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Early Residents,
Soldiers, Railroad Workers, Early Churches
S.M. Hunt, Fritz Hummell, S. R. Hood,
Josiah Howell, H. S. Hazell, F. F. Harrell, F. M. Harrison, Erastus Ham, R. W.
Henry, J. B. Henry, J. M. Hollowell, J. T. Hamilton, Ezekial Ham, R. P. Howell,
Lewis Hummell, Sam Holt, Warberton Hill, John Hollister, H. Clay Hazell, R. H.
Harrison, J. D. Howard, J. W. Ham, Mike Heiniman, Henry Howell, Solomon Hoover,
G. W. Hislop, Asa Head.
J. P. Jordan, Major Johns, Everett
Joyner, G. C. Jones, W. H. Jones, R. M. Johnson.
W. R. Kornegay, Blount King, J. T.
Kennedy, J. T. Kemn, C. E. Glengee, A. H. Keaton, W. S. Keaton, G. W. Keese, Jas
Knight, Jas King.
Thomas Losing, A. H. Langston, Jas
Long, J. S. Lucas, Wm. Lemons, John Lowry, Wm. Langston, B. J. Langston, Grif
Long, Lemon Lynch, J. J. Lawrence, J. E. Langston.
W. H. Moore, J. S. Moore, A. B.
Massey, Alex Murdock, W. G. Morisey, Robt. McIntire, George Morrow, G. J. Moore,
Smithson Moore, D. D. Monroe, Aaron Moses, D. H. Miller, Joseph Murphrey.
W. A. Nichols, C. J. Nelson, C. E.
Nelson.
Henry Oettinger.
Wm. Privett, J. C. Privett, H. C.
Premperst, Chas. Parmalere, J. G. Parker, J. R. Powell, Henry Proctor, R. B.
Potts, J. H. Privett, B. M. Privett, E. S. Parker, N. D. Parmalere, Pino Powell,
Willis Pipkin, Ed Pitman, J. H. Powell.
N. M. Ray, Wm. Robinson, John
Randolph, S. C. Robertson, A. J. Riggs, Thos. Ruffin, Phillip Riley, Kedar
Raiford, Hardy Robinson, W. S. Robertson, A. M. Rockwell, W. S. Royall, D. S.
Ryan.
Wm. Sampson, G. V. Strong, Green
Solomon, B. F. Stanton, John Snipes, Josiah Sauls, John Scarboro, Arthur
Stancell, J. C. Slocumb, W. G. Summerlin, Tobias Snipes, J. G. Smith, N. B.
Stanly, Solomon Satterwhite.
J. R. Tumber, John Taylor, J. W.
Tadlock, E. A. Thompson, Wm. Taylor, A. D. Tumblor.
Thos. Waters, J. B. Whitaker, J. A.
Wilson, J. A. Washington, P. A. Wiley, James Wills, Bennett Webb, J. H. Wiggs,
J. N. Wood, W. H. Wilson, Richard Washington, W. H. Woodard, John Wright, Mike
Wood, Wm. Webb, Wm. Vaughn.
The above represents two hundred and
twenty-five names that forty-eight years ago were residents of Goldsboro and who
had reached twenty-one years of age. Of this entire list, I can only name
fifteen whom I know are living. There may be perhaps three of four others living
that I have not been able to trace up. There are only seven living in Goldsboro,
viz: E. B. Borden, J. A. Washington, Devereaux Creech, L. D. Giddens, W. W.
Crawford, R. P. Howell, and J. M. Hollowell. Col. J. T. Kennedy is living in
Grantham township. This would make only eight of the two hundred and twenty-five
living in Wayne County.
J. F. Devine, Wm. Bonitz, and James
King live in Wilmington; J. H. Crawford in Raleigh; E. S. Parker in Graham; John
Randolph in Greene county; Josiah Sauls in Chicago; and R. G. Best in LaGrange.
This shows how fast a population dies
out - less than 10 percent now living and by April, 1911, which will round out a
half century, it is doubtful if a solitary one of the two hundred and
twenty-five will be alive.
Wayne county furnished at least two
thousand soldiers for the Confederate army; some claim as high as twenty-five
hundred. Its list of killed and wounded was large, and it is doubtful if there
is a county in the state that in proportion to the number of soldiers furnished,
has as small a number on the pension rolls; and at this time there is not an old
veteran in the Old Soldiers' Home at Raleigh who went into service from Wayne.
But few places fared worse during the
war than Goldsboro. It escaped until near the close. Scholfield's army from New
Bern captured the place on the 21st of March, 1865. He had about 35,000 men, and
in the next few days Sherman's and Terry's army reached here. So within a radius
of five or six miles of Goldsboro there was encamped about 110,000 Federal
soldiers, with their usual following of "Bummers," and remained here
for a little more than two weeks. When they left there was scarcely a yard fence
left standing in the town, or a panel in the country in the territory occupied
by them while here.
When the three armies combined left
here to follow Johnston's army, they left a regiment or two here. While the army
was encamped here the county was scoured from one end to the other by foragers,
who took all the horses, cattle, hogs, sheep, chickens, bacon, land corn, and
fodder, in fact everything they could lay hands on, the women, children and old
men being left entirely destitute of substance. So thorough was their work of
devastation that hundreds of the people, some of them the best people in the
county, had to draw rations from the government or starve. I know of cases where
women and children walked fifteen miles and back home and toted the rations they
had drawn. Some of the Provote Marshal with which the town was afflicted were
very rough in their treatment of our citizens. Many of them were hauled up
before this officer and heavily fined on most trivial offences, at least one
being sent to jail. About the worst of these officers was a scoundrel named
Capt. Glaves, of the Freedmans Bureau, who employed a native negro, Grant
Sasser, as an officer to make arrest of white men. I remember the first election
held here after the negroes were given the right to vote. The negroes were
corralled in Little Washington by J. E. O'Hara, a West India negro, and formed
in two lines and marched to the Court House. I was standing on the piaza of the
old Griswold Hotel, when they turned down Walnut Street, and as the last of the
line passed where I was standing, the head of the column was turning into the
court house square near where Col. I. F. Dortch's office stands. The election
lasted for three days and the votes were sent to Gen. Canby's headquarters at
Charleston, S. C. to be counted. At the first election held after the adoption
of the Canby Constitution, one negro, Green Simmons, was elected on the Board of
County Commissioners. Negroes were appointed on the police force of the town. A
Yankee, J. H. Place, who came here with the army, was elected mayor. The
finances of the town and county both got into bad shape, county orders getting
down as low as forty cents on the dollar.
Goldsboro was garrisoned from March
1865, until early in 1869, a good deal of the time by negro troops, a full
regiment of ten companies being kept here the last year of the garrisoning. I
have known men and their wives to be halted on the street by soldiers while
returning from church on Sunday night and made to give their names and place of
residence. This was reconstruction by a republican administration. I said darn
them then, and have never changed my mind to this day.
It is a great wonder with such
provocations there was not more trouble between the races than there was, the
negroes were encouraged in their disposition to be insolent and insulting by a
few white men who had run away from here during the war and gone north, but who
returned after the place was occupied by federal troops.
The Union League was formed and
officered in some instances by white men (scallawag) and almost all the negroes
were members of the League, and this was one of the menaces that gave rise to
and made necessary the "Ku Klux Klan," this organization much as it
has been abused and the members hunted down; cast into prison, and hung up by
the thumbs, proved the salvation of the south during the reconstruction period.
And the true condition of affairs as
shown in Thos. Dixon's play, "The Clansman," is what raises the rage
of the men who so loudly abuse Dixon and his play - it's the truth that hurts.
Following the close of the war a
great horde of adventurers (carpet baggers) squatted in the south most of them
after office and spoils. Wayne County got its share of them. I don't know as
those who came to this county were any better or any worse than those who
infested other places. They were not all bad, but they lacked a blamed sight of
being all good.
A few of these fellows rented farms
and engaged in cotton farming. They were going to learn the ignorant and lazy
Southerner how to farm.
I remember one of these smart alexs,
Dick Vanderburg, who rented the Phil Sasser place now owned by Mr. E. B. Borden.
Dick was one of these Yankees who had a whine and drawling voice. He used to
come to the A. & N. C. R. R. warehouse to get hay and corn. He would tell me
how he was going to farm and going to show the Southerners how to farm.
My recollection is it took just two
crops to put Dick out of business, and he went back north a poorer if not a
wiser man. J. K. Miller, another northern man, tried to learn us things about
farming. He experimented on the fine Collier plantation across Neuse River. He
held out longer than Vandenburg, but the same result followed.
It was not many of them who came
South to engage in farming, they were mostly politicians, and lots of them got
office. The Constitutional Convention that gave us the Canby Constitution was
largely composed of these men, together with a number of negroes. A pretty set
to make a Constitution for North Carolina. David Herton, of Ohio, was elected to
Congress from this district. Gen. J. C. Abbott (I don't recollect from what
state) was elected United States Senator.
Goldsboro at the close of the war was
a wooden town. I recall only about one dozen brick buildings here, this
including the Court House and jail. Now, there is over two hundred. Speaking of
the jail brings to mind a job performed by the late W. Hop Smith and myself. The
new Constitution adopted in 1868 provided for the election of township officers,
including magistrates and the number to be elected. Two were given each
township, and in townships in which were incorporated towns an extra one was
allowed for each 500 inhabitants. An election was to be held for these offices
in the summer of 1869 and the question arose about how many Goldsboro township
was entitled to. This could not be ascertained unless the number of inhabitants
of the town was know. The Board of Aldermen employed Hop and myself to take the
census and when we got through and counted up it showed 1,983 lacking seventeen
of enough to give us four magistrates. We were disappointed for we were anxious
to get four magistrates, but we had stretched out figures as far as we could. We
were in the office of the Register of Deeds doing our figuring when Dave Ezzell,
who was jailer, came in from carrying dinner to his prisoners, and some one
present asked Dave how many prisoners he had and replied twenty-four. I at once
turned to Hop and said, if a person is in jail in Goldsboro he sure is an
inhabitant of the town and these 24 persons must be added to the other 1,983
making 2,007 or enough to entitle us to four magistrates for the town, and there
were four nominated for the town.
Seeing that ever polite old colored
man Isaac Hodges, a few days ago, put me to thinking about the old Griswold
Hotel before the war. It was run under the name of Mrs. Susan A. Griswold &
Co., old man Dick Gregory being the Company. He had been more or less a
rheumatic ever since I first knew him. I remember seeing him shuffling around
old squire Bill Bridgers, John R. Powell and George Griswold, clerks, and Isaac
Hughes and Allen and Peter and Simon and Ned and Randal and Dock, as porters.
In those days the W. & W. R. R.
relayed engines here, and there was always three or four engineers laying off
between trips and equally as many from the N. C. R. R. Nearly all were Northern
men and full of fun, and they would gather around the hotel at night and crack
jokes, and anyone who could listen and not laugh was a poor judge of a joke.
I recall the names of a good many of
them now. In the W. & W. was Geo. Tarlton, Ike Farley, John Urquahart,
Wilbur Trast, Gus Tarlton; Petteway, John Hollister, Bill Paul, Geo. T. Curtis
and James Knight. On the N. C. R. R. was Tom Swan, Will Swan, Corneal Davis,
Sr., Corneal Davis, Jr. Chas. Caroll, Dick Furnell, Chas. Parmenter, Tom Hudson,
Jack Bissett, and John Earle. On the A. & N. C. was Ed Clayton, Asa
Blanchard, and Angus Lietch.
None of the engines were numbered
like they are now; all bore names. On the W. & W. I remember the Express,
President, Director, Wilmington, Gov. Bragg, Farmer, Merchant, Polk, Guilford,
Brunswick, and soon after the war came the Bridgers, Kidder, Dickinson, Wright,
Potter and Ellis.
On the N. C. R. R. was the Cyclops,
Astron, Midas, Helios, Pactolus, Neuse, Rowan, Guildford, Watauga and Ajax.
On the A. & N. C. was the Bragg,
Fisher, Stanly and Whitford.
On the W. & W. were the following
conductors: Dolly Browning, Joe Howell, John Ivey, Bob Lee, Bill Smith, Dick
Fulghum and Archy Alderman.
On the N. C. R. R. Kleuge, Hislop,
Thomas, Summer, Kirkland, Bradbury, Hazell, Davidson and Allen were pulling the
bell cord, and Hancock, Jones, Richardson, Parrot and Lane on the A. & N. C.
The engines were beauties - wide
brass bands around the boilers, cylinders encased in brass - and they were kept
neat and clean.
The ticket and telegraph offices were
under the old railroad shed. The telegraphing was by the old paper system. The
first operator that I remember was Tom Oates; the next a young man named (I
think) McCombor. Dave Ryan was operator at the beginning of the war. I was
learning under Ryan at the time, but my patriotism got the upper hand and I
volunteered, but I was sorry before the war ended that was not an operator.
After the female college was built,
the old Borden Hotel was reopened by Col. Baker, who conducted it a year or two
and sold it to T. A. Granger.
About 1855 or '56 Jesse Pipkin ran a
steam saw mill on the bank of the river at old Waynesboro. I remember the boiler
exploded, killing several, among them the proprietor, Mr. Pipkin.
In 1860 Lawrence and Blount started
the first daily paper here and it was named the "Rough Notes." It was
a small affair, being four pages and about 10 x 12 inches. It did not live long.
Blount went to the war. After the war Lawrence became wealthy as manufacturer of
the one-time famous medicine "Rosadalis."
J. G. Parker and Thos. Loring printed
a paper here for several years called the "Tribune." I have a copy of
the Tribune now, printed in 1862.
Wm. Bonitz started an envelope
factory here in 1862 and did quite a lucrative business. After the war, Mr.
Bonitz went into the hotel business. He built the Arlington, but sold out about
twenty years ago and removed to Wilmington and engaged in the hotel business and
is still following it successfully. He has always been an energetic man and a
good citizen.
His brother J. A. Bonitz came here
about 1860. In '66 or '67 he revived the old "Rough Notes," soon
afterwards changing the name to the "Messenger." For a long time he
had an up-hill business but by energy and perseverance, he succeeded. The paper
reached a large circulation and was of great influence in Eastern North
Carolina. He removed the paper to Wilmington and run it as a daily until his
death. While living in Goldsboro he built the Messenger Opera House and the
Messenger printing house, this being the building recently known as the
Commercial Hotel. He was for years chairman of the County Democratic Executive
Committee. He was one of the principal promoters of the Goldsboro Graded School
and was chairman of the board of trustees of the school as long as he resided in
Goldsboro.
During the latter part of the war
there was a fellow around here named Andrew Wilson. He was said to be a deserter
from the Yankee army. Some thought he was a spy. After the Yankees came he did
considerable piloting of them around. While the army lay around Goldsboro, Frank
Coley, son of Jack Coley, prowled around the outskirts with a company of cavalry
and did a good deal of damage to the Yankees. He would intercept foraging
parties of Yankees who Piney Wilson, Simon Gay, Bill [sic] were robbing and
pillaging in the country. There was many a Yankee who started on the raid who,
on account of the vigilance of Coley, never returned. I don't know whether Coley
ever had any trouble with Wilson or not, but at any rate, Wilson determined on
killing Coley and after Coley returned from the war Wilson went out to Coley's
father's one night and prepared to shoot Coley next morning. About light next
morning Joe Peacock, a white man working for Mr. Coley, started out to feed the
stock and was shot down by Wilson, who thought it was young Coley. Wilson then
put out for Goldsboro, where he knew or expected he would be protected by the
Yankees. A crowd of ex-Confederates in the neighborhood got together in an hour,
all mounted, and, headed by a brave and determined leader, followed Wilson. They
were pursuing him so closely that at a point this side of Greenleaf he left the
county road and took down the railroad. The pursuers came in by way of the
Carolina Rice Mills, turned down Boundary street towards the railroad and when
they reached a point a little north of Giles Hinson's store, Wilson was seen on
the track about where the Norfolk and Southern track crosses the A. C. L. track.
They opened fire on him. At the first fire he made a run for the store in which
Mr. Geo. W. Brown now does business and fell dead on the steps as he attempted
to go in the door, to the surprise of everybody. Peacock, after a long and
lingering time of it, recovered. The Yankees sent out a squad of cavalry to
arrest these men, but I don't think any of them were ever arrested.
In writing these reminiscences I feel
that I want to pay a deserved tribute to the old time colored people, the old
slaves who were faithful and true; the old darkeys who when the war came and
their masters enlisted and went to the front, with no white people at home,
except a few old men and the women and children continued to labor to raise
something to feed his mistress and the children, and yet I do not recall now of
a crime against the whites being committed in the county; they knew that the
success of the Confederate arms meant a continuation of slavery for them and
still with this knowledge before them they proved true and faithful, and theirs
is a creditable record.
It is only since their emancipation
and a new set grown up that hell has broke loose among the negroes. And I now
write of one of the blackest and most devilish crimes ever committed anywhere.
About ten miles west of Goldsboro is
a section known as the Neuse River Island, it is the river low lands, subject to
overflow and sickly, and very few white people have ever lived on them. In 1878
James Worley, a poor but respectable and industrious white man lived in this
section with his family, a wife and three small children. One morning persons
passing found Worley and his wife both killed. He had been called to the door
and killed with an axe, and a crime committed upon his wife and then she was
killed. The 3 children found in the house unhurt, the oldest child being less
than six years of age, had witnessed the killing and spent the night all alone.
An inquest and investigation began and after several days evidence came up that
caused the arrest of Noah Cherry, Bob Thompson, Harris Atkinson and Jerry Cox.
They were put on trial and Jerry Cox turned states evidence. Thompson, Cherry
and Atkinson were convicted and Sheriff D. A. Grantham hung them all three at
the same time. Cox, who turned states evidence was afterwards arrested in
Halifax County. I believe, and put in jail and he set fire to the building and
was burned to death. Old Noah Cherry (and I expect the other two) were buried
just south of the residence of Leslie Weil and A. A. Joseph's and near Mr.
Traylor's house. A negro grave yard was started there just after the war, the
land at one time belonged to Judge Robinson. Some of the negroes used to say old
Noah could often be seen over there at times.
A friend reminded me a few days ago
of an incident that I had entirely forgotten. It occurred in 1860 under the old
car shed. Blount King and James T. Hamilton were about to engage in a fight.
John R. Smith was engaged to Hamilton's sister and quite naturally he went
between King and Hamilton to keep them apart. Just as he stepped in, Hamilton
attempted to draw his pistol and in some way the weapon went off, the ball
striking Mr. Smith in the instep. He cried out he was shot and a number of us
who were looking on took John up and carried him to the office of Dr. Davis, he
complained that he was bleeding to death and could feel the hot blood in his
boot. John's boot was pulled off and out dropped the ball, but there was not a
sign of blood anywhere. The only sign on his foot was a dark bruised spot where
the ball struck.
At August Court 1851 (the first term
held in Goldsboro) Mr. W. B. Edmondson had just discontinued his turpentine
distillery which stood near where is now the residence of Rev. S. H. Isler, and
there was a big open well on the lot uncovered. On Monday morning of Court,
Black Bill Smith, Elijah Cotton, Alfred Ham and Benj. Ellis all came to town
together and tied their horses to trees not far from the open well.
After tying them Black Bill turned
to the other three and said: "Boys, we will all be drunk tonight when we
start home, and if you are not careful some of you will fall in that well."
They did not get together when they started home. So just after dark old man
Cotton started on his horse, forgetting all about the well and he walked
headlong into it, the water being six or eight feet deep, but mischievous boys
of the town had thrown old logs and stumps in the well and by clinging to them
there was not much danger of drowning. Old man Cotton said that he had succeeded
in getting a log under each arm so as to keep afloat when ker-chug went the
water and he had company by someone else falling in, and as the new comer struck
the water he sang out. "In the well by God."
Cotton recognized the voice and said,
"Is that you Black Bill?" Bill replied yes and asked, "Is that
you Elijah?" who promptly replied "Yes, can you give me a chaw of
tobacco?"
Together they set up a yelling which
after a while was heard by an old negro Ennis Lane who was passing and who after
learning their situation started of for an axe to cut a pole to put in so they
could climb out on it. Smith said old Ennis was gone so long after the axe that
he came to the conclusion he had to go to old Waynesboro after it, but he
finally came and cutting down a sapling dropped one end in the well and they
succeeded in getting out.
On Boundary street opposite the
residence where J. M. Grantham used to live stands an old two story frame
building that used to stand on James street near the corner of James and
Boundary. It was built pretty soon after Goldsboro came into existence and was
called the Battle house, and sixty years ago it was said to be haunted, that
when not occupied it was no unusual thing for a light to be seen in the upstairs
windows on the south end. I heard old aunt Chelly Lanston say that on one or
more occasions she was with parties who went there to investigate the strange
light but they could never discover any haunts. And it was finally decided that
the lights only appeared on nights when room number fifteen in the Borden Hotel
was occupied and it was supposed to be the reflection of light from room fifteen
that shone in the window of the Battle house.
I read in the New York World
some days ago, that there remained only fourteen log school houses in New York.
I would be glad to know how many
there are yet in N. C. I hardly think there are many.
I doubt not that some of the
brainiest men in this country has ever produced received their early education
in log school houses. These houses had what was known as dirt chimneys, and a
door in each side, that had to stand open to give light, for none of them had a
window. The fire place would easily burn four foot wood and in cold weather
rousing fires were kept going. At the back end a log was sawed out and a plank
with hinges was attached to the log above the crack. This plank would be let
down to keep the wind out, but raised to give light to the pupils when doing
their writing lessons. The desk was a wide dressed plank arranged just under the
crack so that the light from the opening would shine on the desk. The pens were
all made of goose quills, and an applicant for teacher who did not own a pen
knife and know how to make a quill pen stood very poor show of getting a school.
He must not only be able to make a pen, but also how to repair one.
In those days there were but few
churches in the county (I mean the rural district) and these had preaching only
a month. I remember Salem, Ebenezer, Fort Chapel, Stoney Creek, Smith's Chapel,
Hood Swamp, Falling Creek, Indian Springs, Pleasant Grove, Thompson's Chapel,
Hill's School House, Providence and Nahunta.
There were but few educated
ministers. Most all were poor hard working men, who to led on their farms and
preached on Sunday's, often walking several miles to fill an appointment.
They were consecrated men going about
doing the Master's work without money and without price.
These Godly men did a great work -
the Lord blessed their labors - and the effect of their work performed so many
years ago is visible today.
Among those that I now recall was
John Smith, Thos. Moores, Shade Pate, Morris Powell, Council Scott, Wm. Vernon,
Ransom Rose, Curtis Hooks, Elisha Holland, Dickinson D[ail?], [David?] H. Maher
and J. R. Parker.
D. F. McKinne and Richard Rayner were
cattle dealers. They used to buy up nearly all the fat cattle in the county and
ship or drive them to Wilmington.
I am very sure there is but one fence
standing in Goldboro that was here at the beginning of the war. The Yankees
destroyed nearly all of them, what few they left have rotted. The fence I speak
of is the iron one around the Pridgen property next to the Catholic church.
The late W. T. Dortch had it put up I
think in 1859. I known I was clerk under J. G. Parker in the A. & N. C.
office the latter part of '59 and the early part of '60, and while I was there I
attended to the unloading of the fence.
Only a year or two ago there were
several panels of a wood fence standing at old Everettsville that I was told was
built by D. B. Everett in 1858 and when I saw it last the pickets appeared to be
sound.
The
booklet War-Time
Reminiscences and Other
Selections by J. M.
Hollowell was
contributed by Alton Parnell and digitized by Rita Korbach. Printed with
permission.
Other topics in
this series:
About
these writings and J. M. Hollowell - A Character Sketch
Some Early Recollections of Wayne County - But More
Particularly of Goldsboro
Politics
1852 - 1861
Early
Trade
Webbtown,
Graded school, Pates
Coming of the Yankees
War-Time Reminiscences
More
War-time Reminiscences: Fort Macon, April 21, 1862
Early
History of Goldsboro
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