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Howard Hollis Callaway

Howard Hollis Callaway

Male 1927 - 2014  (86 years)

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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Howard Hollis CallawayHoward Hollis Callaway was born on 2 Apr 1927 in La Grange, Troup, Georgia, USA (son of Cason Jewell Callaway, Sr and Virginia Hollis Hand); died on 15 Mar 2014 in Columbus, Muscogee, Georgia, USA; was buried on 19 Mar 2014 in Callaway Family Mausoleum, Hamilton, Harris, Georgia, USA.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Also Known As: Bo
    • Residence: Crested Butte, Gunnison, Colorado, USA
    • Residence: Hamilton, Harris, Georgia, USA
    • Residence: Pine Mountain, Harris, Georgia, USA
    • Residence: 1930, La Grange, Troup, Georgia, USA
    • Residence: 15 Oct 1965, USA

    Notes:

    Name: Callaway, Howard
    Birth - Death: 1927-
    Source Citation:
    Political Profiles. The Nixon/Ford Years. Edited by Eleanora W. Schoenebaum. New York: Facts on File, 1979. (PolProf NF)

    CALLAWAY, Howard Hollis (Bo), a Representative from Georgia; born in LaGrange, Troup County, Ga., April 2, 1927; attended the public schools of LaGrange and Hamilton in Georgia; graduated from Episcopal High School, Alexandria, Va., 1944; attended Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta, Ga.,1944-1945; graduated from the United States Military Academy, West Point, N.Y., 1949; served in Korea as an Infantry platoon leader in 1949 and 1950 and as an instructor in tactics at Infantry School, Fort Benning, Ga., 1951-1952; president of Callaway Gardens, 1953-1970, and the Ida Cason Callaway Foundation, 1956-1970; director of Georgia Power Co., Atlanta, Ga., 1960-1964, and the Trust Co. of Georgia, Atlanta, Ga., 1958-1964; chairman, Freedom’s Foundation at Valley Forge, Pa., 1966-1973; elected as a Republican to the Eighty-ninth Congress (January 3, 1965-January 3, 1967); was not a candidate for reelection to the Ninetieth Congress in 1966; unsuccessful candidate for Governor of Georgia in 1966; member, executive committee, Republican National Committee; National Committeeman for Georgia 1968-1973; Secretary of the Army, 1973-1975; campaign manager, The President Ford Committee, July 1975-April 1976; unsuccessful candidate for the Republican nomination to the United States Senate in 1980; chairman, Colorado Republican Party, 1981-1987; chairman, GOPAC, 1987-1993; is a resident of Crested Butte, Colo

    Howard 'Bo' Callaway
    Ida Cason Callaway Foundation

    Howard H. "Bo" Callaway currently serves as Chairman Emeritus of the Board of Trustees for the Ida Cason Callaway Foundation. He also served as Chairman, President and/or CEO from 1953 until 1964, 1966 until 1970 and again from September 1993 until November 2003. He has been a member of the Board since 1958.

    From 1949 until 1952 Callaway served as a lieutenant in the United States Army. During his military career he was a platoon leader in Korea and an instructor in tactics at Fort Benning, Georgia. He was the recipient of the Combat Infantry Badge, three Campaign Ribbons and the Republic of Korea Presidential Unit Citation.

    In 1964, following 11 years as Callaway Gardens President and CEO, the 3rd Congressional District of Georgia elected Callaway to the United States Congress. After his term, he returned to Callaway Gardens from 1966 to 1970. Since 1970, he has served as the Chairman/President of Crested Butte Mountain Resort in Colorado. From 1970 to 1973, Callaway also served three years as President/Chairman and CEO of Interfinancial, Inc. in Atlanta.

    An appointment to Secretary of the Army in April 1973 led to his being awarded the Medal of Distinguished Public Service by the Department of Defense in 1975. In 1976, Callaway’s political talent and experience were called into action as he managed Gerald Ford’s presidential campaign. Callaway has been politically active throughout his career. In 1966, he was the Republican nominee for Governor of Georgia. In 1980, he was a candidate for the Republican nomination for the United States Senate from Colorado and from 1981 until 1987 he was Chairman of the Colorado Republican Party.

    Callaway has been an active member of several Boards of Directors including Trust Company of Georgia, Georgia Power Company, The Southern Company, SCI Systems, Inc., United Bank of Denver, World Business Council, Chief Executive’s Organization and the CML Group. He also served as the International President of the Young Presidents’ Organization. He was Vice President of the State of Georgia Chamber of Commerce from 1961 until 1964. In July 2001 Callaway was appointed to the Board of the Georgia Department of Industry, Trade and Tourism. He is currently serving as Chairman of the Tourism Committee of the Georgia Chamber of Commerce.

    Callaway has been a member of numerous organizations including the Board of Regents of the University System of Georgia, National 4-H Service Committee, Republican National Committee and Phi Kappa Phi.

    Callaway attended The Georgia Institute of Technology in 1944 and 1945, and graduated from the United States Military Academy at West Point in 1949.

    He and his wife, Beth, have five children and sixteen grandchildren.

    Name: Callaway, Howard H.
    Birth - Death: 1927-
    Source Citation:
    Congressional Directory. 93rd Congress, 2nd Session. Washington, DC: United States Government Printing Office, 1974. Use the 'Name Index' to locate biographies. (CngDr 93)
    The International Who's Who. 41st edition. London: Europa Publications, 1977. (IntWW 41)
    The International Who's Who. 42nd edition. London: Europa Publications, 1978. (IntWW 42)
    The International Who's Who. 43rd edition. London: Europa Publications, 1979. (IntWW 43)
    The International Who's Who. 44th edition. London: Europa Publications, 1980. (IntWW 44)
    The International Who's Who. 45th edition. London: Europa Publications, 1981. (IntWW 45)
    The International Who's Who. 46th edition. London: Europa Publications, 1982. (IntWW 46)
    The International Who's Who. 47th edition. London: Europa Publications, 1983. (IntWW 47)
    The International Who's Who. 53rd edition. London: Europa Publications, 1989. (IntWW 53)
    The International Who's Who. 55th edition. London: Europa Publications, 1991. Gale Research, Detroit. (IntWW 55)
    The International Who's Who. 57th edition. London: Europa Publications, 1993. Gale Research, Detroit. (IntWW 57)
    The International Who's Who. 61st edition. London: Europa Publications, 1997. (IntWW 61)
    The International Who's Who. 62nd edition. London: Europa Publications, 1998. (IntWW 62)
    The International Who's Who. 63rd edition. London: Europa Publications, 1999. (IntWW 63)
    The International Who's Who. 66th edition. London: Europa Publications, 2002. (IntWW 66)
    The International Who's Who. 64th edition. London: Europa Publications, 2000. (IntWW 64)
    The International Who's Who. 65th edition. London: Europa Publications, 2001. (IntWW 65)
    The International Year Book and Statesmen's Who's Who. 1978 edition. West Sussex, England: Kelly's Directories, 1978. Biographies are found in Part 3. (IntYB 1978)
    The International Year Book and Statesmen's Who's Who. 1979 edition. West Sussex, England: Kelly's Directories, 1979. Biographies are found in Part 3. (IntYB 1979)
    The International Year Book and Statesmen's Who's Who. 1980 edition. West Sussex, England: Kelly's Directories, 1980. Biographies are found in Part 3. (IntYB 1980)
    The International Year Book and Statesmen's Who's Who. 1981 edition. West Sussex, England: Kelly's Directories, 1981. Biographies are found in Part 3. (IntYB 1981)
    The International Yearbook and Statesmen's Who's Who. 1982 edition. West Sussex, England: Thomas Skinner Directories, 1982. Biographies are found in Part 3. (IntYB 1982)
    Standard & Poor's Register of Corporations, Directors and Executives. 1996 edition. Volume 2: Directors and Executives. New York: Standard & Poor's Corp., 1996. (St&PR 1996)
    Standard & Poor's Register of Corporations, Directors and Executives. 1997 edition. Volume 2: Directors and Executives. New York: Standard & Poor's Corp., 1997. (St&PR 1997)
    Standard & Poor's Register of Corporations, Directors and Executives. 1998 edition. Volume 2: Directors and Executives. New York: Standard & Poor's Corp., 1998. (St&PR 1998)
    Standard & Poor's Register of Corporations, Directors and Executives. 1999 edition. Volume 2: Directors and Executives. Charlottesville, VA: Standard & Poor's, 1999. (St&PR 1999)
    Standard & Poor's Register of Corporations, Directors and Executives. 2000 edition. Volume 2: Directors and Executives. Charlottesville, VA: Standard & Poor's, 2000. (St&PR 2000)
    Standard & Poor's Register of Corporations, Directors and Executives. 2001 edition. Volume 2: Directors and Executives. Charlottesville, VA: Standard & Poor's, 2001. (St&PR 2001)
    Standard & Poor's Register of Corporations, Directors and Executives. 2002 edition. Volume 2: Directors and Executives. Charlottesville, VA: Standard & Poor's, 2002. (St&PR 2002)
    Standard & Poor's Register of Corporations, Directors and Executives. 2003 edition. Volume 2: Directors and Executives. Charlottesville, VA: Standard & Poor's, 2003. (St&PR 2003)
    Standard & Poor's Register of Corporations, Directors and Executives. 2004 edition. Charlottesville, VA: Standard & Poor's, 2004. Volume 2: Directors and Executives.(St&PR 2004)
    Who's Who in Government. Second edition, 1975-1976. Chicago: Marquis Who's Who, 1975. (WhoGov 2)
    Who's Who in the South and Southwest. 13th edition, 1973-1974. Wilmette, IL: Marquis Who's Who, 1973. (WhoSSW 13)
    Who's Who in the South and Southwest. 14th edition, 1975-1976. Wilmette, IL: Marquis Who's Who, 1975. (WhoSSW 14)
    Who's Who in the South and Southwest. 15th edition, 1976-1977. Wilmette, IL: Marquis Who's Who, 1976. (WhoSSW 15)
    World Defence Who's Who. Edited by Paul Martell and Grace P. Hayes. London: Macdonald & Jane's, 1974. (WorDWW)


    Died:
    Howard H. "Bo" Callaway, age 86, died peacefully surrounded by his family on Saturday, March 15, 2014, at Spring Harbor Assisted Living in Columbus.

    The family will receive friends on Tuesday, March 18, from 5:30 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. at Christ the King Catholic Church in Pine Mountain, GA.; the Rosary will be said at 7:30 p.m. after the visitation.

    On Wednesday, March 19, a funeral mass will be at noon also at Christ the King Catholic Church. Father John A. Madden will officiate. A private interment will follow.

    Mr. Callaway, son of Cason Jewell and Virginia Hand Callaway was born in LaGrange, Ga., on April 2, 1927. A second generation Harris County, Ga., citizen, Mr. Callaway lived in many places during his lifetime but always loved his Harris County heritage. His early education was in the Harris County School System, where he met his beloved Laura Elizabeth "Beth" Walton in the sixth grade at Hamilton Grade School. They married on June 11, 1949. He attended Georgia Institute of Technology and graduated from the United States Military Academy at West Point. After a distinguished military career, which included time serving as a platoon leader in Korea,

    Mr. Callaway returned to Pine Mountain, Ga. to assist his parents with the creation of Callaway Gardens. This 6,500 acre woodland garden, which features gardens, resort amenities, a preserve and a community, is owned and operated by the 501c3 Ida Cason Callaway Foundation™ (ICCF) and is dedicated to environmental education and land stewardship. He served in leadership positions at the Gardens from 1953 through 2003, at which time he became chairman emeritus.

    Intertwined within his life's work at the Gardens, he set his sights on a political career which included a seat in the U. S. House of Representatives for Georgia's 3rd congressional district, which made him the first Republican elected from Georgia since the Reconstruction era. He later was defeated in the highly contested 1966 run for Georgia Governor in a three-way run-off situation. Had he won, he would have been the first Republican Governor in Georgia since 1872. He later served in positions such as director of Freedoms Foundation, a Georgia Republican national committeeman, Richard Nixon's southern coordinator during the 1968 presidential campaign, Secretary of Army under Presidents Nixon and Ford during which time he was instrumental in the post-Vietnam transition from the draft to the all-volunteer army, and served as campaign manager for Ford's 1976 election.

    The Callaways owned Crested Butte Mountain Resort in Colorado from 1970 until 2004. During their time in Colorado, Mr. Callaway was an unsuccessful candidate for the Republican nomination for the U. S. Senate. From 1981 to 1987, he served as the chairman for the Colorado Republican Party and was head of the political action committee GOPAC.

    In addition to his political, military, and professional accomplishments, he served in a multitude of positions related to citizenship, politics, education and various industries. He was particularly proud to be part of the Young Presidents' Organization and Rotary.

    In addition to his love for Callaway Gardens, Mr. Callaway had multiple interests. He was a rabid baseball fan to the point he created a program for talented yet economically-challenged baseball players, Opportunities Through Baseball, which was later acquired by Major League Baseball, and started a summer collegiate baseball woodbat team, the Woodbats.

    His passion for nature and the Crested Butte area led him to re-establish the threatened Clinton Cutthroat Trout. His boat, the O Be Joyful, was a favorite pastime and one that he relished sharing with his family. He shared all of these amazing accomplishments with his beloved wife by his side. Interestingly, both had earned their private pilots license.

    Mr. Callaway was preceded in death by his wife Laura Elizabeth "Beth" Walton Callaway, his brother Cason J. Callaway Jr. and his brother-in-law Ralph Walton.

    He is survived by his five children; Elizabeth "Betsy" Callaway Considine (Terry) of Denver, Colo.; Howard H. "Bo" Callaway Jr. (Allyn) of Bristol, Va.; Edward C. Callaway (Lynn) of Hamilton, Ga.; Virginia Callaway Martin (Roger) of Toronto, Ontario, Canada; and Ralph W. Callaway (Camilla) of Columbus, Ga.; 16 grandchildren; five great-grandchildren with three on the way; and sisters-in-law, Nancy H. Callaway and Martha P. Walton, both of Hamilton, Ga.

    In lieu of flowers, the family has requested memorial contributions be made to the Ida Cason Callaway Foundation™, c/o Callaway Gardens, P.O. Box 2000, Pine Mountain, Ga. 31822.

    In celebration of Mr. Callaway's life, a memorial organ concert will be 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. on Wednesday, March 19, at the Ida Cason Callaway Memorial Chapel at Callaway Gardens, Pine Mountain, Ga.. Admission will be complimentary.

    Arrangements are by Striffler-Hamby Mortuary, 4071 Macon Rd, Columbus, Ga. 31907

    http://obits.dignitymemorial.com/dignity-memorial/obituary.aspx?n=Howard+H.-Callaway&lc=4590&pid=170225125&mid=5894556&locale=en_US

    Howard married Laura Elizabeth Walton on 11 Jun 1949 in Hamilton, Colquitt, Georgia, USA. Laura was born on 18 Jan 1926 in Hamilton, Colquitt, Georgia, USA; died on 8 Dec 2009 in Pine Mountain, Harris, Georgia, USA; was buried in Callaway Family Mausoleum, Hamilton, Harris, Georgia, USA. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. Living
    2. Living
    3. Living
    4. Living
    5. Living

Generation: 2

  1. 2.  Cason Jewell Callaway, Sr was born on 6 Nov 1894 in La Grange, Troup, Georgia, USA (son of Fuller Earle Callaway, Sr and Ida Jane Cason); died on 12 Apr 1961 in Harris, Georgia, USA; was buried in Callaway Family Mausoleum, Hamilton, Harris, Georgia, USA.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Death Certificate No.: Certificate number: 07711.
    • Residence: Harris, Georgia, USA
    • Residence: 1920, La Grange, Troup, Georgia, USA
    • Residence: 1930, La Grange, Troup, Georgia, USA

    Notes:

    Cason Jewell Callaway (November 6, 1894 - April 12, 1961)

    Cason Jewell Callaway, co-founder of Callaway Gardens, was born in LaGrange, Georgia, the son of Fuller Earle and Ida Cason Callaway. Cason's father was a self-made success in the business world, and by the year of Cason's birth in 1894, Fuller Callaway had built a strong retail business in LaGrange and was just a few years short of running his first mill.

    By the way people treated him, Cason quickly learned that he was the son of an important man. However, his father told him not to get "puffed up." His social standing only meant he would have to work twice as hard as anyone else. Fuller did not like the idea that his success would keep Cason from knowing the adversity that builds character.

    For twelve years, Cason was the only child (his brother Fuller Jr. was born in 1907). Cason's mother, Ida Cason Callaway, treated her sons gently and provided a balance to their father's toughness.

    Cason Jewell Callaway

    Like his father, Cason Callaway (1894-1961) spent years as a textile manufacturer, a businessman, and a state agricultural leader. He achieved his greatest success in developing Callaway Gardens after retiring from Callaway Mills. A native of LaGrange, Cason attended Bingham Military School in Asheville, North Carolina, and the University of Virginia in Charlottesville before getting a degree from the Eastman School of Business in Poughkeepsie, New York. After finishing school, he returned to Troup County to work in the mills. He developed Valley Waste Mills into a commercial success by refining recycling operations.

    During World War I (1917-18), Cason joined the U.S. Navy and worked in the Navy Supply Corps' Bureau of Supplies and Accounts at Navy Headquarters in Washington, D.C. After Cason returned to LaGrange, his father stepped away from active mill management, and Cason began managing the mills. He married Virginia Hollis Hand of Pelham, and the couple had three children, Cason Jr., Howard Hollis, and Virginia.

    Convinced in the 1920s that the national economy was heading for rough times, Fuller advised his two sons to choose one business arena and sell off their other holdings. The brothers sold most of their businesses and created a new corporation, Callaway Mills, which oversaw mill management. One key to Cason's success in mill management proved to be salesmanship, a trait he shared with his father. Cason established relations with General Motors, entered the rug and tire-cord business, and hired managers and salesmen to market mill products. Thanks to careful stewardship and to profits made from selling the other businesses, Callaway Mills survived the Great Depression without closing any plants, while management kept at least one member of every mill family fully employed.

    In 1934 and 1935 Callaway Mills suffered two employee strikes. Eventually management won out and strikers left the area, but the economic stresses of the decade led Cason to retire. He became chairman of the board of Callaway Enterprises and served until 1937; his brother, Fuller Jr., became president. Cason accepted national positions, served on the Board of Regents of the University System of Georgia, and was a director for various national companies.

    During the 1920s and 1930s, Cason became close friends with Franklin D. Roosevelt, a part-time resident of west Georgia. Roosevelt began visiting Warm Springs in October 1924, while trying to overcome the effects of polio. He and Cason shared a love of the people, a desire to improve the land, and an interest in farming, even though they disagreed on politics. In 1932, the year Roosevelt was elected president of the United States, Cason led fund-raising efforts for Georgia Hall, the new administration building for the Warm Springs Foundation (later the Roosevelt Warm Springs Institute for Rehabilitation). The foundation was funded by Georgians as a tribute to their new president.

    Following his retirement from the mills, Cason set up an experimental farming operation of 40,000 acres at his Blue Springs Farms near Hamilton, just south of LaGrange. He worked with the University of Georgia to develop other showplace farms as part of the One Hundred Georgia Better Farms program, which encouraged better farm practices, between 1944 and 1947. The program encouraged using machinery and developing fine production—whether in beef, wool, or fruits and vegetables. The program officially ended in 1950.

    In 1947 Cason had a heart attack. His focus shifted from agriculture to the development of what later became Callaway Gardens, situated on former cotton fields that had been stripped of nutrients by intensive farming. The gardens opened in May 1952. After Cason's death, his son Howard, known as "Bo," oversaw operations of the gardens for many years.

    Cason married Virginia Hollis Hand on 3 Apr 1920 in Pelham, Mitchell, Georgia, USA. Virginia (daughter of Judson Larrabee Hand and Florence Mae Hollis) was born on 21 Feb 1900 in Pelham, Mitchell, Georgia, USA; died on 11 Feb 1995 in Hamilton, Harris, Georgia, USA. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  Virginia Hollis Hand was born on 21 Feb 1900 in Pelham, Mitchell, Georgia, USA (daughter of Judson Larrabee Hand and Florence Mae Hollis); died on 11 Feb 1995 in Hamilton, Harris, Georgia, USA.
    Children:
    1. Virginia Hand Callaway was born in 1921 in Georgia, USA.
    2. Cason Jewell Callaway, Jr was born on 17 Jul 1924 in LaGrange, Troup, Georgia, USA; died on 20 Mar 2011 in Hamilton, Harris, Georgia, USA; was buried in Callaway Family Mausoleum, Hamilton, Harris, Georgia, USA.
    3. 1. Howard Hollis Callaway was born on 2 Apr 1927 in La Grange, Troup, Georgia, USA; died on 15 Mar 2014 in Columbus, Muscogee, Georgia, USA; was buried on 19 Mar 2014 in Callaway Family Mausoleum, Hamilton, Harris, Georgia, USA.


Generation: 3

  1. 4.  Fuller Earle Callaway, Sr was born on 15 Jul 1870 in La Grange, Troup, Georgia, USA; died on 12 Feb 1928 in La Grange, Troup, Georgia, USA.

    Notes:

    Fuller Earle Callaway

    Members of the Callaway family have lived in west Georgia since the mid-nineteenth century. Fuller E. Callaway (1870-1928) was born in Troup County to the Reverend Abner Reeves Callaway and his first wife, Sarah Jane Howard. At age ten, Fuller received a nickel for bringing water to men at a barn raising. The next day, he walked eight miles into LaGrange.
    Fuller E. Callaway
    After realizing that the nickel would not buy the boots he wanted, he chose three spools of thread and went back to the country. He soon found three housewives who paid five cents a spool, and he thereby made a dime on his first commercial transaction.

    Young Fuller continued to peddle and to farm his own tract of land. His formal education was limited to about a year in public schools in Troup County. At age eighteen, he opened a five-and-ten-cents store with $500 he had saved. He later opened four other stores and entered the wholesale business. In 1895 Callaway invested in LaGrange's first modern textile mill. Dixie Mills opened with local fanfare and New England management; nonetheless, the mill began to struggle financially within a couple of years. Other investors convinced Fuller to take over management. They threw out the secondhand equipment and brought the mill onto solid economic footing. After Fuller got his money back, he decided to leave the textile industry.

    Soon, however, the lure of the industry called again, and townspeople, including Fuller, invested in a new project. Unity Mills (later Kex Plant) shipped its first cotton in 1901. Fuller served as secretary-treasurer of the company, a position he would hold in other mill projects as well. Between 1900 and 1920, Fuller and others opened several mills located within 100 miles of LaGrange.

    Fuller stressed the importance of the social and educational development of employees as well as their economic well-being. Mill houses, churches, schools, parks, greenhouses, and other amenities were built along with the mills, but Fuller did not open company stores that would have competed with existing businesses. He was widely quoted as saying, "I make American citizens and run cotton mills to pay the expenses." Such paternalistic interest in his workers also served to keep their morale up and thus to keep unionizing efforts from either within or outside the mill community at bay.

    Fuller also established a variety of businesses, including banks, warehouses, and an insurance company. He held positions in national textile associations, and he was president of the American Cotton Manufacturers Association. He also served as a railroad commissioner of Georgia from 1907 to 1909 and was appointed by U.S. president Woodrow Wilson to the Conference on Industrial Relations in 1919.

    Fuller said that one of his greatest accomplishments was marrying Ida Jane Cason of Jewell in 1891. They met while she attended Southern Female College in LaGrange and after their marriage lived frugally on what Fuller termed "cash street rather than mortgage street." Between 1914 and 1916, he engaged architect Neel Reid to design their Hills and Dales home on Vernon Road in LaGrange. The Italian style of the home complemented the gardens that Sarah Coleman Ferrell had planted on the site beginning in 1841. Fuller and his wife had two sons, Cason Jewell Callaway and Fuller Earle Callaway Jr.

    Fuller married Ida Jane Cason on 28 Apr 1891 in La Grange, Troup, Georgia, USA. Ida (daughter of Alexander T Cason and Living) was born on 16 Jul 1872 in Jewell, Warren, Georgia, USA; died on 10 Apr 1936 in La Grange, Troup, Georgia, USA. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 5.  Ida Jane Cason was born on 16 Jul 1872 in Jewell, Warren, Georgia, USA (daughter of Alexander T Cason and Living); died on 10 Apr 1936 in La Grange, Troup, Georgia, USA.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Name: Ida C Callaway
    • Residence: 1880, District 114, Hancock, Georgia, USA
    • Residence: 1900, La Grange, Troup, Georgia, USA

    Notes:

    Georgia Deaths, 1919-98 Record
    about Mrs Fuller E Callaway, Sr
    Name: Mrs Fuller E Callaway, Sr
    Death Date: 10 Apr 1936
    County of Death: Troup
    Certificate: 12349

    Children:
    1. 2. Cason Jewell Callaway, Sr was born on 6 Nov 1894 in La Grange, Troup, Georgia, USA; died on 12 Apr 1961 in Harris, Georgia, USA; was buried in Callaway Family Mausoleum, Hamilton, Harris, Georgia, USA.
    2. Fuller Earle Callaway, Jr was born on 7 Jan 1907 in La Grange, Troup, Georgia, USA; died on 16 Jan 1992 in La Grange, Troup, Georgia, USA.

  3. 6.  Judson Larrabee Hand was born on 10 Mar 1851 in Americus, Sumter, Georgia, USA; died on 14 Oct 1916 in Pelham, Mitchell, Georgia, USA.

    Judson + Florence Mae Hollis. Florence was born on 6 May 1877 in Sumter, Georgia, USA; died on 10 Mar 1969 in La Grange, Troup, Georgia, USA. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  4. 7.  Florence Mae Hollis was born on 6 May 1877 in Sumter, Georgia, USA; died on 10 Mar 1969 in La Grange, Troup, Georgia, USA.
    Children:
    1. 3. Virginia Hollis Hand was born on 21 Feb 1900 in Pelham, Mitchell, Georgia, USA; died on 11 Feb 1995 in Hamilton, Harris, Georgia, USA.
    2. Alice Hinman Hand was born on 4 Oct 1912 in Pelham, Mitchell, Georgia, USA; died on 15 Jan 1998 in La Grange, Troup, Georgia, USA.


Generation: 4

  1. 10.  Alexander T Cason was born in 1844 in Warren, Georgia, USA (son of Adam Cason and Jane Blackstone Montgomery).

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Residence: 1850, Division 90, Warren, Georgia, USA
    • Residence: 1850, Division 90, Warren, Georgia, USA
    • Residence: 1860, Mc Crarys, Warren, Georgia
    • Residence: 1880, District 114, Hancock, Georgia, USA

    Alexander + Living. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 11.  Living
    Children:
    1. 5. Ida Jane Cason was born on 16 Jul 1872 in Jewell, Warren, Georgia, USA; died on 10 Apr 1936 in La Grange, Troup, Georgia, USA.