Sunday, August 15, 2021

Deposition of Pietro Musquetto, May 1777

Deposition of Pietro Musquetto concerning Matthew Trei 's (Mateu Triay) death.

 Deposition # 20 of 21 given between May 7 and May 20, 1777  20. CO5/557:465 East Florida

     Pietro Musquettro, being duly sworn saith:   That he was present when Matthew Trei (Mateu Triay - PDR), a servant of Dr. Turnbull's, was in the field at work when Nichola Moveritte, the Corporal, was quarreling with Joseph Spinata (Joseph Espineta - PDR) who was standing close by the said Matthew Trei; and saw the said Nichola Moveritte lift up an axe and throw at the said Joseph Spinata, but missed him and hit the said Matthew Trei in the head and killed him.

Pietro Musquetto  his mark Sworn the 10 day of May, 1777, before Spencer Man J.P.

Deposition faithfully reproduced from microfilm of the original document given in Catalan, Italian and other languages, recorded in English with assistance from interpreters. Names are recorded as translated with Catalan spelling in parentheses, transcribed by Wayne Pearce.

 On the ships list after Maria is Triay, Mateu, Minorca 

All Rights Reserved Teresa McVeigh 15 Aug 2021

Is John Pinholster the same person as Juan Francisco Espineta?

 Andrew Turnbull and others acquired a grant of 101,400 acres to establish an Indigo plantation when the 1763 Treaty of Paris gave the British all Spanish lands East of the Mississippi. Turnbull's eight ships and 1403 colonists left Gibraltar for the Florida Colony on April 17, 1768 and arrived in Florida in June , July and August of 1768. 148 died on the voyage and a total of 300 adults and 150 children died during 1768. Elisabet Hernandez and Maria Treal's husband most likely died leading to a marriage between Joseph and Maria.

They came as indentured servants for a periods of six to eight years, at the end of which each family would be given 50 acres plus five acres for each child. By 1777 Turnbull had failed to make the land transfers and over 600 fled to St. Augustine.

The 1783 Treaty of Paris gave Florida back to the Spanish. The Florida citizens had to swear an oath of loyalty to the Spanish Crown and the Catholic Church. Joseph swore loyalty and his sons were living with him. Francisco was living with Joseph on the 1793 Census.  

11-24-1820 Will of Joseph, son of Francisco & Juana Sintas. Wife Maria long dead. Son Juan Francisco left St Augustine more than 25 years ago and believed dead. [Josefa Espineta was the son of Juan Francisco and Juanta (Cintas) Espineta].

Originally written by Teresa McVeigh 21 Dec 2014




Monday, June 17, 2019

A Juan d'Espinosa in South Carolina in 1609


The Waterees. The Wateree Chicanee 1732-1736 lived opposite present Camden. 
1609. Twenty-five or twenty-six Spaniards from St. Augustine, Florida, in Company with their interpreter, an Escamacu Indian woman, Maria de Miranda wife of Juan d'Espinosa, took their ship far enough up the Santee River to meet with the chief of the Wateree Indians. The Chief of the Jordan River guided them into the river Jordan to the Chief of the Waterees.

South Carolina Indians, Indian traders, and other ethnic connections : beginning in 1670 / edited by Theresa M. Hicks, from the papers of Theresa M. Hicks and Wes Taukchiray. The Reprint Company, Spartanburg, SC, 1998, p. 46

Note: If this is the progenitor of the Pinholster family, then he was in SC much earlier (1609) than previously thought. This is before the Minorcans came to Florida in 1768. The Spanish called the Santee River the River Jordan. The town of Camden was not settled by the English until 1772 as the town of Fredericksburg. John Pinholster was born before 1776 and died about 1824. 

Transcribed by Teresa McVeigh 17 Jun 2019

Tuesday, May 28, 2019

Abstract of Confederate Indigent Soldier Pension Applications of David L. Looney 1901-1907

Name: D L Looney
County: Madison
Approx. Application Year: 1901
Application Type: Indigent Soldier
Archive collection name:
Pension Applications of Confederate Soldiers and Widows
Archive Collection #: GCP-321
Number of Images in Packet: 12
9 Apr 1901
Danielsville, Madison County, GA
b. 15 Sep 1837 Franklin County, GA
Served Sep 1864 Athens, GA Co. D First GA Calvary Reserves, abt 8 months
With Co. at Surrender in 1865 at Atlanta, GA
Farming earn $10-12 per annum
Infirmity and poverty, hernia for 12 years, unable to work
1894-1899: no property
1898-1899: Supported by children and people in neighborhood
Wife, daughter, and little boy hire out for any work can get
Applied before under the Indigent Act

Witness: J. P. Looney, Madison Co. GA, 9 Apr 1901
Known applicant about 40 years
Applicant recided Madison Co. all life as far as he knows
Applicant enlisted Sept 1864 Carnesville or Athens GA Co. D First GA Reserve Calvary
J.P. Looney also served there the same 8 months but home sick at time of surrender in 1865 in Atlanta
Doesn't know any income or property applicant has, old and feeble and unable to support himself
No interest in recovery of pension by Applicant

Affidavit of Physician, J. S. Daniel, Madison Co., GA, 9 Apr 1901
Very large right inguinal hernia, renders him unable to work

Ordinary's Certificate, Madison County, GA, 9 Apr 1901, J. N. Boggs
Applicant resident of state since birth
Witnesses: J. P. Looney and W. O. Welch
No tax digest 1899 and 1900

Indigent Soldier's Pension, 1902, applied 14 Jan 1902, 
Danielsville, Madison Co., GA, 7 Feb 1902
Co. D GA Reserve Calvary

Indigent Soldier's Pension, 1903, applied 17 Jan 1903
Danielsville, Madison Co., GA, 19 Jan 1903
Co. D GA Reserve Calvary

Indigent Soldier's Pension, 1904, applied 19 Jan 1904
Danielsville, Madison Co., GA, 3 Feb 1904
Co. D GA Reserve Calvary

Indigent Soldier's Pension, 1905 applied 4 Jan 1905
Danielsville, Madison Co., GA, 1 Feb  1905
Co. D GA Reserve Calvary

Indigent Soldier's Pension, 1906, applied 9 Jan 1906
Danielsville, Madison Co., GA, 1906 (no date)
Co. D GA Reserve Calvary

Indigent Soldier's Pension, 1907, applied 7 Jan 1907
Danielsville, Madison Co., GA, 1 Feb 1907 
Co. D GA Reserve Calvary

Abstracted by Teresa McVeigh 28 May 2019



Abstract of Will of Joseph Walters (Waters)

Joseph Waters
No date.
Heirs: William Carothers, Adam Looney, Robert Prewett, Isham Merritt, Larkin Cleveland, Guardian for J. G. and R. Walters. Samuel Prewett, by his agent, Joseph Prewett. Eliza, Lear, Larkin, and Polly Walters, and Berryman Prewett.

Historical collections of the Georgia chapters, Daughters of the American Revolution,
Online publication - Provo, UT: The Generations Network, Inc., 2005.Original data - Historical collections of the Georgia chapters, Daughters of the American Revolution. Atlanta, Ga.: C.P. Byrd, state printer, 1926. Vols. I-IV.

Volume I. Index of Will Book "B" 1848-1867, Franklin County, Georgia, p. 319

Monday, May 27, 2019

Adam Looney Deed to David Barton (1827)

Adam Looney to David Barton
312 Acres on Harbins Branch
The State of South Carolina

Know all men that by these presents that I, Adam Looney of Franklin County, State of Georgia, in consideration of One Hundred and Thirty Dollars to me paid by David Barton of the State of South Carolina, Pendleton District have granted, bargained, sold, and by these presents do grant, bargain, sell and release unto the said David Barton all of that plantation or tract of land surveyed for Adam Looney the 16th day of February 1801 containing Three Hundred and Twelve acres situate in the District of Pendleton on Harbins Branch (by Robert Looney...) waters of Tugalo River bounded by a line running S.W. 8, by land of Thom. Harbins 33.50 thence to a post oak corner N. E. 50.19 thence to a P, Oak S. E. 25.50 (22) , thence to a blk. jack corner by Jno. Keese N. E. 65.40 thence to a blk. jack corner by vacant land N. W. 10.42 thence to a pine corner by vacant S.W. 75.36 thence to a pine corner S.W. 35.38 and form thence to the beginning corner on a post oak. 

Together with all and singular the rights, members, hereditaments and appurtenances to the same belonging or in anywise incident or appertaining. 

To have and to hold all and singular the premises and above mentioned onto the said David Barton, his heirs, executors and administrators to warrant and forever defend all and singular the said premises unto the said David Barton his heirs and assigns against myself and my heirs and against every person whomsoever lawfully claiming or to claim the same or any part thereof. 

In testimony whereof the said Adam Looney hath hereto set his hand and seal this tenth day of October and in the year of our Lord one thousand eight hundred and twenty six. 

Signed and delivered in the presence of 
Elias Barton
Cloud Barton   
Adam Looney (L.S.)

State of S. Carolina
Pendleton District
Personally Cloud Barton appeared before me the subscribing Justice and made oath in due form of law that he did see Adam Looney sign, the within deed to David Barton for the purpose within mentioned also that Elias Barton did sign as witness with himself. 

Sworn to and subscribed 15 March A.D. 1827.
John Varner, J. Q.           Cloud Barton
Recorded the 24th March 1828 and examined by:-
John Hunter, D.C. and R.M.C.

Transcribed by Teresa McVeigh 27 May 2019 
Deed found in Deeds Office, Oconee County, SC, Book 9, pg 664 [at that time in Pendleton District]
paddypower011 originally shared this on Ancestry. com 04 Jun 2012

Tuesday, January 1, 2019

Obituary of William Jonathan "Jon" Looney (1957-2018)


Obituary for William Jonathan "Jon" Looney
William Jonathan “Jon” Looney, age 61 of Cornelia, passed away on Sunday, December 9, 2018.

Born in Demorest, Georgia on September 6, 1957, he was a son of Minnie Ivie Looney of Cornelia and the late William Jarrell Looney. Mr. Looney was a self-employed architect and the co-owner and operator of Precision Detailing. He graduated from Habersham Central in 1975 and went on to Southern Tech from which he graduated in 1980 with an Architectural Engineering degree. A devoted family man, he was an avid University of Georgia fan who enjoyed riding motorcycles and working on home projects. Mr. Looney was a member of Cornelia United Methodist Church.

In addition to his father, he was preceded in death by his sister, Susan Herron.

In addition to his mother, survivors include his wife, Betsy Higgins Looney of Cornelia; daughter and son-in-law, Katie & Jourdan Smith of Gillsville; brother and sister-in-law, Stephen Looney & Teresa McVeigh of Augusta; nieces, Laura Beth Herron and Ginni East; nephews, Paul Herron and Rev. Jake Herron.

Funeral services are scheduled for 2 pm, Saturday, December 15, 2018 in the Chapel of McGahee-Griffin and Stewart with Rev. Johnny Ray officiating.

The family will receive friends from 1 pm until the service hour on Saturday at the funeral home.
  • McGahee Griffin Stewart Funeral Home
  • 175 VFW Post Rd / PO Box 725 
    CORNELIAGA 
    30531
  • Phone: 706-778-8668
  • www.mcgaheegriffinandstewart.com

Monday, April 23, 2018

Robert Looney (1749-1824) Revolutionary War Land Warrant


On the 10th of July  1788 Robert Looney was awarded 640 Acres for his Revolutionary War Service by the State of North Carolina, County of Davidson (later would be in Nashville, Tennessee).




STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA
To all to whom these presents shall come, Greetings:
Know Ye, that We, pursuant to an act of our General Assembly, entitled “An Act for the relief of the officers and soldiers of the
continental line, and for other purposes,” and in consideration of the Signal brave and persevering Zeal of Robert Looney
one of the Chair Soldiers to the Commissioners for laying off the lands a___ the officers and Soldiers—
of the said s___ have given and granted, and by these presents to give and grant unto the said Robert Looney—
a tract of land containing Six hundred and forty acres, lying and being in our county of Davison,
Lying on St___ creek Beginning at a Sugar Tree and black walnut in Edward Douglass’
line his ___ ___ forty poles with said line to his corner a black walnut and dogwood south fifteen
poles to ___ _________ forward line and corn(er) John Rice East Cross the creek
at twenty ___ ____ ____ two poles ___ ___ sugar tree ____ ____
dred and twenty poles Crost the creek to a dogwood and Chestnut tree South to the Beginning –
as by the plat here unto annexed appear: Together with all woods, waters, mines, minerals and hereditaments, appurtenances, to the said
land and belonging or appertaining. To hold to the said Robert Looney his heirs and assigns forever.
Yielding and paying to us such sums of money yearly, or otherwise, as our General Assembly from time to time may direct. Provided al-
Ways, that the said Robert Looney shall cause this grant to be registered in the Register’s
of our said county of Davidson within twelve month of the date hereof, otherwise the fam___ void and of none effect.
In testimony, whereof we have caused these our letters to be made patent, and our great seal to be affixed. Witness
Samuel Johnston, Esquire, our Governor, Captain-General and Commander in Chief, at ___ the Tenth
day of July in the ____ year of our Independence, and in the year of our Lord one thousand seven hundred and eighty-eight.

Transcribed by Teresa McVeigh, 23 April, 2018
All Rights Reserved


Sunday, March 4, 2018

Looneys in A History of Kirk Maughold


A History of Kirk Maughold
J.W. and C. K. Radcliff
The Manx Museum and National Trust
Douglas, Isle of Man, 1979

p. 86 One of builders of Christ Church, Dhoon (consecrated 1855) was John Looney. 

pp. 268-9 in the Farms and Families chapter

Looney Crowcreen (or Looney Yack)
In the form Lowny, this surname is found in Maughold Register from the beginning (1647), and there was a family of Looneys on the croft Bwaillee Losht, below Ballafayle Kerrush, in the seventeenth century. The fact that John Looney was “of Ramsey” in 1748 does not preclude the possibility of him being a Maughold man, although we must admit that we have not yet found his baptism in Maughold. His wife Margaret Kevin belonged to one of the Scottish families who came to Ramsey in the eighteenth century to engage in business, and even in her later years was a determined and masterful woman. On John’s death in 1770, she married William Creetch of Ballachrinck, whom she also survived. In 1791 she settled her goods on her youngest son Ewan and his wife Mary Taggart, who were to keep her “and live with their loving mother during her natural Life, and to content her with a Decent Living as becometh a loving mother in her old age”. This settlement was accepted as part of her will in 1798; and she had also inserted a clause that if Ewan and Mary disagreed with her, she could go anywhere else she pleased, taking her goods with her!

By her marriage to John Looney, she had nine sons and one daughter, and from six of these sons are descended all the Looneys of Maughold at the time of the 1841 Census, and subsequently. The Parish Register often refers to them as “Yack” (Jack) after their original ancestor. The eldest son William was described in his father’s will as a “poor pitiable object”, and it was the second son Daniel (1745-1826) who lived in Crowcreen after the parents’ deaths. The third son John (1748-1835) bought the intack Boshin and other land near what became the Hibernian., the inn first opened by his son John and his wife Rachel. The fourth son, Thomas, (c. 1750-1826), a shoemaker, bought part of Ballagilley. The sixth son Robert (Robin) (1751-1826) bought East Ballaterson (the White House) from an old established family of Callows, and after the White House was sold to Thomas Quayle and his son John, in 1832, Robin’s eldest son John and his family were farming from Croit ny kennipey (the present Sexton’s house). The eight son, Patrick (1764-1816), was a stonemason, a trade also followed by sons Patrick and Simeon. The youngest and favorite son Ewan (b. 1766), for a long time tenant of Ballaglass, was the father of Joseph later owner of Crowcreen and Magher e kew, of John who farmed the croft on the lowers Ballaskeig Beg; and of George who was farming 30 acres of Ballagilley in 1851.

Sad to say, there have been no Looneys farming Maughold since the War, although there are many descendants and relations of the family, bearing different surnames, resident in the parish. 

Chapter 11 Inns and Hotels
The Brumish Veg., Hibernian, and Folieu Inns
p. 214-215
…we do know that there were two innkeepers in Maughold in 1841, William Kissack of Ballagorry Beg, and Rachel Looney at the Hibernian. [Footnote: No doubt so-called after Rachel herself, who was nee’ Redhead and was of Irish extraction.]

The Hibernian was the first of several inns whose existence arose out of the improvement of the main road from Ramsey to Douglas and the consequence increase in traffic. Their principal purpose was to serve travelers rather than the local population, for indeed it would be difficult to say where the biggest concentration of people in Maughold lay. From time to time the number of travelers varied and so the fortunes of the inns was not constant. The available evidence suggests that innkeeping did not provide a particularly good living in Maughold in the nineteenth century….

[The 1851 Census]…indicates that there was no licensed house in the parish in 1851. Even the Hibernian, so popular in the 1830s, was in temporary abeyance.

The Hibernian was first mentioned in Pigot’s Directory of 1837. The licensee was the most famous of all the Maughold innkeepers, the redoubtable Rachel Looney. A description of her in 1834, when she was about 47, reads:

“She was an odd figure, dressed in a blue petticoat of some sort of cloth or flannel, surmounted by a man’s pilot jacket a good deal too long in the sleeves. To obviate the inconvenience this would have caused, the cuffs were turned back, displaying a large pair of muscular hands and wrists quite out of proportion to her size, as she was considerable below the middle height…When going into Ramsey she rode a large raw-boned carthorse on which what did for duty for a saddle was a sack thrown across the animal’s back from which straw might be seen sticking out. I then saw her come out exactly as before except that instead of a sunbonnet on her head she wore a man’s hat of rough beaver.”
(Quoted by Miss M. Douglas in the Manx Star, Jan 1974)

From this description, it is easy to believe that she had a man’s strength and a story which we have heard recently confirmed it. She employed some men to build an extension to the house, and when they ran short of stone, assured them that a supply would be ready on the following day. In order to obtain this, she is said to have spent the whole night carrying stones down off Barule in her brat (apron). But if she had the strength and resolution of a man, she was also an excellent caterer , as Miss Mona Douglas has written:

“But if costume was of the country style at the Hibernian, amenities were exceptionally good for that period. The inn had its own brewery and also a museum and an excellent library for residents.

Weddings were occasions of great gaiety in those days and often included a party of anything from 50 to 100 folks. The only honeymoon was usually the wedding day itself, on which the whole party went for a long drive after the wedding ceremony and then had dinner at an inn.

At the Hibernian, Rachel, as she was called generally, would be in her element providing for a weeding party arriving from Ramsey or Kirk Maughold or even from Laxey or Douglas.

She would sever a substantial meal, which often included such delicacies as fresh salmon, pigeon pies, lobster salad, roast duckings, lamb and beef, succulent vegetables grown by herself, puddings, light pastries, jellies and fresh fruit (all of these are from an actual menu).”

By 1841, on account of financial difficulties on the island, Rachel’s husband John Looney had emigrated to Australia, where she followed him in 1843….In the 1880s the house ceased to be licensed, but it is still a well-known private residence and landmark on the road, and has given its name to the crossroads when it stands and the little group of houses surrounding.

Transcribed by Teresa McVeigh 
4 Mar 2018


Adam Loony Will, 1674, Ballaugh, Isle of Man

Archdeacon Will 1674A #41 Ballaugh will of Adam Lewney, died 14 March 1674/5: 
Summary: not married, mother & father are alive, brother Daniel, 
sister Catharine,  also: John Cowley, Phinlo Cowley

  Ballaugh

The last will & Testamt of Adam Loony who departed 
this life March ye 14th 1674/5
First he committed his soul to God & his body to Christian buriall
It: he appointed that his funerall charges should be taken out of 
tenn shillings 6 pence yt was due to him from John Cowley.    It: he 
left unto his father & mother a firlett of Barley, for looking to him 
in his sicknesse, & as much cloath as will make his father a dublett.    
It: He left to his brother Daniel Loony his every day coat;    It: to him 
mother a coat;   To Ffinlow Cowley a black coat;   nd to his sister 
Cathrine his shoes.     Lastly he constituted & ordained his brother 
Dan: Looney his lawfull Executor of all his goods moveable and
unmoveable
The Execr not sworne

witnesses
      Willm Kelly} jurati
      John Stean }  

 The sd Adam Looney declared 
   these ensuing pticulars to be 
   due unto him                  s   d
   from Tho: Teare ............. 3 - 5 
         Patr: Kelly ........... 0 - 3 
         Joh: Cowle ............ 0 - 2 
         Hen: Comish ........... 2 - 6 
         In tyth .......... 01£ -01 - 0 

   He acknowledged to be indebted 
   as followeth
         To Willm: Curlett... 10 - 6 
         Robt: Looney ......... 13 - 4 
         Jane Curlett ........... 00 - 2 
         Thom: Christin ...... 01 - 6 
         John Cowle ........... 01 - 3 

Transcribed by: 
Joyce M. Oates
4 Sep 2017
LDS 0106203

Will of Thomas Looney, 1825, Isle of Man

Will of Thomas Looney (d. 1826 Isle of Man),leaving everything to his eldest son and heir,
Thomas. 
Transcribed by Averil Roper on "A Manx Notebook" website 
A Manx Notebook: Family History--Wills, L
Date: 10 July 2005 
Original: LDS: 0106244


In the Name of God  Amen
    I  Thomas  Looney  of   Ballagilly  in the parish
    of  KK  Maughold  being much  advanced in years
    and in decline of life. Knowing from the Course 
    of Nature, that I have not Long to Survive in this
    Transistory State of Life -  Do hereby - make and 
    appoint there presents to be my Last Will and
    Testament, Being of Sound Memory mind and
    Understanding of the Expression and declaration 
    of the same, Hereby Revoking and setting aside 
    all other Wills,  Wills in instruments to that 
    effect made, Signed executed or Otherwise previous 
    to this date hereof  -  I First Commit my Soul 
    into the hands of my Maker Almighty God 
    and my body to the Earth to be interred in a 
    decent like Christian Burial at the discretion 
    of my Hereafter Mentioned Executor.
    And as touching my Worldly Property that 
    I am or maybe in Possessed of. I leave devise and 
    bequeath in the following way  &  manner
Imprimis - I Leave devise and bequeath to all 
    and every of my Children, the Sum of One Shilling 
    british each as Legacy and all other persons 
    that may Presume to Claim any benefit from 
    this my will  -
Lastly I Nominate Constitute and appoint my
    Eldest Son and Heir at Law   Thomas  Looney
    my Whole and Soul Executor and Residuary Legatee 
    of all and every my Goods Chattels and effects of all 
    descriptions denominations Soever.  Bills bonds  - 
    obligations Securities, Mortgages  -  Accounts or what 
    ever Nature or denominations  with respect to
    Property  -  that I am entitled to  -     
    As  Witness my Subscription  This   21st  day of 
    April   1825
                     Thomas  Looney  my  X  mrk
The beforegoing Testamentry
words were expressed in Our
 presence, and by his the Testator
[desired] Committed to Writing 
and Requested of us to bear
Testimony of the Same.
                 John  Quilliam     }
                 William  Kerruish  }  Jurati

At a Chapter Court holden in  Ramsey 
on the   29th  day of  June   1826
Thomas  Looney  the Executor named in the
 foregoing will is sworn in Court in form of
Law and hath given Pledges for the payment 
of Debts and Legacies, namely the witnesses of 
the Will  -                      
              Probatum  est
                  [Ths]  [ Cubbon]      


Monday, February 12, 2018

James Norman Sauls, Jr. (1874-1948) Bible


Photo of James Norman Sauls, Jr., courtesy of Chad Truett



Transcription: This is to Certify That James Norman Sauls And Miss Emma Jane Rodgers Were united by me in the bonds of Holy Matrimony At Home on the 22 day of December in the year of our Lord 1892 Signed Rev. J. M. Weaver

Transcription: Births James N. Sauls son of E. G. and E. J. Sauls borned October 4, 1874 Emma J. Rodgers daughter of J. F. and M. A. Rodgers borned October 8 1873 Adrian A. Abrams daughter of R. F. and Florence M. Abrams borned June 29 1909 Adrian A. Abrams adopted by J. N. Sauls and E. J. Sauls Martha E. Abrams adopted by J. N. Sauls and E. J. Sauls Born Sept. 20, 1924


Transcription-- Deaths: J. Norman Sauls Born 1814 Died Aug 18 1948 
Emma J. Sauls Born Oct. 8 1873 Died July 30, 1950



Transcription: Marriages Raymond L Truett and Martha E Abrams May 16, 1943 
Central Methodist Church, Florence, South Carolina

Minnie Lee (Bryan) Sports Bible 2


Cover of Minnie's Bible


The Combination Holy Bible
D. E. Luther Co.
Atlanta, Georgia

Saturday, February 3, 2018

Minnie Lee (Bryan) Sports Bible

Minnie Lee (Bryan) Sports (1909-1932) Bible


A Holley Bible given to M. L. Bryan by her Father E. L. Bryan



This is to certify that Minnie Lee Bryan and Dudley Sports were united by me in the bonds of Holy Matrimony at Kingstree, S. C. on the 22 day of August in the year of our Lord 1927 in the Presence of Mrs. J. E. Sports and Mrs. L. B. Bryan Signed Judge Snowden


Births: E. L. Bryan was born March the 3d 1861 Anner Rebecca Bryan was born April 7 1872 E. A. Bryan was born Jan 24 1891 W. C. Bryan was born Sept 17 1893 L. B. Bryan was born Sept 17 1893 M. E. Bryan was born July 23 1898 L. D. Bryan was born Oct 19 1901 M. E. Bryan our Mother was born March 21 1834 L. N. Bryan our Father was born April 27 1833 M. L. Bryan was born March 14 1909 H. W. Bryan was born Feb 2 1912 L. D. Sports was born Jan 6 1906 L. D. Sports, Jr. was born July 11, 1928 Baby Sports was born Oct 27 1929


Deaths Of M. E. Bryan who Departed this life the 17 July 1900 E. A. Taylor who departed this life April 1? 1909 Ruby Belle Taylor daughter of W. T. And E.A. Taylor died May 13 1909 W. C. Bryan died Sept. 16 1910 A. R. Bryan died March 28 1914 H. W. Bryan died April 23 1914 L. N. Bryan our Father died October the 12- 1893 T. D. Bryan died the 28 of Feb 1919 Baby Sports died Oct 27 1929 [Notes not legible in Bible: Ella A. Bryan Taylor died April 18 1909]


Marrriages E. L. Bryan and Anner Rebeca Johnson was married Dec 19 1889 E. L. Bryan and O. A. Taylor was married the 22 of Feb 1916 L. D. Sports and M. L. Bryan was married August 22, 1927 [Notes: These are the marriages of Minnie and her father. After her mother died, Emory married Oceana A. Browder who was previously married to William Calvin Taylor]

Minnie Lee (Bryan) Sports

Minnie Lee (Bryan) Sports was born in Williamsburg County, South Carolina, the daughter of Emory L. Bryan and Anna Rebecca Johnson. She married Joseph Dudley Levi Sports (Levi Dudley) 22 August 1927 in Kingstree, Williamsburg County, SC. She died of pulmonary tuberculosis 18 August 1932 in Florence, Florence, SC.





Name: Mrs L D Sports
Gender: Female
Race: White
Age: 22
Birth Date: 1910
Birth Place: SC
Death Date: 18 Aug 1932
Death Place: Florence, Florence, South Carolina, USA [Outside city]
Married
Father: Evely Bryont [Emory Bryant] b. NC
Mother: Don't know
Informant: J. E. Sports, Effingham, SC
Burial: Aug 19, 1932 Tabernacle [Methodist Church]
Certificate Number: 012120
Volume Number: 23
Cause : Pulmonary Tuberculosis

Sunday, July 9, 2017

Love Letters to Margaret Abrams


After 60 years, found love letters still mesmerizing
By F.T. Norton
Fran.Norton@StarNewsOnline.com
Published: Wednesday, February 13, 2013 at 12:48 p.m. 
Catherine Britt thumbs through old letters that she found in her home many years ago and has held on to them in hopes of finding the family of Margarette Abrams, who they are written to and return them. 
Margarette Abrams was stunned in early January when her past came rushing back in a phone call from a stranger. 
"You have what?" she squealed upon hearing the news. 
Love letters found buried for nearly six decades beneath attic insulation in Wilmington stirred memories long forgotten. The words on the dusty, crumbling papers – penned by a beau named Roger – were mesmerizing. 
Dec. 3, 1946: "The radio is on, and right now, ‘You Keep Coming Back Like a Song,' is playing. It doesn't take music to remind me of you, though, since you are in my mind every minute of the day. I go to sleep thinking of you and wondering if you are thinking of me. I wake up wondering if I am going to get a letter from you that day..." 
Roger's heartsong was enchanting. He spoke to and of Margarette with such a whispering gentle love, an innocence that seems foreign in the modern world. 
He wrote nearly every day of songs on the radio, classes he was taking, the view from his University of South Carolina dorm window - all to his muse, a precious high school girl in the Port City. 
March 25, 1947: "Dearest, did I ever tell you how wonderful you are? Did I ever tell you how very, very much I love you? Or why it is that I love you so very much? Sometime when you have about a week to do nothing but listen to me talk I will tell you all of these things. It may take longer than a week..." 
Catherine Britt found the letters in the attic of their Glendale Drive rental home in 2003, and she and her husband Jeremy toted the brittle correspondence around for a decade, wondering who the lovers were. 
The mystery drove the Britts to the library where they were able to find Margarette's class picture in the 1948 New Hanover High School yearbook. 
But beyond that, Margarette was an enigma. Sixty-six years later, the odds of finding her seemed insurmountable. There was no way to know if she or Roger were even still alive. 
"We kept the letters because we felt her or her family would like a part of her history," Catherine said. "When we moved from that house we had packed them up and had forgotten about them until I came across them going through some old totes." 
Each letter ends almost the same, "Yours and yours alone, Roger." 
And as abruptly as the letters began, they ended. Nothing was resolved. In addition to wondering who the people were, the outcome of their relationship also was a mystery. 
The letters from Roger begin in 1945. 
Dec. 28, 1945: "I had wonderful Christmas but there was still one thing missing -- we'll discuss that when I see you again." 
The last indication of contact between the two was an empty envelope postmarked March 1948. 
There were no public records in Wilmington, outside of the yearbook, that listed Margarette Abrams. And property records for the house where the letters were found proved useless. Short of driving to Florence, S.C., records for Roger proved fairly elusive too. But elusive and impossible are two different things. 
The Past Meets the Present 
The Internet, which has made almost obsolete hand-written love letters like Margarette's, helped unlock the mystery. 
Through obituaries, birth records and newspaper clippings, Margarette and Roger were found. 
"I can't believe it," Margarette, 84, sighed from her home in Asheboro when she learned her love letters were still around. The last she knew she'd left them with her sister in Wilmington when she moved away. She'd been meaning to ask Martha what happened to them, but never got around to it. And now Martha is gone. Margarette's best guess is that Martha put them in the attic to store them, and the proclamations of enduring love were accidentally left behind. 
Roger, 86, married and retired, was also surprised that the letters existed. 
"I've often thought of Margarette," he said. 
He said a mutual friend would occasionally mention speaking with her, but the two had no contact since 1948. 
Beyond that, he was uninterested in rehashing the past. Margarette, a private person by nature, was also initially reluctant to speak publicly. But after giving it some thought, she said, she had a change of heart. 
"I was really hoping that this could be something beautiful. People are clamoring for something from the old times. And that's the reason why I will talk about it," she said. 
Margarette was 3 years old in 1932 when her mother died following the birth of the last of her six children. Seven years later, when she was 10, she lost her father and the Abrams children were parceled out to family. 
In 1944, after Margarette's sister Martha married and moved to Wilmington, Margarette joined her. The letters in the attic cache proved other suitors courted the beautiful Margarette through post, but Roger, a school mate she left behind in Florence, was the most prolific and lasting. 
"He said the most wonderful things," she recalled. "I think the reason why I never forgot him is because he treated me like a lady. He was the most gentlemanly human being I'd ever met." 
Oct. 15, 1947: "I love you darling. You are always uppermost in my conscious mind. You are the most important thing in my whole life, and always will be. You are my inspiration and my spirit and I am thoroughly convinced that you are the only one in the world who could handle that position... I'm looking forward to the time when I can give you a big promotion." 
Courtship in the 1940s was unlike the modern era. Most girls didn't do anything more than hold hands and snuggle, Margarette said, and she was no exception. 
"Now if a person dates for two months, the guy expects you to go to bed with them. It would be so good for the young people to see how it used to be," she said. 
For Roger and Margarette, marriage seemed in the cards. But she was still in high school in Wilmington and he was in college 127 miles away. 
Then something happened that was not explained in the letters. 
Even to this day, Margette didn't need a letter to remind her. 
"His friend told him I was unfaithful," she said with a growl. 
At first Margarette pleaded with Roger to believe her, but he cut off all communication. 
"I was miserable," she said. 
After three weeks of silence, her brother-in-law arrived with a letter for her. It was from Roger. 
In it, Roger apologized for disbelieving Margarette, she said. 
"He said that he just couldn't stand it anymore and he was sorry and that he would just like me to forgive his jealous rage," she said. 
Margarette's reply - she is convinced - changed her life forever. 
"I wrote him back and said, ‘You should have thought about that three weeks ago,'" she recalled, her voice catching in her throat. "I've regretted it ever since." 
Life Goes On 
Shortly after the devastating break up, Margarette met and married a dashing and equally smitten boy she worked with at the Walgreens in Winston-Salem, where she lived after graduation. From that union came two boys, Jody and Scott. 
Margarette is now a grandmother of three. Her husband, David, died in 1998 after 49 years of marriage. Four years later, she lost her Jody to cancer. She's been around the world and not strayed far from home. She's welcomed dozens of babies and said goodbye to some. She's lost everything to a hurricane and has rebuilt her life. 
She's happy, and funny, and active and kind. 
In her immaculate home Monday, with her face nearly touching the yellowed pages so she could see, Margarette held the letters in her hands for the first time this millennium. The news of their discovery brought back memories of a time gone by. 
"I feel 15 years old all over again. I look in the mirror and I'm trying to see myself as I was then," she said. 
She's still beautiful, but her strawberry blond hair is white now and her bright blue eyes are failing. 
She began to read aloud one of Roger's letters, then stopped and hid her tears behind the page. Even the countless moons that have passed since she first received the letters have done nothing to dull her love for the boy who adored her so. 
"I was so awful to him," she said. "I never got to explain. I was so angry that he didn't believe me and I cut off my nose to spite my face. 
"I wouldn't want to see him again, because I want him to remember me as I was, but if I could talk to him on the phone to explain..." 
Some things time doesn't heal, she said. 
A broken heart is one. 
"He was my first love. And you never forget your first love." 
F.T. Norton: 343-2070
On Twitter: @FTNorton
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Reprinted in The Daily Advance, Wilmington, NC, Sat. Mar 30, 2013