Individual Notes
Note for: Thomas Lockett III, ABT 1700 - BET 1774 AND 1775
Index
Individual Note: [ge_Bailey-Eubanks.FTW][ge_Bailey-Eubanks.FTW]
[Brøderbund WFT Vol. 6, Ed. 1, Tree #2595, Date of Import: Aug 5, 1998]
NOTES: "Southern Kith and Kin" by Jewel Davis Scarborough page 38.
Individual Notes
Note for: Bessie Malie "NoraLee" Gill, Private -
Index
Event: Type: BURI
Date: Private
Individual Notes
Note for: Thomas Lockett II, ABT 1673 - ABT 1745
Index
Individual Note: [ge_Bailey-Eubanks.FTW][ge_Bailey-Eubanks.FTW]
[Brøderbund WFT Vol. 6, Ed. 1, Tree #2595, Date of Import: Aug 5, 1998]
WILL: Goochland County Record, Virginia--Deed Book #5
NOTES: "Southern Kith & Kin" by Jewel Davis Scarborough, start page 35.
Individual Notes
Note for: Hamlet, WFT Est 1784-1819 - ABT 1853
Index
Individual Note: [ge_Bailey-Eubanks.FTW]
[Brøderbund WFT Vol. 6, Ed. 1, Tree #2595, Date of Import: Aug 5, 1998]
WAR: In Rev War under Washington at Yorktown per "Goodspeed, Ashley County,
Arkansas. R976.76 B615.
Individual Notes
Note for: Randall Clarence Gill, Private -
Index
Event: Type: BURI
Date: Private
Individual Notes
Note for: Emily E Tidwell, ABT 1833 - WFT Est 1874-1928
Index
Individual Note: [ge_Bailey-Eubanks.FTW][ge_Bailey-Eubanks.FTW]
[Brøderbund WFT Vol. 6, Ed. 1, Tree #2595, Date of Import: Aug 5, 1998]
NOTES: Family story: Husband "Jack" was killed by carpetbaggers while home on
leave during Civil War-Home to see 6 week old Julie. Julie was born 1872?
CENSUS: 1880 Soundex Nevada County, Arkansas, Caney Twsp. Roll #52.
NOTES: IGI 8221003 SHEET 2 Eliza Hudson born 19 aug 1862, Bradley County,
Arkansas, Banks.
Individual Notes
Note for: Thomas Lockett I, ABT 1645 - ABT 1686
Index
Individual Note: [ge_Bailey-Eubanks.FTW][ge_Bailey-Eubanks.FTW]
[Brøderbund WFT Vol. 6, Ed. 1, Tree #2595, Date of Import: Aug 5, 1998]
REFERENCE:Southern Kith and Kin--Chapter II BLOOD OF AN ENGLISHMAN: Thomas
Lockett I, and His Descendants by Jewel Davis Scarborough.
NOTE:Thomas Lockett of Virginia--Genealogical Memoir by Katherine Dixon Carter
Blankenburg-RGy 929.2 Lockett, THE ARTS & CRAFTS PRESS, 826 Third Avenue,
San Diego, California 1940.
NOTE: Ancestral File ver 4.12 (GS3F-FG)
WILL: Goochland, Virginia 1654-1737 Part I Deed Book 1672-1792. Dated March
27, 1686 probated June 1 1687.
Individual Notes
Note for: B. P. Greenhaw, ABT 1834 - WFT Est 1872-1925
Index
Individual Note: [ge_Bailey-Eubanks.FTW]
[Brøderbund WFT Vol. 6, Ed. 1, Tree #2595, Date of Import: Aug 5, 1998]
CENSUS: 1870 Arkansas, Lafayette County, 123 Beach Twsp, P. O. Rondo, taken
June 24, 1870, Family #50. Name spelled Greenhold.
CENSUS: 1860 Jackson Parish, Louisiana Census, Vernon P.O., page 430.
TAX RECORDS: Miller County Personal Property Tax Records 1875-1883: B. P.
Greenhaw listed in 1875, 1876, & 1880. Source found at Archives in Washington,
Arkansas.
MILITARY: Greenhaw is often misspelled as Greenham or Greenhold. B. P. is
often found as Bunion P. or Bunion T. In the "Records of Louisiana Conf
Soldiers & Louisiana Conf Comm" Vol III Bk 1, located at Plano Library, Texas,
he is listed as Greenham, B. P.;Pvt. Co. C. 28th (Gray's) La. Inf. En May 10,
1862, Monroe, La. On Roll for July and Aug 1863. On Roll of Prisoners of War,
Paroled Monroe, La., June 9, 1865. Res. Jackson Parish., La.
Found "Guide to Louisiana Confederate Military Units,1861-1865" by arthur
W. Bergeron, Jr at Grapevine Library, Grapevine, Texas, R.976.3 BER, page 138,
the following information about the regiment that B. P. Greenhaw was in:
28th Regiment:
Colonels. Henry Gray, promoted brigadier general April 15, 1864; Thomas W.
Pool.
Lieutenant Colonels: William Walker, killed April 8, 1864, Isaac W. Melton.
Major. Thomas W. Pool, promoted colonel April 15, 1864.
Gives information on Company "A" thru Company "K". B. P. was attached to
Company "C" (Jackson) William F. Clark, resigned May 31, 1864; and Edwin C.
Kidd, resigned January 1865.
"This regiment was organized at Monroe in April or May, 1862, with 902 men.
The regiment moved to Vienna and drilled there for several months before going
into camp near Milliken's Bend. In November, the regiment received orders to
report to General Richard Taylor in south Louisiana. The men were in camp at
Avery Island for a short time and then moved to Fort Bisland near Centerville.
On March 28, 1863, a detachment helped capture the Federal gunboat "Diana" in a
skirmish on the Atchafalaya River. Company K went aboard the gunboat when it
was refurbished for active service. The regiment fought in the Battle of Fort
Bisland, April 12-13, and was instrumental in the Confederate victory in the
Battle of Irish Bend, April 14. With Taylor's army, the regiment retreated to
Natchitoches but returned to south Louisiana in June. During the summer and
fall, Colonel Gray commanded General Alfred Mouton's brigade in its varous
marches back and forth across the southern part of the state. The brigade
marched to Monroe in December and remained there until January, 1864. At that
time, it marched to Pineville and went into camp. When the Federals began
marching up the Red River in mid-March, the brigade crossed over to Alexandria
and began retreating toward Natchitoches. Th Regiment distinguished itself in
the Confederate attack at the Battle of Mansfield, April 8. During the Battle
of Pleasant Hill, April 9, the brigade remained in reserve until late in the
day and saw little fighting. The regiment participated in the Battle of Yellow
Bayou, May 18, and agian suffered numerous casualties. In August, the bridage
marched to Monroe and from there went into southern Arkansas until late in the
year. It then returned to Alexandria via Minden. The regiment camped on Bayou
Cotile until May, 1865, when it marched to Mansfield. There the men disbanded
on May 19, just prior to the surrender of the Trans-Mississippi Department."
LAND RECORDS: CD#3 Automated Archives, Inc. Arkansas Land Records:
G650-Greenhaw, Banion P. 75.63 acres 30 Aug, 1882, Camden. Homestead entry.
LAND RECORDS: CD#3 Automated Archives, Inc. Louisiana Land Records:
G650-Greenhaw, Banion P. 161.56 acres May 10, 1861 Monroe Land Office. Sale
cash entries.
Individual Notes
Note for: Margaret Osborne, WFT Est 1631-1656 - WFT Est 1682-1744
Index
Individual Note: [ge_Bailey-Eubanks.FTW][ge_Bailey-Eubanks.FTW]
[Brøderbund WFT Vol. 6, Ed. 1, Tree #2595, Date of Import: Aug 5, 1998]
NOTES: Ancestral File ver 4.12 (GS3F-GM)
Individual Notes
Note for: Mary Ann Elder, 1 DEC 1841 - 29 OCT 1916
Index
Individual Note: [ge_Bailey-Eubanks.FTW]
[Brøderbund WFT Vol. 10, Ed. 1, Tree #3440, Date of Import: Aug 6, 1998]
Will Book B, p.431, Fayette County, Georgia
Mrs. M.A. Lanier - will signed 12/30/1913 proven 2/5/1917
lists daughters: MattieV. Leach and Daisy M. Jenkins
sons: Robert E. Hollingsworth, James O. Hollingsworth, Joseph F. Hollingsworth
grandaughter: Nellie Leach
executor:son Robert, Wittnesses: C. B. Vickers, C. H. Harvey,M.D., J. H. Longino
Individual Notes
Note for: Zachariah Bailey, 14 DEC 1756 - 18 NOV 1834
Index
Individual Note: [ge_Bailey-Eubanks.FTW]
[Brøderbund WFT Vol. 10, Ed. 1, Tree #3440, Date of Import: Aug 6, 1998]
"Burying Grounds, Graveyards, & Cemeteries" Vol 1, Laurens Co., S. C.
Individual Notes
Note for: John Bailey, 21 MAR 1774 - 27 DEC 1844
Index
Burial: Place: A Private Bailey Family plot near the Lakeside Country Club, Laurens County, SC
Individual Notes
Note for: Quincy Claude Ayres, 30 MAY 1891 - 1 MAY 1963
Index
Individual Note: [ge_Bailey-Eubanks.FTW]
[Brøderbund WFT Vol. 10, Ed. 1, Tree #4472, Date of Import: Aug 6, 1998]
Daddy went to elementary school in Columbus at Franklin Academy. There is a picture of Franklin Academy in the "History of Lowndes County", John Foster Society CAR, Col 1937 in DAR library on p. 119. Also in "Columbus, Mississippi"
W L Lipscomb, 1909, he says "Franklin Academy is the oldest(f. 1821) free public school in Mississippi - a school second to none in educational excellence and offering its advantages to all educable children, white or colored, male or female."
He was graduated from Sewanee Military Academy and won the mathematics medal there. Then was graduated from the University of Mississippi. He served in the First World War in France and his diary from that war is in the bottom drawer of the guest room dresser.
A more complete biography is in the 1960 "Who's Who in America" and a nice tribute to him by the Iowa State University Research Foundation, p 21, in the bottom drawer of the guest room dresser.
WPA for MS, Source material for MS history, Ch XVII, Fine Arts - "Lieut. Quincy Ayres, son of Mr. and Mrs. Claude Ayres of Columbus, Mississippi, served several months with the AEF. He was a member of the Second Division of Engineers, which won distinction for its heroic service in practically every major engagement in which the Americans were engaged. Lieut Ayres wears the Bronze Star, emblematic of the citation of his division for heroic action in the face of the enemy. The particular act of bravery for which his regiment was decorated and in which he played a prominent part, was in effecting the crossing of the Meuse River in the last stage of fighting on the western front. Lieut Ayres directed the erection of the bridges which were constructed under a withering fire from the enemy, and the citation states that the heroic action of the Second Engineers in this engagement contributed largely to the victorious advance of the Americans in this particular sector. The citation reads 'The names of the officers and men of the Second Engineers are placed with the names of heroic men who did heroic deeds in the last battle of the war.' He went to France, December, 1917, and was in Coblentz with the American Army of Occupation."
A favorite of Daddy's was:
Who seeks for heaven alone to save his soul
May keep the path but will not reach the goal
But he who walks in love may wander far
Yet God will lead him where the blessed are
Individual Notes
Note for: Mary Harriet Herron, 20 APR 1894 - 20 APR 1946
Index
Individual Note: [ge_Bailey-Eubanks.FTW]
[Brøderbund WFT Vol. 10, Ed. 1, Tree #4472, Date of Import: Aug 6, 1998]
Mother went to Kidd Key College in Sherman, Texas. She was a very accomplished pianist, giving others much joy by being able to play "anything".