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GeneaSpy is an avid genealogist and advocate for genealogical education. Genealogy is a passion, not a hobby.

Friday, August 15, 2025

Leola Judson (Hawthorne) Vann (1867-1945) Biography

I have been having fun (and that’s what it’s all about), incorporating my timeline facts from my Ancestry tree into ChatGPT to write quick and brief biographies for my family members that I manage on Find a Grave. Yes, I double-check what ChatGPT writes to ensure there aren’t mistakes or hallucinations.

   This morning, I also uploaded an image of her obituary and asked ChatGPT to incorporate it into the bio (I wasn’t sure this was possible). Yes, it did! What I was looking for, besides a few extra facts, was who survived her and where they were living at the time.

   I currently manage 209 memorials, and I can’t wait to start making bios for each of them! I am doing this because, hopefully, Find a Grave will be around for decades to come, and both close and extended family will see this as helpful in their research and understanding of the family dynamics. ~ J. Paul Hawthorne.


Leola Judson (Hawthorne) Vann: A. B. Canada Collection


Leola Judson (Hawthorne) Vann
(12 February 1867 – 24 January 1945)

Leola Judson Hawthorne was born on 12 February 1867 in Greenville, Butler County, Alabama, to Adoniram Judson Hawthorne (1834–1877) and Clara Elizabeth Amelia Ford (1835–1908). She was one of eight children, part of a large family whose lives were deeply intertwined with the history of Greenville.

Her siblings were:

  • Ida Alice Hawthorne (1858–1912)
  • Alexander Travis Hawthorne (1860–1926)
  • Sara Ann Hawthorne (1862–1914)
  • Robert Lee Hawthorne Sr (1864-1950)
  • Emma Edna Hawthorne (1869–1949)
  • Etta Mae Hawthorne (1873–1899)
  • Ford Judson Hawthorne (1877–1932)

 

Leola’s early childhood was spent in Greenville, where she grew up alongside these brothers and sisters. She was ten years old when her father died in August 1877, leaving her mother to raise the younger children.

In 1887, at the age of 20, Leola married Asa Hunter Vann (1867–1948) in Greenville. They had four children: Fred Lee Vann (1887–1972), Clarence Eugene Vann (1890–1972), Perry Leslie Vann (1898–1991), and Edith Mae Vann (1900–1993).

A gentle and quiet woman by nature, Leola found her greatest joy in her home and its duties. She was described as a faithful and devoted wife and mother, whose love for Greenville never wavered.

Leola lived to see her children and grandchildren thrive. Surviving her at the time of her death were her husband Asa; three sons—Fred and Perry of Greenville, and Clarence of Chicago; her daughter Edith, known as Mrs. Melvin Weldon, of Montgomery; a sister, Emma Edna Hawthorne Lewis of Attapulgus, Georgia; a brother, R. L. Hawthorne of Camden; one grandson, William H. Weldon of Great Lakes, Illinois; and two granddaughters, Mrs. Emmett Rodgers of Montgomery and Valerie Vann of Greenville.

Leola passed away peacefully on 24 January 1945 in Greenville after a long illness. Funeral services were held from her home, led by Rev. Andrew Turnipseed and Rev. Joseph Avery, with burial in Magnolia Cemetery under the direction of Dunklin-Johnson. Her funeral was attended by many from near and far, a testament to her lasting impact on the community.

She was remembered not only as a devoted wife and mother but also as a woman whose life reflected a steadfast commitment to family, faith, and the town she called home for nearly eight decades.

Written from facts provided by J. Paul Hawthorne (great-grandnephew), her obituary, and help from AI by ChatGPT on 15 August 2025.

Obituary from the Greenville Advocate




Photo by J. Paul Hawthorne




Photo by J. Paul Hawthorne

Obituary source citation:
"Mrs. Hunter Vann Claimed By Death," Greenville [AL] Greenville Advocate, Thursday, 1 February 1945, page 6, column 4, Leola Judson Vann death notice; imaged, Newspapers.com (https://www.newspapers.com : accessed 15 August 2025).

Wednesday, August 13, 2025

Charity Evelyn (Gowens) Ray (1887-1983) Biography

 Charity Evelyn (Gowens) Ray (1887-1983) Biography

A Biography of my 3/4 great-grandaunt




Charity Evelyn Gowens was born on August 29, 1887, in Old Silver Valley, Coleman County, Texas, the daughter of General Washington Gowens and Rachel Ann Needham. She entered the world in a rural ranching and farming community during a time when Coleman County was still relatively young, its small settlements closely tied by kinship and shared labor.

Tragedy struck early in Charity's life when her mother, Rachel, died on April 9, 1891, leaving four-year-old Charity and her older siblings in the care of their father. In the years that followed, General Washington Gowens remarried, and Charity became the eldest sister to a large blended family of half-siblings born between 1893 and 1913. Sadly, not all survived infancy—Charity experienced the early deaths of her half-brother Moses in 1893, her half-sister Lola May in 1898, and her half-brother Joseph Calvin in 1908.


George Leonard Ray and Charity Evelyn (Gowens) Ray

By 1900, the thirteen-year-old Charity was living with her father, stepmother, and younger siblings in Justice Precinct 6 of Coleman County. On September 25, 1904, at the age of seventeen, she married George Leonard Ray, a man eleven years her senior. The couple made their home in Silver Valley, where George worked in farming and stock-raising. Their first child, George Washington Ray, was born in 1905, followed by Ida Mae Ray in 1907 and Willis Raymond Ray in 1910.

In February 1914, Charity endured one of the most painful moments of her life when she gave birth to twins, Charity Ann Ray and Jerry Dan Ray, both of whom died the following day. More than a decade later, on March 25, 1926, she welcomed her youngest child, Rosa Evelyn Ray.

The Rays remained rooted in Coleman County throughout their marriage. Census records from 1910, 1920, 1930, 1940, and 1950 document Charity's life as a farmer's wife, raising children, tending to the household, and helping maintain the family's livelihood through decades of economic change, including the Great Depression and World War II.

Charity's life was also marked by the continual bonds and losses within her extended family. She lived to witness the passing of her father in 1945, her husband in 1957, and many of her siblings and half-siblings over the decades. Yet she also saw her children grow to adulthood and establish their own families, and she became a grandmother and great-grandmother many times over.


50th. Wedding Anniversary in 1854


Gowens' Siblings in the early 1970s

 

In her later years, Charity lived in Coleman, where she remained part of the close-knit community she had known all her life. On August 12, 1983, at the age of 95, she died at 11:05 a.m. at the Holiday Hill Care Center in Coleman. Funeral services were held two days later at Stevens Funeral Home, officiated by David Coffman of the Novice Church of Christ. She was laid to rest in Coleman Cemetery beside her husband.


Photo by Ralph Terry


Spanning nearly a century, Charity Evelyn Gowens Ray's life reflected the endurance, faith, and family-centered values of rural Texas women of her era. Her legacy lives on in the many descendants who carry her memory forward.

Written from facts by J. Paul Hawthorne (3/4 great-grandnephew) and AI (ChatGPT) 08/13/2025.

3/4 relationship? Even though Charity was my maternal grandmother’s 1/2 sister (different mothers), Charity’s maternal great-grandparents were also my grandmother’s great-grandparents! This is called pedigree collapse. Maybe 3/4 is not the correct term.