JONES - TAYLOR - MACON COUNTY, GA - BIOGRAPHY Carson Family Copyright. All rights reserved. http://www.usgwarchives.net/copyright.htm This file was contributed for use in the USGenWeb Archives by: "Ferdinand Carson" Table of Contents page: http://www.usgwarchives.net/ga/macon.htm Georgia Table of Contents: http://www.usgwarchives.net/ga/gafiles.htm Part One - The Carson Family and their Ancestors Chapter I – The Carson Family HISTORICAL BACKGROUND For at least four hundred years, the English struggled to gain control of Ireland, and by the end of the 16th century, the English were in control of all of Ireland except the northern province of Ulster. Then, early in the 17th century, the English finally gained control of Ulster. In 1606, the English set about to colonize Ulster by establishing the Plantation of Ulster, a plan by which the English confiscated land from the native Irish Catholic lords, and redistributed the land to various Protestant lords from England and Scotland, to developers called undertakers, and to certain London merchant groups. The new owners recruited Protestant laborers, craftsmen, and tenant farmers from England and Scotland to settle among the displaced native Irish tenant farmers in Ulster. The 17th century in Ulster was one of economic, political, and religious strife which continued into the 18th century. The landlords often raised the rent they extracted from the farmers, and the farmers were often evicted from the land if they couldn’t pay. Faced with high rent, uncertainty about their tenure on their farms, and high tithes they were forced to pay to the church, many Protestants whose forefathers had come from Scotland left for America. During the years between 1717 and 1776, an estimated 250,000 people emigrated from Ireland to America. These emigrants from Ireland, with Scottish roots, became known in America as the Scotch-Irish. THE EARLIEST CARSONS IN SCOTLAND AND IRELAND Early Carson genealogy is confusing, because the information is scrambled. There are many different versions, and you sort of have to choose whichever version you like, or you can make up your own as I have done. The parent-child relationships presented here seem most logical, based on the birth and death dates of the individuals, but they are by no means certain. The Carson Family began in Scotland… Oops! Let’s try that again. The Carson family may not have begun in Scotland. It’s just that the earliest known part of the Carson family was in Scotland, and even that’s not known very clearly. Perhaps the earliest known Carson ancestors were Robert Alexander Carson and his wife, Eleanor Jane McDuff. Robert Alexander Carson was born in Wilmarnock, Scotland, on June 12, 1652, and Eleanor was born in Wilmarnock on May 17 of the same year. They married on November 17, 1673. If I’m right, they had at least two children: William Calvin Carson and Alexander Harvey Carson.. Robert Alexander Carson died in Londonderry on September 14, 1724. Alexander Harvey Carson and his Descendants The following information about Alexander Harvey Carson and his descendants is not directly pertinent to the story of “our” Carsons, but it may be of some significance to other Carson researchers. Also, it shows how we are very, very distantly related to the famous “Kit” Carson – again, if I’m right. Alexander Harvey Carson, son of Robert Alexander Carson and Eleanor Jane McDuff, was born in either Scotland or Ireland about 1685. He was a Presbyterian preacher, and he appears to have been the father of Samuel Carson and William Carson. Samuel Carson, son of Alexander Harvey Carson, was born in County Down, Ireland, about 1712, and died in York County, Pennsylvania, about 1760. William Carson, the other son of Alexander Harvey Carson, was born in Ireland about 1715-1720. Now, here’s an example of how scrambled things have become: He married Eleanor McDuff, who had the same name as his grandmother! No wonder early Carson genealogy is confusing! At any rate, they married in North Carolina about 1742, and William Carson died in Rowan County, North Carolina, in 1775 or 1776. After his death, Eleanor married John Scruggs (1712-1792), a farmer and miller who lived on Third Creek about three miles from Statesville, North Carolina. John Scruggs’ first wife was Sarah Carter. The children of William Carson and Eleanor McDuff were: Lindsey Carson Andrew Carson Robert Carson Sarah Carson Eleanor Carson Alexander Carson As a youngster, Andrew Carson, son of William Carson and Eleanor McDuff, was “bound out”, or apprenticed, to Christopher Houston (1744-1837), whose name will come up again shortly. Andrew served in the Revolutionary War under General Francis Marion, and also with Baron Jean (Johann) DeKalb. DeKalb was shot while crossing a stream near Camden, South Carolina, on August 16, 1780, and taken prisoner by the British. Andrew carried him ashore and stayed with him until he died three days later. DeKalb was buried at Camden, South Carolina. Andrew Carson died June 20, 1799, and is buried at Old Pisgah A. R. P. Church Cemetery in Gaston County, North Carolina. Lindsey Carson, son of William Carson and Eleanor McDuff, was born August 1, 1754, in Rowan County, North Carolina. About 1785, he married Lucy Bradley in North Carolina, and their children were Moses Carson, William Carson, Andrew Carson, and two girls. Lindsey Carson settled at Boon’s Lick, Missouri, about 1811. Lindsey and his two sons, Andrew and Moses, rendered militia service at Fort Kinkead during the War of 1812. William Carson married a daughter of Daniel Boone. In 1796, Lindsey Carson married second Rebecca Robinson in Kentucky. She was born in Green County, Virginia, on September 16, 1778. 1818 found Lindsey Carson in Missouri. One day during August of that year, he attempted to cut down a tree. A limb from the tree fell on him and killed him. His widow married Joseph Martin on October 12, 1821, in Howard County, Missouri. Children of Lindsey Carson and Rebecca Robinson were: Elizabeth Carson (born in 1797. Robert Carson (born in 1803) Matilda Carson (born in 1805) Hamilton Carson (born in 1808) Christopher “Kit” Carson (born December 24, 1809) Nancy A. Carson Hampton B. Carson (born in 1812) Mary A. Carson (born in 1814) Sashwell C. Carson (born June 16, 1816) Lindsey Carson (born in 1818). “Kit” Carson Everybody wants to know if we are kin to “Kit” Carson. Well, here it is. Lindsey Carson, son of William Carson and Eleanor McDuff, must have admired Christopher Houston, because he named his son Christopher “Kit” Carson after Christopher Houston. “Kit” Carson ran away from home at an early age and went on to become the famous hunter and scout. An interesting post-script to “Kit” Carson’s story is that, after his death, all of his children except one were adopted by Thomas O. Boggs. The one exception, named William, was adopted by General W. T. Sherman. LEWIS AND CLARK Another son of William Carson and Eleanor McDuff, Alexander Carson, was the father of another Alexander Carson, who was a member of the famous Lewis and Clark expedition. Now that we’ve finished our side-trip down to “Kit” Carson, we’ll go back and pick up the main line of our genealogy. WILLIAM CALVIN CARSON William Calvin Carson, son of Robert Alexander Carson and Eleanor Jane McDuff, was born in either Scotland or Ireland on June 22 or June 27, 1682. He married Sarah Ann Ferguson on June 7, 1704, either someplace in Scotland or in Londonderry, Ireland. Sarah Ann Ferguson was born May 10 or May 18, 1687. Their children may have included Thomas Gibson Carson. William Calvin Carson died in Ulster, Ireland, on November 11, 1748, and Sarah Ann Ferguson died on January 16 in 1745 or 1746. THE CARSONS AND THE MCGOUGHS – FROM IRELAND TO AMERICA Thomas Gibson (?) Carson, Sr., son of William Calvin Carson and Sarah Ann Ferguson, was born in Ulster, Ireland, on May 11, 1710. There is some question whether his middle name was “Gibson”, or whether he had a middle name at all. He married Margaret McDowell in Ulster on August 12, 1734. Margaret was also born in Ulster, and she was probably a Presbyterian. Their children were supposedly: William Carson John Wesley Carson Thomas Carson David Carson Adam Carson Elizabeth Carson Joseph Carson. You’ll see why I use the word “supposedly” in a few minutes. Robert McGough was born in Ireland in 1725, and he was a blue- stocking Presbyterian. He married Sarah Matilda (or Mary) Carson, born in County Down ca. 1729, perhaps a sister of Thomas Gibson Carson, Sr. Their children were: Robert McGough, Jr. John McGough Isabella McGough William McGough Sarah McGough Mary McGough. The Carsons and the McGoughs were good friends. On June 19 or June 30, 1773, they sailed from Newry, Ireland, bound for a new life in America. I think the ship was the Elliott, under the command of John Waring. The Elliott arrived in Charleston, South Carolina, on August 18, 1773. On the internet, I found a list of ships that arrived in Charleston from Ireland in 1773, and only the Elliott sailed from Newry. Therefore, I conclude that the Carsons and McGoughs must have come aboard the Elliott, but since I have no idea whether the list of ships is complete, and since there’s no passenger list for the Elliott, it’s possible that it may have been some other ship. Most Carson and McGough family histories that you’ll see on the internet characterize the voyage as long and hazardous. However, since it took only six to eight weeks, normal sailing time in those days, I’d have to say the voyage was mostly uneventful. It couldn’t have been fun, however, because passengers in those days endured crowded conditions and poor food. Many passengers died on such voyages, but apparently none of our Carsons and McGoughs. Altogether, there were about 40 friends and relatives named Carson, McGough, McDowell, and Patterson crowded among the other passengers on the ship, and I’m sure they were very glad when they disembarked in Charleston. On October 24, 1773, Robert McGough bought 150 acres of land in the Providence Presbyterian Church Community along McCalpanes Creek in Mecklenburg County, North Carolina, from tavern keeper Patrick Jack for 60 pounds proclamation money. Considering the difficulties of travel in the Carolinas at that time, Robert McGough must have been in a real hurry to travel from Charleston to Mecklenburg County (modern-day Charlotte) and find a place to live in just two months. Apparently, Thomas Gibson Carson and his family tagged along. What was proclamation money? The British Parliement had passed a law against bringing English silver money into the colonies. As a result, there was insufficient English money to sustain commerce in circulation in the colonies, so the colonists turned to other monies, particularly Spanish gold coins. The exchange rate was established by a proclamation issued by Queen Anne in 1704. So proclamation money was foreign money accepted at the exchange rate established by Queen Anne. The McGoughs were probably well-off and well-educated, because Robert’s son William owned a library at the time of his death. After the Revolution, Thomas Gibson Carson and his family went to Jones County, Georgia, where he became sheriff and justice of the peace. He also owned a prosperous plantation there called Round Oak. Margaret McDowell died in Greene County, Georgia, on December 16, 1784, and Thomas Gibson Carson died in Greene County on July 10 or November 18, 1790, and lies buried in the family cemetery at Round Oak. THE SOUTHERN CAMPAIGN OF THE REVOLUTIONARY WAR One might think that the Carsons and the McGoughs had sailed away to America and lived happily ever after in their new home. Not so. In just a few years, they were smack in the middle of the American Revolution. So long as the war was conducted mainly in the northern colonies, the settlers on the southern frontier were not affected very much. They had their own problems, notably Indians. However, in 1778, the war in the North was approaching a stalemate, and the British believed that little more than a show of force in the South would restore the southern colonies to normal relations with England. Accordingly, British forces under Sir Archibald Campbell and General Augustine Prevost captured Savannah during the last week of 1778. Campbell completed the conquest of Georgia during the first half of 1779, and devastated much of South Carolina during April of 1779. However, he was not able to capture Charleston, so he returned to Savannah. An American attempt to retake Savannah in September of that year was repulsed, with heavy American losses. In December, the British again attacked Charleston with troops from New York under the command of Sir Henry Clinton. After a siege, the British captured Charleston in May of 1780. Having achieved his objective, Clinton returned to New York, leaving the Earl of Cornwallis in command in South Carolina. Cornwallis kept his base at Charleston, while activity in the interior centered around Camden, South Carolina. In June, the Americans appointed Horatio Gates commander of American troops in the South. Gates determined to liberate the South, starting with an attack on the British at Camden on August 16, 1780. The result was a disastrous defeat for the Americans, which temporarily terminated all organized resistance to the British in South Carolina. Without much resistance, Cornwallis moved his main army to Charlotte, Mecklenburg County, North Carolina in September, 1780. Another British force, composed of Loyalists under Patrick Ferguson, was expected to join Cornwallis at Charlotte. Ferguson’s campaign aroused the settlers. Now the war was personal. The settlers raised several small forces, which eventually coalesced into agroup of about 2000 frontiersmen who set out in pursuit of Ferguson. Ferguson waited for them at Kings Mountain, South Carolina. The settlers found him on October 7, 1780, and about 1000 of them attacked Ferguson immediately. At the end of an hour’s battle, Ferguson was dead, about 400 of his men were dead, and more than 700 were captured. Most of the soldiers on both sides were Americans -- Loyalists and Revolutionaries -- and very few British troops were involved. Learning of the disaster, Cornwallis withdrew from Charlotte to Winnsborough to await reinforcements. American guerilla forces under Francis Marion had disrupted British communications and prevented Loyalists from participating fully in the Battle of Kings Mountain. Marion had learned his guerilla tactics while fighting against the Cherokees in 1761. Marion had earlier been involved in the American attempt to recapture Savannah, and in the unsuccessful defense of Charleston. As a result of Gates’ defeat at Camden, the Continental Congress lost confidence in Gates, and asked George Washington to replace him. Washington appointed Nathanael Greene as commander of the Southern Department. Greene reached Charlotte in December, 1780. He found that the remnants of Gates’ forces were in no condition to fight the British head-on, so he decided on a guerilla-type campaign. Greene divided his army, sending half of it to Fort Ninety-Six under General Daniel Morgan, while Greene himself led the other half to the Peedee River near Cheraw, South Carolina. The position of these two American forces threatened Cornwallis’ entire line, so Cornwallis also divided his army. Colonel Banastre Tarleton led a British force against Morgan, expecting to drive the Americans northward. Meanwhile, Cornwallis tried to move into position to intercept the fleeing Americans. Unfortunately for Cornwallis, Morgan soundly defeated Tarleton at Cowpens, South Carolina, in January of 1781. Morgan then began a rapid retreat to the north and east, with Cornwallis in pursuit, about twenty-five miles behind. Upon learning of Morgan’s victory, Greene sent his army north under General Isaac Huger, while he himself joined Morgan near Beatty’s Ford on the Catawba River near the present site of Mooresville, North Carolina. Greene’s plan was to draw Cornwallis as far as possible from his supply base before engaging in battle, and so continued his retreat toward Guilford Courthouse, North Carolina, where he was joined by the other half of his army. With his entire force, Greene continued on toward Virginia. Cornwallis, eager to catch the Americans as soon as possible, burned most of his supplies so he could travel faster. The pursuit developed into a race for the river fords. At one point, Cornwallis was able to interpose his army between the Americans and the Dan River ford, but Greene had anticipated such a move, and so had prepared boats to take his army across at another point. Failing to catch Greene at the Dan River, and running low on supplies, Cornwallis went to Hillsborough, North Carolina. However, he was dissapointed there, as the citizens did not supply him with many supplies or recruits. Within a few days, Cornwallis was on the move again, partly in search of food for his army. Safely in Virginia, Greene rested his army. However, he became concerned that Cornwallis might return to his base, so Greene recrossed the Dan River about March 1, 1781. For about two weeks, Greene stayed on the move, playing for time and position while he waited for various militia reinforcements. On March 14, the last of the reinforcements arrived, and Greene moved into battle position at Guilford Courthouse. Early the next morning, Cornwallis marched his army to the long-sought engagement. Greene’s army was larger than Cornwallis, but Cornwallis’ 2000 British Regulars were better trained than the Americans. The battle lasted about 2 ½ hours, and resulted in nearly 600 British casualties and about half as many American casualties. Realizing that he had dealt the British a heavy blow, Greene withdrew his forces as the British were regrouping for another attack. Therefore, the battle is considered a British victory, but it so weakened the British that it was the beginning of the end for them. Cornwallis, now running very low on supplies, returned to Wilmington, North Carolina. Greene followed his as far as Cross Creek, where Cornwallis managed to avoid a serious engagement. Greene then broke off the pursuit, and turned to the liberation of South Carolina. Greene lost most of his battles, but each battle left the British weaker than they were before. After the Battle of Eutaw Springs, in which the Americans were led by General Francis Marion, the British were driven from all of South Carolina except Charleston. After about a month, Cornwallis left Charleston for Virginia. In August, 1781, Cornwallis established himself at Yorktown, Virginia, where the Continental Army and the French Navy forced him to surrender on October 19, 1781. After Cornwallis’ surrender, the British Prime Minister, Lord North, resigned, and his successors determined that it was no longer in Britain’s best interest to continue the war. By the Treaty of Paris of November, 1782, Britain recognized the United States as an independent nation. As you continue now with the main body of our story, look for people, places, and dates from the foregoing discussion of the Southern Campaign. Children of Thomas Gibson Carson, Sr., and Margaret McDowell – A Mystery William Carson was the eldest son of Thomas Gibson Carson, Sr., and Margaret McDowell. He was born in County Down, Ireland, on October 15, 1735. He immigrated to America with his family in 1773, and joined Captain William Fullwood’s company of volunteer militia on September 30, 1775, in South Carolina. He lived at Long Cane in Abbeville, South Carolina, south of Patterson Bridge. He was in Mecklenburg County, North Carolina, in 1782, and his name appears on the 1790 census in Long Cane. He was a member of the Cedar Springs Reformed Presbyterian Church. He married Margaret Mills, and their children were: Robert Carson William Carson Jean Carson, “Boarn July ye 7 in the yeare of our Loard 1756 it being on Thursday” Martha Carson Margaret Carson (who married a Mr. Patterson) Elizabeth Carson (June 25, 1764 – April 23, 1847, married John McGough) Mary Carson (who married a Patterson) Sarah Carson (who married a Rafferty). Jean Carson, above, died September 1, 1789, in Abbeville, South Carolina. Martha Carson, above, married John Hearst and became a great grandmother of publishing magnate William Randolph Hearst. William Carson died November 14, 1801 or April 3, 1802, in Long Cane, Abbeville, South Carolina. Now, here comes the mystery. As I said, Thomas Gibson Carson and Margaret McDowell were married on August 12, 1734, so William’s birth date of September 30, 1735, seems about right. However, the second child, John Wesley Carson, wasn’t born until May 24, 1760. That’s twenty-five years after his older brother, when their mother was 47 years old, so it’s unlikely that Thomas Gibson Carson and Margaret McDowell were the natural parents of William’s brothers and sisters. Some have suggested that William was their father, not their brother, but Thomas Gibson Carson plainly claimed all of them as his children in his will (See Appendix IX). So the true parentage of these children (except William) is a mystery which may never be solved. To place John Wesley Carson in the proper sequence among his siblings, he ought to be discussed here, but I'm going to discuss him last. Since we’re going to follow his descendants all the way down to the present time, I think things will be clearer that way. The younger Thomas Carson, third child of Thomas Gibson Carson, Sr., and Margaret McDowell, was born May 23, 1763, in County Down, Ireland. He came to America with his family aboard the Elliott in 1773, and served in the American Revolution between 1780 and 1781 in Georgia and Tennessee. He was a member of the Refugee Regiment of Richmond County raised by Colonel William Candler at the first seige of Augusta, Georgia, in 1780. The regiment moved to Tennessee, marched to the Nollichucky Settlements, and fought at King’s Mountain, Fishdam Ford, Blackstock’s Farm, and Long Cane. On April 7, 1784, Colonel Elijah Clarke testified that Thomas Carson had served in the Revolution, and was entitled to a refugee’s bounty of land. Thomas Carson married his wife, Jenny, on June 24, 1802. Their children were: John S. Carson Thomas S. Carson Ann Carson (married a Mr. Bates) Sallie Carson Elizabeth Carson Joseph Carson Thomas Carson’s father, Thomas Gibson Carson, Sr., willed him the lower part of his property in Wilkes County, Georgia, “the part by the river”, which Thomas and Jenny soon sold to Joseph Scott. In 1802, Thomas Carson was in Washington County, Alabama, where he sold David Johnston a Negro woman named Rose and her child. In 1805, Thomas Carson was in Washington County, Mississippi Territory, where he owned 640 acres of first-quality land and a house on the west side of the Tombigbee River opposite the cut-off. Thomas Carson died in Washington, Alabama, in 1807. Among other things, he left Jenny a ferry on the Tombigbee River. This ferry has an important place in history. As you may recall, Aaron Burr killed Alexander Hamilton in a duel. After Burr’s capture, the sheriff used Mrs. Carson’s ferry while escorting Burr to Pensacola. Thomas Carson’s widow, Jenny, appeared in court in Baldwin County, Mississippi, on October 25, 1815, where she claimed that hostile Indians had stolen her negro woman named Miley, and that Miley had been killed trying to escape from the Indians. Adam Carson, fourth child of Thomas Gibson Carson and Margaret McDowell, was born in 1765 in County Down, Ireland. He came to America with his family in 1773. He enlisted in the Revolutionary Army at the age of 11 or 12, and served between 1777 and 1783. He was promoted to Orderly Sergeant, and held that position from 1781 until 1783. On May 24, 1784, Adam Carson petitioned for 287 ½ acres of land in Washington County, Georgia, for his services in the Revolution. He officially resigned from the army on March 31, 1791. On June 11, 1785, Adam Carson married Sarah (or Sallie) McGough at Round Oak Plantation. Sarah was a daughter of Robert McGough, who came from Ireland aboard the Elliott, as described earlier in this chapter. Sarah was a Quaker, born ca. 1768 in County Down, Ireland. THE STATE OF TRANS-OCONEE In 1791, General Elijah Clarke led a force of land-hungry Georgians across the Oconee River against the Creek Indians. Clarke and his men, including Adam Carson, laid out a few towns and erected some forts along a 120-mile stretch along the west side of the Oconee, including Forts Defiance, Advance, and Winston. However, Georgia Troops blockaded the Oconee River, most of Clarke’s troops deserted, and on September 28, 1794, Clarke surrendered the State of Trans-Oconee. Adam Carson, one of Clarke’s captains, was arrested, but he escaped and was not prosecuted further. MORE ABOUT ADAM CARSON, HIS DESCENDANTS AND HIS SIBLINGS Adam Carson served on grand juries in 1808 and 1810, and he also served as a Justice of the Inferior Court. He was elected sheriff of Baldwin County, Georgia, on July 14, 1806, and served in that capacity for six years. He drew land in the Cherokee Land Lotteries of 1832 and 1838. Adam Carson died in Jones County, Georgia, in 1842 or 1843, and lies buried at Round Oak Plantation. During the War between the States, Adam Carson’s house was burned by General Sherman during his march to the sea. Children of Adam Carson and Sarah McGough were: William P. Carson John P. Carson (born in 1794) David P. Carson Thomas J. Carson Adam Carson James J. Carson Isabel Carson (married John H. Thomas) Malinda Carson (married James Brantley) Jane Carson Joseph J. Carson Of the children of Adam Carson and Sarah McGough, William P. Carson was killed by a runaway horse (or a team of runaway horses) while still a young man, and his orphan children drew land in the lottery of 1821 and again in the lottery of 1832. Thomas J. Carson also drew land in the lottery of 1821. James J. Carson was a Latin scholar, entered Harvard but did not finish, always enjoyed drinking, and died penniless. Joseph Carson, fifth child of Thomas Gibson Carson and Margaret McDowell, served in the American Revolution between 1777 and 1781 in Georgia and Tennessee. He served in the Minute Men Battalion and in the Refugee Battalion. He served in Picken’s Brigade as a private from August 17, 1781, until November 15, 1781. On April 7, 1784, General Elijah Clarke certified that Joseph Carson was a refugee soldier entitled to a bounty of land. About 1790, Joseph Carson served as a captain under General John Clark, raiding the Creek Indian Village of Cheehaw Town. He also served as a colonel in the First Mississippi Regiment, United States Volunteers, under General F. L. Claiborne. He fought the Creek Indians at their “holy city” in 1812, and on April 27, 1813, he forced the Spanish to evacuate their post on the Perdido River in northwest Florida. Joseph Carson, a Presbyterian, married Caroline Charlotte Green on May 16, 1814, in Adams County, Mississippi. Their only child was James Green Carson, who became a doctor. Joseph Carson died in 1817 in Washington County, Alabama, and lies buried at Old St. Stephens Methodist Church in Washington County, Alabama. Caroline Charlotte Green died in Adams County, Mississippi, after July 7, 1831. Joseph Carson probably had an illegitimate child by Patsy Brewer, who later married a Mr. Johnson and lived in Pascagoula, Mississippi. Joseph Carson’s will mentions “my natural daughter,” but does not name her. David Carson, sixth child of Thomas Gibson Carson and Margaret McDowell, was born in 1762 in County Down, Ireland, and immigrated with his family in 1773. He served in the American Revolution in Georgia, South Carolina, and Tennessee in 1780 and 1781, and received a certificate of service as a Minute Man from Colonel Elijah Clarke on April 3, 1784. In 1794, he served with his brother Adam under General Elijah Clarke in the attempt to establish the State of Trans-Oconee. David married Nancy Brantley on December 22, 1807, in Hancock County, Georgia. Their children were Thomas Brantley Carson and Joseph Matthews Carson. After David’s death in Selma, Alabama, his brother Adam refused to serve as his executor. David’s widow, Nancy Brantley, then married John Tipton, and John Tipton was appointed guardian of David’s estate. Elizabeth Carson, seventh child of Thomas Gibson Carson and Margaret McDowell, was born in 1768 in County Down, Ireland. She came to America with her family in 1773. On December 9, 1790, she married James W. McDowell in Greene County, Georgia, and their children were: Thomas McDowell Joseph McDowell Margaret McDowell After the death of James W. McDowell about 1800, Adam and David Carson were appointed guardians of James’ and Elizabeth’s children on July 31, 1800, in Wilkes County, Georgia. Elizabeth Carson subsequently married James Cowan, and by 1820, they were living in Dallas County, Alabama. James Cowan died in 1849. Now, back to John Wesley Carson, second child of Thomas Gibson Carson and Margaret McDowell. John Wesley Carson was born in County Down, Ireland, on May 24, 1760, in a long-forgotten small town near the foot of some mountains near Newry, Ireland. John sailed with his parents from Newry to America in 1773. Isabella McGough, born in Ireland on May 13 or November 8, 1764, the daughter of Robert McGough and Sarah Matilda Carson, was on the same ship. John was just fourteen, and Isabella was just nine. John and Isabella were married in Mecklenburg County, North Carolina, on June 24, 1782, and they settled in Edgefield District, South Carlina, where their eight children were born. Later, they moved to Crawford County, Georgia. Note that Isabella’s sister was Sarah McGough, who married John’s brother, Adam. John Wesley Carson served as a Minute Man in the Revolutionary War in the Georgia Militia in Colonel Elijah Clarke’s company. He received a certificate of service from Colonel Elijah E. Clarke on April 3, 1784, and he also received a refugee’s bounty of land in Georgia, even though he was not a resident of Georgia at the time. John Wesley Carson died in Jones County, Georgia, in 1823. At the time of his death, he owned thirty slaves and much land. In the lottery of 1827, Isabella McGough drew land in Jones County as the widow of a Revolutionary War soldier. Isabella McGough died in Crawford County, Georgia, and lies buried at the Carsonville Cemetery, at the site of the old Methodist Church in Carsonville, Taylor Couty, Georgia. The Children of John Wesley Carson and Isabella McGough The eight children of John Wesley Carson and Isabella McGough were: Thomas Carson (born May 13, 1785) William Carson (born August 26, 1787) Jane Carson (born September 16, 1789, married George Marshall) Isabelle (or Phoebe) Carson (born January 3 or June 5, 1793, married Luke Matthews) Pauline (or Polly) Carson (born July 5, 1796, married James Rowan Cox) John William Carson (born July 2, 1799, married Nancy Shaw) Joseph Jefferson Carson (of whom more later) Robert Carson (born May 2 or May 5, 1806, married Sarah R. Stanford) John William Carson and Robert Carson, sons of John Wesley Carson and Isabella McGough, settled Carsonville in present Taylor County, Georgia, and later moved to Texas. John William Carson died in Weatherford, Texas, November 1, 1783. Joseph Jefferson Carson, son of John Wesley Carson and Isabella McGough, was born in Edgefield District, South Carolina, August 16, 1802. He married Martha Goodwin Raines (See Chapter 2) on October 29, 1823, in Jones County, Georgia, exactly one month before her fifteenth birthday. The Reverend Henry Hooten performed the ceremony. The young couple lived in Pike County, Georgia, for a few years, and sold land there to Robert Wood on January 9, 1830. Sometime between 1830 and 1835 they moved to Knoxville in Crawford County, Georgia, where they operated a stagecoach inn. The stagecoach usually stopped at the Carsons’ for breakfast, and the driver blew a horn as he neared the inn so the Carsons would know he was approaching. When the Carsons heard the horn, they immediately set to work preparing breakfast. By 1850, the Carsons had accumulated 23 slaves, and among them was an old Negro man whose only job was to pick chickens for breakfast. Several times, Joseph Jefferson Carson was appointed as a road commissioner in Crawford County to build various roads and bridges, and on March 3, 1845, he was appointed commissioner of the Poor School in Crawford County. The Carson’s inn was near the courthouse, and the Carsons billed the county for meals for jurors on several occasions. Joseph Jefferson Carson and Martha Goodwin Raines joined Antioch Church in Talbot County, Georgia, on January 18, 1834, but were dismissed by letter on January 17, 1835. They subsequently joined Elam Baptist Church in Crawford County in 1835, and two of their slaves, Daniel and Nelson, also joined Elam Church in 1835. CARSONS ACTIVE IN CHURCH Elam (or Elim) Church in Crawford County, Georgia, was constituted on the Saturday before the fourth Sabbath in January, 1828, by the presbytery composed of Reverend Henry Hooten (the preacher who married Joseph Jefferson Carson and Martha Goodwin Raines), Reverend Jacob King, and Reverend Zachariah H. Gordon (father of General John B. Gordon). Joseph and Martha Carson were received into membership at Elim Church by letter from Antioch Church in February, 1835. In March, 1835, Joseph Jefferson Carson was on a committee to talk to Bro. William Robinson’s slave, Toby, who “was not of sound faith.” Toby was excommunicated. Joseph Jefferson Carson was also appointed delegate to a general meeting at Mt. Paran in Crawford County. In April, 1835, Daniel, colored and property of J. J. Carson, joined Elam Church by letter. In June, J. J. Carson was ordained a deacon. In July, he and Brother Benjamin White were delegates to the association. Also in July, J. J. Carson was appointed treasurer of the church. In November, 1835, J. J. Carson served as moderator pro tem. In April, 1836, a decision was made to move the church to a place on the road leading from Calhoun’s Ferry to Knoxville, not far from the bridge over Ulcahatchee Creek. Brother Carson was on the committee. The Elim Cemetery is on this spot today, but there is no sign of a church building. In April, 1837, J. J. Carson and Benjamin White were correspondents to Antioch Church. In May, 1837, J. J. Carson was on a committee to sell the old meeting house. Also in 1837, Bro. James Perryman was elected supply preacher for the remainder of 1837 and 1838. He may have been Joseph Perryman Carson’s namesake. In April, 1844, J. J. Carson was on a committee to “wait on” a list of eight people for “trace breaking”. In August of that year he was a delegate to the association. In May, 1846, Brother Thomas Carson was appointed to make a talk on missions. In November, 1847, Brother Thomas Carson asked for a letter of dismissal. In March, 1848, Joseph Jefferson Carson and wife and two negroes, Daniel and Nelson, asked for letters of dismissal. Apparently, Joseph Jefferson Carson joined the Pleasant Grove Baptist Church in Garden Valley, because in 1855 Joseph Jefferson Carson was a delegate when the Rehoboth Association accepted the Pleasant Grove Church by letter from the Columbus Association. In June, 1857, four negroes, property of Joseph J. Carson, formerly owned by Cadwell W. Raines, asked for letters of dismissal. Elim Church continued at the same location until it disolved in 1905. When they left Elim Church, many of the Carsons joined Union Church in Macon County. Union Church was first organized May 12, 1832, as a Primitive Doctrine Baptist Church, located about eight miles north of Reynolds, Georgia, at Ariel in Crawford County, which at that time included part of what is now Taylor County. Services were usually held on the fourth Saturday and Sunday of each month. In 1845, the membership moved to a site on the Corbin Place, about four miles southeast of Reynolds in Macon County. The Macon County church was named Union Church. Joseph Jefferson Carson served as clerk of Union Church 1848-1849. In 1851, Joseph Jefferson Carson served on a committee to select a place to build a meeting house. Services were held at Union Church regularly until the outbreak of the War between the States, and intermittently during the 1860’s. In January, 1870, several members of Union Church organized themselves into a new church called The Church of Christ at Reynolds, because Yankees and carpetbaggers had put ideas into the heads of the newly freed colored people, and they wanted to sit on the front seats of Union Church. In December of 1870, the remaining members of Union Church presented themselves in a body to the church at Reynolds,and were accepted. A wooden building for The Church of Christ at Reynolds was erected in 1871. For years, the men sat on one side of the church and the women on the other, with a wooden partition between them. A brick building was built 1956-1959. The church is now known as the First Baptist Church of Reynolds. THE MOVE TO MACON COUNTY In 1854, Joseph Jefferson Carson and Martha Goodwin Raines bought the plantation known as Wilburville on the River Road in the Hicks District in Northern Macon County, Georgia. The previous owners, the Wilburs, were from the North, and in the face of growing resentment against Northerners, the Wilburs sold out and went back North. All of Joseph’s and Martha’s ten children were already born by that time. Let me finish telling about Joseph and Martha, and then I’ll go back and tell about the children. When Joseph Jefferson Carson came to Macon County prospecting for a farm, he was thrown from his horse and taken to the home of Mr. Jones Hicks where he recovered from his injuries. Now, Mr. Hicks sometimes drank too much of his own fine wine, and such was the case when Joseph Jefferson Carson was ready to leave. Mr. Hicks intended to say, “I’m sorry you were hurt, sir, but I’m d--- glad you were at my house.” However, what came out was, “I’m glad you were hurt, sir, but I’m d--- sorry you were at my house!” Both men got a good laugh over that. They became neighbors and good friends, and one of Mr. Carson’s daughters later married one of Mr. Hicks’ sons. MACON COUNTY HAD BEEN SETTLED ONLY A FEW YEARS I don’t think Macon County, Georgia, in 1854, was very much like it is today. I imagine it was mostly virgin forests and swamps. Plantations were clearings surrounded by forests, and there were probably tree stumps left in many of the fields. Roads were poor. In fact, the Indians had only been gone from the area about 30 years. Remember, some of Joseph Jefferson Carson’s brothers had been actively engaged in fighting the Indians. In 1854, it had not been long since Macon County was Indian territory, even though other places further west, such as Alabama, had been settled earlier. We think of slaves engaged in raising cotton, but I’m sure their first task was clearing land. IF THE LORD’S WILLING AND THE CREEKS DON’T RISE The Flint River, which forms the southwestern border of Crawford County, was the border between Georgia and the Creek Indian Nation. As a matter of fact, in order to travel through the Creek Nation, one had to obtain a passport, signed by the Governor of Georgia. So you can see that Crawford County was on the frontier in the early 1800’s, and Macon County was still new when Joseph Jefferson Carson went there in 1854. There were frequent clashes between the settlers and the Indians, and some have suggested that the expression, “If the Lord’s willing and the Creeks don’t rise,” refers not to bodies of water, but to the Creek Indians. In 1802, Georgia ceded its claim to the Mississippi Territory to the Federal Government in exchange for a promise that the United States would buy all the Indian land in Georgia for the state. The land between the Flint River and the Chatahoochee River remained Indian territory until 1821, when President Monroe negotiated with the chiefs of the Creeks, and the Creeks ceded nearly half their land to Georgia. However, the Georgians became impatient with the Federal Government, and, when it appeared that the Federal Government would not evict the Indians by force, the Georgians decided to take action themselves. On February 12, 1825, the State of Georgia made a treaty with Chief William McIntosh and several others at Indian Spring, Georgia, even though McIntosh probably didn’t have the support of the majority of the Indians and the whites knew it. This treaty ceded all of the remaining Indian land to Georgia. Under the Treaty of Indian Spring, the Creeks had one year to leave the area, and received land west of the Mississippi and a large sum of money to compensate them for their moving expenses. The treaty was ratified by the Federal Government. William McIntosh, who was a half-breed cousin of Georgia Governor Troup, received two small reservations – one at Indian Spring, the other near present-day Oglethorpe, Georgia. However, the Shawnee Chief, Tecumseh, had traveled through the Southeast, urging the Indians to resist further encroachment by the whites. He argued that the whites were not to be trusted – after all, hadn’t they crucified their own God? Partially because of Tecumseh’s influence, many of the Creeks disapproved of the Treaty of Indian Springs, and they murdered William McIntosh on April 29, 1825. On January 24, 1826, President Adams and a Creek delegation made a new treaty at Washington, DC. Among other things, the Treaty of Washington voided the original treaty and gave the Indians two years to leave the area, and the Indians ceded most, but not all, of their land to the whites. Governor Troup and the Georgia Legislature continued to recognize the original treaty, and sent surveyors into the area in preparation for settlement by the whites. The Indians considered this to be a violation of the treaty, and President Adams ordered the Governor to stop the survey. Troup refused, and Adams threatened to stop the survey by force if necessary. Governor Troup ordered the Georgia Militia to prepare to repel the federal invasion, and the entire nation watched to see whether the Governor or the President would back down first. In the end, it was the President who flinched. Adams said that a bunch of Indians were not worth going to war over. The Creeks were gone (to Arkansas) by 1827. The dispute between Governor Troup and President Adams was probably the beginning of States-Rights sentiments in Georgia. THE CARSON PLACE In 1859, the Carsons sold the Wilbur place (Wilburville) and purchased the Troutman place from Hiram B. Hicks. The Troutman place, which became known as the Carson place, was approximately 2000 acres on the west bank of the Flint River in northern Macon county. the house, known as the Carson house, was already built at that time. JOSEPH JEFFERSON CARSON, DELEGATE TO THE STATE CONVENTION In 1861, Joseph Jefferson Carson was a delegate to the State Convention in Milledgeville, Georgia. Milledgeville was the state capital at that time, and South Carolina, Florida, Alabama, and Mississippi had already ceceded. On January 19, 1861, J. J. Carson reluctantly voted for cession from the Union, and the Ordinance of Secession passed by a vote of 208 to 99. There are some who argue that states rights, not slavery, was the main issue in the War between the States. I disagree. The dissatisfaction of the South with the Federal Government may have started over states rights and several other issues, but by 1860, the main dispute was over slavery. White Southerners were afraid of losing their source of economic prosperity. The Carson House – water color by Emily Harp Despite what Abraham Lincoln may have thought, the Confederate States of America was an independent country, completely separate from the United States of America. The Confederate States had their own territory, president, congress, money, post office, army, ecomomic system, and social customs. A civil war is a war within one country, and since the War between the States was a war between two separate countries, it is not called the Civil War in this book. Die-hard Southerners may call it the War between the States, the War for Southern Independence, the Late Unpleasantries, the War of 1861-1865, or any of several other names, but never the Civil War. That’s a Yankee term. A New Stepmother? Martha Goodwin Raines died of epilepsy on June 21, 1862. I was very surprised to come across the following in a letter from John Thomas Carson to his wife, Saphronia. John Thomas Carson was a son of Joseph Jefferson Carson and Martha Goodwin Raines. The letter was written on November 13, 1862, while John Thomas Carson was serving in the Confederate Army near the Shenandoah River in Virginia. He wrote, “Glad to learn that the children are better pleased with their new mother than they expected. I hope she will become a mother indeed to all of us. Let each one strive to render her happy as well as to add to Pa’s happiness. I hope that he may spend the remainder of his days as comfortable and happy as it be possible for a companion and dutiful children to render him…. “I learn that our Mother is an amiable lady, one worthy of your esteem in every way. Therefore let us be content and accept her as a Mother. Give Sister Mary my love and say to her, ‘Love our Stepmother’. Bobby must also be kind unto her and try and do all he can to render her happy….” New mother? Stepmother? Who was he talking about? It turns out that Joseph Jefferson Carson had a second wife. He married Mrs. Mary Laura Lamar Slappey on October 21, 1862, in Houston County, Georgia. (See Appendix X) Mary Laura Lamar Slappey was born about 1825, the daughter of John Lamar and Isabella Stewart of Richmond County, Georgia, who married about 1824 in Houston County, Georgia. Mary Laura Lamar Slappey was the widow of William Frederick Slappey (October 9, 1819 – September 29, 1852). Mary and William Frederick Slappey had four children, who became step-children of Joseph Jefferson Carson. They were: Emily Slappey Isabella Slappey Reuben Slappey William (?) Augustus Slappey William Frederick Slappey was the second of five sons born to Jacob Class Slappey and Elizabeth Hiley. Jacob Class Slappey was born in 1790 in Marshallville, Georgia, and died in 1839. His parents were John George Slappey (born in 1749 in Orangeburg, South Carolina, died in 1825) and Henrietta Class (born about 1762). John George Slappey’s parents were Hans George Slappey (born about 1725 in Switzerland) and Magdalena Huber (born about 1727 in Orangeburg, South Carolina). William F. Slappey lies buried in the Hiley Slappey Cemetery in a field on the south side of Dole Road, west of Highway 49 about four miles south of Fort Valley, Georgia, just inside Macon County. His headstone has been moved twice – first to the north side of Dole Road, and then to Oaklawn Cemetery in Fort Valley, Georgia. The original Hiley-Slappey Cemetery has been plowed over. Joseph Jefferson Carson and Mary Laura Lamar Slappey had no children of their own. I suspect that the marriage of Mary Laura Lamar Slappey and Joseph Jefferson Carson may not have been a happy marriage. Joseph Jefferson Carson died at the home of his son-in-law, Henry Terell Jordan, on April 23, 1875, and the question arises, why didn’t he die in his own home, attended by his wife? In 1880, Mary Laura Lamar Slappey was living by herself on her own farm near her sons Reuben Slappey and William Augustus Slappey near Fort Valley, Georgia. Again, the question arises, why didn’t she continue living on the Carson Place? Children of Joseph Jefferson Carson and Martha Goodwin Raines Joseph Jefferson Carson and Martha Goodwin Raines had ten children. They were: John Thomas Carson Emily Jane Carson Cadwell Raines Carson James Alston Carson Martha Goodwin Carson Sara Isabelle Carson Joseph Perryman Carson Annie Elizabeth Carson Mary Jane Carson Robert Hall Carson What happened to these ten children? All four sons served the Confederacy in the War between the States, and only one came home alive. The bodies of the other three were brought home in wagons by faithful servants, and buried in the family cemetery. We’ll discuss each child, and some of his or her descendants, before moving on to the next child. JOHN THOMAS CARSON AND HIS DESCENDANTS John Thomas Carson, eldest child of Joseph Jefferson Carson and Martha Goodwin Raines, was born November 11, 1825. He married Susan Saphronia Howe of Crawford County, Georgia, the daughter of Robert Howe, Jr., and Susanna Gray, on February 2, 1847. Susan Saphronia Howe was born May 17, 1826, and died in Columbus, Georgia, on September 15, 1898. Her father, Robert Howe, Jr., was the son of Robert Howe, who served as a lieutenant in the Revolutionary War. His wife, Susanna Gray, was the daughter of Archibald Gray and Cynthia Armour. Cynthia Armour was the daughter of John Armour and Nancy Caldwell of Greene County, Georgia. Robert Howe, Jr., and Susanna Gray were married on December 17, 1807. John Thomas Carson served as clerk of the First Baptist Church of Reynolds, Georgia, in 1861 and 1862. John Thomas Carson was appointed a first lieutenant in Company C, 12th Georgia Regiment, in the Confederate Army. This Company was known as the Davis Rifles. He was promoted to Captain on May 8, 1862, and to Major on June 9, 1863. He was captured at Spotsylvania Courthouse on May 12, 1864, held prisoner at Fort Delaware, and released (exchanged) in July, 1864. He was wounded three times at Winchester, Virginia, on September 19, 1864, and died in a hospital in Lynchburg, Virginia, on September 30, 1864. When news of her husband’s death reached them, Susan Saphronia Howe and her son Albert Alphonso Carson set out in a wagon to bring her husband’s body home. In route, they met their husband and father who was being brought home by a faithful old family servant named Mose. John Thomas Carson had a Masonic funeral. I suppose that Mose must have had numerous opportunities to escape from his slavery, and the fact that he chose to bring the body home all the way from Lynchburg illustrates the bond of trust and loyalty that existed between the slaves and their masters – in some cases, at least. The grave of John Thomas Carson in the Carson Cemetery is marked by an obelisk, about eight feet tall. On one side of the obelisk, the artist carved a likeness of John Thomas Carson’s sword. That sword was made in Germany by W. Walscheid and imported by the Confederacy from the city of Solingen. It’s a real sword, made for fighting, not just for dress. Children of John Thomas Carson and Susan Saphronia Howe were: Albert Alphonso Carson Martha Adelia Carson Robert Alston Carson Marcia Elbertina Carson Martha Susan Carson Lula Caroline Carson John Thomas Carson, Jr. Albert Alphonso Carson, son of John Thomas Carson and Susan Saphronia Howe, was born March 28, 1849. He married Mrs. Sarah Welch Bethune on June 15, 1875. He became a lawyer, and he died in Columbus, Georgia, about 1912. Children of Albert Alphonso Carson and Sarah Welch Bethune were: Mabel Claire Carson (born March 28, 1876) Willis Gordon Carson (born October 2, 1878) Caroline “Carrie” Rochelle Carson (born September 13, 1879) Robert Alston Carson, son of John Thomas Carson and Susan Saphronia Howe, was born January 18, 1853. He married Ida Brannon on June 12, 1877. They had one son who died young. Marcia Elbertina Carson , daughter of John Thomas Carson and Susan Saphronia Howe, was born December 15, 1854. She married William Ben Hinton on February 21, 1877, and was a member of the First Baptist Church of Reynolds, Georgia.. Children of William Ben Hinton and Marcia Elbertina Carson were: Mary Albert Hinton (born February 25, 1879) Ben Hinton Carson Hinton Martha Susan Carson, daughter of John Thomas Carson and Susan Saphronia Howe, was born January 5, 1857. She married Lewis Bess Hicks, son of Jones Hicks, on December 24, 1878. They had one son, Herman Milton Hicks, born June 11, 1881. Lula Caroline Carson, daughter of John Thomas Carson and Susan Saphronia Howe, was born December 13, 1858. She married Charlton Thomas Waters on September 17, 1879. They were members of First Baptist Church of Reynolds, Georgia, and they were the grandparents of author Carson McCullars. Lula Caroline Carson died November 21, 1923. Children of Lula Caroline Carson and Charlton Thomas Waters were: Mary Helen Waters (September 2, 1880 – June 12, 1892) Thomas Elam Waters (February 21, 1882 – 1939) Martha “Mattie” Waters (born April 4, 1885) Gorham Carson Waters (November 5, 1888 – April 7, 1908) Vera Margaret Waters (born June 4, 1890) John Thomas Carson, Jr., son of John Thomas Carson and Susan Saphronia Howe, was born December 29, 1861. He married Bette Wallace on July 19, 1885. Their children were: Bessie Carson Forrest Alphonso Carson John Thomas Carson Wallace Carson (December 14, 1892 – April 4, 1946, seaman in the U. S. Navy, buried at Butler, Georgia) Lillie Carson (January 21, 1898 – October 16, 1918, buried at Butler, Georgia) Robert Carson Daniel Carson Emily Jane Carson Emily Jane Carson was the second child of Joseph Jefferson Carson and Martha Goodwin Raines. She was born November 8, 1827, and died June 4, 1833. Cadwell Raines Carson Cadwell Raines Carson was the third child of Joseph Jefferson Carson and Martha Goodwin Raines. He was born May 2, 1830, and died in June 10, 1833, just six days after his sister, Emily Jane Carson. James Alston Carson James Alston Carson was the fourth child of Joseph Jefferson Carson and Martha Goodwin Raines. For the sake of clarity, I’ll discuss him after the other children. Martha Goodwin Carson Martha Goodwin Carson was the fifth child of Joseph Jefferson Carson and Martha Goodwin Raines. She was born December 1, 1834. She joined Union Church in 1849, along with her brother, James Alston Carson. On April 16, 1851, she married Henry Terrel Jordan (December 25, 1825 – March 5, 1896). Martha Goodwin Carson died of jaundice at her father’s home February 1, 1854, at the age of 20, leaving two children – Laura Isabella Jordan and William C. Jordan. Laura Isabella Carson married Oliver Jerome Massee (1849 – 1915). Sarah Isabelle Carson Sarah Isabelle Carson was the sixth child of Joseph Jefferson Carson and Martha Goodwin Raines. She was born May 13, 1837. After the death of her sister, Martha Goodwin Carson, Sarah married Martha’s widower, Henry Terrel Jordan, on June 14, 1855. After the death of Joseph Jefferson Carson, Henry Terrel Jordan and Sarah Isabelle Carson moved to Texas. Sarah Isabelle Carson died in Fort Worth. Children of Sarah Isabelle Carson and Henry Terrel Jordan were: Jimmie Jordan (1857 – 1858) Mattie Jordan (1858 – 1858) Walter T. Jordan (born in 1861) Scott Jordan Henry Jordan (born in 1865) Mary E. Jordan (born in 1867) Edwin Jordan (born in 1869) Joseph Perryman Carson Joseph Perryman Carson was the seventh child of Joseph Jefferson Carson and Martha Goodwin Raines. He was born June 1, 1839. He graduated from Mercer University in 1860 with an AB degree and was a member of Reynolds Masonic Lodge #255. He served as clerk of First Baptist Church 1861-1862. He enlisted in the Confederate Army as a private on April 29, 1861. After 12 months, he was elected Junior 2nd Lieutenant. Soon he was promoted to 1st lieutenant, and in March, 1863 he became captain. He was wounded at Sharpsburg, MD, the Wilderness, Winchester, VA., and twice during the siege of Petersburg. The following story was told by Marcia Elbertina Carson Hinton. It seems that, during the War, Major John Thomas Carson became concerned about the education of his children, so he hired a tutor, a Miss Charlotte Keith Briggs of Greene County,Virginia, who was seeking employment as a governess. Major Carson arranged for his younger brother, Lt. Joseph Perryman Carson, to get a furlough for the purpose of escorting Miss Briggs from Richmond to the Carson home in Georgia. Lt. Joseph Perryman Carson did not want to escort a school teacher to Georgia. He obeyed orders, but he did not care how he looked, and he did not bother to change clothes or shave when he went to meet her. Imagine his surprise when the school teacher turned out to be a beautiful 25-year-old. Miss Briggs took one look at the dirty soldier and made up her mind not to go anywhere with such a man. Joseph Perryman Carson told her to think it over, and he’d come back later. That evening, the calling card of “Lieut. Joseph Perryman Carson” was delivered to her room, and when she came downstairs, a handsome young officer in a new uniform and new boots was waiting for her. She could hardly believe it was the same man she had seen that morning. She changed her mind and went to Georgia with Lt. Carson. As one might guess, Joseph Perryman Carson and Charlotte Keith Briggs were married on January 15, 1864 in Macon County, GA. Rumors that they were married at the Orange County Courthouse in Virginia seem to be untrue, as there is no record of their marriage there. Charlotte Keith Briggs was born about 1835, and attended the Winchester, VA, Female Academy when she was fifteen. The Academy was operated by Mr. Joseph Baker, a Baptist minister. The now-defunct Chapter 15 of the United Daughters of the Confederacy was named for her. Captain Joseph Perryman Carson, CSA, was wounded in the abdomen at the Battle of the Wilderness on May 5, 1864, and in the left arm at the Battle of Winchester, Virginia, on September 19, 1864. FORT STEDMAN General Robert E. Lee was committed to the defense of Petersburg, Virginia, and the Confederate capital of Richmond. By March of 1865, things were looking bleak for the Confederacy. General Sherman had completed his march through Georgia and was headed for Petersburg to join forces with General Grant’s Army of the Potomac. General Jubal Early, operating in the Shenandoah Valley, had failed to draw significant numbers of federal troops away from Richmond and Petersburg. Union troops surrounded Petersburg on three sides, and Confederate defenses had been stretched thinner and thinner as Union forces gradually encircled Petersburg. Confederate rail lines leading to Petersburg had been destroyed by the Union army, so that supplies had to be brought in by wagons. Contrary to popular suppositions, there was never a shortage of military supplies for Lee’s army, but there was a shortage of soldiers. Confederate forces in Petersburg numbered about 50,000, a sizeable army, but they were facing a Federal army of about 200,000. Lee saw that the South’s last hope lay in escaping from Petersburg and stopping Sherman from joining forces with Grant. Lee’s youngest corps commander was thirty-three-year-old General John B. Gordon, who owned a farm in Taylor County, Georgia, just north of the Carson Place in Macon County. On March 4, 1865, Lee summoned Gordon to his headquarters and asked Gordon to devise a plan to escape from Petersburg. Gordon presented his plan to Lee on March 22. The attack would be made against Fort Stedman, and would be made at night. The first step was for special squads to open avenues through the Confederate defenses, so the soldiers could get out into the no-man’s land between the two armies. The plan then called for handpicked men to infiltrate the Union lines, overpower the advance Union pickets, and clear a pathway through the Federal obstructions. Next, fifty men with axes would enlarge the opening through the Federal obstructions. Then, three storming parties of 100 men each were to attack the Federal line. One storming party would capture Fort Stedman, while two other storming parties would capture Battery X north of Fort Stedman and Batteries XI and XII south of Fort Stedman. After Fort Stedman and Batteries X, XI, and XII were captured, three more groups of 100 men each were to press through the gap and capture certain crucial places in the rear of the Federal lines. These groups were to use local guides to help them find their objectives in the dark. Finally, the bulk of Gordon’s 15,000 men would rush through the gap to the Union rear, cutting communications and generally raising havoc. Lee approved this plan on March 23, 1865. Serving as a captain of Company I, 4th Regiment of Georgia Infantry under General John B. Gordon, Joseph Perryman Carson had a hundred sharpshooters under his command. On the night of March 24-25, 1865, Captain Carson and his men charged Fort Stedman, commanded by Edward W. Rogers under General McLaughlin. Fort Stedman was named for Connecticut Colonel Griffin A. Stedman, who had been killed in August, 1864, while reconnoitering the site. Fort Stedman was situated on a little hill, and surrounded by three rings of obstructions. The first ring was composed of skinned pine logs about eight inches in diameter. Holes had been bored in these, and sharpened spikes inserted. These logs, about 25 feet long, had been crossed and recrossed and fastened with wire. About 40 steps outside the first ring was the second ring, composed of tangled brush piled up. The third ring was composed of fence rails stuck in the ground with their sharpened ends slanted outward. The fort itself was surrounded by a moat four feet deep and half full of water. The dirt from the moat had been piled up on the inside edge of the moat, so that from the bottom of the moat to the top of the dirt pile was thirteen feet. The fort was manned by 500 Yankee soldiers, armed with eight cannons and numerous rifles. Under cover of darkness, Captain Carson and his men took this fort, killing many of the defenders and capturing the rest. The other two storming parties also captured Batteries X, XI, and XII and captured General McLaughlin, but the next three storming parties became separated from their guides in the confusion and darkness and failed to reach their objectives. It was not until the battle was over that Captain Carson learned that his younger brother, Robert Hall Carson, had been killed in the battle. The next morning, the Yankees advanced with superior forces, and Captain Carson was forced to withdraw. He carried the body of his brother back to the Confederate line on his shoulders. F. T. Sneed of Montezuma, GA, was wounded during the withdrawal. Captain Carson’s horse was shot through the nose, but survived, and served Captain Carson for many years after the war. Captain Carson was forced to bury Robert Hall Carson near the scene of the battle, but reburied him in the Carson Cemetery in Macon County, Georgia, probably in the Fall of 1867. Captain Joseph Perryman Carson was wounded again, this time at Petersburg, VA on April 3, 1865. He was taken to Receiving and Wayside Hospital Number 9 in Richmond, where he was captured on April 3, 1865. He was transferred to Stuart Hospital in Richmond on April 19, 1865, and was paroled on April 20, 1865. Confederate losses at the Battle of Fort Stedman were never officially tallied. Unofficial estimates range from 800 to a little over 4,000, with the figure of 2,681 coming from a careful study made after the end of the war. Union losses were put at 1,044 during the Battle for Fort Stedman itself, and another 690 in related actions against the Confederate lines later in the day. John B. Gordon went on to become United States Senator from Georgia three times, and Governor of Georgia for four years. In 1904, a Union veteran of the Battle of Fort Stedman asked the elderly John B. Gordon why the assault on Fort Stedman had failed. Gordon had been expecting reinforcements which never arrived. He said, “Why did we fail? I’ll tell you why. God did not intend that we should succeed. He did not intend that the Southern Confederacy should be an accomplished fact. He caused the axle of the tender of the last section of the train that was to bring troops from north of Richmond to break, thus delaying that entire body of troops from reaching us. Had they arrived I believe that we should have captured City Point [Grant’s headquarters] that morning. God did not intend that we should succeed. He was in command.” In Taylor County, Georgia, much has been made of the idea that General Gordon was a neighbor of the Carsons. While it is true that Gordon did own Beechwood Plantation on the River Road, about four miles north of the Carson Place, Beechwood was a white elephant for Gordon, and he used it mostly as a sort of vacation retreat. Gordon was never a full-time planter like the Carsons. Gordon was in various businesses, such as coal mining in North Georgia, the practice of law in Atlanta, the insurance business and politics in Atlanta and Washington, and, during the last year of his life, as a lecturer. While Gordon was certainly a Confederate war hero and a great political leader, it is difficult to understand why Gordon is so honored today as an important citizen of Taylor County. It has been claimed that he capture of Fort Stedman was the last Confederate victory in the war. Not true. That dubious honor goes to the Battle of Dinwiddie Courthouse, fought on March 31, 1865. The war ended with Lee’s surrender on April 9th, 1865. ARSON AND A WALKING-STICK Upon his return from the war, Captain Carson settled on his plantation. An ex slave, Charlotte Raines, set fire to Captain Carson’s house. For this, Captain Carson gave her a sound thrashing with his silver-headed walking stick. The Freedman’s Bureau arrested, tried, and convicted him and sentenced him to a term in the Atlanta Penitentiary. En route, Captain Carson fell in with a carpet-bagger Jew, to whom he paid $300 and secured his freedom. In 1869, Joseph Perryman Carson was elected one of the first Road Commissioners of Macon County, and in his later years, he was active in the local Democratic Party. Joseph Perryman Carson performed burial rites for Mr. Haynes Dwight at Little Vine Church, about a mile south of Reynolds, in January, 1887. Joseph Perryman Carson died March 25, 1889 in Reynolds, Georgia, after an illness of three weeks. During a visit to Monacacy Battlefield near Gaithersburg, MD in 2000, Charles Ferdinand Carson Jr. met a Mr. Gary McLaughlin, a member of Friends of the Monocacy Battlefield. Sometime after their meeting, Mr. McLaughlin wrote to Mr. Carson, saying, “[Captain Carson] was not at the Worthington House where I spoke to you, but up at the Jug (?) Bridge on the Baltimore Pike during the Battle of Monocacy. He was in Cook’s Brigade, (unreadable) Division, and they were engaged in skirmishing with the Ohio troops of General Erastus Taylor and Colonel Allison Brown. “Ironic that his death date is the same as the Battle of Fort Stedman….” Children of Joseph Perryman Carson and Charlotte Keith Briggs were: Ophelia G. Carson (April 9, 1865 – Oct. 18, 1886) Raines Carson (July 22, 1867 – Oct. 16, 1881) Beulah Carson (1869- ) Homes Carson (1872-1873) Briggs Carson (1872- ) Keith Carson (born 1877) Joseph Carson (born 1879 or 1880). Briggs Carson, Beulah Carson, and Joe Carson joined the First Baptist Church of Reynolds, Georgia in 1886. Briggs Carson lived at Tifton, Georgia, and Beulah Carson married a Mr. Bivins and lived at Lumpkin, Georgia. A PREMONITION Ophelia G. Carson, daughter of Joseph Perryman Carson and Charlotte Keith Briggs, predicted her own death while she was in perfect health, about four weeks before she died on October 18, 1886. She named her own pall-bearers, and told her sister the dress she wanted to be buried in. As far as possible, her wishes were carried out. Annie Elizabeth Carson Annie Elizabeth Carson, eighth child of Joseph Jefferson Carson and Martha Goodwin Raines, was born January 30, 1841. On March 31, 1857, Annie Elizabeth Carson married Francis Marion Bryan (May 11, 1833 – Aug 1, 1897), whose property adjoined the Carson Plantation on the River Road, now known as the John B. Gordon Road. Francis Marion Bryan and his wife were members of First Baptist Church of Reynolds, Georgia. She died June 6, 1902. Apparently, they had no children. Francis Marion Bryan was a brother of Melissa Bryan, who married James Alston Carson. Mary Jane Carson Mary Jane Carson, ninth child of Joseph Jefferson Carson and Martha Goodwin Raines, was born December 24, 1842. When Mary Jane Carson was about ten years old, she fell into Tote Over Creek while attempting to cross the creek on a foot-log and would have drowned had she not been saved by a negro man working nearby. Mary Jane Carson graduated from Tift College, called Munroe Female College at that time. On December 2, 1863, she married Aretus William Hicks (born March 2, 1836). The Hicks home near Reynolds, GA, was destroyed by fire on December 17, 1920. Mary Jane Carson died March 15, 1929. Once, during the War between the States, Union soldiers from Sherman’s army rode up to the porch where elderly Joseph Jefferson Carson and his daughter, Mary Jane Carson Hicks, were sitting. The soldiers threatened the life of Mr. Carson, who replied, “You will not rob me of many years.” The soldiers left them unharmed, taking only his favorite horse. These Union soldiers were probably men from Wilson’s Raiders, a calvary branch of Sherman’s army. They captured Columbus, Georgia, and then headed for Macon. Macon surrendered without much resistance because the city had received word of Lee’s surrender. Then the Raiders headed to Reynolds, Georgia, and then down the River Road, now called the John B. Gordon highway, raiding supplies as they went. They camped at several Flint River ferry crossings in Macon County in an attempt to intercept Confederate President Jefferson Davis, who was fleeing from the Federals. The Raiders did capture Davis near the Ocmulgee River southeast of Macon County. Children of Mary Jane Carson and Aretus William Hicks were: Alice Hicks Dan Hicks Robert Hicks Katie Hicks Julian Gray Hicks Lizzie Hicks Mattie Hicks Robert Hall “Bob” Carson Robert Hall “Bob” Carson, born April 2, 1846, was the tenth child of Joseph Jefferson Carson and Martha Goodwin Raines. He enlisted as a private in Company E, 12th Georgia Regiment on April 1, 1864. He was wounded at The Wilderness May 6, 1864. He was transferred to Company I, 4th Georgia Regiment, and served as a courier for Generals Dole and Cook. He was killed in the charge on Fort Stedman, March 25, 1865. Not quite 21 years of age at the time of his death, he never married. James Alston Carson Now, let’s discuss James Alston Carson, whom we skipped over several pages ago. James Alston Carson, son of Joseph Jefferson Carson and Martha Goodwin Raines, was born September 10, 1832. He married Melissa Bryan (See Chapter 6) on January 29, 1856. She was born May 11, 1838. James Alston Carson joined Union Church in Macon County, Georgia, in 1849, and served as its clerk 1861-1862. He purchased 101¼ acres of land in Macon County, Georgia from Egbert W. Allen on August 22, 1859, for $300, and additional land from his father for $3500 on March 16, 1860. He enlisted as a private in Company C of the Georgia 12th Regiment on May 1, 1862, was promoted to third sergeant June 15, 1862, and to second sergeant July 8, 1862. He was wounded, date and place unknown, and he died of billious fever in a hospital in Lynchburg, VA, on August 27, 1862. When northern troops came through Macon County, Melissa Bryan, wife of James Alston Carson, sat up all night by a window with a gun to protect her family. Melissa Bryan died December 24, 1912. Descendants of James Alston Carson and Melissa Bryan Children of James Alston Carson and Melissa Bryan were: Nathan Bryan Carson Joseph Jefferson Carson James A Carson Minnie Melissa Carson. Charles Averette Carson Nathan Bryan Carson, son of James Alston Carson and Melissa Bryan, was born December 14, 1856. He graduated from Mercer University in 1878. He was a member of First Baptist Church of Reynolds, Georgia, and he married Wilhelmina Woodfin (1862- 1945) on December 8, 1880 in Athens, Georgia. Nathan Bryan Carson and Wilhelmina Woodfin moved to Kissimmee, Osceola County, Florida, where Nathan Bryan Carson died before May, 1926. Children of Nathan Bryan Carson and Wilhemina Woodfin were: Helen Carson (born November 11, 1881) William Woodfin Carson (born February 22, 1884) Mary Carson Nathan Carson Marion Bryan Carson (born August 5, 1886) Joseph Jefferson Carson, son of James Alston Carson and Melissa Bryan was born on April 12, 1858. More will be said of him later. James A. Carson, son of James Alston Carson and Melissa Bryan, died January 11, 1864, aged 4 years, 6 months, and 21 days. Minnie Melissa Carson, daughter of James Alston Carson and Melissa Bryan, was born July 18, 1860. She joined the Church of Christ at Reynolds in August, 1877. On December 12, 1888, she married Reverend John James Farmer. Minnie Melissa Carson died January 12, 1924. Children of Minnie Melissa Carson and John James Farmer were: James Carson Farmer (born July 23, 1890) Marion Arnall Farmer Charles Luther Farmer. Charles Averette Carson, son of James Alston Carson and Melissa Bryan, was born November 10, 1862, and graduated from Mercer University in 1880. He was valedictorian of his class. He married Annie Bryan on January 5, 1887. Later they moved to Kissimmee, Florida where he was a banker. Charles Averette Carson became a state senator and president of the state Baptist Convention. Charles Averette Carson died in 1920. Joseph Jefferson “Joe” Carson, second son of James Alston Carson and Melissa Bryan, had the same name as his grandfather. He was born in Macon County, Georgia, April 12, 1858. He attended Mercer University in Macon, Georgia, joined the Kappa Alpha fraternity in 1875, was president of the Phi Delta Literary Society during 1877, and graduated from Mercer with an AB degree in 1878. He married Lula Clyde Ricks (See 12) on March 4, 1891, in Taylor County, Georgia, and they had five children, all boys. Joe was a farmer with extensive land holdings. The rumor that his farm had its own railroad is not true, but he did have his own cotton gin, powered by a steam engine. And, in a time and place Photo: Joseph where oil lamps and outhouses were the norm, the Carsons had Jefferson Carson their own electric generating plant and indoor plumbing. Joe Carson was also an officer of the First NationalBank of Reynolds, Georgia. He found time to serve as clerk of the First Baptist Church of Reynolds, Georgia, in 1889 through 1891, and also served as a deacon. Lula Clyde Ricks died on October 27, 1912, leaving Joseph Jefferson Carson to raise their five sons alone. Joseph Jefferson Carson died June 23, 1925. What was Georgia like after the War between the States? The South had lost the war. As a result, the total value of all property in Georgia, real and personal, dropped by about 75 percent, and probably a large part of that was caused by the loss of the negroes as property. If white Southerners were angry, resentful, and suspicious of outsiders, especially Northerners, it’s understandable. Moreover, some said that Georgia was too dependent on cotton farming and needed more industry. Sometime about 1874, a Georgia journalist wrote the following: A Georgia farmer uses a Northern axe-helve [handle] and axe to cut up the hickory growing within sight of his door; ploughs his fields with a Northern plough; chops his cotton with a New England hoe; gins his cotton upon a Boston gin; hoops it with Pennsylvania iron; hauls it to market in a Concord wagon, while the little grain that he raises is cut and prepared for sale with Yankee implements. We find the Georgia housewife cooking with an Albany stove; and even the food, especially the luxuries, are imported from the North. Georgia’s fair daughters are clothed in Yankee muslins and decked in Massachusetts ribbons and Rhode Island jewelry. Children of Joseph Jefferson Carson and Lula Clyde Ricks Children of Joseph Jefferson Carson and Lula Clyde Ricks were: Francis Marion Carson James Ricks Carson William Joseph Carson Charles Ferdinand Carson Clyde Bryan Carson Francis Marion “FM” Carson Francis Marion “FM” Carson was the eldest son of Joseph Jefferson Carson and Lula Clyde Ricks. He was born January 4, 1892. He graduated from Mercer University in 1913 where he lettered in football in 1911 and 1913. He served as a military officer in World War I. On February 14, 1923, he married Annie May James. He was a farmer in Macon County, Georgia, until his death on July 14, 1961. Francis Marion Carson and Annie May James had no children. Annie May James was born January 19, 1896 in Adrian, Emanuel County, Georgia, and died in the city of Macon, Georgia, May 28, 1989 at age 93. To the reader who is not familiar with this part of Georgia, let me point out that the city of Macon is in Bibb County, and the county of Macon is some fifty miles to the south. Annie May was the daughter of Thomas Jefferson James, a Confederate veteran of Company B, 12th Georgia Regiment, and Alice Cheatham. Alice Cheatham was the daughter of John Wesley Cheatham, a Captain of Company E, 48th Georgia Regiment. Annie May James was a graduate of Wesleyan College and Emory University School of Nursing. For most of her life, she lived in Macon County, Georgia, but after the death of her husband, she lived for a time in Reynolds, GA, where she kept house for Mr. Ferdinand Augustus Ricks. After that, she lived in Fresno, California and Macon, Bibb County, Georgia, with her niece Adrienne Ellison the last 17 years of her life. At the time of her death, she was a member of Ingleside United Methodist Church and the United Daughters of the Confederacy. James Ricks Carson James Ricks Carson, second son of Joseph Jefferson Carson and Lula Clyde Ricks, was born February 2, 1894. Ricks, as he was called, attended Coleman Institute in Reynolds, Georgia, where he was a member of the baseball team. He graduated from Coleman Institute in 1912. He attended Mercer University 1912- 1913 and Vanderbilt University. He married Ruth Wilson (born February 7, 1895), and they had two sons, James Ricks Carson Jr. (June 16, 1925 - ) and Joseph Lee Carson (May 4, 1927 - ). Ruth Wilson died May 14, 1927. Ricks Carson married second Frances Camilla Hill (See Chapter 13), known as Camilla, on June 13, 1929, in a ceremony conducted by Rev. M. O. Williams. Ricks Carson and Frances Camilla Hill had two children, too. Ricks Carson died December 30, 1973, and Frances Camilla Hill died at her home in Reynolds, Georgia, August 26, 1987. Children of James Ricks Carson and Ruth Wilson were James Ricks Carson, Jr., and Joseph Lee Carson. James Ricks “Jim” Carson Jr., son of James Ricks Carson and Ruth Wilson, served in the United States Navy during World War II, was educated at Newberry College and the University of South Carolina, and obtained a Master’s Degree from the University of Florida. He was a businessman in Leesburg, Florida, and served as chairman of the County Commission. He married first Jane Campbell, and they had three Children. James Ricks “Jim” Carson Jr. divorced Jane Campbell and married second Ann Duncan on July 22, 1978. Children of James Ricks Carson, Jr., and Jane Campbell were: James Ricks Carson III Phillip Campbell Carson Nancy Hendren Carson James Ricks Carson III, son of James Ricks Carson, Jr., and Jane Campbell, was born May 26, 1947, and did doctoral work at Emory University. On September 22, 1973, he married Elizabeth Ann Longinotti, born April 20, 1952. James Ricks Carson III was an English instructor at Pace Academy in Atlanta, Georgia. Phillip Campbell Carson, son of James Ricks Carson, Jr., and Jane Campbell, was born November 22, 1949. He graduated from Georgia College in Milledgeville, Georgia and married Harriet Jones of Macon, Georgia, in 1972. They had one son, Joshua Clifton Carson, born February 1, 1973, in Macon, Georgia. Nancy Hendren Carson, daughter of James Ricks Carson, Jr., and Jane Campbell, was born October 1, 1955. She obtained a Master’s Degree from Auburn University. On June 11, 1977, she married John Jackson Robinson, also a graduate of Auburn University. Joseph Lee Carson, son of James Ricks Carson and Ruth Wilson, attended Georgia Tech and graduated from Mercer University in 1948. He became an accountant in Macon, Georgia, and he died of cancer in 1990. He never married. Children of James Ricks Carson and Frances Camilla Hill were John King Carson and Frances Marion Carson II. John King Carson, son of James Ricks Carson and Frances Camilla Hill, was born October 28, 1933. He earned Bachelor’s and Master’s degrees from the Georgia Institute of Technology. He married Beverly Jean Hudson, born February 23, 1938, of Fort Valley, GA, on March 17, 1957. Beverly Jean Hudson’s parents were B. J. Hudson and Nettie Lou Champion, both born in Crawford County, Georgia. B. J. Hudson was born May 14, 1909, and died October 22, 1971. Nettie Lou Champion was born May 26, 1913, and died in January, 1994. B. J. Hudson and Nettie Lou Champion were married in Crawford County on September 2, 1933. B. J. Hudson was the only son of Robert Daniel Hudson and Fannie Belle Joyner, daughter of Litty S. Joyner and Betty Walton. Robert Daniel Hudson was both a farmer and a postmaster in Crawford County, Georgia, and he was the son of William E. Hudson. William E. Hudson was a Confederate veteran, and he married Mrs. Marthina Matthews Schofill, daughter of Ezekiel Matthews and Ailsie Shirley. Ezekiel Matthews was the son of Moses Matthews and Sallie Findley, who came to Georgia in 1783. Moses Matthews was the son of John Matthews, who was a gunsmith during the American Revolution. Nettie Lou Champion’s parents were William Elmer Champion (May 4, 1878 – August 19, 1962) and Ella Lula Bryant (December 22, 1883 – October 19, 1962). William Elmer Champion was a Crawford County farmer, and he also served as a Crawford County Commissioner. Parents of William Elmer Champion were William Erastus Champion (born October 8, 1853) and Emma Malissa Hartley, daughter of James D. Hartley and Epsey Thames. William Erastus Champion was the son of Thomas Gilliam Champion and Mary Jane Sandefur, who were married on December 18, 1842. Thomas Gilliam Champion served in Company A, Benaud’s Battalion, CSA, and died in service near Savannah, Georgia. He was the son of Thomas Champion, an active Primitive Baptist, born in Augusta, Georgia. Thomas Champion was the son of Joseph I. Champion, who came to Augusta from Virginia. John King Carson served in the United States Army at Fort Detrick, MD, 1958-1960. John and Beverly had three sons, who called him “coach”, a nickname he earned while coaching Little League baseball. Children of John King Carson and Beverly Jean Hudson were: John Jefferson Carson James Hudson Carson John King Carson, Jr. John Jefferson “Jeff” Carson, son of John King Carson and Beverly Jean Hudson, was born August 22, 1960. On September 12, 1981, he married Maura Lise Martin of Tucker, Georgia, born December 9, 1959. James Hudson “Jim” Carson, son of John King Carson and Beverly Jean Hudson, was born September 7, 1962. John King Carson, Jr., son of John King Carson and Beverly Jean Hudson, was born September 21, 1971. Francis Marion Carson II, son of James Ricks Carson and Frances Camilla Hill, was born March 7, 1945 in Brunswick, Georgia. He earned a B. S. Degree from the University of Georgia and, on September 27, 1969 in Macon, Georgia, he married Virginia Anita McSwain, born November 10, 1947. Virginia Anita McSwain earned a Master’s of Education from Georgia State University. Children of Francis Marion Carson II and Virginia Anita McSwain were: Bryan Logan Carson, born April 11, 1971 Camilla Eleanor Carson, born June 14, 1975 Francis Marion “Frank” Carson III, born June 18, 1978 William Joseph Carson William Joseph Carson, third son of Joseph Jefferson Carson and Lula Clyde Ricks, was born September 27, 1898. He was known as “Bill to his friends, and “Willie Joe” to his family. He attended Coleman Institute in Reynolds, GA until it burned in 1915, and graduated from Columbia (Tennessee) Military Academy in 1917. He attended the University of Virginia for one year, and served as a private in the United States Army at Fort Gordon, GA from October 9, 1918, to December 10, 1918. He graduated from the University of Georgia in 1921 where he was a member of Phi Kappa Literary Society and Kappa Alpha Fraternity. He received a master’s degree from Columbia University in 1922, and a doctorate from the Brookings Graduate School of Economics and Government in 1928. He was a member of the first Federal Reserve Board research staff. In 1928 he joined the faculty at the University of Pennsylvania Wharton School of Business, where he became professor emeritus and retired in 1965. From 1937 until 1965 he was also associated with the National Bureau of Economic Research, where he became Executive Director, and he served in the War Shipping Administration in 1942. In 1965 and 1966 he was professor of economics and chairman of the Business Administration Department at Augusta College. Among his many writings was “Cotton Financing”, published in the Federal Reserve Bulleltin in 1923, and Coming of Industry in the South (1931). On November 30, 1928, William Joseph Carson married Julia Margaret Hicks in Granville, New York. William Joseph Carson was an elder of the Peniel Presbyterian Church of Granville, NY, a member of the Hebron Preservation Society, and an honorary member of the Granville Rotary Club. He died May 24, 1989, in Rutland, Vermont, and lies buried in North Hebron, N. Y. Julia Margaret Hicks was born June 25, 1899, the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Hicks. She was a graduate of the Columbus (Ohio) School for Girls and received her BA degree from Ohio State University and a law degree from Yale University Law School. Her book about artist Mary Cassatt was published in 1966. William Joseph Carson and Julia Margaret Hicks had two children, Hamilton Hicks Carson and Joan Clyde Carson. Hamilton Hicks “Ham” Carson, son of William Joseph Carson and Julia Margaret Hicks, was born January 10, 1930. In June, 1956, he married Carol Brandenburg, and they had one child, Leslie Victoria Carson, born September 10, 1957. They were divorced in 1958. In July, 1961, Hamilton Hicks Carson married Margaret Trowel. They had three children: Timothy George Carson born April 22, 1962 Tyler William Carson born March 28, 1964 Helena Alexandra Carson born July 14, 1966 Joan Clyde Carson, daughter of William Joseph Carson and Julia Margaret Hicks, was born July 9, 1933. In June, 1956, she married Robert Flemming Handy. They had three children: Christopher Carson Handy, born December 20, 1960 Karen Brooks Handy, born April 14, 1962 Douglas William Handy, born September 21, 1971 Charles Ferdinand Carson Charles Ferdinand Carson was the fourth son of Joseph Jefferson Carson and Lula Clyde Ricks. We’ll discuss him in a moment. Clyde Bryan “Kit” Carson Clyde Bryan “Kit” Carson, youngest son of Joseph Jefferson Carson and Lula Clyde Ricks, was born September 25, 1904. He attended Coleman Institute in Reynolds, GA, and graduated from Reynolds High School in 1922. A story is told of Clyde Bryan Carson and his father, Joseph Jefferson Carson, which may say something about the independence of the Carsons and of Clyde’s athletic ability. It seems that Clyde had a horse, which he rode at full gallop to school each morning, a distance of some five miles. One day a neighbor approached Mr. Carson and said, “Hey Joe, that boy of yours is going to kill that horse!” Mr. Carson replied, “When he does, I’ll buy him another.” Clyde Bryan Carson graduated from Mercer University in 1926, where he became famous as a football player, and he did post- graduate work at Columbia University in New York. He was employed by Sears, Roebuck and Company, General Motors Acceptance Company, and Tubize Chatillon Corporation. He was a pitcher for the Tubize baseball team. He was appointed a sergeant in the Georgia State Guard on July 29, 1942, and became a Captain in the United States Army May 26, 1943. His Military Record and Report of Separation says that his civilian occupation was warehouse foreman, and his home address at the time he entered military service was Rome, GA, although he served through much of World War II in Detroit, Michigan. He was discharged June 7, 1951. He was a member of First Baptist Church of Rome, Georgia. Never married, Clyde Bryan Carson died suddenly of a heart attack while at work April 30, 1959 at Rome, Georgia and lies buried at the Carson Cemetery in Macon County. Charles Ferdinand Carson Charles Ferdinand Carson, fourth son of Joseph Jefferson Carson and Lula Clyde Ricks, was born October 27, 1902. He was known as “Ferd” to his friends, and “Podnuh” (Partner) to his brothers. One day when they were boys, Ferd and his brothers wanted to go somewhere. Their parents had gone off in the car (probably a Model T Ford), and someone else had gone off with the horse, so Ferd and his brothers hitched a cow to the buggy. The buggy frightened the cow, which ran right through a fence, and wrecked the buggy. I suspect it was an older brother who instigated the incident. The Night yo’ Grandma Was Married There was an old black woman, a former slave, who lived on the Carson farm. Her name was Clarissa Johnson, and her husband was Dick Johnson, one of the last operators of the Bryan Ferry, which was pulled by hand across the Flint River. One day, young Ferd asked Clarissa, who was called Aunt Classy, how old she was. Aunt Classy replied, “Lor’, chile, I don’t know how old I is, but if you ‘members the night yo’ grandma was married, that’s the night I was born!” The boys had a favorite fishing hole in the swamp behind the Carson house. Years earlier, the slaves had built a dam across a creek there. The dam broke, and the resulting gush of water washed a big hole on the downstream side of the dam, which formed the fishing hole used by the Carson boys. The Carsons had a party-line telephone. One day Ferd was bitten by a rattlesnake. His father telephoned the doctor, and when he finished his conversation, all the neighbors added their advice on the treatment of snake bites. Charles Ferdinand Carson attended Coleman Institute in Reynolds, GA, until it burned in 1915, and finished high school at Georgia Military Academy at College Park, Georgia, in 1920. He joined the First Baptist Church of Reynolds, GA, in May, 1915. Ferd obtained his B. A. degree at Mercer University in 1924 where he was a member of Phi Delta Theta, the Mercer Players, and the Spanish Club. While at Mercer he also taught Spanish at Lanier High School in Macon. When Ferd first went to Mercer University, some of the older students showed him to his dormitory room. Assuming that a boy from the country wouldn’t know about such things, they carefully showed Ferd how to turn on the hot and cold water, and how to work the toilet. Ferd didn’t let on that he had had those conveniences all his life. Real Estate and Bootleggers When Ferd went home after graduation from Mercer, his father asked him what he wanted to do next. Ferd replied that he wanted to get into the real estate business in Florida, so his father gave him a hundred dollars and wished him good luck. Ferd went to Tampa and found employment with a local real estate firm, where he eventually became a small partner. At one time, the company bought a citrus grove, which they intended to resell at a profit. However, they couldn’t find a buyer immediately, so they decided to operate the citrus grove. One day Ferd was in the office when a man drove up in a Model T Ford, loaded with his wife, children, and all their belongings. The man asked for the job of overseeing the citrus grove, and Ferd hired him. Every week, Ferd drove out to the citrus grove to check up on things. One day, the man had on new clothes. The next week, his wife and children all had new clothes. The next week, the house was full of new furniture, and the next week, there was a new Buick automobile in the yard. Ferd told the man, “I know what we’re paying you, and it’s not enough for you to buy all these things. The only way I know for you to make this much money is to be in the bootleg whiskey business. Now, what you do on your own time is your own business, but I don’t want you to have anything to do with the whiskey business on this place. I don’t want you to buy it, make it, store it, or sell it on this place.” The man replied, “Don’t worry. I won’t have anything to do with the whiskey business on this place.” The next week, there were a lot of men with cars and guns around the house when Ferd approached. Ferd started not to turn in, but the men saw him and motioned him in, and then Ferd was afraid not to go in. It turned out that the men were the man’s partners in the liquor business. The man was supposed to make liquor from the fruits that fell on the ground, and the men had put up a lot of money for supplies and equipment. Instead of buying supplies and equipment, the man had simply taken the money! Economics When the Florida real estate boom busted, Ferd went to New York at the suggestion of his brother Bill. Ferd worked doing economic research, and he found that he liked that kind of work. Ferd earned his M. A. at New York University in 1929 and his Doctor of Commercial Science at New West Englewood Home of Charles Ferdinand Carson and Marie Elmer Jackson York University in 1933. He became a professor at New York University. On December 27, 1930, he married Marie Elmer Jackson (See Chapter 14) at City Hall in New York City in a ceremony performed by J. J. McCormick, Deputy City Clerk, and they lived in West Englewood, New Jersey until 1942. When World War II began, Ferd went to Washington. He served with the Board of Economic Warfare from 1942 until September of 1943, when he moved to the Commerce Department and became a special assistant to the under-secretary of commerce.. In 1949 he moved to the Pan American Union where he was an economist. Return to his Roots While in Washington, Ferd dreamed of farming, so in 1954 he left Washington and returned to Reynolds, GA, where he bought the Ricks Place north of Reynolds from his brother, Francis Marion Carson. He was a full-time farmer, but he was also active in civic affairs. At various times, he served as Chairman of the Ocmulgee Soil and Water Conservation District, as a Reynolds City Councilman, as President of the Taylor County Farm Bureau, as Chairman of the Taylor County Rural Area Development Committee, and as Clerk of First Baptist Church of Reynolds, Georgia from 1969 to 1973. He was also Executive Director of the Public Housing Authorities of Reynolds, Butler, and Roberta, Georgia. Charles Ferdinand Carson died October 3, 1977, and is buried in the Carson Cemetery in northern Macon County, Georgia. Carson Brothers with Relatives Left to Right: Francis Marion Carson (in rocking chair), William Joseph Carson, Annie May James Carson, Clyde Bryan Carson, unidentified boy in striped shirt, Francis Marion Carson II (on floor), Julia Hicks Carson, James Ricks (seated on floor), James Ricks Carson, Charles Ferdinand Carson, Jr. (kneeling in foreground), Francis Camilla Hill Carson, Charles Ferdinand Carson, Sr. (in light-colored suit). Son of Charles Ferdinand Carson and Marie Elmer Jackson Charles Ferdinand Carson and Marie Elmer Jackson had one child, Charles Ferdinand Carson, Jr., known by his middle name of Ferdinand. He was born November 14, 1937 in Englewood, New Jersey. He moved to Washington with his parents at the beginning of World War II, and then to Arlington, Virginia. He was confirmed at St. Mary’s Episcopal Church in Arlington, VA, on January 15, 1950, and he attended Sidwell Friends School in Washington, D. C. Timmie and the Chickens While living in Arlington, young Ferdinand had a beagle hound named Timmie. Although Arlington was a residential suburb of Washington, there were still vestiges of its rural past. A few of the Carson’s neighbors still kept chickens, and Timmie earned a reputation for killing chickens. One day Timmie attacked a fighting cock. The cock stabbed Timmie with his spurs, and Timmie almost bled to death. He never bothered any chickens after that. However, another neighbor continued to accuse Timmie of killing chickens. One morning, the game warden appeared at the Carson’s door, and said that he had seen Timmie kill some of the neighbor’s chickens during the night. He said he would have to take the dog and have him put to sleep. Ferd’s Dad replied that the dog had been in the house all night, and couldn’t possibly have killed any chickens. He said the game warden would have to obtain a court order to take the dog. Meanwhile, young Ferdinand went outside and brought Timmie into the house. The game warden said, “Is that your dog?” When the Carsons replied that he was, the game warden said, “That’s not the dog I saw,” and left. The Carsons never had to pay for chickens after that. Ferdinand moved to Reynolds, Georgia, with his family in 1954, and was valedictorian of Reynolds High School in 1956. He graduated from Georgia Tech in 1960 and became an engineer. On September 5, 1959, he married Vivien Elizabeth Johnson (See Chapter 16) in Fort Valley, Georgia, in a ceremony performed by Rev. Shelby P. Royal. Ferdinand’s first engineering job after graduation was with Caterpillar Tractor Company in Peoria, Illinois. Leaving Caterpillar in 1962, he went to Robins Air Force Base at Warner Robins, Georgia. From Warner Robins, he went to Stamford, Connecticut, then to Greenville, SC, then to Cedartown, GA, and finally to Greensboro, North Carolina. In Greensboro, Ferdinand was engaged in the design of machinery for the manufacture of dungarees at Blue Bell, Inc., and he earned several patents in that field. Blue Bell was sold in 1986, and Ferdinand soon found himself without a job. He and Vivien opened a printing business, which they operated until 1993. Charles Ferdinand Carson returned to engineering, and finally retired from that field in 1999. Subsequently, he took a part-time job as a delivery driver for a local drug store. Descendants of Charles Ferdinand Carson, Jr., and Vivien Elizabeth Johnson Children of Charles Ferdinand Carson, Jr., and Vivien Elizabeth Johnson were Charles Randall Carson and Catherine Elizabeth Carson. Charles Randall Carson was born August 29, 1960, in Peoria, Illinois. On April 22, 1989, in Gaithersburg, MD, Charles Randall Carson married Lisa Anne Guidry (See Chapter 25), born March 30, 1960, daughter of Albert Guidry and Elaine Matranga. Their children, all born in Gaithersburg, Maryland, were: Elizabeth Anne Carson (born premature and died the same day) James Francis Carson (born February 23, 1993) Michelle Chiara “Mia” Carson (born December 18, 1995) Joshua Michael Carson, (born August 18, 1997) Catherine Elizabeth Carson was born June 8, 1962, at Methodist Hospital in Peoria, Illinois. On December 2, 1989, Catherine Elizabeth Carson married Allen Larue Foster (See Chapter 28) in Washington, D. C. Their children were: Samantha Elizabeth Foster (born November 28, 1990, in Reston, Virginia) Grant Livingston Foster (born December 30, 1992, in Reston, Virginia) Grace Catherine Foster (born October 8, 1996 in Silver Springs, Maryland).