Saturday, July 14, 2018

Mary Ann Baxter 1841-1897

2nd Great Grandmother - Paternal Side

For years now I had been searching for Mary Ann under different last names: Sisney, Baxter, and Clark. I love it when things finally just fall into place and a whole new branch of my tree opens up. Such was the case with Grandmother Mary Ann.  While looking at a Hembree record (which of course was mispelled as Hamby) I noticed a Sarah Baxter living next door. Looking further, I noticed she lived next door for over 20 years. That was my AHA! moment and the rest "is history".

Mary Ann Baxter was born on August 22, 1841 to Bryant Baxter and Sarah "Sally" Ross in Missouri. She might have been married briefly to a Mr. Clark in Arkansas. By the 1870 U.S. Census she is listed as Mary A. Hembree (Hamby) living next door to her brother William Baxter. It is not known at this time when or where she married Ephriam F. Hembree but together they had the following children:
  1. Mary Elizabeth Hembree (1864-1944); married Jeremiah Ross
  2. James Nathaniel Hembree (1864-1954); married Clara A. Chatman
  3. Rachel Lorinda Hembree (1868-1954); married William Green Hilburn
  4. Nancy Jane Hembree (1870-1936); married George Washington Cooper
  5. Lucinda Hembree (1873-1948); married 1st Thomas Johnson, 2nd Mr. Rucker
  6. Ephraim McDonald Hembree (1876-1936); married Melvina Dorsey

In the 1880 U.S. Census, the family was still living in Barry County, Missouri. This is where Mary Ann would live and die on October 20, 1897. She was buried in Old Easley Cemetery.

Headstone for Mary Ann Hembree - Findagrave.com

Note about DNA matches: I was surprised by the instant match to the Ancestry DNA Circle for Mary Ann Baxter. All of 8 of us show as a Strong match. I then went to FamilyTree DNA to see if I could confirm or deny this. You guessed right, it shows as a match to both Ross and Baxter through various trees.

Tuesday, July 10, 2018

William Ralphus Hutsen 1895 - 1969

Grandfather - Maternal Side
William R. Hutsen (date unknown) 

William Ralphus Hutsen was the first born of John William and Rosetta Turner Hutsen(piller)'s thirteen children in Bloomfield, Stoddard County, Missouri on April 2, 1895. The family lived on a farm in Missouri until the spring of 1901 when they moved by wagons to Red River County, Texas. The journey took two months. William would grow up moving often as his father worked in Como, Greenville, Albany, Mt. Pleasant, Bogota, and Maple Springs. The family settled down near Bogota on a farm where the children could attend school. This is where William would finish the 8th grade.

In the Summer of 1914, there was a drought so William and his father went to Oklahoma to pick cotton until the fall. By the Spring of 1915, the crops had come in but William went to work in Iowa until some time in 1917. I am unsure what occupation he undertook while away. Upon returning home, he was drafted into the army. He spent his time serving by way of working in a Spanish Flu hospital because he was immune.



William married a local girl Cora Van Wey on July 25, 1918. He always said that he married an older woman as she was born in 1894. Together they had the following children:
  1. Turner Van "T.V." Wey Hutsen (1920-1950); never married 
  2. Earl Fred "Freddie" Hutsen (1922-2001); married 1st Esther Bertha Nickli; married 2nd Rose Edith Walker
  3. Juanita"Nita" Mae Hutsen (1925-1997); married 1st Neal Hebert, married 2nd Tommy Hasty, Sr.
  4. Claudia "Allene" Hutsen (1927-1992) married 1st Stanley Gillespie; 2nd Milton Benny Perkins; 3rd Mr. Hufford, 4th Mr. Decou
  5. Eola "Floralene" Hutsen (1929- ); married Everett Cornelius
  6. Luther Glen " L.G." Hutsen (1932-1976); married 1st Gertrude Ella Jean Barnes; 2nd Estuko 


The 1920 U.S. Census shows William renting a farm near Garvinsville, Texas where their oldest son was born. By 1922, the family had moved to Arkansas where William worked in the oil fields moving from El Dorado, to Norflit, to Luann, and Smackover. While living in Arkansas his oldest son, T.V., fell off of a porch and suffered a brain injury eventually going into the State Hospital.  By 1935, William, his wife and six children were living back in Red River County, Texas. In May, 1937 his beloved Cora had become ill with Dropsy and died on June 1, 1937 and was subsequently buried in Longview, Texas.  

I need to put this in here and this seems like a good place. I don't know exactly where or when this happened, but William lost his right eye while chopping wood. It could have happened in Arkansas and that might have been the reason that the family returned to Texas, I simply don't know the rest of the circumstances surrounding it. All that I can say for certain was that he referred to himself as a one-eyed widower.

Between 1937 and 1938 William and his children had moved to Houston, Texas. He bought a bicycle and peddled ice cream. His mother had come to Houston to help with the children when she took ill and passed away. Later his sister, Flora came to help out.

William bought a house on McDaniel Street where the occupants could not move out immediately so he was going to pitch a tent for his family to live in. He was trying to tie the tent rope off when it broke. This happened three times so he sat down to smoke a cigarette before trying for a forth time. His youngest daughter came up and said she would be cussing up a storm if that had happened to her. William looked at her with a solemn face and said, "Now would that have tied that rope?" 

William opened a store with one of his cousins. It did not last and he sold his portion and thought he was cheated for some reason.

William worked at Trinity Portland Cement as a mill operator from which he retired. After retirement, he bought property in Splendora, Texas and built a nice two bedroom house. There he raised strawberries, chickens, and a nanny goat. But William had been lonely all of those years since his wife died. He met and married Mallisses Bell whom my mother called "Granny Good Witch". I was happy to spend a week with him and had the best time gathering eggs and trying to milk the goat. I never got a drop of milk out of that goat!
Mallisses and William
William and Mallisses sold the property in Splendora and purchased property in Cold Springs, Texas that had an old house. There was no bathroom in the house although it had a pump in the kitchen and a well outside. There was also an outhouse. Every time we visited, you had to check for ticks on the ride home. 

All of his children and grandchildren called him Poppa. He was a very quiet man but had a very dry sense of humor. If you drove by a cemetery, he would state: "There's not a living soul in that place." Poppa was very kind and thoughtful, a gentle man who worked hard for his family.
Papaw and Poppa

William did not drink and said if you went to church that you should attend one that had "Christ" in it's name, therefore was a member of the Church of Christ. If William had a cold, he would drink a hot toddy as his cure. One night we received a phone call that William was really ill and needed to be taken to the Veteran's Hospital in Houston. My mother raced up to Cold Springs and loaded the couple in the car snickering the whole way home. When asked by my brother what was so funny, she wrote on a piece of paper that "Poppa is drunk" to which my brother was shocked at the accusation. She brought him home and the next morning took him to the hospital after he had sobered up. It turned out that William had pneumonia and was hospitalized for several days. I was young so I can't say for sure what year this was.

While visiting his oldest son, Fred, in Tulsa William became sick going into the hospital. The diagnosis was pancreatic cancer. William wanted a cigarette after surgery and my mother told him the nurses wouldn't let him have one to which he stated, "Go ahead and ask, Hard Hard, you'll see!" To her amazement they said yes that he could. He lasted for only a few more days and died on February 4, 1969 and was laid to rest in Brookside Cemetery next to his oldest son.


Sunday, July 1, 2018

Fess Cornelius 1895-1975

Grandfather - Paternal Side

How do you write about someone that was larger than life? There is no possible way to convey everything that he did, so I am attempting to at least get my point of view on this blog. I have no doubt that I will leave off a good portion but these are my memories and the facts that I have been able to gather.

Fess Cornelius was born April 22, 1895 in Ferris, Ellis County, Texas to William Cargill and Mary Elizabeth Patrick Cornelius. He was the fifth child out of six and the first one born in Texas after William and Mary moved from Alabama. On the 1900 U.S. Census he is listed as Professor. Family lore states that his name was Professor Dove or Professor Love after a neighbor or family friend but I have been unable to find facts to substantiate this. On all subsequent documentation he is listed as Fess. According to Census records, he only attended school until the 5th Grade.

Draft Papers
Fess lost his father early in life. He was raised by his mother and brothers on a series of rented farms across Oklahoma. According to his 1917 Draft Registration Card he was living in Reagan, Oklahoma as a farmer. He served in the Army as a Private, Quartermaster Corps, 325th ARD from September 3, 1918 until April 21, 1919 in Houston at Camp Logan located in what is now known as Memorial Park.

Fess - Bottom Row, 4th from right. Photo taken 1918 possibly at Camp Logan

On his enlistment record Fess is listed as "Character: Very Good". It also states that he was in the base hospital from January 4, 1919 until his discharge and was in "Poor Physical Condition".

Fess Cornelius Enlistment Record


In 1919 Fess was working in a carnival back in Oklahoma where he met Dartha Esther Hembree.

They married on August 20, 1919 in LeFlore County, Oklahoma. Together they had the following children:
  1. W.C. Cornelius (1920-1975); married 1st Lois ??; married 2nd Billie Jean Mize
  2. Everett Cornelius (1923- 2009); married Eola Floralene Hutsen
  3. Marshall Aaron Cornelius (1926-2001); married Wanda Faye Jones
  4. Billy Jean Cornelius (1928- ); married Virginia Ray Rawls
Top Row: Everett, Marshall, Billy; Bottom Row: W.C., Fess, Dorothy
From the 1920's until around the mid 1930's, Fess and his family resided on farms in Oklahoma. His brother, James Emanuel "Manuel" lived with them. Here is where family lore comes in: Fess raised watermelons and made moonshine. According to his wife "One of these days the hills around Ardmore are going to blow up! Fess would make moonshine and drink it. When he drank it, he would get paranoid that the Revenuers would come and arrest him so Fess would bury it. Once sober again, Fess would forget where he buried it." Another family member (I forgot who) told me that Fess would take watermelons that had been filled with moonshine to the Police Station in town. This seems to have been to his advantage if true. The story according to several family members (including my father) states that a neighbor had to pass through Fess' land in order to get home. Fess had a cow and the neighbor would leave the gate open allowing the cow to wander away. This same neighbor would then charge Fess to get the cow back. Either Fess or Manuel shot the neighbor over the cow, I can't say for sure which one. Fess was tipped off by the police so he fled the county. He sent word to Dart (as he called his wife) to pack up everything in the middle of the night which she did along with their four young sons. They immediately moved to South Texas so he could avoid prosecution. After a late freeze killed their crops, the family moved to Houston. Fess still remained in contact with his family in Oklahoma throughout his lifetime.
Fess & Tom Cornelius at Roy Cornelius Grave, 1945
Fess worked hard. Not only for his immediate family but his extended family as well. According to family lore, he supported Dorothy's (yes, she changed her name) family during the Depression. Once he arrived in Houston he was a peddler of fresh vegetables. Fess also began selling used auto parts on Airline Drive.
Red's Auto Parts, 1824 Airline Drive, Houston, Texas

Eventually Fess was able to purchase land on McDaniel Street where he built a home.  Later he purchased property on Eubanks and opened Red's Nursery.
Dorothy at nursery

One day in the 1960's, quite out of the blue, Fess sold the nursery and opened a boat shop on Irvington. He and Dart moved into a travel trailer until the apartment over the shop could be built. It had a bedroom, living room, kitchen with a dinette table and a bathroom. No pretense but very practical.
Fess in living room on Irvington

On his desk in the boat shop, Fess had a home made barometer which was a coke bottle filled with water and turned upside down to fit into an orange juice bottle. He fished by that barometer and if asked if he wanted to go fishing, that was the deciding factor. He also kept a carton of malted milk balls on his desk.
Fess Cornelius and William R. Husten, November 1969 at boat shop on Irvington

Fess sold used boat parts and had a sign made out of card board and magic marker that stated: No Refunds and No Returns. When a customer came in to get a refund on a broken controller, Fess pointed to the sign. A fight ensued and Fess had a cut on his head that required stitches so when I came home from school, Papaw was sitting in the living room with his bandaged head and his hat sitting on his lap. When I asked my mother why he was there (Fess did not visit people often, they came to visit him!) she quietly told me that he was hiding from the police. No charges were ever filed and he went home that night.
 Fess and religion. I never knew of Fess going to church but apparently he did at one point in his life. He was supposed to have a beautiful singing voice and sang in the choir. All that I can say for sure is that Fess never attended church with us and kept his business open on Sundays, unless he was going fishing.

Fess and fishing. Check barometer and go! If you are a Cornelius then you fish. Doesn't matter if it's fresh water or salt water, you fish. Weather is not really a factor either and we all learned from Fess. I can remember we were out on the boat and Papaw was catching fish left and right while I was catching nothing (being all of 6 or 7 years old) and asked him why I wasn't catching anything. He told me that you had to spit on your bait, so I did and caught a fish. I can still remember him laughing.

Fess and hospitals. Fess thought of hospitals as places that you went to die. He would not visit even his wife in the hospital.

Fess and the raccoon. Some how Fess wound up with a raccoon as a pet. Family lore states that it had gotten on the owners Thanksgiving table and made a wreck so Fess inherited it. Fess would let it run around and Dorothy thought it a pest and would chase it out of the apartment with a broom. It would steal shiny objects and take them to it's cage. When you tried to retrieve the object it would bite. It bit me on the leg one Sunday (I am sure I was annoying it) so Fess poured alcohol on the bite and smeared it with his greasy hand which ruined my new white lace socks. I don't recall how long he kept the coon, but I am sure Grandmother put her foot down and made Fess get rid of it.
Fess and Dorothy 50 Year Anniversary


Fess was not a gentle man by any means. He was a force to be reckoned with at any stage of his life although to his family he was a sweetheart and thought my Mom was the smartest woman around because she got her driver's license. He would feed pecans to wild squirrels right out of his hand and shirt pocket which showed me that he had great patience when needed. I would sit in his lap at his desk and he would frighten me by flicking his false teeth out at me, then give me a hug and chuckle. Everett once said that his father was a wise man who could figure out anything to make it work. Probably where Everett inherited it from.


In August of 1975, Fess' oldest son W.C., drowned in an accident. Fess took his death extremely hard and died a few weeks later of a heart attack at the age of 80.