Category: General Information

January 2, 2012 Dennis Ayers No comments exist

 

Long before English Colonists arrived in North America, the Indians traversed a hunting trail from the North to the South through the Appalachian Valley called the Great Warrior’s Path.  Much of the trail followed the river they called the Shenandoah or “Daughter of the Stars”.  After the French and Indian War in the1750s, and as Colonists expanded into new territory to the South from Pennsylvania, they essentially followed the same route, and it became known as the Great Wagon Road.  Most of the German and Scotch-Irish settlers pushing out of Pennsylvania to find new lands followed this road southward as they could not easily scale the mountains to the West.  It was by far the most heavily traveled route to the Burke frontier in North Carolina.

 

The road began at the Schuykill River Ferry in Philadelphia, and ran west to Lancaster, crossing the Susquehanna River at Harris’s Ferry and then crossing the Potomac River at Williams Ferry (Williamsport, MD). The road took settlers down through the Appalachian Valley (now called the Shenandoah Valley) essentially following Route 81 in present day Virginia. At the present location of Roanoke, the road veered eastward through a gap in the Blue Ridge Mountain and once again turned south essentially following Route 220 today, crossing the Dan River and on into North Carolina.

 

January 2, 2012 Dennis No comments exist

Long before English Colonists arrived in North America, the Indians traversed a hunting trail from the North to the South through the Appalachian Valley called the Great Warrior’s Path.  Much of the trail followed the river they called the Shenandoah or “Daughter of the Stars”.  After the French and Indian War in the 1750s, and as Colonists expanded into new territory to the South from Pennsylvania, they essentially followed the same route, and it became known as the Great Wagon Road.  Most of the German and Scotch-Irish settlers pushing out of Pennsylvania to find new lands followed this road southward as they could not easily scale the mountains to the West.  It was by far the most heavily traveled route to the Burke frontier in North Carolina.

The road began at the Schuylkill River Ferry in Philadelphia, and ran west to Lancaster, crossing the Susquehanna River at Harris’s Ferry and then crossing the Potomac River at Williams Ferry (Williamsport, MD). The road took settlers down through the Appalachian Valley (now called the Shenandoah Valley) essentially following Route 81 in present day Virginia. At the present location of Roanoke, the road veered eastward through a gap in the Blue Ridge Mountain and once again turned south essentially following Route 220 today, crossing the Dan River and on into North Carolina.

 

May 3, 2011 Dennis No comments exist

Most Americans are related to someone famous.  In fact over 100 million of us are related to at least one President of the United States. We Ayers who descend from John Ayre, the Immigrant from 1635 (see post of 16 March 2011), can claim at least two that I know about.  Gerald R. Ford, the 38th President, had Ayers connections on his mother’s side reaching back to Robert Ayer, son of John Ayre.  William Jefferson Clinton, the 42nd President, has Ayers connections on his father’s side through his grandmother, who descended from Nathaniel Ayers of Pittsylvania County, VA like us.  Also of interest, Laura Ingalls Wilder, the author of the “Little House on the Prairie” book series was a descendant of Thomas Ayer, son of John Ayre, the Immigrant.

May 3, 2011 Dennis Ayers No comments exist

Most Americans are related to someone famous.  In fact over 100 million of us are related to at least one President of the United States. We Ayers who descend from John Ayre, the Immigrant from 1635 (see post of 16 March 2011), can claim at least two that I know about.  Gerald R. Ford, the 38th President, had Ayers connections on his mother’s side reaching back to Robert Ayer, son of John Ayre.  William Jefferson Clinton, the 42nd President, has Ayers connections on his father’s side through his grandmother, who descended from Nathaniel Ayers of Pittsylvania County, VA like us.  Also of interest, Laura Ingalls Wilder, the author of the “Little House on the Prairie” book series was a descendant of Thomas Ayer, son of John Ayre, the Immigrant.

 

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 15, 2011 Dennis Ayers No comments exist

Why do they call it Stinking Creek?  Well, it turns out that there are at least a half-dozen streams named Stinking Creek across our country, with all of them arriving at their name due to some mishap in the past that caused a big stench. In the case of Stinking Creek in Campbell County, TN, it was long ago first called Sugar Creek due to the many Maple trees. The story of the name change as told by G. L. Ridenour in his book The Land of the Lake is:

“The winter of 1779-1780 was known as a cold winter. Snow began in late October. Intense cold followed for weeks. Streams froze over. Animals that had drifted to the cane breaks and timber perished in the bitter cold. When spring and summer came in the beautiful valley of cane and meadow, all the animals had perished from the cold. It was an animal charnel house. For months Indian and white hunters alike avoided the place by reason of the carrion stench. Turkey buzzards and animal scavengers that had dens in the cliffs gorged on the putrid flesh of the dead animals. From that time until the present the name of the creek and the beautiful valley has remained Stinking Creek.”

 

Stinking Creek
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 Ayers No comments exist

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.

Revolutionary War in the South