Unionist communities existed throughout the Confederate South during the Civil War. “The Free State of Jones” is an exciting story with its own unique characteristics, but it was only one of many inner civil wars between Unionists and Confederates across the South.
The following excerpt from “Occupied At Home: Women Confront Confederate Forces in North Carolina’s Quaker Belt,” chapter two of The Long Shadow of the Civil War: Southern Dissent and Its Legacies, features the Hulin family of Montgomery County, NC. The Hulins were among the best known Wesleyan Methodist Unionists of the North Carolina Piedmont, which, significantly, was the birthplace of many ancestors of the Free State of Jones uprising.
Because Unionist women in North Carolina’s Quaker Belt abetted men’s avoidance of Confederate service, many Confederate supporters viewed torture and deprivation of deserters’ wives as the product of simple necessity. Torturing the wife of guerrilla leader Bill Owens, after all, had resulted in his capture and imprisonment. In some counties, pro-secessionist millers also denied deserters’ wives government grain even though there was no official Confederate policy to that effect.
Women who sheltered male kin in the nearby woods eagerly told their side of the story. In separate letters to Governor Vance, Phebe Crook and Clarinda Crook Hulin, daughters of a Montgomery County Methodist schoolteacher and kin to numerous deserters, blasted their Confederate occupiers. Clarinda, who had three “outlier” brothers-in-law (she did not mention this in her letter), implored Governor Vance to consider the plight of farm women. “I hav three little children to werk for and I have werk[ed] for ever thing that I have to eat and ware,” she wrote. But military men sent to the region to restore order were “destroying every thing they can lay hans up on.” Troops had taken her “last hog,” and poured her molasses all over her floor. “It ant only Me they air takeing from . . . ,” she added, “they take the women’[s] horses out of the plows,” she explained, for their own use.
Ten more months of armed warfare between militia and deserters brought a more detailed letter from Clarinda’s sister, Phebe. As a single woman, Phebe Crook could not anchor her protest in the time-honored trope of the soldier’s wife or mother. She seemed eager, however, to describe herself as “a young lady that has Neather Husband, son, father, no[r] Brother in the woods” (although she did have male kin hiding in the woods). Invoking the moral authority of republicanism rather than motherhood, Crook informed Governor Vance of the “true” conditions of her community. Calling on him to “protect the civil laws and writs of our country,” she denounced the militia and magistrates of her county for arresting “poore old grey-headed fathers who has fought in the old War and has done thir duty . . . .”
Enraged by home guard who, Crook insisted, had no intention themselves of fighting in the war, she condemned their physical abuse of women and children and their burning of barns, houses, and crops, all done in the name of fulfilling the governor’s directive to force deserters in from the woods. Following such orders was merely an excuse, she wrote, for pro-Confederate men to “take their guns and go out in the woods and shoot them down Without Halting them as if they war Bruts or Murder[er]s.” Once again, Crook emphasized rights of citizenship rather than victimhood by assuring the governor that her motive for writing was that “I always like to [see] people hav jestis.”
Despite the sisters’ separate appeals to Governor Vance, they could not prevent the killing of their three brothers-in-law on January 28, 1865. Jesse, John, and William Hulin were executed along with James Atkins, who had been identified as a draft evader by Sheriff Aaron Sanders during the previous fall court term. Both the Crooks and Hulin families belonged to the county’s network of Wesleyan Methodist families who opposed slavery and refused to fight for the Confederacy.
NOTE: In addition to Long Shadow of the Civil War, this essay will appear in the anthology, Occupied Women, edited by LeeAnn Whites and Alecia Long, forthcoming from LSU Press. Readers who would like to know more about the Unionist Hulin family of Montgomery County, NC, should consult my 1992 book Unruly Women.
You got another winner here. Can’t wait for the book. These women’s stories can break you heart. After a century-and-a-half, their voices need to be heard at last. They’ve been buried under Confederate Monuments too long.
“The past ain’t what it used to be and never was!”
Jon
Amen, Jon!
Vikki
Just now surfed in. I’ll check in on a regular basis, and look forward to it.
Judge Petigru lives!
Welcome! And since you mention Judge Petigru, let’s remember his words about South Carolina’s belief in secession: that the state was too small to be a nation and too large for an insane asylum.
Do come back.
Vikki
[...] Great Post over at Renegade South See here. [...]
The Quakers are always known for their anti-slavery beliefs but I have come across several examples of Quakers owing slaves in the very early 1800s in Eastern NC.
I have had friends relate stories of their ancestors hiding in the swamps to avoid conscription. The women would hang the cloths upside down on the line to let them know not to home near the house.
Richard, thanks for your comments in regard to NC Quakers and Unionists. You are right that by no means did all Quakers oppose slavery. Those who did so most urgently tended to migrate out of NC as slavery became more entrenched in the South. But the so-called Quaker Belt still retained some of its old Quaker pacifism and dislike for slavery in 1861, especially in the Randolph County area. However, the strongest religious dissenters in that region by the time the war broke were the Wesleyan Methodists (historian William Auman published some great pieces on this topic for the NC Historical Review many years ago; see also my 1992 book, Unruly Women).
Vikki
Thank you for all of your great research. I have been looking for information on the Hulin family, especially Jessie, for a long time and until I saw this website I assumed that they were Confederate soldiers. Jessie would have been my g-g-g grandfather. Because the family tradition and oral history that I have heard only says they were killed in the war for deserting, I just assumed they were soldiers. It never crossed my mind that they were actually killed for refusing.
A lady contacted me recently about James Atkins. His g-g niece is looking for information about him and we were wondering if you might have come across anything about him.
Thanks,
Amanda
Hi Amanda,
It’s always nice to hear from a Hulin descendant! Yes, the Hulin brothers were openly opposed to secession and the Confederacy, as was their father, Hiram. Their religious views (Wesleyan Methodist) made them antislavery as well as pro-Union.Two of the brothers, William and John, did enlist in the Confederate Army on March 1, 1862, in the 44th NC Reg’t, but deserted when they got the chance. Jessie, however, evaded the draft; the older brother, Nelson, may also have evaded conscription.
James Atkins was the son of widow Sarah (Sally) Atkins, who was charged during the war with harboring James after he deserted the Confederate Army. The federal manuscript census of 1860 lists 42-year-old Sally Atkins as a farmer with real estate valued at $700 and a personal estate worth $250. There were several other members of her household, most if not all would have been her children: William, 21; Mary, 17; James, 15; Eliza, 11; John C., 7; Chrissy J., 5; and Mary E., 2.
The tragic story of the Hulin brothers’ and James Atkins’s deaths appear in both my 1992 book, Unruly Women, and in my upcoming book, The Long Shadow of the Civil War: Southern Dissent and Its Legacies (forthcoming in Feb., 2010.
Would love to hear more from you about the family stories that came down through the years.
Vikki
Thank you for the chance to learn more about my ancestors, but I really contacted you on behalf of an Atkins ancestor who found me with a lack of knowledge about her g-g-g uncle James. She has been trying to find out where he was buried. She can find no proof that he is at Lovejoy church, but that is what she has been told. She also was told that John, William, Jessie and he were buried in a common grave and that the stone was replaced some years ago and his name was left off. I have been trying my best to help her with this, but at the moment the only record I have is a grave recording that was done in the early 1990′s and his name is not there. I was hoping that you may have done some research prior to that time which might have shown he was positively buried at Lovejoy.
Amanda
Amanda,
I have visited the mass grave of the Hulin brothers (back around 1984), but have never heard or read that James Atkins was originally buried with them. I have no idea, either, whether James was a member of the Lovejoy Wesleyan Methodist Church to which the Hulins belonged, and where their cemetery is located.
Perhaps some Hulin researchers who read this blog have information they will share!
Vikki
Also, although I have done very little research about the Atkins I came across somewhere that James was discharged from the Confederate army for being too young (16) in 1863 or 4. This is kind of confusing to me since I also know that he was supposedly killed for deserting with the Hulin brothers in Jan. 1865. I guess there might have been a few months that he was old enough to fight before he was killed, but it doesn’t seem very likely????
Hi Amanda,
The military records you cite for James Atkins, which I have not seen, are very interesting. Given that he was listed as only 15 years old on the 1860 federal manuscript census, he may well have been forcibly conscripted into the Confederate Army before he was legally old enough. I have read of other instances in which that happened, especially in the N.C. Quaker Belt, where over-zealous Confederate militia were determined to conscript every suspected outlier they could find. James’s young age would also explain why his mother was charged with hiding him.
I also think that your theory that James reached conscription age during the war is sound. The first Confederate conscription law of April 1862 applied to men between 18 and 35; under that Act, he would have been too young. However, in Feb. 1864, the legal age of conscription was lowered to seventeen. In any case, by then, he would have been eighteen or nineteen years old.
Vikki
I may have previously stated the dates wrong. I believe it was 1861 that James was discharged for being too young. In that case the dated would work and he would have reached age of conscription during the war and then everything would fit together.
Sometimes it really helps to have a knowledgable person to bounce research off of. However, I could use your help in one more aspect, I am still finding great difficulty proving James is buried at Lovejoy church. Any ideas???
Amanda
Amanda,
In regard to whether James Atkins is buried at Lovejoy Church, see my reply to your earlier post.
Meanwhile, have you tried accessing cemetery lists on line? Many of the county gen forums have reproduced these records. Other than that, I am hoping a knowledgable Montgomery County researcher can answer this question.
Good Luck!
Vikki
I must have missed your earlier post when I read through today. Thanks for your help. It is truly appreciated.
Amanda
Hi Ms. Bynum,
I am the Atkins descendent in search of James’ Burial place. Amanda has been diligently searching to find the solution to my mystery. I was told by John Callicutt, now deceased, that James was buried with the Hulins at Lovejoy. There is no record of his burial in the cemetery survey of Montgomery County. I live here in Montgomery and also am a g-g-grandaughter of AJ Beaman, …George T. Atkins(my g-grandfather) m. Malinda Beaman, AJ’s daughter. George is James’ brother, born in 1859, the yr his father died. Don’t you know Sallie Atkins had it hard? Anyway, wondering if you know any further on James, & the Beamans and their part in the inner war in Montgomery Co. I look forward to reading your new book, & going to the library to reread parts of Unruly Women. If I recall, Caroline Moore (A. J. Beaman’s first cousin-his mother, Effarilla Moore, was her father, Valentine’s, sister) plays a part in your commentary on those “unruly” ones. Thanks for any insight into these kinfolk of mine.
Kelly Atkins Hinson
Hello Kelly,
Thanks so much for coming on Renegade South and providing information that clearly places James Atkins within the Wesleyan Methodist community of Montgomery County. I did not know that the Atkins family intermarried with the Beamans. It now seems likelier than ever that James might indeed be buried with the Hulin brothers.
I am very familiar with the Beaman family, and included a genealogy table on the connections between the Hulins, Moores, Hurleys, Beamans in my first book, Unruly Women (published by University of N.C. Press, 1992). As you probably already know, both John A. and Abram Jackson Beaman joined the Hulins and James Atkins in the woods during the war. During the war, John Beaman wrote a wonderful letter protesting unfair Confederate policies to Gov. Vance that I quote from in Unruly Women, and again in my forthcoming book, Long Shadow of the Civil War.
Yes, Sallie Atkins clearly had an awful time during the war. There she is, a widow farming her land, no doubt dependent on help from her older children while still caring for little ones as well. Then comes the war, with conscript officers drafting her sons into service. Those were just terrible times.
Thank you so much for adding to the story. The struggles of these families have long fascinated me, and I want to know more.
Vikki
Vikki,
Actually, no, I wasn’t aware of the Beaman brothers involvement in the protests of the Wesleyan sect in Lovejoy…wow, they also joined the outlyers in the mountains! I have no “memories” of this side of my family, nothing was really passed down, a very elderly grandfather, and no ties to his extended family, until the last few years. I have been researching my tree and was told about James Atkins but not about the Beamans. These two brothers (John A. & Abram Jackson Beaman ) both have Confederate markers at Shiloh Methodist Church (also in Troy), and neither has a “deserter” listing in the rosters that I have seen. Can you give us a “preview” of the letter he wrote? Now, I really must thoroughly read “Unruly Women”….had only read excerpts of it years ago. So, in my research on my family tree I am learning alot that has been forgotten, or somewhat swept under the rug. I am always interested in learning more, esp about this subject. Btw, someone mistakenly named A.J., “Andrew”Jackson Beaman for his Confederate stone, and I had planned on having it replaced with one with his real name, although I’m not sure he would want it now that his stance against the CSA is known to me. Funny how the true feelings some had about the Confederacy are replaced with moonlight & magnolia sentiment these 150 yrs later, or were even at the turn of the 20th century. But, even knowing, I guess he should have a stone with the appropriate name on it, and he did serve the Confederacy, if the roster is factual, so he is entitled to recognition that he was in the military, albeit the Confederacy. At any rate,I plan on a trip to Lovejoy this weekend, maybe there is some record at the church there. I will try to dig up (no pun intended) the final resting place of James Atkins, here in Montgomery County. Maybe the Court House is my next destination. (Interestingly, another of my ancestors burned it down in 1843, so research beyond that year is difficult. I have found some real wild branches in my Tree!) I would love to know more…please share any further info you can.
Thanks, Kelly
You are so right, Kelly, about how quickly our history can be buried (these puns are hard to avoid!). I am interested in any new information you can find.
After I get caught up on some others tasks, I will post the John Beaman letter on Renegade South. I’ve been reading it to my students whenever we study the Civil War for years! that and the letter written by Martha Sheets, who was kin to John’s wife, Malinda Cranford.
The Cranfords were also very important in these pro-Union kinship networks. I think both John and A.J. married Cranford women.
Vikki
Vikki,
Amanda and I went to Lovejoy today. We talked to the Pastor there, Rev. Tommy Haynes, who is researching to write a church history. He has been looking in the Duke papers, mainly about Francis Asbury’s tours of the area churchs…it seems he preached there several times. He says he has always been told that the Hulin’s cousin was killed and buried with them in a mass grave, which we saw and took pictures of, of course. (And there is an empty space next to the stone marking the Hulin grave.) But as he described it, they were all buried in ONE grave. Also, he says the locals there call Buck mountain, Dark mountain. Have you heard that? He says he will look in the Duke Archives for any proof or other details about James Atkins burial with the Hulins. He also told us there is an elderly lady in Lovejoy who he will ask about it, too. He knew nothing about where the first stone went when it was replaced. We gave him your name and told him about your work researching several of the prominent families of his church, which he expressed interest in contacting you about info for his history. So far, we still only have word of mouth that James Atkins is buried with the Hulins, (but that word is pretty reliable!!) And of course, we do know he was killed with them for fact in Hiram Hulin’s letter. BTW do you know where Hiram Hulin is buried? He was not at Lovejoy, that we could find. In answer to the above, yes, A.J. Beaman’s wife was Mary Ann, and John Armstrong Beaman’s wife was Malinda Cranford, both daughters of James and Rutha Riley Cranford…and just realized Candes Beaman is A.J. & Johns sister, she is an ancestor of Amanda’s, so we are, after all, related! Actually, the suprise would have been if we were NOT related, with all the intermarrying these families did. If we find out any more, we’ll let you know. Thanks for your help.
Regards,
Kelly A. Hinson
vikki,
I forgot to ask, did you hear about the stains on the old church floor being visible until it burned in the 1920′s? Apparently the bloodstains remained on the wooden floor for many years where the Hulins, & James were placed following their execution. Of course, again hearsay…but when that’s all you’ve got to go on! And, usually there some truth in these old stories, even if embellished over the years. I think I’ll be going to the Montgomery County Court House next week, in search of more.
Kelly
Kelly,
How great that you and Amanda talked with Rev. Haynes. It does indeed appear that James Atkins is likely buried at Lovejoy.
I know that Hiram Hulin is buried there, too; I remember seeing his grave. There was some confusion in the death dates on the headstones of one or both of his two wives, Nancy and Candis, it seems to me. but it’s been so long since I was there (1983 I believe), that I am only sure that I saw those graves.
I checked, and I have old notes in my files in which Buck Mountain is referred to as Dark Mountain.
I have also heard the story of the blood stains on the church floor. I believe that is contained in the memoirs of Thoburn Freeman, which are now in the possession of Elaine Reynolds, who inherited the Hulin family records. She is the person who provided me with the photo of the Hulin family posted here. She lives right there, so you might want to contact her.
William (Bill) Auman wrote an article for the North Carolina Historical Review back in the 1980s that has information on the Hulin brothers, and also a photo of their mass grave (my understanding was also that they were all buried together in the same grave). I believe Bill lives nearby in Randolph County.
I would be happy to share information with Rev. Haynes if he would care to contact me. Meanwhile, I will continue to scour my notes for information. And I haven’t forgotten about posting the John Beaman letter–it’s coming up.
Vikki
Hey all,
Can a cousin from Kentucky sneak into these conversations ?? I am very interested in the Moore, Beaman and Hulin families of Montgomery County. My 3rd gr grandmother was yet another Effarilla Moore, b 1765. We, her descendants, believe her to have been an older sister of Valentine Moore. This Effarilla was never married, but had a son, Allen Moore, who’s father was a “Mr. Morris”. Allen Moore, my 2nd gr grandfather was born July 1800, Montgomery County NC, and before 1820, he and his mother show up in Clay County KY, area now Breathitt County, where they remained the rest of their lives. It is believed his father was John Haton Morris. DNA evidence suggests that John Haton Morris may have been an Owen, or Owens. The dna does not match with other Morrises from Montgomery County. Family tradition handed down from Effarilla, to Allen, and to his children, says her immigrant ancestor was Sterling Moore, who sailed his own ship, “the Effarilla”, to the shores of NC (or VA), and that afterwards, the first baby born to him and his wife (no name given) was named Effarilla, for the ship that had brought them safely to America. My ggg granny may have been this baby, or a yet older generation (my personal belief). When Effarilla/Effie Moore died 1855 Breathitt County KY, her death certificate said her parents were William and Anna Moore. I would like to correspond with my new found kinfolk who’ve posted to this site. My email address is joycehousereeve@webtv.net I am also descended from the Bradley family of Randolph County NC, and the Crowder family of Guilford County NC. My gr grandfather, Jeremiah Davidson (son-in-law of Allen Moore), was conscripted into the CSA in KY, deserted and joined the Union Army. It’s a miracle he lived to tell about it. Thank you for writing about the war in Montgomery County.
Joyce
Joyce,
What fascinating background history and connections you provide for the Moores of Kentucky and North Carolina! I’m sure my Montgomery County readers will agree.
Thanks so much,
Vikki
[...] of Wesleyan Methodism in their community. Battle lines would be redrawn during the Civil War, in a brutal inner war that would pit the same Sheriff Aaron Sanders against the same community of [...]