Sunday, February 28, 2021

52 Ancestors in 52 Weeks: 2021 (Week 8): Power

 Amy Johnson Crow from Generations Cafe is again hosting the blog writing prompt this year called 52 Ancestors in 52 Weeks: 2021.  I'm going to try to participate more fully this year.  I like that she gives us "permission" to interpret the prompt however we wish and share it however we wish.  It doesn't have to be a blog post; it could be a family video, a letter to a child or grandchild, an e-mail, etc.  

The Theme for Week 8 (Feb 22-28) is Power.

When I heard this theme, my first thought was quite literal:  Power, as in electrical power.  The reason for this is I remembered finding the easements for right-of-way filed in the Johnson County, Georgia Deed records for my grandparents, Lusion K Tapley (1870-1935) and Nealie V Drake Tapley (1895-1970).  They signed these easements over to Georgia Power Company for them to run electrical lines and put up electrical poles on my grandparents' land for the Dellwood-Wrightsville lines.  


Evidently, my grandparents owned two pieces of land.  One was in Lusion's name, located in the 55th GM District,  and the other in Nealie's, located in the 1326th GM District.  His parcel must have been quite small because Georgia Power only paid him $10.00 for the right-of-way "upon a strip of land one hundred (100) feet in width."  Whereas Georgia Power paid Nealie $65 for the same sized strip across her land.  

These deeds were recorded on June 11 and June 16, 1927, respectively.  So that is when electric lights came to Johnson County.  All of my grandparents' neighbors granted the same basic easement right-of-way, being paid varying amounts depending on the size of their land.   

One of Lusion's neighbors, whose land his bordered, was C.M. Schwalls, the brother of Lusion's second wife, Mattie Schwalls.  One of Nealie's neighbors was W.S. Pool, though already passed by this time, who was the father of Lusion's sister-in-law, Reida Mae Poole.  Reida Mae was married to his oldest brother, James "Fella." (The W.S. could have also referred to Reida Mae's brother.  The land may have passed to him.)  Such is small towns (and counties!).

I recall the day I found these while searching the Johnson County Courthouse for deed records.  I was in awe.  I've had electricity my entire life.  I had never given any thought about when electrical lines were first run across the land.  My father was born a year after these easements were recorded, and evidently he found it interesting also.  I remember him poring over them.  I can't say that during his childhood, my father always had electricity, because the family was poor, and electricity wasn't free.  But electricity was available in the area his whole life.  [I am sure this had an effect on him and is why he was so diligent in paying the power (or "light") bill on time or early throughout his life.]

We tend to take power for granted.  Folks moan and groan when it goes out for a few hours or even a few minutes.  But once upon a time, less than 100 years ago, my family did not even have electricity run to their house.  I am grateful every time I flip a switch.


Saturday, February 27, 2021

Saturday Night Genealogy Fun - Your Favorite RootsTech Connect 2021 Moment, Experience, Session and/or Feature

 From Randy (cousin discovery!!) over at Genea-Musings:

it's Saturday Night 
time for more Genealogy Fun!!!


Your mission, should you decide to accept it, is to:

(1)  Did you attend the free and virtual RootsTech Connect 2021 conference this week?  What was your favorite moment, experience, session, and/or feature?

(2)  Tell us all about it in your own blog post, in a comment to this post, or in a post on Facebook.  

Here's mine:

As you all know, yes, I did attend RootsTech Connect 2021 virtually the last few days.  I'm going to combine this Saturday Night Fun Post with my Day 3 post about the conference.

Real Life started seeping back in today, so I didn't get to view as many sessions as I would have liked.  However, the ones I did see were fantastic!  Here's what I watched:

- Sensitive Subjects: Writing About the Hard Stuff with Ronda Lauritzen.  I loved this session.  First of all, she had the perfect voice to cover this material, all soft and whispery.  Second of all, she made excellent points and really handled a tough subject well.  The biggest thought I took away from her session is to examine your motive when delivering news you've discovered in your researching.

- Useful Tools for Finding German Ancestors with Dana Palmer.  When I am ever get 'brave' enough to try to research where my brick wall ancestor, George W. Schwalls, Sr., came from in Germany, this session will be what I refer back to to help me read those German records.  She provided excellent samples of the different types of print you'll find there.  

- Capture Physical Photos with Google Photo Scan with Chad Dike.  I will tell you right now that this very short session changed my life.  I love Google.  I use so many of their programs.  However, I did not know they have a photo scanning software!  I have already scanned so many pictures just sitting here this afternoon.  It is so much faster than my printer/scanner!  Google Photo Scan uses four points to scan your pictures into four parts that it stitches together and gets rid of any glare!  You don't even see it stitching, and I swear in many instances, the scanned photo looks better than the original!  Then you can go to photos.google.com (which is where I back up my phone photos) and these scans will be there.  You can download them to your desktop.  You can put in a description for every photo.  You can change the date so that they are put in order.  Plus you can add where the picture was taken, if you know.  It is amazing.  So this session wins "Most Useful" from this conference!

- Finding Your German Ancestor, Parts 1 and 2, with Richard Lynn Walker.  This presentation was very in depth and full of sources you can use to research your German ancestor.  He tells you exactly what you will need to find where in Germany your ancestor came from (information I'm still working on for George).  He explains where records are kept in Germany, and he gives many, many ideas and sites for finding the information you want and need.  I will be referring to his handouts constantly when I start that research adventure.  

I guess my favorite moment from RootsTech Connect 2021 was just getting in there and seeing what all was offered.  I was able to bounce from my Playlist to the Expo Hall to the Relative Connect to back to my Playlist without missing anything.  It was well done.  My only suggestion would have been that when you're picking your sessions, you had to click on it to read the description.  Then when you tried to go back to where you were, it took you all the way back to the top of the list.  This was frustrating and time consuming.  I was trying to cram in as much as possible!

Unfortunately I didn't get to have any experiences.  I didn't know about the Desktop Diner get together.  The Relative Connect was neat, but I only heard from one person.  And I was too busy watching sessions to contact anyone myself.  

My favorite session... oh gosh, that is hard.  I loved so many of them.  The best presenter was Savannah Larson of the Creating YOUR Organizational System sessions (3 parts).  One of my favorite sessions was Revealing Your Mother's Ancestors and Where They Came From by Roberta Estes.  She did a wonderful, easy-to-follow presentation on mitochondrial DNA, and it put me on fire to find my adopted great-grandmother's biological mother.  Along with that, What Do I do with Cousin Matches? with Beth Taylor was equally informative.  She made me want to make a spreadsheet.  

My favorite feature of RootsTech Connect was The Playlist page.  I loved being able to see my chosen sessions in one place and not run the risk of missing any of them.

I hope they will keep a virtual part of the conference in the years to come.  For those, like me, who cannot make it to Salt Lake City, it is a lifeline to help us take part.

Friday, February 26, 2021

RootsTech Connect 2021 - Day 2

 


So Day 2 of RootsTech Connect is in the books.  I don't even have the words to describe today... intense, exciting, frustrating, you name it.  

The intense came from all of the information coming at me from the sessions and trying to soak it all up.  Of course the learning was exciting, however!

My frustration came out of my house, rather than the conference.  It seemed that two of my pets were especially needy today.  So every time, I would get going, one of them wanted/needed something.  Or it was meal time and I was hungry.  Or there were incoming phone calls or texts.  Or the neighbor was playing her music so loud that it was thumping just on the other side of the wall where I sat at my desk trying to listen to sessions... and in the 6 years I've lived here, I have never been able to hear my neighbors through that wall.  Just how loud was it?! 

However, I did get through several sessions today, and learned a whole lot.  Especially about things I am not doing, and I should be!  Let me tell you what sessions I watched today.

- Organize your DNA matches in a Diagram with Nicole Dyer

- Learning from U.S. Military Records That Did Not Burn with Margaret M. McMahon

- How to Use U.S. Public Records Sites for Your Family History Research with Alyson Mansfield.

- Find Your Ancestor's Home Using Google Maps with Megan Hillyer

- Adding Maps to Your Family History Analysis with Miles A. Meyer

- Creating YOUR Organizational System with Savannah Larson (3 sessions)

- Brilliant Ways to Use Pinterest for Family History with Valerie S. Elkins

- Several really short sessions (or perhaps they should be called excerpts from an interview) with Heidi Swapp.  I knew who Heidi was from scrapbooking.  Her short sessions were about how pictures can bring us together by reminding us of better times; how important pictures are especially in light of the loss of her son; and that photos are doorways to history.  

- Connect Your Family Using Find-A-Grave with Dana Palmer

The biggest things I learned today:

- Using Pinterest for genealogy research and education.  I mean I have a Genealogy & Family History Board, but when was the last time I looked at it?  Savannah Larson of the Organizational Systems sessions put links in her Pinterest rather than doing handouts for the class.  So I went to my Pinterest and set up sections under my Genealogy and Family History board, added a lot of the links Savannah had shared with us, and organized all of my links.  Now I can find items of interest.  So can you!  Check out my Genealogy & Family History Board on Pinterest. 

- I need to start using a Research Log.  I have never gotten in the habit of using one.  I think I tried once or twice, but never stuck with it.  However, Savannah really got across to me the importance of using one, if only to remind me where I've already searched..  The best part is she showed us how she uses an Excel spreadsheet for hers.  Excel makes it easy to sort the data, i.e., by date, surname, etc.  Excel spreadsheets have been changing my life lately, so I'm going to set this one up, too.

- There is a website that I had never heard of - OnGenealogy.com - that has links to U.S public records sites from across the country.  And they are all free.  You can use these records to track missing family members, add to the social history of your family, find photos of old family homes (I looked up a couple!) and more.  

- I really need to sit down and make some maps.  Luckily Miles Meyer shared his entire slide presentation with us so I can follow along and make some maps of my ancestors' migrations.  He used various map websites, along with Google Maps, and Google Earth.  I've been wanting to learn how to use Google Earth forever.  Well, there's no time like now!

- Also, thanks to Megan Hillyer's session on using Google Maps to find family addresses, I realized that I don't have to travel to see ancestors' homes or home locations.  Google Maps has taken satellite pictures of every piece of land on this earth it seems, so I should be able to look up an address in Ohio or California or Georgia.  You can even snip a picture of the home and save it (giving credit to Google Maps, of course).  

So I tried to take in a lot today, as you can see.  I'm going to be busy with genealogy until the end of my life, obviously.  Lots to do!  It's too bad that real life gets in the way.  

I did get a couple of things done today.  I added TreeVault Cloud Services to my Family Tree Maker 2019.   TreeVault offers Emergency Tree Restore, FTM Connect (an app that brings your family tree to your smart phone), Historical Weather, and Next of Kin, which is where you can designate who your FTM tree goes to once you pass away.  So far, TreeVault is free.  It must have come with the 2019 version of FTM when I bought it, but I never set it up.  I also downloaded FTM Connect to my Android phone so now when I'm away from my desk, I can look people up in my family tree.  

Tomorrow is the last day of the conference.  I don't think it's even going to run the entire day.  But I have my playlist saved, so I will be able to continue watching the sessions and learning.  I plan to do some more tomorrow after some mundane errands I must run.  I'll share more at the end of the day.

RootsTech Connect 2021 - Day 1


 Yes!  I finally made it to RootsTech!  It took a pandemic, but I made it!  LOL

This is just one example of why I don't mind this pandemic so much.  I can attend a genealogy convention from the comfort of my own home. Keynote speakers can be heard with no interruptions from people coming and going from the room.  There are 18 pages of classes (sessions) being offered!  There is NO way I would get to see even a 1/4 of them if I was there in person!  Plus these sessions will be available online until right before RootsTech 2022!!  So I can take my time viewing them, taking notes, and then maybe viewing them again!  There is a virtual Expo Hall where you can "visit" the vendors, see what they have to offer, and buy if you wish.  (Can't get all the cool free pens, candy, or sunglasses, but that's a small price to pay!)  

Can you tell I'm loving this?!

So I wanted to share a little about the first day of the convention.  Now, it actually started at 11PM on Wednesday night, but the only thing I got done after 11PM was choosing the sessions I wanted to watch and adding them to my Playlist.  (YES!  You have your own playlist so you won't forget anything you really wanted to see.  And you don't have to keep searching over and over for that session you really wanted to watch next!)  

I'll be honest.  I wasn't that interested in nor did I have enough time to watch many of the keynote speakers.  I did watch Dr. Henry Louis Gates Jr.'s session, "Finding Resilience with Ancestry and Henry Louis Gates, Jr." (though I missed the first 15 minutes!), and it was a great talk.  The most moving moment he shared from his PBS show, "Finding Your Roots," was when the show researched Queen Latifah's roots.  That moment when she saw that her enslaved ancestor was set free by her owner in 1792 - that was powerful.  As Queen Latifah said, "One person CAN make a difference."  That one person, Mary Lot, changed everything for her family line.  WOW!

I watched a lot of sessions.  I lost count.  I tried to stick with a theme (like all Ancestry.com videos in a row).  I pretty much stuck to that.  Some sessions were really quick, only 2-4 minutes, and some lasted 20 or 25 minutes. Here's most of them:

- Quick Ancestry Search Tips with Christa Cowan, Corporate Genealogist with Ancestry.com

- Using the Ancestry Card Catalog with Christa Cowan

- Tips for Messaging Members on Ancestry with Christa Cowan

- Why Should I use the Ancestry Mobile App? with Pete Lasko and Liam Molloy of Ancestry

- Research Tips: United States Records with Bob Taylor

- Research Tips:  Vital Records

- Research Tips:  Develop Search Skills 

- Research Tips: Newspapers

- Research Tips: England Research Basis

- Revealing your Mother's Ancestors and Where They Came From with Roberta Estes

- What Do I Do with Cousin Matches? with Beth Taylor

Some of the greatest things I learned today:

The 1950 census will be released by the U.S. Government in April of 2022!!

That I need to use the Ancestry mobile app more often.  I've had it on successive phones for years, but rarely use it.  It has some cool features.  For instance, when you visit a relative and they show you family pictures, you can just take a picture of those photos with your phone and upload them right to the Ancestry.com app!  No more having to "borrow" their pictures to scan or waiting for them to one day maybe make copies for you!  

How having my mother's mitochondrial DNA tested at FamilyTreeDNA could lead us to finding who her adopted grandmother's mother was!  The best part?  My mother has already tested with FamilyTreeDNA!  The research and hard work that must be done to make this a reality is overwhelming.  I wish I knew and could afford to have Genetic Genealogist Cece Moore come in and save the day!  

Something I learned today that I HAVE to do:

Make my own spreadsheet of my DNA matches in order to keep track and organize them to the max!

Is it any wonder I'm tired?  Plus this explains why I'm not getting around to posting this until 1AM the NEXT day!  No matter the time, I just had to share!!  

I'll give you the rundown of Friday's adventures tomorrow  tonight!! 

Sunday, February 21, 2021

52 Ancestors in 52 Weeks: 2021 (Week 7): Unusual Source

 Amy Johnson Crow from Generations Cafe is again hosting the blog writing prompt this year called 52 Ancestors in 52 Weeks: 2021.  I'm going to try to participate more fully this year.  I like that she gives us "permission" to interpret the prompt however we wish and share it however we wish.  It doesn't have to be a blog post; it could be a family video, a letter to a child or grandchild, an e-mail, etc.  

The Theme for Week 7 (Feb 15-21) is Unusual Source.

The topic for this week really threw me for a loop!  I had wracked my brain all week and couldn't come up with a thing to write about!  I mean, I have all the usual sources:  census, birth and death records, marriage records, books, cemeteries, cousins, etc.  None of that is unusual.  So last night, I went through others' posts about this topics, my past posts, and even my source citations in FTM to try to find something to jog my brain.  Finally, I came across something I had forgotten about.  It's not a big thing, but it is definitely unusual.  

My brother, Harry, is 20 years older than me.  My father and his mother divorced when he was very young, so he and my dad were not always very close.  Harry came in and out of our lives infrequently, usually only when he wanted or needed something from my dad.  

However, his first wife, Diane, the mother of Harry Jr and Missi, did a better job of staying in touch.  She loved my dad very much and tried as best she could to allow him to see the grandchildren as much as possible.  As a matter of face, the kids usually spent their summer vacations and Christmas breaks with us, rather than their father.  Because of those visits and the kids and I being so close in age, we were always close.  They were more like my brother and sister than nephew and niece.  

Back in the late 1990's, my parents moved to Augusta and thereafter sold the house in Swainsboro that I grew up in.  I went down to help them clean the house out.  They had basically been living in two houses for years, so the Swainsboro house was still FULL.  That house had belonged to my maternal grandparents, so there were still many items there that had belonged to them, mixed in with items that belonged to my parents.  It was a huge undertaking, and I believe my father only gave us 3 days to clean it out.  And I say he gave my mom and me that amount of time to sort through a houseful of belongings because he didn't do anything.  Nada.  Zilch.  He did not help us at all, except to issue an order here and there.  

Behind my dad's recliner in the living room was his corner desk that I can remember being with us as far back as the Jacksonville years.  It was not used except to collect miscellaneous items in its drawers that had no home anyplace else.  As I was cleaning out that desk, I came across a box of items that had belonged to Harry.  Now I have no idea why they were there and not with him.  Perhaps he gave the box to my dad for safe keeping and had forgotten about it.  It must have been one of those occasions where my father and Harry were not speaking to each other because when I asked my dad about it, he told me I could have the box.  

Being the family self-appointed genealogist, this was a gift from heaven!  There were pictures of Harry's children that I had never seen before, some Marine emblems, and more that I don't even remember.  There was also this scrap of paper:

It actually looks like a torn index card.  I recognize my brother's handwriting so he is definitely the one who wrote it.  I have no idea why he would have felt the need to write this down so properly.  Was he afraid he would forget?  Did he mean to send it to someone in the family and never got around to it?  Or did someone ask for the information and again, he never gave it to them?  It must have been important for him to have held onto it for all those years, even after he and Diane divorced. I will never know the answers, I am sure, but it was definitely unusual.  

I had never known the date they got married.  None of us knew they had gotten married in South Carolina.  They were both from the Jacksonville, Florida area and that's where most of their families were.  They must have eloped.  He was probably stationed at Camp Lejeune in North Carolina, because I do know that Harry Jr, who was born just 9 months later, was born in Jacksonville, North Carolina.  Neither Harry Sr nor Diane were underage.  So perhaps they just drove down one weekend to get married.  Maybe it was kind of a halfway place for them to meet to get married.  Again, I don't know. 

Harry, circa 1963

Diane, circa 1966

So even an unusual source like a torn index card can give you a couple of answers and a whole lot of questions.

Saturday, February 20, 2021

Saturday Night Genealogy Fun - Create an Ancestor's Timeline

 From Randy (cousin discovery!!) over at Genea-Musings:

it's Saturday Night 
time for more Genealogy Fun!!!


Your mission, should you decide to accept it, is to:

(1)  Do you use Timelines to help you in your research? Create a Timeline (a chronological list with dates and events) for one of your ancestors that includes their parents, siblings, spouse(s) and children.  Tell us how you did it, and show us your work.

(2)  Tell us all about it in your own blog post, in a comment to this post, or in a post on Facebook.  

Here's mine:

I used Family Tree Maker (FTM) 2019.  First I chose my great-grandmother, Bessie Alice Carter Ranney (1883-1960).  Then I went to Publish → Person Reports → Timeline Report.  As I have said many, many times, FTM leaves much to be desired in their reports, in my opinion. I could not designate who to include in her report, so her parents are not included.  She didn't have any siblings.  

This is what I chose of the options presented:

✓ Include family events

     ✓ Include spouses' birth
     ✓ Include sibling facts

✓ Include historical events

✓ Use custom fact sentences

✓ Include only facts with dates

✓ Include only preferred facts

Here is what I ended up with for my timeline:



There are two pages of events.  I'm not sure why they included historical events from BEFORE she was born or why some of her children's marriages are missing.  I tried another version, unchecking the "Include only preferred facts" box, but still the marriages were not included on the report.  I'll have to do some research into that.  

One good thing is my report does list the relationship of the person to Bessie.  Perhaps I should have chosen someone who had siblings.  Then I would have gotten more relationships and events.  

I have actually been doing some timeline posts here on my blog recently, but I've been using information from Family Search.  I did not realize I had this report available to me!


Tuesday, February 16, 2021

Time Capsule Tuesday, 1961

 


My beautiful and sweet cousin, Drina, has a birthday today!  We are 1st cousins (Our mothers are sisters.)  So Happy Birthday, Drina!  Let's see what was going on the year you were born!

February 16, 1961 was a Thursday.   

An estimated 109,557,830 babies were born throughout the world in the year 1961. The estimated number of babies born on February 16, 1961 is 300,158.  That's equivalent to 208 babies every minute!

In the United States, the most popular baby name for girls is Mary.  This name was given to 47,676 baby girls.  For the boys, it is Michael. This name was recorded 86,922 times in the year 1961. 

The President of the United States was John F. "Jack" Kennedy (JFK).  The Vice President was Lyndon Baines Johnson (LBJ).

In 1961, the United States and much of the world was in a state of change:  We were moving out of the post-World War II era and into both the Cold War and the Space Age, with broadening civil rights movements and anti-nuclear protests in the U.S.  JFK was inaugurated as the 35th president of the United States, Soviet cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin became the first human to fly in space, Freedom Riders took buses into the South to bravely challenge segregation, and East Germany began construction of the Berlin Wall.  That same year JFK gave the okay to the disastrous Bay of Pigs Invasion into Cuba and committed the U.S. to "landing a man on the Moon" with NASA's Apollo program.  JFK also oversaw the early buildup of a U.S. military presence in Vietnam. By the end of 1961, some 2,000 troops were deployed there.  


1961 Prices

Bread:  $0.21/loaf

Milk: $1.05/gal

Eggs: $0.92/dozen

Car: $2,275

Gas: $0.31/gal

House: $18,800

Stamp: $0.04/each

Average Income: $6,471/year

Minimum Wage: $1.15/hour


Top Songs for 1961:

Calcutta by Lawrence Welk was #1 the week of February 16th

Shop Around by The Miracles (featuring Bill "Smokey" Robinson)

Big Bad John by Jimmy Dean



People Born on February 16:

1920 - Patty Andrews, Minneapolis, Minnesota, singer (Andrews Sisters)

1935 - Sonny Bono, Detroit, Michigan, singer (Sonny & Cher; Mayor of Palm Springs, California)

1959 - John P. McEnroe, tennis player (U.S. Open 1979-81, 1984; Wimbledon 1981, 1983-84)


Academy Award Winners:

Best Picture: West Side Story, Directed by Robert Wise

Best Actor:  Maximillian Schell in Judgment at Nuremburg

Best Actress:  Sophia Loren in Two Women


On TV in 1961:

The Flintstones

Gunsmoke

I Love Lucy


Hot New Toys in 1961:

Slip 'N Slide

Lie Detector

Frosty the Sno-cone Machine


Top Books in 1961:

Island of the Blue Dolphins by Scott O'Dell

Catch-22 by Joseph Heller

The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie by Muriel Spark


In the News on February 16, 1961:

- U.S. Satellite Explorer 9 is launched.

- First all-solid-propellant rocket put in orbit, Wallops Island, Virginia

Sunday, February 14, 2021

A Timeline for Keland Lawton Drake Sr.

Today's timeline is for my great uncle.  Our connection:

Liz (that's me!)

↓↓↓

Gilbert Earl Tapley, 1928-2008 (my father)

↓↓↓

Nealie Vermell Drake Tapley, 1895-1970 (my grandmother)

↓↓↓ 

her brother, 

Keland Lawton Drake Sr., 1903-1972 (my great-uncle)


Time Line for the life of Keland Lawton Drake Sr.  

1903

Age 0

 

Birth

July 12

Adrian, Emanuel County, Georgia

1906

Age 3

 

 

Historical Event

The Atlanta Race Riot of 1906 occurred on the evening of September 22 through September 24. A newspaper reported the rapes of four white women by African American men. Fueled by pre-existing racial tensions, these reports enraged white men who then arranged gangs to attack African American men. Over the next few days, several thousand white men joined in and in the end, 26 people were killed and many were injured.

 

1910

Age 6

Historical Event

The Mann Act makes engaging in transport of any woman for any immoral purpose, prostitution, illegal. Its primary intent was to address prostitution, immorality, and human trafficking, particularly where trafficking was for the purposes of prostitution.

 

1910

Age 6

Residence

Emanuel County, Georgia

 

 

1914

Age 10

 

 

Historical Event

Florida Involvement in World War I.  Florida contributed to World War I in several ways. The state’s open land and warm climate made for a great military training location. Additional technological and agricultural developments took place in Florida as well. Roughly 42,030 Floridians joined the troops during 1917 and 1918.

 

1920

Age 16

 

Residence

Emanual County, Georgia

 

1923

Age 19

Historical Event

Amendment of Equal Rights is a proposed amendment to help guarantee equal legal rights for all citizens of the United States. Its main objective is to end legal distinctions between the two genders in terms of divorce, property, employment, and other legal matters. Even though it isn’t the 28th Amendment yet, it as started conversations about the meaning of legal equality. 

 

1926

Age 23

Marriage

On July 10, Lawton married Maude Crews (1908-1999) in Macclenny, Baker County, Florida.

 

1927

Age 24

Historical Event

Charles Lindbergh makes the first solo nonstop transatlantic flight in his plane, The Spirit of St. Louis.

 

1927

Age 24

Death of Parent

On August 10, Lawton’s father, William John Drake (1857-1927) is killed in an accidental shooting.

 

1930

Age 27

 

Residence

Jacksonville, Duval County, Florida

1932

Age 28

Birth of Child

Keland Lawton Drake, Jr. is born January 8 in Jacksonville, Duval County, Florida.

 

1935

Age 31

Historical Event

The Social Security Act created a basic right to a pension in old age and insurance against unemployment.

 

1935

Age 32

Death of Parent

Lawton’s mother, Emma Vermell Harrell (1867-1935) passes away on October 19.

 

1941

Age 37

Historical Event

Florida Involvement in World War II.  Similar to the first World War, Florida’s location and temperature served as an ideal location for military training; in fact, Florida would end up having 172 military installations. As a result of World War II growth, Camp Blanding became the fourth largest city in the state, capable of housing over 55,000 soldiers.  It’s estimated that about 3,000 U.S. deaths were from Florida troops.

 

1971

Age 67

Historical Event

The Twenty-Sixth Amendment prohibits the states and the federal government from using age as a reason for denying the right to vote to citizens who are 18 years old or older.

 

1972

Age 68

Death

Lawton passed away on January 2 in Jacksonville, Duval County, Florida.

 

1972

Burial

Lawton was buried on January 5 at Edgewood Cemetery in Jacksonville, Duval County, Florida.


While I do not have any pictures of Lawton, I do have pictures my grandmother left behind with a man in them that could have been Lawton.  


I will probably never know...



Saturday, February 13, 2021

52 Ancestors in 52 Weeks: 2021 (Week 6): Valentine

 Amy Johnson Crow from Generations Cafe is again hosting the blog writing prompt this year called 52 Ancestors in 52 Weeks: 2021.  I'm going to try to participate more fully this year.  I like that she gives us "permission" to interpret the prompt however we wish and share it however we wish.  It doesn't have to be a blog post; it could be a family video, a letter to a child or grandchild, an e-mail, etc.  

The Theme for Week 6 (Feb 8-14) is Valentine.

Valentine Tapley was born on Valentine's Day, February 14, 1829 or 1830, in Pike County, Missouri.  He was a mild-mannered and agreeable farmer.  He was also a die hard Democrat.  During the 1860 presidential campaign, Valentine swore he would never shave again if Abraham Lincoln was elected.  Lincoln was elected, and Valentine did not shave.  

This is the story you find online over and over.  It is the story that you hear on the radio.  It is the same story every time you hear it.  However, in doing my research for this post, I found there is more to the story.

Valentine was the oldest of four children born to Joseph Davis Tapley (1799-1846) and Jemimah Cunningham Matson Tapley (1814-1857).  His father was born in North Carolina, the child of Hosea Green Tapley (1767-1799) and Eleanor McFarland Tapley (1764-1847).  In 1818, when Joe was 18 to 19 years old, along with his three brothers, for reasons unknown, he moved west to Missouri, settling in Rauls County.  There Joe met his very young wife.  She was only 15 when she gave birth to Valentine.  

Valentine himself admitted that his beard started growing when he was age 13, and he actually never shaved his beard in his entire life.  As a matter of fact, his beard was already 6 feet long when Lincoln was elected.  

By the time Valentine was 20 years old, he had to braid his beard and tuck it inside his shirt when he worked on the farm.  It continued to grown over the next five years and he began to wear it completely inside his shirt.  The next step was to wear it around his body beneath his clothes.  

When he made his Lincoln election vow, he was age 30.  

 Valentine claimed he had done little after the Civil War but "pay taxes and vote the Democratic ticket." He got offers of as much as $5,000 - about $125,000 today - to display his beard as far away as England, but he refused to be a side show freak.  A local newspaper wrote, "He cares very little for money and display, preferring his quiet farm life to that of the gaze of the curious."  

The Newport News Daily Press of Virginia reported that "Mr. Tapley is very proud of his whiskers, and dislikes anyone who questions whether they are the longest in the world."

It was written at the time that Valentine's beard was soft as silk. He used special oils and a special wooden comb to dress his growing beard to keep it soft and silky.  Having such a long beard required constant care and caution. He couldn't wear his beard down all the time, so most days he tied it in a knot and stuffed it into a silk bag that he wore beneath his vest. 

Valentine apparently was once asked by Pike County children to serve as the pole for a May Day dance.  He declined with the promise that he would allow the kids to stroke his beard later in the year.  He only unrolled his beard a couple of times a year to show neighbors how much it had grown.  

When The Newport News did their report on Valentine and his beard in 1904, he was 74 years old and was "hale and hearty." He continued to work on his farm.  However, for obvious reasons, he would not burn brush or work around a fire.

Even though Valentine tried to avoid the spotlight, his beard did come to national attention in 1907 when S. G. Brinkley from North Carolina claimed to have the world's longest beard.  It was 7 feet long and Brinkley was charging people 25 cents a piece to see it. When Missouri congressman Champ Clark heard about it, he wrote to the Washington Post and did an interview with the New York Times to set the record straight. Congressman Clark knew Valentine personally and said a 7-foot beard was no beard at all. Pike County, Missouri, beards were the best on earth. 

Valentine passed away April 3, 1910 at the age of 80 or 81.  At his death, his beard was 12 feet, 6 inches long, and it was buried with him.  Near the end of his life, he began to worry that someone would dig up his body in order to steal his beard.  So he insisted on having his tomb extra strong and secure so no one could open it.  

Valentine Tapley and his beard

I have been hearing about Valentine Tapley and his beard from Missouri ever since I started doing genealogy.  I knew he had to be related to me somehow, but I couldn't find the connection to the Missouri Tapleys.  Writing this article enabled me to find out!  Valentine is my 4th cousin, 3x removed!  His 2nd great-grandfather, Hosea Tapley Jr (bet 1708-1710 - 1770) and my 5th great-grandfather, Joel Tapley (abt 1720 - 1790-91) were brothers.

Sources:

"Beard of Defeat," The Weekly Holler Newsletter #30, published by Luke Bauserman, published November 13, 2016, https://www.getrevue.co/profile/theweeklyholler/issues/beard-of-defeat-the-weekly-holler-30-35593.

"Great Lengths: Pike County men had the market cornered on beards," Hannibal (Missouri) Courier- Post, Quincy Media Inc., February 12, 2021, https://www.hannibal.net/archive/article/great-lengths-pike-county-men-had-the-market-cornered-on-beards/article_f89b3ed4-14dd-5e6a-b0ab-03fa84a321aa.html. 

"Historically Yours: Valentine Tapley's 50-year protest of Lincoln," by Elizabeth Davis, December 4, 2018, published by the News Tribune, Jefferson City, Missouri.  

"Valentine Tapley - The Man who Grew a 12ft Beard to Protest Abraham Lincoln," The Vintage News, Timera Media, February 8, 2018, https://www.thevintagenews.com/2018/02/08/valentine-tapley/.