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Barfield Folder 19415 Primrose Shreveport, Lao 71118 14 July 1984 Mx* Earl Barfield No -Mistake Plantation Satartia. MIS 39162 .dear Mr a Barfield, It was so -thoughtful of you to call yesterday in reply to qr letter to your aunt0and to offer to check specific items Mnile on your trip to earth: and South. Carolina in Septembera A separate sheet is enclosed listing areas of interest and the approximate dates* Our library has several publioations on Rowan County $ NC but only one general history book on Duplin.9 "Plashes of Dupline o *" Cveralle -there is a good selection of information on the most southern states* incl ding microfilmobut the two wars suffered on this continent resulted in the loss of a great deal of recordso Shermans bless his heart, did his best to obliterate wirerything pertaining to the South.p I have gone through my Barfield file but could loeate nothing on either a Charles or Hopkins afield e l will check at the library nest week to see whether there is anything in Louisiana or Mississipp! on eithers, or bothe There isn*t much on Illinois but you may be able to locate a redord of the river death in a newspaper report:* So many boats burned and/or sank with great loss of life and there was not always a record of the passengers on board* Re* the deed of gift of. slaves to Penelope afield,* wife of Stephen a l am enclosing a chart that will help explain the dual relationship between. thema Most € f the information that l have on the older Barfield s has come through Mrs. Alice Eidson who has corresponded with some deseendantso Perhaps there is some -- thing in her records which will help youo a copy of this letter is bel.ng sent to hers Ann Q "Harea when she sent your aunt e s name and address # referred to Mrs* Smith as a newly found cousin -a The onlyBar-Field blood lane.$ as far as I can tell. for myself is from the issue of Lewis afield and Catherine McCulioh,, Enclosed is a listing of the North Carolina Vdcrofiche record of Barfield marriages in. . dgecombe Gounty a. You may already have had it but it is en- closed just in case* Yours trio. Jimmie Jean (Pate) Bowman snarls. c� s kers,* Allee Ho Eidson 1135 Kenwood St a Winston Q �s1.J 4 2'7103 Davie County Public Library Mo*sville, NG 13 July 1984 SUDUYURY OF TELEPHONE CALF FROM s Earl Barfield No -Mistake Plantation Satartia 9 TTs o 39162 1. Earl Barfield is the nephew of Mrso Wo Ea Smiths to whom I wrote in May of this year-* He said it was a rainy day and he decided to work on his genealogy and found m' letter where his aunt had filed it without telling him it had come* 2* Earl is interested in the lineage of Charles Barfield who died 1809, Edgecombe C o * #. N 4-C . 9 and the son of Charles.$ Hopkins Barfield, who was born in the Pearl River area of either Mississippi or Louisiana* (Gene said this is the Florida Parishes area of Louisiana when Louisianawas part of Florida 0 Hopkins Barfield went to Illinois and died on the river while on a trip southo A� L� 3. His, line of Barfiel.ds went to Vicksburg then. to Hollandale, piss e 40 He gave information ion on deed of gift of slaves ,from James McCulloh to Penelope Barfield - Duplin Co, Pleas and Quarter Sessions* vol, 2s 1788--1791.« He also mentioned a deed dated 1782 from. Stephen "-Ye Barfield to Henry McCulloh.A (This couldn't be son of James as he would have been only four years old in 1782, according to the date of birth given by Ann O*Hare)* 5- I asked Earl whether he had any ideas on ElizabethOs maiden name. His thought is that due to the intermarriages of the McCullohs and Barfi elds s that she might have been a Barfield and the answer would lie in Duplin C ounty a ( I think if she had been a Barfield, that that information would have been in some of the other records that were sent to you. What do you think?) 6a Earl is leaving for North Carolina (son lives there) on 13 Sept, this year for 10 days. He will visit archives in both North and South Carolina and volunteered to Zook up any specific information that I might need, See enclosed letter to him plus enclosure V �V call to Jimmie Jean Bowman 13 July 1984 Shreveportg Lao a rt Cou Davie--publicbt Mookstlille, NG ' u a d 510 21st St., N.W. Washington, D.C. 20006 December 14, 1978 Dear Alice: As they say, here goes nothing. I feel like I'm taking a test for a new job. At least, it will be easier to read, if not necessarily well organized or technically correct from the typing standpoint at least. I looked through your papers and still feel McCulloh is a hard one. I gather you have spent some years on it, so I may not be able to contribute much, but will send you whatever I pick up, even though it may be.duplication, for your disposal. I To add to your maze, am enclosing some pages from the Maxwell History and Genealogy"by Florence Wilson Houston and others. I don't tie it in to your family, but it does have a lot of names, which may be meaningful to you. Somewhere you too had a Houston. Would it be helpful to pursue any of that in her book, or are you familiar with it already? ua�y I later came across a bigger maze of names. Are you familiar with the �� publication "McCullough Memos - All Spellings" put out by W. R. Yarwood, 3' Anaheim Royal #31, 1250 N. State College Blvd., Anaheim, Calif. 92806? It appears to have started around October 1975 and the latesgone in the binder was October 1978. The eahp chap is retired and has been ill, so there was some question about how long it would continue. It contains reproduction6 of material, contributions from subscribers, queries, etc. Many, many names, o4all spellings. Very little on North Carolin& people and no reference to your family as far as I can tell from a quick review. There were two North Carolina people amon*he list of subscribers, whom you might know: a Dr. & Mrs. Harding of ChbLpel Hill and a Mrs. Colleen Cro ch of Raleigh. The penultimate issue made reference to the fact thane makes no charge for the paper, but donations have helped. A reader in an earlier issue suggested hat he might want to charge about $5.00 a year for it if he would expaand it from the size of his first few. Z The latest issue was 35 pages. The paper appears to be a monthly 7 Now to get back to more�ubstantive matters. (My running the words togethr a wil at least make me re ead this and edit the typing a bit.) I tried to zerd in on the Barefield, Baw€-i-fq Barfield, Bearfield families. While the spellings may have been distinct from each other, I found different v spellings being used for the same individuals over the years. Got excited ,c about a Lewis Barefield in Tennessee in 1830, but found it was not yours and that there were three Lewises in North Carolina at the same time - not during 1830, but living earlier at the same time of each other. In the Duplin County marriages, there were 2 or 3 Lewis, a Frederick, and Z a to hen who married Nancy House 22 Oct 1791. Later, a Lewis, Frederick, n an a Stephen s obi w�up in Tennessee rec-or s in Williamson and other counties, and Stephen Barfield°s wife is named Nancy. WI sincerely tried to organize my notes and see that it hasn't worked, but since you've been at it for a while, you can probably pick it up readily in the state it's in. Incidentally, I timed myself, after boasting to you 0 Zj that it took me half an hour to go through a roll. If the whole roll is in teed€ good condition and I don't have to stop to write anything down a because I don't find anything, it takes a full hour. I misspoke. Just mention it so that you don;t gee feel badly about how long it takes you. bra Gd'v�e Cuu�i�y Public U TY tj Mocksuille, NC i, I assume that you have the age categories for the various censuses, = so will not repeat them unless they are special and not the National. 1786 NC State census DuN�sotArfield 1 male ages 21-60; 3 males under 21 or above 60; 6 females; one black ages 12 - 50; 1 black under 12[or over 50 I-3- 6 4- Bearfield 1-5-3-4-1 Stephen Barfield 1-0-0-3-1 Onslow Co. Moses Barfield 1-12-5-1-0 Aaron IF 1-0-1-0-0 1790 Duplin Co. (National Census) arfield, Lewis 2-3- Bearfield, Frederick 1-2-4-0-6 11 Stephen 2-0-2-0-6 1798. 31 Jan. Bladen Co. Abstract of Deeds - John Elkins to Steven Barfield - 10 pounds - 50 acres on the Southside of Gapway Swamop. 1806 Tax list Duplin Co. acreage, white polls, black polls Lewis Barfield, Sr. 510-0-1 if it Jr. 583-1-0 It It 950-1-4 1820 North Carolind_census supplemented from tax lists andother sources —Barefield - Robeson Co. Allan, Jas., Sarrah Barfield - Duplin Co. Ann, Lewis, Theophilus Edgecombe - Ephraim, John, Ready, William Pitt Co. - Federick, Henry Wayne Co. - Bryan, Frederick, Solomon These were all heads of ]Households. 1850 Duplin County (National Census) Theopholus Barfield 65 Farmer $10,000 real estate born in N.C. Mary 60, Sarah A. 31, Isaac 26, Theopholus 23, William 21, Susan A. 19, Mary 16 all born in N.C. P464 Charity Barfield 44, Lewis L. 12, Edward I or J,11, Catharine E. 99 Anna 75 all born N.C. ON John Barfield 24 Farmer, Eliza 30, Loftin 4/12 all b. N.C. Davie County Public ubl'an} Mocksville, NC Duplin Co. 1800 Census N40( McCulloh, eorge 00301 00301 O1 µos Bar4ield, Lewis 02001 11211 03 " Jr. 00100 00100 00 qAs McCulloh, Barfield, Sarah Lewis 10000 40010 01010 01011 00 0 (11)slaw B - p,6 Barfield, Thomas 00100 00000 01 1443 11 Fedrick 1021600109 13011 0 - (17) apparent one Lewis and Fedrick had many slaves 1806 Tax list Duplin Co. acreage, white polls, black polls Lewis Barfield, Sr. 510-0-1 if it Jr. 583-1-0 It It 950-1-4 1820 North Carolind_census supplemented from tax lists andother sources —Barefield - Robeson Co. Allan, Jas., Sarrah Barfield - Duplin Co. Ann, Lewis, Theophilus Edgecombe - Ephraim, John, Ready, William Pitt Co. - Federick, Henry Wayne Co. - Bryan, Frederick, Solomon These were all heads of ]Households. 1850 Duplin County (National Census) Theopholus Barfield 65 Farmer $10,000 real estate born in N.C. Mary 60, Sarah A. 31, Isaac 26, Theopholus 23, William 21, Susan A. 19, Mary 16 all born in N.C. P464 Charity Barfield 44, Lewis L. 12, Edward I or J,11, Catharine E. 99 Anna 75 all born N.C. ON John Barfield 24 Farmer, Eliza 30, Loftin 4/12 all b. N.C. Davie County Public ubl'an} Mocksville, NC %6 ,f'1 � p 20 f, 1 X07 G�UQ,rc�L vZ ,� r,Y, o l 0'-L2 Ca , A 3 / �%��'�.h'vj /'v`'p�yt,w� p� � t/' -"-'C '��''�e•L �-9 t y b73 3 7 Ra -e -e A� 0 IK/0 0 0 a 5 -7 600 L Davie County Public Ubrafy Moos{sville, NG . r89� Q ht� e r �sr a s -F Tam 1"6 �u esu &441 1997 ebb G�01=�� rs�i QZ4 44.e- /9'17 1986 X67 /8s'7 77. aq V. )%C �a �c nc 5-g wtieCo-w ,70 13 `f 3 Gsn'.o�ozr� 7� /I/ �s— I ✓ �iw �� 2-?1ay /9-78 ec a tic 7v� , a o " J jzvzlv�xlz�� t. 4y 0-a aG /7V il'v� �C�' (I V v� � !l7✓ �L/.rvG`.-.-..-yrL � � —V � Ate� n / �v i gv 7 / ik o a- lu-0-�- % Ig -0 I Sr -Y �� � �.�a�� ee. • OF34 s Ot i >MG✓�-Fivl� iic� ►�j Aq 4�Z R ooh©� a�ol/off lvy rt ;Z6 - AL4'1-� (1)7VUL� tOl lo b; 2 �X.2�rtivo bk,Q 5 8 � a7oo 11P.aQ �� �i-0-+�r�� %I, �, �• . /cA ea N 0 3 7 a3 )ne e� 4 ✓hie r'�'"�`"'r �°�� ��a �� �-/�-i��.o �, hr� �.,� , Bare , ,& Z41 it -.64 ut 44�� Atr� 6- 1 /1 1S5 0 e y No — Pa �o i. 7 r a- S"I, �Q �c.�R 2.. Lim .�r.� (��• vr�t t �Sg'd ����- Uvi �/� fil/, ✓��/`lii C4lit. /v1lSs'd�C/LL 'IV !r �'� �'�uc.G 6••yc-� •� l�1it t ���? � a ^- ���v� LUt � • S i dL-x4 =6 0-0 &A*4 I 7 � i i �Ur'lJ�,� � , � �J`� / � '-'v"''�'�C.(%2 !i �T�".�+/?/ /(J'7T�/�/�/ � ''''''''�� 1 �PC`��G�•.,.,.:r �'/ /"�j . "tr u "e o %J wa n o / r3 d �o Suz. A, l Fit U uu! clte a1L '+ rte' 1�' a a/X� G C � rmet �e ru-proyap,t� t�) .e-N-�-tA lir,U 4,,, / 3 P C�vw��TiZe zo .� Cv a ��,yi�-e�Cg vva j�a� THE BARFIELDS OF NORTH CAROLINA November 14, 1694, James Loadman died leaving land in Summerton, North Carolina, to his daughter, Jane Barefield, wife of Richard Barefield. April 6, 1722: Richard Barefield was .awarded a land patent to 470 acres of the West side of Ahotsky March in the Province of North Carolina. February 13, 1724/25: Richard Barfield transferred 100 acres on the South side of Ahotsky March "out of Firebent's patent" to Thomas Barfield for ten pounds. This deed is recorded in the Bertie County Deeds. November 22, 1728: Richard Barefield died in Bertie County. He was survived by his wife, Mary, and sons - Richard, Isham, Solomon, James, Henry, William and Thomas - and a Grandson, Richard. The Colonial Records of North Carolina shows that Richard Barfield petitioned for warrants to 500 acres in Duplin County on November 19, 1744 and petitioned for warrants to 200 acres in Duplin County on November 24, 1744. These lands were part of the McCulloh grant. May 1, 1754: Richard Barfield Died in Duplin County North Carolina. He was survived by sons - Henry, Jesse and Solomon - and Daughters - Mary Barfield, Beth Barfield, Ann Grady and Cathren Taler - and a Granddaughter, Beth Taler. His will reads in part: "sun HENRY plantation I now live on, negor wench Cat, one Bed, to Small Dishes, 1 learge Dish, one hors; sun JESSE neger Boy Called Bob, all the Land Be Loe the Branc Being on gum Running to the Bay line, to Cow and Caves, toe Basen, toe dish, tow Chear, to Soues and piges, tow Bed and furtud; darter MARY Bed and furtute, toe Dish, toe Chear, to Cow and Caves; grandater LEBETH TALER 1 yeo; doter LEBETH one Bed and furnetuted to to year old efirs, toe Dish and t p ate, to e da er DY Soue an peges; darter CATH—REN 3'A ER Sven shil ngs; wire- no named) to potes, to chiest, 1 STI'x, one e, one tame and all the Shep, all t e ogs, son LOMON I to year old hefer extrs: sons JESSE & SOLOMON" Jesse Barfield and wife, Sarah Castillo, of Duplin County deeded gifts to his sons Solomon, John, Frederick, Lewis, Thomas, and Stephen in 1780. The Duplin County Court of Pleas and Quarter Sessions Minutes for 1784 thru 1787 shows that on Wednesday, April 18, 1787, the _!�r oaw Q 1 t 4 a l4 v/ `F -o p1 F_#J% s 4/ pavi� County Public UbrarY —Page 1- Mocksville, KC It W'ourt exhibited an additional inventory of the Estate of Jesse Barfield and appointed a committee to settle the accounts of Jesse Barfield and report to the next Court. The Court also ordered Frederick Barfield, the administrator of the Estate of Jesse Barfield, to sell the perishable part of the Estate and report to the Court. On July 17, 1787, one account current with the Estate of Jesse Barfield, deceased, was exhibited by' Frederick Barfield, Administrator; the Court concurred and Ordered it filed. (This appears to be the probating and settling of Jesse Barfield's estate by his son, Frederick, and indicates that Jesse died some- time in 1787.) In other Court proceedings of the approximate time, Frederick and a Stephen were identified as Bearfield. The 1786 census of Duplin County shows both Frederick and Lewis Barfield residing in Duplin County. Residing with Lewis at that time were: three (3) white males under the age of 21, six (6) white females of various ages, and two (2) blacks. The book North Carolina Revolutionary Soldiers, Sailors, Patriots and Descendants shows Jesse Barfield as a patriot and gives the dates 1738 thru 1780 and shows that he was married to a Sara Castillo. Frederick and Lewis Barfield were quite prominent in Duplin County between 1784 and 1795 as the following analysis of refer- ences to Frederick Barfield and Lewis Barfield in the Duplin County Court of Pleas and Quarter Sessions records found in the Dallas Public Library for the period 1784 thru 1795 shows. This is not an exhaustive analysis, as I noted only the more inter- esting references. I would like to point out that there were numerous other references, not only to Frederick and Lewis Barfield, but to other persons with the name Barfield. October 18, 1784: Frederick Barfield, Justice was ordered to take a list of the taxables for Captain Barfield's Company. (it appears that the county was divided into five or more "companies" each of which were named after a "captain". One of the companies in the 1780's was named Captain Barfield's Company.) Each company had a Justice of the Peace and Constable. They were probably analogous to modern day precincts in a county. The Court of Pleas and Quarter Sessions for the period 1791 thru 1795 made some references to a Barfield bridge and a Barfield road. October 20, 1786: Lewis Barfield is appointed to lay out a road. April 20, 1787: Lewis Barfield is appointed a jury man. January 21, 1788: Frederick Barfield was sworn in as a Justice of the Peace. u�l,c ;..iwA D �ooKsuille� -Page 2- April 21, 1788: Deeds of 120 and 150 acres to Lewis Barfield were recorded. July 20, 1789: Lewis Barfield was ordered to be Constable of Captain Bowden's district. January 18, 1790: Nine (9) slaves were divided amon t children of James McCulloh - Pe a ope, Kat rine, and Henry. January 18, 1790: Lewis Barfield sold a negro slave to Frederick Barfield. January 8, 1791: Lewis Barfield married Catharine McCulloh. January 17, 1791: Lewis Barfield is appointed to the Grand Jury. July 18, 1791: Frederick Barfield, esq. was a member of the County Court of Pleas and Quarter Sessions. / January, 1792: Frederick Barfield is named as the adminis- trator of the estate of Jessie Barfield who had an orphaned minor child named Soloman. July 15, 1793: Steven Barfield and Frederick Barfield are named Justices. July 21, 1794: Lewis Barfield served on the Grand Jury. The 1850 Census of Winston County Mississippi shows a Lewis Barfield, age '82, and wife Catharine, age 76 (both of whomwere orn in North Carolina), wing wit a on, ohn, age 39. Living with, or next oor to, Lewis Barfield were Henry Barfield, age 52, and wife Elizabeth, age 43 (who were born in North Carolina and South Carolina, respectively), along with their children: William, Thomas, Mary, Charles Lewis, John Fletcher, Catharine, Henry, Sar-ah,'Alfred, and Napoleon. Also .shown on the 1850 census r 2 in Winston County at that time were Jessee, Thomas, and Willis Barfield. Davis County Public Library Mooksvilla, NC -Page 3- HISTORY OF THE BARFIELD FAMILY 61 PadAe� ' Early in the eighteenth century there came with other emigrants from England two brothers named Barfield. The older was a bachelor and the younger was a man of family. The elder soon returned to England, and the younger settled near Newborn, North Carolina. I have no authentic record of the Christian names of these.brothers, but the wife of the one who remained was named Mary. They had a large family, and presumably some of the sons remained in the vicinity of Newborn, as some of the younger generation were merchants in that city when my mother was a girl. One son, Richard, went to Georgia, and during the war for independence, that branch of the family developed decided Toryism. The North Carolina Barfields, being strong Whigs, cut the acquaintance of these Georgia kinsfolk, so came to know very little about them and to care less. My great grandfather, Jesse Barfield, a son of the emigrant, lived in Samson County, North Carolina, and there my grandfather, Lewis Barfield, was raised. One of the emmigrant's daughters, named Mollie, married Solomon Jones. One (I do not know her Christian name) married a Grady. Catherine married William Taylor, a large land -owner, and lived in Duplin County, North Carolina. .J Jesse, the great grandfather before referred to, married Sarah Castelo, _daughter of Thomas Castelo, an Irishman. To Jesse and Sarah Barfield were �1 born nine children, seven of which reached maturity - Frederic, Stephen, Charity, Solomon, Lewis (who was my grandfather), John, and Thomas. Frederic i^ was twice married. One of his daughters, Susan - by the first marriage - married Needham Bryan, and about 1836 moved from Tennessee to Alabama. Some C of their children used to visit my grandfather. •I remember having seen cousins Nathan, Needham, and Nancy. There were kinsfolk that we were proud of. DavieCountY Public Liter ary j' Mooksvitie, NC 2. After his marriage, Great Uncle Frederic lived in Tennessee near Stone River. During the Revolutionary War, when he was quite a young man and still living in North Carolina, he and his brother Soloman were fired upon by some of their Tory neighbors. He was seriously wounded and Soloman was shot down, mortally wounded. Frederic managed to get home, leaving his brother, as he thought, dead. Late in the night the family heard someone moan#g as if in distress. Some of them went out to investigate and found Solomon crawling slowly and painfully toward the house. They carried him in and did what they could to relieve his sufferings, but he died before morning dawned. Frederic recovered and lived many years, suddenly dying of apoplexy. Stephen, the second son, married my grandmother's only sister, Penelope McCulloh. She died, leaving an infant daughter who died at the age of ten years. Stephen's second wife was a Miss Nancy Howse, and the Costelo Barfield who used to correspond with me is their grandson. He lived in Lexington, Kentucky. Charity - Aunt "Chelly" - married Theophilus Williams. My Grandfather, Lewis Barfield, married Catherine McCulloh. John was of a roving disposition, hard to satisfy. He came to Alabama and remained with Grandfather for a while, but returned to Tennessee. Later he rambled off and the relatives lost all trace of him for several years and had given him up as dead. After my own Uncle Thomas Barfield went to Yazoo County to live he heard that there was a feeble old man by the name of Barfield in a town some distance away. Uncle Thomas visited the place and found the feeble old man to be his long -lost uncle. Like the good Samaritan, he supplied his needs and hired an attendant for him, intending to remove him to his own house as soon as the invalid would be strong enough to be moved. But the poor old man never rallied, and died in a few days. Davin County -Library Mocksville, NC 3. Thomas, the youngest of Jesse and Sarah Barfield's children, lived. in Kentucky, not far from Bowling Green. His son, Lewis, used to bring horses to Alabama for sale and made my grandfather's his headquarters. In the autumn of 1836 his father accompanied him to Alabama and though I was only a little girl of ten, I entered heartily in the pleasure Grandfather felt in having his baby brother with him again after years of separation. My three-year old brother, John, being -told that his uncle was from Kentucky, called him "Uncle Tuckin". Jesse Barfield, the father of the family a sketch of which is written in the foregoing pages, died near the close of the war while driving beef cattle to the Patriot Army. He was taken suddenly ill and died away from home, although it was but a few miles distant. After his death the mother lived with her oldest son, Frederic. She had the misfortune to lose her eyesight when he was an infant, and although she was the mother of nine children, he was the only one whose features she ever saw. She lived to be ninety years old and was ever cheerful and apparently happy. Catherine Taylor, a daughter of the emmigrants,(as before mentioned) lived in Duplin County, North Carolina. She had two daughters. Sarah married John Rhodes. Mary married James McCulloh, who was born and reared in the city of London, England. Being left an orphan in infancy, he was brought up by his paternal grandparents, who belonged to the nobility. We, his descendants, do not boast -of that, however, but -glory in the fact that we are Americans, consequently we are all Sovereigns. James. McCulloh came to America and located in Duplin County, North Carolina. When leaving England his aunt, Amy McCulloh, told him that she would remit to him fifty pounds sterling each year. She did this until his death. As aforesaid, he married Mary Taylor, and'to this union were born three children, viz., Penelope, Catherine (who was my grandmother), and Henry. Davie County Public Library Mooksville, NC 4. Penelope, as you will remember, married Stephen Barfield, a brother of Lewis Barfield, who married Catherine. Mary (Taylor) McCulloh, my great grandmother, died when her children were quite young and they were raised by their maternal grandmother, Catherine Taylor. James McCulloh married again. There were four children brom this second marriage - Elizabeth, Amy, Alfred, and .Penelope, so you see he had two daughters with the same name. My grandmother's sister had died long before the half-sister was born, however. Grandfather McCulloh lived after his marriage in Roan County, about two hundred miles north of Duplin. He visited Grandmother once every seven years until he became too feeble to travel, and then Grandmother would visit him, making the entire trip on horseback. During the war, and while my Grandmother was a little girl, some British soldiers, accompanied by a gang of Tories, made a raid on the Taylor plantation, and as William Taylor was some miles away watching his valuable horses, which he had hidden in a dense swamp, his wife, Catherine Taylor, had no one to defend her against the insolence of the soldiers, and they pillaged to their hearts' content. One soldier attempted to take some bed- clothes, but Mrs. Taylor clung to them and told him that he would not have them as they were needed for the comfort of her grandchildren, who were then sick with measles. Then the soldier drew his sword to intimidate her, but she resolutely held on until an officer ordered the soldier to desist. During the fracas, Mrs. Taylor's mother, who was very old and feeble, became so frightened that she shook as with an ague. Before taking their leave the soldiers collected the large flock of sheep belonging to the plantation, intending to take them all away, but on Mrs. Taylor's remonstrating and proposing to give one sheep to each officer and soldier, the officer in command agreed to her proposition, and selecting a sheep apiece, they retired. One soldier, however, took an extra lamb. a 5. A few years after the close of the war in 1776 an awful tragedy was enacted in the Taylor family. William Taylor was murdered by one of his own slaves, named Darby. He was arrested, tried and condemed to be burned, which sentence was duly executed in the public square at the county seat. Catherine Taylor survived her husband a good many years, and died about the close of the century, her oled mother, the emmigrant, having died several years before. My grandmother was an important link in the traditionary ,'chain through which I obtained many of these facts set forth in these pages. She was intimately associated with her great-grandmother in her girlhood, and I was, perhaps, more closely associated with her (my grandmother) until I had a family of my own. Grandmother's brother, Henry, died in early manhood. His property was in his father's hands, and though Grandmother had a legal right to it, she felt that he needed it more than she did and allowed him to retain it. After Great-grandmother Taylor's death, the estate went to my Grand- mother as the only surviving heir. Grandfather Lewis Barfield disposed of his home in Samson County and went to Duplin County to live on the Taylor estate inherited by his wife. There all their children were born excepting the three oldest. There my mother was born and lived until some thirteen years of age. Some of the Rhodes family, thinking they had discovered a slight irregularity in the title of the estate, entered suit for possession, and after much litigation and the spending of a great amount of money, Grand- father compromised with the Rhodes, they paying him $1,000. in cash. He then went to Roan County and remained two years. Thence to Tennessee and lived near his brother Frederic on Stone River. •Two years later he went to Alabama, having bought a tract of valuable land in the cane -brake region of that state. His sons could not adapt themselves to their environments and Davie County Public library Mooksville, NC 6. became so much dissatisfied that they finally induced Grandfather to exchange land with Mr. Zack Green, who owned a -tract of poor, sandy land some miles farther south in the same (Marengo) county. About two years after this, that young teacher appeared on the scene of action and gave a coloring to all the after life of at least one of the inmates of the home of Lewis and Catherine Barfield. After my father and mother were settled in their home Grandfather bought land in the southern part of Perry County and lived there until the autumn of 1839. He then came -to Winston County, Mississippi, where he resided until after Grandmother's death. The home in Perry County is the one where we used to congregate at least once a year. His home in Mississippi was pleasant, but was never quite so dear to me as the Alabama home where I spent so many happy hours of my child- hood. After Papa's death we went back to Winston County, Mississippi, and there our dear mother, with what assistances we older children could give, struggled under adverse circumstances to rear her little flock in the fear and admonition of the LORD. Sister Jane taught school for a while in the home neighborhood, then came to this part of the state and took charge of a school not far from where Bethel Church now stands. Her boarding place was on that little rise on the south side of Jackson Road, just beyond the church as you go west. She married Dr. Arnel F. Adair, and lived in that vicinity until the latter part of 1846. They then went to Attala County, and in January 1849 moved to Texas. Sister visited me in the summer of 1848, and I saw her no more for forty-four years. In 1892 I visited her in her Texas home. In March, 1846, I was solicited to teach a school in the southern part of Kemper County. My patrons insisted that I shodld board around among them, free of charge, and I found the arrangement to be very satisfactory and Davie County Public Library Mooksville, NC 7. pleasant. They were all so kind to me, and I am sure that I won not only the respect, but also the love, of most of my pupils. I really enjoyed teaching that school. December 13, 1846 I was married to Charles E. Hughes in the church at Old Daleville, by the pastor, Reverend Walton J. Reeves. We lived with father and Mother Hughes until February 8, 1848, on which date we went to housekeeping in our little log cabin in the woods. (By the way, that-was-:..ust sixty years ago today.) In that room all my children, except the oldest, were born. In 1850 my mother and the children still remaining with her moved to Texas, and I never saw any of them again except Sister Jane. After Dr. Adair's death, Sister Jane with her three little children, lived with mother and taught school most of the time, and in this way, not only helped to provide for herself and little ones, but educated our younger sisters. After almost three years of widowhood, she married Jacob Colvin. She still taught occasiona-ly, and after Mr. Colvin's death followed this vocation most of the time. In this way she was enabled to give her three Adair children and her two Colvin children a pretty fair common school education. Dore, her youngest child, began when quite young to teach in the public schools, and later attended the high school at Huntsville, Texas. Sister Jane died January 31, 1894. *One was Louisa Anna Craig who married John Henry Gore - my greath grandparents. Agatha Gavle county NU -1 Library Mocjtsville, NC q p 2 i v 01- C 0 P Y Dear Jimmie, is 1306 College Street Cleveland, MS 38732 April 24, 1984 Thank you for your letter, received while I was at Continental Congress. I am State Regent of the Miss. State Society DAR which is a fulltime job. I do not have time to go back through my files but will tell you what I know about my McCulloh's. I've searched, in vain, and hope to buy the book when it is printed. I have spent my time helping about 25 other people find lines the past few years and have no time for anything now. (The 25 for DAR membership). In a family Bible (dated in the 1850's) which belonged to Thomas C. Barfield is an old family record on paper dated (printed date) 1899. Penelope daughter of James and Mary McCulloh was born Sep. 16th 1773• Catharine daughter of James and Mary McCulloh was born Feb. 11th 1775. Henry son of James and Mary McCulloh was born July 8th 1777. Catharine Barfield died Nov. 27th 1852 Lewis Barfield died May 6th 1854 Both Catherine and Lewis are buried in Yazoo County. I do not know exactly where, but I feel that they lived with Grandpa Tommy because Lewis' death is recorded in his Bible, although Catherine's was not. Tommy came to Miss. in the 1830's and married Mercy Louisia Leonard White when she was 16. They moved to Hempstead Co. Ark. and stayed there 3 or 4 years and returned to Yazoo Co. Lewis was in Yazoo Co. at the time (1840 census). Tommy and Mercy lived in the Free %m area which is north Yazoo County near the Holmes Co. line. He was one of 5 founders of the Rocky Springs Baptist Church in the 1860's and was a very devout man. My grandfather John Clark McCormack was another of the 5. You did not ask me for help with Mary Craig but I assume you want what I know since you wrote about her. She and her descendants were in Colorado at the time of my g. grandmother Rebecca Barfield McCormack's death in 1925- Mary Craig was Rebecca's aunt and Rebecca (called Beck) had a sister named Mary Craig (called Molly) for their Aunt Mary. My grandmother McCormack died several years before I was born, but my Aunt Mae, who died in 1957 had all of her papers and we found all of this information at that time. No one kept up with them after 1925. As soon as I have time to get all my Barfield info out, a newly 3 found Barfield cousin who lives about 100 miles from here who says she has McCulloh also wants to come see what I have. My mother '7 corresponded with a Roger Gore of Lubbock, Texas who first told us about Catherine's half brother and sister and a story about some aunt in England sending James McCulloh a stipend each year. I remember all of this. Mother has been dead over 10 years. Davis County PublicLr. Alooksville brary . NC COPY -P2 s Although I know Tommy had brothers and sisters, I've never explored those lines. Have been trying to find my Owsley and Leonard lines in the few minutes I've had for myself. I did find (several years ago) the Harmon and Phelps lines and took them back into the 1500's, and what a thrill that was:: These are my First Family lines. Do you know I've never even seen one of those First Families Books::: Penelope McCulloh married Stephen. Barfield (Lewis' brother) and she died without issue. He remarried. She is burried in Williamson Co., Tennessee. Stephen was Jesse's son. Jesse was the ather of is, ep en, Frederick etc. p 4 Jesse, Stephen and Frederick all served in the American Revolution. Catharine McCulloh was descended from the Barfields as well as marrying one. I have all of that in my file - but remember what I'm writing you. If you will send any other specific questions I will be glad to help . Thomas & Mercy Barfield named a son James McCulloh Barfield. He died young. us:: You have to be my family. No one else spells it McCulloh but Hurriedly. Have a stack of mail to answer. Sincerely, /s/ Ann McCormack O'Hare" Davie County Public Library Mooksville, NC 0 Q/*Y'E AC CO-f:D sC6740A'�!�e r GJ/� Gi'¢�/•To,J MC-EIVEN BIBLE Go'eNR 'v' -pap- LO��✓`c Taken fron, BIBLE RECORDS TENNESSEE SOCIETY OF THE. DAU- GETERS OF THE AFIERICAIir REVOLUTION. 1956-1965 In the family Bible of. John L. McEwen of V-7illiamson Count'' Tennessee is recorded the following: John L. McEwen was born Nov. 7, 1794. ' Tabitha *H. ilcEwen (wi.f.e) was -bor-n March 29, .1798. John L. McE%-ren Jr. was - born Jan' y. 30; 1822. James McEwen, -vias 'born Feb.. 291.1824. Mary M. McEvien was born -Sept.' '91'- 1825.- :-.�_Stephen Barfield born Apr.- 1, 1:760.•.. Nancy Barfield born Oct. 26, .1769. County Public Ubra� Page 60 flaV�e �occsvilt��C /Tabitha H. McEwen (wife of Jno. L. McEwen) died on the 28 of December 1852 suddenly* . Mary M. Scott, daughter of Je L. McEwen and T. H. McEvien 75 d died on the 23 June 1855 in -St. Louis at the residence of her husband, Jno. ,Scott .and was buried in Tennessee at the family burial ground on the 4th of July 18550 0 i Major Jno Lapslcy:McEwen died Nov. 1879. James McEwen died apr. 1891 aged 67 years. c Col. Jno L., -I�IcEwen Jr. born 1822 wounded at Drury's Bluff Va. May 16, 1863. A fearless soldier of the Civil.Vlare Died" in Richmond Va. Hay 27, 1864. lu ` Tuesday Morning Oct.. 18, 1.853 John Scott of Srt. Louis *to Mary M. McEwen of Williamson County, Tennessee". Holy Bible containing Old and -New Testaments with Canne's Marginal Notes and References. Sterotyped by E. White, t N. Y. Published in Philadelphia by Kimber and•Sharpless at their book store, No. 93. RAM A� INN GLI, 130 John R Junkin Road •Natchez, Ms 39120 • (601) 446-6311 •Toll Free Reservations 1-800-2-RAMADA _ 1,4 ��" y��r'~-^--�r�-�'�r 1I� c�"� /.t�e�.iJ. �c��-a•�.-�y��-� �^^-o-•� cr-�C/7�iaJ G�,(.c�.� Com,. _Q, LU a.;•. 2,? D'a'ie Cors iie, c l�Lrary MockvilleNC a�1 �X i�' (U,v1ln✓ a LV '7, Davie County Public Library Mocksville, W ICI- �. . . Y LA v � � _- � . • _ c� . Q Rea , Jf • �. S � r RA.MA.DA7 I N N '130 John R. Junkin Road • Natchez, Ms. 39120 (601) 446-6311 • Toil Free Reservations 1-800-2-RAMADA 30 Apr. 1984 JJB - 1. 1840 Census 14ARENGO CO. ALA. p 49 - Southern Dist. Barfield, Jesse U. 4 - (-) 5 F 1 - 5110 1 - 5/10 1 - 10/15 1 - 40/50 1 - 20/30 (These are the right ages to be Jesse Barfield and Elizabeth Brown. They were married in 1827 but the 1850 census shows the oldest child, Nancy, being born ca 1833. That is a 6 year period. In 1840, according to the 1850 census, there would have been Nancy, b ca 1833, Lewis b ca 1835 and Thomas b 1838. The other children could have died before the 1850 census. What do you think?). 2. 1840 Census PERRY CO. ALA. p 254 Barfield, David M 2- (_)5 F 1-(-) 5 2 - 3o/4o 1 - 20/30 (Wonder whether this could be David Lewis Barfield, son of James and Rebecca?). 3. HISTORICAL SOUTHERN FAMILIES VOL XV1 Ed. Mrs. John Bennett Boddie Balt., GPC 1971 P 7: Edward Uutlaw, Bertie Co., deeded 250 a on Chowan River by Richard Barefield, Sr. on Feb. 10, 1723-24 (D. BK "A" p 244). 4. EARLY OBITUARIES WILLIAMSON COUNTY, TENNESSEE - Lynch 1977 Penelope Carothers d. 30 Jun. 1839 James D. Carothers d. 6 Oct. 1840 in Giles Co., of Williamson Co., on his return from a trip to the south. bovl�; "Uu; i y t- clic Library Mocksville, NC k COUV7 Goin¢.. 410q wsutrr i P. 256 11LEYUSDER Be! MORTON, 11dnr. of -Ebner We- Morton, deceased July 1830 Exparte• = Petition for Sale ofe roes 116xander B. Morton was appoii e ..Alder. of -the ~ estate of Abner We Morton at the Oct. Session, 1827. Idexander B. -Morton has sold the. personal• property- of the estate except:.the slaves. The slaves must- be sold ' to have' enough:.noriey to pay the debts. • Abner W. Morton died intestate. John Marshall for the petitioners. Ebner We • Morton --left: a slave, Nathan. Nathan was sold • = ' at the st-ore of 14i3liarl Pdlison. He was sold to Jesse.. Evans {opo $320.G0. P. 258 JOHN L. McEIAIEN5 �,dmr. of Nancy Barfield, deceased i, ri1 1830Exparte - Petition for Sale of I\igro Slaves Nancy Barfi e' ld died Nov, 1929 intestate., She left 2 s1a7es. They are: Peter - 36 yrs: old & Clara •- ry . yrs, o' d. Nancy Barfield left her 7 children as ne:.t of kin. Her children are: + 1.* Leuis BarIt' ield we 11,oce8.air -RAW.0W 0477-VWA) 2. John Bari • eid 3. Brake . Barfield 4. Willie Be Barfield (Willie is .a minor cc his guardian is John L. McEwen.) + 5. Pehe? ope Carothers (She 'is the wife of . JDnes Carothers. )hor So $JA• /9/8 - �A� .� * 6. Mary (She is the wife of JoYin Brown.: )- r� Ay �' Tabitha (She is the wife of John. L. Mc Ewen*. ) �+t. / r A?. /82 o l*lti 0714AD Aw 40wed - ! i • The children want to sell' the- -slaves for a division.. P. 259 G;3RIEL�BUFORD & AllII�ND��, his 'wife; SPENCER BUFORD a 3-,'1iES PUGH, Exrs. of the- last will of Edward Buford, deceased- & ELIZ;'LBETH BUFORD, MARY FPJiDTCIS BUFORD, WILLII;M- W. BUFORD, EMILY l j3UFORDj &T OU15A BUEORD j wh?4or re mars & sue Dy the2.r gp guardians enter d ac ares tau h ipril 1830 Exparte Petition -ior Division of the Persorial Estate of `Edgard Buford, deceased; & Distribution • . of Shai.•e of �'abriel Buford &- 1inanda, his vif e Edward Buford died' ixi 1828.. He left Imanda, his -widow.-, His children. & heirs are: Elizabeth, Mary Francis, William We-; Emily, & Louisa, ac Jane. Jane is now deceased &•she was the child of petitioner, imanda. Edward. Buford left a.-, will. It was probated in 1828. Lnanda,'Elizabeth, Mary Francis. Willian Y'1., mily, Louisa, & Jane were entitled to 1/7 part of the slaves ! according to the --will. Now that Jane is dead, the survivors are entitled to 1/6 part each. �« ;,Wanda has since ma.- ried Pabriel. (CONI'' D) 9415 Primrose Shreveport, La. 71118 INay 1, 1984 Dear Anne I so��appreciate receiving your most enjoyable and informative letter and also your offer to answer specific questions regarding Barfield-McCulloh lines, Of course, my first impulse is to put all of my "begs into one ask it" but that would be a burden on you because of your busy schedule. A separate sheet of questions is en- closed leaving space for a reply underneath, and an SASE. Congratulations on your eledtion as DAR State Regent. Our library genealogy shelves would be pretty bare without the contributions from various DAR chapters. Alice Eidson is the originator of the i4cCulloh research and plans to publish. We became acquainted by mail in 1976 and have been working together since that time when she asked that I help gather the line- age of Charles Granville McCulloh. Then, like Little Eva, it just grew. Alice ' and I hope to meet face to face one daye ccording to files, Mary Barfield Craig was born in 1803. Were you #riting of her being in Colorado in 1925 (age 122) or just some of ler descendants? Roger Gore was out of Louisa Anna Craig and ohn H. Gore. I could not find them in Texas 1900 soundexe apparently, there are still many Barfield descendants in Texas. Lewis and Catherine IMcCulloh Barfield had several children and I have been unable to locate some of them in an 1840 census. These are: lo Alfred ( Matilda) Barfield 2. Mary Barfield -John Craig 3. Sarah Barfield -Thornton Vaught 4, John P . W. ( Nancy) Barfi eld Penelope McCulloh and Stephen Barfield had a daughter who died at about age 10. Apparently Penelope and Henry McCulloh died young as James also named children from the second marriage Penelope and a Henry. There is a lot of information about Stephen Barfield and rt- his second wife Nancy House Barfield in records of Williamson Co., Tn. Id � Would you mind letting me know when the Barfield cousin plans to -- visit you and you have your Barfield information ready to show her? There are probably other things that I would like to know when your records are available. In the meantime, I would like to correspond with the Barfield cousin concerning the McCullohs. H o � pave Count's Public �brary Moc}�svitie, N� a JO c -2— Enclosed 2— Enclosed is a direct -line chart that will more clearly show my McCulloh connection. I notice you stated that your McCulloh search was "in vain". It is too bad that Catherine did not re- late her paternal heritage, or write it down for future genera- tions. If she did, apparently it has not surfaced. Our country has suffered two very destructive wars so I suppose we are fortunate that any records survived. One war leader - either revolutionary or civil - replied, "That's the way things are done in a civilized country", when questioned why records, court buildings, etce were destroyed during a conflict. If you have any Barfield questions, I will be glad to check for you. /jib Encls. Question Sheet Family Chart SASE /Cci Mrs. Alice H. Eidson 1135 Kenwood St. Winston-Salem, NC 27103 Sincerely, Davie County Public UbralY Mo&sville, NG Please return tot Nirs. Jimmie Jean Bowman 9415 Primrose Shreveport, Las 71113 1. Names of parents of Jesse Barfield One source identified them as Richard and YlaryBarfield. 2. Maiden name of Elizabeth, second wife of James McCulloh. 3.. Parents of James McCulloh e 4, 1820 Census t Where were Lewis and Catherine McCulloh Barfield? 5. hat is name and address of Barfield cousin who has McCullohs and wants to see what you have? I would love to correspond with her/him on IYIcCullohs . G -A eqc 06S7 /Jio7--a: /�ESrA�er/ /PAirc r �/ne� ��C.riio�./r THir,J l 7- A JrG�caJ er- le �w ���IX �- 6V _ ./IJ Gt�l✓• /✓'�,�� .Gaze' G.(,�i 4L+� Z a U ii 9 7 S Ck. /'1 /8.20. tee, pf� /8,70 a r- Z— ,e4kAu,J P y: G, r, �w em4ak ,-- m z 9415 Primrose Shreveport, La. 71118 r April 14, 1984 Dear Alice, It is always so nice to hear from you and I appreciate your sharing all the information. It would be impossible for me to get the old records without a trip to an archives and that always seems to be out of the question. I'm sure you have received the latest Barfield information by now. I still have some gaps on some of the children of Lewis and Catharine but have started some more lists as to where they may be found. So many of them are missing for the same census year, 1840. I have read through all the wills and inventories included in your letter of April 10th and will try to make some coherent comments. Catherine Barfield named as the grandaughter of Catharine Taylor must be Catherine McCulloh Barfield, wife of Lewis. Penelope had married and died by 22 Oct. 1791 when widower Stephen Barfield married Nancy House. That means their child would have been born in 1790 at the latest, and dying at age 10 would probably already have been dead when Catharine Taylor made her will. Catharine McCulloh married Lewis Barfield in 1791 and would legally be Catharine Barfield when C. Taylor made her will. Does this make sense to you? No, you didn't send me copies of deeds of land from Henry E. McCulloh or his agent to James McCulloh. Wish I did have them, then I could send you a copy since you can't find your originals. Amy McCulloh: Do you suppose Airy McCulloh could be James' daughter who married the~Scof McCulloch? I haven't come across an Amy anywhere other than in the Barfield History sent to you. Ireland in the time of the McCullohs was an undivided country with Catholic and Protestant in both areas of north and south. North was predominantly protestant and south was predominantly Catholic but the country was not divided into Northern Ireland and Irish Republic until 1921 (think this date is right - from memory). Right, I looked it up; Irish Free State was formed in December of 1921. If we could locate "Grogan" then you would know for sure in which area to -� check on James and offspring. Henry could have been Anglican and Penelope Catholic. If you will send me the name and location of the church where they were married I will try to determine which denomina- tion it is. Incidentally, the two young children of Henry, Sec.of _- Prov., who were christened and buried at St. John's ... St. John is in -; my guidebook but denomination is not given - style is Baroque. It '= is located in Westminster (meaning west. side) area of London, not very far south of Westminster Abbey (Anglican). Close to Thames River. t Davis County Public Ubrar. Mocksvilie, NC Q -2- On 11 Aug. 1787 when William Taylor's estate was divided, John Rhodes received the part deeded to his wife, Elizabeth, during William Taylor's lifetime. This consisted of one-half of: household furniture plantation tools and stock. that the house and grounds were not divided at that time and It seems g widow Catharine had possession.Ap 'se Taylor McCulloh was dead by 1787 - implied by deed of gift to'James McCulloh's children and subsequent remarriage to Elizabeth 0 My thought is that the slaves were not divided among the children until they became of age. Apparently the plantation land was divided between John Rhodes and Henry McCulloh before Catharine Taylor died. The acreage of 500 and 300 acres are listed on the inventory, then crossed out. Catharine Taylor's will indicates that she had only household items and some stock - no land- to leave her grandchildren. Barfield History states that after living on the Taylor Estate some 13 years (her mother was born there c. 1803 and lived on the estate until she was some 13 years old), that the Rhodes entered suit for possession. I can see how confusion can arise in instruments that contain very little punctuation. Above, for instance, John Rhodes received one-half of William Taylor's estate which could have been read, household furniture, plantation, tools and stock. The division seems to clarify that it was "plantation tools" and not one-half of the plantation that he was to receives On page 5 of Barfield History, the writer stated that Henry McCulloh died in early manhood. Legal right to his property belonged to Catharine McCulloh Barfield but that Catharine left it in the hands of her father, James McCulloh as she felt that he needed it more than she did and allowed him to retain it". Do you suppose this means the 400 acres that Henry Received from the Taylor estate? (notice that capital R in Received?-- I've been reading too many old docu- ments that capitalize all major words). I suppose that Henry, being the male heir, received the land while Catharine received personal effects. Henry, not named in his grandmother Catharine Taylor's will, was omitted either because he had already received his part, or had died by 1800. Do you have a death date for him? I had better leave Barfield-McCulloh before I get even more confused. Jimmie, Gene's dad, is still undergoing dental work. He had 2 teeth ea pulled and two capped last Monday: He will have partials on the lower teeth and full uppers. He is to go again tomorrow - I mean Monday - for more to be pulled. I think he has about 6 left. � o Cl - ,7N If nothing comes up, we have tentative plans for a trip to Tulsa v the following Tuesday. We must get up there to talk with the one 00 aunt, and see if we can console the other. Aunt Sadie is calling us every other day and called twice yesterday. She is more mentally confused every day and I don't know how long she can go on like this. I called the nursing home to see how she stands on their waiting list and she has moved up a lot. The home had one bed but two people in line for it and Mr. Pasquier said if they did not take it, Sadie could have it. He didn't call so I am sure one of them accepted the room. Sadie needs the room so desperately,_ and the sister with whom she lives, needs to have her leave. We xxxxft can't wish that two people would leave this world so Sadie could have their room but that is about the only way one ever comes available. A . .. r Copy of letter to Mrs. O'Hare, lineage of Thomas C. Barfield, is enclosed. With luck perhaps we will get a reply. I am sending you a copy so you will know what the score is in case you should hear directly from her. When I get as much on the Barfield-McCulloh clan as I can, I hope to type up the family sheets and send them to you. Have you decided upon a numbering system yet? Love, r THE BARFIELD FREEMAN CONNECTION IN VAN ZANDT COUNTY Henry M. Barfield, Sr., born December 28, 1798 in Duplin County, North Carolina was the son of Lewis and Catharine Barfield. The 1850 U.S. Census of Winston County, Mississippi shows Lewis to be 82 years old and Catharine to be 76. Living with them was a son, John, age 39 who was a Baptist Minister. At that time, Henry Sr. was married to Elizabeth (date of death unknown), age 43, and had 10 children: William (age 18), Thomas (age 18), Mary (age 16), Charles Lewis (age 14), John Fletcher (age 12), Catharine (age 11), Henry (age 8), Sara (age 6); Alfred (age 3) and Napoleon (age 11 months). According to his obituary, Henry Sr. married a McLeod in 1829. This was probably Elizabeth. He later was married to Kate H. McLeod who was born January 2, 1840. Henry Sr. died December 22, 1883, and Kate died May 20, 1885. Both are buried in the Wesley Chapel Cemetary in Van Zatndt County near the Four Mile Prairie where they farmed. Henry M. Barfield, Jr. was born in Winston County, Missis- sippi, December 28, 1841; he came to Texas with his parents in 1850, and settled in Smith County, where he was raised and educa- ted. In 1867 he moved to Van Zandt County and became a member of the M.E. church South. On the 24th of October, 1872, he married A Miss Elizabeth A. Causey. He died at his home October 14, 1911. "a He had no children. He is buried in Wesley Chapel Cemetary. Thomas Barfield married and had three children: Burrel, Rona, and Thomas. Davie County Public Mocksville, �brary 0 C William Barfield did not marry. He was a Lieutenant in Company D, 17th Regiment Texas Calvary (Moore's Regiment) during the Civil War. He died after the war from wounds received in the war. Charles Lewis Barfield was born in Perry County, Alabama, November 10, 1835, moved with his parents in 1836 to Mississippi, where he resided until 1850 when he came to Texas, settling first in Smith Countv near Bullard. Accompanied by his two brothers, John Fletcher, and Alfred M., he came to Van Zandt County in 1867, and located on Four Mile Prairie, where they bought considerable land, and later moved to Wills Point. He was married in 1887 to Miss Alice Draper, a daughter of E.B. Turner. He enlisted in the Confederate army, June 10, 1861, entering the Third Texas Calvary, Greer's regiment, and served until May, 1865. He was in Ross' brigade, and was an active participant in the war, serving in Missouri, Arkansas, Mississippi, and Georgia, and other Southern States, and was in more than fifty battles during the war. He was a valiant soldier and served the Confederacy with distinction and honor. He was a steward of the Methodist church. He lived in Van Zandt fourty-five years. He died July 26 and was buried at Wesley Chapel Cemetary. Mary Barfield married Mr. Hardy and had seven children: Hugh, Mattie, Katherine, Charles, Frank, Henry, and Russell. Mattie Hardy married Mr. Turner, and Katherine Hardy married Mr. Echols. Catherine Barfield did not marry. Davie County Public Library Mooksvilie, NC -2- Sara Jane Barfield married Mr. Havis Halcomb and had three children: Bess married K. D. Middleton, Eva married W. W. Middle- ton, Katherine married Oscar Olson. Bess and Eva settled in Abilene and Kate in West Texas. Alfred M. Barfield married Miss Sally Moore and had six children: Ada, Carlos, Laura (Mrs. Chas Mallory), Emery, Hallie, and Paul. Napoleon Barfield died as a child. John Fletcher Barfield was born March 27, 1838, and died December 28, 1917. He was married to Miss Izora H. Ruff February 1, 1882. They had five children: Wilton, born November 19, 1882; Cora, born September 14, 1885, and died September 28, 1885; Grover Cleveland, who lived only 2 months; and twins who were born dead. He served in the Confederacy, during the Civil War, and received the Medal of Valour. War Department records show that John Fletcher Barfield, private, Company D, 17th Regiment Texas Cavalry (Moore's Regi- ment), Confederate States Army, enlisted March 1, 1862, at Larissa, Texas, at the age 24 years. He was captured at Arkansas Post, Arkansas, January 11, 1863, imprisoned at Camp Douglas, Illinois, and was received by the Confederate Agent at City Point, Virginia, April 6, 1863, for exchange. The company muster roll for March and April, 1864, last on file, shows him present. By consolidation of organizations about April 9, 1865, this company became a part of Company G, Granbury's Consolidated Bri- Davie County Public Ubraly -3- looksville, NC gade, and as a private of that company he was paroled at Greens- boro, North Carolina, May 1, 1865, in accordance with the terms of a Military Convention. His wife, Izora H. Ruff, was born in Knoxuba county, Missis- sippi, August 5, 1853, and died in Van Zandt County, Texas, April 251 1891. She was an orphan. She went to Whitworth College, Mississippi, and came to Texas as a teacher. She was married in Texas. She was the daughter of Mr. Ruff and Miss Vaught, her father died before her birth. Her mother later married Mr. Ingram, and had one child, Allie Ingram: Prior to her marriage she was a teacher at Kidd Key College in Sherman, Texas. After Izora's death, Fletcher Barfield married the widow Lydia Crisp, who owned the farm adjacent to his. This was Decem- ber 19, 1901. The only surviving child of Fletcher Barfield was Wilton, who married George Clark Freeman on January 2, 1901. George Clark lived nearby and was the son of George Washington Freeman, who was born February 29, 1836, in Jackson County Georgia. Prior to moving to Van Zandt County Texas, George Washington Freeman lived in Union County, Mississippi, where he married Rosa Cox. They had five children: George Clark, born November 10, 1881 in Athens Georgia; Pink; Fount; Texas Trimmer; and Knox, born September 16, 1889 in Kaufman County. George Washington Freeman served in the Confederate Army, having enlisted May 15, 1861, as private in Co. K, 21st Regiment Mississippi Infantry C.S.A. at New Albany, Mississippi. His first wife, Rosa Cox, passed away February 15, 1891, and is buried in the College Mound Cemetery. Davie Cou,,ty pUbli 4100svill,, Ubrar� -4- NC ueorge Washington and Rosa lived in Abner, Kaufman County, at the time of Rosa's death. After her death, George Washington married Mary Ann Elizabeth Cox, sister of Rosa. He -had been previously married to June Wilkenson. In 1894, George Washington moved to Wise in Van Zandt County. He died on February 14, 1917, and was buried in Cana Cemetary. George Clark Freeman and Wilton Barf.ield had five children: Izora, Cora Joe, Helen Fletcher, Hula, and John Clark. George died November 24, 1955, and Wilton died March 7, 1967. Both are buried in Tyler, Texas where they lived. George was a shop fore- man for the Cotton Belt Railroad. John Clark Freeman married Jean Marguerite Levorsen and has four sons: John Fletcher, Alan James, Richard Scott, and Philip Bruce, who now own and ranch the Fletcher Barfield place in Van Zandt County. Fletcher is a Dallas County Justice of the Peace, attorney and CPA. Alan is a CPA in Wichita Falls Texas. Richard is an attorney in Houston Texas, and Bruce is a Landman in Shreveport Louisiana. Fletcher has a son, Fletcher Christian, and Alan has a son, Eric, and a daughter, Lara. -5- ®aria C4 ooU 17ty PUblic C i3RY'•..aa�.:��•�.Y14-_i'_fJ^. �cL l��-�.�_'wi4.'•iT::.`.s•?'i]nF..?__.. v-'i'►1a.bK+i:Y^L+k-T: �+[.: ^_�r.2.1".,. .._..R-.i9Y.1s�_4�-�.e�—_-�S]1Y_4f'�!YL C-•�___�. �._=>.. -�.. _a -ti �__ �. .�......- " W/ 4 S ,0#.0b /A-0'MF ATB Rirr r SO a,z Z �`:� t pita, Oar ewl-&0-004d 4 yo&4a ht GOVT I #f.*y1a d CO& ;Jdr.ts 4e1= Page 117 / 9P/ THOMAS WILSON, Dectd. Inventory. April session 1818.. 8 negroes, - livestock Wm. Wilson, Admr. JONATHAN -BATEMAN, . Dec i d. . Inventory. April session 1818. 13 April 1818... livestock, furniture, farm tools, & etc. .'; ,:-Polly::..Bateman. Admr. KEZIAH McCONNICO, Dec t d. Inventory. April session 1818. furniture & etc. by Garner McConnico -(bot-tom" of page • is so worn that it cannot be read) , (P. 378) . STEPHEN.'. BARFIELD, Dec ! d.:. Will. . April session 1818 Son -Lewis Barfield4l in addition to. what I 'have already given him. son -John Barfield4l in addition to -what I;have already given him. son -Blake Barfield -$200 in addition to what I have already given him. - wifP-Nancy Barfield -tract of land where I now live during her widowhood. son -Willie Blount Barfield -where I now live consisting of 2 tracts of land of 125 acres conveyed tome by John Blackman & the other tract of 6V acres conveyed to me by Wm. & Betsey Spencer*to become his property at the death ! of my wife & $200 to help with his education. To my 44 dau hters:Tabitha House Barfield, Penelope House Bar iel arriot Barfield, & Polly (Sam?) Barfield- my , 12 negroes & balance of my estate, *,4AA= •r!!14AF1 _D Exr : Ma jr . James McEwen & Lewis Barfield D14 411z) ,c,/pr�i✓,S; pa A 3rd Nov. 1817 3 ate. 192.3 - A/& Wit: Ephraim McEwen, James McEwen1 & S. Hunt C0 -7-P- Probated April session 1818. (P. 378) HARRISON BOYD, Dectd. Will. April session 1818. Wife -Rhoda Boyd -the land where I now live. 1 negro woman,co � er Celia=Hannah & her boys. Hampton & Dicey wife Rhoda Boyd, Exr. 24 Feb. 1818 -- 4 Wit: H. Petway, Wm. Ewin Page Bond, H. Boyd. =zi Probated April session 118. HENRY INGRAM, Dectd. Will. � n U 0 0 `d April session 1818. tA Being sick & my affliction may prove mortal- 'c ' -Brother=BQn jamin Ingram -my tract of land in Brunswick ca Virginia on Wagar Creek containing 330 acres. He is also i C to collect my debts. At the death .of my vr'ife, I give to my brother & his heirs the following.*negroes: John, Lillah, (Continued) STEPHEN BARFIELD;Dec' d.* Inventory. P./Z t July session 181k. 13 negroes : Da�rid, Peter, Daniel, Dennis, Curtis, Patrick, Larkin, Pleasant, Clary, Mary, Lucy, Philli*s & Mariah livestock, furniture,. flrrri, tools execution on Henry Marlin (desperate) ' notes on: John Go.ff,.:.dec' d. (desperate) ; Wm. L. Corder (desperate); accounts in favor of firm ,of Barfield & Stramler desperate -over 3 years old- _ Frances Parker ' -Benj. Dean" Nat Goodrich ., Thos. Willice -• Wm. Stephens Isaac Crow Richard Davies John Ray j John Patterson •; Sherrod Dean David Campbell'. j, Isaac Long John Carden Frederick Simpson • Aron Willson = James Little - James Hill James Leach ` Wm. Millet �_ Sterlin Davis i John Fletcher :,: Wm. Helm f - Nathan Garner Wm. Stevens 'Sr. Thos. Sappjngton ' John Cohoon • Ewill Ship John Carder Hardeman Stone Wm. Fillerton (Continued) Page :123 (P• 393:Continued) Phillip -Maury Benj. Almary James Harrett John Russell -: Geo. Davidson = Mary Brickle Jesse Foster = Bryan Stone = ti;lm. P. Harrison- John Whaley Thos. Thompson Robt. Reed John Pratt Jeremiah Hay Ezekiel Hughs-' Thos. Polite f Wm. Roberts - Thos. Doyle h ' Wm. Dickey Wm. Mc ug Chzs.Huggins John J. Henry Thos. Willey James Hill Green Williamson John B. Matthews _ John Hill John Fletcher. Demo (y or. s?) Nash Benj. Almary Wm. Grey- -Wm. Willson:( schoolmaster ) Hardy Bizzill' ` - ...Chas: Stephens James McEwen 'Sr.. &. 'Lewis Barfield, Exr e J.. .1 (P. 394) HENRY INGRAM, "Dec I d. Inventory. July session 1818.: July 17, 1818. negro man John age 30 yr. -fit -- �� woman Sina�� '0 �ypu�Ct° C. �If Rachel 24 11 11 a��� MOP - if , N boy. Charles 8 ' Q IgG girl r� Edea- " : 6 " - �� boy Jim 6 If it Dick 3. r� i If girl Sin-th. If .3 t� „ if Nancy " 16 mo. ', t _ .. „_�... n r- 1t ! I W /wwk TE.r/�.iESSE_f--_ /�'2_o Cc.dS NS �o.�/aca vE.C�J a.iAc.�roD DAnJ.v PR�� GAitr ZOA)Aca 76r&&.s/9ply /�i9 i✓cy GJ/G Li%M e"V/LL/fidlSD.J LOO//o - O//o/ RclTH6tsoc� NPnI .Z/o°/o -.Zolo0 /No FsYia �) �CL�if1E�C.-=o.<r"�_ COcr,.J,y 7>EE2� AE.S7/I/1cTT /8D 5' /B/n - //OG •/ t1OSE.�,4 Tf/piri.Q,r ",VP6s TD i-Ra-�E�P/cK .B/9RF/EGD /,U�E,dir/iCE �ETaJc'E,J lJaSEP/! _Ts/o.�AS �NoDEs' Eouv_ry of �ctPct.✓ STATE OF 02TN CylpL/,`/�g ,q�rJlj f=,ta-D E�ccK y�La ' Of S,Ahtc_. PLACE. _�OoD. fiG.�Et O.�GiA.e/7S Gy/.<J� CEJ U,uTy 'J'� �//u//�ro.0 /.✓�Si/�71� of A�O.�!/ C.✓�.�oc�.rJ�4' �o,c�rG�.tcj./ /C1—.(/OG.J /.v .�`T/97� o/� /Z�.✓.yc+--57'EC, p.rJ T/fE 1A GEST to�tK ®t s,—o.✓�s ER, - - - - - - l9��.� T/!E C/.OFE2 P.?.tr /n c rAX 644'7- ai- 38 Xb'O,-,sz- �J.Tiy./%'i4/L of f3htF..[iCA.✓ /.��oeTi✓ii6•G�6 /'%7� rE of TE✓ ✓Esser- /tj gy 2/ Aeo 3 7711f �•cc /KE �Ar/iD c.9i*fP ccc� /O�✓& of TNC yttLY�'ES OF 4✓al A�,jJ !r.5�S�� AFO.[ESA/� plc/y �floD�r GiHo AcrC�rloc✓G�c�c� bri 67 A.) Lc. .lTBc jZcC-/ST�LG'i D9U/r CA�7,gt[c Davie County Public Library Mocksville, NG �' II -W& X TO ,,�F}}LfjBfJlJlip-GJILGS Zc 0,9 -/cam%0 f/LA�g9ia-/,a soci�� l7AR /yss SAwogH T%LcAVooSW QiILG$ / /838- /866 /33 /f cc 0405 (/,d q�.717-1o.✓ T© /f1OTOCcp zs) ac. - p.. 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Io Go/1 /iJ/[L os= // s ✓Jo>'Hc'2 SusaJ lf9A�FrcLD) Bljys �, /is FA7H`ci� 4JAs Davis County Public Library Mocksville, NC �Li�-Off�liP A.iJ ��c1,�c.=l� � ifl� /�-�.a �•�/i� Sii��`�s c'E.rJJc�s' CoHjP. P11� �i9tl�i rl� �JfJ.t%s 4"v /ve- e-,6ue Ate; .3 D �e-' File GELcIi.S /'�22� /17/G cS CoUr.�/�To� lvll /wlt/6� ►f �Go�,¢ �Ai,�wpoa �,cJC-�fl�fl./ /1�f�1�'�0�✓ i9L/1. �.�c7sfr�.r� 5, ��v�) ��p•) Sys ,70&J /mac G our) ,To .rJ,4,aC�. c.9.✓c,� s,�/� - /.� �.4� /&' 3a - Lb R�; ; rr.�.✓ `�isS •�il//iJ 40571 `/C�a To gleo,-b� /003,0 - vo Al TCP ^/JIF%/ �'Cf/OGi9ST/G /SCG o 2p.S O%- /7; y4/7 cCyre, 7) 94,x. ,4=AlsAWIP ✓ %� / ARS/E �� f� �f� /,� f� /)% Ec 7: CA2Los CF-� /3 • I, zAa,?,g ►� C ty koXo- l.% Z194,2>7- &o . %tea`/%` /%A���i91 �CEG�7��5 /�S✓ - /� 8 v " /°Z f l3i9RFl��A s} /i7. Ta SAGL/` ff. ,vov. 6, /o �3 cD moo K 3 �� may- /moo y -co l/ P 3 .✓i9Q %/ELa� i%. F. 7-o /z O /IA P 6 y Aaz coin 13,. s, r- �A��'/�� a C s��Ati �i���?- �isris w� r �,� 1 -?4e -D /OZ/ �O3o SET' r ef %hRr?R/AGE �•v� �E�; �/o: c S �lLo.�i rflE Cf1 fi�Gf:o.J o,P.Ic/tr%s2 1,y2 P- /�yf 7- 1106'C0,11,$ c e- s, WA AJACoB ,PRDPSi 70 /19l7S` /h1�j� �C Ce/ LLOC// ,L OSi G/rr/i(CS� EGiz�9��r�/ G.Jf/c'�LE,� �/.�•9�Jc�s /1'tc ������ i°/��.,vr cam, ,BWW GING zj ��u. /17osES ,�'i4r',ci��� �- CJi�-C i�i� rr• 74 ONS'�o�J ea , N, c, c�flS /v/,rbc 7•S<�c,�� � C�/7• �osEs �f/�'�-/�Lr� CG.'.�%%Gc/�J/¢jtJ Cmc �J��1ES L EGviS � S� � L% ,BA�'�/E� b S�,oT• / 8, /�'/S" �'D�/� /�U >//ER r=D,e� Co . �"�- C� �E� �-�y /1 ECOIDS • IRIS h! /'I Z. /N/(JO �ifi C Q,e- 7->ag I zS, /9S8 .ar.��G,,J C'fJ• .rJ�c, /Y/• /� /�'�y �r%%r9 �S'll.Si4i✓ltl�/`f G�iGLi/�ijtJ' _ 12,-r. 19.20 -/dO3o �'O�ii�/EC.=O� Co• T.�J /h. �i�A�tJC� S � G'f�ircJE.S S. s Davie County Public library m"&sville, NC CaW-7E,c7 fJNd lioc u.wc 1v' Z Tf1,15IWSS/Sr/PPl S'Dq�F yOB 2r.✓BA.t /V/rs,Sr, PPI - 34 ' ciAcrsor/ Mr. 39LiG M-CORMACK B-1 BLE BARE/ELD Original owner - Robert James & Rebecca White Barfield McCormack Address - Yazoo City, Mississippi Present owner - Hugh E. McCormack Address - Carthage, Leake County, Mississippi Copied from the original Bible by - Mrs. Hugh E. McCormack Date copied -fin the Fall of 1955. Submitted by'- Mrs. Herbert D. Forrest Address - 747 Euclid Avenue, Jacksons Mississippi MARRIAGES -"John Clark McCormack and Martha Veazey, April 2nd 1837= 6/Robert James McCormack and Rebecca White Barfield Feb. J Joseph Daniel McCormack and Alice Barksdale (no date). / Robert Fountain McCormack and Martha Arm Shurley, Feb. 22nd, 1893 ✓ Hugh E. McCormack and Thelma Graham Dec. 21-stp lib. ./Robert Herman McCormack and Gertrude Ramsay Dec.. 15th, 1917. BIRTHS /John Clark McCormack June 4th; 1794. ✓ Martha Veazey, (wife of John C. McCormack) June 18th, 1815. ✓obert James, son of John C. and Martha V. M-Cor-wack, Dec. 18, 1837. ,/Mary Elizabeth, Dgt. of John C. and Martha V. McCormack, March 8th, 1839. /Joseph Daniel, son of John C. and Martha V. McCormack, March 29th, 1840. Franklin J., son of John C. and Martha V. McCormack, May 26th, 18L2. /George C., son of John C. and Martha V. McCormack, March ilth, 18bb. ✓ Rebecca White Barfield wife of Robert James McCormack Aug. 25th, 1838. f Robert Fountain McCormack,, son of Robert J. and Rebecca W. McCormack, Aug. 27th, -_867. ./Mary Elizabeth, Dgt. of Robert J. and Reb s.. W. McCozrmack, Sept. 20th, 1869. ,/Joseph Emmett McCormack, son of R. J. and R. W. McCormack, Aug. 18th, 1874. ,/Mercia Rebecca, Dgt, of Robert J. and Rebecca W. McCormack, June 20th, 1877. ✓ Martha Veazey, Dgt, of Rob°t J. and Rebecca N. McC-rmack, March 10th, 1872. /Martha Ann Shurley (wife of Robert Fountain McCz)rmack) June 10th, 1868. ✓ Robert Herman, son of Fountain and Mattie McCerna_k, Dec. 25th, 1893. ✓Hugh Erastus, son of Fountain and Mattie S. M::Conma2:;;k, Feb. 1st, 1895. ✓Rebecca Ruth, Dgt. of Fountain and Mattie S. McCor;.nark, August 25th; 1904. ✓_Thelma Graham, wife of Hugh E. McCormack, Oct. 22nd, 1897. DEATHS ✓John Clark McCormack, May 8th, 1865 ✓Martha Veasey McCormack, Aug. 8th, 1844 6 -'Robert James McCormack, Oct. 14th2 1878 Mw y Elizabeth McCormack, Oct. 4th, 1853 ,/Franklin J. McCormack, July 4th, 1853 ,/George C. ri�,Cormack, Sept. 3rd, 1863. PLACE OF BURIAL Family Cemetery, Yazoo County Black Church, Yazoo County Rog; Springs Church, Yazoo County Family Cemtery, Yazoo ounty Family Cemtery, Yazoo County Confederate Soldiers Grave at newton, Miss. Davie County Public Ubrai * se..ssippi Genealogical Society Mocksviile, NC MCCORMACK BIBLE 35 ,/Joseph Daniel McCormack, Oct. 1920 Wise County, Texas ✓Robert Fountain McCormack, Sept. 19, 1908 Glenwood Cemetery, Yazoo City, Mississippi /Joseph Emmett McCormack, Oct. 2nd, 1878 Rocky Springs Church, Yazoo County ✓Rebecca White B. McCormack, Sept. 24, 1925 Rocky Springs Church, Yazoo County BARFIELD BIBLE Original owner - Thomas Castillo & Mercia Louisa White Barfield Address - Near Benton, Yazoo County, Mississippi Present owner - Hugh E. McCormack Address - Carthage, Leake County, Mississippi Bible published by - Jasper Harding Address - Philadelphia Date published - 1854 Copied from the original Bible by - Mrs. Hugh E. McCormack Date copied - In the Fall of 1955 Submitted by - Mrs. Herbert D. Forrest Address - 747 Euclid Avenue, Jackson, Mississippi BIRTHS Thomas Castillo Barfield was born April 30th, 1805, Mercia Louisa Barfield was born April 13th, 1819. Rebecca White Barfield, daughter of Thomas C. Barfield and Mercia L,, his wife, was born August 25th, 1838. ✓ Mary Craig Barfield, daughter of Thomas C. Barfield and Mercia L,, his wife, was born December 20th, 1840. ✓i -_Nathan Lewis Barfield, son of Thomas C. and Mercia.L. Barfield, was born October 16th, 1842. ✓ John, son of Thomas C. and Mercia L. Barfield, was born February 1st, 18459 v% died Feb. 19th, 1913, aged 68 years and 19 days. /--k James 1847. oh. son of Thomas C. and Mercia L. Barfield, was born August 30th, 1847. ✓ Louisiana, daughter of Thomas C. and Mercia L. Barfield, was born September 14th, 1850. VFrances Elizabeth and Ann Eliza, daughters of Thomas C. and Mercia L. Barfield, were born January 16th, 1853. Cemetery and Bible Records, Volume IV 36 BARFIELD BIBLE Emily, daughter of Thomas C. and Mercia L. Barfield, was born March 22nd, 1855. ✓Huella, daughter of Thomas C. and Mercia L. Barfield, was born May 1st, 1858. ✓Nathan Hugh White, son of Huella and Nathan S.White, was born July 4th, 1890. MARRIAGES /Thomas C. Barfield and Mercia L. (Louisa) White were married October 1st, 1835. ✓Huella Barfield and Nathan S. White were married Dec. 23, 1888. /Mary C. Barfield and Charles F. Johnston were married Sept. 20th, 1865 ✓Rebecca W. Barfield and Robert J. McCormack were married Feb. 23rd, 1865. j Nathan L. Barfield and Cornelia B. Overstreet were married May 1st, 1872; DEATHS •l James McCulloh Barfield departed this life on the 15th day of September, 1849. Aged two years, fifteen days, eight hours and twenty-five minutes. -'Louisiana Barfield departed this life on the 24th of May, 1854, aged four Y.i/Lewis Barfield departed this life on the 6th of May, lb54. /Frances Elizabeth Barfield' -departed this life Nov. 29th, 1865, aged 12 years 10 months and 13 days. I ✓Ann Eliza Barfield departed this life Jany. 19th, 1866, aged 13 years and 3 days. ✓ ercia L. Barfield departed this life Feb. 16th, 1881. ✓ Hugh Ella Barfield White departed this life July 7th, 1890, aged 32 years, 2 mo. and 6 days. /N than Hugh White departed this life Sept. 18th, 1890, aged 2 mo. and 14 days. ✓ _r"Z C. Barfield departed this life June 17th, 1890, aged 85 years, 1 mo. and 17 days. BARFIELD BIBLE Original owner - Thomas Castillo Barfield Address - Near Benton, Yazoo County; Mississippi Present owner - Mr, and Mrs. Hugh E. McCormack Address - Carthage, Leake County, Mississippi Bible published by - Hogan and Thompson Address - Philadelphia Date published - 1839 Copied from the original Bible by - Mrs. Hugh E. McCormack Date copied - In the Fall of 1955 Submitted by - Mrs. Herbert D. Forrest p1Vle COUrit}' �S""-Inc=brarY Address - 747 Euclid Avenue, Jackson' Mississippi MockSVllle, NG Mississippi Genealogical Society E BARFIELD BIBLE 37 MAPRTaGES ✓Thomas C. Barfield and Louisa L. White were r.�-Vied October the 1st, 1835. /Robert James McCormack and Rebecca White B. - _eld were married Feb. 23, 1865. ✓Mary C. Barfield and Charles F. Johnston we -7z- =Tried Sept. 20, 1865, -,'Nathan L. Barfield and Cornelia B. Overstreet •ere married May 1, 1872. ✓ ugh Ella Barfield and Nathan S. White wer � -Y �:ied Dec. 23, 1888. ,/iu h Fountain McCormack and Martha Ann Shurle were married February 22, g 1893. BIRTffS ✓Thomas C. Barfield was born April the 30th 1305. Louisa L. Barfield was born April 13! 1819. /"Rebecca W. Barfield, daughter of Thos. C. eld and Louisa L. , his wife, was born August 25, 1838. /Mary C. Barfield, daughter -of Thos. C. Bartie:.-" and Louisa L. , his wife, was born December the 20th, 1844. -'Nathan L. Barfield, son of Thos. C. Barfield and Louisa L., his wife, was Aorn Oct. the 16th, 1812. Vjohn, son of Thos. C. Barfield and Louisa L,; ':is wife, was born February the is t , 1815. ✓James McCulloh .- son of Thos. C. Barfield L., his wife, was born. August 30th, 1847. ✓touisiana, daughter of Thos. C. and Mercia Le:::sa Barfield, was born September the 14, 1850. u. vfrances Elizabeth and Ann Eliza, daughters e: Thos. C. and Mercia L. Barfield, were born January 16th, 1853. . ✓Emily, daughter of Thos. C. and Mercia L. Ba.r:'iald, was born March the 22, 1855. ert James McCormack was born Dec. 18, 183'.' Obert Fountain, son of Robert J. and Rebecca W. McCormack, was born August 27, 1867. J v/Mary Elizabeth, daughter of Robert J. and Rebacca W. McCormack, was born September 20, 1869. ,/Martha Vezey, daughter of Robert J. and. Rebecca W. McCormack, was born March 109 1872. McCormack was born August 18 ,Joseph Emmett, son of Robert J. and Rebecca If. 9 � 9 18740 Mercia Rebecca and infant son, daughter and son of Robert J. and Rebecca W. AIcCormack, were born June 20th, 1877. ?uella Barfield was born May 1st, 1858. JNathan Hugh White, son of Hugh Ella B. White, was born July 4, 1890. DD James McCulloh Barfield departed this life on the 15th of September, 1849, aged two years, fifteen days, eight hours and twenty-five minutes. ✓`Louisiana Barfield departed this life on the 211th day of May, 1854, aged four ve ars and ten days. '/�T Lewis Barfield departed this life on the 6th o rances Elizabeth Barfield died Nov. 298 18b . Cemetery and Bible Records, Volume IV 54• Davie County Public Library klo&sville, NC 38 BARFIELD BIBLE -/Ann Eliza Barfield died Jan. 19th, 1866. Mercia L. Barfield died Feb. 16th, 1881. /T. C.. Barfield died June 17th, 1890. Robert James McCormack departed this life Oct. 14th, 1878, aged 40 years, 9 months and 26 days. „ Joseph Emmett McCormack, son of Robert J. and Rebecca N. McCormack, died i Oct. 2nd, 1878, aged 4 years, 1 month and 14 days. Infant son of R. J. McCormack and R. W. McCormack died June 20, 1877. ,/Hugh Ella B. White died July 7th, 1890. V#obert Fountain McCormack departed this life Sept. 19th, 1908, aged 41 years and 23 days. t/Rebecca Uhite Barfield 21cCormack departed this life Sept. 24th, 1925, aged 87 years and 30 days. WALL BIBLE Original owner m William Wynn and Josephine Sparkman Wali Address - Williamson County, Tennessee Present owner - Theima Graham McCormack (firs. Hugh E.) Address - Carthage, Leake County; Mississippi Bible published by - Southwes'�ern Publishing House Address - Nashville, Tennessee Date published - 1886 Cop:*Led f= om the original Bible by - Mrs. Hugh E. McCormack Date copied - Fall•of 1955 Submitted by - Mrs. Herbert D. Forrest (ldress - 71 7 Eucl id Avenue, Jackson, Mississippi BIRTHS W. L. Sparkman. Sept. 21, 1825. Lucinda SparRman, Dec. 14, 1827. W. W. an. 27, 1852. Josephine Sparkman Wall; Oct. 21, 18,510 jl� Mattie 1 -Tall; Dec. 23, 1871; Died March 1939. rZ W. C. Val -19 Octo. y �, 18 730 L3Lucy Wall,, Oct. 2, 1876. /�-VP-a_--1 Tall, July 2„ 1878, Q:5) John B. i'a? 1, April 15, 1887. `.-) Ida L. Viall, Feb. 10, 1889. Davie County Public Library Mocksville, NC Mississippi Genealogical Society WALL BIBLE B.. J. Wall, May 8, 1827. Rebecca Allen Wall; Nov. 19, 1830. ✓Thelma Graham, Oct. 22, 1897. Edith Graham, Aug. 30, 1899. Emma Graham, Nov. 26, 1901. -� Ruth Gr aham9 Sept. 23, 1903. Grace Graham, Oct. 12 1905. S MARRIAGES W. W. Wall and Josie (Josephine) Wall, January 229 1871. Mattie Wall and Gus Skelley, Feb. 18, 1892. pearl Wall and Eugene Graham, Aug. 29 1896. Lucy Wall and John Redford, Nov. 6, 1898. John B. Wall and Bertha Priest, April 6, 1906. Ida Wall and Taylor F. Walker, January 319 1911. \/Thelma Graham and H. E. McCormack, Dec. 219 1916. Emma Graham and A. W. Horrell, Oct. 31, 1923. Grace Graham and J. B. Downing, Jure 1, 1926. DEATHS W. L. Sparkman, Sept. 19, 1889. Lucinda Sparkman, Oct. 25, 1899. Edith Graham, Oct. 219 1900. B. J. Wall, May 199 1882, Age 55 years, 2 days. Bernard D. Wall, Nov. 269 1920. Died at 7 o'clock evening. Rebecca Allen Wall, Dec. 269 1925, age 94 years, 1 month. Josephine Sparkman Wall, b. Oct. 219 18519 d. June 20, 1935. William Wynn Wall, b.'Jan. 27, 18529 d. March 229 1935. Eugene G: aham9 'b. D -c . 289 1870 ; d . June 14, 1913. Ruth Graham° b. Sept. 239 1903, d. 'larch 179 1942. Cemetery and Bible Re;,ords, Volume IV WA V � �our� sJDScP/< 4J/GL/R.4i' � T/1'Cdis. C✓/LL�%a/%S '�/EG7� LCIJiS /f?G CG/LL Oaf/ �L�.�li/�ie/�� / dOsrJD /itCDE.0/G.sC ,�,CFG�D ��/lcRCuT O �s D15e. /a 6 d al /v.9.G APOO /o . ,7fC• / 3.3' 22 21,911 Davie County Public Ubrary Mocksville, NC � � e �r� r— il�2�iEL A /WX 4R�i�L�j �c'.�/�E� �/�•�v �iG G/fi � � �our� sJDScP/< 4J/GL/R.4i' � T/1'Cdis. C✓/LL�%a/%S '�/EG7� LCIJiS /f?G CG/LL Oaf/ �L�.�li/�ie/�� / dOsrJD /itCDE.0/G.sC ,�,CFG�D ��/lcRCuT O �s D15e. /a 6 d al /v.9.G APOO /o . ,7fC• / 3.3' 22 21,911 Davie County Public Ubrary Mocksville, NC � � e �r� 6--eo. Svc-. �/��. 2 y e9 ` 193 BROWN - DAWSON - DUNLAP FAMILIES OF TENNESSEE Contributed by Dr. Robert Douglas Crowder, 5366 Nakoma Drive, Dallas, Texas 75209 The saga of the Brown family began in TN ca 1780 with the arrival of John Brown at Fort Nashborough, now Nashville. In 1788, he founded Brown's Station which was located on Mill Creek near what is now the intersection of Thompson Lane and Mur- phreesboro Road in Nashville. John Brown was killed by the Creek Indians at Holly Tree Gap in Williamson County, TN on Dec 20, 1794. I, John Brown m Sarah Ervin of Rowan Co., -NC, a dau of Christopher Ervin and Jane McDowell. Later, Margaret Ervin, sister of Sarah, and her husband, David McEwen, joined the Browns at Fort Nashborough. They later all moved to Williamson County. The children of John and Sarah Brown: A. Margaret Brown d as a young child B. Jane Brown b at Fort Nashborough ca 1790 and moved to Williamson County ca 1800. On Dec 18, 1809, Jane Brown m Thomas Porter, a partner of Gen. William H. Carroll in a nail factory in Nashville. Their children: 1. William N. Porter m Mary Ann Haskell in Paris, TN in 1835. 2. Sarah Jane Paralee Porter b 1820; d in Helena ARK Mar 6, 1893. She m Col. William T. Haskell, brother of Mary Ann Haskell (above), in Paris, TN Feb 7, 1838. William T. Haskell was Colonel of the 2nd Regt. in the Mexican War, member of Congress in 1846 and became chief spokesman for the Tennessee Whigs. After the death of her husband, Paralee Porter Haskell became the lst woman State Librarian of Tenn- essee from 1871 to 1881. Their children: a. Shephard P. Haskell b. William C. Haskell c. Joshua Haskell Davie County Public library, d. Anna B. Haskell MockSVllle, NC e. Mary Haskell m H. C. Rightor of ARK f. Viola Haskell m Nicholas Rightor of ARK ,0 C. John Lapsley Brown b Dec 24, 1793 at Fort Nashborough, had a general �. store in Paris, TN and considerable slaves and property. Nov 16, 1824 he m Mary Jane Barfield, dau of Stephen and Nancy House Barfield, of Williamson Co. TN. Her sister, Tabitha Barfield m the 1st cousin of John Brown, also named John Lapsley McEwen. John Lapsley Brown fell victim to cholera on Feb 3, 1833, while on a buying trip in New Orleans, LA. Children: 1. Angelina P. Brown b Paris, TN Oct 12, 1825; d Oct 19, 1826 � 2. Mary Tabitha Brown b in Paris, TN Oct 10, 1827; d Feb 2, 1888; Nov 10, 1846 she m Dr. John Jay Mattewson, b Sept 19, 1816 and d Apr 11, 1870. Their children: /o �9ez&. /,072 9 1-9 6,>' 5 z/ 'W -z -S �t.-011 . d '6XVA) 26 Mar. 1984 4 JJB 1850 Winston Co. Miss. p 370 p 180 BARFIELD, 764/741 CRAIGG, Mary 45 f N.C. William 19 m Farmer Ala. 30 John 16 m of Ala. Sarah 14 f Ala. it Is Matilda 12 f Ala. Louisa 10 f Ala. 1850 Kemper Co. Miss. p 151 177/177 BAREFIELD, Alfred 49 m Farmer N.C. Matilda 45 f N.C. 22 Matilda C. 2 f Miss. 1860 Kemper Co. Miss. p 33 15th July Alfred 225/225 BAREFIELD, ALFRED 60 wm Farm. N.C. Matilda Matilda C. 55 13 wf wf N.C. Miss. m Alfred 10 wm Miss. 1870 Van Zandt Co. Tx. -1- p 180 BARFIELD, Henry 71 m Farmer N.C. Chas. 30 m Fm.Hand Ala. John 28 m it Is Miss. Henry 26 m toof Miss. Catherine 24 f KH Miss. Sarah 22 f of Miss. Alfred 20 m Fm.Hand Miss. p 181 BARFIELD, Thos.'C. 38 m Fm.Hand Ala. Cossander 28 f KH Miss. William 3 m Tx. V/ Clarine 2 f Tx. 1880 Van Zandt Co. Tx. PCT. No. 2 p 36 146/147 B(lanken)ship, D 33 m Farmer Tn. (smudged) Casander 37 f Wife KH Miss. BARFIELD, Wm. 13 m Son Tx- Work, Farm Clarine 11 f Dau. Tx. n� Burrell 8 m Son Tx. .� �m Thos. 5 m Son Tx. V� n Davie County Public Li braxy ° l�ocltsville NC a 0 26 Mar. 1984 JJB 1880 Van Zandt Co. Tx. Pct. No. 2 9 Jun. P 36 145/146 BARFIELD, A.M. 34 wm Farmer Miss. Sarah A. 27 wf KH Tx. Adah 5 wf dau. Tx. Carlos 3 wm son Tx. Laura 5/12 Jan wf dau Tx. Baxter, Wm. E. 19 wm Nephew Tx. 148/149 BARFIELD, H.M. 81 wm Farmer N.C. Louis son 45 wm Ala. ✓John F. son 42 wm Miss. Catharine dau37 wf KH Miss. P37 150/151 BARFIELD, H.M. 38 wm Farmer Miss. 4 Eliza A. 30 wf KH Ala. Cossy, Ellen 9 wf Tx. .1 Vim. H. 5 wm Tx. Gipson, Mural 28 wm Wk. Fm. Tx. CRAIG, Sarah 37 wf - - Miss. SMITH COUNTY TEXAS MARRIAGES 1846-1899 1. T.C. Barfield & C.D. Thompson (son of Henry Barfield, Sr. - info. agrees on census with that of Barfield -Freeman data) 2. J. T. Gibson & E.M. Craig (wonder whether this is Matilda, dau. of John & Mary Craig). 3. John H. Gore & L.A. Craig (Louisa Ann, dau. of John & Mary). 4. Wm. H. Craig & Amanda J. Smith (probably son of John &Mary). 5. J.W. Lawrence & Mrs. A.J. Craig (widow of Wm. H. Craig?). -2- (niece) (COey) (Nephew) " - - (Gibson) 7 Dec. 1865 B-428 16 Nov. 1860 B-179 16 Nov. 1866 B-427 4 Nov. 1858 B-86 12 Dec. 1897 13-360 Davie County Public Library Mooksville, NC a 26 Mar. 1984 JJB BARFIELD MISC. 1. THEOPHILIS WILLIAMS and CHARITY (CHELLY) BARFIELD 1800 DUP 403 Theophilis Williams 1810 DUP 688 of it 1820 SAM 292 of to 1820 IRE 235 is" 1830 DUP 154 Cheley.Williams 1840 CAM 021 Charity Williams —3- 2. THE ALABAMA GENEALOGICAL REGISTER Vol. 1 No. 1 p 203: 6 Jan. 1825 - estate of Henry Wolf held notes on the following persons: Alfred Barfield Lewis Barfield Vol. 7, 1-4 p 141: 1820 Census Marengo Co. JohnCRAIG Males: Fem. 1-20 & over 2 under 20 1-20 and over 4 under 20 3. THE VIRGINIA MAGAZINE OF HISTORY AND BIOGRAPHY Vol. 29 - article: "Virginia Quit Rent Rolls 1704 Nansemond Co." p 404 Richard Barefield 900 405 Tho. Barefield 100 406 John Barefield 300 Vol. 16, p 91: Gen. Thomas Wynns lived near Winston at the ferry called BARFIELD: Wynns was a member of house of commons in 1787. (N,C.) Vo. 27, p 302: George Gylson of London, Esquire: Will 26 June 1616, Prv, 26 Mar. 1617 "neice Barfields son L100" Davie County Public Library Mocksville, NC C7 16 Apr. 1984 JJB -1- 1. 1860 CHEROKEE CO. TX. BEAT NO. 4, Rusk P.O. 10th Jul. p 460 - 645/645: ✓` BAREFIELD, H.M. 61 m Farmer NC Lewis 24 m ALA Fletcher 22 m MISS Catherine 20 f KH " Henry 18 m Farm. " Sarah J. 16 f " Alfred 13 m it Fam. 812/812: / HARDY, R.G. 30 m Carpent. GA Mary 7 2 f ALA J.H. 5 m TX Ella E. 3 f TX Martha J. 2 f TX 2. CEMETERIES - NORTHWEST CHEROKEE CO. TX. Comp. Mrs. M.J. Crawford, Jacksonville, Tx. p 5 Pleasant Hill Cemetery 1856-1951: BARFIELD, Elizabeth ` BARFIELD , N.A. v (son of H.M. and Elizabeth) BARFIELD, Almetta 6-201807 (sic) 8-4-1856 7-28-1849 7-7-1856 9-4-1878 7-1-1882 3. ANSEARCHING NEWS - Vols. 1-Vl Sec. Ed. 1954-1959 Tenn. Gen. Soc. p 127 - 54-1 (1954) BARFIELD, GAINES: Need pts. of Frances Pendleton Gaines b. Dec. 1798 m. 19 Jung, 1817 Bedford Co. Tenn. James Barfield. Miss Kitty L. Barfield & Mrs. Walter Gholson 773 Roland St. Memphis, Tn. 4. MARRIAGE RECORDS OF CHEROKEE CO., TX. 1846-1880 Comp. Ogreta W. Huttash 1973 ; Richard G. HARDY md. Mary M. BEARFIELD 5-11-1854 C-5. MISC . 1. 1860 CHEROKEE CO. TX. Beat No. 2 Rusk P.O. 18th Jun. 225/225: GIBSON, Joseph T. 33 m Farmer MISS. Martha 16 f KH MO. (could this be the J.T. Gibson who md. E.M. Craig 16 Nov. 1860 Smith Co. Tx.? "E.M." may be Matilda, dau. of John & Mary Craig - JJB). Davie County Public Library Mocksville, NO 16 Apr. 1984 JJB -2- ibid: Beat No. 4 - 10th Jul. Rusk P.O. 691/691 CLICK, Henry 62 m Farmer TN E • 61 f KH SC 700/700 CLICK, Harrison 27 m Farmer ALA 737/737 BAREFIELD, (L.H.?) 29 m Farmer ALA M.A. 24 f KH MISS R.C. 5 m TX John? 1 m TX 798/798 BAREFIELD, Thos. 30 m Overseer ALA William 4 m ALA (H/H of Nancy 'Curt'?) 1800 CENSUS DUPLIN CO. NC p 647: BARFIELD, Lewis 4 males (-) 10 1. James 2. Jesse 3. Henry 4. ? - could have come between James and Jesse - JJB 1 male 26/45 - Lewis 1 fem. 10/16 (dau. of Penelope & Stephen?) 1 fem. 26/45 Catherine McC Barfield 1 fem. 45+ Catharine Taylor? 11 slaves 1810 CENSUS DUPLIN CO. NC p 655: BARFIELD, LEWIS 2 males (-)10 1. Thomas (5) 2. Alfred (9) 2 males 10/16 3. Henry (12) 4. Jesse (15) 1 male 16/26 5. James (18) 1 male 26/45 6. Lewis (43) 2 fem. (-)10 1. Sarah ( 2 ) 2. Mary (7) 1 fem. 26/45 3. Catherine (35) / 3 slaves p 651: RHODES, Taylor 1 m 16/26 1 f(-) 10 1 slave 1 f 10/16 p 651: RHODES, William 1 m 16/26 no fem. 1 slave p 692: RHODES, John F. 4 m (-) 10 1 f 26/45 1 m 10/16 1 m 26/45 2 slaves Davie County public Library MOGAWle, NC 23 Apr, 1984 CO. TX. Pct. 2 J of the above census records -JJB) JJB P 37 - 147/148 1. 1870 CENSUS VAN ZANDT CO. TX. - Canton P.O. p182-3? 01 NC SC (widow 1 year) J.H. wm 25 HARDY, Richard 40 mw Farmer GA Mary 36 fw ALA Houston 15 mw FmHand TX. Ellie 13 fw to Martha 11 fw it Frank 9 mw " Margaret 7 fw to Henry 5 mw of Bell 3 fw of Chas. 2 mw to -1 - (Mary Barfield Hardy, dau. of Henry M. Sr., and Elizabeth McLeod -JJB) 2. 1880 CENSUS VAN ZANDT CO. TX. Pct. 2 J of the above census records -JJB) P 37 - 147/148 (Alice Draper, dau. of E.B. Turner, m. (2) HARDY, M.M. wf 46 Farmer ALA NC SC (widow 1 year) J.H. wm 25 s itTX GA ALA M.J. wf 21 d C. L. Barfield with wife Alice, and a Carric'as a " / N.F. wm 19 s " ✓ M.C. wf 17 d as Carrie Bird Draper. When told that her name was Carrie Bird, " W.H . wm 16 s a. " S.B. wf 13 d " C.C. wm 11 s there was no record of such a marriage. � " T.R. wm 9 s Davie County Public library 0 3. VAN ZANDT COUNTY TEXAS MARRIAGE RECORDS 1855-1884 - Thomas oS L ! p 28 �Bk. 2: W. L. Fitzgerald - Ella E. Hardy 9 July 1873 t.1 QU o' p 45 ,//Bk . 3: J. H. Hardy - Della J. Bennett 30 Nov- 1880 f ppf-i� p 43 Bk . 3 : E . V . Eckols -Kate H . Hardy 21 Dec . 1882 M orJ- ( Barfield Freeman papers named Kate as a dau. of Mar Barfield Hardy but she is not shown on either J of the above census records -JJB) P 42•/Bk. 3: J. D. Draper - S. A. Turner 6 Oct. 1880 (Alice Draper, dau. of E.B. Turner, m. (2) Charles Lewis Barfield in 1887 - JJB) p 60 BK. 3: J. R. Turner - Mattie Hardy 19 Nov. 1880 'v '= # Papers I sent to you on 6 Apr. and dated 2 Apr. showed "Bird, C. L. Barfield with wife Alice, and a Carric'as a daughter who was born in 1886. I feel this was the daughter of Alice Turner Draper and that Carrie should have been shown as Carrie Bird Draper. When told that her name was Carrie Bird, the enumerator probably thought that Bird was her last name. JJB a. C4` PS - I also checked for a Draper -Bird marriage in the event Alice had been married twice before marrying Barfield but g N there was no record of such a marriage. � D Davie County Public library 0 Mocksville, NC , 23 Apr. 1984 ' JJB -2- 2-1. 1.1900 TEXAS SOUNDER Van Zandt Co. Pct. 3 - Code B-426: BLANKENSHIP, Benj. T. w Jul. 1848 51 Tn. Cassie D. w Jul. 1842 57 Miss. Frank s Nov. 1880 19 Tx. Earnest s Dec. 1882 17 Tx. (Cassie D. - widow of Thomas C. Barfield - JJB) Smith Co. Pct. 3: LARRENCE, James w Nov. 1831 68 Ga. Gennia w Dec. 1842 57 Ala. (Amanda J. Craig, wid. of William H. Craig, md. J.W. Lawrence 12 Dec. 1897 Smith Co. Tx. JJB) 2. 1870 KEMPER CO. MISS. - DeKalb P.O. 8 Aug. p 284 - 830/830: BAREFIELD, Lewis 35 mw Keep. ? Ala. Sarah 31 fw KH Miss. Jennie 11 fw " Charles 5 mw " (Glabson? 3 mw) " (James? 3 mw) Triplets? " (Sallie 3 fw) " (Lewis'es age and place of birth correspond to Lewis, son of Jesse Barfield (Elizabeth Brown) and G -son of Lewis and Catharine McC Barfield. 1850 census Winston Co. Misse gives approximate date of birth as 1835 in Ala. - JJB). Davie County Public Library OCkSvifle, NC O � 1 01 a _r Please return to: Mrs. Jimmie Jean Bowman 9.15 Primrose Shreveport, La. 71118 Ax G .�- Names of paren s of e s ar fielQd. ne source identified them. as Richard and Mary Barfield. mgkryA A,✓d S/YaAC 6 Eyr.-•�Z7u i, i� ,�— 2. Mai en name of Elizabeth, second wife of James McCulloh. 7 T c2,0C9�1- o�,� , 1. 3- Parent of James McCulloh. Vie County Public UONI 4. 1820 Census: Where were Lewis and Catherine McCulloh Barfield? �5. What is nam an?address. of Barfield cousin who has McCullohs -I-W and wants to see what you have? I would love to correspond 7f t7d� with her/him on McCullohs. - r ---� - L 6W--O—� Alf f 10 r'eb. lytSy mlela-lab Z /A) CZ 1870 HENDERS ON CO TX Pct, 4 14 Aug. (no P.O.) . . P 309 c Notes:7:1b #242-242: COLVIN, ELIZ. J. 46 fw kh 80.00 290.00 AL (Craig Adair) ELIZABETH 13 fw TX EUD ORA 7 fw TX ("Dore") ADAIR,bJOHN C. 24 mw fm lab MS THEODOCIA E. 14 fw TX (Elizabeth) MARY S. 18 fw TX CRAIG,, SARAH C, 30 fw AL (dau John & Caths) a• GIBSON, BURRELL 8 mw TX son Matilda 1880 HENDERS ON C 0 . TX Pct- 4l p 11 #101-104 COLVIN, ELIZAH wf 55 farm. AL SC NC Jane Craig EUDORA wf 17 dau. TX AL AL "Dore" 1910 HENDERS ON C 0 . TX Pct 5 0 5A , 21 Apr. Micro roll 1563 #81-82 ADAIR , PRICE E., head mw 19 and. 1 TX TX AR son of John Ce SUSIE Be wife fw 17 1/1liv. TX TX TX DANIEL bro mw 4 TX TX AR 1910 HENDERS ON C 0 . TX Pct 4 p 9B #190-190 ADAIR , b7I RTLE D. boarding fw 14 TX TX TX dau. of John C. (enum in h/h Elzie Be Powell) 1910{ NDERS ON C O . TX Pct. 4 biay 2 & 31 #227-227 ADAIR , BURL mw 14 TX TX TXj�. Laborer sons of John C, LUTHER mw 12 TX TX TX (enum in h/h John R. Broyles - no relationship shown). CEMETERY RECORDS OF HENDERSON AND SURROUNDING TEXAS COUNTIES - Vol. 1 Comp, Ruth Riley Peavy Old Rock Hill Cemetery -Henderson: P- 77 Louell Gore, dau. of J.H. and. L.A. Gore b. Dec. 31, 1878 (John & Louisa -j jb) d. Sep. 10, 18?9 .E. a flat concrete cover over graves '° p. 76 Daughter (no name) of J.H. and H.A. Gore - no dates 1- q a. This tends to prove the Marriage of Matilda (E .M.) Craig to v J.T. Gibson and that E.M. was the daughter of John Craig, Jr. and Mary Barfield (dau. of Lewis Barfield and Catherine McCulloh) . I b. John C. Adair 1870 is apparently the same John C. of 1900 census kA Henderson, with wife Mary E. as On my family sheets her name was incorrectly shown as Mary Jane. I've corrected my sheets numbered 1:25, 1:251, 1:252 and 1:2522. 1�3v V Dave � 1.. "r G � Mocksville, NO a .i Y FAMILY GROUP NO. y ; This Information Obtained Fro /T S t CO. ZY j �Z r /AVI1 Husband's Full Name 47' Day Month Year City, Town or Place County or Province, etc. State or Country Add. Info. on Husband 7 'If married more than once No. each mar. (1) (2) etc. and list in "Add. info, on children" column. Use reverse side for additional children, other notes, references or information. Ulmer wives, it any. No. tt) t etc. Her Father Make separate sheet for eac mar. Sex His Father Mother's Malden Name Month Year City, Town or Place County or Province, etc. tate or Country Add. info. on Children �yJ 1 4 Wife's Full Maiden Name Birth Z wit's Day Monlh Year Clty, Town or Place Du6 County or Province, etc. State or Count Add. Info. on Wife Country fi= r oma. Birth Full Name of Spouse' Chr'nd Death Burial Death 2 Burial Birth Compiler Places of Residence ,f Mar. ,003 Address Occupation If other Church Affiliation City, State Otheryythan �httousewife aheif etmfor +J Burial separate eichimnretc. 'If married more than once No. each mar. (1) (2) etc. and list in "Add. info, on children" column. Use reverse side for additional children, other notes, references or information. Date Her Father Mother's Malden Name Sex Cnitdren'a Name in Full (Arrange En order of birth) Children's Day Data Month Year City, Town or Place County or Province, etc. tate or Country Add. info. on Children �yJ 1 4 Birth Z ZZ Mar. Full Name of Spouse' Death Burial 2 Birth 0 Mar. Full Name of Spouse* Death " +J Burial 3 Birth Mar. [, Full Name of Spouse* Death — Burial v z gvggp 7;:V 4 Birth Mar. Full Name of Spouse' Death Burial 5 Birth Mar. Full Name of Spouse' Death Burial 6 Birth Mar. Full Name of Spouse' Death Burial % Birth Mar. Full Name of Spouse- Death Burial 8 Birth Mar. Full Name of Spouse* Death Burial 9 Birth Mar. Full Name of Spouse* Death wvs Burials 10 Birth Mar. Full Name of Spouse' Death Burial 'If married more than once No. each mar. (1) (2) etc. and list in "Add. info, on children" column. Use reverse side for additional children, other notes, references or information. i �d.9X�/G�ca _ c,Z.9is cids�J -- S/1`_-,?� L/I --/tl_/G�YEs. Com/�/` ,�tc� _E• 'M/✓iidE �1�1_S9 _fH,�. Fi9�r.-__S -Sc_Sc.- --- -----.--- ygy G/i-SZ Gd /9L se Ne. yZ9 _s --- ----� I /C� . ................. . .............................. ................................ .. . .............. ...................................... . ............................................................ Dr -z. TO S We JOHNSTON SHERIFF. 1u99 '—"'99 I ckv s htF 7 ewwd C27 'Ooo Davie County Public Libraq-,. Mocksville, NG 0 1. 9415 Primrose Shreveport, La. 71118 March 219 1984 Dear Alice, Here is some more information on the Barfields. Some I couldn't tie in but it may fit later on as we get deeper into it. I assume Pauline Craig who married Charles E. Hughes is the one ` who compiled the Barfield History. I have been trying to document what she wrote - some of the dates seem to be a little off but that is to be expected. I can't reconcile her information that Jesse's father was the immigrant. She stated that the immigrant's son Richard went to Georgia and was 'blotted out', so to speak, by the rest of the family due to his support of Toryism. This means that Jesse would have had a brother named Richard. Richard was not named as a son in the older Richard's will but he may have been disinherited due to the above. There was a Richard Barfield, 1754- 1812, who was a private from Ga• in the Rev. War but but.these dates seem too late to be Jesse's brother. I checked a little in the Georgia books but didn't come up with anything. Will try again another times A search of several immigration and passenger-.- bookd didn't have any Barfields who were familiar. There were 2 men in the 1600s but no Richard .... $izaxx tzx1-wdxx(sorry - I already put that in the above paragraph.) Trying to type. this from old notes. You mentioned a CLICK family name that I had not heard before. You will notice that Thomas C. Barfield and 2 Click families were in Sevier Co., Ark. at the same time. I haven't had any luck in finding our John Craig yet in Ark. - there were none listed in Sevier or Hempstead Co. How does the Click family fit in? Re. dnclosed information on Sampson Co. Wills: George and Blake Barfield were names of sons of Frederick Barfield, according to information in Rutherford County (Ten.) Cemetery Records, but I wonder whether they could be his grandsons because of the dates? I wish we had a chance to get together and compare notes, fill in some of the blanks and determine just which area needs the most research. I go off onto related lines at times because they will often give a clue to what we are looking for. It is easier to write it all down then than try to relocate it later on. After you publish, maybe we could sell our EXCESS, ha:iii There are so many questions that come to my mind when I read the memoirs, histories and other information that has been collected but it is hard to put them all down. What I started doing as a novice,as I had absolutely no knowledge as to how to go about all this genealogy business, was to make a sheet on each single name. I put down everything I located on that person and later rewrote it in chronologic order. Each source of information was given a number, a master list made and the corresponding number was put alongside each bit of information on that person. It saved me from hav ing to write the source each time. February 28, 1984 Dear Alice, Here is some information that I located at the library yesterday. You already have Henry and Lewides info but found Jessie, son of Lewis. The information on James Barfield (Rebecca) that I sent last time from Alabama Records would apps$ appear to be the eldest son of Lewis, don't you think? Lewis was administrator, and also a buyer at the estate sale. I think his daughter (Lewis) married Thornton Vaught 4 Nov. 1826 in Marengo Co., Ala. The dates fit in with other marriages of that time and place. I will look for the Vaughts in the 1850 Miss. census as it may be the whole family moved there. The Barfields moved to Texas after the 1850 census was taken. I've found some marriages of Barfield and Craig but have not bean able to tie them in, with the exception of Henry's daughter S.J. (Sarah Jane) who married H.H. Holcomb 1 Mazy May 1877 in Van Zandt Co., Tx. Plan to look at 1860 Microfilm in Smith Co. Tex. in the Bullard area the next time I go to the library which will probably be next Monday. I'm enclosing some of the &apf-le±d information from the Parish Register of Christ Church, Middlesex Co., Va. There is a great deal more on Rar€igilds but I tried to concentrate on the William with a possible three marriages- 1. Jochabed, 2. Constance, 3. Elizabeth. Naturally, the dates we would most want to verify are the ones that are messed up in the records. Looks like one of the rectors was trying to catch up posting them and did not include the year performed. If you are able to verify any of them being Jincy's ancestors, I will look again and try to pick out her line. Just am not sure about William and Elizabeth being her grandparents. If the dates for the marriage and children of Constance Vause are correct, then Josiah possibly would have been born early 1700s. Jincy was born 1794 so there are quite a few years to cover. No reply yet from Agner. She and associates may have been just trying to find out hovf(nuch you know. Time to get ready for a permanent. Have an invitation to an out- of-town Saturday wedding and want to look xxama "pert" as possible. If there is anything that you specifically would like me to con- centrate on, let me know. Love, Public library Davie County Mocksville, NO -2- After 2- After reading the Barfield History, I thought that perhaps the Lewis Barfield that I found in Duplin in 1800, 1810 and 1820 wu our Lewis but the number of males and females and age groups just don't go with the record furnished you. The fact that he was shown as Lewis, Jr. dich't necessarily mean that he was the son of Lewis, either, as he could have been named for an uncle and the Jr. put after his name to distinguish between them as was the custom there. The 1830 Alabama census is the first definite place that I have been able to place Lewis and his family. I wish you could get into the homes that you want to. Some people jealously guard what they have and will not share it with anyone, even though they have no idea of ever publishing. Ingrained selfish- ness, I suppose. Sadie McC gave Charles G.'s letter to Mother and that is the reason we have it. It was thoughtful of her to do that. Mother had to move so many times that we are lucky to still have it. I think the Morgans in Texas may have more than they acknowledge as their mother was from the first marriage. We have always had a very good relationship with them and never thought of them as any- thing but full relatives. I think that it just didn't mean as much to them as things were stored in the attic and silverfish, etc. got into the old pictures. Yuu can tell that a little from the photo they sent you of their grandmother, Mary Jo. Dunaway. I don't know whether Aunt Vic got anythitg of her folks. Pauline, her daughter, didn't have any children. Charlie's son is the one who will not answer any of my letters. That is his only child. Mac's daughter Betty is the only one who gave me any information on that side of our family. Dock McC and Mother seemed to get along fine. He planned to visit her but became ill and was never able to make the trip. One time he sent her $10.00 - guess out of friendship, I suppose - and she bought a locket with it. I have it now. Mother mentioned that there had been hard feelings between some of the family and that is why some of them spelled their names differently. She didn't know any of the details but she must have -heard it from either her father or from James' family when she went there to visit. I`m so glad that you were able to get Alfred's bed back. You wrote once that h you hoped to. Gene has some things from his father's side of the family and we have discussed what to do with them when we are no longer around. There is no one in his line of Bowman cousins that he feels deserves them and he has decided to donate them on a permanent loan to a museum. These are from Rosedown Plantation in St. Francisville, La. I have a square table that had belonged to Daddy. He had given it to a cousin and the cousin later gave it to& Jane, my oldest sister. I imagine that anything on Daddy's side went., to his brother and sister's families. One cousin on that side has been good to loan pictures for us to have copied* v w Our library has grown in the last few years. When I first started oma- ��"��'�GOGj' going was in the basement and they didn't have the books that they have now. The Ark -La -Tex Gen. Soc. has really helped them, by buying microfilm and donating books. Also, the DAR in various states have been good to donate. There are some new books in now that are new in respect to being in the library but the publication 0 date is old. A Bessie Gray died and her daughters donated her genealogical collection to the library. Shreveport voters passed a bond/tax issue that gives extra money to the library so they have been buyilig some books for the genealogy sect'on. We do hm a good collection on the southern states, ex eciaRy, anmicro 1 m. -3- ` I'm not sure what the library has on Delaware but if you will send • me what you need, I will check it out. There are sectio on the northeast states but the collection is not as extensive as on the southern ones - This is the third day Gene has taken his Dad to the dentists His face was terribly swollen, suddenly, and he d to see the the first day, dentist. He was given capsules for theinfection pulled today, He doesn't x-ray yesterday and was to have the P have many and they all need to be ppll. ed. In the .past he would pack a sore tooth with soda until it quit hurting ung but u the s )da wouldn't work this time .Z� unt in Tulsa who has the retarded son wants to talwit Gene so we may try to go up a way The a there before too longs I dread it as the other aunt will want to come back with us and there is no way we can do it just now. SHe has called several times past in the week - she really doesn't want to come here u lesssteccan o to her daughter's and knows that she can'thave uher on,uher place• accept the fact that the daughter will no We have had the house torn up for several days trying to get some painting and repairing done • Our cat started vomiting yesterday and has been g doin inside. tloff and on since and we think it may be the paint that is causing it. I have her outside now air for fresh air but she is also al ergic n pine g pollen ndds ofnd eflea is full of it. She became alergic wbhento changed argaY kind since then. collars one year and has not been a I painted woodwork in the living room ywentrdwas used a steelwool I sore last night. pad on the floors and paste waxed as I I need to finish up today so we can get the drapes rehung and also the pictures. Next project is the spare bedroom. Well, I must let you get some resttrying needs clarification. to decipher this mess. Let me know if any of the enclose Love, aw CZ�Ory Li Mar . i5oo4 ., JJb -�.. 1• NORTH CAROLINA HISTORICAL AND GENEALOGICAL REGISTER - VOL. 1 NO. 1 JRB Hathaway Baltimore, GPC 1970 p 58: Nov. 14, 1694 James LOADMAN Jane BAREFIELD, Richard BAREFIELD, land in Sumerton, William Butler, Sarah Beasley, Timothy Clare, Elizabeth Phelps, William Bogue. 2, ABSTRACTS OF NORTH CAROLINA WILLS J. Bryan Grimes GPC 1975 p 219 LODMAN, James Apr. 89 1695 (sic) Legatees: Wm. BARFIELD Sarah Basly Timothy Clear Elizabeth Phelps James Kenedy William Booge (Exec.) p 218 LOADMAN, James Albemarle Co. Nov. 14, 1694 - April Court 1695 Jane BARFIELD, Richard Barfield (plus same persons listed in No. 1 above) Exec. William Bogue 3, SOUTH CAROLINA LINEAGE CHARTS - VOL.._2 Chart No. 1: Frederick BARFIELD md. Stepahnie Cade dau. Patience BARFIELD md. Lemuel Robert Sugg son Joshua P. Sugg b. 1$39 Greene Co. N.C. Patience Barfield: 1809-1880 Lemuel Robert Sugg: 1816-1865 (p) Chart compiled bys James M. Creech (Nov. 1977) Rte. 3 Box 358 Snow Hill, N.C. :,2.8580 �,a A t N\pc 0 �oeks 21 Mar. 1984 -2- JJB BRYAN -(Susan Barfield) 1850 Census - Marengo Co., Ala. p 87 --- /298 Crudup, John D. 31 m Far N.C. Elizabeth 19 f N.C. Bryan ,. Susan 60 f N . C . George 18 m Ala. P007 86/86 BRYAN, F.B. 33 m Far Tenn. Holland A. 22 f N.C. Mary E. 4 f Ala. Ann P. 3 f Ala. Nancy L. 2 f Ala. (not named) 6/12 - Ala P 72 1076/1076 BRYAN, Nathan 38 m Far Tenn, Mary A.E. 27 f Ga. Nathan W. 5/12 m Ala. Hamilton, Needham 20 m Tn. (wonder whether Needham Hamilton is the son of Mary W. Bryan and Hamilton? jjb) HUGH E S - (Pauline Craig) 1850 Census - Lauderdale Co., Miss. Southern District P 327 36/37 HUGHS, Charles 29 m Far S.C. Pauline 21 f Alas Mary J. 2 f Miss. Martha 5/12 f Miss. Partin, P. H.? 32 Clk. S.C. 1870 Census - Lauderdale Co., Miss. Twp. 8--P.O. Union Station 6 Jun. 1870 P 132 26/26 HUGHES, Charles E. 48 mw Far S.C. Pauline 42 fw KH Ala, Martha 18 fw Miss. William 17 mw Miss. John 15 mw Miss. Sarah 12 fw Miss. Elizabeth 7 fw Miss. Florence 3 fw Miss. Charles 2/12 mw Miss. ;21 Mar. 1984 3 jjb -2 - BARFIELD MISC. 1870 Miss. Census - Lauderdale Co. TWP 6 Beat 5 p 62 656/656 Barefield, Elias 50 Far N.C. Mary 41 Ga. Susan 18 Miss. (several other children, can get if this proved to be our Barfields) p 66 Barefield, Nancy 82 fw N.C. (H/H of Elizabeth Ross 45 N.C.) CHOWAN PRECINCT NORTH CAROLINA 1696 to 1723 Genealogical Abstracts of Deed Books Margaret M. Hofmann Weldon, N.C., Roanoke News Co. 1972 #681 Lazarus Thomas to John BAREFIELD for love, good will and affection I bare towards my friend ..... 100 a:on s/s Chowan River 19 Apr. 1715 #1649 19 Jan. 171+ - Ye order against ye goods and chattells of John BAREFIELD be continued pursuant to the petition of Thomas Johnakin. (other dates in 1719 refer to others whose lands adjoined that of John Barefield and John Bairfield), jjb ibid Richard Barefield - Richard Bearefield Various dates from 19 June 1715 to 22 Jul. 1721. 31 Mar. 1718 James Boon to Richard BAREFIELD 250 a on Chowan Riv. 16 Apr. 1719 ..Merritt to Richard BAREFIELD of VA. 280 a on s/s Chowan River. Various other references to land adjoining Richard Barefield, or as a witness to deeds. jjb Davie County Public Library Mocksville, NC 'T/>E OXDE,e of T//C lc':I,?sr O'HARE, MARY ANN MCCORMACK (MRS. WILLIAM E.) �l= Membership #357. b. Jackson,MS. m. 5 Sep 1958, William Edwin O'Hare. Member: Order of First Families of Mississippi. Address: 1306 College St., Cleveland,MS 38732. Descended from: 1 James Harmon who resided in Claiborne Co.MS from 1774-1819. cd 2 Hezekiah Harmon Mercy Leonard Suffield,CT 22 Jun 1763 Claiborne Co. Connecticut 14 Feb 1767 Clai.Co. 6 Mar 1818 1787 Clai.Co. 14 Apr 1795 3 Rebecca Harmon Nathan White Clai.Co. 22 Oct 1790 Clai.Co. Georgia 26 Aug 1791 Yazoo Co.MS 15 Jan 1857 18 Jan 1814 Yazoo Co. 30 May 1835 4 Mercy Louisia L. White Thomas Castillo Barfield Clai.Co. 13 Apr 1819 Yazoo Co. Rowan Co.NC 30 Apr 1805 Yazoo Co. 16 Feb 1881 1 Oct 1835 Yazoo Co. 17 Jun 1890 5 Rebecca white Barfield Robert James McCormack Hempstead Co.AR 25 Aug Holmes Co.MS Yazoo Co. 18 Dec 1837 1838 Yazoo Co. 24 Sep 1925 23 Feb 1865 Yazoo Co. 14 Oct 1878 6 Robert Fountain McCormack Martha Ann Shurley Yazoo Co. 27 Aug 1867 Yazoo Co. Yazoo Co. 10 Jun 1868 Eden,MS 19 Sep 1908 22 Feb 1893 Jackson,MS 6 Apr 1956 7 Hugh Erastus McCormack Thelma Elizabeth Graham Yazoo Co. 1 Feb 1895 Holly Ridge, Williamson Co.TN 22 Oct LA 1897 Carthage,MS 15 Apr 21 Dec 1916 Greenwood,MS 22 Dec 1958 1973 1j'c9��y AiD04 /si.✓ ieJ61-11-A.cr ?A�4s/r, 4f9. No: 1-;4k CAO,17 lh! 5 e _ 4 IVER, ELOISE STEWART (MRS. JOHN R.) Membe ip #164. b. Natchez,MS. m. 24 Jun 1925, John Richar Oliver. mber: Order of First Families of Mississippi. ress: 606 State S eet, Natchez,MS 39120. Descended from: 1 James Bolls wh was born in Mississippi in 9. 2 Lucretia Bolls Abram Mayberry Jefferson Co. M5 18 Ma Jefferso o. Virginia 25 May 1790 1802 Fayette,MS 18 Jul 1849 1825 Fayette 9 Apr 1836 3 Martha Jane Mayb William Stewart Tennessee 27 1828 Fayette Somerset Co.NJ 14 May 1814 Fayet 8 Sep 1892 6 Mar 1849 Fa tte 1 Mar 1859 4 illiam Claude Stewart Ella Eu ' e Till Fayette 24 Feb 1856 Lee,MS Rankin Co. 26 Jun 1866 Natchez,MS 25 Oct 1928 17 Nov 1892 Natchez 8 Feb 1 7 248 Davie County Public Library Mocksvgle, NO 14 Mar, 1984 EJB To Alice Eidson ;1. ARKANSAS TAX LIST - 1830-1839 Bearfield, Thomas C. Sevier Co. AR 006 NTL Tx 1838 `' Click, Enoch Sevier Co. AR 008 NTL Tx 1838 Click, Henry to AR 002 NTL Tx 1838 Click, John P. Washington AR 009 NTL Tx 1836 2. 1860 MISS. CENSUS LAUDERDALE CO., BEAT NO. B p 116 805/783 Hughs, C.E. (sic) Pauline Mary J, Martha M. William J. John C. Sarah M. 39 m Farmer S.C. 34 f Ala. 13 f Miss. 10 f " 8 m is 5 m of 2 f of 3. 1860 SMITH CO., TX. CENSUS MT. VERNON BEAT p 63 283/288 Colvin, Jacob Jane Elizabeth Adair, John Wm. Mary 37 m Farmer Ala. 32 f Miss. 3 f Tx. 14 m Miss. 11 m Tx. 8 f Tx. (other Adairs in Smith Co. who are possibly related to Jane Barfield Adair Colvin's first husband). 4. 1840 ARK, SEVIER CO. SALINE TWP. Click, Henry Males: 1 - (-) 5 Females: 2 - (-) 5 1 - 10115 2 - 5/10 1 - 40/50 1 - 10115 1 - 15/20 1 - 3o/4o 5, CEMETERY RECORDS OF LAUDERDALE CO., MISS. VOL. 1 Cecilia Nabors Hobgood & Ann Jones - 1971 Gc.� y rn.J J ` p 94: Charles Edward Hughes 111, son of C.E., Jr. and Ruby b. Jan. 24, 1937; d. Mar 13, 1937 - Oak Grove Cem, Meridian, Miss. a Bpo ni to P-105: Pauline Maggard Hughes, wife of W.B. May 21, 1905 -Apr. 10, 1933 0 -� Davie County Public library Mo&sville, NC v �O 1 t4 V -2- p 2- b. RUTHERFORD CO., TN. DEED ABSTRACTS VOL. 1 1804 -1810 ----Wray i - z , p 92: D.B. "E" No. 486-- 4 86: Frederick Barfield to James Barfield 500 acres. Indenture June 179 1804.. For love and affection for his' `son James Barfield. - Beg. William Barfield's core, etc. Wit. William Barfield, James Dickson Registered July session 1807 Rutherford County Court. '. Note& Original Book G•lost or stolen - following -taken from undaiPd 1 T'IdP_XPm . p 120 s D..B._ "G";s.. Noy. 224-s Frederick &. Wm. Barfield to`,, Benj . D. Wills. No. 214-r: James Barfield to Wright. &. Freeman.. No. 227: James Barfield to William M. Hall. 7, ABSTRACTS OF SAMPSON CO. WILLS 1784-1895 - Bass 1958 P 17: Barfield, Granger G. D. June 3, 1861 P. Nov. 1861 Bross George, Blake Barfield Exec. Julius C. Eason Wit. J. C. Monk, G. R. Williams ibid' Barfield, George D. Dec. 8, 1862 P. Feb. 1863 Mothers Sarah Barfield Bros. Blake, John F. Barfield Nephewss Boswell Barfield Allen Be Grantham (son of Bowdoin Godwin)�z-� f' George Barfield Exec, J. C. Eason Wit. J. C. Monk, A. Thornton p 40.: Grantham, Needham D. Dec. 24, 18?3 P. May 59 18?9 Sons: Hiram, Barfield, Needham J. Grantham Exec. C. Monk Wit, John E. West, James Crusenbury BARFIELD MISCELLANEOUS MISSISSIPPI REVOLUTIONARY SOLDIERS - - Miss. Soc. DAR c. 1956 p 75= William Curtis, Jr. d. 1833 m 1 Mar. 1797 Mary Barfield, b. N.C. 1773 d. Miss. 1836 THE ORDER OF THE FIRST FAMILIES OF MISS. 1699-1817 Charles Owen Johnson - 1981public Ubrar�d pavi� Courts itle, N� PP 17 & 182: Irene Coody b. Warren Co., Miss. 1818 dock (dau. of Zephaniah Coody) d. 1863-4 Warren Co., Miss. m. Jesse Floyd Ba.refield, b. 3 Feb. 1816 N.C. d. 15 Aug. 1850 Warren Co., Miss. Xz,3NXX zXzXRXXXXXXX 9415 Primrose Shreveport, La. 71118 May it 1984 Dear Alice, Enclosed is a reply from Ann McCormack O'Hare that I think you will find interesting. She gave much more than I asked and also volunteered to answer specific questions. A copy of my reply to her is also enclosed. The family chart that I sent is the same that I cleared with you before sending it on to Agner= it only goes to James. I hope she will send the name of the Barfield cousin who said that she had the McCullohs so we can write to her/him. As far as our lirle of Lewis and Catherine is concerned, I had a dry run at the library Monday. I did find a lot of information on Stephen Barfield and second wife Nancy House and am enclosing it because of his connection to Penelope. I went through just about every 1840 census index in the library but could not find some of the Barfields and Vaughts. Just don't know what happened to them. I also read through microfilm of Marengo and Perry Counties in Ala. and Winston in Miss. but they did not surface. If you have any hints, send them along and I will check them out. Ann said that Mary Craig and her descendants were in Colorado in 1925. I don't see how this could be Mary who married John Craig a.adadha as the family sheet gives a birth year of 1803 for her. That would make her 122 years old! It could be children and/or grandchildren but I have no way of checking here. Library aof the not have 1900 soundex for entire U.S. Ann co information that the Barfield relative sent you - such as James getting a "stipend" from an aunt in England. Your Barfield info indicated that both Lewis and Catherine were buried in Winston Co. Miss. It could be that Catherine was since she died in 1852 and that Lewis then went to live with Thomas C. - in Yazoo Co., where he could have died 1854. So far, no cemetery records confirm either place. Gene's Aunt Sadie arrived last Wed. in good shape. We have been to see her once. Holding back a little to see what the children will do. The son came up, and the daughter has been by and brought her some junk food. Neither called us to let us know she was coming or that she had arrived. I think they know we realize just what kind of things they are so are keeping their distance, which is fine with us. We will see that Aunt Sadie has some good food and when she is able we will bring her to the house for a visit and a good meal. Hope you are fine. Davie County Publio Ubeary Mocksville, NO