Dorothy Barnett Darr, a great-granddaughter of John Harvey Hufford, knew Marion and Fannie Hufford during her youth. She vividly remembers a fence that ran the length of the front yard of their home, and it had climbing yellow roses that had a sweet spicy fragrance, i.e., not the fragrance of ordinary roses. There was a well in the back. There was a garage and a car that had gas lamps for headlights. Fannie Hufford had a loom on the back porch that she used to make carpeting for the downstairs of her home. The parlor, and it was full of antiques. The house later burned.
Marion and Fannie Hufford did not have any children. After his death, his brother, Alfred Hufford Jr., filed suit against the descendants of their father, Alfred Hufford, Sr., to divide the land of Thomas Marion Hufford.
Dorothy Barnett Darr, a great-granddaughter of John Harvey Hufford, knew Marion and Fannie Hufford during her youth. She vividly remembers a fence that ran the length of the front yard of their home, and it had climbing yellow roses that had a sweet spicy fragrance, i.e., not the fragrance of ordinary roses. There was a well in the back. There was a garage and a car that had gas lamps for headlights. Fannie Hufford had a loom on the back porch that she used to make carpeting for the downstairs of her home. The parlor, and it was full of antiques. The house later burned.
Marion and Fannie Hufford did not have any children. After his death, his brother, Alfred Hufford Jr., filed suit against the descendants of their father, Alfred Hufford, Sr., to divide the land of Thomas Marion Hufford.
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