Advertisement

Mary Annie <I>Smith</I> Black

Advertisement

Mary Annie Smith Black

Birth
Grayson County, Texas, USA
Death
11 Jul 1967 (aged 87)
Tishomingo, Johnston County, Oklahoma, USA
Burial
Ravia, Johnston County, Oklahoma, USA Add to Map
Plot
3
Memorial ID
View Source
John and Annie Black were both born in 1874 and were joined in marriage at the age of 22 in 1896. They made their home on a section of land northwest of Tishomingo, Oklahoma. Here they farmed and raised cattle.
The first child was a girl, Nora Bell born on July 17, 1898. Soon other children followed, Bill, Lizzie, Henry, Alice, Roy and Jesse.
Four of the children married into the Davis family, Bill married Mollie Davis, Henry married Viola Davis, Alice married George Davis and Roy married Minnie Davis. Jesse married Ellen Selby who was a half sister to Nora's second husband, Fred Johnson. Nora's son by her first marriage to Isaac McDonald, Roland McDonald married Lillian Ritter, Lillian's sister Goldie Cleo married Amos Selby who was a half-brother to Fred. No one crossed blood lines or inter-married; but because these few families produced so many marriages within their bounds it produced a very tight knit community of family and friends.
John and Annie Black were both born in 1874 and were joined in marriage at the age of 22 in 1896. They made their home on a section of land northwest of Tishomingo, Oklahoma. Here they farmed and raised cattle.
The first child was a girl, Nora Bell born on July 17, 1898. Soon other children followed, Bill, Lizzie, Henry, Alice, Roy and Jesse.
Four of the children married into the Davis family, Bill married Mollie Davis, Henry married Viola Davis, Alice married George Davis and Roy married Minnie Davis. Jesse married Ellen Selby who was a half sister to Nora's second husband, Fred Johnson. Nora's son by her first marriage to Isaac McDonald, Roland McDonald married Lillian Ritter, Lillian's sister Goldie Cleo married Amos Selby who was a half-brother to Fred. No one crossed blood lines or inter-married; but because these few families produced so many marriages within their bounds it produced a very tight knit community of family and friends.


Sponsored by Ancestry

Advertisement

Advertisement