Tuesday, May 5, 2026

52 Cousins~James Lundy Brock (1808-1886)

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 ”JAMES LUNDY BROCK (1808 - 1886)" was compiled with the assistance of Claude Sonnett 4 and is entitled:

 

“James Lundy Brock”

September 8, 1808 – April 2, 1886

Henry County, Georgia

 

Overview

James Lundy Brock lived a long and quietly remarkable life that spanned nearly eight decades of American history — from the era of frontier land lotteries to the aftermath of the Civil War. Born in Chesterfield District, South Carolina, in 1808, he made his way to Henry County, Georgia, as a young man and put down roots there that never shifted. He was a farmer through and through, working the red clay soil of middle Georgia for the better part of sixty years. He never married, lived modestly, and left behind a straightforward paper trail: land deeds, tax records, census pages, and a tombstone in the Beersheba Primitive Baptist Church Cemetery in Locust Grove, Georgia, where he rests today.

His life quietly intersected with some of the most turbulent chapters in American history — the era of Indian Removal and the westward push of the Cotton South, the tragedy of the Civil War, and the painful rebuilding of the postwar years — yet he remained anchored to his modest farm in Henry County from beginning to end.

 

Family Origins

Parents

James was the son of Valentine Brock (1775–1830) and Elizabeth Lundy (1780–1855), both born in South Carolina. The Brock family was part of the broader Scots-Irish and English migration into the Carolina backcountry that accelerated in the late 1700s, when land was cheap and opportunity beckoned to families willing to work hard in rough conditions.

Valentine Brock was born around 1775 and died in 1830 when James was just 22 years old, leaving Elizabeth — a strong-willed woman who appears regularly in the records — to carry on. Elizabeth Lundy Brock lived to the impressive age of about 75, passing away in 1855. She had moved with her family to Henry County, Georgia, and the 1850 census shows her still living with her son James, then 41, which speaks to the close family bonds that were the norm in 19th-century rural households.

An important family property transaction in NYDecember 1835 sheds light on the family dynamics after Valentine's death. James purchased the North half of Lot Number 223 in the 2nd District of Henry County — described as the place where Elizabeth currently lived — from his sisters Sarah Brock and Elizabeth Brock for $350. This transaction likely represents James taking formal legal possession of the family homestead, ensuring his mother had a secure place to live while the land passed into his name.

Siblings

James had one sibling on record in: a brother named Valentine Brock (1815–1850), named after their father. Valentine the younger died at only 35 years of age. Given the family naming patterns and the 1830 census listing, there were other siblings, three sisters, Mary Ann, b. 1810; Sarah Elizabeth, b. 1812 and Eliza P., b. 1813.

 

Life in Henry County, Georgia

Arriving in a New Land

Henry County was a young and growing place when the Brock family arrived. It had been carved out of Creek Indian territory and formally organized in 1821 — the very year that James appeared in the earliest probate proceeding index for Henry County. The county was named after Patrick Henry, the fiery Virginia patriot, and it sat in the rolling Piedmont country south of Atlanta (though Atlanta itself wouldn't exist until 1837). This was cotton country, and families who could work the land found a foothold in the expanding Southern economy.

The forced removal of the Creek Nation from this land in the 1820s — and later the Cherokee from north Georgia during the Trail of Tears in 1838–1839 — opened vast tracts to white settlement. James arrived in this social and geographic context, one shared by thousands of other Southern farming families who moved into the Georgia interior in search of fresh, fertile land.

Farming Life

James identified himself — or was identified by census takers — as a farmer for his entire adult working life, roughly from 1827 to 1886. This was not unusual for the time; the vast majority of white Southerners in the antebellum era worked the land. Henry County's mild climate and adequate rainfall made it suitable for cotton, corn, and general subsistence farming.

His tax records and property listings tell us he was a landholder of modest but real means. By 1852, he was paying taxes in the Hail Militia District of Henry County. By 1885, he was listed in the Tussahaw District, paying taxes in the Wynn and Mills area. At his death, the estate included 108 acres — the house place he had worked for decades — which sold at public auction in December 1886 for $830, a respectable sum for a mid-sized farm in post-Reconstruction Georgia. Two other parcels of 252 1./2 acres sold for $341.00. 

The farm was bounded by neighbors whose names appear in other Henry County records: J.R. Williams to the north, the public road and Jack Colvin to the east, W.E. Single to the south, and Arch Brown to the west. These were the faces James would have known at church, at the county seat, and across the fence line for years.

 


The Civil War Years (1861–1865)

By the time the Civil War erupted in 1861, James Lundy Brock was already 52 or 53 years old — well past the prime fighting age. Georgia seceded from the Union in January 1861, and Henry County sent its sons off to war like every other Southern county. The social world James had known — the local economy, the rhythm of farm life, the familiar faces at Beersheba Primitive Baptist Church — was upended.

In 1864, James appears in the Census for Re-Organizing the Georgia Militia, which was the Confederate government's attempt to call up older men and those previously exempt to bolster the crumbling Southern war effort. He is listed as J.L. Brock, age 55, of Henry County, born in Chesterfield District, South Carolina. Whether he was actually called into active militia service is not recorded. By that point, General William T. Sherman's Union army was advancing through Georgia on its devastating March to the Sea, and Atlanta — just miles north of Henry County — fell in September 1864. The destruction, displacement, and grief of those years would have touched every household in the county.

The 1870 census, the first taken after the war, shows James still on his farm, now 63 years old, with a 37-year-old Georgia-born housekeeper named Sarah Miller living in his household. He had survived the war. Many of his neighbors had not.

 

Household and Personal Life

The records tell us consistently that James Lundy Brock never married. He is recorded as single throughout his life. Yet he was not entirely alone. Census records from 1870 and 1880 both show a woman named Sarah Miller living in his household as a housekeeper. In 1870 she was listed as 37 years old and born in Georgia around 1833; in 1880, she was 40 and born around 1840. The slight discrepancy in her birth year is common in 19th-century census records, which were often estimated rather than precisely known. Whether Sarah was a hired hand, a distant relation, or simply a practical arrangement for an aging bachelor farmer, the records do not say.

James's faith life was likely anchored at the Beersheba Primitive Baptist Church in Locust Grove, where he would ultimately be buried. The Primitive Baptists were a denomination that emphasized God's sovereignty, simplicity of worship, and community. Their churches were important social institutions in rural Georgia, serving as the gathering places for marriages, funerals, baptisms, and the quiet rhythms of community life.

 

Death and Legacy

James Lundy Brock died on April 2, 1886, at the age of 77, in Henry County, Georgia. His tombstone at the Beersheba Primitive Baptist Church Cemetery in Locust Grove confirms both his birth date of September 8 (or 9), 1808, and his death date. He had outlived his parents, his brother, and two sisters and most of the world he was born into. His sister, Sarah Elizabeth (Brock) Taylor survied until 28 Jyly 1894. 

Because he died without a spouse or children, the courts appointed an administrator for his estate. J.A.C. Wynn was named administrator at the October 1886 term of the Court of Ordinary of Henry County, and in December 1886, the estate's 108-acre farm was auctioned off on the courthouse steps at McDonough, Georgia. S.E. Miller was the winning bidder at $830 cash. The deed was officially recorded in May 1888.

Final returns for the estate were filed in April 1891, closing the legal chapter on the life of James Lundy Brock more than five years after his death — a reminder of how slowly the wheels of 19th-century probate courts could turn.

James left no direct descendants, but his life is woven into the fabric of Henry County history through the deeds, tax lists, census pages, and church records that document his presence for over six decades. He is remembered today through his Find a Grave memorial (#44612672) and through the genealogical research of family members who have traced his line back to South Carolina and forward through his siblings.

 

Quick-Reference Timeline

1808 — Born September 8 (or 9), Chesterfield District, South Carolina

1821 — Family appears in Henry County, Georgia probate records for the first time

1830 — Listed in the federal census in Henry County; father Valentine dies this year

1835 — Purchases the family homestead (100 acres) from Sarah and Elizabeth Brock for $350

1837 — Appears in Georgia property tax records, Militia District Captain McCommon, Henry County

1838–1839 — Cherokee Nation forcibly removed from Georgia (Trail of Tears) during his years as a young farmer

1840 — Listed in federal census, District 489, Henry County, with his mother Elizabeth

1850 — Listed in federal census, District 42, Henry County, with mother Elizabeth (age 73)

1852 — Listed in Georgia property tax records, Hail Militia District, Henry County

1855 — His mother, Elizabeth Lundy Brock, dies at approximately age 75

1860 — Listed in federal census, Henry County, alone, age 51

1861 — Georgia secedes; Civil War begins

1864 — Listed in the Confederate Census for Re-Organizing the Georgia Militia, age 55

1865 — Civil War ends; the South enters Reconstruction

1870 — Listed in federal census with housekeeper Sarah Miller

1880 — Listed in federal census with Sarah Miller

1885 — Final tax record, Tussahaw District, Wynn and Mills area, Henry County

1886 — Dies April 2, Henry County, Georgia, age 77; buried at Beersheba Primitive Baptist Church Cemetery, Locust Grove

1886–1888 — Estate administered; 108-acre farm sold at auction for $830

1891 — Final probate returns filed, closing his estate

 

James Lundy Brock is my 2nd Cousin 4X Removed.

 

 _____________________

1. Find A Grave, Inc., Find A Grave, database and digital images, (http://www.findagrave.com : accessed  October 2012); Memorial page for James Lundy Brock; (9 September 1808–2 April 1886); Find a Grave memorial # 44612672, Citing Beersheba Primitive Baptist Church Cemetery; Locust Grove, Henry County, Georgia, USA.

2. Henry County, Georgia, Probate Records, 1742-1990, Proceeding index 1821-1939, 47, Brock Estates; FHL microfilm #175296>Image 79 of 676.

3. Henry County, Georgia, Deed Book N: Page 557, Sarah Brock and Elizabeth Brock to James L. Brock; Register of Deeds, Chesterfield, Henry County, Georgia.

4. James L. Brock, District Hail, IMAGE 231 of 289, LINE 4, : YEAR 1852, 1859; , Georgia, Property Tax Digests, 1793-1893; Georgia Archives, Morrow, Georgia.

5. 1840 U. S. Census, Henry County, Georgia, population schedule, District 489, Henry County, Georgia, Page: 329,  Line 23, Household of J. L. BROCK; digital images, Ancestry.com (http://www.ancestry.com : viewed 10 October 2012); citing NARA publication Roll: M704_43.

6. 1850 U. S. Census, Henry County, Georgia, population schedule, District 42, Henry County, Georgia, Page 189B, Line 15, Dwelling 25, Family 25, Household of James L. Brock; digital images, Ancestry.com (http://www.ancestry.com : viewed 10 October 2012); citing NARA publication Roll: M432_73.

7. 1860 U. S. Census, Henry County, Georgia, population schedule, Henry County, Georgia, Page 880, Line 39, Dwelling 675, Family 675, Household of James L. BROCK; digital images, Ancestry.com (http://www.ancestry.com : viewed 10 October 2012); citing NARA publication Roll: M653_127.

8. 1870 U. S. Census, Henry County, Georgia, population schedule,  Militia District 641, Henry County, Georgia, Page 472B, Line 26, Dwelling 661, Family 661, Hohsehold of James L. BROCK; digital images, Ancestry.com (http://www.ancestry.com : online 10 October 2012); citing NARA publication Roll: M593_157.

9. 1880 U. S. Census, Henry County, Georgia, population schedule, District 489, Henry County, Georgia, enumeration district (ED) 069, Page 197A, Line 6, Dwelling 64, Family 68, Household of James BROCK; digital images, Ancestry.com (http://www.ancestry.com : online 10 October 2012); citing NARA publication Roll: T9_152.

10. Henry County, Georgia, Probate Records, 1742-1990 Volune D-E: 18, Image 374 0f 669.

11. Land Deed - Administration of James L. Brock Estate; 12 December 1887; Deed Book #X; Page(s) 395; Register of Deeds; McDanough, Henry County, Georgia; February 2024.


 

Buried at Beersheba Primitive Baptist Church Cemetery, Locust Grove, Henry County, Georgia

Find a Grave Memorial #44612672













Saturday, May 2, 2026

Aunts & Uncles Plus~The Joseph Henry Johns Family

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 Joseph Henry Johns Family was compiled with the assistance of Claude Sonnett 4 and is entitled:  

"THE JOHNS FAMILY"

of South Carolina & North Carolina

A Family Biography

Centered on Joseph Henry Johns (1849–1929)

and his parents, Shadrach Johns & Mary Boan

Compiled: 23 April 2026

Introduction

The Johns family story is one of migration, perseverance, and hardship — woven through the turbulent decades of antebellum America, the Civil War era, and the long aftermath of Reconstruction. This biography traces the family across the Carolinas and into Alabama, following three generations from the early nineteenth century into the first decades of the twentieth.

At its heart, this account focuses on Joseph Henry Johns (April 1849 – 8 April 1929), a South Carolina-born farmer whose eighty-year life spanned some of the most dramatic chapters in American history. Through census records, land deeds, death certificates, newspaper accounts, and genealogical research, a portrait emerges of an ordinary man living through extraordinary times.

 

Part One: The Patriarch and Matriarch

Shadrach Johns (c. 1800–1880) & Mary Boan (1815–1866)

Shadrach Johns was born around 1800, almost certainly in South Carolina, where his family would remain rooted for generations. His wife, Mary Boan — born in 1815, also in South Carolina — carried a surname long established in the Chesterfield County region. Together they formed the foundation of what would become a large, geographically scattered family.

Early Life and Chesterfield County

The earliest documentary record of the family as a unit comes from the 1850 United States Census for Chesterfield County, South Carolina. At that time Shadrach was enumerated at approximately age 50, with Mary listed at 35. Their household included three children: Alice C. Johns (about age 7), Thomas H. Johns (about age 3), and the youngest, Joseph Johns, just one year old. The family appears to have been of modest means — Shadrach's later occupations suggest manual and agricultural labor.

The Alabama Years

By 1860, the Johns family had relocated westward to Russell County, Alabama — specifically to the community of Seals Station. This migration was common among Southern families of limited means seeking fresh land and new opportunities. The 1860 Census lists Shadrach (now enumerated as 'Shadrick') at approximately age 60, working as a Day Laborer. Mary, age 44, is listed as a House Keeper. Their children remaining at home were Alice C. (16), Thomas H. (14), Henry J. (11, presumably Joseph), and a younger daughter, Anna W. (6). The family was white and working-class, typical of the rural Southern yeomanry of the period.

The Civil War

The Civil War almost certainly disrupted the Johns family as profoundly as it did every Southern household. Records confirm that Shadrach Johns served in the Confederate Army with Company H of the 24th Alabama Infantry. His son Joseph would later be claimed in newspaper accounts to also have been a Confederate veteran, though a researcher's note in the family records casts doubt on this: Joseph would have been only about 16 years old when the war ended in 1865, making active service unlikely though not impossible for the final months of the conflict.

Return to South Carolina and Final Years

After the war, the family made its way back to the Carolinas. A land deed dated 3 December 1866 and recorded in Chesterfield County, South Carolina, shows Shadrach Johns, then living in Washington County, Florida, joining other family members — including a young H. J. Johns (Joseph) — in the sale of eight acres of land to Alice Goodwin. This document is notable both for placing Joseph in an adult legal role at about age 17 and for confirming the family's continued connection to Chesterfield County real estate.

Mary Boan Johns died in 1866, the same year as this land transaction, at approximately age 51. Shadrach outlived her by fourteen years, dying in 1880 at an estimated age of 80. The 1880 Census finds him in Marlboro County, South Carolina, aged 80 and working as a Shingle Getter — a laborious trade involving the hand-splitting of wooden roofing shingles — alongside his adult son Joseph and two grandchildren, May and William Tolar, who were living in the household.

Full Name

Shadrach Johns

Born

c. 1800, South Carolina

Died

1880, Marlboro County, South Carolina (age ~80)

Full Name (Wife)

Mary Boan

Born

1815, South Carolina

Died

1866 (age ~51)

Marriage

Before 1843 (estimated)

Known Children

Alice C., Thomas H., Joseph Henry, Anna W. (and possibly others)

Civil War Service

Shadrach: Co. H, 24th Alabama Infantry (Confederate)

 

 

Part Two: Joseph Henry Johns

A Life Across the Carolinas (April 1849 – 8 April 1929)

Joseph Henry Johns was born in April 1849 in Chesterfield County, South Carolina, the youngest son of Shadrach and Mary. His life of eighty years carried him across two states, through a marriage and widowhood, the raising of eight children largely on his own, and a final tragic chapter in Anson County, North Carolina.

Childhood and the War Years

Joseph spent his earliest years in Chesterfield County before the family's move to Russell County, Alabama, recorded in the 1860 Census. Listed as 'Henry J. Johns' at age 11, he was entering adolescence in the Deep South during the most politically charged years of the antebellum period. The outbreak of the Civil War in 1861 would have defined his teenage years; he was twelve when the war began and sixteen when it ended. Whether he served — as a newspaper account would later assert — remains unverified by documentary evidence.

Young Adulthood and the 1866 Land Deed

At approximately age 17, Joseph appears as a signatory in the Chesterfield County land deed of December 1866, identified as 'H. J. Johns.' This marks his first independent appearance in the historical record and suggests he had reached a recognized legal standing within his family. The deed involved the sale of eight acres of land originally purchased from the LaCoste estate by Joseph's grandmother Mary Bone (Boan), and it brought together an extended network of Johns, Eddings, Boan, and Goodwin family members.

The 1880 Census: Life with His Aging Father

The 1880 Census places Joseph at about age 31, still living in Marlboro County, South Carolina, in the household of his father Shadrach. Notably, two grandchildren of Shadrach — May Tolar (age 10) and William Tolar (age 7) — also share the dwelling. These Tolar grandchildren were almost certainly the children of Joseph's sister Alice C. Johns, who had married into the Toler family. The presence of these young Tolar children suggests a family accustomed to extending households across generations.

It is during this period — around 1880, according to census data — that a young woman named Laura Driggers is recorded living next door to the Johns family. She would become Joseph's wife.

Marriage to Laura Driggers (c. 1882)

Joseph Henry Johns married Laura Driggers around 1882, when he was approximately 33 years of age. Laura, born in 1869, was roughly twenty years his junior. Their marriage appears to have been fruitful and stable, producing eight children over approximately sixteen years. The 1900 Census records Joseph as having been married eighteen years — confirming an approximate marriage date of 1882 — and notes that he was, by that time, a widower.

Laura Driggers Johns died in 1898, at the young age of 29, leaving Joseph a widower with a household of children ranging in age from newborn Mamie to fifteen-year-old Walter. The cause of Laura's death is not recorded in the available documents, but the timing — coinciding with the birth of her youngest child Mamie — raises the possibility of complications related to childbirth.

Full Name

Joseph Henry Johns

Born

April 1849, Chesterfield County, South Carolina

Died

8 April 1929, McFarlan, Anson County, North Carolina

Buried

10 April 1929, Pleasant Grove United Methodist Church Cemetery, Chesterfield County, SC

Spouse

Laura Driggers (1869–1898), married c. 1882

Occupation

Farmer

Civil War

Claimed as veteran; unverified (age 16 at war's end)

Find A Grave

Memorial #103837358

 

 

Part Three: The Children of Joseph and Laura

Eight Children; One Widower Father

Joseph and Laura Johns had eight known children, born between 1883 and 1898. When Laura died in 1898, Joseph was left to raise them alone. Census records across 1900, 1910, and 1920 document his quiet persistence — each decade showing a smaller household as children came of age and left, while Joseph grew older.

1. Walter Joseph Johns Sr. (1883–1964)

Walter, the eldest son, was born in August 1883. He was about 15 when his mother died and took on an important role in the family in the years following. The 1910 Census lists him at age 20 still at home with his father in Chesterfield County. Walter eventually settled in McFarlan, Anson County, North Carolina — and it was at his home that his aging father Joseph came to spend his final years. The 1929 newspaper obituary notes that Joseph had been living with 'his son, Walter Johns of McFarlan.' Walter lived until 1964, reaching the age of 81.

2. Julius Johns (1887–1937)

Julius was born in March 1887. He appears in the 1900 Census at age 13 living with his father and siblings in Marlboro County. Julius's death certificate was one of the sources used to establish Joseph's birth information. He died in 1937 at approximately age 50.

3. Annie Bell Johns (1888–1923)

Annie Bell was born in May 1888. She later married into the Boan family — a surname with deep roots in the same Chesterfield County region that the Johns family had long inhabited, suggesting continued social ties within the local community. Annie Bell died in 1923 at age 35, predeceasing her father by six years.

4. Samuel Johns (1890–  )

Samuel was born in 1890 and appears in the 1920 Census living with his father Joseph in Cheraw, Chesterfield County, at age 30. This makes Samuel one of the last of the children to remain near his father before Joseph's final move to North Carolina. Samuel's death date is not recorded in the available records.

5. Nellie Johns (1891–1928)

Nellie, born in July 1891, later married into the Heustess family. She died in 1928 — just one year before her father — at age 37. Her married name, Nellie Johns Heustess, is documented in the Find A Grave memorial for the family.

6. Mary Frances 'Fannie' Johns (1892–1930)

Known as 'Fannie,' she was born in July 1892. She appears in the 1910 Census with her father and siblings in Chesterfield County at age 15. Fannie died in 1930, just one year after her father Joseph, at approximately age 38.

7. Ida B. Johns (1893–  )

Ida B. Johns presents an interesting genealogical puzzle. She appears in the 1910 Census as a 17-year-old daughter of Joseph Johns, but is notably absent from the 1900 Census for the same household. This discrepancy is noted in the family records without a clear resolution — she may have been living elsewhere in 1900, or there may have been a recording error. Her date of death is unknown.

8. Mamie Johns (1898–1910)

Mamie was the youngest child, born in July 1898 — the same year her mother Laura died. Whether Laura's death was related to Mamie's birth is unknown, but the timing is striking. Mamie herself lived only twelve years, dying in 1910. She does not appear in the 1910 Census with her father and siblings, confirming her death before that enumeration.

 

Name

Born

Died

Notes

Walter Joseph Johns Sr.

Aug 1883

1964

Settled in McFarlan, NC; cared for father

Julius Johns

Mar 1887

1937

Death certificate helped confirm Joseph's birth

Annie Bell Johns (Boan)

May 1888

1923

Married into the Boan family

Samuel Johns

1890

Unknown

Last child to live with Joseph (1920 Census)

Nellie Johns (Heustess)

Jul 1891

1928

Died one year before her father

Mary Frances 'Fannie' Johns

Jul 1892

1930

Died one year after her father

Ida B. Johns

1893

Unknown

Absent from 1900 Census; genealogical puzzle

Mamie Johns

Jul 1898

1910

Youngest child; died age 12

 

 

Part Four: Joseph's Later Years

A Widower's Long Journey

1900: Bennettsville, Marlboro County

The 1900 Census captures Joseph at age 55 in Bennettsville, Marlboro County, South Carolina, heading a household of six children — Walter (16), Julius (13), Annie Bell (12), Nellie (8), Fannie (7), and baby Mamie (1). Joseph is listed as a widower who had been married eighteen years. The absence of Samuel and Ida B. from this enumeration is noted but unexplained. Joseph had been farming to support this large family for two years since Laura's death.

1910: Chesterfield County

By 1910, Joseph — now approximately 67 years old — had moved back to Chesterfield County, the county of his birth. The household had shrunk considerably: only Walter (20), Ida B. (17), and Fannie (15) remained at home. The older children had presumably established their own households. Joseph is again listed as widowed, still farming.

1920: Cheraw, Chesterfield County

In 1920, Joseph was approximately 70 years old, living in Cheraw with his son Samuel (30). This would be his last recorded residence in South Carolina. The family had contracted to just the two of them — the old farmer and one unmarried son — in a dwelling in the town of Cheraw.

1926: The Move to McFarlan, North Carolina

Family lore, preserved in genealogical notes, records that Gary Tucker and Bill Toler transported an aging Joe John to McFarlan around 1926 in an 'A-Model' — likely a Model A Ford. This oral tradition, though informal, lends a vivid human detail: an elderly man, approaching 80, being driven north across the state line to live out his final years near his eldest son Walter, who had settled in Anson County, North Carolina.

The newspaper obituary published after Joseph's death confirms that the Johns family had been living in McFarlan only since the beginning of 1929 — suggesting Joseph may have moved back and forth or arrived at Walter's home in early 1929.

 

Part Five: Death and Remembrance

8 April 1929, McFarlan, Anson County, North Carolina

On the morning of 8 April 1929, Joseph Henry Johns, approximately 80 years of age (the death certificate estimated him at 87), took his own life. His death certificate records the cause as a self-inflicted gunshot wound to the thorax. He had been in ill health for some time.

"A horrible tragedy occurred this (Wednesday) morning when an old Confederate veteran, Mr. Johns, committed suicide. He was 87 years of age and had been in ill health for some time. Mr. Johns was making his home with his son, Walter Johns of McFarlan. It seems that early in the morning after his sons had gone to work and the children were outside, Mr. Johns took a shotgun and fired through his heart, death being instant." — The Messenger-Intelligence, Wadesboro, NC, 11 April 1929

The obituary identified Joseph as a Confederate veteran — a claim that generated considerable interest among later family researchers. A genealogical annotation notes that no documentary proof of Civil War service has been found, and that Joseph's age (approximately 16 at the war's end in 1865) makes sustained military service unlikely, though wartime records for young Confederate soldiers are notoriously incomplete.

Burial

Joseph Henry Johns was buried on 10 April 1929 at Pleasant Grove United Methodist Church Cemetery in Chesterfield County, South Carolina — the county of his birth, to which he was returned in death. According to the Find A Grave memorial (number 103837358), there is no tombstone; the record is based on his North Carolina death certificate. He was survived by several children in both Anson and Chesterfield counties.

A Note on Ages and Dates

A recurring challenge in tracing Joseph's life is the inconsistency of his recorded age across documents. His birth year is estimated as 1849 based on his appearance as a one-year-old in the 1850 Census, consistent with the April 1849 birth date. However, the 1900 Census records him as born April 1845, and the 1929 death certificate estimates his birth year as 1842, placing his age at death as approximately 87. These discrepancies — common in historical records compiled from memory or estimation — do not undermine the core narrative but remind us that the documentary record must always be read critically.

 This is a “Works In-Progress Document”.

After many years of research I have determined that sufficient documents have not been found or do not exist to prove the Name, Age and  Death Date of the Wife of Joseph Henry John/Johns.

What is known is that my GrandUncle Walter Joseph John/Johns, Son of Joseph Henry John/Johns and his said to be wife Laura, lived until 30 January 1964, passing away at about age  80, his obituary said age 64; but his mother died about the year 1898.

I knew GrandUncle Walter Joseph John/Johns and his children. For 4 years we were next door  neighbors. He and his children believed that  Laura Driggers, granddaughter of Jeremiah Polson/Polston was in fact Walter’s Mother and their grandmother.,

Descendents of  Joseph Henry John/Johns share DNA with the Jeremiah Polson/Polston descendants and with Driggers Descendants.  

Conclusion

A Family's Footprint on the American South

The story of the Johns family — from Shadrach and Mary's antebellum household in Chesterfield County, through the upheaval of war and migration to Alabama and back, through Joseph's long widowhood and the raising of eight children alone, to that quiet April morning in a small North Carolina town — is in many ways the story of countless ordinary Southern families navigating extraordinary historical forces.

What makes the Johns story compelling is precisely its ordinariness: the movement in search of land and labor, the early deaths, the children scattered across counties, the old man carried in a Model A Ford to spend his last years with a son. These are the quiet textures of a life that census takers recorded in cramped columns, that newspaper editors noted in brief paragraphs, and that descendants have pieced together across generations.

Joseph Henry Johns left no known tombstone, but he left eight children — and through them, a family whose descendants continue to research, remember, and honor his memory.

 

The Children of Joseph Henry Johns and Laura are my GrandUncles and Grand Aunts

___________________

Primary Sources

The following records formed the basis of this biography:

United States Federal Census records: 1850 (Chesterfield Co., SC), 1860 (Russell Co., AL), 1880 (Marlboro Co., SC), 1900 (Marlboro Co., SC), 1910 (Chesterfield Co., SC), 1920 (Chesterfield Co., SC). Available via Ancestry.com.

Chesterfield County, South Carolina Land Deed: S. Johns & Others to Alice Goodwin, Deed Book 6, Page 177, 3 December 1866. Recorded 1 November 1880.

North Carolina Death Certificate: Joseph Henry Johns, 8 April 1929. NC State Archives, Vol. 1305, Page 95. FHL Film #296687.

The Messenger-Intelligence, Wadesboro, Anson County, North Carolina, 11 April 1929. (Obituary: 'Confederate Veteran Commits Suicide.')

Find A Grave Memorial #103837358: Joseph Henry Johns, Pleasant Grove United Methodist Church Cemetery, Cheraw, Chesterfield County, South Carolina. Created by CarolinaGuy, 20 January 2013.

Julius Johns death certificate (source for Joseph's birth information).

 

1. The Messenger and Intellengence, Wadesboro, Anson County, North Carolina, .

2. 1850 U. S. Census, Chesterfield County, South Carolina, population schedule, Chesterfield County, South Carolina, enumeration district (ED) No ED, page 109A, Line 11, Dwelling 161, Family/161, Household of Shadrach JOHN; digital images, Ancestry.com (http://www.ancestry.com : viewed July 2011); citing  National Archives Microfilm M432 Roll 851. Joseph John, son, is listed as age 1 in the 1850 Census for Chesterfield County, South Carolina.

3. 1860 U. S. Census, Russell County, Alabama, population schedule, Seals Station, Russell County, Alabama, enumeration district (ED) No ED, page 893, Line 7, dwelling 238, family 227, Household of Shadrick Johns; digital images, Ancestry.com (http://www.ancestry.com : viewed July 2011); citing  National Archives Microfilm M653_22.

4. Land Deed - S. Johns & Others to Alice Goodwin Deed; 3 Decemeber 1866; Deed Book #6; Page(s) 177; Register of Deeds; Chesterfield, Chesterfield County, SC; 1999.

5. 1880 U. S. Census, Marlboro County, South Carolina, population schedule, Marlboro County, South Carolina, enumeration district (ED) #108, page 460A, Line 22, Dwelling # 43, Family #43, Household of Shade JOHN; digital images, Ancestry.com (http://ancestry.com : viewed July 2011); citing National Archives Microfilm T9_1235.

5. 1900 U. S. Census, Marlboro County, South Carolina, population schedule, Bennettsville, Marlboro County, South Carolina, enumeration district (ED) 87, page 55A, dwelling 365, family 383, Household of Joseph John; digital images, Ancestry.com (http://ancestry.com : viewed July 2011); citing National Archives Microfilm  T623_1536.

7. 1910 U. S. Census, Chesterfield County, South Carolina, population schedule, Courthouse, Chesterfield County, South Carolina, enumeration district (ED) #0037, page 149, dwelling 400, family 400, Household of Joe John; digital images, Ancestry.com (http://ancestry.com : viewed July 2011); citing National Archives Microfilm  T624_1455.

8. 1920 U. S. Census, Chesterfield County, South Carolina, population schedule, Cheraw, Chesterfield County, South Carolina, enumeration district (ED) #36, Page: 34B/95(stamped); Line 99, Dwelling 735, Family 736, Household of Joseph Johns; digital images, Ancestry.com (http://ancestry.com : viewed July 2011); citing National Archives Microfilm T625_1690.

9. North Carolina, death # #1929 (8 April 1929), Joseph Johns; http://www.Ancestry.com, Anson County, North Carolina.

10. The Messenger-Intelligence, Wadesboro, Anson County, North Carolina, 11 April 1929. (Obituary: 'Confederate Veteran Commits Suicide.')

11. Find A Grave, Inc., Find A Grave, database and digital images, (http://www.findagrave.com : accessed  20 January 2013); Memorial page for Joseph Henry Johns; (April 1849–8 April 1929); Find a Grave memorial # 103837358, Citing Pleasant Grove United Methodist Church Cemetery; Cheraw, Chesterfield County, South Carolina, USA.

12. 1880 U. S. Census, Marlboro County, South Carolina, population schedule, Hebron, Marlboro County, South Carolina, ED 108, Page: 460A(stamped), Line 16, Dwelling 42, Family 42, Household of Jeremiah POLSTON.


Note: This biography is based on available genealogical records compiled as of 23 April 2026. Some dates and details — particularly ages recorded in census and death records — show minor inconsistencies, which are discussed within the text. Researchers are encouraged to consult original source documents for verification.