Sunday, October 21, 2018

Benjamin McClusky (1819-1862)

As I discussed in my last post, John P. Kennedy's first wife Mary Susan McClusky was the daughter of Benjamin McClusky and Sarah A. Howard. Her father Benjamin was born in Limestone County, Alabama in 1819 and was the third of eight children belonging to his parents William McCleskey and Elizabeth Proctor. During his childhood, the family would relocate to Lawrence County, Alabama and then to Lincoln County, Tennessee. It is here in Lincoln County that Benjamin would meet and eventually marry his wife Sarah A. Howard on September 28, 1840. Very little is known about his wife Sarah's early life other than she was born in Virginia around the year 1818.

Together Benjamin and Sarah would have five children: William Marion (1841), Sarah E. (1844), Joseph P. (1848), Mary Susan (1851), and Harriet A. (1856).

By 1844, the family would relocate to Pontotoc County, Mississippi. Benjamin McClusky makes his first appearance in the county records via the 1845 tax list for the county. His earliest known appearance in the county's land records involves a deed of trust between himself and a man named Isaac P. Carr dated June 1, 1852. In the document, Benjamin is guaranteeing the transfer of 103 acres of land to Isaac P. Carr who was the treasurer of the county school fund, against a loan of two hundred and fifty dollars. The land is described as being located in the southwest quarter of Section 3 Township 11 of Range 3 east. This piece of land lay to the southeast of the town of Algoma and it's location proves interesting when it comes to trying to locate the final resting place of Benjamin McClusky and his wife Sarah.


Township & Range Map for Pontotoc County, MS.
(red X marks location of land owned by Benjamin McClusky)


Civil War Enlistment Document for Benjamin McClusky


With the outbreak of the Civil War in 1861, Benjamin at age 43 and his oldest son William Marion McClusky would enlist with Company F of the 41st Mississippi Infantry Regiment CSA on April 1, 1862. The men in Company F were also known as the Pontotoc Grays. Benjamin's service would be very short-lived due to his contracting measles and being sent home where he would die from the disease on June 23, 1862. For his efforts, records indicate that Benjamin received a whopping sum of twenty-two dollars and seventy-three cents. In stark contrast, his son William would survive the entire war and ultimately be pardoned in Greensboro, NC as part of General Joseph E. Johnston's surrender to General William T. Sherman on April 26, 1865. In 1863, Benjamin's wife Sarah would petition the Confederate government for his pension and ultimately receive the sum of forty-three dollars and ten cents. After this point, Sarah would disappear from the county record apart from a possible listing on the 1870 federal census. Both her and Benjamin's final resting places are unknown, but I tend to believe they are buried in unmarked graves in a small cemetery south of their property known today as the McCleskey Cemetery. There is also the possibility they are buried in New Salem Cemetery in the southeastern part of the county near the community of Troy which is where two of their children, Joseph and Harriet, are buried.


New Salem Cemetery ~ Troy, MS

Grave of Joseph P. McClusky
(son of Benjamin & Sarah McClusky)

Grave of Harriet A. McClusky
(daughter of Benjamin & Sarah McClusky)

William Marion McClusky and family.
oldest son of Benjamin & Sarah McClusky
(circa 1890 ~ Chickasaw County, MS)
photo courtesy of Nelda Hamer



























Sunday, October 14, 2018

John P. Kennedy (1831-1912)



John P. Kennedy and his six sons.
(circa 1910)


The early life of John P. Kennedy is somewhat shrouded in mystery. His gravestone (a modern replacement) indicates his birth year as being 1822, yet various census records put it as being 1827, 1831, or 1836. I tend to lean more towards the year 1831 which is the birth year stated on the 1900 federal census for Pontotoc County, Mississippi. This is also the record that states he was born in Ireland and had immigrated to the United States as a child in 1842. Port of entry records for the time period show numerous John Kennedys that fit the same description entering the country from various ports in the Northeast, as well as the South.

If I were to venture a guess at a likely candidate and location for John P. Kennedy prior to his appearance in Pontotoc County in 1870, it would be the John Kennedy that appears on the 1860 federal census for Tippah County, Mississippi. With Tippah County bordering Pontotoc County to the north at the time, proximity makes it very possible, as does the fact that this individual shares the same birth year and is listed as being from Sligo, Ireland. If this is in fact the same John Kennedy, this record would provide evidence of a previously unknown first wife named Wiley A. Strong. County marriage records show the couple having married on December 10, 1859, with her father Martin Strong acting as a bondsman. It's also quite possible this same John Kennedy can be seen ten years earlier on the 1850 federal census living in the home of J. and Hannah Kenada in Tishomingo County which bordered Tippah County to the east. Interestingly enough, this John is the only person in the household listed as having been born in Ireland. It's also important to note that both of the John Kennedys mentioned disappear from both of these counties' records beyond these two census records.


1850 Federal Census listing for Tishomingo County, MS


1860 Federal Census listing for Tippah County, MS


The earliest known and definitive record involving John P. Kennedy is his marriage to Mary S. McClusky in Pontotoc County, Mississippi on July 26, 1870. His wife Mary had been born in Pontotoc in 1852 and was the daughter of long-time residents Benjamin McClusky and Sarah A. Howard.

John and Mary Kennedy would have eleven children together: Elizabeth (1876), Harriet (1877), James Hugh (1878), Josephine (1880), Ira (1882), Jennie (1884), Eber (1885), Edwin (1886), Effie (1888), William (1889), and John Pile (1891).

On August 16, 1884 the couple would purchase 160 acres of land from John T. Cruse for the sum of one hundred and sixty dollars. The parcel of land is described as being "the southwest quarter of Section 13, Township 10 of Range 2 east of the Basis Meridian of the Chickasaw Surveys". The money to purchase the land was acquired through a promissory note for the amount of one hundred and eighty dollars and forty cents from W. A. Rodgers and R. D. Wood on that same date. The property lay a few miles southwest of the town of Pontotoc and was primarily used for growing corn and cotton. The land is currently located between Hwy 341 and Old Airport Rd.




2010 Township & Range Map
showing location of John P. Kennedy's farm.


This same piece of land can be seen being used as collateral for monetary loans and referenced in a series of merchants' deeds of trust in the years 1892 and 1895-1899. The southern half of this section of land was later sold to O. C. Carr on January 23, 1903 for the sum of one thousand two hundred dollars. It is unknown what became of the northern half due to the lack of documents addressing it's sale.

At some point between the years 1892 and 1895, John's wife Mary would pass away due to unknown cause. Her burial location remains unknown, although I suspect she's buried in an unmarked grave located in the Jernigan Cemetery which lays just to the north of the family's property.



Jernigan Cemetery ~ Pontotoc County, Mississippi


John would eventually remarry on June 2, 1897. His new bride was a woman named Emma Lula (Rogers) Poe and together the couple would only have one child named Manilla Dykes Kennedy in December of 1898. The family was still residing in Pontotoc County by the turn of the century, but by 1903 or 1904 had set their eyes to the north and the newly opened cheap land in the Indian Territory (present day Oklahoma). The Kennedy family chose to resettle on the Creek Nation (present day McIntosh County) near the town of Eufala. Not long after arriving to the area, John Kennedy's second wife Lula would die in 1905 and be buried in Mellette Cemetery in Hanna, Oklahoma. John P. Kennedy would follow her in death seven years later, dying in 1912, and be buried next to her.



Grave of John P. Kennedy ~ Mellette Cemetery, McIntosh County, OK
(photo courtesy of Jayson Shellady)


Grave of Emma Lula (Rogers) Poe ~ Mellette Cemetery, McIntosh County, OK
(photo courtesy of Jayson Shellady)




















  



Sunday, October 7, 2018

William Kennedy (1889-1931)



William Kennedy 
(circa 1910)


Born on September 16, 1889 in Pontotoc, Mississippi, William Kennedy was the tenth child born unto John P. Kennedy and Mary S. McClusky. His mother was a native of Mississippi and his father an Irish immigrant. As a young man, he farmed cotton in southeastern Oklahoma in McIntosh County. It is here where he eventually meets and marries his wife Ollie Drucilla Jones on January 29, 1911 in the town of Eufala. As I discussed in my last post, William and his wife Ollie would have eleven children during their marriage.



William Kennedy
(circa 1920's)


Just prior to 1920, he would relocate his family to northeastern Oklahoma near the town of Mounds, where he would continue to farm. On the evening of December 9, 1931 after a supposed night of drinking and gambling, he was shot in the abdomen during a dispute with another local farmer named J. L. Sanders. He was brought to Morningside Hospital in Tulsa, where he would eventually die from his wound the following day. The incident was front page news in the Tulsa Tribune newspaper and his assailant would eventually be charged with murder. William was buried in Duck Creek Cemetery in Mounds, Oklahoma. His grave remained unmarked and lost until 2010 when I personally located it and arranged for a gravestone to be placed on the grave. 





Sunday, September 30, 2018

Ollie Drucilla Jones (1893-1980)



Ollie Drucilla Jones
(Mellette, Oklahoma circa 1911)


Ollie Drucilla Jones was born in Batesville, Arkansas on January 5, 1893 and was the fourth child born unto John Curtis Jones and Sarah Parthena Felts. By her own account, she wasn't close to her parents John Curtis and Sarah. In later years she would recollect that "she did not have good communication with her mother and father. Especially her father." Her reasoning for this was that when it came to her father "it seemed boys were more important than girls."

After her family relocated to the town of Mellette, Oklahoma she met William Kennedy whose family had also recently relocated to the area from Pontotoc, Mississippi. William and Ollie would eventually marry on January 29, 1911 in Eufala, Oklahoma. In later years, Ollie would state that she only told one of her sisters about her pending marriage to William, providing further evidence of her strained relationship with her parents.



William Kennedy & Ollie Drucilla Jones on their wedding day.
(Eufala, OK ~ January 29, 1911)


After getting married, William and Ollie remained in McIntosh County for a number of years raising cotton. During this time the couple had seven children: Norma Kennedy (1912), James Curtis Kennedy (1914), Dodd Kennedy (1916), Ira William Kennedy (1919), a set of twins named Elmer and Velma who died at birth (1921), and Dolfus "Don" Kennedy (1922). In 1923 the couple would decide to relocate to California.  The family was accompanied by Ollie's half-cousin, Tinsy, and her husband. After getting as far as Texas, the car broke down. Tinsy and her husband returned to Oklahoma and the Kennedys remained in Dodge, Texas for about a year. It was during this time that Ollie gave birth to her eighth child James Robert "Junior" Kennedy in the late summer of 1924. The family eventually returned to Eufala, Oklahoma and spent several months living in an extra home on the farm owned by one of William's brothers. In 1925 or 1926 the family moved north to Okmulgee County and settled in the Natura Township on a farm known as Old Hayden's Place. While living at Old Hayden's Place, William and Ollie had three more children: Billie "Charles" Kennedy (1926), Leroy Kennedy (1928), and Jack Kennedy (1931). Four months after the birth of Jack, William was shot in the abdomen south of Bixby, OK by a local farmer named J. L. Sanders during an evening of heavy drinking and playing dice. The incident made the front page of the Tulsa Tribune newspaper and Sanders was later charged with murder after William succumbed to his wound and died on December 10, 1931.

Following William's death, the family remained at Old Hayden's Place for a couple of years and then relocated to just outside Kiefer, OK. After only a couple more years the family moved again to Beggs, OK. It was here in Beggs, that Ollie got remarried to a man named Thomas McCall. The marriage only lasted a year. In November of 1936, Ollie gathered all her children and packed all their belongings into a 1932 Ford V-8 with a trailer and headed out to California. After making the long trip at the lightning-fast pace of 30 mph, the Kennedys arrived in Southern California. They first took work helping two older ladies who lived in a huge house. The family took up residence in a small house in the middle of an orange grove. Ollie's son Don recalls that during this time "each family member probably ate five pounds of oranges a night." They worked for seventy-five cents an hour, an unheard of sum for the time, taking care of smudge pots for 10 to 12 hours a night. The family eventually headed north to Turlock, where times got hard due to lack of work. What little work that could be found primarily involved migrant work picking peaches, cotton, and grapes. By the 1940's work became more plentiful and Ollie took a job working for Armours in 1941. Eventually she was able to buy a house for the sum of $2750.00. Ollie would eventually remarry again, this time to a man named Lee Belcher on May 10, 1956. Ollie lived out her days in Turlock, CA, eventually passing away on August 14, 1980.



Ollie Jones Kennedy and daughter Norma
(Turlock, CA ~ 1943)


   

Saturday, September 15, 2018

Stranger Than Fiction Part 2................A Tale Of True Love.

I figured while I was on the topic of John Logan Jones and his children, I'd tell y'all a tale that was told to me by Buddy Jones from Oklahoma City involving John Logan Jones' son John Curtis Jones and his half-brother Lewis Polk Jones. Buddy Jones is the grandson of Lewis Polk Jones. It's an amazing story about love, dedication, and how life was in rural America at the turn of the 20th century.

Between 1895 and 1900, John Logan's son John Curtis Jones left Arkansas for the newly opened Indian Territory (present day Oklahoma) to resettle. His half-brother Lewis Polk Jones soon followed suit and eventually the two families were residing next to each other. At the time, Lewis was married to a woman named Mollie L. Mechum (or Mitchum), and together the couple had three children: a child who died as an infant, a daughter named Perly in 1900, and another daughter named Rosa (Tinsey) in 1904. Not long after their daughter Tinsey was born, Mollie passed away.

At some point after Mollie's death, Lewis and his half-brother John Curtis' daughter Roxie took a shine to each other. Under the guise of heading to Texas to check his prospects down there, Lewis left his two daughters with his half-brother's family and left for Knox County, Texas. Once he arrived, he sent for Roxie, and the two were married without the consent of her father.



Lewis Polk Jones, Roxie Jones, and her father John Curtis Jones in the background.
(circa 1908 Oklahoma)
photo courtesy of Buddy Jones.


Roxie Jones
photo courtesy of Buddy Jones


After their marriage Lewis and Roxie seemed to move around quite a bit, returning to Oklahoma for a short time, then Arkansas, and finally returning to Texas and settling in the town of Vernon. During this time the couple had four children: Cleo Franklin Jones in 1908, Orvel Lee Jones in 1910, Jesse James Jones in 1912, and Opal Jones in 1916. Not long after the birth of their daughter Opal, the family decided to leave Vernon and relocate to the town of Commerce. It was during this time that Roxie drank some bad water, contracted typhoid fever, and died. On the day of her funeral, the family left their infant daughter Opal under the care of a couple named G. W. Polk and Myrtle McCullen who decided to kidnap her. Lewis put up a $1000.00 reward for her return which was matched by the state of Texas. Also at this time, Lewis somehow managed to get deputized and set off for California where one of the suspects' brother lived. This was all done by "riding the rails" which took a substantial amount of time. Upon arriving at the suspects' brother's home in California he found a letter that placed them in Arkansas, and so he set off in that direction. When Lewis arrived in Arkansas, the couple caught wind of it and abandoned Opal in a hotel they were staying at and were never caught. Opal would eventually live to see the ripe old age of 94, passing away in Texas in 2010.



G. W. Polk and Myrtle McCullen
(the couple who kidnapped Baby Opal)
photo courtesy of Buddy Jones.

Thursday, September 13, 2018

John Curtis Jones (1862-1930)



John Curtis Jones (Oklahoma circa 1900)
photo courtesy of Buddy Jones.


John Curtis Jones was the fourth known child born unto John Logan Jones and Margaret Jane Bizzell in Independence County, Arkansas on March 8, 1862. After the death of his mother in 1870, John Curtis and his youngest sister Alzada Elizabeth Drucilla Caroline went to live with their aunt Alzada Bizzell Martin who also lived in the county. At age 22, he would marry Sarah Parthena Felts in Sharp County, Arkansas on April 27, 1884. Sarah was born in Barren Township in Independence County, Arkansas on March 8, 1867 and was the daughter of Robert E. Felts and Susan Carter, both from Tennessee.



Sarah Parthena Felts (wife of John Curtis Jones)


The couple had their first child Edgar Otto Jones on April 8, 1885 in Independence County, Arkansas. This birth would be followed by five more children being born in Arkansas: Roxie Ellen Jones (1888), Maude Lee Jones (1891), Ollie Drucilla Jones (1893), Jeff Thomas Jones (1894), and Rendie Parthena Jones (1895).



Edgar Otto Jones and family
photo courtesy of Buddy Jones.


Roxie Ellen Jones and brother Jeff Thomas Jones
photo courtesy of Buddy Jones.


Ollie Drucilla Jones
photo courtesy of Buddy Jones


Maude Lee Jones
photo courtesy of Buddy Jones.


Rendie Parthena Jones
photo courtesy of Buddy Jones.


With the opening of fresh land for sale in the Indian Territory (present day Oklahoma), John Curtis and his family left Arkansas and resettled on the Cherokee Nation near the town of Warner (present day Muskogee County) at some point between 1895 and 1900. By 1908, the family had relocated to the settlement known as Mellette in neighboring McIntosh County. During this period of time, John Curtis and Sarah had three more children: Arch Franklin Jones (1900), Bertha Ann Jones (1904), and Claude J. Jones (1908).



Arch Franklin Jones and wife Arfil.
photo courtesy of Buddy Jones.


Bertha Ann Jones (circa 1915)
photo courtesy of Buddy Jones.


Claude J. Jones (circa 1915)
photo courtesy of Buddy Jones.


It was during their time spent in Mellette, Oklahoma that they met the family of John P. Kennedy who had also recently moved to the area from Pontotoc, Mississippi. Through the two families' relationship, three marriages would be produced: Ollie Drucilla Jones to William Kennedy in 1911, Maude Lee Jones to John Pyle Kennedy in 1912, and Rendie Parthena Jones to Eber Kennedy in 1915. Eventually John Curtis and his family would relocate once again to the town of Mounds in Creek County, Oklahoma. It is here where John Curtis Jones would pass away at the age of 67 on January 19, 1930. His body would be laid to rest in the Duck Creek Cemetery located in Mounds, Oklahoma. His wife Sarah would pass away six years later on August 17, 1936 and be laid to rest next to her husband.



Grave of John Curtis Jones
photo courtesy of Jayson Shellady.


Grave of Sarah Parthena (Felts) Jones
photo courtesy of Jayson Shellady. 


Wednesday, September 12, 2018

John Logan Jones (1831-1906)



John Logan Jones (1831-1906)
(photo courtesy of Buddy Jones)


Born on January 6, 1831 in Henry County, Tennessee, John Logan Jones was the seventh known child born unto Isaac Jones' son Burrel and my personal great great great grandfather. His name makes it's first appearance in county records on the 1850 Federal Census for McCracken County, Kentucky living in the home of his parents at age 18. Three years later, marriage bond records for the county show that on May 16, 1853 he married Margaret Jane Bizzell.



Marriage bond record for John Logan Jones & Margaret Jane Bizzell



As I mentioned in an earlier post, Margaret was the daughter of Thomas G. Bizzell and Nancy Caroline Sparks, having been born in Calloway County, Kentucky on either August 1, 1835 or August 4, 1838 as her tombstone suggests. The really interesting thing about Margaret is that records seem to indicate that she was actually a cousin of her husband John Logan Jones and the granddaughter of John's father's sister Jane who first married John Sparks prior to 1820 and then later John Jeffrey in 1834.

A little over a year after their marriage, the couple welcome their first child William Alexander Jones into the world on September 27, 1854, followed by a second son Houston Nathaniel Jones on March 3, 1857. By the time of the birth of the couple's third known child James Isom Jones on September 23, 1859, the couple had relocated to Independence County, Arkansas with John Logan's father Burrel. Further evidence of the move can be seen in a series of land patents granted to John Logan starting on December 10, 1859 when he is granted 40 acres located in the NE 1/4 of the SE 1/4 of Section 17 in Township 15 North of Range 6 West, followed by another 80 acres located in the SW 1/4 of the NW 1/4 of Section 9 and the NE 1/4 of the SE 1/4 of Section 8 in Township 15 North of Range 6 West granted on September 1, 1860. This land lay adjacent to his father's land purchase from the same time period and was located in what was then Barren Township and can now be found northwest of present day Cave City, Arkansas near where Conyers Road intersects Center Road.


1859 Arkansas Land Patent granted to John Logan Jones


1860 Arkansas Land Patent granted to John Logan Jones


Seven months after his last land purchase, the country would find itself in turmoil with the outbreak of civil war and records show that on November 19, 1861 John Logan and his brother-in-law Nathaniel P. Jones would both enlist with the 1st Arkansas Regiment of 30 Day Volunteers which was part of the Independence County Home Guard. John Logan enlisted with Company B and given the rank of sergeant. After thirty days the company was disbanded at Camp Borland near Pocahontas, Arkansas on December 18, 1861. Confederate enlistment records show that he may have re-enlisted with the 8th Arkansas Infantry, New Company K which was later re-assigned to the 1st Brigade, 1st Division, Western Dept. and sent to Corinth, Mississippi where 50,000 Confederate troops had amassed by order of General Albert Sydney Johnson. I use the words "may have re-enlisted" because enlistment documents show the individual as being named "John L. Jones" and there isn't any further record involving a request for pension by John Logan. This lack of a service pension record could easily be explained by the fact that this particular "John L. Jones" was listed as having deserted on July 28, 1862.

If this was in fact John Logan Jones serving with the 8th Arkansas Infantry, he would've certainly had a few reasons to desert at this point in time. On April 6th, the 8th Arkansas Regiment became part of the 3rd Brigade (under S. A. M. Wood), 3rd Corps (under General Hardee), Army of the Mississippi and marched in to meet the Yankees at Shiloh. The 8th Arkansas was involved in the first wave of fighting and suffered heavy casualties as the battle climaxed at what's become known as "The Hornet's Nest". After the Confederate defeat at Shiloh, they retreated back to Corinth and were later shipped to Mobile, Alabama, then Atlanta, eastern Georgia, and finally into eastern Tennessee. 

As I discussed in my earlier post about his father Burrel, things had gotten pretty bad for most of the people living back in Independence County between the burden of the Northern Army's occupation of the area and the roving bands of raiding Confederate bushwackers. Coupled with this was the fact that three months prior to this "John L. Jones" deserting, John Logan's wife had given birth to their fourth child, and my great great grandfather, John Curtis Jones on March 8, 1862 which also could have prompted his return home. Later birth records place John Logan in Independence County for the remainder of the war, such as the birth of his fifth child Luther Sherman Jones on December 28, 1864. Oddly enough, records indicate that John and Margaret's sixth child Andrew Johnson Jones was born on December 21, 1865 in Carroll County, Missouri. This may have been due to simply a holiday visit to relatives in the neighboring state, or possibly a temporary move to Missouri to flee the hardships brought on Independence County by the Civil War, or if John Logan had continued serving with the 8th Arkansas Regiment and deserted, maybe even hiding out from a perceived threat due to the desertion. Either way, the stay was short-lived because the family was back in Independence County by October 12, 1868 for the birth of John Logan and Margaret's only known daughter with the extraordinarily long name Alzada Elizabeth Drucilla Caroline Jones.


John Curtis Jones (son of John Logan Jones & Margaret Jane Bizzell)
photo courtesy of Buddy Jones.


Andrew Johnson Jones (son of John Logan Jones & Margaret Jane Bizzell)
photo courtesy of Buddy Jones.


Alzada Elizabeth Drucilla Caroline Jones 
(daughter of John Logan Jones & Margaret Jane Bizzell)
photo courtesy of Buddy Jones.



Less than two years after the birth of their daughter Alzada, tragedy would strike the family with the death of John Logan's wife Margaret on July 14, 1870 at the young age of 32. This death date comes from her tombstone located in Hamlett Cemetery near the family's home. John Logan would waste very little time remarrying, waiting only six weeks before being wed to his second wife Mary Ann Reeves on August 28, 1870. 

Mary Ann Reeves was a local widow who had lost her first husband, Elijah T. Reeves, when he died from disease in Helena, Arkansas only a month after having enlisted with the Union army in 1862. Prior to her marriage to Elijah T. Reeves her maiden name was Carter and she was the older sister of the James Carter who would later marry and become the second husband of John Logan Jones' niece Lucy Jones Gist. Along with Mary Ann's four daughters from her prior marriage, the 1870 Federal Census also shows her mother Keziah Carter living in  the home. The interesting thing about Keziah Carter is that her maiden name was originally Meeks and she was the granddaughter of Priddy Meeks and Elizabeth Denny who lived in the same area along Hunting Creek in Surry County, NC at the same time John Logan's father Burrel and grandfather Isaac did fifty years prior. Through his marriage to Mary Ann Reeves, John Logan would have three more children: Henry Grant Jones in 1872, Merenda (Marinda) Tennessee Jones in 1874, and Lewis Polk Jones in 1875.


Marinda T. Jones (daughter of John Logan Jones & Mary Ann Reeves)
photo courtesy of Buddy Jones.


Lewis Polk Jones (son of John Logan Jones & Mary Ann Reeves)
photo courtesy of Buddy Jones.


One is left to assume that at some point between 1880 and 1888 Mary Ann passed away because Sharp County marriage records show John Logan now marrying his third wife Alice G. Dixon on September 23, 1888. Sharp County marriage records, census records, and her tombstone seem to indicate that Alice G. Dixon was born Alice Genora Brasher in Tennessee on May 12, 1864. Oddly enough, with Alice only being twenty-four at the time of  her marriage to John Logan Jones she was already on her third marriage. The first marriage to Willaim H. Dotson in Sharp County, Arkansas on August 14, 1881 and the second to Merinda Dickson (Dixon) in Sharp County on August 4, 1882. Through his marriage to Alice G. Dixon, John Logan would have seven more children: Louisa C. Jones (1889), Marion Thomas Jones (1892-1894), Josephine C. Jones (1894-1969), George McKinley Jones (1897-1979), Mary Jane Jones (1901-1997), Asberry F. Jones (1904-1908), and Bertie Logan Jones (1907) who was conceived when John Logan was seventy-five!  Unfortunately John Logan wouldn't live to see the birth of his last child, dying on September 4, 1906 in Cave City, AR. John Logan Jones is buried in the Palestine Cemetery in Sharp County, AR next to his last wife Alice who died on May 30, 1935.



Alice G. Dixon (circa early 1900's)
photo courtesy of Buddy Jones.



Grave of John Logan Jones & Alice G. Dixon 
Palestine Cemetery ~ Sharp County, Arkansas
(photo courtesy of Buddy Jones)


  
       

Friday, September 7, 2018

After a rather lengthy absence.....I'm back!!!

Wow! Can't believe it's been six years since I've posted on this blog. What can I say, but, life keeps you busy. In my absence it appears that Google bought the image hosting site that I had all the documents linked from...hence those not working anymore. But not to worry. My first order of business will be to get all that working again, but it's gonna take a little time considering there are close to 500 images I need to relink. Once I get that done, I'll get back on posting new entries from where I left off!


UPDATE (9/11/2018)....all the links to view the source documents at the bottom of each post have been repaired.