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Only the blank faces of undecipherable stones greet visitors to the McCourry
family graves on the small Scottish island of Islay. Salt mist, from
those same turbulant seas which carried Malcolm to America, have erased
all but etched grave markers; and carried with them any trace of Malcolm's
first years there. The first still-legible mark in Malcolm's history
is within the silver-threaded covers of the records of the First Presbyterian
Church of Morristown, N.J. At that altar on December 21, 1766 he
married Rachel Freeman, daughter of Ester and Benjamine Freeman a wealthy
merchant/landowner.
Malcolm was born 1742/45 in Scotland and died 1929 Yancey County, North
Carolina. Forklore from that region gives young Malcolm a variety
of colorful, if unsubstantiated, biographies prior to his marriage.
Perhaps he was kidnapped and indentured on a British merchantship?
Or perhaps, like an Elizabethan Moses, he was hidden for years in a boat
in the waters off Islay, to escape the infantcide practices by English
Protestant soldiers who invaded the islands after defeating the Scottish
Catholic "Bonnie Prince Charles?"
Whatever the circumstances of his arrival in the colonies, Malcolm quickly
made his mark in Morristown. A skilled penman, he read for and practiced
law, speculated in real estate, and founded churches, first as a Presbyterian,
and then as a Congregational in Chester, New Jersey where he moved his
growing family just prior to the Revolutionary War. For twenty- three
years he prospered here.
Malcolm McCourry and his first wife, Rachel Freeman McCourry's six children
were:
1.
Phebe McCourry, born November 18, 1767. No further information.
M. Jacob Drake.
2. Jane
McCourry, born September 8, 1769. Married Zephania Horton, March
25, 1788 and moved to North Carolina. He served several terms in
the North Carolina Senate. There is a monument standing in the city
of Burnsville near where he is buried. Malcolm was friends with the
Horton families in Chester N.J. and this probably helped him in his decision
to come to North Carolina.
3. Benjamine
McCourry, born 1773 and married Cathrine Brown, whose parents were among
the first settlers to settle on the Black River in Western New Jersey.
Catherine's parents held many acres of land and during the war there was
a battle fought on part of his property.
4. Elizabeth
McCourry, married Samuel Carnes, March 17, 1791 and later moved to Mississippi.
5. Rachel
McCourry, no further information.
6. Sarah
McCourry, no further information.
Malcolm was a member of the New Jersey State Militia, Western Regiment,
and under General Munson during the war. Peace time came further
increasing Malcolm's wealth but soon trouble came to him which is unexplained
and in 1794 he left his wife and family in Chester nevermore to return.
Traveling to the wilderness of Buncombe County in western North Carolina,
Malcolm settled with his new wife, Sally Lynn, on a 35 acre farm on Jack's
Creek, Gilders' Branch. Four children were added to this family.
He is listed in the 1800 census of Buncombe County, North Carolina.
Malcolm and Sally Lynn's children are:
1.
James McCourry born 1798, married Jane Edwards
2. Malcolm
Jr. McCourry born 1800, married Martha Deaton.
3. Zephania
McCourry born 1802, married Jane Phillips.
4. Harriet
Harrision McCurry[sic], born November 13, 1808, married Geo Washington
Tucker.
Malcolm continued to serve in the courts of our country by serving many
terms as a magistrate of Yancey County.
In Chester the oldest boy Benjamine, managed well on his father's estate.
He joined his brother-in-law Jacob Drake Jr. and established the major
stage coach route thru Chester from New York to Philadelphia. After
the railroad bought out the stage line the men continued to run two prosperous
inns of Chester. One is located at the crossroads where Benjamin's
large white house still stands.
Behind the limestone walls of the Chester Congregational Church cemetery,
the first McCurry family plot lies well tended. The markers stand
clear, and clearly marked are the graves of Benjamine, and his family,
his mother, Rachel Freeman McCourry "relic of Malcolm McCourry Esq."
The McCourry family here was prominent but short lived.
But on Jack's Creek the family persists, though the resting places of Malcom
and Sally Lynn are forever lost in the laurel thickets which quickly reclaim
land in the mountains.
Publication
source: Heritage I, article #448, p. 266
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