John and Susan suffered great tragedy during that time in the early 1860's. Six of their little girls died within a period of two weeks from Black Tongue Fever, two of them found dead in the same bed together. The children are buried in this cemetery in unmarked graves.
John was a hunter, and is said to have killed the largest deer in the area after many of his neighbors had tried unsuccessfully to do so.
Note: some sources spell his name as "Johnathan", while all the censuses list it simply as John. His birthdate on the census records vary from "about 1815" to "Dec 1820". Since the latest census records it as Dec 1820, I have entered that on this memorial.
Researchers often confuse this John Bailey with the one who lived in Pasquotank County on the other end of the state and was a Civil War veteran.
John and Susan suffered great tragedy during that time in the early 1860's. Six of their little girls died within a period of two weeks from Black Tongue Fever, two of them found dead in the same bed together. The children are buried in this cemetery in unmarked graves.
John was a hunter, and is said to have killed the largest deer in the area after many of his neighbors had tried unsuccessfully to do so.
Note: some sources spell his name as "Johnathan", while all the censuses list it simply as John. His birthdate on the census records vary from "about 1815" to "Dec 1820". Since the latest census records it as Dec 1820, I have entered that on this memorial.
Researchers often confuse this John Bailey with the one who lived in Pasquotank County on the other end of the state and was a Civil War veteran.
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