I have a collection of 32 electronic census spreadsheets that I am happy to share with anyone who wants to download a free copy. The spreadsheets will allow you to electronically organize and archive your extracted census records. The collection includes the federal census (1790-1920), special schedules including slave and veterans, and spreadsheets for the state censuses of Iowa, Kansas, Massachusetts, New York and Wisconsin. I also have spreadsheets for Canada, England, Ireland, and Scotland. I just added 3 spreadsheets for the state of Minnesota and I expect to finish New Jersey and Rhode Island in July. I created them with MS Excel 97 and they require Excel 97 or 2000 to use them. I have a website at http://www.censustools.com where you can see screenshots of all of the spreadsheets, read about them in more detail, and of course download whatever you need. Gary Happiness is helping a stranger find their roots. __________________________________________________ Do You Yahoo!? Get personalized email addresses from Yahoo! Mail http://personal.mail.yahoo.com/
I think you are referring to the Poplar Creek in Montgomery County. It is located on Highway 43 and 407, very close to the Attala County line. There are several cemeteries in the area, just not sure names of all. Take Highway 82 to Winona and Highway 43 from Winona. Good luck in finding. Have many relatives buried in and around area. shirleyb@netdoor.com ----- Original Message ----- From: <JJ3096@aol.com> To: <MISSISSIPPI-L@rootsweb.com> Sent: Wednesday, June 20, 2001 11:32 AM Subject: [MISSISSIPPI] Directions Hi folks.. Just dropped in for assistance...Could anyone give me directions or a website to find directions to Poplar Creek -Poplar Creek Cemetery. I am assuming from the information that this is the name of the cemetery.. which is next to a church there. BTW, what county is this in?? Have a funeral to attend this upcoming Saturday, in case we get lost in finding church and cemetery I might need some definite directions. So many times the cemeteries are on back roads in the hills. We will be coming from Greenville, MS on highway #82. If you live in or near Poplar Creek, this will be the Dennis and Linda Garrett funeral...both recently killed in a tragic auto accident. Descendants of living parents Denton and Suesie Garrett of Greenville. I understand this cemetery is a longtime location of ancestors. Thanks for any help. Jennifer of MS Delta ==== MISSISSIPPI Mailing List ==== Visit the Mississippi-L Website at http://www.rootsweb.com/~mississi where you can both SUBSCRIBE and UNSUBSCRIBE with a click of the mouse. ============================== Visit Ancestry.com for a FREE 14-Day Trial and enjoy access to the #1 Source for Family History Online. Go to: http://www.ancestry.com/subscribe/subscribetrial1y.asp?sourcecode=F11HB
Hi Jennifer, I checked the USGS GNIS web site. There's a Poplar Creek in Forrest, George, Madison, Montgomery, Noxubee and Yazoo Counties. And a Poplar Springs Branch in Pearl River County. But I couldn't find a Poplar Creek Cemetery in Mississippi. USGS GNIS Query Form For The United States And Its Territories: http://geonames.usgs.gov/pls/gnis/web_query.gnis_web_query_form Bill Allen <misterbill@pdq.net> JJ3096@aol.com wrote: > Hi folks.. > Just dropped in for assistance...Could anyone give > me directions or a website to find directions to > Poplar Creek -Poplar Creek Cemetery. I am assuming > from the information that this is the name of the cemetery.. > which is next to a church there. > > BTW, what county is this in?? > > Have a funeral to attend this upcoming Saturday, > in case we get lost in finding church and cemetery > I might need some definite directions. So many times > the cemeteries are on back roads in the hills. We will > be coming from Greenville, MS on highway #82. > > If you live in or near Poplar Creek, this will be the Dennis > and Linda Garrett funeral...both recently killed in a tragic > auto accident. Descendants of living parents Denton and > Suesie Garrett of Greenville. I understand this cemetery > is a longtime location of ancestors. > > Thanks for any help. > > Jennifer of MS Delta
Hi folks.. Just dropped in for assistance...Could anyone give me directions or a website to find directions to Poplar Creek -Poplar Creek Cemetery. I am assuming from the information that this is the name of the cemetery.. which is next to a church there. BTW, what county is this in?? Have a funeral to attend this upcoming Saturday, in case we get lost in finding church and cemetery I might need some definite directions. So many times the cemeteries are on back roads in the hills. We will be coming from Greenville, MS on highway #82. If you live in or near Poplar Creek, this will be the Dennis and Linda Garrett funeral...both recently killed in a tragic auto accident. Descendants of living parents Denton and Suesie Garrett of Greenville. I understand this cemetery is a longtime location of ancestors. Thanks for any help. Jennifer of MS Delta
Seeking info on John David WATSON and Catherine WEST. John and Catherine were first cousins. John died prior to 1900 but Catherine and her children were in Lafayette Co. Mississippi in 1900. Children are: Ina M. b. February 1883, born MS Calvin, B. Sept. 1885, born MS Pearl, born March 1885, born MS Harvey, born 1890 John, born Jan. 1893 Anyone researching this family? I am interested in finding descendants of these families and also info on Catherine's parents. Best Regards, Mary Hill
Hi all, The "Tools for Research" section on http://www.gendirectory.com is a great researching help. Here's what's listed at this time: Birthdate Calculator - for determining date of birth from tombstone data U.S. Surname Distribution Soundex Converter Meanings of Initials on Tombstones Tombstone Symbols - what do all the emblems mean? Outdated Medical Terminology Ancestral Charts Keyboard Shortcuts to Save You Time Old Occupations - a glossary of terms used as listed in early census records Old Handwriting A-T - U-Z Hope this helps, Bill Cribbs Obituary Central http://www.obitcentral.com
Searching for information on the following families. Mary Ann Jones b. 1825 d. 1906 believe in copiah co. children: Josephine Hicks Lenoria Jones Penn Hester E. Jones Haynes Rebecca Jones Hugh Bird Jones. any help appreciated. pat
Does anyone know if there are any of the WPA records especially of Lawrence County anywhere other than the archives? I would appreciate knowing. Gladys Parker
Looking for descendants of John A. Penn and wife Lenora C. Jones Penn. Married in Copiah Co. in 1870. Lenora was the daughter of Mary Ann and William Hugh Jones. thanks Pat
The Life and Times Daniel Hubbard Willis, Jr. & Julia Ann Graham Willis by Randy Willis www.randywillis.org randy@randywillis.org He was born April 2, 1839 and died May 22, 1900 She was born February 22, 1845 and died September 28, 1936 They married on January 5, 1867 in Forest Hill, La. Both are buried in the Graham Cemetery, Forest Hill, La. Daniel Hubbard Willis, Jr. was the eldest son of Rev. Daniel Hubbard Willis, Sr. (b. Dec. 28, 1817; d. Mar. 27, 1887) and Anna Slaughter (b. May 29, 1820; d. Mar. 24, 1876). Rev. Daniel Hubbard Willis, Sr. was the son of Agerton Willis and Sophie Story. He was born on Bayou Boeuf in Louisiana and is buried, along with his wife Anna Slaughter Willis, at Amiable Baptist Church Cemetery near Glenmora, La. He established many churches and was blind the last 22-years of his life. His daughter would read the scriptures and he would preach. He settled on Spring Creek, near Longleaf, La., at a community called Babb’s Bridge. Daniel Hubbard Willis, Jr. was also, a great-grandson of pioneer Louisiana Baptist preacher, Rev. Joseph Willis (b. circa 1758; d. Sept. 14, 1854). He was the first Baptist preacher west of the Mississippi River. Daniel Hubbard Willis, Jr.'s siblings were: Eliza Willis, Mary Jane Willis, David Willis, Martha Willis, Matthew Willis, Dempsey Willis, Calvin Willis, and Robert Willis. Daniel was raised near Sugartown, La. and then settled on Barber Creek near Longleaf, Rapides Parish, Louisiana. Julia Ann Graham Willis was the daughter of Robert Graham (b. Aug. 20, 1818; d. Feb. 10, 1890) and Ruth Smith (b. Dec. 5, 1813 d. Jun. 2, 1869). Robert Graham moved to Louisiana from Texas in 1841. Soon after marring Ruth Smith (a trapper's daughter) in Natchitoches, La., they moved to Forest Hill, La. He was a successful farmer and cattleman there. Ruth had told Robert that she wished to be buried at the top of a hill on their land near Forest Hill. She was and that hill is known today as the Graham Cemetery. Robert Graham's father was William Graham. Robert Graham had two brothers: another William Graham and Samuel Graham. Robert and Ruth Graham are both buried at the Graham Cemetery. Julia Ann Graham Willis' siblings were: Annie Graham Willis, Emily Graham Butter, Maggie Graham Willis, Demerius Graham Willis, Elizabeth Graham Merchant, Katherine Graham Sermons, Lucy "Ruth" Graham Moore, William Graham, and Lorenzo Dow Graham. Daniel Hubbard Willis, Jr. married Julia Ann Graham on, January 5, 1867, soon after the end of the Civil War. Daniel Hubbard Willis, Jr. in the Civil War Daniel Hubbard Willis, Jr. enlisted, September 29, 1861, at Camp Moore, La., in the Confederate Army as a Pvt. 5th. Company Battalion, Washington Artillery of Louisiana. He was (Mar. 16, 1864) in Raxdale's Company E, 16th. La. Regiment, Gibson's Brigade, Army of Tennessee. He was promoted to 2nd Sergt. on Mar. 5, 1865. He was captured and made a prisoner of war. Daniel was paroled at Meridian, Mississippi on May 14, 1865. (Also see Andrew B. Booth, "Records of Louisiana Soldiers and Louisiana Confederate Commands," (New Orleans, La. 1920) Vol. I: 1115) Daniel Hubbard Willis, Jr. fought in many of the great battles of the Civil War, including Shiloh, Bull Run, Perryville, Murfreesboro, Missionary Ridge and Chickamauga. Excerpts from Daniel H. Willis, Jr.'s obituary: Alexandria Town Talk, 23 June 1900: "He participated in all the hard battles of that army and for bravery, soldierly bearing, discipline and devotion to duty, he was unexcelled in his entire Brigade. He was made Orderly Sergeant of his Company at an early period of the war. It has always been said by his surviving comrades that when any particularly dangerous service was required, such as scouting parties to ascertain the position and movements of the enemy, he was always selected for the place, and never hesitated to go, let the danger be what it may. He was for a long time connected with the famous Washington Artillery, and at the battle of Chicamauga so many horses of the battery to which he was attached were killed that they had to pull the guns off the field by hand to keep them from falling in the hands of the enemy. He was paroled at Meridian, Miss., in May of 1865, and brought home with him a copy of General Gibson's farewell address to his soldiers and of him it can be truly said that through the remaining years of his life he followed the advice then given by his beloved commander. His love for the Southern cause, and for the men who wore the gray, was not dimmed by years, but he lived and died firmly convinced of the justice of the cause for which the South poured out so much of her best blood and treasure...Before death he expressed a wish that he might see his children who were at home, especially Randall L., his baby boy, whom he had named in honor of his beloved Brigadier General, Randall Lee Gibson. He also requested that his Confederate badge be pinned on his breast and buried with him." Gibson, later helped establish Tulane University and was elected to the U.S. Senate in 1883. I was named after my grandfather, Randall Lee Willis, who was named after Randall Lee Gibson, in 1886. Current, ed., "Encyclopedia of the Confederacy" (also see "Army of Tennessee Louisiana Division The Association and Tumulus" by Jerry Johnson Wier, The Center for Louisiana Studies, University of Southwestern Louisiana, 1999). Can You Feed Her Son? Soon after the Civil War, Daniel Hubbard Willis, Jr., became the first of four Willis’ brothers to marry four Graham’ sisters. He married Julia Ann Graham on January 5, 1867. (Daniel called her affectingly Julieann). When Daniel asked Julia Ann's father, Robert Graham, for her hand in marriage; Robert asked him if he could feed her. Daniel replied "that he had a horse, a milk cow, a barrel of corn and a barrel of molasses." Robert responded "my goodness son you have enough to marry several of my daughters." They were married at Robert Graham's home near Forest Hill. Later, three of Daniel's brothers would marry three of Julia Ann's sisters. Calvin Willis married Demerius Graham , Robert Willis married Annie Graham and Dempsey Willis married Maggie Graham. A fifth brother, Matthew Willis, also asked a fifth sister, Lucy "Ruth" Graham, to marry him. She said no and later confided in her sisters, "he was just too ugly." Ruth Graham later found her true love, James Moore, and married him. Daniel made good his promise to "feed" Julia Ann and on January 16, 1868 (just a year after their wedding) he sold his father-in-law, Robert Graham, 119 acres "in the fork of Barber Creek," for $350.00. A sum that would have been a years wages for many at that time. When Daniel died, in 1900, he left Julia Ann, $35,000.00 in gold, a home, land, and the woods full of cows, on Barber Creek, near Longleaf. The Law, Cattle, Barber Creek & Home After the end of Civil War, in 1865, Daniel H. Willis. Jr., was made Constable of Spring Hill, Rapides Parish. Julia Ann often spoke of the time Daniel captured an outlaw from Texas who was hid out in the piney woods of Louisiana. She said it was to late to make the horseback trip to the jail, in Alexandria, therefore Daniel handcuffed the outlaw to the foot of their bed for the overnight stay. Daniel told the outlaw he better not make a sound. She said Daniel slept soundly, but she did not sleep a wink all night. He later was a successful rancher. He and his sons would buy cattle in East Texas and then drive them to the railroad at Lecompte, La. to be shipped north. Once, on a cattle drive from Texas, in 1898, the cattle stampeded in the woods. My grandfather, Randall Lee Willis, who was only 12 at the time and riding drag, thought his dad, Daniel, had been killed; but then he could see his father's huge white hat, waving high in the air, in front of the cattle. Julia Ann's grandchildren recalled that she would read her red-lettered New Testament Bible daily on the front porch of the "Old Willis Place" near Longleaf on Barber Creek. She would then open her trunk and pull out Daniel's photo, who had preceded her in death, and a tear would often be seen in her eye. Julia Ann also loved oranges. She would eat them, lay the peals on the window seal and later eat the peals. When asked what she was doing she replied "I don't know for sure, but I think these orange peals are good for you." She once was bitten by a ground rattler, at age 75, and survived. Julia Ann swam in Barber Creek, twice a day, until age 90. There is a huge gravel pit where their home, the "Old Willis Place" once stood. The gravel pit has destroyed the timber and Barber Creek. It became overrun with sand and silt; literally smothered to death. The EPA finally made them shut down, but it was too late. My late cousin, Ilie Willis Close (1907-1995), wrote to me about the Old Willis Place: "The home was a gathering place for all the family. There was always food cooked for family and friends. There was lots of blackberries, huckleberries and fruit of all kinds for good pies. The home was about a quarter of a mile from Barber's Creek, known to be one of the coldest and clearest waters in the area. Grandma [Julia Ann Graham Willis] would walk down and swim sometimes twice a day. She said that was what had prolonged her life. All of the children and grandchildren loved to go swimming with her. She was reared a Methodist but later joined the Baptist Church and was a devoted Christian. She read the Bible daily. We use to joke and say 'she didn't think there would be anyone but Baptist in Heaven.' Her hobby was making quilts and she kept the family supplied with her hand work." Tragedy Daniel and Julia Ann were not immune from tragedy. On a trip away from home in 1880, Julia Ann told Daniel "I feel something is wrong at home." After returning, they found their eight year old son, David Eugene, deathly ill with appendicitis. He soon died. Julia Ann would later tell her grandchildren, that she vowed that if she every lost another child, she would never let herself grieve as she did for David Eugene. The next year, 1881, her four month old baby, Stella, died. Many years later, on December 23, 1935, she lost another son, Dr. Daniel Oscar Willis, in an auto accident. He was born three years after David Eugene. Julia Ann would live only nine months after his death. Daniel Hubbard Willis Jr. died, from kidney trouble, at his son, Dr. Daniel Oscar Willis' home near Leesville, La., on May 22, 1900. Julia Ann Graham Willis died of old age on September 28, 1936. Both Daniel and Julia Ann are buried at the Graham Cemetery near Forest Hill, not far from their beloved Barber Creek. Daniel Hubbard Willis Jr. and Julia Ann Graham Children: 1) Henry Elwa Willis was born 6 OCT 1867. He died 18 JAN 1945 of pneumonia. He was a farmer and cattleman. He is buried at the Paul Cemetery in Lecompte, La. He married Sarah F. Duplissey, Dec., 1890. Henry Elwa Willis and Sarah F. Duplissey had the following children: Clarence I. Willis (b. Jan. 18, 1892; d. Dec. 4, 1940), Viola Willis (b. Dec. 28, 1893; d. Dec. 14, 1973), Elbert K. Willis (b. Feb. 26, 1897; d. Dec. 19, 1974), Henry Willis (b. Mar. 30, 1899; d. Sept. 29, 1977), Mae Willis (b. May 1, 1902), Kit C. Willis (b. May 8, 1905), Bessie Willis (b. July 8, 1908), and Frank Willis (b. Dec. 2, 1915). 2) Carvelia S. Willis was born 10 FEB 1869. She died 31 MAR 1941 of liver disease. She never married. She is buried at the Graham Cemetery in Forest Hill, La. Her date of birth on her grave marker is incorrect by 10 years. 3) Minnie R. Willis was born 7 MAY 1870. She died 18 SEP 1921. She married Charles H. Benedict. She is buried at the Greenwood Cemetery in Pineville, La. Minnie R. Willis Benedict and Charles H. Benedict children were: Arthur Charles Benedict (July 4, 1891; d. Jan. 21, 1969), and Lester B. Benedict (d. April 26, 1899; d. May 10, 1918 of meningitis). 4) David Eugene Willis was born 19 JAN 1872. He died 13 FEB 1880 of appendicitis at age eight. He is buried at the Graham Cemetery in Forest Hill, La. 5) Corine Willis was born 27 SEP 1873. She died 6 OCT 1873 as a young baby. She is buried at the Graham Cemetery in Forest Hill, La. 6) Daniel Oscar Willis, MD was born 8 MAR 1875. He died 23 DEC 1935 from injuries sustained in an auto accident at LeBeau, La. He died at the hospital in Bunkie, La. He married his first wife Ella Elizabeth Lamberth (b. Jan. 16, 1871; died July 1, 1921) on Dec. 24, 1895. Daniel and Ella had three children: Murphy Daniel Willis (b. Nov. 13, 1897; d. Oct. 15, 1930 after suffering with Hodgkin's disease for 14 years), Horace Oscar Willis (b. Dec. 30, 1898; d. Sept. 22, 1936) and Pearl Willis (b. Oct. 24, 1900; d. Apr. 20, 1988 in Baton Rouge, La.) Pearl Willis was a music teacher for many years at LSU. Daniel Oscar Willis then married his second wife Mary Hamilton in 1928. They had one child: Hamilton Barrow Willis (b. Nov. 25, 1931; d. Abt. 1990 in St. Francisville, La.). Daniel Oscar Willis was buried on what would have been his and Ella's 40th. wedding anniversary, if they both had not died prematurely. They are both buried in the Leesville Cemetery, Leesville, La. He began his medical practice in 1904 and was the first medical doctor in Vernon Parish, La. He also owned the first automobile in Vernon Parish. He was in United States Army Medical Corps in World War I and was commissioned as a Captain in August of 1917. He owned the Hotel Leesville in Leesville, La. He once (after being slandered by a young lawyer in a trial in Leesville) bodily removed the young lawyer from his room at the Hotel Leesville and through him in the street. The young lawyer's name was Huey P. Long. 7) Robert Kenneth Willis, Sr. was born 15 JAN 1877. He died 30 JUNE 1951 of a heart attack. He was a butcher and cattleman. He married Eulah "Eula" Rosalie Hilburn in 1903. Eula was born Mar. 10, 1884 and died Feb. 6, 1919, at age 34, of the flu (she is buried at Lecompte Cemetery). Eula is buried next to her parents, Charles Hilburn (1858-1943) and Francis Hilburn (1860-1930). Robert Kenneth Willis, Sr. and Eula Rosalie Hilburn Willis had the following children: Flossie Litton Willis (b. Aug. 5, 1905; d. Sept., 1985 - married a Tomlinson), and Ilie Jewel Willis (b. Mar. 8, 1907; d. May, 1995 - married Carl Close). Robert Kenneth Willis, Sr. then married Julia Mae Johnson on Jun. 13, 1922. Julia Mae was born Sept. 4, 1899 and died Feb. 17, 1934, at age 34. Both of Robert's wives died at age 34. Robert Kenneth Willis, Sr. and Julia Mae Johnson Willis had the following children: Robert "Bobby" Willis. Jr. (b. Feb. 2, 1923; d. Dec. 7, 1941 at Pearl Harbor - buried on the USS Arizona), Glenn Dewey Willis (b. May 8, 1924), and Billy Edward Willis (b. Jun. 2, 1925; d. Aug. 6, 1991). He is buried in the Greenwood Cemetery in Pineville, La. 8) Ruthey Madella Willis was born 20 JUN 1880. Ruthey Madella Willis died of cancer. She married her first husband, Henry Buckaliew, on 20 AUG 20 1898. She then married her second husband, H. C. Matthews. Ruthey Madella Willis had one child by her first husband, Illie Jewel Buckaliew (b. Apr. 10, 1900; d. Feb. 3, 1902 - buried in Graham Cemetery). She had one child by her second husband, Willie Matthews. 9) Stella Willis was born 21 AUG 1881. She died 10 DEC 1881 as a young baby. Buried at the Graham Cemetery in Forest Hill, La. 10) Julia Coatney Willis was born 11 MAR 1883. She died 16 AUG 1945 of a heart attack. She married Harry Scarbrough. She is buried at Mountain View Cemetery in San Bernardino, California. They had one daughter named Audrey Ethel Scarbrough (b. Mar. 1, 1907; d. Oct. 22, 1980) who married Kent Hayden (b. Jun. 18, 1906; d. Nov. 16, 1984). Audrey and Kent Kane Hayden, Sr. had two sons named Charles Hayden and Kent Kane Hayden, Jr. 11) Randall Lee Willis (my grandfather) was born 20 MAR 1886 in Forest Hill, La. He died 14 MAY 1940 of stomach cancer. Married Lillie Gertrude Hanks on 11 JAN 1914. Buried at the Graham Cemetery in Forest Hill, La. He was named after his father's commanding General in the Civil War: Randall Lee Gibson who founded Tulane University. He was a farmer and logger. He died of stomach cancer and she died of a heart attack. Randall Lee Willis and Lillie G. Hanks Willis had the following three sons: Howard Lee Willis (b. Feb. 15, 1915; d. Oct. 2, 1993), Herman Floyd Willis (b. Sept. 17, 1918; d. May 15, 1977), and my father Julian Everette Willis (b. Oct. 5, 1919; d. Jun. 13, 1995). All three sons are buried in the Butter Cemetery, Forest Hill, La.
Greetings, The Yalobusha County Historical Society will hold its monthly meeting on Thursday, June 21st, at 2PM, in the Fellowship Hall of the United Methodist Church, Coffeeville, MS. The special guest speaker will be Dr. Donald C. Simmons, Director of the Mississippi Humanities Council. Dr. Simmons is an active scholar and writer with emphasis on history and political science. He is a columnist with the Mississippi Business Journal and was recently appointed to the Mississippi Press Association Education and Foundation Committee by the president of that association. Dr. Simmons is the author of "Confederate Settlements in British Honduras" which will be the topic of his presentation. The Society extends a general invitation to attend this and all meetings, and to become a member of this particular Society. The Society meets each month of the year, and publishes a quarterly journal entitled "Yalobusha Pioneer" which is mailed to each member. Queries in the Pioneer are free to members and cost just $3.00 each for non-members. Dues to the Society are $15.00 the calendar year, and may be mailed to the Society at P. O. Box 258, Coffeeville, MS 38922. The Society solicits your membership, your attendance to the monthly meetings, and your contributions to the Pioneer. Sincerely, Jim Allen, President of the Society.
<< 1878 New Orleans, LA Yellow Fever: deaths from the last epidemic >> I would be interested in a list also. I believe my g grandparents died in Brookhaven, MS in the 1878 epidemic. Thanks! Carol Murphy Albuquerque, NM
I must have missed the original message , but if this includes MS I would also like a list. An entire family of mine died in Holmes Co about this this time , and I suspect it was from the epidemic. Murph1959@aol.com wrote: > << 1878 New Orleans, LA Yellow Fever: deaths from the last epidemic >> > > I would be interested in a list also. I believe my g grandparents died in > Brookhaven, MS in the 1878 epidemic. Thanks! > > Carol Murphy > Albuquerque, NM > > ==== MISSISSIPPI Mailing List ==== > To subscribe and Unsubscribe with ease, visit http://www.rootsweb.com/mississi and scroll down and click the appropriate link for the list you want, then click on Send > > ============================== > Shop Ancestry - Everything you need to Discover, Preserve & Celebrate > your heritage! > http://shop.myfamily.com/ancestrycatalog
I have numerous family members (since 1800's) in Waynesboro and Clara, MS. Many of my family is buried at the WhiteHouse Cemetery in Waynesboro. Ben & Jean Strickland have published over 85 volumes of compiled data for southeastern counties of MS. Mrs. Strickland has passed away, Mr. Strickland is quite elderly, but I believe he still sends lists of those volumes still available (cost from $15-$25/ea). You can contact him at P.O. Box 5147, Moss Point, MS 39563. >From their books: "Who Married Whom - Wayne County, MS" "Records of Wayne County, MS - Cemetery Books A & B" (two volumes) There are perhaps 150 listings for Pace, Barnett, Cochran (huge family in Wayne Co.) and Starling families. If you would like to review any of their publications, I would suggest asking your local librarian for a list of books by Jean Strickland & Patricia N. Edwards, as well as those by Jean and Ben Strickland. I have obtained additional volumes through the local Inter-Library Lending Service (ILL) by ordering by name of publication. Good luck, Kitty in Natchez.
This isn't unusual. International Paper had the Old Carter Cemetery in north Jackson County bulldozed and, after repeated claims that they would restore it, have done absolutely nothing....The mill is closing in Moss Point and I don't suppose that IP will ever do anything about the cemetery they destroyed.....Just my thoughts. Regards, Jim Date forwarded: Sun, 17 Jun 2001 11:15:47 -0600 From: "Pam Gibbs" <gpakt@netdoor.com> Date sent: Sun, 17 Jun 2001 12:04:45 -0500 Subject: [MISSISSIPPI] Madison County Cemetery--Brown's Plantation To: MISSISSIPPI-L@rootsweb.com Forwarded by: MISSISSIPPI-L@rootsweb.com > Hello, > > I just read in my local paper that Brown's Plantation cemetery in > Madison County is about to become the latest casualty of the new > Nissan factory that is being built there. The cemetery is said to > contain more than 30 graves, only one of which is marked (Frank Brown, > died 1928). The chancery court has been asked to grant permission to > move the cemetery to a more desirable and historically prominent and > accessible location. The paper says that a search for "living heirs" > has been made but none have been located. > > If it were my family I would be interested (and horrified), and if I > lived out of state I never would have known about it. > > Pam Gibbs > http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~gpakt/
Anyone with this name in Mississippi please respond. Seeking my ggggrandmother who was Margaret Davidge. She eloped around the 1840's and cut all ties with her family (some kind of family disgrace). She married Andrew Elliott and the setteled in Copiah Co, MS and started a family. maura@gvi.net (913) 599-4469
Seeing information on Lowe's Wells near Hazelhurst, MS. It was a health spa from circa 1850 to when it burned down in the 1930's. It was owened by Edwin D ("E.D.") Elliott and Ella Lowe. It was sold at some time. I am trying to discover where my relatives were buried in Copiah Co, probably at Lowe's Wells. Family history says that it was used to house wounded soldiers during the Civil War. Ella cared for the Confederated in the house, and the Yankees in the barn. Her son, "E. D.", Jr., was a in Company B, 4th Mississippi Calvary from 1861 (enlisted at age 13-14!) till 1865. Thanks for help. maura@gvi.net
Hello, I just read in my local paper that Brown's Plantation cemetery in Madison County is about to become the latest casualty of the new Nissan factory that is being built there. The cemetery is said to contain more than 30 graves, only one of which is marked (Frank Brown, died 1928). The chancery court has been asked to grant permission to move the cemetery to a more desirable and historically prominent and accessible location. The paper says that a search for "living heirs" has been made but none have been located. If it were my family I would be interested (and horrified), and if I lived out of state I never would have known about it. Pam Gibbs http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~gpakt/
I believe it would be in Clara going by this information. http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gsr&GScid=172864& Bobby
Does anyone have any information on the Whitehouse Cemetery in Wayne County. I have several family members buried there but I can't find an address. Is it in Waynsboro or Clara? Tammy California PACE, BARNETT, COCHRAN STARLING