A History of
Watauga County, NC
J P Arthur
Chapter V-Part 1
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During the Revolution.
Backwoods Tories.-- Roosevelt (Vol. II, p.70) says: "The
backwoodsmen, the men of the up-country, were, as a whole, ardent
adherents of the patriotic or American side. Yet there were among
them many loyalists or Tories, and these Tories included in their
ranks much the greatest portion of the vicious and disorderly
elements. This was the direct reverse of what obtained along
portions of the seaboard, where large numbers of the peaceable and
well-to-do people stood loyally by the king. In the up-country,
however, the Presbyterian Irish, with their fellow of Calvinistic
stock and faith, formed the back-bone of the moral and order-loving
element, and the Presbyterian Irish were almost to a man staunch and
furious upholders of the Continental Congress . . . The Tories were
obnoxious under two heads (pp. 72, 73); they were allies of a tyrant
who lived beyond the sea, and they were the friends of anarchy at
home. They were felt by the frontiersmen to be criminals rather than
ordinary foes. They included in their ranks the mass of men who had
been guilty of the two worst frontier crimes--horse-stealing and
murder . . . and the courts sometimes executed summary justice on
Tory, desperado and stock-thief, holding each as having forfeited
his life."
Samuel Bright, Loyalist.-- We should not be surprised, therefore, to
learn that there is a tradition still preserved at Ingalls and
Altamont post offices, in what is now Avery County, but which
formerly was a part of Watauga, that Samuel Bright, along whose
"trace," according to Draper (p. 177), Sevier's men passed on their
way to king's Mountain, September 27-28, 1780, was a Tory of the
Tories, and while he might have claimed the Crab Orchard,(1) a mile
below the confluence of the Roaring Creek
__________
Note: (1)Owing to the several counties in which this land has been
it is impossible to get record evidence of Bright's ownership, if he
ever held title. Local tradition claims that the Crab Orchard was
embraced in both the Cathcart and Waightstill Avery grants, and that
the representatives of these two claimants compromised the matter by
Avery paying John Brown, Cathcart's representative, 12 1/2 cts. per
acre for the tract, and taking possession. John Ollis, father of W.
H. Ollis, helped to clear it "back in the Forties."
Page 54
with the North Toe River, his home was two miles northeast of Alta
Pass, where the C. C. & O. R. R. crosses the Blue Ridge, and stood
near what is now a tram-road for lumber hauling. Joe Lovin now lives
one-fourth of a mile southwest from the old Bright chimney mounds,
which are still distinguishable. Indeed, Robert Lee Wiseman, a
direct descendant of William Wiseman, the first settler of that
locality, has the original grant and knows the location of the old
Bright place not only from tradition, but from having surveyed the
lands originally granted to Samuel Bright. One of these grants is
numbered 172 and calls for 360 acres in Burke County. The grant is
dated March 5, 1780, though the land was processioned June 28, 1774,
by Will Davenport, who owned "the noted spring on the Davenport
place, since Tate's, and now known as the Childs place," spoken of
by Dr. Draper (p. 178). The grant is registered in book No. 3 of
Burke County, and was signed by J. C. Caswell, Governor, and
countersigned by "In Frank, Pri. Sec." The land was surveyed by C.
W. Beekman, county surveyor of Burke, August 10, 1778, while the
chain carries were Thomas White, afterwards Major White, of
McDowell's regiment, and James Taylor White. The land granted lies
on both sides of Toe River, and a part of it is now owned by W. H.
Ollis as part of his home tract, and the balance by J. L. Wiseman.
The seal attached is of chalk or plaster of Paris and bees was,
one-quarter of an inch thick and three inches in diameter. One one
side is a female figure with staff and liberty cap in one hand and
an open scroll in the other. The obverse face contains a female
figure, a cow and a tree, while beneath these figures are
"Independence MDCCLXXVI." This seal is not impressed upon the paper,
but is detached from it, being connected with it by a double tap
ribbon. Around the border is what appears to be E Pluribus Unum and
Sua Si Bona, though a defacement of the wax renders some of the
letters uncertain. Tradition is here borne out by the State and
Colonial Records in Volume XXII (p. 506), which records that Samuel
Page 55
Bright, after having witnessed the trial and conviction at Salisbury
before Judge Samuel Spencer, March 6, 1777, of one William Anderson,
of having stolen from one Jowe, and the branding of the said
Anderson on the ball of the thumb of his left hand with the letter
T, signifying thief, was brought before the same stern judge to
answer the charge of having committed sundry misdemeanors against
the State by encouraging the enemies of said State. But Samuel
evidently knew on which side of his bread was buttered, and took the
benefit of the governor's proclamation, promising amnesty to all who
would come in and take the oath of loyalty to the patriot cause, and
got off scott-free.
Thirty-Nine Lashes on the Bare Back.--Now William Wiseman, who had
been born in London, England, on St. James Street, Clarkville or
Clarkwell Park, February 2, 1741, and apprenticed to a joiner,
fearing service in the British army, stowed himself away on a
merchant vessel in 1761, and, after lying concealed three days and
nights, revealed himself to the captain, and upon arrival at a port
in Connecticut was sold to pay his passage money; was bid in by a
master joiner, who gave him his liberty and a box of tools upon
proof that Wiseman could make as good a chest as he could himself.
"What those old fellows were after," said an old citizen in speaking
of Wiseman, "was freedom;" and as there was much religious
persecution in the northern colonies about that time, William
Wiseman took his tools aboard a sailing vessel and finally settled
at the place at which W. H. Ollis now lives. Here he married a
Davenport, sister, no doubt, to the Davenport of Davenport Place
spoken of by Dr. Draper. He was the very first settler in that
locality, and became a justice of the peace. To him was brought one
day the wife of Samuel Bright, charged with having stolen a bolt of
cloth from a traveling peddler. She was convicted by him, and as the
peddler insisted that he should pass sentence upon her, he did so,
and as there was no sheriff to inflice it, he enforced it
himself--"thirty-nine lashes, well laid on."
Patriots Feared the Indians.-- Now, the Cherokees had ceded the
lands on the Watauga and its waters to the Watatga settlers,
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but, Roosevelt tells us (Vol. II, p. 74) that they "still continued
jealous of them." and that the Cherokees "promptly took up the
tomahawk at the bidding of the British" (p. 75). As Bright and
Wiseman lived south of the ridge which divided the Toe from the
Watauga, their homes were within Indian territory at this time.
Therefore, Magistrate Wiseman had been afraid to lay the lash on
Mrs. Bright's bare back during the absence of her husband, who was
on a hunting expedition at that time, lest upon his return he should
incite the Indians to burn his cabin and scalp him in the bargain.
But he was worse afraid of the peddler, who threatened to report him
to the great judge, Samuel Spencer, at Salisbury, if he did not
carry out the sentence he had himself imposed. He was, therefore,
much perturbed till Bright and a family named Grand left the
country, passing over the Bright Trace and by the Bright Spring on
the Bald place of the Yellow into Tennessee. Aunt Jemima English,
who was born Wiseman, daughter of the original William, justice of
the peace, etc., May 6, 1804, but lived to a great old ge, not only
preserved these traditions, which she had at first had from her
father, but she believed that the Grant family which left with the
Brights were the family from whom Gen. U. S. Grrant, of the U. S.
army, sprang.
Bright's Spring and the Shelving Rock.-- We must not forget that
"the gap between the Yellow Mountain on the north and the Roan
Mountain on the south" (Draper, p. 177) was once a part of Watauga
County (see chapter X on Boundary Lines). It was here that two of
Sevier's men, James Crawford and Samuel Chambers, deserted and went
ahead to tell Ferguson of Sevier's approach. It was here also,
according to local tradition in the mouth of everyone in May, 1915,
that one of Sevier's men froze to death and was buried in the edge
of the bald of the Yellow. Draper, however, says nothing of such an
occurrence, though he does say (p. 177) that the "sides and top of
the mountain were covered with snow, shoe-mouth deep, and on the
summit there were about one hundred acres of beautiful table-land,
in which a spring issued [Bright's], ran though it and over into the
Watauga." This latter fact, not generally known, coupled with the
still more important fact that all of Watauga County on the
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waters of Watauga River was once a part of Washington
County--formerly Washington District--of the famous and immortal Old
Watauga Settlement of Sevier, Robertson and Tipton, may well "stir a
fever in the blood of age and make the infant's sinews strong as
steel." For Col. Henry H. Farthing, of Timbered Ridge of the Beaver
Dams, and Col. Joseph C. Shull, of Shull's Mills, have each a grant
from the State to lands in their neighborhood, described as being
the Washington County, North Carolina. Shull's grant is numbered 841
to Charles Asher for 300 acres in the county of Washington on both
sides of Watauga River, and dated 11th July, 1788. It is signed by
Samuel Johnston, Governor, and countersigned by Jas. Glascow,
Secretary of State. On it is a certificate from the county register,
Samuel Greer, dated May 28, 1819, that is a true copy from the
records. The Farthing grant is to John Carter for 300 acres in the
county of Washington, beginning on two white oaks standing near the
path that leads across Stone Mountain to Cove Creek and on the west
side of the Beaver Dam Creek. It is dated November 17, 1790, and is
numbered 947, and recorded in the office of the Secretary's office,
page 234. For, when the Watauga settlers set up house-keeping on
their own hook, they had named the territory they had acquired from
the Indians by lease and purchase Washington District, and in 1777,
before they tried to secede, calling the new State Franklin, North
Carolina converted Washington District into Washington County. (Laws
1777, ch. 126.) Dr. Draper continues: "Thence from Talbot's Mill to
its head, where they bore somewhat to the left, crossing Little Doe
River, reaching the noted 'Resting Place,' at the Shelving Rock,
about a mile beyond the Crab Orchard, where, after a march of about
twenty miles that day, they took up their camp for the night. Big
Doe River, a bold and limpid mountain stream, flowing hard by,
afforded the campers, their horses and beef cattle abundance of pure
and refreshing water. Here a man of the name of Miller resided who
shod several of the horsed of the party."
Even Homer and Dr. Draper Sometimes Nod.-- Notwithstanding all the
pains Dr. Draper took to get the facts for his excellent "Kings
Mountain and its Heroes," his failure to visit
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the actual scenes along the route of the King's Mountain men is
responsible for the error in the statement that the Big Doe River,
flowing hard by, afforded the campers, etc., abundance of pure and
refreshing water." The nearest point from the Shelving Rock to the
Big Doe River is at least one mile and a half where that stream
flows through the Crab Orchard, and route to it is over a rather
high ridge and by a rough trail. But the Little Doe, with enough
pure and refreshing water for all the men and stock then in what is
now Tennessee, flows within one hundred yards of the Shelving Rock,
on which there has been placed a bronze tablet about two feet square
with the following inscription:
First Night's
Encampment of
KING'S MOUNTAIN MEN
SEPTEMBER 26, 1780.
__________
They Trusted in God and
kept Their Powder Dry.
__________
Placed by John Sevier Chapter, D. A. R.,
1910.
A Busy Forge.-- But he was right in stating that a man of the name
of Miller resided at the Shelving Rock and shod their horses, for
Squire W. H. Ollis, of Ingalls, N. C., furnished this identical
information to the Historical Society of New Jersey in 1872, saying
that "Absalom Miller told me that his father lived at Shelving Rock
in September, 1780, and shod the horses of some of the King'
Mountain men while they camped under the Shelving Rock." As most of
Sevier's men were practical blacksmiths, we may well imagine that
Johnson's forge was a busy place early on the morning of September
27, 1780, and well up into that day, and that, while some were
shoeing the horses,
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others were busy at bellows and anvil, hammering out horseshoes and
nails, thus leaving none of the available tools idle for a moment.
For the way up what is now called Hampton's Creek to the gap of the
Yellow was even steeper in those days that it is now, with rocks
galore to wrench the shoes from the best shod horses. Dr. Draper
tells us that on this day the men, weary of driving the herd of
cattle with which they had started, killed such as were necessary
for a temporary supply of meat and abandoned the rest, thus
considerably delaying the march of the day, "following the
well-known Bright's Trace, through a gap between the Yellow Mountain
on the north and the Roan Mountain on the south. The ascent was not
very difficult along a common foot-path." But, for three miles at
least, it was very steep and rocky, as the same old Trace, now used
as a "near cut." still bears witness most eloquently. Arrived at the
gap, now grown up with trees, they had a parade on the Yellow and
fired off their short Deckard rifles "for fun." This was but a short
day's march--seven miles--making twenty-seven miles from Sycamore
Shoals in two days. Here, at a conference of the officers, Colonel
Campbell was appointed to the chief command. (note on page 178.) On
the 28th they descended Roaring Creek by Bright's Trace, then
following the bank of the stream very much as does the rude and
rough wagon road of today, to its mouth in North Toe River, one mile
from the North Carolina Crab Orchard, or Avery's Quarter, as it is
now known. Here, at the mouth of Roaring Creek, lives Tilmon
McCurry, who thinks that the Samuel Chambers who had deserted the
night before, finally settled in Buncombe County, North Carolina,
but what became of James Crawford seems not to be known. Only a
short distance from the mouth of Roaring Creek is that of Powder
Mill Creek, a short distance up which later stream Dorry and Loddy
Oaks made enough powder in the dim and distance past with which to
buy a negro man, and, no doubt, obtained the bounty referred to in
Wheeler's History of North Carolina (Vol. II, p. 52). From the mouth
of Roaring Creek, however, Bright's Trace is now no longer followed,
the Cranberry and Spruce Pine Road having usurped its usefulness,
but it can be traced still as
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it takes its almost straight course to the crossing of Toe River,
almost a mile above Spruce Pine, at which place a small monument
marks Sevier's route.
They Did Not Camp on the Yellow.-- Bright's Spring in North Carolina
is a mile north of the gap between the Yellow and Roan. It is in a
field that in 1780 contained a bald place of about 100 acres,
through the Humps, lying near, have since been cleared and the bald
place is now much larger than it was then. There is also another
spring on the Tennessee side, near the gap, called also Bright's
Spring. It is true the ground is said to have been covered with snow
when they camped there, but that 1,040 men(1) and horses could have
supplied themselves with water on the top of that mountain would
have been an impossibility. Dr. Draper says in unmistakable language
that they "passed on a couple of miles, descending the eastern slope
of the mountains into Elk Hollow--a slight depression between the
Yellow and Roan Mountains, rather than a gap-- and here at a fine
spring flowing into Roaring Creek they took up their camp for the
night" (p. 178). Yet, the general impression is that these men
camped on the Yellow Mountain that night!
Oliver Cromwell's Descendant.--Dr. Draper records the fact that Col.
Benjamin Cleveland claimed direct descent from Oliver Cromwell, from
a liaison with Elizabeth Cleveland, "a beauty of the time of Charles
the First" (pp. 425, 426), but this story is doubted by the eminent
historian. Cleveland was mistaken in acting as though cruelty was
Cromwell's chief virtue.
Cleveland's Capture at Old Fields.--Dr. Draper says that this
doughty warrior was captured at this place, which he is said to have
owned, on the 22 day of April, 1781, while on a visit to his tenant,
Jesse Duncan, at the lower end of the Old Fields--probably the very
spot at which the late Nathan Waugh lived and died. Captain William
Riddle was the leader of the gang which captured him, they having
stolen his horses from Duncan's barn the night before and led them
up south fork of New River
___________
Note: (1) The force which started from Sycamore Shoals consisted
of : Colonel Campbell's men, 200; Colonel Shelby's, 240 men;
Lieutenant-Colonel Sevier's 240 men, McDowell's party, who had
retreated from Cowen's Ford, 160 men; (Draper, p. 149); Arthur
Campbell, with 200 men (Id. p. 175), making in all 1040 men.
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into a laurel thicket just above the house then occupied by Joseph
and Timothy Perkins, about one mile distant. There were six or eight
men with Riddle, and when they reached Benjamin Cutbirth's home the
day before, four miles above Duncan's home, and failed to get any
information from him, they abused him shamefully and left him under
guard. Cleveland ran into the ambush prepared for him and was
captured and taken into the Perkins house, which stood on the site
of the house in which Nathan Waugh's son, Charles, now resides. The
illustration shows the present house and apple tree in its front
under which it is said Cleveland was sitting when captured. Into
this house of the Perkinses, Zachariah Wells followed Cleveland and
attempted to shoot him, but that brave (?) man seized Abigail
Walters, who was present, and kept her between him and his would-be
assassin (p.440). Cleveland was then taken up New River to the mouth
of Elk Creek, and thence to "what has since been known as Riddle's
Knob." 9See Illustration.) This is some fourteen miles from Old
Fields and in Watauga County. Here they camped for the night (441).
But they had been followed by young Daniel Cutbirth and a youth
named Walters,(1) Jesse Duncan, John Shirley, William Calloway,
Samuel McQueen and Benjamin Greer, while Joseph Calloway mounted a
horse and hastened to notify Captain Robert Cleveland, Ben's
brother, on Lewis' Fork of the Yadkin. Five of these in advance of
Robert's party fired on Riddle's gang at the Wolf's Den early the
next morning, and Cleveland dropped behind the log on which he had
been sitting slowly writing passes for the Tories, fearing that when
he should finish doing so he would be killed. Only Wells was
wounded, the rest escaping, including Riddle's wife. As it was
thought that Wells would die from his would, he was left on the
ground to meet his fate alone. But he survived. About 1857 Micajah
Tugman found a curious knife in the Wolf's Den, supposed to have
been Riddle's.
Greer's Hint.-- This "hint" is thus accounted for by Dr. Draper in a
note at foot of page 442: "Greer was one of Cleveland's heroes.
___________
Note:(1) These boys had planned to rescue Cleveland, but they
thought better of it when Riddle's force came in sight.
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