Ralph Eugene Petty (seems he reverted back to the old spelling.) was born in 1892 to William Holloway and Eliza Jane (Welch) Pettey, the fifth of eight children, in Nacogdoches, TX.
He married Sudie Alice Grayson (born 1894 in Buffalo, Leon Co. TX) in 1917 in Robertson County Tx. and recieved WWI draft card 1917-1918.
He appears on the 1920 Census living with Sudie and her family in Teague, TX. He worked as a lineman for the telephone company. This was the year their first child was born dead.
Suegene Petty was born in 1922 in Teague, Texas
Son Ralph Grayson Petty.was born in 1924 in Freestone County, TX.
In 1930 they were living in Teague, Freestone County with Ralph's mother-in-law, Julia Grayson living with them. Ralph's occupation is electrician in an electrical shop.
Julie Jean was born in Buffalo, Freestone Co. Texas in 1933. I have found two copies of her birth certificate. Ralph Eugene signed on one of Julia Jean's birth certificates where the doctor or midwife signs. No signature on other BC. Wonder if he had to deliver the baby himself?
In 1935 (1940 census) they were living in Freestone County. Ralph was an electrician for the utility light company.
In 1941 he was registered for the draft for WWII.
Sudie died in 1970 and it appears that Ralph remarried Lula E in 1971. They divorced in 1979 in Freestone County.
He died in San Antonio 1985 at age of 93. His daughter, Suegene Gibson was living in San Antonio at the time so I suspect he was living with or near her. His SS death index gives his residence as San Antonio.
Ralph Eugene and Sudie are buried in Greenwood Cemetery in Teague near their infant daughter..
In which I search for the Pettey, Welch, Jeffrey, Willis and Crane families.
Related Name List: All of the above plus Nance, Graybill, Franks, Williams, Thompson, Bernardi, Bishop, Berry Brewster, Bronaugh, Brumbalow, Coon, Crossland, Fabretto, Fleming, Gossage, Hellums, Hoooper, Horn,Meals, Monroe, Moore, Murdoch, Myers, Power, Reed, Rigs, Sardini, Sims, Stanley,Washington, Wright
Related Name List: All of the above plus Nance, Graybill, Franks, Williams, Thompson, Bernardi, Bishop, Berry Brewster, Bronaugh, Brumbalow, Coon, Crossland, Fabretto, Fleming, Gossage, Hellums, Hoooper, Horn,Meals, Monroe, Moore, Murdoch, Myers, Power, Reed, Rigs, Sardini, Sims, Stanley,Washington, Wright
Saturday, December 12, 2015
Monday, November 30, 2015
Saturday, November 28, 2015
Monday, November 9, 2015
William Marcus Jeffrey (1852-1900/1902)
I thought
when I moved to Willis, Texas that I would have a better chance
solving the mystery of what happened to my great-grandfather, William Marcus
Jeffery. It didn’t turn out to be any easier to solve the riddle than before.
William
was born in Caldwell County, Texas, in November, 1852, the son of
Jeremiah C. Jeffrey and Miverva Minervice (Franks) Jeffrey. William possibly
was born in Prairie Lea, the location given on the first census[1]
where he is mentioned, The Caldwell County 1860 lists parents and William as a
son age 8 along with Mary A. age 9, Andrew age 5 and James, 11 months.
By 1870[2]
the family had moved to Crockett, Texas. With them were children J D, (I
believe this to be Jeff Jesse, born 1861)
J C, (Jerry C) age 6, and M E (Mattie Elizabeth) age 1 year.
By 1880[3]
William’s father had died and Minerva remarried to George Forrest, listed on
the census as Dr. but his occupation is given as a farmer. He had been living
nearby on the last census so possibly was a family friend.
With them are James, Jerry and Mattie. William, now 28 years
old is not living with them. There is a William Jeffrey living in Milam County, Texas[4] with a family named Harvey. This William is listed as 28 years
of age and relationship as laborer. We suspect this is our William who has gone
off to find work.
There is no 1890 census so the next time we find William, he
is the father of Daisy, born to Ellen Crain in 1892 in Oakwood, Texas, on the border of Leon and Freestone Counties[5].
In 1894, William and Ellen are married in Anderson County, Texas.[6]
William’s brother was living in Palestine in Anderson County so they might have been living with
him or nearby. Mattie was born the same
year but we don’t have a record of just where.
By June, 1900 the census of Montgomery county shows they had moved to
Willis Texas. Willis was a major center for tobacco growing. I imagine that
William wanted to find work to support his family. With them are now Manni, age
2 and Maud age 2 months. William’s mother and sister Mattie along with a few
other relatives are now living in Huntsville.
Then the mystery occurred. Ellen remarried in May of 1902.[7] What happened to William?
I’ve searched records and even wandered cemeteries trying to
find him. I haven’t turned up so much as a clue. There is a large and very old
cemetery near where they might have lived in Willis. I was told that one field
is full of unmarked graves. It’s possible that he was buried there or he could
have been buried in Huntsville or even the Jeffrey cemetery in Caldwell County. We’ve found no trace. He has
simply vanished. But I haven’t given up
searching.
[1] 1860 Federal
Census Caldwell County, Texas
[2] 1870
Federal Census, Houston County, Texas
[3] 1880
Federal Census, Houston County, Texas
[4] 1880
Federal Census, Milam County, Texas
[5]
Certificate of Death for Daisy Robinson
[6]Index
of "Texas,
Marriages, 1837-1973," index, FamilySearch
(https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.1.1/FX74-XVW :
accessed 23
Sep 2013), W. M. Jeffrey and
Ellen Crane, 14 Oct 1894.
[7] Anderson
County Marriages Index familysearch.org
Friday, November 6, 2015
Ellen Katherine Crain/Jeffrey/Moore (1870-1959)
I remember visiting my great-grandmother, Ellen or Granny as she was called at my great-aunt's house. She was very quiet and very wrinkled and had long grey braids that were wound around her head. I was just a youngster and was a bit shy. We didn't say much to each other.
I wish I had been older and
wiser and had asked her about her life. Now that she's gone, I'm trying to put
pieces together.
Her early life is a
mystery. We don't know for sure where she was born or who her parents were.
There are several family legends that are most likely not true. Her death
certificate gives her date of birth as December 3, 1870 and place as Willis,
Texas. I really doubt the place of birth is correct. The
informant was her daughter, my grandmother, Maude Pettey and this was where she
was born. She might not really have known. Besides that, it’s a very stressful
time for many informants since they are dealing with the grief of losing a
loved one.
Ellen’s maiden name was Crane
or Crain depending on who was writing it down. I did find a family by that name
in Crockett, Houston
County, Texas[1], at the right time for Ellen to have met our
great-grandfather, William Marcus Jeffrey. William’s mother and siblings were living in
Crocket at that time. [2]
There is no 1890 census but
we have a record of the first daughter Daisy born in 1892[3] in
Oakwood, Texas. Oakwood lies in both Leon and Freestone counties.
William and Ellen married
in 1894 in Anderson County. William’s brother, Andrew was living in Anderson County at this time.[4]
The second daughter,
Mattie, was born in 1894 in either Leon County or Montgomery County. The records conflict here. Her son Radford’s birth
certificate gives her birthplace as Leon County. Her death certificate just says Texas and Ancestry.com says Montgomery County. I lean toward using the son’s birth certificate
since she might have given the information herself.
In 1900 we find the family
of William and Ellen in Willis Texas with four children, Daisy, Mattie, and
daughters Manni, age 2 and Maude age 2 months. The census also notes that Ellen
had five children and four living children[5]
This census was taken in
June of 1900. In May of 1902, Ellen married Albert Moore in Huntsville, Texas. We don’t really know what happened to William. Our
best guess is that he died and Ellen, like almost all women at the time needed
to find a way to survive. Most often the solution was to move in with relatives
or to remarry quickly. Ellen had in-laws living in Huntsville so I imagine that she went to stay with one of them
until she married Albert.
In the 1910 census of Walker County, Albert and Ellen are listed with three daughters,
Daisy, Mattie and Maude. We are told by family that Manni had died. We don’t
know how or when or where she was buried. Albert’s occupation is listed as
farmer. [6]
The family remembers him as a prison guard at the Huntsville Prison but I’ve
not been able to find him in any employment records for the prison.
On the 1920 census[7]
Albert and Ellen are listed with daughter Daisy. Mattie might have been already
married by then. Maud didn’t marry until 1922 but there are other reasons she
might not have been listed. We know from personal contact that she worked for
the phone company as an operator. She might just have been at work or maybe was
renting a room elsewhere. In any case, Albert is again listed as a farmer
On the 1930 Census[8]
the location is now the Goree Unit of the Huntsville Prison. Only Albert and
Ellen (listed as Helen) are there and Albert is listed as not working. Not
surprising since he died of cancer in August of 1931. His death certificate only lists his place of
burial as Near Huntsville.
Once again Ellen went to
live with relatives. This time she went to live with her daughter, my grandmother,
Maude Pettey and her husband Jesse. My dad has some great stories about her in
his memoirs.[9]
Ellen died March 7, 1959. She was buried in Pine Prairie Cemetery in Huntsville.
There are unanswered
questions about this woman. Why was she buried in Pine Prairie instead of Old North Church where many of my ancestors are buried? I can only find one other Moore in Pine Prairie - Frank Henry Moore Jr. and can't find any
connection to Albert. And Ellen died before her daughter Daisy or her husband.
Perhaps there’s an unmarked grave of someone we've been looking for. Or she knew Daisy would be buried there and
wanted to be near her. And what happened to her husband William Jeffrey and her
daughter Manni? Where are they buried? And where did she come from?
I would so love to go back
in time and find out the answers to some of these questions, but I know that
isn’t going to happen. I can only keep plugging away at the search and maybe
I’ll eventually discover the truth about Ellen Crain.
[1] Census
for Houston County
1880
[2] ibid
[3] Death
Certificate Daisy Robinson familysearch.org
[4] Anderson
County Marriages Index familysearch.org
[5] 1900
federal Census for Montgomery County, TX
District 1 West of the RR tracks.
[6] 1910
Federal census for Walker County
[7] 1920
Federal census for Walker County
www.archive.org
[8] 1930
Federal census for Walker County
www.archive.org
[9] Pettey,
Jesse, (Dec. 1, 2001) One More Mission,
A Journey from Childhood to War, Xlibris
Sunday, October 25, 2015
Friday, October 23, 2015
Wrong Turn
I got a bit excited. I was going through my computer files with all the genealogical data trying to organize them when I came across some documents. One was a death certificate for James Nathan Jeffrey giving his father as Jessie Jeffrey and mother as Mary Franks. The informant was his son, John T. Jeffrey. Also there was the funeral record, with the same informant.
I was excited because I've been trying to discover if there is a link between the Franks that were in Caldwell county around 1822 and my g-great grandmother, Minerva M. Franks (1823-1903) in Huntsville, TX. I haven't been able to find any information on her as to who her parents were.
The problem was, I couldn't find the Jessie referred to as Mary's husband. There was a Jesse who was the brother to Jeremiah Jeffrey, Minerva's husband, but nothing matched up.
Slowly it started to make sense. The informants on the two documents were the same person, James Nathan Jeffrey's son. I've discovered that informants on death certificates are wildly unreliable. Whether from grief of the moment or just not really knowing, they almost always give the wrong information somewhere. And I seem to recall, in the distant past, going through this same excitement, only to realize that James Nathan's father was Jeremiah Jeffrey and his mother "Mary" was actually Minerva M. Franks. Back to square one.
I was excited because I've been trying to discover if there is a link between the Franks that were in Caldwell county around 1822 and my g-great grandmother, Minerva M. Franks (1823-1903) in Huntsville, TX. I haven't been able to find any information on her as to who her parents were.
The problem was, I couldn't find the Jessie referred to as Mary's husband. There was a Jesse who was the brother to Jeremiah Jeffrey, Minerva's husband, but nothing matched up.
Slowly it started to make sense. The informants on the two documents were the same person, James Nathan Jeffrey's son. I've discovered that informants on death certificates are wildly unreliable. Whether from grief of the moment or just not really knowing, they almost always give the wrong information somewhere. And I seem to recall, in the distant past, going through this same excitement, only to realize that James Nathan's father was Jeremiah Jeffrey and his mother "Mary" was actually Minerva M. Franks. Back to square one.
Sunday, October 4, 2015
The Algonquin
My apologies for not posting for a while. I spent a couple of months in the hospital and am adjusting to a new life style. I'm still digging through genealogy though.
Today's find was the passenger list for the Algonquin which brought women from Italy to the US after WWII. My mother is on line 15, Carla Pettey. I have a picture somewhere of her on the deck. If I find it I'll post it too.
When I get back from the Fun Match with Moss, I'll enlarge these as best I can.
Today's find was the passenger list for the Algonquin which brought women from Italy to the US after WWII. My mother is on line 15, Carla Pettey. I have a picture somewhere of her on the deck. If I find it I'll post it too.
When I get back from the Fun Match with Moss, I'll enlarge these as best I can.
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