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Reynolds Family Circle
The Descendants of William Reynolds and Jane Milliken who married in Green County, Tennessee on August 23, 1790.
Notes
Matches 1,051 to 1,100 of 1,689
# | Notes | Linked to |
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1051 | Macedonia Cemetery | Hamilton, John Alex (I3023)
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1052 | Macedonia Cemetery | Hamilton, John Alexander (I3024)
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1053 | Macedonia Cemetery | Hamilton, Lorena (I3028)
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1054 | Macedonia Cemetery | Hamilton, Infant (I3035)
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1055 | Macedonia Cemetery | Hamilton, Vader Viola (I3041)
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1056 | Macedonia Cemetery | Hamilton, Vinnie E. (I3043)
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1057 | Macedonia Cemetery | Hamilton, William Lester (I3047)
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1058 | Macedonia Cemetery | Hancock, Herman Lee (I3089)
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1059 | Macedonia Cemetery | Haynes, Infant (I3161)
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1060 | Macedonia Cemetery | Haynes, John Edward (I3166)
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1061 | Macedonia Cemetery | Haynes, Daniel Ervin (I3176)
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1062 | Macedonia Cemetery | Haynes, David Wilfur (I3178)
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1063 | Macedonia Cemetery | Haynes, Lester Hugh (I3184)
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1064 | Macedonia Cemetery | Haynes, Ester (I3193)
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1065 | Macedonia Cemetery | Haynes, Infant (I3199)
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1066 | Macedonia Cemetery | Haynes, Infant (I3200)
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1067 | Macedonia Cemetery | Haynes, Sidney Allen (I3294)
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1068 | Macedonia Cemetery | Reynolds, Lucinda Jane (I6253)
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1069 | Macedonia Cemetery | Reynolds, Sarah Elizabeth (I6687)
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1070 | Macedonia Cemetery | Stiefel, General Gartrell (I7338)
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1071 | Macedonia Cemetery | Hamilton, Infant (I8719)
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1072 | Macedonia Cemetery | Haynes, David Wilfur Jr. (I8814)
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1073 | Macedonia Cemetery | Cox, Robert Leroy Jr. (I9451)
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1074 | Macedonia Cemetery | Ireland, Lloyd Eugene (I9612)
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1075 | Macedonia Primitive Baptist Church | Boozer, Armathine (I744)
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1076 | Macedonia Primitive Baptist Church | Reynolds, Albert Warren (I5682)
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1077 | Macedonia Primitive Baptist Church Cemetery | Patterson, Velma Audrey (I5209)
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1078 | Macedonia Primitive Baptist Church Cemetery | Reynolds, Roy Elijah (I6410)
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1079 | Many years ago, possibly the 1970's, this charming remembrance was memeographed and handed out to family members at a family get-together. There is no date on this paper of when it actually took place. This is an excerpt pertaining to the above. Many thanks to Norene for taking the time to pass this wonderful information down to her family. This was written by: June Stokes, great-granddaughter of the Rev. Isaac Newton Franks.. "The following historical information was given to June Stokes, of Fort Towson, by her Aunt Norene (Davidson) Hunt. Mrs. Norene Hunt is Rev. Franks' granddaughter. June called her aunt for information concerning Ouida Roberts research on the early history of the Fort Towson First Baptist Church. She is compiling this into book form on the early history and organization of the church.. Norene Davidson Hunt resides in a nursing home in Ardmore. She is a retired teacher, who was born and raised in this county. Mrs. Hunt first taught school at Sunkist, near Boswell, then at the Sulphur State School for the Deaf when she retired. Mrs. Hunt was given this information from her mother, Abbie Nora Davidson, Rev. Isaac Franks' daughter.. Isaac and Elizabeth Franks' son Charlie married Daisy Fodge, whose mother was Granny Fodge. June Bokies Stokes remebers for years thinking Granny Fodge to be her own grandmother. After their mother's death in April of 1928, June and Joe just being seven days old, were taken to live with their grandmother, Abbie Davidson. Abbie Davidson being 55 years old knew she needed help with the twins, so while daughter Norene was away at school, Granny Fodge being "a specially good" life-long friend helped out with the rocking chair. They rocked us a million miles, Joe being Granny's favorite, they saved our lives and we made it with their love and those old rocking chairs. . Daisy Fodge was also the sister of Marvin Fodge who was the father of Frank Fodge, all of Ft. Towson. Frank Fodge now lives in Antlers, OK. Daisy and Charlie Franks had thirteen children, of which there were two sets of twins. One of the girls, from one set of twins named Nora, married a fellow by the name of Horace Eudy. (*the story of the Eudy's by Norene is posted on Horace Eudy's page and some of his descendants).. From the thirteen children born to Charlie and Daisy Franks eleven lived. Charlie Franks passed away years ago in Oklahoma City. Charlie and Daisy were laid to rest in a small cemetary in western Oklahoma where they made their home. (* Correction - Daisy is buried in Orland, California).. This story again has been passed on by Norene Davidson Hunt, who resides in a nursing home in Ardmore, Ok. She is the daughter of Abbie Franks Davidson and the granddaughter of Rev. Isaac Newton Franks. This was told to her by her mother and then passed down to her neice, June Stokes, who lives in Ft. Towson now.. This you could say is some of the earliest history of a "Circuit riding" minister who served the Ft. Towson Baptist Church in its earlier years, about 1902. (* please see Isaac Newton Franks) Told in full detail it involves the lives of a lot of old-timers in the past, history of its time and in this area in and around Ft. Towson." . | Fodge, Daisy Laura (I9727)
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1080 | Maple Grove cemetery | Brinsfield, Martha Jane (I810)
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1081 | Maple Hill Cemetery | Raney, William Samuel (I8762)
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1082 | Maple Hill Cemetery | Raney, James Floyd (I8784)
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1083 | Maria and Claes had a child, "Claes" (Nicholas) baptized in the Dutch Reformed Church, 3 November 1655. | Family (F3302)
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1084 | Marie Holloway of Groesbeck passed away Sunday, Nov. 2, 2008, in Fort Worth following a brief battle with cancer. Funeral: 1 p.m. Friday in Groesbeck Funeral Home Chapel. Interment: Faulkenberry Cemetery. Visitation: 6 to 8 p.m. Thursday at Groesbeck Funeral Home. Memorials: Contributions may be made in Marie's memory to Camp Crossfire, in care of Groesbeck Church of Christ, Box 512, Groesbeck, Texas 76642. Marie was born Nov. 18, 1930, in Thornton to T.O. and Emma Louise Rayburn Rasco. She married Walter R. Holloway on Jan. 1, 1959, and lived in Bedford until 1980. Marie and Walt moved back to Groesbeck, where she worked for Limestone County Appraisal District until her retirement in 2002. Marie was a much beloved and active member of the Church of Christ in Groesbeck. She treasured her friends at the Cynthia Ann Garden Club and enjoyed her membership and friends at Curves in Mexia. She had dear friendships with Grace King, Doris Durham, the Daily family and a host of others. Marie loved her Lord and lived her faith, sharing and caring and touching the hearts of those she met. Marie was preceded in death by her parents; her husband, Walt Holloway, in 2003; and her brothers, Bedford, Joe and Leslie Rasco. Survivors: Daughters, Brenda Holloway of Springtown, Teresa Justice of Hurst, Karla Orr and husband, Bruce, of Arlington and Frances Barnett and husband, Scott, of Flower Mound; grandchildren, Tory, Micah and Jared Stewart, Haley Crumpler, Bennett and Morgan Orr, Casey and Maurice Beeman, and Shaffer Barnett; seven great-grandchildren; sisters, Emma O'Neal and Buena Coffee; and brother, Jack Rasco of Groesbeck. Published in the Star-Telegram on 11/5/2008 | Rasco, Marie (I10128)
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1085 | Marietta Memorial Hospital | Reynolds, Rhoda Irene (I6395)
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1086 | Marriage | Family (F3418)
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1087 | Marriage at the Christian Church in Detroit, TX semiformal ceremony by H. McNair of Clarksville Presbyterian Church | Family (F3473)
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1088 | Married and divorced Albert Barnett 4 times. | Chatagnier, Evelyn (I1258)
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1089 | Married at his Mother's home by Pastor Elder C. Felts | Family (F148)
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1090 | Married at the Home of Clara's parents. | Family (F1298)
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1091 | Married at the same time as her sister Mattie to Sam Pigg. | Family (F3179)
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1092 | Married by JP Frank Madison | Family (F145)
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1093 | Married by Pastor Steven Packer, at the Prayer Tower in Pittsburg | Family (F143)
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1094 | Married by Rev. James Bell at Old Union Baptist Church | Family (F144)
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1095 | Married in Presbyterian Church | Family (F4065)
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1096 | Marshall Co. GenWeb page - They are buried at Union Cemetery at Langston, Alabama, (Kirbytown area). His grave death date is given as 1896 | Reynolds, James (I5987)
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1097 | martha haynes [mhaynes@HiWAAY.net] | Blackwell, George Washington (I667)
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1098 | martha haynes [mhaynes@HiWAAY.net] After George left about 1933 she raised 13 children on her own. | Hamilton, Martha Elizabeth (I3001)
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1099 | martha haynes [mhaynes@HiWAAY.net] had heard that some one had poisoned lenner and that is how she died. | Blackwell, Lenner (I652)
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1100 | Martha Jane was an early Oklahoma pioneer, participated in the Land Rush, built and operated one of the first hotle/boarding houses in Seminole, Oklahoma, was a major funder of the Seminole Pentecostal Church and in her youth was known as a Pentecostal "Leaper", one who would leap from aisle to aisle, playing a tambourine. People remember her sometimes running out of the old Commercial Hotel to separate her adult male children in street fights. She was less than 5 feet tall and thin. They were all large men. A Pioneer Woman, Martha Jane Brinsfield "Grandma Floyd" Martha Jane Brinsfield was born January 8, 1866, in Izzard County, Arkansas, the daughter of Simpson Franklin Brinsfield and Martha Susan (Elvira) Redding. Martha Jane may have been a quarter Choctaw or Creek from her mother, Elvira, who was said to be half Indian. Martha Jane was also a quarter Cherokee from her grandmother on the Brinsfield side, Charity Skipper, who was a full-blood Cherokee. In 1818, Charity was married to a Methodist minister, the Reverend George Washington Brinsfield; six children were born of this marriage in Tennessee. Simpson Franklin Brinsfield was one of these children who came with his father from Tennessee to Izzard County, Arkansas. Martha Jane married Andrew (or John) Reynolds, a farmer, in 1884 at Mountain Home, Izzard County, Arkansas. In early 1887, the family joined a wagon train headed for Oklahoma Indian Territory. They settled in the Econtuchka Bottoms (north of Shawnee), made dugout homes, cleared the land and planted crops. They were share-cropping, and when the crops were laid by, they moved back to Mountain Home Arkansas. In 1889 the Brinsfields and the Reynolds share-cropped on the Arkansas River Bottoms near Fort Smith. In the fall they traveled by wagon back to Oklahoma Indian Territory. This time they settled in Wewoka, the Seminole Indian Capital. In 1889, on April 22, Martha Jane and her father, Simpson, were in Guthrie for the "Land Rush." They drove their open wagon to Guthrie. The land they received was too dry to farm, and after many hardships they returned to Wewoka. Later, they went back to Arkansas, this time to Van Buren. In 1893, when her last son was only three weeks old, they loaded their wagon to return to Oklahoma Indian territory. Martha Jane's husband, Andrew, died on the trip. One version of his death is that after working through a hot day, he ate a watermelon that had been kept cold in a well, and fell dead. A different version is that he died of a local "fever". He was buried on the bank of the Arkansas River, near Fort Smith. Martha Jane, her father, and her four small children continued their journey, and with her father's help she was able to survive the trip west. They arrived back in Wewoka, made a dugout, and Martha Jane set up a tent for a boarding house. White people were moving to a predominately Indian Wewoka (the capital of the Seminole Indian Nation), and soon there was enough demand for more comfortable shelter that she was able to build a tin and wood boarding house and hotel. Martha Jane married Henry Brannan in 1897, and a son, Simpson, (Uncle Simp), was born to them in 1899. They moved to Tidmore where she again established a boarding house. Henry died and she later married a widower, Andrew Jackson Floyd (Uncle Drew). In 1907, the town of Tidmore moved to the new original townsite of Seminole. Martha Jane bought the land at Main and Oak and on it built the Seminole Hotel. It, too, was a tin and wood structure. Her husband and sons hauled the materials from Ada by dray wagons. A grandson, Andrew Jackson Reynolds, later became an Air Force Colonel, was born in the hotel on August 17, 1917. The original hotel burned in 1925. Immediately, Martha Jane began work to replace it, this time with a two-story red brick building from Main Street to the alley on Oak. Seminole became a "boom town" at about this time, and the buiness was very successful. Martha Jane named the building "The Commercial Hotel". Martha Jane's home was at 400 Highland. She was a charter member of the Pentecostal Holiness Church at the corner of what is now Walnut and Milt Phillips Avenue. Her children were Nancy Ellen, Hugh, John, and Dan Reynolds and Simpson Brannon. Nancy Ellen's husband, Ben Rich, was the first U.S. Marshall in Seminole and is pictured on the mural behind the First National Bank Building. All of Martha Jane's children preceded her in death. Seventeen grandchildren survived her. | Brinsfield, Martha Jane (I810)
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