Monday, November 21, 2016

Mary Allen Morgan

Mary Allen Morgan was born on 14 June 1905 in Mebane, Alamance County, North Carolina. She was the first child of Samuel Goodloe Morgan and Laura Augusta "Minnie" Wilson Murphy Morgan.

Mary Allen, as she was always called, was a beautiful child, with blond curls and blue-grey eyes that captured attention.

Minnie was was ill-prepared for motherhood, and had little idea of what to do with a child. Having been raised by a black woman herself, she demanded that she have a female servant to "do for" Mary Allen. In effect, Minnie turned over all responsibilities to that woman known by the name of "Linie", short for Caroline.

Mary Allen and Jack, 14 June 1907.
Mary Allen's father, Sam, worshiped her in every way. He brought her sweets in the pockets of his jacket.  He gave her presents such as as a doll, doll clothes, a doll carriage, building blocks, and books to be read to her. In the Summer of 1907, he presented her with with a dog named "Jack" for her first birthday. You can see her with Jack in the front yard of the family home.
Mary Allen atop the family horse.

Sam fancied that she might like riding and helped her ride the family's horse in the yard beside their two-story home on Center Street in downtown Mebane. Minnie was apparently appalled that anyone might see her daughter astride a horse and demanded that she be taken down. Immediately!

Sam was the oldest of three brothers. He was a graduate of Trinity College in 1900, having studied mathematics and accounting. Trinity later became Duke University. His next youngest brother, William Rainey "Will" Morgan had a love of the land and became a farmer in Caswell County, North Carolina, where all three brothers were born. The youngest brother was John Allen "Jack" Morgan, and he too graduated from Trinity College in 1906 after having studied mathematics and finance.

Sam had come to Mebane in 1902 to take a position as cashier at the Farmers Commercial Bank. He purchased the family home on Center Street, just three blocks from the bank, and that is where he and Minnie settled. He could walk to work if he liked, but Minnie insisted he always be driven to and from work in a carriage. She wanted him to be seen as a successful young businessman.

In the meantime, Minnie set about becoming involved with society in Mebane. She began by immediately transferring her membership to the First Presbyterian Church and regularly attending services with Sam. She joined other women of the church in their activities, and she insisted that Sam become involved teaching Sunday School and joining the mens' group. Minnie made contacts with the more well-to-do female members and began inviting the ladies to the house for tea and refreshments. Her insistence in Sam's participation helped insure that he became acquainted with and visible to the influential men of the town who were Presbyterian by affiliation. As a result, both Sam and Minnie became well known in the town as members of "society."  In the meantime, Linie took care of Mary Allen and mothered her.

Mary Allen Morgan, 1908
Mary Allen was a healthy child she smiled and laughed. She adored her father. In 1908, he bought a ram's skin rug with long fur and finished with a burgundy-colored woolen base to which it was mounted. He teased her that she was going to stand on that rug when she was married. A photograph taken in 1908 (left) shows Mary Allen with her favorite doll posed on the ram's skin rug. She kept that rug until she died.

Minnie was not satisfied with life in small-town Mebane. She visited Durham, Raleigh, and Burlington to shop. She also traveled to Mecklenburg County to visit her parents and her siblings and their families who remained there. Sam, Minnie, and Mary Allen went to stay with Minnie's parents for Christmas in 1908.

One of Minnie's brother's, Emory Lee Wilson, and his wife, Dora Ester McKey Wilson,had opened a hotel in Black Mountain, Buncombe County, North Carolina, east of Asheville. Black Mountain was a tiny town in a spectacular scenic area. With the arrival of the railroad in 1879, the town began to become a tourist destination during the summer months. By the time of the 1900 US federal census, the population was 209. Emory's hotel developed a regular clientele, and the hotel was open from the end of May until September.

In early 1909, Minnie decided it would be fashionable - and cooler - to spend the summer in Black Mountain. Sam made arrangements for them to travel together there in May and off they went together with Mary Allen and Linie to look after Mary Allen's needs. Sam stayed in Black Mountain for a few days to see them settled in, and he then returned by train to Mebane.

But Minnie and Mary Allen would not stay the entire summer. Instead, Minnie discovered (or revealed) that she was pregnant with a second child. Sam insisted that Minnie come home before the pregnancy got too far along and it became visible. At the end of June or the beginning of July, Sam came back to Black Mountain to accompany Minnie, Mary Allen, and Linie back to Mebane. I can only imagine that Minnie was fit to be tied.




(c) Copyright George G. Morgan.
All rights reserved for text and photographs.








Saturday, November 19, 2016

Forgive the Tardiness ...

Please forgive my tardiness in posting new installments. First my computer had to go to the "spa" for a complete wipe. That was followed by a full week of restoring files, purchasing and reinstalling the software packages that I need for my business, and catching up with a backlog of business work. Next, I couldn't get signed into the blog because of a Google Blogger issue. That is finally corrected. And then, finally, I had my seventh surgery on Thursday, 17 November 2016, for bladder cancer. I'm up and limping today, but posted a new installment. More to follow!

Thanks for following this diatribe.

George

My Paternal Grandparents

My family was definitely not the idyllic nuclear group portrayed on the television series of the 1950s and early 1960s. There were lots of reasons for that, and some that I am certain that I have not discovered. However, this is the beginning of the story of the most important - and favorite - woman in my life.

Let's begin at the beginning, and that begins with my paternal grandparents.

My father's mother was born Laura Augusta Wilson on 24 January 1873 in Mecklenburg County, North Carolina. She was the ninth and youngest child of her parents, Dr. Joseph McKnitt Wilson and Lydia Lenora Patterson. The family story is that her mother invited a friend to stay with her during the last weeks of her confinement. It is said that the friend exclaimed when the baby was born that, "Oh, she looks so much like me! You'll have to name her "Minnie." Whether there was or was not any resemblance is unknown, but the child was called Minnie thereafter.

Minnie was a child of privilege. Her father, and indeed his father (Dr. Isaac Wilson), were well-respected physicians in the northwest part of Mecklenburg County. Minnie's mother, whose nickname was "Nora", was also from a well-off family. Nora had attended the Salem Female Academy in Salem, North Carolina. I have two receipts issued to her father, William Patterson. One is dated 29 July 1850 for the sum of $50 "in advance on account of Board and Tuition for Miss Lydia L. Patterson" and another from May 1852 in the amount of $151.59 that itemized her expenses for the entire 1851-1852 school year.

Joseph McKnitt Wilson and Lydia Lenora Patterson were married on 8 April 1856 in Mecklenburg County, and their first child was born in March of 1857. In the 1860 US Federal Census, Joseph M. Wilson is listed with seven slaves.

As the youngest child, it was said that Minnie had whatever she wanted and was spoiled by her father. The well-to-do doctor and his wife endured the Civil War and were in good condition in 1870, and by 1880 Joseph was farming. Minnie recounted to me that by the age of 17, she had two carriages: one for everyday and one for special occasions. From infancy, she had had African-American women to "look after her."
Minnie & Jeter (right) with her sister and fiance.

On 2 February 1898, Minnie married Jeter Ernest Murphy, from Iredell County, North Carolina. The wedding occurred at her parents' home in Sheva in the northwest corner of Mecklenburg County.

Jeter was employed as a salesman at The Green Front Store in Statesville, Iredell County, North Carolina. He was a member if the Junior Order United American Mechanics, a nativist organization. The couple moved to Statesville to settle. Unfortunately, Minnie's life took a tragic turn soon after. Jeter was stricken with typhoid fever in June. After a slight improvement, the Semi-Weekly Landmark, published in Statesville, reported in its Friday, 8 July 1898 edition, page 2: "Miss Della Wilson of Mecklenburg is here with her sister and brother-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Jeter Murphy. My Murphy has fever and is very low." He succumbed the next day, 9 July 1898.

Jeter died intestate, and the Junior Order United American Mechanics paid to Minnie a sum of $250, the amount of the funeral benefit due her as the widow of a member. Minnie returned to her parents' home to live. Jeter's estate was entered into probate and an administrator, Mr. Eugene Morrison, was qualified as administrator on 23 January 1899. The sole heirs were identified as "Wm. Murphy and sister, Miss Murphy."

My paternal grandfather was Samuel Goodloe Morgan, born on 6 April 1879 in Caswell County, North Carolina, He was the oldest of three sons born to Rainey Baines Morgan (27 November 1851 - 13 September 1891) and Caroline Alice Whitefield (23 August 1853 - 26 June 1917). His father was a farmer who died at the age of 39 of an infection in his leg.

Sam Morgan and Minnie Wilson Murphy met through a somewhat convoluted set of circumstances that I'll describe another time. However, they were married on 24 December 1902 in a wedding at her parents home.


Samuel Goodloe Morgan and Minnie Wilson Murphy Morgan.

The next installment will discuss the early years of their marriage and the births of their two children, Mary Allen Morgan and Samuel Thomas Morgan. The story becomes more intriguing.




(c) 2016 George G. Morgan

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