Showing posts with label Welch. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Welch. Show all posts

Tuesday, August 12, 2014

Tombstone Tueday - Mary Matilda Bynum


Mary Matilda "Mollie" Bynum

Born on July 4, 1870

Daughter of
Prentice Montgomery Bynum and Frances Welch

Sister to
Aurelia, Ben, Ida, Buford, John Franklin, Felix, Charity,
Robert, Willard and Nannie Nita

Wife of
Simeon "Sim" Herrin

Mother to
Fannie, Ida, Ora, Lucy, Sallie, Prent and Buford

Died on March 13, 1928
Buried in the New Hope Cemetery
Sanford, Covington County, Mississippi


Tombstone photograph was taken by FindAGrave member, Natalie Maynor.

Monday, June 2, 2014

Margaret "Peggy" Collins (1821-1890)



Margaret "Peggy" Collins was born in Covington County, Mississippi on February 21, 1821.

She was one of many children born to the marriage of Stacy Collins and Sarah Anderson.






Stacy Collins' Bible on display in the Jones County Library in Laurel, Mississippi

Her siblings included:
Nancy
Sarah "Sallie"
Betsy
Vinson Allen
Mary
Simeon
Stacy, Jr.
Riley James
Jasper Jones
Newton
Warren Jacob
Christopher
E. Warren
The 1830 U. S. census shows the Stacy Collins family living in Jones County, Mississippi.  Jones County was formed in 1826.  The area of Covington County where the Collins family lived was part of the land used to form Jones County.


Following her marriage to Benjamin Franklin Bynum, Sr. circa 1838, Peggy and her family made their home in Jones County.


1850 U. S. census


1860 U. S. census

1870 U. S. census

1880 U. S. census
Margaret "Peggy" Collins Bynum died circa 1890.  Benjamin Franklin Bynum, Sr. died circa 1886.  The location of their burial places has not been documented.  Family records show them buried at the Old Gaines Bush Place in Calhoun, Jones County, Mississippi.

The following children were born to the marriage of Benjamin and Peggy Bynum:
Minerva, 1840-1860
Dicey E., 1842-1872 (m. William A. Mauldin)
Benjamin Franklin, Jr., 1844-1862
Prentice Montgomery, 1846-1906 (m. 1. Frances Welch; 2. Nancy Rawls)
Zachary T., 1848-?
Sarah Elizabeth, 1850-1922 (m. Marion Columbus Valentine)
Celeta Margaret, 1853-1917 (m. Jefferson Thomas Herrington)
Morgan Lafayette, 1856-1929 (m. Mahalia Jane Bush)
Gustavus Adolphus, 1860-1907 (m. Dicy Herrington) 
Margaret "Peggy" Collins Bynum was my maternal 3great grandmother, through her son Prentice Montgomery Bynum; grandson, James Benjamin Bynum; great grandson, John Buel Bynum; great-great granddaughter, Mildred Bynum Edmonds.



Tuesday, May 20, 2014

Tombstone Tuesday ~ Aurelia Bynum Lott


Aurelia "Rilla" Margaret Bynum Lott

Born on June 9, 1867

Daughter of
Prentice Montgomery Bynum and Frances C. Welch

Sister to
Mollie, Ben, Ida, Buford, John Franklin, Felix, Charity,
Robert, Willard and Nannie Nita Bynum

Wife of
Clinton Lott

Mother to
Prentice Everett, Thomas D., Mary Frances, 
William Estus,Infant Son and Nancy Willard Lott

Died on January 28, 1942
Buried in the Military Baptist Church Cemetery
Lamar County, Mississippi





Friday, May 16, 2014

Rawles Cemetery and the Bynums Buried There


This past March, my daughter and I spent several days traveling around the Mississippi counties of Covington, Jefferson Davis, Jones and Lamar.  

My goal was to locate the final resting places for many of my maternal ancestors whose burial locations had yet to be documented.

We visited several cemeteries and while there, we documented and photographed the grave sites of many of my maternal ancestors.

One of the cemeteries we visited was Rawles Cemetery located in Lamar County.  


My great-great grandfather, Prentice Montgomery "P. M." Bynum, his second wife, Nancy Caroline "Nanny" Rawls, and six of their eight children are buried in this small rural cemetery.  Two other children, Ida Burtie and Robert Everett, are buried in the Military Baptist Church Cemetery.  

Prentice Montgomery Bynum's first wife, Frances Welch, died in 1876 leaving three small children; Rilla, Mollie and Ben.  Nanny Rawls raised these three children as her own.  Ben Bynum was my great grandfather.  The location of Frances' burial is still unknown.

Bynum Family Plot

Prentice Montgomery "P. M"Bynum
1846-1906

Nancy Caroline "Nanny" Rawles Bynum
1853-1944

Prentice Buford Bynum
1883-1905

John Franklin Bynum
1886-1895

Felix "Fel" Jefferson Bynum
1888-1974

Charity P. Bynum
1890-1891

Willard William Bynum
1893-1906

Nannie Nita Bynum
1896-1982



Friday, July 5, 2013

Frances S. Welch (1847-1876)

Frances S. "Fanny" Welch was born in Jones County, Mississippi in 1847 to the marriage of James Richard Welch and Mary Marzilla Valentine. 

The 1850 and 1860 census records show Fanny and her family living in Jones County, Mississippi. 



Frances S. "Fanny" Welch married Prentice Montgomery Bynum in 1866.  The following children were born to this marriage:

Aurelia Margaret, 1867-1942 (m. Clinton Lott)
Mary Matilda, 1870-1928 (m. Simeon "Sim" Herrin)
James Benjamin, 1875-1941 (m. Annie Jane Sumrall)

The 1870 census shows Fanny, Prentice and daughter, Aurelia living in Jones County, Mississippi.



At the young age of twenty eight, Frances S. "Fanny" Welch passed from this life on August 29, 1876.  She left behind her husband and three young children, as well as her parents, James Richard and Mary Valentine Welch.



Thursday, July 4, 2013

Prentice Montgomery Bynum (1846-1906)

Prentice Montgomery Bynum was born in Jones County, Mississippi on January 5, 1846 to the marriage of Benjamin Franklin Bynum, Sr. and Margaret "Peggy" Collins.

In the fall of 1863, at the age of seventeen, Prentice and his uncle, Tapley Bynum, joined the Knight Company.  Formed by Captain Newt Knight and Jasper Collins, this group of southern men were loyal to the union and defied the Confederacy.

Prentice and Tapley remained a part of the group for a little over a year, clashing with confederate soldiers on several occasions.

After the death of Tapley Bynum, Prentice traveled to New Orleans where he enlisted in the Union Army at Fort Pike, Louisiana on May 26, 1864.

In October of 1864, he was in the University Hospital of New Orleans due to a disabling injury to his left foot caused by the "scold of shoe" and aggravated by fever and abscess.

He was later transferred to St. Louis General Hospital on January 5, 1865.  Prentice remained there until April of 1865 before being transferred to  McDougall U.S. Hospital at Fort Schugler, New York.




After being discharged from McDougall U.S. Hospital on May 22, 1865, Prentice returned to New Orleans and was discharged from the Union Army.

Prentice made his way home to Jones County, Mississippi where he married Frances "Fanny" Welch several months after his return.

The following children were born to the marriage of Prentice and Fanny:
Aurelia Margaret
Mary Matilda
James Benjamin
In 1870, Prentice Bynum was appointed as the Chancery Clerk of Jones County and Circuit Clerk.

Chancery Clerk
Circuit Clerk













In 1872, Prentice Bynum was elected as the Coroner and Ranger in Jones County.  He was appointed the local Commissioner to the Southern States Agricultural and Industrial Exposition in 1876.

Coroner and Ranger
Fanny Welch Bynum died in 1876, leaving Prentice as a single parent of their three young children.  In 1878, he married Nancy Caroline Rawls who became a mother to these three children as well as eight more children born to this marriage.

The following children were born to the marriage of Prentice Bynum and Nancy Rawls:
Ida Burtie
Prentice Buford
John Franklin
Felix Jefferson
Robert Everett
Willard William
Nannie Nita

Lamar County Supervisor
Prentice Bynum served as deacon of the Oral Baptist Church and was instrumental in organizing the first school in the Sumrall area.  He was also the first teacher in the school.

In 1904, Prentice Bynum was appointed the first supervisor of Lamar County, a position he held until his death.




Prentice Montgomery Bynum passed from this life on November 14, 1906.  He is buried alongside his second wife in Rawles Cemetery, Lamar County, Mississippi.




















Sunday, June 2, 2013

James Benjamin "Ben" Bynum (1875-1941)



James Benjamin "Ben" Bynum was born in Jones County, Mississippi on August 27, 1875 to the marriage of Prentice Montgomery Bynum and Frances S. "Fanny" Welch.  He was a brother to Aurelia and Mary "Mollie" and a step-brother to Ida Bertie, Prentice Buford, John Franklin, Felix Jefferson, Charity, Robert Everett, Willard William, and Nannie Nita Bynum.


At one year of age, Ben's mother died; leaving his father with the responsibility of rearing three young children.  Aurelia was nine years old and Mary "Mollie", was six years old.

The story handed down is that Prentice was taking his daughters to the school at Enon, Mississippi when he met another wagon driven by G. W. Rawls and his daughter, Nancy "Nannie" Caroline.  Nannie Rawls fell in love with Prentice's children.

On December 4, 1878, Prentice married Nancy "Nannie" Rawls

At the age of nineteen, Ben Bynum took on the responsibility of running the family farm.  His father was in Birmingham, Alabama seeking medical treatment for Ben's younger step-brother, John Franklin, who had been diagnosed with a terminal disease.

On December 29, 1894, James Benjamin Bynum married Annie Jane Sumrall in Lamar County, Mississippi.  Several years later Ben purchased 160 acres on which he built their family home.

The acreage was covered with virgin long leaf pine trees of which Ben used to build the family home, barn and other buildings.

Ben also sold timber to the J. J. Newman Lumber Company in 1902 and Abner Hudson in 1904. An additional 160 acres of land was purchased in 1912 from which timber was sold in 1921.

Ben and Annie Bynum had the following children:
John Buel
Minnie Francis
Narvel Houston
Thomas Terrell
Robert Earl
Bertha Rebecca
Annie Roberta "Bertie"
Bessie Lee Anna
Nancy Arella
Daniel Gordon
Howard Ben
Margaret Evelyn
Mary Lois
James Benjamin "Ben" Bynum passed from this life on September 23, 1941. He is buried alongside his wife in the Military Baptist Church Cemetery in Sumrall, Lamar County, Mississippi.