Author: Dennis

April 23, 2011 Dennis 2 comments

                                    LaFollette, TN

 Ira Ayers married Helen Derrie in LaFollette, TN on 2 January, 1942, less than one month after the bombing of Pearl Harbor caused the United States to enter WWII.  He was drafted in the Spring of 1942 and went to Georgia for induction into the Army.  He probably traveled by bus to Georgia. He didn’t know that he had left behind a pregnant wife who would bear a son by the end of 1942.-

Fort Olgethorpe, GA

 Ira was inducted at Fort Olgethorpe, GA on 13 April 1942 “for the duration of the war plus 6 months”.  He was 5 ft 10 in tall and weighed 140 Lbs. His group was asked to volunteer to go over to the Army Air Forces.  Not knowing what the best move would be, Ira decided to wait and see what most of the other soldiers would choose. To his dismay, his name was called first in alphabetical order. Without knowing what the others would do, he decided to step out and volunteer. This single decision may have saved his life as he spent the remainder of the war out of the infantry and mostly out of harms way.-

 

Wichita Falls, TX

Ira was then sent to Sheppard Air Field in Wichita Falls, TX for Basic Training in the Summer of 1942.  This is where many Army Air Forces personnel went for training.  He traveled to this station and others in the US by troop train.

   

Brookley Field, Mobile, AL

After Basic Training, Pvt Ayers was assigned to the 7th Air Depot Group, a maintenance unit at Brookley Field in Mobile, AL. This assignment may have been the result of his prewar job being listed as “Gas and Oil Man”. This is where Helen went on a bus to visit him. Then his unit received orders to go overseas.

New York, NY

Pvt Ayers sailed on a troop transport ship which left New York City on 6 August 1942. It was most probably the West Point pictured above which sailed on that day and later joined a convoy of ships from Nova Scotia to England. On the ship, the men slept in hammocks which were spaced only 2 feet apart.-

                  

Avonmouth, Bristol, UK

His troop transport ship arrived at Avonmouth on 18 August 1942. His 7th Air Depot Group was assigned to the Eighth Air Force on 26 August 1942.  From this location and others in England, the Eight Air Force ran countless bombing raids over German held territory.-

                                       

                                   Belfast, Ireland

The 7th Air Depot Group was temporarily assigned to the airfield at Langford Lodge in Ireland for just a few months in late 1942. Ira mentioned Belfast, Ireland on several occasions when remembering back.-

Warton, Lancashire, UK

The 7th Air Depot Group moved back to England in Lancashire around 29 December 1942. I remember him telling me that he was stationed near Blackpool. A post card he wrote home not long after being assigned there indicated he was in the Repair Squadron.  However, he was soon assigned as an orderly in the Officers Dining Hall.  The officers really liked him and he remained in this position for the remainder of the war. In the Dining Hall photo, he is standing at the far right side.  It was during this period that he was promoted to Corporal.-

                       

                       Leave in London

On one occasion Ira went to London on a pass, but he didn’t stay long since the city was being bombed regularly and no place was safe.

                                        

                                                   Three-Day Pass in Scotland

After the Allied invasion of Europe in 1944, three-day passes were given to the men remaining in England. Only four men at a time from a squadron were allowed to go and most headed to Edinburgh, Scotland. Many of the men had their picture taken at a studio in a Scottish kilt such as Dad is wearing here. The town was peaceful during this time, and it had a big dance hall with bands playing every night.

                         Southampton, England

After the victory in Europe in May 1945 (VE Day), he left Southampton, England on 17 November 1945 and was transported back by ship to New York.  The return ship was probably the Queen Mary, shown below, which carried 11,683 troops back on that trip. It arrived in New York on 27 November 1945.  Ira was glad to be back stateside.

Fort McPherson, GA

After return to stateside, Ira was temporarily sent to Fort McPherson, GA where he was separated from the service on 2 December 1945.  In addition to his Honorable Discharge Papers, he was given a Certificate of Appreciation from Commanding General Hap Arnold of the Army Air Corps, and a Thank You Letter from President Truman.-

                                                           

                                                                 Return to LaFollette, TN

Ira didn’t arrive back home until the first week of December of 1945, but it was in time for Christmas, and he had returned unharmed!  He had been away for 3 years and 9 months.  A country boy had traveled overseas, had seen part of the world, and had participated in a glorious victory for the USA.

April 18, 2011 Dennis No comments exist

In addition to the Cumberland Gap cutting through the mountains, heading south the next largest break in the mountains is in Campbell County, TN. In the 1890s, two LaFollette brothers arrived in the Big Creek Gap area as it was then known. Upon observing iron deposits, timber stands and abundant coal and water resources located in close proximity, they purchased over 37,000 acres and formed the LaFollette Coal, Iron and Railway Company. To attract workers for their new company, they built the town of LaFollette. As workers flooded into the new town, the population grew from 300 in 1900 to 3000 by 1920.  At its peak, the LaFollette blast furnace was one of the largest in the Southern United States and the LaFollette brothers employed some 1500 people from all backgrounds. Ironically, the business failed during the height of the roaring twenties. By then the small town of LaFollette was already firmly in place.

April 17, 2011 Dennis 1 comment

The picture below is Elihu Ayers (1819 – 1896).   It is the oldest picture of the any ancestor that I have, and it is a copy of the original “crayon portrait”.  I estimate the image was created in the 1880s when he was between 60 and 70 years old.

 

In days before color photography, many techniques were tried to enliven pictures.  To create a crayon portrait, a photographer printed a light image and then artistically enhanced it using charcoal, paint and crayon. Sometimes the photographer would update the original image or remove flaws. Crayon portraits were popular from the 1860s to 1900.  In this particular case, I don’t think the artist was very talented, as I have seen better examples elsewhere.

 

Crayon Portrait of ggGF Elihu Ayers 1819-1896

 

April 16, 2011 Dennis 2 comments

Elihu Ayers’ fourth son was named William Riley Ayers, born in 1852 in Campbell County, TN. Supposedly, he was given his middle name to distinguish him from his cousin, William Bailey Ayers, son of his father’s brother James.

Campbell County, TN 

 

At the age of 20, William married Malinda Bolton from another long-time Stinking Creek family, whom he probably met when she visited her Uncle’s family two houses away from William’s house.  He and Malinda proceeded to have a family of four boys and five girls in the next 18 years. They had a farm off of Stinking Creek Road. In 1903, the whole family almost died from typhoid fever. Their son Mitchell did die.

 

William was a quiet fellow and very easy going.  He was of medium build and had black hair and brown eyes.  He had a black mustache and a big long black beard.  All the neighbors called him Black Bill to distinguish him from all the other Bill Ayers living in the area. It’s said his hair never turned gray. Unfortunately, there don’t seem to be any existing pictures of him.

 

Bill was fortunate not to have been in any wars. He was too young for the Civil War and too old by the time some men in Campbell County went to fight in the Spanish American War.

 

Bill’s wife Malinda died in the early 1920s (no record).  At first he moped around, then one day he spruced up in a shirt with a stiff front and walked across Walnut Mountain to the small town of LaFollette to see a woman named Lizzie Gross.  He later married her around 1925, after which they lived in her house on Rose Hill Road in LaFollette.  It is believed that Bill originally met Lizzie through the Hatmaker family.

 

In 1935, William would have been in his 80s, yet his granddaughter Aileen remembers him and Lizzie walking all the way from LaFollette to visit them at their Walnut Mountain home. This was about 7 miles as the crow flies, but much longer walking through the hills. Then after the long walk, she remembers Lizzie and him having fun by jumping off the high end of the porch along with the grandchildren. She says they always had lots of fun together.

 

Black Bill Ayers died in 1940 at age 88 of an apparent stroke. Instead of being buried in LaFollette, he was buried next to his first wife, Malinda, in Hall Cemetery off Stinking Creek Road.

 

April 15, 2011 Dennis No comments exist

Bailey Ayers had four sons. By about 1840 they had all moved from Kentucky across the border into Tennessee.  The sons names were John (Jackie), Elihu (Lihu), James (Jim), and Elcanah (Cain) with our ancestor being Elihu Ayers.  They eventually homesteaded in the mountains of Campbell County in a remote area called Stinking Creek, which is a long valley with Pine Mountain on one side, Walnut Mountain on the other and the the unfortunately named stream running the length of the valley for about 20 miles.

 

The first people, other than the native Indians, to inhabit these mountains and valley lands were the long hunters like Daniel Boone and a few before him.  Liking the abundance of game, clear water and fertile land in the valleys, these hunter-explorers became the first settlers to make their homes in an untamed wilderness.

 

The first settlers actually sought out isolation, and perhaps this is why the Ayers brothers too moved to the Stinking Creek area from Kentucky which was quickly gaining population in the 1800s.  For these backwoods settlers, however, death was a constant concern. Disease and accidents were prevalent. There was a continuous threat of being killed by wild animals or even other humans. Hospitals were nonexistent, and doctors were few and far away. Children were delivered by midwives, and many infants and mothers died in childbirth. They lived in log cabins, farmed and hunted the land, and had large families.

 

Their homes were built by cutting logs by hand, and they also made crude furniture from logs. They split logs to make fence rails. It was back breaking work. Big open fireplaces were built out of rocks and used for preparing meals. They raised corn, tobacco, cotton, and potatoes as crops, and had gardens for other vegetables. They raised cattle, sheep and hogs as livestock with kept chickens for eggs. The hogs and chickens usually ran free around the farm and adjacent fields and woods. The forests furnished deer, wild turkeys, squirrels, fish and rabbits. Their clothes were hand made from the cotton and the sheep wool. They made lye from hickory wood ashes and boiled it with animal grease to make soap.

 

The Ayers brothers certainly did their part of propagating the family genes as they gave the Stinking Creek area many descendants.  For example, our ancestor, Elihu Ayers,  married Theresa (Thursey) Wilburn and together they had eleven children, eight of which were boys, and the boys that lived to adulthood in turn had large families. So, the Ayers name quickly became prominent in that part of the county with many of the same given names such as Elihu, John, James, William, etc., repeated over and over again through generations.

“Lihu” Ayers

 

In 1860, Elihu was age 41 and already had his large family.  He had a farm valued at $600 (~$15,000 in 2010) which was larger than his two next door brothers, and a personal estate of $275.  He is said to have had a high tempered nature.

 

In 1861, the Civil War became a tragedy both nationally and locally. Just prior to the outbreak of the war, Campbell County had a population of 6712 with only 61 people owning a total of 366 slaves. Since the ownership of slaves directly impacted only a few, and no one in the mountains, there was little sentiment in Campbell County for the Confederate cause. In fact, this was true for most of the counties of Eastern Tennessee, but despite their resistance to separate from the Union, they were outvoted by the rest of the state.  So, Campbell County became an island of Union sympathy surrounded by a sea of Confederate support, with many men in the county joining Union regiments formed not far away in Kentucky. Early in the war, the nearby Cumberland Gap at the border of Virginia, Kentucky and Tennessee, was thought to be of strategic importance to both sides. As a result, Campbell County suffered greatly at times in 1862 and 1863 as both armies fought and scavenged in the county as they tried to secure the Gap for their side.

 

It is totally unclear the extent to which Elihu Ayers and his various relations in the Stinking Creek area may have participated in the Civil War. Many records were lost, especially for the Confederate service. Existing Confederate and Union service records simply do not list any Ayers from Campbell County. Perhaps his age and family situation, and the fact that he was a farmer living far off the beaten path on the backside of nowhere in the mountains, allowed Elihu to somehow avoid the conflict. Interestingly, he had cousins in Virginia and in southern TN, (tracing back to old Nathaniel Ayers in VA) also named Elihu, who did in fact fight in the war for the South.

 

Elihu was a farmer his whole life.  He died at age 77 in 1896 just a year after his wife Thursey died.

 

April 8, 2011 Dennis No comments exist

Men never get lost…or at least that’s what they think!  Well, apparently this is not just a modern-day phenomenon, as it seems to have been true over the centuries. Take for example the story about the legendary wilderness pioneer and scout, Daniel Boone. When Boone was 85 years old, he was asked by a writer if he ever got lost in his long wanderings after game.  He said “No, I was never lost, but I was bewildered once for three days.

April 3, 2011 Dennis 1 comment

Folks, this is a little longer post than normal, but it contains a lot of historically important information to help put our ancestors lives in perspective. Sorry, but you gotta learn some history.

 

The Revolutionary War started in Massachusetts in 1775.  However, by 1779, the British had been slowly driven from most of the North, and in frustration shifted their hopes to military campaigns in the South.  They were hoping to take advantage of much loyalism in the Southern back-country.  In 1780, after first taking South Carolina, the British Army, commanded in the South by Lord Cornwallis, was ordered to reclaim North Carolina from the rebels and push on into Virginia.  Refer to the map at the end of this post for battle locations.

 

As mentioned earlier, Thomas Ayers had several sons in his family.  While residing in Surry County, NC, they were drawn into the war.  Although much of the time they were involved in informal, but violent, battles between loyalists and rebels, one of them also participated in two major battles with regular British troops which turned the tide of the war in the South.

 

It is not known if Thomas’ family, like his father’s, were also Quakers who were against violence. However, it is known that some Quakers, out of necessity, temporarily suspended their memberships during the war and then rejoined afterwards.

 

The extreme delay of providing pensions to veterans after the war was a sad, drawn out affair, and not until a Special Act of Congress in 1832 were pensions made available to the majority of surviving veterans. Fortunately, due to these detailed pensions applications in which they had to explain when and where they fought, we are able to get a glimpse into the lives of our Ayers ancestors during the war.  I’ll try to capture some of the significant highlights below.

 

In 1780, Thomas Ayers Sr., was about 46 years old, his son Nathaniel about 25 years old, son Elihu about 19 and son Thomas Jr. about 9.  While it would be unthinkable today, Thomas Jr., when still only a young lad, saw much violence and fighting action as he later stated in an affirmation for another pension applicant:

“I was too young to be put on a list of soldiers but I prefomed a voluntary servitude as hard as any soldier that is against Tories.  I had to run many a time when over powered by them to save myself.  I fought in my Father’s place he being old. Old and young had to fight it was a time of trouble in this country as I before stated the Tories was so bad.”

Elihu Ayers saw the most service.  He first entered as a volunteer private in the militia in January 1778.  He served a little over 12 months during which he only participated in skirmishes against the Tories (loyalists) and not against the foreigners.  He traveled the area around Surry and Wilkes counties defending Whigs (rebels) and their property from the ravages of the Tories.  During this term of service, he was present and assisted in “half hanging” William Combs whom they let off on promise of better behavior, and in hanging two other men condemned by a Court Martial.  He obtained a discharge from this term of service which was some years afterwards burned in his Father’s House.

 

Elihu entered his next tour of duty in April 1780.  Initially, he again was employed in the surrounding country to keep down the Tories and retaking and restoring property to the Whigs taken by the Tories.  Then in the Fall of 1780, he was marched to South Carolina where he participated in the famous Battle of King’s Mountain. The British, under Colonel Ferguson, fought in their traditional close-packed European fashion. The frontiersmen, however, played by different rules, moving from tree to tree picking off Ferguson’s men with their long and much more accurate frontier rifles. Many British were killed with few prisoners taken, and Elihu Ayers personally witnessed the death of Colonel Ferguson. King’s Mountain was a stunning defeat for Lord Cornwallis. After that General Washington sent one of his most experienced officers, Nathaniel Greene, to the South to drive the British out.

 

Elihu returned to North Carolina for a short furlough, but in the Spring of 1781, he was marched to the very important battle of Guilford Courthouse in Guilford County, NC, which was only 50 miles from his home in Surry County. There, he was part of the militia who panicked and ran from the scene of action. It was a terribly bloody battle from which the Americans, led by General Greene finally retreated, but it left both sides grieviously wounded. The battle was significant, however, in that Cornwallis began to fully realize that he could no longer count on the Loyalists for help, and that victories in the Carolina territory would always elude him.  Frustrated he turned his attention back to Virginia where he was also unsuccessful and the war finally ended with an American victory at Yorktown later in 1781.

 

In 1786 Elihu married Lydia Owen and they later moved to Patrick County, VA.  He finally received a pension beginning in 1834 until he died in 1844.  You can read a complete transcription of Elihu Ayers’ pension application in his own words here (R335).

 

Meanwhile, Thomas Ayers’ oldest son, Nathaniel, who is our direct ancestor, was also called into service as a militia man in August of 1780.  He too was marched to South Carolina to the Battle of King’s Mountain.  However, he did not participate in the battle, as he had been sent to a powder maker, for powder.  As it turned out, the Tories had already taken the powder maker, and his powder and the main battle was over before Nathaniel returned.  He met the victorious soldiers with the prisoners and marched with them and was held in service until some time in November or December and was discharged.

 

In February, Nathaniel was again called into service with the same militia company.  The object was to join General Greene’s forces, but they kept missing them as Greene, endeavoring to avoid an early engagement with Cornwallis kept changing his positions.  As a result, they never did join with Greene before the Battle of Guilford Courthouse. On the other hand, they frequently fell in with parties of the enemy and had little skirmishes. He was then discharged in May 1781.

 

Since Nathaniel Ayers did not complete at least six months service, he was deemed not eligible for a pension.  You can read a complete transcription of his pension application in his own words here (R336).

 

I wonder if the Ayers clan in North Carolina, was aware that some of their cousins back in New England and New Jersey also fought and helped win the Revolutionary War.

 

I heartily recommend viewing “The Patriot” movie released in 2000 starring Mel Gibson, which does a very creditable job in depicting the horrific conditions and events in the Carolinas during the Rev War.

Rev War in the South
April 1, 2011 Dennis No comments exist

Thomas Ayers, Nathaniels’ oldest son was born in Baltimore County, MD in 1734.  Growing up, he and his brothers worked alongside their farmer father and eventually moved with him to Pittsylvania County, VA about 1755.  However, Thomas initially ventured even further south into Surry County, North Carolina for a time before returning to Pittsylvania County.  There, like his father, Thomas also became a landholder, obtaining a land grant of 400 acres on Double Creek in 1758 and another 200 acres on Wolf’s Hill Creek in 1763.

 

Thomas married first Ellender (or Eleanor), last name unknown, and later Barbary (Barbara) Murphy.  He had four sons, Nathaniel, Elihu, Thomas Jr, and Joseph, along with three daughters, Elizabeth, Jane and Phoebe. In 1780, Thomas sent his son Elihu back down to Surry County to buy land, which he did, but then got caught up in the Revolutionary War (more in the next post).  He did not return home until he had served his tour, believing his father would not move on account of the Tories (British sympathizers) raging in that country so violently.  After receiving a letter from his father, Elihu returned home in 1780, and his father perhaps erroneously thinking the fighting had ended, immediately moved to the new land.

Colonial Surveryors

 

When Thomas moved to Surry County, his brother Moses also moved there with his family. In the very first U.S. census in 1790, we find a total of six Ayers households located near each other: Thomas Ayers along with two sons, Nathaniel and Elihu; and Moses Ayers along with two sons John and Samuel.

 

Of special note is that a tract of land belonging to Moses and Thomas Ayers on the Yadkin River was used to establish the town of Rockford, the original Surry County, NC, seat.

 

It seems that Thomas Ayers was always on the move.  In 1791 he again moved, this time to Patrick County, Virginia which was a newly formed county just across the VA border from Surry County. There he purchased 100 acres on Johnson’s Creek.  He died in Patrick County in November 1814. The inventory of his estate included household furniture, side saddle, cotton, wheel, tomahawk, corn, sheep, cattle, horse, loom, books and hay for a total of $185.80.

 

Surry County, NC where Thomas Ayers settled ……for awhile
March 31, 2011 Dennis No comments exist

Colonial families migrating to the Southern Virginia and North Carolina Piedmont area had to traverse rutted dirt wagon roads no more than 10 feet wide with very few routes to follow.  Before the French and Indian War in the 1750s, the preferred route going south first took them across the Potomac river via Noland’s Ferry, near what is now Point of Rocks, MD. The Carolina Road then took them east of the Blue Ridge Mountain along a trail which essentially followed Routes 15 and 29 in present day Virginia straight to the Piedmont area. The road was favored by Colonists – as it had been favored by their predecessors, the Algonquin and Iroquois Indians – because of numerous springs along its route, milder temperatures east of the mountains and relatively safe fords across major rivers and streams.