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Thank you for visiting my blog!

This blog is used to share information I find about the families I am researching. To see these family names click on the "My Families" tab. Please feel free to make comments, corrections, and ask questions here or on my Facebook page or go to the "About Me" tab to send an e-mail.

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My posts can be accessed by the date posted from the column on the right. Blog posts containing specific surnames can be found by clicking on the names in the left column.

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Friday, April 29, 2022

Friday's Photo: Lillie Mae Trott, from Bienville Parish to San Francisco

Lillie Mae Trott  1895 - 1985 [1]


Lillie Mae Trott, the daughter of Lula Laura Cook and William Jackson Trott, was born on 22 May 1895 in Bienville Parish, Louisiana. Lillie Mae's father was from Alabama, but her mother grew up in Bienville Parish. Lula Laura Cook was the daughter of Joseph Cook and Josie Bryan and the granddaughter of Joseph Bryan and Sarah Margaret Wimberly.[2] 

Lillie Mae grew up in Bienville Parish with two siblings, Allie Belle Trott and William Bryan Trott.[3] Lillie's father, William Trott, was a teacher in 1900 and 1910 but is shown as a farmer on the census in 1920.[4] Lula Laura, her mother, was known to be a teacher assistant and was appointed postmaster at Ringgold in 1932.[5] 

Lillie Mae Trott - about 1916 [11]
Lillie Mae married Herbert Benjamin Scott of Hope, Louisiana (now known as Fryeburg) sometime before 13 February 1916, when she was found as a resident of Hope as Mrs. H. B. Scott.[6] In 
December of 1917, Lillie Mae was working as a teacher in a public school in Hope, Louisiana but lived on Templeman Street in Shreveport.[7] By 1920 Lillie Mae and Herbert were living in Ringgold.[8] 

In 1922 Lillie Mae and her husband moved to Georgetown, Louisiana, and by 1926 they built a home in Pollock described as a residence and garage. The garage may have been a Ford dealership as H. B. Scott was the Ford Dealer in Pollock. At one time, it was also described as a filling station.[9] 

Lillie Mae was an active community member in Pollock. She was president of the PTA and a member of the State PTA Board; she organized the Pollock Community Fair and attended the State Woman's Missionary meeting in New Orleans.[10] 

Lillie Mae and Herbert had two children; Mary Beth Scott in 1920 and Jack Anthony Scott, who died at birth in 1926.[12] 

In 1928, the City Cafe opened in Pollock with Lillie Mae as the manager. On the 1930 U. S. Census, Lillie Mae's occupation was listed as a salesman in the insurance industry while her husband sold cars.[13] 

By 1931, Hebert Scott lived in Hope while Lillie Mae remained in Pollock. The Scott home burned later that year, and Lillie Mae and her daughter eventually moved to Alexandria.[14] 

Lillie Mae married Captain William W. Murphey on 15 February 1936 in Minden, Louisiana, at the home of Mr. and Mrs. L. B. Hunter. They may have met in Alexandria as Captain Murphey was the executive officer at Camp Beauregard in Alexandria prior to their marriage. Following their marriage, they lived in Alabama and the Philippine Islands.[15] 

In the summer of 1941, Lillie Mae and her daughter, Mary Beth, evacuated the Philippine Islands with other military families due to safety concerns.[16] William Murphey, a Lieutenant Colonel, remained at Fort Stotsenburg in the Philippines and was captured by the Japanese at the fall of Bataan. He was eventually transferred to a prison camp on Honshu, where he died on 31 January 1945.[17]

After leaving the Philippines, Lillie Mae lived in San Francisco until the age of 85 when she moved to Alabama to live with her daughter. Lillie Mae died at the age of 90 in Alabama. She and her husband are buried in the San Francisco National Cemetery.[18] 


Click on the links below to see photos of Lillie Mae as a child and other Trott family photos.











If you want to know more about the families I research, click here to like my Facebook page, where you will see each post and other genealogical finds. 
.
Diana
© 2022 


    1. Lillie Mae Trott, photograph, n.d.; scanned image, from the privately held photo collection of the Frye Family, San Francisco, 2019.
    2.  Vera Meeks Wimberly, Wimberly Family History, Ancestors, Relatives, and Descendants of William Wimberly, Pioneer from Georgia to Louisiana 1837 (Houston Texas: D. Anderson, 1979), 350-351.
    3. ibid.
    4. 1910 U.S. Census, Bienville, Louisiana, population schedule, Ward 4,  enumeration district 8, page 13A, dwelling 206, family  206, William J. Trott household; digital images, Ancestry.com (https://www.ancestry.com/imageviewer/collections/7884/images/31111_4329971-00342?pId=166957930 : accessed 16 April 2022); citing NARA microfilm publication T624, roll T624_509. Also, 1900 U.S. Census, Bienville Parish, Louisiana, population schedule, Ringgold, ward 4,  enumeration district 7, page 2A, dwelling 23, family 23, W. J. Trott household; digital images, Ancestry.com (https://www.ancestry.com/imageviewer/collections/7602/images/4120173_00878?pId=5899283: accessed 21 April 2022); citing NARA microfilm publication T624, roll 509. Also, 1920 U.S. Census, Bienville, Louisiana, population schedule, ward 4,  enumeration district 140, page 2A, dwelling 163, family 153, W. J. Trott household; digital images, Ancestry.com (https://www.ancestry.com/imageviewer/collections/6061/images/4300961_00278?pId=29023813 : accessed 28 April 2022); citing NARA microfilm publication T625, roll 606. 
    5. 1910 U.S. Census, Bienville, Louisiana, population schedule, Ward 4,  enumeration district 8, page 13A, dwelling 206, family  206, William J. Trott household; digital images, Ancestry.com (https://www.ancestry.com/imageviewer/collections/7884/images/31111_4329971-00342?pId=166957930 : accessed 16 April 2022); citing NARA microfilm publication T624, roll T624_509. Also, New Postmaster Takes Position at Ringgold, The Times (Shreveport, Louisiana), 27 April 1932, p.5; database with images, Newspapers.com (https://www.newspapers.com/clip/100644436/lula-laura-cook-trott-postmaster/: accessed 28 April 2022).
    6. Personals, The Times (Shreveport, Louisiana), 13 February 1916, p.3; database with images, Newspapers.com (https://www.newspapers.com/clip/100646494/lillie-mae-trott-is-mrs-h-b-scott-in/: accessed 28 April 2022).
    7. Personals, The Times (Shreveport, Louisiana), 28 December 1917, p.10; database with images, Newspapers.com (https://www.newspapers.com/clip/87464977/lillie-mae-trott-scott/: accessed 28 April 2022).
    8. 1920 U.S. Census, Bienville, Louisiana, population schedule, ward 4, Ringgold Village,  enumeration district 4, page 2B, dwelling 41, family 41, Herbert Scott household; digital images, Ancestry.com (https://www.ancestry.com/imageviewer/collections/6061/images/4300961_00259?pId=29022921 : accessed 28 April 2022); citing NARA microfilm publication T625, roll 606.
    9. Pollock Personals, The Town Talk (Alexandria, Louisiana), 28 December 1917, p.10; database with images, Newspapers.com (https://www.newspapers.com/clip/87468558/h-b-scott-new-carlillie-mae-trott/: accessed 28 April 2022). Also, Filling Station at Pollock Burns; Loss is $2000, The Town Talk (Alexandria, Louisiana), 21 February 1931, p.1; database with images, Newspapers.com (https://www.newspapers.com/clip/87470129/burned-filling-station-lillie-mae/: accessed 28 April 2022). Also, Pollock Feels Oil Field Boom, The Town Talk (Alexandria, Louisiana), 20 February 1926, p.4; database with images, Newspapers.com (https://www.newspapers.com/clip/87466552/lillie-mae-trott-mm-hb-scott/: accessed 28 April 2022).
    10. Pollock, The Times (Shreveport, Louisiana), 22 April 1928, p.30; database with images, Newspapers.com (https://www.newspapers.com/clip/87468934/state-missionary-meeting-new/: accessed 28 April 2022). Also, Pollock Parent Teachers Meet, Weekly Town Talk (Alexandria, Louisiana), 21 January 1928, p.6; database with images, Newspapers.com (https://www.newspapers.com/clip/87468684/president-of-pta-also-vp-of-wmu/: accessed 28 April 2022). Also, Pollock Community Fair Arrangements, The Town Talk (Alexandria, Louisiana), 11 September 1925, p.12; database with images, Newspapers.com (https://www.newspapers.com/clip/87466036/mrs-h-b-scott-organizer-of-fair-lillie/: accessed 28 April 2022). Also, State PTA Board Holds Meet Today, The Shreveport Journal, 30 September 1932, p.20; database with images, Newspapers.com (https://www.newspapers.com/clip/84349595/state-pta-board-lilli-mae-trott-mrs/: accessed 28 April 2022).
    11. Lillie Mae Trott Scott, photograph, ca. 1916; scanned image, from the privately held photo collection of the Frye Family, San Francisco, 2019. 
    12. Mary Pilkington, The Selma Times-Journal (Selma, Alabama), 23 September 1985, p.7; database with images, Newspapers.com (https://www.newspapers.com/clip/58551888/obituary-for-mary-beth-scott-allen/?: accessed 28 April 2022). Also, Pollock, The Times (Shreveport, Louisiana), 5 December 1926, p.40; database with images, Newspapers.com (https://www.newspapers.com/clip/87467483/jack-anthony-baby-son-of-mr-and-mrs-h/: accessed 28 April 2022).
    13. Pollock Personals, Weekly Town Talk (Alexandria, Louisiana), 7 April 1928, p.4; database with images, Newspapers.com (https://www.newspapers.com/clip/87468878/mrs-h-b-scott-manager-cafe-lille-mae/: accessed 28 April 2022). Also, 1930 U.S. Census, Grant County, Louisiana, Pollock Town, population schedule, supervisor's district no. 5, enumeration district 22-4,  p.1A, dwelling 6, family 6, Herbert B. Scott household; digital images, Ancestry.com (https://www.ancestry.com/imageviewer/collections/6224/images/4584878_00077?pId=34807365: accessed 24 April 2022); citing NARA microfilm T626.
    14. Pollock, The Town Talk (Alexandria, Louisiana), 14 February 1931, p.2; database with images, Newspapers.com (https://www.newspapers.com/clip/87469987/hb-scott-living-in-hope-arkansas-so/: accessed 28 April 2022). Also, H. B. Scott Home at Pollock Burns, Loss Totals $6000, The Town Talk (Alexandria, Louisiana), 5 October 1931, p.8; database with images, Newspapers.com (https://www.newspapers.com/clip/84350519/h-b-scott-home-burns-lillie-mae-trott/: accessed 28 April 2022).
    15. “Murphy-Scott,” The Bienville Democrat,  27 Feb. 1936, p.6, col. 5; database and images, The Digital Archives of The Bienville Parish Library (http://bienville.advantage-preservation.com : accessed 27 August 2021). Also, “Army Life of Pre-War Philippines Was Familiar to Mrs. William B. Allen,” Corpus Christi Times (Corpus Christi, Texas), 27 April 1946, p.4-C; database and images, Newspapers.com (https://www.newspapers.com/clip/100675597/mary-beth-scott-allen-dau-of-lillie/ : accessed 8 Dec. 2021).
    16. Ibid.
    17. Find a Grave, database and images  (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/8757949/william-wayne-murphey : accessed 28 April 2022), memorial page for LTC William Wayne Murphey, Find a Grave Memorial ID 8757949, citing San Francisco National Cemetery, San Francisco, San Francisco County, California, USA; Maintained by William Holly (contributor 46616971). 
    18. Lillie Murphey, The Selma Times-Journal (Selma, Alabama), 19 June1985, p.2; database with images, Newspapers.com (https://www.newspapers.com/clip/84304632/lilli-mae-murphey-obituary/: accessed 28 April 2022).


Wednesday, April 27, 2022

Clippings from The Baylor County Banner - Seymour, Texas - September 13, 1923 (Part 2)




My grandparents, Redic E. Bryan and Myrtie Hairston, and my great-grandparents, Phillip A. Hairston and Lodema Criswell, moved to Baylor County in 1905. My father, Whit Criswell Bryan, was born in Seymour in 1920. He was the youngest of seven children born to Redic and Myrtie. 

In April 2019, I visited the Texas State Library and Archives to read Baylor County Banner issues that could not be found online or on microfilm. I photographed articles with information about my father's family who lived in Seymour. While sorting through my family finds, I realized I had photos of articles that might interest others looking for family. I have pictures of numerous articles from 1923 and a few from other years. I will post as time allows. 

Thank you to Matt Gwinn at the Baylor County Banner for giving me permission to post these clippings.  


My father was three years old when his sister, DeRay Bryan, began her first teaching job in Seymour. She taught previously in Corn and would go on to teach in Amhurst and in Borger where she would teach until 1941. 

If this clipping is too hard to read, send me an email from the "About Me" tab and I will send you the original photo. 




Willie Mae Bryan, later Willa Mae, was
my father's sister. She was 13 years old 
when attending this social. 










If you want to know more about the families I research, click here to like my Facebook page, where you will see each post and other genealogical finds. 
.
Diana
© 2022 


O. C. Harrison, The Baylor County Banner (Seymour, Texas), 13 September 1923, Vol. 28, No. 51, print; Texas State Library and Archives, Austin, Texas, 2019. 

Tuesday, April 26, 2022

Take a Look at My OneNote Notebooks




In my last post, 
Using OneNote as Temporary Storage for My Genealogy Research, I told of my change from permanent family notebooks in OneNote to using OneNote as temporary storage for much of my research. In this post, I will describe the OneNote notebooks I use for genealogy. Samples you can copy to your OneNote notebooks can be found at the bottom of this post. 

I currently have five working OneNote notebooks. That is a considerable reduction of over 25 notebooks since the summer of 2020, when I decided to stop storing information in family notebooks.

                OneNote Notebooks used for Genealogy                     

I use only two notebooks for genealogy. Surprisingly, my most used notebook for genealogy is my Work from Home notebook. This notebook came to pass in March 2020 when everything closed due to the pandemic. I was working from my home office and wanted everything work-related within easy reach on my second monitor. Gradually my personal tasks were added to the notebook, and genealogy soon followed. Upon retirement, that notebook is now a combination of sections related to personal / family needs and genealogy. It is almost always found on my vertical screen.




OneNote Notebook: Work From Home 


Beginning on the left, I will briefly explain how I use the genealogy-related sections of my Work from Home notebook seen below. If you have questions, please feel free to contact me.  


Presentation handouts from webinars, conferences, and other genealogical activities are placed in this notebook's Education - Webinars section. I take notes on the handout in OneNote from my iPad or computer.  As I review my notes and the handout, I look for any suggested links or tasks that I might have noted and add them to one of my to-do lists. Most handouts are eventually discarded. Only a few make it to my digital files. 

Friday, April 22, 2022

Friday's Photo: Mrs. J. W. "Bunnie" Harrison and Friends



These photos were found in the collection of Marguerite Cook Clark. In two of the photos, one woman is identified as Mrs. J. W. Harrison (or Mrs. J. N. Harrison) and as "Bunnie." Others are not identified but are found in all three photos. 

Locations are unknown but the identification of Bunnie is written by Maggie Martin Cook, Marguerite Cook Clark's mother. Maggie Martin was born in Bienville Parish where she married E. C. Cook and raised a family. 

If you can help with the location of the photos, the identification of the persons in the photos, or with information about Bunnie Harrison, please contact me. You can leave comments at the end of this post, on my Facebook page, or send me an email












If you want to know more about the families I research, 
click here to like my Facebook page, where you will see each post and other genealogical finds. 
.
Diana
© 2022 

Bunnie Harrison and others, photographs, n.d.; digital image, from the privately held photo collection of Marguerite Cook Clark (1913-1989), Waynesville, North Carolina, 2021. Photos were accessed and scanned at the home of Marguerite Cook Clark's daughter in Alpine, Texas on April 28, 2014, September 14, 2014, and November 9 to 11, 2016. 

Wednesday, April 20, 2022

Clippings from The Baylor County Banner - Seymour, Texas - September 13, 1923 (Part 1)



My grandparents, Redic E. Bryan and Myrtie Hairston, and my great-grandparents, Phillip A. Hairston and Lodema Criswell, moved to Baylor County in 1905. My father, Whit Criswell Bryan, was born in Seymour in 1920. He was the youngest of seven children born to Redic and Myrtie. 


In April 2019, I visited the Texas State Library and Archives to read Baylor County Banner issues that could not be found online or on microfilm. I photographed articles with information about my father's family who lived in Seymour. While sorting through my family finds, I realized I had photos of articles that might interest others looking for family. I have pictures of numerous articles from 1923 and a few from other years. I will post as time allows. 

Thank you to Matt Gwinn at the Baylor County Banner for giving me permission to post these clippings.  


There was much happening in Baylor County in the news on September 13, 1923. The Cowboy Reunion and Baylor County Fair took up much of the news and school starting resulted in several articles. Photos of buildings in Seymour were also found in this issue. I will post half of the articles and photos found today and more next week. 





Only a portion of this article was copied, but it does give
a nice glimpse of the rodeo. 













If you want to know more about the families I research, click here to like my Facebook page, where you will see each post and other genealogical finds. 
.
Diana
© 2022 


O. C. Harrison, The Baylor County Banner (Seymour, Texas), 13 September 1923, Vol. 28, No. 51, print; Texas State Library and Archives, Austin, Texas, 2019. 

Friday, April 15, 2022

Friday's Photo: Ruby Poland Metcalf

26 July 1911 to 15 September 2003 [1]


This photo was found in the Frye family's collection.[2] It is badly stained and I used my very amateurish skill of repairing photos to make it look a little better. The original is below. 

Ruby Louise Poland was the daughter of Alabama Frye and Hardie J. Poland. Her family lived in Fryeburg in Bienville Parish. Ruby was married to Albert Crockett Metcalf. She is buried in Bistineau Cemetery in Heflin, Webster Parish along with her parents and other family members.[3] 








If you want to know more about the families I research, click here to like my Facebook page, where you will see each post and other genealogical finds. 
.
Diana
© 2022 

    1. Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/38361913/ruby-louise-metcalf : accessed 15 April 2022), memorial page for Ruby Louise Poland Metcalf (26 Jul 1911–15 Sep 2003), Find a Grave Memorial ID 38361913, citing Bistineau Cemetery, Heflin, Webster Parish, Louisiana, USA ; Maintained by Ron Manley (contributor 46788603).
    2. Ruby Louise Poland Metcalf, photograph, n.d.; scanned image, from the privately held photo collection of the Frye Family, San Francisco, 2019.
    3. Find a Grave, memorial  38361913, for Ruby Louise Poland Metcalf.