Saturday, July 11, 2026

52 Cousins~Julia Ellen Teal Boatwright (1860-1931)

 


JULIA ELLEN TEAL BOATWRIGHT

23 February 1860 – 12 June 1931

Chesterfield County, South Carolina

Julia Ellen Teal Boatwright spent her entire eighty-one years within a few miles of the Teal family homeplace near Chesterfield, South Carolina. Daughter of a Pee Dee-region farm family, wife of Drew Lewis Boatwright for over fifty years, and mother of three, Julia lived through the aftermath of the Civil War, the hard turn-of-the-century farm economy, the First World War, and the early years of the Great Depression — all without ever, so far as the records show, leaving Chesterfield County for long.

Quick Facts

Born23 February 1860 — Chesterfield, Chesterfield Co., South Carolina
ParentsBenjamin Franklin Teal (1822–1868) and Eliza A. Davis (1819–1883)
Marriedabt. 1878 (late 1878 or early 1879) — Chesterfield, SC, to Drew Lewis Boatwright
SpouseDrew Lewis Boatwright (1 April 1860 – 9 February 1939)
ChildrenGeorge R., Benjamin F. (infant), and Fannie Mae Boatwright
Died12 June 1931 (age 71) — near Chesterfield, SC
BuriedTeal Cemetery, near Zoar, Chesterfield County, SC

Early Life: A Teal of Chesterfield County

Julia Ellen Teal was born 23 February 1860, just months before South Carolina became the first state to secede from the Union. She grew up on the farm of her father, Benjamin Franklin Teal, and mother, Eliza A. Davis Teal, in Chesterfield County, deep in South Carolina's Pee Dee region.

The 1860 census, taken when Julia was just an infant, captured the whole Teal household together: Benjamin, a 38-year-old farmer, his wife Eliza, and eight children ranging from teenagers down to baby Julia herself, listed at one year old. Her older siblings — William, David, Thomas (also recorded as Benjamin T.), Isabella, Daniel, Frank, and Wesley (C.W.) — would have made for a lively, crowded farmhouse.

NameApprox. Birth YearNotes
William Tealabt. 1843age 17 in 1860 census
David Tealabt. 1845age 15 in 1860 census
Thomas (Benjamin T.) Tealabt. 1847age 13 in 1860 census
Isabella Tealabt. 1848age 12 in 1860 census
Daniel Tealabt. 1850age 10 in 1860 census
Frank Tealabt. 1852age 8 in 1860 census
Wesley (C.W.) Tealabt. 1854age 6 in 1860 census
Julia Ellen Teal1860the subject of this biography — age 1 in 1860 census

Household of B. F. Teal, 1860 U.S. Census, Chesterfield County, SC, Dwelling #351, Family #350.

A family research note preserved with these records asks a fair question — was Julia Ellen a Rivers or a Teal by birth? The documentary evidence settles it firmly in favor of Teal, corroborated by an Anson County, North Carolina deed record (Book 22, pages 356–358) in which Julia's mother, recorded as “Eliza A. [Davis] Teal,” conveyed land to Daniel B. Lisenby.

Julia's father Benjamin Franklin Teal died in 1868, when Julia was only about eight years old — during the chaotic years of Reconstruction in South Carolina, a period marked by military occupation, the reorganization of the state government, and profound upheaval in the rural economy that the Teal family, like most Chesterfield County farm families, would have felt directly. Her mother Eliza lived on until 1883, so Julia would have known her mother well into her own adult married life.

Historical Note

South Carolina bore some of the heaviest scars of the Civil War of any state, and Chesterfield County itself saw the passage of Sherman's forces in the war's closing weeks in early 1865. No direct record ties the Teal family to specific wartime events, but the family would have lived through the occupation, emancipation, and the reordering of Southern farm labor that followed — the backdrop against which young Julia grew up.

Marriage to Drew Lewis Boatwright

Sometime around 1878, Julia Ellen Teal married Drew Lewis Boatwright, a young man from another well-established Chesterfield County farm family. The exact wedding date has not survived, but it can be closed in on two ways: the birth of the couple's first child in September 1879 points to a marriage no later than late 1878, and the 1900 census — which recorded the couple as married 21 years — points to the same window, late 1878 or very early 1879.

Drew was born 1 April 1860, the son of George R. Boatwright (1819–1894) and his first wife, Lauretta Hurst (1831–1863). Drew's mother died when he was only about three years old, and he was raised for at least part of his childhood in his father's household alongside siblings from that first marriage. By 1880, Drew and Julia — both listed as 19 years old — were keeping their own household at Court House, Chesterfield County, with infant son George, not yet a year old, completing the family.

Family Life Through the Decades

Building a Household (1880s)

The young couple's household grew through the 1880s. Son George R. Boatwright arrived in September 1879, followed by Benjamin F. Boatwright in May 1881 and Fannie Mae Boatwright in June 1885. Sorrow touched the family early: baby Benjamin lived only three months, dying in August 1881 and being buried that same month. The 1900 census would later confirm this loss in its own quiet way, recording that Julia had borne three children, with two living.

Turn of the Century (1900)

By 1900, the family was settled at Court House, Chesterfield County. The census taker recorded “Drury L.” Boatwright, age 40, and his wife “Julia E.,” also 40, married 21 years, with son George (age 20) and daughter Fannie (age 14) still at home. Cotton remained the backbone of the Chesterfield County farm economy at this time, though the boll weevil's advance into South Carolina in the years just ahead would soon test farm families across the Pee Dee region.

A Daughter Marries (1902)

On 27 July 1902, Fannie Mae Boatwright married Charlie Lester Davis in Chesterfield. The couple settled nearby and, by the 1910 census, had four young children of their own — Elma, Blanche, Lila, and Atlas — giving Julia and Drew their first grandchildren.

Middle Age and the World War I Era (1910s–1920)

The 1920 census found Drew, now 59, and Julia — recorded that year as “Jenn E.,” clearly a mishearing or misreading of Julia Ellen — still keeping house together at Court House, Chesterfield County, their children grown and gone. This was the decade of the First World War and the 1918 influenza pandemic, both of which touched rural South Carolina communities broadly, though no specific family record here documents their direct impact on the Boatwright household.

Later Years (1930)

By the 1930 census, Drew was 69 and Julia 70, still together at Court House, Chesterfield County — more than fifty years after their wedding. This was the eve of the Great Depression, which would soon bear down hard on small Southern cotton farmers, though Julia would not live to see much of it.

Children of Julia and Drew

Julia and Drew Boatwright raised two children to adulthood, having lost their middle son in infancy.

NameBornDiedMarried
George R. BoatwrightSept. 1879, Chesterfield Co., SC21 Sept. 1939, Chesterfield Co., SCGarphelia F. Swinnie (1883–1933)
Benjamin F. Boatwright22 May 1881, Chesterfield Co., SC23 Aug. 1881, Chesterfield Co., SC— (died in infancy)
Fannie Mae Boatwright12 June 1885, Chesterfield Co., SC19 Oct. 1970, Florence, SCCharlie Lester Davis (1882–1953), 27 July 1902

Family Group Sheet, Drew Lewis Boatwright and Julia Ellen Teal.

Their elder son, George R. Boatwright, married Garphelia F. Swinnie and remained in Chesterfield County his whole life, dying there in September 1939, just months after his father. Their daughter, Fannie Mae Boatwright, married Charlie Lester Davis in 1902 and lived to age 85, passing away in Florence, South Carolina, in October 1970 — outliving both of her parents by decades. Fannie's obituary named her five surviving children: Elma (Mrs. John William Purvis) of Wadesboro, Blanche (Mrs. Wallace) of Monroe, P. Melton Davis of Chesterfield, and sons Drew (of Kannapolis) and Loubert (of Key West, Florida).

Family Connection

Elma later married John William Purvis, Jr. — a connection of particular interest, as he was Charles Purvis's first cousin once removed, linking this Boatwright/Teal line directly to the preparer's own family.

Final Years and Death

Julia's health declined in her last years. According to her obituary in the Chesterfield Advertiser, she had been in poor health for about two and a half years before her death and had been confined to bed for over a year of that time. She seemed to be holding her own until the Saturday before she died, then took a turn for the worse and passed away the following Friday, 12 June 1931, at her home near Chesterfield — just eleven days shy of her 72nd birthday.

From the Obituary (Chesterfield Advertiser, 2 July 1931)

“She was a faithful mother and grandmother and was always ready to welcome all who came in to see her… She bore her pains well and did not worry about her troubles.” The obituary recorded that Julia left behind her husband, two surviving children (George Boatwright and Mrs. Lester Davis), seven grandchildren, and three great-grandchildren.

Her funeral service was conducted at the home by her pastor, Mr. Gobe Smith, and she was laid to rest in the Teal Cemetery near Zoar — the same burying ground where her own parents and, eight years later, her husband would also be buried.

Drew Lewis Boatwright outlived Julia by nearly eight years, dying 9 February 1939 at home in Chesterfield, just shy of his 79th birthday. His obituary described him as “a loved and respected citizen of Chesterfield… upright in character, kind and generous and truly loved by a wide circle of friends.” He was buried beside Julia in the Teal Cemetery following services at Zoar Methodist Church, the same church that had figured throughout the family's life in Chesterfield County.

The World Julia Lived Through

Julia Ellen Teal Boatwright's life — 1860 to 1931 — spans an extraordinary stretch of American and South Carolina history. She was born on the eve of the Civil War and secession, came of age during Reconstruction and the difficult rebuilding of the Southern farm economy, married and raised children through the height of the cotton era, and lived to see the arrival of the automobile, the First World War, and the early rumblings of the Great Depression. None of these larger events are documented as touching the Teal or Boatwright families directly beyond what the census and obituary records show — but they form the backdrop against which this quiet, close-to-home farm life was lived.

  • 1860 – Julia born; South Carolina secedes from the Union that December
  • 1861–1865 – Civil War; Sherman's forces pass through South Carolina in early 1865
  • 1865–1877 – Reconstruction era in South Carolina
  • 1868 – Julia's father, Benjamin Franklin Teal, dies
  • abt. 1878–1879 – Julia marries Drew Lewis Boatwright
  • 1879–1885 – Children George, Benjamin, and Fannie Mae are born
  • 1902 – Daughter Fannie Mae marries Charlie Lester Davis
  • early 1900s–1920s – Boll weevil infestation disrupts Southern cotton farming
  • 1917–1918 – World War I and the influenza pandemic
  • 1929 – Stock market crash; onset of the Great Depression
  • 1931 – Julia dies in Chesterfield County
  • 1939 – Drew Lewis Boatwright dies; buried beside Julia in Teal Cemetery

Open Research Questions

  • The exact marriage date for Julia and Drew has not been located; it is currently estimated (abt. 1878) from the birth of their first child and the “21 years married” notation in the 1900 census.
  • Julia's death certificate lists her age at death as 75 and an implied birth year of 1856, which conflicts with the 1860 birth year given on her tombstone and consistently used throughout the census record. This discrepancy is unresolved and worth further investigation.
  • The burial date of 13 June 1931 is an estimate only; neither the death certificate nor the obituary specifies a burial date.
  • Precise birth years for Julia's Teal siblings (William, David, Thomas/Benjamin T., Isabella, Daniel, Frank, and Wesley) are approximated from ages given in the 1860 census and have not been individually verified against other records.
Julia Ellen Teal Boatwright is my 2nd Cousin 3X Removed. 

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 Julia Ellen Teal Boatwright (1860-1931) was compiled with the assistance of Claude Sonnett 4.

Sources

This biography draws on a family group sheet compiled 7 July 2026, incorporating U.S. federal census records (1860, 1870, 1880, 1900, 1920, 1930), tombstone transcriptions from James C. Pigg's Chesterfield County, South Carolina Cemetery Survey (1995), South Carolina death records, Find A Grave memorials, and obituaries published in the Chesterfield Advertiser (1931, 1939, 1970). Full source citations are preserved in the underlying research file.

Prepared by

Charles Purvis

Tuesday, July 7, 2026

Aunts and Uncles~Mary "Polly" Davis

 


                                            A FAMILY BIOGRAPHY

Mary "Polly" Davis

1808 – 1890

Daughter of Thomas Davis, "Patriot," and Nancy Rivers Davis

Chesterfield County, South Carolina


QUICK FACTS

Full NameMary "Polly" Davis
SexFemale
Born25 June 1808 — Chesterfield, Chesterfield County, South Carolina
Died20 May 1890 (age 81) — Chesterfield, Chesterfield County, South Carolina
Buried21 May 1890 — Zoar United Methodist Church Cemetery, Brocks Mill, Chesterfield County, South Carolina
FatherThomas Davis, "Patriot, Rev. War" (1760–1845)
MotherNancy Rivers (1767–1853)
Marital StatusNever married
Find A GraveMemorial #83059333

OVERVIEW

Mary "Polly" Davis was born on 25 June 1808 in Chesterfield, Chesterfield County, South Carolina, the daughter of Thomas Davis and his wife, Nancy Rivers Davis. She spent her entire life of eighty-one years within Chesterfield County, never marrying, and is remembered in family tradition as a devoted daughter and sister who cared first for her aging parents and, after their deaths, helped raise her brother Michael's children in his household. She died on 20 May 1890 and was laid to rest the following day at Zoar United Methodist Church Cemetery near Brocks Mill, where her tombstone still stands today.

SOURCE: James C. Pigg, Chesterfield County Cemetery Survey (Chesterfield County Genealogical Services, 1995), p. 828, tombstone of "Polly" Davis, 25 June 1808–20 May 1890, Zoar United Methodist Church Cemetery, Chesterfield County, South Carolina.

PARENTS AND FAMILY OF ORIGIN

Polly was the daughter of Thomas Davis (1760–1845), known in family memory as "Patriot" — a name that reflects Revolutionary-era service and family pride, though no service record is included in this file. Her mother was Nancy Rivers (1767–1853). Thomas and Nancy Davis raised their family in Chesterfield County, South Carolina, and Polly is recorded in their household in three consecutive federal censuses: 1810, 1820, and 1830.

The Davis household in Chesterfield County was a large one. Federal census enumerators of this era did not list the names of every household member — only the head of household was named, with everyone else tallied by age bracket and sex. Fortunately, this file's underlying research notes identify several of Polly's siblings by name alongside the corresponding census tick-marks, allowing at least a partial reconstruction of the family group shown below.

Siblings Identified in the Household (1810–1830 Census Records)

NameApprox. Birth (from census)Source Notation
William Davisc. 1794–18041810 census, male 16–25
Susannah Davisc. 1785–17941810 census, female 16–25
Isaac Davisc. 1794–18001810 census, male 10–16
Elizabeth Davisc. 1800–18101810 census, female under 10
Sarah Jane Davisc. 1800–18101810 census, female under 10
Jonathan Davisc. 1800–18101810 census, male 0–10
Michael Davisc. 1800–1810; age 54 in 1860, 74 in 18801810, 1860, 1880 census
John Calvin Davisc. 1811–18151830 census, male 15–19

Ages shown above are estimated from the census age brackets rather than exact birth dates, and some individuals may be listed more than once across census years under different age ranges as they grew older. Michael Davis, Polly's brother, is the sibling most fully documented in this file; he appears again decades later as head of the household in which Polly herself was living in 1860 and 1880.

SOURCE: 1810, 1820, and 1830 U.S. Census, Chesterfield County, South Carolina, population schedules, Household of Thomas Davis; digital images, Ancestry.com; citing National Archives Microfilm M252_60, M33_119, and M19_172 respectively.

CHILDHOOD AND YOUTH (1808–1830)

Polly was born in June 1808, during the second term of President Thomas Jefferson and only a few months after the United States had banned the further importation of enslaved Africans. She was still an infant when the nation entered the War of 1812 against Great Britain, a conflict that touched the South largely through naval blockades, militia call-ups, and economic disruption to cotton exports — the very crop on which Chesterfield County's agricultural economy depended.

The 1810 census captured Polly as a small child of about two years old, one of at least nine people in her father Thomas Davis's household. By the 1820 census, taken when Polly was about twelve, South Carolina and the nation were absorbing the effects of the Panic of 1819 — the country's first major financial crisis — and the political tensions that would soon produce the Missouri Compromise of 1820, the first great sectional showdown over the expansion of slavery.

By the time of the 1830 census, Polly was about twenty-two years old and still living in her father's household alongside her mother Nancy, her brother Michael and his wife Hulda, and a younger brother, John Calvin. South Carolina in this period was consumed by the growing conflict over federal tariffs that would erupt, within two years, into the Nullification Crisis of 1832–33 — a direct confrontation between the state and the federal government that made South Carolina, and Chesterfield County along with it, a center of the states'-rights movement that would resurface a generation later.

SOURCE: 1810 U.S. Census, Chesterfield, Chesterfield County, South Carolina, population schedule, p. 554, line 22, Household of Thomas Davis; 1820 U.S. Census, Chesterfield County, South Carolina, p. 123, line 22; 1830 U.S. Census, Chesterfield County, South Carolina, p. 239, line 14, Household of Tho[mas] Davis, Senior; digital images, Ancestry.com.

ADULT LIFE: A LIFE OF CARE FOR FAMILY (1830–1890)

Polly Davis never married. Family tradition preserved in the notes accompanying this record states plainly that she "grew up and helped care for her parents until their death," and that afterward she "moved into her brother Michael's home and helped him and his wife, Hulda, with their children." This single sentence captures the shape of her entire adult life: five decades spent in service to family rather than in a household of her own.

Her father Thomas Davis died in 1845, when Polly was about thirty-seven, and her mother Nancy followed in 1853, when Polly was about forty-five. By the time of the 1860 census, Polly — then about fifty-two years old — was living as "Mary Davis, age 50" in the household of her brother Michael Davis, a farmer, and his wife Hulda, along with their children William, Sarah, Thomas, Charles, Elisha, Jane, and Mary Eliza. The census taker's bracketed note in this file identifies her clearly as "Michael's sister."

The years surrounding that 1860 census were the most turbulent South Carolina had yet seen. In December 1860, South Carolina became the first state to secede from the Union, and the Civil War that followed touched nearly every family in Chesterfield County. Michael Davis's household in 1860 included several sons of military age — William, Thomas, and Charles among them — the age group from which the Confederacy would draw its soldiers throughout the war that began the following spring.

By the 1880 census, taken fifteen years after the war's end and in the midst of the Reconstruction era's unwinding, Polly — then seventy-one years old — was still recorded in Michael's household, listed as his "Sister," alongside Michael (74), Hulda (64), and another relative, Hauly Rivers (66), whose surname suggests a continuing connection to Polly's mother's Rivers family. Polly had, by this point, spent more than half a century as a fixture of her brother's home.

SOURCE: 1860 U.S. Census, Chesterfield County, South Carolina, population schedule, p. 94, line 1, Household of Michael Davis; 1880 U.S. Census, Court House, Chesterfield County, South Carolina, ED 5, p. 316B, line 28, Household of Michael Davis; digital images, Ancestry.com.

DEATH AND BURIAL

Mary "Polly" Davis died on 20 May 1890 at the age of eighty-one, in Chesterfield, Chesterfield County, South Carolina — the same county in which she had been born, raised, and had spent her entire life. She was buried the following day, 21 May 1890, at Zoar United Methodist Church Cemetery in Brocks Mill, Chesterfield County. Her tombstone there records both her birth and death dates and confirms her lifelong identity within the family and the church community she had served.

Polly's grave lies near that of her brother Michael Davis, and her Find A Grave memorial — created in January 2012 and still visited today — notes her explicitly as "Sister to Michael Davis buried in this cemetery." Visitors have left flowers and remembrances at her memorial in the years since, including verses of comfort left by strangers moved by her simple, quiet story of a life spent in devotion to family.

SOURCE: James C. Pigg, Chesterfield County Cemetery Survey (1995), p. 828; Find A Grave, memorial #83059333, Zoar United Methodist Church Cemetery, Brocks Mill, Chesterfield County, South Carolina, created by Julious, 6 January 2012, accessed 7 July 2012.

POLLY DAVIS'S LIFETIME: 1808–1890

Polly Davis lived through one of the most eventful periods in American history — from the early years of the young republic to the aftermath of the Civil War and the beginnings of the modern South. A few of the major national and state events that framed her eighty-one years:

  • 1808 — Polly born in Chesterfield County; the U.S. federal ban on the importation of enslaved persons takes effect.
  • 1812–1815 — War of 1812 disrupts Southern cotton exports and brings militia musters to Carolina counties.
  • 1819–1820 — The Panic of 1819 and the Missouri Compromise mark growing national economic and sectional strain.
  • 1832–1833 — The Nullification Crisis places South Carolina at the center of a states'-rights confrontation with the federal government.
  • 1845 — Polly's father, Thomas Davis, dies.
  • 1853 — Polly's mother, Nancy Rivers Davis, dies; Polly, about forty-five, joins her brother Michael's household.
  • 1860 — South Carolina becomes the first state to vote for secession from the Union, in December.
  • 1861–1865 — The Civil War is fought; Chesterfield County, South Carolina, lies within the path of Sherman's 1865 Carolinas Campaign.
  • 1865–1877 — The Reconstruction era reshapes the political and social structure of the South.
  • 1890 — Polly Davis dies on 20 May and is buried the next day at Zoar United Methodist Church Cemetery.
Mary "Polly" Davis is my 3rd Great GrandAunt. 

These broader events are provided as general historical context for the era in which Polly lived; no specific connection between Polly Davis or her immediate family and these events is documented in the source material for this biography.