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Collection: RAY FAMILY. PAPERS
1847-1918
Cumberland Co,; Fayetteville, N.C.
Physical Description: 9 fibredex boxes and 1 volume, including letters,
financial journals, ledgers, and reports, bills and receipts, and
miscellaneous manuscript and printed items.
Acquisition: Gift, R. Jackson Marshall, Raleigh, N.C., 1998
Description: Captain Neill W. Ray (1839-1899) , son of William and Margaret
(McLaughlin) Ray, was educated at Longstreet Academy and at the North
Carolina Military Academy. He was one of the class to leave the academy
to enter Confederate service upon outbreak of the Civil War. Ray enlisted
in May, 1861, in Company D, 6th Regiment, North Carolina Infantry, where
he ultimately achieved the rank of captain.' He remained with his company
throughout the war until his ankle was badly shattered at Bethesda Church
on May 30, 1864, and subsequently amputation ended his military career.
In 1865 he was elected clerk of Superior Court of Cumberland County for a
two-year term, during which period he simultaneously read law. Defeated
for re-election during the polling of 1867 (held under U.S. military super¬
vision) , Captain Ray obtained a law license and entered practice. He
maintained a successful practice at Fayetteville from 1868 until his death
in 1899. He served a three-year term as mayor of Fayetteville (1890-1893),
and for an undetermined period (including all or part of 1890) served as
president of the Fayetteville Gas Light Company.
Laura Pearson Ray (1847-1931), daughter of Robert C. Pearson of Morgan-
ton, married Captain Ray in 1878. Their son Donald Fairfax Ray (1888-1918)
was educated locally in the Fayetteville-Davidson Academy, in the Woodberry
Forest School at Orange, Virginia, and in the University of North Carolina
where he commenced studies in law following his A.B. degree in 1909. When
the United States entered World War I, young Ray joined the army, training
at Fort Oglethorpe (Chattanooga, Tennessee) , at Camp Jackson (Columbia, South
Carolina), and at Fort Sill, Oklahoma. After he was commissioned first
lieutenant in the 156th Artillery Brigade and sent to Camp Jackson in the
summer of 1917, Ray married Anne McKimmon, daughter of Charles and Jane
McKimmon of Raleigh. In 1918 he was promoted to captain and sent for
further training to Fort Sill where he died suddenly on July 6. Sometime
after the death of her son, Mrs. Ray left Fayetteville to live near her
family in Morganton.