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2 THE IREDELL FAMILY THE EARLY LIFE AND CARERR OF THE DISTINGUISHED JAMES IREDELL. A MOST ROMANTIC LOVE AFFAIR. The Original Name of the Family Was Iretail and Tradition Says That They are the Collateral Descendants ol Henry lreton, the Son-in-I.aw of Oll wer Croat well—The Honorable Ri valry ot James Iredell and the Young Baronet ot Dnkinlield. Written for Sunday News and Observer. The family of Iredell, though not nu merous, has been eminently and honor ably distinguished in the history of North Carolina. There is a tradition in the family that the original name was Ireton; that they are collateral descend ants of Henry Ireton, the sou in-law of Oliver Cromwell; and that for obvious reasons, after the restoration of the Stewarts, that obnoxious cognomen was dropped and that of Iredell assumed. The firstof the family in North Carolina was James Iredell, who was born in Sus sex county, England, October 5, led. His father and grandfather were clergy men of the Established Church and well connected by marriage as well as by de scent. Through the influence ot Sir George McCartney, a relative, he was appointed Deputy Collector of the t us fcoins at the port of Eienton, or port Roa noke, one of the most considerable towns in the province at that day. This was in the year 17(13, when Iredell was under seventeen years of age. The law, or customs regulations required that the recipient of the office should be of the full age of twenty-one years Here was a difficulty to overcome. His kinsman, Henry E. McCulloh, who held the prin cipal office, and, without performing the duties, divided the fees with the Deputy, was equal to the emergency. In a long and affectionate letter to Ins young kins man, he advised him, or enjoined him. wheu he should appear before the Board of Trade in Boston, to be commissioned, that “if any questions arise concerning your age”, that he should “insist you was twenty-one in May last." McCulloh was a mui of the world, well educated and highly connected. His evil advice to young Iredell, whom he had befriended, was well calculated to lead him astray. The temptation was great. But it may be hoped that in this instauce the Question of age was not raised. The high character which Ireddl bore through life forbids tbe thought that he secured the coveted prize at the expense of truth. He was remarkably well developed physically, as well as mentally; and this circumstance may have served to obviate the difficul ty. At any rate he was commissioned, and entered upon the discharge of the duties of the office before the end of the year. This long letter of McCulloh to Iredell is a literary curiosity, and furnished a clue to tbe author's character. After deliberately advising his young friend to tell a falsehood, if it should become necessary to secure the office, he pro ceeds to give him a great deal of good advice about the importance of a vir tuous and upright life, and the obser vance of the obligations of religion. “I hope,” he says, “you Will always have too much pride to disgrace the introduction you have by keeping improper company.” This is good prudential advice; but he improves in tone as he warms up with his theme. Parenthetically, he adds. ed my dear Jemmy, when you reflect upon the pest and the future you have great reason to be thankful to that Providence which has blessed the endeavors of your friends to serve you).” McCulloh had already intimated that he had been an humble instrument in the hands of Providence, in that behalf, and took a benevolent pleasure in the reflection. Again he say 3, “I am duly sensible how strongly passion prompts at your time of life; but be certain, that if it should now prove too strong for your reflection, all is over with you. Avoid the first occasions of evil, for no maa can say, “thus far will I go, and no fur ther.” But this caution as to the danger of the first step in evil paths, can of course have no reference t > what the author regarded as a necessary lie Busi ness is business. He concludes his affec tionate exhortation ia a higher key. “I pray God” he sums up, “the common Father o? mankind, to take you under his protection, to watch over, protect and bless you: Forgtt not your duty to Him, as your first Benefactor, and endeavor to think and act so that you may ever lie able to put your trust in Him. The nummery of form and nonsense are an offense to most thinking minds; but never lose sight of that Religion which will make you firm and constant in your duty towards God, and just and beneficent towards your fel low-beings.” It Ls not unlikely that, McCulloh was .sincere in giving this religious admoni tion, and believed, that by heeding it, Ms young friend would atone for any lie it might be necessary to tell, as a means of securing the office, lie was a large land proprietor in North Carolina, and spent much of his time here; but pre ferred. as he grew older, to reside in England Iredell arrived at Edenton near the close of the year 1768, and entered upon the duties ot his office when just seven teen years of age. The towu had been set tled above fifty years, and the surround ing country much longer. It contained a number of highly intelligent, and for that day, wealthy families, who const:- . tuted a polished and charming society. These families were either English or -Scotch in birth, or in immediate descent; and the young English gentleman had an agreeable surprise in finding con genial friends and company in the far off Provincial Wilderness. It was his good fortuue to find in Samuel Johnston, Esq., a man of wealth, and a lawyer of prominence, a friend and adv iser. Ire dell’s income from the collectorship, was about £ HID, derived from the fees There was a little salary of £3O, which he sent home to his pareuts. His official duties were not burthensome, and he enjoyed ample time for the study of law, in which profession he was destined to become eminent, and to rise to the high- est honors. His preceptor in the law was his distinguished friend Mr. Johns Um. This gentleman also, had a great career before him, as a Representative ol I the Province in the Continental Congress o" which bodv he was chosen President, but declined in honor; as Governor of the State, under the Constitution, and as a United States Senator. Mr. Iredell’s diary and correspondence present a most pleasing and graphic pic ture of life and manners in what was then a remote corner of the great world, which, prior to the Revolution, was further from the centers of civilization in Europe, than the most distant British Colony in the South Sea, is at the pres ent day. The Province of North Caro lina, which was as extensive in territory as England, and not unlike it in conflg uration, contained, at that time, per haps, two hundred and fifty thousand people of British origin with fifty thous and negro slaves. This small popula tion was located chiefly 7 in the lower counties; but with strorg settlements of Scoteh-Irish, and Pennsylvania Ger mans hi the western part, it is delight ful iu view of this State of things, to find here a society composed of edu cated and refined people—of ladies and gentlemen who were acquainted with the best literature of the mother country— who read Addison and Johnson, and Sterne, and Shakespeare and Milton and Pope. There correspondence ami writ ings bespeak intelligence and taste Edenton is situated at the head of Albemale Sound, a beautiful expanse of water, with the broad Chowan flowing iu from the north and the Roanoke, one of the great rivers on the Atlantic Slope, entering from the west, through primeval forests. The residence of Mr. Johnston, called Hayes, after the birth place cf Sir Walter Raleigh, still stands on the south, or south-east side of the bay, with a commanding view of the town, the har bor, and the broad sheet of water, stretching away for many miles. This venerable house was the center of a charmed circle of friends, one hundred and twenty-seven years ago, when Ire deli first knew it. * He so thought and wrote in his interesting diary. The household consisted of Mr. Johnston and lady, and his two accomplished sis ters. Besides the enlightened and dig nitied head of the family, a Scotchman by birth, of honorable ancestry, and his charming wife, the sisters were educated and refined ladies, Miss Hannah was as remarkable for sound sense as for a no ble mien, and gentle, unaffected nature. Iredell had a rival in admiration for this lady, in the person of a North Brit ish Baronet, who possessed large estates in the colony. This was Sir Nathaniel Dukinfield, of Dukintie'd. in the county of Chester, England. He owned large tracts of land in the county of Bertie, and in other parts of the Province. He was a member of Governor Martin’s council; and is descrioed as gay, good natured and popular. Advantages such as these could not fail to invest their possessor with formidable power in such a contest. Iredell, on the other hand, possessed char acter, talent, education, industry, ambition to succeed in the profession he had chose, and all the world before him in which to achieve fortune. The first intimation of a warmer sen timent than mere friendship, is given by Iredell, in his diary, under date of August 24th. 1770. He with Sir Nathan iel and Mr. Hewes —the latter, the future signer of the Declaration of Indepen dence —and perhaps other gentlemen, took tea at Mr. Johnston's, which cere mony seems to have been gone through with before night fall, as Mr. Johnston, when rhing from the table, proposed to the gentlemen a walk, to see his new ditch. (I think I saw this ditch a hun dred years later). He asked Mr. Ire dell. particularly, if he would, or remain with the ladies. Iredell preferred the latter alternative, but his host insisted on his going, and he awkwardly consent ed, as he admits; upon which, he adds: “Hannah was a little out,” and her dis satisfaction was, doubtless, his consola tion. But the walking party soon returned, and spent a very happy evening, after which he, with Mr. Hewes, at 10 o’clock, returned to the village, leaving Sir Na thaniel behind. About this epoch Iredell's time was divided between his official duties, Little ton on Tenures—l believe that Black stone’s Commentaries had not yet been published—and last, rmt least, in visit iug, thinking of and indicting billet-doux to Miss Hannah. The following speci men is preserved, and evinces good sense and earnest feeling, if no high political, gift: In what soft language shall my soul convey Its dreams by night and anxious cares all day, To her, the object o my fond desires, To call my wife whom my proud heart aspires; In whom each female excellence we view, The just decorum of the happy few, Possessed of el gant angelic minds, Where truth with goodness, grace with virtue shines, May you, the dearest mistress of my love, No more the pangs of dire affliction prove, But ev’ry day, and ev’ry hour employ Some new’ occasion fora rising joy: x\nd might the penner of this wish im part The rapt’rous feelings of his faithful heart, He’d hope to share the bliss, which you profess, And being blest, have some sweet power to bless, Mr. Iredell was admitted to the prac tice of law in all the Inferior courts of the Province, in December, 1770. He was still under twenty-one years of age. The license was given by Governor Tryon, with the “approbationand recommenda tion” of Chief Justice Howard. He was sworn in as an Attorney by Thomas Highest of all in Leavening Power.—Latest U. S. Gov’t Report Ro>&]» A3£Cy,DTEI.Y PURE The News and Observer, Sunday, Hareh 17, 1895. Jones, the Clerk of Iho Court at Edenton. A year later lie was licensed by Governor Martin, (who had succeeded Tryon), to practice iu the Superior Courts of the Province. Ho still retained the Deputy Collectorship. JMcUulloh spent the great er part of his time in England, and had nothing to do with the office, except to receive the lion’s share of the emoluments. He had more than once talked of resigning the principal place in Ire dell’s favor. But that was only his plausible method of inducing the Deputy to attend to his private affairs in the Province, without compensation. Mo had promised Iredell, and other young relatives to make them his heir, he being a bachelor. But, whatever may have been his real purpose, the inter vening war ent off Iredell from any ben efit from it. McCulloh\s property in the Province was confiscated, in spite of Iredell’s efforts to prevent it; and the es tates of Dukinfield shared the same fate, which was unjust, as he resigned from the British- Army to avoid fighting against this country. But at length, in October, 1771, Ire dell managed to increase his compensa tion. In a letter to his mother he says: “His office,” meaning McOulloh’s, “he could at aDy time part with for a con siderable sum, and this 1 dreaded he might be tempted to do, in his present distressed state. These things urged me to press him for a change in my power, and 1 told him I would only reserve £2OO proc. (about £ 100 St) to myself, and remit the re-it, (nearly as much more) to him. This may appear to you a disadvantageous proposal, but. it is far otherwise. By Mrs means I secure myself a genteel provis ion, upon which I can live comfortably; and my salary then will be £4O St..whieh will be yours.' The fixed salary of £3O seems to have increased in proportion to the increase of the fees from the Cus toms. This brief extract reveals the fact that the carpet-baggers of that day were not under the necessity of residing in the province of their adoption, and t hat they could appoint a deputy to do the work, on a stipulated allowance, g > home, en joy the pay, or sell out the offi e entirely, to a third party. Iredell’s rival for the hand and heart of Miss Johnston was his intimate friend: and the whole world of romance eaun >t furnish a more admirable instance cf chivalrous honor and magnanimity than that which appears in this courtship. The rivals had no secrets to withhold one from the other. They were confi dants. Each told the other of his devo tion to the same lady; and it was agreed between them that the decision of the lady should determine the matter with out shaking their friendship. And tbe sequel proved that they stood by the agreement. The briefless young lawyer won the prize. The proposal of the wealthy young Baronet met with a courteous, but prompt refusal. Iredell had won her heart. The decis ; on against Sir Nathaniel so wounded him that he left the Province, never to return. The following letter from him to Mr. Iredell, written the day after his suit was re jected, unbosoms a soul of honor: “Wingfield, 13th Feb., 1772 “Oh ! my dear friend, how terrible is love, when pure, and sincere, and free from lust and passion! I find myself greatly to have been mistaken when I have sometimes formerly thought myself in love. Never, I’m sure, did 1 diseovt r anything like the present. I hive wrote to her, enclosed to my mother, and told her I hoped permission to renew my ad dresses if she should be disengaged on my return. Though she did no 7 yest« r day really say that her affections were engaged, yet I suspected that to be the case. But, if upon your discovery of your passion for her, she should ever (but I cannot suppose it) object to you, I hope you will let me know; or what re ception you meet with. Indeed, she has shown her good sense if she has chosen you to be the happy man, you are much more deserving of her than myself. I ecu never expect so much happiness, ’tis too much for any mortal. How unfor tunate is this. I can scarce support my existence. But 1 must endeavor to re move as much as possible the great grief which at present overwhelms me Berry, thank God, suspects nothing of the real cause of my misery. He supposes it arises from leaving my mother and friends; but this is nothihg iu com parison to the real cause. I must dispel this additional curse, arid totally insup portable. Excuse, m y dear friend, the overtlowings of my heart in this uncon nected manner; ’tis some alleviation to me while lam unbosoming myself to you. “Believe me, my dear Iredell, yoursin cere “Nat. Dukinfield.” The narrative will be concluded next week. Daniel R. Goodlok. Free Fills. Send you address to 11. E. Bueklen <k Go., Chicago, and get a free sample box of Dr. King's New Life Bills. A trial will convince you of their merits. These pills are easy in action and are particularly effective in the cure of constipation anil sick headache. For malaria and liver troubles they have been proved invalu ble. They are guaranteed to be per fectly free from every deleterious sub stance and to be purely vegetable. They do not weaken by their action, but by giving tone to stomach and bowels greatly invigorate the s> stern. Regular size 25c. per box. Sold by John V. Mac- Rae. Buck leu’s Arnica Salve. 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It is beauti fying, soothing, healing, health ful, and harmless, and when rightly used is invisible. A most delicate and desirable protection to the face in this climate. Insist upon having the genuine. M IT IS FOR SALE EVERYWHERE.
The News & Observer (Raleigh, N.C.)
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March 17, 1895, edition 1
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