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 46+ years of research. Today's Biography of "John William Purvis, Jr." (1906-1985) was compiled with the assistance of Claude Sonnett 4 and is entitled:
John William Purvis, Jr.
20 May 1906 – 11 August 1985
A Life in Morven, Ansonville, and Wadesboro
Anson County, North Carolina
A Family Biography
At a Glance
John William Purvis, Jr. spent nearly his entire eighty-year life within a few miles of where he was born — the small mill and farming communities of Morven, Ansonville, and Wadesboro in Anson County, North Carolina. He came of age alongside the cotton mills that reshaped the Carolina Piedmont, raised a family through the hardest years of the Great Depression, and spent his working life as a millwright keeping the machinery of Wade Manufacturing Company running. The summary below pulls together his core vital information; the sections that follow tell the fuller story.
Full Name | John William Purvis, Jr. |
Born | 20 May 1906, Morven, Anson County, North Carolina |
Died | 11 August 1985 (age 79), Wadesboro, Anson County, North Carolina |
Buried | Morven Cemetery, Morven, Anson County, North Carolina |
Parents | John William Purvis, Sr. (1880–1956) and Nancy Elizabeth Wallace (1881–1968) |
Spouse | Elma Davis (1903–1994), married 23 April 1927, Bennettsville, Marlboro County, South Carolina |
Children | Julia Martin Purvis (1929–1998) and Bobby James Purvis (1933–2003) |
Occupation | Millwright, Wade Manufacturing Company (cloth factory), Wadesboro, NC |
Parents and Family of Origin
John William Purvis, Jr. was born into a farming family in Morven, Anson County, North Carolina, the son of John William Purvis, Sr. (1880–1956) and Nancy Elizabeth Wallace (1881–1968). His obituary and Find A Grave records confirm both parents by name, and the 1910, 1920, 1930, 1940, and 1950 federal censuses trace the family's steady presence in the Morven area across four decades.
The household the younger John William grew up in was a sizable one. The 1910 census, taken when he was not yet four years old, shows him as the second-youngest of four children in the home of John W. and Nancy Purvis. By the 1920 census, the family had grown again, and a clearer picture of his brothers and sisters emerges.
Siblings
Based on the 1910 and 1920 census records, John William Purvis, Jr. had at least four siblings:
Sarah H. (Sarah K.) Purvis — born about 1903; listed as age 7 in the 1910 census and age 17 in the 1920 census.
Maud Purvis — born about 1905; listed as age 5 in the 1910 census and age 15 in the 1920 census.
Ross J. Purvis — born about 1909–1910; listed as 4 months old in the 1910 census and age 11 in the 1920 census.
Violet H. Purvis (later Violet P. Derrick) — born about 1913–1914; listed as age 6 in the 1920 census. John's 1985 obituary names “Mrs. Violet P. Derrick of Union, S.C.” as his surviving sister.
John William Jr. himself appears in both censuses — age 2 in 1910 and age 12 in 1920 — squarely in the middle of this growing household of farm-raised brothers and sisters.
The World He Was Born Into
John William Purvis, Jr. was born in May 1906 — just months before San Francisco's great earthquake and during a period of rapid change across the rural South. Anson County in the early twentieth century was overwhelmingly agricultural, with cotton as the dominant crop, but the seeds of change were already being planted. Across the North Carolina Piedmont, entrepreneurs were building cotton mills powered by the region's rivers and cheap labor, drawing farm families like the Purvises away from the fields and into mill villages. This shift from farm to factory would come to define much of John's own working life a generation later.
Birth and Early Life (1906–1920s)
John William Purvis, Jr. was born on 20 May 1906 in Morven, Anson County, North Carolina. His birth date and birthplace are confirmed by his tombstone in Morven Cemetery, his 1985 obituary, and his North Carolina death certificate. Interestingly, his Social Security Death Index record lists a birth year of 1907 rather than 1906 — a minor discrepancy that sometimes appears between Social Security records (which relied on self-reported information decades after birth) and earlier vital records and family sources. Given the consistency of the 1906 date across his tombstone, obituary, and official death certificate, 1906 appears to be the more reliable year.
He grew up on the family farm near Morven, appearing in his parents' household in both the 1910 and 1920 federal censuses. By 1920, at age 12, he was the third-oldest child still at home, living alongside his parents and four siblings in a household that, like most in the area at the time, would have centered its rhythms around the cotton-growing season.
Marriage
On 23 April 1927, John William Purvis, Jr. married Elma Davis in Bennettsville, Marlboro County, South Carolina. He was not yet 21, and Elma was 23, a native of nearby Chesterfield County, South Carolina.
A note of caution for future researchers: the Purvis family Bible, in the possession of [Name withheld] of Wadesboro, NC, records a marriage date of “23 May 1921 / 6 January 1922” alongside this couple's entry — a date that would have made John only 14 or 15 years old. Given that this is inconsistent with both his documented birth year and the 1929 and 1933 birth years of his two children, the Bible entry as transcribed likely reflects either a transcription error or a mixed-up entry, and the 23 April 1927 Bennettsville marriage record should be treated as the more reliable date. UPDATE: Marriage confirmed as taken place on 23 April 1927, Certificate#11244.
Elma Davis was born on 4 June 1903 in Chesterfield, Chesterfield County, South Carolina, the daughter of Charlie Lester Davis (1882–1953) and Fannie Mae Boatwright (1885–1970). The 1910 census, taken in the Davis household at the Chesterfield County Court House, shows six-year-old Elma alongside her parents and three younger siblings — Blanch (age 5), Lila (age 2), and Atlas (7 months old) — rounding out a young family that, like the Purvises across the state line, made its living from the land.
Elma spent her working life as a weaver at Wade Manufacturing Company in Wadesboro, eventually retiring from the mill, and later worked as a sitter at Anson County Hospital. She outlived her husband by nine years, passing away on 30 July 1994 at the age of 91.
Children
John William and Elma Purvis raised two children together, both born in Morven, Anson County, North Carolina, during the years the family lived and farmed — and later worked the mills — in that community.
Julia Martin Purvis (1929–1998)
Julia was born 10 June 1929 in Morven — just months before the stock market crash that fall ushered in the Great Depression. She appears in her parents' household in both the 1930 and 1940 censuses. On 15 June 1947, in Chesterfield, Chesterfield County, South Carolina, she married Frank Crouma Ratliff (1922–2020). Julia died 24 May 1998 in Charlotte, Mecklenburg County, North Carolina, and was laid to rest two days later in Morven Cemetery, near the parents who had raised her.
Bobby James Purvis (1933–2003)
Bobby was born 16 May 1933 in Morven, in the depths of the Depression years. He grew up in the family home, appearing alongside his parents and older sister in the 1940 census, and was still in the household as a 16-year-old student in the 1950 census, by which time the family had moved to Ansonville. As an adult, Bobby settled in Nashville, Davidson County, Tennessee — both his 1993 residence and his obituary place him there — and he married Barbara Ann Downey (b. 1937). He died 7 December 2003 in Tennessee.
Coming of Age in the Depression Years
John and Elma started their married life and their family just as the country tipped into the Great Depression. Julia's birth in June 1929 came only months before the October stock market crash, and Bobby followed in May 1933, near the very bottom of the economic downturn — the same spring that a newly inaugurated President Franklin D. Roosevelt launched the first New Deal programs. For a young couple in rural Anson County, these were lean years. Cotton prices, already falling through the 1920s, collapsed further, squeezing farm families across the Carolina Piedmont and pushing many — including, in time, the Purvis family — toward the steadier, if still modest, wages offered by the area's textile mills.
A telling detail survives in the 1940 census: the Purvis household included not just John, Elma, and their two children, but also two lodgers, Frank DeBerry and his son Robert. Taking in boarders was a common strategy for families stretching tight household budgets during and after the Depression, and its presence in the Purvis home offers a small, human glimpse of how the family weathered those difficult years.
The World War II Years
In 1940, as the United States began preparing for the possibility of war, John William Purvis, Jr. registered for the Selective Service draft, as required of American men of the era. His registration card lists him as a resident of Morven, Anson County, with Elma listed as his wife in the household. By the time the United States formally entered the war in December 1941, John was in his mid-thirties with two young children at home — circumstances that, for many men in similar situations, often meant continuing essential work on the home front rather than entering military service. The surviving records do not indicate that he served overseas; his draft registration appears to be the extent of his documented World War II-era military record.
Mid-Century Life: From Morven to Ansonville
By the time of the 1950 census, the family had moved a few miles from Morven to Ansonville, also in Anson County. John, then 43, was working as a millwright at a cloth factory that made shirts, where both he and Elma would spend the bulk of their working lives, he as a millwright maintaining the mechanical heart of the mill, and she on the production floor. A millwright's job — installing, maintaining, and repairing the heavy machinery that ran a textile mill — was skilled, steady work, and a meaningful step up from the farm labor of his parents' generation.
Textile manufacturing was, by mid-century, the economic backbone of much of the North Carolina Piedmont, and Anson County was no exception. Mills like Wade Manufacturing employed entire families and shaped the rhythm of daily life in towns like Wadesboro for decades, offering the kind of dependable employment that had been far less certain during the Depression years of John and Elma's early marriage.
Later Years, Death, and Burial
John William Purvis, Jr. eventually retired from his work at Wade Manufacturing Company and lived out his later years at 48 Cherry Street in Wadesboro. He died on Sunday morning, 11 August 1985, at Anson County Hospital following what his obituary described as a lengthy illness. He was 79 years old.
His funeral was held the following Monday at 3:00 p.m. in the Leavitt Funeral Home Chapel in Wadesboro, conducted by the Rev. Charlie Stutts and the Rev. Aubry Whitley. He was buried 12 August 1985 in Morven Cemetery, the same cemetery where so much of his family's history in Anson County is recorded in stone. He was survived by his wife, Elma; his daughter, Julia Ratliff of Wadesboro; his son, Bobby Purvis of Nashville, Tennessee; his sister, Violet P. Derrick of Union, South Carolina; four grandchildren; and three great-grandchildren.
Elma Davis Purvis outlived her husband by nine years, continuing to live in Wadesboro. She died 30 July 1994 at Anson County Hospital, at age 91. Her funeral was held at Salem United Methodist Church, where she was a member, conducted by the Rev. Linda Stack Morgan, and she was buried beside John in Morven Cemetery, with arrangements again handled by Leavitt Funeral Home.
Legacy
John William Purvis, Jr.'s life traced a path familiar to many Carolina Piedmont families of his generation: born on a cotton farm at the dawn of the twentieth century, married and starting a family just as the Great Depression took hold, and spending his working decades as a skilled tradesman in the textile mills that came to define the regional economy. He and Elma raised two children who, in turn, carried the family into Charlotte and Nashville, even as John and Elma themselves remained rooted in the Anson County soil where they had both been laid to rest by the close of the twentieth century.
Today, four generations later, the records of his life — census pages, draft cards, obituaries, and the family Bible passed down through the Purvis line — preserve the outline of a life built on steady work, family, and community in Morven, Ansonville, and Wadesboro, North Carolina.
John William Purvis, Jr. is my 1st Cousin Once Removed.
Sources
This biography is drawn from the documented sources compiled in the accompanying Family Group Sheet, including:
Find A Grave Memorial #65087282 (John W. Purvis, Jr.) and #65113549 (Elma D. Purvis)
U.S. Federal Census records, 1910, 1920, 1930, 1940, and 1950 (Anson County, NC, and Chesterfield County, SC)
North Carolina, Death Collection, 1908–2004, for John William Purvis and Elma Davis Purvis
Social Security Death Index entries for John Purvis and Elma D. Purvis
U.S. WWII Draft Cards (Young Men), 1898–1929, for John William Purvis and Elma Purvis
Obituaries: The Anson Record (14 August 1985) and The Charlotte Observer (31 July 1994)
Purvis Family Bible, in the possession of Tammy Gathings Swearingen, Wadesboro, NC
Full citations for each record appear in the endnotes of the source Family Group Sheet, dated 21 June 2026.
