Physical Address
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Physical Address
304 North Cardinal St.
Dorchester Center, MA 02124
Illegitimate son of Ellison Hatfield and Harriet Hatfield, 1st cousins. … Ellison Hatfield Cotton Top Mounts.
Birth | Aug 1864 Logan County, West Virginia, USA |
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Death | 18 Feb 1890 (aged 25) Pikeville, Pike County, Kentucky, USA |
Burial | Dils Cemetery Pikeville, Pike County, Kentucky, USA |
Plot | Unmarked Grave |
Memorial ID | 104268010 View Source |
And while there remains no hostility between the families, the feud history itself is still something that is hotly contested. Below are 5 things Hatfields and McCoys (along with those who study their history) still feud over.
Pharmer McCoy On Aug. 5, 1882, it was Election Day and at the polls on Blackberry Creek, Ellison Hatfield got into a fight with Tolbert McCoy (Randolph’s son). Tolbert’s two younger brothers, Pharmer and Randolph Jr., jumped in the fight with knives, and Pharmer McCoy shot Ellison.
On February 18, 1890, Ellison Cotton Top Mounts was hanged in Pikeville, Kentucky, for his role in the Hatfield-McCoy Feud. … It’s believed that Mounts was involved in the worst atrocity of the feud, which occurred on New Year’s Day 1888.
Ellison Mounts was hanged for Alifair’s death, and the feud seemed to settle down after that. But by the time all was said and done, at least 13 Hatfields and McCoys had diedall over a pig, it seems. Still, some historians believe that the hog was just a scapegoat.
Johnse Hatfield, who would be married four times in his life, met Nancy McCoy (the daughter of Asa Harmon McCoy, who had been killed by the Hatfields) and they were married on May 14, 1881.
Wall petitioned his brothers to assist in his emancipation from jail but none came for fear of being captured and brought to trial. He died in prison of unknown causes and was buried in the prison cemetery.
The HatfieldMcCoy feud, also described by journalists as the HatfieldMcCoy war, involved two rural American families of the West VirginiaKentucky area along the Tug Fork of the Big Sandy River in the years 18631891. … Those involved in the feud were descended from Joseph Hatfield and William McCoy (born c. 1750).
Sally inherited land from her father a few years after they married. They settled on this 300-acre spread in Pike County, Kentucky, where they had 16 children together.
Ron McCoy and Reo Hatfield are both descendants of the famous feuding Hatfields and McCoys. They will be among descendants visiting Pikeville next week for Hatfield and McCoy Heritage Days.
Roseanna McCoy | |
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Birthdate: | March 21, 1859 |
Birthplace: | Pike County, Kentucky, United States |
Death: | 1889 (29-30) Pikeville, Pike, Kentucky |
Place of Burial: | Pikeville, Pike, Kentucky, United States |
Although they ended the feud in 1891 and shook hands in 1976, Saturday, June 14, 2003, marked the official end to the Hatfields and McCoys’ feud when the families signed a truce, in an event broadcast by the The Saturday Early Show.
Ephraim Hatfield Nancy Vance Devil Anse Hatfield / Parents William Anderson Hatfield was born in Logan, Virginia (now Logan, West Virginia), the son of Ephraim Hatfield, of English descent, and Nancy Vance, of Ulster Scots descent. He ran a successful logging operation, and was considered wealthy for his times.
Harriet Hatfield Ellison Hatfield Cottontop Mounts was born in August 1864 in Logan, West Virginia. He was the illegitimate child of Ellison and Harriet Hatfield, first cousins and close relatives of clan leader Devil Anse, though he later took the surname Mounts when his mother, Harriet, married Daniel Mounts in 1867.
He was also described as having a eye injury that was caused by a percussion cap explosion, giving him the appearance of being wall-eyed. Cap was perhaps better suited for his role as Devil Anse’s Lieutenant than Johnse, as Cap’s quarrelsome demeanor and affinity for violence is legendary.
The Hatfields and McCoys inspired a famous game show. (It was the rumored theft of a valuable pig by a Hatfield ancestor that had served as a catalyst for the eruption of hostilities more than 100 years earlier.) The Hatfields won the contest.
They both died young, Frank was shot to death in a fight at the age of thirty-six in 1898, while Nancy passed away from tuberculosis three years later.
It’s only the fifth fatality in the 16 year history of the Hatfield-McCoy Trail system according to Executive Director Jeffrey Lusk. It does happen, said Lusk. This sport, like all outdoor sports, does occasionally have a fatality.
The Hatfield-McCoy legend was embellished by a brief love affair about 1880 between Johnson (Johnse) Hatfield and Rose Anna McCoyan affair that was opposed and eventually broken up by the McCoys. Newspapers turned it into a Romeo-and-Juliet romance.
After the war ended, Hatfield settled down with Levicy and turned to farming, cutting timber and buying real estate. The couple eventually had 13 children together. Ambitious and aggressive, Hatfield had one of the most successful timber businesses in the area.
Despite her clear defiance of her own family, Johnse did not resume his relationship with the pregnant Roseanna, and chose instead to marry her cousin, Nancy McCoy. Having lost everything she held dear, it is said that Roseanna died of a broken heart.
In 1868, Perry married Martha Adkins and she moved into the Cline Homestead. They would have eight (8) children to live to maturity: John S. (b.
That’s when Johnse Hatfield, son of clan leader Devil Anse Hatfield, accidentally met Roseanna McCoy, daughter of clan leader Randolph McCoy, at a local event. The two immediately began a torrid romance.
Powers Boothe Hatfields & Mccoys Judge Valentine ‘Wall’ Hatfield / Played by Hatfields & McCoys 2012 Judge Valentine Wall Hatfield, played by Powers Boothe.
Ephraim Big Eaf Hatfield was born on April 11, 1812 in Mingo County, Virginia, United States, the son of Valentine Hatfield and Martha Weddington. He was the brother of Aly Hatfield, Joseph B. Hatfield and Thomas W Hatfield. Ephraim married Nancy Bettie Vance on April 28, 1828 in Pike County, Kentucky.
Floyd Hatfield Relations between the two families continued to sour over the next decade before flaring again over a seemingly small matter: a dispute over a single hog. In 1878 Randolph McCoy accused Floyd Hatfield, a cousin of Devil Anse, of stealing one of his pigs, a valuable commodity in the poor region.
Early in 1864, dozens of soldiers, including Hatfield, deserted the Confederate unit for unknown reasons. Some sources maintain the desertions occurred because the 45th Battalion had been ordered to move out of the area and the men were not willing to leave their homes unprotected from bushwhackers.
The Hatfield-McCoy feud ran off and on for nearly 30 years. Here, against the backdrop of other events in American history, is a chronology of the feud’s main events, according to www.matewan.com. Devil Anse Hatfield forms guerrilla band.