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Thursday, December 31, 2015

Parallel Lives of Stelle and Daisy, Part 2


To recap, my paternal grandfather’s sisters, Stelle and Daisy Troutman’s lives ran a traditional path at first—marriage, children, and all that—but they asserted their independence in later years. Their lives paralleled each other’s in several ways. Though 15 years apart in age, they both married at age 21 to men with the same name, William Tell Worley, Stelle’s “Tell” being uncle to Daisy’s “Will.” Both families left Smyth County, Virginia, Stelle and Tell moving first to Missouri where their brother Clint and his wife Mary lived, then Daisy and Will following, but not until all had moved to Nebraska. Apparently, farming opportunities looked better there.
According to family lore, Clint and Mary and their three children and Stelle and Tell and their four children traveled by train from Howell County, Missouri to northeast Nebraska. Clint and Tell rode in the box cars with their horses and cattle. Clint’s daughter Neville rode on her cousin Dale’s lap. "It must have been almost like pioneer days," Neville wrote.[1] This move occurred between the birth of Clint and Mary’s third child Carl, born near West Plains, Missouri on 4 December 1912, and the birth of their fourth child Verne, born in Stanton County, Nebraska on 13 April 1914.
By 1920, Daisy and Will had also moved to Nebraska. They rented property, which Will farmed at Strahan township, Wayne County. By this time, they had five children: Marvin, 12; Leroy, 9; Charles, 7; Thelma, 3 years and 8 months; and William, 3 months.[2] Apparently, they had moved sometime between the birth of Charles, born in 1913 in Virginia and a baby girl, Edna, born in 1915 in Nebraska who died the same year, buried at Greenwood Cemetery, Wayne. A little grave, all alone.
Photo courtesy of Find A Grave contributor, Brad Kellogg.

 The photo below is one of my favorites. It shows my grandfather Clint and his two sisters, Stelle and Daisy and their children taken about 1915. In back stands Clint holding his son James, next to Stelle. Seated of the left is my grandmother Mary with Verne (my father) on her lap, Neville and Carl on each side. Behind Carl is Stelle's daughter Ethel, then Leona. Daisy is seated holding her son Charles, and next to her are sons Lee Roy and Marvin.
Clint and Mary Troutman with Stelle and Daisy Worley and children.

In 1920, Stelle, age 49, and Tell, age 65, owned a farm at South Branch Township, Pierce County, Nebraska. Dale, Leona, and Ethel were still living at home,[3]  but Carl, age 26 had married. He owned a shoemaking shop in Wayne where he lived with his wife Serena and their four children: Verdena, age 6; Pauline, age 4; Carl, age 2; and Captola, age two months.[4]
Clint and Mary were renting a farm at Brenna precinct, Wayne County. Their family had also expanded to five: Neville, age 9; James, 8; Carl, 7; Verne, 5; and Virginia, 3.[5] Stelle, Daisy, and Clint and their families lived within about a 50-mile radius of each other in northeast Nebraska.

Note the proximity of Wayne, Pierce, and Stanton Counties in northeast Nebraska. Click to enlarge map.

Then Stelle and Daisy both divorced their husbands—not at the same time. More later.


[1] Neville Lamson, Omaha, Nebraska, to Zola T. Noble, Anderson, Indiana, letter, 25 August 1989, information on her father's family; Troutman, Neville (Max Lamson) binder, privately held by Noble, [E-ADDRESS & STREET ADDRESS FOR PRIVATE USE], Anderson, Indiana, 2016.
1920 U. S. census, Strahan township., Wayne County, Nebraska, population schedule [ED] 224, p. 12-B, dwelling 113, family 113, William Worley, wife Daisy; digital image Ancestry.com (http://www.ancestry.com : accessed 11 December 2015); NARA mic. pub. T625, roll 1003.
[2] 1920 U. S. census, South Branch tnshp., Pierce Co., Ne., pop. sched., ED 224, p. 12-A, dwell. 84, fam. 85, William T. Worley, wife Estella; NARA mic. pub. T625, roll 995.
[3] 1920 U. S. census, Wayne, Wayne Co., Neb., pop. sched., ED 225, p. 15-A, dwell. 161, fam. 169, Carl Worley; NARA mic. pub. T625, roll 1003.
[4] 1920 U. S. census, Brenna precinct, Wayne Co., Neb., pop. sched., ED 218, p. 5-A, fam. 86, Clint Troutman; NARA mic. pub. T625, roll 1003.

Wednesday, December 16, 2015

Parallel Lives of Stelle and Daisy




My paternal grandfather’s sisters, Stelle and Daisy seem to have been strong, independent women. The more I learn about them, the more I wish I could have met them. Although they were not close in age, their lives took similar, somewhat unique paths for women of their day.

Born in February 1870, one year—maybe to the day—after her parents were married, Laura Estelle was the first born of Daniel A. and America Troutman.[1] She was probably named for America’s oldest sister Laura E. (whose middle name remains undetermined), who was also the firstborn of her parents, Nicholas and Sarah Pratt.[2]

Daisy arrived about fifteen years later,[3] another girl, a few years after her parents had suffered the loss of two little daughters and a son. (The story of the loss of these babies is told here.) Stelle and Daisy were the only daughters to survive to adulthood.

Then they married men with the same name.

On 16 November 1891, Laura Estelle Troutman, age 21, married William Tell Worley, age 33.[4] Daisy was a little five-year-old admiring her older sister. In 1900, Tell Worley farmed land he owned, free of mortgage, in the Broadford precinct. Stelle’s mother-in-law, Eliza Worley lived with them, as did a twelve-year-old white servant girl named Mary Harris, probably hired to babysit so Stelle could get her other work done. Stelle and Tell had two living children: Carl, age 6, and Dale, age eleven months.[5] In the few short years of their marriage, they had already faced tragedy. Their baby boy, Harvey Lee, born 30 March 1896 had lived only one month and seven days.[6] They buried him in the Rich Valley Presbyterian Church Cemetery where Stelle’s young sisters and brother had been buried.

About 1906, Daisy Virginia Troutman, age 21, married William Tell “Will” Worley, a nephew of Stelle’s husband and his namesake, age 23. A tall, slender, blue-eyed, redhead,[7] Will was a son of Thomas E. Worley,[8] Tell’s oldest brother.

For the first eight years, or so, of their marriage, Daisy and Will stayed in Smyth County, Virginia. In 1910, they and their three-year-old son Marvin lived on a rented farm in the Broadford precinct.[9] So far, so good.

Eventually, both sisters and their families moved away from Virginia.

By 1910, Stelle and Tell had moved to Missouri, as had Stelle’s brother Clint. I’m not sure which of them left first. Stelle and Tell were living at Dry Creek township, Howell County, Missouri. In addition to Carl, who was now 16, and Dale age 10, they had two daughters, both born in Virginia: Leona, age 6, and Ethel, age 4. They had apparently lost another child, but details are unknown. At this time, they were living on a rented farm and Tell was working as a farm laborer.[10]

Some time about 1911-12, my grandfather Clint and his wife Mary, moved from Audrain County to Howell County, also. We have some wonderful family group photos taken in Missouri from around that time. If you look closely at the photo below, I think you can see my grandmother's baby bump. She would have been pregnant with her third child Carl at this time. Her hairdo is the best!

Besides people identified on back: Children standing, l to r.: Leona Worley, Dale Worley, Ethel Worley, unknown, unknown. Adults standing, l to r: unknown, unknown and baby, Clint & Mary Troutman, unknown, Tell, Stelle, and Carl Worley.

 This next photo fascinates me, especially the woman wearing gaucho pants. What daring for 1911-12! I would like to know who she is. Also I love seeing these photos of Grandma Mary as a young mother. Mary is the third adult from right, and Stelle is the fourth.
Besides those identified on back below: To far left, Tell Worley, Leona in front of Stelle and Ethel in front of Mary.

 
c. 1912. I think Tell is the man in the light colored hat next to Stella, but the back identifies him as the "2nd man." Maybe the two males on the left are considered boys, so that would make the man next to Stelle the 2nd "man." Could the boys be Dale and Carl Worley, who would have been about 12 and 18?
Handwriting on the back of this photo identifies Ethel as "3rd girl" from right, but she is the 2nd. She was the youngest of Stelle's daughter, and the 3rd girl is obviously not younger than the 1st one. Compare the 2nd girl, with her long hair, to the girl identified as Ethel in the other photos.


Then they all moved to Nebraska. More on that next time.



[1] 1900 U. S. census, Smyth County, Virginia, population schedule, Broad Ford Precinct, p. 119 (stamped), enumeration district [ED] 84, sheet 10-A, dwelling 166, family 167, Tell Worley household; digital image Ancestry.com (http://www.ancestry.com : accessed 11 December 2015); NARA microfilm publication T623, roll 1728. Estelle’s birth is the only one of Daniel and America’s children that is not recorded in birth books at the Smyth County courthouse. This census states her birth as Feb. 1870.
[2] 1850 U. S. census, Smyth County, Virginia, population schedule, district 60, p. 176 (stamped), dwelling 261, family 265, Nicholas Pratt family, see Laura; NARA microfilm publication, M432, roll 976.

[3] Records conflict as to Daisy’s birth date. (1) Smyth County Register of Births, Book I, p. 12, shows the birth of an unnamed female to D. A. and America Troutman on 27 June 1886. (2) U.S., Social Security Death Index, 1935-2014, states her birth date as 22 January 1886. (3) California, Death Index, 1940-1997, states her birth date as 22 January 1885. (4) Her tombstone photo on Find A Grave shows 1885. (5) The 1900 U. S. census of Smyth Co. Va. states her birth date as Jan. 1884.

[4] Smyth County, Virginia, Register of Marriage, Book 1, p. 83, Wm. T. Worley and Laura E. Troutman, 16 November 1891; County Clerk’s Office, Marion. Tell was actually 36, not 33, as stated in the record.
[5] 1900 U. S. census, Smyth Co., Va., pop. sch., Broad Ford Precinct, p. 119 (stamped), ED 84, sheet 10-A, dwell. 166, fam. 167, Tell Worley household.
[6] "Virginia Deaths and Burials, 1853–1912," Harrie Lee Worley, database Ancestry.com (http://www.ancestry.com : accessed 11 December 2015).
[7] “U. S. World War I Draft Registration Cards, 1917-1918,” images Ancestry.com (http://www. Ancestry.com, accessed 14 December 2015), card for William Tell Worley, serial number 1098, Local Draft Board, Wayne County, Nebraska.
[8] Virginia Birth Records, 1864-2014, digital image Ancestry.com (http://www.ancestry.com : accessed 14 December 2015); entry for William Tell Worley, 20 January 1884.
[9] 1910 U. S. census, Broadford, Smyth County, Virginia, population schedule, enumeration district [ED] 88, p. 10-B, dwelling 180, family 181, William T. Worley family; digital image Ancestry.com (http://www.ancestry.com : accessed 11 December 2015); NARA microfilm publication T624, roll 1649. This census states that Will and Daisy have been married 3 years.
[10] 1910 U. S. census, Dry Creek, Howell County, Missouri, population schedule, enumeration district [ED] 78, p. 10-A, dwelling 205, family 207, W. T. Worley family; digital image Ancestry.com (http://www.ancestry.com : accessed 10 December 2015); NARA microfilm publication T624, roll 784.

Wednesday, December 9, 2015

More Treasures: Photos of Amanda Orr and Daughters

Grandma Mary's sister, Amanda, is the only one of her sisters that I can remember--and we didn't see her often. We called her Aunt Mandy. I wasn't particularly impressed with her. She was big and plain and I don't remember that she ever paid any attention to me. But that didn't matter. That's the way it was. My grandparents and aunts and uncles didn't gush over us, nor play with us, nor try to entertain us--except on the 4th of July when the uncles set off fireworks for us. At our family gatherings, the women had work to do getting the meal on the table; the men had macho things to talk about as they sat and smoked in the living room before and after dinner, which the noon meal was called. The evening meal was supper.

We children had cousins to play with. We didn't expect attention from the adults. There were too many of us--nineteen grandchildren. I was number eleven, the sixth girl--not a particularly auspicious position. We children ate at a separate table until we became teenagers. Then we could eat at the adults' table.

Aunt Mandy was just another one of the adults. Actually, she was not a part of any of our family gatherings, that I recall. We saw her at other times when she was visiting Grandma. The photo below shows her with her nephew, John Waggoner, the first born of Emery Waggoner, her brother. John came to live in Hartington, Nebraska, where Amanda lived, and was buried there. The young woman in the photo is one of Amanda's daughters, either Reba or Geneva according to a note on the back of the photo. (Thanks again to Lee Nelsen for these photos.)
John Waggoner, Amanda Orr, Reba or Geneva Orr. 

I love studying photos to see what I can learn, so I put my limited sleuthing skills to work on this photo and the next to see if I could figure out which daughter is shown in the first photo.

My conclusion: it's Geneva. I'll tell you why.
Reba Orr and her husband, Donald Torppa.


Notice the tree in the background of both photos, the identical curve of the branches to the right, and other landscape features. This make me think the photos were taken at the same outing. If that's the case and Reba is positively identified in the second photo, then the woman in the first photo is Geneva. They're wearing different outfits, the woman in the first photo appears to more slender than Reba in the second photo, and their hair is parted on opposite sides. The shadow of the photographer shows a woman wearing a skirt. Did the same woman take both photos? Or did Geneva and Reba take turns behind the camera? One could argue that the faces look much the same. If the photos are not the same woman, the two sisters looked a lot alike.

After all that, I must confess my bias in this study. I wanted this to be Geneva because I have no photos of her other than the grainy ones from the news stories of her murder (see link below).  I still think my evidence is valid that it's Geneva.

Next, here is another photo of Reba again with her husband, Donald Torppa. Reba and Donald eventually moved to Spokane, Washington, where they lived in 1960 and were both employed as teachers in the public schools.[1]
Reba and Donald Torppa, 1945.


For my original post on Amanda, click here.
For the first of the stories on Geneva's murder, click here.
__________________
[1] U. S. City Directories, 1822-1925, Spokane, Washington, City Directory, 1960; digital image Ancestry.com (http://ancestry.com : accessed 8 Dec. 2015); citing Donald Torppa and Reba Torppa.

Tuesday, November 24, 2015

More Photo Treasures!

In my previous post, I shared a few photos sent to me by cousins after I blogged about the folks in them. As a follow up, I'm sharing the photos. Now to add the others I promised. The ones here are more photos shared by cousin Lee Nelsen from his mother Virginia Troutman Nelsen's collection.

I'm not sure what happened to put Grandma Mary's brother, Jake Waggoner, into this wheelchair, but here he is. Looks as if he isn't the only invalid in the photo. Note the crutch and man on Leo's left. Read more about Jake here.
Jake Waggoner
Here's another photo of Grandma Mary's brother, Leo Waggoner, taken in Fresno, California, 7 May 1922. Leo is the man on the left. More of Leo's story can be found here.

Recently, I learned from Cousin Debbie Imus that she remembers visiting Leo in California. It's better in her words: "He lived with someone we called Aunt Ann. My father loved his Uncle Leo [his namesake].  I was probably 8 or 9. I remember we drove up back roads on a dirt road to get to his house. He gave all three of us kids a rattlesnake tail rattler. And Aunt Ann gave me a silver bracelet with a turquoise stone in it." What great memories! Thanks, Debbie, for sharing them.

More photos of Leo and friends. Too bad these photos are not dated and place identified also.

Leo is on the left.
Leo is the one standing beside another unknown friend.

Enough for now. More to come.


© 2015, Z. T. Noble






Friday, November 20, 2015

Old Photos, Found Treasures!

Thanks to my cousin Lee Nelsen who shared photos from his mother's collection, and to a recently found second cousin, Debbie Mitchell Imus, granddaughter of Ida Waggoner, my Grandma Mary's sister, I have a few photos to add, which I've linked to the stories about these folks.

A few months ago, I wrote about my paternal grandfather's brother, James Henry Troutman, known as Uncle Jim to my dad and his siblings. Maybe you've read the "black sheep" stories. Here are a few photos, fronts and backs, to add to the collection of photos of Uncle Jim and Aunt Susie:


Any car buffs out there? Do you know the year and make of the car?
Jim's wife Susie, on left, and her sister, Bessie.
Then way back, early in the first year of my blog, I wrote about my grandmother Mary's siblings. I was thrilled to receive more photos of them from Cousin Lee and Cousin Debbie.

I like this formal portrait of Emory Waggoner, Grandma Mary's oldest brother; it lends him a bit more dignity than some of his other photos. No matter how poor folks were, it seems that they could get gussied up for a formal portrait, at least once. Emery wrote on the photo, "This is your uncle & brother Emory. To Mr. & Mrs. Troutman and children." This message shows a certain restraint, yet underlying affection for his sister's family. It had been sent to Mary and Clint and their children, Neville, James, Carl, Verne, and Virginia. The year is uncertain, perhaps early to mid-1920s.

The back gives evidence as to the place he resided when he sent the photo.
Boyd, Minn. is a small town in Lac qui Parle County, which borders South Dakota.
Then there was handsome Gordon, Grandma's closest brother in age, one year older. This photo is similar to one posted earlier, but a slightly different pose.

Apparently, Gordon made a trip to California, too, at some point in time.
I wish the year had been included here.
The next photo is a treasure (not that the others aren't): Grandma Mary's sister, Alice and her husband, Herbert Ellington and daughter Hazel. Thanks to Debbie for this find. Alice remained in Missouri when the rest of the family moved to Nebraska, and I don't have as much information on her as Grandma's other siblings. That's why I treasure this photo. It's the only one I have of Alice's husband and daughter.
Herbert Ellington, Hazel Ellington, Alice Waggoner Ellington, c. 1914, Missouri.

Another photo from Debbie is this next one of Grandma Mary's sister Ida's grandson, Ernest Wendorf. I learned from Debbie that Ernest and his sister Alice died from Huntington's disease; their father also had it. In the blog post I wrote on Jan. 22, 2014, I did not know the cause of their early deaths. Now we know.
Ernest Wendorf (1939-1977)
 I have more photos to share, but this is enough for now.


(c) 2015, Z. T. Noble

Friday, November 13, 2015

Dan's Daughters: Lois


For fifteen years, Warrington was an only child, but she wanted a sister. Apparently not being able to have more children, her parents, Carrie and Dan Troutman finally went looking. They found eighteen-month-old Lois Marie Bethel in an orphanage somewhere in southwest Virginia, perhaps Dickenson County, her family’s last known residence.

Lois, on right, with her foster father, Dan Troutman, and foster sister, Warrington.

 Lois’ mother Elsie Anne Salyers Bethel had succumbed to tuberculosis on 7 July 1922.[1] She was 22 years of age. Six days earlier, Lois had turned one year old. Born December 1899, Elsie Anne was the third daughter of eight children born to John Salyer and Mary Holbrook, probably in Dickenson County, Virginia, where the family were living in 1900.[2] The Holbrook and Salyer families were long time residents of the area.

Lois’ father, Walter O. Bethel died of a stroke a few months after his wife, but his exact death date is unknown.[3] In fact, little is known about his early life, at this time, including the names of his parents. He was born 19 May 1885 in Tennessee.[4] He was first married 22 October 1904 in Jefferson County, Tennessee to a woman named Mattie Howard.[5] They had at least one child, a boy named Dewey.[6] In 1912-13, Walter and Mattie Bethel were living in Middlesboro, Kentucky, and Walter was a fireman at the Middlesboro Electric Company.[7] The marriage apparently dissolved not long after that, for when Walter registered for the draft in 1918, he was living in Helier, Pike County, Kentucky, his occupation was recorded as “Elect. Engineer” for “Mfgs. C&C Co,” and his wife’s name was Elsie.[8]

In 1920 Mattie and Dewey lived with her parents in Jefferson City, Tennessee,[9] and Walter and Elsie were lived in Ervinton, Dickenson County, Virginia near Elsie’s family. They had two children, Ruth and Herbert, ages two and eleven months, respectively, and Walter was working in the coal mining industry.[10] Walter seems to have been on the move frequently.

When the parents of the Bethel children died, Rutha, Herbert, and Lois were placed in an orphanage and eventually raised separately in foster homes. Lois’ life with Dan and Carrie Troutman was good. She felt loved and cherished.[11] And she loved Dan and Carrie in return.

As valedictorian of her high school class, Lois received a scholarship to Montreat College, North Carolina from the Presbyterian Church of which she was a member.[12] She graduated from Montreat with a liberal arts degree in 1941 and married Gale L. Faris a few months later on 27 September. After her marriage, Lois worked for a few months as a secretary to the purchasing agent at Matheson Chemical Company in Saltville. When she was expecting her first child, she quit. She and Gale had three sons.[13] In 1942, Lois reunited with Ruth and Herbert and her biological, maternal aunts and uncles.[14]

Lois’ experiences with her foster father Dan Troutman and his mental illness influenced her, in later years, to become a psychiatric social worker at the very hospital where Dan had been a patient.[15] A loyal and loving daughter, indeed.


[1] Virginia, Death Records, 1912-2013, Elsie Bethel, digital image, Ancestry.com (http://www.ancestry.com : accessed 23 October 2015).

[2] 1900 U. S. census, Ervinton, Dickinson County, Virginia, population schedule, p. 142 (stamped), enumeration district [ED] 15, sheet 5-B, dwelling 83, family 85, John Salyers family; digital image Ancestry.com (http://www.ancestry.com : accessed 23 October 2015); NARA microfilm publication T623, roll 1706.
[3] A search of Virginia death records, Tennessee death records, Find A Grave records and others, have turned up nothing, thus far, on Walter O. Bethel’s death. Cause of death and approximate time of death were supplied in a letter from Lois Faris to Zola Noble dated 3 August 2009. Also included in the letter was a statement that Lois had visited her parents’ graves in a “family cemetery” in Dickinson County, Virginia.
[4] “U. S. World War I Draft Registration Cards, 1917-1918,” images Ancestry.com (http://www. Ancestry.com, accessed 23 October 2015), card for Walter Orphaus Bethel, serial number 3947, Local Draft Board, Pike County, Kentucky. For birth place, both the 1910 and 1920 censuses (footnotes 5 and 7), cited below, record Tennessee as his birth place. A search for Walter Bethel in the 1900 census, with possible parents, resulted in no one with that name born in Tennessee at or about 1885.
[5] Tennessee State Marriages, 1780-2002, database Ancestry.com (http://www.ancestry.com : accessed 23 October 2015), entry for Walter Bethel and Mattie Howard, 22 Oct. 1904.
[6] 1910 U. S. census, Knox County, Tennessee, population schedule, enumeration district [ED] 103, p. 3-B, dwelling 57, family 58, Walter Bethel family; digital image Ancestry.com (http://www.ancestry.com : accessed 23 October 2015); NARA microfilm publication T624, roll 1508.
[7] U. S. City Directories, 1882-1989, Middlesboro, Kentucky, 1912-13, digital image Ancestry.com (http://www.ancestry.com : accessed 22 November 2015), entry for Walter Bethel (Mattie).
[8] “U. S. World War I Draft Registration Cards, 1917-1918,” card for Walter Orpheus Bethel, ser. Num. 3947, Loc. Dft. Bd., Pike Co., Ky.
[9] 1920 U. S. census, Jefferson City, Jefferson County, Tennessee, population schedule, enumeration district [ED] 71, p. 12-B, dwelling 249, family 266, William N. Howard family; digital image Ancestry.com (http://www.ancestry.com : accessed 23 October 2015); NARA microfilm publication T625, roll 1748.
[10] 1920 U. S. census, Ervinton, Dickenson County, Virginia, population schedule, enumeration district [ED] 23, p. 7-A, dwelling 105, family 107, Walter R. Bethel family; digital image Ancestry.com (http://www.ancestry.com : accessed 23 October 2015); NARA microfilm publication T625, roll 1887.
[11] Lois Faris, Glade Spring, Virginia, to Zola Noble, 15 August 2008, letter, information on life as a foster daughter in the Dan C. Troutman home; Lois Faris file, Troutman family; privately held, [ADDRESS FOR PRIVATE USE] Anderson, Indiana.
[12] Ibid.
[13] Lois Faris, Glade Spring, Virginia, to Zola Noble, 3 August 2009, letter, information on her birth family; Lois Faris file, Troutman family; privately held, [ADDRESS FOR PRIVATE USE] Anderson, Indiana.
[14] Ibid.
[15] Lois Faris, Glade Spring, Virginia, to Zola Noble, 15 August 2008, letter.

© 2015, Z. T. Noble

Wednesday, November 4, 2015

Dan's Daughters: Warrington


My paternal grandfather’s brother Dan Troutman and his wife Carrie had two daughters, Warrington and Lois. Warrington was born to them, and Lois was “adopted.” That’s what everyone thought, anyway, but truth be told, Lois was never legally adopted. One of her maternal aunts objected, so her legal status remained foster child.[1]



I don't remember ever meeting Warrington, but she lived well into my lifetime. I remember my dad talking about her affectionately. He liked to tell that she outlived four husbands. Warrington Catlett Troutman was born 27 December 1907.[2] At the time, her mother was 27 and her father was 24. Why she was given such unusual names is anyone’s guess. Perhaps Carrie’s three years of college had given her out-of-the-ordinary ideas about naming children.

Warrington with her parents, Dan and Carrie Troutman, c. 1920.
A high school graduate, Warrington was employed by the WPA as a seamstress throughout the depression years.[3] Later, she worked as a legal secretary.[4] She remained single until her mother died. Perhaps, because of her father’s illness, she felt a responsibility to stay with her mother.
Warrington, on left, with her cousin Verne Troutman (my dad) and an unknown friend. c. 1938, on a Virginia mountain road.
Carrie’s death at age 74 on 1 August 1954[5] seems to have freed Warrington to marry. The first was a 48-year-old, twice divorced farmer, Floyd J. Reynolds. Just two weeks after Carrie died, on 14 August 1954, they were married by a Presbyterian minister in Washington County, Virginia. Warrington was 47.[6] The marriage ended on 3 March 1958 when Floyd died suddenly of a cerebral hemorrhage.[7]
The second time, Warrington chose a widowed laborer named Fred R. Barker, or maybe they chose each other. They married at the Glade Spring Baptist Church on 2 May 1959. Fred was 58, and she was 51.[8] The couple lived on a farm near Damascus, Virginia. This marriage lasted until Fred died at age 66 on 2 April 1967, one month short of celebrating their 8th anniversary.
Warrington’s third marriage was to Marion L. Davis, a farmer living at Mouth of Wilson, Grayson County, Virginia. They married in the early 1970s.[9] Marion died suddenly of a heart attack at age 89 on 24 June 1978.[10] Warrington was 71.
For a couple of years or so, Warrington remained single and lived on the Davis farm at Mouth of Wilson. She was persuaded to marry a fourth time by widower Charles G. Miller, a retired carpenter in the building construction business from Damascus.[11] At ages 91 and 73 respectively, Charles and Warrington surely had a spark of romance left in them when they married in view of the Blue Ridge Mountains at Whitetop in Grayson County on 11 February 1981.[12] About 20 months later on 23 October 1982, Charles died of pneumonia.[13]Warrington continued to live at their home in Damascus until she died two years later on 30 October 1984 at age 77. She is buried next to her first husband, Floyd J. Reynolds in Glade Spring Baptist Church Cemetery.[14]
Warrington's grave marker.
Troutman cemetery plot at Glade Spring Baptist Church Cemetery (New). Those buried here are Dan and Carrie Troutman, Warrington Troutman Miller, and Floyd J. Reynolds. Photo by Barry L. Seitz, Find A Grave contributor.



[1] Lois Faris, Glade Spring, Virginia, to Zola Noble, 15 August 2008, letter, information on life as a foster daughter in the Dan C. Troutman home; Lois Faris file, Troutman family; privately held, [ADDRESS FOR PRIVATE USE] Anderson, Indiana.
[2] Virginia, Birth Records, 1864-2014, Warrington Catlett Troutman, digital image, Ancestry.com (http://www.ancestry.com : accessed 23 October 2015).
[3] 1940 U. S. census, Glade Spring, Washington County, Virginia, population schedule, enumeration district 96-6, sheet 8-B, visit no. 158, Carrie Troutman, see Warrington; digital image Ancestry.com (http://ancestry.com ; accessed 28 October 2015); NARA microfilm publication T-627, roll 4300.
[4] Lois Faris, Glade Spring, Va., to Zola Noble, 15 August 2008, letter.
[5] Virginia, Death Records, 1912-2013, Floyd Jefferson Reynolds, digital image, Ancestry.com (http://www.ancestry.com : accessed 28 October 2015).
[6] Va., Marriage Records, 1946-2014, Floyd J. Reynolds and Warrington Troutman, digital image Ancestry.com (http://www.ancestry.com : accessed 30 October 2015).
[7] Va., Dth. Rcds., 1912-2013, Mrs. Carrie Sexton Troutman, digital image, Ancestry.com (http://www.ancestry.com : accessed 28 October 2015).
[8] Va., Marr. Rcds., 1946-2014, Fred R. Barker and Warrington T. Reynolds; digital image Ancestry.com (http://www.ancestry.com : accessed 28 October 2015).
[9] Va., Marr. Rcds., 1912-2013, does not include this marriage, and I have not looked elsewhere for the marriage information.
[10] Va., Dth. Rcds., 1912-2013, Marion Lonzo Davis, digital image, Ancestry.com (http://www.ancestry.com : accessed 28 October 2015). Warrington was the informant for the death certificate.
[11] Va., Dth. Rcds., 1912-2013, Charles Gilham Miller, digital image, Ancestry.com (http://www.ancestry.com : accessed 28 October 2015).
[12] Va., Marr. Rcds., 1946-2014, Charles Gilham Miller and Warrington Catlett Davis, digital image Ancestry.com (http://www.ancestry.com : accessed 28 October 2015).
[13] Va., Dth. Rcds., 1912-2013, Charles Gilham Miller, digital image, Ancestry.com.
[14]  Find A Grave, database and images (http://www.findagrave.com : accessed 04 October 2015), photograph, memorial page for Warrington Troutman Miller (1907-1984), Find A Grave memorial no. # 95736549, citing Glade Spring Baptist Cemetery (New), Glade Spring, Virginia; photographs contributed by Barry L. Seitz.


© 2015, Z. T. Noble