Caswell County, North Carolina Genealogy

United States   North Carolina    Caswell County

Caswell County Courthouse
This historic old building has seen much. If these walls could talk many would listen. The Courthouse has seen proud times, troublesome times, and tragic times. It has endured occupation, murder, and fire. The first Caswell County public library was housed in its dark and mysterious basement. It was home to respected and loved Register of Deeds Burch Blaylock. And, it saw the murder of Senator John W. Stephens.

The Caswell County Courthouse was completed at the end of what has been called Caswell County's "Boom Era" -- from approximately 1830 until the Civil War. It is a handsome building, with a storied past. Now listed on the National Register of Historic Places, it no longer functions as the hub of county business, which is sad. Many can still remember when the Courthouse was alive with governmental and political activity. Many can still remember court week, election eve, and, possibly, just getting their first driver's license there. It was where you found the sheriff, the tax collector, the register of deeds, the clerk of the court, and, many years ago, the Freedman's Bureau. The air was electric, the smell of the building distinctive, as government unfolded before your eyes.

To many it is the symbol of the greatness of Caswell County. To others it is a reminder of the absolute worst in the hearts of men. However, after all this, the majestic Courthouse remains standing.

As late as April 1857, the county was still considering making repairs to the old courthouse. That building, the third Caswell County Courthouse, had been damaged by fire that year, and there was local disagreement over whether to repair or replace it. The following is found in the minutes of the April 1857 session of the Court of Pleas and Quarter Sessions ("Court"):

Ordered commission to be appointed to consider the propriety of repairing the Court House and to report the best plan of proceeding for the public convenience in regard to the courthouse and to procure and exhibit a plan or plans of alternative or repairs with the probable cost. Commission -- Wm. Long, N. M. Lewis, Daniel S. Price, Joseph S. Totten, Calvin Graves, Benjamin F. Standfield, Bluford W. Cooper, John Cobb and Wagstaff Maynard. Ordered that they have leave to employ architect to aid in preparing a plan.

This commission wasted no time and persuaded the Court that a new building was preferred over making repairs to the old courthouse. In its July 1857 session, the Court made the following order:

Ordered by the Court that a new Court House shall be built and that the old one be disposed of by the Commissioners herein appointed to the best advantage to aid in the erection of the new court house. Following persons appointed as commissioners for new building: S. P. Hill, Wm. Long, E. K. Withers, C. H. Richmond, and N. M. Lewis to employ an architect and contract for the building of the said Court House and they are also empowered and authorized to purchase a lot or piece of land if in their opinion it is necessary on which to build the new court house.

However, the membership of this commission soon was changed to add John Cobb, Wagstaff Maynard, and Dr. Nathaniel M. Roan. And, in October 1858, C. N. B. Evans was paid $4.50 for "publishing the letting of the building of the new court house." Presumably, this had something to do with the construction of the new building. Dr. Nathaniel M. Roan became chairman of the commission. His goal of purchasing a chandelier from England for the center of the courtroom was never realized, being interrupted by the Civil War. The interior furnishings of the courthouse were not completed until the 1870s.

In April 1859 the Court directed the County Treasurer to pay all drafts drawn by the "commission who have charge of building of [the] court house in payment of expenses and charges of said building" and that the County Treasurer be reimbursed for all such sums already paid. A similar order was issued in July 1859. Construction of the new courthouse was underway, and miscellaneous bills had to be paid. And, of course, taxes were levied to pay for the new structure.

At the July 1861 term of the Court, County Trustee Thomas D. Johnston reported a payment of $200 to William Percival, architect, and a payment of "about $25,000" to David McKnight of Greensboro, the contractor who built the courthouse. McKnight was a mason by trade and would have been around fifty years old in 1861.

It also appears that the Yanceyville post office had been housed in one of the rooms of the courthouse, because the Court in that same July 1861 session "ordered and directs that the Post Office shall no longer be kept in any of the rooms of the Court House and that the same shall be removed and the sheriff of said county is hereby directed to notify Alex McAlpin of this order by serving a copy of this order on him." Presumably, McAlpin was the postmaster. The same Court also appointed James L. McKee "to keep and take care of Court House and to attend to the keeping of the public clock in order for 1 year," for which he was to be paid $50.

While not related to the new courthouse, the in July 1861 the Court also appointed a committee "to aid and provide for the families of such soldiers as have volunteered to serve in the War against Abe Lincoln's scoundrels."

What became of the old courthouse structure is not known, but some believe that parts (such as windows and doors) were incorporated into various houses built in Yanceyville, especially the Roan House remodeling.

Until 1868, North Carolina counties were governed by the Court of Pleas and Quarter Sessions, which was composed of justices. As few as three apparently made a quorum. And, the minutes of the Caswell County Court of Pleas and Quarter Sessions show from three to thirty-five justices assembled quarterly for a five-day session to transact county business and to act as an inferior court. In 1868, the North Carolina constitution was amended to vest county government in a board of county commissioners.

Overview
Caswell County, North Carolina, was established in 1777. It was carved from Orange County to make governmental agencies more accessible to the area's residents. Over three hundred men signed the petition submitted in 1771 requesting that the Colonial government at New Bern further partition Orange County. Because Orange County had just recently been subdivided and because matters leading to the Revolution took precedence, no action was taken on this petition. It was not until independence had been declared and the Revolutionary War had begun that Caswell County was created by the first state government. The new county appropriately was named Caswell after Richard Caswell, the first governor of the new State of North Carolina.

Thus began the new county. Governor Caswell had appointed justices of the peace to hold court and to administer the business of the county. The initial organizational meeting was to be the convening of the first court at the house of Thomas Douglas in what would become Leasburg, the county's first county seat. There, on June 10, 1777, at the first session of the Caswell County Court of Pleas and Quarter Sessions, the justices of the peace appointed by the governor met to create the government of the county. John Lea was given the honor of opening the first court. Selected at this first session were the clerk of the court (William Moore), the sheriff (David Shelton), the register of deeds (Archibald Murphey), and the ranger (John Payne). Among the business conducted by this first court was recognizing the commission from the governor appointing John Graves as Captain and appointing James Saunders as Colonel. The first court session lasted but three days.

Just as travel made it difficult to attend court at the county seat of Orange County in Hillsborough, many in what became Person County found travel to Leasburg difficult. As a result, in 1792 Caswell County essentially was divided into halves. The western half remained Caswell County; the eastern half became Person County. Leasburg was the county seat of Caswell County for only a few years. With the revised county boundaries, a new county seat was needed more at the geographic center of the county. Leasburg, now near the border with Person County, no longer was a convenient county seat. This resulted in surveyors locating the geographic center of Caswell County. There, at a place called Caswell Courthouse (initially called Caswell New Courthouse), the new seat of county government was created in 1792. This eventually became Yanceyville, and was so named in 1833 in honor of James Yancey (c.1772-1829), brother of Bartlett Yancey, Jr.

In September 1777, representatives to the North Carolina legislature were chosen. John Atkinson and John Moore were selected to attend the House of Commons. James Saunders was chosen to attend the Senate. The state government remained centered at New Bern.

Because both Caswell County and the State of North Carolina were created in 1777 there were other matters at hand -- the Revolutionary War. Accordingly, between 1777 and 1783 both county and state had their hands full with fulfilling the terms of the Declaration of Independence. Caswell County contributed significantly in personnel and material to the war effort. However, it was but marginally a site of actual combat. Caswell County natives famous for contributing to the War of Independence are: Lieutenant Colonel Henry ("Hal") Dixon; Captain John Herndon Graves; Dr. Lancelot Johnston; and Starling Gunn. After the 1781 Battle of Guilford Courthouse, General Cornwallis brought his British forces through Caswell County pursuing that wily General Greene, whose "retreat" probably won the Revolutionary War. This was part of the famous Race to the Dan, which was the calculated retreat by General Greene across the Dan River that extended General Cornwallis so far from his source of supply that his fighting power was effectively ended.

Cornwallis is believed to have marched through the Camp Springs area, through Leasburg, and certainly through the Red House Church area in Semora, where the grave of Reverend Hugh McAden was disturbed.

After the war ended, a census was taken by the State of North Carolina. It showed Caswell County to be the second most populous county in the state, with 9,839 people. Second, by only 489 people to Halifax County. With the county seat relocated to Caswell Court House (Yanceyville), Leasburg ceased to have significant political importance. However, along with Milton in the northeast corner of the county, Leasburg and Yanceyville would be responsible for much of the county's development over the next century.

The period between the turn of the nineteenth century and the Civil War was a golden time for Caswell County, at least if you were a white land owner. Were you a slave, the perspective would be somewhat different. The county continued to grow and prosper. And, around 1830 it began that part of its history now termed the Boom Era. This was roughly from 1830 to when the adverse effects of the Civil War began to be felt in the 1860s. As it remains today, tobacco was the leading agricultural product of the county during the antebellum period. The county also saw during this period the development of various mills (flour and lumber), most dependent upon water power. It saw the creation of the Milton Cotton Factory and the furniture output of Thomas Day. It saw the Yarbrough Foundry and the Yanceyville Silk Company. It saw the discovery in 1839 of Bright Leaf Tobacco in Blanch by Stephen, the slave of Abisha Slade. Fine homes were built in Leasburg, Milton, Yanceyville, Locust Hill, and in other communities throughout the county as the wealth of the tobacco-based economy and those industries supported by tobacco provided the ability to build impressive homes. Academies opened, with such notables as Solomon Lea in Leasburg as their head masters.

Caswell County produced many political leaders, including Bartlett Yancey, Jr., Archibald Debow Murphey, Romulus Mitchell Saunders, Bedford Brown, Calvin Graves, John Kerr, Jacob Thompson, and others. At one time it was stated that all successful legislation had to make its way through the Caswell County legislators. As an example, Bartlett Yancey, Jr., was Speaker of the North Carolina Senate 1817-1827, and during part of this time Romulus Mitchell Saunders was Speaker of the North Carolina House of Commons.

These were heady times for Caswell County. However, the course of the county's history was changed in 1861 with the start of the Civil War. The next four years devastated the South, they devastated North Carolina, and they devastated Caswell County. The Boom Era was over.

Caswell County's elected leaders in the months leading to the Civil War were against secession. They supported the union and believed the best approach was to take moderate steps to accommodate all points of view, but to keep the Country together. However, they also resented the fact that the federal government was attempting to deprive the states of the right to determine their own destiny within the federal framework. In the end, events beyond Caswell County determined its future as, reluctantly, the State of North Carolina seceded and joined the Confederate States of America. Though reluctant to leave the union, both state and county fought bravely in the Civil War. Caswell County produced the Leasburg Grays, the Milton Blues, and the Yanceyville Grays. Of course the county contributed men to other troops and provided much in the way of supplies and material. To those brave men a memorial was erected in 1921 on the square in Yanceyville, the Confederate Monument. However, when the war ended, those soldiers still able returned home, but it would never be the same. William Powell who wrote the 1977 history of Caswell County sums it up as follows:

Events of the brief span of time between 1861 and 1865 completely changed the course of the history of Caswell County as it did for much of the state and the South. What the effect was of the price paid with the life of so many young men can never be determined, of course. The loss of many thousands of dollars invested in slaves was regarded as significant only briefly; mere dollars were soon forgotten in the face of more pressing concerns. The totally changed pattern of life throughout the country, however, was a different matter. For blacks it meant freedom from the bonds of slavery, a brief period of rejoicing, and then a resumption of a life of hard work. For many whites it meant the abandonment of the familiar plantation life style; for the previously poor small farmer it meant even greater poverty; and for the whole county it meant a reduced standard of living all around, abandoned land, and a public revenue inadequate for the services that governments ordinarily were expected to provide. The character of the county underwent a metamorphosis that perhaps would not have surprised Bedford Brown, Willie P. Mangum, or Jonathan Worth had they lived to recognize it; but most people were stunned by what had happened, and they lost the pride and the spirit that had made Caswell a leader among counties for so many years.

The year 1861 saw the start of the Civil War and the completion of the magnificent Caswell County Courthouse. The years following the Civil War saw the onset of Reconstruction, the murder of Senator John W. Stephens in that same Caswell County Courthouse, and the Kirk-Holden War. Reconstruction was a confusing period in the history of Caswell County. Blacks were free and could vote, but they continued to have secondary economic and social status. The conservative whites, out of power for the first time in decades, resorted to the Ku Klux Klan in attempt to regain that power. Principally as a result of events in Caswell County, Governor William W. Holden was impeached and removed from office. It was a sad time for the county and the state.

To say that the county languished between 1870 and 1920 could very well be an understatement. Using tenant labor and extended families, Caswell County continued its antebellum reliance upon tobacco. Surprisingly, it was one of the few North Carolina counties to emerge immediately after the Civil War with an increased economic output than immediately before the war. But, that was a temporary and aberrational state of affairs. With the continued dependence upon tobacco, the reluctance to diversify agriculturally, the continued abuse of the land, and no reason for the industrial revolution to have an impact, the county continued its slide into poverty. Caswell County could not dig itself out of the economic mire created by the Civil War. It took the Depression of the 1930s with its federal works programs, the trauma of World War II, and the boom years of the 1950s to awaken Caswell County. And, many claim that it remains slumbering today.

The county attracted a few small textile mills in Yanceyville that certainly were important to those who found employment there and they could not but help a tax base that was tied to agriculture. A most-welcome meat packing operation opened in the Matkins community of the county's southwest corner. Leasburg and Milton continued to decay economically, and became bedroom communities to Danville, Durham, and beyond. However, there was no geographic or political reason for Caswell County to be attractive as a site for industry. It had no modern infrastructure and could not generate internally the capital required to build industrial parks and the necessary transportation links. While the land itself has recovered somewhat from the ravages of mismanagement, it appears that the county's most valuable asset may be its past.

A rich heritage wasted? Valuable land devoted to tobacco no matter the cost? The best and brightest lost to other places? Where did Caswell County go wrong? Even today its economy is based upon tobacco, almost one hundred years after many advised it to diversify its agricultural base. The almost opulent Caswell County Courthouse and the mansions sprinkled throughout the county are sources of pride, but they are also reminders that the basis of this pride is almost two-hundred years old. Caswell County's history is worth studying. One can only hope that its future will be as interesting.

Parent County
1777-Caswell was created 8 April 1777 from Orange County. County seat: Yanceyville

Record Loss
Some records may have been destroyed during occupation by militia troops during reconstruction.

Neighboring Counties

 * Alamance
 * Orange
 * Person
 * Pittsylvania County, Virginia
 * Rockingham

Family History
Bibliography

Local Histories
Bibliography

[Powell] Powell, William S. When the Past Refused to Die: A History of Caswell County North Carolina 1777-1977. Durham, North Carolina: 1977.

Web Sites

 * Caswell County Historical Association
 * Caswell County, North Carolina GenWeb
 * Caswell County Family Tree
 * Caswell County History and Genealogy Yahoo Group
 * Caswell County Historical Association Weblog
 * Caswell County Photograph Collection
 * Caswell County on Facebook
 * Caswell County Cemetery Census
 * Family History Library Catalog