Note: This is a continuation from a previous post. To start back at part 1, click here.
Tuesday, March 12, 2019
What happened to John Powell? Part 2
Note: This is a continuation from a previous post. To start back at part 1, click here.
Sunday, January 13, 2019
What happened to John Powell? Part 1
In genealogy circles, they are referred to as "Brick Walls" - genealogical puzzles that refuse to be solved, no matter how much research you do. I have one that has plagued me for several years now - my 2nd great-grandfather on my Powell line. He married my 2nd great-grandmother, Hattie Gregory, sometime around 1890, fathered my great-grandfather, James Edward Powell, who was born in 1891, and then seemingly dropped off the face of the earth.
Saturday, September 8, 2018
The Murder of Jacob Black
For today's post, I'd like to investigate an incident that took place over 78 years ago, not to a direct ancestor of mine, but to his brother. That distant uncle's name is Jacob Riley Black. On February 19, 1940, Jacob Black was murdered. Or was he?
My 3rd great-grandparents, Riley and Elvina Mauldin Black, were the parents of fifteen children - five girls and ten boys. One of those children was my second great-grandfather, Andrew Paul Black, whose history I will explore in a later post. However, great-great-grandpa Andrew Paul ("Paul") had a brother named Jacob. That makes Jacob my third great-uncle, or the uncle of my great-grandmother, Myrlie Catherine Black Foster.
Sunday, July 22, 2018
William Henry and Nancy Jane Knight Davis
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"Aunt Marthie" - Martha Jane Davis (1918-2003) |
Saturday, July 21, 2018
My DNA Story
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My Ancestry DNA Ethnicity Estimate. |
Saturday, July 14, 2018
The Mystery that Started It All (part 3)
Note: This is a continuation from previous posts. To start back at part 1, click here.
As a preteen or very young teenager, my grandmother was sent by her mother and stepfather to live with her paternal grandmother in Elberton, Georgia. Grandma Eva’s father, James David Parham, had passed away from a gastric hemorrhage caused by a peptic ulcer in 1937, when my Grandma was only nine years old. Her mother, my great-grandmother, who I always knew as “Grandma Bobo” (Annie Mae Jones Parham Bobo) had remarried Snow Robert Bobo just shy of a year later on September 19, 1938.
The story that has always been told through the family is that Grandma Eva's older brother (James David Parham, Jr.) joined the military, and that shortly thereafter Grandma Eva was sent to live with her grandmother. However, I have had some difficulty making that timeline work, as my records show that James joined the Navy in June 1944, which would have been well after Grandma Eva moved to Elberton. At any rate, at some point between 1940 and 1943, Grandma Eva ended up living with her Grandma Parham in Elberton, Georgia.
As a preteen or very young teenager, my grandmother was sent by her mother and stepfather to live with her paternal grandmother in Elberton, Georgia. Grandma Eva’s father, James David Parham, had passed away from a gastric hemorrhage caused by a peptic ulcer in 1937, when my Grandma was only nine years old. Her mother, my great-grandmother, who I always knew as “Grandma Bobo” (Annie Mae Jones Parham Bobo) had remarried Snow Robert Bobo just shy of a year later on September 19, 1938.
The story that has always been told through the family is that Grandma Eva's older brother (James David Parham, Jr.) joined the military, and that shortly thereafter Grandma Eva was sent to live with her grandmother. However, I have had some difficulty making that timeline work, as my records show that James joined the Navy in June 1944, which would have been well after Grandma Eva moved to Elberton. At any rate, at some point between 1940 and 1943, Grandma Eva ended up living with her Grandma Parham in Elberton, Georgia.
Tuesday, July 10, 2018
The Mystery that Started It All (part 2)
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Bonnie Rose Bryant, 9/30/46 - 7/28/47 |
For most of my life, I lived right next door to my paternal grandparents. My parents bought the house I grew up in when my mom was pregnant with my sister and I was barely five years old. When I was in elementary school, I would walk the block and a half home from school straight to my grandparents' house to stay. Even when I started middle school and became older and more trustworthy, I would first check in with Grandma (and get a snack, because, well ... she was my sweet southern Grandma and that's what sweet southern grandmas do!) before going next door to my house to do homework and chores until my parents got home from work. But I almost always stopped in at Grandma's house first.
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