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NC ----'------- J� ---- __-' _--- �&�. ���J��� _--_------_ . . . _-_-_---- 401- ---'--' -----'-----'------------------ --''---- ' �� �� __���� �� ^ | . | _ ___-------------- - '---�'-------'--�r�--=--- --7�---- -- - -- , ---------------' -------------_'----'-------- - -�---'----- ---------'----' -------'------- -r-------------- -T�- \| -- -- --- - , THE NAME Before one may trace his ancestry in confidence as to the accuracy of his data, one must, as in this instance at bast, seek to identify the persons and verify the spelling of the names. A few names, Jones for instance, might not lend themselves to many spellings or mis-spellings, but so numerous are the variants of Gobbel, so carelessly and inaccurately has it been translated, used, and abused, that it becomes necessary to attempt to determine which of the persons and families really belong to the genealogical line of the Gobbel family of Rowan. One finds among the variants in the course of this study these spellings: Gobel, Gobel, Goebel, Goebell, Goble, Gaabell, Gobble, and others. Our study of spelling variants, in search of certainty, begins with the fact that although it is difficult if not impossible to determine precisely when the progenitors of the Gobbels known to have settled in Rowan County, North Carolina before 1784, first appeared in America, many Gobbels or persons with names of similar spelling arrived in this country as early as 1732 and at frequent intervals thereafter. Our chief source is .Pennsylvania German Pioneers, Vols. I, II, and III. It becomes quickly apparent that many of the variants in spelling have arisen from the fact that not all of the arrivals who are named in the ships' registers signed their own names and that others arose from errors in deciphering the spelling from the German scripts into English. For example, the na me of Heinrich Gobell, age 65, listed among 1 l 5 men with their families arriving September 25, 1732, on the Ship Loyal Judith of London, Robert Turpin, Master, "from Rotterdam but last of Cowes"1 is spelled on page 88 as Hendrick Gaabell and on pages 90 and 91 as Henrick Gobell. The same passenger spelled his own name Henrick Gobell.' Anyone acquainted with German script can readily understand the variations in the different decipherments.3 Note, also, other examples of spelling variants. In the Ship Hope Daniel 1. Pennsylvania German Pioneers, Strassburger and Henke, Vol. 1, pp. 88, 89, 90 and 91; also Colonial Records, Vol. 111, p. 456. Note: Hereafter the book by Strassberger and Henke will be referred to as P.G.P. 2. P.G.P. , Vol. II, p. 81- 3. Ibis. , Vol. 1, xiv. P �pu /446 l� ISLy Tkr�i b At m /fe-3 Asis cafy ow� /110 S [ AVe'/1; wr. MA0 9u�rra,��`�t2n✓���� C w a Davin County Public Library MacNsville, NO G f ^p U V r..��� .,,;�,��.Y Public �ra►y �t„x;Ksville, NC -21 G � v �✓ d2� t we foe . , C���. 'd \ r AV �-�2� h�� Earle" Gilkeyy 8606 228th Si SW l 4/ O6 Edmonds h 98020 (, (�l a -A C> ZM 3 V Q C,c'i1,Ge(�-rel �i-r7�C.c-Q, at -L. cl W-,-ff &-7-W axe A j J 'ell 8a -719 CW y r CIO .T ��zurcG d 40. d d 3=3/-Arf .I d sY- za -/lyy. .sre h. l-"o-.-,ri or 9- i -..,F-,4e /7r • /.� ��l. y�l.Gw /.,-6 - / )>r z - /v -,ms's ?r d N- 7 All rr. Jls•�e l -j b. z s -.>f.l 9z �e o � • ���,� /,�C�,c,e � o�,�� ,�,� e �� �,�, fit,. ate -/t 7.1 Yp 0 7h • Qu.�-- 01 OC 7jr -_ - d r 9 h,-1a�-.-yp0a7 (lI(, X4 >A.,, 71 d - Ic - •43 dg��. �GJ � c /filo yh d. ii- - I? fie 0-� e*AA� b. �- X- -94"� SA , b. -7 7 -,le -0,3P -1104 3 . �7�diir"Kid. G J+YwJ�g S .e J,-/ �JA e 4� 4A� Are/ AV/ Al", Cv_E . QCT Vi e; e WM /,_/�96 a, 4m . OV -1. &W ------ i �pp� lADgl i 9 4 _ ' d /9sa 1 - �J�_�,/%4% �ci• atm-/_1/�S -—_ � -- - Q_ D 9 g m _ 4 d s- � r: AaWA --- ^ - - - --- - -- I - -fi � � - - ---F- - _�__ OMN /'1 z I - - -- -- � ,� 1836 ?,•� �-�. �. �g56 I � , . �� . ° � . ^�m� | / ` / ^ ' �-______' __-__--_'_-_'_--_ '___-_� _________ _ l C T-) caax�l "p, e -a -k a , i61- gel 7 �-� Ke73 -� 14 7 1, r I 1`2 — 63Pa � 714 �-� 7 /� 5 C�P-e� �o U�v� • div ! ' � � 73 043 Oar �1L400,S Q @, DaVie County Public Library 4 Mock-Qville, NC V OBSTETRICS AND GYNECOLOGY SUITE 71 S, FORSYTH MEDICAL PARK 1900 SOUTH HAWTHORNE ROAD WINSTON-SALEM, NORTH CAROLINA 27103 TELEPHONE 76S-3301 R1 . ,, A / f_' ��_' '- *zR_/V 'ted"w w r .o I • i L�,`(J�rjg�tt.Q�1� I �ca c Ccw X76& v 6" `rnaA,--��T Win" Q� �e�ef u �•Fi� ✓� Oda 2 2 - Low �ccrc u-� J • l � c �`fo � . � l � 3 �l � `d'1 � n K �1 rv>� ate• �� r�� Vie County Public Library 6 cry L Mocksville, NC H. RAY STURKIE, M. D. OBSTETRICS AND GYNECOLOGY SUITE 718, F'ORSYTH MEDICAL PARK 1900 SOUTH HAWTHORNE ROAD WINSTON-SALEM, NORTH CAROLINA 27103 TELEPHONE 765-3301 ff,i, 6) a/A a I Jh9'i"d-4r �.IFX�'-1 AOIL lb I t _ r Davie County Public L ibr@Y Mocksviilo, NC THE PEOPLE Where the early settlers in Rowan County came from and why they left their native land have been clearly determined. That the forebears of the Gobbels of Rowan originally came from the Rhinish Palatinate seem unques- tioned although lacking positive proof. That a certain Johan Henry Gobel who came to Philadelphia from Rotterdam September 16, 1738,1 may have been a progenitor of the John Gobbel, Sr., listed in the census of 1790, is a possibility but as yet unproved. What is positive, as shown in the preceding section of this study, and elaborated in the early histories of the county, is that there were numerous persons by the name of Gobbel, however variously spelled, who were among the thousands of German refugees who poured into the country between 1732 and 1775. These pioneers came principally from the Palatinate, via Rotterdam, to Philadelphia. Specifically, it appears that they were political and religious refugees, fleeing from their homeland in the southern part of Germany, east- ward, from the River Rhine, the capital city of which once was Heidelberg on the Nechar River, a few miles above where it empties into the Rhine." It was a fertile agricultural region, famous for its wines.= These refugees had France as their political opponent and the Roman Catholic Church as their religious enemy, with Louis XIV, King of France, the embodiment of both.' Being robbed of their earthly possessions, they were driven from their home in Germany by fire and sword in she middle of the winter. `'The early settlers of Rowan County were religious people .. . The poor Palatines had endured such suffering in their homes on the Rhine and been driven forth to seek shelter in foreign lands. They and their descen- dants found a resting place in Eastern Rowan."' They fled down the Rhine to Holland, "where Queen Anne of England invited them to her hospitable shores, lodged them in tents on the Black heaths near London, gave them food and clothing, and afterward provided them homes in her American 1. Ibid., p. 219 and Vol. II, p. 326. 2. History of Organ Church, Rowan County, N. Carolina, by Rev. George H. Cox, p. 23. 3. See Palatinate in the Columbia Encyclopedia, third edition, p. 1585. 4. History of Organ Church, Cox, p. 34. 5. History of Rowan County, Rumple, p. 261. rd THE PEOPLE Colonies."' That they were, at least on the whole, a genuinely religious people is the testimony of Dr. G. D. Bernheim, who, when giving the centennial address at Organ Lutheran Church, May 6, 1894, declared that "they came to the wilds of America that they might worship and serve the Lord according to the dictates of their own conscience."' On another occasion Dr. Bernheim said, with special reference to the Lutherans and Reformed churchmen, who were numerically strong in those days, that "their piety, sobriety, industry and economical habits were the source of constant praise among their Eno, lish neighbors."8 Many of these refugees from the Palatinate spent their remaining years in Pennsylvania. After some thirty-five or forty years, many of their children, in search of farms and homes for themselves, left Pennsylvania where land was becoming scarce and expensive, migrated in wagons down the Cumber- land Valley of Pennsylvania, through the Shenandoah Valley of Virginia, across the Blue Ridge Mountains into the unoccupied lands of North Caro- lina, notably the fertile areas along the east and west banks of the Yadkin River.' It was into this very area along the Yadkin that the Gobbel families of Rowan found their abiding places, as will appear more specifically later in our discussion of the first known Gobbel arrivals who acquired by grant and by purchase large acreages. For example, it is noted here that John Gobbel, Sr., and others were able to buy land in 1784 at fifty shillings an acre. In 1805 lie bought 500 acres from his brother Jacob for 650 pounds, which Jacob had earlier obtained by grant. Not all of the early settlers in Rowan were Germans. The early settlements made about 1737 included many of the nations of Europe.' There were Eng- lish, Welsh, Scotch, and the ever present Scoth-Irish, the pure Irish, the French, the Germans from the upper and lower Rhine, the Palatines and Hessians, with now and then a Switzer or Italian."I0 6. Ibid. For an illuminating account of the exodus of the pioneers from the Palatinate, see Rhine• landers on the Yadkin, by Carl Hammer, Jr., chapters I and II. 7. Ibid. 8. German Settlements in North and South Carolina, Bernheim, p. 4. 9 Ibid., 1I, p. 42. 10.Ibid.pu'al+c library . pavi� CountY� 5 Moonsille, NC THE GOBBEL FAMILY OF ROWAN Although in these early years perhaps most of the settlers in the Yadkin Valley were Lutherans, as were the Gobbels from John; Sr. (1784) through Robert A. (1904), the Reformed and Presbyterians had many adherents; and Methodists and Baptists established themselves as vital forces in the religious development of the area as time moved on. Early historians are not .in complete agreement as to when these pioneer settled in America. It has been estimated that 12,000 Germans reached Pennsylvania in the year 1749 and that by 1775 there were 110,000 people of German birth or descent, or one-third of the population.' ' Rumple be- lieved that the settlements along the Yadkin River were made from 1745 to 1750. Amore recent writer holds that "although a few Germans were among the first settlers, it seems clear that the general Teutonic immigration did not begin until after 1752."1 2 A careful examination of the lists of passengers named in Pennsylvania German Pioneers, Strassburger and Henke, shows that most of the Gobbel arrivals, by whatever spelling they may appear, came to this country before 1760. Only three names remotely resembling Gobbel are found after that date. They are Daniel Cobbel,' 3 who subscribed to the usual qualification for admission to America, October 31, 1765; Nicholas Cobbel,14 November 23, 1767; and Cond C. Cobel,l 5 April 30. Living in the area where English was the language spoken and in which the laws were written and all public affairs were conducted, those early German settlers along the banks of the Yadkin in Rowan, like many other German- speaking settlers in North and South Carolina, faced the ordeal of changing their language. Consequently for a long time they were unable, in most cases, to take leadership in public affairs. "Hence," as Bernheim relates, "letting public affairs alone, and attending to their home interests, they sur- rounded themselves with well -tilled farms, and adorned their premises with capacious barns and threshing floors."' 6 Large land holdings were not unusual in the early history of this section of North Carolina. As early as thirty-five or forty years before the first known members of the Gobbel family settled in Rowan, Andrew Long had acquired between 2,500 and 3,000 acres in the county, much of it along the Yadkin l.Rhinelanders on the Yadkin, Hammer, p. 21. 12. Carolina Cradle, Ramsey, p. 151. 13.P.G.P., Vol. I, p. 706, and Vol. 11, p. 808. 14.Ibid., Vol. I, p. 715, and Vol. II, p. 822. 15.1bid., Vol. I, p. 746. 16. Bernheim, op. cit., p. 42. 6 THE PEOPLE River and Grant's Creek,' 7 near where the Gobbel family settled and where they also acquired large acreages, as will be: shown in some detail later in the study. 17. Rumple, p. 183 ff., describes the Long holdings as follows: "About six miles northeast of Salisbury where Grant's Creek pours its yellow waters into the Yadkin, there was a large farm and sparious dwelling, owned by Alexander Long, Esq. Somewhere about 1756, there appeared in Rowan County a man who is designated in a deed, dated October 7, 17$7, as John Long, gentleman. He purchased a tract of land six hundred and twenty acres on the ridge between Grant's Creek and Crane Creek, adjoining the township land. In 1758 he received a title from the Earl of Granville for six hundred and eight acres on the Draughts of Grant's Creek. Also six hundred and forty acres on Crane Creek, adjoining his own. Also six hundred and four acres on Second Creek; besides some town lots in Salisbury—altogether between twenty-five hundred and three thousand acres of land." rlt�ja County Public Lb-a[Y oclmlille, NC VA IV THE FAMILY Whether they came directly from the Palatinate or were descendants of earlier arrivals, two brothers, John and Jacob Gobbel, were living in North Carolina in 1784. It seems reasonable to assume either that they came di- rectly or, what is more likely, that, like hundreds of other German pioneers after fleeing persecutions in the Palatinate, these two Gobbels spent some years in Pennsylvania, moved through Maryland, thence to Virginia, and finally settled in the fertile and inexpensive Yadkin River valley of Rowan County.' John Gobbel, Sr. This John Gobbel, Sr., identified in some documents as a cooper ("a maker or repairer of barrels or casks") and a yeoman ("a mall of the com- monalty, of the first or most respectable class; a freeholder; a man free born") is unmistakably the progenitor of the Gobbel families who have been in Rowan for about two hundred years. It is to him and his descendants and particularly to the family of his great -great-grandson, John Henry Gobbel, that special attention will be paid in this study. About his brother Jacob not much is recorded other than that he was granted 500 acres of land in Rowan in 1784 which he sold to John in 1805, and that he made a will June 23, 1823, probated August, 1827. In it no mention was made of wife or children. This brother of John is not to be mistaken for another Jacob Gobbel, 1773-1849, his nephew, son of John, Sr., and brother of John, Jr., 1785- 1854. At some future time it might be rewarding for some "curious chron- icler" to do extensive research concerning this older Jacob Gobbel and his branch of the family. John, Sr., was twice married. His son, John, Jr., was eight years old when his father married Mary Coldiron on May 20, 1793.2 We do not know the Centennial History of Davidson County, Leonard, from which the following is quoted: "Among the early settlers of that part of North Carolina which is now called Davidson County were quite a number of German descent. These people came not directly from Germany, but mostly from Pennsylvania and were popularly known as Pennsylvania Germans. They were attracted to this part of the country by the abundance, fertility, and cheapness of the land. Many of these settlers came to North Carolina as early as 1750 and some prior to that date, and soon, by industry and thrift, had attained a position of prosperity and influence. See title on marriages in Rowan County courthouse. 10 THE FAMILY name of his first wife. According to the census of 1790 he had three daugh- ters and four sons at that time under 16, which indicates that he was first married before 1774. He acquired by grant and by purchase many acres in what is now Davidson County.3 In 1783 or 84 he was granted 200 acres. He bought 300 acres from Henry Roberts and, in 1805, 500 acres from his brother Jacob for 650 pounds. Periodically he acquired other tracts.4 Much of this he sold at var- ious times, including 210 acres to Frederick Gobbel in 1826,5 300 acres to Jacob Gobbel the same year,' and 400 acres to John, Jr., also in 1826.' What John, Jr., inherited from his father is not quite clear, for the son's be- quests to his children represented principally the 400 acres which John, Jr., purchased February 17, 1841, from Andrew Holtshouser.8 John Gobbel, Sr., the patriarch of the Gobbel family of Rowan, was a Lutheran churchman, an elder and a trustee in Sandy Creek Church near Tyro, now Davidson County, which church was sometimes called Swicegood's Meeting House, taking the name of the donor of the land on which the church was built.'. It is now known as St. Luke's Lutheran Church and occu- pies a new site near the center of the Tyro community.' ° The deed, which names John Gobbel as one of the trustees, reads in part as follows: This Deed made the eighth day of January in the year of our Lord 1790 between Adam Swicegood and Mary Cathron his wife of the County- of Rowan and the State of North Carolina, planter, of the one part and Henry Clements and John Gobel of said County and State, Trustees for the corporation that upholds the German Meeting House known and degignated by the name of Sandy Creek Mectina House on the waters of Sancy C:reek.11 St. Luke's has become one of the strongest churches which united in the 3. Rowan Book, 10, p. 91. 4. Rowan Book. 11, p. 486. Indications of the activity of members of the Gobbel family in real estate transactions are the fact that at least fifteen Gobbel deeds are recorded in Rowan County court - house in Salisbury between 1784 and 1822, the year Davidson County was cut off from Rowan, and 106 such recordings at the Davidson courthouse in Lexington between 1823 and 1921. 5. Davidson Book, 3, p. 157. 6. Ibid., p. 205. 7. Ibid., p. 406 8. Davidson Book, 8, p. 152. Will of John Gobbel, Jr., made 1854, reproduced in the Appendix. 9. Centennial History of Davidson County, Leonard, p. 386. ^ y, 10 Ibid. Davie County Public. Lj; u+ I I.Ibid., p. 387 Moclisville, NC II THE GOBBEL FAMILY OF ROWAN organization of the North Carolina Lutheran Synod.12 Listed as elders of Sandy Creek in the minutes of 1820 were Adam Schweisguth and John Lobel.` 3 A daughter of Henry Ratz (Ratts) who was listed at the same time as one of the deacons, became the wife of John Gobbel, Jr. 14 Sandy Creek Church played a large part in the lives of many members of the Gobbel family for a long time, especizlly for fifty years or more after John, Sr., served as an elder and trustee. For example, according to the re- cords of Sandy Creek,15 twenty-two members of the family were baptized there between 1807 and 1842, among them children of John, Jr., and his son, Richmond. And although as previously indicated the church building no longer stands on the old site, the family interest in Sandy Creek was still so strong in 1904 that the body of the great-grandson of John, Sr., Robert Alexander Gobbel, was buried there in the long -neglected graveyard. John Gobbel, Jr. John Gobbel, Jr., who was known as Captain John Gobbel because of his military service in the War of 1812,16 born December 20, 1785, and died December 29, 1854, was thrice married; first to Elizabeth Ratts, who be- came the mother of Richmond Gobbel, my great-grandfather; then to a Miss Roberts, a cousin of his first wife, Elizabeth, who died August 26, 1832. His third wife was Isabel, probably a Reid or a Smith, who eleven months after the death of her husband married William Farrabee. The direct line of descent from John Gobbel, Sr., to the writer of this study is as follows: John Gobbel, Sr., exact dates unknown; John Gobbel, Jr., 1785-1854; Kichmond uoubei, 1808-1876; Koberi Alexander Gobbel, 1835-1904; John Henry Gobbel, 1872-1950, father of the writer. Each of these progenitors will receive careful consideration in the following pages. It is from his will, dated September 25, 1854, three months before his death, that we learn much concerning the man. 17 It reveals that he owned 12.Ibid. 13.Ibid. 14.Ibid. Ratz is also spelled Ratts. IS. Record copied and sent to me by Jessie Young Earnhardt. 16.Soldier No. 70 in the 4th Regiment, Rowan War of 1812-14, State of North Carolina Records, a book giving name of .service men, published in 1851. 17.Captain in the Second Company, Rowan County, according to the Salisbury Post. We also learn something of the man from the minutes of the Sandy Creek Church Council, December 1, 1831. which recorded: "The Church Council convened to take cognizance of Abraham Sharpe and John 12 THE FAMILY over 400 acres of fertile river bottom land in what is now Boone township of Davidson County, a mill, horses, sheep, and at least one slave, "my negro man Emanuel" who was left to his son Addison. Each of four sons, Rich- mond, Addison, Thomas, and Henderson, received over 100 acres; his wife Isabel sharing with Addison the plantation on which they lived until her re- marriage when the title passed to Addison. To his daughter, Polly, wife of John Garrett, he left 39 acres; to his son John, his daughter Margaret, and other descendants he willed cash amounts ranging from $300 to $100 each.' 8 The tract willed to Richmond passed to his son Robert Alexander Gobbel in 1870.' 9 It was here that most of the children of Robert, including my father, were born and continued to live until their father moved with his family to a 240 -acre tract on Grant's Creek on the west side of and about two miles distant from the Yadkin River. Much more is to be found about this acreage in another place in this study. Richmond Gobbel Richmond, the first-born son of John Gobbel, Jr., was born in 1808 and died in 1876. His wife, Elizabeth Wood, born the same year as her husband, died within seven days of his death. Both were buried in Sandy Crc-o,% Lutheran cemetery near Tyro. It is interesting to note that Rev. J. D. Bowles, then serving Sandy Creek Church as pastor, preached the funeral of.the two. The minister gave a receipt to their son, Robert Gobbel, for $8.50 for preaching their funeral. The receipt bearing the date, April 30, 1878, indicates either that. as was often the case in the days before good roads, the funeral was conducted about two years after the deaths of the couote, or* that the charges for the ministerial service were late in being paid. The six children of Richmond were: Robert Alexander, about whom not a little is to be said later; Hiram, who married Reny Swicegood by whom he had two children: Adolphus and Horace; Sarah Jane, who became the wife of B. R. Warner; John M., whose wife Mary Anne died the same year as her Gobble, Esq. A. Sharpe was suspended six months, acct. of intoxication. John Gobble, Esq., has tolerated riot and revelling in his house; he also is suspended for six months." It is also noted in these minutes: "Attending Church Cullard Members Dinah, a servant belonging to John Gobble, Esq." This information about the actions of the Sandy Creek Church Council was given to the writer by Mrs. Jessie Young Earnhardt, of Spencer, who was quite' helpful to Marcia in her research of the Gobbel family. 18. Will of John Gobbel, 1854, reproduced in the Appendix. 19. Davidson Book, 24, p. 120. See a survey map of this tract made by Azariali Williams, C. S., wit- nessed by William 5imeson and Meredith Poole, and dated April 22, 1857, opposite this page. 19avia County Public Library Mocks%lille,, NC THE GOBBEL FAMILY OF ROWAN V _ X:: �', • 3`0 � � n � � ....'cc�..-r..s� ..�J�2 % �`� • �.Lt/-�•sr f?,, , ��ii..e,L. �� '`"- Thr acv � :�✓ ra-g-�rL � ,G o�t7� �r s /2.4 z,4 X PL �. � ,,.� T�; • ..fes-' �� .,-�,� j � T� -� _ - �� '1`.L � �,a �' 2),L hi .vrc' 14 a� y lam, 2) ta2mS J / 07 t i _ _i 4, .� / ,�� ,- .;, . G c 7 —. ( d o~ husband, 1861; Mary Albertine and her husband John Grubb Iived all their remaining days on the Yadkin River farm inherited from her father. Present day descendants will recall Grubb's Ferry" which crossed the Yadkin at the Grubb farm and the baptizing of converts in the river at that crossing. About another son, Witiiam, the record is meager. 20. Sower's Ferry was a short distance down the river from Grubb's and Long's Ferry a little farther down the Yadkin from Sower's Ferry. 14 THE FAMILY As previously stated, Richmond inherited from his father the 103 -acre farm and homestead on the Yadkin where he had lived for a few years before he obtained title21 to it after his father's death in 1854 and where he lived continuously thereafter, or at least_until he joined with his oldest son Robert Alexander and Alexander Swicegood in 1876 in the purchase of the 240 -acre tract across the river on Grant's Creek. About this transaction and its subse- quent involvements extensive reference is made later. As stated earlier, Richmond transferred the 103 acres to Robert A. in 1870.2-2 Robert Alexander Gobbel Born August 11, 1835, Robert Alexander Gobbel married first Eliza Gobbel, a cousin and a daughter of Jacob Gobbel, July 29, 1859. To this union were born two sons: Charles Adams and Jefferson Davis, named quite obviously after the President of the Confederacy. His second wife was Sarah Jane Young, to whom he was married on October 10, 1867. She was the daughter of a prosperous farmer and landowner of the community, Andrew Young, and Margaret (Rotan) Young, about whom more will be related in a subsequent section of this study. Sarah Jane (Young) Gobbel died in the family home on Third Street, Spencer, North Carolina, March 13, 1928, and was buried in Calvary Baptist Church cemetery near Ellis Crossroads in Rowan County. Little is recorded about Robert A. Gobbel's early life spent in what is now Davidson County. He grew up on his father's farm, received the usual meager educational opportunities of the era, learned thrift and sobriety, and res- ponded in young manhood to the call for military service in the War between the States. He was a member of Company A, 54th Regiment of the North Carolina Infantry.2 3 It is understood in the family that he. was wounded in Battle of Bull Run, and some have facetiously suspected that his injury was in his back, although nothing in his subsequent record even suggests that he had a cowardly streak in him. If he was wounded at Bull Run, it was in the second battle in the summer of 1862, only a few months after he became a Confederate soldier. Official records show that at the age of 27 he was mustered into service May 26, 1862, at Camp Mangum; that he was sick in a hospital September and October 1865, near Petersburg and imprisoned at Point Lookout, Maryland, where he 21 -Will of John Gobbel,dated 1854, and Davidson Book 14, p. 224 22. Davidson Book, 24, p. 120. 23.See appendix for an official record of his military service. Dave County Public Library 15 Mocksvilla, NC THE GOBBEL FAMILY OF ROWAN was released June 27, 1865, on taking an oath of allegiance to the United States. Whether his hospital experience of 1864 was the aftermath of the in- jury at Bull Run is uncertain. In a little over two. years he married the daugh- ter of a "Squire" Young. His brother Hiram served in the same regiment, being a paroled prisoner of the Army of Northern Virginia at the end of the war, and was given permission to return to Davidson County under date of April 9, 1865.2 a Robert A. Gobbel was thirty-two years old when he married the second time, which was three years before he received title to his father's homeplace in 1870 and nine years before he decided to move with his wife and children across the river to the Grant's Creek acreage, discussed later under the head- ing, Grant's Creek Venture. After twenty-seven rugged years on and near Grant's Creek, he died of pneumonia April 18, 1904, and was buried in the Sandy Creek Lutheran graveyard. His children by his second wife were: Martha Ellen, 1870-1939; John Henry, 1872-1950; Minnie Caroline, 1873-1946; Robert Baxter, 1875-1960; Alfred Tilden, 1876-1965; James Thomas, 1878-1908; William Edgar, 1880- 1907; Ida Jane, 1882-1907; .Lizzie Bell, 1884- ; and. Ada Savannah, 1886- 1886 (dying in infancy). Lizzie Bell, widow of J_ L. Lyerly, is the only sur- vivor of this large family of children. She now lives in Spencer. 24."The bearer hereof H. Gobble, a Private of Company `A' 54th N. C. Regt. a paroled prisoner of the Army of Northern Virginia, is hereby permitted to go to his home in Davidson County, North C-rolina, and remain until duly exchanged. ne at 2kppr�mattox Court liouse, Va.. the 9th day of April, 1865. E. Smith, Lt. Comd. Company." 16 V CONDITIONS AFTER THE CIVIL WAR Some comprehension of the state of the union in general and of the South in particular is essential to an understanding, if such is possible, of what the Confederate soldiers returned to at the end of the Civil War in 1865. What my grandfather Robert A. Gobbel, perhaps still recuperating from the wound received at Bull Run; what John H. Simeson, my maternal grand- father who served in the Confederate cavalry, and what others,like them who had served in the defeated army, faced upon rejoining their families is hard for anyone today to understand. The South was a ruined land. The old order established on slavery had collapsed completely, with nothing to replace it.' Instead of any sort of en- couragement or assistance comparable with that given our late enemies through the Marshall Plan or that tendered other nations in distress following their defeat in battle, the opposite treatment was meted mercilessly upon the fallen Confederates and its prostrate people. At least, such was the treatment accorded through the so-called Period of Reconstruction. The physical destruction of towns, countryside, and tranz- portation facilities by the invading Union soldiers was enormous. The radi- cal leaders in Congress, moreover, under the leadership of Thaddeus Stevens, held that the ex -Confederate states were conquered provinces, out of the Union, and should be punished for their rebellion. This punishment they proceeded to administer. President Lincoln thought differently and, but for his untimely assassina- tion, would have succeeded in his purpose to lend a helping hand and to re- unite the country. When the United States Congress met in December, 1865, the radicals blocked the President's plan by refusing to allow the representa- tives and senators from North Carolina and the other Southern States to take their seats.' The task of economic and social rehabilitation was not helped even a little by the authority and acts of the Union army commanders, the Northern carpetbaggers, and the Southern scalawags who dominated politics by mani- pulation of the Negro vote. Ex -Confederates were disfranchised. In some I. Columbus Encyclopedia, Third Edition, pp. 1775-1776 2. North Carolina History. Geography, Government, Lefler, p. 317 17 Godfrey Gobble Born Oct. 5 th 1802 died July 2 nd 1870 1" wife Sophia Kontz. Born March 25 th. 1809 died July 21 st. 1842 2 nd wife Eliza. Jane Redwine. Burrel Gobble Born Dec 8th. 1846 died Nov 8 th 1930 Married America Hedrick Koontz. Daughter Banna married Robert Evans. They had daughter Elizabeth who Married George Bloom. Wesley Gobble born Aught 2. nd 1854 died died Feb 12. th 1940. Wesley married Alice Dawson. Alice born Sept 28 th 1855 cherry Grove Ohio died June 20 th 1931 in Grandview Washington. They had two children Willborn born in state of washington and Kittie who married a Newt Gilkey. They had one son FW119 j}vgl' jp P, C-, To Godfrey's second union was bom one P4i pbtef, �R j Ffgngq§ known as Fannie. Laura Francis Married Goshen McC712i6h. They had 12 children .r �t See McCulloh Goshen McCJob file. ^S AQ Davie County public library Mooksville, NG . f i�