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On This Day in 1986

September 27, 1986
22 years ago today

Also, on this day Charles R. Daugherty
was born September 27, 1871, 137 years ago today.
Just in case you wanted to know,
that is the bride’s 1st cousin – 4 times removed.

On This Day in 1872

Samuel A. Davis was born 136 years ago today.
He married Nick Addison and had two children,
Emmit & Sallie.
He was the oldest of 12 children born to
Doctor Caleb Davis and
Nancy C. “Nannie” Jessee
  1. Samuel A. Davis – September 26, 1872
  2. Jefferson Bonaparte Davis – March 29, 1874
  3. Charles Henry Davis – July 7, 1876
  4. Mary A. Davis – December 19, 1877
  5. Sarah Ellen Davis – September 9, 1878
  6. Manerva Josephine Davis – August 3, 1881
  7. Polly M. Davis – August 9, 1883
  8. David P. Davis – December 1879
  9. Vance P. Davis – April 1883
  10. Asa C. Davis – January 7, 1883 (my grandfather)
  11. Ida E. Davis – May 21, 1885
  12. Nannie K. Davis – April 1885

On This Day in 1869

139 years ago today in Tazewell County, VA
George Fulton Daugherty – b.September 25, 1869
George was the son of David A. & Nannie L. Moore Daugherty.
David & Nannie are buried at the Marrs graveyard in Falls Mills, VA.
David is brother to my g-g-grandmother, Mary Jane Daugherty.

On This Day in 1846

Emily Jane Tabor – b. September 24, 1846 d. December 31, 1912
She was the daughter of James Harrison Tabor and Nancy Moore Runyan;
Older sister to my g-grandmother Sarah Jane.
The sisters married brothers Emily married
William Jasper Buckland on March 14, 1865.
Sarah married a younger Buckland
Jacob Alexander on March 2, 1871.
The boys were the sons of Jacob W. Buckland
and Martha W. “Patsy” Compton.

PLANT A FAMILY TREE; it never stops growing

…just can’t seem to get enough of my family tree. The more I dig, the more it grows, so if you ever decide to plant a tree, be sure you have enough time to stay with it. Obsessed, or so my family says, about finding as many relatives as possible, I want more than just the particular data, I want pictures, stories, and obituaries. These things bring to life a family I never knew, but have had huge impact on my life.

Now, while I continue to hoe around the tree, take a look at this special picture. Grandmother Buckland (Mary Jane Davidson) with Gail, Larry & Ellis. She died in 1960 when I was only a little more than six, so I don’t remember much about her. She allowed me, and I say that guessing she may have been a bit picky, play in the “colonade”. Colonade was her reference to those small built-in bookcases behind glass doors between the foyer and living room. Also, I remember her thick stockings and large black shoes as she pushed her rocking chair to the rhythum of her crochet needles.