John Smith (d.1783) was a blacksmith in Bertie County who was involved in the Gourd Patch Conspiracy and went on the run with… Read More
John Smith (d.1783) was a blacksmith in Bertie County who was involved in the Gourd Patch Conspiracy and went on the run with… Read More
John Smith was born near Darnaway, Scotland on February 20, 1811. Smith was a stonecutter who moved to North Carolina to work on the construction of the state capitol in Raleigh in the 1830s. He died at his home outside Fayetteville (Cumberland… Read More
John Smith was a pilot of the local waterways around New Bern and the Pamlico who helped guide a group of Craven County Militiamen under the command of Lt.… Read More
Joshua Smith associated with known loyalist agitator, Josiah Phillips in 1777. … Read More
Malachi Smith was a resident of Bertie and Martin Counties. In 1777 he may have served as a private in the 7th North Carolina Regiment of the Continental Army. By June 1778 he returned home, where he signed an oath swearing his allegiance to the… Read More
Maurice Smith was born in Granville County, North Carolina on May 6, 1776. A colonel in the War of 1812, he later served as a justice of the peace for Granville County and was a judge of the court of pleas and quarter sessions. He died in… Read More
Michael Smith (1698-circa 1771) was an Ireland-born ordained Anglican minister and poet. Following a rough patch in South Carolina, Smith relocated to coastal North Carolina where he served the congregations of Wilmington and New Bern until… Read More
Milton Hannibal Smith was born in Chautauqua County, New York, on September 12, 1836. Smith was a railroad industrialist who served as president of the Louisville and Nashville Railroad from 1891 to 1921. He died in Louisville, Kentucky, on… Read More
Norfleet Saunders Smith was born in Scotland Neck, North Carolina, on November 28, 1882. Smith was commissioned as a first lieutenant on November 27, 1917, and assigned to the 11th Infantry. He served overseas… Read More
Captain Richard Smith was a planter who resided alongside the Pamlico River in Bath County, North Carolina. Smith resided in Bath by 1697, where he served as one of the county's first representatives to the House of Burgesses. Later in 1703 he… Read More
Richard Smith was born in North Carolina on June 10, 1780. A merchant and justice of the peace in Wake County, North Carolina, he helped many people submit pension claims for service during the American Revolution. He died in Raleigh on October… Read More
Robert Smith (d. 1798) was a lawyer and justice of the peace in Chowan County. In 1777 and 1778 he signed a series of oaths swearing his allegiance to the State of North Carolina and promised to report any treasonous conspiracies that might… Read More
Robert Smith was a Patriot officer who served as a captain in the 4th North Carolina Regiment of the Continental Line from 1776 to 1777. He later served as a captain in the Mecklenburg County Regiment of the North Carolina Militia from 1779 to… Read More
Robert Lee Smith was born on April 4, 1864, in North Carolina. He was an attorney in Stanly County, North Carolina. In the summer of 1919, he represented Tallassee Power Company against allegations of violent treatment of labor organizers. Smith… Read More
Samuel Smith associated with known loyalist agitator, Josiah Phillips, who carried out raids… Read More
Samuel Smith, of London, served as private attorney for royal governor Arthur Dobbs and as colonial agent for the North Carolina Council from 1759 to 1764.
Stephen Smith (d. c1795) was a justice for the Hyde County Court. In 1777, as a member of that court, he helped oversee the collection of loyalty oaths from the county's white male citizens.
Susan Smith was born on November 30, 1887, in Harnett County, North Carolina. Smith was a stenographer in Averasboro, North Carolina, who served as the chief clerk of the Harnett County Exemption Board during World War I. She later relocated to… Read More
Thomas Smith was a resident of Chowan County. In 1778 he refused to take an oath swearing his allegiance to the State of North Carolina.
During the War of Regulation, Mrs. Smith sold supplies to the North Carolina Militia. Mrs. Smith's full name has not been identified. While it is possible this individual is… Read More
Wade Cothran Smith was born in Georgia on June 1, 1869. Smith was a minister who served as editor of a monthly Presbyterian magazine called The Missionary Survey, published out of Richmond, Virginia. He seemed to split his time between… Read More
Ward William Smith was born on June 19, 1876, in Manhattan. Smith was manager of the Fruit and Trade Association, based in New York City. He died in the Bronx on May 27, 1943.
William Smith was an English attorney who arrived in North Carolina in early 1731 to accept his commission as chief justice of the colony's general court and president of the North Carolina Council. He resigned in May 1731 due to a disagreement… Read More
William Alexander Smith was born in Warren County, North Carolina, on January 9th, 1828. He was a farmer, railroad president, legislator, and congressman. Smith served in the U.S. House of Representatives from 1873-1875. Smith died in Richmond,… Read More
William Alexander Smith was born in Cartersville, Georgia, in 1858. Smith was an attorney who served as mayor of Hendersonville (Henderson County) and as the vice president of the Greater Western North Carolina Association. He died in… Read More
William Nathan Harrell Smith was born in Murfreesboro (Hertford County), North Carolina, on September 24th, 1812. Smith was a attorney, judge, and politician. He served as a representative in the Confederate Congress from 1862-1865. Smith died in… Read More
Mack C. Smithey was born in Wilkes County, North Carolina, on September 13, 1875. Smithey was a veterinarian and drayman in Wilkes County. He died in North Wilkesboro on February 26, 1918.
Nikeard Bruce Smithey was born in Wilkes County, North Carolina, on August 11, 1880. Smithey opened a store in Wilkesboro in 1899. By the time of his death, his company, N. B. Smithey Co., had grown into a chain of department and grocery stores… Read More
Dorman Stewart Smithson was born on April 22, 1892, in Alabama. Smithson was an employee of the Hardaway Contracting Company in Iredell County, North Carolina, when he was ordered to report for military service in September 1917, in support of… Read More
Edward Smithwick was born in about 1647 and was a resident of Chowan Precinct, North Carolina by 1680. The… Read More
Luke Smithwick (d. 1778) was a resident of Bertie County. In 1778 he signed an oath swearing his allegiance to the State of North Carolina and promised to report any treasonous conspiracies that might threaten North Carolina's independence.
James Clinton Smoot was born in Alexandria, Virginia, on October 1, 1857. Smoot was a businessman connected with the tannery operation C. C. Smoot & Sons Company in North Wilkesboro (Wilkes County). He later moved to Charlotte (Mecklenburg… Read More
John Smyth was born near present-day Smithfield in Isle of White County, Virginia in about 1644. In 1673 Smyth moved near the Blackwater River. In 1707 he gave a deposition in support of North Carolina's boundary claim with Virginia. He died… Read More
Stephen K. Sneed was born in North Carolina on July 2, 1794. He worked as the clerk of the county court for Granville County, North Carolina. He later resided in Fayette County, Tennessee, where he died on March 14, 1841.
William Morgan Sneed was born in North Carolina in about 1780. A farmer, he served as a justice of the peace in Granville County, North Carolina. He died in about 1849.
Roger Snell was born in England in about 1647. He immigrated first to Maryland in 1661 and later to North Carolina by 1694, establishing himself in Perquimans Precinct. In 1697 he served as a witness in the case against Dorothy Steele, a colonist… Read More
Charles H. "Charlie" Snider was born in North Carolina on January 23, 1889. On December 14, 1918, Snider—freshly discharged from the army at Camp Greene—slashed the throat of Southern Railway engineer Hugh Alexander Winders (1892-1918) and cut… Read More
Thomas Snoden first appears in North Carolina colonial court records in 1693. An attorney, he served as the clerk of the North Carolina General Court from March 1703 to July 1705. He served as the colony's attorney general from July 1705 to 1708… Read More
Cindy Snow was a Black woman who was described as "very old" in 1916. That July, she was living along the Yadkin River in Marsh Township (Surry County) when a devastating flood pushed the Yadkin beyond its banks and washed away all of her… Read More
George Snyder was born circa 1885 in North Carolina. As a child, Snyder was stricken with an unnamed disease that left him paralyzed down one side of his body. Despite the impediment, he proved himself to be a good worker and secured work as a… Read More
Chartered in 1701, the Society for the Propagation of the Gospel in Foreign Parts organized missionary work in colonial British America.
John Solley was a resident of Pasquotank Precinct, North Carolina by 1713. There he served as a justice of the North Carolina General Court from 1722 to 1723 and later served as a justice of the peace for Pasquotank. He died sometime after 1735… Read More
Michael Sope was a resident of colonial Anson County. In an undated petition, he joined other Anson County residents in asking royal governor Arthur Dobbs to organize a patrol to defend against attacks by members of the Catawba, Cherokee, Seneca… Read More
Sophia Charlotte of Mecklenburg-Strelitz (1744-1818) was a German princess whose marriage to King George III in 1761 made her Queen of Great Britain and of Ireland (later the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland), a position she held until… Read More
Alonzo Herman Sorrell was born on January 23, 1894, in Sumner, Georgia. During World War I, Sorrell served with Company A of the 317th Machine Gun Battalion and was deployed overseas from July 1918 to June 1919. He was honorably discharged from… Read More
Seth Sothel was born in England and became a Proprietor of Carolina in 1677. In 1678, while en route to North Carolina to become the governor there, Sothel was captured by pirates and held for ransom in Algiers. After being released in September… Read More
Andrew South was a resident of Bertie County. In 1778 he signed an oath swearing his allegiance to the State of North Carolina and promised to report any treasonous conspiracies that might threaten North Carolina's independence.
Charles Sowell (d. 1802) was a resident of Bertie County. In 1778 he signed an oath swearing his allegiance to the State of North Carolina and promised to report any treasonous conspiracies that might threaten North Carolina's independence.
Francis Sowell (d. 1796) was a resident of Bertie County. In 1778 he signed an oath swearing his allegiance to the State of North Carolina and promised to report any treasonous conspiracies that might threaten North Carolina's independence. Later… Read More