Gen. Paul Mathias Barringer

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Paul Mathias Barringer

Birthdate:
Birthplace: Mecklenburg County, North Carolina, United States
Death: June 20, 1844 (65)
Lincolnton, Lincoln County, North Carolina, United States
Place of Burial: Concord, Cabarrus County, North Carolina, United States
Immediate Family:

Son of John Paul Barringer and Catherine Elizabeth Barringer
Husband of Elizabeth Barringer
Father of Paul Brandon Barringer; Rep. Daniel M. Barringer (W-NC); Margaret Grier; Brig. Gen. Rufus C. Barringer (CSA); Catherine Jane Means and 2 others
Brother of Mathias Barringer; Martin Barringer; Elizabeth Boone; Sarah Barringer; Esther Barringer and 4 others
Half brother of Catherine Savitz; Joseph Christian Barringer and Capt. John Barringer

Managed by: Private User
Last Updated:

About Gen. Paul Mathias Barringer

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paul_Barringer

Paul Barringer (born c. 1776; died 1835 or 1844) was a North Carolina politician and military veteran of the War of 1812. General Barringer served in the North Carolina House of Commons (1793, 1794, 1806–1815) and in the North Carolina Senate (1822, 1824), representing Cabarrus County.

He was the brother of Daniel Laurens Barringer, the father of Daniel M. Barringer and Rufus Barringer, and the grandfather of Paul Brandon Barringer.

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https://www.ncpedia.org/biography/barringer-paul

Paul Barringer, businessman, member of the North Carolina House of Commons and Senate, and brigadier general in the War of 1812, was born at the family homeplace, Poplar Grove, in southeastern Cabarrus County. He was the eldest child of John Paul Barringer, founder of the Barringer family in North Carolina, who emigrated from Germany to Pennsylvania in 1743. John Paul's second wife, Catherine Blackwelder, was Paul's mother. Since his father spoke only German, young Paul's early education was conducted mainly in the German language, but at the age of eighteen he was sent to an English classical school, where he remained for three years. He spoke and wrote both English and German fluently.

When he was twenty-one years old, he moved to Concord and, with his father's help, became a successful planter and merchant. Later he helped to organize the first cotton mill in Cabarrus County and became its first president. He also subscribed $2,000 toward the construction of North Carolina's first railroad, the Raleigh to Gaston Railroad. Not only did he support this railroad financially, but he was one of a small group that worked to make the idea of such an undertaking a reality.

In 1805, Barringer married Elizabeth Brandon of Rowan County, daughter of Matthew Brandon, an enthusiastic supporter of the American Revolution. Barringer's father died in 1807; a few years later, the young couple moved back to the family home. There they had a family of eleven children, two of whom died in early childhood: Daniel Moreau, U.S. minister to Spain under presidents Taylor and Fillmore; Margaret, married first to John Boyd and second to Andrew Grier; Paul Brandon, one of the first settlers in the "Chickasaw Purchase" at Pontotoc, Miss.; Mary Ann; Matthew; William; Elizabeth; Alfred; Rufus, a general in the Confederate Army; Catherine, who married W. C. Means; and Victor, lawyer, professor at Davidson College, state senator, and U.S. representative at the International Court at Alexandria, Egypt, from 1874 to 1894.

A handsome man nearly six feet tall, Barringer was quiet and unassuming. He preferred a simple life as a planter and merchant and close relationships with his family, church, and community. Underneath his quiet dignity, however, was a leader and a man of integrity. Because his associates recognized his leadership and respected his integrity, he was elected to represent his county for twelve years in the North Carolina Assembly, where he performed admirably and won the esteem of his fellow legislators. He was a member of the Federalist party until he later joined the Whig party. In 1823 he refused to run for reelection, claiming that his business interests—three plantations, two stores, a tannery, and a cotton mill—needed his guidance. Because he felt it necessary to locate nearer his enterprises, he moved his family in 1838 from Poplar Grove to a location two and a half miles west of Concord and built a home called Bellevue.

Like many others of German descent who had suffered hardship in Germany, Barringer was not in favor of slavery. He did for a time own about fifteen slaves; these he later gave to his son Paul Brandon to take to Mississippi, saying he did not believe the practice was moral or economically sound and that he did not wish to own them any longer.

He was opposed to the War of 1812, but when the war broke out, he quickly volunteered and was commissioned a brigadier general of volunteers, a position he held throughout the war.

Like his father before him, Barringer was a deeply religious man. He held office in St. John's Lutheran Church, for the building of which his father had given the land and most of the money. Paul, too, was a generous financial and spiritual supporter of this church.

Barringer was buried in the then new Lutheran Cemetery in Concord.



Son of John Paul Barringer & Catherine [Blackwelder Barringer]

Married Elizabeth Brandon February 21, 1805 Cabarrus Co., NC


https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/22009941/paul-mathias-barringer

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Gen. Paul Mathias Barringer's Timeline

1778
September 26, 1778
Mecklenburg County, North Carolina, United States
1803
January 27, 1803
Mt. Pleasant, Cabarrus County, North Carolina, United States
1806
July 30, 1806
Concord, Cabarrus County, North Carolina, United States
1808
February 12, 1808
1821
December 2, 1821
Cabarrus County, North Carolina, United States
1824
1824
1827
March 29, 1827
Concord, Cabarrus County, North Carolina, United States
1844
June 20, 1844
Age 65
Lincolnton, Lincoln County, North Carolina, United States
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