Showing posts with label John Williams Medlock. Show all posts
Showing posts with label John Williams Medlock. Show all posts

Monday, September 8, 2014

John Williams and Sarah Jemison Ware Medlock





John Williams Medlock - My Family History Journey - Debbie LowranceSarah Jemison Ware Medlock - My Family History Journey - Debbie Lowrance

John Williams Medlock and Sarah Jemison Ware Medlock are my paternal 3x great grandparents. John Williams Medlock was born in Greenville, South Carolina 4 Apr 1803, and died 5 Nov 1882 in Atlanta, Fulton County, Georgia. Sarah Jemison Ware Medlock was born in Green Co., Georgia 21 Nov 1807, and died 16 Dec 1883 in Atlanta, Fulton County, Georgia. They were married 7 Nov 1822 in Gwinnett Co., Georgia. John was 19 and Sarah was 15. They had 13 children with 2 dying in infancy. Their children are:

Thomas Landrum Delony Medlock
Susannah Eliza Medlock
James Isham Henry Medlock
John Oliver Medlock
Robert Medlock
Martha Margaret Ann Medlock
William Parks Medlock
Eli Wren Medlock (my paternal 2x great grandfather)
Sarah Jemison Medlock
Caroline Medlock
Georgia Ann Medlock
Zachry Taylor Medlock
Clark Smith Medlock


1830 John (27) and Sarah (23), lived in Gwinnett, Georgia.

1840 John W. Medlock (37) and Sarah (33) lived in Gwinnett, Georgia.

1850 John W. Medlock (47) and Sarah (43) lived in Gwinnett, Georgia.

In 1851 John W. Medlock bought 102 acres of land from Allen L. Johnson for $1000.



Buying Land Lot Forty-eight they made their home near a spring on land that is now near Grace United Methodist Church on Ponce de Leon Avenue.  (Atlanta's Ponce de Leon Avenue: A History  By: Sharon Foster Jones)

The Medlocks did make use of slave labor, but they were not the stereotypical plantation owners of hundreds of slaves in the antebellum South; they reported six slaves in Atlanta in 1850 between the ages of one and thirty-one years and ten slaves in 1860 between the ages of four months and forty-four years.  (Atlanta's Ponce de Leon Avenue: A History  By: Sharon Foster Jones)

1860 John was a farmer in Atlanta, Fulton, Georgia.

The Civil War took it's toll on the family in many ways. Five sons, as well as four son-in-laws fought in the Confederate State Army (CSA) better known as the Confederacy. The family was forced to leave their plantation in 1864 when the Union army marched through Georgia. When the war ended, they returned to their home to find their house burned, timber cut down, and life as they knew it, gone.  One son, Thomas Landrum Delony Medlock, committed suicide shortly after coming home from the war. William Parks Medlock was wounded in both hands, with the bullet remaining in his left hand until his death. Eli Wren Medlock (my paternal 2x great grandfather) was wounded at Sharpsburg, Maryland. Sarah Jemison Ware Medlock wrote this letter to her daughter Martha Margaret Ann Terry in Longview, Texas. It will give you a better understanding and glimpse into the life of the Medlock family after the war.  


Atlanta, Georgia

March the 12, 1866

Dear Children:
I will try to write you a few lines in answer to your very kind and affectionate letter received a few days ago.  We wsd truly glad to hear from you and hear you were all well.  Your lines found us only in tolerable health.  Ellen and Ciscero are at the hospital.  He has had the smal pox.  Ellen had it very light.  Ciscero came very near dying.  His toes are coming off.  He has been there two weeks tomorrow.
I cannot say I am ever well but keep up the most of my time.  I feel this morning like I could not hold out to finish my letter with a numbness in my arm and hand.  It has troubled me for four years at least, but it gets worse.  I do not rest with it after I lie down and get to sleep, it pains me.  I have to rub it very often.  If you really knew how it is, you would be surprised at my attempting to write.  It is raining a little this morning, I suppose makes it worse.
The small pox is more common than you every knew the measles, yes is five times as much.  I believe there has been thousands of cases.  There is and has been more negros died around here than belong to the place before the war.  The Yanks is throwing them out... The blacks is with us except Jude and Mary.  Jude is with S.J.W.   Mary is with Rebecca Medlock.  Charles is hired at 10 dollars per month and will feed him, his family is at Chattanooga; Ellen and her oldest girl and four boys - three of them not able to do any thing.  The burned one and the one she called Noah, died in 1864.  We left home in July '64 the 12th day.  We left our furniture.  We took a few chairs and bedding, the best or the most of our clothes - our cattle we sold to the government except three cows and calves.  We have one cow and calf is all the stock except two mules.  We lost our hogs and horses.  We refugeed at Washington County, stayed there September '64 until November '65.  The fighting was mostly from Peachtree Road around to Decatur.  Our houses burned, our timber cut down on the home lot, our shade trees and pretty well all of our fruit trees.
There has been thousands of pounds of lead picked up on our land.  People supported their family picking up lead.  They got 50 cents a pound before the surrender.  The bomb-shells is plenty, many with the load in them.
I mailed a letter to you in January.  I told you that Georgia was to be married the 30th of January.  She married at 3 o'clock on the 30th to Joel Yarborough.  He is the one we spoke of when you was there.  He has been raised an orphan, he is very steady.  I think he is doing business in town on his own hook - has been clerking before the war.
I also told you about the boys, they are all home except Thomas, poor fellow - his body lies in the nearest grave yard to his house - he shot his brains out.  He was wounded in the 7 days fight before Richmond in '62 - shot himself in '64.  He never enjoyed life after he was wounded.  John came home unhurt, only his constitution somewhat impaired.  B.F.W. is alright at home.  W.P. badly hurt, has lost his left hand and fore-finger on his right hand, neither amputated.  Robert is also at home, has bad health.  E.W. is living in Troop County.  Was wounded at Sharpsburg, hurt badly but has, I learn, got over it.  I have not seen him since the surrender.  Fletcher Tilly and Albert was both wounded, not serious.  Now I must say the connection is on foot as far as I know.  I forgot to tell you that Wiley is dead.  He died in the fall of '64.
You seem to think of coming back to Atlanta, there is as much ground here as there ever was, but not as many trees.  It is not my wish to try to persuade you against your will but it is a great terror to me - not only me but all of the connection, to think of being deprived of seeing Ann and her children when they all think you could do as well here.  I believe the Lord heard my prayer on behalf of my children.  I feel some time that I ought never to cease shouting and praising my God, for his mercy and goodness to my children.  My prayer has been that I might live to enjoy Ann's company in life, but if I am not permitted, I hope I shall in heaven.  It seems to me that I  could write a week if my arm would hold out - it is so dead I will have to close.
Kiss the children for us.  Write soon.  I remain your mother in love.
Sarah Medlock
Footnotes:  
  •  S.J.W. is her daughter Sarah Jemison Walker
  • Rebecca Medlock is the wife of her son Thomas  
  • Georgia who married Yarborough is her daughter
  • Thomas who shot himself is her son
  • John is her son
  • B.F.W. is her son-in-law Benjamin F. Walker
  • Robert is her son
  • E.W. is her son Eli Wren Medlock
  • Fletcher Tilly is her son-in-law
  • Albert is the brother of Fletcher
  • Wiley who died could possible be her son William
  • It is unknown who Ellen and Ciscero were.

This letter is courtesy of atlandows (user name) on Ancestry.com.


1880 John (77) and Sarah (73) lived in Atlanta, Fulton, Georgia.

John Williams Medlock died 5 Nov 1882 in Atlanta, Fulton, Georgia and Sarah Jemison Ware Medlock died 16 Dec 1883 in Atlanta, Fulton, Georgia.

In 1883 - the year following John Williams Medlock’s death-three hundred acres of his land near Ponce was auctioned for development; it had been divided into fifty lots. (Atlanta's Ponce de Leon Avenue: A History By: Sharon Foster Jones) The land sold for over $79,000.

Life was hard for the Medlock family. As a mother, I cannot imagine all of my male children going off to war. John and Sarah lived during turbulent times and never gave up.  They worked hard, starting with next to nothing and working their way to a large parcel of land. The strength that John and Sarah had, both physically and mentally, shows the type of people they were, strong. Developing the area which is now the heart of Atlanta, Georgia, they were true pioneers in every sense of the word.


Debbie


A special thank you to Sharon Foster Jones - Atlanta's Ponce de Leon Avenue: A History for the history and insight.





Friday, July 18, 2014

Attention all Medlock Family Members!!

I recently received an e-mail from my 4th cousin Sarah Matthews Pongracz regarding Tommy Medlock's  90th birthday on 15 July 2014.  Tommy Medlock,my 2nd cousin 2x removed, is the last surviving child of James Wade Medlock Sr.

Here is a portion of the letter that was sent to Sarah Matthews Pongracz.

Hey Dear Medlock Relatives,

A big benchmark in our family is Uncle Tommy Medlock's birthday in a couple of weeks, and his daughter asks that cheer him with a barrage of birthday cards. He turns 90 on July 15.

It would mean EVERYTHING to him to get birthday cards from the larger family of Medlocks. Tommy's daughter, Tommie Lynn, writes: "It's not a big request but it would make his year. The cards can come anytime within the month of July as far as he is concerned.  I just know how much he appreciates cards and this year has not been the best, health wise. He is trying to get over the shingles and it has really taken its toll."

He would enjoy any kind of card, snarky or sentimental. If you included some of your thoughts and memories about this great man, he would be thrilled even more.

Thank you all,

Wade Medlock

If anyone is interested in sending Tommy Medlock a birthday card I do have an address available.  I did not want to post the address here, so if you are interested you can request it one of two ways.  1) Comment with your email address and I will email you Tommy Medlock's address.  Or 2) if you prefer, send me an email and I'll send you the address.

I love this idea!  And yes, I have a card I will be sending out in the next day or so.  With my card, I will include how I am related to him.  Maybe, just maybe we can exchange some family history!  

Happy Birthday Cousin Tommy!!!

Debbie


Thursday, May 15, 2014

Tips I have Learned along the Way

This past week has flown by so quickly.  And with still learning how this blog works and just how I want it set up, has me losing valuable family history/genealogy time.  Uggg

Since I was not prepared for a new post, I will give you some tips that I have learned along the way of my journey.

Tip # 1  Find a Way to Keep Yourself on track

I have learned to keep a 9 generation fan chart on each family tree that I am working on.  Why?  This allows me to see where I have holes in my research and where I need to concentrate my research.  This keeps me from losing my way and gathering info on the "husband of my 1st cousin 3x removed".  Which, if that is what you want, that's ok.  But, another lesson learned a long time ago is that it is best to concentrate on just your direct line.  Trust me, I made that mistake earlier in my research, and OMG, it was more than never ending.  I was so excited that I was finding information on my ancestors that I did not realize that I was not finding anything on my direct line.  Someone once said "when I am finished with my direct line, then I will go back and fill in my branches".  Good luck with that one, cause I don't ever see an end to my direct line.  I hope that when I am gone that 1 of my 3 boys will continue this journey.  I want them to know who and where they came from.

Tip # 2  Keep Photos/Images Organized

Keep all of your photos/images organized!  It makes it so much easier to access when you know where a photo/image is.  I have a CD for each surname that I am searching.  When I am working on a certain family, I keep that CD in my laptop, so if/when I come across a photo/image I can download it to the CD with that family name on it.  (See tip # 3)  Within each CD I keep a folder for each individual person, and if necessary I will add a folder to that folder for other ancestors from that branch.  example:  I have a CD name Medlock.  Within that CD I have folders with the names of each Medlock family: Leotra Medlock (my grandmother), Charles Woodson Medlock (my great grandfather), Eli Wren Medlock (my 2nd great grandfather), and John Williams Medlock (my 3rd great grandfather).  In Leotra's folder I have a folder titled Butler (for Leotra's 1st husband Thomas Butler).  In Charles Medlock folder, I will have a folder for McGee (Willie McGee, my great grandmother).  In the Eli Medlock folder I will have a folder for Edmonson/Edmondson ( Martha P Edmonson, my 2nd great grandmother).  And so on.

It's not a hard system to keep up with, and I don't have to just aimlessly dig around looking for one thing and having to go through 1000's of other things to find what I am looking for.

Tip # 3  Permission, Copyrighted Material and Plagiarism

Please, before you download a photo/image from another website, make sure to contact the owner of that website and ask for permission to use what you want.  Do not copy text, photo's, or other images without permission!!  Websites and blogs are copyrighted material.  When you just take something from a website without permission, that is stealing.  Respect others work and DO NOT DO IT!!!

Everyone works hard on their website/blogs.  I know I do.  And I do not want someone just taking what they want and using it.  I use my own personal pics on my blog and place a watermark on them.  This way no one can just use my pics without my permission.  (Or that is how it is suppose to work.  Hopefully, my work will be respected as well.)  No plagiarism!
(as From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plagiarism
Plagiarism is the "wrongful appropriation" and "stealing and publication" of another author's "language, thoughts, ideas, or expressions" and the representation of them as one's own original work.   http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plagiarism

Tip # 4  Verify - Citations and Sources

It is so easy to get involved with research and finding information about your ancestors that we sometimes forget to verify what we find.  And don't forget to use citations and sources.  I have a method that I use when I start researching someone.  I am a member of several genealogy websites.  And I have come across (too many times to count) mistakes in information on those websites.  Once I have a name, I will go to Find-A-Grave and search for that person.  A headstone is a good validation that a person lived and died.  If there is other information on that memorial, then I go through other steps to verify it.  It seems that too many people are happy enough to find information on their ancestors to just take someone's word for it.  I don't and won't.  Make sure to use your sources.  Where did you find the information?  How valid is the information?

Tip # 5  Backup, Backup and Backup

Always backup your information. (Another lesson learned - the hard way I might add.) I use a USB stick to backup my family trees.  I have set up a schedule in my daily planner to backup everything once a month.  If you are doing research everyday and a lot of it, then I would suggest doing a backup more than once a month.  I have a program on my laptop and I use a couple sites on-line.  I sync my family tree once a month and back it up as well.  Think about all the research and hard work that you have done, now think what would happen if you should lose that?  Would you be able to sit down and re-enter all that data from memory?  I don't think so.  (Not unless it was only for 1 person - maybe.)  Don't let your hard work go to waste, back it up!


Debbie