Showing posts with label Family History. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Family History. Show all posts

Friday, September 11, 2020

Archibald Tulian Reese

 Archibald Tulian Reese

1868-1945

Eddie Bowden Reese 
1872-1942

Life post 1865 was proving extremely difficult for the South. Georgia, like all the other Southern states, found themselves struggling with post war unemployment, inflation and decimated cities and country sides. Large land owners found themselves without a cheap labor force and small farmers, in order to feed their families, were at the mercy of lending institutions. Georgia, in particular, had been dealt a punishing blow by Sherman's army. Archibald Tulian Reese, the son of Thomas Clopton and Martha Olivia Kimbrough Reese, was born on June 9, 1868 just three years after the Civil War ended. He was the first born of Thomas Clopton Rees's second wife. Thomas Rees had been able to hold onto his land but was forced to borrow money every year to buy seeds, fertilizer and other farm needs. He lost acreage every year due to exorbitant interest and dropping cotton prices. In 1870 he owned about 360 acres, 300 acres that were in farm production. By 1872, land prices had fallen from $4.85 an acre (1860) to $2.87 an acre. The cost of producing cotton was high and the planter was dependent on his cotton broker to secure money for his crop. Interest rates at this time were about 2.5% a month (30% interest a year!).  In 1874 Thomas Rees borrowed $550.00 from from Watt and Walker, Columbus cotton merchants, to be paid back by October 1, 1874 or he would deed them 150 acres. In January 1875, Thomas Rees borrowed $996.44 from Charles B. Taliaferro, cotton merchant,  to be paid back by October 1, 1875 or he would deed him ? acres (amount of acreage could not be read). In April 1876, Thomas Rees borrowed $275.00 from Blanchard and Williams, cotton merchants, payment to be received by November 1, 1876 or he would have to surrender to them 3 mules, 1 horse, 16 hogs, 7 head of cattle, a two-horse wagon, an express wagon, and all the cotton, peas, corn and oats produced on his farm that year. I can only imagine that these items were the entirety of his farm. At this point he had lost more than 150 acres of crop land and could not mortgage any more and still be able to produce a crop. In 1877 he borrowed $419.51 from Flournoy and Eppling, Cotton Brokers, or give them the entire cotton crop. The years following the war had indeed been tremendously hard on farmer. Cash was scarce, cotton prices had fallen and planting costs had risen. High interest rates had driven many farmers, including Thomas Rees, deep into debt. At age thirteen, Archie and his older brothers were working on the farm. It was into this economy that Archie Reese reached manhood, found a wife and continued to farm.  Archie married Eddie Bowden, the daughter of Morris Malachi and Frances Simmons Bowden, on December 22, 1891. They settled on Hamilton Road in Columbus, Ga. The country went into a deep economic depression in the 1890's. Around 1892 the boll weevil arrived in the United States and infested cotton country from Texas eastward   destroying much of the south's staple crop and economy.  Archie struggled to feed and clothe a growing family. By 1901 the couple had five children, followed by five more by 1916. They lost a son, Raiford Kimbrough Reese who died in infancy in 1915. Between 1910 and 1920, they were able to purchase a small farm. In 1933, the Reese family gathered to celebrate Archie's 65th birthday. It was a huge celebration as you can see by the pictures of the family. Eddie Bowden Reese died on April 23, 1942. Archie died three years later on October 29, 1945. 

Archie and Eddie Reese
1933



Archie and Eddie Bowden Reese's Children:

1) Tulian Clements Reese 1892-1966

     m.1) Nancy Bedell Smith 2) Dorothy Ethel McDaniel

2) Annie Mabel Reese 1894-1983     

      m. Jesse Eugene Smith     

3) Clyde Bowden Reese 1896-1966

     m. Ora Mae Webb

4) Nell Olivia Reese 1899-1986

      m. Julius M. Kite

5) Edith Sommers Reese 1901-1983

     m. Getzen Luther Smith

6) Ilga Earline Reese 1903-1984

     m. Henry Nevin Lumpkin

7) Thomas Gray Reese 1908-1979 

     m. Lois Beavers

8) Archie Kye Reese 1910-1960

     m. Ruby Gunnells

9) Stanford Eugene Reese 1913-1978

     m. Gladys Newsome

10) Raiford Kimbrough Reese 1915-1915

11) Clopton Dickerson Reese 1916-1991

       m. Doris Hix




Saturday, August 1, 2020

Thomas Clopton Rees


Thomas Clopton Rees
1829-1893




Thomas Clopton Rees

Martha Olivia Kimbrough (2nd wife)

Thomas Clopton Rees was my maternal great great grandfather, the son of James Rees and Rebecca Mathews Smith. He was born in Jasper County near Clinton, GA on June 8, 1829. The family moved frequently due to his father's occupation as a minister. By the early 1840's the family had settled in Muscogee County on Hamilton Road (now Veteran's Parkway) near present day Northside High School. The Rees family owned a farm in the community and as Thomas grew into manhood he continued to farm. On November 29, 1855 he married Martha Minerva Kimbrough, the daughter of William B. Kimbrough and Jane Ann Nutt.  They settled near Martha's grandmother Sarah Stallings Kimbrough the widow of Thomas Kimbrough.  There were a variety of neighbors with diverse occupations living near the Rees and Kimbrough families. Larkin Davidson, a lawyer and farmer was the Rees's closest neighbor. Edward Beers, a tailor, Charles Blake, a teacher, Jacob Hugh, a dentist and David Dean, a dentist also lived in the community. Wiley Cannon, John Murrain and James Moon were farmers in the area. (1850 U.S. Federal Census, Muscogee County, GA)
In the mid 1850's with several Baptist churches already in the area, Methodists  decided to build a church. The church, located about eight miles from Columbus, was built on land owned by Benjamin A. Clark, who later deeded the land the church stood on. One third of the church was set aside for enslaved people, so they could attend worship. Dr. Lovick Pierce dedicated the church on the second Sunday of August 1855, giving the members "a spiritual feast of nearly three hours."  After Thomas and Minerva married, they began attending Pierce Chapel along with his youngest brother Joseph. In 1861, on the deed of Pierce Chapel Methodist Church Thomas Rees was listed as a Trustee.  (Louise Calhoun Barfield, The History of Harris County, Georgia, 1827-1961, {Columbus, Ga, Columbus Printing Co., 1961} p.395) 


The 1860's were destined to bring drastic changes to the small rural community. Following the secession of 1861, Georgia governor Joe E. Brown called for volunteers, set up munitions factories, seized the Federal mint at Dahlonega, and made it illegal to distill grain into liquor. The Georgia Legislature authorized one million dollars to raise an army and prepare for war. (one million dollars into today's currency would be worth approximately thirty two million dollars). Though Georgians rushed to enlist,  clothing, weapons and essential equipment were already in short supply.  (John H. Martin, Columbus, Georgia, From It's Selection as a Trading Town in 1827 to It's Partial Destruction by Wilson's Raiders in 1865,  Georgia Genealogical Reprints, 1972)      
All of Thomas's brothers enlisted in the war, only the youngest, Joseph died (1862). Thomas Rees only has limited participation in the war. he enlisted in John Pemberton's Company, Muscogee Calvary on July 13, 1863. The purpose of this calvary unit was to provide local defense within a hundred mile radius of Columbus, Georgia. He served a short time in Atlanta and mustered out there on February 4, 1864. 
The economy, though stable in 1860, was unable to bear the financial pressures the war brought. Georgia tried to finance the war with bonds and treasury notes, but it was insufficient, and inflation was soon running rampant. Food prices soared and clothing prices were exorbitant. 
Martha Minerva Kimbrough died on December 17, 1864. She was buried in the Pierce Chapel Cemetery. Thomas Rees was left with four young children. 
On December 18, 1865, Thomas married Martha Olivia Kimbrough, Martha Minerva's first cousin. Martha Olivia was the daughter of Archibald Malachi Kimbrough and Nancy Dickerson. 
The war brought severe financial problems to the Rees family. Thomas continued to farm but stayed deeply in debt to the large cotton brokers in Columbus. He ventured into politics in the 1870's and became a local judge in the Nances community. He was active in the Democratic Party and ran for Tax Receiver of Muscogee County in 1874. (Columbus Daily Enquirer, December 9, 1874, p.4) 
Thomas Rees died on February 6, 1893. The last twenty years of his life had been a financial struggle. Fourteen children and ever decreasing farm land on which to grow crops were certainly a heavy burden. His obituary stated that he "reared a large family and bequeathed them something better than wealth-a good name and religious impress on every child." (Columbus Daily Enquirer-Sun, February 8, 1893, 4.)
Martha Olivia developed heart problems and died in her home on February 1, 1902. Thomas and Martha are buried in the Pierce Chapel Methodist cemetery along with many of their children.
 
Children of Thomas and Martha Minerva Kimbrough Rees:
1) Cora Rees 1857-1935 
    m. Albert Pitner

2) Annie  Rees 1859-1945
    m. Jeremiah Griffin Gray

3) Raiford Kimbrough Rees 1861-1898
    
4) Suda Ella Rees 1863-1864

5) Thomas Matt Rees 1864-1943
    m. Virginia Clark
 
Children of Thomas and Martha Olivia Kimbrough Rees:

1) Archibald Tulian Rees 1868-1945
    m. Eddie Bowden

2) James Clement Rees 1870-1949
    m. Mary Lucille Dodd

3) Vara Rosco Rees 1873-1901

4) Henry Butler Rees 1875-1963
    m. Gussie Olive Gibson

5) Rev. Albert William Rees 1877-1955
    m. Augusta Lee

6) Erin Maude Rees 1882-1901

7) Thaddeus Lawson Rees 1883-1948
    m. Irene Lester Daniels

8) Griffin Gray Rees 1886-1948
    m. Mary Hogan

9) Marvin M. Rees 1889-1966


Thomas Clopton Rees
Martha Olivia Kimbrough Rees

Martha Minerva Kimbrough







Tuesday, July 7, 2020

Tulian Clements Reese



He sat rocking on the back porch of the white frame house he had built in 1947 watching his grandchildren play in the dirt. Every once in a while they would run past him and he would swat them with the flyswatter he always had in his hand and they would squeal in delight. It was a game that they all enjoyed. Tulian Clements (T.C.)Reese was my grandfather and though he passed away when I was twelve, I have wonderful memories of him. My mother, his youngest daughter Irell, adored him. She described him as a fun loving father who loved to tease and dispel words of wisdom, such as "If you lie down with dogs, you get up with fleas on you," or "Pretty is as pretty does." My family lived with him and my grandmother for about six years. I watched him drive my sweet grandmother to distraction by thumping his teaspoon on a saucer while she prepared breakfast. He loved to slurp coffee while my grandmother glared at him. He was seventeen years older than Ethel McDaniel Reese. I never heard him call her by her given name, only Daughter. My brother and I spent a lot of time following granddaddy around, helping him garden and tend to his cows and hogs. My grandfather would be considered a "picker" today because he had several barns filled with junk as most of the family termed it. His grandchildren, however,  thought he had barns filled with treasures. He had a huge wooden box filled with skeleton keys, and another huge box filled with suicide knobs (those colorful knobs found on the steering wheels and columns of vintage cars.) One barn held a huge pump organ that we loved to play and furniture and bric a brac of all sorts. There were old cars on the property also filled with junk. He had an old smoke house that my grandmother filled with jams, jellies and other canned goods. She had also stored a couple of boxes of depression glass on one of the shelves. My cousin and I were playing in the smokehouse one day (though we were told not to) and I knocked a box off the shelf and everything in the box shattered. We decided not to tell anyone, but granddaddy found it and told us it was a good thing grandmother hated those dishes or we would be in a lot of trouble. Years later I confessed to my grandmother and ask her why she had hated those dishes so much. She said they were all the dishes they could ever afford and she hated the green color. I would love to know what those dishes were worth today!
Eddie Bowden and Archibald Tulian Reese




Tulian Clements Reese
1893


Tulian Clements Reese was born to Archibald Tulian (Archie) and Eddie Bowden Reese on November 30, 1892. He was the oldest child of ten siblings with big beautiful blue eyes. The family lived in the rural area of Columbus, GA and had a small farm.  They attended Pearce Chapel Methodist church with many of Archie's brother and sisters, along with Eddie's family. As the oldest son, Clements started working in the field along side his father at a very young age. According to the 1900 and 1910 census Clements never attended school. 
Clements and his sister Mabel were quite popular in the small Fortson community. Their names were often mentioned in the What's Happening Around Town column in the Columbus paper. 






Bowden (left) and Clements Reese

In 1913 Clements and his brother Bowden were involved in an accident on Hamilton Road (now Veteran's Parkway). They were driving a wagon filled with seed cotton. The horse and mule team bolted and rounding a curve the wagon turned over trapping Clements and Bowden underneath. Clement's left arm was broken in two places between the elbow and shoulder. Bowden was buried under a full bale of seed cotton, but was only badly bruised. 
(From Columbus Daily Enquirer, October 13, 1913, p.3)

 
Clements Reese and Nancy Bedell Smith



Nancy, Blackie and Clements



Janie and Mildred Reese

Clements married Nancy Bedell Smith, the daughter of Cicero and Lucy Jane Cannon Smith on March 3, 1915. They welcomed their first son, Larkin Tulian Reese (known as Blackie) in April 1916. They lived on Smith Road in the house pictured below. 
Clements and Nancy's home in the background*





Their second child,Joe Lemuel, was born on December 8, 1918. He became very ill in early November 1919 and died November 15th of acute enteritis (chronic inflammation of the lining of the intestine). He was buried at Pearce Chapel Methodist Church. Their first daughter Janie Somers arrived in arrived in 1920 and Mildred Lavinia was born in 1923. During this time the family lived in the Fortson area. The family was living on Woolridge Road when their home burned down. The story goes that there were moonshiners in the area. Their still was discovered and for some reason they thought Clements had informed the sheriff. They retaliated by burning their home down (story was told to me by Bill Reese, Clements' son).  In June 1925, their son Arthur was born, Nancy never recovered from his birth. She passed away on July 10th from acute nephritis and septicemia (inflammation of the kidneys and blood poisoning.) Clements found himself a widow with three young children and an infant. (Nancy's brother, George Smith, took Arthur, telling Clements he and his wife Lavinia would be glad to take care of the baby until he could make arrangements for the care of him. He continued to live with the Smiths until he was 16 and went by Arthur Smith. At the age of 16, Clements and his sons went to see Arthur and explained that he was his father. Arthur decided to move back in with his real father.) 

Ethel McDaniel, Clements Reese, Mittie Lou McDaniel


At the age of 33, Clements decided that he needed a new wife. According to Clement's son Bill, T.C. was driving a logging truck and found himself on Whitesville Road in Harris County, GA in a logging camp. Logging companies built small cheap houses for the timber workers and their families to live in. Ethel McDaniel and her family were living in the camp. After a whirlwind courtship, Clements and Ethel married on December 15, 1925. By 1930, Clements and Ethel had three children, Dorothy Edna born in 1927, Frances Lorene born in 1928 and John Blanchard born in 1929. William Clements (Bill) was born in 1931 and Bessie Irell in 1932. 


Dot, Lorene, John
Bill and Irell Reese




  In the 1930's and early 40's Clements ran a grocery store and worked in his brother Bowden's dairy farm. They rented various homes in the Fortson area. In 1939 or 1940, Clement's brother Bowden bought an old tractor. On the first day of it's use Clements got the tractor stuck in the mud. He was able to get the tractor moving the next day. He started inching the tractor up on some wood when the tractor suddenly turned over trapping him underneath. John and Bill were with him, John ran to tell Ethel and Bill tried to help him. Hot water was spilling over Clements. He was finally able to get out from under the tractor and made it to the side of the road. His brother Bowden took him to a doctor in town. He had a broken pelvis. In a few days he went back to work. In the early 1940's they lived in the Old Smith homeplace on Smith Road. On the back of the photograph my mother Irell wrote that "Daddy had barns for the cows and horses. He milked the cows and delivered milk and butter to make extra money."
The Old Smith place is in the background

The family moved to a house on Smith Road near the railroad tracks. My mother Irell wrote that "the house near the railroad tracks was not a very good house. Mother kept the house so clean and cooked on a wood stove. We carried water from a well from an old home place that had burned down. I carried a syrup bucket, a half gallon size. By the time I got back home I had very little water left."


Ben Brown, Bob Brown and John Reese


Clements at the house near the railroad tracks on Smith Road

Irell, Bob Brown, Bill and John with Clements

Clements built their first home in 1947 on Smith Road in front of the house he had lived in with his first wife, Nancy. 


Bill and John Reese at the home on Smith Road built by Clements Reese



Shortly after they moved into their home, Ethel's cousin asked if he would manage his grist mill at Oak Mountain outside Waverly Hall, GA. They moved into the house provided with the mill. They lived at Oak Mountain until 1952.(More information on their time at Oak Mountain, along with pictures can be found in the post: Dorothy Ethel McDaniel Reese in this blog). 

Ethel, Irell and Clements Reese at Oak Mountain in 1952
They moved back to Columbus and Clements ran a grocery store on Hamilton Road near Britt David Road. 



Clements sitting in front of his store on Hamilton Road across from Hale's Grocery (Hale's Grocery is still in this location.)


In 1953 they moved again and ran a grocery store above Moon Road on Hamilton Road. I have some memories about this time in their lives. I can remember the red Coca Cola coke box and a large jar of Jack's Cookies
inside the grocery store. I was living in Wichita, Kansas with my parents but we visited a lot. 






Clements and Linda (me) checking on the chickens behind the store on Hamilton Road

  We moved from Wichita, Kansas to Crestview, Florida and in 1957 we moved back to Columbus and moved in with my grandparents. By this time they had moved back to their home on Smith Road. We lived with them for six years, I feel so lucky that I got to spend those years with them. They loved me and spent a lot of time with me and all their grandchildren. I never lacked for playmates! Clements always had a lot of animals, no matter where he and grandmother were living. On Smith Road, he raised chickens, calves and pigs. He also gardened. We spent a lot of time in the garden helping him weed and gather the vegetables.

Scott Self, Jan Reese, Linda Self in the garden on Smith Road with Clements


Scott Self, Jan Reese, Linda Self and Joannie Reese with Clements



Clements and Ethel beside their home om Smith Road (1960)


Clements sitting on the back porch

Whenever I think of my grandfather, Clements Reese, this picture always pops up in my mind. He sat on the back porch a great deal as his health declined. Clements Reese died on July 14, 1966. I feel so fortunate to have had such a wonderful grandfather and grandmother. Their legacy lives on in their descendants. These memories are mine and from stories told to me all my life. I invite you to add your memories of this truly wonderful man.












*There's a humorous story behind this picture. Clements had a sister that was quite a gossip. She was always calling Ethel to tattle on the children.  So Uncle John decided to play a little joke on her. They rode up and down Smith Road with the "Just Married" sign on the side of the car. Sure enough, before they could get back home she had called Ethel to give her the shocking news! I'm sure my Uncle John got a big kick out of it!



Monday, May 11, 2020

A Connection with Cousins!

Last week I had the opportunity to visit with my cousins Donna, Jan and Joanie. On Thursday we met after Jan flew in from her home in Virginia. We spent the afternoon catching up on our families, sharing childhood memories and laughing all afternoon. We then went to Pierce Chapel Methodist Church Cemetery where several generations of our family are buried.
 On Friday morning I picked Jan and Donna up and we spent the day visiting cemeteries, churches, and areas where our Bowden family lived. We started our day with a visit to the grave of our third great grandmother Mahaly Barmore Simmons. (She is buried in the Macedonia Baptist Church cemetery in Manchester, GA.)



We stopped next at the former Bethesda United Methodist church where some of our Bowden relatives are buried..

Sunday, April 26, 2020

Dorothy Ethel McDaniel Reese


She stood in her tiny kitchen bending over her dough bowl mixing buttermilk biscuits with her hands. One of my sweetest memories of my grandmother was her ability to mix buttermilk, lard and flour together with her hands and when she had finished remove all traces of the dough by rolling her fingers over each other. She would hold up her hands and you would never had known that she had just had two hands with fingers covered in dough! She was an amazing woman and I'm so fortunate to have had her as my grandmother.


 Ethel McDaniel was born to Jesse Hamilton McDaniel and Josey Beatrice Storey McDaniel on March 13, 1908 in Talbot County, GA. In 1910 the young family was living in Langdale, Alabama where Jesse worked as a stitcher in one of the Langdale cotton mills. 







By 1920 the young McDaniel family had grown to six. Mittie Lou McDaniel was born in 1912, Rawleigh "Bud" McDaniel in 1913 and Willie Eugenia McDaniel in 1916. Jesse McDaniel was now working in a saw mill in Waverly Hall, GA.













Ethel McDaniel (on right) at age 16 with her friend 

Renada Weldon



                      


Ethel McDaniel Reese, T.C. Reese and Mittie Lou McDaniel

circa 1925




At the age of 17, Ethel McDaniel met Tulian Clements Reese, a widow with four young children. (Clements Reese's first wife Nancy Bedell Smith died following complications from childbirth).  After a whirlwind courtship they married on December 15, 1925 at the home of Judge Almond.




Almond Home Almond Road Columbus, Ga

Janie and Mildred Reese






In 1930 they were living in the Fortson, GA area. Clements  Reese was working for his brother Bowden Reese on his dairy farm. They had three children: Dot, Lorene and John along with Clements' children Tulian (Blackie), Janie, and Mildred. (Clememts's youngest, Arthur was taken by Nancy's brother at her death. They moved to Florida and would not return Arthur. When Arthur was 16, Blackie drove to Florida and brought him home.)   At age 24, Ethel Reese was the mother of six children!  Times were hard and the young Reese family moved a lot, but stayed in the Fortson area. By 1940, two more children had been born, Bill (1931) and Irell (1932). In 1934 their youngest son Bill was critically injured in an automobile accident. Bill survived the accident and is the last surviving Reese sibling.




Dot, Lorene, John
Bill, Irell Reese
1934
Ethel Reese McDaniel and Irell Reese
  
During the depression, money was scarce and the Reese family was large. Clements continued to work for his brother making $6.00 a week (48 hour week) . Bowden Reese owned a small grocery store and T.C. frequently gave him back most of his earnings to pay for the groceries that he bought on credit.  (This recollection came from Blackie Reese in an interview with Nancy Craig Graham in the early 1990's.)  They moved frequently but stayed in the Fortson area. They lived in this house on Smith Road. It had been the home of Cicero and Lucy Cannon Smith, Clements' first wife's parents. Their oldest daughter Janie married Edwin Brown in 1937 and Blackie married Jean Newsome (2nd wife) in 1942  
Old Smith Home

They later moved into this house near the railroad tracks on Smith Road. Mildred married Ed Talbot in 1943, Dot married Farris Austin in 1944 and Lorene married Willie Jordan in 1945. 

Home near the Railroad Tracks on Smith Road
Dot, Bill, Mildred, Lorene and Janie Reese



T.C. built a home for the family on Smith Road and they moved into it in 1947. They only lived in the house for three months. Shortly after moving into their new home, one of Ethel's cousins contacted T.C. and gave him the opportunity to manage Oak Mountain grist mill in Waverly Hall, GA. The mill also came with a house for the family to live in. They moved to Waverly Hall. During the years they lived in Waverly Hall, their youngest daughter (Irell) married and three of their sons (Arthur, John and Bill) enlisted in the army and were stationed in Korea.

 

                                           Oak Mountain Grist Mill                                                            Waverly Hall, GA


Oak Mountain Home (Irell Reese posed in front)




T.C. , Irell, John, Blackie, Bill Reese
Farris Austin, Nancy Reese



Creek at Oak Mountain



John Reese, Bill Reese and Arthur Reese



T.C. ran the grist mill about five years.  Shortly after their youngest daughter married in late 1952, they returned to Columbus. T.C. ran a grocery store on Hamilton Road with living quarters over the store. When her children that lived away from Columbus came home they were always welcomed!  After the store closed it slowly deteriorated, the picture below was taken in 1978, it was located near Williams Road.


Thanksgiving 1953 at store on Hamilton Road
 


Ethel and  T.C. Reese,  Dot Reese Austin



Behind the Grocery store on Hamilton Road
Roger Brown, Donna Gayle Reese, Linda Self, Gary Reese

Ruins of Hamilton Road Store (1978)
Hamilton Road (Veteran's Pkwy)
Columbus, GA 

Ethel and Josie Storey McDaniel


Children and grandchildren were always important to Ethel. She welcomed one and all! On Sunday mornings she would get up very early (she rose at 4:30 for her personal devotional time every morning)and make angel biscuits. She would put them in the warming drawer under her stove and bake them after church. An amazing aroma welcomed everyone walking into the kitchen. She was a wonderful cook, her fruit cobblers were my favorite whether they were blackberry or peach. Sharing meals together with an abundance of food is still a Reese tradition. 









 Ethel and T.C. moved back into their home on Smith Road in 1955. They raised cows, pigs and chickens. T.C. always had a large garden. Ethel was a wonderful seamstress and had several ladies that she made clothes for.  Once a year the family would gather for a hog killing. Huge vats of Brunswick stew was cooked, along with cracklings. 

    





Christmas 1957

Ethel Reese, Dot Reese Austin, Lorene Reese Jordan, Willie Jordan

Floyd Jordan, Irell Reese Self, Marion Self

Linda Self, T.C. Reese, Scott Self, Ken Jordan
July 1958



Irell Reese Self, T.C. Reese (background)
John Reese
Smith Road

   



T.C. and Ethel Reese
Smith Road


T.C. and Ethel Reese
Smith Road
1960


Clements Reese's health began to decline and Ethel took care of him at home until his death on June 14, 1966. Ethel's life changed dramatically after Clements'  death. Dr. Phillip Schley (a Columbus, GA physician) had  made visits to their home during T.C.'s illness and got to know Ethel well. When Clements passed away, Dr. Schley made arrangements for Ethel to work as a nurse's aide at Pine Manor nursing home in Columbus. She had never worked outside the home and couldn't drive. Her children, including son and daughter-in-laws made sure she got to work and back home everyday. It was a very happy time in her life. 


Mrs. Katie Flowers

Ethel Reese

Pine Manor Nursing Home

Ethel and her beloved Pekingese pups Prissy and Ming

Ethel was only able to work for a few years, but they were happy ones. She enjoyed her Pekingese babies and spoiled them! When she passed away on June 6, 1981 she left a legacy that still shines today. Her children and grandchildren only have loving happy memories of her. She taught us that the riches we have in life aren't monetary ones. She showered her family with love and sunshine. She had such a strong influence on my life, I am truly blessed to have had her as my grandmother. 

P.S.Please leave your memories of our sweet grandmother. I started this blog to share family memories and pictures. I'll be sharing pictures and memories of granddaddy and aunts and uncles. 



   
  

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