Saturday, August 24, 2013

Andrew Jackson Holland, great grandfather of Dr. V.M. Holland




Andrew Jackson Holland, great grandfather of Dr. V.M. Holland

Birth: Dec. 22, 1860
Benton County
Tennessee, USA
Death: Nov. 22, 1941
Huntingdon
Carroll County
Tennessee, USA

Son of Gilbert and Martha Frances Brigham Holland; Married Margaret "Maggie" Young 28 Aug 1888; Father of Eddie, Jewell, David Mordie, Halley Leroy, Adrain and Mammie.

Family links:
Parents:
Gilbert Holland (1835 - 1896)
Martha Frances Brigham Holland (1840 - 1906)

Spouse:
Margaret Adaline Young Holland (1869 - 1941)*

Children:
Eddie Calvin Holland (1889 - 1904)*
Jewell Frances Holland Neely (1891 - 1985)*
Mamie Pearl Holland Kennon (1893 - 1950)*
David Mordie Holland (1895 - 1972)*
Willie Halbert Holland (1900 - 1967)*
Adrain Jackson Holland (1906 - 1990)*
Hal L Holland (1910 - 1976)*

*Calculated relationship

Burial:
McLemoresville Cemetery
McLemoresville
Carroll County
Tennessee, USA

Created by: Christa
Record added: Feb 12, 2012
Find A Grave Memorial# 84850275

Andrew Jackson Holland, great grandfather of Dr. V.M. Holland

Andrew Jackson Holland, great grandfather of Dr. V.M. Holland Birth: Dec. 22, 1860 Benton County Tennessee, USA Death: Nov. 22, 1941 Huntingdon Carroll County Tennessee, USA Son of Gilbert and Martha Frances Brigham Holland; Married Margaret "Maggie" Young 28 Aug 1888; Father of Eddie, Jewell, David Mordie, Halley Leroy, Adrain and Mammie. Family links: Parents: Gilbert Holland (1835 - 1896) Martha Frances Brigham Holland (1840 - 1906) Spouse: Margaret Adaline Young Holland (1869 - 1941)* Children: Eddie Calvin Holland (1889 - 1904)* Jewell Frances Holland Neely (1891 - 1985)* Mamie Pearl Holland Kennon (1893 - 1950)* David Mordie Holland (1895 - 1972)* Willie Halbert Holland (1900 - 1967)* Adrain Jackson Holland (1906 - 1990)* Hal L Holland (1910 - 1976)* *Calculated relationship Burial: McLemoresville Cemetery McLemoresville Carroll County Tennessee, USA Created by: Christa Record added: Feb 12, 2012 Find A Grave Memorial# 84850275

Friday, August 2, 2013

Leland Holland's Family in Fairplay Texas

June Holland; three sons, Steve and wife Cindy, Tim and wife Sue of Shreveport,
and Terry and wife Debbie Jo, and their daughter Khakie Jo

Sunday, April 7, 2013

William Charles "Chuck" Sutlive, Jr. of East Texas, son of Robbie Jewel Fort Sutlive of Deberry, Texas

William Charles “Chuck” Sutlive, Jr.


Funeral services for William Charles ("Chuck") Sutlive, Jr., 59, of El Paso, TX, were held Sunday, September 16, 2012, at Peaceful Garden Funeral Home in Pecos, TX.


Born March 5, 1953 in Marshall, Texas, the son of Robbie (Fort) Sutlive and William Charles Sutlive, Sr., Chuck passed away Friday, September 14, 2012 at Kindred Hospital in El Paso, Texas, following an extended bout with diabetes and complications from that disease. Interment was in Mt. Evergreen Cemetery in Pecos, where several members of his wife's family are buried.


He was preceded in death by his father and his grandparents. His mother, Sutlive, Robbie Jewel Fort, 1929- , worked with Dr. V.M. Holland on the historical records of East Texas. She is a member of  Daughters of Texas Republic,  United Daughters of the Confederacy (UDC).  Her major work was her own family: "Robbie Fort Sutlive's genealogical collection."  Contents: v. 1. James Sutlive and his descendants - v. 2. John Wesley Sutlive and his descendants, 1789 forward - v. 3. California J. Sutlive, daughter of John Wesley Sutlive, Sr. - v. 4. Mary (Polly) Catherine Sutlive Nading. Her research into the Sutlive, Nading, Moore, Gray, Henderson, and related families. She also complied three other works related to her family interests:

Register of deaths, Panola County, Texas, 1903-1917 Sutlive, Robbie Jewel Fort, 1929-


Walnut Springs Baptist Church and cemetery Sutlive, Robbie Jewel Fort, 1929-

Walnut Springs Cemetery Sutlive, Robbie Jewel Fort, 1929-


Mr. Sutlive attended Carthage Public Schools and graduated from Karnack High School in Karnack, TX with the class of 1972. He graduated from Panola College and attended Stephen F. Austin University for three semesters, majoring in journalism.

Chuck was exceptionally talented in writing and enjoyed covering sports events.

He worked in various capacities for several newspapers in Texas and Louisiana, including the Panola Watchman and the Panola Post in Carthage, as well as newspapers in Livingston, Katy, Marlin, Marshall, Pecos, Plano, Dallas and Atlanta, Texas. He also served on the staff of publishers in Vivian and Oil City, Louisiana.


He was a former policeman with the Pecos Police Department and served as a deputy with the Reeves County Sheriff's Office. He was employed with the United States Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS) for the past 15 years. He retired in 2012 due to complications from diabetes.

Chuck was an avid hunter and fisherman and was extremely knowledgeable about firearms. He was often contacted by other gun enthusiasts for information about the mechanism of all types of firearms. He was a very reliable source on that subject. He also enjoyed horseback riding and had received numerous awards in riding events while growing up in his beloved East Texas.



He accepted Jesus Christ as his Saviour when he was eight years old and joined the Shady Grove Baptist Church, near DeBerry. He later united with the Evangelical Presbyterian Church in Marshall in 1975. Chuck had a strong Christian faith which he shared with his family and friends. He was a man of deep integrity and honesty. As a child, he would choose to tell the truth and accept his punishment, rather than tell a fib and escape discipline. Those characteristics remained a part of his personality for his entire life.


Survivors include his wife, the former Maby Hortencia DeLaGarza, of El Paso; one daughter, Briana Yvette (Sutlive) McRoy and husband, Casey, also of El Paso; one son, William Charles Sutlive, III; grandchildren, Alana and Casey McRoy, Jr., all of El Paso; his mother, Mrs. Robbie Sutlive of De Berry; and two brothers, Gary Lynn Sutlive and wife Dawn of Henderson and Jerry Glynn Sutlive of DeBerry; niece Cary Lynnita (Sutlive) Peterson and her husband, Jalon Peterson of Nacogdoches; one nephew, Derek Heath Sutlive and wife Kristin, of Henderson; numerous cousins and a host of friends who will miss him and mourn his death.


Pallbearers included Gary Sutlive, Jerry Sutlive, William Charles Sutlive, III, Casey McRoy, Sr., Edel DeLaGarza, and Manuel DeLaGarza.

Wednesday, March 6, 2013

March 6, 1836 Tapley Holland died at The Alamo

The Battle of the Alamo (February 23 – March 6, 1836) was a
pivotal event in the Texas Revolution.


Dr. V.M. Holland never found a link in his Holland family research to Tapley Holland who died at The Alamo on March 6, 1836. What seems to be true is that Colonel William B. Travis, who commanded the Alamo never drew a line in the sand and asked for volunteers to defend The Alamo to their death; therefore, Tapley Holland never stepped across it saying, "I regret having but one life to give for Texas!"

HOLLAND, TAPLEY (1810–1836). Tapley Holland, Alamo defender, one of six children of Margaret (Buck) and Francis Holland, was born in Ohio in 1810. His father had migrated from Canada to Louisiana and moved to Texas in 1822 as one of Stephen F. Austin's Old Three Hundred settlers. Tapley Holland, a resident of the Washington Municipality (present-day Grimes County), took part in the siege of Bexar. Later he served in the Alamo garrison as a member of Capt. William R. Carey's artillery company. Tapley Holland died in the battle of the Alamo on March 6, 1836.


BIBLIOGRAPHY:

Daughters of the American Revolution, The Alamo Heroes and Their Revolutionary Ancestors (San Antonio, 1976). Daughters of the Republic of Texas, Muster Rolls of the Texas Revolution (Austin, 1986). Bill Groneman, Alamo Defenders (Austin: Eakin, 1990).

Monday, March 4, 2013

My father, Dr. V.M. Hollland, of Fairplay, Texas was born today.



His father was David Mordie Holland. His mother was Louise Allison. Into a farming family in Fairplay, Texas, which is between Carthage, Texas and Henderson, Texas, he was the oldest of five children.

He is shown here with his family in Hobbs, New Mexico, where he was a physician, next to him is his son Frederick Leon Holland, his wife Evangeline Neal Dennard Holland, who is holding his daughter Mary Marie Holland. Dad was 72 when he died. What my mother told me was that he had been working out at the farm at Fairplay clearing a blocked sewage line to a septic tank on a white house where Bob Tatum, who was laying claim to being one of Mother's Dennard relatives,  and his  aging mother were staying. It was a cold October day and dad had gotten back after dark and was sitting in the kitchen drinking hot tea when he died suddenly and quickly in his work overalls and muddy farm boots, in his own home. This blog is dedicated to Dr. V.M. Holland, who grew up in East Texas, traveled around the world in the US Navy during World War II and ended up back in Panola County with the neighbors and family he grew up with during the Great Depression of 20th Century America. He was a young man during WWII and joined what has been called "The Greatest Generation" however, he would have argued with that assessment of his generation.

Thursday, January 31, 2013

Jessie Jo Dennard Wedgeworth, Sister-in-Law to Dr. V. M. Holland

Jessie Jo Dennard Wedgeworth


















"Streaks Across The Sky"

by Jessie Jo Wedgeworth © 2013
from from her book Chimes of Time: A Collection of Poems

This morning-blue sky
Is overlaid with light streaks,
As tiny specks move swiftly
In the endless vastness,
Criss-cross to form contrails,
Which puff full, then,
Pushed by wind currents,
Break into thin wisps
And drift away into farther blue;
Streaks left as jets pass through.

What streaks do I leave, passing?

Occasional clean streaks
Sweeping dirty floors
Swiping spotted windows
Swishing dusty furniture

Little streaks of cheer
Cover others’ heartaches
Carry their loads
Comfort their souls

Is this all I can do?

My Prayer —
Please help me,
Speck that I am,
Leave meaningful streaks
Across the arch of my existence.


NOTE: my Aunt Jessie Jo was buried on the 10th Anniversity of  the tragic lost of  the shuttle Columbia, which broke apart as it re-entered the atmosphere and streaked across the Texas skies. Burned parts of the shattered spacecraft rained down across a broad expanses, much of it centered over Hemphill, Texas.

Jessie Dennard and family, c. 1930  based on the image of  Hilda Dennard (  85 in 2013) who appears to be  between 1 and 2 in this photo in the arms of her mother. Marion Dennard holding the doll in the front row thinks that is a good date for this photo, which shows Jessie Jo Dennard between her older step-sister Evangeline Neal Dennard ( to become Dr. V. M. Holland 's wife) and her younger brother James Dennard.

Like most members of both the Dennard and the Wedgeworth families, I have always felt close to my Aunt Jessie Jo Dennard Wedgeworth.  Her son Tracy Wedgeworth (Denny) was like my brother when I was grewing up as a boy up in Panola County. Her husband Tracy Wedgeworth (Uncle Tracy)  was one of the greatest men I have every known in my life. I used to follow him around like a puppy on trips to the dairy barn,  where I listen to the sounds of his voice and the sounds of the dairy and the smell of his pipe smoke and the cows with their feed, to the pasture to help out a cow having troubles with calfing, to a haunted house in a tractor pulled hay wagon one night, to have a gilt serviced by a boar, and always back again to Aunt Jo's table for my first (and by means not last) cup of coffee at the age of four or five... Jo had the largest platter of fried eggs I had ever seen in my life at her breakfast table for hard working dairy hands.  Later she worked at First National Bank where she retired with plans to travel with Tracy... who then passed away. Her Nanna grandmother career kicked into high gear... and along with it came her passion for writing poems, short stories, observations on life in and around Panola county. Her books were published for awhile ( and she had a large email list following and won  regional awards for poetry and short stories. Those books, especially the Joisms Series, were very popular with my Mom, Evangeline Neal Dennard Holland, who was her older step-sister,  and with my Wife, Deborah Ann Richey McAlister Holland, who is also an author,  and her small, self published booklets can still find them in libraries if you look hard enough. And then her brilliant flame slowly went out that fueled her writing. Her life became very quite.  She was always so polite and courteous when we visited in those later years... she told me on one visit not long ago that "I am done with that [my writing] you will have to make do with what you've got." Then she smiled and asked about how I was doing and how my family was doing ... Her life story was a great one. I will have to do with what I got of it. Hope you were in it. I am glad to have been in her story among the histories of  East Texas.


Jessie Jo Dennard Wedgeworth
http://www.hawthornfuneralhome.com/
July 1st, 1922 - January 30th, 2013

Obituary:

Quotes were writen by Jessie Jo Wedgewoth from her bio, "About Me" , from Chimes of Time: A Collection of Poems



"When I was born on a cotton farm near Terrell, Texas on a hot summer day in 1922, I was named after my grandfathers, Jesse Dennard and Joseph Heath. I have always been proud of my name.” Jessie Jo Dennard Wedgeworth was born July 1, 1922. She was one of four children born to the marriage of Buford Leon Dennard and Loma Heath Dennard. “We moved to East Texas when I was twelve; two years later we settled in the Clayton Community, and I still live within two miles of that place, as the crow flies. I graduated from Carthage High School in 1939 and attended SFA at Nacogdoches.”


Jesse married Tracy Howard Wedgeworth November 27, 1940. “In WWlI my husband, Tracy, was drafted and with our two little girls, Peggy and Patsy, I lived with my parents at Irving. When my husband was discharged from the army, we returned to East Texas, bought land and operated a daiiy many years. Our son, Denny, was born during this time. We worked hard developing the lfe we wanted and we were a happy, close-knit family, with our home and church the center of our lives.” Mrs. Wedgeworth was a member of the Cedar Grove Baptist Church where she served as the church clerk for 50 years. “After our two daughters left for college, I began a career in banking, which lasted over twenty-three years.” Jesse worked for the First National Bank of Carthage. “This was a very educational and fulfilling experience. My husband died of lung cancer two months after I retired in 1987, and I seriously began writing poetry and articles to help heal the grief of being forced to carve a new life alone.” Mrs. Wedgeworth was a writer of Poetry and member of the Rusk County Poetry Society. She volunteered with the Panola County Historical and Genealogical Association in the Old Jail House [where she worked with Dr. V. M. Holland, her brother-in-law, on historical reseach of Panola County]. She is preceded in death by her parents, husband, Tracy Wedgeworth in 1987, son-in-law, John Meek, sister, Evangeline Holland and brother, James C. Dennard.

Mrs. Wedgeworth is survived by her children, Peggy Wedgeworth of Nacogdoches, Patsy Waldrop and husband Doug of Carthage, Denny Wedgeworth and wjfè Barbara of Longview, brother, Robert H. Dennard and wfe Jane of Croton-on-Hudson, NY, grandchildren and great grandchildren, Dawn and Dan Killough, Abbie and J.P. of Winters, David Waidrop of Clayton and Fiancé Cris Barkowski of Bentonville, AR, stepdaughter, Madeline Lee of Pine Tree, Jessica and Kirk Carlisle, Anna Grace of Longview, Sabrina and Mark Westfall of Nacogdoches, step grandchildren, Jamie and Bart Eppenauer, Alex, Alyssa and Luke, Tern Lightfoot, Nolan and Pam Meek, Keith and Karen Meek, and Melanie.

Serving as pallbearers will be the Dennard and Wedgeworth nephews. The family
requests memorials to
 Cedar Grove Baptist Church, 1896 CR 106, Carthage, Texas
75633, Bethlehem Cemetery, 181 Emma Drive, Diana, Texas 75640, Marian Place
Assisted Living, 1690 NE Loop 59, Carthage, Texas 75633 or The Old Jail, 213 N.
Shelby, Carthage, Texas, 75633.


Funeral services for Mrs. Jessie Jo Dennard Wedgeworth, 90, of Carthage, Texas were held at  2:00 p.m. Friday, February 1, 2013 at the Cedar Grove Baptist Church with Rev. Freddy Mason and Rev. Dale Read officiating. Burial followed in the Bethlehem Cemetery under the direction of Hawthorn Funeral Home. Family visitation was on  Thursday 6-8:00 p.m. at the Wawthorn funeral home. Mrs. Wedgeworth died January 30, 2013 in Carthage, Texas.

Cemetery:
http://mapq.st/WDafJ8
Bethlehem Cemetery
1343 CR 108
Carthage, TX 75633

Books by Jessie Jo Wedgeworth (c) 2013

Chimes of Time: A Collection of Poems
http://books.google.com/books/about/Chimes_of_Time.html?id=BXvqtgAACAAJ

Joisms.

Joisms 2, Etc.
http://books.google.com/books/about/Joisms_II_Etc.html?id=piTeGwAACAAJ

A History of Cedar Grove Baptist Church
http://www.carthagetexas.com/center/churches/Cedar_Grove.htm

Bethlehem Cemetery, Genealogical Survey 1867-1990: Panola County, Texas

(c) Bethlehem Cemetery Association, 1990 - 114 pages

http://books.google.com/books/about/Bethlehem_Cemetery_Genealogical_Survey_1.html?id=nKiLHwAACAAJ







Sister to Robert H. Dennard , Fellow at IBM, inventor of DRAM

http://www.angelfire.com/games3/BKBT/bio.html

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_H._Dennard

http://www.ideafinder.com/history/inventors/dennard.htm