Nathan Honeycutt
Garther Barnett of Pigeon Roost, accompanied by Dewey Hughes (not the son of Martha Honeycutt and J. Wesley Hughes), also of Pigeon Roost, reported to the writer that they visited the Honeycutt graveyard on Tuesday, October 26, and Mr. Barnett said that he had not been to that graveyard before within 18 years, which is located far on the mountainside at the farm known as the Nate Honeycutt place on Pigeon Roost. The graveyard is not far from the top of the mountain which on the other side is the Brummets Creek section.
There is no markers at any of the graves but just some initials and dates carved on the common soft kind of rocks used for head and foot stones.
The writer's great-great-grandfather, Mosie Honeycutt, was buried in that cemetery as well as many of our other ancestors.
Excerpt from 11/11/65 entry from News From Pidgeon Roost By Harvey J. Miller Copyright 1974 by Harvey J. Miller
Published by The Foxfire Press Edited by Eliot Wigginton Volume 8, Number 4 (Winter 1974) of Foxfire Magazine.