2, Dec 2025
STORYTELLING – A HICKS AND HARMON TRADITION

© 2025 Terry Harmon My 4x great-granduncle, Samuel Hicks, Jr., or “Little Sammy,” as he was known, was apparently a friendly, outgoing, gregarious man who loved dances, social occasions, and celebrations. He was musically inclined and a natural entertainer. He liked to tell ghost stories and “Jack Tales,” and he,…

25, Nov 2025
THE WORST CUP OF COFFEE

© 2025 Terry Harmon My 3x great-granduncle, William “Billy” Mast, and his wife Mira lived along Watauga River, not far from the present-day site of the Mast Farm Inn in Valle Crucis, North Carolina, and in the fall of 1849, they lost their lives on the same day. They were…

18, Nov 2025
OUR MENTAL STATE

© 2025 Terry Harmon In the TV series Designing Women, character Julia Sugarbaker said it straight out: “This is the South. And we’re proud of our crazy people. We don’t hide them up in the attic. We bring ‘em down to the living room and show ‘em off. See, no…

11, Nov 2025
A STRANGER FROM THE WEST

© 2025 Terry Harmon My great, great-grandfather, Eli Presnell, was a woodworker. Because he only had hand tools to use, this was a time consuming undertaking, but he did a good job and reportedly made the prettiest furniture. He also fashioned a handmade turning lathe that was said to have…

4, Nov 2025
‘MITTIN’ AND ‘FESSIN’

© 2025 Terry Harmon It’s always interesting and actually quite entertaining to read old church minutes. Some of the oldest of those here in Watauga County, North Carolina belong to the Three Forks Baptist Church (established in 1790) and Cove Creek Baptist Church (established in 1799). Members were often “churched”…

28, Oct 2025
WHY, WHY, WHY DELILAH?

© 2025 Terry Harmon Perhaps one of the most intriguing of mountain lasses was my distant cousin, Delilah Baird. Born in 1800, she left home at the age of eighteen, wooed by another of my cousins – a preacher man named John Holtsclaw. Problem was, the good reverend already had…

21, Oct 2025
“FRONIE, FRY ‘EM A COUPLE OF EGGS!”

© 2025 Terry Harmon One of the most colorful characters of late 19th and early 20th century Watauga County, North Carolina was my great, great-grandmother’s first cousin, Newton Banner, who was known to many as “Uncle Newt.” Newt and his wife, Sophronia “Fronie” Mast Banner, lived on George’s Gap near…

14, Oct 2025
UNCLE DAVID HICKS, MOUNTAIN MAN

© 2025 Terry Harmon My 4x great-granduncle, David Hicks, is believed to have served in the War of 1812, and family lore says he talked about British bullets lodging in cotton bales piled in front of him and his comrades at the Battle of New Orleans and how well “Old…

7, Oct 2025
MR. GREENE GENES

© 2025 Terry Harmon Just to be clear, this article is not about Mr. Green Jeans of Captain Kangaroo fame; rather, it’s an accurate portrayal of myself as I am descended three times from a particular Greene family. Granted, in these hills and hollars of Appalachia, it’s not uncommon to…

30, Sep 2025
TIME TRAVELER

©2025 Terry Harmon Shortly after the conclusion of the American Revolution, a young Patriot veteran, Nathan Horton married Elizabeth Eagles in New York. The following year, in 1784, these two native New Englanders decided to relocate to North Carolina from their home in New Jersey. They loaded their four-horse Conestoga…