Saturday, December 31, 2022

 Louisiana State Representative Archie Davis, Bush, Louisiana

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bush,_Louisiana


from the July 4, 1970 The Pittsburgh Courier


from the June 20, 1970 The Desert Sun (Palm Springs, Calfornia)


from the July 26, 1970 The Town Talk (Alexandria, Louisiana)


from the February 25, 1971 St. Tammany Farmer

Thursday, December 29, 2022

 Bright Star Cafe & the Alston yacht MARY FRANCES on which 26 Tuscaloosan's drowned on June 15, 1919.

renamed FAIRFIELD after Mr. Corey had a messy divorce.
THE BRIGHT STAR






 MERIDIAN CAMPAIGN https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Meridian_campaign

 

 from the June 30, 1864 Chicago Tribune: "Loring has been identified with the Army of the Mississippi for some time, and at Champion's Hill experienced the delectable sensation of being cut off from the rest of his command, and only saved himself by rare exhibitions of pedestrianship on the part of his troops. Loring took part in the evacuatory operations of Polk's army during the Sherman raid to Meridian, Mississippi. He will now have a rare chance to perfect himself in the favorite practice of discreet Generalship."  https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Wing_Loring

Meridian's CIVIL WAR TRAIL  https://www.visitmeridian.com/explore/historic-trail-markers/civil-war/

Sherman's 1864 Raid on Meridian, Mississippi




from the March 19, 1964 Chicago Tribune



WHITFIELD'S OF GAINESWOOD & DEMOPOLIS http://www.bmgen.com/document/pdf/History_Whitfield_Bryan_Smith_Vol_I.pdf

 

The house on the place at the time of the sale, two stories in height and formed of
hewn logs, was made the nucleus of a better structure. As the work progressed a
friend remarked that the old structure would rot and so ruin the whole. The master
of Gaineswood caused the old logs to be replaced. It was wittily remarked that
General Whitfield built the new house over the old one which he threw out the
window.32
Children:
1. Sarah Watkins Whitfield; b. 1819, d. 1822.
2. Winifred B. Whitfield; b. 1821, d. 1822.
3. Nathan Bryan Whitfield; b. 1824, drowned 1832.
(269) 4. Mary Elizabeth Whitfield; b. April 5, 1825, at. Demopolis,
d. Jan. 2, 1859, in Mobile, Ala. She married William Wiltshire
Whitfield (278). She was buried in Mississippi.
(260) 5. Bryan Watkins Whitfield.
6. Needham George Whitfield; 13. Aug. 21, 1830 d. Feb. 18, 1884.
He enlisted in the Marengo Rifles, the first company to leave Demopolis,
Ala. in the service of the Confederacy. He was an honor graduate of the
University of North Carolina, 1849. and a law student in Cumberland
University Lebanon, Tenn., however, he never practiced law. Unmd.
7. Edith Winifred Whitfield; b. 1832, d. 1842.
(261) 8. Nathan Bryan Whitfield.
9. James Bryan Whitfield; b. 1837, d. 1842.
10. Sarah Elizabeth Whitfield; b. 1889, d. 1842.
(262) 11. Edith James Whitfield.
(263) 12. Bessie Winifred Whitfield; b. Nov. 24 1843; m. Francis Eugene Whitfield
(234). John Bryan Williams in his notes calls her Betsy an gives her
birth as Nov. 29 1843. Theodore Whitfield (229) who knew her and
visited her in 1889 in her home called her Bessie. She was living in
Demopolis, in 1929.
Second marriage
(264) 13. Natalie Ashe Whitfield.
32. Gaineswood like many other fine homesteads suffered in the War for Southern
Independence. In these days it was impossible to carry on in the earlier style, but
later, 1896, it was bought by Edith James Whitfield and restored to its former
beauty. During the war it was the headquarters of Gen. Leonidas Polk, C. S. A.,
when he and his staff were guests of Gen. Whitfield.
Data concerning children based on records of Bryan Watkins Whitfield (260).
(72) GEORGE WHITFIELD (Bryan, William, Willia






 
from the October 10, 1925 Daily Mississippi Clarion & Standard (Jackson)


from the October 11, 1907 Birmingham News


from the June 19, 1881 St. Louis Globe-Democrat  

 

Tuesday, December 27, 2022

REGISTER'S LUNCH





  











 











 POSSUM & ICICLES

Monday, December 26, 2022

clipping from the June 12, 1917 Dothan Eagle


from the July 23, 1909 DOTHAN EAGLE

FIFTY YEARS OLD

The postoffice of Dothan, Alabama is fifty years old, going on fifty-one. In fact it will be fifty-one this fall.

Considering that the town is counted only a little over twenty years old, this statement about the postoffice is hard to believe to those who have had a hankering to know all about Dothan that is possible. So much were we interested, till we went to the trouble a little over a year ago to get up the pictures of all the mayors the town ever had since it was incorporated. We even went back to the old Henry County records, and got the paper, the petition the citizens of this town signed, asking the judge of probate to call an election to see whether or not the place could be incorporated. After showing the pictures of all the mayors, it occurred to us that we ought to find out something about the postoffice. Some of the older citizens told us that it was once Poplar Head. We took the matter up with the postoffice department at Washington, and put the question up to them. When was Dothan postoffice in Henry county, Alabama created? The department said August 28, 1871, and that was what we stood by. The department further said that there had never been a Poplar Head postoffice.

When this statement was published, one man, an old citizen, told us that the department must have been wrong. Said he had seen a letter, only a few years ago, written by a soldier from Virginia, back to a woman living in this section, informing her that her husband had been killed in battle, during the war. That was so far back for our records, but he said he couldn't be mistaken for had seen the letter, it being used to substantiated this woman's claims for a pension only a few years ago. This got our dates mixed, and we were never fully satisfied but that a Dothan had existed in or about here, before the year 1871. Then came a report from Dale County, from an old citizen, to the effect that the postoffice had once been in Dale. It was generally understood, that the postoffice had been moved all over this section of the country, that the postoffice of the country, to any man's house they could find who would look after the office, for there wasn't much mails in those days.

 So we again took it up with the postoffice department, and requested that they look way over in exibit A, and see if a Dothan postoffice in Dale county, Alabama had ever existed, and if so when it was established, and the postmaster. Very promptly the reply came, through the assistance of Uncle Henry Clayton.

 There had been a Dothan in Dale and it was established way back in 1858, and lived a sort of dog's life till 1866, when it died, surrounded by a few friends.

It was laid to rest, and nothing was said about a postoffice for this section of Alabama , till the South began to rebuild, and the natives of this section saw they needed a postoffice again. It was at this period the office was reestablished, but this tiem, put just over the line, in Henry county. So here are the list of all the postmasters, from the first to the last:


 Duncan R. Stevender, October 18, 1858. Stephen Lee, June 25, 1860 to '66 (when it was discontinued.) Re-established, John W. Hays, August 28, 1871. James H. Hooten, October 30, 1874. Thos. J.G. Clark, December 28, 1875. James L. Hays, January 10, 1877. Mary L. Horton, April 2, 1877. James Z.E. Connally, February 21, 1882. John T. Keyton, February 5, 1889. Rachel E. Booth, December 2, 1891. Frank D. Smith, April 13, 1893. Rachel E. Booth, November 26, 1897. William W. Millikin, March 21, 1909. Byron Trammell, July 30, 1904 and he holds it still.

So this shows all the postmasters filling the office from its creation, over a half a century ago, down to the present. Now we can all keep up with it.

It is gratifying to know also, the man who said he had seen the letter written and received at Dothan postoffice during the war. He was right, and his name is W.J. Baxley, who has been here a long time and ought to know. Of course, at that time, the office was just over the line in Dale county, but it was the office that supplied this territory. When it was re-established four years later, in 1871, it was put in Henry County, but at that time the man sending in the name spelled it "Dothen", and it ran along this way until the year 1897, when the spelling was changed back to Dothan, which all know it ought to be.

The old postoffice was spelled "Dothan."

We can only draw upon our imagination as to the amount of mail matter received at the Dothan of old postoffice. It only got a mail once a week, with possibly not a dozen letters, for period of nearly thirty years. A man could put it in a very small hand-bag.

There's a difference now. There are about eighteen or twenty mail pouches a day, with something like 750 pounds of mail matter received at the office each twenty-four hours, to say nothing of the pouches that are transferred here, unopened.