Reynolds Family Circle

The Descendants of William Reynolds and Jane Milliken who married in Green County, Tennessee on August 23, 1790.

Living Pallas

Living Pallas

Female

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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Living Pallas (daughter of Living Reynolds and Living Pallas).

Generation: 2

  1. 2.  Living Reynolds (son of Living Reynolds and Dorothy M. Stanistreet).

    Living married Living Pallas. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  Living Pallas
    Children:
    1. 1. Living Pallas


Generation: 3

  1. 4.  Living Reynolds (son of Dan Reynolds and Rosa Bell Chatagnier).

    Living married Dorothy M. Stanistreet. Dorothy was born in in Dublin, Irland. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 5.  Dorothy M. Stanistreet was born in in Dublin, Irland.

    Notes:

    Dorothy was born in Dublin, Irland and moved to England. She married Prince when she was about 19 years old in 1952. Her father's name was John, worked at a chemical plant in Manchester, England. Mother died before Prince ment Dorothy. Singer Aunt known as Maureen of Ireland, Mother was a champion step dancer, theatrical family.

    Children:
    1. 2. Living Reynolds


Generation: 4

  1. 8.  Dan Reynolds was born on 24 Dec 1892 in Izzard County, Arkansas (son of Andrew Reynolds and Martha Jane Brinsfield); died on 25 Jul 1931 in Fort Levenworth, Kansas.

    Notes:

    Dan was a farmer, oil field worker, and bootlegger. Rosa said he was a very strong man, once stealing a good size calf from a man who refused to pay a debt and running with the calf over his sholder most of the way from Wewoka.

    Trix tells a story of Dan at a local dance, the sort that neighbors rotated among their homes. Dan was playing fiddle and was ready to leave at some point that was too early for one of the other partygoers. They went outside to fight. The other man grabbed an ax and chopped Dan in the back. The ax stuck, Dan pulled it out and then chopped the man's legs off.

    Dan and Rosa's first house at Letha was a 12x24 ft. red wooden house. Their previous place was just off the road to Wewoka Lake.

    Dan was wealthy during the bootleg years. Prince remembers as a small boy playing in a tunk full of money. Prince remembers that Dan had more than 20 stills in the Kiamishi Mountains and at least that number of drivers.

    A partner of Dan was Red McBride.

    Dan built a large wooden house that burned. He built a new stone home in the same location and also put up a stone barn.

    After Dan's health went, the family was broke. His wife, Rosa kept up the liquor sales for a time, but couldn't manage it for long. She remarried Bill Clifton, who had managed the business for Dan after Dan was sick. Bill couldn't manage it either and also drank quite a lot, so they were divorced.

    Dan was drinking "Jake" whiskey with a man named Rice, another named R.T. Harbor, Woody Woodward, and Sheriff Sims. Rice, Harbor, and Sims got what was called Jake Leg from a poison in the whiskey, Sims was called Jake Sims thereafter.

    Dan built a large brick mansion next to the stone house just before his health broke. A local teacher, Ethyl Miller, rented a room in the house during that time. School board did not object to a teacher renting from a bootlegger because board supt. was one of Dan's whiskey customers. Ethyl now lives on her family's place near Antlers, OK near a small town named Finley. She had no furniture so Dan bought her $10,000 worth of furniture, including a piano which Ethyl's sister Mabel used to teach Edna.

    Edna says Dan died of pellagra, (from eating too much corn?). Rosa said consumption.

    The last 3 or 4 years of his life he had stomach ulcers and was only able to eat raw oysters. These were imported from New Orleans. It was due to his health that Dan surrrendered to the law and was sent to Leavenworth. It is said that he believed he would get better health care there than in Seminole.

    Many important politicians, including the Governor, were frequent guests and drinking buddies with Dan, so it is entirely possible that Dan did have, as the family story has it, the option of going to jail or not.

    It is said that Dan and John pulled a few jobs with Pretty Boy Floyd. They were going to rob one of the big county dances and the old man at the door told Dan that he knew who he was and he had better go home. Sos they left empty handed that night.

    It is also said that Al Capone, sent a man down to take over Dan's bootlegging business. The man made friends with Dan's right had man to whom he told his plans. So Dan's friend went and told him what this fellow planned to do. So Dan had them come and eat breakfast and said to this fellow, "You have been here long enough now. I will show you where all of my stills are." which is what the man had been waiting for. They say a big smile came upon this man's face at this time. As they left the house that morning, Dan took Rosa aside and said one one of us will be back! About a week later Rosa was going to wash Dan's overcoat, and found a bullet hole in the pocket. The man from Chicago was never seen again.
    Dan was a farmer, oil field worker, and bootlegger. Rosa said he was a very strong man, once stealing a good size calf from a man who refused to pay a debt and running with the calf over his sholder most of the way from Wewoka.

    Trix tells a story of Dan at a local dance, the sort that neighbors rotated among their homes. Dan was playing fiddle and was ready to leave at some point that was too early for one of the other partygoers. They went outside to fight. The other man grabbed an ax and chopped Dan in the back. The ax stuck, Dan pulled it out and then chopped the man's legs off.

    Dan and Rosa's first house at Letha was a 12x24 ft. red wooden house. Their previous place was just off the road to Wewoka Lake.

    Dan was wealthy during the bootleg years. Prince remembers as a small boy playing in a tunk full of money. Prince remembers that Dan had more than 20 stills in the Kiamishi Mountains and at least that number of drivers.

    A partner of Dan was Red McBride.

    Dan built a large wooden house that burned. He built a new stone home in the same location and also put up a stone barn.

    After Dan's health went, the family was broke. His wife, Rosa kept up the liquor sales for a time, but couldn't manage it for long. She remarried Bill Clifton, who had managed the business for Dan after Dan was sick. Bill couldn't manage it either and also drank quite a lot, so they were divorced.

    Dan was drinking "Jake" whiskey with a man named Rice, another named R.T. Harbor, Woody Woodward, and Sheriff Sims. Rice, Harbor, and Sims got what was called Jake Leg from a poison in the whiskey, Sims was called Jake Sims thereafter.

    Dan built a large brick mansion next to the stone house just before his health broke. A local teacher, Ethyl Miller, rented a room in the house during that time. School board did not object to a teacher renting from a bootlegger because board supt. was one of Dan's whiskey customers. Ethyl now lives on her family's place near Antlers, OK near a small town named Finley. She had no furniture so Dan bought her $10,000 worth of furniture, including a piano which Ethyl's sister Mabel used to teach Edna.

    Edna says Dan died of pellagra, (from eating too much corn?). Rosa said consumption.

    The last 3 or 4 years of his life he had stomach ulcers and was only able to eat raw oysters. These were imported from New Orleans. It was due to his health that Dan surrrendered to the law and was sent to Leavenworth. It is said that he believed he would get better health care there than in Seminole.

    Many important politicians, including the Governor, were frequent guests and drinking buddies with Dan, so it is entirely possible that Dan did have, as the family story has it, the option of going to jail or not.

    It is said that Dan and John pulled a few jobs with Pretty Boy Floyd. They were going to rob one of the big county dances and the old man at the door told Dan that he knew who he was and he had better go home. Sos they left empty handed that night.

    It is also said that Al Capone, sent a man down to take over Dan's bootlegging business. The man made friends with Dan's right had man to whom he told his plans. So Dan's friend went and told him what this fellow planned to do. So Dan had them come and eat breakfast and said to this fellow, "You have been here long enough now. I will show you where all of my stills are." which is what the man had been waiting for. They say a big smile came upon this man's face at this time. As they left the house that morning, Dan took Rosa aside and said one one of us will be back! About a week later Rosa was going to wash Dan's overcoat, and found a bullet hole in the pocket. The man from Chicago was never seen again.

    Dan married Rosa Bell Chatagnier on 25 Jan 1916 in Houston, Harris, Texas. Rosa was born on 12 Mar 1901 in Abbyville, Louisiana; died on 13 Oct 1961 in Seminole, Oklahoma, USA. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 9.  Rosa Bell Chatagnier was born on 12 Mar 1901 in Abbyville, Louisiana; died on 13 Oct 1961 in Seminole, Oklahoma, USA.

    Notes:

    Rosa was a child bride, met her husband Dan while he was staying in her mother's rooming house in Beaumont, (maybe Galveston) Texas. She married him and was then sent to Oklahoma alone, at the age of 14, on a train by her new husbnad, Dan Reynolds. She spoke only French and was taken care of for a time by her new sister-in-law, Bertha Reynolds, wife of Hugh Reynolds. While she was pregnant with Edna in a railroad camp near Mexia, Texas, she had to carry her son Prince on horseback to the doctor to have his thumb sewn back on after Prince's older brother, Andy, had, on a dare from Prince, chopped it mostly off with a hatchet. After her husband died, she was informed by the town's wealthiest man, "Doc" Grisso, that her husband had borrowed $10,000 from him and had not repaid it. Grisso had nothing in writing, but Rosa began paying it back from whatever she could make by selling milk and eggs. She was living in a two story 22 room rock house at Letha, Oklahoma on 40 acres of land. She sold 160 acres at Butner and the Broadway Garage and used all but $50 of the rent on the Corner Bar to pay off the debt over a number of years. Both the brick and stone houses burned shortly after Dan's death, and she and her five children lived in the 2 car brick garage for a couple of years until they could purchase a small frame house and have it moved onto the property. Gradually they patched together several shotgun shacks to make a larger home. During the last years she made her living from several rental "shotgun" houses she had moved onto another part of her land up nearer the highway. She married twice more, had one more child, Oscar Clifton, and died of heart failure brought on by diabetes. She had a near-death-experience after a severe stroke and for nearly a week experienced while awake an overlay of heaven-like meadows simultaneously with her perceptions of the hospital. She saw green rolling lawns with small groups of quite people strolling and conversing. She was unable to speak to them as they always seemed to be just a little too far away. She told Dan Gourley that her repeated phrase "I can't" during the stroke phase of was in reference both to her trouble trying to talk to the people and finding it impossible to describe what she was seeing to the people in the hospital. She described the whole experience as beautiful but frustrating. Rosa's last child, Oscar Clifton, suffered permanent and major brain damage at 7 years of age from a near drowning incident in a small pool behind their home. He currently lives in a state institution in Oklahoma. The pool was then filled with sand and was sued by later kids as a play area.

    Children:
    1. Andrew Jackson Reynolds was born on 17 Aug 1917 in Seminole, Oklahoma, USA; died on 27 Oct 1976 in Wichita Falls, Texas.
    2. Living Reynolds
    3. Living Reynolds
    4. Leroy Reynolds was born on 13 Dec 1924 in Seminole, Oklahoma, USA; died on 14 Feb 1989 in Tustin, California; was buried in Military Cemetery, Riverside, California.
    5. 4. Living Reynolds


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