Spring/Summer 2025 & The Outlaw Whitson Brothers

We finally got 4 loads of roadbond for our roads a few weeks ago. We get our roadbond from a quarry called Vulcan Materials. Due to Hurricane Helene, there is an incredibly high demand for roadbond to repair our local railroad and state highways. As a result, it’s been very difficult to get roadbond this year.

We still have a lot more summer to go, but here are some photos of this year’s spring thus far…

And now for some local history…

There were three brothers named Tom, Dick, and Will Whitson. They grew up in Mitchell County during the War Between the States (1861-1865). Without question, the War and its aftermath had a negative impact on these brothers.

Brothers Tom, Dick, Will and Sam Whitson (my Great Great Granddaddy)

Their father was John Whitson. Very little is known about him, but he disappeared during the War. He was most likely a Unionist. He probably served in one of the Union regiments of East Tennessee or Kentucky. North Carolina didn’t have any Union regiments until 1863.

The Whitson Brothers’ widowed mother Matilda opened up a store/house of ill repute. It was more than just a simple general store. The reputation of the store was not good. Prostitution, gambling, drinking, etc. went on there. When the Whitson Brothers were old enough to make whiskey, they started selling it out of their mother’s store.

Corn was something easily and commonly grown in this region. However, the markets to sell corn were far away and the roads weren’t great to get there. As a result, most mountain people in the 1800s were subsistence farmers. This means they grew everything they needed to survive on their farms and sold very little for actual cash.

Those who wanted to make more money off of their corn decided to ferment and distill it first. This approach was more economical. Therefore, the Whitson Brothers decided to turn their corn into whiskey before selling it.

Nobody really knows why or how it happened, but the Whitson Brothers shot and killed a man by the name of “Kit” Byrd. It was either over a woman, a liquor deal or both. Nobody is even sure which Whitson Brother killed Kit Byrd. Regardless, all three of them were at the scene and all three played a role.

Now how does this tie into Amber Ranches?

These brothers took a strategic route to avoid the law. They went up the Bald Road (pronounced “Ball Road”) through modern day Amber Ranches. This road was built so that people could travel to the Cloudland Hotel on top of Roan Mountain. Locals used this road to sell their produce to the hotel. Prior to the killing of Kit Byrd, The Whitson Brothers probably used this road to sell their bootleg whiskey to hotel guests.

So by way of the Bald “Ball” Road, The Whitson Brothers escaped to Tennessee. They then settled down in southeastern Kentucky. They changed their names (Jones Brothers), bought land, raised families and continued to make and sell illegal corn whiskey.

Eastern Kentucky was also a rough place in the 1880s. Coal had been discovered and coal companies were buying up huge tracks of land. Dick Whitson (aka Harrison Jones) either wouldn’t sell his land or was asking more than what the coal company offered. As a result, an assassin by the name of Abijah Lewis was hired by the coal company to kill him.

Dick and his adopted son Caudle got into an argument at a saloon with Lewis. Dick walked out the door of the saloon. The company man followed. He grabbed a secretly placed pistol on the way and shot Dick in the heart. After killing Dick, Lewis tried to run, but was shot in the back by Dick’s adopted teenage son Caudle.

Tom and Will Whitson didn’t suffer the same fate as their brother. However, after 9 years of being fugitives, they were finally captured. They were sentenced to prison and sent down east to do hard labor.

Tom Whitson’s prison term was cut short when he broke out in 1895. He simply walked out and moved back to Eastern Kentucky by knocking out a prison guard and wearing his clothes out the door.

Many years later, Tom was captured again but pardoned by the governor of North Carolina. He would live out his days in Kentucky but kept in contact with his Mitchell County relatives.

Will Whitson served his time in prison and was also pardoned for the crime of murder. He lived out the rest of his days in Mitchell County.

These Whitson Brothers are my Grandma’s Great Uncles (Her Grandpa’s brothers). If you’re interested in learning more about these brothers, my information comes from a book written by our relatives. It’s called, Red Hill: The Untold Story of the Whitson Brothers and the Murder of Kit Byrd by K. B. and S. R. Whitson.

6 responses to “Spring/Summer 2025 & The Outlaw Whitson Brothers”

  1. Great history lesson ! Thanks 👍

    Liked by 1 person

  2. Thanks  Josh !!Sent from my iPhone

    Liked by 1 person

  3. Thanks! Interesting!

    Liked by 1 person

  4. Greetings gents,  Your work DOES NOT go unnoticed! We appreciate you guys beyond words I can not express. Thank you doesn’t seem enough, but I sincerely THANK YOU. I look forward to your newsletters and find them entertaining, informational and mesmerizing!  Just a side note: being from Texas, we are considered Louisiana’s cousins… Loving us some crawfish! In all my life, I’ve only seen one other blue crawfish. And trust me when I say that I have seen hundreds of pounds of crawfish in my life, the photo of the blue crawfish you captured was quite surprising to see. Statistics say that you find only one out of 10,000 crawfish to be blue in color. Crawfish naturally produce a mix of pigments, including astaxanthin, which is red. In some crawfish, a genetic mutation occurs that causes them to produce less of the masking pigments that normally hide the blue color. This reduced masking allows the blue pigments to be more visible, giving the crawfish a blue appearance. Just thought I’d share some facts in the event you didn’t already know.  Keep up the great work!  Dawn & Andy

    Sent from the all new AOL app for iOS

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Thanks so much for the kind words and information regarding the blue crawfish! I had no idea they were so rare! I found that one next to my house in the little stream that flows out of the upper pond. I’m glad I didn’t use him for fish bait!

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  5. Good afternoon,Really interesting information, I enjoy pictures &  reading your emails. I wanted to ask if you know of a good home builder. To build a log cabin/home for my family

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