Williams-Dupree Papers

1856
Manuscript Collection #134
Creator(s)
Dupree family; Williams family
Physical description
0.073 Cubic Feet, 5 items , consisting of correspondence.
Preferred Citation
Williams-Dupree Papers (#134), East Carolina Manuscript Collection, J. Y. Joyner Library, East Carolina University, Greenville, North Carolina, USA.
Repository
ECU Manuscript Collection
Access
No restrictions

Collection (1856, undated) consisting letters requesting prompt payment for a debt and correspondence.


Biographical/historical information

The Dupree family originally were from Brunswick County, Virginia. In 1771, James Dupree moved to Pitt County with his wife and three sons. The Dupree family lived in Pitt County and had about 360 acres by 1779 around Autres Creek. When James Dupree died in ca. 1785, his youngest son Thomas Dupree inherited his father land when he reached maturity. James' other sons, were already married and living nearby.

Thomas Dupree married Nancy Ann Renn and they had five children, Allen Renn, Finette, Redmond Renn, William Redmond, and Thomas Bird. Thomas Dupree continued to but land in Pitt and Edgecombe County, and by 1804 the Dupree family owned almost 2,000 acres.

In addition to being a landowner and farmer, Thomas Dupree was an ordained minister and was active in the Primitive Baptist Church and served as a preacher, messenger, and elder. In 1840, Thomas' son Thomas Bird, was still living in the home along with eighteen enslaved men and women. He married Penina May and had four children, Robert Williams, Benjamin Franklin, Laura Penelope, and Joseph Alvin. After Penina's death Thomas Bird married her younger sister Sarah W. May and had four children together, James W. Thomas, Francis Marion, and Redmond Renn.

Thomas B. Dupree's real estate holdings were valued at $1,841 and consisted of 500 acres and livestock. The Dupree family enslaved over thirty men and women and the number of enslaved people continued to grow over the years. After the Civil War, the plantation went unscathed and the family continued growing cotton, sweet potatoes, and Irish potatoes. However, they had to begin paying the freed men and women wages for their work. Twenty years after the Civil War, the Dupree family struggled financially, and by 1896, much of the land was sold off to the Moore family.


Scope and arrangement

The collection consists of a letter (1856) requesting prompt payment for a debt and referring to "hard times; " undated notes pertaining to the leasing of land for wheat cultivation and commenting on illnesses in the Dupree household; and a remedy (undated) for the fever.


Administrative information
Custodial History

September 18, 1970, 5 items; Correspondence (1856, undated). Transferred from J. Y. Joyner Library, East Carolina University, Greenville, N.C.

Source of acquisition

Gift of J. Y. Joyner Library, East Carolina University

Processing information

Processed by D. Lennon

Encoded by Apex Data Services

Copyright notice

Literary rights to specific documents are retained by the authors or their descendants in accordance with U.S. copyright law.


Key terms
Family Names
Dupree family
Williams family
Topical
Fever--Treatment--North Carolina--Pitt County--History
Places
Pitt County (N.C.)--History