For privacy reasons, Date of Birth and Date of Marriage for persons believed to still be living are not shown.
Arnett Galen Gregory [Male] b. 2 SEP 1916 Smith Co., TN - d. 21 NOV 1985
5729
She was a homemaker and a member of North Side Church of Christ. She was a daughter of the late Noah Sampson Gregory and Bessie Anderson Gregory
Two sons, Melvin Henry Belcher of New Kent, Va., and Charles Rayburn Belcher of Auburn; a daughter, Shirley Fay Harper of Russellville; a brother, Coston Gregory of Auburn; a sister, Alleyne Barrow of Auburn; four grandchildren; four stepgrandchildren; and seven great-grandchildren.
Another record to be verified is:
She married DODGER W. KEMP November 05, 1922, son of HARVEY KEMP and ALDORA CARTWRIGHT. He was born October 04, 1905 in Macon County, TN, and died January 22, 1981 in Macon County, TN.
Her first marriage was to John Wesley Key on 18 Oct 1893 in Sumner Co; they had 5 known children: Clara Alice, Conce Morrow, Willie Birchel, Lilly Margaret, and John Wesley; after his death she married again (19 Jul 1909 Macon Co), to Charles Jessie Roalin; they had 6 known children: Hattie, Dewey, Clarence Allen, Stanley, Hassie Irene, and Martha Ann.
Cal's Column: "Mordecai Gregory was fatally injured by the accidental discharge of a shotgun in the hands of another youth. This occurred about 45 years ago. The youth who lost his life was the son of Mr. And Mrs. Peyton Gregory, who later moved to the vicinity of Lafayette, buying a farm near Brattontown. This youth’s life could have perhaps been saved in people then had known how to cord a leg to prevent bleeding to death. By the time a doctor arrived, the youth was too far gone to live. He was shot in the leg above the knee, the bone being broken and a large blood vessel or artery being severed. Peyton Gregory, the son of William H. Gregory, a brother of Bry Gregory."
(45 years ago being about 1900)
8724
11014
Believe to have died of a stroke of apoplexy without warning.
Cal's Column:
"Arch enlisted in the Federal Army and had come home sick and disabled. Before he had had time to regain his health, several of the guerrillas that were numerous at that time, came down off the high hill to the rear of the house. Their leader was Buck Smith, perhaps the most noted or shall we say? the most notorious, of all the guerrillas that infested North Middle Tennessee. He had entered the Southern Army at the tender age of 16 and had been discharged later when his correct age was ascertained. He had had enough of army life to make him like it and when he came home, he felt it was his duty to punish those whose sympathies were with the North or those who had enlisted in the United States Army. Consequently he was on the lookout for Jenkins. In spite of all Jenkins’ protests, Smith and his cohorts carried Jenkins away from his wife and children, who were never to see him alive again. A rope was placed about the neck of Jenkins and he was led from home on down Peyton’s Creek on foot while his tormentors were on their swift horses. Jenkins was led down by the present Pleasant Shade, thence to Graveltown, two miles further south, and there the party turned off the main stream and went up the "Bishop Hollow." At the very head of this valley there lived a man named Knight. Here the party halted and Smith demanded that Mrs. Knight prepare a meal for him and his gang. She did this, finding time when the guerrillas were not looking to tell Jenkins he had better get away as she was sure that he was going to be killed. Jenkins encountered his danger and also added that he could not hope to escape as he was too sick to be able to escape by fleeing or running. After eating, Buck Smith and the remainder of the gang took Jenkins to the top of the hill above the old Knight place, and we have seen the old home a number of times, and then proceeded to slay Jenkins, whose only fault was that he had been in the Union Army. Smith made Jenkins mount a stump on the very top of the ridge that divides the waters of Peyton’s Creek from those of Defeated Creek. Then at the point of a gun, Jenkins was forced to crow like a rooster and was then shot off the stump by Smith, who left his body to lie where it fell, disdaining even to letting Jenkins’ family know of his fate.
Days later a man named West, who resided on the Defeated Creek side of the ridge, saw buzzards about the top of the hill and investigated, finding the bones of Jenkins, the flesh having been eaten away by the vultures. He managed to get word to Jenkins’ family, who went to the scene and identified him as the missing husband and father, identification being made by his shoes which had remained intact. The bones were gathered together and carried to the present Will Gregory Cemetery, near Sycamore Valley, this county where they laid him to rest.
Greenlawn Cemetery, Franklin, Simpson Co., Kentucky
868
s/o Joseph R. "Joe Red" Gregory & Nancy Elizabeth Brawner.
Death certificate states he was a farmer and died of the Spanish Influenza.
Source
Title: Cothern Records
Source
Title: Cothern Records
Source
Title: Cothern Records
1617
[Cothern.FTW]
Wiley Clemons
Thanks to:
Sue Ann Gregory
706 Scarlett Place
Lebanon, TN 37087
615-444-6900
Descendants of Thomas Idle Gregory
Generation No. 1
1. THOMAS IDLE6 GREGORY (JOHN GALEN5, AMBROSE4, BRY3, THOMAS2, UNKNOWN1)
was born July 11, 1857 in Macon County, Tennessee, and died June 17, 1946
in Macon County, Tennessee. He married MARY ELIZABETH GANN May 13, 1877 in
Macon County, Tennessee. She was born January 08, 1858 in Liberty,
Tennessee, and died August 24, 1940 in Macon County, Tennessee.
Children of THOMAS GREGORY and MARY GANN are:
i.MATTIE (MALTIE) L.7 GREGORY, b. March 26, 1878, Macon County, Illinois;
d. June 06, 1969; m. JOHN DAVIS BOWMAN; b. March 08, 1864, Tennessee.
ii.ADA GREGORY, b. May 11, 1880, Macon County, Illinois; d. October 04,
1956.
iii.FASSIE LOE GREGORY, b. July 07, 1884, Macon County, Tennessee; d.
November 12, 1973, Lafayette, Macon County, Tennessee; m. ELSIE MORGAN
STEEN, January 13, 1903, Macon County, Tennessee; b. September 29, 1884,
Macon County, Tennessee; d. April 09, 1913, Lafayette, Macon County,
Tennessee.
iv.MONNIE N. GREGORY, b. May 07, 1886, Macon County, Tennessee; d. March
22, 1972; m. BURFORD ROLAN BUTCHER, Aft. 1910.
v.FONCE SCHOZE GREGORY, b. June 04, 1887, Macon County, Tennessee; d.
February 03, 1962, Franklin, Simpson County, Kentucky; m. MAGGIE M. GAMMON,
November 05, 1906, Macon County, Tennessee; b. January 20, 1892, Trousdale
County, Tennessee; d. September 30, 1978, Bowling Green, Warren County,
Kentucky.
vi.HUFF GREGORY, b. July 12, 1889, Macon County, Tennessee; d. February
01, 1946, Franklin County, Kentucky; m. LAURA UNKNOWN, Aft. 1910.
vii.CARLOS MYERS "CARL" GREGORY, b. October 18, 1891, Macon County,
Tennessee; d. November 20, 1967, Franklin, Simpson County, Kentucky; m. (1)
LOU ANDREWS, Aft. 1910; b. December 10, 1892, Macon County, Tennessee; d.
March 23, 1928, Macon County, Tennessee; m. (2) EARSIE DONIE GAMMON,
January 29, 1929, Trousdale County, Tennessee; b. July 28, 1899, Macon
County, Tennessee; d. June 22, 1990, Madison, Davidson County, Tennessee.
viii.ONIE GREGORY, b. December 29, 1893, Macon County, Tennessee; d.
1905, Macon County, Tennessee.
ix.MEARDITH LILLIAN GREGORY, b. December 08, 1896, Macon County,
Tennessee; d. August 01, 1984, Lafayette, Macon County, Tennessee; m. EARL
SHRUM, December 21, 1913, Macon County, Tennessee; b. July 08, 1894, Macon
County, Tennessee; d. April 13, 1972, Lebanon, Wilson County, Tennessee.
x.PALIE DOVE GREGORY, b. January 29, 1899, Macon County, Tennessee; d.
1899.
Source
Title: Andrews1.FTW
Source
Title: Gregory.FTW
Source
Title: Cothern Records
Source
Title: Andrews1.FTW
Source
Title: Gregory.FTW
Source
Title: Cothern Records
Source
Title: Andrews1.FTW
Source
Title: Andrews1.FTW
Source
Title: Andrews1.FTW
Source
Title: Andrews1.FTW
Macon Co., Tennessee
Some sources indicate born in September 25, 1857
54
Source
Author: Jamison & Andrews Family
Title: Family Records
Source
Author: Jamison & Andrews Family
Title: Family Records
Source
Author: Jamison & Andrews Family
Title: Family Records
Source
Author: Jamison & Andrews Family
Title: Family Records
Source
Author: Jamison & Andrews Family
Title: Family Records
Source
Author: Jamison & Andrews Family
Title: Family Records
23314
Source
Title: Cothern Records
Source
Title: Cothern Records
Source
Title: Cothern Records
1605
Source
Title: Cothern Records
Source
Title: Cothern Records
1606
He and some friends were hauling logs in a wagon one evening. According to the story, they had been drinking. Wagons at that time had a large amount of iron girding. Somehow, the wagon got off the road and turned over on Hollie. He lived a few more weeks before succumbing to his internal injuries.
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