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Tombstone Tales: A Revolutionary War Soldier at Canton’s Locust Field

Tombstone Tales: A Revolutionary War Soldier at Canton’s Locust Field

A fieldstone memorial marks the grave of Revolutionary War soldier Thomas Abel at Locust Field Cemetery in Canton, N.C. The monument and bronze plaque were placed generations after Abel’s death in 1822. Photo: Contributed/Shannon Ballard


Editor’s Note: Western North Carolina is rich with untold stories—many resting quietly in local cemeteries. In this Tombstone Tales series, we explore the lives of people from our region’s past whose legacies, whether widely known or nearly forgotten, helped shape the place we call home.


CANTON, N.C. (828newsNOW.com) — At Locust Field Cemetery, a rough stone symbolizes the quiet persistence of family and dedication.

Thomas Abel was a Revolutionary War soldier who died in Haywood County on Aug. 30, 1822. Today, his burial place is marked not by a single headstone, but by a collection of stones added across generations, each telling part of the same story.

The earliest marker is easy to miss. A narrow, roughly shaped stone bears a hand-carved inscription that reads, in part, “Thomas Able D … August the 30 … A.D. 1822.” The lettering is shallow, but the meaning is clear. This is the original grave marker, likely placed shortly after Abel’s death, reflecting the simple burial practices of early 19th-century frontier families.

An early hand-carved grave marker for Thomas Abel notes his death on Aug. 30, 1822, at Locust Field Cemetery in Canton, N.C. The stone reflects the simple burial practices of the early 19th century. Photo by Shannon Ballard

Nearby stands a larger fieldstone monument, installed long after Abel was buried. It reads “Thomas Henry Abel, Aug. 1759 – Aug. 1822,” and names his wife, Elizabeth Kathrine Woodfin Abel, who died March 30, 1855. At the base, the stone bears the inscription “First settler of Haywood County,” a phrase that reflects family and community tradition.

Affixed to the stone is a bronze plaque placed by the Hugh Rogers Chapter of the Daughters of the American Revolution. It identifies Abel as a “Revolutionary Soldier” and formally recognizes his service in the war for independence.

That service is documented through a federal pension file created after the war, when Congress expanded benefits to widows of Revolutionary War soldiers.

In June 1839, Elizabeth Abel appeared in Haywood County court to apply for a widow’s pension. She testified that she and Thomas were married in September of 1782, on a place along the Pigeon River. She said they lived together as husband and wife until his death in 1822.

Elizabeth traced their long residence in Western North Carolina and told the court she had often heard her husband describe his Revolutionary War service.

According to her account, Thomas entered service in Shenandoah County, Virginia. Her statements were supported by an affidavit from fellow Revolutionary War pensioner, Daniel Henson, who swore he served alongside Thomas Able in Virginia in 1781 and 1782.

Notes attached to the pension file reference a size roll listing “Thos. Able,” age 22, described as 5 feet 8 inches tall with brown hair, gray eyes and a fair complexion. The roll identifies him as a planter, born and residing in Shenandoah County, and states he enlisted March 19, 1781.

A bronze plaque placed by the Daughters of the American Revolution identifies Thomas Abel as a Revolutionary War soldier at Locust Field Cemetery in Canton, N.C. Photo by Shannon Ballard.

Elizabeth testified that her husband frequently spoke of seeing Gen. George Washington and said he was present at the Siege of Yorktown, where he witnessed the surrender of British Gen. Charles Cornwallis.

In stone and bronze, Thomas Abel’s memorials stand as a lasting tribute to a Revolutionary War patriot who helped shape a new nation.


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