Carolina Piedmont in the late 1700s. The Dry (originally Drei or Drei) and Köppel families were deeply embedded in this tight-knit community of Germanic settlers who farmed, worshipped, and intermarried across the region for generations.

Phillip Wiley Dry was already in his mid-forties when Abraham was born, and he lived to see his son married and settled before passing away in 1837. Abraham's mother, Catherine Köppel, died in 1830, the same year Abraham married — she likely never met her daughter-in-law. Growing up in this household, Abraham would have been shaped by the values of his community: hard work, thriftiness, deep religious faith, and strong attachment to the land.

Historical context: Abraham came of age during a remarkable period in American history. When he was born in 1804, Thomas Jefferson was president and the Lewis and Clark Expedition was just getting underway. During his youth, the War of 1812 was fought, and the "Era of Good Feelings" brought a brief period of national unity. The state of North Carolina was growing rapidly, and Cabarrus County — formed in 1792 — was still a relatively young, developing community.

Marriage to Mary Catherine "Polly" Harkey

On February 9, 1830, Abraham Dry married Mary Catherine "Polly" Harkey in Cabarrus County. A marriage notice published in The North Carolina Star on April 1, 1830, announced the event: the wedding of Mr. Abraham Dry to Miss Polly Harkey, daughter of Jacob Harkey, Esq. Polly was born on October 26, 1811, also in Cabarrus County, making her about eighteen years old at the time of the wedding and Abraham about twenty-five — a typical age difference for the era.

The Harkey family was another prominent German-descended family in Cabarrus County. Polly's father, Jacob Harkey, Esq., was a well-regarded local figure — the title "Esq." suggesting he held some standing in the community, likely as a justice of the peace or a respected landowner. The Harkey and Dry families were already neighbors and community members, so this was very much a marriage within a close-knit social world.

Polly's brother Eli Harkey served as bondsman for the marriage bond, filed on February 27, 1830, with James G. Spears as witness — a common legal formality of the day that ensured the marriage was above board and the couple had community support.

Land and Livelihood

On October 25, 1834, just four years into his marriage, Abraham acquired 124 acres of land in Cabarrus County through a deed from his father-in-law, Jacob Harkey, Sr. — a generous and practical gift to help the young couple establish themselves. This land became the foundation of the family's farming life. In this era before mechanized agriculture, farming required the labor of the whole household: clearing land, tending crops of wheat, corn, rye, oats, and hay, and maintaining livestock including horses, cattle, hogs, and sheep.

The 1850 and 1860 federal censuses confirm Abraham as a resident farmer in Cabarrus County. By 1860, his household in the Subdivision East of the NC Railroad (a geographical designation used by census takers) was a busy one, with several adult children still living at home and presumably helping work the land.

When Abraham wrote his will in 1865, he painted a vivid picture of what he owned: household and kitchen furniture, weaving cards, spinning wheels, a loom, provisions including bacon, lard, salt, wheat, corn, hay, oats, rye and growing crops, two horses with wagon and gear, a cutting box, a windmill, and all manner of farming tools. This was the inventory of a self-sufficient, working farm — modest but sufficient for a large family.

Historical context: The 1830s and 1840s were a time of great change in North Carolina. The state's economy was still largely agricultural and rural. The completion of the North Carolina Railroad through the Piedmont in the 1850s was a transformative event — it linked communities like Cabarrus County to markets in the east and west, changing how farmers sold their goods and how communities grew. Abraham's land near the NC Railroad suggests he was well-positioned to benefit from this development.

A Family Tragedy: The Death of Polly

Sadly, Mary Catherine "Polly" Harkey Dry died on April 17, 1846, at just thirty-four years old. She and Abraham had been married sixteen years, and she left behind seven children ranging in age from about one to fourteen years old. Her death must have been a devastating blow to the family. The cause of her death is not recorded, but childbirth-related illness, fever, and infections were common killers of young women in this era.

Polly was buried at Henkelite Cemetery in Mount Pleasant, Cabarrus County — a Lutheran congregation cemetery that served the German community of the area. Abraham never remarried, raising his children as a widower for the remaining nineteen years of his life.

Children

Abraham and Polly had seven children, all born in Cabarrus County, North Carolina:

Mary Ann Dry (July 6, 1831 – November 2, 1904)

Mary Ann was the eldest child, born just a year after her parents married. She appears in both the 1850 and 1860 censuses living in her father's household, and she never appears to have married. She lived well into adulthood, eventually dying on November 2, 1904, in Zion, Somerset County, New Jersey — far from her North Carolina roots, suggesting she may have relocated north in her later years.

Margaret Purlina Dry (July 6, 1833 – February 12, 1892)

Margaret was born the same day as her older sister — July 6 — two years later, which is a remarkable coincidence. She married Caleb Franklin Allman (1853–1914) on July 27, 1873, and they remained in Cabarrus County. In 1866, following her father's death, she was named in guardianship proceedings — likely as a minor or young adult needing her affairs managed during the estate settlement. She died on February 12, 1892, in Cabarrus County. She is buried there, with a Find a Grave memorial on record.

Rebecca Maria Dry (August 27, 1834 – October 12, 1906)

Rebecca was born in August 1834, the year her parents received their land grant. She married Daniel Noah Corl (1834–1910) on February 8, 1867, in Cabarrus County. Rebecca died on October 12, 1906, in Cabarrus County. She is buried there as well, with a Find a Grave memorial on record.

Elizabeth Matilda Dry (February 12, 1838 – November 23, 1914)

Elizabeth, born in 1838, married Michael Caleb Rhinehardt (1843–1926) on August 9, 1866. She lived a long life, dying on November 23, 1914. She is buried at Organ Lutheran Church Cemetery in Salisbury, Rowan County, North Carolina — still within the region her family had called home for generations. The Organ Lutheran Church, founded in the 1700s, was one of the earliest Lutheran congregations in North Carolina, reflecting the deep roots of the German Lutheran community in this area.

Jacob Mathias Dry (May 16, 1840 – February 9, 1910)

Jacob was the only son in the family, born in 1840. He married Martha E. Rendleman on May 25, 1864, while his father was still living. In his father's will, Jacob received only ten dollars — a notable contrast to the extensive property left to his sisters. This was not necessarily a slight; it was common in this era to give sons cash or land while leaving the household goods and movable property to daughters who remained at home to care for aging parents. Jacob eventually moved west, and he died on February 9, 1910, in Makanda, Jackson County, Illinois — far from his Carolina birthplace.

Eleanor Adeline "Nellie" Dry (November 20, 1842 – April 10, 1926)

Nellie, as she was known, was born in 1842 and married Alfred Monroe Coleman (1838–1886) on June 2, 1866, in Cabarrus County. She, too, eventually left North Carolina, living out her later years in Anna, Union County, Illinois, where she died on April 10, 1926. She was buried on April 12, 1926, at Anna Cemetery in Anna, Illinois. At eighty-three years old, Nellie was the longest-lived of Abraham's children.

Polly Mellisa Dry (born about 1845)

Polly Mellisa, named for her mother, was the youngest child, born around 1845 — just about a year before her mother's death. She appears in the 1850, 1860 and 1870 censuses in her father's household. Like her sister Margaret, she was listed in guardianship proceedings in 1866 after her father's death. Her date of death and any marriage record have not been found among the current records.

The Civil War Years

Abraham Dry's final years were lived in the shadow of the Civil War (1861–1865). North Carolina seceded from the Union in May 1861, and Cabarrus County sent many of its men to fight for the Confederacy. As a man in his late fifties by the time the war began, Abraham himself was past fighting age, but the war would have profoundly affected his community — neighbors gone, food and supplies scarce, anxiety ever-present.

On March 3, 1865 — just weeks before the war's end — Abraham dictated and signed his Last Will and Testament. He was described as being "of sound mind and memory" but clearly aware of his mortality, reflecting on "the uncertainty of any earthly existence." The document is a touching and practical piece of family history, carefully dividing his possessions among his children. Perhaps he sensed the end was near; he was sixty years old and the war had taken a heavy toll on North Carolina's communities.

Abraham Dry died on April 3, 1865 — just four days before Robert E. Lee surrendered at Appomattox Court House on April 9, ending the Civil War. He did not live to see the end of the conflict that had so dominated the nation's last four years. He was sixty years old. He was buried at Henkelite Cemetery in Mount Pleasant, Cabarrus County, alongside his wife Polly, who had preceded him by nineteen years.

Historical context: The spring of 1865 was one of the most momentous in American history. General William Sherman's Union army had swept through the Carolinas just weeks before Abraham's death, and North Carolina was in turmoil. The surrender at Appomattox came just days after Abraham passed, followed by Lincoln's assassination on April 14, 1865 — less than two weeks after Abraham's death. The world he had known was coming apart and being rebuilt simultaneously.

Abraham's Will and the Settlement of His Estate

Abraham's will, probated at the Cabarrus County Court July Term in 1865, offers a warm and detailed glimpse into his values and family relationships. He appointed John L. Henderson as his executor, and directed that his debts and funeral expenses be paid first. He then left the bulk of his personal property — all the household furnishings, farm equipment, livestock, provisions, and tools — to his six daughters jointly, to be held in common or divided equally among them.

His son Jacob received only ten dollars in cash. The real estate was to be divided equally among all his children. Any surplus after debts were paid was also to be split equally. The will was witnessed by Mathias Cook and John L. Henderson, and duly proven in open court. It's a document that speaks to a man who wanted fairness and cared deeply for his daughters, who had remained with him and kept the household running through the difficult years of widowhood.

After Abraham's death, in June 1866, his daughters sold the family land for $75.00 — recorded in Deed Book 22, page 49, of Cabarrus County's Register of Deeds. That same month, several of the daughters married and began their own households, signaling the formal close of the family's long chapter on their Cabarrus County farm.

Legacy and Resting Place

Abraham Dry rests at Henkelite Cemetery in Mount Pleasant, Cabarrus County, North Carolina, alongside his beloved wife Polly. The Henkelite Cemetery takes its name from the Henkel family, early Lutheran leaders in the region, and it served the German-descended Lutheran community to which Abraham and his family belonged.

His children scattered after his death — some staying in Cabarrus County, others heading west to Illinois, and one reaching New Jersey. They carried with them the values of their Cabarrus County upbringing: industriousness, family loyalty, and the deep roots of a German-American community that had been building a life in the Carolina Piedmont for generations.

Abraham Dry's Find a Grave memorial (#29718932) was created in September 2008, and over the years, descendants and researchers have added information and left flowers in memory of him and his family. His story, pieced together from census records, deeds, wills, marriage bonds, and a single newspaper announcement, is the story of an ordinary man living through extraordinary times — and that makes it all the more worth telling.

Quick Reference: Family Summary

Abraham Dry

Born: October 19, 1804 | Cabarrus County, NC

Died: April 3, 1865 | Mount Pleasant, Cabarrus County, NC

Buried: Henkelite Cemetery, Mount Pleasant, Cabarrus County, NC

 

Parents

Father: Phillip Wiley Dry (1759–1837)

Mother: Catherine Köppel (1771–1830)

 

Wife

Mary Catherine "Polly" Harkey (October 26, 1811 – April 17, 1846)

Married: February 9, 1830 | Cabarrus County, NC

 

Children

1. Mary Ann Dry (July 6, 1831 – November 2, 1904)

2. Margaret Purlina Dry (July 6, 1833 – February 12, 1892) m. Caleb Franklin Allman, 1873

3. Rebecca Maria Dry (August 27, 1834 – October 12, 1906) m. Daniel Noah Corl, 1867

4. Elizabeth Matilda Dry (February 12, 1838 – November 23, 1914) m. Michael Caleb Rhinehardt, 1866

5. Jacob Mathias Dry (May 16, 1840 – February 9, 1910) m. Martha E. Rendleman, 1864

6. Eleanor Adeline "Nellie" Dry (November 20, 1842 – April 10, 1926) m. Alfred Monroe Coleman, 1866

7. Polly Mellisa Dry (born about 1845, date of death unknown)


 Abraham Dry is my 1st Cousin 5X Removed.


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1. Find A Grave, Inc., Find A Grave, database and digital images, (http://www.findagrave.com : accessed  3 April 2020); Memorial page for Abraham Dry; (19 October 1804–3 April 1865); Find a Grave memorial # 29718932, Citing Henkelite Cemetery; Mount Pleasant, Cabarrus County, North Carolina.

2. Land Deed - Jacob Harkey, Sr. to  Polly [Harky] Dry & Abraham Dry; 25 October 1834; Deed Book #12; Page(s) 404-405; Register of Deeds; Concord, Cabarrus County, North Carolina; November 2024.

3. 1850 U. S. Census, Cabarrus County, North Carolina, population schedule, Cabarrus, North Carolina, Page: 483A; Line 32, Dwelling 1245, Family 1245, Household of Abraham DRY; online database, Ancestry.com (http://www.ancestry.com : viewed 3 March 2020); citing National Archives Microfilm Publication M432, Roll 622.

4. 1860 U. S. Census, Cabarrus County, North Carolina, population schedule, Subdivision East of NC Rr, Cabarrus, North Carolina, Page: 110/55 (Stamped); Line 29, Dwelling 372, Family 372, Household of Adam [Abraham] DRY; online database, Ancestry.com (http://www.ancestry.com : viewed 3 April 2020); citing National Archives Microfilm Publication M653, Roll 890.

5. Cabarrus County, North Carolina, : Will Book#2, pages 122-123 The Last Will and Testament of Abraham Dry; Ancestry.com, Salt Lake City, Utah.

6. North Carolina, Deed Book:  DEED BOOK 22, pages 49, Daughters selling the land for $75.00; Register of Deeds, Concord, Cabarrus County, North Carolina.

7. "North Carolina Marriage Index, 1741-1868," database, Ancestry (http://www.ancestry.com : viewed 3 April 2020), Marriage: Abraham Dry & Polly Harkey; North Carolina Division of Archives and History, 1977; 27 Feb 1830.

8. "Marriage: Mr. Abraham Dry to Miss Polly Harkey, daughter of Jacob Harkey, Esq.," The North Carolina Star, Raleigh, North Carolina, 1 April 1830, page 3, Col. 5. MARRIED: 9th [Feb. 1830].

9. Find A Grave, Inc., Find A Grave, database and digital images, (http://www.findagrave.com : accessed  3 April 2020); Memorial page for Mary Catherine “Polly” Harkey Dry; (26 Oct 1811- 17 Apr 1846 (aged 34)); Find a Grave memorial # 17905899, Citing Henkelite Cemetery; Mount Pleasant, Cabarrus County, North Carolina, USA.