Wednesday, June 16, 2010

A Teacher’s Memory Book

by David Parmer

Left: Olita Strader – Teacher at the Walnut Grove School near Peterson Siding

It was just a simple booklet, given by a caring teacher at the end of the school year, but to Terry Blake it was a treasure. Terry had never had a book inscribed with his name before, and besides that, it had the photo of Terry’s Walnut Grove teacher, “Miss Olita,” adorning the front inside cover. The school memory book was taken home by Terry and carefully placed in his secret hiding box. The treasured booklet would be extricated by Terry from its secret place from time to time over the years so that he could gaze upon the photo of “Miss Olita” and see his name, “Terry Blake,” emblazoned (at least in Terry’s mind) in the dedicatory place.

Walnut Grove School
It was 1924 and the Walnut Grove School serving the Peterson Siding community was full of school children. The residents of Oil Creek near Peterson Siding were mostly all subsistence farmers, with some railroaders filling out the slate. There were no luxuries and besides a few marbles, school children, and especially Terry Blake, son of Martha (Posey) and Joseph Blake, had few “treasures.” But now Terry had a memory book with his teacher’s photo and his name written in it. And it was personally given to him by “Miss Olita.”
Olita Strader
Olita Strader was one of the many dedicated school teachers serving in the Oil Creek area during the early part of the 20th century. Although her first name was “Edna,” no one ever referred to her by that name, and instead she was known to her family, friends and acquaintances as “Olita.” To her students, she encouraged the use of “Miss Olita.”

Born to Nicholas and Rosie (Lanham) Strader at Wildcat in 1901, Miss Olita was born to be a teacher, in a family of teachers. The fourth of nine children, Olita attended graded school at Roanoke and, after having exhausted all of the local schooling available to her, prior to 1920, Olita enrolled in Glenville Normal School at Glenville where she earned her teaching certificate.

By 1924, Olita would have been 23 years of age. Whether Walnut Grove was her first teaching assignment we cannot be certain. Memories have faded or died and records are non-existent except for a few mementoes such as Terry Blake’s memory book which provide a record of the students who attended Miss Oita’s school at Walnut Grove.
Miss Olita’s Students at Walnut Grove
Terry Blake
Terry Blake has already been introduced above to the reader. As mentioned, he was the son of Joseph Franklin and Martha (Posey) Blake. In 1924, Terry was listed by “Miss Olita” as a “Beginner – Second” in his Memory Book. Presumably this meant that he was in the second grade. Unfortunately, Terry did not advance much academically because he was afflicted with a speech impediment, as well as mental retardation, and today would be identified as a “Special Needs” student. As he grew older, his physical growth did not keep pace with his age, and he was a very small person after reaching adulthood. To provide him with a sense of security, his mother always accompanied him wherever he went in order to assure that he would not get lost on his short travels away from home. He was however, adept at riding a bicycle which he rode near to his home on Red Lick, a short distance from the Walnut Grove School.. Terry never married and lived his entire life on Red Lick with his sister Ellie and his mother upon whom he was totally dependent.

Violet Blake
In 1924, Violet Blake, sister of Terry, was one of “Miss Olita’s" oldest students. Today, it would almost be unheard of that a seventeen year old would still be attending grade school. However, in 1924, it was quite common that students of that age remained in school as eighth grade students. There was no high school to attend, and with the help an older reliable student for the younger children, teachers would often tailor class work to include post-eighth grade instruction for the older student.

Right, above: Terry Blake
Left: Walnut Grove School near Peterson on Oil Creek
In 1928, when she was twenty-one years of age, Violet married James Townsend, son of Albert Townsend. They lived their married life on Route 2, Weston, until Violet died in 1967 at age fifty-eight. She was buried in the Mitchell Cemetery on Clover Fork.

Oliver, Woodrow and Helen Keith
Oliver, Woodrow and Helen Keith, the three youngest children of Hugh Keith and Margaret “Maggie” Perrine Keith attended the Walnut Grove School in 1924. The four older Keith children, Ruth, Eva, Rudy and Alta had already completed their eight years of schooling and their help was needed on the farm. The Keith family was long associated with the Peterson Siding area. Hugh, the son of Albert and Rosella (Kelley) Keith, operated a general store for several years after he and Maggie were married in 1905. Sometime around 1922, marital bliss ended in the Keith family and Hugh moved to Clarksburg and opened a restaurant. The Peterson Siding Store was sold to Walter Foster and Maggie and her seven children continued to reside at the Keith home a short distance up Red Lick.

Oliver was born in 1914 and attended the Walnut Grove School through the 8th grade. He joined the Civilian Conservation Corps during the 1930’s and served in Greenbrier County where he met his wife. Oliver lived much of his life in Greenbrier County and for many years was manager of a large dairy farm until he developed an allergy to cattle dander. Oliver later worked for the Radford Arsenal in Virginia and for the Department of Highways. He died in 2005.
Oliver’s brother Woodrow was about a year younger. Like his older brother, Woodrow attended Walnut Grove School through the 8th grade and would have been around a third grade student during Miss Olita’s 1924 term. Woodrow served in the United States Army during World War II and after the farm bought a farm near Akron, Ohio. A part-time farmer, Woodrow also worked as an assembler in a plant which manufactured devices used in the space industry. He died at the age of 79 in 1995.
Right above: Oliver Keith
Left: Woodrow Keith
Helen, the youngest of the Keith children, like so many other Oil Creek natives, migrated to Ohio for employment when she was old enough to work. Helen worked in the food and lodging industries at various places in the Columbus area where she died in 1996 at the age of 78. Her married name was McCort.

An interesting historical note about the Keith children is that their great-grandfather John J. Keith (1823-1890) was a veteran of the Mexican War. He is buried in the Keith Cemetery on Red Lick.

Frank, Norman and Henry Ables
Frank, Norman and Henry Ables were sons of Jackson and Eliza (Riffle) Ables, and were born in 1908, 1912, and 1913 respectively. Although their normal residence was on Butchers Fork, during the 1924 school year the Ables brothers were living on Bear Run with their Aunt Fannie Riffle Atkinson (their mother’s sister) and her husband Philip Sheridan Atkinson. At the time Fannie and Philip were in their late 40’s and had a young daughter named Mary. Frank, Norman, and Henry were old enough to do farm chores for their aunt and uncle before and after school, an arrangement which was mutually beneficial.

Frank, the oldest of the three Ables children attending the Walnut Grove School in 1924, married Grace Deletha Posey, the daughter of Martha (Riffle) Posey and “Jack Sam” Posey, a noted hunter of ground hogs who was frequently mentioned in the writings of Uncle Zeke in the Buzzardtown News. Frank worked during his lifetime as a coal miner. He died in 1998 at age 89 and was buried in the Jacksonville Cemetery.

Norman Ables was a farmer and lived most of his life on Butchers Fork, Vandalia, and in the Indian Fork area. He married Ruth Neal, the daughter of Fletcher Neal and Mary Radcliff Neal. Norman served in the Civilian Conservation Corps during the 1930’s in Pocahontas County and was engaged mostly in the building of roads and the planting of trees. Norman died in 1976 at age 64, and was buried in the Harrison Grove Cemetery near Copley.
Henry Ables, the middle in age of the Ables children attending the Walnut Grove School in 1924 was the first to pass away. Henry married the former Mamie Townsend, the daughter of Albert and Virginia Barnett Townsend. Henry and Mamie lived in the Three Lick area. Their children, three decades later, would also attend the Walnut Grove School which their father attended in 1924. Henry was barely 39 years of age when he died in 1948. He was buried in the Jacksonville Cemetery.
Five Puffenbarger Children:
Harry, Lillie, Nellie, Mabel, and Madeline
The Puffenbarger children who attended Walnut Grove School in 1924 were not all siblings. Sisters Mabel and Madeline were the children of Wilbert Puffenbarger and Vera Gay Puffenbarger. Harry M. Puffenbarger and his sisters Lillie and Nellie were the children of the late Roy Puffenbarger and Blanche Ables Puffenbarger. Harry was living with his uncle Addison Puffenbarger on Bear Run and Lillie and Nellie were living with their mother Blanche who later remarried Lloyd Riffle. The fathers of the Puffenbarger children were brothers and were the sons of Joshua Puffenbarger and Louisa Varner Puffenbarger.

Right: Madeline Puffenbarger
Right below: Mabel Puffenbarger

Mabel Puffenbarger never married and lived most of her adult life in the Akron, Ohio area. She was an employee of the Summit County, Ohio Sheriff’s Office for many years and worked as a tax collector. She died in 2000 and was buried at Peterson Siding. Her sister Madeline, who also never married, lived for many years with her elderly cousin Frank Groves at Peterson Siding. After Frank died, she lived with Sylvia and Hayward Groves at Peterson Siding for many years. Late in life, she moved to Akron and lived with Frank’s daughter, Ersel Groves Spencer. Madeline was residing in a nursing home in Ohio when she paased away in August of 2010.
Harry Puffenbarger was raised by his bachelor uncle Addison Puffenbarger on Bear Run after the death of his father Roy in 1922 at the age of 30. Harry followed his uncle into the carpentry and home-building trade, as had many of the Puffenbarger family. An example of the still-existing carpentry handiwork of Addison and his nephew, Harry, is the former J. W. “Bill” Conrad store building in Orlando, now owned by the Burgett family. Around 1930, Harry and his Uncle Addison dismantled the original J. W. “Bill” Conrad Store in Orlando and rebuilt the store in its current location. Harry married Martha Florence Radcliff of Gilmer County in 1941 but they soon separated. He lived at Peterson Siding and died in 1992. Harry’s sister Lillie married Martin Posey and his sister Nellie never married.
Clarence and Mabel Perkey
Clarence and Mabel Perkey were the children of Hayden D. Perkey and his wife Grace Bailey Perkey. Hayden had been a planing mill employee and worked in the busy Braxton County lumber industry during the early 1900’s. He later worked as a carpenter and farmer. Mabel Perkey was twelve years of age when she was a student of Miss Olita at the Walnut Grove School in 1924. After becoming of age, she began work in Clarksburg where she met her future husband Luther Johnson. They married in 1934.

Mabel’s older brother, Clarence, left the Walnut Grove School and Peterson Siding at an early age to work in the coal mines near Boomer, West Virginia. A mere three years after he sat attentively in the Walnut Grove School, he was dead of typhoid fever which he contracted while working for the Boomer Coal and Coke Company. His remains were returned before Christmas in 1927 to the Peterson Siding Cemetery on the hill overlooking the Walnut Grove School.
Not long after their son and brother, Clarence, was laid to rest in the Peterson Village Cemetery, the Perkey family left the upper Oil Creek valley and moved to McKees Rocks, Pennsylvania, a suburb of Pittsburgh, where Hayden found employment.
Floda Hoover
Floda Hoover was the daughter of Clyde and May Peterson Hoover and the granddaughter of Charles Henry and Emeline Smith Peterson with whom she made her home. Her mother’s family was long connected with the Peterson Siding village which was named for her family. In 1924, Floda was an eleven year old student of Miss Olita, and lived close to the Walnut Grove School. Two of her classmates in Miss Olita’s classroom were her close-in-age aunts, Lora and Dorothy Peterson. Since Floda was familiar with the Puffenbarger name, she married the Arthur Puffenbarger, the son of George Harvery Puffenbarger and Rosa Keener Puffenbarger. Arthur was the first cousin of her five Puffenbarger classmates at Walnut Grove School.
Dorothy and Lora Peterson
The daughter of Charles Peterson and Emeline Smith Peterson, Dorothy was twenty-one years of age when she married Walter Currence in 1934. Five short years later she would be a widow with two young children, Delcie and Wilda, when her husband was killed in a slate fall at the Weston State Hospital coal mine. She remarried in 1940 to Silbert Harley Workman of Weston. They became the parents of eight children, all of whose names began with the letter “S” and with a middle name which began with the letter “H.” Dorothy passed away in 1990 and is buried in the Machpelah Cemetery in Weston. Dorothy’s daughter by her first marriage, Delcie, was a frequent visitor to Peterson Siding during her youth and recalls that Sylvia Groves was her Sunday School teacher. Delcie, now a resident of Florida, recalls how she loved to visit the Oil Creek area and how much she misses it.
Lora Peterson was three years older than her sister Dorothy. Dorothy’s and Lora’s older sister Charlotte had married a Connellsville, Pennsylvania native, John Wiltrout, and during a visit with her sister, Lora met her future husband, David Bates, who was also from Connellsville. After their marriages, Lora and Charlotte made Pennsylvania their permanent home.

Stanton and Lena Gay
Lloyd Stanton Gay was the son of Lloyd Glen Gay and Laura (Wellen) Gay. Afflicted with polio when he was young, Stanton had some mobility problems when he was young. After his Walnut Grove school days ended, he took up farming on the family farm. Tragically, an unknown heart ailment proved his end and he died in 1941 at the age of twenty-seven. Like his Walnut Grove School classmate, Clarence Perkey, who died of typhoid while working in the Kanawha coal fields fourteen years prior, Stanton reposes in the Peterson Village Cemetery, not far from his classmate, Clarence.

Stanton’s sister, Lena Gay, was a nine year old student of Miss Olita in 1924. Lena remained single during her lifetime and continued to live on upper Oil Creek. Doris Nicholas of Dunbar recalls pleasant visits with Lena at her home over the years.

Herbert Fox
Herbert Fox was the son of Howard Reese Fox and Elizabeth (Posey) Fox. In 1924, he was fourteen years old, two years younger than his older brother Harley. Herbert began farming for a living after his Walnut Grove school days ended and at age twenty-one married Marnie Elizabeth Taylor Sims. Herbert’s last known address was Jane Lew.
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Martha Brooks and Charles Brooks
Mary Summers, a kindly woman in her mid-60's who lived at Peterson Siding, was the daughter of Adam Summers and Mary Corathers Summers and a half-sister of Charles Peterson of Peterson Siding. In 1924 Mary took in as foster children a brother and sister, Charles and Martha Brooks, both of whom were enrolled at the Walnut Grove School. The family origin of Charles, who was afflicted with dwarfism, and his sister Martha is unknown and little is known of their life after Walnut Grove. Their foster mother, Mary Summers, eventually moved away from Peterson Siding and into Homewood where she died in 1940 at the age of 82.

The Class Roll is Complete
This completes the class roll of Walnut Grove School of 1924. Nearly ninety years have passed and all of the students of Miss Olita have since died. Few family members of the students still remain in the upper Oil Creek valley and the descendants for the most part have moved away to other sections of the country and have done well. Children of today know little of the struggles of their forebears to make ends meet for the simple things to keep body and soul together. No government programs existed to help educate school children with special needs or to provide support for them if their parents died or became disabled. There were no luxuries in the homes of the families of Peterson Siding and their livings were eked from the soil and from the sweat of the brows of the families. The compassion of neighbors to take in orphans and needy children has mostly been forgotten in the pages of time. Miss Olita, who took from a meager salary the wherewithal to buy each of her students a memory book, was long remembered by her students, and needs to be remembered still, by chronicles such as this one.
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Miss Olita
It is unknown how long Miss Olita taught at the Walnut Grove School. We do know that she married Karl Post in 1928 when she was twenty-seven years of age and that she gave up her teaching career in order to raise three sons. Tragedy however struck her life when her husband died suddenly in 1936, in the midst of the Depression, leaving her a widow with three children to support. She returned to what she knew best – teaching. She re-enrolled at Glenville State Teachers College to renew her teaching certificate and in 1941 she returned to teaching at the Roanoke School and later at Jane Lew. After touching the lives of many more youngsters with selfless devotion, she retired because of poor health in 1966 and died in 1982.
Right: Olita (Strader) Post with her husband Karl Post

She lies in the serene Mitchell Cemetery, overlooking the picturesque Stonewall Jackson Lake at Roanoke, beside her husband Karl who died many years before her. Many of the students she taught at Walnut Grove School and at the Roanoke School also are at rest in this immaculately kept burial ground. Miss Olita’s son Bill wrote, “Doing for others – that was a way of life for the Strader family, and Olita was no exception.” No better epitaph could mark the stone which lies above her head.
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Note on the Puffenbarger Family
In the early 1900’s, four sons of Joshua Puffenbarger and Louisa (Varner) Puffenbarger of the Churchville area of Lewis County became residents of the upper Oil Creek valley. Addison, Wilbert, James Roy and George Harvey Puffenbarger found farms in the Peterson Siding and Bear Run areas and raised families there. Addison however remained single and never married although he did help raise the sons of his late brother, James Roy, who died young.

Joshua Puffenbarger (1841-1924) was born in Pendleton County, the son of German-born Henry Puffenbarger and Ireland-born Fanny (Stone) Puffenbarger. Henry was the son of Peter Puffenbarger and the former Sarah Pickle. Henry’s sister Charlotte married Adam Grogg of Highland County. Charlotte’s and Adam’s son, Samuel Grogg, married Margaret Lantz. Their son, Lee Grogg and his wife, the former Mary Montana Tracy, were the great-grandparents of this writer.
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Note on the photo to the right:
Left to right is Terry Blake, with Jim Townsend and Jennings Roosevelt Blake
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Comment 1 by Terri Bohl
While investigating my grandfather's family I was very pleased to come across your blog!

I am the granddaughter of the Herbert Fox mentioned in this article. Just to complete what you have listed, I thought I'd add to your information.

Grandpa passed away in Jane Lew on 2/6/88. His wife (my grandma) passed away in St. Louisville, Ohio, on 5/30/94. They had one son, Herbert Blaine (my dad) who is still living.

Great Grandma's full name was Laura Elizabeth Posey.

Thank you for this piece of the puzzle I've been trying to sort out...so many records were destroyed in a courthouse fire that it's been difficult and every little bit counts!

Sunday, June 13, 2010

Lee W. Blake's Monograph


Lee W. Blake (pictured tto the right), son of John Jackson Blake and Ella Mae (Foster) Blake. His monograph, which follows, is an important source of cultural and genealogical information for Orlando. It was taken as is from the internet several years ago. The transcriber is unknown. -ed

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This document has been copied exactly as written as much as possible

Blakes and Riffles

Going Back To The Seventh Generation


July 1953 Weston, West Virginia

This booklet is back to the seventh genration and to the present genration of today. there is no more of the forth generation of three marriages. thay only went to the forth genration. thay are reckorded in this booklet. see if you can find them. the date of the first was 1804 first marriage genoration seckond in 1824, as near as I can get date there ten childern borned, three of thes childern married in to one famiey. the 6 sons and 4 daughters was borned the seckond marriage. 4 sons and 4 daughters third marrieg. 4 daughters borned. ten sons and 12 daughters 22 childern in the three famileys that were double first cousins, all very helthy from 1844 two 1854. Five of thes sons married five of thes daughters. first marriage there was nine childern borned. the seckond marriage there was sixteen childern borned. none ever married. two daughters living. family name gone. third marriage eliven childern borned, none ever married. parents all children are dead. familey name gone at the forth genration. the forth marriage eight children borned, four married. eight childern borned, four of married, two of them have large famileys. the first marriage there was six childern married. the fifth marriage six children borned. one hunderd and six all grand childern living to day to the seventh genration. I ll give one marriage of first cousins. marring six children, borned only one daughter. married parents and all childer dead. family name gone. the forth genration at a familey Reunion of the Blakes august 2/ 1953, two more childern to ad to a marriage. nine other marriges of the first 22 that did not marry a Relation. i have a Reckord on one Familey. the others are scattered in differnt states. i can only give a complete Reckord on one there is Eight of the three first marriages i do not have the information on thir famileys. i will give the one i have the reckord on complet this marriage of 1883. there was nine childern borned. Eight of these married and have thirtynine childern, living to day twenty seven are married and have sixty nine childern living to day. one is a great great grand child of this marriage of 1883 the seventh genration from 1804 there is 116 living to day, august the 3/1953. all the marriages i have given was in Braxton and lewis county the reckodrs will show. i have knowen menny Catholic nothing like this ever taken place in enny of thir famileys i could give simler cases that has happened. it is going on to some extent here in lewis not so meny know it but it is still going on. i think all should be a ginst this practis this has cost Braxton and lewis, co, quite a bit.

what I have discribed of this relation last thrugh life you meet them you know there something the matter never but five have had the ability to take care of them selvs no one knowes how bad this has bin only the ones that has lived threw this i hate to here a remark made about some having no sence and here some why dont you no the relation of thir parents the Blake famileys is not the only famileys that have practis this I could show just as bad in other famileys where this has bin practis I am not trying to cast a shadow on eny one i am just telling what has happend in case of doubt you can investagate the geral publick dosent know so much about this and some dosent like to here this and say why do you tell this the only way i know to brake this up is to let the pulick know it and see the results of what has bin i think the Blakes and Riffles are a avrige people and are taking thir place with others i have twenty four grand childern I never want to see eny thing like this happen to them or eny one there is meny that knows all about what i have related the older people why not let the younger know it has never proved good for eny as i have knowen all the Blakes in this bookle but five that was dead before my time i have knowen two to get hurt by saying thay would whip them selves a little Blake one layed in bed for a week or more and he did not whip a blake the other was nocked uut for a hour or two all because of remarks about the Blake familey there is meny to day in other states when i first rember there was no Blakes that had a education that i knew or a Riffle you can find them in schools in difrent countys and thay have made good think in genral thay try to tend to thir own bisness you will find thay have thir falts along with others none are perfick thay have come a long ways sence i can rember let us all try to improve our ways we would be better of if we Did

Here are the disease i rember so well from 1890 to the present Typhord fever 22 cases 6 deths six cases of Diphtheria four death three famileys of twenty childern all had scarlet fever some was very bad one death in the twenty cases four famileys chicken pocks no deaths wasent very bad I remember two famileys seven childern Each all had what they called the black french measels this was bad no one died there has bin menny cases of mumps no one died The worst scars I rember was small pocks in 1898 Olvia. Sttutler of shady brook, and James Skinner, both of orlando, W.V.A. I think it was still called Confluence, at that time Stuttler and Skinner, was workin at cowen or camden on gauley stuttler got the small pocks tha y run of and got on train so they locked them in and run them to flat woods and left them locked uo tell the sherif and members of borad of helth could get there from sutton stuttler had broken a window was out when thay got there all was afraid get close to them thes officers come armed with shot guns stuttler was very sick laying in the snow he had to do what thay told him when he under stand thay was trying to help them thay put in a old house above the orlando cemetery and kept them about all winter Skinner never taken the small pocks that was the reason thay were kept in so long I knew two other famileys had small pocks no one died in this comunity clover fork creek is the line betwen Braxton,and lewi and thay had gards to keep you from one county to the other it hard to get to the store or grist mill the first few days was the worst Thay locked the mail train to the rail at Burnsville. finly let it thrugh I have knowen of three cases of Polo one death this all happend in a radis twenty mile square a long the lin betwen braxton and lewis county not more then ten mile deap in Either County All thes diseas I do not think have cost state and countys as much as this marriage of this cloce relation ship most of thes diseas only lasts three to five weeks you die or get well

havent writen this ofend eny one just trying to tell what has happend as i rember so well i do not have education to tell this as it should be told i hope you can under stand what i have tryed to tell the Blakes some were very superstisous belived in witchery and gosts i do not know eny to day that belives in eather. I will say to all that can look back fifty to sixty five years ago and think of all we have to be thankful for all that has taken place in that time i dont think there is eny one that can Emagin what will take place in the next fifty years this has all bin for our benfit we should be very thankful for it has made better living for us all i have meny mistake in spelling but i hope you can under stand what i am trying to tell there is some that say you should tell this it is not the Blakes alone that had practis this relation if you look around i have went thrugh this booklet very carful and found that some was no more at the forth genration while some has went to the seventh genration i have knowen all of thes names in this bookle but five who was before my time i got this information from the parties names in this booklet who are living to day i am just tryin to show what has happend to this relation .......................................................................................................................... The demand for truth is greater then the suply so it come high .......................................................................................................................... There is a over suply of untruth this makes it very cheap

In the following pages I have outlined some history of the Blake family. I remember much of it - and have received much more from others. This history dates back more than 130 years. In the beginning, six Blakes with no record of the parents. Some data on four sons and a daughter, coming from Greenbrier county and settling on Clover Fork north of Orlando. One was probably Andrew, who owned 500 acres of land at the site of Orlando in Lewis and Braxton counties. My great grandfather, Johnny B. Blake owned 320 acres adjoining the first brother---all in Braxton county. The next brother was probably George Blake who owned quite a bit of land up on Clover Fork. He married Nancy Heater; no children. He was either killed early in the Civil War or died about that time. The land was divided among the widow, Martha Blake and Elick Blake---a nephew and neice.Huey Blake owned a large tract of land on Chop Fork in Braxton County. Johnny B. Blake was born in 1804 and died in 1886. He married Abby Chrismore who was born in 1797 and died in 1895. To this union were born ten children. I will outline below the names as I know them or have been informed - on the families and families in which the Blakes married for the past 130 years. Johnny B. and Abby Blake, first son John was killed late in the Civil War; second son, Stuart J. Blake; third son, Anthony; fourth son, Ballard; first daughter, Elsie, Mary and Margaret. No information on other members of the original family. The first son, John Blake wed Elizabeth Riffle. Born to this union eight children, two sons and six daughters: Albert and Chester; Lydia, Elizabeth, Abby, Kathryn, Susan and Elsie. John and Elizabeth Blake: first son, Albert was married to Savina Posey and they had ten children, six sons and four daughters. Sons---Jenkins, George, Burl, Porter, Edward, and Dick or Richard. The daughters---Alice, Laura, Minnie and Ola. The first Son of Albert, Jenkins, married Lillie Taylor and had one son, Furman Blake. The second son, George Blake was wed to Zura Malcolm. The third son, Burl, married Mae Cottrill and to this family were born three sons and four daughters: Harry, James, and Harold (in Army); Juanita, Luma (deceaed), Mildred, Harry married Mary Conley and they have one son and two daughters: Junior, Mary and Sally.

James Blake, married, no information. The first daughter, Juanita, married Raymond Wooddell, four children; Mildred married Roy Ramsburg, two daughters. Porter Blake, fourth son, married Mona Brown; Edward married in New Jersey; sixth son, Richard, wed Civilla Workman, daughter and two sons. Albert and Savina Blake: first daughter, Alice married to George King; second daughter Lura, deceased; third, Minnie, married Edward Heath; and fourth, Ola, married Floyd Markley and lives in Parkersburg. John and Elizabeth Blake: second son, Chester married Mary Underwood, three sons and two daughters: Cecil, Clyde, Thomas, Myrtle and Eva. Clyde married Annie Droppleman, no children; Cecil wed Addie Savage; Thomas married Ona McCoy, two sons and a daughter; Chester and Clifford---no data on the daughter. Myrtle Blake wed Ray Norman; Eva married John Sandy. John and Elizabeth Blake: first daughter, Lydia married James Foster and they were the parents of four sons and three daughters: William B., Albert, George and Frank, and Lumie, Minnie and Annie. William married Eva Bennett and they had six sons and four daughters: Annie, Thelma, Nellie, Guy, Fred, Ralph, Brooks, Bennett and Woodrow. Albert Foster wed Matilda Alkire; George wed Dora Thornhill, two sons; Frank married a Smith. The three daughters named are married and live in Akron, Ohio.

John and Elizabeth Blake: second daughter, Abby married Stuart L. Riffle, five sons and three daughters: Charles, Robert, Allen, John (deceased) and Clyde, sons and Amanda, Minnie and Bessie, daughters. The first son, Charles Riffle, wed Dona Blake---Ellis, Dana, Clarence and Jack, sons, and Joyce, Della, and Rena, daughters. Ellis married Nellie Mick and lives at Flemington; two other sons are married; Joyce married Red Beckner, two sons and two daughters; Della Riffle wed Tucker Wymer, three daughters and a son --- Janestine, Wanda, Susie. Abby and Stuart L. Riffle: second son, Robert, married Lillie Taylor, two sons, Ralph and Oliver (deceased). Third son, Allen married Nellie Groff; fourth son, John, deceased; fifth son Clyde single, lives at Burnsville; first daughter, Amanda married Ervin Conrad, five sons and two daughters---all blind but one daughter, Exie. Second daughter, Minnie, married Ersie Henline, two sons and three daughters, Ruth Jessie, data incomplete. Third daughter, Bessie Riffle married William McPherson, some children---they live in New York. John and Elizabeth Blake: third daughter, Elizabeth married Thomas Posey, three daughters, Mary, Martha and Ora and three sons, Charles, William and Alderson. No data on the children except Mary. She married Sam Ocheltree and they had three daughters. Dessie married Ernest Ocheltree; second daughter, Lulu married Clarence Blake and lives in Akron; Lillie is married. A son, Lydle Ocheltree was killed in action in World War II. Fourth daughter, Kathryn Blake married Sell Taylor. Four daughters and a son were born to this union: Luma, Mollie, Lily, Dora---nothing on son. Luma married William Riffle; Lillie Taylor marred Robert Riffle; Dora Taylor married Roy Riffle, two sons and five daughters---Roy, Zella, Mishie, Irene, Madeline and Katherine. All are married.

Fifth daughter, Elsie Blake married Rand Wooddell, a son, Ray; the sixth daughter, Susan Blake married Jack Riffle, three sons, Lloyd, George, Ellis. Lloyd married Alice Blake; George and Ellis both married. Johnny B. and Abby Blake: second son Stuart J. Blake married Lucinda Posey, a family of ten children in the union, six sons and four daughter---William L., Ballard, John Jackson, Stuart S., Joseph and Andrew, Mary, Savina, Sarah, and Lucy Blake. William L. Blake married Janie Blake, nine children, eight sons and a daughter---Charles, Burley, Robert, Harry, John, Walter, Wesley, Floyd, Charles (latter two deceased), and Esta. (changes to type) Sturt .J. Blake. & Lucindy Posey Blake 3 son John Jackson Blake. Ella Mae.Foster Blake Comenced on third page only giv to 4 sons familey fifth son Ruffus C.Blake married Cora Nay. of Sand Run, Wva June 30,.1923. Ruffus Decesed in 1945 born to thie union a son Lewi. a daughter Jene Lewis Blake married Jene Lewis of Adrion W.V.A. Jene Blake Married James Mcdowell of Statesville north Corlinia born to this onion two sons Wayn & Roger Mcdowell Ruffus. C and Cora Blake all live at 2137. 657. Fern Arlinton. V.A sixth son Stokes Blake married Lotta Riffle born to this union four sons Stanton & Ray & Jimmy & daugh Mary havent other names Stanton Blake served in world war two ..........................................................................................................................
6 son William. Ray. Blake marrie Zada. Willims a daughter of Sam and Roda Williams of Walkersville. W.V.A. born to two daughters Vera & Pauline both married nothing on familey Paulin. Lives in Baltimore. MD Vera Live in Weston. W.V.A. Eilliam Ray. and Zada Live in. Buckhanen
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John. Jackson. and Ella. Mae first daughter Myrtle. Elizebeth. Blake married Francis Marin Davisson. Borned to this union 12 Children Parents and two childern are deceased first son Hazel H. Davisson married born to this union three childern Margret & Harvy & Luciel. ..........................................................................................................................
Seckond son Melrose Davisson. married bored to this union a son William. Davisson. allon Melrose ..........................................................................................................................
third son Leroy.Davisson Married no childern ..........................................................................................................................
4 son Fred. K. Davisson single at home ..........................................................................................................................
5 son Paul. Davisson. married born to this union three childer Conney & Mamie & Nancy. ..........................................................................................................................
6.son Sherman. F. Davisson married bornd to this union A daughter Helen. Mere Davisson
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first daugh lives at Glenville. W.V.A
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2 daugh Paulin. Virgina Davisson . married Franklin. Burkhamer bornd to this union six childern Robert & Madline & Franklin JR. & Rasles. Garldin Bonney. allon Pauline and Franklin live on Bord St Weston. W.V.A.
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3 daugh Viola. Davisson married Raymon Riffle born to this union six childern sons Donld & Maion & Thomas & Truman Daug Opal & Jane Live at Orlando. W.V.A ..........................................................................................................................


John. Jackson and Ella Mae. Foster Blake seckond daughter Nora Blake married Roy. Hall borned to this union four sons and two daughters first son Hillery & Larance & Dellis & Bud. Hall daughter Edna & Mary. Edna. married Otto. Scott. no childern to this union seckond son Larnce. Hall. married Polin. Fox. borned to this union four childern live in Ohio the rest of the familey live R# 2. Roanoke. W.V.A all ..........................................................................................................................
John. Jackson and Ella .Mae. Foster Blake there is on hunderd forty three living to day counting inlaws from this marriage of 1883 fifth genration or the seventh from 1797 1804
.......................................................................................................................... seven other marriages in same familet and two repeat marriages nine in all there is not one hunderd and fifty libing to day you can find them in This Booklet this relation is not good for eny one less discurge this Practis to all (changes to print) Charles A. Blake married Daisy Heater, a daughter, Ruby who married Thomas Riffle. They had four children, Rosemary wed Paul Crutchfield, one child. Second son, Burley Blake married Dora Fox, several children. Third son, Robert, married Verney Townsend; fifth son, John, married Verna Riffle, no children: (John deceased); Walter is State Hospital; Wesley Blake at Flemington; daughter Esta Blake married Eli Riffle, sons Hoy, Raymond, Rodney, William and daughters Lottie, Eva, Naoma and Hazel. Raymond Riffle married Viola Davis; William Riffle married Ethel Doyle, twin daughters; Rodney Riffle married Virginia Taylor, one child; no data on Roy Riffle;

Eva Riffle married Icen Taylor, large family of children, names not available; third daughter married Will Boggess, several children; forth daughter, Nevie married; fifth daughter, Hazel, married Dwight Skinner, three children, name of oldest, Bernice. First daughter, Lottie Riffle married Stokes Blake, four children, Stanton served in World War II. Ray Blake, all children at home. Stuart J. and Lucinda Blake: second son Ballard, married Amanda Blake, sixteen children, all deceased but two daughters, oldest Rosie, and Nora Blake, not married. Stuart J. and Lucinda Blake: third son, John Jackson Blake, born in 1860 and died in 1940, married Ella Mae Foster. She was born in 1865, died in 1935. To this union, seven sons and two daughters: Lee W. Blake, Ezra, deceased, Alva, Vincent A., Rufus, Ray, Stokes, sons, and Lizzie and Nora, daughters. Lee W. Blake married Civilla Susan Riffle, October2 1906. Born to this union, four sons and three daughters---Gilbert L., Edward R., Vaden S., and Delis W. Blake, sons, and Pearl, Mae, and Phyllis, daughters. Gilbert L Blake married Wonda McCauley, three sons and a daughter---Francis L., David, Mike, and Carol. Edward R. Blake married Elizabeth McDonald, a son and daughter, William and Margie; Vaden S. Blake married Ruth Tinney, four sons and two daughters---Junior L., Opha, John B., Jean and Leota. Delis W. Blake married Mildred Wallace, born to this union three sons---Robert, Reggie, and Rodney, They reside in Miami, Fla. Pearl Blake married Edward Skinner, three daughters and two sons---Shelby and Shirley, twins, and Judy, Edwin and Darrell. Mae Blake married John Harkins, one son, Patrick; Phyllis Blake married John Zimmerman, two sons and a daughter---Johnny, Steve, and Sue, live in Brentwood, MD. John Jackson and Ella Blake: third son, Alva B. married Gertrude Dennison, three daughters, Mildred, Christine and Goldie. Mildred married Lee Conley, son and daughter, John and Mary. Christine married Olen Morrison, three daughters; Goldie married Bud Starrett, three children.

Vincent A. Blake married Clare Posey, two sons and three daughters; Arden Blake married Mary Gillespie, one son; Virgil Blake married Minnie Dye, two sons and two daughters---Mike, Donald, Carol and a sister; first daughter, Reva Blake married Shirley Myers, two sons and a daughter---Jerry and Jacie Myers and sister. Ina blake wed James Skinner, a son; Jean Blake married Harold Sands. Fourth son of Sturart S. Blake: Stuart, married Janie Posey, six sons and two daughters---Emory, Marion, Orvil, Oley, Amos, Edward, Bessie and Mamie. Emory died in Detroit in 1930; Marion married Charlotte Ethel Skinner, 14 children of whom 12 are living---Francis, Marion, Edward, Edna, Wayne, Katherine, Opal, Nina, Elija, Goldie, Fay, Patrick, Charles. The first son, Francis, married Betty Henline Fox, no children; Edward Scott married Ruth Riffle, son Leo; third son Wayne, married Joan Skinner, no children; Lijah, single, in US Nave; Patrick, single, at home; Fay, resides on Weston Route 4; Charles Duane, at home; Edna married John Ware, no children; Katerine married Arno Gould, three daughters---Helen Sue, Evelyn Joyce, and Alma Kay. The third daughter, Alma Kay, married A. M. W. Hall, two children, Marcella and Arcellus Ralph; Nina, fourth daughter married Foster Hardman, no children; Goldie, single. Orvil J. Blake, third son of Stuart S. and Janie Blake, married Ertha Bennett, some of the children are Richard, Frank, Homer, Cledith, Hazel, Audra, Madelyn---don't have all their names. Oley Blake, fourth son on Stuart and Jane Blake resides on Weston Rout 2; fifth son Amos, married Ethel Dennison, no children; sixth son lives with his sister, Mamie, at Orlando; the second daughter married Joseph Riffle and lives near Frenchton.

Joseph blake married Martha Posey, two sons, Ova and Terry Blake, and four daughters---Lona, married; Violet, married James Townsend, several children, including Hubert. Third daughter, Nellie Blake married Calvin Riffle, two daughters and two sons; the fourth daughter Ella, at home. Sixth son of Stuart and Lucinda Posey Blake, Andrew Adam Blake, married Vestie Clark; Clarence, the first son married Lula Ocheltree reside in Ohio, no children; Lloyd Blake, the second son, married Ruth Skinner, Amick and Lela born to this union. Gaylord Blake married, lives in Ohio; Doyle Blake, married, one child; fifth son, Delmer, married. Mabel Blake, first daughter, married an Ocheltree; second daughter, Jeanette, married a Smith; third daughter, Agnes Blake married Red Belt, several children; fourth daughter married. John Blake, third son of Anthony, married Ella Thompson, no children; fourth son, Sam, married Matilda Butcher, a son, Perry, and two daughters, Ada and Genevieve Blake. Janie, the first daughter married William Blake, history previoulsy given; Amanda married Ballard, previously noted; and third daughter, Mollie, married Jackson Skinner, two sons, Oak and Ezra. Oak married Floda McCauley, three sons---Sam, Winford and one other; Ezra married Lettie Blake, two sons and a daughter; Maggie Blake never married. Fourth son of Johnny B. and Abby Chrismore Blake, Ballard, married Mary Jane Riffle, three sons---William Henry, John Jackson, and Bennie, and two daughters, Mary Ann and Alice. William Henry Blake married Mintie Williams, celebrated his 86th birthday in 1952. Born to this union: Sarah Jane Blake married Homer Allen; Georgia Blake wed French Conrad; James Blake married Mary Duncan; Reta Blake married Ezra Skinner; Richard Blake wed Irene Wooddell; Willard Blake married Mabel West, all living. William Henry Blake has 42 grand children, 48 great grand children. Their names are not avialable. John Jackson, second son was born February 14, 1872, died November 14, 1945. He married Biddie Jane Bragg, who was born on April 9th, 1878, died February 13, 1941. Born to this union, seven sons and eight daughters---Lloyd James, Wilbert, William, Pearl, Hobert Lee, John Ruben, Basil Henry Jackson. Lloyd James married Lola Robinson, four sons and a daughter, Ralph Junior, Paul Wesley, Vaughn, and Mattheny Blake, Marguerite Blake. Lora Wilbert Blake married Anna Pullman, eight children, Ruth, Opal, Eugene, Matoska, William Jackson, Clarence. William Pearl Blake married Litho Givens, two daughters, Lela Mae and Juanita. Hobert Lee married Beulah Riffle, five children, Harvey Lee, Earl Shea, Carl Ray, Eulah Anna, and Marjory. John Ruben Blake married Bertha Wade, three children, Grover, Lora Gordon, Lillian; second marriage to Bell Nicholson, two children, Woodson and Leva Mae Blake. Lula married Frank Dean, six children, Hermit E., Zilma, Law First daughter of Stuart J. and Lucinda Blake, Mary, was wed to Marcellus Blake, five daughters and a son, John. Bell, a daughter; Minnie, second, married Arch Riffle, two sons, Leo and Junior; daughter Charlotte Riffle married Bill Mullen; second daughter, Mary wed George Heater, no children; Sylvia married George Posey, two children; fourth daughter, Addie Riffle; fifth, Dorothy, no data. Second daughter, Stuart and Lucinda Blake, Sarah married Franklin B. Riffle, three sons and two daughters---Herman, Ezram, Moses, Dora and Vernie Riffle. Third son of Johnny B. and Abby Chrismore Blake, Anthony, married Rebecca Posey, sons---William J., James, John, and daughters Janie, Amanda, and Mollie. First son, William, married Sovina Blake, eleven children, have a record of but three---Roy, Bert, and Docia. James Blake, second son wed Rebecca Bull, two sons, Darius and Vincent, daughter, Tressie, Darius married daughter of Roy Williams and is in Ohio, as is the other son. Tressie married Howard Wymer. John Blake, third son of Anthony, married Ella Thompson, no children; fourth son,rence, Betty, Vance, Mino Dean.

Second daughter Myrtle married Issac Hosey, three children, Geraldine, Arline and Ernest Dewayne Dean. Third daughter, married Vaughn Cutlip, nine children---Vivain, Ruth, Vaughn, Fred, Earl Kendall, Lelah Mae, Jackie, Harry Dale, Iris Kay, Oris Cutlip. Bertie Blake Married Clyde Bosley, born to this union Azalea, Shea, and James Irvin. Basil Blake married Freda Steele, four children---Mabel, Johnny, Homer and Harold Gene Blake. Sarah Blake married James H. Singleton, a son Reetis Jackson Singleton, a daughter, Sue Carol. Lona Blake married Ernest Conrad, 2 children, Clarence Jarvis and Rena Gray; Macel Blake married Clarence Overall, six children, names of two are Dorothy and William. Youngest son not married. Daughters of John and Abbie Crismore Blake: Eliza Blake married Jacob I. Riffle, seven sons, three daughters. First son W. T. Riffle, known as Taylor, served the last year of the Civil War; second son Stuart L. Riffle married Abby Blake, history given in the foregoing; Henry Riffle, third son, fourth son Benjamin F. Riffle who married Sarah Blake, previously given; the fifth son, John Scott Riffle; sixth son, T. A. Riffle; and seventh son, Adam. First daughter, Elsie; second, Louisa; third daughter Samantha J. Riffle. W. T. or Taylor married a Posey, a son. Marion J. Riffle wed Cora Reynolds, three sons, Layton, Alva and Gilbert; daughters, Ora, Pearl, and Hettie. Layton married Bertha Mick, three daughters, Freda, Betty and Doris; two sons, Ronald and Buddy. Freda married John Vankirk, a daughter, Diana; Ronald married Jacqueline West. Betty, Doris and Buddy at home. Second son of Marion and Cora, Gilbert Riggle married Virgie Barrett, no children; third son, Alva married and lives in Baltimore. First daughter, Ora married Scott Legg, born to union, Grace, Bessie, Lawrence, Stanley; second daughter, Pearl married Bill Edgell, three sons, George, Ted and Junior; third daughter, married Homer Skinner, no children. W. T. or Taylor riffle, one daughter Minerva Riffle married Wade Mick, no children.

Jacob I. and Elsie, second son of Stuart L. Riffle, history given. Third son, John Scott Riffle married Mary Ann Skinner, a daughter of Granville Skinner. Born to this union, Effie, Ora, Anna, Hallie, Mamie, three sons, Joseph E., R. M. or Bos., Effie, Ora, first daughter, wed Joe Skinner, three sons, Obie, Rupert and Scott Skinner. Obie Skinner married Lulu Blake, no children; Scott Skinner married Mary Wines, four sons, Joe, Bob, Don, and Peck. Effie, first daughter, married Robert Ayard; Opal married Clem Crislip, children, Maxine and Tenna. Second daughter of John Scott and Mary; Ora, Riffle married Andrew Heater, two sons Jack and Ray Heater, and two daughters, May and Sybil Heater. May married Buster Parmer and Sybil Married Simon Cole. Third daughter, Anna Riffle married a Stutler. Born to this union were Oris Stutler who married Edith Skinner, four daughters one son. Bill, Virginia, Mary and Juanita. Mary Stutler married Leo Moran, a daughter; John married Juanita Price, no children, third son Everett married Ruth Henline, two daughtes, Betty and Carol Ann; fourth son Frank married Evelyn Gay, children Frank, Marylin, Arnett and Paul. Fourth daughter of John Scott and Mary Ann: Hallie Riffle married Sheridan Nicholson, children, Steele Paul, Bruce, James and Vera. Fifth daughter, Mamie married Roy Lester, children Roy, Carl, Robert, Dona, Belle, Mildred and Mary Ann. John Scott and Mary Ann: first son Joseph E. married Bettie A. Skinner, daughter of Frank and Lucy Posey Skinner; their daughters Grace, Margaret, Jessie and Katerine Grace married George Reynolds, two daughters, Betty, Bernice; Margaret married Cecil Fleming, two sons and two daughters---Joseph, Isaac, Pearl and Canna; third daughter Jessie married Pressley J. Bragg, children Margaret, Joseph, John; fourth daughter, Catherine married Cecil Skinner, Betty Jane and Linda Kay children.

Oldest son Dwight, served in World War II, died two years after the war, at home. Second son, Brannon, married Thelma Nestor, children, Betty Jane, Donald Lee, deceased, Robert, Sheldon, Geraldine, Jerry and Brenda Joyce. Fourth son Eugene married Deltha Mick, three children, Dwight, Eugene and Sherry. Fifth son. Claude married Christine Gay, two children, Claudia, Jimmy; Sixth son, Jack married Mariana Finster, a daughter, Beverly Jo. Five brothers, Dwight, Glenn, Eugene, Claude and Jack all served in World War II Second son of John Scott and Mary Ann Riffle, known to many as "Boss" married Dennie Skinner, two sons, Fred at home and other son died young. Third and youngest son, Everett Riffle married Tina Scarff, two sons---Lynn Riffle, who married Mildred Posey, a son Tomas, daughter; Virgil Riffle married Edna Posey, a daughter of Lloyd and Maggie Posey, a son. Jacob I and Elsie Blake Riffle; Seventh son Adam, who died in 1951 at the age of 85, married, one son, Jacob Riffle. First daughter of Jacob and Elsie Blake Riffle, Jane married Alonzo Mitchell, six sons and two daughters. Son John married Minnie Henline, no children; William, Art and Cassie Mitchell, all deceased. Ossie married Minnie Godfrey, daughter Ruby; fifth son, Okey Mitchell married Pearl Snodgrass, two sons and two daughters, one son named Garland, others unknown; sixth son, Homer Mitchell, married Lula Henline, two sons. Nelson Mitchell married Francis Hamrick, sons Bobby and Stanley who married Louise Heater, a son. First daughter of Samantha Jane and Alonzo Mitchell, Ollie married John Groves, a daughter, Jacie. John was killed in a sawmill accident in 1896. Second daughter, Minnie M. Mitchell, married J. O. Ruble, five sons, Fred, Jim, Ray, Edward, and Victor, in Army since World War II. First daughter Gay, married a Goff, 12 children; second daughter, Victoria, at home; third, Mary, wed Chester Bruce, two sons. Second daughter of Jacob and Elsie Riffle, Louisa Riffle married James Pumphrey, one son William.

Jacob I. Riffle, second married to Matilda Riffle, a daughter of Jefferson and Elizabeth Heater Riffle: four sons and three daughters---Eli, Arch, Oscar, George, Tillie, Jennie and Ollie. Several of these are given in the foregoing or elsewhere in this history. Fourth son, George married Bessie Fox, several children. Hubert, Edward, Carry, Winnie, Ruth. First daughter, Tillie married Worthy Radcliff, no children; Jennie married Newton Riffle, children, Boss, Jiggs, Mamie, and Edna Riffle. Third daughter, Ollie Riffle, deceased. Johnny B. and Abby Crismore Blake: Second daughter, Margaret married a Donaldson. Born to this union 14 children, 12 living. One son was Alfred and a grandson, Charles. A grandson of Johnny B. and Abby Blake, know as little Stuart married Mollie Riffle. Children known are John, James, Lulu and Alice. John married Mary Atchison, several chidren, Matthew, Edward, Richard. Two sons married. Mabel married James Posey; Susie married Charles Hawkins. Johnny B. and Abby had two more daughters but have no information on them and can't trace the families. Johnny B. Blake had three brothers and on or two sisters. The brother may have been George who married Nancy Heater and who died or was killed first part of the Civil War. Calvin Skinner married Nancy after the war. Another brother may have been Anthony or Andrew Blake. No trace of this family. A sister---haven't her name---married a Matthews. A daughter, Francis, who married a Duval; a daughter or two and a son, Leet Duval; a daughter married Jackson Skinner. Children of this union---Gid C. Skinner, Delbert, Lloyd, Edmond, of Clarksburg, Earl of Weston, daughters Ama, Clara of Orlando, Lela of Elkins.

This Blake family came from Greenbrier county in the early 1800's. Johnny B. Blake was killed in the Civil War, married and the father of two sons and six daughters. Huey Blake, brother of Johnny B. Blake, grand children don't know whom he married. Four sons and four daughters, Joseph, Aleck, John, William Blake, Louise, Milly, Cindy and Martha. The first son, Joseph, no record of whom he married. He had a son, John and a daughter, Mary. He married a second time to Elizabeth Jane Sands, four sons and three daughters. Patrick Newlon Blake married Lorena Godfrey, daughter of David Newton and Mary Jane Skinner, a daughter and two sons. Carry Blake married Walter Sharp, no children; Ray Blake wed Jennita Posey, two sons and a daughter---Francis, Robert and Pauline. Francis married Conchita Alveres, two children, Martha Louise and David Blake. Pauline married Lester Carnes, two children, Shirley and Betty Lou Carnes. Ray Blake, second son Robert wed Wilma Conley, three children, Carrie Lynn, Brenda Paige and Stephen Randle. Second son of Patrick Newton and Lorina Blake, Pete Blake, married Fannie Riffle, eight children, Edward, Bernard, Glenn, Wilma, Emogene, Denzil, Billie and Pettie J. Blake, and an adopted daughter, Marie. Patrick Newton Blake was well known. He wrote for the Independent at Weston and for the Braxton papers and died in 1951.

Second son of Joseph and Elizabeth Blake, Joseph Blake, married, four children, no data. Third son, Francis M. Blake married Ollie Skinner, daughter of Frank and Lucy Skinner. Three daughters and a son. Lula Blake married Obie Skinner, long deceased, no children. The second daughter, Lilly Blake, third, Maysell, both married, no information on either. Four children, haven't their names---only Francis who lives in Charleston. Third son of Joseph and Elizabeth, Charles V. Blake, married Ollie Scarff, two sons, Wade and Walter and a daughter, Charlotte. Wade married Genevieve Henline, some children, no data. Walter married, no information. Charlotte married Amos Henline. Joseph and Elizabeth first daughter: Margaet married Joseph Scarff, six children, Ethel, Ovie, Myrtle, Elsie, Joseph, Lorine. Ethel married Lee Morrison, a daughter, Myrtle, deceased, and two sons, Ivan and Edward. Ivan married Nellie Godfrey; he is now deceased. Edward married Ruth Peck of Burnsville. Myrtle Scarff married Clyde Snyder. Joseph and Elizabeth's second daughter, Alice Blake married John Marshall Scarff, nine children: Clarence, Tina, Iva, Necie, Dorothy, Thomas, Herbert, Virgil and Walter. Clarence wed Lettie Davis, three daughters, Pauline, Grace and Mary Alice. Mary Alice married Doyle Skinner, no children; Grace is single, no data on Pauline. Tina, family given in marriage to Ebert Riffle. Iva married Edward Oldaker of Burnsville; Necie, no data; Dorothy married Ebert Posey, several children. Thomas, Herbert, Virgil and Walter all married. Virgil married Ruby Smith, several children.

Joseph and Elizabeth, third daughter; Belle married Danny Murphy, eight children, know only these: William, Patrick, Cecil, Arden, Lanta, Ina and Josephine. Huey Blakes' second son, Aleck married Corinne Ocheltree, four daughters, little known but their names. Ellen married Jack White; Maggie married Tucker Bragg, Rebecca married, Elsie married Asbury Losh, son Alonzo. Huey Blake's third son, John, married Elsie Ocheltree, sic daughters and a son; lived on Kanawha River a few miles above Burnsville. Mary Elsie died at the age of 91 last year. She married William Groff, these children: Docie married James Vankirk. Their first daughter Rose Vankirk wed Pearl Wines; Reatha wed Emmett Conrad; Henry married Charlene Mick; Helen at home; John married Freda Riffle; Nellie Groff married Allen Riffle. First son Mack married Nona Pritchard; Rosie wed Lee Holcomb; Rucks married Virgina Ocheltree; Mary Riffle wed Charles Oswald. Ettie Groff married Oscar Riffle, born to this union: Thomas, deceased, George, Wayne, Myrtle, Nina, Ivy, Ruby, and Fanny. Myrtle married Patrick Barnett; Nina married Arnold Posey, four children. Iva Riffle married Warren McCauley, two sons, Maynard and Barney, four daughters, Delfie, Rosie Lee, Bonnie and Peggy. Fourth daughter married Clarence Posey, a son. Fifth daughter, Fanny Riffle, married a Robinson. Lizzie Groff, fourth daughter of Mary Ellen and William Groff married Cecil Bee; a daughter, Freeda married Hayward Fox, two children.

John and Elsie Blake, second daughter, Margaret married Thomas Groff, the following children: Rosa Belle, deceased; second daughter maried Mack Ratliff; born to this union: Elsie, Nina who married Reva Conrad; Samuel Ratliff married Mary Ellen; Holden Ratliff in US; Jean, Weeda, James and Patty all deceased. Margaret and Thomas, second daughter, Lena married William C. Skinner, children Raymond and Forest Skinner, sons; Pauline and June, daughters. Raymond married Sylvia Posey. Forest wed Edith Reed. Pauline married Johnny Getz; June married Bill Clayborn. Lilly Groff married Bill Straight; their children---Margorie married Mike Zellic; Gail Straight wed Maxine; Max Straight wed Madge Williams; John Groff married Lucella Kellar; Ella Groff at home. John and Eliza Blake, third daughter: Sarah, married Ace Conrad, Roy, Charles, Gracie, Jack and Moses. Fourth daughter, Rosie married Morgan Riffle, children: Lena, Belcie, Glodie, Mattie, Clyde, Erroll, Ralph and Fred. Fifth daughter Allie married Ben Ratliff. First daughter of Huey Blake; Back in the early years John Townsend was united in marriage with Louisa Jane Blake. Six children, four sons and two daughters, Perry, Albert, Tom, John Jr., Mary Jane and Margaret. His second wife was Venda Meadley, one son and two daughters; George, Rosa and Diana, all deceased. John Jr., first marriage was to Margaret Mealey, son Darius; second marriage to Georgia Wilson, son and two daughters, Creed, Mildred and Belle. Albert married Virginia Barnett, three sons and three daughters, Cyrus, James, Willis, Vernie, Susan, and Mamie. Willis married Maude Teter, children: Nellie, Macel and Madeline; Susan married David Riffle, Vernie wed Harry Blake, and son and a daughter; James married Viola Blake, three children; Mamie marred Henry Ables, four children; Cyrus, deceased; Tom married Melissa Westfall.

Mary Jane Townsend married on April 4, 1889 to James A. Barnett, son of Pleasant and Betty Elizabeth Hitt Barnett. They were originally form England and came to Culpepper and Albemarle, VA. Six children, Ella Mae, Charles, Alva, Willa, Allie Belle and Laura Gay. Ella Mae Barnett married Tony Mick on March 16, 1916---two children, Alice Gay and Grover Lee. Alice Gay married Raymond McCoy, three daughters, Marie, Rena and Dorothy. Her second marriage was to D. D. Delaney of New London, Conn. Grover married Callie Rube of Tennessee, two children; Charles Barnett married on Dec. 14, 1919 to Gay Myers, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Will Myers of Walkersville: three children: Delmer Eloise of Weston and Emma May who married Calvin Carper, now in Ohio. Alva J. Barnett married Jessie Gay Marple, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Lincoln Marple of Green Hill, two sons, Denver and Harold. Denver married Rose Amos of Burnsville and they have two sons and a daughter: Denver Ross Jr., Robert Harold and Linda Rose Barnett. Harold Barnett married Eleanor Whiteman of Clarksburg. Willie Barnett married Marie Parmer, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. N. P. Parmer of Orlando, two sons and a daughter, Dale Leon, Billy Martin and Betty Jean. Dale Leon married Maxine Allman of Weston; Betty Jean wed Charles Mick of Orlando, a daughter Connie Lee and Billy Martin deceased; Lura Gay Barnett married Arthur O. Williams, son of Mrs. Sanford Williams of Walkersville on May 30, 1947; Allie Belle, died on December 20, 1944; Mary Jane Barnett died Sept. 13, 1947; and James A. died July 30, 1924. Rosa Townsend married John Alkire, both now deceased; children: Roy, Charles, Henry, Iza, Belle, Gay, Martha and Donna. Iza, Gay, Belle and Henry are deceased.

Sarah Ann Myers Harold celebrated her 90th birthday on July 19th. She is the third daughter of Huey Blake. Millie A. Blake was born April 19, 1840, married Samuel B. Myers Sept. 11, 1860. he died April 13, 1871, at the age of 30. Children, Sarah Ann Myers, married, deceased; children, Stella Law, Weston; May Spaur, Walkersville; Iza Harold, deceased; Lee Harold, Weston; Guy Harold, Altoona, PA.; and Roy Harold deceased. There are seven grandchildren, two great grandchildren, Belle Myers, one son, Leslie Myers; Allie Myers, deceased, married Will Fleming, children, Alula Fleming Knawl's Creek; Harry Fleming, Charleston; Zona Mick, Detroit; Cora Myers married Marsh Myers, now deceased, their children, Troy Myers of Weston; Minnie Cunningham of Knawl's Creek. First son of Cora Myers, Edwin born September 18, 1888, died November 7, 1918, four days before the Armistice in France. H. Tom Myers now deceased, married Ida Galford, also deceased, child, Grey Messenger, Macon, GA. Huey Blake, second daughter, Martha was born May 20, 1836. She married Pete Heater, a son and a daughter, Bennie Heater. Emsey born in 1855 died December 12, 1921. Pete Heater was killed duing the Civil War. Martha later married William Ocheltree, no children. Cindy Blake, fourth daughter married John Ocheltree, several children. Sam married Mary Posey; Phillip married Lucy Williams; Tom married Artie Murphy, some children. Only son of John and Ellie Blake, the information on Lockard Blake is he married a Wines who was nicknamed "Cute", several children. Blanche Blake who married Frank Riffle; Rissue Blake; Bud Blake married Bertha Singleton; Bobby Blake married Lou Singleton; Alice Blake wed Homer Lipps; Bessie married George Taylor; Belle Blake married Ballard Bleigh, several children: Blanche who married Earl Burkhammer; Rhoda, Mattie, Virginia, Elsie Lee, Thomas, Samuel, Clare, and Cleveland Bleigh. Three of theses sons served in World War II. Jeferson and Elizabeth: second daughter, Amanda married Nimrod Foster, to this union was born four sons and two daughters; first son, Thomas, married, no children; second son, Tucker C. Foster married Dora Cosner, two sons and four daughters, Raymond, deceased; Rondall Foster married; Mabel, Mildred, Lean and Maxine Foster all married. Homer Foster married Ocie Bennett, born to this union Randall Foster, Russell Foster, Carl Foster, Brannon Foster, Nellie and Garnet Foster, all married but no other information. Fourth son, Burton Foster married, some children; first daughter, Ida Foster marrieed William Smith, a daughter, Opal. Second daughter, Winnie Foster married Ersie B. Posey, four daughters and two sons. Vera Posey married Glenn Jeffries a son Jerry. Opal Posey, single; Lucille, single; Virginia Posey wed Paul Brown, a daughter, Patricia Ann. First son, Edward, second, Elwood, and third son Kenneth all single and all served in the Korean War. Matilda riffle married Jacob Riffle, history given. Fourth daughter of Jefferson and Elizabeth; Nancy Riffle married Cyrus Mitchell, three sons and three daughters: Minter Robert, Charles: Minter, married, no data. Minter is Methodist minister, stationed at Weston for a time, built the Memorial Methodist Church, now lives at St. Mary's. Robert Mitchell, deceased, married Necie Skinner, two sons, Luther and Benjamin Mitchell; Daughter Evelyn married Pete Wymer, one child. Third son of Nancy, Cyrus Charles Mitchell; Betty Mitchell, married; Annie Mithcell, married; third daughter, Katherine married a Simmers.

Jeferson and Elizabeth: second daughter, Amanda married Nimrod Foster, to this union was born four sons and two daughters; first son, Thomas, married, no children; second son, Tucker C. Foster married Dora Cosner, two sons and four daughters, Raymond, deceased; Rondall Foster married; Mabel, Mildred, Lean and Maxine Foster all married. Homer Foster married Ocie Bennett, born to this union Randall Foster, Russell Foster, Carl Foster, Brannon Foster, Nellie and Garnet Foster, all married but no other information. Fourth son, Burton Foster married, some children; first daughter, Ida Foster marrieed William Smith, a daughter, Opal. Second daughter, Winnie Foster married Ersie B. Posey, four daughters and two sons. Vera Posey married Glenn Jeffries a son Jerry. Opal Posey, single; Lucille, single; Virginia Posey wed Paul Brown, a daughter, Patricia Ann. First son, Edward, second, Elwood, and third son Kenneth all single and all served in the Korean War. Matilda riffle married Jacob Riffle, history given. Fourth daughter of Jefferson and Elizabeth; Nancy Riffle married Cyrus Mitchell, three sons and three daughters: Minter Robert, Charles: Minter, married, no data. Minter is Methodist minister, stationed at Weston for a time, built the Memorial Methodist Church, now lives at St. Mary's. Robert Mitchell, deceased, married Necie Skinner, two sons, Luther and Benjamin Mitchell; Daughter Evelyn married Pete Wymer, one child. Third son of Nancy, Cyrus Charles Mitchell; Betty Mitchell, married; Annie Mithcell, married; third daughter, Katherine married a Simmers.

Elizabeth Riffle married Sanford Posey, three sons and three daughters. Marshal Posey married Ida Plymall, several children; Ezra Posey married Bertie Butler, several children; Patrick, Allie and Rosa Posey, all married. Third daughter, Carrie Posey married Ernie fox, a son Dallas; Kathryn Fox, single. Elsie Riffle married John Foster, three sons, Nimrod and Vayden, both deceased, and Cecil, who married Clara Riffle; Mae, single; Floda and Ethel, both married. Seventh daughter, Lucy Riffle, married Hezikiah Fox, a son and a daughter, Benjamin and Lora Fox. Eighth daughter, Annie married; ninth daughter, Lilly Riffle married Albert Sponaugle, a son, Wayne is married; Ocie, single; Opal married Oley Collins, three sons and three daughters, names of two only---Evelyn and Ruth Collins. Of the nine daughters and two sons all are deceased except the last daughter, who was 79 last Feb 27, (1953) Jefferson and Elizabeth Riffle---first son, Benjamin married Sarah Posey, a son William, who married Columbia Taylor; Martin Riffle married Samantha Jane Mitchell, four sons, William, John E., Charles and George. Charles and George are deceased. Four daughters, Bertha, Eliza, Civilla S. and Eva Riffle. William B. Riffle married Daisy Todd, three sons and two daughters; Carl, Clyde, Earl, Donna and Lucille. All three sons are at home at Tioga; First daughter, Donna married William Cisna, Baltimore; a daughter. Lucille married William Handschumaker, a daughter, at Charleston. Bertha Riffle married Bingham Taylor, two sons, Cecil who married Dona Heater, Flemington, several children; Ison Taylor married Eva Riffle, Flemington.

A brother of Jefferson Riffle, part of the Charles Riffle family married Bessie Blake. Born to this union a daughter who lives at Wild Cat; a daughter, Dude, married Isaac Posey, three sons and two daughters: William, Joseph, Frank, Florence and Carrie Posey. William married Nora Clark, two sons and two daughters; Clarence married Ruby Riffle; Arnold Posey married Nina Riffle, data on both previously given. First daughter, Phoebe Posey marrieed George Riffle---history given; second daughter married Newton Skinner, several children; Isaac and Dude, first daughter, Florence married John Sandy; second daughter Carrie deceased; Joseph Posey lives in Clarksburg. Benjamin Riffle Married Sarah Jane Posey, A son william Riffle married Columbia Taylor; Martin Riffle married Samantha Jane Mitchell, four sons and four daughters: William B. Riffle lives at Tioga; John R. Riffle at Crowford; Charles Riffle, deceased; George Riffle, deceased; Bertha Riffle, deceased. She married Benjamin Taylor, two sons, Cecil who wed Dona Heater and Ison who married Eva Riffle. William B. Riffle married Daisy Todd, three sons, Carl, Clyde and Earl, and two daughters, Donna and Lucille.

The second son of Martin and Samantha Jane Riffle, John E. Riffle, married Mary Clarks in 1906, eight sons and three daughters; Nelle, Madge, Mildred, Brooks, Rex, Onward, John, Neil, Warren, Melvin and Hollis Riffle. Nelle married S. L. White, born to this union Kellus, Kullus, Donald Lee, Roberta Jean and Carol Ann White. Brooks Riffle married Pearl Wymer, a son and two daughters, Robert, Shirley and Jean. Madge Riffle married Casey Hawkins, four daughters and a son: Laverne, Louise, Virginia, Charline and Robert Linn. Rex Rifffle married Irene Speicher, a daughter Mary Camilla; Onward Riffle married Edith Greenlief; Neil Riffle married Margaret Llewellen; John V. Riffle married Mabel Edwards, a daughter Sonya and a son Donald Edward. Warren Riffle marreid Nancy Lovejoy, a son, Warren Harold Riffle. Melvin Riffle married Margaret Holland, a daughter and two sons: Sandra Sue, Melvin Lee and William John. Mildred Riffle married Ralph McCoy, children Patricia, Diane, Sharon Sue, Hollie Riffle is single, at home. Nellie Riffle White's children. Donald Lee married Anna Lee Mollohan, a daughter, Sharon. Roberta Jane married Frank Gay, two sons: Frank Junior and William Gay; Madge's daughter, Laverne Hawkins married Junior Corathers; Louise Hawkins married Robert Martin, a son, Robert Paul Martin. Second daughter of Martin and Samantha Jane Riffle, Lizzie Riffle, at home; third daughter, Civilla Susan Riffle married Lee W. Blake. Eva Riffle, deceased. (changes to type)

Jacob.I.Riffle.and.Elise.Blake.Riffle 6 son Thursa.Anthny.knowen by menny as T. A. Riffle. who married.Lucy.Skinner a daughter of granvil.Skinner.borned to this union two daughters and three sons first daughter Dessie.seckond daughter Tiney.First son Ersie.seckond.Cllie.V.Riffle third .W.R.orWilliam.Rosco.Riffle first daughter Dessie married Ura.Mcfee borned to this union three daughters and two sons daughters Lucy Lulu Alberta sons Warren. and Edward Alberta Married Ray Ruble borned to this union two childern all information I have on Dessie familey...Tiney seckond daughter married Thomas.W.Wymer thay have a daughter Hellen she married Doil Groves thay a child all on Tiney Familey. ....................................................................................................................... T.A.and Lucy first son Ersie.Riffle. Ethel.Tuliver.borned to this union a son Evert.and two daughters Nine. and Elcie Evert.married Jewell.Bligh a daughter of J.O.Bligh.borned to this union three sons Paul.and Jimmy.and Charles.and a Daughter Doris all on Evert.and Jewells .. Familey .......................................................... Erseie.and Ethel.first daughter Nine married Glenn.Butcher borned to this union three childern Barba.Jene and Jerry.and.Sue. all on nine familey ...................................................................................................................... Ersie.and Ethel.seckond daughter Elsie.married Joseph.Lewis all I have on Elsie .............................................................................................................. T.A.and .Lucy seckond son Cllie V. Riffle was in world war one in germeny was killed in battle october the 24. 1918 ...................................................................................................................... T.A.Riffle.and.Lucy.Skinner.Riffle.third sonWilliam.Rosco.Riffle married Bessie Skinner born to this union four sons a daughter sons Arnold.Arnet Gaylord and Raymond a daughter Anna Besie dedesed
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William Rosco Riffle seckond marriage no information all the Jacob I. Riffle And Elise.Blake.Riffle.thre is meny of the sixth genration and several of the seventh only three of the third genration living to day I will give the names and berth date that are great grand parents and great.great.great. to menny living to day you will find names on the front page of this booklet
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Johney.B.Blake.was borned in 1804 Abby Crismore.was.borned in 1797 Thay have menny desendents to day of the seventh genration all the Riffle Famileys formely Lewis county Orlando.W.V.A. ...........................................................................................................................
T.A Riffle and Lucy .famileys most live in Parkersburg, W.V.A. I said i would tell about four other famileys that are not Blakes that has practised this relation and it has bin just as bad as any thing i have ever noted being borned mently sick or blind or deformed or no helth thay cant help this meny has died in state hospital thay did have the ability to take care of them selves meny has died there the geral publick dosent know about this relation ship meny are embarsed by people asking the matter with thes childern or what the matter with him or her i have talked to some that did not know the relation of thir parents
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there is meny grand childern to day that do no know the relation of thir grandparents thay have taken thir place in publick as thay should this relation ship is not quite sa bad as it was forty years ago parents have fought aginst this i can rember back more then sixty years as my own famile was mixed up in this so much it made me note all other parties that practised this relation ship i do think it is good for anyn case of doubt of any thin i have told the reckors in Braxton,lewis Countys will show ...........................................................................................................................
I have twenty four grand childern two are married i never want to see this happen to any familey as i have noted the results in all cases of this relation I have knowen about havent told the names of thes parties i have told about most of thir names are in this Booklet i did not know this practis was this bad tell i went to geathring this information and found meny that have practised this relation i think we should eduicate our childern better practis then this relation ship as I rember back to 1896 the Blakes was hard woking in wood thay made all thir own furnituere and for the publick in genral made looms spining wheels raised flax made about allo thir own clothing of this and wool a corn planter was more to see then a new mocel car is to day and people go for miles to see a moing machin there was not much cleard land then mostly bottom land this was along the line of Braxton and lewis county very little stock kept by farmers at that time as was very few had land cleard to keep stock most all had a cow or two thay let them run out to the comons as thay called it them no rail road in ether Braxton or lewis at that time may have bin a nar gage rail road from clarksburg to weston, all merchants had to have thir goods halled from clarksburg or weston. there was plenty of road houses from one county seat to other county seat to take care of men and teams at that time then the rail road came threw lewis and braxton countys some where in the early eighteen ninetys this give a lot employment to the people in meny ways the next was the C&P.rail road this brought more employment to all in coal and timber this made better living for all

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333 There is meny living to day that rember when we had no victrola or raido or car tha was all writen about long before we had them in genral use thay have brought better living to all there is meny of us that are not thankful for this and think this just happend it has happend for all there was a will put forth and a efort to bring all this I wonder what the next fifty years will Bring us i can not emagin as meny things brought to us for our comfort in the next fifty years I dont think ther is eny one that can emagin the changes that will take place in the next fifty years let us hope thay will be as great as the past fifty years I belive thay will if we would all try to impruve as our convinces has it would be a much better world to live in and we could make it that way if we try i have no eduication to tell what i would like to tell as i never learned to write my name in school may have went as much as six months all to geather if you wasent able to buy books and dress for the cold weather there was no way provided as of to day i knew two other famileys in the same conditon as our familey so thir education was very limited like ours i liked to had a free school education i have learned a little just by reading and listning to others i was always dertermend all my childern should have a free school education which thay all did three went to high school one went glenville state teachers school the others had a chance to go to high school but did not take it so thay have all bin albe to take care of them selves
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and I have not told this to reflect on any one as there is meny that knows this but did not know how bad this had bin tell you would find the persentage that has survived ,


what i dident know that i told i got from thes parties who name is in the Booklet the blakes some of them was very superstious belived in wiches and gosts i think this is the stronger mind pring on the weaker mind i learned this thrugh life, ........................................................................................................................
always try to be satfide with what you have,if you want better things then you have you can have them if you will make a efort to have them do not try to have things you are not able to have, some one elce may hafto pay for this,if you you always live up to your word you will be all right
...................................................................................................................... Somithing to rember The suply of untruth is greate then the demand this makes it very cheap, ......................................................................................................................
The demand for truth is greater then the suply this makes it come high. ......................................................................................................................
one fault mended is worth two falts made
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if we thought more about others then we do of our selvs we would have more frids
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There is so much bad in the best of us and so much good in the worst of us that it dosent behove any of us to speak ill of the rest of us
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it has bin more then six years sence i bin able to work i can do nothing and i am geathring this information and writing this to help pass the time i have found meny things i did not know
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I would like to see a movie made of what i have related of this relation ship and let the public see what the results of this relation has bin meny do not know the relation of thir parents i have found in talking to them you here so meny remarks made about them that are not right something the matter with them thay cant help this, in all this relation i have knowen about there has always bin something wrong withpart of the familey i have seen only one normal in familey of six one normal in familey of eleven three norma in a familey of sixteen childern i could go on and name meny more this mental sickness lasts thrugh life let us all discurge this practis i bleive this has cost the state and countys more then eny thing i know it is a cost to all (changes to hand written)] Vayden S Blake third son of Lee W. Blake Civilla Riffle Blake his children. Betty Jo married Darell Crites 2 daughters Brenda & Myra K Junior Lee married Georgie Steele 3 boys Gary Vaden Lee & Dennis Stanley O. Married Janie Church 2 sons Allen & Steve. Jean married Cecil Hornbeck one daughter Careen. Leota married John married Faye Barron