Reynolds Family Circle
The Descendants of William Reynolds and Jane Milliken who married in Green County, Tennessee on August 23, 1790.
Notes
Matches 1,551 to 1,600 of 1,689
# | Notes | Linked to |
---|---|---|
1551 | Texas Department of State Health Services. Texas Divorce Index, 1968-2011. Texas, USA: Texas Department of State Health Services. | Source (S18)
|
1552 | Texas Department of State Health Services. Texas Death Certificates, 1903–1982. iArchives, Orem, Utah. | Source (S175)
|
1553 | Texas Health Presbyterian Hospital | Rankin, Fred Wayne (I10565)
|
1554 | The Carnegie Herald, May 14, 1975 Swarts Rites On Saturday Funeral services for Russell E. Swarts, Sr., 67, retired Carnegie fire chief, were held at 2:30 p.m. Saturday, may 10, in the First Christian church with Rev. Ward Botts of Enid, former pastor, officiating. Rev. Bob Williams, pastor of the Church of the Nazarene, assisted. Swarts died Thursday, May 8, in the Carnegie Municipal Hospital. He was born March 5, 1908 in Oklahoma, and moved to Carnegie with his parents in 1909. He joined the Carnegie Fire Department in 1943, and served as fire chief from 1953 to 1963. He was a retired mechanic and a member of the First Christian church. Survivors include his wife, Ora of the home; two sons, Russell, Jr. of Oklahoma City and Bob of San Antonio; his mother, Mrs. Fred Swarts of Carnegie; two sisters, Goldia Hibbard and Margaret English of Anadarko; and five grandchildren, Suzanne, mark and Libby Swarts of Oklahoma, Robert and Scott Swarts of San Antonio. | Swarts, Russell Edwin (I10237)
|
1555 | The death certificate of Benjamin Franklin Reynold states that his mother's name was Jane Lampkins born in North Carolina. Other family records state that her name was Jane L. Ray, or Jane Barrett. At this point i'm not sure as to what her correct maiden name was. Perhaps it was Lampkins, and she married a Ray before she married John Reynolds? Perhaps someone has linked the incorrect Jane with John Reynolds? Perhaps the death certificate was wrong? Can't be sure, but I will continue to investigate this.-- RL Obit: Provided to me by Kristen plaino4@aol.com REYNOLDS- Mrs. Jane L.,nee Ray Was born February 6, 1816 in Bedford County Tenn., and departed this life December 22, 1895 at her son's home at Scotland Ark. This aged mother had been a faithful member of the M.E. Church, South, for more than sixty years, and she has now gone to reap her reward. She was the mother of eleven children eight of whom preceed her to the world beyond; three sons are still battling for the Lord, one in Arkansas and two in Texas. may the Lord bless them with all the relatives and friends and may they imitate their mother's godly example till they meet her in the skies. Sister Reynolds was a very patient sufferer being five years an invalid from paralysis, she suffered very much, yet without murmuring. Praise the Lord for a Christian mother. C.H. Nelson Jane REYNOLDS Household Female Other Information: Birth Year <1814> Birthplace TN Age 66 Occupation Marital Status W | Lampkins, Jane Ray (I3986)
|
1556 | The following was taken from a Maryland newspaper - "Two Killed in Murder-Suicide" A Guilford man shot his wife and then committed suicide last Thursday, within a week of his release from jail. Riley Lee Harris, who had been ordered by Judge Macgill to make support payments to his estranged wife, Pauline, came to her home on Guilford Road Thursday morning and became involved in a quarrel interrupted only when she left to take their older children to school, police report. Harris left in the afternoon and then returned about 6:45 carrying a 32 caliber automatic with which he first shot his wife in the chest, killing her instantly, and then turned it on himself. Mary Hickman, who had been living with Mrs. Harris to care for the children while their mother worked, called police. Both victims were pronounced dead at the scene by Dr. Thomas Herbert. The couple's four children, ranging in age from nine to about eighteen months, are being cared for by an aunt, Mrs. ?? (undecipherable) Dyanmore.( Pauline born 1934 Hancock Co. Tn. Died Sept 27 1961 MD. Pauline is buried next to her brother on Walden's Ridge, it is believed Riley is buried in Gollihon Cem. | Moore, Pauline (I8895)
|
1557 | The following was written by Hosea's daughter, Melba Harding Black Cross in 1987 Hosea Black 1878-1942 Youngest Child of Silas Taylor & Mary Ann Reynolds Born in Jackson County, Section area. Not sure when he came to Lawrence County. He married Martha Jane Latham at Landersville Methodist Church in 1906. He was not listed in the household of Silas T. Black in the 1900 Lawrence County census. I have a brass disc that he kept n his key chain. He told me that he used it at the iron ore mine near Russellville, Alabama when he worked there as a “checker” before he married. He was a good father, an ideal one to me, a Christian in all his ways, a steward and a leader in the Methodist Church. He was a good citizen, a good neighbor, a good provider for his family, a good farmer, kind and just with his hands and tenants. About 1909 he moved from the farm near his father’s farm, about two miles west of Landersville to another farm he bought near his wife’s family about a mile north of Landersville, living on it till he departed this life in 1942. I am most grateful for my heritage, growing up in a small close-knit farming village surrounded by a loving family and caring neighbors, many of tem connected to the Latham’s by marriage. My Black “Kin” were in Lawrence County but not on adjoining farms as were the Lathams. The inscription we worded for our parents grave stone epitomized our feelings for them. Quote: “They leave memories forever treasured, not a single regret.” They were praiseworthy, they were progressive, neither had the opportunity to attend high school, nevertheless they were well-read. They even read our college text. Mama was reserved, lady-like, kind, friendly. Daddy was out going, jolly, a steadfast friend to many. He told me of younger days when he enjoyed dancing, singing, parties, marbles and “poling down the Tennessee River”. I remember his job in singing bass around the organ with all of us and in the big porch rockers with me. When his brother Thame and his family visited, I recall all of us singing all kinds of songs. Their visits were the highlight of the summer. He was a great hunter, a good checker player, a spinner of yarns. He loved to travel, one of the high points of life was traveling to New Mexico to visit his brother Tham’s family. He often visited his sister Nora in Jackson County at Langston. I recall the visit we made to his brother Orvil’s in Texas. I regret that I do not remember his other brother, Mark. His half brothers and sisters lived in Lawrence County. He visited them often | Black, Hosea (I595)
|
1558 | The following was written by Martha Jane’s daughter, Melba Harding Black Cross in 1987 Martha Jane Latham Black Wife of Hosea 1888-1951 We think the Lathams came from Lanchashire England, Great, great grandfather owned property on Peach Tree Street in Atlanta, Georgia. They were in Landersville, Alabama by 1900 in North Alabama earlier. Both Grandfathers were Confederate Soldiers. Martha was oldest of six daughters, younger than two brothers, older than one. She was of farming heritage. She was a Christian mother, an ideal mother. Her interest were first in being a wife and mother and homemaking. When something new and better came along, she was first in the community to have it for our house. Church activities (Methodist) organist, choir, community involvement, needlework, embroider, tatting, knitting, crochet. I have a lovely drawn-thread handkerchief that she made for her trousseau. Other linens, etc. designing and sewing clothing, reading and entertaining. Recently her great granddaughter, Rebecca Hill, carried it for something old in her wedding. | Latham, Martha Jane (I4013)
|
1559 | The grave stone has her name as Iva May, marriage application has name as May. ( information received from alicecash@itlnet.net) | Reynolds, Iva Mae (I6098)
|
1560 | The News Times, Newport, OR March 2, 2007. Sharon Sue Slatten, 70, of Toledo died Feb. 17 2007. She was born in 1937 in Vernon, Texas to Faye and Roy Larimore. When her stepfather, Ben Holliday, was stationed in the United Kingdom, she attended London Central High School in Bushy Park. She met and married a U.S. Air Force sergeant stationed at RAF Station Greenham Common on June 18, 1955. Sue loved to settle in with a good book, watch a great football game, or create something special in her painting room. She would scour antique shops looking for just the right object to decorate. An excellent cook, one of her favorite times of the year was Thanksgiving when the family would gather for the big meal. For many years, she worked in the delivery room at Mercy San Juan and the Roseville Community Hospital; she loved working with newborn babies. Sue and Bob spent the spring and summer traveling up and down the Pacific Coast, and into Arizona, New Mexico and Utah, with their German Shepherd, "Sarge," along for the ride. During her lifetime, Sue was a great many things, from wife and homemaker to parent, college student, registered nurse, a small business owner, traveler, and artist. Her family and friends will remember her not only for all that she did and all that she was, but for all that she gave, beginning and ending with simple, unconditional love. Sue was preceded in death by her mother and birth father. She is survived by her husband of more than 51 years, Robert Slatten; daughter Jeri Moser; sons, Robert Slatten III and David Slatten; sisters Norma Cormier and Bennie Bledsoe; five granddaughters, Raquel Ferguson, Brigitte Ferguson, Ashley Moser, Mariah Moser, and Betsy Slatten; and a great-grandson, Jacob Bell. Her family expressed their deep gratitude for all those associated in her cancer treatment who greatly increased her quality of life. Remembrances may be made in Sue's name to the Samaritan Regional Cancer Center, P.O. Box 1068, Corvallis, OR, 97330; Samaritan Pacific Hospice, P.O. Box 945, Newport, OR, 97365; or the Outpatient Treatment Center, PCHD Foundation, 930 SW Abbey St., Newport, OR, 97365.. ***************************************** Sharon Sue (Larimore) Slatten (56) From her husband: Sharon Sue Slatten, of Toledo, Oregon, left us on 2/17/07. Born in Vernon, Texas in 1937, the daughter of the late Faye and Roy Larimore. . When her stepfather, Ben Holliday, was stationed in the UK, she attended London Central High School in Bushy Park she met and then married a US Air Force sergeant stationed at RAF Station Greenham Common on June 18, 1955. She is survived by her husband of 51+ years, Robert Slatten, and three children, daughter Jeri Moser, and sons, Robert Slatten and David Slatten, five granddaughters, Raquel, Brigitte, Ashley, Mariah, and Betsy, and a great-grandson, Jacob. She is also survived by her sisters, Norma Cormier and Bennie Bledsoe.. A wonderful wife and mother, Sue loved to settle in with a good book, watch a great football game, or create something special in her painting room. She would scour antique shops looking for just the right object to decorate. An excellent cook, one of her favorite times of the year was Thanksgiving when the family would gather for the big meal. For many years, she worked in the delivery room at Mercy San Juan and the Roseville Community Hospital; she loved working with newborn babies. Sue and Bob spent the spring and summer traveling up and down the Pacific Coast, and into Arizona, New Mexico and Utah, with their German Shephard, Sarge, along for the ride. . During her lifetime, Sue Slatten was a great many things, from wife and homemaker to parent, college student to Registered Nurse, a small business owner, traveler, and artist. Now that she has left us, her family and friends remember her, not only for all that she did, and all that she was, but for all that she gave us, beginning and ending with simple, unconditional love.. Remembrances may be made in her name to the Samaritan Regional Cancer Center, P.O. Box 1068, Corvallis, OR, 97330; Samaritan Pacific Hospice, P.O. Box 945, Newport, OR, 97365; or the Outpatient Treatment Center, PCHD Foundation, 930 SW Abbey St., Newport, OR, 97365. All those associated in her cancer treatment greatly increased her quality of life and to whom we will be forever grateful. . | Larimore, Sharon Sue (I9769)
|
1561 | The Old Homeplace The farm and old homeplace was located on Fishing Ford Road, Petersburg (Blakeville), Lincoln County, TN. Granddaughter Pauline "Polly" Moore, daughter of Paul and Sadie Massey Moore, remembers it from her visits as a child. She remembers they would catch a bus in Shelbyville and it dropped them off Howell, TN. From there and they would walk on the road and through fields, climbing fences and everything else for several miles to get and would come in the back way to the farm to visit with the grandparents. Paul, her father, would leave her there for two or three weeks in the summer. Polly remembers a peddler would come every Thursday and they walked a mile to meet him at the road. (Actually it was only about 1/3 mile from the house to the road). They traded eggs for meal, flour and sugar and would usually get a candy bar. All the vegetables came from the garden. During this time they had no electricity because the house was so far from the road and nightime came quick with kerosene lamps. They listened to the Grand Ole Opery on Saturday night with a battery radio. Her recollections of the farm were several years before their son Ross, my father, would return to live there with his family for a short time before his death. My father had electricity put in when we moved there and we had a party line telephone. Like our grandmother, our mother raised chickens for meat and eggs. Our grandmother raised turkeys but I do not remember mother having any. We milked cows and daddy would take it to the road for the Borden milk truck to pick up each day. In the summer he had to put the cans in the creek to keep the milk from ruining. The milk money was one of our prime sources of income for the farm. Mother would churn the milk to make our butter. As during Polly's time, the creek was one of our main sources of entertainment in the summer when we had water. I also remembering swinging across a gulley on grapevines. There was a big Beech tree on the hill in front of the garden with limbs coming down. We had a saddle on one of the limbs and the other one we tied twine on to make our stagecoach. I also remember daddy building my brother a box hockey game that was a lot of fun. He carved our hockey sticks out of wood. We didn't have much but we had a lot of fun and had a lot of love. Polly continues: "There were grapevines all across the front porch, five peach trees in the front yard, and several apple and pear trees in the back yard. We tried to help out as much as we could during the three week visit. Mama had a collie dog named Brownie. Polly could hit Harold and if he hit her back the dog would take up for Polly and jump on Harold. She said it was the only time she could get away with anything." . Our family left Old Hickory and moved to Petersburg where my father bought the place from his mother. He served in World War II and because of his age and the situation he was in overseas he developed heart problems. DuPont told him he could no longer remain an employee because the work was too strenuous for him. This was about 1950 and I remember some of the frut trees but not all of them and I do not remember the grape vines being there when we lived there. Pauline and Harold called our grandmother, Mary Barthenia Raney, Mama but my brother Tommy and I always called her Mama Moore. Others called her Miss Sennie or Aunt Sennie.. Mama Moore planted a white baby's breath Spirea on the upper left side of the front yard and I still have a piece of it with me. Every where I have moved I have taken a cutting with me. There were several large trees in the front yard and the one on the right front corner facing the house where we had a white wooden swing that we sat in. An the left side of the entrance gate was another large tree that we would climb and play in. I remember mama, daddy and I were sitting on the front porch one day with my new baby pet chick. Tommy and one of his friends were up in the tree and he called me to come help him with something. I looked up to see what he wanted me to do and stepped back. Unfortunately my baby chick followed me and I stepped on it. That was a very sad day for me. . The old house was log with weathered boards on the outside and a tin roof. The entrance or breezeway was a hallway that took you out the back door. The kitchen had a pot bellied stove and was on the right of the entrance. The living room with a fireplace was on the left. In the winter we mainly burned coal but some wood as well. One winter Tom was chopping wood and the ax slipped and cut through his shoe into his toes. It was so cold he didn't feel the pain until after he came into the house. Directly on the right when you came in the front door was a steep set of stairs that took you upstairs to a small room. There was a larger bedroom on the right that was never used for anything but storage as it was not in good shape. The main bedroom was on the left and this is where everyone slept when the weather was bearable. If it was too cold we would sleep in the living room with the fireplace. We did not have any closets but there was a cubby hole bult into the back wall of the beedroom for quilts. . Tom atteded Petersburg Elementary school for five years and I attended only one year. I remember the swing was moved to the front porch which ran across the complete front of the house and mother and daddy would be sitting there waiting for us to walk home from the bus in the afternoons. This would usually be a good time for daddy to rest from all his farm chores.. When Mama Moore moved "to town" she left her old dog Brownie and we had a younger dog named Skippy. One night we heard a noise on our back porch and the next morning I discovered it was Brownie trying to get up the steps. He was very old and he died that night. Skippy was my companion from that time on. Many times I would walk with Tommy to meet the school bus before I was was ole enough to go to school and Skippy always went with us. One day on my way back home, it was probably abouta third of a mile but seemed much longer to a young child, a snake crossed in front of us and Skippy killed it. There was a rock wall on the other side of the creek that ran through the property and I would cross it rather than go the longer way through the gate. Skippy would get ahead of me and I would call his name and he would turn around and wait for me. When daddy died we had to give Skippy up because he would not have been happy in the city. They guy came to get him and Skippy knew something was up and would not let anyone near him. Mama told me to get him so I got him in the old smoke house so the guy could take him. Our grandfather was killed before I was born so I never knew him. On July 1, 1940, William Doak Moore was in a car wreck while riding home with another man. They had been in Fayetteville and had been drinking according to Veral and Wilson Moore who were cousins of my father and lived across the road from our grandparents. They hit a milk truck in a head-on collision and he spent 11 days in the hospital before he died. Mama Moore continued living there until about 1950 and my father helped her financially until he had to leave DuPont because of his health. Mama Moore then moved into an apartment in Petersburg diagonally across the street from Petersburg Elementary School.. When our spring ran dry daddy would load up an empty metal milk jug in the trunk of the car and we would go to Mama Moore's to pump water from her well. The water had to be carried up a hill and was not close to the house. It made wash day really hard. Mother used a wringer washing machine and heated the water to wash the clothes. There was a large metal tub for rinsing the clothes. They were run back through the wringer to get the rinse water out and then hung outside on the clothesline to dry. I remember mother telling me about going to the farm while daddy was in the Army and she would help our grandmother. I have pictures where they were boiling the clothes in a big black kettle over fire and lift them up with a big stick. I am so glad mother had a nice wringer washing machine and we didn't have to wash our clothes that way. We also had a cellar underneath the house that served as a storage place for all our canned goods from our garden, potatoes and whatever else need a cool place to keep them. It had a door on it so it kept things from freezing in the winter. The bathroom was on the outside but had blown down by the time we moved there. We used what was referred to as a "slop jar" in the house and had to be taken out every morning. During the day you just found a nice place to hide. If the weather was nice we would take a bath in the creek. Otherwise it was in a wash pan. On Sunday we crowded around the pot bellied stove in winter to wash before church. I have some of the best memories of my life while we lived there. I went everywhere on the farm with daddy until I started the first grade. He was never supposed to be alone because of his heart problems. About February 5, 1955 daddy was out working on a fence row and Oscar Edmiston helping him. I remember an ambulance coming and getting him and taking him to the hospital. He had a heart attack that day in the field. We stayed some with Mama Moore and attended school when mama was at the hospital. One of the worst days of my life was February 15, 1955 when my brother and I were called inside from playing and mama told us our daddy had died. That August our Uncle Johnny came down in a truck and moved us to Nashville. . Mama Moore had two main rooms and you had to walk out her living room bedroom combination to the hallway and enter another door on the right to get to her kitchen. She heated the rooms with coal in the fireplace and had a woodburning stove in the kitchen. The house had 12 foot ceilings and wallpaper with flowers. It seemed a lot larger when I was a child than it was as I grew up. She had a couch that made a bed that we would sleep on when we stayed with her as well as two rocking chairs in front of the fireplace. She didn't drive but she would walk to "town" which was not far from her house, Polly says it was about two blocks, to buy her groceries, attend church and shop. I also remember a cellar, what we would call a basement now, and it was the first time I had ever seen one that was concrete. I never saw any canned goods stored there but when it rained it looked like a swimming pool and my brother and I would play there. Also at the back of the yard was the requisite out house. I never remember any paper being there but there was always an old Sears and Roebuck catalog. Buddy, Polly's husband and Polly remember a cistern where they caught rain water but I do not remember it. The house downstairs was divided, by the hall down the middle, into two apartments. The entire upper floor was a separate apartment for the owner to stay in when she visited. Unfortuantely I can't remember the lady's name that lived across the hall or the name of the lady who owned the house. . About a block down from where she lived was the only brother that I remember, Johnny and his wife, Myrtle, Raney. She and her sister Mattie had a double wedding and Aunt Mattie lived in the Friendship Community. She married Sam Pigg.. After our mother died my brother insisted we sell the farm which broke my heart. He never liked it and wanted the money. After a few years Ben Massey sold it and Mike Brown bought it. Mike still owns the 75 acres and the old log house that was over 100 years old was torn down. The barn eventually fell down and Mike bales hay and keeps cattle there. When you enter the drive, which is part of the old road bed going to Howell, the farm is on the left side and Center Point Cemetery is on the right side. Polly said this is where they used to walk and meet the peddler. The cemetery is on the property where an old school was many years ago. When we moved from there Pappy Moore was the only person buried there. In 955 Uncle Henry was the second person buried there. In 1990 Mama Moore died in Huntsville Hospital. She was buried there beside Pappy and Mildred, the youngest child, is also buried there. It was originally only family there but now neighbors have started being buried there.. | Raney, Mary Barthenia (Sennie) (I8789)
|
1562 | The oldest child of James Fielding and Sarah Ellen Reynolds Nelson. His father died when he was just a teenager and he worked in the lumber mills in AR and eventually went to Boulder City, NV to work for Six Companies [the builders of Hoover Dam] as a mechanic and taught himself to become a machinist. He also hauled a lot of rock up and down the mountains as did his brothers who came to work with him. He was given the nickname "Stoney" for an auto crash (I was told) he had one time. He married 3 times and had four children. First marriage was to Della Billingley, Second to Bessie Inez Rawls [they had a daughter, Judith Ann]. Third marriage to Helen Ware. He never returned to Arkansas. | Nelson, Charles Erastus (I9931)
|
1563 | THE PARIS NEWS, Aug. 15, 2011, page 3. Mary Signor Ramsey Holloway, 87, of Detroit, passed away Saturday Aug. 13, 2011, at her residence. Funeral services were scheduled for 10:30 a.m. Monday, Aug. 15, in the First Christian Church in Detroit. Burial was to follow in the Detroit Cemetery under the direction of Fry & Gibbs Funeral Home. | Ramsey, Mary Signor (I10127)
|
1564 | The State of Texas, to-wit: Eastland County, ss TO ALL WHO SHALL SEE THESE PRESENTS--GREETING: Know Ye, That any person legally authorized to celebrate the RITES OF MATRIMONY, is hereby licensed to join in Marriage, as Husband and Wife B. F. Reynolds and Miss Flora V. Sparks and for so doing this shall be his sufficient authority IN TESTIMONY WHEREOF, I, Ike P Schunick (?) Clerk of the District Court, hereunto subscribe my name, and affix the Seal of said Court, this 8th day of July, 1879 THE STATE OF TEXAS, to-wit: EASTLAND COUNTY,ss. This certifies, that I joined in Marriage, as Husband and Wife B. F. Reynolds and Miss Flora V. Sparks on the 16 day of July 1879 H.P. Mann Pastor Recorded this 16 day of August 1897 ****** Flora's last name is listed as Sparks on this Marriage License. That is incorrect. Her maiden name was Speck. At the time of Benjamin's death he was a Storekeeper. His grandaughter Mary Ruth Reynolds remebers him putting her inside of the candy counter where she would crawl around and pick out treats. She was only 1 yr old when he died. mothers name is listed as Jane lampkins not Jane Ray on death cert. 6. Benjn. F. REYNOLDS - 1880 United States Census / Texas Self Gender: Male Birth: <1849> TN 7. Flora V. REYNOLDS - 1880 United States Census / Texas Wife Gender: Female Birth: <1862> TN 1880 Census for Eastland Co. TX "your grandfather was a small man about the size of your father. He had sandy red hair and a red mustache. He was real kind and good, we kids just loved him. He had a small grocery store on the corner of the lot where they lived. We would go over and he would give us candy, etc. The little old house where they lived is still standing but looks like it is about ready to crumble. I asked Vic yesterday if he was sick very long befor eh died. He said No, just a week or so. he had pneumonia and of course there wasn't any medications much for it at that time." (Letter from Anna Mae and Bill from Granbury TX July 1983 to Mary Ruth Reynolds) | Reynolds, Benjamin Franklin (I5841)
|
1565 | There is no headstone, but historians for the cemetery believe he is buried there. | Floyd, David Allen (I2453)
|
1566 | They were married near Konawa | Family (F3439)
|
1567 | Thirteenth Census of the United States, 1910 (NARA microfilm publication T624, 1,178 rolls). Records of the Bureau of the Census, Record Group 29. National Archives, Washington, D.C. For details on the contents of the film numbers, visit the following NARA web page: NARA. | Source (S770)
|
1568 | Thirteenth Census of the United States, 1910 (NARA microfilm publication T624, 1,178 rolls). Records of the Bureau of the Census, Record Group 29. National Archives, Washington, D.C. For details on the contents of the film numbers, visit the following NARA web page: NARA. | Source (S771)
|
1569 | This information comes from 1 or more individual Ancestry Family Tree files. This source citation points you to a current version of those files. Note: The owners of these tree files may have removed or changed information since this source citation was created. | Source (S334)
|
1570 | This is the touching poem written by Cora's dear friend and neighbor, Mrs. Alfrey, in memory of her friend right after she died. This is just as she wrote it:. To the Mother, Sisters, Daughters of Cora Spruill, IN MEMORY OF CORA SPRUILL, To Her Loveing Family. ~GONE FISHING~. I went to see my nabour. Couldn't find her around. The place was very lonely and the dogie was in teers. Then her mother said (she's gone fishing). I walked along the Alley and she was diging worms. I asked what she doing and this is what I learned. (I'm going fishing). When Gabriel blows his horn, and I don't see her around, I'll just look up in the sky and say (my nabour's gone fishing). Sincerely your Nabour Alfrey. This poem was a lovely tribute to Cora from her friend who was inspired by Cora's love of fishing. The original is in Cora's bible. It was posted to the Eitel-Franks family Website, by her granddaughter S. Shaw, on March 21, 2009. Cora's family placed the words "GONE FISHIN'" on her tombstone when her young granddaughter, Susan, stood in her yard after she had died and said, "She's gone fishing.". | Franks, Cora Lee (I9742)
|
1571 | This letter is five pages written in pencil on small lined tablet paper. Sent back home to his wife, Cora and children left behind in Oklahoma, from Clarence Eitel in Washington state. A sign of the times during the Great Depression. . Kelso, Sept 6 1934 Wash.. Dear Wife and Children.. Will drop you a few lines this morning everybody is o.k. and hope you all the same. We landed here Saturday about 10 o'clock had good luck on the road didn't have any trouble at all only had one flat. These people seem to be awful fine. Folks we only had about $4.50 when we got here Mr Mcnabb says we will eat don't worry so that is the main part until we get a job. He said we could get a job before long and that they don't pay less than 03.60 a day at any work. I like here fine so far. Mc says you can buy spuds for 50 ct per hundred lb cabbage 50 ct apples 25 pears 25 just 10 miles from here. We went to town yesterday. Those large white grapes that you pay 25 ct a pound there for is 2 lbs for 15 ct here. lettuce 3 large heads 10 ct apples in the store as good as any you can buy in Carnegie for 40 ct tomatoes is about the same 5 ct meat 20 to 30 everything else is about 1/3 cheaper in the store. The best flour that can be bought here is $1.65 so you see anyone can live here cheaper than there.. Cora you all be careful get by as cheap as you can so you all can get out here as soon as possible don't worry about getting here because if nothing hapens we will get you all here before the last of the year that seems a long time off but if we go over across the mt and pick apples it wont be so d _ _ n long. Mcnabb says the girls can get a job at $3.50 a day for 8 hours easer than we can.. McNabb his wife 14 yr old boy made $145.00 in 4 weeks last fall afore there living so you see we can live out here as well as anywhere it doesnt cost anything to send the kids to school no even clothes if you are not able to buy them the state will buy them. Cora tell Omega and Dick not to make anyother arrangement but to come out here for they cant help but like here and can make money easyer than there and if they dont like be no trouble to get away but I know they will like tell Dick and Doyle it is only 15 miles to where we can see all the Bear deer elk you want to and fish right here at us. Just worlds of them.. Well I will close for this time Cora it is all a joke about it being cold here McNabb told me that he didnt even drain his car all last winter didnt even freeze any ice here at all altho he said it would be disagrable in winter on acount of mist but not to cold at that will tell you more when I see you. tell the kids hello and kiss them for me tell W.L. not to forget dady. Mr McNabb just brought me a glass of wine and it sure is fine. Good by with love.. Dady | Eitel, Willam Clarence (I9581)
|
1572 | This story was added to the profile page of Ruby Ellen Fodge on March 20, 2010 by her Great Niece Carrie Pool. "Aunt Ruby was my Grandpa Fodge's sister. I remember that we drove to Southern California to visit her when she was really ill and near her death (I was born in 1960). It was so very very hot, I believe it was the summer of 1963. My Grandpa and Grandma Fodge (William Newton Fodge) drove us from Oregon to see his sister before she passed. I recall that she would lay in her bed with her window pulled up to open it so a little black boy from the neighborhood could come and sing songs to her from under her window. He came every Sunday after church and would sit underneath her bedroom window and would sing the songs he had sung in church that day. I played with him in the yard and tried to "wash" all the black from him. He was so patient and let me hose him down. I was only 3 and remember it fairly well.". | Fodge, Ruby Ellen (I9736)
|
1573 | This unique collection of records was extracted from a variety of sources including family group sheets and electronic databases. Originally, the information was derived from an array of materials including pedigree charts, family history articles, querie. | Source (S245)
|
1574 | Thomas Jackson Reynolds, Sr. married Ina Lavelle Daniel abt. 1916 (she's buried in Mt. Home Baptist Church Cemetery in Montgomery Co., AR); father of Jessie Floyd Reynolds, Sr. & Thomas Jackson Reynolds, Jr.; married Josephine Eveline Carter on 18 Jun 1924; father of Francis Bernice (Reynolds) Tigue, Effie Stella (Reynolds) Allen Hopper VanVleet, Claudia Odell (Reynolds) Bowling, Mattie Belle (Reynolds) Aasland Bowling, Jicie Mae (Reynolds) Bridges Weatherford & Amos Jefferson Reynolds, | Reynolds, Thomas Jackson (I10322)
|
1575 | Titus | Brown, Andrew Gustavous (I903)
|
1576 | Titus | Brown, Andrew Gustavous (I903)
|
1577 | Titus | Brown, Charlcie (I938)
|
1578 | Titus | Brown, Charlcie (I938)
|
1579 | Titus | Brown, Charlie M. (I940)
|
1580 | Titus | Brown, Jess G. (I979)
|
1581 | Titus | Brown, William Oliver (I1014)
|
1582 | Titus | Brown, William Oliver (I1014)
|
1583 | Titus | Davis, Lecy Belle (I1852)
|
1584 | Titus | Taylor, Mary Frances (I7448)
|
1585 | Titus | Wellborn, Quillar (I8011)
|
1586 | Titus | Family (F354)
|
1587 | Titus | Family (F3051)
|
1588 | Titus County Memorial Hospital | Allen, Carolyn Sue (I206)
|
1589 | Titus County Memorial Hospital | Dawson, Sallie Loretta Pearl (I353)
|
1590 | Titus County Memorial Hospital | Brown, Albert Eligah (I928)
|
1591 | Tonda Thomas | Collins, Samuel Houston (I1512)
|
1592 | Torrance "Frazier" McEwen was sheriff of Coffee County, Tennessee in the mid 60's and he was kidnapped during this time. | McEwen, Torrance Frazier (I4511)
|
1593 | Townson Ms. Dorothy Sewell Townson, 65, of Henagar died Tuesday, Jan. 6, 2009, at her residence. Services were held Thursday, Jan. 8, from the W.T. Wilson Funeral Chapel with the Rev. Terry Wright officiating. Burial followed in the Old Sardis Cemetery with W.T. Wilson Funeral Chapel of Rainsville directing. Survivors include: sons, Charles Benjamin Sewell Jr. and Mark Alan Sewell, both of Henagar; stepsons, Charles Christepher Sewell and Terry Don Sewell, both of Henagar; sister, Shirley Turner of Sylvania and Reta White of Section; special grandchild, Nicholas "Nick" Sewell of Henagar; 16 grandchildren; and one great-grandchild. Ms. Sewell was preceded in death by her husband, Charles Benjamin Sewell Sr.; and a brother, Bug "Hoarse" Townson. | Townson, Dorothy Jean (I7613)
|
1594 | Trinity Memorial Park | Mason, Elmo Eugene (I9827)
|
1595 | Trinity Memorial Park | Mason, Pearl Venora (I9831)
|
1596 | Trinity Memorial Park | White, Lucretia Venora (I10294)
|
1597 | Trinity Memorial Park, Machpelah 504-1 | Phillips, John Wesley Jr (I9912)
|
1598 | Tuberculosis | Reynolds, Benjamin Cecil (I5838)
|
1599 | Twin Oaks Cemetary | Collins, Elizabeth Jane "Bess" (I9495)
|
1600 | Twin Oaks Memorial Gardens Cemetery, Thursday, 9/29/83, 11:00 a.m., Find A Grave Memorial #: 40389188 | Fodge, William Newton (I9739)
|