The Arl(ansas
Family Historian
Volume 25, No.3 & 4,
September/December 1987 .
There is a surnanle index for VoL 25 at the
end of issue No. 3/4.
Tut
ARKANSAS
fAMILY
HISTORIAN
Arkansas
Genealogical Society
\[l'
,~,
-~,...~
September / December, 1987 r-= •
~~0
"'-'. ,
1987 OFFICERS AND DIRECTORS
President
Vice hesi.dent
Treasurer
Corresponding Secretary
Recording Secretary
Historian
I-brdd
Parliam:mterien
Editor
Mrs. A. Hall Allen
D!!smond Halls Allen
RusEell P. Baker
Beth B,:ownlee
Jeania Moore Burns
Ruby Gagliano
Jan B. Eddleman
Pat L. Bennett
Bobbie J. ttLane
Frankie Holt
Frances Jernigan
Lynda Suffridge
Ilensil M. Clark
James Logan Morgan
Margaret H. Hubbard
Johnita Glover
Roberta Hollis
Yvonne Perkins
Ed Sanders
Mary Nell Turner
•
FAM~LY HIS'roRIAN is the official publication of the
Arkansas Genealoglcal Society.
It is published quarterly by the
Society and ente.red in the mails under Third Class Permit No. 509 at
Hot Springs National Park, AR.
'mE ARKANSAS
Membershi~
rate is $12.00 per calendar year.
Four issues constitute
one year s membership.
Membership may be entered by sul:mission of
dues and enrollment data to Arkansas Genealogical Society, P. O. Box
908, Hot Springs, AR 71902-0908.
Neither the Arkansas Genealogcal Society, the Board of Directors
thereof, nor any individual or committee assume any responsibility for
information or maaterials included herein.
Contributors of material
are indicated and correspondence should be directed to those persons.
Notify the Society of any corrections that are needed.
"
ARKANSAS GENEALOGICAL SOCIETY
SEMINAR AND ANNUAL MEETING
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 24, 19B7
NORTH LITTLE ROCK COMMUNITY CENTER
2700 NORTH WILLOW
NORTH LITTLE ROCK, ARKANSAS
Our speaker, Or. James Johnson, of the Memphis, Tennessee Public Library, will
present a program on research in Kentucky. Tennessee, and Immigration and
Naturalization Records. Or. Johnson is a native of Arkansas. and graduated
from Hendrix College and the University of Arkansas at Fayetteville.
9.00 - 9:30 Registration
9.30 - 10.15 Introduction to Genealogical Records of Tennessee and Kentucky
10.15-10.30 Break
10.30 - 11030 Land Records and Military Records of Kentucky and Tennessee
11.30 - 1.00 Lunch and Book Browsing
1,00-1.30 Annual Meeting of the Arkansas Genealogical Society
1.30 - 2.15 Immigration and Naturalization Records, Part I
2.15 - 2,30 Break
2.30 - 3.30 Part II
HHHN#NOTICE##HH
SEATING IS LIMITED TO 130 PERSONS
Pre-registration i . $7.00 - At The Door $10.00
Book Vendors ••••• Space Available Only For Those Who Request Space In Advancel
For a reserved display space, send request to Mrs. Lynda Suffridge, 3801
Caraway Ct., North Little Rock, AR 72116.
WHERE VOUR ARE GOING AND HOW TO GET THEREI!!!! Entering North little Rock
from Conway, exit at the NlR Holiday Inn and turn right at the stop light.
Turn right at the next stop light and travel two blocks on Pershing Blvd.
Turn right on Willow. Persons entering North little Rock on the freeway from
Little Rock or from the East will exit on the Hwy 107 exit and go to the top
of the hill. Turn left at the stop light and travel down JFK Blvd. to the
second stoplight and turn right on to Pershing Blvd. Travel two blocks and
turn right onto Willow. Plenty of free parking on the streets and cIty
parking lots.
REGISTRATION FORM
Make Check payable to AGS and mail·ALONG WITH AN SASE tal
Suffridge, 2301 Caraway Ct., North Little Rock, AR 72116.
fee is $7.00.
NAME _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
AOORESS _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
TOWN __________ S TA TE/ZIP_______
Mrs. Lynda
Pre-registration
ARKANSAS GENEAlOOICAL OCCIElY
P. O. Box 908
Hot Springs, AR 71902...Q9()8
APPLICATION FOR MF1dBERSHIP
Date:
-------
Enclosed is $12.00 annual manbership fee. Please mail ll\Y copies of
the quarterly ARKANSAS FAMILY HIS'IDRIAN and any newsletters to:
NAME:
-------------------------------------------------------------County: ..
1Sl'RE/i.'r:
City:
-------------------
State: ____________________________
New MEmber ___
-------
ZIP __________
Renewal
---------------_._-------------(Please type or print)
I ~t to subnit the following query: (<;Ieries are free to manbers.
Sorry, only one at a time may be accepted and they should· be no IIDre
than 50 words in length, nrust pertain to Arkansas at sane point and
should contain a location and, at least, an approximate date. Your
query will be published in THE ARKANSAS FAMILY HIS'lUUAN in the order
it is received.)
Date: _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
~
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
Name and Ccrnplete Mailing Address: _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ___
Volume 25, Nos.
President's Page
Genealogical & Family History Records
McDaniel Bible Record
Tanperance M. S. Standridge Bowen Walker
Sivils Family Bible
Permit to Cross Arkansas River, Pope ~,. ,1865
Records of Men !Uld Wanen ,Who Were lmates of
The Arkansas Cl:'>nfederate Hi::tne, 1895-1953
Robert Blair Descendants (continued)
Newspaper Excerpts - 'lAfayette Recorder 1895
Daybook of W. J. Hinsley (continued)
Book Reviews & Notices
Queries
Index
125
129
130
131
132
134
148
157
160
169
177
209
~:!l'
IN MEMORIAM
Mrs. Adelia Kittrell
;
,
Mrs. Adelia C. Kittrell, fTI. of
AUGUSl'A. died TueSday. Mrs.
KittreM",!as.8 Illelllb'r of First
'UDltiCi '.MetIiOalst CHurch; the
Woodruff County 1Iistoricai
Society and the state Library
Committee. Funeral"will be at
2 p.1l). 'F'ri.iJlIY at FI,i'St UJlited
lMlfthQdillt; Cb!lrch., RuriaI will
'be~lIh\WUsta'.e~al Park
by Rbodes and S~ Funeral
Home. Survivors a , .four sons,.
Carl Kittrell or berwood.
Charles Kittrell. J n Kittrell
of Augusta and ;,Illam-' Kittrell of Denver. Co ; a daughter. Mrs., Betty, asley, of
Houston, ·!foal; ,
,broth"ers, Otto Buen " d()f SllDayside, Wash., Am. o~'Hueneseld
of August,:::a ' ,,- WlUiam
HU!iDeseld' cit';" ncoln; 15
IrlllldehiiailiillM:Ulne 'l1"eat~ •
''grandchildren. _,
I
Arkansas IlEIl:vcrat, Wednesday, Ma.y 13, 1987
Mrs. Kittrell was a long time member and
staunch supporter of genealogy in general
and Arkansas Genealogical SOCiety in
particular. She served on the Board of
Directors of Arkansas Genealogical Society
and was active in her community.
PRESIDENT'S PAGE
Since I .have been kidnapped and taken to South Carolina by a
husband assigned to temporary duty there, 1 thought 1 might take
a few mi nutes to tell you a l i ttl e about the South Carol i na
Archives and researching there. The government of South Carolina
has been in existence for over 300 years, so, as you might
imagine, the number of record. that the Archives houaes is
tremendous':
Upon your ir,ital visit, you must register, .Bnd upon
subsequent
visits your registration form 1s
stamped
and
activated.
Parking space is provided, but you must go into the
Archives for a permit and then return it to your car, before you
start to research. The research hours are very generous: from <,
a.m.
to 9 p.m. Monday through Friday, <] a.m. to 6 p.m.
em
Saturday, and from 1 p.m. to 9 p.m. on Sundays. Briefly, the
Archives have the following records:
1.
LEGISLATIVE RECQRDS (Journals from 1692 and acts from 1693.,
supplemented by bills, petitions, reports, etc., from 1792)
2.
COURT RECORDS
appellate courts)
(Journals and case papers of provincial
3.
STATE AI3ENCIES AND DEPARTMENTS
existing and defunct organizations)
(non-current
records
and
e)1'
4.
EXECUTIVE RECORDS (Council journals from 1671; governors'
papers from 1960, with some scattered earlier material)
TREASURY RECORDS (Ledger'S,
and stub-entry books from 1721)
5.
6.
LAND RECORDS
(a
real
journals,
treas~... e!
cash-boeKs, vCI..u::hel"'l!l,
nearly complete froBl 1671!)
7.
RECORDS OF THE SECRETARY OF THE PROVINCE AND STATE
(wills,
inventories of estate!il;
marriagE! settlements,
commissions,
mortgage5~
bill!il of sale, registers of trademarks, and charters
of incorporations since 1671; alse a rE1al treasure')
8.
MILITARY SERVICE RECORDS' (complete since American Revolution)
9.
COUNTY RECORDS (over 3,01)0 cubic feet!)
10.
REFERENCE COLLECTION (microfilm from the British Public:
Record Office, private manuscripts, bibliograhies, monographs,
etc. )
The staff will answer queries and de a reasonable amOLlnt 01'
research, for example indices, by mail.
I al so wanted to remi nd you that the next i S!ilUS of ARKANSAE,
FAMILY HISTORIAN will be! a combined' issue,
September and
December, so that the material you get in December will be CJl.W
celebration of our twenty-fift.h year -- a reprint of tht~ 'fi,,,,,,t
year's i$il;Ues.
1
GENEALOGICAL & FAMILY HISTORY RECORDS
Ed Sanders
Genealogists & Family Historians are very strange people. They will
check into a hotel with the family. Then, while the others read a
book, take a dip in the pool, or nap in the room, the famlly historian
is reading the Telephone Directory. Later, when everyone else is
visiting the zoo and the recreation park and Sight-seeing, the family
historian is strolling through the cemetery, squinting at the inscriptions on headstones, and mak1ng notes whlle muttering under his
breath. He makes telephone calls across country late at night and
hides the phone bill from his spouse. All of this is because he is
greatly excited about something that does not appeal to some people
at all. However, almost everyone 1s 1nterested 1n h1s ~ tamlly.
The existence of all information is fragile and each of us must take
steps to preserve what we know in order for later generations to
have much of 1t at all. .
1. EVERYONE HAS SOME INFORMATION
You know:
(1) who you are, (2) where and when you were born, and (3) who
your parents were. You may know (4) where and when they were
born, and (5) you know who your children are, if you have them.
That covers three generations of family, and will be a good deal of
Information to a later generat10n. But, it w1ll per1sh with you unless
you share it with others .
.w.r.ue it down!
Whlle traveling recently I saw a sIgn wh1ch said, "Life is uncertain
eat dessert first.'" That should impress us with Just how urgent
making a written record Is.
II . .INTERVIEW RELATIYFS--PARTICULARL Y THE OLDEST SURVIVORS
Collect
memorabilia--Ietters, documents,
photographs,
receipts,
b1l1s, military papers, etc. Something which appears now to
have no value may later help to unravel a mystery. I recently was
shown a b1ll, well over a hundred years Old, from a general store.
The family which had it appreciated it as a curiosity but had failed
to learn anything from it. A few seconds examination showed it to
be a list of Items needed to begin housekeeping, A check of the date
and place led unerringly to the preViously unknown date and place
of marriage of the great grandparents! The bill has been copied and
is on the wall of the family home in an attractive frame.
III. MAK.E USE OF PUBLIC RECORDS
These are amazing in scope; yet very vulnerable to destruction.
125
Genealogical &. Family History Records &. Their Use &. Preservation - Ed Sanders - Apr 1987
Abstract information from them, and encourage their preservation.
Public records are avallable from the very earl1est days ot
this country--even Colonial records. We know much about the very
earliest settlements; e.g., St. Augustine, FL (1585), New Orleans 8.
Natchitoches, LA (719), Williamsburg, VA (1722) and Arkansas Post,
AR (1819).
IV.PUBLIC RECORDS CONSIST OF:
A. CENSUS RECORDS
1790 - 1980, except 1890, plus special census enumerations
These are the backbone ot genealogy
B. TAX RECORDS
1. Can be a kind of substitute census record
2. Can furnish a death date
C. MARRIAGE RECORDS
1. Early records required a surety bond. Can be clue to
friends or relations.
2. Minister's name appears on Marriage Cert1t1cate.
3. Permission may have had to be granted by a parent.
4. May furnish clues to the religion of bride and/or
groom.
a. Minister's atflUatlon may be slgnlt1cant.
b. Failure to return license for recording may indicate
Quaker, Mennonite, or similar faith.
D LAND RECORDS
Can reveal:
(l) neighbors
(2) wife's name
(3) dates of relocations
(4) family's tinancial status
(5) military service
(6) family groups
E. WILLS & PROBATE RECORDS
1. W11ls can furnish names of family members and relatlon:ships, including in-laws.
2. Probates can tell a lot about how people lived, and who
their friends and neighbors were. Estates were auctioned;
records kept of what was sOld, who bought It and for
what price.
F. COURT RECORDS - CIVIL 8. CRIMINAL
Remember that 68,000 convicts were settled in this new
country because British Jails were tUll. Some ancestors had
problems with each other and the laws in this country. If
you discover an English or Irish convict in your family, he
will probably also turn out to be a Revolutionary War soldier
and you will be glad you found him.
126
Genealogical 8. family Hislory Records 8. Their Use 8. PreservaUon - Ed Sanders - Apr 1967
G. MILlTARY RECORDS
Every war which has ever been fought generated records In the U.s.
National Archives, Washington, D.C. Yes, Indian Wars and Confederate
records, too!
H. VITAL RECORDS
The are late and Imperfect. For example, Arkansas did not reqUire
statewide registration of births and deaths' until 1914 and many are
still unregistered. South Carolina has required central registration
only since 1942.
Prior to that, the individual counties kept such
records. Gett1ng a b1rth certificate from South Carol1na can still be a
nightmare.
BIRI E RECORDS
Kept by many tamtl1es, these notat10ns are pr1celess. They are often
the only vital records In existence for several generations. Have
them microfilmed by the state agency responsible for history. In
Arkansas, that is the Arkansas History Commission, 1 Capitol Mall,
LIttle Rock, Arkansas, 72201. Your B1ble w1l1 be returned undamaged.
V.
VI. CHURCH RECORDS
These are also substitute vltal records and are much older, and often
more complete, than of!1clal records. The bur1al record Of one of my
ancestors 1n Germany in 1700 includes the priest's notation that the
man died by freezing!
VII. RECORDS IN PUBLIC LlBRARY
Newspapers and other vertical f1les in public libraries contain notices
which serve as vital records, and wUl more often than not include
the place of a birth, or marriage, and the cause of a death. Much
can also be learned about surv1vors of the dead ancestor and his
occupation and religion.
VIII.
MAPS
There are numerous sources for maps wh1ch w1ll greatly enrIch the
story. Readily accessible sources are:
A .. State universities
The University of Arkansas, Department of Agriculture, has for sale
a marvelous map of the state's Old Trails. Roads .1 Landmarks.
B. History textbooks
C. Geography textbooks
D. Atlases
E. U.S. GeologiC, or Coastal 8. Geodetic Survey
F. Corps of Engineers (especially good for streams)
G. Highway Departments
The Arkansas Highway and Transportation Department pUblishes a
complete series of finely detailed county maps which Show, among
other things, every cemetery in the county, with mllage notations
127
Genealogical t. Famity Hlst.ory Records !I. Their Use !I. Preservation - Ed Sanders - Apr 1987
from each intersection to bridges, other intersections and other
landmarks. Even the Individual houses are shown on the correct
side of the road, as of the date of the cartography.
H. Genealogical Organizations
The Arkansas Genealogical Society has for sale a Township Atlas by
Russell Baker picturing and giving a brief history of every townShip
in every county in the state.
IX.
RULES TO REMEMBER
A. Write It down!
Otherwise, It will be gone when you are--even when your memory
tails.
B. Footnote it!
Give others a chance to read it where you read It. A name or date
may have been misread and all will be assisted by a correction.
C Share It!
Stay in touch with others who are are researching the same families
and/or areas.
D. Preserve it!
Keep your records in the safest place possible. If practical at all,
duplicate them and store them in more than one place. Providing
copies to others serves this purpose to some extent.
Our genealogical records are too meaningful and precious for us to be
careless with them.
Write it down--now!l
Ed Sanders subnitted the above material which he used to speak fran at the
Wages Frunily Reunion this year. Both beginner and advanced researchers Will
benefit from this.
Thailks, Ed!
#
#
#
MQVING?'
128
McDJL~IEL
BIBLE
R~£ORD
Subnitted by Martha Taylor Houk, Rt. 4, Box 26, Greensburg, KY 42743, who
stated: "My great grandmother Martha Francis McDaniel was born 13 Oct. 1838 in
Saline Co., Benton, Ark. She left there in about 1844-1845 and came to KY with
her mother, Nancy and new step-father, James P. Brewer. As far as I know, she
never returned to Ark. as she died here in Green Co., KY, in 1913. Her father,
George McDaniel, died in Benton, Ark. 20 Dec. 1830.
"The following record is in the family Bible which belonged to Martha F.
McDaniel and has been handed down through the family and is in my posession now.
I would like very much to hear from anyone who has any information on any of
these people named and also from someone who is interested in early Saline Co.,
Ark., his tory. "
Taken from:
The Holy Bible
containing the new and old testaments - together with the lpage torn]
copyrite 1828 • Philadelphia.
Marriages
George A. McDaniel was married to Malissa A. Burgin - Dec. 25, 1828
George A. McDaniel was married to Nancy H. Black- Apr. 19 A.D. 1836
Robert T (?) Burgin and Eliza C. McDaniel was married
*Aaron W. Blakeman and Martha F. McDaniel was married "se-p-:t-.-4-;-6--:;1"85;:';6~
Benjamin B. McDaniel and Ferancis Brownlee was married Nov. 1 , 1856
*great grandparents of Mrs. Houk
Births
George A. McDaniel born Jan. 19, 1809
Melissa A. McDaniel born Dec. 26 1811
Eliza A. McDaniel born Jan. 13, 830
Benjamin B. McDaniel born Mar. 9{ 1831
James T. McDaniel born Aug. 13, 834
Nancy H. McDaniel born Aug. 29, 1814
Martha F. McDaniel born Oct. 13, 1838
r
Found written on the side of a page: '''Ih.o's. A. Burgin born Jan. 23, 1814"
Deaths
Malisa A. McDaniel died June 4, 1835
George A. McDaniel died 20 Dec. 1839
lllcinda McDaniel died Oct. 18, 1843
John Black died Apr. 18, 1818
William G. Black died jan. 27, 1829
Maline L. McMahan died mar. 10, 1849
End of Bible record.
Also found in the Bible was a letter from Saline Co.
Circuit Court Clerk stating: "Mr. James Brewer and Mrs. Nancy McDaniel were
129
married Feb. 1, 1844.
Letter was dated Sept. 7, 1904.
Found on separate papers in the Bible:
John Black born March 25, 1773
lucinda Black born Aug. 31, 1792 Saturday
The William W. Stockton born Feb. 10, 1798
maline L. Black born 21 Sept. 181w - M:mday
Nanvy Henry Black born ~n. 29 Aug. 1814
William G. Black born Sun. 15 Sept. 1816
John L. Black born 29 Aug. 1818
John L.Black b. 1818 was also in Saline Co. Ark. 1835-1840.
Martha Frances M::Daniel was known to all descendants and friends as "Grandloother
Blakeman.
Mrs. Houk says further: "Grandloother Blakeman was born in Ark. and
left as a small child to come live in KY.
I was named for her.
Martha and I
lived in Mississippi Co. ,Ark. 2 years (1973-1975) and left there with my husband
and another "small child" - my daughter - to come "home" to KY and our home is
on the same farm where Grandloother Blakeman and her husband lived and raised
their family.
So I feel a closeness to the State of Arkansas that is hard to
explain.
I traveled by car in 1975 when I left and crossed the Mississippi and
'(l1io Rivers at Cairo, IlL I've often wondered what it was like for Grandloother
when she lef there 130 years before.
How did they travel and where did they
cross the River?"
,
If you have information on this family, please contact Mrs. Houk directly.
#
TEMPERANCE M. A. STANDRIDGE BCX<EN WALKER
Subnitted by Russell P. Baker 6525 Magnolia Dr., Mabelvale, AR 72103.
contact Russell Baker if you have further information on this family.
Please
Temperance M. A. Standridge Bowen Walker was born about 1836 in Habersham, now
White County, Georgia.
She was a daughter of Nancy P. and James Standridge.
She married Frances M. Bowen, a son of Thomas and Eliza Beth Bowen, about 1854
in White County.
Their first son, John H. Bowen, was born there in February
1855.
Shortly after his birth, the Bowen family joined a large wagon train of
some 60 indiViduals bound for the wilds of Arkansas from northern Georgia.
Included in their number were members of the Abernathy, Bates, Dilbeck,&lwards,
Goss, Vandivier, Walker and Standridge families.
~st of the emigrants were
Many of their families were
from <llerokee, White and Habersham countiers.
interrelated and most were members of the Baptist church. They settled in Polk,
Montgomery and Scott counties in western Arkansas.
They were followed later by
still more members of their families.
Frances M. Bowen purchased 40 acres of
land near Big Fork in ~ntgomerY County from his father-in-law for $100 in 1857.
He sold it back to him for $400 in 1858.
While in Arkansas, Frances M. and
Temperance Bowen became the parents of a daughter, Nancy Ann Elizabeth, born in
February of 1857.
Soon after her birth the family left Arkansas.
Their last
son, William Oliver or "Olney", was born in Missouri in August of 1861. By 1870
Mr. Bowen was dead, and Temperance and her children were living in Big Fork
Township, Montgomery County, Arkansas, with her father and mother. On November
14, 1875, Temperance married a family friend, Abraham Walker, a widower aged 55
130
Who was a native of South Carolina and a member of the wagon train of the 1850s.
He settled near Black Springs in fobntgomery County where his first wife, Mary,
died after 1870.
Evidently Abraham and Temperance left Arkansas and moved to
South Carolina soon after their marriage.
Their first child, Sarah Walker, was
born in that state in 1878.
However, they returned to Arkansas shortly and
settled in Lafayette Township, Scott County, where a son, Silas Walker, was born
in 1879.
Mr. Walker died about 1893 and Temperance moved hack to fobntgomery
County where she homesteaded land at Alf where her father, who died in 1896,
lived.
Temperance died in December of 1901 having just won a law suit with a
neighbor over a team of mules.
Of her children: John H. Bowen married Roseanna,lRosehanna Hutchinson about 1874
in Polk County; Nancy Ann Elizabeth Bowen married (1) Nathaniel B. Goss, and
(02) Abraham R. Bates; and William Oliver or "Olney" married (1) Annie Baren;
(2) Cordela Farr; and (3) Ella Carter. Temperance M. A. Standridge Bowen is the
great-great-great grandmother of the author.
#
#
SMrs FAMILY BIBLE
Sul::mitted by Merry Gay M. Phillips, Rt. 2, Box 618, #16, Tyler, TX 75704, who
writes:
"'!his is said to be copied as it was written in the Family Bible.
I
have left the spellings as they appeared.
As the Bible was destroyed by fire
before I was born, I believe it is correct. It Ms. Phillips also says that she
has never seen a reference to the lines she is searching, rut continues to try
to locate her ancestors. Do contact her if you can help.
BIRTHS
James Rufus Sivils was born April 22, 1857
Nettie Jo Ella Tullos (Sivils) born March 29, 1969
Ida Jo Ella Sivils born January 10, 1888
Edna Elizabeth Sivils born August 17, 1889
James Benjamin Sivils born August 17, 1890
Ollie Clifton Sivils born October 25, 1891
*Shellie Nexson Sivils born June 111 1893
~~i60~e~E 2~;t~91frn April I., 1895
Mary M.!rtle Sivils born January 18, 1889
Nettie Kizzirah Evielean Sivils born October 4, 1900
Eula May Sivils born April 7, 1903
Oscar lee Sivils born August 22, 1904
Oston Lee Roye Sivils born January 10, 1906
Baby born May 16, 1907
Norman Alford Sivils born December 2, 1909
Baby born March 4, 1911
Baby born July 1, 1913
*grandmother of Merry G. Phillips
131
DFAms
Ollie Clifton Sivils died November 9, 1891
Little Sister Sivils died August 23, 1897
Oscar lee Sivils died May 11, 1905
Mary Mlrtle Sivils died August 16, 1905
Little baby Sivils died May 16, 1907
Grandma Sivils died May 19, 1907. She was 81
Nettie Kizzirah Evielean Sivils died July 25,
Little baby Sivils died March 4, 1911
Little baby Sivils died July 2, 1913. 2 days
Nettie Jo Ella Sivils died July 9, 1913. She
old.
Ida Jo Ella (Sivils) Deal died June 26, 1915.
days old.
years, 4 months and 6 days old.
1907
old.
was 44 years, 3 months and 10 days
She was 27 years, 6 months and 16
James Rufus Sivils died January 28, 1940
Oston Lee Roye Sivils died February 12, 1959.
The Grandma Sivils in this record is really Elizabeth (Copeland) 'fullos.
No
birth or death dates on him.
James Rufus Sivils and Nettie Jo Ella 'fullos
married April 21, 1887.
She is the mother of Nettie Jo Ella ('fullos) Sivils, wife of Malcomb Mlos.
#
#
#
The following is from the Orville Gillet Collection at the Arkansas History
Commission, #1 Capitol Mall, Little Rock, Arkansas.
It lists five families
given permission to cross the Arkansas River at Norristown in Pope County on
April 6, 1865, just before the end of the Civil War.
Signed by the order of D. W. Mason by Maj. Pound of Detach. 3rd Ark. Cav., it
lists: Mr. Barnett !tElwee and family
John Oals (Oats?) family
James Wells family
Mrs. Widow Carr's ~?) family
Mrs. Woods' family.
They were allowed to take with them 20 days worth of supplies plus clothing,
bedding, cooking utensils and "teams to transport same".
#
First officials of Drew County and their years of service: W. H. Wells, Judge,
1847-1850; Y. R. Royal, Clerk, 1847-1856; D. D. Greer, Sheriff, 1847-18481 W. ~.
Guice, Treasurer, 1847-1850; T. Hale, Coroner, 1847-1848; E. J. I:IOWarcI ,
Surveyor, 1847-1850.
First officials of Searcy County and their years of service:
William Wood,
Judge, 1836-1838; W. Kavanaugh,Clerk, 1836-1838; E.Hale, Sheriff, 1836-1838.
132
C":..1f::derate Soh.•iers 1 Home. at Swe,.r:t Home, nenr Little Rvck, At;c
133
REOORDS OF MEN AND IDIlli WOO WERE
INMATFS IN 1HE ARKANSAS C/l'WEDERATE H!l'iE
Little Rock, Arkansas 1895 - 1953
OJpies of these records may be ordered from the Arkansas History
O:xmtission, #1 Capitol Mall, Little Rock, AR 72201. Please write to them, and
send SASE, for a price quote before ordering.
The ARKANSAS COOFEDERATE HIl1E was established in 1890 by a group of
philanthropic citizens Who formed the Ex-Confederate Association of Arkansas to
care for the needs of indigent Confederate soldiers and their widows. They were
John D. Adams, W. P. Campbell, John G. Fletcher, R. A. Little, and Thomas W.
Steele. They purchased some 60 acres of land on what is now Dixon Road near
Sweet Ibne south of Little Rodk and opened a nursing home in a rem:x:leled
residence on December 1, 1890.
In April of the next year, the Arkansas
Legislature appropriated $10,000 annually for the upkeep of the Home and the
Association deeded the property to the State.
It became one of Arkansas'
charitable institutions.
A new building was constructed in 1892 and remodeled
in 1911.
By 1915 the institution housed 130 innates.
After that occupancy
declined. In 1955 a new smaller Confederate Home was built on the grounds of the
Schools for the Deaf and Blind in Little Rock. By 1961, with only eight innates
remaining, the legislature voted to close the Home and transfer the remaining
patients to nursing homes. The Ibne was finally closed in 1963 and the building
use transferred to the Blind and Deaf School.
This material was subnitted by Russell P.
this contribution for our quarterly.
Baker.
CDUNIY APPLIED
NAME
ABEL, William Randolph, Sr.
ABERNATIiY, J. W.
ABBO'IT, Mrs. Martha Caroline
ADAMS, C.M.
ADAMS, Mrs. C. M.
ADAMS, Rebecca J.
AKIN, Mrs. Mary
AKINS, Ida
ALBRIG!fl', Julia
ALEXANDER, Mrs. Nancy E.
- AILEN, D. A.
AILEN, Mrs. D. A.
ALLFN, Mary Elizabeth
ALLFN, Mrs. M::!llie
ALLFN, Neil B.
AU«JND, Romulus Dickinson
ANDERSON, Mrs. Nancy Belle
ANDlilli'S, Alice Jane
ARMSl'RONG, Thomas H.
AROOlD, H. C.
AROOlD, Mary Elizabeth
We sincerely appreciate
DATE
FROM
ADMITI'ED
Hempstead
Apr. 1, 1925
Apr. 4, 1925
none
Nov. 18, 1927
Sep. 28, 1931
Jun. 23, 1932
none given
Apr. 22, 1957
Jui. 27, 1947
Sep. 12, 1933
Jui. 14, 1926
Jui. 14, 1926
Jul. 9, 1932
Jui. 11, 1942
Aug. 28, 1920
Nov. --, 1914
not given
May 3, 1973 ?
Jan. 11, 1918
Aug. 27, 1932
not given
Clark
Pulaski
Pope
Sebastian
Crawford
Garland
Craighead
Boone
Pulaski
Independence
Independence
Pulaski
Pulaski
White
Cleburne
Arkansas
Garland
Benton
Pulton
Yell
134
AUSTIN, 4'dia A.
AVANr, Belle
AVERY, Mrs. Belle
BABB, Mary J.
BAO<, Mrs. Willie Elizabeth
BAILEY, James Henry Harrison
BAILEY, Richard Jesse
BAKER, Mary
BAKER, John Washington
BAKER, Martha Jane
BALDING, James H.
BALDRIDGE, Frank V.
BAllARD, Mary J.
BAllARD, Samuel J.
BARHAM, Malissa Ann
BARNES, James L.
BARNEITE, 'Thomas B.
BARNEITE, Mrs. W. R. D.
BARNEIT, Mrs. 'Thomas
BARR, J. M.
BARRINGER, Wn. H.
BARRY, Tabitha Jane
BARTON, Sarah B. (Mrs. Olarles 1.)
BARWIO<, William Benjamin
BASHAM, Fountain Fletcher
BASLERVIILE, Mary E. (Mrs. William)
BASKElT, Joseph C.
BATES, Mrs. !'bllie ItGough
BEARD, J. A.
BEARDEN, Clara (Mrs. H. P.)
BEARDEN, H. P.
BFASLEY, Mrs. R. F.
BEAVERS, Mrs. L. A.
BECKWITH, Mrs. Nancy Ellen
BELT, Mrs. C.
BENSON, John
g~'Be~~Maggie E.
BERRY, [>bse Richard
BICKLE, Catherine
BICKLE, Janus P.
BIRD, Mrs. S.L
BISIDP, Cary M.
BISIDP, Jasper Reynolds
BISIDP, Mrs. Minnie B.
BLACKBURN, Mrs. Belle
BLACKWELL, William A.
BLAO<\\(X)D, Mrs. Willie A.
BlAKELY, M. P.
BlAKELY, W. E.
BLAYLCXlC, Susan E.
BLEDSOE, Mrs. Francis A.
BLEVINS, 1. M.
Pope
June 19, 1926
Pulaski
Aug. 15, 1931
Perry
Jun.
Benton
Phillips
Franklin
Dec. 11, 1951
Garland
not given
Jul.
Sep.
Cleburne
Nov.
Pulaski
Jan.
Jul.
Jan.
Jan.
Sep.
Jan.
I'bnroe
Pulaski
Franklin
Pope
Scott
Franklin
Johnson
Sebastian
Pike
Sebastian
Little River
Pulaski
Yell
Dallas
Craighead
Crawford
Lonoke
Faulkner
Union
Bradley
Saline
Saline
Little River
Saline
Saline
Little River
Pulaski
Jefferson
JackSon
Jackson
Clerurne
Cleb.irne
Garland
Searcy
not given
Jackson
Benton
not given
Pulaski
Clark
Conway
Logan
Saline
Boone
135
6, 1930
8,
4,
7,
1,
21,
24,
31,
1918
1923
1927
1926
1921
1909
1926
8, 1908
15, 1925
Mar. 7, 1943
Jan. 1, 1923
JuI. 11, 1924
Nov. 5, 1936
JuI. 11, 1924
Aug. 7, 1919
JuI. 19, 1922
Mar. 22, 1950
Aug. 7, 1923
Sep. 7, 1925
Dec. 2, 1939
Aug. 29, 1924
Mar. 1, 1917
not given
Aug. 10, 1929
Apr. 15, 1928
Jan. 31, 1927
not given
Dec. 3, 1938
():t. 24, 1933
Nov. 25, 1934
Jan. 24, 1909
~:
23:
t~~~
Mar. 23, 1936
Apr. 25, 1925
Apr. 14, 1925
Dec. 4, 1935
Apr. 15, 1920
not given
May 30~ 1932
Dec. 10, 1936
Apr. 2, 1907
():t. 13, 1936
Mar. 1, 1921
Jan. 1, 1917
Jan. 1, 1922
Jul. 1, 1932
Feb. 12, 1917
Bl.OIJNT, Mrs. Beanetar
lafayette
BOATRIGHr, Salathiel B.
Crawford
BOBBTIT, Mrs. 1. P.
BOBO, Mrs. Gertie
BOBO, Mrs. lin. J.
Lee
Apr. 19, 1924
Benton
Benton
Sebastian
Clark
not given
not given
BOONER, E. B.
BOYD, Mrs. Ida
BOYD, Mrs. Uzzie O'Neal Conditt
BCDl'H, A. J.
BCDl'HE, Mrs. M. E.
BORlAND, Harold
BOSTAIN, N. B.
BRACEY, A. A.
BRAO<MAN, George
BRADFORD, J. C.
BRADFORD, Mrs. J. C.
BRADY, Mrs. Mary J.
BRANSCN, Mrs. laura
BRANTIEi, Eisnor E.
BRANILEY, Mrs. Josephine
BRarolER, Mrs. Margaret C.
BRA~, Mrs. M. A.
BRFARLEY, Joseph
BRIWU..E'l, Mrs. Joseph
BREWER, J. W.
BRIJX;ES, D. J.
BRIJX;ES, Mrs. D. J.
BRIJX;ES, Mrs. Darthulia Jane
BRIDWELL, Jerry T.
BRUCEFIELD, Marilda Jane
BRINCEFIELD, 0J.a.
BRINCEFIELD, Mrs. Sarah
BRILEY, Mrs. Neppie May
BROOKFIELD, Mrs. J. S.
BROOKS, B. M.
BRlXM, Mrs. Lucy A.
BRent, Mrs. Susan E.
BRam, Mrs. Ben F.
BRam, Mrs. Bettie
BRam, Mrs. Dolly Ann
BRam, Mr. Frank. N.
BRam, Henry
BRam, James Allen
BRam, Jim N.
BRam, JOM N.
BRam, Martha Alice Patterson
BROWN, Mrs. Nancy Caroline
BRYAN, Mrs. Nannie
BRYAN, Mrs. Mary Roper
BRYANT, Mrs. Elizabeth
BRYANT, James P.
BRYANT, Jesse M.
BRYANT, Mrs. Tennessee Virginia
BRYANT, William P.
BRYMER, Mrs. Mary
Pulaski
not given
White
Howard
Drew
Desha
Miller
Lonoke
Lonoke
Randolph
Pope
Pulaski
Miller
Pulaski
Searcy
Saline
Saline
Crawford
Hot Spring
Hot Spring
Franklin
Jefferson
Pulaski
Poinsett
Pulaski
Pulaski
Cross
Bradley
Saline
Miller
Saline
Lonoke
Miller
not given
Lonoke
Pope
Bradley
Bradley
Franklin
Montgomery
Pulaski
Pulaski
Jefferson
Clark
Saline
Pulaski
Clay
Ashley
136
not given
Dec. 20, 1920
1914
Nov. 30, 1935
Jul. 5, 1932
tkt. 3, 1910
tkt. 16, 1918
Jan. 3, 1908
tkt.
1934
Jun. 20, 1914
Jan. 1, 1919
Feb. 10, 1937
Aug. 15, 1922
Apr. 6, 1961
Jan. 2, 1929
1916
Nov. 2, 1934
Sep. 3, 1945
Feb. 18, 1934
Aug. 20, 1923
Aug. 20, 1923
Jan. 5, 1910
Mar. 4, 1912
Mar. 4, 1912
Jan. 18, 1936
Jan. 24, 1922
Feb.
1918
Feb. 4, 1918
Nov. 12, 1907
Mar. 10, 1948
Jan. 17, 1935
Mar. 13, 1930
Feb. 24, 1918
Dec. 18, 1940
Sep. 13, 1933
Jul. 1, 1919
Aug. 14, 1941
not given
Apr. 15, 1918
Dec. 27, 1934
not admitted
not admitted
Jul. 13, 1951
Apr. 2, 1929
Oct. 26, 1937
Jul. 17, 1951
Sep. 5, 1932
Feb. 14, 1918
Mar. 8, 1920
Nov. 20, 1924
Jul. 27, 1917
Feb. 4, 1934
B' $HERS, John
BURKHEAD, W. J.
BURLISON, Mrs. J. M.
BURNE'IT, George W.
Nevada
Apr.
Feb.
1,
1,
9,
29,
23,
9,
12,
22,
22,
28,
22,
13,
11,
20,
1923
1928
1947
1936
1920
1927
1912
1922
1922
1932
1952
1914
1935
1935
BURNEY, Mrs. Lou
BURNS, Hardy
BURRCM, Mrs. Ellen O.
BURRCM, Robert
BURRCM, Samuel M.
BUTI.ER, Miss El!ma
BUZBEE, Mrs. ElDma L.
Clark
Pulaski
Independence
Garland
Pulaski
Logan
Clark
Randolph
!-bntganery
Union
Jefferson
BYERLY, W. M.
BYRD, Sara
BYRD, Lydia A.
Pope
JuI.
Jefferson
Garland
not given
BURNEITE, Seth
CADAY, (harles S.
CAIROUN, !-bllie A.
CAMERCN, lizzie
CAMPBELL, Mrs. Anna
CANADAY, J. L.
CANE, J. B.
CANl.\rlN, B. T.
CANTRELL, T. B.
CAPER'IDN, Mary E.
CAPSHAW, Mrs. Florence
CARDWELL, Mrs. Nancy
CARTER, Isaac
CARTER, Joshua. M.
CARTER, Mrs. Mary C.
CARTREIT, A. M.
CASH, Andrew
CASADY, Mrs. Eleby
CATER, Mr. M. T.
CHADWICK, J. C.
CHAMBERS, Mrs. Louisa J.
CHAMBERS, Mrs. Mary
CHANCEUDR, Mrs. Laura
CHANDLER, J. A.
CHANDLER, !-bllie
CHAH1AN, David D.
CHAH1AN, Martha M.
CHAPPELL, Mrs. ltlrris
CHASTAIN, T. J.
CHATFIEl.D, John Clay
CHATFIEl.D, Mrs. J. C.
CHEEX, Mrs. Mary
CI:lESTNI.IT, Mrs. L.J.
CHEVALIER, Henry F.
CH()'WNING, Mary Francis
CHUM, R. D.
CHURCHWELL,
CHURCHWELL,
Cl.ARK, Mrs.
ClARY, Mrs.
Hattie
J. R.
A. B.
Mary J.
!-bntganery
Pulaski
Miller
Woodruff
Saline
Scott
Independence
Independence
~tead
Woodruff
Randolph
Saline
Garland
Faulkner
Nevada
Clark
Ibward
Washington
Cleveland
Hot Spring
Saline
Benton
Greene
Pulaski
Pulaski
White
Fhillips
Benton
Mississippi
Boone
Jefferson
Ashley
Lincoln
Jefferson
Pulaski
Miller
Independence
not given
Pulaski
137
Dec.
Mar.
Aug.
Jan.
Feb.
May
Jun.
JuI.
Jan.
Apr.
Dec.
Jun. 23, 1932
Oct. 8, 1936
Feb. ,2 1 1920
not admltted
Jan. 71 1918
not admitted
Aug. 17, 1932
Jan. 1, 1924
3,
Sep. 19,
Jan. 11,
JuI. 6,
Nov.
1948
1937
1935
1925
not admitted
Apr. 4, 1934
circa 1913
Feb. 10, 1920
Jan. 25/ 1951
not admlt ted
Feb. 14, 1926
not given
~.
Mar.
15, 1936
4, 1928
):!i: t§:
t~j~
did not enter
Apr. 5, 1932
Feb. 9/ 1926
not admitted
Jan. 17, 1929
May 11, 1928
May 3, 1946
Aug. 6, 1923
not admitted
Jan. 10, 1927
Jui. 19, 1915
Nov. 11, 1931
Apr. 12, 1934
not admitted
not admitted
ClAY, Mrs. Cynthia H.
ClAYI'ON, R. P.
CI.ElX, Mrs • Mary E.
CLIFf, Nancy Welch
CLIFI'OO, Ida B.
CLINE, John
ClAUD, David M.
COBB, Jesse
COBB, D. A.
CODY, B. F.
CODY, James L.
COFFELT, James A.
COFFELT, Mrs. James A.
OOFFEY, Mrs. Nannie H.
COFFMAN, H. C.
OOFFMAN, Mrs. H. C.
COLE, Mrs. /wanda A.
OOLE, L. L.
COLE, Mrs. L. L.
COLEMAN, Mary
COLLINS, Mrs. C. A.
OOLLINS, Mrs. M. C.
CONDElL, Harriet M.
ClXJK, Mrs. Florence
COOK, James T.
ClXJK, Mary
COOK, Richnond N.
ClXJK, Robert C.
COOK, Mrs. Sarah Ellen
COPPLEMAN, George F.
OORBEIT, Rev. R. R.
aJRBEIT, S. D.
CORLEY, Mrs. Sarah J.
OORN, Thomas J.
aJl'HREN, James M.
OOITEN, Mrs. A. E.
COTION, Benjamin T. L.
carroN, John M.
OJI'IREIL, W. J.
COURmEY, Mrs. Donia
CCNEY, A.
OOVINGI'ON, Mrs. N. J.
COWELL, Mrs. Susie V.
fiX, Mrs. Elizabeth F.
COX, Mrs. Jennie Belle i1lrnett
OOZORf, Mrs. Nancy Ervin
CRABTREE, B. M.
CRABTREE, Mrs. B. M.
CRABTREE, James
CRADDOCK, Ed
CRAIG, Joheph H.
CRAIG, Mrs. Joheph H.
CRAIG, Mrs. Mary A.
CRAIG, Mrs. Mary A.
CRAIG, Mrs.
Franklin
Washington
Cleveland
May 25, 1939
Faulkner
Howard
Saline
Independence
not admitted
Oct. 25, 1931
not admitted
Jan. 23, 1951
Feb. 22, 1922
Jun. 15, 1943
Oct. 1, 1922
Pulaski
Dec.
Miller
Baxter
Benton
Benton
Boone
Montgomery
not given
not admitted
Oct. 10, 1921
Oct. 10, 1921
Jan. 8, 1936
Jan. 1, 1932
not admitted
not admitted
not admitted
Oct. 31, 1916
Jul. 1, 1919
Aug. 12, 1923
Aug. 26, 1934
Aug. 25, 1922
Jul. 28, 917
not admitted
Jan. 24, 1922
Sep. 6, 1956
not admitted
not given
Oct. 13, 1936
not admitted
not admitted
not admitted
Nov. 16, 1938
Nov. 6, 1911
not given
not admitted
not admitted
Feb. 17, 1923
not given
Aug. 11, 1933
not given
Nov. 30, 1922
not admi t ted
Sep. 1, 1925
Oct. 25, 1932
Pulaski
Pulaski
Garland
not given
Calhoun
Drew
Pulaski
Pulaski
Poinsett
Lafayette
Pulaski
Clark
Yell
Pulaski
not given
White
Hot Spring
Benton
Pulaski
Miller
Boone
Bradley
Garland
Sebastian
Pulaski
Floyd
Pulaski
Newton
Miller
Jefferson
Pulaski
9, 1918
May 24, 1950
1, 1919
Jun. 1, 1919
Saline
not given
Jul.
Pulaski
Clay
Pulaski
Pulaski
not given
not given
Jan. 13, 1916
not given
not admitted
Jan. 15, 1927
not admitted
Saline
Saline
Saline
138
CRAIG, W. T.
CRAIN, Henrietta
CRAMER, Martha
CRAMER, Jas. A.
CRANFORD, J. N.
CRANFORD, Mrs. Janie
CRAVENS, A. G.
CRAWFORD, C. C.
CRIM, Josephine
CROOKS, Mrs. Fannie J.
CROSIN, Sam J.
CROW, Mrs. Dana
CROWE, Mrs. M. J.
CRCXo1Fll.., Dora B.
CRCXo1Fll.., Robert N.
CROZIER, aJgh Vaughn
CRUl'CHER, James George
CUlLINS, Mary E.
CLm, wella Ann
CONDIFF, A.
CURRIE, Mrs. Wn. H.
CURTIS, Ida J.
DABBS, Mrs. Martie M.
DANIEL, G. W.
DANIEL, E. N.
DANIELS, Mrs. L.
DANIEl. Fannie J.
DAVENPORT, Mary E.
DAVENPORT, Mrs. Mary
DAVIDSON, E. F.
DAVIDSON, Mrs. E. F.
DAVIS, A. H.
DAVIS,Joseph Wilson
DAVIS, Mrs. Catherine
DAVIS, Mrs. Mary
DAVIS, Mrs. Mary Pritchett
DAVIS, W. D.
DAVIS, Mrs. W. D.
DEAL, William J.
DEAL, Mrs. William J.
DEARMAN, Mary
DeHART, E. P.
DENDY, W. C.
DFNI'ON, Einily Vick
DESKIN, Sam R.
DICK, 1homas Jefferson
DINGLER, J. T.
DIlLAHUNlY, J. G.
DILLI~ER, Dr. A.
DIXON, Angus
DIXON, Mrs. Angus A.
DIXON, Mrs. Susan
DIXON, Jerome L.
DAAN, W. F.
DAa<ERY, J. C.
1, 1915
3, 1956
Jun. 3, 1952
Hazard 7
Jan.
Izard
May
Iilite
not given
Little River
Iilite
Marion
St. Francis
fulaski
Pulaski
Franklin
Nevada
Clark
Washington
not given
Jan. 8, 1918
Feb. 9, 1935
Feb. 11, 1925
Jan. 20, 1912
not admitted
Apr. 16, 1946
Washi~ton
not admit ted
not admited
Jan. 23, 1925
Mar. 2, 1926
Jan. 1, 1926
Prairie
not admitted
Greene
not admitted
Jan. 1, 1920
Pulash
Pulaski
Pulaski
Benton
Pope
Drew
not given
Nevada
Phillips
~~ki
fulaski
Lincoln
Lincoln
Grady?
Woodruff
Pike
Iilite
Union
Craighead
Craighead
Ashley
Ashley
Franklin
Clark
~=
Miller
fulaski
Ashley
Marion
FUlton
Bradley
Craighead
Bradley
Johnson
not given
West M:Jnroe, lA
139
May 10, 1935
Jul.
9, 1922
Dec. 14, 1939
O::.t. 3, 1956
Jun. 19, 1936
not given
O::.t.
1, 1922
not given
not admitted
Jul. 14, 1933
not admitted
May 13, 1925
Jun. 16 r 1925
not admitted
not given
Aug. 6, 1938
Feb. 3, 1918
not admitted
Mar. 24,1923
24, 1923
Mar.
~: 2~: l~~
O::.t. 18, 1938
not given
not admi t ted
O::.t. 27, 1931
not given
Jan. 8, 1917
Feb. 24, 1920
Apr. 23, 1926
not admitted
Sep. 7,
Jan. 1,
Sep. 7,
Jan. 1,
Jun. 12,
1921
1922
1921
1921
1913
not admitted
OODSON, Calvin
OODSON, Parilee
OOUARHIDE, Mrs. T. B.
OOllARHIDE, Mrs. Virginia
DOOALDSOO, J. F.
DONALDSON, Mrs. Synthia D.
DOOOVAN, C. W.
DRFA, Mrs. Ella
DUKE, G. H.
DUlA, Mrs. Ella H.
DUMAS, Mrs. M. A.
DUNCAN, R. Y.
DUNCAN, W. T.
DUNFORD, Jim W.
DUNKLIN, Jr., J. P.
DUNLOP, Mrs. Mary F.
DUNN, Robert M.
DURHAM, Mrs. Mary F.
DUVAlL, Bettie
DWYER, Mrs. Vinnie
DYE, Bette
DYER, J. B.
DYER, Isaih
DYER, Jim W.
DYER, Mattie
DYKES, Nannie E.
DYKES, Mrs. J. W.
DYKES, Mr. J. W.
DYKES, Nannie Turner
DYKES, William
Perry
Nimrod
Sevier
Pulaski
Carroll
Chicot
Pulaski
Phillips
Pulaski
Phillips
Pulaski
Craighead
Ashley
Franklin
Mississippi
Clark
Little River
Nevada
Pulaski
Clay
Cross
Jackson
Jackson
Jackson
Jackson
Franklin
Franklin
Franklin
Saline
Faulkner
Feb. 29, 1924
Nov. 13, 1923
not admitted
May 13, 1933
Feb. 2, 1935
not admited
Jan. 3, 1925
not admitted
Apr. 21, 1926
not given
Jul. 15, 1935
not admitted
Apr. 9, 1930
no t admitted
Apr. 6, 1922
Aug. 11, 1923
Feb. 1, 1928
Nov. 15, 1938
Jul. 9, 1922
Jul. 31, 1925
May
8, 1947
not admitted
not admited
EANES, John o.
EASLEY, Charles
EASAM, James
FASTSEP, B. F.
EBBS, E1nilY Cooper
ECHOLS, Elec tus T.
EDERINGTON, R. C.
EII'KlNSON, D. F.
EWARDS, Laura
ElAM, Josiah
ElMJRE, Jane
ELROD, Jinmie
EMERSOO, J. M.
EMERSON, Mrs. J. M.
ENGLISH, Henry C.
EPPES, William J.
ERVIN, George M.
EVANS, Mrs. A. H.
EVANS, Mrs. Annie Cora
EVANS, Mrs. Ella H.
EVANS, Mrs. M. M.
EVANS, Mrs. Odie
EVANS, Wn.
EVEREIT, Mrs. Mattie R.
Pulaski
Pulaski
Washington
lDgan
not admitted
not admitted
not admitted
Feb. 20, 1920
Howard
Montgomery
Bradley
Saline
Howard
Pulaski
Pulaski
Saline
Pulaski
Pulaski
Lawrence
White
Drew
Benton
Pulaski
Pulaski
Faulkner
Pulaski
Yell
lDnoke
140
Aug.
5,
1,
1,
6,
1,
28,
1925
1921
1914
1921
1914
1924
Jan.
Jan.
Jul.
Jan.
May
not admitted
Dec.
4, 1929
Nov. 29, 1930
Apr. 11, 1926
Jan. 7, 1919
Feb. 1, 1949
not adm~tted
not admitted
May 23, 1938
not given
not given
not admitted
not admitted
Oct. 29, 1921
Sep. 16, 1933
Aug. 17,
Oct. 18,
Aug. 24,
Sep. 12,
Aug. 1,
Jan. 22,
1938
1936
1933
1929
1920
1923
EZEll.., Isaac
Washington
Apr. 14, 1918
FARMER, Rachael C.
FARMER, B. F.
FARRIS, D. B.
FARRIS, R. M.
FAUlKNER, Mrs. Caroline
FAUlKNER, D. B.
FAUlKNER, Mrs. D. B.
FAULKNER, R. A.
FEEMESTER, Mrs. Lizzie
FEErON, Mrs. Fnma Winn
FENNIE, Julia L.
FERGUSON, Alfred M.
FERGUSON, A. M.
FERGUSON, Mrs. Amanda M.
FERGUSON, J. N.
FERGUSON, J. P.
FERGUSON, Mrs. R. R.
FEW, Ignatius S.
FIELDING, James Marion
FIGG, John L.
FILES, Mr. Jesse F.
FINLEY, James A.
FINLEY, Mary C.
F'LEM'tING, Mrs. M. M.
FLEMING, Mark !tJnroe
FLEMING, Mrs. M. M.
FLYNT, S. W.
FORBES, Mrs. M. E.
FORD, Mrs. Allie
FORD, Mrs. Amanda
FORD, Mrs. Susie M.
FARSHAY, Jesse H.
FOSTER, Mrs. Elizabeth
FOSTER, G. F.
FOSTER, Mrs. Maggie
FOSTER, Mrs.Mary
FOSTER, Mary A.
FRANKLIN, Mrs. Irene Cloyd
FREEMAN, George Washington
FREEMAN, William Larkin
FREEMAN, William J.
FRENCH, E. D.
FRENCH, Mrs. E. D.
FRISBY, A. G.
FROST, E.M.
FRYAR, John H.
FRYAR, Mrs. M. D.
FRYER, Henry
FULKS, Mr. G. W.
FILLER, Caswell Holmes
FULLER, Mrs. Thomas C.
Cleoorne
not given
not given
Garland
Pulaski
Pulaski
Pulaski
not
not
not
not
not given
Sebastian
not given
Johnson
Yell
Monroe
!tJnroe
Monroe
Stone
Craighead
Phillips
3, 1921
not admitted
not admitted
JuI. 30, 1916
Apr. 24, 1925
Aug. 22, 1923
Dec. 3, 1934
Oct. 19, 1912
Apr. 4, 917
not given
May 20, 1923
Aug. 16, 1928
Nov. 26, 1938
not admitted
Apr. 14, 1933
not admitted
Oct. 14, 1932
not admitted
not admitted
Oct. 11, 1933
Oct. 1, 1917
not admitted
Oct. 7, 1936
Jan. 1, 1925
not given
Jan. 13, 1921
Jan. 13, 1921
not given
Apr. 4, 1927
May 11, 1928
May 11, 1928
not admitted
not admitted
Feb. 13, 1926
JuI. 7, 1933
GAINES, Mrs. Keron G.
White
Aug. 6, 1936
unknown
Howard
Pulaski
Union
not given
not given
Independence
Lonoke
Clark
Pulaski
Ashley
Grant
hbite
Jefferson
Union
Pulaski
lawrence
Pulaski
not given
Sevier
Pulaski
Pulaski
Greene
Pulaski
Benton
White
Lee
Baxter
Bradley
Pulaski
Faulkner
Lincoln
Perry
141
admitted
admitted
admitted
admitted
Aug. 22, 1923
not admitted
not admitted
not admitted
Apr. 23, 1948
May 29, 1952
not admitted
not given
not given
Mar. 22, 1923
Jun. 22, 1914
~r.
NOv.
30. 1932
GArnIER, Mrs. Z. H.
Saline
Apr.
GAMBLE, Anna L.
Fulton
Clark
Ashley
Nov. 13, 1919
GARDNER, J. C.
GARDNER, Lee
GARDNER, t.1n.
GARNER, C. W.
GARNER, Mrs. Mary Jane
GARNER, Rachael
GARNEIT, W. R.
GARRETT, Benjamin Franklin
GARRETT, E.
GARRETT, Susan E.
GARRIOTI', Eim1a Walker
GARRIS, James Andrew
GATELY, Mrs. Fannie C.
GATELY, W. K.
GATES, Janus
GATES, Thocnas W.
GA'I'EHKOD, Dr. C. C.
GATHRIGHl', Mrs. K. M.
GENI'RY, G. M.
GENTRY, Mrs. G. M.
GENI'RY, Mrs. a;len Estell
GEORGE, R. L.
GERVIN, Carrie
GIBSON, James Napoleon
GILBERT, Henderson Leona
GILBERT, Mrs. henderson Leona
GilL, D. W.
GIll., J. S.
GIU, Stroud J.
GIllESPIE, Mrs. Lelia M.
GIllESPIE, Mrs. L. M.
GilLIAM, t.1n.
GII.IDRE, Campbell G.
GIVENS, Wesley
GLASSCXlCK, Mrs. Nancy
GLENN, George W.
GOWEWEIL, John H.
GUDEWEIL, J. R.
GlIJVER, Mrs. Martha
GlDVER, H. J.
GlDVER, S. A.
GlDVER, Mrs. S. A.
GlDVER, Mrs. Tempie
GOWER, J. M.
GOWER, Mrs. J. M.
GOOCH, Mrs. Mary L.
GORDON, Robert
GORDIAN, Nancy C.
GOSSEIT, Mrs. It>llie
GRAHAM, W. W.
GRANBERRY, C. M.
GRANBERRY, G. W.
GRANT, t.1n. H.
Arkansas
Ouachita
Ouachita
Grant
Garland
Woodruff
Lafayette
Clark
Stone
Clark
Yell
Perry
Pulaski
not given
not given
Lincoln
Hot Spring
Hot Spring
Ihite
Faulkner
Poinsett
i'lhillips
hllliPS
Drew
Drew
not given
Hempstead
Hempstead
Ashley
Pulaski
Saline
Pulaski
Washington
Saline
Johnaon
Randolph
not given
Pulaski
Pulaski
Jefferson
not given
not given
Nevada
not given
Arkansas
Pulaski
Pulaski
Pulaski
wnoke
not given
142
5, 1933
not admit ted
not admitted
Jan. 13, 1919
20, 1923
Sap. 24, 1924
Aug.
not
not
not
not
Aug.
admitted
admitted
admitted
admit ted
3, 1923
not admitted
Apr. 30, 1934
Dec. 16, 1936
Jan. 6, 1923
not admitted
Nov. 14, 1915
not admitted
not admitted
Jun. 25, 1917
Jun. 25, 1917
Jui. 1, 1936
not admitted
not admi tted
not admit ted
Aug.
12, 1917
not admitted
Feb. 1, 1921
Jui. 25, 1922
not adml.tted
Apr. 17, 1940
Jan. 1, 1922
Feb. 20, 1918
Jan. 15, 1917
May 28, 1925
Feb. 16, 1933
Feb. 20, 1918
Jui. 18, 1915
not admit ted
Apr. 6, 1920
Jan. 20, 1916
Jun. 19, 1922
May 17, 1922
Aug. 11, 1933
not given
not given
Oct. 21, 1933
not given
Jan. 7, 1917
Oct. 7, 1935
not given
not admitted
Jan. 31, 1922
not admitted
•
GROSS, Mrs. Larenia
GRAVES, James C.
GRAVES, James F.
GRAY, Mrs. Mary A.
GRAY, Sarah Ann
GRAY, Mrs. M. A.
GRAY, T. L.
GRAY, Wn.
GRFA'lHOOSE, B. H.
GREEN, Ci.Jrtice J.
GREEN, George Washington
GREEN, George W.
GREEN, J. W.
GREEN, Mrs. Sarah
GREEN, Sr., lhomas
GREER, Mrs. ~ Hartley
GREER, Miss. Lou
GREGORY, James K.
GRffiG, Bettie
Saline
Perry
Arkansas
Yell
Pulaski
Independence
Union
Col1.mbia
Washington
Pulaski
Sebas tiaI:t
Logan
Yell
Miller
Jefferson
Pulaski
Drew
M:>ntgomery
Craighead
GREY, C. C.
'White
GRIFFIN, Bettie Thompson
GRIFFING, W. L.
GRIFFING, Mrs. W. L.
GRIFFITH, A. J.
GRIFFITH, Mrs. L. H.
GRIMES, W. F.
Lafayette
not given
not given
Colunbia
Union
lDgan
Jackson
GR(X;AN, A. J.
GUNl'ER, Elnma
GWYN, D. B.
~~l_Joseph I.
HA\NAlill, J. N •
HADOON, J. N.
HALE,James Alexander
HALE,John
HALE, Mrs. F. M.
HALEi', Mrs. M:>llie A.
HALEY, J. P.
HALL, C. A.
HALL, Mrs. C. A.
HALL, J. T.
HALL, Mrs. M. E.
HALL, Martin V.
HALL, Mrs. Nettie
HALL, Silas
HALLIBURroN, Mrs. Edith
HAMBLFN, Mrs. Lillie B.
HAMER, F. A.
1iAMPl'CX'I, Mrs. Ettie
HANCE, Ehrna Louise
HAN<XlCJ{, Elizabeth
HANlXlCK, J. W.
HAN<XlCJ{, Mrs. Ehrna Olivia Elliott
HANEY, John Harrison
HANKS, Alexander M.
Pulaski
not given
Pulaski
Sebastian
Crawford
Mississippi
not given
Little River
Sebastian
Ashley
Lonoke
Saline
Lawrence
'White
not given
Bradley
Grant
Pulaski
Washington
Madison
Miller
Hot Spring
lee
Union
Pulaski
Dallas
not given
143
not admit ted
not admitted
Jan. 3, 1923
Jun. 4, 1933
Jan. 27, 1922
Mar. 16, 1922
Aug. 17, 1918
Sep. 16, 1919
not admitted
not admitted
May 29, 1918
not admitted
Nov. 6, 1911
not admitted
Sep. 6, 1920
Mar. 28, 1950
Apr. 19, 1923
not admitted
Jan. 3, 1921
not admitted
Mar. 28, 1951
not given
not given
not given
Jan. 15, 1930
<X:.t. 25, 1924
not admitted
not admitted
not given
not admitted
not admitted
Jul. 12, 1933
not admitted
Mar. 1, 1920
Feb. 1, 1924
Aug. 18, 1940
Jan. 1, 1922
Feb. 9, 1895
Jan. 25, 1918
not admitted
Feb. 12, 1927
not given
Mar. 6, 1927
not admitted
Nov. 19, 1938
May 28, 1944
Sep.
1913
Nov. 16, 1932
Jul. 1, 1946
Nov. 3, 1948
not admitted
May 4, 1933
1900
not given
HANNA, Peter
HARDEN, H. C.
HARDEN, J. B.
HARDFSI'ER, R. D•
HARDIN, Mrs. John B.
HARDIN, George W.
HARDIN, Mrs. Mary M.
HARDIN, Nancy N.
HARGIS, Gaston S.
HARKINS, Fannie Elizabeth
HARKINS, Mary
HARlDW, Mrs. Fannie
HARPER, Mrs. Bettie
HARPER, Miss lJJcy
HARPER, Mrs. Mary
HARPER, Mrs. Roberta
HARRELL, J. A.
HARRINGTON, Mrs. Sarah
HARRIS, F. H.
HARRIS, J. M.
HARRIS, Jesse W.
HARRIS, Mrs. Susan Ann
HARRISON, Mrs. Collie
HARRISON, Mrs. Esther
HARROLSOO, Mrs. S. C.
HARROLSON, J. B.
HARSHAW, Mrs. M. L.
HART, W. H.
HAR1WEI.L, E. N.
HAR1WEI.L, Ed. N.
HARVIlL, Mrs. Nole Smith
HARImD, Louis N.
HPITCH, Mrs. Elizabeth
HATFIELD, Mrs. Tennie Thompson
HAWLEY', Mrs. Bertha
HAY, Mrs. Katie Bishop
HAYNES, William Henry
HAYNES, J. J.
HAYNES, Mrs. W. H.
HAYNIE, Toliver Jones
HEARD, John B.
HEARD, Mrs. John B.
HEATH, Mrs. R. S.
HEATH, R. S.
HELUJMS, Thos.
HELTON, Mrs. Nannie
HENDERSOO, Mrs. Carrie M.
HENDERSON, J. J.
HENDERSOO, 1. W.
HENDRI<XS, J. L.
HENDRICKS, T. E.
HENLEY, J. M.
HENLEY, Mrs. J. M.
HENRY, R. R.
HERBERI', Mary Jane
Washington
Saline
Cross
Perry
Cross
Van Buren
Washington
Lawrence
Garland
Ouachita
Hot Spring
Cleveland
Clark
Pulaski
Pulaski
Drew
Saline
Jefferson
Dallas
Benton
Lawrence
Poinsett
White
Craighead
Jefferson
Jefferson
Prairie
White
not given
Nevada
Pope
Yell
Woodruff
Pope
Pulaski
Woodruff
Pulaski
not given
Pulaski
Ouachita
Jackson
Jackson
Randolph
Randolph
Nevada
Poinsett
Pulaski
Stone
Pulaski
Craighead
Pulaski
Baxter
Baxter
Lawrence
Jefferson
144
Feb. 10, 1920
Sep.
8, 1920
Feb. 21, 1923
not given
not given
Aug. 15, 1931
Aug. 20, 1936
not admitted
Jan. 12, 1927
Jan. 16, 1949
not admitted
Jul. 19, 1936
(Ct. 31, 1933
Jul. 5, 1938
Jan. 7, 1926
(Ct. 31, 1932
May 31, 1925
not admitted
Jan. 14, 1933
not admitted
Feb. 8, 1917
Sep. 10, 1935
not given
Jun. 26, 1948
Mar. 28, 1919
Mar. 28, 1919
(Ct. 7, 1931
not admitted
not admitted
not admitted
Jul. 28, 1947
not admitted
Mar. 30, 1937
(Ct. 5, 1947
May
4, 1930
not admitted
not admitted
not given
1916
Feb. 12, 1935
Jul. 30, 1925
Jul. 30, 1925
Jun. 30, 1931
not given
(Ct. 1, 1920
Jun. 24, 1946
Mar. 20, 1950
not admitted
Mar. 20, 1921
not admitted
Dec. 31, 1918
not admitted
not admitted
not admitted
May
1, 1922
HERMAN, L. P.
HERRINGTON, Mrs. S. H.
HICKMAN, A. J.
HICKMAN, Mrs. A. J.
HICKMAN, J. O.
HICKS, Albert
HICKS, C. W.
HICKS, Mrs. C. W.
HICKS, Mary
HIGGINS, Jno. M.
HIGHIUJER, J. O.
HILL, Annabella ~riot
HILL, E. P.
HILL, Mr. Geo. W.
HILL, ~nry H.
HILL, Mrs. Henry H.
HILL, Mrs. laura
HILL, Martha A.
HILL, Mrs. Sidney W.
HINES, F. M.
HINES, Mrs. F. M.
HINES, George W.
HINSON, Mrs. M. A.
HIPP, Mrs. J. R.
HOBBS, Mrs. Alice
HODGENS, Mrs. Lena
HOGUE, B.F.
HOLDER, W. R.
HOllAND, Mrs. E. E.
HOllAND, Mrs. Fanine
HOllAND, Mrs.Mary
HOllAND, W. G.
HOllAND, W. M.
HOLLAWAY, J.L.
HOlliES, M. J.
HOLT, Mrs. Lodnsen
HOOEYClJIT, Mrs. EInrna
HOOE, James
HOOE, James
HOOKS, Mrs. Mary A.
HOPKINS, Francis N.
HOPKINS, Mrs. M. A.
HOPPER, M. R.
HOPPER, Thomas T.
HOR'IDN, H. J.
HOUrnENS, Mrs. William T.
HOUrnENS, William T.
HOUSE, Jefferson J.
HGlARD, Mrs. Fannie
HOWARD, J. H.
HOolE, J. B.
HCM.EI.l.., W. B.
HUDSON, lliarles H.
HUDSON, lliarles E.
HUDSON, John M.
Columbia
Pulaski
Saline
Saline
Hot Spring
not given
White
White
Cle1:urne
not given
Bradley
Pulaski
Lonoke
Ashley
Clark
Clark
Fulton
Hempstead
Pulaski
Columbia
Nevada
Nevada
Sebastian
Cle1:urne
St. Francis
Pulaski
Garland
not given
Lonoke
Yell
Pulaski
Madison
Pulaski
St. I!'rancis
Faulkner
Yell
Pulaski
Garland
Hot Spring
Faulkner
Pope
Greene
White
Austin, 'IX
Pulaski
Washington
Washington
Pulaski
Union
not given
Washington
Lonoke
Pulaski
Jefferson
not given
145
Apr. 23, 1929
Jul. 15, 1922
May 3, 1925
May 3, 1925
not admitted
not given
Sep. 1, 1927
Sep. 1, 1927
Jun. 20, 1926
Apr. 24, 1916
not admitted
Aug. 15, 1931
not admitted
Oct. 7, 1929
Apr. 22, 1922
Mar. 18, 1922
Jan. 1, 1922
not admitted
Jan. 10, 1935
not admi t ted
not admitted
not admitted
Nov. 15, 1925
Jun. 15, 1933
not admitted
Apr. 17, 1934
Nov. 5, 1921
not admitted
Jan. 1, 1935
Oct. 19, 1941
Jun. 5, 1920
Jul. 5, 1922
not admitted
not admitted
not admitted
not admitted
Nov. 1, 1933
not given
Jan. 1, 1922
Jul. 23, 1940
Aug. 25, 1921
JuI. 20, 1935
Aug. 12, 1918
not admitted
Jan. 30, 1926
Aug. 17, 1924
Jul. 26, 1924
Apr. 29, 1918
Dec. 7, 1934
May 13, 1921
Jun. 2l, 1914
not admitted
Jan. 14, 1919
no t admit ted
not admitted
HUFF, Mrs. Mahley S.
HUGHES, John V.
HUGHES, John W.
HULSE, Mrs. J. V.
HULSEY, Es ther
HUNT, Ira P.
HUNl'ER, Mrs. J. P.
HUNI'SMAN, A. F.
HURLEY,Noah
HURN, P. R.
HUSION, Maria M.
HlJI'CHINSON, Mrs. Gertie
HlJI'CHISON, Mr s. L. S.
White
Johnson
Pulaski
Nevada
Lawrence
Yell
Pulaski
not given
Woodruff
Washington
Garland
Phillips
Sep. 7, 1933
Aug. 11, 1931
Mar. 17, 1926
not admitted
not admitted
not admitted
Dec. 5, 1932
Sep. 3, 1914
not admitted
Apr. 7, 1926
not admitted
Nov. 12, 1956
not admitted
IRBY, Ella Elizabeth
IRION, James P.
IVEY, Martha J.
IVEY, William B.
Lonoke
Pike
Saline
Saline
not admi t ted
Mar. 1, 1921
Jan. 8, 1926
Jan. 8, 1926
JABINE, Mr. <liar les Woodruff
JACKSON, Mrs. Nancy Jane
JAMES, John J.
JAMES, Mrs. Venia Maore
JAMISON, Mrs. P. G.
JANKINS, Mr. A. F.
JANKINS, Allen F.
JENKINS, L. A.
JENl'RY, Reason Allen
JESTER, Mrs. lucy
JOHNSON, Mr. Ella S.
JOHNSOO, Mrs. Fanine
JOHNSON, Mrs. J. W.
JOHNSON, Mrs. Mary A.
JOHNSON, Marian J.
JOHNSON, Mrs. Sarah
JOHNSON, Mrs. W. P.
JOHNSTON, J. N.
JONES, Mrs. Alice Norvell
JONES, Edward B.
JONES, Mrs. F. B.
JONES, Mrs. Georgia
JONES, Mrs. Josephine E.
JONES, Mary E.
JORDAN, W. J.
Pulaski
Pulaski
Craighead
Lawrence
not given
Marion
Marion
Clerurne
White
Ibward
Boone
Woodruff
Grant
Lonoke
Woodruff
Hot Spring
not given
Greene
Pulaski
Little River
Jefferson
Hot Spring
Pulaski
Pulaski
Washington
Dec. 12, 1940
not admitted
Jul. 7, 1921
not admitted
not admitted
not admi t ted
not admitted
not admitted
not admitted
Jul. 25, 1932
not admitted
Nov. 10, 1935
not admitted
Aug. 11, 1923
Nov. 25, 1938
not admitted
May 24, 1914
Apr. 20, 1933
Jan. 13, 1925
not given
Feb. 21, 1927
Jul. 15, 1936
Jul. 7 1932
Dec. 10, 1032
not admitted
KAEBFLEISQI
KALIP, Henry
KEAI'HLEY, James
KETrn, Mrs. Mary C.
KELLEIT, J. T.
KEllEY, James A.
KEllEY, Mary J.
KElLEY, Mrs. M. S.
KElLEY, Mrs. Willie Ella
KEIl..Y, Andrew Jackson
Pulaski
Franklin
Faulkner
Kay, OK
Randolph
Pike
Garland
Grant
Independence
Monroe
not admitted
Jan. 25, 1918
not admitted
not admitted
not admitted
Jan. 7, 1927
Dec. 12, 1937
Oct. 24, 1935
Aug. 24, 1933
not admitted
Sharp
146
KEU.Y, C. J.
KEU.Y, J. B.
I<ElLY, Josiah
KEU.Y, Julia E.
I<ElLY, Martha J.
I<ElLY, Mrs. S. C.
KENDRICK, O. R.
KI!NNElT, F. B.
KERLEY, Mrs. Arena Jane
KESTIR, Isaac
Kw..OOS'iiORl'H, Mrs. Melissa
KItti[NS, B. F.
KINCADE, A. p.
KOO, C. W.
KOO, Mrs. C. W.
KIRKHAM, lin. H.
KIRKHAM, Mrs. lin. H.
KIRKPFil'RICK, Mrs. Elizabeth
K~D, JOhn B.
KIRl'LE'i, M.
Union
Nevada
Aug. 21, 1923
Lee
Nevada
Jun. 13, 1923
Pulaski
Poinsett
Pope
Benton
Randolph
Fulton
Nevada
Benton
Logan
lDgan
·lDgan
Crawford
Crawford
Pulaski
Pulaski
Perry
KNIGHr. Mary
KNIGHr, Mrs. N. L.
KULP, Mrs. Mary
Ashley
LACY, W. 1.
LACY, Mrs. W. 1.
LAEL, J. A.
LAMB, l£roy
LAMB, strubel C.
LAMB, W. J.
LANCASTER, Ida
LANCASTER, Margaret L.
LANCASTER, W. L.
LANCE, Mrs. Agnes E.
LANE, M:lses
LANE, Mrs. Oscar B.
LANG, Mrs. B. F.
LANG, B. F.
I..ANGLE.Y, mrs. E. C.
I..ANGLE.Y, Mrs. Mattie M.
LANGSTON, J. H.
LANGSTON, Mrs. Sarah J.
LARY, Mrs. Zipparah
LASSITER, Jessie B.
LASSITER, Sarah Ann
lAWSON, G. W.
LAWRENCE, Mrs. Annie C. James
LAYMAN, John S.
LEAVELL, R. H.
LEDBEITER, J. C.
LEDOON, Mrs. lacy
LEDFORD, E. C.
Sebastian
Logan
Lincoln
Hot Spring
Os.llas
Pike
Saline
not given
Stone
Stone
~
Randolph
Garland
Sevier
Sevier
~ite
Pulaski
Yell
Pulaski
Faulkner
Independence
Nevada
Lawrence
Ibt Spring
Saline
Perry
Madison
Drew
not given
not admi t ted
Feb.
1, 1920
Jan. 5, 1927
not admitted
Sep. 20, 1932
Sep. 29, 1932
not admi tted
not admitted
Jan. 18, 1939
Mar. 23, 1929
Jan. 23, 1925
Sep. 5, 1922
Jan. 3, 1923
May 19, 1925
not admitted
Jun. 25, 1918
not admitted
not admitted
not admitted
Sep. 27, 1922
not admitted
Feb.
1, 1933
Dec. 14, 1932
Mar. 3, 1936
Jan. 1, 1918
not given
not given
Feb. 25, 1953
Feb. 25, 1953
Aug. 25, 1926
Jan. 6 1932
Jan.
1920
Aug. 14, 1923
Jul. 24, 1911
Jul. 24, 1917
Sep. 17, 1932
not admitted
not admitted
not admitted
May 24, 1932
Nov. 12, 1933
not admitted
Apr. 6, 1920
Jan. 16, 1949
Jan. 11, 1915
Jan. 14, 1925
Oct. 17, 1923
Aug. 10, 1933
Jan. 28, 1918
3,
This listing will be continued in the March, 1988, Arkansas Family Historian.
147
ROBERT BlAIR DESCENDANTS
Continued from June 1987 issue
BlAIR 00l'ES FR<J.I DECATUR ADVANCE
August 16, 1893: J. W. Blair is ahead now. He brought in a bunch of pea pods
2 feet 10 ioohes long, and soote geman millet 6 feet 11 inches tall.
Jerry
Truett says the land was a little thin where they grew, or they would have grown
larger. The sanples were taken to the fruit fair at Siloam Springs.
Great in
Arkansas.
September 6, 1895:
fruit this year.
September 27,
l\Jesday.
J.
2895:
Blair has a pear tree that bore 15 bushels of fine
W.
J.
W.
Blair returned from his visit to Barren Fork,
J. W. Blair left us a generous supply of extra good eating apples
morning. 'Illey were the pearmore variety.
this
October 4, 1895: JOM Blair who has been time keeper for the contractor on the
P & G Road at Barren r'ork returned home last week.
He expects to attend the A.
1. U. at Fayetteville this winter.
November 15, 1895:
Notice:
J. W. Blair Notary Public - All kinds of Legal
Papers made out and acknowledged - at Advance Office every Saturday afternoon.
January 24, 1896: J. W. Blair has it in the neck - a carbuncle.
of enjoying "heap much" agony.
March 13, 1896:
He complains
J. W. Blair was listed as Secretary of Decatur Lodge No. 562.
June 19, 1896: JOM W. Blair came up from Fayetteville, Saturday and will spend
vacation at home.
He has many things to say about A. 1. U. and intends to
return in September.
November 27, 1896:
Report of Decatur School.
Arithmetic Granmer Geeg.
Report Cards:
Writing Spelling History Psysiology
Maggie Blair
90
90
90
95
78
92
John Blair
90
89
72
95
63
88
Sam Blair
80
55
71
90
85
J. E. Thomas, Teacher
(This was listed as a subscription school.)
Item from the Decatur Herald: Thursday, october 30, 1969
&tract of obit of Samuel T. Blair: Residence at death - 2305 S. Drive,
Anaconda, Montana. Death came six days before his 86th birthday. Born October
148
25, 1883, in Decatur, Arkansas.
Received an engineering degree from the
University of Arkansas in 1910. he was the first rnenber of the Hall of Fame at
the University of Arkansas, a member of Tau Beta Pi engineering society, and
received a distinguished alumnus citation.
He had lived in Gary, Indiana., and in Arizona before moving to Anaconda 40 years
earlier.
His wife, Mary, and several nieces and nephews survived.
Mt. M:lriah Cemetery Mausoleum at Anaconda.
Note:
He was entombed in the
J. W. Blair - .James Washington Blair
John H. Blair - son of James W. Blair
The Blair letters are continued here.
Bentonville, Ark.
November 15, 1881
Dear Father,
Yours cane to hand and was glad to hear from you, but was very much disappointed
in not getting any money.
I had to borrow $50 to get some corn with. With the
exception of you sending me some. Well about the wagon, I never told him if I
did not pay it before I left I would leave. enough in your hands to pay for it
and he said that was all right.
I want you to sell all the stuff I left there
if you don't get half price for it and settle for the wagon and pay Mary Ann and
send me the balance as soon as possible.
As to John Williams, you will have to
look to him for what you paid him for I did not promise to pay anything and
will swear it.
I wrote to Young and he tells me that he had no authority to go
to you for anything. My things got here at last. If I had not got them I could
not have made the road paid for them for a receipt from a depot agent is worth
nothing after it leaves their road.
I recon they were all right. One box was
busted open.
I don't think there was anything gone. You said you wanted me to
give you a history of our travels.
I cannot give you all in one letter, a
portion of our trip was a rough one. Through Tennessee and Kentucky the roads
were very rough with water plenty. We crossed the Chio river the second TI.lesday
of our journey. Then we traveled in Illinois one week the most of it is a
pretty country but it looked like starvation. They are not making IIP.lCh. Their
feed and water was scarce and awful dusty. We crossed the Mississippi the Third
TI.lesday at Greens Old t'erry then we struck the roughest country I ever saw until
we got to Springfield.
There is some pretty country. The fourth 'lllesday I got
a passed going.
It was at Salem, M:l. there I stayed one week and as soon as I
was able to get out about we started.
I got to stay in a mans house and slept
on a mattress and he charged me $1.00 per day and the doctor charged me $10.50.
It was at Old fuody Williams and Wash Shackleford's ri~t there is where Mlrton
stopped.
It is the roughest place I ever saw but ~s good dust that is at
Hartsville, Ml, 150 miles from here.
We drove it in 5 days but it injured my
mules.
As to this state, this part of it is mity nice Bentonville is as nice a
place as I ever saw. I live 3 1/2 miles from it. There is some rough country
here when you ~t --- in the timber but the land is good of a good season it
will bring from 60 to 75 bushel of corn to the acres. This year it will make 25
bu.
Hardy had some that made 40 measured. Good land is going up fast.
I
Hardy has one place I had rather have as
missed it not coming here years ago.
any place in your valley that can be bought for 3000 and there is another place
149
close to me that can be bought
yours.
This is an easy country
cow any time of the year.
June
ship them to St. Louis, Mo. 335
of here.
for $1000 that I had rather have as either of
to make a living in. You can sell a fat hog or
is the best market for hogs. They buy them and
miles from here. '!he railroad runs in 12 miles
We are having sane cold weather here now.
to hear from you soon.
I will quit for the presnt.
I:bping
Your son as ever,
J. W. Blair
November 16, 1881
At Home
Bentonville, Ark.
Dear Old Father and Sisters:
As James is writing you I have concltxied a few words from me would not come
amiss; although separated hundreds of miles; and you and the girls are often
present with me in my thoughts; and even in my dreams at night; yes often, very
often, do I think of you all with much love and affection at heart.
It is
always a pleasant time with the children When I call them around my knees to
talk to them about Grandpa and Tennessee.
Mary says if Grandpa will send her
his picture she will put it in her album and look at him once every day so she
will be sure not to forget how he looks; I join her in saying be sure and send
it without fail, also Mothers, I would love to have all the girls photographs
and intend just as soon as I can make the money to get the children's pictures
taken and send them to you. Well perhaps you would like to know something about
how, and where we live, we live 3 1/2 miles west of Bentonville. lhe land that
Jimmie will cultivate next year is very pretty in the edge of the timber with a
spring and creek within 100 yards from the house, the house is ruilt cottage
style just one large room rut we are situated very ccxnfortably and have plenty
of good coarse diet to live on together with a good aappetite makes it quite
relishable. The children are all stout, well, and quite harty. Little Dannie is
standing alone, and all of the children look well, since they recovered from the
sore eyes we all had them in a few days after we arrived here.
father, the farmers in this country are far ahead of the Tennesseans in
cultivating the soil.
It is not the number of acres they pride in but to make
every foot of the soil profitable to them, 80 acres is considered a good farm,
and 160 acres is considered a large farm, and the most of the farmers only have
40 acres, rut it makes close neighbors, a good orchard all the year, handy to
church, only 1 mile to a place called Center fuint where thare is a CUnberland
and Methodist meeting once every month also a good sabbath school.
A near neighbor cleared sanething over 200 hundred dollars from his orchard this
present year, besides the corn he had in it, and still he lives on a 40 acre
farm with as nice a house as that one we left, also good out house and barn.
It is the way they Manage and tend their land. Just like a garden spot and it is
so level it cannot wash off is another great advantage they have.
Now about the thing they came all right after so long a delay I wish you would
see Carmany about a little debt due me. I sent him 6 sweeping brooms and he
150
owes me for them; and Billie was to pay me 7 1/2 cents apiece for 8 little
guineas and 15 cents apiece for 3 grown ones making it in all $1.05 for the
guineas. I will take it as a great favor if you will collect it and send it to
me and if you can sell that clrum dash also, these are little things but still I
have to buy them again and have to have something to buy with.
lbping to hear from you soon.
I remain as ever, Your daughter
!:lAB
At Home - Arkansas
May 21, 1882
Dear Grandpa and Aunts,
As 30lm and Pa was writing, I thought I would write some too. I am very well and
hope you are well too. I am through my spelling book and half through it again,
and have read almost all the reading. I am half through the first reader,
l1:.Guffey Reader.
I am learning at home and do not go to school.
Maggie is a
very big girl and every body says she is the prettiest little girl they ever
saw. She looks so stout and healthy. Ma is well all the time and does not have
to lie in bed sick like she did in Tennessee.
Dannie is the prettiest, sweetest and the roost mischievious little boy you ever
seen.
Sometimes he gets a big long switch and he runs all us children out of
the house.
I rite you he makes everybody stand around.
He is never better
pI.ea.sed than when he and Mag is up on one of the miles riding to the barn, he
will catch hold of ttl' s dress and pull her to a chair and scream to her as loud
as he can tittie, Mama, Tittie, and won' t let her rest until she suckles him.
He talks plainer than roost children of 2 years old and is large of his age.
Aunties I carry most of the water, wash the dishes, sweep and make up the
trundle bed, and sometimes I get so tired I wish there was no dishes, especially
when I have eaten a hearty dinner.
Aunt Nancy I had almost forgotten to tell you there is some of the
prettiest wild flowers you ever seen. 'lhe woods is just full, thousands of rooss
like you have in boxes.
It just grows wild all over the rocks, along the creek
banks.
If the seed can be gathered, I intent go gather some and send you some
this fall.
Ch!
Mama says write soon.
It does her so nruch good to read a letter from you all.
I will close. M..Ich love to you all Dear Aunties and Dear Old Grandpa.
Write soon,
t1<iry K. Blair
Bentonville, Ark.
Mar. 21, 1882
My dear old Grandfather,
I thought I would write you a little letter to tell you how we are getting along,
and to thank you for my <hristmas present (I thank you with all my heart) and I
151
intend to send you a present before long.
I never intend to spend my quarter
for any thing, rut I had another quarter for which I invested in two hens, and
now one of my hens is setting and I am trying to raise some chickens to sell;
you may look out for your present some time this sunmer.
I am over to Banquet
in Sister Mary's spelling book.
I have never had a spelling book, so I thought
I 'WOuld learn in Mary's book. I love to live out here. come to see us. Grandpa
I held the pencil that wrote ewry 'WOrd.
Write to me soon.
Now I send you a
great big kiss. From your little boy
John H. Blair
P. S. How is your
getting along. I have a pet turkey which I call
Alexander, I low long names so thought that 'WOuld do.
August 27, 1882
Dear Father and Sister,
Your letters all came to hand alright with the exception you did not put postage
enough. on the 2 registered ones.
I offered to pay the balance on them rut they
said they 'WOuld not receive it. Me and the IR.pty P.M. had a little jour over
it, I have not seen the P.M. yet. he is not at home. It is laid over until he
comes.
I will talk to him about it you have the law how is it on registered
package about the postage, can it be paid at the and of the route like other
letters or does it have to be paid at the start?
Well I did not get the place I told you of.
I was about closing it up when a
Doctor, the best one here, told me there was milch sick on the place and advised
me as a friend not to go there.
I do not expect to get another such a bargain
as it was rut health is a great thing. I am on a trade with another man now for
a place at $600 a number one place, fresh land, good OOildings, but notmuch
broke.
I will ruy sOOlewhere here for it is impossible to rent good land.
I
like the place I spoke of last mity well.
It is in a good neighborhood and
close to school and healthy. If we trade, which I expect we will, I pay him half
down and the other by the first of November. If you can send me the balance by
then, I will be roity glad or if you can only send $200 dollars I will be mity
glad.
I can ~et the money out of the bank by paying 10% and keeping it 5 years
or I can get J.t for less time rut will have to pay more for it.
Now I do not
want you to think I am asking you for the money to spend.
For I expect to get
me a hOOle and I expect every cent of money you send me to go into a home for I
know there never was anyone that wants a home of their awn any worse than I do
for I have got my satisfaction a moving.
I never want to move but one time
You can't buy a place in this country for less than $600 that is worth
more.
anything and you can' t buy on time and if anyone borrows the money the
interest soon eats him up. I am well pleased with this country.
I like the
people better the more I get acquainted with them.
I am as well satisfied as
anyone could be to be as far from their folks as I am.
I hope to see you all
again on earth.
I can't help but think I will see you all again.
I will make
plenty of stuff to do me. This has been a hard year for us everything has been
high but crops are fine.
We have not thrashed the wheat yet.
I only got 8
acres sowed but it was fine Mr. Woods says it will make 9 or 10 rushel to the
acre.
I get halt my corn is fine. The best I ever raised. Corn will be worth
152
nothing I have heard of some selling at 14 cents.
here.
There will be
50
much raised
James W. Blair
September 2, 1882
Dear Father,
As I told you in my last letter about buying a place, I have bought it. The man
will be here to fix up the deed on K:lnday.
I am to pay him $300 down and $300
by the first of November.
Now if you can send me the balance of the money I
will be mity glad.
I can have me a home that I can live on and live.
It is a
mity hard life to live on rented land in this colIDtry.
You cannot get a house
that is fit to live in.
The house that I got is a good one and good land and
fresh. I will give you a description of the place hereafter. I have got one of
the nicest places in Benton County.
The finest range in the State.
The grass
in the woods higher than your head, thousands of acres covered with it.
The
Post Master acted the rask:ell about those letters if you are put to any trouble
I will tell him what I think of him.
This leaves us all well.
Hope to hear from you soon.
Your son,
J. W. Blair
At Home, Ark. Ckt. 1882
Dear Old Grandpa,
I sometimes
I was so glad to hear from you and to know that your arm is well.
dream of seei~ you Grandpa, and being at your bous!!} Mary, Maggie, and I all go
to Canter Polnt (hurch to Sabbath SChool every saooath. My teacher is Mrs •
Mattie Mays, one of the best, kindest and prettiest women you ever saw, she does
not live very far from us, and sometimes I go up to see her; she has no little
children to play with me, but she always has some pretty book or picture paper
for me to look at which is nicer than play; I have been working some too,
Grandpa. I have been helping Ma to gather her beans. She has gathered 3 bushels
and is not half done yet.
Old Coley has a fine nest full of baby pups, 11. We
have give her and all the puppies away but one and I am going to keep one which I
have named Watch. Grandpa I am nearly half through my reader and get a nice bib
paper at SlIDday School called the Sabbath School Visitor.
Ma reads all the
pretty pieces to me and when she is too busy to read Mary reads for me.
Well
Grandpa I went with Fa down to our new home that is where Fa bought some land,
and I just wish you could see it. It is the prettiest place, it looks just like
where we use to live in Tennessee. The house is up on a little hill. I think I
will be 80 happy when we get to a home of our own.
I have saved a half gallon
of fine peach seed to plant me an orchard of peaches.
Grandpa I have had a beep of fun gathering hazle nuts and hickory nuts to eat
this winter.
Won't you come and help me eat them. Write soon Grandpa. I will
COlIDt how many days till I get a letter. Every day will seem mighty long.
I
153
have wrote everything I can think of. Write me a great long letter as big as a
book, for I make Ma read your little letters over so often I get them all by
heart. So goodbye for this time and don't forget your little
Jonnie
October 8, 1882
Dear Father,
Uours came to hand and was glad to hear from you and to hear of your getting
along so well.
This leaves us all well. I have suffered a great deal with my
spleen this fall, worse than cOllJllOn. I have taken medicine but it does no good.
The medicine that Tat Blair gave me done me more good than any I have taken.
I
have no idea of ever getting over it. It has run on me so long. I have just got
done sowing wheat.
There are some wheat fields plum green now.
I made 82
bushel off of 9 acres. Sowing corn is fine. I will make thousands to do me. I
Well you wanted to know about my place.
It lies 12
have done it all myself.
miles west of where I now live, 15 1/2 miles from Bentonville, 5 miles from the
nation line. There is a post office granted at a place 1 mile from it if we can
get a P.M., will know in a short time.
I have 212 1/2 acres.
A good house, smoke house, a good barn, and a good
tobacco barn, an orchard of SO to 100 acres, young trees, 25 acres in
cultivation, a good fence, first class land and plenty to put in. Nothing to do
only to fence as fine land as you ever saw. The land that is in cultivation and
to put in will bring SO to 75 bushel of corn to the acre any year. Well timbered
The grass now is green and as high as your
and the finest range I ever saw.
head all over the woods for miles around government lands that will never be
taken up.
I have plenty of water, but it is unhealthy. I will have to dig a
well.
The other half of the money is to be paid the first day of November. Now if you
can send me the money I will be mighty glad.
If you can borrow the money I am
willing to pay you the interest.
If I fail to get the money from you I will
have to go to the bank and mortgage the place for the money.
If I get it at 10
percent I will have to keep it 5 years and to get it a shorter time I will have
to pay 15 percent.
You know the rule of the bank, when it becomes due. Now if
there is any possible chance for you to get me the money it will save me a great
deal and then I will have a home.
Write as soon as you get this and let me
know.
If you can get the money, start it so I can get it a few days before the
first day of November.
I will not move until I gather my corn.
I have swaped
it for corn. There the safest way to send it is to send a post office order.
Send it to Bentonville.
My place is in a good neighborhood, close to school,
every Sunday in the year, a good Sabbath School.
and church.
I will close for the present, write as soon as you get this.
Your son,
J. W. Blair
154
Preaching
At Ibne
Benton Co. Ark.
Dec. 10, 1882
Dear Father and Sisters,
Now that we are moved and fixed up to live again once more, I concluded we would
write you a good long letter and give you a description of our new home and
future prospects for a living; feeling assured if there is a true friend and one
truly interested in our welfare that you and the girls are.
In the first place
I must say that I an well of dispepsia.
I have not had an hours sickness nor
taken one dose of medicine since we cane to this State.
I can eat what I wish
and as IlllCh as I wish of any thing but I mostly use a vegetable diet with milk
and butter.
I do all my work, have never hired a single washing since here we
have been, and more than that I worked out in the field in the truck patches a
good part of the SllIlJller, and just strengthed on it, you know with good health I
can have some pleasure and without it there is not lIlUcll pleasure to be felt.
Mr. Blair is stout and harty, suffers less with headaches than any fall and
winter since I knew him, the children are all well and harty.
Well, we live 15 miles nearly due west of Bentonville, 6 miles from the Indian
Terri tory, 5 miles from the famous Eldorado all healing Springs, 3 miles from
tbthers and 1 1/4 from Jonnies Cottons. We have as good pure freestone water as
ever run out of the earth and no end to the timber and range for sheep, hogs and
cattle.
I call the place a very pretty place and a spendid neighOOrhood and
some as fine bottom land as ever you saw, to clear if we still continue to all
have good health there is nothing in the world to hinder us from doing well and
laying by a competinsy for old age.
This is a great country for cattle, it one
has the capital to buy a few head of sucking calves they live from March until
November on the range and cost very little and in one year or two at the
fartherest, you clear 3 times what you have invested with but little cost and
comparetively no labor.
There was fruit in great abundance this year, in this
country there is a New York Company cane to Bentonville and put up a Drying
factory that consumed 300 bushels of fruit per day; one day with a nother for
more than 2 months and still there was thousands of bushels of fruit left. I
dried plenty and more than enough to do us for 12 months, but have green fruit
plenty yet.
There is a fine young orchard ukp on this place old enough to be
bearing the coming year.
There is some orchards here in this county of 100
acres bearing frui t.
I thought I had seen some right fine frui t in 'tennessee
but to tell you the plane truth I never saw fruit before, it surpasses all I
have ever seen for tine flavor, size and quantity.
The children wants me to
write some for them.
Mary says to tell her Aunts that she picked dried beans
and sold enough to buy her a worsted dress, and concluded me would not make up
the one you gave her until she is a little older.
I have made John a nice new
Jeans coat and lined it all over with linsey.
He is all right for jack frost.
Maggie and Dannie are as fat as pigs.
Dannie can talk as good as a 6 year old
child and still sucks. He will be 2 years old 14 day of January 1883, the other
day some one was teasing him for sucking and he got down out of my lap and took
hold of my hand and said, let's go in the kitchen and get titty, my good ManIlla,
the children are still very attentive to their books, Mary says she has read
that chapter 2 times and thinks that the preacher must have seen a great deal of
folly in this world to explain everything as vanity, vanity.
Write me a great
long letter Grandpa and tell me what you think. If I could see you I could talk
more than I could write in a month.
Come out to see us you and some of the
155
girls or all of them. If Jane would come I believe she would be stout again,
excuse bad writing for Dannie is at my elbow punching me for the pencil, write
me all the news far and near.
Hoping this may find you all well and in good
spirits, I remain as every your true friend. Write soon. I will think the time
long for your letter.
H. A. Blair
P.S.
Girls, please write me how to make Calico and worsted dresses in
Tennessee.
I do not like the fashions here, write how to make them for
children.
December 11, 1882
Dear Grandpa:
As Pa is writing I thought I would write you a little letter.
I wish you all a
"Merry On:istmas" with all my heart.
I am well pleased with our new home, we
luNe. plenty of Green apples and hickory nuts and Clti.nkapins yet come and help
us to eat them and Mary and I will go home with you and spend New Years day with
you.
Me. hes some big turkeys it we can persuade her to kill one for Christmas.
Maggie and Dannnie and Mary and I all send you a big KISS
From John and Mary
Write soon soon soon
On:istmas Gift Grandpaw and hints
Mary, John, Maggie and Dannie
December 11, 1882
Dear Father,
I received your long looked for letter and was glad to hear from you and to hear
of your health improving. 'This leaves us all well. My general health is better
than it hes been.
I luNe a mity bad finger.
I mashed my middle finger on my
right hand about a month ago and caught cold in it and I luNe suffered a great
deal with it - but it is getting better but a bad finger yet.
I moved the 9th
of November. I am well pleased. 'lhe title is all right the land that the house
and barn including 160 acres and the title came from the government and the
other 52 1/2 acres was land that belonged to an old man that died about 1 year
ago. He was one of the first settlers of the country. It was sold for division
and the deed was made to the man that I bought off by the court.
I gathered my
corn.
I made 900 roshel, 600 bushel to my part. ilirn is worth 25c bushel. The
man that lived on my place this year gathered 75 bushel per acre on the part of
the land he had in.
You spoke of that rosiness.
I just leave it with you if you think that iliusin
Jim will attend to i t for me and not charge me all for it.
Send me a copy of a
J?CMer of attorney or get him to and I will fix it up.
The Laws of this State
and Tennessee are different and I do not want to go to the expense but once.
Please see or write to him as soon as you get this.
If there is any money
156
there, I would like to have i t as soon as I can get it.
My house is not
sealed yet. It is a new one just weatherboarded.
It is not sealed around the
sides and of course it is not comfortable yet wtIen it is cold and the wind blows
and that is pretty often.
We have had 2 northers this winter, the only ones I
ever saw. It was warm enough that I could go without my coat and in a half hour
it was cold enough to freeze the horns off a !II.1ley cow. 1be last
that
cane I was 13 miles fran home and came home in the time of it.
1beYliOth came
up about dark and lasted until the next evening. 'lou never saw the wind blow so
in March in Tennessee.
I have not changed my Post Office yet for we will have
an office in a mile of us in a month if nothing happens.
As my hand is giving
out I will quit. See to that business for me and write soon.
As ever your son,
J. W. Blair, Bentonville, Ark.
'lhe Blair letters will be concluded in the March, 1988, issue of 'lhe Arkansas
Family Historian.
EXCERPl'S
FR(l1
NEWSPAPER DATED JANUARY 12, 1895
LAFAYElTE RIDJRDER
Subnitted by Mrs. Hayle P. (Roberta) Hollis of 628 Banner St., Canrlen, AR 71701
Mr. Judd Cochran, of Kizer, spent M:>nday night here.
Mr. H. i«llf made a business trip to Texarkana M:>nday.
C!!.pt. W. W. C!!.rloss was up fran Garland City '\okdnesday.
Mr. Geo. B. Smith of Walnut Hill was in towo last Saturday.
Mr. W.O. Harrison made a business trip to Shreveport 'fuesday.
Mr. 1homas H. \i'heeler visited his old home, Arkana, 'fuesday.
Mr. Wilson Nash made a business trip to Texarkana 1hursday.
Miss Annie Mathews spent last Sunday with relatives at Magnolia.
Mr. W. L. Starling, of wng Prairie, visited our city on business last M:>nday.
Major A. H. Sevier, ofTexarkana, was here on legal business last 'fuesday.
Mrs. Trammel and Mrs. Sam Finley made a flying visit here last Sunday evening.
Mesdames Rudd and rrazier, or ltilgore wdge, visited our towo last Sunday.
Rev. W. A.
tOOlOrrow.
Fornes will fill his regular appointment at the Baptist clrurch
157
Itlssrs. Gloss and Ernest Velvin are visiting friends at Bingen,Ark. their former
home.
Rev. R.
County.
R.
Farrar left 1lrursday to fill an appointment at Macedonia, Columbia
Col. J. M.M:mtganery came over fran Texarkana Monday morning on legal business.
Mr. Will Harrington,
Stephens, Ark.
our popular jeweler,
Mrs. J. C. Russell and little son,
Magnolia this week.
spent a portion of this week at
of long Prairie,
visited relatives at
Mrs. Dr. Robinson returned frOOl a visit to relatives at Aberdeen,
Sunday night.
Mr. Frank DeVaine,
night here.
Sr.,
Miss., last
a prOOlinent business man of Canfield, spent Wednesday
Rev. Ha!l1nock will fill his regular appointment at the Presbyterian church today
and tomorrow.
Mr. W. J. Williams says
returned to his old post.
he likes New lewisville better than Texas ,and has
Dr. A. M.Henry of VilLage,Ark., was here M:mday.
this place to Mr. Ben Mathews.
we regret to learn that Mrs.
week.
J.
A.
He has sold his residence
in
Hodges has been quite sick during the past
Mrs. J. H. Hamiter and two little daughters returned from a pleasant visit to
relatives at Little Rock Monday night.
Postmaster Nance has been confined at home with sickness for a number of days.
We are glad to learn that he is much better.
Mr. M. H. Trimble will likely move from Texarkana to his residence recently
purchased from Mrs. Ella Bacon, at lewiSville, next week.
Mr. \in. M. Crocker of Pocahontas, Term., a cousin to our Mr. John Crocker,
visited our town this week. He is traveling for a St. LDuis firm.
Mrs.Will Browning, of Georgetown, Ky., who is on a visit to relatives at
Magnolia, spent lsat Monday with Mrs. Clarence Walker, of this place.
Miss Alice Grubb, a popular young lady of Magnolia who has been making a
pleasant visit to the Misses Boone, at lewisville, returned home TUesday.
Miss Ella Cargill, who has been visiting her sister, Mrs. McCarthy for some
time, to the regret of many friends here left for her hOOIe in Marshall, Tex.
las t Monday.
158
J. C. Atkinson and fanily have moved from an old town to his residence in
this place, formerly occupied by Mr. Z.Burt, who has m:wed his fanily to the old
Boyd residence on Second Street.
Mr.
An account of the lecture of Ex.-Governor Robert Taylor, at Qm:!en,Ark., January
17, 1895, the CDtton Belt will sell round trip tickets from New lewisville at
$2.10. Tickets on sale January 17th, good to return January 18th.
Mrs. Ben Graves, of Arkana, was called to the bedside of her toother, Mrs. Doc.
Tatom, at Sardis, last Wednesday. Mrs. Tatom is very low with little hope of
recovery.
An account of lecture of Ex.-Governor Robt. Taylor at Texarkana, January 28th,
the <Atton Belt will sell round trip tickets from New lewisville at $1.15.
Tickets on sale Jkanuary 18th, limited to return Jarruary 19th.
Mr. Linwood Lee, fonnerly doing a family grocery rusiness on First Street, has
sold the remainder of his stock to Messrs. Lester-McCants Mercantile company and
the Janes M.Houston Grocery company and retired from rusiness.
Judge C. N. Maryman, having completed the usual routine business of the county
court, returned home Wednesday.
Court has been adjourned until the 18th of
February; it will then convene for the purpose of receiving and cancelling
county scrip.
Mr.W.
W. Shirey, the son of Mr. B. C. Shirey, of this place, arrived from
a few days since and will make his home here.
He is engaged in reading
law in the office of Messrs. King and Searcy. He is an intelligent, affable
young gentleman and we welcane him as a citizen of New lewisville.
~s
Misses Hattie Hicks and Neddie t4.tlkey left for Little Rock on M:lnday night.
As
before announced, Miss Hicks is a candidate for enrolling clerk of the House of
Representatives. Her former experience in that position,
and extensive
acquaintance with her great popularity, make her prospects for re-election toost
flattering.
Mrs. M. V. Hepp closes her school and goes to Camden, Ark., the coming week. We
sincerely regret the loss to our town of such a talented lady and able educator,
and the Recorder, to which she has so often contributed, sustains no small loss
when she surrenders her citizenship here.
The above items were taken from LAFAYETl'E REXXlRDER,
1895, donated by Mrs.
Society.
Our thanks to Mrs.
members.
Gloria T.
dated Saturday, January 12,
'lbomas to the lafayette <Aunty Historical
'lbomas and to Mrs. Hollis for sharing this material with our
159
DayBook of W. J. (Billie) Hinsley - Continued fran Vol. 25, No. 2
Page 24 "Day Book"
page 56
Apr. 6
..
it
If
"
"
"
.."
..
13
"
..
"
"
"
"
"
"
..
"
14
"
II
Hay 14
It
H
"..
18
..
..
17
II
20
Billie .Hinsley Acct. 1901
Amt. brought forward
To pro shoes
" pic~.
.. Shoe Black·
" Writing paper
Luther Bros. By Cash for shoes
To medicine
.. Coffee
" pr. su spend er s
.. Candy
.. Cheese
Paid L. Webb
TO two sweeps Dixon
" pa ir under shirt s
" pair top shirts
postage stamps
To one cow and calf
" Mrs. B. cott<.o cooping
Robe. McLeod
B}' meat
By two shotes
TO flour
26.55
1.50
1.00
.05
.20
75.75
1.50
.25
4.40
.20
.05
.10
.50
.50
.50
1.00
.10
25.00
.25
11,30
2,50
4.25
65,90
91. 05
page 57
Billie Hinsley Acct. 1902
Act. on hand
LN. Borum to borrowed cash
II
"
Billie Hinsley to pr. pants
II
II To medic.
II watch
Mar. 14 " cloth
II
11
II One hat
II
" pr. boots
"
"H
"H II Goobers
" Tooth powdera & brush
14 To corn 13 bu. @ 87 1/2
~!ar. 24
Fannie Lambert By Cash for book
25
Tavlor
Counts by cash for book
"
25
To
shaving
mug 20, soap 10
"
29
l'.r.
Shelly
By Cash on book
"
Apr. 3
J.J. Tr~e11 By Cash
11 To harrow teeth
"
II
" " Swamp root
Feb. 20
"
27
..
"
"
"
.."
II
"
"
II
May
II
17
"
22
"
"
"
28
"
II
Cream
To one pair harnes
" box pills
.. Walter Nix work
board
"
"
"
.. mandolin
W'. N. Nix Acct. on Robt. McLeod
To Cash paid Wlilter Nix
" One pr. suspenders
John Floyd to seed
160
120.00
20.00
1. 50
2.00
3.00
1.13
2.00
2.62
.25
.30
11.38
1.50
.50
.30
.25
2.00
l.00
1.00
.25
.75
.25
3.57
1.10
6.00
5.69
5.00
.50
B.OO
page 25 "Day Book"
paKe 57 continued
Billie Hinsley Acct. continued
May~
One song book
..
12 Com 15 bushel!; 112 1/2
..
tI
One shirt
" " One bottle medicine
"
" One tie
II
Paper & envelopes.
II
II
Handkerchief
II
" One weeding hoe
" " 3 pro socks
13 Small Elevace
"
.
H
"
II
June
"
II
..
H
.
"
28
n
Aug.
Aug. 1
"
II
"
"
"
"
"
15
23
..
"
28
II
"
Il
"
"
Sep. 4
II
13
18
"
" 20
Oct.
Oct. 16
If
II
"
"
.
II
It
"
II
"
25
27
II
28
Nov. 1
II
"
II
4
.25
.15
.~5
.35
.15
91. 9~
page 58
May 23
.40
16.85
1.00
1.00
.25
Billie Hinsley Acct. 1902
One pr. shoes
" Double plow rod
Collar Butone
Candy
To watch repair
Baseball uniform
Paid Mdse. to Julia Hinsley's work
Paid cash to Webbs Boya for work
.J.T. Hinsley 2 day plowing
one pro suspenders
Received of J.J. Trammell on books
To handkerchiefs
One pro undershirts
Bottle cough syrup
Sods water
Paper (, candy
To one pro shoew
Pilir duckins
Silk handerchief
Stamps
Cotton sackint
one spool thread
Candy
Envelopes
To cheese and Candy
Received of I.N. Borum
J.T. Hinsley to Cash Dr. Bill
to one saddle girth
J. Shelly by cash
To two pro pants
" one collar
" one shirt
II two pr.soclts
.. expenses of show
"one knife
AsSOCiation expenaes
To Mr. Shelly cotton p.
To J. Shelly cotton picking
"apples and candy
Lenir Webb cotton p.
132.25
2.75
.15
.15
.05
1.00
1.15
3.00 .
2.75
1.50
.50
5.00
.25
.80
.50
.15
.10
2.90
.75
.25
.10
.~5
.05
.10
.10
.25
10.00
4.50
.25
4.00
.20
.75
.25
1.50
.50
.• 30
5.70
1.10
.20
1.10
1.50
US. 75
161
page 26 "Day Boo k"
page 59
1902
Received of Richard Borum
1.55
Paid
for cotton picking
"
,,-~,.,,; suits underware
1.75
4
one
pair
ladies
shoes
2.00
"
1.00
" Pair top shirt s
.10
" copers
3.25
lS one slicker
.25
" livery stable
.20
23 To one lb. nuts
.25
Oranges
Ii.
candy
"
1\
Cocoa
nuts
.10
"\I
One quart Whisky
1.00
Alfred
Borum
by
Cash
"
24 Sold to H.A. Shelly on time two 'books
24 "to Jake Waters one book
49.55
Dec. 3
"
"
1\
"1\
"
1\
1\
"II
II
II
1\
"
4.70
1.00
1.00
155.45
page 60
Dominion Company
Dr. to H.W. Hinsley
Aug. 3
Aug. 18
Sept. 1
For Cash
Dr. to H.W. Hinsley FOT Cash
By 22 books
Mahaffey Cotton 1919
2nd bale and seed
6.60
15.00
21.00
51.58
page 61
Sept.14
II
II
1\
..
II
"
"
"
to
"
1\
15
16
17
20
21
22
23
24
24
26
27
Cotton Picked fOT G.A. Nix 1898
1bs.
price for hundred
Ii3
.45
305
.45
325
.45
169
.45
181
.45
363
.45
.45
383
.45
337
.45
205
2351
Rec'd of G.A. Nix
336
316
28
398
29
30
Oct. 1
382
.45
.45
.45
.45
.45
.45
316
191
l'9'3§
Oct. 1
"
"
Oct. 3
"
4
amt. ~er day
• 735
1.3725
1.4625
.7605
.8115
1.6335
1. 7235
1.5165
.9225
$10.5765
1.5120
1.4220
1.791'<)'
1.7190
1.4040
.8595
$8.7075
Received of G.A. Nix $9.00
G.A. Nix Cr.
296
323
By Cash
.30
.45
.45
162
1.3320
1.4535
page 27 "Day Book"
page 61 cont inued
Cotton Picked for G.A. Nix continued
OCt. 5
193
103
176
179
1270
Rae 'd. of G.A. Nix
.45
.45
"
"
"
7
8
"
8
..
10
291
.45
11
12
285
264
13
14
251
.45
.45
.45
.45
"
"
"
"
6
235
.8685
.4635
.7920
.45
.45
.8055
$5.7150
$5.00
.7150
1. 3195
1.2825
1.1880
1.1295
1.0545
6.6920
1326
"
15
90
.4050
.45
1416
"n
7.0970
17
183
.45
18
188
.45
.8235
.8460
371
1.6695
page 62
Oct. 19
"
"
"
Amt. brought forward
19 198
20
75
21
1.6695
,8910
.3375
.45
.45
.4455
99
John Shelly Cotton 1919
1 bale of cotton
2 bale
3 bale of cotton
3/4 bale seed
39.36
45.41
39.27
20.00
page 63
G. A. Nix 1898
To one week and a half cotton
picking
24 By cash
"
Oct. 1
To one week cotton picking
Oct. 1
By cash
To One weeks cotton picking
Oct. 8
By cash
Oct. 8
Oct. 15 To one weeks cotton picking
Oct. 17 By cash
Oct. 21 To one week cotton picking
Nov. 7 By Cash
Sept 24
M.D. Nix
10.57
10. S5
8.71
9.00
5.71
5.00
6.80
6.80
3.35
35.14
3.35
34.70
9.10
43.80
163
page 28
"Day Book'i
ESlle 64
H.O. Nix Cotton picking 1898
.40
Oct. 25 125
.40
Oct. 26 202
227
.40
27
"
28
.40
195
"II
96
29
.40
4
5
Rec'd of M.a. Nix
234
328
209
248
266
151
3.40
,40
.40
.40
.40
.40
.40
Nov. 5
Rec'd of M.O. Nix
5.70
29
30
Nov. 1
"
"
"
"
"
"
2
3
I,halter Nix Apr. 1902
Apr. 15 By 1 day on road
16 1/2 day plowing
"
17 1 day ditthing & clearing
"
II
18 1 day plowing a~d bush cut
1/2 day droping corn
19
"
"
Walter
Nix to Cas'.
"
II
21 By 1 day plowing
22 To Cash
"
To scct. with Luther
"
Bros.
"
" By mandolin
Robt. McLeod
To Board
..
..
28 To cash Bal.
Apr 11 the 28th
.5000
.8080
.9160
.7800
.3840
3',3880
.9460
1.3120
.8360
.9920
1. 0840
.6040
5.74
.70
.35
.70
.70
.37 1/2
1. 00
.75
1.00
7.80
6.00
5.69
.45
10.25
5.00
$U.26
15.26
$15.26
Ease 65
Billie Hinsley 1903
Sola one bale cotton
To sugar
1.00
1.00
" Coff ea
II Calico
1.00
"
.75
" II Yar socks
one
collar
.20
" "tI Day
book & candy
.20
tI Pr .
hame st r ::.ngg
.25
;25
" " Thread &,needles
16 " Bot tle Medicine
1. 00
Sold one bale cotton
20.84
" To rents on cotton
" By cash R. Mc.
.20
" To Salmonds & candy
" Sold bale cotton
22 Bought 132 lbs. of cotton. Geo. W. 2.00
" To cotton picking
.68
Jan. 14
14
"
"
"
"
"
.
..
"n
n
"
II
"
"
"
"
41.55
.
....
.
164
11.24
41.84
page 29 "Day Book"
Ease 65 continued
Bill ie Hinsley 1903 continued
Jan. 23 10 cotton picking
"
" Sold 1/2 bu. goobers
27
To Razor H & S.
"
"
.. Button & pins
"
" .. Shoe Polish
Feb. 1 To pictures
/I
Coal 011
"
One
bridal
"u
"
7 To -cstridees
"u " Gun primers
Mr. Winless cash for gun
u
n Alfred Borums by cash
24 To Peruna one bottle
"
"u . .," u Lightning aU
u plow point
"
Candy
"
"
22
I.N
• Borum By cash
"
Mar. 12 I.N. Borum by Hauling
/I
Bought 2 cans Salmond
" One psd lock
To cotton weighing
" "" Sold
2 bales cot ton
13
Rents
On cotton
"
15
Paid
Bro.
Farris
"u
"
To
miss
ion
"/I
.. church repairs
..
...
..
.
..
.
eSSe 66
Acct. of B111i~ Hins1e~ 1903
brought forward
Hog
colery
medicine
"
Shevel plows
Missellsneous
4 Sent to the Orwon 60
Lace leather
Pair pants
Pair Shoes
" Socks
Drugs for syrup
To one file
17 To Ashley for hoeing
To Webb
15 To one pr. Shoew
" pr. panta
one shirt
"/I "It one
shirt
10 Ii pro Shoes
" handkerchief
" " Bromo Tableta
Water melon
Lawyer fee
Mar. 19
"
Apr.
"
May
"
u
June
n _"
..
Jul.
"
"
"
.
Aug.
It
"
IImt.
..
..
165
1.89
.50
1.00
.10
.20
.75
.30
.90
.90
.50
2.00
1.00
1. 00
.25
.25
.05
4.00
1.50
.40
.15
.20
91.81
14.60
.75
.25
.25
56.06
56.06
1.10
.70
1.50
3.00
.50
3.50
1.50
.25
.30
.15
1. 50
1.10
2.25
3.00
.1.00
.75
3.00
.25
.25
.25
5.00
86.91
86.91
173.84
193.49
193.49
193.49
37.56
231.05
page ,;U "Pay Boo\<'''
page 67
Billie Hms1ey 1904
Oct. 18
27
Oct. 27
Kov. 17
II
H
Stocks cash Dark
Household
Coffee mill
Derk by ca$h
3~
.50
3.21
1.00
~leat
.50
Rice
Thread
!>ov. 26 Flour 1 sack
Coffee
TI.'O bowls
Chalk
Coal 011 2 Gal.
Dec. 2
16 yds. calico
't
H
7 II outing
"
"
1 1/2 yds Shims.
II
It coconut
& candy
to
" bottle medicine
"
19 l".dse
u
"
fI
II
tI
,I
.05
1.50
1. 00
.50
.10
.40
.96
.70
.10
.15
1.00
3.79
.80
1.50
~:aat
Flour
"
..
Hat Ladies
"
"
Raisens 1 lb.
..
23 Sold 1/2 bu. corn
"
"Casegoods 1 gal.
Jan. 13 One pro shoes
1905"
2 cake pans
"
..
Quilt lining
"
..
Thread - Ball
2
6
~feat Box & She'lel
"
28 One half bushel meas.
..
One dollar coffee
"
..
Sole
leather
"
"
Shee
tacks
"
"
Turpent ine
"
"
Salt
- 100 lba.
"
"
25
lb.
sack flour
"
Feb. 23. To one 50 lb. eack flour
"
Dress goods
"
..
Drapery
"
..
Onion
sets
"
"
Curry comb
"
"
"
Candy bucket
"
"
Coal Oil
"
One lb. starch
"
~jar. 15
Worsted Eo linmg
"
" Thread
"
" Sugar
If
.07
62.25
II
2.25
.15
.25
3.23
2.50
.15
.~5
.05
.50
.50
1.00
.30
.05
.10
.65
.75
1.50
.65
.~5
.40
.25
.15
.40
.05
1. 20
.10
.50
95.08
37.5.3
95.08
37.53
page 68
Mar. 15
"
15
II
iI
II
II
Acct. Billie Hinsley 1905
Amt. brought forward
One pro plow lines
Box cartr idges
One barrel
.20
.35
1.00
166
page 31 "Day Book"
paile 68 con t :!nued
Billie H:!nsley cont:!nued
~.ar. 15
By cotton cash
36.95
"II J.T. H:!nsley cotton
2.55
Robt. McLeod by cotton
"
4.66
II
Sack chops
"
1.25
" Sack bran
"
1.20
"
" Rob\, McLeod rent
7.43
"
" Robt. ~lcLeod by cash for work
7.43
20 To one dollar coffee
1.00
"
.25
" Barrel & dress lining
II
To flour 50 Ibs.
1.50
1.00
" 27 Rot tIe medic:!ne
"
"II Black draught
.20
Plow point
"
.25
.80
"
" Shevel plows
Apr. 1
To S.C. Sharp for giving
3.00
11
II
B.}~. Graves to S.C.S. giv:!ng
3.15
14 to melon seed hodes
.25
14 to thread-ball & lining
"
.08
25
to
"ugar
1.00
rent 7.68
"
25 To R.P. Gray on place
"
25.00
25 !~ W.F. Nichols for bond for title
"
.50
May 6 Flour one barrel
5.90
II
Ladies hat
"
2.50
O:le
harvest
hat
"
.15
"
Cel1co
&
thread
"
.10
"
"
Horseshoe:!ng
"
.40
19 R.P. Gray to meat 25D
"
2.50
23 Coifee
"
1.00
"
.50
" 3 Jars stone
" 1 broom
.35
"
"
1 heel sweep
.15
"
5
bars
soap
.25
"
Lad
ies
hose
&
l''.Iber
.40
"
"
"
" to Skillern contest
.50
164 .10
92.09
page 69
Billie Hinsley 1905
June 10 2 Jumpers
1.00
1
heal
bolt
.10
"
"
.20
"
" Y,.,squeto bar
"
14 Sugar
1.00
.60
"
" Coffee pot
Calico
3
1/2
y08.
.20
" "
II
La,,'T!
4
yd
s.
.40
"
El:broidery
.48
"
one
pr.
pants
.50
"
"
"
.35
" Gotriage"
"
Rose
011
.20
"
28 Sugar
1.00
"
Candy
.05
"
"
July 15 Y.<lse. and vinegar,
3.62 1/2
II
25 one Doz 1/2 & two Dow Doz. Qts.
1.90
"
21 Sold M.A. Shelly 10D lard
1.20
28 Sold M.A. Shelly meat 37 lbs. 12 1/2 cts.
"
3.87 1/2
.
.
.
.,
..
.
167
page 32 "Da)' Book"
page 69 continued
Billie Hinsley 1905 cont inued
Aug. 5
Bleaching 15 yds.
.75
II
16 Bought of Nichols one pro Shoes
1.50
50ii flour
1.50
Table linen
1. 00
16 bought of Christian one pro shoes
2.75
"
16 Bought of Luther Bros. Shot &
"
powder
.55
Lamp chimney
.10
Sept. 8 Calico 15 yds.
.75
It
"
Quilt lining
.90
.36
"
" Feather tick
2l To cost
11.00
"
.80
"
" "4 Gal. coal oil
.05
"
" " thread one spool
29 Sugar
1. 00
"
Coff.ee. Stock cut
"
1.00
"
Oct. 30 Chanber
.25
It
II
MediCine
.30
II
tt
Wagon
25.00
II
II
Sold 3 bales cotton
Nov. 1
Paid on place
113.33
II
II
" for bond for title
.50
II
4.50
" Tax on place for R.P. Gray
179.49
12,55
154.94
If
172.26
page 70
Nov.
II
"
11
Dec.
..
Dec.
"
If
It
"
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"
Dec.
Jan.
n
"
"
.
Billie Hinsley 1905
10 Arnt. brought forward
343.59
It
lo.l. A. Jones corn
7.50
"
~Ieat 19 lbs
It cts.
2.28
II
Coffee
1.00
Flour one sack
1.40
Coal oil one gal.
.20
8
Flour 25 lbs. sack
.70
Rice
.25
Capsules
.10
Castora
.25
Shoes
2.23
16 Pants & Flour 50 #
1. 30
Pictur and fram
3.50
18 bought of Luther Rios 150 lbs. flour4.20
II
32 lbs. meat
4.00
fI
Coffee
1.00
11
Cotton flannel - outing
2.30
1.00
" Ned ic ine
.SO
" Wedged
Plow points
.60
"
"
Lamp
.35
19 One bed stead
1.50
1906 Harness collar
9.20
19 J .E. King for shoes
2.00
23 Coffee
.50
Sugar
.50
"
Thread
.25
"
168
264.35
BOOK REVIElJS AND NOTICES
Bobbie J. ttLane, Russell P. Baker and Desmond W. Allen
The follCMing are reviews and/or annotmcements of book acquisitions for the
Arkansas Genealogical Society.
These books are permanently housed in the L:>cal
History and Genealogy Room of the Little Rock Public Library.
The Society
expresses its appreciation to the authors and contributors.
UNDERTAKER'S RECORDS 1916-1928: ASHBY FUNERAL HOOE RECORDS (BENTON. AR) by
Shirlene M. (bilton, 58+ pages, paper, index. Oraerfrom Saline Co. History and
heritage Society, P. O. Box 221, Bryant, AR 72022-0221, $13.75. Since the organization of the Saline Co. History and Heritage Society in 1986, a number of
excellent books have been published on Saline Cotmty. One of the best so far is
Shirlene M. Otilton' s transcription of the records of the Ashby FUneral Home in
Benton from 1916 ro 1928. The records have the date of the ftmeral, the name of
the deceased, the cemetery buried in and additional information about the size
of the casket, "1/9 are usually children who had died at birth", etc. Shirlene
has also abstracted a number of obituaries from the files of the BENTON COURIER
that relate to people listed in the undertaker's record.
A complete index
conclu::\es the volllDe. Proceeds from the sales of this book are to be donated to
the Saline Cotmty History and Heritage Society. RPB
TIlE DELmUR ROAD Nicholas B. Delcour and his Descendants 1780-1987. , compiled by
Bill and Mary Delcour, 310 pp, paper, index. Published by the authors, whose
address is 3739 Oakes Dr., Hayward, GA 94542.
The Delcour Road has not been
prepared for sale, but for sharing with the 160 "cOUsins" Who 'filiV'e assisted in
research and for donation to historical and genealogical societies.
The book
covers over 2900 descendants of Nicholas B. Delcour, beginning with his birth in
France, migration through Belgium and Canada to New York, enlisted in the US
Arrrry in 1812, to Carondelet and then Washington Co., MO, where he spent the rest
of his life.
It gives a brief picture of the lives of his children and his
children's children for up to eight generations. BJM
The following book was a gift from Dr. Marion S. Craig, a fonner President of
the Arkansas Genealogical Soci~ who has shared a great number of books with
us.
TIlE BYERS FAMILY OF WASHI
N CD.. PENNSYLVANIA by Raymond Martin Bell,
with an introduction by Marion Stark Craig, 40 pp, soft-cover, index.
Order
from Raymond M. Bell, 413 Burton Ave., Washington, PA 15301. $7.00.Dr. Bell's
monograph concerns the family of Samuel Byers, Sr. , and wife, Jane Im.ite, who
settled in 1777 in the part of Washington Co, PA that was then Chio Co. ,VA. it
contains recently discovered information primarily from an 1893 Commemorative
Biographical Record of Washington Co.. PA by Beers of (bicago, and concerns the
family whose record was published in 1877 by Dr. Craig entitled: BYERS-BONARSHANNOO AND ALLIED FAMILIES. The book contains, in addition to the Byers material, infonnation on the families of Lawson, Munn, Hupp, Hawkins, Ramsey, Shannon, with Wilson Connections in Washington Co. and Elsewhere by Dr. Craig. BJM
SCIJITISH CDAI11INING ANCESTORS, by Lindsay S. Reeks, 292 pp, hard cover, index,
illustrated. Order from Lindsa)l S. Reeks, 2013 Wesrover Drive, Pleasant Hill, GA
94523 $25.00, plus $1.50 for domestic postage and packing and $2.00 for foreign
169
(California residents add $1.72 sales tax).
This volume covers over 30 years research in the records of coalmining parishes
of Scotland in the counties of Midlothian, Fife, West lothian, Fast lothian,
Lanark and Sterling, the counties of Northumberland and Durham in England, and a
few areas of Australia.
The families include Anderson, Archibald, Black,Boyd,
Brown, Cheyne, Crawford, Cunningham, Fleucker, Jack, Johnston, King, Lindsay,
lourie, Miller, !>bffat, Neilson, Pentland, Porteous, Reid, Robertson, Russel,
Smith, Steel, Walker, Williamson, Wilson and others. Fach line, treated alphabetically, is fully documented with sources used. BJM
MARRIAGES OF S(l'lE AMERICAN RESIDENTS AND GUIDE TO DOCUMENl'S, VOLUME V, compiled
and published by Yates Publishing Co., P.O. Box 237, Ozark, MO 657'2'1, 222 pp,
paper, alphabetical listing by husband and separate alphabetical listing by
wife.
(Subscription ~8.00).The majority of marriages in this fifth volume are
from family group sheets and pedigree charts received through the "Family Group
Sheet Exchange", during the fourth quarter of 1986. The ¥ear and state of birth
are included if known.
In almost every instance, additwnal data can be found
in the documents from ~ch the marriages have been gleaned, often the names of
parents or children.
In most cases it is possible to contact compilers of the
charts by looking up addresses in the "Numerical List of Documents" subnitteed
to Yates Publishing Co. BJM
BIGENrENNIAL TAPESTRY OF TIm YELI..aJSTONE aJNFERENCE, compiled by lXlris Whitham,
510 S. 8th, Livingston, -m' 59047, 211 pp., 1l8.rd cover, $15.00. The Bicentennial
Gomnittee of the Yellowstone Conference of the United Methodist Church, covering all of !>bntana and parts of Wyoming and Idaho, published this volume,
which includes 2200 biographical sketches of ministers who served the area - a
compilation made by Roberta B. West, formerly of Qrinook, Mr. Profusely illustrated, it also includes church histories, conference structures, work of the
women, camp histories and youth organizations. It is a remarkable aid for those
seeking information in this area. BJM
CLARK aJUNlY, (AR) CEMEl'ERY RECXJRD BOOK, published by a Committee for Extension
Homemakers Council, 500 pp, plus unnumbered pages of full index, hard cover.
Order from Clark Co.
Extension Homemakers Council, 400 Crittenden St.,
Arkadelphia, AR 71923, $30.00 plus $3.00 for mailing. (This is a sale price to
clear out about three dozen books left in stock.
The money from the sale of
these books will be used to furnish the Extension Homemakers kitchen.)
Transcriptions from tombstones in more than 150 cemeteries in Clark Co., AR,
were copied by Extension K:lmemakers Club members, originally in 1968, and
finished in 1982. Because of the age of many markers and the handwritten lists
that were turned in, they readily admit that there are some unavoidable mistakes
either in dates or spelling of those namas difficuilt to read; however, this
volume is a welcome addition to our historical and genealogical records for
Clarki one of the oldest counties in the State, created in 1818. It comprised
Pike and Dallas
rough y all of the present Clark, Hot Spring, Garland,
Counties. BJM
MAGNESS MIGRATION 1793 .:. 1986, compiled by Verna A. Magness, Rt. 3 Box 158,
H8Inson, AR /2601-;-II4 pp., plus unnumbered index pages, soft cover, ~25.00.
The earliest records of Magness' in America were in the 1733 Maryland State
papers in Prince Georges County on a list of personal names for taxables _
170
Peregrin Mockness.
This book chronicles members of the Magness family in
Maryland, Pennsylvania, North and South Carolina, Kentucky, Tennessee and into
Arkansas.
It is somewhat difficult to follow, but appears to contain much
genealogical information, particularly those in Independence and Marion Co., AR.
BJM
MARRIAGES OF SCME AMERICAN RESIDENI'S AND GUIDE TO DOCUMENI'S, VOWME III,
compiled and published by Yates Publishing Co., P. O. l:klx 237, Ozark, M) 65721,
softcover, 240 pp. $8.00. This is the third volume of a series devoted to the
indexing of American marriages collected from pedigree charts, family group
sheets, letters, Bible records, biographies, and other sources. Each of these
volumes contains some 20,000 names and should be of value as another source of
early marriage data and, through its list of document sources, as a means of
contacting other researchers with related interests.
On the negative side, the
book of necessity takes a somewhat scatter-gun approach, covering the entire
nation over a broad time frame.
As a result, the chances of finding one
particular elusive marriage are somewhat limited.
You may order photocopies of
documents, including pedigree chargs, from the publisher. BJM
MARRIAGES OF SCME AMERICAN RESIDENTS AND GUIDE TO DOCUMENrS, VOLUME IV
compiIed anapu'5ITShed bY Yates PUblishingTh., P. O.oox 237, ozark, 00 6572r,
213 pp., paper, alphabetical listings by both husbands and wives, $8.00.
Continues with parents listed on a portion of the collection of famiy group
sheets. The book is columnar, listing document, page, type code (Le., article,
biographial sketch, correspondence file, pedigree chart, etc.). BJM
SEVIER mUNlY, ARKANSAS 1890 "CENSUS" REmNSTRUCl'ED FROO TAX RECORDS, by Vinita
LOvell lDng, Martha J'Ohnson
Mary M::Crory.
83 pp., aooinclUdes unnu:nbered
index pages, soft cover, velo bind, $12.00. Order from Mary C. M::.Crory, Rt. 1,
l:klx 58, DeQ..teen, AR 71832.
This volume adds to the Sesquicentennial project
originated by the Arkansas Genealogical Society of reconstructing the 1890
Census of Arkansas, and includes the informataion taken from the Sevier Co. Tax
l:kloks 1885-1891. An additional, "Oomnents" colu:nn was added with the 2890 taxpayers' names were compared with the 1880 Census typescript. BJM
ana
PARACLIFTAj FOUR DECADES GLIMPSED, by Mary C. M::.Crory, Rt. 1, l:klx 58, DeQ..teen,
AR 71832, 18 pp, soft cover, velo bind, $5.00. Submitted in competition for the
weille Westbrook Local History Award, this booklet presents a picture of
Paraclifta, a struggling village which was the county seat of Sevier Co. for
nearly 42 years, (11 pages of footnotes). BJM
VOLUME 1, by M. C. M::.Crory, Sevier Co. Historical Society (see
above for address of Mary C. McCrory), soft cover, velo bind, index, $6.00. A
collection of 35 newspaper colu:nns dated throughout 1984, from The DeQ..teen Bee,
DeQ..teen, AR, concerning historical information in this area of our state, with
handwritten explanatory marginal notes by the author. BJM
TI-IE WIRE SIFTER,
TI-IE WIRE SIFTER, VOWME II, by M. C. M::.Crory, Sevier Co. Historical Society (see
aoove for address of MarYC. McCrory), soft cover, velo bind, index, $6.00. A
collection of 46 newspaper columns dated throughout 1985 from the DeQ..teen Bee
and Daily Citizen, DeQ..teen, AR, concerning historical information in this area
of our State. BJM
POLK COUNlY NEWSPAPER "CLIPS", VOWME ONE by Shirley "Gypsie" Cannon, P.O. l:klx
Mana, AR 71953, soft cover, vero=bind, index, $15:00. A compilation of
orr,
171
personal columns in the local fulk OJ.
However, many are dated as far back as
as far foward as 1926.
There ware many
best known and the one used most in this
newspapers, dating mostly 1904-1914.
the beginning of the paper in 1896, and
newspapers in the Polk OJ. area but the
record was TIlE MENA STAR. BJM
SEVIER mUNIY. ARKANSAS DESCRIPrIVE LISTS SOlDIERS' FAMILIES IN 1863, by M. C.
fiECiory, Rt. 1, BOx 58, l'leQieen, A'R 71832, soft cover, 52pp, ~00ec, $6.00.
This "descriptive list" of needy families is dated 1863, listing the name of the
soldier, where he enlisted, in what unit he served, whether in service, dead, or
discharged, names of his ffamily, with ages, and relationship to the soldier.
An excellent research tool to locate individuals who might be missed in both the
1860 and 1870 Sevier OJ., AR, census. BJM
FULTON mUNIY, ARKANSAS FOlKS 1890-1893, by Desmond Walls Allen, P. O. Box 303,
OJnway, AR 72032, and Henryetta WallS Vanaman, soft cover, 137 pp., arranged
alphabetically, $15.00.
"Fulton Folks", another volume from the prolific
compiler, Desmond Walls Allen, is a part of AGS' project to "reconstruct" the
missing 1890 Federal Census reports.
The ideal source, personal property tax
books, were not available for Fulton OJ., so alternate material was located.
This book contains 3,480 names of individuals takekn from: the 1893 Voter's List
of Fulton Co.; Delinquent Personal Property Tax Books 1890, 1891 and 1892;
Justice OJurt Books covering 1890-1893, and Indictment Record Book for 18901893. BJM
SWANINER AND SIC FAMILIES, !. Czech Genealogy, by Robert and Coleen Swantner,
hard cover, 154 pp, index, price not quoted, may be ordered from Coleen M.
Swantner, 1800 B West Lane, Kerrville, TX 78028.
This book covers the
descendants of these two families and would be a good reference for others
interested in their Czech ancestry. CllaJ?ter III deals with the interesting life
in and around the Slovac cormrunity, Pra~rie OJ., AR, which drew settlers from
the Midwest and which was promoted by JOM Kocourek, whose descendants still
live in the Hazen area. BJM
THE t-fJVERS, The Heartland O:!ronicles, by Nancy N. Baxter, 516 pp., soft cover,
$7.'"95 at Waldenbooks, or may be ordered at $7.95 (+$1.50 for mailing) from the
author, Nancy Baxter at Guild Press Indianapolis office, 6000 Sunset Lane,
Indianapolis, IN 46208.
This novel deals seriously with the subject of
genealogy and brings to life the lives of real people in a vivid way.
The
Movers is the story of the massive inrnigration of the Scotch Irish into the Ohio
River Valley in the 18th Century. It is based on actual families' lives as they
intertwined with religion, the Revolutionary War, the beginning of the War of
1812 and the Battle of Tippecanoe.
The book follows the fortunes and
misfortunes of JOM M::Clure and his descendants as they travel from Ireland, to
Pennsylvania, to Kentucky, to Indiana.
Mrs. Baxter has used the original
records, interprted carefully and painted an interesting, at times compelling,
picture of Midwestern Indian life.
She tells a good story, enticing the
readar's interest while giving a very palatable does of heartland history. BJM
GENE.AI.JX;Y of the BlANDING FAMILY with Blanden, Blandin, Blandon, by Leonard
Clark Blanding60 P. O. Box 1078, Grand Rapids, MI, 431 pp., soft cover, 6 x 9,
indexed, $25. .
This volume traces the American line from Willian Blantine
along with those of other Blanding/Blanden/Blandin/Blandon families whose
connection must be assumed but is as yet unproven.
The result is an extensive
collection of data that should be valuable to researchers with an interest in
the subject family.
References are extensive, although frequently secondary
172
evidence.
Researchers should not attempt to use this work withou having first
read the author's explanation of his file code system and system of references.
BJM
1840 SALINE COUNIY, ARKANSAS, CENSUS by Carolyn Earle Billingsley, Daline
Research, 270 Midland Road, Alexander, AR 72002. This book contains a complete
transcription of the 1840 census of Saline County, AR, including the number of
slaves and the number of people over the age of wenty who could not read or
write in each household.
'The page numbers of the original census are given, as
are the population totals for each township and the entire county.
Also
included is a list of slaveowners in the countYt a list of people who ap~ on
both the 1840 Saline County census and the 18.:10 Pulaski County census ~Saline
County was fromed from Pulaski County in 1835), a short history of the evolution
of Saline County and an 1836 nruster roll of Saline County men.
Since the 1840
Saline County census is so difficult to read on microfilm, this should make a
Full name
welcome addi tion to the bookshelf of Saline County researchers.
index, 25 pp., 8-1/2 x 11, softcover, $7.25 postpaid, order from the compiler.
DWA
unmos
OF THE HADDOCK FAMILY, by liJgh and Orpha Haddock, 1976.
John Haddock,
Sr., was born about 1720, married Miss Liscom, and reared his family in Pitt
Co., NC.
'This book contains a list of descendants of John Haddock and stories
about early Haddocks in America.
Genealogical statistical information has been
supplemented with colorful items about the lives of Haddock descendants.
The
authors' son has arranged to donate copies of the book to genealogical and
historical libraries throughout the nation.
Full name index, 344 pp., 5-1/2 x
8-1/2, hardbound, $20.00 postpaid, order from Gerald H. Haddock, 339 E.
Jefferson, Wheaton, IL 60187. DWA
MARRIAGES OF BENI'ON o)UNIY, ARKANSAS 1860-1877, by Verba Jo Pearce and Gail
Scott, 1978.
These records were transcribed from Marriage Book A of Benton
County, the oldest extant records.
Marriages of more than 4,500 persons are
listed, showing date, names of bride, groom and officiating officer, and in some
cases the ages of the couple are shown. Page numbers from the original book are
included, and the compilers have done an excellent job of transcribing the
material, obvious errors and all.
A list of ministers' credentials with dates
and page number follows the chronological record of marriages.
Residences of
the individuals when other than Benton County, are listed, and they include
Barry,
Greene, Lawrence and McDonald Couni tes in Missouri, Madison and
Washington Counties in Arkansas, and the Cherokee Nation.
This represents a
valuable addition to printed material available on northwest Arkansas.
Surname
Index with cross references to similar spellings, 140 pp., 8-1/2 x 11,
softbound, published 1987, $17.50 postpaid, order from Northwest Arkansas
Genealogical Society, P. O. Box K, Rogers, AR 72757. DWA
THE LAST ~ MILITIA 1861 - 1865: The History of the North Carolina Militia
and lbme Guard in the CiviIWar, and Ii1dex to Over1,100 Militia Officers, by
Gerald Wilson Cook-,-Coomander, U-.-So Navy-;-Retired. 1987. In addition to the
alphabetized list of names of over 1,100 militia officers (Confederate) from 13
northwest North Carolina counties, many letters from the North Carolina
Adjutant General's Letter Book. relevant to the counties covered, are included,
as are lists of militia officers by county.
The counties covered are Ashe,
Alexander, Alleghany, Davidson,
Davis,
Forsyth,
Iredell, Rowan, Stokes,
Surry, Watauga, Wilkes and Yadkin.
Commander Cook also presents a hist<;>ry of
militia in ancient times, Furope,Colonial America and its developnent J.n the
173
United States.
His information is most enlightening and contributes to a clear
understanding of the organization and functions of a militia.
This book covers
an often overlooked group of military records and should be helpful to
genealogists and military historians alike.
Surname/Subject/Place Index,
Excellent Bibliography, Photos, Illustrations 190 PP'6 8-1/2 x 11, softcover,
$18.00 postpaid, order from the author at P.
• Box 1 811, Winston-Salem, NC
27108. DWA
.
6
S(}fE OF THE MANY BRANCHES OF lliE GREENWELL FAMILY TREE, by Marion Elizabeth
Burgelin,
1984.- ~eeler Printing aOO-Publishing, Inc.
This
family history traces male descendants of nine primary Greenwell lines. The
author's personal line is that of James and Anastatia Greenwell of Hardin and
Nelson Counties in Kentucky.
Original documents and sources of information are
cited in the material and illustrations and photos enh.a.nc.e the text.
fullname!Place Index, 315 pp., 6 x 8-1/2, softcover, request price information from
the author at 150 Juanita Court, Vallejo, CA 94590. DWA
Green~n
A GENFAlOOICAL R.EaJRD OF WIlLIAM BR~ AND DESCENDANI'S, compiled in 1905 by W.H.
Taylor, Revised in 19"78 with Supplement
New Ii1dex by Mary E. Hayslett,
Gateway Press.
William Brown and Olristiana Thompson Brown came to America in
1772 and settled in western Pennsylvania.
Their children were George ,William ,
Olristiana, Margaret and Anna.
The Brown daughters married Andrew M:::Caslin,
Samuel Barber and Neil Murray, respectively.
In addition to a list of descendants of this Brown family, there is a separate list of family members who were
soldiers (through the Spanish-American War) and a chart of the first three
generations.
fullname index, 180 pp., 5-1/2 x 8-1/2 hardbound, contact Mrs.
Hayslett at 2121 Columbia Pike '302, Arlington, VA 22204 regarding availability.
ana
DWA
FROO VIRGINIA WIlli WVE by Thomas E. Barton, parts I and II, Revised and CondenPart Il8a record of William M.Hightower and his family who moved
sea 1986.
from Virginia to Georgia, Alabama, Mississippi, Texas, Louisiana and Oklahoma.
Part II is about the Spottswood, West, Hightower, Trammell, Dandridge, Allen,
Terrell, Creilly (Creely) and Barton families Whose descendants eventually
setttied in Indian Territory.
This book packs a great deal of interesting
family information, photos, charts and illustrations into 126 pages. 5-1/2 x 81/2, softcover, write Thomas E.Barton, 1418 N. Binkley, Sherman, TX 75090 for
more information. DWA
A CHOCKLIST OF SCliE SOl1IHERN CAlITER MARRIAGES by Karl Eaton Parks, II.
the
Information on carter surname marriages is taken from the 'Carter Files', a
clearing house for northern and southern Carter Families in America.
The
records are arranged in two parts, one for Carters in alphabetical order by
first name, and a second section in order by last name of folks Who married into
Carter families.
The State or region of the marri~e is given. For additional
information about the marriages listed the reader lS directed to write to the
rauthor and enclose $1. and a SASE.
71 pp., 5-1/2 x 8-1/2, softcover, $8.75
postpaid. Order from Mr. Parks, 220 Shaddock St. Tarpon Springs, FL 33589. DWA
ARKANSAS' DAMNED YANKEES, An Index to Union Soldiers in Arkansas Regiments, by
Desmona Wans Allen, P.O. Box 303, Conway, AR 72032. TIo pp., softcover, $22.00
postpaid. This book contains information about 9,203 Union soldiers who served
in Arkansas Regiments during the War Between the States.
The information was
taken fran the Qxnpiled Service Records of Volunteer Union Soldiers Who Served
in Organizations fran the State of Arkansas, and includes the soldier's name as
174
it appears on the jacket envelope, his unit, company, rank in and out, the date
and place of his enlistment, his age at the time of enlistment, and his reported
place of birth.
The volume also includes an Index to Miscellaneous Card
Abstracts, and an Index to Miscellaneous Personal Papers listing records which
the Compiled Service Record project workers apparently felt did not seem to fit
into particular service records for one reason or another.
This new book, from
one of our mosrt active publishers of Arkansas material, is a valuable ne....
source for researchers, both genealogical and historical, in Arkansas.
Ms.
Allen has also included information for ordering these records from both the
National Archives and the Arkansas History Coll1llission. BJM
TURNBO'S TALES OF THE OZARKS:
BIOGRAPHICAL S'lURIFS, by Desmond Walls Allen, P.
O. Box 303, Conway, AR 72032, 185 pp., softcover, $18.00 postpaid.
Silas
Claborn 1\Jrnbo wrote a series of marvelous tales about the people, places and
events of the early history of the Ozark region in Arkansas and Missouri.
His
stories, states the editor, form a sort of "Poorman's Goodspeed History of the
Ozark Region." There is an amazing amount of ganealogical information in them
besides the entertainment value. This is the first book in a series which will
contain hundreds of tales 1\Jrnbo wrote about his childhood experiences, war
related experiences, and interviews with old settlers.
He visited graveyards
and historical sites and corresponded with folks who related their memories of
old time to him.
The stories appear to have been written prior to 1906, and
sorne ....ere published in newpapers in northern Arkansas and southern Missouri.
This series will be an important addition to the history of this region of our
State. ruM
MARRIAGE REOJRDS 1825-1900 HOI' SPRING COUNlY, ARKANSAS, published by the
HOt spring County Historic81 Society, P. O. Box 674, Malvern, AR 72104,
softcover, ,12.00.
Each of the earliest Marriage Books, A, B, C and D, have
been copied and indexed by surname separately at the end of each book.
Additional records in the Probate Books, known as the Justice of the Peace
Docket, ....ere also researched and added.
A complete index for all the records
would have enhanced the usefulness of this book which is, however, well done and
has been certified as true copies of the originals by the County Clerk of
Hot Spring County.
It should probably be noted that the marriage records
contained in the first three of these five books copied for this publication,
those from 1825 through May 1881, ware transcribed and published in 1970 by
Bobbie Jones M::.Lane, in one volume with grooms names listed alphabetically and a
complete bride name index. The volume published by the Historical Society,
however, contains the additional marriages performed after May 1881 through 24
April 1899. DWA
REBE£J.lOO AND REALIG~ Arkansas' Road to Secession,
by James M. \-klods, 277
pp., ~cover,
i
x.
Order Tr<in The university ofArkansas Press,
Fayetteville, AR 72701, $18.00 plus $1.50 handling fee.
CAlt of the Arkansas
archives comes a phase of history never before told, along with f1ndi~s tbat
are pertinent to the modern social seene.
Arkansas, the Old South s last
frontier, was forced, after the election of Lincoln, to face the issue of
secession.
A decade earlier, the state had spurned all efforts from within to
with::lra.... from the Union, but the following ten years dre.... Arkansas deeper into
the economic and cultural cOlllllUl1ity that bound it to the other slaveholding
states.
The question was asked on street corners, in offices, barbershops and
living rooms:
Would Arkansas leave the Union? Answers to that question caused
a geograrhical realignnlmt of politics in Arkansas during the ....inter of 1860-61.
TIle author focuses upon the resulting social, economic and geogra);h1c divisions
175
that grew within our State before and during the secession crisis.
He captures
the political struggles of the state as it tore /!May from the nation, and as it
threatened in so doing, to tear itself apart. BJM
ANNOTATED 1860 CENSUS OUACHITA 00.
ARKANSAS, by Bobbie J. M:Lane, Arkansas
M::.MilfuIll Drive, IErSprings, AR 71913, 1987. This book contains
AnCestors,
not only a complete transcription of Ouachita COunty Federal Census reports for
1860, but is annotated extensively from several other sources: cemetery records,
Goodspeed, notes from the files of the late Mr's.Pauline Jones Gandrud, records
from surrounding counties ~ and 1850 Federal Census reports. The alternate title
for this work could be 'All You Ever Wanted to Know About the Folks in 1860
Ouachita COunty," 1be very poor quality of the original census microfilm
further erihances the value of this compilation.
Researchers of Nevada County,
Arkansas, 'Will also be interested in this material as part of Ouachita County
contributed to the creation of Nevada COunty in 1871, Surnane Index, 130 pages,
soft cover, 8-1/2 x 11, ,18.00 postpaid.
Available from the compileer at the
above address. DWA
--zzr
ALONG THE ROAD ']X) GLORY A O:m!pilation and Bi~aphy of the Soldier, ~Y and
l%\li:unent ~tne con£ederaieAriliy fran-saIin unt
Ar'lWiSas, by ~ To
Rus ng, I9"8S:- Over 1,300 men fran the 1860 Sa ine cotmty Federal Census
Reports are listed in alphabetical order in the first part of this book 'With
their ages, townships and page n\l1lbers from the census reports,
Each man's
rank, company and regiment is listed as well. 1be second part of the book lists
the regiments and companies in which the Saline County soldiers served 'With
information about each unit and an alphabetical list of men 'With notes from
their service records.
There is an 1860 map of Saline County and several War
Between 1be States battlefield maps.
Garland and Grant COunties were created
partially from Saline County after the war and researchers of those counties
should also profit fran this book. Proceeds from this printing of Mr'. Rushing's
book have been contributed to the Saline County History and Heritage Society,
Inc.
Bibliography, 103 pages, soft cover, 8-1/2 x 11, ,14.25 postpaid,
available from the Society, P. O. fox 221, Bryant, AR 72022. DWA
1,
#
This review of books 'Will cover all voll.lllles received to date, and 'Will conclude
the 1987 listings.
Books received after this issues goes to print 'Will be
reviewed in the 1988 issues.
176
QUERIES
Prepared by Bobbie Jones M:.Lane
Material suhnitted for this "Query· Section" must pertain to an area of Arkansas
at some point in time.
Since we always work with a backlog of queries, we have
no time table for printing them, as we work several months ahead of the actual
appearance in this quarterly. We do, however, strive to print them in the order
in which they are received.
In order to be fair to all our members, PLEASE
SUBMIT 00 t-DRE THAN OOE ~y AT A TIME.
Queries are limited to members only.
It simplifies the work of the
volunteer staff of this publication if you send your queries with
manbership fee, to the Arkansas Genealogical Society, Inc., P. 01 Box
Hot Springs, AR 71902-0908.
Queries should be confined to approximately
words.
allyour
908,
fifty
,
If the name of the County is known and included, it increases your chance of
receiving replies to your questions. Always giw a full name and a date for
reference.
Nal'E: In the June 1987 issue of our quarterly, an incomplete query was printed.
We apologize for this and can only explain it this way:
we are entering the
computer age with the rest of the world; however, as you well know, the machines
have to be "kin" to be compatible.
The machine the query was entered on is not
"kin" to the machine these are being typed, which resulted in this earror. The
query should have read as follows:
RICE
HINKSON
Joan Kelley Marks, 6009 Barry Dr., Cypress, CA 90630, seeks info.
on family of O!arity Hinkson Rice, b. ca 1825, Pulaski Co. m. A.
J. Rice 18551 In Arkansas Co. 1880, with a dau. 19 and son Andy,
age 12, said to be a widow. Where did they go 1
Fai th M. Bradley, P. O. Box 3188, Fayetteville, AR 72702, would
like information from the Daniel Leib family of Green and Randolph
Cos., AR, dates 1820 to 1860.
LEIB
Mrs. C. H. Eilff, 2628 SW 35th, Oklahoma City. ()[{ 73119, seeks information on Nancy Jane Pool Patton and descendants. Patton left
HARGRAVES
Maud, ()[{ in 1908 for Clay Co •• AR, to take care of her grandmother
HARRIS
Nancy Hargraves.
Patton's son stayed with his grandmother Alice
Cheatham Harris in OK.
PATroN
A!)())C[{
1URNER
JAQ{SOO
ANDERSON
(Will individual who submitted the following query advise name and
address and we will include in a later issue. Somehow, this info.
got s~a.rated from this query.) James Alfred Adcock b. IN and
PermelJ.a Turner m. Mar. 20, 1861, Altus, AR.
Who was 1st wife,
mother of !.\n. Jackson and Joel Anderson. Would like to locate any
descendants.
WAYlAND
SNOW
Jan l.auhon, 1456 Ronda Place, Fscondido, CA 92027, is seeking info. on Thomas Henderson Wayland, b. 16 Sept. 1836 in AR, m.L:>uisa
177
Snow on 7 May 1856.
He lived in Iuka, Izard Co., ARr in 1862
where he joined the Confederate Army arid served from 862-1863.
He drew a pension and died on 14 Nov. 1913 in AR.
He is the son of I2nry
Wayland, b. 23 July 1808 in SW VA and his wife Hester English.
ENGLISH
Marjorie Thurston, Rt. 2, Box 244, l'bunds, OK 72027, needs info.
on grandfather Pete W. Baughman b. Dec. 11, 1854, d. 1927, m.
July 10, 1873 Frances Sarah Otambers b. Mar. 10, 1855, d. June 13,
1933, lived in Jasper, Newton Co., AR.
<11. Henry b. 1874; Ruth 1876; 5armJel
1883; Annie 1884; Wn. 1888; James 1891; Dome 1. They settled in the Ft. Gibson,
OK area 1901.
BAUGHMAN
CHAMBERS
WIll.,u'ORD
HANo:x:K
DAVIS
Winona H. Rennie, 10910 West EUfaula, Not'l1l8l1, OK 73069.
Lucy
Antoinette Williford Hancock's mother was Delilah Davis Williford.
She was b. in GA, where and who were her parents? She was l:I.!ried
in the Bayou Mete Cemetery at Jacksonville, AR. (Approximate dates
would help in this query. BJM)
Dorothy Earls, 1965 lullaby lane, Anaheim, CA 92804, seeks info.
on Patsey A. M:Adoo, b. in KY ca. 1796, m. Abner Stinnett May 1822
in Independence Co. AR, listed on 1850 census in Fulton Co., AR as
head of household. Who were her parents?
It::.AOOO
STINNEIT
Winnie Temple, 2501 W. Ave. Z, Temple, TX 76501, needs data on
America Lavenia Owens, b. 1852 in MS/AR/TN? m. James Wesley Temple
in White Co., AR. he d. ca. 1882. She m. R. C. Doss ca 1889. She
BILES
d. 24 Dec. 1900. her brother, Will Owens was a merchant in
Rosebud, AR and son Albert and claus. Eimna and Perl, who m. Biles
brother and lived in Little Rock. Who were hnerica and Will Owens' parents?
OWENS
TINPLE
DOSS
FITZHUGH
M. ana Goble, Rt. 2, Box 14, Jennings, OK 74038,
needs info. on
parents of ~bert Fitzhugh, b. 1829 in AL, later traced to l'bnroe
Co., AR.
Alice P. Ball, 336 Atterberry Rd., Sequim, WA 98382, needs
parents of Smith S. Matlock b. ca 1813 TN and his wife, Rebecca,
b. ca. 1823 VA. Smith and Rebecca m. ca. 1841. Family in 1850 Carroll Co., AR
census, Prairie 1Wp. p. 147. Also 1860 census, same county and township, p. 76.
MATI..OCK
HUI'SON
Harold G. Hutson, #1 Pine Tree Point, North Little Rock, AR 72116.
Robert C. Hutson moved to AR in 1849 from MS, died Lonoke Co., AR
1864, thought to have been born in NC ca 1807, moved to 'IN as small boy, then to
AL~_ to MS, then AR. Need info. on his parents. (Robert C. Hutson, age 43, b. NC,
18)\) Census, Prairie Co., AR, 0-21, Pigeon Roost 1Wp. - BJM).
HARRIS
Mrs. W. Gill Bonner, Rt. 3, Box 61, Marianna, AR 72360. Jeremiah
H. Harris b. ca. 1826 (rA or AR? then rA) lived Desha, Ark. Cos.,
Ehillips Co 1860-80 (d. 1880 Lee Co.).
Interested in Harris 1816-20 Lincoln
Co., GA, the descendants of James, I2nry, Richard, Abner, Nat, Micajah, Wn., aU
in earliest records of Lawrence and Independence Cos., AR; also the Harris
family, Timothy 1826 Conway Co., AR; 1830 Pulaski Do. Harris family. Have over
30 years collection to share.
Mary Nell Turner, 1001 S. Walnut, Hope, AR,
178
71801.
James D.
~
~
ltDowell m. Sallie E. Ne'WCO!!l in Saline Cb., AR 1848. Need his
parents and/or siblings. He was b. NC or GA, d. Hempstead Cb., AR
1897.
She was orphan of Anderson G. Newcom and Nancy Pugh who d.
in Jackson Cb. 1837 and 1839.
Mrs. Ella Joslin Sands, 1018 5th Ave., Fairbanks, AI< 99701, needs
parents of Samuel Joslin, b. 1805/06 TN, also info. on his death
in AR 1870-80, and on his wife Elmire Eilrst, b. 1819/20, AL or GA,
d. 1870 Lawrence Cb., AR.
JOSLIN
HURST
B~
Mrs. Joyce Bayless, 1404 S. (hester Ave., Bakersfield, C'A 93304
needs info. on parents/siblings of Nancy Brown m. James Jackson
Barnes 31 Dec. 1840 pos. Independence, Searcy or Van &.Iren Cbs.,
AR, b. 16 Apr. 1823 M)?, d. 21 O::.t. 1864, Iswisburg, AR. (h.: Nancy Ellen,
Sarah Malinda, George W., Mary Ann, Jane Lavina, James, JKr., Albert Elzy.
BARNES
Lynne E. Drennan, 137 Rambling Dr., Folsom, CA 95630.
Elizabeth
Ferguson m. Andrew Scott ca. 1780, probably in Baltimore.
'lheir
son was Judge Andrew Scott of Little Rock and Pope Cb., AR.
Member is direct descendant of his son Walter Ferguson Scott.
sa:YlT
FERGUSON
Joseph M. Hill, 2313 lakeshore Dr., Cleb.n:ne, TX 76031,
needs
info. on Dr. George Newton Hill, b. 1855 in AR. 1860 census was
living in Searcy Cb. with his father George W. Hill, who was b. in IL and mother
Nancy, b. in TN.
George M. Hill practiced medicine in Hempstead and Nevada
Cbs., d. 8-1-1923 at Spring Hill.
George W. Hill d. in 1902 (late) or early
1903 in Ouachita Cb., was b. June 1822.
HIlL
Mght Avery King, 4352 thitney lane, Wichita, KS 67210.
Avery
King came to Searcy Cb., AR, ca. 1851, m. Elizabeth (Ellis)
Carrollton in Wileys Cove, Searcy Co., AR. He and Elizabeth and
her daughter Julia C. Carrollton made their home near Marshall in
Bear Creek Twp.
They had two sons, James A. and Benjamin C. King. Ben m. and
reared a family, lived in Searcy Cb. his entire life.
KING
EU.IS
CARROLTCN
BENroN
EASLEY
GARNER
Mrs. C. T. Patterson, Jr., Rt. 1, Box 188, Ashdown, AR 71822. Does
anyone know of any newsletters on these families? GARNER, FENI'ON,
EASLEY, LEVERETl', STEPHENS, OOZIER
KENNEDY
M::FERRAN
Rita Kay Ackerman, 4055 E. Hartford Ave., Phoenix, AZ 85032.
Esther Kennedy was b. ca 1818 in MS, dau. of Nathan Kennedy. No
known info. on him. Esther m. Samuel ltFerran in 1840 in AR. 'lhey
had 4 ch., Mary, Thanas, Catherine and Harriet. She d. between 1850 and 1853,
probably in Franklin Cb., AR.
Paul H. Reeves, Rt. 1, Box 63, Arcadia, M) 63621 would like to
correspond with anyone working on the family of Swearingen that
moved from AL to AR in the mid 1800s.
SWEARINGEN
Estelle M. ibpe, 605 E. Circle, Clarksdale, MS 38614:
"Can you
help?" Rufus Gates b. 1870, White Cb., AR, on 1870 census age
3/12, on 1880 census Ybite Cb., AR, as James R. Gates, age 10. What became of
him? If he died, when and where is he buried?
GATES
Robert A. Campbell,
4 Caylor lane, Little Rock, AR 722.09, seeks
179
data on his grandfather, Robet't Armstrot]g ~bell b.PA O:.t. 30
in Wayne CD., l'() 1880, Little Rock, AR 1900 and 1910, probably in Howeli
CD., l'() in 1890.
1833,
HARRISON
ERWIN
Allene Kerr l.Dcklar, 3155 Endicott Dr., Boulder, CO 80303, wants
cause of death of Thomas H. Harrison (native of Liverpool,
England).
He d. 14 Dec. 1859, Prairie CD., near Lonoke or Old
Austin, AR. Vbere buried? Thought at one time to own land also in Little River
.CD., AR. Husband of Mary S. Erwin.
SFAY
Mrs. Frances
needs obit.
Wheeler CD., TX, bIt lived
an Apr.!May 1910 newspaper
ROBERTS
BAKER
TAYlOR
GARNER
BAILES
;Ida Emma.
Need help.
CAllAHAN
PFAVEY
MAUPIN
D. Intravia,
2704 Carroll, No. Las Vegas, NV 89030,
of Andrew Jackson Seay, d. 13 Apr. 1910, ~beetie,
1870 to Mar. 1910 in Izard CD., AR. Has anyone found
Newburg 'lWp., Izard CD., AR?
Franklin Jack Chapnan, 30825 10th Ave., S. E. , Federal Way, WA
09-23. lliward Franklin Roberts b. 7 Jan. 1853, 'IN, m. Elvira Jane
Baker (Taylor), b. 5 Dec. 1855,
father George Baker and mother
Rebecca Garner.
<llildren 10, b. around ~untain Home (Baxter
CD.), AR and Viola (Fulton CD.), AR.
Grandmother Sarah Matilda
Roberts m.William J<ranklin Roberts.
His brother m. her sister,
Iml. Franklin' s father was from l'().
His mother was Sarah Bailes.
Ted C. Hilliard, P. O. &:lx 819, Hilmar, CA 95324, searching for
parents of <llester Arthur Callahan, b. 9 Sept. 1895, ~rrilton,
CDnway CD., AR. His father was a schoolmaster in area who d. ca.
1887.
C. A. Callahan had sister Annie, who m. a Peavey, then a
Maupin.
WIlSON
Mrs. linpo K. Berry, Rt. 1, Box 262, Warsaw, 00 65355. Would like
to correspond with descendants of the Jefferson N. Wilson family
who were listed on the 1880 census of Washington CD., AR.
Mrs. Thomas A. <llerry, 701 N'. Witte, Poteau, OK 74953.
lin. H.
Neal m. lucetta Skaggs 1855, Hempstead CD., AR. When and where
did he die? Is Susan R. Neal b. 1798 VA his mother? Who is his
father? Luetta's parents, James M. Skaggs and Catherine Kernsl m.
1833 Hempstead CD., AR. Need her parents names.
NFAL
SKAGGS
KERNAL
Mary Jones Ziegler, 606 CDoper Dr., Placentia, CA 92670. Joshua!
Jarvis Duncan, b. ca. 1833 'IN, and wife Susan Fhillips, b. ca.l844
GA, were at Magnolia, CDlumbia CD., AR by 1867 when their son \in.
MACHEN
Marion was born; two other children b. there in later years.
Joshua and Susan said to have died at Dierks, Howard CD., AR, ca 1875. Where are
they buried? Who were "Uncle Pack Fhillips" and Dr. Machen who took in the
children?
DUN'CAN'
PHILLIPS
OLIVER
HOI.MAN
Mrs. EUgene D. Johnson, 15530 Stone Ave. N., Seattle, WA 918133.
1880 Bellefonte, &:lone Co. - Blacksmith. Milton Oliver b. 1827
HAGGARD
MO, son of James and Rachel Iblman Oliver, m.Kisire Haggard, b.
REEVES
1826 'IN, dau. of Nathaniel and J
Haggard. Their ch.: Artelia,
Elias, James, Campbell, Ellen,
m. John Baker, son of Noah and
Elizabeth Reeves Baker.
wno
180
SISQ)
oorothy S. Gray,
9ZZ S. Schneider, Pampa, IX 79065, seeks info.
UZZLE
M:::NAIL
on lhrace Sisco, known to have lived in Little River Co., AR in
1886, first wife Annie, ch.: Malinda, Lizza, Dinna, Dan, E'dward
Perry m. Bell Sadie Uzzle 1890, AR.
Jacob Shannon m. Elizabeth
ltNail 3/17/1874 in Iron CD., M:l.
ANIIDNY
AlLEN
ECHOLS
Mrs. JanES C. Sanders, 305 Devon, Sherwood, AR 72116. William A.
Anthony, b. 1796 VA,
son of John A. and Mary Allen Anthony, m.
Sarah Ebhols 12 Sept. 1824, d. 1852, Pittsylvania CD., VA. lin. d.
Q:.t. 1866.
'Their son,!, Dr. Homer L. Anthony, Ashley Co., AR, was
killed in auto accident in WIldon, rngland, July 1905.
"Who were their other
children?
Henry F. ¥boley, Jr., 112 Stewart Ave., Mansfield, OH 44906,wants
descendants of Pascal B. Andrews, b. ca. 1823 GA and wife Martha
E., b. ca 1823 GA, d. Dec. 1859, Bradley CD., AR. Lived in MS before moving to
Warren (Bradley Co.) AR area ca. 1850.
ANDREW(S)
GRIDER
DAVIS
ZACHARY
Mrs. Yvonne S. Perkins, Rt. 2, Box 629, Cam::Ien, AR 71701, needs
info. on R. H. Parker, I. C. Perkins and O. P. Anderson, who lived
in Nashville (Howard Co.) AR; looking Eor wills, deeds, births,
deaths, etc., living there ca 1850; understand owned land now city
of Nashville. Any Andersons still there?
AlLEN
Bernard H. Folk, 1224 Honeysuckle Dr., Magnolia, AR 71753.
William H. Allen came to Columbia Co.,AR in the late 18SO's.
He
farmed at that location until his death in 1901.
His father, Hesikiah Allen,
moved from Henry or Jasper Co., GA 1849. Who were Hesikiah' s parents and "Where
did they live?
READY
CRAWFORD
M. B. Ready Gestring, Box 224, Leola, AR 71084, needs data on
parents of Allen Beckham Ready, who was b. in GA, m. Jane Crawford
BECKHAM
in Pike CD., GA and came to Ark. Co., AR between 1840/50. Jane d.
Sf'OITSI.KX)D
1860 and Allen moved to Bradley CD., AR. He later lived in Ashley
Co., AR.
His father was Spottswood G. Ready, and mother Sallr
Beckham, who m. in 1811 Baldwin CD., GA.
Was John Ready of GA, Spottswuods
father or brother? Where was Spottswoood G. Ready from and who were his parents. Is he from the Spottswoods of VA?
NIXON
MEDux::K
Mary Catherine Sturgeon, 6217 Boyle Park Rd., Little Rock, AR
72204. Abner Nixon b. VA 1777, wife Parthenia Medlock, said to
have been grandson of Henry Nixon, who came to VA from Northern
Ireland in 1740.
Who was Abner's father?
Abner's son, Burrell, and family
settled in Faulkner Co., AR in 1860.
Mrs. Kathryn Lee S:nith, 603 10th, Zephyrhills, FL 34248.
Dr.
Bushrod Washington Lee came to Little Rock from Petersburg, VA,
1830. Moved to Arkansas CD., m. Isabella Douglass 1841. Seeking
descendants both names, also Wilkins in Jefferson Co., AR and
Fayette Co., TN, descendants of Betsy Lee and Robert Wilkins "Who came from
Petersburg mid-1840s.
LEE
DOUGlASS
WILKINS
RICHARDSON
NICHOLS
CARVER
Mrs.Edwin W. 'I\.Jrner, 317 Braden St.,
Jacksonville, AR 72076.
Joseph and Sarah (Richardson) Nichols were b. and m. in AL, "Where?
They were in Sharp Co., AR 1860. at.: William; John m. Cl!arlotte
181
SNIDER
OSBORN
RUCKER
t1)RRIS
All.FN
Carver; Jane m. John Snider; James m. Jane Osborn; U:luisa m. John
Rucker; Alexander m. Malissa Morris; Tobert m. Ehziabeth Allen;
Robert m. Margaret Ware; Isaac m. Martha Norman; Mary m. James
O'Neal - JOM Norman - Stephen Tyler - JOM Middlecoffj Sarah m.
John Hamilton - Thomas Swafford; Martha m. Joseph Hamilton.
WARE
HULSEY
Bill C. liIlsey 12620 Southridge
contact with any descendants
Family moved to Drew OJ., AR ca. 1850 where
were born 1854-62. Family in ltNairy O:l., TN
Conway O:ls.
Mrs. raVena L. Wilson,
Henry Lawrence m. Nancy
in Northern AL ca.l840.
O:l. , AR shows Jeremiah
happened to Malvina end Jeremiah?
LAWRENCE
THARP
ABELS
Dr., Little Rock, AR 72212, seeks
of Guilford Hulsey b. 1815 GA.
James, Guilfred?, and William T.
1840-50. Some members in Yell and
P. O. Box 684, Camp Verde, AZ 86322.
'!harp, Jefferson O:l., TN 1821. Nancy d.
Henry m. Malvina Abels. 1860 census Polk
Lawrence, age 1. Henry gone in 1870. What
Vera S. Rock, Rt. 6, Box 362, Spokane, WA 98208. JOM E. Flowers
signed up for service in the Civil War at Antoine, AR (Ct. 10,
1861.
He d. Apr. 5, 1862 of pneumonia in MJddy Boggy, OK. >here would he have
Would there be a marker?
Capt. Speer's O:l. 19 Regt. Arkansas
been buried?
Infantry.
FI..CMERS
Aubrey Hyatt M::.Cann, 2696 S. Osceola St., Denver, m 80219. JOM
Ashbrook b. ca. 1807 Wash. O:l., t1) d. after 1880, m. Fannie Ann
Harper/Howard ca. 1867 Pike O:l., AR. Fannie b. ca. 1832 in GA, d.
1909 in Little Rock,AR.
1hree children.
Fannie m. 1st a Mr.
Howard in GA ca. 1850; had son Thomas Howard b. 1853 GA. 'Ihomas was a longtime dentist in Glenwood, Pike O:l. ,AR, and d. there 1920. Father of JOM was
George Ashbrook b. 1 June 1763 VA, d. 21 Sept. 1839 Wash. O:l., MO.
ASHBROOK
HWARD
HARPER
Dr. Betty Morris, 3201 S. 18th, Fort Smith, AR 72901 wants data
on wives of William Allen Gammill, b. 1827 TN, to AR 1845,
Margaret (ml) b. 1828 AL, d. ca. 1855 Ouachita O:l.; Sarah H.
Jackson (m2) b. 1835, d. 1873 UJachita O:l. Need places of birth, parents nanes.
GA!+!IU.
JACKSOO
STROUD
Evan L. Stroud, P. O. Box 192, Decatur, MI 48045, would appreciate
any information on the Samuel Stroud family.
Samuel died in the
early 1900s at Mt. View, AR.
SIDBAUGH
Mrs. Sunny Harness, 3751 Beethoven, U:lS Angeles, CA 90066 would
like to know where John J. Stobaugh was in 1850, or any help on
his parents.
He was in Van furen O:l., AR in 1860 and was killed in the Civil
War.
BRADSHAW
SINGLEI'ON
Mrs. lenora Tatum, 2499 E. Garard Ave., #148,Merced,CA 95340,would
like documentation of. the marriage end death of George A. Bradshaw
who m. Georgia Anne Singleton ca 1893.
They had five ch. end he
and an infant son d. in Roseville in 1898/1899 of smallpox.
Old newspaper
notices or family Bible entries would be appreciated.
LYON
CAMPBEll
Mrs. Ann W. O:lndren, 1428 SW 7200, Oklahoma City, OK 73159.
William Carroll i¥on, b. 8 Jan 1822 TN, d. 11 Dec. 1895, Yell O:l.
182
AR, bur. Lyon Cemetery near Dardanelle, AR, m. Sarah E. Campbell.
CIH1INS
WARD
children.
musician.
Louise C. Ryan, 3086 Wastridge Dr., Kelseyville, CA 95451. John
Berry Qmmins and his family lived in !1ma, AR from 1898 to 1910.
His wife was Sarah Ann (Ward) and they were parents of nine
He owned a lumber mill and was a house carpenter.
Was also a
LEISTER
RITCHE.Y
Darlene leese, T Bar Ranch, Eldorado, OK 73537.
Any data on
leister-Ritchey, NC, AR, KY, PA.
In Lawrence Co., AR 1817.
David Leister d.
1818 Lawrence Co.
Some records
as
Luster/Lister/Laster.
Rex Guyse, 22708 Nicolle, Carson, CA 90745, needs father of Allen
Allen Wallis b. 1818 SC;
Alfred Wallis b. 1825 Fayette Co., AI.. Their mother, Edith, b. 1800 Chesterfield
Dist, SC. What was her maiden name? 'lhey came to AR from AI. in 1850.
WALLIS
and Alfred Wallis of Hot Spring Co. ,AR.
Katherine R.Simpson, Rt. 1, 300 Overby Rd., Fairview,TN 37062
needs parents of John Edward O'~inn, b. 26 April 1858, TN, d. 30
Sept. 1960, Conway,AR, wried Vilonia, AR, m. Sarah Lou Freeman,
b. 6 Jan. 1867, d. 2 Apr. 1942. Seek info. on her parents.
O'QUINN
FREEMAN
Jack N. Rose, 603 39th St., Richmond, CA 94806. Lydia Elrod b.
1833 GA, dlo Abraham Elrod & mary Dobbs; m. 1st JOM Davis, 1855
TULL
Saline Co., AR, need data on issue. Reason b. 18665, Jeanette b.
1868, both living with mother 1880 census, m. 2nd Abraham Tull
1871, Saline Co., AR, issue: AdE;lline Tull b. 1872, ElillS J. b. 1874. !men and
where did Lydia die and where Wried?
EI.ROO
OOBBS
GARNER
E. English, 38 Park Plece, Richardson, TX 75081, needs info. on
William H. Garner and wife Elizabeth (maiden name unknown) both
born ca. 1840. Their son, William C.Garner lived in Holly Grove, AR. lin. H.
Garner was son of J. J. Garner.
DYER
WARD?
BROO<
Mrs. Charles Bowen, 4885 Academy St., San Diego, CA 92109.
Calloway Dyer b. ca. 1811, ("'rainger Co., TN, son of lin. & Nancy
(Ward?) Dyer, came to Pike Co., AR, in 1850. Frob. moved elseBAIRD
where shortly after arriving in Pike Co.Did he take his family to
BARD?
TX or another county in AR? His brother Jackson Dyer moved to
CLEVATE
Washington Co., AR in 1851. His sister, Mahala, who m. !'bses
Brock lived in Pike Co. for many years with her fam. Son lin. Dyer
m.Mandy Baird/Bard, dau. of James & Rachel (Clevate) Baird in Wash. Co., AR
1869.
Nannie Watson ~ndez, 8555 I.lurmond, Fontana, CA 92335. James H.
Watson, farmer from MJ, m. Winney E. Edwards whose first husband
was Benjamin Fdwards. Ch.: Watson, John C' l Mary ,Lenanah, Charles
and Richard.
Edwards, Ann M., James, William and Henrletta. James H. Watson
and John C. Watson were in fulaski Co., Maumelle Twp., in 1850.
WAT&lN
EDWARDS
BOYER
WALLIS
WtIRY
William F. ("'raves, 9710 Barlow Road, Fairfax, VA 22031, seeeks bp
and documentation for Ida M9.y Wallis, nee Boyer, b. 6 April 1883,
perba:ps near Carlisle,Lonoke Co., ARt to Charles D. and Alice
lkey lIoyer, nee Lowry. She was rearea, married and died in Collin
183
Co., TX.
HAlL
HEMBREE
M::.CHRISTIAN
Ruth B. Carr, 17128 Fsperanza Dr., Perris, CA 92370, needs parents
of Elijah Hall, b. ca 1820-25 KY, m. Rachel Hembree b. ca. 1825,
mowd to Barry Co., 11), had six ch. <X!e, Ephraim Riley Hall m.
Mary M::.Ou:istian ca 1890.
They lived in Madison and Washington
Cos., AR.
MARTIN
Orene S. fuore, Rt. 1, Box 782, Mead, OK 73449. Joseph Francis
Martin, b. 1840 came to AR ca 1853 without parents to relatives;
where? to whom? m. in GA to whom? His dau. Sarah Jane b. GA, her sister Ida in
AR ca. 18771.
Their monther d. when? where? he remarried 1879 in Conway Co.,
AR.
Ida was still alive in 1880, 1881 they were in Van Buren Co. (Alread).
Where and when did Ida die?
Mrs. James P. fuke, 418 ME
William Fox b. ca. 1840 'IN
MO? Harriet Manes b. 15
1919, Marion Co., AR, had one dau. Sarah
FOX
MANES
11th St., Grants Pass, OR 97526.
d. CA 1868 AR or 11)? m. ca. 1861 AR or
Dec. 1845, Bradley Co., 'IN, d. 11 Aug.
Jane Fox b. 2 Mar 1862 AR.
HARDING
'I'HCtIAS
Mrs. Jo Billings, Rt. 5, Box 418, Nashville, AR 71852, still
needs lead on Lewis Harding, living Johnson City, AR 1880 with 3
sons, 2nd wife and stepchildren.
1st wife Sarah ThOOlaS d. after
1869, probably AR. Where did Lewis go? Where was he in 1870? Did he marry 2nd
wife Ann in AR?
Mrs. Hugh Harrison, 3808 Overland Dr., Del City, OK 73116.
Benjamin Craven Harrison, b. AR, M:l, or IL in 18502, m. Francis
Autry 1879, d. Ft. atIith, AR 1928, lived with ThOOlaS Harrison,
Searcy,
AR,
1870.
Siblings or cousins possibly Virginia,
Missouri, ThOOlaS and C.
Was this ThOOlaS a relative?
ThOOlaS m. who1
Died
where? Related family may be Hampton.
HARRISON
AlTl'RY
HAl1PI:'OO
DAVIS
Mary Cheeseman, 3306 Ransom, Mlskogee, OK 74401, needs parents and
bp. of Nancy Davis, b. 1814, who m. Daniel H. Karnes in 1843, and
lived in Franklin Co., d. 1900. Any info. about Willis E. Mason
MASrn'
b. 1825, lived Polk Co. 1860, a".: William, Martha, ThOOlaS, Sarah,
James and Jackson.
KARNE')
BUSTIN
FEl'lNEIL
Mrs. ]):)rothy W:l.ite, 6419 Hallel Circle, Little Rock, AR 72209.
Missouri N. Bustin, b. GA 1842 m. Wade Fennell, SC 2 Apr. 1856 in
Union Co., AR, 5 ch. b. there, mowd to Hot Spring Co., AR ca
1875, Mill Twp., 2 ch. b. there. Missouri N. paid taxes there in 1884. Have
not found them since that year.
RALlS
David A. Ralls, 2005 S. Main Ave., Sioux Falls, SO 57105, wishes
to conmunicate with anyone researching any of the following RALlS
brothers: Nathaniel, John, William B. and Cllarles, 1830-1860 in Sevier, Howard,
Polk, Pike or Hempstead Cos.
ARRINGl."OO
WCXER
LFMASTER
CASEY
Harold Casey, l00lWestwood Dr., Stillwater, OK 74074, needs info.
on parents of lJ.Jcinda Arrington, b. ca. 1810 NC, m. John A.1\.tc.ker
b. 1809,KY/'IN.
They were parents of 11 ch.: Salinda, Robert,
Alfred, John, Mary, Nancy, David M. (m. Julia Ann Lemaster),
James, Louisa, Elizabeth Ellen and Annette (m. James Alfred
184
Casey), all b. Madison Co., AR.
!i!.ry L. Nelson, Rt. 1, Box 333 A, Kingsville, ID 64061, needs
parents of Robert Waid Lackey, b. 1817 'IN, in Izard Co., AR by
1852. Had brother A. William Lackey, Izard Co., AR also. In Wayne Co. 'IN 1850.
Need other brothers and sisters.
LAa<EY
Jerry E. Douglas, 2726 N.W. 54th Ave., Gainesville, FL 32606,
Dickerson Falkner (Faulkner) family 1860/70 & 90 census Jonesboro
'lWp., Ct-aighead Co., AR. Sons of Dickerson & wife were Lewis
Redus, George, Bliscan, Burrel. Daus. m. names Crutchfield, Wills,
Bennett,Downs and Hall, same area, same time.
JONES
MOOREHEAD
Artie IXDonald, 23582 N. Bryant Rd., Acampo, CA 96220. Jacob
Lewis Jones, b. 1820 'IN and wife Mary, in Independence Co., AR
DAVIDSON?
1850/60, Fulton Co., AR 1870, found selling part of their property
in 1873. When and where did they die? When did they sell the
balance of their Fulton Co. property? Ch.: l''rancis M., m. America J. Teal,
Independence Co., Elizabeth m. Geo. W. ~rehead, !i!.rthena, Nancy, all b. 'IN;
fuillip M. b. 1855 AR, m. Isabell (Davidson?) ca. 1877 where? Aalamintha, Susan,
Gilbert Jolm, Mary and Sarah Jones all b. AR.
SCHOFIElD
Constance Schofield, Rt. 1, Bluejacket, OK 74333. Jolm Schofield!
Scofield b. 1826 in IN, wife Ida A. b. 1832 KY. Ch.: Fdm::md b.
1847 KY; Mary 1. b. 1854 AR tm. before 1870); Martha A. b. 1855/56; James B. b.
1858; G. B. (female) b. 1868. In Cedar Ct-eek 'lWp., Ct-awford Co., 1860.
Mildred Neeley Tatum, 9716 Howard St., Lamont, CA 93241 is 1«Irking on the name of Clopton, buried at Dayton, AR, also Neeley
M::CORMICK
lived in the area as did M::Cormick and Henderson. Was or is there
a place in the area called Witcherville (a college was there years
HENDERSOO
ago).
(Both Dayton and Witcherville are small = i t i e s
located in Sebastian Co., AR.
A quick check of published marriage records for
this county reflects a few Clopton marriages. BJM)
CLOPrOO'
NEELEY
Linda S. Martin, 357 Middle Dr., West Jefferson, OH 43162, needs
birthdste for Lillie Belle Horn, b. Arcadia, Kansas, June 8, 1874,
also any births or deaths for any M::Kibbens, b. Coal Hill, AR,
late 1800's. Births or deaths of any Horns.
HORN
M::.KIBBFNS
NELSON
James Rlwell, Box 702245, 'lUlsa, OK 74170. James Nelson, b. 1808
Ireland and ch. b. 'lX, Mary A. b. 1841, Robert b. 1843/4, David M.
b. 1845, b. MS, !i!.rgaret E. b. 1848, Jolm b. 1856. Gr.a.. b. MS, between 1860
and 1878: Ann Eliza, Margaret, Ruth, John C. and~. T.
Nelson lived in
Crittenden Co., AR, wring 18705 and 18805.
MIDDLEl'ON
DANIELS
Betty L. Pettit, P. O. Box 14, tiJevo, CA 92367. <l!.arles Middleton,
wife unk. 10 ch., Sarah, James, Rebecca, !i!.rion, George, Thomas,
John, Molly, Zillah and Nancy Caldonia, b. AR 22 Mar. 1877.
<l!.arles 2nd m. to Widow Daniels also had 10 ch. moved to OK.
Alan DunS1«lrth, Rt. 2, Box 420 #1, Fayetteville, AR 72703. Andrew
Jackson Ibgan, b. 1827 'IN, m. Martha A. Steele 1858 in !i!.rshall
Co., MS.
They were in Conway Co., AR, 1860 census and after.
Where in TN was A. J. born? Who were his parents? Glad to exchange info. and
H(X;AN
STEELE
185
research O:>nway 0:>. families.
Violet Reed, Rt. 2, Box 144 B., floral, AR 72534. (James?) Martin
Blankenship, b. 1826, Bowling Green, KY7 rn. Betty (Elizabeth)
Scates. 1850 TN census shows Wyatt Scates as her father, where
WOOD
was she born? Married? Died? Martin's children: ~. Martin,
JOHNSON
Sherman, Jalm S., Green b. TN between 1860-18731 Martin's sister,
Martha J. m. Osmond M. Wood, one dau. m.love Johnson in TN. She d. in TN.
Blankenship and Wood families cane to AR 1876, cannot find on AR census.
BlANKENSHIP
SCA.TES
Mrs. L. D. Burnes, Box 365, Yellville, AR 72687, interested in
St. Clair (Sinclair) family in Marion and Searcy O:>s., AR. In
1850 census Mary St. Clair Burnes and husband Alfred Burnes -were
living in Marion 0:>., along with her 8 St. Clair ch. and his 8
Burnes ch.
In 1860 & 70 she, with part of her St. Clair ch. are listed in
Tomahawk Twp., Searcy Co. In 1880, she is living with her widower son Samuel
St. Clair in Richla.nd Twp., Searcy Co. After 1850 she is again listed as Mary
St. Clair.
Were she and Alfred divorced? INhere did she die? lNhom did Samuel
and her son <lla.ries marry?
ST. CLAIR
SINCLAIR
BURNE'S
Camille Petree, 1326 Camellia, Can:rlen, AR 71701-2635, seeks Bible
records, forebearers, descendants, census locations 1870, 1900/10
for Aden Jalmson b. 1816 NC, d. 1895 Dublin, TX, m. matilda Ann
Smith TN, m.Louisa? AR.
Ch. William Robert b. TN, John W. b. AR, Elizabeth,
Frances, O:>lumbus, Matilda, Thomas, Leva, Wiley and Ada.
JOONSOO
SMITH
KING
ODEll..
SPFAKS
~
ClARK
Leah King, 1501 Cartwright z Earle! AR 72331. Need information on
children b. TN to Joseph King ca 831-1841, m.l?, m.2?, m. into
families in Craighead and Greene Cos., AR.
Elizabeth lm. John
Odell 1877), Ellen (m. Speaks), Joseph (m. Wilkins), <lla.rles
Daniel (m. Hunter), Parlie lm. Wilkins), Macy (m. Clark), Jess
(m. Kirksey), Teenie (m. Byrd). Came to AR about 1877.
Ilene O'Mary Wages, 29 Sunnydale Dr., Little Rock AR 72209.
Louisa Wages b. ca 1851, m.Banjamin Wages b. ca lAsl, on July 6,
1873, Ouachita 0:>., AR. Ch.: Martha, John, Lemuel and Sarah, AR
census 1880.
Arminda Wages b. Oct. 1853 m. Jediah W. t-r.Mahan b. Nov. 1848 on
Mar. 10, 1872,O:>nway Co., AR.
Ch.: lhoma.s, Elbert L. and Lillie, AR Census
1900.
WAGES
M:MAHAN
Leslie Erickson, 600 E. Ocean Blvd., Apt. 701, Long Beach CA. 90802
Is John S. Matlock b. 2-20-1831, Overton TN,son of Valentine b.
2-27-1786 TN.
John, nephew of George MatlOCK, 1850 Crawford Co.
AR Census in Valentine's household.
MATlJJ(l{
BASSEIT
Frances A. Thomson, Box 900, Etowah, NC 287829, seeks info. on
George W. Johnson, b.AL ca 1829 m. Wincy <lla.nally Sanford Goodman.
S'DJRGIS
His wife m. 2nd Hiram D. Sturgis and they resided Bradley Co., AR.
BRAZEAL
1he Johnsons moved from AL to MS then to AR. Ch.: Frank, Sarah
(Sally), Mary Ellen,John Wesley, Lucy Ann, Wn. Henry and Carolina.
George W. is believed to be the son of John Johnson and Lucy Brazeal.
JOONSOO
GOO!11AN
BLYTHE
WOOD
Mrs. A. Keith Jernigan, 52 O:>lony Rd., Little Rock, AR 72207.
John Blythe, 1832 Izard Co. coroner, 1836 Blythe postmaster,
Carroll Co. for Whom Marion Co.·s Blythe Twp. was nHIled, member
186
of Crooked Creek Primitive Baptist QlUrch in Marion Co., had ch.: W. Jackson, b.
GA 1815 KY, m. Clarinda Wood, and Missouri, b. 1818 in KY, m.John Wood.
REEVES
HAYNES
Paul H. Reeves, Rt. 1, Box 63, Arcadia, MJ 63621. William Reeves
family living in Boone Co., AR in 1910 census, wife was Mary E.
Haynes.
Ch.: Noah H., 17, Martha Miy 15, William Homer 13, lDgan
9, all b. MJ, and Golda 2, b.AR. Where did they go after 1910?
HOll.IS
Marlene Gal.'wlod, 1605 H St., Washougal, WA 98671.
ANDRElJS
Bernard Hollis, b. ca. 810/20 in Shropshire, England, son of lin.
and Hannah Hollis of same place, lived in IL and WI; m. 28 Feb.
BRaJN
Benjamin
1847 in lafayette Co.,WI to Amanda Andrews dau. of Thomas Brown
and Miry Ann (Cain) Andrews; d. in 1852. Who are his sisters and
brothers? What is his ancestry?
Descended from his grandson, J. B. Hollis of
/-t)untain Home, AR, from J. B. 's father, Thomas Brown fullis of Kansas.
GAIN
l.UFFORD
ROSS
Dale James, Rt. 1,Box 301 A, Plunerville, AR 73237.
GreenP.
Wofford, age 19, and Mrs. Mary Elizabeth Ross, age 21, were m. 12
Feb.1874 in Faulkner Co., AR. She was previously m. to John Ross
(ca 1870.) What was her maiden name?
HIX
SWAIN
CGlAN
Clara Hix Clifford, 983 <herryvale Rd., Boulder, CO 80303, needs
Bible or family records and info. for Richard and Sarah Hix and
John Hix, VA 1800 and 1860-65. Also for Samuel and Nancy A. Swain
Hix, dau. Exar J. Hix Gowan from Prairie and Woodruff Cos., AR
1860/1890.
Billie W. New, 2 Kaye lane, Jacksonville, AR 72076. lin. J. (H.?)
Furlow, b. 1839 GA, in Bradley Co., AR by 1861, Pope Co., AR 186870, d. Ashley Co. 1875t wife Nancy N. (Gill?), son of Wn. &nry b.
1863, daus. Nancy Melissa (b. 1869), Sarah rrances (b. 1869). Need parents of
lin. J. (H.?). What connection is he to Furlows of Columbia Co., AR?
FlJRl.a.1
GilL?
WELCH
GREER
Mrs. Rose Marie Williams, Rt. 2, Box 326, Attica,OH 44807, needs
parents of Lawrence Hansford Welch, b.MS ca 1831, but was in Union
Co., AR after 1840 census.
1860 Census shows mother, Penelope,
41, b. GA, lawrence 19 b.MS, fulda 18 b. MS, Agnes 16 b. MX, Permela 14 b. MS,
Penelope 11, b. MS, Jamina 7 b. AR, Banjamin F. 2 B. 14. Lawrence Welch m. Mary
Greer and. he served in Co. I, 19th ARK Inf. GSA.
Date and place of death
unknown.
MURPHY
HORN
DEAN
Vera L. Dean-Ross, 332 W. Micllonald Ave., Ricbnond, GA 94801,
needs marriage data ca. 1814 and maiden name of Susanna t1Jrphy,
of Searcy Co., AR, b. 1795 GA, the mother of Richard Coleman
Murphy (1816-1900) who m. 1st Mary (maiden name unknown) and 2nd
Sidney (Horn) Dean, widow of Andrew J. Dean. Did Richard Coleman Murphy have
both Peggy 1849 (did she die?) and Margaret, b. 1850 AR?
RAGSDALE
<DFFLE
EIXl1
Nelda Davis, Rt. 1, Box 126, MilbJrn, OK 73450. Josie Ragsdale
b. 1880, Lawrence Co. toJim (James W.) and Martha (Coffle) Ragsdale, m. J. E. &iom, lived in Sharpe, Jackson and White Cos., AR,
buried at Bald Knob, AR.
Also her brother Mirvin Ragsdale, same
counties.
BLEVINS
Martha K. Blevins, 307
~ccasin
187
St., fuchanan, MI 49107. Ruebin
ANDERSOO
Richard Blevins b. Feb. 3, 1885 in Grant Co. and Malcom Hunter
. Blevins, mohter, Tempe AiKierson. \\ho was his 1st wife, and where
does the name "Perry" come in 7
DODSON
GOAD
CANrRELL
Eli
Dodson~
Mrs. W. C. Dodson, 802 S. Birch PI., Broken Arrow, OK 74012 has
lost addresses of those seeking following information.
Please
write. Grandfather Confederate Colonel Eli Dodson, 22 May 1828,
Spencer, 'IN, 26 Feb. 1921, Yellville, AR, parents, Mary Goad and
1st wife Rhoda Caroline Cantrell, 3rd Mary Catherine Cantrell.
Mrs. Izola ~Coy, Rt. 3, Box 170, Tahlequah, OK 74464. H.C.Hollis
and Martha E. Wallace, both b. 'IN, m. Wayne Co., 'IN 1850.
H. C.
on tax Roll in 1850s Searcy Co' l AR.
Martha E. IIDved with her
children, without H.C. to Searcy Co. about 186L.
HOlLIS
WAUACE
GLENN
RYAlS
Tl.lRNEY
BRISCO
Wands J. Conley, 206 E. Calvin St., Taft, CA 93268. Jacob and
Mary (Ryals) Glenn lived Searcy Co., AR, in Marion Co. by 1836.
Both buried Glencoe Cemetery near Pindall, AR.
Their son,
George A. m. 1st Nancy Turney and 2nd Leanna Brisco.
WIlKINS
Nancy Kennedy, 409 West 8th, Russellville, AR 72801. William A.
and Mary Bradford Wilkings, parents of Charles Henry Wilkins, b.
12-23-1869 'IN, d. Yell Co., AR 12-19-1943. Daniel Kestler, b.
OH d. 1908 in Greenwood, AR. Need information on both.
BRADFORD
K£STLER
ALLEN
DAWSOO
Mrs. J. Everett Sneed, 22 Lafite Cir., North Little Rock,AR 72116
seeks ancestry of John Redman Allen, b. Aug. 16, 1761,d. ca 1851,
and his wife Mary Elizabeth Dawson, b. June 12, 1773, parents of
Margaret Bremer, Thomas Dawson, Absalem R., Jane, E, James Parkerson, and
Delilah. They probably m. in Halifax VA and moved to Sevierville, TN in 1822.
MITCHEll.
ROARK
BOYCE
Madeline N. Phelps, 509 Brooks Dr., Midland, TX 79703, needs parents and siblings of Martha Jane Mitchell, b. AL 1840, m. 1854
John W. Roark who died 1860, m. James Boyce 1868 in Calhoun Co.,
AR. She d. Olerokee Co., TX early 1900s
WRIGlfi'
WILBURN
CROSSLIN
CROSSLAND?
Carol Shearer Stavlo, 2112 73rd, Lubbock, TX 79423, needs info.
on Richard B. Wright, b. Jan. 1840 or Jan. 1837, d. Harrison, AR,
m. Martha Ann Wilburn, b. 12 Apr. 1859, d. Harrison, AR, both
buried in Cottonwood Cemetery.
Also need info. on Narcissus
Crosslin (Crossland?), buried Maplewood Cemetery.
SPARRCM
Jane Wiley, Box 242, Heber Springs, AR 72543, will exchange
information on ancestors b. 1800s, migrated to Arkansas (Pulaski,
Faulkner, White, Independence, Marion Cos.) John Sparrow ('IN),
Marinda Cato (11); N. P. Johnson, Donna Ward (Pontotoc, MS)
William Dillard (NC); Mary Parker (VA); George Davidson (INh
\in. Taylor, Margaret Robinson (IN).
CATO
JOHNSOO
WARD
DILLARD
PARKER
CASE'{
Arthur R. Brown, 12400 31st Ave. South, Burnsville, MN 55337,
needs origins of Ellsberry B. Casey and Fmaline Ne\«llan Casey,
DUGGAN
m. at Boxley, Newton Co., AR (1863/1865).
Both b. 'IN 1837.
Lived Scott, Sebastian, other western counties. Buried Mansfield
AR.
She lived to 102.
Son Pleasant Lafayette m. Florence Duggan 9 May 1893:
Silver Hills,AR.
NE»IAN
188
COOK
Bertha L. Cook,Rt. 20, Box 236, Springfield, MO 65803, needs info.
on family of Abraham and Nancy Cook, listed in 1860 census in
Lawrence Co., AR.
01. : Mary, John, Margaret, WIn., Thomas and
Need death dates of Abraham and Nancy.
Also need data on parents of
Solomon.
Martha Jane Young, b. 20 July 1859.
YOUNG
OJX
PATRICK
ALLEN
SANDERS
Genoba Dawn Derks, Rt. 1, Box 3175, New Waverly, TX 77358.
WIn. Thomas Cox b. near Waldron,AR 14 Jan, 1871, came to TX 1892
m. Ida Patrick 1896, d. 1912. His father, Wesley Marshall Cox,
mother Milly Emily Allen. Grandparents lliward Marshall Cox b.
b. Ireland and Martha Jane Sanders, also from Ireland.
Aleatha Easterly Galloway, 4105 Bonanza Way, Loomis, CA 95650.
Any info. on James Easterly, b. 1826, m. Louisa Mitchell. 01.:
Margaret, Samuel, Staniford, John, James Isaac, Beard, Mary, WIn.,
WIn.
Conrad. From TN to AR ca. 1860. James' sister Turesa m.
DYE
Bennett in 1847, in Johnson Co. (Piney) and Dye, in 1868 in AR,
county unknown.
EASTERLY
MITCHELL
BENNEIT
fully M. Leftwich, P. O. Box 11, Estero, FL 33928. Sarah Whitten
1850 census Saline Co. AR, no husband, oot several children. Was
she dau. of John and Rebecca Whitten~ Were David and Joel Whitten her brothers?
David ooried south of Prattsville and Joel ooried Post Oak, TX.
WHI'I'fFN
MEAJ)(MS
Joan Meadows Young, 3711 Allendale Ave!.} Oakland1 CA 94619.
Samuel ~ows (Medo) , 1st wife Sarah hlizabeth \,;laighern, TN,
listed 1850 census Independence Co., AR, came to AR from TN in a
covered wagon.
Samuel b. 1818 Vigo Co., IN, Sarah Elizabeth d.
1865, Washington Co., AR.
MEOO?
CLAIGHERN
McKAY
Nell McKay Todd, 726 Tate St., Camden, AR 71701, interested in
family of Samuel Miller who lived Little Rock in 1900. Twin
sons, Clyde and Claude are in picture collection of Thomas
Franklin Brown family. Believed to be relatives of T. F. Brown
or wife Letitia Martin, all of GA. Brown was policeman and Miller
was possibly his partner. Have info. to exchange.
BRCMI
MARTIN
MILLER
DAVIS
ALLEN
Mrs. J. F. Hallioorton, 4800 Oaklawn Dr., N. Little Rock, AR 72116
needs infQ~ on parents, b. dates of. Zachariah Davis, b. Clark Co.
1 O:::.t. 18;)6, m. Mary 1 b. 1804 1.n KY.
Ch.: James M., Sarah,
Elizabeth and Prudence.
Elizabeth and Prudence d. in Clark Co. in 1835. James
m. Sarah R. Allen, 25 Sept. 1849, Clark Co., AR.
BESS/BEST
WHITENER
Elsie M. Cole, Rt. 1, Box 327, Waynesville, 00 65583, needs
parents of Levi Bess (Best) b. 4-26-1820 Stoddard Co., MO, m. Dec.
31, 1843 Barbry Whitener. Levi d. 2-16-1864 in Federal Prison in
Alton, IL.
Levi could be bro. or cousin of Charles Best of Newport, AR, ca
1915.
Chas. had son, R. N. and Levi had grandson named R. N., will share
all information.
PARKER
PERKINS
ANDERSON
Connie Hutchinson, 5019 Montoya Dr., El Paso, TX 79922,
needs
info. on R. H. Parker, I. C. Perkins and O. P. Anderson, who
lived in Nashville (Howard Co.) AR;
looking for wills, deeds,
births, deaths, etc., living there ca. 1850; understand owned land
189
now city of Nashville.
Any Andersons still there?
Rhoda J. Morley, 3215 Hwy. 441 N., Okeechobee, FL 33472.
!men
did Elizabeth (Betsy) b. May 1884 m. Marshall Alexander Thomas and
when did she die? Was on 1900 census of Johnson Co., AR.
'JlKMt\S
Faye M. Rypkema, 460 Circle Dr., Miami, OK 74354.
Ajal (Frlgel)
Fowler d. 10 May 1869 t Carroll or Madison Co., AR; where buried?
widow, resided 1860 South Fork 'lWp., in
Triphinea Puit (Pewit),
Fulton Co., AR. Ch. with her: Tripheny, Thomas, Permelia, Andrew.
Any descendants or tombstone records?
roJLER
PUIT
PEWIT
TAYIDR
PHILLIPS
Mrs. Doris Lampnan, Box 85, Centerview, M) 64019, needs date and
place of the marri~e of Frlgar Phillips and Alpha Taylor.
Need
his father & mother s names, his date and place of birth, and date
and place of death, and where he is buried.
They were divorced and she
remarried, lived Little Rock, AR in 1904, and had one dau.Mildred, 1 grandson.
M. Martin Soward, III, P. O. Box 3642, Corpus Christi, TX 78404,
seeks date of death and place of burial of Rev. Josiah Roberts and
wife Mary (Polly) Stone Roberts.
Res. Lawrence Co., AR 1860,
Independence Co., AR 1870, possibly resided in Sharp Co., AR. He was Methodist
minister.
ROBERTS
SlONE
Mrs. Alonzo G. Wren, 13424 Reid Cir., Ft. Washington, MD 20741.
Willis Yates b. 1828 NC d. 1906 Nevada Co., AR, lived in Pike,
Hempstead, Lafayette Cos., m. Sarah Ann Davis b. 1833 GA, d.after
Sl1ITON
1910, Nevada Co./ lived in Pike Co. Dau. Mary Ellen m. Wilburn J.
Sutton, Hempstead Co. 1870. Wlilis Yates rec'd Civil War pension.
YATES
DAVIS
Leila L. Hessley, 4232 Fulton Parkway,
Cleveland, OH 44144.
Andrew Jackson Seay, b. 1830 TN, AL or VA, m. Mary Ann Howell,
Oregon City, MO in 1852; after her death m.her sister, Sarah Ann
Howell, in Howell Co., MO; in Izard Co"
AR 1870 census, d. 1910 on visit in
t>bbeetie, TX.
SEAY
HaOELL
Ramona L. (Rector) Barr, 13607 W. 145th Place, Lockport,IL 60441,
seeks info. on father, Earl Wayne Rector, b. 24 Nov. 1911, Cave
Springs, AR, d. 10 July 1984, Carterville, MO. Grandfather Ole
Lee Rector b. Apr. 1886, wife Mary Jane Razor, b. 28 Jan. 1890 Stone Co., MO, d.
22 July 1965, Webb City, 'MO, m. 23 July 1910, Bentonville, AR; lived in white
house on 1st Street, Rogers, AR, next to ice plant, ca 1911/1912.
RECroR
RAZOR
Tom tklod, 1106 N. Kaweah, Visalia, CA 93277. Rev. Wm. Henry Wood
b. Dec. 25, 1825 in AL was preaching in Miss. Co., AR 1852/1857,
Marion Co., AR in 1857; m. Louisa Jane Reynolds, b. 1835 (d. 1918)
on Oct. 28, 1858. t>bved to Barry Co., MO in 1861 till 1877, then back to Marion
Co., AR where they both d. at Flippin; he in 1908, both buried in Hurst Cemetery
near Flippin.
9 ch.: John Marion, Anna, James Perry, Wm. Eugene, Francis
Marion, Leroy Vernon, Ira Cook, Robert Pinkney, and Louisa K.
WOOD
REYNOLDS
BAKER
BLEVINS
Lewis D. Baker, P. O. Box 2805, Crossville, TN 38555, seeks ancestors of William Baker, b. 19 Oct.1772, wife Esther Baker, sons:
190
Dr.Arthur Asher Baker and Dr. Andrew Sagle Baker of Carroll Co.,
AR 1835-80. Jeremiah T. Meek b. 1788 NC, his wife Elizabeth "Betsy" Blevins, b.
1796 KY. of Carroll Co., AR 1835-80.
Kaleta K. livesay, Rt. 1, Box 136, Griffithville, AR 72060, needs
help in locating gravesite Butlerville Cern., Lonoke Co. AR,
Dillard TUrnage d. ca. 1877/80 (Conf. soldier - 13 Apr. 1861 Co.B,
8 se Inf. - POW Camp (hase, OH, Sept. 1864-June 64), arrived AR ca. 1868 with
wife Sarah Jane Lampley, son, John W.
Sarah J. had brother, John Thomas
Lampley, in Carlisle/Butlerville area.
'lURNAGE
LAMPLEY
Wallace Edwin Leard, 8753 Del Vista Dr., St. Louis, MO 63126
needs proof Alexander L.leard, b. 1792 Abbeville se, d. ca 1851,
Neshoba Co., MS, m. Jane E. Rainey ca. 1816 SC, b. 1796 GA, d.
1882 Ft. Smith, AR, m. Priscilla Terry Morris, 1851, Perry Co.,
AL, b. 1822, d. 1883, Ft. Smith, AR.
LEARD
RAINEY
MORRIS
KNIGfIT
RODMAN
Donn E. Wagner, 5245 Walton St., Long Beach, CA 90815,
Silas
(hades Knight, MD, and wife Mariam Carpenter Rodman and ch.,
(hades Rodman Knight and William deRavelle Knight who owned
property and resided in Gobel, Big Creek 1Wp., Phillips Co., AR 1890-1920.
Willie Mae Morris, 605 N. Ellis, New Boston, TX 75570.
Martha
Hickerson, dau. of Jefferson Hickerson and Nancy Ann Bishop, m.
MARTIN
James Martin, 23 July 1866, Perry Co., TN. Last known residence
Black Rook, AR, Lawrence Co. in early 1920. Children: Bud, Bob,
Myrtle,Nora and Sally.
HICKERSOO
BISHOP
Martha J. Vaughan, 2557 Glenfield Ave., Dallas, TX 75233. J. R.
Vaughan and family listed 1850 AR Census, Poinsett Co., with
Spirios fundley. Vaughan not listed with his family 1860 Indepence Co.
Did he die ca. 1853? Can anyone tell me where he is buried. If not,
what happened to him?
From what county in TN did he come? Will reimrurse
postage/costs.
VAUGHAN
HUNDLEY
CAMPBELL
DODSON
SAYLORS
nntAS
WIU<ERSON
Mrs. Kirby Jean Martien, 742 W. Seminole, Springfield, MO 65807,
needs death date, place of burial for Greenville Campbell, wife
Margaret Dodson, residents of Marion Co., AR in 1910.
Ch.:
Martha m. Saylors, Mary m. Thomas, John, Tennessee m. Wilkerson,
James m. Rosa M. ? Where in TN were Greenville and Margaret m.
ca. 18671 Are there printed cemetery books for Marion Co., AR?
EDISON/
EDSTON
John Morgan Dudley, 2102 N. Beard, Shawnee, OK 74801. Any
EdisonlFdston or Lofton/Loften in Conway, Perry or nearby counties
1840-1900. Any Morgans residing in Desha Co. 1850-1860. John
Clark (d. 1835 AR Co.) m. Margaret Taylor, b. ca. 1794 VA, resided Desha Co. until ca. 1860. 01.: Catharine (m. Henry Sears),
Harriett, Nancy Oliver (m. Calvin Wn. Morgan), Giles T. Clark.
LOFION
MORGAN
CLARK
TAYLOR
Bettye Rathbone, 16413 Fitzhugh Rd., Austin, TX 78736,
seeks
relatives of Elizabeth Orubb, b. ca. 1822 MS, d. after 1880,
Lonegrove, Uano Co., TX, m. David M. Gass, ca. 1840; lived
WHITSOO
Clark Co., AR 1850. Her mother may be Elilzabeth Whitson, sister
of Van and Dave Whitson; her father may be Henry W. Chubb, 1820 Census Monroe Co.,
MS, near Charles Whitson.
CHUBB
GASS
191
CROW
Jean Huggins Wingert, 79 La Premia, Benicia, CA 94510. RW Soldier
James Crow, d. 1795 OIatham Co., NC.
Will lists John, James,
Stephen, Reuben, Isaac ,Abel , William, Hannah Bron, Abba Rilla Pilkington. lhese
ch. spread out across Nand SC, TN, GA, AI.. and AR. Wish to correspond with Crow
descendants. My James Crow came to Newton Co. 1868.
Winfred H. Tollett, 101 So. 7th St., Nashville, AR 71852, needs
to know the facts - Sarah Tollett, dau. of David and Juliet Brown
Tollett, b. 1841, Mine Creek, Tollette, AR area, where David
settled 1819. Reported to have m."Harney", she lived for a while
with Francis Marion Holman and wife Eliza, her sister. (Have most
of her brothers and sisters).
TOllEIT
BROWN
HARNEY
HOlMAN
GOINS
Vonah P. Boudro, 7501 E. Service Rd., Hughson, CA 95326, needs
parents and siblings of Nancy Katherine Goins, b. 1860, MS, m.
2d. Stephen Stuckey, d. 1924, Alex, Grady Co., OK, resided at
Bright Star, Miller Co., AR 1878.
SWCKE'{
McCOY
NANCE
Evelyn Nance Pyles, 309 Maple St., Truth or Consequences,NM 87901
Mary Caroline McCoy, b. 1838, place uknk., d. Scott Co., AR 1927,
buried Freedom Cemetery, wife of Jesse P. Nance.
Need parents,
brothers and sisters, any dates and locations of this McCoy line.
McNEELY
Mrs. Van G. Meek, ~r., 2401 ~ixth St., Apt. 17-L, Clarksdale, MS
38614. John A. McNeely, wife Nancy E. Scott and three ch., James
FORT
Cowan, Mary Lula, and Mittie, left Coldwater, MS for Perry Co. ,AR
1878.
Thomas H. Scott, brother of Nancy, was either there or
traveled with them. James Cowan McNeely returned to Coldwater and m. Martha Ann
Fort.
soon
POITS
FRANCE
Nina Sadler Bell, 19620 Bob-O-Link Dr. Miami, FL 33015, seeks
info. on parents and siblings of Dr. John J. Potts, b. 1811 PA,
m. Susannah A. France 1832, moved to AR and d. 1852, Roseville,
AR.
Elva Pearl Merriott, 5856 Redwood St., San Diego, CA 92105, meeds
data on Samuel Tillery, son of Samuel and Anne Paul Tillery, came
to Saline Co., AR quite young with half-brother, Caufield Taylor
Tillery, Thomas and Hugh, and two sisters Elendar and
Jane.
Elendar and husband Thomas Elza Caufield,Hugh and Thomas are
buried Antioch Cemetery, Saline Co., AR. Jane m. a Runyan. Have nothing proven
on Samuel.
TIlLERY
PAUL
CAUFIELD
RUNYAN
McINTOSH
HUBBLE
BARNHILL
HAWKINS
HOlMFS
Irene L. Auld, 464 Uranus Ct., Nipomo, CA 93444, needs help with
McIntosh, 1750 VA, 1774 NC, 1800 TN, KY, 1850 MO, 1875 AR, 1904
OK, 1917-1965 AZ. HUbble, AR 1831, OK 1900. Barnhill, AR 1831.
Hawkins and Johnson, 1850 MO, 1890 AR. Smith, 1843 MO, 1885 AR,
1900 OK. Holmes/Homes ~ 1835, IL, 18/0 MO, 1875 AR, 1900 UK.
ADAMS
Joyce D. Bell, 7924 Mc~'adden Dr., Sacramento, CA 94828.
Wo.
Franklin Adams, b. 1I:!41 ~, d. 181:18 m. 1871 Leake Co., MS Louisa
Jane Myers, b. 1852 MS, d. 1911. In AR by 1871:1, both buried in
M:Jntgomery Co., AR. Adam I s sister Matilda m.John Woodall. Myers
parents were Joseph and Caroline Myers. Her sisters Maranda m.
MYERS
ID)DALL
JONES
DENDY
192
~
S<llUI.AR
CUMBLE
Sanfprd F Jones "JeQIlY" m. John L. J.lendy Jul:\,a m. W. J.
Plunkett {lived llnpire}, "Bett" m. J. B. HainLLton (lived GLenwood)
Ehma m. Wn. H. Schular, ''Lun'' m. a OJinbie. Her brothers Markus
Myers (lived Ibntgomery 0>.), Henry, George, Benj. Lee and Robert.
MIMS
Leonard B. Stephens, 22141 Raven Way, Grand Terrace, CA 92324.
Ln 18b! at Camp &'haver, AR, Linah, Byron O. and J. M. MinIs
(brothers) enlisted in the O>nfederate Army, 0>. C, 6th and 7th Ark. Inf. Where
was Camp Shaver located1 Need info. on the 6th and 7th Ark. Inf., i.e., where
they fought. Need info. on MinIs in AR.
Jean Marthe, 1400 Hwy. 7 North, Box 144, Harrison, AR 72&01.
John King m. Jamimia, pioneer of Severe Co. & Okla. Territory, b.
CLIFJ.'OO
ca. 1780 'IN, 2nd wife Celina Brownfield m. in Pulaski Co., AR, ca.
J..El.IIS
1825. John Edwards King. b. 1751 VA, father of John King, m.Sarah
Gl1fton 1791.
Need Jamimia' s surname, proof of m. to Celina
Browntield, also info. on Sarah Lewis m. Edwards King, bro. of John. Sarah d.
Ouachita 0>., AR.
KOO
BRaYNFIELD
HAI..l!:
Mrs. James S. &:ott, 3520 !:'ina, No.little Rock,AR 72116. John C.
Hale b. ca 1800 'IN, came to Hot Springs, AR in 1828. Dr. Enoch
Parsons Hale b ca. 1803 'IN, came to Ibscow, Nevada Co., AR ca 1852.
Albert
George Hale, b. 1808 'IN, came to Clark Co., AR ca 1857.
How were these men
related? Were they brothers? Who were their parents?
Fern Willis, 22207 Dexrad, Perris, CA 92370. Is Margaret Holderbey listed on the 1850 census for 'fell 0>., AR as a 9 year old unHl!MJ:'HIU.
dar the head ot household, Alexander Barringer, the same Mar~t
Holder!;W who m. Henderson P. Hemphill "just betore the CiVll War
near little Rock, AR1'
HOlDERBEY
BARRINGER
Helen G. Llavis, 1:'. U. Box 31712'1$, Lacey, WA ~8:>03. Henry Walker
Bookout, b. ca 1838/40 'IN, both parents b. 'lN, m. Mary Eliz.Hicks,
b. ca. 1842 AR, dau. of James L. Hicks, b. June 4, 1809 VA and
.Amelia Ann Vaughn, b. ca 1827 1tJ.
Henry & Mary m. Oct. 1871
Hempstead 0>.
<h.: 'thomas, James, Elnma C., Annie, Maude, 10m. Joe, Caroline b.
188'1$ (still living at 100), twin Kate d., Mollie; most children m. in Ashdown.
BCXX<UUl'
HICKS
VAUGHN
Imogene Woslum, 1~507 Orting-Kapowsin Hwy., Orting, lolA 98360 has
been told her grandparents, L:ln Sinmons and Elizabeth (Jenkins)
Sinmons are boi'ied at DeQueen, Sevier Co., AR. Does anyone know
burial site or funeral home? They d. ca. 1911. L:ln Sit11llOns had two wives (both
named Elizabeth) and the 1st is buried at Hot Springs.
8lACK'i\OJD
CLEMENTS
Mrs. Cathy BlackWood, !>O3 Cedar, Pocahontas, AR /245:>, wants the
parents and siblings ot Elizabeth Clements BlackWood, b. 1-18-1887
, in AL or AR, lived in Greene 0>.
AR most of her life, was 2nd
wife ot General <ler Mlackwood, m. b-25-1893 ~m. lie. trom Craighead Co., AK),
had 8 ch.: Samuel Hale, Anna, Mark, Kate, Mary Clevie, James, 2 stillborn sons.
Died 6-3-1~5b in Jonesboro, AK, bUried at Mt. Zion Cemetery, C>reene 0>., AR.
GAFFORD
!'OKRIS
Madge
into.
town
and alissa Gaftord,
Lamar Johnson, 391 E. 9 N., Spanish r'ork,
Vi' 846bO, seeks
on William Robert Gatforn on 186U census in Pike 0>., AK,
of Amity, along with John and Martha Ann Gafford, James
Ellender Gaftord and James I't>rris. Believe that William d.
1~3
here while others went on to Sulj,Xlur ::>prings, 'lX.
(Amity is in Clark Co.,
AR,
adjacent to Pike Go.? BJM)
HOOUE
HUFf"
llnda Rogers, 401 Kimberly Dr., Mesquite, 'lX 1514'::1.
Montgomery
Hogue (Hoge, Hogg) m.Sarah Huff, dau. Daniel/Matilda Huff, resided
uanas Go., AR ca 1850.
Want to find others researching these
families.
WARD
Catherine Delsindico, 5935 Aublrn Blvd., #162, Citrus Heights, CA
95621, would like to exchange info. on the Ward brothers of Hardin
Co. , TN, arrived Van Buren Co., AR ca. 1867.
They were Jordon b. 1824,
Henderson b. 1830 and Isaac b. 1833.
Marshall E. Kuykendall, Rt. 2, Box 45, Kyule, 'LX 181>40. Marshan
Daniel Early (184b-1919) reared in Clark Co., AR, served in "t:rawRWK
ford's 3rd Ark Cavalry'·. He was a prominent Baptist minister in
Arkansas, married Mary J. Roe (Rowe), wried DeGray churchyard.
Need information.
EARLY
ROE
Joan Uland, 27:J Otirco Ave., :;anta Cruz Gardens, Santz t:ruz, CA
95065.
\ben did Adelia E. Mason Holt ot VA and her children,
Edward llless, Rebecca Rose, M. Williford, R. W:littield and Ilennett S. arrive in
ARl
What county? Was her husband James "Pascal" Holt with them'!
\;hen did
Eklward llless Holt purchase property at Ileyou Meto, AR1 This all took place atter
181>4.
HUI.;r
RUSS
Jewell W. Ross, 28114 N. 51st Ave., Ridgefield, lolA 9!!642.
\;bl.
Green Ross was 6 months old in 1860, \;hite Co., AR cansus in
household of S. E. Ross, female tram TN, later census show Iokn. b. in M!:i. Iokn. m.
Betty Wright in Searcy, Uec. 24, 1876. They lived in El Paso and had 5
children. Need william's parents.
BUTIER
Mrs. Dorothy L. Miller, 540 Solano Ave. N. E., A100querque, NM
87108.
\;ho was the Joseph Butler tmlrdered by Hugh A. Patterson,
who was convicted in the Circuit Court of Scott Co., AR, in Aug. 1843, but who
escaped from the Sherift in Ckt. 18451
Linda Hanks, 180!! Miner Ave., San Pablo, CA 94!!06, seeks info. on
Richard and Viola Hanks, parents or James, George, Cllarles Alfred
and Cordelia Hanks, who are believed to have lived in Lawrence
Co., AR. (hades Alfred b. 1910 was supposed to have been born in Walnut Ridge,
AR and lived there until his marriage to Ruth 'furnbull, Oct. 1933, when (hades
and Ruth moved to Lake City, AR.
HANKS
TURNBULL
CUBAGE
OODU
BRWN
HliARD
June Maclin, P. O. Box 133, Eureka Springs, AR 72632, in interested
in information on the wm. R. Cubage - James Dodd families from
Ouachita and Montgomery Cos. 18UD-H!6:J to the present. Also, the
George Brown - Heard families from Hot Spring and Dallas Cos. 1!:l0'!
to present.
~'Ihe tamily of Melinda Ann Jones and her husband
James IlocId OJbage are listed in the book "Patillo, pattillo, Pattullo and
Pattillo r'ami.Lies" compiled by Melba t:. t:rosse, 1':1n. if interested, write query
OOi tor BJM for data fram book).
OXFURU
WHITNE\'
Linda J. Oxtord, Rt. 1, !:!ox 3b8, Fayetteville, AR 12/03
needs
info. on wives ot Andrew Lafayette Oxford who m. America \;hitney
1':14
(Whit~ey?)
7-14-1872. After her death! m. N. L. Howard 9-5-1880
<ind after her death m. Susan Sharp ~-1 -lB8::!. Any info.
of the three wives would be appreciated, births, deaths,
on any
burial
sites, children,names of parents, etc., all in Washington Co., AR
James Blackard, 7820 79th Ave. S.E., Mercer Island, WA 98040,seeks
info. on James (1) 'fuggle, listed age 21 in 1850 census of Clark:
Co. with Ransum 'fuggle, physician. ''1\Jggle Family of VA" lists Ransom T. in
Comanche Co., 'I'X trom 1855 to death in 1878.
Any info. on James T. or other
Ransum T. descendants will be appreciated.
TUGGLE
Jane Schinzinger, 29 Gillman St., Irvine, CA 92715, seeks parents
of Nancy Miller who m. James M. Briscoe in Sevier Co., AR on 10
March IB7l, moved to Texas after marriage.
MILLER
BRISCDE
Virginia L. Wessel, 638 W. Simpson, Fresno, CA ~3705. William M.
Tyler was in the Confederate Army, discharged at l"ayetteville ca'.
1862 on disability. Parents were Roderick and Tamps \Williams)
Ty ler • Also need into. on Hansel and Louise t:aleb, perhaps in
Scott Co., AR 18:>6 and Caroline E. Caleb 1)' ler.
1YLER
WIILIAMs
CALEB
SN.lIX;RASS
<.n:-IBS
TIO'1tili
fmily.
Kent FlIbanks, Rt. 1,lbx 132, Ringling, UK I34Sb.
Joseph
Snodgrass, age 40, m. July 23, 1900,Jonesboro, Alt, Uora Combs,age
IB; had son Jim b. Apr. 1:>, 1902.
~ra died and it is believed
Joseph died leaving his son age 2 to be reared by Ben. Thomas
Joseph and Uora were both tram Weiner, AR.
Shirley Cannon, P. U. Box 6l!3, Mana, AR 11Y5::!,
would like to
correspond with anyone researching the names Slopnan and Shewmake!
Shoemsk/er.
SWrMAN
SIiE\oiMAKE
SHOEMAKER
l'1!lba IJ:lng, P.O. Box 801, Palmer, AI< 9~645. Samuel S. Scott and
wife Nancy, Pope Co., AR 1860 census.
Samuel S. Scott, b. ca.
1821 'IN, wife Nancy b. 1822 SC. Need info. on parents ot both.
James M. Weaver b. ca. 1854 AR m. Nancy Jane Steen. Allen and
Elizabeth 1\lcker, Searcy Co., 1870.
SCD'IT
WFAVER
SlEEN
'rua<ER
Jeanne G. Parlette, 32131 Harvard, Westland, MI 48185. Everett C.
Hollis, b. Jan. 2, 18~, Clay Co., AR, m. Floy A. Burch,sept. 8,
1915, Clay Co. John Wesley Burch m. Sarah t:aroline lewis
();t.
LFlJIS
23, 1B93, both wried Helena, Phillips Co., AR. Would like to
hear from anyone researching these families in Clay Co.
HOlLIS
BURCH
DAVIS
Mrs. James Earl Thomas, 530 ltKinley, Pocatello, ID 83201.
William Thomas Davis, b. 26 June 1858, Oregon Co., ID, d. Nov. I,
1935/36, wried MallInoth Springs, J!ulton Co., AR.
His wife was
sarah Jane Bates, b. 25 Feb. 185Y, Myrtle, Oregon Co., ID, d. 26
Mar. 1934, buried letona, Mlite Co., AR. Related surnames Brewer
BATES
BREWER
SllH.)NS
and Simmons.
WEAV!1l.
Sl'Ei!N
MAl'HIS
later m.
Billie llenedict, 8Ul w. ward, Space 16, Ridgecrest, (,;A ~3:J5:>.
James Weaver, b. ca, 1l!56 , m. Nancy Steen, 18S:.!.
Parents
Jetferson and Louisa Matlock Weaver.
One child, Nancy.
They
broke up just betore, or just at ter Nancy, Jr. was born. Nancy
George Mathis.
\\bat happened to James? 'lhese people lived in AR,
1~5
around Searcy
<.;0.,
Archie Valley, Una, Snowball, Boston Mountains, AR.
~DAN1EL
Mary Anne ~Daniel, 42::>1 Niblick Way, Fair Oaks, <.:A 94)21:1, needs
parents of Io'elix Alex. (ltlJaniel, b. Feb. 10, 1844,
Elizabeth
(ltlJaniel b. 1827 \who m. r:lijah Kelley and resided in Pike Co. ,AR)
BUCK
Eliza (who m. Dorsey), Wn., George, and lhomas (ltDaniel. I>lhat becaroe of Thomas1 Family tradition is he went to San Francisco, CA,
struck it rich, and was never heard from again. Did he marry Alcy Buck before
or atter his "California adventure?" Who went to Texas?
Census record has
their father b. SC and IOOther in lAo
Kill..EY
• UOl{Sr.Y
cox
NElSON
HILDEBRAND
FRmIAN
WILLIAMS
BOLlS
BOLES
BGlLES
Mary Hildebrand Cox, Rt. 4, Box 1':12 A, Prescott, AR 718)7. John
Cox, b. 1787 VA, and wife Sarah (Nelson) b. 1808 NC, living in
Hempstead Co. (later Nevada Col) 11:14Us/18650 census; Daniel J.
Hildebrand b. 1813 SC, living in Union, <Alachita and Nevada Cos.
1840s till 1':100; James Freeman b. 1807 SC and wife Frances
(Williams) b. 1813 VA, living in Union Co. (<lIampaignolle area)
1840s-18/0s; William and Lewis Bolls (Boles/Bowles) living in
Hempstead Co. (later Nevada Co.) 1840-1850s.
HENDRY
Jeannine Hendree Ratliff, 2215 Widgeon Court, Winston Salem, NC
27106,
is
interested in obtaining information concerning
individuals having the surname ''Hendry'' who served in the Civil War from the
State of Arkansas.
Nancy Misenheimer, #47 Bowers ltd. ,Kt. 1, Box 171-47, Jacksonville,
AR 7207&. Martha Wren High.tower b. MS. d. l':1OU Izard <.;0., AR.
Sister was Fannie and one cousin named George High.tower, Columbus
Martin Misenheimer b. 16 Mar. 181>4, d. 1Y2J at Batesville, son ot
James Kutty & Reed Misenheimer ot Rowan <.;0., NC. Walter, Lawson,
Miles J., Susanna, Dova M. and Ollie (brothers and sisters ot Columbus)
WRJ:<.N
HIGHfOOER
MISENHEIMER
RUl'Ti
Mrs. I9:lward Parham, Rt. 1, Box 31, Warren, AK 716/1. 1!l4U Census
Desha Co., AR, Aaron Jones b. Ind. 185U Census Drew Co., Jane,
wife, b. ca. 1199 KY.
Known ch.: Jackson & Robert,Clara, Mary J.
and James Marion, Martha. James Marion m. (2) Mallissa Halsell,
d. ca. 1866, Texarkana.
Jackson m. Mary Holcom and Mary J. m.
John Halligan, both in 1853, Drew Co., AR.
JOO~
HALSEll.
HOLOJM
HALLIGAN
'lhomas Niswonger, P.O. Box 10, Vendor, AR 72683. Nathaniel \.b.
1808 NC, m. Mary Polly Jones in ~), John tb. 180Y NC) and James
(b. 1820 NC) moved to then Carroll Co., AR with their mother
Rebecca flood in about 18J8 near Joplin or Ozark, ~.
Want info. on Jones
tamily, maiden name and husband ot Rebecca Io'lood.
JOOES
FLOOD
PENSE
MCONEY
Faye Goodner, 5244 Mill St., Fortuna, CA95540. James P. Johnson,
b. 1857, son of Pleasant ,Totmson and Louisa Pense, m. J1 O:.t. 1880
OJNLEY
Crawford Co., AK, Johanna t-boney b. 1883, dau. of John t-boney and
PEfERS
Nancy Ann Conley. 01..: Marion b. 1l:S81, Delia b. 11:185, Dillard b.
NEELEY
1888, Leonard b. 1893, Frank, b. 18Y5. Living in Crawford Co.l900
IJAVI~
James' half-sister, Lavina Ellen (Neeley) Peters, was my greatLINDSEY
grandmother.
Would like to contact descendants of Thomas Neeley, b. ca. 1820,
AL. In 185U, Thomas was in Crawford Co., AR, living with sister and brother-inlaw, Samuel and Eliza (Elizora Neeley) Davis.
My great-great-great
196
grandfather's estate records (Jo~h Neeley, Sr.) M:mroe Co., MS, lists Thomas
Neeley and Elizora Davis as his cluldren. Other children of Joseph Neeley, Sr.:
my great-great grandfather, Joe Neeley ,Jr., Luke loin. Neeley, James A. Neeley,
Fereba Neeley Peters, Mary Louisa Neeley Lindsey, Gabriel M. Neeley, Luli:e loin.
and James A. Neeley remained in MSj Gabl:iel returned to Jackson Co. ,AL, where
they were all born j Joe and sister, Sarilda ,'erebs Neeley, who married James
Another Sister, Mary Louisa
Manuel Peters, were in Crawtord 0;). before 1!15l>.
Neeley, m. Thomas W.Lindsey, and was in AR before 11160, probably Q1achita 0;).
Louisa was a Widow in Crawtord 0;). by 1117u. Would appreciate any help.
B.C. lillsey, 12b20 Southridge Dr., Little Rock,AR 12212. John W.
ItIlsey's oldest sister Lucretia ~lillsey) U'J:lart died in &.ott Co.
in "eb. l8110, leaving a husbsnd ~James U'J:lart, 31, b. NC) and :>
small children - Mary, Martin, Elisa, Harvey and lllarlotta. :;eek any descendant
ot these U'J:lart children. Will gladly exchange.
D'HARr
HUtS!!.,,!
!{EID
BAI...I.ARD
GATLIN
BLAO<
SlDAN
BARREIT
NELSON
weldon W.l>tout, 1fJ:J S. Okfuskee, Wewoka, OK 748114 needs info.
about John Reid, John D. Ballard and James T. Gatlin who lived in
Nevada Co., AR in the 11170·s.
Mrs. Kenneth Epley, 734 N. Broadway, Shawnee, OK 74801. Need
info.on following families:
uavid Black, Randolph Co., Ali fran
1815-1850; Fergus Sloan, Lawrence Co., AR from 1800-1850; Howard
Barrett, Cleburne Co., AR fran 1850-11180; and Nathaniel H. Nelson,
White Co., AR fran 1860 to 1880.
FITZWATElt
. WHITE
ElLARD
Ina M. Friend, 670 W. Hamilton Ave., San Pedro, CA 90731. John H.
Fitzwater, lawyer, area of Mtn. Home, AR, Baxter Co., 1870-1880,
wife Mary Ann, two stepsons: Columbus and Frank White. His dau.,
Sarah Perkins Ellard.
His sons James, Jasper, William, listed on
18l:10 census, rnay have died then. Will exchange.
GlAZE
LAMBERT
BARNHILL
Norma Willeford Norred, Box 994, Delhi, CA 95315. Isaac Martin
Glaze Be wife Nancy Ann Isan Be family resided Clark Co., AR in the
1880s. A dau. m. Marion Frances lambert and remained in AR. Abel
Barnhill res. Benton Co., AR in 1860. Would like to contact
descendants.
Mrs. l'brrnan Barnett, P.O. Box %, &liley, TX 711159. James Aaron
Woolsey b. ca. 1848 Okolona, AR, m. May 10, 1869 Susan Blackwell,
also b. AR. They reared their family in Van Buren, Crawford Co ••
AR, and later moved to Bexar Co., TX.
lD)I..SEY
BLACKWEU.
REAMS
DUNN
Mrs. Betty C. Gill, 2321 Felicia Ave., Rowland Heights, A 91/411.
Needs marriage date of Amanda (Mandy) Reams to James Dunn.
Resided Fort . Smith, AR 1119U-1910 time period.
Also need death
record of both.
Mandy last listed on Fort Smith 1900 census as widow.
OIm:N
William Orton, 1041 Halsell, Fayetteville, AR 12101. Lucy Urton
ffiILLIPS
b. 1845 KY/TN?, moved to Hempstead Co., AR in 1853. Married a
Mr. R\iHips of Rogers, AR.
KX>RE
Olarlene RalIibaud, 25408 Via Escovar, Valencia, CA 91355. Clement
/i.)ore b. TN m. 1st to ?, ch.were Clement Wesley b. 1854 Be Isabella
b. 185& Mt. Ida, /i.)ntganery Co., AR. After 1st wife's death, Clement m. 2nd and
197
had many children.
DENNY
WFA'nlERFORD
YOOOOBLOOD
CAR'lRIGIiT
mLCLA::>URE
BEERJ)
Died in Broken Bow, OK area in 1911.
John D.i:enny, 1455 East 52nd PL, Thlsa, OK 74105. Jacob Denny
b. KY Lv. Morgan & Macoupin Cos., 1L 1830-1!l44, Iv. Crawford Co.,
AR 11:144-181:1Or, m. 1st Sarah 1 possibly Weathertord, m. 2nd Mrs.
Jane A. Youngblood tBrtright, (''rawtord Co. ,AR, Iv. Alma, Al:l, d.?
lb.: Harden W., WIt. J., John, Martha A., m. ? G. W. Beers, !:iarah.
Jacob Benton, Bethany and Elizabeth J. th. by 2nd wf.: Sarah m.
Riley Colclasure, HOI:I Crawford Co., Al:l.
SMUll
MU::>E
Mrs. Jesse T. Peak, 17u6 Independence, Fort Smith, Al:l 7l9Ul.
Peter Smith, b. 11:116 NC, d. 18/6 ::>aline Co., AR, m. Sarah l'ltse
0\.: Jennett Ann, Daniel H., John, Joyce, Mary, Sarah,
1838 NC.
Nancy, Hessiebelle, Theodocia and Nathan.
James E. Clark, P. O. Box 421, Houston, MS 381:151. Ruben A.Martin
family in A1illips Co., AR in 181:10. 1st wife Mary Ann Glidwell,
2nd Lelia. 0\.: Sallie, Samantha m. W. S.Mitchel, Josephine m.
Elisha Monroe Sullivan, James F., laura Jane m. Henry Hickman
Sullivan, H. Milton, M:lllie, Anana 1., and Henry Allen (census
record shows Henry as temalel).
MARTIN
GUDEWElL
MITCHEL
SUllLIVAN
SP;I'1'EHFIEIJ)
Netta 1. Satterfield, 3161 Mildron Ur., Mojave,C\ 935ul,
wants
YADEN
parents and siblings of James Presley Satterfield, b. ca. 18:.!1 'IN,
d. ca. 1880 (CrawfOrd Co., Al:l?) m. Easter Manarva Yaden, Y Mar.
in 1870 census in Jasper 'l'wp., Crawford Co., Al:l. th.:
1845, Adair Co., M:>.
William P., Margaret, Silas, Joseph, Franklin, Marion and James.
carlene Sledge Guthier, 310 Safriet Rd., Statesville, NC 21:1677,
wants parents ot Thcmas P. Sledge, who arrived in Conway Co., AR,
during the 1850's, possibly trom VA via 'IN.
Also would like the names of his
three wives. He was b. ca. 1814, died Conway Co. in 181:10' s.
SLEDGE
SANDERS
MURl:flY
HORN
~Y
FENTER
HARDAGt:
MJRRIS
Beulah Hendrix, 3301 Riverside Dr., Anderson, CA 96007. Hiram
Sanders b. ca. 11:174 and Mark ::>anders b. ca. 18/6, son of James L.
Sanders and Susan Murphy Horn Sanders. Last known residence in
Searcy Co., AR. Susan is buried in t'ope Co., AR.
Mrs. Jack Horrocks, 2701:1 Pine, Texarkana, TX 75503, wants names
ot parents of Samuel Houston M:lntgomery, b. 12 Dec., 11:152, 'lW,m.
Mary Eliza tFenter) Hardage 8 Sept.lI:175, clark Co., Al:l, d. 1 May
1Y17 Hot ::;pring Co., AR, lxlried in DeRoche Baptist Church Cemetery, Hot Spring Co., AR. M:lther's surname Morris.
Norma Pennington, 38356 Perkins Dr., Lebanon, OR 97355. !'>berrod
Rowland b. 14 ~'eb. 1815, M:lntgomery Co., Ne, was 1st m. to Elvira
King in Uirroll Co., TN, then m. Margaret McMillan 1856 in carroll
M::.MILLAN
Co. and moved to AR.
Lived in Dallas Co. and is ruried at Holly
Springs lleme tery, Dallas Co., Al:l.
ROOLAND
KING
DYER
GARREI'l'
Co.,
sons
Flora Nell Ranton Unger, 257;.( Russell, Redding, CA 96001, needs
parents of James Dyer, b. 10 Noy. 1792, KY, reared Lincoln Co.,
TN;War ot 11:11:.!, Battle of New Orleans; settled ca. 11:117, Hempstead
AR, m. 15Jan. 1820, Hempstead Co., AR, Tallitha Garrett; had 14 ch., 14
in Civil War (Conrederates).
WOUld like to correspond with all
1')8
descendants.
JOOES
!i)SELE'i
lou Boelens, 1595 Manzanita Ave. #35, O1ico, CA 95926. Gabriel
Henry. Jones and Frances Jane ~seley had children Mary Ann, b.
Warren, AR, and Andrew Jackson Jones b. in or near Little Rack,AR.
'!hey later moved to TX. Gabriel was b. in GA 1824 and Frances in Alabama 1~35.
lletty M::.Farland, 4619 No. "M" St., Fort Smith, AN. 72904. Henry T.
M::.i"arland (b. NC) and his wife Mallissa Sloan tb. 'IN) are in Yell
OJ. 1!l6{) (3 ch.) Malissa m. Henry A. Carter H168. ~t happened
to Henry M::.Farland? Malissa and son, . William Thomas M::.Farland,
are still in ¥ell Co. in 1880. Any help?
Mrs. W. J. Bledsoe, Jr., Rt. 1, Box 846, Normangee, TX 7/871,
wants place of bJrial for Ralph Kelm who died Benton Q>., AR, Feb.
1907, buried near Gravette, AR.
KEI.M
SMrlH
!'I)RRISON
AtKINSON
louis T. Bogy, 100 Roundup Or., san Antonio, TX 78213. Ivy l"irman
Smith, b. 19 ~t. 1814 Ne, d. 24 July 1868 in AR, m. Mary Jane
~rrison in Greene Co., AL, Dec. 1838, moved from Dem:>polis, AL to
Star City, AR, ca 186!). Need ancestors; thought to be a cousin or
brother ot Stephen :inith. WidoW m. Alsey Atkinson, Star City.
BROON
SAVAGE
1!l90.
No
Mrs. Hugh C. Brown, 7500 Hwy. 26 S., Unden, CA 95236. JOM S.
Brown m. Elizabeth (llellazora) Savage 14 Nov. 18/8 in Ulpoke.
Daus. Gadie & Ethel born in Lonoke. lJife d. in childbirth ca.
record found in courthouse.
Mrs. C. W. Davidson, 11307 W. 77th Terrace, Shawnee, KS 66214.
James S. Darling (Darlin) and wife, Louisa tWare) Darling, both
b. ca. 1800 SC.
Census 1850 in Weakley Co., 'iN; 186U Canton,
Jackson 'lWp., lawrence Q>. (now Sharpe Q>.) AR and same for 1887U. Need death
dates for both or place ot burial.
oARLIOO
WARE
l'~
mu,INS
children.
Mrs. Alma Fuller, Its Meadowview, lilgo, OK 14/43, needs names of
parents of '!hanas James Fuller and Mary Jane Collins who married
in Black For.k '1Wp. in Scott Q>., AR, Dec. 18, 189!l. 'They had lU
Family also lived in Heavener, OK.
Gene Cole, 1902 S. Cleveland, Russellville, AN. 7t8Ul, wants parents of Mary Jane Barnes b. 18t9 IN. She m. 'Lhomas C. Mangum ca.
1857 and lived in Hardin Q>., IN, later moved to AL, l1J, and AR.
Mary Jane Barnes in Memphis, IN on 1850 census, 5th ward, Fam. 744.
BARNES
MANGUM
PLTl'NAM
I-O)DY
Floydene Gillihan, Rt. 28, Box 14C,
parents or siblings of ~lly Putnam
B. "Bill" ~ody and moved to Izard
from Madison Co., AR. Her brother, Henry, lived
the 1890's and early lYOO's.
Ferrelview, foI) 64163, needs
(Putman?). ~lly m. William
Co., AR in 1888-89, possibly
in the Madison Q>., AR area in
Wanda Q>pe, 2401 lexington Dr., Arlington, TX 70014, wants parents
of Richard (Dick) Howell, b. 1858 'iX or AR; Will Howell; and Susan
Howell. "'arents
tbwell and Maratha Mitchell Howell. Martha m.
again in 1876 JOM Thomas in PuLiSki Q>., AR, to Hempstead Co., AR in 1880, to
Parker Co., TX in 1884. Will pay ,25.00 tor Richard Howell's location in 18/0.
HG/Eu.
MrH1IEU,
199
TUKMAN
SHARP
MORRIS
Willie Ann I\halial, 222';1 Surrey Rd., Sacramento, CA ';15815. Louisa
'furman m. John James Sharp, Lawrence Co., AR 1843.
01.: John
James, Jr., Jane E. and Mary E. Her brother was O1arles H.'1\mnan
m. O1arlott liJrris. 'lurman's believed to have come trom KY.
Mrs. Hill ~'. 'lrarrmell, 114/2 W. Whispering Cliffs Dr., Pocatello,
ID 83202.
David Trammell b. 1777. Descendant George Trarrmell d.
1~69 Fordyce, Dallas Co., AI:!..
Need into. on Rebecca McUonald b.
1~24 AR, who m. Stephen P. 'l'ramnell.
Where did William E. capps
tamily go when they left Cleveland Co., AR in the late 1880'a1
Need the maiden name of the wife of Rayford 0' Neal, her first name was Nancy b.
1812 SC, d. after 1870, Bradley Co., AR.
URIE
BAMSON
Mrs. H. M. Glenn, 503 Canal, Wynne, AR 72396. John Pierce Urie
came to Gross Co., AR from Stuttgart, AR in the Late 1~00' s, m.
Naomi Samson, d. at Hsher, AI:!. , June 6, 1922.
Dr. Kenyon tl. UeGreene, 4345 OlalDllOnt Rd., Woodland Hills, CA
91364. Esther Elizabeth Hash, b. 1844, Washington Co., AI:!. - what
date1 Dau. ot Alvin Hash and Esther Elizabeth Drake. Married to
POOL
and divorced from John Knox Pool. Supposedly d. in OK about 1~9U,
but where, on what date, and under what circumstances1
HASH
DHAKE
HIll
TACKt.1'i'
FOUNI'AIN
COl'ELAND
JOHNSON
SPENCER
POSI!.Y
Sharon Minton Phipps, 13u Sunnyside, Hot Springs, AR 71901.
George Washington Hill, Sr., m. 1850 ~'ranl<lin Co., AL, Louisa
Tackett, moved to Montgomery Co., AR by 18~0. 01.: James M. m. 1.
Addie Fountain, 2. Martha E. Copeland, Susan, Thomas H. m. S.R.
"Sinea" Johnson, Sarah F. m. George Spencer, Zachariah, George
Washington, Jr. m. Sarah Posey, LDuisa m. 'lheodore caldwell,
Es ther m. John Cox.
Richard H. Davis, 316 O1ucl< Wagon 'l'rail, Willow Park, TX
Lnfo. on family of John Smith Ward b. MD ca. 1803, d.
Pulaski Co., AR, and Sarah Wells b. MD ca 1805, whose son Joseph
Henry Ward m. Sarah Ring b. ca. 184~ AR; m. 5/10/1861, Pulaski
Co., AR; d. ca. 1~73, dau. of Nathaniel Ring b. MASS. ca. 1803, d. AR
WARD
WElL')
lUNG
Mrs.
16U86.
Marian M. Dingman, 11353 E. 39th St., Yuma, AZ 85365. Any into.
on 'lhomas Russell Gist, b. ca. 1~25 AL, m. when1 Mary Elzira
Perlina Rainey b. 1858 in AR. Known ch.: James, Julie, Joseph
Wiley, Theodoshia, &nest and Leora. Believe Thomas Gist served with the Union
Army in the Civil War. Was in Baxter Co. 1886, maybe earlier.
GIST
RALNI!.Y
S'lOREY
NIX
Loy Sunday, P.O. Box 1035, Eufaula, OK 74432 would like to correspond with relatives of Alex and Dora Nix Storey of Little Rock,
Pulasl<i Co., AR, from ca. 1895 to present.
PERRY
YARBROUGH
Michael 1. Perry, Ib39 Vance Ave., Memphis, TN 38104. Joseph W.
Perry, b. 1/9b-98 NC, farmed Marengo and Sumter Cos.,AL, 18211843 w/wife Lucy t Yarbrough1 b. ca 1~0~ TN?) and children Jame8 M.
ca. 1825, Sarah ca. 1~2~, Elizabeth ca. 1829, John ca. 1831, Alford ca. 1833,
Joseph ca. 1835, and Andrew ca. 1841. 1hey moved to OuAchita Co., AR, in 1843
and had Nathan ca. 1849.
200
Nancy Stokes Sprague, Rt. 1, Box 197, Kincaid, KS 66039. Polly
Ann Fowler m. 1842 Henry Shater and Mrs. Mary Ann Shater m. 11148,
William Glenn (r:>aline Co. records) 186U Census William and Mary
Ann in Perry Q).
ln household, Upelona Shaver, age 7 (among
others). When did Shafer die? Who are Mary Arm's parents1 What
becane of Upelona? Want any Glenn/Crawfords in area.
Frances J. 'Ward, lU524 S.Broaciway, Oklahoma City, OK 73170.
Looking for info. on R. L. (Louis or lewis) Orllton, b. 18~2,
lived in Danville 'l'Wp., Yell Q). ca. 190U or earlier. Would be interested in
information on any Chiltons.
CHILTOO
Jane rarmer, 831 ~tter Chapel Rd., Apt. A-21, Q)nway, AR 72032.
Were T. B. ~tewart and M. E. Wilson m. 1859 Clark Q)., AR, parents
of Alsie & Martie?
~tewart, ages 12 & 14? who appear 188U Nevada
Q)., AR census with Wilson grandparents?
Were these girls orphans by IB80?
Who were T. B. Stewart·s parents?
S'IEWA1IT
WILSoN
STANIFORD
HUFFACRE
Twp., AR.
Raymond E. Jefferies, P. O. Box 369, PeaRidge, AR 12/51. Dr.
Israel Stanitord b. 1841 Indian Territory wed Amanda ruffacre
(spelling varies) ~1
In 1880 census, Benton Co., Mt. Vernon
Both died before 1895 leaving several children.
DYER
Flora Nell Unger, 2572 Russell St., Redding, CA 96001-3609. Need
parents of James Dyer, b. 10 Nov. 1792 K'ij raised Lincoln Co., 'IN;
War ot IB12, Battle of New Orleans; settled ca. 1811, Hempstead
Q)., AR, m. 15 Jan.1820, Hempstead Q). ,AR Tallitha Garrett, had 13 Children, 4
sons in Civil War. Woule like to correspond with all descendants.
GARREIT
Harold carpenter, 308 W. Gettysburg, Apt. C, Clovis, CA 93612.
Dearl Alexander Carpenter, b. ca. 1856 MS, thought to have been an
orphan raised by family named Hancock and lived in Clark Q)., AR
1B70.
Married twice; 1st 'f, 2nd laura (Black) Yarbrough 1895.
(lJanel?
carpenter, 14 b.MS, was living with the family of Martin Wilson and wife Sarah,
0-20, Alpine Twp., 1870 Censusl. Clark Q)., AR. The only Hancock. family there in
187U, that of 'thomas and wife ~~ancis,lived 4 doors away in D-24. BJM)
Juanita Connally, 6U9 W. Central, Anadark.o, OK 73005. Virginia
Castlerry, b. 1852 MS, 1870 Census listed in Polk Co. with her
parents Mark and Rhoda Castleberry and son John D. w. Woody, age
1 yr. rti. 1st _Woody (Woodie). 1B80 census listed in Scott Co.
KENDALL
with son John 11 yrs. 2nd m. Andrew Spurling with 5 children by
1st wife, Rebecca Kendall.
Rhoda Castleberry, age 56 living in the Spurling
household, P. O. Waldron, AK. Iotten did RnO<1a castleberry die1 When and where
die Mark Castleberry die?
CAbn.EBERRX
W::ODY
SFlJRLING
SHARP
HOlDER
IIDIDr:RSOO
HOLLAND
EDDY
SPRINGER
WOODAIL
FINNEY
Ill.vid Berlin (!>1larp, 4141 l!:. 68th, Anchorage, AI( 9':15U7. Needs
parents of Jacob Sharp b. ca. 183u in AR. In 1850-8U Arkansas
Census, lawrence Co., m. r'rances Mary Eddy, b. ca. 1831. Desire
contact with anyone researching these related lines in Randolph
and lawrence Cos., AR.
Carthal R. Ihrvey, Rt. 1,Box 223, Amity, AR 71':121-Y7~1. Four
Woodall brothers came to Alpine, Clark Co., AR, in mid-ll:!40s
201
from GA. Samuel,tharlie, Pachard and John Woodall IOOved to
Woodall Valley, Pike CD. Who did Pachard marry and who were his
children? Need date and place of marriage for John M (Jasper)
J<'inney and Allie Jane rutman.
l>t:lst likely this marriage was in
Montgomery CD. in 1881. (Marriage not recorded in Montgomery CD. - BJM). Need
names of progeny ot George M. D. Tucker b. 11 Feb. HI54,Glark CD" AK, d. :.13
June 1923 in Clark Co., m. Harriet Rhodes ca. 1873.
WIMAN
TUCKER
RHODES
MIlJDLElOO
DANIELS
Betty L. Pettit, P. O. lbx 14, Nuevo, CA 9:.!307.
<lIarles
Middleton, wite unknown, 10 children: Sarah ,James , Rebecca,
Marion, George, thomas, John, Molly, Zillah and Nancy laIdonia,
born AR 22 Mar. 1877.
Charles 2nd m. to Widow Daniels also had 10 children,
moved to OK.
MASQII
SHUMAKE
i\lKINSON
l"ARM1
MAHAN
WHITE
Mrs. David V. lbstian, P. O. Box 7:.13, Yellville, AR 72687.
Would like to exchange information with others researching
these early settlers of CDnway CD., AK: Selathiel Mason and
wife Elizabeth Shewmake/Shtmake; &.ll:well Burwell Atkinson and
wife t'bry "Polly" Farm?, James Mahan and fiirst wife Emily \>ihite,
Solomon Bostian/Boston and wife Mary Ann.
B(b"IDN
uVto;RION
Mrs. Joyce OVerton, 429 Holcan Ave. Oshawa, Ontario, CI\.NAlJA.
Does anyone have info. about arrival in Little Rock, AR of a baby,
Walter Lewis Uverton, b. 15 Jan. 1891, survivor ot an Atlantic ocean shiporeck,
occuring ca. feb. 1891, out of Ebgland bound for USM Child brought to little
Hock by passengers trom another vessel.
May have arrived some time in
March!April 1891.
Mary Ann Creason Rohde, 5797 Sycamore, Rialto, CA 92370. Member
interested in above surnames. Abraham l>t:lhney died at Benton or
n::l Rivers", AK.
GORF;GUAK
CHRISTIAN
SMIlH
ltlriel Battaile, 1245::1 S.W. King George Dr., King City, OR 97:.!24.
Solomon Gore (Goar) res. Drew Co., AR 1840/50s with wite Susan
who d. prior to 18::.0 census. SolO!OOn sent some of his younger
fW\CUM
ch. back to MS to their maternal grandparents, the James
REEP
O1ristians, and he evidently left for California prior to 1860,
as he remarried in Butte CD., C in 1861. He d. 1869 and is buried
in Olico Cemetery, lllico, GI\. John Franklin Smith, b. 2 t;ept. 193:.1, cane to AR
at an early age with his parents James and Jane Marcun limith.
Census records
reflect AL bp and John F. m. Sarah E. Reep in Prairie CD. on 1 !kt. 1856. Four
sons:
John Franklin, Jr., Marcus Allen, I:hillip Lafayette, and William Cephus
by 1861.
ua.u. Laura Jane b. TX 1873. ::;arah apparently d. and John m. in GI\ in
1876 Martha Ellen Sackett.
HUGHES
FLINN
K~Y
KE'J:tSEY
descendants.
Mrs. Juanita J:ltghes Harris, 809 Nevin Way, San Jose, CA 95128.
Moses Hughes b. 1797 TN, lived Greene Co., TN. Wife lucy Flinn
moved to Wayne CD., [I(), then to Franklin CD., AR ca. 1845.
01.:
Polly, Ihomas, Martha, George, Rebecca, Sarah and Sapbrona.
William Kennedy m. Paralee Kersey.
Would like to contact his
THIRD REX;1MJ!lIIT ARKANSAS IN~'Arffi{Y - Bryan [{. Howerton, 8 u>ttonwood 1Jr., ::iearcy
AR 72143, seeks biographical data on members of Third Regt. Ark. Inf. (GSA)
1861-65. Will share large amount of information.
HENDERSON
LANE
DAILY
CARTER
VAN PELT
Mrs. Mar. L. Garrett, 1428 S. Elm, Bartlesville, OK 74003.
William Henderson lived with the Joel Lane family, later m. dau.
Margaret Lane. He had one sister, Sarah, who m. E::ld lJailey,
t:heit a Carter. '[here roother was a Van Pelt. All buried in
Thorn's Cemetery near Greenbrier, AR.
Mrs. W. C. Stuart, Rt. 1.1 Ilox 155, Foreman, AR 71836. In 11180
Census Clark CD. , AA, Uiza J. was listed in home of son James M.
and Harriet J. Stuart. Need given name of husband of Eliza J. Known 00.: John
calvin b. Apr. 1838 TN; \\in. Henry b. Dec. 11142 TN; '!homas W. b. Mar. 1844 TN;
and James M. b. 1!!411 TN.
Sybil Shearin, 837 E. Francisquito Ave. West CDvina, CA 917YO.
Needs data on Abner H.henson b. ca. 1806 SC, wife Elvira b. ca.
1810 NC. Family lived Dallas CD., If) by 1838, rooved to Hot
Spring Co., AR, Clear Creek Twp. by 11150; oldest son, John G.
Henson b. ca. 1832, died Jan. 6, 11163, member of hawthorn Regular Ark.Inf. GSA.
His wife was Margaret N. CDmpton m. 2nd husband Josiah Glifton 11175.
HliNSON
<XMPI.UN.
CLIl'TCN
MEi'XER
Ihrothy Hall, 711:1 First Ave., NW, Grand Rapids, MI 55744. Needs
info. on Hester S. Meeker b. 1857 in AR, m. Alfred David lmitener
ca. 111711, d. ca. 11193 in HempsteadCo., AR.
Mrs. Hildred Ables, 700 Garfield,Miami, OK 74354. Daniel and
Pedina (Smith) liIghes, dau. Mary, from Marion CD., TN, between
18501-52 to Franklin Co., AR. Other 00.: Malvana, Billy, Mag.,
Daniel d. when, where? Perlina m. 2nd Sept. 11:159 S. H. Haisten.
Mag (Mrs. John) Davis buried Asher, OK Perlina d. when, where?
MD~
Mrs. Rose Marie Williams, Rt. 2, Box 326, Attica, OH 44807.
Rudolphus Andrews, b. Springfield, Green Co., f'() ca. 1113b, in
Faulkner CD., AR in 1890 census, m. in AR ca. 11:165 to Arena '/ What was her
maiden name?
!mere (Co.?) married, need parents names for both Rudolphus and
Arena Andrews.
~
Helen Caarpenter Davenport Rt. 1, Box 117, Sparta, f'() b5153.
Robt. carpenter b. ca. 1809 TN, and wite, Matilda, b. ca. 1807 Ne,
lived Henderson CD., TN before removing to Lawrence Co., AR in
1850s.
James Bennett, b. ca. 1790 se, wire Amla, b. ca. 1793 TN, lived as near
neighbors iin TN and in AR (near Poukeepsie in lawrence/Sharp u>.) • lin. H.
Bennett, orphan son or grandson of James and Amla, was apprenticed to Hobt.
Carpenter in 1858.
What was the relationship, if any, between the Bennett and
Carpenter families?
BENNl.Tl:
Mary L. lauer, 7626 W. Lone Mountain Rd., No. 66, Las Vegas, NV
89129.
John Howard acquired land in Lawrence Co., AR ca 1850/51.
Both Robt. Howard and his dau. Clara Jane Howard, were b. on the land in Black
Rock, Lawrence Co., AR. Need cemetery records and want to know how he acquired
the land. Have tax receipts back to 1851.
ImARD
Paul H.
Reeves,
Rt.
1, Box 63, Arcadia,
203
If)
63621, would like to
correspond with anyone having knowledge of Edwin !'bnroe Smith, b. ca.. 1117b, Iron
Co., MO, lived Searcy Co., AR early 1900s. His parents were lin. Boyd Smith and
Louisa J. Pinkley of Iron Co., l1.l.
His grandmother, Rhoda, lived Reynolds Co.,
l1.l 1891. \olhat was his grandfather's given name?
JOyce Ann Webster, 4310 W. Dennett, ~'resno, CA 93711. t-brnin
Elizabeth (maiden name unknown) Byford, b. Mar. 1840 in AR a:rrl
her first husband, last name Epison, who was b. in GA.
Both
believed to have been in '1ex.as by the 18~Os.
!'brnin Elizbeth d. ca.. 1YOI while
visiting a dau. near Van &iren, Crawford Co., AR.
BYFORD
EPISON
Carrie E. McDowell, 2225 NW 62nd St., Seattle, WA ':1810/. W. P.,
Seldon, Laura, Virginia and Sarah E. Jones last known to be in
Holmes Co., MS 1860. Sister Cornelia E. Jones m. Asa C. Ellis,
when? a:rrl where? 'they died in Hempstead Co., AR.
JOOFS
ElLIS
Mary Ann Patton, P. o. Box 384, Summit, AR I1b77. William Dardan
livied in Marion Co. 18YO. His 3rd wife was Mandy Cook. He was
b. 1824, d. 18 Oct. 1':101, buried Crawtord Cemetery, Boone Co.,
!mat date was he born a:rrl who were his parents?
DARDEN
COOK
AR.
Rachel Rainey, P. O. Box I, walnut Ridge, AR 1247b.
l.acheus
Phelps b. Berkshire Co., MA 30 Apr. 11114, m. Mary Caroline Sanders
in May 1B37 in McNairy Co., TN.
In 1853, they moved to AR and
settled at Dardanelle until 185b.
Need into. on possible land records in or
near Dardanelle.
PHELPS
SANDERS
GRIIflER
<l1arles W. Lewis, Rt. 3, Bo ::142, Conway, AR 72032, needs info.
ROUE
on John E. and U1cy Belle Rolle Grirrmer. After the death of
Mrs. Grimmer, their two daus., U1cy and Minnie Belle, lifed with
the Sam Henderson family at Brinkley, AR. lJ..Jcy m. Ben Wilhite
and lived at liarle, AR. Minnie Belle m. Rev. Henry Meriwether
lewis 18 Apr. 1906 at Clarendon, !'bnroe Co., AR and moved to fort
HEl'lDER.'SON
WIl.HITE
LEWIS
Smith, AR.
wrna laFave, 13.5011 3bth Ave., NE, Seattle, WA 911125. Saline Co.,
AR, Marriages: Cordelia Kesterson to Richard Brown 16 Jul 1854;
M. M. (Marion) Kesterson to Nancy Brown, 25 Apr. 18b5;
Elnily
Kesterson to Joel E. Brown 27 Aug. 1854.
According to 1B50
census, the Browns appear to be ch. ot lin. Brown, b. ca.. 1790 NC and Nancy? b.
ca.. 179':1 GA. Bradley Co. Marriage: B. A. (Belsora) Kesterson to Jesse Harrison,
15 lbv. 1B60.
Researching Vincent Kesterson b. ca.. 1800 GA, m. H12.5 Dolly G.?
b. ca. 1803 VA, parents of the Kestersons listed.
KES'!ERSON
BROWN
HARRISON
BALDRIDGE
Mary Lou ibuse, ;'(02 W. t-bneta, Bakerstield, CA ':13308, needs parents of SamuelJackson Baldridge, b. Feb. 1898 in Jonesboro, AR.
Believe them to be Richard Baldridge of AR and JOsephine? of KY.
Mrs. J. Everett Sneed, 22 Laffite Cir., North Little Rock,AR 7211b
seeks ancestry of JOhn Redman Allen, b. Aug. 16, 1761, d. 1851
Ch.:
and his wife Mary Elizabeth J.Jawson, b. June 12, 1773.
Margaret Bremer, Thomas Dawson, Absalem R., Jane E., James Parkerson and
Delilah.
Probably moved from Halifax, VA, to Sevierville, '1'1'1 in 1822, then to
~nn, TN.
James P. moved to Independence Co., AR in 1856 and died in 1905.
AlliN
DAWSON
204
BIRCHFIELD
0XlE'EK
Martha O'(''uinn .MIes, B42 Hwy. 00, Wright City, M:.l 63390, needs
info. on families of Birchfield and Cooper of Lawrence and Sharp
Cos. , AR. Woodtord George Birchfield (son of Joseph) b. 1!!48 KY,
came at a very early age to Lawrence Co., AR, m. Nancy Victoria Cooper ca. 18/4,
had 13 ch., died 1911 in Sharp Co., AR.
wALTERS
JAa<sON
<.:I.AXI.00
Deloris J. c:l.axton !tElroy, 4 Sugar Creek Ct., North Uttle Rock,
AR 72110.
Info. on family of Nora Alice Walters, b. Apr. 1875,
Hunt Co., TX, m. John Pointer Jackson possibly in 1892; had 11
ch., died Apr. 1914, Greene Co., Marmaduke, AR, as well as <':laxton
families, Greene Co., AR 1913, settled wngvi.ew, TX, and Walters, TX 1890.
George R. Howard, 705 Tangle~ Dr., Hurst. TX 7bO!:>3. seeks info.
on George &: Julia tbward, 1880 AR census, Cotton Plant, \oklodruft
Co., AR, with children Sallie, Clara, Edward, Anna and Robert.
Also Olarlie &: Minnie Taylor with children E'dner (Fdna), Willie,
Robbie, and John &: Sallie Havel with children &lgene, lilvira, John, Sallie and
Tomis.
Both families on 1900 AR census for Union 1Wp., Lee Co., actually near
Haynes, AR.
FOX
&lith L.Sinith, 414 Uncolnshire Dr., Irving, TX 75061. Gatus Fox,
a Confederate vetera, b. 1836 Lawrence Co., AR, d. July 4, 19113,
Polk Co., AR. Belle Gardner b. ca. 1815 AR, or KJ, m. William
<.:OOPER
Cooper. Harry Cooper b. ca. 1901 AR, Veroque Cooper b. ca. 18n,
DALE
Strawberry, AR.
William Dale b. ca. 1898 AR. Dale ch., Minnie
Ide 11 , Ross and Jessie, all b. in 1890s left orphans. Need history of family
prior to coming to TX ca. 1900.
GARDNER
HAlL
('.(l1ER
JOOES
SMI'IH
HARRIS
Joyce Mc.r'arland, 2501 Riverfront Dr., Apt. E-:.!03, Uttle Rock, AR
72202. Robert Newton !lell b. 1840 GA m. 1st 1, ch. Mary I). b.
1875 m• .MIOS D. Comer ca. H!9b; Fannie B., b. 1888, AL m. Redford
L. "Bink" Jones; John R., b. 1867 AL m. Mittie B. Smith 1899.
Robert Newton m. 2nd Mary b. 1848 MJ, had Samuel b. 18/B, m. Ellen
Harris ca.
19O1:S. All were in Jackson Co.,
AR, Tukpe1o,
Breckenridge 'fwp.
Betty Parker Eilbanks, P. O. Box 146, Cotton Center, TX 19021,
looking for Pebbles &: lbarles Ray Parker b. in 1930s, lived at
BURKS
Ada, OK, father Lester E'dItJmd (ru.tch) Parker L mother &Ina P. Burks,
WEST
Ada, OK.
Dutch Parker m. Isabella West 19J4 lived at Plainview,
AR. Sister looking for you. (l:'hone 8/9-23(0)
PARKER
HINES
Mrs. Mildred Barker, 1423 'lulip Lane, <Xiessa, TX 79761.
Need
names of Martha Hines' parents. She was b. 11 Feb. 1844, m. John
Mng ca. 1861-2, lived in hot Springs &: near Glenwood, AR.
Martha d. 18tiO, buried Mt. Tabor Cern., funtgomery Co, Her sister, Ann hines, m.
John Mng's bro., James M. Mngj also lived in funtgomery Co.
EWI~
PRF.SNAL
Marie DeVena, 62b Tejas, HK 4ti, Porter, TX 7/3b5.
William
Presnal, SCott Co., AR Hi60 with wife Sarah and dau. Mary. r'ound
Sarah 1BtiO St. Francis Co.
Robert Marion Presnal b. 1878 AR, came to TX when
young. Is he a son of William Presnal?
Betty Ferguson, 2708 Mass, Joplin, ID 6!lB05.
Woking for a
Bla.ldey in NW AR 1BW that has Charley, age 2, and Elizabeth b/12.
Only census that will show father alive. Older son William, but age unknown.
Cannot find Olarley, rut William and Robert m. in Washington Co., AR 18BOs.
Barbara Peebles, 11862 John Ave., Garden Grove, GA ':12040.
Needs
info. on parents ot John A. Wheat, b. ca. 1853 MS (parents born
in AL) and his first wife, whose name was either Jennie or Mary
Bailey, b. ca. 1854, MS, mother's name Jemima Bailey, b. ca. 1821 M::i. They were
married 13 O::.t. 875 in Ashley Co., AR.
WHFM'
BAILE.Y
Mrs. Nena Reisner, 20b Marigold. Ave., l'ullerton, CA ':I2b31. lJaniel
Griffin Knick b. 12 Mar. 18':10 in Johnson Co., AR, m. Effie Elizabeth Bowen in Johnson Co. on 3 May 1':11':1.
Need info. on parents
KNla<
BailEN
and relatives.
Denzil R. Mauldin, P. O. Box 690, Valdez, AK 9':1686, is collecting
records on the descendents ot Nicholas and Ann (LDng) Hale, m.
1723, MD.
lh.: Nicholas, Susanna Green, Mary Day Talbot, Ann
Mead, Shadrack, Neshack, Abednego and John Hale. Descendants are
found in Newton, Benton, Searcy, Madison and Howard Cos., AR.
JOOES
PARKS
MALLARD
EUlARD
BAYEK
Doris Jones·I..atrlpnan, P. o. Box 85, Centerview, MJ 6401':1.
Needs
an obit. on El:nily (,Jones, Parks) Mallard, d. July 5, lYOO,
Prairie 1'wp., Boone Co., AR. Would like to hear from any of her
descendants tor a genealogy we are writing on the Descendants ot
Stephan & Jane (Howard) Jones. Her ch.: Belle Parks, b. H:..l IB7':1,
by 1st hubsand., Daniel Mallard, she and John E. b. June 18/9,
Rilie (Riley) b. Apr. 18Bl, Ada b. Sept. 1885, m. Peter Bayer, Id.a b. jan. 1886,
Alma. b. April 1888, and William, all born Boone Co., AR.
Deborah Jarero, 432B Valerie, Bellaire, TX 17401-5625.
Seeks
info. on i!phram Boyd., b. Mar. 1885 at l"rancis, Boone, AR.
Father: 'lhomas Jefferson Boyd.. futher: Elizabeth LDuiset:ombs.
Also need info. on William F. Freaman b. Nov. 1855 in AR, m. Mary
Ann Rebecca Alston on 29 ~t. 1889, BooneCo., AR.
DAVIS
MAJ{URG
KIRKENDALL
wILSON
l..J(],J[)y
JOlLY
Betty J. furan, 18832 Cordary Ave., Torrance, GA ':/0::'04. Need parents/date of death of James l"ranklin llavis, b. 1839 MS, m. 2nd
Irrena Mahurg, Clay Co., AR 28 Jan. 1895.
Was 1st wife U
Kirkendall:< Victoria Wilson? Also need date of death ot John F.
Dowdy, Clay Co. AR, b. 185u, Marshall Co., 'IN, m. 21 Apr. 1869,
Johnson Co., IL to Harriet A. Jolly b. 1BSO TN.
Peggy B. llry, 2718 lJantzler St. fuss Point, MS 39563. Thomas
Blakeney and Martha Mat~lda Page Blakeney are said. to be buried on
W. W. Blakeney's tarm at Des Are, Ashley Co., AR. tIs this Des
Arc, Prairie Co., AR? - BJM) d.ied 1870. Alvin Blakeney, son of
above, married wcy Ann Jernigan in AR. She died in Miss. Co., AR in 1874/75.
B.LA.l\HlEY
PAGE
JERNIGAN
WELUI
Jessye Ann Welch High, 411 l''orest llr., Mtn. Home, AR 728::,3. Need
into. on ancestry ot Richard C. Welch, b. ca. IB17 'IN. r'rom
Lauderdale Co., AL by 1!:l6U to Pope Co., AR.; where did the family go from
PopeCo.1
Wife, Elizabeth. Who was she? lh.: William N., John C., Thomas J.,
Jetf L., Judy T., tlistla V., Richard C. and Alex H.
206
Betty Thylor Yotmg, lO~ Fordham Gir., Fort Smith, At!. 72903, needs
parents of Robert Sanders, b. 1801 NC, d. 1882 AR, m. Mary Haney
b. 18:.:4 'IN, d. 1907 AR, son Ellliue b. 11:154 Ttshmingo Co., MS, d.
1933 AR, m. Sophronia libittield, b. 18bO AR, d. lY46, AR; all died
Izard Q)., AR.
Bobbie Barnes, Rt. 1, Box 192, Godley, 'IX 7&044. Need info. on
Elmira Dennington b. 1851 Glark Q)., AR. James K. Kennington
b. 1853 Clark Q)., AR, m. Mary. Martha R. Dennington m. '!homas R.
Bearden, Nov. 3u, 18lil, Clark 1,;0., AR.
Mrs. Mildred lBtum, Y716 Howard St., Lamont, CA 93241. John
Clopton b. 1848/50 in AR, family came from l'D. He d. ca. 1932/33,
buried Dayton, AR! m. Emma Henderson, bone in l'D, d. ca. 1901,
bUried Hackett City, AR.
Clopton was m. 2nd time to Callie
!:!Ottoms •
un
Betty L. Pettit, P.o. Box 14, Nuevo, CA 923b7. Benjamin Franklin
POINER
lDck, b. 185?, AR, m. in Independence 1,;0. 2b Dec. 11:175,
Elizabeth Ann fuiner b. 18.51 AR. Daus. Mary ~line June
181:10 AR, Martha Adeline 181:12 AR, Robert L. 11:184 iX, Q,leen,
Nathan, Ularlie, Willie, Camp. ~ved from AR to TX and settled in Chickasaw
Indian Territory,
OK.
Who are parents of Benjamin and Elizabeth AnnI
{Benjamin F., age 6, b. AR, is listed in the househoLd of Albert G. lDck, age 42
b. 'IN and wife Sarah A. ~e 27, b. 'IN, !Melling 1067, W'hite River 1'wp., 11:16U
Independence Q)., AR - tUM)
Mrs. Vera Mae Iblder, Rt. 1, Box 48':', Wichita Falls, 'IX 7b301.
Samuel and Eliza Peterson were in Coosa Co., AL in 1830/1840.
Prior to 1860 they !lDVed to Iblly Springs, Dallas, Q). ,AR. lhe
following ch. were born in Q)osa Q)., AL: William, James, Mary,
Martha, Eliza and lDuisa and Clara were b. in Dallas Co., AR. lheir son, James
Peterson, m. Ann M. Carter in 18b7 in Llallas 1,;0., AR, and they had: John, Belle,
William, Mary and 'Jhanas. !lell Peterson m. lliward lDuis !later tX.t. 12, 1902 and
they]wi 9 00. Need maiden name of Eliza Peterson and Ann M. L:arter Peterson's
mother.
<hristlne Kesterson, Rt. 1, Box lbO, Wickes, AR 11843. Any info.
on the family of WilliamLackey, in Dallas, Polk, Scott and Pike
Cos., AR. he reared four children of Solomon and Mary Marsh (Mary
was his sister.)
Billie J. loihiteside, 2u12 W. 1l:1th, Plail1View, 'IX 79072. Thanas
Jackson loihiteside, b. ca. 1830 IN, d. ca. 1:16Y AR, was in Lawrence
Co. , AR in l!:16O.
His son, \tin. '!homas Whiteside, b. MO 18,:,8, d.
1914 Poinsett Q)., AR, m. Nancy E. Meredity, b. Howell Co., MO, d. 902 t'ulton
Co., AR.
WHIThSIDI!:
MEKEllrlH
B~VERS
~S
Faye Harvey 'I.\Jcker, Rt. 1, !:!Ox 822, Sperry, OK 14073.
Willis Beavers, Sr., m. Elizabeth tMens. um anyone furnish
names of the other six children? Elizabeth lived with John,
in 1880, Van Buren Q)., AR. Was Charles W. Beavers, 1855-1898, Van Buren
AR, one ot the sonst
2u7
John
the
Jr.,
Q).,
Mrs. Nelda Potts, P. o. Box 536, Buda, TX 711610. Thomas Potts,
b. iN 18L8 and Mary Jane Clark or Clarke b. 'm 1830, m. in Carron
Co., AR li.i411/49, possible connection Rufus Clark from EiJreka
Springs area1
WORnUNGl'ON
Virginia Castleton, 1Y06 '!hatch Palm Dr., Boca Raton, F1. 3::1432,
wants descendants and ancestors ot Alvina (A.L.) Worthington in
Union Co., At< lllSU census with Martha (~Uaniel) 2q, born AL, Mary
2, AL, and Sarah, J mes. b. AR.
~DANIEL
Mrs. Debbie Looper, !::>'R A, Box iJ-L, Shatook, OK 74010. Amos
Holt b. 1825 in Wayne Co., 'IN, d. 1913, buried Silver Hill Cemetery, Gilbert, R, Searcy Co. m. sarah Jones, b. 11123 AL, d. 1919,
also buried at Silver Hill Cemetery. lobo were her parents? Were either Amos or
sarah ot Indian descentl
HOLf
JurlliS
HOLI..OWEIL
SMI'lli
Evalena Berry, 11300 Baintlridge
on descendants of the following
b. Mississippi Co., AR: Martha
1856; Young 1850; Martin 11156; Mississippi
11171; sally 111711 and Missouri 18/9.
Dr., Little Rock, At< 7L212. Info.
children of hbitby Hollowell, all
Ann b. 1839; James 1841' Mary Jane
11162, m. W. C. Smith 1882; tihitby
Mrs. lna M. Friend, b7u W. hamilton Ave., san Pedro, CA 90731.
John H. ntzwater, Atty., alk/a Col. Fitzwater, practiced in
Mountain Home, Baxter Co., AR, lived outs:i.de area, close to .
Cotter. He m. Mrs. Mary White 18b8 and they had a son William,
stepchildren ot Mary's - sarah, James and Jasper fitzwater. Dau.
Perkins
and Zoo Elland (Eiland ,Ellard) •
Sarah m.
FIT'L.WATI!:R
WHITE
PERKIN::;
EI..LAND
Aleatha Easterly Galloway, 4105 Bonanza Way, lDanis ,GA 95b5u.
Needs info. on .!::asterly tamily Who lived in AR about 1!.l9o.
\odn.
OJnrad and brothers. James Wesley b. about 182b, raised family in ~ and AR.
EA::.TI!:RLY
HIGGIN::;
FAN1'ER
(PAINl'ER)
!::>'Ml'lli
HUNr
WILFONG
BI1J..
Alceon Jones, 1!.l25 Willard Dr., Altus, OK 73521. Need date and
place of death ot James O. Higgins, Jr., and Hannah ?, who were
married in Sevier OJ. ~ At< in Dec. li.i4!.l. ( Co. Clerk called
Hannah's maiden name 'r'anter" and 1 have found it in a published
marriage index as "Painter"?'! Would also like siblings and parents ot Frances Maron Smithi b. 8 Apr. 1851, prob. in AR, d. 10
Jan. 1Yll, place unk., m. l!: iza Ellen ~th. '1heir ch. were
Bertha Smitn Hunt and Berle Smith Wilfong Bell.
'lliIS QlvIPLEI'ES QUt1UES R.l'i:Q;IVED TO DAlE OF PREt'AM110N OF nm SU>l'EMBt1VD~ER
19!.l7 lSSUl!: or' THE ARKANSAS .t'AMIJ...Y HI!::>TURIAN.
THlS HA:) BI::EN SUCH A P01'lJI.AI:{
fFA'IlJRE Of OUR QUARl'ERLY 'IliA:!' WE HAVE HAD, OF Nm:s::;IlY, TO LOOT QUERilli TO ONE
PI!:R MEMBI!:R PEH Yl'AK.
wE HAiJ HOPl!:D TO US!!: THE BAJ..ANQ; Of MUI;rIPLE QUERIl!:S AS
SUBM['ITED BY SOOE OF OUR MEMBERS, AS SPACE PERMITrED.
HOWEVER, yOU WllL NOTE
fRll't 11Jt: NUMBF£. USED IN 'lliIS ISSUE,· THI::; WAS 001' POS::;IBLE.
QUERIl!:S FPR lY88 WILL BE ACCEPlEIJ, PllliFJ1Wll.Y wrlli yOUR MEMBERSHIP lIDlEWAL FORM
CONTAINED IN THIS ISSUE, AND wILL BE USJ1) 1N T!-lli OKl)ER 1N WHICH THEY Al<E
RECEIVED.
-
2U8
REl4EW Na.' fOR 1Y8!.l - IT'S NUl: TOO FARLY
1987 Surname
Abbott - 134
Abel - 134
Abels - 182
Abernathy - 134
Ables - 103
AbrIllll8 - 107
Ackerman - 179
Acklin - 122
Aclin - 122
Adams - 2, 4, 119, 134, 192
Adcock - 177
Adkins - 116
Aiken - 14
Akin - 134
Akins - 134
Albri&ht - 134
Alex:aiider - 134
Allan - 51, 89 109 111
113
122, 134, 169, 172, 174, 17~,
181, 182, 188, 189, 204
Alley - 2
Alloond - 134
Alston - 206
Ames -
205
Anderson - 75, 78, 89, 115,
119, 122, 134, 170, 177,
188, 189, 190
Andrew(s) - 181
Andrews - 55, 113, 134, 187, 203
Anglin - 3 4
Anthony - 81
Archibald - 170
Arledge ". 6
Armstrong - 134
1
Arnold -
19, 48, 76, 134
Arrington - 184
Ashbrook -182
Ashcraft - 121
Ashley - 165
Ashly - 38
Atkins - 85
Atkinson - 159, 199, 202
Auld -
192"
Austin - 135
Autry - 184
Avant - 135
. Avery - 135
Ayers - 118
Aylor - 2
B' shears - 137
Babb - 135
Babbs - 57
Back - 135
Bacon - 158
Bagwell - 3
Bailey· 55, 135, 206
Baird - 8, 9, 10, 11,
14, 16, 183
Baker - 2, 4, 75, 86,
130, 131, 135, 169,
190, 191, 207
Balding - 135
Baldridge - 112, 135,
Ball - 178
Ballard - 135, 197
12, 13,
87, 89,
180,
204
Bamson - 200
Bandy - 80
Barbee - 63
Barber - 174
Bard - 183
Baran - 131
Barham - 135
Barker - 205
Barkman - 76
Barlette - 90
Barnes - 14, 121, 135, 179, 199,
207
Barnett - 20 1 120, 35, 197
Barnette - U5
Barnhill - 192, 197
Barr - 135, 190
Barrett - 197
Barringer - 135, 193
Barry - 135
Barstow - 90
Barton - 1351 174
Barwick - 13,
Basham - 135
Baskett - 135
Baslerville - 135
Bassett - 186
Bates - 118, 135, 195
Battaile - 202
Battie - 55
Baughman - 178
Baxter - 4, 172
Bayer - 206
Bayes - 120
Bayless - 179
Beal - 10
Beal - 63
Beany - 121
Beard - 8, 9, 11, 135
Bearden - 9, 63, 135, 207
Beasley - 135
Beattie - 55
Beavers - 90, 135, 207
Beck -2
Beckham - 181
Beckwell - 82
Beckwith - 135
Beene - 86
Beers - 198
Bell - 43, 78, 82, 83, 169,
192, 208
Belt - 135
Benedict - 32, 91, 185
Bennett - 89, 90, 185, 189, 203
Benson - 135
Benton - 135, 179
Berley - 86
Berry - 135, 180, 208
Bercyman - 117
Bess - 189
Best - 89, 189
Bickle - 135
Bilbrey - 120
Biles - 178
Billings - 184
Billingsley - 173
Bilton -56
Birchfield - 205
Bird - 89, 135
Bishop - 135, 191
Black - 6L 19, 56, 129, 130,
170, 191
Blackard - 195
Blackburn - 59, 135
Blackston - 75
Blackwell - 78, 135, 197
Blackwood - 135
Blackwood - 193
Blair - 61 thru 70, 112,
148 thru 157
Blakely - 135
Blakeman - 129
Blakeney - 206
Blakley - 205
Bland - 22, 122
Blanden - 172
Blanding - 172
Blankenship - 186
Blanton - 172
Blaylock - 135
Bledsoe - 135, 199
Bleimes - 121
Blevins - 135, 187, 188, 191
Blount - 63, 136
Blythe - 186
Boatright - 136
Bobbit - 89
Bobbitt - 136
Bobo - 136
Boelens - 58, 199
Bogy - 199
Boker - 90
Boldin - 54
Boles - 32, 196
Bolls - 196
Bolton - 122
Bonar - 169
Bond - 122
Bone - 54
Bonner - 107, 136, 178
Bookout - 193
Boone - 158
Booth - 122, 136
Boothe - 136
Borboa - 59
Borland - 136
Borum - 100, 160, 161, 162, 165
Bostain - 136
Bostian - 202
Boston - 202
Bottoms - 207
Boudro - 192
Bowen - 102, 103, 104, 130, 131
183, 206
Bowls - 196
Boyce - 188
Boyd - 136,170 206
Boyer - 59, 18j1
Bracey - 136
Brackman - 136
Bradford - 115, 136, 188
Bradley - 177
Bradshaw - 63, 122, 182
Brady - 136
Branch - 92
Brandon - 115
Branham - 54
Branson - 136
Brantley - 136
Bratton - 49, 136
Bravo - 92
Brazeal - 186
Brazil - 120, 122
Brearley - 112, 136
Brew - 77
Brewer - 2, 129,136, 195
Brewton - 121
Bridges - 73, 119, 136
Bridwell - 136
Briley - 136
Brincefield - 136
Brinsfield - 59
Brisco - 188
Briscoe - 195
,fUq
Brock - 111, 183
Bron - 192
Brookfield - 6, 136
Brooks - 120, 123, 135
Brothcer - 136
Browder -57
Brown - 6, 59, 89, 107, 121, 136,
170, 174, 179, 187, 188, 189,
192, 194, 199, 204
Brownfield - 193
Browning - 61, 641 65, 158
Brownlee - 52, 12~
Brozun - 89
Bruce - 6
Brucefield - 136
Brucelor - 75
Brumby - 90
Bryan - 136
Bryant - 120, 121, 136
Brymer - 136
Bryson - 64
Buck - 196
Buc'khannan - 83
Buell - 122
Burch;. 115, 195
Burgelin - 174
Burgin - 129
BurlChead - 137
Burks - 12, 205
Burley - 86
Burlison - 137
. Burnes - 186
Burnett - 1161 137
Burnette - 13,
Burney - 137
Burns - 137
Burrow - 1121 137
Burrows - 12u, 121
Burt - 159
Burton - 59
Bushrod - 8
Bustin - 184
Butler - 137, 194
Buzbee - 137
Byerly - 137
Byers - 169
Byford - 204
Byler - 2, 5, 107
Byrd - 561 86, 137
caday - 1;)7
Cagle - 53, 81
Cain - 89, 187
Caleb - 195
Calhoun - 2, 137
Callahan - 180
Cameron - 137
Campbell - 10, 11, 13, 14, 119,
134, 137, 179, 180, 182, 183, .
191
Canady - 137
Cane - 137
Cannon - 1081 1371 171, 95
Cantrell - 1~8, 1;)7
Caperton - 137
CapPs - 200
Capshaw - 137
Cardwell - 137
Cargill - 158
Carloss - 157
Carmichael - 53, 61, 65,
Carpenter - 201, 203
Carr - 132
Carr - 184
Carroll - 33
Carroll -97
Carrolton - 179
Carson - 2, 4, 61
Carter - 5, 12, 131, 137,
174, 199, 203, 207
Cartor - 77
Cartrett- 137
Cartwright -198
Caruson - 115
Caruthers - 65
Carver - 181, 182
Casady - 137
Casey - 2, 4, 123, 184, 185,
188
Cash - 46, 57, 137
Castleberry - 57, 201
Castleton - 208
Caststeel - 2, 4
Catchings - 11
Cater - 137
Cates - 90
Cato - 188
Caufield - 192
Cavin - 120
Chadwick - 137
Olambers - 178
Olambless - 121
'Olamplin - 89
Chancellor - 137
Chandler - 137
Chapman - 137, 180
Chapnan - 180
Chappell - 137
Chastain - 113, 120, 137
Chatfield - 137
Cheatham - 56, 102, 103, 177
211
Oleek - 137
Cheeseman - 119, 184
Oleay - 55, 180
Olestnut - 137
Olevalier - 137
Cheyne - 170
Chilton - 169, 201
Oloat - 77
Olowning - 137
Olristian - 168, 202
Chubb - 191
Olum - 137
Oturchwell - 137
Claighern - 189
ClarK - 112
Clark - 6, 12, 32, 48, 56, 121,
122, 123, 137, 186, 191, 198
Clark(e) - 208
Clary - 137
Claud - 138
Claxton - 205
Clay - 138
Clayton - 112, 138
Clegg - 138
Cleggott - 76
Clements - 31, 193
Clevate - 183
Clifford - 187
Clift - 138
Clifton - 138, 193, 203
Cline - 138
Clopton - 185, 207
Clver? - 139
Cobb - 138
Cochran - 157
Connally - 57, 201
Cook - 31, 43, 55, 65, 67,
138, 173, 189, 204
Cooley - 14
Cooper - 119, 205
Cope - 199
Copeland - 57 l 132, 200
Coppleman - 1.j8
Coppock - 51
Corbett - 138
Core - 48
Corley - 138
Corn - 138
Cornwallace - 74
Cornwell - 88
Cothren - 138
Cotten - 138
Cotton - 138, 155
Cottrell - 138
Coulter - 36, 56
Counts - 160
Course -90
Courtney - 138
Covingrton - 3, 138
Cowan -187
Cowart - 50
Cowell - 138
Cox - 121, 138, 189, 196
Cozort - 138
Crabtree - 123, 138
Craddock - 138
Craig - 8, 138, 139, 169
Crain - 139
Cramer - 139
Cranfill - 3
Cranford - 139
Cravens - 139
Crawford - 51, 54, 139, 170, 181,
201
Creason - 202
Creely - 174
Creily - 174
Crick - 114
Crim - 139
Crisp - 90
,Crocker - 158
Crooks - 139
Crosin - 139
Crossland - 188
Crosslin - 188
Crow - 32, 112, 123, 139, 192
Crowe - 139
Crowell - 139
Crozier - 139
Crutcher - 139
~~~1382
Coffelt - 138
Coffey - 138
Coffle - 187
Coffman - 138
Colclosure - 198
Cole - 83, 138, 189, 199
Coleman - 57, 138
Collar - 121
Collins - 138, 199
Combs - 50, 195, 206
Comer - 205
Compton - 203
Condell - 138
Conditt - 122, 139
Condren - 182
Coney - 138
Conklin - 89
Conley - 3, 5, 89, 188, 196
212
Dill - 103, 105
Crutchfield - 185
Cubage - 194
Cullins - 139
Culp - 59
Q.vnbie - 193
Clmmings - 57, 61, 63, 120
Clmmins - 183
Cunningham - 4, 65, 76, 170
Cupp - 119
Currie - 139
Curtis - 139
D'Hart - 197
Dabbs - 139
Dackery - 139
Dacus - 121
Daily - 203
Dale - 205
Dandridge - 174
Daniel - 123, 139
Daniels - 22, 123, 139, 185, 202
Danley - 139
Darby - 85
Darden - 204
Darling - 199
Davenport - 139, 203
Davidson - 55, 115, 139,185, 199
Davis - 31, 41, 57, 58, 82, 104, 139,
178, 181, 184, 187, 189, 190, 193,
195, 196, 197, 200, 203, 206
Dawson - 61, 188, 204
Day - 206
Dayton - 112
DeGreene - 200
DeHart - 139
DeRamos - 57
DeVaine - 158
DeVena - 205
DeVille - 49
Deal - 132, 139
Dean - 139, 187
Dearman - 139
Deatherage - 3
Delcour - 169
Delsindico - 194
Dendy - 139, 192
Dennington - 207
Denny - 198
Denton - 100, 139
Deramus - 57
Derks - 189
Deskin - 139
Devine -33
Dick - 139
Dickson - 56
Dilbeck - 130
213
Dillahunty - 139
Dillard - 188
Dillinger - 139
Dingler - 139
Dingman - 200
Dinsmore - 87, 88
Dixon - 139
Dobbs - 183
Dodd - 2, 4, 32, 114, 194
Dodgton - 81
Dodson - 63, 81, 140, 188, 191
Dollarhide - 120, 140
Donaldson - 140
Donovan - 140
Dorsey - 1%
Doss - 98, 178
Douglas - 185
Douglass - 58, 84, 85, 181
Douthit - 113
Dowdy - 206
Downs - 185
Dozier - 179
Drake - 200
Drea - 140
Drennan - 179
Drinnon - 57
Dry - 206
Dubois - 116
Duce - 79
I>.Jdley - 191
Duff - 53
Dugan - 123
Duggan - 123, 188
Duggins - 2
Duke - 140, 184
Dula - 140
£mas - 140
Duncan - 6{ 140, 180
Dunford - 40
Dunklin - 140
Dunlap - 90
Dunlop - 140
Dunn - 140
Dunn - 197
DUnsworth - 185
Durham - 140
Dutton - 116
Duvall - 59, 140
Dwyer - 140
Dye - 116, 140, 189
Dyer - 140, 183, 198, 201
Dykes - 140
Fanes - 140
Farle - 173
Earls - 178
Early - 194
Easam - 140
Easley - 140
Easley - 76, 179
Easterly - 189, 208
Eastsep - 140
Eatman - 6
Eatmon - 5
Ebbs -
140
Echols - 140, 181
Eddleman - 17, 25, 33
Eddlemon - 40
Eddy - 201
Ederington - 140
Edington - 77
Edison - 191
Edmonds - 5
Edmondson - 19
Edmonson - 140
Fdan - 187
Edston - 191
Edwards - 58, 130, 140, 183
Elam - 140
Eldridge - 70, 90
Elland - 208
Ellard - 197
Elliott - 57
Ellis - 179, 204
Elmer - 33, 46, 97, 101
Elmore - 140
Elrod - 55, 113, 114, 140, 183
Emerson - 108, 140
Endsley - 61
England - 64
English - 140, 177, 183
Epison - 204
Epley - 197
Eppes -140
Erickson - 186
Ervin - 140
Erwin - 180
Estes - 65
Etherton - 115
Etter - 52
Ettes - 76
Eubanks - 123, 195, 205
Evans -
140
Everett - 140
Ewbank - 110
Ewing - 205
Ezell - 141
Falkner - 185
Fanter - 208
Farish - 13
Fm:m - 202
Farmer - 116, 141, 201
Farnsworth - 58
Farr - 131
Farrar - 158
Farris - 141
Farrow - 123
Farshey - 141
Faulkner - 141
Faye - 58
Feeton - 141
Fennell - 184
Fennie - 141
Fenter - 198
Fenton - 179
Ferguson - 141, 179, 205
Few - 141
Fielding - 141
Figg - 141
Files - 53 , 141
Filler - 141
Finley - 31 1411 157
Finney - 2ul, 2u2
Fisher - 32, 51
Fisk - 3
Fitzhugh - 178
Fitzmier - 54
Fitzsimmons - 112
Fitzwater - 197, 208
Fleming - 32, 58, 92, 141
Flerrming - 141
Fletcher - 134
Fletcher - 2, 3, 79
Fleucker - 170
Flinn - 202
Flood - 54, 196
Flowers - 182
Floyd - 112, 160
Flud - 54
Fludd - 54
Flynt - 141
Folsom - 65
Forbes - 141
Ford - 141
Fornes - 157
Forsyth - 55
Fort - 80, 192
Foster - 58 l 90~ 141
Fountain - :>9, ,,00
Fowler - 31, 190, 201
Fox - 184, 205
Fraly - 81
France - 192
Franklin - 63, 141
Franks - 86
Freeman - 75, 123, 141, 183, 195, 205
French - 141
Friend - 197, 208
Frisby - 122, 141
Frizelle - 3
Frost - 141
Fryar - 141
Fryer-63
Fulkerson - 116
Fulks - 141
Fuller - 120, 141, 199
furrush - 6
Furlow - 31, 187
Gafford - 193
Gage - 122
Gailes - 180
Gaines - 141
Gaither - 142
Galliway - 38
Galloway - 189
Gamble - 61 142
Gammill - li, 182
Gandru:l - 176
Gam! - 115
Gardner - 113, 142, 205
Garner -
Goodner -
55, 142, 179, 180, 183
Gore -
202
Gorman - 112
Goss -
130, 131
Gossett - 142
Goswick-90
Graham - 116, 142
Granberry - 142
Grant - 142
Graves - 39, 59, 159, 167, 183
Gray - 90, 143, 167, 168, 181
Graybeal - 120
Grayson - 82
Greathouse - 143
Green - 2, 115, 116, 143, 206
Greenway - 65
Greenwell - 174
Greer - 117, 143, 187
Gregg - 143
Gregory - 143
Gresham - 112
Grey - 143
Grider - 181
Griffin - 12, 31, 55, 56, 108, 143
Griffing - 143
Griffith - 90, 143
Grigsby - 62
Gass - 191
Gately - 142
Gates - 142, 179
Gatewood - 142
Gathright - 142
Gatlin - 123, 197
Gatten - 90
Gaylon - 64
Gee -
196
Goodwin - 19
Gorden - 89
Gordian - 142
Gordon - 142
Garnett - 142
Garrett - 12, 142, 198, 203
Garriott - 142
Garris - 142
Garrison - 119
Garwood - 187
14
Gentry - 541 142
George - 14:t
Gervin - 142
Gestring - 181
Giacalone - 114
Gibson - 119, 142
Gideon - 92
Gifford - 117
Gilbert - 142
Gill - 57, 107, 142,
Gillespie - 142
Gillet - 132
Gillimn - 142
Gillihan - 199
Gilman - 112
Gilmore - 142
Gist - 200
Givens - 142
Glasscock - 74, 142
Glaze - 197
Glazner - 47
Glenn - 122, 142, 188, 200, 201
Glidewell - 142, 198
Gloss ~ 158
Glover - 12, 142
Goad - 188
Goar - 202
Goble - 178
Goforth - 2, 4
Goins - 192
Golden - 30, 53
Golder - 142
Goldewell - 142
Gooch - 142
Good - 56
Goodal - 2
Goodman - 186
187, 197
Grimes - 57, 143
215
Harp - 120
Harper - 144, 182
Harrell - 144
Harrington - 57, 144, 158
Harris - 6, 113, 120, 144, 165,
Gril1lller - 204
Grisham - 50
Grogan - 143
GroOOl ~ 116
Gross - 143
Grubb - 158
177, 178, 202, 205
Harrison - 8, 10, 57, 144, 157, 18(
63
Guddrod - 82
Guder - 78
Grundy -
184, 204
Harrolson - 144
Harshaw - 144
Hart - 144
HarMlll - 144
Harvey - 192, 201
Harvill - 144
Harwood - 144
Hash - 200
Haskett - 89
Haskins - 62, 67, 68
Hatch - 144
Hatfield - 32, 144
Havel - 205
Haverly - 89, 90
Hawk - 89, 90
Hawking - 192
Hawkins - 2, 115, 169,
Hawley - 144
. Hay - 144
Hayden - 17
Hayes - 47
Haynes - 144, 187
Haynie - 144
Hays - 111
Hayslett - 174
Hazzard - 56
Heard - 144, 194
Heath - 144
Heiskill - 3
Helder - 80
Helderlein - 58
Hellums - 144
Helton - 144
Hembree - 184
Hemphill - 193
Henderson - 58, 144, 185, 201,
Guilford - 118
Gunter - 143
Guthier - 198
Guthrie - 109
Guyse - 183
Gwyn -
143
Haddock - 173
Haddon - 143
Hafford - 119
Hager - 143
Haggard - 143
Haggard - 180
Hais ten - 203
Hale - 122, 132, 143, 193, 206
Haley - 143
Hall - 90, 117, 118, 143,
184, 205, 209
Halliburton - 143, 189
Halligan - 196
Halman - 192
Halsell - 196
Hamblen - 143
Hambrick - 55
Hamer - 143
Hames - 20, 23, 24
Hamilton - 3, 182, 183
Hamiter - 158
Harrrnock - 159
Hampton - 143, 184
Hance - 143
Hancock - 143, 178, 201
Haney - 143, 207
Hanks - 143, 194
Hanna - 144
Hannah - 11, 84
Hardage - 198
Harden - 144
Hardester - 144
Hardin - 117, 144
Harding - 184
Hardwick - 121
Hargis - 144
Hargraves - 2, 4, 177
Harkins - 144
Harlow - 144
Harness - 182
204, 207
Hendree -196
Hendricks - 144
Hendrix - 56, 198
Hendry - 196
Henley - 64, 144
Henry - 144, 157
Henson - 203
Hepp - 159
Herbert - 144
Herman - 145
216
20~
&!.rndon - 13
Herrington - 145
Herron - 2, 55
Hessley - 190
Hester - 115
Hickerson - 191
Hickman - 145
Hickok - 3, 4
Hicks - 145, 159, 193
Higgenbotham - 14
Higgins - 145, 208
High - 206
Highfill - 51
Horn - 185,
Horn - 187
Horrocks - 198
Horton - 145
Houchens - 145
Houk - 129. 130
House - 145, 204
Houston - 123, 159
BOward - 2, 4, 6, 121, 122, 132, 145,
182, 195, 203, 205, 206
Howe - 145
lbIell - 145
Howell - 190
HiRhtower - 145, 174, 196
lbIerton -202
Hildebrand - 196
Hill - 55, 85, 86, 115, 145, 179,
Hubbard - 14, 122
Hubble - 192 .
200
Hudson - 3, 79 145
Huff - 119, 146, 177, 194
Huffacre - 201
Huffman - 116
Hu2hes - 146, 202, 203
!lin - 6, 84
Mse - 146
!lIlsey - 146, 182, 197
HUmphreys - 62, 63
Humphries - 117
Hundley - 191
!lint - 89, 146, 208
!linter - 146, 186
!lIntsman - 146
Hurley - 146
!lim - 146
Hurst - 179
!lIston - 146
!lItchinson - 3, 146, 189
Hutson - 178
Hilliard - 180
Hillis - 80
Hines - 145, 205
Hinkson - 123, 177
Hinshaw - 107
Hinsley - 32 thru 40, 9Z! 99,
100, 101, 102, thru lUb,
160 thru 168
Hinson - 145
Hipp - 147
Hix - 187
Hobbs - 145
Hodge - 123
Hodgens - 145
Hodges - 158
Hogan - 185
Hoge - 119
Hogue - 119} 145, 194
Hokan - 19b
Holder - 145 201, 207
Holderbey - i 93
~!~y-_lti~
Hwell - 199
H}>den - 122
201
Uland - 194
Ingram - 64
Intravia - 180
Hollingsworth - 54
Hollis - 115, 157, 159, 187, 188, 195
Hollowell - 57, 208
Holman - 180
Holmes - 7, 145, 192
Holowell - 105
Holt - 83, 100, 145, 194, 208
Honeycutt - 145
Hood - 116
Irby - 146
Irion - 146
Ivens - 3
lvey - 146
Jabine - 146
Jack - 170
Jackson - 2, 4, 55, 56, 114, 146,
177, 182, 205
Hooe - 145
Jacobs - 13
James - 2, 133, 90, 122, 145,
Jameson - 87
Jamison - 146
.rankins - 146
Jarero - 206
Hooks - 145
Hope - 179
Hopkins - 145
Hopper - 145
Hopson - 90
217
187
Jefferies - 201
Jefferson - 1
Jeffery - 17
Jeffreys - 59
Jenkins - 3, 146, 193
Jentry - 146
Jernigan - 186, 206
Jester - 146
Johnnycake - 3
Johnson - 25, 62, 64, 73, 81, 112,
146, 171, 180, 186, 188, 193, 200
Johnston - 55, 146, 170
Jolly - 206
Jones - 6, 19, 25, 48, 49, 56, ~8, 59,
86, 89, 114, 115, 146, 168, 175,
176, 192, 193, 196, 199, 204, 205,
206, 208
Jordan - 6 145
Joslin - 179
Kaebfleisch - 146
Kalip 146
Karnes - 184
Kasinger - 3, 120
Kavanaugh - 132
Keathley - 146
Keith - 146
Kelleam - 117, 118
Kellett - 115, 116, 146
Kelley - 3, 146, 196
Kelly - 77, 146, 147
Kemp - 3, 199
Kendall - 90, 201
Kandrick - 147
Kennedy - 179, 188, 202
Kennett - 147
Kerley - 147
Kemal - 55, 180
Kerney - 89
Kersey - 202
Kester - 122
Kesterson - 204, 207
Kestir - 147
Kestler - 188
Key - 8, 12, 16
Khalial - 200
Kilduff - 56
Killingsworth - 147
Kimes - 57
Kinmins - 147
Kincade - 147
King - 25, 38, 39, 78, 79, 102,
120, 147, 159, 168, 170, 179,
186, 193, 198
Kirkendall - 206
Kirkham - 147
218
Kirkpatrick - 147
Kirkwood - 147
Kirtley - 147
Klondyke - 103
Knick - 206
Knight - 3, 4, 147, 191
Krahn - 50
Kranz - 121
Kratovil - 109
Kuespert - 57
Kulp - 147
Kuykendall - 194
laFave - 204
laGrone - 123
laboon - 113
lackey - 185, 187
lacy - 47
lael - 147
lainhart - 111
lakies - 114
lamb - 3, 147
lambert - 59 160, 197
Lampley - 19i
Lampman - 54 190, 206
lancaster - i47
lance - 2, 147
landers - 116
landis - 54
lane - 147, 203
lang - 147
langdon - 112
langley - 147
langston - 147
lary - 147
lassiter - 147
latimer - 8
latting - 5
lauer - 203
Lauhon -177
Lauleu - 77
lavi - 81
lawrence - 122, 147, 182
Lawson - 147, 169
Layman - 147
Leard - 191
Leash - 38
Leavell - 147
Ledbetter - 147
Leddon - 147
Ledford - 147
Lee - 36, 98, 159, 181
Leese - 183
Leftwich - 189
Leib - 177
Leister - 183
Martin - 3, 49, 55, 65, 90, 119,
184, 185, 189, 191, 198
Maryman - 159
Mason - 184, 202
Massey - 49, 80, 123
Mastine -81
Matheny - 119
Mathews - 157, 158
Mathis - 79, 195
Matlock - 5Z 1 178, 186
Matthews - j\)
Mauldin - 206
Maupin - 180
Mavity - 93
Mays - 31, 153
M::.Adams - 113
M::.Adoo - 178
M::Allister - 9
tt:.Bay - 55
lobBride - 91
lobCanen - 6
lobCann - 182
lobCants - 159
lobCarthy - 158
lobCaslin - 174
lobChristian - 61, 184
lobCool - 113
lobCord - 202
lobCormack - 3
lobCormick - 185
lobCowan - 89
lobCown - 114
lobCoy - 121, 188
lobCoy - 192
lobCrack:in - 3
lobCrory - 171, 172
McDaniel - 129, 130, 196, 208
McDonald - 581 1851 200
McDowell - 171S, 17':1, 204
l:EH~: i9i
McFann - 116
McFarland - 199, 205
McFerran - 179
Lemaster - 184
Leonard - 116
Lester - 57, 159
Lettle - 75
Leverett - 179
Lewallen - 73
Lewis - 3, 193, 195, 204
Ughtfoot - 12
!4gon - 11
Lincon - 19
Lindsay - 170
Lindsey - 122, 123, 196, 197
Liscom - 173
Little - 134
Littlefield - 2
Livesay - 191
Livingston - 4, 38
lock - 207
locklar - 50, 180
lDfton - 191
Long - 57, 91, 92, 171, 195, 206
looney - 56
looper - 208
lDurie - 170
lDve - 77
lDvell - 171
lDwer - 93
lowry - 59, 183
lDyd - 54
lJJke - 84
lJJster - 62
lJJther - 2
!-yerly - 120
LYnn - 57
Lyon - 182, 183
Machen - 180
Maclin Macrae -
194
63
Madewell - 80, 89
Madison - 112
Magness - 120, 170, 171
Mafiaffey - 33, 162
Mahan - 202
Mahurg - 206
M::.Gann - 115
Mallard - 206
Malone - 39
Manes - 184
~-47
M:::.Ghehey -
122
Mangum - 199
H:Gough - 117
Marcun - 202
McGown - 53
McGowen - 53
Mankins - 118
McGuire - 63
K::Henry - 60
McIntire - 91
lobIntosh - 89, 192
McKay - 189 - 185
Marks - 123, 177
Marler - 2, 3
Marsh - 207
Marthe - 120, 193
Martien - 191
219
Moore - 8, 110, 184, 197
Moorehead - 185
Moran - 206
l"kJt:'ehead - 58
Morgan - 3, 22, 191
Morley - 190
Morris - 81, 182, 190, 191, 193,
198, 200
Morrison - 199
Moseley - 199
Moseley - 86
Mosely - 76
Moutaw - 59
!t.Ildrow - 36
!t.Ilkey - 159
!t.Illen - 89
!t.Illins - 94, 95, 96
!t.Inn - 169
!t.Irp!ley - 56
!t.Irphy - 187, 198
!t.Irray - 49, 113, 174
!t.Irry - 115
!t.Ise - 198
Myers - 192
Myrick - 119
trance - 158, 192
Nash - 157
Neal - 55 t 57, 89, 180
Nealy - 51
Needham - 33, 43
Neeley - 185, 196, 197
Neighbors - 77
Neilson - 170
Nelson - 55, 185, 196, 197
Nevels - 123
New - 31, 187
Newberry - 121
Newcom - 179
Newman - 123, 188
Newton
Nexon - -151
3
Nichols - 167, 181
Nickell - 121
Niswonger - 196
Nix - 33, 38, 160, 162, 163, 164, 200
Nixon - 181
Nole - 79
Nood - 75
Norman - 182
Norred - 197
Norris - 3
Northcut - 90
Nunnally - 6
D'Donne - 79
O'Neal - 200
McKinley - 25
M:.Kinney - 90
McKittrick - 108
M:.Lane - 47, 53, 107, 119, 169,
176, 177
M:.Leod - 33, lOS, 106, 160,
164, 167
M-.::Mahan - 186
M:.Millan - 198
M:.Minn - 113
McNabb - 120
/'tNail - 181
McNeely - 192
M::Neil - 3
McQuistian - 118
M:.Williams - 53
M:.lin - 77
Mead - 206
Meador - 55
Meadows - 189
Medlock - 181
Medo - 189
Meek - 192
Meeker - 203
Meeks - 54
Megee - 3
Melsin - 82
Melton - 91
Mendez - 183
Meredith - 207
Merriott - 192
Messick - 1, 6
Middlecoff - 182
Middleton - 185~ 202
Midgett - 84, 8~, 86
Milam - 57
Miller - 58, 102, 120, 121, 122
170, 189, 194, 195
Millican ,. 119
Milliken - 49
Mills - 9, 118, 123
Millsap - 89
Mirns - 193
Minton - 200
Misenheimer - 196
Mitchel - 198
Mitchell - 77, 188, 189, 199
Moberly - 118
Mobley - 31
Moffat - 170
Mohney - 202
Montgomery - 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23,
24, 25, 89, 158, 198
Moody - 13, 199
Mooney - 2, 3, 4, 5, 120, 196
220
Pilkington - 192
Pinckney - 112
Pinkley - 204
Pitt - 94
Pittman - 5
Pitts - 90
Plunkett - 193
Poiner - 207
Polk - 181
Pollarad - 58
Pool - 200
Pope - 82, 83
Porteous - 170
Porter - 18, 65, 90
Porterfield - 120
Posey - 200
Potts - 192, 208
Pound - 132
Powell - 5, 185
Pratt - 90 114
Presley - 109
Presnal - 205
Presson - 88
Prise - 84
Proctor - 45
PI.Wt - 179
Pult - 190
Putman - 114, 202
Putnam - 199
Putty - 115
Pyles - 192
Q..!esenbury - 18
Ragsdale - 91, 181
Rainey -191, 200, 204
Raisback - 80
Ralls - 123l 184
Rambaud - 11:17
Ramsey - 113, 120, 169
Randall - 556
Rath - 79
Rathbone - 191
Ratliff - 11, 196
Rawls - 117, 123
Razor - 190
Ready - 181
Reams - 197
Reams/Reames - 57
Reaves - 121
Rector - 73, 74, 190
Redman - 123
Reed - 8, 186
Reeks - 169
Reap - 202
Reeves - 90, 179, 180, 187, 203, 204
Reid - 170, 197
O'Q..!inn - 183
O'Reilley - 55
Oals - 132
Oats - 132
O:lell - 186
Oloon - 121
Oliver - 56, 180
Orton - 197
Osborn - 182
Otey - 123
Overton - 202
Owens - 54l 178, 207
Oxford - 1':14
Oxindine - 82
Page - 81, 206
Painter - 2
Painter - 208
Parham - 196
Parham - 50
Parker - 94, 188, 189, 202, 205
Parks - 174, 206 .
Parlette - lIS, 195
Parr - 110
Parsons - 56
Pat - 84
Pate - 91
Paterson - 112
Patrick - 189
Patton - 6, 90, 177, 204
Patterson - 90, 179
Paul - 192
Paxton - 32
Payne - 55, 122
Peak - 76 198
Pearce - 173
Pearson - 3
Peaty - 78
Peavey - 180
Peebles - 206
Pennington - 11, 198
Pense - 196
Pentland - 170
Perkins - 118, 181, 189, 208
Perry - 86, 200
Perryman - 120
Peters - 19b, 19/
Peterson - 207
Petree - 18b
Pettit - 185, 202, 207
Petty - 11b
Pewit - 190
Phelps - 188, 204
Phillips - 51, 54, 76, 89, 131,
180, 190, 197
Phipps - 200
221
Reisner - 206
Rennie - 178
Reynolds - 190
Rhea - 121
Rhodes - 202
Rice - 123, 77
Rich - 83
Richardson - 181
Richmond - 87, 88, 89
Richter - 121
Riddle - 82
Rider - 103
Riggs - 54, 122
Riley - 55, 56
Ri[]1Jl - 3
Ring - 200
Rios - 168
Risenhoover - 57
Risner - 53, 116
Ritchey - 183
Roark - 188
Robbins - 93
Roberts - 0, 51, 53, 64, 121, 180, 190
Robertson - 3, 58, 170
Robinson - 62, 77, 113, 121, 158
Rock - 182
Rodgers - 01, 65
Rodman - 191
Roe - 194
Rogers - 51, 59, 119, 194
Rohde - 202
Rolle - 204
Roper - 5
Rose - 41 55, 114, 183
Ross - 1~7, 194
Rouse - 4
Rowe - 25, 184
Rowland - 90, 198
Royal. - 132
Rucker - 182
Rudd - 157
Rufty - 1':16
Runyan - 192
Rushing - 170
Russel - 170
Russell - 2, 55, 158
Rutledge - 58, 121
Ryals - 188
Ryan - 183
Rypkema - 190
Saddler - 115
Sanders - 13, 54, 65, 78, 95, 112,
125, 128,181, 189, 198, 204, 207,
Sands - 179
Sans leer - 76
222
Sargent - 93
Satterfield -198
Savage - 199
Sayers - 86
Saylors - 191
Scates - 186
SChinzinger - 195
Schmidt - 121
Schnabel - 4
Schofield - 185
Schoggen - j
School - 63
Schroeder - 58, 92
Schular - 193
Schwanmel - 54
Scott - 90, ':11, 92, 173, 179, 182,
183, 19:,
Scribner - :,9
Seagraves - 56
Searcy - 159
Seay - lBO, 190
Sevedge - 123
Sevier - 157
Shackleford - 149
Shaddock - 119
Shafer - 201
Shambers - 131
Shannon - 169
Sharp - 8~1167l 195, 200, 201
Sharry - .,:I.j, 9~
Shaver - 114, 115, 201
Shaw - 9, 54
Shearer - 113
Shearing - 203
Shelby - 160, 161/ 162A 163, 167
Shelly - 33, 36, ql, 4~, 43, 44,
45, 98
Shelton - 89
~=~d--~,~2:
Sherrill - 121
She~ke - 195
Shields - 91
Shipley - 57
Shipp - 2
Shirey - 159
Shockey - 93
Shockley - 114
Shoemaker - 1\15
Shutord - 78
st;umake -
!l, <J,
172
Sicers - 55
Sick - 22
Si[]1Jlino - 122
Sl.C -
gS; %
202
Simmons - 61, 185, 193
Sirmls - 81
Simpson - 183
Sims - 114
Sinclair - 186
Singleton - 182
Sinns - 81
Sinor - 31 4
Sisco - 1111
Sis tier - 12
Sitz - 117
Sivils - 131, 132
Skaggs - 55, 56, 180
Sledge - 198
Sloan - 197, 199
Slopnan - 195
Smith - 18, 55, 73, 17, 85, 90,92, 94,
114, 116, 121, 170, 181, 186, 198,
199, 202, 203, 205, 207, 208
Smoot - 53, 54
Smothers - 2
Sneed - 188, 204
Snider - 182
Snodgrass - 195
Snot - 177, 178
SnOl«ien - 90
Soward - 731 190
Sparrow - 1118
Speaks - 180
Spencer - 118, 200
Spicer - 55
Spottswood - 174, 181
Sprigg - 8
Springer - 201
Sprq!I&Ue -
;WI
Spurhng - 20
Sroit - 82
St. Clair - 186
Stagner - 55
Stallcup - 121
Standridge - 55, 130, 131
Staniford - 201
Stanley - 90
Stanton - 113
Starling - 157
Staunton - 113
Stavlo - 188
Steel - 38, 170
Steele - 1341 185
Steen - 91, ~2, 195
Stegall - 63
Stell - 11
Stephens - 54, 1/9, 193
Stepp - 119
Stevens - 31, 119
223
Stevenson - 122
Stewart - 110, 201, 202
Stilwell - 108
StilUlett - 178
Stobaugh - 182
Stockton - ~8, 113, 130
Stoker - 79
Stokes - 201
Stone - 2, 61, 89, 190
Storey - 200
Stout - 191
Stovall - 90
Straight - 112
Strain - 118
Stranbroug - 32
Stroud - 182
Stroud - 25
Stuart - 6,11, 203
Stuckey - 192
Sturgeon - 181
Sturgis - 186
Sudduth - 02
Suftin - 0
Suggs- 101
Sullivan - 198
Sturrnit - 90
Sunday - 200
Sutton - 30, 43, 190
Swafford - 18:.!
Swain - 187
Swan tner - 172
Swartout 108
Swearingen - 179
Sweeny - 117
Swim - 109
t~rk:ts8- 200
Talbert - 3
Talbot - 206
Talbot - 3
Talburt - 3
Talkington - 57
Talley - 65
Talor - 77
Tate - 122
Tate - :.!
Tate - 3
Tate - 0
Tate - 7
Tatom - 1~9
Tatlln - 18:.!
Tatum - 185
Ta tlln - :.!O 1
Taylor - 12~
'l'ay lor - 1~9
Vail - 121
Valentine -92
Van Pelt - 203
Vanaman - 172
Vance - 50
Vandergriff - 03
Vandiver - 130
Vardel - 90, 91
Vaughan - 50, 191
Vaughn - 116, 193
Vaught - 30, 9~
Veemester - 141
Velvin - 158
Venable - 22
Vend - 90
Voluntine - 117
Wade - 73
Wadkins - 92
Wages - 186
Wagner - 1201 191
Wagoner - 10!!
Wainscott - 113
Waldrop - 120
Walker - 14, 11/, 121, 130, 131,
1!:>8" 170
WaHls) - 124
Wallace - 17, 4~, 91, 188
Wallis - 2, 25, 20, !:>9, 183
Walters - 20!:>
Ward - !:>7, 112, 116, 183, 188, 194,
200, 201
Ware - 182, 199
Wasson - 30
Waters - 36, 102
Watkiins - 181
Watson - 51, 183
Watts - 56
Wayland - 80, 177
Weatherford - 1987
Weathers - 112
Weaver - 91, 92, 195
Webb - 160, 161, 16!:>
Webber - 2
Weber - 116
Webster - 7!:>, 204
Weems - 10
Welch - !:>7, 187, 206
Wells - 2, 60, 89, 93, 134, 400
Wensorski - 11!:>
wesley - 2
Wessel - 19!:>
West - 170, 174, 205
Westbrook - 171
Iileat - 206
Iileeler - 115, 157
Taylor - 174
Taylor - 180
Taylor - 190
Taylor - 191
Taylor - 54
Taylor - 58
Taylor - 63
Teague - 45
Teal - 185
Temple - 178
Terrell - 174
Thane - 124
Tharp - 182
Thomas - 48, 159, 184, 190,.191,
Thomas -19!:>
'Thompson - 6 1 55, 90
Thomson - 181:>
Thornton - 124
Threet - 57
Tht'onesbery - 114
Thurman - 117
'lhurston - 118
Tidwell - 57
Tillery - 192
Tinsley - 119
Tinsley- 9
Todd - 120
Todd - 189
Tollett - 192
Tracey - 2
Tranrnel - 157
Tranrnell - 160, 161
Tranrnell - 174
Tt'anrnell - 200
Tt'avis - 3
Tt'igleth - SO
Trimble - 151S
Truett - 148
'l'ruman - 2, 5
Tucker - 4, 19~ 91~ 92, 119, 142,
184, 195, 20L, 2u7
'fug,gle - 195
TuII - 18::l
Tullos - 1~1, 1~2
'l\.ll:man - 400
Turnage - 191
Turnbull - 194
Turner - 16, 177, 178, 181
Turney - 53, 188
Tweedle - 93
1Wiggs - 5
Tyler - 121, 182, 195, 205
Unger - 198, 201
Urie - 200
Uzzle - 181
224
Whisenhunt -9u
White - 12, 13, 34, 46, 64, M9, 91,
Yorthington - 20B
Woslum - 193
Wren - 190, 196
Whitecotten -22
Whitener - 189
Whiteside - 207
WhitHeld - '1.01
Whithom - 17u
Whitley - 12, 195
Whitney - 79, 194
Whitson - 191
Whitten - 33, 189
Wier - 118
Wilbanks - 77
Wilburn - 1M8
Wilcoxon - 104
Wiley - 6, IBM
Wilfong - 208
Wilhite - 204
Wilkerson - 191
Wilking -18b
Wilkins - 13, 14, 188
Wilks - 84
Williams - 55, 57 1 63, 78, 90, 110,
Wright - 57, 120, 188
Wyette - 82
Yaden - 198
Yarbrough - 86, 200
Yielding - 123
Yates - 190
York - 14
Young - 120, 149, 189, 207
Zachary - 181
169, 19B, 202, 20M
116, 117, 149, 1~8, 187, 195, 196,
203,
Williamson - 112, 170
Williford - 118, 178
Willingham - b3
Willis - 193
Wins - 18!>
Wilson - !>, 32, 8!>, 112, 118, 169,
170, lSO, 182, 201, 20b
Wing - b
Wingert - 5b, 192
Winless - 165
Winn - 120
Winningham - llb
Winter - 120
Winters - 9M
Wisdom - 33, 99
Withers - 111
Wittrock - 92
Wofford -187
Wolf - 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 157
Wolfe - 117
Wood - 14, 21, 45, 46, 85, 101, 116,
11M, 132, 186, 187, 190
202
Woods - 118, i32, i52, 175
Woody - 201
Woodall - 192 201
Woolen - 122
Wooley - 181
Woolsey - 197
Word - 91
225
Ziegler - !I4, 100
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