Showing posts with label Daughrity. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Daughrity. Show all posts

Sunday, February 9, 2025

Celebration Sunday-Genealogy Happy Dance! Adding to My Grandmother's Story Using Full -Text Search

 



You know the dance. You know you've done it. The one every researcher does after finding something new. The one where you want to jump up and down and shout to everyone that you found the document, contacted a cousin with the family Bible, made a DNA connection, or found a new branch to your tree. The one that is met with glazed stares and eye rolls.

                                                          Celebration Sunday is a place to share your discoveries. 
This weekly series enables everyone to tell about their Genealogy Happy Dance moment. 
Share by scrolling 
down and add your story to the comments section, or you may also put a link to a blog post telling about what had you dancing this week.


My Happy Dance Moment for the week:

Have you tried Full-Text Search from FamilySearch? Since its release, it has been a source of happy dance moments for me and others. 

This week, I discovered a document naming my grandmother and her sisters as plaintiffs in a court case. Their mother, Loretta McManus Daughrity, took out a loan before her death and had not paid it. 


Source: "Sumter, South Carolina, United States records," images, FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-C9P1-RSZN-2?view=fullText : Feb 9,2025), image 452 of 485.

This court document deals with the foreclosure of the Daughrity home in Sumter, South Carolina, and a plaintiff claiming their mother borrowed money from her before her death and wanted her money paid back out of the sale of the home.

Stories get lost if not told, and finding documents can help us discover them but also have us asking so many more questions. I talked to my grandmother many times about her parents, their home, and the death of her parents.

She never told me that the house went into foreclosure. 

It sat empty for several years and then was lost to a fire.

Finding about more had me doing that dance this week?

What was your happy dance moment?


Share your Happy Dance Moment for the week, and let's celebrate together!


 Thanks so much for stopping by!

Helping you climb your family tree,




Sunday, January 22, 2023

Celebration Sunday-Genealogy Happy Dance!-Finding a Manumission Record

 

  You know the dance. You know you've done it. The one every researcher does after finding something new. The one where you want to jump up and down and shout to everyone that you found the document, contacted a cousin with the family Bible, made a DNA connection, or found a new branch to your tree. The one that is met with glazed stares and eye rolls.

                                                          Celebration Sunday is a place to share your discoveries. 
This weekly series enables everyone to tell about their Genealogy Happy Dance moment. 
Share by scrolling 
down and add your story to the comments section, or you may also put a link to a blog post telling about what had you dancing this week.




Sumter County, South Carolina Conveyance Records, (FamilySearch.org),
William Doughty to Hester, Edward, Sarah, and Susan,
Book D, 1812, pg. 26

My Happy Dance Moment for this week: 

As a researcher in the south, I often run across records of enslavers buying, selling, or willing the enslaved as pieces of property. These are hard records to reconcile with.
This week as I was looking for information on my maternal Daughrity line from Sumter District/County, South Carolina, I was surprised to come across a manumission record.

William Daughty, Jr. gives "the mulatto wench Hetty, and her three mulatto children, named Edward, Sarah, and Susan their full and absolute freedom.....releasing them from a state of slavery and bondage.....making them fully and absolutely and free forever every sense conception and meaning of the word free."

At this time, I am not sure exactly where William fits into my Daughrity family. A grandfather to my William, perhaps?  He may not be part of my line at all. But, he gives me hope. Hope that someone in my family line did was right regarding the holding of the enslaved. 

A genuine happy dance of thankfulness for his huge act of humanity during a time and place when it was uncommon to do so.


What's your Happy Dance Moment?
 Please share, and let's celebrate together!






                                                                      
                                                                                              

Share the fun! Click below to tweet this post! 
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Looking forward to reading about your Happy Dance moment!

Thanks so much for stopping by!
Helping you climb your family tree,

Saturday, March 12, 2016

Saturday Night Genealogy Fun!

Randy Seaver has issued this challenge for tonight's Saturday Night Genealogy Fun:
 We are to go back 4 generations and list the middle names of the children in those families.
 Here are mine~

Maternal Great Grandparents:

Manning David Daughrity, Jr. (1889-1931) and Loretta (McRady) McManus (1894-1936). 
Their children:
Mildred Chrystanella (Daughrity) Jolly Finfrock (1914-2006)
Frances Elizabeth (Daughrity) Hicks (1916-1989)
Lila Lorine (Daughrity)Robinson (1918-1951)
Loretta Geraldine (Daughrity)Dennis (1919-1959)
Azile Juanita (Daughrity) Roberts Sullivan (1921-2009)


Daughrity Sisters
About 1924
©Cheri Hudson Passey
  
William Treadford Roberts (1894-1959) and Beulah Mae (Price) Roberts (1897-1980)
Their children:
Ruby Mae (Roberts) Robinson (1916-1997)
Bertie Lee Roberts (1917-2001)
Wilbert Lewis Roberts (1918-1944)
Lester Philip Roberts (1919-2009)
Gilbert Ernest Roberts (1920-1944)
Viola Roberts (1921-2003)
Edman George Roberts (1922-1943)
Leroy Calvin Roberts (1923-2010)
Thelma Burdelle (Roberts) Waynick (1925-2010)
Edith Marie Roberts (1926-1926)
Baby Girl Roberts (1927-1927)
William Treadford Roberts, Jr. (1928-1928)


Thelma, Bertie Lee and Viola Roberts
Late 1940's
©Cheri Hudson Passey

My paternal Great Grandparents:

John McSwain Hudson (1880-1961) and Louvinia Blanche (Thames) Hudson (1886-1918)
Their children:
 Benjamin Allen Hudson (1918-1976)


Benjamin Allen Hudson
About 1920
©Cheri Hudson Passey


Jubal Ransom Early (1888-1964) and Emma Ruth (Baker) Early (1901-1993)
Their children:
 Mary Ann (Baker) Hudson (1920-2010)
 Lola Bess (Early) Rawls (1923-2012)
Annie Ruth (Early) Fetner Johnson (1926-2013)


Lola, Mary and Ann
Late 1990's
©Cheri Hudson Passey

Out of these 29 names
2 have no middle name
2 daughters are named after their mother
1 son is named after his father
1 son is named after his grandfather
1 daughter named after her aunt

The others are names not found to have a family connection. 

What middle names are in your family tree?

Are we kin? Please contact me. Together we can find our people.





    

Tuesday, September 1, 2015

52 Ancestsors Week 35: School Days~A Mother, Sisters and Friends




  School Days is the topic of week 35 for Amy Johnson Crow's 52 Ancestors in 52 Weeks 2015 Edition.

   One of the first pictures found when beginning my family history journey was of my maternal Great Grandmother, Loretta "Etta"(McManus) Daughrity.  It looks as though she may be at a table with a book.  Perhaps a school picture?

Loretta "Etta" (McManus) Daughrity
(1894-1936)
About 1898

 Etta graduated from St. Joseph's Academy in Sumter, South Carolina about 1912.

Loretta "Etta" (McManus) Daughrity
(1894-1936)
Graduation Picture

 Etta married Manning David Daughrity, Jr. on 13 October 1912.  Four of their five daughters had pictures made in about 1925. It is not clear whether these are school pictures, but they were definitely school aged.


Mildred Chrystanella (Daughrity) Jolly Finfrock
(1914-2006)
Frances Elizabeth (Daughrity) Hicks
 (1916-1989)

Lila Lorine (Daughrity) Robinson
 (1918-1951)

Loretta Geraldine (Daughrity) Dennis (1919-1959)

   

Daughter number five, my Grandmother Azile Juanita (Daughrity) Roberts Sullivan (1921-2009) was not among these pictures. Most likely because she was not school aged at the time.
 A picture was taken when she graduated from Sumter High School, Sumter, South Carolina in 1939.

Azile Juanita (Daughrity) Roberts Sullivan
(1921-2009)
High School Graduation 

 Along with these pictures of the Daughrity sisters, are school pictures of friends. Unknown to me now but important enough for Grandmom to keep in her scrapbook.
   
Cleveland O.Wilson, 1930

Unknown from 1939
Unknown child from 1939


Unknown child from 1939
  

 A Mother, sisters, and friends. Precious memories of school days.

Are we kin? Please contact me. Together we can find our people.
Thanks so much for stopping by!




Thursday, July 2, 2015

52 Ancestors Week 26-Who's Taking Up My Time?





 Since we are Halfway through the year for 52 Ancestors in 52 Weeks 2015 Edition, a blog prompt series by Amy Johnson Crow, I decided to share information on some of my family lines that I have been researching since the early 1980's.
 Amy asks in this week's prompt:
 " What ancestor takes up half of your research time?"

These South Carolina (and a couple of North Carolina) families take up all of mine~

   John McSwain Hudson (1880-1961) married 1st. Louvinia Blanche Thames (1886-1918) and 2nd her sister Margaret Anne Thames (1875-1960). They lived in Clarendon County.      
   John's parents were Ezra Ashby Hudson (1821-1882) and Sarah Rebecca (Smith) Flemming Hudson (1835-1916). Ezra and Sarah lived in Darlington and Florence Counties.  
 Blanche and Annie were the daughter's of Benjamin Thomas Thames (1854-1931) and Margaret Francis (Gibson) Thames (1854-1929), also from Clarendon County.
Blanche and Annie
Thames Sisters
Left- Louvinia Blanche Thames (1886-1918)
Right-Margaret Anne Thames (1875-1960)
©Cheri Hudson Passey

   Jubal Ransom Early (1888-1964) was born in Statesville, North Carolina. Moving to South Carolina, he married Emma Ruth Baker Early (1901-1993). They made their home in Richland County. 
 Jubal's parents were Ransom Taylor Early (1829-1888) and Ellen Caroline (Martin) Early (1850-1926) from Statesburg, North Carolina. 
  Ruth grew up in Sumter County and was the daughter of Arthur Wellington Baker (1857-1940) and Martha "Mattie" Victoria (Bradford) Baker (1862-1947). 
Arthur Wellington Baker (1857-1940)
1911
©Cheri Hudson Passey

William Treadford Roberts (1894-1959) was the son of George Phillip Roberts (1856-1930)  and Hattie (Brazell) Roberts (1870-1927).  Both the Roberts and Brazell families  
lived in Richland County for many generations.  
  William married Beulah Mae Price in 1914.  She was the daughter of Bertran Campbell Price (1876-after 1922) and Elizabeth "Bessie" Mae (Eargle) Price (1878-1943).
 The Eargle and Price families were from Aiken and Edgefield Counties. 

George Phillip Roberts and Hattie (Brazell) Roberts family
About 1907
©Cheri Hudson Passey



   Manning David Daughrity, Jr. (1889-1931) married Loretta "Etta" McManus (1894-1936) in Sumter County in 1912. He was the son of Manning David Dority, Sr.(1844-1918) and Mary Elizabeth (Stafford) Dority (1843-1930).
  Family stories say the name Dority was changed to Daughrity by David, Jr. 
  Etta was the daughter of William A. McManus (1854-1914) and Frances "Fanny" Virgina (McRady) McManus (1856-1903). 
These families all have roots in the Sumter County area. 



Mary Elizabeth Stafford (1843-1930)
Sitting in chair
 Sons and grandchildren enjoying time on the porch
©Cheri Hudson Passey

  Francis "Frank" Emerson Sullivan, Sr. (1880-1925) was a soldier who served in WWI and was assigned to  Camp Jackson, South Carolina after the war. Conflicting information has his birth place as Pensylvania or Indiana.
 He married Mary Christine Williams (1896-1930) in Camden, Kershaw County in 1921. Frank's parents are unknown. 
 Christine was the daughter of James Lewis Williams (1873-1937) and Lizzie (Pettigrew) Williams of Kershaw County. Lizzie's birth and death are unknown, but she most likely died between 1895-1900. 

Francis "Frank" Emerson Sullivan. Sr. (1880-1925)
Headstone
Quaker Cemetery, Camden, Kershaw, South Carolina
©Cheri Hudson Passey

  Many years of research have provided this and much more on these families. It has also produced many questions still needing answers. 

Are we kin? Please contact me. Together we can find our people.
Thanks so much for stopping by!







Thursday, March 19, 2015

52 Ancestors Week 11: A Lucky 9% Irish

 According to my Ancestry.com DNA test, I am 9% Irish which is the topic of this week's 52 Ancestors in 52 Weeks 2015 Edition.

Ancesty.com Ethnicity Estimate

    From my maternal line, I have the Daughrity family. My Grandmother, Azile Juanita (Daughrity) Roberts Sullivan (1921-2009) once told me that the Daughrity's hailed from Ireland. Her Grandfather and his brother were said to have come to America during the Potato Famine in the mid-1800's. Searching for the family in the Sumter, South Carolina area has debunked that story. Records for her grandfather, Manning David Daughrity, Sr. (1814-1918) indicate that he was born in South Carolina as were his siblings and parents. It looks as if the Daughrity/Dorrity/Dougherty family has been in South Carolina since at least the early 1800's well before the Great Famine of 1845-1852. Did they come from Ireland? With a name like that, probably. I just need to discover when, why and just who those two brothers may have been.


   
   Teige Cantey (1621-1679), my paternal 9th Great Grandfather, was born in Ireland about 1621 and lived for some time in Barbados before coming to Charleston, South Carolina in the mid to late 1670's. Some claim that Tiege and wife Elisabeth were from County Cork. I am not aware of any documentation that proves their place of origin.

The following description of the inventory of Tiege Cantey's belongings after his death is entertaining:
  "The inventory of Teige Cantey's estate, with its bill of expenses for wine and rum in connection with a funeral, would seem plainly to indicate that the family was of Irish descent." 
Source: Six generations of the Cantey family of South Carolina (1910) Author: Ames, Joseph Sweetman, 1864-1943 Publisher: Charleston, S.C., Walker, Evans & Cogswell Co., pg.3

   Does wine and rum at your funeral mean you are Irish? Well, maybe, but a trip to Ireland may be in order to find those 
supporting documents.

Are we kin? Please, contact me. Together we can find our people.
Thanks so much for stopping by!



Thursday, March 5, 2015

52 Ancestors Week 9-There's No Place Like Home


  There is something wonderful about walking where your ancestor's walked and imagining the stories that played out in their homes.
 The following pictures of where some of my ancestors lived during their life's journey are the subject of my contribution to Week 9 of the  52 Ancestors in 52 Weeks 2105 Challenge.



Baker Home
Sumter County, South Carolina  1930's
©Cheri Hudson Passey

Baker Home
As it is today
©Cheri Hudson Passey



Daughrity Family Land
Church St., Sumter, Sumter, South Carolina
©Cheri Hudson Passey
       From the mid 1900's to the late 1940's, this land was the home of the Daughrity family. The home burned and the land was donated to the City of Sumter and is now used as a park.




                                         
Two of the Columbia, Richland, South Carolina homes lived in the 1950's by my Dad's family.




        Springbank Plantation
 Williamsburg County, South Carolina
©Cheri Hudson Passey

Built in the late 1700's, Springbank Plantation was the home to the Epps, McElveen and Smith families until the early 1900's. The home has been rebuilt and remodeled and is now a retreat.

Unknown Family Photo
©Cheri Hudson Passey

This photo may have been taken in Clarendon County, South Carolina and be of the Hudson or Flemming family.

Eargle Cabin
Aiken, South Carolina
©Cheri Hudson Passey
The Eargle Cabin was built in 1808 near the Edisto River in Aiken County, South Carolina. It was moved in the mid 1930's and is now a historical site in the city of Aiken.


Roberts Home 1949
 Camden, Kershaw, South Carolina
©Cheri Hudson Passey
 The Roberts home is still lived in by a member of the family.

Sullivan Home
1958
Camden, Kershaw, South Carolina
©Cheri Hudson Passey
  Built by my Grandparents in the mid 1950's this was "home" for most of my life. Mom and I came home from the hospital when I was born to this house while we waited for Dad to finish Basic Training in the USAF. The year Dad spent in Viet Nam was made bearable by living in this home. Memories of vacations, holidays and birthdays were created in this special place.
 My Grandparents are now gone and the house belongs to someone else. When I visit Camden, I still drive by, take a look and remember. There's no place like home.

Are we kin? Please contact me. Together we can find our people.
Thanks so much for stopping by!




Friday, August 22, 2014

What I Did On My Summer Vacation

   What a fast summer! For me it seemed to fly by. Sleeping in, going to the beach, pool and water park were so much fun but what did I do genealogy wise? Not as much as I would have liked to, but I did accomplish a few things.

  Rereading Mastering Genealogy Proof by Tom Jones while sitting by the pool and at the water park was a highlight. The kids could go off and splash in the water and slide down the slides while I sat in a quiet corner soaking in what it really means to follow the Genealogy Proof Standard. I found that while there are some areas that I need to improve on , for the most part I have been doing a decent job in regard to following the 5 elements. Now, I just need to "master" them!
  I also read Only a Few Bones by John Philip Colletta. This is a novel based on Mr. Colletta's years of research into a family murder mystery. It is very well written and an example to anyone who wants to write about their family stories.
 Our Ancestors, Our Stories by The Memory Keepers: Harris Bailey Jr., Bernice Alexander Bennett, Ellen LeVonne Butley, Etherl Dailey and Vincent Sheppard was a wonderful read. The contributors told their stories of researching their enslaved ancestors from Edgefield County, SC. Although my ancestors, who were slave owners from Edgefield, weren't named in the book, the experiences of the authors had and the stories they told touched me and helped me to understand what life was like during that time period.

Summer Reading


  Attending and presenting at the South Carolina Genealogical Society Workshop in July was also a fun time. Meeting other researchers who are interested in the same state and counties is always a bonus!


With Rorey Cathcart "the Who Hunter"









Meeting up with Robin Foster of "Saving Stories"











  My presentation was on Blogging with the emphasis on how to set up a blog and why to do so. Fortunately, it seemed to go well and I was able to hear back from a few people who actually set up a blog afterwards. That was very rewarding!
  A lecture that I attended at the workshop was on Kershaw County, SC by Joan and Glen Inabinet. They have been life long Kershaw County residents and had many stories and facts to share. They recently published a new book A History of Kershaw County which I purchased. Several of my lines are from Kershaw County. One, the Roberts, lived in Camden, Kershaw,SC.
 As we all tend to do when looking at a genealogy or history book, I looked in the index and found:
 Roberts, William T.  This was my Great Grandfather! The Inabinet's had included the story of my Great Grandparents William and Beulah Roberts whose three sons died within a short time of each other in WWII.  After contacting the Inabinet's to thank them for including their story, Joan Inabinet emailed me and told me that her husband Glen was part of the Military Post that provides and maintains the American Flags on my Grandfather's grave as well as the graves of his two brothers in honor of their service.
 When asking about other lines in Kershaw County that I was researching, Joan offered to pass on a family group sheet from my Williams family to those she thinks may be connected. I hope to hear back from them soon!

  While in Columbia for the SCGS Workshop a visit to the South Carolina Archives was very productive. I was able to obtain the marriage records for several of my ancestors. Seeing their signatures and those of their parents giving them permission to marry when they were underage was exciting. It took a good deal of time and microfilm rolling, but in the end, I was able to find 5 marriage records and locate 2 probate records. All in all, a good couple of days!
 
Marriage License of my paternal Grandparents
Benjamin Allen Hudson and Mary Ann Baker
photo ©Cheri Hudson Passey


Working on my NGS Homestudy lesson on Church Records led me to a cousin connection. A descendant of my Daughrity line is still living on part of the property his Great Grandmother owned. She was a sister of my ancestor. The property has part of what was once called "Daughrity Creek" running through it. Plans are being made for a visit in the near future.

Speaking of the Daughrity's, time was also spent this summer planning a reunion for the Manning David and Loretta McManus Daughrity family. David and Etta were the parents of 5 girls, one of them being my Grandmother Azile. Each daughter married and had children. We will be meeting in Sumter, SC at the beginning of September for the first time in many years. We will eat, share information, show family heirlooms and get to know each other. Afterwards, we will drive to the land that the family once owned and take a picture of all who attend. So looking forward to that!

 The most emotional discovery this summer was during a visit to my paternal Aunt's house for a day of blueberry picking and swimming. My Grandmother-Mimi- lived there for many years A cedar chest is still in the room that belonged to her. Graciously, my Aunt left me alone to go through the contents. It had not been opened since Mimi's death four years ago. Inside I found old shoes, clothing, pictures and documents. It is truly a treasure chest!
Mimi's Cedar Chest


 Listening to webnars and podcasts when I could, investigating those shaky leaves on Ancestry.com, matches on WikiTree and My Heritage, trying to keep up with my blog,, attending my local Genealogy Club meetings and keeping in touch via social media with the genealogical community kept me busy this summer too.
  There were more things that I had hoped to accomplish, like finishing my NGS Homestudy class, that just didn't happen. Now that summer vacation is over, I can look back and see that I did make progress on my goals even if I didn't complete them all and look forward to setting new ones for the fall.
 It was a great summer of fun, relaxation and learning!
What did you do on your Summer Vacation?


Are we kin? Please contact me. Together we can find our people.
Thanks so much for stopping by!




Sunday, September 22, 2013

This Week On My Family Calendar

Sept. 22-Sept. 28








Sept. 24
 Manning David Daughrity, Sr., my 2nd Maternal Great- Grandfather, would be 169 years old . He was born in Sumter County, SC in 1844.

Sept. 27
 The 137th anniversary of the death of my Paternal 3rd Great-Grandmother. Matilda C. Martin died in Statesville, Iredell, NC. in 1876.

©Cheri Hudson Passey

Sunday, March 10, 2013

Celebrating Women's History- Day 10: Foundation of Faith


 Day 10 of Celebrating Women's History from The Accidental Genealogist asks these questions:


 What role did religion play in your family? How did your female ancestors practice their faith? If they did not, why didn’t they? Did you have any female ancestors who served their churches in some capacity?


 Christianity was,and still is, a very big part of the lives of the woman in my family.This is evident not only by the lives they lead but by the things they left behind.
  I am so blessed to have a collection of old, worn, well read set of Scriptures and Religious Texts. In them are notes and keepsakes from loved ones and friends, along with recorded family information.
  .Bible verses and uplifting poems are cut out from various sources and placed as book marks.  One, when I first opened it, showered down with generations of birth, wedding, and death announcements. 

These were owned by my Great Grandmother Martha Bradford Baker and her daughters  Kate Baker Ryan and Ella Baker Wells.
    


Personal Bible of
 Martha "Mattie" Victoria Bradford Baker
1862-1947
© Cheri Hudson Passey




 Personal Bible of "Auntie Kate"
Kate Baker Ryan
1898-1987
© Cheri Hudson Passey
                                                           




The Words of Jesus
Owned by  Aunt Bess
 Ella Baker Wells
1889-1971
© Cheri Hudson Passey

Personal Bible of
Ella Baker Wells
1889-1971
© Cheri Hudson Passey

                                                                         
                                                                                                                                                 

    Bibles belonging to my Grandmother Azile Daughrity Roberts Sullivan. 

Personal Bible of
 Azile Junita Daughrity
1921-2009
© Cheri Hudson Passey
Personal Bible of
 Azile Daughrity Roberts Sullivan
1921-2009
© Cheri Hudson Passey

                                                                               
      This book called The Story of the Bible was in the home of my Great Grandparents John and Margaret Ann "Annie" Thames.  John had previously been married to Annie's sister  Louvinia Blanche Thames who died in childbirth. It is not known which member of the family it belonged to. 


The Story of the Bible
Owned by the Thhames/Hudson Family
Early 1900's-1960
© Cheri Hudson Passey




 These faithful women set the foundation for generations.