Noble John Sarratt's life
spanned nearly all of the 19th Century, from 1809 to
1897. He spent it in the lower part of Cleveland County,
and in northern Cherokee County, South Carolina, specifically
in the area north of the town now known as Gaffney.
Noble was the son of a prosperous land owner, Anthony
Sarratt, and was the great grandfather of several Cliffside
natives you might know or remember. He was also something
of an historian, who was able to describe
in fascinating detail the life and times of his contemporaries,
as you'll see below.
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Anthony
Sarratt
1777-1850 |
Anthony was the son of John Sarratt and Letitia Ellis,
the daughter of James Ellis who ran a ferry between the
North Carolina and South Carolina sides of Broad River
in lower Cleveland County near the Mt. Sinai community.
Ellis Ferry Road exists to this day, on both sides of
the river, in both states. Anthony owned over 100 slaves,
who worked his land from the Grassy Pond settlement down
to what is now Gaffney.
If you'd like to examine a fairly complete listing
of six generations of John Sarratt's descendents, view
this PDF
file. (Use your Back button to return here. This
requires Adobe's Acrobat reader, which may already
be on your computer, or you can download it
from Adobe at no charge.)
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Noble John
Sarratt
1809-1897 |
Noble too was a ferryman on Broad River, at a
location somewhere near the NC-SC state line.
It is told that a young couple once boarded his ferry
on their way to Gaffney. When Noble learned the reason
for their journey—to
get married—he
performed the ceremony himself then and there, for,
after all, he was captain of the “ship.”
Some researchers have it that Noble married Elizabeth
H. McCraw in 1832. Other sources have her name as
Deborah. In any event, she was born in 1819 and died
in 1860.
One of Noble's daughters, Nancy, married a school
teacher named John Nicholson. Together they started
a community called Nicholsonville at the point where
Sandy Run Creek joins Broad River, a few miles SSW
of Boiling Springs. Eventually this little town had
its own post office. A township
map exists that shows the
town, along with the homes in the area and their owners'
names.
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Ugenius (1839-1915) &
Lettie
Sarratt (1845-1924) |
According to the 1880 Federal Census, Noble, then
71 years old, lived in Cleveland County's Township
2, which would have been north of Broad River, perhaps
in the vicinity of Nicholsonville. He is listed on
the census sheets as living alone near another daughter.
That daughter was Letitia Lucretia, born in 1846.
She was known as “Lettie” like her grandmother
Ellis, for whom she was named. Lettie married
her first cousin, Ugenius Sarratt,
a Civil War veteran who lost his left arm in the
battle of Petersburg. Four of Lettie's and Ugenius'
children would become the parents of some well-known
Cliffside residents.
In her widowhood, Lettie is said to have asked—in
jest?—to be buried in the old Sarratt graveyard
with her father, Noble, instead of at Camp's Creek
with Ugenius. She was afraid, she said, that
when the devil came for Ugenius, he would take
her too. If that was indeed her wish, it did not come
true. She lies at Camp's Creek Baptist Cemetery with
her one-armed husband.
Of
the seven children of Ugenius and Lettie
Sarratt, these four contributed to the population
of Cliffside:
-
Samuel L. (1870-1951) married Rachel Carrie Blanton
(1868-1940). They were the parents of Homer
Sarratt (1902-1980); Tinnie Sarratt (1901-1992),
who became the wife of Clayton Scruggs; and Valoree
Sarratt (1897-1984) who married Jesse
Frye. Valoree and Jesse were the parents of Sam
and Joe Fry.
-
Nancy Jane (1864-1908) married Leander Hamrick
(1860-1916). Leander
and his children are listed in the 1910 census,
living in Fairview. In that listing you'll find
young Carves
P. Hamrick (1892-1961), who for many
years would be our friend and grocer, and Bertie
Pearl Hamrick (1891-1995), who was later
the wife of Thomas J. Price. Carves and his younger
brother Clarence
Dixon Hamrick (who died in 1936) joined
the U. S. Army on the same day during World War
I.
-
Cora D. (1866-1949) married Columbus P. Moore
(1865-1940) and three of their children were Otto
Moore (1908-1989),Tencie Estelle
Moore (1899-1968) and John
Geary “Pete” Moore (1895-1961).
-
John L. (1881-1922) married Mary O. Vinsett
(1880-????). One of their children was Johnson
Eartell Sarratt (1902-1988).
To view more photos, go to the Sarratt family
album.
Toward the end of his life Noble John Sarratt wrote
a small book titled “The
History Of The Sarratts Along Main Broad River.” Much later, The
Gaffney Ledger,
as an introduction to its reprint of the history, wrote:
“A
seventy-six-year-old man, who lives in No. 2 TWP,
Cleveland County, N. C., found this clipping in
his family Bible. It is quoted in its entirety.
It was printed in The Gaffney Ledger Gaffney, S.
C., on Thursday, June 2, 1927.
“'The
Sarratt Family,' a 24-page history by Noble Sarratt,
who has been dead for a score or more years, was
one of the first jobs printed by The Ledger, something
like a quarter of a century ago.
“There
are numerous members of the Sarratt family now
residing in Cherokee County, and The Ledger is
herewith reproducing this interesting document
in full below.”
You may find parts of the book a tangle of kinships
not particularly interesting, but
don't fail to read the middle chapters, which describe
the hardscrabble lives the people in this area led
in the 1800s. Click here and
Noble's history will appear in Acrobat PDF format.
(Use your Back button to return here.)
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