_____________________ | _David BROCK ________| | (1933 - 1988) | | |_____________________ | | |--Freddie D BROCK | | _Charles C SAYLOR ___+ | | (1893 - 1953) m 1913 |_Dorothy SAYLOR _____| | |_Ida Rose KNUCKLES __+ (1896 - 1948) m 1913
________________________ | _Henry William CLARK _| | | | |________________________ | | |--Dennis CLARK | | _Jacob Elijah KNUCKLES _+ | | (1903 - 1983) m 1921 |_Retha KNUCKLES ______| (1925 - 1981) | |_Charity MILLER ________ (1901 - 1987) m 1921
___________________________ | _Ralph E HAMBAUGH ________| | m 1889 | | |___________________________ | | |--Marie HAMBAUGH | | _Richard Henry SHROPSHIRE _ | | (1840 - 1909) m 1862 |_Maria Louisa SHROPSHIRE _| (1866 - ....) m 1889 | |_Mary Alice Louise ILES ___+ (1842 - 1926) m 1862
_________________________ | _Benjamin Perry JONES _______| | (1874 - 1949) m 1897 | | |_________________________ | | |--Hattie Maria JONES | (1908 - 1953) | _Joseph Lewis NUCKOLLS __+ | | (1842 - 1932) m 1869 |_Lillian Dickinson NUCKOLLS _| (1872 - 1944) m 1897 | |_Willie Maria DICKERSON _+ (1846 - 1929) m 1869
_Charles LITTLEJOHN _ | (1769 - ....) _Felix Walker LITTLEJOHN _| | (1806 - ....) | | |_Susannah NUCKOLLS __+ | (1767 - 1858) | |--Franklin LITTLEJOHN | (1841 - ....) | _____________________ | | |_Elizabeth _______________| (1809 - ....) | |_____________________
[29736]
Name: «tab»White L Moss
Post Office Location: «tab»Cary, Bell, Kentucky
Appointment Date: «tab»17 Aug 1907
Volume #: «tab»86
Volume Year Range: «tab»1893-1930
Appointments of U. S. Postmasters, 1832-1971
[29737]
Name: «tab»White Lane Moss
County: «tab»Bell
State: «tab»Kentucky
Birth Date: «tab»4 Sep 1883 Pineville, KY
Race: «tab»White
Emp White-Moss Coal Co, Pres
Contact Lulu Simpson Moss
[29738]
Lexington Leader
Moss For Senator
While LMoss of Louisville, has announced his candidacy for the Republican nomination for State Senator in the Laurel-Knox-Bell district.
[29739]
Lexington Herald pg 6
MOSS FUNERAL HELD.
Harlan, Bell Counties Pay Tribute to Former Jurist
Pineville, KY, April 3- Funeral services for Judge M J Moss, former judge of the Bell-Harlan-Letcher-Perry District, and one of the outstanding men of southeastern Kentucky, were held here today. Services were conducted by the Rev C M Stults, the Rev L C Kelly, and Rev W B Foley and Rev W D Welburn. Burial took place in the Odd Fellows Cemetery. Judge Moss was the father of White L Moss, who was urged by many to seek the Republican nomination for the governor last summer, and Ray B Moss, member of the state game and fish commission. All business houses and court in Harlan and Bell were adjorned during the funeral.
[29740]
Mrs Patterson Rites Are Held at Pineville
Funeral services for Mrs Marie Moss Patterson, 76, member of the Southern Kentucky pioneer family, were held today. Burial was in Pineville Cemetery. She was the daughter of the late Judge Marcellus J Moss and sister of two former Kentucky state senators, Ray B Moss, Pineville and While L Moss of Jacksonville, FL Other survivors include a daughter Mrs Don Whitehead, Washington, DC. Mrs Patterson died Saturday
_Joel Meadors MOTLEY _+ | _William Fretwell MOTLEY _| | | | |______________________ | | |--Mary Bess MOTLEY | | ______________________ | | |__________________________| | |______________________
_John Douglas NUCKLES __+ | (1887 - 1958) m 1909 _Floyd Elmo "Buddy" NUCKLES _| | (1921 - 1998) m 1946 | | |_Mary Frances CAMPBELL _ | (1892 - 1930) m 1909 | |--Shirley Marie NUCKLES | | ________________________ | | |_Lottie Dell KEESEE _________| (1922 - 1999) m 1946 | |________________________
_Ezra NUCKOLLS ______+ | (1798 - 1857) m 1823 _Lafayette NUCKOLLS ___________| | (1835 - 1860) m 1855 | | |_Lucinda HALE _______+ | (1807 - 1857) m 1823 | |--Frances M "Fannie" NUCKOLLS | (1859 - 1884) | _____________________ | | |_Elizabeth Jane "Lizzy" MOODY _| (1839 - 1915) m 1855 | |_____________________
_Israel Richmond NUCKOLS _+ | (1796 - 1857) m 1832 _Jacob Woodson NUCKOLS _| | (1836 - 1910) m 1857 | | |_Jane M WOODSON __________+ | (1798 - 1874) m 1832 | |--Hartwell McKendree NUCKOLS | (1865 - 1927) | __________________________ | | |_Mildred Hester JORDAN _| (1832 - 1902) m 1857 | |__________________________
[6327]
Chataigne's Directory of Richmond, VA 1885
Nuckols, Hartwell M, clk, h 817 E Marshall
[6329]
Chataigne's Directory of Richmond, VA 1886-'87
Nuckols, Hartwell, tobacconist, bds 817 E Marshall
[6331]
Richmond, Virginia City Directories, Chataigne's Manchester Directory
Hartwell M Nuckols 12 19th N Location 2: 817 Marshall E Occupation: manager
[6333]
Chataigne's Directory of Richmond, VA 1891
Nuckols, Hartwell M, manager, 12 n19th h 619 E Franklin
[6335]
Chataigne's Directory Of Richmond, Va 1892
Nuckols, Hartwell M, manager , 12 n 19th, h 619 e Franklin
Nuckols, Oscar N, manager, bds, 619 E Franklin
[6337]
Chataigne's Directory Of Richmond, Va 1893-94
Nuckols, Hartwell M, mgr, bds 619 e Franklin
[6339]
Chataigne's Directory Of Richmond, Va 1894-95.
Nuckols, Graham E, finisher, h 632 n 7th
Nuckols, Hartwell M, manager, h 632 n 7th
[6341]
Chataigne's Directory Of Richmond, Va 1895-96.
Nuckols, Hartwell M, manager, h 532 n 7th
[6344]
Richmond Times Dispatch
Home Ransacked
Work Resembling that of the Thieves Who Operated Here Last Winter
The residence of Mr H M nuckols, No 9 North Third St was entered Friday night or early yesterday morning and ransacked. Early yesterday morning a man going to his work at the Tredger Works saw three men in the alley back of St labans Hall, ner the Nuckols residence, and a lady next door saw a man jump the fence. Nothing was taken from the house, the search being eveidently for money. The work resembled that of the thieves who were here operating last winter.
[6346]
Richmond Times -Dispatch, Saturday, April 24, 1909
Police and detectives fail to solve mystery after vigil a six weeks
No solution is given
Homes of Howard and Hartwell Nuckols invaded after servant girls arrest
Unable to longer endure mysterious attempts on their homes by persons whose actions have baffled the police and detectives departments for nearly 2 months. Howard J. Nuckols of 4 N. 1st St. and his brother Hartwell in Nuckols of 6 N. 1st St., having determined unless there is some way to stop the trouble, to leave the neighborhood. Plain clothes men had endeavored, but in vain, to fathom a mystery, which even now, it seems, will never be solved.
Included in the attempts to terrify the occupants of the two houses have been attempts at arson, the appearance of Negro men lurking about the house and more over, the criminals have frequently been so bold as to cast missiles through the windows of the upper stories. Every effort to locate, or even to secure circumstantial evidence against any individual, has been in possible.
Neighborhood in Terror
What ever the motive may be is as much a mystery as any other circumstance connected with the cases, and that the Nuckols families are not alone be object of the criminals is laderated by the fact that frequently the family of Frederick A. Robbins, 14 E. Main St. had been terrified when missiles, thrown by some unknown hand have been cast into their premises. What the object of the attacks may be is a conjecture, which no one seems able to explain.
Aside from terrorizing the families on whom attacks have been made directly, the news that the neighborhood is infested with persons who seem to be organized for the purpose of keeping certain citizens in constant dread, has spread, until citizens for squares around are constantly on the alert lest, at an unguarded moment their homes be invaded.
The police version of the mystery is that the criminal act with such shrewdness and alertness that their acts are committed in one minute, and in the next the criminal has concealed himself.
The houses are , four and 6 N. 1st St., are two of a row of four. In the rear there is an alley four feet wide, and to the west there is a board fence 12 feet high. This leaves any suggestion that the missiles are thrown from a rear yard an impossibility.
An Attempt at Arson
This small alley, which extends from the alley which connects with the first St. by a narrow passageway in the rear of the houses fronting on Main Street, is an outlet to the row of which the houses, apparently fated, are two. From what direction, or spot, the missiles are thrown, is one of the mysteries with which those investigating«tab»have to contend. The most probable solution is that they are hurled over the back fence from the rear alley.
When Mrs. Hartwell M Nuckols came downstairs Wednesday morning she was terrified to see newspapers stuff into the blinds of the kitchen. She investigated to learn that the paper had been stuffed with kindling wood, and on the ground several burnt matches were found. Why the criminal did not succeed in setting the house afire is not known.
On February 27 Berta Mosely, colored, a servant girl in the home of Hartwell Nuckols, was arrested, following and attempt at robbery by a Negro man who escaped the police by jumping a rear fence. The morning before the same man had been seen coming from a coal cellar with two bags of coal on his shoulder. The Mosely woman was arrested by the police at a suspicious character, but was released after she had refused to get a any information which might lead to the arrest of the man.
Detectives on the Case
The day following the arrest, a Negro man, who gave his name as "Jim" called at both the Nuckols homes and asked for the servant girl. He was informed that she had been arrested, and with this the conversation ended. This mysterious "Jim" the police can learn nothing, but their theory is that he is implicated in the attacks on the families. Berta Mosely refused, when cross - questioned by a detectives, to acknowledge her acquaintance with a man answering to the name given over the telephone.
It was three days after Berta Mosely's arrest, or on March 1, that the first missile was tax through the bedroom window in the home of Howard Nuckols. A nurse was rocking a young baby to sleep, when she was suddenly startled by a brick which crashed through the window and rolled across the room. Broken glass spattered all about her, Mrs. Nuckols was in the front room with in a few yards of where the brick landed.
The police were notified and a dectective was put on the case. It was thought that the first act was an accident: but this theory was dispelled, when a few days later, at about the same time -- six o'clock in the afternoon -- a quart bottle crashed through the same window, in which a new pane had been placed. The family became alarmed and the police were again notified.
Tried it Many Times
Several times thereafter futile attempts were made to break the nursery window. Each time the bottle, brick, or lump of coal struck against the wall and shattered in the yard. The climax came Wednesday afternoon at 1:15 o'clock, when a large lump of coal, weighing perhaps 2 pounds, crashed through the windows and broke on the floor. Several member of the family were in the house at the time, and a detective had recently left. Earlier in the morning of the same day, while Mrs. Hartwell M. Nuckols was in her backyard, a bottle flew past her head and spattered against the kitchen wall. She was in enveloped in a shower of falling glass. She ran into the house and notified her husband and the police by telephone. This is the only effort which has admin made directly to injure any single person. Seven different attempts have been made to throw missiles through the windows of Howard Nuckols home. Four attempts had been made at the house next door, and the same number of times bricks and bottles had been thrown into Mr. Robbins Yard. Berta Mosely has many relatives among the servants in the neighborhood and it is believed that day are all incensed at the fact that she should have been arrested. She was taken into custody by the police on their own initiative.
Police are Determined
Capt. George Epes of the second police station, is interested in the case to the extent that he has instructed his men to keep at work and to land the criminal even if it should say a year to do so. For the past six weeks one of his shrewdness officers have been at work on the case, and has spent many hours on watch. No missile has been thrown while he was on the premises. This leads to the belief that the Negroes are so intent in their attacks, and so determined to keep their movements secret that day are constantly on guard. The presence of an officer in the neighborhood, as has frequently been detected, it is a signal for a general stir, and often Negroes are seen to disappear at his approach. Every police man is known by name and site, it is said, by one or another of those engaged in tormenting the residents. Since the trouble began the Mssrs Nuckols have feared to leave their homes after dark, and no chance has been given for a night attack. The police are still at work on the case, and there is nothing but praise for the fair continued thorough fruitless efforts to place the sources of the crimes. Arrests may be made almost any day.
[6348]
Hartwell M Muckols
Age: 41 State: VA 1910
Color: W Enumeration District: 0078
Birth Place: Virginia Visit: 0045
County: Richmond City, Richmond
Relation: Head of Household
Other Residents: Relation Name Age Birth Place
Wife Bera V 35 Virginia
Brother-in-law Mason S 28 Virginia
Brother-in-law Norton W 25 Virginia
[6350]
9 S Davis Ave
Laughton W Mickols «tab»34 widower, VA VA VA Shoe merchant
Laughton Mickols «tab»5 son VA
Hartwell M Mickols «tab»54 bro in law (sic)
Mabel L Mickols «tab»42 sister
Guelda Mickols «tab»22 niece
Mary Payne «tab»20 servant
«tab»
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_William W NUCKOLS __+ | (1846 - 1885) m 1870 _Emmett William NUCKOLS ___| | (1877 - 1954) m 1901 | | |_Emma MARKS _________ | (1852 - 1935) m 1870 | |--Joseph S NUCKOLS | (1911 - 1931) | _____________________ | | |_Margaret A "Maggie" KING _| (1880 - 1942) m 1901 | |_____________________
[23812]
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Death Certificate
_Gus Burton NUCKOLS _+ | (1906 - 1975) m 1924 _Robert Kenneth NUCKOLS _| | | | |_Eva Alice SEARS ____ | (1907 - 1990) m 1924 | |--Lori Lynn NUCKOLS | | _Clayton STEWART ____ | | |_Edna Wallace STEWART ___| (1929 - 2001) | |_Nettie WILKERSON ___
[13050]
[S70]
Family Member Personal Knowledge
_Ellis Pierce NUCKOLLS __________+ | (1888 - 1959) m 1909 _Ernest Pierce NUCKOLLS _| | (1921 - 1999) m 1942 | | |_Mary "Mollie" Catherine SAYERS _ | (1893 - 1986) m 1909 | |--Marsha Kay NUCKOLS | | _John Fletcher WILLIAMS _________ | | |_Mary Margaret WILLIAMS _| (1921 - 2003) m 1942 | |_Willie Hill EVERSOLE ___________
_Joseph Charles NUCKOLLS _+ | (1796 - 1853) m 1847 _Joseph Dodridge NUCKOLS _| | (1854 - 1931) m 1883 | | |_Ann Elizabeth GARRETT ___ | (1823 - ....) m 1847 | |--Mary Kathryn NUCKOLS | (1896 - 1976) | _Decalb MCCONNICO ________ | | |_Sue Bonham MCCONNICO ____| (1861 - 1941) m 1883 | |_Elizabeth BONHAM ________
_Charles Smith NUCKOLS ___+ | (1874 - 1950) m 1901 _Roggie Elmore NUCKOLS _________| | (1915 - 2010) m 1944 | | |_Charlotte E SADLER ______ | (1871 - 1950) m 1901 | |--Peggy Jane NUCKOLS | | _Claude Raymond FAUDREE __ | | (1894 - 1931) m 1921 |_Virginia West "Cupsy" FAUDREE _| (1922 - 2012) m 1944 | |_Geneva Corine CHILDRESS _ (1902 - 1997) m 1921
__ | _Joseph RUNYAN ______| | (1781 - ....) | | |__ | | |--Elizabeth Kindred RUNYON | (1812 - 1889) | __ | | |_Nancy JACOBS _______| (1782 - ....) | |__
_Martin WALTON ______+ | (1761 - 1844) _Thomas J WALTON ____| | (1800 - 1872) | | |_Elizabeth JOHNSON __+ | (1765 - ....) | |--Lycurgus Bartlett WALTON | (1827 - ....) | _____________________ | | |_Martha BARTLETT ____| | |_____________________