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On This Day in 1891

118 Years Ago Today
June 4, 1891

Joseph B. Brooks married Alverda “Verta” Kiser in Russell County. Joseph was one of thirteen chidren born to John Jeremiah and Elizabeth “Betty” (Hill) Brooks.

  1. Sarah Brooks
  2. Alfred Brooks
  3. Martin V. Brooks
  4. James K.P. Brooks
  5. Judith “Judy” Brooks
  6. John Brooks, Jr.
  7. Mary Elizabeth “Polly” Brooks
  8. Charles Brooks
  9. Solomon Lemuel “Sol” Brooks
  10. William M. “Bill” Brooks (my great grandfather)
  11. Rebecca Caroline Brooks
  12. Joseph B. Brooks (my great granduncle)
  13. Benjamin Brooks

Verta was one of three known children born to Fullen and Matilda (Sutherland) Kiser.

  1. Alverda “Verta” Kiser (my 6th cousin, 2x removed)
  2. Thomas Kiser
  3. Bessie Kiser

Joseph and Verta had seven children:

  1. Etta Cordelia Brooks
  2. Esther Lobelia Brooks
  3. Lottie Azen Brooks
  4. Bertha Elizabeth Brooks
  5. Thomas Starling Brooks
  6. Gay Nell Brooks
  7. Ruby Matilda Brooks

Many thanks to cousin Shirley Fields for pictures and family history.

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135 Years Ago Today
June 4, 1874

John Davis, my great granduncle married Caroline Mitchell. John is one of fifteen children born to Thomas Jefferson and Sarah Ann (Combs) Davis. See earlier posts for siblings.

On This Day in 1896

113 Years Ago Today
June 3, 1896 – June 10, 1899

Gladys S. Shufflebarger was one of six children, my 2nd cousins, 2x removed, born to Thomas L. and Perlina Belle (Gregory) Shufflebarger. She is buried at the T.E. Steele Cemetery, Clearfork, Bland County, VA.

  1. Curtis L. Shufflebarger (Bank of Tazewell Co)
  2. Gladys B. Shufflebarger
  3. Clyde W. Shufflebarger
  4. Edith M. Shufflebarger
  5. Forrest Gregory Shufflebarger
  6. Thomas Garnett Shufflebarger

On This Day in 1861

148 Years Ago Today
June 3, 1861 – 1943


Sarah Sutherland, my great grand aunt, was one of eleven children born to Jesse and Mahala (Kiser) Sutherland. She married Abraham Kiser on November 14, 1876.

  1. Matilda Sutherland
  2. Phoebe Sutherland
  3. Mary Polly “Pop” Sutherland (my great grandmother)
  4. Emily Jane Sutherland
  5. Sarah Sallie Sutherland
  6. Alabama Sutherland
  7. Thomas A. Sutherland
  8. Margaret P. Sutherland
  9. Joseph Sutherland
  10. Samuel Peery Sutherland
  11. Daniel Sutherland

Thanks to Shirley Fields, another cousin, for this picture of Sarah.

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114 Years Ago Today
June 3, 1895
My 3rd cousin, 3x removed, Catherine Florence Powers Jessee married John T. Bausell in Russell County, VA. She was one of nine children born to John Henry and Louvisa (Powers) Jessee. (b.8-1-1877 d.6-9-1955)

  1. Catherine F.P. Jessee
  2. Conley Trigg Jessee
  3. William Ellis Jessee (m. my great aunt Rose Brooks)
  4. Sarah Margaret Jessee
  5. Laura Della Jessee
  6. John Stanford Jessee
  7. Mary Alice Jessee
  8. Kent Jessee
  9. Taulbee Balford Jessee

Catherine Florence and John T. Bausell had three children

  1. Hattie Russell Bausell (m. Hobert Brooks)
  2. Sadie Bausell
  3. Hazel Bausell

Kathy, please correct me if I’m wrong on this or if you have more to add. sherrykelly@comcast.net

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77 Years Ago Today
June 3, 1932-November 22, 1988
2nd cousin Tommy Allen Jessee, son of Ora Stanford and Martha Alice (Viers) Jessee.
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76 Years Agos Today
June 3, 1933, Wilma Jean Huffman was born. She married Jack Lewis Blankenship.

WARNING – Watch for Snakes

If you are at all bothered by snakes, you might want to skip this post. I mean, this is supposed to be a family tree blog to which I post ancestoral information and pictures based chronologically on birth or anniversary dates. However, some days I don’t have any relatives to post or boast about, so I feel free to stray.
Almost daily, I stroll our secluded suburban neighborhood and see beautiful things. We are surrounded by a natural setting that offers, eagles, hawks, redfox and even a coyote or two on occasion. If only I were a wonderful photographer who could capture the moment to share with you.

Lately … I have seen SNAKES, SNAKES, SNAKES – Yuk!

This morning a small, probably harmless SNAKE met me at the faucet as I turned on my garden sprinkler. A little later, I halted in my tracks when I spotted a huge shiny dark slithering SNAKE crossing the street in the direction of the pond. Just last week, I found a wonderfully colorful SNAKE, a couple of houses down; the obvious victim of direct contact with a car tire. Yes! Yes!

The red, yellow and black stripe SNAKE is actually my favorite. I mean, if I could have a favorite SNAKE. Not just because it is dead, but because it is beautiful and has a great story attached. It’s a Florida Scarlet SNAKE.

The snakes in question are the venomous Coral Snake, and my favorite copycat, the Florida Scarlet Snake. Oftentimes in nature, a species will mimic the appearance of a dangerous species, for protection. Animals know to stay away from the venomous Coral Snake, so a similar color pattern has helped other snake species survive.

There’s one little glitch, however. Though the mimic snake has a similar size and shape, and the same Red-Black-Yellow color scheme, the order of the pattern is different. For some reason, the mimic, has black bands every other color. The coral snake is the only one that has alternating yellow bands. Thus, with the Coral snake, the red band touches the yellow band, and with the mimics, the red band touches the black band.

Here is what I love – In order to help folk remember how to distinguish a venomous from a harmless SNAKE, a man named “Fat” Jack Loticus developed a rhyme in 1862.

Red and yellow, kill a fellow
Red and black, friend of Jack.

Cool, Huh? I always say that rhyme to myself, just to be sure.

Anyway, imagine our Virginia pioneer ancestors forging their way through the mountain side forests and rockbed rivers, and the encounters they must have had with SNAKES. Some SNAKES common to southwest Virginia are shown below. Would you recognize them if you happened upon one?

Black Racer

Copperhead
Cottonmouth
Timber Rattler

If you want to know more about SNAKES, visit http://fwie.fw.vt.edu/VHS/reptiles/snakes/snakes_of_virginia.htm

On This Day in 1863

146 Years Ago Today
June 2, 1863

My 2nd cousin, 3x removed, Margaret Laforce married John Neece. Margaret was one of thirteen children born to James and Dicie (Kiser) Laforce, Sr.

  1. Elijah Laforce
  2. Lucinda Laforce
  3. Bethany Laforce
  4. Joseph Laforce
  5. Mary P. Laforce
  6. Margaret Laforce
  7. Monsuer H. Laforce
  8. James Laforce, Jr.
  9. William Warren Laforce
  10. John Laforce
  11. Rachel Matilda Laforce
  12. Mahalia Laforce
  13. Aaron Laforce

On This Day in 1851

158 Years Ago Today
June 1, 1851 – January 21, 1935

My 3rd cousin, 3x removed, Charles Henry Peery, Sr. was one of six children born to John Drew and Mary Clay (Gregory) Peery in Tazewell County, VA.

  1. David Preston Peery
  2. Charles Henry Peery, Sr. (m. Ellen Phoebe Beavers)
  3. George Peery
  4. Ellen Martelia Peery
  5. Louisa Alice Peery
  6. Mary Elizabeth “Molly” Peery
    Charles and Ellen had seven children.
  7. John David Peery
  8. Joseph Grattan Peery
  9. Lena Devore Peery
  10. Charles Henry Peery, Jr.
  11. Maggie C. Peery
  12. Kate Louisa Peery
  13. Letitia Ward Peery


The couple is buried in Maplewood Cemetery, Tazewell, VA.

On This Day in 1854

155 Years Ago Today
June 1, 1854

Rachel Kiser married Noah S. Kiser. They had eleven children.

  1. Elbert S. Kiser
  2. Robert Boyd “Dick” Kiser
  3. Polly Ann Kiser
  4. Ephriam Kiser
  5. Joseph Cephas Kiser
  6. Thomas Hansford Kiser
  7. Martha Adela Kiser
  8. Alvin Ashbrook Kiser
  9. Andrew Jackson Kiser
  10. Noah Haynes “Toby” Kiser
  11. Rauseline Kiser

There are so many Rachel’s and Noah’s in our family history. If you notice that I have the wrong information or the wrong picture, please let me know sherrykelly@comcast.net


On This Day in 1898

111 Years Ago Today
May 31, 1898

Captain Greenlee D. Letcher, my 2nd cousin, 4x removed, married Katherine Seymour Paul in Rockbridge County, VA. Captain Letcher was one of eleven children born to Governor John Letcher and Mary Susan Holt.

  1. William Holt Letcher
  2. Samuel Houston Letcher
  3. Andrew Holt Letcher
  4. John Davidson Letcher
  5. Margaret Kinney Letcher
  6. Mary Davidson Letcher
  7. Virginia Lee Letcher
  8. Greenlee Davidson Letcher
  9. Fannie Wilson Letcher
  10. Elizabeth Stuart Letcher
  11. Mary Susan Letcher

The Captain and Katherine S. (Paul) Letcher had three children.

  1. Greenlee D. Letcher
  2. John Letcher
  3. General John Seymour Letcher (father of author Katie Letcher Lyle)*

Greenlee Davidson Letcher
July 19, 1867 – August 12, 1954
Interred – Stonewall Jackson Cemetery – Lexington, VA


*FROM KATIE LETCHER’S BOOK – MY DEAREST ANGEL

When her father died, author Katie Letcher Lyle uncovered in his garage three cartons of papers documenting four generations of her family. The boxes included an astonishing array of materials, including “letters, postcards, papers, documents, check registers, Confederate bills, files, receipts, old photographs, notebooks, envelopes of stamps, deeds, bills, depositions, certificates, proclamations, diplomas, and market lists.” Among them were the letters of her grandparents-Greenlee D. Letcher, the youngest child of John Letcher, Virginia’s Civil War governor, and his wife, Katherine (Katie) Seymour Paul. In My Dearest Angel, Lyle deftly tells the story of their life together.

Greenlee and Katie Letcher could not have been more different. He served as a state legislator, worked as a lawyer in Lexington, and traveled widely, all the while scribbling and sending letters. She was the daughter of a Republican circuit judge and state senator from Harrisonburg and shied away from public life, preferring instead the familiarity of home and family. Their marriage was tinged with melancholy: Two of their three children died, and Katie, who found fulfillment largely in her role as a mother, struggled throughout her life with ill health and depression. Greenlee’s letters addressed her as “Sweet Angel, My Own, My Love, My Life,” but she often chafed at the role of adored wife, spending long periods of time with her parents, on rest cures, or in hospitals, away from her husband and his family. Their letters provide an unusually intimate portrait of a marriage, beginning in 1898, when they wed at her parents’ home, and ending in 1947, when Katie died from a stroke.

On This Day in 1875

134 Years Ago Today
May 29, 1875

Elizabeth Sutherland married William L. Kiser. She was my 5th cousin, 3x removed and mother of ten.

  1. Walter Vermillion Kiser
  2. Wm Kinder “Jackie” Kiser
  3. Frank Fitzhugh Kiser
  4. John Trig Kiser
  5. Elijah Otas Kiser
  6. Marcus Henry Kiser
  7. Douglas Daniel Kiser
  8. Martha Dicie E. Kiser
  9. Arnold Gaines Kiser
  10. Ora Jackson Kiser

Elizabeth was one of ten children born to Elijah and Mary Polly (Childress) Sutherland.

  1. Elihu Sutherland
  2. Martha Jane Taylor Sutherland
  3. Elizabeth Sutherland
  4. Rebecca Sutherland
  5. Cynthia Sutherland
  6. Phoebe Sutherland
  7. Frances “Frankie” Sutherland
  8. Elijah Beauregard Sutherland
  9. Mary Sutherland
  10. Noah Sutherland

Happy Anniversary

14 Years Ago Today
May 27, 1995

OK, I couldn’t help but snatch a couple of shots from FB.
This one is sooo cute!

and who is the other woman?
You know the way to a man’s heart is
through his stomach.
What better way to woo him than with Paula Deen.

Has it really been 14 years since we road the train
ALL THE WAY to Delaware?
(18 hours worth of train riding)
Wow, time flies!


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106 Years Ago Today
May 27, 1903

My 4th cousin, Ora Neel married Thomas Edward Nash. They had four children.

  1. Claude Witten Nash
  2. Nancy Ernestine Nash
  3. Anna May Nash
  4. Thomas Edward Nash, Jr.

Ora was one of six children born in Clear Fork, Tazewell County, VA, to Matthias Fox Neel and Harriet Letcher Daugherty.

  1. Arlington Hicks Neel
  2. Anna Lane Neel
  3. Ora Lee Neel
  4. Margaret Barnes Neel
  5. Clara B. Neel
  6. David Elgin Neel

Ora was one of six children born to