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Some Holts of Spartanburg County
DNA
testing proves that our family is closely linked to Robert and
Dorothy Holt who came from Rochdale, Lancashire, England to St.
Marys, Maryland in 1646. The DNA test means that we share a common
ancestor with Robert, and he might, indeed, be that ancestor,
although no direct link has been established yet.
An
article at
http://files.usgwarchives.net/nc/anson/bios/family31bs.txt
by Carson Turner gives a good summary of the Holts in North and
South Carolina in the earliest censuses. The first Holt to be
listed in Spartanburg County was Clayburn (Claiborne, Clayborn, or
Clabourn), appearing in the1800 census. He was the only Holt listed
in the county until the 1830 census when he is joined by Hugh Holt.
Claiborne was born in Virginia around 1753 (the SC census of 1840
states that he was 87). As a South Carolina resident, he was given
a pension from Virginia for his service during the Revolutionary
War, and a Claiborne Holt is listed in John H. Gwathmey’s 1938
publication Historical Registry of Virginians in the Revolution,
Vol 82, page 493. According to his application for this pension, he
served in the “Continental Establishment Scott’s Company Third
Regiment commanded by Colonel Heath... in the line of the State of
Virginia” from the Spring of 1779 to 1782. The Virginia Line was
assigned to the Southern Department and sent to defend Charleston,
SC in the siege of 1780, and most all of the Virginia Line was
surrendered by Patriot General Lincoln to Tarleton. Perhaps the
reason Claiborne moved from Virginia to South Carolina is that he
was given land for his service to SC. A land grant was given by
Gov. Moultrie after the war to a man named Charles Holt, land along
Spartanburg-Union County border, and this might be true for
Claiborne as well (The book Revolutionary War Bounty Land Grants
by Lloyd DeWitt Bockstruck states that Claiborne Holt received 100
acres from Virginia on May 20, 1829 but I don’t know if this acreage
was in SC or elsewhere).
There
is good evidence that Claiborne came to SC from Accomack County,
Virginia, which is located on Virginia’s eastern shore near Hogg
Island which was once entirely owned by the Holt family. There is
further evidence that his father was Reuben Holt of that county. In
the book Genealogical Abstracts of Revolutionary War Soldiers,
Claiborne Holt is mentioned as the “issue” of Rueben [sic]
Holt, a soldier in the Continental Line (Armand’s Corps) who was
killed in battle at the Siege of Savannah on October 9, 1779. An
application (number 1667) was filed at Accomack County, Va. Court on
February 28, 1884. John Neely of Accomack County was named
Administrator debonis non in 1883 to represent this unsettled
estate, and he stated that there were four heirs of Reuben in
Accomack County and one heir in SC. It also states that Claiborne
Holt was living in Spartansburg [sic] in 1828. Also there is
a Land Bounty claim (number BL Wt 1412-100) for Reuben Holt filed by
his heir Claiborne for Reuben’s service during the Revolutionary
War.
It is
likely that one of Claiborne’s sons was Hugh Holt of Spartanburg.
There is an 1821 deed recorded in the records of Spartanburg County
(Book R, Page 340) which shows Clayborn Holt giving 120 acres of
land to Hugh Holt “for and in consideration of the future care,
protection and provision given.” This same deed lists Claiborne’s
wife as Elizabeth. The land given was somewhere along Lawson’s Fork
Creek in the Bivingsville Post Office area - near the Glendale
Community. The 1860 Spartanburg County census lists Hugh’s place of
birth as Virginia also and places his birth in 1794. His wife was
also named Elizabeth; her place of birth was listed as South
Carolina in 1795.
I have
also found that Clayborn had another son named, William.
Spartanburg County/District South Carolina Deed Abstract Books A-T
reports on “October 22, 1809 Clayborn Holt (Spartanburgh) to son
William Holt; for love and affection give a gray horse...”
For a
time, Hugh lived in Union County, SC. In the 1820 deed which records
a purchase by Hugh Holt of 120 acres along Green Creek in
Spartanburg County from Nancy Brown et al, it states that
Hugh Holt was from Union County. The 1820 Union County Census does
report a Hugh Holt among the residents of that county and it shows
four people in his household: 1 male under 10, 1 male 16‑26
(presumably Hugh), 1 female under 10 and 1 female 16‑26 (presumably
his wife Elizabeth).
Connecting Hugh to the next generation was interesting! In the 1860
census, Hugh and Elizabeth have a son named “Peter A.” who was said
to be 25. In the 1880 census, Milton Holt is listed as head of a
household that included his grandmother Elizabeth (born in SC
in1797) and his Uncle Peter (born in SC in 1833). Milton’s birth
year is listed as1850. In the 1850 census there is a Samuel (Milton
Samuel) born in 1849 and in the 1860 census a Milton H. (b.1849),
both entries in the household of James T. and Susan Holt. If Milton
was the grandson of Hugh and Elizabeth and the son of James, then
Milton’s father James Thomas Holt is the son of Hugh and Elizabeth.
James was born on March 18, 1824. (Note: There is a death
certificate for Milton Reid Holt Jr. in 1923, listing M. R. Holt and
Alta Land as his parents. In that case, Milton Holt (b. 1849) would
have the middle initial “R” instead of “H.”)
Hugh
and Elizabeth had sons Peter and James and at least two more sons.
One was John C. Holt, listed in the 1860 census in Hugh’s family.
He died during the Civil War of an accidental, self-inflicted gun
shot. The other was Berryman R. Holt who lived in Pickens County,
Georgia. The abstract of newspaper articles from Spartanburg papers
(dated Feb. 6, 1873) reported the “accidental death of Berryman R.
Holt at his home in Pickens County, Ga, on the 17th. He
was a native of this county and son of Hugh Holt.” The 1870 Pickens
County, Georgia census lists these members of that household:
Berryman R. age 41, Nancy C. age 34, Virginia age 14, John F. age
12, Ancil age 10 (male), Perry E. age 6 (male), and Harriet E. age
1. There are Spartanburg land deeds with the names Nancy C. Holt,
John F. Holt, and Ansel Holt and also “Hattie” Holt who was probably
Harriet. This shows an ongoing connection between the Berryman R.
Holt family in Georgia and the Spartanburg Holts.
Another item of interest and mystery: The 1850 Spartanburg County
census lists a Solomon age 4 in the home of Hugh and Elizabeth. In
the 1860 Richmond County, Ga. census, there is a Solomon Holt, age
14, in the home of another Berryman Holt - this one with the middle
initial of H - who is said to be 68 years old. I haven’t been able
to prove it yet, but I believe these Solomons to be the same person
and that this Berryman was the brother of Hugh and son of Claiborne
and the uncle of the younger Berryman.
James
T. was married twice. His first wife was Susan (either Cannon or
Cameron). Comparing the censuses of 1850, 1860, 1870, and 1880,
James and Susan Holt (b.1827) had these children in their home:
James Robert, Sarah Caroline (Carrie), Milton (Samuel), Lucinda
(Lu), Marietta, Susan E. (Euphemia), Nancy A. (Alice), and William
E. There was a John listed in the first census who is absent from
subsequent lists, causing me to believe that this is the same John -
son of Hugh - who was killed in the War Between the States.
The
census of 1880 shows James now married to Luisa - my
great-grandmother. She was Sarah Louisa McCarley, born on December
31, 1848, daughter of James and Rachel McCarley. Their marriage on
December 18, 1878 produced my grandfather Thomas Earl (9/15/1879),
Roland Wofford (9/16/1881), Fannie Viola (9/25/1883), Clarence
Calahan (1/6/1886), and Russell Miller (12/17/1888; Russell died
3/28/1889).
James
T. died on January 27, 1892 and his young wife Louisa died four
months later on June 1, 1892. My father told of how the orphaned
children were taken into the homes of their McCarley kinfolk to be
raised. Aunt Viola, an 8-year-old, was wanted by many family
members, as was the 6-year-old Clarence. But teenaged Thomas Earl
found it more difficult to find a willing family to take him in.
Finally, someone said, “Come on Earl, let’s go home.” In looking at
census records, I found that it was his half‑sister Susan Holt
McCarley and her husband Kendree (or Kennedy) McCarley that Thomas
Earl was living with in 1900. Viola was listed in that same census
as being in the home of her half-brother William Holt while Clarence
was living in the home of M. Cicero Poole who had married his
mother’s sister Melinda McCarley (Louisa is buried at Zion Hill
Baptist Church, in the part of the cemetery that is across the
highway from the church. I do not know where James T. or his
forebears are buried).
(Another question: Is this Kendree McCarley (b.1850 in the 1900
census) the same person as Kennedy McCarley (b.1852 in 1880 census),
son of James M. and Rachel A. McCarley? If so, then Kendree’s wife
was James T. Holt’s daughter and Kendree’s sister Louisa was James
T.’s second wife!).
I have
very few memories of my “Papa” Holt. He died on Christmas Eve when
I was four. His obituary lists his father as James T. Holt, and that
gives a paper-trail to my connection back to Claiborne and Reuben.
I am told by my older cousins that Thomas Earl (also lovingly called
TeeHee) was a man who appreciated good humor, as did his brother
Clarence whom I knew longer. That seems to be a family heritage.
These Holts were faithful members of a church near their home -
Liberty Methodist Church on US 221 between Whitney and I-85 - and
that is their final resting place.
To
briefly finish my heritage, Thomas Earl married Lucy May Chapman.
One of their sons was Henry Hardin Holt (August 30, 1910 - June 1,
1990). His marriage to Caroline Cannon (daughter of John B. Sr. and
Eulalie Earle Cannon) on January 18, 1946 produced my sister and me.
Thomas
Earl and Lucy May’s children were James Rufus, Wofford, Aubrey L. (Osburn),
Henry Hardin, W. Marvin (“Joe”), Edna (Parris), and Estelle (Hall).
Clarence C. Holt married Ida Arsula Johnson, and their children
were J.P., Edwin, Homer, Glenn, Oren, Robert, and Mary.
Fannie Viola Holt married Herman Walter Thomas (b. 1877) and they
lived in Newberry, SC where he was an overseer at the cotton mill.
Herman died on December 10, 1944. I have found a record regarding
the death of one child, Elbert Woodrow Thomas (b. January 21, 1916)
on September 28, 1917 when the child was 20 months and 7 days old.
The 1920 US census showed a son Paul (age 9) in the household along
with daughters Sadie (age 12) and Lois (age 6). Aunt Viola was
living at the time of my grandfather’s death in 1954.
The family of Roland Wofford Holt: Regarding James and Lou’s
other son Roland Wofford Holt (b. 9/16/1881), he died while still
quite young on 8/16/1907 and is buried at the cemetery on the
Glendale-Clifton Road (right behind the District 3 administration
building). He had a son named William Raymond who was born in
1905. Raymond died on March 20, 1989, and his obituary states that
his mother was Mae Gault Holt, who I believe is also buried in the
Glendale Cemetery near Roland. The marker on that grave reads “May
Holt Hellams, 1880-1948.” Raymond and his wife are also buried at
this Glendale-Clifton Cemetery.
Raymond was married to Thelma Reeves Holt (1909-2001) and they had a
son Roland Maxwell, Sr. and a daughter Harriet. Roland M Holt, Sr.
married Miriam Lee Holt and they had a daughter and two sons. Roland
Sr. died on January 23, 2002 and is buried at Greenlawn Memorial
Gardens in Spartanburg.
The
family of Peter A. Holt: Hugh Holt’s son Peter Alexander (born
in 1833) was wounded during the Civil War but survived his wounds.
He married Mary Pauline McCarley who was probably another daughter
of James and Rachel McCarley. This means that brothers James and
Peter married sisters Lou and Mary Pauline! Peter and Pauline had a
son named Walker Alexander Holt and perhaps others. Walker married
Sara Hammett Holt and they had a son, William Knox (“Toby”) Holt,
and daughters Helen Holt Turpin and Nell Holt Hawley.
Toby
married Mary Barnwell Holt and they had a son and a daughter. Helen
married Joseph Richard Turpin and they have 2 daughters.
Arthur H. Holt,
March 27, 2010
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