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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Living

    Family/Spouse: Living. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


Generation: 2

  1. 2.  Harold Russell Powell was born on 2 Nov 1922 in Lulu, Columbia, Florida, USA (son of Amon Powell and Eva Irene Dicks); died on 7 Jan 1999; was buried on 10 Jan 1999 in New Hope Baptist Church Cemetery, Canton, Cherokee, Georgia, USA.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Social Security Number: 263240535
    • Residence: 1930, Dundee, Polk, Florida, USA
    • Residence: 1935, Precinct 33, Polk, Florida, USA

    Notes:

    Died:
    Mr Harold R Powell, 76
    Deaths & funerals

    Cherokee Tribune (Canton, GA) - Saturday, January 9, 1999

    Canton resident Harold Powell, 76, of Canton, died Thursday, Jan. 7, 1999.

    Services will be 2 p.m. Sunday at New Hope Baptist Church, with the Rev. Carl George officiating.

    Burial will be in the church cemetery.

    A retired fireman with Lockheed, Mr. Powell was a Mason and a deacon and member of New Hope Baptist Church. He also was an organizer of the Hickory Flat Volunteer Fire Department.

    Survivors include his wife, Janet Powell; three daughters, Eva Lausier of Alpharetta, Margaret Turner of Duluth and Jannette Williams of Canton; one sister, Verdelia Elbon of High Springs, Fla.; and six grandchildren. Sosebee Funeral Home in Canton is charge of arrangements.

    Cherokee Tribune (Canton, GA) - Saturday, January 9, 1999

    CITE THIS RECORD
    Cherokee Tribune () , obit for Harold R. Powell, GenealogyBank.com (https://www.genealogybank.com/doc/obituaries/obit/11D854CB3AFE8A00-11D854CB3AFE8A00)

    Age: 76

    Harold + Janet Paterson. Janet was born on 4 Sep 1928 in New Stevenston, Lanarkshire, Scotland; died on 28 Nov 2018 in Canton, Cherokee, Georgia, USA; was buried on 1 Dec 2018 in New Hope Baptist Church Cemetery, Canton, Cherokee, Georgia, USA. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  Janet PatersonJanet Paterson was born on 4 Sep 1928 in New Stevenston, Lanarkshire, Scotland; died on 28 Nov 2018 in Canton, Cherokee, Georgia, USA; was buried on 1 Dec 2018 in New Hope Baptist Church Cemetery, Canton, Cherokee, Georgia, USA.

    Notes:

    Died:
    Mrs. Janet P. Powell, age 90, of Canton, passed away Wednesday, November 28, 2018 at Provident Village at Canton.

    Funeral services are scheduled for 2:00 p.m. Saturday, December 1, 2018 at New Hope Baptist Church with Rev. Larry Kelley and Dr. George Anderson officiating. Interment will follow in the church cemetery. The family will receive friends at Sosebee Funeral Home on Friday from 4:00 p.m. until 8:00 p.m. and Saturday from 10:00 a.m. until 12:00 p.m. Mrs. Powell will lie-in-state at the church from 1:45 p.m. until 2:00 p.m.

    Mrs. Powell was a member of Canton First Baptist Church. She enjoyed sewing, reading and singing.

    She was preceded in death by her husband, Harold Powell. Survivors include her three children, Eva Lausier (Phil), Margaret Pociask (Bob) and Jannette Williams (David); one brother, Bobby Paterson (Johnnie); six grandchildren, Vanessa Blevins, Michelle Gunter, Evan Lausier, Rachel Tribble, Dixie Williams and Matthew Williams; and eight great grandchildren.

    In lieu of flowers memorial donations may be made to St. Jude Children's Hospital, 501 St. Jude Place, Memphis, TN 38105 or online at www.stjude.org.

    Sosebee Funeral Home, Canton, GA is honored to serve the family. sosebeefuneralhome.com 770-479-2131

    FACTS
    Born: September 4, 1928
    Place of Birth: New Stephenson, Scotland
    Death: November 28, 2018
    Place of Death: Canton, GA
    Occupation: Supervisor at ERB Plastics
    Hobbies: Sewing, Reading and Singing
    Organizations: Canton First Baptist Church

    SERVICES
    Visitation
    Friday November 30, 2018 , 4:00 PM - 8:00 PM at Sosebee Funeral Home
    Click for Map and Directions

    Visitation
    Saturday December 1, 2018 , 10:00 AM - 12:00 PM at Sosebee Funeral Home
    Click for Map and Directions

    Lie-in-State
    Saturday December 1, 2018 , 1:45 PM - 2:00 PM at New Hope Baptist Church
    Click for Map and Directions

    Funeral
    Saturday December 1, 2018 , 2:00 PM at New Hope Baptist Church
    Click for Map and Directions

    Interment
    Saturday December 1, 2018 at New Hope Baptist Church Cemetery
    Click for Map and Directions

    DONATIONS
    Memorial donations may be made to:
    St. Jude Children's Hospital

    GUESTBOOK
    Share your thoughts and memories in the guestbook.

    Sign the guestbook
    Read the guestbook

    http://www.sosebeefuneralhome.com/memsol.cgi?user_id=2150936

    Children:
    1. Living
    2. Living
    3. 1. Living


Generation: 3

  1. 4.  Amon Powell was born on 9 Feb 1902 in Florida, USA; died in Jun 1967 in Union, Florida, USA.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • SSN issued: Florida, USA
    • Social Security Number: 264-01-7647
    • Residence: 1930, Dundee, Polk, Florida, USA
    • Residence: 1935, Precinct 33, Polk, Florida, USA
    • Death: Jun 1967, High Springs, Alachua, Florida, USA

    Amon married Eva Irene Dicks on 10 Jun 1921 in Columbia, Florida, USA. Eva (daughter of Thomas Dicks and Lula Mary Brown) was born on 11 Feb 1904 in Mason, Columbia, Florida, USA; died on 29 Jun 1941 in Pinellas, Florida, USA; was buried in Royal Palm South Cemetery, St Petersburg, Pinellas, Florida, USA. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 5.  Eva Irene Dicks was born on 11 Feb 1904 in Mason, Columbia, Florida, USA (daughter of Thomas Dicks and Lula Mary Brown); died on 29 Jun 1941 in Pinellas, Florida, USA; was buried in Royal Palm South Cemetery, St Petersburg, Pinellas, Florida, USA.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Name: Eva Powell
    • Residence: 1910, Mason, Columbia, Florida, USA
    • Residence: 1920, Lake Butler, Bradford, Florida, USA
    • Residence: 1930, Dundee, Polk, Florida, USA
    • Residence: 1935, Precinct 33, Polk, Florida, USA

    Children:
    1. 2. Harold Russell Powell was born on 2 Nov 1922 in Lulu, Columbia, Florida, USA; died on 7 Jan 1999; was buried on 10 Jan 1999 in New Hope Baptist Church Cemetery, Canton, Cherokee, Georgia, USA.
    2. Living


Generation: 4

  1. 10.  Thomas DicksThomas Dicks was born on 12 Sep 1868 in Lake City, Columbia, Florida, USA (son of Joseph Dicks and Sarah Taylor); died on 20 Feb 1941 in MacClenny, Baker, Florida, USA; was buried in Douglas Cemetery, Union, Florida, USA.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Residence: 1870, Columbia, Florida, USA; Not Stated
    • Residence: 1880, Precinct 10, Columbia, Florida, USA
    • Residence: 1900, Precinct 8, Columbia, Florida, USA
    • Residence: 1910, Mason, Columbia, Florida, USA
    • Residence: 1920, Lake Butler, Bradford, Florida, USA
    • Residence: 1930, MacClenny, Baker, Florida, USA
    • Residence: 1935, Precinct 3, Baker, Florida, USA

    Notes:

    Cincinnati Dicks Mobley
    AUGUST 1994
    Cincinnati Dicks Mobley is the authentic model of an extinct class of southern women. She represents a bygone era of uniqueness that defies description and challenges the writer to the limit of characterization. Wealth and fortune, prosperity and affluence were her fate, yet they are concealed in a remote area of her thoughts. Her glory lies in the homage she feels for her husband, children, friends, faith and family heritage, not necessarily in that order, because somehow this distinctive lady has woven them all into one majestic tapestry that embraces her heart and symbolizes her nature.
    Charlton Mobley brought his bride to a newly constructed home after their marriage on April 3, 1935. Today, very little change is detectable at 222 West Macclenny Avenue, although 60 momentous years have passed into oblivion. It's what you can't see that has lasted, like the legendary memories and tangible character of the special people who lived in her past, and experienced together the tears, the laughter, the triumphs and tragedies. This is their story because they are Cincinnati's life.

    Cincinnati Dicks was born February 3, 1914 to Thomas and Georgia Satilla Johns Dicks of Columbia County and she is often asked to explain the unusual family names.

    "My mother, who was the daughter of John Marshall and Mary Mills Johns of Columbia County, was named Georgia for the state, and Satilla for the river," she said. "When she and daddy started naming their children, they had a little trouble deciding on a name. My father sat down on the trunk in their room with a magazine after mama gave birth and said, 'I'll find the baby a name in this magazine'. It just so happened it was published in a place called Augusta, Maine, so daddy asked mama how she liked Maine and she said that it was all right, so that's how my brother Maine got his name," she said.
    "They named me before I was born because they agreed the first girl would be Cincinnati," she continued. "Then one day after I was born, daddy carried mama into Lake City from the farm in a horsedrawn buggy, and they stopped somewhere along the way to show a neighbor named Mrs. Hancock their new baby. Mrs. Hancock said,'Mrs. Dicks, if you ever have another little girl, name her Alabama'. So, Mama named my sister Alabama."

    Thomas and Georgia were parents of seven children. The five who lived to adulthood were Maine, who died at age 12 of Hodgkin's Disease; Cincinnati; Spain; Thomas, who died at age two of burns after he fell in hot water., Alabama; Denver and Boston.

    Looking back, she tells the story of how her grandfather, Joseph Dicks, left his native land in Liverpool, England: "in those days, boys were taught a trade and my grandfather didn't like the one he was taught, which was making brushes," she began. "It's really a sad story because he was young, in his teens. The last time he visited his home for a weekend, his mother walked with him as far as she could. He said later that he kept turning around, looking back at her because he felt it might be the last time he would ever see her and sure enough it was."

    The fourteen-year-old lad apparently hid out as a stowaway on a boat heading for Canada. Upon arrival in Ottawa, Cincinnati said he obtained employment working in a quarry. Joseph's wandering spirit eventually took him to New York where he enlisted in the U.S. Army.

    Although he was too young to serve, the persistent youth was accepted when he persuaded them he was older than he was. He was sent to fight throughout South Georgia and North Florida in the ferocious Second Seminole Indian War. Joseph fought in Columbia, Baker, Alachua and Pinellas counties before his term was up. Two days after he was honorably discharged, his Army unit was almost completely destroyed in the dreadful Indian Massacre at Bushnell. For his tour of duty he received a land grant.

    Joseph married Sarah Taylor on January 18, 1846 and settled in the Hopeful Community, south of Lake City. The couple had seven sons and one daughter.

    " My father, Thomas, was their son," said Cincinnati. "He married his childhood sweetheart, Ellen (Ella) Douglas. They had two children, Bessie and Reid. Ellen died about three months after Reid was born.

    While his in-laws cared for his young son, Thomas continued to work and care for his other child. Then, before he married my mother, he married Singer Brown's sister, Lulu. The town of Lulu is named after her.

    Their children were Wealthy, Eva, Josephine, Earnest [who died as an infant] and Freeman. Lulu died in childbirth two years after Freeman was born. After that, my father married my mother, Georgia," she said.

    For a while the couple lived in Columbia County, then later moved to nearby Union County, where Thomas farmed and raised cattle and sheep on 360 acres of land. His health began to decline, so they sold the farm and moved to Macclenny with their family.

    When dark-complected, dark-eyed Thomas Dicks and his redhaired, blue-eyed wife, Georgia Satilla, moved their family to Baker County on December 29, 1929, a rickety, narrow wooden bridge separated Macclenny from Glen St. Mary. The couple purchased a frame house and five acres of land on west Highway 90 from Mr. Rufus Louder and that's where Cincinnati lived until she married Charlton. He worked at a sawmill on the opposite side of the highway, and only a little distance from her home.

    Source: Once Upon A Lifetime Vol No. 3 In Baker County, Florida

    Life of Thomas Dicks
    spengale8 added this on 5 Oct 2009
    lanedicksdekle originally submitted this to Dekle Family Tree on 22 Feb 2009

    Thomas Dicks was born on Sept 12, 1868. He was the youngest child of Joseph (1819-1899) and Sarah Taylor Dicks (1822-1896). When he was sixteen years old, in January, 1884, his father deeded him one hundred sixty and forty-three hundredths acres of land in southeast Columbia county, off the Price Creek Road. Thomas always called this land the "Brow" for reasons unknown. It is today part of Rodney Dicks' farm. Joseph and Sarah are considered early pioneers of Columbia county and Sarah was one of the initial members of Hopeful Baptist Church.

    Thomas Dicks married Ella Arkansas Douglass (1872-1891) in 1886. He was eighteen years old and she was fourteen. They lived at the Brow and had Bessie, Josephine,and Reid. Reid was about six weeks old when they rode the wagon to visit Ella's parents. A light rain came and Ella became sick and died within a few days. Ella's mother took Reid and Thomas kept Bessie who was two years old. He fashioned a seat on his plow for Bessie when he went to the field. (Josephine had died young).

    Thomas married his second wife, Lula Brown(1868-1908), in 1901 or 02. They were still living at the Brow for the births of Weatthy, Eva, Earnest Thomas (died young), and Freeman. Lula died while trying to give birth to a fifth child in 1908. Lula was thirty three when they married and forty at the time of her death. This left Thomas a widow again at the age of forty years with five children still living at home.

    Thomas married his third wife, Georgia Satilla Johns9(1884-1976), my paternal grandmother on April 30, 1911. Georgia was twenty six years old. They married on the front porch of her mother's (Mary Ann Mills Johns 1855-1936) home on Possum Trot Road in Olustee, Florida. They started out their family at the Brow with the birth of Maine and Cincinati. Each child was named for a city or place out of a geography book. In 1915, they sold their land, and moved to Union county where Thomas had bought 640 acres of land called the Dan Knight Place. At that time, the dirt road from Lake Butler to Lake City ran right in front of the house. Spain, Thomas Jr., Alabama, Denver (my father), and Boston were born here. They raised cows, sheep, and goats which all had free range on the area.

    Thomas (Tom) loved to joke and kid. He was once in Lake City with his young wife Georgia in a dry goods store. One of the local men asked Tom who the young woman (Georgia) was. Tom told him she was his daughter. Then the man went over to Georgia and asked if he could come a courting. Georgia replied, "I don't know, you'll have to ask my father". Thomas quickly told the man that he was the biggest liar in the county, that Georgia was his wife!

    In 1917 in the pandemic flu epidemic, Thomas got very sick, lost forty pounds, and nearly died. He never again was a healthy man for running the farm. In the late twenties, a terrible tick infected all cows. The government required all farmers to round up their stock and take them to Olustee for dipping. This was the final straw for Thomas. With his oldest boy Freeman just leaving home, he had no help to get the job done. In 1929, he sold the property for $2500 after selling off the stock earlier.

    On Dec 27, 1929, he moved the family to Macclenny, Florida. Cincinati was fifteen, Spain twelve, Alabama eight, Denver three, and Boston one and a half. This is where his family lived til his death of stroke on Feb 20, 1941. Georgia lived to be ninty one years old and died on May 10, 1976 in the home of her daughter, Alabama Lyons.

    Thomas married Lula Mary Brown on 2 Feb 1893 in Baker, Florida, USA. Lula was born on 1 Jun 1869 in Florida, USA; died on 18 May 1910 in Columbia, Florida, USA; was buried in Hopeful Baptist Church Cemetery, Columbia, Florida, USA. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 11.  Lula Mary Brown was born on 1 Jun 1869 in Florida, USA; died on 18 May 1910 in Columbia, Florida, USA; was buried in Hopeful Baptist Church Cemetery, Columbia, Florida, USA.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Name: Lulu Dicks
    • Residence: 1900, Precinct 8, Columbia, Florida, USA
    • Residence: 1910, Mason, Columbia, Florida, USA

    Children:
    1. Jeanie Wealthy Dicks was born on 5 Dec 1897 in Lake City, Columbia, Florida, USA; died on 9 Mar 1977 in Winter Haven, Polk, Florida, USA.
    2. 5. Eva Irene Dicks was born on 11 Feb 1904 in Mason, Columbia, Florida, USA; died on 29 Jun 1941 in Pinellas, Florida, USA; was buried in Royal Palm South Cemetery, St Petersburg, Pinellas, Florida, USA.
    3. Freeman Brown Dicks was born on 8 Oct 1906 in Mason, Columbia, Florida, USA; died on 27 Sep 1988 in St Petersburg, Pinellas, Florida, USA.
    4. Earnest Thomas Dicks was born on 10 Apr 1895 in Columbia, Florida, USA; died on 18 Aug 1900 in Columbia, Florida, USA; was buried in Hopeful Baptist Church Cemetery, Columbia, Florida, USA.
    5. Living