He was likely referred to as “Elder” Corn
among those who knew him. His name was
Adam Corn, an ordained Baptist minister, who was living with his family
in
Union County Georgia by the time of the 1840 census.
Extant family stories about this pioneer state
that he moved here from North Carolina by 1839.
In the 1839 census, his household had four males and four
females. By age distribution, one male was
five to
ten, one was ten to fifteen, one twenty to thirty, and one fifty to
sixty;
females were two aged fifteen to twenty, one thirty to forty, and one
fifty to
sixty. The elder two listed in the
household would likely have been Rev. Adam Corn and his wife, Hannah
Heatherly
Corn. Although the last name of another
family living in Union at the time of the 1840 census was spelled
Carne, it was
likely intended to be Corn, the eldest son of Rev. Adam Corn. In that household were John Carne (Corn) who
was
between thirty and forty, his wife, and one child, a female under five.
As we shall see, this early Baptist minister was what we call today a church planter, for everywhere he went, including Union and Towns Counties in North Georgia, he started new churches. He was aided in this work (especially in the North Carolina area) by two more noted ministers of that early settlements era, the Rev. Humphrey Posey and the Rev. Stephen Smith. Bonded together in their work with frontier settlements and mission work with the Cherokee Indians, these men contributed significantly to early church establishment and mission work in Virginia, North and South Carolina and North Georgia.
As we shall see, this early Baptist minister was what we call today a church planter, for everywhere he went, including Union and Towns Counties in North Georgia, he started new churches. He was aided in this work (especially in the North Carolina area) by two more noted ministers of that early settlements era, the Rev. Humphrey Posey and the Rev. Stephen Smith. Bonded together in their work with frontier settlements and mission work with the Cherokee Indians, these men contributed significantly to early church establishment and mission work in Virginia, North and South Carolina and North Georgia.
Adam
Corn was born May 2, 1783 in Albemarle County, Virginia, the son of
John Peter
and Elizabeth Parr Corn. His father was
a Revolutionary War soldier. His
grandparents were Matthew and Millie Corn and John and Miriam Parr, all
of
Henry County, Virginia. When Adam was a
young lad of about eleven, his family moved from Virginia to Surrey
County,
North Carolina, then on to Wilkes County where so many who migrated
from Union
County had settled.
Adam
Corn met Hannah Heatherly in Buncombe County, North Carolina. Her parents had migrated there from the old
Pendleton District in South Carolina.
Adam and Hannah were living near her parents, the John
Heatherlys, in
the 1810 census of Buncombe County. Adam
was ordained as a Baptist minister in 1812 by the Mud Creek Baptist
Church in
Henderson, North Carolina. Thus began
his career as a minister, church organizer and itinerant preacher and
pastor. We trace several moves over the
next years as
he assisted the Rev. Humphrey Posey of the Board of Domestic Missions
and the
Rev. Stephen White, sometimes called a “hardshell Baptist preacher” to
organize
churches. “Hardshell” often referred to
an anti-missions position of doctrine.
Since Corn and Posey were obviously quite missions-minded, one
wonders
how the three then cooperated. Perhaps
the demarcations in beliefs were not as divisive in those early years
and
people welcomed ordained itinerant preachers to deliver sermons,
perform
funerals and weddings, and baptize converts at the locations of
scattered
churches.
We
trace Adam Corn’s ministry to the Cullowhee District in Jackson County,
North
Carolina where their eldest son, John, was born in 1813, and where he
assisted
with missions to the Indians and in organizing the Cullowhee Baptist
Church. He was also an organizer of the
Tuckaseegee Baptist Association at Cullowhee and presided at the
meeting. He was present and led in
organizing the
Waynesville Baptist Church in 1823. He,
the Rev. Stephen White and the Rev. Humphrey Posey organized the Cowee
Baptist
Church on March 15, 1828, and Rev. Posey served as its first pastor. Other churches he and the Rev. Humphrey Posey
founded were the Locust Field Baptist Church in Canton (now First
Baptist of
Canton, NC), Mt. Zion Baptist Church at the Arneechee Ford of the
Oconaluftee
River, as well as the Luftee Baptist Church, the latter in 1836.
Then
when Indian lands opened up in Union County, Georgia, Elder Adam Corn
moved his
family there about 1839. Within that
area Rev. Corn led in organizing Macedonia Baptist Church which is
south of
present-day Hiawassee in Towns County, Brasstown Baptist Church, and
Old Union
Baptist Church in Young Harris. Towns County was formed from Union in
1856. Without moving, Rev. Adam Corn
became a
resident of the new county. Their farm
was in the Bell Creek Community. He
continued active in the ministry for all of his long life.
Records show that he baptized his two older
sons, John and Alfred, in the Hiawassee River in 1841 and they became
members
of the Macedonia Baptist Church their father had helped to organize. Alfred himself became a noted minister. Adam’s son John Corn served as the first
moderator of the Hiawassee Baptist Association in 1849.
The
graves of Rev. Adam Corn and his wife Hannah Heatherly Corn are in the
Lower
Bell Creek Baptist Church Cemetery. She
died February 8, 1859 and he died September 12, 1871, at age 88. He had served as a minister for sixty years.
©2012
by Ethelene Dyer Jones. Published March 15,
2012 online with permission of the author at the GaGenWebProject. All rights reserved.
[Ethelene Dyer
Jones is a retired educator,
freelance writer, poet, and historian. She may be reached at
e-mail edj0513@windstream.net;
phone 478-453-8751; or mail 1708 Cedarwood Road, Milledgeville, GA
31061-2411.]
No comments:
Post a Comment