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THIRD GENERATION
19. Serena HOOKS
(5)
was born on
14 Sep 1817.(8) She died in 1892.
(9) "Serena Aycock was a solemn and benign
woman. Although she could not read or write, she exercised a stronger influence
in the home than did her husband. Her manner was characterized by brevity of
speech, gentleness, and affection. She was 'remarkable for her fidelity to duty
and vigor of mind and body.' [Judge Frank A. Daniels] A family friend, Jonathan
Thomas Hooks, stated that Serena had full control of the farm during the eight
years that Benjamin served as clerk of court in Wayne County. 'Her responsibilities
were great, but she met them with courage,' Hooks wrote. Serena 'never left the
farm, and handled it successfully. She was firm, never known to be in a hurry
or to lose her temper, but moved steadily and thoughtfully along, and with her
discipline was inflexible, yet she was always kind and accomodating [six]....
And it was to her that Charles gave the credit of being what he was." (Orr:
C.B. Aycock, p.6) "Serena Hooks was a remarkable woman. She possessed intellectual
gifts that, in a large degree, made up for her lack of early education. During
the years in which her husband's public duties took him away from home, the entire
management of the farm and the training of her sons, then at their most impressionable
age, fell upon her shoulders. She met her responsibilities with great success.
Firm and inflexible in her discipline, she was always kind and affectionate,
never in a hurry and never known to lose her temper. In the evenings, during
the school term, it was her custom to gather her children around her for an hour
or two of study, after which she required them to recite their lessons to her;
and although without any education herself, she had no trouble in telling by
the expressions of their faces whether or not they knew their lessons. Charles
Aycock once saw his mother make her mark when signing a deed; and his incident,
as he often declared to his intimate friends, impressed him so forcibly with
the failure of the State to do its duty in establishing and maintaining a public
school system, that he resolved to devote whatever talents he might possess to
procuring for every child born in North Carolina an open schoolhouse, and an
opportunity for obtaining a public school education." (Connor & Poe:
Life and Speeches of C.B. Aycock, p.7) She was married to Benjamin AYCOCK (son
of James AYCOCK and Charity WILKINSON)
about 1840.(5)
(10) "They settled in a house on the fifty acres of land that
Benjamine had inherited from his father in 1836. This house became their permanent
home." (Orr: C.B. Aycock, p.5) "Benjamin and Serena Aycock had ten
children, of whom Charles Brantley was the youngest." (Connor & Poe:
Life and Speeches of C.B. Aycock, p.8) Benjamin AYCOCK
(5)
was born on
2 Mar 1817.(11) He was elected as State
Senator in 1864/65.(12) "His service
in the State Senate was not without significance and interest. There was nothing
of the politician about him. He performed his duties in the same straightforward,
uncalculating manner, and with the same unyielding courage of conviction--as
a single instance will illustrate--which so strongly characterized the public
career of his more distinguished son [Gov. C.B. Aycock]. In 1864 the relations
existing between the State Government and the Conferderate Government bordered
upon open hostility. The passage of the Conscript Act by the Confederate Congress
had aroused intense opposition in North Carolina. Governor Vance, though determined
to enforce the law, was known to believe it unconstitutional. A majority in both
Houses of the Legislature not only believed it unconstitutional, but were resolved
if possible to prevent its enforcement. In the Senate the anti-administration
forces were ably led, bent upon embarrassing the Confederate Government and intolerant
of opposition. Moreover, they had the moral support of popular sentiment. Timid
men bent before the current of public sentiment, and politicians trimmed their
sails to catch the prevailing winds. Senator Aycock was neither the one nor the
other. He did not sympathize with these views, and came forward as one of the
most active leaders in opposition to them. As chairman of a committee to report
on that part of the Governor's messsage, which related to the Conscript Act,
he declared that while he lamted the necessity for it, he did 'not consider the
present to be the proper time or place to decide upon the constitutionality of
that measure.... Shall the noble-hearted men,' referring to those in the army,
he exclaimed, 'be suffered to call and die in vain, while a man is left at home
who can or ought to render aid.' In spire of intense opposition, and in the face
of popular sentiment, on every vote taken in the Senate his 'name always led
the list of those who sought to uphold the Confederate administration, and although
that part was in the minority in the Senate as well as in the House, he never
flinched in the performance of his full duty to the soldiers in the field and
to those who were making such Herculean efforts to achieve Southern Independence'."
(Connor & Poe: Life and Speeches of C.B. Aycock, pp.5-6) He died in 1875
in Wilson County, NC. He was a Clerk of the Superior Court for 8 years in Wayne
County, NC.(13) "Benjamin Aycock,
a man of great reserve and dignity, was a fine product of that sturdy, law-abiding,
industrious rural population which has always formed the backbone of North Carolina,
and has given to the State her most marked characteristics. He loved the simplicity
and independence of rural life, and inculcated in the members of his family habits
of economy, thrift and industry. His neighbors esteemed him for his honesty,
his fine common sense and practical wisdom, and for his great strength of character."
(Connor & Poe: Life and Speeches of C.B. Aycock, p.5)
"The collapse of the Confederacy led to the diminution of Benjamin's wealth
but did not deplete it. He lost slaves, equipment, and intangible property, and
in 1865, he planted his crops largely by hand. 'Eighteen sixty-five is known
to this day as a wonder year,' Charles Aycock said later. 'Crops grew without
cultivation and the harvest of abundant. We struggled through the spring and
summer with scant food and less clothing, but with the fall came a bountiful
crop.' After 1865, however, Benjamin Aycock began once more to prosper. While
many large planters lost their property, Benjamin enlarged his farm. In 1869,
he bought 254 acres and, by 1870, he valued his personal property at $1,500 and
his real estate at $8,000. His wealth permitted him to hire a housekeeper to
live in the home to help Serena with the housework." (Orr: C.B. Aycock,
pp.11-12)
"Benjamin Aycock had no fondness for politics, but, like his son, he considered
it the duty of every good citizen to participate in public affairs to the end
that good government might be established and maintained; and he neither sought,
nor, when called upon by his neighbors, refused to accept public office. But
it was as a private citizen that he served his country best. A law-abiding citizen,
a good farmer, a God-fearing Christian, he impressed himself strongly on his
family and his community. He was, as one of his former pastors tells us, 'an
excellent member and deacon of the Primitive Baptist Church; and while opening
a conference at Aycock's Church in Wilson County (1875), he dropped dead of heart
disease, thus falling at his post of duty as did his distinguished son'."
(Connor & Poe: Life and Speeches of C.B. Aycock, pp.6-7) Serena HOOKS and
Benjamin AYCOCK had the following children:
44 i.
Piety Melvina AYCOCK was born on 22 Jul 1842.
(14)
45 ii.
Francis Marion AYCOCK(15) was born
on 9 Jan 1844.(16) He "was co-operator
of a general store in Fremont, experimented with tobacco, built the community's
first tobacco barn, and served one term in the North Carolina Senate." (Orr:
C.B. Aycock, p.12)
46 iii.
James Robert AYCOCK(17) was born
on 16 Apr 1845.(18) He "engaged
in business in South Carolina." (Orr: C.B. Aycock, p.12)
47 iv.
Jesse Thomas AYCOCK(19) was born on
20 May 1847.(20) He devoted himself "almost
exclusively to farming." (Orr: C.B. Aycock, p.12)
48 v.
William Butler AYCOCK(21) was born
on 11 Apr 1849.(22) He "went to
Florida and entered the turpentine business." (Orr: C.B. Aycock, p.12)
49 vi.
John Wilkinson AYCOCK(23) was born
on 10 Nov 1850.(24) He devoted himself
"almost exclusively to farming." (Orr: C.B. Aycock, p.12)
50 vii.
Benjamin Franklin AYCOCK(25) was
born on 11 Feb 1853.(26) He "farmed
in the Nahunta township, established a lumber mill in Whiteville, and participated
extensively in politics." (Orr: C.B. Aycock, p.12)
51 viii.
Catherine AYCOCK(27) was born on
8 Jan 1855.(28)
52 ix.
Bardin H. AYCOCK(29) was born on 16
Jan 1857.(30)
+53 x.
Charles Brantley AYCOCK. |