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Brandon Ray Kirk

Tag Archives: James P. Mullins

James P. Mullins Grave and the K.S. Colley Cemetery in Breaks, VA (2018)

11 Tuesday Sep 2018

Posted by Brandon Ray Kirk in Big Harts Creek, Cemeteries, Lincoln County Feud

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Appalachia, Big Branch, Big Harts Creek, Brandon Kirk, Breaks, Dickenson County, feuds, genealogy, history, James P. Mullins, K.S. Colley Cemetery, K.S. Colley Cemetery Road, King Solomon Colley, King Solomon Colley Road, Lincoln County, Lincoln County Feud, photos, Phyllis Kirk, Virginia, West Virginia

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View of K.S. Colley Cemetery Road from the K.S. Colley Cemetery in Breaks, Dickenson County, VA. 25 August 2018.

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K.S. Colley Cemetery. 25 August 2018.

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James P. Mullins, once a merchant at Big Branch of Harts Creek in Lincoln County, WV, was involved in the Lincoln County Feud. Photo by Mom. 25 August 2018.

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View of the cemetery from K.S. Colley Cemetery Road. 25 August 2018.

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The K.S. Colley Cemetery is located near the Dickenson-Buchanan county line. 25 August 2018.

Grundy, Virginia (2017)

27 Monday Mar 2017

Posted by Brandon Ray Kirk in Lincoln County Feud

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Appalachia, Blood in West Virginia, Brandon Kirk, Buchanan County, genealogy, Grundy, history, James P. Mullins, Kentucky, Lincoln County Feud, Louisa Jane Mullins, Maysville, photos, Phyllis Kirk, The Evening Bulletin, Virginia

BK at Buchanan County Courthouse

On 9 November 1889, The Evening Bulletin of Maysville, Kentucky, referenced Louisa J. (Collins) Mullins as a key participant of the Lincoln County Feud. Years earlier, in 1872, L.J. had married James P. Mullins in Buchanan County, Virginia. I recently visited Grundy, the county seat of Buchanan County. Photo by Mom. 25 March 2017. https://www.newspapers.com/clip/7839482/elizabeth_louise_mullins_hatfield_1889/

 

James P. Mullins

04 Saturday Mar 2017

Posted by Brandon Ray Kirk in Big Harts Creek, Boone County, Harts, Lincoln County Feud

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Albert Mullins, Appalachia, Big Branch, Boone County, Buchanan County, Dicy Collins, Dorcas Mullins, genealogy, Harts, Harts Creek, Henry H. Hardesty, history, Isham Collins, James A. Mullins, James P. Mullins, Kentucky, Lincoln County, Louisa Jane Mullins, Mary J. Mullins, merchant, Minnie B. Mullins, Victoria Mullins, Virginia, West Virginia

From “Hardesty’s History of Lincoln County, West Virginia,” published by H.H. Hardesty, we find this entry for James P. Mullins, who resided at Big Branch of Harts Creek in Lincoln County, West Virginia:

Came to Lincoln county in 1877, and now owns 250 acres of fine farming land on Hart creek. The farm has good improvements, and a large orchard. Mr. Mullins was born in Kentucky in 1848, and he is a son of James P. and Dorcas (Mullins) Mullins, residents of Boone county, West Virginia. Elizabeth J., daughter of Isham and Dicy (Johnson) Collins, was born in Kentucky, October 5, 1855, and in Buchanan county, Virginia, May 25, 1872, she became the wife of James P. Mullins. Five children are the result of their union: Mary J., born October 5, 1873; Victoria, April 23, 1876; Albert, July 18, 1877; Minnie B., July 1, 1879; James A., November 13, 1883. Mr. Mullins is a man of good business qualifications, and is prosperously engaged in merchandising, with business headquarters on Hart creek, one and one-half miles from its mouth. He may be addressed at Hart, Lincoln county, West Virginia.

Source: The West Virginia Encyclopedia, Vol. 7 (Richwood, WV: Jim Comstock, 1974), p. 136.

Harts Creek Area Preachers (1891-1892)

09 Saturday Jan 2016

Posted by Brandon Ray Kirk in Big Harts Creek, Halcyon, Harts, Shively, Spottswood, Warren

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Albert Sidebottom, Allen Ellis, Andrew Conley, Ann Dingess, Bettie Conley, Brook Hager, Charley Conley, Cora Dingess, Dorthena Gore, Elbert Dingess, Eliza Mullins, Ellen Meadows, Emery Mullins, genealogy, George W. Deskins, Gordon Farley, Harts Creek, Henry Meeks, history, Jackson Adkins, James P. Mullins, Jeff Vinson, Jeremiah Sias, John Adams, John Coburn, John Conley, John F. Dingess, Josephus Workman, Leona Williamson, Leota Hager, Logan County, Lourena Fry, Margaret Adams, Margaret McCloud, Minnis W. Perry, Moses Dempsey, Nellie Workman, Ozilla Thompson, Peter Carter, Peter Dalton, Peter Mullins, Robert L. Browning, Rosa Marcum, Roxie Dempsey, Sallie Adkins, Sally Adams, Sarah Ball, Stella Abbott, Tilda Vance, Van B. Prince, Virginia Perry, Washington Dempsey, Washington Vance, West Virginia, William Fleming

The following list of Logan County marriages for the period of 1891 to 1892 reveals the names of preachers operating in the Harts Creek area. This is a “working list” and will be updated. The source for this material is “Marriages-Births-Deaths, 1872-1892,” pages 65-69, and “Logan County Marriages, 1893-1913,” which is located at the Logan County Clerk’s Office in Logan, WV. Many thanks to the county clerks and their employees who have always been so helpful to my research these past twenty-five years. NOTE: Marriage records for the Lincoln County section of the community are unavailable.

1891

Van B. Prince     __ January 1891     Peter Dalton and Evaline James

Josephus Workman     10 January 1891     Emery Mullins and Estella Abbott

Josephus Workman     05 February 1891     William Fleming and Lourena Fry

Van B. Prince     28 May 1891     Peter Carter and Margaret Adams

James P. Mullen     04 June 1891     J.D. Ellis and M.L. Berry

Van B. Prince     08 June 1891     Elbert C. Dingess and Ozilla Thompson

Gordon Farley     4 September 1891     Andrew Conley and Ellen Meadows

Van B. Prince     08 October 1891     Henry Meeks and Leota Hagar

Van B. Prince     15 November 1891     Robert L. Browning and Sarah Ball

Washington Dempsey     24? November 1891     Moses Dempsey and Sallie Adkins

Van B. Prince     23 December 1891     Jeremiah Sias and Margaret McCloud

Jackson Adkins     24 December 1891     John Cobern and Leona Williamson

Gordon Farley     31 December 1891     O.J. Simms? and Bettie Conley

1892

Van B. Prince     11 January 1892     Washington Vance and Sally Adams

Gordon Farley     26? January 1892     John Adams and Dorthena Gore

Van B. Prince     29 January 1892     Jeff Vinson and Brook Hagar

Gordon Farley     13 February 1892     Peter Mullins and Eliza Mullins

Van B. Prince     01 March 1892     John Conley and Nellie Workman

Isaac Fry     07 March 1892     Minnis W. Perry and Virginia Perry

Van B. Prince     08 March 1892     Allen Ellis and Tilda Vance

Gordon Farley     September 1892?     John F. Dingess and Ann Dingess

Gordon Farley     September 1892?     Albert Sidebottom and Cora Dingess

Wash Dempsey     October 1892     Charley Conley and Rosa Marcum

Washington Dempsey     December 1892     George W. Deskins and Roxie Dempsey

Harts Creek Area Preachers (1890)

08 Friday Jan 2016

Posted by Brandon Ray Kirk in Big Harts Creek, Halcyon, Harts, Spottswood, Warren, Whirlwind

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Anthelia Gore, Arminta Thompson, Caroline Dingess, Charley Brumfield, Charley Curry, Dump Farley, Dyke Garrett, Ella Workman, Farabell McCloud, Floyd Hager, Frances Adkins, genealogy, George Thompson, Harts Creek, James A. Hager, James Messer, James P. Mullins, James Williamson, Jesse Gore, John Chapman, Josephus Workman, Julia Browning, Lena Chapman, Logan County, Lucinda Hall, Margaret Vance, Pat Anna Dingess, Richard Kirk, Rosa B. Farmer, Sarah Ann McCloud, Susan McCloud, U.S. Richards, Van B. Prince, Vinson Collins, West Virginia, Wilson Abbott

The following list of Logan County marriages for 1890 reveals the names of preachers operating in the Harts Creek area. This is a “working list” and will be updated. The source for this material is “Marriages-Births-Deaths, 1872-1892,” pages 62-64, which is located at the Logan County Clerk’s Office in Logan, WV. Many thanks to the county clerks and their employees who have always been so helpful to my research these past twenty-five years. NOTE: Marriage records for the Lincoln County section of the community are unavailable.

1890

Van B. Prince     23 February 1890     James Williamson and M.J. McCloud

Van B. Prince     25 March 1890     A.S. Lowe and Susan McCloud

Van B. Prince     28 March 1890     James Rose and Mary Marcum

Van B. Prince     17 April 1890     Vinson A. Collins and B. Ella Workman

Van B. Prince     25 April 1890     James Messer and Margarett Vance

J.P. Mullins     18 May 1890     John Chapman and Lena Chapman

Van B. Prince     23 May 1890     U.S. Richards and Pat Anna Dingess

Josephus Workman     25 May 1890     Wilson Abbott and Rosa B. Farmer

Van B. Prince     3 July 1890     Richard Kirk and Sarah Ann McCloud

M.V. Prince     19 July 1890     Floyd Hager and Farabell McCloud

Josephus Workman     14 September 1890     George B. Farley and Lucinda Hall

Van B. Prince     23 October 1890     James A. Hager and Julia Browning

Josephus Workman     __ November 1890     Jesse Gore and Araminta Thompson

Van B. Prince     9 November 1890     Charley Curry and Frances Adkins

Josephus Workman     13 November 1890     George Thompson and Anthelia Gore

Dyke Garrett     27 November 1890     Charley Brumfield and Caroline Dingess

Harts Creek Area Preachers (1888-1889)

25 Friday Dec 2015

Posted by Brandon Ray Kirk in Big Harts Creek, Lincoln County Feud

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Albert Bryant, Almeda Workman, Appalachia, Arminta Adkins, Arminta Thompson, Asa Ferrell, Ballard Bryant, Barrette Mullins, Bird Smith, Cain Adkins, Charley Collins, Cordelia Messer, Daniel Vance, David Burns, David Robinson, Dolcena McCloud, Elizabeth Kinser, Elizabeth Tomblin, genealogy, Harts Creek, history, James Carter, James Messer, James P. Mullins, Jane Poos Adams, Jesse Gore, John A. Farley, John Adams, John Adkins, John Dingess, John Farris, John Mullins, John W. Tomblin, Joseph A. Fowler, Josephus Workman, Leanzy Farris, Lincoln County, Logan County, Luda Mullins, Malinda J. Bryant, Marietta Carter, Martha Richards, Mary J. Dingess, Matilda Vance, Melvin McCloud, Minnie Collins, Minnie Ferrell, Mollie Robinson, Parris Smith, Penelope Dingess, Philip Hager, Rebecca Bell, Rosalie Stone, Roxie Bryant, Roxie Lena Farley, Solomon Mullins, Spencer Mullins, U.S. South, Van Buren Mullins Jr., Van Prince, Viola Smith, West Virginia, William Bell, William Kinser

The following list of Logan County marriages for the period of 1888 to 1889 reveals the names of preachers operating in the Harts Creek area. This is a “working list” and will be updated. The source for this material is “Marriages-Births-Deaths, 1872-1892,” pages 57-62, which is located at the Logan County Clerk’s Office in Logan, WV. Many thanks to the county clerks and their employees who have always been so helpful to my research these past twenty-five years. NOTE: Marriage records for the Lincoln County section of the community are unavailable.

1888

Josephus Workman     15 April 1888     George Smoot and Fannie Smoot

Canaan Adkins     16 April 1888     John Adams and Jane Dalton

Canaan Adkins     23 April 1888     David Burns and Martha Richards

Philip Hager     4 May 1888     Crockett Butcher and Laura Vickers

Canaan Adkins     3 May 1888     V.B. Mullins, Jr. and Luda J. Kinser

Canaan Adkins     14 May 1888     John A. Farley and R.L. Workman

Philip Hager     16 June 1888     John Mullins and Barrette Lucas

Canaan Adkins     30 August 1888     Melvin McCloud and Dolcena Rose

Josephus Workman     12 September 1888     William F. Dingess and Penelope Stollings

Philip Hager     25 September 1888     Thomas B. Steele and Dixie L. Ferrell

J.P. Mullins     3 October 1888     John Dingess and Mary J. Mullins

Josephus Workman     7 October 1888     James Messer and Cordelia Abbott

Canaan Adkins     3 November 1888     William H. Workman and Almeda Workman

1889

Canaan Adkins     10 January 1889     John Adkins and Arminta Mullins

Canaan Adkins     10 January 1889     John W. Tomblin and Elizabeth Browning

Canaan Adkins     31 January 1889     Albert Bryant and Malinda J. Kinser

V.B. Prince     10 April 1889     Spencer Mullins and Simantha Collins

Canaan Adkins     12 April 1889     A.J. Browning and Cassie Williamson

V.B. Prince     4 May 1889     Solomon Mullins and Elizabeth _____

V.B. Prince     31 May 1889     William Kinser and Elizabeth Dalton

Josephus Workman     7 June 1889     Joseph A. Fowler and Louvernia Whitman

Josephus Workman     13 July 1889     C.H. Stone and Rosalie Lilly

V.B. Prince     16 August 1889     Burdin Smith and M.J. Bryant

V.B. Prince     16 August 1889     Parris Smith and Viola Tomblin

V.B. Prince     29 August 1889     James Carter and Marietta Burns

V.B. Prince     29 August 1889     Charley Collins and Minnie Dingess

Josephus Workman     26 September 1889     Asa Ferrell and Minnie Dingess

No Preacher Given     No Date Given     Jesse Gore and Araminta A. Thompson

V.B. Prince     15 October 1889     Daniel Vance and Matilda Lytton

V.B. Prince     1 December 1889     Ballard Bryant and Roxie Butcher

V.B. Prince     7 December 1889     John Farris and Leanzy Alford

Josephus Workman     25 December 1889     F.H. Brown and R.D. Dingess

Josephus Workman     30 December 1889     William Bell and Rebecca Hill

Van B. Prince     30 December 1889     David Robinson and Mollie Adams

Harts Creek Area Preachers (1885-1887)

21 Monday Dec 2015

Posted by Brandon Ray Kirk in Big Harts Creek

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Albert F. Gore, Alex Dalton, Anthelia Smith, Arrena Doss, Betty Nelson, Cain Adkins, Cordelia Thompson, David Bryant, Doshia Conley, Elizabeth Tomblin, Ellen Curry, Emeline Hall, Harriet Carter, Harts Creek, Henderson Bryant, James Kirk, James P. Mullins, John Adams, John Brumfield, John Smith, John W. Marcum, Joseph Baisden, Josephus Workman, Laura Butcher, Logan County, Mahala Browning, Mary A. Dingess, Mary A. Thompson, Mary Vance, Meekin Vance, Melvin Baisden, Minerva Tomblin, Moses Howard, Nancy Bryant, Nancy Mullins, Philip Hager, Solomon Adams, Stephen Yank Mullins, U.S. South, Van B. Prince, Weddington Mullins, William Carter, William Simpkins

The following list of Logan County marriages for the period of 1885 to 1887 reveals the names of preachers operating in the Harts Creek area. This is a “working list” and will be updated. The source for this material is “Marriages-Births-Deaths, 1872-1892,” pages 49-55, which is located at the Logan County Clerk’s Office in Logan, WV. Many thanks to the county clerks and their employees who have always been so helpful to my research these past twenty-five years. NOTE: Marriage records for the Lincoln County section of the community are unavailable.

1885

Van B. Prince     15 January 1885     David Bryant and Minerva Tomblin

Philip Hager     29 January 1885     John Brumfield and Mary A. Thompson

Josephus Workman     9 February 1885     Moses Howard and Mahala Browning

Josephus Workman     17 February 1885     William Simpkins and Nancy Bryant

Canaan Adkins     5 March 1885     W. Dempsey and E. Tomblin

Van B. Prince     19 March 1885     M. Baisden and M.J. Workman

J.P. Mullins     21 May 1885     John Adams and Anthelia Smith

Van B. Prince     16 August 1885     John Smith and Arrena Doss

1886

Van B. Prince     16 March 1886     W.H. Browning and Matilda Dempsey

Canaan Adkins     18 May 1886     James Kirk and C. Thompson

Van B. Prince     8 August? 1886     A.F. Gore and Sarah? McCloud

Josephus Workman     July or August 1886     W. Smith and L.B. Booth

Josephus Workman     7? August 1886     T.D.E. Stollings and Mary A. Dingess

Van B. Prince     9 August 1886     Melvin Baisden and Emeline Hall

Van B. Prince     21 August 1886     Stephen Mullins and Harriet Carter

Josephus Workman     September 1886     James Resner and Cela Hatton?

Van B. Prince     15 September 1886     Joseph Baisden and M.J. Williamson

Josephus Workman     29 November 1886     Alex Dalton and D.W. Conley

1887

Van B. Prince     13 January 1887     William Carter and Nancy Mullins

Van B. Prince     16 February 1887     Meekin Vance and Betty Nelson

Josephus Workman     18 February 1887     J.C. Marcum and Doshia Conley

Van B. Prince     25 February 1887     John W. Marcum and Mary Vance

Canaan Adkins     25 July 1887     J.H. Mullins and Elizabeth Tomblin

Van B. Prince     27 July 1887     Solomon Adams and E.E. Curry

Van B. Prince     20 August 1887     Weddington Mullins and Missouri Kinser

Van B. Prince     22 August 1887     Henderson Bryant and Laura Butcher

Harts Creek Area Preachers (1879-1881)

28 Saturday Nov 2015

Posted by Brandon Ray Kirk in Big Harts Creek

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America Toppins, Ann Conley, Anthelia Elkins, Appalachia, Arminda Roberts, Asa Williamson, Barbara Workman, Canaan Adkins, David Straton, David Thompson, Elgan Tomblin, Eliza Thomas, genealogy, Harts Creek, Henry S. Godby, history, Isaac Fry, James Browning, James P. Mullins, Jefferson Mullins, Jeremiah McCloud, Jesse Collins, John Bryant, John Frock Adams, Josephus Workman, Letilia Kinser, Lewis Collins, Lewis Dingess, Logan County, Lucinda Curry, Margaret Hensley, Martha Hall, Mary A. Lowe, Matilda Vance, Melissa Ann Hager, Nancy Dempsey, Nancy J. Mullins, Obediah Tomblin, preachers, Pricy Roberts, Rebecca Browning, Sarah Lambert, Stephen T. Myers, Thomas Browning, U.S. South, West Virginia, William B. Wheatley

The following list of Logan County marriages for the period of 1879 to 1881 reveals the names of preachers operating in the Harts Creek area. This is a “working list” and will be updated. The source for this material is “Marriages-Births-Deaths, 1872-1892,” pages 37-41, which is located at the Logan County Clerk’s Office in Logan, WV. Many thanks to the county clerks and their employees who have always been so helpful to my research these past twenty-five years. NOTE: Marriage records for the Lincoln County section of the community are unavailable.

1879

Isaac Fry     8 January 1879     James Browning and Margaret Hensley

James P. Mullins     15 February 1879     David Straton and Nancy J. Mullins

Canaan Adkins     21 February 1879    Obediah Tomberlin and Nancy Dempsey

Isaac Fry     22 March 1879     Lewis Collins and Pricy Roberts

Isaac Fry     24 April 1879     David Thompson and Barbary Workman

James P. Mullins     14 June 1879     James P. Mullins and Eliza Thomas

Isaac Fry     25 September 1879     Jeremiah McCloud and Sarah Lambert

Canaan Adkins     16 October 1879     Jesse Collins and Malisa Ann Hager

Canaan Adkins     14 November 1879     Jefferson Mullins and Anthelia Elkins

Isaac Fry     30 December 1879     Asa Williamson and Rebecca Browning

1880

Canaan Adkins     4 May 1880     Lewis Dingess and Martha Hall

James Mullins     9 May 1880     Elgan Tomlin and Arminda Roberts

Josephus Workman     25 December 1880     H.S. Godbey and Mary A. Lowe

1881

Josephus Workman     15 February 1881     John Bryant and America Toppins

Canaan Adkins     28 May 1881     John Adams and Lucinda Curry

Canaan Adkins     12 July 1881     Dr. Stephen T. Myers and Matilda Vance

Canaan Adkins     12 July 1881     Thomas Browning and Letilia Kinser

Josephus Workman     9 October 1881     William B. Wheatley and Ann Conley

Hart, 1882

27 Saturday Dec 2014

Posted by Brandon Ray Kirk in Big Harts Creek, Harts

≈ 2 Comments

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Andrew D. Robinson, Appalachia, Bill Fowler, blacksmith, Blood in West Virginia, distiller, genealogy, general store, Hamlin, Harts, history, Isaac Fry, Jackson Browning, James P. Mullins, Lincoln County, Lincoln County Feud, Paris Brumfield, Polk's State Gazetteer and Business Directory, postmaster, U.S. South, Wheeling

"Hart," Polk's West Virginia State Gazetteer and Business Directory, 1882-1883.

“Hart,” Polk’s West Virginia State Gazetteer and Business Directory, 1882-1883.

In Search of Ed Haley 235

07 Friday Feb 2014

Posted by Brandon Ray Kirk in Ed Haley, Harts, Lincoln County Feud

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Addison Vance, Al Brumfield, Benjamin Fowler, Bill Fowler, Cain Adkins, Charley Brumfield, Ed Haley, Effie Fowler, Emzy Petrie, Ferrellsburg, genealogy, George H. Thomas, George Washington Fowler, Harts Creek, Henry H. Hardesty, history, Isham Roberts, James P. Mullins, John H. Adkins, John H. Napier, John W Runyon, Milt Haley, Salena Vance, writing

The Lincoln County Courthouse — which holds deed records, vital statistics, and criminal records for the Harts Creek District — burned on November 19, 1909, taking with it whatever records might have existed pertaining to the 1889 feud. Thanks to a now-forgotten arsonist reportedly hired by a gas company to eliminate locals’ claims to mineral rights, we can locate little information in the courthouse on Milt Haley’s death or Brumfield family antics. However, somehow, we do have access to Lincoln County land records since 1867 and they reveal quite a bit about the happenings at the mouth of Harts Creek in the late 1880s. (The Logan County Courthouse, which holds similar records on Ed Haley and his family, has fared little better: it was burned by Yankee soldiers during the Civil War.)

Al Brumfield, according to Brandon’s research, first settled with his wife in a small, boxed house on property owned by his mother and located just below the mouth of Harts Creek at the Shoals along the Guyandotte River. In 1888, some seven years after his marriage, he secured his first piece of property on Brown’s Branch, courtesy of his mother. More importantly, according to land records (in one of those moments where written records confuse the story by totally conflicting with oral tradition), he did not own any property at the mouth of Harts Creek at the time of the Haley-McCoy trouble. Al apparently bought land there from Bill Fowler immediately after the Haley-McCoy trouble. The earliest documented account of him owning the log boom was an 1895 deed, which partially read, “…about three hundred yards above the mouth of said creek where the log boom is now tied.”

One thing for certain: Brumfield wasted little time in eliminating his business competitors at the mouth of Harts Creek immediately following the Haley-McCoy murders. In 1889, he had four primary rivals: (1) Bill Fowler; (2) John Runyon; (3) Isham Roberts and, to a lesser extent, (4) James P. Mullins. Fowler was his cousin, Runyon was no relation, and Roberts was his brother-in-law. Mullins was located more than a mile up Harts Creek at Big Branch and operated a business that was likely past its prime.

In 1890, Brumfield acquired two tracts of land (a 95-acre tract worth 113 dollars and a 25-acre tract worth 75 dollars) from Runyon. We don’t know what price was paid for this land (thanks to the courthouse fire) but considering the circumstances it may have helped save Runyon’s life in the wake of his possible role in the Haley-McCoy fiasco. In that same year, a stubborn Bill Fowler sold two valuable lots on the west side of Guyan River totaling 165 acres to Isaac Adkins, not Al Brumfield. Fowler was apparently resisting the urge to sell out to his ambitious younger cousin who had reportedly burned his business. One tract was 75 acres and worth six dollars per acre, while the other was 90 acres and worth four dollars per acre. The property was worth 810 dollars. Meanwhile, in 1891, Brumfield’s brother-in-law, Isham Roberts, who was referenced in a circa 1884 history as a “prosperous young merchant” at the mouth of Harts Creek, sold out and moved upriver near Fowler Branch (present-day Ferrellsburg).

Not only did Fowler, Runyon and Roberts sell out — they moved away completely. Fowler took his wife and four children (Bettie, age 15, Effie, age 14, Benjamin Franklin, age 12, and George Washington, age 10) and moved to Central City in Huntington. In May of 1892, his wife bought Lot 6 Block 88 in Central City from Susan Porter and her husband. On October 19, she deeded it to Louis H. Taliaferro, who deeded it back to William Fowler, who deeded it back to Taliaferro, who deeded it back to Mrs. Fowler. The Fowlers were in Central City in 1900. According to family tradition, Roberts moved to Oklahoma because of his wife’s disapproval of the violent deeds committed by her family. Several years later, she sold her interest in her father’s estate to Charley Brumfield — the man who had murdered her father in 1891.

Aside from businessmen, the 1889 troubles drove away other important citizens from Harts. First was Cain Adkins, a doctor, lawman, preacher and schoolteacher. In 1891, Cain Adkins sold 40 acres to John H. Adkins, who thereafter claimed the remainder of the farm. Two years later, in 1893, John and his wife Sallie deeded “the Canaan Adkins Farm” (205 acres) to Salena Vance for $607.50. In 1895, Vance and others sold the farm to J.A. Chambers, who in turn deeded it to Louis R. Sweetland in 1897. Thereafter, Salena Vance acquired the property again (jointly with her children, John and Nettie Toney) and sold it to George H. Thomas and E.O. Petrie in 1913. Later that year, Petrie sold his half-interest to Thomas. In 1914, the property contained a 300-dollar building.

In addition to Preacher Cain, John H. Napier, a doctor and in-law to Adkins, seems to have fled the community around 1890. According to Hardesty’s History of Lincoln County, West Virginia (c.1884), Napier settled near the mouth of Harts Creek in 1879. His wife, Julia Ann Ross, was a niece to Cain Adkins. Her older sister married Cain Adkins’ brother-in-law, Addison Vance, of Piney. John was listed in the 1880 census as a thirty-seven-year-old physician with a wife (age 30) and five children, as well as a nephew. He did not own property locally, although his occupation as a doctor and businessman might have made him particularly threatening to an ambitious person like Al Brumfield. “Mr. Napier is a prosperous merchant in Hart Creek district, with business headquarters at the mouth of the creek,” Hardesty wrote.

In Search of Ed Haley 199

18 Monday Nov 2013

Posted by Brandon Ray Kirk in Chapmanville, Civil War, Ed Haley, Green Shoal, Guyandotte River, Harts

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Admiral S. Fry, Andrew D. Robinson, Andrew Robinson, Appalachia, Big Branch, Bill Fowler, Chapmanville, Confederate Army, Dicy Roberts, Elias Adkins, Francis Fork, G.S. Fry, general store, Green Shoal, Harts, Harts Creek, Harts Creek District, Henry H. Hardesty, Henry S. Godby, history, Hollena Brumfield, Isham Roberts, Jack Johnson, James P. Mullins, Joseph Workman, Marsh Fork, Martha Jane Brumfield, merchant, Milt Haley, Paris Brumfield, Sallie Dingess, Sand Lick Run, teacher, Thomas H. Buckley, timber, West Fork

The town of Harts — originally named Hart’s Creek — was established at the mouth of Big Harts Creek in the summer or fall of 1870 when Henry S. Godby, a peg-legged Confederate veteran from Chapmanville, petitioned the government for the creation of a post office called “Hart’s Creek.” At that time, Green Shoal was the most thriving spot in the Harts section of the Guyandotte River. A.S. Fry was its chief businessman and postmaster. Godby’s effort to establish Harts as a postal town was a short-lived venture. By 1876, Green Shoal still reigned supreme in local affairs. According to a business directory, it could boast a gristmill, free school and a Baptist and Methodist church. T.H. Buckley and G.S. Fry were physicians, while Joseph Workman was a clergyman.

Around that time, in 1876, Bill Fowler — a local general storekeeper — petitioned the government for the creation of a “Hearts Creek” post office and established his business headquarters at Harts. Fowler had migrated to the area in 1847 and married a daughter of Elias Adkins, an early settler. After a short stint as a schoolteacher in 1871, Fowler was by 1876 a general storekeeper and owner of some 30 acres of land on the Marsh Fork of West Fork. In March of 1877, he became postmaster of “Hearts Creek;” he was also a saloon keeper according to oral tradition. As his business interest generated profits (primarily in timber), he extended his land holdings. In 1878, he purchased 75 acres on the Guyan River from Abner Vance, valued at $5.00 per acre. The following year, he added a 90-acre tract to his estate on the west side of the Guyan River, valued at $3.25 per acre, which he purchased from brothers-in-law, Aaron and Enos Adkins.

Throughout the period, Fowler was unquestionably the chief businessman in Harts. Curiously, Andrew D. Robinson replaced him as postmaster of Hearts Creek in 1879. Robinson was a Union veteran and former township clerk, justice of the peace, and secretary of the district board of education. He was a brother-in-law to Ben Adams, as well as Sallie Dingess (Hollena Brumfield’s mother). In 1881, Robinson shortened the name of the Hearts Creek post office to “Hart.”

The Green Shoal area, meanwhile, fell into a state of decline as a local economic center. A.S. Fry gave up his postmaster position in 1878. He maintained his local business interests well into the next decade, then turned them over to his son George and left to pursue a hotel business in Guyandotte, a town situated at the mouth of the river in Cabell County. The Green Shoal post office was discontinued in 1879.

By 1880 — roughly the time that Milt Haley came to Harts from “over the mountain” — Harts reigned supreme as the hub of local business affairs. In that year, according to census records, the population of the Harts Creek District was 1,116. There were 1,095 white residents, fifteen blacks and six mulattos. 93-percent of locals were born in Virginia or West Virginia, while six percent were born in Kentucky. Most men worked at farming, although A.S. Fry and Paris Brumfield both had stores. In 1882-1883, Brumfield was listed in a state business directory as a distiller.

At that time, Bill Fowler was the undisputed kingpin of the local business scene. According to Hardesty’s History of Lincoln County, published around 1884, Fowler owned 200 acres of land at the mouth of Harts Creek and 254 acres on Mud River. He also owned 200 acres on Sand Lick Run, a branch of Francis Fork, based on land records at the Lincoln County Courthouse. “That situated on Hart creek produces well,” Hardesty wrote, “and has a good orchard and a part is heavily timbered with oak, poplar and pine; coal and iron ore are quite abundant.” Fowler was the father of four small children, recently born to his second wife.

There were other notable business folks in the neighborhood, namely Isham Roberts, who operated a store near Fowler on the Guyandotte River. He was the son of Dicy Roberts and the stepson of Jack Johnson, a local farmer. In the early 1880s, he married Martha Jane Brumfield, a daughter of Paris Brumfield, and opened a store on rental property at the mouth of Harts Creek. By 1884, when Hardesty wrote his history of the county, he referred to Roberts as “a prosperous young merchant in Hart Creek district, having his headquarters on Guyan river, at the mouth of Big Hart creek. His prices are the most reasonable and the business very extensive.” Roberts was the postmaster at Harts from 1883 until 1884, when Dr. T.H. Buckley replaced him.

James P. Mullins, who operated a general store building above Roberts at Big Branch, was also a budding merchant. By 1882, Mullins was the owner of a $200 storebuilding situated on a 203-acre tract of land. Over the next few years, he added another 55 acres on lower Harts Creek and 150 acres on Francis Fork (this latter tract likely acquired for timbering purposes). Hardesty referred to Mullins as being “of good business qualifications and prosperously engaged in merchandising, with business headquarters on Hart creek, one and one-half miles from its mouth.” In that year, Mullins purchased an additional 93 acres on Harts Creek. One year later, the value of his store building increased by $100, hinting at his growing prosperity.

Feud Poll 1

If you had lived in the Harts Creek community during the 1880s, to which faction of feudists might you have given your loyalty?

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Feud Poll 2

Do you think Milt Haley and Green McCoy committed the ambush on Al and Hollene Brumfield in 1889?

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Feud Poll 3

Who do you think organized the ambush of Al and Hollene Brumfield in 1889?

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Ed Haley Poll 1

What do you think caused Ed Haley to lose his sight when he was three years old?

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