WOODLAWN CEMETERY, Clemson, Oconee County, SC aka Fort Hill Plantation & Calhoun Family Cemetery Version 1.0, 25-Sep-2010, C243A.TXT, C243 **************************************************************** REPRODUCING NOTICE: ------------------- These electronic pages may not be reproduced in any format for profit, or presentation by any other organization, or persons. Persons or organizations desiring to use this material, must obtain the written consent of the contributor, or the legal representative of the submitter, and contact the listed USGenWeb archivist with proof of this consent. **************************************************************** LOCATION: --------- Located along the south side of the present day Clemson University Football Stadium. Find the intersection of Highways 123 and 93. Drive 1.5 miles southeast on Highway 93 (Old Greenville Highway) to Perimeter Road. Turn right and drive 0.3 miles. Stadium is located on the left-side of road. HISTORY: -------- Fort Hill was the name of John C. Calhoun's (1782-1850) plantation, South Carolina's preeminent nineteenth century statesman. He lived in the home from 1825 to 1850. The surviving parts of the plantation include the dwelling house, office, reconstructed kitchen and a partially restored spring. The plantation consisted of approximately 1100 acres - 450 were only cultivated. It later became the property of Thomas G. Clemson (1807-1888)(Thomas married Anna M. Calhoun). The railroad stop in this area was also called Fort Hill and it was located near the present day Clemson depot. There were several other buildings located in the general area. The L.C. Drug Store/Bogg's Store, now called Calhoun Corners was one of them. Many university students rode the train to the crossroad stop and walked to the campus. Cherry's Crossing was the other rail stop and was located near the university's J.P. Stevens plant. Woodland Cemetery dates back to 1837, when it was simply called Cemetery Hill. It is speculated that the cemetery name changed in the 1920's. It is believed that John Caldwell Calhoun, the son of Andrew Pickens Calhoun, was the first white person to be buried in this area. John Caldwell Calhoun died 7-Dec-1837. As other members of the Andrew Calhoun family died, they were buried near the child's grave. The Calhoun burial area is surrounded by a high cast-iron fence, having a large double gate - it's public accessible. About 100 yards to the west of the Calhoun plot, is the burial grounds for approximately 60 Slaves that underwent excavation in the 1990's. Many Calhoun family members, as well as Clemson family, are buried at St. Paul's Episcopal Church cemetery in Pendleton. Woodlawn Cemetery contains 202 plots and no additional development is planned. Cemetery privileges are extended to all University full-time employees and their immediate families, provided the employee has been in continuous service with the University for five years. Cemetery privileges are also extended to members of the Board of Trustees. If no plots are available, the individual will be placed on the Woodland Cemetery list. By: Unknown Author o----------o Africans were a vital force in the operation and economy of Fort Hill, the home of John C. Calhoun from 1825 to 1850 and Thomas Green Clemson from 1872 to 1888. Like many other Southern planters, Calhoun raised cotton as a cash crop using African Slaves as labor. The experiences of the Africans at Fort Hill can be seen as a microcosm of the history of Negro's during the 19th century. Since Slaves at Fort Hill left no written record, their perspective is unavoidably voiceless in history. However, reports of visitors and family letters have given insight into understanding the lives of Slaves, who later became Freedmen at Fort Hill. A reporter for a New York newspaper, visiting Fort Hill in 1849, noted that the Calhoun Slaves lived approximately "one-eighth of a mile from the mansion. The houses are built of stone and joined together like barracks, with garden attached, and a large open space in front. There are perhaps seventy or eighty Negroes on and about the place." During a tour of the Slave quarters, the reporter followed Calhoun. As they walked, Calhoun stopped and inquired "in regard to some who were sick; among them, seated under a cherry tree, was an aged Negro man, who was, as he informed me, the oldest on the place, and enjoyed particular privileges. He was allowed to cultivate some four or five acres of land for cotton and other things; the proceeds of which became his property, and sometimes produced $30 to $50 a season." Other Calhoun Slaves also were allowed to plant cotton in patches conveniently located near the quarters so that they could cultivate them after their work was done. The visitor was struck by the business savvy of the Slaves, whom he described as "shrewd in getting the highest price for it [cotton] as White planters, and are as perfectly conversant with fluctuations in the cotton market in Liverpool and New York as a cotton broker." The Calhoun Slaves must also have known of their own value as property or chattel, which often fluctuated with the value of cotton. As property, Slaves could be assigned as collateral for mortgages and they could be sold. However, it appears from family letters that the Calhouns seldom sold Slaves from Fort Hill. Slaves did have a family life at Fort Hill. While the aforementioned reporter was visiting Fort Hill, he witnessed the marriage of a house servant to a female slave from a nearby plantation. He recorded that "the marriage ceremony was performed in the evening, and in the mansion of the proprietor of the plantation. The ceremony was performed by the oldest negro who was a sort of authorized, or rather recognized parson of the Methodist order." After the ceremony, the excitement continued with fiddling and singing. In addition to weddings, the Calhoun Slaves usually had Sundays off to attend church services. Their longest holiday occurred during the Christmas season when they were given additional provisions and a four-day holiday. Often the celebrations culminated with a party that was held in the kitchen at Fort Hill. The Calhoun's Slaves were not as homogeneous a group as one might expect. They did have the same race, but often that was where similarities ended. The Calhoun Slaves ranged in age from infants to the elderly. The oldest recorded slave was Mennemin Calhoun. (All the Slaves at Fort Hill were assigned the Calhoun name.) Her age was reported to be 112 in 1849. Her husband, Polydore, also lived a long life, and they had numerous descendants. The legend is that Mennemin and Polydore were first-generation Slaves from Africa. There was not always harmony among the Slave population. According to family letters, Calhoun treated his Slaves fairly well, but understandably they desired freedom and often were discontent. There are several accounts of Calhoun Slaves who ran away from the plantation. The discontent of the slave population at Fort Hill may best be explored through the actions of three Slaves - Aleck, Sawney and Issey. Aleck was often the only male house servant at Fort Hill. He is recorded in the history of Fort Hill because he "offended" Floride Calhoun. Fearing punishment, he ran away. When he was captured, Calhoun insisted that he be jailed for 10 days and given 30 lashes. Calhoun did this, he stated, "to prevent a repetition." Sawney had a particular position in the slave community. He was the son of Old Sawney, who had been a childhood companion of Calhoun's. Sawney was treated well including privileged doctor's care. On a trip to the doctor, Sawney set a fire to the White overseer's tent, apparently attempting to kill him. He later was sent to Calhoun's son Andrew's plantation in Alabama. Issey was perhaps the most troublesome of the Calhoun Slaves. She was a house servant and attempted to burn the house down by placing hot coals under the pillow in Willy Calhoun's room. Fortunately for the Calhoun family, the smell of burning feathers floated throughout the house, and the fire was extinguished. She, too, was a child of Old Sawney, who even though being described as "dangerous," remained at Fort Hill until freed. Despite these occurrences, there were calmer days in the slave community. The Calhoun's had skilled gardeners, seamstresses and carpenters, in addition to field hands. The problems during the transition from slavery to freedom at Fort Hill were further complicated by the changing households at Fort Hill. After Calhoun's death, Mrs. Calhoun sold the estate to her oldest son, Andrew, who operated the plantation from 1850 to 1865. After 1866, Floride Calhoun recovered Fort Hill through foreclosure and willed it to her daughter and remaining child, Anna Maria Calhoun Clemson, wife of Thomas Green Clemson. The Clemson's hired as wage hands many of the former Calhoun Slaves. One of the Clemson servants was Bill Greenlee. He was 17 years old when Clemson died in 1888 and remembered working as the stable boy and carriage driver at Fort Hill during Clemson's last years. A glimpse into the experience of Africans at Fort Hill and the study of Negro history gives a better perspective of the total life experience at the home of John C. Calhoun and Thomas G. Clemson. By: Unknown Author o----------o Slavery: Calhoun was shaped by his own father, Patrick Calhoun, a prosperous upstate planter who supported the Revolutionary War but opposed ratification of the federal Constitution. The father was a staunch slaveholder who taught his son that one's standing in society depended not merely on one's commitment to the ideal of popular self-government but also on the ownership of a substantial number of slaves. Flourishing in a world in which slaveholding was a badge of civilization, Calhoun saw little reason to question its morality as an adult; he never visited Europe. Calhoun had seen in his own state how the spread of slavery into the back country improved public morals by ridding the countryside of the shiftless poor whites who had once terrorized the law abiding middle class. Calhoun believed that slavery instilled in the white who remained a code of honor that blunted the disruptive potential of private gain and fostered the civic-mindedness that lay near the core of the republican creed. From such a standpoint, the expansion of slavery into the backcountry decreased the likelihood for social conflict and postponed the declension when money would become the only measure of self worth, as had happened in New England. Calhoun was thus firmly convinced that slavery was the key to the success of the American dream.[27] On February 6, 1837, John C. Calhoun took the floor of the Senate to declare that slavery was a "positive good." Senator William Rives of Virginia had referred to slavery as an evil that might become a "lesser evil" in some circumstances. Calhoun believed that conceded too much to the abolitionists: "I take higher ground. I hold that in the present state of civilization, where two races of different origin, and distinguished by color, and other physical differences, as well as intellectual, are brought together, the relation now existing in the slaveholding States between the two, is, instead of an evil, a good-a positive good... I hold then, that there never has yet existed a wealthy and civilized society in which one portion of the community did not, in point of fact, live on the labor of the other." A year later in the Senate (January 10, 1838), Calhoun repeated this defense of slavery as a "positive good": "Many in the South once believed that it was a moral and political evil; that folly and delusion are gone; we see it now in its true light, and regard it as the most safe and stable basis for free institutions in the world." Calhoun rejected the belief of Southern moderates such as Henry Clay that all Americans could agree on the "opinion and feeling" that slavery was wrong, although they might disagree on the most practicable way to respond to that great wrong. Calhoun's constitutional ideas acted as a viable conservative alternative to Northern appeals to democracy, majority rule, and natural rights.[28] by: Wikipedia DATAFILE INPUT . : Paul M. Kankula at (visit above website) in Apr-2001 HISTORY WRITE-UP : Dennis Taylor at td@clemson.edu in Apr-2001 TRANSCRIPTION .. : Clemson University in May-2001 TRANSCRIPTION NOTES: -------------------- a. = age at death b. = date-of-birth d. = date-of-death h. = husband m. = married p. = parents w. = wife (60) Unmarked Slave graves on west side of hill. Note: Negro members of the nearby New Hope Baptist Church claim that this is where their Slave descendants are buried. Clemson University insist that hard- copy documentation proof is required before they will acknowledge this fact. (?) Unmarked graves on south side of hill. ABERNATHY, Ray ANDERSON, Mary, d. 22-mar-1996 ANDERSON, Merrit Boone, d. 29-sep-1993 ATCHLEY, Bill AULL, (?) AULL, Mary Evans, b. 2-apr-1893, d. 18-apr-1976 AULL, William Barre, b. 24-mar-1887, d. 16-apr-1949 BARRE, Florence T., b. 21-feb-1888, d. 30-dec-1963 BARRE, Henry Walter, b. 5-may-1881, d. 6-may-1969 BEALS, Josephine Lehotsky, d. 3-jul-1999 BEHNEY, Victoria Parks, b. 1887, d. 1969 BENNETT, Charles G., b. 24-sep-1898, d. 25-feb-1961 BENNETT, Lucille Smith, b. 2-nov-1904, d. 10-feb-1969 BOOKER, Leonard R., b. 25-sep-1901, d. 27-oct-1967 BRADLEY, Bob, d. 30-oct-2000 BRADLEY, Mark Edward, b. 9-may-1878, d. 22-feb-1965 BROWN, Margaret S., b. 1892, d. 1975 BURLEY, Boyce Byron (Jr), b. 26-jul-1920, d. 10-sep-1957 BURLEY, Boyce Byron, b. 29-jan-1891, d. 24-jan-1946 BURLEY, Mildred Sanders, b. 10-sep-1920, d. 16-aug-1967 NOTE: Calhoun graves contained within a large cast-iron fenced area: CALHOUN, Andrew Pickens (2nd), b. 10-apr-1872, d. 6-oct-1942 CALHOUN, Andrew Pickens, b. 15-oct-1811, d. 16-mar-1865 CALHOUN, Andrew Pickens, b. 16-sep-1895, d. 9-may-1963 CALHOUN, Bonnie Lusher, b. 6-dec-1892, d. 9-mar-1968 CALHOUN, Carmen Mangum, b. 30-dec-1902, d. 28-jul-1972 CALHOUN, Creighton Lee, b. 31-oct-1901, d. 17-jan-1940 CALHOUN, George Williams, b. 5-oct-1892, d. 3-jul-1959 CALHOUN, James Edward, b. 1878, d. 1937 CALHOUN, John Caldwell, b. 7-jun-1837, d. 7-dec-1837 CALHOUN, Margaret Green, b. 18-feb-1816, d. 27-jul-1891 CALHOUN, Margaret M., b. 6-jul-1897, d. 12-jan-1959 CALHOUN, Margaret Maria, b. 30-apr-1847, d. 19-feb-1910 CALHOUN, Mary Lucretia, b. 21-feb-1862, d. 17-jul-1865 CALHOUN, Patrick, b. 21-mar-1856, d. 16-jun-1943 CALHOUN, Sallie Williams, b. 14-oct-1864, d. 26-aug-1928 CALIFF, Tommy, b. 20-may-1953, d. 24-may-1953 CAREY, J.R.C., b. 3-mar-1885, d. 26-jun-1955 CAREY, Mamie Smith, b. 26-nov-1891, d. 15-feb-1956 CARODEMOS, Peter, b. 1897, d. 1967 CARROLL, Frances Musser, b. 1922, d. 1961 CLARK, Lillie Olgia Bell, b. 1906, d. 1909 CLARK, Olgia Bell, b. 1906, d. 1908 CLARK, Olin Mitchel, b. 22-jun-1885, d. 25-mar-1946 CLARKE, Elwyn Lorenzo, b. 18-jun-1879, d. 13-jan-1977 CLARKE, Lucile Wyatt, b. 12-mar-1904 CLOANINGER, Bruce Daquault, b. 29-oct-1909, d. 22-may-1970 COLLINS, Gilbert H. COLLINS, Hazel Cover COLLINS, Margaret Pitts, b. 15-dec-1918, d. 11-nov-1967 COOK, Edward William, b. 3-may-1889, d. 14-dec-1964 COOK, Harriet Hefner, b. 30-oct-1892, d. 23-jun-1965 COOK, James C. (Jr), b. 21-sep-1918, d. 28-sep-1965 COOL, B.M., d. 6-may-2001 COOPER, Edith Louise Mills COOPER, John Robert Roy COX, Infant, d. 8-aug-1963 COX, Irene Todd, d. 13-may-1993 CRAWFORD, Dennis CRAWFORD, Dennis E., b. 24-jan-1914, d. 5-aug-1975 CRAWFORD, Florence M., b. 16-jul-1917 CROMER, Elaine Chisman , d. 25-jan-1997 CROUCH, Sydney James Leonhardt, b. 20-aug-1889, d. 13-aug-1969 CURTIS, Donald D., b. 31-may-1896, d. 19-oct-1966 CURTIS, Evalyn G., b. 9-oct-1894, d. 20-dec-1975 DANIEL, David Wistar, b. 23-may-1867, d. 5-sep-1961 DANIEL, Eva Jones, b. 15-mar-1881, d. 29-apr-1970 DARGAN, Frank Townes, b. 8-may-1873, d. 2-jul-1929 DEAN, Jacob D., b. 23-sep-1871, d. 1-mar-1954 DEAN, Myrtle, b. 8-aug-18967, d. 23-jul-1971 DEAN, Sallie Mae Jorden, b. 28-oct-1875, d. 13-mar-1975 DOGGETT, Charel Stebbins, b. 27-nov-1858, d. 22-nov-1929 DOGGETT, Sarah Berity, b. 1-dec-1864, d. 13-dec-1937 DUNAVAN, David, b. 15-jul-1895, d. 20-aug-1956 DUNAVAN, Ione Grace Shaffer, d. 1895, d. 1971 EARHART, Jean Crowther, b. 23-dec-1923, d. 1-aug-1956 EARLE, Samuel B. (Jr), b. 1878, d. 1978 EARLE, Virginia Shanklin, b. 30-dec-1909, d. 1-jul-1949 EATON, Lena Brayton, b. 10-jan-1886, d. 13-apr-1953 EATON, Robert Knight, b. 31-jul-1883, d. 26-mar-1947 EPTING, Mary Elizabeth, b. 8-mar-1943, d. 12-sep-1943 EVANS, Rosa Calhoun, b. 25-dec-1875, d. 18-may-1951 EVANS, Samuel Wilds, b. 22-jun-1881, d. 30-dec-1950 FEELEY, Robert O., b. 15-mar-1884, d. 30-apr-1954 FERGUSON, Linda Mania, d. 19-jul-1966 FERRIER, Ruth Bloomfield, b. 1892, d. 1974 FERRIER, Wallace Thomas, b. 1889, d. 1968 FIKE, Ethel Ewing, b. 16-jul-1890, d. 2-nov-1976 FIKE, Rupert Howard, b. 25-nov-1887, d. 30-oct-1956 FOY, John Treutlen, b. 20-oct-1889, d. 21-sep-1970 FOY, Nela Sloan, b. 21-apr-1887, d. 26-mar-1967 FREEMAN, Carrie Hutchins, b. 15-jan-1901, d. 12-jul-1969 FREEMAN, Edwin Jones FREEMAN, Edwin, b. 8-mar-1896, d. 22-apr-1969 GODBEY, Ewart G., b. 26-dec-1893, d. 22-aug-1968 GODBEY, Marie W., b. 16-apr-1893 GOEBEL, Norbert GOODALE, Ben E., b. 22-apr-1897, d. 8-mar-1978 GOODALE, Nelson M., b. 18-nov-1901, d. 1-mar-1964 GOODE, Charles Weston, b. 1906, d. 1970 GOODE, Emmie Fowler, b. 1909, d. 1968 GOODE, John Keese, b. 1875, d. 1953 GOODE, Laura Lemon, b. 1878, d. 1967 GRAHAM, Ann Carolyn, b. 8-jul-1946, d. 17-jul-1947 GUNNIN, Dorothy G., b. 16-jun-1918 GUNNIN, Eemery A., b. 27-feb-1916, d. 26-may-1971 HARCOMBE, James D., b. 3-may-1882, d. 11-nov-1946 HARRIS, David Nivin, b. 1885, d. 1949 HARRIS, Frances P., b. 1887, d. 1961 HENRY, Charles B., b. 3-oct-1855, d. 13-dec-1941 HENRY, Susan Ella, b. 9-mar-1865, d. 25-jun-1953 HILL, Henry Hughes (Jr), b. 1915, d. 1977 HILL, Henry, d. 1977 HILL, Patricia Buchanan, d. 13-mar-2001 HINSON, Ethelyn Mitchell, b. 6-sep-1913, d. 25-dec-1938 HINTON, Trescott N. HOLTZENDORFF, Ann L., b. 1897 HOLTZENDORFF, Infant, d. 6-aug-1950 HOLTZENDORFF, Infant, d. 9-jun-1946 HOLTZENDORFF, Preston B. (Jr), b. 9-nov-1894, d. 28-jan-1971 HOWARD, Frank, d. 26-jan-1996 HUNTER, Carolyn Johnson, b. 28-dec-1914, d. 6-jan-1978 HUNTER, Della B., b. 27-jan-1880, d. 18-may-1947 HUNTER, Howard L., b. 17-jun-1904, d. 27-mar-1975 HUNTER, Joseph E., b. 12-sep-1874, d. 9-oct-1952 JONES, Inez, d. 10-feb-2001 KINARD, Anna Sloan, b. 2-jul-1903, d. 17-dec-1944 KINARD, Francis Marion, b. 2-jun-1902, d. 20-may-1960 KNOWLAND, Ralph, d. dec-1999 LAGRONE, John Wallace, b. 13-nov-1911 LAGRONE, Mary Anderson, b. 1-oct-1914 LAMASTER, Edna Earl, b. 5-sep-1894 LAMASTER, Joseph Paul, b. 21-mar-1892, d. 2-may-1971 LANE, John Dewey, b. 14-mar-1898, d. 8-jan-1968 LAZAR, Josephine Stribleng, b. 17-feb-1920, d. 7-dec-1976 LEAVER, Asberry Francis, b. 5-jan-1875, d. 28-apr-1940 LEAVER, Lucile Butler, b. 19-feb-1889, d. 13-nov-1957 LEHOTSKY, Josephine Beans, b. 4-sep-1913 LEHOTSKY, Koloman, b. 18-feb-1906, d. 20-aug-1975 LINDSAY, Bertha P., b. 5-jan-1904, d. 8-aug-1968 LINDSAY, James Gill, b. 27-aug-1889, d. 18-jul-1952 LINDSAY, Joseph, b. 31-oct-1898 LITTLEJOHN, Charles Edward (Jr), b. 28-sep-1918, d. 27-may-1975 LITTLEJOHN, James Corcoran, b. 27-nov-1888, d. 30-jan-1959 LITTLEJOHN, Mary Katherin, d. 18-jan-2001 LITTLEJOHN, Mary Poats, d. 2-dec-1949 LITTLEJOHN, Samuel McGowan, b. 11-jul-1915, d. 29-feb-1976 LONG, Mary Pettie, b. 8-sep-1873, d. 13-dec-1954 LONG, William Williams, b. 4-jul-1861, d. 13-nov-1934 LOWRY, Polly Hughes, b. 1911, d. 1973 LOWRY, Walter Lee (Jr), b. 5-apr-1907, d. 14-sep-1961 MARSHALL, Grace C., b. 21-jan-1888, d. 14-apr-1947 MARSHALL, John Logan, b. 25-oct-1885, d. 8-apr-1975 MARTIN, Conway Simpsom, b. 22-jun-1872, d. 22-jan-1948 MARTIN, Eva Gasque, b. 2-mar-1878, d. 30-may-1964 MARTIN, Samuel Maner, b. 30-oct-1875, d. 17-dec-1959 McDUFFIE, Taylor Floger, d. 19-may-1995 McFADDEN, Agnes, d. 3-oct-2000 McGINTY, Letitia Cross, b. 23-jan-1889, d. 13-nov-1971 McGINTY, Rupert Alonzo, b. 2-may-1886, d. 28-feb-1951 McMILLAN, Collin Eleazer, b. 23-oct-1968, d. 13-mar-1969 McMILLIAN, Covington, b. 30-may-1906, d. 23-jan-1968 McMILLIAN, Edith Green, b. 28-sep-1913, d. 10-oct-1973 METZ, Evelyn Daniel, b. 22-jan-1908, d. 31-jul-1956 MILLER, Max G., d. 20-dec-1995 MILLS, William Hayne, b. 12-sep-1872, d. 29-mar-1942 MITCHELL, Benjamin F., b. 8-aug-1871, d. 28-may-1960 MITCHELL, Ethel B., b. 8-sep-1883, d. 13-jun-1971 MITCHELL, Gladys E., b. 23-oct-1898, d. 17-aug-1973 MITCHELL, Jack H., b. 23-sep-1880, d. 13-jan-1976 MITCHELL, Leattia B., b. 17-apr-1874, d. 25-jun-1964 MONROE, Infant, d. 7-jan-1942 MONROE, James Beasley, b. 26-jan-1894, d. 5-jan-1973 MONROE, Sarah, d. 15-may-1943 MOORE, Helen T., d. 3-apr-2000 MOORMAN, Robert Wardlaw, b. 16-sep-1919, d. 17-feb-1974 MORGAN, Thomas W., b. 1900, d. 1977 MORRISON, Margaret Jackson, b. 27-jul-1860, d. 2-jun-1939 MORRISON, Margaret, b. 17-jun-1884, d. 18-sep-1973 MORRISON, Mary Willie, b. 1-feb-1890, d. 12-oct-1947 MORRISON, Nannie, b. 10-apr-1881, d. 23-sep-1933 MORRISON, Rosa, b. 30-apr-1887, d. 7-aug-1939 MORRISON, William Shannon, b. 7-apr-1853, d. 25-dec-1922 MUSSER, Albert Myers, b. 1892, d. 1974 MUSSER, Jean Teague, d. 30-jan-1955 MUSSER, Sallie Pearce, b. 25-oct-1902, d. 12-apr-1974 NEELY, William NORMAN, Joseph T., b. 2-jun-1954, d. 25-aug-1974 NORMAN, Joseph T., b. 30-oct-1938, d. 17-dec-1962 PADEN, William Reynolds, b. 1895, d. 1977 PARKS, Eugene, d. 10-oct-1995 PARRADO, Pedro, d. 16-nov-1994 PATRICK, David Robert, b. 1-aug-1930, d. 3-sep-1930 PATRICK, Lois Virginia Watkins, b. 2-jan-1895, d. 6-jan-1971 PATRICK, Sharner S., b. 6-may-1887, d. 28-sep-1960 PEELE, Thomas C. (Sr), d. 16-apr-1996 POOLE, Margaret Bradley, b. 6-oct-1898, d. 22-jan-1975 POOLE, Robert Franklin, b. 2-dec-1893, d. 6-jun-1958 PRESSLEY, Emma Louise, b. 28-jul-1872, d. 11-feb-1954 PURSER, Infant, d. 19-aug-1945 RICHIE, Mary Leighton Mills RICHIE, Robert Russell RIGGS, Lula Moore Hall, b. 9-feb-1873, d. 24-feb-1958 RIGGS, Walter Merritt, b. 24-jan-1873, d. 22-jan-1924 RITCHIE, R.R., d. 1-sep-1999 ROBBINS, Richard, d. 7-jun-1980 ROBINSON, Gilbert (Sr), d. 23-feb-1996 ROCHESTER, Stephen Glenn, b. 2-jun-1954, d. 25-aug-1974 RODGERS, Lillie Reola Carney, b. 14-aug-1899, d. 12-dec-1929 RUSSELL, Adelaide Pemble Royal, b. 2-may-1877, d. 3-aug-1968 RUSSELL, Dorothy, b. 7-dec-1902, d. 21-dec-1956 RUSSELL, Dorothy, b. 7-dec-1902, d. 21-dec-1956 SCHILLETTER, Ann Louise, b. 12-dec-1906, d. 20-feb-1928 SCHILLETTER, August Edward, b. 30-oct-1891, d. 2-dec-1959 SCHILLETTER, August, b. 25-mar-1865, d. 28-nov-1929 SCHILLETTER, Grace W., b. 17-aug-1896, d. 18-oct-1969 SCHILLETTER, Lavinia Fincken, b. 21-mar-1866, d. 2-jun-1927 SCHWARZ, Anna P., b. 28-jan-1893, d. 17-may-1927 SHANKLIN, A.G., b. 22-jul-1871, d. 10-jul-1942 SHANKLIN, Antoinette Neville, b. 13-may-1876, d. 23-apr-1951 SHERMAN, Franklin (Jr), b. 1877, d. 1947 SHERMAN, Grace Berry, b. 1879, d. 1952 SIKES, Enoch Walter, b. 19-may-1868, d. 8-jan-1941 SIKES, Ruth Janet, b. 15-sep-1904, d. 1-dec-1967 SIKES, Ruth Wingate, b. 25-jul-1875, d. 10-aug-1959 SIKES, Walter Wingate, b. 1907, d. 1977 SLOAN, Daisy R., b. 13-oct-1876, d. 22-may-1962 SLOAN, Jack Winslow, b. 1906, d. 1978 SLOAN, Jean B., b. aug-1882, d. 7-apr-1969 SLOAN, Joe Henry (Sr), b. 12-jul-1900, d. 8-jun-1962 SLOAN, Susan Hall, b. 11-feb-1876, d. 13-dec-1953 SLOAN, Winslow Poe, b. 21-apr-1873, d. 11-apr-1959 SMITH, Robert W., d. 5-sep-1994 STANLEY, Dessma Long, b. 18-mar-1910, d. 10-jul-1972 STANLEY, Muriel Bell, b. 4-jul-1908, d. 18-sep-1952 STARKEY, Lawrence Vincent, b. 27-mar-1888, d. 26-jun-1971 STARKEY, Marie Compton, b. 17-feb-1893, d. 7-apr-1974 STEPP, J.M., d. 21-jul-1994 STERN, Archie D., d. 4-nov-1928 SWAIN, Alice Groat, b. 1892, d. 1959 THURBER, Willaim Fisher, b. 29-oct-1893, d. 20-nov-1973 TIMMS, Mary Bell, d. 13-may-1993 VanBLARICOM, Infant, b. 6-feb-1943, d. 7-feb-1943 WATKINS, Daisy Patton, b. 8-dec-1889, d. 1-dec-1974 WATKINS, David Wayne, b. 1-feb-1889, d. 9-apr-1976 WATSON, Christine Faust, b. 5-jul-1905, d. 31-jul-1975 WATSON, David Joseph, b. 10-oct-1894, d. 2-sep-1971 WATSON, Ernest Chisolm, b. 4-nov-1906 WELBORN, Frances Booker, d. 16-may-1996 WEST, Harley, b. 26-may-1881, d. 28-oct-1937 WHEELER, Harvey J. (Dr), b. 1930, d. 1970 WHITE, Lucie, d. 29-jan-1995 WILLIAMS, Carolyn Feeley, b. 12-jul-1923, d. 8-sep-1973 WILSON, H. Betts, d. 28-may-1993