Life's Weaving
| Home | Biographies | Cemeteries | Families | History | Music | News | Obits | Old Newspapers | Photos | Queries | Schools | |
Franklin County, Alabama
Obituaries
From Old Newspapers
Home > Obituaries > Old Newspapers
The
Franklin County Times IN MEMORY Corridon Dexter
Britton was born June 22, 1854, and
departed this life November 17, 1909, aged 55 years, four months and 25 days. He was
married to Miss Rebecca C. Ezzell January
21, 1879. He joined the Cumberland Presbyterian church at Mountain Home in the 1882
under the pastorate of Rev. Rome Pickens,
when the church was organized at that place. After he moved to Belgreen he joined
the Methodist church at that place in August, 1908, yet he never changed his religious
views. To this union was born ten children, all living but one little girl who
proceeded him eight years ago to that beautiful home in heaven. All the children are
in this country except the oldest son who lives in Oklahoma. Hearing his father was
seriously sick he came home and spent two months with his afflicted father. Brother
Britton was an honest hard working man, a good neighbor, a kind husband, a loving father,
a good citizen. He will be badly missed in his community as well as in his
home. His heart, his home and his purse were all open to all good people and worthy
causes. His hospitality was full and abundant. His affliction was long and
severe, yet he bore it all as only a true Christian can--without a murmur. He
received all that kind and loving hands could do for him, together with all that skillful
aid could bestow. He was an Odd Fellow and Woodman, in both of which he so demeaned
himself so as to merit the highest respect of his brethren and country at large.
This fact was prominent from the long procession and vast throng that attended his funeral
and burial. I have known him near all of his life. I shall miss his kind and
hearty welcome when I visit his pleasant yet sad home. May the rich blessings of God
be poured out on his bereaved family and relatives. We hope to meet him again in the
sweet bye and bye where afflictions and death are no more. The Franklin Times. Mr. L. C. Bendall Saturday,
August 24, 1929, marked the passing of one of Franklin County's most highly respected
Confederate veterans. He was nearing his eighty fifth birthday being eighty four
years and nine months of age. John W. Carter Died Suddenly
Wednesday afternoon our city was shocked by the sudden and unexpected death of City Tax
Collector John W. Carter. Mr. Carter had been apparently in his usual health except
for a day or two past he had suffered from neuralgia. Just before his death he was
sitting in a chair at home when some friend started to rub his arm that had been giving
him much pain, and almost instantly the pain went to Mr. Carter's heart and he was dead in
a few moments. |
The Franklin County Times Alabama News: Lillian Bowden, the eight-year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Bowden, who reside two miles north of Prattville, was so severely burned Saturday that she died five hours later. She and her oldest sister were standing by the fire in their home warming, when the skirt of the little one caught in flames. Aunt Julia Asher, 106 years old, and by many years the oldest inhabitant of Lauderdale county, died at her home in Florence under very distressing circumstances. For many years she had lived alone, though almost perfectly helpless from old age. A colored woman, who looked after her, found a large hole burnt in the floor before the fireplace when she went there early in the morning. Not seeing the old woman she commenced a search and finally discovered her under the bed, unconscious, with her clothes almost burned off and a large burn on her back. She never regained consciousness and died at noon. Eliza Ann Bolton Hooper On March 26, 1916, our
church and community suffered an irreparable loss in the death of Mrs. Eliza Ann Hooper,
nee Bolton, born March 12, 1845. She joined the church in early life, being one of the
charter members of Belgreen church. On December 29, 1864, she was married to Jas. W.
Hooper, who preceded her to a home of rest, February 11, 1902. To them were born eight
children, five of whom are left to mourn her departure. The Franklin Times. J. T. Southgate Dies
According to Chief of Police, H. C. Quillin
who received this advice from his daughter, Mr. J.
W. Noland, of Columbia, stating that Mr. J. T. Southgate, of Nashville, died
suddenly at Columbia, Tenn., Monday afternoon at 5:30 o'clock. |
The
Franklin County Times December 25, 1909 Died
at the Age of 115 Years When old
"aunty" Eliza Bell, a good ole time slave darkey, peacefully closed her eyes and passed into the
great beyond Saturday morning at the home of her daughter in Reedtown, the southern suburb
of our city, death came to the oldest person in Franklin county, she having passed her one
hundred and fifteenth birthday several months ago according to the records in the Harris
family to whom she belonged and was brought to Alabama one hundred years ago. The Franklin Times. Claude Isbell Claude
Isbell was killed when his car crashed into the rear of a street car in Gadsden, crushing
his scull, breaking his arm in three places and a leg is two places. Mourn Christiny Thompson On
Tuesday mourning, November 16, 1920, Mrs. M. C. Hester calmly Mrs. Annie Wayne Funke, wife of John F. Funke, a well known and prominent business man of Tuscumbia, died Monday afternoon at the family residence, after an illness of several weeks from gastritis. She was born and reared in Tuscumbia, and was the only daughter of A. J. Wayne, deceased, a merchant of Tuscumbia many years ago. |
Page created March 2004
Modified July 2004