THROUGH
MOUNTAIN MISTS
Early Settlers of
Their
Descendants...Their Stories...Their Achievements
Lifting the
Mists of History on Their Way of Life
By: Ethelene Dyer Jones
Writing
about early settler Thompson Collins and his family is
like taking up an enthralling story that you can’t put down until
you’ve read
it all. And even then, you want to fill
in gaps, go farther with the story.
In recent articles we’ve explored the
first Thompson Collins, holder of vast acreages, progenitor of many who
were
born and grew up in Choestoe District and went out from there to make
their
mark in the world. A son, Thompson
Collins, Jr. was a long-time Justice of the Peace.
A grandson, Thompson Smith Collins, was known
as “the poor man’s friend.” In the first
year of my writing “Through Mountain Mists,” I traced the remarkable
career of
Dr. Mauney Douglas Collins, for twenty-five years
This article pays tribute to Nancy Collins
(February 13, 1829 – July 22, 1888), eighth of the ten children born to
Thompson and Celia Self Collins. Nancy
and her sister just older than she, Celia (1827-?) who married James
West, were
born after their parents migrated from
Nancy Collins married John Combs Hayes
Souther (Oct. 22, 1827 – Jan. 4, 1891), born in North Carolina, the
second of
twelve children of John Souther (1803-1889) and Mary “Polly” Combs
Souther
(1807-1894). The Souther family had
settled in 1836 on land in the locality of present-day
John, better known as “Jack” Souther,
took his bride Nancy to live in the log house he and his father had
built for
Jack about 1850 on land lot # 150. The
house still stands today within sight of
Nancy Collins married one week before
her twenty-second birthday in 1852. She
no doubt felt pride in the fact that her husband Jack had taught the
first
school in the Choestoe District. Later
he would become ordinary of
When the
Since
The Civil War came when the couple was
ten years into their marriage. Jack
Souther was a conscientious objector. In
order to evade the Confederate draft, he hid out in caves in nearby
The children born to John Combs Hayes
and Nancy Collins Souther were:
(1)
Mary
Elizabeth Souther
(1853-1929) married
Smith Loransey Brown (1850-1932)
(2)
Celia
Souther (1854) died when
about
sixteen years of age.
(3)
William
Albert Souther
(1856-1945) married
(4)
Sarah
Evaline Souther
(1857-1959) married
Bluford Elisha “Bud” Dyer (1855-1926)
(5)
John
Padgett Souther (1858-1959)
married
Martha Clementine Brown (1861-1933)
(6)
Joseph
Newton Souther
(1861-1922) married
Elderada Swain (1867-1948)
(7)
Ruthie
Caroline Souther
(1863-1928) married
(1) William Sullivan and (2) James Logan Souther (1847-1914)
(8)
Nancy
Roseanna Souther
(1865-1938) married
William Hulsey (1862-1946)
(9)
Martha
Souther (1867-1937)
married (1)
Jasper Todd Hunter (1863-1897) and (2) James Hunter (1847-1912) [Jasper
and
James were brothers.]
(10) Catherine Souther
(1869-1921) married
William Bruce Moore (1868-
1905)
Of the nine
children
who lived to adulthood and married, the descendants of John Combs Hayes
and
Nancy Collins Souther became legion.
Each family has its own story. In fact, geneology lines
sometimes are
surprising. Their child number four, Sarah
Evaline Souther who married Bluford Elisha Dyer is my grandmother. Sarah and Bluford’s tenth child, Jewel Marion
Dyer (1890-1974) married Azie Collins (1895-1945), daughter of Francis
Jasper
Collins. Nancy Collins Souther was my
mother’s great aunt. She is my own great
grandmother, as well as my great, great aunt.
When I tell
my children and grandchildren about these family
ties at Christmas and other family gatherings, they sometimes shake
their heads
in disbelief. Somewhat like the royal
families of
Have a wonderful Christmas with your
family and remember the true meaning of the season.
c2004 by
Ethelene Dyer
Jones; published December 16, 2004 in The Union Sentinel, Blairsville,
GA. Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
[Ethelene Dyer
Jones is a retired educator,
freelance writer, poet, and historian. She may be reached at
e-mail edj0513@windstream.net;
phone 478-453-8751; or mail 1708 Cedarwood Road, Milledgeville, GA
31061-2411.]