Wednesday, March 31, 2010

Guest writer: Mary Anna Riggan

The recent article (March 16, 2010) on Knowles Cemetery (click to read) contained an inventory of the names from the grave markers found in the old burial ground overlooking Halfway Creek. Reader and Monroe County historian Mary Anna Riggan sent the following article which explains how the cemetery was started on Crump property, how the first burial of Mr. Stanton there came about, and how the Knowles from Rhode Island came to the Hill Country during the early development of the county. The first marker in that cemetery survives --- and marks the grave of the individual in Mrs. Riggan's essay.


TRAGEDY IN HILL COUNTRY


by Mary Anna Riggan


It was probably warmer than usual on May 25, 1840 in Monroe County, Mississippi. Seemingly there had been plenty of rain during the winter so the mighty Tombigbee River was flowing deep, churning up silt, and was very inviting to the locals. The area close to the thriving town of Cotton Gin Port was known as a “wash hole” and a place for fun and frolic.

Abel Stanton and a group of his friends were there that day for whatever reason.

Abel Stanton, born April 24, 1804 in Rhode Island, was twenty-six years old when he wascommissioned by his Knowles Cousins to scout out the new lands that were opening up in Mississippi. The Benjamin Knowles family of Kingsport, Rhode Island, blessed with eleven children, had literally out-grown their land holdings. Benjamin decided the only way for all to survive was for the six oldest of his sons to migrate south to northeast Mississippi where new land was available through the recent Chickasaw Session.

It is said Abel traveled by boat from Rhode Island along the eastern seaboard, connecting to the Tombigbee River at Mobile. His journey upriver ended at Cotton Gin Port. Abel found everything to his likin’, so he set about establishing his own business and has been described as an industrious young merchant. He sent favorable word to his Knowles Cousins and encouraged them to join him.

Abel married Jane Crump on May 3, 1835. Jane’s father was John Crump, who was in Monroe by ~1830 or 1832. John had large land holdings, most of which were near or along either side of the Cotton Gin to Columbus Road (which we know as Old MS Hwy 25). For this narrative, the parcel of interest was south of Halfway Creek in S31 T13S R18W -- just north of where John Crump built his family home.

The Knowles Cousins arrived around 1836. After they settled in, Abel partnered with them, thus the business became Stanton and Knowles. Marriages and births took place at Cotton Gin Port.

As reported by a Stanton family researcher and suggested by the 1840 census, Abel and Jane had a son before 1840 and named him John.

Another family living at Cotton Gin Port at this time was that of Ezekiel “Zeke” Morgan. According to tax records, Zeke had been in Monroe since 1820/1821. He was married and hadtwo children. It is written that Zeke was a cabinet maker by profession, was a mechanicalgenius, and made all of his own tools. Everything he made was of superior workmanship. W. B. Wilkes describes him as “regarding his own opinion as the law to himself”…“He cared nothing for the opinions of anybody.” …and “would work at nothing longer than he was interested in it.”

Possibly Abel Stanton and his friends weren’t aware of the “contradictory” character of the person they were teasing at the “wash hole” on that fateful day in May. Some accounts report “horse play” turned into mud slingin’... reportedly both literally and vocally. Whichever the case, the young men tried to involve this fella’ in their fun.

He didn’t wanta’ play.

There are several versions of what happened that day, but the outcome of all the versions was tragic. It seems without reservation, Zeke Morgan picked up his gun and shot Abel Stanton.

In an instant, Jane Stanton was left a widow and little John was fatherless. There weren’t any formally plotted cemeteries at Cotton Gin at that time, so where were they going to bury Abel?

John Crump offered the answer. A small plot of ground just north of the Crump home was the chosen place. The land was owned by John Crump, the first burial was that of John Crump’s son-in-law, Abel Stanton, but the cemetery has been known though the ages as the Knowles Cemetery.

It’s bittersweet to note that on January 13, 1841, a new “twig” appeared on the Stanton family tree. Jane Crump Stanton named him Abel.

Sources: Monroe County History, Mother Monroe, Cemeteries of Monroe County, MS, 1820-1850 US Censuses of Monroe County, MS, Monroe County Land Records

Copyright © 2010. Mary Anna Riggan. Lackey, Mississippi. All Rights Reserved. Printed at Hill Country by permission of the author.

Monday, March 29, 2010

Sun: rise, set, dawn, dusk, shine?

WORDS FROM THREE GRAVE MARKERS

by Terry Thornton
email: hillcountrymonroecounty@gmail.com







© 2010. Details from grave marker photographs by Terry Thornton. Fulton, Mississippi. All Rights Reserved.

Sunday, March 21, 2010

An Update: Loyd-style pottery markers -- A link to Peppertown Pottery

1980s marker presented as an 1880s marker. A correction

by Terry Thornton
email: hillcountrymonroecounty@gmail.com

In the photo essay posted yesterday at this blog, Loyd-style Pottery grave markers markers (click to view), a pottery marker was identifed as a Loyd-style marker with speculation that it was one of the pre-1900 ones. That is not the case. The marker, shown below, was made in the 1980s by Itawamba County Mississippi potters, the late Titus and Euple Riley, of Peppertown Pottery.


According to Itawamba County historian Bob Franks, the Rileys experimented with making grave markers of clay similar in style to the 1870s Loyd-patented markers. Two of their pottery
markers were installed at Keys Cemetery and are shown above. The one for Mr. Clouse was pictured in the previous article.

According to Franks, the Clouse graves were unmarked and the Rileys made the markers for them in the 1980s. Further, the name "Levi" should be "Eli." "Elie Clous" and Elizabeth Clous are found on the 1880 Lamar County, Alabama, federal census. The family consisted of
Elie Clous, 35, born Alabama
Elizabeth Clous, 26, born Mississippi
Erlich F. Clous, 9, born Alabama
Katie M. Clous, 7, born Alabama
Mary A. Clous, 5, born Alabama
William J. Clous, 2, born Alabama
Didemie J. Clous, 5 months, born Alabama

Elizabeth was the daughter of Daniel Lockhart and Dedema Liles Dill Lockhart of Gattman, Monroe County, Mississippi. Daniel Lockhart's grave marker in Lockhart Cemetery contains the following information.

Eli Clouse, according to Franks, was the father of Eldridge Frazier Clouse. Eli and his family moved from northwest Alabama into northeast Mississippi after the Civil War. The Clouses last lived in the Greenwood community of Itawamba County and are buried in nearby Keys Cemetery. Their graves were marked with stoneware/pottery markers made by in the 1980s by Titus and Euple Riley of Peppertown, Itawamba County, Mississippi. The markers for the Clouses were made in the 1980s and are in the style of the older circa 1880s Loyd-style grave markers.

Thanks to Bob Franks for sharing his extensive knowledge of Itawamba County history and for documenting the Clouse stoneware/pottery markers at Keys Cemetery.

Sources:
Clouse Family Information and Peppertown Pottery Information by Bob Franks, emails to Terry Thornton, March 20, 2010.

Clouse Family Census Information, 1880 Lamar County, Alabama, Federal Census. Transcribed from the census images at Heritage Quest, March 21, 2010. Accessed through the Lee-Itawamba County Mississippi Library System.

Clouse Markers photographed in Keys Cemetery, Itawamba County, Mississippi, March 19, 2910, Terry Thornton, Fulton, Mississippi

Lockhart Markers photographed in Lockhart Cemetery, Monroe County, Mississippi, October 25, 2008, Terry Thornton, Fulton, Mississippi


Saturday, March 20, 2010

Loyd-style stoneware or pottery grave markers


A Photographic Essay

UPDATE: See additional information and correction at http://hillcountryhogsblog.blogspot.com/2010/03/update-loyd-style-pottery-markers-link.html

by Terry Thornton
email:
hillcountrymonroecounty@gmail.com

Various forms of Loyd-style pottery grave markers are found in the Hill Country of north-western Alabama and north-eastern Mississippi. Almost all older cemeteries in this region have one of more of these patented Loyd-style markers.

The use of local clays by Hill Country potters to make pottery grave markers was a process perfected by William Payne Loyd and William Dickinson Loyd of Tremont, Itawamba County, MS. On June 10, 1879, they received U.S. Patent # 216,427 for making a tombstone or grave marker from clay fired into stoneware/pottery. Their patented technique was licensed to several other pottery shops.

Slight differences are apparent in the markers from potter to potter --- but the overwhelming majority of the surviving stoneware grave markers show the typical slab of light (Bristol slip) glazed stoneware embellished with cobalt blue markings done with a stylus or with letter embossing molds

On occasion Loyd-style markers show the work of more creative potters and a few such markers are decorated with stylized drawings and figures. See examples posted by Mona Mills at Itawamba Connections:
The following photographs show additional attempts to use pottery grave markers. No attempt was made to determine who fired these examples from local clay or when --- nor is there any attempt made to determine which forms inspired the Loyds or if the marker is a copy of the patented Loyd process by a potter who wished to emulate the Loyd-maker without using the patented process.

Example 1. The following close-up of Levi C. Clouse's pottery marker shows a Bristol slip/wash on a reddish clay decorated freely with cobalt blue with hand-lettered manuscript writing. Damage to the marker has removed some of the overglaze revealing the clay color below. tawamba County, Mississippi.

Example 2. The following photograph of Thomas Minyard pottery marker is a typical example of the Loyd-process. The base no longer survives on Mr. Minyard's marker --- but the typical Bristol slip with cobalt-blue writing remains vivid. Itawamba County, Mississippi.

Example 3. The following photograph shows a brownish glaze (Albany slip ?) with brown writing on a typically shaped Loyd-marker which was uncovered recently in a Hill Country cemetery.
According to Itawamba County historian, Bob Franks, only one other brown glazed with brown writing Loyd-style marker has been found in the county. Franks speculates that the Loyds may have experimented with various colors and glazes and that there was not much market for brown. [Note: The photograph does not capture the brownish color of this marker very well. The marker was removed from beneath a layer of dirt and moss and photographed without cleaning.]. Itawamba County, Mississippi.

Example 4. Below is shown a typical Loyd-style marker from the same cemetery as Example
3. It too was uncovered from beneath a large rock where it was partcally covered with dirt and a layer of forest rubble. Note the typical glazing and colors. Itawamba County, Mississippi.

Example 5. The photographs below shows an Loyd-style pottery grave marker and its base. The base, which is a turned piece of pottery holds the pressed/slab marker upright. The two
pieces are shown as found, separated, in photograph A. When rejoined, a typical intact Loyd-style pottery grave marker is much like that shown in photograph B. Monroe County, Mississippi.

Example 6. The following three photographs show a pottery marker that may have been influenced by the patented Loyd-style marker. Clearly a turned pottery base, the marker
consists of an round slab of fired clay that is decorated with both line work and applied pottery elements. The slab portion is joined to the based with a metal fastener. Unfortunately most of the applied elements to this one-of-a-kind pottery marker have been lost. Photograph A shows this small stoneware marker from the back and side; Photograph B shows it from the front and Photograph C is a close up of the slab. It is not known who made this stoneware marker; it is located in a traditional African-American portion of a cemetery in northern Monroe County, Mississippi.

Example 7
. Compare the shape of the slab portion of the Loyd-style marker in Example 7 to Example 8. Various changes in shape, size, and lettering to the manufacturing process occurred over time which enables some pottery experts to determine which specific potter made a specific grave marker. Itawamba County, Mississippi

Example 8. Itawamba County, Mississippi.

See also Hill Country Kiln: Firing the Potter's Clay, April 27, 2007, by Terry Thornton in Hill Country of Monroe County Mississippi, Volume 1. Post # 3.).

Photographs of Loyd-style grave marker. Copyright © 2010. William T. "Terry" Thornton, Fulton, Mississippi. All Rights Reserved.


Friday, March 19, 2010

The Insect Man of Hill Country --- Francis Flavius Bibby

[Note: Hill Country is a column from the Monroe Journal, Amory, Mississippi. My articles appear there every other week. After the column appears in MOJO it is then published here on the blog. I am happy to be writing in the newspaper of the Hill Country, the Monroe Journal. Below is the column from March 17, 2010.]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~


The Insect Man --- Francis Flavius Bibby


by Terry Thornton


One of the most interesting adults I knew in the 1950s was the entomologist Francis Flavius Bibby. During the summers when cotton insects were on the rampage devouring cotton plants in the Hill Country, Mr. Bibby would often take a break from his field studies and stop by my father's store in Parham for gasoline, soft drinks, and a snack. And he would talk with my father about bugs and bollworms and other fascinating critters.


As a twelve-year old, I found Mr. Bibby interesting for a variety of reasons. One, his name was unusual and pronounced "B.B." And when he was mentioned as "F.F. Bibby" it sounded wonderfully as if "F.F.B.B." was his name.


Two, I thought he looked somewhat like the bugs he was so passionate about.


Three, Mr. Bibby was a big talker --- he was interested in lots of things but he was obviously an expert-on-the-go about insects. He had vast knowledge of crop insects in particular.


Four, once I learned his given names were Francis Flavius, I knew he was a special person.


Francis Flavius Bibby was the first scientifically educated man I ever met. F. F. Bibby was the first entomologist I ever knew. The second was my entomology professor, Dr. Hull, at the University of Mississippi. Both were passionate about insects.


And to me, they both looked like the critters to which they devoted lifetimes of study.


Francis Flavious Bibby was born in Smithville, Mississippi, son of Marian and Phebe Bibby. He is listed in their household on the 1900 census as a 6-year-old. In the household with Flavious and his parents were sister Dellie, 14 (later to become the wife of Dr. Benjamin C. Tubb of Smithville) and his aunt Luella Bibby, 30 (Luella is buried at New Hope Cemetery in Parham. She shares a grave stone with her nephew Archie, son of James Bibby. Archie was Flavious' first cousin.).


In 1918 Francis F. Bibby completed a World War 1 draft card. He was then residing in Alachua County, Florida, at Gainesville. His World War 1 induction card shows that he enrolled in the Navy at Jacksonville and his home address was his place of employment in Florida, the Florida State Plant Board at Gainesville. Obviously Mr. Bibby had completed his university training and had found employment as an entomologist in Florida.


A variety of interesting artifacts document Mr. Bibby's life according to Ancestry.com. There is a U.S. Passport Application for F. F. Bibby to go to Mexico to study the pink cotton bollworm for the U.S. Department of Agriculture. In 1939, Mr. Bibby is listed as a passenger on the Santa Barbara which sailed from Calloa, Peru, to New York. And Mr. Bibby is listed in Who's Who in the South and Southwest in 1976 and 1978. The final entry is notice of his death on the Social Security Death Index.


Francis Flavious Bibby died in March 1980. His last residence was Smithville, the place of his birth 86 years earlier.


Google searches and Google Book searches for Francis Flavius Bibby or F.F. Bibby show numerous references in a variety of national and international entomological publications. While in the Navy during the war, Mr. Bibby did entomological field studies at various islands while on shore leave. I found no on-line family trees to indicate his family although one undocumented tree indicated that he was married several times and had no children.


If you have information about F.F. Bibby, I'd most appreciate hearing from you. Of major interest are his journals, field notes and photographs. Does anyone know where they are housed?


~~~~~~~~~~


Terry Thornton is a retired college administrator and former Amory Middle School principal who resides in Fulton. He can be contacted at hillcountrymonroecounty@gmail.com or at his FaceBook account.

~~~~~~~~

Wednesday, March 17, 2010

MORRISON CEMETERY, Monroe County, Mississippi


Index of burials based upon names found on the grave markers,

March 15, 2010


by Terry Thornton
email: hillcountrymonroecounty@gmail.com



The following alphabetized index was transcribed from the names on grave markers in Morrison Cemetery. The grave markers in the cemetery were photographed on March 15, 2010.


Morrison Cemetery is located on the west side of Cowden Road north-northeast of Hatley. A sign marks the cemetery; there is a driveway for off-road parking. The cemetery contains about one acre and has, at present, twenty burials.


The index below contains the individual's surname, given name(s), year of birth, year of death, name of cemetery, and the image number of the grave marker photograph which also serves as a link (click to view). The abbreviation nod means "no other date."


Researchers are advised to view the grave marker photographs to determine the exact spelling of names, to establish the complete dates of birth and death, and to ascertain the relationships of individuals sharing markers.


ALLRED, Amanda Beth, 1986, 2006, Morrison, img 4979


DAVIS, Nell M., 1926, 1966, Morrison, img 4965*


LINDSEY, Cordie Lucille, 1925, 1996, Morrison, img 4977


MAES, Millicent, 1914, 1998, Morrison, img 4975

MORRISON, Bill, 1891, 1968, Morrison, img 4969*

MORRISON, Chattie Bell, 1904, 1963, Morrison, img 4969*

MORRISON, Fannie, 1862, 1968, Morrison, img 4971

MORRISON, Ivy, 1921, 1969, Morrison, img 4972

MORRISON, John, 1852, 1921, Morrison, img 4971

MURPHY, Johnie F., 1918, nod, Morrison, img 4970

MURPHY, Johnnie G., 1927, 1983, Morrison, img 4970


STRAWBRIDGE, Carolyn Jane, 1945, 2003, Morrison, img 4978

STRAWBRIDGE, James Elmer, 1927, nod, Morrison, img 4978


THOMPSON, Melena Morrison, 1929, 2007, Morrison, img 4973


VAN HOOK, Oscar P., 1949, nod, Morrison, img 4964

VAN HOOK, Wanda K., 1952, 2009, Morrison, img 4964


WALTERS, Newtie, 1904, nod, Morrison, img 4976

WALTERS, Will, 1892, 1973, Morrison, img 4976

WARNER, J. Louise, 1910, 2000, Morrison, img 4974

WARNER, Woodrow W., 1913, 1989, Morrison, img 4974



*Originally interred at Clover-Ridge Cemetery, Itawamba County, Mississippi; relocated to Morrison Cemetery, Monroe County, Mississippi.


Thanks to Sherman Thornton, Amory, Mississippi, for his help in photographing the grave markers.


Additional reading: For an earlier transcription of Morrison Cemetery, see Patricia Horne's April 2006 transcription of the burials online at http://www.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~msmonro2/cems/morrison.html

The Morrison and Davis burials mentioned above as originally at Clover-Ridge Cemetery, Itawamba County, are indexed in that cemetery by Betty Burton-Cruber in the early 1970s in her Cemetery Markings.


Index and grave marker photographs copyright © 2010. William T. "Terry" Thornton, Fulton, Mississippi. All Rights Reserved.



Tuesday, March 16, 2010

KNOWLES CEMETERY, Monroe County, Mississippi

Inventory of Burials

Transcribed from photographs of grave markers found in the cemetery, March 15, 2010


by Terry Thornton

email: hillcountrymonroecounty@gmail.com



The following index is an alphabetized list of names transcribed from the grave markers in the abandoned Knowles Cemetery, Monroe County, Mississippi. The small family cemetery is surrounded by a low iron fence and is located south of Becker just south of Halfway Creek. It is found a few yards off Old Highway 25. Located in a dense wood, the cemetery is not marked nor is it easily seen from the roadway. To the left of the fenced portion is an area which appears to contain burials but only three markers with writing were found there.


The burial within the fenced portion of the cemetery seems to be allied families of Knowles, Stanton, Watkins, and Williamson. Several of the Knowles markers state the individuals were from South Kingston, Rhode Island.


The most recent burial noted is 1887; the earliest burial is 1840. The majority of those buried at Knowles Cemetery died in the 1860s.


The cemetery is in rough condition; much work is needed to clean, restore, and protect these early burials in Monroe County. Additional markers may be found beneath the rubble of the forest. The cemetery is on private land and requires a guide with permission to enter the property.


Index format:

SURNAME, Given names, year of birth, year of death, name of cemetery, image number (which serves as a link to the photograph of the grave marker)

Added information is included within brackets.


Outside the fenced portion of the cemetery to the left; note numerous brick and broken stones in that general area

____, ___ broken stone, 1833, 1871, Knowles, img 4954

CRUMP, Ida E., 1866, 1866, Knowles, img 4951

CRUMP, infant, 1869, 1869, Knowles, img 4949


Inside the fenced portion of the cemetery:

KNOWLES, Benjamin G., [abt 1808], died 1866, age 58 years, Knowles, img 4905

KNOWLES, Charles Lewis, [abt 1849], died 1850, age 1 year, Knowles, img 4936

KNOWLES, Clovis T., [abt 1859], died 1870, age 11 years, Knowles, img 4940

KNOWLES, Edwin G., 1850, 1881, Knowles, img 4912

KNOWLES, Eugene A., [abt 1849], 1851, age 21 months, Knowles, img 4934

KNOWLES, Fannie M., 1848, 1879, img 4914

KNOWLES, Fannie Mabel. [abt 1887], 1880, 3 years age, Knowles, img 4917

KNOWLES, Hannah C., [abt 1819], 1870, age 51 years, Knowles, img 4906

KNOWLES, James C., [abt 1811], 1855, Knowles, img 4925

KNOWLES, Lewis, [abt 1820], 1844, age 24 years, Knowles, img 4946

KNOWLES, Oliver Benjamin, [abt 1851], 1852, age 11 months, Knowles, img 4931

KNOWLES, Ralph Alexander, [abt 1848], 1852, age 4 years, Knowles, img 4926

KNOWLES, Sarah Ann, [abt 1832], 1855, age 23 years, Knowles, img 4919

KNOWLES, Sarah, [abt 1846], 1846, age 6 months, Knowles, img 4938

KNOWLES, Stephen D., [abt 1813], 1852, age 39, Knowles, img 4930

KNOWLES, Susan G., [abt 1815], 1855, age 40 years, Knowles, img 4921

STANTON, Abeel, [1811], 1849, age 38 years, Knowles, img 4910

WATKINS, Adele, 1887, 1887, Knowles, img 4903

WATKINS, Herbert Bryan, 1885, 1886, Knowles, img 4901

WATKINS, May Irene, 1883, 1884, Knowles, img 4898

WILLIAMSON, N.H., 1833, 1873, Knowles, img 4908


Researchers are advised to follow the image number link to Flickr and view the grave marker photographs to determine accuracy of names and dates as well as to obtain additional information about family relationships.


Below are four general photographs of the cemetery.



Additional reading: Knowles Cemetery was transcribed by W. A. Evans, Frank Crawford, and J. L. Shell in May 1938. Their inventory is presented in the Monroe County Mississippi Cemetery Records (reprinted in 1980 by Lowndes County Department of History and Archives), pages 57 - 58. The 1938 transcription by Evans et al is thought to be the only other listing of the cemetery available.


Acknowledgement: Thanks to the assistance of Ray Blaylock, Sipsey Fork, and others who responded to my plea for hunters to advise me of the location of abandoned cemeteries in Monroe County. Through Mr. Blaylock's efforts, the cemetery was marked and his directions enabled me and my guide, brother Sherman Thornton of Amory, to go direct to the cemetery.


Cemetery index and photographs copyright © 2010. William T. "Terry" Thornton, Fulton, Mississippi. All Rights Reserved.

Monday, March 15, 2010

A Book Review: Itawamba County, MS: World War I Draft Registration Records

by Terry Thornton
email: hillcountrymonroecounty@gmail.com

Cover of Martha Reece Bone Lake's recent book.


Mississippi genealogist Martha Reece Bone's Itawamba County, MS: World War I Draft Registration Records with selected information from censuses, cemetery books, and Social Security death indexes is a treasure-trove of information about the Hill Country.

Written and privately published by the author in 2007, hard-bound copies of this 232 page reference book are available for purchase at the Itawamba County Historical Society for $20 each to help raise funds to benefit the Society. Copies of this book may also be obtained direct from the author (contact her by email bone@tecinfo.com for specifics).

Researched over a period of several years, Martha transcribed information from the WWI draft cards complied on individuals from Itawamba County. She then added information about the individual which she gleaned from various census reports, burial information (from Betty Burton-Cruber's Cemetery Markings), and data, if available, from the SS Death Index.


Typical page from the book shows two columns of information per page


A typical entry in the alphabetized list of individuals for whom draft registration cards were prepared includes name, address, age, place of birth, race, occupation, family information including marital status and often name of spouse, physical description (size, built, eye and hair color), voting precinct, date of registration, and additional information from the census, burial information, and Social Security Death index.

Of particular interest to many researchers are the various given names or nicknames under which Martha found information about the individual ---- and she provides those various names. Inconsistencies in spelling of name, date of birth, and age of individual from the various records examined in this research are noted

Also included are a list of the registrars for Itawamba Country. The book ends with an alphabetical list of World War I veterans from Itawamba County.

On a personal note, Martha Reece Bone Lakes is retiring and making plans to move out-of-state. We wish her much happiness and contentment in her new location --- and with many thanks for her contributions to family research in the Hill Country of Northeast Mississippi.

Sunday, March 14, 2010

Through the windshield video: Marching Across the Tennessee River



Click the start button above to start another Through the Windshield Video. This one is called Marching Across the Tennessee River. The view, through the front windshield of my car, is of the Natchez Trace Parkway going north across the Tennessee River in northwest Alabama.

No, we didn't go sideways --- I'm learning how not to pan the camera. The music is something that was playing on my car audio system. I'm driving a Prius --- and you will please notice that it didn't accelerate out of control not even once as I tootled along averaging (on the Trace) more than 50 miles per gallon of gasoline.

A new blog: Itawamba County Mississippi BOOK OF THE DEAD

by Terry Thornton
email: hillcountrymonroecounty@gmail.com


An on-going project is underway to photograph and to transcribe all of the grave markers in Itawamba County, Mississippi. The transcriptions and photographs of the grave markers will be posted at the Book of the Dead as the various cemeteries are completed.

The first cemetery to be posted online at Book of the Dead is Walton Cemetery, a medium-sized rural cemetery which dates to approximately 1860. Walton Cemetery continues to receive burials; the last published index of the burials there was by Betty Burton-Cruber completed in the early 1970s.

Because of the length of the new index to all 900 burials now at Walton Cemetery, the index was broken into twenty alphabetized sections arranged by surnames. At the Book of the Dead, each of those subsections are listed in the right side-bar and are easily accessed.

Within the next few days, the transcriptions of and the links to the photographs of Maxey Cemetery and Chastain Cemetery (both completed in late 2009) will be posted at the Book of the Dead. Files Cemetery which was photographed last week will be posted soon --- and plans are to photograph Little Cemetery this week.

All of the transcriptions from the grave markers of Itawamba County cemeteries will be indexed in a master list at the Book of the Dead.


Itawamba Historical Society meeting, March 16, 2010

Patricia Neely-Dorsey is the scheduled speaker for the March regular meeting of the Itawamba Historical Society, Tuesday, March 16, 2010. Patricia, author of the popular book of folk-poems, REFLECTIONS OF A MISSISSIPPI MAGNOLIA, will be reading from her book at the IHS auditorium, Mantachie, MS (corner of Church St and Museum Drive) at 6 PM. All are invited.

A Poem and a Photograph for Hill Country: The Broken Chain

by Terry Thornton
email: hillcountrymonroecounty@gmail.com

While photographing grave markers in a cemetery last week, I found an excellent example of the "broken chain" symbol. The carved broken-chain image on the stone of Thomas Christian in Walton Cemetery, Itawamba County, bears mute testimony of the sorrow a missing link has on a family --- a chain is no stronger than its weakest link --- and if a link is missing, the chain is broken. The symbol imagery is strong and evocative.

John Ruskin wrote a long poem, The Broken Chain, which contains lines which may be used to describe the grief one feels over the death of a beloved spouse. The following lines were taken from various portions of The Broken Chain.

. . .The silence of her voice was broken,
As by a gasp of mental pain:
May the faith thou hast forgotten
Bind thee with its broken chain. . . (page 131)

. . . Through the dimly woven forest
Comes the cry of one in pain ---
May the faith thou hast forgotten
Bind thee with its broken chain. . . (page 139)

. . . There was another echo in his ear ---
An under murmur deep and clear,
The faint low sob of one in pain:
May the faith thou hast forgotten
Bind thee with its broken chain. . . (page 146)

. . . Passed on the air, in passion broken,
The faint low sob of one in pain ---
Lo! the faith thou hast forgotten
Bind thee with its broken chain. . . (page 159)

SOURCES:

Broken chain photograph, detail from the grave marker of Thomas Christian, 1827 - 1911, Walton Cemetery, Itawamba County, Mississippi, March 7, 2010, Terry Thornton, Fulton, Mississippi.

The Broken Chain by John Ruskin. From The Complete Works of John Ruskin. New York: Longmans, Green and Company. 1903. Pages 124 - 180.


Saturday, March 6, 2010

A Hill Country Hootie Hoo --- An Epitaph

Special to Hill County. Submitted by I.J. Porcum, IV.

An Epitaph

IGNORAMUS JUGUM PORCUM
May 1, 1763 - March 4, 2010

Here sit the stone
Below lie the bones
Of a man whose words
Were rarely conjugated verbs.

The number of his subjects
Never matched his action word
But write he did
With abandon, free as a bird.

His only use of grammar
Was to prove what
A rabbit could do
To a log. Pitiful prepositions.

A kreative speler,
A sprinkler of commas,
Was he -- our
Most challenged fellow.

Of rhyming patterns
Or rules of writing
Died he, Witless
But, oh, so blissful.

Mr. Porcum passed to the great beyond, called home so-to-speak, appropriately on March 4, the National Grammar Day, during, a bad, attack, of, punctuation.