THROUGH
MOUNTAIN MISTS
Early Settlers of
Their
Descendants...Their Stories...Their Achievements
Lifting the
Mists of History on Their Way of Life
By: Ethelene Dyer Jones
About Patriot
Ebenezer Fain
Setting the
record straight is very important to me. Therefore, I admit that I made
a mistake in names in last week's column (April 12 edition) concerning
one of the two Fain brothers who settled in the Choestoe District of
Union County and were listed in the county's first census taken in
1834.
Please note
that the name of the older brother should be David M. Fain. I
erroneously concluded that the M. was for "Mercer," his mother's maiden
name. In family record studies, one should never "jump" to conclusions.
Each time I listed David Fain's name in last week's column, it should have been David M. (not Mercer). There is
no record available thus far to show what the M. stood for in David's
name. The third child of Ebenezer and Mary Mercer Fain was, indeed,
named Mercer Fain. I apologize for the error. To clarify, and for those
interested, I will list here the names of their children.
Children of
Ebenezer and Mary Mercer Fain:
David M. Fain
(1782-1852)
Margaret
Kathryn Fain-Witzel-Thomas (1786-ca.1870)
Mercer Fain
(1789-ca.1872)
Elizabeth
Fain-Trammell (1791-1870)
Mary Ann Fain
(1794-1881)
Sarah M.
Fain-Howard (1796-1877)
John Samuel
Fain (1797- 1873)
Rebecca
Fain-Hughes (1801- ca.1875)
Polly Ann
Fain-Harwell (1804-1877)
To correct
dates when the Fains moved to
Their proximity
to the new Union County saw John Samuel Fain and David M. Fain settling
there about 1832, and when they moved on in 1839 to Old Gilmer in what
would become Fannin in 1854, they left behind the Fain name on a creek,
a road and later a post office in Union (that part of last week's
article was correct!)
Now, with
corrections made, to use flashback, let us review some pertinent
information about Patriot Ebenezer Fain (08.27.1762-12.29.1842). He was
born in
For descendants
of Ebenezer Fain, it is interesting to trace his patriotic service.
At age fourteen
in 1776, he enlisted in the Virginia Militia. His job was to help quell
an uprising of the Cherokee against the settlers whom the British
termed "unruly western frontier whites." This enlistment was for three
months, June through August. Fain's service then involved two
victorious battles against the Cherokee.
In 1778,
Nicholas and Elizabeth Taylor Fain moved again, that time to
His third
enlistment began in September, 1780. Among other encounters, he was at
the famed battle of King's Mountain where he received a wound in the
leg.
In December,
1780, Ebenezer Fain enlisted for the fourth time, serving under the
famed Colonel John Sevier. Their raids against the Cherokee (who were
in alliance with the Tories and the British) burned towns, captured
horses, destroyed crops and killed Indians. Ebenezer's fourth
enlistment ended in March, 1781.
His fifth and
final enlistment began on
The Fains loved the mountains and followed the
ridges from
[Ethelene
Dyer Jones is a retired educator, freelance writer, poet, and historian.
She may be reached at e-mail edj0513@windstream.net;
phone 478-453-8751; or mail
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