OR, THE WORLD HAS CHANGED. 59 



seph Earle, T. W. Farrar, C. W. Miller, Samuel Cherry, John 

 Taylor, J. C. Griffin, Colonel Robert Anderson, Thomas Strib- 

 ling, John Greene, Josiah Galliard, Francis Burt, John Hun. 

 ter, W. S. Adair, William Taylor, William Anderson, Thomas 

 M. Sloan, Joseph Mitchell, Thomas Lorton, Reverend James 

 Hillhouse, Benjamin Dickson, Richard Lewis, J. B. Hammond, 

 John Holbert, Robert Lemon, John Hall, David Cherry, Chas. 

 Story, McKenzie Collins, George Taylor, Theodore Galliard, 

 Samuel Gassaway, R. A. Maxwell, Jesse P. Lewis, Doctor F. 

 W. Symmes, George Reese, James Farris, James O. Lewis, 

 Henry McReary, David K. Hamilton, Major George Seaborn, 

 Major R. F. Simpson, E. B. Benson, B. F. Perry, Geo. Reese, 

 George Liddell, David Sloan, J. B. Perry, John Martin, T. 

 Farrar, Warren R. Davis, Willir.m Gaston, John Maxwell, 

 William Sloan, William Hubbard, Elam Sharpe, Leonard 

 Simpson, Samuel Taylor, Major Lewis, William Steele, James 

 Lawrence. 



And this old Farmers' Society, organized seventy-five years 

 ago, is still in existence, and flourishing under the administra- 

 tion of the presefit officers, D. K. Norris, President; J. C. 

 Stribling, Vice-President; G. E. Taylor, Secretary and Treas- 

 urer; J. B. Sitton, J. D. Smith, James Hunter, W. H. D. Gal- 

 liard, H. S. Trescot, Executive Committee. 



Let all honor be given to the old Pendleton Farmers' So- 

 ciety'-, the pioneer of our Southern agriculture, the first organ- 

 ization of its kind in the sunny South, and nowhere in the 

 State to-day can be found greener pastures, finer stock, or 

 better farming, than in the vicinity of this venerable old vil- 

 lage, all due to the grand race of people who once lived and 

 flourished there, and at that time one of the most intelligent 

 and delightful communities that ev^er existed on this check- 



