Carroll County genealogical quarterly, Fall 1985

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ALABAMA
CARROLL
COUNTY
GENEALOGICAL
QUARTERLY S&/Ce© C**ek &
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HARALSON CO iai/
Jan. 26, 1856
DOUGLAS CO
Oct. 17
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Dec. 22
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FALL - 1985
THE
CARROLL COUNTY GENEALOGICAL QUARTERLY
BY THE
CARROLL COUNTY GENEALOGICAL SOCIETY
P. 0. BOX 576
CARROLLTON, GEORGIA 30117
F
037
Faa
VOLUME VI FALL 1985 NUMBER THREE
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Officers and Committees .73
President's Letter . 73
New Hope Primitive Baptist Church Minutes, Concluded . 74
Index to 1827 Land Lottery, Ninth Dist., Fifth Section . 84
James C. Richards, Company I, 19th Reg., GA Volunteer Infantry .. 90
Bible Record of Jacob W. and Rachel S. Vincent Adams . 94
Some Descendants of the Hood Family in America . 95
A Letter from Mary Jane Abercrombie Shoemaker, about 1912 . 97
Genealogical Sketches - W. D. Lovvorn, Wm. H. Malone, D. R.
Martin .98
Focus of Research .100
Queries .101
Pedigree Charts .1°3
Carroll County Genealogical Society 1985 Members .105
Index . 108
The Carroll County Genealogical Society, Carroll County, Georgia,
membership dues are $10.00 per person or $12.50 per family, on a
calendar basis (January through December). This publication is
included at no extra cost in the membership dues, with one copy per
family. Extra copies are available for $3.00 each. Former issues of
the Quarterly are available at the prices shown on the back page of
this issue. These are available from the Carroll County Genealogical
Society, P. 0. Box 576, Carrollton, GA 30117. Queries are published
free for members of the Society. This Society does not assume.respon¬
sibility for errors in fact or opinion which may appear in articles
furnished by its members. We will gladly correct any errors brought
to our attention.
Copyright 1985
ISSN-0734-5682
THE CARROLL COUNTY GENEALOGICAL SOCIETY
1985 OFFICERS AND COMMITTEES
-73-
President .Mrs. Marcia S. McGahee
Vice-President ...Dr. Elmo Roberds
Secretary ..... Mrs. Maida Rose Webb
Treasurer .Mrs. Shirley M. Gardner
Program Committee . Vachel Driver
Membership Committee ... Evylan Morrow, Mary Reeves, Edna Lackey
Project Committee . Nancy Sparkman, Clarice Cox
Publication Committee .. Myron W. House
(In this Quarterly we are substituting a letter from the Editor in place
of the President's letter. We let Marcia take a vacation every now and
then. )
August, 1985
Dear Friends,
Thank you for supporting the Carroll County Genealogical Society and
its Quarterly. I especially want to thank those who have been contri¬
buting to the publication.
I am sure some of you are wondering when your family tree charts will
appear in the Quarterly. We are now almost caught up in printing these,
so yours should be appearing soon.
We are still working with the supplement to the Carroll County Cemetery
book. This supplement will include some additions and many corrections.
However, I am sure that when it does appear many errors will still
remain in the original volume. Therefore, if you have a question about
an individual listing which you think must be an error, please notify us
and we will try to verify the information.
Once the supplement has been printed, we will be looking for other
projects. If you have any suggestions, let us know. Also, if there
is anything in particular that you would like to see printed in the
Quarterly, let us know that.
As always, best wishes in your research.
^ncerely ytmrs,
Myron W. House
Editor
-74-
(The following Minutes are continued from the Summer Quarterly. They
are printed here with the same phrasing and spelling just as they appear
in the original record. Parentheses are added by the editor. This
church, although originally in Carroll County, is in that part of Villa
Rica which is now in Douglas County, and is still being used.)
MINUTES OF THE
NEW HOPE PRIMITIVE BAPTIST CHURCH. VILLA RICA
May 31f‘irst 1862. After divine servise by Elder J. M. Muse the Babtist
Church of Christ at new hope set in conference. 1 Invited visited
Breathren to seats with us. 2 caled for corispondance Brother pray from
prays Mills. 3thrd Opend the door of the church none come forward.
4th apointed corispondance Bro Stephens and Harper to prays Mills
Brother Sheats and Tyson to Masadonia Brother Chievs and Raburn to
pleasant grove then adjourned. J. M. Muse Mod J. Tyson Clk
July 5th 1862. After divin servise By Elder J. M. Muse the Babtist
Church of Christ at new hope set in conference. 1 Invited visited
Breathren to seats with us. 2 opend the door of the church none come
forward. 3 went into an election to elect delagates to the general
meeting Elected Brother Sheats and harper Brother Cheves and Tyson
alternate the church set apart our next meeting to go into a choise of
a decon. J. M. Muse Mod J. Tyson Clk
August 2cond 1862. After divine servise By Brother Burk the babtist
church of Christ set in conference at new hope. 1 Invited visited
Breathren to seats with us. 2 opend the door of the church none come
forward. 3"thrd went into an election of delagates to the assiation
elected the Brothren to wit Brother Tyson and chievs Bro. Sheats
alternate. 4th went into a choise of a decon chosen Bro. Tyson the
church set apart our next meeting or conference for ordination and then
adjourned. Brother Sims Moderator J. Tyson Clk
September the 6th 1862. After divine servise by Brother Sims we the
church at new hope set in comference. 1 Invited visited Breathren to
seats with us. 2 Opend the door of the church none come forward.
3 caled for corispondance Brother fielder and scales from plesant
grove Apointed corispondance. Bro Harper and Sheats to prays Mills
Bro Yarbrough and J. Harper to plesant grove and then adjourned.
Bro Sims Mod J. Tyson Ch Clk
October 4th 1862. After divine servise By Elder H. Hamrick We the
Babtist church of Christ at New Hope set in conference. 1 Invited
Visited Breathren to seats with us. 2 Opend the door of the church
none come forward. 3 caled for refrence Refrence of last meeting taken
up Reconcidered and adopted and set apart our next Meeting for ordina¬
tion an granted Brother William Stepens and Sister Stepens a letter of
dismision and then Went into a choise of a minster for next year
unanimously choose Bro. J. M. Muse and then adjourned.
Harison Hamrick Mod J. Tyson Ch Clk
November the first 1862 after divine servise By Elder J. M. Muse &
H. Hamrick We the Babtist church of Christ at new hope set in confer¬
ence. 1 Invited visited Breathren to seats. 2 opend the door of the
church Received by esperence Elizabeth Jane Micall Mary Hunter &
Rebecia finch the Letter of Bro. Stepens and sister Stepens Returned
and Reed took up the Reffrence of last conference of ordination of
Decon the Breathren H. Hamrick & J. M. Muse being present according to
request of the church acted as presbytery & Brother John Tyson was
ordained to the office of Decon By Prayr and imposition of hands
-75-
Brother Muse accepted the call of this church to serve them the next
year no other buisness adjourned until next conference in course.
J. M. Muse Mod. J. Tyson Clk
Janury 3 I863 After servise By Elder J. M. Muse We the Babtist church
of Christ at new hope set in comference. 1 Invited visited Breathren
to seats. 2 opend the door of the church Reed Nancy Jane Woods By
Experence. 3 caled for acknowledgments Under that head Brother Terel
Harper rose and stated a dificulty that ocured between him and one
other man After a full Investigation the church thought him justifiable
and then adjourned. J. M. Muse Mod John Tyson Clk
January 31 I863 After divine servise By Elder J. M. Muse We the Babtist
church of Christ at new hope set in conference. 1 invited visited
Breathren to seats. 2 opend the door of the church Reed Polly Ann Pain
By Experence and then adjourned. J. M. Muse Mod J. Tyson Clk
April the 4th 1863 After sirvise By Elder J. M. Muse We the Babtist
church of Christ at new hope set in conference. 1 Invited Visited
Breathren to seats with us. 2 opend the door of the church none come
forward and then adjourned. J. M. Muse Mod J. Tyson Clk
May 2 I863 After divine servise By Bro J. M. Muse We the Babtist Church
of Christ at new hope set in comference. 1 Invited visiting Breathren
to seats. 2 opned the door of the church none come forward. 3 called
for acknowledgements under that head Brother Cheevs rose and stated of
a dificulty he got into By fighting and after a full investigation the
church thought him justifiable also Sister Willkerson made an acknow¬
ledgement of going into Polks Mills and takeing some flour With others
which she soon saw was rong & says she will pay him for it and asked
forgiveness of the church which was unanimously granted We the church
made up eleven dollars for the benifit of Brother Stepens two dollar
for church purposes and apointed Brother Terel Harper tresurer and then
adjourned. J. M. Muse Mod J. Tyson Clk
June 6th I863 after divine servise By Bro Meaders and J. M. Muse We the
Babtist church of Christ at New hope set in conference. 1 invited
visited Breathren to seats with us. 2 opned the doore of the church
none come forward. 3 caled for corrispondance from pleasant grove
Bro fielder and yates from prays Mills Brother Meader and arnold Under
the head of acknowledgements sister pain rose and made an acknowledgement
of going to polks Mill and takeing some flour with others She soon saw
it was rong and says she will pay him for it we the church unanimously
forgave her then apointed corispondance Bro harper and Tyson to prays
mill Bro Raburn and cheves to pleasant grove Bro Chevs and Tyson to
Masidonia. J. M. Muse Mod J. Tyson Clk
August th I863 after divine servise By Bro J. M. Muse We the Babtist
church of Christ at New hope set in conference. 1 invited visited
Breathren to seats with us. 2 opend the doore of the church Receivd
Bro Wadington Chambers By Letter. 3 Elected deligates to the assoiation
Bro Chievs and Bro Terel Harper Bro Raburn alternating and granted
Brother Joseph Harper and his wife Charity Harper letters of dismision
and then adjourned. Bro J. M. Muse Mod John Tyson Ch Clk
Sept I863 The Baptist Church at Newhope After divine sirvise by Sims
The Church set in conference. 1st Invited Brethren & Sisters to seats
Took up the Regular Order of Business Read the Letter to the Assosiation Sent to the assosiation for Minuts $4.00 No other Business being
on Hand Adjurned to conference in course.
J. M. Muse MD John Tyson CC
-76-
Newhope Baptist Church October & November Meeting No Conference Held.
Opend Door of the church Recited by Letter J. R. Caldwell Wytey Bagwell
Richard Shannon.
December the 2nd I863. Newhope Baptist Church. After Divine by Brother
Muse Set in Conference. 1st Invited Brethren & Sisters to seats with us
Took up the Regular Order of business. 2nd General Business was Taken
up The Church Went into Choise of A Preacher for the year 1864. Brother
J. G. Denton was unanimously chosen. No other Business being on hand
Adjurned untill Conference in course.
J. M. Muse M D A. Cheaves C.C.
January Meeting 1864. Bad Weather no Confirence.
Newhope Baptist Church
February the 6th 1864. After Divine Sirvise By Brother Denton the church
set in conference. Invited Brethren <p- Sistirs to seats. Took up
Reference of Last conference. Called on Brother Denton to know either
he would searve us for the present year his answer was Favorable. No
other Business being on hand Adjurned to Conference in Course.
J. G. Denton M.D A. Cheaves C.C
Carroll County Georgia 1864. Newhope Baptist Church.
March the 5th 1864. After Divine By Brother J. G. Denton Church set in
conference. Took up Regular order of Business under Head of Gen
Business ordered our Church Book be revised by our Clerk.
J. G. Denton M.D A. Cheves C L
April 2nd 1864. Newhope Baptist Church, after Devine service By
Brother J. G. Denton the Church set in conferance and took the regular
order of Business. 1st invited Brethering and Sisters of the same faith
and order to seates with us. The conferance then ajurned.
J. G. Denton M.D A Cheves C.L
April 31st 1864. The Baptist Church of Christ at New Hope mat according
to privious appointment after service By Brother J. G. Denton the Church
then taken up the regular of Business. 1st Invited Brethering and
sisters to seates with us. 2 reasons of absence satisfactory, done in
conferance this April 31st 1864. J. G. Denton M.D A. Cheves C.L
Georgia Carroll County June Terme 1864 in consequence of the yankee
army Being in the settlemint the was no conferance held.
Allison Cheves C Clk
Georgia Carroll County July Term 1864 on account of the yankee army
Being in the settlemint there was no conferanc held.
Allison Cheves C. Clk
Georgia Carroll County August Term 1864. The Baptist Church of Christ
at New Hope meet according to previous appointment after divine service
By our elder Brorthen J. M. Muse the Church then took the regular order
of Business. 1st invited Brethering and Bisters to seates with us.
There Being no Business the conferance closed.
J. M. Muse M.D Allison Cheves C.C.LK
Georgia Carroll County Sept Term 1864 on the account of Bad weather there
was no conferance. Allison Cheves C.CLK
Georgia Carroll County Oct Term 1864. The Baptist Church of Christ at
Hope meet according to previous appointment after Divine Service By our
elder Brother the Church then took up the regular order of Business.
1st invited Brethering and Sisters to seates with us there Being no
Busness the conferance then closed. J. M. Muse M.D Allison Cheves C.Clk
-77-
Georgia Carroll County November Term 1864 no conferance.
Allison Cheves C.CLK
Georgia Carroll Cty Dec term. The Baptist Church of Christ at New Hope
met and after Devine Service By our pastor the church then set in
Conferance and took up the regular order of Business & Called over the
regular items under the head of ackowledgements Brother Terrill Harper
made and acknowledged of having offered a greavous insult to sister
Rebecca Finch By Proposing fornication he having made public confesion
to her (The sister) also to the Church after muteral delibaration & with
the advise of visiting Brethering the Church forgive him done in
Conferance this Dec 3"th 1864. J. M. Muse M.D A. Cheves C.Clk
Georgia Carroll County January Term 1865 no conferance.
Allison Cheves C.Clk
Georgia Carroll County February 4th 1865. the Baptist Church of Christ
at New Hope meet according to previous appointment and after Divine
service By our elder Brother J. M. Muse the Church then took up the
regular order of Business. 1st invited Brethering and sisters to seats
with us. 2 - under the head of general Business granted Sister Tabitha
Man a letter of dismission done in conferance this Feb the 4th 1865.
J. M. Muse, M.D. Allison Cheves C.Clk
Georgia Carroll County March the 4th 1865. The Baptist Church of Christ
at New Hope meet according to previous appointment after Divine service
the Church then took up the regular order of Business. 1st invited
Brethering and sisters to seates with us. 2nd under the head of general
Business appointed corrispondents to with Allison Cheves and John Tyson
to go to massadona Brothers Terrell Haper and W. H. Sheates to go to
Pleasant Grove done in conferance this March the 4th 1865.
J. M. Muse M.D Allison Cheves C.Clk
Georgia Carroll County April 1st 1865. The Baptist Church of Christ at
New Hope meet according to pvious appointment after Divine service By
our elder Brother J. M. Muse the Church then took up the regular order
of Business. 1st invited Brethering and sisters to seates with us.
2nd under the head of general Business it was made the order By a move
and seccond that we took up a subscription for the purpose of repairing
the roof of the Church done in conferance this April 1st 1865.
J. M. Muse M.D Allison Cheves C.Clk
May Term. Georgia Carroll County The Baptist Church of Christ at New
Hope meet according to previous appointment and after Divine Service the
Church took up the regular order of Business. 1st invited Brethering
and sisters to seates with us done in conferance this May 6th 1865.
J. M. Muse M.D Allison Cheves C.Clk
Georgia Carroll County Newhope Church Agst 24 1833 To the Western
Baptist Association to Convene at Mountain Creek meeting house on Satur¬
day before. Paid into the hands of Bro. Pace 6 - 62 for Church purposes
& to be accounted for. B. Pace
June Terme 1865 Georgia Carroll County The Baptist Church of Christ
at New Hope meet according to previous appointment and after Divine
Service the Church then took up the regular order of Business. 1st
Invited Brethering and Sisters to seats with us also called for corrispondets from - Prais Mill Church Brother young Darnald from - Massadona
Church Brethering Jones & McGuirt from Pleasant Grove Church Brother
-78-
J. T. Chambers. 2nd opened the door of the church for the reception
of members received By letter Sisters Winna Grobbs and Sister Cena
Strickland. Un. the head of ackowledgements restored Brother Willis
and his wife Emily Bagwell. General Business as follows appointed
corripondents Prais mill - W. H. Sheates Massadona - Tyson & Cheves
Pleasant Grove -- Bgwell Rabun done By order of the Church in Conferance June 3th I865. J. M. Muse M D Allison Cheves C.Clk
Georgia Carroll County 1865* The Baptist Church of Christ of Christ at
New Hope meet according to previous appointment and after Divine service
the Church took up the regular order of Business. 1st invited Brethering
to seates with us. 2nd Elected delagates to the general meeting
Breatherings Allison Cheves and Terrell Harper and in case of failure
Brother William H. Sheates done in conferance this July 1st I865.
J. M. Muse M.D Allison Cheves C.Clk
Georgia Carroll County I865. August Meeting. The Baptist Church of
Christ at New Hope meet according to previous appointment and after
divine service took up the regular order of Business. 1st invited
Breathering and Sisters to seates with us. 2nd opened the doore of the
Church received By leter Sister Nancy A. Wildes a member in full
fellowship with us. 3rd under the head of general Business Elected
dellagate to the assosiation to wit Breathering Allison Cheves and
William H. Sheates and in case of failur Willis Bagwell done in
conferance this August 15th I865. J. M. Muse MD Allison Cheves C.Clk
Newhope Church Carroll Cty, Augst 24th 1823. To the Baptist Association
to convene at Mountain Creek Meeting house Harriss County on Saturday
before the seconde Saturday in Sept. next.
Dear Brothren it is with pleasure that we address you in your
associated capacity and Oh that we had it in our power to give you
pleasing intelegenc, But we have only to complain of coldness and and
deadness in the things that make for our future happiness. Brethren
pray for us and May the God of peace assist you in your counsel and
preside over you as your great Moderator -- Yours in the bonds of the
Gospel -- by order of the Church -- James Majors Mdr B. Pace C Clk
P.S. This we send you by our Brethren Bozeman Adair & James Majors and
in case of failure Bro. Jonson Haynes whom we esteem faithful the state
of our church as follows Reed by letter 12 dismissed by letter 10
excommunicated 2 restored none dead two and that our whole number is
(blank) Meetings fourth Sunday.
Georgia Carroll County I865. Sept meeting. The Baptist Church of
Christ at New Hope meet according to previous appointment and after
Divine Service By our Elder Brother John M. Muse the Church then took
up the regular order of Business. 1st invited Breathering and sisters
to seates with us also Inquired for corrispondents reported as follows
1 - from Pris mill Church B. Meadow
2 - " Massadona " Christopher Garst
3 - " Pleasant Grove " J. T. Chambers - F. M. Fielder
2 under the head of acknowledgements Sister (blank) Morrice give general
satisfaction for a difficulty she had got unto previous to this. 3 under
the head of general Business appointed corricepondents
1 - To Prais Mill Church A. Cheves, W. H. Sheates
2 - " Massadona " J. Tyson, T. Harper
3 - " Pleasant Grove J. Raburn, W. Bagwell
-79-
read and received the letter to the association Sent up two dollars for
minutes done in conferance this Sept 2nd 1865*
John M. Muse MD Allison Cheves C.Clk
Georgia Carroll County. The Baptist Church of Christ at New Hope meet
according to previous appointment and after divine service By our
Brother John M. Muse the Church then took up the regular order of Busi¬
ness. 1 Ivited Brethering and sisters to seate with us. 2 under the
head of General Business it was moved and secconed that there be a
subscription drawn up By the Clerk and presented to the Church for the
Benefit of the Pastor in Charge of the Church Done By Order of the
Church while setting in conferance this Oct 3th 1865• Granted Broth
John Tyson and wife letters of dismissed.
John M. Muse, M.D Allison Cheves C Clk
Georgia Carroll County 1865. The Baptist Church of Christ at New Hope
meet according to previous appointment and after divine service By our
Elder Brother John M. Muse the Church then took up the regular order of
Business. 1 invited visiting Brethering and Sisters to seates with us
under the head of general Business 2 The Church went in to the Choice
of a Preacher and By unanimos vote made choice of Brother S. T. Sims
also granted letters of dismision to Brother Willis Bagwell and his
wife Emily Bagwell done By order of church in conferance Nov the 2nd
1865. John M. Muse M.D Allison Cheves C.Clk
Georgia Caroll County Deem 2nd 1865 The Baptst Church of Christ at New
Hope meet according to previous appointment & after divine service the
Church then took up the regular order of Business. 1 Invited visiting
Brethering and Sisters to seates with us. 2 General Business. Granted
letters to Broth Wm. H. Sheates and his wife Susan F. Sheates. Also
granted Brother Allison Cheves and his wife Mahala A. Cheves letters of
dismission also Brother Wily Bagwell a letter of dismission done By
order of the Church while setting in conferance this December 2nd 1865.
John M. Muse M.D Allison Cheves C.Clk
Georgia Carroll County Oct 3th 1866. The Babtist Church of Christ at
newhope met in conference and called on Bro. John T. Chambers to act as
moderator took up the bisness of the Church 1st apointed delelegats
to the association Bros Terrell Harper and John Rabun in case of falure
J. W. Chambers. 2nd Bro Jack a man of color and Coraline his applyed
for Leter of dismision from this Church which was granted.
John T. Chambers Mdr Terrell Harper
C Clk
Newhope Church met this 31st of Mach I867 and set in conference granted
Sister Elizabeth T. Michael a Letter of dismision and Nancy J. Woods.
John M. Muse Mdr John T. Chambers
C Clk
Georgia Carroll County 1864 List of members Belonging to the Church
at New Hope
Nov 2 Allison Cheve I865 Dec 2nd dismiss letter
Mar 1862
Mar 1 Prudence Buckner
May 3 Matilda J. Shannon
Nov 1 Elizabeth J. Michael Dismissed March I867
" 1 Mary Hunter
" 1 Rebecca Finch
Jan 1863
Jan 3 Nacy J. Woods
-80-
Members belonging to the Church at New Hope, 1864, Cont'd.
1863
Jan 31 Polly Ann Pane
Aug 3 Washington Chambers
Dec 2 J. R. Colwell
" 2 Wyly Bagwell
" 2 Richard Shannon
1865
Jun 3 Winna Grubbs
Jun 3 Sena Stricklin
Jim 3 Willis Bagwell
Jun 3 Emily Bagwell
Jun 3 Hannah Michael
July 1 Mahala A. Cheves
Aug 5 Nancy A. Wilder
I865 Dec 2nd dismiss letter
By Letter Dec 2 I865
By Letter Dec 2nd I865
I865 Dec 2nd dismiss letter
List of Members Belonging to the Church at Newhope 1864
Males
Joseph Harper Dismissed by
Terrell Harper
Haman Yarber
his wife Yarber
A. J. Yates
Harriett Yates
Hanah J. Merrell
Caroline a woman of Coular
Jack a man of Colar
1860 William M. Stephens
Hildy Stephens
Nov 16 Jackson Lipham
" Elizabeth Lipham
1861
Females
let. Charity Harper Dis by let.
Sena Harper
Dismissed by leter 1866
Do Do
Oct 4 1862 Dismissed By
** " " " By
letter
letter
Feb 4 Mary Yarbrough
Mar 2 John Tyson
" Mary E Tyson
(page torn)
6 Mary Miller
4 Sarah Ann Wilkerson
4 Sarh Morris
4 James Michael
4 Tabitha Mann
3 William H. Sheates
Susan Sheates
Oct 5 Nancy C. Carnes
” 5 Mary A. Harper
Nov 2 John Raburn
Ruthy Raburn
Dismiss By letter Oct 3 1865
•< » » 3 1865
1865 Feb 3th dismiss By letter
1865 Dec 2nd dismiss By Letter
1865 Dec 2nd
Mails in 1853
1. Elder Henry Haynes
2. Thos W. Garner
3. James Ensley
4. John Ensley
5. Willis Bagwell
6. Bacus a man of cular
7. Jesse Jinkins
8. John Miller
9. Joseph Harper
10. Elder Wm. Keeton
11. James Burges
12. H. G. Hulsey
13. Ellick a man of cular
-81-
Fee Mails in 1852
1. Elizabeth Haynes
2. Sarah Garner
3- Maryann Ensley
4. Nancy Miller
5* Elizabeth Garner
6. Rebecka Garner
7. Emely Bagwell
8. Manda Yats
9. Sarah Keeton - Dead
10. Ann Keeton
11. Sarah Elesbery
12. Dicy Mann
13• Lorany Burnes
14. Ditha Sheets
15• Ann Burnes
16. Ann Ruppin
17. Nancy Johnson
18. Delsey a Woman of cular
19. Sarah Burgess
20. Elizabeth Ann Keeton
21. Elizabeth Henderson
22. Phoda Miller
23. Sarah Miller
24. Planah Michael
25. Mary Hulsey
26. Angeline Johnson
27. Jane Bivins
28. (blank) Ellison
29. Juliann Whitley
30. Maryann Williams
The Members of the Church of New Hope
1. Jese Wooton
2. Polly Wooton
3. Maryann Endsley
4. Nancy Miller
5. Arminda Leathers
6. Washington a man of cular
7. Jams Trammell
8. Bozeman Adair
9. Lydia Dickson
10. Maria Leathers
11. Sarah Adair
12. Judith a woman of color
13* Baukus, A man of color
14. Wallee A man of color
15- James Colhorp
16. Charity Bowen
17• Lucretia Haddock
18. Sarah Trammell
19* Sitha Sheets
20. Elizabeth Blair
21. Mariann Hartsfield
22. Juiliann Mathiss
23. Sarah Keaton
24. Malinda a woman of color
25. Sally Coal
26. Margaret Coal
27. Ann Childers
28. Polly Addams
29. Joannah Coltharp
30. Lydia A woman of color
31. Hannah A woman of color
32. James Endsly
33* Martha Johnston
34. Wm. Burns
35* Lorany Burnes
36. Elizabeth McCurter
37* Elizabeth Brooks
Oct 1845 Dismissed by letter
Do Do
Dismissed by letter 1842
(all crossed out)
Reed back again
Jan 23th Dismissed by letter
Dismissed by Letter 26th Feb 1842
Dismissed by letter August 1844
Dismissed By Leter July 1843
Dismissed By Letter August 1843
Dyied the rth August 1842
Died 1850
dismist by letter 1856
Dismissed By August 1844
dismis by letter 1856
Reed again in this Church Jan 23th
Dismissed By Letter 26th Feb 1842
Dyed 1843
Dismissed by Letter April 1842
dismissed By Letter 26th Feb 1842
Dismissed By Letter 1843
Dismissed by Letter
Dismissed By Letter June 1843
Dismissed By Letter August 1844
Dismissed by Letter Feby 1845
Excommunicated
Excluded in 1850
Dismissed by Letter Jany 2st 1846
Dismissed By Letter Jun 1845
-82-
The
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48.
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50.
51.
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54.
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59.
60.
61.
62.
63.
64.
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66.
67.
68.
69.
70.
71.
72.
73.
Members of the Church of
Ann Keeton
David Hyden
Major S. Chandler
Melinda Chandler
Dicy Mann
Jesse H. Chambers
Katharine Chambers
Jno. T. Chambers
New Hope, Cont'd.
Excommunicated June
Dismissed By Letter
Excommunicated 1845
Dismissed by Letter
23rd 1849
Oct 1st 1845
December 6th 1845
Lucinda M. Chambers
Nancy McBeer
Mary Hyden
Merrell C. Awtry
Nancy Awtry
Susannath McBreer
Coraline Adair
John McCurdy
Joseph W. Chambers
James Lathers
Melinda P. Sheets
Sarah Elsbury
John Strickland
Jno. P. Clinton
Peter J. Thias
Maria Leathers Bap 1840
Martin Mattos b 1 1840
Clarissa Mattos do
Anna McCurdy
Washington a man of col bap
Sally Dyer Babtised 1841
John Huckebuy By Letter 1841
Jane Huckeby do
Arminda Leathers
Elizabeth a woman of collr 1841
dismissed By Letter 26th Febr 1842
do do - -
Excumicated April 5th 1845 for
with the Misionary Baptist
do do do do do do
dismist by letter 1851
Dismissed By Letter June 1845
dismist by letter
dead I852
Dissmissed by Letter Jany 2nd 1846
Dismissed By Letter Augt 1844
dismist by letter 1852
Dismissed By Letter 1844
dismissed By Letter 26 Febr 1842
Dyed the 24th December 1841
comming
dismissed By Letter May 1842
died August 1848
Dismissed By
Dismissed By
Dismissed By
do do
Dismissed By
1840 Died
Letter Augst 1843
Letter Augt 1843
Letter Augst 1843
1843
Letter 1845
1850
Dis By Letter Oct 1842
Dismissed By letter Oct 1842
Dismissed By Letter 26th 1842
By Let Dismissed by letter June 26
1847
Maryann Davis Babtised 1841
Albina Awtrey Babtised 1841
Elizabeth Dickson Babtised
Sarah Bone By Letter Oct 1842
Amanda Yates By Let Oct 1842
Letty Smith By Letter June 1843
Martha Gurley By Letter 1842
Elizabeth Henderson By Letter Aug
Hannah Michael By Let 1844
Disms by Let
Dismissed By
Dismissed by
Janry 24 1847
Letter July 1843
Let Januy 26th 1847
Charels C. Calaway Babtised 1840
(Blank) Calaway do
Judith Huff By Letter 1843
Thomas Garner By Letter
Sarah Garner By Letter
John Rogers By Letter
John B. Williams ordained minister
Dissd by Letter June 27 1846
Dismissed By Letter July 1844
1845 Dissd by Let Oct 23 1847
Dismissed by letter Nov 1844
Sister Michael returned letter
Jany 3rd 1846
Dist By Letter Jan 1845
Dyied 1844
Diss by Letter Deer 1849
William Sandford
James Roberts by
C. C. Calaway by
Dismissed By Letter 1844
May 4th 1845 dismissed by Letter
May 24 1847
by Letter May 4th 1845 died March 1848
Letter Aug 2 1845 dismissed by Let May 24 1847
Letter April 25 1846 Dissd by Letter 21st Oct 1845
-83-
The Members of the Church of Mew Hope, Cont'd.
Martha Jackson by experience May 23rd 1845 Dissmst by Letter
January 1848
Jenny woman of collor by Let July 1846
Susanah Trapp By Let Sep 26 1846
Catherine Williams by Let Sep 26 1846 Dismissed by Let Dec 26 1846
Jemimah Williams Bap 22 Oct 1846 " " "
Martha Williams Bapt
Barnabas Michael by Let Oct 21st 1846 Diss by Let Sep 21 1850
Catherine Michael " " " do do
Sarah Michael " " " do do
Major L. Chandler Restored & Dismissed by Letter Feb 27th 1847
Matilda Stewart Restored 21st August 1847 Dissd by Let May 1850
Ann Burns by Letter Sept 21 1850
Elizabeth Garner " " "
Rebecka Garner
John Ensley
John Yarber
Sarah Miller
G. H. Hulsey
Angeline Johnson
Henry Haynes
Elizabeth Haynes
Willis Bagwell
Emley Bagwell
Ann Ruppin
Memorandum of
of the Church
for the use of
house
Bozeman Adair
James Coltharp
Jonathan Haynes
Henry Haynes
Johnson Haynes
Mrs. Chambers
Mrs. Trammel
Berryman Huckeby
B. Mathews
Wm. Majors
P. Black
Mary Hyden
D. Brazell
L. Williams
G. McSpaden
Wm. Haynes
the several sums of money contributed by individual members
at good Hope towards defraying the expenses of making seats
said Church purchasing lumber & repairing of the meeting
$2.50
2.00
2.62
2.00
3.00
50
50
50
50
50
50
50
50
50
50
50
25
50
50
50
50
The Church unanimously agree to choose a moderator on the Saturday before
the fourth Sunday in Auguist next to Preside over the Church for the term
of Twelve months - and that this chuch do further unanimously agree to
choose on said day in each year thereafter a paster to preside over this
church for the term of tweve months and no longer unless reelected -
Provided always that said chuch shall be unanimous in the selection The
church do further agree that this be inserted as an article in our
decorum.
(next page)
Paid over to the Church by the former Clerk two dollars and fifty six
and fourth cents to it. ' Johnson Haynes Clk
-84-
(next page)
Jonathan Haynes
Jonsom Haynes
Berryman Huckaby
Bozeman Adair
Barnabas Pace
Wm. Majors
F. Pace
J. Coltharp
F. H. Pace
John Richards
Cristopher Garst
David Hyden
Wm. Smedley
James Brewer
Wm. T. Childers
Thomas Roddy
Derrill Brazzil
Wm. Haynes
Peterson Black
1833
1111
1111
1111
1111
1111
111
1111
11
1111
1834
1
1111
(This concludes the minutes of the New Hope Primitive Baptist Church.
The bound books of these minutes can be found in the Georgia State
Archives, Atlanta, and in the Irvine S. Ingram Library, West Georgia
College, Carrollton, GA.)
INDEX TO 1827 LAND LOTTERY
CARROLL COUNTY, GA.
_(By Districts)_
NINTH DISTRICT, FIFTH SECTION, CARROLL COUNTY, GA.
We, the Managers appointed to Superintend the drawing of the Lottery
authorized by the several Acts of the Legislature to dispose of and
distribute the Lands lately acquired from the Creek Nation of Indians
by the U.S. in a treaty concluded at the Indian Springs on the 12th day
of February 1825, do certify that we have performed the duty assigned
us, and that the following pages contain the names of the fortunate
drawers in the Fifth Section of Carroll County with the respective
Lots of Land drawn by them.
Signed: Ted Cullens H. Luckie John Hatcher Joseph Ligon
Edw. Cary
LOT
NO. NAME DISTRICT COUNTY DATE
2. John Eastwood (RS)
3. Samuel Hargroves
4. Jacob New (RS)
5. Allen R. Gains
6. Mary Ann Odom (Idiot)
7. William A. Skinner
8. John L. Wingfield
9. Benjamin Williams (RS)
10. Archibold S. Jackson
11. James Goodman, Orphans
12. William Gordy (Sol.)
Mops
Wilkensons
Smiths
Godfreys
Gordons
Floyds
Newton
Telfair
DeKalb
Rebun
Burke
Washington
W. Lieuellen
Cobbs Taliaferro
R. H. Ramsey
Rutlands Bibb
McDaniels Clarke
R. H. Ramsey
Tysons Washington
Mattocks Upson
B. H. Mouttne
21 Feb
12 Mar
2 Nov
29 Apr
10 Dec
3 Nov
1846
1830
1837
1837
1839
1845
16 Feb 1846
18 Mar I837
16 Feb 1846
27 Nov 1834
16 Feb 1846
-85-
LOT
NO. NAME DISTRICT COUNTY DATE
13. Thomas F. Anderson
14. Aaron Scarborough
15. Benjamin R. Market
16. Pleasant Baker
17. Marshall Early
18. Henry Adkerson (RS)
19. Harrison Beall (RS)
20. Wiley Bradford
21. John Davis
24. Jesset Goolsby MM
25. Reuben Wright Sr. (RS)
26. John Mims
27. Amos Brown
28. John Grants orphans
29. Anna J. Graddy (Blind)
30. Mitton N. Howards orphans
31. Hugh Carr's orphans
32. James Hubbard
33* George Hays (RS)
34. Mathew Wilkinson
35- James Bivins
36. David Landers (Sol.)
38.
39.
40.
41.
42.
^3.
46.
*7.
48.
49.
50.
51.
52.
53.
54.
55.
56.
57.
58.
59.
Dees Tattnall
Scarboroughs Pulaski
Wilson Crawford
W. B. W. Dent
Gholstone Batt Gwinnett
Tos. Rowe
Dixs Oglethorpe
W. B. W. Dent
Mathews Wilkinson
Kinseys Warren
W. B. W. Dent
Wards
Colcloughs
A. J. &
559th
•Porters
Gilberts
Hardins
Wilkinson
L. J.
Tysons
Bivins
Bozeman's
Whartons
B. H.
Millers
Grays
Bivins
Morgan
Henry
Greene
D. W. Orr
Walton
Early
Washington
Hall
Telfair
Holland
Washington
Baldwin
Houston
Fayette
Mouttine
Jackson
Henry
Baldwin
Henry
37• Larkin Milsap
(Error in grant - granted in 10th Dist.)
Fayette
W. Dent
Upson
Putnam
Hall
John Andieton
James R. Harwell
Elizabeth Whitlock
of RS)
Joseph L. Moultree,
Wm. Lacy
(Wid
Poziers
W. B.
Cooper
Bledsoes
Harrisons
Jonathan Cox
Lemuel Alcocks orphans
Sarah Stokes, Widow
William Trail
Walton Knight
Wm. W. Bush
Wm. Rucks Sr. (RS)
Montford Carter
Jacob Barron
Roderick R. Taylor
Elizabeth Ballard
minor Barnetts
Christians
W. B. W.
Cross
Tysons
Richardsons
Kellams
Treadwells
Treadwells
Greens
Holloways
Buchanans
Evans
Powells
Putnam
Morgan
Dent
Habersham
Washington
Wilkes
Pulaski
Richmond
Richmond
Gwinnett
Oglethorpe
Baldwin
Gwinnett
Pulaski
B. H. Moultri
Jacob Hampton
Thomas B. Corksey
Seaborn & Thomas
Clutchfield (Ill.)
John Dorothy's orphans
117 Dist.
Snows
Halls
Snows
Hancock
Walton
Wilkerson
Walton
7 Nov
11 Mar
31 Mar
1837
I836
1846
10 Dec 1845
31 Mar 1846
4 Jan
31 Mar
1 Jul
21 Feb
1838
1846
1843
1846
1 Jul 1843
1 Aug 1835
8 Jun 1830
26 Mar 1829
8 Sep 1848
27 Jan 1834
30 Jun 1843
8 Mar 1843
16 Feb 1846
15 Dec 1835
7 Mar 1829
1 Sep 1835
1 Oct 1844
31 Mar 1846
3 Dec 1832
25 Apr 1840
24 Nov 1831
1 Jul 1843
31 Mar 1846
12 Jun
6 Dec
23 Dec
1 Dec
4 Nov
28 Jun
20 Dec
15 Dec
6 Feb
16 Sep
13 Feb
1843
1832
1833
1830
1829
1830
1830
1834
1837
I836
1846
21 Apr 1831
30 Dec 1830
3 May 1841
9 Feb 1833
-86-
LOT
NO .
60.
61.
62.
63.
64.
65.
69.
70.
71.
72.
73.
74.
75.
76.
77.
78.
79.
80.
81.
82.
83.
84.
85-
86.
89.
90.
91.
92.
93-
94.
95.
96.
97.
98.
99.
100.
101.
102.
103.
104.
105.
106.
109.
110.
111.
112.
113.
114.
115.
NAME DISTRICT COUNTY DATE
Peter Youngblood's Woodards
orphans
Francis M. McRee M Crees
Richard Parnell (Sol.) Hattocks
James Ausley (next friend Sanders
of Oliver Wall)
John Smith
Henry Richards
minor
(Widow)
(RS)
Wm. V. Hoskins
Redden Atwell
Zacheirah Wise
Asa Eiland
William Smith
Malinda Coal,
Sarah Vickers
Jess Lee (RS)
Wm. Rogers Sr
Harrison Rees
Charnick A. Therp
Michael Maning
Denis I. Griffen
Elijah C. Hunter
Bolling Hall
Humphrey Posey
John Eldridge (Ill.)
Thomas Hichorason
William Richardson
Robert Register
James S. Erwin
Wm. Glenn (Sol.)
Joseph Spooner
Mary Sharp (Husband
Absent)
Charles Elms
Dedges
W. B.
Lynches
W. B.
Spinks
Kellys
Darden
Hammocks
Ragsdales
Jones
118 Dist
Watsons
Conners
Kinseys
Anderson
Vincents
(Orph.) Gragge
Morgans
Singers
Andersons
Pearsons
Reaves
Richardson
Hodges
Bryans
Pennington
Humphrys
McKays
Monroe
Clarke
Upson
Warren
Appling
Johnson
Burke
Johnson
Jones
Richmond
Jasper
Jones
Wilkes
Habersham
Hancock
Morgan
Tattnall
Warren
Dooly
Greene
Twiggs
Henry
Baldwin
Dooly
Twiggs
Screven
Wilkes
Laurens
Habersham
Jasper
Screven
Burke
Wm. Manleys orphans
Jermiah Godoin
Joseph Marshall
Henry James
Elias Watson
John Treadwell
Dempsey W. Clayton
Oliver Ushers orphans
Mary Bryon (Widow RS)
Elisha Horn (RS)
Henry Johnsons orphans
Archibald Miller
Hubbard Hampton
Noah Prince
Argant Morrison
Wiley Hamrick Sr.
Thomas Rolson Ellet
Nanflight Howards orphs
Solomans
A. S. and D.
Stephens
Vinings
Boyds
Davenport
Dean's
Craigs
Smiths
Holmes
Scarborough
Gordons
Gilberts
Talleys
Adairs
Towels
Lampkins
C. Willaby
Bryan's
Wilsons
Cuorys
Twiggs
W. Orr
Bryan
Putnam
Jefferson
Clarke
Laurens
Fayette
Newton
Jasper
Pulaski
Burke
Washington
Newton
Madison
Clarke
Telfair
Habersham
Early
Washington
26 Nov 1841
7 Dec I833
20 Apr 1831
2 Nov 1841
21 Feb 1841
21 Feb 1841
19 Nov
7 Dec
1 Jul
20 Dec
11 Dec
11 Dec
13 Feb
9 Sep
14 Feb
5 Sep
7 Jun
3 Dec
1 Mar
1 Apr
1 Jul
19 Nov
13 Dec
1 Jan
19 Dec
21 Feb
6 Jan
16 Mar
4 Aug
14 Jul
1834
1831
1843
1836
1835
1835
1846
1845
1846
1835
1835
1833
1832
1833
1843
I832
1847
1830
1836
1846
1831
1843
I830
1838
21 Feb 1846
7 Nov
12 May
22 Feb
16 Jul
26 Jun
26 Nov
9 Dec
12 Nov
31 Mar
21 May
19 Jul
6 Nov
31 Mar
4 Sep
1 Oct
1839
1829
1834
I832
1843
1836
1835
1830
1846
1836
1835
1837
1836
1837
1835
18 Dec I837
22 Jun 1831
12 Dec 1842
-87-
LOT
NO.
116.
117.
118.
119-
120.
121.
122.
123.
124.
125.
126.
130.
131.
132.
133.
134.
135.
136.
137.
138.
139.
140.
141.
142.
143.
144.
145.
148.
149.
150.
151.
152.
153.
154.
155.
156.
157.
158.
159.
160.
161.
162.
163.
166.
167.
168.
169.
170.
171.
172.
173.
174.
NAME DISTRICT COUNTY DATE
Nancy Flemellen (Widow)
William R. Stalham
Arthur Manning
John Black
Isiah Beck Sr.
John C. Tolbert
Benjamin Bateman
Alexander Farmer's orphs
John Nix Sr.
Roan Oliver
Hezekiah Crompton's orph
Leteta Ann Driggors
(Ill.)
Manusoa Barganer, minor
Samuel Robinson's orphs
Duncan McLeod
Elizabeth Stringfellow
(Widow)
Stephen Jackson
James H. Osborn's
orphans
James H. Blackshear
Dudly Poole
Wm. N. Roberts
Wm. Quicks
Wm. Bap
Isham Tooke
Wm. P. Newell
Robert Malone Jr.
David Dunn
Jamison Ware
Jermiah Gains
Belsey, Samuel and
George Wilkinson
Frances 0. Smith
Charles H. McClammy
Lewis Bradberry (RS)
Wm. Kimbell
Wm. Bales
Jonas McClung
Alexander Smiths orph
Jesse Gordon
Rawson Owen
Wm. B. Ball
John M. William's orphs
Anderson Baker
Asa Clark
Cornelious Jackson
Thomas S. Hansard (Sol.)
Joel Eckles
Wm. Arnold
Wm. L. Torke
Payne Lovelle
Whitehead Ryan (Sol.)
Thomas Whorton
James Posey
Brinkley's
Prathers
Wortham's
Bryan's
9th Dist.
Tolbert's
Price's
Pearson's
Bryan's
Gilbert's
Moor's
Delvache's
Taylor's
Wood's
Barrentine's
Robinson's
McDonnell's
Clarks
Gahagan's
Ragsdale's
Young's
Gilbert's
Robertson's
Green's
Bryant's
Douglas
Bell's
Baker's
Newby's
Godfrey's
Alford's
102nd Dist.
Hearndon's
Thompson's
Donner's
Cupp's
Yager's
Harry's
Dan' s
Buchann's
Woods
Ray' s
McDowell's
Hay' s
Horton's
Reeves
Stinson's
McLendon's
Culbreath's
Stapler's
Finches
Borentine's
Warren
Lincoln
Washington
Habersham
Fayette
Columbia
Houston
Twiggs
Habersham
Washington
Gwinnett
Bullock
Jones
Washington
Telfair
Greene
Clarke
Newton
Clarke
Wilkes
Morgan
Washington
Gwinnett
Greene
Henry
Decatur
Oglethorpe
Gwinnett
Jones
Rabun
Taliaferro
Hancock
Clarke
Burke
Warren
Gwinnett
Hall
Henry
Walton
Baldwin
Jones
Walton
Chatham
Ne wt on
Elbert
Wilkes
Putnam
Washington
Columbia
Jackson
Gwinnett
Telfair
2 Dec
12 Feb
1 Jul
21 Feb
22 Dec
11 Dec
10 Dec
31 Oct
31 Mar
16 Oct
22 Jun
13 Dec
1840
1846
1843
1831
1834
1835
1835
1840
1846
1837
1843
1838
30 Nov 1842
23 Dec 1836
20 Jan 1829
10 Dec 1834
18 Dec I833
19 Dec 1836
6 May
1 Dec
29 Dec
1 Jul
27 Mar
15 Nov
27 Jan
8 May
31 Aug
22 Nov
10 Feb
7 Dec
1 Jul
9 Sep
21 Dec
1 Dec
17 Feb
27 Dec
5 Dec
23 Aug
26 Jun
6 May
7 Dec
28 Nov
22 Oct
16 Feb
12 Dec
30 Nov
15 May
28 Mar
4 May
30 Jan
13 Jul
2 Dec
1833
1837
1828
1830
1837
1836
1831
1838
1836
1839
1846
1829
1843
1845
1837
1831
1836
1837
1836
1837
1843
1836
1839
1830
I830
1846
1837
1832
1843
1832
1827
1839
1832
1830
-88-
LOT
NO.
175.
176.
177.
178.
179.
180.
184.
185.
186.
187.
188.
189.
190.
191.
192.
193.
194.
195.
196.
197.
200.
201.
202.
203.
204.
205.
206.
207.
208.
209.
210.
211.
212.
213.
216.
217.
218.
219.
220.
221.
222.
223.
224.
225.
226.
227.
228.
232.
233.
234.
235.
236.
237.
238.
239.
NAME DISTRICT COUNTY DATE
26 May
12 Nov
22 Dec
24 Dec
Jan
Sep
7 Nov
12 Sep
19 Dec
3 Dec
1 Feb
14 Sep
7 Dec
6 Jan
16 Feb
14 Feb
12 Sep
10 Dec
29 Nov
25 Jan
5 Jan
9 Sep
20 Nov
2 Jul
29 Dec
14 Jul
17 Dec
12 Sep
7 Jul
14 May
20 Nov
27 Feb
23 May
13 Nov
16 May
9 Aug
19 Dec
20 Jun
21 Jun
1 Jul
21 Nov
21 Feb
30 Dec
10 Dec
Jun
Jul
6 Dec
4 Oct
26 Jul
3 May
4 Oct
3 Mar
4 Jul
6 May
4 Dec
Alford P. King
Thomas Frasure
Mary Poyner (Widow of RS)
Jeptha Henderson
Wright Sanders
Nancy Joiners (Ill.)
Asa Cox
Berry Watkins
William Spence
Martha Allen Tyson orphs
William L. Smith
Elisha Bolton (orp)
Sarah Waits (Widow)
Peter Sutton
Thomas D. Houldridge
John Turin
Daniel Patterson
Willis S. Scott
William Hasty
James Thompson Sr. (Sol.)
Elias Osborn
Abram Elton (RS)
Wm. Wards orphs
Richard Strickland
Edmond Brown
Wm. Dune an
Richard Mattox's orp.
Robert Camron
Hardy Gregory Sr.
Bunell Walls
Wm. Griffin
Edwin Brantley
Moses Wade's orphs
Thomas Darsey
Theophilus Powells orphs
Benjamin Rounsey's orph
John McKee (RS)
James Murrays orp.
(Father died in service
John Jones
Josiah Beck Sr.
Wm. Yates (RS)
David Tillman
Isham Peoples
Nathaniel Ennis' orph.
Arron Cox
Jepe Freeman's orphs
Patience Smith orphs
Wm. M. I. Chrisolin
Alexander McDaniel
Murphy
Houston
(Sol. )
Guice (RS)
Thomas H.
Lalathiel
John Moon
Nickolas
Thomas D. Jordan orphs
Henry Lockhart (Sol.)
Rankin's
Hall's
Allen's
Bateman's
Kellys
Poytry's
Harvey's
Alreds
118 Dist.
Plummers
Key' s
Clark's
Wilsons
Chamberlains
Carpenter's
Douglas
Mathis
James
Breadlove's
Snow's
Keys
McLendons
Blackwell
McDonalds
Wilson's
Shaws
Washington
Anderson's
Seegar's
Becks
Worthen's
McLendon's
Clarkes
Whiteheads
Elliots
Spivey's
Lacy's
Burns
)
Rander's
9th Dist.
Plummers
Mynicks
Hopkins
Singer's
Woods
Reaves
Leavearingin
Whatleys
Underwood's
Sullivan's
Rushings
Mann's
Loniorgan's
Blankinship'
Ford's
Greene
Wilkinson
Henry
Houston
Twiggs
Screven
Bryan
Hall
Hancock
Laurens
Jasper
Columbia
Hall
Twiggs
Twiggs
Decatur
Appling
Jones
Jones
Walton
Jasper
Washington
Elbert
Appling
Crawf ord
Wilkinson
Wilkes
Clarke
Burke
Rabun
Washington
Washington
Columbia
Laurens
Jefferson
Laurens
Oglethorpe
Baldwin
Bibb
Fayette
Laurens
Upson
Camden
Baldwin
Washington
Screvin
's Bibb
Morgan
Irwin
Jones
Washington
Madison
Lincoln
s Franklin
Warren
9
6
9
1
1843
1831
1838
1833
1832
1848
1829
1831
1833
1847
1828
1839
1833
1829
1846
1846
I831
1835
1830
I830
1830
1845
1837
1830
1829
1845
1835
1831
1830
1839
1829
1838
1848
1832
1843
1830
1828
1838
1843
1843
1836
1846
1833
1846
I836
1843
1841
1827
1830
1836
1831
1828
1843
1839
1837
-89-
LOT
NO. NAME DISTRICT COUNTY DATE
240. Thomas Simpson
241. Miles D. Cullens
242. Wm. B. Bronjohn
243. Josiah Turner
246. John G. White
247. Hugh Archer
248. Frances Dent, Widow
249. Joseph Jolly
250. John Griffin's orphs.
251. Alfred Bankston
252. John Razor
253* John W. McLeod
254. Jane Dunn (Widow of RS)
255* Polly Saxon (Widow)
256. Daniel B. Worsham (Sol. )
257. Amanda M. Spurlock (Ill.'
260. John J. Phipps orphans
261. Thomas Cox (RS)
262. Edward Grayham
263. James Glispon's orphans
264. Joseph McCune
265. Wm. Hamby's orphans
266. Thomas McHampton
267. Isaac Gray
268. Lucretia Smith (Widow)
269. Nancy Robinson (Widow)
270. Robert Smith
274c Zachiriah Weslers
275* John Fowler
276. Richard Jones
277* Thomas W. Glover
278. John R. Puyear
279. James To Gordy (Ill.)
280. Morris Sutton
281. John Branan
Error in above - 10th
282. Reuben Stevens (RS)
283. James Davis' Children
(Father shot)
Bateman's
Floyd's
Hayden's
Jones
Boswell's
Gordon's
Baines
Newby's
Parhams
Bowlings
Powell's
McLeod's
Robinson's
Allen's
Duncan's
) Stapler's
Rogers'
Baker's
Powers
Dugas
Bones
Snow's
Bowen's
Chandler's
Bostick's
Woods
Howell's
Wynn's
Wilcox's
Barnetts
Tiller's
Galagan's
Lynches
Ragsdale's
Millers
Dist.
Stephens
Kendricks
Houston
Washington
Chatham
Habersham
Franklin
Chatham
Chatham
Jones
Warren
DeKalb
Pulaski
Glynn
Burke
Henry
Jones
Jackson
Jackson
Gwinnett
Laurens
Burke
Madison
Newton
Jackson
Franklin
Twiggs
Washington
DeKalb
Montgomery
Richmond
Jasper
Crawf ord
Clarke
Burke
Wilkes
Henry
DeKalb
Putnam
26 Nov
31 Mar
11 Dec
31 Mar
31 Mar
31 Mar
4 Nov
30 Nov
20 Dec
13 Apr
1 Jul
8 Dec
28 Jun
8 Nov
29 Apr
2 Apr
2 Oct
31 Mar
28 Jul
7 Jun
6 May
26 Dec
31 Mar
31 Mar
27 Nov
3 Dec
1 Jul
24 Oct
7 Jul
11 Nov
31 Mar
19 Aug
8 Jun
16 Jul
1 Dec
1830
1846
1829
1846
1846
1846
1829
1829
1834
1842
1843
1829
1830
1831
1827
1828
1848
1846
1837
1837
1830
1842
1846
1846
1833
1831
1843
I831
1831
1839
1846
1839
1847
1839
1836
31 Mar 1846
6 Sep I838
Submitted by Nell Yates
Frances Brengle, 6619 Pheasant Rd. #16, Baltimore, MD 21220, has sent us
the following;
"I edit a newsletter by subscription, $12 yearly, published quarterly,
known as 'Northington Descendants,' covering all branches of the
Northington surname and its many allied lineages. The newsletter
includes an unlimited free query column, heraldry, military records,
ancestral charts, tombstone inscriptions, family history, wills, and
deeds."
For further information, contact Mrs. Brengle.
We welcome your family histories, copies of Bible records, and material
related to Carroll County and surrounding areas for publication.
-90-
JAMES C. RICHARDS
COMPANY I, 19TH REGIMENT, GEORGIA VOLUNTEER INFANTRY
__
CARROLL COUNTY, GEORGIA
On a misty morning
"VILLA
in
RICA
April
GOLD
of 1985»
DIGGERS"
I
_
walked in the area where
my great grandfather, James C. Richards, was killed on the battlefield
December 13 > 1862. Up on a hill, high above the town of Fredericksburg,
Virginia, one can see old Confederate cannons pointing toward the town
below. Grass has grown over the Confederate trenches that are no longer
deep, but remain very much a part of the terrain. An employee of this
National Battlefield went out of his way to help us locate the place
where the Georgia 19th fought on that fateful day in 1862. He located
a report, written by Lt. Col. Andrew J. Hutchins of the 19th, explaining
what took place that day involving this Regiment. With what my husband
and I read from the report, a map in our hands marking the spot, and
going to the historical marker, we were able to reconstruct what went
wrong that cold and icy day in December of 1862. The Battle of Freder¬
icksburg was a big win for the South, but the Richards lost two sons
that day, as Joseph Denman Richards, a younger brother, was also killed.
Visiting Fredericksburg has been the highlight of all my research.
I cannot begin to express the feelings I had that day, walking on that
battlefield over 122 years later. I am possibly the only family member
to visit this site after the Georgia 19th left. I went to Fredericks¬
burg to pay my respects and to represent those of the past closest to
James — my great, great grandmother Angeline Mahaley Richards, his
mother; my great grandmother Sarah C. Hesterly Richards, his wife; and
my grandmother Almedia Ann Richards Swindle, his daughter -- who because
of numerous circumstances following the War were never able to go to
this historical site.
The emotions I felt in viewing this long-past battlefield stayed
with me as we left the battlefield and went down the hill and walked
through the iron gates into the Confederate Cemetery. My hopes of
finding a lasting memorial, a gravestone, were futile. I did not find
James' name among the rows of Confederate soldiers buried there. I will
now have to accept that which I had hoped would not be; he was probably
buried in a mass or unmarked grave near the battlefield.
James C. Richards was born in Carroll County, Georgia, about
1834-5. He was the third son and sixth child of Francis M. and Angeline
Mahaley Richards who settled in the Sixth District of Carroll County
around 1827.
James enlisted March 4, 1862, in Villa Rica, Carroll County,
Georgia, along with his oldest brother, William Milburn, and Joseph
Denman, a younger brother, in the Georgia 19th Regiment, Company I,
known as the "Villa Rica Gold Diggers." John W., another older brother,
enlisted a year earlier in June of 1861 in this same Regiment. This
Company, like most, was made up of friends and relatives, men who knew
one another well. This proved tragic later. Of the 147 known men in
Company I of the Georgia 19th, 16 were permanently disabled and 64 known
dead would not return from the War.
The Civil War was to be the last war Americans would fight, using
fairly modern weaponry with an out-dated style of combat. This was the
reason the battles in the War were so deadly. Disease, such as dysentery,
malaria, measles, typhoid fever, smallpox, tuberculosis, and others, was
eventually found in almost every unit of the Union and Confederate armies.
It caused as great a loss of life as battle wounds. Medical care was
-91-
still very primitive, but above all no one was prepared, in the beginning,
for the devastation the weapons would cause on the battlefield. One
historical statement tells it all -- more lives were lost in the Civil
War than in all the other major wars combined.
James, at age 27, had probably never been out of the State of
Georgia. He waited a year before joining the Army, but he did join a
month before the draft was enforced in the South. Because the War was
fought away from Georgia in the beginning, I doubt if things changed
much there at first. The War must have been the main topic of conversa¬
tion at gatherings; therefore, he kept abreast of the situation. I suggest
he knew the draft was coming. I do not think the issue of slavery was his
reason for joining because he had no slaves. In James' case I suggest
that the politicians, backed by the large slave owners, brought the
threat of war to reality and he was coerced into it.
The Georgia 19th fought the War primarily in Virginia. Up until
late May of 1862, General Joseph E. Johnston was the Commander of the
Army of Northern Virginia. When he was wounded at Fair Oaks (Seven
Pines), Jefferson Davis appointed Robert E. Lee to take his place. When
Lee took over, Thomas J. (Stonewall) Jackson and James Longstreet were
made his two main Army Corps Generals. Brigades were controlled by the
Division and attached to each were several Regiments. The Georgia 19th
fought under the leadership of both James Longstreet's Corps and Stone¬
wall Jackson's Corps. The Regiments were subject to constant change from
brigade to brigade and, therefore, the 19th fought under the command of
both these famous Confederate leaders.
As James marched farther into Virginia and farther from Georgia,
he must have had doubts as to what this War would ultimately accomplish.
Then, as he became engaged in battle and the days turned into weeks, his
doubts might have lifted in that he was thankful that his family was
safe in Georgia and were not confronted with what he was seeing in
Virginia.
His thoughts must have drifted constantly back to Sarah and their
three children, his concern being the responsibility he had been forced
to leave with her. Since their children were small, she would have
everything to manage. He would not be there to provide, guide, or
protect her as had been a woman's way of life.
On May 7, 1862, just two months after James enlisted, the Georgia
19th went into combat in the vicinity of Eltham's Landing in Virginia.
They along with other Regiments, being part of a 10,592 Division strong,
kept a Union fleet, anchored off West Point, Virginia, and landing twelve
to sixteen Regiments with a battery of artillery, from gaining a strong¬
hold. They eventually drove the Union back under the protection of their
gunboats.
On May 31, 1862, the Georgia 19th fought at Fair Oaks or Seven
Pines. This battle is known by both names. This was to be James' first
major battle (5-31-1862 to 6-1-1862). The Confederate Army would suffer
6,134 casualties during this battle. James had not faced anything up to
this point in comparison to what he saw those two days. He witnessed
6,134 Confederate and 5,031 Union casualties on this battlefield. Earlier
battles such as this, due to the enormity of the task which confronted
the field surgeon, turned into a nightmare. Some wounded men were
inadvertently left on the battlefield, unattended, for as long as two
days until moved for treatment. The Georgia 19th Regiment, along with
four other Regiments, from a report submitted by Surgeon John T. Darby,
met with less loss than any others engaged.
-92-
9n August 26, 1862, the 19th crossed the Rapidan at Raccoon Ford
and arrived at Manassas Junction where they engaged in battle. They
destroyed the railroad bridge over Bull Run. On the 27th they marched
to Centerville and on across Bull Run, supporting Purcell's Battery
that evening. On the 28th they supported Braxton's Battery at forenoon
and marched to the railroad cut and engaged the enemy until dark,
retaining this position. On the 29th they moved to the left of the
railroad cut and engaged the enemy during the day and advanced with
General Pender and Thomas's Brigades in the evening, capturing the
enemy's guns. On August 30th they marched toward Fairfax Court House.
This had been James' second major battle, the Battle of Manassas or
2nd Bull Run (8-29-1862 and 8-30-1862).
To give us an idea as to what condition the Confederate Army of
Virginia was in in August of 1862, I refer to documentation found in the
Confederate Historical Association's papers, Vol. 24, Montgomery, Ala.,
March-April 1888. In an address made by Col. Samuel H. Stowe before
the survivors of Dixon's Rifle Regiment, North Carolina Volunteers, about
the Battle of Manassas or 2nd Bull Run (8-29-1862 - 8-30-1862), Col.
Stowe talked about a tribute given by a Union officer (not named), who
was captured after the Battle of 2nd Bull Run, to the Southern Army ....
"Their artillery horses are poor, starved frames of beasts, tied to their
carriages and caissons with odds and ends of rope and strips of rawhide;
their supply and ammunition trains look like a congregation of all the
crippled California emigrant trains that ever escaped off the desert ...
the men are ill-dressed, ill equipped and ill provided -- a set of
ragamuffins that a man is ashamed to be seen among, even when he is a
prisoner and can't help it. And yet they have beaten us fairly, beaten
us all to pieces, beaten us so easily that we are objects of contempt
even to their commonest private soldier with no shirts to hang out the
holes of their pantaloons, and cartridge boxes tied around their waists
with strands of rope." With documentation such as this with words
spoken by the enemy, an eye-witness to the scene, a Southerner is saddened
and proud at the same time. With this being the situation in August of
1862, one cannot comprehend what the remainder of the War was for the
South.
The weeks became months. The combat, the constant marching, the
dusty roads with a scorching southern sun or the rain with the mud,
wearing the same set of clothes for weeks. All this became routine.
The days without food due to supply trains not getting through, the
physical exhaustion, and all the physical discomforts he could accept.
But the emotional aspect of what this War caused cannot be surmised by
anyone. It was the stench left from the battles, the moaning and cries
of pain with rows of mangled bodies and splattered flesh that James could
not endure. He must have wondered how much more destruction, violence,
killing, and maiming of humans it would take before someone with authority
would finally realize it was achieving no useful purpose and would put an
end to this War of attrition.
But the War raged on with escalated fury and the Georgia 19th
marched on to Frederick, Maryland. This was to engage in the Battle at
Harper's Ferry, West Virginia (9-12-1862). On September 12th, James was
taken a Prisoner of War and appeared on a report of Confederates admitted
into the Union Army Hospital at Frederick, Maryland. The admittance date
was omitted but the transfer date from the Hospital to Ft. Delaware, Del.,
was October 22, 1862. While in the Hospital he was placed on a roll by
the Union Army as a Prisoner of War to be exchanged (10-2-1862). Finally
on November 10, 1862, he was exchanged at Aikens Landing, Virginia. He
-93-
appeared on a morning report as being received in the hospital, Camp
Winder, Richmond, Virginia, and did not return to duty until November 27,
1862.
James rejoined the Georgia 19th and marched on to his fourth major
battle, the Battle of Fredericksburg. It would be his last. From a
report by Stonewall Jackson: ("The War of the Rebellion" - official
records) "About 1 o'clock, (Sat., Dec 13# 1862) the main attack was
made by heavy and rapid discharges of artillery. Under the protection
of this warm and well directed fire, his infantry (the Union Army) in
heavy force advanced, seeking the partial protection of a piece of wood
extending beyond the railroad. The batteries on the right played on
their ranks with destructive effect. The advancing force was visibly
staggered by our rapid and well-directed artillery, but, soon recovering
from the shock, the Federal troops, consisting of the main body of
Franklin's grand division, supported by a portion of Hooker's grand
division, continued to press forward. Advancing within point-blank
range of our infantry, and thus exposed to the murderous fire of
musketry and artillery, the struggle became fierce and sanguinary. They
continued, however, still to press forward, and before General A. P.
Hill closed the interval which he had left between Archer and Lane it
was penetrated, and the enemy, pressing forward in overwhelming numbers
through that interval, turned Lane's right and Archer's left. Thus
attacked in front and rear, the Fourteenth Tennessee and Nineteenth
Georgia, of Archer's brigade, and the entire brigade of Lane fell back,
but not until after a brave and obstinate resistance." The Union was
eventually pushed back but with much loss to both the North and South.
James C. Richards was killed on the battlefield at Fredericksburg.
Fifteen in the Georgia 19th were killed that day.
Sarah C. Hesterly Richards, my great grandmother, filed an affi¬
davit to obtain the remaining pay due to James, from October 31# 1862,
until his death. Because there was no administrator for the estate and
women had few legal rights, Sarah was compelled to have her father,
Starling Tucker Hesterly come forward and verify her identity as the
widow of James C. Richards. With her father's help and signature on the
affidavit, Sarah filed on March 31# 1863# and was finally paid $32.97 on
August 12, 1864. This amount seems like a paltry sum to us but to Sarah
it could have been survival.
Upon my return from Fredericksburg, I read and researched for
more information about the War and the Georgia 19th. What I discovered
was profoundly dismal. I have tried to emphasize this by writing about
the path of this Georgia Regiment and constructed some idea of what
James faced as he fought and marched through Virginia from May until
December of 1862.
The Confederate Army has little documentation to be found today.
The volumes of "The War of the Rebellion," official records of the Union
and Confederate Armies, were an excellent source of documentation. The
reports are short and limited, but state where the Georgia Regiment was
and the dates. Written by
Mrs. Louise C. Haase
2893 Umberland Drive
Doraville, GA 3°3^0
An order blank for publications of the Carroll County Genealogical
Society is at the back of this issue.
-94-
__
JACOB W. ADAMS AND RACHEL S. VINCENT ADAMS
BIBLE RECORD
From
_
a Bible in the possession of
Mrs. Sara Adams Wood
42 Locust Street
Rome, GA 30161
Jacob W. Adams was born June the 18th 1818.
Racheal S. Adams was born Feb the 28 1820.
John Henry Adams was born Aug the 20 1842.
Betsy H. Adams was born June the 15 1844.
James H. Adams was born April the 26 1846.
Sarah J. Adams was born Jan the 18 1848.
Francis L. Adams was born Sept the 5 I850.
Racheal Abigail Adams was born June 12 1852.
Mary Rebecca Adams was born April the 12 1854.
Jacob N. Adams was born March the 8 1855*
Martha Adams was born June the (illegible).
William H. Adams was born Sept the 30 1859*
Isaac Elexander Adams was born May 15 1861.
Died Feb 2, 1938.
Isaac Elexander Adams married Sara Lue Hammonds Wilson, Dec. 23,
1894 in Floyd County.
Sara Lue Adams died Aug 2, 1947.
Hoyt Lee Adams was born Nov 29 - 1897.
Lillian Clemmons Cargle Adams was born June 20, I898.
Edna Lane Adams was born May 291 1920.'
Horace Clemmons Adams was born Jan 23, 1923*
Sarah Francis Adams was born Dec. 18, 1927*
Franklin Alexander Adams was born Nov. 28, 1935*
Hoyt Lee Adams died Feb 24, 1977*
Lillian Clemmons Cargal Adams died Oct. 8, 1971*
Mrs. Wood has submitted the following inquiry:
Looking for the parents of Jacob W. and Rachel S. Vincent Adams, md
May 12, 184l in Carroll County. Jacob b June 18, 1818 in SC. Rachel
b Feb 28, 1820 in SC. Jacob died in the Civil War and Rachel moved
to Bartow Co., GA, between i860 and I870. What happened to her three
oldest children, John Henry, James H., and Betsy A. Adams?
Carroll County Times, Friday morning, February 2, I872.
Mr. E. G. Kramer has during the past week moved into his new store in
the Edgeworth Building where he will be happy to see his many friends
and numerous customers. Mr. K. though but a short time in Carrollton
has built up for himself a fine reputation as a businessman and is
enjoying, as he merits, a splendid patronage in the large and commo¬
dious store into which he has just moved. He has plenty of "elbow
room" for "spreading himself" as he intends to do during the coming
year.
Carroll County Times, Friday morning, February 9, 1872.
On the 20th ult. lightening struck the house of Mr. Gresham living some
eight miles from West Point in Troup County severely injuring Mr. G.
and wife and instantly killing a son aged twelve years. Another son
and a nephew escaped unhurt. The smaller children in the bed near
which the lightening passed escaped unharmed.
95-
SOME DESCENDANTS OF THE HOOD FAMILY IN AMERICA
The first name of the father of the Revolutionary Soldier, William Hood,
is not known; however, it is known that he was Scotch-Irish and came to
America from Northern Ireland some years before 1739* His wife's maiden
name was Jordan, and she was of Dutch and Scotch-Irish descent. She
also arrived in America before 1739* They may have had a number of
children but the only one known is the above-named William Hood.
WILLIAM HOOD was born Tuesday, December 29, 1739» in North Carolina,
and died August 26, 1809, in Washington County, GA. He enlisted in 1782
in Captain Brevard's Company, 10th North Carolina Regiment, Continental
Line. He married CHRISTIANA HARRIS, born Monday, October 11, 1746, in
Washington County, GA, and she died in 1807 in Washington County, GA.
They had fifteen children:
1. Edward Hood born 20 June 1766.
2. William Hood "
3. Stephen Hood "
4. WHEY HOOD (See Below) "
5. Treasey Hood "
6. Allen Hood "
7. Nancy Hood "
8. Alexander Hood "
9. Allea Hood
10. Sion Hood
11. Greene Hood "
12. Bedea Hood )
13. Caliac Hood 3 triplets "
14. Bridget Hood)
15. Elizabeth Hood
12 May 1770.
6 Dec 1771.
30 Mar 1773.
26 Dec 1774, md Churchwell Harris.
1 Apr 1776.
12 June 1778.
8 Feb 1780.
28 Mar 1782.
28 Oct 1783.
4 Mar ,1785.
8 Dec 1787.
10 Feb 1790.
WILEY HOOD (#4 above) was born March 30, 1773» in Washington County,
GA, and died in 1814 in Newton County, GA. He married MARY BAKER (known
as POLLY BAKER) on September 27, 1798. She was born May 6, I78O in
Washington County, GA, and died August 27, 1846, in Coweta County, GA.
They had nine children:
1. Joshua Jordan Hood
2. Elizabeth Hood
3. Treasey Hood
4. Treasey Hood
5- Josa Hood
6. J0DA ALEXANDER HOOD
(See Below)
7. Rachel Hood
8. Wiley Hood
9. Katy Hood
born 1 Jan 1800.
" 13 Aug 1802.
" 4 Mar 1804 (died in infancy).
" 6 June I806.
" 15 Feb 1808.
" 12 May 1810
" 12 Dec 1811.
" 10 Nov 1813.
" 20 Jan 1815.
J0DA ALEXANDER HOOD (#6 above) was born May 12, 1810, in Washington
County, GA, and died December 16, 1846, in Island Shoals, Newton County,
GA. He married MARY CARTIS ROBERTSON (known as POLLY) on February 29,
1829. She was born August 4, 1813, in Washington County, GA, and died
June 17, 1892, in Bowdon, Carroll County, GA. She married (2) JAMES T.
ROBERSON, on September 26, 1855, in Henry County, GA. Joda Alexander
Hood and Mary Hood had nine children:
1. Falitha Hood born 16 Dec 1831.
2. Joseph Robertson Hood " 8 May I833 in Rocky Creek, Jasper
Co., GA; md Hattie E. Dingier;
d 29 Dec 1924, Randolph Co., AL.
-96-
Children of Joda Alexander Hood, Cont'd
3- born
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
Isaac Eason Hood
Rebecca Hood
BENJAMIN JODA HOOD
(See Below)
Elizabeth Hood
Zachariah Alexander Hood
Mary Hood
Margaret Alexander Hood
23 Feb 1835; d
14 Feb 1837; d
12 Feb 1839; d
19 Oct 1840.
20 June 1842.
30 May 1844; d
19 Oct 1846; d
12 May
8 June
1887.
1857-
1915.
14 Mar 1914.
1850.
BENJAMIN JODA HOOD (#5 above) was born February 12, 1839 > in Georgia
and died I887 in Benton County, Ark. He married SARAH CAROLINE PHILLIPS
in Carroll County, GA, December 23, 1858. She was born ca I838-9 to
ROBERT PHILLIPS (b ca 1792, SC; md 12 May 1814, Morgan Co., GA; d Carroll
County, GA) and MARY BECK PHILLIPS (b ca 1800, GA; d Carroll Co., GA) ,
and she died ca 1878-9 in Benton County, Ark. Benjamin md (2) MATTIE A.
CARROLL, July 24, 1886, Benton County, Ark. Benjamin and Sarah had six
known children:
1. Dora Hood
2. JERUSHA EMMA HOOD
(See Below)
3. Allis B. Hood
4. Hatta A. Hood
5. Joseph M. Hood
6. Robert A. Hood
born ca i860, GA; md Benjamin Greene,
Benton Co., Ark; d Calif (?).
" 18 July 1863* d 17 Aug 1946.
II
If
ca 1868, Ark.
ca 1870, Ark; md Frank Carney,
19 Mar I889, Benton County, Ark.
ca I876, Ark; d infancy,
ca I878, Ark; d infancy.
JERUSHA EMMA HOOD (#2 above) was born July 18, I863, in Carroll
County, GA, and died August 17» 1946, in Orange County, CA. She married
BENJAMIN ROCHESTER ABNEY on June 17, 1880, in Benton County, Ark. He
was born April 8, 1859» in Benton County, Ill., and died August 4, 1942,
in Orange County, CA. They had three children:
1. William Hood Abney
2. Thomas Monroe Abney
3. BEULAH MYRTLE ABNEY
(See Below)
born 16 May 1881; md Edna Barnes.
" 7 Aug 1886; md Mae-.
" 23 Aug 1889; d 18 Mar 1923.
BEULAH MYRTLE ABNEY (#3 above) was born August 23, I889, in Robinson,
Benton County, Ark. She died March 18, 1923» in Graham, TX. She married
NELSON BRIDWELL on September 21, 1907> in Beliefonte, Boone County, Ark.
He was born August 10, I883, in Hamilton County, Ill., and died May 5i
1965 in Las Vegas, Nev., and was buried in Phoenix, AZ. They had seven
children:
1. Gladys Gemono Bridwell
2. Modena Sarah Bridwell
3* Pauline Bridwell
4. William Bridwell
5. John Benjamin Bridwell
6. Rowdy Bridwell
7- Infant Bridwell
Submitted by Mrs. John Edwards
5010 Terrace Hgts. Drive
Yakima, WA 98901
born 16 Nov 1908.
" 22 Dec 1910;
" 16 May 1914.
" 28 Dec 1912.
" 12 Aug 1921.
d 9 Oct 1961.
d 1918.
d after 1918.
If you have family records like the above information, we would welcome
them for publication.
-97-
__
A LETTER FROM MARY JANE ABERCROMBIE SHOEMAKER
ABOUT 1912__
Mr. Lonnie Tubbs, 4360 Cunningham Drive, Wichita Falls, TX 76308, has
sent us the following letter, stating "I thought you might be interested
in the copy of a letter written by my G. Grandmother to the Dallas
Morning News. It was written about 1912. In 1850 she was living in
Carroll Co. In i860 she was living in Campbell Co."
DALLAS NEWS
I like to read the nice letter. I will try to tell something
I remember about relatives. I am the daughter of John Abercrombie.
He married Susan Hariet Hall. My grandfather, Thomas Abercrombie,
married Roda Rose. He died near Villa Rica. My grandfather William
Abercrombie lived in Fayette Co. Georgia, and died there. My grand¬
father Blake Hall married Miss Elizabeth Pessnell. My mother Susan
Abercrombie was the only child of Blake Hall and Elizabeth Pessnell.
My Great Grandmother Sallie Hall married Mr. Head.
I was raised in Carroll Co. GA. My first school teacher was
Miss Nancy Hanner. She married a Methodist preacher by the name of
Green. My next teacher's name was Roll Andrews, and my next teacher's
name was Needham Burnham. My next teacher's name was Roll Mitchell.
My next teacher's name was Hodge Raburn. My next teacher's name was
Miss (-rrow) Rhodann. That was in Campbell Co. GA at E Prays Mill
Church. I went to school at that place to Mr. Albert Taylor. My last
dear teacher's name was Lou Rilie, she taught school at Prays Mill
Church. My singing teacher was James R•• Turner. He taught school at
Wesley Chapel, which was about six miles from Villa Rica, GA.
Well I would be glad to get letters from relatives of any of the
above named families.
Sister let the children make all the racket they want to make.
The time may come when you want to hear them. I am sixty-eight years
old. I have one boy somewhere that I would be glad to see or hear
from if any of the readers of the News know him, write and I will
return the postage. His name is Hiram Hardy Shoemaker. I would be
glad to get a letter from him.
I live in Red River Co. near Clarksville. I came to Texas ten
years ago, I moved from Hancerville Cullman Co, Alabama to Garden
Valley, TX in Smith Co. Love to the News and its many readers.
Mary Jane Shoemaker
Cherry P.0. Red River Co.
Texas
GENEALOGICAL SKETCHES
From Memoirs of Georgia. Atlanta: Southern Historical Association, 1895,
Vol. I. These sketches are continued from the Summer Quarterly.
W. D. LOVVORN, farmer and miller, Bowdon, Carroll Co., Ga., son of James
and Bashaba (Traylor) Lovvorn, was born in Henry county, Ga., in I83I.
His great-grandfather, Elijah Lovvorn, came from Ireland to this country
before the revolutionary war, and was a soldier in the patriot army,
during which time he suffered many privations and great hardships. His
grandparents, James and Hannah (Smith) Lovvorn, were born in Virginia,
whence they moved to North Carolina, and afterward to Georgia, about
1800, and settled in what is now Morgan county. Subsequently they moved
98-
to St. Clair county, Ala. He was a soldier in the war of 1812. Mr.
Lovvorn's father was born in Morgan county in 1807 and went with his
father to Alabama, where he died. His mother was a daughter of Mijman
and Lidy (Lang) Traylor. Mr. Traylor was a soldier in the war of 1812
and was captured and confined in Fort Pickens. He was fond of fun and
jokes, and on one occasion when sweeping the floor an officer passed
him, and on the impulse of the moment he gave him a playful swipe with
the broom. The officer resented the apparent indignity, and the incident
came near involving him in serious trouble. He also served through the
Indian war of I836. Mr. Lovvorn was reared on the farm, in Alabama, and
was educated in the common country schools (walking three miles, some¬
times barefooted in the winter), taught in a dirt floor log house with
split log seats. After "graduating" he taught school himself a few
years. He was a justice of the peace many years, and in I872 was elected
to represent Randolph county in the legislature of Alabama -- the last
republican elected from the county0 In 1878 he removed from Alabama to
Carroll county, Ga., and bought and settled the large farming property
on which he now lives, and on which he has built and runs a large custom
mill. Mr. Lovvorn was married in Alabama in 1851 to Miss Sarah D.
Burden -- born in Elbert county, Ga. -- daughter of Henry and Sarah
(White) Burden. Her parents were born in Virginia, migrated to Georgia,
and settled in what is now Hart county, and afterward moved to Alabama,
where he died. Ten children blessed this union: Thomas J., Mary,
Gaines W., William J., Sarah R., Robert M., Martha E., Cindonia and
Henry 0. Mr. Lovvorn and his wife are members of the Missionary Baptist
church. He was one of the first county commissioners of the county, a
man of large property and a most substantial and highly-respected citizen.
WILLIAM H. MALONE, merchant, Villa Rica, Carroll Co., Ga., son of J. D.
and Mary (Hale) Malone, was born in Atlanta, Ga., in 1858. His paternal
grandparents were Jones and Lucy (Dumas) Malone, his grandmother Dumas
being a Huguenot refugee. Mr.
Malone's father was born in Union
district, S. C., in 1811. He was
educated at the Presbyterian college
at Marysville, Tenn., and came to
Georgia and settled in Atlanta in
1852. He engaged in merchandizing
and continued in business until
Gen. Sherman entered the city in
1864. He was then sent a prisoner
to Cambridge City, Ind., where he
remained until after the surrender,
when he came back to a farm he had
in Cobb county, Ga. Soon after that
he re-entered business in Atlanta,
but in I869 he had the misfortune
to be burned out, and returned to
his farm. Subsequently he went to
Villa Rica, where he died in I887.
He was a local preacher in the
Methodist church, an active worker
and a liberal contributor to all
movements having in view the ad¬
vancement of the church and the
progress and upbuilding of the
city. It was a genuine pleasure
to him to be helpful to others,
m
sys.
*4 -f
oiW. H. MALONE
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especially the poor, and many are the deeds, agreements and wills on
record in Fulton county written by him. A true man and a sincere
Christian, he lived beloved and died regretted.
On his mother's side Mr. W. H. Malone traces his ancestry far back
and through prominent family lines. The great-great-grandfather, George
Hale, came from England to America with Lord Baltimore. George, a
descendant of his, was a soldier during the revolutionary war, and
married a Miss Nancy Grant, who was a Scotch refugee. Alexander Hale,
their son and Mrs. Malone's grandfather, was born in Baltimore, Md.,
in 1768, and some time not long afterward his parents migrated direct
to territory since erected into the state of Tennessee, and settled in
what is now Blount county. John B. Hale, Mrs. Malone's father, son of
Alexander and Sarah (Billingslea) Hale, was born in Washington county,
Tenn., and married Miss Jane McClung, daughter of William and Euphemia
(Cunningham) McClung. The families of her parents were early settlers,
and prominent in Savannah, Ga., in social and commercial circles. Early
in the history of Tennessee her parents moved to that state, and the
house they lived in is still standing. Hon. J. C. Hale, Mrs. Malone's
brother, is an ex-state senator of Tennessee, and now holds a very
important position under the government of Washington. Mr. Malone was
reared in Atlanta, where he received a good education, and afterward
took an eclectic course at the university of Georgia. At the age of
eighteen he began teaching, and taught as many as six different schools
in different places. A part of the time he taught in Forsyth county,
where he read law and was admitted to the bar and practiced four years.
He taught school in villa Rica three years. When his father died, 1887»
he abandoned all other pursuits and assumed- control of his estate, in
the management of which he has been pre-eminently successful, and has
become the leading merchant and citizen of that part of the county. He
took great interest in the establishment of a high grade school in villa
Rica and was instrumental in the accomplishment of the object. He was
elected president of the board of directors, and occupies that position
to-day. Every movement inaugurated for advancing the interests of villa
Rica has had his support and substantial aid, and he contributes liber¬
ally to all church and moral enterprises. In 1894 he reluctantly
consented to become a candidate for the general assembly, and received
975 out of about 1,200 votes, although for competitors he had two of the
best citizens of the county. As he lives in an extreme corner of the
county the result is a very significant compliment. Mr. Malone was
married in 1884 to Miss Mary A. Knox, born and reared in Forsyth county,
Ga., daughter of Dr. J. R. and Martha (McAfee) Knox. Her parents on
both sides are among the best known and most influential families in
Cherokee county, Ga. To this happy union three children have been born:
Robert K., William H., and Ralph G. Mr. and Mrs. Malone are active and
prominent members of the Methodist church, and Mr. Malone is a member of
the masonic fraternity. In view of his age and what he has already
attained to in general popularity, in his standing in the commercial
world and in the political field, it is safe to predict for him wealth,
influence and political honors -- prosperity and usefulness.
D. R. MARTIN, farmer, Carrollton, Carroll Co., Ga., son of John C. and
Emily (Bates) Martin, was born in Coweta county, Ga., in 1846. His
paternal grandparents migrated from South Carolina to Coweta county in
I830. They came in the old-time block-wheel ox carts, and it took them
three weeks to make the journey. His grandfather was born in South
Carolina and was a farmer -- he, however, supplemented farming with blacksmithing and wood-working. Like other early settlers, he had to clear
the land on which he made his home. His father was born in South Carolina
in 1821, and his mother, daughter of David and Rhoda (Evans) Bates -- old
-100-
settlers -- was born in Wilkes county, Ga., in 1824. Mr. Martin was
reared in Coweta county, and, as were other boys at that time, was
educated in an old-time dirt floor log cabin and subjected to all the
inconveniences incident to them. In May, 1863, he enlisted in Company
K (Capt. George Short), First Georgia regiment (Col. Lester), for six
months, when the time expired he enlisted in the First Georgia cavalry
(Capt. H. A. North, under Col. Cruse) and was in many battles. He was
in front of Gen. Sherman's army from Marietta to Atlanta, and during
the "March through Georgia." He was in North Carolina at the time of
the surrender. Immediately after the event he returned to Carroll
county penniless, but with a firm will and a stout heart went to work.
In I869 he bought a tract of land with not a stick amiss on it, and
proceeded to make a farm and lay the foundation for a fortune. He made
a specialty of raising Irish potatoes and fruit, and his great success
has demonstrated his sagacity and wisdom. In 1893 he bought the land
on which he now lives, also virgin forest, which he has transferred
into one of the best improved farms in this community, and has built
on it one of the finest modern residences in the county. He is recog¬
nized as one of the leading and most successful farmers in Carroll
county; rich and getting richer. In I869 Mr. Martin was married to
Miss Mary Ann, daughter of E. B. and Ruth Ann (Curtis) Martin, both
born in Gwinnett county, Ga., who were among the early settlers of
Carroll county, by whom he had the following children: Henry C., Lou,
Ida, Mary and Claude. The mother of these children died in I887, and
in 1888 Mr. Martin married Nannie, widow of Thomas Dixon, and daughter
of Otha and Eliza (Curtis) Bell, born in Randolph county, Ga. To them
two children -- Laura and Susie -- have been born. Mr. Martin is a
Knight of Honor, and himself and wife are members of the Methodist
church. In farm management Mr. Martin is acknowledged to have few
equals -- no superiors. Content with the superior management of his
240-acre farm, its profitable returns and the esteem of his neighbors,
he is unambitious of public honors. Whatever he has is the result of
honest toil.
(These sketches will be continued in the next Quarterly.)
FOCUS OF RESEARCH
GARNER, GILES, HENDERSON, MORRIS.
Phil Garner, 197 Glover Cr., Newnan, GA 30263.
McCALL, MICHAEL, MIKELL, RIGDON.
Mrs. Elizabeth M. Herrington, 533 Suncrest Blvd., Savannah, GA 31410.
HENRY, MERRELL, WINN/WYNN. Especially interested in finding relatives
of James A. HENRY, born Mar 1845 (not sure of birthdate).
Gayle McCauley, 5720 Peachtree Pkwy., Suite 100, Norcross, GA 30092.
BARROW, CALDWELL, CHAMBERS, HIGHT.
H. Martin Chambers, 3625 Keswick Dr., Chamblee, GA 30341.
CUMBY/CUMBIE, KUGLAR, LOFTIN, WILSON.
Ann Loftin, 2707 Brook Dr., Morrow, GA 30260.
ODOM, WINKLE(S).
Margaret Martin, 4917 Staples, Fort Worth, TX 76133.
Have you sent us your Focus of Research? A blank for this information is
at the back of this issue.
-101-
QUERIES
GARNER, GRAY, GILES, GRIFFIN, HAMMOND, LEUDWARS, MORRIS, TOLBERT, YOUNG.
I would like to correspond with anyone doing research on Wylie Henderson
GARNER, h 15 Mar 1824, d 5 Mar 1889. He was md to Ellender (Nellie) W.
GILES. She d 30 Oct 1897. He was the son of William and Elizabeth
GARNER from Ya. Wylie is found in the 1850-60-70 Census of Coweta Co,
Ga and in the 1880 Carroll Co. Census. Wylie and Nellie had eight
children: (1) William T. GARNER md Mary GRIFFIN 23 Jan 18?0. (2)
James S. GARNER md Susan Martha MORRIS 26 Aug 1874. (3) Elijah GARNER
md Celia A. LEUDWARS 15 Jan I887. (4) Charles M. GARNER md Elizabeth
HAMMOND 7 Nov I87I. (5) Mary Elizabeth GARNER md John Walker GRAY
24 Mar I887. (6) Sarah A. GARNER md William C. TOLBERT 1 Aug I878. (7)
John Frank GARNER md Sallie YOUNG 21 Apr 1889- (8) Lucy GARNER never md.
.. Phil Garner, 197 Glover Circle, Newnan, GA 30263.
BAKER, CARGEL, DUNCAN, GRESHAM, GUEST, HAMMONDS, HUNTER, LEE, SCOGGINS,
WATSON, WOOD.
Looking for the parents of Andrew (b 1803 SC) and Jane (b 1815 SC)
CARGEL. Living in Walker Co, Ga in, i860 and I870. They had ten children.
John B. (b 12 Aug I836) and Jeannette GUEST HAMMONDS. Where were they
md? Where were they living in 1850, i860? Who were Jeannette's parents?
Alexander (Ellick) (b 1750 Orange Co, NC) and Mary GRESHAM SCOGGINS.
Need info on his parents or any of his family.
Ivy (b 1815 SC) and Matilda (b 1816 SC) DUNCAN. Living in Cherokee Co,
Ga in i860, in Chattooga Co. in I870. Who were their parents?
Edmond (b 1 Oct 1812) and Rhoda SCOGGINS BAKER.. Md 27 Dec 1833 in Troup
Co, Ga. Rhoda b 14 Oct 1810 dau of Gresham and Winnie WATSON SCOGGINS.
Who were Edmond's parents?
Charlie Franklin and Elizabeth LEE lived in Gwinnett Co, Ga I87O; Milton
Co, 1880. They had six children. What was Elizabeth's last name? Who
were their parents?
Looking for the parents of Timpie HUNTER LEE, md Thomas W. LEE in Milton
Co, Ga in 1879. Living in Forsyth Co, Ga in 1900. They had nine children.
Solomon Pinckney and Melinda WOOD, both b 1806 SC. Living in Cherokee
Co, Ala in 1860-70-80. Had eight children all b in Ga. Where were they
before i860? Who were their parents?
.. Sara Adams Wood, 42 Locust St., Rome, GA 30161.
ADAMS, McADAMS/MacADAMS, RODGERS.
William ADAMS resided Hickory Level ca 1848, believed from Pittsylvania
Co., Ya. Had a grandson Edmond R. in Ga. William, the brother of Samuel,
Lemuel (b 1797), Patterson (b ca 1803) and Anne RODGERS. Seek info on
William, his parents, and on family legend that surname in Ya was McADAMS
or MacADAMS.
.. Richard Boge, 2903 Woodland St., Abbotsford, B. C., Y2S 4E5, Canada.
BECK, HOOD, PHILLIPS, R0BERS0N/R0BERTS0N.
Who were the parents of Mary Cartis ROBERTSON, b 4 Aug 1813» prob Ga?
She md Joda Alexander HOOD 29 Feb 1829 either in Jasper or Newton Co.,
Ga. Mary HOOD md (2nd) James T. R0BERS0N/R0BERTS0N 1855 Henry Co, Ga.,
and removed to Carroll Co, Ga by i860. Seek info on Robert PHILLIPS and
Mary BECK who md 1814 Morgan Co, Ga, and were in Carroll Co. by 1840
where they remained.
.. Mrs. John Edwards, 5010 Terrace Hgts. Dr., Yakima, WA 98901.
BLACK, BURK, CRAIG.
I am working on Judge Lawson BLACK who md Mary Jane BURK. Their dau
Martha Ann BLACK md Hugh Lawson White CRAIG, son of John and Rhoda W.
CRAIG. Would like to hear from anyone working on these lines.
.. Elizabeth Webb Kern, 700 Swift Court, Matthews, NC 28105.
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MICHAEL, MIKELL.
I would like to correspond with anyone with info on the family of
Barnabus MICHAEL, b 1769 NC, and his wife Catharine, b 1770 NC, who were
in Carroll Co, Ga by I830. They moved from Tenn apparently. Were they
connected with the MICKELL/MICHAEL family of Bulloch Co, Ga, who came
from Cheraw Dist. SC to Ga, then on to Tenn, Ala, and Miss? Other family
names were William, James, and John.
.. Mrs. Elizabeth M. Herrington, 533 Suncrest Blvd. , Savannah, GA 31410.
MILLER, TAYLOR.
Need parents of Aaron MILLER who md Penelope TAYLOR. May be same as .
recorded in Newberry Co, SC 1810 Census. Was in Jasper Co, Ga before
moving to Carroll Co, Ga ca I830. Also need marriage record.
.. Rita B. Denman, 1008 Blue Ridge Place, Richardson, TX 75080.
HARPER, HENDERSON.
I am seeking info on Brooks HARPER and family. He moved from Jackson
Co, Ga to Murray Co, Ga. Is on the 1840 Census in Murray Co. with three
children. He md Mary HENDERSON in Jackson Co, Ga. Is Brooks H. HARPER,
a Civil War soldier from Carroll Co, Ga a son of Brooks and Mary HARPER?
Any info anyone can give me will be welcome. Will*be glad to share what
info I have.
Also seeking info on the family of Jones HENDERSON and wife Elizabeth.
They were in Jackson Co, Ga 1830. Went to Murray Co, Ga. The family is
listed on the 1850 Murray Co. Census. Not all the children went to
Murray Co. Their children were Sallie, Margaret, Millie, Caroline, Jane
Emaline, Robert, Benjamin, Levi, Henry, and John. If anyone knows any¬
thing about any of these children, please share the info with me.
.. Mrs. Mattie L. McDearis, 3831 Wilcox Blvd, Apt 44, Chattanooga, TN
37411.
HALL.
Who were Hiram HALL'S parents? He was b ca 1795 in SC, and lived in
Haralson Co, Ga. He md Charity-(?) and their children were Nancy,
William, Eveline, *Tyra/Tyre, Ailey, Parthena, and Green.
.. Geraldine Dilbeck, Rt 1, P. 0. Box 258-A, Porter, OK 7^454.
GRAY, LOLLIS, MUSICK, ROOKS, ROWE, WALKER, WITCHER.
Hannah A. WALKER, dau of Moses and Antoinette WALKER, md Francis M.
ROOKS, Carroll Co, Ga. She had one son named Moses Parks ROOKS. Were
there other children? Would like to correspond with Hannah's descendants.
Seeking info on parentage of Eli GRAY b ca 1805 NC, md Elizabeth MUSICK,
Coweta Co, Ga I836. Was listed on 1850 Carroll Co Census. Is Francis
GRAY related to Eli? If so, how? How is Annie GRAY related? Is George
MUSICK the father of Elizabeth?
My grandfather Joel Timothy WALKER md F. A. E. (Lizzie or Elizia) ROWE
ca I876-I877. Lizzia gave birth to a baby girl 30 Sep I878. The baby
was named Mary Frances Alberty. In 1880 Calhoun Co, Peaks Hill Dist,
Ala Census I find J. Timothy WALKER b 1855 Ga, male, farmer; Lizzia
WALKER b i860 Ga, female; Frances WALKER, age 2, female, b Ala; Mary ROWE,
age 40 (mother-in-law); James ROWE, age 8 (brother-in-law). Cannot locate
after 1880. In 1886 Joel Timothy WALKER md Ellen Zora WITCHER LOLLIS.
Can anyone help me with the ROWE family? What happened to Lizzia ROWE
WALKER and Mary Frances Alberty WALKER? Will some WALKER or ROWE
descendants help me? Will answer all letters and share any info.
.. Mrs. Gertrude W. Stone, 11 Casey St., Newnan, GA 30263.
We need your pedigree chart! We are beginning to print those sent to us
this year. Forms are at the back of this issue.
-103-
PEDIGREE CHARTS
Betty Brown Johnson, 536 Angie Way, Lilburn, GA 30247.
1. BROWN, Betty (Bettie), b 5 Sep 1927» Morrow, Clayton, GA; m 17 Oct
1945, South Gate, Los Angeles, CA, to Clifton Elmer JOHNSON (b
19 Apr 1926, Denver, CO).
2. BROWN, James Gladden Jr., b 7 July 1905* Jonesboro, Clayton, GA;
m 23 May 1924, Clayton Co., GA.
3. TRAMMELL, Verna Ruth, b 4 Jan 1907, Morrow, Clayton, GA.
4. BROWN, James Gladden Sr., b 12 Dec 1866, Macon Co, GA; m 14 Dec 1886,
Clayton Co; d 28 Oct 1935, Clayton Co, GA.
5. MANN, Laura Whitfield, b 7 Dec I87O, Clayton Co,- d 9 Oct 1959,
Clayton Co, GA.
6. TRAMMELL, Dorsey Cullen (Doss), b 31 July 1868, Lincoln Co, GA; m
25 Dec I898, Clayton Co; d 26 Oct 1958, Clayton Co, GA.
7. MITCHELL, Lilia Ophelia, b 15 Feb I878, Clayton Co; d 12 Sep 1974,
Clayton Co, GA.
8. BROWN, George Washington, b 4 Apr 1812, GA; m 13 Sep 1857, Carroll
Co, GA; d 3 July I870, Macon Co, GA; bur Carroll Co, GA.
9. HARMAN, Eliza Jane, b 25 Jan I83I, Meriwether Co, GA; d 25 July
1888, Carroll Co, GA.
10. MANN, Stephen Archie, b 12 Oct 1843, Butts Co, GA; m 23 Sep 1864,
Clayton Co, GA; d 1 Aug 1904, Clayton Co, GA.
11. HARRIS, Safronia Clark, b 17 Aug 1845, Fayette Co, GA; d 13 Aug
1930, Flintville, TN.
12. TRAMMELL, Wade Hamilton, b 10 June 1828, Lincoln Co, GA; m 6 Feb
I858, Lincoln Co, GA; d 23 Aug 1890, Clayton Co, GA.
13- CALLAHAM, Sarah Elizabeth, b 20 Feb 1840, Lincoln Co, GA; d 29 Mar
1931, Clayton Co, GA.
14. MITCHELL, James Thomas Monroe Branch, b 4 Mar 1856, Clayton Co, GA;
m 23 Dec 1874, Clayton Co; d 3 Mar 1931, Clayton Co, GA.
15. ADAMSON, Mary Matilda, b 6 June 1859; d 27 Nov 1943, Fulton Co, GA.
18. HARMAN, William May, b 25 Feb 1805; d 21 Nov 1862.
19. DILLARD, Nancy, b 1 June 1811; d 26 Feb 1885.
20. MANN, James Washington, b 22 Nov 1818; d 25 Sep I889.
21. SMITH, Elizabeth (Betsy), b 13 Dec 1820; d 25 Dec I889.
22. HARRIS, Guilford (Gifford), b 9 Sep 1779, NC; d 15 Feb 1864.
23. CLARK, Marie, b I803 GA.
24. TRAMMELL, William Sr., b 1770-80.
26. CALLAHAM, David, b 1783 SC.
27. CR0ZIER, Nancy Elizabeth, b 15 Apr 1804; d 12 July I879.
28. MITCHELL, Allen David, b 1816 GA; d 14 Sep 1864.
29. ESTES, Elmina, b 1821; d 1869.
30. ADAMSON, William J., b June 1831 GA; d 27 July I863.
31. SANDERS, Sarah (Sally), b 15 June 1833 GA; d 14 Apr I898.
36. HARMAN, Merriman, b 1784; d 1850.
37- MAY, Nellie, b 1784; d 13 Dec 1861.
38. DILLARD, Arthur.
39. ABNEY, Mary.
40. MANN, John J. Jr.
41. HARPER, Mary R., b 24 Feb 1796; d 28 Sep I870.
44. HARRIS, Robert Nelson, b NC; d 1820.
45. LONG, Elizabeth (Nancy).
52. CALLAHAM, John.
53 • -, Nancy.
56. MITCHELL, John Hinckley, b 1775; d 1862.
57- TH0MASS0N, Margaret.
58. ESTES, Allen Toney, b 4 Mar 1798 SC; d 12 Aug I879.
59. HAPPUNCH, Karen, b 18 Feb 1798; d 9 May 1857.
60 o ADAMSON, George Washington, b 22 Feb 1799; d 19 Mar I878.
61. COMER, Mary, b 1810; d 21 Mar I877.
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Betty Brown Johnson Pedigree Chart, Cont'd.
62. SANDERS, Henry, b 1799; d Nov 1861.
63. -, Elizabeth (Betty), b 1805; d 6 July 1886.
72. HARMAN, Zachariah Sr.
73* PETTY, Rebecca.
74. MAY, Joseph.
75. FISHER, Lettie.
76. DILLARD, Hiram.
80. MANN, John J. (Jones).
81. HARPER, Sarah Ann.
82. HARPER, Charter M.
83. -, Nancy
88. HARRIS, William.
89. CALDWELL, Ibbie.
120. ADAMSON, Greenberry, b 29 Oct 1770.
121. COATS, Sarah, b 1774; d 1849.
124. SANDERS, Edward (?).
Betty Bearden Gatliff, 1301 G. Ave., Lawton, OK 73501.
1. BEARDEN, Betty Dean, b 30 Dec 1928, Lawton, Comanche, OK; m 11 Feb
1951, to Richard William GATLIFF Jr, b 1 Jan 1929, Caddo Co, OK.
2. BEARDEN, James Hamilton, b 18 Jan 1902, Montgomery Co, AL; m 12 Aug
1923; d 22 Oct 1983, Medicine Park, Comanche, OK.
3. PATTERSON, Ina Etta, b 14 Oct 1902, Pauls Valley, Garvin, OK;
d 26 July 1976, Comanche Co, OK.
4. BEARDEN, John Thomas, b 11 June I865, Haralson Co, GA; ml Apr
1883; d 16 June 1947, Lawton, Comanche, OK.
5* CAMPBELL, Lula Idella, b 9 Mar 1897» Fairburn, Pulton, GA; d 15 Oct
19^2, Comanche Co, OK.
6. PATTERSON, Matthew Green, b 13 Jan 1877, Wilson Co, TN; m 25 Sep
1901; d 6 Feb 1949, Marlow, Stephens, OK.
7* SEYMOUR, Myrtle Mae, b 30 Jan 1886, Elmore City, Garvin, OK; d
9 Jan 1972, Marlow, Stephens, OK.
8. BEARDEN, Soloman T., b 1820, Clarke Co, GA; m 7 Feb 1847, Carroll
Co, GA; d ca 1970.
9* COCKWELL/COCKRELL, Elizabeth Ann, b ca 1825, Carroll Co, GA.
10. CAMPBELL, James Hamilton, b 1847, Payette Co, GA; m 29 Mar 1866.
11. WILSON, Martha Jane, b 1847, GA.
12. PATTERSON, William D. , b 1833-4 TN; m ca 1857; d McLellan Co. (•?),
TX.
13. -, Margaret (?), b I839 TN; d Waco, McLellan Co, (?) TX.
14. SEYMOUR, Charles Albert, b 23 Nov 1850, Washington Co, Ark; m 1881;
d 3 Aug 1925* Sterling, Comanche, OK.
15. MEADORS, Dora, b 13 Nov 1866, Tyler, Smith, TX; d 4 Aug 1958,
Stevens Co, OK.
16. BEARDEN, Edward, b ca 1789 NC or GA; m2 Jan 1834; d ca 1848,
Fayette Co, GA.
17. WATSON, Martha, b 179^-1800; d I83O-I.
20. CAMPBELL, Thomas Edward, b 1821 GA; m 21 Oct 1845, Fayette Co. GA;
d I858, Fayette Co, GA.
21. BEARDEN, Cynthia, b 1829, Clark Co, GA; d I858, Fayette Co, GA.
28. SEYMOUR, Robert, b 1 Nov 1813, Eng.; m 1844, Washington Co, Ark;
d 12 Aug 1894, Garvin Co, OK.
29. INGRAM, Elizabeth, b 19 Mar I83O; d 7 Nov I858, Ark.
30. MEADORS, Elijah, b 1846 GA.
31* HILL, Elizabeth, b TN; d ca I879.
42. BEARDEN, Edward (See #16 above).
-105-
_
CARROLL COUNTY GENEALOGICAL SOCIETY
Continued from the Summer Quarterly
1985 MEMBERS
and
_
as of May 15, 1985.
104. Miss Maxine Alcorn, IO38 Althea, Houston, TX 77018.
105. Mrs. Karen Anderson, P. 0. Box 8612, Honolulu, HI 96830.
106. Mrs. Mary Arp, 1101 E. Brenda, Casa Grande, AZ 85222.
107. Karan A. Berryman, P. 0. Box 234, Cuthbert, GA 31740.
108. Gusterine Bowers, Rt 1 Box 215, Ore City, TX 75683.
109. Lowell H. & Erlene C. Boyd, 1539 Flat Rock Rd., Villa Rica, GA 30180.
110. Mrs. Monte Browne, 412 Manor House, Boaz, AL 35957.
111. Mrs. Brenda M. Buchanan, P. 0. Box 171091, Arlington, TX 76003.
112. Mrs. Josephine M. Bush, P. 0. Box 328, Huntsville, TX 77340.
113* Mr. John T. Caldwell, 322 Kimberly Lane, Los Alamos, NM 87544.
114. Billy S. & Orpha Lou Carson, 109 Walker Dr., Pineville, LA 71360.
115. Mrs. Christine Carter, 98 Head Ave., Tallapoosa, GA 30176.
116. Mrs. Gwyn B. Clay, I85 Cottage Hill Rd. , Carrollton, GA 3OH7.
117. Mrs. Dona C. Cohen, 3612 Spring Valley Rd., Birmingham, AL 35223.
118. Mr. & Mrs. 0. B. Copeland, 383 Shades Crest Rd., Birmingham, AL
35226.
119* Mrs. Faye Bonner Coppedge, P. 0. Box 834425, Richardson, TX 75080.
120. Anna C. Corn, 3350 Due West Rd. NW, Marietta, GA 30064.
121. Mrs. Geraldine Dilbeck, Rt 1, P. 0. Box 258A, Porter, OK 74454.
122. Mrs. A. W. Earnest, 84 Henderson St., Carrollton, GA 30117.
123. Minnie L. Earnest, 215 Piedmont Ave. NE, Unit 503, Atlanta, GA 30308.
124. Mrs. John Edwards, 5010 Terrace Hgts. Dr., Yakima, WA 98901.
125. Mrs. Sue M. Elliott, 444 Ridge Rd., Birmingham, AL 35206.
126. Jenny Martin Fagg, 4314 Nenama, Houston, TX 77035.
127. Mr. William C. Friddell Jr., 3 Poplar Ave., Merchantville, NJ 08109.
128. Mrs. Jessie L. Glover, Rt 6 Box 114, Ada, OK 74820.
129* Marie Gray, P. 0. Box 399» Blountsville, AL 35031.
130. Mrs. Violet S. Henry, 5334 Scofield Rd., College Park, GA 30349.
131. Mrs. Elizabeth M. Herrington, 533 Suncrest Blvd., Savannah, GA 31410.
132. Mrs. Dorris Holland, Rt 9 Box 549, Hwy 120 Conn., Dallas, GA 30132.
133* Mrs. Margaret C. Hollingshaus, 1834 Meadow Downs Way, Salt Lake City,
Utah 84121.
134. Mr. Singleton Jackson, 106 N. Lakeshore Dr., Carrollton, GA 3OH7.
135* Mrs. Meredith Jacobs, 6076 Belle Meade Dr., Villa Rica, GA 30180.
136. Mrs. Betty B. Johnson, 536 Angie Way, Lilburn, GA 30247.
137* Mrs. Tommie A. LaCavera, 419 Boulevard, Athens, GA 30601.
138. Mrs. Edna S. Lackey, 109 Lakeview Dr., Carrollton, GA 3OH7.
139. Mrs. Martha A. Lassetter, 755 Lakeshore Dr., Lexington, KY 40502.
140. Mr. Robert L. Masdon, P. 0. Box 806, Newnan, GA 30264.
141. Mrs. Gayle McCauley, 5720 Peachtree Pkwy, Suite 100, Norcross, GA
30092.
142. Mattie L. McDearis, 3831 Wilcox Blvd., Apt 44, Chattanooga, TN 37411.
143. Mrs. G. E. McLendon, 2545 Browns Mill Rd. SE, Atlanta, GA 30354.
144. Miriam C. Merrell, Chateau Apts. A-3, Carrollton, GA 30117.
145. Mrs. Betty Metcalf, 1402 Mosseycup Dr., Farmington, NM 87401.
146. Mr. Ivan Joe Miles, 2912 Mimosa Dr., Newport, AR 72112.
147. Mr. S. L. Millican, P. 0. Box 335, Commerce, GA 30529.
148. Mrs. Wilma C. Moody, 3074 Jett Dr., Doraville, GA 30340.
149. Mr. Ned C. Morris, 1205 W. Richard, Kingsville, TX 78363.
150. Estelle B. Owen, 3810 Brookwood Dr., Phenix City, AL 36867.
151. Mrs. Thelma Pate, 199 Old Five Notch Rd., Whitesburg, GA 30I85.
152. Mr. Thomas M. Phillips, 6040 Tahoe PI., Camarillo, CA 93010.
153* Mr. L. Richard Plunkett, 152 City Hall Ave., Bowdon, GA 30108.
154. Mickey A0 & Connie B. Posey, P. 0. Box 1612, Douglasville, GA 30133.
-106-
155* Mr. & Mrs. Robert A. Roberds, 4631 Grammar Ave., Metaire, LA 70001.
156. Mrs. George R. Roberts, Rt 3 Box 75-Y, Galveston, TX 77551.
157* Mr. Angus P. Robinson Jr., 228 E. 144th St., Dolton, IL 60419.
158. Dr. Jerry C. Robinson, P. 0. Box 910, Carrollton, GA 30117.
159* Harold & Betty Sharp Smith, 825 Austin Dr., Smyrna, GA 30080.
160. Mrs. Sara Stapler, Rt 2 Box 271, Buchanan, GA 30113*
161. Mrs. Paula Wilson Steed, 175 Dogwood Lane, Bowdon, GA 30108.
162. Mrs. Hildred M. Stratton, 1202 Donelson Ave., Old Hickory, TN 37138.
163. Mrs. Sherrie Rowe Walton, P. 0. Box 249, Social Circle, GA 30279.
164. Mrs. Faye Ward, 511 Alabama Ave., Bremen, GA 30110.
165. Mrs. Fred Watts Sr., 600 Glenwood Place SE, Atlanta, GA 30316.
166. Mrs. Ada V. Wester, P. 0. Box 102, Tularosa, NM 88352.
167. Mr. Ollie Lee Williams Jr., 1473 Vine St., Gainesville, GA 30501.
168. Mrs. Sharelle K. Williams, P. 0. Box 56, Soso, MS 39^80.
169. Mrs. Alice M. Williamson, l6ll Seneca Lane, Las Vegas, NV 89109*
170. Mrs. Wiley A. Wilson, 570 Wiley Wilson Rd., Bowdon, GA 30108.
171. Mrs. Frank D. Wood, 42 Locust St., Rome, GA 30161.
172. Dr. & Mrs. J. J. Word, 1238 West Hwy 166, Bowdon, GA 30108.
173* Mrs. Joanne S. Pirkle Wright, 105 Knoll Crest Dr., Birmingham, AL
35209.
(This list will be concluded in the next Quarterly.)
INDEX - FALL 1985
Abercrombie 97
Abney 96 103
Addams see Adams
Adair 78 81-84
Adams 81 9^ 101
Adamson 103 104
Adkerson 85
Alcock 85
Alcorn 105
Anderson 85 105
Andleton 85
Andrews 97
Archer 89 93
Arnold 75 87
Arp 105
Atwell 86
Ausley 86
Awtr(e)y 82
Bacus 80 81
Bagwell 76 78-81
83
Baker 85 87 95
101
Bales 87
Ball 87
Ballard 85
Baltimore 99
Bankston 89
Bap 87
Barganer 87
Barnes 96
Barron 85
Barrow 100
Bateman 87
Bates 99
Baukus see Bacus
Beall 85
Bearden 104
Beck 87 88 96 101
Berryman 105
Billingslea 99
Bivins 81 85
Black 83 84 87 101
Blackshear 87
Blair 81
Boge 101
Bolton 88
Bone 82
Bowen 81
Bowers 105
Boyd 105
Bradberry 87
Bradford 85
Branan 89
Brantley 88
Braxton 92
Brazell/Brazzill
83 84
Brengle 89
Brewer 84
Bridwell 96
Bronjohn 89
Brooks 81
Brown(e) 85 88 103
104 105
Bryon 86
Buchanan 105
Buckner 79
Burden 98
Burges(s) 80 81
Burk 74 101
Burn(e)s 81 83
Burnham 97
Bush 85 105
Calaway 82
Caldwell 76 100
104 105
Callaham 103
Cam(e)ron 88
Campbell 104
Cargal/Cargle
94 101
Carnes 80
Carney 96
Caroline 79 80
Carr 85
Carroll 96
Carson 105
Carter 85 105
Cary 84
Chambers 75 78 79
80 82 83 100
Chandler 82 83
Cheaves/Cheves/
Chieves 7^-80
Childers 81 84
Chrisolin 88
Clark 87 103
Clay 105
Clayton 86
Clinton 82
Clutchfield 85
Coal see Cole
Coats 104
Cockrell/Cockwell
104
Cohen 105
Cole 81 86
C olhorp/C oltharp
81 83 84
Colwell 80
Comer 103
Copeland 105
Coppedge 105
Coraline see
Caroline
Corksey 85
Corn 105
Cox 73 85 88(2) 89
Craig 101
Crompton 87
Crozier 103
Cruse 100
Cullens 84 89
Cumbie/Cumby 100
Cunningham 99
Curtis 100
Darby 91
Darnald 77
Darsey 88
Davis 82 85 89 91
Delsey 81
Denman 102
Dent 85(5) 89
Denton 76
Dickson 81 82
-107-
Dilbeck 102 105
Dillard 103 104
Dingier 95
Dixon 92 100
Dorothy 85
Driggors 87
Driver 73
Dumas 98
Duncan 88 101
Dunn 87 89
Dyer 82
Early 85
Earnest 105
Eastwood 84
Eckles 87
Edwards 96 101
105
Eiland 86
Eldridge 86
Elesbery see
Elsbury
Elizabeth 82
Ellet 86
Ellick 80
Elliott 105
Ellison 81
Elms 86
Elsbury 81 82
Elton 88
En(d)sley 80 81
83
Ennis 88
Erwin 86
Estes 103
Evans 99
Fagg 105
Farmer 87
Fielder 74 75 78
Finch 74 77 79
Fisher 104
Flemellen 87
Fowler 89
Franklin 93
Frasure 88
Freeman 88
Friddell 105
Gains 84 87
Gardner 73
Garner 80 81 82
83 100 101
Garst 78 84
Gatliff 104
Giles 100 101
Glenn 86
Glispon 89
Glover 89 105
Godoin 86
Goodman 84
Goolsby 85
Gordon 87
Gordy 84 89
Graddy 85
Grant 85 99
Gray 89 101 102
105
Grayham 89
Green(e) 96 97
Gregory 88
Gresham 94 101
Griffen 86
Griffin 88 89 101
Grobbs 78
Grubbs 80
Guest 101
Guice 88
Gurley 82
Haddock 81
Hale 98 99
Hall 86 97 102
Hamby 89
Hammond(s) 101(2)
Hampton 85 86
Hamrick 74 86
Hannah 81
Hanner 97
Hansard 87
Happunch 103
Hargroves 84
Harman 103 104
Ha(r)per 74 75 77
78 79 80 102 103
Harris 95(2) 103
104
Hartsfield 81
Harwell 85
Hasty 88
Hatcher 84
Haynes 78 80 81
83 84
Hays 85
Head 97
Henderson 81 82
88 100 102
Henry 100 105
Herrington 100
102 105
Hesterly 90 93
Hichorason 86
Hight 100
Hill 93 104
Holland 85 105
Hollingshaus 105
Hood 95-96 101
Hooker 93
Horn 86
Hoskins 86
Houldridge 88
House 73
Houston 88
Howard 85 86
Hubbard 85
Huckeby 82 83 84
Huff 82
Hulsey 80 81 83
Hunter 74 79 86
101
Hutchins 90
Hyden 82 83 84
Ingram 104
Jack 79 80
Jackson 83 84
87(2) 91 93 105
Jacobs 105
James 86
Jenkins 80
Jenny 83
Jimkins see
Jenkins
Johns(t)on 81 83
86(3) 91 103 104
105
Joiners 88
Jolly 8'9
Jones 77 88 89
Jordan 88 95
Judith 81
Keaton/Keeton 80
81 82
Kern 101
Kimbell 87
King 88
Knight 85
Kramer 94
Kuglar 100
LaCavera 105
Lackey 73 105
Lacy 85
Landers 85
Lane 93
Lang 98
Lassetter 105
L(e)athers 81 82
Lee 86 91 101
Lester 100
Leudwars 101
Lieuellen 84
Ligon 84
Lipham 80
Lockhart 88
Loftin 100
Lollis 102
Long 103
Longstreet 91
Lovelle 87
Lovvorn 97~98
Luckie 84
Lurin 88
Lydia 81
MacAdams 101
Majors 78 83 84
Malinda 81
Malone 87 98-99
Manley 86
Man(n) 77 80-82
103 104
Man(n)ing 86 87
Market 85
Marshall 86
Martin 99 100(2)
Masdon 105
Mathews 83
Mathis(s) 81
Mattos 82
Mattox 88
May 103 104
McAdams 101
McBeer 82
McBreer 82
McCall 100
McCauley 100 105
McClammy 87
MeClung 87 99
McCune 89
McCurdy 82
McCurter 81
McDaniel 88
McDearis 102 105
McGahee 73
McGuirt 77
Me Hampton 89
McKee 88
McLendon 105
McLeod 87 89
McRee 86
McSpaden 83
Meador(s) 75 104
Meadow 78
Merrell 80 100 105
Metcalf 105
Micall 74
Michael 79 80 81
82 83 100 102
Mi (c )kell 100 102
Miles 105
Miller 80 81 83 86
102
Millican 105
Milsap 85
Mims 85
Mitchell 97 103
Moody 105
Moon 88
-108-
Morrice see
Morris
Morris 78 80 100
101 105
Morrison 86
Morrow 73
Moultree/Moultri/
Mouttine/Mouttne
84 85(3)
Murphy 88
Murray 88
Muse 74-79
Musick 102
New 84
Newell 87
Nix 87
North 100
Northington 89
Odom 84 100
Oliver 87
Orr 85 86
Osborn 87 88
Owen 87 105
Pace 77 78 84
Pain(e) see Payne
Pane see Payne
Parnell 86
Pate 105
Patterson 88 104
Payne 75 80
Pender 92
Peoples 88
Pessnell 97
Petty 104
Phillips 96 101
105
Phipps 89
Plunkett 105
Poole 87
Posey 86 87 105
Powell 88
Poyner 88
Pray 74
Prince 86
Purcell 92
Puyear 89
Quicks 87
Rabu(r)n 74 75 78
79 80 97
Ramsey 84(2)
Razor 89
Rees 86
Reeves 73
Register 86
Rhodann 97
Richards 84 86 90
91 92 93
Richardson 86
Rigdon 100
Rilie 97
Roberds 73 105
Roberson 95 101
Roberts 82 87 105
Robertson 95 101
Robinson 87 89
105
Roddy 84
Ro(d)gers 82 86
101
Rooks 102
Rose 97
Rounsey 88
Rowe 85 102
Rucks 85
Ruppin 81 83
Ryan 87
Sanders 88 103
104
San(d)ford 82
Saxon 89
Scales 74
Scarborough 85
Scoggins 101
Scott 88
Seymour 104
Shannon 76 79 80
Sharp 86
Sheats/Sheets 74
77-82
Sherman 98 100
Shoemaker 97
Short 100
Simpson 89
Sims 74 75 79
Skinner 84
Smedley 84
Smith 82 86(2)
88(2) 89(2) 97
103 106 87(2)
Sparkman 73
Spence 88
Spooner 86
Spurlock 89
Stalham 87
Stapler 106
Steed 106
Step(h)ens 74 75
80
Stevens 89
Stewart 83
Stokes 85
Stone 102
Stowe 92
Stratton 106
Strickland 78 80
82 88
Stricklin see
Strickland
Stringfellow 87
Sutton 88 89
Swindle 90
Taylor '85 97 102
Therp 86
Thias 82
Thomas 92
Thomasson 103
Thompson 88
Tillman 88
Tolbert 87 101
Tooke 87
Torke 87
Trail 85
Trammel(1) 81 83
103
Trapp 83
Traylor 97 98
Treadwell 86
Tubbs 97
Turner 89 97
Tyson 74 75 77-80
88
Usher 86
Vickers 86
Wade 88
Waits 88
Walker 102
Wall(s) 86 88
Wallee 81
Walton 106
Ward 88 106
Ware 87
Washington 81 82
Watkins 88
Watson 86 101 104
Watts 106
Webb 73 101
Weslers 89
Wester 106
White 88 98
Whitley 81
Whitlock 85
Whorton 87
Wilder 80
Wildes 78
Wil(l)kerson 75 80
Wilkinson 85 87
Willaby 86
William(s) 81-84 87
106
Williamson 106
Wilson 94 100 104
106
Wingfield 84
Winkle(s) 100
Winn 100
Wise 86
Witcher 102
Wood(s) 75 79 94
101 106
Wooton 81
Word 106
Worsham 89
Wright 85 106
Wynn 100
Yarber/Yarbrough
74 80 83
Yat(e)s 75 80 81
82 88 89
Young 101
Youngblood 86
We welcome your family histories, copies of Bible records, and material
related to Carroll County and surrounding areas for publication. We are
starting to print the pedigree charts sent to us this year, so please
send us yours if it has not yet appeared in the Quarterly. We also need
your queries, and a blank for your focus of research is at the back of
this issue. Also at the back of this issue is an order for publications
of the CCGS. Any suggestions as to how we can improve the Quarterly are
sincerely appreciated. Let us know what you would like to see in the
Quarterly.
PLEASE USE EITHER BLACK INK OR A BLACK TYPEWRITER RIBBON.
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Vatkar at No. II,
Motbor at No. II,
Fttbor at No. 12,
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F tutor
y No. 13,
MoUtor ol No. 13.
FtUior at No. 14
,
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a No. 14,
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a No. 13.
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Checks for the following are to be made payable to the Carroll County
Genealogical Society, P.
1985
0.,
MEMBERSHIP
Box 576, Carrollton,
BLANK
GA 3QH7 •_
Enclosed is my check for membership in the CCGS.
$10.00 for individual membership. $12.50 for family membership.
Name(s)
__
__Address
Phone
__
No. ____
All 1985 Quarterlies will be mailed to you as a member, one copy only.
FOCUS OF RESEARCH
Please enter the following names, on which I am doing research, in the
Quarterly :__ _
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(No charge for this service)
ORDER FOR PUBLICATIONS OF THE SOCIETY
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i860 Carroll County Census - $9.00 $
Quarterlies:
1980 All 3 $10.00 $
1981 Spring $3.00 $
1981 Summer $3*00 $
1981 Fall-Winter
$5.00
1982 Spring $3.00
1982 Summer 83*00
1982 Fall $3.00
1982 Winter $3.00
1983 Spring $3.00 $
1983 Summer 83*00 8
1983 Fall $3.00 8
1983 Winter $3.00 $
1984 Spring $3.00 8
1984 Summer 83.00 8
1984 Fall $3.00 $
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Total Enclosed- $
My name, address_____
All checks for membership and for the above order are to be made payable
to the Carroll County Genealogical Society, P. 0. Box 576, Carrollton.
= * = * = * = * = * = * = •*:=*=: * = *=:*= *= *=: « = * = * = * = * = * = * = *= *=* = * =* = # = * = * = * = *= * = * = * = * = *= * =
CARROLL COUNTY CEMETERIES BOOK ORDER
Please send me the large 842-page book on Carroll County Cemeteries. My
check for $30.00 is enclosed.
____
Name____
Mail this form with your check payable
Address
to the
Phone
Carroll
__
No._
County Genealogical
Society to Mr. C. P. Tigner, 3312 Oak Grove Church Rd., Carrollton, GA
30117.
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PLEASE NOTE - All correspondence with the Society, all contributions to
the Quarterly, all checks for Society membership and publications are to
be sent to the Carroll County Genealogical Society, P. 0. Box 576,
Carrollton, GA 30117. The only exception is your order for the Cemetery
Book to be sent to Mr. Tigner at the address listed on the above order.
Please allow 4-6 weeks for delivery on all publications.
Spec
Coll
CC7 (1)
Fall
1985