THROUGH
MOUNTAIN MISTS
Early Settlers of Union
County, Georgia
Their
Descendants...Their Stories...Their Achievements
Lifting the
Mists of History on Their Way of Life
By: Ethelene Dyer Jones
An early Union
County Minister: Rev. Thomas M. Hughes
For several
weeks now we’ve explored aspects of the Eli Townsend family and its
branches. That subject still has many avenues to explore, but for now I
change directions and focus on the Rev. Thomas M. Hughes family. His
legacy in Union and
other north Georgia
counties was as an early minister of the Methodist Church.
In 1846 the Rev. William Jasper Cotter, a noted Methodist
minister in his own right, was sent by the Conference to his new charge
at Blairsville, Ga. In
writing his autobiography published in 1917 when he was an old man,
Rev. Cotter made several references to Rev. Thomas M. Hughes. He wrote
of arriving at the Blairsville Mission.
“The next
evening (after five days on the road from Murray County) we
reached Blairsville and were kindly received at the home of Rev. Thomas
M. Hughes, a local preacher.” The Rev. Hughes helped the Cotters to
find a cabin to live in and helped them get settled. The Hughes family
and the Cotters became steadfast friends. While Rev. Cotter was on
preaching missions to Tennessee, North Carolina and throughout North
Georgia, he wrote in his autobiography: “Our good friends, the Hugheses…never allowed Rachel to spend a night
alone while I was gone.”
The Rev. Thomas
M. Hughes was born in Buncombe
County, N.C., on January 31, 1809. He
was a son of Goodman Hughes and Eleanor Payne Hughes. In Habersham
County, Ga., on January 1, 1828, he
married Nancy Bird. She was a daughter of the Rev. Francis Bird and
Frankie (Frances)
Abernathy Bird. Nancy was
born in Rutherford County, N.C. Both the Hughes and the Bird families
had come to north Georgia to
live when Cherokee lands were opened up for settlement.
Rev. and Mrs.
Thomas M. Hughes had a family of thirteen children. Martha (1828-1881)
married Joab Addington
and William R. Logan; William Chapel (1830-1906); Francis Goodman
(1833-1908) married Amanda F. Goodrum and
became a Methodist minister; Louisa (1834-?); Eleanor C. called
“Nellie” (1834-1902) married the Rev. M. G. Hamby; Frances Jane
(1840-1904) married W. R. Duncan; Rosetta (1841-1912) married James
Calvin Erwin; Thomas Coke (1844-1932) married Rhoda Butt and Sallie
Daniel and became a Methodist minister; Sarah Elizabeth (1847-1885)
married the Rev. John Wesley Twiggs; John Wesley; Andrew Paxton; Calley; and Samuel.
Rev. and Mrs. Thomas M. Hughes, through his ministry and through
their family, contributed much toward the upbuilding
of the Methodist Church in
the 19th century. Rev. Cotter in an article in “The Wesleyan Advocate”
following Rev. Thomas M. Hughes and Nancy Bird Hughes’ deaths wrote:
“Brother Hughes was a worthy local preacher, gifted in song, popular in
his county, filling offices of trust…Sister Hughes was Miss Nancy Bird
before her marriage, and like her husband, a sweet singer, amenable,
and one of the best of women. Her father, Rev. Francis Bird, joined the
S. C. Conference in 1805 with Lovick
Pierce and Reddick Pierce. Rev. Bird
baptized me in 1842. He was the son of Rev. Thomas Bird who lived to be
quite old. This places brothers Francis Goodman Hughes (son of Thomas
and Nancy) and W. T. Hamby (grandson of William and Nancy) in a long
sacerdotal line.”
In an obituary
in “The Wesleyan Advocate” written by Weir Boyd following Rev. Thomas
M. Hughes’ death, these outstanding achievements were noted about his
life: He was licensed to preach in 1839, ordained a deacon in 1847, and
ordained as an elder in 1867 by Bishop Pierce. He was a local preacher,
in labors abundant, regular and prompt in
appointments, impressive in his preaching. He was stable of character,
uniform in deportment, the patriarch of a large family several of whom
are ministers of the gospel. He served as Clerk of the Superior Court of Union County for
sixteen consecutive years. In addition to his duties as a local pastor
and as Clerk of Court, he also was a merchant. He died August 22, 1882 in
the 74th year of his life.
A lofty
obituary to Nancy Bird Hughes was written for The
Wesleyan Christian Advocate by J. B. Allen. In
it he praised Mrs. Hughes as one who sought first and foremost “the
will of God,” was faithful in “the great congregation, in the Sunday
School, in her family circle.” Three of her sons became ministers of
the gospel. She died March 9, 1881 and
her slipping the earthly vale was described as follows: “Her face
beamed with divine light, and her whole appearance presented anything
but that of fear and sorrow... We have seen many die but none so
triumphantly.”
Rev. and Mrs.
Hughes were interred in the Old Blairsville Cemetery.
c2005 by Ethelene Dyer Jones; published Sept. 15, 2005 in The
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 July 8, 2018
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