James Lewis Sparks
James Lewis was born
16 June 1861, He was the only child of John Landrum
Sparks and Mary Ann Mintz. [Read more about
them and others in John Sparks' Descendents
List.]
James Lewis married Cassa Dorinda Clementine Spake,
who was born on 25 March 1854, the daughter of George
Spake and Cynthia Adeline Morningstar. They were
married on 15 September 1879 in Rutherford County.
He was eighteen years old and she was twenty-five
years old. Witnesses at their marriage were P. A.
Miller, Albert Morrow and Jane Morrow (Clementine's
sister). Clementine was a carrier for hemophilia,
which she had inherited from her mother, Cynthia
Adeline Morningstar, the daughter of James Morningstar
and Rhoda Vinesett. Rhoda Vinesett was the daughter
of John Vinesett and Mary (Molly) Green. The hemophilia
was inherited from Mary's mother, who is unknown
at this writing, although she is known to be the
wife of William Green from Goochland County, Virginia.
Jim and Clementine had fourteen children; however,
several died of hemophilia while they were young.
Sometime after the birth of several children, the
family moved to the Pacolet Mills area of South Carolina.
Several of the girls met their husbands there and
settled down to rear their families in that area.
Perhaps the flood of 1903 caused the family to move
back to the Cliffside area of North Carolina. In
the Cliffside Baptist Church minutes of 1903, J.
L. Sparks and wife, Clementine, requested that they
and their children, John, Robert, Docia, and Dovey
come under the watchcare of the church. Later they
moved back to the Shiloh community and were living
there when Clementine died on 16 March 1911 at the
age of fifty-six. She is buried at Shiloh Baptist
Church cemetery.
The house in which the Jim Sparks family lived while
they were in the Shiloh community of Rutherford County
still stands, although it has undergone complete
remodeling. They were members of Shiloh Baptist Church,
where Clementine played the accordion for the services
until the church could afford an organ. After the
church purchased an organ, she remained the organist
until her death. Miss Minnie Millard tells the story
that because Clementine had asthma, the church members
would not paint the sanctuary until after her death.
After the death of Clementine, James Lewis married
his second wife, Montie Culbreth, the daughter of
L. D. Culbreth and Mary Louise Bradley. Montie was
born on 26 June 1889 and was twenty-two when she
married fifty year old Jim. The couple had nine children:
Monroe, Morgan, Louellen, Virginia, Charles, Garland,
Montie Ree, Lorenzo Dow (Jack) and Emory. They lived
on farms in southern Virginia and later settled in
Oxford, NC. James Lewis Sparks died on 28 January
1938 and is buried at Gray Rock Methodist Church
cemetery in Kittrell.
It is apparent from talking with people who knew
him that James Lewis Sparks was indeed a character.
Some tell of his dancing antics in the community
of Shiloh and they looked forward to having jovial
cousin Jimmy visit. He was a talker who never met
a stranger and must have been spoiled as an only
child. He moved his family quite a bit and there
are several records of land sales in Rutherford Co.
The property in Ruth where his son, John, had lived
was sold to Uncle John by his father. Rev. Watson
Abrams tells the story in his book of having a severe
toothache when he was a boy living in the Shiloh
community. He tells that his mother sent him to the
home of Mr. Jim Sparks to have his tooth extracted.
Inez Harding, his granddaughter, and daughter of
Docia Sparks Abrams, says he was “a jack
of all trades; master of none.” A son by his
second marriage says he treated Montie, his second
wife, with great love, but to the children he was “as
mean as a damn snake.” My father, Robert Lee
Sparks, told of leaving home as a young man because
of his father's drinking and the problems that sprang
from the alcohol abuse.
From “Some of the Ancestors
and Descendents of Robert Lee Sparks and Ebber
Sloan Bostic” by Jimmy Louis Sparks, 1999
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