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 Sarah E. Deese Melton (1841-1916) was compiled with the assistance of Claude Sonnett 4 and is entitled:
Sarah E. Deese Melton
About 1841 – November 18, 1916
Stanly & Anson Counties, North Carolina | Chesterfield County, South Carolina
Introduction
Sarah E. Deese was born around 1841 in Stanly County, North Carolina, into a family with deep roots in the Carolina Piedmont. She lived through one of the most turbulent stretches of American history — the antebellum years, the Civil War, Reconstruction, and the gradual rebuilding of the postwar South — before passing away on November 18, 1916, in Lilesville, Anson County, at approximately seventy-five years of age. She is buried at Olivet United Methodist Church Cemetery in Lilesville.
Sarah's life took her from her birth family in Stanly County to Anson County as a young girl, then into a first marriage, then across the state line to South Carolina, and finally back to Anson County, where she spent her final decades. Through two marriages and the raising of a large family, she was a steady presence in the communities she called home.
Family Origins
Parents
Sarah was the daughter of Samuel Deese (born about 1815, Stanly County, North Carolina) and Sarah "Sallie" Hill (born about 1811, Stanly County, North Carolina). Samuel passed away in 1888 and Sallie in 1881, both having lived long lives in the Piedmont region. Samuel is identified in census records as working as an overseer — a supervisory agricultural role common in the antebellum South.
The Deese family name (also spelled Deas or Dies in various records of the era) was well established in Stanly and Anson Counties. Sarah's death certificate, filed by her husband Frank Melton, lists her parents as "Sam Deese of Anson Co., NC" and "Sallie Hill of Stanly Co., NC" — a small but telling detail suggesting the family had connections across both counties.
Siblings
Based on the 1850 census, Sarah grew up in a large household. Her known siblings, enumerated in the household of her aunt Mary Deese in Anson County that year, include:
Martha Deas — born about 1831, North Carolina
William B. Deas — born about 1832, North Carolina
Nancy Deas — born about 1843, North Carolina
James H. Deas — born about 1845, North Carolina
Zachariah Deas — born about 1848, North Carolina
The 1850 census finds Sarah (listed as "Sarah J. Deas," age 9) residing not in her parents' own household but in the household of her aunt, Mary Deese, also in Sandy Point, Anson County. It is likely that her parents' household was enumerated nearby, or that she was temporarily staying with her aunt — a common arrangement in extended families of that era.
Early Life
Sarah spent her earliest years in Stanly County before appearing in Anson County records by 1850. Sandy Point, where the family was enumerated, was a small community in Anson County near the Pee Dee River. Life in the Carolina Piedmont in the 1840s and 1850s revolved around agriculture — cotton and corn were the primary crops — and families like the Deeses were part of the fabric of rural community life that centered on churches, farms, and close-knit neighborhoods.
The 1850s were a time of growing tension across the South. As Sarah entered her teenage years, the national debate over slavery was intensifying, culminating in the outbreak of the Civil War in April 1861. Sarah would have been about nineteen or twenty years old when the war began. Like all families in North Carolina, the Deese family almost certainly had members who served in the Confederate Army. These were years of hardship, uncertainty, and loss for communities across both Carolinas.
First Marriage: Robert Aycock
At some point before August 10, 1870, Sarah married Robert Aycock (born 1827). When the 1870 census was taken on that date, the couple was enumerated together as husband and wife with no children listed at that time. Robert was approximately fourteen years Sarah's senior.
Tragically, Robert Aycock died in 1873, leaving Sarah a widow at around thirty-two years of age. Despite the short duration of their marriage in the census record, the couple had at least one child together:
Robert Ofnile Aycock — born 1870, died 1956
The Reconstruction era of the late 1860s and early 1870s was an extraordinarily difficult time in the South. North Carolina, like other former Confederate states, was under federal military oversight, and communities were struggling to rebuild economically and socially after the devastation of the war. Widowhood in this period was especially challenging, and Sarah found herself in that position while still a young woman with a small child.
Second Marriage: Frank F. Melton
In 1873 — the same year Robert Aycock died — Sarah married Frank F. Melton (born September 1851, South Carolina). Frank was about ten years younger than Sarah, a fact not uncommon in second marriages of the era. The couple would go on to build a substantial family together over the next decade and more.
By 1880, the family had relocated to Chesterfield County, South Carolina, where they are found in the census enumerated in the Court House district. Frank was twenty-four and Sarah was listed as twenty-nine (a slight undercount of her actual age). Their household in 1880 included four children, all born in South Carolina, suggesting the family had been living there for most of the previous decade.
Life in Chesterfield County, South Carolina (c. 1873–c. 1890s)
Chesterfield County, in the northeastern corner of South Carolina, was largely rural agricultural country — much like the Anson County Sarah had grown up in. The county seat, Chesterfield Court House, was a modest town, and families in the area depended heavily on farming. The 1880s were a period of slow economic recovery in the post-Reconstruction South, and Frank and Sarah, like most rural families, would have been working hard to establish themselves.
By the time of the 1900 census, the Melton family had returned to Anson County, North Carolina — to Lilesville, the small town that would remain Sarah's home for the rest of her life. The 1900 census notes that Sarah and Frank had been married twenty-seven years, had six children, and five of those children were still living at that time.
Children
Sarah was mother to six children across her two marriages. Her children, with known birth and death information, are listed below.
Child of Sarah E. Deese and Robert Aycock
Robert Ofnile Aycock (1870–1956) — Robert was born before his father's death in 1873 and lived a long life, dying in 1956 at approximately eighty-six years of age.
Children of Sarah E. Deese and Frank F. Melton
Robert Melton (born 1871) — born in South Carolina; further details unknown.
Sarah Melton Luther (1874–1958) — born in South Carolina; married into the Luther family; died in 1958.
Wade Hampton Melton (1877–1919) — born in South Carolina; named for Confederate General Wade Hampton, a popular name in South Carolina during the post-Reconstruction era. He died in 1919.
James Marshall Melton (1879–1952) — born December 1879 in South Carolina; lived until 1952.
George Bunyon Melton (1884–1979) — born June 1884 in North Carolina; notably long-lived, dying in 1979 at approximately ninety-five years of age.
The 1900 census indicates that of Sarah's six children, five were living at that time. The child not accounted for in the surviving records may be an infant who died young. That infant most likely was Robert, born 1871 who was only found listed in the 1880 Census.
Later Life in Lilesville, North Carolina
By 1900, Sarah and Frank Melton had settled in Lilesville, a small town in southern Anson County, not far from the South Carolina border. Lilesville was — and remains — a quiet community, and the Melton family was part of its social and religious fabric. The 1900 census shows only two children still at home: James M. Melton, age nineteen, and George B. Melton, age fifteen.
Sarah was in her late fifties by the time of the 1900 census, and she would live another sixteen years after it was taken. The early twentieth century brought enormous changes to the nation — the Wright Brothers flew for the first time in 1903, the country was industrializing rapidly, and North Carolina's textile mills were transforming the Piedmont economy. Sarah, however, appears to have lived out her remaining years quietly in Lilesville, surrounded by family.
Her husband Frank was still living at the time of her death in 1916, and it was Frank who served as the informant on her death certificate — a sign of his presence at her bedside and his role in recording her final details for posterity.
Death and Burial
Sarah E. Deese Melton died on November 18, 1916, in Lilesville, Anson County, North Carolina. She was approximately seventy-five years old, though her death certificate recorded her age as eighty — a discrepancy likely reflecting the imprecision of birth records for people born in the early nineteenth century. The cause of death was recorded as a heart attack.
She was buried two days later, on November 20, 1916, at Olivet United Methodist Church Cemetery in Lilesville. The Olivet United Methodist Church was — and remains — a community institution in the Lilesville area, and her burial there reflects the family's ties to the Methodist faith.
Her tombstone at Olivet gives a birth date of February 15, 1829, which researchers have noted is likely incorrect, as census records consistently suggest she was born around 1841. The discrepancy in birth years on older tombstones was not unusual; family members relying on memory often recorded approximate dates, and errors were common. What is certain is that she died November 18, 1916, and that her grave at Olivet is a touchstone for her descendants today.
Sarah's Find A Grave memorial number is 45036741.
Historical Context: A Life Spanning a Century of Change
Sarah E. Deese's approximately seventy-five years on earth spanned one of the most dramatic and turbulent periods in American and Southern history. It is worth pausing to consider the world she lived through.
She was born around 1841, when North Carolina was still largely an agrarian society and the great national crisis over slavery had not yet come to a head. The 1850s of her girlhood saw the passage of the Compromise of 1850 and the Kansas-Nebraska Act of 1854, and the deepening sectional crisis that would end in war.
By the time she was in her late teens and early twenties, the Civil War (1861–1865) had torn the nation apart. North Carolina seceded from the Union in May 1861, and Anson County — like every county in the state — sent men to fight for the Confederacy. The war brought hardship, food shortages, and grief to communities across the South, and the Deese and Melton families would not have been spared those trials.
After the war, the years of Reconstruction (1865–1877) brought further upheaval — the emancipation of enslaved people, new constitutional amendments, federal occupation, and then the so-called Redemption period when white Democrats retook control of Southern state governments. Sarah's first husband Robert Aycock died in 1873, during this unsettled time, and she remarried Frank Melton that same year.
The 1880s and 1890s were years of economic hardship for Southern farmers, marked by falling cotton prices, the rise of the Farmers' Alliance, and the Populist political movement. Sarah and Frank were living in Chesterfield County, South Carolina, through much of this period before returning to Anson County.
The turn of the twentieth century brought new inventions and a faster pace of change. By the time Sarah died in November 1916, the United States was on the verge of entering World War I (it would do so in April 1917), automobiles were becoming more common on North Carolina roads, and the world Sarah had been born into had been transformed almost beyond recognition. She had seen it all — from the antebellum South to the modern age — in the span of one life.
Sarah E. Deese is my Great GrandAunt.
Sources______________
The following records were used in compiling this biography:
1850 U.S. Census, Anson County, North Carolina, Sandy Point, Page 188A, Household of Mary Deas; National Archives Microfilm M432, Roll 619.
1870 U.S. Census, [Anson County, North Carolina], Household of Robert Aycock; Ancestry.com.
1880 U.S. Census, Chesterfield County, South Carolina, Court House, ED 005, Page 316B, Household of Frank Melton; National Archives Microfilm T9-1225.
1900 U.S. Census, Anson County, North Carolina, Lilesville, ED 5, Page 9B, Household of Frank F. Melton; National Archives Microfilm T623, Roll 1181.
Death Certificate, Sarah E. Melton, Death Certificate Book 3, Page 165 (1916); Register of Deeds, Wadesboro, Anson County, North Carolina.
North Carolina Deaths, 1906–1930, Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2014; FHL Film Number 4216067, Reference ID fn 203 p 38.
Find A Grave, Memorial #45036741, Sarah E. Deese Melton, Olivet United Methodist Church Cemetery, Lilesville, Anson County, North Carolina.
Prepared by Charles Purvis | CPurvis1@gmail.com | June 2026