This small quaint seaport has roots back to April 7, 1730 when Isaac and Jonathan Green Sr. purchased from Ebenezer Harker "a certain plantation and track of land containing by estimation 441 acres situate lying and being in ye Carterett in ye county of province of aforsaid being ye west side of ye mouth off White Oak River." By 1771 Theophilus Weeks started a town on his plantation, laying out a plat and selling lots. Formerly known as Bogue, Week's Point, The Wharf and New Town, the town was officially designated by the North Carolina General Assembly on May 6, 1783. Above photo (from North Carolina State Archives) courtesy Jack Dudley, as included in Swansboro - A Pictorial Tribute

Charles Hickok Barnum


AMBROSE-HARGETT CEMETERY - ONSLOW COUNTY
Thomas Barnum, the fourth great grandfather of Charles Hickok Barnum, was the first Barnum to come to the new world.  
Born in County Kent, England, Thomas Barnum (1625-1695) left England in 1640, settled in what would become Bethel, Connecticut and married Hannah Hurd of Norwalk, Connecticut. Several generations of the family were born in Connecticut including Charles Hickok Barnum. Thomas (1663-1730) married Sarah Beardsley. Ephraim Sr. (1710-1775) married Mehetabel Starr. Their grandson Philo (1779-1828), son of Ephraim Jr., was the father of Phineas Taylor “P.T.” Barnum (1810-1891) who founded what became Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey Circus.
David Barnum (1739-1795), brother of Ephraim Barnum Jr., married Rachel Benedict. Their son Thomas (1775-1847) married Lucy Hickok. Their son Charles Hickok Barnum (1816-1865), born in Danbury, moved to Onslow County, North Carolina and married Alice Harget (1823-1867) on May 11, 1845. As noted above, Charles was a kinsman of P. T. Barnum—their great grandfathers were brothers.
 

During the first half of the nineteenth century, Charles H. Barnum, William P. Ferrand, Cyrus Glover and Robert Spence McLean were the town’s chief exporters of naval stores; Barnum and Glover also operated a saltworks facility. In 1846 Charles H. Barnum became Swansboro’s second postmaster.
 

In the records of the US Southern Claims Commission, Disallowed and Barred Claims, 1871-1880 appears the case of C. H. Barnum, as follows:

Case of Estate of Charles H. Barnum. The County of Onslow, North Carolina. The above claimant owned two schooners which were sunk in the Inlets of North Carolina to obstruct the Channels. Barnum filed a claim in the Confederate Treasury Department for pay for the above vessels. House of Representatives US Feby/21/88. Received of Clerk, House of Reps. sundry papers in above named case. /ss/ J. Randolph, sec.

Charles and Alice Barnum had three known children. Mary Amelia Barnum, born in 1846, married Major Russell; their daughter Lina Russell (1870-1967) married Swansboro builder Robert Lee Smith.

Edward Hargett Barnum, the second child of Charles and Alice Barnum, was born in 1849. In 1887 Edward married Ida Dolly Harget Fulford, widow of Francis Joseph Fulford. In the 1900 census Edward and Ida Dolly were living in New Bern with stepson Joseph C. Fulford 19, stepdaughter Julia May Fulford 16, Charles Harget Barnum 10, and 8-year-old Robert Barnum.

In the 1850 Swansboro census, in the household were: Charles H. 33, merchant; Alice 28; Amelia 3; Edward H. 1; Z.B. Barnum 28, merchant and brother; Daniel A. Hargett 25, clerk; and E.H. Remick 32, teacher.

The third child of Edward and Ida Barnum, Charles Hickok Barnum Jr., was born in 1855.

In the 1860 Swansboro census, in the household were: C.H. 43, merchant; Alice 37, seamstress; Amelia 13; Edward 10; Charles 5; William H. Hawkins 16, domestic; Arabella Sanders 12. The value of Barnum’s real estate was noted as $15,000, with a personal estate of $30,000. At that time, Charles H. Barnum owned twelve slaves.

Both Edward and Ida Barnum were buried in the Ward-Jones Cemetery in Swansboro.

Charles Hickok Barnum and Alice Hargett Barnum were buried in the Ambrose-Hargett Cemetery on Hammock Beach Road in Onslow County. Others interred there include Daniel Ambrose (1781-1850), Daniel Ambrose Hargett (1825-1872) and Rosamond Ambrose Hargett (1795-1859).


1860 SWANSBORO CENSUS


PHINEAS TAYLOR "P.T." BARNUM

Swansboro Historical Association Map


David Ward Sanders and Family

This ink-wash drawing of Sander's Plantation at Hatchell's Point was done during the Civil War by H.E. Valentine - July 13, 1863. Valentine noted the site was on route to Swansboro, NC. 
Image courtesy Virginia Tech Imagebase - H.E. Valentine Sketchbook
____________________________________________________
PALO ALTO PLANTATION
PALO ALTO PLANTATION
In her 1959 paper on the early history of Onslow County published in The Commonwealth of Onslow by Joseph P. Brown, Lucy Green wrote, “At the outbreak of the Civil War one of the show-places of the area was Palo Alto Plantation*, owned by David W. Sanders, and the entire plantation was given over to the raising of cotton. During a raid by Federal troops the place was overrun by soldiers, the house and barns plundered and the slaves driven off. Today the house stands as a memorial to the cotton era in this area.” Is this house H.E. Valentine sketched during the Civil War and was perhaps remodeled after the war? If not, it is on the same land owned by D.W. Sanders.
Map Showing Site of Palo Alto Plantation - Sander's 1840-1860 Farm and Distillery
David Ward Sanders' Lineage:
Isaac Sanders 1777-1821 Sanders Family Cemetery
John Sanders 1645-1712, born in Wasmond, Virginia, married Sarah Davis.
Francis Sanders 1676-1744, born in Isle of Wight, Virginia, married Mary ____.
John Sanders 1690-1751, born in Virginia, married Mary Neal.
John Sanders 1725-1796, born in Virginia, married Rebecca Shepherd.
Isaac Newton Sanders 1777-1821, born in Onslow County, married Ruth Ward.
David Ward Sanders 1800-1860, born in Onslow County, married Alice Mitchell.

Children of Isaac Newton Sanders and Ruth Ward: David Ward Sanders 1800-1860, Daniel S. Sanders 1800-1854, Benjamin W. Sanders 1807-1880, John A. Sanders 1809-1880, Edward Ward Sanders 1811-1854, Nancy Sanders 1813-1846 and Isaac Newton Sanders 1817-1866. (Jones Family Tree on Ancestry.com)

In his 1821 Will, Isaac Sanders "loaned to his wife land he had purchased from John Sanders including house and salt works; after her death to Isaac. To son David, three hundred acres lying on the southwest prong of the New River. To Daniel and Benjamin lands bought from John Sanders including house, salt works and one hundred acres of land adjoining the wood place together with my Inland lands near Bear Inlet. To John A., Edward all my land not otherwise disposed of including my piney lands.”

His marker in the Sanders Family Cemetery in Hubert reads: "In Memory of  ISSAC SANDERS who was born the 19th day of May 1777, and died the 8th day of Sep. 1821, & was the Father of 11 Children." This cemetery is on private property off Bear Creek Road.

DAVID WARD SANDERS 
Portrait circa 1852
Artist: William Carle Brown
TN State Library and Archives
DAVID WARD SANDERS
August 20, 1800 – August 26, 1860
  • NC Clerk of Superior Court
  • Representative 1855
  • Constitutional Convention
  • Grandson Daniel L. Russell Jr. was NC governor 1897-1901
  • David’s wife Alice Mitchell was the daughter of George Warren Mitchell 1770-1830 and Phoebe Ogden Starkey 1790-1857 of Onslow County.
Children of David W. and Alice Mitchell Sanders: Caroline Elizabeth Sanders 1825-1845 (mother of Governor Daniel Russell), Isaac B. Sanders 1829-1851, twin of George Edward Sanders 1829-1836, J.B. Sanders born 1829 and Benjamin Sanders born 1831.

1820 Census, Onslow County, North Carolina:: 4 Persons in Household

1830 Census: 31 Persons in Household  including 23 Slaves

1840 Census: 87 Persons – 82 Slaves – 57 Engaged in Agriculture
Free White Persons - Males - 10 thru 14: 1
Free White Persons - Males - 30 thru 39: 1
Free White Persons - Males - 40 thru 49: 1
Free White Persons - Females - 30 thru 39: 1
Free White Persons - Females - 60 thru 69: 1

1850 Census, White Oak, Onslow County, North Carolina:
Farmer D.W. Sanders, 49, Alice 44, Phoebe O. Mitchell 70, J.B. Sanders 21 “sawyer,” Oden Taylor 20 overseer. Value of real estate owned was $28,000.

1850 Slave Schedule, White Oak Township: D.W. Sanders - 134 slaves including children of slaves. The 1860 Slave Schedule noted D.W. Sanders with 188 slaves and 32 slave houses.

1850 Manufacturing Schedule – Turpentine Distillery: $4000 Capital invested; Raw Materials – Quantity 30,000, Value $37,500; Steam Power; 6 hands employed; Wages $72 per month; Annual – Quantities 25,000, Rosin and Turpentine, Value $35,800.

1860 Census, White Oak, Onslow County, North Carolina – Post Office Palo Alto:
Farmer David W. 64, Alice 54 and M.W. Draughn 26 overseer.

Part of D.W. Sanders 1859 Will
In his 1859 will, David Ward Sanders left a great deal of money, for that time, to his wife and children along with “my plantation & Negroes to be kept together under the direction and control of Danl. L. Russell, one of my Exr. for two years at least, after that he to act with them at his pleasure either to farm or rent out the lands and hire out the Negroes.”

The following were buried in Hickory Hill (D.W. Sanders Cemetery) located adjacent to 3210 Belgrade-Swansboro Road, Maysville, Onslow County, NC:

D.W.Sanders 
1800-1860
D.W.Sanders 
1800-1860
  • Alice Mitchell Sanders and David W. Sanders
  • 1) Isaac B. Sanders son of David W. and Alice Sanders, age 22 yrs 5 mos 6 days 2) George E. 1836 twin brother of Isaac B. Sanders age 6yrs 11 mos 5 days 3) Carolina E. 1842 wife of Daniel L. Russell and daughter of David W. and Alice Sanders, age 20 yrs 3 mos 9 days
  • 1) Daniel Lindsay Russell* 1845-1908 son of Daniel Lindsay Russell and Elizabeth Caroline Sanders—Statesman – Jurist – Soldier. Gov of NC 1897-1901. CAPT CO. G 2NC ARTILLERY CSA 2) Sarah Amanda Sanders Russell, 1844- 1913 daughter of I.N. and S.C. Burns Sanders, wife of D. L. Russell - Inspirer of educators, temperance advocate, woman suffrage pioneer
Many of the above details were found on the Jones Family Tree at Ancestry.com.


Governor of North Carolina 1897-1901
*Daniel Lindsay Russell, Jr. (1845-1908) was elected to office by the uneasy Fusion alliance of Republicans and Populists in the bitter and racially charged election of 1896. The "Maverick Republican" was born in Brunswick County. At age six, he went to live at the Onslow County home of his grandfather. Russell studied at the Bingham School and the University of North Carolina; the Civil War cut short his education.


Daniel L. Russell 1845-1908 - Sanders-Hickory Hill Cemetery
Russell was nineteen when he was elected in 1864 to the state House. He won election as a Superior Court judge, remaining in that position for six years. In 1878 he ran for the U.S. House and served a single term. Out of political office, he castigated the Democrats for their use of the racial issue, charging that blacks had been innocent victims of white barbarity.

By the early 1890s agrarian unrest and economic depression split the Democratic Party. An alliance with Populists resulted in victories in 1896 that removed control of the legislature from the Democrats and placed Republican Russell in the governor's office. During Russell's administration, the Railroad Commission gave way to a Corporate Commission and a new law provided for popular election of the Commissioner of Agriculture. Some of the greatest gains came in education.

One of Russell's disappointments was his inability to recover the North Carolina Railroad from its lease to the Southern Railway. In the last two years of his term, the Democratic Party resurrected the racial issue and staged the "Red Shirt" campaign, capturing the legislature and many state offices. The Democrats virtually negated any gubernatorial powers, witness Russell's ineffectiveness in using state troops to quell the 1898 Wilmington race riot. Further insult followed when Russell was forced to accept the "grandfather clause" effectively prohibiting blacks from voting.

After leaving office, Russell returned to Brunswick County to try to recoup financial losses due to agricultural failures. At his death in May 1908, his estate cleared only $1,000. Russell is buried in a family plot at Belgrade in Onslow County. Source

PALO ALTO PLANTATION
Side Porch - PALO ALTO
MORE HISTORY NOTES: 
  • In 1874 (Bk. HH, p. 49), James and William Hatsel bought from D. W. Sanders land known as Hatchell’s Point lying at mouth of Hadnot’s creek. This land included the mill site and the Dudley Cemetery
  • PALO ALTO PLANTATION was placed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1979. The house at 1706 Belgrade Swansboro Road, Maysville, is noted as having Federal and Greek Revival elements. Periods of historic significance 1825-1849 and 1850-1874. 
_______________________________
Mr. & Mrs. David Ward Sanders
Click to enlarge

Daniel Ambrose Harget

D.A. Hargett courtesy Swansboro, A Pictorial Tribute
Daniel Ambrose Harget was born in 1825 to Daniel Harget 1790-1849 and Rosamond Ambrose 1795-1859. Daniel’s great grandfather Johan Henich Harget was born in 1728 Harmstadt, Hessen, Germany. According to family trees, the name was originally spelled Horgadt. Daniel’s mother Rosamond was the daughter of Daniel and Sarah Ambrose of Onslow County, North Carolina.

Daniel married Julia Ann Gibson on February 24, 1853. Julia Ann was the daughter of William Gibson 1805-1860 and Susannah Simmons 1814-1890; William Gibson’s family was from Onslow County. Susannah Simmons was born in Onslow County to Obedira Isler Simmons and Julia McDaniel, who had been in Onslow County for many generations.

Children of Daniel and Julia Ann Harget: William Davis 1853-1932 married Mamie Meadows, Edgar B. 1856-1928 married Noma Mattocks (daughter of James Allen Mattocks and Sarah Hatchell), Ida Dolly 1859-1916 first married Francis Joseph Fulford* in 1875 and secondly Edward H. Barnum (born 1855) in 1887, Walter Lee 1862-1865, Daniel born about 1865 and Etta Dollner 1869-1914 married Julian Adolphus Mattocks son of James Allen Mattocks and Sarah Hatchell.

F.J.Fulford, husband of Ida
*Francis Joseph Fulford 1850-1880 married Ida Hargett of Silverdale, NC, and they had two children - Joseph Clarence and Julia Maye. He was an apothecary in New Bern, NC.” Contributed by Florence Fulford Moore.

1850 census: clerk Daniel A. Harget 25, in household of merchant Charles H. Barnum. Others in the household were Alcy Barnum 28, Amelia Barnum 3, Edward H. Barnum 1, merchant Z.B. Barnum 28 and teacher E.H. Remick 32.

1860 Slave Schedule
1860 census: D.A. Harget 35 farmer, wife Julia 25 seamstress, William D. 6, Edgar 4 and one-year-old Ida Hargett. Value of real estate noted as $17,100 and personal property estate valued at $33,100.

1870 census: Daniel 42 wholesale and retail grocer, Julia 31, William 16, Edgar 13, Ida 11, Daniel 3, Etta 6mo., Edward Barnum 21 clerk in store, Sophia Marshall 50 domestic servant, and Hiram Graham 21 still yard laborer.

1870 Products of Industry, Swansboro: Daniel Harget – Turpentine Distilling. Capital invested $3600. Two stills with eight laborers. Total wages for year $1500. Materials and production including kinds, quantities and values, see image.

As noted in Old Brick Store 1839, in 1847 William P. Ferrand died and the store was deeded to Cyrus Glover and Daniel Ambrose Harget. An 1875 deed shows that Ida D. Harget inherited the property from the estate of her father, Daniel Ambrose Harget.

According to Mrs. Daisy Moore, as quoted in Commonwealth of Onslow 1960, the old brick store “served as the post office during the early 1900s. Daniel A. Harget, brother of Ida Harget, operated a drugstore beginning about 1912.”

Daniel Harget once owned Ringware House.

Cyrus B. Glover - Navel Stores Merchant, Postmaster and Maker of Salt

HAWKINS-GLOVER HOUSE
Bazel Hawkins probably built what is known as the Hawkins-Glover House at 224 Elm Street; merchant and turpentine trader Cyrus Glover acquired and probably renovated it in the 1840s. The house originally stood on the waterfront to the west of town and was moved to its present location around 1900.

Cyrus B. Glover 1821-1867, born in Connecticut, came to Swansboro before 1847.* He married Catherine Jane Hawkins 1833-1868 on December 19, 1849 in Onslow County. Catharine was the daughter Bazel Hawkins.

OLD BRICK STORE
*In 1847 William Ferrand died and the “old brick store” was deeded to Cyrus Glover and Daniel Ambrose Harget.

The 1850 Swansboro Census recorded mother-in-law Catherine Hawkins 55, merchant C.B. Glover 29 (value of real estate $7900), wife Catherine Jane Glover 17 and boarders Caroline Fuller 25, Julia Ann Fuller 24, Isaac Eaves 40 physician, Elijah Taylor 36 distiller, Sylvester Shearman 26 merchant.

By the 1860 Swansboro Census, in the household were C.B. Glover 39, Catherine J. 27, Charles B. 8, William H. 3, Caroline Fuller 39 domestic and Julia Fuller 30 domestic.

Children of Cyrus and Catherine Glover: Charles Bazel 1851-1933, William H. 1857-1860, Theodore S. 1861-1927 and William B. Glover 1868-1908. Charles and William made their way to Houston, Texas. Theodore returned to Connecticut.

By the second quarter of the nineteenth century New Englanders Charles H. Barnum and Cyrus Glover had joined others in Swansboro to produce and market resin and turpentine. Barnum and Glover also operated saltworks and were postmasters.

In Selected US Federal Census Non-population Schedules 1850-1888 – Manufacturing – Enumerated June 1, 1850 C.B. Glover – Onslow County.
Capital invested in real and personal estate in the business: $10,000.
Raw Materials: Quantity 15,000, Turpentine, Values $21,500.
Average number of people employed: 9 at wages of $81 month.
Annual product: Quantity 25,000 resin, 2000 turpentine; Values $25,000.
1850 Manufacturing in Onslow County, North Carolina
1850 Slaves - C.B. Glover
1860 Slaves - C.B. Glover

1850 and 1860 Slave Schedules – Swansboro, Onslow County, North Carolina - entries for C.B. Glover


1866 Pardon
Confederate Application for Presidential Pardons, 1865-1867 – Year 1866: Included fact that he was a Rebel postmaster.

The Swansboro Historical Association’s tour guide noted: Hawkins-Glover Cemetery circa 1771—Two grave markers, one with especially elaborate carvings with perhaps New England influences, are visible from [NW] Elm Street. In 1975 town workers discovered the grave of Cyrus Glover during road repair. The exhumed iron coffin is currently stored in the Onslow County Museum.

William Lawrence Kirkman House circa 1920

NATIONAL REGISTER of Historic Places: 212 Elm Street – Aluminum-sided house with shed-roofed front porch, dormer with clipped gable. NR

William Lawrence Kirkman 1882-1959 was the son of Calvin Kirkman 1849-1917 and Eveline Merrell. His siblings were: John Edward 1870-1948, George Calvin born 1873, Annie born 1874, Elizabeth born 1876 and Herman B. Kirkman 1879-1920.

William Lawrence Kirkman married Sadie Lee Dennis 1885-1965 about 1905. Like his older brother John Edward Kirkman, he was a surfman at the Bogue Inlet Lifesaving Station.

Children: Louise Kirkman 1906-1983, Margaret Paul Kirkman 1908-1920 and Doris Frances Kirkman 1911-1999. Louise married Andrew Mason, who worked at the Coast Guard Station.

In the 1900 Swansboro Census, Swansboro Village, Willie L. 17 was at home with his parents sailor Calvin and Eveline Kirkman and brother George C. 23 sailor. They were next door to Thomas Merritt and John Kirkman.

By the 1910 census Lawrence and Sadie had been married five years and were in their own home in Swansboro with two daughters, Louise 4 and one-year-old Margaret. Lawrence was noted as a fisherman.

The 1920 Swansboro Village census located Kirkman, his wife and three daughters on Walnut Street, between Abram Bell and Cicero Davis, perhaps before he moved to the Church Street home. On this census Kirkman’s occupation was noted as “Coast Guard Station”—as a member of the Bogue Inlet Lifesavers.
Bogue Inlet Lifesaving Service

Milstead House 1930

 


408 Church Street

Gable-fronted bungalow with hip-roofed front porch. (National Register of Historic Places)




Carl Milstead
Carl Stephen Milstead 1934-2010 was born in Onslow County, the son of Edgar Leneve Milstead 1907-2005 and Ruby Ward 1914-2005. He married Mary Ann McKeon. "Carl Milstead was one of the most accomplished lawyers and finest gentlemen I have ever know. It was always a pleasure to have him in my court and to work with him. He will be greatly missed." - Giles Clark

Edgar L. Milstead and Ruby Ward

Peter Bryant Smith House circa 1916

NATIONAL REGISTER of Historic Places: 115 Main Street – Hip-roofed four-square plan house with one-story front porch, aluminum siding. This was the second Onslow County house of Smith, who was associated with sawmills at Swansboro and Silverdale. NR

Peter Bryant Smith 1872-1949 was the son of George Washington Smith and Missouri Ann Haskins. G.W. Smith, possibly the son of George S. Smith 1806-1880, married Missouri Ann Haskins 1853-1926 in 1868. Missouri was the daughter of Timothy Haskins and Theresa Hewitt of Onslow County.

Children of George and Missouri: Georgia 1870-1961 married James Thomas Bartley; Edgar W. 1871-1934; Edward W., born 1871; Peter Bryant, born 1872; Etta E. 1878-1881; and Ramon B., born 1880.

G.W. Smith was born in 1850 and died before 1910. Missouri Haskin Smith’s 1926 death certificate recorded the fact that she was widowed, a resident of Swansboro and buried in Silverdale, North Carolina.

In the 1880 White Oak Township Census, recorded in the George W. Smith household were George W. 30 retail grocer, Missouri 28, Georgiana 12, Edgar 10, Peter Bryant 7 and one-year-old Etta Smith. Twenty years later, the 1900 Swansboro Census recorded George W. Smith 50, Missouri 47, Edward W. 28 and Ramon B. 19—foreman at fish company.

WWII REGISTRATION CARD
The 1910 Swansboro Township Census recorded the fact that farmer Peter Bryant Smith owned his home on Swansboro Road. In the household were Peter B. 37, Annie M. 34 and Missouri 58. The census noted Missouri as having given birth to six children, four of whom were living.

By 1920, Pete is noted as owning his home. His mother Missouri 67 was still in the household as well as wife Annie M. Smith.

Peter Bryant Smith - Death Certificate
By 1930 in Swansboro Village, Peter and Annie Smith owned their own home, valued at $2000. At that time, Peter was noted as a superintendent of a farm.

Peter Bryant Smith’s 1949 death certificate noted his address as Swansboro, occupation fisherman with a surviving spouse. He was buried in Jacksonville, North Carolina cemetery.


Andrew Mason House & Mason Ancestors

Designated on the National Register of Historic Places as the [Andrew] Mason House circa 1910, at 204 Elm Street, is now plaqued as the Methodist Parsonage. 

Alvin and Amelia Newton Mason
The ancestry of the Mason family of Carteret County can be traced back to two brothers, William and George Mason, born in Pershore, Worcestershire, West Midlands, England, who left England for the new world. They came ashore in Norfolk, Virginia in January 1652. 

Descendants eventually moved to an area between the Albemarle and Pamlico Sounds, now Hyde County, North Carolina.

Born in Hyde County in 1745, Joshua Mason relocated to Hunting Quarters, now the town of Atlantic. He was the only Mason listed on the 1790 Carteret County census.  

Alvin and FDR circa 1918
Joshua Mason (1745-1811), the father of 1802 Caleb Mason and grandfather of James Hill Mason (1822-1908), was Andrew Jackson Mason's 3rd great grandfather.

In 1927 Andrew Jackson Mason (1902-1982) married Louise Kirkman 1906-1983, daughter of William Lawrence Kirkman 1882-1959 and Sadie Lee Dennis 1885-1965.

Andrew was the son of Alvin Thomas Mason Sr. (1879-1933) and Amelia Jane Newton (1883-1967) of Hunting Quarter, Carteret County, North Carolina. Alvin was the keeper of the Pilantary Hunting Club, near Portsmouth Island, who assisted then Secretary of the Navy Franklin D. Roosevelt. This photograph appeared in a 1949 issue of Life Magazine--part of a collection of photographs from the life of F.D.R.

George Delaware Mason
Sarah Nelson Mason
Andrew’s Mason grandparents were George Delaware Mason (1851-1927) and Sarah A. Nelson (1856-1900), also of Hunting Quarter, Carteret County, North Carolina.

His great grandparents were James “Jim” Hill Mason (1822-1908) and Malinda Greene Salter (1832-1908). Jim Hill Mason was born in North Nelson Bay, Carteret County, to 1802 Caleb Mason and 1804 Louisa Lewis. 

Andrew’s Newton grandparents were Portsmouth-born Jessie Jarvis Newton (1851-1936) and Varita Ann Robinson (1847-1929). Jesse was a member of the crew at the Portsmouth Island Lifesaving Station circa 1910.

Jim Hill Mason
Jesse Jarvis Newton
Andrew’s great grandparents were James Nichols Newton (1827-1905) and Judith Simpson of Portsmouth and South River.

At the time of the 1910 and 1920 censuses, Andrew, his parents and siblings were in Hunting Quarter.

The 1930 Swansboro census recorded Andrew Mason 29; his occupation was noted as, “Coast Guard – U.S. Service.” In the rented house on Elm Street were his wife Louise 24 and 8-mo.-old daughter Margaret L. Mason.

James S. Newton
Andrew Mason died on December 8, 1982 at N.C. Memorial Hospital
in Chapel Hill, North Carolina.
Andrew Mason 1902-1982

Family images are from the Mason Family Tree on Ancestry.com posted by Novem M. Mason.