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I'm
Rob Salzman of
4130 SW 117th Ave # 415 Beaverton, OR,
97005 USA.
Welcome to e-familytree.net. E-familytree.net is my personal genealogy hobby site.
The data contained here has been gathered through 20 years of genealogy. Some small
part of it is my original research, but most of it has been shared with me.
It is important to understand:
This is SPECULATIVE DATA. Most of it is unverified. Use it for hints and pointers, but DO
YOUR OWN RESEARCH!
You can leave a comment on each page here. If you want to be notified
when this site changes, you can leave contact information here. I can
always be reached at the mailing address above, or by email at genealogy at e-familytree dot net.
This website built on November 02, 2009.
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Family Sheet
HUSBAND
Name: Harry Miller GaryMale Note
Born: 9 Mar 1872 1872-3-9 at Edisto Island, SC Edisto Island, SC
Married: 11 Nov 1898 1898-11-11 at Charleston, SC Charleston, SC
Died: 5 Nov 1921 1921-11-5 at Albion Hotel, Augusta, GA Albion Hotel, Augusta, GA
Father: Andrew Nunn Gary
Mother: Mary Ann(a) Clark
WIFE
Born: 12 Nov 1873 at Marion, SC
Died: 25 Oct 1958 at Charleston, SC
Father: John Taylor Northrop
Mother: Mary Rhoda Rutledge Henagan
CHILDREN
Name: Caroline Elizabeth Gary
Born: (suppressed / living)
Died:
Born: (suppressed / living)
Died:
Husband: John Sloan Hodges
Born: 12 Sep 1899 at Sullivan s Island, SC
Died: 16 Jan 1982 at Mt. Pleasant, SC
Husband: Horace Hobson Earley
Born: 1 Dec 1902
Died: 20 Sep 1966 at Charleston, SC
Wife: Nancy Grace Witherspoon
NOTES
1). Place of birth is shown as Shelbina Township, Shelby County, Missouri. The papers of Alice Gary Early showed Edisto Island, SC. He obviously lived in Shelbina, MO, as a young child because he is shown on the 1880 Census in above Shelbina. Source Application papers for The National Society of Colonial Dames of America in The State of South Carolina for Mrs. Philip DuTart Pinckney, full maiden name Nancy Patricia Gary. 1880 Census differs in the place of birth. It lists it as Missouri. The Edisto Island source came from Alice May Gary Early & it is unknown where her information came from. MGHB 2002
2). Grannie as she was known to her grandchildren, wholeheartedly believed in God and the Episcopal Church. She had her own pew, and anyone who would dare to sit there was asked to move to another pew. Carrie as she was known by friends, was also a master seamstress. She made beautiful baby clothes, some still in possession by the family. She made the clothes with lovely round thread lace and lawn a soft cotton fabric like batiste . She made beautiful Charleston bonnets of organdie, in fact making them for others by order. She sewed to bring a little money in to run her household and survive. Grannie mended and laundered Rector Harold Thomas s vestments. Rector Thomas served St. Luke s Episcopal Church in Charleston and Grannie s granddaughter, Jeanne, remembers Rector Thomas visiting her when she was sick as a child She also remembers what a kind and popular man he was, often playing games and telling stories to the children. Grannie had a treadle sewing machine. Her granddaughter, Jeanne, used to love to sit on the floor and watch her peddle and treasured the times that her Grannie would help her learn to sew. Grannie made doll clothes for all of her granddaughters Jeanne, Trish , and Carol. Grannie was also a wonderful cook. On Saturday mornings, she and her cook, Viola, prepared breakfast for her black friends Clement, the fish and shrimp man, who sold his seafood out of his hand pushed cart Mattie, the vegetable woman who carried her wares on her head Janie, the flower woman who sold flowers out of her huge sweetgrass basket which she balanced on her head as she walked. Source Jeanne Northrop Early Hagood, Granddaughter of Caroline Cummings Northrop Gary, July 2002. CENS CONC s does not agree with date recorded by daughter Alice. CENS FAMS @F0337@
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