I am not sure what year Henry H. migrated to Holmes County. According to the paperwork that has been shared with me, he was born in 1831 in Bibb County, Georgia.
He married Elizabeth Autumn Head in Cerro Gordo, Holmes County, Florida, September 19, 1858. Cerro Gordo, was at one time the County Seat of Holmes County, and is located on the west side of the Choctawhatchee River.
He married Elizabeth Autumn Head in Cerro Gordo, Holmes County, Florida, September 19, 1858. Cerro Gordo, was at one time the County Seat of Holmes County, and is located on the west side of the Choctawhatchee River.
Elizabeth was born August 18, 1836 in South Carolina, and I do not know at this time when she migrated to Holmes County. And I would love to know how and where they met.
In the notes of the paperwork that was shared with me by another Family member, Sharon Tibbits Grant, it states that Henry H. Lewis is a Creek Indian, and Elizabeth Autumn, is a Cherokee. It also states this information has not been verified, and it was furnished to the writer by Pam Rimes, another descendent of Henry H. & Elizabeth Lewis.
At this time I do not know when they moved to the Whitewater Community, which is on the east side of the River and to the east, north east of Cerro Gordo. The Whitewater Community butts up to the Florida/ Alabama Stateline. But at some point they did!
Following is a list of their children:
#1 William Thomas Lewis b. October 18, 1859 Holmes County, Florida, d, September 25, 1927, buried Whitewater Cemetery.
# 2 John Henry Lewis b. July 22, 1863 Holmes County, Florida. d. November 29, 1892 Atlanta Georgia, Fulton, County. Buried Whitewater Cemetery
# 3 Matthew Wesley Lewis b. January 29, 1866 Holmes County, Florida, d. December 03, 1932, buried Whitewater Cemetery
# 4 Mary M. Lewis b. October 20, 1871 Holmes County, Florida d. March 24, 1882, buried Whitewater Cemetery
# 5 Martha Ella Lewis b. February 18, 1876 d. May 21, 1928, buried Whitewater Cemetery
They all grew up in the Whitewater Community. Married, and most of their children were born and grew up there, as well as some of their children’s children.
Curde, not to scale map of the Whitewater Community when my Dad was a little boy drawn by my brother |
William Thomas Lewis, married Henrietta Whitehead, in 1883. She was born in January, 1866 in Alabama.
Their children:
# 1 Henrietta E. Lewis b. March 07, 1885 Holmes County, Florida d. February 21, 1969. Buried in Shady Grove Cemetery, Holmes County, Florida
#2 Rosa Lee Lewis b. January 11, 1887 Holmes County, Florida d. December 28, 1956. Buried Whitewater Cemetery
# 3 Mary K. Lewis b. December 1890
# 4 Allie Bethel Lewis b. November 1892
# 5 Ada Lewis b. September 1895. Buried Whitewater Cemetery
# 6 William Oscar Lewis b. November 25, 1898 d. January 20, 1925. Buried Whitewater Cemetery.
# 7 Sarah Ester Lewis b. November 1899
# 8 Etta Edna Mae Lewis, b. 1904
# 9 Clifton Lewis , June 14, 1907 d. February 21, 1996 Buried Whitewater Cemetery
# 2 Child of Henry H. and Elizabeth Autumn Lewis
John Henry Lewis, married Sarah Evelyn Brigman in, 1889. She was the daughter of Moses Brigman., and Caroline Watson. Sarah Evelyn, was born December 26, 1865 in Walton County, Florida And she died March 14, 1952.
John Henry, was enrolled at Emory University in Atlanta, Georgia. studying to become a Doctor. He got sick and died November 29, 1927. His body was brought home, and he is buried at Whitewater Cemetery in Holmes County.
Their children:
# 1 Gracie Belle Lewis b. February 15, 1890 Holmes County Florida d. March 14, 1973 Buried Whitewater Cemetery, Holmes County, Florida
# 2 John Henry Lewis b. January 25, 1893 Holmes County Florida d. March 02, 1957. Buried Whitewater Cemetery, Holmes County Florida.
# 2 John Henry Lewis b. January 25, 1893 Holmes County Florida d. March 02, 1957. Buried Whitewater Cemetery, Holmes County Florida.
Sarah, was with child when John Henry, died, but she named the baby in honor of the Father even though the baby was a girl and she was called Johnnie most of her life.
Sometime after John Henry Lewis, died Sarah, married Lee Dunn, and had three children by him. When she died she was buried in Whitewater Cemetery, Holmes County Florida.
# 3 child of Henry H, and Elizabeth Autumn Lewis
Matthew Wesley Lewis, married Sarah Sallie, maiden name unknown, in 1888. She was born March 23, 1871 in Florida and died December 21, 1939, they are buried at Whitewater Cemetery, Holmes County, Florida.
Their children:
# 1 Lizzie R. Lewis b. 1892
# 2 Norah Lewis b, 1893
# 3 John W.H. Lewis b.1895
# 4 ELLA Mae Lewis b. September 19, 1897 d. January 02, 1917 at 19 years old, she is buried at Whitewater Cemetery, Holmes County, Florida
# 5 Wesley E. Lewis b. 1900
# 6 Horace E. Lewis b. 1902
# 7 Arthur E. Lewis b. 1904
# 8 Annie S. Lewis b. 1906
# 4 child of Henry H. and Elizabeth Autumn Lewis
Nancy Lewis b. 1869 Holmes County Florida married George Marshall, he was born in 1860 and died in 1922, they are buried at Whitewater Cemetery, Holmes County, Florida.
Their children:
# 1 Pinkie W. Marshall b.1895
# 2 May Bell Marshall b. 1896
# 3 Isabel Marshall b. 1898
# 4 Corabelle Marshall b. 1900
# 5 Flora E. Marshall b. 1902
# 5 child of Henry H. and Elizabeth Autumn Lewis
Martha Ella Lewis, married John Miller, he was born June 16, 1874 and died March 03, 1952. They are buried at Whitewater Cemetery, Holmes County, Florida.
Their children:
# 1 Bamma Leona Miller b. July 22, 1893
# 2 William Alma Miller b. September 23, 1902
# 3 Alto V. Miller b. February 01, 1905 d. May 26,1907, buried at Whitewater Cemetery, Holmes County, Florida.
# 4 Fannie S. Miller b. April 20, 1907
# 5 Julian Odell Miller b. January 10,1911 d. June 09, 1912 buried at Whitewater Cemetery, Holmes County, Florida.
The point of this writing is to tell you a story that was told to me by my Daddy, about my G Granddaddy Tom Lewis. I will attempt to tell you this story in the vernacular or Southern dialect my daddy spoke in.
And for those who grew up in that part of the country and have Southern ears, it is easy to understand.
In 1918, there was an outbreak of an influenza, an epidemic that killed thousands upon thousands of people, world wide. That particular strain was called the Avian Influenza or commonly known as the Bird Flu!
There were no Doctor’s or medications such as penicillin or anti-biotic available in those days.
Daddy said, “ folks took care of thurselves and prayed, and ye made it er ye died”.
He said, “me ‘n’ Granddaddy Tom wuz tha onliest ones in our whole family that didn’t git it”.
Daddy was three years old at the time, but it was a very traumatic time in his life and it was indelibly imprinted in his memory cells!
He said, “ Granddaddy’ud cum by our house uva morning, ‘n’ he’d set the water bucket down on a chur, and he’d say now Earl, give’em a drink ah water ever now and agin, even if they don’t ask fir’it”.
I asked him why Granddaddy Tom, set the water bucket down off the shelf onto a chair, and Daddy answered, “ Cuz I’uz too little to reach the shelf, I wat’en but three years old”.
After he came by their house, he would make the rounds in the Whitewater Community, visiting, and taking care of all of the sick. He carried a barrel of water in the back of the wagon, and a tub of soup, he’d made.
Daddy said, “ he’ud clean up the ones who needed to be, give em water, give em soup if they’uz hungry, people wuz dying like flies everwhur, and he’d bury the dead”.
He said, “ thar wuz one whole family of tha Berry’s that died, one by one.
Granddaddy Tom did this care giving day after day, until some of the other men got well enough to help him.
Caring for his own Family and everybody else in the community. Daddy said, “one morning Granddaddy went in to the Berry’s and found the last one dead. He wuz a teenage boy, ‘n’ he’uz either puttin’ on er takin’ off his shoes when he died, he’uz bent over ‘n’ his hands wuz still holding on to his shoelaces”.
Daddy said, “ that one really got to Granddaddy, he buried him with tears streaming down his face”!
What a sad time the folks in Whitewater Community had to live through! But the love and care of my G Grandfather, Tom Lewis, for his Family and neighbors was remarkable!
It seems in this time that we live in that kind of love and care for others has waned. But Thanks be to God, there are still some who have that kind of compassion for others. And it is very commendable!
This time frame could have been the start of Whitewater Cemetery! This is pure speculation on my part, I do not know this to be a fact! I do know that the land for the Cemetery and Church was donated by the Lewis Family because the story was passed down through the Family.
I can see there was a need at that time for a place to bury those who died during this epidemic. And it just makes sense to me that maybe this was the start of the Cemetery there. I have never seen any documents about it, and I just don’t know for certain if this was when it all started.
Wow, what a terrible time that was! Which branch of the tree is Mr. James on? Thanks for starting and hope you continue on!
ReplyDeleteHis g granfather was Mathias Wesley Lewis and mine was William Thomas, they were brothers, sons of Henry H. and Henrietta Lewis!!!
ReplyDeleteA remarkable story, Cousin Annette, as to both the geneology and the great flu epidemic. I never knew about the flu epidemic of 1918 until you told Page about it.
ReplyDelete@ Ms Claudia, my mistake and just noticed it, William Thomas and Mathias Wesley were sons of Henry H. and Elizabeth Autumn Lewis.
ReplyDelete@ Cousin Vernon had I known you didn't know about the Flu epidemic I would have shared with you much earlier!!!
As you know, this is my favorite of your southern stories! I feel somewhat of a connection to it because of a visit I had with a very old lady back in 1991, in Geneva, Alabama. She was the daughter of Mathias Wesley who married Sallie (Sarah) Braxton. Her name was Annie (Lewis) Spears and she was a wonderful and kind woman. She gave me several tin photos, two of which were of Henrietta Whitehead and Tom Lewis, her husband. She spoke of them with great tenderness and said they were awfully good people.
ReplyDeleteThank you so much Page for sharing this with us, info such as this makes our family histories even more interesting!!!
ReplyDeleteHi Annette, I am another of your cousins. My great-grandmother was Henry Etta Lewis daughter of William Tom and Henrietta. Her sisters called her Ett, her grandkids called her Mommer Harris. She had my grandmother (Thelma) out of wedlock in 1909. From what we have been told she was working at a logging camp as a cook when she got pregnant. She later married Will Harris and had two children by him. Thelma married Hosey Lee Webb in 1924.
ReplyDeleteI think that makes you and my dad 2nd cousins and me your 2nd cousin once removed.
Melinda Webb Russ
Annette, I would like to compare notes as I am still looking for my great grandmother. I know the name my granddaddy left for us, however I have searched and searched to no avail. It's like she is a phantom but I know she was for real because there was 4 children born and I understand that she had another child before my granddad was born. Note: My granddad gave her name as Carrie Lewis and she was born in 1865. Your story about your grandparents caused to reach out to you, hoping that you have a little real information for me. According to my gd she was born in Westville and they lived in cerro gordo. Any info you can provide would be appreciated. Thanks, Alice Hood Lynn
ReplyDelete