
Cliffside—A prodigious history of Cliffside
residents in 1910 came about because young Scott Crow needed his
family history for a seventh-grade class report.
His father, Judson, knew little of the genealogy, but began a research
in 1978 which still continues.
 |
| He doesn't golf and she doesn't play bridge, so Judson and
Jeri Crow turned their interest toward genealogy, which led them
to research Cliffside, Judson's hometown, and produce a new book
that is a goldmine of facts and figures. —Bonnie Davis photo |
Since 1989, when he retired, he and his
wife, Jeri, have worked on it together. “We've been in hundreds
of homes, courthouses, and cemeteries. I don't golf, she doesn't
play bridge, so this is our hobby,” Judson said.
They prove their love for it—they're
active in eight genealogical societies, have ridden many miles
and talked to hundreds of people.
Crow was born in Cliffside and lived there until
1950, when he joined the Air Force during the Korean War. Afterwards
he worked for Duke Power Co.
His ancestors are wholly Rutherford County people, with names like
Long, McCurry, Melton.
“I identified Abraham Crow, who was born
if 1763 in Prince George County, Va., and moved here in 1784,” said
Crow. “He
was a justice of the peace, county ranger, and Representative to
the State House of Commons. He also taught school and kept organs,
then began preaching in early Baptist churches, including First Broad
and Sandy Run.”
Crow identified his ancestor through Benjamin Crow's Revolutionary
war pension.
The addition of the letter “e” to
the name came recently and was used by Judson Crow's brother, James,
a three-term mayor of Forest City.
Discoveries of family history—and legend—made
history come alive for him. “Some of my family lived in Golden
Valley, had gold mines there, and owned slaves.”
Another, Abraham, Jr., was said to have left
his wife, Martha, after she killed his hunting dogs, either by
hanging them or chopping off their heads. She, in turn, sued for
divorce, which she was granted because he was, court records show, “an
habitual drunkard and spendthrift.”
Crow laughs about the fact that no more was heard from that male
ancestor.
His interest in Cliffside came from his family's
residence there. “I
learned that migration was away from over-populated farms and some
families left for the mills.”
After he and his wife began copying the census
records of 1910 for Cliffside, “I began to see a profile
emerging and Jeri and I decided to do an analysis.”
Both had computers and worked side-by-side, a task involving six
months of hard work.
“But we enjoyed it,” he said. “I
guess we're the only people who read books backward. But this is
our hobby and we hope that other people will be interested enough
to do the other townships.”
Besides the pleasure they received, “we're
leavng something for the county. When we leave this life, everyone
needs to leave more than we've consumed.”
Reprinted with permission from The Daily Courier.
Copyright owned by The Daily Courier.