A WAY BILL FROM SAMPSON CO., NORTH
CAROLINA TO GIBSON CO., TN
submitted by
For me, the fascination with genealogy is, not putting lists of names on a computer, but rather absorbing the flavor of the times, and understanding of the history of our country from the personal stories of our relatives.
So when I came across this copy of the early 1800's version of a AAA ‘trip-tick’, I did a back flip. It was used by my children’s ancestor, James Wilson, to make the trek from Sampson Co to Gibson Co in 1839. I had wondered how they found their way unless they hired a guide, as was done on the much longer trips made by pioneers going out to Texas or California.
James Wilson brought his family, consisting of his wife Elizabeth Ward Wilson and children ranging in age from 13 - 1. ( Shadrack, Horace, Bryant Becton, Judith Ann, John James, Susan Jane and Delilah Catherine).
Along with them came other wagons including Kings, Wards, and Kornegays and probably others. It wasn’t unusual for wagon trains to number 50 wagons.
If you have relatives who made the trip from Sampson Co to one of the counties surrounding Gibson, get your Atlas out and follow their route.
A WAY BILL FROM NORTH CAROLINA TO GIBSON COUNTY TENNESSEE
Sampson county to Fayetteville
Thence to Lawrenceville
Thence to Sentersville
Thence to Concord
Thence to Bates Ford across Big Catawby River *
Thence to Morganton
Thence to Pleas Gardens
Thence to Swannanoa Gap across the Blue Ridge
Thence to Asheville
Thence to Warm Springs
Thence to the mouth of Chucky River
Thence to Newmarket
Thence to Knoxville
Thence to Kingston
Thence to Post Oak Spring
Thence to Crab Orchard
Thence to Spayta **
Thence to McMinnville
Thence to Shelbyville
Thence to Farmington
Thence to Loves Mills
Thence to Columbia
Thence to Mount Pleasant
Thence to Paryville on Tennessee River
Thence to Lexington
Thence to Independence
Thence to Trenton
Thence to Joseph Mainors, 15 miles from Trenton on the Troy Road
* Catawba River
**Sparta
The above is a copy of the Way Bill used by
the Wards, Wilsons and other in migrating from North Carolina to West Tennessee
in 1839
From "Colonists And Pioneers" by Charles Edmundson