Everyone has seen images of the famous lighthouses of North Carolina, but only recently did I discover our family's close connection to them.
My grandfather, Joe Jeanette, descended from a Williamson County, Tennessee family of blacksmiths. His father, Ben Jeanette, moved to Ohio in 1916 for a job with the Pennsylvania Railroad when my grandfather was just an infant. Joe and most of his family believed the Jeanettes originated in France, settled in French Canada, and then New York, Kentucky, and Thompson's Station south of Nashville, Tennessee, a family of loggers.![]() |
The famous Cape Hatteras Lighthouse has stood since 1870. |
But researchers now agree that these Jeanette ancestors received bad information somewhere along the line, because before Tennessee and Kentucky, census data traces them to the eastern counties of North Carolina, along the barrier islands and on the mainland along the various waterways.
So my research took me to North Carolina's Outer Banks and a branch of the family that settled in the south end of Hatteras Island, in and around the town of Buxton.
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Joseph Claud Jennette and his wife, Terah Levena (Williams) Jennette |
During the 1700's, shipwrecks became all too common off the Cape near what was known as the Diamond Shoals, where the warm Gulf Stream from the south collides with the cold Labrador current from the north. It was so bad that the area became known as the "Graveyard of the Atlantic." So around 1800, the United States Congress appropriated funds to construct a lighthouse on Hatteras Island. The four acres of land for the project was purchased from four Jennett orphans, William, Mary, Jabez, and Aquilla, by the U.S. Treasury Department for the purchase price of $12.50 per acre.
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The original Hatteras Lighthouse was completed in 1803. |
Benjamin Fulcher Jennette, grandson of Joseph and Terah |
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Unaka Benjamin Jennette cleaning the lenses |
Here is an entertaining story penned by Unaka's son, Rany Jennette, his memories of life around the lighthouse.... Cape Hatteras Lighthouse As I Knew It
About a mile from the lighthouse, in the town of Buxton, I found an old cemetery, just off Highway 12. Take a right turn onto Buxton Cemetery Road and drive about 100 yards along a very creepy lane. It is called Quidley Cemetery, or just Buxton Cemetery.
Scary cemetery lane |
Terah Levena Jeanette (1807-1882) |
Joseph Claud Jennette (1805-1861) |
I am one of the Last jennettes on the outer banks,my father Leon Jennette was a very well known man down here
ReplyDeleteInteresting stuff. I'm from the Jennettes in middle Tennessee...but not near Thompson's Station (as I read in one article). We live northwest of Nashville... in west Cheatham County between Ashland City and Clarksville. Some of our extended Jennette family lives in eastern Montgomery County...b/c we're all right near the county line. -Tracy Jennette
ReplyDeleteGreat research, thanks a lot. I'm from the Jeanettes also from middle Tennessee. I'm part of the group that changed the spelling of our last name. I requested to join the family Facebook Group.
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