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Category: 33. The Henry Berry Lowry era BETH001. [Account of incidents in Dillon County, South Carolina resembling those of the Lowry Band in Robeson County.] In: Kinfolks: A genealogical and biographical record. By William Curry Harllee. New Orleans: Searcy & Pfaff, 1937. Volume 3, pages 2434-2435. Publication type: Genealogical account; excerpted in a book Full text: The full text of the source excerpted in Kinfolks is reproduced on the following Web page: "Historical Genealogy of The Bethea Family. Prepared by Philip Yancey Bethea. April 13th, 1916. With updates in 1930." Accessed July 15, 2007. Harllee's book provides an excerpt, labelled "Warfare with deserters," from Philip Yancey Bethea's Historical Genealogy of the Bethea Family. I have not seen an original copy of Bethea's work; but the Web page cited above reads almost identically to the excerpt in Harllee's book, except that Harllee adds the alphanumeric codes, in the genealogical classification system of his book, for the Bethea kin mentioned in the excerpt. To avoid typographical errors, I have copied and pasted below, from the Web page, the "Deserters" excerpt provided in Harllee's book. I have set it off in paragraphs, as in Harllee's book. In addition, I have placed in brackets phrases that are different on the Web page, as well as a key section provided on the Web page that does not appear in Harllee's book. All of the text below appears on the Web page under the heading "John J. Bethea."
Note: I am grateful to Josephine Humphreys for alerting me to Harllee's Kinfolks. Analysis: When I discovered this account in Kinfolks, I immediately had two hypotheses about the incidents it describes: For example, Brewton Berry, in his article, "The mestizos of South Carolina," American Journal of Sociology, 51.1 (July 1945) pages 34-41, notes, ". . . in Marlboro, Dillon, Marion, and Horry they are 'Croatans' ..." (p. 34). In his discussion of the origins of the names of the South Carolina mestizos, he states, "Most romantic and widespread is the legend that they are descended from Sir Walter Raleigh's Lost Colony and the Croatan Indians who befriended them. . . . " (p. 35). Additional evidence of the kinship link between Indians in the Dillon/Marlboro area of South Carolina and Robeson County Indians is that the source documents used to certify individuals for membership in the Lumbee Tribe included (in 1987, when the Lumbee Petition was written) the "1900 and/or 1910 U.S. Special Indian Census Marlboro County, South Carolina" [Lumbee Petition, 1987, p. 233; cited in: Dial, Heather Kimberly. Struggling for voice in a Black and White world: Lumbee Indians’ segregated educational experience in North Carolina. Dissertation (Curriculum and Instruction). North Carolina State U, 2005. Pp. 28-29.] I was intrigued by this statement in the excerpt from Bethea's genealogy: "The main leaders of the deserters were Arthur Jackson, Chief; John Jackson, his brother; . . . " Genealogist Morris Britt, in the draft appendix to his forthcoming book that lists 523 documented Lumbee surnames, includes the surname Jackson and traces it to the Dillon, South Carolina, area. The following excerpt comes from Part 6 of his appendix, page 56: "JACKSON. The 'Croatan' name appeared in the 1790 census of Cheraw District, South Carolina and later in Marlboro, Dillon, Marion, and Horry counties (White, 1975, DeMarce, 1993, p. 31)." My first hypothesis, therefore, is that the band described in this excerpt contains, and is led by, Indians who were oppressed and denied rights in the same ways as were the Lowry Band and the Indians of Robeson County at that time. The Indians in this South Carolina band may or may not have heard of, or known, the Lowry Band and been moved to emulate their methods. (2). My second hypothesis is that the South Carolina band contained (perhaps only occasionally) members of the Lowry Band. Perusal of a South Carolina atlas shows that the Maple Swamp area of South Carolina is not far from Robeson County; and this environment would be similar to the swamps of Robeson County. I have not done exhaustive searching to see if sources on the Lowry Band era mention activity in this area of South Carolina; but a quick scan of To Die Game and The Life and Times of Henry Berry Lowry did not reveal any direct mentions. To Die Game does, however, discuss an incident in January, 1871 that in a very indirect way might tie the Lowry Band to this area of South Carolina. Bounty-hunters stopped a buggy on the Old Stage Road, twelve miles south of Fayetteville and headed toward Lumberton. Two men were in the buggy; they said they were Sinclair Locklear and his brother John and were on their way to Marion, South Carolina, to do farm work for J. L. Smith. The bounty hunters noticed that the men were armed, ordered them to halt, and then engaged in a fight with them, taking Sinclair prisoner; the other man escaped. The Fayetteville Eagle reported that it was believed that the man who escaped was Henry Berry Lowry (Evans,To Die Game, pp. 156-157).
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Copyright © 2002-2007, Glenn Ellen Starr Stilling. All rights reserved. |