Who's Who at Rome Meeting Room, GA

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Rome Meeting Room, Floyd, Georgia (EB) +1878-1909; (TW) 1909-1992; (TW-N) 1992-2005+

Correspondents

  • Noble Green Watson +1878-1923+
    • hosted Flat Woods Meeting Room, NW of Rome +1878-1879+
  • George Graham 1878+
    • hosted one assembly +1878+
  • John Gibbes Barnwell IV +1878-1918
    • hosted assembly 1879-1911+
  • Charles Gadiz/Gattis 1879+; +1894-1903+
    • hosted Silver Creek Meeting Room, 6 mi. SE of Rome 1879-1889+;
  • Levi Dover 1879+
    • hosted one assembly 1879+
  • C. Morris +1889+
  • Allie W. Watters +1903-1905+
  • W.D. Close +1908-1914+
  • G.S. Graham +1908-1927+
    • George Graham?
  • J.L. Scott +1917-1927+
  • John Gibbes Barnwell V +1920-1940
  • William Lloyd +1927+
    • In 1923, William resided in Savannah.
  • Roscoe Nicholson +1933-1944+
  • George May Russell +1933-1966+
  • John M. Lloyd +1944-1973+
  • Charles E. Gardner +1949+
  • John T. Crozier +1962-1985+
  • Joe Ben Mulinix +1973-2005+
  • B.J. Nicholson +1985-2005+

Families

Lord Cecil, Christopher Hatton Turner, & Charles Holder resided together in 1880 at Div. 385 of Flat Woods, in the NW corner of what is now part of Rome. Their occupations in the 1880 Census were listed as "Minister".

Barnwell family

John Gibbes Barnwell IV hosted one of the assemblies in his home 6 miles SW of Rome 1879-1911+.

Ancestry

Paternal

John's father, John Gibbes Barnwell III (1816-1905) served in the Civil War 1861-1865 as a Confederate, his last rank earned was as a Major. His card index states that he served as a "1st Lt., CSA, Artillery, N. & C. March 16, 1861 to report to W.N. Pendleton, July 31, 1861; ("A.A.I.G. to Pendleton", in "Staff"). Capt., PACS, Ordn., from April 16, 1862; W.N. Pendleton's staff; Major, PACS, Ordn., from April 15, 1863; Chief Ordn. Off., Arty. Corps, A.N.V. (Pendleton), surrendered with H.Q.'s, Arty. Corps, A.N.V., Appomattox, Va, April 9.

Another card incorrectly lists John's father as John Gibbes Barnwell II, "South Carolina, Major, PACS, Arty., N.&C. March 16, 1861; Ordn. Off., Trapier's Brig., May 6, 1862; At Gov't Works, Augusta, Ga., Nov., 1864."

John's great-great-uncle (brother of Anne Hutson Barnwell) was Chancellor Richard Hutson (b. 1747 Prince William, Fort Mill, SC - d. 1795 Charleston, SC) who is regarded as a Founding Father of the United States. According to Biographical Sketches of the Bench and Bar of South Carolina, Vol. 1 Chancellors, pp. 211-212) and Wikipedia, he was one of the first three Judges of the first Court of Chancery of SC. he studied law at Princeton, and represented South Carolina from 1778-1779 as a member of the Continental Congress, signing the Articles of Confederation in 1778. After the British captured Charleston in Aug. 1780, he was imprisoned as a Whig at St. Augustine, learning Spanish while there, to 6-7 other languages he had mastery over. From 1782-1783, he served as the eighth lieutenant governor of SC. 1783-1784, he served two terms as the first mayor of Charleston, and elected Chancellor in 1784, and in 1791 became senior Judge of the Court of Equity of SC. He never married, and the "last political act of his life, was to vote for the adoption of the Federal Constitution in the Convention of 1788, where he sat as a delegate from St. Andrews."

John's great-great-grandfather was Rev. William Maine Hutson, born in 1720 in Devon, England (where the PB was later founded and popularized). He served as an "Independent" minister at Stoney Creek, Fort Mill, SC from 1743-1756, then at the Circular Congregational Church, Charleston, SC from 1756-1761.

According to Wikipedia, CCC was founded in 1681 by English Congregationalists, Scots Presbyterians & French Huguenots (Independents) of the original settlement, and located at 150 Meeting Street. In 1816, the first Sunday School in South Carolina was started in this church, and members also founded the Charleston Bible Society, said to have been a prototype for the later American Bible Society.

Membership included two state governors, prominent senators, the editor of the Charleston Courier, and also "many slaves and poor whose names were unknown to anyone beyond its walls". With regard to the latter, from 1820-1860, it was notable for its successful integration of white and black members within its large congregation. The original structure burnt by a fire that started near the Cooper River in 1861. It was rebuilt in 1890, and CCC belongs to two denominations, the UCoC & PCUSA, and founded the city's first marriage & family counseling center.

After William's wife (John's great-great-gma) Mary died in 1757, he remarried (in 1758) Mary Sarrazin Prioleau (1722-1760), then Martha Hay, a daughter of Col. Ann Hawk Hay & Martha Smith Hay. During the Revolutionary War, Col. Hay "commanded an Orange county regiment that guarded the Havershaw district. His correspondence between the Committee of Safety and the Commander-in-Chief, shows the obstacles he encountered, and the confidence he inspired, when the Hudson was the chief theatre of the war." (Lineage Book of the Charter Members of the DAR, Vol. 9, p. 319).

John's great-3 grandfather (William's father) was Thomas Hutson, who "was successfully Captain and Major of Militia in the Revolution (his regiment being first in Bull's brigade, subsequently commanded by Francis Marion, and later in brigade commanded by John Barnwell) and colonel just subsequent thereto; was a member of the State convention which ratified the Constitution of the United States in 1788; died May 4, 1789. He was wounded in the siege of Savannah and taken home by his man-servant, Jim." U.S., Sons of the American Revolution Membership Applications 1889-1970.

John's great-4 grandfather, Dr. Henry Woodward, was considered, according to a bio on Find A Grave, "the first English settler of South Carolina having been authorized by King Charles II to survey the Carolinas about 1667." He "may have been buried on the Gibbes Plantation on Johns Island". Dr. Howard's father, John Woodward, died in Virginia in 1665. His grandfather, Thomas Woodward (1600-1677) died at the Isle of Wight, VA. His great-grandfather, Christopher Woodward (b. 1569 Shropshire, Eng. - d. 1621) died at Charles City, VA. An ancestor, according to Ancestry.com, was William Sir de Willoughby (b. 1196 Willoughby, Lincolnshire, Eng. - d. 1227 Barton St. David, Somerset, Eng.).

According to a plaque in his honor installed by The Society of Colonial Wars in the State of South Carolina, John's great-4 grandfather, Col. John "Tuscarora Jack" Barnwell, was born in Dublin, Ireland (birthplace of the PB), son of Matthew Barnwell. He immigrated to South Carolina in 1701 seeking to "travel but for no other reason" (Geni.com but settled in Charleston early on, and became a Protege of Gov. Nathaniel Johnson (for whom he named his first son, according to Geni.com), and Chief Justice Nicholas Trott.

He then served as Deputy Surveyor in 1703, Clerk of the Council in 1703, and Deputy Secretary of the Council in 1704. While a surveyor, according to the South Carolina Encyclopedia, he "mapped the newly settled Sea Islands around Port Royal Sound", where he "staked his claim to 6,500 acres of land" and "became one of the first British settlers of Port Royal Island and an active trader with the Yamassee Indians". After mapping Port Royal Sound, he continued to map further in the region, eventually making "the great mother map of the American southeast from which all subsequent maps of the area were made" (Geni.com.

In 1711, the Tuscarora Indians launched an attack against white settlers, and as per Appleton's entry for John Barnwell, 137 were killed in one night in Roanoke alone. Barnwell led the 1711 expedition of (either 30 or 600) Carolinians and several hundred friendly Indians, as per Appleton's, against the Tuscarora Indians and killed 300 in the first engagement in Narhantes, and ultimately more than 1,000 were killed or captured, and the remnant escaped to the Five Nations of New York.

Subsequently in 1715, the Yamassee War was started at Pocotaligo, near Beaufort, by the Yemassee, Creeks, Choctaws & Catawbas, which took the lives of Indian Commissioner Thomas Nairne and 400 British settlers south of the Edisto River. Two or three British settlers on Port Royal Island fled to Barnwell's plantation, and together they escaped to a British merchant ship at anchor in the Beaufort River, joined by 300 other colonists.

Barnwell then led the Port Royal militia in a counterattack that destroyed the principal Yamassee villages south of the Combahee River" which killed 300 the first night, and drove the Yamassee warriors to retreat to Florida, according to the SCE. In 1717, Barnwell was appointed to the first Board of Commissioners towards reforming Indian policy, and also commanded the Carolina Scouts, "a waterborne militia force that patrolled the inland passage between Charleston and St. Augustine."

In 1719 or 1720, Barnwell met with the Board of Trade and Lords Justices in London to argue "for transfer of power over the Carolinas to the King". At this time he presented the "Barnwell Plan" of settlement, which proposed a "string of defensive forts" be constructed from the coast of Georgia to Tennessee, surrounded by royal grants of free land to attract settlers, but only one was approved. Returning in 1720, Barnwell constructed Fort King George on the Altamaha River at Darien, Georgia, which was the first British settlement in 1721. He also served as Justice of the Peace for Granville County and commander of the county militia until his death in 1724, and is also considered the founding father of Beaufort. He was also an early member of the Saint Helena's Parish, organized in 1712, with the church constructed in 1724, later used as a hospital during the Civil War, with its flat tombstones used as operating tables. Geni.com

John Warley, who serves as vice-president of the Beaufort History Museum, and is presently working on a biography of Col. Barnwell, of whom he is a descendant.

John's great-5 grandfather, Capt. Matthew Barnwell, was an Alderman in Dublin, Ireland, who "was killed in the Siege of Derry in 1690 while serving in James II's Irish Army, which attempted to restore the last Stuart king to the English throne." (South Carolina Encyclopedia)

  • John Gibbes Barnwell IV (b. 1839 Beaufort, SC)
    • Maj. John Gibbes Barnwell III (b. 1816 Beaufort, SC - d. 1905 Stateburg, Sumter, SC)
      • Col. John Gibbes Barnwell II (1778-1828 Beaufort, SC); Wife: Sarah Bull Barnwell (b. 1782 Beaufort, SC - d. 1862 Walterboro, Colleton, SC)
        • Gen. John Gibbes Barnwell I (b. 1748 Charleston, SC - d. 1800 Beaufort Co., SC)
          • Col. Nathaniel Barnwell (b. 1705 Charleston, SC; m. 1738 Johns Island, SC; d. 1775 Beaufort, SC)
            • Col. John "Tuscarora Jack" Barnwell (b. 1671 Dublin, Ireland - d. 1724 Beaufort, SC)
              • Matthew Barnwell (d. 1690 Derry, Ireland)
            • Anne Berners Barnwell was a descendant of Sir John Bourchier, first Baron Berners, who was a great-grandson of King Edward III, as per Geni.com.
        • Anne Hutson Barnwell (1755-1817).
          • Rev. William Maine Hutson (b. 1720 Devon, Eng. - d. 1761 Charleston, SC).
            • Capt. Thomas Hutson (d. 1789)
            • Esther Hutson
          • wife: Mary Woodward Chardon-Hutson (1717-1757 Charleston, SC)
            • Richard Woodward (b. 1683 Port Royal, Beaufort, SC - d. 1725 James Island, Charleston, SC)
              • Dr. Henry Woodward (b. 1646 Barton, St. David, Somerset, Eng. - d. 1689 Charleston, SC)
          • wife: Mary Sarrazin Prioleau (1722-1760)
          • wife: Martha Hay Hutson, daughter of Col. Ann Hawk Hay

Maternal Ancestry

Emma's ancestry

John's grandmother Emma's maternal great-grandfather was James Habersham, Sr. He and George Whitefield founded a school for orphans and other impoverished children at Bethesda, nine miles from Savannah, GA in 1738, as per Appletons' Cyclopedia of American Biography. Together they managed the Bethesda Orphan Home from 1741-1744.

In 1744, James founded the firm "Harris and Habersham", establishing trade between Savannah and England (FindaGrave bio. In 1750, he was appointed with Pickering Robinson, a commissioner, to advance the culture of silk in the colony. In 1754, he became secretary of the province, and one of the councillors. In 1767, he was elected president of the upper house of assembly, and 1769-1772 he officiated as governor, in the absence of Sir James Wright. At Bethesda, it was written in Appletons' that James produced the first cotton in the state, exporting the first few bales to England.

James' son Joseph Habersham (1751-1815 Savannah, GA), Emma's great-2 uncle, was also a statesman. He was a member of "the first commission appointed by the friends of liberty in Georgia in July, 1774, and one of those who on 11 June, 1775, on receiving intelligence of the skirmish at Lexington" raided the King's magazine in Savannah, seizing the powder for the use of the patriots. "In June of that year he was appointed a member of the council of safety, and in July commanded a party of "eleven young men at the time of the siege in Boston" that captured a government ship with munitions of war, including 15,000 pounds of powder. On 18 Jan., 1776, while a member of the assembly, he raised a body of volunteers who took the Royal Gov. Wright prisoner, and confined him to his house under a guard.

He was appointed major of the 1st Georgia battalion, 4 Feb., 1776, and defended Savannah from a British naval attack early in March. After Savannah was taken in the winter of 1778, he removed his family to Virginia, but on the landing of D'Estaing participated in the disastrous attack on Savannah in 1779. At the close of the war he held the rank of lieutenant-colonel. He was a member of the state assembly and its speaker in 1785 and 1790", mayor of Savannah 1792-1793, "and postmaster-general of the United States 1795-1801" under Washington and Adams. "He was president of the branch of the U.S. bank at Savannah from 1802 until the expiration of its charter." (Appletons' Cylopedia).

Another of James Sr.'s sons, John Habersham (1754-1799), served as a Major in the first Georgia Continental Regt., and was imprisoned twice in the Rev. War. He was a member of the Continental Congress in 1785, Commissioner in the Convention which established the Georgia/South Carolina boundary, and the first Collector of Customs at Savannah. These facts are as per a plaque dedicated to him and two of his brothers at the cemetery where they are buried, via FindaGrave.com.

James Habersham, Jr., Emma's great uncle, "actively opposed the revenue acts of Parliament in 1775, and served (as did John) on the board of Trustees created in 1785 to establish the University of Georgia, and was Speaker of the General Assembly in 1782 and in 1784."

Emma's father, Stephen Elliott, was a noted naturalist, biographed in Appletons. Graduated from Yale in 1791, and elected in 1793 to the legislature of South Carolina which he served until 1812 when he was appointed the first president of the state bank. In 1813, he co-founded the Literary and Philosophical Society of South Carolina, and served as its first president also. In 1825, he assisted in starting the state medical college, and lectured on natural history and botany. He authored The Botany of South Carolina and Georgia, a seminal work developed 1821-1824.

Stephen Elliott, Jr. (1806-1866), Emma's brother, graduated Harvard in 1824, and practiced law in Charleston and Beaufort 1827-1833. He became an Episcopal candidate for holy orders in 1835, and professor of sacred literature and Christian apologetics at the South Carolina college. He became a priest in 1836, first bishop of the diocese of Georgia in 1840, rector of St. John's church in 1841, then provisional bishop of Florida in 1844. He resided in Montpelier, Georgia 1845-1853 where he founded a seminary for young ladies, then served as an officiant at Christ Church in Savannah until his death in 1866.

  • Emma Gibbes Elliott Barnwell (1817-1894 Beaufort, SC)
    • Rev. Stephen Elliott (b. 1771 Beaufort, SC - d. 1830 Charleston, SC)
      • William Elliott (1738-1778 Beaufort, SC)
        • William Elliott (1703-1751 Perquimans Co., NC)
          • Thomas Elliott (b. Cornwall, Eng. - d. 1731 Berkeley Co., SC). 1st wife: Mary Gibbes Elliott (b. 1685 Barbados - d. 1714 Charleston, SC), daughter of Robert Gibbes (b. 1644 Sandwich, Kent, Eng. - d. 1714 Charleston, SC) & Jane Davis Gibbes. Jane was baptized in 1678 at Christ Church in Barbados.
    • Esther Wylly Habersham Elliott (b. 1775 Savannah, Chatham, GA - d. 1836 Charleston, SC)
      • James Habersham, Jr. (b. 1745 - d. 1799 Savannah, GA)
        • James Habersham, Sr. (b. 1712 Beverley, Yorkshire, Eng. - d. 1775 New Brunswick, Middlesex, N.J.)
      • Esther Rebecca Wylly Habersham (1754-1808 Savannah, GA)
        • William Wylie (b. 1700 Coleraine, Londonderry, N.I. - d. 1765 Savannah, GA).

John Gibbes Barnwell IV & V

His Civil War index card lists (should be IV) "Barnwell, John Gibbes III, South Carolina, Capt., Co. H, 1st (Gregg's) S.C. Inf. Reg., from July 2, 1863; A.A.A.G., McGowan's Brig., Dec. 1863; wounded at the Wilderness, and Fassell's Mill; absent wounded Oct.-Dec. 1864; surrendered at Appomattox; 1st Lt., same, from Sept. 2, 1861; Wounded at Gaines' Mill; Acting Adjt., Dec." The backside of the card: April 3, 1839 - Aug. 13, 1918; att. Univ. of Va., 1856-57; att. Harvard Univ., married (1) 1868, Katherine McIntosh Shanklin (7 children); (2); 1862; A.A.I.G., McGowan's Brig., Feb. 1863; to Capt.; Postwar civil engineer, Athens, Ga. & architect, Rome, Ga. In family cemetery, Rome, Ga."

  • John Gibbes Barnwell IV +1878-1918 (b. 1839 Beaufort, SC; m. 1868 or 1871; d. 1918), son of Maj. John Gibbes Barnwell III (b. 1816 Beaufort, SC - d. 1905 Stateburg, Sumter, SC). In 1895, he resided 5 mi. down the Cousa River, and in 1896 listed as 5 1/2 miles SW of Rome.
  • Catherine McIntosh Shanklin Barnwell +1878-1933+ (b. 1848 SC), daughter of
    • John Gibbes Barnwell V +1878-1896+; +1920-1940 (b. 1869 GA - d. 1940 Rome, GA). John lived in Atlanta in 1900, and Chattanooga, Tennessee +1901-1914+ and his wife Lilla settled there with him in 1914 after honeymoon in NC and a summer at Lookout Mountain, he was also listed as in fellowship there +1901-1903+, and evidently returned to Rome sometime after his father's death in 1918, and by 1920 he was residing in the county at Mount Alto. Wife (1914 @ Atlanta, GA): Lilla Neyle Colquitt Barnwell (b. 1874 Savannah, Chatham, GA - d. 1956 Rome, GA), daughter of Walter Welborn Colquitt (b. 1847 Macon, Bibb, GA - d. 1913 Mulberry, Polk, FL) & Lilla Neyle Habersham Colquitt (b. 1853 Savannah, GA - d. 1906 Atlanta, GA). No children.
    • James Shanklin Barnwell (b. 1871 - d. 1916 Rome, GA). Civil Engineer.
    • Joseph Shanklin Barnwell (b. 1871); wife (1905 @ Independence, Montgomery, KS). Wife: Rosa West Montgomery Barnwell (b. 1877 Rome, GA), daughter of Col. Alexander Blair Montgomery (b. 1831 Augusta, Richmond, GA - d. 1904 Rome, GA) & Ella Jane Mitchell Montgomery (b. 1846 Savannah, GA - d. 1898 Rome, GA). Were the Montgomery family at Rome Meeting Room?
    • Katherine Barnwell King 1884-1902+ (b. 1884 Rome, GA - d. 1960 Greensboro, Guilford, NC). Husband: Henry Gray King.

Cecil family

  • Lord Adelbert Percy Cecil +1880+ (d. 1889)

Close family

  • W.D. Close +1908-1914+

Crozier family

  • John T. Crozier +1962-1985+

Dover family

Levi hosted an assembly in his home, 7 miles N of Rome 1879+

  • Levi Dover +1879+

Gadiz/Gattis family

Charles hosted an assembly in his home, 6 miles at Silver Creek, SE of Rome 1879-1889+, correspondent at the other assembly by 1894.

  • Charles Gadiz/Gattis +1879-1889/1903+

Gardner family

  • Charles E. Gardner +1949+

Graham family

George hosted an assembly in his home in 1878.

  • George Graham +1878+
  • G.S. Graham +1908-1927+

Holder family

  • Charles Holder +1880+ (b. 1851 N.Y.)

Lawrence family

Dr. Lawrence was a dentist in Cave Springs, presumed to have commuted to the meeting in Rome in 1880, as he was listed in the LoG.

  • Dr. James H. Lawrence +1880+

Lloyd family

In 1923, William resided in Savannah.

  • William Lloyd +1927+
  • John M. Lloyd +1944-1973+

Morris family

  • C. Morris +1889+

Mulinix family

  • Joe Ben Mulinix +1973-2005+

Nicholson family

  • Roscoe Nicholson +1933-1944+
  • B.J. Nicholson +1985-2005+

Russell family

  • George May Russell +1933-1966+

Scott family

Joseph was PB by 1891, and self-employed in 1901 as a coal merchant in Chatham, Kent, ON. 1886-1901 @ Chatham; 1911 @ Winnipeg, MB. 1927 @ Toronto, ON.

  • Joseph Lounsbury Scott +1917-1927 (b. 1854 Norwich, Oxford, ON - d. 1937 Toronto, ON)
  • 1st wife: Margaret "Maggie" Moore Scott +1917-1926 (b. 1855 Norwich, ON - d. 1926 Rome, Floyd, Georgia)
  • 2nd wife (1927 @ Toronto, ON): Emma Augusta Millen Scott (b. 1868 Buffalo, N.Y. - d. 1951 Toronto, ON), daughter of Thomas Hunter Millen & Mary Celia McNairn Millen.
    • Elsie Northwood Scott (b. 1879 Thamesville, Bothwell, ON)
    • Howard Claude Russell Scott (b. 1881 Thamesville, ON - d. 1944 Volusia, FL). Wife (1906 @ Virden, Selkirk, MB): Viola Jean Spiers Scott (b. 1884 Woodworth RM, MB - d. 1915 Holly Hill, Volusia, FL), daughter of John Spiers (b. 1849 Glen Allan, Wellington, ON - d. 1900 Virden, MB) & Elizabeth Blair Spiers (b. 1861 Glen Allan, ON - d. 1953 Sarnia, Lambton, ON).
    • Helen Marion Moore Scott Hayhoe (b. 1884 ON; m. 1907 Winnipeg, MB; d. 1948 Toronto, ON); Husband: John Cecil Hayhoe (b. 1882 ON - d. 1962 Toronto, ON), son of Edward John Hayhoe (b. 1843 Coltishall, Norfolk, Eng. - d. 1913 Toronto, ON) & Susannah Sarah Munnings Hayhoe (b. 1854 Uxbridge, Durham, ON - d. 1921 Toronto, ON).
    • Sgt. Robert Lloyd Scott (b. 1887 Chatham, ON; m. 1913 Flint, MI; d. 1958 Baltimore, MD). Wife (1913 Flint, MI): Mary Magdalene Walsh Scott (b. 1890 Grand Rapids, MI). 1920 @ Russia, Lorain, OH); 1930 @ Chicago, IL; In 1916, Robert was CoE & Mary was RC. 1958 @ Baltimore, MD. Robert served in WWII 1943-1945.
    • Walter Printall Wolston Scott (b. 1889 Chatham, ON - d. 1919 Rome, GA). Wife: Gertrude May Hayes Scott (b. 1893 Winnipeg, MB - d. 1919 Rome, GA), daughter of William J. Hayes (b. 1863 L'Orignal, ON; m. 1893 Winnipeg, MB; d. 1936 Winnipeg, MB) & Jessie Elizabeth Ure Hayes (b. 1868 ON - d. 1903 Winnipeg, MB).
    • Anna "Annie" Pauline Irwin Scott Brown +1918+ (b. 1891 Chatham, Kent, ON - d. 1972 Columbus, Polk, NC). In 1916, Anna was studying nursing at Winnipeg General Hospital in Manitoba, and registered as "Protestant". In 1918, she was employed for King Gen. Hospital in Winnipeg and relocated to Rome and was self-employed there as a nurse, rooming with dentist, Dr. Thomas C. Mason (1885-1962 Rome, GA) and his family. Living at Oak Hall Hotel, Tryon, Polk, N.C. at the time of her death. Informant was Mrs. George Chapman of Tryon, NC. PB 1891-1911+
    • Hester Josephine Marguerite Scott Parham (b. 1895 Chatham, ON; m. 1918 Fulton Co., GA; d. 1986 Key West, Monroe, FL). Husband: Erwin Thompson Parham (b. 1890 - d. 1923 Marshallton, Newcastle, DE), son of Alonzo Whitfield Parham (b. 1857 Tabbs Creek, Oxford, Granville, NC - d. 1937 Gainesville, Hall, GA) & Mary "Molly" Addison Ellington Parham (b. 1860 Henderson, Granville, NC - d. 1938 Gainesville, GA); Erwin served as a cook on a hospital train in Manchuria during WWI in 1918, sailing from Hoboken, N.J. In 1900, Alonzo was a music dealer in Greensboro, NC.
    • Joseph Leslie Scott +1917+ (b. 1899 Chatham, ON - d. unknown); 1931 PB salesman for a collecting agency @ Brantford, ON. 1940 @ Eglinton, Toronto, ON.
    • Margaret Scott Dye +1917-1919+ (b. 1901 Chatham, ON - d. 1981 Fletcher, Henderson, NC). Husband: Dr. Alexander Vincent Dye (b. 1876 Flora, IL - d. 1956 Tryon, NC), son of Alexander Elbridge Dye (b. 1816 Wheeling, Ohio, W.V. - d. 1876 Salem, Dent, MO) & Mary Caroline Hudspeth Dye-McMurtrey (b. 1825 Washburn, Barry, MO - d. 1908 Oklahoma City, OK). Dr. Dye retired as a foreign service officer, a diplomat.

Turner family

  • Christopher Hatton Turner +1880+ (b. 1840 Leamington, Eng.)
  • Alice Killaly Turner (b. London, ON; m. 1871 Toronto, ON)

Christopher and Lord Cecil were both members of the British Rifle Brigade, and resigned their commissions at Ottawa in 1868 in order to devote themselves to evangelism and Christian ministry. Also pointed out that in Christopher and his wife Alice's marriage record, they identified denominationally as "Christian ch. catholic, not R. catholic".

Watson family

Noble hosted an assembly in his home 3 miles W of Rome, Div. 307, Flat Woods +1878-1879+

  • Noble Green Watson +1878-1923+ (b. 1847 Carroll Co., GA - d. 1926 Rome, GA)

Watters family

  • Allie W. Watters +1903-1905+

Sources

  • EB/AB LoG's 1878-2005
  • Ancestry.com
  • several Turner family notes courtesy of Philip Bertram Allan 6-27-23 via FB