Prologue
The principal of this
sad story is Eva Madora Haynes, daughter of Charles
Hodge and Sara Walker Haynes, and an older sister
of Raleigh Rutherford Haynes, who was to become one
of the south's great textile tycoons.

Eva Haynes |
Eva had three other
brothers, named Wayne, John and Perry, and three
sisters, Letitia, Cordova and Jennie. She was born
in 1848 in Ferry, a community west of Cliffside,
where she lived all but the last months of her life.
In case you don't know exactly where Ferry is, or
was, the Haynes' lived just a mile or two southeast
of the site of present-day Chase High School,
and about the same distance from Floyd's Creek Church,
a fact that becomes pertinent at the end of the story.
Eva led a mostly quiet life in Ferry in the
house with Raleigh, his family,
and their widowed mother, and for most of her adult
years had an on-again off-again courtship with
a man named Holloway Wall. Over the decades they
would be apart for long periods, sometimes years
at a time. But, finally, in or around her 40th
year, after Holloway had made another particularly
persuasive proposal, she consented to marry
him. It was a supremely tragic decision.
In her last years she saw her brother Raleigh become
a successful store owner, then builder of the town
and mill of Henrietta. It's unlikely she ever heard
the word “Cliffside,” a town and a dream
that didn't exist until after her untimely death.
The Story
In
the early 1890s there was a popular magazine, The Lyceum, published bi-monthly in Asheville,
N. C. In 1892, over a year after the shocking
events of Dec. 3, 1890, the magazine serialized,
over three editions, a long and detailed version
of Eva's and Holloway's trials and troubles. The
tale is told in flowery prose, with the melodrama
of the Victorian era, when villains were hissed and
all heroines were graced with incomparable
beauty. So it's hard to imagine these events happening
to actual Rutherford county people. It's a
long read, but you won't want to put it down.
We
present the story here (with
additional photographs) in an Adobe Acrobat (PDF)
format, which you can read on-screen or print out
for later reading. When you're finished with the
story, close your Acrobat Reader and return
here. Also you can review Eva and Holloway's actual marriage license issued on October 8, 1889. There is some discrepancy about Eva's age. On the license she is listed as age 30. However her birth year was 1848, which would make her about 41 years old.
Epilogue
The incident was a sensation. A murder/suicide must
have been unusual for the time, for news
of it traveled
near and far. Eva was buried in the graveyard at
Floyd's Creek
 |
Eva's
gravestone
Inscription: In my Father's house
there are many mansions. |
Church near her sister Cordova. Not
surprisingly, her tombstone bears the name Eva
Haynes, not Eva Wall. The family obviously chose
not to have her carry her murderer's name through
eternity.
Speculation endures that Holloway purposely
went to Floyd's Creek Church and killed himself on
the church steps, to ensure that he would be buried
near Eva. That was not to be. He lies in an unmarked
grave at Race Path Church, at Six Points, near his
father.
Wayne Haynes, Eva's brother, who took her in when
she returned from Colorado, lived the rest of his
life in the house where the tragedy occurred. In
1903 Wayne and his wife Mary Craite Wall bore a son
named Myles, who later became the cashier of Cliffside
Mills.
As for Eva's little infant Samuel, Wayne and
Mary raised him as their own child, with Eva's
surname. He grew up to be the man we knew as Sam
Haynes, a well-known figure in Cliffside and
Rutherford county.
Sam wed Elsie Etta Pruette. Born to them were
John Clarence, Evie Lee, Mary Willie,
Minnie Sue, Annie Mae, William Wayne and
Betty Ruth Haynes.
Wayne was 63 when he died in 1923. He and
Craite, who outlived him by 10 years, are buried
at High Shoals Church. Samuel
Edgar Haynes, the sickly infant born in
Colorado, not expected to survive,
lived 91 years, until 1981.
The Raleigh Haynes Home on Ferry Road |
|
| Looking northwest from the
Wayne Haynes house on Ferry Road. The R. R.
Haynes home is at left. Across the road is one
of Raleigh's stores. Holloway Wall probably
fled past these buildings on his way to Floyd's
Creek Church. |
Contributing to this story:
Myles Haynes, Jr., Hazel Haynes Bridges, Betty
Haynes Lyles.
Lyceum Magazine provided
by Myles Haynes, Jr.; gravestone photo by Reno
Bailey; other photos from Hazel Haynes Bridges
Collection. |