Ruby Allmond, Fiddle Champion

Fiddle Champion Ruby Allmond and her Texas Jamboree Band.

Fiddle Champion Ruby Allmond and her Texas Jamboree Band in a 1949 publicity photo.

Fiddlers and their trusted instruments were some of the first to cross the Appalachian Mountains with the earliest pioneers. They were special men who added pleasure to an otherwise hard, dangerous existence on the American frontier. They fiddled at house-raisings and barn-raisings, they set the pace at corn husking parties, and played all night whenever a dance was held. Fiddlers played at circuses and campaign speeches. Their music was lively with a rhythm that set toes to tapping.

The fiddle was actually a violin adapted for traditional or “folk” music styles that were played by ‘ear’ rather than by reading written music. This traditional music came to the Colonies from the British Isles and Scandinavian countries. Sometimes the fiddler played solo; at other times he played with a group of other instrumentalists, and more often than not with another fiddler known as twin fiddlers.

Notice that fiddlers were always men who believed that no woman could play a fiddle well. Ruby Allmond of Bailey in Fannin County proved them wrong and became the National Champion Woman Fiddler in a contest in 1947 held at the Greenville Municipal Auditorium. That year announcer “Pappy” Hal Horton, no relation to Greenville’s Hal C. Horton, and music promoter “Cousin” Herral Goodman of Dallas sponsored the contest to spark interest in country shows that were making the rounds of towns and small cities in North Texas. When Ruby finished, there was no doubt in anyone’s mind that she could hold her own against any male fiddler.

Ruby was born on a blackland cotton and corn farm in Fannin County in 1923. Music was the chief entertainment for the family and Ruby learned to play guitar and violin at a very early age. According to family stories, Ruby would climb on furniture to reach her brother’s fiddle and play while the men were in the fields. An outstanding student at Bailey High School, Ruby won an Interscholastic League essay-writing contest in 1939 at East Texas State Teachers’ College and a chance to compete for the statewide title. Unfortunately, Bailey High School could not finance her trip to Austin and the boys’ basketball team.

After graduating from high school, Ruby found a job at a local bank. But fiddling was still her first love. After winning the National Champion Lady Fiddler title Ruby began playing shows as a trio fiddler with two of American’s best fiddlers, Slim Rutland and Howdy Forrester. Her two brothers and Harold Carder completed the string band. Later Ruby formed her own band, Texas Jamboree. The groups played locally in Fannin County, in Hunt and Hopkins Counties, across the Red River in Oklahoma and as far away as Abilene, Texas. But Ruby always said her favorite venue was the Greenville Municipal Auditorium.

The Honorable Sam Rayburn, Speaker of the U. S. House of Representative took Ruby’s band on the campaign trail to entertain the crowds each time he was up for re-election.
In the 1950s when television began to provide popular entertainment, interest in local music shows died out. Ruby Allmond dusted off her writing skills and composed ninety original songs, including her most famous Reno. Chet Atkins produced the Dottie West version of Reno that became a top-ten national hit song. Atkins himself recorded several of her works.

This year marks the seventy-fifth anniversary of the Greenville Municipal Auditorium. Musicians and songwriters like Ruby Allmond contributed immensely in making the venue a popular stop on the local music industry of mid-20th century America.

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Greenville Municipal Auditorium

A photo of the stage at Greenville Municipal Auditorium during a Women's Club event in the 1940's.

A photo of the stage at Greenville Municipal Auditorium during a Women’s Club event in the 1940’s.

Seventy-five years ago the citizens of Greenville celebrated the opening of one of the most magnificent structures in Greenville. The Greenville Municipal Building was officially presented to the community on Tuesday, October 22, 1939 at a grand open house. Dignitaries from city, county, and state were on hand to welcome guests. Architects and builders were feted in an atmosphere of beauty, but with subdued decorum. Mayor A. S. Moore, who had worked so diligently for the project, passed away less than a month before the completion of the structure.

For the first time since the city of Greenville was created on April 11, 1846, all city offices were in the same building. In addition, there was a large, acoustically sound, auditorium for public use. Both concepts had been dreams of early leaders, yet there was always something more critical to resolve.

The inauguration of Franklin Delano Roosevelt (FDR) in the spring of 1933 set off 100 days of feverish legislation to rein in the devastating economic depression with startling alternatives to financial woes. One of the new agencies created to stimulate growth was the Public Works Administration (PWA), not to be confused with the WPA or Works Progress Administration charged with putting unskilled laborers to work. The PWA made loans combined with grants to public entities such as cities, schools, colleges, and states to build courthouses, libraries, schools, dormitories, dams, docks, and city halls.

The program began to take applications in 1933 and was immediately overwhelmed. Greenville applied on the first round but was passed over. Yet, the city retained the plans drawn by W. R. Ragsdale, local architect of the Hunt County Courthouse built in 1928-1929. At that time, the fire department was in an old building at the corner of Picket and Johnson Street, the city offices were in the Beckham Hotel Annex, and jail space was leased from the county.

In 1937 the economy that had been improving, stumped its toe so to speak, and a recession occurred. Fearing the worse, FDR convinced Congress to revitalize the PWA. This time Greenville had its act together and received notice of acceptance of their proposal. They were to spend no more than $150,000.00. The city would receive a grant of 45% of the expenditure and a loan of 55% of the cost that was paid from revenue of the municipally owned electric power plant. No tax dollars were spent on the Municipal Building and Auditorium.

Mack Harrell, Greenville native and baritone at the Metropolitan Opera in New York performed the first concert in the Municipal Auditorium two nights after the official Open House. It was an outstanding success and the beginning of countless performances in the Auditorium by performers in a wide variety of genres.

My favorite story related to a performance in the 1960s by pianist Victor Borge. It seems a drunk in the jail under the stage began a hilarious conversation with the pianist. Many in the audience believed the drunk was actually part of the act. Big Band performances during World War II broadcast from the Auditorium to troops in North Africa via Armed Forces Radio. Everyone has memories of his/her favorite performer. What’s yours?

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What Do We Do with Them?

The South Plants area of Rocky Mountain Arsenal (RMA) was a complete chemical manufacturing complex designed, built and used by the U.S. Army.

The South Plants area of Rocky Mountain Arsenal (RMA) was a complete chemical manufacturing complex designed, built and used by the U.S. Army.

During the late 1930s, the United States and other countries were keeping a sharp eye on Germany and its growing military might. Yet, the United States was intent on remaining neutral as was its intention in 1914. This time, though, the US did not want to be caught off guard. Plans for regional airfields that could be converted into pilot training centers soon became realities. One such airfield was located just south of Greenville. We know it today as Majors Field.

Pilot training was one of many needs facing a nation preparing for war while hoping and praying to avoid the crisis. American leaders along with colleagues in Europe vividly recalled the deadly chemical warfare introduced by Germany in the First World War. There was no doubt the same strategy would be used again. So plans were made for chemical warfare production. No tangible work began until after Pearl Harbor, but the ideas were in place.

Sites were chosen around the country, all away from coastal areas to prevent likely attacks. Each should be near a major transportation hub with both air and rail services available. A sufficient and reliable labor force must be nearby. Weather had to be suitable for year-round outdoor work and the soil must be appropriate.

The U. S. Army constructed the Rocky Mountain Arsenal on 17,000 acres of farm land just ten miles northeast of Denver in early 1942. Such deadly chemicals as white phosphorus, mustard gas, and napalm were manufactured there. At the peak of operations, 3,000 civilians mostly women worked at the Arsenal.

At the end of the war, private sectors of industry were encouraged to lease these various facilities. At the Arsenal Shell Oil Company began to produce agricultural pesticides. The Arsenal was reopened during the Korean Conflict and used throughout the Cold War era for its original purpose. Later the Arsenal manufactured rocket fuel used to power Apollo 11 flights.

Similar plans were made for Majors Field at the end of World War II. The site reverted back to the City of Greenville. Local companies leased parts of the site, until Temco began refurbishing aircraft and needed the entire field in 1951.

However, decades of chemical and agricultural production led to contamination of soil, structures, and groundwater at Rocky Mountain Arsenal. In 1982 all production there ceased, and the mission of the Arsenal changed from manufacturing to environmental cleanup and restoration.

A prairie dog at the Rocky Mountain National Wildlife Refuge.

A prairie dog at the Rocky Mountain National Wildlife Refuge.

Today Rocky Mountain Arsenal is part of the U. S. Fish and Wildlife Service that oversees the continued environmental cleanup. The Rocky Mountain Arsenal National Wildlife Refuge is working to restore the original short-grass prairie and provide habitat to more than 300 species of wildlife. A visit there recently allowed me to see prairie dogs for the first time ever. One of the little critters stood guard at the entrance to their vast underground residences and chirped to warn others of my approach. Other species seem to be acclimated to the homes their species enjoyed in the 19th century before so much upheaval.

Yet, the U. S. Army permanently retains and manages about 1,000 acres of land that contains landfills, waste consolidation areas and groundwater treatment facilities to ensure they remain protective of human health and the environment. Aren’t we glad Greenville was home to Majors Field?

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Were the Good Old Days Really So Good ?

Do you ever find yourself longing for those good old day, when everything seemed so cheap? Or at least, everything seemed cheaper than today’s prices. Using old newspapers as often as I do, I am astonished to find grocery prices, clothing prices, and yes, gasoline prices so cheap.

But wait a minute. Were they really cheaper, or was our pocketbook thinner in the good old days? Wages and prices usually rise hand in hand. So I went to a couple of websites I sometimes use. The first one is Inflation Calculator of the Bureau of Labor Statistics. It can be found at www.bls.gov/data/inflation_calculator.htm. You simply enter a price from say 1915, the earlier year for comparison, and the current year or the year you wish to compare, click on calculate and Bingo! There are the price differences. I use this site frequently when I want to see the cost/value of something in today’s prices.

But let’s say you want to investigate inflation over the years. Go to Consumer Price Index at www.cpi.findthedata.com. Again the data is based on Bureau of Labor Statistics sources. But at this site you can get a better picture of prices in a specific year, say 1915. That year the inflation rate was 0.92% or 2.02 percentage points lower than the average of 2.9%. Between 1914 and 1915, the magnitude of price change was smaller than average. One big reason was that the United States was providing supplies to European countries involved in World War I and farming conditions were some of the best in years.

The Consumer Price Index in 1915 was about nine cents higher than in 1914. Goods and services costing $10.02 in 1914 would have cost $10.11 in 1915, thus a slightly higher profit for the seller. A better example is comparing a $50,000 salary today with a $2,148 salary in 1915. Today’s gift certificate of $100 would have been like $4.30 in 1915. So, the theory of a thinner pocketbook holds true.

Both sites are fun to look at. The Consumer Price Index gives more detailed numbers on a wide variety of foods, beverages, transportation, and other. Included in other are such items as college tuition and fees, televisions, and prescription drugs.

Now let’s look at some specific price equivalent between goods in 1915 and an average price today in the United States. In other words, we will adjust 1915 prices for inflation and see what happens. (All prices given per pound or dozen)

                              1915 Ad Price                  Adjusted Price                      Today’s Price

Pork Chops               $0.125                               $2.95                                      $3.99
Bacon                         $0.40                                 $9.45                                     $5.59
Peanut Butter           $0.125                              $2.95                                      $2.91
Eggs                            $0.27                                $6.38                                      $2.11
Potatoes                     $0.10                                $0.24                                      $0.67
Rice                             $0.42                                $0.99                                      $0.69

Maybe things aren’t so bad today, after all.

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Another A.J.

Chester Hurdle holds a photo of his father Andrew Jackson Hurdle in his 80's. This photo was taken in 2002 as part of an article on SFGate online news.

Chester Hurdle holds a photo of his father Andrew Jackson Hurdle in his 80’s. This photo was taken in 2002 as part of an article in SFGate online news.

Someone reminded me recently that I wrote an article about a gentleman whose initials were A. J. back in the summer. I said then I knew of two other men with the initials A. J., but not all of them were named for Andrew Jackson. The first man was and today’s subject was also a namesake of our seventh president. Later I will tell the story of the A. J. who wasn’t named for the seventh president.

Today’s Andrew Jackson was born a slave on Christmas Day 1845 even though President Andrew Jackson was a known slave owner. Why name your child after a notorious slaveholder? Quite simply, the boy’s parents did not give him his name, the owner did. Not only that, the boy’s birth was recorded in the deed records in the North Carolina County in which he was born. The owner and the laws of North Carolina considered him as a piece of property.

However, this was a fairly lucky family. Both parents and all eight of their children were able to live together for a considerable length of time. That is until the owner over-extended himself financially and had to sell all of this family on the auction block about 1853. The parents and seven of the children were bought by nearby buyers. Andrew Jackson was the exception. A man who was moving to Daingerfield in what is now Morris County, Texas bought him. Sadly, our Andrew Jackson Hurdle left his family behind to travel to Texas.

His new masters wanted an intelligent, alert, male child who could be a companion to their son of the same age. Their son had an extreme speech defect. The mother homeschooled the boy with Andrew Jackson sitting by his side. When the family went to church at the Disciples of Christ Church in Daingerfield, Andrew Jackson went also. Andrew Jackson’s only task was to be a companion to the young boy, and hopefully help him with his speech.

When Andrew Jackson Hurdle and his companion were about sixteen years old, the Civil War broke out. The plantation owner immediately left for war, leaving his plantation, slaves, and crops in the hands of an overseer who whipped Andrew Jackson. At that point, the young slave fled to Louisiana where he came in contact with a Union Cavalry company. They gave Andrew Jackson a job caring for horses and a blue Union tunic that he treasured for the rest of his life.

When the war was over, Andrew Jackson returned to Daingerfield, and in 1868 married Vine Jane “Viney” Sanders in Titus County. Conditions there were some of the worst and most deadly of Reconstruction violence in all of the former Confederate states.

Hurdle was ordained a Deacon in the Disciples of Christ Church in 1874 and an ordained preacher by 1880. Late in 1874 the couple and their children moved to what is known today as Center Point in Hunt County. Hurdle organized a school for former slaves and ministered to five churches. In his long life, Andrew Jackson Hurdle ministered his congregations and encouraged young people to continue their educations. He passed away in 1935 at the age of ninety, a well-respected African American minister and educator in Hunt County.

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Prohibition Elections and Blind Tigers

In early September, I presented one of my favorite topics at the Audie Murphy/American Cotton Museum Lunch Break Special. It is Blind Tigers, a simple title that often confuses people. We didn’t have any Blind Tigers around here, they say. But, quite the contrary we had several in the area. One was particularly humorous.

You see it all has to do with prohibition, the mere thought of which caused severe reactions to various strati of society. Some were rabidly in favor of the demise of Demon Rum while others equally supported the Constitutional Right of freedom to chose whether to partake of ardent spirits or not. The battles raged for over a century here in Texas.

There was a nod to the temperance movement in the Republic of Texas Constitution of 1836 stating that local elections could be held to outlaw saloons, but it was never really enforced. Those were fairly wild times. With few amusements, liquor and cards were high on men’s list of favorite things to do. Statehood brought lukewarm attempts to follow the temperance movement developing in the North; but those same folks also advocated emancipation. Not a thing for a Texan to become involved with.

Scholars and historians tell us that the alcoholism rates rose rapidly during the Civil War and Reconstruction. Ben Bickerstaff and Cullen Montgomery Baker, two of the three most wanted outlaws following the Civil War were heavy consumers of alcohol to boost their bravado. The same held for their followers.

When the new Texas Constitution was ratified in 1876 there was a section that acknowledged the right of men (literally) to petition for a local option vote to deny saloons the right to sell liquor. Manufacture and transportation were not an issue until early in the 20th century leading up to the ratification of Federal Prohibition. But in 1876 communities simply wanted to close saloons. However, the article pertaining to local option was slanted in favor of the whiskey industry.

A favorite saying of saloon owners was “get behind the returns.” In many cases for violation of local option law the state had to prove the local government, be it ward, city, precinct or county properly carried out law with due diligence. First, the petition had to be in due form. The requisite numbers of qualified voters were necessary. Since women did not have suffrage, no woman’s name could be on the petition.

The petition and prescribed notice of an upcoming election must be duly publicized and posted. In one case here in Hunt County, Tom Holland was not indicted for selling liquor without a license because the county clerk neglected to put the election notice in every county newspaper.

Election officials had to be duly appointed and commissioned. Proof the election was actually held was necessary. The returns must be made out properly and filed in the prescribed manner. Commissioners’ Court was required to count votes and enter an order declaring results and the passage of the law.

Legal notices of the election returns informing the saloonkeeper and all others involved with the sale of alcohol were necessary. The one exception to local option regulations was practicing physicians who prescribed alcohol for medicinal purposes.

Needless to say, many elections did not follow the prescribed routine. Saloonkeepers jumped at the opportunity for a trial. And while they waited for their turn in court, sales of alcohol continued. This led to the creation of Blind Tigers.

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Billy Sunday

Rev. Billy Sunday's unique style of preaching attracted large crowds wherever he appeared.

Rev. Billy Sunday’s unique style of preaching attracted large crowds wherever he appeared.

If I were to tell you that a century ago a group of fine Greenville ladies boarded a special train for Fort Worth in order to hear Rev. Billy Sunday preach, would you find that odd?  The week of September 22, 1915, Billy Sunday appeared in both Fort Worth and Dallas and drew huge crowds as he did throughout the country.

William Ashley (Billy) Sunday was first known as an American athlete, an outstanding outfielder in the National League from 1880 to 1888.  While in playing ball in Chicago, Billy converted to Christianity at a street corner mission.  Gradually he honed his preaching skills and by 1900 he was one of the most celebrated and influential American evangelists during the first two decades of the 20th century.

Sunday was born in poverty in Iowa in 1862.  His father was a Union soldier who died in the Civil War before Sunday’s birth.  For a time he lived at the Iowa Orphans’ Home before beginning his athletic career.

After his conversion, Sunday was ordained in the Presbyterian Church, one of the leading religious groups in Greenville at that time.  A defender of conservative Christianity, he became wealthy and influential.  However, his reputation was never besmirched by scandal.  A strong supporter of Prohibition, Sunday probably played a significant role in the adoption of the 18th Amendment.

He was back in Fort Worth for November and December of 1918.  The Fort Worth Star-Telegram ran a column known as “Billy Sunday’s Question Box” while he was in town.  One reader posed the question about how much Sunday was paid to preach in any town.  The answer was that the host church reimbursed all travel expenses and gave the collection on the last day to Rev. Sunday.  The church retained all other revenue.

One questioner asked if Billy Sunday had his whisky after his daily bath.  The answer was a simple NO.  During one period of time the Billy Sunday Club met every Sunday morning at 10:00 A.M. at the Strand Theater in Fort Worth, whether Billy was in town or not.  Once while in Fort Worth, Billy Sunday drew an audience of 400 for a noon Lions’ Club luncheon on a Tuesday.

While highly popular and sometimes controversial in his time, Billy Sunday drew crowds from all over Texas, even from Greenville.  He certainly had a following here in Greenville and other parts of Hunt County.

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Finding Absolute Treasures in Special Collections

A list of many treasures for research can be found at the Texas Archival Resources Online website.

A list of many treasures for research can be found at the Texas Archival Resources Online website.

Recently, I wrote about a terrific conference sponsored by the Dallas Genealogical Society that I attended earlier this month. One of the most useful topics discussed was Finding Aids.

Finding Aids can be found in many libraries, archives, special collections, and museums. Many are online either at the collection site or at TARO, Texas Archival Resources Online. These aids or guides help a researcher find what materials can be found in that particular location.

Finding Aids begin with an overview or what to expect to find in the collection. Then a brief history of the person, family or state agency is next. Dates and types of records are included in the section titled Scope and Content. Any restrictions for use are shown. It should be noted that most documents created by state or local government are not copyrighted. Related books and articles about the subject are listed. An example of the preferred citation is given. The meat of the Finding Aid is found in Detailed Descriptions with the box or folder number. That is the information you will need when you visit the repository.

I typed in “Hunt County” at TARO and found eighty-seven hits, many which really intrigued me. Because the Hunt County Courthouse was the prototype for the Travis County Courthouse in 1929, records, blueprints, and media presentations can be found in two collections at the Alexander Architectural Archive at the University of Texas, and one collection at the Austin History Center.

Another interesting collection is the Bertram C. Hill Architectural Collection at the DeGolyer Library on the SMU campus. In it are drawings for a home in the Floyd-Merritt (sic) area. I know that is one that I definitely want to see.

There are a lot of county records at the Texas State Archives in Austin. Among the interesting collections are State Surveyors records from 1853 -1983, especially concerning the county boundaries when Rains, Delta, and Rockwall Counties were created. District and County Court records from 1852-1857 are there. Yet records from the County and District Court Clerks pertaining to county headrights returns are found at the Texas General Land Office.

Two sets of personal papers of interest are the Minnie Fisher Cunningham Texas Equal Suffrage Association correspondence and reports from Hunt County 1918-1919 found at the Houston Public Library and the Clyde McQueen papers at Cushing Memorial Library on the Texas A&M University campus in College Station. McQueen is the author of Black Churches in Texas that included St. Paul’s Church in Neylandville. The book can be found at the W. Walworth Harrison Public Library in Greenville.

Different sorts of personal papers, those that tell personal stories of an individual or family are frequently given to repositories. David Anders wrote a short memoir about his life in Arkansas before migrating to Hunt County. A typeset version is available at the Dolph Briscoe Center for American History in Austin. The Grayson Family papers at the Daughters of the Republic of Texas Library on the Alamo grounds in San Antonio tell about life in early Hunt County.

Knowing what to ask for when you arrive at one of these repositories is quite important. Using TARO and other websites that offer excellent finding aids will make your research trip worthwhile.

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Our Ancestors Vacationed?

The Baker Hotel in Mineral Wells, Texas, was a popular spot for vacations from the 1890's through World War I.

The Baker Hotel in Mineral Wells, Texas, was a popular spot for vacations from the 1890’s through World War I. (Photo courtesy of cardcow.com)

The Texas & Pacific Railway paid for a series of ads that ran in the Commerce Journal during March 1914. Railroads frequently offered excursion rates to events such as the State Fair of Texas, a Confederate Veterans Reunion in Nashville, or to the “Old States” during the Christmas season. But this particular ad was for an excursion to Mineral Wells, Texas, known as the “Human Repair Shop” according to the advertisement.

There have been several articles lately about the possible renovation of the Baker Hotel in Mineral Wells. The grand old lady sits in a prominent spot in the downtown of town. My aunt and uncle spent their honeymoon at the Baker in the 1940s. When I heard about it I thought it was rather unusual, but my aunt was somewhat eccentric.

To me, Mineral Wells was a dusty town south of my hometown of Jacksboro, the place where the boys in my class went to buy beer since Jacksboro was as dry as a bone. But as the ad explained, Mineral Wells was blessed with mineral waters, believed to cure anything that “ailed” you. I don’t know if the treatments worked since I never tried them. I have seen pamphlets and brochures celebrating the wonders of the waters. Mineral Wells was the go-to place from the 1890s to World War I. Actually, there was another hotel in Mineral Wells known as the Crazy Water Hotel. Needless to say, it’s not there anymore, having never been a top spot for the tourism committee.

After reading about two to three week excursions to Mineral Wells to partake of the baths, I began to contemplate pre-World War II vacations. Did our ancestors actually take long vacations, and if they did, what did they do? After the First World War, the automobile became an acceptable means of travel. It allowed individuals and families a more flexible itinerary than railroads did and to a certain extent was much cheaper.

Walworth Harrison took his mother and two female cousins on an automobile trip from Greenville to San Diego, up the Pacific coast to Vancouver, and home through Wyoming and Colorado in the summer of 1921. Harrison kept an incredible diary describing roads that were no more than cow paths, seeing women in shockingly clad in pants, and dealing with numerous mechanical breakdowns. The trip consumed more than six weeks.

We know about the journeys of the “Okies” during the Dust Bowl, but those could hardly be described as pleasure trips. Many families never made it to California where they would have been turned back at the border. They simply drove until the money ran out.

Throughout the 19th Century, excursions via rail were acceptable but seldom enjoyed by the average family. Even moving from Georgia to Texas was out of the question for most; it was simply too expensive. Sometimes local newspapers wrote that the more prominent and wealthier citizens went to New York on business, or to Atlanta to visit an ailing relative, or even that men took hunting trips to Mexico or Colorado.

I think I will pursue the idea of a vacation as it pertained to the ordinary farmer or wage-earning laborer before World War II. Something tells me it won’t be a lengthy paper.

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Finding Fathers

Rebecca Sampley Coley (1845-1885) was one of the many members of the Sampley family in north Alabama during the 19th Century.  While Rebecca never migrated to Texas, many of her relatives did.  Historians tell us that migration to a new home with more opportunities for better wages and more comfortable lifestyles is common after major wars.

Rebecca Sampley Coley (1845-1885) was one of the many members of the Sampley family in north Alabama during the 19th Century. While Rebecca never migrated to Texas, many of her relatives did. Historians tell us that migration to a new home with more opportunities for better wages and more comfortable lifestyles is common after major wars.

Most genealogists can trace their families back quite a few generations on the male line and struggle with the female line. Married women in the 19th century and earlier seldom ever used their own names; instead they were Mrs. So and So. And, they hardly ever mentioned their maiden names.

But my father’s line, the Coley families who suddenly appear in Georgia in 1850 are virtually impossible to find. I really think William Coley, the first Coley I have found, was either adopted, a criminal using an alias, or an alien from Mars. In fact, he listed his occupation as Gold-Digger after the gold rush in northern Georgia was over and California was the place to go for gold.

But his grandson who was my great-grandfather married a perfectly delightful young lady whose maiden name was Sampley. Her father was Edmond Browder Sampley, a Methodist minister, a schoolteacher, and a Sergeant in the Alabama-Tennessee Vidette Cavalry (USA). Yep, old E. B. was a Union supporter as were most of his brothers, cousins, uncles, and other male relatives.

Once the Civil War was over, the Sampley families had some pretty hard times in Alabama. Jobs were scarce, money was even scarcer, and men who supported the Union were not treated kindly. E. B. had a younger brother named Theodore Higgins. In 1872, Theodore Higgins (T. H.) picked up and moved to Texas, to Jack County, Texas, to be exact. Why T. H. settled there has always been a mystery. Because he was the youngest child, he only served in the Civil War one year; one year as a teamster for the Union Army in Tennessee, just across the state line.

I have always wondered if he chose a place with fellow Unionists around. Fort Richardson was established in 1867 as a frontier fort to protect white settlers. The 1870 census showed several families in Jack County from the same part of Alabama where the Sampley family lived. Most served in the Union Army.

But the topography of Jack County is not at all like Jackson and DeKalb Counties in Alabama where T. H. and his siblings were raised. That part of Alabama was in the hills, full of trees with cold winters and significant amount of rainfall. Jack County is usually dry, the pockets of Cross Timbers interspersed with flat grasslands. However, T. H. thought he had arrived in Heaven. He wrote to relatives about the cheap land, the open spaces, and the ability to own one’s own land.

Soon his siblings, cousins, in-laws, and others began to arrive. By 1900 there were numerous relatives in the southwest corner of Jack County. More arrived every year. Each family seemed to have acquired 160 acres of farmland. They were prosperous small farmers, raising a number of children who were all educated, and visited every day by T. H. He liked to check on all the family, probably because he felt responsible for their being in Texas. Whether he knew it or not, the extended family began to refer to him as Daily.

The ironic thing about all those people with the last name Sampley in Jack County between 1880 and 1945 is that after World War II most of the young people moved to Fort Worth or Dallas for better jobs. When you consider it, they followed an age-old pattern their parents and grandparents pursued.

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