----- ............Cemetery Walk: An afternoon of discovery! Every stone has a story. And they are waiting to be told........... -----
Showing posts with label AL: Russell Co. Show all posts
Showing posts with label AL: Russell Co. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 2, 2012

Wives of Horace King

I made another visit to the Godwin Cemetery to take a better photo of the lot in which Horace's wives are buried.

1st wife: Francis L. Goode
2nd wife: Sally Jane McManus


I also have permission to use screenshots from the following YouTube video -

Horace: The Bridge Builder King by Tom Lenard

These screen shots are from the King bible showing the cemetery layout.



John Godwin Monument
Placed by his former slave, Horace King

Previous posts on DCW about Horace King:
Post 1
Post 2

Tuesday, January 3, 2012

Tombstone Tuesday


Ladonia Baptist Church
Russell Co., AL

Are these true barrel style tombs?

Tuesday, September 13, 2011

Horace King: Slave & Master Bridge Builder

A part of my hometown history...

I learned about the relationship of John Godwin and his former slave, Horace King, during my search for cemeteries in Phenix City, Alabama. While Phenix City is my birthplace I was raised across the Chattahoochee River in Columbus, GA.

During a trip home I found the Godwin Cemetery and visited the grave of John Godwin and photographed the headstone placed there by his former slave, Horace. I knew I also needed to find and visit Horace's grave in LaGrange, GA. On my latest trip home I made time to travel to LaGrange to find and visit the grave of Horace King.

I was saddened by the sparseness of the cemetery and found Horace and his son, Marshall, buried beside a tree next to the creek bed. There were few marked graves in this large piece of ground outside of the confederate cemetery referred to as Stonewall Jackson Cemetery.




I kneeled down and cleaned the debris from their graves and told him how I had learned about him and wanted to visit him. That much has been written about him and the new 13th Street bridge connecting Alabama and Georgia is called the Horace King Friendship Bridge.



Standing at the head of Horace's grave looking
toward the Confederate Cemetery
After I returned to Kansas I discovered his wives are buried in the Godwin Cemetery. I will visit them when I return home in a few months. The documentary listed below states the King wives are buried close to the Godwin plot by the two cedars. I reviewed my photos and see the location.


Horace King 9/8/1807 - 5/28/1885
His headstone is marked wrong with the year 1887
1st wife: Francis L. Goode
2nd wife: Sally Jane McManus

Alabama Heritage

New Georgia Encyclopedia
Born as a slave of African, European, and Native American (Catawba) ancestry in Chesterfield District South Carolina, King moved with his master, John Godwin (1798-1859), a contractor, to Girard, Alabama, a suburb of Columbus, where Godwin had the contract to build the first public bridge connecting those two states. King probably planned the construction and directed the slaves who erected that span. Godwin apparently realized King's intuitive genius as a builder and nurtured those skills. During the early 1840s King served as superintendent and architect of major bridges at Wetumpka, Alabama, and Columbus, Mississippi, without Godwin's supervision.
John Godwin allowed King and his other slaves a great degree of freedom, and in 1846 he freed King, perhaps to protect this valuable asset from his creditors. King might have simply bought his freedom, but the relationship between the former master and slave remained the same. After Godwin's death in 1859, King erected a monument over his grave that declared "the love and gratitude he felt for his lost friend and former master."
Horace: The Bridge Builder King documentary by Tom C. Lenard
As shared by his descendents, researchers and historians on YouTube
Part 1. Be sure to watch all 6 segments.

Other links with information on Horace King:

Monday, August 8, 2011

Timpoochee Barnard - Yuchi Leader





[Great photo embeded from here]
I have this book "Phenix City".





Excerpt from Alabama Pioneers:

Timpoochee Barnard was a Yuchee chief, born about 1783 in the Creek Nation, died near Fort Mitchell in Alabama. He was the son of Timothy Barnard, who was the son of Captain John, commanding a company of rangers in Georgia, dying in that colony about 1768. Captain John Barnard may have been of Scotch birth, as possibly may have been the case with his son Timothy, who was born, conjecturally, about 1750...
Other online resources
Historic Collections of Georgia
Congressional edition
History of Alabama Vol 2

Sunday, July 10, 2011

Aged 500

I'm aged 500..........500 posts that is!

I started this blog in September 2008. It was my way of sharing the interesting cemeteries and headstones I find on my cemetery walks. I never would have guessed it would lead to being voted as a best genealogy blog for 2011 by Family Tree Magazine readers.

Crawford Cemetery

Here's hoping you'll remember me for the next 500!

Davis Cemetery


Davis Cemetery
Hwy 80
Several miles west of the East Alabama Speedway

Don't blink or you'll miss it.

14 interments on Find A Grave.

Saturday, July 9, 2011

Beneath the silent tomb

In remembrance of
Little
Oscar R. Carden
Son of
Mr. & Mrs. S. C. Carden
Born
Oct 30, 1901
Died
Dec 2, 1909

Godwin Cemetery

Those little lips so sweet to kiss
Are closed forever now
Those sparkling eyes that shone so bright
Beneath that pearly brow
That little heart that beat so high
Free from all care and gloom
Are hidden now from those he loved
Beneath the silent tomb

Thursday, July 7, 2011

Although he sleeps

William H. Lassiter
Feb 6, 1873 - Jan 25, 1918
Ladonia Baptist Church Cemetery

Although he sleeps
his memory doth live.
And cheering comfort
to his mourners give.
He followed virtue as
his truest guide.
Lived as a christian -
as a christian died.


Tuesday, June 28, 2011

Goslin Lot

No visible stones mark these graves. The names and death dates are located on the gate.

Crawford Cemetery
Simon Goslin: died 11/17/1856
Mary G. Goslin: died 10/30/1868

A quick look at Ancestry.com reveals the name Simon Goslin in many Alabama land records and census and slave schedules. Before locating to Russell County Alabama they were across the river in Columbus, GA. Georgia marriage records list a Simon Goslin to Mary G. Bivins on 1/19/1826 in Baldwin, GA.


Monday, June 27, 2011

Box Tomb

My photo of this box / chest tomb is misleading. It looks large in the photo but it is actually about the size of a laundry basket. There were a couple of small ones in this cemetery.



Anderson G. Jones
Son of FG & S Jones
7/31/1856 - 10/1/1857
Crawford Cemetery