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Lewis County Tennessee TN WPA Records GENEALOGY

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    Description

    Lewis County, Tennessee WPA Records
    Compiled by WPA Workers *
    66 Pages, 8.5" x 11", Full Name Index, Soft Cover, Reprint
    A True Story
    In the corner of an attic in Chattanooga, Tennessee, several hundreds of files lay gathering dust. Between the hunger of rats and insects, they were slowly being destroyed.
    At first, the young man looking through the documents could not understand them. With the help of a friend, he slowly began to realize the worth of his discovery. Between the spider webs, dust, and mold there were records, lots of records ... church records, bible records, cemetery records, and miscellaneous records.
    Finally the true nature of the documents was confirmed: they were the lost WPA Records *.
    Bible Records
    Bible Records For:
    Bates, Beatty, Brown, Bundrant
    Carroll, Coble, Cooper, Cothran
    Daniel, Defoe, Downey, Duncan
    Edwards
    Fain, Fite, Fuller
    George, Goodman
    Hensley, Himes, Hull, Humphrey
    James
    Lankford, Ledbetter, Leeper, Lipscomb, Loveless
    McCann, McClain
    Peeler, Peery, Perry, "Pollock" (Christian & Napier), Poore
    Ricketts, Robertson, Rochell, Rosson
    Sanford, Shaw, Skelton, Steagald, Stockard
    Talley
    Warren, White, Whitwell, Williams, Willis
    Yaggie
    Tombstone Inscriptions
    Complete cemetery records for:
    Banks Cemetery
    Blackwell Family Graveyard
    Brown Family Graveyard
    Churchwell Graveyard
    Dabbs Cemetery
    Downey Graveyard
    Edwards Cemetery
    Fain Family Graveyard
    Goodman Family Graveyard
    Harder Family Plot
    Lewis National Park Cemetery
    McClain Graveyard
    Napier Cemetery
    Palestine Cemetery
    Skelton Cemetery
    Vinson Graveyard
    Civil War Letters
    Civil War Letters authored by Capt. Biffle, W.L. Bramly, Jessee Coble, L.B. Cooper, S.G. Cooper, and Capt. T. Plummer.
    History of Meriwether Lewis' Death (1809)
    A biography of Meriwether Lewis, founder of Lewis County, owned by his grand-daughter Katie Cooper in the 1930s.
    Surnames Included In This Publication
    Alison, Allison, Ammons, Amos, Anderson, Armstrong, Ashley, Ashton
    Bailey, Baker, Banks, Barber, Bass, Bastian, Bastin, Bates, Beasley, Beatty, Bennett, Best, Biffle, Bingham, Bircham, Birdwell, Bishop, Bit, Black, Blackburn, Blackwell, Blair, Bland, Blankenship, Boyce, Boyes, Bramly, Branth, Breckinridge, Bresbois, Brewer, Bride, Briggs, Brooks, Brown, Bruce, Bullion, Bundrant, Burch, Burcham, Burns, Bush
    Cabron, Cagle, Campbell, Carey, Carpenter, Carroll, Cathey, Chambers, Cheser, Chessor, Choat, Christian, Christon, Churchwell, Clark, Claud (Cloyd/Cloied), Clay, Clayton, Clement, Clymons, Coble, Cochron, Coffee, Cooper, Cortram, Cotham, Cothram, Cothran, Couch, Cox, Craig, Crain, Creamer, Crgia, Cunny
    Dabbs, Daniel, Davis, Dean, DeFoe, Denton, Denver, DePriest, Dickey, Distric, Dixon, Dobbins, Dodson, Dollar, Dotson, Dowdy, Downey, Downing, Doyle, Duffle, Duke, Duncan, Dyer, Dyle
    East, Edwards, Elerson, Elkins, Ellison, Evins
    Fain, Farmer, Fields, Fite, Flanigan, Floid, Flowers, Floyd, Folks, Forrest, Foster, Freeman, Fuller
    Galloway, Garner, Gason, Gasper, Gentry, George, Gibbs, Gibson, Goodman, Goper, Gray, Greecy, Green, Grimes, Grimmett, Grimmitt, Grinder, Griner, Grover, Gulley, Gullick, Guthrie
    Halbrook, Hale, Haley, Ham Harbison, Harder, Hargrove, Harlow, Harrington, Harris, Harts, Hayes, Henderson, Hensley, Hensly, Higgins, Hill, Himes, Hines, Hinsley, Hinson, Holbrook, Hollbrook, Holme, Holmes, Holt, Horn, Hovey, Howel, Hudson, Hughes, Hull, Hulsey, Humphrey, Humphrey(s), Hurst, Hyden
    Jackson, James, Johnson, Johnston, Jones
    Kennedy, Kernelle, Kersa, Killpatrick, Kilpatrick, King, Kinzer, Kirk, Kirksey, Kistler
    Lairmore, Lamore, Land, Lankford, Ledbetter, Lee, Leeper, Lewis, Linsey, Lipscomb, Locke, Lockridge, Lomax, Long, Loveless
    Mabery, Mackey, Mantle, Mash, Mathis, Mearideth, Meece, Melton, Meredithy, Milliken, Mitchell, Monroe, Moody, Moore, Morgan, Murray
    McAnnally, McCann, McClain, McClaran, McCollum, McKanon, McMilton, McNeeley
    Napier, Neeley, Neely, Nichols, Nicholson, Nolen, Norman, Nutt
    Odem, Ogg
    Page, Parker, Patison, Patton, Payne, Peaveyhouse, Peeler, Peery, Pendergrass, Pennington, Pernia, Peters, Pickard, Plummer, Pogue, Pollock, Poore, Pope, Potts, Preste, Price, Priest(e), Prince, Priste, Pruitt
    Quillen
    Ragsdale, Randel, Rasbury, Ray, Reaves, Reed, Reggs, Reid, Rhee, Richardson, Rickets, Ricketts, Riggs, Roach, Roberts, Robertson, Robnett, Rochell, Rodes, Rodgers, Rogers, Roggers, Rosson, Rowden, Runions, Rye
    Sadler, Sanford, Satterfield, Scott, Sealy, Seiber, Serrell, Shan, Sharp, Shaw, Sheffield, Shiffield, Sims, Sisco, Siymmis, Skelton, Skipper, Smith, Smithson, Spann, Sprinkles, Spurgeon, Staggs, Steagald, Stockard, Stone, Styles, Sutton
    Tait, Talley, Tarrant, Tate, Tatum, Tharp, Theodore, Tiller, Tolle, Toty, Turnbough, Turnbow, Twinbow
    Underwood
    Vanleer, Vick, Voorhier, Voorhies
    Walker, Wall, Ward, Warren, Weatherspoon, Weaver, Webb, Welch, Wheat, White, Whiteside, Whitewell, Whitlock, Whitwell, Wilburn, Willbanks, William, Williams, Willis, Wilson, Wisdom, Witherspoon, Wix, Wood, Woods, Woolard
    Yaggie, Young
    Ziegler
    *
    WPA Workers
    During the Great Depression in the early 1900s, many Americans were given a "job" by the United States Government to support their family. One such "job" was transcribing early court, family, Bible, and cemetery records as well as other local records. Original versions were typed on onion skin paper with "x" number of carbon copies. Although the State Archives owns the vast majority of 'first' or typed copy, carbons have circulated for years but are now scattered. Often the typing is not the best and is difficult to read but these valuable records still constitute one of the best sources of information for Tennessee Counties. In many cases, these are all that remain of the original as many county records have been lost. WPA records are generally full text transcription: much larger in scope than an abstraction or summary.
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