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Showing posts with label Davis. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Davis. Show all posts

Sunday, January 31, 2016

Sunday's Obituary: Lena (Alley) Davis

Nashville Tennesseean, 28 September 1956, page 52

Mrs. Larned Davis
Rites Incomplete

    Funeral arrangements for Mrs. Larned Davis, 76, of 3853 Saunders Ave., will be at 10:30 a.m. (CDT) tomorrow at Phillips-Robinson funeral home, 2707 Gallatin road.
    Mrs. Davis died yesterday morning at her home after a year's illness. The body is at the funeral home.
    A native of Nashville, Mrs. Davis was the former Lena Alley, daughter of the late Walter P. Alley and Idella Young Alley. She was educated in Nashville public schools and lived here all her life.
    In 1895 she was married to Larned Davis, a Nashville millwright. He died in 1935.
    Mrs. Davis was a member of the Church of Christ.
    She is survived by three daughters, Mrs. Charles Jacobs and Miss Frances Davis, both of Nashville, and Mrs. I. G. Harris, Gallatin; two sons, John R. Davis, Nashville, and Walter E. Davis, Brewerton, N.Y.; two sisters, Mrs. John Hudson, Nashville and Mrs. E. B. Howell, Skokie, Ill.; three grandchildren and one great-grandchild.

Nashville Tennesseean, 28 September 1956, page 52

DAVIS––Thursday morning, Sept. 27, 1956 at 11 o'clock at her home, 3853 Saunders Ave., Mrs. Lena Davis, survived by three daughters, Mrs. Charles Jacobs and Mrs. I. G. Harris of Gallatin, Miss Frances Davis of this city; two sons, John R. Davis of this city and Walter E. Davis, Brewerton, N.Y.; two sisters, Mrs. John Hudson of this city and Mrs. E. B. Howell of Skokee, Ill., three grandchildren and one great-grandchild. Remains rest at the funeral home of Phillips-Robinson Co. where services will be conducted by Paul Yucker at 10:30 a.m. (CDT) tomorrow. Pallbearers will be J. Webb Wherry, Casey Hutson, Hugh Hutson, Buford Hutson, Austin Hutson and Raymond Alley.

Lena (Alley) Davis was the mother of Walter Enloe Davis, the second husband of my great-grandmother Anna Gertrude Tarkington.

Thursday, August 6, 2015

Those Places Thursday: Orangeport Road, Brewerton, New York

My great-grandmother Anna Gertrude Tarkington and her husband Walter Enloe Davis lived on Orangeport Road in Brewerton, Onondaga County, New York in the 1950s (and possibly in the 1940s as well).

Mexico Independent, 17 May 1959, page 13

 Orangeport Road, Brewerton, New York. Google Maps.

Two years ago when I was in the area, I drove through Brewerton and onto Orangeport Road to see the street that my great-grandmother had lived on.


Brewerton United Methodist Church is located on Orangeport Road.


Brewerton United Methodist Church

 My great-grandmother was a member of this church. However, she did not attend church in this building. She died in 1959, and in 1960, the decision was made to relocate. Land on Orangeport Road was donated in 1961, and the first service at the new building was held on 9 February 1964. (The History of the Brewerton United Methodist Church)

Railroad tracks cross Orangeport Road.

Orangeport Road, Brewerton, New York. Google Maps.

The Black Creek also crosses Orangeport Road.

Unfortunately I do not know which home on Orangeport Road my great-grandmother lived in, or whether it is still standing.

Orangeport Road, Brewerton, New York

Saturday, April 4, 2015

52 Ancestors: Week 14 "Favorite Photo": Anna Gertrude Tarkington

One of my favorite photos is the above picture of my great-grandmother Anna Gertrude Tarkington. This photo was probably taken in upstate New York, possibly at her home on Orangeport Road in Brewerton, New York. I am not sure if she lived anywhere else after she and her second husband Walter Enloe "Bill" Davis moved to New York. My father visited Gertrude and Bill in New York when he was young, and he recalls that they had wild strawberries in their backyard. One of the things I love about this photo is that Gertrude is holding a cat (probably her cat). I have loved cats since I was young (I got my first cat at age 4). I currently have five cats. They are my babies. My paternal grandparents, Gertrude's son Henry Cornelius Gatlin and Helen Martha Marie (Anderson) Gatlin, did not have pets. From knowing my grandfather, I would not have guessed that his mother would be a "cat person," but she seems very fond of the cat that she is holding in the photo. This is the first photo of Gertrude that I ever saw, and I immediately had positive feelings about her. One reason is that she seems to have liked cats, but another is that I see a resemblance between her and my grandfather, her son. Although I never met her, this photo gives me the impression that she was a very nice woman.

Tuesday, February 17, 2015

52 Ancestors: Week 7 "Love": Walter Enloe Davis

My great-grandmother Anna Gertrude Tarkington and her first husband, my great-grandfather Henry Brown Gatlin, did not have a happy marriage. But Gertrude found love with her second husband, Walter Enloe "Bill" Davis.

Walter was born in Nashville, Tennessee on 17 February 1899. He was the son of Larned Davis and Lena Alley. In 1900, he and his parents lived at 941 Woodland Street, Nashville, Tennessee. I have not been able to locate Walter in the 1910 United States Census. He was not in his parents' home in Sumner County, Tennessee. When he registered for the World War I draft in 1918, Walter was living with his parents in Bethpage, Sumner County, Tennessee and working as a farmer. He was not in their household in 1920, and I have been unable to locate him in census records.

In 1930, Walter lived at 4530 N. Lincoln Street, Chicago, Illinois. He worked as a  chauffeur for a private family. My great-grandmother Gertrude (Tarkington) Gatlin and her son, my paternal grandfather Henry Cornelius Gatlin, lived with him and were listed as lodgers, but I suspect that Walter and Gertrude were already in a relationship.

Walter applied for a Social Security account on 25 February 1937. At that time, he lived at 4719 N. Winchester Ave. Chicago and worked for Schach Motor Livery, 1820 Lawrence Avenue.

In 1940, Walter and Gertrude lived at  4710 Wolcott. Walter worked as a chauffeur for a motor livery company. He and Gertrude were listed as married. However, they may not yet have been married. According to my father's baby book, he received a birthday gift from Grandma Gatlin and Bill Davis for his first birthday in 1942, and he received a gift from Grandma Davis for his second birthday in 1943. So they may have actually married between March 1942 and March 1943.

Sometime between 1940 and 1943, Walter and Gertrude moved to New York State. My father took a trip to Utica, New York to visit them on 1 August 1943. I am not sure if they had more than one residence in New York. I only know of one: Orangeport Road in Brewerton, Onondaga County, New York.

Gertrude died on  9 July 1959. On 27 February 1962, Walter married Mary Katherine Johnson in Manchester, Coffee County, Tennessee.

Walter died in Davidson County, Tennessee on 3 September 1983. There is a gravestone for him (shared with Gertrude) in Cedarville Cemetery, Cedarville, New York, but I am not sure whether he is buried there. His death date is not inscribed on the stone.

Supplemental report of birth, Walter Enloe Davis. Tennessee Delayed Birth Records, 1869–1909. Nashville, Tennessee: Tennessee State Library and Archives. Available from Ancestry.com. Tennessee, Delayed Birth Records, 1869-1909 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2012.

World War I draft registration card, Walter Enloe Davis. United States, Selective Service System. World War I Selective Service System Draft Registration Cards, 1917-1918. Washington, D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration. M1509, 4,582 rolls. Imaged from Family History Library microfilm. Available from Ancestry.com. U.S., World War I Draft Registration Cards, 1917-1918 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations Inc, 2005.   

Walter Enloe Davis, SS no. 351-07-2053, 25 February 1937, Application for Account Number (Form SS-5), Social Security Administration, Baltimore, Maryland.

Friday, February 13, 2015

World Radio Day


February 13 is World Radio Day. Jorge Álvarez, the chairman of the Academia Española de la Radio (Spanish Radio Academy), wrote to Kōichirō Matsuura, the director general of UNESCO, in January 2008 and proposed an international day to celebrate radio. On 3 November 2011, at its 36th session, UNESCO's General Conference proclaimed World Radio Day. February 13 was chosen as the date because United Nations Radio was established on 13 February 1946. The proclamation was formally endorsed by the United Nations General Assembly on 14 January 2013.

According to the official World Radio Day Web site, the goals of World Radio Day are:

  • raising greater awareness among the public and the media of the importance of radio
  • encouraging decision makers to establish and provide access to information through radio
  • enhancing networking and international cooperation among broadcasters
One of the questions asked by United States census enumerators in 1930 was whether the household had a radio. All four of my grandparents were living in households with a radio.

1930 United States census, Chicago, Cook County, Illinois, Ward 47, population schedule, enumeration district 16-743A, sheet no. 18A. Available from Ancestry.com. 1930 United States Federal Census [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations Inc, 2002.

1930 United States census, Chicago, Cook County, Illinois,Ward 19, population schedule, enumeration district 16-722, sheet no. 21B. Available from Ancestry.com. 1930 United States Federal Census [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations Inc, 2002.

1930 United States census, St. Louis City, Missouri, Ward 14, population schedule, enumeration district 96-496, sheet no. 3A. Available from Ancestry.com. 1930 United States Federal Census [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations Inc, 2002.

1930 United States census, St. Louis City, Missouri, Ward 8, population schedule, enumeration district 96-382, sheet no. 20A. Available from Ancestry.com. 1930 United States Federal Census [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations Inc, 2002.

References
Proclamation of a World Radio Day
UN Officially Endorses World Radio Day
Why World Radio Day?
World Radio Day
World Radio Day 2015

Saturday, December 6, 2014

52 Ancestors: #49 Anna Gertrude Tarkington

My great-grandmother Anna Gertrude Tarkington was born on 16 April 1889 in Nashville, Tennessee. She was the fourth of five children, and youngest daughter, of James William Tarkington and Anna Malvina Binkley. When she was five years old, her father died. In 1900, she lived with her mother, her maternal grandmother Angeline (Mayo) Binkley, her sister Viola Maydell, and her brother Robert. Her oldest sister Laura Belle had married Patrick Henry Leech and lived nearby. When the 1900 United States census was taken, her sister Margaret was enumerated in the household of their paternal grandparents. By 1905, Gertrude was working as a telephone operator for the East Tennessee Telephone Company.

Nashville City Directory, 1905. Nashville, TN: Marshall-Bruce-Polk Co. Available from Ancestry.com. U.S. City Directories, 1821-1989 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2011.

On 12 June 1907, Gertrude gave birth to a son, Robert Leland Taylor. He died on  4 July 1907 and was buried in the family cemetery in Vaughn's Gap, Tennessee. Gertrude's sister Margaret "Maggie" was the informant on the death certificate; she stated that the father was unknown. But since her child had a different surname, Gertrude must have known who his father was. I suspect that Maggie also knew, but did not wish to reveal his name.

On 19 November 1909, Gertrude married Henry Brown Gatlin in Nashville. She probably did not know it, but he had not yet divorced his first wife Rose Kuenninger. Shortly after their marriage, Henry and Gertrude moved to Chicago, Illinois. Their first child, my paternal grandfather Henry Cornelius Gatlin, was born in Chicago on 14 April 1910. My grandfather should have been enumerated in the 1910 United States census; it was supposed to include everyone who was in the household on 15 April 1910. However, he was not enumerated. Henry and Gertrude were incorrectly enumerated under the surname Galter. They were lodgers in the household of N. King, and several other lodgers also resided in the household. Gertrude and Henry were probably not the ones who provided the information to the census taker. Henry divorced his first wife Rose in 1916, probably without telling Gertrude.

On 26 June 1923, Gertrude gave birth to a stillborn son, Eugene Joseph Gatlin. The stillbirth was caused by placenta previa. Eugene Joseph was buried in Oak Forest Cemetery, Oak Forest, Cook County, Illinois.

On 29 November 1929, Gertrude filed for divorce. On 26 August 1929, while he was drunk, her husband Henry had threatened her life and thrown her out of their home. He later tried to break into her new residence with the intention of hurting her. She obtained a restraining order against him. Because no one appeared to prosecute the case, it was dismissed. She and her husband remained separated. In the 1930 United States census, Gertrude and her son (my grandfather) were living in the household of Walter E. Davis. They were listed as lodgers. Like Gertrude, Walter had been born in Tennessee. They later married. I suspect that they were already in a relationship at the time that the 1930 U.S. Census was taken. Gertrude was listed as widowed, but her husband was still alive.

On 24 January 1935, Gertrude's mother passed away in Memphis, Tennessee. She had been visiting her granddaughter (Gertrude's niece) Nina (Leech) Clark. Gertrude was the informant on her mother's death certificate; she may have been visiting prior to her mother's death, or may have traveled to Memphis immediately after hearing the news.

In late 1939, Gertrude's niece Louise (her sister Margaret's daughter) came to stay with her and Walter (called "Bill") at their residence, 4710 No. Wolcott Av., Chicago, Illinois. Louise's husband and former stepfather John Joseph Berberick had recently passed away. They had been living in Cedarville, New York. Margaret had passed away in 1929.

In the 1940 United States census, Gertrude and Walter were listed as married. However, they may not have actually been married at that time. According to my father's baby book, for his first birthday in 1942, he received a birthday gift from Grandma Gatlin and Bill Davis. For his second birthday in 1943, he received a gift from Grandma Davis. There is a section about trips in my father's baby book, and it says that on August 1, 1943 he took a train to Utica, New York to see his Grandma Davis. Gertrude and Bill moved to New York sometime in the early 1940s. They must have been in New York by 1943.They lived on Orangeport Road in Brewerton, Onondaga County, New York. I am not sure if their home on Orangeport Road was their only New York residence. or just their last one. My father remembers that they had wild strawberries in their backyard. Gertrude was a member of the Brewerton Methodist Church and its Women's Society of Christian Service (now United Methodist Women).

There were many "black sheep" on my grandfather's father's side of the family, but my grandfather was a good man. He must have taken after his mother's side of the family. Gertrude must have been a good mother, and raised him well. Looking at the photo below, I definitely see a resemblance between my grandfather and his mother. As a cat lover, I am glad to see that Gertrude appears to have liked cats.


Gertrude died in St. Joseph's Hospital in Syracuse, New York on 9 July 1959, as a result of ovarian cancer. She was buried in Cedarville Cemetery in Cedarville, New York, near her sister Margaret.

 Mexico Independent, 17 May 1959, page 13

Certificate of death, Gertrude Davis. 9 July 1959. New York State Department of Health, Office of Vital Statistics.

Syracuse Post Standard, 10 July 1959, page 9.

Saturday, August 30, 2014

Sympathy Saturday: Card of Thanks, Walter E. Davis

Mexico Independent, 23 July 1959

Walter E. Davis placed this notice in the Mexico Independent (Mexico, Oswego County, New York) after the death of his wife, my great-grandmother Gertrude (Tarkington) Davis on 9 July 1959 in Syracuse, Onondaga County, New York. The couple lived in Brewerton, Onondaga County, New York.