
The Moore Family
Jim Hall
Where did the fpc/mulatto Moores live before    moving to Rockingham County, North Carolina, about 1778?    That question has plagued me for decades    and caused years of research.    Unfortunately, I have not found a    definitive answer because there is no reliable trail of deeds, wills,    tax lists or other documents to point us in the right direction.    I will attempt to answer that question by     giving you my best guess based on the information I have collected to    date.    I freely admit that I cannot prove my    theory with documents but it is my hope that the theory is someday    proven or disproven, through research, newly found documents and DNA.    In analyzing my “best guess” we will look     at some of the available information and the surrounding circumstances     and see if we can draw some reasonable inferences from that  information.
   The most well-known location where the people  who    came to be known as “Melungeons” lived is Hawkins and Hancock Counties     in Tennessee.    These two counties had a large population     of mulatto/fpc people and many descendants of the original settlers    still live in the area.    
   It is important at the outset to consider a  couple    of questions.    Was it an historical and geographical    accident that these people migrated to and lived in the same area of    Tennessee?    Was it just a coincidence?     I    think not.    Several of the families moved into the  area    together, as a group.    Some of the families or the ancestors of    those families had been acquainted at some time and location prior to    moving to Tennessee.    Sometimes the group would split and go in     different directions only to meet again at a new location.    Sometimes, a family would drift off from    the group and in a short time become “white” on documents and lose  their    connection to the group.    Members of the group, and their  ancestors,    tended to intermarry within the group as the group slowly migrated    westward.    Continuous intermarriage within the group     was the primary force that retained and preserved those  characteristics    in the individual which led to them being called “Melungeon” or listed     as mulatto or fpc on documents.
   Let’s begin our discussion of the Moore family  in    Rockingham County, North Carolina, with John Moore and try and  establish    some relationships.    We know for a fact that John had five  sons    and I will suggest that he had a father, Charles, and probably three    brothers, James, Andrew and Ephraim.    
   The most valuable document in researching these    Moores, and the most well-known, is John Moore’s Revolutionary War    pension application.    The pension application was made by John  in    1834 in Floyd County, Kentucky, and, after his death, by his wife,    Sally.    From that application we learn that John    was born in May of 1758 in Orange County, North Carolina, that he    married Sally Goodman in March of 1784, in Rockingham County, and,  they    had five sons, Joel, Andrew, Obadiah, Edmund and John Jr.    
John would have been about 26 years of age at the time of his marriage and Sally, who was born about 1765, was about 19 years of age. We know John lived for most of his adult life in, first, Surry County, and then across the county line in the north-west corner of Rockingham County in an area which came to be known as Goinstown. The Moores lived along Hickory ander Buffalo Creeks of the Mayo River just south of the Virginia line.
No comments:
Post a Comment