Speaking with relatives about family history, I am often told to keep this piece of information between you, me and the gate post. Respecting sensibilities, I will share my family stories entwine with historical events from Copiah, Jefferson and Lincoln Counties, Mississippi, from gate post to gate post.
Family Tree
- Home
- Surnames
- Family Tree
- Ann Nelson's Children
- Henny's Family - Up From Slavery
- Unknown Photographs
- Family - Antebellum Records
- Family Churches and Cemeteries
- Family - Civil War Soldiers and Body Servants
- Family Wills
- Freedmen Labor Contracts - Family
- Remembering Their Names
- Family Obituaries
- Monroe's Children
Wednesday, March 30, 2011
Wordless Wednesday - Cousin Theodosa
Cousin Theodosa Markham Culver born 1912 was my mother's first cousin. Theodosa was the daughter of James Markham and Anna Culver. Theodosa married her first cousin once removed Tolson Culver resulting in a family scandal.
Friday, March 25, 2011
Anding Family Bible Record
Slave Births
Slave Births
(Faded) was Born Nov 4th 1837
Samuel was Born October 20th 1841
Moses was Born August 10th 1843
Benjamin was Born 1846
Louden Trotter was Born May the 7, 1847
The Martin Alexander Anding family of Caseyville, then Copiah County, Mississippi, was a neighbor to the Buie family, slave owning family of members of my family. Descendants of Anding slaves married descendants of my family.
Martin's wife Mary Lambright was the owner of the family bible. Mary and others listed the births of the Anding family and at the bottom of a page, the slaves births were listed.
One of the babes listed, Samuel Anding aka Samuel Anderson, served with the 6th Regiment, Company I, during the Civil War. Samuel met Caroline Williams while in Natchez. The couple married after the War and raised a family in Jefferson County, near where Caroline was raised. Samuel died in 1916
Genealogy research has not revealed a connection between Samuel Anding and my ancestors.
Sources:
Family Bible of Mary Lambright Anding
Information shared from Carolina Gale Lambright, collateral relative of Mary Lambright Anding.
Samuel Anding's Civil War Pension Records
Tuesday, March 22, 2011
Wash Day
Before the invention of washing machines, they tell me that wash day began early in the morning and was an all day chore for the women in the family. The family wash was done in a black cast iron pot. My mother remembered carrying buckets of water from the pond on wash day.
Soaking clothes in the bath tub overnight and scrubbing the clothes on a wash board was my mother's method of washing clothes when I was a young child. Later when I was about ten years old, going to the laundry mat on a Friday evening or early Saturday morning became a ritual for my younger brother and me. Mama would sort the clothes, bundle the clothes in a sheet. We had a little red wagon we used to carry the clothes. Off to the laundry mat we went with our quarters, detergent, bleach, and pine soil.
We didn't use the dryers because mama would put the laundry on the lines to dry. Taking the laundry was easier than bringing the wet laundry home. We couldn't neatly bundle the laundry the way our mother had done but we did the best we could. One of us would pull the wagon and the other would try to hold on to the clothes to keep them from falling off the wagon. Neighbors sitting on porches would give us advice how to handle the wet laundry. By the time we got home, several pieces would be dirty from falling in the street.
The red wagon was put to rest and we began taking the clothes in laundry baskets and a younger sister made us a trio. Sometimes we made two trips. We didn't own a washer until I was fourteen and the clothes line was our dryer. My mother never owned a dryer.
I hated going to the laundry mat. Maybe because it took up so much of my time. I didn't mind putting the clothes on the line, or bringing the clothes in after drying or folding and putting away the laundry. I was one happy daughter when the family purchased our used automatic washer.
Soaking clothes in the bath tub overnight and scrubbing the clothes on a wash board was my mother's method of washing clothes when I was a young child. Later when I was about ten years old, going to the laundry mat on a Friday evening or early Saturday morning became a ritual for my younger brother and me. Mama would sort the clothes, bundle the clothes in a sheet. We had a little red wagon we used to carry the clothes. Off to the laundry mat we went with our quarters, detergent, bleach, and pine soil.
We didn't use the dryers because mama would put the laundry on the lines to dry. Taking the laundry was easier than bringing the wet laundry home. We couldn't neatly bundle the laundry the way our mother had done but we did the best we could. One of us would pull the wagon and the other would try to hold on to the clothes to keep them from falling off the wagon. Neighbors sitting on porches would give us advice how to handle the wet laundry. By the time we got home, several pieces would be dirty from falling in the street.
The red wagon was put to rest and we began taking the clothes in laundry baskets and a younger sister made us a trio. Sometimes we made two trips. We didn't own a washer until I was fourteen and the clothes line was our dryer. My mother never owned a dryer.
I hated going to the laundry mat. Maybe because it took up so much of my time. I didn't mind putting the clothes on the line, or bringing the clothes in after drying or folding and putting away the laundry. I was one happy daughter when the family purchased our used automatic washer.
Photograph purchased from Ebay.
Wednesday, March 16, 2011
Wordless Wednesday - Twin Sisters
Missouri and Beatrice Markham were the second set of twins born 1899, to Monroe and Mary Byrd Markham. Missouri was a teacher in Lincoln County, MS. She never married nor had children. She died in 1925 of brights disease (kidney disease). Beatrice was a domestic. By the standards of her generation, Beatrice married late in life to Silas Johnson in 1938. The couple did not have children. Beatrice died in 1989 of Alzheimer's Disease.
Wednesday, March 2, 2011
Wordless Wednesday - Sisters
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