CHAPTER VIII
COUNTY HISTORY
BUNCOMBE
COUNTY.1
In 1781 or 1782 settlers from the blockhouse at Old Fort,
McDowell county as it is now, crossed the mountains on the
Cherokee territory, the Blue Ridge at that time being the
boundary line. Samuel Davidson, his wife and
child were among the first. They brought a female
negro slave with them, and settled a short distance east of
Gudger's ford and Swannanoa river, and near what is now
Azalia. He was soon afterwards killed by Indians, and
his wife and child and slave hurried through the mountains
back to Old Fort. An expedition to avenge his death
set out, with the late Major Ben. Burgin who died at
Old Fort in November, 1874, at the age of ninety-five, among
the number and conquered the Indians at the mouth of Rock
House creek. By this time, however, several
other settlements had been effected on the Swannanoa from
its head to its mouth by the Alexanders, Davidsons,
Smiths, and others, the earliest being about the mouth
of Bee Tree creek, a little above this being the
Edmundson field, the first cleared in Buncombe.
Soon another company passed through Bull gap and settled on
upper Reems creek, while still others came in by way of what
is now Yancey county and settled on lower Reems and Flat
creeks. Some of the people who had been with Sevier at
Watauga settlement settled on the French Broad above the
mouth of Swannanoa, and on Hominy creek. Some from
South Carolina settled still higher on the French Broad.
THE CHEERY NAME OF BUNCOMBE.2
The Swananoa was now recognized as the dividing line between
Burke and Rutherford counties, from portions of which
counties Buncombe was subsequently formed, and named for
Edward Buncombe, who had been a colonel in the
Revolutionary War.3
In 1791 David Vance and William Davidson, the
former representing Burke and the latter Rutherford,
agreed upon the formation of a new county from portion of
both these counties west of the Blue Ridge, its western
boundary to be the Tennessee line.
FIRST COURT AT THE GUM SPRING.4 In April,
1792, at the residence of Col. William Davidson on
the south bank of the Swannanoa, half a mile above its
mouth, subsequently called the Gum Spring place, Buncombe
county was organized, pursuant to the act which had been
ratified Jan. 14, 1792. On Dec. 31, 1792, another act
recited taht the commissioners provided for in the first act
had failed to fix "the center and agree where public
buildings" should be erected, and appointed Joshua
Inglish, Archibald Neill, James Wilson, Augustin Shote,
George Baker and John Dillard of Buncombe, and
Wm. Morrison of Burke, commissioners, in place of
Phillip Hoodenpile, William Brittain, Wm. Whitson, James
Brittain and Lemuel Clayton, who had failed to
agree, to select a county seat. There was rivalry for
this position, many contending for the "Steam Saw Mill Place
on the road afterwards known as the Buncombe Turnpike Road
about three miles south of Asheville, where Dr. J. F. E.
Hardy resided at the time of his death," says Dr.
Sondley in his Asheville's Centenary. They
selected the present site, which at first was called
Morristown. AS the Superior Court was at this time
held at Morganton, five men from Buncombe were required to
serve there as jurors, for the July term, 1792. These
were Matthew Patton, Wm. Davidson, David Vance, Lambert
Clayton and James Brittain. The first court
hose stood in the middle of the street upon the public
square at the head of what is now Patton avenue, and was of
logs. The first county court held there was on the
third Monday in July 1793. In January, 1796,
commissioners were appointed to lay off a plan for public
buildings; but in April, 1802, the grand jury complained
that the county had no title to the land on which the jail,
etc,. stood, and in April, 1805, steps were taken to secure
land for a public square. In April, 1807, the county
trustee, or treasurer, was ordered to pay Robert Love
one pound for registering five deeds made by individuals for
a public square . . . . . The next court house of which the
late Nicholas W. Woodfin, while a poor boy, carried
brick and mortar. This gave way to a handsome brick
building fronting on Main street, which is destroyed by fire
on the 26th day of January, 1865. Some years later a
small one-story brick structure was built nearly in front of
W. O. Wolf's storeroom, the late Rev. B. H.
Merrimon having been the contractor. In 1876 this
gave way to a larger building with three stories, J. A.
Tennent being the architect. In the erection of
this a workman fell from the southwest corner of the tower
to the ground and was killed. His name have been
forgotten. The first jail was succeeded by a brick
building now a part of the Library building; but a new jail
was built afterwards on the site of the present city
hall, its site being sold to the city when the Eagle street
jail was built some years afterwards The first jail
was a very poor structure, every sheriff from 1799 to 1811
complaining of its insufficiency. In 1867 the county
began to sell off portions of the public square on the north
and south sides, thus reducing it to its present dimensions.
MORRISTOWN. John
Burton's grant was "by private contract laid out . .
. for a town called Morristown, the county town of Buncombe
county, into 42 lots, containing , with the exception of the
two at the southern end, one-half an acre each, lying on
both sides of a street 33 feet wide," which runs where the
southern part of North Main street and the northern part of
South Main street now are.5
There were two cross streets across the public square.
"Nobody seems to know why the name of Morristown was
bestowed upon the place . . . but there is a seemingly
authentic tradition that it was named for Robert Morris,
who successfully financed the American Revolution, yet
himself died a bankrupt." 6 About this time
he owned large bodies of land in Western North Carolina;
indeed it is shown in the record of one case in the Federal
Court here (Asheville) that Robert Tate of York
county, Pennsylvania, and William Tate, of York
county, Pennsylvania, and William Tate, of Burke
county, N. C., conveyed to him in one deed 198 tracts of
land, only one tract of which, containing 70,400 acres and
lying in what are now Yancey, Burke, and McDowell counties,
was involved in that litigation. The State grant for
these lands was issued to Robert and William Tate on
May 30, 1795, and they conveyed the same lands to Morris
on August 15, of the same year. "The Tates were
evidently the agents of Morris . . . . Morris was one
of the heroes of the Revolution, and . . . it is small
wonder that . . . the people . . . should name it for him."
His will (dated in 1804) was probated in McDowell county on
April 21, 1891. In November, 1797, the village was
incorporated by the legislature as Asheville in honor of
Samuel Ashe of New Hanover, governor.
OLD ASHEVILLE. On Thanksgiving Day, 1895,
Miss Anna C. Aston, Miss Frances L. Patton and other
ladies published a "Woman's Edition" of the Asheville
Daily Citizen. It contained much valuable and
important information of that city. But in February,
1898, Foster A. Sondley, Esq., a descendant of the
Fosters and Alexanders of Buncombe county, and a
leading member of the Asheville Bar, published a historical
sketch of Buncombe county and Asheville, containing
practically all that could then be ascertained concerning
the early history of this section. Hon. Theo. F.
Davidson and the late Albert T. Summey also
contributed their recollections. There was a woodcut
reproduction of an oil painting of Asheville by F. S.
Duncanson, which was taken from Beaucatcher, and
it appears that there were not more than twenty five
residences in 1850 that were visible from that commanding
eminence, all the buildings, including outhouses, not
exceeding forty, and they were between Atkin, Market and
Church streets. The painting itself, now owned by
Mrs. Martha B. Patton, shows five brick buildings, the
old Presbyterian church, on the site of the present one,
with the cupola on its eastern end, because the street ran
there; the little old Episcopal church, on the site of the
burned Trinity; the old jail, standing where the city hall
now stands; Ravenscroft school, and the Rowley house,
now occupied by the Drhumor building. The old jail was
three stories high. The other buildings were white
wooden structures, and included the central portion of the
old Eagle hotel and the old Buck hotel. Mr. Ernest
Israel also has a similar picture.
Dr. J. S. T. Baird's facile pen has given us an
equally vivid picture of Asheville in his "Historical
Sketches of Early Days," published in the Asheville Saturday
Register during Jan. Feb. and Mar., 1905, as it appeared in
1840. He records the facts that the white population
then did not exceed 300, and the total number of slaves,
owned by eight or nine persons, did not exceed 200. In
the 400 acres embracing the northeastern section of the
city, between the angle formed by North Main and Woodfin
streets, he recalled but two dwellings, those of Hon. N.
W. Woodfin and Rev. David McAnally both on
woodfin street. There was an old tannery and a little
school house near the beginning of what is now Merrimon
avenue, the school having been taught by Miss Katy Parks,
who afterwards became Mrs. Katy Bell, mother of
Rev. George Bell, of Haw Creek. This 400-acre
boundary, now so thickly settled, was then owned by James
W. Patton, James M. Smith, Samuel Chunn, N. W. Woodfin
and Israel Baird. There was a thirty-acre field
where Doubleday now is, and was called the "old gallows
field," because Sneed and Henry had been
hanged there about 1835. Standing south of Woodfin and
East of North and South Main streets to the southern
boundary, there were but eight residences, not including
negro and outhouses.
SOUTHWEST ASHEVILLE. Just north of Aston
street was the brick store of Patton & Osborne, and
later Patton & Summey, adjoining which was the tailor
shop of "Uncle" Manuel, one of James W.
Patton's slaves. Then came a white house which was
kept for guests when there was an overflow crowd at the
Eagle hotel. Between this house and the Daylight
store, J. M. Smith some years later erected a
two-story building for the use of Dr. T. C. Lester a
physician who came from South Carolina and settled here
about 1845. He kept a sort of drug store, the first of
its kind in Asheville. The negroes called it a
sot-i-carry-pop, in their effort to call it an apothecary
shop.
Hilliard Hall now stands where it stood. Just
above was the residence and place of business of James B.
Mears now the Daylight store. Then came Drake
Jarrett's place - better known as the Coche7
place "where for many years the little short-legged
'monsieur' and his 'madam' dealt out that which Solomon
says biteth like a serpent and stingeth like an adder."
Thus was reached what was the Chunn property, which,
beginning at the lower side of T. C. Smith's drug
store, ran straight back to Church street. Samuel
Chunn had lived in a large brick house which fronted
north, and which was later replaced by a building used as a
banking house, known as the Bank building. This was
about 1845. The Asheville branch of the Bank of Cape
Fear occupied it till the Civil War period. The
residence of A. B. Chunn stood on the corner now
occupied by Pat McIntyre's grocery store. An
old stable stood at teh corner of Patton and Lexington
avenues.
CHURCH STREET. The grounds of the
Methodist church extended from Patton avenue and Church
street to the Aston property and several rods back,
forming an oblong plat of several acres. On the corner
of Patton avenue and Church street stood a large brick
building used as a boarding house in connection with the
school for girls which was taught for many years in the
basement of the Methodist church. The late William
Johnston afterwards bought and occupied this building as
a residence. The land south of the Methodist church
was used as a cemetery till long after the Civil War.
The Presbyterian church of that day stood nearly where
the one of this day stands, opposite that of the Methodist
church, and its cemetery extended down to 'Aston street.
Near where Asheland and Patton avenues join the late
James M. Smith had a large barn, which stood in a ten
acre field.|
NORTHWEST ASHEVILLE. In the angle formed
by North Main street and Patton avenue, in 1840, there were
not many houses. Beginning at the north end, Mrs.
Cassada - "Granny Cassie" - occupied a one-room house
which stood where the Rankin tan house afterwards stood.
She baked and sold ginger cakes, and brewed cider.
Coming up North Main street was a house built by Israel
Baird in 1839, now known as the Brandt property.
Israel Baird had lived two and a half miles north of
Asheville at what is now the Way place, but about
1838 he bought 40 acres, commencing at the junction of North
Main street and Merrimon avenue, running west to the present
auditorium, thence to Starnes avenue and thence back to
North Main street. The only building within this area
was the wooden store and shoe-shop opposite the old Buck
hotel, now occupied by the Langren hotel, and the
barns, stables, sheds and cribs of J. M. Smith which
covered a large portion of the lot lying between West
College street, Walnut and Water streets. From the
foregoing it is evident that the artist Duncanson did
not get all the houses into his oil painting of 1850.
EAST AND SOUTH ASHEVILLE. In these
sections of the town the land was owned by James M.
Smith, James W. Patton, Montraville Patton, Dr. J. F. E.
Hardy, Mrs. Morrison and Thomas L. Gaston,
principally. The old Buck hotel, a small frame
building near it, what was known as the Dunlap store,
the court house, the jail, the office of the Highland
Messenger on what is now North Pack Square, east of the
Gazette News office, where then the oldest house in
town. The old jail stood where the new Legal building
now stands; the court house stood where Vance's
monument stands, with the whipping post and stocks
immediately in its rear. Mrs. Rose Morrisons'
residence occupied the site now covered by the present court
house, while the store of Montraville Patton occupied
the corner now used by the Holt Furniture Company.
Lower down on South Main street lived William Coleman
in a brick built in a part of which the post-office was
kept. Later on Col. R. W. Pulliam lived there
and Rankin and Pulliam did a large mercantile
business. Just below this, embowered in green vines
and fragrant flowers, was the stylish wooden dwelling
occupied for years by Dr. J. F E. Hardy, and was
later to fall into such disrepute as to be called "Greasy
Corner." This, however, was about 1890 after the
handsome old residence had for years been used as a negro
hotel and restaurant. On it now stands the large
Thrash Building.
EAGLE HOTEL. Just below Eagle street stood
and still stands the building then and for years afterwards
known far and wide as the Eagle hotel, then owned by
James Patton and later by his son James W. Patton.
There were a large blacksmith shop just below this hotel,
where Sycamore street now leaves South Main, and a tannery
on the branch back of and below this. Joshua
Roberts lived on the hill where Mrs. Buchanan
lived until her recent death, and it was the last hosue on
that side of the street.
LARGE LAND OWNERS. In the angle formed by
Patton avenue and South Main street, according to
Dr. Baird, the lands were owned principally by James
M. Smith, Col. James M. Alexander, James W. Patton, and
Samuel Chunn, but James B. Mears and Drake
Jarrett owned from T. C. Smith's drug
store down to and including Mear's Daylight store.
The Methodist and Presbyterian churches owned and occupied
the land now used by them for their present places of
worship. Within this area were eleven residences, two
stores, two churches, two stales, one tanyard and one barn.
At the corporate line on South Main street, at the forks of
the road, lived Standapher Rhodes, and north of him
was the blacksmith shop of Williamson Warlick whose
sign read: "Williamson Warlick Axes," his axes being
especially fine. He died and was succeeded there by
Elias Triplett. Two hundred yards north was the
home of Rev. William Morrison. J. M. Alexander
afterwards lived in this house. Then came a tannery of
J. M. Smith's, while David Halford occupied a
residence at the corner of South Main and Southside avenue,
known as the Goodlake curve because of the reverse curve of
the street railway tracks at that point. There was a
frame house about halfway between the Halford house
and Mrs. M. E. Hilliard's residence. Mrs.
Hilliard's home site was formerly occupied y a large
two-story frame house which stood upon the street, and was
occupied at one time by Col. J. M. Alexander before
he removed to "Alexander's" ten miles down the French
Broad river. Then John Osborne occupied the
Alexander (Hilliard) house for a long time, to be
followed by Isaac McDunn, a tailor. It was
finally bought by the late Dr. W. L. Hilliard, and
occupied as a residence. From his house to Aston
street there was no dwelling, though a large stable
belonging to the Eagle hotel stood where now stands the
Swannanoa-Berkeley Hotel.
GEORGE SWAIN.
He was born in Rosborough, Mass., June 17, 1763, and on
Sept. 1, 1784, he left Providence, R. I., for Charleston, S.
C.; but as a storm had required that much of the cargo be
thrown overboard, Swain arrived at Charleston
penniless. He walked to Augusta, Ga., where he lived a
year, and then removed to Wilkes, afterwards Oglethorpe
county, where he engaged in Hat-making, and was a member of
the Legislature of Georgia five years, and of the
Constitutional convention held at Louisville about 1795, in
which year ye moved to Buncombe county and settled in or
near Asheville, soon afterward marrying Carolina Lowrie,
a sister of Joel Lane, founder of the city of
Raleigh, and of Jesse Lane, father of Gen. Joseph
Lane, Democratic candidate for Vice-President in 1860.
She was the widow of a man who had been killed by the
Indians. In the early part of his residence George
Lane lived at the head of Beaverdam creek, where the
late Rev. Thomas Stradley afterwards resided and
died, and where, on Jan. 4, 1801, David Lowrie Swain,
afterwards judge, governor and president of the University,
was born. Here the future statesman saw the first
wagon ever in buncombe brought up the washed out bed of
Beaverdam creek in default of a road. At this sight,
"he incontinently took to his heels and rallied only when
safely entrenched behind his father's house, a log double
cabin." "About 1805 a post-route was established on
the recently constructed road through Buncombe county . . .
. In 1806, the post-office at Asheville was made the
distributing office for Georgia, Tennessee and the two
Carolinas, and George Swain became postmaster," the
commission issuing in 1807. He was a ruling elder in
the Presbyterian church. He used to say his father was
a Presbyterian and an Arminian, and his mother was a
Methodist and a Calvinist. He was a trustee of the
Newton academy. He afterwards carried on the hatter's
business in the house now called the Bacchus J. Smith
place in Grove Park, where his son-in-law, William
Coleman, succeeded him as a hatter. For some time
before his death he was insane. He died Dec. 24, 1829.
SAMUEL CHUNN. In 1806
he was chairman of the Buncombe county court, having been a
tanner for years, his tanyard being where Merrimon avenue
crosses Glenn's creek. In 1807 he was jailer, and from
him Chunn's Cove took its name. He died in
1855, on the bank of the French Broad in Madison county at
what is known as the Chunn place, where he had
resided in his old age.
WILLIAM WELCH. He
was at one time a member of the Buncombe county court, and
in January, 1805, was a coroner. He was interested in
lands on what are now Haywood and Depot streets. He
afterwards removed to Waynesville and married Mary Ann,
a daughter of Robert Love. In 1829 he was a
senator from Haywood county, a member of the constitutional
convention of 1835 and for many years clerk of the court.
He was born Apr. 8, 1796, and died Feb.. 6, 1865.
COLONEL WILLIAM DAVIDSON.
He was a son of John Davidson and first cousin of
Gen. Wm. Davidson, who succeeded Griffith Rutherford
in the generalship when the latter was captured at Camden.
Gen. Davidson was killed Fed. 1, 1781, at Cowan's
ford of Catawba river. Gen. Davidson was a
brother of the Samuel Davidson who was killed by the
Indiana in 1781-2 at the head of the Swannanoa river, and
was the first representative of Buncombe county in the State
Senate, taking a prominent part in the preparations made by
the North Carolinians for the Battle of Kings Mountain.
He was the father of William Mitchell Davidson of
Haywood county, whose son, Col. Allen T. Davidson,
was a prominent lawyer and represented this section in the
Confederate Congress.
WILLIAM
MITCHELL DAVIDSON. He was born Jan. 2, 1780,
and died at Rock Island Ferry, on the Brazos river,
Washington county, Texas, May 31, 1846, and was buried in
the Horse Shoe Bend of that stream in the private burying
ground of Amos Gates. On Jan. 10, 1804, he
married Elizabeth Vance (who was born on Reem's
creek, Buncombe county, North Carolina, Mar. 23, 1787), the
ceremony being performed by the Rev. Geo. Newton
She died at the home of her son, Col. Allen Turner
Davidson, on Valley river, Cherokee county, Apr. 15,
1861. They settled on a beautiful farm on Jonathan's
creek, in Haywood county, where they remained until Oct. 24,
1844, when the family went to Santa Anna, Ill., where they
remained until the first of March, 1845, when they again set
out for Texas. They settled on Wilson's creek
of Collin county in April. From there they moved to
Rock Island Ferry, where Mr. Davidson died. One
cause of his removal to Texas was an unfortunate mercantile
venture which he had made with his sons, W. E., H. H.,
an A. T., at Waynesville, in 1842. The story of
the adventures of this family to and from Texas at that
early day, as preserved in a manuscript written by John
M. Davidson, one of W. M. Davidson's sons,
reads more like a romance than a sober recital of real
facts. (See Appendix)
ISAAC
B. SAWYER. Was born on Tuskeegee creek in
Macon, now Swain, county in 1810. James W. Patton,
John Burgin and 'Squire Sawyer were, for years,
the three magistrates composing the Buncombe county court.
He was the first mayor of Asheville and was clerk and
master for many years before the Civil War and until the
adoption of the Code. He was the father of Captain
James P. Sawyer, who for years was the president of the
Battery Park bank, a successful merchant and a public
spirited and enterprising citizen. Isaac B. Sawyer
died in 1880.
JAMES MITCHELL
ALEXANDER. He was born on Bee Tree creek,
Buncombe county, May 22, 1793. His grandfather,
John Alexander, of Scotch-Irish descent, was a native of
Rowan county, where he married Rachel Davidson, a
sister of William and Samuel Davidson, and resided in
Lincoln county during the Revolutionary war. They are
afterwards among the first settlers of Buncombe, but moved
to Harper's river, Tenn. His son, James Alexander
was born in Rowan, December 23, 1756. He fought on the
American side at Kings Mountain, and Cornwallis's camp
chest, captured by him, was in Buncombe in 1898 when
"Asheville's Centenary" was written by F. A. Sondley, Esq.
Mar. 19, 1782, he married in York district, South Carolina,
Miss Rhoda Cunningham, who had been born in
Pennsylvania, Oct. 13, 1763. They then moved to
Buncombe with their father and uncle and settled on Bee
Tree, where he died in the Presbyterian faith.
James Mitchell Alexander was their son, and on September
8, 1814, he married Nancy Foster oldest child of
Thomas Foster, who was born Nov. 17, 1797. In 1816
he removed to Asheville and bought and improved the
Hilliard property on South Main street. He was a
saddler, and at his house he lived till 1828, carrying on
his trade and keeping hotel. In 1828, upon the
completion of the Buncombe turnpike, he bought and improved
the place on the right bank of the French Broad, ten miles
from Asheville, afterwards famous as Alexander's
hotel, also carrying on a mercantile business there.
In the latter part of his life he turned over this business
to his son, the late Rev. J. S. Burnett, and improved
the place three miles nearer Asheville called Montrealla,
where he died June 11, 1858. His wife died Jan. 14,
1862
ANDREW ERWIN. He is
the man to whom Bishop Asbury referred as "chief
man." He was born in Virginia about 1773
and died near the War Trace in Bedford County, Tenn., in
1833. When seventeen years old he entered the
employment of hte late James Patton, afterwards
becoming his partner as inn-kee0per and merchant at
Wilkesborough. In 1800-01 he was a member of the House
of Commons from Wilkes. He was Asheville's first
postmaster. In 1814 he moved to Augusta, Ga.
THOMAS FOSTER. He
was born in Virginia Oct. 14, 1774. In 1776 his
father, William Foster came with his family and
settled midway between the road leading to the Swannanoa
river by way of Fernihurst from Asheville. He married
Miss Orra Sams, whose father, Edmund Sams, was
one of the settlers from Watauga. After his marriage
Thomas Foster settled on the bank of Sweeten's creek,
afterward called Foster's Mill creek, the first which
enters Swannanoa from thZe south above the present iron
bridge on the Hendersonville road. He was a member of
the House of Commons from Buncombe from 1809 to 1814, both
inclusive, and represented that county in the State senate
in 1817 and 1819. He died Dec. 24, (incorrectly on
tombstone Dec. 14), 1858. He was a farmer and
accumulated a considerable property. A large family of
children survived him. His wife died Aug. 27, 1853.
He is mentioned in Wheeler's History of North
Carolina, Bennett's Chronology of North Carolina and Bishop
Asbury's journal.
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