Communicator
 THE WEAVER FAMILY

 



 
 
 
ARTICLES
JOHN WEAVER
WEAVER FAMILY
ZEBULON WEAVER, 1872-1948

 
 
 
 
 
 

 

JOHN WEAVER
submitted by Mary Cook Hyder
    John Weaver was born in 1763 and, with three brothers, left home and family in the Netherlands, and came to America.  They were of German-Dutch descent as their father, a cloth-maker by the name of Weber, had fled from  Germany under persecution of religion and speech and settled in Holland.

     The brothers had heard that land was cheap and plentiful in Pennsylvania, but on arriving there found it was scarce and high-priced.  Being young and strong and well trained to work, they soon found many ways of earning a living.

     During the Revolution, the Weaver brothers volunteered their services. John served five years in the Pennsylvania Rangers on the Frontiers.      They heard much about the Southwestern country so they headed west, travelling into a vast, wild and dangerous region called the Shenandoah Valley through Virginia and Kentucky.  They crossed the Alleghaney Divide into the Valley of Green Brier River, a branch of the Ohio River.  Here John Weaver and his brothers parted, they going on to the Ohio River.

     While scouting through the wilds, John had staked land claims from the Ohio River into the northern parts of North Carolina in 1785, buying several hundred acres at 50 shillings an acre.  He met a man named Albert Biffle who told him about a small settlement near Elizabethton called Happy Valley, and about his young sister, Elizabeth.  John went to Happy Valley to meet her, courted and married her, and they lived there in Happy Valley for a while and their first son was born there.  He was Jacob, born September 13, 1786.

     In the spring of 1787, John and Elizabeth left the Valley for the mountains of North Carolina, travelling by way of the Bald Mountains in what is now Yancey County.  Night was approaching and they needed to rest.  John found a bed of wild hogs close to a cliff, routed them out, built a fire and fixed a place to bed down for the night.  Early in the morning he found a trail leading down to the Toe River, crossed it and went on to the mountain range called 'The Blue Ridge.'  Taking the southern end, they crossed over into a nice fertile valley which was in a wild state but peopled with an Indian Village.  The Indians seemed friendly, so John travelled on down a short distance to a creek which later became known as Reems Creek.

     Making friends with the Indians, he set up a wigwam for a home and lived there for a while.  Soon he bought 320 acres of land from John McDowell of Burke County on each side of Reems Creek and on both sides of the path leading to Green River known now as the French Broad.  He like the valley so he worked to clear ground higher up from the creek and built a warm log house.  Then he cleared land for a garden, and for corn and wheat fields, becoming the first white settler in this region.

     John and Elizabeth had eleven children all together:  Jacob married Elizabeth Siler; Susannah married John McCarson; Christiana married Samuel Vance; Elizabeth married Robert Patton Wells of Sandy Mush; Matilda married Jefferson Garrison; Catherine married Andrew Pickens; James married Susan Barnard; John Jr; Christopher married Margaret Lowry; Montraville Michael married Jane Eliza Baird; and Mary married Henry Addington.

--Heritage I, article #655, p. 359
Note: Jacob Weaver = article #652, p. 358
James Weaver = article #653, p. 359
Montraville Weaver = article #656

 
WEAVER FAMILY
I. John Weaver b. 1763, d. 1830; married Elizabeth Biffle b. ca 1773, d. 1843. Lived: Weaverville, NC. On 1800 Census of Buncombe County, N.C.
     2. Matilda Weaver married J.G.D. Garrison
     3. Montraville Michael Weaver married Jane Eliza Baird

2. Matilda Weaver (b. 1803; d. 1891) married J.G.D. Garrison (b. 1801; d. 1823) Resided: Weaverville, NC.

   4. Thomas Garrison (b. 1829; d. 1900) married Susannah Carter (b. 1834; d. 1904) Resided: Weaverville, NC.
5. Solomon Garrison (b. 1859;d. 1915)  married Fannie Foister (b. 1868; d. 1960) Resided: Big Ivy, N.C.
6. Myrtle Garrison (b. 1894; d. 1961married Wallace W. Roberts (b. 1890;d. 1934) Resided: Flat Creek, NC.
7. Fannie R. Roberts (b. 1914; d. 1978) married Kenneth Elkins (b. 1915) He resides in Swannanoa. NC
8. Nancy Elkins b. 1942) married ohn F. chultheis (b. 1937) Residence: Swannanoa., NC
3. Montraville Michael Weaver (b. 1808; d. 1882) married Jane Eliza Baird (b. 1810;d. 1889) Lived: Weaverville, NC
9.. Margaret Matilda Weaver (b. 1835;d. 1926) married Wylie Francis Parker (b. 1827;d. 1892)     Lived: Weaverville, NC 
10.. Eliza Parker(b. 1859; d. 1903)married John Russell Cannon (b. 1859;d. 1915) Lived: Weaverville, NC
11. Pearl Cannon (b. 1884; d. 1979) m. James Reuben Lee (b. 1882; d. 1939 ) Lived: Weaverville, NC and Coeur d'Alene, Idaho
12. Betty Lee (b. 1919) married Owen Paul Hatley (b. 1918) Residence: Centralia, WA

 
ZEBULON WEAVER, 1872-1948
   WEAVER, Zebulon, a Representative from North Carolina; born in Weaverville, Buncombe County, N.C., May 12, 1872;   attended the public schools and was graduated from Weaver College at Weaverville in 1889; studied law at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; was admitted to the bar in 1894 and
commenced practice in Asheville, N.C.; member of the State house of representatives 1907-1909; served in the State senate 1913-1915; presented credentials as a Democratic Member-elect to the Sixty-fifth Congress and served from March 4, 1917, to March 1, 1919, when he was succeeded by James J. Britt, who contested his election; elected to the Sixty-sixth and to the four succeeding
Congresses (March 4, 1919-March 3, 1929); unsuccessful candidate for reelection in 1928 to the Seventy-first Congress; elected to the Seventy-second and to the seven succeeding Congresses (March 4, 1931-January 3, 1947); unsuccessful candidate for renomination in 1946; resumed the practice of law in Asheville, N.C., until his death there October 29, 1948; interment in Riverside Cemetery.
--Congressional Record