James Ransom (Regulator) Explained

James Ransom
Birth Date:c. 1740
Birth Place:Brunswick County, Virginia
Death Date:1810
Death Place:Warren County, North Carolina
Relations:Nathaniel Macon's stepfather

James Ransom (Regulator) should not be confused with James Ransom.

James Ransom (c. 1740–1810) was part of the Regulator movement and a delegate to the 2nd North Carolina Provincial Congress from Bute County, North Carolina (now Warren County) in 1775, as well as a member of the Bute County Committee of Safety alongside Jethro Sumner. He was the step-father of Nathaniel Macon and a neighbor of Benjamin Hawkins.[1] He married Macon's mother Priscilla Jones after the death of Gideon Macon.[2]

Early life

James Ransom was born about 1740 in Brunswick County, Virginia to Richard Ransom and Frances Hicks.[3] [4] Despite his father not being named James, he was often referred to as "James Ransom, Jr", to distinguish him from his cousin James Ransom who married Amy Davis.[5] He married Priscilla Macon in Oxford, North Carolina on February 9, 1763.[6]

American Revolution

Ransom was a "man of energetic Regulator sympathies". "Men like him had begun to call themselves patriots and Sons of Liberty, while labeling their loyalist neighbors Tories, oppressors, and damned rascals".[7] [8] He succeeded Osborn Jefferys as sheriff of Bute County in 1771, and was succeeded in that capacity in 1772 by Jethro Sumner. Ransom was a Justice of the Peace and both Ransom and Sumner were members of the Bute County Committee of Safety. Ransom was a delegate to the Second North Carolina Provincial Congress at New Bern in April 1775.[9]

During the American Revolution in 1776, Ransom was appointed superintendent of the North Carolina Gun Works in Halifax, North Carolina.[10] [11] [12]

Ancestors and relatives

Ransom's great-great grandfather was Peter Ransom, who arrived in Virginia from England, settling in Elizabeth County, Virginia, and served in the House of Burgesses in 1652.

Ransom was the great-grandfather of Confederate generals Matt Whitaker Ransom and Robert Ransom,[13] [14] and great-great grandfather of Confederate general John Pegram and artillerist William Ransom Johnson Pegram.[15] [16]

Robert Ransom described his great grandfather: "The stories of his costumes and habits all indicate that he possessed a large fortune. He was a man nearly six feet tall with a ruddy complexion. He became very stout in his old age...He divided his large fortune equally among his step children and his own children. He was doubtless a high liver and he was a real English churchman, but with no great piety. He built the first Episcopal church in Bute Co., known as Shocco Chapel."

Marmaduke Johnson, who married Ransom's daughter Hixie Ransom, was the owner of the oldest house in Warrenton.[17] Another daughter, Betsy Ransom, married William Plummer II.[18] Their son James Ransom Plummer was the mayor of Columbia, Tennessee in 1832, 1833, 1834, 1836, and 1838.[19] William's brother Kemp Plummer, the grandfather of Kemp Plummer Battle, was the second owner of Johnson's house.[17] William and Kemp's sister Hannah was the wife of Nathaniel Macon.

Notes and References

  1. http://dc.lib.unc.edu/cdm/singleitem/collection/ncmaps/id/3419 Map showing homes of some Colonial Families in Old Granville County North Carolina
  2. Book: Dodd, William Edward. The Life of Nathaniel Macon. 1903. Edwards & Broughton, Printers. Internet Archive.
  3. Book: Judah, J. C.. The Legends of Brunswick County - Ghosts, Pirates, Indians and Colonial North Carolina. 1 February 2008. Lulu.com. Google Books. 9780615175867.
  4. The William and Mary Quarterly. 10. 4. 264–267. 1915004. 1902. 10.2307/1915004. Ransone Family.
  5. James Ransom. Ransom Researcher. 25 August 1993. M.J. Ransom. Benjamin Ransom McBride. 192.
  6. Marriages of Granville County, North Carolina, 1753-1868 p. 276
  7. Book: Wellman, Manly Wade. The County of Warren, North Carolina, 1586-1917. 10 October 2017. UNC Press Books. Google Books. 9781469617077.
  8. Book: Marlow, Clayton Charles. Matt W. Ransom, Confederate General from North Carolina. 1 January 2006. McFarland. Google Books. 9780786427352.
  9. Web site: Convention of North-Carolina meets, List of the Delegates elected, List of the Delegates present, John Harvey chosen Moderator - American Archives. amarch.lib.niu.edu.
  10. Book: Whisker, James B.. The American Colonial Militia: The colonial militia of the Southern States, 1606-1785. 1 January 1997. E. Mellen Press. Google Books. 9780773485280.
  11. Web site: The State Records of North Carolina. Walter. Clark. North. Carolina. 25 August 1896. Google Books.
  12. Web site: An Extract from the North Carolina Militia. Whisker, James B.. May 18, 2019.
  13. Book: James Sprunt Historical Monographs. 39. 1900. University of North Carolina. Internet Archive.
  14. Book: Dowd, Jerome. Sketches of Prominent Living North Carolinians. 217. 25 August 1888. Edwards & Broughton, printers and binders. Internet Archive.
  15. Book: Mooney, Katherine C.. Race Horse Men. 2014-05-19. Harvard University Press. 9780674419568. en.
  16. Book: Groves, Joseph Asbury. The Alstons and Allstons of North and South Carolina. 1901. Franklin printing and publishing Company. 512–515. en.
  17. News: The Marmaduke Johnson House: A Warren County (and national) treasure hidden in plain sight. The Warren Record. 2018-09-01.
  18. Book: Groves, Joseph Asbury. The Alstons and Allstons of North and South Carolina. 1901. Franklin printing and publishing Company. 512–515. en.
  19. Web site: Century Review, 1805-1905, Maury County, Tennessee.... David Peter. Robbins. 17 November 2018. 44. Board of mayor & aldermen. Google Books.