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 Andrew Hildreth (1859 - 1917)" was compiled with the assistance of Claude Sonnett 4 and is entitled:
James Andrew Hildreth
8 March 1859 – 29 August 1917
Anson County, North Carolina
A Life Rooted in Anson County
James Andrew Hildreth spent his entire life in Anson County, North Carolina — a rural, agricultural corner of the state that shaped him from birth to death. Born on March 8, 1859, just two years before the Civil War tore the South apart, James grew up in a world of small farms, close-knit communities, and deep family ties. He lived through some of the most turbulent decades in American history and built a family of his own along the way. He passed away on August 29, 1917, at the age of 58, and was laid to rest at Morven Cemetery in Morven, North Carolina — just a short distance from where he spent most of his life.
Parents & Early Life
James Andrew was the son of James Hildreth (1827–1864) and Emeline Previtte (1837–1860). Sadly, he barely knew either of his parents. His mother, Emeline, died in March 1860, very likely from Puerperal Fever — a dangerous infection sometimes associated with childbirth — when James Andrew was still just a baby, probably around one year old. It's a poignant detail: his mother's death may well have been connected to his own birth or that of a sibling born close in time.
His father, James Hildreth, died in 1864, during the Civil War, when young James Andrew was only about five years old. North Carolina sent tens of thousands of men to fight for the Confederacy, and many Anson County families — like the Hildreths — paid a steep price. Left without both parents by the time he was five, James Andrew had a tough start in life.
By 1880, when James Andrew was around 19 years old, the census found him working as a farm servant in the household of Peter Griggs at Whites Store, Anson County. It was common in the post-war South for young men without family land or resources to hire themselves out as farm laborers. It wasn't glamorous work, but it was honest, and it gave James a foothold as he made his way in the world.
Growing Up in the Post-Civil War South
The years of James Andrew's childhood and young adulthood were extraordinarily difficult for North Carolina. The Civil War ended in 1865, and the Reconstruction era that followed brought enormous social and economic upheaval. Anson County, like much of rural North Carolina, depended heavily on cotton farming. With the collapse of the plantation system and the sharecropping economy that replaced it, many families — Black and white — struggled to get by. James Andrew came of age in this world, working farm land that wasn't his own, likely saving what he could to build a future.
First Marriage: Martha Ella Boswell
On December 21, 1882, James Andrew Hildreth married Martha Ella Boswell in Anson County. He was about 23 years old; she was 21. Ella, as she was likely known, was born on July 16, 1864, also in Anson County, the daughter of George T. Boswell (1834–1911) and Mary Ann Porter (1838–1906). She came from an established local family and brought warmth and stability to the young couple's life together.
James and Ella settled in the Morven area of Anson County, where they farmed and raised their family. The 1900 census shows them living happily in Morven with six children — all still living at the time — after 18 years of marriage. That's a meaningful detail, because child mortality was tragically common in the late 19th century, and having all six children alive speaks to the care and resilience of this family.
Sadly, Ella did not live long after that census was taken. Martha Ella Boswell Hildreth passed away on December 19, 1900, at just 36 years old. She was buried at Deep Creek Baptist Church Cemetery in Deep Creek, Anson County. Her early death left James a widower with six children ranging in age from about 2 to 15 years old — a heartbreaking situation for any family.
Children of James Andrew and Martha Ella (Boswell) Hildreth
James and Ella had six children together:
Dora Hildreth (February 28, 1885 – March 19, 1904, Anson County) — Dora was the eldest child and died young at just 19 years of age, only a few years after her mother's passing. The family experienced real grief in those early years of the 1900s.
Elijah Austin Hildreth (February 8, 1889 – January 4, 1954, Pee Dee, Anson County) — The eldest son, Elijah went on to live a full life, passing away in the Pee Dee community of Anson County at age 64.
Carrie M. Hildreth (September 11, 1890 – September 8, 1948) — Carrie nearly made it to her 58th birthday, dying just three days before. She is memorialized at Find A Grave (Memorial #27885854).
Mamie Hildreth (January 16, 1893 – March 14, 1973, Wadesboro, Anson County) — Mamie had the longest life among her siblings, living to age 80. She married Adam J. Cranford and is remembered as Mamie Bell Hildreth Cranford.
Minnie L. Hildreth (September 15, 1896 – October 30, 1920, Anson County) — Minnie died young at 24, just a year after the devastating 1918-1919 influenza pandemic swept through North Carolina. She had married Samuel Hancock on December 11, 1911.
James David Hildreth (January 22, 1898 – October 15, 1963, Laurinburg, Scotland County, NC) — The youngest child of James and Ella, James David moved to neighboring Scotland County and died in Laurinburg at age 65.
Second Marriage: Dora Ellen Curlee
Less than a year after Ella's death, on August 29, 1901, James Andrew married for the second time. His new wife was Dora Ellen Curlee, born in 1871, making her about 30 years old at the time of the wedding — 12 years younger than James. Dora was the daughter of the Curlee family, another Anson County clan. Remarriage after the death of a spouse was quite common in this era, especially for men with young children who needed a mother figure in the home.
By the time of the 1910 census, James and Dora were living in Wadesboro, the county seat of Anson County, with a full and busy household. In addition to the surviving children from his first marriage, James and Dora had added several more children to the family. The household listed in 1910 included Flonnie, Connie, Boyce, and Roy Hildreth — children from his second marriage — alongside the older children Carrie, Mamie, Minnie, and James David. It was a large, lively home.
Dora Ellen Curlee Hildreth outlived her husband by 17 years, passing away in 1934.
Life Events & The World Around Him
James Andrew Hildreth lived through one of the most eventful periods in American history. Here's some of the world he inhabited:
The Civil War (1861–1865): James was only a toddler when the war began, but its effects shaped his entire childhood. North Carolina lost more men in the war than any other Confederate state. His own father died in 1864, almost certainly connected to the conflict. The devastation of Reconstruction left Anson County — and families like his — struggling to rebuild for decades.
The New South & Cotton Economy: Through the 1870s, 80s, and 90s, Anson County was deeply tied to cotton farming. James spent his young adulthood laboring on farms before eventually establishing his own household. The rise and fall of cotton prices directly affected families like his.
The Spanish-American War (1898): Just as James and Ella were welcoming their youngest son James David into the world, the United States went to war with Spain. North Carolina sent volunteers, and the war marked America's emergence as a global power — a distant but felt reality even in rural Anson County.
The Turn of the Century: The years around 1900 were a time of loss for James — he lost his first wife Ella in December 1900, and eldest daughter Dora in 1904. Yet he pressed forward, remarried, and continued building his family.
World War I (1914–1917): The Great War in Europe was raging in the final years of James Andrew's life. The United States entered the war in April 1917, just four months before James Andrew passed away. It's likely that some of his sons were at or near draft age as the country mobilized.
Death & Legacy
James Andrew Hildreth died on August 29, 1917, in Gulledge Township, Anson County, at approximately 58 years of age. He was buried the very next day, August 30, 1917, at Morven Cemetery in Morven, Anson County. His tombstone inscription reads: "Father, let thy grace be given / That we may meet in heaven" — a beautiful, faith-filled epitaph that speaks to the religious character of the time and place.
His death certificate lists his name as "John Andrew Hildreth" — a small clerical error that genealogists have had to work around. His parents are recorded there as James Hildrith and Emeline Prinett (a spelling variation of Previtte).
James Andrew left behind a large and lasting family. Between his two marriages, he fathered at least ten children, many of whom went on to have families of their own across Anson County and beyond. His second wife, Dora Ellen Curlee Hildreth, continued on until 1934. His daughter Mamie lived all the way until 1973, carrying the Hildreth family story well into the modern era.
Though James Andrew Hildreth never left Anson County, his life was anything but small. He lost his parents as a child, worked as a farmhand as a young man, married twice, buried a wife and a daughter, raised a large family, and lived through the Civil War's aftermath, Reconstruction, and the dawn of World War I. He was, in every sense, a man of his time and place — and his descendants carry that story forward today.
James Andrew Hildreth is my 1st Cousin 3X Removed.
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1. Find A Grave, Inc., Find A Grave, database and digital images, (http://www.findagrave.com : accessed 3 November 2018); Memorial page for James Andrew Hildreth; (8 March 1861–29 August 1913); Find a Grave memorial # 38313732, Citing Morven Cemetery; Morven, Anson County, North Carolina, USA.
2. 1880 U. S. Census, Anson County, North Carolina, population schedule, Whites Store, Anson, North Carolina, enumeration district (ED) 006, Page: 436D (Stamped); Line 19, Dwelling 279, Family 298, James Hildreth in Household of Peter GRIGGS; digital image, Ancestry.com (http://www.ancestry.com : vwewed 3 November 2018); citing National Archives Microfilm T9, Roll 951.
3. 1900 US Census, Anson County, North Carolina, population schedule, Morven, Anson County, North Carolina, enumeration district (ED) 08, Page: 155A(Stamped); Line 18, Dwelling 103, Family 103, Household of James HILDRETH; digital image, Ancestry.com (http://www.ancestry.com : viewed 3 November 2018); citing National Archives Microfilm T623, Roll 1181.
4. 1910 U. S. Census, Anson County, North Carolina, population schedule, Wadesboro, Anson, North Carolina, enumeration district (ED) 0014, Page: 2A/208 (Stamped); Line 18, Dwelling 22, Family 23, Household of James A. HILDRETH; digital images, Ancestry.com (http://www.ancestry.com : viewed 3 November 2018); citing National Archives Microfilm T624, Roll 1096.
5. North Carolina, Death Certificates, 1909-1976, Images. Ancestry, (https://www.ancestry.com: 3 November 2018), North Carolina, Death Certificates, 1909-1976, Raleigh, Wake County, North Carolina, John Andrew Hildreth; Certificate number 346, 29 August 1917.
6. "North Carolina, Marriages Record, 1741-2011," database, Ancestry (http://www.ancestry.com : viewed 3 November 2018), Marriage: J. Andrew Hildreth and Ella Boswell, Marriage Date: 21 Dec 1882.
7. Find A Grave, Inc., Find A Grave, database, "Record, Martha Ella Boswell Hildreth (16 July 1864–19 December 1900), Memorial # 30075923.
8. "North Carolina, Marriages Record, 1741-2011," database, Ancestry>, Marriage: J. A. Hildreth and Dora Curlee.
8. Find A Grave, Inc., Find A Grave, database, "Record, Dora Ellen Curlee Hildreth (13 June 1871–17 July 1934), Memorial # 38314141.
10. 1920 US Census, Anson County, North Carolina, population schedule, Wadesboro, Anson, North Carolina, enumeration district (ED) 017, Page: 3B/253 (Stamped); Line 68, Dwelling 165, Family 143, Household of Dora HILDRETH; digital image, Ancestry.com (http://www.ancestry.com : viewed 3 November 2018); citing National Archives Microfilm T625, Roll 1283.
11. Indexes of Vital Records for Georgia: Deaths, 1919-1998, Images. Ancestry, (https://www.ancestry.com: ), State of Georgia, Atlanta, Georgia, DORA HILDRETH; Certificate number , 17 July 1934; Jesup, Wayne, Georgia.
12. "Mrs. Dora Hildreth, 64, widow of J. A. Hildeth," Obiituary, The Charlotte Observer, Charlotte, Mecklenburg, North Carollina, 19 July 1934, Page 12, Column 7; Digital On-Line Archives, Newspapers.com (https://www.newspapers.com/ : viewed 22 May 2021); https://www.newspapers.com/.
Prepared by Charles Purvis • Thomasville, NC 27360 • CPurvis1@gmail.com
Family Group Sheet dated 14 May 2026