Sunday, June 27, 2010

One found

There are several family members who are supposed to be buried in the Palma Sola cemetery in Bradenton, Florida but don't have markers.

Martha Fulford Willis, sister of my great grandfather died in 1888 during childbirth. It was her first child and neither of them made it. She was married to Augustine Willis who remarried after her death and had a large family.
Some family records said she was buried in Palma Sola but I had been though the cemetery several times and never found her grave.

I listed her grave as being there at findagrave and a volunteer went out and after seeing a mound, dug off the dirt and located her marker. It was a concrete cover over red brick with her name etched in the concrete.
It has been broken and not all of it is legible but at least we now know where she is buried.

Martha wife of Augustine Willis Born: Jan 28, 186. Died: Oct 7, 18... REV. ch. 18

Sunday, June 20, 2010

Dortch family

I have an old photo from the Oneco, Florida Church of Christ. My parents attended here until it closed in the mid 1990s to make way for a 4 lane highway. The photo was taken about 1910.

My grandmother Edith Wilson and her parents were charter members. Over the years I have researched some of the people in the photo and in several cases found they were relatives.

Ellen Dortch, the woman on the second row, 2nd to the end on the right was one of those. It turned out she was actually the sister of my great grandfather.
Her maiden name was Ellen Alabama Wilson. She was married to William Dortch who I assume is the man next to her. I didn't have any other Dortchs in my records until recently. I came across a Robert Lindsay Dortch , married to Mary Emma Childers. Mary Emma Childers was the daughter of Mary Wilson, sister of Ellen Alabama Wilson.

So Ellen Wilson's brother in law married her niece. Robert and Mary Dortch lived in Oneco, Florida up until 1930 and then moved to Dade County, Florida. I found her on the 1945 census in Miami and a death certificate for Robert about the same time but don't know what happened to their children or Mary after that.
Ellen Alabama Wilson Dortch moved to Tampa, Florida and died there in 1935.

Sunday, June 13, 2010

Share of the part

It seems when someone dies there is a good probability that relatives and heirs will fight over the estate more often than not.

It has happened several times in my family and I am sure there will be more in the future.

One interesting dispute over the terms of a will occurred in 1852 almost 30 years after the death of the person who thought he was settling his estate with it.

My ancestor Stephen Fulford served in the Revolutionary War and when he died on February 04, 1834 his will left part of the estate to his wife Louisa during her life and distributed land, slaves and personal property to his son Col. Thomas Fulford (my ancestor) and his two daughters Sabra and Abigail. The will terms seemed to give a half of the remainder of his estate to the son with the daughters sharing the other half. It was not unusual to give more to male children. What is unusual is that his estate and will became a dispute 20 year later when his wife died.

When Louisa died in 1850 the part of the estate she had received was being distributed but by then daughter Sabra had died and the executor of her estate objected to the way the estate had been distributed earlier. Sabra, during her life never objected but her executor read the terms differently than everyone else had.

The dispute was heard by the North Carolina Supreme Court in 1852 and the ruling is shown below.

THOMAS FULFORD AND OTHERS against WILLIAM HANCOCK, ADM'R. OF SABRA SHACKLEFORD.

Where the testator bequeathed the residue of his estate to be divided between a son and two daughters, the son to have half a part, and the daughters the remainder: — Held, that the word " part " means share, and the son therefore takes one sixth.

CAUSE removed from the Court of Equity for Carteret county, at Spring Term, 1852.

Stephen Fulford died in the year 1834, having previously made and published his last will and testament, in which he devised as 'follows :

"I will and bequeath unto my beloved wife, Louisa, the house and plantation during her widowhood, and after her death, to my son, Thomas Fulford, and all the back lands included. Also my will and desire is, that my wife, Louisa, is to have Quake and Perry, also Peg and her children, during widowhood and after her death, my will is, that my son, Thomas Fulford, is to have my chest, buffet and desk, and a mahogany table, also half a dozen of flat back chairs ; the remainder of my furniture and all property to be divided betwixt my two daughters and son, Sabra Shackleford, Abigail Simpson, her heirs or assigns ; my son, Thomas Fulford, to have half a part, and my two daughters above mentioned, the remainder."

The will was duly proved by the plaintiff, Thomas Fulford, the executor therein appointed, who qualified as such, and assented to the legacies therein given. Louisa Fulford, the widow, died in the year 1850, as also did Sabra Shackleford, the intestate of the defendant. The bill was filed by Thomas Fulford and Ziba Simpson and his wife Abigail, against the defendant, as the administrator of Sabra Shackleford, alleging that the plaintiff, Thomas, had purchased the interest of the other plaintiffs in a part of the slaves and their increase, given to the said Louisa for life, and praying for a partition of said slaves between himself and the defendant, as the administrator of the said Sabra. In said partition, he claimed to have three fourths of said slaves assigned to him, to wit, one half in his own right, and one fourth by virtue of the assignment from Simpson and his wife; and he alleged that upon a petition in the County Court for partition of a portion of the slaves, given by the same clause of the will of his testator, the slaves were divided between himself and his two sisters in those proportions. The defendant filed his answer, in which he admitted all the material facts stated in the bill, but contended that upon a proper construction of the will of Stephen Fulford, the plaintiff, Thomas, was entitled to only one sixth or two twelfths of the said slaves in his own right, and five twelfths under his purchase from Simpson; and that he was entitled in right of his intestate to the remaining five twelfths; and he insisted that the construction must be made upon the will itself, and not by any thing which had been done by the parties.

The cause was set for hearing, and by consent, transmitted to the Supreme Court.
J. W., with whom was J. H. Bryan, for the plaintiffs,
Donnell, for the defendant.

BATTLE, J., after stating the case as above, proceeded : — The only difficulty between the parties arises from that clause of the will which gives the " remainder of the furniture and all property ' ' to be divided between the two daughters and son, the son "to have half a part," and the two daughters the "remainder."

The counsel for the plaintiffs contends that the obvious meaning is to give the son one half of the property there referred to, leaving the other half to be equally divided between the two sisters. He contends further, that such meaning is made more manifest by the intent of the testator, apparent from other parts of the will, to give the son much the larger portion of the property ; and also by the parties themselves having put that construction upon tho clause, when they divided the other slaves.

The defendant's counsel objects to this construction, and contends that the testator, having in the previous part of his will given his son the greater part of his estate, intended that his daughters should have larger shares in the residue; and to that end declares that his son shall have half a part; that is, half of a third part, or one-sixth part of the said residue, and his two daughters shall take the remainder. He insists, also, that the construction must be made upon the will itself, and cannot be affected by any thing done by the parties. We agree with the defendant's counsel, that the acts of the parties in relation to the other slaves, can have no effect in determining the construction of the will. The intention of the testator must be ascertained by what he has said in his will, and not by what other persons may have done after his death. The aid which each party seeks to derive from the other provisions in the will, seems to be about equal. It is almost, if not quite, as probable that the testator intended to make the portions of his daughters more nearly equal to that of his son, as that he intended to continue his preference for his son, in this disposition of the residue. We are then driven to look to the clause itself for its interpretation, and from that, we think, the son was intended to take only one-sixth part of the residue. The word "part," in its connection, evidently means share. It is often so used in common parlance, and that is one of the meanings given to it in dictionaries of high authority. Now substitute " share " for " part," and the intent seems plain. The property is to be divided between the two daughters and son. If nothing more is said, the part or share of each is evidently one-third of the whole.

The son is to have half a share. A share is a third of the whole: half a share must therefore be half of one-third — that is, one-sixth part of the whole. The testator does not then say that the daughters are to have whole shares, for that would have left a small portion undisposed of; but he 'gives them the remainder — all that his son did not take. He thus, too, obviates the difficulty that might otherwise have arisen upon the supposition that the son was to have half as much as each of the daughters. The decree must be for a partition according to the rule above expressed. The costs must be paid out of the fund.

PER CURIAM. Decree accordingly.

Sunday, June 6, 2010

Mementos

I first heard of Richard Purvis about 15 years ago. I received some old family history research papers from a relative in Alpharetta, Georgia and there were some old letters in the box. They were written by a descendant of Richard Purvis who also lived in Georgia. Both people who wrote the letters had passed away and it took me over 10 years to track down family members.


Richard Francis Purvis was the husband of Rebecca Pamelia Hogan, sister of my great great grandfather James Henderson Hogan. Richard Purvis Enlisted in Company F, 46th Georgia Infantry Regiment on March 4, 1862. They were known as the "Webster County Invincibles."


He spent two years fighting in battles across Georgia, South Carolina, Mississippi and Tennessee but Richard's luck finally ran out in February of 1864. He was hospitalized for illness and was too sick to continue in the army so they sent him home to Georgia.

He died of disease on March 25, 1865. I don't know what kind of illness but by that stage of the war there was all kind of bad stuff going around. Few men made it through the war without being exposed to life threatening disease.


Richard's family kept the clothes he wore during his time in the war and they have been passed down for over one hundred and fifty years. One of his descendants sent me this photo of his vest and pouch two years ago. Richard Purvis also kept a diary of his war years and it has been also preserved.

Thursday, June 3, 2010

Family Truth

I have just started reading "Sweet Mystery" written by a distant cousin on the Green side about her search for family history. She quoted a child psychologist in the Preface that jumped off the page at me.

As we search for our roots we are also trying to discover what has made us what we are. For many of us it comes down to the impact a relative or friend made in our youth. The expert was giving his opinion of what makes a person have a healthy childhood and said "Somebody has got to be crazy about that kid."

As we record the dates and names in our genealogical pursuit wouldn't it be great to be able to know the positive impact our ancestors had. If not them, maybe us.