A Collection of Data on Some of the Bell Families of Early Dallas County, Alabama |
Mr. Leonard Cooper, a Bell descendant whose name is highlighted below in red, is my first source for the following material. He found one of my webpages and contacted me concerning sharing material related to our mutual Bell family connections. While his material definitely relates to some of the people buried in the same cemetery as several of my relatives, he's not yet found the "Fannie" Bell of Bogue Chitto who married my gg-granduncle Chesley R. Gwin.Leonard's cousin Ms. Janet Neimeyer, name also highlighted below in red, has now sent data as well. Her grandfather is Gerald Gwin Bell, which news greatly encourages me!
--John M. Gwin jmcdgwin@zianet.com
1.00--Elijah Bell
[SEE
PHOTO], b. 18 Jan 1818 in
Twiggs Co., GA; d. 27 Dec 1899 at Browns, Dallas Co., AL; bd.
Bell
Cemeteries, Dallas Co., AL--Find
A
Grave
Memorial# 57511916 (Material in this green color is taken
from Kelley Ward's very informative Findagrave pages for Elijah
and
family.); m1. 31 Dec 1840 to
Nancy Ann
Jones
(b. 29
May
1827 at
Browns, Dallas Co., AL; d. 7 am, 11 Sep 1848 at Browns,
Dallas
Co., AL, aged "21y 3m 13d" according to a family Bible, and Enoch
was
raised
by her parents, Grandpa and Grandma Jones; bd. unk.); m2. bef.
1870 to
Laura Page
Grice [SEE PHOTO]
(b. ca. 1832 in NC; d. unk.; bd. unk.); m3. Ms.
Daugherty; at least 7 children; Frances and
Enoch were
definitely borne by Ann; and the other five were almost
certainly
borne by Laura; whether there were other children who did
not live is
unknown
2.02--Enoch Jones Bell |
2.02--Elizabeth Josephine Jones Bell |
|
Enoch Jones Bell and sons (l. to r.: 3.01--Horace, 3.08--David, 2.02--Enoch J., 3.07--Elijah, and 3.02--John Bell)
3.01--Horace Jones Bell [SEE PHOTO], b. ca. 1874 in AL/AL/AL; d. unk.; bd. unk.; m. unk.; unk. ch.;
[listed as Horace Bell, age 6 and b. in AL/AL/AL, in the 11 Jun 1880 census of Pences Precinct, Dallas Co., AL]
3.02--John Jones Bell [SEE PHOTO], b. ca. 1876 in AL/AL/AL; d. unk.; bd. unk.; m. unk.; unk. ch.;
[listed as John J. Bell, age 4 and b. in AL/AL/AL, in the 11 Jun 1880 census of Pences Precinct, Dallas Co., AL]
3.03--James T. Bell, b. ca. 1877 in AL/AL/AL; d. unk.; bd. unk.; m. unk.; unk. ch.;
[listed as James T. Bell, age 3 and b. in AL/AL/AL, in the 11 Jun 1880 census of Pences Precinct, Dallas Co., AL]
3.04--Annie Laura Bell, b. Feb 1879 in AL/AL/AL; d. unk.; bd. unk.; m. unk.; unk. ch.;
[listed as Annie L. Bell, age 2 and b. in AL/AL/AL, in the 11 Jun 1880 census of Pences Precinct, Dallas Co., AL]
[listed as Anna L. Bell, age 21 and b. Feb 1879 in AL/GA/AL, in the 7 Jun 1900 census of Pct. 2, Trinity Co., TX]
[listed as Annie Bell, age 29 and b. in AL/MS/AL (sic), in the 16 Apr 1910 census of Pct. 2, Trinity Co., TX]
[listed as Annie L. Bell, age 40 and b. in AL/AL/AL, in the 21 Jan 1920 census of Trinity, Trinity Co., TX, and still lvg. with her father]
3.05--Mary Emma "Mamie" Bell, b. 1 Dec 1881 (1900 census says 1882) in Browns, Dallas Co., AL/AL/AL; d. 24 Aug 1961 in Trinity, Trinity Co., TX; bd. Cedar Grove Cem., Trinity, Trinity Co., TX--Find A Grave Memorial# 56332486; m. Edgar T. Walker (16 Jan 1880 in Trinity, Trinity Co., TX; d. 2 Jan 1912 in Trinity, Trinity Co., TX; bd. Cedar Grove Cem., Trinity, Trinity Co., TX--Find A Grave Memorial# 56332486); at least 1 ch.;
[listed as Mamie B. Bell, age 17 and b. Dec 1882 in AL/AL/AL, in the 7 Jun 1900 census of Pct. 2, Trinity Co., TX]
[listed as Mrs. Mamie Walker, dau., age 36 and b. in AL/AL/AL, wid., in the 21 Jan 1920 census of Trinity, Trinity Co., TX]
4.01--Marie E. (Mary Emma?) Walker, b. ca. 1904 in TX/TX/AL; d. unk.; bd. unk.; m. unk.; unk. ch.
[listed as Marie Walker, granddau., age 16 and b. in TX/TX/AL, in the 21 Jan 1920 census of Trinity, Trinity Co., TX, and lvg. w/ her mother and grandfather]
3.06--Kate "Katie" Elizabeth Bell, b. Dec 1882 in AL/AL/AL; d. unk.; bd. unk.; m. unk.; unk. ch.;
[listed as Katie E. Bell, age 13 and b. Jun 1886 in AL/AL/AL, in the 7 Jun 1900 census of Pct. 2, Trinity Co., TX]
[listed as Kate E., age 23 and b. in AL/MS/AL (sic), in the 16 Apr 1910 census of Pct. 2, Trinity Co., TX]
3.07--Elijah Bell [SEE PHOTO], b. Aug 1888 in AL/AL/AL; d. unk.; bd. unk.; m. Eleanor [SEE PHOTO] (nee unk.); at least one ch.
[listed as Elija Bell, age 11 and b. Aug 1888 in AL/AL/AL, in the 7 Jun 1900 census of Pct. 2, Trinity Co., TX]
[listed as Elijah Bell, railroad brakeman, age 22 and b. in AL/MS/AL (sic), in the 16 Apr 1910 census of Pct. 2, Trinity Co., TX]4.00--granddaughter of Enoch Bell; m. Mr. Cooper;5.00--Leonard Cooper, CONTRIBUTOR
3.07--Elijah and Eleanor |
4.00--Elijah Bell (b. 1932) |
3.08--David Herbert Bell [SEE PHOTO], b. Aug 1891 in AL/AL/AL; d. unk.; bd. unk.; m. unk.; unk. ch.
[listed as David H. Bell, age 8 and b. Aug 1891 in AL/AL/AL, in the 7 Jun 1900 census of Pct. 2, Trinity Co., TX]
[listed as David Bell, (OCCUPATION ILLEGIBLE), age 18 and b. in AL/MS/AL (sic), in the 16 Apr 1910 census of Pct. 2, Trinity Co., TX]
[listed as David Bell, age 26 and b. in AL/AL/AL, in the 21 Jan 1920 census of Trinity, Trinity Co., TX, and lvg. w/ his father and fam.]
1.00--Elijah Bell and Laura Grice Bell
the Elijah Bell family (see
Kristin's email below)
From: "Scot &
Kristin Williams"
Date: March 31, 2007 9:39:24 AM MDT To: <jmcdgwin@zianet.com> Subject: photo of Elijah Bell family? Hello Mr. Gwin. I came across your Bell family website a couple of months ago and was surprised to see my family photographed on the page! I have spoken with Mr. Cooper about the photo, and he and I cannot agree on who the photo is of. However, I inherited the original photo from my grandmother who inherited it from her grandmother, Catherine Clara "Kate" Jones Bryant. Also, I have photos made the same day of two of the couples in the photo which are labeled on the back (1) "Bro. Enoch and Sister who were living by the old Bell church" ("Sister" was Kate's name for Marrdie Jones Bell) and (2) T. B. and Fannie Jones, and my Grandaunts have positively identified my great-great grandparents in the picture. Additionally, I have several other photos of people in the picture. I am almost completely certain that my grandmother correctly identified the photo. I can provide the names of those photographed in the picture that is labeled on your site as the "Elijah Bell family." Back row left to right:
Annie Eva
Jones (who later married Claude Thompson),
Thomas Wade Jones,
Eliza Bell Jones
Tipton, Reubin
L. Tipton, Marddie
Jones Bell, Enoch
Bell
Middle row: Hugh Ernest Jones, Clarence Eugene Jones, my gg-grandfather Claiborne Whitt "Claib" Bryant holding his daughter Francis Bell "Fannie" Bryant, my gg-grandmother Catherine Clara "Kate" Jones Bryant holding her daughter Marddie Bryant, my ggg-grandmother Francis Sabrina Foster Jones holding her son Elias Fort Jones, and my ggg-grandfather Thomas Bell Jones, Jr. holding his youngest daughter Eddie Lee Jones (who later married Henry Leslie.) The woman standing on the porch is thought to be "Bec". At one time my grandmother had
the
Thomas Bell
Jones Jr. family Bible but since her death I cannot
find it. I
had several other old photos including Forts and
Smyleys.
Thank you for your time and I'm sorry if I have caused you any grief. I just did not want the picture to be confused. If I can provide any further info for you, I will try. I live in Alabama and am able to go visit a cousin in the Dallas County area several times a year. I recently had an adventurous trip there, too, and found the graves of Thomas Bell Jones, Sr. and Jr. and William T. Jones! Very exciting. Thank you again for your time. Kristin S. Williams scotawilliamsatbellsouthdotnet |
3.00--Gerald Bell; [John M. Gwin NOTE: Where did he get this name? Can this be Chesley Gwin's namesake and a relative of Chesley's wife, Fannie Bell?]
4.00--child of Gerald Gwin Bell5.00--Janet Bell m. Mr. Neimeyer, CONTRIBUTOR
[John M. Gwin NOTE: From the above data, one can see that Enoch Bell and Turner Bell are half-siblings, their respective children half-first cousins to each other, their respective grandchildren half-second cousins, and Leonard and Janet half-third cousins! :-)]
...William Turner Bell married Mary Elizabeth Averyt on 16 Feb 1841 in Dallas County. Their daughter Mary Elizabeth Bell married William Pegues Pope. His parents were Ann Pegues and Abram Lewis Pope. William Turner Bell and his wife Mary are in the Bell Cemetery. I found the cemetery back in 1981 as well. I also uncovered the old Pope Plantation on that trip. When I went on that land, I knew I had found a story of my lifetime. I was born a story teller. I love spinning a yarn just like Daddy did. When he died in 2009, I made a promise to my niece that I'd complete this for our family... --Sheila Morgan, from an email to John Gwin, Jun 2011
[John M. Gwin Note: Sheila, I have used your data, above, to delve into census records, putting it all together into my outline format as follows (data you provided is included in the turquoise color of your email.]
24.00--Abram Lewis Pope, Sr., b. ca. 1808 in GA; d. betw. 1870 and 1880 in Perry Co., AL; bd. unk.; m. by ca. 1838 (perhaps earlier) to Ann T. Pegues (b. ca. 1814 in SC; d. unk.; bd. unk.); at least eight ch.
[listed as Abram L. Pope, age 42 and b. GA, in the 24 Oct 1850 census of Woodville Beat, Perry Co., AL]
[listed as A. L. Pope, age 52 and b. GA, in the 21 Jul 1860 census of Woodville (Uniontown P. O.), Perry Co., AL]
[listed as A. L. Pope, age 62 and b. GA, in the 6 Jun 1870 census of Twp. 16, Rg. 6 (Marion P. O.), Perry Co., AL]
[listed as Ann Pope, age 36 and b. SC, in the 24 Oct 1850 census of Woodville Beat, Perry Co., AL]
[listed as A. T. Pope, age 46 and b. GA (sic), in the 21 Jul 1860 census of Woodville (Uniontown P. O.), Perry Co., AL]
[listed as Ann Pope, age 56 and b. SC, in the 6 Jun 1870 census of Twp. 16, Rg. 6 (Marion P. O.), Perry Co., AL]
[listed as Ann Pope, widow and nurse, age 60 and b. AL/AL/AL (sic), in the 17 Jun 1880 census of Beat 16, Perry Co., AL, and lvg. w/the fam. of her son, A. L. Jr.]
25.01--Charles F. Pope, b. ca. 1839 in AL; d. unk.; bd. unk.; m. unk.; unk. ch.
[listed as Charles Pope, age 11 and b. AL, in the 24 Oct 1850 census of Woodville Beat, Perry Co., AL]
[listed as C. F. Pope, age 21 and b. AL in the 21 Jul 1860 census of Woodville (Uniontown P. O.), Perry Co., AL]
25.02--William Pegues Pope, b. ca. 1841 in AL; d. unk.; bd. unk.; m. unk. date/place to Mary Elizabeth Bell (b. aft. 1841, [d/o William Turner Bell and Mary Elizabeth Averyt {who md. on 16 Feb 1841 in Dallas County}]; d. unk.; bd. unk.); at least one ch.
[listed as Wm. Pope, age 9 and b. AL, in the 24 Oct 1850 census of Woodville Beat, Perry Co., AL]
[listed as W. P. Pope, physician, age 17 and b. AL in the 21 Jul 1860 census of Woodville (Uniontown P. O.), Perry Co., AL, and lvg. with his parents]
[listed as E. M. Pope, domestic, age 18 and b. AL in the 21 Jul 1860 census of Woodville (Uniontown P. O.), Perry Co., AL, and lvg. with her husband and in-laws]
26.01--L. E. Pope, son, b. ca. Jan. 1860 in AL; d. unk.; bd. unk.; m. unk.; unk. ch.
[listed as E. M. Pope, domestic, age 18 and b. AL in the 21 Jul 1860 census of Woodville (Uniontown P. O.), Perry Co., AL, and lvg. with his paternal g-parents]
25.03--Abram Lewis Pope, Jr., b. ca. 1845 in AL; d. betw. 1900 and 1910; bd. unk.; m. ca. 1879 in AL to Elizabeth "Lizzie" P. Irby (b. ca. 1858 in AL/AL/AL; d. unk.; bd. unk.); at least one ch.
[listed as L___se? Pope, age 5 and b. AL, in the 24 Oct 1850 census of Woodville Beat, Perry Co., AL]
[listed as A. L. Pope, age 15 and b. AL in the 21 Jul 1860 census of Woodville (Uniontown P. O.), Perry Co., AL]
[listed as A. L. Pope, Jr., lawyer, age 25 and b. AL, in the 6 Jun 1870 census of Twp. 16, Rg. 6 (Marion P. O.), Perry Co., AL]
[listed as Abe Pope, farmer, age 35 and b. AL/AL/AL (sic), in the 17 Jun 1880 census of Beat 16, Perry Co., AL]
[listed as Abram L. Pope, lawyer, age 55 and b. AL/VA(sic)/SC in Apr 1845, m. 22 yrs., in the 17 Jun 1900 census of Beat 16, Perry Co., AL, and lvg. w/ his sis-in-law, Rebecca E. Irby, 43, single]
[listed as Lizzie Pope, age 22 and b. AL/AL/AL, in the 17 Jun 1880 census of Beat 16, Perry Co., AL]
[listed as Lizzie I. Pope, age 45 and b. AL/SC/NC in Sep 1854, m. 22 yrs. w/5 of 5 ch. lvg., in the 17 Jun 1900 census of Beat 16, Perry Co., AL, and lvg. w/ her sister, Rebecca E. Irby, 43, single]
[listed as Lizzie P. Pope, age 55 and b. AL/SC/NC, wid. w/5 of 5 ch. lvg., in the 20 Apr 1910 census of Marion, Marion Beat, Perry Co., AL, and lvg. w/ her sister, Rebeka E. Irby, 53, single]
[listed as Lizzie P. Pope, age 65 and b. AL/SC/NC, wid., in the 17 Jan 1920 census of Marion, Marion Twp., Perry Co., AL]
26.01--(Temperance?) "Tempie" Ann "Annie" Pope, b. Mar 1880 in AL/AL/AL; d. unk.; bd. unk.; m. unk.; unk. ch.
[listed as Tempie Pope, age 3 mos. and b. in Mar. 1880 in AL/AL/AL, in the 17 Jun 1880 census of Beat 16, Perry Co., AL]
[listed as Tempie A. Pope, age 20 and b. AL/AL/AL in Mar 1880, in the 17 Jun 1900 census of Beat 16, Perry Co., AL]
[listed as Tempie Annie Pope, age 30 and b. AL/AL/AL, single, in the 20 Apr 1910 census of Marion, Marion Beat, Perry Co., AL]
[listed as Tempie Pope, clerk in dry goods store, age 39 and b. AL/AL/AL, single, in the 17 Jan 1920 census of Marion, Marion Twp., Perry Co., AL]
26.02--Thomas Irby Pope, Sr., b. Jan 1882 in AL/AL/AL; d. unk.; bd. unk.; m. Natalie P. (nee unk.; b. unk.; d. unk.; bd. unk.; at least one ch.;
[listed as Thomas I. Pope, printer, age 18 and b. AL/AL/AL in Jan 1882, in the 17 Jun 1900 census of Beat 16, Perry Co., AL]
[listed as Thomas I. Pope, age 28 and b. AL/AL/AL, m1. for 1 yr., in the 20 Apr 1910 census of Marion, Marion Beat, Perry Co., AL]
[listed as Thomas Irby Pope, county clerk, age 38 and b. AL/AL/AL, in the 17 Jan 1920 census of Marion, Marion Twp., Perry Co., AL]
[listed as Irby Pope, county clerk, age 48 and b. AL/AL/AL, in the 10 Apr 1930 census of Marion, Perry Co., AL]
[listed as Natalie P. Pope, age 27 and b. AL/AL/AL, m1. for 1 yr. w/ 1 of 1 ch.lvg., in the 20 Apr 1910 census of Marion, Marion Beat, Perry Co., AL]
[listed as Natalie Pope, age 37 and b. AL/AL/AL, in the 17 Jan 1920 census of Marion, Marion Twp., Perry Co., AL]
[listed as Natalie Pope, age 48 and b. AL/AL/AL, in the 10 Apr 1930 census of Marion, Perry Co., AL]
27.01--Thomas Irby "Irby" Pope, Jr., b. ca. Aug 1909 in AL/AL/AL; d. unk.; bd. unk.; m. unk.; unk. ch.
[listed as Thomas I. Pope, grandson, age 8 mos. and b. AL/AL/AL, in the 20 Apr 1910 census of Marion, Marion Beat, Perry Co., AL]
[listed as Thomas Irby Pope, Jr., age 10 and b. AL/AL/AL, in the 17 Jan 1920 census of Marion, Marion Twp., Perry Co., AL]
[listed as Irby Pope, Jr., age 20 and b. AL/AL/AL, in the 10 Apr 1930 census of Marion, Perry Co., AL]
28.00--Thomas Irby Pope III, LTC, USA (Ret)
Member, Presidential Advisory Council, Marion Mil. Inst., 1101 Washington St., Marion, AL 3675627.02--William "Bill" Pope, b. ca. 1914 in AL/AL/AL; d. unk.; bd. unk.; m. unk.; unk. ch.
[listed as William Pope, age 6 and b. AL/AL/AL, in the 17 Jan 1920 census of Marion, Marion Twp., Perry Co., AL]
[listed as Bill Pope, age 16 and b. AL/AL/AL, in the 10 Apr 1930 census of Marion, Perry Co., AL]
26.03--Virginia Pope, b. Jun 1884 in AL/AL/AL; d. unk.; bd. unk.; m. unk.; unk. ch.
[listed as Virginia Pope, age 16 and b. AL/AL/AL in Jun 1884, in the 17 Jun 1900 census of Beat 16, Perry Co., AL]
[listed as Virginia Pope, age 26 and b. AL/AL/AL, in the 20 Apr 1910 census of Marion, Marion Beat, Perry Co., AL]
26.04--Rebecca E. Pope, b. Dec 1885 in AL/AL/AL; d. unk.; bd. unk.; m. unk.; unk. ch.
[listed as Rebecca E. Pope, age 14 and b. AL/AL/AL in Dec 1885, in the 17 Jun 1900 census of Beat 16, Perry Co., AL]
[listed as Rebecca E. Pope, age 24 and b. AL/AL/AL in the 20 Apr 1910 census of Beat 16, Perry Co., AL]
26.05--Abram L. Pope, III, b. Jan 1888 in AL/AL/AL; d. unk.; bd. unk.; m. unk.; unk. ch.
[listed as Abram L. Pope, Jr., age 12 and b. AL/AL/AL in Jan 1888, in the 17 Jun 1900 census of Beat 16, Perry Co., AL]
[listed as Abram L. Pope, age 22 and b. AL/AL/AL in the 20 Apr 1910 census of Beat 16, Perry Co., AL]
[listed as Abram Pope, printer in printing shop, age 32 and b. AL/AL/AL, single, in the 17 Jan 1920 census of Marion, Marion Twp., Perry Co., AL]
25.04--Virginia C. Pope, b. ca. 1847 in AL; d. unk.; bd. unk.; m. unk.; unk. ch.
[listed as Virginia Pope, age 3 and b. AL, in the 24 Oct 1850 census of Woodville Beat, Perry Co., AL]
[listed as V. C. Pope, age 13 and b. AL in the 21 Jul 1860 census of Woodville (Uniontown P. O.), Perry Co., AL]
25.05--Claudius R. Pope, b. ca. 1849 in AL; d. unk.; bd. unk.; m. unk.; unk. ch.
[listed as Claudius Pope, age 1 and b. AL, in the 24 Oct 1850 census of Woodville Beat, Perry Co., AL]
[listed as C. R. Pope, age 11 and b. AL in the 21 Jul 1860 census of Woodville (Uniontown P. O.), Perry Co., AL]
[listed as Thaddeus Pope, age 25 and b. AL, in the 6 Jun 1870 census of Twp. 16, Rg. 6 (Marion P. O.), Perry Co., AL]
25.06--James/Jones C. Pope, b. ca. 1851 in AL; d. unk.; bd. unk.; m. F. M. (b. ca. 1856 in AL/NC/NC; at least one ch.
[listed as Jas. C. Pope, age 9 and b. AL in the 21 Jul 1860 census of Woodville (Uniontown P. O.), Perry Co., AL]
[listed as Jones C. Pope, age 18 and b. AL, in the 6 Jun 1870 census of Twp. 16, Rg. 6 (Marion P. O.), Perry Co., AL]
[listed as J. C. Pope, age 29 and b. AL/VA(sic)/SC, in the 23 Jun 1880 census of Beat 16, Perry Co., AL]
[listed as F. M. Pope, age 24 and b. AL/NC/NC, in the 23 Jun 1880 census of Beat 16, Perry Co., AL]
26.01--James Pope, b. ca. 1878 in AL/AL/AL; d. unk.; bd. unk.; m. unk.; unk. ch.
[listed as James Pope, age 2 and b. AL/AL/AL, in the 23 Jun 1880 census of Beat 16, Perry Co., AL]
25.07--E. C. Pope, dau., b. ca. 1853 in AL; d. unk.; bd. unk.; m. unk.; unk. ch.
[listed as E. C. Pope, age 7 and b. AL in the 21 Jul 1860 census of Woodville (Uniontown P. O.), Perry Co., AL]
[not listed as lvg. w/her parents in the 6 Jun 1870 census of Twp. 16, Rg. 6 (Marion P. O.), Perry Co., AL,and assumed deceased or married and lvg. elsewhere]
25.08--Mercy M. Pope, dau., b. ca. 1855 in AL; d. unk.; bd. unk.; m. unk.; unk. ch.
[listed as M. M. Pope, age 5 and b. AL in the 21 Jul 1860 census of Woodville (Uniontown P. O.), Perry Co., AL]
[listed as Mercy Pope, age 14 and b. AL, in the 6 Jun 1870 census of Twp. 16, Rg. 6 (Marion P. O.), Perry Co., AL]
Name: Abram L Pope Age: 42 YOB: abt 1808 POB: Georgia Gender: Male Home in
1850:Woodville,
Perry, ALHouse-
hold:
Name Age Abram L Pope 42 Ann Pope 36 Nancy Pope 76 Charles Pope 11 Wm Pope 9 Lersis Pope 5 Virginia Pope 3 Claudius Pope 1
Name: A L Pope Age: 52 YOB: abt 1808 POB: Georgia Home in
1860:Woodville,
Perry, ALGender: Male P. O.: Uniontown House-
hold:
Name Age A L Pope 52 A T Pope 46 C F Pope 21 E M Pope 18 L E Pope 6/12 W P Pope 17 A L Pope 15 V C Pope 13 C R Pope 11 Jas C Pope 9 E C Pope 7 M M Pope 5
Name: A L Pope YOB: abt 1808 Age: 62 POB: Georgia Home in
1870:TWP 16 RG 6,
Perry, ALHouse-
hold:
Name Age A L Pope 62 Ann Pope 56 A L Pope 25 Thaddeus Pope 20 Jones C Pope 18 Mercy Pope 14
Name: Ann Pope Home in
1880:Pope,
Perry, ALAge: 60 YOB: abt 1820 POB: Alabama R2HOH: Mother FPOB: Alabama MPOB: Alabama Occ.: Nurse Mar.Stat: Widowed House-
hold:
Name Age Abe Pope 35 Lizzie Pope 22 Tempie Pope 3m Ann Pope 60
From: John Gwin <jmcdgwin@zianet.com>
Date: Sat Mar 19, 2005 12:03:51 PM US/Mountain
To: "Leonard Cooper" < l c o o p e r @ v a l o r n e t . c o m >
Subject: Re: Elijah BellLeonard, thanks for writing--good to meet you!
On Tuesday, March 15, 2005, at 03:57 PM, Leonard Cooper wrote:Well, now this is encouraging! I've been wanting to know more about the Bells and Grices, so perhaps you're just the one to tell me! :-)
Sir: I just happened on this email regarding Elijah Bell. I am the Great Great Grandson of Elijah Bell. Elijah Bell, Enoch Bell, and Elijah Bell of Trinity, Texas. I have a picture of Elijah Bell and Fam. (Laura Grice) of Browns, Alabama, if you are interested.
Leonard L Cooper lcooper@valornet.com
I don't know if I'm related to the Bells at all except to one of them by marriage: Mary Frances "Fannie" Elizabeth Bell married my gg-granduncle Chesley R. Gwin 21 March 1850 (155 years ago Monday!), just a few months before the census was taken.I know very little about the Bells, but I do know she lived in Bogue Chitto where her dad was a "hard-shell" Baptist preacher. I know Chesley and Fannie got married there--probably in her dad's church or perhaps their home, and that Chesley's father's Methodist pastor, James Cotten from Cahaba, recorded in his diary that the event was happening that evening.
Later I learned that Chesley's parents, John and Jane Gwin, were living (along with two of John's grandchildren) in the 1860 census with a young couple by the name of Grice (W. G. Grice, 32, and Eliza, 20), so there must've been a connection to the Grices somehow.Then last summer I was in the Bell family cemetery just south of Browns and saw that a Susan Grice had married a William Bell. Her year of birth was 1837, so she'd've been 23 in 1860, perhaps the younger sister of the W. G. Grice with whom the Gwins were living then.
That's about all I know. I don't know Fannie's parents' or siblings' names; I don't know how the Grices connect or even if they're the same Grices. If you'd like to help me fill in some of the many blanks, I'd be obliged, friend. Thanks again for writing!
Best to you,
In Jesus,
John (Contact information:)
John:
You were answering an email from B
a l t 4 2 @ a o l . c o m. [Remove
spaces
before
mailing!] She is Janet Bell Neimeyer.
She wrote
me:
She also has notes on Gwins and Bells.
Turner Bell married Blanch Booth (maybe a cousin of
John
Wilkes Booth).
My G Grand father was Enoch Bell b.1848 son of Elijah
Bell
b.1818
and Elijah's first wife Ann Jones.
She passed away and Enoch was raised by his mother's parents, Grandpa
and
Grandma
Jones.
Laura Grice comes into play.
and then his third wife was Daugherty.
I have the complete Bell History on my computer but it is a large
file
and I will have to subdivide it. I tried sending it to my sister
and it
was rejected as too large.
The Weissingers, Bells, Jones, Grices, and Gwins were
all
entwined together.
You might Google Johann Jacob Wisinger for a nice site on
the
Wisingers (spelled both ways).
I have checked all the Fannies in the Bell tree and I can't see
where
our Fannie fits yours. Ha.
You might have better luck at it than me. Between the three of us
we
should be able to come up with a lot more info.
Sincerely,
Leonard Cooper
Elijah Bell b.1818, Laura Grice Bell and Fam.
From Janet: |
|
<-----
|
two |
|
|
|
|
1--John Bell, b. 1669; d. 1713bd. unk.; m. Ann Bennett |
|
2--Thomas Bell 1691 - 2--Richard Bell
1697 - 1734 + Sarah unknown
3--William Bell |
A M E P |
<----
|
Connect |
5--James Bell 1787 - 1827 +Lydia Chapman |
From the 1850 census of Dallas Co., AL: | ||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
Value |
|
|
742/742 | W. G. | Bell | 36 | M | Farmer | 6,000 | NC | |
Mary | 27 | F | AL | |||||
Mary | 6 | F | AL | |||||
Lydia | 4 | F | AL | |||||
James | 2 | M | AL | |||||
763/763 | Silas | Blann | 58 | M | Farmer | 4,100 | GA | |
Elizabeth | 50 | F | GA | |||||
Thomas | 20 | M | AL | |||||
Mary | 12 | F | AL | |||||
Susan | 15 | F | AL | |||||
Silas | 12 | M | AL | |||||
Stephen | 9 | M | AL | |||||
765/765 | David | Pence | 49 | M | Farmer | 320 | SC | Evidently Elijah Bell is living with the Pences, and we wonder why. Perhaps Elijah's wife is deceased, leaving him to care for the children, and Mildria Pence has offered to help. He certainly owns some 15 times as much property as do the Pences, so it can't be because he's poor and destitute. Perhaps his own house has recently burned, and they are living there temporarily until a new one is built. Perhaps Mildria is his sister, since they were both born in NC. On another note, perhaps David Pence is related to the Pences of Pences' Beat. (See also comment for Elijah Bell, same household, below.) |
Mildria | 37 | F | NC | |||||
Enoch B. | 15 | M | AL | |||||
Julia | 9 | F | AL | |||||
Wm. | 6 | M | AL | |||||
Ann | 2 | F | AL | |||||
Elijah | Bell | 33 | M | Bap. Min. | 5,000 | NC | Son of Enoch, below. Uncle James Gwin's notes that I inherited state that Fannie Bell's father was a "Hard-shell Baptist minister", and this is the only Bell Baptist minister I see in Dallas Co. in 1850. But this man's age is 33, and Fannie was 20 the same year, so this cannot be her father; on the other hand, he could be her brother who has perhaps named his own daughter for Fannie. (See also comment for David Pence, same household, above.) | |
Frances A. | 3 | F | AL | |||||
Enoch | 2 | M | AL | |||||
Robert | Moseley | 15 | M | AL | ||||
766/766 | Enoch | Bell | 62 | M | Farmer | 15,000 | NC | Father of Susanna Bell Weissinger, next-door neighbor (#767 below). I believe he is likely the father also of Fannie (Mrs. Chesley Gwin). This man's wife is Frances (Fannie), and if Mrs. Chesley Gwin is his daughter, the latter would've been named for her. |
Frances | 61 | F | NC | |||||
William | Bell | 23 | M | AL | This William is the husband of Susan Page Grice, a picture of whose tombstone appears on the Gwin Graves Photos page. A letter, written in 1862 from William to his wife Susan, appears below. | |||
J.W. | Westmoreland | 5 | M | AL | ||||
Rebecca | 3 | F | AL | |||||
767/767 | Jesse B. | Weisinger | 43 | M | Farmer | 2,400 | SC | Ran a store near Browns, AL, according to the Weissinger Historical Sketch, Dec. 1971, by Horace Weissinger, sent to me by Leonard Cooper. He was robbed and murdered on 19 Dec 1881; b. 15 Oct 1806; m. 20 Jul 1831; d. age 75+; most info below comes from this same sketch; bd. beside Susanna in Bell Cem., Browns; |
Susanna | 33 | F | GA | Nee Bell, m. Jesse W. when she was 15 and he 24; had 14 children; b. 26 Feb 1816; d. 18 Aug 1862 of typhoid, age 46+; d/o Enoch and Frances Bell (bd. Bell Cem, Browns); s/o William Bell and Elijah Bell (a preacher, for whom Bell Ch. was probably named) ; Susanna bd. Bell Cem. beside Jesse; | ||||
Frances | 19 | F | AL | "Fannie" b. 5 Oct 1832; d. 30 Jul 1900, age 67+ | ||||
Mary | 16 | F | AL | b. 3 Aug 1834; d. 30 Jul 1857, age 22+ | ||||
Elijah | 14 | M | AL | b. 8 Jan 1837; d. ca. 1908, age ca. 71 | ||||
Rebecca | 10 | F | AL | b. 17 Jul 1839; d. unk. | ||||
Emily | 8 | F | AL | "Emma" b. 7 Oct 1841; d. unk. | ||||
James | 6 | M | AL | "Jim" b. 28 Jun 1843; d. unk. | ||||
Adriana | 4 | F | AL | "Ada" b. 6 Nov 1845; d. 26 Apr 1926 in Guthrie, OK | ||||
Enoch | 3 | M | AL | Twin, "E. J."; b. 12 Jan 1848; d. 11 May 1927, Browns, AL | ||||
William | 3 | M | AL | Twin "W. T."; b. 12 Jan 1848; d. 29 Nov 1934, Browns, AL | ||||
Onslow | 6/12 | M | AL | Alonzo, b. 28 May 1850; d. 1900
Selma,
AL Four children b. after 1850: Joseph, b. 24 Jan 1853; d. unk., Browns, AL Julia Mildred, b. 18 Sep 1855; d. unk., Browns, AL Sallie, b. 30 Nov 1857; d. unk., Browns, AL Nonnie, b. 2 Feb 1860; d. unk.; |
||||
875/875 | John | Bell | 30 | M | Farmer | 1,600 | AL | |
E. R. | 26 | F | SC | |||||
M.A.E.J. | 1 | F | AL | |||||
884/884 | J. B. | Jones | 56 | M | Farmer | 3,650 | GA | |
Nancy | 56 | F | GA | |||||
F. A. | Bell | 5 | F | AL | ||||
E. J. | 2 | M | AL | |||||
John | Walker | 90 | M | Farmer | 2,042 | PA | ||
885/885 | Elijah | Bell | 36 | M | Farmer | NC | ||
John | Mosely | 64 | M | Overseer | GA | |||
Elizabeth | 61 | F | GA |
Name: Enoch Bell Age: 2 YOB: abt 1848 POB: Alabama Home in
1850:Pences,
Dallas, ALFam #: 765 House-
hold:
Name Age David Pence 49 Meldria Pence 37 Enoch B Pence 15 Julia Pence 9 Wm Pence 6 Ann Pence 2 Elijah Bell 33 Frances A Bell 3 Enoch Bell 2 Robert Mosely 15
Name: E. J. Bell Home in
1880:Pences,
Dallas, ALAge: 32 YOB: abt 1848 POB: Alabama R2HOH: Self (Head) Spouse: Elizabeth J. Bell FPOB: Georgia MPOB: Alabama House-
hold:
Name Age E. J. Bell 32 Elizabeth J. Bell 27 Horace Bell 6 John J. Bell 4 James T. Bell 3 Annie L. Bell 2
Name: David Bell Home in
1920:Trinity,
Trinity, TXAge: 26 YOB: abt 1894 POB: Alabama R2HOH: Son Father: Enoch J Bell FPOB: Alabama MPOB: Alabama Mar.Stat.: Single House-
hold:
Name Age Enoch J Bell 72 Annie ? Bell 40 Mamie Walker 36 Marie E Walker
granddaughter
16 David Bell 26 William Dennis
grandson6 Enoch J Bell
grandson5
Letter from William Bell to his wife, Susan P. Grice Bell[John Gwin Note: The following is my transcription of a pdf copy of an unnamed (and therefore unknown to me) transcriber's transcription of a letter written in 1862 from the CSA Camp Friendship by CSA soldier William Bell to his wife, Susan. I have taken the liberty of putting it into this column format for easier reading and of highlighting the names of people and places for easier reference. I hope I have corrected all my errors in my transcription. The pdf copy, which I received from Leonard Cooper, was two and a half typed pages. I don't know how many pages were in the original handwritten letter.]
[John Gwin's and original transcriber's Note: This is the same William Bell who appears in the 1850 census, above, at age 23. William Bell: b. 31 Aug 1827 in Browns, Dallas Co., AL, s/o Enoch Bell (b. 2 Mar 1789 in Chatham Co., NC; d. 28 Feb 1850) and Frances Manghon (b. 2 Mar 1789 in Chatham Co., NC); m. Susan Page Grice.]
[Note of original Transcriber: This is the best translation that we could make of this letter because William Bell's handwriting is hard to read. There are spelling errors, run on sentences, the symbol "&" is used many times, and capital letters are used where small letters should be used in the original letter. You will find these errors as you read this letter. We kept these errors in this documentation to keep from destroying the authenticity of what William Bell wrote.]
Camp Friendship, Sept. 7, 1862My Dear Beloved Susan,I was glad to get your letter which came to hand last Friday night. I also got one at the same time from Bro. Elijah. The letter had been here some time before I got it, as we were out on a long scout. I have written you 4 letters. Hope you have got them all, I have been well ever since my arrival in camp. I intended My Dear Susan to send you 2 pairs of gloves by Mr. Pasloy, then didn't get to see him, as he left while we were on a scout. Our scout troop out longer, than any that has ever been. We had many strange little adventures and some very exciting times, while we were gone we were near the Mississippi line. We were after a large Yankee force at Russelville, Franklin Co. They were too strong for us to make the attack, so long around and tried to get him to bring his force out so that we could ambush him. The Yanks tried hard to find us, they said, but we did not think them keen, as we were lying in less than 2 miles of them. We had to be very sly in all our movements and done some good retreating. After staying long enough around Russelville to make the Enemy at Decatur & Tuscaloosa think we were going to storm Bylae, & finding the road clear, we ate supper, blew our whistle and started for Newburg. As the boys all thought, but didn't go far before we turned suddenly to the left and then we all knew we would ride all night or near it so after a brisk ride about 20 miles, we left the road and took through fields for about 3 or 4 miles where we parted. We got down then counted off by 4's & let every 4th man hold horses. Other balance which was 3/4 formed & marched to the railroad tore it up. Then we Marched often up a road to slip the Iron so that it can't be seen but will run
this car off. We had 6 companies making 550 men in all on this Rail. Well, now I must tell you of one of the unfortunate road mishaps I ever saw in all my life, we were waiting for the Cars to come & run off about half our men were sleeping & from some unseen cause to us our horses became frightened and a few guns fired, the horses snorted like that many wild beasts. A regular stampeed took place & 5 or 600 horses broke through the field as hard as they could go running over some men trampling them in the ground. I suppose we had at least 50 men run over and some badly damaged. Some so bad that I suppose they will die. I don't think more than 2 or 3 will die. None that you know are badly hurt. We all felt like fate was against us, but providence seems to take care of me, for my horse didn't run off & I think the Good Lord is taking care of all the Confederates in this section of our good state and after all this affair has done more good than the taking of several cars. No one ever saw and heard of anything like it. The Yanks were at Hatton in a good position and a big force. They heard the running and roaring of our horses & thought we were coming down by the thousands on them so they broke, fled the place & took in wild confusion, sent runners to inform their friends that 6000 Cavalry had attack. They have left Decatur & as all making for Tuscumbia. The Yankies are coming in and surrendering almost every day. Some say they didn't come here to steal negroes but to fight for the Union, but have fooled and many they say have laid down their arms, where they won't fight any more. My Dear Susan you can't tell how bad I felt when I saw in your letter that Our Dear Sister was dead, but we all have to die and at best can't live long. And as She
died so well satisfied, I hope we may be prepared to meet her inthat good land where there is no more war and strife. I hope though that it is the will of the good Lord that I may spend many good days on this earth with you & our dear children. If I can get a substitute, I will do it and come home as soon as Possible, but if I can't, I must do the best I can & so must you. If I find I can't get a man, I will let you know it, & if we get to a place where we will be stationed any length of time at, I will write for you to come & bring the children, as Bro. Elij will come with you I know & If I stay I must have a negro to cook and wash for me and must bring Isaiah I reckon. I suppose Mr. Pasley is with you today & has told you what sort of Good Soldier I make. I was sorry he left before I got back. Pasley got a horse here and gave an order on me for the money which I paid yesterday, it was $165.00, one hundred sisty five dollars. I shall want that money pretty soon if I can get a substitute, so tell Bro. Elij about it and if convenient to get the money & hold it in readness for me. I will write him soon. I hope you got my letters which I directed at Gunterville. I shall direct this to Bellville. If you were at home I should feel quite uneasy. As all our friends here received news that we were surrounded & 80 of our men killed. I am remarkably pleased with all our officers. We are doing nothing now only feeding and resting. We may leave tonight & may not leave in a week. Capt Lewis has gone to Chattanooga and has been for 2 weeks, Lieut. Brooks is in command. Brooks is liked by all. Well, My Dear You want me to say what you must do about taking E. B. Wysinger's horse. Well, all I can say about that is if you want it, take it, for whatever accomodates you pleases me. I want you to enjoy yourself as well as you can while I am gone, for if it is the will of the good Lord to permit me to get back to you & the babies, I know I can make you all happy, for I have in store many long years for you. Let me tell you my Dear Susan how I would have you act on my absence. Anything you want, or any little trade you want to make, I want you to have it, so trade for it. As you think best, I am satisfied. Bro. E. will do anything for you he can make you happy, for when I think you are happy & enjoying yourself, it does me good. For let me tell you, if it were not for you & the children, this world would have no charms for me, don't forget to kiss all the children, Buck, Lester & Laura. Give my respects to Fannie too. Tell E. B. Wysinger we would all be glad to have in our Co. That man Henson that stayed all night at our house is very much a gentleman & a good man to boot. Give my respects to Whitt & W J Bell and Harris. I shall write often to you and if I get sick you shall know it, tell the negroes all how do for me & tell them I expect them to take good care of you and the children, as well as everything else on the place. Oh how I would like to be at home today with you & the children, but can't. Be cheerfull & happy, my Dear Susan if possible teach all our little ones to be good as I know you will teach them to say their little prayers at night, tell them I think of you and them all the time. I wish I had Enoch here. Graham sends his respects to Bro. E. & Mr. Harris Meggs sends his to you all. Tell Mrs. Meggs if you see her, he is well. Meggs makes a good soldier and is a good man. I shall drop Bro. E. a small note in this, send it to him. If Melvin Harris comes back to our house, I will write to him soon. I will close My Dear goodbye my Dear Susan. Your devoted Husband W Bell
[John Gwin Note: The following is my transcription of a PDF copy of an unknown transcriber's transcription of a handwritten letter from a female college student at Tuscaloosa, AL, to her friend, Fannie Bell of Brown's Station, AL. It was sent to me by Leonard Cooper. I have taken the liberty of highlighting the names of people and places for easier reference. I hope I have corrected all my typos in transcription.
At the top of the PDF copy is penciled "Love Letter", making me think that the original transcriber may have thought this was written by a male. I am confident, however, that this is written by a female, primarily because of the "he would have thought me rather fast" statement in column two and secondarily because it was not at all uncommon for female friends to use such intimate language with each other.
Whether or not this Fannie Bell is the one who married Chesley Gwin is still unknown, but if so, I believe the date to be 1849 or earlier, not 1850, because Fannie and Chesley were married in Feb. 1850, and no reference is made to her being Mrs. Gwin.]
Miss Fannie Bell, Brown's Station, Alabama
Dallas CountyTuscaloosa, Ala., Nov. 2, ___?___My Own Beloved Fannie,
[about 185 0--date torn off]I received your dear letter this morning and I cannot begin to tell you how glad I was to get it. When I perused its contents however, I must confess that it inspired me with the conciousness that my darling Fannie is not as happy and contented as I could wish her to be or as she deserves to be. I discovered the fact throughtout the whole letter. If my sweet darling was not very sad she could not have written in such a sad tone. I could not help crying when I read it for I love you so much that the very thought of you being unhappy renders me miserable. If I could command the circumstances, ___ govern your life, nothin but sunshine should illumine your path way and sweet scented flowers shed their aroma around you in your journey through life.
Nov. 8--Dear Fannie, here it is Sunday evening and I have not finished this letter yet. We have just come from dinner and are all in our rooms for the rest of the evening. I saw your cousin Mr. John Bell at church this morning. He looked so natural and so familiar that I wanted to speak to him and ask about you. If I had, he would have thought me rather fast, wouldn't he? But you know that would have been foreign to my nature. Is your brother coming back to the university? I ask for Bessie's benefit, but she did not tell me to. Mamie Long sends love to you and says she is going to be a good girl this year.
Mrs. Clark sends love to you but says you have treated her just as badly as you can. She thought you would have been one of the first to write to her. So she would like to see you so much. Miss Bennie also says she has looked long and in vain for a letter from you. She sent love to you.
Miss Nammie & Miss Lula Manly send lots of love and said to send your sister here to school. I wish she could come. If she can, please tell her to come here. I would be so glad to see her.
Fannie darling please send me one of your pictures. Send me the one that is most like yourself. I would consisder it as one of my treasures. Please, please send me one. I have written to you since I came here. I suppose you have received that letter. Write soon to your loving friend,
Love,--...........
Your Property
Dark Days in Dallas Co., Alabama:
The Family of Jesse and Susannah Weissinger
William Thomas Weissinger
as told to his daughter
Susie Weissinger
as told to
Horace Weissinger and William WeissingerThis information is from Horace Weissinger, 4529 Linpark Drive, Birmingham, AL 35222. Horace and Dr. William Weissinger are first cousns. Their gg-grandfather, Enoch Bell (1789-1850) is also our [antecedent unknown] gg-grandfather. Their infomation came from Mother Susie who died 1983 at the age of 94 years. She got information from her father W. T. Weissinger (1848-1934). Dr. William lives in Browns, AL.We have recently read an account in an old Selma, Ala. newspaper of the murder of Mr. Jesse Weissinger, and it has occurred to us that the known circumstances surrounding this murder should be written down, lest in a few years all knowledge of it be lost. Mr. Willliam Thomas Weissinger, Jesse's son, years after the event, was riding in a buggy with his daughter, Susie, from his homeplace to Browns, Ala. He told her that he had never mentioned much about his father's murder to his children, but now that she was grown and married, he would like to tell her more.
These notes are written by Horace Weissinger, W. T. Weissinger's grandson, in December 1971 based on recollections of W. T.'s children and from other available information. If any reader can supply more information or correct inaccuracies, we can make the necessary revisions.
First, we shall list somethin about Mr. Jesse Weissinger's family. He was born in 1806 and married Susannah Bell when he was 24 years old and she 15. They had 14 children, and at the time of his death there were five living sons and five living daughters. The five sons at the time of their father's murder in 1881 were: Elijah, 44; Jim, 38; William T. and Enoch (twins), 33; and John Alonzo, 31.
In December 1881, a group of negroes on the Weissinger plantation near Browns, AL, entered into a conspiracy to rob and kill Jesse's son, W. T. Weissinger, at his store near his residence near Browns, AL. W. T., however, had gone with his twin brother, E. J., to Selma, AL, to attend to business, leaving his father, Jesse, to mind the store. On the night of December 19, 1881, the negroes entered the store and asked Mr. Weissinger to sell them some molasses. As he leaned over the counter to draw it, one of the conspirators struck him in the head at least once with a fence rail, and Mr. Weissinger fell and was left for dead. He later regained consciousness and crawled to a bed in a room in the store. Early the next morning one of the negroes, who was supposed to find Mr. Weissinger dead when he built the morning fire, instead, found him alive. He then finished him off, saying later that he hated to kill" Old Marse", but that he know too much and that he had to do it. When he [was?] found Jesse still had molasses on his battered head from that, that he had drawn for his assailants. Jesse Weissinger had been reading a newspapaer by lamplight when he was first attacked. He had pencil-marked a quotation, "God moves in a mysterious way, His wonders to perform." Will Billingslea, a cousin living near Browns, sent a telegram to Selma, AL, reading: "Tell Weissinger his father's dead."
W. T. and E. J. Weissinger were staying at the St. James Hotel after having conducted business and seeing a show in Selma. In their haste to get home, they rode a buggy rather than wait for the train, the distance back home being about 30 miles on the roads of those days. The telegram sent by Mr. Billingslea was said to be included in one of the family Bibles, which may be still on hand.
Of course, many facts about events after the murder are missing, but it is abundantly clear that the months following the murder were ones of legal action, revenge, and were packed with drama. The known facts are:
Dates Events December 19, 1881 Murder of Jesse Weissinger February 7, 1882 Trial in Selma, AL, begun February 9, 1882 Bill Ledlos, Al Wissinger, and Porter Ivey convicted of murder March 30, 1882 Bill Ledlow and Al Weissinger were hanged in a lot behind Live Oak Cemetery in Selma. April 19, 1882 Henry Ivey and Sim Acoff were hanged by 40 masked men. It is noted that one of the murderers was named All Weissinger. He was presumably a former slave [or the son of a former slave] for the family as was frequently done before the Civil War.
There have been stories of others executed for the crime, but there is no way to authenticate them now. At least two eyewitnesses have come forward during the lifetime of W. T. Weissinger's children. One, a Mr. Rountree in Selma, was an old man in about 1930. He told that his father was Sheriff Rountree who conducted the legal hanging and that the hangings were witnessed by the younger Mr. Rountree.
A confession to the crime was signed by Henry Ivey in the presence of seven witnesses. This confession appears to have been signed afer the execution of Bill Ledlow and Al Weissinger. Henry Ivy and Sim Acoff were being held by their interrogators for safe keeping when the 40 masked men overpowered the guards and hung the two near Bell's Church near Browns, AL.
The story is told that interrogation of suspects was being held at a schoolhouse near Browns. When one suspect (probably Henry Ivey) admitted actually wielding the murder weapon, Dr. Alonzo Weissinger, in his rage, rushed forward to the platform and almost tore the man's cheek loose.
Some negroes came to the aid of the investigators with information. An "Aunt Maria" came voluntarily to W. T. Weissinger to tell him that her husband had talked in his sleep, saying something that caused her to think that he was one fo the murderers. There were others suspected but on which there was no proof. One was "Uncle Seab Acoff" who lived on or near W. T.'s place.
- - - - - - - - - - - -
W. T. and E. J. Weissinger, in about 1873, left Alabama for Arkansas where they had relatives and where they hoped to homestead land. With a former slave, Uncle Jack Weissinger, and his wife, they went in a wagon to Arkansas and stayed about a year, returning to Alabama in 1874. The family has a letter addressed to Jesse dated Oct. 24, 1874, from Mr. James Wilson of Clark Co., Arkansas, in which he tells Jesse of knowing his twin sons (then 26 years old) in Arkansas. He is complimentary of them and states he has never "met anyone who excelled them in promptness nor accuracy in filling all their promises."
The Family of Jesse and Susannah Weissinger
A. Jesse Weissinger b. Oct. 15, 1806 d. Dec. 19, 1881 m. July 20, 1831 B. Susannah Weissinger b. Feb. 26, 1816 d. Aug 18, 1862 m. July 20, 1831
Children
1. Fannie b. Oct. 5, 1832 d. 1900
2. Mary b. Aug. 3, 1834 d. July 30, 1857
3. Elijah b. Jan. 8, 1837 d. 1908 approx.
4. Rebecca b. July 17, 1839 d.
5. Emma b. Oct. 7, 1841 d. 6. Jim b. June 28, 1843 d.
7. Ada b. Nov. 6, 1845 d. April 26, 1926, Guthrie, Okla.
8. William T. b. Jan. 12, 1848 d. Nov. 29, 1934, Browns, Ala.
9. Enoch J. b. Jan. 12, 1848 d. May 11, 1927, Browns, Ala. 10. Alonzo b. May 28, 1850 d. 1900, Selma, Ala.
11. Joseph b. Jan. 24, 1853 d. Browns, Ala.
12. Julia Mildred b. Sept. 18 1855 d. Browns, Ala.
13. Sallie b. Nov. 30, 1857 d. Browns, Ala.
14. Nonnie b. Feb. 2, 1860 d.
On Saturday, December 17, 2005, at 08:01 PM, C a r o l V a e t h at a o l dot c o m wrote:I am researching Bell family in Alabama. Do you have a John Bell in your line who married a Louisa D____? Or a John R. Bell?
Thank you, Carol L. Vaeth
These are all those with the surname BELL found in the online transcription of the book Dallas County, Alabama, Marriages, Vol. One posted at http://www.trackingyourroots.com/data/dallasmr.htm |
[Smith, Levi & Manerva Bell 11 Jan 1819 --- 7] [Westmoreland, Dr. Robert & Emily Bell 10 Jul 1844 --- 297] [White, John & Julia Bell 19 Jan 1842 --- 252] [Bell, Elijah & Nancy Ann Jones 31 Dec 1840 --- 251] [Bell, John C & . Louisa Dorman 10 Jan 1842 --- 214] [Bell, Jonathan L. & Louisianna Blann 26 Sep 1842 --- 237] [Bell, William T. & Mary Avery 16 Feb 1841 --- 252] |