Lenoir County NcArchives History....Inventory, Before 1814 ***************************************************** Copyright. All rights reserved. http://www.usgwarchives.net/copyright.htm http://www.usgwarchives.net/nc/ncfiles.htm ***************************************************** File contributed for use in USGenWeb Archives by: Joe P. Sutton, PhD, sutton@edtesting.com, May 13, 2018. Clellan Sutton Collection, Bucklesberry Community, La Grange, NC. THOMAS SUTTON & WILLIAM SUTTON INVENTORY, BEFORE 1814 William Sutton Eighteen Hogs wei 2018 Thomas Sutton twenty fore Hogs wei 2773 ---- Thomas one Hog wei 100 - - - - - - - - - - 4891 6 ----- for William 2018 29346 6 ---- $ 12108 ----- Thomas Sutton } 2873 6 ---- $ 17238 12108 ------- $ 29346 [Back side] Wm Sutton { 4891 Thomas Sutton 6 ----- 29346 161 133 hogs 110 82 117 138 107 123 103 119 109 136 140 94 111 132 098 127 092 132 118 120 126 137 093 99 95 106 93 117 93 120 134 107 118 109 2018 128 130 105 101 78 100 ---- 2773 2018 ---- 4791 100 ---- 4891 END OF DOCUMENT Comments: Thomas and William Sutton are likely the sons of Benjamin Sutton, Sr. It stands to reason that, given the Collection contains more than 50 documents bearing Benjamin Sutton, Sr.'s name, and since documents of this nature were typically passed down generationally, one would expect documents bearing the names of Benjamin, Sr.'s sons to also be contained in the Collection. Thomas, born ca. 1782, would have been in his early-30s at the time of this document. His brother, William, born 1784-1789, would have been within the same age range. Both men were well into the prime of their working adult lives. This large hog inventory, then, logically supports the work of experienced men like Thomas and William. Benjamin Sutton, Sr. also had brothers named William and Thomas. But William's death date of 1813-1820 eliminates him as the William in this document. Benjamin’s brother, Thomas was born before 1758, Although his death year is unknown, he would likely have been too elderly to have partnered with the younger William, Benjamin Sr.'s son. See additional discussion about Benjamin, Sr.'s sons, Thomas and William, and Benjamin, Sr.'s brothers of the same names in the 1814 receipt for Benjamin, Thomas, and William Sutton in this Collection. The basis for assigning a document date of before 1814 rests on an earlier 1814 receipt naming Benjamin, Jr., Thomas, and William which had a pork price of $6 per hundredweight, the same $6 unit indicated in the current document. Dating the document before 1814 also has to do with its reference to the dollar. The US monetary system switched from the British pound to the dollar after 1800. An 1810 invoice to Winifred Sutton (also in this Collection), who was sister to Thomas and William, also used the US dollar as the monetary unit.