1. Barney McCoy Smith, Senior (Part 4 of 4, Life in Texarkana, TX)
[These are the words of Barney McCoy Smith, Jr., recorded on an audio cassette tape, January 1999 in Macomb, Illinois. The first part of the tapes describe his father, Barney McCoy Smith, Sr.]
[Words that are unclear are marked with "????"]
[*Inaudible* Speaking of the parents of Barney Smith, Senior??] In 1923 she wrote a letter in answer to my mother’s request for information, and she said something to the effect of they moved around an awful lot and she just didn’t have any records, something to that effect. Jamie may know more our father’s family than I do. My father’s father we don’t know anything about more than what I said a while ago. I can give you some more information about my father’s brother and sister. I’ll do this in chronological order.
Uncle Claude, I guess his name was Robert Claude. His brothers and sisters called him RC[?]. His wife was Annie. I can’t think of what her family name was. They had one child, Robert Claude Jr. They lived in Tonka City, Oklahoma. I think he was a mechanic, and in later years he was in the banking business. During World War II they lived in New Orleans. They came to Beaumont when my actual father died, for my father’s funeral, and Annie later died and Uncle Claude remarried. Their son, Robert Claude Jr., that we call Bobby, was a….
[END OF TAPE 1 SIDE A / BEGINNING OF TAPE 1 SIDE B]
Name was, MacMickel? And I don’t know where she came from, probably from around Texarkana. Uncle Claude and Aunt Annie’s son, Bobby, was or is several years older than I. He graduated from law school. I don’t know which law school it was. In World War II he was a naval officer. I think he may have married and may be living in San Antonio. I’ve seen him two or three times but that’s about all.
Now going on down the scale, Uncle Onny[?] was next in line. He’s the next [????]. By the way I think Uncle Claude was probably born in about 1883, and I think each child came about once every year ago. Uncle Claude was probably ten years older than my dad… That doesn’t make sense, less than ten years.
Uncle Onny came next. I know absolutely nothing about him. I don’t even remember seeing him. He lived up in Oklahoma, and I think he was in the dry cleaning business.
Uncle Bart was in the dry cleaning business. I don’t know anything about his marriage or his family or anything like that. He lived in California. I visited him in Colton, California in 1941. He was very glad to see me, welcomed me into his house. I think he was living with a mom and her daughter, sort of a strange combination. I visited him one Sunday afternoon when I was stationed at Emit, California, in primary flying school. He was very nice, very sweet, very welcoming, and I think he wrote to my dad and mother telling them of my visit, and he was very glad to have seen me. I don’t know whether he wrote someone or not.
But next in line, Aunt Neva was next. Her name was, well I don’t know what her middle name was. She was married three times. Her first two daughters were Maybel and Virginia. She had two other daughters by another husband, Neva Francis and Anna Catherine, and I think she had a son. I don’t remember his name. She lived around Temple, Texas in the 1950s. When you and I and mom and Doug lived in Houston, I visited one of the daughters. I don’t remember exactly what the details were, but I got to see them, and Aunt Neva, and had a nice visit. I went out to see them two or three times.
Next in line was Uncle Wallace. Uncle Wallace never did marry. He lived in [Crat??], Kansas and worked for a dry goods store named “Black’s” I think. He was a musician. He played the organ in his church. I would think [????] married. He died ten or fifteen years ago. He died without a will, and all of his fortune was shared by the relatives. James and I got about a thousand dollars each as our father’s share of it.
Let’s see, there was Russell. Russell’s wife was named Alberta. Uncle Mills [Mules?] married I don’t know who. Uncle Crippy[?] I think married. Uncle Crippy lived in Edmond, Oklahoma. He was in the military in World War II. He came to visit in Chicago when our dad was sick. He was a very nice guy, and the youngest of all. That’s about it for right now.
Next post: The Endsley family in East Texas.