Smaller Villages of the County
Hon. J. M. Allen once averred that his
father, Jesse Allen, a Virginian, entered the land on Smith Fork
Creek from John Corley's farm to Lancaster, one mile on each
side of the creek, but sold his rights for $400, after which he
entered a tract in another part of the county that became
DeKalb. Lower Smith Fork Valley is one of the most fertile
sections in Middle Tennessee, and the wonder is that the
pioneers could see no farther ahead.
Dr. R. M. Mason says Samuel Caplinger, a
large landholder, built the mill and house which were later
owned by Nicholas Smith and which formed the nucleus of
Temperance Hall. The late A. P. Smith, son of Nicholas, has
stated that the village received its name from the fact that the
Sons of Temperance used to hold their meetings on the second
floor of his father's residence. It was named then, after 1848,
for the elder Smith in that year removed from Wilson County to
Temperance Hall, the site being in Smith County. By act of
February 1, 1850, the line was changed so as to include in
DeKalb County the farms and homes of Smith, Andrew Vantrease,
John Robinson, and others. By the same act John F. Goodner's
farm, near Alexandria, was taken into DeKalb, as has been seen.
The men who located at and around
Temperance Hall in the first years of the nineteenth century
were, many of them, of unusual force of character and a number
in affluent circumstances: Samuel Caplinger, Alex Robinson,
Stephen Robinson, Nicholas Smith, Daniel Ford, John Mason, John
Corley, James Simpson, Matthew Simpson, John Lamberson, George
Kelley, Jack Reynolds, Peter Reynolds, the Drivers, Bates,
Lawrences, Lancasters, Oakleys, Hayeses, Tubbs, Stephens,
Kelleys, Fishers, Stokeses, and others.
Owing to the distinction to which two
members of the Stokes family reached in the State (William B.
and Jordan), it is pertinent to record that their father.
Sylvanus, had started from North Carolina to locate on his land,
near the present Temperance Hall, when his team ran away, and he
was killed. Mrs. Stokes, with her three children, Thomas,
William B., and Jordan, and a Mr. Kelly, continued the journey,
reaching this country in 1818. Some years later the widow
married Mr. Kelly and settled near or in Temperance Hall. To
them were born Harry and Rufus Kelly and two daughters, one
becoming Mrs. Mike Lancaster and the other Mrs. Thomas
Lancaster. Thomas Stokes became a farmer. Of him a reliable
citizen, a former neighbor, writes: "He was at one time the
richest man in DeKalb County, having at the close of the war of
1861-65 about fifty Negroes and large land interests. He was a
fire-eating secessionist, as was his brother William at the
beginning of the war, though the latter became a Federal.
Everything Thomas had that was loose at both ends was taken from
him by Federal soldiers. For intelligence and fine mother wit he
was the superior of either Colonel Bill or Jordan, but his fault
was a fondness for alcoholic drink. He gave way to this habit
after the war and died poor and almost an imbecile. A son of
Thomas was William G. I can just remember him. A year or more
prior to the war he started south with a drove of hogs and was
never heard of more. Sylvanus, another son, the youngest, fought
through the war for the Confederacy and died a few years ago. He
was one man in the county who, in a threatened difficulty, made
Capt. W. L. Hathaway 'take water.'"
Early merchants of Temperance Hall were
John Mason, Dr. Arch Robinson, and Mr. Rodgers. The two first
were in business about 1851-52; the last named, who was there
about 1855 to 1860, was Northern-born and returned to that
section. Present business men: L. Driver (who also twice
represented the county in the legislature), Williams & Terry, J.
H. Close & Son. Turner & McBride, J. R. Kelley, and L. B.
Midgett. The flour mill is operated by the Temperance Hall
Milling Company.
Dr. Arch Robinson, father of the late
Dr. W. H. Robinson, of Liberty, was one of the early physicians.
Following his death, his brother, Dr. William B. Robinson,
located in the village. After the war Dr. Thomas Gold entered
that field. Other physicians have been Drs. R. M. Mason, G. W.
Martin, and S. C. Robinson. Dr. Samuel Walker was for some years
practicing in that region.
One of the earlier teachers was Mrs.
Stephens. Others were Mr. Bush, Mr. Hatcher. A. L. Reynolds, A.
L. Malone, E. W. Brown, J. W. Thomison (now a lawyer of
Nashville), Joseph Ford, Dr. Thomas Ford, and Frank Foster. The
present teachers are Leroy Smith and Miss Stella Young. Miss
Lizzie Simpson taught in the vicinity some years following the
war.
The Southern Methodists have a good
church in the hamlet. A Baptist church and Pisgah, the latter
belonging to the Northern wing of the Methodists, are located a
short distance out. The Disciples also have a congregation at
this place.
Dowelltown, on the Lebanon and Sparta
Turnpike and two miles north of Liberty, is on land settled some
years after 1800. Thomas Dale, of Maryland, seems to have bought
up some of the claims of Revolutionary soldiers of North
Carolina. At any rate, he held warrants for much of the land
around the village.
Levi Gray became possessed of a tract on
the south side of the creek, living in the house east of the
covered bridge, which was later occupied by Frank Dowell. It
belonged to the Grays for years, and their family graveyard was
across the turnpike west of the residence. The estate was
inherited by Isaac Gray, who married a Miss Dowell. He died and
left two children, Harriet and Melvina.
Frank Dowell married the widow Gray, his
cousin, and lived on the farm until the close of the War between
the States, when he removed to Arkansas. At one time he
represented his county in the Arkansas Legislature. Dowelltown
was named for him.
Frank Dowell sold the Dowelltown
property to Rev. John Hunt, a Baptist minister from East
Tennessee. Hunt exchanged it for land belonging to Sanford Mann,
who came from the North after the war and was the first
ferrotype artist of Liberty after peace.
Mann sold to Thomas Chapman. The present
owner is John Robinson, a son of the pioneer, Edward Robinson.
The country adjacent to Dowelltown was
settled by as high-class men as any mentioned in other sections
of the county. Among them were Robin Forrester, William and
Samson Williams, Matthew Sellars, Benjamin Avant, David Fite,
Alex Robinson, George Barnes, Edward Robinson, the Yeargins, the
Harts, the Fraziers, the Bankses, the Snows, the Turners, and
others.
The first storehouse was erected about
1869 where the Barger Hollow Lane intersects with the Lebanon
and Sparta Turnpike, and probably the first merchant was James
Ashworth. In the same building the following successively had
stocks of merchandise: James Fuson, William Wall, Bratten &
Turney, Riley Taylor, Barney Taylor & Co., Thomas Curtis, Less
Fuson, and John F. Turner. Other early merchants were Charles
Pullen, Thomas Bright, Pat Geraty, and Robert F. Jones.
There are now six stores in the village,
the present merchants being John F. Turner, N, R. Robinson, W.
T. Robinson, A. R. Meares & Son, G. S. and W. T. Blackburn, and
Less Bass.
In 1866 Col. J. H. Blackburn began the
erection of a flour mill, which was finished in 1872 by Lieut.
Wingate T. Robinson. The Big Spring northwest of town furnishes
the power.
In 1866 Allan Wright (born in Baltimore
County, Md., in 1 831) came to DeKalb County and erected the
first flour mill in Liberty after the War between the States on
the site of that burned by Gen. John T. Wilder during the war.
In 1868 he erected and has since controlled the Dowelltown
Woolen Factory.
As to physicians of the town, Dr. C. C.
Robinson was the first to locate, remaining in the village until
his death. Previous to this time Dr. John A. Fuson, of Dry
Creek, did the practice. Dr. W. F. Fuson came next, then Dr. S.
C. Robinson, a son of C. C. and now of Temperance Hall. Dr. C.
B. White resides there at present. Dr. Howard Curtis, son of
Rev. Mack Curtis, was graduated at Chattanooga University, but
located at Allgood and is a leading physician of Putnam County.
Dr. W. T. Robinson, a son of B. W. Robinson, was graduated at
Vanderbilt and is meeting with success at Shelbyville.
The local dentist is Dr. J. T. Duggan.
Dr. Hoyt Robinson, son of B. W. Robinson and graduated in
dentistry at Vanderbilt University, located in Union City.
W. B. Corley and Hon. N. R. Robinson are
resident attorneys.
Edward Gothard was probably the earliest
blacksmith, then came Gothard & Self, then Self & Grandstaff.
Isaac Burkett had a shop just north.
One of the early teachers of the
neighborhood was Alex Robinson, a capable man. Other teachers:
R. B. Harris, J. B. Green, T. A. Kilman, R. A. Underwood, Mr.
Sykes, Mr. Myatt, O. B. Close, Rev. W. P. Banks, N. R. Robinson,
J. F. Caplinger, O. B. Starnes, and M. Malone.
The postmasters have been William Wall,
Robert Yeargin, Alf Standford, R. F. Jones, M. A. Stark, Lucian
Avant, B. W. Robinson, N. R. Robinson, and Fannie M. Robinson.
In 1885 an elegant school building was
erected and for some years was properly appreciated. As in most
villages, the public's appreciation of educational advantages is
spasmodic, and in saying that there have been good schools here,
followed by intervals of languor, we but repeat the history of
most communities. Old Asbury Church was frequently used for
schools before it was burned. Preceding it was a smaller
structure erected by the pioneers for religious and educational
purposes.
The village is surrounded by a fine
agricultural region, and its population is prosperous and
law-abiding. A considerable number of Federal pensioners live
there and adjacent (though they are rapidly passing away), and
their pensions have greatly added to the volume of business.
The Big Spring northwest is a notable
feature of the community and was such before the village came
into existence. It is deep, cold, and about forty feet in
diameter. Formerly it was a great fishing place for "gigging" by
torchlight, angling, and lassoing with copper wire.
Near the Dry Creek Bridge were the
muster grounds, which in ante-bellum times provided a great
gathering place. Nearby was Gum Springs in a cave like
depression at the edge of the turnpike. "The water," Mrs. Pet
White explained once to the writer, "was almost as cold as ice,
dropping from the overhead rocks and falling into the tub made
from the cut of a hollow tree. The young women and young men of
the neighborhood congregated here on muster days and Sunday
afternoons, so that you would be led to believe it some famous
summer resort."
In the center of Dowelltown and on Mrs.
White's land is the old Gray cemetery, a popular burying place a
half century ago. Several members of the Gray pioneers sleep
there, among the rest, Isaac C. Gray, born in 1807, died 1850;
Leven Gray, born in 1812; C. E. Gray, died in 1852, in the
sixty-fifth year of his age. Others interred there are: Rev.
James Stanford, Matthew Williams, William Craven (Union
soldier), James White, Isaiah White (born in 1806), and Charlie
Blades. Time and the weather will crumble or hide these simple
memorials before many years, then the humble sleepers will be as
entirely forgotten as if they had never lived.
For them no more the blazing hearth
shall burn,
Or busy housewife ply her evening care;
No children rush to lisp their sire's return,
Or climb his knees the envied kiss to share.
Laurel Hill, a pleasant village in the
northern part of the county, was for a long while better known
as Smutville, owing to the irreverence of the wag who does not
let home pride interfere with his attempts at wit. The country
adjacent is hilly but fertile and needs only good roads to make
it an ideal section.
The citizens are mainly of North Carolina and Virginia ancestry,
industrious, lovers of music and the chase, and of strong
religious and political convictions.
Early Settlers
Coleman Helm
Riley League
P. W. Presley
James Isbell
William Garner
Isaac Burton
Riley Coggin
Jeremiah Hale
Willis Coggin
Peter Exum
Elisha Conger
Hezekiah Love
Andrew Carr*
John Clemens |
Mat Lee
David Lee
T. J. Lee
Ephraim Foster
Nelson New
J. H. Kerr
Jesse Haggard**
Jesse Hale
Claiborne Vaughan
S. H. Smith
John McGuffey
Joseph Mitchell
Robert Maxwell
John Merritt |
*Living in 1914 at the age of
ninety-four)
**Living aged eighty-four |
These were of the pioneer type of
Americans, sturdy, conscientious, and level-headed. In politics
they were, both Democrats and Whigs, of strong convictions. A
majority of the old-timers were antislavery in sentiment. The
village furnished several men to the Federal and Confederate
armies, the larger number siding with the North. In 1914 only
two veterans of the Great War were surviving, J. S. Maxwell
Union veteran, and W. A. Moss, Confederate. During the war there
was no local engagement between the belligerents, though not
infrequently detachments and even regiments of troops passed
through the community. It may be added that there was naturally
considerable bitterness among neighbors of opposing political
views, though this is now a thing of the past.
The Laurel Hill people are either
Baptists or Methodists in religious faith, and both sects have
comfortable churches. In 1876 and 1880 the old log structures
were displaced by modern frame buildings creditable to any rural
locality. Among the early ministers were Thomas Dodson, Alex
Byers, David Lee, M. P. Gentry, D. P. Searcy, and Milton
Pressley. Later ministers have been; J. M. Carter, Francis Deal,
J. M. McNeil, J. B. Kitchens, Van N. Smith, and J. H. Keathly.
Near Laurel Hill is Wolf Creek Baptist Church.
Among the old field teachers of the
neighborhood were William Whitefield, S. H. Smith, Walker Brown,
William Garner, William Isbell, and Jesse McDowell. These men
were of rugged individualities. We are told that in the old days
here the pupils sat in the schoolroom with hats on, studied
aloud, and sang geography. They were followed by Napoleon Smith,
J. E. Conger, Van N. Smith, and Misses Sallie and Emma McDonald.
There are two schoolhouses on Wolf Creek and one north at the
river, and school is still kept at these places.
The Physicians have
been; William Farmer, Gideon Smith, W. E. Sypert. W, E. Sypert,
Jr., J. C. Fisher, and T. J. Smith.
Early business men;
J. H. Kerr
Nelson New
S. H. Smith
Joseph Mitchell
Later:
T. J. Fisher
J. T. Exum
Smith Bros.
D. G. Eaton
Bose Tyree
J. E. Conger
Present:
Noah Duke
Z. O. Medley
Allie Pressley
Henry Sadler |
Millers;
K. D. Exum
Pinkney Coggin
J. S. Maxwell
L. S. Exum
Blacksmiths:
Coleman Helm
W. G. Stephens
John Alcorn
Pleas Randolph
John New |
About 1906 the post office was abolished
and rural route service established. Former postmasters were: J.
H. Kerr, S. H. Smith, W. E. Bartlett, Van N. Smith, T. J.
Fisher, and Henry Sadler.
In every community there has been some
citizen whose bizarre qualities have attracted to himself
unusual and pleasing attention above his local contemporaries.
That of Laurel Hill is no exception to the rule. To illustrate,
"Uncle Pink" Coggin, miller, will long be recalled with pleasure
and amusement, and many anecdotes are told at his expense. Had
Rev. Milton Pressley, another old-timer, been properly educated,
it is probable that he would have been a leading minister of his
day. "Chill penury" often indeed represses a noble rage. To this
inland preacher one who knew him pays this tribute: "He could
not read, but knew the Bible almost by heart. He also knew a few
of the early day hymns. I have heard preachers of every type,
but no scholar or theologian have I heard who had the power
Uncle Milt wielded over an audience. He once preached before
Methodist bishops and startled his cultivated audience with his
untutored power. Sacred be his dust!"
There are a number of burgs throughout
the county which sprang up after post offices were secured, but
the rural route service has left them without official names.
Perhaps the largest was Forks-of-the-Pike.
The adjacent territory is very fertile,
and the farmers are progressive. Among the older farmers were:
James Roy, John, Moses, and Henry Fite, Thomas West, Eli Vick,
Thomas Fite, Thomas and John Groom, and the Truits and Hayses.
They were succeeded by Samson Sellars, Mrs. Ford, Grant Roy, F.
H. Hayes, Tom Ford, John Bell Hays, William Hays, Robert Vannata,
Sam Vannata, Henry Givan, P. T. Bragg, W. D. Evans, Sam Flippin,
Jake Young, Joseph Clarke, and others. William Fite erected a
storehouse just after the war, merchandising for several years.
He was succeeded by Jacob Young, and Young by P. T. Bragg in
1880. The last merchant and postmaster was R. B. Vannata.
Postmasters have been; P, T. Bragg, James J. Evans, and R. B.
Vannata.
Four Corners, the Village
Schoolhouse
many competent tutors
Rev. Pearson
Mrs. P. A. Pearson
John W. Overall
Mr. Pendleton
Preston brothers
Mr. Hood
E. W. Brown
Mr. Jones
Robert Hayes
Mr. Whitlock |
Wheeler & Holmes
Matt Bratten
Lee West
Mr. Ford
Thomas Bryant
Prudie Sellars
Miss Mullins
Willie Bell
Maggie Robinson
The Misses Bell* |
* Teachers in 1914. |
Keltonsburg, a few miles from
Smithville, was named for James Kelton, who built the mill
there. This mill, it may be stated here, was transferred to
Paris & Boles in later years, who sold it to Mr. Thompson. It is
at present possessed by Mr. Mullikins. The village has two
stores and a blacksmith shop, and the Methodists and Disciples
have congregations there.
The first store was under the control of
B. M, Magness for many years. Keltonsburg is surrounded by a
worthy class of citizens.
DeKalb County |
Tennessee
Source: History of DeKalb County,
Tennessee. By Will T. Hale, Nashville, Tennessee, Paul Hunter,
Publisher, 1915.
|