Person:Nicholas Earp (1)

m. Abt 1809
  1. Lorenzo Dow Earp1809 - 1893
  2. Elizabeth Ann Mary Earp1811 - 1899
  3. Nicholas Porter Earp1813 - 1907
  4. Josiah Jackson Earp1816 - 1901
  5. Mary Ann Earp Eirp1817 - 1893
  6. James O'Kelly Earp1818 - 1893
  7. Francis Asbury Sr Earp1821 - 1901
  8. Walter C. Cookey Earp1824 - 1900
  9. Sally Ann Sarah Earp1826 - 1902
  • HNicholas Porter Earp1813 - 1907
  • WAbigail Storm1813 - 1839
m. 22 Dec 1836
  1. Newton Jasper Earp1837 -
m. 1840
  1. James Cooksey Earp1841 - 1926
  2. Virgil Walter Earp1843 - 1905
  3. Martha Elizabeth Earp1845 - 1856
  4. Wyatt Berry Stapp Earp1848 - 1929
  5. Morgan Seth Earp1851 - 1882
  6. Baxter Warren Earp1855 - 1900
  7. Virginia Ann Earp1858 - 1861
  8. Adelia Douglas Earp1861 - 1941
Facts and Events
Name Nicholas Porter Earp
Gender Male
Birth[1][5] 6 Sep 1813 Lincoln, North Carolina, United States
Marriage 22 Dec 1836 Hartford, Ohio County, Kentuckyto Abigail Storm
Marriage 1840 to Virginia Ann Cooksey
Census[1] 1850 Marion, Iowa, United States
Census[2] 1860 Marion, Iowa, United States
Census[3] 1870 Barton, Missouri, United States
Census[4] 1880 San Bernardino, California, United StatesTemescal
Census[5] 1900 San Bernardino, California, United States
Death? 12 Feb 1907 Sawtelle, Los Angeles, California, United StatesSoldiers' Home
Burial? Los Angeles National Cemetery, Los Angeles, Los Angeles, California, United States
Reference Number? Q7026073?


Photos of Nicholas Earp's tombstone on FindAGrave.com.

Nicholas Porter Earp, was raised in a strongly Methodist family, named for an early circuit rider in Kentucky, and he had ambitions to become a prominent landowner. It was clearly one reason that he, his parents, and his brothers and sisters moved to western Illinois in 1845. Nicholas Earp worked as a cooper and farmer in Warren County, Illinois, for four years. He owned only one town lot in the county seat of Monmouth, but he held the title to empty lots across the street, paying with promissory notes.

He volunteered for the Mexican War in the Illinois Mounted Volunteer Infantry commanded by Wyatt Berry Stapp and was made 3rd Sergeant, but was invalided home after a mule kicked him in the groin. He arrived back in Monmouth a month before the birth of his son, Wyatt Berry Stapp Earp, on 19 March 1848. (He also volunteered in the Union Army in 1861 at his old rank of 3rd Sergeant.) In March of 1849, as gold fever was raging in the community, he sold his property and left town with his family, leaving his creditors with the impression that he was on his way to California. However, he made it no farther than Pella, in Marion County, in central Iowa. Neighbors here began to become numerous only in the mid-1850s.

It is difficult to establish when Nicholas Earp acquired 160 acres seven miles northeast of Pella. We know from the Census of 1850 that he was a cooper and a farmer, but there is no record in the courthouse of his registering land. Moreover, the National Archives and Records Administration have no record of Nicholas Earp in the Iowa tract books. A reverse search, backward from the land Nicholas sold March 17, 1856, indicates that two different men held the southern 80 acres (N ½ of SE ¼ of Sect. 1) and two others each held 40 acres just to the north (S ½ of NE ¼ of Sect. 1) before him. The Bureau of Land Management records show that the southern 80 acres (together with an equal acreage in Sect. 6) was given as a military grant for service in the War of 1812, to Le Grand Byington (1 Feb 1853). This land next appears in the possession of Henry Peter Schotte, who paid $1.25 per acre for them on 22 Feb 1855. This was the price of a normal preemption claim. Sometime in the next year, Nicholas Earp acquired legal title to this tract and to the other 80 acres as well.

Clearly, these tracts were not given as a grant for service in the Mexican War, as is sometimes claimed. Since Nicholas did not record any land transactions at all, it is impossible to say whether he had purchased these parcels with a quit claim, and never bothered to go to the county seat to record them, or whether he had simply squatted on good land until the rush of settlers began. Squatting on land was not uncommon on the frontier. At the least, the squatter could get in some good crops, perhaps making enough money to preempt the land. Alternatively, he could force the legal owner to pay for improvements already made. The owner might have the law on his side, but the squatter usually had the judge (who was locally elected) and the jury (who were his neighbors) ready to rule in his favor.

Since Schotte was accumulating land in the neighborhood of Pella, he might have been a speculator who came to some accommodation with Earp. Further answers may lie in long-forgotten court records of Marion County. Suits for trespass were common in days before fences could be built, when cattle and horses strayed onto neighbors’ fields, and sometimes "trespass" actually meant squatting. Suits were also common for non-payment of debts and obligations. Earp sold the 160 acres on 4 March 1856 for $2,050 to Aquillin W. Noe, who passed it on that same day to Hiram Webster for $1,600. This is the same A.W. Noe who had sold Earp Lot 3 on Block 35 and Lots 3 & 6 in Block 33 in Monmouth, Illinois, on 10 March 1856, for $2,050.

Aquillin Waters Noe was born in Kentucky, like Nicholas Earp, and was also a neighbor of Lorenzo Earp. He was then 56 years old, with a wife he had married in Monmouth (Martha Ridlon, on 24 Feb 1847) and a small daughter, Fedelia. Soon after the Iowa transaction, Noe returned to Monmouth, where on 19 June 1856, he bought 44 acres in the NW quarter of Sect. 17 of Lenox Township from Matthew Armsby for $250. In 1857 the newspaper noted a wedding at his home in Monmouth. He does not appear in the census in 1860, but he sold his 44 acres to Hiram C. Mark that year on 29 October; in 1861 he joined other patriots in calling for a public meeting to raise troops for the war. He was not in the special census of 1865 (though Virgil Earp was) or the census of 1870. Nevertheless, he is listed as a taxpayer in _Past and Present of Warren County, Illinois_ (1877), working as a gardener. He died in Monmouth, 4 May 1880, but apparently no obituary was published.

Hiram Zenas Webster was a 26-year-old native of Illinois. He had married Elizabeth Root, daughter of Brainard Root, 30 Dec 1852, in a Presbyterian ceremony. She was just eighteen at the time, but the slapdash record-keeping of the time does not tell us what happened to her, except that they moved to Ogle County and when Webster returned to Young America (Kirkwood), he was single. Webster married Mary McQuire 22 July 1855, at nearby Lenox. At that time, and in 1856, he owned 44 acres in the NW corner of Sect. 17, valued at $534. These were the acres that Noe purchased in June 1856. Clearly, the $250 that Noe paid Armsby was the balance that Webster owed on the land, and equally clearly, Webster never filed the deed at the courthouse. He probably did not do so now in order to avoid paying the recording fee. Webster moved his family to the Iowa farm in 1856 and lived there until about 1872. A descendant wrote: "It was known that he had many Clydesdale Horses that he had acquired from the former owner of the property, and from whom he had acquired the knowledge of Clydesdale breeding." This previous owner was, of course, Nicholas Earp.

Thus, there was a three-way swap of property between Earp, Noe and Webster. This gives a time line for some of Earp’s travels. On 4 March 1856, Nicholas and Virginia Earp and Noe and Webster were in Iowa, presumably in Pella. On March 10, Earp and Noe were in Monmouth. On March 17, Noe and Webster filed their papers at the courthouse in Knoxville, Iowa, and by June they had returned to Monmouth, possibly traveling with Earp and his family. In early July, the _Monmouth Atlas_ reported: "Died here on the 26th unknown. Mary Elizabeth, only daughter of Mr. N.P. Earp, in the eleventh year of her age." Wyatt was eight years old.

Nicholas, unable to find suitable work as a cooper or farmer, became one of several municipal constables, serving warrants and assisting court officers. His property, according to the 1855 and 1856 tax rolls, had some improvements on the two lots on Block 33 (valued at $75 and $100), and the house must have been on Lot 3 of Block 35 (tax value $400). The house was of modest size, even though the family was large. The fruits of his hard labors in Iowa, which we had once believed to have been considerable, actually were few. He ended up without much more property than he had owned in Monmouth in 1849, before he had gone west with high hopes of becoming rich.

Three years later, after he was convicted in the spring and fall of 1859 of selling liquor, humiliated in court in front of the entire community, and the judge ordered his property sold at public auction on November 11 to pay his fines, Nicholas left Monmouth. He was in Pella on 17 November 1859, buying Lot 2 in Block 64 for $500 and assuming the $200 mortgage payable to the school district in five years (at 10% interest). He was back in Monmouth on December 13th, threatening to sue the high bidder on his property. On 11 January 1860, he was in Pella again, recording the purchase made in November. On March 19, he was back in Monmouth to conclude the sale of his properties there, but had hardly left town before more suits were filed against him. Being listed as a delinquent tax payer was a minor civic sin -- everyone paid late. But not everyone left town without paying anything. Eventually, one suit for $142.71 was dropped about 1864 because nobody knew where Earp was to be found. We know that he had left for California.

Thus it was that Nicholas was in Iowa in time for the census of 1860, just as he had been there ten years before. This had led earlier generations of scholars to conclude that Nicholas Earp and his family had been continuously in Iowa, or in Missouri. In reality, the Monmouth connection remained strong through all these years. This should not be surprising, since that was where his mother, sisters, and brothers were, and the Earps were a close-knit family. In 1868, when Nicholas brought his family back east, they went to a family reunion in Monmouth. If they stopped in Pella, as would have been easily done, no one remembered it.

References
  1. 1.0 1.1 United States. 1850 U.S. Census Population Schedule. (National Archives Microfilm Publication M432).


    1850 U.S. Census, Lake Prairie Twp, Marion County, Iowa (Roll M432 187), p. 290A; Dwelling 150, Family 156.
    Earp N.P. 37 [abt 1813] M North Carolina Cooper & Farmer
    Earp Virginia A. 29 [abt 1821] F Kentucky
    Earp Newton J. 13 [abt 1837] M Kentucky [attended school]
    Earp James C. 7 [abt 1843] M Kentucky [attended school]
    Earp Virgil W. 6 [abt 1844] M Kentucky [attended school]
    Earp Martha E. 5 [abt 1845] F Illinois
    Earp Wyatt B. 2 [abt 1848] M Illinois

  2. United States. 1860 U.S. Census Population Schedule. (National Archives Microfilm Publication M653).


    1860 U.S. Census, Pella, Marion County, Iowa (Roll M653 335), p. 230; Dwelling 1671, Family 1572.
    Earp Nicolas P. 45 [abt 1815] M North Carolina Farmer (re=$800; pe=$200)
    Earp Virginia A. 38 [abt 1822] F Kentucky
    Earp James C. 19 [abt 1841] M Kentucky Farmer [attended school]
    Earp Virgil W. 17 [abt 1843] M Kentucky Farmer [attended school]
    Earp Wyatt S. 12 [abt 1848] M Illinois [attended school]
    Earp Morgan L. 9 [abt 1851] M Iowa [attended school]
    Earp Warren 5 [abt 1855] M Iowa
    Earp Virginia A. 2 [abt 1858] F Illinois
    Davis Lucinda 17 [abt 1843] F Kentucky [attended school]

  3. United States. 1870 U.S. Census Population Schedule. (National Archives Microfilm Publications M593 and T132).


    1870 U.S. Census, Lamar, Barton County, Missouri (Roll M593 757); p. 830B.
    Dwelling 212, Family 212
    Earp Nicholas 58 [abt 1812] M W Grocer (re=$1,200; pe=$425) North Carolina
    Earp Virginia 50 [abt 1820] F W Keeping house Kentucky
    Earp Warren 13 [abt 1857] M W At home Iowa
    Earp Adelia 9 [abt 1861] F W Iowa
    Earp Vergil 26 [abt 1844] M W Grocer Kentucky
    Earp Rosa 17 [abt 1853] F W At home "France"

  4. United States. 1880 U.S. Census Population Schedule. (National Archives Microfilm Publication T9).


    1880 U.S. Census, Temescal, San Bernardino County, California (Roll 72), ED 63, p. 462A; Dwelling
    Earp N. P. W M 67 [abt 1813] Farmer Married Kentucky Virginia Virginia
    Earp Virginia W F 59 [abt 1821] Wife Housekeeping Married North Carolina Maryland Virginia
    Earp Morgan W M 29 [abt 1851] Son Farmer Married Iowa Kentucky North Carolina
    Earp Warren B. W M 25 [abt 1855] Son Farmer Single Iowa Kentucky North Carolina
    Earp Louisa W F 25 [abt 1855] Dau/law Housekeeping Married Wisconsin Illinois Illinois
    Carter Minnie W F 14 [abt 1866] "Visiter" Single Utah Terr. Illinois Indiana

  5. 5.0 5.1 United States. 1900 U.S. Census Population Schedule. (National Archives Microfilm Publication T623).


    1900 U.S. Census, Redlands Twp, San Bernardino County, California (Roll T623 97), ED 235, p. 4B; Dwelling 103; Family 104.
    Edwards William Head W M Jan 1856 44 Marr. 23 yrs [1877] Missouri Illinois Missouri Farmer
    Edwards Addie D. Wife W F Jan 1861 39 Marr. (8 ch, 7 liv) Iowa North Carolina Kentucky
    Edwards Mary V. Daughter W F May 1880 20 Single California Missouri Iowa
    Edwards Nichols V. Son W M Dec 1882 17 Single California Missouri Iowa Farm Laborer
    Edwards Leroy Son W M Nov 1885 14 Single California Missouri Iowa Farm Laborer
    Edwards Estella J. Daughter W F Oct 1887 12 Single California Missouri Iowa At school
    Edwards Helenna Daughter W F Oct 1889 10 Single California Missouri Iowa
    Edwards Ester M. Daughter W F Dec 1894 5 Single California Missouri Iowa
    Edwards Raymond T. Son W M Mar 1898 2 Single California Missouri Iowa
    Porter Nichols E. Father/law W M Sep 1813 86 Marr. 21 yrs [??] North Carolina Maryland Virginia
    Boren Henry L. Boarder W M Dec 1879 20 Single California Iowa Iowa Farm Laborer

  6.   Wikipedia:Nicholas Porter Earp
    16 September 2010.

    "Nicholas Porter Earp (September 6, 1813 - February 12, 1907) was born in Lincoln County, North Carolina, to Walter and Martha Ann Earp. He is most famously known as the father of OK Corral shootout participants and Old West lawmen Wyatt Earp, Virgil Earp, and Morgan Earp. Nicholas' father Walter Earp, a school teacher and Methodist Episcopal preacher, was born in Montgomery County, Maryland, in 1787. Nicholas' mother, Martha Ann Early, was born in Avery County, North Carolina, on August 28, 1790. Nicholas was the third of ten children; his siblings include six brothers: Lorenzo Dow, Josiah Jackson, James Kelly, Francis Asbury, Jonathan Douglas and Walter C (twins); as well as three sisters: Elizabeth, Mary Ann, and Sarah Ann."

    Nicholas Porter Earp 1813-1907 Nicholas Porter Earp 1813-1907