Sometimes, it helps to pay attention to the friends and
neighbors of the family member you are researching. You never know when the one
you presumed was a mere acquaintance will turn out to have been a lifelong
confidante.
About the same time I noticed the clues that helped me resolve
the mystery of what the “Wall” meant in the name “Wall Smith,” I saw another
mention of that same Childers surname. It was in the newspaper clipping from The Fort Meade Leader I had referred to a few days ago. Remember the mention of the teacher who also was in attendance at
the high school reunion? And the graduate from the prior year’s class at Fort Meade
High School?
Both those ladies happened to bear the name Childers:
Also on hand for the get-together on Wednesday were Hazel Finney Childers, a home economics teacher who was on the faculty in 1920; and Lula Childers Smith from the Class of 1918; and Mrs. Carrie Dodson, who graduated in 1920, but was an usher for commencement exercises of the Class of 1919.
Incredibly, the Childers hint was lost on me, so focused was I on
writing about my grandmother’s reunion celebration!
Another little giveaway to the family connection: the very
marriage document I just found yesterday. If you notice, on the line where the
witnesses sign, there was a particular name, “Mrs. R. C. McClellan.”
McClellan, of course, was my grandmother’s maiden name. Her father’s name—the dentist and former mayor of Fort Meade—was Rupert Charles McClellan. He likely, as all good southern gentlemen were accustomed to doing at the time, went by his initials, R. C. McClellan.
After Rubie McClellan graduated from high school, the family
moved to Tampa—most
likely for professional reasons for Rubie’s father.
Who knows? Perhaps the Tampa-born Wall Smith crossed paths with either of
the McClellans who, thinking of their good friends, the Childers family, back
in Fort Meade, may have played a small role in connecting the forty-something
bachelor with Rubie’s good friend and still-single school teacher, Lula
Childers. Of course, I don’t know this. But there must have been some reason the couple requested Mrs.
McClellan to fulfill that honored role.
Now that I got my bearings, as far as family connections
went, I began to wonder about the Childers family. Perhaps it was not just a
case of Rubie and Lula being good friends. Despite no longer living in the same town, perhaps the entire family still had an
ongoing relationship.
One of the other mystery photographs in my collection—bearing
that same marking as yesterday’s photos, “March 1949”—was labeled “Reubin and
wife.”
What were my chances that Lula had a brother named Rueben? Pretty near one hundred percent, judging by the 1920 census. Apparently, Lula was still living at home in Fort Meade, along with her mother and brothers Pinson, Reuben and Leland.
Pinson, as it turns out, was the Childers who married Hazel
Finney, the former home economics teacher on the staff of the local high school
who had attended Rubie’s high school reunion in 1977.
And Reuben and his unnamed wife? She apparently was the former Aina
T. Persson, who promised Reuben Childers “I do” on March 24, 1934.
While I still can’t figure out what the occasion might have
been in March, 1949, for which my grandmother had made the trip to Florida—it wasn’t,
apparently, either Reuben’s wedding, or Lula’s (though it came close)—it must
have been for some sort of special event. The last photograph for which its clues
fell into place—labeled “Reubin’s (Fort Meade) March 1949”—showed what appeared
to be three couples, nicely dressed, standing in front of what likely was
Reuben Childers’ own home.
While I can’t be certain about the identity of all six of
those people, finding a few clues here and there along the research way
certainly helped me understand more about this set of photos. There, in that
last photograph, stood the ones I now knew to be Reuben and Aina Childers and Wall
and Lula Childers Smith.
The couples don’t line up exactly right, though. When I enlarged the picture to see greater detail, I was almost sure the man to the far right was actually Rubie’s husband, my grandfather Jack R. Davis. If you look at the shoes of the woman to his right, you’ll recognize them from the picture yesterday of Lula and Wall—making the woman standing next to Jack, Lula. Wall is to the other side of Lula.
The couples don’t line up exactly right, though. When I enlarged the picture to see greater detail, I was almost sure the man to the far right was actually Rubie’s husband, my grandfather Jack R. Davis. If you look at the shoes of the woman to his right, you’ll recognize them from the picture yesterday of Lula and Wall—making the woman standing next to Jack, Lula. Wall is to the other side of Lula.
That leaves yet another mystery: who is the woman between
Wall and Reuben’s wife Aina? It isn't my grandmother—she is most likely the one taking the photograph. And no, I won’t be revealing an easy answer in
tomorrow’s post.
Unfortunately, that is how mysteries unravel: not all at once, and not even in a steady progression. But I know if I set this puzzle aside and give it time to breathe and grow, the next time I pick it up to tackle that question, there likely will be another hint staring me in the face and daring me to chase it.
Unfortunately, that is how mysteries unravel: not all at once, and not even in a steady progression. But I know if I set this puzzle aside and give it time to breathe and grow, the next time I pick it up to tackle that question, there likely will be another hint staring me in the face and daring me to chase it.
You can be sure when that happens, there will be another
post written up and waiting for you to share.
I suspect Wall and the mystery lady are on the step to make them "look taller" as they were both rather short!
ReplyDeleteI wonder if the lady is Lula's mother.
I did notice that about the steps, Iggy :)
DeleteThe mystery lady has me puzzled...Lula's mother might be a good guess, as she would be mother to two people in that picture. However, I did remember that I have some other photos with that same border, and also labeled "March 1949" which include Rubie's mom, Sarah Broyles McClellan. I'll have to pull them out and see if I can find any clues from her clothing in those. The only problem is: I don't think this face matches hers. Maybe a second look, under enlargement with PhotoShop, is in order here.
Back then no special occasion was needed for a parting photograph. Photos by cars and photos near doorways outdoors were popular. I love that porch and would enjoying sitting a spell there:)
ReplyDeleteI imagine you could use a spell sitting on that porch, right about now, Far Side, considering the weather you've been having lately!
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