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	<title>Notes on the History of Randolph County, NC</title>
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		<title>Benjamin Swaim and the “Man of Business”</title>
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		<pubDate>Tue, 17 Jan 2012 18:06:25 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>macwhatley</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Education]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[legal history]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[NC]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Quakers]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Randolph County]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Benjamin Swaim; Moses Swaim; The Man of Business]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[[A comment on this blog last month asked for information on Benjamin Swaim.  I have written about him twice; the biogrpahy of him in Volume “S” of the Dictionary of North Carolina Biography is by me, and actually contains a portion of the following paper.  This study of his life and one of his books [...]<img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=randolphhistory.wordpress.com&amp;blog=1204349&amp;post=1000&amp;subd=randolphhistory&amp;ref=&amp;feed=1" width="1" height="1" />]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a href="http://randolphhistory.files.wordpress.com/2012/01/swaim-0012.jpg"><img class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-1021" title="New Salem Street Scene before 1900" src="http://randolphhistory.files.wordpress.com/2012/01/swaim-0012.jpg?w=450&#038;h=171" alt="" width="450" height="171" /></a></p>
<p><em>[A comment on this blog last month asked for information on Benjamin Swaim.  I have written about him twice; the biogrpahy of him in Volume “S” of the Dictionary of North Carolina Biography is by me, and actually contains a portion of the following paper.  This study of his life and one of his books was originally written in 1981 as an assignment for my Masters Degree courses at the UNC-Chapel Hill School of Library and Information Science.  For Mr. Powell at DNCB I abstracted the basic biographical information about Swaim.  The bibliographical information is here presented to the public for the first time.  One thing I realize is not clear from this paper is that Benjamin Swaim's legal books are the first known Randolph County imprints-- that is, they are the first books printed in the county.]</em></p>
<p><em> </em><br />
<strong>SWAIM, BENJAMIN</strong> (13 May 1798 &#8211; 23 Dec. 1844), lawyer, printer, author and newspaperman, was almost certainly the son of William (10 March 1770 — 1 June 1850), and Elizabeth Sherwood Swaim (8 Nov. 1773 — 14 Aug. 1835).  They and several other branches of the numerous Swaim clan were residents of the Timber Ridge Community, east of Level Cross in Randolph County. <a title="" href="#_edn1">[i]</a></p>
<p><strong>Life and Career</strong>.<br />
Benjamin’s early life and education are obscure, although he perhaps attended schools taught by his uncle Moses Swaim.  Benjamin first appears in the records of the North Carolina Manumission Society, when, on August 27, 1819, he attended the society’s convention and began a sixteen-year association with the abolitionist group.<a title="" href="#_edn2">[ii]</a>   In the fall of 1822, he was hired to teach day classes of Mt. Ephraim schoolhouse in Guilford County.  Swaim, a law student at the time, was considered to be a teacher of great ability.  The number of students attracted to this school was so large that an assistant teacher was needed, and his second cousin William Swaim was hired for the position.  Benjamin and William organized a debating club at the school known as the “Polemic Society,” which became a forum for local men of all ages to join in oratorical contests.   In 1823, Guilford County Sheriff and state legislator Col. William Dickey asked Benjamin to take over Dickey’s private school.  Swaim instead successfully recommended cousin William for the job.</p>
<p><a href="http://randolphhistory.files.wordpress.com/2012/01/swaim-0191.jpg"><img class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-1005" title="Swaim 019" src="http://randolphhistory.files.wordpress.com/2012/01/swaim-0191.jpg?w=450&#038;h=184" alt="By  Line" width="450" height="184" /></a></p>
<p>Benjamin Swaim then relocated to the Randolph County town of New Salem, where he opened a law practice.  New Salem was (and is) located about a mile southwest of the Swaim family farms at Timber Ridge.  It was a crossroads community located at the point where the road between Asheboro and Greensboro intersected the ancient Indian Trading Path.  Land was conveyed to trustees of a Quaker meeting house there in 1815, but an informal group had probably met there as early as 1792.  New Salem was the commercial hub of Randolph County during the first quarter of the Nineteenth Century, hosting more stores and businesses than Asheborough.<a title="" href="#_edn3">[iii]</a>  The state legislature chartered town government in New Salem in 1816, appointing commissioners Benjamin Marmon, Jesse Hinshaw, Peter Dicks, William Dennis and Moses Swaim.</p>
<p>Moses Swaim, a brother of Benjamin’s father William and the only non-Quaker on the board, was the first president of the North Carolina Manumission and Colonization Society.<a title="" href="#_edn4">[iv]</a>    Benjamin, also a charter member of the organization, was in 1827 elected its President as well as delegated to attend the National Convention of the Abolition Society.  His opinions on the subject of slavery are revealed in his 1829 “Report of the President”, as printed in the Greensborough Patriot.  In it, he declares that “&#8230;the hour of Negro Emancipation is fast approaching.  It must and will assuredly come.  And all that we can do is prepare for its approach by a timely and gradual improvement of their debased condition….  Aided by Divine assistance, we may fearlessly encounter all the opposition of our enemies and confidently stand forth, the advocates of truth and justice, with such unyielding firmness and determined purpose as no earthly Interest, power or prejudice can successfully resist.” Swaim was reelected President of the Manumission Society until its discontinuance in 1835.</p>
<p><a href="http://randolphhistory.files.wordpress.com/2012/01/swaim-002.jpg"><img class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-1009" title="Swaim 002" src="http://randolphhistory.files.wordpress.com/2012/01/swaim-002.jpg?w=450&#038;h=630" alt="" width="450" height="630" /></a></p>
<p>Perhaps as early as May, 1831, Swaim began planning a serial law publication, <span style="text-decoration:underline;">The Man of Business or Every Man’s Lawbook</span> , a pioneer reference work of business law and legal forms.<a title="" href="#_edn5">[v]</a>   Swaim called <span style="text-decoration:underline;">The Man of Business</span> “new in character and design’, and publicly appealed for the approval of other lawyers, since “the prudent and seasonable prevention of ruinous litigation is no less a professional duty than the skillful management of it.”  Benjamin’s partner in this venture was his cousin William, had founded <span style="text-decoration:underline;">The Patriot</span>, Guilford County’s first newspaper in 1829.<a title="" href="#_edn6">[vi]</a>  William Swaim printed the first volume in 1833-31.  However, the successful reception of <span style="text-decoration:underline;">The Man of Business</span> , and the trouble involved in traveling repeatedly from his home to the printing office in Greensboro, led Swain to open his own shop in October, 1834.  The New Salem operation was staffed by R.J. West, printer, and John Sherwood (a cousin)<a title="" href="#_edn7">[vii]</a>.  Volume II of The Man of Business was produced there in 1834-35.<br />
In February, 1836, Swaim began editing and publishing a newspaper from his office in New Salem.  Titled <span style="text-decoration:underline;">Southern Citizen</span>, it had been proposed in November, 1834 by William Swaim. <a title="" href="#_edn8">[viii]</a>  William’s prospectus, published in the <span style="text-decoration:underline;">Patriot</span>, lamented the low esteem in which Southern newspapers were held, and sought to supersede his Patriot with a new “splendid, superfine” publication, “the largest and most usefull family newspaper… devoted to the interest, amusement, and edification of the American people Swaim was roundly abused in the state’s periodical press for his pretentious statements, but within a year he had attracted enough subscribers to begin preparations for publication.  His death age 33 in December, 1835 threw these preparations into disarray.  The <span style="text-decoration:underline;">Patriot</span> continued to be published for the benefit of William’s estate, while Benjamin took up the challenge of publishing the <span style="text-decoration:underline;">Southern Citizen</span>.</p>
<p><a href="http://randolphhistory.files.wordpress.com/2012/01/southern-citizen.gif"><img class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-1025" title="Southern Citizen" src="http://randolphhistory.files.wordpress.com/2012/01/southern-citizen.gif?w=450&#038;h=360" alt="" width="450" height="360" /></a><br />
The first issue of the <span style="text-decoration:underline;">Southern Citizen</span> appeared in February, 1836.  The editorial content was of an uncompromising Whig political persuasion, promoting agriculture, internal improvements, universal education, and literature. (Its motto: “What do we live for but to improve ourselves and be useful to one another?”) An unusual feature was the “Legal Department,” subtitled “Ignorance of the Law Excuseth No Man.” Here Swaim, obviously inspired by the success of <span style="text-decoration:underline;">The Man of Business</span>, answered the questions of subscribers on various points of law.</p>
<p><a href="http://randolphhistory.files.wordpress.com/2012/01/swaim-021.jpg"><img class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-1006" title="Swaim 021" src="http://randolphhistory.files.wordpress.com/2012/01/swaim-021.jpg?w=450&#038;h=138" alt="" width="450" height="138" /></a></p>
<p>In December, 1836 Swaim moved his newspaper, printing business and law office to Asheboro, the Randolph County seat.  The Southern Citizen was issued from there weekly without interruption until April of 1842, when publication was suspended.  Either debt and financial instability or the recent death of Swaim’s wife following the birth of a daughter may have contributed to the shut-down.  Publication was resumed on 14 October 1843, and continued until 17 October, 1844, when Swain sold the newspaper and printing office to John Milton Sherwood.<a title="" href="#_edn9">[ix]</a>  Whether the newspaper continued after that date is unknown.</p>
<p>On 7 Feb. 1829 Swain married Rachel Dicks (Aug. 1808 &#8211; 3 March 18141), daughter of Peter and Rachel Seals Dicks. They were the parents of five children: Anna Dicks (b. 17 Apr. 1830), Thomas Clarkson (10 May l832- 1 March 18kb), Matilda Rosalie (8 March 1835 — 26 Feb. 1837), Charlotte (b. 9 Dec. 1837), arid Rachel Dicks (b. 21 Feb. 1841). Benjamin Swaim’s sudden death while on a trip to Raleigh revealed the fact that he was “indebted beyond the account of his personal assets.”<a title="" href="#_edn10">[x]</a>(x)  Although his executors discovered more than 300 debtors owing money to Swaim’s estate, very little money could be collected and his property was sold in a futile attempt to pay his creditors.</p>
<p><a href="http://randolphhistory.files.wordpress.com/2012/01/swaim-011.jpg"><img class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-1008" title="Swaim 011" src="http://randolphhistory.files.wordpress.com/2012/01/swaim-011.jpg?w=450&#038;h=298" alt="" width="450" height="298" /></a></p>
<p><strong>Publications.</strong></p>
<p>Swain’s legal career after 1836 consisted mainly of writing and publishing form-books and digests of North Carolina state law.  A proposed third volume of <span style="text-decoration:underline;">The Man of Business </span>grew into Swain’s 540-page opus <span style="text-decoration:underline;">The North Carolina Justice</span>, printed in Raleigh in 1839 [<span style="text-decoration:underline;">The North Carolina Justice:  containing a summary statement of the statues and common law of this state, together with the decisions of the</span> <span style="text-decoration:underline;">supreme court, and all the most approved forms and precedents relating to the office and duty of a justice of the peace and other public officers]</span>.  In 1841 Swain published, “at the Southern Citizen office” in Asheboro his <span style="text-decoration:underline;">The North Carolina Executor . . . a safe guide to executors administrators in their practical management of estates. . </span>.   And in 1842, Swaim likewise published  <span style="text-decoration:underline;">The North Carolina Road Law… with all the necessary forms and practical observations pertaining to the… responsibilities of overseers and road hands. </span></p>
<p><a href="http://randolphhistory.files.wordpress.com/2012/01/swaim-022.jpg"><img class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-1010" title="Swaim 022" src="http://randolphhistory.files.wordpress.com/2012/01/swaim-022.jpg?w=450&#038;h=298" alt="" width="450" height="298" /></a></p>
<p>Swaim therefore made a career of writing and publishing form-books and digests of North Carolina state law related to various public offices and private professions.  All of his works seem to have been relatively popular;  <span style="text-decoration:underline;">The Man of Business </span>was still in print in 1841 and offered for sale (along with Swaim’s <span style="text-decoration:underline;">Justice</span> and <span style="text-decoration:underline;">Executor) </span>in the catalog of law books of the Raleigh bookseller Turner and Hughes.  A second edition of the popular <span style="text-decoration:underline;">North Carolina Justice</span> was updated by Swaim and published posthumously in 1846.  Another purported revision of <span style="text-decoration:underline;">The North Carolina Justice</span> was edited by an Edward Cantwell and published by Henry D. Turner of Raleigh in 1856; although titled “<span style="text-decoration:underline;">Swaim’s Justice—Revised,</span>” it was subtitled <span style="text-decoration:underline;">The North Carolina Magistrate, a practical guide to the laws of the state…under the Revised Code, 1854-55</span>, and its preface states that the work is not a revision of Swaim, but a “new and original publication.”  That a “new and original publication” would wish to trade on Swaim’s name in its title twelve years after his death suggests that his reputation as a North Carolina legal authority was high.</p>
<p><a href="http://randolphhistory.files.wordpress.com/2012/01/swaim-015.jpg"><img class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-1011" title="Swaim 015" src="http://randolphhistory.files.wordpress.com/2012/01/swaim-015.jpg?w=450&#038;h=305" alt="" width="450" height="305" /></a></p>
<p><strong>Precedents.</strong></p>
<p>The author of “Legal Practice and Ethics in North Carolina, 1820-1860” muses that “when one remembers that he was a lawyer, one is amazed that Swaim was eager to help the common man and to assist him in being his own attorney.”   Yet to some extent Swaim was following in the footsteps of legal predecessors in the state.  North Carolina’s first printer, James Davis, published in 1774 his  <span style="text-decoration:underline;">Office and Authority of a Justice of Peace.  And Also, the the duty of Sheriffs, Coroners, Constables, Churchwardens, Overseers of Roads and other Officers, Together with precedents for Warrants, Judgements, Executions and other legal process&#8230;.</span>  New editions by different authors appeared in 1791 and 1800 which were also subsequently revised and reprinted<a title="" href="#_edn11">[xi]</a>; Swaim’s <span style="text-decoration:underline;">North Carolina Justice </span>therefore had a long pedigree.   Likewise, his <span style="text-decoration:underline;">Executor </span>was preceded by Francois-Xavier Martin’s <span style="text-decoration:underline;">Treatise on the Powers and Duties of Executors and  Administrators according to the Law of North-Carolina</span>, published in Raleigh by J. Gales in 1820.  However,  Swaim’s <span style="text-decoration:underline;">Road Law</span> does not seem to have had North Carolina antecedents, and <span style="text-decoration:underline;">The Man of Business </span>appears to have been a completely original conception.  An 1819 self-help book which could represent a parallel idea was J.H. Conway’s <span style="text-decoration:underline;">The North Carolina Calculator; or New Practical Arithmetic…  of utility to merchants, traders and others, in their general occupations; </span>this was a prototype small-business accounting treatise.</p>
<p>Swain asserted, however, that <span style="text-decoration:underline;">The Man of Business </span>was “new in character and design,” and worried that those in the legal fraternity might protest the popularizing of the law.  Though the work was “calculated to render every man his own counsellor in matters of ordinary business,” Swaim declared himself motivated by the desire “to improve the modes of doing business, and thereby to render the ends of justice more easy and accessible to all classes of the community…”  While today every state (except Louisiana) operates under the Uniform Commercial Code (a model state law package governing all commercial transactions), the nineteenth century operated under the burden of a bewildering array of local laws regulating business. Although business law is taught as a separate curriculum in modern business schools and economic departments, Swaim may have been an originator of the concept of uniform laws as a vital part of business administration and financial efficiency.  His most direct influence lay in the inspiration of imitators such as Franklin Crosby, who in 1860 in Philadelphia published <span style="text-decoration:underline;">Everybody’s Lawyer and Counsellor in Business:  containing plain and simple instructions to all classes for transacting their business according to law&#8230;.</span> <a title="" href="#_edn12">[xii]</a></p>
<div id="attachment_1013" class="wp-caption aligncenter" style="width: 460px"><a href="http://randolphhistory.files.wordpress.com/2012/01/swaim-005.jpg"><img class="size-full wp-image-1013" title="Swaim 005" src="http://randolphhistory.files.wordpress.com/2012/01/swaim-005.jpg?w=450&#038;h=713" alt="" width="450" height="713" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">Vol II Title Page</p></div>
<p><strong>Characteristics of the Printed Page.</strong><br />
<span style="text-decoration:underline;">The Man of Business</span> was considered by Swaim to be a periodical “published simultaneously at Greensborough and New Salem, N.C.  It will consist of four hundred and thirty-two duodecimo pages (in twelve monthly numbers) neatly printed, pressed, -folded, stitched and trimmed.”  Each monthly number consisted of 18 leaves or 36 pages made up of 9 signatures of 4 leaves each.  Four pages of type were printed at once on one side of an 8 x 13-inch sheet of rough-laid paper from the Emmanuel Shober paper mill in Salem.<a title="" href="#_edn13">[xiii]</a></p>
<p>The joint publishing arrangement may have arisen from the difficulty of a single press publishing a weekly newspaper as well as a monthly magazine.<a title="" href="#_edn14">[xiv]</a>  Although the printing work for volume one was stated to have occurred at William Swaim’s <span style="text-decoration:underline;">Greensborough Patriot</span> office, four versions of volume one exist.  This physical evidence indicates volume one was set in type by hand and printed four separate times, and perhaps only once in Greensboro.  Two versions of volume one exhibit a simple masthead on page one, and two begin with title pages.</p>
<p>The masthead design resembles a tiny newspaper masthead, with title, editor, and imprint information.  “THE MAN OF BUSINESS./ (motto)/ Benjamin Swain, Editor./ NEW SALEM, N.C. JULY, 1833/ VOL. I NO, 1/ PROSPECTUS&#8230;” Version one also includes the “TERMS” at the foot of the page, ending with “…stitched and trimmed.”  Version two does not include TERMS, ending instead with “…ordinary business.”  Version one of the ‘title page’ design ends “VOL. 1/ OCTOBER, 1834-5/ WILLIAM SWAIM, PRINTER,/ GREENSBOROUGH, N.C./ 1834.” Version two of the title page ends “VOL. 1/ OCTOBER, 1833,/ Reprinted,/ New Salem, N.C./ 1836.”</p>
<div id="attachment_1012" class="wp-caption aligncenter" style="width: 460px"><a href="http://randolphhistory.files.wordpress.com/2012/01/swaim-006.jpg"><img class="size-full wp-image-1012" title="Vol II No. 6 Title Page" src="http://randolphhistory.files.wordpress.com/2012/01/swaim-006.jpg?w=450&#038;h=677" alt="" width="450" height="677" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">Vol II No. 6 Title Page</p></div>
<p>The imprint of version one of the title page is obviously incorrect. Volume one, number one is dated July, 1833, not October, 1834. The printer has taken the title page for volume two, printed in 1834, and replace the “II” of that “VOL. II’ with “I’, making no other corrections, This suggests that volume one originally appeared with no title or imprint information other than its masthead.  Moreover, since the title page of the 1836 reprint corrects 1834-5 to 1833, but has not corrected “October” to ‘July”, we may surmise that the type for the reprint was set from a copy of the 1834 title page, with some mistakes corrected and others overlooked. Which one of the two “masthead” versions may be original requires further study.</p>
<p><a href="http://randolphhistory.files.wordpress.com/2012/01/swaim-003.jpg"><img class="aligncenter size-thumbnail wp-image-1014" title="Swaim 003" src="http://randolphhistory.files.wordpress.com/2012/01/swaim-003.jpg?w=150&#038;h=122" alt="" width="150" height="122" /></a></p>
<p>In volume one, number twelve, Swaim complains of the trouble and expense of traveling back and forth to the printing office, and says “I hope to find some relief in the location of the whole concern in one place&#8230; In future it will be printed and published in the town of New Salem, Randolph County, N.C., provided its patronage should be sufficiently increased to justify the purchase of a press, etc.” However, at least volume two, number one must still have been printed in Greenshorough, for in number two Swaim states “Since the appearance of the first number of this volume, I have engaged in the services of a young <em><span style="text-decoration:underline;">printer</span></em>,<a title="" href="#_edn15">[xv]</a> who has recently set up, and is commencing business in this place&#8230; it is therefore hoped, and confidently expected, that the publication will, in future, go on with more promptness and regularity, as the whole concern is now at home.”</p>
<p>Numbers three through twelve of this volume all bear the imprint “R.J. WEST PRINTER,/ New-Salem, N.C.” No versions of the volume two title page exist. Version one bears the imprint “VOL. II/ NEW SALEM,/ OCTOBER/ 1834’5.” The page is printed in six different point sizes of type, including two versions of an unusual ball-serif italic, one slanting to the left, the other slanting right.<a title="" href="#_edn16">[xvi]</a>  Title page version two has already been mentioned, bearing the imprint “VOL. II/ OCTOBER, 1834-5/ WILLIAM SWAIM, PRINTER./ Greensborough, N.C./ 1834.”<br />
Volume one is indexed by a simple contents list following the numbered page sequence. This is complicated by the fact that pages 37 through 48 are misnumbered 1 through 12 (noted in an Erratta on page 72), and by the fact that “Pages from 352 to 417 are erroneously numbered by mistake. The index, however, is made out as the pages are, and not as they <em>should be</em>&#8230;” This indexing system cannot have been very satisfactory. Volume two provides a classified alphabetical index to both volumes; it indicates both the true page number and the erroneous page number (bracketted). The mistakes were probably perpetuated due to the exigencies of legal citation, which demands that page numbering be uniform from copy to copy— even uniformly incorrect.<br />
Swaim ends volume two hinting at a third volume which was, however, never published and probably grew into his <span style="text-decoration:underline;">North Carolina Justice, </span>which appeared two years later.  He indicates throughout volume two that complete files of both volumes could be bought “in good law binding.”  Therefore, in addition to “young printer” R.J. West, Swaim also evidently secured the services of a bookbinder.  A copy of <span style="text-decoration:underline;">The Man of Business </span>in the Peacock collection at Duke has the damaged label “(torn)/ BOOK BINDER/New-Salem, N.C.”  A copy of Volume 2 now in the possession of the author includes a paper label inside the front cover, imprinted “<strong>JOHN SHERWOOD</strong>/ <em>BOOK BINDER</em>,/ <em>New-Salem, N.C.</em>”  This is evidently his cousin John Milton Sherwood who was subsequently the purchaser of the Southern Citizen printing office.<a title="" href="#_edn17">[xvii]</a></p>
<p style="text-align:center;"><a href="http://randolphhistory.files.wordpress.com/2012/01/swaim-004.jpg"><img class="aligncenter  wp-image-1015" title="Swaim 004" src="http://randolphhistory.files.wordpress.com/2012/01/swaim-004.jpg?w=260&#038;h=200" alt="" width="260" height="200" /></a></p>
<p>In view of the numerous pleas throughout the work asking subscribers to pay their bills, and from the fact that none of Swain’s subsequent works appeared serially, it may be assumed that his experience with subscription sales was an unhappy one.  The problems of sale and distribution of such published materials in the early nineteenth century must have discouraged many local printers from even attempting a project of the magnitude undertaken by Benjamin Swaim— nearly 900 pages of material related to the study of business law. <a title="" href="#_edn18">[xviii]</a></p>
<p><strong>Copies </strong><strong>Examined.</strong><br />
<span style="text-decoration:underline;">UNC-CH, North Carolina Collection</span> (call number: C347.05-M26)</p>
<p><span style="text-decoration:underline;">Vol. I </span><br />
(c.i) New Salem reprint, 1836.<br />
Stephen B. Weeks Collection.<br />
Number 1, p.1 ends “&#8230;ordinary business.”<br />
(c.2) Greensborough, 1834.<br />
Stephen B. Weeks Collection.<br />
(c.3) No title page (t.-p.); rebound.<br />
Gift of the N.C. Baptist Historical Commission.<br />
(c,4) No t.-p.; ‘S’ dropped from masthead: “PROSPECTU .”</p>
<p><span style="text-decoration:underline;">Vol. II </span><br />
(c.l) Greensborough, 1834.<br />
John Sprunt Hill Collection.<br />
(c.2) New Salem, Oct. 1834’5.<br />
Stephen B. Weeks Collection.<br />
(c.3) Greensborough, 1834.<br />
Dialectic and Philanthropic Societies.</p>
<p><span style="text-decoration:underline;">UNC—CH, Law Library (Rare Book Room) </span>(call number: S971m-1834)</p>
<p><span style="text-decoration:underline;">Vol.  I </span><br />
(c.1) New Salem reprint, 1836 (#241180),<br />
Bound in calf; black label; stamped “1” on Spine.</p>
<p><span style="text-decoration:underline;">Vol. II </span><br />
(c.1) No t.-p. (#180548),<br />
Bound in calf; red label; stamped “2” on spine.<br />
<span style="text-decoration:underline;">Duke University Library, Peacock Collection</span> (call number: 347.6—3971-P)</p>
<p><span style="text-decoration:underline;">Vol, I </span><br />
(c.1) Greensborough, 1834 (#23290)<br />
Rebound in red library bindings<br />
(c.2) New Salem reprint, 1836 (#23291<em>),</em></p>
<p>Number 1, p.1, ends “…In short it will be calcu-“</p>
<p>Signed on t.-p.: “Wm. M.B. Arendell”</p>
<p>(c.3) No t.-p. (#23292)<br />
Number 1, p. 1 ends “. . .and trimmed.”<br />
“B.F. Swaim/ A.D. 1852” in ink on front cover.</p>
<p><span style="text-decoration:underline;">Vol. II </span><br />
(c.1) Greensborough, 1834 (#23293)<br />
On flyleaf: “B.F. Swaim’s/ Law Book/ May the 2nd. 1852” In ink on cover: “B.F. Swaim/ 1852”<br />
(c.2) Greensborough, 1834 (#23294)<br />
Inside front cover: “(torn)/ BOOK BINDER/ New-Salem, N.C,”</p>
<p>“DICK” stamped (in ink?) on spine.</p>
<p><strong>Bibliography.</strong><br />
1. Arnett, Ethel Stephens, <span style="text-decoration:underline;">William Swaim, Fighting Editor:</span> <span style="text-decoration:underline;">The Story of O. Henry’s Grandfather.</span> Greensboro Piedmont Press, 1963.</p>
<p>2. Blackwelder, Fannie M. F. “The Bar Examination and Beginning Years of Legal Practice in North Carolina, 1820-1860.”  <span style="text-decoration:underline;">North Carolina Historical Review</span> XXIX (April, 1952), pp. 159-170.</p>
<p>3. &#8212;&#8212;-, “Legal Education in North Carolina, 1820-1860.” <span style="text-decoration:underline;">N.C.H.R</span>., XXVIII (July, 1951), pp. 271-297.</p>
<p>4. &#8212;&#8212;-, “Legal Practice and Ethics in North Carolina, 1820-1860.” <span style="text-decoration:underline;">N.C.H.R.</span> (July, 1953), pp. 329-353</p>
<p>5. Davis, Jewell Faye, <span style="text-decoration:underline;">Bibliography of North Carolina Imprints, 1801-1820</span>.  Washington, D.C. Catholic Univ., M.S.L.S. thesis, 1955.</p>
<p>6. Fox, Charlesanna M., ed., <span style="text-decoration:underline;">Randolph County 1779-1979</span>. Winston-Salem: Hunter Publishing Co., 1980.</p>
<p>7. Gibson, Virginia E. <span style="text-decoration:underline;">Salmon Hall, N.C. Printer, 1800-1840</span>, UNC School of Library Science: MSLS paper, 1967.</p>
<p>8. Gress Edmund F.  <span style="text-decoration:underline;">Fashions in American Typography, 1780-1930</span>. New York Harper and Bros., 1931.</p>
<p>9.  Hall, Francis H. <span style="text-decoration:underline;">Public Printing in North Carolina, 1816-1861</span>.  UNC School of Library Science: MSLS thesis, 1957.</p>
<p>10.  Jones, H.G.  <span style="text-decoration:underline;">Union List of North Carolina Newspapers</span>. Raleigh, N.C., Dept. of Archives and History, 1966.</p>
<p>11.  McFarland, Daniel M, “North Carolina Newspapers, Editors and Journalistic Politics, 1815-1835.” <span style="text-decoration:underline;">N.C.H.R.</span>, July, 1953.</p>
<p>12.  McMurtrie, Douglas C.  <span style="text-decoration:underline;">Eighteenth Century North Carolina Imprints, 1749-1800</span>. Chapel Hill: UNC Press, 1938.</p>
<p>13.  Paschal, George Washington.  <span style="text-decoration:underline;">A History of Printing in North Carolina</span>. Raleigh: Edwards and Broughton Co., 1946.</p>
<p>14.  <span style="text-decoration:underline;">Raleigh Register</span>, 16 Feb. 1836, 16 March 1841, 24 Dec. 1844.</p>
<p>15.  Sherrill, P.M., “The Quakers and the North Carolina Manumission Society,” <span style="text-decoration:underline;">Trinity College Historical Society Papers</span>, Series X, 1914.</p>
<p>16.  Robert N. Tompkins, ed., “Marriage and Death Notices from Extant Asheboro, N,C., Newspapers, 1836—1857”, <span style="text-decoration:underline;">N.C. Genealogical Society Journal</span> (Nov. 1978);</p>
<div>FOOTNOTES</p>
<hr align="left" size="1" width="33%" />
<div>
<p><a title="" href="#_ednref1">[i]</a>  Swaim Bible Records, published in Randolph County Genealogical Society Journal, Vol. X, #2, p.28 (1986); Sidney Swain Robins, A Letter on Robins Family History (nd.); Swaim family genealogical records (possession of Mrs. Francine Holt Swain, Liberty, N.C.)</p>
</div>
<div>
<p><a title="" href="#_ednref2">[ii]</a>  H.N. Wagstaff, ed., “Minutes of the N.C. Manumission Society, 1816-1831”, The James Sprunt Historical Studies, Vol. 22 (1934)</p>
</div>
<div>
<p><a title="" href="#_ednref3">[iii]</a>  Peter Dicks was a storekeeper in the Town, as well as the operator of a mill on Deep River some 2 miles southwest. William Dennis was a potter of slip-decorated redware whose home and kiln were sited half a mile east of town. Dr. John Milton Worth, born in the nearby Centre Friends Meeting community just north across the county line, opened his first practice in New Salem.  William Clark, a future organizer of the Union Factory, operated a “flourishing” tannery and store in the town.  (J.A. Blair, p. 50)  The Adams family, who employed Naomi Wise as a servant girl, lived just South of town.</p>
</div>
<div>
<p><a title="" href="#_ednref4">[iv]</a> At that first meeting, says Levi Coffin in his autobiographical Reminiscences, Moses Swaim, “a lawyer of Randolph County, delivered a lengthy and able address, which was afterward printed and widely circulated.  It was a strong abolition speech, and would not have been allowed a few years later.”  (p.74)  Moses Swaim was elected Clerk of Superior Court in Randolph County in 1837 and served for several years.</p>
</div>
<div>
<p><a title="" href="#_ednref5">[v]</a>  The phrase “Man of Business” had come into English writing as early as 1660, but it had only begun to assume its modern form, “business-man,” in 1829.</p>
</div>
<div>
<p><a title="" href="#_ednref6">[vi]</a>  William Swaim also happens to have been the grandfather of novelist O. Henry, and so has merited the monograph <span style="text-decoration:underline;">William Swaim&#8211; Fighting Editor </span>by Ethel Stephens Arnett (1963). William’s cousin Lyndon Swaim later took over editorship of his newspaper. “The Life of William Swaim” was a multi-part biographical series written by Lyndon Swaim and published in the Patriot from May 18 to June 22, 1866. In transmogrified form, the <span style="text-decoration:underline;">Patriot </span>survives today, becoming the <span style="text-decoration:underline;">Greensboro Daily News,</span> now known as  <span style="text-decoration:underline;">The News and Record</span>.</p>
</div>
<div>
<p><a title="" href="#_ednref7">[vii]</a>  John Sherwood (27 Sept. 1806 – 5 July 1895) was the son of Benjamin Sherwood (1783-1865) and Sally Swaim (b. 29 Sept. 1787).  Sally Swaim was the daughter of distant cousin Michael Swaim; Benjamin Sherwood was evidently a brother of Benjamin Swaim’s mother Elizabeth Sherwood Swaim.  On 26 Sept. 1835 John Sherwood was the grantee of a deed of trust (Randolph County Book 20, Page 111) encumbering property described as “one quarter acre lot in New Salem adj. B. Swaim (formerly Jesse Watkins”.  In 1837 John Sherwood was a candidate for Randolph County Clerk of Superior Court, printing circulars on June 10<sup>th</sup> , decrying prejudice against candidates who were not Randolph natives and on July 29<sup>th</sup>,  printing a diatribe against “racing candidates” and describing himself as a “man in limited circumstances, with an extensive family.”  Moses Swaim was the victor in this contest (see Deed Book 21, Page 151).</p>
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<div>
<p><a title="" href="#_ednref8">[viii]</a>  In October 1834, Williams Swaim proposed merging the <span style="text-decoration:underline;">Patriot</span> into the <span style="text-decoration:underline;">Southern Citizen</span> beginning July 4, 1835.  He planned to enlarge the weekly paper with three times the editorial material, “printed in new type, on a new press.”  The prospectus of the new paper was printed Nov. 19, 1834; in it he said 2.000 subscribers would be required to begin publication.  Lyndon Swaim, “The Life of William Swaim,” in <span style="text-decoration:underline;">The Patriot</span> (Greensboro, NC) published from May 18 to June 22, 1866.</p>
</div>
<div>
<p><a title="" href="#_ednref9">[ix]</a>  From The Southern Citizen, Vol. V, #52 (17 October 1844)—“We have recently sold out to Mr. John Milton Sherwood, a young gentleman who was partly raised in this office, and , for the past year, has been the foreman in the establishment.  He will issue the first number week after next./  This number of our paper concludes the Fifth volume of the Southern Citizen, and closes, for the present, at least and very probably forever, the Editorial Career of its present Editor and Proprietor.”</p>
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<div>
<p><a title="" href="#_ednref10">[x]</a> From <span style="text-decoration:underline;">the Patriot</span>, Greensboro, 12-28-1844:  “Died/ In Raleigh, on Monday the 22<sup>nd</sup> inst., about 12 o’clock, BENJAMIN SWAIM, of Randolph county, counselor at law, and author of several legal works.</p>
<p>“A friend who watched his dying bed informs us that the deceased ‘had been indisposed about two weeks ago, but had got much better, so as to consider himself well.  On Friday night he was taken with a violent cholera morbius, which proved fatal on Monday.  His suffering was intense.  He had the best medical aid, and attentive nursing, but all failed.  He retained his senses in a most remarkable degree, and submitted to his fate without a murmur- observed, after he was conscious of the near approach of death, that he had no disposition to complain of any act of Providence.  He had but few friends present, but these few gave every possible attention that could be bestowed.’</p>
<p>“Always under the depressing influence of pecuniary want, and afflicted from his birth with a radical defect in his sight, he labored under more of the difficulties of life than fall to the lot of most men.  But nature had endowed him with a remarkably clear intellect and a patient disposition, which enabled him to press forward in the attainment of knowledge to an extent highly creditable to himself and useful to the community.  His mind, patient to investigate, delighted to follow the old law writers through the mazes of their learning into the latent recesses of truths and right reason.  The law was his favorite study, and in it he had made uncommon proficiency for one of his age and proscribed opportunities. He enjoyed the reputation of a clear and correct legal theorist and a safe counselor.  And the practical legal works which he compiled and published will long be used and appreciated by the business public.  He was a man of inoffensive manners and most amiable disposition.  Peace be to his ashes!</p>
<p>“We have deemed this meager public tribute due to one who was, during a portion of our youth ‘our guide, companion, and familiar friend.’—EDS. PAT.”</p>
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<div>
<p><a title="" href="#_ednref11">[xi]</a>  i.e., Francois-Xavier Martin, <span style="text-decoration:underline;">The Office and Authority of a Justice of the Peace of Sheriffs, Coroners, &amp;c., According to the Laws of North-Carolina</span> (1791) ; or <span style="text-decoration:underline;">The Office and Duty of A Justice of the Peace and A Guide to Sheriffs, Coroners, Clerks and Constables and Other Civil Officers  According to the Laws of North-Carolina </span>(John Haywood, ed., printed in Raleigh by William Boylan in 1806; and Henry Potter, ed., published by J. Gales and Son of Raleigh in 1828 (2<sup>nd</sup> ed.).</p>
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<div>
<p><a title="" href="#_ednref12">[xii]</a>  Interestingly, Brantley York (1805-1891), Randolph County native, teacher and founder of Trinity College, is credited with authoring <span style="text-decoration:underline;">The Man of Business and Railroad Calculator:  Containing such part of arithmetic as have a special application in business transactions</span> (Raleigh: J. Nichols &amp; Co., 1873).  The work contains legal forms edited by Richard Watt York, “A.M. and Counsellor at Law,” but it does not appear to relate to Swaim’s Man of Business in anything but title and subject matter.</p>
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<div>
<p><a title="" href="#_ednref13">[xiii]</a>  On Feb. 7, 1838, in the midst of a financial crisis, Benjamin Swaim mortgaged his house and lot in New Salem, his household property in Asheboro, and “also the printing press, cases, gallies, and all other Materials belonging to the printing office of the Southern Citizen of Asheboro, including the Dog Press, also the Library of books belonging to the said Swaim, consisting of about 200 volumes.”  Swaim owed 4 local businessmen $770, as well as $33.87 to printer R.W. West, and $260 to Salem paper mill owner Emanuel Shober.  “Dog Press” was evidently a generic name for a traditional wooden screw-type printing press.</p>
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<div>
<p><a title="" href="#_ednref14">[xiv]</a>  According to Ethel Stephens Arnett, William Swaim used a Ramage press to print <span style="text-decoration:underline;">The Patriot</span> (<span style="text-decoration:underline;">Greensboro, North Carolina, The County Seat of Guilford</span> (1955), p. 240).  Adam Ramage of Philadephia  built wooden printing presses from about 1800 until he died in 1850.  They were available in three sizes: a full-size common press, an intermediate free-standing press which he called his “screw press,” and the smallest, the “foolscap,” named for the size of sheet paper it could print.</p>
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<div>
<p><a title="" href="#_ednref15">[xv]</a> Identified on all subsequent monthly title pages as “R.J. WEST, Printer/ New-Salem, N.C.”</p>
</div>
<div>
<p><a title="" href="#_ednref16">[xvi]</a>  A modern “trutype” version of this typeface is available on computers as Elephant Italic, an adaptation of early 19<sup>th</sup> century “fat face” types made by designer Matthew Carter.</p>
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<div>
<p><a title="" href="#_ednref17">[xvii]</a>  Swaim’s reference of October 17, 1844 to the purchase of the <span style="text-decoration:underline;">Southern Citizen</span> by John <strong><em>Milton</em></strong> Sherwood is the only known use of that middle name, but the buyer appears to be the same as the “John Sherwood, Book-Binder” of the Man of Business.  While Sherwood’s latter career with the Southern Citizen is not clear, he also is apparently the same man responsible for another first in N.C. journalism.  A John Sherwood, editor of The Farmer’s Advocate and Miscellaneous Reporter, published in Jamestown from Aug. 1838 to June 1842, is cited by James Oliver Cathey as publishing North Carolina’s first agricultural journal.  [see “Agricultural Developments in North Carolina, 1783-1860,” published in <span style="text-decoration:underline;">James Sprunt Studies in History and Political Science</span>, Vol. 38; Chapel Hill, UNC Press, pp. 84, 102-103] .  Says Cathey, “John Sherwood… was one of the leading advocates of greater efficiency in farm operations. ‘What you undertake, do well,’ he urged.  Farmers were encouraged, in the interest of efficiency, to keep business-like records of their activities, to include notations of stock on hand, implements, methods used, weather conditions, time of planting, time and methods of culture, and of all experiments conducted…. Sherwood, in his Farmer’s Advocate, was the most forceful and persistent in advocating this feature of the reform program.”  Sherwood’s program to make farmer’s more business-like seems very much akin to Swaim’s program to codify and demystify business law.</p>
<p>And as regards book binding, Swaim’s estate papers indicate that Daniel Clewell of Salem in 1842 bound 29 copies of the <span style="text-decoration:underline;">N.C. Executor</span> and 4 sets of the <span style="text-decoration:underline;">Man of Business</span>.</p>
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<div>
<p><a title="" href="#_ednref18">[xviii]</a> Swaim’s estate papers in the NC State Archives contain records of an auction sale of his assets held in August 1845; for sale were 185 copies of the <span style="text-decoration:underline;">N.C. Road Law</span>, which sold for 5 cents each; 8 copies of the <span style="text-decoration:underline;">Man of Business</span> which sold for $1.35; 53 copies of the <span style="text-decoration:underline;">N.C. Executor</span>, and 1 <span style="text-decoration:underline;">N.C. Justice</span>.  5 bound volumes of the <span style="text-decoration:underline;">Southern Citizen</span> were sold to Joseph P. Julian.  At least one of these bound volumes survived into the 21<sup>st</sup> century, which the local owner, refusing to sell to the local historical society, auctioned it off to a paper dealer on eBay who cut the pages apart and sold them as “SLAVE ADS!!!”  Among the law books in Swaim’s sale were Haywood’s Justice; Haywood’s Manual; a Revised Statutes (of N.C.); Iredell’s Digest; N.C. Reports; Battle’s Reports; Martin’s Sheriff; N.C. Sheriffs, and “Right’s M of B.”  This last title is intriguing; if “M.O.B.” is short for “Man of Business” then this might indicate some other work related in title or subject to Swaim’s periodical.  But so far nothing under that title or author (either Right or Wright) has been found in union catalogs.</p>
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		<title>2011 in review</title>
		<link>http://randolphhistory.wordpress.com/2012/01/01/2011-in-review/</link>
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		<pubDate>Sun, 01 Jan 2012 18:22:21 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>macwhatley</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[The WordPress.com stats helper monkeys prepared a 2011 annual report for this blog. Here&#8217;s an excerpt: The concert hall at the Syndey Opera House holds 2,700 people. This blog was viewed about 43,000 times in 2011. If it were a concert at Sydney Opera House, it would take about 16 sold-out performances for that many [...]<img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=randolphhistory.wordpress.com&amp;blog=1204349&amp;post=997&amp;subd=randolphhistory&amp;ref=&amp;feed=1" width="1" height="1" />]]></description>
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<p>Here&#8217;s an excerpt:</p>
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		<title>Lyndon Swaim</title>
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		<pubDate>Fri, 09 Dec 2011 00:07:26 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>macwhatley</dc:creator>
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		<category><![CDATA[Literary History]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[architect]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Lyndon Swaim]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[[This is my entry on Lyndon Swaim, as I wrote it for the Dictionary of North Carolina Biography in the early 1980s.  It can be found under the S’es in the next to last volume.] SWAIN, LYNDON (1 Dee, 1812 26 March 1893), printer, newpaperman, and architect, was the oldest of eleven children.   His father [...]<img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=randolphhistory.wordpress.com&amp;blog=1204349&amp;post=1029&amp;subd=randolphhistory&amp;ref=&amp;feed=1" width="1" height="1" />]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a href="http://randolphhistory.files.wordpress.com/2012/01/swaim-0231.jpg"><img class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-1034" title="Swaim 023" src="http://randolphhistory.files.wordpress.com/2012/01/swaim-0231.jpg?w=450&#038;h=553" alt="" width="450" height="553" /></a></p>
<p><em>[This is my entry on Lyndon Swaim, as I wrote it for the Dictionary of North Carolina Biography in the early 1980s.  It can be found under the S’es in the next to last volume.]</em></p>
<p>SWAIN, LYNDON (1 Dee, 1812 26 March 1893), printer, newpaperman, and architect, was the oldest of eleven children.   His father Moses Swaim (31 Dec. 1788—25 April 1870) married Adah Swindell (17 April 1791 2 May 1866) of Hyde County on 13 Feb 1812. The family’s farm was on Deep River, in Randolph County’s Timber Ridge community. The nearby village at New Salem was incorporated by legislative act in 1816, and Moses Swaim had been appointed one of the five town commissioners.   The same year the elder Swaim had helped to found the North Carolina Manumission Society, and was elected its first President.  Whether Moses practiced law in addition to farming is unknown, although he was elected Clerk of the Superior Court in Randolph County from 1837 to 1840. In the 1850s Swaim emigrated to Indiana, where he settled on the St. Joseph River, north of South Bend.  His death occured during a subsequent visit to North Carolina.<br />
Lyndon Swaim left home in 1834 at the age of 22 to work for his cousin WillIam Swaim, in the printing office of the <span style="text-decoration:underline;">Greensborough Patriot</span>.  After William’s death in 1835, Lyndon returned to New Salem to work in the printing office of another cousin, Benjamin Swaim, editor of the Southern Citizen.   In 1839, a delegation of Greensboro citizens contacted Lyndon Swaim, urging him to take charge of the moribund <span style="text-decoration:underline;">Patriot</span>.   “We need a paper amongst us that will be regularly issued, that will be fixed in its Whig principles and that will advocate with spirit and fearlessness the Whig cause,” they frankly admitted.  Swaim decided to return to Greensboro, and in partnership with yet another cousin, he bought the ailing newpaper.   Michael Swaim Sherwood (b.1816), son of Benjamin Sherwood (1783-186g) and Sally Swain (b. 1787), were to handle the mechanical and business affairs of the printing office, while Lyndon attended to the editorial duties of the paper, In accordance with the call far a strong Whig point of view, Swain promised in his first editorial to “advance all well-judged plans for the improvement of the internal commerce of the state and that system of school education which may reach every child in the land.”<br />
Swain devoted the next fifteen years to the <span style="text-decoration:underline;">Patriot, </span>selling out to Sherwood in 1854 only to devote full time to his official duties as clerk of the county court. He held that office continuously from his initial election in 1853<em> </em>until it was abolished by the new state constitution of 1868. He additionally served as one of the commissioners of Greensboro in the years l846, 1850-1852, and 1859-1862, and was appointed one of the town commissioners under the provisional government of Governor Holden.  Swaim’s final public service occured in 1876-77, when he served as a Guilford County representative to the State Legislature.<br />
Swaim temporarily took over the editorial helm of the <span style="text-decoration:underline;">Patriot</span> once again in 1869, counselling moderation and reconciliation in the race of Reconstruction turmoil.  At the same time,<em> </em>he began the study of architecture and subsequently left the newspaper to begin professional practice.  Swaim was successful in his new career, becoming known as the town’s leading architect of the 1870’s and 1860’s. Although the facts of this stage of his life are as yet unclear, he is said to have designed residences as well as commercial buildings in Greensboro and surrounding communities.</p>
<p>On 3 Jan. 1842 Lyndon Swaim married Abiah Shirley Swaim, widow of his former employer William Swaim.  The only child born to this marriage died in infancy<em>. </em>Swaim’s step-daughter, Mary Jane Virginia, became the mother of William Sidney Porter (O. Henry).   Abiah Swain died in January, 1858; on 25 Oct 1859 Swaim married Isabella Logan (d. 9 Feb. 1900), daughter of General John N. Logan of Greensboro.  Four children, Isabell, Mary, Lyndon and Logan, were born to them; none married. In addition to his other activities, Lyndon Swain was one of the ruling elders of the First Presbyterian Church in Greensboro from 1872 until his death at the age of eighty, following several years of declining health.<br />
SEE: Ethel Stephens Arnett, Greensboro, North Carolina: The County Seat of Guilford (1955);  Bettie O. Caldwell, ed., <span style="text-decoration:underline;">Founders and </span>Builders of Greensboro, 1808-1908 (1925 [Portrait]); Deeds (Randolph County Courthouse, Asheboro, N.C); Swain family genealogical records (possession of Mrs. Francine Holt Swain, Liberty, N.C.).</p>
<p>L. McKay Whatley</p>
<p><em>[The biographical sketch of Lyndon Swaim</em>, <em>architect, </em><em>which appears </em><em>in <span style="text-decoration:underline;">North Carolina Architects and Builders</span></em><em>, (s</em>ee <a href="http://ncarchitects.lib.ncsu.edu/people/P000115">http://ncarchitects.lib.ncsu.edu/people/P000115</a>) <em>evidently appropriated much of my DNCB entry without attribution. Here is the only part that is new or different:   </em></p>
<p><em> </em></p>
<p>“Around 1869, as postwar construction picked up, he made a serious study of architecture, and became Greensboro&#8217;s leading architect during the 1870s and 1880s. Although many men in this period moved from being artisans or contractors to taking on the title of architect, Swaim was unusual in entering the field from a background of journalism. In 1880, the 67-year-old Swaim identified his occupation to the census taker as &#8220;Architect.&#8221; William T. Comstock&#8217;s <em>Architects&#8217; Dictionary</em> (an erratically updated publication) listed &#8220;L. Swain&#8221; (who died in 1893) along with Epps and Hackett (see <a href="http://ncarchitects.lib.ncsu.edu/people/P000012">Orlo Epps</a>) as Greensboro&#8217;s only architects in 1894 and 1896.</p>
<p>“Details of Swaim&#8217;s architectural work are few, and none of the buildings documented or attributed to him still stands. He is said to have planned residences as well as public buildings. In Greensboro, his principal projects were designs for two civic edifices at the center of town: the <a href="http://ncarchitects.lib.ncsu.edu/people/P000115#B000224">Guilford County Courthouse</a> (1872), an Italianate style building that copied much of the form of its 1858 antebellum predecessor, which had burned; and the <a href="http://ncarchitects.lib.ncsu.edu/people/P000115#B000225">United States Post Office</a> (1883-1885), considered &#8220;a very fine and expensive building in its day.&#8221; Swaim also gained commissions for public buildings in nearby counties, including the eclectic <a href="http://ncarchitects.lib.ncsu.edu/people/P000115#B000227">Person County Courthouse</a> (1883) in Roxboro and remodeling of the <a href="http://ncarchitects.lib.ncsu.edu/people/P000115#B000228">Rockingham County Courthouse</a> in Wentworth. Farther afield, he provided drawings and specifications for the <a href="http://ncarchitects.lib.ncsu.edu/people/P000115#B000345">Pender County Courthouse and Jail</a> (1882-1883) in Burgaw, an Italianate building with tower, similar to that in Greensboro.”</p>
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		<title>Hoover’s Mill (aka Rush’s Mill, Arnold’s Mill, Skeen’s Mill)</title>
		<link>http://randolphhistory.wordpress.com/2011/10/31/hoover%e2%80%99s-mill-aka-rush%e2%80%99s-mill-arnold%e2%80%99s-mill-skeen%e2%80%99s-mill/</link>
		<comments>http://randolphhistory.wordpress.com/2011/10/31/hoover%e2%80%99s-mill-aka-rush%e2%80%99s-mill-arnold%e2%80%99s-mill-skeen%e2%80%99s-mill/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 31 Oct 2011 07:29:38 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>macwhatley</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Geography]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Grist Mills]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[NC Geography]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Prehistory]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Quakers]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Randolph County]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Religion and Practice]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Revolutionary War]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Uwharrie River]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Andrew Hoover]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Herbert Hoover]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Totero Fort]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Tutelo Indians]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Every historic site has both a public and a private history.   In the case of this mill site on Covered Bridge Road in Tabernacle Township, I have a thirty-year personal association that gives me an intimate knowledge of it.  In the summer of 1975 I participated in the archeological excavation of the Mt. Shepherd Pottery [...]<img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=randolphhistory.wordpress.com&amp;blog=1204349&amp;post=979&amp;subd=randolphhistory&amp;ref=&amp;feed=1" width="1" height="1" />]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p style="text-align:center;"><a href="http://randolphhistory.files.wordpress.com/2011/10/fragments-a-001.jpg"><img class="aligncenter size-medium wp-image-982" title="The Hoover Miller's House" src="http://randolphhistory.files.wordpress.com/2011/10/fragments-a-001.jpg?w=300&#038;h=400" alt="" width="300" height="400" /></a></p>
<p>Every historic site has both a public and a private history.   In the case of this mill site on Covered Bridge Road in Tabernacle Township, I have a thirty-year personal association that gives me an intimate knowledge of it.  In the summer of 1975 I participated in the archeological excavation of the Mt. Shepherd Pottery which is located about a mile southeast of this site.  At that time the Skeen’s Mill Covered Bridge still stood on Covered Bridge Road, and I convinced some friends to join me in an expedition up the Uwharrie to see if we could discover if there was actually a mill anywhere around the Skeen’s Mill Bridge.  Over the course of an afternoon we not only found a site of surprising natural beauty, but well-preserved evidence of an elaborate mill seat.  And a “For Sale” sign.</p>
<p>Not knowing anything more than that, I convinced my parents to return with me the next weekend, and eventually prevailed upon them to purchase the tract which included the entire junction of the Uwharrie and Little Uwharrie Rivers.  After graduating from college and returning home, I actually lived in a trailer perched high above the site of the dam for two years while researching and writing my architectural history of Randolph County.   The property is still owned by my family.  But for two hundred and thirteen years previously, it had been owned by a parade of other people, and it has taken me years to piece together not just the history of this one tract of land, but the story of the surrounding neighborhood, part of what has been called the “Uwharrie Dutch” community, where this mill and the Mt. Shepherd Pottery were commercial landmarks.</p>
<div id="attachment_990" class="wp-caption aligncenter" style="width: 460px"><a href="http://randolphhistory.files.wordpress.com/2011/10/uwharrie-dutch-map-mesda.png"><img class="size-full wp-image-990" title="Uwharrie Dutch Map MESDA" src="http://randolphhistory.files.wordpress.com/2011/10/uwharrie-dutch-map-mesda.png?w=450&#038;h=392" alt="" width="450" height="392" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">Map of the &quot;Uwharrie Dutch&quot; region from MESDA Journal</p></div>
<p>The historic layout of the property took some time to puzzle out.  State Road 1406 runs from Hoover Hill Road on the East to Tabernacle Church Road on the West; and the one-hundred-foot-long Skeen’s Mill Covered Bridge (Tabernacle Township Site 18 in my architectural history) spanned the Uwharrie River about twenty feet north of its modern replacement.  It was built before March 1900, when C.T. Hughes was paid $11 for “repairing the bridge at N.R. Skeen’s.”  The bridge was one of only three remaining in North Carolina when it was placed on the National Register of Historic Places in the 1960s, but it was unappreciated and neglected by its nonresident owner and was destroyed by high water about the year 1984.</p>
<p>The mill was located to the South of both the covered bridge and modern bridge, about 150 feet from the road.  The foundations trace the footprint of a building thirty by fifty feet in plan, with its western side built into the side of a hill where the miller’s house  stood about fifty feet above and 200 feet southwest.  What was initially very confusing is that the mill race ran in the opposite direction that it should have if the dam was located anywhere near the covered bridge.  The tail race obviously flowed back into the Uwharrie River downstream from the bridge, but the head race was dug into the side of the hill, ending at least twenty feet above the mill perfectly situated for an overshot water wheel.  But the race ran south, curling around the hill at the foot of the miller’s house until it bent into a horseshoe shape and began running in a canal paralleling the Little Uwharrie River, where we finally found the evidence of head gates and a dam.</p>
<p><a href="http://randolphhistory.files.wordpress.com/2011/10/fragments-a-009.jpg"><img class="aligncenter size-medium wp-image-986" title="Reconstruction of Miller's House" src="http://randolphhistory.files.wordpress.com/2011/10/fragments-a-009.jpg?w=300&#038;h=199" alt="" width="300" height="199" /></a></p>
<p>Only iron bolts drilled into the river bed indicate the location of the dam, which ran diagonally across the Little Uwharrie at a 50-degree angle to the flow.  Water was funneled into the head gates, and then ran in a horseshoe-shaped canal approximately 1,340 feet around the hill to the site of the mill, a very impressive engineering achievement for some unknown millwright.   Parts of two sets of mills stones were then in evidence, made of the individually-quarried blocks set in plaster that were characteristic of “French Buhr” stones.   The road which crossed the Uwharrie at the covered bridge stopped at the mill and then continued South, parallel to the river, in deeply-cut double tracks, one wide enough for a horse and wagon, the other just wide enough for a horse.  The tracks converged to cross the Little Uwharrie at a ford just northwest of the confluence, and then continued south west.<a href="http://randolphhistory.files.wordpress.com/2011/10/fragments-a-006.jpg"><img class="aligncenter size-medium wp-image-983" title="fragments a 006" src="http://randolphhistory.files.wordpress.com/2011/10/fragments-a-006.jpg?w=300&#038;h=199" alt="" width="300" height="199" /></a></p>
<p>Research into previous ownership was the first order of research, beginning with the most recent and going backwards.  The recent history of the entire neighborhood was clear:  the surrounding lots had first been sold  in 1963 as part of the “Thayer Plantation” subdivision (See Plat Book 10, Page 116, Randolph County Registry).   Lee C. Thayer was the operator of a sawmill located on the railroad in Trinity, and owned hundreds of acres in Trinity and Tabernacle townships.  He lived in the Queen Anne style Victorian house at the northwest corner of Covered Bridge and Thayer Roads which was the center of a tract totaling more than 350 acres.  When the business hit bad times, the land was sold , roads were pushed out into the woods and hundreds of small lots were sold at auction.</p>
<p>The Thayers acquired the mill tract in 1943 (DB 386/PG 340); for the previous  thirty years it had been owned by the family of Julian Pearce, who bought it at auction in 1910 (DB134/PG276).  The auction had settled the estate of J.R. Skeen, son of Noah R. Skeen for whom the covered bridge was named.   The Skeen Mill tract consisted of 52 acres on both rivers, and included a tract “bought by N.R. Skeen from John Hill known as Boy Hill in the forks of the two prongs of Uwharrie River just below the Skeen Mill…”</p>
<p>Reaching back into the 19<sup>th</sup> century the information grew sketchier, but Skeen acquired the mill about 1890 from Penuel Arnold, who bought “Rush’s Mills” from the Estate of Nineveh Rush in 1881 (DB58,P352).  An article from The Courier of 1934 described Rush’s Mills: “the Little Uwharrie came down on the top of a hill just west of Big Uwharrie.  And 120 rods before it emptied into the bigger river it was forty feet higher on a level than the big river.  So Rush, with the help of his slaves, built a small dam on the hill, plowed and shoveled a canal or race around the hill and landed the water on a 20-foot wheel which operated a long saw placed so as to give it speed up and down.”  The grist mill was forty feet further down the race, where “two sets of stones were put in, one for wheat and one for corn.  When it rained enough they could run the saw and the grist mill at the same time.  When rains let up they could not run either one.”  (R.C. Welborn, “First Saw Mill in Tabernacle Dates Back to 1820”)</p>
<p><a href="http://randolphhistory.files.wordpress.com/2011/10/fragments-a-010.jpg"><img class="aligncenter size-medium wp-image-985" title="Head Race" src="http://randolphhistory.files.wordpress.com/2011/10/fragments-a-010.jpg?w=300&#038;h=199" alt="" width="300" height="199" /></a></p>
<p>Rush bought the mill and 300 acres in February 1826 from the Estate of Jacob Hoover (DB16, P319).  Jacob Hoover (b. 1754) had acquired 35 acres, including “the mill seat where Jacob Hoover now lives… in the fork of the Uwharrie”  in October 1794 from the estate of his father Andrew Hoover (DB7, P263).  Andrew Hoover was the anglicized name of Andres Huber, who had purchased 275 acres on both forks of the Uwharrie from Henry Eustace McCulloh in February 1763, when the area was still part of Rowan County (see Rowan DB5, P343).</p>
<p>Andreas Huber was born January 23, 1723 in Ellerstadt, now part of the German Palatine.  As the ninth child of a vintner, Huber saw little opportunity at home, and at age 15 he arrived at Philadelphia.  He lived with a brother in Lancaster County until age 22, when he married Margaret Pfautz and moved to Carroll County, Maryland.  By 1763 he and his large family had settled on the Uwharrie.   After the Revolution he turned the mill at the forks over to son Jacob and moved further down the Uwharrie to the Jackson Creek area, where he died and is buried in the Hoover cemetery. (See Genealogy of the Herbert Hoover Family by Hulda Hoover McLean, published by the Hoover Institution, Stanford University, 1967).</p>
<p>Nothing much was heard of Andrew thereafter until 1928, when his 3<sup>rd</sup> great- grandson Herbert Clark Hoover was elected President of the United States.  Though Herbert Hoover had been born and bred in Iowa, his distant cousins and proud Republican brethren of Randolph County didn’t miss the opportunity to turn the President’s ancestor into a modern folk hero.  A 1928 story by T.M. Pridgen published in the Charlotte News (“Myths of Prowess of early Hoovers along Uwharrie”) declared that Andrew Hoover was a Quaker and neighbor of Daniel Boone, and Hoover’s mill was “an important granary of the Revolution.”  “The story goes that Andrew Hoover was not afraid of man, beast or devil; that he climbed to the top of Eagle Nest Rock when others were afraid to; that he swam the raging Uwharrie to save the lives of his horses; and he set out to face the headless horseman on the Uwharrie trails, and braved the other ghostly figures that moved like lost souls down the valley.”</p>
<p>It is doubtful whether any of those florid claims are real.   Far from being supporters of the Revolution, the Hoovers were part of the German Pacifist community that clustered around this area of the Uwharrie during the 18<sup>th</sup> century.  I have written about this before in my article on the Mt. Shepherd pottery [http://www.archive.org/stream/journalofearlyso0601muse#page/20/mode/2up/search/21 ]  Historian John Scott Davenport has extensively researched the area, and asserts that though President Hoover was a Quaker, “the Uwharrie Dutch were predominately Dunker and Mennonite.  The Uwharrie Dunkers [German Baptists] were the largest settlement of that sect in North Carolina, 1778-1782.  Their minister was Jacob Stutzman, who bought Ramsey’s Place from Henry Eustace McCulloh in 1764, and led the congregation until he moved to Clark County, Indiana Territory, in 1801…. Dunkers did not have meeting houses until the mid-19<sup>th</sup> century; hence Mast’s Old Meeting House [across the Uwharrie just east of Hoover’s Mill; see DB10, P5) was a Mennonite church.  Mennonites, called “Dutch Friends” by the Quakers, fellow-shipped with Quakers, appeared occasionally as witnesses to Quaker weddings.  The Dunkers would have nothing to do with Quakers.  Land problems, brought about by their rigid pacifism during the Revolution, and the influx of Quakers into the Uwharrie following the Revolution, were largely responsible for the removal of the Dunkers from Randolph County.”  (Letter dated November 12, 1976, in the Hoover files of the Randolph Room)</p>
<p>Jacob Hoover (1754-1821) married Elizabeth Stutzman, a daughter of the Dunker minister, and it is likely that his mother Margaret Pfautz was also a member of the congregation.  But Andrew’s family must not have been as strict as others, as their numerous deeds were all properly sworn to and recorded.  It is said that disastrous floods in 1795 and 1798 caused all of Andrew’s children but Jacob and Jonas to move west to Indiana.  Jacob ran and rebuilt the mill, which was alternately washed away by a flood and destroyed by fire, until he was crippled in an accident during a flood.   It seems likely that the unusual configuration of the present mill race stems from a desire to protect it from flood waters; a breach of the dam on the Little Uwharrie would never wash away the mill on the other side of the hill.</p>
<p><a href="http://randolphhistory.files.wordpress.com/2011/10/fragments-a-003.jpg"><img class="aligncenter size-medium wp-image-984" title="1733 Moseley Map- Totero Fort" src="http://randolphhistory.files.wordpress.com/2011/10/fragments-a-003.jpg?w=300&#038;h=199" alt="" width="300" height="199" /></a></p>
<p>Finally, we can take one additional step further back into history:  the 1733 map of North Carolina by Surveyor General Edward Moseley (A New and Correct <em>Map</em> of the Province of <em>North Carolina) </em><em>depicts both Deep River and the Uwharrie, but the only landmark noted in the whole area of the county is in the forks of the Uwharrie: “Totero Fort.”  This is a reference to the Tutelo Indian tribe, which appears to be far south of where they had been visited in September 1661, when </em>Thomas Batts and Abraham Wood led an expedition from Fort Henry (Petersburg, VA) to Totero Town (approximately where present-day Salem Va. is located).   In 1701 John Lawson visited the Keyauwee tribe living nearby on Caraway Creek at Ridge’s Mountain, but said nothing about any Tutelos.   It may be that attacks by the fierce Iroquois tribe forced the Tutelos to move South, but in 1714 the Occaneechi, Saponi, Eno, Totero and others relocated to Fort Christanna in Lawrenceville, Va.   More research is needed to confirm or deny this single tantalizing reference, but the location- the hill above the bottomland in the forks of the rivers- would be a natural defensive position for a palisaded village.</p>
<p>With a variety of documented stories spanning nearly 300 years, the Hoover Mill site is certainly a landmark of Randolph County history.<em></em></p>
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		<title>BALLOON BUSTING II</title>
		<link>http://randolphhistory.wordpress.com/2011/09/15/balloon-busting-ii/</link>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 15 Sep 2011 17:29:32 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>macwhatley</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Civil War]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Military History]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[NC]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Randolph County]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[artillery]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Evansport]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Quantico]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[S.G. Worth]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Wood family]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Did a Randolph County artillery gunner really take down a Union observation balloon?  Probably not; but every other aspect of the story can be verified and the characters named in the story are inarguably real:  it shines a light on one of the county’s first and at the time, premier military units: Company I of [...]<img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=randolphhistory.wordpress.com&amp;blog=1204349&amp;post=954&amp;subd=randolphhistory&amp;ref=&amp;feed=1" width="1" height="1" />]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a href="http://randolphhistory.files.wordpress.com/2011/10/balloncwnj7.jpg"><img class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-956" title="BallonCWnj7" src="http://randolphhistory.files.wordpress.com/2011/10/balloncwnj7.jpg?w=450" alt="Union Balloon"   /></a></p>
<p>Did a Randolph County artillery gunner really take down a Union observation balloon?  Probably not; but every other aspect of the story can be verified and the characters named in the story are inarguably real:  it shines a light on one of the county’s first and at the time, premier military units: Company I of the 22<sup>nd</sup> North Carolina Regiment.</p>
<p>Company I, known as the “Davis Guards,”<a title="" href="#_edn1">[i]</a> has not been as well known as Franklinville’s Company M, the “Randolph Hornets”.  But in 1861 the opposite was true:  the Guards, formerly known as the “Asheborough Guards,” were the long-time militia company of the county seat.  The Hornets were newly minted, freshly equipped, and backed by the largest corporation in the county.  The Guards were old school militia, traditionally uniformed, and serving under much of their antebellum leadership.</p>
<p>A notice of one of the quarterly musters of the Guards appeared in 1859 in the local newspaper:</p>
<p><strong><em>ATTENTION ASHEBOROUGH GUARDS!</em></strong></p>
<p><strong><em>You are hereby commanded to appear at Asheborough, on Saturday the 4<sup>th</sup> of July next, at 10 o’clock A.M.—armed with Gun, Shot-Pouch, Horn and Six Rounds of Powder.</em></strong></p>
<p><strong><em>Also, all persons wishing to join the C Company, are requested to come forward on that day.</em></strong></p>
<p><strong><em>By order of the Captain.</em></strong></p>
<p><strong><em>June 20, 1859.</em></strong></p>
<p><strong><em>S.G. Worth, Sergeant.</em></strong><a title="" href="#_edn2">[ii]</a></p>
<div id="attachment_972" class="wp-caption aligncenter" style="width: 209px"><a href="http://randolphhistory.files.wordpress.com/2011/10/p1150272.jpg"><img class="size-medium wp-image-972" title="P1150272" src="http://randolphhistory.files.wordpress.com/2011/10/p1150272.jpg?w=199&#038;h=300" alt="" width="199" height="300" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">S.G. Worth tombstone in the Asheboro cemetery.</p></div>
<p>Shubal Gardner Worth (1836- 1864), the company Sergeant in 1859, was elected Captain of the company in 1861.  Worth was the son of Dr. John Milton Worth (1811- 1901) of Asheboro, and the nephew of wartime State Treasurer and future Governor Jonathan Worth.  At the outbreak of the war, S.G. Worth was serving as the Clerk of Superior Court of Randolph County, and resigned that office to raise the county’s first company for service in the Confederate army.<a title="" href="#_edn3">[iii]</a>  “Shube” Worth served as company commander for more than eighteen months,<a title="" href="#_edn4">[iv]</a> about half of which involved service along a line of hastily-built fortifications along the Potomac River.  The Washington Post recently rated this story of the Potomac blockade, which bottled up Washington, DC for much of the first year of the war, as one of the “most important yet overlooked” stories of the Civil War.<a title="" href="#_edn5">[v]</a></p>
<p>Company “I” took up camp at Evansport, Virginia late in September, and was stationed there during the Autumn and Winter of 1861-&#8217;62.  Evansport, today better known as Quantico, Virginia, was the headquarters of heavy cannon batteries established on the west bank of the Potomac from the Occoquan River, just south of Mt. Vernon, to Quantico Creek, about 15 miles.  This series of gun emplacements prevented ships from passing up river to the capital, thus isolating Washington, D.C.  Three batteries were largely built and maintained by the 22<sup>nd</sup> North Carolina regiment, mounted with 9-inch Dalghren guns, smooth bore 32 and 42 pounders, and one heavy rifled Blakely gun.<a title="" href="#_edn6">[vi]</a> The batteries frequently engaged with federal gunboats and with Union batteries on the Maryland side of the Potomac, but combat casualties were few.</p>
<div id="attachment_957" class="wp-caption aligncenter" style="width: 441px"><a href="http://randolphhistory.files.wordpress.com/2011/10/p1150270.jpg"><img class="size-large wp-image-957     " title="P1150270" src="http://randolphhistory.files.wordpress.com/2011/10/p1150270.jpg?w=431&#038;h=287" alt="A &quot;Quaker&quot; Gun" width="431" height="287" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">Union soldier posing with the fake cannon after capture of Evansport.</p></div>
<p>Given the constant observation from the Balloon Corps, the Confederates shrewdly increased the number of visible guns by creating “Quaker Cannon,” tree trucks painted black and carefully situated in gun emplacements to look like additional artillery.  Balloon observers could not distinguish between the fake and the real cannon, and thus reports back to Union command consistently overestimated Confederate fire power.</p>
<p>Company I was detailed to man Battery No. 2 at Evansport during the entire Potomac blockade,<a title="" href="#_edn7">[vii]</a>  and once had several men wounded when a 42-pounder Dalghren gun burst.</p>
<div id="attachment_958" class="wp-caption aligncenter" style="width: 460px"><a href="http://randolphhistory.files.wordpress.com/2011/10/dahlgren-gun.jpg"><img class="size-full wp-image-958" title="Dahlgren-Gun" src="http://randolphhistory.files.wordpress.com/2011/10/dahlgren-gun.jpg?w=450&#038;h=348" alt="" width="450" height="348" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">One of the Gosport Dahlgrens.</p></div>
<p>Fifty-two 9-inch Dahlgren cannon had been rescued by the Confederates from the burned Gosport Navy Yard at Norfolk and brought to Evansport.  Dahlgrens, by far the most popular gun in the U.S. Navy, were soda-bottle-shaped, smooth-bore, muzzle-loading naval guns.  Commonly designated by caliber using Roman numerals (i.e., “IX”), the most common variety of Dahlgren IX was 108 inches long, weighed more than 9,000 pounds, and could throw an 80-pound solid shot or a 73.5-pound exploding shell.<a title="" href="#_edn8">[viii]</a></p>
<p><a href="http://randolphhistory.files.wordpress.com/2011/10/blakelyrifle.jpg"><img class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-969" title="BlakelyRifle" src="http://randolphhistory.files.wordpress.com/2011/10/blakelyrifle.jpg?w=450&#038;h=253" alt="" width="450" height="253" /></a></p>
<p>A Blakely rifle is also known to have been at Evansport, and this is probably the one which would have been used to shoot at the balloons, as Blakelys were British muzzle-loading cannon which had rifled barrels.  Blakelys were very popular with Confederate artillery, and there were many different designs and sizes.  What they all had in common is that the rifled barrels imparted a spin to the shell which allowed longer and more accurate shots.<a title="" href="#_edn9">[ix]</a></p>
<div id="attachment_962" class="wp-caption aligncenter" style="width: 440px"><a href="http://randolphhistory.files.wordpress.com/2011/10/p1150277.jpg"><img class="size-large wp-image-962  " title="P1150277" src="http://randolphhistory.files.wordpress.com/2011/10/p1150277.jpg?w=430&#038;h=286" alt="" width="430" height="286" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">Parents of the Wood brothers, buried in the Asheboro Cemetery.</p></div>
<p>Randolph County’s lead actor in the balloon drama, Sergeant Thomas Jefferson (records alternatively say &#8220;Jones&#8221;) Wood of Company I, 22<sup>nd</sup> North Carolina Regiment, was born in 1 Mar. 1840 near Asheboro.  He and his older and younger brothers Franklin Harris Wood (1836-1913) and William Penuel Wood (1843- 1924) all served with the 22<sup>nd</sup> North Carolina.  The three boys were the only children of Penuel P. Wood (1813-1903) and his wife, Calista Birkhead Wood (1816- 1903) of Randolph County.  Franklin Harris Wood (1836-1913) served as the regimental Chaplain.<a title="" href="#_edn10">[x]</a></p>
<p style="text-align:center;"><a href="http://randolphhistory.files.wordpress.com/2011/10/p1150297.jpg"><img class="aligncenter size-large wp-image-961" title="P1150297" src="http://randolphhistory.files.wordpress.com/2011/10/p1150297.jpg?w=430&#038;h=286" alt="" width="430" height="286" /></a></p>
<p>W.P. or “Penn” Wood enlisted in January 1862 and joined his brother in Company on March 1<sup>st</sup>.  He was promoted to Full Corporal on October 1<sup>st</sup>, and to Full Sergeant on May 23, 1864.  Wood represented Randolph County in the state senate in 1901 and in the state house from 1905-1907; he was elected State Auditor in 1911, and served in that office until 1921.  He is buried in the Asheboro cemetery, just across the carriageway from J.M. Worth.<a title="" href="#_edn11">[xi]</a></p>
<div id="attachment_960" class="wp-caption aligncenter" style="width: 512px"><a href="http://randolphhistory.files.wordpress.com/2011/10/p1150268.jpg"><img class="size-large wp-image-960  " title="P1150268" src="http://randolphhistory.files.wordpress.com/2011/10/p1150268.jpg?w=502&#038;h=333" alt="" width="502" height="333" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">View of the Potomac from inside the Confederate gun emplacements.</p></div>
<p>The 22<sup>nd</sup> N.C. regiment remained in support of the batteries at Evansport until March, 1862, when the army was abruptly ordered to fall back from Manassas and the Potomac to the line of the Rappahannock at Fredericksburg.  The retreat was both so hasty and so quiet that it was not discovered by the Union spy balloons for almost a day.  When federal troops landed at the Evansport batteries on March 9<sup>th</sup>, “Two or three guns of the battery were found bursted.  All of the pieces had been heavily wadded, then crammed to the muzzle with sand and fires built under the carriages with the expectation that they would burn and the heat cause the gun to discharge and burst.  But this failed except in a few instances.  The guns were mostly rifled 7 and 9-inch Dahlgrens with one magnificent 120-pounder Blakely gun, which had been brought from England but a few months before.  This, with its fellows, was subsequently taken to the Washington Navy Yard, where they were all put in good condition and did much excellent service for the Union thereafter.”<a title="" href="#_edn12">[xii]</a></p>
<p>The Confederate departure was so quick and confused that Company M of the 22<sup>nd</sup> Regiment, the Randolph Hornets, left its almost-new Company flag flying over its camp, soon to be captured without a shot being fired.<a title="" href="#_edn13">[xiii]</a></p>
<p>T.J. Wood served throughout the war and was with General Robert E. Lee when he surrendered at Appomattox Court House, Virginia, on Palm Sunday, April 8, 1865.<a title="" href="#_edn14">[xiv]</a></p>
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<hr align="left" size="1" width="33%" />
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<p><a title="" href="#_ednref1">[i]</a> Almost certainly re-named in honor of Confederate President Jefferson Davis.</p>
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<p><a title="" href="#_ednref2">[ii]</a> <strong><em>North Carolina Bulletin</em></strong>, Asheborough, 27 June 1859.</p>
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<div>
<p><a title="" href="#_ednref3">[iii]</a> S.G. Worth was appointed Clerk of Superior Court for Randolph County for Spring term Superior Ct&#8211; just in time for the storied trial of his cousin, State vs. Daniel Worth.  See the Greensboro Patriot, 4-6-60, p.2.</p>
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<div>
<p><a title="" href="#_ednref4">[iv]</a> Appointed Lt. Colonel of the 5<sup>th</sup> Battalion of Home Guards by Governor Vance, Worth returned to Asheboro.  He subsequently resigned that command to raise another company, which served with the 19<sup>th</sup> N.C. Cavalry, in the brigade of Gen. W.P. Roberts.  Worth was regimental Adjutant when he was killed in the vicinity of Richmond on May 11, 1864 during the Battle of Yellow Tavern, the same day and place General J.E.B. Stuart was mortally wounded.  Worth’s life and career will be the subject of a separate post.</p>
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<p><a title="" href="#_ednref5">[v]</a> http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/house-divided/post/untold-civil-war-stories-the-potomac-blockade/2011/10/07/gIQAKMLcTL_blog.html</p>
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<p><a title="" href="#_ednref6">[vi]</a> <a href="http://www.22ndnorthcarolina.com/id3.html">http://www.22ndnorthcarolina.com/id3.html</a></p>
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<p><a title="" href="#_ednref7">[vii]</a> Ibid.</p>
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<p><a title="" href="#_ednref8">[viii]</a> <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dahlgren_gun">http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dahlgren_gun</a></p>
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<p><a title="" href="#_ednref9">[ix]</a> <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blakely_rifle">http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blakely_rifle</a></p>
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<p><a title="" href="#_ednref10">[x]</a> Franklin Harris Wood was born in Randolph County 19 Aug 1836; he died at the home of his son George Thomas Wood (1874-1943) in High Point on 2 Oct 1913.  He married Frances Elizabeth Pearce (1852 – 1936).  F. H. Wood Wood is listed as “D.D.” without further explanation on genealogy websites, which traditionally means “Doctor of Divinity.”  His post-war career as a minister, if any, is not known.</p>
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<p><a title="" href="#_ednref11">[xi]</a> William Penuel Wood (2 May 1843 –  1 Apr 1924), married Henrietta J. Gunter (1849-1893) and had the following family: Blanche Penn Wood (1873 – 1954) (who married J.O. Redding); John Kerr Wood (1875 – 1939); and Mabel Emma Wood (1879 – 1967) (who married William A. Underwood).  The  W.P. Wood House was located on the north side of the 300 block of East Salisbury Street in Asheboro, currently a playground for an adjacent daycare.</p>
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<p><a title="" href="#_ednref12">[xii]</a> Pvt. Oliver C. Cooper, 1st Mass. Infantry, quoted in “Annals of the War: Chapters of Unwritten History Blockading the Potomac,” published December 20, 1879 in the “Weekly Times,” Philadelphia, PA.</p>
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<p><a title="" href="#_ednref13">[xiii]</a> Ibid.  The story refers to a “handsome banner… of satin, bearing on one side the inscription, ‘The Randolph Hornets,’ and on the other, ‘Onward to VICTORY.’”  This is what allowed the identification and return of the flag to the county historical society in the 1960s.</p>
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<p><a title="" href="#_ednref14">[xiv]</a> He died Feb. 4, 1923 in High Point.  He married Sara Sadie Christian (1843-1900), and had one son, William Marshall Wood (1868-1951), who died in Beaumont, TX.</p>
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		<title>BALLOON BUSTING</title>
		<link>http://randolphhistory.wordpress.com/2011/08/29/balloon-busting/</link>
		<comments>http://randolphhistory.wordpress.com/2011/08/29/balloon-busting/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 29 Aug 2011 20:27:42 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>macwhatley</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Civil War]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Military History]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[NC]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Randolph County]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[22nd NC Regiment]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Balloons]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Thaddeus Lowe]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[The following story was published in the April, 1898 edition of The North Carolina Home Journal (Vol. I, Number V).  The monthly magazine cost fifty cents a year, and its editorial offices were in Trinity, Randolph County, N.C. [Very little is known about this Randolph County magazine.] RANDOLPH COUNTY BOY DOWNS BALLOON  After the battle [...]<img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=randolphhistory.wordpress.com&amp;blog=1204349&amp;post=943&amp;subd=randolphhistory&amp;ref=&amp;feed=1" width="1" height="1" />]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p align="center"><strong><a href="http://randolphhistory.files.wordpress.com/2011/08/19thc-balloon.jpg"><img class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-944" title="19thc.balloon" src="http://randolphhistory.files.wordpress.com/2011/08/19thc-balloon.jpg?w=450&#038;h=437" alt="" width="450" height="437" /></a><br />
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<p>The following story was published in the April, 1898 edition of The North Carolina Home Journal (Vol. I, Number V).  The monthly magazine cost fifty cents a year, and its editorial offices were in Trinity, Randolph County, N.C. [Very little is known about this Randolph County magazine.]</p>
<p align="center"><strong><em>RANDOLPH COUNTY BOY DOWNS BALLOON</em></strong></p>
<p><strong><em> After the battle of Manassas the Confederate troops occupied the southern bank of the Potomac for some time. The 22d Regiment of N. C. Troops were at Evansport between Aquia Creek and Mount Vernon, Federal Troops were encamped on the opposite side of the river, which is at that point about a mile and a half wide. From this camp balloons would ascend every day for the occupants to make observations as to what was doing on the Confederate side. One very large and beautiful balloon was named “The Belle.”  Every strip in the cloth, which seemed to be silk, was of a different color from the others. The Confederates had batteries along the river, and at Evansport was a long range gun which some of the members of the 22d Regiment were trained to handle. Thomas J. Wood, of Randolph County, was the gunner.</em></strong></p>
<p><strong><em><br />
He acquired considerable proficiency in firing the gun, and one day asked his Captain to let him try a shot at that big balloon. The Captain could not give the permission, but suggested that he ask General Holmes, who was then in command of the brigade. Accordingly, the first time the General came around Wood sought the desired permission. Holmes after swearing at him awhile, and telling him he would better save his ammunition for he would likely need it in a few days, finally told him he could come down, and he might try it.</em></strong></p>
<p><strong><em> </em></strong></p>
<p><strong><em>Two days after, a clear, bright, still evening, the balloon being up, the General came. J. J. Pettigrew, who was then Colonel of the regiment, and had had a splendid military education, was standing near the gun. Wood asked him to pass judgment of the distance. “About four miles,” Pettigrew replied. “Try your fifteen-second shell first, and if it falls short, take your twenty-two-second shell, which is made to go four miles and a half before bursting. Wood fired his first shell, and men with field-glasses watching, observed that it fell short. He then loaded with the twenty-two-second shell, adjusted his gun, and drew the lanyard. As the iron missile went singing through the air, all watched intently the result, and behold, when at last it exploded, the beautiful balloon collapsed and fell, her variegated coat torn to tatters by the fragments of the bursting shell. </em></strong></p>
<p>This is an intriguing little vignette of the early war, discovered by local genealogist Barbara Newsome (“Bobbie”) Grigg and republished in 1981 in the Randolph County Genealogical Journal.<a title="" href="#_edn1">[i]</a>  However, there is a fundamental flaw with the whole story:  I can find no account of any federal observation balloon being shot down by Confederate artillery.  In fact, histories of the Balloon Corps say exactly the opposite.<a title="" href="#_edn2">[ii]</a>  But the story provides an entry point into a number of fascinating footnotes to the story of the War Between the States.</p>
<p><a href="http://randolphhistory.files.wordpress.com/2011/08/balloon_corpsii.jpg"><img class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-945" title="Balloon_CorpsII" src="http://randolphhistory.files.wordpress.com/2011/08/balloon_corpsii.jpg?w=450" alt=""   /></a>First, the United States Balloon Corps, a civilian organization established by President Lincoln in June, 1861 to provide aerial reconnaissance for the Union armies.  While ostensibly under the authority of the Union&#8217;s Bureau of Topographical Engineers, the Balloon Corps and its “Chief Aeronaut” Thaddeus S.C. Lowe were never trusted by Lincoln’s mediocre cadre of command generals, and was phased out of use after June 1863, despite providing useful and, sometimes irreplaceable intelligence on southern troop strength and movements.</p>
<p>The primary reason the War Department bureaucrats distrusted the Balloon Corps was probably what caught the attention of the President in the first place:  its flamboyant founder, a character who could have been the model for Professor Marvel, the failed balloonist who became Frank Baum’s Wizard of Oz.  “Professor” Thaddeus Sobieski Constantine (or, sometimes he used the more impressive and mysterious “Coulincourt”) Lowe (1832- 1913), was a self-educated aeronautical enthusiast who made a living in the 1850s demonstrating hot air balloons at county fairs across the country.</p>
<p><a href="http://randolphhistory.files.wordpress.com/2011/08/tsclowe.jpg"><img class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-946" title="TSCLowe" src="http://randolphhistory.files.wordpress.com/2011/08/tsclowe.jpg?w=450" alt=""   /></a></p>
<p>Lowe made and wasn’t afraid to make use of influential friends such as Joseph Henry, the Director of the Smithsonian institution.  But what got the attention of the President was a stunt Lowe engineered under the guise of testing atmospheric wind currents for a trans-Atlantic balloon flight.  On April 20, 1861, Lowe made headlines North and South with a storybook aerial journey from Cincinnati, Ohio, flying 500 miles in just nine hours, sailing entirely over North Carolina to land in a field near Unionville, S.C.  Since this was just a week after the fall of Fort Sumter, the startled residents of South Carolina were more inclined to believe that the flying Yankee disguised in a formal Prince Albert tailcoat and silk top hat was some sort of spy.  They packed Lowe and his balloon, the <strong><em>Enterprise</em></strong>, off to the state capital where he finally managed to persuade the authorities to let him catch a train back to Ohio.</p>
<p>Whether or not Lowe started out to spy, by the time he got back to Cincinnati he had a firm grasp of the military value of his hobby, and a burning desire to use it in the service of the Union.  He had an influential friends arrange a meeting with President Abraham Lincoln at the White House on June 11, 1861 where Lowe outlined his vision for the military use of observation balloons.  A week later Lowe not only demonstrated the balloon-ship <strong><em>Enterprise</em></strong> 500 feet above the south lawn of the White House, but sent the President the world’s first telegram from the air to prove how easily aerial intelligence observations could be communicated to the ground.<a title="" href="#_edn3">[iii]</a>  Lincoln wasted no time in putting Lowe to work; before the end of June balloons took their place in military history when Lowe and a sketch artist ascended near Bull Run to observe the Confederate Army.  In August General George McClellan authorized Lowe to build seven balloons for the army,<a title="" href="#_edn4">[iv]</a> and Lowe invented a portable hydrogen generator to allow the balloons to be filled with gas on the battlefield.</p>
<p><a href="http://randolphhistory.files.wordpress.com/2011/08/thaddeusloweintrepid.jpg"><img class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-947" title="Thaddeus Lowe and the Intrepid" src="http://randolphhistory.files.wordpress.com/2011/08/thaddeusloweintrepid.jpg?w=450&#038;h=359" alt="" width="450" height="359" /></a></p>
<p>On August 29<sup>th</sup> Lowe began providing McClellan with information on the Confederate fortifications being built on the Potomac five miles south of Washington.  Lowe’s daily observations of Confederate activities attracted immediate artillery and rife fire from southern troops, but at their regular altitude of 500 feet, they were usually out of range.  In November Lowe, observing across the Potomac from the airship <strong><em>Constitution</em></strong>,  reported to army headquarters that “We had a fine view of the enemy’s camp-fires during the evening, and saw the rebels constructing new batteries…”<a title="" href="#_edn5">[v]</a>   “A hawk hovering over a chicken yard could not have caused more commotion than did my balloons when they appeared,” Lowe wrote.  “As soon as it became inflated so the rebels could see it,” a young Union officer wrote, “they commenced throwing shells at it… [one] shell passed directly over our heads… and exploded the instant it struck the ground.”<a title="" href="#_edn6">[vi]</a>  Union soldiers made bets on whether the Southern artillerists would actually hit a balloon, but the closest shots only nicked the observer basket or the tether ropes.<a title="" href="#_edn7">[vii]</a>  The balloons were such enticing targets that Lincoln’s biographer Carl Sandburg called Lowe “the most shot-at man in the War.”<a title="" href="#_edn8">[viii]</a>  Despite being such a frequent target, there is no evidence that any Confederate shot ever pierced the silk envelope of a balloon; however, it may sometimes have appeared so.  Major Porter Alexander, Chief Engineer and Signal Officer of the Confederate army, wrote on September 8<sup>th</sup> that “We sent a rifle shell so near old Lowe and his balloon that he came down as fast as gravity could bring him.”<a title="" href="#_edn9">[ix]</a>  Perhaps something like this is the factual basis of the story.</p>
<p><a href="http://randolphhistory.files.wordpress.com/2011/08/proftsloweintrepid.jpg"><img class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-948" title="Prof. T.S. Lowe and the Intrepid airship" src="http://randolphhistory.files.wordpress.com/2011/08/proftsloweintrepid.jpg?w=450" alt=""   /></a></p>
<p>Unfortunately, there is one other major discrepancy.   The federal Balloon Corps never had a multi-colored airship.  Lowe’s silk envelopes were evidently white or gray, emblazoned with the name of each balloon and decorated with appropriate paintings such a bald eagle, the United States flag, or a portrait of George Washington.<a title="" href="#_edn10">[x]</a>  Varnished and reflective, a Union balloon “glistened… like a ball of silver suspended in the air.”<a title="" href="#_edn11">[xi]</a>   In fact, the only accounts of brightly colored silk balloons are of the two Confederate balloons <strong><em>Gazelle</em></strong> and <strong><em>Nimbus</em></strong>, built in 1862.  The Gazelle was made in Savannah, Georgia by Capt. Langdon Cheves (1814-1863), who purchased silk dress material from local merchants without regard to color or pattern.  Its bright plaids and flowered designs gave the Gazelle a distinctive patchwork aspect that caused General James Longstreet in his war memoir to author the myth that the balloon had been sewn from “all the silk dresses in the Confederacy.”<a title="" href="#_edn12">[xii]</a></p>
<p>Whether or not some important aspects of the story are verifiable, it still opens a window on a barely-remembered aspect of the war, in which Randolph County’s companies in the 22<sup>nd</sup> Regiment were heavily involved.  <em>[ To be Continued in the next entry--]</em></p>
<p><a href="http://randolphhistory.files.wordpress.com/2011/08/mysteriousisland1961.jpg"><img class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-949" title="The Mysterious Island 1961 film" src="https://randolphhistory.files.wordpress.com/2011/08/mysteriousisland1961.jpg?w=450" alt=""   /></a></p>
<p><em>[Jules Verne’s Mysterious Island involved the escape of Union POWs in a Confederate balloon… not made of silk dress material in this illustration!]</em></p>
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<p><a title="" href="#_ednref1">[i]</a> The Genealogical Journal of the Randolph County Historical Society, Vol. V, No. 4, Fall 1981, p.35.</p>
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<p><a title="" href="#_ednref2">[ii]</a> Gail Jarrow, Lincoln’s Flying Spies: Thaddeus Lowe and the Civil War Balloon Corps.  Honesdale, Pa.:  Calkins Creek, 2010, p. 70.</p>
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<p><a title="" href="#_ednref3">[iii]</a> Thus the <strong><em>Enterprise</em></strong> was not only America’s first military airship, but the only <strong><em>Enterprise</em></strong> ever to have been an actual guest at the White House.  If Gene Roddenberry had only known…</p>
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<p><a title="" href="#_ednref4">[iv]</a> Mixing naval history with pro-Union sentiments, Lowe’s airship fleet was made up of the <strong><em>Union, Intrepid, Constitution, United States, Washington, Eagle</em></strong> and <strong><em>Excelsior</em></strong>.</p>
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<p><a title="" href="#_ednref5">[v]</a> “TSC Lowe’s Official Report,” in The War of the Rebellion, series 3, Vol. 3, p. 266.</p>
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<p><a title="" href="#_ednref6">[vi]</a> Letter from Benjamin Steven to his parents in New Hampshire, 30 Nov. 1861.  Benjamin C. Stevens Papers, Duke University Library Special Collections, Durham, NC.</p>
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<p><a title="" href="#_ednref7">[vii]</a> Jarrow, op.cit.</p>
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<p><a title="" href="#_ednref8">[viii]</a> Carl Sandburg, Abraham Lincoln: The War Years, Vol. 1 (New York, 1939), page 493.</p>
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<p><a title="" href="#_ednref9">[ix]</a> Letter from E.P. Alexander to A.L. Alexander, 8 Sept. 1861, quoted in F. Stansbury Haydon, Aeronautics in the Union and Confederate Armies, Vol. 1., p. 206.  (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins Press, 1941).</p>
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<p><a title="" href="#_ednref10">[x]</a> Jarrow, p. 45.</p>
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<p><a title="" href="#_ednref11">[xi]</a> Gilbert Adams Hays, comp.  Under the Red Patch: the Story of the 63<sup>rd</sup> Regiment Pennsylvania Volunteers (Pittsburgh, 1908), p.76.</p>
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<p><a title="" href="#_ednref12">[xii]</a> James Longstreet, “Our March Against Pope,” in Battles and Leaders of the Civil War, Vol. 2, p.513.  (New York: Century Club, 1888).</p>
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		<title>The True Lost Cause:  The Battle for Peace in February, 1861</title>
		<link>http://randolphhistory.wordpress.com/2011/04/11/the-true-lost-cause-the-battle-for-peace-in-february-1861/</link>
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		<pubDate>Mon, 11 Apr 2011 01:20:33 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>macwhatley</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Civil War]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Government]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Military History]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[NC]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Quakers]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Randolph County]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[disunion]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[secession]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[union]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[April 11, 1861 was America’s last day of peace. On April 8th, President Lincoln’s envoy to the Governor of South Carolina announced the President’s intention to resupply the besieged garrison at Fort Sumner with food and water, threatening to prolong indefinitely the stalemate that had begun the previous December 26th.  The implication of Lincoln’s action [...]<img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=randolphhistory.wordpress.com&amp;blog=1204349&amp;post=919&amp;subd=randolphhistory&amp;ref=&amp;feed=1" width="1" height="1" />]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div id="attachment_925" class="wp-caption alignnone" style="width: 624px"><a href="http://randolphhistory.files.wordpress.com/2011/04/fort-sumter-from-the-battery.jpg"><img class="size-large wp-image-925 " title="fort-sumter-from-the-battery" src="http://randolphhistory.files.wordpress.com/2011/04/fort-sumter-from-the-battery.jpg?w=614&#038;h=269" alt="" width="614" height="269" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">Fort Sumter from the Battery in Charleston.</p></div>
<p>April 11, 1861 was America’s last day of peace.</p>
<p>On April 8<sup>th</sup>, President Lincoln’s envoy to the Governor of South Carolina announced the President’s intention to resupply the besieged garrison at Fort Sumner with food and water, threatening to prolong indefinitely the stalemate that had begun the previous December 26<sup>th</sup>.  The implication of Lincoln’s action was that, if war was to come, then the Southern firebrands who had advocated for a state’s right to leave the Union would have to turn push into shove.</p>
<p>The cascade of fear and anger that had begun with Lincoln’s election in November had almost run out of steam by April, 1861.  South Carolina, ever fast to take offense, led the way on December 20<sup>th</sup>, followed by Mississippi (Jan. 9), Florida (Jan. 10), Alabama (Jan. 11), Georgia (Jan. 19), Louisiana (Jan. 26), and Texas (Feb. 1).   But there the flood tide had run out, and in the months since it seemed that overwrought tempers and heated words had cooled and even begun to recede.</p>
<p>The rock on which the initial secession wave broke was the Upper South, the border states possessing a majority of the southern populace, natural resources and industry.    Even there the vocal minority of men of property and power had advocated for secession.   But Unionists held back the flood, pointing out that the United States had been created by state constitutional conventions, authorized by a vote of the people, which then ratified (or not, in the case of North Carolina), the U.S. Constitution.  They argued that secession, more simply known as “Disunion,’ could only be achieved by following a similar process.  They hoped this delaying tactic would provide time to think, consider the consequences, and allow the possibility of compromise and new understanding.</p>
<p>On February 9, 1861, Tennessee voted on whether to send delegates to a State Convention to decide on secession.  88,803 votes were cast for pro-Union candidates and 22,749 votes were cast for Secession candidates, but the actual proposal for a secession convention was defeated by a vote of 69,675 to 57,798.</p>
<p>On  February  13<sup>th</sup> a convention assembled in Richmond to determine whether Virginia should secede from the Union.  More than two thirds of the delegates refused to vote for secession.</p>
<p>On Feb. 18<sup>th</sup>, the day that Jefferson Davis was inaugurated president of the Confederate States, the citizens of Arkansas approved holding a convention to consider the question, but when an ordinance of secession was put to a vote on March 16<sup>th</sup>, it was rejected by a vote of 39 to 35.</p>
<p>Anyone reading the returns of the election of 1860 could have discerned the pro-Union sentiments of the voters of North Carolina.  When the final vote totals were published in the Greensboro Patriot on February 14, 1861, John C. Breckinridge of Kentucky, the Southern Democratic candidate, had received the most votes (48,533); second was John Bell of Tennessee, the Constitutional Union nominee (44,039); and far behind was the Democrat Stephen A. Douglas (just 2,690 votes).   When their totals are combined, more than 97% of North Carolina voters arguably approved the pro-Union positions of Bell and Breckinridge.  (Abraham Lincoln probably didn’t get a single vote in Randolph County during the election of 1860; the new Republican Party had not garnered enough votes in the previous election to even be allowed on the North Carolina ballot.)</p>
<p>On January 29<sup>th</sup> the North Carolina General Assembly scheduled a referendum on whether to call a secession convention.  “Whereas, the present perilous condition of the country demands… that the sovereign people of this State should assemble in Convention to effect an honorable adjustment of existing difficulties whereby the Federal Union is endangered, or otherwise preserve the honor and promote the interests of North Carolina; and Whereas, this General Assembly, on matters of such grave import, involving the relation of North Carolina to her sisters in the Confederacy, is reluctant to adopt any settled policy without the sense of the people in whom, under our governance, all sovereignty resides, being first ascertained.” [The act was  published in the Feb. 14<sup>th</sup> edition of the Greensboro Patriot.   The Yoda-like sentence structure of its preamble is a potent combination of florid Victorian language and turgid legalese.]</p>
<p>The act required the Governor “to issue a proclamation commanding the Sheriffs of the respective counties… to open polls… on the 28<sup>th</sup> day of February, A.D. 1861, when and where all persons qualified to vote… may vote for or against a State Convention:  those who wish a convention, voting with a printed or written ticket, ‘Convention,’ and those who do not wish a convention, voting in the same way, ‘No Convention.’”</p>
<p>At the same time, potential delegates were to be elected in case the Convention was approved.  Further complicating the process, even if the Convention met and approved an Ordinance of Secession, the bill still would require ratification by yet another vote of the people before it could take effect.</p>
<p>Campaigning against the Convention- against “Disunion”- began immediately in The Patriot, the old-line Whig newspaper serving Randolph and Guilford counties.  On Thursday, February 6<sup>th</sup>, the editor wrote “TO THE POLLS!  The bill calling a Convention, having provided that it shall be left to the people to say, through the ballot-box, whether or not they desire said Convention, we hope and trust that every man who loves his country, who desires the perpetuity of this Union, will resolve, if possible, to be at the polls and record his vote against a Convention.  Let no one be deceived:  The real question is Union or Disunion…. Let no one say, that it is useless to vote… It may be, and we think it probably that a majority will be cast for a ‘Convention,’ yet it is of the utmost importance, that as large a vote as possible should be cast against a Convention, for every vote so cast will be a vote for the Union…”</p>
<p>On January 31<sup>st</sup>, Jonathan Worth, leader of the Randolph Whigs and newly-elected to represent the county in the state House of Commons, issued “a circular to his constituents” which took a strong stand against the Convention.  “Every artifice will be employed to make you believe that the Convention is to be called to save the Union.  Believe it not…. If war begins, it will probably be brought on during the sitting of the Convention.  It is now the policy of the disunionists to postpone hostilities till President Buchanan goes out and President Lincoln comes in.  They will probably court a fight as soon as Lincoln takes the reins…. Believe not those who may tell you this Convention is called to save the Union.  It is called to destroy it.  If you desire to preserve the Union, vote ‘No Convention.’” [Worth’s Circular was excerpted in the Patriot of Feb. 6, 1861, and printed in full in the Feb. 14<sup>th</sup> issue.]</p>
<p>The last issue of The Patriot before the referendum (Feb. 21<sup>st</sup>) was full of articles and editorials seeking to get out the vote of faithful Whigs.  “The 28<sup>th</sup> of February, the day which perhaps will decide the fate of the Union, is close at hand.… Let every man then who loves his country be at his post… There is a battle to be fought.  A battle upon the result of which hang the destinies of this Nation.  The enemies of our Union have been marshaling their forces.  The hand is already uplifted to strike down the flag of our country!  Union men, to the rescue!  To the rescue!  …Believe not those who tell you, that the question is, whether North Carolina shall go with the North, or the South.  The issue, and the only issue, is Union, or disunion… If we are but true to ourselves, the stars and stripes will yet continue to wave over the freest and happiest people upon whom the sun ever shown.”</p>
<p>The editorial quotes multiple stanzas of a poem,</p>
<p>“Stand like an anvil, when the stroke</p>
<p>Of stalwart men falls fierce and fast,</p>
<p>Storms but more deeply root the oak</p>
<p>Whose brawny arms embrace the blast.</p>
<p>Stand like an anvil, when the sound</p>
<p>Of ponderous hammers pains the ear;</p>
<p>Thine, but the still and stern rebound</p>
<p>Of the great heart, that cannot fear.”</p>
<p>“The Convention will be the first step toward revolution…” another editorial blasted.  “The vote…will be the most important ever polled in North Carolina.  We hope and trust the people will follow the example set them by Tennessee… [and say] in a voice that cannot be misunderstood, that this Union ‘must and shall be preserved.’”</p>
<p>When the great day of battle arrived, the voters of North Carolina joined in electoral combat at the polling places, and the forces of Union achieved a narrow victory, rejecting the Convention by a vote of 47,705 (No Convention) to 47,611 (Convention).   The traditional Piedmont Quaker counties overwhelming voted for the Union and against the Convention.  Chatham County cast 283 votes for the Convention, but 1,795 against it.  In Guilford County, the margin of victory was 25 to 1.  And in Randolph, editor E.J. Hale exulted in the Asheboro Herald of March 3, 1861,  “Listen to the thunder of Randolph!</p>
<p>&#8220;Convention…………………..45</p>
<p>&#8220;No Convention……………..2,436!</p>
<p>“The honest democracy of this county have showed that they love their country better than their party; and the Whigs, who detest the accursed doctrine of secession, have made their action conform to their principles, by voting against convention—the instrument, solely relied upon by secessionists to make their heresy effectual, and impotent to do anything else.”  [The Asheboro Herald is a newspaper which has not survived, except as copied in the Greensboro Patriot of March 14<sup>th</sup>]</p>
<p>Alongside the results of the referendum printed in the March 14<sup>th</sup> Greensboro Patriot was the inaugural address of President Lincoln, delivered on March 4<sup>th</sup> , and agreeing with the pro-Union sentiments of North Carolina voters in his assertion that &#8220;the central idea of secession is the essence of anarchy.&#8221;</p>
<p>The final canvass of the Randolph County vote was 2,570 to 45, a ratio of 57 pro-Union voters to every one pro-Confederate secessionist.   That lop-sided proportion struck newspapers in eastern North Carolina as fishy… the <strong><em>New Bern Progress</em></strong> [quoted in the April 11, 1861 Greensboro Patriot], headed its editorial “Something Wrong.”</p>
<p>“There must be something wrong in the vote cast in Randolph county for and against Convention.  In 1856 Randolph cast for Bragg and Gilmer 1842 votes, in 1860 for Ellis and Pool she gave 2015 votes; in November for President she gives 1589; and in February 1861, six months later, on the question of Convention, they run up to 2514, showing a clear gain since August last of 497 votes.  Now when you consider that the vote in August last was by far the largest ever polled in the state and that every county strained its full strength, we come deliberately to the conclusion that there is something wrong about the Convention vote in Randolph… We hope the matter will be sifted and that we will have new light on the subject.”</p>
<p>The editor of the <strong><em>Fayetteville Observer</em></strong>, in a lengthy defense of the Randolph vote, replied [again, quoted in the Patriot of April 11<sup>th</sup>], “We have heard what perhaps the Progress has not&#8211; the county of Randolph was more thoroughly canvassed, and the people more thoroughly aroused, at the late elections, than ever before.  They are attached to the Union, and they felt that the Union was in danger.”</p>
<p>The terrible irony of this rousing defense of the pro-Union vote in Randolph County is that it was published on the last day of peace.  Early that next morning the hungry defenders of Fort Sumter saw their supply ship approach, and be turned away by the start of a two-day bombardment by the Army of South Carolina.</p>
<p>On April 15, Abraham Lincoln issued a proclamation, calling for as many as 75,000 troops to crush the rebellion.  That call to bear arms against fellow Southerners was too much for the upper South states.  On April 17<sup>th</sup>, Virginia’s Secession Convention (still in session since January) saw former Governor Wise seize the podium and announce that he had ordered the state militia to capture federal installations in the jurisdiction, and pulling out a pistol, dared the Convention to stop him.  Within minutes the delegates had voted 88 to 55 to recommend disunion to the state’s voters.</p>
<p>Arkansas voted to leave the union on May 6<sup>th</sup>.   The last state to join the Confederacy, on June 8<sup>th</sup>, was Tennessee, and even then eastern half of the state overwhelmingly voted against it.</p>
<p>On May 1, 1861, the North Carolina General Assembly bypassed the voters to call directly for a Convention.  The Convention delegates passed an Ordinance of Secession on May 20<sup>th, </sup>but the eager Confederate Congress, already meeting in Richmond, had “provisionally” admitted the state to the Confederacy three days earlier.</p>
<p>This past February I told a group of local high school students that February 28<sup>th</sup> was the anniversary of one of the most important votes ever taken in Randolph County:  to secede and join the Confederacy, or to stay with the Union.  How did they thing their ancestors of 1861 voted? How would they have voted?</p>
<p>Without hesitation, they all voted to join the Confederacy, “of course.”</p>
<p>It is a huge loss when the modern residents of Randolph County have no idea of the true struggles of their forebears during the “Civil War” period.  It is a terrible mis-use of history that teaches children some muddy “big picture” and completely loses the details.</p>
<p>We still fight a war of words over what to call the conflict that began April 12, 1861.  The &#8220;winning&#8221; side prefers to call it &#8220;The Civil War;&#8221; unreconstructed Southerners insist it was &#8220;The War Between the States.&#8221;  The poet Walt Whitman simply called it &#8220;The Secession War,&#8221; and that best describes what happened in North Carolina.  One of the bravest battles of the war which would last 4 years and kill more than 600,000 Americans  was the very nonviolent, yet very verbal battle for the Union which was fought in Randolph County in the spring of 1861.  As we commemorate the 150<sup>th</sup> anniversary of the breakdown of peaceful conflict resolution, no finer memory of the Quaker heritage of our county can be found than in its struggle to preserve, not destroy, the United States of America.</p>
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		<title>Confederate Christmas in Randolph County</title>
		<link>http://randolphhistory.wordpress.com/2010/12/10/confederate-christmas-in-randolph-county-2/</link>
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		<pubDate>Fri, 10 Dec 2010 18:40:35 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>macwhatley</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Asheboro]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Civil War]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[folklore]]></category>
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		<description><![CDATA[This is best-known of the autobiographical reminiscences of Nancy (“Nannie”) Steed Winningham.  It is been reprinted over the years in various sources, without much editing or explanation.  Once it was erroneously reprinted as “A Confederate Christmas in Asheboro,” despite the fact that Mrs. Winningham clearly recites the wagon ride to her grandparents home in the [...]<img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=randolphhistory.wordpress.com&amp;blog=1204349&amp;post=885&amp;subd=randolphhistory&amp;ref=&amp;feed=1" width="1" height="1" />]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong><em>This is best-known of the autobiographical reminiscences of Nancy (“Nannie”) Steed Winningham.  It is been reprinted over the years in various sources, without much editing or explanation.  Once it was erroneously reprinted as “A Confederate Christmas in Asheboro,” despite the fact that Mrs. Winningham clearly recites the wagon ride to her grandparents home in the country.  As a “Christmas Gift” to you blog readers I am offering the original text here, and will serve up footnotes and explanations in another post.  I hope to track down the rest of the Winningham letters and publish them here, with annotations.</em></strong></p>
<p style="text-align:center;"><a href="http://randolphhistory.files.wordpress.com/2011/01/christmas-eve-1031863.jpg"><img class="aligncenter size-large wp-image-888" title="christmas-eve-1031863" src="http://randolphhistory.files.wordpress.com/2011/01/christmas-eve-1031863.jpg?w=502&#038;h=355" alt="" width="502" height="355" /></a></p>
<p><img src="/Users/MACWHA%7E1/AppData/Local/Temp/moz-screenshot-2.png" alt="" /></p>
<p><em>This illustration by Thomas Nast, entitled “Christmas Eve, 1862” appeared in the January 3, 1863 issue of Harper’s Weekly, published in New York City.  The appearance of our modern American “Santa Claus” was largely the pictorial creation of Thomas Nast, and this engraving includes two of his earliest depictions of him and his reindeer in both upper corners.<br />
</em></p>
<p><strong>A CONFEDERATE CHRISTMAS IN 1864</strong></p>
<p>By Mrs. James Lafayette Winningham</p>
<p><strong><em>Note to the original from Miss Laura Worth:  “Mrs. James Lafayette Winningham was the daughter of John Stanley Steed and Rachel Director Swaim. She wrote several letters in 1919 about old Asheboro which were published in the Courier in response to other reminiscences. Her daughter brought the original letters to the Historical Society in 1959. During her last years she lived in Greensboro.“</em></strong></p>
<p><strong><em> </em></strong><br />
As I was born in 1857, I can remember Christmas of 1862-3-4. The first two were much the same. My mother always took the children home to her father’s for the holidays. In their home were our three young aunts and a young uncle, all full of life and fun, and about ten grandchildren. Of us there were my three brothers and myself.</p>
<p>On the morning of Christmas Eve what a scurrying there was to get our home-made things packed. A hasty lunch and by the time one of my married uncles came with his team, everything was ready and we arrived in good time for supper, which to us children was a feast indeed, but I suspect it was a little of the pig killed for Christmas, if one was left by that time; lye hominy, sweet potatoes, persimmon pudding, pumpkin fried in pork gravy with maybe a taste of “good coffee” for the elders. This was kept carefully hidden away in Grandmother’s lowboy. The young people had wheat or potato coffee and the children mugs of milk.</p>
<p>Grandmother owned a little black girl who was a year or two older than I. Her mother, a young slave girl, had died at her birth and Grandmother had reared her on a bottle, and kept her for her personal waiting girl. Like most southern children, I loved Harriet as much as if she had been my own sister.</p>
<p>At last, after much excitement, the stockings were all hung — Harriet’s too with the rest, and the sand man came along. Then in about seventeen seconds the pine knots were blazing in the big fire-place and Santa Claus had been there, for wasn’t there the tracks of his sleigh in the big, wide chimney — made by my uncle with the poker “as was a poker”.   In our stockings were “goobers”, as we called the peanuts, walnuts, ginger cakes and Oh Joy! two or three sticks of striped candy. I’m wondering to this day where it came from for we had not seen a stick of striped candy in a year.</p>
<p>After breakfast my aunties started the eggnog; then about ten o’clock their friends, mostly young boys, came in to wish all a merry Christmas, but expressed in those days as “Christmas Gift” and to get a drink of eggnog.  It was there in the big bowl all the morning and we were all given a generous taste.</p>
<p>Just before the one o’clock dinner we were playing in the yard, when from the front porch my aunt Sue exclaimed: “Oh, Look! There they come!” I looked and until my dying day I shall never forget the fear and horror that filled me. There were sixteen or eighteen old bony horses with trappings of anything that could be found, with strings of rags of black, blue, red or white. The riders were young boys, with their coats turned wrong side out and wearing horrible—looking false faces, singing and making all kinds of discordant noises. I made one dash to the side of my boon companion, Harriet, and asked in a trembling voice: “Which is it, the old bad man or the Yankees?” which to a southern child at that time meant much the same thing, the bad man, if anything, playing on the winning team. Being assured it was only the boys, my fears were allayed and I enjoyed the strange spectacle. They rode around the village several times and disappeared. As I look back upon it, I suppose it was a scraggly, pitiful attempt to carry out the old English custom of the waifs of England, which had been handed down from their English ancestors.</p>
<p>After dinner some old men and boys came in with flutes, banjos and fiddles (not violins) and played for an enthusiastic house full of friends and neighbors. Sometimes I almost seem to hear now the sweet, sad music played so martially &#8211; “The Bonnie Blue Flag”, “The Girl I left behind me”, “Hurrah for the Southern Rights, Hurrah! Hurrah!&#8221; and “Hurrah! for the Homespun Dress the Southern Ladies Wear”.</p>
<p>Through all this trying to have a little fun ran an undercurrent of solemnity and anxiety, and many questions of “Have you heard any more from husband, father or son?” were heard.</p>
<p>Late in the afternoon I passed the open kitchen door and Grandmother stood leaning against a cupboard with her head in her arms crying as if her heart would break and it almost broke mine. I asked Harriet why she was crying and she said, “Mars Luther Clegg had drinked too much eggnog” &#8212; her baby boy, just a youth. I wondered why she allowed them to make it but it was a Southern custom hard to break.</p>
<p>My father and my uncle owned and operated a large tannery, shoe and harness shop. They had a contract with the Confederate government to furnish shoes to some of our soldiers and that kept them in the service at home.  Early in 1864 my father sold his interest in the business to my uncle and in a few months was drafted and sent to eastern Carolina, where he was in the service, though not in the line.</p>
<p>It seemed to me that Christmas in 1864 began about December 10. We were told on getting up in the morning, that our mother was sick and during the day she became much worse. One of our kind neighbors brought her black woman, “Aunt Patsy”, and they stayed through the night. Soon they sent for our faithful family physician, who on account of advancing years bad about given up his practice until the war began and the younger doctors were all in the service of their southland. He gave my mother tender care and attention, with no thought of ever rendering a bill- his payment being the service of my father to the flag. On the morning of the 10th we were told we had a little brother named for his daddy. Oh! I suppose he was welcome but Christmas loomed darkly ahead. No daddy, no trip to “Grampys”, no shoes, no clothes hardly, no picture books, no dolls, no candy and just no “nuthin”.</p>
<p>On Sunday morning my uncle rode by while we were playing in the road, and be asked: “Boys, where are your shoes?” “We haven’t got any”, my brother answered. He told them to go to the shoe shop Monday and be measured for shoes. I was sorry my own were not a little better or else worse so that I could have a new pair.</p>
<p>There was a man in our town called Captain Pragg, who owned a dry goods store. A few days before Christmas he sent one of his men to the house to tell my mother that if she would send for it he would give her a nice ham for a present. She was very pleased and never forgot the courtesy.</p>
<p>My aunt from the country came and brought us all something for Christmas.  My present was a balmoral (petticoat) which she had carded, spun and. woven herself. I never told anyone but I could never drum up enough patriotism to like that coarse, scratchy petticoat. And that wasn’t the only thing I could never learn to like.</p>
<p>To this day when my husband occasionally likes a supper of milk and mush or corn bread and milk, the vision of a big, grayish-brown earthenware jar of milk and a bowl of mush or the plate of thick corn pones, with perhaps smudges of ashes on the brown crust, that depending on the skill of the one who lifted the lid with its burden of coals and ashes from the skillet, comes to me and I say “You may have it all,” I’m afraid it will give me indigestion.</p>
<p>And the Christmas baby — well, his father never saw him until he came home after General Lee’s surrender and by that time he was almost five months old.</p>
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		<title>Notes on A Confederate Christmas</title>
		<link>http://randolphhistory.wordpress.com/2010/12/08/notes-on-a-confederate-christmas/</link>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 08 Dec 2010 21:52:38 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>macwhatley</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Asheboro]]></category>
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		<description><![CDATA[Introductory Note: “Mrs. James Lafayette Winningham&#8230;” On 24 May 1876 Nancy Hannah Steed married James Lafayette Winningham (ca. 1853- 1930), the son of Siebert Francis Marion Winningham and Laura Ann Lyndon.  Winningham was born at Union Factory, now Randleman, North Carolina.  [Internet geneaological research on the Winningham and Steed families was largely posted by Donald [...]<img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=randolphhistory.wordpress.com&amp;blog=1204349&amp;post=900&amp;subd=randolphhistory&amp;ref=&amp;feed=1" width="1" height="1" />]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div id="attachment_902" class="wp-caption aligncenter" style="width: 446px"><a href="http://randolphhistory.files.wordpress.com/2011/01/thomas-nast-santa-claus-in-camp-1863.jpg"><img class="size-large wp-image-902 " title="thomas-nast-santa-claus in camp 1863" src="http://randolphhistory.files.wordpress.com/2011/01/thomas-nast-santa-claus-in-camp-1863.jpg?w=436&#038;h=511" alt="" width="436" height="511" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">&quot;Santa Claus in Camp, 1864&quot; by Thomas Nast in Harper&#039;s Weekly.</p></div>
<p><strong>Introductory Note: </strong><br />
<em>“Mrs. James  Lafayette Winningham&#8230;” </em><br />
On 24 May 1876 Nancy Hannah Steed  married James Lafayette Winningham (ca. 1853- 1930), the son of Siebert  Francis Marion Winningham and Laura Ann Lyndon.  Winningham was born at  Union Factory, now Randleman, North Carolina.  [Internet  geneaological research on the Winningham and Steed families was largely  posted by Donald Winningham.]</p>
<p><em>“&#8230;was the daughter of John Stanley  Steed and Rachel Director Swaim.”</em><br />
John Stanley Steed (22 Feb 1829 &#8211; 3 May  1899) was the son of Charles Steed (15 May 1782- March 1847), who  served Randolph County both as a member of the North Carolina Senate and  as a member of the North Carolina House of Representatives.  His mother  Hannah Raines (born circa 1788- died after 1850) married Charles Steed  on 25 Jan 1806.  John Stanley Steed married Rachel Director Swaim (15  Nov 1835 &#8211; 27 Nov 1880) about the year 1852.</p>
<p><strong>Paragraph 1: </strong><br />
<em>“As I was born  in 1857…” </em><br />
Nancy &#8220;Nannie&#8221;  Hannah Steed was born 14 June 1857.</p>
<p><em>“My mother always took  the children home to her father’s for the holidays” </em><br />
Rachel Steed’s parents  were Joshua Swaim (1804-1868) and Nancy H. Polk (1808 &#8211; 14 April 1865),  who married in Guilford County on 1 September 1824, but lived in the  Cedar Falls area (the area west of Franklinville, south of Grays Chapel,  and east of Millboro).  The Christmas of 1864 may have stuck in Nannie  Steed’s memory because it was the last she would have with her maternal  grandmother Nancy Polk Swaim.</p>
<p>Maternal grandfather Joshua Swaim was  the son of William Swaim and Elizabeth Sherwood, and nephew of the Clerk  of Court Moses Swaim (1788-1870).   Joshua and Nancy Swaim were buried  in the old Timber Ridge cemetery near Level Cross.  Here is a link to  photographs of their tombstones: <a href="http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com/%7Edavidswaim/TimberRidge.htm">http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~davidswaim/TimberRidge.htm</a></p>
<p><em>“In their home  were our three young aunts and a young uncle, all full of life and fun,  and about ten grandchildren.”</em><br />
Nancy and Joshua Swaim of Cedar Falls  had the following children, several of whom had moved West before the  time of the Civil War.  Numbers 7 through 10 are Nannie’s “young aunts  and uncle”:<br />
1.   James Polk Swaim (November 21, 1825 &#8211; February 04, 1890); m. Sarah  McDonald about 1848; died in  Franklin County, Ark.<br />
2.  Elizabeth Swaim  (September 30, 1827-  June 28, 1846).<br />
3.  Margaret J. Swaim, b. March 22,  1829- February 29, 1848.<br />
4.  Mary Swaim (b. ca. 1831); md. Mr. Glass  before 1854.<br />
5.  William Walter Swaim (February 10, 1833 &#8211; died October  17, 1905 in Eldora, Hardin County, Iowa); m. Mary Ann Davis, ca. 1859,  in Hamilton Co., Indiana.<br />
6.  Rachel Director Swaim, (November 15, 1835  &#8211; May 27, 1880); m. John Stanley Steed on October 07, 1852.  [Nannie’s  Grandma Swaim]<br />
7.  Luther Clegg Swaim (b. ca. 1837, d. ca. 1868) [Nannie’s  Uncle “Luther Clegg”]<br />
8. Susannah Swaim (b. ca. 1840); m. J.L.  Coble, September 04, 1862.<br />
9. Hannah Swaim (b. ca. 1841); m. Henry C.  Green, October 06, 1864.<br />
10. Martha Swaim (b. ca. 1847).</p>
<p>{The family  information is Included in the Polk family genealogy, posted by Kathy  Parmenter at <a href="http://archiver.rootsweb.ancestry.com/th/read/POLK/1999-07/0931116431">http://archiver.rootsweb.ancestry.com/th/read/POLK/1999-07/0931116431</a><a href="https://docs.google.com/document/d/12e8DCEaktNwG-GkoQG1qU4H90j2wATgmHhg5CsjOBPc/edit?hl=en&amp;pli=1#"> }</a>.</p>
<p><em>“Of us there  were my three brothers and myself.”</em><br />
As of this time in the story, John and  Rachel Steed had the following children:  Emily, born 1853, who died in  infancy; Wiley Franklin, born 1855; Nancy Hannah, born 1857; Henry  Luther, born 1860; Joshua Nathaniel, b. 1862.</p>
<p><strong>Paragraph 2:</strong><br />
<em>“The young  people had wheat or potato coffee&#8230;”</em><br />
Imports of coffee and other  delicacies were reduced almost to the point of nonexistence by the  federal blockade of southern ports.  According to Wikipedia <a href="https://docs.google.com/document/d/12e8DCEaktNwG-GkoQG1qU4H90j2wATgmHhg5CsjOBPc/edit?hl=en&amp;pli=1#">(http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coffee_substitute</a> ), Roasted acorns,  almonds, barley, beechnuts, beetroots, carrots, chicory, corn,  cottonseed, dandelion root, figs, okra seed, peas, Irish potatoes (but  only the peel), rice, rye, soybeans, and sweet potatoes have all been  used as coffee substitutes.  Roasted and ground wheat as a  non-caffeinated substitute for coffee was popular again in the United  States during both World War I and II, when coffee was sharply rationed.    “Postum”  was the brand name of an instant-style coffee substitute  made from wheat bran, corn and molasses which was popular in North  Carolina in the 20th century, but production was discontinued in  October, 2007.</p>
<p><strong>Paragraph  3:</strong><br />
<em>“In our stockings were…ginger cakes&#8230;”</em><br />
Ginger is a  tropical root imported from Africa, Jamaica, India or China.  It was a  much-loved spice during the Civil War era; ginger beer, ginger ale, and  all sorts of ginger cakes and breads were popular.  Some recipes could  be rolled out, cut into shapes and hung on the tree; some were soft like  bread and others were hard and crisp.  The following recipe from a  Civil War reenactor group makes crisp, sugar- coated cookies suitable  for putting in a stocking:</p>
<p>3/4 cups shortening</p>
<p>1 cup sugar</p>
<p>1 beaten egg</p>
<p>1/4 cup molasses</p>
<p>2 tsp. soda</p>
<p>1 tsp. cinnamon</p>
<p>1 tsp. ginger</p>
<p>2 cups flour</p>
<p>Combine  shortening and sugar into a cream; add the egg and molasses and mix  well. Sift together the dry ingredients and add to the shortening  mixture. Mix until combined. Roll into walnut sized balls and roll in  sugar. Bake at 350 degrees for 7 &#8211; 10 minutes.</p>
<p><strong>Paragraph 4:</strong><br />
<em>“&#8230;my aunties  started the eggnog&#8230;”</em><br />
Various milk punches were known in Europe and brought to America, so  the exact orgin of Egg Nog is obscure.  “Nog” is an old English word  with roots in East Anglia dialects that was used to describe a kind of  strong beer which was served in a small wooden mug called a “noggin”.    “Egg nog” is first mentioned in the early nineteenth century but an  alternative British name was “egg flip,” a punch made with milk and  wine, particularly Spanish Sherry.<br />
Internet sites repeatedly cite an  unnamed and unsourced English visitor who wrote in 1866, &#8220;Christmas is  not properly observed unless you brew egg nogg for all comers; everybody  calls on everybody else; and each call is celebrated by a solemn  egg-nogging&#8230;It is made cold and is drunk cold and is to be commended.&#8221;<br />
The English author Elizabeth Leslie regularly published cookbooks on  both sides of the Atlantic from 1837 to 1857.  Her Directions for  Cookery, published  in 1840, introduced the concept of the “sandwich” to America.  This  recipe for Egg Nogg comes from the edition of 1851:<br />
“Beat separately  the yolks and whites of 6 eggs. Stir the yolks into a quart of rich  milk, or thin cream, add half a pound of sugar. Then mix in half a pint  of rum or brandy. Flavor with a grated nutmeg. Lastly, stir in gently  the beaten whites of three eggs. It should be mixed in a china bowl.”</p>
<p>Perhaps the last  word on Confederate egg nog would be the recipe of Mary Custis (Mrs.  Robert E.) Lee herself::</p>
<p>-10 eggs, separated</p>
<p>-2 c. sugar</p>
<p>-2 1/2 c. brandy</p>
<p>1/2 c. and 1 tsp. dark  rum</p>
<p>-8  c. milk or cream</p>
<p>Blend well the yolks of ten eggs, add 1 lb. of sugar;  stir in slowly two tumblers of French brandy, 1/2 tumbler of rum, add 2  qts new milk, &amp; lastly the egg whites beaten light (very fluffy).  Allow to &#8220;ripen&#8221; in a  cold but not freezing place; an unheated room or porch was the common  location for Mrs. Lee.</p>
<p>From The Robert E. Lee Family Cooking and Housekeeping Book (UNC Press, 2002), by  Anne Carter Zimmer.</p>
<p><strong>Paragraph 5:</strong><br />
<em>“&#8230;expressed in those  days as ‘Christmas Gift’&#8230;” </em><br />
The phrase “Merry Christmas” was  popularized around the world following the appearance of the Charles  Dickens&#8217; story, A Christmas Carol in 1843.  Robertson Cochrane, Wordplay: origins,  meanings, and usage of the English language, p.126. (University of  Toronto Press, 1996).  “Christmas Gift!”  is an earlier Southern  tradition, used as a greeting.   The first person saying it on Christmas  morning traditionally received a gift.  See &#8220;<a href="http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0671522914?ie=UTF8&amp;tag=thephrasefinder&amp;linkCode=xm2&amp;camp=1789&amp;creativeASIN=0671522914">Whistlin&#8217; Dixie: A  Dictionary of Southern Expressions</a>&#8221; by Robert Hendrickson (Pocket Books,  New York, 1993).</p>
<p><strong>Paragraph  6:</strong><br />
<em>“Which is it,  the old bad man or the Yankees?”</em><br />
She is using a euphemism for “the Devil,” a  word considered to be so much a curse word at the time that a well-bred  young lady was not allowed to use such language.  The Devil was on the  side of the Yankees, just as God was supposed to be on the side of the  Confederacy.</p>
<div id="attachment_903" class="wp-caption aligncenter" style="width: 460px"><a href="http://randolphhistory.files.wordpress.com/2011/01/little-christmas-waifs-are-we.jpg"><img class="size-full wp-image-903" title="Little Christmas Waifs are We" src="http://randolphhistory.files.wordpress.com/2011/01/little-christmas-waifs-are-we.jpg?w=450&#038;h=450" alt="" width="450" height="450" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">&quot;Little Christmas Waifs Are We&quot;- 19th century Christmas Card</p></div>
<p><em>“&#8230;the old English custom of the waifs  of England.”</em><br />
It is unclear  whether Nannie has here conflated two distinct Christmas rituals from  medieval England, or whether the traditions had previously merged in the  antebellum South.<br />
The surviving English tradition is of  the Christmas “Waits,” musicians and singers who go from door to door  “waiting,” or caroling.  According to the 11th edition of the  Encyclopedia Brittanica, “wait” is the name of a medieval night  watchman, who sounded a horn or played tunes to mark the hours.  By the  15th century waits had become bands of itinerant musicians who paraded  the streets at night at Christmas time, and became combined with another  ancient tradition, “wassailing”.  It gradually became expected that the  musicians would receive gifts and gratuities from the townspeople, and  often “those who went wassailing would dress up like street waifs or  ragamuffins.”  <a href="http://www.cafepress.com/+christmas_waifs_sticker,320599343">http://www.cafepress.com/+christmas_waifs_sticker,320599343</a><br />
One other  British custom of the Christmas season was specifically aimed at  soliciting alms.  “Thomasing” anciently occured on 21 December (St  Thomas&#8217;s Day) when the village poor people visited the homes of their  better-off neighbours soliciting food and provisions to help them  through the winter. Also called “Gooding,” “Mumping,” and “Doleing,” the  earliest reference is from the year 1560, but the custom gradually  declined through the 19th century as poor relief was institutionalized,  and laws were passed against ‘begging’.<br />
In the South this  tradition may have inspired a tradition of inviting local orphans or  “waifs” to spend Christmas afternoon with rural families or in urban  church socials. [<a href="http://books.google.com/books?isbn=0253219558">books.google.com/books?isbn=0253219558</a> ]  In 1864 the “  crowning amusement” of Christmas day for the Davis children in Richmond  was &#8220;the children&#8217;s tree,&#8221; erected in the basement of St. Paul’s  Church, decorated with strung popcorn, and hung with small gifts for  orphans.   (First Lady Varina Davis’s 1896 article “Christmas in the  Confederate White House” makes an  interesting contrast to Nannie Steed  Winningham’s story of Christmas in rural Randolph County;<br />
<a href="http://www.civilwar.org/education/history/on-the-homefront/culture/christmas.html">http://www.civilwar.org/education/history/on-the-homefront/culture/christmas.html </a>).</p>
<div id="attachment_904" class="wp-caption aligncenter" style="width: 210px"><a href="http://randolphhistory.files.wordpress.com/2011/01/1confederate_flag.gif"><img class="size-full wp-image-904" title="1confederate_flag" src="http://randolphhistory.files.wordpress.com/2011/01/1confederate_flag.gif?w=450" alt=""   /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">The First Confederate States Flag</p></div>
<p><strong>Paragraph 7:</strong><br />
<em>“ The Bonnie  Blue Flag”</em><br />
-is a marching song associated with the  Confederacy.   The song was written to an Irish melody by entertainer  Harry McCarthy during a concert in Jackson, Mississippi, in the spring  of 1861 and first published that same year in New Orleans.  The song&#8217;s  title refers to the unofficial first flag of the Confederate States, the  symbol of secession from the Union bearing the &#8220;single star&#8221; of the  chorus.   The &#8220;Band of Brothers&#8221; mentioned in the first line of the song  is a reference to the St. Crispin&#8217;s day speech in Shakespeare’s play Henry V.<br />
[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Bonnie_Blue_Flag]<br />
Here is the song:  <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/21566/21566-h/music/bonnie.midi">http://www.gutenberg.org/files/21566/21566-h/music/bonnie.midi</a></p>
<p><em>“The Girl I  left behind me” </em><br />
-is a popular folk tune.  The first known  printed text appeared in an Irish song collection in 1791; the earliest  known version of the melody was printed in Dublin about 1810.   It was known in  Britain as early as 1650, under the name &#8220;Brighton Camp&#8221;.  It was  adopted by the US regular army as a marching tune during the War of 1812  after they heard a British prisoner singing it.</p>
<p>http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Girl_I_Left_Behind</p>
<p>The song can be  heard here:  <a href="http://www.contemplator.com/england/girl.html">http://www.contemplator.com/england/girl.html</a></p>
<p><em>“Hurrah for  the Southern Rights, Hurrah! Hurrah!”</em><br />
-Hurrah! Hurrah!/ For  Southern rights, hurrah!” is actually the first two lines of the chorus  of  “The Bonnie Blue Flag.”  ‘Hurrah! Hurrah! For the Southern Rights, hurrah!’ is an  alternative reading of the line that is only found in Gone With The  Wind, page 236.  Both undoubtedly reflect the way singers at the time  added ‘the’ to mirror the same article in ‘the’ Bonnie Blue Flag.</p>
<p><em> “Hurrah! for  the Homespun Dress the Southern Ladies Wear” </em><br />
-”The Homespun  Dress,” also known as “The Southern Girl,” or “The Southern Girl’s  Song,” is a parody of The Bonnie Blue Flag that oral historians have  found in variant versions all over the South.  Most authorities  attribute the words to Miss Carrie Belle Sinclair of Augusta, Georgia.   See Songs  of the Civil War, by Irwin Silber, Jerry Silverman; Dover, 1995, p.54.  The  lyrics can be found at <a href="http://www.lizlyle.lofgrens.org/RmOlSngs/RTOS-HomespunDress.htmlv">http://www.lizlyle.lofgrens.org/RmOlSngs/RTOS-HomespunDress.htmlv</a></p>
<p>Oh, yes, I am a  Southern girl,</p>
<p>And glory in the name,</p>
<p>And boast it with far greater pride</p>
<p>Than glittering  wealth and fame.</p>
<p>We  envy not the Northern girl</p>
<p>Her robes of beauty rare,</p>
<p>Though diamonds grace  her snowy neck</p>
<p>And pearls bedeck her hair.</p>
<p>CHORUS: Hurrah! Hurrah!</p>
<p>For the sunny South  so dear;</p>
<p>Three  cheers for the homespun dress</p>
<p>The Southern ladies wear!<br />
<strong></strong></p>
<p><strong>Paragraph 8:</strong><br />
<em>“&#8230;Mars  Luther Clegg had drinked too much eggnog.”</em><br />
“Mars,” short-hand for “Master,”  was used by enslaved people as a general title of respect, in the same  way that white people would use “Mister.”<br />
Luther Clegg  Swaim was born in Cedar Falls in 1837.  On February 1, 1866 he married  Dorcas Aretta Odell (1828-1918), daughter of James Odell and wife Anna  Trogdon.  This was the second marriage for Dorcas Odell, the sister of  J.M. Odell and J.A. Odell who worked for George Makepeace in the factory  stores at Cedar Falls and Franklinsville.  John M. Odell was the first  Captain of the Randolph Hornets, Company M.  Her brother Laban Odell  became Major of the 22nd Regiment, and was killed at Chancellorsville.   Her first husband was her second cousin, Solomon Franklin Trogdon, who  died in 1860.  She had two sons in the first marriage, and a daughter  with Luther Clegg Swaim before he died in 1868.  Dorcas’s son Williard  Franklin Trogdon became the original geneaologist of the Trogdon family,  publishing the family history which provided this information in 1926.</p>
<p><strong>Paragraph 9:</strong><br />
<em>“My father and  my uncle owned and operated a large tannery, shoe and harness shop.”</em><br />
The J. S. Steed  family is the very first one listed in the Western Division of Randolph  County’s 1860 census; his occupation is listed as “Tanning,”  and a  17-year-old boarder living with them is listed as “Apprentice Tanner.”   Family #2 in that census is David Porter, a buggy manufacturer and  grandfather of author William Sidney Porter.  I believe the Porters  lived on the southeast corner of the intersection of Salisbury Street  and the Plank Road (Fayetteville Street)- where First Bank is today.</p>
<p>The 1860 Census  of Manufacturing for Randolph County lists &#8220;J.W. &amp; J.S. Steed&#8221; as engaged in &#8220;Tanning&#8230; Boot and Shoe Making&#8230;[and] Harness Making.&#8221;  6 employees in 1859 cured &#8220;1400 sides of harness, sole and upper leather&#8221; worth $2000; made 40 pair of boots worth $300; 250 pair of shoes worth $500; and 50 setts of harness worth $900.</p>
<p>The Steeds probably lived on Salisbury between Cox and the Plank Road,  but the location of his tannery is unclear.  The only tannery I am aware  of that was ever located in or around Asheboro itself is the one  located on the site of the present-day Frazier Park, across Park Street  from Loflin Elementary School.  The branch that heads in a spring (now  piped underground) on that site is called Tan Yard Branch.</p>
<p><em>“My uncle”</em> probably refers to the &#8220;J.W. Steed&#8221; listed on the Census of Manufacturing; this was <strong>Joseph Warren Steed, </strong>born ca. <sup><strong></strong></sup><sup><strong></strong></sup> 1806, and little else is known about him.   It could also refer to John Stanley Steed’s brother <strong>Nathaniel Steed</strong> (3 May 1812 -10 Nov  1880).  In 1832 Nathaniel married Sarah (“Sallie”) Redding (9 Oct. 1811  -10 Aug. 1852), daughter of John Redding and Martha Jane Swaim.  They  are buried at Charlotte Church, on Old Lexington Road west of Asheboro.</p>
<p><em>“Early in 1864  my father… was drafted and sent to eastern Carolina, where he was in  the service..”</em><br />
[Some of you  Civil War experts, trace his service record, please.]</p>
<p><strong>Paragraph 10:</strong><br />
<em>“&#8230;our  faithful family physician, who on account of advancing years bad about  given up his practice until the war began&#8230;”</em><br />
Could this have  been Dr. John Milton Worth, (28 June 1811 -5 April 1900), who studied at  the Medical College in Lexington, Kentucky and practiced in Asheboro up  to the time of the war?  A substantial part of Dr. Worth’s war years  were spent overseeing the Salt Works near Fort Fisher, so this may be  some other faithful family physician.</p>
<p><em>“On the morning of the  10th we were told we had a little brother named for his daddy&#8230;”</em><br />
John Stanley  Steed, Jr., born December 1864.  The Steeds would have five more  children over the next 15 years.  Rachel Steed evidently died during  childbirth in 1880.</p>
<div id="attachment_905" class="wp-caption aligncenter" style="width: 460px"><a href="http://randolphhistory.files.wordpress.com/2011/01/civil-war-new-bern-copy-web-painting-battle.jpg"><img class="size-full wp-image-905" title="New Bern, N.C.  400dpi, H = 2758, W = 4000 pixels." src="http://randolphhistory.files.wordpress.com/2011/01/civil-war-new-bern-copy-web-painting-battle.jpg?w=450&#038;h=219" alt="" width="450" height="219" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">A view of antebellum New Bern from the Neuse River</p></div>
<p><strong>Paragraph  12:</strong><br />
<em>“There was a man in our town called Captain Pragg, who owned a  dry goods store&#8230;”</em><br />
The name “Pragg” is not found in the  Randolph County census records for 1860 or 1870, but “Isaiah Prag” does  appear in Randolph County marriage bond records for April 19, 1865, when  he married &#8220;Mrs. Jane Sugg.&#8221;  This was apparently the second marriage  for each of them, as according to family genealogical records &#8220;Mrs.  Sugg&#8221;&#8216;s maiden name was Jane Adaline Andrews (1841-1907).  She may have a  family connection to Lt. Col. Hezekiah L. Andrews of western Randolph,  who was killed at Gettysburg.<br />
Isaiah  Prag was born 20 October 1824 in  the town of Hadamar in the state of Hesse, Germany.  He first appears  in America in the 1850 census of Annapolis, Maryland, with wife Rose  Adler (1827-1864), and a new baby, Mary.  Prag would ultimately have 8  children by his first wife, and 7 by his second.  By 1860 Isaiah and  family have relocated to New Bern, NC, where he is in business as a  &#8220;merchant.&#8221;   From  June 1, 1861 to February 10, 1862, the state Quartermaster&#8217;s office  paid receipts totalling $13,11320 for purchases from Isaiah Prag.  He  evidently provided most of the &#8220;dry goods&#8221; or clothing needed to equip at least two  companies of Craven County volunteer troops: Company F and Company K  (The Elm City Rifles):  98 suit coats and pants; 74 flannel shirts and  199 striped shirts; 218 caps, 141 pairs of &#8220;drawers&#8221; and 160 pairs of  &#8220;pantaloons;&#8221; not to mention 556 overcoats- enough for 5 companies!<br />
Isaiah Prag is also listed as an  “Ordinance Sergeant” in Company B of Clark&#8217;s Special Battalion of the North  Carolina Militia, but further details of his military service are not  yet known.<br />
Prag&#8217;s initial connection to Randolph County is also unclear.  It is possible that he was  involved with the local factories in the production of underwear under  contract to the Quartermaster.  His work supplying the army may have  forced him to leave New Bern after its capture by federal forces on  March 14, 1862.  It doesn&#8217;t seem likely that Prag would have been  allowed to frequently cross enemy lines if his family remained in New  Bern, but  Rose Adler Prag is said to have died in New Bern on July 20,  1864.<br />
The 1870 census finds Isaiah and Jane Prag in Calvert County,  Maryland.  The 1879-80  city directory of Baltimore (p. 625) lists 6 separate families of  Prags, with Isaiah  listed as selling furniture.  The 1880 census finds him settled in  Cambridge, Maryland, the seat of Dorchester County on the eastern shore  of the Chesapeake Bay.  This is where family records place him at the  time of his death, April 18, 1889.<br />
It appears that Isaiah and Rose  Adler Prag were Jewish, and may have been one of the first Jewish  families to reside in Randolph County.  That may be why Isaiah gave the  Steed family as valuable a gift as the ham would have been in 1864-  religious dietary laws would have prevented him from eating it.<br />
[Sources:  US Census records  for the years cited; Randolph County Marriage Bonds; Miscellaneous Records  of the North Carolina Quartermaster’s dealings with Isaiah Prag or  Pragg, preserved in the National Archives at <a href="http://www.footnote.com/documents/30358865/confederate_citizens_file">Confederate  Papers Relating to Citizens or Business Firms, 1861-65</a> ; the Park Service  online list of Civil War Soldiers and Sailors System, at <a href="http://www.itd.nps.gov/cwss/%3E;">http://www.itd.nps.gov/cwss/&gt;;</a> Prag family geneaology  records on Ancestry.com at <a href="http://trees.ancestry.com/pt/person.aspx?pid=1078239925&amp;tid=16758860&amp;ssrc=">http://trees.ancestry.com/pt/person.aspx?pid=1078239925&amp;tid=16758860&amp;ssrc=</a> .]</p>
<p><strong>Paragraph 13: </strong><br />
<em>“My present  was a balmoral (petticoat) which she had carded, spun and woven  herself&#8230;”</em><br />
A Balmoral was a  long woollen petticoat which was popularized by Queen Victoria at  Balmoral Castle in Scotland.  Usually of striped fabric, it was worn  immediately beneath the dress so that it showed below the skirt.<br />
<a href="http://randolphhistory.files.wordpress.com/2011/01/cdv_cincinnati_bodley3.jpg"><img class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-901" title="cdv_cincinnati_bodley3" src="http://randolphhistory.files.wordpress.com/2011/01/cdv_cincinnati_bodley3.jpg?w=450" alt=""   /></a><br />
<em> The woman wearing a  Balmoral in this “carte de visite” is Rachel Bodley (1831-1888), the  first female chemistry professor at Philadelphia’s Women&#8217;s Medical  College from 1865 to 1873.</em></p>
<p><strong>Paragraph 14:</strong><br />
<em>“&#8230;a bowl of mush or …  plate of thick corn pones.”</em><br />
<strong>Corn Meal Mush</strong> was made two different ways, and it  appears that Mr. Winningham liked both of them.  The first was prepared  in rolls like sausage or in loaf pans like modern liver pudding.  The  cook would cut it in slices, dredge in egg yolk, dust in flour, fry and  serve with butter, molasses, syrup or powdered sugar.  The second method  was to boil the corn meal in a saucepan just as if preparing raw  oatmeal or grits.  It was then served hot in a bowl topped with milk,  sugar, fruit, raisins, nuts or ice cream.<br />
<strong> “Corn Pone”</strong> is corn bread made  without milk or eggs, and either baked in hot coals (as described by  Nannie Winningham) or fried.</p>
<p>Modern Corn Pone Recipe (makes 4 servings):</p>
<p>Ingredients:  3 cups  cornmeal; 3 teaspoons salt; 2-3 cups water; 3 tablespoons lard</p>
<p>Directions:  Bring  water to a boil in a medium sauce pan. Add cornmeal and salt and  immediately remove from stove. Mix well.  Melt half of lard in a baking  pan to coat. Stir remaining lard into corn meal mixture. Pour mixture  into baking pan.  Bake at 350 degrees for about 50 minutes, or until  golden brown.</p>
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		<title>Randolph County: A Sense of Place</title>
		<link>http://randolphhistory.wordpress.com/2010/10/19/randolph-county-a-sense-of-place/</link>
		<comments>http://randolphhistory.wordpress.com/2010/10/19/randolph-county-a-sense-of-place/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 19 Oct 2010 23:07:27 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>macwhatley</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Randolph County]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Arcadia books]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[historic photographs]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Randolph County (NC) histories]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://randolphhistory.wordpress.com/?p=857</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[[Click on the photograph for an enlarged view] I have not posted here for about six months, but not because I&#8217;ve been on vacation.  (Actually,  I did take 3 weeks off in August for my first trip to Russia, but that&#8217;s another story). I have spent a lot of time working on a new book, [...]<img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=randolphhistory.wordpress.com&amp;blog=1204349&amp;post=857&amp;subd=randolphhistory&amp;ref=&amp;feed=1" width="1" height="1" />]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a href="http://randolphhistory.files.wordpress.com/2010/10/scan0011.jpg"><img class="alignnone size-large wp-image-864" title="scan0011" src="http://randolphhistory.files.wordpress.com/2010/10/scan0011.jpg?w=491&#038;h=383" alt="" width="491" height="383" /></a></p>
<p><em>[Click on the photograph for an enlarged view]</em></p>
<p>I have not posted here for about six months, but not because I&#8217;ve been on vacation.  (Actually,  I did take 3 weeks off in August for my first trip to Russia, but that&#8217;s another story).</p>
<p>I have spent a lot of time working on a new book, a photographic history of Randolph County which is being published by the Arcadia company, publishers of hundreds of local histories.  They have been great to work with, and the whole thing has been a learning experience for me (mostly about the technical requirements for scanning and printing historic photographs).</p>
<p>I tried to do this solo 6 or 7 years ago, and couldn&#8217;t handle the writing, the scanning, and everything else it took to make a living simultaneously.  Fortunately, in the intervening time technology has advanced so that it has become a manageable thing.  When I wrote my first book in 1981, publication involved typesetting and cutting and pasting text and photographs on graph paper with rubber cement.  Copying photographs involved an elaborate &#8220;photo stand&#8221; device with extra lights and a lot of sweat.  Now photos can be scanned &#8220;while u wait,&#8221; as they should be, so people never have to part with their precious originals.</p>
<p>For the last 18 months I&#8217;ve been writing and re-writing the text for the book- but that was actually the easy part.  Harder was scanning the photographs at the correct resolution for printing- which is much higher than the resolution which looks good on a computer screen.  Almost all the illustrations used on this blog are scanned at 300 dots per inch or less.  The Arcadia illustrations are usually scanned at 600 dpi- primarily so a small photograph doesn&#8217;t loose its detail when enlarged.  But the hardest job was actually picking out the most important, useful and valuable 225 photographs that could be printed in a 126-page book, from the 600 or more photographs that I thought were really deserving of publication.</p>
<p>One of the great barely-tapped resources for Randolph County history is the public library&#8217;s <a href="http://www.randolphlibrary.org/historicalphotos.htm">historic photograph collection</a>.    There are several thousand photos available there now, and many have been added as a result of my sorting through them for this book.  About a third of the illustrations are from my personal photograph collection, and many were taken by the amateur photographers (and also first cousins) Hugh Parks Jr. and George Russell.  I have used illustrations from both in this blog before, as they were among the first people in the county to take informal, outdoor photographs of everyday life (as opposed to the posed studio shots and still lifes mandated by the slow photographic processes available before 1890).</p>
<p><a href="http://randolphhistory.files.wordpress.com/2010/10/hughparksjrselfportrait.jpg"><img class="alignnone size-medium wp-image-859" title="Self Portrait: Hugh Parks Jr. in mirror; parents pictures on wall" src="http://randolphhistory.files.wordpress.com/2010/10/hughparksjrselfportrait.jpg?w=284&#038;h=300" alt="" width="284" height="300" /></a></p>
<p>It was not always possible to use my favorite photos, usually because the copies available to me would not reproduce well in print.  This self-portrait of Hugh Parks Jr. about 1900 is one of those.  With portraits of his mother and father on the wall in the background, he is tending his camera while shooting his reflection in a mirror.  The composition has a silvery, otherworldly effect which brings to my mind the evanescent nature of human life, as it gradually fades into history.</p>
<p>I wanted to use photographs not just as illustrations, but as a sort of slide show tour through Randolph County history.  Therefore, each photograph is not included just for its own merits, but because it could be used to tell some part of the county&#8217;s story.  The text is organized thematically, in seven chapters.  The first chapter is about the idea of &#8220;home&#8221;&#8211; not just buildings, structures, and landmarks but people.  My historic architectural inventory published in 1985 was just about buildings; in this first chapter I wanted to make it clear that houses are homes for families, and that each structure includes a geneaology of human habitation.  So when possible, I included the photo of the builder with the picture of his house.  And I specifically looked for a photo of the owner/builder at the age he would have been when he built the house.  For example, the best-known images of Governor Jonathan Worth and his brother Dr. John Milton Worth were taken late in their lives&#8211; they look like somebody&#8217;s great-grandfather.  I was able to discover photos of both of them in their 40s, when they were in the prime of life.  I also found early pictures of other well-known county luminaries such as Braxton Craven, John M. Odell, and Henry B. Elliott.  The oldest portrait is not a photograph at all, but a silhouette cut out by hand, that hangs on a bedroom wall in Blandwood mansion in Greensboro.  Some of the hardest illustrations to find were those showing the county&#8217;s black citizens at home or at play&#8211; our historical collections need to make a better effort to document the history of local minority groups.</p>
<p>The second chapter covers agriculture; the third deals with work; the fourth, transportation; the fifth, churches, schools and social groups; the sixth illustrates public service in various forms; and the seventh ends with recreation and entertainment.</p>
<p>Some of the photos, I am happy to say, have already been published and extensively written about in this blog.  Some have never before been published, and I will treat them to future blog entries of their own.  Entire books could be compiled of photographs of local covered bridges, or of local schools and students, or of local churches and congregations, or of local mills and employees.  A separate book on Asheboro is a definite possibility if this one proves to be popular.</p>
<p>I have already been asked numerous times to tell the story of the cover photo (which is cropped on the cover but is set forth above in its entirety).  Unfortunately, there&#8217;s not much information available.  The good folks at Arcadia asked me to send them 4 or 5 illustrations I thought would make a good cover, and that was one I sent.   But it wasn&#8217;t my first choice, not because it isn&#8217;t a great photo, but because I know almost nothing about it.  I bought it in a local antique shop.  On the back is written, several times in several different curly scripts, &#8220;I.H. Skene&#8221; or &#8220;F.H. Skeen&#8221; .  That, and the information in the picture itself, are all I know about it.  The setting is a group of young people, 46 of them, posed at some kind of gathering.  The clothing worn by most is very formal, which could argue either for a &#8220;Sunday Best&#8221; church group or a school graduation celebration.  It stylistically dates them to the period right around World War I, and seems to be appropriate for cool weather.   The flags they hold have 6 rows of 8 stars- 48 states- and Arizona, the 48th state, was added to the union on February 14, 1912.   &#8220;National Flag Day&#8221; was first proclaimed as a holiday by President Woodrow Wilson, and celebrated on June 14, 1916.  It would be a nice story if that was what brought these people together- but I&#8217;m thinking that their clothing would be a little hot for a North Carolina June!  So choose what you like best- Sunday School or Graduation or Flag Day- and remember from now on to make it easier for future historians by captioning your own photographs.<strong> </strong></p>
<p><strong></strong>The book is officially available in bookstores and on Amazon dot com on November 15th.  Unofficially, I already have a copy, and it looks great.  The price is $21.99.</p>
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