Saturday, May 9, 2026

Aunts & Uncles~Winnie Elizabeth Deese Streater

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 ”Winnie Elizabeth Deese Streater (1893 - 1980)" was compiled with the assistance of Claude Sonnett 4 and is entitled: 

"Winnie Elizabeth Deese Streater"

September 10, 1893 – June 18, 1980

Morven, Anson County, North Carolina

 

A Life Rooted in Anson County

Winnie Elizabeth Deese — known to just about everyone as "Lizzie" — was born on September 10, 1893, in Morven, Anson County, North Carolina. She came into the world in a small farming community tucked into the Piedmont region of the state, not far from the South Carolina border. It was the kind of place where everybody knew everybody, families stayed close to the land, and roots ran deep. Lizzie would call Anson County home for most of her life, and even after she eventually moved south to Alabama in her later years, she was brought back to Morven to rest alongside the family she had loved so well.

Her nearly 87 years spanned one of the most turbulent and transformative eras in American history — from the Gilded Age through two World Wars, the Great Depression, and into the space age. Through all of it, Lizzie remained anchored to the rhythms of rural North Carolina life, raising her family on a farm and weathering considerable heartbreak with quiet resilience.

 

Family of Origin: The Deese Family

Lizzie was the daughter of John Calvin Deese (1854–1930) and Sarah Frances Gathings Deese (1858–1950), both native North Carolinians. Her father, John Calvin — often called "Calvin" — was a farmer in the Morven area, as most men in that community were. He and Sarah Frances, known in some records as "Fannie," built their lives around the land and raised a close-knit family of daughters.

The 1900 census gives us a snapshot of Lizzie as a young child of seven, living in the family home in Morven alongside her parents and several sisters: Lucy P. (age 13), Theresa (age 12), and the younger girls Cora L. (age 4) and Callie B. (age 2). By 1910, the household had shifted — Lizzie was 16, and the sisters at home were Fleeter R. (21), Cora J. (14), and Callie B. (12). By the time the 1920 census rolled around, Lizzie was 25 and still living at home with her parents, along with her sisters Cora and Callie.

Life for the Deese family, like most farm families of the era, was defined by hard work and modest means. The years Lizzie grew up in — the 1900s and 1910s — were shaped by the legacy of Reconstruction, the growth of the textile industry in the Carolina Piedmont, and the uncertainty of farming in the New South. It's worth noting that Lizzie's mother, Sarah Frances Gathings Deese, lived to the remarkable age of about 92, passing in 1950. Longevity clearly ran in the family — Lizzie herself would live to 86.

 

Marriage to Joseph Vernon Streater

On January 4, 1930, Lizzie Deese married Joseph Vernon Streater — known as "Joe" — in Chesterfield County, South Carolina, just across the state line. She was 36 years old and he was 37. Marrying later in life than was typical for the era, they may have known each other for years before tying the knot; after all, in a small community like Morven, everyone's paths crossed regularly.

Joe Streater was born on October 4, 1892, in Anson County, North Carolina, the son of William Boswell Streater (1848–1910) and Mary Elizabeth Lampley Streater (1852–1929). He had served his country during World War I — registering for the draft in Anson County in June 1917 — and by the time he and Lizzie married, he was a farmer, just as his family had always been. In 1930, the couple appeared in the census in Morven, listed as husband and wife, farming their own land.

The world the newlyweds stepped into in 1930 was a difficult one. The stock market had crashed just months earlier in October 1929, and the Great Depression was tightening its grip on the entire country. For farm families like the Streaters, already living close to the bone, the 1930s brought particular hardship. Crop prices collapsed, and many farm families across the rural South struggled to hold onto their land. Despite all this, Joe and Lizzie stayed on their farm in Morven, and by 1940, the census shows them still there with their young daughter Sarah, ages 47, 44, and 10 respectively.

 

Children: Joy and Heartbreak

Lizzie and Joe had five children, and their story as parents is one of both love and profound loss. Three of their five children did not survive infancy or early childhood — a tragedy heartbreakingly common in rural communities during the early-to-mid 20th century, before modern medicine had transformed childbirth and childhood illness.

Abner L. Deese Sr. (1921–2004)

Lizzie's first child, Abner L. Deese Sr., was born on June 1, 1921, in Morven — notably before her marriage to Joe Streater. His surname, "Deese," was Lizzie's maiden name, and he appears in the 1930 census living with Lizzie's parents, John Calvin and Sara Deese, as their grandson (age 8). Abner later married Annie Elizabeth Chewning (1922–2001) around 1942, and the couple eventually settled in Wadesboro, where he lived until his death on March 8, 2004. His obituary lists him as a son of "the late Lizzie Streater Deese," and he is remembered as a devoted family man with six children of his own. He is buried in Morven Cemetery.

Sarah Ann Streater (1930–2013)

Sarah Ann, born June 18, 1930 — curiously the same calendar date on which her mother would die exactly 50 years later — was Joe and Lizzie's eldest child together. She grew up in Morven, and on October 30, 1951, she married Harold Brant White (1929–2001). Harold served in the United States Army, and the couple moved frequently with the military, eventually settling in Ozark, Alabama. Sarah worked as a Retail Manager with the Army and Air Force Exchange Service for over 23 years before retiring. After battling breast cancer bravely for twelve years, she died on May 27, 2013, in Ozark, Alabama. Her two sons survive her.

Infant Streater (September 9, 1932)

Lizzie and Joe's second child together was an infant who was born and died on September 9, 1932, in Morven. The baby was buried the same day. No name is recorded in the family records, a reminder of how frequently such tragedies struck families before modern prenatal and neonatal care.

Joseph Vernon Streater Jr. (August 14, 1933)

Their son Joseph Vernon, named for his father, was born and died on August 14, 1933, in Morven. Like his unnamed sibling the year before, he lived only a single day. He is buried in Morven. The loss of two infants in consecutive years must have weighed heavily on Lizzie and Joe.

William Balsey Streater (1934–1939)

William Balsey, born November 3, 1934, in Morven, lived longer than his two siblings but still only reached age five. He died on December 26, 1939 — the day after Christmas — and is buried in Morven. The family was still reeling from depression-era hardships, and losing a young child so close to the holidays would have been devastating.

 

Losing Joe: Life as a Widow

Joseph Vernon Streater died on December 30, 1945, in Wadesboro, Anson County, North Carolina, at the age of 53. He had lived to see the end of World War II — the war in Europe ended in May 1945 and the Pacific war in August — but did not survive the year. His death certificate notes his residence as Morven and lists his parents as W. B. Streater and Elizabeth Lampley. He was buried on January 1, 1946, in Morven Cemetery.

Lizzie was 52 years old when she became a widow. Of their five children, only two were living — Abner in his mid-twenties, and Sarah, just 15. In the years following Joe's death, Lizzie remained in or near Morven. Aronr the time of Joe 's death, Aunt Cora, sister of Lizzie join the family. One family note recalls that "Aunt Lizzie and Aunt Cora lived on Diggs Road about a mile from where Diggs Road connects with Highway 145," suggesting she and her sister Cora kept each other company in those later decades — the way sisters often do. Our family also lived on Diggs Road and we would always stop and visit with Aunt Cora and Aunt Lizzie becuse they were family and our grandmother Lucy Pearl "Pearly" Deese Purvis were paternal half-siblings. 

Later Life and Final Years

As her daughter Sarah and son-in-law Harold White eventually settled in Ozark, Alabama, Lizzie followed them there after the death of her sister, Cora, in 1968. At the time of her death, she was living in Ozark, in the southeast corner of Alabama — a good distance from the Anson County fields where she had spent most of her life.

Winnie Elizabeth "Lizzie" Deese Streater died on Wednesday, June 18, 1980, at the Ozark Nursing Home in Ozark, Dale County, Alabama, following an extended illness. She was 86 years old. Her obituary in The Ozark Star noted that she was "formerly of Morven, North Carolina" — a small acknowledgment that her heart had always remained in Anson County.

Funeral services were held on Saturday, June 21, 1980, at 3:30 p.m. at Shiloh Methodist Church in North Carolina, with Moore Funeral Home directing. Holman Funeral Home of Ozark handled local arrangements. She was buried in Morven Cemetery, in the Deese family plot, on June 21, 1980 — back in the community where she was born, where she married, where she raised her children, and where so many of the people she loved were already waiting for her.

The inscription on her tombstone reads simply: "With Christ in Harmony."

 

Family She Left Behind

At the time of her death, Lizzie was survived by her daughter, Mrs. Harold (Sarah) White of Ozark; two grandsons and several nieces and nephews. Her son Abner Deese Sr. was also living at this time. He has since passed away.   

Her World: A Historical Snapshot

It's worth pausing to appreciate the remarkable span of history Lizzie lived through. She was born in 1893 — just 28 years after the Civil War ended — into a South still rebuilding itself. She came of age during the Progressive Era, when electric lights, automobiles, and telephones were novelties spreading slowly into rural communities like Morven.

She was 17 when the Great Triangle Shirtwaist Factory fire shocked the nation in 1911. She was a young woman of 24 when the United States entered World War I in 1917 — the same year her future husband Joe registered for the draft. She married in 1930, just months after the stock market crash that triggered the Great Depression, and raised her surviving children through those lean years. She lived through the rationing, the worry, and the sacrifice of World War II, and saw her country emerge as a world power.

She was in her 70s when Americans walked on the moon in 1969, and she died in 1980 — a year that saw the election of Ronald Reagan, the eruption of Mount St. Helens, and the assassination of John Lennon. Through nearly nine decades, Lizzie Deese Streater was simply a woman of Morven — a farmer's daughter, a farmer's wife, a mother, and a survivor.

 

Vital Records at a Glance

Birth: September 10, 1893 — Morven, Anson County, North Carolina

Death: June 18, 1980 — Ozark, Dale County, Alabama

Burial: June 21, 1980 — Morven Cemetery, Morven, Anson County, North Carolina (Deese plot)

Parents: John Calvin Deese (1854–1930) and Sarah Frances Gathings Deese (1858–1950)

Spouse: Joseph Vernon Streater (1892–1945), married January 4, 1930, Chesterfield County, South Carolina

Children: Abner L. Deese Sr. (1921–2004); Sarah Ann Streater (1930–2013); Infant Streater (1932); Joseph Vernon Streater Jr. (1933); William Balsey Streater (1934–1939)

Find A Grave Memorial: #38280167

 

Winnie Elizabeth Deese Streater is my paternal GrandAunt. 


____________________________________________

1. Find A Grave, Inc., Find A Grave, database and digital images, (http://www.findagrave.com : accessed  5 June 2015); Memorial page for Joe Vernon Streater; (4 October 1892–30 December 1945); Find a Grave memorial # 65483688, Citing Morven Cemetery; Morven, Anson County, North Carolina, USA.

2. "World War I Draft Registration Cards, 1917-1918," on-line digital images, Ancestry.com (http://www.ancestry.com : Viewed 5 June 2015), Joe V Streater; citing Selective Service System. World War I Selective Service System Draft Registration Cards, 1917-1918. Washington, D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration. M1509, 4,582 rolls, Roll: 1765559.

3. 1940 U. S. Census, Anson County, North Carolina, population schedule, Morven, Anson County, North Carolina, enumeration district (ED) 4-18, Page: 7A/214(stamped), Line 35, Household #105, Houssehold of Joe V. STREETER; digital images, 1940 CENSUS (www.ancestry.com : viewed 5 June 2015); citing NARA microfilm publication T627, roll 2871.

4. State of North Carolina, death no. 27215 (30 December 1945), Joe Vernon Streater; https://www.ancestry.com, Raleigh, Wake County, North Carolina.

5. "South Carolina County Marriage Records, 1907-2000," database, Ancestry (http://www.ancestry.com : online 14 October 2011), Marriage: Joe V. Streater & Lizzie Deese; https://www.ancestry.com/discoveryui-content/view/900127979:61450; https://www.ancestry.com/search/collections/61959/records/64204.

6. Find A Grave, Inc., Find A Grave, database and digital images, (http://www.findagrave.com : accessed  4 June 2010); Memorial page for Elizabeth Deese Streater; (10 September 1893–18 June 1980); Find a Grave memorial # 38280167, Citing Morven Cemetery; Morven, Anson County, North Carolina, USA.

7. 1900 US Census, Anson County, North Carolina, population schedule, Morven, Anson County, North Carolina, enumeration district (ED) #8, Page 152A; Line 26, Dwelling 52, Family 52, Household of Calvin DEES; digital image, Ancestry.com (http://www.ancestry.com : viewed 12 October 2011); citing National Archives Microfilm T623, Roll 1181.

8. 1910  U. S. Census, Anson County, North Carolina, population schedule, Morven, Anson County, North Carolina, enumeration district (ED) #0011, Page 165B; Line 89, Dwelling 208, Family 217, Household of John C. DEES; digital images, Ancestry.com (http://www.ancestry.com : Viewed 14 October 2011); citing National Archives Microfilm T624, Roll 1096.

9. 1920  U. S. Census, Anson County, North Carolina, population schedule, Morven, Anson County, North Carolina, enumeration district (ED) #13, Page 194A; Line 26, Dwelling 148, Family 148, Household of John C. DEES; digital images, Ancestry.com (http://www.ancestry.com : viewed 14 October 2011); citing National Archives Microfilm Series: T625, Roll: 1283.

10. Mrs. Elizabeth Streater obituary, The Ozark Star, Ozark, Dale County, Alabama, 25 June 1980. Holman Funeral Home in Charge.

11. 1930 US Census, Anson County, North Carolina, population schedule, Morven, Anson County, North Carolina, enumeration district (ED) 18, Page: 4B & 5A/25B & 26A; Line 100, Dwelling 82, Family 83, Household of Calvin J. DEESE; digital image, Ancestry.com (http://www.ancestry.com : viewed 2 January 2011); citing National Archives Microfilm T626, Roll 1672.

12. Mr. Abner Deese obituary, The Anson Record, Wadesboro, North Carolina, 10 March 2004.

13. Mrs. Elizabeth Chewning Deese obituary, The Charlotte Observer, Charlotte, North Carolina, 2 July 2001, On-Line-Edition.

14. Obituary for Sarah Ann Streater White, Holman Funeral Home  of Ozark, (www.HolmanFuneralHome.com: accessed  5 June 2013), Sarah Ann Streater White, died 27 May 2013.

15. Find A Grave, Inc., Find A Grave, database, "Record, Sarah A White (1930–27 May 2013), Memorial # 12710353.


Biography prepared by Charles Purvis · Thomasville, NC 27360 · CPurvis1@gmail.com

Sources: Find A Grave, Ancestry.com census records, NC Death Certificates, The Ozark Star, The Anson Record

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