Reynolds Family Circle

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

Mary Barthenia (Sennie) Raney

Mary Barthenia (Sennie) Raney

Female 1882 - 1970  (88 years)

Generations:      Standard    |    Compact    |    Vertical    |    Text    |    Register    |    PDF

Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Mary Barthenia (Sennie) RaneyMary Barthenia (Sennie) Raney was born on 23 Apr 1882 in Lincoln, Tennessee, USA; died on 11 Nov 1970 in Huntsville, Madison, Alabama, USA; was buried in Nov 1970 in Howell, Lincoln County, Tennessee.

    Notes:

    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..

    Buried:
    Center Point Cemetery

    Mary married William Doak Moore on 21 Oct 1905 in Lincoln County, Tennessee, USA. William was born on 18 Aug 1877 in Petersburg, Lincoln, Tennessee, USA; died on 11 Jul 1940 in Fayetteville, Lincoln, Tennessee; was buried in Jul 1940 in Howell, Lincoln County, Tennessee. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 2. Fred Doak "Hud" Moore  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 19 Oct 1907 in Tennessee, USA; died in Nov 1975 in Old Hickory, Davidson, Tennessee, United States of America; was buried in Nov 1975 in Hermitage, Davidson, Tennessee, USA.
    2. 3. Mildred Elizabeth "Mickey" Moore  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 5 Dec 1911 in Petersburg, Lincoln, Tennessee, USA; died on 25 Aug 1997 in Huntsville, Madison, Alabama, USA; was buried in Aug 1997 in Howell, Lincoln, Tennessee, USA.
    3. 4. Paul Leonard Moore  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 31 Jul 1910 in Petersburg, Lincoln, Tennessee, USA; died on 20 Dec 1982 in Jacksonville, Duval, Florida, USA.
    4. 5. Ross Clayborne Moore  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 25 Oct 1906 in Petersburg, Lincoln, Tennessee, USA; died on 15 Feb 1955 in Fayetteville, Lincoln, Tennessee, USA; was buried on 17 Feb 1955 in Nashville, Davidson, Tennessee, USA.


Generation: 2

  1. 2.  Fred Doak "Hud" MooreFred Doak "Hud" Moore Descendancy chart to this point (1.Mary1) was born on 19 Oct 1907 in Tennessee, USA; died in Nov 1975 in Old Hickory, Davidson, Tennessee, United States of America; was buried in Nov 1975 in Hermitage, Davidson, Tennessee, USA.

    Notes:

    Son of William Doke Moore and Mary Barthenia Raney.
    Married Martha Etta Baker in 1930.

    He retired from I. E. DuPont in Old Hickory, TN. and was a member of the Old Hickory Country Club. He loved playing golf.

    They raised one daughter.


    Buried:
    Hermitage Memorial Gardens, Garden of Faith 145 B Sp 1

    Fred married Martha Etta Baker in 1930. Martha was born on 24 Jan 1911 in Shelbyville, Bedford, Tennessee, USA; died on 11 Oct 2006 in Old Hickory, Davidson, Tennessee, United States; was buried on 13 Oct 2006 in Hermitage, Davidson, Tennessee, USA. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 6. Private Moore  Descendancy chart to this point

  2. 3.  Mildred Elizabeth "Mickey" MooreMildred Elizabeth "Mickey" Moore Descendancy chart to this point (1.Mary1) was born on 5 Dec 1911 in Petersburg, Lincoln, Tennessee, USA; died on 25 Aug 1997 in Huntsville, Madison, Alabama, USA; was buried in Aug 1997 in Howell, Lincoln, Tennessee, USA.

    Notes:

    Mildren Elizabeth Moore, Aunt Mickey, was the youngest and only daughter of William Doke Moore and Mary Barthenia (Sennie) Raney Moore. She was born at the farm on Fishing Ford Road in Petersburg (Blakeville) Lincoln County, TN. . On the 1940 Census Mickey is listed as a new worker and was a stenographer in Lincoln County but I do not know what company she worked for.. Mickey later moved to Huntsville, Alabama where she resided most of her adult life. She retired secretary and insurance clerk for Interstate Life Insurance Co. She would ride the bus home to visit her mother regularly. The bus station was a short distance from her home. I always loved when she came and we would go visit. She would bring her parakeet named Tweety with her. She would let Tweety out of the cage and Tweety would fly over and sit on her glassses. It alway made me want a Parakeet as well. She never married but Veral Moore told me that she was in love with one of the Couch boys and never got over him. I do not know why they never married.. She and Wilma Moore were always very close and Wilma was living in a duplex in Fayetteville. She wanted Mickey to move to Tennessee and live in the one next to her when it came vacant. Mickey did and stayed for awhile. She decided she wanted to move back to her old neighborhood in Huntsville so Buddy and Polly Bradford moved her back.. She would drive to Nashville about once a year and stay with her brother Fred and his wife Martha. She never like to drive that far and eventually did well to drive from Huntsville to Petersburg before she stopped driving that far. I remember she had shingles and broke her foot and hurting herself as the years passed. On one visit she spent several days recuperating with her niece Polly and her husband Buddy in Dickson.. My brother Tom, his son Ross and I went to Huntsville to visit her on one of the occasions when she was in the hospital before her death. She also had diabetes. Her last illness was from a stroke that she did not recover from.. Polly was administrator to her estate and she was brought back to Tennessee and was buried in Center Point Cemetery beside her parents..

    Buried:
    Center Point Cemetery

    Died:
    Rehabilitation and Healhcare Center


  3. 4.  Paul Leonard MoorePaul Leonard Moore Descendancy chart to this point (1.Mary1) was born on 31 Jul 1910 in Petersburg, Lincoln, Tennessee, USA; died on 20 Dec 1982 in Jacksonville, Duval, Florida, USA.

    Notes:

    Paul Leonard Moore was born at the farm on Fishing Ford Road in Petersburg (Blakeville), Lincoln, TN. Paul was the third son to William Doke Moore and Mary Barthenia (Sennie) Raney Moore. . When Paul married Sadie Louise Massey they lived with her parents. They moved to Shelbyville when Polly was three years old. He worked as a butcher at a meat cutter. They had two children, Harold and Pauline. . I do not remember a lot about Uncle Paul as he divorced Aunt Sadie while I was still a baby. I do remember the family saying he and his brother Fred opened a grocery store in 8th Avenue in Nashville. Paul would catch the bus to Nashville on Mondays and returned home on Fridays. In Polly's Junior year in high school, Paul met a woman came in the store from Florida and evidently they started dating. He left his wife and two children and went to Florida with her. The store went broke and closed.. Paul and Beth moved to Jacksonville, Florida. Buddy said Paul did some preaching at a Baptist church.. I saw him on very few occasions when he and Beth would come to visit his mother in Petersburg. I remember there was a young girl that always came with them and supposedly was Beth's child although Veral Moore told me everyone always believed it was really Paul's child as well.. Pauline told me that on one of their trips to Florida they went in the furniture store where he worked he introduced her to his co-workers and they were all very surprised because they were unaware he had a previous family. The family always referred to him as the black sheep of the family mostly because he did come around his two children and never saw his grandchildren..

    Family/Spouse: Mary Elizabeth (Beth) Hamer. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Paul married Sadie Louise Massey on 11 Sep 1929 in Lincoln, Tennessee, USA. Sadie (daughter of Walter C Massey and Carrie Massey) was born on 26 Jun 1909 in Tennessee, USA; died on 31 Dec 1998 in Nashville, Davidson, Tennessee, USA; was buried on 28 Dec 1998 in Nashville, Davidson, Tennessee, USA. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 7. Harold Leonard Moore  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 4 Dec 1931 in Petersburg, Lincoln, Tennessee, USA; died on 30 Oct 1984 in Brentwood, Williamson, Tennessee, USA; was buried on 1 Nov 1984 in Nashville, Davidson, Tennessee, USA.
    2. 8. Pauline Moore  Descendancy chart to this point was born in 1934 in Hancock, Tennessee, USA; died on 27 Sep 1961 in Maryland, USA.

  4. 5.  Ross Clayborne MooreRoss Clayborne Moore Descendancy chart to this point (1.Mary1) was born on 25 Oct 1906 in Petersburg, Lincoln, Tennessee, USA; died on 15 Feb 1955 in Fayetteville, Lincoln, Tennessee, USA; was buried on 17 Feb 1955 in Nashville, Davidson, Tennessee, USA.

    Notes:

    Son of William Doak Moore and Mary Barthenia Raney.
    Ross was one of six children. Sister Mildred Elizabeth Moore and two brothers, Fred Doak Moore and Paul Leonard Moore.

    Married Nethel R Proctor on 20 May 1936 in Franklin, Kentucky.

    Worked for E I Dupont in Old Hickory, Tennessee where he met and married mother. He continued to work there until he went into the military. Daddy served until 28 Oct 1945 in the Pacific Theater. Rome-Arno, North Appennines and Po Valley. Good Cnduct Medal, Expert Rifle, EAME Service Ribbon and Three Bronze Service Stars. Because of his health resulting from serving in the military he was dismissed from DuPont because the work was too strenuous. He bought his parent's farm and moved to Petersburg, Tennessee in 1950 and farmed until his death in 1955.

    He was a member of the Friendship Church of Christ.


    Buried:
    Nashville National Cemetery Cemetery with military honors. Buried At: Section 1 Site 532. Find A Grave #93057621

    Died:
    Lincoln County Hospital

    Ross married Nethel R "Bill" Proctor on 20 May 1936 in Franklin County, Kentucky, USA. Nethel was born on 15 Dec 1909 in Jackson Co., Tennessee, USA; died on 8 Sep 1971 in Nashville, Davidson, Tennessee, USA; was buried on 10 Sep 1971 in Nashville, Davidson, Tennessee, USA. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 9. Tony Wayne Moore  Descendancy chart to this point
    2. 10. Wanda Carroll Moore  Descendancy chart to this point


Generation: 3

  1. 6.  Private MoorePrivate Moore Descendancy chart to this point (2.Fred2, 1.Mary1)

  2. 7.  Harold Leonard MooreHarold Leonard Moore Descendancy chart to this point (4.Paul2, 1.Mary1) was born on 4 Dec 1931 in Petersburg, Lincoln, Tennessee, USA; died on 30 Oct 1984 in Brentwood, Williamson, Tennessee, USA; was buried on 1 Nov 1984 in Nashville, Davidson, Tennessee, USA.

    Notes:

    Buried:
    Mt. Olivet Cemetery


  3. 8.  Pauline MoorePauline Moore Descendancy chart to this point (4.Paul2, 1.Mary1) was born in 1934 in Hancock, Tennessee, USA; died on 27 Sep 1961 in Maryland, USA.

    Notes:

    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.

    Pauline married Riley Lee Harris on 17 Apr 1951 in Hamblen, Tennessee, USA. Riley was born on 30 Aug 1931 in Tennessee, USA; died on 27 Sep 1961 in Maryland, United States. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 11. Melvin Wayne Harris  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 9 Oct 1953; died on 18 Oct 2006 in Mohawk, Greene, Tennessee, USA.
    2. 12. Homer Lee Harris  Descendancy chart to this point
    3. 13. Private  Descendancy chart to this point
    4. 14. Private  Descendancy chart to this point

  4. 9.  Tony Wayne MooreTony Wayne Moore Descendancy chart to this point (5.Ross2, 1.Mary1)

  5. 10.  Wanda Carroll MooreWanda Carroll Moore Descendancy chart to this point (5.Ross2, 1.Mary1)


Generation: 4

  1. 11.  Melvin Wayne HarrisMelvin Wayne Harris Descendancy chart to this point (8.Pauline3, 4.Paul2, 1.Mary1) was born on 9 Oct 1953; died on 18 Oct 2006 in Mohawk, Greene, Tennessee, USA.

    Notes:

    Died:
    Age at Death: 54

    Family/Spouse: Mona Lisa Kelly. Mona was born on 31 Jan 1964 in Tennessee, USA; died on 1 Apr 2007 in Seattle, King, Washington, USA. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 15. Montana Wayne Kelly  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 21 Sep 1982 in Morristown, Hamblen, Tennessee, USA; died in 1982 in Morristown, Hamblen, Tennessee, USA.

  2. 12.  Homer Lee HarrisHomer Lee Harris Descendancy chart to this point (8.Pauline3, 4.Paul2, 1.Mary1)

  3. 13.  PrivatePrivate Descendancy chart to this point (8.Pauline3, 4.Paul2, 1.Mary1)

  4. 14.  PrivatePrivate Descendancy chart to this point (8.Pauline3, 4.Paul2, 1.Mary1)


This site powered by The Next Generation of Genealogy Sitebuilding v. 13.1.2, written by Darrin Lythgoe © 2001-2024.

Maintained by Joe Reynolds.