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Pewter Beaker

April 26th, 2011

Roy Rodriguez collects early American pewter. He has come across a small beaker engraved as follows:

“Nellie M. Barrett Woodford, loomer, Deering, Maine, Feb. 7th, 1872″

The three inch beaker does not carry the name of the maker, but it probably was made in Connecticut and may be a marriage cup.

Mr. Rodriguez is interested in locating descendants. If you have additional information, please contact me so I can put the two of you in touch!

linda@lindageiger.com

Dr. David Morgan Woodward

April 9th, 2011

Ortel, Alex, Dr. Woodward, Mark, Mrs. Woodward, Cecil and Gladney

The Tennessee State Library and Archives is a wonderful research facility with a knowledgeable and delightful staff. When visiting any repository, I think it is important to investigate the files that you’ll not be able to find elsewhere. TSLA has a collection of  genealogy folders containing a variety materials such as newspaper clippings, family charts, and other materials often submitted by the public. When I visited TSLA in February, I took the opportunity to search the genealogy folders for Woodard and Woodward. The article transcribed below came from the Woodward File. In the upper left had corner contained the source information: “Press Clipping Division, Tenn. Press Association, P.O. Box 8123, Knoxville. This clip from Oneida News July 10, 1964. There were five images within the article, but most of them reproduced so poorly it is impossible to share them here.

Profiles in Courage
Neighborly Notes by Mrs. Esther Sanderson

According to historical records members of the Woodward families were living in Massachusetts as early as 1633. They emigrated from England where they had been landed gentry and yeomanry. The name Woodward came from the office of its first bearer as a forester or warden of the woods. They helped found the nation and have been instrumental in its growth and development through their energy, industry, ambition, courage and leadership in peace or in war.

Among the Woodwards who fought as officers in the Revolutionary War were Lieutenants John and Richard of Massachusetts, Lieutenant Peter of New York, Sergion’s Mate, Samuel of Massachusetts, Captain Samuel of South Carolina, and Captain Nathaniel of New York. On the maternal side, Thomas Ely served with 5th Continental Line and the Virginia Calvary.

One of the most colorful ancestors of the Scott county Woodwards was Captain Henry Woodward who commanded the 10th Company, Virginia Regiment during the French and Indian War. He was present at Braddock’s defeat, and was voted thanks and gratuity by the Virginia Assembly for gallantry at Fort Necessity. In 1757, he was place in command of Voss’s Post on the front. He served in the Cherokee Expedition and remained in the service until 1762. He received large land grants in Virginia in recognition of his faithful services to his country. The original portion of the Capitol Building at Washington was built from stone quarried on Captain Woodward’s land.

The fascinating story of how Captain Woodward met and married Sarah Shelton, who could trace her ancestry to Charlemagne and the Magna Charta Barons, has been handed down from father to son through the generations. When Captain Hentry boarded ship in England to come to America, British officers came on board to search it to see that no able-bodied man left. Addressing no one but the sea and himself, he made the remark, “I have served seven years in the war, and now I suppose I will have to end my life in the army.” Sally Shelton, a buxom young woman, standing by heard the remark. Seeing that he was a very small man, she told him, “Squart down under this stool here on the deck.” She then spread out her skirt, as it was very wide and threw it over the stool and sat down on it and remained on it until the ship was searched and was well out to sea. She then got up and let him out from under the stool and he jumped up and kissed her. They were later married by the Captain of the ship while enroute to America.

Dr. David Morgan Woodward was born March 15, 1868, in Lee County, Virginia. He was the son of Fletcher and Sarah Jane Campbell Woodward. He was on of a family of ten children, five sisters and four brothers. He migrated from Virginia to Claiborn County, Tennessee. David Morgan was a good singer, and he traveled with a group who sang at conventions in adjoining counties. It was on one of these tours, that he met the southern belle, Mary Jane Davis, the daughter of one of the most prosperous farmers in Bloundt County. James Calvin Davis, whose wife, was Martha McTeer Davis. David Morgan and Mary Jane were married in Knox County. He started his premed training at Porter Academy in Blount County in 1900. It was an uphill struggle for the young couple who had no financial help from any source. Like many other poor boys who were determined to get an education he decided that he would find a shack and batch during week days. Mrs. Woodward would bake enough corn bread to last him during the week, and he carried it in his saddle pockets. The shack was so rundown and open that the hogs decided to batch also. Between the hogs and the fleas, David Morgan found it hard to study or sleep. Something must be done. But what? He boiled a kettle of water, saturated the whole brood and they vacated the shack with such force and speed they turned it over, but they never returned again. He lifted the shack repaired it and continued to live in it.

After his hard struggle through prep school, he entered the Tennessee Medical College in Knoxville where he graduated in 1902. He was a classmate of the late J. Victor Henderson. He entered the Medical School in New Orleans where he received a diploma in 1904. In his quest for still more knowledge in medicine, he entered the Chattanooga School of Medicine and received a diploma in 1906. He began his medical practice in South Knox County in 1906. He moved to Caryville during the booming coal mining days where he practiced medicine during 1909-10. He then moved to Pioneer and from Pioneer to the hills of Scott County, December 1911. He put up an office at Winona where he bought a good farm. He later had an office at Huntsville and at Capitol Hill where he continued his practice until shortly before his death in 1940. Mrs. Woodward passed away in 1959.

Dr. Woodward, was a member of the State Medical Board and a member of the Scott County Medical Board, a charter member in 1922. He was also a member of the Volunteer Medical Corps during the war.

When Dr. Woodward first started his practice, Mrs. Woodward would go along with him and assist him with obstetrical cases, but the children came, one almost every year until there were eleven, eight boys and one girl (two who died in infancy) kept her at home. They had eight boys, Mark, Ortel, Gladney, Alex, Cecil, Ivan, Gordon and Johnny. The only girl, Chloe (Mrs. Carl Rector) came along and upset Dr. Woodward’s plans for a full baseball team. However, he always managed to borrow some young man to replace her on the Woodward ball club. Dr. Woodward and all his sons were interested in sports of all kinds, but especially baseball. However, it was not all play and no work for the boys. During week days, the boys were put to work on the farm where they helped raise food for the large family and for the livestock. Sister Chloe, being the only girl in a large family of baseball playing brothers, was kept busy cleaning after them, and hanging up their baseball paraphanalia [sic]. On one occasion, she hid their suits in a cubbyhole in the attic and “went for a visit”. They eventually found them just in time to make it to the ball park for a game.

Gladney, Cecil, Ivan and Johnny served in the armed forces of their country. Gladney served on the Police Force at Oak Ridge and was later elected sheriff of Anderson County for two terms. Ortal has been a member of the Scott County Board of Education for the past 20 years. Mrs. Carl Rector lives in Huntsville. She is active in church and civic affairs. She is a member of the Eastern Star, the P.T.A. and the Garden Club. Mark recently retired from the Lukenheimer Company in Cincinnati after 40 years of service. Cecil was connected with one U.S. Air Force in Dayton, Ohio where he was a Provost Marshall. Johnny is a veteran of World War II. Dr. and Mrs. Woodward have 34 grandchildren and several great grandchildren.

When Dr. Woodward started his practice in Scott County, he had to travel on foot or horseback to the most remote sections of the county. During the influenza epidemic in 1917-18 he would often go to Rock House and other remote places and be gone from home a week at a time. Like an angel of mercy he went from house to house where he treated the living, lay out the dead, cut wood to heat the cold buildings and made soup to feed them. He arranged for funerals and did every thing in his power to bring relief to the suffering and the needy. Many of his bills were payed [sic] in produce from the farms, others were never paid, but lack of money never kept him from answering a call. He delivered some 3,000 babies during his career. He also helped other struggling young medical men to get started in the profession. Two of these were his nephew, Dr. Bedford Campbell and the late Dr. M.E. Thompson. He recalled buying Dr. Thompson’s first saddle bags and starting him out “for better or worse” which ended in a long and useful career only a few years ago.

Dr. D.M. Woodward’s calls often took him twenty miles away. Many times he would return home soaking wet and cold, with mud up to the horses belly, only to rise and go again, with little or no rest between times. A doctor’s “widow” was a hard life and a lonely life, but Mrs. Woodward was a patient understanding wife and a good mother. She devoted her life to the welfare of her husband and children. The Woodwards kept open house every week day and WIDE OPEN house on Sundays. Mrs. Woodward and her only daughter, Chloe, never knew how many people to expect. People would ride for miles to his office bother at Winona and Capitol Hill. Dr. Woodward would call one of the boys to put up their horses and feed them while they had dinner and “set a spell”. Sometimes the boys became irked at the visitors, for it was their hard labor in the hot fields that had produced the corn and much of the food on the table. On one occasion one of the boys remarked, “People will ride fifteen miles to get ten cents worth of medicine and a full stomach for themselves and feed for their horses.” But little did Dr. Woodward care; he had little material wealth, but he had great spiritual wealth. He made no effort to lay up wealth on earth” where moth and rust doth corrupt and thieves break through and steal.” Said he, “The king and the pauper occupy the same amount of space after death.”

Dr. D.M. Woodward was a most generous soul, and as a humanitarian he had no peer. He lived and loved from day to day among his patients and friends. He worked for them and shared his earnings with them. During the depression, he kept several families from actual starvation, and he provided shoes books, and clothing to keep children in school.” In asmuch as ye have done for the least of these ye have also done it unto me.” Although a deploy religious man, Dr. Woodward made no outward display of piety. He lived his religion day by day through love of his fellowmen.

 

© Linda Woodward Geiger. All Rights Reserved.
linda@WoodwardsWeSearch.com

 

Accidental Death of Ed Woodward, 1907

April 7th, 2011

Met Death Accidentaly.
Ed Woodward, a negro boy, met his death accidentaly late Wednesday afternoon last near the Gainesville Cotton Mill. He went to take a gun from the hands of George Wilsonan, other negro when the barrels were discharged, the load producing instant death. The negroes had gone out to shoot at a target. They body was brought to Undertakers Dorsey Bros. where it was kept until Thursday, where it was interred.

Source: The Gainesville News, Gainesville, Georgia, 16 October 1907.
Courtesy of Patricia K. Jones, Oakwood, Georgia.

Wordless Wednesday: Woodward & Lothrop Advertisement

April 6th, 2011

Advertisement appearing in The Gainesville News, Gainesville, Georgia, May 1907.

Courtesy of Patricia K. Jones, Oakwood, Georgia

Kept Mother’s Body 33 Years

March 18th, 2011

Article transcribed from the Stars and Stripes, Saturday, April 21, 1945, page 4, and printed in the Bulletin of the California Central Coast Genealogical Society 6 (February 1973): 30.

“Kept Mother’s Body 33 Years.”

Washington (ANS)—Police inspecting the deserted home of Mrs. Mary Eva Woodward, 77, who died Sunday, discovered in a back room and propped on 2 boxes, a sealed, glass-topped coffin containing the body of Mrs. Woodward’s mother, who died 33 years ago.

The body of the older woman was clad in a high-necked gray dress with tight sleeves. It was in a remarkable state of preservation, Coroner A. Magruder McDonald said, apparently some unusual embalming method having been used.

Police assume from the identical names of the two women that they had married men of the same name. But detectives were unable to say where or when the elder Mrs. Woodward had died. Statistical records both in Wilkinsburg, Pa., and in St. Louis showed that a woman named Mary E. Woodward died in 1912.

Mrs. Hattie Hay Quinter, a neighbor of the younger, Mrs. Woodward, said she had told her that the mother’s body had been sent to Egypt to be preserved permanently by a “mummifier,” and that it was returned and buried near Boston about 24 years ago.

The daughter then began worrying about her mother’s last wish “that they never be separated,” Mrs. Quinter related, so the body was exhumed, shipped here and enshrined in a room beside the rocker that had been the elder woman’s favorite chair.

“Every afternoon,” Mrs. Quinter said, “the daughter would sit in the rocker and commune with her mother’s spirit.”

The daughter, a graduate of Wellesley, wrote books on genealogy and ceramics. She was also prominent in the Washington branch of the Daughters of the American Revolution.

Linda Woodward Geiger
linda@woodwardswesearch.com

Maritime Monday: News from India 1796

March 14th, 2011

Columbian Museum & Savannah Advertiser, Savannah, Georgia, 7 June 1796. [original spelling preserved]

Salem [Massachusetts], May 10
By Captain Jacob Crowninshield, lately arrived at the port, from Calcutta, we are informed, that in December last, he saw there Mr. David Woodward, formerly mate of the ship America of Boston, Capt. Hubbuard who about two years since, sailed from Batavia for Manilla. In passing thro the streights of Macasser, Mr. Woodward, with six men, went in the long boar on board a country ship, to get some provisions–in returning they were separated from their ship by a squall, and given over as lost. They were captured by the Malays, and kept in a most cruel slavery for more than a year, being constantly at hard labour in cleaning rice, and th[e] natives often times whipping them for sport. They at last made their escape in a prow, to a Dutch settlement at Massacer, from whence they took passage to Batavia. Mr. Woodward now commands a county ship in Bengal and his friends may rest assured [he] is in good health and happy prospects. The boats crew (except for one man who was killed by the natives, are now dispersed in different European settlements in India–Their names are William Giddings of Salem, John Cole, Archibald Melish, and two others, whose names cannot be recalled, all Americans.

Copyright. Linda Woodward Geiger. All Rights Reserved.
linda@woodwardswesearch.com

Sunday Obituary: Ricky Woodard

March 13th, 2011

“Westmoreland mayor dies after choking” [Tennessean, Sunday, June 20, 2010, p. 3B]
Westmoreland Mayor Ricky Woodard died Saturday, reportedly after chocking while dining at a Goodlettsville restaurant. He was 55.
The official cause of death was not known at press time on Saturday, but Westmoreland Alderman Brad Penick and City Attorney John Bradley said Woodard was dining at Red Lobster in Goodlettsville Saturday evening when he choked on a piece of food.
He was rushed to nearby Skyline Medical Center and later pronounced dead.
“This is a real tragedy for Westmoreland,”
Jennifer Easton, Gannett Tennessee
—————-
Source: Newspaper clipping from Woodard Vertical File no. 2, Tennessee State Library and Archives

Sunday Obituary: Ernest T. Woodard

March 6th, 2011

Woodard, Ernest T.

“Woody” – Age 84 of Hendersonville. Passed away March 6, 2008. Mr. Woodard served in the Army in World War II in the 398th Anti-Aircraft Artillery Gun Crew, 14th Armored Division, attached to the 3rd Army European Theater, which was responsible for shooting down 43 enemy aircraft in a two-day period. He was a member of the Al Menah Shrine Temple, the Jere Baxter Lodge for 50 years, VFW, American Legion and The Hundred Club of Nashville. He worked at Cooper and Martin for 20 years and founded Woody’s Restaurant in 1953. He was preceded in death by his parents, Fred and Elsie Woodard; brothers, Charles and Bradford Woodard; sisters Ava Doris Givins, Shirley Pratt and Agnes Richardson. He is survived by his wife of 65 years, Eloise S. Woodard; daughter, Brenda (Buddy) Carr; sons, Ernest T. “Butch” (Sandra Woodard, Jr. and Paul Dwight Woodard; grandchildren, Cheryl (Jimmy) Douglas, Eric Woodard, Landan Woodard, Bryant (Vanessa) Woodard, Chuch Woodard and Duane (Amy) Woodard; nine great grandchildren. Grandson will serve as Active Pallbearers. Honorary Pallbearers will be Max Torlay, J.D. Vandercook, Bob Barker, Soony Weatherford, Jim Sloan, Bill Pass, Bob Cole, Gene Hoffman, Early Riley and the Round Table at Woody’s Restaurant. Funeral services will be conducted on Monday, March 10, 2008 from the Chapel of Hendersonville Funeral Home at 10 a.m. with Pastor Roger Thaxton officiating. Interment will follow at Spring Hill Cemetery in Nashville, TN with Military Honors. In lieu of flowers, memorial donations may be made to the Shriner’s Children Hospital ro St. Jude’s Children Hospital. The family will receive friends on Sunday, March 9, 2008 from 2-4 and 6-8 p.m. at Hendersonville Funeral Home, 353 Eat Main Street, Hendersonville, TN (615) 824-3855

www.harpethhills.com

——————————-

Source: Newspaper clipping from Tennessean, March 8, 2008, page 7B located in the Woodard surname file at the Tennessee State Library and Archives

 

 

Military Monday: WWII, Old Man’s Draft, Texas

February 28th, 2011

Records of the Selective Service System, 1940–47 (Record Group 147) include the fourth draft registration. The “Old Man” or fourth registration was created by the Act of 1940 and included men born between April 1877 and February 1897. The fourth registration took place in 1942.

The Selective Service System turned the records over to respective National Archives regional facilities but with mixed signals—these are a permanent annexation or these are not a permanent collection. Consequently at least one regional facility—NARA-Southeast— destroyed the records. From the author’s personal experience the Old Man WW II draft cards are available at the regional archives in Texas and Seattle. Other regions have have microfilmed their collections

 

Information on the draft card includes:

  • Name
  • Place of Residence
  • Mailing Address
  • Telephone Number & Exchange
  • Age in Years
  • Place of Birth
  • Date of Birth
  • Name & Address of Person Who Will Always Know Your Address
  • Employer’s Name and Address
  • Place of Employment or Business
  • Signature of registrant
  • Description (height, weight, completion, color of eyes and hair, and any physical characteristics that will aid in identification
  • Signature of Registrar
  • Address of Local Board
  • Local Board number

What follows is an index to the “Old Men” who registered in Texas with the surname Woodward or Woodwards. Source: WW II Fourth Draft, Selective Service System, 1940–47 (RG 147), National Archives-Southwest Region, Forth Worth, Texas.

Only the name;  residence;  and birth date have been abstracted for this index.

Albert E. Woodward; Hse #115 Huber Camp Borger, Hutchinson Co., Texas; 12 Feb 1888

Alma Monger  Woodward; Rt. # Temple, Bell Co., Texas; 11 Apr 1896

Alva Coan Woodward; 1/2 mile S.W. Lamesa, Dawson Co., Texas; 14 Nov 1896

Anson Hudson Woodward; 1214 W. Broad, Freeport, Brazoria Co., Texas; 15 Nov 1882

Arthur Herman Woodward; 200 East Chandler St., Brownwood, Brown Co., Texas; 3 Nov 1894

Batt Carr Woodward; 2413 Denley Dr., Dallas, Dallas Co., Texas; 19 Feb 1891

Ben Benson Woodward; 2111 N. 5th, Waco, McLennan Co., Texas; 20 Sep 1887

Benjamin J. Woodward; Rt. 1, Cedar Valley, Texas; 6 Mar 1880

Bradford King Woodward; Gen. Del., Hallettsville, Lavaca Co., Texas; 16 Jan 1889

Carroll Wayne Woodward; 430 Cheyenne St., Copus Christi, Nuecis? Co., Texas; 1889

Cecil Roy Woodward; Obrien, Haskell Co., Taxas; 20 Jun 1892

Charles Joseph Woodward; Greentree Hotel, San Anotonio, Begar Co., Texas; 30 Oct 1894

Charles Lampton Woodward; Hico, Hamilton Co., Texas; 4 Apr 1887

Chester B. Woodward; Navasota, Grimes Co., Texas; 29 Sep 1883

Christopher Columbus Woodward; 822 Essex, San Antonio, Begar Co., Texas; 15 Mar 1886

Cicero Smith Woodward; Home for Aged Masons, Arlington, Tarrant Co., Texas; 28 May 1894

Clarnece Stephen Woodward; Box 233, Knox City, Knox Co., Texas; 11 Feb 1890

Clyde Chilton Woodward; 1000 Live Oak St., Marlin, Falls Co., Texas; 9 Jul 1891

Clyde Joseph Woodward; 29 Haywoard, Naco-doches, Nacogdoches Co., Texas; 9 Jun 1888

David Edwin Woodward; Box 582, Colorado City, Mitchell Co., Texas; 20 Jul 1893

David Isham Woodward; La Tuna, Elpaso Co., Texas; 30 Jul 1895

Dixie Woodward; 1706 S. St. Paul St., Dallas, Dallas Co., Texas; 6 Dec 1886

Dudley Kezer Woodward; 4315 Glenwood, Dallas, Dallas Co., Texas; 19 Jul 1881

Eben Gould Woodward; Lockney, Floyd Co., Texas; 7 Oct 1883

Edgar Eugene Woodward; 618 Olive St., Texarkana, Bowie Co., Texas; 22 Nov 1889

Edward Jackson Woodward; 1216 Austin Ave., Brownwood, Brown Co., Texas; 1 Dec 1889

Edwin Woodward; Pearsall, Frio Co., Texas; 6 Feb 1883

Elmer Blair Woodward; 1417 S. Sixteenth St., Corpus Christi, Nueces Co., Texas; 7 Apr 1887

Emerson Francis Woodward; 1605 Heights Blvd., Houston, Harris Co., Texas; 23 Febg 1879

Emmette Jackson Woodward; Nederland, Jefferson Co., Texas; 28 Sep 1890

Enos Paul Woodward; 1615 Buchanan, Wichita Falls, Wichita Co., Texas; 3 Jun 1891

Ernest E. Woodward; Flomot, Motley Co., Texas; 7 Sep 1893

Ethridge Woodward; 416 Oriental Road, Waco, McLennan Co., Texas; 15 Oct 1888

Felix Clyde Woodward; 630 – 4th St., Texas City, Gaveston Co., Texas; 16 Jul 1896

Fonnie  Woodward; Ranch 56 Mi. North Sanderson, Pecos Co., Texas; 22 Apr 1893

Fordyce Clay Woodward; Santa Anna, Coleman Co., Texas; 23 Jan 1885

Frank Marion Woodward; 420 Sunset Ave., Dallas, Dallas Co., Texas; 11 Sep 1885

Fred (tye) Woodward; Garwood, Colorado Co., Texas; 1887

Garland A. Woodward; 1922 Banks St., Houston, Harris Co., Texas; 6 Aug 1891

George Edward Washington Woodward; Eagleford Rd., Weisenberger Add., Dallas, Dallas Co., Texas; 3 Jan 1877

George Franklin Woodward; Route 4, Kemp, Kaufman Co., Texas; 15 Feb 1887

George Washington Woodward; Calliham, McMullen Co., Texas; 16 Apr 1887

George Washington Woodward; Devers, Liberty Co., Texas; 14 Dec 1879

George William Woodward; 347 Gulf St., San Antonio, Texas; 15 Oct 1890

Grover Woodward; 316 Sherman, Waco, McLennan Co., Texas; 18 Sep 1886

Hardy Leroy Woodward; Route 4, Box 278, Waco, McLennan Co., Texas; 22 Nov 1895

Harvey James Woodward; 305 E. Champion St., Edinburg, Hidalgo Co., Texas; 25 Aug 1886

Henry Ciscle Lee Woodward; Woodson, Throckmorton Co., Texas; 18 Oct 1877

Horace Eugene Woodward; Rt. 1, Shallowater, Lubbock, Texas; 30 Jun 1884

Ivy Lee Woodward; Rt. 2, Chandler, Henderson Co., Texas; 24 Jan 1897

J David Woodward; Crockett, Houston Co., Texas; 9 Mar 1882

Jacob Clinton Woodward; 61st Ave S 1/2, Galveston, Galveston Co., Texas; 29 Sep 1891

James Basil Woodward; 1208 South Walters, San Antonio, Bexar, Texas; 23 Dec 1894

James Carter Woodward; E. Ave. C, Robstown, Nueces Co., Texas; 28 Sep 1893

James Clifford Woodward; 726 W. Russell, San Antonio, Bexar Co., Texas; 24 Sep 1891

James Taylor Woodward; Transient; 20 Apr 1885

James William Woodward; 802 Ave. L., Lubbock, Texas; 14 Feb 1882

Jesse Harper Woodward; 408 SW 4th St., Perryton, Ochiltree Co., Texas; 20 Sep 1889

Jessie L. Woodward; Mt. Enterprise, Box 53, Rusk Co., Texas; 25 Oct 1892

John Clifton Woodward; Rt. 2, Tyler, Smith Co., Texas; 4 Jun 1891

John D. (ini) Woodward; Menard, Menard Co., Texas; 11 Jun 1879

John Floyd Woodward; Box 213, Jacksboro, Jack Co., Texas; 25 Oct 1885

John Kars Woodward; Milford, Ellis Co., Texas; 18 Jul 1880

John Luther Woodward (Sr.); Stuart Place, Harlingen, Cameron Co., Texas; 6 Jan 1880

John Marcus Woodward; 1541 Ashland St., Houston, Harris Co., Texas; 27 Nov 1882

John Paul Woodward; 805 Oakland, Plainview, Hale Co., Texas; 22 Dec 1894

John Roland Woodward; 119 Beckleywood, Dallas, Dallas Co., Texas; 18 Aug 1887

Joseph Henry Woodward ; Fentress, Caldwell Co., Texas; 13 May 1888

Joseph Walker Woodward; 1221 W. Elm, Tyler, Smith Co., Texas; 18 Aug 1877

Lewis Oliver Woodward; 2229 Waco, San Angelo, Tom Green Co., Texas; 20 Jan 1896

Linton Stevens Woodward; 1208 S. Walters St., San Antonio, Bexar Co., Texas; 24 Jun 1888

Lon Logan Woodward; Route #2, Belton, Bell Co., Texas; 13 Jan 1882

Louis Woodward; Brazoria, Texas; 12 Jan 1891

Lycan Parks Woodward; 621 Micheaux Ave., Palestine, Anderson Co., Texas; 21 May 1895

Marion Alexander Woodward; Hemphill, Sabine Co., Texas; 3 Mar 1894

O.T. Woodward; Brownsboro, Henderson Co., Texas; 2 Jul 1895

Oscar Edwin Woodward; Carriham, McMullen Co., Texas; 6 Feb 1882

Oscar Leander Woodward; Eldorado, Schleicher Co., Texas; 18 Sep 1892

Phillip Woodward; 928 Iowa St., San Antonio, Bexar Co., Texas; 20 Jul 1893

Preston Edgar Woodward; Rt. 3, Waco, McLennan Co., Texas; 27 Nov 1892

Ralph Waldo Woodward; Danbury, Braporia Co., Texas; 23 Mar 1880

Ray Dean Woodward; Rt. #1, Hallettsville, Lavaca Co., Texas; 14 Nov 1883

Richard Erle Woodward; O’Brien, Haskell Co., Texas; 6 Feb 1894

Robert Augustus Woodward; 3216 Ayers, Corpus Christi, Nueces Co., Texas; 27 Oct 1887

Roy Woodward; Pearsall, Frio Co., Texas; 12 Nov 1884

Samuel Claud Woodward; 1 mi N from Emberson, Lamar Co., Texas; 31 Mar 1881

Samuel Joseph Woodward; 127 E. White Ave., San Antonio, Bexar Co., Texas; 29 Jul 1890

Sidney Vernon Woodward; Rt. 1, Tahoka, Lynn Co., Texas; 11 Oct 1889

Thomas Woodwards; 6022 Schuler, Houston, Harris Co., Texas; 29 Sep 1888

Thomas Oscar Woodward; 1902 Leopand, Corpus Christi, Nueces, Texas; 8 Feb 1884

Tom Woodward; 3 mi. w. Plainview, Hale Co., Texas; 9 Jul 1896

Tom B. Woodward; Camden, Polk Co., Texas; 24 Dec 1878

Tom Julious Woodward; 3115 Clinton, Fort Worth, Tarrant Co., Texas; 18 Oct 1881

Tomas Bengaman Woodward; Globe, Lamar, Texas; 1 Jan 1881

Valin Ridge Woodward; 400 East 1st Street, Arlington, Tarrant Co., Texas; 12 Feb 1890

Walker Harrison Woodward; 310 N. Palmer, Tyler, Smith Co., Texas; 1 Jul 1896

William Woodward; 536 Chapultepec Ave., Mexico, D.F.; 2 Apr 1886

William Ashley Woodward ; Adkins, Bexar Co., Texas; 15 May 1878

William Harvey Woodward; 800 1/2 Bellview St., Amarillo, Potter Co., Texas; 24 Apr 1890

William Henry Woodward ; 1931 W. Huisache, San Antonio, Bexar Co., Texas; 14 Feb 1888

William Jebb Woodward; Streeter, Mason Co., Texas; 13 May 1877

William Lee Woodward; O’Brien, Haskell Co., Texas; 8 Nov 1895

William Rentz Woodward; 2421 McKenzie, Waco, McLennan Co., Texas; 12 Apr 1890

William Walker Woodward; E. 3rd Ave. & 8th St., Mineral Wells, Palo Pinto, Texas; 6 Jan 1879

William Whitton Woodward; Jarrell, Williamson Co., Texas; 26 Jan 1886

William Zane Woodward; 8141 Ithaca St., Houston, Harris Co., Texas; 5 Mar 1890

Zelmer David Woodward; 822 Delmar Ave., San Antonio, Bexar, Texas; 15 Jan 1896

(c) 2011 Linda Woodward Geiger, All Rights Reserved.
Linda@WoodwardsWeSearch.com.

Wordless Wednesday: The Twins

February 23rd, 2011