Sunday, June 28, 2015

Jesse Baker Smith, III, son of Jesse Baker Smith, II

Jesse Baker Smith, III (Jay), son of Jesse Baker Smith, II, born March 1, 1944, at Denver, Colorado.  He married Janice Marie Jacksa in the St. James Roman Catholic Church in Denver.  Janice is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph V. Jacksa of Oakland, California.  Jay and Janice were married in June 1966.

Jay graduated from the University of Wyoming in 1966.  In 1968 he was "certified as a deputy combat crew commander for the Strategic Air Command.  Lt. Smith distinguished himself by earning a highly qualified rating.  He is assigned with the 351st Strategic Missile Wing at Whitman Air Force Base, Missouri."  Jay is now employed by the Trans-International Airlines.  He is the District Sales Manager of the San Francisco area, which included Northern California, the Pacific Northwest, and as far east as Utah.  He and his wife live in San Bruno, California.


Jesse Baker Smith, II, son of Jesse Baker Smith

Jesse Baker Smith, Jr
South Seas Island, 1944
Jesse Baker Smith, II, son of Jesse Baker Smith, was born March 30, 1913, at Evanston, Wyoming.  He married, on July 9, 1938, Ernestine Letita Ricci, born August 2, 1915, in Georgetown, Colorado.  Ernestine's parents were from Italy.

Jesse, II (Jess), attended the University of Wyoming for two years.  During World War II he served four years (1942-1946) in the Southwest Pacific Anti-Aircraft Artillery and Communications and was released from duty with the rank of captain.  He worked three years for the Unita County Abstract and Title Company in Evanston, then went to the Title Guaranty Company in Denver in 1940.  Since 1952 he has been vice president of Title Guaranty and in April 1964 was appointed manager of the Jefferson County Branch at Lakewood.  He has many interests and activities; is a past president of the Denver Realty Board, Mile-Hi Sertoma Club, Presidents' Round Table, and Land Title Association of Colorado, and was District Governor of Sertoma for two terms.  He is active in the Denver Board of Realtors, the Denver Home Builders Association, and the Chamber of Commerce.  He is a member of the Denver Athletic Club, Pinehurst Country Club and Sigma Nu Fraternity.  
Jesse Jr, Jesse Sr, and Merrill Smith

Jesse's and Ernestine's one child is

Jesse Baker Smith, III


Jesse Baker Smith, son of Elias William Smith

Jesse Baker Smith, age 16
Ceralvo, Kentucky
Jesse Baker Smith, son of Elias William Smith, born July 8, 1884, at Ceralvo, Kentucky; died March 30, 1947; married on June 20, 1912, Sarah Ellen Gerrard, born October 2, 1889, at Evanston, Wyoming.  Sarah's parents were Daniel and Sarah (Morris) Gerrard, both of whom were born in England.

When Jesse Baker Smith was in his early twenties, he left his native State of Kentucky to seek employment in Florida.  Later he decided to leave Florida and go to Portland, Oregon.  He went by train as far as his money would take him, which was to Evanston, Wyoming.  There he left the train to look for a job.  He was employed as a carpenter and he worked at that trade the rest of his life.

Sarah Ellen Gerrard,
age 19
Jesse arrived in Evanston in August 1908.  About a year later, a close friend, who was a member of the Latter-day Saints Church, invited him to attend a Church meeting.  Jesse was introduced to several Latter-Day Saints girls, one of whom was Sarah Ellen Gerrard.  They became friends and went to church together, to dances and other entertainments.  Jesse became a convert to the L. D. S. Church in July 1911 and he and Sarah were married on June 20, 1912, in the Salt Lake Temple of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.  In time, they became the parents of five children.

Some time later, unemployment in Evanston necessitated Jesse's going to Rock Springs, Wyoming, to find employment and he continued to work there.  He died in the Rock Springs Hospital on March 30, 1947, and was buried in Evanston on April 2. 

Jesse Baker Smith & Sarah Ellen Gerrard, 1910
Although Sarah G. Smith and this writer have not met, they have corresponded for twenty years and have exchanged a great deal of information about the Smith and related families.  Before her marriage Sarah was a school teacher.  When she was 66 years of age she enrolled for 8-month courses in English Literature and Social Science.  This is only one evidence of her industry and quest for knowledge.

The children of Jesse Baker and Sarah Ellen (Gerrard) Smith are:

Sarah Smith,
Merrill, Claude, Jesse Jr.
Jesse Baker Smith
David Merrill Smith













William Ashby Smith, son of Everett Andrew Smith

William Ashby Smith, son of Everett Andrew Smith, is the youngest of the three children.  His date of birth probably was 1923 or 1924.  On February 4, 1951, he married Eugie Virginia Lawler at the First Methodist Church in Athens, Alabama.  For a time the couple lived in Red Bay, where "Billy" was engaged in the practice of law.  Some years later they moved to Memphis, Tennessee, where I believe they now live.  Mrs. Smith is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. C. N. Lawler, of Russellville, Alabama. 

Mary Nell Smith, daughter of Everett Andrew Smith

Mary Nell Smith, daughter of Everett Andrew Smith, a few years younger than E. A., Jr. She married and had one child.  Following the birth of the child, she suffered a mental illness. 

Everett Andrew Smith, Jr., son of Everett Andrew Smith

Everett Andrew Smith, Jr., son of Everett Andrew Smith, born in 1911; died May 26, 1950, at age 39.  His obituary read as follows and is taken from an Alabama newspaper of Saturday, May 27, 1950:

"E. A. Smith, 39, president of the Smith Lumber Company at Red Bay, was killed in an (auto) accident near Florence Friday.

"He was a trustee of Athens College, chairman of the board of stewards of the Red Bay Methodist Church, and was active in civic affairs.

"He was educated at the Brandon-Hughes Military Academy in Tennessee and at the University of Alabama.


"Mr. Smith is survived by the widow, Mrs. Julia Smith; his mother, Mrs. E. A. Smith, Sr.; two daughters, Mary Lucille, 4, and Sandra, 12; a son E. A. Smith, III; a brother, William Ashby Smith, and a sister, Mary Nell Smith.  Funeral services will be held at 4 p.m. tomorrow in the Red Bay Methodist Church.  Burial will be in Red Bay Cemetery." 

Everett Andrew Smith, son of Elias William Smith

Everett Andrew, Everett Andrew Jr,
Mary Nell, & Geneva Ashby Smith
Everett Andrew Smith, son of Elias William Smithborn January 4, 1882, in Ohio County, Kentucky; died August 15, 1928; married Geneva Ashby about 1905 or 1906.


Everett Smith went to Red Bay, Alabama, when he was a young man.  This writer does not know what prompted him to go there, but in 1927 he was considered a wealthy man and was called "the father of Red Bay."  He had numerous business interests, but the chief one was a lumber business he had established.  It was headquartered in Red Bay and had branch offices and mills in three or four other small towns in Alabama.
Cousins:   Martha Mary Smith, Everett Andrew Smith Jr., 
Pearl O. Smith, & Mary Nell Smith

Mrs. Smith survived her husband by a number of years.  She was an active Daughter of the American Revolution.  In her latter years, she was the victim of crippling arthritis.

Mr. and Mrs. Smith's children were:

Carrie Bell Ashby, daughter of Lula May Smith

Edward Johnson Ashby, Sr,
Lula May Smith Ashby,
& Carrie Bell Ashby
Carrie Bell Ashby, daughter of Lula May Smith, born October 28, 1920, at Echols; married October 8, 1938, Vernon Williams.  They are the parents of several children who are married and have children.  In 1972, Mr. and Mrs. Williams lived on Route 1, Beaver Dam, Kentucky

Mae Ashby, daughter of Lula May Smith

Mae Ashby
Mae Ashby, daughter of Lula May Smith, born November 2, 1915, at Echols; married Lenwood Brown; married (2nd) Garland Hamrick on June 1, 1951; married (3rd) Dudley B. Lutz in 1960. 

Mr. Lutz was born April 9, 1890, in Madisonville, Kentucky.  In his professional life, he had been a school teacher, a supervisor of instruction, and a high School principal.  At the time of his death October 11, 1965, he was retired and lived in Taylor, Michigan.  

After his death, Mae Ashby Lutz continued to teach in the Taylor School System.

Edward Johnson Ashby, Jr
& Mae Ashby


Edward Johnson Ashby, Jr., son of Lula May Smith

Edward Johnson Ashby, Jr
Edward Johnson Ashby, Jr., son of Lula May Smith, born September 8, 1913, at Echols; married Bernice Matelis on February 19, 1944; lives in or near Chicago. 

Jesse Baker Ashby, son of Lula May Smith

Jesse Baker Ashby
Jesse Baker Ashby, son of Lula May Smith, born July 29, 1910, at Echols; died December 7, 1935. 

Saturday, June 27, 2015

Agnes Ashby, daughter of Lula May Smith

Mary Ashby (left) & Agnes Ashby (right), 
daughters of Lula Mae Smith and Edward Ashby,
 with “Grandfather” Elias William Smith
Picture taken between 1910 - 1915
Agnes Ashby, daughter of Lula May Smith, born February 5, 1908, at Echols.  On July 25, 1925, married Melford Ashby; married (2nd) Chuck Vredenburg; married (3rd) Hugh Smith.


Sam Elias Ashby, son of Lula May Smith

Sam Elias Ashby, son of Lula May Smith, born May 13, 1906, at Echols; married Betty Wiley and they are the parents of at least two children: a son who saw military service in Vietnam and a daughter, Lois Jean Ashby.  In 1972, Mr. and Mrs. Sam Ashby lived in Indiana.

Mary Elizabeth Ashby, daughter of Lula May Smith

Mary Ashby (left) & Agnes Ashby (right), 
daughters of Lula Mae Smith and Edward Ashby,
 with “Grandfather” Elias William Smith
Picture taken between 1910 - 1915
Mary Elizabeth Ashby, daughter of Lula May Smith, born November 5, 1903; died November 18, 1942; married Calvin Sayler.  Their children were:

Arthur Ray Sayler, born in Henry County, Indiana, December 30, 1939; died in Ohio County, Kentucky, September 19, 1965.  He was a graduate of Beaver Dam (Kentucky) High School and a member of the Rockport Baptist Church.  Burial was in the Sunnyside Cemetery at Beaver Dam.  He is survived by his wife, Joanne Taylor Sayler, daughter Vicki Joe Sayler and son Kevin Sayler.


Mrs. Madge (Sayler) Burger, who lived in Detroit in 1965 

Lula May Smith, daughter of Elias William Smith

Wedding Picture of Lula May Smith
& Edward Johnson Ashby
Lula May Smith, daughter of Elias William Smith, born August 24, 1878, at Ceralvo; died at Echols, Kentucky, January 9, 1931; buried in the Pond Run Baptist Church Cemetery in Ohio County, Kentucky.  On September 16, 1902, Lula married Edward Johnson Ashby, who was born December 26, 1883, and died September 3, 1969; was buried at the Pond Run Baptist Church Cemetery.  Late in life Mr. Ashby married Mrs. Dora Bratcher, who survived him.  

Children of Lula May (Smith) and “Ed” Ashby are:




Martha Mary Smith, daughter of Claude Everly Smith

Martha Mary Smith Taylor, George R Taylor,
 Larry Russell Taylor
Martha Mary Smith, daughter of Claude Everly Smith, was born Feburary 5, 1909, in Ohio County, Kentucky.  She graduated from Lindenwood College, a girls' junior college in St. Charles, Missouri.  She then went to the University of Kentucky at Lexington and received a degree there.   

On May 29, 1932, she married George R. Taylor.  They went to Washington, D. C., and entered the Lewis Hotel Training School, but when they were ready to put into practice what they had learned no opportunities were available.  For a number of years they operated a dry cleaning establishment.  

Larry Russell Taylor








Their only child was Larry Russell Taylor, born March 31, 1945.  Larry Russell Taylor is a printer at the National Security Agency, a branch of the Federal Government.  He married Debra Ann Yorkilous at Rockville, Maryland, on April 11, 1969.  They have one child, Jenifer Lynn Taylor, who was born in 1969.

Martha died in Washington, D. C., on May 27, 1958, and is buried in the Washington National Cemetery.


Appendix H - Will of Thomas Smith

The following was deleted from the original of this publication by Pearl O. Smith, and has been inserted here for historical purposes.

Thomas Smith's will is recorded in Will Book B, page 374.  It reads:

            "I, Thomas Smith, of Fairfax County...to son William Smith, all my lands wherever situated, except that it is my desire that if the lands for which I have a suit against Colonel Fielding Lewis be recovered, then I direct the same be sold by my said son and the money equally divided between him and my two daughters, Susannah and Mary and their heirs. Also give my son seven slaves and all of my household goods, stocks of all kinds, plantation utensils, feather bed, six silver spoons, two guns, one of which commonly called T. V., I desire may never be parted with out of the family and one silver marked G. M. and the other half of my stocks and household goods at the plantation, to her all the rents and outstanding debts due to me with my crop of tobacco, I give...to be equally divided between my wife and said two daughters. I give my wife the use of my whole estate during her life and at her death, and not before the same, to go as directed above.  Son William sole executor."

Sealed March 15, 1764.


Inventory shows that John West received quit rents for 1594 acres of land.  Paid. 

Exhibit G - Claude Everly Smith Newspaper Articles



Appendix F - The Will of Elias Guess Smith

Muhlenberg County, Kentucky, Will Book 3, page 7

E. G. SMITH Will.

This day personally appeared before one Solomon Rhodes, Justice of Peace for
Muhlenberg County, State of Kentucky, Simion Vaught and Hannah Smith made oath as follows; to wit, On the 3rd day of March 1830 Elias G. Smith did voluntarily give and deliver into the actual possession of his son William B. Smith in their presence, all his personal estate without any exception, he, the said Elias G. Smith, being in his perfect mind--further the witnis saith on oath sworn to and signed by said witnis before me this 3rd day of March 1830.
                                                                                                            Her
                                                                                                Hanna  X  Smith  
                                                                                                            Mark

Test. Solomon Rhodes
Muhlenberg County J. P.                                                   Simon Vaught

March County Court 1830

The foregoing instrument of writing purporting to be the nuncupative will of
Elias G. Smith, deceased, was executed in the Court proven by the oathe of Simion Vaught and Hannah Smith subscribing witnesses and ordered to be recorded.
                       
                                                                                                Atty. Ch. F. Wing, Clk.



Claude Everly Smith, son of Elias William Smith

Claude Everly Smith
Claude Everly Smith, son of Elias William Smith, was born February 9, 1876, at Ceralvo, Kentucky.

Ceralvo was laid out on March 10, 1851, on the banks of the beautiful Green River.  In 1870, it was a thriving little town with two general stores, a blacksmith shop, a boot and shoe maker, three tobacco warehouses where tobacco was bought and sold, two doctors, a post office, a church and a school.[1]  Freight and supplies were brought to Ceralvo by steamboat and transferred by wagon and teams to Hartford, Centertown, and other parts of Ohio County.  In dry weather the dirt roads were dusty, when it rained they were muddy, and in the winter months they were almost impassable.  The ferry across Green River at Ceralvo transported people and vehicles from the Muhlenberg County side of the river to the Ohio County side.

Some of Claude Smith's biographies refer to him as "of humble birth."  By today's standards it would indeed have been so, but the home of his parents was no more "humble" than were other homes in the community.  Most of the citizens were farmers.  Claude's father owned his home and the land upon which he lived and raised his large family of children.  Homes in that era were without electricity, running water, and refrigeration.  It was before the advent of the railroad, and the automobile, telephone, radio, TV, and aeroplane were yet to be invented.

Ceralvo eventually died when new modes of transportation came into use and became widespread, and when educational and employment opportunities in the cities called to its young people.  After attending the homecoming at Ceralvo on August 31, 1958, Claude Smith wrote to his niece Pearl Smith as follows:

"The town to which I resorted during my youth and young manhood with extreme pleasure is gone and instead there has risen a wilderness, but the tragedy of it you could not realize, for you never knew Ceralvo the home and pride of your father and mother.  The school house where I first attended school and last, when I was practically grown, attended a school of select pupils, which is now a church, is the only thing about Ceralvo that remains as it was. ...The cemetery is changed but is so well kept that one can take pride in having known it so long.  I located the graves of Grandfather and Grandmother Baker (Andrew W. and Polina F.) ...All in all, it was a rather sad day for me."

Claude Smith's early education was received in a one-room school house.  Of it, 75 years later, he said, "The schools today think they are quite progressive, but I was studying physiology, trigonometry, and surveying in primary school in 1894."  After the one-room school, he attended special classes at the college level conducted by a university graduate.  He began teaching at age 18.  There were no degree requirements for teachers, but in order to get a license he was required to take an exam before the County Examiner.  He became a “traveling schoolmaster,” teaching for five months in each of seven one-room schools.[2]

In 1903, he gave up teaching to become a manager and editor of the Hartford Republican (later The Ohio County News).

He read law while engaged in teaching and later in the office of M. L. Heavrin.  He was admitted to the bar in 1898 in Hartford, where some years later he began the practice of law.  In 1909, Claude Smith was elected County Attorney and served in that capacity until 1915, when he was elected Commonwealth Attorney for the counties of Ohio, Daviess, McLean, and Hancock.  During his term as Commonwealth Attorney, a term that extended to 1922, he was instrumental in prosecuting and bringing to an end the activities of a group known as “possum hunters.”  (See Exhibit G)

Some time during the 1960’s, Mr. Smith’s fellow lawyers in Owansboro gave a luncheon (or dinner) to honor him, their “nestor.”  In his response to the honor paid him, he said, in part, regarding the “possum hunters”:

“Soon after these bands of marauders began their nefarious operations, the victims of the onslaughts came to counsel with me to devise ways of apprehending the participants and to prosecute them.  Our first step was to establish their identity, as they were either disguised, unknown or not identifiable by the victims in the darkness of the night when the raids were perpetuated.  Our investigation soon resulted in a witness whose evidence was sufficient to submit to the Grand Jury.  This was done in June 1915 and indictments were returned accusing the marauders of confederating and banding themselves together for the purpose of intimidating, alarming, injuring and disturbing another person.

“Not long after the indictments were returned, those indicated had the word passed on to me that if I did not ‘let up’ they would ‘get me.’  I told their emissaries that I was certain they would not accost me in the daytime and if they came at night I would be ready for them; that if they came after I had retired, I would have a double-barrel shotgun standing against the wall by the side of my bed and a Colt automatic pistol under my pillow.  They never molested me.”

At the outset of his law career, Claude Smith pursued the profession alone but in 1912 became associated with W. H. Barnes.  He moved to Owensboro in 1924, but they also maintained an office in Hartford.  “The firm of Barnes and Smith was in 1928 one of the strongest legal combinations in Owensboro and established a large and desirable clientele.  Mr. Smith has a comprehensive knowledge of the principles of jurisprudence. ...Mr. Smith was chairman of the Red Cross committee in Hartford during the World War (I) and did much to promote the success of the organization.  He is a consistent member of the Methodist Episcopal Church and is a republican in his political convictions.  He is a Mason...and a member of the Owensboro Lodge, No. 144, B. P. O. E. He finds diversion in hunting and fishing.  Mr. Smith is highly esteemed by his professional colleagues and has demonstrated his public spirit by actual achievement.”[3]

Claude E. Smith was married on November 3, 1903, to Jessie B. Tatum, who was born February 11, 1884, the daughter of Dr. V. O. and Mattie (Tichenor) Tatum.  Jessie died on March 10, 1910, and is buried in Oakwood Cemetery at Hartford, Kentucky.  

Their only child was Martha Mary Smith.  

In 1912, he married Sue Wright, and the marriage lasted until 1922 and ended in divorce in 1923.  On April 22, 1939, he married Sadie (Adams) Jones, and they had been married 33 years at the time of his death.

September 1964
Claude Everly Smith 88 years old
Jesse Baker Smith II, Sadie Adams Jones Smith 
Claude Smith fell on ice in January 1972.  This resulted in his hospitalization and began his decline in health.  He died July 17, 1972, in his 97th year.  He had until his fall in January continued the practice of law and was at that time the oldest practicing lawyer in the State of Kentucky.  His funeral was conducted in Owensboro on July 20, and he was buried in Oakwood Cemetery in Hartford beside Jessie Tatum Smith, the mother of his child.

 Mrs. Sadie Smith died at noon Wednesday, October 25, 1972, after a short illness. Her funeral was conducted at the Glenn Funeral Home in Owensboro and she was buried in the Elmwood Cemetery there. 



[1]  “The Story of Ceralvo,” by Mary K. Maddox, in The Ohio County Times of July 31, 1969, and August 7, 1969
[2]   Messenger and Inquirer, Owensboro, Kentucky, August 18, 1968, page 1-C
[3]  History of Kentucky, V. IV, S. J. Clarke Publishing Company, Chicago-Louisville, 1928