Saturday, May 30, 2026

52 Cousins~John Hancock “Jack” Brown

 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 Hancock “Jack” Brown (1855-1900) was compiled with the assistance of Claude Sonnett 4 and is entitled:

 

John Hancock “Jack” Brown

3 July 1855 – 11 February 1900

Mississippi · Arkansas · Oklahoma

Early Life

John Hancock Brown — known simply as "Jack" to family and friends — was born on July 3, 1855, in Mississippi, just a few years before the nation was torn apart by the Civil War. He grew up as the son of Stephen Brown (1823–1890) and Susan Griffith (born 1828), and was one of several children in the household.

The 1860 U.S. Census found young Jack, then about five years old, living with his family in Smith County, Mississippi. His father Stephen had been born in Alabama, while his mother Susan hailed from South Carolina — a typical Deep South family of that era. By 1870, the family had moved west to Sunflower County, Mississippi, where the flat Delta land offered fertile farming ground.

Jack's childhood unfolded during one of the most turbulent periods in American history. The Civil War (1861–1865) shook the South to its foundations, and Reconstruction that followed brought enormous social and economic upheaval to Mississippi. Many families like the Browns found themselves navigating a transformed landscape — economically, politically, and socially. As Jack grew into a young man, westward migration beckoned as a way to start fresh.

Parents and Siblings

Jack's father, Stephen Brown, was born around 1823 in Alabama and appears to have remarried at some point, as the 1880 census lists a "Rosa Brown" (born in South Carolina, around 1835) as Stephen's wife and Jack's stepmother. Stephen lived to approximately 1890.

Based on census records, Jack had at least the following siblings growing up:

Sarah Brown (born about 1851, Mississippi) — the eldest daughter in the household as of 1860.

Nancy Brown (born about 1853, Mississippi) — appeared in both the 1860 and 1870 censuses.

Joab Brown (born about 1858, Mississippi) — a younger brother.

Henry C. Brown (born about 1859/1860, Mississippi) — the youngest child noted in the 1860 census.

The family was a farming household — hardworking, land-dependent, and deeply rooted in the agricultural traditions of the Deep South.

Marriage to Susan Rose Adams

On July 9, 1876, Jack married Susan Rose Adams in Sunflower County, Mississippi. He was 20 years old; she was about 18. The marriage record appears in the Mississippi Compiled Marriage Index, listing him as "Jack Brown" and her as "Susie Adams." It was a fitting match — both were Mississippi-born and likely knew each other through the tight-knit farming communities of the Delta region.

Susan (also recorded as "Susan Eff Adams") was born around March 1858, also in Mississippi. Her parents are not yet identified in the available records, but she would prove to be a remarkably resilient woman — eventually heading her household alone after Jack's early death and raising eight children, several of them still young, on the frontier of Indian Territory.

Life in Carroll County, Arkansas

Within a few years of their marriage, Jack and Susan packed up and headed west to Carroll County, in the Ozark hills of northwest Arkansas. The 1880 U.S. Census found them living in the Osage township, where Jack, age 25, was working as a farmer. Susan was 20. They already had two young children: Henry Clay (age 3, born in Mississippi) and baby Maggie (age 10 months, born in Arkansas).

Interestingly, the same 1880 household included Jack's father Stephen (age 59) and stepmother Rosa (age 45), suggesting the extended Brown family had migrated together. This kind of multi-generational move was common on the frontier, where family labor was essential and kinship networks provided safety nets in hard times.

The Ozarks of Carroll County were rugged and beautiful — a world apart from the flat Mississippi Delta. Families there were largely subsistence farmers, raising hogs, corn, and vegetables, supplemented by hunting and fishing. It was a good place to raise a family, and Jack and Susan continued to add children during their Arkansas years.

During their time in Arkansas (roughly 1879–1892), four more children were born: Susan Ethleen "Sudie" (1881), John Stephen (1886), Debetha Biddie (1889) and Sallie May Brown (1892). The family was growing, and the frontier continued to call them westward.

Moving to Indian Territory

By the early 1890s, the Brown family had made another bold move — this time into Indian Territory, the lands set aside for the Five Civilized Tribes in what is now eastern Oklahoma. This was an era of intense pressure on those tribal lands, as white settlers pushed in from all sides. The Dawes Act of 1887 had begun the process of allotting tribal lands to individual Native Americans, opening vast areas to non-Native settlement.

Two of the Brown children were born in Arkansas around this time — Rosa Belle (April 12, 1895)and then the family had clearly relocated to Indian Territory near Stigler (in what is now Haskell County, Oklahoma) by 1895. Their youngest, Jesse James Brown, followed on September 13, 1897, also near Stigler.

Life in Indian Territory was raw and unsettled. There was no official U.S. government structure for non-Native residents — no property titles, no county courts, no public schools. Settlers lived under an informal arrangement, many as tenant farmers or squatters. Jack, always a farmer, would have been working whatever land he could claim or rent, trying to feed and clothe a large family.

The 1890s were also difficult nationally. The Panic of 1893 sent the American economy into a deep depression, banks failed, railroads went bankrupt, and drought hammered the Southern Plains. Many frontier families struggled to survive. Jack and Susan had nine children to care for, and the odds were stacked against them.

Jack's Death

Jack Brown died on February 11, 1900, in Whitefield, Haskell County, Oklahoma. He was just 44 years old. The cause of his death is not recorded in the available documents, but the loss was devastating. Susan was left a widow at 41, with at least five children still living at home, the youngest — Jesse James — just two years old.

Jack was buried at Whitefield Cemetery in Whitefield, Oklahoma, where his grave can still be found today (Find A Grave Memorial #55376553). The tombstone confirms his birth and death dates and stands as a quiet testament to a life spent farming across three states and one territory.

His death came just as Oklahoma was on the cusp of major change. Statehood was only seven years away (1907), and the allotment of Indian Territory lands was well underway. Jack never saw Oklahoma become a state — but many of his children would.

Jack and Susan's Children

Jack and Susan had eight children who survived to adulthood, born across Mississippi, Arkansas, and Indian Territory:

 

Henry Clay Brown (April 9, 1877 – May 26, 1945)

Born in Mississippi, Henry was the eldest child. He married Myrtle Lou Evelyn Hendrix (1891–1974) and the couple appear in the 1920, 1930, and 1940 censuses. Henry died in Amarillo, Potter County, Texas, and was buried in Perryton, Ochiltree County, Texas, on May 28, 1945.

 

Mary Margaret "Maggie" Brown (August 22, 1879 – unknown)

Born in Mississippi and appearing in the 1880 census in Carroll County, Arkansas, as a baby. Little more is currently documented about Maggie's later life.

 

Susan Ethleen "Sudie" Brown (February 27, 1881 – July 12, 1951)

Born in Arkansas (two birth dates appear in records: 1881 and 1882). She married John Brents and died in Atascosa County, Texas.

 

John Stephen Brown (April 26, 1886 – unknown)

Born in Arkansas. John Stephen appears in the 1900 census as a 15-year-old still living with his widowed mother in Cherokee Nation. His later life is not yet fully documented.

 

Debetha "Biddie" Brown (April 30, 1889 – March 25, 1972)

Born in Arkansas, Biddie married Milo Cecil Scroggins (1883–1958) on February 23, 1906, in Ardmore, Indian Territory. She lived a long life, dying in Holdenville, Oklahoma, at age 82.

 

Sallie May Brown (December 6, 1892 – unknown)

Born in Arkansas. Sallie May appears in the 1900 census with her mother.

 

Rosa Belle Brown (April 12, 1895 – unknown)

Born in Indian Territory near Stigler. She was about five years old when her father died, and appears in the 1900 census.

 

Jesse James Brown (September 13, 1897 – January 29, 1962)

The youngest child, born in Indian Territory near Stigler. He was only two when Jack died. Jesse married Ida Mae Hill Turner (1898–1969) around 1920.

 

Susan After Jack's Death

After Jack's death in 1900, Susan Brown carried on with extraordinary determination. The 1900 U.S. Census, taken just months after Jack died, found her heading a household in Township 10 of the Cherokee Nation, listed as a widow, age 42, with nine children (eight living). Five children were still at home: John Stephen (15), Betha (11), Sally M. (8), Rosa B. (5), and baby Jesse J. (2).

She described herself as having had nine children, with eight still living — meaning one child had already died before the 1900 census. This unnamed child is not identified in the available records.

At some point after 1900, Susan made one final journey — westward to New Mexico. She died in 1907 in Chaves County, New Mexico Territory, and was buried in Hagerman Cemetery, in Hagerman, Chaves County (Find A Grave Memorial #58637658, Plot 3E 11 or 13). She was about 49 years old. The journey from Mississippi to Indian Territory to New Mexico is a testament to the restless, searching spirit of American frontier families in the late 19th and early 20th centuries.

A Life in Historical Context

Jack Brown's 44 years spanned one of the most dramatic and transformative eras in American history. Born in 1855 in the Deep South, he was a child during the Civil War (1861–1865), came of age during Reconstruction (1865–1877), raised his family during the Gilded Age and the great westward expansion, and died on the Oklahoma frontier just seven years before statehood.

The westward migration of families like the Browns was part of a massive demographic shift. After the war, millions of Southerners — their livelihoods shattered, their social order overturned — looked west for a new start. Arkansas attracted many, offering cheap land and a frontier spirit. Then, as Oklahoma opened to settlement, another wave of migration followed.

The era also saw the completion of the transcontinental railroad (1869), the invention of the telephone (1876), the rise of barbed wire fencing that transformed the open range (1870s–1880s), and the closing of the American frontier (officially declared by the Census Bureau in 1890). The world Jack Brown moved through was changing at breathtaking speed.

He lived through the Reconstruction era's hopes and disappointments, the Gilded Age's vast inequalities, and the relentless pressure of westward expansion that displaced Native peoples from their lands — including in Indian Territory, where Jack and Susan spent their final years together. It was a hard life, lived close to the earth, shaped by weather and chance and the strength of family bonds.

His grave in Whitefield, Oklahoma, is a quiet marker of a life that touched Mississippi, Arkansas, and Indian Territory — three very different corners of a rapidly expanding nation.

 

John Hancock Brown is my 2nd Cousin 4X Removed. 

Tuesday, May 26, 2026

Aunts & Uncles~Lucy Gilham (Page) Smith (1840-1887)

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 Lucy Gilham (Page) Smith (1840-1887) was compiled with the assistance of Claude Sonnett 4 and is entitled:

Lucy Gilham Page Smith

circa 1840 – circa 1882–1887

Stanly County, North Carolina

 

Introduction

Lucy Gilham Page Smith lived a quiet but resilient life in the red-clay hills of Stanly County, North Carolina. Born around 1840, she grew up in a close-knit farming community, married young on the eve of the Civil War, and then watched her husband march away — never to return home. For the next two decades, she raised her five surviving children largely on her own, drawing on the support of her father Sion Page and the tight bonds of the Furr community. Her story is one that was lived by thousands of Southern women during one of the most turbulent eras in American history, and it is worth knowing and remembering.

 

 

Family Background — The Page Family

Lucy was the daughter of Sion Page (born 1807) and Nancy Page (born about 1805), both natives of North Carolina. Sion was a farmer who worked the land in the Furr community of Stanly County, an area of small tobacco and grain farms nestled among the rolling Piedmont hills. The 1850 Census found the Page household bustling with nine children: Allen M. (age 21), Sarah E. (14), Rosa A. (12), Lucy G. (11), Mary F. (8), Uriah S. D. (7), Margaret A. (5), and little Jno F., age 3. Lucy, listed as 'Lucy G. Page,' was eleven years old that year — old enough to help with the younger ones and share in the daily rhythms of farm life.

The 1850s were a time of growing tension across the South, but in the Furr community, life centered on planting seasons, church gatherings, and family. The Pages were not wealthy planters — Sion was a working farmer, and Lucy grew up understanding hard work and the deep value of land and family. By 1860, Lucy, now about eighteen or nineteen, still lived at home with her parents and several siblings, listed in the Albemarle post office district of Stanly County.

Sion Page would live to the age of about eighty, dying in 1887. Nancy Page died around 1880. Their long lives gave Lucy's children — their grandchildren — an anchor of stability during the hardest years after the war.

 

 

Marriage to Evan (Evin) Smith — March 8, 1861

On March 8, 1861, Lucy Page married Evan Smith — known in family records and letters as 'Evin' — in Albemarle, Stanly County. She was around twenty years old; he was about twenty-eight. Evin was the son of Joseph Smith (1800–1872) and Mary Gilbert Smith (1800–1863), and had grown up just down the road from the Page family farm in what was called 'Smith's District.' After marrying, Evin bought land adjoining Lucy's father Sion Page, and the young couple began building a life together.

Their timing could not have been more bittersweet. They married in March of 1861 — just one month before Confederate forces fired on Fort Sumter, launching the Civil War. The world they had planned to build together was about to be torn apart.

 

 

The War Years — Evin Goes to War, 1861–1865

Evin Smith enlisted as a Private in Company K of the 28th North Carolina Infantry on September 7, 1861 — just six months after their wedding. He left behind a pregnant Lucy, who would give birth to their first son, John Franklin Smith, on November 25, 1861.

Evin wrote faithfully to Lucy when he could. His letters, preserved by the family, give us a vivid picture of what both of them were enduring. From Wilmington on January 12, 1862, he wrote:

"Dear wife, I received your kind letter in due time and was glad to hear from you and hear that you was all well. I am well at this time for which I feel thankful to God... I want to come and see you all but I can't come yet nor can't tell at this time when I can come... I can't tell whether I will ever see you again and if I don't, I want you to do the best you can for yourself and the child... I want you to take my son down to his grandpa and let him see him... if we never meet again on earth I hope we will meet in heaven where there is no war."

Evin was captured at the Battle of Hanover Court House, Virginia, on May 27, 1862. He was described in military records as 5 feet 6 inches tall, with black hair, dark eyes, and a sallow complexion. He was confined at Fort Monroe, Virginia, and then Fort Columbus in New York Harbor before being paroled and exchanged at Aiken's Landing on August 5, 1862.

That exchange brought Evin home briefly — his only visit after the war began. He finally met his infant son John Franklin, and spent precious time with Lucy. But he returned to duty before January 1, 1863, leaving Lucy pregnant once again. Their second son, James Evan Smith, was born May 20, 1864 — a child his father would never see.

Evin wrote again in March 1863 from Camp Gregg near Fredericksburg, Virginia, describing sparse rations — less than a pound of flour a day, a quarter pound of bacon — and asking Lucy to send food if she could manage it. He worried about the money he'd sent her, fretted over shirts left with a neighbor, and longed to come home.

On May 12, 1864, during the savage fighting at Spotsylvania Court House — part of Grant's Overland Campaign — Evin was captured a second time. He was sent first to Point Lookout, Maryland, and then transferred to the Elmira prison camp in upstate New York in August 1864. Elmira — grimly nicknamed 'Hellmira' — was notoriously overcrowded, exposed to brutal winters, and plagued by disease. Evin Smith died there on April 2, 1865, just one week before Lee's surrender at Appomattox, from chronic diarrhea. He was buried at Woodlawn National Cemetery in Elmira, New York (Plot: CSA 2579). He was around thirty-two years old. Lucy was a widow at approximately twenty-five, with two small boys under four years old.

 

 

Life After the War — Widowhood and Rebuilding, 1865–1880

The years after the Civil War were desperately hard for Southern families, and Lucy's situation was no exception. North Carolina had been ravaged by the conflict — farms were neglected, the economy was shattered, and thousands of women like Lucy faced the future without their husbands. The period of Reconstruction brought political upheaval and economic uncertainty to the entire region.

Lucy leaned heavily on her family. The 1870 Census found her living in the household of her father, Sion Page, in the Furr community of Stanly County. She was listed as 'Lucy Smith, age 30,' with her two sons John (age 8) and James (age 6) alongside her. Her mother Nancy, her sisters Mary and Jane, and her aging father Sion all shared that home. It was a household of women and children, piecing together a life in the aftermath of war.

In 1867, Evin Smith's estate was probated in Stanly County — a legal process Lucy likely had to navigate as his widow and the mother of his heirs. The estate process formally wound down the affairs of a man who had been gone from home since 1861.

Remarkably, Lucy's family continued to grow after the war. She gave birth to a daughter, Catherine Smith, on March 23, 1872 (in Bladen County, North Carolina), and then twins — a daughter named Nora Janie 'Jane' Smith and a son named Jackson Sion Smith — both born on June 20 and July 20, 1879 respectively, in Stanly County. The records do not document a second marriage for Lucy, and the circumstances of these births remain part of the family's private history.

By 1880, Lucy was head of her own household in Furrs, Stanly County. The census that year listed her as 'Lucy Smith, age 40,' with four children at home: John F. (18), James E. (16), Jane (4), and Jackson (3). She was managing a farm household on her own — a remarkable feat for any woman of that era.

In September 1884, a notice in the Stanly Observer announced the court-ordered sale of 140 acres of land known as the 'Page Place' to satisfy a debt owed to the First National Bank of Salisbury. This was almost certainly the land that Evin had purchased next to Sion Page's farm — the family homestead that Evin and Lucy had dreamed of building their future on. Its loss at auction was a painful end to that chapter.

 

 

Death — Circa 1882–1887

Lucy Gilham Page Smith died sometime between February 1882 and February 1887 in Stanly County, North Carolina. The dates of her two sons' marriages help bracket this estimate — she was alive before John's marriage in February 1882, and gone before James married in February 1887. According to family oral history passed down through her grandchildren's generation, Lucy died of tuberculosis (TB), a disease that was tragically common in the late nineteenth century and particularly devastating to families already weakened by poverty and hardship. She was likely in her mid-forties. Her burial place is not currently known.

 

 

Lucy's Children

Lucy and Evin had two sons together, and Lucy had three more children after the war:

 

1.  John Franklin Smith

Born November 25, 1861, in Stanly County. John was Evin's firstborn son — the infant his father cradled in letters from the front and longed to visit. He grew up under his mother's care and his grandfather Sion Page's roof. John married Serena A. Howell (1858–1910) on February 2, 1882 in Stanly County, and after her death married Pattie Reynolds (1872–1920). He died August 28, 1938, in Albemarle, Stanly County, and is buried there.

2.  James Evan Smith

Born May 20, 1864, in Stanly County — the son his father never met. James was named after Evin and carried his father's memory through his name. He married Catharine Ann Huneycutt (1868–1940) on February 6, 1887, in Stanly County. He died February 9, 1934, in Albemarle, and was buried there on February 28, 1934.

3.  Catherine Smith

Born March 23, 1872, in Bladen County, North Carolina. Catherine later married James Marshall Hales (1862–1939). She died October 30, 1950, in Wilson, Wilson County, North Carolina.

4.  Nora Janie 'Jane' Smith

Born June 20, 1879, in Stanly County. Jane was a toddler when her mother died. She married the Reverend Rufus Franklin Huneycutt Sr. (1875–1945) on January 26, 1905. She died August 18, 1943, in Winston-Salem, Forsyth County, North Carolina, and was buried on August 20, 1943, at Albemarle City Cemetery, Albemarle.

5.  Reverend Jackson Sion Smith

Born July 20, 1879, in Locust, Stanly County — possibly the twin of Nora Janie. Jackson was named for his grandfather Sion Page, a touching tribute. He became a minister and eventually made his way to the Pacific Northwest. He married Ellen Pearl Hastings (1882–1972) in 1913. He died March 3, 1938, in Butte Falls, Jackson County, Oregon — a long way from the Stanly County hills where he was born.

 

 

Historical Context — Living Through Turbulent Times

Lucy's life unfolded against a backdrop of extraordinary upheaval. She was born around 1840, just as North Carolina was entering a period of rapid change — cotton and tobacco were reshaping the Southern economy, tensions over slavery were rising nationally, and the communities of the Piedmont were being drawn deeper into a conflict that would tear the country apart.

The Civil War (1861–1865) struck Stanly County as it did everywhere in the South. Men enlisted in large numbers — the 28th North Carolina Infantry, the regiment Evin joined, suffered tremendous losses throughout the conflict, fighting in major engagements from Hanover Court House to the bloody trenches of Spotsylvania. Back home, women managed farms, raised children, and worried. Letters like Evin's — describing sparse rations, brutal winters, and uncertain futures — were the only lifeline connecting husbands to wives.

The period of Reconstruction after 1865 brought federal oversight of Southern states, political turbulence, and profound economic disruption. Thousands of widows like Lucy navigated a world fundamentally changed: no husband, diminished resources, and children to raise. The loss of the 'Page Place' at auction in 1884 reflected the financial pressures squeezing families across the South during these years.

Tuberculosis — the illness family tradition says claimed Lucy — was the leading cause of death in nineteenth-century America, often called 'consumption.' It spread easily in crowded or impoverished conditions and had no effective treatment until the twentieth century. Lucy was likely in her forties when she died, leaving behind children ranging from young adults to children as young as five or six years old.

 

 

Legacy and Family

Lucy Gilham Page Smith left behind five children who carried her legacy forward across the American South and beyond. Her sons John and James remained in Stanly County, raising families that became woven into the fabric of Albemarle. Her daughter Nora Jane married a minister; Catherine married James Marshall Hales and her son Jackson Sion — named for her father — became a reverend himself, carrying the family's faith across a continent to Oregon.

The family she anchored through impossible circumstances — a husband lost to war, land lost to debt, children left to raise alone — endured. The letters Evin wrote to her from the front, preserved through the generations by descendants like John Stevens, are a testament to the love at the heart of that family. When Evin wrote from Wilmington in January 1862, 'if we never meet again on earth I hope we will meet in heaven where there is no war,' he was writing to Lucy. She kept going. That was her story.

 

Lucy Gilham Page Smith is my 2nd Great GrandAunt.




________________________________

1. 1860 U. S. Census, Stanly County, North Carolina, population schedule, Stanly, North Carolina, Page:#38B (Stamped); Line:#29-34, Dwelling:#540, Family:#542, Household of  Joseph SMITH; online database, Ancestry.com (http://www.ancestry.com : online July 2016); citing National Archives Microfilm Publication M653, Roll 914.

2. Ancestry, "Civil War Service Records" database, Military Service Records (https://www.fold3.com/ : accessed 3 June 2019), entry for Evan Smith, Pvt.; 28th NC Company K; Confederate.

3. Ancestry,Military Service Records, database entry for  EVAN SMITH, Pvt.; Co. K, 28th North Carolina Infantry; Confederate.

4. The "PAGE PLACE"; 140 acres of land obituary, The Stanly Observer, Albemarle, Stanly County, North Carolina, 18 September 1884, Page 3, column 6. SALE OF LAND KNOWN AS "PAGE PLACE".

5. Find A Grave, Inc., Find A Grave, database and digital images, (http://www.findagrave.com : accessed  3 December 2020); Memorial page for Pvt Evan Smith; (unk.-2 apr 1865); Find a Grave memorial # 66211002, Citing Pvt Evan Smith; Elmira, Chemung County, New York, USA; Plot: CSA 2579 [2549].

6. James Smith, META, FACEBOOK (: ONLINE 2018), EVAN SMITH, CIVIL WAR, 1865.

7. "North Carolina, Marriages Record, 1741-2011," database, Ancestry (http://www.ancestry.com : viewed June 2019), Marriage; Evan Smith & Lucy Page, Marriage Date: 8 Mar 1861.

8. 1850 Census, Stanly County, North Carolina, population schedule, Furr, Stanly County, North Carolina, Page: 38A(stamped); Line 16, Dwelling 533, Family 535, Household of Sion PAGE; online database, Ancestry.com (http://www.ancestry.com : viewed 21 July 2015); citing National Archives Microfilm Publication M432, Roll 645.

9. 1860 U. S. Census, Stanly County, North Carolina, Population Schedule, Albemarle P.O., Stanly County, North Carolina, Page: 8 (stamped); Line 18, Dwelling 92, Family 92, Household of Sion PAGE.

10. Stanly County, North Carolina, Estate Files, 1663-1979, Evan Smith; digital images, Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, FamilySearch (http://www.familysearch.org: online July 2015); Evan Smith.

11. 1870 U S Census, Stanly County, North Carolina, population schedule, Furr, Stanly County, North Carolina, Page: 62B/264 (stamped); Line 29, Dwelling 72, Family 73, Household of Sion PAGE; digital image, Ancestry.com (http://www.ancestry.com : viewed 21 July 2015); citing National Archive  Microfilm M593, Roll 1160.

12. 1880 U. S. Census, Stanly County, North Carolina, population schedule, Furrs, Stanly, North Carolina, enumeration district (ED) 205, Page: 296D (stamped); Line 7, Dwelling 104, Family 107, Household of Lucy SMITH; digital image, Ancestry.com (http://www.ancestry.com : Viewed 6 June 2014); citing National Archives Microfilm T9, Roll 0982.

Compiled by Charles Purvis · Thomasville, NC · May 2026