2010 3.pdfDavie Dossier
Issued by
Davie County Historical and Genealogical Society
Mocksville, North Carolina
July 2010, Issue 3
Davie County Historical and Genealogical
Society
MEETINGS ARE HELD THE FOURTH TUESDAY (January through November)
President Linda Leonard
Secretary/Treasurer Frances Beck
Board of Directors Pat Reilly, Claude Horn, Bill Urdanick
Dossier Editors Marie Roth, Doris Frye
Webmaster Marie Roth
Our Web site: http://www.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~ncdavhgs has these features:
?All the churches in Davie County
?Cemeteries in Davie County with locations
?National Register of Historic Places sites
?Names on the War Memorial in Mocksville
?NEW: Index to Bible Records at DCPL
?Townships as listed on US Census, 1790 - 1930
?Meeting Dates and Programs
?NEW:Guardian Accounts, Davie Co. 1846- 1859
?NEW:Apprentice Bonds, Davie Co. 1829 -1859
?NEW: 1974 booklet about old schools in Davie.
DAVIE CO. HISTORICAL/GENEALOGICAL SOCIETY PROGRAMS, 7 pm at the library:
January 26, Beth Hill, Historic Site Manager of Fort Dobbs State Historic Site, Iredell Co., NC.
February 23, Larry Campbell, using Ancestry.Com to its maximum potential.
March 23, Debra Dotson and Marie Roth, Photography in Genealogy.
April 27: Joe and Terri Ramsbotham discussed Moravians with an emphasis on foods grown and used.
May 25: Dorothy Rucker Graham discussed her family history research.
June 22: H. Lee Waters filmed Davie County events, schools, and people about 1940.
We will look at some of his footage and try to identify people and buildings.
This 16 mm silent film was changed to video cassette and then recently Marie changed
the video to DVD. We’ll talk about preservation methods for films. For information about him,
see http://www.colorlab.com/archives/HLeeWaters.htm
Duke University has his old films and records.
July 27: Discussion about maps of Davie County. Bring your favorite Davie map and share how it
helped you to learn more about the county and/or your ancestor.
Part 2 of H. Lee Waters films of Davie County. Twenty people came June 22 and really enjoyed
seeing Part 1 of these old movies.
August 14: Instead of our regular meeting, we’ll attend the August 14 Daniel Boone Conf. in Mocksville.
September 28: to be announced. See Web site for program topic.
October 26: Bob and Sue Hill will discuss the Salisbury Confederate Prison and the National Cemetery.
November 23:
SPECIAL EVENTS
May 1, Daniel Boone Festival A record number of people took the bus tour (sponsored by our society) of
areas in Davie County related to Daniel Boone.
May 8, Civil War Monument On Saturday, May 8, a small crowd attended the dedication of the names
newly inscribed on the war monument on the square in Mocksville. These 55 additional men had lost their
lives in the War Between the States. Since the first listing on the monument
years ago, more research has provided these additional names. The first 262
names of men dying in the Civil War filled up the face of the back of the
monument. These 55 new names were added to the right edge of the stone.
Lynne Hicks welcomed the group, Judge Jimmy Myers had the opening
prayer, Jack Koontz spoke briefly, and Mary Alice Hasty gave a short talk
describing the research that she and her sister Hazel Winfree did in writing the
book The Civil War Roster of Davie County, North Carolina. (The book can be
purchased; see page 7.) She gave credit to Mr. James Wall, county historian, for
his work in previous research of Civil War casualties. His book, History of
Davie County, lists these on pages 401 and 402. This book is also available for
purchase on page 7. Judge Myers gave some remarks about the significance of
our appreciation for the lives given by military throughout history. Mr. Wall also
gave credit to Jack Koontz for being a leader in helping to create the military monument from its inception
to the present. A Civil War Re-enactment group marched and fired their muskets 3 times in salute.
August 14, Yadkin Valley Historical Association Workshop is at First United Methodist Church in
Mocksville. Theme: “Daniel and Rebecca Bryan Boone, Their Lives and Times.” Registration form
and more information at http://www.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~ncyadvha/. To get ready, read Randell
Jones’ article: http://www.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~ncyadvha/dbtrail.pdf. Speakers: Randell Jones,
Randy Bryan, Everett Gary Marshall and Mark Hager.
This will be a special workshop, and you should make every effort to attend !!
August 18-21, Federation of Genealogical Societies Annual Conference in Knoxville TN August 18-21,
2010. On Wednesday, there will be a special emphasis on improving genealogical societies.
For information, see http://www.fgs.org:80/2010conference/. You can register online for the conference.
Make hotel reservations early or you may be sleeping in your car. Brochures are available at Davie
County Public Library listing the speakers and topics.
September 18, Saturday, 10 am - 3 pm. Genealogy Jamboree to be held at the First Reformed Church on
East Center Street, Lexington, NC. There will be exhibits and sale tables for county and state
genealogical/historical societies and family surname organizations. Contact persons: David and Belinda
Rogers, 336.798.3537 or djrodgers@lexcominc.net .
SPECIAL PROJECTS
Interviewing: Our society will assist our Davie County Senior Services in an interviewing project of Davie
County residents over 90 years old. A committee has been formed and the details will be planned for
questions to ask, video equipment for recording and use of the information. One man who is 99 remembers
when greater downtown Mocksville had a dirt road and only two stores. This information needs to be
recorded.
New Map to Sell.Several years ago, our society sold a 1928 map of Davie County that was drawn by
Wilson F. Merrell who was a professor at Fork Church Academy. We are planning to have our depleted
supply restocked soon. Homes, churches, schools, and consolidated schools were marked with symbols.
Roads were also included. Highway 601 was then highway 80; highway 64 was then highway 90; and
highway 158 was then highway 65. Check at http://www.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~ncdavhgs/sales.pdf to
see when this is available.
His biography on the map: “Professor Wilson F. Merrell, November 29, 1850 - June 21, 1931. For 62
years a teacher in the Davie County Schools. Professor Merrell was principal of Fork Academy for many
years. He was Supt. of the Fork Baptist Church Sunday School for forty years, a Deacon and clerk of such
church for over 30 years. For 14 years, clerk of the South Yadkin Baptist Association. He was Postmaster
of Fork Church, N.C. From 1879 to 1885 and during such years he was a merchant in Fork Church, N.C.,
maintaining the Post Office within his store building.”
SPOTLIGHT ON A DAVIE COUNTY HISTORIAN
Mary Jane Heitman, 2 October 1886 - 23 January 1962
Mary Jane Heitman was the unofficial Davie County
historian in the first half of 1900. Her father was Charles
Heitman and her mother was Julia Clement.
Mary lived at 309 North Main Street, Mocksville, NC. This
was at the same location as the current First Methodist
Family Life Center.
1860 census of Mocksville, 24 years before Mary is born,
her grandfather, J.M. Clement, 34, a lawyer,is head of the
household.His wife Mary J. is 27, his son Louis H. is 6, his
daughter Florence is 4, his daughter Eliza is 2, and his son
John is 1.
1870 census of Mocksville, 14 years before Mary is born,
her grandfather, John M., 44, a lawyer, is head of the
household. His wife Mary J.is 37, his son Lewis H. is 16,
his daughter Florence is 14, his daughter Lizzie is 12, his
daughter Julia is 10, his daughter Sophia is 5, and his son
Herbert is 2. The Whitaker family of 3 lived with them.
1880 census of Mocksville, 4 years before Mary is born, her
grandfather,John M., 52, a lawyer is head of the household.
His wife Jane M. is 48, his daughter Florence A. is 24, his
daughter Lizzie is 22, his daughter Sophia is 14, his son
Walter R. is 8, his son Hubbard is 11, and his daughter Julia
is 19.
1900 census of Mocksville, Mary is 13 living on North
Main Street. Head of household is her grandmother, Mary
J.Clement, 68 (she had had 10 children and 7 were living);
her daughter Lizzie is 43, her son Herbert is 31, her son
Walter is 28, her daughter Julia Heitman is 39, her
granddaughter Mary J. Heitman is 13, her daughter Sophie
C. Trundle is 34, and her son-in-
law Horatio H. Trundle, 33, was a
civil engineer.
1910 census of Forsyth County,
Mary is 23, a boarder, and is an
English teacher at Salem
Academy College.
1920 census, Mary is 33. Head of
household is her mother Julia C. Heitman, 59. Also living
with them is Herbert, 51, Julia's brother, and Walter R., 49,
Julia's brother who was an attorney.
1930 census, Mary J. is 43 living on North Main Street.
Head of household is her mother Julia C. Heitman, 69.
Julia's brother, Walter R., 58, lives with them and he is a
salesman. Mary's listing under occupation is reporter for
newspaper.
1930's - She wrote many articles for
the Davie County newspaper and
also Winston-Salem. She included
vital records, inter-views with older
people,poems, nostalgia features,
and descriptions of the area. She
kept many small journals and pages
of records such as court records,
wills, members of churches (example,Joppa), and dates of
birth,marriage and deaths. Davie County Public Library
has these note-books plus copies of her newspaper columns
she wrote every week for several years entitled "The Corner
Cupboard Notes".
1962 - died at age 75 of a heart attack. She is buried in
Clement Family Cemetery. Tributes to her mention her
almost 50 years of teaching Sunday School at First
Methodist Church.
This is an editorial in the local paper: “Miss Mary.
Death last week took away a most esteemed citizen of this
area in Miss Mary Jane Heitman. “Miss Mary”, as she was
known to so many, was a reserved and gracious lady with an
intense interest in local history, in her church, and in cultural
activities.In addition to teaching school, she served on the
staff of this newspaper for many years during the twenties and
early thirties. During this time she was the author of a
column called “The Corner Cupboard” in which she noted
many historical articles and items of Davie County,
Mocksville,and the area. Her constant research into the
future brought to her the recognition as the historian for
Davie County and it is largely due to her efforts that much of
our history has been preserved. She was most loyal to her
church,the First Methodist Church of Mocksville and taught
a Sunday School class for years. In the passing of Miss Mary
Jane Heitman this county loses a citizen that through the
years contributed to the passing scene through her interest in
historical and cultural life of the area.”
There have been many men and women in Davie County
who have helped to document the early history of our
area.We are indebted to Mary, the English teacher and
journalist,for compiling much information about our
county.
Old letter to Mary Heitman which describes
scenery in greater downtown Mocksville:
In the Mary Heitman files, there is a letter from
Nannie Herrick, 219 Kelvin Street, Ithaca, NY, dated
November 9, 1953. Mary had mailed her a
commemorative plate which featured a photo of the
old courthouse in Mocksville. Nannie was writing a
thank you note to Mary and included this description:
“I was delighted to come upon the beautiful plate
picturing Mocksville’s old Court House. It certainly
brought back scenes of my childhood and fond
recollections.I wish the building had not been torn
down.It should have been kept as a memento of old
times when our grandfathers and great grand
fathers were active in and about it. Wasn’t my
grandfather,your great grandfather, town clerk with
an office there for years and years? (Sounds like
Nannie is Mary’s aunt.) Then later associations
which crowd and ask to be remembered. I wish we
could talk about the happenings the sight of that
picture recall. I tried to make a map of my journey
up town from grandmas’s but didn’t do very well.
After going “down the lane” from the “big gate”
that “Old Sauk” used to try to jump over in order to
tear unwelcome intruders limb from limb down to
the “Sandy Place” where the bull frogs croaked on
one side and the path turned on the other side to go
by the cotton gin to the Negro Pres. Church and
Uncle Peter Hunley’s, up the hill by Aunt Melinda’s
to the beginning of Mocksville, with Griffin’s, the
jail, the hotel on the right. The Presbyterian
Church,Dalton’s, a store on the left with Court
House in middle of the square.That was one way.
Then if I kept on “up the lane” from the “Sandy
Place”,there was the Lexington Road. Across it
through the pines, with Uncle Brax’s on one side, I
came to the Red School House where Aunt Mary
used to teach, then Cousin Sallie Lee, then cousin
Mattie.When I started going to school, your
mother was “one of the big girls” with big desk in
the back row. The other big desk also in back row
had Miss Lizzie Spencer for one occupant. I was at
a little front row desk right under cousin Mattie’s
nose.From the school house the way to the Court
House and uptown led down to the “the bridge”
(under which we used to keep tadpoles) up the hill
by Chaffin’s who had an orchard with very good
apples.I could go on and on but you have been
sufficiently bored. Anyway, I enjoy looking at my
plate very much and remembering. “
The Corner Cupboard Column by Mary Jane
Heitman in the 1930's included these by-laws that
were established in 1845.
Any person stopping his or her wagon and
team in the Public Square and feeding the same, or on
public days selling cakes, beer or other produce, shall
forfeit and pay a fine of one dollar for each offense.
Any person hitching his horse to the Court
House or any part thereof, shall forfeit and pay a fine
of one dollar for each and every such offense.
Any person who may engage in horse racing
within the corporate limits of the Town of
Mocksville,shall forfeit and pay a fine of five dollars
for each and every offense.
Any person throwing wood, scantling,
timber,brick or rock, except for building purposes,
into the Public Square or street, and permitting the
same to remain over 24 hours shall pay a fine of one
dollar for each day until it is removed.
Any person shooting a gun or pistol within
two hundred yards of any of the public streets of the
Town of Mocksville, shall pay a fine of one dollar for
each and every offense.
Any person having a wet cellar or permitting
water to accumulate in it and become stagnant, shall
pay a fine of five dollars for each and every day he
permits the same to remain after notice to remove it.
Any person refusing to serve as a patroller
when appointed and notified of the same, shall pay a
fine of twenty-five dollars, and any person neglecting
to patrol during the time for which he was appointed,
shall pay a fine of one dollar for each and every night
he so neglects to perform his duty, but he may make
his excuse before the commissioners at the first
meeting after his time expires.
Any manager of a circus or menagerie, who
performs or exhibits within the corporate limits, shall
pay a fine of ten dollars.
Any person neglecting his or her chimney,
until they become foul and take fire,shall pay a fine
of not less than one dollar nor more than five dollars
for each and every such offense.”
The first board of town commissioners was
in 1839. Commissioners elected and who passed
these bylaws were Thomas M. Young, Stephen L.
Howell, Phillips F. Meroney, Hugh Reynolds, and
James R. Linn, chairman.There were 15 bylaws in
all, and Mary Heitman listed these nine above.
I Know Now Why I Became a Math Teacher
by Marie Benge Craig Roth
I was always so happy for the consistency and
certainty of mathematics. Therefore, I majored in that
and taught various math subjects. I was always
frustrated with the lack of sureness of history. No one
can agree on what caused the Civil War, on what is the
foundation of a strong nation, or on what is the exact date
of and discoverer of our United States. We don’t even
have a name, just a description.
However,in the two years that I’ve been working
on this book about old schools in Davie County, I have
attempted to enter the world of history. E x a m p l e o f
frustration in Jerusalem Township: one source says that
the citizens of the Augusta area decided to build an
academy;another source says that Concord Methodist
Church built it; and a third source says that J.D. Hodges
designed and built it. It was called Augusta Seminary.
But it occasionally is known as Augusta Academy. There
was an earlier evidently nearby school called Augusta
School which I have determined is the same as Concord
School.J.D. Hodges built the brick structure which still
stands and has been returned to glory and is now a private
home.He called this Hodges Business College, but he
also taught across the road at Augusta Seminary. This
latter school closed and was bought by Quakers who had
an academy and a church in the building. I have copies
of Hodges’ ads for summer school for teachers, a boys’
school where they lodged at a nearby farm house and had
a farm scholarship, and a girls’ school with Mrs. Hodges
as lady principal. J.D. Hodges was superintendent of
Davie County schools for about 10 years and closed his
College sometime during this era. But when he was no
longer superintendent, then he opened the Business
College back up but called it Augusta Academy.
Augusta Public School burned in 1896 by an arsonist’s
hand who also tried to burn the other 2 schools
unsuccessfully. The Seminary/Quaker school burned in
1917. These dates range from 1887-1917.That’s a lot
to happen in 30 years, and there are very few records that
give details.
Cokesbury School only lasted a year or so in
what is now the Shady Grove Township. It was a
Methodist School started about 1793. But there is quite
a bit of information about it. This was 100 years before
the 3 schools mentioned in the previous paragraph.
It has been amazing to me that a school, teachers,
hundreds of students and learning situations could happen
at a specific site and then 80-100 years later there is very
little evidence of any of this ever happening. I have
wished for a time machine.
Other puzzles are separating the three academies
in Mocksville and the several academies in Farmington.
What do we learn from all this? Time goes
quickly and unless things are written down and archived
somewhere,valuable information is lost forever. I read
a quote recently: “When an old person dies, it’s like a
library burning down.” Are you compiling your family
history and your own personal history?
If any of you have information or photographs of
old schools in Davie, please E-mail me:
MarieBCR@gmail.com .
Photos below:
top row: Augusta Seminary,Hodges Business College
second row:Sketch of Cokesbury, Mocksville Academy 1
third row: Mocksville Academy 2,Mocksville Academy 3
fourth row: Farmington Academy, Farmington High School
USE THIS UPDATED PAGE FOR ORDERING ITEMS AND/OR PAYING DUES. 2010 3 July
(Postage has increased;state taxes increased 1%.) (Out of state residents don’t pay state tax when ordering.)
BOOKS:Author non- NC NC res.No.Price
Davie County...A Brief History,
paperback
James W. Wall, 128 pages $9.00 $9.39
The Daniel, Squire, and John Boone
Families in Davie County
James W. Wall, Howell Boone, and
Flossie Martin
$8.00 $8.31
Davie County Marriages 1836-1900 Nancy K. Murphy $25.00 $26.55
Davie County Marriages 1901-1959 Nancy K. Murphy $25.00 $26.55
Davie County Cemeteries, a 2-volume set D.C. Historical/Gen. Soc. $55.00 $58.88
1860 Federal Census-Davie County Nancy K. Murphy and Everette Sain $20.00 $21.16
1870 Federal Census-Davie County Nancy K. Murphy and Everette Sain $20.00 $21.16
1880 Federal Census-Davie County Nancy K. Murphy and Everette Sain $20.00 $21.16
MAPS OF DAVIE COUNTY:
Lagle Land Grant $8.00 $8.31
Hughes Historical, 1700's, drawn in 1977 $8.00 $8.31
J.T. Alderman, 1887 $6.00 $6.16
POSTCARDS OF DAVIE CO. SCENES (set of 8)$2.50 $2.50
CD of all issues Davie Dossier since 1987 $7.00 $7.39
TOTAL COST, send to DCHGS below includes tax, postage & handling
Davie County Heritage Book, $45.00 non-NC resident; $48.10 NC resident. Make check to Davie County Heritage Book.
Use DCHGS address below.
The Historic Architecture of Davie Co.,non-NC resident cost is $30; NC resident cost is $31.94.History of Davie County,
hardback, by James W. Wall, 449 pages; non-NC resident cost is $30; NC resident cost is $31.94. Make check to Davie County
Public Library. Use DCHGS address below.
The Civil War Roster of Davie County by Mary Alice Miller Hasty and Hazel Miller Winfree can be ordered. This book,
published by McFarland, incorporates biographical and military service sketches of 1,147 Davie County Civil War veterans, with
accompanying photographs where possible. Non-NC resident cost is $60. NC resident cost is $64.26. Checks should be made out
to M & M Books and sent to Mary Alice Hasty, 105 East Brick Walk Court, Mocksville NC 27028.
Images of America, Davie County by Debra Dotson and Jane McAllister. This 128 page book of old photos and descriptions can
be ordered from Jane McAllister, DCPL, 371 N. Main St., Mocksville NC 27028. Make check to Jane McAllister. Non-NC
resident cost is $26.99. NC resident cost is $28.69.
MEMBERSHIP for a calendar year is still just $5.00/year. Life Membership is $100 per person. We are 501(c)(3)
and dues are tax deductible. Below is a registration form for your use; checks, payable to the Society.
DAVIE COUNTY HISTORICAL AND GENEALOGICAL SOCIETY
Frances Atkinson Beck
1131 Wagner Road
Mocksville, North Carolina 27028
NAME _____________________________________________________________
ADDRESS _____________________________________________________________
E-MAIL ADDRESS _____________________________________________________________