THROUGH
MOUNTAIN MISTS
Early Settlers of
Their
Descendants...Their Stories...Their Achievements
Lifting the
Mists of History on Their Way of Life
By: Ethelene Dyer Jones
Jarrett Turner
Family in Union By 1834
Examining the first census of
Moving to the brand new
Turner is an English or Scottish
occupational name meaning "the maker of objects of wood, metal, or
bone" by turning a lathe to shape them. Jarrett Turner had lived in
District Ninety Six in
Jarrett Turner and his
father-in-law,
Thompson Collins, cleared land and farmed along the rich creek bottoms.
Some of
the land they farmed had already been used to grow maize, pumpkins and
other
crops by the Indians who had left the land just prior to the white
settlers
moving in. The major exodus of all Indians did not occur until 1838, so
the
Turner and Collins families may have had Indian neighbors when they
first
settled on the land they acquired.
Jarrett and Sarah Collins Turner
had a
large family of thirteen children. They were:
(1) Celia Turner (b. 1831)
married William
Jackson Hood.
(2) Nancy Turner (b. 1832) - no
record of
her marriage
(3) Francis Turner (b.1834) -
lived in
(4) Elizabeth Turner (b. 1836) -
no record
of her marriage
(5) Ruth Turner (b. 1837)
married Bluford
Lumpkin Dyer
(6) James Turner (b. 1840)
married
Elizabeth Dyer
(7) Sarah Turner (b. 1842)
married Rev.
John Henry Lance
(8) Phoebe Turner (b. 1845)
married James
H. Lance
(9) Micajah Turner (b. 1847),
named for his
Grandfather Turner - no record of marriage
(10) Olive Turner (b. 1849),
married Joseph
G. Dyer
(11) Marion Turner - birth date
and
marriage unknown
(12) Thompson Turner - birth
date and marriage
unknown
(13) William "Bill" Pruitt
Turner
(b. about 1854,
Many claiming kinship to the
first Turner
family in
Like the occupational title from
which
their surname derives, they make their work count through diligence and
service.
c2009 0by
Ethelene Dyer
Jones; published Aug. 6, 2009 in The Union Sentinel, Blairsville,
GA.
Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
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