knoxcotn-digest Sunday, January 28 2001 Volume 01 : Number 171

 

 

 

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Date: Sun, 28 Jan 2001 10:20:55 EST

From: DCMowery@aol.com

Subject: [KnoxCoTN] Yearbook

Hi, list--

My brother just sent me some things that were my father's for safekeeping.

Among them is a 1923 Knoxville High School yearbook. It's in great condition

and the photos in it are nice.

If there's anything in it I can share, I'd be happy to.

Donna

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Date: Sun, 28 Jan 2001 11:48:46 EST

From: DCMowery@aol.com

Subject: [KnoxCoTN] Crockett, Renshaw, Marley

Hi, list...

Looking for information on any of the following:

 

1 William Crockett 1779 - Aft. 1860

. +Mary Ann Flesheart 1795 - 1859

........ 2 Eliza Ann Crockett 1812 -

............ +James M. Pannell Abt. 1810 -

................... 3 Mary Elizabeth Pannell

....................... +Archibald Yontz

................... *2nd Husband of Mary Elizabeth Pannell

....................... +Alanson Capps

................... 3 Joseph Crockett Pannell

................... 3 Martha C. Pannell

....................... +Joseph Ross

.............................. 4 Eda Ann Ross

................... 3 Ann E. Pannell

........ 2 Joseph Henderson Crockett 1823 - 1881

............ +Eliza P. White 1833 - 1914

................... 3 Kate Luvenia Crockett

................... 3 Charles Edward Crockett

....................... +Louisa Fairfax Morgan

.............................. 4 Calvin Webster Crockett

.................................. +Hilah Irene Wilcox

......................................... 5 Donald Benjamin Crockett

............................................. +Elizabeth Montez Henry

.............................. 4 David Atwood Crockett

................... 3 Eugene Goff Crockett

................... 3 Joseph White Crockett

................... 3 Gustave Busegood? Crockett

................... 3 William Graves Crockett

................... 3 Willie's Twin Bro Crockett

................... 3 Samuel Marley Renshaw Crockett

................... 3 John Rodgers Crockett

....................... +Lizzie H. Patterson

.............................. 4 Violet May Crockett

................... 3 Harry White Crockett

....................... +Julia L. Kiley

................... *2nd Wife of Harry White Crockett:

....................... +Lucy Mustard

................... 3 Caroline Reine Crockett

....................... +Hezekiah Niles

................... *2nd Husband of Caroline Reine Crockett:

....................... +Edgar William Lank

................... 3 Hugh Campbell Crockett

....................... +Susie Hardy

.............................. 4 Joseph Campbell Crockett

.............................. 4 Ruth H. Crockett

........ 2 Mary Belinda Crockett

............ +James H. Renshaw

................... 3 Joseph S. Renshaw

................... 3 William B. Renshaw

................... 3 Frank Renshaw

....................... +Lulu Nebraska Jett

................... 3 Sophia

....................... +Ransom Badgett

................... 3 Mary C. Renshaw

....................... +Charles P. Mills

................... 3 Elizabeth M. Renshaw

................... 3 Blanche Renshaw

....................... +Clarence B. Brayton

................... 3 James Edwin Renshaw

................... 3 James Renshaw

....................... +Lottie Milnor

........ 2 Elizabeth Jane Crockett

............ +John T. Marley

................... 3 Mary E.H. Marley

................... 3 Samuel F. Marley

................... 3 Thomas White Marley

................... 3 Jefferson Davis Marley

................... 3 Robert E. Marley

................... 3 Fanny B. Marley

....................... +Charles A. Sandberg

........ 2 Samuel Henry Crockett

............ +Seraphina Renshaw

Thanks for any help you can give.

Donna

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Date: Sun, 28 Jan 2001 12:10:18 EST

From: DCMowery@aol.com

Subject: [KnoxCoTN] Henry

Looking for descendants of Francisco (Frank) Alonzo Laffeyette Henry b. 1848

s/o Rev. Hugh Jackson Henry and Mary M. Reagan Henry. Frank m. Nancy

Clementine Kounts on 10/11/1866 and they had 9 children:

1. Hugh m. Minnie Housewright

2. Joseph Perry m. Lula E. Hatcher

3. Guss m. Kate Ellis

4. Nan m. Edd Sands

5. Molly m. Tom Brabson

6. Rachel m. Jim Franklin

7. Bertha ?

8. Jessie ?

9. Sam m. Lula Hayes

Donna

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Date: Sun, 28 Jan 2001 14:57:12 -0500

From: "Billie R. McNamara" <knox@tngenweb.org>

Subject: [KnoxCoTN] Sunday Afternoon Rocking

Sunday Afternoon Rocking

Telling the Tales (from the "Sunday Afternoon Rocking" series)

Once upon a time when I was a very young woman, I worked in a public

library. A large part of my duties consisted of entertaining and telling

tales to the youngsters who visited that entity that was so much a part of

a small town with little else for folks to do beyond the work that was

their subsistence. So it was to me that the elderly lady came. Her eyes

bright and eager in a lined leathery face, she told me she had "tales to

tell", stories her father and her grandfather and before them had told, and

there was none left to hear them. She asked if she might "borrow" the

children who visited our story hours for a bit in order that she might "get

them all told" again.

The day she sat to tell the tales to a group of equally eager children, I

did not recognize the tales. Later, and too late to preserve the woman's

stories, I learned something about those stories, and hearkened back in

memory to the elderly lady who once gave me and a group of children a gift

none of us may ever run across again. Many there are who know "Jack and

the Beanstalk", but few there are who know that Jack is actually the "hero"

of a series of ancient stories featuring villainous kings and worse

giants. Those stories, commonly known as the "Jack Tales" were brought to

this country by the early English, and generally nurtured and passed on

only in Appalachia. Some of the stories were gathered into a book early in

the 1900's and preserved by one Richard Chase. I realized much later this

woman had not mouthed the words of Richard Chase, nor shared only the

stories he preserved. She was telling the stories as she had heard them at

the knees of her ancestors, and as they had heard them before.

When I was a girl I knew all of the Mother Goose rhymes by heart, and had

heard those old childhood "standards" (at least in my world) of "The Three

Bears", "The Three Little Pigs", "Hansel and Gretel", "Cinderella", and

more. What I did not realize at the time was that all of the stories I

was told, beyond the regional folklore of the America of my pioneer

ancestors, were of British, French or German origin. It was much later

that I would receive the knowledge that would allow me to peg giants as

British, fairy godmothers as French, elves as German…and realize my

ancestry could be pegged as well through the knowledge of the stories

passed on through my family.

For over thirty years now I have worked closely with children and

literature. A sad thing I see happening. For all too many, there are no

stories to remember at all. Their experience with traditional literature

is limited to what they have seen in Disney remakes of the same, and they

have no concept what has been "added" by a movie maker and what is the

story as it was told by those who peopled their own past. They are hard

put, many of them, to tell you "who pulled a plum from a pie" or who it is

that "stole a pig". Having evening entertainment at the touch of a button,

families tend to no longer gather in front of a fireplace of an evening

with sewing or whittling in hand, entertaining little ones with the tales

that were always told in a family. And while it is of little importance in

the scheme of things whether Cinderella actually had mice to help her

prepare for a ball, and whether her name was Cinderella, Ashpet or

Ashenputtel, it seems to me we have forgotten a literary heritage that

points us to our past.

 

A good thing it is, for those families so inclined, that the children's

book market is now so large and varied. For children of those families who

value books, they can know now the folklore of any place on earth,

classics, and wonderous imaginative tales with equally imaginative

illustrations. But without the stories that were told in a family,

something still is missing. The "old timey" stories, told only by word of

mouth and unique to a family are those that can place a family in history,

in a part of the world. The "old timey" stories, told by grandparents and

grandparents before them, are those that can open the doors to history and

give clues to what happened to a family.

Had I not begged my grandmother for a story, and the ensuing one been a

ghost story, I might never have realized an ancestor worked an iron

furnace. Had I not begged a grandfather for a story, I might never have

realized that the farm we called "down home" was once a hunting ground for

Native Americans. Had I not begged an aunt for a story, I might never have

realized where it was in this country a family migrated. And had I not

thought back to the fairy tales I was also told, I might never have

realized that I could match the origins of those very stories to the lines

I have become acquainted with through genealogy.

Time it is, I think, to turn off the box that robs our children of a

literary heritage and tell the tales. Time it is, I think, to make a

pilgrimage to see what elders still live and put the children up to asking

"for a story". Before it is "too late" and "past time", perhaps it is time

to remember we have a literary heritage, as vital a part of our family

history as names, dates and facts.

Just a thought,

jan

Copyright ©2000JanPhilpot

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Thanks, jan)

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End of knoxcotn-digest V1 #171

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