Saturday, March 2, 2013

Death and the Civil War at the Library of Congress

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Ric Burns and Drew Gilpin Faust on stage at the Library of Congress

One of my favorite parts of working in Washington, D.C. is having access to so much history-oriented content. From events to panel discussions to exhibits, this city does love its American history.

On Wednesday, I was able to squeeze in a lunchtime panel discussion at the Library of Congress about death and the Civil War. As a bonus, it gave me a chance to check out their exhibit, “The Civil War in America.”

Filmmaker Ric Burns (the younger brother of Ken) along with the President of Harvard University, Drew Gilpin Faust discussed Burns’ recent PBS documentary “Death and the Civil War,” which was based on her book “This Republic of Suffering: Death and the American Civil War.

You can watch the extended promo below, purchase it or rent it on Amazon Prime.


During their presentation, they discussed the many ways the deaths that took place during the Civil War permanently transformed the character of American society.

My family tree includes ancestors that fought on both side of the war and it greatly affected the social, religious and economic culture that was developing in Haywood County at the time.

The previous generation had migrated their families to the area just 30 years before and the Civil War forever changed the futures of those who survived.

If you calculate the number of Civil War dead using today’s population numbers, it would be as though seven million of our fellow American citizens were to die.

It was a short discussion and I had to bolt early so I would have time to run through the Civil War exhibit there at the library.

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Entrance to "The Civil War in America" exhibit
at the Library of Congress

Photo Source

The exhibit includes many personal items from those who experienced the war, some of which have never been on public display. Of course, I was most interested in the aspects that most relate to my own genealogy research. There was so much to see and I was running so late, I had to cut my visit short. I plan on going back before it closes on June 1 so I can see it all.

You can view some of the items they have exhibited on CNN.com.

The Library of Congress is the nation's oldest federal cultural institution and serves as the research arm of Congress. It’s also the largest library in the world, with millions of books, recordings, photographs, maps and manuscripts in its collections.

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Waiting in line at Library of Congress, Thomas Jefferson Building



It’s one of the most beautiful buildings in which I have ever been in the United States and, if you’re ever in Washington, I highly recommend putting it at the top of your list (after the Newseum, of course). I didn't even mind having to wait in line to get through security.

If you can’t make it to Washington anytime soon, you can always like the Library of Congress on Facebook.

Below are a few photos I grabbed while there.

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Library of Congress, Thomas Jefferson Building

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Library of Congress, Thomas Jefferson Building

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Library of Congress, Thomas Jefferson Building

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Library of Congress, Thomas Jefferson Building

Although I was hoofing it back to work as fast as I could, all the Civil War content made it impossible not to stop at the Civil War monument in front of U.S. Capitol. “Calvary Charge” is part of the Ulysses S. Grant Memorial.

Created by sculptor Henry Merwin Shrady, it can also be seen as a monument to those who work a little too hard. Shrady spent 20 years of his life working on the memorial and, according to James Goode, died stressed and overworked, two weeks before its dedication in 1922.

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Calvary Charge in front of the U.S. Capitol

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Calvary Charge in front of the U.S. Capitol

He should have slipped out of his studio occasionally and visited the Library of Congress.

For more blog entries, visit my Blog Home Page or to check out the genealogy research about my specific family lines, go to Haywood County Line Genealogy Page.

Sunday, February 24, 2013

Sister C.A. Williams is Gone

That the was the first sentence of my third great-grandmother's obituary written by John Charles Warren Cobb and W.T. Morris.

They began with the ending. So here is a little about the beginning and some of the in-between.

Catherion Arthur Nowell Williams was born in Bertie County, NC on 6 Feb 1828 to Dempsy Nowell III and Elizabeth Rawls Nowell.


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The William Pugh House in Bertie County, NC is a great
example of the homes left behind as farmers
migrated West in the early 1800s.

Photo by Watson Brown

She moved with her parents, along with many other families in their community, from Bertie County to Haywood County, TN around 1833.

Cotton was becoming the primary crop for many southern farmers so Indians were being moved off the land west of North Carolina to make room for the growing nation.


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Plantation of the Speight family of Windsor in Bertie County, NC

Photo Source
 "As cotton began to replace tobacco, Bertie County moved from being a major tobacco producer to one of the state's leading cotton producers. Therefore the production of cotton dominated the antebellum period in the county. Slave owners, including the Pughs, Williams, Smallwoods, Outlaws, Spruills, Rascoes, and Gilliams, also began to clear and move into Tuscarora land. Between 1800 and 1840, cotton and the lack of unexausted farmland also caused more Virginians, North Carolinians, and South Carolinians to move farther west into what had been the Southwest Territory. This migration separated many Bertie County families. Loved ones, slaves as well, left Bertie County and joined the westward migration."
Smallwood, Arwin D., Bertie County: An Eastern Carolina History (Arcadia Publishing, 2002), 84.
Catherion was baptized and joined Zion Baptist Church at the age of 13 and remained a very active member there for the remainder of her life.

She married George Solomon “Sol” Williams, on 6 Feb 1844 when she was just 16 and he was 24.

Sol had also come to Haywood County from Bertie County as a young boy when his father, George Williams, became the first minister at Zion Baptist Church.

The same year she married, Catherion's mother died shortly after giving birth to a daughter.

Sol and Catherion would have eleven children together.

In the U.S. Census of 1850, Sol and Catharine were living in District 11 of Madison County, TN with their two young children, Elizabeth who was six and my second great grandfather, George, who was four.

The family was living next door to Sol’s parents Rev. George and Nancy Williams and their daughter Harriet Ann Williams who was 17.

Both families were very prosperous.

In the U.S. Census of 1860, Sol was 39, Catharine was 33 and they had moved to District Five of Haywood County. Elizabeth was 15, George was 13 and the family had added three more children: John who was nine, Edward who was seven and William E., who was two.

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1860 U.S. Census, Haywood County

The family was farming a large amount of land in 1860 with real estate that had grown in value to $12,500 and personal estate valued at $12,185. That figure most likely included a number of slaves and, in comparison to others in the census, they were quite well off. The "historic standard of living value" of that amount of money in 1860 was around $750,000.

The family was living one farm away from Joseph and Emily Rawls and their very large family. Joseph is listed as a “Physician and Farmer” and was from North Carolina. Joseph was likely part of the family of Catherion's mother.

Sol died at the young age of 44 in 1864. Was he killed in the Civil War? There are two Confederate soldiers named “Solomon Williams.”

One enlisted in Company D, 7th Infantry Regiment Tennessee and the other in Company E, Newsom's Cavalry Regiment. Many of my ancestors who fought in the war were in the 7th Tennessee Infantry so I do plan to look for more information about Sol there.

Catherion seems to have been a very strong lady. Right after her husband's death, she was 36-year-old widow, living in the post Civil War south raising a house full of very young children with a farm that was likely decimated.

In the U.S. Census of 1870, Catherine was 42 and was farming land that had dropped in value to $4,000 and a personal estate now only valued at $1,000. Living with her were her children, John who 19, Edward who was 16, William E. who was 11, Catherine E. "Katie" who was 10 and Rebecca M. who was 6.

Her oldest son, George D., and his wife, Martha Jane Watridge Williams (my second great grandparents), were living on the farm next door with their 9-month-old baby, E. L. who died before the next census.

In the US Census of 1880, Catherion was still going strong at 52. It was Catherion, rather than any of her sons, who was listed as the “Head of Household” and the family was still in District Five. Living with her were her children John N. who was 28, William E. who was 22, Katherine, who was 20, Rebecca who was 17 and a 50-year-old black male named Richard Traylor who was listed as a “servant.”

The 1890 Federal Census records were destroyed by a fire at the Commerce Department in Washington, DC on 10 January 1921 so I am not certain where Catherion was living then.

She was 62 and all her children were adults. Her son George, my second great-grandfather, had recently become widow with a house full of children when his wife, Martha Jane Watridge died. It's certainly possible she moved in with him and helped run his home.

Catherion died 3 August 1895 at the age of 67. She is most likely buried at Zion Baptist Church although it is possible she was buried next to her husband in the Williams Family Cemetery. Either way, her grave is unmarked.
Obituary of Catherion Arthur Williams
Sister C.A. Williams is gone. She was born in North Carolina Bertie County Feb 6, 1828. Her parents moved to Tennessee Haywood County when she was quite young. She professed faith in Christ and was baptised into the fellowship of Zion Church by Elder Hugh Coffen at the age of 13 years which she lived a consistent member til her death. She was married February 6, 1844, and was the mother of eleven children of whom 5 are living and members of the Baptist church. She departed this life the 3rd day of August 1895 being 67 years 5 months old. Our loss is her gain and we say to her relations and friends to strive to meet her in Heaven where the wicked cease from troubling and the weary are at rest. September 14, 1895.
Written by J.C.W. Cobb and W.T. Morris
Zion Baptist Church Book of Obituaries
In case you are researching your own ancestry and googled your way here, you may want some details about Sol and Catherion Nowell Williams’ children. According to her obit, she was the mother of 11 but only five were still alive when she passed away in 1895.
Laverna Williams
Most likely died as a baby.
Mary Elizabeth Williams Thomas
Born in 1844, she married John Ambrose Thomas and they had Laverna, George, Albert Thomas, Frances "Fanny" Marian, Victoria and Grover C. John and Elizabeth Williams Thomas were founding members of Holly Grove Baptist Church. She died 17 May 1924 at the age of 81 and was buried at Holly Grove Baptist Church Cemetery.

George D. Williams
My second great grandfather was born 27 Nov 1846. His middle name was most likely Dempsy after his mother's father, grandfather and great-grandfather. George married Martha Wateridge and fathered six children: E. L., James Solomon, John, George T., Elberta and William “Will” Lafayette Williams, my great grandfather. Martha Jane died when my great grandfather, Will, was born. George remarried first Mollie Collier and then finally, Virginia Estelle Cobb with whom he had a daughter named Mary Lorene Williams. He died at the age of 72 and was buried in the Williams family cemetery. You can read more about him and my search for the cemetery in this previous blog entry.
Will Williams was the father of Lloyd "Bo" Williams who was the father of Bob Williams who is my father.


John Nowell Williams
He was born 25 Jun 1851 and married Mary Catherine “Mollie” Cobb on 14 Dec 1881. Mollie was the daughter of Leonard Decatur Cobb and Mary Amanda Rooks Cobb. They had a daughter, Zelma A. Williams, who married Roy Earl Simpson. John died 30 Aug 1928 and Mollie died 13 Nov 1938.

Edward W. Williams
He was born Jan 1853. He married Martha Amanda Crowder 23 Dec 1873. Edward and Amanda had six children: Mark K, Edward, Henry Foster, Maggie S., Nellie Margaret and Lemuel Edward. Their daughter, Maggie, shot her husband Ellis on July 4, 1917. You can read more about her drama in this blog entry. Edward died in 1893 and Amanda died 05 Jun 1921.

William E. Williams
He was born in 1856. He married Eliza A. Chandler on 9 Jan 1889. The children of Will and Eliza were: Willie K., Lizzie W., Mable L., and Dan B. Like his sister, Elizabeth Thomas Williams who was mentioned at the top of the list, Will Williams was among the men and women who petitioned for a letter of dissmision from Zion Baptist Church so they could form Holly Grove Baptist Church.

Catherine E. “Katie” Williams
She was born in Aug 1860. She married William L. Booth on 28 Oct 1885. William was a brother of my second great-grandmother, Lena Booth.

Rebecca Manie Williams

She was born in 1863 and died 1 Oct 1890 at 27.

For more blog entries, visit my Blog Home Page or to check out the genealogy research about my specific family lines, go to Haywood County Line Genealogy Page.

Sunday, February 10, 2013

How Harriett Ann Williams Became an Outlaw

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Will Williams, Lloyd "Bob" Williams and Bob Williams

While I've been able to track many of my ancestral lines back 10 or more generations, I have "hit a brick wall," as they say in genealogy, on the Williams line at the sixth generation.

After searching off and on for several years, I have still been unable to determine the parents of my fourth great-grandfather, George Williams of Bertie County, NC.

I do know George was born around 1797.

He was the father of George Solomon Williams
who was the father of George D. (possibly Dempsey) Williams
who was the father of Will Williams
who was the father of Lloyd "Bo" Williams
who was the father of Bob Williams
who is my father.

My third great-grandfather, George Solomon "Sol" Williams., had a sibling, Harriett A. Williams who became an Outlaw...by marrying one.

For the last few weeks, I've been researching her life to see if it would help me discover any addition information about my Williams ancestors.

From a variety of sources, I was able to pull together quite a bit about Harriett Williams Outlaw and her family so I thought I would share what I've found in case any of her descendants are looking for information about her.

Harriett was born in 1833 in North Carolina to George and Nancy Williams. It appears their son, Sol, (my third great-grandfather) was already 13 when she was born. I don't know for certain if there were any other siblings born to George Sr. and Nancy between the births of Sol and Harriett but can find no reference to any. If there were additional children, they likely died during childhood.

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Holly Grove Baptist Church, Bertie County, NC
Source

The family was living in Bertie County, NC, or one of the neighboring counties, in 1828 because there is a reference to George in the minutes of the Holly Grove Baptist Church in Bertie County on 13 Dec 1828.

I did go through the U. S. Census of 1830 for Bertie County and there were many "heads of households" with the last name of Williams: John B., Elijah and Elisha, two Johns, Samuel, William L., Areneth, Moses, Cornelius, William, Joseph, Davis and Lewis...but no George. Was he still living with his father in 1830? It's difficult to tell because, in 1830, only the name of the heads of each household and age ranges of those living there were listed.

On 20 Nov 1836, George Williams was chosen as pastor of Zion Baptist Church in Haywood County, TN. Many of George’s friends and relatives had migrated from Bertie Co., NC to Haywood Co., TN in the early 1830s to help settle that area of the country. One of the first things they did was start a church and George Williams became their first minister.

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Road to Zion Baptist Church, Haywood County, TN
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Notation above the entry of older sanctuary of Zion Baptist Church
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Older sanctuary of Zion Baptist Church

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Current sanctuary of Zion Baptist Church as seen from the cemetery

“Saturday before the 3rd Lords day in November, 1836, the church convened in their new building and conference was opened by prayer. The church then proceeded to elect a pastor. It was moved by brother Leggett and seconded by Brother Rooks that Brother George Williams be our pastor for the ensuing year. Brother (likely David) Outlaw was instructed to write Brother Williams informing him that he was chosen pastor of Zion Baptist Church and requesting him to attend the next meeting."
Cobb, Bernie. "A History of Zion Baptist Church" Nashville: Self Published
Harriett moved to Haywood Co. with her family when she was a small child.


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George Williams Census Entry, 1850

By the time of the United States Federal Census of 1850, Harriett was 17 and living with her mother and father in District 11 of Madison Co., TN, which bordered Haywood County.

The family was living next door to their son, Sol Williams, his wife Catherine Arthur Nowell Williams and their children Elizabeth and George D. (my second great-grandfather) who were ages six and four.

Catherine’s father’s occupation is listed as “Mip. Bapt. Min” and the family’s worth is about $3,700, which is quite a bit more than most of their neighbors.

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Marriage Certificate of
Jack Outlaw and Harriett Ann Williams

Harriett married Andrew Jackson “Jack” Outlaw on 28 Dec 1859 in Haywood Co. when she was 17.

Jack Outlaw was the son of George W. and Luday Elizabeth Outlaw who were among the original Bertie County settlers who arrived in Haywood County around 1833.

George and Elizabeth Outlaw are also my fourth great grandparents but on the maternal side of my family. One of their daughters, Elizabeth Temperance Outlaw was the mother of Mary Etta Cobb who was the mother of William Day Brantley, who was the father of Virginia Brantley Lovelace who was the mother of Shirley Ann Williams who is my mother.

Jack Outlaw served as the clerk at Zion Baptist Church and was the Justice of the Peace for the 5th District of Haywood County.

It appears Jack and Harriett had five children but only two, William and Elizabeth, lived to adulthood.

Sadly, two of their children, George who was five and Minnie who was two, died one day apart in March 1871.

The children of Jack and Harriett Williams Outlaw were:
William Price Outlaw
Born 25 Sep 1862 in Haywood County, William married Leanna Catherine Mann on 30 October 1894 and farmed the land originally settled by his parents, Jack and Harriett.  Their children were Dewey Schley Outlaw, William Henry Outlaw, Eunice Odell, Edna Earl Outlaw Stewart (Edna Earl married David Earl Stewart and was a close friend of my maternal grandmother, Virginia Lovelace), Harriett Ann Outlaw Sensing, Luther Jackson Outlaw, Sidney Johnston Outlaw and Flossie Outlaw (who died as an infant). In addition to running his father’s farm, William was the Public School Director of the 5th District in Haywood County and lead the efforts to build a school in the Allen community. Source
William and his wife both had the measles in the winter of 1917. He died on 8 Feb 1917 from pneumonia and she died the following day of “paralysis of the heart.” He was 54 and she was 41. Their youngest children, Sidney Johnson Outlaw and Edna Earl Outlaw, were still infants. William and Catherine are buried in the Zion Baptist Church cemetery.
William’s descendants, Jimmie Outlaw and his son Mark and his nephew, Gene, still farm the land originally farmed by Jack before the Civil War. Gene's son Taylor recently joined the family farm operation adding another generation to the farming legacy. Their farm was designated a Century Farm by the Center for Historic Preservation.

Solomon Andrew Jackson Outlaw
Named after his paternal grandfather and his father, he was born 5 June 1864 and died 24 Aug 1864 at just two months old.

George Arthur Outlaw
Born 6 Aug 1865, nearly a year after the death of his brother, George was named after his grandfathers and great-grandfather. He died 10 March 1871 at age five. His two-year-old sister, Minnie, died the following day.

Luday Elizabeth Outlaw
Born 17 Sept 1867 and named after her grandmother, Luday married W. Harrell White in 1900. Their daughter, Winnie White, married Isaac Castellaw, a brother of my paternal grandmother, Elizabeth Castellaw Williams. Elizabeth Outlaw White died 23 Feb 1917 at the age of 49.

Minnie Outlaw
Born in 1869, she died at the age of two on 11 Mar 1871, one day after her brother, George.
Harriett Ann Williams Outlaw died 6 Feb 1878 at the age of 45.

Her husband, Jack Outlaw, lived 25 more years and died 12 Nov 1903. I am not certain where he or his wife are buried but J. C. Davis and Sim and Callie Cobb wrote his obituary:
"Brother A. J. Outlaw was born in Bertie County, North Carolina on March 22, 1825. He left North Carolina with his father’s family in the fall of of 1831 and came to Madison County in the spring of 1832.

He was converted in August, 1842 and joined the church at Ararat which was an arm of the Big Black Church and was baptized in September by Rev. J. J. Smith.

In 1845 he came to Haywood County. Big Black split up and one part organized at Denmark and the other at Maple Springs. His name was dropped from the role. He was restored in 1851 in the church at Ararat and obtained a letter from that church and joined Zion Church by letter in July 1851.

Brother Outlaw was elected clerk of the church and served very faithfully for a good many years. He departed this life on November 12th 1903.”

Cobb, Joe H. Nicholas Cobb Descendants. Nashville: M. L. W. Publishing Company, 1983.
For more blog entries, visit my Blog Home Page or to check out the genealogy research about my specific family lines, go to Haywood County Line Genealogy Page.

Sunday, January 13, 2013

Haywood County High School Class of '39

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Haywood County High School
Class of '39

Source: Vicky Morrow Hutchings

This great photo of the Haywood County High School Class of 1939 was posted on the Haywood County Genealogy Facebook page managed by volunteers from the Genealogy Room at the Elma Ross Library in Brownsville, Tenn.

Vicky Morrow Hutchings found it in a corn crib at her father-in-law's house. I am personally very grateful she shared it because it does include some of my relatives.

Included in the photo is:

Top row: Marilyn Wilson-Rooks; J.T. Jacocks, Marie Willis, Faye Rauls, Kenneth Gagland, Elise Escue

2nd row: Elsie McCool, Judson Patton, Thelma Hendron, Marion Powell, Charlene Larde, Hargrove Wateridge, Willie Joe Carraway, Glenn Covington, Lois Jeter

3rd row: Louise Herris (Harris)?, Robert Johnson, Rebecca Tyus, S.L. Edwards, Jane Braley (Bailey)?, Ron Cozart, Martha Williams, Haskel (Hasreal) Hooper

4th Row: Lila Williamson, Sherman Taylor, Doris Evans, Lloyd Wilson (in center, under HHCS), Virginia Ragland, Louis Burford, Ovida? Haynes

5th Row: Mary Lou Beak, Tom Frekland, Margaret Hopkins, Gene Cregton? (President), Wm Bush (Vice Pres), V. Suddeth, J M Holland, Martha Fletcher

6th Row: Mary Jarrett, Homer Webb, Mary Taliferro, Edward Wenden (Wenders), Jack & Jewel Kimory? (couple below the 1939), Henry Duggan (Dugger), Sarah Chapman, Jack Seymour, Nellie Harris

7th Row: Laura Verrell?, Sara Carrell (Currell), Frank Fletcher, Dorothy Richardson, Virginia Richardson, Wm A Chapman, Mary G Smith, Jas F. Merrill, Jr.

8th Row: Deveraux Rudolph, Chas Moore, Doris Drake, Vernon Moore, Eloise Williams, Ted McWhirter (is this our ex-governor?), Marjorie Warren, R.C. Hawkins (Hankins), Dorris Allen

9th row: Wade Ouser?, Martha Moore, Joe Dickenson, Jennie Powell, Charlie Drumwright?, Betty Rothschild

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My Great-Uncle, J.T. Jacocks

J.T. Jacocks, pictured second from left on the top row of the high school class photo, married my grandmother's sister, Cordelia Brantley. I have a copy of a letter written by Aunt Cordelia to my grandmother the same year the above photo was taken.

Bells Tenn
June 15, 1939

Dearest Virginia,

How are you all getting along? I haven’t heard from you in all in so long I thought I would write to you. I had to write a letter because no one in this county had a postal card.

I guess you know by now that I’m an old married lady now. I don’t feel so much older though. Maybe I just haven’t had time yet.

How is Bobby? Tell him I said Hello and that he has a new uncle. I guess he thought that J.T. was already a member of the family though.

Are you all through chopping cotton? Daddy is going to try to get through by Sat. J.T. and Mr. Arthur have been chopping for hire while it was too wet in theirs. I haven’t chopped any since I married. I am celebrating. They are ? here this ? but they won’t let me help.

I mean they really are nice to me here. They treat me just exactly like they treat J.T. and Solan. Aunt Clara said to tell you she thought about you every day and would surely like to see you but that was a little too far to walk.

When have you seen Aunt Gladys? I haven't seen anyone in a long time.

Tell Bobby J.T. said tell him “hey.”

How is Guy? I’m so sorry he isn’t doing well. Daddy said he looked mighty bad last Sun. aft. when they went by there. They said Aunt Mabel was sick too. I guess our family has a curse over it. Something is always happening to us.

I aimed for us to go up to mothers Sunday but we messed around and didn’t even get up until nearly eleven o’ clock. Aren’t we lazy?

Didn’t it rain hard Sat night? J.T. and ? and I got wet all over. We went to Bells and were coming back when it started raining so hard. That lightening scared me. I never saw it lightening so hard in all my life. I better get up from here. I’ve got to wash out some things and finish cleaning up the house. I clean up the house and ? the kitchen every morning.
Well I’ll see you when I can.

Lots of Love,
Cordillia
For more blog entries, visit my Blog Home Page or to check out the genealogy research about my specific family lines, go to Haywood County Line Genealogy Page.

Sunday, January 6, 2013

Sarah Booth Brantley, From Civil War Widow to Living in Tomato


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Sarah Brantley's signature on Civil War pension application in 1865

For a long time I've been curious about Daniel E. Brantley, the brother of my third great-grandfather, Henry Day Brantley. Many members of their family fought in the Confederate Army during the Civil War, but I found Daniel listed as having fought as a Union soldier.

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I hit the jackpot with the digital contents of "Box 32714, Cert 101338" during a recent visit to the National Archives and can now share much more information about Daniel and his wife, Sarah.

As it turns out, Sarah is also a sibling of one of my direct ancestors.

Daniel was born in 1833 in Bertie Co., N.C.  but traveled with his parents, Augustus and Martha White Brantley to Haywood County, Tenn. where the Brantleys were among the earliest settlers. Daniel was the first child born to Augustus and Martha. 

From information later supplied by his youngest brother, Solomon, we know the Brantley family farmed 320 acres, lived in a frame house with four rooms and their father owned five slaves. Solomon wrote, "My father run the farm. My mother run the house and was boss over the negro women who done the cooking, spinning and weaving. I was an expert with a hoe. We cut wheat with a cradle. Tramped it out with horses and cleaned same with a fan by hand." When asked what he did after the war, Brantley wrote, "Building up what the Yankees tore down on my father's farm."

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l to r: Henry Brantley, Preston Brantley,
Willie Brantley and Virginia Brantley Lovelace

In the U.S. census of 1850, the Augustus Brantley farm was in District Five of Haywood Co. and Daniel was 17 years old. Augustus and Martha White Brantley are my fourth great grandparents (Another of their sons who was Daniel's brother was Henry Day Brantley. He was the father of Henry Preston Brantley who was the father of William Day Brantley who was the father of my maternal grandmother, Virginia Brantley Lovelace).

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l to r: Lena Booth Marbury, Allie Marbury Lovelace
and Virginia Brantley Lovelace
Next door to the Brantley's farm was the home of James and Nancy Mulligan Booth. Their youngest child, Sarah Louise Booth was also 17 in 1850. The Booths are my fourth great grandparents from my grandmothers paternal ancestry. Their oldest son, Billy, was the father of Sarah Evelena "Lena" Booth Marbury (she was likely named after her aunt) who was the mother of Allie Marbury Brantley who was the mother of my maternal grandmother, Virginia Brantley Lovelace).

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Marriage certificate of Daniel Brantley and Sarah Lousia Booth


Daniel Brantley married Sarah Louisa Booth on January 17, 1854 and Daniel purchased a farm in Ripley, Tenn. which is in Lauderdale Co. and very close to Haywood Co.

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Daniel enlisted in the Union Army in 1863 and fought in Company G., Indiana Infantry, 52nd Regiment.

The Brantley family literally became a case of brother fighting brother when Daniel's sibling Julius enlisted in the Confederate Army seven months after his older brother on July 10, 1863 and fought in the 12th Tennessee Calvary, C.S.A. He died on Dec 18, 1863 in Ft. Pillow, TN, only five months after enlisting.

Daniel and Julius' brother Solomon N. Brantley enlisted in the Confederate Army on October 1, 1863 and was a member of the 7th Tennessee Volunteer Cavalry Regiment. Solomon was discharged in Gainesville, Ala. in May 1865. At the age of 75, he filled out this questionnaire which was sent out to all living Tennessee Civil War veterans.

But what happened to Daniel and Sarah Booth Brantley?

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Sarah Louisa Brantley Claim for Widow's Pension

At the National Archive I found a very large pension file regarding the couple that fills in a lot of blanks and, unfortunately, they don't live happily ever after.

Declaration and identification in due form.
PROOF EXHIBITED

Adjt. Genl. Of Ind. Reports him enrolled May 1st 1863. Died at Tyler, Texas Rebel Prison Aug 23rd 1864 of Diarrhea.

Adjt General U.S.A. reports him missing in action Apr 9th 1864 at Pleasant Hill, GA.

Com Genl. Of Prison reports that on Q. M. Genls report of U. S, soldiers buried in National Cemeteries, it appears that Daniel Brantley, Priv. Co. G. 52nd ind. died at Camp Ford, Tyler Texas, Sept 23rd, 1864.

Surg. Genl. Reports D. Brantley Co. G. 116th Ind. Vols as having died since Sept. 16th 1864 at Camp Ford, Tyler Texas.

Daniel E. Brantley and Louisa Booth were married Jany. 17th 1854 by J. W. Rawls, Justice of the Peace.

Certified copy of public record by the county clerk

Children:

Nancy E. Brantley, born Mar 20th 1859

Laura Evangeline, born Feb 16th 1861

Established by the affidavit of the attending midwife

From this we know Daniel and Sarah had two daughters, Nancy and Laura. Daniel enlisted in the Union Army in May of 1863 when Nancy was four and Laura was two.

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Battle of Pleasant Hill, 9 April 1864, by Charles E. H. Bonwell
(or Bonwill), as illustrated in Frank Leslie's
illustrated newspaper (Frank Leslie's Weekly), 14 May 1864, pp. 120-121.


Daniel was reported "MIA" on April 9, 1864 after The Battle at Pleasant Hill.

He was taken, along with other prisoners, to Camp Ford in Tyler, Tex. where he would eventually die, most likely from dysentery. This Confederate-run prison, which had, up to that point, experienced a very low death rate, suddenly quadrupled in size when 2,000 Union prisoners of war, including Daniel, were placed in captivity after The Battle of Pleasant Hill.

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Non-commissioned officers, 19th Iowa Infantry,
exchanged prisoners from Camp Ford, Texas.
Photographed at New Orleans on their arrival.

Source

During the war, the total number of prisoners who were held at the camp was slightly more than 5,500. Only about 327 prisoners died in captivity, giving the camp a mortality rate of 5.9%, one of the lowest of any Civil War prison. The deceased prisoners, including Daniel Brantley, were reinterred to the Alexandria National Cemetery in Pineville, La. in 1867.

Daniel is buried in plot: B O 1027.

If you are passing through Tyler, they have a small roadside park where Camp Ford was, although, the latest TripAdvisor review is, "Dilapidated."

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Sarah Louisa Brantley Declaration for Army Pension

After filling out many forms and supplying afidavits and documents like those above, Sarah received a pension of $8 per month until she married Green B. Jennings on Nov. 2, 1882.

She became a widow again when Jennings died ten years later on Jan. 29, 1892 at which time she began receiving her pension checks again.

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Legal Request Regarding Sarah Brantley Jennings

After a move to Arkansas "she got dropped off somehow" and, in 1903, enlisted the services of Ripley attorney, Thomas Steele, Jr.

Sarah really needed this pension.

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Statement from Sarah's daughter

On March 7th, 1913, her daughter, Laura E. Nicholas (married to Charles H. Nicholas) provided details on Sarah's real estate transactions. Together, mother and daughter had traded the land they owned for 44 acres near Barr, Tenn.  By 1913 the land was nearly gone. According to Nicholas, "It has all nearly washed away by the Miss. river. There are only about 12 acres left."

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Report to Commissioner of Pensions, Washington, D.C.

On March 10, 1913, William Sullivan, Special Examiner, sent a report to the Commissioner of Pensions in Washington, D.C. that included the information that Sarah had moved with her daughter's family to "the banks of the Mississippi River" in Tomato, AR. At the time, Sarah was "feeble, so much so that she is at present time confined to her bed." He described the home in which they lived as "a hovel on land that overflows at every high water" and he described them as being "very poor class."

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Tomato, AR on Google Earth

During this time, Sarah's neice and my second great-grandmother, Sarah Lena Booth Marbury was 44 and living in Haywood Co. with her husband and children, which included my great grandmother, Allie Marbury, who was 18 at the time. I wonder if they knew what had become of their Aunt Sarah? I actually remember my great grandmother well and sure wish I could go back and ask her now.

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Approval for Payment of Pension

It appears that after the report by William Sullivan, on March 29, 1913, Sarah was finally approved by the Bureau of Pensions to receive the money she was owed.

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Certification of Death

The last document in the file reports that Sarah died on July 23, 1915 at the age of 79.

For more blog entries, visit my Blog Home Page or to check out the genealogy research about my specific family lines, go to Haywood County Line Genealogy Page.

Saturday, December 29, 2012

Photos from 1960s Suburbia in an Old Red Wallet


I
was looking through boxes of old photos at my parent's house during the holidays and came across this old red wallet crammed full of small Polaroids taken in the 1960s. They feature my family at home, at work, with friends, and on vacation nearly 50 years ago.
 
I had not seen most of the photos before so it was a great find.
 
While both my parent's ancestors had lived and farmed the same land in Haywood County, TN since the early 1830s, they were part of the postwar baby boomer trend of leaving farms and rural communities and moving to the cities and suburban communities.  

They purchased one of the first lots in a planned community called Parkway Village in Memphis that, at the time, was mostly cotton fields and dirt roads.

The chemicals on the photos are fading giving them a ghostly vintage look that no iphone filter could replicate so I scanned them and left them as they were, other than adjusting the contrast on some to bring out the detail.

In Haywood County

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Home Sweet Suburbs

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The Office

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Vacation

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Friends and Family

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For more blog entries, visit my Blog Home Page or to check out the genealogy research about my specific family lines, go to Haywood County Line Genealogy Page.