hmtl5 Notes: Gage and Shook Families

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701 Joshua Bigelow was the son of John Bigelow and Mary Warren. He was born in Watertown, Massachusetts, on November 5, 1655. When the War with King Philip broke out, he enlisted in the forces of Governor Winslow, and was in the memorable Swamp Fight, December 19, 1675, where he was wounded. He received, therefore, a grant of land in Worcester, as well as his Narraganset (Westminister) grant. He was in the Company to whom Narraganset number 2 was assigned, and drew lot number 12.

He married in Watertown, October 20, 1676, Elizabeth Flagg, daughter of Thomas and Mary Flagg, who was born in Watertown on March 22, 1655. Joshua & Elizabeth were the parents of at least eleven children. Sometime after 1705, they moved from Watertown to Worcester, where they lived for many years. Elizabeth died there on August 9, 1729. In June, 1742 at the age of 86, Joshua took up residence in Westminister with his son Eliezer. He was the only Narraganset soldier who ever became an actual resident of Westminister.

Joshua died on February 21, 1745 in Westminister. It is claimed that he was the first adult person to die in Westminister, after a residence of 2 years and 8 months. 
Bigelow, Joshua (I617)
 
702 Last Will and Testament of Christopher Osgood. See page 200. Genealogy of the French family, Mida F. Doan, (https://archive.org/details/genealogyoffrenc00doan/mode/2up). Osgood, Christopher (I447)
 
703 Lieut Henry Bryant Guernsey Guernsey, Henry Bryant (I207)
 
704 Lieutenant John Bigelow was the son of Joshua Bigelow and Elizabeth Flagg or Flegg Bigelow. He was born 20 Dec 1681 in Watertown, Middlesex, MA. He was married 4 times.

First: Hannah ?, m. unknown, d. 31 Mar 1709
Children:
David, b. by 1706
John, b. 25 Mar 1709

Second: Sarah Bigelow, m. 4 Nov 1709 at Colchester (d. 13 Oct 1754). Sarah was the daughter of Jonathan and Rebecca Shepherd or Shepard Bigelow and a cousin of John.
Children:
Sarah, b. 17 July 1712
Jonathan, b. 21 May 1714
Asa, b. 3 Sept 1720

Third: Abigail (Lewis?), m. 17 Sep 1755, d. 1 Aug 1760

Fourth: Hannah Munn

The will of Lieutenant John Bigelow of Colchester, dated 18 May, 1769, mentions wife Hannah (probably his fourth wife), two sons, David and John, and heirs of his deceased son Asa.

Source: Memoranda of all the inscriptions in the old burying ground at Colchester, Conn. by Frank E. Randall. 
Bigelow, Lieut. John (I637)
 
705 Littlejohn Rites Held
Special to the Phoenix
Stilwell, Feb. 13 – Funeral services for Mrs. Maggie Littlejohn, 60, who died at her home south of Stilwell Monday morning, were held Tuesday afternoon at the home with Rev. Evan Brewer officiating.
Burial was in the Chuculate cemetery under the direction of the Moore funeral home of Sallisaw. Survivors include her husband, Charlie Littlejohn of the home, several children and a brother, Jim Bateman of Stilwell.
Muskogee Daily Phoenix and Times-Democrat, Muskogee, Oklahoma. Friday, 14 February 1941.
 
Bateman, Maggie Ann (I682)
 
706 LKH note:
Civil War. Confederate Army, Company J, 11th & 17th Arkansas Cavalry. Prisoner of War. Parole date: 13 May 1865.

Enlisted 20 Nov 1861 at Fort Smith, Arkansas in 17th Infantry, A-H, Griffith's Infantry.
 
Bateman, Elisha Summerfield (I674)
 
707 LKH note:
Obituary gives birthplace as Collins County, Texas.

1930 census records gives birth place as Oklahoma.

1950 census records gives birth place as Texas.

WWII Draft info gives birthplace as Cartridge Hill, Texas. I'm uncertain as to where that is.

Social Security application and Social Security death index both give birthplace as Seminole County, Oklahoma.
 
Shook, Julian Glenn (I1)
 
708 LKH note: no other family names appear in this news article, but the time and location point to this being James Andrew Bateman.

Man Seriously Cut.
Stilwell, Okla., Oct. 17. – (Special) – Carrying part of his protruding bowels in his hands after his stomach had been ripped open with a knife, James Bateman of Stilwell walked several blocks to his home. Bateman is in a critical condition but refuses to thrown any light on the affair, hence no arrest has been made.
The Daily Oklahoman, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. Tuesday, 18 October 1910.
 
Bateman, James Andrew (I689)
 
709 Lorene Gage Haas died at her home in Fullerton, California, April 25.She was born December 10, 1913 at Huntsville, Arkansas, the daughter of Joseph A and Hattie Price Gage.
She is survived by her husband, Allan of the home; three children and several grandchildren; a sister, Ella Gage King of Fullerton; two brothers, Allan Gage, Porterville, Calif, and Bob Gage of Huntsville.
Services and interment were Friday, April 28, in California.
(The Madison County Record, Huntsville, AR, May 4, 1978) 
Gage, Lorene Sadie (I134)
 
710 Lula Catherine “Belle” Price Price, Lula C. (I136)
 
711 Lydie Osgood dau of Christopher & Sarah died July 20 1694. Osgood, Lydia (I438)
 
712 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Notes, Notes (I293)
 
713 Mabel Edwards, youngest child of Richard Edwards, Esq. and his first wife Elizabeth Tuttle, was bapt. at the Hartford 1st Chh. Dec. 13, 1685 and d. at Hartford May 14, 1765. She was interred at Hartford's Ancient Cemetery (Sextant Rec.), but by 1853 had no discernable gravestone.

Mabel was not baptized near the time of her birth, and the year of her birth cannot be determined; there is no record that gives her age at death. (Mary K. Talcott erred in her annotation of the Ancient Cemetery sextant record in stating that she was "born" Dec. 13, 1685). On Mar. 8, 1695/6 along with several of her siblings, Mabel "owned the covenant" of the Hartford 1st Chh., which was not possible at 10 years of age. And, it is highly unlikely that if Dec. 13, 1685 was otherwise close to her date of birth, she married when she was only recently turned 14 years old. Mabel is probably the "Mehetabel wife to Jonathan Biglow" who was admitted to full communion of the Hartford 2nd Chh. Aug. 27, 1724. Unfortunately, there are no member records for the 2nd Church between mid-1731 and early 1791.

Mabel m. Dec. 14, 1699 at Hartford (HTR and 1st Chh. Rec.) Jonathan Bigelow, Jr., s. of Jonathan Bigelow and Rebecca Shepard, b. Mar. 22, 1674/5 at Hartford, Conn. He d. July 29, 1749 at Hartford, Æ 75 and is interred with an extant gravestone at Hartford's Ancient Cemetery.

Mabel Edwards and Jonathan Bigelow, Jr. had the following children b. at Hartford:

• i. Lieut. Timothy Bigelow, b. June 20, 1702 (HTR); d. June 2, 1747, Æ 45; m. Abigail Olcott Oct. 25, 1727, who m. 2) Capt. Daniel Goodwin Nov. 6, 1748.

• ii. Mabel Bigelow, b. Nov. 12, 1703 (1704 HTR, but bapt. Nov. 21 1703, Hartford 1st Chh.); m. Daniel Seymour May 10, 1727, s. of John Seymour, Jr. and Elizabeth Webster (dau. of Lieut. Robert Webster and Susannah Treat, the writer's ancestors). Mabel d. betw. Dec. 16, 1738, when given a legacy in her father's will, and Feb. 1759, when distribution of her father's estate was made, including to the heirs of "Mabel Seymour deceased, late wife of Daniel Seymour." However, she did not d. Nov. 10, 1757 as claimed by Barbour as that is the date Mary Harris, the one month long wife of David Seymour, not Daniel Seymour, was bur. at Hartford's Ancient Cemetery.

• iii. Jesse Bigelow, bapt. Sept. 15, 1706 (2nd Chh); not included in his father's Dec. 1738 will.

• iv. Rebecca Bigelow, bapt. Dec. 5, 1708 (1st Chh.); d. unm. Jan. 8, 1754, Æ 46 and interred at Hartford's Ancient Cemetery.

• v. Irene Bigelow, bapt. Nov. 4, 1711 (1st Chh.); d. Mar. 27, 1790, Æ 79; m. Ens. Daniel Marsh, s. of Lieut. Nathaniel Marsh and Elizabeth Spencer. He was bapt. at the Hartford 1st Chh. Oct. 30, 1709 and d. Nov. 6, 1795, Æ 87. They resided at East Hartford, Conn.

• vi. Jonathan Bigelow, 3rd, bapt. June 27, 1714 (1st Chh.); d. Jan. 25, 1779, Æ 65 and interred at Hartford's Ancient Cemetery.

• vii. Jerusha Bigelow, bapt. June 23, 1717 (2nd Chh.); m. Elisha Butler.

• viii. Anne Bigelow, bapt. Jan. 7, 1721/2 (2nd Chh.); not included in her father's Dec. 1738 will. 
Edwards, Mabel (I634)
 
714 Mac Ferrian Robinson Robinson, McFerren (I275)
 
715 Madison County, Arkansas records show that William was appointed as one of a group of commissioners on April 8, 1879 to select a site for a new courthouse, as the previous one had been "burned by the federals in 1863". When the group failed to agree on a site, the county judge ordered that the new courthouse would be built on the site of the previous one. A contract was awarded to William A. Gage on May 24,1881 with a bid of $3000 to build the new structure. In Goodspeed's "History of Madison County, AR" a biography of William A. Gage is printed. The following information was taken from that biography. William A. Gage, son of John Gage and Lydia Clement, grew to manhood under the paternal roof. He served some time in the third Arkansas Infantry during the Civil War, but was discharged on account of disability, but afterward served as orderly sergeant in John Carrol's Co. After his marriage he engaged in farming upon the home place until the close of the war, when he purchased a place a short distance above, upon which he lived until 1874, at which time he was then elected county clerk. He sold his place and moved to Huntsville, and served four consecutive terms in that office. Upon moving to Huntsville, he purchased a farm located one-half mile north of Huntsville. He engaged in stock raising in connection with his farming, and for five years did a mercantile business in Huntsville. William was a leading Democrat of the county, and for many years was chairman of the Democratic County Central Committee. He was also a Royal Arch Mason. His sons James and Joseph were editors of the "Madison County Democrat."

New York Times
April 28, 1894

SAMUEL F. VAUGHAN EXECUTED
The Wealthy Arkansan Had TO Be Carried To The Gallows

FAYETTEVILLE, Ark., April 27.

-Samuel F. Vaughan who promised Thomas Hamilton $3,000 if he would kill ex-County Clerk Andrew Gage of Madison County in 1891, was hanged this morning for the murder of Gage. He denied his guilt to the last. His wife and children spent last night with the condemned man, and at 5 o'clock this morning his wife, when told by the Sheriff to take final leave of her husband, dropped on her knees by his side and prayed God for half an hour to kill her husband before he reached the gallows. Vaughan had to be carried to the gallows, from which his body fell a distance of eight feet, almost severing the head from the neck. Samuel F. Vaughan was twice convicted of the same crime. Hamilton will be sent to the penitentiary New York Times
April 28, 1894

Hired to Kill Another Man.
LITTLE ROCK. Ark. Aug. 2l.

-At the Circuit Court in Berryville. Ark., to-day, Thomas Hamilton pleaded guilty to murder in the second degree
for killing W. A. Gage, one of the most prominent citizens of Madison County, three years ago. He was sentenced to eighteen years in the penitentiary. Hamilton was hired to kill Gage by Samuel F. Vaughan, who was hanged at Fayetteville last April.

Appeal from circuit court, Washington county; Edward S. McDaniel, Judge.

Samuel F. Vaughan, convicted of murder in the first degree, appeals. Affirmed.

The other facts fully appear in the following statement by WOOD, J.:

W. A. Gage was assassinated at his home, in Madison county, September 26, 1891. He was fired upon by some one in ambush, as he was returning to his house from his horse lot, and instantly killed. Tracks leading to and from the place of the killing were discovered. Those leading away were made by a person in sock feet. Those leading up to where the assassin stood were made with shoes having plates or irons upon the heels. The shoes of one Thomas Hamilton were compared with the tracks, and found to fit exactly. Also, beggar lice and red dirt were found upon his socks, corresponding to dirt of the same description in the field of the deceased,-the way the party doing the killing had gone. Hamilton was indicted as principal; the appellant, Samuel F. Vaughan, as accessory. Samuel F. Vaughan was suspected and arrested on account of the bitter animosity which he was known to have had against Gage on account of a lawsuit which had been pending for years between them. Samuel F. Vaughan had sued Gage for something between $2,500 or $3,000.and had been heard, at different times and places, and by various witnesses, to express great hatred towards Gage. Had said "that Gage had treated him very bad, or very mean; that it was very hard to bear; that there were two ways a man could get him to kill him,-one, in self-defense; the other, by treating him mean." Also, "that if Gage beat him in his suit he did not know what he would do; that he though he would leave the state; had never been fooled so badly by a man in his life." And, again, "that he had decided in his mind that, If a man beat him out of his just rights, that it would not do him any good; that there was old Andrew Gage, who owed him about twenty-five hundred dollars, and, if he beat him out of it, it should never do him any good." And, again, "that he sometimes thought that, if it were not for his family, or Gage's family, before Gage should testify against him, he would take his gun and kill him." Other witnesses testified that appellant, after being arrested, and on his way to jail, when near deceased's house, fell off his mule, began crying, and told that he had just realized that he was charged with crime; that he regretted the thought of having to be taken among his old friends and neighbors, charged with killing as good a man as Mr. Gage." After Samuel F. Vaughan and Hamilton were lodged in jail, witnesses and letters were introduced to show that Samuel F. Vaughan endeavored to dissuade Hamilton from turning state's evidence, all of which will be set out fully in the opinion. Hamilton, by an agreement with the state's attorney to the effect that he might plead to murder in the second degree, was permitted to testify. Omitting the details of the horrible crime, as given by him, his testimony was, in substance: That he was in most distressed circumstances,-his family sick, and he in want that defendant, Samuel F. Vaughan, at different times when they were hunting together, and on other occasions, talked to him about his trouble with Gage; said that Gage was going to swear him out of his money, if he was not removed, and that he wanted him (Hamilton) to do it, and would give him half Gage owed him if he would kill Gage. Said that Samuel F. Vaughan promised to let him have land to cultivate, furnish him a team, and give him all he could make; that he had nothing against Gage, but finally yielded to the requests of Samuel F. Vaughan, moved through his promises to pay him, and committed the deed in the manner above described, with a double barrel shotgun furnished him by Samuel F. Vaughan. Said that Samuel F. Vaughan planned the way for him to do the killing, and said he (Vaughan) would be suspected, but that he could prove that he was not there, and that he (Hamilton) would not be suspected. The defendant, on his own behalf, denied all the statements of Hamilton, introduced witnesses to show his good character, and that Hamilton had made statements at different times "that he (Vaughan) had nothing to do with the killing." The above, together with the facts set out in the opinion, constitute the substance of the evidence upon which the state asked conviction. The jury returned a verdict of guilty, and the case is here by appeal from Judgment of death pronounced upon the verdict.

J. D. Walker and J. W. Walker, for appellant James P. Clarke, Atty. Gen., and Charles T. Coleman, for the State.

https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/46075249/william-andrew-gage
Find A Grave, database and images (accessed 13 June 2019), memorial page for William Andrew Gage (9 Jan 1836-26 Sep 1891), Find A Grave Memorial no. 46075249, citing Huntsville Cemetery, Huntsville, Madison County, Arkansas, USA; Maintained by scott97172773 (contributor 46798626).
 
Gage, William Andrew (I31)
 
716 Marion H. Osgood was optician who had a shop at 156 North First Street in downtown San Jose. Before, that, he was a jeweler. He was born in Fairfield, Somerset County, Maine, and served in the Union Army as a private in Company G, Maine 14th Infantry Regiment. After the war, he married Hattie A. Harker on Sept. 23, 1874, in Rochester, New Hampshire. Their marriage record states that Marion H. Osgood was 27 years old, born in Fairfield, Maine, to Hudson and Elizabeth Osgood; Hattie was 22, born in Dover, N.H., the daughter of John C. and Harriett Harker.

The family moved from Rochester, New Hampshire, to San Jose in the 1880s. Their children included Wilfred Hudson Osgood, Alice Maud Osgood, Charles Sumner Osgood, and Hattibel H. Osgood.

Hattie Amanda (Harker) Osgood died on Jan. 22, 1944, in Los Angeles, at the age of 91. 
Osgood, Marion Hudson (I175)
 
717 Marriage:
October 26, 1876
Elijah Springer Allen
Lawrence County, Missouri, USA

OBITUARY
Mt. Vernon, MO. Lawrence Chieftain Feb. 18, 1943

Mrs. Elizabeth Allen, 83, Mrs. D.C. Adams mother, died at 2 at the home of another daughter, Mrs. Albert E. Baugh, at Mt. Vernon. She had suffered a slight stroke about Christmas time, but was thought to be improving.
Mrs. Allen was the widow of E.S. Allen, veteran postmaster at Hoberg. He died three and a half years ago and she had since made her home with Mrs. Baugh.
Joint funeral services for Mrs. Allen and Mrs. Adams were conducted at 3 Tuesday afternoon at the Presbyterian Church in Mt. Vernon, by Rev. Elizabeth Hillhouse, pastor of the Hoberg Presbyterian Church, assisted by the Rev. James McInnis, pastor of the Mt. Vernon Church. Burial was made in the Odd Fellows Cemetery, under the direction of the Orr & Co.

Children:
Myrtle Allen
Ethel A. Allen

 
Shook, Elizabeth (I252)
 
718 Married by the Reverend Woolems. Family F5
 
719 Married James Purvis in 1858
James Purvis 1837 - Aug 06, 1864
Married Elisha Summerfield Bateman Dec. 09, 1866

Daughter John Alexander & Mary Winnie Idella Reed Bush 
Bush, Marina Catherine (I710)
 
720 Martha supposedly initially married Thomas Olmsted and then promptly divorced him. However, she married Obadiah Wood Jr of East Hartford CT on 12/10/1684 in Watertown MA but the marriage to Thomas was supposed to have occurred in 1686 so something's uncertain.

Birth date is from the Massachusetts, Town Clerk, 1626-2001 records. 
Bigelow, Martha (I621)
 
721 Mary Benton married 1st to Nathaniel Cole.
After he died, she married Jonathan Bigelow.
After Jonathan died in 1710, she married 3rd in 1713 to John Shephard.



 
Benton ???, Mary (I590)
 
722 Mary born unknown date; married 11 Jan 1700 John WILLIAMS; was living 1716, when she receipted for her share of her father's estate. Family F274
 
723 Mary presented inventory of her husband Abraham's estate taken on 16 Feb 1643 Unknown, Mary (I469)
 
724 Mary, wife of Thomas Flegg
Good reason to think her name was Underwood:

At the Public Record Office in London is still preserved a list of one hundred and fifteen Norfolk persons who, between 8 April and 13 April 1637, were examined and licensed to pass to New England to inhabit and remain. They were to sail from Yarmouth, England, either in the ship John and Dorothy, Capt. William Andrews, Sen., master, or in the ship Rose, Capt. William Andrews, Jr., master. Thomas Flege, aged 21 years, and possably his future wife, Marable Underwood, aged 20 years, were listed along with another man, Isacke Hartt, aged 22 years, as servants of passenger Richard Caruear of Skratby in the County of Norff, aged 60 years, and Grace his wife, aged 40 years, who had with them their two daughters, Elizabeth and Susanna, twins, aged 18 years. (This information may be found in Exchequer, Kings Rembrancer, Licenses to Pass beyond the Seas, No. 21, Public Record Office, London. It was found in a book by Ernest Flagg, Genealogical Notes on Founding of New England, p. 438.)

Mary, whose maiden name has not been proven, but a strong indication is that it was Underwood, married Thomas Flagg about 1640, judging from the birth of their first child. The record of their marriage has not been found, but was probably in Watertown. Thomas & Mary had either eleven or twelve children, the birth of William not being recorded, but he fits between Thomas & Michael. All were born in Watertown, Massachusetts.

There is a record at Great Yarmouth, Norfolk, England of a Mary Underwood, daughter of Edmund and Elizabeth, being baptized on October 19, 1619 
Underwood, Mary (I663)
 
725 Maudie Cherokee Brown was born May 22, 1915 in Stilwell, OK and departed this life on Jan. 30, 1997 at St. Francis Hospital in Tulsa, OK at the age of 81.
She was a retired homemaker and a longtime resident of Adair County. She was the daughter of Charles Poesy LittleJohn and Maggie Ann Bateman Littlejohn. Maudie and Harrison Taylor Brown were married on May 18, 1933 in Stilwell.
She was preceded in death by her parents; her husband; four daughters, Carlene Salsman, Margaret Ann Brown, Linda Mae Hothouse and Mary Lavon Huggins; and two sons, Joe Harvey Brown and William Harrison Brown. Also preceding her were 5 brothers and 2 sisters.
She leaves to mourn her passing two sons, Roy Brown and wife, Neva of Stilwell and Troy Brown and wife Anita of Sublette, KS; 6 daughters, Myrtle Stages of Shamrock, TX, Opal King, Maggie Ann Cantrell and husband Cecil, Wanda Buckner and husband Adrian, Connie Smith and husband Dallas, Irene Kay and husband Tracy all of Stilwell; one brother George Washington Adair Littlejohn of Stilwell; one sister, Gertrude Reddin of Leflore, OK; 32 grandchildren and 31 great grandchildren plus 2 great great grandchildren.
Brother Jim Walker officiated the service.
 
Littlejohn, Maudie Cherokee (I727)
 
726 Max Robinson Robinson, McFerren (I275)
 
727 Mentioned in his grandfather Bennett Beltoft's will in 14 Apr 1623. Belknap or Beltoft, Abraham (I473)
 
728 Merrill Memorial.
The chapter on Nathaniel begins on page 159 and continued through page 161.

Nathaniel Merrill was one of the earliest settlers of Newbury, Mass., in 1635. He was the ancestor of a vast majority of those who now bear the Merrill name in this country: it is believed, indeed, that less than one percent of the Merrills in America can trace their pedigree to any other emigrant ancestor.

Nathaniel Merrill and his older brother John were born in England. The registers of Wherstead, a parish lying three miles south of Ipswich, in Suffolk County, England, contain the following entries:

1599, Aug.16. John Merrell son of Nath. Merrell & Mary his wife was baptised.

1601, May 4. Nathanaell Merrell son of Nath. Merrell & Mary his wife was baptised.

 
Merrill, Nathaniel (I571)
 
729 Missouri death certificate
https://www.sos.mo.gov/images/archives/deathcerts/1915/1915_00001623.PDF 
Shook, Phinetta Jane (I668)
 
730 Missouri death certificate
https://www.sos.mo.gov/images/archives/deathcerts/1939/1939_00029546.PDF 
Allen, Elijah Springer (I253)
 
731 Missouri death certificate
https://www.sos.mo.gov/images/archives/deathcerts/1951/1951_00008261.PDF 
Wright, Charles Daniel (I289)
 
732 Missouri death certificate
https://www.sos.mo.gov/images/archives/deathcerts/1962/1962_00033448.PDF 
Reed, Mary Angelina (I24)
 
733 Missouri death certificate:
https://www.sos.mo.gov/images/archives/deathcerts/1928/1928_00000942.PDF 
Brown, Elzona (I665)
 
734 Moved from Hartford to West Hartford after 1719.

 
Merrill, Isaac (I566)
 
735 Moved from Hartford to West Hartford in 1725. Merrill, Jacob (I568)
 
736 Mrs. Alice Berry dies Friday a.m.

Mrs. Alice Berry of Harrisville died Friday morning at the Sydney Convalescent Home in Vicksburg. She was 84 years old and was the daughter of the late E. S. Bateman and Marina Bush Bateman. She was born and reared in the Pleasant Hill community, and was the widow of the late James Franklin Berry. Funeral services were conducted from the Harrisville Baptist Church Saturday afternoon with Rev. E. L. Warren officiating, assisted by Rev. W. P. Miley of Braxton. Interment was in the Harrisville cemetery with Mendenhall Funeral Home In charge! of arrangements.

Survivors include one son, James F. Berry, Jr., of Mobile, Ala.: seven daughters, Mrs. A. S. Neely, Miss Muriel Berry and Mrs. Ellis Felts, all of Harrisville, Mrs. S. O. Ross of Vicksburg, Mrs. J. V. Magee of Braxton, Mrs. W. N. Neely of Mandeville, and Mrs. Thomas J. Gipson of Ocean Springs; twenty nine grandchildren; and thirty three great grandchildren.

Simpson County News, 01 Feb 1962, Thu, Page 1
 
Bateman, Alice Marina (I717)
 
737 Mrs. Daniel C. Bateman, Native of Tarrant, Dies
Mrs. Daniel C. Bateman, a lifelong resident of Tarrant County, died at 2;50 a.m. Thursday at her home at 845 Davis.
Mrs. Bateman, who would have been 74 on Saturday, was born at Azle but moved to Fort Worth as a small child and lived here most of her life. She was a member of Evans Avenue Baptist Church.
She was the daughter of Will and Minerva Isbell Tanahill, early day settlers of Parker County.
Mrs. Bateman and her husband celebrated their 55th wedding anniversary on Christmas Eve.
Surviving are the husband; five sons, Roy Bateman, assistant city secretary, and Marvin Bateman of Fort Worth, Clarence Bateman, former Fort Worth resident who recently moved to Dallas, Leonard Bateman of Waco and Raymond Bateman of Norman, Okla.; three daughters, Mrs. H.G. Calk of Fort Worth, Mrs. H.W. Cates of Houston and Mrs. Hugh Robinson Jr. of Laredo, 15 grandchildren and four great-grandchildren.
Funeral services will be conducted at 2 p.m. Friday in Evans Avenue Baptist Church, with Revs. W.W. Phelps and Jesse Garrett officiating.
Burial will be held in Greenwood under direction of Gause Ware.
Fort Worth Star-Telegraph, Fort Worth, Texas. Thursday, 7 January 1954.
 
Tannahill, Marion Mae (I695)
 
738 Mrs. Hazel O’Brate
Syracuse – Funeral for Mrs. Hazel V. O’Brate, 83, will be 2 p.m. Tuesday at the First Christian Church, Syracuse, the Rev. Clyde Spaulding officiating.
Burial will be in Syracuse Cemetery.
Mrs. O’Brate died Saturday at the Hamilton County Hospital, Syracuse.
Born Sept. 21, 1892, at Eureka Springs, Ark., she was married to Anthony O’Brate in 1956 at Los Angeles. He died in 1959. She had lived in Syracuse since 1956.
Mrs. O’Brate was a member of the First Christian Church, Syracuse.
Survivors include a son, Norval Ogden, San Diego, Calf.; two step-sons, Larry O’Brate, Bowie, Md., and Howard O’Brate, 1711 Mike’s Dr., Garden City; three daughters, Mrs. Lucille Hart and Mrs. Dorothy Eastman, both of Sand Diego, and Mrs. Jessie Ashley, Phoenix, Ariz.; a step-daughter, Mrs. Helen Christeansen, Walsh, Colo.; 18 grandchildren; 30 great-grandchildren; and one great-great-grandchild.
Friends may call from 6 to 9 p.m. Monday at McFadden Mortuary, Syracuse.
 
Reed, Hazel Vivian (I279)
 
739 MRS. J. I. BROWN

Mrs. J. I. Brown, 77, died at 3:15 o'clock Friday morning January 26, ;at her home in Mt. Olive, after an illness of ten months. Funeral services were held Saturday afternoon at 2 o'clock at the Rials Creek Methodist church in Simpson county, with interment in the Rials Creek cemetery. Rev. Gray, pastor of the Magee Methodist church, and Rev. Easterling of Mt. Olive officiated.

Mrs. Brown is survived by her husband, J. I. Brown of Mt. Olive; three sons, John L. Brown, San Francisco, Calif; J. T. Brown, Magee; W. K. Brown, Mt. Olive; three daughters, Mrs. J. A. Grissom, of Stringer; Mrs J. P. Jones, Mt. Olive; Mrs. S. H. Butler, Mt. Olive; one sister, Mrs. Alice Berry, Braxton; one brother, Andrew Bateman, Hazlehurst; one half brother, Joe Purvis, Newhebron, and 14 grandchildren.

Mims Mitchell Funeral Home had charge of arrangements.

Simpson County News, Mendenhall, Mississippi, 22 Feb 1945, Thu • Page 1
 
Bateman, Florence Victoria (I714)
 
740 Mrs. Maggie A. Littlejohn
Funeral services for Mrs. Maggie A. Littlejohn, who died at her home here Monday was held Tuesday afternoon at the Chuculate cemetery under the direction of the Wheeler-Stevenson Funeral home.
Mrs. Littlejohn was born October 18, 1880 in Scott county, Arkansas. She was married to C.P. Littlejohn 44 years ago.
Survivors include the husband, two daughters, Mrs. Maude Brown and Mrs. Gertrude Anderson of Stilwell; three sons, Joe and Felix Littlejohn of Stilwell, and Jeff Littlejohn of Washington.
Sequoyah County Times, Sallisaw, Oklahoma. Friday, 14 February 1941.
 
Bateman, Maggie Ann (I682)
 
741 Mrs. Pearl Reed
Funeral services will be held at 10:30 a.m. today (Thursday, December 11) at Sisco Chapel in Springdale, for Mrs. Pearl (Virginia King) Reed who passed away in a Springdale Nursing Home Tuesday, December 9. Her home was at 305 South Blair in Springdale. She was born in Owasso, Oklahoma the daughter of William Dyle and Eugenia Dell Burkett Smith, and was a member of the First United Methodist Church of Springdale. She was the widow of P.B. Reed of Huntsville.
Survivors are one daughter, Mrs. Ina Shirley, Sacramento, California; two sisters, Mrs. Jessie Stromquist and Mrs. Marion Blankenship, both of Springdale; two grandchildren and three great-grandchildren.
Rev. Joe Taylor officiated. Burial was in Forest Park Cemetery in Springdale.
 
Smith, Pearl Virginia (I286)
 
742 Mrs. W.A. Bateman Dies At Home Of Son
Mrs. Theodious Louisa Bateman, 76, died here Wednesday morning at the home of her son, J.W. Bateman, 1408 West Haven Blvd.
She was a lifelong resident of Hazlehurst and a member of the Poplar Springs Baptist church. She celebrated her 57th wedding anniversary last July.
Funeral services will be held at the Poplar Springs Baptist church at 2 p.m. Friday with the pastor and her grandson, Rev. William S. Bateman of Memphis, officiating. Interment will be in the Poplar Spring cemetery with Hartman funeral home of Brookhaven in charge.
Survivors include her husband, W.A. Bateman, Hazlehurst; six sons, G.E. Bateman and R.W. Bateman, both of Memphis, R.A. Bateman, Bremerton, Wash., J.A. Bateman, Albany, Ga., J.W. Bateman, Jackson, H.H. Bateman, Charlotte, N.C.; one daughter, Mrs. L.A. Beasley, Raymond; one brother, G.W. Gardner, Fort Worth, Texas; 16 grandchildren and five great grandchildren.
Clarion-Ledger, Jackson, Mississippi. Thursday, 30 December 1954.
 
Gardner, Thedius Louisa (I712)
 
743 Name: William Bethel Allen
Enlistment Age: 41
Birth Date: 8 Jun 1823
Enlistment Date: 15 Sep 1864
Enlistment Rank: Captain
Muster Date: 15 Sep 1864
Muster Place: Missouri
Muster Company: D
Muster Regiment: 46th Infantry
Muster Regiment Type: Infantry
Muster Information: Commission
Side of War: Union
Survived War?: Yes
Was Officer?: Yes
Last Known Residence Place: Lawrence County, Missouri
Death Date: 29 Mar 1893
Burial Place: Hoberg, Lawrence Co., Missouri
Title: Index to Compiled Military Service Records; National Archives: Index to Federal Pension Records; SUVCW Database: http://www.suvcwdb.org/
 
Allen, William Bethel (I669)
 
744 Named in her father Ezekiel's will. 1740 Osgood, Hannah (I406)
 
745 Named in her father Ezekiel's will. 1740. Osgood, Mary (I408)
 
746 Named in his father Ezekiel's will. 1740. Osgood, John (I407)
 
747 Nathaniel and his father, Nathaniel, both served in the Revolutionary War. Merrill, Nathaniel (I503)
 
748 Nathaniel Merrill served 3 years in the Revolution. His son, Nathaniel, also served. Merrill, Nathaniel (I322)
 
749 Nathaniel never married. He was considered to be insane. Merrill, Nathaniel (I555)
 
750 Next door neighbors to William Counts, age 36, b.TN. wife Elizabeth, age 32, b. TN and 6 children aged 1-10 born in Missouri.
Next door neighbor to Carroll County, age 26, b. TN, wife Jan age 19, b. TN and 1 child age 1 born in Missouri. 
Counts, John Adam (I51)
 

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