John GILREATH

Male Abt 1754 - Aft 1802  (~ 49 years)


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  • Name John GILREATH 
    Born Abt 1754  Granville County, North Carolina Find all individuals with events at this location  [1
    Gender Male 
    Event-Misc 07 May 1794  Sheriff's sale of 106 acres owned by Cantrel Find all individuals with events at this location  [2
    • Type: Unknown-Begin
    Event-Misc 19 Oct 1802  Wilkes County, North Carolina Find all individuals with events at this location  [3
    • Type: Unknown-Begin
    Event-Misc Jan 1803  Wilkes County, North Carolina Find all individuals with events at this location  [4
    • Type: Unknown-Begin
    Died Aft 19 Dec 1802  Wilkes County, North Carolina Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Event-Misc 18 Oct 1817  Deed from heirs of John Gilreath to John St. Clair Find all individuals with events at this location  [5
    • Type: Unknown-Begin
    Reference Number 2720 
    Person ID I2720  Bennetts of Pittsylvania County
    Last Modified 17 Dec 2008 

    Father William GILREATH, Sr.,   b. Abt 1730, Granville County, North Carolina Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. 06 May 1795, Newberry County, South Carolina Find all individuals with events at this location  (Age ~ 65 years) 
    Mother Mary ARRINGTON,   b. Abt 1731,   d. Aft 1795, Greenville County, South Carolina Find all individuals with events at this location  (Age ~ 65 years) 
    Married 1751  North Carolina Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Married 1751  Granville County, North Carolina Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Children 8 children 
    Notes 
    • [William2.FTW]

      REFN17202
    Family ID F28  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart

    Married Abt 1771  Bute County, North Carolina Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Notes 
    • [William2.FTW]

      REFN16716
      In 1771, John Gilreath was living apart from his parents and taxed
      separately in Bute County, NC. So he was probably already married at
      that t ime.
    Family ID F823  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart

  • Notes 
    • [William2.FTW]

      REFN: 3507
      John Gilreath was the oldest of five sons of William Wesley Gilreat h.
      His name is first found on the Bute County tax lists in 1771, living
      ap art from his father but in the same district as Benjamin Jones. No
      record of his marriage to Johannah Jones has been found but there seems
      to be general agreement among Gilreath family researchers that this is a
      fact. After his m arriage to Johannah Jones, it appears that they lived
      on the farm of her fath er and mother. In his will, made in 1776,
      Benjamin Jones leaves John Gilreat h in full possession of the farm, for
      his widow's behalf, and gives him a sha re of his personal estate. There
      was clearly a close relationship between J ohn Gilreath and Benjamin Jones.
      Although in 1778, John and his brother, Willi am, refused to sign a
      loyalty oath in support of North Carolina and against K ing George 3rd, he
      and two of his brothers were soldiers in the Revolutionary War. Why they
      refused to sign the oath is a mystery, especially in view of the fact
      that their father had been active in attending meetings of the Bute
      County Committee on Safety. That same year, John and his brothers James
      an d William signed a petition to divide Bute County into what became
      Warren and Franklin counties. The Carolina legislature approved and,in
      1779, the part of Bute County where the Gilreaths lived became Warren
      County. John Gilreat h is on the 1779 list for the Smith's Creek and
      Hawtree Creek Tax District wi th property valued at 507 pounds.
      It is not clear when he migrated west to Wil kes County. The recordsshow
      that in 1780 he claimed 50 acres in Wilkes adjo ining the land of Thomas
      Hamrick. However in 1781, he was still on Captain J ohn Colclough's tax
      list in Warren County for 126 pounds and 8 shillings. Wh ether he was
      physically present in Warren County at that time is not known. In any
      case, sometime around 1780 he moved his family Wilkes County, followin g
      in the footsteps of his father, brothers William and Alexander and three
      of his brothers-in-law, Thomas, William and James Jones. Johannah's
      mother, then a widow, went with John and her daughter.
      By 1782, John is in Captain Nathaniel Gordon's Tax District, listed as
      owning 100 acres and two cattle. Thomas Jones (Sr.) is also in this
      district. William Gilreath, Sr. and his other two sons, William, Jr.and
      Alexander are in Capt. Abraham Demoss' distr ict. The 1787 North Carolina
      census for Wilkes County, Captain Trible's Distr ict, taken by James
      Fletcher, lists the John Gilreath household with one male 21-60, 3 males
      under 21 amd 4 females. He was taxed on 150 acres of land.
      The 1790 census for the 16th Company of Wilkes County, in which John,
      William and Alexander Gilreath lived, showed that John Gilreath's
      household containe d four females one of whom was probably the widow
      Johannah since John and his wife had only three daughters. John Gilreath
      was appointed constable in Cap tain Gordon's District in 1793, replacing
      his brother Alexander, a position h e held until he resigned on May 2,
      1797.
      The 1800 census for John Gilreath's household shows one male less than
      ten, two less than sixteen,, one over for ty five and, for females, one
      less than sixteen and one over 45. Apparently, Johannah Jones has either
      died or moved away.
      He remained in Wilkes County until his death in 1802. Although John
      Gilreath received land grants in Wilk es County ranging from 50 to 100
      acres during the 1780s, the land his family seemed to have retained after
      his death was a tract of 106 acres purchased on May 7, 1794 (Wilkes
      County NC DB B-1, p. 407-408). This land, bought at a c ourt orderedland
      sale, was located on both sides of Little Cub Creek, probab ly near his
      father who lived on a fork of the same creek. The deed was prove d on the
      oath of Hillair Roussau who in 1805 was the Captain of the tax distr ict
      where Johannnah Gilreath resided. Later, o

  • Sources 
    1. [S106] Research by Nancy Brensdel-Douglas.

    2. [S108] Deed Book B-1, p. 407-408.

    3. [S109] Wilkes County, NC, WB- 2, p. 83.

    4. [S107] Wiilkes County, NC WB-2, p. 83.

    5. [S110] Wilkes Co., NC Deed Book-L, p. 273.