<?xml version="1.0"?>
<?xml-stylesheet type="text/xsl" href="http://digital.lib.ecu.edu/Styles/abstractBio.xsl"?>
<TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance"
	xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0 http://digital.lib.ecu.edu/tei/xsd/tei_P5.xsd">
	<teiHeader>
		<fileDesc>
			<titleStmt>
				<title type="main">Abstract of <title>Tar River (the Name). North Carolina Booklet. 19 (July-October 1919)</title></title>
				<author>Anderson, Heather</author>
				<author>Moye, William T.</author>
				<respStmt>
					<resp>Images scanned by</resp>
					<name>Digital Collections, J. Y. Joyner Library, East Carolina University.</name>
				</respStmt>
				<respStmt>
					<resp>Text encoded by</resp>
					<name>Gretchen Gueguen</name>
				</respStmt>
			</titleStmt>
			<publicationStmt>
				<publisher>Digital Collections, J. Y. Joyner Library, East Carolina University.</publisher>
				<pubPlace>Greenville, North Carolina</pubPlace>
				<date>2010</date>
			</publicationStmt>
			
			<sourceDesc>
				<p>Born Digital</p>
			</sourceDesc>
		</fileDesc>
		<encodingDesc>
			<editorialDecl>
				<p>All quotation marks retained as data.</p>
				<p>All end-of-line hyphens have been removed, and the trailing part of a word has been joined to the preceding line.</p>
				<p>All smart quotes have been converted into straight quotes.</p>
			</editorialDecl>
			
		</encodingDesc>
		<profileDesc>
			<creation>
				<date></date>
			</creation>
			<langUsage xml:lang="en-US">
				<language ident="en-US" usage="100">English</language>
			</langUsage>
			
		</profileDesc>
	</teiHeader>
	<text>
		<body>
			<div type="abstract">
				<head>Abstract of <title>Tar River (the Name). North Carolina Booklet. 19 (July-October 1919)</title>
					<bibl>
						<title>Tar River (the Name). North Carolina Booklet. 19 (July-October 1919)</title>
						<author>Cotten, Bruce</author>
						<idno type="call">F251.N86</idno>
						<date when="1901">1901</date>
					</bibl></head>
				<p>This is an account of possible origins of the name given to the Tar River. Some names associated with the river include Tau, Tor, and Taw.</p>
			</div>
			<div type="bio">
				<head>Author Biography</head>
				<p>Cotten, Bruce (3 Mar. 1873-1 Apr. 1954), collector, writer, and army officer, was a native of Pitt County.  His father, Colonel Robert Randolph Cotten, a businessman and owner of Cottendale Plantation, was the son of John Llewellyn and Nancy Pennine Johnson Cotten.  Bruce's mother, Sally Sims Southall Cotten, a widely known author and civic leader, was the daughter of Susanna Sims and Thomas James Southall.  Cotten had five brothers and sisters, one of whom was Admiral Lyman Atkinson.
					</p>
					<p>Cotten attended Homer's Military School at Oxford and, in 1891-92, The University of North Carolina.  After a short business career, he went to Alaska during the gold rush, later describing his experiences in <title>An Adventure in Alaska, During the Gold Excitement of 1897-1898</title> (1922).  Upon returning to Seattle, he volunteered for the Spanish-American War.  He then joined the regular army, participating in the Boxer Campaign (1900) and the Philippine Insurrection (1901-2) and winning a commission in 1901. During World War I he served as chief of military intelligence of the second military intelligence division of the general staff (1918-19).  At his discharge he held the rank of major.  Cotten described this career in <title>Drills, Raids and Escapades</title> (1925).  
					</p>
					<p>While stationed at Fort McHenry, Cotten met Edith Johns, the widow of Jesse Tyson, a Baltimore industrialist who had made a fortune mining chrome.  Cotten followed her to Europe, where they were married on 4 Aug. 1910.  They lived at Cylburn, a mansion and showplace of some 180 acres that is now a Baltimore City Park, used as a wildflower display and garden center.  Mrs. Cotten, as chairwoman of the assembly for a quarter of a century, was "Baltimore's social arbiter."  She was also a patron of music and the theater.  She died in 1942; they had no children.  
					</p>
					<p>Cotten was an avid collector of materials pertaining to North Carolina, amassing the largest known private assortment of materials on state history.  Early inspiration to assemble the collection came from his mother, who had noted the paucity of materials available for the state exhibit at the 1892 Chicago World's Fair.  His collection and experiences are described in his <title>Housed on the Third Floor</title> (1941).  Upon his death, he willed the entire collection to The University of North Carolina, where it forms a significant part of the North Carolina Collection.  He investigated his own family history, compiling <title>The Cotten Family of North Carolina</title> (reprinted in 1963), and related local legends and family reminiscences in <title>As We Were: A Personal Sketch of Family Life</title> (1935) and <title>The Mirrors of Bensboro</title> (1925).  
					</p>
					<p>He was buried in Baltimore.</p>  
					
					<p>Sources:</p>
					<listBibl><bibl><title>Baltimore Sun</title>, 2 Apr. 1954, 18 July 1954, 15 May 1960;</bibl> 
						<bibl><title>Durham Morning Herald</title>, 2 Apr. 1954;</bibl>
						<bibl><title>Greensboro Daily News</title>, 18 May 1941;</bibl> 
						<bibl><title>History of North Carolina</title>, vol. 5 (1919).</bibl>
						<bibl><title>DICTIONARY OF NORTH CAROLINA BIOGRAPHY</title>, Volume 1, edited by William S. Powell.  Copyright (c) 1991 by the University of North Carolina Press.  Used by permission of the publisher.</bibl>
					</listBibl>
				
				</div>
		</body>
	</text>
</TEI>