Tuesday, March 10, 2026

52 Cousins~Daniel Earnhart, Roots in Carolina Clay, Legacy in Tennessee Soil

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 Daniel Earnhart (1809-1883) was compiled with the assistance of Claude Sonnett 4 and is entitled:

"Roots in Carolina Clay, Legacy in Tennessee Soil" 

 Daniel Earnhart

1809 – 1883

Rowan County, North Carolina  ·  Bedford County, Tennessee

A Life on the Tennessee Frontier

Daniel Earnhart was born on February 13, 1809, in Rowan County, North Carolina — a region that had been home to generations of German-descended settlers, including the Earnhart family. He came into the world at a fascinating moment in American history: just six years after the Louisiana Purchase had doubled the size of the young nation, and as the frontier was rapidly pushing westward into Tennessee and beyond.

Daniel spent the first two decades of his life in North Carolina before making the move that would define the rest of his days. By 1835, he had settled in Bedford County, Tennessee, in Civil District 18 — a rural, agricultural stretch of Middle Tennessee that he would call home for the rest of his life. He farmed, raised a large family, accumulated land, and lived to see the Civil War tear apart the very county where he'd planted his roots. By the time he passed away in early 1883, Daniel Earnhart had witnessed nearly three-quarters of a century of American history, from frontier settlement to Reconstruction.

 

Family Roots — His Parents

George Earnhart (1759–1850) and Margaret Keppel (1759–1840)

Daniel was the son of George Earnhart (1759–1850) and Margaret Keppel (1759–1840), both born in 1759. His parents were part of the broader wave of German and Scots-Irish settlers who populated the Piedmont region of North Carolina in the late 18th century. Rowan County, where Daniel was born, was a well-established community by that point, with strong German Lutheran and Reformed Church roots. George lived to a remarkable 91 years of age, and Margaret to 81 — remarkable longevity for the era, suggesting the family was hardy stock. The names of Daniel's siblings are not recorded here, but as one of likely several children in a large farm household, Daniel would have grown up surrounded by extended family and the rhythms of agricultural life.

 

Moving West — The Tennessee Years

By the mid-1830s, Tennessee was booming. The state had been a magnet for migrants since the early 1800s, and Bedford County — established in 1807 and named for Revolutionary War general Thomas Bedford — was a productive farming county in the heart of Middle Tennessee. Shelbyville was its county seat, and Civil District 18, where Daniel settled, was a rural farming community.

On September 18, 1835, Daniel acquired his first recorded property in Bedford County (Deed Book FF, p. 49), signaling that he was putting down permanent roots. He appeared on the 1836 tax list for Bedford County — a sign that he was a property-owning adult citizen in good standing. Then on July 4, 1846 — fittingly, Independence Day — he purchased 47 acres of land from James A. Walker in Civil District 18 (Deed Book 1845–1846, p. 377), which became the heart of his farm operation.

In 1882, a year before his death, Daniel and his wife Ann sold a smaller parcel of about 12 acres and 89 poles to C.A.D. Davis of Rutherford County for $100.51½ — a transaction that was carefully witnessed and certified by the Clerk of the County Court, Robert L. Singleton.

 

His Two Marriages

First Marriage: Martha Ann "Lucy" Lentz (c. 1811 – after 1870)

Around 1830, when he was about 21 years old, Daniel married Martha Ann Lentz, known by her middle name or nickname "Lucy." Martha was born around 1811 in North Carolina, and the couple likely met and wed there before making the move to Tennessee together. She was the mother of all seven of Daniel's children, and the two were partners through the hardest decades of American life — building a farm from scratch, raising children through the Civil War years, and working the land together for over four decades.

Martha last appears in the 1870 census, listed at age 59 alongside Daniel in District 18, Bedford County. She is not present in the 1880 census, suggesting she passed away sometime between 1870 and 1880. Also living with them in 1870 was a Susannah Earnhart, age 54, born in North Carolina — possibly a sister or sister-in-law — and their son George, age 25, with a young Margaret, age 10, likely a grandchild.

Second Marriage: Ann Kimmons (1854–1925)

Before the 1880 census, Daniel married his second wife, Ann Kimmons, who was born in 1854 in Tennessee — making her 52 years his junior. In the 1880 census, Daniel is listed as 79 and Ann as 27. Their marriage is noted in Daniel's own will, in which he left her generous provisions: use of his farm for her natural lifetime, a wagon, two bay mares, livestock, furniture, a clock, a cooking stove, and more. Ann outlived Daniel by over four decades, dying in 1925.

 

His Children

Daniel and Martha raised seven children, all born in Tennessee:

1. William Earnhart (1831–1901) — The eldest, William lived to age 70.

2. Malinda J. Earnhart (1833–1925) — She had a remarkably long life, dying at about age 92.

3. Harriett Earnhart (1835–1864) — Harriett died young, at about age 29, likely during the Civil War years. She married into the Paschal family. Daniel's will specifically called out "the children of my deceased daughter Harriett Paschal," ensuring her children would receive one-seventh of his estate — a touching provision for grandchildren who had lost their mother.

4. Mary C. Earnhart (1837–1923) — Mary later became Mary Crowell (per Daniel's will), and lived to approximately 86 years of age.

5. John Henry Earnhart (1841–1896) — Known as J.H. in census records.

6. James A. Earnhart (1843–1925) — James lived to about age 82.

7. George Earnhart (1845–1904) — The youngest son, still living at home at age 25 in the 1870 census.

 

The Census Records — A Picture of Family Life

The federal census records paint a vivid picture of Daniel's growing household across five decades:

1840: Daniel, age 30–39; Martha, age 30–39; and young children including a boy 5–9, a girl 5–9 (likely Malinda), and a girl under 5 (likely Harriett). The family was young and growing.

1850: The household shows eight members: Daniel (41), Martha (39), and six children — Melinda (17), Harriett (15), Mary (13), John (9), James (7), and George (5). William, the eldest at 19, may have already been on his own.

1860: The older children had started leaving home. Daniel (51) and Martha (49) are listed with Mary (23), J.H. (19), J.A. (17), and George (15).

1870: After the war, the household had thinned to Daniel (61), Martha (59), Susannah Earnhart (54, likely a relative), son George (25), and young Margaret (10).

1880: By now Martha had passed. Daniel (79) and his new young wife Ann (27) are living together in a simple two-person household in District 18.

 

The Civil War Years — Living Through Conflict

Daniel and his family lived through one of the most turbulent periods in American history. Bedford County, Tennessee was deeply affected by the Civil War (1861–1865). Tennessee was the last state to leave the Union and the first Confederate state to be restored, and Middle Tennessee was bitterly contested throughout the war.

Shelbyville and Bedford County changed hands multiple times. In 1863, the area was swept up in the Tullahoma Campaign, when Union General William Rosecrans maneuvered Confederate General Braxton Bragg out of Middle Tennessee. The county experienced raids, requisitions of food and livestock, and the constant upheaval of armies passing through.

For the Earnharts — a family with sons of fighting age — these were harrowing years. Daniel's daughter Harriett died in 1864, right in the thick of the war's final brutal chapter. His sons John (born 1841) and James (born 1843) would have been prime military age. Whether they served in the Confederate or Union army (or avoided service) is not known from these records.

The War Claims recorded in 1888 — five years after Daniel's death — are especially intriguing. A Daniel Earnhart of Shelby/Fayette County was awarded $534 by the U.S. Court of Claims, likely for property (livestock, crops, or supplies) taken or destroyed by Union forces during the war. This was a common postwar process for Unionists or those who could demonstrate loyalty to the United States. The county listed (Shelby or Fayette) differs from Bedford, so this may or may not refer to our Daniel — but it is included in his record.

 

His Last Years — The Will of Daniel Earnhart

By March 1883, Daniel was 74 years old and evidently feeling the weight of age. On March 2, 1883, he put pen to paper and signed his Last Will and Testament — a remarkably personal document that reveals much about the man and his values.

He opened by requesting that his body be "decently interred in the graveyard near my house, known as the Earnhart Graveyard" — a family burying ground on the home property, which speaks to how rooted the Earnharts were in that particular patch of Bedford County soil.

His provisions were thoughtful and fair. To his young wife Ann, he left the farm for her lifetime, along with a substantial list of personal property: a wagon, two bay mares, three sheep, two milk cows and their calves, a sow, three hogs, two bedsteads, beds and bedding, all the chairs, a bureau, a clock, a dining table, a cooking stove and utensils, a cupboard, farming tools, looms, and a large wash pot. He also gave her full control over any stock she raised and anything she produced.

Upon Ann's death, Daniel directed that the farm be sold and the proceeds divided equally among his seven children (or their descendants if any had predeceased the division). He specifically named: William, Malinda, Harriett Paschal's children, Mary Crowell, John, James, and George. His executor was named as Hiram Harris, described warmly as "my esteemed neighbor and friend."

Daniel Earnhart died before April 2, 1883 — likely just days or weeks after signing his will. The will was probated at the April Term 1883 of the Bedford County Court, with Hiram Harris qualifying as executor and posting bond of $400 with three securities.

 

His Legacy

Daniel Earnhart lived a full and characteristically American life of the 19th century: born on the Carolina frontier, he moved west with the tide of settlement, carved a farm out of Middle Tennessee, raised seven children, weathered war and loss, and died in the county where he had spent nearly half a century. His descendants — the Earnharts, Crowells, Paschals, and others — carried his story forward.

His will, his deeds, his census appearances, and his family Bible entry all paint the portrait of a man who was diligent, fair-minded, and deeply attached to family and place. The Earnhart Graveyard near his house — where he asked to be buried — stands as perhaps the most lasting symbol of that attachment: a man who wanted to rest in the same ground he had worked and called home.

 

At a Glance — Key Dates

Born: February 13, 1809 — Rowan County, North Carolina

Died: Before April 2, 1883 — Bedford County, Tennessee (age 73–74)

Father: George Earnhart (1759–1850)

Mother: Margaret Keppel (1759–1840)

First wife: Martha Ann "Lucy" Lentz (c. 1811 – after 1870), married c. 1830

Second wife: Ann Kimmons (1854–1925), married before 1880

Children: William (1831–1901), Malinda (1833–1925), Harriett (1835–1864), Mary (1837–1923), John Henry (1841–1896), James A. (1843–1925), George (1845–1904)

Settled in Tennessee: By 1835, Civil District 18, Bedford County

Land purchased: 47 acres on July 4, 1846

Will signed: March 2, 1883

Buried: Earnhart Graveyard, near his home, Bedford County, Tennessee


Daniel Earnhart is my 1st Cousin 5X Removed.

 



______________________________

1. Bedford County, Tennessee, FF: 49 & 50, ; Register of Deeds, Shelbyville, Bedford County, Tennessee. 

2. Tennessee, United States, "Early Tax List Records, 1783-1895, 1836, Daniel EARNHART; Tennessee Archives, Nashville, Tennessee. 

3. 1840 U. S. Census, Bedford County, Tennessee, population schedule, Bedford, Tennessee, Page 60B, Line 21;, Household of Daniel EARNHART; digital images, Ancestry.com (http://www.ancestry.com : accessed 3 May 2022); citing National Archives Microfilm M19. 

4. 1850 U. S. Census, Bedford County, Tennessee, population schedule, District 18, Bedford, Tennessee, Page: 185A (Stamped); Line 7, Dwelling 2, Family 2, Household of Daniel EARNHEART; digital images, Ancestry.com (http://www.ancestry.com : accessed 2 May 2022); citing National Archives Microfilm M432. 

5. 1860 U. S. Census, Bedford County, Tennessee, population schedule, Western Division District 18, Bedford, Tennessee, Page 248 (Stamped); Line 8, Dwelling 1241, Family 1195, Household of Daniel EARNHEART; digital images, Ancestry.com (http://www.ancestry.com : accessed 2 May 2022); citing National Archives Microfilm M653. 

6. 1870 U. S. Census, Bedford County, Tennessee, population schedule, District 18, Bedford, Tennessee, Page: 327B(Stamped); Line 33, Dwelling 135; Family 139, Household of Daniel EARNHART; digital images, Ancestry.com (http://www.ancestry.com : viewed 6 June 2021); citing National Archives Microfilm M593. 

7. 1880 U. S. Census, Bedford County, Tennessee, population schedule; digital images, Ancestry.com (http://www.ancestry.com : accessed ); citing National Archives Microfilm T9_. 

8. Last Will of Daniel Earnhart (1883), WILL BOOK: Wkll Book #1; page 460 & 461; Probate Office, Shelbyville, Bedford County, Tennessee. 

9. Bedford County, Tennessee, Wills and Probate Records, Sale of Inventoried personal property items; digital images, FamilySearch.org, FamilySearch.org (http://www.FamilySearch.org: online mar 2024 ); Daniel Earnhart Estate. 

10. Bedford County, Tennessee, Administrator and Executor Bond, Daniel Earnhart Estate. 

— compiled from primary sources, March 2026 —

Saturday, March 7, 2026

Aunts & Uncle~Rooted in Carolina Soil: The Life of Peter Dry, Cabarrus County Farmer, 1787–1853

The “Aunts & Uncles” series of biographical sketches are Artificial Intelligence (AI) compiled narratives of selected individuals from my Genealogical database.  The selected AI will used the RootsMagic Individual Summary from my Genealogical Software, Roots Magic. All genealogical data is my research material acquired over the past 46 years of research. Today's Biography of The Life of Peter Dry (1787-1853) was compiled with the assistance of Claude Sonnett 4 and is entitled:


"Rooted in Carolina Soil: The Life of Peter Dry, Cabarrus County Farmer, 1787–1853"


 

Overview

Peter Dry was a farmer who spent his entire life in Cabarrus County, North Carolina — a place his family had called home since before he was born. Born in 1787, he lived through some of the most transformative decades in American history, from the early years of the young republic right through the turbulent 1840s and into the eve of the Civil War era. He married Hetty Elizabeth Teeter in 1809, built up a small farm, raised five children, and left behind a carefully written will that tells us a good deal about the man he was. He passed away sometime before December 1853, likely in his mid-sixties.

 

Family Background & Parents

Peter came from a well-established German-American farming family. His father, Johan Martin Dry (1759–1836), and his mother, Catherine Keppel (1767–1836), were both born in the mid-18th century, likely to immigrant families who had settled in the Piedmont region of North Carolina — an area heavily populated by German and Scots-Irish settlers throughout the 1700s.

Interestingly, both of his parents died the same year, 1836, when Peter was around 49 years old. His father Johan Martin was an active participant in local land transactions: in October 1822, he purchased a 95-acre tract of land at a Sheriff's sale in Cabarrus County for $60. Court records show that Peter himself was present and certified the transaction in open court — a sign that father and son had a close working relationship.

The Dry family name (likely originally "Dürr" or a similar Germanic spelling) was part of a broader wave of German-speaking settlers who arrived in the Carolina backcountry during the 18th century. These families were known for their industry, their Lutheran faith, and their strong community ties — all values that seem to have been passed on to Peter.

 

Marriage to Hetty Elizabeth Teeter

On July 10, 1809, when Peter was about 22 years old, he married Hetty Elizabeth Teeter (also recorded as "Feter" in some sources) in Cabarrus County. The marriage bond was witnessed by Peter Teeter — likely Hetty's father or brother — and a Rd. Brandon. The bond number was 000007773, and it is recorded in the North Carolina Marriage Bonds, 1741–1868.

Hetty was born in 1787, the same year as Peter, making them true contemporaries. She would outlive her husband by many years, passing away in 1870 at the age of approximately 83. The couple was together for over four decades, raising their family on their farm near Three Mile Branch in Cabarrus County.

It is worth noting that Peter's will, written in 1850, refers to his wife as "Elizabeth Dry" — her middle name — which was common practice at the time. He speaks of her with evident warmth, calling her his "beloved wife" and entrusting her with full control of his estate for the remainder of her life.

 

Children

Peter and Hetty had five children together, all born in North Carolina:

 

Margaret Ann Dry  (1813–1880)

Margaret married a man named Simon E. Speight and became Margaret Speight. She had at least one son, Franklin Dry (named in Peter's will), who was Peter's only grandson mentioned by name. Margaret's relationship with her father had clearly soured by the time he wrote his will — in no uncertain terms, Peter excluded her, her husband, and their children from any share of his estate. He does, however, acknowledge Franklin separately, suggesting the rift was with Margaret and Simon specifically rather than with the grandchild. The reason for this estrangement is not recorded.

John Martin Dry  (1820–1899)

John Martin — called "Martin" in Peter's will — was still living at home in 1850 at age 26, as recorded in the census that year. He is one of the three children Peter designated as primary heirs.

Marian Carline Dry  (1824–1850)

Marian Carline died in 1850, the same year her father wrote his will. She is not mentioned among the heirs, likely because she had already passed away or was gravely ill by the time the will was finalized in February of that year. Her early death at around 26 would have been a source of great sorrow for the family.

Mary Ann M. Dry  (1827–1897)

Mary Ann (called "Mary" in the will) was 23 years old and living at home in the 1850 census. She is named as one of the three main heirs in her father's will.

Elizabeth Catherine Dry  (1829–1891)

Elizabeth Catherine (called "Catherine" in the will) was 21 at the time of the 1850 census and also living at home. Like her siblings Martin and Mary, she was named as a primary heir in her father's will.

 

Life on the Farm

Peter was a farmer — that much is clear from the census records, which list his occupation as "Farmer" in 1850. His connection to the land in Cabarrus County goes back to at least 1810, when he purchased a 125-acre tract from Paul Barringer for $316, a substantial sum at the time. The deed, dated February 8, 1810, describes the land as lying in Cabarrus County and was recorded in Deed Book #10.

Later records show Peter holding 150 acres near Three Mile Branch. This suggests he may have expanded his landholdings over time, or that the acreage in the 1844 tax record reflects the same property with adjusted boundaries. By the 1850s, the estate inventory after his death totaled over $900 — a reasonable, middling estate for a Piedmont farmer of his era.

Life for a Cabarrus County farmer in the early 19th century was demanding but not isolated. The county seat of Concord was a center of trade and legal activity, and Cabarrus County was home to a thriving community of German-American farming families. Cotton became an increasingly important crop in the region as the century progressed, though subsistence farming — corn, wheat, hogs, and kitchen gardens — remained the backbone of most households.

 

Key Life Events & Records

1810 – Land Purchase

Just a year after his marriage, Peter purchased his farm from Paul Barringer for $316, securing 125 acres for his growing family. The purchase was recorded in the Cabarrus County Register of Deeds.

 

1810 Census

The 1810 federal census shows Peter (age 16–25) and Hetty (age 16–25) as the only members of their household — a young couple just starting out.

 

1822 – Court Witness

Peter appeared in open court to certify his father Johan Martin's land purchase at a Sheriff's sale in October 1822. This suggests Peter was a trusted and respected member of the local community, called upon to verify legal proceedings.

 

1830 Census

By 1830, the household had grown considerably. The census records show Peter (age 40–49), Hetty (age 30–39), and three children — one boy and two girls — all under the age of 20. The family was in the prime of farm life.

 

1840 Census

The 1840 census shows a household of six, including Peter (age 50–59), Hetty (age 50–59), and four children of varying ages, including a boy under 5. The presence of a very young child in 1840 is puzzling given the known birth dates of Peter's children, but this may reflect an extended family member or a recording error.

 

1844 – Tax Troubles

A notice in the Weekly Raleigh Register on December 3, 1844 lists Peter's 150-acre farm near Three Mile Branch as subject to a Sheriff's sale for unpaid taxes of $2.67 for the years 1842 and 1843. This was not unusual — many farmers in the region fell behind on taxes during lean years, and the threat of sale often prompted payment before the actual auction took place.

 

1850 Census

The 1850 census captures the household near the end of Peter's life: Peter (age 64, Farmer), Hetty (age 63), and three of their children still at home — John Martin (26), Mary Ann (23), and Elizabeth Catherine (21). A young man named Marten Keese (21, from Wilkes County, NC) was also living in the household, possibly a farmhand or a suitor for one of the daughters.

 

February 23, 1850 – His Will

Peter wrote his will on February 23, 1850, declaring himself to be "in sound and disposing mind and memory." The will is a revealing document. He left everything to his wife Elizabeth (Hetty) for the remainder of her life, with the estate to be divided upon her death among his children Martin, Mary, and Catherine, as well as his grandson Franklin Dry. His daughter Margaret Speight and her husband Simon were explicitly excluded — a dramatic family rupture that unfortunately left no explanation in the record.

The will was witnessed by two prominent local men: Rufus Barringer (a well-known Cabarrus County figure and future Confederate general) and R. M. Foard. It was not probated until January 1855, two years after Peter's death.

 

Death & Estate

Peter Dry died sometime before December 17, 1853, when his property was sold by estate administrator James Williford. The sale that day brought in $141.25. A second, larger sale on February 13, 1855 yielded $905.27 — together representing the modest but solid material legacy of a lifetime of farming.

The final settlement of his estate was recorded in December 1857, closing out a chapter that had begun with a young farmer buying his first land nearly five decades earlier. Hetty lived on until 1870, more than sixteen years after her husband's death, presumably supported by the estate as Peter had intended.

 

Historical Context (1787–1853)

Peter's lifetime spanned one of the most dynamic periods in American history. He was born the same year the U.S. Constitution was drafted (1787), grew up under the early republic, and witnessed enormous change across his lifetime:

 

1793 – Eli Whitney's invention of the cotton gin transformed Southern agriculture, making cotton king and reshaping the economy of states like North Carolina.

1803 – The Louisiana Purchase doubled the size of the United States, opening new western lands and sparking debates about the future of slavery and agriculture.

1812–1815 – The War of 1812 touched communities across the South. Peter would have been in his mid-twenties during this conflict.

1829 – The Reed Gold Mine, just a few miles from Peter's farm in Cabarrus County, was the site of the first documented commercial gold mining in the United States. Gold fever hit the region hard in the 1820s and 1830s, and Peter would certainly have been aware of the excitement all around him.

1830s–1840s – The forced removal of Native Americans via the Trail of Tears opened up lands to the west but created enormous suffering. North Carolina's own Cherokee population was among those affected.

1845–1849 – The Mexican-American War and the resulting territorial gains reignited fierce national debate over slavery's expansion — debates that would eventually lead to the Civil War, which Peter narrowly missed living through.

Cabarrus County itself was a place of growth and change during these years. The Charlotte and South Carolina Railroad reached the area in the early 1850s, transforming transportation and commerce just around the time Peter died. His will witness, Rufus Barringer, went on to become a Confederate brigadier general — a reminder of how closely the threads of ordinary family life were woven with the larger events of the age.

  

At a Glance

Born:  1787, Cabarrus County, North Carolina

Died:  Before December 17, 1853, Cabarrus County, North Carolina

Father:  Johan Martin Dry (1759–1836)

Mother:  Catherine Keppel (1767–1836)

Wife:  Hetty Elizabeth Teeter (1787–1870), married July 10, 1809

Occupation:  Farmer

Children:  Margaret Ann (1813–1880), John Martin (1820–1899), Marian Carline (1824–1850), Mary Ann M. (1827–1897), Elizabeth Catherine (1829–1891)

 

Peter DRY is my 3rd Great GrandUncle. 

 ______________________________________________________

Prepared from genealogical records including US Federal Census records (1810–1850), Cabarrus County deed records, the Weekly Raleigh Register (1844), and the Last Will and Testament of Peter Dry (Will Book 1, pages 253–254, Cabarrus County, North Carolina).

1. 1810 U S Census, Cabarrus County, North Carolina, population schedule, Cabarrus, North Carolina, Page:#373 (stamped), Line 6th name from bottom of page, No Page numbering;Page:#373 (stamped), Line 6th name from bottom of page, No Page numbering; 1 Male, age 16-25 [Peter DRY], Household of  Peter DRY, Peter DRY; digital images, Ancestry (www.ancestry.com : online November 2025); citing  National Archives Microfilm M252, Roll 39.

2. Land Deed - Paul Barringer to Peter Dry; 8 February 1810; Deed Book #10; Page(s) 217; Register of Deeds; Concord, Cabarrus County, North Carolina; November 2025.

3. Ancestry, "Revolutionary War Service Records" database, Military Service Records (https://www.fold3.com : accessed 3 June 2015), entry for Martin Penninger, S-41951, Private; Colonies; https://www.fold3.com/image/27197132.

4. 1830 U S Census, Cabarrus County, North Carolina, population schedule, , ; digital images, Ancestry (www.ancestry.com : accessed ); citing  National Archives Microfilm M19, Roll 119.

5. 1840 U S Census, Cabarrus County, North Carolina, population schedule, Cabarrus, North Carolina, Page:#22 (stamped), Line:#4, Household of Peter DRY; digital images, Ancestry (www.ancestry.com : online November 2026); citing  National Archives Microfilm M19, Roll 356.

6. "SHERIFF'S SALE.," Land, Weekly Raleigh Register; Raleigh, North Carolina, 3 December 1844, Page 1 Column 5 & 6.

7. 1850 U. S. Census, Cabarrus County, North Carolina, population schedule, Cabarrus, North Carolina, Page 445B(stamped), Line 14, Dwelling 670, Family 670; Peter DRY, Household of Peter DRY; online database, Ancestry.com (http://www.ancestry.com : viewed 3 May 2018); citing National Archives Microfilm Publication M432, Roll 622.

8. Peter DRY (1850), WILL BOOK: 1; Page 253 & 254; Probate Office, Concord, Cabarrus, North Carolina.

9. Cabarrus County, North Carolina, Probate Files & Loose papers, Inventory--Property of Peter Dry; digital images, Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, FamilySearch (http://www.familysearch.org: om;ine November 2026); https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:S7WF-3WGW-V9.

10. Cabarrus County, North Carolina, Estate of Peter Dry Decd, https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:S7WF-3WGV-J9.

11. "Index to North Carolina Marriage Bonds, 1741-1868," database, Ancestry (http://www.ancestry.com : Viewed 4 June 2016), Elizabeth Teter and Peter Dry; North Carolina Division of Archives and History, 1977.; Bond Date: 10 Jul 1809.

12. 1830 U S Census, Cabarrus County, North Carolina, Population Schedule, , , .

13. 1860 U. S. Census, Cabarrus County, North Carolina, population schedule, Subdivision East of NC RR, Cabarrus, North Carolina, Page: 54 (stamped); Line 33, Dwelling 357, Family 357, Household of John M. DRY; online database, Ancestry.com (http://www.ancestry.com : viewed 3 May 2018); citing National Archives Microfilm Publication M653, Roll 890.