Sunday, April 9, 2023

My Direct Ewing Lineage

Paternal side

Truman Bryan Quillin, Sr.'s mother:
Merphia Ewing (1901-1985)
            m 1) Paul Bryan Quillin (1897-1957)
            m 2) Oscar Clifton Hart ((1893-1974)

Merphia Ewing's father:
Frederick Short Ewing (1869-1962)
            m. 1) Emma S Frances Woodall (1877-1910) **
            m. 2) Mary Loren "Mollie" Short McKinley (1881-1971)

James Henry Ewing (1829-?)
            m. Malinda Dillard (1834-1880)

William P Ewing (abt 1804-abt 1864)
            m. Sarah Pentenny (1811-1860)

James Ewing, Jr. (1758-1810)
            m. 1) unk
            m. 2) Ladovsey Dillard (1785-1821) **

James from Pocahontas Co WV Ewing Sr. (1721-1802)
            m. 1) Sarah Mayes (1728-1818)
            m. 2) Sarah Edwards (1728-1818) **

John Ewing of Carnshanaugh Ireland (1648-1745) **

John Ewing of Carnshanaugh's father, William, moved the family from Stirlingshire, Scotland and migrated to Ireland as a result of war. John and his brothers eventually moved to America. 
I have followed some intricate research on this line. Research is difficult with the brothers who immigrated and landed in America, all with the same names as their ancestors in the Old World and then giving the same names to their sons in the New World. I believe that my sources are close to having an accurate account to the Ewings that moved West which incorporated my lineage. Hopefully, as I continue to blog about this family, these sources will prove my research. 

Has Easter Changed?

                          Nancy Quillin Long    26 April 2011

Easter morning has changed over the years, but technology hasn’t done away with the traditional egg hunts.  I feel certain, though, that today’s children would not know what to do with an Easter bonnet or white gloves.  Easter, as I knew it, saw a deluge of new hats, white patent leather shoes, white gloves and sometimes a duster to match our dresses.  Since Easter can come in the dead of winter or in ninety-degree heat, outfits for the occasion included long-sleeved coats which went over the dress.  Of course, we wore the dresses all summer, but the duster never made it out of the closet again.  We wore lace trimmed socks and carried purses to match our patent leather shoes.  The Saturday before Easter was spent washing and rolling our hair.

Easter Sunday, of course, is a very holy day for the Christian world.  We honor Jesus Christ for dying on the Cross for our sins and being resurrected so that we can have everlasting life.  He Is Risen!  And mother would respond, “He Is Risen, indeed!”  I’m not sure how Mother managed Easter morning with the special outfits and hairdos and also remembering to have everything ready for after church, but I very rarely saw her frustrated.  She just did what she had to do, and she took care of me well.  

Church attendance was at a premium with everyone in their new attire.  After church, we would quickly change clothes, jump into the car, and head to Crowell, Texas, a 30-mile drive west of Vernon.  It was there that, as a child, the celebration began.

I had a large extended family on my mother’s side, which included Mother, and her sibling's families: sister Reitha Jo Jones, brother Martin Frank Jones, sister Doris Marie Jones Jackson, sister Dorothy Faye Jones Lynch and all their children, and I feel that my cousins were some of my best friends.  Pappy (Joe Carroll Jones) was a layman and a deacon in the First Baptist Church.  He was very capable of delivering a sermon.  Mimi (Ava Ella McNair Jones) was the one who worked hard to prepare for our Easter family gathering.  Throughout the week, she would prepare much of the food and bake all different kinds of cakes and pies.

And then the real fun began.  The men folk would hide the eggs – I never knew the Easter bunny.  For several years the hunt was staged at my daddy’s terraced farm and amid the newly planted wheat crop.  If not there, it would be at Pappy's farm or in Mimi and Pappy’s backyard.  I know kids today still hunt for Easter eggs, but they believe that “real” Easter eggs are plastic eggs from Wal-Mart and crack apart to reveal money and candy.  The eggs I searched for were individually wrapped colorful candy eggs, and THAT was the prize.  A side note – I remember as a Campfire Girl, that we would dye hard boiled eggs and decorate them for the State School.  Our adult leader would take them to the school so that the patients would have an egg hunt…. but I always wondered if they really ate the eggs.  It was fun as a group, though, to prepare the eggs.

So… some things haven’t changed, yet I worry about our society that has become so politically correct about not offending the non-Christian religions that we are losing sight of the greater impact of Easter on our lives.  Gone is the mention of this holiday in any ads or news articles, and Good Friday in the big city just seems to be a vacation from work and school.  Many people work on Sundays anyway, so Easter is no different.

However, He Is Risen Indeed and Easter will always be a celebration of our eternal life.

 


1958


Easter Sunday 1966

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