What I Have Been Doing Lately

1.  I had purchased several hundred photos on eBay that all turned out to be a family collection.  After hunting around for a while I finally found the family to which they belong.  I scanned roughly 70 of the photographs and mailed those off to the family on Tuesday.  In the coming weeks I will scan the rest of them so I can get those mailed off, too.  I am extremely happy that I found the family, and I am extremely happy that they are getting their precious heirlooms back.  I had started a blog regarding the photos just in case I wasn’t able to find family.  I will be keeping it going so you can check it out here.The Lebo Family

 

2.  My mom and I went up to Tennessee to visit with family again.  After picking up Great-Aunt Kat we drove up to Clarksville to visit Grandmother and Granddaddy’s graves.  Then we drove down to Hurricane Mills (our usual spot) and visited with Donny and Bobbie.  We didn’t stay long because Bobbie wasn’t feeling well (luckily she is feeling much better now).  While there we had decided that instead of buying Nan Nan’s fried pies from Cissie Lynn’s store, we would go to Nan Nan’s store and buy them directly from her.  After driving out of our way (you can tell from the start of this that it ended badly) we got to the location only to find out that the location was moved.  The sign (of which I wish I had taken a photo) gave the address of the new location and said to stop in and visit.  So we drove even further out of the way.  Come to find out the new location was the original location:  the owner’s home.  She (I assume Nan Nan, but it might just be named Nan Nan by using her grandmother’s recipe or something) was not pleased to see us.  She seemed to be miffed that we pulled into her driveway.  After telling us she didn’t really have many pies to sell I asked her if she took credit cards.  No, she said, she didn’t even take them at the other location.  By now I was angry.  Their website (which is just their Facebook page from what I can tell) didn’t have the new address listed which caused the looooong drive.  They also didn’t have payment options on the page, so I didn’t know I should have stopped for cash.  But in the end, you know what?  Her attitude ruined the entire thing anyway.  Had she been more pleasant I may have considered driving out to an ATM and getting cash just to buy a fried pie.  Will I ever purchase another Nan Nan’s Homemade Fried Pie again?  Nope.  (I just checked out the Facebook page, and they now have that they don’t accept credit cards and failed to use spell check…ok, that’s just me being bitter and mean)Untitled

 

3.  A couple of weeks ago my mom and I got to meet new cousins who live here in Georgia:  Valerie Craft and her mom Ruby!  Valerie has the genealogy blog Begin With Craft, which is chock-full of great information and research tips.  Due to the shared Craft surname we think that may be how we are related.  Through DNA Valerie’s father matches up to Great-Aunt Kat an estimated 4th cousin.  That means to find out how they are related we would need to go back to, at the very least, Prestly Ezekiel Craft’s father.  I think it has been figured out that his name was John Craft (don’t hold me to that because I am not positive).  Kat’s Craft family goes back:

Henry Corbit Craft (1895 TN-1971 TN)

John Craft (1859 TN-1936 TN)

Thomas Craft  (abt 1810 NC-aft 1880 TN)

Prestly Ezekiel Craft (abt 1786 NC-btwn 1850 and 1860 TN)

Several people have that Prestly married his wife Mary Thaxton in Surry County, North Carolina.  I guess I will have to look into that more.Untitled

 

4.  My mom and I are getting ready for the Bondurant Family Association Annual Meeting next week.  I’m pretty excited about it!

 

5.  I recently applied to go back to school.  I have thought about it for a while, and now with the imminent closing of the Georgia Archives to the public I decided to just do it!  I applied to American Public University online school for history.  Who knows, maybe I will eventually become an archivist!Georgians Against Closing State Archives

 

6.  In my genealogy research I am currently working on (ready for this?  It’s like it is never-ending!):

-Who are Peter McQueen’s parents?  It really is driving me crazy not knowing.  The earliest I can find him is on an 1818 bill of sale for a slave named Daniel.  Peter doesn’t appear on any census record (by name at least) until 1840, though. 

-What happened to Spencer DeMumbrie?  When and where did he die?  Where is he buried?  Why is he being difficult?

-Why am I unable to locate James Franklin Stalls’s grave in Oak Grove Cemetery in Paducah, McCracken County, Kentucky?  His obituary says he is there, but there is no record of him as being buried there. 

-Is the research I did on Brett’s Murphy family correct?  It seems perfectly logical to me, but I was presented with something extremely different that is completely illogical to me.

-The Craft line (as mentioned above).

-The search for Eppy Willhite Craft’s death record.  I will have to write a whole post for this fun headache.  Let’s just say that no one is actually sure of her first name anymore, and her death cannot be found (and she had to have died unless she’s still alive at the ripe old age of about 150 years-old…which you never know, I guess).

-William Glenn Cathey:  where are you buried exactly?

-Amanda Summers: when, where and how did you die and where are you buried?  Oh, and who exactly is Lizzie’s father?  Or do you not even know? Winking smile

-And let’s just say many other research subjects, such as who are the parents of John B Smith?  Where exactly was Elizabeth Brownlee from?  Where is t
he Stalls family from?  And many, many more questions. 

 

I’m going to go watch movies now!

The DeMumbrie Conundrum

Nearly three months ago I discovered a record on FamilySearch.org for a woman by the name of Leah Demumbrie who married a man by the name of Henry Hodges on July 22, 1866 in Tunica County, Mississippi.  Intrigued, I sent a money order for $10 to Tunica County Clerk of Court for a copy of the record.  A few days later I received a phone call from them saying that they were unable to find the marriage record.  Kind of bummed me out.  Then my mom reminded me that it may have been in the marriage records for the “non-white” marriages.  So I called the Clerk of Court office back and inquired if the records were kept in separate books.  I was informed that they were, but the book it may be in was missing, and to give a couple of weeks to locate it.  Well, I waited.  And waited.  And waited.  I called back every couple of weeks.  Finally it came down to that the book is missing and the Clerk of Court office staff are totally unable to find it. 

Sigh.  I really wanted to see whose signature was on that marriage record as bond/security.

Then…

A distant cousin-several-times-over (you know about those cousins, right?  the cousins that you share relatives with through more than one line?), Karen Baker, sent me a message on Facebook that she would be going over to the Family History Library in Salt Lake City, Utah and would I like for her to look anything up for me.  WELL!  Yes, yes I would!  So I sent her the information, and she swung by the library and looked up the Leah Demumbrie marriage record.  She then sent that to me, along with ANOTHER marriage record with a DeMumbrie I haven’t heard of, and WOW! 

Yes, this leaves more questions, but I think I *might* know what’s going on here (to an extent).

So, back in the olden days (what some in the South may still refer to as “The Late Unpleasantness”) slaves were not allowed to marry LEGALLY.  However, when the Freedman’s Bureau was established on March 3, 1865 ex-slaves were granted the right to marry and, in effect, to make legal the unions that had been made (with permission from their “master(s)”) during the time of slavery.  So, what ended up happening is A LOT of marriages in 1865 and 1866 for ex-slaves.

So, Leah Demumbrie.  The reason that this marriage record caught my eye is because of the last name Demumbrie.  No one has this last name anymore (that I know of, anyway).  John Spencer DeMumbrie, my 3rd great-grandfather, is the grandson of Jacques-Timothée Boucher, Sieur de Montbrun, commonly known as Timothy Demonbreun, who is considered (at least according to Wikipedia and the Timothy Demonbreun Heritage Society) as "the “first citizen” of Nashville, Tennessee".  One day I will write a whole post on him, but for now we will just focus on Spencer DeMumbrie’s name.  There are many variations of “Demonbreun”.  There’s Demontbrun, Demumbra, Demonbrun, etc, etc.  But Spencer seems to be the only one with DeMumbrie/Demumbrie.  And he was the only DeMumbrie/Demumbrie in Tunica County, Mississippi (at least, according to census records, the only DeMumbrie/Demumbrie in Tunica County, Mississippi besides his wife (wives) and child).  And his child WAS NOT named Leah.  And his child DID NOT marry Henry Hodges in 1866.

Oh, let me just post the marriage recordLeah Demumbrie and Henry Hodges MarriageTO ANY MINISTER OF THE GOSPEL, JUDGE OF THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI, JUDGE, JUSTICE OR ANY OTHER OFFICER OF TUNICA COUNTY, AUTHORIZED TO CELEBRATE THE MARRIAGE CEREMONY—GREETING:

You are hereby authorized to celebrate the RITES OF MATRIMONY, between Henry Hodges colored, and Leah Demumbrie colored.  A certificate of the solemnization thereof you will transmit to the Clerk of the Probate Court of said County within six months from the date hereof.

In Testimony Whereof, I have hereunto set my hand and affixed the seal of my office, this 26th day of June A.D., 1866

JM Phillips, Clerk

By virtue of the above License, I have this day joined in the holy bonds of Matrimony Henry Hodges colored, and Leah Demumbrie colored.

Given under my Hand, This 22 day of July 1866

(?) Neblett J.P.

THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI

TUNICA COUNTY

Know all Men by these Presents, That we Henry Hodges colored, as principal, and Spencer Demumbrie colored, as security, are held and firmly bound unto the State of Mississippi in the sum of Two Hundred Dollars, payment of which well and truly to be made, we bind ourselves, our heirs, executors and assigns, firmly by these presents.  Given under our hands and seals, this (blank) day of (blank) A.D. 186(blank)

The Conditions of the above Obligation are such, That, whereas, the above bounden henry Hodges colored, has this day obtained a license to marry Leah Demumbry colored; now if there be no lawful cause why said marriage should not take place, then this obligation shall be void, otherwise remain in full force and virtue.

Henry Hodges (seal)

S. Demumbrie (seal)

 

Ok, so there are three scenarios that come to mind with this:

1.  Leah Demumbrie is an ex-slave of John Spencer DeMumbrie, and he signed as security for her to marry (they failed to mark out “colored” next to his name).

2.  Leah Demumbrie is an ex-slave and possible child of John Spencer DeMumbrie, and he signed as security for her to marry (they failed to mark out “colored” next to his name).

3.  The Spencer Demumbrie that signed as security for Leah Demumbrie to marry is not John Spencer DeMumbrie, but perhaps an ex-slave of John Spencer DeMumbrie who just happened to have the same name and was the actual father of Leah Demumbrie.

Yeah, I’m gonna say no for Number Three.  And here is why:

This is the 1871 marriage record for John Spencer DeMumbrie and Effee Jane Gilchrist.  See his signature at the bottom? Spencer DeMumbrie and Effee Jane Gilchrist Marrige 1871

Here, have a closer look:Spencer DeMumbrie Signature

Now, have a closer look at the signature on Leah Demumbrie’s marriage record:Spencer DeMumbrie Signature

They look the same!

Now, I tried to track down this Leah Demumbrie and Henry Hodges.  They do appear in in Austin, Tunica County, Mississippi in 1870, two families down from Spencer and his daughter (and his third wife…and his second wife’s mother…and an unknown woman).  Well, all I can say is Henry appears, since his wife is listed as Sarah.  She may or may not be Leah.  There are also two children, Nancy and William Hodges (ages 9 years and 4 years, res
pectively).  According to this census Henry was born in Mississippi about 1844 and Sarah was born in South Carolina about 1846.  So, based on place of birth, provided that Sarah is Leah, then we can take Number Two out of the equation.  Anyway, I can’t trace the family past 1870.  I don’t know where they went or what happened to them.Henry Hodges Family 1870 Tunica

 

The other curious marriage record is for Spencer Mhoon and Fanny Mhoon.  The security was signed by Gilbert Demumbrie.  Mhoon Marriage 1866 TO ANY MINISTER OF THE GOSPEL, JUDGE OF THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI, JUDGE, JUSTICE OR ANY OTHER OFFICER OF TUNICA COUNTY, AUTHORIZED TO CELEBRATE THE MARRIAGE CEREMONY—GREETING:

You are hereby authorized to celebrate the RITES OF MATRIMONY, between Spencer Mhoon colored, and Fany Mhoon colored. A certificate of the solemnization thereof you will transmit to the Clerk of the Probate Court of said County within six months from the date hereof.

In Testimony Whereof, I have hereunto set my hand and affixed the seal of my office, this 3rd day of February A.D., 1866

(illegible), Clerk

By virtue of the above License, I have this day joined in the holy bonds of Matrimony Spencer Mhoon colored, and Fany Mhoon colored.

Given under my Hand, This 4th day of February 1866

(illegible) J.P.

THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI

TUNICA COUNTY

Know all Men by these Presents, That we Spencer Mhoon colored, as principal, and Gilbert Demumbrie colored, as security, are held and firmly bound unto the State of Mississippi in the sum of Two Hundred Dollars, payment of which well and truly to be made, we bind ourselves, our heirs, executors and assigns, firmly by these presents. Given under our hands and seals, this 3rd day of February A.D. 1866

The Conditions of the above Obligation are such, That, whereas, the above bounden Spencer Mhoon colored, has this day obtained a license to marry Fany Mhoon colored; now if there be no lawful cause why said marriage should not take place, then this obligation shall be void, otherwise remain in full force and virtue.

Spencer (his x mark) Mhoon (seal)

Gilbert (his x mark) Demumbrie (seal)

 

I cannot find a Gilbert Demumbrie in Tunica County, Mississippi at all.  In fact, the only Gilberts that could have been old enough to sign a security had the surnames: Davis, Hurt, Perkins and Smith.  However, Gilbert Smith does live next door to Spencer Mhoon and Fanny Mhoon and 1870 in District 1, Tunica County, Mississippi.  And I can say with certainty that Spencer and Fanny Mhoon lived in Tunica County, Mississippi until at least 1910, when they were in their 70s.  They probably passed soon after.

So, who exactly is Leah Demumbrie?  And who is Gilbert Demumbrie?  And what happened to them?

Spencer DeMumbrie and Ellen Watson

I found something today that I haven’t heard before, nor have I run across it in my research…so I’m not really sure if anyone else has discovered it.  It definitely leads to further research, that’s for sure.

Ok, so I don’t have a marriage date for Spencer DeMumbrie and Cornelia Ann McMillen/McMillan.  I’m not sure if they married in Tennessee or Mississippi.  I thought at first it was probably Tennessee, in Shelby County, since that’s where Cornelia was living when the 1850 census was enumerated.  But then, of course, if Spencer was living in Mississippi when they married then it may have been there, since her parents are found on the 1860 census in the same county as Spencer and Cornelia. 

The easiest place to start looking is Shelby County, Tennessee since it’s online.  So I start searching, not knowing exactly what year to look for, just knowing they married sometime in the 1850s.  To my surprise I did find a marriage record for Spencer.  Even more surprising the marriage was not to Cornelia.

On December 7, 1848 Spencer DeMumbrie married a woman named Ellen Watson in Shelby County, Tennessee.  And whose name appears on the marriage record, I assume as bondsman?  One MG McMillen/McMillan, Cornelia Ann McMillen/McMillan’s father.Spencer DeMumbrie and Ellen Watson Marriage

Ok, so that’s pretty strange.  I never knew anything about Spencer having been married prior to Cornelia.  This means that Spencer was married (at least) three times:  Ellen Watson in 1848, Cornelia Ann McMillen/McMillan sometime in the 1850s and Effie Jane Gilchrist in 1871.

So wait, he married Ellen in 1848 and then married Cornelia within 10 years?  Yes, because the next document I found concerned Spencer dealing with Ellen's estate…within six months of their marriage.  Yup, that’s right, Ellen was deceased by June of 1849.  I’m not certain when exactly she died, or how…or even where she is buried…but I found the entire situation odd.  Dealing with her estate stretched out for several years, with Spencer paying off the last of her debts, as far as I can tell, in October of 1852.  (note:  pages from the settlement of the estate will be posted at a later date)Ellen Watson DeMumbrie Estate

So who is Ellen Watson?  Where did she come from?  Is she related to the McMillen/McMillan family?  How did she die?  Where is she buried?

Another interesting little tidbit I found:  Spencer appears on the 1850 census in both Davidson County, Tennessee (with his grandmother) and in Shelby County, Tennessee living with a Lewis family.  My mother said it is probably when he was working on the river.Spencer DeMumbrie 1850 Again

I still don’t have a marriage record for Spencer and Cornelia.

I Have An Overactive Imagination

So, I have been searching and searching for what possibly could have happened to (John) Spencer DeMumbrie and his second wife Effee Jane Gilchrist.  And as usual I am coming up empty handed.  The thought is that Spencer may be buried in Memphis, Shelby County, Tennessee somewhere.  Or maybe he is buried in Cheatham County, Tennessee on the land that his father Jean Baptiste Demonbreun and grandmother Elizabeth Bennett Durrat (or whatever her actual married surname was) is buried (and possibly his grandfather Timothy Demonbreun, but no one actually knows where that guy is buried, either). 

This isn’t a life post for Spencer, but there is some background information.

Facts about (John) Spencer DeMumbrie:

  • He was born in 1821 in Nashville, Tennessee
  • He lived in Nashville, Tennessee in 1850 with his brother and grandmother (who, by the way, was listed as being 105 years of age….just wait until I do a post on her!)
  • Spencer married Cornelia Ann McMillan sometime between 1850 and 1858
  • They had daughter Minnie in 1858
  • 1860 living in Tunica, Tunica County, Mississippi
  • 1870 Cornelia had died
  • 1870 Jane Gilchrist shows up on the census with Spencer and Minnie
  • 1872 Spencer marries Effee Jane Gilchrist (I still have not figured out where this woman came from)
  • Spencer and Effee Jane are never heard from again
  • Minnie marries Jerome E Richards, Sr in 1878 in Memphis, Shelby County, Tennessee

Ok, so those are some facts.  Some other facts that I have that my aunt had written down that I have not been able to find the records for are:

  • Apparently in 1872 Spencer put some land into a trust fund for Minnie.  The records were supposedly done in Shelby County, Tennessee.  I am still searching for these records.  My aunt wrote that Spencer’s handwriting was so shaky it is presumed that he was either very sick or dying.
  • My aunt also wrote that Minnie and Jerome sold the land in the trust fund to M.S. Leatherman in 1902.  As of the time she wrote this down (I’m guessing about 10-12 years ago) the Leatherman family still owned the land.  It was in Commerce Landing, Mississippi.  (which, just for S&G I looked up Commerce Landing, Mississippi and it’s Tunica alright, just as I suspected.  What made it amusing to me is that Google Maps has the marker sitting in the Mississippi River, rather than at least on shore…you know, like a landing).

So those are the facts as I know them, short and sweet.

Now for some speculations concerning Minnie:

  • Minnie went to a private girls school in Memphis
  • Minnie went to finishing school in Memphis
  • Minnie lived with relatives of some sort in Memphis

 

Now, are you ready for my theory about what happened to Spencer?  Get your tissues and chocolate ice cream ready, because this is going to be a love story to end all love stories (not really).

disclaimer:  so what you are about to read below…really, I just came up with this, so I have no verification that it is true, and it probably isn’t.  a complete figment of my imagination.  just sit back and enjoy the story

I think that after Cornelia died (which according to my aunt happened in 1868, but I can’t find that information either…I think it’s written in a family bible somewhere?) Spencer was so heartbroken and just didn’t know what to do with himself.  He began selling off his land (again, my aunt wrote that down, but I haven’t tried to find those records yet), perhaps the section containing her roses and her garden gnomes, all because the sight of them was a painful reminder of the great love that he had lost.  After a few years of mourning he sent Minnie to boarding school so that she could learn to be a proper young lady.  But Spencer was so lonely, and he had a young (and I do mean young) woman living in his home (I’m still not sure why Effee Jane lived with him…there is nothing listed in “Occupation” and I haven’t figured out yet how, if at all, she might be related to Cornelia-which I’m thinking she might be…like a niece or something).  He figured the logical thing to do would be to marry her.  So in December of 1871 he married Effee Jane Gilchrist.  Minnie was upset, refused to return for the wedding, deciding to stay in Memphis over Winter break with mysterious relatives.

And life went on.  Minnie saw her father only when he traveled to Memphis to see her (because, you know, she didn’t want to see Effee Jane).  On one trip to visit Minnie in 1872, not even a year after marrying his young wife, Spencer decided that since he had sold off most of his land it might be in his best interest to put the most valuable of the land he had left in Minnie’s name.  By now he had discovered that Effee Jane was nothing more than gold-digger after his land and money.  He suspected that she may have been poisoning him since their wedding night, spiking his cognac with…well, he didn’t know what with, but was pretty sure it was happening (this accounts for his shaky handwriting, by the way…maybe).

Through the years that he was married to Effee Jane (um…almost 6 years at this point) he kept her at arms length, pouring his own cognac, preparing his own peanut butter and jelly sandwiches, until he could figure out what to do to get out of the marriage (if he followed in the Demonbruen religious views then he was Catholic and wouldn’t have divorced her…I think it was the religion that caused Spencer’s grandfather to have two children three months apart by two different women-not the affair, but because his wife couldn’t divorce him even though…you know what?  that’s another story for another post).

Then…

The Yellow Fever Epidemic hit.  And it hit hard.  Spencer went first.  Effee was quite pleased that she was suddenly (she thought) the owner of all of the DeMumbrie riches (in Tunica, at least).  Refusing to spend any money on Spencer after his death, she dug a hole out on what was left of the plantation and buried him there.  What she didn’t know was that the fever clung to his skin, seeped out of every pore of his poor, lifeless body. Within days, however, she realized…realized that death was coming for her.  Realized that her greediness, her attempts at murder…had brought bad juju.  The fever killed her.

By the time Minnie’s grandmother Minerva returned from a trip to Maury County, Tennessee (where I think her family settled) both Spencer and Effee Jane had been dead for months.  The county officials, believing that the entire family had succumbed to the Yellow Fever sold off the DeMumbrie plantation to the highest bidder (like, they did this really quick).  Minerva, distraught (and wringing her hands), collapsed attempting walk to the Richards’ plantation.  Jerome Richards (Minnie’s future husband) was returning from the burial of his own family members (I have not yet found where his father and brothers died, or when) and came upon Minerva’s body.  He hurriedly made attempts to revive her, breathing a sigh of relief as she opened her eyes.

“Minnie…Minnie…”

And Jerome knew that meant Minnie had not yet learned the fate of her father (which I don’t know how Minerva knew Minnie had not yet learned about it since Minerva herself had just found out).

That very night Jerome and Minerva hopped a riverboat to Memphis.  Once there Minerva was unable to get the words out.  Minnie stood, probably with her hand on her hip, looking back and forth between them.  Jerome clasped her hand (the one not on her hip) in both of his…and whispered the fate of her father.  Minnie turned white.  Her eyes rolled to the back of her head and she fainted (I think she had a fainting couch behind her at the time).  Minerva sat across the room crying.

After a few tense moments Minnie came to.  She lay on the fainting couch, clutching the hanky Jerome handed her, crying, sobbing.  Jerome felt the emptiness Minnie was feeling.  He felt the need to do something, anything.  And as he kneeled on the floor, his hand aching from Minnie’s fingernails digging into his palm’s flesh, he  proposed.

Minnie was furious!  How dare he propose to her on a day of such sorrow!  How dare he even think that this was appropriate!  But Minerva, who had been sitting in the corner sniffling softly to herself, so softly that Jerome and Minnie had forgotten she was there, concluded that the marriage was the best idea for such a mournful time.  That without marrying Jerome there would be nowhere for Minnie to go.  Yes, yes…they must be married.  And right away.

Jerome scraped up the $1250 it cost for the marriage bond (I think he just happened to have it in his wallet).  And the two were married on January 21, 1878.

The couple, and Minerva, returned to Tunica, but after several years the pain of seeing her father’s plantation, now owned by another family, was too much for her broken heart.  The small family moved to Memphis.

And it was there that they lived out the rest of their lives.

And Spencer is now under a casino.

last disclaimer:  remember, none of that is true…nor will it win any literary awards.

Richards Family Bible

The following is a copy of the Richards Family Bible records, probably started by Minnie DeMumbrie, as you can see the handwriting for her death is different from the rest.  Although Jerome, Jr’s death date is written in a completely different handwriting, too.  One interesting thing to note is that though all previous records of the name “DeMumbrie” were spelled with the first “M” capitalized, she did not capitalize that letter.  Also, I’m not sure that George Washington Richards was listed in any other posts along with her other children.  I actually was not aware of him until after I wrote the post about her.  AND there seems to be a debate about Jerome, Sr and Jerome, Jr’s middle name.  It is either Edward, Edmund or Edmond.  I’m not really certain which, since different records have it listed all three ways and the Bible records below have it as Ed, Eddie or E.

Photos of the family members follow the Bible pages, with the exception of George Washington Richards and Bluford Napoleon Richards (I do not yet have photos of them, but, please, feel free to send some to me!).

 

 

Richards Family Bible MARRIAGES

Jerome Ed Richards

and

Minnie Demumbrie

was married 21st of

January 1878

 

Richards Family Bible BIRTHS

Jerome Eddie Richards Jr

was Born 18th Jany 1879

Claude Eugene Richards

was Born Aug 14th 1880

Bluford Napoleon Richards

was Born March 9th 1884

Clegg Demumbrie (Richards)

was Born March 16 1890

George Washington (Richards)

was Born July 4th 1892

Minnie Virginia (Richards)

was Born April 5th 1896

 

 

Richards Family BibleDEATHS

Geo W Richards

Died March 3rd 1894

Age One Year & Eight Months

J Ed Richards Jr

Died May 18 1929

Jerome E. Richards

Died Aug 14- 1822

Age 66 years 6 months

Minnie Demumbrie Richards

Died November 6, 1928

 

 

 

Jerome Edward/Edmund Richards, SrJerome E Richards, Sr

 

Minnie DeMumbrieMinnie DeMumbrie

 

Judge Jerome Edward Richards, Jr Jerome E Richards, Jr

 

Claude Eugene RichardsClaude Eugene Richards

 

Clegg DeMumbrie RicahrdsClegg DeMumbrie Richards

 

Minnie Virginia Richards abt 1908 Memphis, Tn    Minnie Virginia Richards

Malcolm McMillen and Minerva Worsham

If I have tracked down this couple correctly then this is my relationship to Malcolm McMillen and Minerva Worsham:

Me

Virginia Marie Stalls (mom)

James Paul Stalls, Jr (granddaddy)

Minnie Virginia Richards (g-grandmother)

Minnie DeMumbrie (2nd g-grandmother)

Cornelia Ann McMillen (3rd g-grandmother)

Malcolm McMillen/Minerva Worsham (4th g-grandparents)

 

I searched and searched and searched (and searched some more!) and I *think* I have found Cornelia A McMillen's parents.  I haven’t been able to trace them back to any particular McMillen or Worsham families, so anyone out there in internetland, feel free to help!  (and, of course, when I find information I will post it)

 

(note: after searching around on the internet I discovered that Cornelia A McMillan is probably actually McMillen.  unless all of the records are wrong, in which case I apologize.  the only place I have found it as McMillan is in my Granddaddy’s baby book and the 1860 census.  that baby book also has Caroline McQueen as Carolyn, but all records I have found are Caroline.)

 

On January 19, 1831 Malcolm McMillen and Minerva Worsham married in Maury County, Tennessee.Malcolm McMillen and Minerva Worsham Marriage

 

Within about two years after their marriage their daughter Cornelia was born.  However, it is not until 1850 that she shows up by name on a census with them.  This is because up until 1850 only head of household was named on the US Federal Population Census, though there are some states that conducted their own census reports that listed other family members.

 

In 1840 the family is found in Tipton County, Tennessee.  Head of household is Malcolm, listed as M.G. McMillon.  Everyone in the household:

2 males between 20 and 29 years of age

1 male between 30 and 39 years of age

1 female between 5 and 9 years of age

1 female between 20 and 29 years of age

1 female between 60 and 69 years of age

1 male slave under 10 years of age

1 male slave between 10 and 23 years of age

1 female slave between 10 and 23 years of age1840 McMillen Family

1840 Slave Census McMillen Family I’m guessing that one of the males between 20 and 29 years of age and the female between 20 and 29 years of age are Malcolm and Minerva.  The female between 5 and 9 years of age would be Cornelia.  I’m not sure who the others are, though.

 

In 1850 the family is found on the census living in District 14, Shelby County, Tennessee.  They are listed as:

M.C. McMillen, age 41 years, born in Tennessee

Manerva McMillen, age 40 years, born in North Carolina

Cornelia McMillen, age 18 years, born in Tennessee1850 Malcolm McMillen and Minerva Worsham Also living with the family is a man by the name of William P Day, age 24 years.  Not a single person living in the household has an occupation listed.  In fact, under occupation for Malcolm (M.C.) it actually says “none”.  This is also the very first time we get to see in which state they told the enumerator they were born.

 

The 1860 census has the whole family moved to Mississippi.  While Cornelia had married (John) Spencer DeMumbrie and was living in Tunica, Tunica County, Mississippi, her parents weren’t that far from her.  Malcolm and Minerva are shown living in Austin, Tunica County, Mississippi.  They are listed as:

M.G. McMillan, age 50 years, a farmer, born in North Carolina

M.H. McMillan, age 50 years, born in Virginia1860 Census Malcolm McMillen and Minerva Worsham So the place of birth changed for both of them. 

 

Sometime between 1860 and 1870 Malcolm died, most likely in Tunica County, Mississippi.  Cornelia had also died within the same time frame.  By 1870 Spencer DeMumbrie had moved with his daughter to Austin, Tunica County, Mississippi and Minerva is living with him, most likely to help raise his and Cornelia’s daughter Minnie.  In the household are:

S. DeMumbrie, age 49 years, a planter, born in Tennessee (this is Spencer)

Clara DeMumbrie, age 13 years, born in Mississippi (this is Minnie)

Jane Gilcris, age 19 years, born in Tennessee (this is Spencer’s future 2nd wife listed as Effee Jane Gilchrist on the marriage record)

Mary McMillen, age 62 years, housekeeper, born in North Carolina (this is Minerva)

Ellen Johnson, age 60, born in South Carolina (I don’t have a clue who this is)1870 Census Minerva Worsham Again, the place of birth changed.

 

By 1880 Minnie had married Jerome Richards.  Spencer had married Effee Jane Gilchrist and disappeared off the face of the planet (at least until I find where they went).  Minerva is found on that census living with Minnie and her family in District 1 and 2, Tunica County, Mississippi.  Living in the household are:

J.E. Richards (Jerome), age 24 years, a farmer, born in Arkansas, both parents born in Tennessee (this last bit of information is, of course, wrong)

C.A. Richards (Minnie), age 21 years, wife, keeping house, born in Mississippi, father born in North Carolina (wrong), mother born in Tennessee (wrong)

J.E. Richards Jr (Jerome Jr), age 2 years, son, born in Mississippi, father born in Arkansas, mother born in Mississippi

M.H. McMillen (Minerva), age 70 years, grandmother (to Minnie), at home, born in Tennessee, both parents born in Virginia (not yet sure)1880 Census Minerva Worsham The other people found living in the household are boarders: J.A. Matthews, Ellis Sholley and Barbary Shipp.  Once again, the place of birth has changed for Minerva.

 

There is no census for 1890, of course.  Jerome and Minnie are found living with their family in Memphis, Shelby County, Tennessee by 1900 and Minerva is not living with them.  I feel it’s safe to assume that she died sometime between the 1880 census and the 1900 census, especially since I can’t find her on any 1900 census (unless she was nice and spry and remarried).

 

So, now I just need to find the families of Malcolm and Minerva.  I also have a feeling that Effee Jane Gilchrist is somehow tied into either the McMillens, the Worshams or both.

Cornelia A McMillan (McMillen)-UPDATED

My relationship to Cornelia Ann McMillan:

Me

Virginia Marie Stalls (mom)

James Paul Stalls, Jr (granddaddy)

Minnie Virginia Richards (great-grandmother)

Minnie DeMumbrie (2nd great-grandmother)

Cornelia Ann McMillan (3rd great-grandmother)

 

Cornelia A McMillan in Granddaddy's Baby Book

 

Cornelia Ann McMillan was born about 1833 in Tennessee to parents MC McMillan (about 1808-?) and Minerva (Manerva) Unknown (about 1810-?).

 

The US Federal Census did not record the names of every person in a household until 1850, though a handful of state census records did.  Because of this the first census record that Cornelia can be found on is the 1850 US Census enumerated September 25, 1850 in District 14, Shelby County, Tennessee.  She is shown as 18 years of age and her place of birth is Tennessee.  She is listed as living with her parents MC (age 41 years) and Manerva (age 40 years).  The family name is spelled McMillen.  Also living with them is a man by the name of William P Day (age 24 years).  It doesn’t appear that any of them have a job, though I can see on the 1850 Slave Schedule that MC is the owner of one slave, a black female (age 11 years).

Cornelia A McMillan 1850 US Census

 

Cornelia married (John) Spencer DeMumbrie sometime between September 25, 1850 and May 13, 1858, though I don’t know what state they married.  On May 13, 1858 Cornelia gave birth to her daughter Minnie (whose name, judging by what I know now and matching it up to the initials on the 1860 census, may have been Cornelia Ann Minerva DeMumbrie).

 

The second, and final, census record that I can find Cornelia on is the 1860 US Census enumerated July 23, 1860 in Tunica, Tunica County, Mississippi.  Cornelia is listed as C.A. and 27 years of age.  Also listed in the household is her husband Spencer (listed as S., a farmer, age 38 years) and her daughter Minnie (listed as C.A.M., age 2 years).

Cornelia A McMillan 1860 US Census

 

I believe Cornelia passed between the time the 1860 census was enumerated and the time the 1870 census was enumerated since she is not found in 1870 with Spencer and Minnie, nor can I find her anywhere else.  I don’t know her death date, nor where she is buried, though I assume in Tunica is where she died.  If the plantation they lived on was washed away by the Mississippi River slowly eroding the land around it then it is quite possible her grave is now under water.

I’m still trying to locate more records for Cornelia’s parents.  Once I find more I will update!

UPDATE

I just went back and looked at the 1870 census record for Spencer DeMumbrie in Tunica, Mississippi.  I had forgotten that two older women in their 60’s were living in the household.  One of the women was named Mary Mcmillen, age 62 years and born in North Carolina.  I believe this Mary was Minerva (Manerva), Cornelia’s mother.  Since she was listed as “House Keeper” she may have moved in to help raise Minnie, who was 13 years of age at the time, before Spencer married Effee Jane Gilchrist.

I also found Minerva (Manerva) living in Tunica, Mississippi with Minnie in 1880 after Minnie had married Jerome Richards.  This census says that she was born in Tennessee rather than North Carolina as the other census records I found have said.  Because her name is listed as M.H. McMillen (age 70 years) I am beginning to think that the spelling in my Granddaddy’s baby book of McMillan may be incorrect.  I know that his baby book has Caroline McQueen’s first name spelled as Carolyn (see first photo above), which was incorrect.

Effee Jane Gilchrist

I have so many different scenarios in my head for who Effee Jane Gilchrist is and what became of her and Spencer DeMumbrie, but I will keep them in my head instead of sharing them (since most are hilariously macabre and totally uncalled for).

Who is Effee Jane Gilchrist?  She kind of appeared out of nowhere.  The only census I can find her on is the 1870 census enumerated in Tunica, Mississippi, listed as Jane Gilcris.  She is living with Spencer DeMumbrie, his 13 year old daughter Minnie (listed as Clara), Spencer’s mother-in-law Mary McMillan (listed as McMillen-her daughter, Spencer’s wife, had passed away sometime between 1860 and 1870) and some random woman named Ellen Johnson (I will figure out who she is someday).  I want to say that it is possible that Effee Jane, at the time, was a nanny or governess for Minnie, but it doesn’t list an occupation for her.  She was 19 years old, 30 years younger than Spencer and 6 years older than Minnie.

1870 Census with Effee Jane Gilchrist

The next, and last, documentation of Effee Jane Gilchrist is her marriage record to Spencer DeMumbrie.  They married in Tunica, Mississippi on December 27, 1871.

Effee Jane Gilchrist and (John) Spencer DeMumbrie Marriage Record

Security for the bond was put up by JN Neblett.  What is his relationship to Effee Jane Gilchrist and Spencer DeMumbrie?

I cannot find Spencer or Effee Jane on any census after.  On RootsWeb my aunt said that she saw somewhere that Spencer put his land into a trust fund for his daughter in 1872.  But that still doesn’t tell us where Spencer and Effee Jane went.  Did they have any children?  Where did they die?  When did they die?  Where are they buried?  Where did Effee Jane come from (yes, I know…Tennessee, but who did she come from?)?  Why can I not find her anywhere? 

Do you have the answers?

Inspector Clegg D Richards, Edmund (Edmond) Richards, (John) Spencer DeMumbrie and stories along the Mississippi River

I believe this newspaper article appeared in The Commercial Appeal, August 3, 1940.  It has been transcribed exactly how it appears in the paper.  Both Edmund Richards and Spencer DeMumbrie are my third great-grandfathers.

 

 

Article of Edmund Richards and Spener DeMumbrie The Commerical Appeal August 3, 1940 The article

 

Edmund Richards Edmund Richards

 

John Spencer DeMumbrie John Spencer DeMumbrie

 

 

Old River Boats Depended Upon Dozens Of Woodyards Scattered Along The Route

Police Inspector Clegg Richards’ Grandfathers Operated Two Of Largest-Abraham Lincoln Worked On Old Ferguson Farm Near Here

By Joe Curtis

For nearly 100 years Mississippi River steamboats used cord wood for fuel. Although coal began to come into service as a fuel early in the 50’s, it was not in general use until after the end of the Civil War and even then some boat masters believed good hickory or oak cord wood made a faster and hotter fire under the boats’ boilers.

For a number of years some of the largest woodyards along the Mississippi were located in Memphis territory, because for miles and miles the banks of the river were thick in forests of hickory, white oak, ash, and other hardwoods, which produced hot fires to generate steam rapidly an often saved a boat from falling in disgrace when racing another packet.

Many Yards Near Here

Between Memphis and just below Helena, Ark., there once were about 80 woodyards. In the vicinity of Memphis was the yard owned by Wappannocca Ferguson. Whether it was just above or below the city has never been determined, but a great many oldtime river pilots claimed it was in the big bend running the west side of President’s Island.

Anyhow, there is a story that Abraham Lincoln once worked for Mr. Ferguson. This is how it is supposed to have happened. Mr. Lincoln was returning to his home in Illinois, after making one of his famous flatboat trips down the Ohio and Mississippi to New Orleans between 1830-32. Not having much money with him, he and a number of companions engaged deck passage on an up-space boat.

Evidently, there must have been some slick fellows in the group, because when the boat went in at Wappannocca Ferguson’s to “wood up” Mr. Lincoln walked ashore and by mere chance met Mr. Ferguson. What transpired during their conversation is not known, but Mr. Lincoln said he had been “skinned” and he was given a job on Ferguson’s big farm and worked for him long enough to get money to pay his way home.

Invited to White House

When Mr. Lincoln was elected President of the United States, he extended to Mr. Ferguson a personal invitation to come and visit him at the White House in Washington, and it was accepted. Mr. Ferguson remained in Washington two weeks, so the old story goes.

E. M. Daugherty of Tunica, Miss., writes some valuable information on these old river woodyards between Memphis and below Helena. In a letter, he states that three big yards used to be at Ashly Point owned by Mr. Ashly, the other by a Mr. Clack, and the third by a Mr. Hutcheson. At Commerce, Miss., a man named Smith had a yard. At Mhoon’s Landing, Miss., there was Richards’ woodyard and not far from it was DeMumbrie’s Landing, Miss., and a big yard. Then came the yards at Whiskey Island, owned by Mr. Davis, one at Bordeaux Island, owned by a Mr. Goode. On Fox Island, opposite Austin, Miss., John McCann operated a yard and at Harbert’s Landing was the yard owned by Tom Turner.

Most all these famous landings have disappeared. The villages and towns that once thrived between Memphis and Helena have gone out of the picture, simply because they seem to have served there purpose and as Ol’ Man River had no further use for them, he simply changed his course, either washing away their very foundations or cutting out a new path for himself and leaving them miles away.

Old Pilots Would be Lost

In the bends from Helena to Memphis the changes have been so drastic and numerous no river pilot who ran the Mississippi in the days of Mark Twain would dare to attempt to handle a steamboat today through the sometimes narrow, twisted channels built up between sandbars of thousands of acres.

Mr. Dougherty writes interestingly of a double tragedy on Bordeau Island a number of years after the steamer Pennsylvania stopped at Goode’s woodyard to refuel and then exploded her boilers a few minutes after pulling away from that landing.

This Mr. Goode, writes Mr. Dougherty, always kept considerable money about his premises. His hired man, Charles Ibeck, suspected this and although he watched time and again to see where Mr. Goode hid his gold, he must have been unsuccessful, so he worked out another plan to rob him.

“One day,” continues Mr. Dougherty’s letter, “Ibeck came running to Goode’s house, telling him a cow had bogged down in some swampland. Mr. Goode and Ibeck hurried to the place to save the cow. When passing through a thick growth of underbrush and can, Ibeck, who had carried a axe with him, chopped Goode’s head open and he fell dead.

“Ibeck ran to the house after Mrs. Goode, telling her that Mr. Goode had been injured and she must hurry to him. She followed Ibeck into the canebrake and he slugged her to death with the axe. He then returned to the house and searched it for valuables. Some money was found.”

Took Boat North

The following day, so Mr. Dougherty states, a Cincinnati bound steamboat put in at Goode’s woodyard for fuel. Ibeck supplied her and engaged passage to Cincinnati. He took with him a team of horses, wagon and other valuable farming tools. But, the climax came when a packet from Napoleon, Ark., to Memphis landed at Bordeau three weeks later.

The captain of this boat had a hunch all was not right at Goode’s yard. He had not missed being hailed there in several years. Twice had he passed up the landing because there came no hail, but this afternoon he told the pilot to go in because he believed something was wrong.

Some of the crew investigated the premises. Finding no one in the house, they picked up tracks leading to the cane and swamps where they found the bodies of Mr. and Mrs. Goode. Picking up broken threads in the trail, caused the packet captain to trace Ibeck to Cincinnati. There he was investigated at a farm near the city. The team and wagon were identified and when confronted with his accusers, he confessed to murdering the Goodes.

Ibeck was returned to Austin, Miss., for trial. While in jail one day in 1869, three skiff loads of wood choppers came from Arkansas, battered their way into the jail at Austin, took Ibeck out and strung him
up. Mr. Dougherty said the sheriff at Austin then was Frank S. Belcher, who afterward became a big manufacturer.

River Took Plantation

Mr. Dougherty says there have been so many changes along the Mississippi since the day of the woodyard, rivermen of the 70’s wouldn’t recognize it. And, if these changes hadn’t taken place, Inspector Clegg D. Richards, Chief if the Detectives of the City of Memphis, might today be one of the biggest cotton planters in the State of Mississippi, for both his grandfathers, Col. Spencer DeMumbrie and Edmund Richards, owned the largest woodyards along the Mississippi, between St. Louis and New Orleans.

At the death of his grandfather, Edmund Richards, his big plantation on which was the woodyard and a fine colonial residence, was left to Jerome Richards, father of Inspector Richards. But the Mississippi kept gnawing away at it, cutting out acres at a time and carrying it down the river for miles to build up another man’s landholdings and make him richer. Finally, the Richards’ place had only 150 acres left. It was sold. Then what happened? “Well,” said Inspector Richards, “Lady Luck came onto the scene, took Ol’ Man River by the neck, forced him to change his course back like he was in the days of Grandfather Richards, so he built up the old plantation to a larger number of acres than originally were in it.”

And then, way back in about 1853, when the great steamboat Diana and Baltic raced from New Orleans to Louisville, the Diana being a mile or so in the lead of the Baltic when nearing Colonel Demumbrie’s woodyard, blew a whistle to refuel and a barge was taken in low and carried almost to Memphis before it was cut loose and floated back to its old home port in charge of a Negro slave, for both Colonel DeMumbrie and Edmund Richards were big slave owners.

Used Barges for Wood

Colonel Demumbrie is believed to have been the only woodyard man along the Mississippi to own a fleet of barges on which cord wood was loaded for ready use. If a boat went upstream, it towed the barge until unloaded and it floated down to the landing with an attendant guiding and propelling it with a log sweep-like car. If the boat taking a barge in tow was going downstream, the barge was landed at some point for the first upboat to take back to DeMumbrie’s Landing.

The DeMumbrie residence was said to have been the finest along the Mississippi this side of the plantation homes in the Louisiana. Colonel DeMumbrie’s long record of service to the United States went back a long way. He accompanied the Rogers an Clark expedition to the Northwest and upon returning, went to that point along the Mississippi River where he established his woodyard. Mrs. Demumbrie died leaving a little girl. She had been christened Minnie and was reared by a Memphis relative. It was Miss Minnie DeMumbrie who married the late Jerome Richards at Central Baptist Church.

Today, there isn’t a grain of sand left where DeMumbrie’s woodyard and stately plantation residence stood. It wasn’t far from Mhoon’s Landing and the ground on which it stood is now the Mississippi River.

Edmund Richards, father of the late Jerome Richards and Miss Caroline McQueen were married. And there again is a family tree with its branches reaching back to Colonial Days, for Miss McQueen was born on May 11, 1826, a daughter of Peter and Elizabeth Freeland McQueen. Edmund Richards settled with his bride on his Mississippi River plantation where he saw steamboating grow from its crudeness to its greatness and now, his grandson, Inspector Richards, points with pride to the days when as a little boy, he rode the old Kate Adams to his father’s cotton plantation and in later years he with other members of the family heard about the cruel Mississippi taking most of it away. That is when his youthful dreams of becoming a rich cotton planter came to an end, he says.

Minnie DeMumbrie

Minnie DeMumbrie

On May 13, 1858 Minnie DeMumbrie was born in Mississippi, most likely in Tunica, to (John) Spencer DeMumbrie (1821-?)and Cornelia A McMillan (1833-before 1870).  She was the granddaughter of Jean Baptiste DeMonbreun (1788-1872) and the great-granddaughter of Timothy Demonbreun (Jacques-Timothée Boucher, Sieur de Montbrun) (1747-1826), the man considered the “first citizen of Nashville”.

On the 1860 census in Tunica, Mississippi she is 2 years old and living with her parents on a plantation (value of the real estate was $10,000 and the value of the personal estate was $6000).  Her father is listed as “S. DeMumbrie”, a farmer, her mother is listed “C.A. DeMumbrie”.  Minnie is listed as “C.A.M. DeMumbrie”.  I read my aunt’s post on a genealogy forum that the full name of Minnie’s mother was Cornelia Ann Minerva McMillan.  If so Minnie may have been named after her and “Minnie” may have been a nickname.  Their neighbors in 1860 were the Owens family and the Roberts family.

In 1870 Minnie (listed as “Clara”) age 13, is living in Tunica, Mississippi with her father, who by now is widowed and listed as a “planter”, and three other people.  Jane (Gilcris?) is one member of the household that, at some point, married Spencer.  I believe Mary McMillan, listed as a housekeeper, is Minnie’s maternal grandmother.  The third person is Ellen Johnson.  I haven’t quite figured out how she is related to the family yet.  She is listed as 60 years old and no occupation.  The DeMumbrie’s neighbors are the Johnson family and the Richard’s family.  Included in the Richards family is Jerome Richards, age 14-Minnie’s future husband.

By 1880 Minnie had married Jerome E Richards.  The Tunica, Mississippi census for that year shows that she is listed as “C.A. Richards” and she is living with Jerome (a farmer), her son JE (Jerome Jr-Eddie), MH McMillan (her maternal grandmother again, I believe), and three others listed as farm laborers and a servant, or boarders:  JA Matthews, Ellis Sholly and Barbara Shipp.  Their neighbors are the Bullock family and, if I am reading it correctly, the Shearings family.

There is, of course, no record of the family for 1890.

In 1900 the Richards are living in Memphis, Tennessee.  Jerome, by now the Chief of Police for the City of Memphis, and Minnie have five children:  Eddie (Jerome Jr), Claud E, Bluford (Napoleon), Clegg, and Minnie (Virginia).  Also living in the household are Frank Macon, John Smith and George Smith, who are all three listed as servants.  This census also tells us that Minnie is the mother of six children, five of whom are living.  The sixth child was George Richards, born in 1892 and died in 1894, no further information on him (buried in Forest Hill Cemetery, Memphis, Shelby County, Tennessee).  The neighbors of the Richards family were the Kean family and the Piaggo family.

In 1905, on December 4th, Minnie watched in horror as her son, Claud E, shot himself in the parlor of their home.  She held him in her arms as he lay dying.

The year 1910 leaves Minnie living with her husband Jerome, now a criminal court clerk, Bluford, Clegg, Minnie Virginia, cousin Dick Richards and servant, Will Knoles (post about him to come soon!).  This census, too, was enumerated in Memphis, Tennessee.  Their neighbors were the Borner family (if I am reading it correctly) and Old Widow Hall (Jane Hall). 

By 1920 Minnie, now reported at age 61 and still residing in Memphis, Tennessee, is living with husband Jerome, son-in-law James Paul Stalls, Sr, daughter Minnie Virginia, son Bluford Napoleon, daughter-in-law Willie D and Nannie Taylor, servant/nanny.  Oddly enough James Paul Stalls, Jr, Minnie’s grandson, who would have been 3 years old in 1920, isn’t on the census with them.  I wonder where he was?  The families that were their neighbors were the Borners and the Maingaults.

I found a property record that shows that Minnie sold a tract of land to a Nannie Brown on January 15, 1927.  I can’t quite make out the record, but here is what I was able to get from it:

The _____ 33 1/3 feet of dist Eight, Block “B” of Stephens Subdivision beginning in _____ side of Wicks (Ave?) __5 1/2 feet _____ of H____ road.  Hence _____ with Wick’s Avenue _____, 33 1/3 feet.  Hence _____ 136 ?/10 feet to use _____;  Hence _____ with said _____, 33 1/? feet;  Hence northbound 136 8/10 feet to the point of beginning.

I will need to do more research, but I think that this Nannie Brown might be the nanny, Nannie Taylor, listed in the 1920 census with the family.

Minnie DeMumbrie passed away at 8:35pm on November 6, 1928 in Memphis, Tennessee.  The cause of death was myocarditis, which, according to the death certificate, she suffered from for 2 years.

Minnie DeMumbrie Death Certificate

Minnie DeMumbrie is buried in Forest Hill Cemetery Midtown, Memphis, Shelby County, Tennessee.

One story that my mother can remember her father telling her about Minnie:  Granddaddy referred to Minnie as his “French Grandmother” and he told of how she would have Will Knoles trap birds (sparrows and such) in the yard.  He said that she would keep the little dead yard bird bodies in the ice box.  Apparently when he would eat chicken it reminded him of those little birds!