Walt & Terri Sterneman's Family Pages

James C. McCarty

Person Chart

Parents

Father Date of Birth Mother Date of Birth
Thomas J. Carty 26 Dec 1819 Caroline Porter

Partners

Partner Date of Birth Children
Mary Ellen Chapman 26 Mar 1852

Person Events

Event Type Date Place Description
Birth 23 Dec 1847 Russell County, Virginia
Census 1850 #1059, Russell County, Virginia
Census 1860 #1199, Russell County, Virginia
Marriage 08 Jun 1869
Census 1870 #66, Russell County, Virginia
Place of Residence 1870 115 acre farm, Copper Creek Township, Russell County, Virginia
Death 26 Sep 1918 Nasbie, Dickenson County, Virginia
Burial Chaney Ridge Farm, Dickenson County, Virginia

Notes

There is a map to Uncle Jim's place on page 13 of "John P. Carty of Molls Creek." According to "John P. Carty of Molls Creek":

James C. Carty's will stated that he left a mansion house when he died. Of course this statement aroused our curiosity and the search for the-rest-or-the-story was on! The following is what people who knew James and Mollie had to say about them and the mansion house.

The house was located in the Caney Ridge Section of Dickenson County, Virginia which is now Coeburn Route #2. The mansion house was built of logs in an L shape. It had three very large rooms. The outside of the house was covered with boards for siding.It had good windows. The doors were hand made. A front porch filled in the L shape of the house. There was also a back porch. There was a large fireplace in the living room. The chimney was sandstone and mud. The top was rived boards. The floor was punchon, one log in the middle of the front room was loose on both ends. It would be removed to get under the house to store potatoes, apples, and so on for winter use. The house was papered with newspapers and catalog leaves. This house was one of the best at that time. It stood the test of time. The mansion house is no more; it burnt down in the early 1950's.

Uncle Jim (as he was called) was a farmer. He had apples, peaches, and cherry trees on his farm; and a grape arbor in front of the house. He grew lots of vegetables. He peddled his produce, eggs, milk, and butter in Coeburn. He used the money he got to buy things that he and Mollie, his wife, needed. He made brooms out of hickory sticks. These were called scrub brooms.

Uncle Jim and Mollie did not have any children of their own, but they reared a girl named Rose Powers who went by the name of Rosie Carty.

James is buried on Caney Ridge at his homeplace. His headstone reads: Gone to dwell with the happy and blest.

After James died Mollie married 15-June-1923 at Toms Creek, Wise County, Virginia, to Green Berry "G. B." Adkins. We have not done any research as to what happened to her after this marriage.

Sources

Description Page Quality Information Evidence
John P. Carty of Molls Creek, VA Don't know Don't know Don't know
McCarty-Smith GEDCOM file Don't know Don't know Don't know