Monday, September 9, 2013

A long history of my family - the Coleman-Scott Family


Scott-Coleman History
By Brooke Marsh


Preface
In this paper, I have attempted to trace my family line back through the Coleman’s.  The actual history was pieced together using a combination of census records, oral tradition, newspaper articles, family records kept by individuals, family Bibles, letters, interviews, discussions, and even a few books.  The information found here is only as accurate and complete as the records on which it is based.  Oftentimes, the records were conflicting, in which case I used my best judgment based on other knowledge in the family.  I am sure, however, that some errors may be found within this account, either from typing errors or from inaccurate records.  If, in reading this, you have any additions, please notify the author or enter the information on Ancestry.com so that it can be included in any future histories.

I want to thank the following for their help and contributions: those working with the UTC/National Endowment for the Humanities Summer Regional History Project; Mrs. Jack H (Mary) Gilbreath for her help in getting me started; Ruby Hildah Scott Beaty, my grandmother, who has been an invaluable help and source of information and photographs; Pearl Coleman Scott Turner for her help; the Claiborne County Historical Society, especially Wanda Wallen Hodges, for the information that they sent; David Adams and the Claiborne County Progress for the article on Henry Frances Coleman; all my relatives for their interest, and especially my mother, Myra Carol Gravitt Beaty, for her help, interest, and support.



The Coleman family is of English origin.  Their ancient place of residence was Langley in Wiltshire, England (Bales, 488).  My branch of the Coleman family immigrated first to the New England States then to Maryland and then to Virginia, North Carolina, and Tennessee (Bales, 488).
The first Coleman in America is not known by name.  It is known, however, that he moved from Maine to Maryland and settled in Harford County.  Some of his children were born in Harford County and he lived there for a few years before moving to an area near Richmond, Virginia.  He and his wife died in Virginia.
            His son, Thomas P. Coleman, is the first of the Coleman family identified by name.  It is with Thomas that the history of this branch of my family begins.  He was born August 4, 1783 in Harford County, Maryland.  According to a book by Hattie Bales, Thomas P. left Virginia as a young man, moved to Orange County, North Carolina and in September 1806, married Esther (Hetty) McClary (born May 10, 1785 in North Carolina). 
Their older children were born in North Carolina where they lived for several years before moving to Mulberry Valley (Claiborne County later Hancock County, Tennessee) in 1820.   There, Thomas was a prosperous farmer and he and Esther had several more children. They had eight children total, an average number in that day.  They were:
1.     Calvin K. Coleman who later married Julia McClary
2.     Thomas R. Coleman, born August 8, 1813 in Orange County, North Carolina
3.     Elizabeth (Betsy) Coleman who later married Alfred Corbin in Claiborne County
4.     Alvis P. Coleman, born March 26, 1816
5.     George W. Coleman, born February 3, 1819
6.     Cynthia Coleman who later married Moses Hatfield
7.     Sterling G. Coleman, born about 1822
8.     William Cooper Coleman, born September 1, 1828

Thomas died not long after William was born (1833) in Claiborne County (Bales 489) and Esther (Hetty) died October 10, 1863 in Hancock County, where they are both buried.

The Coleman line through which I am descended continues through Thomas P. Coleman’s son Thomas R. Coleman.  His story and the story of his descendants is as follows.
Thomas R. Coleman was born August 8, 1813 in Orange County, North Carolina.  On September 1, 1841, he married Frances B. Fitts.  Isaac Thomas performed the ceremony in Tazewell, Tennessee.  Frances was the daughter of Cornelius and Sarah (Randolph) Fitts of Lee County, Virginia.  Frances was born April 16, 1819.  She and Thomas settled in Mulberry Gap Valley in Hancock County and became one of the prominent families of East Tennessee.  He was a prosperous farmer like his father and, in 1850; his real estate was valued at $3,200.  That amount rose, by 1860, to $9240 for real estate and $15,200 for the value of his personal estate.  After he died, the real estate value of Frances’ property decreased to $3,000 and her personal estate was valued at only $400. 
During his and Frances’ lifetime, they had eight children, all born in Tennessee.  They were:
1.     Callaway H. Coleman, born October 28, 1843
2.     Henry Francis Coleman, born May 13, 1847
3.     Mary Coleman, born around 1847-48
4.     Sarah Esther Coleman, born August 20, 1851 and died October 20, 1902; married in 1868 to John Jett Livingston (born August 23, 1845 and died February 25, 1904)
5.     Martha Jane Coleman, born February 9, 1854; died April 3, 1936; married October 21, 1869 to John Martin Southern (born January 21, 1842 and died November 3, 1902)
6.     Franklin Columbus Coleman, born March 7, 1855; died July 12, 1912; married June 12, 1863 to Benith Atwood in Jasper, Missouri
7.     Julia Ann Coleman, born September 30, 1858; died September 9, 1932; married J.B. Rice of Tennessee
8.     Mary Coleman, born around 1860 (Census of Hancock County; Bales 489)

Thomas died May 16, 1862 in Hancock County, leaving Frances with several children still at home.  After the children left, Frances lived with her son Callaway and his wife until her death on July 4, 1893 at age 74 years, 2 months, and 18 days (Bales 489).
There is not much else known about the children of Thomas P. Coleman other than Thomas R. but according to family tradition, at least two of Thomas P.’s sons owned slaves.  According to Ruby Beaty, my grandmother, one of them, it seems, “wasn’t very kind to his slaves, and one day, a big tree fell on him and we just surmised that his slaves was the cause of that.” The other, at one point, left his slaves at the house alone while they were out. The slaves, “were roasting eggs in the fireplace and they set the house on fire and burned the house down” (Ruby).  Thomas R., however, is not believed to have owned slaves.
It is the Thomas’ son Callaway through which my line continues.  Callaway H. Coleman was born October 28, 1843 in Tennessee.  He lived with his parents up to 1863 and attended school and helped work the farm.  He even attended Cripple Creek College (Ruby). On October 29, 1863, he married Mary Ann Riley.  She was born on April 23, 1842, in Tennessee, like her husband.
Not long after their marriage, the Civil War began.  According to military records, Callaway enlisted on _________________________ and deserted ____________ later. According to family tradition, Callaway went to fight in at least one battle in or near Cumberland Gap.  Mary Ann was left alone in their house 2-3 miles away in Harrogate.  During the battle, a shell fell on or near their house, and, some Yankee soldiers came and took Mary Ann’s only form of transportation – a black horse. In keeping with her spunky character, Mary Ann went after them, stopped the commanding officer and asked him to give her horse back.  He must have been impressed with her nerve. For whatever reason, he gave the little black horse back to her. 
After Callaway returned from the war, he and his wife started a family.  His mother lived with them for a while in Hancock County (Mulberry Gap) but later they moved to Claiborne County, NT.  They had eight children in all. They were:
1.     Alice Coleman, born September 19, 1864
2.     Ida F. Coleman, born December 23, 1866, married Ed Pruett
3.     William T. Coleman, born June 7, 1869; taught school at Shawanee for a while, later became attorney general then county judge
4.     Robert Coleman, born March 27, 1873; later moved to Rogersville, TN and became a civil lawyer
5.     Etta May Coleman, born June 11, 1876; married William T. Bales and had four children: Mary, Jessie, Ann, and William T., Jr.
6.     Lula Narvesta Coleman, born May 16, 1879
7.     Henry R. Coleman, born July 6, 1882; became a telegrapher at Rhoda, Virginia but still lived in Shawanee.  One day at work, he heard a noise and went outside to check on it.  He was suddenly shot in the head by what the authorities supposed was a prowler.  He died a few days later on November 1, 1910.
8.     Mary Evelyn Coleman, Born May 9, 1885 (Census; Bales 489; CH Coleman family records)

At one point in 1870, Callaway and Mary Ann had servants.  She and her daughter lived with them.  Her name was Eliza Watkins and her daughter was Mary.  Eliza was 41 and her daughter was 5 in 1870. 
At that same time, his property value was $3750 and his personal estate was valued at $500.  He worked as a fairly well off farmer for quite a while but then became a lawyer and civil land enforcer and, later in life, he was a postmaster in Claiborne County.
It was while he was a lawyer that a band of gypsies came through and got in some trouble with the law so Callaway became their lawyer.  As it turned out, however, they had no money with which to pay him. Instead, they left a very fine violin for his pay.  They said that they would return for the violin when they had some money but they never came back.  This must have suited Callaway very well for he was known to have a great love of music.
As a matter of fact, when he later lived with his daughter Lula and her family, he tried to teach his granddaughters music. As one of the granddaughters, Ruby, puts it, “He loved music and he was tryin’ to teach us the notes and he would get kindly aggravated cause we couldn’t learn them….” (Ruby, 6).  He did however succeed in teaching his daughter Lula to play the violin.
Despite a small amount of occasional aggravation or frustration, Callaway was “always in a good mood, everybody liked him” (Ruby, 6). That joviality was often seen in his sense of humor.  When he lived with Lula, her husband, James Scott, and her children Ruby and Pearl, he would play jokes on the children. Ruby describes it this way:
He was so funny…he was always playing jokes on Pearl and me. Pearl would cry. She was a great crier, my sister was. Oh she cried over everything, crybaby. And he’d say, “Here Pearl, here is my hat.  Cry in my hat.”  Oh, it’d make her so mad.  One time, Aunt Evelyn, who lived in Louisville then, she sent him a box of candy and he brought it in and said, “Ruby, she sent me a box of candy and she told me not to give you any at all.  It wasn’t for you, it was just for me.”  And I cried and cried.  And, of course, he had to tell me different.  I mean that was just an example.  He was always pullin’ something on us.  He was really jolly all the time.
           
            Because he was so friendly and jolly, he got along well with Lula’s husband, James Scott. They spent a lot of time arguing in a friendly way over politics.  They were both Democrats but still found cause to argue (Ruby, 8). They enjoyed each other and got along very well throughout the years that Callaway lived with Lula’s family.
            On May 15, 1911, Mary Ann Riley Coleman died.  Her youngest son, Henry, had been shot and had died November 1, 1910.  Lula always said that Mary Ann died of grief. “It just nearly killed her when he died.  He was her youngest son. It was a close family, very close and she always said she believed she just worried herself to death. (Ruby, 7).
            Then, several years later, the eldest son of Thomas R. Coleman, Callaway H. Coleman died on February 5, 1927 at about the same time that Lula’s husband James Scott died. Callaway was 84 when he died and he is buried in Scott Cemetery along with his wife Mary Ann and his son Henry.
            The second son of Thomas R. Coleman, Henry Francis, though not a direct ancestor of mine, has a very interesting history also. He was born in Tennessee on May 13, 1847 and lived with his parents in Mulberry Gap, Hancock County until the time of the Civil War.
            According to the memoirs of Henry, when the Civil War come around, there was a problem in the country east and southeast of Cumberland Gap (including Lee and Scott counties in Virginia and Hancock and Claiborne in Tennessee) with “roving and raiding bands of Confederate soldiers, with here and there a few men that belonged to neither army, but were engaged in pilfering and robbing the citizens…And since these citizens were mostly favorable to the Union position, they were being killed, captured and annoyed almost constantly.” At the time, the nearest branch of Federal troops was too far away to protect them, so the citizens organized a company for the purpose of defense and protection.  Henry Francis Coleman, though only a teenager, was a part of this company called the Tiger Company or the Riley Company.
            It was sometimes called the Riley Company because William Riley was the captain.  John Parkey was lieutenant.  Some of the other members in the fall of 1864 included: Thomas Riley, John Fugate, Tennessee Parks, William Fugate, C.D. Spence, John Martin Southern, Josiah Ramsey, William Ramsey, Harvey Ritchie, Henry Hall, John Woods, Lafayette Mason, Calvin Mize, Calvin Brooks, Levi Brooks, Samuel Estep, Jacob Estep, John Longeornite, John C. Fields, David Brandham, Albert Overton, Rufus Overton, Isaac Livingstone, John Leary, and Henry Francis Coleman.
            This company was active from September 1864 until the end of the war in the spring of 1865. Its headquarters was at Tazewell, Tennessee, Claiborne County, and it was allied with the second North Carolina mounted infantry.  The Tiger Company acted with the infantry until the close of the war.  As a matter of fact, the federal government provided clothing, horse feed, rations, and ammunition.  The men had to provide their own horses, however, and, although the government provided some guns, most preferred guns of higher quality so they brought their own. 
            Many of these men were well off and they were an honorable company.  No one in the company could pilfer or rob and no one was allowed to insult or mistreat a prisoner.  All prisoners were turned over to the authorities and Henry remembers those prisoners being many in number. The prisoners were treated kindly while in the company’s care and the company would even pitch in to provide both the prisoners needs and wants while in captivity.
            The company was engaged in several clashes during its course of service.  Two engagements were in Tazewell; two were at Ball’s Bridge in Lee County, Virginia; and, before it was associated with the 2nd North Carolina Regiment, the company had two engagements with the Confederates near Rob Camp Church in Claiborne County.  They also had one near the Bales Iron Works in Lee County, Virginia.
            After the war, on February 17, 1867, he married Matilda Evelyn Parkey (born April 6, 1851; daughter of William and Martha Ann Martin Parkey).  He also worked at a sawmill (census is unclear of his role) and his real estate was worth $2000.  His personal estate was valued at $200. 
            After 1870, he became a farmer, cattle dealer, lawyer, Tennessee State Senator, Judge of Hancock County Court, and a U.S. Commissioner of Internal Revenue (Prog). He seemed to be a very prominent and busy man but also a family man.
            During his marriage to Matilda, they had eight children, all born in Tennessee.  They were:
1.     Rosa Coleman, born April 19, 1868; died January 28, 1935; married Frank Hopkins, son of Washington Hopkins of Hancock County, TN
2.     Dora Ann Coleman, born in March 1870; married Cass Jarvis of Sneedville, Tennessee
3.     John S. Coleman, born about 1872; married Nancy Trent (born in 1874; daughter of James A. and Mary Jane Green Trent)
4.     Martha Coleman, born about 1874; married J. Lewis Turner (born March 3, 1860; died February 6, 1908)
5.     William P. Coleman, born about 1878; married December 29, 1898 in Lee County, Virginia to Myrtle E. Albert (born December 6, 1882; died July 1942 in Loudon County, Virginia; daughter of Jacob Paris and Alice Shelburn Albert); after married they moved to Lee County, Virginia and settled on Wallens Creek where William was in the milking and mercantile business.  Later they moved to Leesburg and he became a farmer. They had four children: Vivian, Vinnie (Jean), Paris, and Matilda.
6.     Frank D. Coleman, born September 8, 1884; died May 4, 1944; married Mossie Lawson Gillenwaters (born June 15, 1885; died December 3, 1949).  They had no children and owned and operated the Rose Hill Hotel in Virginia.
7.     Shirley Coleman; married Nelle Baker (daughter of the Reverend Neil Baker and Jane Weston Baker)
8.     Isabella (Belle) Coleman; married 1st to Horace L. Tyler (divorced); married 2nd to R.E. Whitney (Census and Bales, 489).

On April 7, 1910, Henry’s wife Matilda died.  In September of that same year, he remarried Martha (Drinnon) Surgener, widow of Abraham Surgener and daughter of Thomas Jefferson and Ruth Johns Drinnon of Mulberry Gap, Tennessee.  Then on August 16, 1914, Henry Francis Coleman, the second son of Thomas R. Coleman, died (Bales, 489).
My line continues through Callaway’s daughter, Lula N. Coleman.  Lula was born May 15, 1879 in Hancock County, Tennessee. When she was eight, she and her parents moved to Claiborne County and she lived with them from then on. During that time, her father imparted his love of music and taught her to play the violin.  In 1900, she lived two or three houses down from a man named James Stewart Scott and his family.  This was the man she would marry, but not for several more years.
At this time, James was married to Nancy (or Mannie) A. Scott and they had been married for fourteen years. She had been born on February 27, 1860 in North Carolina.  James was born April 12, 1860 in Tennessee. They had five children at home in 1900. They were:
1.     William S. Scott, born May 1886 in Tennessee
2.     Mossie Scott (Eads), born August 3, 1887 in Tennessee; died May 1, 1914
3.     Floyd C. Scott, born in 1890 in Tennessee
4.     Catherine Scott, born May 1892 in Tennessee
5.     Minnie Scott, born January 23, 1894 in Tennessee; died January 23, 1910.
On March 22, 1907, his wife died of Tuberculosis.  She is buried in Scott Cemetery in Claiborne County, Tennessee.  By 1911, two daughters had also died of the same disease.  Mossie died three years later.  By 1912, only one son was still alive and he was 40 at the time.  James Scott had lost most of his family within the space of 7 years, most to tuberculosis.
Lula’s personal papers list August 27, 1911 as the wedding date that an old maid of 32 married a widower of 51.  They were married by Jessie Moore, a Quaker preacher, who was later to perform the ceremony to marry Lula’s daughter Ruby to James Agee Beaty.  The marriage took place in Claiborne County, Tennessee with the witness listed as Ruth Moore.
Then on December 21, 1912, Ruby Hildah Scott, Lula’s first daughter, was born.  Later, on October 20, 1916, Pearl Coleman Scott was born.  James Scott had a happy second family.
Although this was his second family, he built a new house up on a hill above Shawanee for Lula.  Here is what his daughter Ruby says about it:
He built it for her and it was an odd house.  It was pink – pink and white. Well, nobody had ever seen a pink house back then but my brother in law had been to Florida. He was a carpenter, a very good one, and he said he could build it and he said down in Florida, they were all pink. And he said, “Now, I’m gonna paint this house pink.” And he trimmed it in white. And it was beautiful.  Oh – it was so pretty – up on a hill with lots of trees. And I really never envied anybody their home ‘cause I thought we had the prettiest home of anybody in the world.  Yeah, it was really kinda unusual but it was pretty – real pretty. (Ruby, 6).


            Within the house itself, there were four rooms – two bedrooms, living room, kitchen and one closet.  But the whole house was big – “big kitchen, big high ceilings, and big rooms, and big windows” (Ruby, 6).
            The site of the house often came in handy because, when Lula would play the violin, people would come in from all over town to hear her.  It was a large attraction since there were no radios or phonographs prevalent at the time.  People would enjoy it greatly. However, Lula and her family had a little dog that would start to howl every time Lula would start to play.  “It was so funny,” remembers Ruby.  They would have to put the dog up while Lula played.
            Lula must have enjoyed music, especially church music, as she was a staunch Baptist.  She took Ruby and Pearl to the Baptist church for Sunday School and Church in the afternoon. They attended the Methodist church with James in the mornings.  Ruby says this about James Scott and church:

He went to church and took Pearl and I with him, my sister and I every morning…He sat on the front seat at the church, at the Methodist church.  I can just see him sitting in the corner of the front seat - always sat in the corner. And we had to go to church.  He was a good man, a very good man.  And there was one minister used to come to see us real often. And there was one song that Daddy loved – they played it on the organ.. and this old minister would play it on the old organ: Peace, peace, wonderful peace.  Yeah, it’s an old, old song, and I remember how daddy liked that.

            According to Ruby, James did seem to be at peace with God and man. He was very well liked around town and continually did kind things for people.  For instance, he ran a small grocery store (along with a farm for the family’s food) and when things like coffee and sugar were weighed out onto the scales, he would always heap it up and give a little bit more than the customer had asked for, free of charge.  That was his nature and everybody liked him.  He was popular, as was his store.
            The store was of the type you think of when you think of small town country grocery. The men would spend their time sitting around on big sacks of meal feed gossiping, talking, and spitting tobacco. The store had a high porch and one day, some men were sitting on the porch sitting and chewing tobacco. At the same time, Pearl just happened to be down near the edge of the porch playing. Before she knew what happened, a big wad of tobacco hit her right in the face and she ran home crying. She never forgot that.  It was a part of what it meant to be a daughter of a grocer.
            To be the daughter of James Scott, the grocer, also meant a degree of popularity at school.  Any friends that Ruby brought home from school were allowed to get free candy from the store and James Scott never said a word about it.  He was generally just kind and givng in his business and in life.
            Besides the store, James Scott also had a little farm that grew just enough to support the family.  “It really did support us very well because he was a good gardener” (Ruby, 3). Lula would work on the farm too, especially when James ran the store. She was happy with her work and her life.
            Lula was, character-wise, a very happy person, an optimist at heart, despite her hard life.  Ruby says, “she was always happy and enjoyed working in the garden and was a real good cook. As a matter of fact, she cooked so well that the traveling preachers all liked to come there to eat.  She could cook the best fried chicken and the Methodist preachers especially loved it” (Ruby, 5). For regular meals, she would make jams and and jellies, ho-cakes (corn cakes cooked on top of the stove), butter, molasses, buttermilk, beans, soup beans, and turnip greens. She would even process meats and sausage from the animals on the farm.  She was a real southern cook and managed to keep the family well fed.
Even after James and her father died, she was able to manage the farm and keep Pearl and Ruby in school and well fed. She did, however, have to close the store because she couldn’t handle it on top of managing everything else. Everyone begged her to keep the store open but with James gone, she couldn’t.
Right before James died, Lula was so busy taking care of the farm and the stock that Ruby, at age fourteen, had to take care of her father.  She would “get him out of bed, get him into his big ole’ rocker”, bathe him, and comb his hair and much more. During that same year that Ruby was fourteen, James died.
Later on, after his death and after Ruby’s marriage, Lula lived with Ruby and James A. Beaty, her husband. Then in December of 1963, Lula Narvesta Coleman Scott died and was buried in Scott Cemetery, Claiborne County, TN.
It is through her daughter Ruby that my line continues. She was born in 1912 in Tennessee and went to school in Claiborne County. She attended public school as a child. Her school was first held in an old Masonic building that was in very bad shape so the whole community got together and gave up their time to remedy the situation.  There was very little money for a new school so the women fixed lunch and the men worked together to build a brick school building in just one day.  It was an amazing feat. The building was close enough for Ruby and Pearl to walk to and from school and to even go home for lunch.
When Ruby went off to college, she also stayed close to home and attended Lincoln Memorial University for one year before she married James Agee Beaty (born July 18, 1909).
She and Beaty, as she called him, met when she was fourteen. She tells the story like this: “I believe it was the day that my father was buried, the lady and her daughter that my husband lived with and worked his way through college. They had this big farm in Shawanee and so they were very good friends of momma’s and they came up that night. We lived up on a hill and there was a big gate at the foot of the hill. Well, Beaty, my (future) husband, drove them up and he parked down at the foot of the hill and I was sitting on the front porch reading a magazine so he stayed down there a while and he kept lookin’ up and lookin’ up and I looked down at him and finally he moseyed up, you know, and we started talking and I think that was the beginning of our long, long relationship.”
The relationship was a very long one. It was not until Beaty had finished college and had taught for a year that they were married.  Finally, on April 16, 1931, James Agee Beaty and Ruby Hildah Scott were married in Claiborne County by the same Quaker preacher that had performed the ceremony for her mother and father.
It was then that they moving around begin because of Beaty’s many job changes.  They stayed in Shawanee for a while, long enough to have their first child – Jimmy Jeanne, and their second, Lee Scott, before they moved to Pennington Gap, Virginia where William Patrick was born. After that, they moved back to Shawanee, then to Harrogate, then to Bristol, Virginia, back to Shawanee, and finally, to Chattanooga.
During this time, Beaty taught school in Shawanee for three years right after they were married. Due to the Great Depression, schoolteachers got very little pay and, once they were paid, they had to take their checks to a man in Claiborne County who would cash them and take a percentage of the check in order to cash them.  After this, Beaty only ended up with $88.00 a month for being a teacher and principal of Tazewell High School.  This wasn’t enough to support his growing family, so he decided to quit.
After that, he went to Roanoke, Virginia to try to sell insurance but that didn’t go well during a depression so he came home and worked for the government for a while. His job required that he go out on farms and teach the farmers in the Shawanee area to conserve soil.
Next, he got a job teaching school in the mines above Middleburg, Kentucky and worked there until 1942 when he got a job with the Knoxville News Sentinel and worked with them until 1950 or so.  Then he moved to Bristol, Virginia and became the circulation manager of the Bristol newspaper.  It soon went broker so he went back to Shawanee for a while before moving to Chattanooga to work with the Chattanooga News Free Press.
When World War II began, Beaty took his physical (1941) but he kept being deferred from the draft because he was with the newspaper. At that time, since TV and radio were not common, the newspaper was the main source of information so the government considered newspaper work a very important job and vital to the war effort.  At one point, however, he was about to go to war when the government announced that men with families weren’t going to be taken up anymore.  So James Beaty ended up not going to war. He spent the rest of his life in Chattanooga as a newspaperman, husband, father, and grandfather.
As a matter of fact, James Agee Beaty died a short time after his youngest son’s first child was born. The newest grandchild and her grandfather were in Memorial Hospital at the same time but he never got to see her.  He died after 38 years of marriage to Ruby.
Ruby’s sister Pearl also married. She married George Turner in Mississippi.  They had no children.
Ruby’s firstborn, Jimmy Jeanne (born January 8, 1932) first married Don Warren and had three children: Donna Leigh, Mary Ann, and Donald Richard. Later, she divorced and remarried to George Dunn.  Donna Leigh married Jim Rimer and had Kristen and Jackie.  She later divorced and married again and had Leigh Ann Brown. Jimmy Jeanne is deceased.
Mary Ann married John Tipton and had two children, Sarah Faith and Lauren Lee. She and John Tipton later divorced.  Mary Ann passed away March 1, 2007 at the age of 52.  Donald Richard (Rick) passed away in 2013.
The second child, Lee Scott Beaty (born April 12, 1936; died July 22, 2006), married Ruth and had two children, Lee Scott Beaty, Jr. and James Lawrence Beaty.  Ruth and Lee later divorced. 
William Patrick Beaty, the third child in the family, was born on March 14, 1938 in Pennington Gap, Virginia.  He married Myra Carol Gravitt (born June 28, 1942 in Marion County, TN; died July 28, 2004) on December 21, 1964 in Ringgold, Georgia. They had two children, Wendy Brooke Beaty (born April 26, 1969) and Amy Beth Beaty (born January 27, 1977). 
Wendy Brooke married William Bruce Marsh (April 2, 1968) on August 12, 1989 and later had two children, Daniel Patrick Marsh (May 12, 1996) and Heather Grace Marsh (January 6, 1999). Amy Beth married David Andrew Sherman (April 2, 1966) on August 2, 2002. 
The Coleman family who began in Wiltshire, England before 1783 end up as the Beatys, Marshes, and Shermans of Chattanooga, Tennessee in 2013.  The story is to be continued…..