We’ve
traced the story of Elder Adam Corn who moved to Union County from
North
Carolina as early as 1839 and of his second son, the Rev. Alfred E.
Corn, both
of whom were noted as missionaries to the Indians and were instrumental
in
planting churches in the new settlements to which they moved. The first son of Adam and Hannah Heatherly
Corn was John who was born October 18, 1813 near Cullowhee in what was
then
Buncombe County, North Carolina, now Jackson County.
John was already married when his father Adam
and the rest of his siblings relocated to Union County, Georgia. John and his wife and one child under five
were listed in the 1840 census of Union, but the census taker
mistakenly
spelled John’s last name as Carne instead of Corn.
John Corn’s marriage to Mary Wade
(known as “Polly”) Carter was recorded in Rabun County, Georgia as
occurring on
November 10, 1836 with the Rev. Robert Wood, also a Justice of the
Peace,
performing their marriage ceremony.
Polly’s parents were Jesse Carter and Lavina Sams Carter. The Carter line went back to Edward Carter
from Oxfordshire, England who settled in Pennsylvania about 1682. Before Jesse and Lavina Carter moved to Rabun
County, they had lived in Buncombe County near Cullowhee and their
daughter
Polly and John Corn knew each other then, and probably fell in love. He went to Rabun County to court and marry
her in 1836. Polly was about three years
older than John, having been born September 20, 1810 on the farm where
her
parents then lived at the Atkins Branch of the Big Ivy River near
Cullowhee,
NC. The young couple made their home at
first at Cullowhee, but then when Adam Corn, John’s father, decided to
migrate
to Union County, Georgia to secure land available for settlement there,
John
and Polly decided to move, too.
We have seen from previous stories
about Adam and Alfred that Rev. Adam Corn baptized his two older sons
in the
Hiawasee River near Macedonia Baptist Church in 1841.
John Corn’s license to preach was issued by
Macedonia Church on December 17, 1842.
Two years later, on November 16, 1844, John Corn was ordained to
the
gospel ministry by that same Macedonia Church.
Serving on the presbytery and ordaining council to question John
were
his father, Rev. Adam Corn, and neighboring pastors Rev. James Kimsey
and Rev.
Singleton Sisk.
A very significant event took place in Augusta, Georgia in May of 1845. Messengers gathered from states having Baptist Conventions and cooperating Baptist churches to discuss and act upon the proposal to form the convention and establish a Board of Domestic Missions, of Foreign Missions, of Education and other benevolent entities. Four friends discussed the importance of the meeting in advance, and they were made messengers from their respective churches in Union County to attend the organizational meeting. They had been given credentials for voting on proposals presented at the Augusta meeting. The men rode in Major Josiah Carter’s carriage drawn by two fine horses. With the routes available then from Blairsville to Augusta, we can imagine they went provisioned to camp out along the way since it would have been a several-days journey. In the group were the Rev. John Corn, the Rev. Elisha Hedden, the Rev. Elijah Kimsey and Major Josiah Carter. Major Carter was a brother-in-law to Rev. John Corn, the brother of John’s wife, Polly Carter Corn. Not only did these four men from Union County vote to form the Southern Baptist Convention, but Major Carter himself pledged there to contribute to foreign missions. Not only would he hold true to his pledge, but three of his granddaughters and one great grandson later became appointed foreign missionaries. The long trip to Augusta for these three ministers and one layman had far-reaching effects.
Rev. John and Mary Carter Corn lived in the Upper Hightower section of Towns County, a portion taken in when Towns was formed from Union in 1856. There they had a farm and reared their family: Lucinda Caroline who married Lafayette McKinney and Rev. Will Eller; Hannah Lavina who married Marion Stonecypher; John Heatherly who married Sarah Elizabeth Dillard; Mary Adeline (an invalid) who never married; and Nancy Elizabeth who married Ransom Smith.
Rev. John Corn was pastor of the
Upper Hightower Baptist Church in his community for many years. It was said that, because that church was in
his home district, he would never accept money for his services. Other churches he pastored were Old Union and
Bell Creek in Towns County, and at
Franklin and Valley River in North Carolina.
He was listed as the first moderator of the Hiawassee Baptist
Association when it was organized in 1849.
But farming and preaching were not
the only two interests of the Rev. John Corn.
When the Civil War was looming and the secession of Georgia from
the Union
seemed eminent, Rev. John Corn and Rev. Elijah Kimsey were elected
representatives from Towns County to attend the secession convention
held at
the state capitol, then located at Milledgeville, Georgia, a
four-hundred miles
round trip by horseback from Hiawassee.
Each of these representatives voted against Georgia’s seceding
from the
Union.
Rev. John Corn was a slave
owner. He bought two young slave girls
from his brother-in-law Major Josiah Carter.
Harriet, a slave girl, age 7 was purchased for $750 in 1861, and
Susan,
age 14, for $1,600 in 1863. He purchased
a 17 year old slave lad at a slave auction in South Carolina for $850
in 1862.
When he was 48, Rev. John Corn was
drafted into the Confederate Army and served, according to his pension
record,
as Captain of Company D, 24th Regiment of the Georgia
Volunteers. His service lasted from June
21, 1861 through May 22, 1862. When the
elder Rev. John Corn resigned his commission, his son John Heatherly
Corn enlisted in the Georgia Cavalry,
Company A of
the Sixth Regiment and served until the end of the war.
In 1874, Rev. Corn was elected as
Towns County’s representative to the Georgia Legislature.
By then, the state capitol had been relocated
from Milledgeville to Atlanta. While in route
to his legislative duties, he became ill and had to return home. He died from complications with pneumonia at
his home at Upper Hightower on January 2, 1875.
He was interred in the Corn family cemetery at Upper Hightower
near his
home. Mary Polly Corn died January 14,
1879 and was also laid to rest in the family cemetery.
A
special election was held through orders of Georgia Governor James
Smith, and
Samuel Y. Jameson, the great-uncle of Dr. S. Y. Jameson, President of
Mercer
University, Macon, was elected as Rev. John Corn’s successor to
represent Towns
County in the Georgia Legislature. Just as John Corn’s son, John
Heatherly Corn,
followed his father’s example and served in the Civil War, so he
entered
politics, becoming Towns County legislator for the 1884-1885 term. John
Heatherly Corn also served as postmaster of the Visage post office in
Towns
County from 1875 through 1913, the entire life of that post office. The Corn families contributed much to early
development
of both Union and Towns Counties.
©2012
by
Ethelene Dyer Jones. Published March 29, 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.]
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