Showing posts with label Montgomery County. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Montgomery County. Show all posts

Thursday, February 20, 2025

Thriller Thursday - The untimely death of Wayne Thaddeus Finch (1937-1975)

 While working on the family tree this week, I came across the sad and horrible story of the death of Wayne Thaddeus Finch (1937-1975). 

This was found on his Find a Grave memorial:

  "Man Dies in Sawmill Mishap" - Mt. Vernon (Georgia) - A 38 year old man was killed early Saturday when his head was crushed by logging machinery at the H.V. & T.G. Thompson Lumber Co. in Ailey (Georgia).

Wayne Thaddeus Finch, a Saturday maintenance man at the saw mill, was killed about 9:15am Saturday, Ailey Mayor Jack Leroy said."

This was followed by his obituary:

"Wayne T. Finch Rites on Monday.

Wayne Thaddeus Finch, 28, of Mt. Vernon, died Saturday morning from injuries received in a sawmill accident in Ailey. He was a native of Montgomery County and was employed by Thompson Lumber Company of Ailey. He was a member of the McGregor Presbyterian Church.

Funeral services were held Monday afternoon from the McGregor Presbyterian Church. Interment was in the Mt. Vernon cemetery with Ronnie L. Stewart Funeral Home in charge of arrangements."

Wayne left two small children.


Appreciation to Wayne's daughter, Cheryl, who posted these 
photos on his memorial.

This story really made me think that we never know what could happen in a day.  Wayne went to work that Saturday morning just like any other Saturday.  He had no idea he would never return home.  Hold your loved ones a little closer and say what needs to be said before it is too late.

Wayne was my 4th Cousin on my Claxton line.  Our common ancestors were Zachariah William Claxton (1806-1895) and his wife, Lincelia 'Lincely' Bush (1806-1872).

Friday, February 18, 2022

Morgan Goodgame Swain was Innkeeper, Blacksmith, Sheriff & Jailor

On May 2, 1814, my 3rd great-grandmother, Sarah "Sally" Tapley (1775-bet. 1850-60) gave birth to twins out of wedlock.  It has always been family folklore that the twins' father was a man named Canneth Swain (1770-1831), who just happened to be a neighbor of Sally's in Emanuel County, Georgia. Canneth was a married man, but all stories passed down indicate that the twins always knew he was their father.  Also, I have found several descendants of the twins who were named Canneth.  

About 10-12 years ago, my cousin, Keith Tapley, provided the DNA that finally proved the link between the Tapleys and the Swains.  So the family folklore was actually truth!

(Just think... if things had been different, I would have been a Swain and not a Tapley!  Mindboggling!)

Canneth married Rebecca Johnson in 1801 in Montgomery County, Georgia and together they had somewhere between 10-13 children.  They were married until Canneth's death in 1831.  In December of 1825, Canneth bought land in Thomas County, Georgia and moved his family there the following year.  Thomas County is located about 170 miles southwest of Emanuel County... 3 hours and 15 minutes by car; many more hours by horse and wagon.  The twins would have been about 12 years old.  I do not know if they ever saw their father again after that.  

No one knows the reason for the move.  All we have is conjecture.  Were the boys getting old enough to announce to anyone who listened that Canneth was their father?  Or perhaps they were wanting to spend time with their father?  I would think their existence would have been an embarrassment to Rebecca Swain.  Could she have pressured Canneth to move away?  Or was it something as simple as finding better or more land?  Canneth also owned nearly 2,000 acres of land in Early and Lee Counties, along with herds of hogs and cattle.  So perhaps the reason was simply to be closer to his farmland and stock.  We will probably never know.  

Anyway, the DNA proof led me to research Canneth and Rebecca's children and their descendants since they are my relatives also.  This is when I found Morgan Goodgame Swain.

Morgan, known as Morz, was the 3rd child of Canneth and Rebecca.  (This makes him my 3rd great uncle.)  He was born in Montgomery County in 1805. Morz was about 21 years old when his family moved south, and he went with them.  Within two years, he had married Elizabeth Wooten and settled near her father in Thomas County.  However, when the town of Troupville was established in 1838 as the county seat of Lowndes County, the Swains moved there to be one of the town's first residents.  In Troupville, Morz set up a blacksmith shop and also took work as a Deputy Sheriff, both trades that suited him as one of the biggest, strongest men in Wiregrass Georgia.  

Here is how his grandson, Montgomery Morgan Folsom (1857-1899) who was a Wiregrass poet and historian, described him:

    "Among those who settled in Troupville and left behind many momentous memories, was Morgan Goodgame Swain, a burly blacksmith from Emanuel, who was ever ready for a fight, frolic or a footrace. He stood six feet three and weighed over two hundred without pound of surplus flesh. As handsome as a Greek god he was gifted with herculean strength and a heart that was generous and true."

    "Many a time and oft has he stepped out in the road and throwing off his hunting-shirt, flop his arms and crow like a game-cock."

For five years, the Swains prospered in Troupville.  While Elizabeth raised their children, Morz became owner and operator of Swain's Hotel (a tavern).  But tragically, Elizabeth Wooten Swain died in 1843 at the age of 32, leaving Morgan with two children to raise.  

About six months after Elizabeth's death, in 1844, Morz remarried a Rebecca "Becky" Griffin.  They had 5 children together.  

    "He [Morz] erected his forge [blacksmith shop] on the bank of the Ockolockocee [River], and his wife took possession of the tavern.  Becky, she was lord above, and Morz was lord below."

Morz operated one of the three hotels in Troupville.  When he remarried, he apparently felt it necessary to advertise his intention to continue as innkeeper.  "Swain's Hotel," the tavern operated by Morz Swain, was properly called The Jackson Hotel, and for several months in 1844, he ran this ad in the papers of the state capitol.



However, the very next year, in late 1845, Morgan Swain sought to dispose of his hotel and Troupville city lots.



During this time period, Morgan Swain had continued to hold public office, serving as Justice of the Peace of the 658th District of Lowndes County from 1844 to 1849, and also as the county jailor.  Morz was also involved in the activities of the Democratic party in Lowndes County.

Morgan Goodgame Swain lived a short but prominent and colorful life in old Troupville, Georgia.  He died there on August 9, 1851 at the young age of 46.  

Obituary of Morgan G. Swain appeared Aug 19, 1851 in the Milledgeville Federal Union newspaper.


A slightly longer obituary appeared a few days later on Aug 22, 1851 in The Albany Patriot.


Becky Swain, Monz's widow, applied in July 1852 for guardianship of the "minors and orphans" of the deceased.  The Ordinary of the Lowndes Court advertised the application in The Milledgeville Southern Recorder.



Meanwhile, Becky's father, who served as administrator of Morgan Swain's estate, made notice of the disposal of Morgan's property and the conclusion of his affairs.



Map of Troupville with the location of Morgan Swain's hotel marked:



Valdosta became the county seat of Lowndes County and there is nothing left of Troupville except some white rocks where Morgan Swain's blacksmith forge used to be.  

Oh and no, I do not know where his middle name "Goodgame" came from.  I wish I did!

Sources:  Ray City History Blog, April 7, 2012Ray City History Blog, February 9, 2014Ray City History Blog, July 20, 2019WWLAS.net, March 16, 2018

Monday, September 24, 2012

The Difference Between Johnson County Tapleys and Emanuel County Tapleys

Once upon a time, there was an independent woman named Sarah (Sally) Tapley.  She was the daughter of Newhampton (New) Tapley.  The identity of her mother is unknown.  Sally was born in South Carolina in 1775 (during the Tapley migration from North Carolina to Georgia).  When Sally's parents moved further south to what was then Washington County, Georgia but later became Montgomery County and still later Emanuel County, she came with them and spent the rest of her life in that area.

Though she never married, she gave birth to three children, all sons, two of them twins.  Through her twins, James M. Tapley and George Washington (Wash) Tapley, she wound up having many hundreds, maybe thousands, of descendants.

James M. Tapley (May 2, 1814 - August 2, 1884) lived his entire life in an area that was part of Montgomery County until Emanuel County was created in 1814.  The area remained a part of Emanuel until 1858, when it was cut off in the formation of Johnson County.  Generally called the Oaky Grove area, it now forms the northeastern corner of Johnson, near the borders of Emanuel and Washington counties.

James M. Tapley is buried in the Oaky Grove Church Cemetery:

 

 James' descendents moved into Emanuel County and multiplied there over the next century.


Georgia map with Emanuel County highlighted
  

George Washington (Wash) Tapley (May 2, 1814 - after 1880) is believed to have lived his entire life in the area that is now eastern Johnson County.  He is also buried at Oaky Grove, but in an unmarked grave.

Wash's descendents tended to stay in Johnson County.  This is the twin I am descended from, along with almost every one I have written about in this blog.

Georgia map with Johnson County highlighted

We (those of us who consider ourselves Johnson County Tapleys or are descended from them) call James' descendants "Emanuel County Tapleys" or "those other Tapleys."  We are all related, of course; just at more of a distance. And I know very few of them and very little about them.   

So now you know the difference!


Maps courtesy of wikipedia.org. 
Some information taken from Tapley:  A Family of Georgia and the South by Ray Tapley, 1993.

Saturday, November 26, 2011

Saturday Night Genealogy Fun - Historical County Boundaries

From Randy over at Genea-Musings:

Hey Genea-philes, have you recovered from your tryptophan coma on Thursday?  Wake up - it's SATURDAY NIGHT!  Time for more GENEALOGY FUN!

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

1)  Go to the Historical U.S. County Maps page on Randy Majors website ( http://randymajors.com/p/maps.html ) .Read the whole page for tips on how to use the tool by entering a current geographical place in the United States and a year (from the drop down list) at the top of the page.

2)  Pick one place of interest and enter the name of the place (a current town/city or county) and choose a year from the dropdown list.  Use the Back < and Forward > arrow links to move forward or backward in time.

3)  Note the Historical jurisdiction for the place you selected for each year.  Write down the list from 1790 to 1900.

4)  Post the place you selected and the historical jurisdictions for that place in a blog post of your own, in a comment to this blog post, or in a Facebook Status or google Plus Stream post.

5) Think about  the jurisdictions that came up - have you looked in those jurisdictions for information about your ancestral families that were in that place?

Here's mine:

I chose Johnson County, Georgia.  The jurisdictions it was in from 1790 to 1900 were:

1790:  Washington County, Georgia
1800:  Montgomery County, Georgia
1810:  Montgomery County, Georgia
1820:  Emanuel County, Georgia
1830:  Emanuel County, Georgia
1840:  Emanuel County, Georgia
1850:  Emanuel County, Georgia
1860:  Johnson County, Georgia (created December 11, 1858)

1870:  Johnson County, Georgia
1880:  Johnson County, Georgia
1890:  Johnson County, Georgia
1900:  Johnson County, Georgia

I have done research in Washington County.  Emanuel County has had too many courthouse fires to be of much help.  However, I have not done ANY research in Montgomery County.  I'd better get on that!