Tuesday, May 20, 2014

Tombstone Tuesday - Mary E. Corn

Mary E. Corn
Oct. 29, 1844
Mar. 20, 1923
Gone But Not Forgotten

Buried Pleasant Grove Cemetery, Crittenden County, Kentucky. Tombstone photographed 13 January 2014.

According to death certificate #10404 (1923), Mary E. Corn was the daughter of George Watson and Mary Etta Porter, both born in Kentucky.  The 1880 Crittenden County census (Hurricane District) shows Mary E. Corn in the household of James C. Corn. They had married 16 September 1859 in Pope County, Illinois.

Published 20 May 2014, Western Kentucky Genealogy Blog, http://wkygenealogy.blogspot.com/

Thursday, May 15, 2014

A Game for Family Reunions

One of our favorite summertime activities this time of year is attending family reunions. Sometimes, though, there is a lull, especially after the meal,  and something is needed to liven up the group. This is what we did at our family reunion last summer - and it worked.

Everyone arranged their chairs in a large circle and we started our game -  a game called "I Remember." Each person was asked to remember an event from long ago about someone else in the family, living or dead. For example, one person mentioned Grandma courting with her beau and soon-to-be second husband when she was 70 years old. Another person mentioned the many model airplanes hanging from the ceiling in my brother's room when he was in elementary school.  One memory seemed to spark another and before long we were laughing at events long-forgotten or never known.  The best part about this game is that everyone could participate and no materials were required. Maybe this is something you might like to try at your family reunion.

Published 15 May 2014, Western Kentucky Genealogy Blog, http://wkygenealogy.blogspot.com/




Tuesday, May 13, 2014

Tombstone Tuesday - Lillie Knight Paris


Lillie Knight
Wife of
Raymond Paris
Oct. 25, 1897
Apr. 22, 1928

Buried Leeper Cemetery, Livingston County, Kentucky. Tombstone photographed 19 February 2014.

According to death certificate #10445 (1928), Lillie Knight was born in Kentucky and was the daughter of T. Pink Knight and Lucy Stewart, both of whom were born in Tennessee. Lillie appears on the 1920 Livingston County census in Driskill Precinct with her husband, Raymond Paris, and one year old daughter, Eula Paris.

Published 13 May 2014, Western Kentucky Genealogy Blog,  http://wkygenealogy.blogspot.com/

Thursday, May 8, 2014

First Table

Recently an older cousin mentioned the phrase, "First Table," when talking about dinner table seating for groups, including large families. The phrase brought back some long-forgotten memories from my childhood. "First Table" refers to the practice of men and older boys eating first when there is not enough room for everyone to sit around the table together. Women and children ate at a later seating.  As a girl and especially as a child, I was always relegated to the second or third seating. It may not have been politically correct, but that is the way it was and it was not questioned. Was this a Kentucky custom or was this common in other parts of the United States?

Below is a photo from the early 1950s showing my grandfather, Herman R. Croft; Uncle "Buck" Sefrit; my father, John M. Joyce; Uncle Oakley Croft and my older brother, John Paul Joyce,  eating at  the First Table in Livingston County, Kentucky.



Published 8 May 2014, Western Kentucky Genealogy Blog,  http://wkygenealogy.blogspot.com/


Tuesday, May 6, 2014

Tombstone Tuesday - Thomas J.W. Jones




In Memory of
Thomas J.W. Jones
Born
Sept. 7, 1839
Died
Dec. 2, 1864
Weep not for me but weep for
yourself and your children

Buried at Landrum Cemetery, Livingston County, Kentucky. Tombstone photographed 4 September 2013.

Thomas J.W. Jones married Miss Serena Bennett 26 September 1861 in Livingston County. At that time he was age 22 and his bride was age 18. Serena remarried after Thomas died.  Mrs. Serena Jones married J.H. Walker 14 February 1871 in Livingston County. She died 10 December 1919 and is buried in Dunn Graveyard, Benton, Kentucky.


Published 6 May 2014, Western Kentucky Genealogy Blog,  http://wkygenealogy.blogspot.com/


Saturday, May 3, 2014

Thursday, May 1, 2014

Marion, Kentucky in 1894

The following article appeared in the Crittenden Press 16 August 1894 and was reprinted in the Caldwell County Times, Princeton, Kentucky, 26 August 1926.  Marion is the seat of justice of Crittenden County and, in 2012, had a population of 3,025.

"The first page of this illustrated edition contained a history of Crittenden County, including its agriculture resources, soil climate and the educational, religious and business institutions. According to this account the first settler to what is now Crittenden County was James Armstrong, of South Carolina, who in 1786 "with his chattels loaded on a pack horse," he came to a spot on Livingston Creek a few hundred yards below Centerville ford and built a cabin, 12 feet square, no door, but with a window in the gable that was reached by a ladder that was drawn inside the cabin for the night. The first town in the county was known as Centerville. The first house in Marion was occupied by Dr. John S. Gilliam.

"At that time Marion had a population of 1500 scattered over a territory less than one mile square. It had one bank, four big dry goods stores carrying stock varying from $8,000 to $15,000 each, three hardware stores, two furniture stores, one book store, six groceries, one tailor shop, two millinery stores, one bakery, two shoe shops, two drug stores, two livery stables, two blacksmith and wagon shops, five good boarding houses, eight preachers, thirteen lawyers, five doctors, two dentists, twelve carpenters, two transfer men, one marble  yard, two photographers, one newspaper, two barber shops, one opera house, one planing mill, two saw mills, one wool carding machine, one creamery, two big flouring mills, one brickyard, two jewelers, two saloons, one tobacco stemery, three insurance agents, four white churches, three colored churches, one graded school, four secret societies, one produce house, one distillery, two saddle and harness makers, one carpenter shop, one dairyman."

Published 1 May 2014, Western Kentucky Genealogy Blog, http://wkygenealogy.blogspot.com/