![]() ![]() “Dallas-Scott Wedding”, Abbeville (S.C.) Press and Banner, 4 October 1922, p. ![]() The same is printed in the Greensboro Daily News of 8 October 1922 on page 30, without headline in a section titled “Social Events of the Past Week From Many Sections of the Old North State.”.Katherine Waddell Scott on 27 September). Lyttleton Edmunds Scott announcing the marriage of Rev. See also “Dallas-Scott Wedding Announced”, Winston-Salem (N.C.) Journal, 1 October 1922, p.“Dallas-Scott” (announcement of 27 September marriage), Rockingham (North Carolina) Post-Dispatch, 28 September 1922, p.Dallas had arranged to visit his old church in Mt. “In Former Pulpit”, Evansville (Indiana) Press, 13 August 1921, p.5 (noting that the subject of the morning service would be “Sifting and Praying” and the installation service would be held at 7:30 p.m. See also: “Personal”, Rockingham (North Carolina) Post-Dispatch, 2 December 1920, p.John Jordan Douglas had been appointed to charge the congregation in the installation of Rev. Hardison Taken To Charlotte Hospital”, Charlotte Observer, 22 November 1920, p. (noting installation ceremony will be on the first Sunday in December). See also: “Tom Kelly, Negro, Will Be Tried For Murder”(Charlotte News), Greensboro Daily News, 17 November 1920, p.Dallas from the Indiana Presbytery to assume the pastorate at Rockingham Rev. 10 (noting that the Mecklenburg Presbytery met the day before and received Rev. Dallas, Late of Indiana, Received as New Minister at Rockingham”, Charlotte Observer, 16 November 1920, p. “Mecklenburg Clergy Welcomes New Minister, Rev.Dallas in the Knoxville, Tennessee press from 1942 to the mid-1960s is astounding after 1945 onward I have only included a selection of articles that I feel are most significant. Indeed, the number of brief mentions about Rev. Dallas does not seem to have been as prolific a writer as his father, and so this will mostly be sources about him, rather than written by him. As with the other bibliography, I admit that the style here is a bit “DIY” but I believe I have captured the essential elements of citation. I am not going to list every source that is already in the other bibliography this should be seen as a continuation of that work with a particular focus on events that did not involve Rev. This will overlap in part with the previous bibliography of his father, Rev. Dallas” below), born 25 April 1894, and his children (Dr. This is a bibliography focusing on Archibald Elgin Dallas, D. The stone itself is very close to a marker for Hobart K. If you park and then start on foot back down the hill (west) you should a large obelisk for the McFarland family, as well as headstones for the Pierce, Breeden, and Gillenwater families (other nearby prominent stones include the Little, Sitton, Miller, Ward, Stanton and Greenwell stones, as well as Marchant and Hickam near the top of the hill where you would park). Follow the path up the hill, almost to its top, where there is a roundabout with a small tree. The main path through the cemetery is fairly straight until you get to the base of a hill that is the dominant landmark in the back (northeast) part of the cemetery. ![]() To find the grave, enter Woodlawn Cemetery at its main gate off of Woodlawn Pike. By looking for large headstone and other prominent memorials listed either just above or just below the Dallas grave marker in, I was able to locate it. I finally found the graves by abandoning some of my preconceived notions about where to look and by carefully reviewing the records in and recognizing that they had to have been entered by someone walking the graveyard on foot so the order in which the data had been entered should be roughly correlated to their physical location. While my father, uncle and aunts generally remembered the location, I had difficulty understanding their directions (and have been unable to have in-person meetups with them due to the fact that we are spread out across the South). I had some difficulty finding it again as I had not visited it since I was a child. One can easily spend all day looking for a certain grave if they do not know where to look - and I know this, because I spent probably six hours looking spread out over three separate visits (from 2014 to 2020). Woodlawn is a large cemetery with over 23,000 graves (according to ). Coming from Interstate 40, the fastest route is to take the James White Parkway south through downtown and across the Holston River to Sevierville Pike, heading west for a few hundred yards on Sevierville Pike, then turning left (south) onto Woodlawn Pike. This cemetery is located in South Knoxville just east of Chapman Highway (old U.S. The final resting place of my great-grandparents Archibald and Katherine is located in Woodlawn Cemetery (4500 Woodlawn Pike, Knoxville, TN 37920). ![]()
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