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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Living

Generation: 2

  1. 2.  Deward Belmont Moody was born on 13 Jan 1918 in Norwood, , Pulaski County, Kentucky (son of Robert Lafette Moody and Aleatha E. Tolley); died on 3 Nov 2004 in Hamilton County, , , Ohio.

    Notes:

    MOODY Deward B., beloved husband of the late Bertha E. Moody, dear father of Patricia E. Seward, Susan Schwartz, Kathryn Eikenberry, Ernest Sr., John and the late Robert Moody, also survived by eight grandchildren and nine great grandchildren, brother of Helen Rambo, Lena DeLoach and the late Ernest Sr. and Bobby Moody. Wednesday, November 3, 2004.

    Deward married Bertha E. Tolley about 1941 in , Avery County, North Carolina, . Bertha (daughter of John Dawson Tolley and Clota Esther McQueary) was born on 31 Jul 1925 in Casey County, , , Kentucky; died on 31 Aug 2004 in Hamilton County, , , Ohio. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  Bertha E. Tolley was born on 31 Jul 1925 in Casey County, , , Kentucky (daughter of John Dawson Tolley and Clota Esther McQueary); died on 31 Aug 2004 in Hamilton County, , , Ohio.

    Notes:

    MOODY Bertha E. (nee Tolley), beloved wife of Deward B. Moody, dear mother of Patricia E. Seward, Susan Schwartz, Kathryn Eikenberry, Ernest Sr., John and the late Robert Moody, also survived by six grandchildren and four great grandchildren, sister of Thelma Horn, Alpha Helton,, Nora Plummer, Freida Keefe and Marvin Tolley. Tuesday, August 31, 2004.

    Children:
    1. Living
    2. 1. Living
    3. Living
    4. Living


Generation: 3

  1. 4.  Robert Lafette Moody was born on 8 Mar 1892 in Johnson County, , , Tennessee (son of Thomas Clingman Moody and Mary Ellen Trivette); died on 19 Apr 1943 in Detroit, , Wayne County, Michigan; was buried in Canton, , Stark County, Ohio.

    Notes:

    1920 Pulaski County, KY Census
    Caney Fork

    Household 67
    Robert L. Moody 27TN NC NC
    Aletha 21NC NC NC
    Deward B . 1 11/12KY TN NC

    1930 Stark County, OH
    Canton
    Household 1
    Moody, Robert37TN TN NC
    Duward11KY TN NC
    Lena 9KY TN NC
    Ernest 7KY TN NC
    Helen 5KY TN NC
    Bobby 3KY TN NC

    1940 Avery County, NC Census
    Linville Twp
    Household 210
    Robert L. Moody 48 TN
    Marjorie 25 NC
    Deward 22 KY
    Helen 14 OH
    Bobbie 12 KY
    Oliver 7 TN
    Kathleen 5 TN
    Lucious 3 TN
    Thomas 1 NC
    Ernest W. 17 KY

    The family resided in Johnson City,
    Washington County, TN in 1935.


    Robert L. Moody lived in Johnson City, possibly from 1900 to around 1918. From there, he moved to Pulaski County, Kentucky, where he was in the logging business with his father, Thomas C. Moody. In about 1926, he and his family moved to Canton, Ohio. Following the death of his wife, Aletha Tolley Moody, he moved back to Johnson City, where he married Marjorie Lewis. He and his family lived on Market Street Extension until about 1942, when he went back to Canton.

    May have been married for a very short time to a woman before marrying Marjorie Lewis.

    Robert married Aleatha E. Tolley on 20 Dec 1912 in , Avery County, North Carolina, . Aleatha (daughter of William Larkin Tolley and Sarah Louise "Sally" Taylor) was born in Dec 1898 in Mitchell County, , , North Carolina; died on 30 Dec 1928 in Canton, , Stark County, Ohio; was buried on 2 Jan 1929 in Canton, , Stark County, Ohio. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 5.  Aleatha E. Tolley was born in Dec 1898 in Mitchell County, , , North Carolina (daughter of William Larkin Tolley and Sarah Louise "Sally" Taylor); died on 30 Dec 1928 in Canton, , Stark County, Ohio; was buried on 2 Jan 1929 in Canton, , Stark County, Ohio.

    Notes:

    In the early 1910's, Thomas C. Moody, his wife Mary Ellen Trivett and their family lived in Minneapolis, Avery County, NC. During this same period, the family of William Larkin Tolley and his wife Sarah L. "Sally" Taylor lived in the small settlement of Ivey Heights, about half-way between Minneapolis and Newland. The Ivey Heights Free Will Baptist Church is one of the few remants of this community.
    Robert L. Moody, son of Thomas and Mary, met Aleatha E. Tolley, daughter of William and Sally. Whether they met in Ivey Heights or Minneapolis is not known. A romance developed, and the couple were wed on 17 Dec 1912. Aleatha was 14 years old.


    Death certificate states:
    Residence: 2915 Rosewood NW
    Canton, Ohio
    Date of death: 30 Dec 1928
    Cause of death: Bronchial pneumonia and measles
    Buried: 2 Jan 1929, Westlawn Cemetery

    Birth:
    A Few Highlights of Avery County History:
    Avery County is North Carolina’s “baby county” (just 108 years old), but it is packed full of history. Here are just a few of the highlights.
    While many long hunters, like Daniel Boone, fished and hunted in the area, the first settler was Samuel Bright. He arrived in the 1770s and built a home at Lower Old Fields of the Toe, called the Bright Settlement. Bright guided early settlers to the Watauga Settlement along an old Indian path, Bright’s Trace of the Yellow Mountain Road.
    In September 1780, the Overmountain Men took that same route, over Roan Mountain, down Roaring Creek, and through Ingalls and Green Valley. They defeated the British at the Battle of Kings Mountain, considered the turning point of the American Revolution.
    French naturalist Andre Michaux visited Grandfather Mountain in 1794, declaring it the highest mountain in the United States.
    On April 4, 1840, the Childsville, Cranberry Forge, and Yellow Mountain Post Offices were established, the first in the area.
    After several attempts throughout the 1850s, Mitchell County was created in February 1861, encompassing much of the area, almost to Banner Elk, which the Banners settled in 1848. Childsville, located at the current Avery County airport, became Calhoun. The first session of Mitchell County Court was held there.
    The Civil War tore families apart. Many families along the North Toe River sided with the Confederacy. Those along the Elk River sided with the North. Many men marched away to fight at Manassas, Gettysburg, and Chickamauga. Locally, the Cranberry Iron mines produced ore for the South. Kirk’s raiders passed through in June 1864, burning the Palmer House in Altamont, and there was a skirmish near Banner Elk in the fall of 1864.
    In June 1882, the East Tennessee & Western North Carolina Railroad reached Cranberry. While the mines had been in operation for decades, the arrival of the railroad provided easy access to outside markets. A month later, regular passenger service began. In March 1883, Cranberry got telegraph service.
    Elk Park, the oldest town in present-day Avery County, was incorporated in 1885. That same year, Monroe Dugger and J. Erwin Calloway opened the Grandfather Hotel on Grandfather Mountain.
    Samuel Kelsey purchased property from Walter Lenoir in 1888, including much of Grandfather Mountain. The Linville Improvement Company was formed in 1889, controlling some 16,000 acres in and around Grandfather. Kelsey helped found Linville.
    The first mica grinding mill was built in Spear in 1891. Mica became big business, helping the Allies win WWII.
    In 1892, the Yonahlossee Turnpike was completed, linking Linville with Blowing Rock. That same year, Monroe Dugger published “The Balsam Groves of Grandfather Mountain,” the first book by a local.
    Edgar Tufts arrived in Banner Elk in 1895, eventually founding Lees-McRae College, Grace Hospital and the Grandfather Home for Children. Golf was played, possibly for the first time, in Linville that year.
    The Linville River Railroad was chartered in 1896. However, before the first rail was laid, the business folded and was reborn as the Linville River Railway in 1899. The rails ran from Cranberry through Minneapolis, Vale, Newland, Montezuma, Pineola, Linville and, eventually, all the way to Boone.
    Also in 1899, U.S. Marshall William H. Greer was killed, the first local law enforcement officer to die in the line of duty. Others include John Staford (1912); Zebulon Winters (1920); William Burleson (1923); Hardy Coffey (1936); Alvin Jones (1939); Max Daniels (1949); and Glenn Hicks (2003).
    The Plumtree School for Boys opened in 1903. Five years later, Mrs. and Mr. Sloop, both medical doctors, arrived in Plumtree. They moved their practice to Crossnore in 1911. Also in 1908, the Tar Heel Mica Company opened in Plumtree.
    In 1909, Scott Wiseman was born in Ingalls. After college in West Virginia, he began performing on WLS in Chicago, where he met, and later married, Lulu Belle (Myrtle Cooper). They went on to have an amazing career both on radio and on film, retiring to the Ingalls area in 1958.
    A fire in 1910 destroyed much of the business district in Elk Park. That same month, a hydroelectric plant was constructed in Banner Elk, powering the school and hospital.
    Avery County was created in February 1911. Elk Park was the first county seat, but after a vote, Old Fields of Toe became the official county seat. The area was renamed Newland, in honor of Lt. Gov. William C. Newland. The first newspaper, the Avery Vim, began publication in May, and the first court session was held in October.
    Town lots were auctioned off in Newland in 1912. Construction began on the Altamont to Altapass section of the Crest of the Blue Ridge Toll Road, a precursor to the Blue Ridge Parkway.
    With the completion of the courthouse and jail, the county seat moved from Elk Park to Newland in 1913. That same year, the owners of the Cranberry Iron and Cola company, owners of the ET&WNC, agreed to buy the Linville River Railway.
    In 1915, Dr. Sloop constructed a dam on the Linville River in Crossnore, which eventually powered the hospital, school, and town. The Crossnore School, run by Mary Martin Sloop, was chartered in 1917.
    The United States entered WWI in 1917, and more than 400 local men served in the armed forces. Eight men died in action, including Cpl. Jesse Staton, who was killed after the armistice papers were signed but before the cease fire took effect.
    A flu pandemic struck in 1918, claiming at least 24 Avery County citizens.
    Howard Marmon, who designed the car that won the first Indy 500, purchased property in Pineola in 1919.
    Uncle Jake Carpenter, who kept death records for lower Avery County, died in 1920. In 1924, the first Singing on the Mountain was held at MacRae’s Meadow.
    The town of Crossnore was incorporated in 1925. Preston Johnson was the first mayor.
    In 1927, Lees McRae Institute became co-educational, opening a nursing school. Two years later, the school became Lees-McRae College. Also in 1929, the Cranberry Mines closed down.
    Shepherd Dugger published “War Trails of the Blue Ridge” in 1931. In 1935, the road to Observation Point on Grandfather Mountain opened, and in 1936, the original Eseeola Lodge in Linville burned.
    William Newland and Shepherd Dugger both died in 1938.
    A flood in August 1940, worse than the previous one in 1916, destroyed the railroad. The line from Cranberry all the way to Boone was abandoned, despite local protests.
    In January 1941, a fire swept through the business section of Newland, destroying several structures. Fire returned in January 1961. There were other fires as well: Elk Park in 1903 and 1914; the Cranberry Hotel in 1924; and the boys dormitory at the Plumtree School for boys in 1927.
    The United States entered WWII in 1941. More than 1,200 local citizens served, and 54 died in service. In Elk Park, passenger service resumed on the ET&WNC, continuing through the war years, taking people to work in war-related jobs in Elizabethton. Eventually, the line from Tennessee to Cranberry was abandoned; the last regular run was in 1950.
    Dr. Mary Sloop was chosen as the American Mother of the year in 1951; Linville Falls was donated to the National Park Service in 1952, the same year that Hugh Morton acquired Grandfather Mountain. Morton constructed the Mile High Swinging Bridge that same year.
    Highway 105, connecting Boone to Linville, opened in 1955. The Grandfather Mountain Highland Games began in 1956. Richard Nixon spoke at the groundbreaking ceremony of Cannon Hospital in 1958. The hospital opened in 1961, the same year that Dr. Sloop passed away. Mrs. Sloop passed the next year.
    The Mountain Glen Golf Course opened in 1964, and the nursing school at Lees-McRae closed in 1965. Joe Hartley, founder of Singing on the Mountain, passed in 1966. Both the Grandfather Golf Club and Beech Mountain Ski Resort opened in 1967, and in 1968, the National Park Service and Hugh Morton reached an agreement on the route of the Blue Ridge Parkway over Grandfather Mountain.
    The Avery County High School opened in 1969, merging the high schools in Newland, Crossnore and Cranberry. The sales office for Linville Land Harbor opened the same year. The Land of Oz opened on Beech Mountain in 1970 and closed in 1980, although it is occasionally opened.
    In 1971, a Christmas tree from Avery County was selected for the White House. Mayland Technical College was established by the General Assembly that same year. “Where the Lilies Bloom” was filmed locally in 1972. Tommy Burleson played basketball for the men’s team in the 1972 US Olympics. Johnny Cash performed at Singing on the Mountain in 1974, the same year that the Sugar Mountain Golf Course opened.
    Linville Ridge Golf Course opened in 1981, the same year that Scotty Wiseman died, and construction began on the Linn Cove Viaduct, which opened a year later. Horton Cooper, who published a history of Avery County in 1964, passed away in 1986, and “The Winter People” was filmed in Plumtree in 1987.
    Lees-McRae College became a four-year school, and the Grandfather Mountain Nature Museum opened in 1990. The hospitals in Crossnore and Banner Elk merged in 1999, the same year Lulu Bell Wiseman died. Hugh Morton passed away in 2006. The Morton family sold the Grandfather Mountain backcountry in 2008, an area that became Grandfather Mountain State Park in 2009.
    (Written by Michael C. Hardy. June 2019)

    Children:
    1. Fay Levetts Moody was born on 3 Mar 1914 in , Avery County, North Carolina, ; died on 16 Apr 1914 in , Avery County, North Carolina, ; was buried in Ashley Cemetery, , Avery County, North Carolina.
    2. Alice Lee Moody was born on 8 Jul 1915 in , Avery County, North Carolina, ; died on 16 Nov 1915 in , Avery County, North Carolina, ; was buried in Ashley Cemetery, , Avery County, North Carolina.
    3. Ruby Rose Moody was born on 25 Dec 1916 in Washintgon County, , , Tennessee; died on 18 Jan 1917 in Washintgon County, , , Tennessee; was buried in Snow's Chapel, Knob Creek Road, Washington County, Tennessee.
    4. 2. Deward Belmont Moody was born on 13 Jan 1918 in Norwood, , Pulaski County, Kentucky; died on 3 Nov 2004 in Hamilton County, , , Ohio.
    5. Lena Frances Moody was born on 13 Aug 1920 in Norwood, , Pulaski County, Kentucky; died on 4 May 2015 in Washintgon County, , , Tennessee; was buried in Fairview United Methodist Church Cemetery, , Washington County, Tennessee.
    6. William Earnest Moody was born on 13 Dec 1922 in Pulaski County, , , Kentucky; died on 9 Sep 1973 in Hamilton County, , , Ohio; was buried in Oak Hill Cemetery, , Hamilton County, Ohio.
    7. Helen Mae Moody was born on 25 Jul 1925 in Canton, , Stark County, Ohio; died on 26 Nov 2006 in Canton, , Stark County, Ohio.
    8. Bobby Moody was born on 26 Oct 1926 in Waynesburg, , Lincoln County, Kentucky; died on 3 Feb 2000 in Clermont County, , , Ohio.
    9. Living

  3. 6.  John Dawson Tolley was born on 25 May 1909 in Mitchell County, , , North Carolina (son of William Larkin Tolley and Sarah Louise "Sally" Taylor); died on 4 Jun 1984 in Hamilton County, , , Ohio; was buried in Willow Springs Methodist Church Cemetery, , Casey County, Kentucky.

    John married Clota Esther McQueary about 1920 in Kentucky, , , . Clota (daughter of Warren McQueary and Minnie Etner Holder) was born on 22 Feb 1909 in Casey County, , , Kentucky; died on 28 Aug 1977 in Hamilton County, , , Ohio; was buried in Willow Springs Methodist Church Cemetery, , Casey County, Kentucky. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  4. 7.  Clota Esther McQueary was born on 22 Feb 1909 in Casey County, , , Kentucky (daughter of Warren McQueary and Minnie Etner Holder); died on 28 Aug 1977 in Hamilton County, , , Ohio; was buried in Willow Springs Methodist Church Cemetery, , Casey County, Kentucky.
    Children:
    1. Freda Tolley
    2. Leon Tolley
    3. 3. Bertha E. Tolley was born on 31 Jul 1925 in Casey County, , , Kentucky; died on 31 Aug 2004 in Hamilton County, , , Ohio.
    4. William Lawrence Tolley was born on 30 Apr 1927 in Pulaski County, , , Kentucky; died on 18 Apr 1932 in , Avery County, North Carolina, .
    5. Living
    6. Living
    7. John D. "Johnny" Tolley, Jr. was born on 10 Sep 1931 in Pulaski County, , , Kentucky; died in Nov 1995 in Hamilton County, , , Ohio; was buried in Oak Hill Cemetery, , Hamilton County, Ohio.
    8. Living
    9. Living
    10. Living


Generation: 4

  1. 8.  Thomas Clingman Moody was born on 15 Aug 1853 in Ashe County, , , North Carolina (son of Isaac W. Moody and Louisa Porch); died on 25 Aug 1940 in Johnson City, , Washington County, Tennessee; was buried in Snow's Chapel, Knob Creek Road, Washington County, Tennessee.

    Notes:

    1860 Johnson County, TN Census
    5th District
    Household 39
    Isaac Moody 26. NC
    Lousa 23. NC
    Thomas C. 6. NC


    1880 Watauga County, NC Census
    Blowing Rock Township
    Household 38
    Thomas C. Moody. 27 NC NC NC
    Mary E. 24 NC NC NC
    Louisa J. 7. NC NC NC
    Susan E. 5. NC NC NC
    Laura B. 1. TN NC NC
    William Trivett 7. NC NC NC Nephew

    1900 Washington County, TN Census
    9th District
    Household 52
    Thomas C. Moody 48. Aug 1851 TN NC NC
    Mary E. 45. Dec 1854 NC NC NC
    Isaiah 19. Apr 1881 NC TN NC
    Isaac 19. Apr 1881 NC TN NC
    Alviney 16. May 1884. NC TN NC
    Rosa E. 12 Sep 1887 TN TN NC
    Ivalie 10. Jan 1890 TN TN NC
    Robert L. 8 Mar 1892 TN TN NC
    Albers T. 6. Mar 1894 TN NC NC


    1910 Mitchell County, NC Census
    Cranberry Township
    Household 385
    Thomas Moody 57. NC NC NC
    Mary E. 55. NC NC NC
    Robert L. 18. TN NC NC
    Thomas L. 16 TN NC NC


    1920 Pulaski County, KY Census
    Science Hill

    Household 136
    Thomas C. Moody 67 NC NC NC
    Mary E. 65 NC NC NC
    Thomas A. 25 TN NC NC
    Mary E. 6. NC TN NC. Granddaughter
    Edith E. 3 NC TN NC. Granddaughter
    Iva L. 1 KY TN NC. Granddaughter
    Elizabeth 24 NC NC NC. Daughter in law
    Irvine Sparks 22 NC NC NC. Grandson
    Eliza E. Sparks 18. TN TN TN Granddaughter
    Margaret K. Sparks 2 TN NC TN Great Granddaughter

    Thomas C. Moody moved to Johnson City, Washington County, Tennessee from Watauga County, North Carolina in about 1887. He and his family lived in 'the Jackson house' at the corner of West Main Street and Pactolus Avenue. He moved to Pulaski County, Kentucky and then to Canton, Ohio, in about 1928. In about 1931, he and his family moved back to Johnson City, Tennessee, and lived on Sidney Street.

    Thomas married Mary Ellen Trivette on 13 Jun 1871 in Ashe County, , , North Carolina. Mary (daughter of Isaiah "Zade" Trivette and Susan "Sissie" Hatton) was born on 3 Nov 1854 in Ashe County, , , North Carolina; died on 1 Sep 1933 in Johnson City, , Washington County, Tennessee; was buried on 3 Sep 1933 in Snow's Chapel, Knob Creek Road, Washington County, Tennessee. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 9.  Mary Ellen Trivette was born on 3 Nov 1854 in Ashe County, , , North Carolina (daughter of Isaiah "Zade" Trivette and Susan "Sissie" Hatton); died on 1 Sep 1933 in Johnson City, , Washington County, Tennessee; was buried on 3 Sep 1933 in Snow's Chapel, Knob Creek Road, Washington County, Tennessee.
    Children:
    1. Eliza J. Moody was born on 1 Oct 1872 in , Watauga County, North Carolina, North Carolina; died on 10 Nov 1891 in Johnson County, , , Tennessee; was buried in Rock Springs Church of Christ Cemetery, , Johnson County, Tennessee.
    2. Louisa J. Moody was born about 1873 in North Carolina, , , .
    3. Susan E. Moody was born about 1874 in , Watauga County, North Carolina, North Carolina.
    4. Laura B. Moody was born on 20 Dec 1878 in , Watauga County, North Carolina, North Carolina; died on 12 Feb 1908 in Johnson County, , , Tennessee; was buried in Mountain View Cemetery, , Johnson County, Tennessee.
    5. Isaac S. Moody was born on 17 Apr 1881 in , Watauga County, North Carolina, North Carolina; died on 10 Aug 1907 in Sullivan County, , , Tennessee; was buried in Childress Galloway Cemetery, , Sullivan County, Tennessee.
    6. Isaiah Moody was born on 17 Apr 1881 in , Watauga County, North Carolina, North Carolina.
    7. Alvenia Moody was born on 30 Aug 1884 in , Watauga County, North Carolina, North Carolina; died on 3 Oct 1901 in Johnson City, , Washington County, Tennessee; was buried in Snow's Chapel, Knob Creek Road, Washington County, Tennessee.
    8. Rosa Etta Moody was born on 1 Sep 1886 in Johnson County, , , Tennessee; died on 12 Apr 1954 in Washintgon County, , , Tennessee; was buried in Monte Vista Memorial Park, , Washington County, Tennessee.
    9. Iva Lee Moody was born in Jan 1890 in Washintgon County, , , Tennessee.
    10. 4. Robert Lafette Moody was born on 8 Mar 1892 in Johnson County, , , Tennessee; died on 19 Apr 1943 in Detroit, , Wayne County, Michigan; was buried in Canton, , Stark County, Ohio.
    11. Thomas Albers Moody was born on 6 Mar 1894 in Washintgon County, , , Tennessee; died on 28 Jul 1937 in Johnson City, , Washington County, Tennessee; was buried on 31 Jul 1937 in Snow's Chapel, Knob Creek Road, Washington County, Tennessee.

  3. 10.  William Larkin Tolley was born on 17 Apr 1877 in Mitchell County, , , North Carolina (son of Merrit Tolley and Mary E. 'Polley' Calhoun); died on 8 Mar 1934 in , Avery County, North Carolina, ; was buried in Ashley Cemetery, , Avery County, North Carolina.

    Notes:

    1910 Mitchell County, NC Census
    Linville Township
    Household 373
    William L. Tolley29NC NC NC
    Sarah L. 31NC NC NC
    Aletha E. 11NC NC NC
    McElroy 9NC NC NC
    Martha E. 5NC NC NC
    Ellen L. 3NC NC NC
    Dawson J. 1NC NC NC

    1920 Avery County, NC Census
    Linville Township
    Household 205
    William L. Tolley 39NC NC NC
    Sallie40NC NC NC
    Mack18NC NC NC
    Martha14NC NC NC
    Ella 12NC NC NC
    Dawson10NC NC NC
    Carl 8NC NC NC
    Florence 4NC NC NC
    Pearl(m) 2NC NC NC

    1930 Stark County, Ohio Census
    Canton
    Household 312
    Carl Tolley18NC NC NC
    Sally50NC NC NC
    Florence 15NC NC NC
    Pearl(m)12NC NC NC

    William married Sarah Louise "Sally" Taylor on 6 Mar 1898 in Mitchell County, , , North Carolina. Sarah (daughter of John W. Taylor and Martha E. Hicks) was born on 17 May 1880 in Mitchell County, , , North Carolina; died on 15 Mar 1954 in Pulaski County, , , Kentucky; was buried in Freedom Cemetery, , Pulaski County, Kentucky. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  4. 11.  Sarah Louise "Sally" Taylor was born on 17 May 1880 in Mitchell County, , , North Carolina (daughter of John W. Taylor and Martha E. Hicks); died on 15 Mar 1954 in Pulaski County, , , Kentucky; was buried in Freedom Cemetery, , Pulaski County, Kentucky.
    Children:
    1. 5. Aleatha E. Tolley was born in Dec 1898 in Mitchell County, , , North Carolina; died on 30 Dec 1928 in Canton, , Stark County, Ohio; was buried on 2 Jan 1929 in Canton, , Stark County, Ohio.
    2. McElroy "Mack" Tolley was born on 18 Apr 1901 in Mitchell County, , , North Carolina; died in 1962.
    3. Frances Tolley was born about 1901 in Mitchell County, , , North Carolina; died about 1976.
    4. Essie Tolley was born on 1 Nov 1903 in Mitchell County, , , North Carolina; died on 15 Feb 1904 in Mitchell County, , , North Carolina.
    5. George Tolley was born about 1904 in Mitchell County, , , North Carolina; died about 1966.
    6. Martha Louise Tolley was born on 10 Mar 1905 in Mitchell County, , , North Carolina; died on 2 Oct 1989 in Lincoln County, , , Kentucky; was buried in Parlor Grove Cemetery, , Lincoln County, Kentucky.
    7. Ella L. Tolley was born about 1907 in Mitchell County, , , North Carolina.
    8. 6. John Dawson Tolley was born on 25 May 1909 in Mitchell County, , , North Carolina; died on 4 Jun 1984 in Hamilton County, , , Ohio; was buried in Willow Springs Methodist Church Cemetery, , Casey County, Kentucky.
    9. Carl James Tolley was born on 20 Jul 1911 in , Avery County, North Carolina, ; died on 13 Apr 1986 in Lincoln County, , , Kentucky; was buried in Parlor Grove Cemetery, , Lincoln County, Kentucky.
    10. Finley Tolley was born on 22 Mar 1914 in , Avery County, North Carolina, ; died on 5 Mar 1915 in , Avery County, North Carolina, ; was buried in Ashley Cemetery, , Avery County, North Carolina.
    11. Living
    12. Pearl George Tolley was born on 14 Sep 1917 in , Avery County, North Carolina, ; died on 15 Mar 1983 in Allen County, , , Ohio; was buried in Pleasant Hill Cemetery, , Allen County, Ohio.

  5. 14.  Warren McQueary was born on 12 Nov 1866 in Russell County, , , Kentucky; died on 3 Nov 1944 in Casey County, , , Kentucky; was buried in Rich Hill Cemetery, , Casey County, Kentucky.

    Warren married Minnie Etner Holder about 1909 in Kentucky, , , . Minnie was born on 11 Jan 1879 in Russell County, , , Kentucky; died on 22 Jan 1948 in Hamilton County, , , Ohio; was buried in Rich Hill Cemetery, , Casey County, Kentucky. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  6. 15.  Minnie Etner Holder was born on 11 Jan 1879 in Russell County, , , Kentucky; died on 22 Jan 1948 in Hamilton County, , , Ohio; was buried in Rich Hill Cemetery, , Casey County, Kentucky.
    Children:
    1. 7. Clota Esther McQueary was born on 22 Feb 1909 in Casey County, , , Kentucky; died on 28 Aug 1977 in Hamilton County, , , Ohio; was buried in Willow Springs Methodist Church Cemetery, , Casey County, Kentucky.
    2. Minnie E. McQueary was born about 1912; died on 10 Jul 1978 in Casey County, , , Kentucky.