This is the
grave of my first cousin, once removed, Lois Hunter Carraway (1895-1998). She lived 102 years. She is buried at Bascomb Methodist Cemetery,
near Woodstock.
She had ill feelings towards me the
last 25 years of her life.
Lois was one
year old when her father William Jason Hunter (1875 - 1896) died. Her
mother, Fanny Medley had another
daughter and no means of support.
William Jason's parents, William A. and Emaline Hunter had them move in
with them and they supported the young family.
Lois and her sister Jacie never knew their real father, their father
figure was William A. Hunter, their grandfather.
Then I came
along. I was on a quest. I knew from my grandfather Frank Hunter (also
William A.'s son) that William A.'s last
name was not Hunter, he was adopted young.
It is a long
story that took several years of
research to track it down, but this is essentially the summary of what I found:
In 1842, the
year William was born, his mother, Rebecca Trammell sued Jason Henderson Hunter,
the local constable of Franklin, North Carolina, for bastardy. The
court found him guilty and ordered that he pay $100 a year child support. William grew up using the last name of
Trammell, married with the name Trammell, and enlisted in the CSA with the name
Trammell.
He was shot
in the knee during the Battle of Kennesaw Mountain and recuperated in a little
community called Andersonville, just north of Woodstock a mile or two.
After the
war, and returned to Franklin, his uncle Van Trammell killed a man named
Lambert over a heated argument about the Civil War. All evidence pointed towards Van, real name
Jacob Vanburen Trammell. William stepped
forward and he said Van couldn't have killed him because Van was with him all
day. The sheriff proved William was
lying, and put out an arrest warrant for both of them, Van and William - Van
for murder and William for Accessory to Murder.
They both fled the state. Van
went to Arkansas, near the Texas border, where he spent the rest of his life,
and William and his young family first went to Texas, and then back to the
Woodstock, Georgia, where he had friends.... by the time they got to Woodstock
in 1879 the family's last name was Hunter... as in Jason Henderson Hunter.
During this time of research I visited Lois several times and copied pictures she had, drank iced tea with her, and ate white grapes from a vine by the garage/barn that William A. Hunter, had planted. I remember the wasps or yellow jackets were enjoying the grapes also.
When I got
it all compiled I printed it off and mailed it to each of my Hunter relatives
that I thought would be interested, which included Lois Hunter Carraway.
Lois called
me up raging mad and said she knew William was born a bastard and involved in
the murder and it was her secrets she wanted to carry to the grave with her and I messed everything up.
Whoops!
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