Cora Ida & Emmett Black from my grandmother's notes

Media file
Title: Cora Ida & Emmett Black from my grandmother's notes
Media type: story
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Record ID number
735d2e13-0de4-456c-b816-4d792d3ea348

OBJE:PLAC
Butler TN, Kingsport, TN and Idaho

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<metadataxml><content><line>&lt;p&gt;My grandmother, Maggie Cinderella Black, had a lot of notes on the family. &amp;nbsp;In the 60's 70's and 80's my mother took these notes and visited a lot of kin then put it all into a book, giving us each of her children, a copy. &amp;nbsp; I plan to include her book on here some day in it's entirety. &amp;nbsp;I am including the information below regarding Cora Ida Black directly from the book she wrote.&lt;/p&gt;</line><line>&lt;p&gt;Daddy's mother was one half Cherokee Indian. &amp;nbsp;Her name was Cora Ida Black. &amp;nbsp;Black was her maiden name, and she married Thomas Mortimer Black, whether kin or not I don't know, but probably distant kin. &amp;nbsp;Different family members have her mother's name spelled different ways. &amp;nbsp;(Susa or Susah) (DeArnold or Darnell or D'Arnall or D'Arnell) the name Selinas is worked in there somewhere. &amp;nbsp;Some have it as a middle name and others as a last name. &amp;nbsp;They all agreed that Susa was a full blooded Cherokee Indian whose family hid out in the mountains when Andrew Jackson forced the march on the Trail of Tears. &amp;nbsp;She nor her family trusted the government enough to sign the registry when amnesty was offered. &amp;nbsp;Cora Ida's&amp;nbsp;father was Emmett Black. &amp;nbsp;Cora Ida was a widow having two sons. &amp;nbsp;Her first husband was a Mullis. &amp;nbsp;She married granddaddy Black and had Aunt Ola and Daddy, and then died when Aunt Rose was five weeks old. &amp;nbsp;Daddy was born June 18, 1908 at old Butler in Carter County, TN. &amp;nbsp;This town was buried by Watauga Lake. &amp;nbsp;A lot of this family migrated west near the turn of the century and early in the 20th century. &amp;nbsp;Aunt Ola said one of the cousins played in a lot of western movies as an indian.&lt;/p&gt;</line><line>&lt;p&gt;Grandaddy Black never remarried after Cora Ida's death. &amp;nbsp;He was a devout Christian and the establish the Elk River Baptist Church at Butler, where his brother James was the pastor. &amp;nbsp;He was a very easy going and kind man but lacked the ability to control his son.&lt;/p&gt;</line><line>&lt;p&gt;They moved to Last Chance, Idaho where he learned the shoe repair business from his brother. &amp;nbsp;He came back around 1929, to Kingsport, TN where he opened a shoe shop. When people's shoes began to wear they had them fixed instead of buying new ones. &amp;nbsp;Daddy (Louis Black) was in some form of the Navy. &amp;nbsp;I was told it was the Merchant Marines. &amp;nbsp;Aunt Ola, whose legal name is Ora, wrote her biography, which I have a copy of. &amp;nbsp;She tells a lot about their lives at Butler and about Idaho. &amp;nbsp;Granddaddy Black's mother was Eleanor Baer Parsons Black, a widow. &amp;nbsp;His father was John Black. &amp;nbsp;&lt;/p&gt;</line><line>&lt;p&gt;&amp;nbsp;&lt;/p&gt;</line></content></metadataxml>

OBJE:_CREA
2020-03-10 20:32:00.000

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_TID: 12969627
_PID: 457861083
_OID: 984d8d32-27d5-4f12-860f-34c6d4fc6e09
OBJE:_ORIG
u

Unique identifier
9331B7D371B84DF6A787750332A45A56E618

Given names Surname Sosa Birth Place Death Age Place Last change
Eleanor Ellen Parsons
April 17, 1827
197 Ashe County, North Carolina, USA
8 January 12, 1908
116 80 Carter County, Tennessee, USA
Never
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