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J Hampton Rich.pdfDavie County Public Library Mocksville, North Carolina J. Hampton Rich July 14, 1874 - December 1, 1949 J. Hampton Rich was born July 14, 1874, the son of Samuel Chase and Betty Caroline McMahan Rich of the Cana section of Davie County. Graduating from the Wake Forest College in 1898, he attended the Southern Baptist Seminary in Louisville. He then spent several years preaching and teaching before buying a printing press and operating the Piedmont Printing Company in Winston Salem, publishing a newspaper called “The Labor Leader”. In 1913 Hamp Rich founded the Boone Trail Highway and Memorial Association. He engaged a sculptor named Henley to design the Daniel Boone tablet which shows a likeness of Daniel Boone sitting on a boulder looking westward, with his dog, rifle and powder horn. From the Navy he obtained 400 pounds of metal from the USS Maine, which had been scuttled in 1912. A little bit of this metal was mixed into each tablet. However, the connection between Boone and the battleship was never explained. Rich dressed in a coonskin cap and carrying a long rifle, made personal appearances through- out North Carolina and all over the nation. He would deliver a spellbinding speech about Daniel Boone to any assembled audience, urging them to build a monument to the great pioneer. School children brought in money, civic clubs and patriotic societies donated funds, and hats were passed around. When enough money was raised, Rich would pull from the back of his old car shovels, bags of cement, and a large metal tablet. He would supervise local labor in construction of a large 8 foot arrowhead from rocks and concrete. The metal tablet designed by Henley, was riveted onto the side of the arrowhead, along with another tablet carrying the message. Hamp Rich marked Boone’s trail from North Carolina to Kentucky and back. Then he began working on a transcontinental Boone Trail from Virginia Beach to San Francisco. In 1925, he made a cross-county trip and claimed to have spoken to 50,000 school children. When asked about the Boone marker constructed at the Golden Gate, Rich reportedly explained: “Although Boone never actually got that far west, he dreamed a lot about the Pacific”. Davie County Public Library Mocksville, North Carolina About 1934 Rich headed the American Institute of Heraldry in North Carolina, offering to research and register arms as a "token of the achievement of blood." In the following decade in Chapel Hill he built inexpensive log cabins for students at the university, and in 1945 he served on the staff of the General Assembly. Rich married Ina Bagby and they had four children, Katherine Elizabeth, Edith Hulda, Charles Hampton, and Samuel Frederick Chase. He died on December 1, 1949 in Duke Hospital of a liver ailment and was buried at Eaton's Church in Davie County. J. Hampton Rich, who claimed to have placed more than 350 metal tablets throughout the country and to have addressed more than 50,000 schoolchildren on just one cross-country tour, was an enigma. Given to exaggerations, less than scholarly in his research, and not above a little chicanery, Rich was nevertheless a gentle and generous man who enjoyed the luxury of making his hobby his career. For more than two decades he stirred the interest of countless schoolchildren in what he called "pioneer lore," which formed the "mud-sill of our republic." Many of his markers may still be seen from the Atlantic to the Pacific and from Florida to Michigan and Massachusetts. In memorializing Daniel Boone, Hamp Rich probably exceeded the old pioneer in both travel and exploration. Sources: https://www.ancestrylibrary.com/mediaui- viewer/tree/31218530/person/12390284367/media/2ef63344 -94b9-4d3b-b13c-da39ddfd703c http://www.ncpedia.org/biography/rich-joseph-hampton Gordon Tomlinson, Salisbury Post