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
Another Turner
Family in Union by 1850

Bailis Earle
Turner
Last week
we traced an early settler in
Today, we look at another Turner
family who migrated to and settled in
Were Jarrett and Bailis Turner
related? Brothers, maybe?
Or cousins?
This writer does not know for sure.
Both Jarrett and Bailis were born in
Bailis Turner claimed “Black Dutch”
ancestry, stating that he descended from Protestant Germans who lived
in the
Bailis Turner was born in the
There Bailis met and married his first
wife, Elizabeth (“Betsy”) Darnell, daughter of Daniel and Sarah Darnell. When the 1850 Union County, Georgia census
was taken, Bailis was 44, his wife Elizabeth was 41, and they had
children
Avaline, 19, William, 17, Jesse, 14, and Leander, 11, all born in North
Carolina. The last four listed were born
in
In 1854, when a new county was formed,
Bailis and his family were within the confines of
When Murray, Miles and Leander were
home on leave from the Union Army, they were out picking blackberries
on their
father’s farm. A roving band of raiders
known as the Home Guard and led by Harrison Martin overtook them. Miles and Leander ran from the raiders and
escaped. But
When the war was over, Miles Turner
married, first, Amy Jane Patterson on
A younger son of Bailis and Nellie
Turner was named Lewis (Nov. 12, 1852-Aug. 12, 1949).
He was only twelve when a group of raiders
went to the Turner house demanding to know where clothing and food were
hidden. Others in the family had fled
and young Lewis was left to confront and answer the raiders. He told them he would never reveal the hiding
place of his family’s goods. The raiders
tied a rope around Lewis Turner’s neck and strung him up to a joist on
the
porch of the Turner home. They let him
down, thinking the punishment would force him to tell.
The brave boy was adamant in not telling. He
was strung up a second time, and the
raiders left the boy hanging. As soon as
the raiders were gone, his mother and sisters came out of hiding and
gently
lowered the boy and revived him. “Uncle
Buddy” Turner as he was known in his later years often told the story
of how he
was hung twice in the same day and survived to tell the story.
This same Lewis Turner, “Uncle Buddy”
got a permit and opened the Lewner Post Office in Union County near the
Fannin
County line. He named the mail site
Lewner, using the first syllable of his first name and the last
syllable of his
last name. It opened
The ancestors of Bailis Turner endured
the rigors of the
c2009 by
Ethelene Dyer
Jones; published Aug. 13, 2009 in The Union Sentinel, Blairsville,
GA.
Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
[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 1708 Cedarwood Road, Milledgeville, GA
31061-2411.]
Updated June 30, 2018
Back To Union County, GAGenWeb
Site