Col. Isaac Thomas "Ike" Avery

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Col. Isaac Thomas "Ike" Avery

Birthdate:
Birthplace: Swan Ponds, Burke, North Carolina, United States
Death: December 31, 1864 (79)
Burke, North Carolina, United States
Place of Burial: Morganton, Burke, North Carolina, United States
Immediate Family:

Son of Col. Waightstill Avery and Leah Francks Avery (Probart)
Husband of Harriet Eloise Avery
Father of Child (twin) Avery; William Waightstill Avery (CSA); Theodore Horatio Avery; Colonel Clark Moulton Avery (CSA); Thomas Lenoir Avery and 11 others
Brother of Polly Mira Summey; Elizabeth Lenoir and Selina Louisa Lenoir

Managed by: Private User
Last Updated:

About Col. Isaac Thomas "Ike" Avery

Isaac Thomas Avery was a fine Latin scholar; a successful farmer, and the largest raiser of cattle and horses in his section of the country ; cashier of the Morganton bank ; member of the state legislature and of the governor's council. He left a large estate.

THE GROTON AVERY CLAN, Vol. I, by Elroy McKendree Avery and Catherine Hitchcock (Tilden) Avery, Cleveland, 1912. p. 367


For further biographical information, refer to profile source documents


https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/12084540/isaac-thomas-avery

Isaac Thomas Avery, politician, planter, and banker, was the only son of Waightstill Avery and Leah Probart Avery. He was born at Swan Ponds. He married Harriet Eloise Erwin. They had twelve sons and four daughters, six of whom died in infancy or childhood. Four of his sons served in the Confederate army, three of them as colonels. Three were killed during the Civil War, and the fourth son died shortly afterward as a result of wounds received during the war.

He married Harriet Eloise Erwin on Jun 27,1815 at Belvidere,NC.

https://www.ncpedia.org/biography/avery-isaac-thomas

Isaac Thomas Avery, politician, planter, and banker, only son of Waightstill Avery and Leah Probart Avery, was born at Swan Ponds, Burke County. He had little formal education: he received an adequate education in the classics and some knowledge of science under Samuel Doak at Washington College near Jonesboro in Washington County, Tenn., but he left the college at the age of sixteen when his father, Waightstill Avery, became incapacitated. He returned home to shoulder the responsibilities for the family's prospering estate and slaves as well as to accompany his father as he continued the practice of law.

The young Avery showed an early interest in politics, representing Burke County in the legislature for the first time in 1809 at the age of twenty-four and returning to the lower house in 1810 and 1811. After that time he never again sought public office but continued to be a formidable figure in western North Carolina politics as an advisor to the governor, being three times appointed to the governor's council. In 1824 he was a presidential elector from North Carolina, at which time he initially supported Calhoun, who championed internal improvements. When Calhoun's star faded, however, he reluctantly supported Andrew Jackson over William H. Crawford. He was also a presidential elector for John Quincy Adams in 1828. In 1815 he married Harriet Eloise Erwin, daughter of William Willoughby and Matilda Sharpe Erwin, both members of prominent families. Mrs. Erwin was a daughter of William Sharpe, a Salisbury lawyer who served on the Holston River Treaty Commission with Waightstill Avery. Isaac Thomas and Harriet Erwin Avery had twelve sons and four daughters, six of whom died in infancy or childhood.

In 1829, Avery was appointed head of the Morganton branch of the North Carolina State Bank, a position he held for thirty years. At this time, gold mines at Brindletown in southern Burke County were producing profitably, and Avery was extremely optimistic about the future of this industry in western North Carolina. However, because of the lack of transportation, it was extremely difficult for any enterprise other than agriculture to prosper in Burke County. It was almost impossible to get the products out of the county.

Avery was a member of the board of internal improvements from 1821 to 1822 and was for many years president of the Catawba Navigation Company, which attempted to make this river navigable from its upper reaches to the South Carolina line. The project was unsuccessful, apparently because of inadequate capitalization, incompetent technical assistance, and the eventual development of the steam locomotive as a more efficient mode of transportation.

As the Avery family grew, the old brick house that Waightstill Avery had built became inadequate, and a new and larger house was erected in 1848. Isaac Avery of necessity administered large agricultural holdings, but he was considered a man of culture and learning and, like his father, primarily a classical scholar. He collected copies of the works of the Latin writers, as well as Shakespeare, and is reported to have read Latin easily even in his advanced years.

Four of his sons served in the Confederate army, three of them as colonels. Three were killed during the Civil War on the field of battle, and the fourth son died shortly afterward as a result of wounds received during the war.

Avery was buried in the family burial ground at Swan Ponds. A grandson said he seemed to give up his will to live when a servant returned with news of the death of his third son in battle.



Isaac Thomas Avery, politician, planter, and banker, was the only son of Waightstill Avery and Leah Probart Avery. He was born at Swan Ponds. He married Harriet Eloise Erwin. They had twelve sons and four daughters, six of whom died in infancy or childhood. Four of his sons served in the Confederate army, three of them as colonels. Three were killed during the Civil War, and the fourth son died shortly afterward as a result of wounds received during the war.

He married Harriet Eloise Erwin on Jun 27,1815 at Belvidere,NC.

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Col. Isaac Thomas "Ike" Avery's Timeline

1785
September 22, 1785
Swan Ponds, Burke, North Carolina, United States
1816
May 25, 1816
Swan Ponds, Burke County, North Carolina, United States
May 25, 1816
Swan Ponds, Burke County, North Carolina, United States
1817
September 1817
Swan Ponds, Burke County, North Carolina, United States
1820
October 3, 1820
Swans Pond, Burke County, North Carolina, United States
1821
March 16, 1821
Swan Ponds, Burke County, North Carolina, United States
1822
December 20, 1822
Swan Ponds, Burke County, North Carolina, United States
1824
October 4, 1824
Swan Ponds, Burke County, North Carolina, United States
1826
May 8, 1826
Swan Ponds, Burke County, North Carolina, United States