Edwin Alexander McCorkle, 1799-1853, & Jane Maxwell Thomas McCorkle, died 1855.
former CH.
THREE.
Edwin Alexander
McCorkle & wife
Jane Maxwell Thomas (McCorkle),
including her
Purviance
and
Thomas
AncestrY.
Children of Edwin Alexander McCorkle & wife
Jane Maxwell Thomas McCorkle:
Hiram R. A. McCorkle
Rebecca "Becky" McCorkle Zarecor (Mrs. John C. Zarecor)
David Purviance McCorkle
Anderson Jehiel McCorkle
Elizabeth McCorkle Reeves
Twins: Finis Alexander McCorkle and
Margaret LATINA McCorkle (Mrs. John T. Gregory)
In the photograph of Deana Glen & little brother Jimmy Glen, James Lionel "Jimmy" Glen (born 1947 - d. 1975) is down in left corner at about 6-ish.
Hiram R. A. McCorkle--the "Hiram" is for the mother Jane's brother, Dr. Hiram Jacob Thomas;
Rebecca McCorkle Zarecor --alias Mrs. John C. Zarecor;
Elizabeth McCorkle Reeves;--she moved to Gadsden near Humboldt in Gibson County, Tennessee;
Anderson Jehiel McCorkle (an "uncommon good man," his uncle RAH McC wrote to his aunt Elmira);
David Purviance McCorkle--he moved north just a bit to contiguous Obion County, Tennessee;
John Edwin McCorkle, 1839-1924--he remained in Dyer County;
the twins Margaret Latina McCorkle Gregory --Mrs. John T. Gregory-- &
Finis Alexander McCorkle.
Below: Uncle Hiram R. A. McCorkle's descendants, some grandchildren of "Nan" Nancy McDiarmid Norling, the oldest daughter of John McDiarmid, Ph.D.; son from Allie May McCorkle (Mrs. Errett Weir McDiarmid): The McCorkle descendant in this photo is Christine Norling, who was somehow deleted by me from the photograph. Shown is Christine's husband ANDREW SCOTT JONES with Christine and their children.
Above: Andrew & Christine Norling Jones and children, Christine being a daughter of Nan Norling, a descendant of Hiram R A McCorkle. I do not know what happened to the right half of this photograph, Nan's daughter Christine, but I made the error, for which I apologize.
"Nan" Nancy McDiarmid Norling is John McDiarmid's oldest child. Her brothers are John McDiarmid II and David McDiarmid. Nan's daughter Christine and her family were supposed to have been pictured above. Christine's husband Andrew works with CARE, and they have just returned to the D.C. area from Africa after an assignment where he has been in charge of the CARE operation in Rwanda. Prior to that, he was in Nairobi. Now, they are very glad to be back nearer family, and their families are glad to have them back home. Christine has her M.A. in museum studies and worked in that field prior to their move to Africa. She plays and teaches violin, and has taught English in the schools in Africa.
____________________________________________________________________________
Photo above: 1897, Union Grove School Photo, Union Grove School, Churchton Community, Dyer Co., Tenn.We begin with Edwin & Jane's first child, HRA (Hiram) McCorkle. Hiram must have been named after his mother's brother, Hiram Jacob Thomas, M.D., who moved on from Lebanon, Wilson County, Middle Tennessee, down to Mississippi, q.v. .
Some of
HIRAM R. A. McCorkle’s Descendants,
particularly through his eldest son Winfield
Purviance
McCorkle: For
HRA’s other children,
please see Arahwana Ridens’
book on the earliest families of
Generation
I. The immigrants to
Generation II. Robert McCorkle &
Margaret Morrison McCorkle.
Generation
Generation IV. Hiram R. A. McCorkle
& Margaret Cowan McCorkle.
Now
to McCorkle Generation V: Winfield Purviance McCorkle:]
Note: Just before
going to “press” (placing this on my web site) I found reference from Dyer
County researcher Sam Alsup to an 1850 census that
seems to list as Hiram & Margaret Cowan McCorkle’s 1st
child an O.F. McCorklle. Assuming the census taker was correct and
such a child was born to their union, evidently the child did not live, for
none of us has ever heard of it.
<HRA1: Winfield
Purviance McCorkle who m. Mary
“Mamie” King (McCorkle) of Eminence, Kentucky, where he
had moved to teach school; Mamie King McCorkle was a daughter of Gideon King &
Sophia Woodruff (King) of Eminence, Henry County, Kentucky.
Gideon King was a Cotton 1st cousin to the 2nd wife of
John Edwin McCorkle of Newbern: that is to say, Gideon King was a 1st
cousin to Mary Elizabeth Cotton (McCorkle) of Botland
near
For
example, John W. Crume married Elizabeth
Cotton (Crume), a daughter of Henry Cotton and Mary Harrell on
In 2003 we placed a new grave marker for
John Cotton[1] at
Winfield
Purviance Mccorkle, born
about 1851, was living in 1870 in District 9 of Dyer County, Tenn. He
moved to Eminence and in the 1910 census is shown as living in Eminence, Henry
County, Kentucky. The 1920 census lists him as still living in Eminence.
A granddaughter living
today, in 2006, of Graham King McCorkle (Winfield Purviance
McCorkle’s son and Uncle HRA McCorkle’s grandson) lives in the
Gideon King Excursus: Children
of Gideon & Sophia Woodruff King [parents of Mrs.
Winfield Purviance McCorkle]:
One.
Allie King Haymaker. Allie F.
King (Haymaker) was a sister of Winfield Purviance
McCorkle’s wife (the wife was née Mary P. King [McCorkle]). Allie F.
King became Mrs. Jesse Newton Haymaker,
later of
Gideon
King is listed in 1860 as being 42, his wife Sophia Woodruff King as 34.
The daughter of Gideon King named Allie
King, who m. Jesse Newton Haymaker, married a Christian
missionary and moved to
)))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))
Margaret Gooch, Ph.D., of
Allie May McCorkle [McDiarmid] b.
Her sister, Bertha McCorkle, was born
Florence Woodruff McCorkle b.
Graham
King McCorkle b.
Mary Foster
Haymaker b.
Herbert
Henley Haymaker, b.
“These are
from a page my father [Cowen Gooch]
wrote out and left with other genealogical info in Gideon King’s Bible.
“,,,[Please]
mention our mother
_______________________________________________________
Below are the children
of Winfield Purviance McCorkle & Mary King
McCorkle as listed on the 1900 census for Eminence, Henry
County, Kentucky, with my additions:
Allie May McCorkle (McDiarmid), born circa 1877, aged 23, music teacher; she
was to m. Errett Weir McDiarmid.
Allie Mae McCorkle was a college graduate. Was her college
The 2nd of the two
daughters of W.P. McCorkle & Mary King McCorkle was Allie May
McCorkle who married Errett Weir McDiarmid,
who taught at
The children of E.W. McDiarmid, Sr., and Allie May McCorkle are: [(1) Archie Campbell McDiarmid
was born and died in 1906.]
(2)
Margaret Gooch, Ph.D. in Literature and librarian at
Martha Ann Gooch (Hogrefe) who m.
Charles Hogrefe
(Robert Charles Hogrefe) -- each is
a 1962 graduate of
They have 3 children:
a daughter Sarah
Ellen Hogrefe, born 1974, who is a nurse in
a son James Errett Hogrefe who is a physicist-engineer who married a
female physicist from Rumania, Oana Hogrefe; to this union of Errett
& Oana Hogrefe was
born, on
Laura Christine Hogrefe, who in 2006 is getting a master’s degree
in music (voice) at the
Generation I. James? Matthew? Samuel? McCorkle; II. Alexander McCorkle; III. Robert McCorkle; IV. Edwin Alexander McCorkle; V. Hiram Robert A. "HRA" McCorkle; VI. Winfield Purviance McCorkle; VII. Allie May McCorkle McDiarmid; Florence McDiarmid Gooch; Martha Ann Gooch Hogrefe; Errett Hogrefe.
Added in Summer 2007: Corrigenda:
The following is from Errett Hogrefe, for which I am most grateful:
" minor additions and corrections to our branch of the
family (chapter 3). I (James Errett Hogrefe) was born in 1971. My wife is
Oana Tataru Hogrefe, and she is originally from Bucharest, Romania. We
have two children. Roy Peter Hogrefe (Roy) was born in September of
2004. Mary Anca Hogrefe (Mary) was born in August of 2006. We are both
educated as physicists (I have a Master's degree, my wife a Ph.D.), but we both
work as engineers (me as an electrical systems engineer, my wife as a software
engineer).
My middle sister (born Sarah Ellen Hogrefe, now Sarah Hogrefe Mabary) was
born in 1974. She is married to Jody Mabary, a general contractor
in Hattiesburg, MS. Sarah is a 2006 graduate of the University of Indiana with
a Master's degree in vocal performance.
My youngest sister (born Laura Christine Hogrefe, now
Laura Hogrefe Knight) was born in 1977. She is married to Jason Lee
Knight, Sr (Jason). They have two children together. Jason Lee Knight, Jr.
(Lee) was born in August
of 2001. Hannah Elizabeth Knight (Hannah) was born in May of 2003. Laura is a
registered nurse in Jackson, MS. Jason works as an EMT in Jackson, MS."
___________________________________________________________________________
James Cowen Gooch, attorney in
“Best Lawyers in
By 1st wife Julia Davidson
(Gooch), there were two children, viz.,
Anne
Davidson Gooch, daughter, born
a son James
Cowen Gooch II or Jr. (an attorney turned finance person, in
Nashville attorney James Cowen Gooch Sr.'s second wife is Jennie Smith.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - PURVIANCE: Elizabeth Purviance (Mrs. William Thomas) was the mother of Mrs. Edwin Alexander McCorkle.
Purviance (French: Purvaiance or de Purvaiance) Huguenots escaped up to Ireland after revocation of the toleration for Protestants that had been granted in the Edict of Nantes. Two or three years ago Ralph and I naively toured old cemeteries in La Rochelle, ancient center of Huguenot activity, but found no Purviance graves. We should have gone to the Mairie --to the town official's office to check birth and death records.
Generation II. Elizabeth Purviance m. William Thomas.
Generation III. Jane Maxwell Thomas m. Edwin Alexander McCorkle.
Generation IV. Hiram R. A. McCorkle m. 1st wife Margaret A. L. Cowan.
Generation V. Winfield
Purviance McCorkle m. “Mamie” Mary King of Eminence,
Generation
VI. Allie May McCorkle
McDiarmid.
Generation
VIII. Weir had three daughters, the first of whom is director of admissions at the
Yale University School of Forestry and Environmental Sciences: Emly McDiarmid,
Sage Hall,
VIII. Weir McDiarmid’s
2nd daughter: Anne McDiarmid (Brahmey), born
VIII.
Weir McDiarmid’s 3rd daughter: Mary McDiarmid was born
Third child of Cousin Allie
May McCorkle McDiarmid:
Aunt Katie Pearl McCorkle
(Fox)’s record in
Unbeknownst to us in 1970-71,
John McDiarmid was at that time director of the U.N.’s programme for
The
following is in Int’l Who’s Who
about our John McDiarmid: … … … … …[to be added
later] … … * * * * * * * * * * *
John McDiarmid,
Ph.D., was born
VIII.1st
Nancy McDiarmid Norling,
eldest, was born
IX.1. Christine McDiarmid Norling, born
X.
Children of Christine McDiarmid Norling
& Andrew Scott Jones are:
X.1. Nathaniel
Scott Jones, born
X.2.
Darice McDiarmid Jones,
born
X.3. Evan
Marshall Jones, born
IX.2. Jonathan Norling,
born
X.1. Beck Jeffries Norling,
born in
X2. Elsa Claire Norling, born in
Back
to children of John McDiarmid and Darice
Elmer McDiarmid:
VIII.2nd John McDiarmid, married but divorced Candy Cunniberti (1977)
-- This John is a son of John McDiarmid Sr., Ph.D.;
VIII.3rd
David Weir McDiarmid, born
Jeremy McDiarmid, born January of 1974
John Douglas McDiarmid, born April of 1977;
Andrew McDiarmid, born
-- How far many of Uncle Hiram’s descendants
have come from the frontier of
To
repeat, to remind us where we have been:
________________________________________________________________________From: "nan norling"
<norling@udel.edu>
To: "Martha Ann Hogrefe"
<mahogrefe@hotmail.com>
Darice Elmer McDiarmid:: born May 12, 1915, in Trenton,
NJ. Died in March, 1990
married John McDiarmid:
Christine McDiarmid
Norling, born August 7, 1967 in
West Chester, PA.
Jonathan McWhinnie
Norling, born February 12, 1969, in
West Chester, PA.
Nathaniel Scott Jones, born
September 9, 1996., in Atlanta GA.
Darice McDiarmid Jones,
born November 17, 1998, in Atlanta.
Evan Marshall Jones, born May 22,
2002, in Nairobi, Kenya.
Beck Jeffries Norling,
born in Portland OR on Sept. 6, 2001.
Elsa Claire Norling,
born in Portland OR on June 30, 2003.
A photograph should follow of some
grandchildren of Nan McDiarmid
Norling:
[This turned out to be my mother Joyce Cope Huie, and I can't fix the mistake.]
PLC Blackwell with his 90-year-old GreatGrandmother Joyce Cope Huie, 2006
The
above email came from Martha Ann Gooch Hogrefe
Sent: Sunday, April 09, 2006 6:19 PM
______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Many
thanks to Martha Ann Gooch Hogrefe of
Dear Cousins, I have been in
touch with Marsha Huie - a realtive of ours through
our King/McCorkle ancestors. Some of you may already be familiar with her
research. She has collected an impressive amount of family history dating
back …to the early 1800's. If you visit her site at
www.marshahuie.com, be sure to explore
the Old McCorkle Letters. … It is nice that someone in the family is
interested in our shared history and is making an effort to make our
family tree accessible to those who might like to know more about their roots.
Back to the children of Winfield Purviance McCorkle & wife Mary King McCorkle:
‘Bertie’ C. McCorkle, Bertha was born circa 1877, aged 21 at time of this
census.
[Bertha was another child of
Winfield Purviance McCorkle & wife Mary King
McCorkle] She contracted scarlet fever and became totally deaf, making
her life tragic. Her sister, Allie May McCorkle McDiarmid,
considered Bertha to be the pretty one.
Florence McCorkle, born circa 1884, aged 16
[Another child of Winfield Purviance McCorkle & wife Mary King McCorkle]
Graham King
McCorkle, born
[Another child of Winfield Purviance McCorkle & wife Mary King McCorkle.]
Winfield Purviance McCorkle begot one son, Graham King McCorkle who was
circa 1930 the president of Illinois Bell Telephone Co., Chicago—I know this
because my father’s maternal uncle, Errett Cotton
McCorkle, 1888-1976, kept in touch with his cousin Graham King McCorkle. Errett Cotton McCorkle & Graham King McCorkle were 1st
cousins through their McCorkle fathers (John Edwin McCorkle & Hiram
R.A. McCorkle) and were 2nd cousins-once removed through their Cotton
ancestors: Mrs.
Mountjoy
King (mother of Gideon King) and John Cotton (mother of Mary
Elizabeth Cotton McCorkle, Mrs. John Edwin McCorkle) were 1st cousins. Errett Cotton McCorkle lived in
Graham McCorkle, SSN 320-10-1293, born
Graham King McCorkle, son of
Winfield Purviance & Mary “Mamie” King McCorkle,
born
Jean Frances McCorkle Mesick, born
Frances Louise Mesick (Mrs. John Szyer), who had two sons Szyer. In 2006, FRAN SEYER lives in the
Stephen Graham Mesick was born to the
above union
Mary Elizabeth McCorkle Hess, born December 1925. Married in 1946:
Robert L.
Hess.
Gail Graham Hess Meade,
born 1949 (Mrs. Robert G. Meade), who had two sons:
Kristyn Graham Meade and
Evan Joseph Meade.
Philip
Arthur Hess, born 1951, m. Debra Franks.
Lindsey
Hess LaMarche,
born 1955, married Michael Joseph LaMarche. One
daughter: Amber LaMarche.
[Gideon
& Sophie King/ their non-McCorkle daughter Allie King Haymaker/
connection: Floersch? A King/Haymaker kinswoman named Pat Floersch placed the following material on the
Internet about the Haymaker-King connection:
“ … in reply to “Haymakers in
1. Joseph M. Haymaker, b. ??
2. John Wesley Haymaker, b. 1829
3. George Washington Haymaker, b. 1831
4. Isaac Newton Haymaker, b. 1836
5. Mary E. b. 1838
6. Margaret E. b. 1844
7. Amanda b.1847
Looking for Crum information may help you with Haymakers as the two
families used the same first names and traveled as part of a group from Quaker
meeting house to meeting house. Also look into the
*** *** *** ***
… … … … … …
… … … …
Anyone interested in “uncle”
Hiram R. A. McCorkle should read parts of
his journal
as excerpted by the late Arahwana Ridens
of Newbern. The journal is now in the hands of HRA’s
g-g grandson David
Caldwell of
An extant letter from Robert A. H.
McCorkle (son of Robert & Margaret Morrison McCorkle) writes his
sister Elmira Sloan McCorkle Roache of the sad
condition of the mental health of Margaret Cowan McCorkle, that there is no joy in her company.
And
As far as I know, the rest of Uncle Hiram R. A. McCorkle’s children (other
than Winfield Purviance McCorkle, supra,
who moved up to Eminence,
–And when the railroad finally
came through Newbern to go on down to
Why have I concentrated here on Uncle Hiram McCorkle’s son Winfield Purviance McCorkle? -- in part, because Arahwana Ridens
[2] of Newbern published a book on early
Dyer County families including the descendants of HRA McCorkle other than
those of Winfield Purviance McCorkle. I felt the need
to fill in the Winfield gap. In part, other reasons: My father Ewing Huie’s mother, who died in 1915 when
he was just 7 years old, was née Sophie King McCorkle. When I was
convalescing in the old Huie homeplace and found carefully preserved letters back and
forth from Eminence, Kentucky, I still had not been able to learn why
the Sophie “King.” [As usual, nobody seemed to care but me.] It
took me years to determine that the first Sophie King was née Sophie Woodruff, the wife of Gideon King of Eminence,
-- Mary Elizabeth Cotton (McCorkle)
(the 2nd Mrs. John Edwin McCorkle) was displaced by the Civil
War. She sewed for a living, I think my Aunt Beth Huie (her maternal
granddaughter) told me. Her father, John Cotton, died on or about 1852 or
53. My sister Sophie and I got him a new
tombstone recently up in
<HRA2: Almeda McCorkle
(Pope) (Mrs. Priest Pope)—this
is not as I had once thought the McCorkle daughter whose mother chased her
across the corn field in an unsuccessful effort to prevent her marriage, as
Uncle Hiram recorded in one of his journals; that fleeing descendant of Hiram
was née Janette Pope, and she married a Mr. Barkley.
– I think Priest Pope’s full name was Eugene Priest Pope; and I think my Unce Mutt’s (Maury Adolphus
Huie’s) “Cousin Meda” would have been this Mrs.
Priest Pope -- ;
<HRA3: Elizabeth
Jane “Bettie” McCorkle
(Cawthon) married Johnny Cawthon; this is the
ancestor of Mrs. Charles Caldwell, mother of David Caldwell of Newbern
who now has possession of Uncle Hiram’s diaries. We hope to transcribe these diaries for
public viewing in the year 2006.
<HRA4: Lula
McCorkle (Woods)
(Mrs. Johnny R. Woods),
who died peri-childbirth & is buried in the
McCorkle Cemetery as “Lulu McCorkle” because, Aunt Beth Huie said, Uncle Hiram
despised his cousin/son-in-law Johnny Woods as a drunkard, although John R.
Woods was a son of Hiram’s maternal first cousin “Billy” William T. Woods,
and John R. Woods was a grandson of Eleazor
Woods & Sarah Purviance Thomas.
--
Sarah Purviance Thomas (Woods), born 22 July1804, married Eleazor Woods,
1813-1875. [John Edwin McCorkle’s 1860-61 journal refers often to Eleazor Woods as “Uncle Woods.”]
Sarah Purviance Thomas Woods was a sister to Hiram
McCorkle’s own mother, Jane Maxwell Thomas (Mrs. Edwin Alexander
McCorkle).—This sad story about the ill-fated Lulu Woods McCorkle
intrigues me, because I suspect that the real root of the dissonance was
that William Thomas Woods (“Billy” Woods) probably joined the Union Army from Dyer
County, while I know Uncle Hiram McCorkle joined and fought for the
Confederacy. A letter of Billy Woods’ descendant, the beloved “Miss” Cattie Morrow Flatt of my childhood, says not, that Billy Woods never
joined “the army” but she writes of troubling times for Billy Woods. I know from old newspaper
articles that William T. Woods [Is the “T” for “Thomas?”] lost his lands
in
<HRA5: Tolbert McCorkle (died young; I
would guess that his middle name was Fanning, because Tolbert Fanning
was a noted Church of Christ-Christian Church preacher). The family
records of Aunt Ora McCorkle Huie and her younger
sister Aunt Katie Pearl McCorkle (Fox), as updated by Maury A. Huie, state that
Tolbert fell
from his mother’s lap while riding in a buggy
and was mortally wounded by being run over by a surrey-- whether
the culprit was the buggy from which the child fell, or an oncoming one, I
cannot tell. --
and Uncle Hiram R.A. McCorkle also begot:
one child, a son, by his 2nd
wife Janette Menzies:
<HRA6:
Edwin Archibald McCorkle
(a.k.a. Eddie McCorkle)
who m. Dona
McCutchen. Uncle Hiram’s 1st
wife (née Margaret Cowan) died in the “lunatic asylum” at Nashville, Tennessee,
as it was then called, and his own diary records her death, Margaret Cowan’s,
without comment. He visited her grave when attending a Civil War
Confederate Veterans reunion in
_____________________________________________________________
Descendants of Anderson
Jehiel McCorkle should go here.
Descendants of Elizabeth
McCorkle Reeves should go here.
Descendants of David Purviance McCorkle should go here.
Descendants of Becky McCorkle Zarecor should go here.
And Descendants of Margaret
Latina McCorkle (Mrs. John Gregory) should go here.
I.
Generation One. Alexander McCorkle m. “Nancy” Agness
Montgomery, the mother of his children; and 2nd Rebecca Brandon
II.
Robert McCorkle m. 1st Elizabeth Blythe; then 2nd
Margaret Morrison, a daughter of Andrew Morrison & Elizabeth Sloan
(Morrison).[4][2]
III.
Edwin A. McCorkle
[Edwin Alexander or
Edwin Archibald?] m. Jane Maxwell Thomas (McCorkle).
IV.
John Edwin McCorkle
m. 1st “Tennie” Scott (Tennessee Alice Edwards Scott) (daughter of
William SCOTT & Nancy Edwards Wellborn and granddaughter of James
& Sarah Dickey Scott, the Scott grandparents having each been born in 1777,
emigrants from
IV. John
Edwin McCorkle m.
2nd Mary
Elizabeth Cotton of
Botland near
The following explains why we have a Julius M. Huie – John Edwin McCorkle Reunion
almost every summer in
Generation
V. Children of John Edwin McCorkle & Tennie
Scott (McCorkle):
V.
Ora McCorkle (Mrs. Julius Adolphus
Huie—“Dolph” Huie), mother of
VI.
Maury Adolphus Huie, 1895-1973. Maury’s
father was “Dolph” Julius Adolphus
Huie and Dolph Huie was a son of Julius M. Huie (d. 1911) and
Julius’ 2nd wife “Sade” Sarah
Elizabeth Scott (Huie), 1839-1893. Maury married Nell
Campbell of
VII.
(“Bill”) Reverend William
Maury Huie m. Iris Lathbury. Bill and
Iris are buried in
VIII.
Generation
VIII. “Becky” Iris Rebecca (Cornelius), who moved to
– [ We hopefully expect four contributions in 2006 to this new generation from Jessica Huie
Cashdollar (Blackwell), now living in Memphis/Cordova—Update:
Parker Louis Cashdollar
Blackwell, was born 14 April 2006; from Helen Huie (Burns), now
living near Charlotte, NC—“Livi” Livingston Ann Burns, born late April or early May 2006; from Heather Huie Hatley, now living in
Wisconsin; and from Beth Cornelius
(White), now living in Lexington, KY.—to be named Rebecca Ellington
White. – For us, that’s a lot
of children; we are poor breeders.]
Bill & Iris Huie’s 2nd child is: Generation
VIII. “Billy” to me but William
Maury Huie II to others. Generation VIII Bill Huie, born
1946 m. Jeanne Kegley and they have 3
children:
Generation IX. Kathryn, born 1970, Vanderbilt U graduate, in U.S. Forestry
Service, remarried in winter of 2006
in
Generation IX. Heather
Huie (Hatley), graduate of Southern Methodist
University ; and
Generation
IX. Jay Huie (male), an engineer with
Generation
VIII. Jennifer
Catherine Huie and Stephen Fisher Tucker, Sr., had 3
children: Generation IX. Stephen Fisher Tucker, Jr., who lives near
Generation
VIII. “Joe” Joseph Headden Huie, an attorney in
Generation VIII. John Ewing Huie m. Joan Simpson of Newbern and had 3
children: Mackenzie; Walker; and Tyler. Generation IX.
Mackenzie Huie (
V.
Will McCorkle (son of John Edwin
McCorkle & 1st wife Tennie Scott
McCorkle). In John E. McCorkle’s journals he calls this son “Willie.”
Will McCorkle m. Una Pace. Will McCorkle begot through Una Pace:
VI. Pat McCorkle who
had
Sean
will graduate from GMU also with a degree in Information Technology.
Generation
The Generation
Generation VIII Lisa McCorkle was born
Generation
VIII Natalie McCorkle was born
and
Generation
VIII Sean McCorkle (male) was born
VI. Pat McCorkle through
Will McCorkle & Una
Pace’s youngest child was VI. Julia Dale McCorkle (Mrs. Bob Messer) (Mrs. “Monty” Elbert
Montgomery). Julia had only one child,
Will McCorkle & Una Pace
had other children who had no issue, viz.,
VI. Hazel Glen McCorkle who is buried in the
V. Glenn Roache McCorkle
m. Annie Heath of near
VI. Sue Alice McCorkle Lee of
Suzanne Lee Gaultney had two sons of near
Generation VI. The
younger daughter of Glenn Roache McCorkle & Annie
Heath McCorkle was Annie Glen McCorkle. Annie G. McCorkle,
born 1916, never married and lives in
After the death of Annie Heath
McCorkle, Uncle Glenn McCorkle married Irma King, who bore no children but had nephews surnamed Harris.
________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Generation IV. John Edwin McCorkle and his 2nd wife
V. Sophie King McCorkle (Mrs. Howard
Anderson Huie) gave a valedictory address at either
Sophie McCorkle (Huie) had
three children when she passed into heaven in 1915: VI. Sarah
Elisabeth “Beth” Huie, 1904-1993, who never married;
VI. Howard Ewing
Huie, 1907-1971, who had 2 daughters,
Sophie and Marsha; and VI. “Baby Ralph” Ralph McCorkle Huie,
1914-1916.
All three of Sophie &
Howard Huie’s children are interred in the
VI. Howard Ewing Huie
m. Joyce Rebecca Cope, born
VIII. Hunter Huie Casddollar, born
IX.
Jessica
Huie Cashdollar (Mrs. Brian Louis Blackwell), born
Our
hopes ride on the New Generation as linchpin
“
Soon, Joyce Cope Huie, aged 90, was to quieten
her
great-grandson Little
Ewing
and Joyce Huie also had your compiler, Generation VII,
Marsha Cope Huie, no issue, born 1 August 1946 (please note that I’m
much younger than Jennifer Huie Tucker, supra.) On Thanksgiving
Day, at age 53, Marsha married a 2nd husband, Ralph Ervin Williamson
of
This Ewing & Joyce Cope
Huie branch of the family have indeed been poor breeders. With humility
and gratitude to God we announce the birth in Memphis on
Maury A. Huie’s branch have produced more
children. –Joe & Ann Huie’s daughter, Helen Huie Burns, soon followed suit with
the birth in
And we with hope await the
birth in 2006 of Heather Huie Hatley’s
second child, a grandchild of Billy & Jeanne Huie; as well as the
birth of Rebecca Ellington White to
Beth Cornelius White of
________________________________________________________
_______________________________________________________
Now we go to Uncle Finis McCorkle:
_____________________________________________________________
DESCENDANTS OF FINIS
A. McCORKLE, twin to Margaret Latina McCorkle
(Gregory):
Generation I.
Alexander McCorkle m. ‘
Generation II.
Robert
McCorkle & “Peggy” Margaret Morrison. She was his 2nd
wife. After the death of his 1st wife, Elizabeth Blythe,
in Middle Tennessee, Robert went back to Rowan Co., NC, and married Margaret
Morrison, daughter of Andrew Morrison & Elizabeth Sloan (Morrison).
Robert and Margaret may have either moved back to
Generation III.
Edwin Alexander McCorkle & Jane
Maxwell Thomas McCorkle. (Edwin moved from Rowan Co., NC, to
Generation IV.
Finis Alexander McCorkle & first wife
Sallie Jo Jackson -- “Sallie” Sarah
Josephine “Jo” Jackson,
I think Sallie Jo Jackson McCorkle is buried in
Finis’ children by his 1st wife included Gentry
Purviance McCorkle who m. a Cason woman (inter
alia; in fact Gentry married at least 2 more alia) (Dyer Co,
Tennessee, to Texas, to California); Homer McCorkle (Dyer Co., TN, to
Texas, to California–a jeweler); Gillum
McCorkle (buried as a teenager in the McCorkle Cemetery, Dyer Co.,
Tennessee—the neighbors gossiped that his step-mother “Mag”
Margaret HART McCorkle poisoned him, but he is
officially listed as a suicide & is buried in the McCorkle Cemetery east of
Newbern). His uncle Hiram RA McC’s diary recorded
that Gillum had shot himself while in bed with his
brother Homer--the two brothers slept in the same bed in Newbern. ; and Jennie McCorkle Carter (who I know from old
photographs lived with her uncle John Edwin McCorkle & Mary Cotton McCorkle
circa 1900, not with her father and step-mother, and who, according to my Aunt
Beth Huie (Sarah Elisabeth Huie, 1904 –1993) became the wife of a Dr. E. E.
Carter of Hot Springs, Arkansas—I think she said Hot Springs). I think
the doctor’s name was Edward E. Carter, and I think he removed to
Jennie McCorkle Carter: Recently, I found a Dr
Edward E Carter in the 1920 (I think) census records for Arkadelphia,
Arkansas, whom I presume to have been Jennie McCorkle Carter’s widower; but I’m
not certain.—In her 1900 photograph taken of her uncle John Edwin McCorkle’s
home, Jennie McCorkle sits on the porch with a lyre (or mandolin or guitar)
so she must have been musical. Aunt Beth Huie said that Jennie McCorkle Carter
was a special friend, and of course 1st cousin, of my paternal
grandmother, Sophie King McCorkle Huie. -- Aunt Beth Huie lost
track of Jennie McCorkle Carter, so I know nothing more except that she died in
Below: Susan Jane McCorkle Carter (Jennie) with her brother Gentry Purviance McCorkle, Senior: Photo courtesy of
Cornelia Taylor, sister-in-law to Deanna Glenn Taylor [Deanna Glenn Taylor
being a daughter to Mary Helen McCorkle (Glenn), a.k.a., Mrs. Glen Glenn, late
of
Gentry
P. and little sister Jennie McCorkle
Gentry Purviance McCorkle with his children.
Gentry Purviance McCorkle, president of Bandera County Bank, Bandera, Texas, near San Antonio. His brother Homer also moved from the Newbern, Tennessee, area to Bandera, where he was a jeweler. Each brother moved on to California after Texas. Photo courtesy of Cornelia Taylor sister-in-law of Deana Glen Taylor, daughter of Gentry's daughter Mary Helen McCorkle.
"Jennie" Susan Jane McCorkle lived with her uncle John E. McCorkle & wife Mary Elizabeth Cotton McCorkle, not her stepmother and father Finis A. McCorkle. John E McCorkle (my father's grandfather through John E & Mary's daughter Sophie King McCorkle (Mrs. Howard A. Huie) is thought to have built this house just after the Civil War, circa 1868.
Finis
A. McCorkle’s child by his 2nd wife “Mag” Margaret HART
was Mada McCorkle Montgomery who
lived to become a centenarian in
Generation V. Homer
McCorkle m. ?HELEN? Cason (a
sister to the Ruth Cason who was the 1st to marry Homer’s
brother, Gentry Purviance McCorkle) (Homer moved from
Homer McCorkle appears
on the 1910 Census as being aged 21 and living in Newbern, Dyer county,
Hiram R. A. McCorkle’s diary
records in October 1892 or ‘93 that a Mrs. M.E. Peacock removed from Center Point,
Texas, to make Newbern her home but makes no connection between her and Hiram’s
nephews, Gentry Purviance
McCorkle and Homer McCorkle who
were later to move to Center Point / Bandera, Texas. On
Generation VI. ‘Casey’ McCorkle
m. (2nd) Lois Miller McCorkle. (removed from
As
mentioned immediately above, Casey McCorkle had by his first wife
Floy Disney two children, Carter McCorkle and Lynn McCorkle, and by Lois Miller McCorkle a daughter named Kathleen
McCorkle (Brudno). Casey had two
brothers, now deceased:
Generation VI. Horace Jackson McCorkle, M.D., at the University of California San Francisco Medical College, from whom his brother Casey was estranged. Casey’s sister-in-law Marjery Manchester McCorkle told me soon before her death that her other brother-in-law, Dr. Horace Jackson McCorkle, in the doctor’s old age said he had switched to Casey’s view, that Casey had been right. Casey had generously assumed an unfairly apportioned burden to take care of their elderly parent(s) when Casey himself had wanted to pursue further education but could not. -- . I do not know the names of the children if any of Horace Jackson McCorkle, M.D.
Generation VI.
Homer McCorkle’s baby son was “Tom” Homer Thomas McCorkle, Ph.D., born
The children of Tom
McCorkle, by wife Margery Manchester of
Maggie McCorkle Pinson has
the M.A. in Latin American Studies from the
Maggie Pinson,
International Manager
M.A. Latin American Studies, University of Texas at Austin 25 years of experience in international education 10 years of experience at UTMB Active Member of NAFSA: Association of International Educators Recipient of National Defense League Fellowship for language and area studies, 1978-1979 Chair Houston Area Forum of Advisors to Internationals, 2002-2003 NAFSA Distinguished Service to International Education Award, November 2004. “Providing assistance to UTMB internationals has been my greatest professional reward” |
Below is a likeness of Maggie's sister Susan McCorkle, stage name Susannah, who died in 2000 A.D.
Finis A. McCorkle should have a marker at
the McCorkle Cemetery in Dyer County, Tennessee, even
if his 2nd wife Mag Hart McCorkle dumped
him in the Mississippi River. (Aunt Beth Huie referred to her great-uncle
Finis A. McCorkle’s 2nd wife as “Mag Hart
not Mag McCorkle," for
whatever that’s worth from a woman who never spoke evil of anyone.)
Finis
A. McCorkle had a son other than Homer McCorkle who removed to
Sarah Josephine [“Sally Jo”] Jackson (1st wife of Finis A. McCorkle) was born 1849 and died 1880; she was, again, the mother of, inter alia,
Gentry Purviance McCorkle & was the paternal
grandmother of Mary Helen McCorkle (Mrs. Glen [Percival] Glenn); Gentry Jr; and David McCorkle. Sallie Jo Jackson’s
father was Gilliam [Gillum?] Jackson,
a minister of
n
Aunt Katie
Pearl McCorkle (late in life Mrs. Ed Lee Fox) died in 1961 in Dyer County
an aged woman, the last to die of the children of John Edwin McCorkle by his 1st
wife née Tennessee
Alice Scott, Aunt Kate outliving her siblings all but a half-brother, Errett Cotton McCorkle.
Errett Cotton McCorkle was a child of John Edwin
McCorkle & his 2nd wife, Mary Elizabeth Cotton McCorkle of Botland
near
n
Religion
& Religiosity at Lemalsamac: Uncle Glenn McCorkle
& at Aunt Katie Pearl McCorkle, brother & sister, were devout members
of the
Above: Gentry Purviance
McCorkle, Sr., with daughter Mary
Helen McCorkle (Mrs. Glen Glenn)
of
A letter from Gentry Purviance McCorkle (son of Finis
Alexander McCorkle & Sarah Josephine
"Glen Glenn Sound Company
4516 Sunset Blvd.
Dear Katie Pearl:-
“First of all you, and you only, can ever understand how
terrible I feel about the news your letter brought me of [your sister and] my
dear [first] cousin Ora [Ora McCorkle Huie]. After her long life of usefulness and
cheerfulness it is depressing to me to have it end like this [in the insane
asylum at
“These two letters of your delight me no little.
They are so filled with the news of my remnant acquaintances and old time
friends in the homeland. It seems but yesterday that I was riding ‘old beck’, uncle Hiram’s mule,
to Lemalsamac [Christian Church, now
You did not tell me about Kate Cawthon [Mrs. Pace]. How is she? Still a teacher in the schools? I always thought a lot o’ her. [--Kate Cawthon Pace’s husband, Mr. Pace (father of Harry Pace), was killed at the Newbern railroad tracks by a man from Trimble who did more than merely brandish his walking stick. This man from Trimble was the father of “Miss” Mattie ????? who ran the Trimble library until circa 1985. No one was prosecuted; each participant in the deadly fisticuffs was considered a bit contentious.]
I’m sorry now that I did not write the
letter to cousin Sallie Tobe before
her death. I had it in mind a hundred
times [Quaere: Might
Sallie Tobe have been some connection to “Tobe” Allen Scott, a sister to Mrs. Julius M.
Huie, (Sarah Scott Huie’s dates of life 1839-1893)?]. Eddie [McCorkle, the only child of Hiram R. A. McCorkle by
Hiram’s 2nd wife née Dona McCutchen] is a
first-class rascal: I have written
several letters to him since 1884
when I left uncle Hiram’s to live at home but has he ever answered a single one? Nay Pauline ! ! ! ! His boy Hiram [McCorkle]
was in
And, so, Baz Brown is dead; that good old man;
We ne’er shall see him more;
He used to wear a long tailed coat
All buttoned up before:
With his departure goes my last known
living enemy in the state of
Maggie L. [Meeks McCorkle]
and Mattie and I were friends together and had our little happy times together
and after Mattie married him she seemed to be afraid of him and permitted him
to alienate Mattie’s friendly relations from both Maggie and me. I feel sure she is happy to be rid of him and
his nasty vulgarity. The community will
sustain no loss and the world is better off.
If I did not consider it ill manners to tell the truth, the whole truth
and nothing but the truth about the dead, I’d devote another paragraph or two
to that bird.. [At one time in her
life “Miss” Mattie Brown kept a boarding house in Newbern.]
[page two:]
”2”
Just how old is Florene [Hamilton]? Maybe you knew she and I were conducting a
burning courtship once upon a time and then the fire all of a sudden went
out. I saw her once, only, when she was
married to Clennie. She was good-looking then, I thought, and
was favorably impressed. So, in time, Clennie
and Momsie both died and I wrote to her. Was she 15 years or more older than he
was? That was reported by the
[Florene
Hamilton was the one who had the ladies’ Dixieland band that traveled all over
No, Katie Pearl darling, I’m not married yet but by golly I am going to be some o’ these days. As many darling women as there are in this earth and as much as I love a precious woman, when I does love her, I’ll be dad-blamed if I’m going to spend the next 35 years o’ my life doin’ without one. SO:
But, they’re difficult to find. That is, the gal I desire to have as a [third] wife is scarce in
She should be a Seventh Day Adventist; Not over 40; Not too fat nor yet too thin; not too tall and neither too short; a demi-blonde; not too brilliant and not too dumb; not too rich and never too poor; a pretty face and a well developed form; auburn hair preferred; brown will do; well educated; widow; (Old maids above 40 are too exacting) who plays the piano.
There are 12 women to one man in the
Well, Katie darlin’, the Signs O’ The Times have the name of the lawyer John Doe in my story but did not want me to use his real name. I thought you would know him at first sight but maybe you do not remember him. I heard him make just the speech at the meeting as described in the story. He was a brilliant lawyer there for years, was a drunken bum for a long period of time and then reformed, opened his law-office again, made good, married a beautiful and talented woman, was supt of the christian sunday school at Newbern and was restored [
`````````````````````````````````````````”3”
I’m sure uncle John E [John Edwin McCorkle, 1839-1924] would call his name the first name he would pronounce. Think over all the people of that generation and if you fail to recall him, I’ll tell you in my next letter. He was always a friend o’ mine.
I have not seen [my ½-sister] Mada [Mada
McCorkle Montgomery, a.k.a. Mrs. Howell Montgomery] since she came
back [to
I’d be very much pleased to hear from Ona. I think I’ll write another letter and take a
chance. Where is her step-mother
now? I believe, also, I’ll write to [our
McCorkle first-cousin] Hiram Reeves
[son of Elizabeth McCorkle Reeves, who was a sister to Finis Alexander
McCorkle, GP’s father]
Well darlin’ cousin o’ mine, I’ll not enter into any controversy with you for remaining with the church of our fathers. But I will say this: Quoting you: “We have the same bible”: The law did indeed bring us to Christ. But which law? Do not forget that there were two laws. The moral law and the ceremonial law. The Earthly Sanctuary question discloses that. All things revolve about the two laws and the sanctuary.
The hand of the Lord Himself wrote the Decalogue. It was laid IN the ark of the covenant. It is this law whereby we are to be judged. It stands forever. It has never been supplanted. The ceremonial law brought us to Christ. The high-priest in the Holy of Holies had his hand raised to slay the sacrificial lamb but dropped his knife when the Lord Jesus said ‘It is Finished’ and the lamb went free for the reason the moment Jesus paid the price no further animal blood was efficacious. The ceremonial law was there nailed to the cross because it had in fact ended when the veil of the temple was rent in twain.
One other: Acts 20:7 does not recite that His followers are to meet on the first day to break bread in memory of His death and resurrection. I believed that once also. It says they came together to break bread. Another way of expressing a coming together to have a meal. No change of the Sabbath is suggested.
“4”
The death of my [first] cousin John Jackson saddens me no little. I did not know him very well but always liked him. He was the son of my uncle John Jackson who was one of my favorite uncles of them all.
But great scott, gal: This is such a long and such a dull letter. I have another story coming out this week or next in the SIGNS which maybe you’ll like to read and I’ll send one to you. You will recall some of the events and times and characters. Read it and tell me if you think it’s “sea worthy”.
Write to me again. I do not like to be forgotten. Neither do I wish to forget any of you. It was a terrible disaster about the Crenshaw bank wreck [in
Your cousin,
Gentry
______________________________________________________________________________________
__________________________________________________________________
Pictured below is
a daughter of Glen Glenn & Mary Helen McCorkle (Glenn): Deanna Glenn (
Photo courtesy of Cornelia Taylor, sister-in-law to Deanna Glenn Taylor.
Gentry Purviance
McCorkle ’s children (beside Mary Helen McCorkle Glenn)
included HRA McCorkle, Jr. [Hiram Robert A. (HRA
like Gentry’s uncle Hiram Robert Archibald or H.R. Alexander McCorkle)];
and David
McCorkle, b. 1916. David McCorkle was a WWII
prisoner of war. Another child of G.P. McCorkle [Senior] was Gentry Purviance McCorkle Jr. .– I think I remember seeing that
one of the sons was a POW in WWII in the records kept by my great-aunt, Aunt
Katie Pearl McCorkle. And I think I remember that Aunt Kate kept this
David World War II photograph in her album at her home,.
The Old
John Edwin McCorkle homeplace in
His
daughter Katie
The
home of Edwin Alexander McCorkle before destruction by fire sat across
the road from his son John E’s house and was known as the “Red House.”
Edwin A. McCorkle (1798-Jan. 10, 1853) was born at the end of the 18th
century in Rowan County, NC; moved with his parents and siblings to receive a
Revolutionary War grant of land situated near Murfreesboro, Tennessee; then
upon losing the land to title-dispute litigation accepted a Revolutionary War
land grant made in lieu to his father Robert and therefore removed with his
parents and living siblings to the newly opened Western District. He was
appointed by the governor of
–In
my childhood (1950s and 69s), “Cousin Ollie” Pace Gregory, widow of EDWIN GREGORY,
a son of John T. Gregory
and wife Tina McCorkle Gregory (a daughter of Edwin Alexander &
Jane Maxwell Thomas McCorkle and wife of John Gregory of Churchton),
lived across the highway, in the field of the burnt Red House. Cousin Ollie Gregory was the mother of three sons, viz., Maurice J.
Gregory, Guy Gregory, and Garrett Gregory. The grandmother, Margaret Latina McCorkle
Gregory, was a twin sister to Finis Alexander McCorkle. I’m almost certain her formal name was
Margaret Latina Gregory but will have to wait and defer to her
great-grandchildren whom I know, Anna Lois Gregory
Kuykendall and Max Gregory, Ph.D. Update: It is with regret that I report the death of
Anna Lois Gregory Kuykendall on or about
Gentry Purviance McCorkle, Sr., circa 1925 (photo courtesy of Cornelia Taylor,
sister-in-law to Deanna Glenn Taylor, GP’s granddaughter).
_____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Some of the following is
duplicative, but here is more about the lineage of
Finis A. McCorkle, twin to Margaret
Generation I. Alexander McCorkle & Agnes
Montgomery McCorkle
Generation II. Robert McCorkle & 2nd
wife Margaret Morrison McCorkle
Generation
Generation IV. Finis Alexander McCorkle & 1st wife “Sallie Jo” Sarah Josephine Jackson. Something in Uncle Hiram’s (Finis’s oldest
brother’s) diary said that Finis rode on his horse during the Civil War to find
Gen. Nathan Bedford Forrest. And something in John E. McCorkle’s journal
made me think that Finis attended, with John E., Bluff Springs Academy.
Children of Finis Alexander & Sallie Jo [actually,
Sarah Josephine] Jackson McCorkle:
1.
Gentry Purviance McCorkle, born
Son of Gentry Purviance
McCorkle: Gentry Purviance
McCorkle, Jr.,
Son of Gentry Purviance
McCorkle: Hiram Robert Anderson (?) Archibald?)
Son of Gentry Purviance
McCorkle: David McCorkle, not Hiram,
was I think the one who was a WWII prisoner of war, according to Aunt Kate
Pearl McCorkle (Fox)’s journals.
Daughter of Gentry Purviance
McCorkle: Mary Helen McCorkle (Mrs. Glenn Glen),
2.
Gillum Edwin McCorkle, b.
3.
“Jennie” Susan Jane McCorkle (Carter), b.
Somewhere farther above in photo of : Gentry Purviance
McCorkle, Sr. 1904. President of Bandera County Bank,
Now to HOMER McCORKLE, a son of FINIS A McC
4.
Homer Thomas
McCorkle – I suppose the “Thomas” was for his grandmother Jane Maxwell Thomas
McCorkle’s maiden name.
5.
Jodie L. McCorkle,
6.
(only child by
Finis Alexander McCorkle’s 2nd wife (Mag) Margaret F. Hart:) Maida
Maxwell McCorkle (
Generation V. Homer McCorkle (1877,
Generation VI. Casey McCorkle & Floy Disney (mother of 2 children) and Lois Miller (mother
of Kathleen “Kate” McCorkle Brudno) -- Casey McCorkle, born
Generation
Generation
Generation
___________________________________________________________________________________________________
Casey McCorkle’s
siblings, also sons of Homer &
Helen Hart Cason, were:
Casey’s older brother Horace Jackson McCorkle, M.D.,
born
and
Casey’s younger brother “Tom” Homer Thomas McCorkle,
Ph.D., born b. 30 Aug 1914 in Comfort, Texas; removed to California. Graduate
of
|
Marjery “Maggie” McCorkle Pinson,
M.A.
Latin American Studies, Tom McCorkle, Ph.D., and Marjery Manchester McCorkle of California; granddaughter of Homer McCorkle; and great-granddaughter of Finis Alexander McCorkle & Sarah Josephine Jackson McCorkle of |
|
_____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________
Rebecca McCorkle Zarecor of Yorkville area -- will go here.
Margaret
________________________________________________________
END
OF CHAPTER THREE—Edwin Alexander & Jane Maxwell Thomas McCorkle
Alexander McCorkle of
The Last Will and Testament of Alexander McCorkle, dated
) )
) ) ) ) ) ) ) ) ) ) )) )) ) ) ) ) ) ) ) ) ) ) ) ) ) ) ) ) ) ) ) )) ) ) ) ) ) )
) ) ) ) ) ) ) )) ) ) ) ) ) ) ) ) )
1101 [certified copy from
Signing
& Sealing Thereof
Thomas
King
Jurat [Thomas King]
A lexander M c Corkle
Robert Ramsey
Jurat [Robert Ramsey][2]
Samuel King
Jurat [Samuel King[30]]
*<0< SEAL û<;:981
In the name of God Amen
I
Alexander McCorkle of the County of Iredell & State of North Carolina being
of sound & perfect mind & memory bleßed be God do this thirty
first Day of July in the year of Our Lord one thousand Eight hundred make
& publish this my last Will & Testament in manner of allowing that is
to say First. I give & bequeath all my books with all my household
and kitchen furniture excepting one Chest of Drawers also
her Saddle & bridle & horse two Cows two Calves
& four Sheep of her own Chooseing with all
the wool Flax Cotton Yearn & Cloth to me
belonging to her uße
and behoof forever.
[ ¶
] I Do Also bequeath to my Wife Rebecah
Eighty pounds in money to be raised out of my Estate in Case That She
does Relinquish her wright of Dower in land.
But if my Wife Rebekah di¶ents
from this my Will & retains her dower in land then & in that Case I
ordain that the above mentioned Eighty pounds Shall be Divided Among all my
Children eaqually Share & Share. I do also
bequeath to my Wife Rebekah the u¶e benefit
& Servis of the two rooms in the East end of
the [page break] house in which I now live During her
widowhood. I also bequeath to my wife Rebekah
the use benefit & Servis of my Negro man Tom
during her widowhood & at the expiration of her widdowhood
I ordain that the Said negro man Tom shall be under the direction of my son
John. I do also bequeath to my wife Rebekah
the use benefit & Servis of my Negro girl Mary
untill she the sd. girl
shall have an Isue in which case I ordain that
the Said negro girl Mary & her Isue shall be
sold & the money ariseing thereof I bequea[-]th to my wife Rebekah forever & in case the Said negro Mary
shall have no isue before my wife Rebekah’s
Death I Ordain that she Shall then be Sold & the
money[arising there from eaqually divided
amongst all my Children.
[
I am ashamed to type this.]
[ ¶
] I Also ordain & appoint that said [2nd] Wife Rebekah Shall have & receive a comfortable & honourable maintainance on
& from the land on which I now live dureing
her reside in Widdowhood on sd.
lands. I also ordain a suficie[n]t Supp[ort]
to her stock above mentioned which maintainance
I Expect & require my son Robert with the assistance of the
negroes in her Servise to grant & perform.
[ ¶
] I Do also grant & Devise bequeath & make over to
my son Robert & his heirs or assigns forever all that Track [tract]
of [im]proved Land on which I now Live held by a
title from John B[?ef?] bearing date May the
Twenty sixth one thousand seven Hundred & fifty Six [1756].
[Is
1756 the date Alexander McCorkle settled in Iredell Co.? Later, this
part was Rowan Co.]
I also bequeath Devise & make over to my
Son Robert all that tract of land lying & being on the North
Side of the above named land held by a title from the [page 3 begins here] State
of North Carolina bearing Date May the Eighteenth day One Thousand Sevenhundred & Eighty nine. [1789 was the year
of adoption of the US Constitution and the year that George Washington
became President of the all
my Farming & mecanick tools & ]
Negro Gearl Esther to his behoof
forever. I also bequeath to my son
Robert all my farming & Mecanick
tools & Equipage.
[ ¶
] I do also bequeath to my Son Alexander forty pounds in money
I also ordain that my Body Clothes be vandued
among my Sons that Can or may be conveniently Conveined
for that purpose & the money therefrom Ariseing & the monies ariseing
from the Sales of other property not otherwise bequeathed & all monies
to me belonging not otherwise ordained be Divided into Eleven eaqual Shares two of which shares I bequeath to my daughter
Elizabeth & the remaining nine to my other Children eaq[-]ually Share & Share.
[ ¶
] I Do Also bequeath to my sons Wm.
& Robt. all my rite interests
or Claim to a track or parcel of Land entered in John Armstrongs office Located on the watters of among
between them or their lawful Heirs.
[ ¶
] And I hereby ordain & Appoint my sons John [,] Alexander
[,] & Robt. McCorcle Executors of this my last Will &
Testament.
In
witneß
whereof I Alexander McCorcle
McCorkle have to this my last Will & Testament Set my Hand &
Seal the day and Year above
Written
Signed Sealed published & Declared by the Said Alexander McCorkle the Testator as
his last Will & Testament in the presence of Us who were Present at the
time of Signing
Alexander
McCorkle
[End
of Will of Alexander McCorkle,
*********
Note appended by Marsha Cope Huie:
The above-bequeathed “waters of the Duck River” land -- devised to sons
William McCorkle & Robert McCorkle -- must be the land that had
been granted for Alexander McCorkle’s Revolutionary War service
that placed son Robert McCorkle on Stone’s River, Rutherford Co., TN
[Murfreesboro area]. Robert’s brother William McCorkle also
went there, at least for awhile.
William McCorkle’s wife, nėe
“Mattie” Martha King, had 1st been married to the John Purviance, Jr., who was scalped by
hostile Indians in Middle Tennessee (
The sons of the immigrants Alexander & Nancy Agness
Montgomery McCorkle were:
1. Samuel
Eusebius McCorkle, Doctor of Divinity, Presbyterian minister, Thyatira
Church, Rowan Co., NC. The State of
2.
John McCorkle -- His niece Elmira Sloan
McCorkle Roache described him as “rather
eccentric.” If so, he fits right in with the rest of us. ;
3.
Joseph McCorkle;
4.
Alexander McCorkle [Aleck] -- His niece Elmira
Sloan McCorkle Roache wrote that Aleck was emotional
in character and joined the Methodists. ;
5.
William McCorkle -- His niece
6.
James McCorkle, 1768-1840;
7.
Robert McCorkle.– 1st wife Elizabeth “Lizzie”
Blythe; 2nd wife: Margaret (Peggy) Morrison. Robert was born
in Rowan Co., NC; moved to Middle Tennessee; married Elizabeth Blythe, his 2nd
wife, in Sumner County, Tennessee (then, I suspect, a generic term for “Middle
Tennessee”); at one time was a member of a Presbyterian or
Cumberland Presbyterian Church congregation in Kentucky; removed to the
Murfreesboro area of Rutherford County , where the father’s Revolutionary War
land grant was lost in a land-title dispute litigation; then removed to West
Tennessee, Dyer County, where he died and is buried in the 1st grave
of the McCorkle Cemetery about 5 miles east of Newbern, Tennessee, although it
should be noted that before the advent of railroads in the wesetern
district, and before the Civil War, Yorkville was the better town. A study of
Civil War maps will show Yorkville, but not Newbern. —Aunt Beth Huie
said her Huie family [Benjamin Huie, b. 1798 in N.C.] settled 1st
just west of Yorkville a bit down the road and up the hill from what is now a
Cumberland Presbyterian Church, with a house on the south side of the road;
then moved west about 2 miles, building a house on the north side of the road;
and did not buy the land where the Tigrett family
settled, further toward Newbern, because Yorkville offered more
“community.” One notes that
The
immigrants’ 3 daughters were:
1. Mattie
McCorkle,
2. Bettie
McCorkle [Elizabeth McCorkle, who received 2 of 11 shares in her
father’s will], and
3. Nancy
McCorkle.
Land records of Rutherford
Co., Tennessee, that may or may not
be pertinent, circa 1830:
C
David Morrison to Obadiah Cole [Cale?] , deed
book S, p. 586
C
David Morrison from Thomas Powell, 1832, book S, p. 392.
As mentioned, Robert McCorkle had a granddaughter, Elizabeth Anderson,
by Robert McCorkle’s 1st wife Lizzie Blythe [The
granddaughter Elizabeth Anderson was a dau. of Mrs. Elizabeth
McCorkle Anderson, Mrs. Thomas Anderson, of Middle Tennessee – Sumner Co.
at the time.] The granddaughter, Elizabeth Anderson married J. Mitchell McMurray,
a Cumberland Presbyterian minister, who long preached at
C
Deed to Joseph A. Montgomery from Hugh McMurry.
Deed Book U, page 614.
C
Deed from Robert McMurry to James A. Montgomery.
Deed Book U, p. 54.
C
Deed to Thomas Murry from Benj. Cruch Book T, p. 397.
C
Deed from James A. Montgomery to Robert McMurry,
1834. Mortgage deed, Book U, p. 54.
C
Thomas Murray to Henry Goodloe, Jr. , Book U,
page 232.
[William
T. Woods, born Dyer Co, TN., 1833, married Cattie Doak in 1854. Then in 1862, William T. Woods married
Susan A. Goodlow, the mother of John R.
Woods (who married Lulu or Lula McCorkle, a daughter of Hiram R. A.
McCorkle.-- Eleazor Woods, b. 1813 in
Sumner Co., TN, by wife Sarah Purviance Thomas
(Woods), begot William T. Woods, b. 1833.]
C
Robert Maxwell from Isaac Hendrix [Isaac Hendricks] of
I
wonder if Isaac Hendricks was kin to Joyce Cope Huie’s
great-grandfather Uriah C. Hendricks who is buried
in the McCorkle Cemetery, Dyer Co.,
In
an extant Deed Index in
We
could trace the following deeds to see what property Robert McCorkle and
family lived on in Rutherford County, Tennessee, couldn’t we?
C
Robert McCorkle, grantee, from Joseph Fitzgerald. 1804.
Deed Book G, page 241. In Deed Index only, Deed Book not extant.
C
Robert McCorkle, grantee, from John Jenkins. 1804? Book G,
313. Actual Deed Book destroyed. [Spelled McKorkle
in Index.]
C
Robert McKorkle, grantee,
from George and Jane F. Pechels. 1816.
Book M, page 122. Deed says “delivered to Edwin McKorkle 20th June 1820.” Edwin
Alexander McCorkle was a son of Robert & Margaret Morrison
McCorkle; and Edwin Alexander McCorkle married Jane Maxwell Thomas.
C
Robert McKorkle,
grantor, to Robert G. Cummings. 1826. Book R, page
87. – [Can we find 1826 litigation records between Cummings &
McCorkle?]
This must
surely mark the date (1826) when
Robert & Margaret “Peggy” Morrison McCorkle lost their land in Rutherford
Co.,
Another
deed in the
C
John McCorkle to William D. Carns. Book
S, 477. 1830.
Was
the grantor a brother of Robert McCorkle, who most certainly did have a brother
named John McCorkle ? Is the Carns kin to the Karnes
family who married into the McCorkle family in Dyer Co., TN., after they moved
to the Western District of Tennessee. Given all the misspellings of the
time, the answer is very probably “yes.” Blaine Karnes and son T. C.
Karnes were morticians in
Purviance Connection. Excursus added immediately below:
[ I
sent a great deal of Purviance - Thomas - McCorkle -
Huie genealogical information circa 1984 to Stuart Hoyle Purvines
for inclusion in his Purviance Family
book. Stuart Purvines produced a
huge, red volume circa 1986, which if not still available for purchase, should
be available for reading in a genealogical library somewhere.]
Colonel John Purviance [Senior] on
Something I read in 2003 on Mark Freeman’s website about his Purviance/Maxwell wife – he lives in Garland, Texas--
mentioned a reference he had found; someone once described a Maxwell grave as being in Brown Cemetery,
perhaps in or near Spring Hill, Tennessee, and as being adjacent to
the grave of a “Mr. Pevines.” It is
not impossible that this would be the grave of our ancestor Col. John Purviance, also known sometimes known as John Purviance, Sr.
Col. John Purviance
by wife Mary Jane Wasson begot three sons and eight
daughters, videlicet:
C
“Elder” David Purviance – signed the
Last Will & Testament of the Cane Ridge Presbytery to begin with Barton
Stone a new denomination; served in the Kentucky then Ohio state legislature;
and is buried in New Paris Cemetery, Preble Co., Ohio. He also served as needed
as president pro tempore of Miami University of Ohio. In 2003, Garner
Huie, the son of Joseph Headden Huie & Ann
C
Eleazor Purviance
[Eliazor Purviance?] [Eleazer Purviance?]
C
John Purviance
(scalped by Indians; his widow married William McCorkle, a brother of
our ancestor Robert McCorkle, our Robert having died in 1828 soon after removal
to
In searching for our “Mattie” Martha King (Purviance)
(McCorkle), I found the following on
www.ancestry.com but don’t know what to do
with it. All I’m certain about is that she is not the wife (2nd
wife) of William McCorkle. : Martha K. McCorkle,
aged 68 in 1880 census [born about 1812]. Home in 1880: Oxford, Lafayette
Co.,
C
Anne Purviance (Mrs. Samuel Woods)
– One might see my Internet entry on the Roots Web pages for
C
Margaret Purviance (Mrs. James Cropper)
C
Martha Purviance (Mrs. Fleming)
C
Sarah Purviance (Mrs. Samuel Harris)
C
Mary Purviance
(Mrs. Cowan) – I wonder if
this Mr. Cowan was kin to Lavinia Cowan from Rowan
Co., NC, who was the 1st wife of Benjamin Huie, 1797-1879. Pure
speculation. This Mrs. Benjamin Huie was a daughter of Samuel Cowan &
Rachel Lewis (Cowan) of
C
Our ancestor, Elizabeth Purviance, 1775-1849,
who married William Thomas, born 1765. One of Elizabeth Purviance and William Thomas’ children was our ancestor, Jane
Maxwell Thomas (Mrs. Edwin Alexander McCorkle). Edwin
Alexander McCorkle was a son of Robert and Margaret Morrison McCorkle. –
Just think of it: Elizabeth Purviance Thomas’
brother, John Purviance, was scalped
by hostile Indians in Middle Tennessee !!!
C
Jenette Purviance
(Mrs. Richard Maxwell)
– Child of Jenette Purviance
Maxwell: Mary Maxwell, born
Purviance-Thomas Excursus:
I.
William Thomas married Elizabeth
Purviance. Their children are listed as
Generation II immediately below.
Generation Two:
II.1. John Purviance Thomas, Jr., born 1792, married
Kitty Espey [?Catherine?]
[Now I’m wondering about a Thomas connection
with historic Espy Tavern in Bedford,
One of the children of Kitty Espy & John Purviance Thomas, Jr., was David E. Thomas, a lawyer
who moved to
II.2.
Peggy Dickey = Margaret Purviance
Thomas (Dickey), born 1793, married a Mr. Dickey.
No issue.
“Peggy” Margaret Purviance Thomas Dickey is the one
who gave the land for building Lemalsamac Christian
Church in Dyer County, Tennessee (now, in 2003, called a Church of Christ). I
do not know the name of Peggy Dickey’s husband.
Just before Christmas of
2006, James Ragon of
Last Will and Testament of MARGARET [Thomas] DICKEY dec'd
Set up and established November Term 1869
State of Tennessee Dyer County I MARGARET DICKEY being in usual good health of body and of sane mind do this the 20 day of January declare this to be my last will and testament, 1st I will my body to the Earth whence it came. And my Soul to God who gave it 2nd It is my will that out of my worldly effects, at my decease that all my just debts shall be paid and a sufficiency used to secure my body a decent burial 3rd I then will that my brother HIRAM J. THOMAS shall have the use of all means belonging to me that he shall have in his hands at my death for the space of four years by him paying simple interest on same
4th I then will to my nephew D. P. McCORKLE ESQ. Four hundred dollars in money
5th I then will to my nephew JOHN E. McCORKLE Three hundred dollars in money.
6th I then will to my nephew ANDERSON J. McCORKLE the use of my house and lot in the town of Trenton Gibson county Tenn. Twelve months.
7th I then will to my nephew
FINIS A. McCORKLE Three hundred Dollars in money 8th I then will to
my niece ELIZABETH J. REEVES (wife
of WYATT REEVES) Four hundred dollars in money 9th I then will to my niece LATINA McCorkle GREGORY
(wife of JOHN GREGORY) four hundred dollars in money - 10th I then will to my nephew W.T. WOODS the tract or
parcel of land willed to
me by my Father said land lies adjoining the said WM. T. WOODs land on which he now lives and contains by estimation
Sixty acres more of less I also will to the said nephew W.T. WOODS one half of
my town lot in the Town of Trenton
Gibson county Tenn. (after ANDERSON J. McCORKLE has
the use of it twelve months) which I hold by deed to me from J. P. THOMAS 11th I then will the
other half of the above described house and lot after - after ANDERSON J. McCORKLE has the use of it twelve months) to CORA ALICE daughter of the above
named nephew, WM. T. WOODS 12th I then will to niece my MARTHA
MARGARET DICKEY (SEAL)
Test
M.R. HENDRICKS
W.H.
____________________________________________________________
I had sent the following email to James Ragon in
Dear James:
Direct Descendants of John (Sr.) DICKEY
1 John (Sr.) DICKEY
b: 1703 in
+Martha McNEELY
b: 1706 in Antrim County, Ireland d: 1895 in Bullock
Creek, York County, South Carolina m: Abt.
1737 in Augusta County, Viriginia
2 Jane DICKEY
b: 1738 in Albemarle Co., VA d: Nov 1763 in Jackson
County, Georgia
2 John (Jr.)
DICKEY b: 25 Aug 1740 in Albemarle Co., VA
d: Bet. 22 Mar - 06 Apr 1801 in York Co., SC
2 George (Sr.)
DICKEY b: 15 Apr 1742 in Albemarle Co., VA
d: 04 Aug 1817 in Madison Co., AL
+Mary (Polly) SCOTT b: 1746 d: 1826
in Wabash, Indiana m: Apr 1762
3 John DICKEY b: Abt. 1765 in Albemarle Co., VA d: Bef. 1870
3 Rebecca DICKEY b: 1766 in
Albemarle County, Virginia d: 19 Sep 1832 in Madison
County, Tennessee
3 Ephraim E. DICKEY b: 1770 in
York County, South Carolina d: 1840 in Lincoln County,
Tennessee
3 Martha Jane DICKEY b: 18 May
1774 d: Unknown
3 Jane DICKEY b: 15 May 1778
in York County, South Carolina d: 25 Feb 1858 in Round Rock,
Williamson County, Texas
3 Mary Polly (Molly) DICKEY b:
11 May 1781 in York County, South Carolina d: 06 Jun 1843 in
Princeton, Gibson County, Indiana
3 George (Jr.) DICKEY b: 15
Feb 1785 in York County, South Carolina d: 05 Oct 1870 in
Dyer County, Tennessee
+Anna CALLAHAN b:
04 Dec 1785 in Alabama d: 27 Aug 1869 in Dyer County,
Tennessee m: Bef. 1812
4 Matthew (Sr.)
DICKEY b: 1812 in Madison County, Alabama
d: 11 Aug 1886 in Dyer County, Tennessee
4 Madison DICKEY
b: Abt. 1818 in Madison County,
Alabama d: 1839 in Dyer County, Tennessee
4 Anderson DICKEY
b: 31 Jul 1820 in Madison County, Alabama d: 31 Jan 1867
in Dyer County, Tennessee
3 Nancy DICKEY b: 1788 in York
County, South Carolina d: Unknown
3 Sarah DICKEY b: Feb 1792 in
York County, South Carolina d: 1892 in Warwick County,
Indiana
3 Eleanor DICKEY b: Dec 1775
in York District, South Carolina d: Sep 1825
2 Ebenezer (Ebner) DICKEY b: 15 Nov 1744 in Albemarle
Co., VA d: Bef. 25 Sep 1784 in
Kentucky
2 Robert (Sr.)
DICKEY b: 25 Nov 1745 in Albemarle Co., VA
d: 24 May 1817 in South Salem, Ross County, Ohio
2 Mary Eleanor
(twin) DICKEY b: 18 Oct 1747 in Albemarle County,
Virginia d: 12 Dec 1834 in Livingston, Kentucky
2 David (twin)
DICKEY b: 18 Oct 1747 in Albemarle Co., VA
d: 07 Nov 1823 in Washington, Daviess County, Indiana
2 Susannah
DICKEY b: Abt. 1751 in Albemarle
Co., VA d: Aft. 1784 in York County, South
Carolina
2 Mary (Polly) DICKEY
b: 11 Apr 1753 in Albemarle Co., VA d: 12 Dec 1834 in
Livingston, Crittenden County, Kentucky
Burial: 15 Dec 1834 Bethany, Livingston County, Kentucky
2 Martha
DICKEY b: 12 Jan 1756 in Albemarle Co., VA
d: Unknown
2 William (Sr.)
DICKEY b: 06 May 1764 in York Co., SC d: 28
Jun 1832 in Macon, Illinois
79. x.
GEORGE JR. DICKEY, b.
James, Could this be the husband of Margaret “Peggy” Thomas (Dickey), who donated the land for Lemalsamac Christian Church???????] The dates fit, as she was born in 1795.
Sincerely, Marsha Cope Huie (Mrs. Ralph Ervin Williamson)
MHuie@satx.rr.com
James Ragon responded, This George is a first cousin of our
Sarah [Dickey Scott], and his wife is Anna Callahan. George, Jr., is not
mentioned in Margaret Dickey's will; see
below. Margaret may have married one of the Rowan Co., NC. Dickeys.
Take care and have a Merry Christmas, James
___________________________________________________________End
of Blurb about Margaret “Peggy” Thomas Dickey
II.3.
David Purviance Thomas, born 1795
– died 1836
a hero of the
[Other records erroneously say he was
born 1801; but our McCorkle-Huie records say 1795; the State of
David Purviance Thomas
was mortally wounded near San Jacinto Battleground,
I hope to get to visit the Texas State Archives
in
An
entry follows further down, the article I placed on Wikipedia,
the online encyclopedia:
`
II.4.
Jane Maxwell Thomas (McCorkle), b.1802, married Edwin Alexander McCorkle,
an initial magistrate for
II.5.
Sarah Purviance Thomas, b ca.1803,
m. Eleazor Woods
See Goodspeed’s History of
Tennessee Dyer County.
II.6.
Hiram Jacob Thomas, M.D., born 1813, married Rebecca
Stephens. He removed from Wilson County, Tennessee, to
Obituary from The Weekly Clarion,
“ [1878] Obituary
“Dr. Hiram
J. Thomas died at his residence in
“In all that
constituted a good citizen and neighbor he was pre-eminent. He was charitable, just, and public spirited,
his purse and hand were ever ready to aid in any work of public good, whether
religious, charitable, social or political.
He was in his convictions and opinions inflexibly firm, yet always
respectful of those of others; without ostentation, he dispensed charity with a
liberal hand. After a long life of
public and patriotic usefulness, he goes down to the grave with a memory
revered and blessed by troops of friends.
He died without an enemy, and his walk and conduct, his justice, his
love of truth, his unvarying integrity in all the relations and duties of life,
his charity, and his kindness to his fellow man, his fidelity to every trust,
show that in its broad and full sense he was a true Christian, although not a member of any church. He met death with that calmness and composure
which a Christian with a conscious sense of the rectitude of his life should
meet the end of earthly things. R.B. “
Back
to: David Thomas Wikipedia online dictionary
entry:
(10 December
1795–1836) was a
signatory of the
Texas Declaration of Independence
and the first
Attorney General (ad interim) and acting
Secretary
of War of the
Republic
of Texas.
David
Thomas was the third of six children of William and Elizabeth (Purviance)
Thomas of
Wilson County, Tennessee. He was born on
10 December
1795 (State of Texas
records say 1801), presumably in
Wilson County, Tennessee. His parents
removed from Middle Tennessee to
Dyer County in the newly opened Western
District of Tennessee.
David
Thomas's father, William Thomas, was from the area of
Statesville, North Carolina, then
Tennessee. His three brothers, Henry, James, and John, were also soldiers in
the Revolutionary War. William's father was Jacob Thomas of
Rowan County, North Carolina, also a
Revolutionary War soldier, who married Margaret Brevard.
David
Thomas's mother Elizabeth was the daughter of
Revolutionary
War soldier John Purviance of Rowan County, who married Mary Jane Wasson.
One of Elizabeth's brothers was
David Purviance,
who is listed as a co-founder with
Barton
Stone of the Christian Church-Church of Christ which originated at the
Cane Ridge Meeting
House in
Bourbon County, Kentucky, outside
Paris,
Kentucky, circa 1804. David Purviance served in the Kentucky and Ohio
legislatures, where he continually advocated
abolitionism,
and founded
Miami University, serving often as its president pro
tempore. Levi Purviance wrote a biography of the father David Purviance.
A
birth quilt made by his family is crafted "D.O. Thomas", but his
middle name is unknown and it is possible that the intent was "DP" for
"David Purviance Thomas", reflecting his mother's maiden name.
David
Thomas later became a
lawyer. It is known that
Sam Houston
read law at
Maryville College in eastern Tennessee, but is
not yet known where his friend and colleague David Thomas read law, whether
with a preceptor or at college.
David
Thomas affixed his signature to the
Texas Declaration of Independence
alongside that of Sam Houston, each from
Refugio on
March 2,
1836. His writings in
the Texas State Archives as Secretary of War reveal, by the degree of shakiness
of handwriting, the relative proximity to the Texans of
Santa Anna's
troops heading toward
San Jacinto.
On
3 March
1836, David Thomas was
amongst those appointed to the Constitutional Committee for the nascent
Republic of Texas and is thought to have been a principal drafter of the
Constitution of the Republic of
Texas: on the committee were, inter alia, David Thomas and
Sam Houston
of Refugio, Texas, and Robert Hamilton of Red River and James Collinsworth of
Brazoria.
Thomas
died 1836 after suffering an accidental mortal wound from a musket ball in the
leg on the steamship Cayuga when fleeing troups of Santa Anna (Antonio
Lopez de Santa Anna) with the new government of the Republic of Texas as part
of the Runaway Scrape. David Thomas is buried in a hero's grave in the de
Zavala Cemetery in the San Jacinto battlefield state shrine near
Houston.
An
extant letter sent from
Groce's Plantation,
some 12 miles below
Washington-on-the-Brazos, Texas to
his brother, Hiram Jacob Thomas, M.D., dated just before David Thomas's death
in 1836 states unequivocally, "I am attorney general of Texas." He
reports that their fellow Tennessean Colonel
David
Crockett has been killed at the
Alamo. By 1836, his brother Dr. H. J. Thomas had removed from
Tennessee to
Vernon in
Jasper County, Mississippi. The letter,
in the
University of Texas libraries, is handstamped
"Nashville T," where evidently the recipient paid for and picked up
the letter, in a time before the government issued stamps and when the
addressee had to pay to receive mail:}}
"
Großes Pass [Groce's Plantation]
March 20th 1836
13 miles below Washington [-on-the-Brazos]
"
Dear Brother
"
I have only time to write you a few words Major Green has just arrived and
tells me that he saw you lately at New Orleans, afterwards at Vernon [Mißißippi].
"
The convention has adjourned, and after a declaration of Independence and
adoption of a constitution and electing a President -- one Presidente [sic],
Secratary [sic] of State of War of the Navy of The Treasury, and attorney
general all forming the 3 cabinets--I have not time to write to you in detail.
I am the attorney General of Texas.
"
You will I have no doubt see from the papers a full account of the proceedings
of Texas. The President & his cabinet will find their residence at
Harrisburgh on the Waters of the Trinity on [or?] Galveston Bay where you will
be good enough to direct your letterξ ---------
"
I have not speculated any as yet - times are a little difficult at this time.
Santa Anna is in the country--San Antonia [sic] was stormed on the 8th day of
this month, not a man escaped to tell the news, about one hundred & eighty
Americans were butchered col Croket amongst them and I expect Major Autry of
Jackson [Tennessee? Mississippi?] It is said that there was between two &
three Thousand Mexicans who made the attack. There was according to their own
account upwards of five hundred killed and as many wounded
"
Gen. Houston is in the field with 800 men in the Colorado his force increasing
dayly [sic]. Col Fannis is at Goliad with five or six hundred men, all
volunteers from the United States they have fortifyed [sic] and have, I have no
doubt, been attacked before this time. I am anxious to hear from there All my
acquaintances are there that belong to the army.
"
I have very little doubt but Santa Anna will attempt to storm that force, if he
should succeed they will suffer the fate of those in the Alamo. But I feel
confident this place will be able to sustain itself.
"
I will write to you again soon
Yourξ &c. [et cetera]
David Thomaξ
"
Dr. H.J. Thomaξ " [End of Letter]
[Envelope handstamped as received at "Nashville T."]
Dr. H.J. Thomaξ
Vernon
Mißißippi
U.S.
_______________________________David
Thomas's
land
grant from the State of Texas was posthumously claimed by his nephew in
West Tennessee John Edwin McCorkle (1839-1924), Tennessee state legislator, on
behalf of all the nieces and nephews of David Thomas. One of them was David E.
Thomas, by then an attorney in Austin, Texas, who responded to an inquiry from
McCorkle that the land grant was not worth claiming, for it was subject to
Indian depredations and back taxes amounting to more than its fair market
value. Nevertheless, McCorkle claimed the land for the heirs of the decedent
David Thomas.
This
is what the land-grant document says:
"No.
525-- IN THE NAME of the STATE OF TEXAS: To all to whom these Presents shall
come, know ye: I, :F.R. Lubbock, Governor of the State aforesaid by
virtue of the power vested in me by Law and in accordance with the Laws of said
state in such case made and provided by these presents GRANT to the Heirs of
David Thomas, deceased, their heirs and assigns forever, One Third of a
League of Land, situated and described as follows: In Callahan County,
Survey No. 801, on the waters of Pecan Bayou, a tributary of the Colorado River
and between the East and West Caddo Peaks, by virtue of Headright Certificate
No. 165, issued by the Board of Land Commissioners for Bastrop County, on the
2'd day of November A.D. 1838. ...*********** In Testimony whereof, I
have caused the Great Seal of the State to be affixed, as well as the SEAL of
the General Land Office. Done at the City of Austin on the Twenty Fifth day of
April in the year of our Lord One thousand eight hundred and Sixty Two [1862]
.....[signed] F.R. Lubbock, Governor...."
See for the presidents of the
The Texas Declaration of Independence online:
www.tsl.state.tx.us/treasures/republic/odeclar-10.html
Comptroller's Office, Austin, Texas, Certificate of
Redemption No. 675 P. A.,
Stuart Hoyle Purvines, PURVIANCE
FAMILY (privately published 1986).
1836 letter from David Thomas to his brother Hiram Jacob
Thomas, M.D., in University of Texas library for American History, donated by
Evelyn d'Arcy Cushman, wife of Alfred Cushman, a descentant
of David Thomas' other brother John Purviance Thomas,
born Middle Tennessee (Sumner County) 22 Feb. 1792, died 1857 Mississippi (and
wife Catherine Espy Thomas). John Purviance Thomas'
children were American J. Thomas (Mrs. Milton Hue Johnson), c.1817-1860, of
Gibson County, West Tennessee, mother of Sarah Jane Johnson McGee, 1845-1892,
grandmother of Henry Johnson McGee, 1869-Memphis 1919, great-grandmother of
Lucille McGee Cushman, born in Gibson Co, Tenn., to Houston, Texas, and gg-grandmother of James Alfred Cushman IV whose wife Evelyn
donated the 1836 letter to the University of Texas libraries; David E. Thomas,
1822-1887, attorney in Austin, Texas, m. Olivia Tulley;
Albert H. Thomas, 1825-1884, Methodist minister in Memphis who m. a daughter of
Judge Greer; and Melvina E. Thomas Riley.
Family photograph of Dr. Hiram Jacob Thomas, brother of
David Thomas; and papers concerning John Edwin McCorkle's redemption of land
grant to David Thomas for back taxes, both in the hands of Marsha Cope Huie.
Purviance-Thomas-McCorkle-Huie
Family Records of Dyer County in
Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/David_Thomas_%28Texas_politician%29"
Categories:
1795 births |
1836 deaths |
Texas politicians
_________________________________________________
The
following reproduces a 2001 email from Juanita Cook of
“ I do have lots of Thomas info---my gggg-grandfather and William Thomas who
married Elizabeth Purviance, were
brothers. I became a
[It
was about the Estate of David Thomas, 1st attorney general ad
interim of the Republic of Texas; signer of the Texas Declaration of Independence
if not the main drafter, his signature inscribed beside Sam Houston’s
signature, each listing himself as representing Refugio, Texas; and Secretary
of War. John Edwin McCorkle circa 1880 succeeded in redeeming the land grant.
He got together the unpaid taxes on the land. By then the only land
“I also have a copy of an old newspaper page that has
an obituary of William Thomas. Also a small death
notice of Col. David Thomas. Do you have a copy of "
Biographical Directory of the Texan Conventions and Congresses" which has
a long article about David Thomas?
“Most of my info on this line of Thomases
came from Evelyn Cushman of
“Marsha, did you know that your William Thomas [who
married Elizabeth Purviance] and 3 other
brothers were in the Revolutionary War? All sons of Jacob
Thomas & Margaret Brevard Thomas: my John was the
oldest, then James--Henry—William. John stayed
in
“I live in
[End
of the above Email from Juanita Cook to Marsha Huie]
[Immediately
below is another email transmission from Juanita Cook to Marsha Huie:]
“
My John Thomas married Mary Jetton--she was a
daughter of Elizabeth Brevard and John Jetton. A son of John's, Isaac
Thomas, married Asenath Houston.
My gggg- grandfather and the William Thomas
who married Elizabeth Purviance,[32] were brothers. I became a
Juanita
Cook writes further:
(1)
“I think the Thomas men did stop over in Middle Tennessee before
stopping in
(2)
John Thomas, James Thomas, Henry Thomas, and William Thomas – all four Thomas
brothers – were in the Revolutionary War.
And
so begins the Thomas Genealogy:
Generation II.
Children of Jacob Thomas & Margaret Brevard Thomas:
CII John
Thomas, the oldest
brother. –This John Thomas remained in
C II
James Thomas – James
Thomas was in
C II
Henry Thomas
– Please recall that the brother John stayed in
C
IIWilliam Thomas,
born Rowan County, NC, on 3 Sept. 1761, and lived there until end of Revolutionary War; moved
to Wilson County in Middle Tennessee for many years,
then circa 1830 moved westward to Dyer County where he
died 1 April 1833. – William’s brother John stayed in
Generation II.
Elizabeth Thomas (Sherrill),
daughter of Jacob Thomas, was born circa 1763, married on
Generation II. Annie
Thomas (Sherrill), daughter of Jacob Thomas, sister of Elizabeth Thomas
Sherrill and of William Thomas, inter alia.
Annie Thomas (Mrs. Able Sherrill) was born
- - -
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
Generation III. John Thomas and Mary Jetton
Thomas had a son, Isaac Thomas, who married Hannah
McKnight. Or is this correct: Isaac Thomas, son of John Thomas
and Mary Jetton, married Asenath
Houston.
Juanita Cook writes, “I'm not sure but I think her, Asenath Houston’s, family tied to old Sam Houston some
way.”
***
*** ***
Generations
Later: The “John Thomas married Mary
Jetton” union produced Juanita Cook. John Thomas was her gggg-grandfather. This John Thomas and Marsha Huie’ss William Thomas, who married Elizabeth Purviance, were brothers. Juanita Cook became a
I
think the ff. is repetitious, but have spent way too much time editing
this document, so here it may be again, with apologies to the reader:
Generation
II. William
Their
children = Generation III:
C
Generation III.
John
Purviance Thomas,
b 1792 married Kitty Espy –“ Juanita, I’ve been
to see an old Espy Tavern in
Generation
IV. David E. Thomas,
attorney in
C
Generation III.
Margaret Thomas, b 1793 m Mr Dickey – the “Peggy” Dickey who
provided land for the building of Lemalsamac
Christian Church, later after the schism the Lemalsamac
Church of Christ, which still stands in the year 2003. She was herself a Purviance descendant, from the Purviances who began their life in
Generation III.
C
David Thomas, born 1795 according to my great-aunt’s
records, that is, the records of Katie Pearl McCorkle (Mrs. Ed Lee Fox), who
lived until her death circa 1963 on the old McCorkle Home-place in eastern Dyer
Co., Tennessee. Aunt Kate’s records supplemented those of her sister Ora McCorkle Huie (Mrs. Julius Adolphus
Huie).
o
“My John Thomas
married Mary Jetton--she was a daughter of Elizabeth Brevard
and John Jetton. A son of John's, Isaac Thomas, married
Asenath Houston. …My gggg- grandfather and the William Thomas
who married Elizabeth Purviance,[33] were brothers.”
Generation
III.
C
Jane Maxwell Thomas, born 1802, married Edwin Alexander
McCorkle. They removed from Rutherford County, Tennessee (
Generation
III.
C
Sarah Purviance b
circa 1803, m Eleazor
Woods. Sarah P and Eleazor Woods are
in Goodspeed’s History of
Tennessee, biographies of Dyer Co,
Generation
III.
C
Hiram Jacob Thomas, M.D., born
1813, married Rebecca
Stephens. She soon died and he had no issue. An obituary about
him in
1834 Application of Elizabeth Purviance Thomas (Mrs. William Thomas)
for Revolutionary War Widow’s Pension, Number 53780
William Thomas was born to Margaret Brevard & Jacob Thomas in Rowan County, North Carolina,
on 3 September 1761,
[Jane Maxwell Thomas (Mrs.
Edwin Alexander McCorkle) was a daughter of Elizabeth Purviance
(Thomas) and husband, Revolutionary War soldier William Thomas. Jane Maxwell Thomas McCorkle was therefore a
sister-in-law to Margaret Permelia (Pamela) McCorkle
Scott (Mrs. Lemuel Locke Scott, 1802-1853); to Jehiel Morrison McCorkle (died 1849); to
This day appeared before me GEORGE W. TINKLE, one of the acting
justices of the peace for the county of Dyer, ELIZABETH [PURVIANCE] THOMAS, widow and relict of WILLIAM
THOMAS, deceased, late of said county, at the residence of the said
ELIZABETH [PURVIANCE] THOMAS because
from age, said Elizabeth was unable to appear before me, and made the following
declaration in order to obtain the benefits of the Act of Congress passed the 7
of June A.D. 1832.She states that on the first
of April 1833 her husband WILLIAM THOMAS departed this life
being then a citizen of Dyer county where he had resided about 3 years having removed from the county of WILSON where he had lived for many
years, to the county of Dyer where he died.
She states that she intermarried with the said WILLIAM THOMAS, deceased, some time
about
And the said ELIZABETH [PURVIANCE] THOMAS,
widow and relict of the said WILLIAM THOMAS, deceased, further declares and
says that the said WILLIAM THOMAS has always been held and taken for a soldier
of the Revolution and a man of good character and undoubted veracity, and that
the substance of his declaration is herewith embodied and set forth which the
said ELIZABETH THOMAS believes to be true, having often many years heretofore
heard the said WILLIAM THOMAS repeat the same, the substance of which is as
follows:
Declarant
[William Thomas] stated that he was born
in the county of Rowan, North Carolina,
on the 3rd day of September 1761, where he continued to
reside until the close of the revolutionary war and he stated that he
entered the service of the United States and served under the following
officers; that sometime in the year 1780
he was drafted to go into South
Carolina to ??serve??? a tour of three
months against the British. The
company to which declarant belonged was commanded by James Purviance,
Lt. Abel Armstrong, Ensign John Lucky [?]. He rendezvoused at
“ Shortly after this, declarant
was again called out, his time of service not having expired, by Gen l
Davidson, when they went to
“Declarant further stated that
some time in 1780 he was called into
service to go against the Loyalists in N.C. under Col. HUGH BREVARD. They were
marched towards the south fork of the Catawba.
Here they were engaged for some time against the tories
some of whom they took prisoners and dispersed others. He further stated that they then returned
home. He further stated that within the
last of 1780 or the first of 1781, they were again drafted to serve a tour
under Gen’l DAVIDSON
against the British under Cornwallis, who were pursuing Genl
MORGAN [Swamp Fox: Francis
Marion Morgan] after the battle of COWPENS.
They were marched under Gen’l DAVIDSON
to the
“He stated that he then remained in Iredell County, N.C., until the year 1791, when he removed to SUMNER COUNTY, Tennessee, where he
remained until 1799, when he removed to Wilson County, Tenn., where he remained
till the year 1830, when he removed to Dyer County, Tenn., where he resided at
the time of his death. He stated that he
was 71 years of age on
“Sworn to and subscribed before me this 2nd day
of July 1834
George W. Tinkle, J.P.
“[signed] ELIZABETH THOMAS ”
[…Pension Application also contains Affidavits of reputation for veracity of William Thomas and wife Elizabeth Purviance Thomas made by affiants Daniel Hendricks and Edwin A. McCorkle….]
[The related affidavit of James Thomas of
_________________________________________________________________________________________________
Some
Maxwell marriages in
C
Thomas Purviance to Nancy Maxwell,
C
Richard Maxwell, son of William Maxwell, was b. in Va. in 1776
and married (1st ) Jennette
“Janie” Purviance, daughter of John Purviance and Mary Jane Wasson Purviance,
Jennette b. aft. 1776. He m.(2nd) Anna
McCutcheon in Bourbon Co., KY.
Nancy
Purviance (Mrs. Thomas Maxwell) –
In
Sept. 2003, on the Internet [markfreemn@comcast.net],
I found information about the Maxwell families that were attached to the
Purviance family, and by extension to the Thomas
and McCorkle families. This is the crux of Mark Freeman on Thomas
Maxwell and Nancy Purviance Maxwell, at <http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~markfreeman/maxwell
>:
Re:
Nancy Purviance: Eleazor
Purviance lived two doors from Thomas Maxwell
in the 1820 or 1830 census for Giles Co., TN. [Then, kind of a generic term for
Middle Tennessee, I think.] Nancy Maxwell’s will, executed by her in 1839
and probated in 1839 – meaning she died in 1839 – lists her
children as Cynthia Maxwell, Sarah Maxwell, Thomas Mulky Maxwell, David Purviance
Maxwell, John Purviance Maxwell, Jane
Purviance Maxwell, and James W. Maxwell.
Executors of will of Nancy Purviance Maxwell: two
sons John Purviance Maxwell & David
Purviance Maxwell.
More
about the children of Nancy Purviance Maxwell (Mrs.
Thomas Maxwell):
C
1. Cynthia
Maxwell, oldest daughter, born about 1811 in Bedford Co., TN. She
married [unknown] Carl.
C
2. Sarah
Maxwell, youngest daughter
C
3. Thomas [Mulky] Maxwell, youngest son– Thomas [Mulky] Maxwell, born
C
4. David Purviance Maxwell.
C
5. John Purviance Maxwell – born
C
6. Jane P.
Maxwell, born 27 March 1814 in TN, died Nov. 1871 in
Hunt Co., TX [This would be near Greeneville, TX, which is about 60
miles east of Dallas.]
C
7. James
W. Maxwell, born
Thomas
Maxwell, born 1792 = the generation 4
denoted by Mark Freeman’s web pages. Father of Thomas Maxwell =
generation 3 and is unknown. Generation 2 = William Maxwell.
Generation 1 is unknown.
Thomas Maxwell, b.1792, d. about 1828 [?] in
Alternatively, records show a Thomas Maxwell buried in Giles Co.,
Tennessee, listed in the “Brown Cemetery” in Giles Co., Tennessee,
records as having died in 1831; this Thomas Maxwell is buried in
“Brown Cemetery” adjacent to a Mr. Pevines.
This name is probably some variation of Purviance.
If this 1831 death in Giles Co., TN., is our Thomas Maxwell, then his
father-in-law was a Mr. Purviance. In
fact, the name of Thomas Maxwell’s father-in-law would have been John Purviance. Therefore, according to the
above, this could be where our ancestors, Col. John Purviance and wife Mary Jane Wasson Purviance, are buried. A likely spot,
then, is
1839, Will of
I Nancy Maxwell of the
Second I give and bequeath to my oldest daughter Cynthia two beds and
bed cloths one cow and one side saddle.
Third I give and bequeath to my youngest daughter Sarah two beds and bed
cloths one cow and one stand of curtains, one set of plates and one set of cups
and saucers, one set of knives and forks, one bedstead, one trunk and two head
of sheep. I also want her to have three months of schooling.
Fourth I give and bequeath to my youngest son Thomas my bay colt a good
saddle and one cow. I also wish him to have five months of schooling.
Fifth I wish all my just debts paid and then what remains divided equally
between all my children and last of all I do hereby appoint my two sons John
P. Maxwell and David P. Maxwell executors.
Acknowledged and signed in the presence of us this 14 day of July 1839:
Witnesses: [signed] W i
l l i a m H. W o o d s
[signed] Samuel
Whitehead
End of Purviance Excursus
______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
McCorkles in
Our McCorkle people were almost certainly in the
This would explain “Peggy” Margaret Morrison McCorkle’s references in her
correspondence to the likelihood of various relatives’ being in
David Thomas and Samuel Houston seemed to appear in
Our David Thomas is buried in a hero’s grave, at the
I got the following McCorkle family in
I pulled the following information regarding
“
Rebecca Anderson5 McNutt
(John4th Generation , Alexander3rd Generation , Alexander2nd
Generation , John 1st generation One MacNauchtan) was born circa 1755 in Augusta Co., Va, & died Jan 1818 in Rockbridge Co.,
Mark Freeman lists the children of Rebecca McNutt and John Mc Corkle as:
“
64 i. Rev. Alexander6 McCorkle,
born
“65
ii. Rebecca McCorkle, born 03 May 1781 in Rockbridge
Mark
Freeman then lists the children of Rebecca McNutt by her 2nd
husband, Arthur Glasgow:
“66 i.
Joseph6 Glasgow, born 14 Oct 1783 in "Green Forest",
near Lexington, Rockbridge, Va; died in Rockbridge Co.,
Va.
“67
ii. John Glasgow, born
1785. ”
______________________________________________________________
Mark Freeman lists the following information about the surname Morrison.
[I searched because Margaret Morrison McCorkle was née Margaret Morrison]:
“Sarah5 Walker (John4 , Henry3 , James2
, Robert1 ) was b. 1755 in Derry Twp.,
----- END of Topic of: “Were our McCorkle people in the
area for a time on their migration from
Many thanks to Mark Freeman for placing his information on the Internet. [End of Chapter Three]
__________________________________________________________________________________________________________
APPENDIX to CHAPTER THREE
Sent from Marsha Huie to Conny Green. Provenance of letter:
Gentry Purviance McCorkle to his 1st cousin Katie Pearl McCorkle (Fox) to Aunt
Kate's niece Annie Glen McCorkle; to Marsha Cope Huie, a daughter of Annie Glen
McCorkle's 1st cousin Howard EWING Huie.
Cornelia Taylor Correspondence by Email with Marsha Cope Huie
"Glen Glenn Sound Company
Hollywood Studios
4516 Sunset Blvd. Olympia 2131
Hollywood
November 16 1937
Dear Katie Pearl:-
“First of all you, and you only, can ever understand how terrible I feel about the news your letter brought me of [your sister and] my dear [first] cousin Ora [Ora McCorkle Huie]. After her long life of usefulness and cheerfulness it is depressing to me to have it end like this [in the insane asylum at Western State Hospital in Bolivar, Tennessee]. It makes me pray all the more fervently: “O Lord Thy Kingdom Come”. For then, our youth will be restored.”
“These two letters of your delight me no little. They are so filled with the news of my remnant acquaintances and old time friends in the homeland. It seems but yesterday that I was riding ‘old beck’, uncle Hiram’s mule, to Lemalsamac [Christian Church, now Church of Christ] with Ona on a pad behind me and now I’m as old as my Dad was at the date of his death.
You did not tell me about Kate Cawthon [Mrs. Pace]. How is she? Still a teacher in the schools? I always thought a lot o’ her. [--Kate Cawthon Pace’s husband, Mr. Pace (father of Harry Pace), was killed at the Newbern railroad tracks by a man from Trimble who did more than merely brandish his walking stick. This man from Trimble was the father of “Miss” Mattie ????? who ran the Trimble library until circa 1985. No one was prosecuted; each participant in the deadly fisticuffs was considered a bit contentious.] I’m sorry now that I did not write the letter to cousin Sallie Tobe before her death. I had it in mind a hundred times [Quaere: Mmight Sallie Tobe have been some connection to “Tobe” Allen Scott, a sister to Mrs. Julius M. Huie, (Sarah Scott Huie’s dates of life 1839-1893)?]. Eddie [McCorkle, the only child of Hiram R. A. McCorkle by Hiram’s 2nd wife n ée Dona McCutchen] is a first-class rascal: I have written several letters to him since 1884 when I left uncle Hiram’s to live at home but has he ever answered a single one? Nay Pauline ! ! ! ! His boy Hiram [McCorkle] was in California but I did not get to see him.
And, so, Baz Brown is dead; that good old man;
We ne’er shall see him more;
He used to wear a long tailed coat
All buttoned up before:
With his departure goes my last known living enemy in the state of Tennessee and maybe in the USA. He hated me without reason. I never did understand the reason why Mattie McConnell [Brown] ever married him! He was a goose!! He did not enjoy first-class principle. I has always despised him.
Maggie L. [McCorkle]
and Mattie and I were friends together and had our little happy times
together and after Mattie married him she seemed to be afraid of him and
permitted him to alienate Mattie’s friendly relations from both Maggie and
me. I feel sure she is happy to be rid of him and his nasty vulgarity. The
community will sustain no loss and the world is better off. If I did not
consider it ill manners to tell the truth, the whole truth and nothing but
the truth about the dead, I’d devote another paragraph or two to that
bird.. [At one time in her life “Miss” Mattie Brown kept a boarding house
in Newbern.]
[page two:] ”2”
Just how old is Florene [Hamilton]? Maybe you knew she and I were conducting a burning courtship once upon a time and then the fire all of a sudden went out. I saw her once, only, when she was married to Clennie. She was good-looking then, I thought, and was favorably impressed. So, in time, Clennie and Momsie both died and I wrote to her. Was she 15 years or more older than he was? That was reported by the Hamiltons.
[Florene Hamilton was the one who had the ladies’ Dixieland band that traveled all over West Tennessee. She was tall and thin and, after coming to Newbern where she married Mr. Hamilton, she brought with her a niece named Florene Wood, who was not so tall as she.]
No, Katie Pearl darling, I’m not married yet but by golly I am going to be some o’ these days. As many darling women as there are in this earth and as much as I love a precious woman, when I does love her, I’ll be dad-blamed if I’m going to spend the next 35 years o’ my life doin’ without one. SO:
But, they’re difficult to find. That is, the gal I desire to have as a [third] wife is scarce in California. Maybe I’ll have to do as I did the other two times, go back to Tennessee. I am a lookin’ all the time and a hopin’ and prayin’ for the sort who can love me and whom I also can rave about forever.
She should be a Seventh Day Adventist; Not over 40; Not too fat nor yet too thin; not too tall and neither too short; a demi-blonde; not too brilliant and not too dumb; not too rich and never too poor; a pretty face and a well developed form; auburn hair preferred; brown will do; well educated; widow; (Old maids above 40 are too exacting) who plays the piano.
There are 12 women to one man in the SDA church and if there are any such as this in Tennessee she might consider me. I’m still as gentle as a lamb, as light on my feet as a fox; my fingers are as nimble as those of a boy of 25. There are many such women as I have enumerated but mostly all married. But whenever I find the gal, which I will, and she names the day, which I’m sure she will, I’ll send you her picture and invite you to the wedding. I have one such in the horizon but have not met her and she does not know what I’m a thinkin’.
Well, Katie darlin’, the Signs O’ The Times have the name of the lawyer John Doe in my story but did not want me to use his real name. I thought you would know him at first sight but maybe you do not remember him. I heard him make just the speech at the meeting as described in the story. He was a brilliant lawyer there for years, was a drunken bum for a long period of time and then reformed, opened his law-office again, made good, married a beautiful and talented woman, was supt of the christian sunday school at Newbern and was restored [
`````````````````````````````````````````”3”
I’m sure uncle John E [John Edwin McCorkle, 1839-1924] would call his name the first name he would pronounce. Think over all the people of that generation and if you fail to recall him, I’ll tell you in my next letter. He was always a friend o’ mine.
I have not seen [my ½-sister] Mada [Mada McCorkle Montgomery, a.k.a. Mrs. Howell Montgomery] since she came back [to California] from Tennessee. She owes me $50.00 borrowed money and $3000.00 additional which she and Howell and [their daughter] Margaret [Montgomery] squandered and this makes her shy about coming around since she received her insurance money from the death of her husband. [My brother] Homer [McCorkle] is shy also on account of $1600.00 and $250.. and $150.00 which I loaned to him in Texas in 1905. But it is more blessed to lend than it is to borrow and I’m thankful enough that I’ve always been on the lending end o’ the pole rather than the borrowing end.
I’d be very much pleased to hear from Ona. I think I’ll write another letter and take a chance. Where is her step-mother now? I believe, also, I’ll write to [our McCorkle first-cousin] Hiram Reeves [son of Elizabeth McCorkle Reeves, who was a sister to Finis Alexander McCorkle, GP’s father]
Well darlin’ cousin o’ mine, I’ll not enter into any controversy with you for remaining with the church of our fathers. But I will say this: Quoting you: “We have the same bible”: The law did indeed bring us to Christ. But which law? Do not forget that there were two laws. The moral law and the ceremonial law. The Earthly Sanctuary question discloses that. All things revolve about the two laws and the sanctuary.
The hand of the Lord Himself wrote the Decalogue. It was laid IN the ark of the covenant. It is this law whereby we are to be judged. It stands forever. It has never been supplanted. The ceremonial law brought us to Christ. The high-priest in the Holy of Holies had his hand raised to slay the sacrificial lamb but dropped his knife when the Lord Jesus said ‘It is Finished’ and the lamb went free for the reason the moment Jesus paid the price no further animal blood was efficacious. The ceremonial law was there nailed to the cross because it had in fact ended when the veil of the temple was rent in twain.
One other: Acts 20:7 does not recite that His followers are to meet on the first day to break bread in memory of His death and resurrection. I believed that once also. It says they came together to break bread. Another way of expressing a coming together to have a meal. No change of the Sabbath is suggested.
“4”
The death of my [first] cousin John Jackson saddens me no little. I did not know him very well but always liked him. He was the son of my uncle John Jackson who was one of my favorite uncles of them all.
But great scott, gal: This is such a long and such a dull letter. I have another story coming out this week or next in the SIGNS which maybe you’ll like to read and I’ll send one to you. You will recall some of the events and times and characters. Read it and tell me if you think it’s “sea worthy”.
Write to me again. I do not like to be forgotten. Neither do I wish to forget any of you. It was a terrible disaster about the Crenshaw bank wreck [in Newbern, Tennessee][1], The paper said the money was stolen by some one inside. Who did it? Who got the money? Tell me the inside facts and maybe I’ll write another Newbern Bank Story: With all my love to you and to all the kin I am
Your cousin,
Gentry
___________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
1. Bush Crenshaw, a brother to Aline Crenshaw (Mrs. Parker Ditmore) (Aline, the maternal grandmother of Parker Ditmore Cashdollar) took the hit --he went to jail--for the bank troubles in Newbern. Because of the influence of Hattie Carraway, one of the few women congresspersons (was she a senator from Arkansas or a U.S. congresswoman from Arkansas?), Bush Crenshaw received a presidential pardon. --The story refined: Hattie Carraway's son was visiting someone in Newbern, Tennessee. The son was injured (killed?) in Newbern. Bush Crenshaw and wife Glades took the child into their home and cared for him. They didn't know Hattie Carraway as I understand the story. She was understandably grateful. And Bush got a great reward, indeed.--My grandfather Ira Mitchell Cope, 187-1949, thought the world of Bush Crenshaw, who managed to keep from foreclosing on the poor farmer's land when times got tough. He felt that Bush Crenshaw was treated unjustly by the courts. I imagine Bush broke some banking regulations but have not been able to find anything written about the case.
______________________________________________________________________________________________
Pictured below is a daughter of Glen Glenn & Mary Helen McCorkle (Glenn): Deanna Glenn (Taylor). She sits in a rocking chair inherited from the Roache family of Elmira Sloan McCorkle (Roache) & Dr. Stephen Roache. In the left-hand corner is her brother, -. Photo courtesy of Cornelia Taylor
Above:
Gentry Purviance McCorkle, Sr., with daughter Mary Helen
McCorkle (Mrs. Glen Glenn)
of Hollywood, California.
The
following was placed on the Internet by Mark Freeman of Texas.
Ahnentafel, Generation No. 1 1.
Margaret Thomas was born 22 DEC
1793, and died 23 OCT 1869 in Dyer Co., TN.
She was the daughter of 2.
William Thomas and 3.
Elizabeth Purviance. She married
[Unknown] Dickey.
Ahnentafel, Generation No. 2 2.
William Thomas was born 3 SEP 1765,
and died 1 APR 1833 in Dyer Co., TN.
3.
Elizabeth Purviance was born 12 MAY
1765 in Rowan Co., NC, and died DEC 1849 in
Dyer Co., TN. She was the daughter of 6.
John Purviance , Jr. and 7.
Mary Jane Wasson.
i.
John Purviance Thomas was born
22 FEB 1792 in Sumner Co., TN, and
died ABT 1857 in Coffeeville,
Yalobusha, MS. He married
Catherine M. Espy ABT 1816. She
died ABT 1875 in Coffeeville,
Yalobusha, MS. 1.
ii.
Margaret Thomas was born 22 DEC
1793, and died 23 OCT 1869 in Dyer
Co., TN. She married
[Unknown] Dickey.
iii.
David Thomas was born 10 DEC
1795 in TN, and died APR 1836 in
Republic of Texas. Acting secretary
of war and first attorney general
ad interim. Buried in
hero's grave at de Zavala Cemetery,
San Jacinto state shrine outside
Houston.
iv.
Jane Maxwell Thomas was born 11
FEB 1802 in Wilson Co., TN, and died
30 JAN 1855 in Newbern, TN. She
married
Edwin Alexander McCorkle 28 NOV
1821 in Lebanon, TN. He was born 18
MAR 1799 in Rowan Co., NC, and died
10 JAN 1853 in Newbern, TN.
v.
Hiram Jacob Thomas was born 8
SEP 1803, and died 15 MAY 1878,
Yazoo, Mississippi. He had
first moved to Vernon, Mississippi,
from Wilson Co., Tennessee. He
married
Rebecca Stephens
but she soon died and he never
married again. No issue.
vi.
Sarah P. Thomas was born 22 JUL
1804, and died 13 AUG 1853 in
Newbern, TN. She married
Eleazor Woods 1832, son of
Samuel Woods and Anne 'Anna'
Purviance. He was born 8 JAN 1813 in
Preble Co., OH, and died 1875 in
Dyer Co., TN.
Ahnentafel, Generation No. 3 6.
John Purviance , Jr. was born 6 JUN
1743 in Lancaster, PA, and died 6 AUG 1823
in Wilson Co., TN. He was the son of 12.
John Purviance and 13.
Margaret McKnight.
7.
Mary Jane Wasson was born 15 JUL
1746 in Chester Co., PA, and died 1810 in
Wilson Co., TN. She was the daughter of
14.
Archibald Wasson and 15.
Elizabeth Woods. 3.
i.
Elizabeth Purviance was born 12
MAY 1765 in Rowan Co., NC, and died
DEC 1849 in Dyer Co., TN. She
married
William Thomas 19 MAY 1791. He
was born 3 SEP 1765, and died 1 APR
1833 in Dyer Co., TN.
ii.
David (Church Elder) Purviance was born
14 NOV 1766 in Iredell Co., NC, and
died 19 AUG 1847 in Greenville, OH.
He married
Mary Ireland 1789, daughter of
John Ireland and Martha Purviance.
She was born 24 FEB 1763.
iii.
John Purviance was born 1768 in
Rowan Co., NC, and died 7 MAY 1792
in near Gallatin, TN. He married
Martha 'Mattie' King 26 DEC 1791
in Sumner Co., TN. She was born ABT
1767 in Rowan Co., NC.
iv.
Robert Purviance was born BEF
1773.
v.
Anne 'Anna' Purviance was born 3
FEB 1774 in NC, and died 17 AUG 1858
in Bentonville, Benton, AR. She
married
Samuel Woods 8 SEP 1796 in
Montgomery Co., KY. He was born 17
FEB 1776 in Rowan Co., NC, and died
4 DEC 1840 in Bentonville, Benton,
AR.
vi.
Jennette 'Janie' Purviance was
born AFT 1776, and died BEF 1800.
She married
Richard Maxwell BEF 1796, son of
William Maxwell and Jane Pilson. He
was born 15 OCT 1776 in VA, and died
BET 1840 AND 1850 in Sullivan Co.,
IN. Marsha thinks this
is the namesake of Jane Maxwell
Thomas (Mrs. Edwin A. McCorkle).
vii.
Sarah Purviance was born BEF
1780, and died 1803. She married
Samuel Harris , Jr. 2 SEP 1795.
He was born BEF 1775.
viii.
Eleazor Purviance was born 6 SEP
1782, and died 19 NOV 1869 in West
Lebanon, Warren, IN. He married
Elizabeth Orr 1809. She was born
24 DEC 1782, and died 10 MAR 1839 in
West Lebanon, Warren, IN.
ix.
Margaret Maria Purviance was
born 1786. She married
James Cropper 17 AUG 1808.
x.
Mary Purviance. She married
[Unknown] Cowan.
xi.
Nancy Purviance was born BEF
1795, and died AFT 1839 in Benton
Co., AR. She married
Thomas Maxwell 15 MAR 1810 in
Preble Co., OH, son of [Unknown]
Maxwell. He was born 1792, and died
ABT 1828 in Giles Co., TN.
xii.
Martha Purviance was born ABT
1784, and died in Drakesville,
Davis, Iowa.
Ahnentafel, Generation No. 4 12.
John Purviance was born 1712 in
Castle Finn, Ireland, and died BEF 12 JAN
1748/49 in Lancaster Co., PA. He was the son
of 24.
John Purviance.
13.
Margaret McKnight was born ABT 1712
in Ireland, and died in Lancaster Co., PA.
i.
James Purviance was born 14 JAN
1732/33 in Castle Finn, Ireland, and
died 26 APR 1806 in Bourbon Co., KY.
He married
Sarah Wasson ABT 1764 in Iredell
Co., NC, daughter of Archibald
Wasson and Elizabeth Woods. She was
born 15 JAN 1745/46 in Rowan Co.,
NC, and died ABT 1800 in Bourbon
Co., KY.
ii.
Mary McKnight Purviance was born
1734 in Castle Finn, Ireland, and
died 5 OCT 1784 in Iredell Co., NC.
She married
Andrew Morrison. He was born
1718, and died 5 FEB 1770 in Iredell
Co., NC.
iii.
Martha Purviance was born 14 OCT
1737 in Castle Finn, Ireland, and
died in Cane Ridge, Bourbon, KY. She
married
John Ireland 1750 in PA. He was
born BEF 1738 in Co. Tyrone,
Ireland, and died AFT 26 APR 1796 in
Cane Ridge, Bourbon, KY.
iv.
David Purviance was born ABT
1743. 6.
v.
John Purviance , Jr. was born 6
JUN 1743 in Lancaster, PA, and died
6 AUG 1823 in Wilson Co., TN. He
married
Mary Jane Wasson 2 AUG 1764 in
Rowan Co., NC, daughter of Archibald
Wasson and Elizabeth Woods. She was
born 15 JUL 1746 in Chester Co., PA,
and died 1810 in Wilson Co., TN.
vi.
Sarah Purviance was born 1747.
vii.
William Purviance was born ABT
1749.
14.
Archibald Wasson was born 1719 in
Ireland, and died 4 AUG 1785 in Rowan Co.,
NC. He was the son of 28.
John Wasson.
15.
Elizabeth Woods was born 1720 in
Ireland, and died 1766. She was the daughter
of 30.
[Unknown] Woods.
i.
John Wasson was born ABT 1740 in
Rowan Co., NC, and died BEF 11 OCT
1825 in Preble Co., OH. He married
Barbara Gordon ABT 1760.
ii.
Archibald Wasson was born ABT
1743 in Rowan Co., NC. He married
Ann Lansdill 27 JAN 1769 in
Rowan Co., NC. She was born BEF
1748.
iii.
Joseph Wasson was born 25 DEC
1744 in England, and died 23 JUN
1822 in Richmond, Wayne, IN. He
married
Sarah Smith 1770. She was born
17 MAR 1753 in England, and died 16
JAN 1832 in Richmond, Wayne, IN.
iv.
Sarah Wasson was born 15 JAN
1745/46 in Rowan Co., NC, and died
ABT 1800 in Bourbon Co., KY. She
married
James Purviance ABT 1764 in
Iredell Co., NC, son of John
Purviance and Margaret McKnight. He
was born 14 JAN 1732/33 in Castle
Finn, Ireland, and died 26 APR 1806
in Bourbon Co., KY. 7.
v.
Mary Jane Wasson was born 15 JUL
1746 in Chester Co., PA, and died
1810 in Wilson Co., TN. She married
John Purviance , Jr. 2 AUG 1764
in Rowan Co., NC, son of John
Purviance and Margaret McKnight. He
was born 6 JUN 1743 in Lancaster,
PA, and died 6 AUG 1823 in Wilson
Co., TN.
vi.
James Wasson was born BET 1747
AND 1755 in Rowan Co., NC, and died
1813 in Bourbon Co., KY. He married
Catherine [Unknown] 1773 in
Iredell Co., NC. She was born 1757
in Rowan Co., NC, and died 18 JUL
1839.
vii.
Nancy Wasson was born ABT 1748
in Rowan Co., NC.
viii.
Agnes Wasson was born ABT 1749
in Rowan Co., NC. She married
William Mordah 4 NOV 1769 in
Rowan Co., NC. He was born BEF 1745.
ix.
Elizabeth Wasson was born ABT
1752 in Iredell Co., NC.
Ahnentafel, Generation No. 5 24.
John Purviance was born BEF 1681 in
Ireland, and died in Ireland. He was the son
of 48.
Jacques Purviance. 12.
i.
John Purviance was born 1712 in
Castle Finn, Ireland, and died BEF
12 JAN 1748/49 in Lancaster Co., PA.
He married
Margaret McKnight BEF 1733 in
Ireland. She was born ABT 1712 in
Ireland, and died in Lancaster Co.,
PA. He married
Janet [Unknown] BEF 1742.
ii.
Samuel Purviance was born ABT
1701 in Castle Finn, Ireland, and
died in PA. He married
Lettice Dinsmore 2 APR 1725.
iii.
James Purviance was born ABT
1714 in Castle Finn, Donegal,
Ireland, and died BEF 18 MAY 1748 in
Lancaster Co., PA.
iv.
David Purviance was born 1708 in
Castle Finn, Ireland, and died 1743
in Dauphne Co., PA.
v.
Sarah Purviance was born AFT
1720 in Ireland. She married
Hugh Carruthers. He died AFT 31
JUL 1782 in Rocky River,
Mecklenburg, VA. She married
Hugh Carruthers. He was born BEF
1720.
28.
John Wasson was born ABT 1700. 14.
i.
Archibald Wasson was born 1719
in Ireland, and died 4 AUG 1785 in
Rowan Co., NC. He married
Elizabeth Woods 1741 in Rowan /
Iredell Co., NC, daughter of
[Unknown] Woods. She was born 1720
in Ireland, and died 1766. He
married
Ann [Widow] Lansdale AFT 1755.
30. 15.
i.
Elizabeth Woods was born 1720 in
Ireland, and died 1766. She married
Archibald Wasson 1741 in Rowan /
Iredell Co., NC, son of John Wasson.
He was born 1719 in Ireland, and
died 4 AUG 1785 in Rowan Co., NC.
ii.
[Unknown] Woods was born ABT
1720.
iii.
iv.
v.
Oliver Woods was born ABT 1710,
and died ABT 1760 in Rowan Co., NC.
He married
Martha [Unknown].
vi.
Samuel Woods was born BET 1710
AND 1730. He married
Sarah [Unknown].
Ahnentafel, Generation No. 6 48.
Jacques Purviance was born AFT 1630.
He was the son of 96.
Jacques de Purvaiance. 24.
i.
John Purviance was born BEF 1681
in Ireland, and died in Ireland.
ii.
Samuel Purveyance was born ABT
1660 in Royan, France, and died 18
JUL 1747.
Children of Elizabeth Purviance and William
Thomas are:
Children of Mary Jane Wasson and John
Purviance , Jr. are:
Children of Margaret McKnight and John
Purviance are:
Children of Elizabeth Woods and Archibald
Wasson are:
Children of John Purviance are:
Child of John Wasson is:
Children of [Unknown] Woods are:
Children of Jacques Purviance are:
[2] The 2nd Mrs. Haskins Ridens. The 1st wife of Haskins Ridens Sr. was a daughter of Lula Stephenson, a best friend of my maternal grandmother Notie Headden Cope. Sam Ridens, father of Haskins Sr., was a member of the Newbern Christian Church, now defunct, although as a child I never saw him there, but he did donate a small organ to our church, for which we were grateful.
[4][2] Robert McCorkle’s brother Generation II. William McCorkle is mentioned prominently in this document. William had 3 wives: (1st) “Peggy” Margaret Blythe; (2nd) “Mattie” Martha King (widow of the John Purviance who was scalped in the wilderness of Sumner County, Tennessee); this murdered John Purviance was a son of Revolutionary War lieutenant (“colonel”) John Purviance & wife Mary Jane Wasson Purviance. The 3rd wife of William McCorkle was Jennie Graham, whom William m. in 1800 in Sumner County, Tennessee.
It was William and
Robert McCorkle, brothers, who received the Revolutionary War
land grant from their father’s will. The father was Alexander
McCorkle, our immigrant McCorkle, who died and left a will in 1800 in
[3] Robert’s brother William McCorkle had 1st
married Margaret “Peggy” Blythe, a sister to Elizabeth Blythe
(the 1st Mrs. Robert McCorkle). James
M. Richmond, whose wife is a descendant of William McCorkle (brother
to our Robert) has identified the parents of “Peggy” Margaret Blythe as Reverend James Blythe and Elizabeth King (Blythe), parents of:
(1) Mrs. William McCorkle, née Margaret Blythe; [and, I
presume, (2) Mrs. Robert McCorkle, née Elizabeth
“Lizzie” Blythe].
[2] I suppose this Robert
RAMSAY was Alexander’s son-in-law, the one who married Alexander’s
daughter, “Nancy” Agnes McCorkle (Ramsay), whose
papers are in the Archives of the
[31]
[32] William Thomas & Elizabeth Purviance were the parents of Mrs. Edwin Alexander McCorkle, née Jane Maxwell Thomas.
[33] William Thomas & Elizabeth Purviance were the parents of Mrs. Edwin Alexander McCorkle, née Jane Maxwell Thomas.
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