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Showing posts with the label #farmer #Oklahoma

52 Ancestors: Willie Marion Crooks

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  Sometimes our ancestors seem to emerge from the historical records like ghosts, leaving only breadcrumbs of their existence scattered across decades and state lines. Willie Marion Crooks was one of those restless souls—a man perpetually in motion, chasing opportunities across the American frontier as the 19th century gave way to the 20th. Born on October 18, 1876, in Hill County near Hillsboro, Texas, Willie entered a world still raw from Reconstruction. His parents, Bolivar Houston Crooks and Martha G. Thomas, were raising their large family in the heart of rural Texas, where cotton fields stretched to the horizon and the frontier was still a living reality rather than a romantic memory. A Texas Childhood The 1880 census captures four-year-old Willie as simply another child in the Crooks household—one of many siblings, including brothers John Porter, General Grant, Daniel H., Guy Melton, and sisters Sudi, Julia, Maggie Delana, and Sarah Jane. His father, Bolivar, worked the ...

52 Ancestors: Thomas Marion Elonzo Manning - When Family Stories Don't Match the Records

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(AI generated image) One of the most frustrating aspects of genealogy research is when family oral history directly contradicts the documentary evidence. This week's ancestor, my husband's 2x great-grandfather Thomas Marion Elonzo Manning, presents exactly this kind of puzzle—one that has me questioning everything I thought I knew about his character and his relationship with his daughter. The Man Behind the Records Thomas was born on November 7, 1874, in Montgomery County, Arkansas, to Ira W. Manning and Tamsey Manervia Sessions. His childhood was marked by loss—his father died around 1888 when Thomas was just 14, leaving him to help support his mother and younger siblings. After his mother remarried, Thomas gained several half-siblings through the Shopshire family. At age 25, Thomas married 17-year-old Mattie Smith on March 24, 1900, in what was then Indian Territory (later Oklahoma). They built their life as farmers, moving around McIntosh County as Thomas sought better ...