Tuesday, December 24, 2019

Lemon Jackson

Lemon Jackson
1880-1957
Everyone knows how much I like old pictures. Sometimes I find an interesting story to go along with them. This man’s picture and his story captured my attention. Lemon Jackson was born between 1874 and 1880 in Hempstead, Texas. His wife, Ada Ford, was my distant cousin. They were married on September 16, 1929, in Jefferson County, Texas. Ada and Lemon had three children during their marriage. Records indicate Lemon might have been married at least two other times. 

Lemon worked in Texas and Oklahoma as a common laborer all of his life. At the time of  his World War I draft registration he was working as a wagon driver for Commerce Ice Company in Beaumont, Texas. Later in his life, 1940's and 1950's, he worked as a delivery man at a grocer store.

Lemon Jackson’s
WWI Draft Card
Although he pled not guilty, in 1887 Lemon was found guilty of rape. From January 1897 to May 1901 he was imprisoned in the state penitentiary in Huntsville, Texas. 

Lemon Jackson died on January 18, 1957, at the age of 76. His death certificate listed his cause if death as senility and second degree burns. He was buried in Beaumont, Texas.

Saturday, December 14, 2019

Moments in Time

Zula Runnels Johnson
1889-1935
They say picture is worth a thousand words.They make life stand still for a moment. I have hundreds of pictures. and they all have a story.  I probably never will uncovered all the details or their stories, but I don't think keeping them stored away in a database does the people whose lives I research justice. So, I've decided to share some of the pictures of people who may or may not be related to me, but whose lives and stories were intertwined with the lives of my ancestors. 
Mamie Johnson Martin
1904-1978

Monroe Johnson, a distant cousin, was born in the Magnolia Springs community in Jasper County, Texas in 1880. In 1901 Monroe married Zula Runnels. Together they had six children: Carrie, Charlie, Bertha, Mamie, Willie, and Evelyn. I have found pictures of Monroe's wife, Zula, and three of their daughters: Bertha, Mamie, and Evelyn. The daughters have a remarkable resemblance to their mother.
Bertha Johnson Thomas
1903-1964

Evelyn Johnson Armstrong
1910-1932
Cameras of that era took some time to be adjusted and focused. I know that photographers in those days were strict about how their subjects posed, but I'm still taken aback by the unsmiling faces. I wonder what their lives were like and what they were thinking. There is a sadness in Zula's eyes. The slump of her shoulders and the slight tilt of her head suggest a weariness that she is holding. Bertha, on the other hand, looks glamorous and sophisticated, while Mamie's stern appearance and impatient glare chills me. My favorite picture is of Evelyn. She looks so put together, poised, self assured, and confident. She could not have been much more than a teenager. Her clothes suggest the picture was taken in the late 1920s or early 1930s. She died in 1932.