Barnes

The 31 heirs of Harriet Wilkinson Barnes, part 1.

Harriet Wilkinson Barnes died in Wilson in 1916. She was survived by her husband Austin Barnes and a slew of nieces and nephews, but left no will. This set of documents related to the disposition of her property — a house and lot at what is now 702 East Green Street — is among the most astonishing I’ve ever encountered.

The lot was auctioned pursuant to court order. George H. Edmundson bought it for $1550 and requested that the deed be made out to his parents Jerry and Zillie Edmundson. Distributing the proceeds of the sale, however, required that Harriet Barnes’ heirs be identified, and W.H. Lee, a court-appointed referee, conducted an investigation that is breath-taking not only for the effort it represented for so small a reward, but for the range of matters it touched upon — slavery, fractured families, Exoduster and other migration, repeat naming patterns. Not to mention surprise witnesses and the fallibility of memory and family stories. In the end, the referee produced a report which, though flawed, outlines three generations of descendants of a woman who was born into, and barely outlived, slavery.

The petition and order of sale are below, and the referee’s report starts on page 459.

I’m going to try to summarize his findings, but I urge you to peruse the document for yourself. The referee interviewed the family of Harriet Barnes’ former enslaver, as well as numerous relatives, to determine which of Barnes’ siblings’ descendants had legitimate claims to her estate. An annotation of the named parties will need a follow-up post. There’s just too much.

First, Harriet Bynum was the daughter of Edna Bynum, who “was a slave woman owned by Mrs. Elizabeth Bynum or her husband.” There was no clear evidence as to the identity of Edna Bynum’s husband, but all their children were born prior to 1 January 1868 (which, apparently, was when Edna died.) Those nine children, including Harriet, were Louis Bynum, Arnold Bynum, Isaac Bynum, Ben Bynum, George Bynum, Sylvia Bynum Best, Chanie Bynum Mitchell, and Mary Bynum Dupree Bynum.

Also, as Harriet Bynum and her second husband, Austin Barnes, had no children, he was not entitled to inherit property she brought to the marriage.

The conclusions re Harriet Barnes’ brother Louis Bynum

Louis Bynum died leaving six children — Lawrence Bynum, Rennie Bynum Farmer, George Bynum, Isabella Bynum Best, Ida [Ada] Bynum Aycock, and Teda Bynum Bynum. Per George Bynum — an 81 year-old man who lived near Saratoga, had also been enslaved by Elizabeth Bynum, but was no relation to Harriet — Louis never married.

The referee relied on evidence in a letter received by John Edwards [the husband of one of her nieces, but who was the letter from?] to conclude that Lawrence Bynum was dead; that he had lived with Rachel Newsome, but never married her; that “he left here many years ago and went to Arkansas”; and that his many children — James C., Louis, Charlie, Lawrence Jr., Mary, Rachel, and Ada, who lived in Scott, Arkansas — were “illegitimate.” Louis’ son George Bynum of Mount Olive, N.C., and his daughter Isabella Best of Stantonsburg also gave testimony about their uncle. (The report refers to them incorrectly as Lawrence Bynum’s children. The substitution of “Lawrence” for “Louis” appears to happen several times in the first paragraph of page 460, as when the referee discounts George’s testimony about having a brother named Scott Bynum who had not been heard from in 28 years.)  [The referee’s conclusions were incorrect several ways. First, we’ve met the Lawrence Bynum family. Lawrence Bynum married Edna Bynum in Wilson County in 1878; they migrated to Lonoke County, Arkansas, with their elder children. Second, Louis Bynum very much had a son Scott. Census records establish his children (and their approximate birth years) as George (1859), Ada (1860), Scott (1862), Marenda “Rennie” (1863), Pet (1865), Isabella (1867), Charles (1869), and Tedy (1871). ]

Rennie Bynum married Robert Farmer and died before 1916. Her surviving children were Nealy Farmer Edwards of Stantonsburg; Maggie Farmer Brown of Stantonsburg; Ida Bynum Hall of Stantonsburg; Katie Farmer Hall of Stantonsburg; Hattie Farmer Wynn of Dudley [Wayne County, N.C.]; Robert Farmer of American Expeditionary Forces, France; and Bessie Farmer Brown of Stantonsburg. [Personal note: my grandmother’s first cousin, Mildred Henderson, married Katie Farmer Hall’s son Louis Hall. Louis Hall founded a vault company in the 1950s that is now a third-generation operation. When I began researching gravestone artist Clarence B. Best, I spoke with Louis Hall Jr., who told me his father had taken over Best’s business when he retired in the early 1970s. I had no idea that Louis Hall and Clarence Best were cousins. See below.]

The conclusions regarding her brother Arnold Bynum

Per Louis’s son George Bynum and Clarence Best, Arnold Bynum died without children.

The conclusions regarding her brother Isaac Bynum

Isaac Bynum was deceased. Per George Bynum, Isaac had a son Ben Bynum. Per witness Calvin Bynum, Isaac “left here 30 or 40 years ago.” As neither Ben nor any other descendant had put in an appearance, the referee determined Isaac Bynum had no descendants who were heirs at law.

The conclusions regarding her brother Ben Bynum

More confusion, as Ben Bynum is described as “son of Lawrence” rather than son of Edna Bynum and brother of Harriet Barnes. Further, the referee noted that the evidence he received was contradictory. George Bynum of Saratoga said Ben was one of Lawrence Bynum’s children [sic]. George Bynum of Mount Olive (Louis Bynum’s son) said Ben Bynum’s descendants were not related to him. A white man named B.A. Scott testified that a Ben Bynum who belonged to Elizabeth Bynum married a woman named Charlotte, who had been enslaved by Scott’s father. Calvin Bynum, age 69, son of Moses Bynum and averred first cousin of Edna Bynum’s children, who had been enslaved by the same family as Edna, said Harriet Bynum’s brother Ben Bynum married Charlotte Scott. “He says that his father, Moses, always told him that this Ben Bynum was a brother of Harriett, and that Harriett was a daughter of a sister of this father.” Other witnesses claimed to be Ben Bynum’s children and said they had visited Harriett and called her “aunt,” and she recognized them as her nieces and nephews, and Ben always claimed Harriett as his sister.

The referee concluded that Ben Bynum, deceased, was Harriett Barnes’ brother and his children were her heirs at law. They included Riley Bynum of New Bern, N.C.; George Bynum of Bonnerton, N.C.; W. Randal Bynum and Ida Bynum of Royal, N.C.; Lina White of Greenville, N.C.; and Mary Jane Jackson of 421 Green Street, Wilson.

The conclusions regarding her brother George Bynum

Per George Bynum of Saratoga, this George Bynum died in childhood.

The conclusions regarding her sister Sylvia Bynum Best

Per Robert E. Bynum, son [actually, nephew] of Eliza [sic; Elizabeth] Bynum, who had enslaved Edna and her daughter Sylvia, Sylvia had been married and had a child named Ben Best, born before the Civil War. Ben Best was deceased, leaving children Jenetta Newsome, Junius Best, Ollie Best, and Clarence Best. (Who had their own legal representative in this matter — attorney E.J. Barnes.) George Bynum of Saratoga and John Edwards testified that Sylvia had two more children, Lou Ellis and Cora Deans, born out of wedlock after the Civil War.

The referee concluded that Ben Best’s children were entitled to their grandmother’s share as heirs at law, and Ellis and Deans were not entitled to anything. [Clarence Best was the well-known grave memorial cutter featured in multiple posts here.]

The conclusions regarding her sister Chanie Bynum Mitchell

Chanie Bynum married a Mitchell and had two children — Fannie and John Mitchell — who were believed to be living.

The conclusions regarding her sister Mary Bynum Dupree Bynum

Again, contradiction among witnesses and confusion created by the referee’s sloppiness. (He calls Mary “Annie” at one point.) The petition to sell Harriet Barnes’ land stated Mary was married to a Dupree, but George Bynum of Saratoga said she married Hack (or Jack) Bynum. Clarence Best testified that Annie [sic; Mary] Dupree married Sam Ward, “went South about ten years ago and has not been heard from.” Isabella Best said Mary Bynum first married a Dupree and had two children, Ben and Sam. Ben migrated to Arkansas; Sam lived and died near Wilson. No known children for either. But: after witness testimony concluded, “a negro man came in who claimed to be Ben Dupree, the son of Mary Bynum by her first marriage.” Ben Dupree testified that he had moved to Leesburg, Florida, many years before; that he had lost touch with his brother Sam Bynum [sic; Dupree]; that he had come to “see about it”; that he had found that his brother had died; and that his brother had seven living children — Ed, 21, Mary, 18, Sam, 13, Minnie Bell, 12, Sallie, 9, Maggie, 8, and Bennie Dupree, 6. Having been fetched, Ed Dupree confirmed that he and his siblings were Sam Dupree‘s children, and Sam had died five years earlier. Ben Dupree also stated that his mother Mary had married Jack Bynum and had two or three children; that about thirty years after Mary died, the children “left and went to the far South or South-west”; and that they had not been heard from since, and no one knew if they were living or dead. The referee thus concluded that Ben Dupree and Sam Dupree’s seven children stood to share Mary Bynum’s share of Harriet Barnes’ estate.

“These parties are negroes,” the referee stated, “and many of them without Counsel.” He acknowledged that the strict rule of procedure had not been followed in collecting evidence from witnesses who testified in multiple hearings and lived in various places around the state of North Carolina, “but I have collected the facts from any and whatever sources available, calling witnesses whenever it was learned that their personal knowledge might throw some light upon case pertaining to the relationships of the parties ….” He then broke down the interest to which each person was entitled, ranging from 1/20 to 1/175. Even if the full $1550 from the sale of Harriet Barnes’ lot were available — which it wasn’t, as court costs had to be paid — the payouts would have ranged from $77.50 down to $8.85.

Wilson County, North Carolina, Property Settlement Records 1905-1923, http://www.familysearch.org.

Dick Pender and Joshua Barnes.

From the obituary of General Joshua Barnes, Zion’s Landmark, vol. 24, no. 3, 15 December 1890:

“A great benefactor as well as a special friend of so many individuals, General Barnes, in the 78th year of his age on the 13th day of October, 1890, at the residence of his son in law, Mr. A. Branch of Wilson, lingering only a few weeks, after a second attack of paralysis, with no indications of pain, gently breathed out the last of his mortal existence.

“He spent his entire life in this community — was aggressive in style, turning up things rather than waiting for them to turn up; and in spite of his liberality and charitableness, this world’s goods continued to accumulate around him; and although in consequence of the late war his loss in slaves and other property was immense, he was nevertheless left in possession of a handsome estate.

“Early in life he embraced the Primitive Baptist doctrine … [and] about 14 years ago at Toisnot Bridge near Wilson, by Elder P.D. Gold and Elder Wm. Woodard and Dick Pender, the faithful colored janitor, he together with his brother Wm. Barnes Jr., were immersed. Considering his weight some 250 pounds, that he was so helpless his entire left side still being paralized, and that he had to be baptized in an invalid’s chair, the baptism was considered a most remarkable one. …”

……

  • Dick Pender — Pender was sexton of Wilson Primitive Baptist Church.

The estate of Harriett Barnes Parks.

We read Harriett Parks‘ will here. After her death in late 1896, John A. Gaston was duly appointed executor of her estate.

From December 1896 through 25 September 1897, Gaston reported income from rent payments made by tenants Ennis Thompson and Christiana Taylor. Gaston paid out ten dollars for Parks’ coffin and forty-five cents for a ticket for Parks’ daughter Allie Kate Barnes.

In addition, Gaston paid an unnamed person one dollar for digging Parks’ grave [which was mostly likely in Oakdale Cemetery]; a dollar for use of a horse and buggy for her funeral; and $1.25 for the whitewashing of her house.

From 27 September 1897 through 22 March 1900, Gaston received rent payments from Christina (or Christiana) Taylor, Allen Morgan, and Annie Williams. He paid forty cents for a lock; $1.30 for lights; another $1.25 for whitewashing; one dollar for cleaning out a well; and a dollar for a well bucket. Gaston paid Parks’ daughter Allie Kate $5.00 and her son Harvey G. Barnes $6.25.

Wilson, N.C., Probate Estate Files 1854-1959, http://www.familysearch.org.

The last will and testament of Ned Barnes.

Ned Barnes dictated his last will and testament on 2 March 1885, leaving a lifetime interest in all his property to his wife Margaret Barnes and thereafter to their children, who were all minors. Barnes was not even 40 years old, which suggests that despite his “sound mind,” he was not well physically.

Will Book 2, page 359, Wilson County

Barnes died within days, and Charles Battle was duly appointed executor of his estate. Margaret Barnes “dissented from [Barnes’] will,” and J.A. Tynes and Daniel Vick were appointed to assess the estate and assign her a year’s support.

Tynes and Vick filed their report on 30 March 1885, setting aside $113.20 worth of items on hand for Margaret Barnes. The amount fell far short of the total she was due.

Charles Battle filed an inventory of Barnes’ belongings on 3 June 1885. He noted that Barnes’ “cotton planter belongs to the partnership of Barnes & Clark.” [Harry Clark, who was a neighbor? What kind of partnership?]

Battle filed a final account in March 1887, reflecting transactions made in December 1885. On the 26th, he had sold $147 worth of items, including a hundred-dollar horse.

Two days later, he disbursed $198.46.

——

On 12 August 1869, Ned Bunn [sic], son of Abner and Mary Webb, married Margaret Edmondson, daughter of Shed and Gatsey Edmondson, in Wilson.

In the 1870 census of Wilson township, Wilson County: Gatsey Edmondson, 40; Becton, 18, Riley, 17, Nancy, 14, and Elias Edmondson, 21; Ned Barnes, 22, and wife Margarett, 19.

In the 1880 census of Wilson township, Wilson County: farmer Ned Barnes, 34; wife Margarett, 35; and children Luvenia, 9, Franklin, 8, Walter, 10, Sarah Eliza, 7, and Caroline, 5.

Estate of Ned Barnes (1885), Wilson County, North Carolina Estate Files 1663-1979, http://www.familysearch.org; note that documents from the estate of a different Ned Barnes, who also died in 1885 (but was married to Della Barnes) are intermingled in this file.

Clues from the estate of Ned Barnes.

I have written of my great-great-grandfather Willis Barnes and his daughter Rachel Barnes Taylor, my great-grandmother. Rachel’s mother appears variously in records as Cherry Battle or Cherry Eatmon. She shows up in the 1870 and 1880 censuses; in the death certificates of five of her children; and on the marriage licenses of three.

Today, I discovered a document that I believe identifies Cherry Battle/Eatmon’s father. Two Black men named Ned Barnes died in Wilson County in 1885. Their estate records, unfortunately, are commingled in a single file. One Ned Barnes, born about 1847, was married to a woman named Margaret Edmondson. The other, born about 1820, married Della Barnes after another relationship that produced several children.

Here’s what caught my eye:

“R.W. King, Administrator of Ned Barnes deceased vs. Della Barnes, N.B. Herring, Braswell Eatman, Cherry Barnes, Waity Eatman, Turner Eatman, David Hagans, Willis Barnes, James Moore, heirs at law and parties in interest.”

Della Barnes was Ned Barnes’ widow. Needham B. Herring was a party in interest by virtue of a claim to Della Barnes’ property. (N.B. Herring was a well-known white physician in Wilson.) Braswell Eatman, Cherry Barnes, Waity Eatman, Turner Eatman, and David Hagans were heirs at law — Ned’s children and/or grandchildren. Willis Barnes, as Cherry Barnes’ husband, was a party in interest. I’m not sure who James Moore was but, presumably, he was a party in interest.

Ned Barnes’ liquid assets were insufficient to cover his obligations, and his chief asset — a 36-acre parcel — was sold.

——

  • Ned Barnes

In the 1870 census of Toisnot township, Wilson County: Ned Barnes, 48, farm laborer.

On 19 October 1874, Ned Barnes married Della Barnes in Wilson.

In the 1880 census of Toisnot township, Wilson County: farmer Ned Barnes, 66; wife Della, 37; and [step]son Allen, 18.

  • Della Barnes

In the 1870 census of Wilson township, Wilson County: farmer John J. Barnes, 49; Della, 26; and Allen, 8.

In the 1880 census of Toisnot township, Wilson County: farmer Ned Barnes, 66; wife Della, 37; and [step]son Allen, 18.

  • Braswell Eatmon

On 4 April 1872, Braswell Eatmon married Louisa Boykin at Joshua Barnes’ in Wilson County.

Probably: in the 1880 census of Raleigh township, Wake County, N.C.: Braswell Eatman, 39, servant.

  • Cherry Barnes

In August 1866, Willis Barnes and Cherry Battle registered their six-year marriage with a Wilson County justice of the peace.

In the 1870 census of Wilson township, Wilson County: farm laborer Willis Barnes, 30; wife Cherry, 25; and children Rachel, 7, West, 5, Jesse, 2, and Ned, 5 months.

In the 1880 census of Wilson township, Wilson County: Willis Barnes, 42; wife Cherey, 20 [sic]; stepdaughter[?] Rachel Battle, 17; children Wesley, 15, Jesse, 13, Ned, 11, Eddie, 7, and Mary Barnes, 4; niece Ellen Battle, 2; and son Willey Barnes, 1.

[Note: Cherry Barnes’ children included a son Ned and a daughter Cintha. (See below.)]

  • Waity Eatman

In the 1870 census of Wilson township, Wilson County: Cinthia Eatmon, 40, with Luke, 23, Turner, 20, Wady, 18, and David Eatmon, 6. [They did not marry, but was Cinthia Eatmon the mother of Ned Barnes’ children? (And thus my great-great-grandmother?)]

  • Turner Eatman

In the 1870 census of Wilson township, Wilson County: Cinthia Eatmon, 40, with Luke, 23, Turner, 20, Wady, 18, and David Eatmon, 6. [Next door: Morrison and Martha Woodard, whose daughter Cherry married Turner Eatmon.]

On 9 April 1873, Turner Eatmon, 22, married Cherry Woodard, 18, in Wilson.

In the 1880 census of Wilson township, Wilson County: farmer Turner Eatmon, 30; wife Cherry, 23; and brother David, 15.

The Farmer and Mechanic (Raleigh, N.C.), 10 March 1881.

  • David Hagans, alias David Eatmon

In the 1870 census of Wilson township, Wilson County: Cinthia Eatmon, 40, with Luke, 23, Turner, 20, Wady, 18, and David Eatmon, 6.

In the 1880 census of Wilson township, Wilson County: farmer Turner Eatmon, 30; wife Cherry, 23; and brother David, 15.

Wilson [County, North Carolina] Special Proceedings, http://www.familysearch.org.

Harry Barnes vs. Charity Robbins.

In May 1907, a Superior Court clerk issued a summons to Charity Robbins to appear in court to answer a complaint filed by Harry Barnes. Barnes was contesting ownership of a lot on the north side of Pine Street, adjoining lots owned by Pennie Bynum, Miley Barnes, and S.H. Vick.

Barnes requested and was granted permission to file his suit as a pauper, asserting that he was unable to pay costs associated with pursuing his case. I could not determine the outcome of this litigation.

The final account of the estate of Nunnie Barnes.

My post about Nunnie Barnes‘ striking Odd Fellows Cemetery headstone including details of her estate administration. On 9 September 1922, her administrator filed a final account of receipts and distributions.

The estate received more than $1800 from a savings account at Wilson Trust & Savings Bank. It paid out $408 to C.H. Darden & Son for an undertaker’s bill and funeral expenses. Two different hospitals — Carolina General and Moore-Herring — were paid, as was Wilson Drug Company. Wilson Marble & Granite Company received $67.50 for manufacturing Barnes’ gray-and-white striated grave marker.

Wilson County, North Carolina, Property Settlement Records 1905-1923, http://www.familysearch.org.

The final account of the estate of Della Hines Barnes.

Dr. Boisey O. Barnes was administrator of his mother Della Hines Barnes‘ estate.

Like her sons William Hines and Walter S. Hines, Della Hines Barnes owned multiple tenant houses in Wilson, and monthly rents from and sales of those properties made up the estate’s receipts from January 1936 to June 1937.

A few hundred dollars in disbursements went to repairs and upkeep of Barnes’ properties — water bills, paint, plumbing, electrical, insurance, lumbers, carpenters. The estate paid $100 to Cobb Marble Works for the lovely marker that still stands at Odd Fellows Cemetery’s highest point (and inspired Lane Street Project’s logo) and $100 for “balance on funeral expenses,” which probably went to C.H. Darden & Son. Finally, Della Hines Barnes’ five heirs — sons William and Walter Hines and Boisey and Dave Barnes and granddaughter Charmaine T. White — equally shared a little over $4000 cash. Equivalent to about $90,000 in 2024 money, Barnes’ estate represented a remarkable accumulation of wealth by a woman born into slavery.

Della Hines Barnes’ headstone in Odd Fellows Cemetery.

Wilson County, North Carolina, Property Settlement Records 1932-1937, http://www.familysearch.org; photo by Lisa Y. Henderson, May 2023.

The last will and testament of Leah Ellis Barnes.

Leah Barnes executed her last will and testament in November 1914 with the following provisions:

  • to grandsons Paul and Louis Barnes, her house and lot on Viola Street adjoining the property of J.Z. Staton and Wash Pitt
  • to children Edward Barnes, Maggie Barnes, Mary Jane Lane, and Frank Barnes and grandsons Paul and Louis Barnes, all personal property, to be divided equally
  • Elder Jonah Williams to serve as executor and guardian to Paul and Louis if they were not yet 21 years of age

——

In the 1900 census of Stantonsburg township, Wilson County: farmer Laurence Barnes, 53; wife Lizzie [sic], 48;  and children Edwin, 18, Maggie, 15, Frank, 14, and Joseph, 12.

In the 1910 census of Wilson, Wilson County: Lela [sic] Barnes, 55, widow, odd jobs laborer; children Edward, 26, wagon factory laborer, and Frank, 25, blacksmith; grandchildren Lewis, 9, and Maggie, 25, servant; and boarder Harry Draughn, 24. Leah Barnes reported that 6 of her 11 children were living.

Lear Barnes died 1 June 1915 in Wilson. Per her death certificate, she was 62 years old; was born in Wilson County to Amos Ellis and Mary Edmundson; was a widow; and was buried in Wilson [likely, Vick Cemetery.] Maggie Barnes was informant.