USA > West Virginia > Braxton County > History of Braxton County and central West Virginia > Part 47
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DANIEL S. SQUIRES.
Daniel S. Squires, son of Colonel Asa Squires, was born June 15, 1827. His former wife was Amelia Burr of Upshur county; she died leaving one son, Olin B. Squires. He married for his latter wife, Elizabeth MeLaughlin, daughter of Col. Addison MeLaughlin. He had by this marriage six children, Otis, Addison, Asa, Sarah, Byrd and Minnie.
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SUTTON'S HISTORY.
Mr. Squires owned a large and valuable plantation on Salt Lick ereek. He represented his county in the legislature in 1875; he was Braxton county's first superintendent of free schools, after the organization of West Virginia, and was also a member and president of the county court. He died in 1905.
WM. G. SQUIRES.
Wm. G. Squires, son of Asa and Sarah Estep Squires, was born May 25, 1825, at Salt Lick, and was married August 20, 1845, to Marie Jane Morrison. His children are John, Amelia, Susan, Elizabeth, Jane, Asa, Margaret, Lucy, Mary and Amanda. Mr. Squires was a successful farmer, owning one of the best farms near Salt Liek Bridge, where he settled when he was married. and where he lived until his death, which occurred March 24, 1901.
The family are members of the M. E. Church, South.
ASA SQUIRES.
Asa Squires was born in Farquar county, Va., April 22, 1812, and with his father, Elijah Squires, came to what is now Braxton county, then Lewis, in 1824 or 5. He was a member of the Methodist Church for many years. He died of organic heart disease. His wife was Catherine Gibson, born in Brax- ton county, May 12, 1815. Their children were Clarisa. Norman B., Johnson, Elizabeth. Newlon, Ellis W. Permelia and Calvin.
Mr. Squires was a farmer and teacher. He filled several offiees of trust in the eounty.
NORMAN B. SQUIRES.
Norman B., son of Asa and Catharine Gibson Squires, was born in Braxton eounty, Virginia, March 28, 1835. He acquired the best edueation that the schools of the county afforded, and at an early age, married Ruhama, daughter of Charles Mollohan, widow of Jesse Skidmore.
Mr. Squires followed farming until the breaking out of the Civil war, when he enlisted in Co. F, 10th W. Va. Inft. and after the death of Orderly John D. Baxter, served in that capacity until he was severely wounded at the Sinks, in Pendleton eounty. He was shot by Lieut. Regar, of the Confedrate army, a wound that caused him great pain, and from which he never recovered, but died from its effects, in April, 1881.
After the war, Mr. Squires kept hotel in Sutton. W. Va., and was elected Clerk of the Circuit Court of Braxton for two or three terms. He studied law, and practiced at the Bar, after his term of office expired, until his health failed him, when he retired to his farm on Salt Liek, where he, after great suffering, passed away. He was a man of splendid attainments, kind and affable. He died loved and respected by all who knew him. His body lies in the family cemetery, near his old home. His children were Mary M., Francis C., Elizabeth M., Effie J. and Henry.
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SUTTON'S HISTORY.
JOHNSON SQUIRES.
Johnson Squires, son of Asa and Catharine Gibson Squires, was born in Braxton county in 1830. He grew up on his father's farm, and attended such schools as the neighborhood afforded and in 1859, he was joined in marriage with Susan C. Prince, daughter of Levi and Sallie Skidmore Prinee. To this union were born Sarah C., Effie J., Charles W., Levi P., and Wilbur N.
A the breaking out of the Civil war, Mr. Squires volunteered in the 11th W. Va. Inft. and participated in many battles. He held the rank of Orderly Sergeant of his company. After the return of peace, he returned to his native county, and followed farming and for many years kept the Squires Hotel, in Sutton. He was a man of energy and industry. His wife died of heart failure, in 1896, and a short time afterward, Mr. Squires became afflieted with cancer of the liver, and died, March, 1896. He, with his wife, and some of their chil- dren, are buried at the Squires cemetery, on Salt Lick. They were both mem- bers of the M. E. Church, and lived exemplary Christian lives.
NEWLON SQUIRES
Newlon Squires, son of Asa and Catharin Gibson Squires, was born March 2, 1841. He married Catharin J., daughter of Levi and Sally Skidmore Prinee, April 7, 1861. To them were born Minter, Ertin, Cary, Warder, Lucy. Nettic and Ida. His wife having died in 1886, he in 1892, mar- ried for his second wife Ettie Haymond, daughter of Eugenus Haymond. By this marriage, he had four children, Herbert, Esther, Newlon and Henry. He was a farmer, and owned the farm on Salt Lick where his widow and children now reside. When the war between the States began, he volunteered in Com- pany F, 10th W. Va. Vol. Inft. and served to the close of the war. He was wounded in the shoulder, at the battle of Droop Mountain. He was made a prisoner in a raid made by Capt. Baldwell, of the Confederate Service, sent to Libby Prison, at Richmond, Va., but was afterwards exchanged, and partici- pated in many of the battles in the Valley of Virginia, and in front of Rich- mond, Petersburg and Appomattox, Va. Mr. Squires was a man well beloved, a noble eitizen, a true friend. He died of Cholera Morbus, in 1906, and was buried at the Squires cemetery, by the side of many of his loved ones.
CALVIN G. SQUIRES.
Calvin G. Squires, son of Asa and Catharin Gibson Squires, was the youngest of the family. Hc married Susan, daughter of David and Har- per Bright. They reared a family of four boys and one girl-Albert, Scott, William and Asa, and Rosa. Mr. Squires owned and lived on his father's old farm, on Salt Lick. He was early in life killed by lightning, while he was going from his home on Salt Lick to Flatwoods. He and his wife are buried at the Squires cemetery on Salt Lick.
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SUTTON'S HISTORY.
ELLIS W. SQUIRES.
Ellis W. Squires was born June 20, 1843, on the Elk river, five miles above Sutton. His father, Asa Squires, was born in Farquar county, Va., and his mother, Catharine Gibson, was born at Salt Lick, this county. His grandpar- ents, Elijah Squires and Elizabeth Ertin, were natives of Louden county, Va. He was married June 20, 1865, to Mariah C. Shaver, and their children are Louvena L., Melvin B., Jesse L., Moody H. Mr. Squires is interested in farm- ing and the mercantile business. He has been a Notary Public forty years; was Clerk of Supervisors' Court for eight years, Secretary Board of Educa- tion for thirty years, and President of Board of Education for four years. He also served as U. S. Deputy Marshall seven years, and was Postmaster of Flat- woods for five years and is mayor of Flatwoods. He enlisted in the U. S. Army, May 1, 1862, at Sutton, and was honorably discharged May 3, 1865, at Wheel- ing.
S. WISE STALNAKER.
S. Wise Stalnaker was born Feb. 7, 1860, in Gilmer county. His father, S. G. Stalnaker, was born in what is now Randolph county, and his mother, Elizabeth Wiant, in Gilmer county, this state. His grandparents, Wm. Stal- naker and Elizabeth Goff, were also born in Randolph county. He was mar- ried to Miss Dora Pickens on July 9, 1885, and their children are Edna B., Elva R., Bonnie O., Aubrey L., Gaylord W., Elizabeth R., and S. Goffe. Hon. S. Wise Stalnaker has always held a position as a citizen of high attainments, active in all matters pertaining to the betterment of society. He is a Democrat of the old school, and his party elected him as a representative to the W. Va. Legislature from this county, a position which he filled with credit.
ALEXANDER TAYLOR.
Alexander Taylor was born in Glasgow, Scotland, Jan. 6, 1762, and died at Champaign, Ohio, Sept. 5, 1834. His wife was Phebe Skidmore, daughter of Captain John Skidmore, and she was born in Virginia, Oct. 22, 1765. Her death occurred in Ohio in September, 1824. Their children were Nancy, Mar- garet, Archibald, Florence, Rachel, Phebe, Susannah and John S.
ARCHIBALD TAYLOR.
Archibald Taylor, son of Alexander Taylor, was born in Ohio, Oct. 27, 1795, and died at his home near Sutton, May 4, 1889. He married Elizabeth Friend, daughter of Thomas Friend. She was born in Pendleton county, Va., Nov. 5, 1800, and died in Braxton county, Feb. 9, 1866. They were married Sept. 15, 1824, and their children were: Rachel, Douglas L., Gustavus F., Susannah, John S. and Alexander T.
In 1812, Archibald Taylor belonged to a Rifle Company that assembled
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SUTTON'S HISTORY.
at Warm Springs, Va., but peace being shortly declared, the company saw no active service.
After his marriage, he never left the beautiful hills of West Virginia as the streams and mountains seemed to have an enchantment that abided with him to the last. In 1834, he purchased a thousand-acre tract of land, three miles below Sutton on which he made his home. This valuable tract of land now belongs to his descendants. His youngest child, Alexander T. Taylor, is the only one of the family now living.
Mr. and Mrs. Taylor, and other members of his family are buried on a beautiful eminence overlooking the Taylor farm and the beautiful valley of the Elk.
CAPTAIN GUSTAVUS FRIEND TAYLOR.
Captain Gustavus Friend Taylor was born June 27, 1834, and was the son of Archibald and Elizabeth Friend Taylor. His father was a grandson of Captain John Skidmore, and his mother, a daughter of Thomas who was a son of Jacob Friend. Late in the 60's, he married Nannie Dunn Levy of Wheel- ing, and to this union were born five children: Elizabeth, Edgar D., Archibald A., Ida and N. Mendal.
Captain Taylor lived amid the storm center of our national history; saw the gathering clouds and heard the mutterings of an angry nation. Descend- ing from a distinguished Revolutionary ancestry, he played a noble part in the country's political convulsions that shook the nation to its center, and its deep trouble gave birth to a new state, and freedom to a race. He was educated in the best schools of the county, also went to the Ohio Wesleyan College. At the age of twenty-six, he was elected to the Constitutional Convention which sat in Wheeling in 1861 and 1862, and was recalled in 1863 to perfect the draft of the Constitution before its adoption. He was next to the youngest member of that memorable body, and so far as we know, he was its last survivor. He was also associated in the formation of this Constitution with such men as John J. Brown of Preston, Lewis Ruffner of Kanwha, Peter G. Vanwinkle of Ohio, Waitman T. Wiley of Monongalia, and many other men of splendid attain- ments.
After the adoption of the Constitution, he was made Captain of the Brax- ton company of state troops, and served in this capacity until the close of the Civil war. He was the first Recorder of Braxton county after the Civil war, and in 1870 was elected Prosecuting Attorney of the county. In the 70's, he owned . and edited the Mountaineer, Braxton county's first newspaper. He had no fondness for the law, but was a literary man of learning and research, his facile pen having no superior in central West Virginia. It is to be regretted that his history of the Aboriginals of America, a work on which he bestowed much labor and research, was unfinished by reason of age and infirmity.
He died Oct. 5, 1915, and is buried at the Taylor cemetery, three miles be- low Sutton.
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SUTTON'S HISTORY.
JOHN S. TAYLOR.
John S. Taylor was the third son of Archibald and Elizabeth Taylor, both deceased. On Dee. 24, 1865, he married Elizabeth C., youngest daughter of the late Thomas and Catharine Lawrence, and to this union were born four chil- dren. His widow and all the children survive him. He participated in the Civil war as Adjutant of the Militia.
JOSEPH H. TAYLOR.
Joseph H. Taylor, son of Amandrus and Analiza Thomas Taylor, born July 22, 1844, married Cassa Shields. Their children numbered ten. Mr. Taylor volunteered in the U. S. Navy in 1864. The name of his vessel was the Aretic. He was in Fort Fisher battle, Cape Fear river battle and helped to take Wil- mington, North Carolina.
Wm. Crawford was a sailor on the same vessel. Crawford died in Sutton some years after the war.
These were the only two men who belonged to the Navy from Braxton county.
JACOB C. TONKINS.
A remarkable history-from wealth in infaney to extreme poverty in later life from a devoted life of usefulness to a eruel, tragic death.
Jaeob C. Tonkin's father eame from England as a soldier in the Revolu- tion. With quite a number of others, he deserted at Redbank and joined the American forees. After the war, he was rewarded by the gift of a traet of land on the Delaware river.
He married and reared a family of sixteen boys, Jacob C. being the youngest. At one time in the history of this family, there were seventy-two boys of the genration, and only one girl.
Jacob C., was born and reared at or near Philadelphia, and learned the stone-cutter's trade. He married Ann Guess, a Welch lady of education and refinement. Mr. Tonkins failed in business, and his effeets were sold to pay his debts. With what little they could earry, he removed his family in a wheelbar- row. He and his wife, with three sons, Wm., Edward and Ambrose, started on a long march toward the western wilds of West Virginia, and settled at Jane Lew in about 1845. Two years later, he removed to Braxton county, and set- tled on Salt Liek where he made his future home. Besides the above-named sons, his family consisted of Francis Asbury, John I., and a daughter who was drowned in infancy by falling in a tub of water, thus leaving the generation of seventy-two boys.
Of the family of sixteen boys, have come men of prominence, Congressmen, Judges, Ministers. Jacob C. Tonkins was one of the early ministers of the M. P. Church, and his tragic death is noted on another page.
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SUTTON'S HISTORY.
MARCELLUS TROXELL.
Mareellus Troxell, son of Philip and I.avina Troxell, died in Denver, Colo., April, 1915. No other boy who ever went out from Braxton eounty had a greater or more varied experienee than Mareellus Troxell. He left his home in Sutton in 1868 when oly seventeen years of age, and wandered through the wilds of the West, and visited many strange lands. He served five years in the U. S. army, and fought Indians on the western frontier. Later he served in the U. S. Navy, made several trips around the world, and was in two or three shipwrecks. After leaving the navy, he worked in the steel mills at Steu- benville, Ohio, farmed in Indiana and Illinois, mined and prospected in Col- orado, Nevada, New Mexico, Arizona, California, Montana, Alaska and Mexieo. He was in San Franeiseo at the time of the big earthquake which oeeurred in 1906, nd later worked on the Panama eanal. While employed on the eanal, he received injuries which necessitated the amputation of one leg for which the government paid him $2500. After recovering from this injury he came home and remained several months, going from here to Nevada and then to Denver, where he resided for several years until his death. He was a man of genial disposition and extraordinary intellect, and but for his too intimate relations with old John Barleycorn would have been a sueeess in any line of endeavor. He was never married. His body was interred in Denver.
LEDREW MORRIS WADE.
Ledrew Morris Wade was born in Monongalia county, Feb. 14, 1854, a son of Josephus and Elizabeth (Morris) Wade. He married Sarah J., daughter of Alpheus D. Hagans, June 23, 1880, at Brandonville, Preston county. Hugh Roseoe, Josephus Harper and Edna Irene are their children.
Mr. Wade is a graduate of Fairmont Normal Sehool, having taught a short time at Brandonville. Soon afterwards, he eommeneed reading law, and was admitted to the bar in 1880. Mr. Wade still resides in Sutton, having moved here in 1882.
JOSEPH B. WESTFALL.
Joseph B. Westfall, a son of Jacob W. and Margaret (Brown) Westfall, was born Aug. 2, 1841. He enlisted in Company F, 10th West Va. Infantry, Jan. 15, 1862, and was discharged with rank of first sergeant, May 3, 1865. He married Naney E., daughter of Leonard W. and Margaret (MePherson) Hyer, Oet. 25, 1865. Their children were Lenora Aliee, Emma M. and Columbus Simpson.
REV. CLEMMER WARMAN.
Rev. Clemmer Warman was born in Monongalia eounty, Oet. 17, 1844. His parents, James D. Warman and Mary Dunn, and the grandparents, Thomas
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Warman and Mary Kirkpatrick, were all natives of the same county. The subject of this sketch was married May 7, 1873, to Miss Martha Ellen Wells of Morgantown, and their children are Minnie, Hofman H., W. Clay, Ernest, Worth and White. Rev. Warman is a minister of the Methodist Episcopal church, and for several years served the Sutton eharge.
Rev. Warman ranks as one of the strong men of the conference-a worker, a student, a thinker, a safe shepherd, a sweet counselor, a noble pastor, and with a strength and vigor of body that should give him several more years of active work in the ministry. Standing nearly six feet, with broad shoulders and mus- cular frame, with hair slightly tinged with gray, the pieture of health and manhood, backed by the years of experience in sowing the good seed and wit- nessing under his own ministry the building of many churches and the eonver- sion of scores of men and women, the gathering of the gospel harvest has surely been to him a theme of delight and joyous satisfaction. What greater sacrifice could be given to the church? What firmer monument eould stand upon the walls of Zion to proclaim its truths than a personage like Rev. Warman.
WILLIAM WAGGY.
William Waggy, a native of Pendleton county, was born in the year 1820, and died at his home in Flatwoods in 1884. Mr. Waggy was for several years a citizen of Clay county, this state, where he accumulated con- siderable wealth in the lumber business, principally building flatboats on the Elk river. He was a man of great energy and industry, and in ability was far above the average. He represented the county of Clay in the West Virginia Legislature, was a magistrate also of that county, and was held in very high esteem by the people who knew him.
He married Anna, the daughter of Felix and Susan Sutton. To them were born two children, Henry and Susan, the latter becoming the wife of B. C. McNutt. Mrs. McNutt died quite carly in married life, leaving three children, while her noble and saintly mother lived for several years until death relieved her of the suffering and afflictions which she had so patiently borne. They are all buried on the hill overlooking the old home.
ANNA WAGGY.
Anna Sutton, daughter of Felix and Susan Skidmore Sutton, who be- came the wife of William Waggy, was the oldest of five children and was thir- tecn years of age when her mother died. She then assumed the management and care of the family, and grew to be a fine house keeper, and as a cook she had no superior in the country. She had two children, Henry and Susan. This noble and indulgent sister who eared for me in my youth and encouraged me in everything that was right, passed to her reward June 17, 1899. She was noted for her kindness to the poor, and on her monument is inseribed : " A mother to the motherless, and a friend to the friendless."
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T. S. WADE.
One of the old time gospel ministers of West Virginia, a man who labored long and faithfully in Southern Methodism. Rev. Wade was earnest and elo- quent in his presentation of the truths of the gospel, and did more than any other minister to build up the interests of his ehurel in West Virginia; a man of spotless eharaeter, one whose memory will long abide with the people of his. native state.
GEORGE B. WAGGONER.
George B. Waggoner, formerly cashier of the First National Bank and the Home National Bank of Sutton, was a resident of Braxton county from 1906 to 1911 inclusive. He is a native of Harrison county, now being cashier of a bank at Jane Lew. He was born November 9, 1881, and in June, 1910, married Vida Goodwin of Harrison county. They have three interesting ehil- dren.
Mr. Waggoner was a son of George S. and Eliza Waggoner and grandson of Elijah and Mary Waggoner. (M. E. Church.)
F. M. WARE.
F. M. Ware married Mary V. Wesfall, daughter of Wm. Westfall. His mother's name was Elizabeth A. Ware, and lived to be ninety-nine years of age. F. M. Ware is the father of eight ehildren two of whom are blind, San- ford C. and Louisa R. They were edueated at Romney, this state. Sanford manufactures brooms, and his blind sister assists her mother in the house. She ean sew, and is able to thread her needle. They read the Christian Reeord, a monthly magazine published at College View, N. Y., using type which the blind ean read. They own a small farm on the Little Kanawha river.
JACOB WESTFALL.
Jaeob Westfall settled on Cedar creek in 1811. It is said he was the first white man to locate on the head waters of that stream. His house for many years was a regular meeting place for the Methodists. He lived a long and ex- emplary life, and his deseendents were many. His old land and estate is now known as the Campbell farm at the mouth of the Westfall fork of Cedar ereek.
JOHN WYATT.
John Wyatt came from Greenbrier county, W. Va., in an early day. He was commonly ealled Major Wyatt. His wife was a Miss Ludington of Green- brier. Their sons were John W., Andrew, Samuel, Joseph, Charles and Balard. The daughters are as follows: Betsy who married Taylor Squires, Nancy and
.
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SUTTON'S HISTORY.
Liza. Several of Mr. Wyatt's children moved to Illinois in the early settlement of that state.
REV. GEORGE H. WILLIAMS.
Rev. George H. Williams, one of the pioneer ministers of the West Virginia M. E. Conference, was born in Giles county, Virginia, August 19. 1844. He began preaching in the year 1872, and traveled over more rough and rugged territory embraced in the Conference than perhaps any other minister of his ' day. He has just recently completed the manuscript of an interesting book entitled Building Sunward, which gives a graphic description of the trials of the ministry and the triumphs of the gospel, covering a period of over forty years throughout southern West Virginia. He was married in 1866 to Mary Elizabeth Scott, and they had six children, Fernando D., Sallie B., Charles W., Willie, who died in infancy, India D., and Ivra E. His wife died July 8, 1918, they having lived together for 52 years. For fifteen years or more they had made their home in Sutton, W. Va.
THOMAS J. REXROAD.
Thomas J. Rexroad, son of Hezekiah and Nancy Helmick Rexroad, was born in Wood county, W. Va., April 15, 1866. He married Josephine Simmons in May, 1891, and moved to Braxton county and settled at Flatwoods. Their children are, William, George, Mary, Mabel, and Russell, who died in infancy. Mr. Rexroad is a house carpenter by trade; his son George is a soldier in France.
Mrs. Elizabeth Fisher and her grandson, Felix R. Fisher.
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SUTTON'S HISTORY.
OFFICERS AND SOLDIERS.
List of names of commissioned officers and soldiers who served in the World War from Braxton county :
Captain Justus Stalnaker
Lieut. Joseph M. Lorentz
Captain Curtis P. Miller
Lieut. Wat Stewart
Lieut. Hugh E. MeMorrow
Lieut. Okey B. Ellison
Lieut. Albert K. Walker
Lieut. Dan G. Simmons.
Lieut. Thornton A. Berry
Lieut. Clyde Heater
Lieut. Raymond Hawkins
Lieut. Marvin Luther Golden
Lieut. Earl F. Fox
Lieut. Earl Rollyson
Lieut. William B. Morrison
Lieut. Charles Knieley
Lieut. George Garrett Davis
Lieut. James Clyde McNeill
Joseph Forest Bennett
Dewey MePherson
Virgil A. Long
Draeo Doddrill
Early G. Riffle
Hugh Kitts
Ralph Boggs
Luther H. Green
A. B. Niehols
Robert G. Kelly
William Longwell
Harry Fleming
Roy Sergeant
George Dent
Charles Rawson G. E. Paisley
Norris Hamrie
Walter Saunders
James C. Gillespie
Ovis E. Tinney
Wm. Earl Gillespie
Charles O. Grose
William MeCoy
Sprague Chapman
Harry J. Hyer Alda Stines
Charles B. Pierson
William Kidd
Criss Eli Juergens
Mathew Kidd
Harry B. Criss H. F. Davis E. I. Squires
Beverly Crites
Claude Stalnaker
Wilber Gillespie
George Coble Byrne
Harry Carper
Clinton Ward
Floyd Short
Caz. Mullins
Em. Jamison
Charley MeElwaine
Roy H. Canfield
William Herbert Crawford
Cecil Canfield B. L. Hall
Charles S. Adams
George Lloyd
Denzil Rhea
Rhea Lamb Ralph White
O. T. Knieley
Dwight L. James
Wesley Fidler
Ervin Hamrie
Levi H. Humphreys
Orville Hayhurst
Captain John Edwin Grose
Lieut. Lewis Jordan
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SUTTON'S HISTORY.
Carl MeCune Dewey Fleming Ephriam Jones Emory Ware Felix Loyd James Eli Kester Siers
Franeis D. Carr
Thomas Perkins William Harry Long
Oley Marple Long
Lawrenee Elliott Bowen
Milton Henry Humphreys
Alonzo Carr
William MeCauley Pierson
Albert Groves
Roeeo Roccisano
Lanta Thruman Perkins
Frank Morris Fagan
Russell J. Knight
Alva Curtis Jenkins
Jesse Franeis Moore
Criss Carr
Harper Carpenter
Saint George Duffield
Clarence Robinson
Edward H. Garber
Earl Herbert Sponaugle
Hansford Earl Frame
Frederick Estell Floyd
Robert Ellis Perkins
Chaney Chapman
Roy Herbert Johnson
Erna Harper
William Hazel Diekey
Charles Ashby Bussey
Charley Leon Underwood
Oliver Greene
Russell A. Bosley
Charles Homer Ball
Francis Arleigh Watkins
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