Showing posts with label Alabama. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Alabama. Show all posts

Monday, April 7, 2014

52 Ancestors 52 Weeks John "Carroll" Cal Week 14

John Cal

I label him "John Cal" for other than the 1900 US Census, Town Creek, Lawrence County, Alabama, he is always listed that way.  John is my great grandfather and one of Henry Carroll/Cal's  and Celia's (Sherrod) older sons.

John Carroll/Cal was born in Leighton, Colbert, Alabama, on 12 Jan 1885 (according to some records). His draft registration card of 1918 states he was born 12 January 1881.  So he may be the first or the third child of Henry Carroll/Cal Sr. (May 1858) and Celia Sherrod (October 1864). Dallas Carroll (07 May 1883), Charles Carroll/Cal (07 January 1884), Sielas Carroll (06 March 1886), Robert Carroll (August 1891) 5, Henry Jr. Carroll/Cal (15 June 1892), Earnest Lee Sr. Carroll/Cal (15 July 1893) 6, Berta Estell Carroll (November 1896) 4, Percy Carroll/Cal (25 November 1899) and Otis/Odis Carroll/Cal (1 Apr 1900) 1,7 are his siblings. He shows up on the1900 US Census in Leighton, Colbert, AL, USA.  John was one of ten children of this marriage.

On 3 Dec 1905 he married Sally Copeland (1887) in Town Creek, Lawrence, AL.  Rev. Sherren, Minister of the Gospel married John Cal and Sally Copeland.   John was twenty and Sallie was eighteen years old (born in 1887 in Alabama).  She is the daughter of Julius and Praline may be Pearline (Burt) Copeland of Creek, Alabama.  Julius Copeland was a member of the United States Colored Troops and joined in Chattanooga, Tennessee in 1863 before his marriage to Pearline.  John and Sally lost their first child between 1904 and 1907. No name or sex of this child was found.   Their first surviving child was Minnie Pearl in 1908.  John was twenty-three when his brother, Silas died on the 13 of November in 1908 at the young age of 21. He went on to have four children with Sally Copeland (1887).   Minnie Pearl Carroll/Cal (24 May 1908), Richard C. Carroll/Cal (1909), Henry Howard Carroll/Cal (12 May 1910) and George Alvin Carroll/Cal (15 May 1912).  John and Sally lived with her parents while they were married.   When John Carroll/Cal was 25 years old, his mother Celia Sherrod died on 26 December 1910 and this was prior to him leaving Alabama.  About 1911, before the birth of George "Alvin", John found himself in a situation due to a struggle or death of a white male in the area.  John had to leave the area, end up in jail or face some other penalty for the situation.  He left Alabama for Virginia and West Virginia finally settling in Marting, Fayette, WV working as a coal miner.  Conditions of working as a coal miner could have been and most likely a rough lifestyle.

According to legal documents, Sally filed a complaint stating that John left the area with Alberta Bowling in 1915.  While she expressed this in a legal complaint, no proof of her statement could be found and Sally amended her complaint in 1917.  John was in Marting, Fayette County, West Virginia on September 12, 1918 according to his WWI Draft Registration Card. He listed Sallie Cal of Town Creek as his nearest relative. However, on 14 Nov 1921, Sally Copeland Cal divorced Johnnie Cal in Moulton, Lawrence, AL, when he was 36 years old.   She had satisfied the requirements of placing a newspaper notice and posting an announcement on the Moulton courthouse.  Johnnie Cal did not reply or show up at court to answer the filed complaint.

Whatever the mystery of John's Alabama departure was significant enough to keep him away until his   later years.  John suffered with diabetes, lost one leg while in West Virginia and the other one after family member brought him back to Town Creek, Alabama.  Rumor was that his wife (ex) waited for him the rest of her life and she died in 1962.  John never remarried but had lived with another woman, Rena, that was a widow with one daughter from her previous marriage.  She went by Rena Cal and died in 1945.  John was the informant on her certificate yet did not list himself as her husband.  John died in 1975 and is buried in the Cal Family Cemetery that his father started in early 1900's.  He is buried next to his daughter, Minnie Pearl Cal without a headstone.

The journey of this family historian is sometimes sad yet at the same time worth the journey to find and document the stories.


Monday, March 31, 2014

52 Ancestors 52 Weeks Wesley Watkins 1870-1929 Coalmining

52 Ancestors 52 Weeks – Wesley Watkins 1870-1929

Wesley Watkins was the name he went by in the found documents and as family members referred to him.  Several of his descendants would also carry this same name. The difference in naming pattern has been John Wesley Watkins.  He is my great grandfather on my paternal (Henry H. Carroll) maternal side (Lois Watkins). 

Wesley was born in Walker County, Alabama August 1870, five years after slavery to John Wesley Sr. and Amanda Andrews.  Wesley married Mary Eliza Bailey in 1892 and their children were Lulu, Smith, Floyd, Otis/Ocie, Wesley, Lillie Mae and Lois (my grandmother) between 1898 and 1912 in Alabama.  Wesley worked as a farm laborer in 1880 and yet somehow according to family stories became involved in the coalmine industry in Jasper, Walker County Alabama.  The story shared with me by my great uncle, Ocie and my father, Henry was that he was in charged of the black company store for the coal mining company.  His sons, Smith, Floyd, Ocie and John Wesley would go back and forth between the black store and the white store performing errands during the early 1900’s.  The freedom of movement between the two stores concerned my great grandfather Wesley and often I have wondered about that part of the story and needed to move beyond dates, places and names.

Researching the mining industry in Alabama opened many doors.  Walker County Alabama was part of the 70,000 square miles from Pennsylvania and Ohio to Central Alabama that had coal deposits at the southern end of Appalachian coalfields.  Alabama Coal Mining Company was the first company mining in the area and was owned by William Phineas and went back to around 1849. Coal mining began in Alabama during the 1830’s.  Phineas was known to have used slave labor to mine the coal.   My mouth fell open when learning about how state prisons began leasing convicts, arrested and incarcerated for insignificant offenses like vagrancy since many black men had no way to prove they were employed that is unless they were fortunate to have a landowner vouch for them.  Thousands of black men were held in involuntary slavery due to minor charges that sheriffs and law enforcement would charge them with and earn money for convictions.  They would leased those jailed to plantations/farms, railroads, lumber camps, etc. and the state of Alabama as well as other states in the Deep South gained by the leasing of humans to commercial enterprises.  The advantage is this forced labor was beneficial to the appropriate state budget and in some states made up ten percent of their budget.  This involuntary slave labor lasted right up to World War II (1940’s).

So my Family History Journey leads me to want to learn more about the terrible conditions of the mining industry for so many of my branches participated in coal mining.  The book and Public Broadcasting TV station on “Slavery By Another Name
caught my attention.  The book was by Douglas A. Blackman and covers how coal mining in the south forced blacks into involuntary service after the “official” slavery period was over in 1865.  It was harsh labor yet financial incentive was given to all that participated with the exception of the black male.  Because personal individuals no longer owned slaves there was no real interest in keeping those workers alive.  One case stated that about one third of the prisoners that worked in the mines died in Alabama yearly.  This labor system has pretty much been excluded from America History yet lasted after Reconstruction in 1877 through 1928.  The NAACP investigated many cases and even set up “underground railroads” in Georgia to assist blacks to leave the rural parts of the state.  The Federal Government after turning their heads for years in fact for five decades finally acted in the mid 1930’s.

So what does this have to do with my great grandfather, Wesley Watkins?  The family story is he was concerned for his sons going back and forth between the racial divided stores and felt it was time to migrate north.  Now Pittsburgh Pennsylvania was the sister city of Birmingham and participated in the coalmining industry, which he knew a great deal about, so he packed his family up and I believe secured employment near the area in Ernest, Indiana County, Pennsylvania in the middle to later 1920’s.  Wesley’s mother Amanda Andrews (age 78) was living with him in the 1920 US Census for Walker County and it is my belief it was after her death that they all moved to Ernest.  Wesley died of a heart attack on 6 Sep 1929 and is buried on 10 September in Oakland cemetery in Earnest, Indiana Pennsylvania.  Below is the record that his youngest daughter Lois Watkins, my grandmother recorded in his 1928 Bible.




Tuesday, March 25, 2014

52 Ancestors 52 Weeks Wk. 12 Whispers of Lillian D. Copeland

52 Ancestors 52 Weeks Week 12 Whispers along the Journey – Lillian D. Copeland

Lillian D. Copeland, birth 15 January 1902, Alabama.  You whispered to me yet I didn’t pay attention on more than one occasion.  I snapped a picture of your headstone at the Cal Family Cemetery in Town Creek, Alabama over two years ago and wondered who your where.  The carved words explained yet it didn’t fit what I knew so not too much attention was given to the engrave letters that spelled it out.

I hunted for your father, Richard W. Copeland born 20 Oct 1973 and found him living with your mother and wife, Lillian in the 1910 Town Creek Census yet you were not listed.  I figured he was one of the two living children of Julius and Pearlina (Burt) Copeland but wasn’t certain.  Your father, Richard Wallace Copeland listed your mother Lillian as the nearest kin in his Draft Registration Card of 1918.  I saw him living in Birmingham Alabama close other family members, Robert and Rose Carroll yet your mother wasn’t in that household in the 1920 Census.  I questioned and wondered but looked no further.  I hunted and hunted for the marriage record of your father and mother in the Alabama Marriage Index without results.  Yet the 1900 US Census for Precinct 22 ½ Town Creek, Alabama stated they had been married for fourteen years without any children.  Of course, it took awhile to find them for their names were recorded as Bichar and Lilin Copelan so at first I didn’t realize it was them.  Looking beyond the index at the written records noticed that Bichard was Richard and someone had no idea of how to spell Lillian.  The birthrates matched, the location was the same as 1910 and the birthplace of them and their parents matched.  Felt certain this was the Richard Copeland that I was looking to document. 

Along the way, at Family Search.org noticed a Lillian Copeland in the death index for Town Creek, Lawrence County, Alabama, a female that was 11 yrs. 10 mos. with a birth years of 1901.  Immediately wrote it down with the source for future reference.  Now my paternal grandmother’s brother Ocie Watkins adopted a Carroll in Indiana, Pennsylvania.  It was within the last couple of years that I learned his daughter was a Carroll and it was long after his death.  He called me ONCE a year since I moved to Atlanta up to his death in the 1980’s.  What amazed me was how much he seemed to know about the Carroll’s and the tidbits he would tell me.  Once I learned his adopted daughter was a Carroll, what he knew made sense. 

So yesterday and today, I found him whispering in my ear to a point that I had to stop and pay attention.  Mostly, what I heard was “Mr. Copeland was your Grandmother Sally’s brother”.  My response was I hear your Uncle Ocie but I loose track of him in 1927, the last document found where he was a miner in New Kensington, Pennsylvania.  So I went back again to learn what I could about Richard trying to document him as my great grandmother Sally’s brother.  Found his Draft Registration for WWI in Jefferson County Alabama where he listed his next of kin as Lillian in 1918 (good good thought I was making headway).  In the 1920 Census he is living alone and no signs of Lillian not even in the Alabama Death Index.  Okay for some reason he went on to Pennsylvania alone yet no record of death found in Pennsylvania or Alabama.  I know his father and sister visited Pennsylvania in 1930 so what the heck happened to him and where was Lillian, your mother.  Frustrated I pretty much decided to record what was found and leave it alone.  My great Uncle Ocie continued whispering in my ear as I was driving to and from an appointment.  My response was what is it what do you want me to know????  Came home got on my computer again and something told me to go to my records on the Cal Family Cemetery in Lawrence County Alabama.  Sure enough I found what Lillian D. and Uncle Ocie wanted me to find today.  A newly found cousin that died much too young.  So now how or what did you die of at such a young age? Thank you Lillian D. and Uncle Ocie for leading me to tie this much together.  Not sure I'm leading this Journey or following and with finds like this, I'll go with the whispers of my ancestors.