While posting about my fourth Great Grandparents, it really bothered me that I knew almost nothing about my fourth Great Grandmother, Patsy Atkins, who married James Palmer.
I knew she was born on December 20, 1784, due to well-kept Palmer Family Bibles. I know she died on July 18, 1879 and was buried at Kendall's Baptist Church, near New London, NC.
I knew she was the mother of 9 children with her husband James Palmer:
1) Little Lucy Palmer, who died at age 6, born June 9, 1808 - Aug. 14, 1814).
2) Mary Palmer, born November 17, 1809 and married Bailey F. Smith.
3) William Pearson Palmer, born November 1, 1811 and died February 19, 1881, who married Hannah Bushrod Harris.
4) Martha Palmer, born June 1, 1817 and died March 27, 1863, who married Henry Davis - my line.
5) Elizabeth Palmer, born August 18, 1818 and died on November 20, 1827, at the age of 9.
6) Serlana Palmer, born March 31, 1819 and died March 16, 1823, at the age of 3.
7) Sarah Palmer, born April 21, 1821 and died August 2, 1854, who married Richmond Gage Davidson Pickler.
8) Margaret Tyson Palmer, born April 8, 1834 and died February 24, 1879, who married Jonah Askew Love.
Page from Bible of W. P Palmer |
I knew she appeared in three census records in Stanly County: 1850, where she and James are living the the "Albemarle Post Office" area, and have a 50 year old man in their home "Abia", who was labeled an idiot. The 1860, where James is 75 and Martha is 76 and they are living next to what appears to be a "Poor House", because everyone listed in it were Paupers. And the 1870, their last, where James is 85 and Martha is 86 and they are still in Albemarle Post Office and living near Kendalls and Calloways, and Laton's and Freemans, and surrounded by a bevy of Civil War Widows, Sarah Byrd, Amy Pennington, Elizabeth Smith, and Elizabeth Hinson. Also, in a separate house on the same property were Ralph Palmer, 58, and Adaline Palmer, 21. These two were African-American, signified by a "B" for race, and can be logically assumed to have been freed slaves of the Palmers, as they are shown in previous census records as being slave holders.
Page from Family Bible of W. P. Palmer |
The Palmers lived long lives and had made it through the War. James, who had served in the War of 1812, lived to be 87 and passed away in 1873, and Martha, a year older than her husband, outlived him by 6 years and lived to be 94.
Kendall's Baptist Church, Kendall Valley area, Stanly County, NC |
I have posted in this blog about her before in my 30 Mothers in 30 Days series, which I did for Mother's Day one year when I was stuck home recovering from an injury.
But I can not tell you where she came from, except that the census recors indicate she was born in North Carolina, or who her parents were. It's time to fix that, or try.
Martha's last child, Margaret Tyson Palmer, was a menapause baby, born when her mother was 50 years old and 13 years after her closest sibling, Sarah. Some may argue that she was probably a grandchild, but her brother, William Pearson Palmer, the only son, faithfully recorded all of the births and deaths of his siblings, except for the death of Mary, and Margaret was recorded as sibling.
Although she is not named, Martha can be regarded as the adult female in the older, dash-indicated census records, with her husband, James.
1830
Name | James Palmer |
---|---|
Home in 1830 (City, County, State) | West Side Pee Dee River, Montgomery, North Carolina |
Free White Persons - Males - 20 thru 29 | 1 William would have been 19 |
Free White Persons - Males - 40 thru 49 | 1 James |
Free White Persons - Females - 5 thru 9 | 2 Sarah and Serlana |
Free White Persons - Females - 15 thru 19 | 2 Mary and Martha |
Free White Persons - Females - 40 thru 49 | 1 Martha |
Slaves - Males - Under 10 | 1 |
Slaves - Males - 10 thru 23 | 1 |
Slaves - Males - 36 thru 54 | 1 |
Slaves - Females - 10 thru 23 | 1 |
Free White Persons - Under 20 | 4 |
Free White Persons - 20 thru 49 | 3 |
Total Free White Persons | 7 |
Total Slaves | 4 |
Total - All Persons (Free White, Slaves, Free Colored) | 11 |
1840
Name | James Palmer |
---|---|
Residence Date | 1840 |
Home in 1840 (City, County, State) | West Pee Dee River, Montgomery, North Carolina |
Free White Persons - Males - 40 thru 49 | 1 Abia? |
Free White Persons - Males - 50 thru 59 | 1 James |
Free White Persons - Females - 15 thru 19 | 1 Margaret or Sarah? Sarah would have been 18 or 19, Margaret only 7 |
Free White Persons - Females - 50 thru 59 | 1 Martha |
Slaves - Males - 24 thru 35 | 1 |
Slaves - Females - Under 10 | 3 |
Slaves - Females - 10 thru 23 | 1 |
Slaves - Females - 24 thru 35 | 1 |
Persons Employed in Agriculture | 4 |
Free White Persons - Under 20 | 1 |
Free White Persons - 20 thru 49 | 1 |
Total Free White Persons | 4 |
Total Slaves | 6 |
Total All Persons - Free White, Free Colored, Slaves | 10 |
In the 1840 census, Margaret should have been around 7, and this is not found in the dashes, so there could have been other circumstances, but who was the other teenaged girl, if not Margaret and where did Margaret come from then? There have been mistakes in census records and ages, particularly among females. I've seen women buried with a year of birth 7 or 8 years younger than a census they show up in as a child. One in particular that I am thinking of, claimed a birth year of 1862, when she clearly showed up as a 5 year old in 1860 and a 14 year old in 1870.
Page from Bible of W. P. Palmer showing death dates of sisters. |
In the early records of Montgomery County, NC, there were several records of Atkins, primarily James, John and Lewis. John, in particular, is mentioned in a large number of land records. But for the most part, they all disapear. Almost. By 1830, there are three others, George, John C. and Mary. The 1830 census is divided into East Pee Dee and West Pee Dee, depending upon which side of the Yadkin - Pee Dee River they lived upon. East Pee Dee was what would remain as Montgomery after the 1841 split and West Pee Dee would become Stanly.
George was in Stanly, living near Drury and Mark Morgan, who lived along the Rocky River below Oakboro and Stanfield. He was in his 50's, his wife in her 40's and they appeared to have 4 sons and 4 daughters.
Mary Atkins was in East Pee Dee, near James Hurley Sr., Thomas Ragsdale and Green Hardister. I know Thomas Ragsdale lived in "Lovejoy". Probably a widow, the oldest female in the home was in her 50's, probably Mary. Two boys, one under 5 and one between 5 and 10, a female between 10 and 15 and another between 15 and 20 lived with her. She also was counted with two very elderly slaves, a man and a woman, between 90 and 100, in her home. She also lived next to a widow Davis.
John C. Atkins was also in East Pee Dee, listed between Edmund Deberry and William Davis, or the Pee Dee area. He was in his 30's with a female 10 to 20, (perhaps a teenaged wife, and a teenaged boy as well, perhaps a farm hand.
All of them were gone by 1840. No Atkins (or Adkins as it was sometimes spelled), in Montgomery .
As there are really no (or few) records of Atkins in Stanly County, I've had to look in the Palmer family records for any mention.
Of interest, on October 17, 1844, Barbara Pickler swore out a warrant for the arrest of Ralph, a slave of James Palmer, for breaking into her barn and taking a bushel of wheat. Barbara (or Barbary) Pickler was the mother of Richmond Gates (or Gage) Davidson Pickler, who married James Palmer's daughter Sarah. The Picklers were somehow related to and entangled with the Davis family. For one, Henry Davis married Sarah's sister Martha. Henry's younger brother, Marriott Freeman Davis, would marry R.G.D. Pickler's sister, Mary, after she was widowed by the death Henry and M. F.'s first cousin, Milton Winfield. Yet, oddest of all, the four Davis brothers recieved an inheritance from R. D. G. Pickler's grandmother, Jane Davis Pickler, mother of his father, John Davis Pickler. That one I've not figured out yet, except for the Davis name.
Name | James Palmer |
---|---|
Gender | Male |
Race | White |
Residence Age | 64 |
Birth Date | abt 1786 |
Birthplace | North Carolina |
Residence Date | 1850 |
Home in 1850 | Albemarle, Stanly, North Carolina, USA |
Occupation | Farmer |
Industry | Agriculture |
Real Estate | 300 |
Line Number | 29 |
Dwelling Number | 863 |
Family Number | 868 |
Inferred Spouse | Martha Palmer |
Name | Age |
---|---|
James Palmer | 64 |
Martha Palmer | 65 |
Abia Palmer | 50 |
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