Photo/Mary S. Williams
Click to Enlarge Will and Eva Williams |
I never knew my paternal great-grandfather, William Lafayette “Will” Williams (Feb. 13, 1888 – April 1, 1962) because he died the year before I was born.
Although I’ve seen several photos of him, one of my first cousins, Donna Williams Taylor, recently posted several photos to Facebook that belonged to one of his daughter-in-laws, Mary Shealy Williams.
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Will Williams and his son, Bo Williams, around the same age |
Will Williams was born in Haywood County, Tennessee on Feb. 13, 1888 to George D. Williams and his wife, Martha Jane Watridge.
Martha Jane died when her young son was only around 10 months old so Will never got to know his mother.
In the 1900 census, 12-year-old Will was living with his maternal aunt and uncle, George W. Castellaw and Mary E. Watridge Castellaw (Martha Jane Watridge Williams and Mary E. Watridge Castellaw were sisters). However, his father wasn’t far away.
He was living right next door with his third wife, Virginia Estelle “Essie” Cobb Williams and their 15-year-old daughter, Elberta. Essie was a daughter of John Charles Warren Cobb and Penelope Trottman White.
The Williams, Castellaw, Watridge, Cobb and White families were all early Haywood County settlers from Bertie County, North Carolina.
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Janie Williamson (upper left) and family |
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Will and Eva Williams with their children |
Photo/Mary S. Williams
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Will Williams (upper left) with Billy Chandler
Douglas, Dempsey, Jesse, Bob (my father),
Billy and Bobby Williams
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Photo/Mary S. Williams
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Photo/Mary S. Williams
Click to Enlarge Will and Eva Williams |
Photo/Mary S. Overton
Click to Enlarge Will Williams in his den. I was quickly drawn to the photo |
Eva’s Overton line can be traced back to William De Overton who was born in 1270 in Cheshire, England and died in the same town in 1355.
Eva’s eighth great-grandfather was Major-General Robert Overton (1609 – Dec. 22, 1679), a soldier of the Parliamentary Wars. Overton was married to Anne Gardiner.
Overton was a prominent English soldier and scholar, who supported the Parliamentary cause during the English Civil War (1642 – 1651) and was imprisoned a number of times for his views. More
In the second Civil War (1648 – 1649), Overton’s regiment supported Cromwell in Wales and in 1650, accompanied Cromwell to Scotland where he commanded troops in the battle of Dunbar and was subsequently made governor of Edinburgh. On May 14, 1652, Parliament voted him 400 pounds a year and Scottish lands in return for his services. More
Her seventh great-grandfather was Robert Overton’s son, William Overton. William migrated to Virginia from the family estate at Easington in England in 1669 and received a land grant of 4,600 acres on the south side of the Pamunkey River in Hanover County, Virginia for bringing 92 people to America.
On Eva’s maternal family tree, her second great-grandfather, Ephraim Alpheus Stanfield, was the first of that family to migrate to Madison County, Tennessee.
The obituary from another settler, Alfred B. Joyner, from July 20, 1899 includes a mention of Stanfield.
“Another family from Bedford County, Middle Tennessee preceded the Joyners, coming in the winter of 1824-25. This was the Stanfield family. Ephraim A. Stanfield, Esq. and his wife Sarah, who brought a large family of children, all of whom, except for Dr. C.A. Stanfield of Toledo, Ark. have with the Joyners, passed over the river to rest under the shadow of the trees. This family settled north of Wellwood and were noted in many respects. Ten sons and three daughters; the boys grew to manhood, remarkable for their unusual physical and mental development, above medium size, erect, strong, active, healthy and intelligent, all except one lived to raise families, many of whose descendants are filling positions of trust and honor in Arkansas, Texas, Kentucky, etc. these two families were among the first settlers of this section.”
I love how the obituary writer referred to their deaths as “passed over the river to rest under the shadow of the trees.” I assume both the writer and those who read the obit had spent much time in the cotton fields of the Delta so resting in the shadow of the trees had strong meaning for them.
Stanfield and his wife, Sarah Priscilla Powell, had thirteen children and many of the members of this family are buried at Providence Methodist Church Cemetery.
Photo/Mary S. Overton
Click to Enlarge Will and Eva Williams |
As I mentioned earlier, Will died before I was born. Eva lived until Sept. 5, 1970. I was seven years old and at my grandparent’s house when my grandmother, Elizabeth Castellaw Williams, received the call letting her know Eva had passed away. Her reaction made a strong impression on me at the time and is something I never forgot.
I’ve since heard from many people what a generous and kind-hearted woman Eva Overton was and I do think that comes through in the photos.
Eva Overton Williams Obituary
The States-Graphic, Brownsville, Tennessee 9/11/1970
Funeral services were held at 5 p. m. Tuesday for Mrs. W. L. Williams.
Mrs. Williams, the former Eva Overton, was 74 and died suddenly Saturday at her home after suffering a heart attack.
Services were held at Brownsville Funeral Home with the Rev. H. K. Sorrell officiating. Burial was in Haywood County Memorial Gardens.
She leaves five sons, Lloyd Williams, Douglass Williams and Dempsey Williams, all of Brownsville, Billy Williams of Miami, Fla., and Bobby Williams, of Orlando, Fla.; three daughters, Mrs. Sidney Hudgings and Mrs. Ray Robinson, both of Memphis, and Mrs. Billy Chandler of Brownsville; a brother, Marshall Overton of Florida, and sister, Mrs. Eunice Campbell, of Bells; 20 grandchildren, 11 great-grandchildren.
For more blog entries, visit my Blog Home Page or to check out the genealogy research about my specific family lines, go to my Haywood County Line Genealogy Website.