A History of
Watauga County, NC
J P Arthur
Chapter VIII
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Page 87
Ebenezer Fairchild.
First Light on the Jersey Settlement.--(1) From a sketch of the
Greene Family of Watauga, by the late Rev. G. W. Greene, Baptist
missionary to China, we learn that "about the middle of the
eighteenth century a colony moved from New Jersey and settled in
Rowan County, North Carolina. This "Jersey Settlement: is now a part
of Davidson County, and lies near the Yadkin River, opposite
Salisbury . . . H. E. McCullough, of England, had secured grants to
large tracts in North Carolina, track No. 9 containing 12,500 acres,
including much of the land of the Jersey Settlement. Jeremiah Greene
bought 541 acres of this tract. This land is described as lying "on
the waters of Atkin or Pee Dee," on Pott's Creek. This creek passes
near the village of Linwood, within a mile of the Jersey church, and
empties nto the Yadkin, not far away. This land was bought in 1762.
Some years later, when this tract of land was divided between his
two sons, Richard and Isaac, the new deeds were not registered, but
the names of the new owners were written on the margin of the page
were the old deed was registered. The Yadkin becomes the PeeDee in
South Carolina. In his "Rhymes of Southern Rivers" M. V. Moore says
that Yadkin is not an Indian name, but a corruption of Atkin or
Adkin. If Atkin's initials were P. D., then P. D. Atkin might very
easily have become P. D. Yatkin, just as "don't you know" becomes "doncher
know." Henry Eustace McCulloh was doubtless the "H. E. McCullough,
of England." referred to by Mr. Greene, as he was the agent of the
province of North Carolina in December, 1771, and was commended for
good conduct (Col. Rec.,
__________
Note: (1) Rev. Henry Sheets, author of "A History of Liberty
Baptist Association." the successor of the Jersey Settlement Church,
says that the McKoys, Merrills, McGuires, Smiths, Moores, Ellises,
Marches, Haydens, Wisemans and Trauthams are the names of some of
the leaders of the Jersey Settlement, but that letters to prominent
men in New Jersey failed to secure any information as to this
colony. Governor Ellis's ancestors were among these settlers, and
many residents of Ashe, Watauga and Alleghany claim the same
distinction.
Page 88
Vol. IX, p. 206), and he surrendered land in Mecklenberg, claimed by
John Campbell, Esq;, of England, without authority, as Campbell
claimed, although there was a direction in the minutes of the
council journals that the attorney-general directing McCulloh was to
surrender it.(1) (Id. p.. 790.) It seems that land in large tracts
had been granted to certain persons of influence on condition that
they be settled within certain dates, for G. A. Selwyn, of England,
appointed H. E. McCulloh to surrender any part of three tracts of
100,000 acres each, which had been granted to him upon the above
conditions. (Id. Vol. VI, pp. 996-7.) This was in November, 1763,
only a year after Jeremiah Greene bought his 541 acres from H. E.
McCullough. This would seem to account for the reference by Bishop
Spangenberg to the 400 families from the North which had just
arrived in 1752, and for the fact that most of the land east of
Rowan County had been already taken up at that time. (Id. Vol. IV,
p. 1312.)
Meager Facts Concerning.(2)-- This settlement consisted of about ten
square miles of the best wheat land in the South, and was located in
Davidson County, near Linwood. It was composed of many people from
New Jersey who had set an agent there to locate and enter the best
land still open to settlement. According to Rev. C. B. Williams in
his "History of the Baptists in North Carolina" (p. 16), "The exact
year in which the Jersey Settlement was made on the Yadkin is not
known. It is probable that this settlement left New Jersey and
arrived on the Yadkin between 1747 and 1755. Benjamin Miller
preached there as early as 1775, and the facts indicate that there
were already Baptists on the Yadkin when Benjamin Miller visited the
settlement. The Philadelphia Association has in its records of 1755
the following reference: "Appointed that one minister from the
Jerseys and one from Pennsylvania visit North Carolina." But Miller
appears to have gone to the Jersey Settlement still earlier than
1755 . . . (p. 17). Another preacher
__________
Note: (1) See, also, Col. Rec. Vol. V. p. xxxii.
(2) The first mention of the settlement is probably by Bishop
Spangenberg (Col. Rec., Vol. IV, p. 1311 to 1314). In which he spoke
of 400 families with horses and wagons and cattle having emigrated
from the North to North Carolina.
Page 89
who visited the Jersey Settlement was John Gano. He had been
converted just before this time, and was directed by Benjamin
Miller, pastor of Scotch Plains Church, New Jersey, to take the New
Testament as his guide on baptism. He bacame a Baptist, and,
learning of Carolina from Miller, decided to visit the Jersey
Settlement on his way to South Carolina. This he seems to have done
in 1756. During his stay at the settlement he tells us in his
autobiography that "a Baptist Church was constituted and additions
made in it." He left the colony early in the year 1759, and so the
church must have been organized between 1756 and 1758, and so the
church. There is a tradition that while there Gano married a Bryan
or a Morgan, one of the antecedents of the Bryan family of Boone.
John Gano.-- It appears from Rev. Henry Sheets' History of the
Liberty Baptist Association (Raleigh, 1907), that the Rev. John Gano
had been a Presbyterian, but met Rev. John Gano had been a
Presbyterian, but met Rev. Benjamin Miller, the pastor of the Scotch
Plains Baptist Church in New Jersey, who induced him to take the new
Testament on the mode and subjects of baptism. In a short time he
joined the Baptists and became a minister. On his way to South
Carolina, Mr. Gano visited the Jersey Settlement on the Yadkin, and
soon after his return home was induced to make a second trip, when
he was strongly solicited to move among them. It was on this second
journey that he was accompanied by Ebenezer Fairchild, and, by
traveling about eight hundred miles, arrived after a journey of five
weeks. We have most of Ebenezer Fairchild's diary of their trip to
and from the Yadkin, though the first few pages are missing.
Fairchild was in a wagon, while Gano and his wife and child were in
a chair or chaise, which turned over on one occasion, though no one
was hurt.
Ebenezer's Diary.-- It begins October 21, 1757, at some unnamed
place along the road, where he got up and wrote a letter to his
wife, Mr. Gano preaching on the 23d, after which they drove to a Mr.
Winchester's, where they remained till Tuesday morning on account of
the rain. It was on the day following that Mr. Gano upset the chair,
"but they wasn't hurt." Mr. Gano preached that night on "What will
ye that I should
Page 90
do unto you?" after which Fairchild smoked a pipe and went to bed.
The next day they crossed Menoe Crosse Creek and came to Frederick
Town, stopping at Arthur Charleston's, "where they did a little
business." They soon forded the "Potomoc," and put up all night at
Mr. Nolens. The next day "we see a wench that said she was a negroe
to Mr. [undecipherable] son." They then crossed "Goos" Creek and
turned out of the Bell Haven Road to a tree marked with a B, where
they slept in the woods tht night. all the next day they drove in
the rain and crossed Bull's Run, and, going on seven "milds furder,"
came to "one powel ordnari, or powel town." This was Saturday night,
and they found forty-five travelers already there, but they remained
all night. Having a house to themselves, did not, however, prevent
their being kept awake till after ten o'clock by the fiddling and
dancing of seven men. The next day Ebenezer was so upset by the want
of rest the night before that he could "hardly get any ease lying in
the wagon" till he remembered the cause of his restlessness. On the
Sabbath John Gano preached from Galations--chapter and verse
undecipherable. "They behaved quite od--talked in meeting and did
not sing with us, except two or three of them." The next day they
crossed Seder [Cedar?] Creek and came to a "taverne," but passed on
to the "Rapahannock and crost it." As it was then night, they went
to James Alieson, "but he would not let us stay there, so we drove
on agin about half a mild and campd in the woods." There Mrs. Gano
was quite unwell, but they got her some sage tea and got her to bed
also. The next day was November 1st, and they drove ten miles before
taking breakfast, going nine miles further on to the south branch of
the Rappahannock "and foarded it and ate supper at John Bannon's"
where Mrs. Gno spent the night, Fairchild and her husband camping
out. There they bought half a bushel of apples for a shilling. Later
on they reached Porter's tavern, where they "drank a dram." and then
went on again, Mr. Gano buying a turkey on the way, which they
dressed and ate at camp that night. The following day they killed a
deer by the way and had steaks for supper that night. At a tavern
kept by someone unknown to Ebenezer, he got a
Page 91
quart of cider, and ate his dinner alone. Mr. Gano left him at the
next tavern, and Fairchild "lay alone that night." But "as they were
a bought (about) sixteen Irishmen or there abought, there was noise
all rownd." The next day he got up early and crossed a prong of the
James River at Tucker Woodles'. On Saturday they reached Jacob
Micaux's, on the south side of the James River, where Fairchild went
hunting, but got nothing. At night he and Micaux's family sang
psalms, hymns and said poetry till bed time, when he "went to his
duty." That is, he had to go outand stay with the wagon, near which
several "Irishmen" were camping, who usually "made a noise." The
next morning he went early to what seems to be "Guglin" Court House
to meet Mr. Gano, who prached from I Peter, 9th chapter, verse 18,
"If the righteous scarcely be saved," etc. On the fifth they bought
two hens and "made broth, ate supper and went to bed." The next day
Ebenezer killed a pilot (snake), and they "past by a smigh's shop
and a taverne." Then they "crossed Allen's Creek and went two mild
furder and campt." On Friday, November 11th, they reached "ronoak
and fared over," meaning probably that they ferried over. They
bought corn at David Michels, where Gano again left Ebenezer and "he
shifted for himself." The 13th was the Sabbath, when Fairchild
salted the horses. Gano overtook Fairchild after crossing the Tar or
the Haw River, the word being uncertain, bringing with him John
Shurman, but Shurman went on to his own home that night. They
proceded on to Orange, but how do you suppose he spelt it? "Orring!"
The next day Uriah Carl and another, whose name cnnot be deciphered,
"being weary of traveling so slo, set out for themselves at high
speed, but Tuesday we overtook them, but thes set out again." Mr.
Gano bought two more hens a short time afterwards, which Fairchild
is careful to state that they "cooked." As it rained, Mrs. Gano got
into the wagon "and rid till we came to Little Creek, where she got
out and maid tea." They came at length to John Hunt's and then drove
two miles to Colonel Smith's, where they took out the teams,
"unloaded the waggin, and maid it out home." Subsequent disclosures
show that they made Colonel Smith's
Page 92
their home--not the "waggin"--where they remained till three days
after Christmas, when they set out for their New Jersey home again;
not, however, before Fairchild had recorded the fact that "John
Stits Gano this day walked half acrost the room all alone--a bat
came inot the room tonight." While at Colonel Smith's, also, it
seems that Fairchild was converted by Mr. Gano's sermon of November
26th, for he writes: "Blessed be God, it was a good day for my
sole." While out hunting there they saw "a man on horseback with a
woman behind him a straddle." During their stay there Fairchild went
to visit Ephriam Coxe, where a woman told him she had lived there
six years and had been but to three houses in that neighborhood. On
Christmas Day Mr. Gano preached a sermon at Colonel Smith's house,
but spent the night at John Hunt's, taking breakfast with Isaac
Thomas. There Fairchild "tuned my fiddel, and maid ready to start
homeward the next day." But that night he records the fact that he
hopes things will grow better; that "men and women do try to preach.
Some men do preach with the Bibel wrong end up: sometimes two or
three are preaying at once, two or three exhorting at same time."
Mr. Marshall McLean, Mr. Breed, Mr. Stain, McMulkey, Mr. Bentin, and
how many more separately ministered there I do not know. John Hunt
and Benjamin Marvel separately, but preaching; but I believe they
are three good men. Mr. McDaniel ------------(name undecipherable),
Mr. Swetend, Mr. Wilson, Mr. Minten --- these all separately
ministered, besides Mr. Marshall. These "are from round about --all
but nineteen within fifty mild of Mr. Gano at the Jersey
Settlement." They had intended to start back on the 27th, but the
weather being bad, they went instead to look at a piece of land. He
did not like this as well as land on Muddy Run, with a "sand spring"
near the door. To this spring after dinner he took Mrs. Gano, who
liked it. He adds forebodingly: "How it will sute my wife I don't
know, but I hope well, and my wife to come and see for herself."
"After we rid about awhile we went to John Hunt's there staid till
dark, then came home." On the 28th of December they set off on
horseback or New Jersey, and reached there on the fifteenth or
sixteenth of January, 1758, after crossing the "sus ka
Page 93
hannar" on Friday, the 13th. This was a quick trip, compared with
their journey down. The most notable thing that occurred on their
return journey was a receipt for a sore backed horse: A pint of salt
and a quart of wheat flour, mixed with water in a stout bag or sack.
This is then placed on "a clean place in the fire, where it is
backed to a hard or firm lump." Then it is gritted up into a powder
and poured on the sore place on the horse's back. It was prescribed
by "John poepper, hoarse doctor, Mary Land."
Mr. Gano Constitutes a Church.-- In Mr. Sheet's history (p. 75) Mr.
Gano said that before he left the Yadkin a Baptist Church was
constituted and many additions made to it. but he left it in 1758
because of war with the Cherokee Indians. A second son was born to
him November 11, 1758. And the new church did not survive his
departure very long (p. 76). In a note (p. 76) Mr. Sheets thinks
they never had another pastor, and that the records were destroyed
or carried off, and the church finally scattered and became extinct.
The settlement was on the Yadkin River in what is now Davidson
County, and mainly on the south side of what is now the Southern
Railway track, near what has always been known as the Indian Trading
Ford.
A Colonial Document.
By His Excellency JONATHAN BELCHER, ESQ.,
Captain-General and Commander in Chief of the Province of Nova
Caesarea, or New Jersey, and territories thereon depending in
America, CHANCELLOR and VICE-ADMIRAL in the same, etc.:
To Ebenezer Fairchild, Esq:
Reposing especial trust and confidence in him, he was "under the
broad seal of Great Britain" appointed "insigne of that company
whereof John Brookfield is captain. You are, therefore, to take the
said company to your charge and care as insigne. Done at
Elizabethton in New Jersey the 14th day of July in the 31st year of
His Majesty's reign, Anoque Domini, 1757.
Seal.
J. Belcher."
Page 94
Lincoln a Plagiarist?-- On a blank discharge from Sir Henry Clinton,
K. B., General and Commander-in-Chief of all His Majesty's forces
within the colonies, lying on the Atlantic Ocean, etc., is written:
Cyrus Fairchild, his hand and pen;
He will be good, but God known when.
As this is attributed to Abraham Lincoln by some of the biographers
as an example of precocious literary ability, it may surprise them
to learn that it was current in Watauga County before Lincoln was
born.
An Ancient Document.-- Among the papers of the late Ebenezer
Fairchild is an agreement dated Mar 23, 1761, by which John Stevens
and Alexander Rutherford, for themselves and the devisees of Mary
Alexander, undertake to convey to Ebenezer Fairchild, of Newtown, in
the county of Sussex, eighty acres of "Rights for unappropriated
land in the Eastern Division of New Jersey, except Romopok, upon the
payment of sixty pounds Proclamation Money of New Jersey."
Carpenter and Yeoman.-- There is also a deed from Peter Dukerson,
carpenter, of Morristown, province of East New Jersey, to Ebenezer
Fairchild, yeoman, of the same place, for fifty acres in Morristown,
for seventy-two pounds, dated May 16, 1754, and in the 27th year of
His Majesty King George the Second of Great Britain.
On Bound Meadows Run.-- There is a warrant for the survey of
fifty-three and three-tenths acres of land in the county of Sussex
on the head of a southwest branch of Wall Kill, called the Bound
Meadows Run, for the devisees of Mary Alexander at the request of
Ebenezer Fairchild, by virtur of a warrant to her and Robert Hunter
Morris for 1,600 acres of land to be taken up in any part
unappropriated in the Eastern Division of New Jersey. It is dated
December 9, 1757, and recorded in Book W4, page 14, by virtue of her
last will and testament, which is recorded in Book A5, page 9. All
recorded in the Public Records of the Proprietors of New Jersey, in
the Surveyor General's office at Perth Amboy, in Book S, page 389.
John Smyth, Jr., Surveyor General.
Page 95
AN OLD LETTER.
Morris Town, August 23, 1771.
The Church of Jesus Christ in this place holding believers Baptism
Laying on of Hands Eternal Election & Final Perseverance of the
Saints in Grace &c
To the Church of Christ in Roan County in North Carolina of the same
Faith, or to any one of the sister churches to whom These Presents
may Come, Greeting:
Whereas our Brother Ebenezer Fairchild has Been Baptized in a
Regular Way and Received by Us in Full Communion who for some time
gave Good Satisfaction to this Church, But after falling into some
Sensorious Errors was Laid under Suspension, and is now Removed from
us without a Regular Dispensation has Sent us a Letter Dated
September 28, 1770 wherein he seems to make very humble Confession
of his Sins and Grievance to the Church and Desires Forgivness for
it which, as he Confessed, was Drinking too hard, Loose Living, and
also not keeping his Place in the Church which he Acknowledges and
Begs our Prayers to God for him that he may be Enabled to Live up to
the Profession he has made, which may the Lord help him to do.
Wherefore as his Life and Conversation is now better Known to you
than to us, Although by what we Hear from him we do hope he is a
Humble Penitent, Therefore, if you do Receive him, he is Dismissed
from us, and the God of all Grace Bless you all.
..............................................Amen.
Brother Ebenezer Fairchild
...........................................James Globe
we rejoice to hear from you
..........................................Daniel Walling
such agreeable News may the
.......................................John Brookfield
Lord Grant you Grace and live
......................................Ezekiel Goble
Agreeable to the profession
..........................................Sam'l Parkhurst.
you have
made.......................................................................Pray
for us.
Signed by us at our Meeting
Part for All.
The Fairchild Ladies.-- These ladies, whose names were Rachel
and Clara, lived in Watauga County during the first quarter of the
nineteenth century on Howard's Creek, where
Page 96
William Hardin now lives. Rachel Fairchild had married a man named
Smith, but he died soon afterwards, and she and her sister were
generally known as Fairchilds. They were the daughters of Cyrus
Fairchild, son of Ebenezer Fairchild. They reared Wyatt Hayes, and
after his marriage deeded to him their land, he having agreed to
support them the remainder of their lives. In Deed Book F, page 497,
is record of a deed from "Cirous" Fairchild to Rachel and Clary
Fairchild, showing that Rachel did not continue to be known by her
late husband's name at that time. The consideration named is "for
diver good and caused and considerations for the service of my
daughters, Rachel and Clary Fairchild, for the last fifteen years
and longer." The land was the 200 acres which Ebenezer Fairchild had
entered on Howard's Creek when he first came to this country. The
deed is dated April 26, 1843. It is probable that their father died
soon afterwards, for when Wyatt Hayes was four years old his mother
died, and he was taken to the home of the Misses Fairchild in 1846,
where he remained till they died, excepting the time when he was in
the Civil War, where he had part of one of his feet shot off at
Mechanicsville in the first of the Seven Days Fight around Richmond
in 1862.
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