Saturday, December 27, 2025

52 Cousins~The Rivers Run Deep: Amelia Holifield and Her Pioneer Family

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 the RootsMagic Individual Summary from my Genealogical Software, Roots Magic. All genealogical data is my research material acquired over the past 49 years of research. Today's Biography of Amelia "Milly" Rivers Holifield (1800-abt 1865-1867) was compiled with the assistance of Claude Sonnett 4 and is entitled:

"The Rivers Run Deep: Amelia Holifield and Her Pioneer Family"


Early Life and Family Origins

Amelia "Milly" Rivers was born around 1800 in Chesterfield, Chesterfield County, South Carolina. She was the daughter of Mark Rivers (1781-1831) and Annie Parker (1785-1860), growing up in the rural farmlands of South Carolina during the early years of the American republic.


Milly came from a close-knit Rivers family that included several siblings who would remain important figures throughout her life. Her brothers Mark and Luke Rivers, along with her sister Elizabeth Rivers (who married John Dryman), formed a support network that would follow the family westward. These family connections would prove crucial during the hardships that lay ahead.


Marriage and Early Family Life in South Carolina

Around 1817, at approximately seventeen years old, Milly married Moses S. Holifield Sr. in Chesterfield County, South Carolina. Moses, born around 1800, was the son of John H. Holifield (1769-1869) and Caley (1780-1850). The young couple began their married life in the same South Carolina community where they had both grown up.


Between 1814 and 1837, Milly and Moses welcomed eight children into their growing family:

Joshua S. Holifield (March 15, 1814 - January 29, 1894)

Ray Holifield (born about 1822) (Note: this may be Bay)

Charlotte Holifield (March 4, 1826 - June 14, 1904)

John C. "Cow John" Holifield (born about 1827)

Mark Holifield (born about 1830)

Jonathan Holifield (born about 1833)

James Holifield (born about 1835 in Greene County, Alabama)

Moses Holifield Jr. (born about 1837 in Jones County, Mississippi)

The 1820 census found the young Holifield family in Huntley, Anson County, North Carolina, suggesting they had already begun moving westward from their South Carolina roots. By the 1830 census, they had returned to Chesterfield County, South Carolina, where Moses was listed as a man aged 30-39 with Milly and their young children, including sons Ray and John under five years old, Joshua aged 5-9, and daughter Charlotte under five.


The Great Migration Westward

Like many Southern families in the 1830s, the Holifields were drawn by the promise of cheaper, more abundant land on the frontier. Moses left South Carolina around 1830, first moving the family through Greene County, Alabama (where their son James was born around 1835), before finally settling in Jones County, Mississippi in 1836. Moses became the first Holifield to establish roots in Jones County, attracted by the wide-open ranges and abundance of wild game in what was then still frontier territory.


Jones County had only been formed ten years earlier in 1826, carved out of Wayne and Covington Counties. The area was initially called "Copperas Brithes," and the early settlers were sometimes sneeringly called "smutty skins" because of the soot from cooking over smoky pine fires. It was a rough, pioneering existence, but it offered opportunities that crowded South Carolina could not.


By the 1840 census, Moses and Milly were well-established on Talahala Creek with 160 acres of land. The household bustled with activity—nine people in total, including their sons ranging in age from young James (under 5) to their oldest, Joshua (20-29). Milly, listed as a woman aged 40-49, was managing a frontier household with children spanning nearly two decades in age.


Family Ties and Tragedy

The Rivers family remained close even across the distances of the frontier. Between 1850 and 1860, Milly's brother Luke Rivers and his wife Mary Salena Johns moved their family from Chesterfield County, South Carolina to Jones County, Mississippi, maintaining those important family connections.


Tragedy struck the extended family when Milly's sister Elizabeth Rivers Dryman and her husband John died sometime after the 1840 census, leaving three minor orphaned children: Ann, Louisa, and Jasper Newton Dryman (born February 9, 1842). The 1850 census shows Milly and Moses opening their home to two of these orphaned nieces—Ann Driman, age 17, and Louisa Driman, age 11. Their nephew Jasper was taken in by Milly's brother Mark Rivers and his wife Catherine Hancock Rivers. This kind of family care for orphaned relatives was common on the frontier, where extended family networks provided crucial support.


Life in Jones County, Mississippi

The 1850 census provides a glimpse into Milly's life at mid-century. The household included Moses (age 50), Milly (age 50), and several of their sons: Mark (age 20), Jonathan (age 15), and Moses Jr. (age 12), along with the two Driman nieces. Moses was working as a farmer, and the family was carving out a modest but respectable existence in the Mississippi piney woods.


By April 19, 1859, there are records suggesting some family difficulties, though Milly continued managing her household and caring for her family. The 1860 census found Moses (age 70), Milly (now listed as age 80—likely an error in recording), and their son Mark (age 33) still living together. At this point, Moses owned about 80 acres of cropland.


Final Years

Milly Rivers Holifield spent her final years in Jones County, Mississippi, the frontier territory that had been her home for nearly three decades. She died sometime between 1865 and 1867 and was buried in the Old Holifield Cemetery in Jones County.


The exact circumstances of her death are not recorded, but these were difficult years. The Civil War had just ended, bringing tremendous upheaval to Mississippi. Her husband Moses had even attempted to enlist in the Confederate Army in 1861 at age 65, though he was sent home due to his age. The war years brought hardship to everyone in the South, and Milly lived through some of the most challenging times in American history.


Legacy

Milly's legacy lived on through her children and their descendants. Her son Joshua married Mary Ann Craft and lived until 1894. Daughter Charlotte married Robert Cooper and lived to 1904. Many of her children remained in Jones County, establishing the Holifield family as permanent fixtures in the community.

After Milly's death, Moses remarried around 1867 to Nancy M. Sumrall, a much younger woman (born about 1838), with whom he had three more children before his death after August 3, 1872.

Amelia "Milly" Rivers Holifield embodied the pioneer spirit of 19th-century America. She raised eight children while moving from South Carolina through Alabama to the Mississippi frontier, took in orphaned nieces when tragedy struck her family, and helped establish a family dynasty that would spread throughout Jones County. Her life spanned the early republic, westward expansion, and the Civil War—a true witness to one of the most transformative periods in American history.


Amelia "Milly" Rivers Holifield is a distant cousin.  





_________________________

1. 1850 Census, Jones County, Mississippi, population schedule, Jones County, Mississippi, Page:s 25 & 28#128B, Line:#42 Dwelling:#186, Family:#186;, Household of Moses Holifield; online database, Ancestry.com (http://www.ancestry.com : online January 2024); citing National Archives Microfilm Publication M432, Roll 374.

2. 1860 Census, Jones County, Mississippi, population schedule, Jones County, Mississippi, page 709, Line 10, Dwelling 329, Family 329, Household of Moses Holifield; online database, Ancestry.com (http://www.ancestry.com : viewed 2009); citing National Archives Microfilm Publication M653, Roll 584.

3. Patricia N. Edwards & Jean Strickland, Who Married Whom (Ashdown Arkansas 71822: Strickland Books, 1986), page 68.

4. Ancestry, "Civil War Service Records" database, Military Service Records (https://www.fold3.com/ : accessed 11 June 2011), entry for MOSES HOLIFIELD, Sr., Private; 8th Regiment, Mississippi Infantry; Confederate.

5. 1820 U S Census, Anson County, North Carolina, population schedule, Huntley, Anson County, North Carolina, page 33, Line 22, Household of Moses Holyfield; digital images, Ancestry (www.ancestry.com : viewed 2011); citing  National Archives Microfilm M33, Roll 80.

6. 1830 U. S. Census, Chesterfield County, South Carolina, population schedule, Chesterfield County, South Carolina, page 244, Line 19, Household of Moses Holifield; digital images, Ancestry.com (http://www.ancestry.com : viewed 2009); citing  National Archives Microfilm M19_172.

7. 1840, Jones County, Mississippi, population schedule, Jones County, Mississippi, page 305, Line 1, Household of Moses Holyfield; digital images, Ancestry.com (http://www.ancestry.om : viewed 2009); Family History Library Film: 0014840, Roll 214..

8. Moses HOLYFIELDS, Image 4 of 9, , ; , Jones County Tax Rolls; Mississippi State Archives, Jackson, Mississippi.

9. 1841, Jones County, Mississippi, state census, No Township Listed, Moses Holyfield; digital images, Ancestry.com (http://www.ancestry.om : viewed 20 June 2011).

10. 1853, Jones County, Mississippi, mississippi state and territorial census collection, 1792-1866, , Line: 88, Moses Holifield; digital images, Ancestry.com (http://www.ancestry.om : viewed 11 June 2012); Microfilm V229. 3 rolls. Heritage Quest .Roll : v229_2.

11. Bureau of Land Management, Mississippi Pre-1908 Patents: Homesteads, Cash Entry, Choctaw Indian Scrip and Chickasaw Cession Lands, on-line database (: The Generations Network, Inc.,, 1997), Moses Holifield.

12. National Park Service, "Soldiers" database, Civil War Soldiers & Sailor System (http://www.nps.gov/civilwar/search-soldiers.htm : accessed 11 June 2011), entry for Moses Holifield Sr., Private; 8 Mississippi Infantry; Confederate.

13. 1870 US Census, Jones County, Mississippi, population schedule, Township 8,  Jones County , Mississippi, Page 204B; Line 15, Dwelling 84, Family 86, Household of  Moses HOLYFIELD; digital images, Ancestry.com (http://www.ancestry.com : viewed 11 June 2011); citiing NARA publication M593_733.

14. Ed Payne, "Ed Payne on Jones County Civil War Widows: Part 4: Ed Payne on Jones County Civil War Widows," Victoria Bynum, Renegade South, 7 April 2010 (https://renegadesouth.wordpress.com/2010/04/07/part-4-ed-payne-on-jones-county-civil-war-widows/ : viewed 11 June 2011), Moses Holifield sold 40 acres to Kitty Sumrall, 1871.

15. Land Deed - Moses Holifield to Mrs. Kitty Sumrall; 3 August 1872; Deed Book #A!; Page(s) 571; The Chancery Clerk's Office; Ellisville, Jones County, Mississippi; 3 September 2020.




Wednesday, December 24, 2025

Merry Christmas 2025

 


Wishing all my family, friends, blog readers, subscribers and fellow bloggers a very Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year.

















_______________
1. image courtesy of https://pixabay.com/

Tuesday, December 23, 2025

Aunts & Uncles~Nancy (Rivers) Parker: Keeper's Wife at the Poor House"

 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 Nancy (Rivers) Parker (1833- aft 1866) was compiled with the assistance of Claude Sonnett 4 and is entitled:

"Nancy (Rivers) Parker: Keeper's Wife at the Poor House" 


Early Life and Family Background

Nancy Rivers was born around 1833 in Chesterfield, South Carolina, to William Rivers (1776-1855) and Elizabeth "Betsy" Rivers (died 1847). Growing up in the antebellum South, Nancy came of age during a time of significant social and economic change in South Carolina.


By 1850, when Nancy was about 17 years old, she was still living in her father's household in Chesterfield. This was captured in that year's census, which provides us with a snapshot of the Rivers family during this period.


Marriage and Family

Around 1851, at approximately 18 years of age, Nancy married George A. Parker III, who was born in 1829. Their marriage took place in Chesterfield, South Carolina, and they went on to build their life together in the same county where Nancy had grown up.


Nancy and George welcomed three children:

Elizabeth J. Parker (born 1852)

Samuel Parker (born 1853)

John Parker (born 1854)


Life as Keeper's Wife at the Poor House

The 1860 census provides fascinating detail about Nancy's life at age 27. George had taken on the role of Keeper of the Poor House in Chesterfield County, and Nancy lived there with him and their three young children—Elizabeth (8), Samuel (7), and John (6). The household also included a 40-year-old woman named Hawley Rivers, likely a relative, along with James Lemons (60) and Lavinia Sellers (76), who were residents of the poor house.


This position would have required Nancy to help manage a facility that served as a safety net for the county's most vulnerable residents during a challenging period in Southern history.


The Civil War and Reconstruction Years

The years between 1860 and 1866 encompassed one of the most turbulent periods in American history—the Civil War (1861-1865) and the beginning of Reconstruction. On May 25, 1861, Nancy signed as a witness to a land deed involving her husband George, documented in the Burnt Deed Book of Chesterfield County. This deed transaction occurred just weeks after the Civil War had begun with the attack on Fort Sumter in April 1861.


The war years would have brought enormous hardship to South Carolina families. As the conflict progressed, the state saw significant military action, economic devastation, and social upheaval. George passed away in 1869, leaving Nancy to navigate the challenging Reconstruction period.


Post-War Life

Around 1866, Nancy appeared in the Freedmen's Bureau Records in Cheraw, Chesterfield County. She was listed as white, approximately 30 years old (though records show slight variations in her reported age across different documents), with a residence record dated 1865-1872. The Freedmen's Bureau was established after the Civil War to assist formerly enslaved people and poor whites in the South during the difficult transition to peacetime.


Nancy's appearance in these records tells us she was seeking assistance during the challenging years immediately following the war, when South Carolina's economy was devastated and many families struggled to survive.


Later Years

After September 1866, records of Nancy Rivers Parker become scarce. No further documentation has been found following her entry in the Freedmen's Bureau Records, and it's believed she passed away sometime after this date in South Carolina. She would have been in her early thirties.


Nancy's life spanned a remarkable period in American history—from the antebellum South through the Civil War and into Reconstruction—and she navigated these turbulent times while raising her three children and supporting her husband's work serving the community's most vulnerable residents.


Nancy Rivers Parker is my 3rd Great Grand Aunt. 



______________________

1. Based on the 1860 CENSUS for Chesterfield County, SC Nancy was age 27 and borne about 1833. 

1860 CENSUS: Poor House Household, 1860 U. S. Census, Chesterfield County, South Carolina, population schedule, National Archives micro publication Series: M653  Roll: 1217. Family History Library  Film #0805217; page 126, Line 32,  Dwelling 460, Family 460;.

2. 1850 U. S. Census, Chesterfield District, South Carolina, population schedule, Chesterfield District, South Carolina, Page 179B, Line 16, family 1242, dwelling 1242, Household of William Rivers; digital images, Ancestry.com (http://www.ancestry.com : accessed 2010); citing National Archives Microfilm M432 Roll 851.

3. 1860 U. S. Census, Chesterfield, Chesterfield County, South Carolina, population schedule, Chesterfield County, South Carolina, page 126, Line 32, Dwelling 460, Family 460, Household of George A. PARKER; digital images, Ancestry.com (http://www.ancestry.com : viewed 27 July 2015); citing  National Archives Microfilm M653_1217.

4. Nancy Parker, "U.S., Freedmen's Bureau Records, 1865-1878," Cheraw, Chesterfield, South Carolina, p. 155, Record Type: Residence, 1865-1872; database with images, Ancestry.com (https://www.ancestry.com/discoveryui-content/view/1954062:62309 : accessed 20 Dec 2025); citing National Archives and Records Administration (NARA) microfilm publication.

5. George A. Parker born 1829 married Nancy Rivers, daughter of William Rivers and Elizabeth Rivers. George and Nancy's first child - Elizabeth was born abt 1852, age 8 in 1860 Census. In 1850 Census George & Nancy both were single.  They were married in 1851 or maybe early 1852.

6. 1850 U. S. Census, Chesterfield County, South Carolina, population schedule, Chesterfield, Chesterfield County, South Carolina, enumeration district (ED) No ED, Page: 126A; Line 13, Dwelling 431, Family 431, Household of Hawley PARKER; digital images, Ancestry.com (http://www.ancestry.com : viewed 22 July 2011); citing  National Archives Microfilm M432 Roll 851.

7. The Library of Congress, "Mary Parker, Applicant,vs George Parker and Others," Legal Notice, CHERAW GAZETTE,  Cheraw, South Carolina, 14 February 1837, Page 3, Column 4; Digital On-Line Archives, Chronicling America ( https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/ : on line May 2024), Historic American Newspapers.

8. Land Deed - George A. Parker to illegible; 29 May 1861; Deed Book #Burnt Book; Page(s) 21; Probate Office; Chesterfield, Chesterfield County, South Carolina; 27 August 2014.

9. Land Deed - A. W. Davis to G. A. Parker of Marlboro County; 6 September 1869; Deed Book #2; Page(s) 171 & 172; Register of Deeds; Chesterfield, Chesterfield County, SC; February 2024.

10. Chesterfield County, South Carolina, Deed Book# 1: page 462 & 463, G. A. Parker to A. W. Davis Deed; Register of Deeds, Chesterfield, Chesterfield County, South Carolina.

11. Chesterfield County, South Carolina, Deed Book# 2: Page# 384, P. F. Spofford, Shff to E. B. White Deed; Register of Deeds, Chesterfield, Chesterfield County, South Carolina.





Saturday, December 20, 2025

52 Cousins~Gone Too Soon: Phillip A. Sellers of Anson County, NC

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 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 Phillip A. Sellers (1832-1862) was compiled with the assistance of Claude Sonnett 4 and is entitled:

"Gone Too Soon: Phillip A. Sellers of Anson County, NC"

Early Life and Family Background

Phillip A. Sellers was born around 1832 in Anson County, North Carolina, though military records note he was actually born in Chesterfield District, South Carolina. He was the son of Philip Sellers Jr. (1806-1850) and Mary E. Gulledge (1790-1875). Phillip grew up during a time when North Carolina was still largely agricultural, and farming would become his lifelong occupation.


By 1860, Phillip was living in the Gulledge area of Anson County with his mother Mary, who was then 65 years old. The census from that year shows the household included Phillip, age 28, and his young wife Viney, age 20.


Marriage and Family

On March 8, 1860, Phillip married Viny Phillips, daughter of Captain John Phillips, in Anson County. The marriage was performed by John P. Ratliff, Esquire, and was announced in the March 15, 1860 issue of The Argus newspaper. Viny (also spelled Viney or Vina) was born in September 1838 in North Carolina.


The young couple began their married life together as farmers in Anson County, settling on a tract of land consisting of about ninety acres adjoining Thomas Gulledge's property.


The Civil War Years

Enlistment

As tensions between North and South escalated into war, Phillip answered the call to serve the Confederacy. On February 25, 1862, at age 33, he enlisted in Anson County as a private in Company "I" of the 43rd Regiment North Carolina Troops. His military records describe him as a farmer from Anson County who was present and accounted for with his unit.


Death in Service

Tragically, Phillip's military service was cut short just months after he enlisted. In August 1862, while his unit was stationed near Petersburg, Virginia, Phillip fell ill with typhoid fever. He died in a hospital at Petersburg between August 9-12, 1862, and was laid to rest at Blandford Church Cemetery in Petersburg. He was only about 30 years old and had been married for barely two years.

Historical Context

Phillip lived during a pivotal period in American history. His lifetime spanned the antebellum South of the 1830s-1850s, when cotton was king and agriculture dominated the economy of North Carolina. The 1850s saw increasing sectional tensions over slavery and states' rights, which ultimately erupted into the Civil War in 1861.

The 43rd North Carolina Regiment, in which Phillip served, was organized in March 1862, just weeks after his enlistment. Like many Confederate soldiers, Phillip faced not just the dangers of battle but also the devastating impact of disease. Typhoid fever, spread through contaminated water and food, was a major killer during the Civil War—claiming more soldiers' lives than combat itself.


After Phillip's Death

Following Phillip's death, his widow Viney was left with their property. On April 19, 1870, the Superior Court of Anson County ordered the sale of Phillip's estate—the ninety-acre farm—to pay remaining debts. John P. Ratliff, the same man who had married Phillip and Viney ten years earlier, served as administrator of the estate.

The land was sold at auction on November 15, 1870, with John H. Gaddy making the highest bid of $350. He subsequently assigned his bid to James T. Moore. Viney retained her dower rights (a widow's legal claim to one-third of her late husband's property for her lifetime), for which she received an additional $250 when she relinquished those rights on January 7, 1871.

Viney eventually remarried John H. Gaddy, and they appear together in the 1880 census living in the Gulledges area of Anson County with Gaddy's daughter Martha. By 1900, Viney was living as a boarder in the household of Alfred Gaddy and his wife Eliza in Wadesboro. She lived until at least 1900, surviving her first husband by nearly four decades.

Phillip A. Sellers' brief life exemplifies the experience of countless young Southern men whose lives were cut short by the Civil War, leaving behind widows and unfinished dreams of building farms and families in rural North Carolina.


Phillip A. Sellers is my 1st Cousin 4X Removed. 



_____________________________
1. 1860 U. S. Census, Anson County, North Carolina, population schedule, Gulledge, Anson County, North Carolina, Page: 288 (stamped), Line 21, Dwelling 1049, Family 1009, Household of Mary SELLERS; online database, Ancestry.com (http://www.ancestry.com : viewed 26 December 2014); citing National Archives Microfilm Publication M653, Roll 887.
2. North Carolina, Deed Book:  17, Page 435, John P. Ratliff Adm of P. A. Sellers to Jas. T. Moore; Register of Deeds, Wadesboro, Anson County, North Carolina.
3. 1880 U S Census, Anson County, North Carolina, population schedule, Gulledges, Anson, North Carolina, enumeration district (ED) 003, Page: 376D(Stamped); Line#12, Dwelling#291, Family#291, Household of  John H. GADDY; digital image, Ancestry.com (http://www.ancestry.com : viewed 31 May 2023); citing National Archive  Microfilm T9-0951.
4. 1900 US Census, Anson County, North Carolina, population schedule, Wadesboro, Anson,North Carolina, enumeration district (ED) 0009, Page: 4B/166B (Stamped); Line#69, Dwelling#54, Family#54, Vina GADDY; digital image, Ancestry.com (http://www.ancestry.com : viewed 31 May 2023); citing National Archives Microfilm T623, Roll 1181.
5. Anson NCGenWeb, Anson NCGenWeb, Anson County, NC - Marriage & Death Notices, 1859-1860 (http://files.usgwarchives.net/nc/anson/vitals/marriages/argus02.txt : viewed 2 June 2014), Mr. Phillip SELLERS to Miss Viny PHILLIPS, daughter of Capt. John PHILLIPS.
6. 1860 U. S. Census, Anson County, North Carolina, Population Schedule, Gulledge, Anson County, North Carolina, Page: 288 (stamped), Line 21, Dwelling 1049, Family 1009, Household of Mary SELLERS.
7. Matthew Brown Editor, BOOK: NORTH CAROLINA TROOPS:1861-1865: A Roster (Raleigh, NC 27699-4622: Historical Publications Section, 1997), Phillip A. Sellers, Volume 10, page 379.
8. Ancestry, "Civil War Service Records" database, Military Service Records (https://www.fold3.com/ : accessed 14 September 2016), entry for Phillip Sellers, Private; Co. "I", 43rd Reg't; Confederate.
9. North Carolina, Deed Book: 17, Page 435, John P. Ratliff Adm of P. A. Sellers to Jas. T. Moore; Register of Deeds, Wadesboro, Anson County, North Carolina.



Thursday, December 18, 2025

The Deese-Pratt Conundrum: Untangling Two Mary Anns

 The Deese-Pratt Conundrum: Untangling Two Mary Ann's


The Problem

For over 46 years, genealogists believed that John Pratt married Mary Ann "Polly" Deese, and that their son was John W. Deese (born July 15, 1839). This conclusion rested on just two documents:


John Deese's 1915 death certificate listing his parents as "John Pratt and Mary Deese"

John W. Deese's 1873 marriage license showing his father as "John Pratt, dead" and mother as "Polly Deese, living"


However, a closer examination of census records and other documentation reveals a case of mistaken identity involving two different women both named Mary Ann.

The Evidence: Two Different Women

Mary Ann Adams (Born c. 1825)

The actual wife of John Pratt:


Born around 1825 to John and Nancy Adams

Married John Pratt on March 26, 1844 (she was 19, he was 32)

Appeared in the 1850 census in Sandy Point District, Anson County with John Pratt and four children

Became a widow when John Pratt died December 2, 1859 (age 47)

Received her dower (widow's portion) of land in June 1860, documented in Anson County Deed Book 16, page 155

Age 33 in the 1860 census (which would make her birth year approximately 1827)

Age 55 in the 1880 census, living with her children James, Eliza, George, and Jonas Pratt

Lived 29 years after her husband's death

Death date unknown


Mary Ann "Polly" Deese (Born c. 1808)

The actual mother of John W. Deese:


Born around 1808 (based on being age 72 in 1880)

Age 72 in the 1880 census, living in the household of her son John W. Deese and his wife Harriett Sellers.

Died around April 1888 (Anson County Commissioner Proceedings document a payment of $2.25 to John Deese for his mother Mary Deese's coffin)

Never actually married to John Pratt


The Key Discrepancy

The critical evidence lies in the 1880 census age discrepancy:


If Mary Ann Adams (John Pratt's actual wife) was 33 in 1860, she would have been approximately 53-55 years old in 1880

The Mary Deese living with John W. Deese was 72 years old in 1880

These cannot be the same woman—there's a 17-20 year age difference


What Actually Happened

The confusion stems from two issues:


John W. Deese's true parentage: While his 1915 death certificate and 1873 marriage license list "John Pratt" as his father, the census evidence suggests this may have been a legal fiction or error. John W. Deese was likely the son of Mary "Polly" Deese by another relationship, not by John Pratt.

Two women, same name, same county: Both Mary Ann Adams Pratt and Mary Ann Deese lived in Anson County, North Carolina during overlapping time periods, creating confusion for later genealogists who assumed they were the same person.


The Census Trail

1850: John Pratt and Mary Ann (Adams) with their legitimate children

1860: Mary Ann Pratt (widow, age 33) receiving her dower lands after John's death

1880:


Mary Ann Pratt (age 55) living with her grown Pratt children

Mary Ann Deese (age 72) living with her son John W. Deese and his family—two separate households, two separate women


1888: Mary Deese (mother of John W. Deese) dies; county pays for her coffin


Conclusion:

John Pratt married Mary Ann Adams in 1844. They had legitimate children together, including James, Eliza, George, and Jonas Pratt. John Pratt died in 1859, and Mary Ann Adams Pratt lived as a widow until at least 1880.

John W. Deese was the son of Mary Ann "Polly" Deese, a different woman entirely. While he claimed John Pratt as his father on official documents, the census evidence—particularly the age discrepancy—demonstrates this cannot be accurate. The nature of the relationship between John Pratt and John W. Deese remains unclear, but Mary Ann Deese, not Mary Ann Adams, was definitely John W. Deese's mother.

The 46-year genealogical error collapsed two distinct women into one, leading researchers astray for decades.








Tuesday, December 16, 2025

Aunts & Uncles~Hardy Sellers {1823-1863):Faith, Family, and the Cost of War

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 Hardy Sellers {1823-1863) was compiled with the assistance of Claude Sonnett 4 and is entitled:

 "Hardy Sellers: Faith, Family, and the Cost of War" 


Early Life and Family Origins

Hardy Sellers was born on December 13, 1823, in Chesterfield County, South Carolina, into a family deeply rooted in the region. His parents were Philip Sellers Sr. (1774-1835) and Mary Gulledge (1774-1848), both of whom had witnessed the early years of the American Republic. Sadly, Hardy's father passed away when he was just eleven years old, leaving his mother Mary to raise the family. Hardy grew up alongside his brother Roland Sellers (1794-1848), who was nearly thirty years his senior.


The Sellers family had established themselves as respected members of the Chesterfield community, and young Hardy would carry on this legacy throughout his life.


A Generous Act of Faith

At just seventeen years old, Hardy demonstrated remarkable maturity and devotion when he made a significant contribution to his community. On October 30, 1841, he donated two acres of land to the Hopewell Baptist Church of Chesterfield—land where the church's meeting house already stood. This generous deed, executed "for the love I have to God, and the interest I take in his cause on earth and to the Baptist denomination in particular," showed Hardy's deep commitment to his faith even as a young man.


The deed was witnessed and recorded properly, though it would later need to be re-recorded in 1888 after the original courthouse records were destroyed during Sherman's march through South Carolina in 1865.


Marriage and Family Life

Around 1845, when Hardy was about twenty-two years old, he married Mary E. Hancock, who was born on December 6, 1822. Together, they built a loving family and were blessed with at least seven daughters:


Lauraetta Jane Sellers (1846-1900) - their firstborn

Sarah Frances "Fannie" Sellers (1849-1914)

Mary Ann Sellers (1849-1922)

Harriett Sellers (born about 1850)

Susannah Wood "Sue" Sellers (1855-1939)

Martha Eliza Sellers (1857-1918)

Celia Rebecca Sellers (born about 1858)


The family moved around a bit during these years. By 1850, when Hardy was twenty-seven, they were living in Gulledge, Anson County, North Carolina, where Hardy worked as an overseer. The census that year captured the young family with Hardy, his wife Mary, and their two eldest daughters, Lauraetta (age 4) and Sarah (age 1), along with a woman named Zilpha Phillips.


By 1860, the family had returned to Chesterfield County, South Carolina, where the census recorded Hardy, now thirty-six, living with Mary and their growing household of daughters ranging from infant Celia to fourteen-year-old Loretta.


The Civil War Years

When the Civil War erupted in 1861, Hardy was nearly thirty-eight years old with a large family depending on him. Despite these responsibilities, he answered the call to serve the Confederacy. On April 12, 1862, he enlisted as a Private in Captain Kelly's Company, also known as the Chesterfield Artillery, part of the South Carolina Light Artillery.


Hardy served faithfully in this artillery unit, which was involved in the defense of Petersburg, Virginia—a critical railroad hub and supply center for the Confederate capital of Richmond. The siege and battles around Petersburg would prove to be among the longest and most grueling campaigns of the entire war.


A Tragic End

Tragically, Hardy Sellers never returned home to his wife and seven daughters. On August 15, 1863, at the age of thirty-nine, he died in Petersburg, Virginia. According to hospital records, he succumbed to "Febris Congestive"—a congestive fever that caused seizures and sudden attacks. He was being treated at the South Carolina Hospital in Petersburg when he passed away.


Hardy was laid to rest in Blandford Church Cemetery in Petersburg, Virginia, far from his South Carolina home. Today, a memorial marker stands in his honor at Hopewell Baptist Church Cemetery in Chesterfield, the same church he had so generously supported as a young man. The memorial notes his service with the South Carolina Light Artillery, Captain Kelly's Company, CSA.


Legacy

Hardy Sellers lived just under forty years, but he left behind a meaningful legacy. His early gift of land to Hopewell Baptist Church served the community for generations. His service to the Confederacy, like that of so many young men from both sides, ended in tragedy, leaving behind a widow and seven daughters to carry on without him.


Mary survived her husband by thirty-seven years, passing away on May 15, 1900, at the age of seventy-seven. She was buried at Hopewell Baptist Church Cemetery, finally at rest near the land her husband had donated so many years before. Their daughters went on to marry and have families of their own, ensuring that Hardy and Mary's lineage continued through the generations.


Hardy Sellers is my 3rd Great Grand Uncle. 



____________________

1. Marriages and Death Notices obituary, Raleigh Register, Newport News-Hampton, Virginia, United States, 26 March 1844, Marriage: Mary Ann Adams & John Pratt.

2. 1850 Census, Anson County, North Carolina, population schedule, Sandy Point, Anson County, North Carolina, Page: 188A(stamped); Line 2, Dwelling 427, Family 427, Household of and John PRATT; online database, Ancestry.com (http://www.ancestry.com : viewed 5 June 2014); citing National Archives Microfilm Publication M432, Roll 619.

3. Emma Goodwin, Type Talk I of Lilesville Township: Anson County, North Carolina (Charlotte, North Carolina: Herb Eaton Historical Publication, 1990), page 16.

4. Court of Pleas and Quarter Sessions Jan-1846, "John Pratt, Alex'r S. McAlpin and others vs William Pratt, Hiram Pratt, Daniel Short and wife," Legal Notice,  Fayetteville Weekly Observer, Fayetteville, N.C., 10 February 1846, Page 2, Column 7.

5. "Death of John Pratt," Death Notice, The North Carolina Argus, Wadesborough, North Carolina, 15 December 1859, Died on 2nd Inst (Dec).

6. Anson County, North Carolina, Probate Files & Loose papers, John PRATT; digital images, Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, FamilySearch (http://www.familysearch.org: online July 2024); Pratt, John (1860).

7. 1880 U. S. Census, Anson County, North Carolina, population schedule, Morven, Anson County, North Caroline, enumeration district (ED) 2, Page:#342B (Stamped); Line:#43, Dwelling:#88; Family:#95, Household of James PRATT; digital image, Ancestry.com (http://www.ancestry.com : online June 2024); citing National Archives Microfilm T9, Roll 0951.

8. 1880 CENSUS: Morven, Anson County, North Caroline;Enumeration District:#2; NARA Publication:#T9_0951; Page:#342B (Stamped); Line:#43; Dwelling:#88; Family:#95; James PRATT; Son, age 21, born in NC; Mary A. PRATT, Mother, age 55, born in NC and Eliza J. PRATT, Sister, age 22, born in NC; Gorge PRATT; Brother, age 16, born in NC and Jonas PRATT; Brother, age 10, born in NC. 

https://www.ancestry.com/search/collections/6742/records/19268999

9. 1880 CENSUS: Morven, Anson County, North Carolina; Roll: 951; Family History Film 1254951; Enumeration District: 2; Image: 0483; Page 345D; Line 29, Dwelling 137, Family 151; John DEESE, Male, age 41, born in NC; Harriett A. DEESE, Wife, age 26, born in NC; Derette DEESE, Daughter, age 5, born in NC; Mary E. DEESE, Daughter, age 4, born in NC; Nizza L. DEESE, Daughter, age 2, born in NC; Minne E. DEESE, Daughter, age 2, born in NC and Mary DEESE, Mother, age 72, born in NC. 





Saturday, December 13, 2025

52 Cousins~Huldah Ann Rivers Baldwin: A Winston County Mother's Story

 

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 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 Huldah Ann Rivers Baldwin (1856-1932) was compiled with the assistance of Claude Sonnett 4 and is entitled:

Huldah Ann Rivers Baldwin: A Winston County Mother's Story

Early Life and Family Origins

Huldah Ann Rivers was born on April 4, 1856, in Warrior, Jefferson County, Alabama, to Frederick W. Rivers (1817-1890) and Synthia Matilda Knight (1824-1902). Her parents had both been born in South Carolina and made their way to Alabama, where they established their family in the growing region around Birmingham.

Huldah grew up as one of several children in the Rivers household. Her siblings included Margaret Matilda Rivers Tidwell (1844-1913), Synthia Jane Rivers Waid (1860-1909), Marcus C. Rivers (1862-1945), and Richard M. Rivers (1866-1944). The 1860 census shows young Huldah, then just three years old, living with her family in the Blackburns area of Jefferson County. By 1870, when she was fourteen, the family had moved to the Mt. Pinson area, still in Jefferson County.

Marriage and Moving to Winston County

On February 14, 1874—Valentine's Day—seventeen-year-old Huldah Ann married Lewis William Baldwin in Houston, Winston County, Alabama. Lewis, born December 8, 1855, in Ashville, St. Clair County, was the son of Irvin C. Baldwin (1814-1864) and Sydney S. Willoughby (1816-1864). Both of Lewis's parents had passed away when he was just a young boy, leaving him and his siblings to make their own way in the world.

The young couple settled in Houston, a small community in Winston County—an area known as the "Free State of Winston" for its opposition to secession during the Civil War. This rugged, independent region in Alabama's hill country would be their home for most of their married life.

Growing a Family

Huldah and Lewis wasted no time starting their family. Over the next eighteen years, they would welcome eleven children into the world, though tragically, not all would survive to adulthood. Their children were:

Matilda Frances Baldwin (December 29, 1874 - 1974), who married Grant U. Burdick on Christmas Day 1890

Tempie Jane Baldwin (February 7, 1877 - May 31, 1958), who married Thomas Jefferson McClellan on Christmas Day 1894

Margaret Elizabeth Baldwin (January 3, 1879 - August 10, 1961), who married Robert Coatney Bradfield on October 22, 1899

Joanna Elizabeth Baldwin (March 10, 1881 - March 21, 1942), who married William Jasper Dunlap on December 17, 1899

George H. Baldwin (August 21, 1882 - July 14, 1972), who married Ada Lauvernia Thornton on April 8, 1906

Hulda Henrietta Baldwin (March 20, 1884 - February 27, 1953), who first married Ross E. Thornton in 1901, and later married William Jasper Dunlap (her sister's widower) in 1943

Lillie Alice Baldwin (January 25, 1886 - December 20, 1971), who married George Washington Blevins on May 10, 1902

Richard Andrew Nathaniel Baldwin (April 14, 1888 - June 15, 1968), who married Lillian Horsely on December 27, 1919

Esther Izora Baldwin (March 25, 1890 - July 7, 1964), who married Burvil Angress Sides on October 10, 1909

Cynthia Jane Baldwin (August 19, 1892 - April 26, 1953), who married Oscar C. Johnson on September 24, 1911

Jonnie Harrison Baldwin (August 19, 1892 - September 23, 1897), who died at just five years old

The loss of little Jonnie in 1897 must have been heartbreaking for Huldah and Lewis, but they continued to raise their remaining children in the close-knit community of Houston.

Life as a Farmer's Wife

The census records paint a picture of Huldah's life over the decades. In 1880, the family was living in Township 11, Beat 1 of Winston County. Lewis worked as a farmer, and at just 23 years old, Huldah already had three young daughters—Matilda (age 5), Tempa (age 3), and Margaret (age 1).

By the 1900 census, the family was still in Houston, and the household was bustling. Huldah, now 44, had been married for 26 years and had given birth to ten children, with nine still living. The census that year captured daughters Hulda, Lillie, Esther, and Jane still at home, along with son Richard and nephew George H. Terry.

Life in rural Alabama during this period meant hard work for everyone. Huldah would have been responsible for cooking, cleaning, preserving food, making clothes, tending gardens, and caring for her large brood—all without modern conveniences. Meanwhile, Lewis worked the land to provide for his growing family.

By 1910, the family had moved to Walker County, Alabama, specifically to Precinct 5. The household had gotten smaller, with most of the older children married and gone. The census shows that Huldah and Lewis had been married for 26 years (though it was actually 36 by then), and only their youngest children, Andrew and Janie, were still at home.

Historical Context: Life in Alabama (1856-1932)

Huldah lived through some of the most transformative periods in American history. She was born just five years before the Civil War began. Although she was too young to remember much of the war itself, she certainly grew up hearing stories about it and experiencing its aftermath during Reconstruction.

The region where she lived—Winston County—was unique in Alabama. It had attempted to remain neutral during the Civil War, with many residents opposing secession. This independent spirit shaped the community where Huldah and Lewis raised their family.

During Huldah's lifetime, Alabama transitioned from an agricultural economy devastated by war to one beginning to industrialize, particularly in the Birmingham area where she had grown up. The state struggled with poverty, the sharecropping system, and Jim Crow laws, but also saw the development of coal mining and iron production.

Widowhood and Later Years

After 43 years of marriage, Huldah's life changed dramatically when Lewis died on November 28, 1918, in Jasper, Walker County. He was 62 years old. Lewis was buried at New Prospect Baptist Church Cemetery in Jasper. His death came at the end of World War I, during the devastating Spanish Flu pandemic that swept the world.

The 1920 census shows 64-year-old Huldah, now widowed and going by "H. A. Baldwin," living in Motes, Winston County. Her son Andrew, age 30, and his wife Lillian, age 21, were living with her—likely helping to care for her and maintain the household.m

In an interesting twist of fate, about 1922, at the age of 66, Huldah married James Owen Farley, who was 77 years old. James was the widower of Elizabeth A. Baldwin—Lewis's own sister. This type of marriage between in-laws was not uncommon in rural communities, where practical considerations and existing family connections often influenced such decisions.

Final Years

Huldah spent her final years in Walker County, Alabama. She passed away on March 21, 1932, in Falls City, Walker County, at the age of 75. She was laid to rest beside Lewis at New Prospect Baptist Church Cemetery in Jasper.

She died during the depths of the Great Depression, having witnessed enormous changes in American life—from the horse-and-buggy era to the age of automobiles and radio, from the Civil War's aftermath to the modern industrial age.

Legacy

Huldah Ann Rivers Baldwin's legacy lived on through her children and their descendants, who scattered across Alabama and beyond to California and Illinois. Her daughters and sons carried forward the resilient, independent spirit of Winston County, raising their own families and contributing to their communities. Through hard work, dedication to family, and perseverance through difficult times, Huldah exemplified the strength of women who built families and communities in rural Alabama during one of the most challenging periods in American history.

Huldah Ann Rivers Baldwin is my 1st Cousin 4X Removed. 




_______________________

1. Irvin Baldwin Family, G. Edward Stahlnecker (g.stahlnecker@worldnet.att.net), Irvin Baldwin Family Bible (http://www.freestateofwinston.org/baldwinbible2.txt : Downloaded 4 August 2011), Lewis William BALDWIN, BIRTH, 8 December 1855.

2. 1880 U. S. Census, Winston County, Alabama, population schedule, Township 11, Beat 1, Winston County, Alabama, enumeration district (ED) #287, Page 535C; Line 46, Dwelling 24, Family 24, Household of Lewis W. BALDWIN; digital images, Ancestry.com (http://ancestry.com : viewed 4 August 2011); citing National Archives Microfilm T9_0035.

3. 1900 U. S. Census, Winston County, Alabama, population schedule, Houston, Winston County, Alabama, enumeration district (ED) #157, Page: 247A; Line 24, Dwelling 43, Family 43, Household of Louis BALDWIN; digital images, Ancestry.com (http://ancestry.com : viewed 4 August 2011); citing National Archives Microfilm T623_44.

4. 1910 U. S. Census, Walker County, Alabama, population schedule, Precinct 5, Walker County, Alabama, enumeration district (ED) #0175, Page: 107A & 107B; Line 50-53, Dwelling 537, Family 551, Household of Louis W. Baldwyn; digital images, Ancestry.com (http://ancestry.com : viewed 4 zug 2011); citing National Archives Microfilm T624_35.

5. Family, Irvin Baldwin Family Bible, Lewis William BALDWIN, DEATH, 28 November 1918.

6. Family, Irvin Baldwin Family Bible, Lewis William BALDWIN, MARRIAGE, 14 February 1874.

7. Find A Grave, Inc., Find A Grave, database and digital images, (http://www.findagrave.com : accessed  July 2024); Memorial page for Huldah Ann Rivers Baldwin; (4 April 1856–21 March 1932); Find a Grave memorial # 80429161, Citing New Prospect Baptist Church Cemetery; Jasper, Walker County, Alabama, USA.

8. 1860 U. S. Census, Jefferson County, Alabama, population schedule, Blackburns, Jefferson County, Alabama, Page: 676, Line 5-15, Household 232/217, Household of Frederic W. RIVERS; digital images, Ancestry.com (http://www.ancestry.com : viewed 23 July 2011); citing  National Archives Microfilm M653_12.

9. 1870 U. S. Census, Jefferson County, Alabama, population schedule, Township 14 Range 3, Jefferson County, Alabama, Page: 288A, Line 17-28, Dwelling/Family 246/254, Household of Frederic W. RIVERS; digital images, Ancestry.com (http://ancestry.com : viewed 23 July 2011); citing National Archives Microfilm M593_21.

10. 1910 U. S. Census, Walker County, Alabama, population schedule, Precinct 5, Walker County, Alabama, ED #0175, Page: 107A & 107B; Line 50-53, Dwelling 537, Family 551, Household of Louis W. Baldwyn.

11. 1920 U. S. Census, Winston County, Alabama, population schedule, Motes, Winston County, Alabama, enumeration district (ED) #131, Page: 198B, Line 51, Dwelling 101, Family 101, Household of H. A. Baldwin; digital images, Ancestry.com (http://ancestry.com : viewed 4 August 2011); citing National Archives Microfilm T625_43.

12. Find A Grave, Inc., Find A Grave, database, "Record, Huldah Ann Rivers Baldwin (4 April 1856–21 March 1932), Memorial # 80429161.



Tuesday, December 9, 2025

Aunts & Uncles~A Carolina Girl's Journey: The Story of Alice Eddins Adams

The “Aunt & Uncle” 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 Alice "Alley" (Eddins) Adams (c. 1781–bef 1870) was compiled with the assistance of Claude Sonnett 4 and is entitled: 

"A Carolina Girl's Journey: The Story of Alice Eddins Adams"

Early Life and Family Background

Alice "Alley" Eddins was born around 1781 in Chesterfield, South Carolina, during the final years of the American Revolution. She was the daughter of William Eddins (1757–1822) and Nancy (died 1816). Growing up in South Carolina in the decades following independence, Alice came of age during a time of tremendous growth and westward expansion in the young nation.

Marriage and Family

Around 1810, Alice married Emanuel A. Adams in Anson County, North Carolina. Emanuel, who was born in 1773 in Pitt County, North Carolina, was the son of John Adams. The couple appears together in the 1810 Anson County Census as newlyweds without any children, suggesting their marriage was quite recent.

Together, Alice and Emanuel had at least three known children, though census records suggest there were more that have not been idntified:

  • Riley Adams (1811–May 12, 1877) – Born in Chesterfield, South Carolina, Riley later married Matilda May Collins on July 3, 1864, in Monroe County, Alabama. He served in the Creek War in 1853 and later in the Home Guard in September 1864 during the Civil War.
  • James Irvin Adams (c. 1813–before 1870) – Born in Anson County, North Carolina, James married Nancy Helen Eddins on January 6, 1839, in Pike County, Alabama. He later moved to Colorado, Texas, where he died before 1870.
  • Louisa Ann Adams (May 6, 1821–July 16, 1901) – Born in Anson County, North Carolina, Louisa married Reverend Simeon Williams (1797–1870) and died in Pike County, Alabama.

The 1830 census reveals an important detail: Emanuel and Alice's household included five unnamed children who have not yet been identified by researchers, reminding us that there were more branches of this family tree waiting to be discovered.

Life in North Carolina (1810–1827)

Alice and Emanuel began their married life in Anson County, North Carolina, where they were farming and raising their young family. The 1810 census shows them with one young male child—likely their firstborn, Riley. By 1820, their household had grown considerably, with the census recording one male aged 10-15, three males under 10, and two females under 10, totaling eight free white persons. The family also owned one enslaved person.

Life in Anson County wasn't without its challenges. In 1827, Emanuel lost 149 acres of land in a tax sale when the sheriff couldn't find any goods or chattels to cover the unpaid taxes from 1824. The property on Thompson's Creek was sold to John McRae for just $2.87—the amount of back taxes and costs. This financial setback may have influenced the family's decision to seek new opportunities elsewhere.

The Move to Alabama (1827–1830)

Like many families in the 1820s and 1830s, Alice and Emanuel looked westward for better opportunities. Between 1827 and 1830, they joined the great migration to Alabama, settling in Pike County. This move was part of a larger pattern—thousands of families from the Carolinas and Georgia were drawn to Alabama's fertile cotton lands following the removal of Native American tribes.

The 1830 Pike County census provides a snapshot of their household: Emanuel (age 50-59), Alice (age 30-39), and their children—including males aged 10-14, two aged 15-19 (Riley and James Irvin), one aged 20-29, and three females aged 10-14. The family now owned two enslaved people and had nine free white persons in the household.

Establishing Roots in Alabama (1830s–1840s)

Emanuel worked to establish the family's future in Alabama, acquiring land through federal grants. In August 1837, he purchased 83.1 acres in Pike County, and in July 1841, he added another 159.8 acres. These land acquisitions show the family was building prosperity in their new home.

The 1840 census shows some changes—the household had decreased to five free white persons, though they now owned five enslaved individuals. By this time, some of their older children were likely establishing households of their own.

In 1846, Emanuel served as security for William R. Eddins (the brother of his wife Alice) who was appointed guardian for Christian Joliff, a minor heir. This role suggests Emanuel was respected in the community and had accumulated enough property to stand as surety for a $1,500 bond.

Later Years in Monroe County (1850–1860)

At some point between 1840 and 1850, the family moved from Pike County to Monroe County, Alabama. The 1850 census found 76-year-old Emanuel, 69-year-old "Aley" (Alice), and their 39-year-old son Riley living together. The agricultural census shows Emanuel still actively farming, and the state census records they owned six enslaved people.

These were comfortable years for the couple. In 1858, Emanuel acquired an additional 40 acres in Monroe County, continuing to invest in land well into his eighties. The 1860 census records Emanuel at age 88, Alice at 75, and Riley at 46 still living together—a multigenerational household that was common on the frontier.

Historical Context

Alice and Emanuel's lives spanned an extraordinary period in American history. Alice was born just as the Revolutionary War was ending, when the United States was barely formed. By the time of her death, the nation had expanded across the continent, fought a second war with Britain, experienced massive westward migration, and survived the devastating Civil War.

The couple's move to Alabama was part of the "Alabama Fever" of the 1820s–1830s, when cotton became "king" and Alabama's population exploded from about 128,000 in 1820 to over 590,000 by 1840. They witnessed the forced removal of Creek Indians from Alabama lands, the rise of the plantation economy, and the growing tensions over slavery that would tear the nation apart.

Living through the Civil War years in their seventies and eighties, Alice and Emanuel saw their world transformed. The 1861 probate records from Emanuel's estate include the painful notation of enslaved people being sold—a woman named Tamer sold to "Ailey Adams" (likely Alice herself) for $223, and a woman named Sarah sold for $1,000.

Final Years

Emanuel died before December 3, 1860, when his estate administration began. The probate records show he owned eight head of cattle and a wagon at his death. His land and remaining assets were sold in April 1861, just as the Civil War was beginning.

Alice survived her husband and continued to live in Monroe County. She died sometime before 1870, as she doesn't appear in that year's census. She was likely in her late eighties at the time of her death.

Alice and Emanuel's story is one of resilience, migration, and family—a narrative shared by countless American families who moved westward seeking opportunity in the nineteenth century. While we don't know all their children or every detail of their lives, the records that survive paint a picture of a couple who built a life together across nearly sixty years of marriage, raised a family through tremendous national upheaval, and left descendants who continued their legacy in Alabama and beyond.


Note: Research continues to identify the unnamed children referenced in census records. Family members with additional information are encouraged to contribute to this ongoing genealogical research.


Alice "Alley" (Eddins) Adams is my 3rd Great Grand Aunt


________________________

1. 1810 U S Census, Anson County, North Carolina, population schedule, Anson County, North Carolina, Page#NL, Line#12, Household of Emanual ADAMS; digital images, Ancestry (www.ancestry.com : viewed 1 October 2022); citing  National Archives Microfilm.

2. 1820 U S Census, Anson County, North Carolina, population schedule, Ratcliff, Anson, North Carolina, Page#NL, Line #12, Household of Emanual ADAMS; digital images, Ancestry (www.ancestry.com : viewed 1 October 2022); citing  National Archives Microfilm M33, Roll 80.

3. 1830 U. S. Census, Pike County, Alabama, population schedule, Pike County, Alabama, Page#32, Line #Last Entry, Household of Emanual ADAMS; digital images, Ancestry.com (http://www.ancestry.com : viewed 1 October 2022); citing  National Archives Microfilm.

4. 1840 U. S. Census, Pike County, Alabama, population schedule, Pike County, Alabama, Page#366, Line #22, Household of Emanual ADAMS; digital images, Ancestry.com (http://www.ancestry.com : viewed 1 October 2022); citing  National Archives Microfilm M704 Roll 12.

5. 1850 Alabama State Census, Pike County, Alabama, population schedule, Monroe, Alabama, Emanuel Adams; digital images, Ancestry.com (http://www.ancestry.com : viewed 1 October 2022).

6. 1850 U. S. Census, Monroe County, Alabama, population schedule, Monroe, Alabama, Page 49 (Stamped), Line #9, Dwelling#710, Family#710, Household of Emanual ADAMS; digital images, Ancestry.com (http://www.ancestry.com : viewed 3 October 2022); citing  National Archives Microfilm M432 Roll 11.

7. 1860 U. S. Census, Monroe County, Alabama, population schedule, Monroe, Alabama, Page 849 (Stamped), Line #22, Dwelling 620, Family 571, Household of Emanual ADAMS; digital images, Ancestry.com (http://www.ancestry.com : viewed 3 October 2022); citing  National Archives Microfilm M653 Roll 18.

8. North Carolina, Deed Book:  Deed Book "E", page 123, the property of Emanuel Adams; Register of Deeds, Wadesboro, Anson County, North Carolina.

9. Lebanon, Alabama, Alabama, Homestead and Cash Entry Patents, Pre-1908, Document Number: 2734; Emanuel Adams, 15 August 1837; Ancestry.com, http://www.ancestry.com.

10. Lebanon, Alabama, Alabama, Homestead and Cash Entry Patents, Pre-1908, Document Number: 6111, Emanuel Adams, 1841.

11. Wilcox County, Alabama, Probate Files & Loose papers, Guardian of Christian Joliff; "Wilcox County Court Minutes," digital images, Ancestry, Ancestry.com (https://www.ancestry.com/discoveryui-content/view/2994809:8799: online July 2025); Estate of Davis Joliff.

12. Lebanon, Alabama, Alabama, Homestead and Cash Entry Patents, Pre-1908, Document Number: 44338, Emanuel Adams, 1858.

13. Wilcox County, Alabama, Probate Files & Loose papers, Emanuel Adams; "Monroe County Court Minutes," digital images, Ancestry, Ancestry.com (https://www.ancestry.com/discoveryui-content/view/2994809:8799: online July 2025); Estate of Emanuel Adams.

14. Wilcox County, Alabama, Estate Appraisement, Estate of Emanuel Adams.

15. Wilcox County, Alabama, Sale of Slaves, Estate of Emanuel Adams.






Saturday, December 6, 2025

52 Cousins~ A Family Man's Journey: John Henry Earnhart Through War, Peace, and Migration

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 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 John Henry Earnhart(1841-1896) was compiled with the assistance of Claude Sonnett 4 and is entitled:

"A Family Man's Journey: John Henry Earnhart Through War, Peace, and Migration"


Early Life and Family Origins

John Henry Earnhart was born on October 6, 1841, in Bedford County, Tennessee, to Daniel Earnhart (1809-1883) and Martha Ann "Lucy" Lentz (1811-?). He grew up in a large farming family in the rural Tennessee countryside during a time when most families made their living from the land.

John had several siblings who grew up alongside him in Bedford County. His sisters included Melinda J. (born around 1833), Harriett (born around 1835), and Mary (born around 1837). He also had brothers James A. (born around 1843) and George (born around 1845). The family remained close-knit throughout John's childhood, all living together in District 18 of Bedford County.


Growing Up in Antebellum Tennessee

John spent his boyhood in the 1840s and 1850s, a pivotal time in American history. As a young man, he would have witnessed the growing tensions between North and South that would eventually lead to the Civil War. In 1850, when John was about nine years old, he was living at home with his parents and siblings, likely helping with farm chores and attending whatever local schooling was available in rural Tennessee.

By 1860, at age 19, John was still living with his parents. This was the year Abraham Lincoln was elected president, and the nation stood on the brink of civil war. Many young men John's age would soon find themselves caught up in the conflict that would define their generation.


Marriage and Starting a Family

Around 1860, John married Evaline Wise, who was born on April 30, 1838, in Tennessee. Evaline was about three years older than John. Evaline was the daughter of Henry Wise and Margaret Brindle. The couple would spend the next 36 years together, building a life and raising a large family in Bedford County.

John and Evaline had eight children together:

Martha Elizabeth Earnhart (1861-1940)

William Daniel Earnhart (1863-1954)

Henry Jasper Earnhart (1864-1870) - tragically died at age six

NOTE: A son named "Jones" b. 1865 is listed in the 1870 Census: This is believed to be James Robert Earnhart.

James Robert "Bob" Earnhart (1867-1950)

Margaret Susan Earnhart (1870-1948)

John Wesley Earnhart (1873-1959)

Francis Matilda Earnhart (1875-1956)


Life During and After the Civil War

The 1860s were tumultuous years for Tennessee families. The state was a major battleground during the Civil War (1861-1865), with divided loyalties tearing communities apart. While we don't have records of John's specific wartime activities, he was of military age during the conflict. What we do know is that by 1870, five years after the war ended, John was back home in Bedford County with Evaline and their growing family.

The 1870 census shows 28-year-old John living with his wife and their young children: Martha (8), William (7), Jones [James Robert] (4), and baby Margaret, who was just seven months old. The family was rebuilding their lives in the post-war South, a period known as Reconstruction.


Family Life in the 1870s and 1880s

By 1880, John was 38 years old and firmly established as the head of his household in District 18, Bedford County. The census that year lists six of his children living at home: Martha (17), William (16), Robert (14), Susan (11), John (8), and Fanny (5). Like most families in rural Tennessee at the time, they likely farmed for their livelihood, with the older children helping with the heavy work.

These were the years when John and Evaline watched their children grow into young adults. The 1870s and 1880s saw America transform from a war-torn nation into an increasingly industrialized country, though life in rural Tennessee would have changed more slowly than in the cities.


Later Years and Move to Missouri

Sometime between 1880 and 1896, John and Evaline made the significant decision to leave Tennessee and move to Christian County, Missouri. Many families made similar moves during this period, seeking new opportunities or joining relatives who had already relocated westward.


Death and Legacy

John Henry Earnhart died on August 25, 1896, in Christian County, Missouri, at the age of 54. He was buried in Wise Hill Cemetery in Clever, Christian County, Missouri. Evaline lived another 17 years as a widow, passing away on June 21, 1913, at age 75. She was laid to rest beside John in Wise Hill Cemetery.

John and Evaline's legacy lived on through their children, most of whom enjoyed long lives. Their descendants continued to spread across America, carrying forward the Earnhart family name and the stories of their Tennessee roots.

John Henry Earnhart is my 2nd Cousin 4X Removed. 






______________________________

1. Find A Grave, Inc., Find A Grave, database and digital images, (http://www.findagrave.com : accessed  June 2025); Memorial page for John Henry Earnhart; (6 October 1841–6 October 1841); Find a Grave memorial # 70064390, Citing Wise Hill Cemetery; Clever, Christian County, Missouri, USA.

2. 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.

3. 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.

4. 1870 U. S. Census, Bedford County, Tennessee, population schedule, District 18, Bedford, Tennessee, Page:#331B (Stamped); Line:#20, Dwelling:#181; Family:#191, Household of John EARNHART; digital images, Ancestry.com (http://www.ancestry.com : online June 2025); citing National Archives Microfilm M593_.

5. 1880 U. S. Census, Bedford County, Tennessee, population schedule, District 18, Bedford, Tennessee, enumeration district (ED) 12, Page:#331B (Stamped); Line:#7, Dwelling:#1; Family:#3, Household of John EARNHART; digital images, Ancestry.com (http://www.ancestry.com : online June 2025); citing National Archives Microfilm T9_.

6. Find A Grave, Inc., Find A Grave, database, "Record, Evaline Wise Earnhart (30 April 1838–21 July 1913), Memorial # 70064258.

7. 1870 U. S. Census, Bedford County, Tennessee, Population Schedule, District 18, Bedford, Tennessee, Page:#331B (Stamped); Line:#20, Dwelling:#181; Family:#191, Household of John EARNHART.

8.1910 U. S. Census, Christian County, Missouri, population schedule, Porter, Christian, Missouri, enumeration district (ED) 0040, Page:#21B/100B (Stamped); Line:#76, Dwelling:#76; Family:#76, Household of James M. LETT; digital images, Ancestry.com (http://ancestry.com : online June 2025); citing National Archives Microfilm T626_Roll:.