2006 1.pdfDAVIE DOSSIER July 2005
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There will be a meeting of the Davie County
Historical and Genealogical Society
on Thursday, February 23, 2006,
at the Davie County Public Library.
All members are urged to attend.
HISTORICAL SOCIETY NEWS
A big change in our mailing address. Frances “Pan” Beck has been appointed as the
new Secretary-Treasurer for the Society and all correspondence should be sent to her at the
following address: Frances A. Beck, 1131 Wagner Road, Mocksville, North Carolina 27028
A new year has started. Check the address label on the front of the Dossier to find the
expiration date of your membership in the Society (the year is noted after your name). On the
last page of the Dossier is an application blank for your use.
Now that so many of our members are computer literate, we are requesting that you
consider submitting your email addresses to our office. There are times when we might want to
contact you by email to notify you of upcoming meetings or to ask for your opinions. You can
submit your address by contacting Aubrey Wensil, awensil@yadtel.net
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MEETING OF THE SOCIETY
The Davie County Historical and Genealogical Society held a meeting January 24, 2006
in the History Room of the Library with 11 members present.It was announced that Doris Frye
had resigned her position as Secretary-Treasurer of the Society and Frances Beck was selected to
fill her position. A new board member, Dale McCulloh, was elected to fill the vacancy left by
Frances’s move.
The Board of Directors and those present agreed to scheduling a new format for future
meetings of the Society. The meetings will be held on the fourth Thursday of each month at 7:00
p.m. in the History Room of the Davie County Library. Mark your calendars.
On February 4 at 9:00 a.m., a trip is planned to trace the Daniel Boone Trail/Old Wagon
Road –2nd Creek in Rowan Co. to Cornwallis’s Gorge, through Davie Co.
Frontier Family Festival, sponsored by the Davie County Chamber of Commerce. This
very active committee will have their festival on August 19, 2006. The Davie Arts Council is
working closely with us on this event. They are writing a musical that will have its opening
night on August 18. This event will be family oriented and highlight a wedding re-enactment of
Daniel Boone and Rebecca Bryant commemorating their 250th Wedding Anniversary. There will
also be heritage food vendors, handmade crafts, re-enactments and commercial vendors.
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DAVIE DOSSIER July 2005
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A SAD GOODBYE
After working for thirty-nine years in the Davie County Public Library, Doris Frye is
retiring. Although Doris had reached retirement age many years ago, she stayed on in the job
she loved on a part-time basis; however, recent health problems changed her mind and she has
decided to slow down and turn in a different direction.
Doris came to Davie County from Greensboro when she married a local lad, Avalon
Frye, and raised her family –a son, Keith, and a daughter, Karen. She now has three wonderful
grandchildren –all girls –that she can watch grow and mature. Although Doris was working at
the reference desk, Miss Flossie Martin soon spotted her and cajoled her into helping her in the
History Room.At the age of 97, Miss Flossie retired from the Library and Doris stepped in to
fill the vacancy.
Doris was “in charge” when the new History Room was completed and was instrumental
in much of the planning. The wonderful comments and tributes that have come from people who
have visited the History Room, and conducted genealogical and historical researches, are all a
testament to the work and dedication that Doris has made. We will all miss her presence but we
will benefit from her endeavors for years to come.
Thank you, Doris. We wish you a long and pleasant retirement.
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A HAPPY “HELLO”
How fortunate we are to have Jane McAllister as the new History Room Librarian. Born
and raised in Maryland, Jane graduated from Wake Forest University with degrees in History
and Business Administration. She worked for the US Treasury in Washington, DC, before
earning an MBA from the University of Virginia –where she met her husband Charles
McAllister. He had just received his PhD and to be closer to both of their employees (Wachovia
Bank for Jane and Catawba College for Charlie) they moved to Mocksville –half-way between
work for both of them.
To pursue her love of history, Jane gravitated to the Davie County Public Library and her
appetite was whetted. The Library had no openings for employment so she enrolled at UNC-G
to study for a Masters degree in Library Science. However, before the semester started, she was
offered a part-time job at the Library –an opportunity she could not turn down.When Doris
Frye decided to retire, Jane had just received her degree and was the perfect person to fill the
position.
Although only on the job for a short time, Jane has acclimated herself to the History
Room and is quite knowledgeable about the location of materials and other procedures. A
delightful lady, Jane will be happy to answer and assist any who have questions or comments.
She can be reached most days at 336-751-2023 or email: jane.mcallister@co.davie.nc.us
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DAVIE DOSSIER July 2005
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NEW BOOKS IN HISTORY ROOM
GROWING UP IN DAVIE COUNTY, Reflections from One Hundred Years Ago; Dr.
Jamie W. Moore, Editor.
William Jamie Moore, 1902-2000 (grandfather of the editor) grew up in Davie County in
a time that he has lovingly preserved through his stories. He mentions names, places, businesses
–all the while giving descriptions of the rich rural and small-town culture of the day. Many
Davie County residents will find out what life is like in a small town and county.
They will find their relatives mentioned and experience the activities of the days before
paved roads, electricity, and modern telephone service. This nostalgic and heart-warming book
should find its place in the annals of social history of a day when life moved at a slower pace and
people had time for each other.The Introduction from this book follows:
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My mother had dressed me in my warmest suit and rolled me in a blanket from head to
toe against the December wind to make the trip from Liberty Hill to Mocksville in the back seat
of the two horse buggy. For local travel in 1902 you elected to go on horseback or hooked the
horse to some vehicle. There was not one automobile in the county and few if any in the whole
state of North Carolina. The first airplane, such as it was, had not as yet left the ground. In those
days you were not going anywhere very fast. With the early morning start we had plenty of time
to travel the seven miles to Mocksville and move into our new home.
I took no part in the activities that day other than mostly eating and sleeping to add to my
one month age.
At 85 I don’t really work in the same manner I did for so many years or maintain a
schedule in which I go to work certain hours. Generally I use my time as I see fit. I must
confess that I had in some recent months thought about getting a dog, only a small one of course,
but he would be a pleasure to have around, but then I know I can’t walk a dog, or run with him as
I once did. Instead, last week I bought a computer and printer.
For my birthday about two months ago I with my wife went to have dinner with our son
and daughter-in-law. While waiting for the cake to finish I asked where my grandson was since
he had not come through the kitchen. I climbed the stairs to his room and there before an array
of equipment he was completing a complicated something on the screen of his computer. Jamie
Lee explained what it was and a tiny bit about how the object came into existence. When he
finished he let me sit down at the keyboard to see if I could type “Now is the time for all good
men to come to the aid of their party.” When I did it, he told me I could hit the wrong key and
correct without erasing. I could also rearrange words, paragraphs and a dozen more things after
which I could punch some more keys and this marvel would print what I had written, even give
me more than one copy if I wished. I asked some more questions which he answered plus many
words of information that I had not known enough to ask. Jamie Lee is barely seventeen and I
think he knows a hundred, two hundred or maybe three hundred things about computers. Three
summers at Duke University Computer Camp offered knowledge by the ton and he soaked it up
like a sponge.
I must be honest, my son got the computer for me while I sat by and listened to shop
people talk. Over the next several days he brought it over, set up the desk, hooked up everything
DAVIE DOSSIER July 2005
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and told me how to get started. Then he went home and I began. The first afternoon I called my
son or his wife or my grandson four or five times because I could not make it do the next step.
Now I have typed about three thousand words, some of them spelled correctly, and I must tell
you it is a great joy, even though there have been a few setbacks,such as punching the wrong
key and wiping out about 800 words which I had carefully t yped.
There was a major reason for buying the computer. Over the past several years I have
been writing events beginning mostly with 1902 and coming forward. These accounts have now
climbed to about ninety thousand words and are still growing. The computer would be a great
aid in arranging rewrites and printing the manuscript.
....Growing up, my roof was the sky, no building in town was mo re than two stories, the
streets were dirt and lined with trees, yards were full of shade trees and grass. We seemed to
have plenty of time and with some exceptions did not travel great distances. I was probably
eighteen before I traveled more than 60 miles from home. Years later someone would write a
song titled “Don’t Fence Me In.” In our small town we were not fenced in. I have no thought
that we should go back to the old world, which we of course cannot, but I think perhaps our
fellow travelers of today may miss something if they do not review and become familiar with the
history of those customs and times. There were no Twinkies but we had Persimmon Puddings
and plums were ten cents a gallon.
These are of course personal experiences and interpretations of events which I thought
might be of interest to my family, friends and perhaps some others since we have at one time
been from zero to young to older and grown. Someone asked me when I was talking about
things if I lived in the past. I think not. Wr iting stories on a modern computer, correcting the
spelling with the aid of this same computer and then allowing it to print the entire collection of
words I hardly view as the past. However, I suspect that because I know so much more about the
past than I do of the future the events of yesterdays are likely to continue to show up in what I
write.
In many things I think I have been extremely fortunate. My grandson is so great that if
you will come over some afternoon I will tell you about him. I truly hope when you reach my
age your family has brought you equal happiness. Thank you for listening.
January, 1988
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MICROFILM IN THE MARTIN-WALL HISTORY ROOM
Arranged by Drawers 1 –9
Contributed by Marie Roth
NC Davie Co.Dutchman’s Creek Church Record 3A
The Buckner Family Genealogy 3A
Genealogy of the Griffen Family 3A
NC Iredell Co.Land Valuations for Direct Tax 1800 3A
NC Mecklenburg Minutes County Court of Pleas, 1792-1808 3A
NC Stokes Co.List of Taxables, 1790-1815 3A
Civil War Newspapers, 1861-1881 3A
NC Iredell Co.Taxables, 1837-1840 3A
empty 3B
NC Davie Co.Record of Estates, 1809-1936, A-H, 14 rolls 3C
NC Davie Co.Record of Estates, 1809-1936, H-W, 13 rolls 3D
DAVIE DOSSIER July 2005
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NC Davie Co.Marriage Bonds, 1836-1868, 3 rolls 4C yes
empty 4D
NC Davie Co.Minute Docket, 1837-1848, 1850-1879 4A
NC Davie Co.Land Entries, 1837-1916 4A
NC Davie Co.Index to Wills, Reverse Legatee, 1837-1970 4A
NC Davie Co.Index to Wills, Direct Testator, 1837-1970 4A
NC Davie Co.Records of Wills, 1837-1934 4A
NC Davie Co.Index to Real Estate, Grantees, 1837-1934 4A
NC Davie Co.Index to Real Estate, Grantors, 1837-1970 4A
NC Davie Co.General Index to Administrators, Trustees, Estates, Agents 4A
NC Davie Co.General Index to Administrators, Trustees, Estates, Trustees 4A
NC Davie Co.County Court Minutes, 1837-1862 4A
NC Davie Co.Record of Deeds, 3 rolls, 1837-1848 4A
NC Davie Co.Index to Guardians and Wards, 1868-1935 4A
NC Davie Co.Minutes of Board of County Commissioners, 1868-1923 4A
NC Davie Co.Court Minutes, 1862, 1868 4B
NC Davie Co.Minutes, Superintendent of Common Schools, 1841-1864 4B
NC Davie Co.Tax Scrolls, 1843-1860 4B
NC Davie Co.Tax Scrolls, 1869 4B
NC Davie Co.Record of Estates, 1846-1854 4B
NC Davie Co.Record of Resales, 1920-1970 4B
NC Davie Co.Index to Special Proceedings, 1883-1970 4B
NC Davie Co.Guardians Settlements, 1846-1868 4B
NC Davie Co.Equity Minute Docket, 1837-1868 4B
NC Davie Co.Record of Accounts, 1948-1963 4B
NC Davie Co.Davie County Enterprise Record, 1922-1968 5A
NC Davie Co.Davie County Enterprise Record, 1968-1979 5B
NC Davie Co.Davie County Enterprise Record, 1979-1987 5C
NC Davie Co.Davie County Enterprise Record, 1988-1991 5D
NC Davie Co.Davie County Enterprise Record, 1991-1997 6A
NC Davie Co.Davie County Enterprise Record, 1997-2003 6B
NC Davie Co.Davie County Enterprise Record, 2003-6C
NC Davie Co.Cooleemee Journal, 5 rolls 6D
NC Davie Co.Davie Record, 1899-1927 7A
NC Davie Co.Davie Record, 1928-1943 7B
NC Davie Co.Davie Record, 1944-1956 7C
NC Davie Co.Mocksville Davie Times, 1881-1886 7D
NC Davie Co.Mocksville Davie Times, 1887-1903 7D
NC Davie Co.Mocksville Davie Times, 1912-1912 7D
NC Rowan Co.Historical Record 8A
NC Rowan Co.Index to Real Estate, Grantees, 1753-1921 8A
NC Rowan Co.Index to Real Estate,Grantees, 1753-1921 8A
NC Rowan Co.Index to Real Estate, Grantors, 1753-1921 8A
NC Rowan Co.Index to Real Estate, Grantors, 1753-1921 8A
NC Rowan co.Minutes, Court of Pleas, 1753-1795 8A
NC Rowan Co.Minutes, Court of Pleas, 1753-1795 8A
NC Rowan Co.Minutes, Court of Pleas, 1753-1772 8A
NC Rowan Co.Minutes, Court of Pleas, 1773-1800 8A
NC Rowan Co.Cross Index to Wills, 1761-1959 8A
NC Rowan Co.Record of Wills, 1762-1805 8A
NC Rowan Co.Record of Wills, 1799-1845 8A
NC Rowan Co.Land Entries, 1778-1925 8A
NC Rowan Co.Equity Court Minutes, 1815-1820 8A
DAVIE DOSSIER July 2005
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NC Rowan Co.Superior Court Minutes, 1807-1809 8B
NC Rowan Co.Superior Court Minutes, 1811-1819 8B
NC Rowan Co.Superior Court Minutes, 1820-1849 8B
NC Rowan Co.Tax Lists, 1802-1849 (some years missing)8B
NC Rowan Co.Wardens of the Poor, 1818-1865 8B
NC Rowan Co.Index to Map Books, 1800-1950 8B
NC Rowan Co.Map Book, not recorded 1800-1950 8B
NC Rowan Co.Processioner’s Return, 1803-1868 8B
NC Rowan Co.Index NC Soldiers in War of 1812 8B
NC Rowan Co.Road overseers Order, 1824-1831 8B
NC Rowan Co.Probate Minutes, 1819-1822 8B
NC Rowan Co.Receipt Book, 1823-1861 8B
NC Rowan Co.Record of Deeds, 14 rolls, 1753-1818 8C
NC Rowan Co.Record of Deeds, 7 rolls, 1819-1838 8D
NC Rowan Co.Salisbury Carolina Watchman, 1838-1937, 2 rolls 9A
NC Rowan Co.Salisbury Western Carolinian, 1820-1842, 8 rolls 9A
NC Rowan Co.Marriage Bonds, 1753-1868, 7 rolls 9B yes
NC Person Co.Roxboro Courier, 1901-1903, 3 rolls 9C
empty 9D
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AENEAS CAMPBELL CELEBRATION
Resting unrecognized for decades, and in some cases centuries, are the patriots
and veterans of the wars that established and maintained our country. Later this year
there will be a ceremony to honor one of these patriots. Lieutenant Aeneas Campbell, Jr.
was in the American Revolution serving in the Maryland Flying Camp Militia. After the
Revolution, he came to Iredell County where he raised a large family of ten sons and four
daughters. He now rests in the New Hope Baptist Church Cemetery near Statesville in a
humbly marked grave.
Later this year, this will change ever so slightly. Members of the Sons of the
American Revolution, who happen to be descendents of Captain Campbell, and Clan
Campbell Society of North America will place a marker on his grave signifying his
service to our country. There will be a service with a period honor guard, a bagpiper, and
other honors rendered.
We ask that interested parties, especially descendents, contact Larry Campbell,
soupcan5@yadtel.net or 336-492-5356 to participate. We would really like to assemble
any family lineages and family lore to share with the cousins immediately after this
event. Old photos, family Bibles, and objects related to this large family are encouraged.
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Thanks to: James Cobb
In an 1870 U.S. census, I found this notation for an adult daughter
living at home with her parents.
Her occupation was listed as "no gumption." –
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DAVIE DOSSIER July 2005
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D C H G S 2006 OFFICERS
President:Aubrey Wensil
Vice-President:Linda Leonard
Secretary-Treasurer:Frances Beck
Board of Directors:Dale McCullough
Diane Webb
Bill Urdanick
Dossier Editor:Nancy Murphy
ITEMS FOR SALE
Postage and handling included in price
Davie County...A Brief History (Wall) Paperback 7.50
The Daniel, Squire, and John Boone Families in Davie
County (Wall, Boone, & Martin)5.00
Davie County Marriages 1836-1900, by Nancy K. Murphy 25.00
Davie County Marriages 1901-1959, by Nancy K. Murphy 25.00
Davie County Cemeteries, a two-volume set 55.00
by D.C. Historical & Genealogical Society
1860 Federal Census-Davie County, by Murphy & Sain 17.00
1870 Federal Census-Davie County, by Murphy & Sain 17.00
1880 Federal Census-Davie County, by Murphy & Sain 22.50
Maps -Lagle Land Grant 6.50
-Hughes Historical 6.50
-1887 Alderman 2.50
Postcards (set of 8 )2.50
These items can be ordered from the Davie County Historical and Genealogical Society
Office. North Carolina residents need to add 7% sales tax to the total.
Membership for Calendar year 2006 remain the same as in previous years -$5.00/year.
The number following your name on the address label indicates the year through which your
dues are paid. Below is a registration form for your use; checks are to be made payable to the
Society.
DAVIE COUNTY HISTORICAL AND GENEALOGICAL SOCIETY
Frances A. Beck,
1131 Wagner Road
Mocksville, North Carolina 27028
NAME _____________________________________________________________
ADDRESS ____________________________________________________________
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