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----------------------------------------- Parents -----------------------------------------
Wesley Blassingame Reynolds
    Birth: 16 Mar 1830 - Alabama
    Death: 23 Jul 1901 - Conway County, Arkansas
    Marriage: 10 Dec 1852 - Lauderdale County, Alabama
Sarah Anjaline Brewer
    Birth: 22 Aug 1837 - Tennessee
    Death: 05 Feb 1936 - Conway County, Arkansas
---------------------------------------- Children ----------------------------------------
   George Riley Reynolds
    Born 08 Jul 1856 - Tennessee
     Died 25 Apr 1931 -
   James Alexander Reynolds
    Born 18 Nov 1858 - Tennessee
     Died 19 Sep 1902 -
   Elizabeth Forrest Reynolds
    Born 1860 - Alabama
     Died 01 Jan 1914 -
   Thomas Hamilton Reynolds
    Born 22 Jan 1861 - Alabama
     Died 19 Feb 1864 -
   William Hickland Reynolds
    Born 22 Feb 1863 - Alabama
     Died 29 Apr 1923 -
   Emily Jane Reynolds
    Born 12 Jan 1869 - Alabama
     Died 11 Aug 1875 -
  Hugh Randolph Reynolds  
    Born 10 Feb 1871 - Arkansas
     Died 23 Feb 1920 -
   John Wesley Reynolds
    Born 01 May 1873 - Arkansas
     Died 31 May 1944 -
   Anna Gertrude Reynolds
    Born 20 Aug 1875 - Arkansas
     Died 18 Jan 1958 -
   Minnie Doren Reynolds
    Born 03 Feb 1878 - Arkansas
     Died 18 Sep 1955 -
   Sherwell Karah Reynolds
    Born 19 May 1881 - Arkansas
     Died 11 Aug 1936 -
Artifacts:
  • Wesley Blassingame and Sarah Angeline Brewer Reynolds

  • Notes:
    Research Notes -- David G Brewer 
    1852 - Lauderdale County, Alabama Marriage Book 6
    
      Brewer, Sarah A.  Reynolds, Wesley B. 10 Dec 1852  Bourland, J. P. JP
    
    1860 Census - Wayne County, Tennessee
    District 11 - 14 July 1860
    
      653 653
      W B Runnels   30 M Farmer 1000 1635 Ala
      Sarah A.      21 F                  Tenn
      George R.      3 M                  Tenn
      James A.       1 M                  Tenn
    
    1870 Census - Franklin County, Arkansas
    Mulberry Township - 1 June 1870
    
      21 23
      Reynolds, Wesley  40 M W Farmer 275    Alabama
      Anjeline          37 F W Keeping House Alabama
      George            16 M W At Home       Alabama
      James             13 M W At Home       Alabama
      Elizabeth         10 F W At Home       Alabama
      William            7 M W At Home       Alabama
      Emily              2 F W At Home       Alabama
    
    1880 Census - Conway County, Arkansas
    Lick Mountain - 8 June 1880
    
      132 133
      Reynolds, Wesley B.  W M 50      Works on Farm  Ala  NCar Ncar
      Angelina             W F 42 Wife Keeping House  Tenn Tenn Tenn
      William H.           W M 14 Son  At Home        Ala  Ala  Tenn
      Hugh                 W M  9 Son                 Ark  Ala  Tenn
      John                 W M  6 Son                 Ark  Ala  Tenn
      Anna                 W F  4 Dau                 Ark  Ala  Tenn
      Minnie               W F  2 Dau                 Ark  Ala  Tenn
    
      133 134
      Reynolds, James      W M 22      Works on Farm  Tenn Ala  Tenn
      Mary                 W F 14 Wife Keeping House  Mo        Mo
      Forrest (Foust?)     W M 1/12 Son               Ark  Tenn Mo
    
    1900 Census - Conway County, Arkansas
    Griffin TWP - 5 June 1900
    
      42 43
      Reynolds, Wesley B.  Head W M Mar 1830 70 M 45      Ala  Geo  Kent  Farmer
      Sarah A.             Wife W F Aug 1837 63 M 45 11 9 Tenn Tenn Tenn
      Minnie D.            Dau  W F Feb 1878 22 S         Ark  Ala  Tenn
      Shurewell K (R?).    Son  W M May 1881 19 S         Ark  Ala  Tenn
      James R.             GSon W M Nov 1890 10 S         Ark  Tenn Missouri
      Shurley              GSon W M Oct 1895  4 S         Ark  Tenn Missouri
    
    Miscellaneous from http://patrickthomson.com/reynolds/wesleyblassingame.html#sab
    
    	Wesley Blassingame Reynolds was born March 16, 1830, in Alabama, the eighth 
    	of fourteen children of Hugh Riah Reynolds and Elizabeth Hamm. Hugh Riah's 
    	father served in the Revolutionary War in North Carolina and in Georgia, 
    	according to his application for a pension. Hugh Riah's family settled in 
    	Alabama near the Tennessee border. There they built a plantation and 
    	prospered. 
    	
    	When Wesley was grown, he moved just across the state line to Tennessee, and 
    	lived there near the line between Tennessee and Alabama. He is believed to 
    	have been living in Wayne County Tennessee, when the Civil War began. The 
    	Company Muster Roll shows Wesley installed August 31, 1863, in Wayne County, 
    	Tennessee. His brother, Captain James Marion Reynolds, older than Wesley by 
    	seven years, installed him for three years. The company roster indicates that 
    	this company was part of the 9th Tennessee Cavalry; however, it was also 
    	known as the 19th Tennessee Cavalry Regiment and was commanded by Col. Jacob 
    	Biffle. It was also referred to as Biffle's 9th. (See Tennesseans in the 
    	Civil Wa, Volume I, pages 95-97.)
    	
    	Just three and one half months into his service to the Confederacy, Wesley 
    	was captured, after surrendering, by Lt. Col. Gaines, 50th Illinois Infantry 
    	in Lawrence County, Tennessee, December 2, 1863. His captor (a neighbor), 
    	shot him anyway. He lay in a fence corner for some time before being taken to 
    	a doctor. He somehow survived gangrene. He was confined at Pulaski, 
    	Tennessee, Louisville, Kentucky, and Rock Island, Illinois. He was exchanged 
    	March 2, 1865 ,having endured some fourteen months at Rock Island Prison. He 
    	was honorably discharged. 
    	
    	Family legend from several sources, among them Connie Reynolds and Virgie 
    	Sewing, say that on his way home from the war, he went to a hotel or large 
    	boarding house that had several floors, to get a room for the night. He got 
    	a room two or three stories up and went in. After he went into his room (it 
    	was night), someone locked the door so he couldn't get out. When he took his 
    	boots off, and set them down, they bounced back at him. He lit a match, and 
    	found three dead men under the bed, probably other Southern soldiers who had 
    	been killed. He stuck a nail in the key hole to keep it from being unlocked. 
    	During the night, the hotel people killed a woman in the hotel, and let her 
    	blood flow freely down the common bathtub. He feared they wanted to kill him 
    	and rob him, too. Somehow he attracted attention from a window the next 
    	morning and was able to escape. 
    	
    	When he finally got home, he found that things had not gone well there 
    	either. There was no money to pay the taxes. There had been a battle in his 
    	front yard, and Angeline's father was dead. So Wesley and Angeline joined a 
    	wagon train going west. Two of his brothers, James Marion and George Riley, 
    	and three of Angeline's brothers, Riley, Jim, and Alexander Brewer, came with 
    	them.
    	
    	Traveling was difficult. Crossing the big river on ferries was frightening. 
    	The eldest son, George, walked all the way carrying Wesley's muzzle loader, 
    	which is still in the family. Following the river roads, which weren't very 
    	good, they came to a settlement on Hacker Creek near Atkins, Arkansas. Having 
    	heard that "money grew on trees in Arkansas," they spent the first winter 
    	there with the Wilson family. They first settled at Old Hickory.
    	
    	Many say that Wesley was a very smart man and very well-liked. Some family 
    	members recall he may have been a school teacher. Virgie Sewing said he 
    	taught her mom, and taught her how to read! 
    	
    	Wesley's wounds from the war (at Walking Springs, Tennessee - see the sworn 
    	declaration dated June 30, 1893) were permanent. The wound was to his left 
    	hip and caused lumbago and retention of urine in his last months. The doctor 
    	said, in a sworn statement, that Wesley was a "Christian gentleman and his 
    	diseases and wounds are permanent, totally disabling him from manual labor, 
    	confining him to his bed nearly all the time." (Dr. P. M. Tate, Physician's 
    	Statement, June 14, 1901.) In fact, Wesley had to be helped onto a horse and 
    	taken to the creek to be baptized. He drew his pension from August 1, 1900, 
    	until he died July 22, 1901. He died, according to Martha Callahan 
    	Reynolds, of "catarrh of the kidneys." He is buried at Cedar Creek Cemetery 
    	near Jerusalem, Arkansas.
    	
    	Submitted by: Dayna Crow, P. O. Box 429, Fort Jones, CA 96032. E-mail to 
    	.
    	
    
       
    
    	Sarah Angeline Brewer, born August 22, 1837, in Alabama,  went by the name of 
    	Angeline (pronounced An juh LINE).  She had at least three brothers, and a 
    	half-sister named Emmaline.  She was probably of Indian Descent, as she often 
    	spoke of the Cherokees.  Virgie Sewing, her granddaughter, believes she was 
    	1/4 Indian, probably Cherokee.  She also told of the city of Birmingham. 
    	Alabama, being built on her family's property.  Mr. Brewer was said to have 
    	buried his gold in barrels.  The Brewer family had a two-story house there.  
    	(Virgie Sewing said their house in Birmingham was "blown away.")
    	
    	Grandfather Brewer gave a slave girl to Angeline when she was just a young 
    	girl. He wanted the mother of the slave to work so he gave the child slave to 
    	Angeline.  As a result, Angeline was not used to doing any work, and had 
    	never done any.  She had to learn to do everything.  Her mother died when she 
    	was young, and her father's second wife left him. As Angeline contemplated 
    	marriage, her daddy begged her not to marry so young, perhaps because he knew 
    	the training in work that she had missed out on in her growing up years.  But 
    	she married Wesley in late fall, 1854.
    	
    	Grandpappy Brewer's thoughts rang true as preserved by family stories. Four 
    	children came in rapid succession in the next few years.  Angeline, who had 
    	married at age 17, had not changed as a result of marrying.  She was a lover 
    	of sleep.  She sometimes slept until 10:00 AM.  Wesley would rise early and 
    	would call her to get up and get his breakfast several times but she would 
    	answer with, "Alright, Wesley, wait till I let the baby suck."
    	  
    	When Wesley went off to fight the Confederate fight in 1863, he and Angeline 
    	already had four children: George Riley born in 1856, James Alexander born in 
    	1858, Thomas Hamilton born in 1861, and Elizabeth Forrest born in 1863.  
    	Angeline said that while Wesley was in the war, she, three of the children 
    	(Thomas Hamilton had died in 1864), a woman slave and a child slave all lived 
    	together.  During the war, the slave used to sleep on a pallet at the foot of 
    	Angeline's bed because Angeline was so afraid.  
    	
    	There were many things of which to be afraid during the war.  The raiders 
    	were just one.  Angeline's grandmother was a midwife. She had a side saddle 
    	which she rode upon to deliver babies.  During the war, there were raiders 
    	who robbed people of anything they had, so Grandmother Brewer kept her side 
    	saddle upstairs hidden.  But one day a band of raiders found it.  She tried 
    	to take it from them.  They would pull and she would pull.  Finally, she 
    	pulled as hard as she could and let go suddenly and the raiders fell down the 
    	stairs with it.  Their leader made them leave her alone, saying something 
    	about  "anyone with that much spunk."  If anyone laid a hand on her, he said 
    	he would shoot them.  So Grandma kept her saddle.
    	     
    	After the war and Grandpappy  Brewer's death, Angeline's brothers had 
    	Grandpappy Brewer's will put aside. They felt he had been of unsound mind and 
    	his sons sold the property.  They also sold Angeline's slave, but Wesley 
    	bought her back for $900.
    	
    	The time after the war was hard for Wesley and Angeline. One more child was 
    	born in Alabama, William Hickland in 1866. Wesley was determined to move on, 
    	but Angeline didn't want to go to Arkansas.  Wesley had to pick her up and 
    	put her in the wagon!  When Wesley and Angeline left for Arkansas, from 
    	Alabama, after the war, the Negro slave girl followed them on foot.  They 
    	came by wagon.  The slave was the girl that Angeline's father had given to 
    	her for a wedding present.  The girl wouldn't leave.  They tried to get her 
    	to go back because Negroes weren't allowed in that section of the country by 
    	the people living there. They were afraid for her.  It was some time before 
    	she left.
    	
    	Settling first at a settlement at Hacker Creek near Atkins and then later at 
    	Old Hickory, Hattieville, and Jerusalem, six more children were born to 
    	Wesley and Angeline.  They were Emily Jane in 1869, Hugh Randolph in 1871, 
    	John Wesley in 1873, Annie Gertrude in 1875, Minnie D. in 1878, and Sherwell 
    	Karah in 1881. The family lived at that time on a farm.  Wesley taught school 
    	and farmed, even planting some sugar maples which are still standing today.  
    	He was a very industrious person according to all accounts. 
    	
    	Virgie Sewing says that Angeline carded, spun, and wove.  She made clothes.  
    	They lived in a one-room house.  Even when their eleven children got married, 
    	they all lived together in one room.
    	
    	Sometime during their years in Jerusalem, Angeline felt the need to follow 
    	the Lord in baptism.  Son William Hickland told her, "Mama, you're gonna be 
    	pretty cool."  She went when there was snow and ice on the ground and was 
    	baptized in the creek.
    	
    	She died just a little over a year shy of her hundredth birthday on February 
    	5, 1936.  She was buried at Cedar Creek Cemetery near Jerusalem, Arkansas.
    	
    	Submitted by: Dayna Crow, P. O. Box 429, Fort Jones, CA  96032.  E-mail 
    	.
    	
    
    
    2007-08-21 21:29:53