Lammon

The Genealogy of the Lammon Family

Joseph Edward Lammon

Joseph Edward Lammon

Male 1944 - 2022  (77 years)

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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Joseph Edward LammonJoseph Edward Lammon was born on 28 Aug 1944 in Montgomery, Montgomery County, Alabama (son of James Edward Lammon and Donnie B Beagles); died on 1 Aug 2022 in Enterprise, Coffee County, Alabama.

    Notes:

    JOSEPH LAMMON OBITUARY

    Joseph Ed Lammon, DVM, age 77, of Enterprise, Alabama, passed away Monday, July 25, 2022 at his home.

    Memorial services will be held at 2:00PM, Thursday, July 28, 2022 at Searcy Funeral Home and Crematory Chapel. The family will receive friends at the funeral home from 1:00PM until service time. In lieu of flowers, memorial donations may be made to the Dr. Betty Cully Scholarship Fund, c/o EOCC Foundation, PO Box 1300, Enterprise, AL 36331 at Enterprise State Community College (donations may be made online by clicking here).

    Survivors include his wife, Roberta Guy Lammon, Enterprise, AL; daughter, Jill Boozer (Micah), Enterprise, AL; son, Ed Lammon (Hilary), Chattanooga, TN; four grandchildren, Will Lammon, Brooke Lammon, Brodie Boozer, and Leela Boozer; sister, Ann Day, Enterprise, AL.

    A man who touched countless lives - especially in and around his hometown of Enterprise, Alabama - Eddie rarely let his presence go unnoticed in any room he entered. He will always be remembered as a loving husband, a caring father, an avid outdoorsman and a true friend. He could tell stories with the best of them - so much so that, even if you'd heard him spin the same yarn a thousand times before, you'd never stop him from telling it again, gladly welcoming each retelling. His laugh was infectious - which is good news, as he never stopped telling jokes and amusing himself (and usually others, too).

    To plant Memorial Trees in memory of Joseph Ed Lammon, DVM, please click here to visit our Sympathy Store.

    Published by Searcy Funeral Home and Crematory - Enterprise on Jul. 25, 2022.

    Joseph married Roberta Allen Guy [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


Generation: 2

  1. 2.  James Edward LammonJames Edward Lammon was born on 5 Jul 1911 in Hartford, Geneva County, Alabama, United States (son of Edward Barnes Lammon and Alice O'Keith Fields); died on 10 Mar 1982 in Enterprise, Coffee County, Alabama, United States; was buried in Meadowlawn Cemetery, Enterprise, Coffee County, Alabama, United States.

    Notes:

    General Notes: The Lammon Tree. Additional Info from Jane Atkinson Linton and Elmer Burns Lammon.
    Ed was the youngest of seven children.
    *********************************************
    The following is part of a taped interview with James Edward's sister, Avis, in 1988.
    Avis had an excellent memory and other family members wanted to capture some of it for posterity. Present were Nancy Lammon, daughter of Elmer Fields Lammon; Donnie B Beagles, Ed's wife; Ann Lammon, his daughter; and Joseph Edward, his son. - EBL:
    NANCY: The little stories that Daddy used to always tell, the little funny stories - and Uncle Ed. Where did they get that? Was your daddy that way?
    AVIS: Yeah.
    NANCY: Or was your mother that way?
    AVIS: Mama was.
    NANCY: Just always telling little -
    AVIS: Lammons were all witty. The Fields were always kind of strict, straight-faced, straight-laced.
    DONNIE: Like Aunt Irene.
    AVIS: Yeah, Aunt Irene got hers.
    ANN: She's a Fields, isn't she?
    AVIS: She's a Fields.
    DONNIE: Irene never has crossed her legs.
    AVIS: She said Papa told her that the ladies didn't do that.
    NANCY: Oh, really? Ann, uncross those legs.
    ANN: Well, I remember Daddy saying that Papa said that women - he said a whistling woman and a cackling hen -
    AVIS: And a crowing hen.
    NANCY: What now?
    AVIS: Yeah, because a whistling woman and a crowing hen never comes to a good ending.
    ANN: That's right. And Daddy said that a crowing hen - you know, sometimes a hen will try to act like a rooster and cackle. And they said Granddaddy would go out and kill it if it did it - right then - and I don't know if that's -
    EDDIE: We never did whistle in our house either.
    NANCY: Oh, really?
    EDDIE: Huh-uh. Ed Lammon wouldn't permit whistling in the house.
    DONNIE: You didn't cut up at the table either.
    NANCY: Listen, Aunt Donnie, have I not ever told you that my mama and daddy used to threaten us when we were little, if we misbehaved, they would send us over to live with Uncle Ed? I'm serious. They did. And you talking - it's the truth - and you talk about straightening up. We wouldn't open our mouth for days. I'm serious. That's true. That was the truth. And we'd come over to spend the night - I'd come over to spend the night with Ann. And we'd get tickled at the table, and he'd get so mad. Or we'd go to bed in there and get to laughing, and you couldn't stop. And, I mean, he wouldn't put up with that. And Daddy, he didn't have any problem with that. He never made us behave or what -
    ANN: Honey, Daddy wouldn't put up with anything like that. All of our friends were afraid of Daddy.
    NANCY: Tell me about it.
    AVIS: I remember something about when y'all were little, and other folks trying to -
    NANCY: Yeah. I'm telling you, it's part -
    EDDIE: It's a matter of record here.
    NANCY: That's exactly right. That's part of the real record.
    ******************************************************************
    James Edward Lammon, known to everyone as Ed, came into the world in 1911. He was the youngest of the children of Edward Barnes Lammon and Alice O'Keith Fields, and, according Avis, Irene, and Sadie, they spoiled him. In an interview, Avis said, "Edward was the baby of the family, and we all spoiled him because he was real, real sweet." The Lammon boys - and this included lots of Ed's cousins, too - were well known in Hartford for their pranks and practical jokes.
    The following story was told to your editor by James Hardwick. [But, a little background first: James Hardwick, in a telephone conversation, after I had received this story from him, asked me if I knew anything about the Assembly of God Church. Answering that I was aware of it but had never attended a service, James explained that they believe that the end of the world - the Second Coming of Christ - will be soon. In other words, we are living in the last days, according to prophecies that have been fulfilled, and the world could end any time now! - EBL]
    One breezy, dark, Sunday night, during church service, James Edward Lammon and one of his buddies were flying their kites, but not in the usual way. Usually, people fly kites during the day. Up to their usual pranks, however, they had tied cattails to their kites, cattails that had been dipped the in kerosene and set afire! The kites, invisible at night, were aloft with those cattails attached, now lighted, blazing! Someone sitting close to a window, looked out and saw that the sky was on fire! Others saw the fire. They must have thought that judgement day had come, since all they could see was the fire floating about in the sky. The meeting broke up, as James recalled. Another incident, this one related to the editor by Rachel Lammon, daughter of Lee, and Ed's first cousin: A fully assembled carriage was found atop the roof of the Alabama Hotel in Hartford one morning. The culprits were never found, but Lammon family insiders knew who did it.
    According to James Hardwick, Ed played the drums in the Coffee County High School Band. All of the Lammon boys seemed to have an aptitude for mechanical things, and Ed was particularly talented.
    *******************************************************************
    The following is compiled from stories told by Avis Lammon Atkinson and Donnie Beagles Lammon and is contributed by Joseph Edward Lammon:
    In 1924, I believe, Edward Barnes Lammon, being the eldest of his brothers and sisters, moved to Enterprise with his wife O'Keith to work as a millwright. Of his seven children, two were still young enough at this time to live in his household, Avis and James Edward. Another son, Elmer, was in the US Navy at the time and later moved to Enterprise. Ed's father, Edward Barnes Lammon, died of Bright's disease in 1925 at the age of 53. O'Keith and the two youngest children later moved from Enterprise to Dothan to live with her eldest child, Sadie and her husband, Charles Herbert Johnson. Ed worked for Herbert in his shoe repair shop in Enterprise. Herbert's son, Clyde, was only a year younger than Ed was and they became good friends. About the time of the depression, 1930 or 1931, James Edward left home to avoid being another mouth to feed and became a hobo for about 3 years, traveling first to Florence, South Carolina, in 1930 to visit sister Avis. Avis was married and already had her first baby, John Keith. James Edward visited only briefly and, declining Avis' invitation to stay longer and perhaps get a job there, left for California. There he worked as a farm laborer in the San Joaquin Valley, near Merced, picking oranges, cabbages, lettuce, fruit, and whatever was in season. James Edward, being a fairly muscular and tough physical specimen, also spent some time there as a prize fighter, probably the bare-knuckle variety. He returned to Enterprise in about 1934 or 1935, where he took a job with Herbert, sister Sadie's husband, who owned a shoe repair shop. "Herbert said that Ed could repair shoes better than anyone who had ever worked
    for him, if he wanted to," Avis recounted many years later. Later, he worked at the funeral home, and the Ford place, and often ate at Carmichael's Café. Ed was a good customer there and Mr. Dan Carmichael liked him. Working for Dan Carmichael was a young lady named Donnie B Beagles, who worked there as a waitress. Mr. Carmichael said to Donnie, "?now, Miss Donnie, you just fix your plate and when he comes in, you sit down with him and eat." Because she was too modest, she wouldn't do it, but they did meet later and, after a whirlwind courtship, married one night at midnight in 1936. Colley Pittman, probate judge, did the marrying. They moved to DeFuniak Springs, Florida. This made Dan Carmichael "fuming mad", Donnie said later, having encouraged the couple to meet, and afterwards losing a good waitress because of it.
    Following are Ed's Obituary and a proclamation honoring him:
    ED LAMMON
    Funeral for Ed Lammon, 70, will be held Friday at 2 PM. from the First Baptist Church of Enterprise with Dr. Bill Montgomery and the Rev. Burney Reese officiating. Burial will follow in Meadowlawn Cemetery with Searcy Funeral Home directing. The body will lie in state at Searcy Funeral Home until one hour prior to funeral time. Mr. Lammon died Wednesday in his home. He was a longtime resident of Enterprise and operated Ed's Restaurant until his retirement in 1973. He was a member and deacon of the First Baptist Church where he taught a Sunday school class for many years. He was also a member of Gideons International. Survivors include: his wife, Mrs. Donnie Lammon, Enterprise; one daughter, Ann Day, Enterprise; two sons, Elmer Lammon, Tampa, Fla., Dr. Eddie Lammon, Enterprise; two sisters, Irene Hardwick, Dothan, Avis Atkinson, Hartford; one brother, Otis Lammon, Montgomery, and six grandchildren.
    PROCLAMATION
    WHEREAS J.E. Lammon has given precious evidence of his walk with the Lord Jesus, and
    WHEREAS Ed Lammon has faithfully served his Lord as Sunday School teacher and deacon in the First Baptist Church of Enterprise, Alabama, and
    WHEREAS Ed Lammon has shown his concern for spreading the gospel by personal soul winning and Christian counsel, and
    WHEREAS Ed Lammon believed in the authority of the Scripture and promoted its distribution through Gideons, International, and
    THEREFORE BE IT RESOLVED that the deacon body of the First Baptist Church of Enterprise convey to his family their love, respect, and admiration and
    BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that Ed Lammon's memory be honored by having an Adult Sunday School Class bear his Christian name, and
    BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that we seek as a church to continue the work to which Ed had committed his life and resources. This being done the 1st day of May, 1982, Jerry W. Byrd, Chairman of Deacons Maxie Searcy, Vice Chairman John Moates, Secretary

    The following note from son, Elmer:
    Daddy had an extraordinary amount of mechanical ability and ingenuity. He could fix almost any mechanical device. At various times, he was an auto mechanic and accumulated a mechanic's uniform from every car dealer in Enterprise. I think he had a low tolerance for supervision, would get unhappy and change jobs. Unafraid to ?take a swing? at a new venture, but lacking the capital and business skills to succeed, he started several small businesses that failed: a stock car racing venture in Montgomery, an electric motor rewinding shop, a poolroom, an ice cream parlor, "Ed's Big Cone". (The racing venture ended with the whole family being chased out of the race track one night when there wasn't enough "gate" to pay the prize money.) I remember that he decided against a McDonalds franchise in Enterprise because he would have had to pay 5 or 6 % of sales to the parent company. Finally, in about 1952, in a move that put me all the way through college, he and mother started ?Lammons Café?. It was named that until Daddy bought a new sign with shimmering sequins on it (a new development at the time), for which the signmaker charged by the letter. They changed the name to "Ed's Restaurant" and joked about it, although I never could figure why he didn't give her some credit in the name of the business. He kept the books, paid all the bills and taxes, fixed everything that needed fixing. He opened every morning for breakfast and stayed until Mama came in later. He cut all the meat, including grinding the hamburger meat, went to Panama City every week or two to pick up fresh shrimp and fish. Mama always said she couldn't have done it without Daddy's support. They were a good team. Daddy always had a quick temper and was hard to deal with, for me, anyway, and for Ann, too, I know. As children, we were afraid of him. When I got old enough to drive, I knew that, before asking for permission to use the car, it was very important to try to find him in a good mood. It seemed to me like he was almost never in a good mood, and when permission was given, it was given grudgingly. Maybe this is something all boys go through but I don't think so. Anyway, he sort of mellowed later in life, and his main job, it seemed, at Ed's Restaurant was to sit out front and drink coffee and talk and joke with the regular customers. They claimed to have solved many of the world's problems at the coffee table!

    James married Donnie B Beagles on 6 Feb 1936 in Enterprise, Coffee County, Alabama, United States. Donnie (daughter of Hiram B Beagles and Callie A Benefield) was born on 20 Oct 1913 in Samson, Geneva County, Alabama, United States; died on 19 Jul 1995 in Enterprise, Coffee County, Alabama, United States; was buried on 21 Jul 1995 in Meadowlawn Cemetery, Enterprise, Coffee County, Alabama, United States. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  Donnie B BeaglesDonnie B Beagles was born on 20 Oct 1913 in Samson, Geneva County, Alabama, United States (daughter of Hiram B Beagles and Callie A Benefield); died on 19 Jul 1995 in Enterprise, Coffee County, Alabama, United States; was buried on 21 Jul 1995 in Meadowlawn Cemetery, Enterprise, Coffee County, Alabama, United States.

    Notes:

    General Notes: From Elmer Burns Lammon. The "B" in mother's name is not the initial letter of a name. The letter "B" is, itself, her middle name. Mother was tall and pretty in her youth. She was a wonderful cook and worked in restaurants much of her adult life, first as a waitress and later as cook and owner. She got along very well with the kitchen help, the waitresses, and people in general. She could cook without reference to recipes, judging amounts of different ingredients by taste or judgment. She authored several recipes that were recognized with honors, such as her recipe for peanut pie.

    She had a wonderful sense of humor, too. One of her practical jokes, I recall, happened at Christmas in 1969. I had been attending the first semester of graduate business school at Carnegie-Mellon University in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. The school had a well-deserved reputation for putting its students through a regimen of very much hard work and study. The required reading and study for the next day's classes took so much time each day that I grew a beard in order to avoid wasting time shaving. Preparing to make the trip to Enterprise for Christmas, I called mother to tell her that I would be flying into Dothan and to ask her to meet me at the airport. Since she had never seen me with a beard, I told her that she might not recognize me at the airport because I had grown a beard.

    The flight was uneventful. The plane landed at the Dothan airport. I got out of the plane, walked toward the terminal, anxious to see her. Finally, I made it to the door. I looked around - didn't see her anywhere. I went on deeper into the lobby - she was nowhere in sight. Surely, I thought, she could not have forgotten to meet me. There were people standing around in the lobby and Dothan terminal is not large. Finally, I noticed a tall woman with red hair. She was heavily made-up, with dark eyelashes, lots of eye shadow, too much rouge and lipstick. This woman looked like a whore in a B-movie As I kept looking, I realized that I was the butt of this joke. Indeed, it was mother, of course, at her best. She figured that if I were going to be hard to recognize, then so would she.

    Donnie and Ed owned restaurants at two different times. The first was Lammon's Cafe on S. Main Street in Enterprise. I was too small to remember why this business didn't prosper. I think that, in losing it, Mother decided that if she ever had another one, she would make a go of it. She had great will and determination.

    Children:
    1. Elmer Burns Lammon was born on 21 Sep 1938 in Samson, Geneva County, Alabama; died on 8 May 2009 in Panama City Beach, Bay County, Florida.
    2. Ann Elane Lammon
    3. 1. Joseph Edward Lammon was born on 28 Aug 1944 in Montgomery, Montgomery County, Alabama; died on 1 Aug 2022 in Enterprise, Coffee County, Alabama.


Generation: 3

  1. 4.  Edward Barnes LammonEdward Barnes Lammon was born on 2 Feb 1872 in Barnes Cross Roads, Dale County, Alabama (son of James Daniel Lammon and Mary Jane Barnes); died on 3 Nov 1925 in Enterprise, Coffee County, Alabama; was buried in Hartford City Cemetery, Hartford, Geneva County, Alabama.

    Notes:

    The Lammon Tree 1900 Soundex
    "Edward Barnes Lammon met Alice O'Keith Fields on his birthday February 2, 1893, when she went with one of his cousins, Lizzie Smith, to visit him as he was sick with typhoid fever. He made the remark that day that, "This girl will be my wife"--and it happened two years later. "
    --Sadie Lammon Johnson
    --Irene Lammon Hardwick
    --Avis Lammon Atkinson

    The following is part of a taped interview with Avis Lammon in 1988. Present at the interview were Avis Lammon Atkinson, Nancy Lammon Tuck, Ann Lammon Day, Joseph Edward Lammon. - EBL
    AVIS: Elmer came home. Elmer came home from the Navy. I think this is right interesting, too. Elmer was in the Navy when Papa was real ill, fixing to die. And we knew that he was going to die. So, Mama tried every way she knew -- all of us did -- to get in touch with Elmer's commanding officer or whatever he was. And the last letter we had from Elmer he had come from the Pacific side of the United States over to the Atlantic side. And we couldn't seem to get in touch with him. So, Elmer called one day on the telephone, and he was in Jacksonville, Florida, when he called, and said, I haven't heard -- he said, well, I haven't written y'all in a long time. He said, since I'm this near home, I wanted to let you know I was here. And so Mama told him about Papa being so ill. And ? they let him out of the Navy, and he didn't have to go back. His time was so near out, they just dismissed him then. So, he came on home, and Papa died just a few days after Elmer got home. That was in -- I declare. Let's see. I need that book, don't I?
    NANCY: I believe it was '24.
    ANN: About '24 because Daddy was about fourteen.
    NANCY: I think it was '24 or '25.
    ANN: Tell us about when Granddaddy died, how he talked to all of y'all. He called each one of you in.
    AVIS: Yeah. Papa never had accepted the Lord, never had professed to have any kind of salvation. And when people would talk about -- about him getting religion or whatever, he'd say, I got to stay out and fight for the family. These women got to have it, he said. And I don't want nobody talking about them, so I'll fight for them. So, after he got sick, well, he told Sadie one day -- Sadie had got to be around a preacher. So, he told her one day, he said, Sadie, tell me how to accept the Lord. I know I'm not going to live. So, she told him how to submit hisself to the Lord. And so then, after that, Grandma Lammon was in our house -- his mother. And he called her in the room and told her, said, Mama, I'm a Christian now. I've given up all this, and I'm telling the Lord about it. And so, he said, I know I'm going to die, and I just want to tell that you that I'm not going to Hell. Then, he called Mama and told her. Then, he told Sadie and Irene and Otis and Avis, Elmer, and Edward. He told each one of the children separately that week that he was saved. And we were all so glad, especially Mama. That thrilled her, of course.
    ANN: Tell about ? the things you remember about your mother and daddy, different things about their personality. I know Grandma Lammon was supposed to be a really fine Christian all of her life ?
    AVIS: Mama didn't, we never did, have much. And when Papa was young, when they were young, I was a kid, a little one, he had the Ford agency in Hartford and had it for the whole county of Geneva. Any car that was sold in Geneva, he would get a percentage of it. Well, he decided he had to go over to Bellwood to put in a gin for somebody, so he just turned over the Ford agency to Lee -- to one of his brothers. And he went over there to put in a gin. I'll tell you something else about that. While we lived in Bellwood - I started to school in Bellwood - but one day - of course, we didn't have telephones or anything - one day Mama ? sent me and Elmer to the gin to tell Papa to bring something for dinner, tell him to bring something she needed. And while we were there, a man from Hartford had bought an automobile and, in driving over to Bellwood, something had happened to it. And he brought it to the gin, and said Mr. Lammon - I know all Lammons are mechanical - and said, I want you to see if you can fix this car. So, Papa did whatever there was to do to it. And told me and Elmer, come get in the car, and I'll take y'all home. Oh, we just felt like we were -- well, we were. That's the first car I had ever seen. We rode home in it.
    **************************************
    Another part of the same interview:
    EDDIE: What about your father's personality? Did he have a lot to do with the children, or?
    AVIS: Yeah, he was real sweet and kind to children, and -- but he was a Lammon. It was kind of like your daddy. Your daddy was like him.
    NANCY: Was he more like Uncle Ed, or was he more like Daddy?
    AVIS: I don't know how to tell you that. I wouldn't know. To me, he was more precious than any of them, and, you know, he never was mean to any of us. The only time my father ever switched me, or punished me with a switch, Aunt Carl came over there one time, and I was studying. I was in the seventh grade, and I was studying for an examination in school. She said, if you'll climb that hickory tree right there and study that, you'll never forget it. So, up the tree I went and took my book with me. And my father came home about that time. He said, what are you doing up that tree? I said, I'm studying. He said, get down from there, and he whipped me about three times around the ankle. It broke my heart.
    ANN: But he didn't want you up --
    NANCY: He was afraid you'd fall.
    EDDIE: You didn't forget that whipping, did you?
    AVIS: I didn't forget that. But he was real kind and sweet. He was, I don't know, not real thoughtful, not as thoughtful as Eddie is to his younguns. But he was sweet and kind, and we were good to him, I remember. And he was heavy like you are. And he was always going to lose weight like you are. One time I remember he was sick and did lose weight because of the illness. We just had an old fireplace. And it was wintertime because it was there by the fire. And he said, go tell the children to come, I've got something I want to show all of them, something they've never seen before. And he was sitting right by a window, facing the fireplace. So, I first went to the window, and he was looking out the window. I said, what is it? Show me first. He said, no, I'm not going to show you 'til all of you get in here. So, I ran and told them. We all got in there. And what he was going to tell us was -- he had his legs crossed, like that -- like this. He said, this is the first time I've ever been able to do this, you know, put it up like that.
    ANN: Eddie can't cross his.
    AVIS: He always crossed it further down than that, just let it lay there.
    NANCY: That's cute.
    AVIS: And he said, I want y'all to see this. This is the first time you have ever seen my legs crossed like this.
    ANN: Was he stocky like Eddie and Daddy?
    AVIS: Eddie is built a lot like him.
    ANN: But, now, his brothers were not that. Wasn't Freddie tall?
    AVIS: Freddie was tall and thin.
    ANN: Wonder how tall Freddie was?
    AVIS: I don't know.
    ANN: Over six feet, wasn't he?
    AVIS: And Uncle Duncan was kind of stout, and Uncle Archie was stout like Papa and not as tall, so that made him look even broader. And Uncle Ed was just a medium-size man.
    NANCY: Well, I've always thought of the Lammon men all being stocky. But when I think of Uncle Otis, I never thought of him being stocky. He was thinner, but he was probably about the same height as Daddy and Uncle Ed.
    ANN: Yeah.
    NANCY: He just wasn't as stocky. Because Daddy and Uncle Ed were built similar.
    ANN: They said Granddaddy was the shortest of all his brothers.
    AVIS: No.
    ANN: He wasn't?
    AVIS: I don't think. I think Archie was shorter.
    NANCY: Shorter?
    AVIS: Uh-huh. Does the Lammon book say that?
    ANN: No. I just had heard somebody say that he was probably one of the shortest, and that Freddie was a lot taller and --
    AVIS: Uncle Freddie was the tallest of all of them and the only one that was real tall like that. Uncle Duncan was taller than Papa, but was built -- not as broad, you know.
    NANCY: Well, when your mother would take you all to church - I remember Daddy telling me one time - when he was little, and this may be one of his stories, because he said that they had him bundled up in a blanket and put him up underneath the pew, and they left church, and they left him in the church. They had to come back and get him. Now, that may be one of his stories.
    AVIS: It may be so, too. I've heard that, too.
    NANCY: I've heard that, too. Did your Daddy go to church?
    AVIS: No, no, no.
    NANCY: He didn't go to church?
    AVIS: He didn't go to church. He stayed at home on Sunday.
    EDDIE: How about the rest of the bunch -- Archie and that crowd?
    AVIS: They didn't go either.
    EDDIE: None of them did?
    NANCY: So, just the women went to church?
    AVIS: Uncle Joe went with Aunt Carl. Let's see. I don't believe a one of the Lammon men went, though. I don't know. I know one time when holiness first came through the country, I don't reckon I was old enough to go maybe. But Sadie and Irene, when we lived in Bellwood, they stayed with Grandpa Lammon and went to school in Hartford because they had already passed the school that was in Bellwood. And then they didn't have school buses to go. And, they had a holiness meeting, a tent meeting. I know where it is, but I don't know how to tell you the street it was on in Hartford. But it was over close to where the Assembly Church is now. And Irene and Sadie wanted to go. And Grandma Lammon, they were real strict with the girls. You didn't do things by yourself. You had to have an escort. So, Uncle Duncan said, well, I'll go with them. Then, when they got there, he told Sadie and Irene, said, don't you get up there close, they sprinkled powder on you and make you shout and do all that stuff, you sit way back here. So, Uncle Duncan didn't go, and he never did partake in any kind of church service. He married Mamie Hilton. They had two boys -- three boys.
    ANN: So, the church influence y'all had came from your mother then?
    AVIS: Yeah.
    ANN: The little ones --
    AVIS: Grandma Lammon now, she was a great church go-er and church worker.
    EDDIE: You know, I remember Daddy talking about when he was a kid, that his mother took him to church all the time, and that he just couldn't wait 'til he got old enough not to go to church.
    AVIS: He got tired of it.

    Edward married Alice O'Keith Fields in 1895 in Fields Home, Alabama. Alice (daughter of Alexander Clayton Fields and Roxie Louise Atkinson) was born on 25 Feb 1872 in Ozark, Dale County, Alabama; died on 20 Feb 1942 in Enterprise, Coffee County, Alabama; was buried in Hartford, Geneva County, Alabama. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 5.  Alice O'Keith FieldsAlice O'Keith Fields was born on 25 Feb 1872 in Ozark, Dale County, Alabama (daughter of Alexander Clayton Fields and Roxie Louise Atkinson); died on 20 Feb 1942 in Enterprise, Coffee County, Alabama; was buried in Hartford, Geneva County, Alabama.

    Notes:

    THE LAMMON TREE by Avis Lammon Atkinson

    B-1900 Alabama Soundex.

    Children:
    1. Sadie Anne Lammon was born on 7 Feb 1896 in Hartford, Geneva County, Alabama; died on 4 Jan 1982 in Pensacola, Escambia County, Florida; was buried in Andalusia Memorial Cemetery, Andalusia, Covington County, AL, US.
    2. Irene Lammon was born on 4 Apr 1897 in Hartford, Geneva County, Alabama, US; died on 24 Apr 1988 in Panama City Beach, Bay County, Florida, US; was buried in Hartford City Cemetery, Hartford, Geneva County, Alabama, US.
    3. Otis Barnes Lammon was born on 15 Jul 1899 in Hartford, Geneva County, Alabama, US; died on 1 Jul 1988 in Montgomery, Montgomery County, Alabama, US; was buried in Greenwood Cemetery, Montgomery, Montgomery County, Alabama, US.
    4. Avis Annette Lammon was born on 28 Feb 1902 in Hartford, Geneva County, Alabama; died on 22 Aug 1994 in Titusville, Brevard County, Florida; was buried in Hartford City Cemetery, Hartford, Geneva County, Alabama.
    5. Elmer Fields Lammon was born on 11 Oct 1904 in Hartford, Geneva County, Alabama, United States; died on 18 Jan 1977 in Florence, Florence County, South Carolina, United States; was buried in Enterprise City Cemetery, Enterprise, Coffee County, Alabama, United States.
    6. Mary Louise Lammon was born on 10 Mar 1907 in Hartford, Geneva County, Alabama; died on 25 Aug 1908 in Hartford, Geneva County, Alabama; was buried in Hartford City Cemetery, Hartford, Geneva County, Alabama.
    7. 2. James Edward Lammon was born on 5 Jul 1911 in Hartford, Geneva County, Alabama, United States; died on 10 Mar 1982 in Enterprise, Coffee County, Alabama, United States; was buried in Meadowlawn Cemetery, Enterprise, Coffee County, Alabama, United States.

  3. 6.  Hiram B BeaglesHiram B Beagles was born on 29 Jul 1874 in Georgia (son of John Jefferson Beagles and Nancy Catherine Wright); died on 25 Jul 1957 in Chipley, Washington County, Florida; was buried in Piney Grove Baptist Church Cemetery, Samson, Geneva County, Alabama.

    Hiram married Callie A Benefield. Callie (daughter of James A Bennefiled and Lula Smith) was born on 14 Jan 1886 in Berrien County, Georgia; died on 7 May 1959 in Chipley, Washington County, Florida; was buried in Samson, Geneva County, Alabama. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  4. 7.  Callie A BenefieldCallie A Benefield was born on 14 Jan 1886 in Berrien County, Georgia (daughter of James A Bennefiled and Lula Smith); died on 7 May 1959 in Chipley, Washington County, Florida; was buried in Samson, Geneva County, Alabama.
    Children:
    1. 3. Donnie B Beagles was born on 20 Oct 1913 in Samson, Geneva County, Alabama, United States; died on 19 Jul 1995 in Enterprise, Coffee County, Alabama, United States; was buried on 21 Jul 1995 in Meadowlawn Cemetery, Enterprise, Coffee County, Alabama, United States.


Generation: 4

  1. 8.  James Daniel LammonJames Daniel Lammon was born on 17 Feb 1843 in Alabama (son of Duncan Lammon and Nancy Ann McCoulskey); died on 18 Mar 1914 in Hartford, Geneva County, Alabama; was buried in Hartford, Geneva County, Alabama.

    Notes:

    Notes:
    The Lammon Tree by Avis, Irene & Sadie Lammon.
    1850 Dale Co. Alabama Census
    1860 Dale Co. Alabama census.
    1880 Dale Co. Alabama Census, E.D 66, house 167.
    1900 Geneva Co. Alabama Census B-Gravestone inscriptions, Hartford, Geneva Co. Cemetery inscriptions, p.22. M-Pension application of Mary Jane Lammon, SLC #1510411: Confederate Pension applications --Alabama.
    DPension application of Mary Jane Lammon, SL C #1510411: Confederate Pension Applications--Alabama, (alphabetical). D-Cemetery inscriptions, Hartford Cem. Geneva Co., Alabama, p. 22.


    "The historical record roll of Co. E, 15th Alabama Infantry Regiment shows James Lammon, Private, enlisted in the Confederate Army August 3, 1862 at Newton (formerly Westville) Alabama. He was honorably discharged from the service on the 13th day of April 1865. The James Lammon family moved from the Barnes X Roads in 1893 to settle in Geneva County. They spent the first year in what was known as the Kinsaul Community and in 1894 they bought land and moved to Hartford, where they cleared land and farmed. Later they organized a milling company and operated sawmills, planer mills, a variety shop, gristmill and a cotton gin. They were a busy family and attended church about two miles from their home, the Pondtown Methodist, until the town grew enough to build and support one, which was only a few years."

    "The first time real tragedy struck in the family was in 1902 when their 20-year-old son, James Olin, died suddenly. He is buried in the Pondtown Methodist Church Cemetery. In 1906 a beautiful two-story home was built of choice timbers saved over the years for this purpose. The outstanding feature of the home was the wide veranda all around the house with decorative woodwork and banisters. Another tragedy of the family was when the home and practically all of the furnishings were completely destroyed by fire March 31, 1911."

    ---Sadie Lammon Johnson Irene Lammon Hardwick Avis Lammon Atkinson



    The following note from Elmer Burns Lammon:

    In corresponding with Wanda Gale Stafford, a descendant of Frances Caroline Lammon, she showed James Lammon as having the middle name Daniel. I wrote and told her that I had never known that he had a middle name and asked her for the source. She replied, "I received a handwritten copy of Snell and Lammons family information. The Snell outline was of my gg gf Wilburn and his wives (2) and children and the Lammons family Info page reads like this:

    Smith side of family - From Lammons family records. Grandmother Mary Ann Rebecca Smith. (then lists the family info)

    Mary Ann "Mollie" was the second wife (my gg gm) of Wilburn Snell. Mollie's mother was Francis Caroline Lammons that married James F. Smith. Your ancestor's name was listed with both names that I gave you.

    I was told it was taken from a family bible. The bible was held by one of my gg aunt's, but I do not know who got it when she died. The document was very yellow and old looking. I made a copy and mailed the original back to its
    owner."

    As this source is as good or better than most of my sources, I will use it.

    James married Mary Jane Barnes on 29 Dec 1870 in Barnes Cross Roads, Dale, Alabama. Mary (daughter of Edward Barnes and Sarah Francis Dean) was born on 28 Nov 1850. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 9.  Mary Jane BarnesMary Jane Barnes was born on 28 Nov 1850 (daughter of Edward Barnes and Sarah Francis Dean).

    Notes:


    General Notes:
    B-Confederate Pension Application, Alabama: SLC #1510411: widow's pension app. of Mary Jane Lammon. (Alphabetical) M-ibid. D-Hartford, Geneva Co., Alabama Cem inscriptions, p. 22.
    1850 Dale Co., Alabama Census.
    1860 Dale Co., Alabama Census.
    1880 Dale Co., Alabama Census, E.D. 66, house 167.
    1900 Geneva Co. Alabama Census.
    1920 Hartford, Geneva Co. Census, age 68, enumerated with Joseph S. Fields, s-in-l.

    Children:
    1. 4. Edward Barnes Lammon was born on 2 Feb 1872 in Barnes Cross Roads, Dale County, Alabama; died on 3 Nov 1925 in Enterprise, Coffee County, Alabama; was buried in Hartford City Cemetery, Hartford, Geneva County, Alabama.
    2. Duncan McColskie Lammons was born on 7 Jun 1873 in Alabama; died on 6 Jun 1951; was buried in Hartford City Cemetery, Hartford, Geneva County, Alabama.
    3. Marvin Peddy Lammon was born on 11 Apr 1875 in Alabama; died on 21 Jan 1937 in Hartford, Geneva County, Alabama; was buried in Hartford City Cemetery, Hartford, Geneva County, Alabama.
    4. Archie Murdock Lammon was born on 12 Jan 1877 in Hartford, Geneva County, Alabama; died on 7 May 1928 in Hartford, Geneva County, Alabama; was buried in Hartford, Geneva County, Alabama.
    5. Lee Gillis Lammon was born on 16 May 1878 in Barnes Cross Roads, Dale County, Alabama; died on 23 Feb 1955 in Hartford, Geneva County, Alabama; was buried in Hartford City Cemetery, Hartford, Geneva County, Alabama.
    6. Carol Anne Lammon was born on 13 Aug 1880 in Alabama; died on 23 Feb 1957 in Hartford, Geneva County, Alabama; was buried in Hartford City Cemetery, Hartford, Geneva County, Alabama.
    7. James Olin Lammon was born on 30 Jul 1882 in Hartford, Geneva County, Alabama; died on 11 Jul 1902.
    8. Freddie Franklin Lammon was born on 28 Jun 1884 in Alabama; died on 18 Dec 1852; was buried in Hartford City Cemetery, Hartford, Geneva County, Alabama.
    9. Flaudie Frances Lammon was born on 28 Jun 1884 in Alabama; died on 5 Apr 1953 in Dothan, Houston County, Alabama; was buried in Hartford City Cemetery, Hartford, Geneva County, Alabama.

  3. 10.  Alexander Clayton Fields was born on 9 Feb 1851 in Ozark, Dale County, Alabama (son of Alexander Bartholomew Fields and Sinai Matthews); died on 1 Oct 1937 in Hartford, Geneva County, Alabama.

    Alexander married Roxie Louise Atkinson. Roxie (daughter of William Maldree Atkinson and Ursula Eugenia Griffith) was born on 4 May 1848 in Cuthbert, Randolph County, Georgia; died on 31 Jul 1933 in Hartford, Geneva County, Alabama. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  4. 11.  Roxie Louise Atkinson was born on 4 May 1848 in Cuthbert, Randolph County, Georgia (daughter of William Maldree Atkinson and Ursula Eugenia Griffith); died on 31 Jul 1933 in Hartford, Geneva County, Alabama.
    Children:
    1. William Carleton Fields was born in Ozark, Dale County, Alabama.
    2. Alexander Clayton Fields, Jr was born in Ozark, Dale County, Alabama.
    3. Joseph Spencer Fields was born on 19 Feb 1877 in Ozark, Dale County, Alabama; died on 1 Mar 1970; was buried in Hartford City Cemetery, Hartford, Geneva County, Alabama.
    4. Clinton Cyrus Fields was born in Ozark, Dale County, Alabama.
    5. Mary Beatrice Fields was born in Ozark, Dale County, Alabama.
    6. 5. Alice O'Keith Fields was born on 25 Feb 1872 in Ozark, Dale County, Alabama; died on 20 Feb 1942 in Enterprise, Coffee County, Alabama; was buried in Hartford, Geneva County, Alabama.
    7. Sinai Ethel Fields was born on 9 Jan 1892 in Ozark, Dale County, Alabama; died on 1 Feb 1919.
    8. Cornelius Bryant Fields was born on 3 Sep 1880 in Ozark, Dale County, Alabama; died in 1956 in Pensacola, Escambia County, Florida.

  5. 12.  John Jefferson BeaglesJohn Jefferson Beagles was born on 29 Nov 1829 in Edgefield, South Carolina; died on 13 Mar 1924 in Valdosta, Lowndes County, Georgia; was buried in Beaver Dam Cemetery, Ray City, Georgia.

    John married Nancy Catherine Wright. Nancy (daughter of William Wright and Matilda Catherine Whitley) was born in Apr 1835 in Georgia; died on 5 Jan 1903 in Valdosta, Lowndes County, Georgia; was buried in Beaver Dam Cemetery, Ray City, Georgia. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  6. 13.  Nancy Catherine Wright was born in Apr 1835 in Georgia (daughter of William Wright and Matilda Catherine Whitley); died on 5 Jan 1903 in Valdosta, Lowndes County, Georgia; was buried in Beaver Dam Cemetery, Ray City, Georgia.
    Children:
    1. 6. Hiram B Beagles was born on 29 Jul 1874 in Georgia; died on 25 Jul 1957 in Chipley, Washington County, Florida; was buried in Piney Grove Baptist Church Cemetery, Samson, Geneva County, Alabama.

  7. 14.  James A Bennefiled was born in 1856 in Clayton, Barbour County, Georgia.

    James married Lula Smith. Lula was born in 1857 in Clayton, Barbour County, Georgia; died in 1937. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  8. 15.  Lula Smith was born in 1857 in Clayton, Barbour County, Georgia; died in 1937.
    Children:
    1. 7. Callie A Benefield was born on 14 Jan 1886 in Berrien County, Georgia; died on 7 May 1959 in Chipley, Washington County, Florida; was buried in Samson, Geneva County, Alabama.


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