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Category: Washington County Arkansas

The Single Most Favorite Double in the World

1979 Doublemint twins ad from YouTube.

This week the theme is ‘multiples’. This theme was almost too broad for me to decide what to write about! After some debate I narrowed it down to two topics. After looking at the 2021 weekly topics list I felt the other story would fit into an October theme and this particular story for this week didn’t really fit anywhere else. So, this week we’re talking about multiple births. I’m going to look into something I’ve always wondered: how many sets of twins did my direct-line ancestors have? I’ll be going back as far as my 2nd great grandparents. I chose that as a stopping point so this blog doesn’t get too lengthy. Out of the 8 pairs of my 2nd great grandparents, 3 of the couples had twins.

Dad’s Family: Double Your Sentiment

90’s Doublemint twins ad.

In the 21st century the statistical probability of having twins is about 3%, or 3 in 100. That is a higher probability than previous generations. In my family (in that 2nd-great-grandparent generation) mixed sets of twins were more popular (mixed meaning a boy-girl set of twins versus same-sex twins). Out of my dad’s great grandmothers, he had one who had twins. Eliza Emoline BELL WILLIAMS (and her husband, Samuel Morris WILLIAMS) had a set of twins in 1900- two boys named Lorenzo Dall and William Sherman WILLIAMS. Neither baby survived. I’m guessing the babies are probably buried in Oakland Cemetery in Success, Texas County, Missouri since the family lived in that area and other family members are buried in that cemetery but I can’t say for certain where the babies were buried. I’m not going to spend a lot of time on this family today because I’ve written about them quite a bit. You can find previous posts at:

Mom’s Family: Double Good

Early iteration of the Doublemint twins ads.

My 2nd great grandmother, Sarah C. DAVIS REITER, and her husband Nicholas Wilhelm REITER had a set of twins in 1864. My mom thinks Sarah’s twins were mixed – one boy and one girl. She can’t remember their names but is going to try to find that information for me. I’ve not found their names anywhere but if mom locates that information I’ll be sure to let you know. The babies did not survive. I don’t know where they’re buried but I’m sure it’s in Illinois, in the area of Perry, Pike County, Illinois since that’s where the family lived. This is another family I’ve written about quite a bit so I won’t spend a lot of time on them today. You can read more about Sarah and her family at:

My 2nd great grandmother, Druziller Mahala LATTY BULLOCK (and her husband James Mathaniel BULLOCK), also had a set of twins born in 1892. For this grandma though, both twins survived – one girl named Alice May and one boy named Oscar Morris.

1982 Wrigley’s Doublemint gum twins ad.

Alice May and Oscar Morris BULLOCK were born 17 April 1892 in Benton County, Arkansas. They remained in Benton County, Arkansas until after they married. Alice married Martin Rotramel when she was 17 years old. Together, Alice and Martin and had 8 children – and no twins. Here is Alice in her later years with her dog, Major. I love this photo.

Alice BULLOCK ROTRAMEL and her dog, Major.

Alice lived to be 92 years old! The last 52 years or so of her life she lived in Delaware County, Oklahoma. Alice passed away on 1 December 1984 in Jay, Delaware County, Oklahoma. She’s buried in Hillcrest Cemetery beside her husband in Gravette, Benton County, Arkansas where her parents are buried.

Oscar Morris BULLOCK grew up with his family in Benton County, Arkansas. He served as a Private in the U.S. Army as evidence by the Army transport document below.

Army Passenger List.

I don’t fully understand that document. It looks like perhaps he was transported to a Veterinary Hospital. It would be interesting to know what he did in the Army. Oscar fought in World War I. I do know he arrived in New York in June of 1919 on his way to fight in France.

Army transport document.

According to military records, Oscar was serving with Veterinary Hospital #16 MR. as a Private V.C.. Oscar served in France in 1919. During that time, the final US deaths of the war happened and the Treaty of Versailles was drawn up. The treaty was signed the day after Oscar arrived back on US soil. Oscar shipped out from Marseille, France on the ship Taormina and arrived home at New York, USA on 27 June 1919.

Some researchers say that at age 27 Oscar married Stella BROWN. He lived in California at the time but the marriage certificate was in Arkansas. I haven’t done extensive research on this line so I can’t say what really happened. I know that in his obituary no children or wife were listed. Oscar passed away at 80 years of age. He died on 17 February 1973 in Fayetteville, Washington County, Arkansas. He was buried in the Fayetteville National Cemetery in Fayetteville, Washington County, Arkansas.

Doing the Numbers

So, let’s bring this all together. I looked at all my direct line ancestors from my parents up through all of my 2nd great grandparents. The only generation that included twins were my 2nd great grandparents’. Out of 8 sets of 2nd great grandparents, only 3 couples (2 on my mother’s side and 1 on my father’s side) had twins. The paternal set of twins passed away or were stillborn; their names were Lorenzo and William. One set of maternal twins also passed away or were stillborn and included one girl and one boy; I don’t know their names but they were given names. The final set of maternal twins (Alice and Oscar) lived to adulthood and at least one of them had their own offspring but did not have their own set of twins.

According to official statistics:

The gender chances of a fraternal twin pregnancy are; 25% chance that a mother will have two boys, 25% chance that a mother will have two girls, and 50% chance that a mother will have a boy and a girl. On the other hand, identical twins are always the same gender.

https://healthresearchfunding.org/24-interesting-fraternal-twins-gender-statistics/, accessed 28 Feb 2021.

So, according to Health Research Funding, Alice and Oscar were fraternal twins as were the DAVIS twins. Only the paternal twins- Lorenzo and William WILLIAMS- had a chance at being identical twins. I found that very interesting.

I was wondering about what my chances of having twins might have been in my childbearing years. Since 3 out of 8 couples in my 2nd great grandparents’ generation had twins, I felt like statistically I stood a better chance of having twins in my child bearing years. MedlinePlus.gov confirms it as does Washington State Twin Registry. Turns out, fraternal twins- especially if they occur on the mother’s side- are associated with an increased likelihood of twins being hereditary in families. I searched some more and I hit some good information:

A family history of identical twins does not necessarily make it more likely you’ll have multiples, although the offspring of male identical twins may be more likely to have their own identical twins. However, if you have fraternal twins (non-identical) in your family, your chances of conceiving twins rise. If there are fraternal twins on both the mother and father’s side, your odds for twins goes up even higher.

Lazarov S, Lazarov L, Lazarov N. Multiple pregnancy and birth: Twins, triplets and high-order multiples. OverviewTrakia J Sci. 2016;1:103-107. doi:10.15547/tjs.2016.01.015 

There are other factors that play a role as well. As it turns out, having children when you’re older increases your odds of having multiple births from one pregnancy. So I went back to my charts to check ages of the mothers. Eliza Emoline was 28 years old when she had Lorenzo and William. Sarah C. was 27 years old when she had her twins. Druziller Mahala was 34 years old when she had Alice and Oscar.

Final Thoughts

One last statistic about twins from Health Research Funding.

A woman named Mary Jonas, who died in 1899 had 15 sets of fraternal twins.

24 Interesting Fraternal Twins Gender Statistics – HRF (healthresearchfunding.org)

I found that tidbit interesting since two sets of the twins I talked about today were born during the 1890’s. I will spare you one last Doublemint commercial. Hopefully the song is now stuck in your head so I don’t have to suffer that fate alone now.

If you’d like to learn more about the BULLOCK family, you can find more of my posts at:

If you’re looking for more blogs to read later in the week, you can go to:

If you’re interested in joining me on this family history writing adventure, well…the more the merrier! You can join at Amy Johnson Crow’s website. There’s a Facebook page that goes along with the 52 Ancestors in 52 Weeks Challenge. The only rules are the rules you make up for yourself on this writing adventure. Anything you get down in writing is more than you had before so get writing! Don’t miss out on Amy’s blog and podcast either. Both are very good.

Enjoy your week and make the most of it!

Until next time,

Lisa @ Days of Our Lives Genealogy blog

Laura Bullock Riter: A Woman at Work

The Woman and Her Tool

Laura Bullock Riter
Laura Riter with her daughters including my granny on the far right.

 

I started this post a couple of years ago but never found the time to finish it.  Laura’s birthday is today.  She was born in 1887.  I thought this might be the perfect time to go ahead and publish this part of her story.  Laura is my maternal great grandmother- my granny Bates’ mom.  I’ve written about her before on my blog at https://honeysuckle-farm.com/laura-ann-bullock-riter-the-consummate-mom-and-grandma/.

Sometime around the 1930’s-1940’s Laura worked in Hiwasse, Benton County, Arkansas at a canning factory.  She hulled strawberries and got them ready to process.  She used this tool to do her job:
 Laura Riter strawberry huller
 The engraving on the metal says, “Indepent/Marion, Ind./Supply Co.”.
That huller is still in the family and it’s a very unique kitchen tool.  I’ve tried looking it up online and have never found an image of one like it.  This tool was used to seed and cap the strawberries. 

The Law and the Era

Shortly after the first known cannery was opened in Hiwasse in 1920, new legislation (Act #140) was enacted allowing canning factories to hire women and work them for more than 9 hours a day.  The change in the law also provided for women to receive time and a half overtime and made provisions for fair pay and for redress for women who were doing “piece work”.  Working the strawberries for the canning factory was considered piece work since the women were paid by the bucket for the work they did.  (Fayetteville Daily Democrat, 13 June 1921).  Within a year, newspapers were making a big deal about hiring women to work in the canning factories.  There was such a shortage of workers for the canneries that they were eager to dip into their new supply of female workers.  One newspaper article entitled, “Big Demand for Women at Canning Factories” stated, “men will not peel apples” and, “women are faster”.  (Fayetteville Daily Democrat, 26 Aug 1922)
 laura bullock riter women in canning factories
Newspapers.com clipping. 

In the early 1920’s Laura was in her 30’s.  In 1928 she lost her husband and had a house full of children to care for.  She chose to work rather than marry again.  It was in this climate, with the first world war safely behind us, laws having been changed to assist factories, and in the beginning years of the Great Depression and the Dust Bowl Era, that Laura went to work.

The Canneries: Her Potential Employers 

I always thought (and was always told) that Laura worked for Allen Canning Company.  Once I started researching, I began to question which company she worked for or whether she might have worked for multiple companies with Allen’s being the last she worked for.  There were several canneries that operated in Hiwasse in the 1920’s through 1940’s: Gentry Marketing Association’s cannery which was later sold to Allen Canning and then later sold again and known as Hiwasse Canning, a different company operating as Hiwasse Canning (two separate canneries operated under the name Hiwasse Canning), and Appleby Brothers cannery. 

Fayetteville Canning Company

In a 1919 edition of the Texas Trade Review and Industrial Record, I found one sentence stating that Fayetteville Canning Company had plans to establish a canning factory in Hiwasse, Arkansas.  I was never able to establish whether they did, in fact, build a canning factory there.  I’ve never seen any other mention of this anywhere so possibly this canning factory is the one mentioned in the next section or possibly it never came to fruition. 

W. E. Cherry and Hiwasse Canning Factory

W. E. Cherry seems to have been the first known canner in Hiwasse.  He started his factory about 1920 in Hiwasse.  In addition to owning the canning factory, he was also the first (although temporary) Chairman of the Hiwasse Berry Growers’ Association, an organization which he helped organize.  This fact leads me to believe that Mr. Cherry’s cannery probably canned strawberries, although I have no proof either way.  Here is a 1921 article about the Hiwasse Canning factory owned by W. E. Cherry:
 w e cherry canning factory hiwasse
Newspapers.com clipping

I have never been able to find much about the Hiwasse canneries online.  While researching, I discovered that Shiloh Museum in Springdale, Arkansas has an amazing online exhibit about the Benton County canneries.  I highly recommend visiting their website.  You can find a history of the local canning industry here.  You can find images of the different cannery labels here,  a photo gallery of local canneries hereand audio clips of people who were involved in the local canning industry talking about the canneries and cannery work here.    There are a couple of other links in the online exhibit that I did not include.  Please take some time to check out Shiloh Museum’s digital exhibit. 

Since I couldn’t find much online, I decided to call Shiloh Museum and ask if there was anything they had that wasn’t included in the online exhibit that might be relevant to my blog post.  I spoke with Ms. Rachel Whitaker, a Research Specialist at Shiloh Museum.  She was so kind as to search their holdings and get back with me (the same day!).  Ms. Whitaker found a listing for W. E. Cherry’s cannery in Hiwasse in The Hiwasse History Book. This book includes an ad showing that Mr. Cherry’s cannery handled blackberries, tomatoes, and green beans. 

Appleby Brothers’ Canning

The Appleby Brothers had a cannery in Hiwasse also.  (Fayetteville Daily Democrat, 10 Apr 1923).  You can see an image of Appleby Brothers’ canning label at the Shiloh Museum website’s online exhibit in the “Canning Label Gallery” linked above.
I know for certain that Appleby canned strawberries because there is an ad in the 6 Apr 1940 edition of The Northwest Arkansas Times advertising for 300 people to cap strawberries.  Strawberry canning season typically lasted from April to early June.  In Brooks Blevins’ book Hill Folks, Mr. Blevins noted that the Appleby Brothers- George and Charles- also organized a “strawberry growers’ association” in the area.  Although I found the 1940 ad for Appleby Brothers, in Rachel’s research, she found that Appleby Brothers’ properties were auctioned off as noted in the 10 August 1939 edition of the Northwest Arkansas Times newspaper. 
In addition to the information listed above, Rachel also found that Appleby’s cannery in both the 1921 edition of the Marketing and Industrial Guide: Directory of Manufactures and the 1922 edition of the Canner’s Directory.  Appleby’s was also mentioned in Brooks Blevins’ book Hill Folks.

Gentry Marketing Association’s Cannery

Gentry Marketing Association was created by and for the local farmers who supplied produce to the canneries.  It was a surprisingly strong and united group.  The farmers took care of one another, advocated for fair prices for produce, staved off outside big businesses who were coming in and trying to take away profits and produce from the farmers and canneries, and successfully marketed the produce and products of Benton County, Arkansas. 
The association owned its own canneries and one of those canneries was in Hiwasse.  If the cannery had a name, I’ve never found it.   This plant was sold off a couple of times in the latter half of the 1940’s.  In 1946 it was sold by the Gentry Marketing Association presumably to Allen Canning (then called Allen & Son of Siloam Springs).

Allen Canning

Earl Allen founded Allen Canning in 1926.  Mr. Allen “established a solid reputation for his honesty in dealing with growers, forging relationships that would benefit the company for years to come”.  (http://www.referenceforbusiness.com/history2/5/Allen-Canning-Company.html)  Mr. Allen apparently only owned the Hiwasse factory for a couple of years from 1946-1948.

When Allen Canning was still in business in Siloam Springs, Arkansas they had a large Popeye statue that stood outside their office.  Here is my brother standing with the Popeye statue:
  Jared and Popeye statue

In 1948 Allen Canning sold the plant to Frank Brandhuber and Hill Diven and it was called Hiwasse Canning.  My mom says that my grandparents (her parents- the BATES’) and great-grandmother (her maternal grandmother- Laura BULLOCK RITER) always referred to working for Allen Canning.  A few years ago before Allen Canning sold out to Sager Creek (who then sold out to Del Monte), my mom called them and asked if they had any photos or historical materials pertaining to the canning factory in Hiwasse and the people who worked there.  They did not have anything.  She says they referred to the Hiwasse factory by name and she thought they said they bought the canning factory from Appleby Brothers.  So perhaps Allen Canning had two different stints in Hiwasse.  I’m not sure.  I could go to Benton County Courthouse and try to look up deeds but that would delay publishing this blog post and who knows when I’ll get a chance to go there.  I’ll leave that task for another day and another blog post.  For now, I’m going to publish what I have.  Perhaps it is meant for someone else to find those records.

Hiwasse Canning 

It isn’t surprising that a member of the Diven family purchased the factory from Allen Canning.  Members of the Diven family were heavily involved in various canning companies in Benton County, Arkansas during this time period.  (Joplin Globe, 28 July 1929)  They even took their business into Texas and had canning factories there.  Unfortunately, not much is known about Brandhuber and Diven’s Hiwasse Canning company- or at least not that I could find in my research.  Ms. Whitaker at Shiloh Museum was unable to find any information about Hiwasse Canning either.  I can only assume that since Brandhuber and Diven called their factory Hiwasse Canning that by this time, Mr. Cherry’s Hiwasse Canning factory had already closed.

Working Conditions

I want to be sure you understand what kind of conditions Laura worked in at the canning factories.  Here is a link to an audio clip from Shiloh Museum’s online exhibit talking about the oppressive heat and how you couldn’t get away from it when working in the cannery.  There was no air condition.
https://web.archive.org/web/20151218192523/https://shilohmuseum.org/podcasts/004bowmn.mp3
Whenever you think you have it bad at work, just think about Laura in the heat and humidity of an Ozark summer working in a canning factory that produced more heat on top of the already oppressive heat and humidity outside.  I really encourage you to listen to some of the audio clips the museum has online to get a feel for the conditions Laura worked in.  Just as a reminder, you can find those audio clips here https://web.archive.org/web/20150926002836/https://shilohmuseum.org/exhibits/canning-listen.php. 

Miscellaneous Information 

There were other mentions of Hiwasse-based canning factories in newspapers of the 1920’s to 1940’s era but most of the time the Hiwasse plants were not named or identified in any way so it’s hard to say if there were more than the factories mentioned above in Hiwasse. 


I made a trip to Hiwasse with my mom on June 23rd– just this week- in search of the location of the old canning factories.  Mom suspected they were on Main Street.  At the intersection of Old Main and Highway 72 were two very old buildings.  One was a former gas station.  The other building turned out to be the old Banks grocery store.


 
banks grocery ad
Virgil Banks Store ad for 1947 canning season.  Newspapers.com clipping from The Journal-Advance newspaper out of Gentry, Arkansas, 20 February 1947.


Banks grocery hiwasse ar 2017
The old Virgil Banks grocery store on 23 June 2017 in Hiwasse, Arkansas.


I began at the Hiwasse post office and asked if the woman working the counter knew where the canning factories had been located when they were still standing.  She said she wasn’t from the area and couldn’t help me but she directed me to the Holloway family at the corner convenience store in town.  Mom and I (and two of my grandsons who were with me that day) headed down the highway to the Hiwasse convenience store.  The owner was very busy taking lunch orders so the girl at the counter directed me to an elderly gentleman sitting at one of the tables.  I introduced myself to him and told him what I was looking for.  He said his name (I think- it was loud and hard to hear) was James Adams.  He said he’d only been in Hiwasse for about 15 years and couldn’t really help me but said I should go back down the street to the lawnmower shop and ask the people there.  They would know, he said.  I thanked him and left.  We headed West again on Highway 72 back to the small engine shop in town.  There, the lady at the counter directed me to a small office to talk to Jan.  Jan was wonderful.  She loves history and was more than happy to share with me what she knew.  She said she moved to the Hiwasse area from South Dakota about 40 years ago.  This is home for her now and she would never leave.  She loves it here.  She said there used to be a lot of old-timers here who told her all the history of the place but they were all gone now.  She said when she first moved here, the canning factory buildings- there were 2- were still standing but they’re gone now.  She gave me specific directions and told me what to look for to know I was in the right spot.  Mom and I headed West again on Highway 72- maybe a block or so and turned South onto Sandusky Road- a little dirt lane that was barely noticeable.
 
Sandusky Rd Hiwasse AR sign
 

As we were leaving the canning factory site I took a photo of the Sandusky Road sign.  From the highway heading West it was completely covered by the tree.  We guessed at where the canning factories had stood.  As we were making a second pass down the dirt lane I noticed an older man sitting in his truck in front of a mobile home.  Being from the country, I knew better than to pass him by.  He’d be wanting to know what we were doing and what we were looking for.  Things would go better if I stopped and introduced myself.  Besides, I might get more information.  So I stopped and introduced myself and told the gentleman what we were looking for.  His name was Mr. Gallion and as it turns out, he is only a few years older than my mom.  He knew of my mom’s family- the BATES’- and she was familiar with his family name as well.  We talked for a while.  He told me all that was left of the canning factories was one cement pad and the well house.  These two things stand behind the yellow house about the distance of 1 and ½ city blocks south of Highway 72, on the West side of the road just past the big storage buildings (the storage buildings are on the East side of the road).  I didn’t get a photo because there isn’t anything you could see except the yellow house and I didn’t want to take a photo of someone’s home and put it up on the blog.  He told me that the Easley sisters- two elderly, unmarried women had lived in the mobile home we were all sitting in front of.  Hattie Easley had been the Postmaster of Hiwasse back in the day and her sister Esther (?) Easley had been the teacher at the one-room school- Banks School House.

Thank-You’s and Closing Thoughts

Before I close, I want to thank my mom who almost always gives me the basics of the stories I tell about her family.  Thanks to Rachel Whitaker at Shiloh Museum for assisting me with research in Shiloh’s collection.  Thanks to Hiwasse residents who either helped me or referred me on to someone else who could help me: the lady at the Hiwasse Post Office whose name I did not get, James (?) Adams whom I spoke with at the Hiwasse convenience store while he was having coffee.  The lady at the small engine repair shop who led me to Jan- another lady at the small engine shop who knew how to find the old canning factory sites and who shares a love of local history with me.  And lastly, thank you to Mr. Gallion who took time out from eating his lunch to chat with us about the canning factories and the old families and places of Hiwasse.

 
Mr. Gallion talked of the old hotel that has since been torn down and of many of the other wonderful things about Hiwasse that are gone now.  He lamented that newcomers just consider themselves part of the town of Gravette now.  Only the old-timers still call this place Hiwasse.  I guess that makes me an old-timer.  My Papa BATES was born in Hiwasse so I grew up hearing stories about this place.  To me, this will always be Hiwasse.  I commented to mom that the day is coming when I’ll go to a place and ask about the old places, old families, and old times and no one will remember.  That’s one thing that keeps me writing about these old places and people from times gone by.  They’ll live on as long as someone remembers. 
So always remember- and always tell your stories…even if you think no one is listening. 
 
Until next time,
Lisa @ Days of Our Lives
 
P. S.- There is still work to be done in regard to this topic if anyone is interested in taking up the research.  University of Arkansas Library Special Collections has records of some of the local canning companies that I’ve never looked at.  I’m wondering if the David and Barbara Pryor Center in Fayetteville, Arkansas contains any collections that would be informative to us about this topic.  There are two Hiwasse history books that I hear would be beneficial to my research.  Shiloh Museum has records that are not included in their online exhibit that I’d still like to see even if none specifically mention Hiwasse.  Also, a visit to the Benton County Clerk’s office to look at land records would help shed light on which companies owned land in Hiwasse and when.  There is so much research to do and I won’t live long enough to do it.  Feel free to help me!

Laura Ann BULLOCK RITER- The Consummate Mom and Grandma

Laura is my maternal great grandmother. Hers is the first death date anniversary I’ll be honoring this year. So if you’re lighting a candle with me today, now would be a good time to go do it while you’re thinking about it.

On the far right is Jessie RITER BATES and to the left of Jessie is Jessie’s mom, Laura BULLOCK RITER. To the left of Laura are two of her other daughers, possibly Bertha (second from left) and Myrtle (far left).
When I was younger I asked Granny to tell me about her mom, Laura. What she recalled the most was that Laura always went outside and played WITH her kids instead of sending them outside to play alone while Laura took care of chores and household business. Granny also recalled Laura being a good cook. When I asked my Mom about her grandma Laura, my Mom also remembered Laura’s cooking. She remembers going to Laura’s house on Sunday’s for meals and Laura almost always fixed Angel Food cakes with sprinkles inside for dessert. I talked about those cakes in this blog post. Mom loved those cakes! In spite of Laura’s good cooking, she was always a thin, petite woman. My mom didn’t recall ever hearing Laura yell or get loud.
Laura lived in several different houses in Sulphur Springs, Benton County, Arkansas. Laura’s brother, Uncle Ed, always lived near Laura all his life. I don’t think he ever married. I remember Mom telling me once that it was almost like he stayed to take care of Grandma Laura.
Just before Laura’s 23rd birthday, she married William Sherman RITER. They had five children together. Granny always told me there was another baby that didn’t live but I have no proof of that. This baby that didn’t live was Laura’s first baby which would make a total of 6 children that Laura gave birth to. When Laura was just 41 years old, William passed away and left her to raise those five children alone. She raised them well and never remarried. Granny recalled that it took Laura almost a year to get William’s military pension started. That year was very difficult as the family didn’t have much money to live on.
In the mid-1950’s, Laura’s daughter Bertha was diagnosed with cancer. In the fall of 1957, when Laura was 70 years old, Bertha died due to the cancer. That left Bertha’s children with their stepfather with whom they did not have much of a relationship and while he loved them, he had no way to raise them on his own. Laura moved those five children back from California and finished raising them. In January of 1970 at the age of 81, after raising 10 children, she passed away. She died on a Saturday. At the time of her death her son William lived in Panama City, Florida. Her daughter Myrtle (RITER) PENDERGRAFT lived in Sulphur Springs (as did Laura). Laura’s daughter Jessie (RITER) BATES live in Southwest City, Missouri. Her daughter Faye (RITER) STEVENS lived in Anderson, Missouri. Her brother Ed BULLOCK lived in Sulphur Springs, Arkansas near Laura as I talked about earlier. He is also buried in the same cemetery as Laura (Butler Cemetery near Sulphur Springs, Arkansas).

William "Ed" Bullock's gravestone.
William “Ed” Bullock’s gravestone.


I’m leaving a photo of Ed’s gravestone here since the name on the stone is different than what they called him. He doesn’t have any descendants to remember him or clean his gravesite and leave flowers. If you’re ever in the area, you might stop by and leave flowers for he and Grandma Laura and clean off the stones.
Laura’s brother Oscar BULLOCK lived in Fayetteville, Arkansas. Oscar was a World War I veteran and when he passed away he was buried in the Fayetteville National Cemetery in Fayetteville, Arkansas. Her sister Cynthia (BULLOCK) BATY lived in Gilroy, California. Another of her sisters, Alice (BULLOCK) ROTRAMEL, lived in Southwest City, Missouri. At the time of her death, Laura had 29 grandchildren (5 of whom she finished raising as noted above) and 53 great grandchildren (of whom I was one of the newest, being less than a year old at the time of her death).

Portrait of me as a baby.
Portrait of me as a baby.

Me at approximately the time Laura BULLOCK RITER passed away.
If you have any memories of Laura I’d love to hear them. If you have any photos to share, I’d love to see them.


Until tomorrow,
Lisa @ Days of Our Lives

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