Our Family Genealogy Pages

Home Page  |  What's New  |  Photos  |  Histories  |  Headstones  |  Reports  |  Surnames
Search
First Name:


Last Name:



Reverend Americus Jackson

Male 1872 - 1936  (64 years)


Generations:      Standard    |    Compact    |    Vertical    |    Text    |    Register    |    Tables    |    PDF

Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Reverend Americus Jackson was born on 7 Jan 1872 in Pike, Alabama, USA; died on 20 Jun 1936 in Pasco, Florida, USA; was buried in Linden Cemetery, Linden, Sumter, Florida, USA.

    Americus married Letha M Hamrick on 25 Oct 1891 in Dale, Alabama, USA. Letha was born in 1863 in Henry, Alabama, USA; died in 1955 in Pasco, Florida, USA; was buried in Linden Cemetery, Linden, Sumter, Florida, USA. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 2. Capeaus Jackson  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 1 Oct 1900 in Covington, Alabama, USA; died on 19 Sep 1979 in Bradenton, Manatee, Florida, USA; was buried in Skyway Memorial Gardens, Palmetto, Manatee, Florida, USA.


Generation: 2

  1. 2.  Capeaus Jackson Descendancy chart to this point (1.Americus1) was born on 1 Oct 1900 in Covington, Alabama, USA; died on 19 Sep 1979 in Bradenton, Manatee, Florida, USA; was buried in Skyway Memorial Gardens, Palmetto, Manatee, Florida, USA.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Also Known As: CP
    • Race: White
    • Social Security Number: 267-01-7115

    Notes:

    Died:
    Age at Death: 78

    Capeaus married Eloise V Milton on 19 Sep 1928 in Dade City, Pasco, Florida, USA. Eloise (daughter of Doctor Martin Milton and Mattie Hagen) was born on 17 Apr 1908 in Lake City, Columbia, Florida, USA; died on 7 Oct 1986 in Tampa, Hillsborough, Florida, USA; was buried in Skyway Memorial Gardens, Palmetto, Manatee, Florida, USA. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 3. Comiledah Jackson  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 22 Aug 1937 in Bradenton, Manatee, Florida, USA; died on 17 Jun 1995 in Tampa, Hillsborough, Florida, USA; was buried in Skyway Memorial Gardens, Palmetto, Manatee, Florida, USA.
    2. 4. Letha Dale Dickenson  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 22 Apr 1941 in Bradenton, Manatee, Florida, USA; died on 8 Jul 2006 in Tucson, Pima, Arizona, USA.


Generation: 3

  1. 3.  Comiledah Jackson Descendancy chart to this point (2.Capeaus2, 1.Americus1) was born on 22 Aug 1937 in Bradenton, Manatee, Florida, USA; died on 17 Jun 1995 in Tampa, Hillsborough, Florida, USA; was buried in Skyway Memorial Gardens, Palmetto, Manatee, Florida, USA.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Also Known As: Connie
    • Race: White
    • Name: Connie Jackson Dunaway
    • Social Security Number: 262-54-2184

    Comiledah married Living [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Family/Spouse: Marvin Landie Jones. Marvin was born on 11 Mar 1930 in Indiana, USA; died on 25 Dec 1997 in Pinellas, Florida, USA. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 5. Gregory Lee Jones  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 23 Jun 1960 in Bradenton, Manatee, Florida, USA; died on 27 Oct 2004 in Tampa, Hillsborough, Florida, USA.

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

    Children:
    1. 6. Living  Descendancy chart to this point

  2. 4.  Letha Dale Dickenson Descendancy chart to this point (2.Capeaus2, 1.Americus1) was born on 22 Apr 1941 in Bradenton, Manatee, Florida, USA; died on 8 Jul 2006 in Tucson, Pima, Arizona, USA.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Also Known As: Letha
    • Name: Letha D Jones
    • Name: Lethadail Jackson

    Notes:

    Died:
    Letha Dale Jones "Gidget": Newspaper Obituary and Death Notice

    Arizona Daily Star, The (Tucson, AZ) - Friday, July 14, 2006

    Deceased Name: Letha Dale Jones "Gidget"

    Born April 21, 1941 passed away July 7, 2006. Loving mother and devoted grandmother,

    Letha is survived by Tony Spencer; her son, Scott Stahl; grandchildren, Jaremiah and Rachelle and many other friends and family.

    Gidget was one of a kind and will be missed by all.

    Services will be held at SOUTH LAWN MORTUARY, 5401 S. Park Ave., Saturday, July 15, 2006 at 400 p.m. with a visitation from 200 p.m. - 400 p.m.

    Page: B7
    Copyright (c) 2006 The Arizona Daily Star

    Letha married Arthur Lee Dickenson on 18 Sep 1957 in Manatee, Florida, USA, and was divorced in Mar 1963 in Manatee, Florida, USA. Arthur was born on 16 Feb 1936; died on 3 Apr 2011 in Sarasota, Sarasota, Florida, USA. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Letha married Living [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Letha married William Henry Stahl in Jun 1964 in Manatee, Florida, USA. William was born on 7 Sep 1935 in Tiffin, Seneca, Ohio, USA; died on 15 Jun 2013 in Show Low, Navajo, Arizona, USA. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 7. Scott Ray Stahl  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 25 Jul 1963; died on 30 Mar 2008 in Arizona, USA.

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



Generation: 4

  1. 5.  Gregory Lee Jones Descendancy chart to this point (3.Comiledah3, 2.Capeaus2, 1.Americus1) was born on 23 Jun 1960 in Bradenton, Manatee, Florida, USA; died on 27 Oct 2004 in Tampa, Hillsborough, Florida, USA.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Race: White

    Notes:

    Died:
    Age at Death: 44

    Gregory married Living [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 8. Living  Descendancy chart to this point

  2. 6.  Living Descendancy chart to this point (3.Comiledah3, 2.Capeaus2, 1.Americus1)

    Living married Living [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 9. Living  Descendancy chart to this point
    2. 10. Living  Descendancy chart to this point

  3. 7.  Scott Ray StahlScott Ray Stahl Descendancy chart to this point (4.Letha3, 2.Capeaus2, 1.Americus1) was born on 25 Jul 1963; died on 30 Mar 2008 in Arizona, USA.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Residence: 1994, Tucson, Pima, Arizona, USA; Age: 31

    Notes:

    Should A Prison Inmate Get A Kidney Transplant?

    By Morgan Loew, Phoenix

    Scott Ray Stahl, inmate number 128-150, looks like any other inmate, but Stahl is dying. He's trying to save his own life by asking you, the taxpayer, to pay for a kidney transplant.

    Letha Jones says, "The man's dying and there's nothing I can do."

    Letha Jones is Stahl's mother. She's trying to help her son, but she doesn't get much sympathy. You see, Stahl is serving a life sentence for first-degree murder. Ten years ago, Stahl was implicated in a fatal shooting in Sierra Vista.

    Dawn Struse says, "He was disguised. He had black paint on his face."

    None of the witnesses could place Stahl at the crime scene, but he was convicted under Arizona's felony murder law. He still claims he's innocent, but one of the shooting survivors believes he's holding back information about who else was involved and should not be given special treatment until he talks.

    Struse says, "Just say that he wasn't the shooter. He knows who it was. He's admitted he knows who it was." Struse says, "He's outright refused to help."

    That may seal Stahl's fate in the minds of many.

    State Representative Russell Pearce says, "This guy's a convicted murderer. I'm not willing to spend my tax dollars to keep him alive." Pearce says the problem he has with inmates receiving organ transplants is there are thousands of sick people outside prison walls waiting for the same organs.

    Pearce says, "If you had all the extra kidneys in the world.. and there was no waiting list.. that would be a different debate then. That's not the case."

    Now.. if you think you've made up your mind- hold on. There's something else you should know. It may be the state's fault Stahl's kidneys failed to begin with. While he was in prison five years ago, Stahl became ill. His gall bladder was removed and medical records his mother provided show he was prescribed large doses of ibuprofen, a pain medication scientifically linked to renal failure.

    Shortly afterward, Stahl's kidneys failed.

    "(Reporter) Do you think the ibuprofen they were prescribing to him had something to do with his kidneys failing?"

    "(Jones) Yes I do."

    Jones says, "It'll shut your kidneys down. It can cause liver failure. It's all on the back of the directions on the bottle that you get across the counter."

    Dawn Wyland says, "Just because a person is convicted doesn't mean they have been convicted to a death sentence." Dawn Wyland from the ACLU of Arizona says the Constitution requires the state to provide inmates with proper medical care. She says this case goes one step further.

    Wyland says, "If a man is in prison and he has been given proper medical care or medical care by the state and that's the reason he needs a transplant, I don't see how you could think of it any other way than the state should pay for it."

    Stahl is currently on an organ donor waiting list. There are no Department of Corrections policies that prohibit inmates from receiving transplants, but we could find no cases in at least the last 15 years, where an Arizona inmate has received a transplant.

    Jones says, "The sad part of it is, it's not just my son. But there's more than him in there that are sick, that need transplants - and not everybody in prison is guilty."

    According to the Department of Corrections, kidney dialysis for an inmate costs about $100,000 every year. The transplant plus ongoing medications would be $250,000. A hospital spokesperson said the transplant pays for itself in 2 to 3 years and financially is more cost effective.

    http://www.tucsonnewsnow.com/Global/story.asp?S=4186951

    A Fair Trial?

    By Kris Pickel , News 13
    The issue isn't guilt or innocence -- it's did he get a fair trial? That's what some are still asking 6 years after a man was sentenced to life in prison.

    He's now asking for a pardon because of a medical condition he claims was caused by the prison.

    "He was disguised and he had black paint on his face and even though I was looking at him I was concerned with the gun."

    Dawn Struse can say without doubt, she is a survivor. Eight years ago someone tried to kill her. In 1995 a gunman walked into the 3 Generations Hair Salon in Sierra Vista and fired 21 shots.

    Three women were hit -- one died. Struse was shot twice.

    "As to the actual shooter, I couldn't tell you because I really couldn't identify him," Struse says.

    Scott Stahl was arrested and convicted of murder and conspiracy to commit aggravated assault.

    "Getting a fair trial means having good counsel," says Stanton Bloom, one of the most prominent private defense attorneys in Southern Arizona.

    He is not the lawyer who represented Stahl in his murder trial. However, Bloom was paid to review the trial transcripts and evidence, a nd believes Stahl did not get a fair trial.

    The reason -- his lawyer.

    "The guy from start to finish did not do a good job," Bloom says. "He was asleep at the switch here a lot."

    Bloom believes there was very little evidence to convict Stahl, and that it was his own defense attorney who made him look bad during trial.

    "They dirty this guy up unnecessarily," Bloom says. "There was no reason to let this stuff come in."

    Bloom did an interview with Stahl's attorney following the trial. In it the attorney admits, "some of these things I missed may help him obviously."

    In fact, it was Stahl's own attorney who brought in testimony about his drug use, criminal background, domestic violence, even food stamp fraud -- much of the evidence the prosecution would not have been allowed to bring into trial.

    "Unless he got up there and says, 'I'm a thoughtful and honest person,' and get people to bring in opinions on that. He didn't do that," Bloom says.

    "The reason we introduced a lot of these negatives is to explain who Scott Stahl was," says I van Abrams, the private lawyer who defended Stahl -- and now defends his defense.

    "For each negative there was a positive," Abrams says. "That's what were trying to bring out."

    We asked, isn't it better to not make your client look as bad as Stahl looked during this trial?

    "I would suggest he looked like a victim himself," Abrams said.

    What about a motive for the shootings that happened 8 years ago? The state built its case around Stahl's employer at the time, Charles Dipple. The state said Dipple wanted his wife dead and hired Stahl to kill her. But Dipple was never called to testify at Stahl's trial to try to disprove the motive.

    "'I didn't hire anybody to kill my wife.' At least you would have got that testimony," Bloom says. "I don't know how convincing he would have been. At least you would have got that testimony."

    One of the most perplexing aspects of the case: Bloom says Abrams did not argue for even the possibility of parole, when Stahl was sentenced to life in prison.

    "Any time there is the possibility you can get a lesser sentence for a defendant that's the time you want to make an argument on his or her behalf. It wasn't done. He did nothing really."

    Scott Stahl has been in prison for almost 8 years and is now suffering from kidney failure. He claims overmedication by the prison created his medical condition..

    "I got pneumonia in '99 and when I got out of the hospital the Department of Correction medical prescribed me 800mg of Ibuprofen three times a day for 8 1/2 months," Stahl says. "Shortly after my kidneys shut down."

    Stahl is asking for a pardon to undergo a kidney transplant. The state does allow inmates to undergo transplants in prison, but approval for the operation is made on a case by case basis.

    The Department of Corrections would not discuss Stahl's case with us, other than to say it's being looked into. Stahl says a transplant is a matter of life or death.

    "T his is an agonizing existence. There is no quality of life whatsoever. I would prefer the state give me the death penalty."

    Although Dawn Struse can not positively identify Stahl as the man who shot her. She believes if he wasn't the gunman, he knows who was. And sick or not, he belongs behind bars.

    "I don't think he should get out of jail. I think he should stay in and I think he should pay for what he did," Struse says. "I think he should pay for what he knows."

    Stahl's case was appealed on ineffective council. But a court determined allowing hearsay was a tactical maneuver by his lawyer, a nd introducing negative evidence did not necessary hurt Stahl's case.

    Stahl's case went before the Executive Clemency Board, but it decided not to reccomend a pardon.

    http://www.tucsonnewsnow.com/global/story.asp?s=1515031

    http://www.zoominfo.com/p/Scott-Stahl/389097912

    Died:
    Age at Death: 44