THROUGH MOUNTAIN MISTS
Early Settlers of Union County, Georgia
Their Descendants...Their
Stories...Their
Achievements
Lifting the Mists of History on
Their Way
of Life
By:
Ethelene Dyer Jones
|
Many of the children of Union
County
citizens through the years have left the county to find their place in
the
world beyond the confines of the mountains that surround our peaceful
valleys
and meandering streams.
Such was the case for Ivan
Thomas Collins,
born March 3, 1891 to James Johnson Collins (1868-1967) and Margaret
Nix
Collins (1871-1927). Tom, as he was known, was the first-born of this
couple,
whose marriage had brought together two notable families in the county,
Collins
and Nix. Tom's father was a son of Ivan Kimsey Collins (1835-1901) and
Martha
J. Hunter Collins (1840-1920). Note that his grandfather Collins's
first name,
Ivan, was given to this first-born of James and Margaret's children,
and Thomas
is another way of having the child bear the name of Thompson Collins,
James
Johnson's great grandfather, who was the first Collins settler in the
Choestoe
District.
Margaret Nix Collins, the baby
Ivan
Thomas's mother, was a fourth generation Nix, daughter of Thomas James
Nix
(1848- 1902) and Martha Jane "Sis" Ballew Nix (1852-1951). Tom Nix
joined the Confederate Army and served in Company I, 23 Regiment, of
the
Georgia Infantry. It is said he was only thirteen years of age when he
enlisted. Again, Margaret and James Collins's first born go a family
name,
Thomas, from her father, Tom Nix.
In 1886, four years before
Margaret married
James Johnson Collins, her father, Tom Nix, left his wife and children
behind
in Georgia and went to the Cripple Creek, Colorado gold fields near
Rye. It is
reported that Tom Nix did find gold, but that his claim was stolen from
him.
Martha remained several years in Union County, but then moved to
Colorado to
join her husband. They both died there, Tom Nix in 1902 and Martha
lived to the
ripe age of 99 when she died in1951. Tom was buried in the Roselawn
Cemetery,
Pueblo, Colorado, and Martha in the Eaton, Colorado Cemetery.
Colorado held a fascination for
the
children of James Johnson Collins and Margaret Nix Collins. A great
drawing
card was because their grandparents Nix had migrated there and lived
out their
lives in Colorado.
Six children were born to James
Johnson
Collins and Margaret Nix Collins. First, was the above-mentioned Ivan
Thomas
Collins; second was Mary Viola Collins who married Francis Thurman
"Bob" Collins; third was Fannie Maybelle Collins who married Harvey
Allen Souther; fourth was Dessie Dora Collins who married Haralson J.
Hood;
fifth was Sadie Collins who married William Jesse Hunter; and sixth was
Charles
Roscoe Collins who married LaVerne Cheshire.
The Collins family valued
education for
their children and encouraged them to attend the one- and two-teacher
schools
in the community until they were ready for high school. Some of them
went to
the Blairsville Collegiate Institute after its founding in 1904. But
Ivan
Thomas, the elder son, went to Hiawasse, Georgia where he attended the
school
variously called the Hiawassee Institute and/or the Hiawassee College.
It had
been founded by the two noted Baptist ministers, cousins, Dr. George W.
Truett
and Dr. Fernando Coello McConnell on land given by the McConnell
family.
Several young men from Choestoe attended the Hiawassee Academy. They
would rent
a cabin, "batch," or do their own cooking and housework, and attend
classes. Their being able to attend this school represented a sacrifice
on the
part of their parents to provide the money for tuition and books, and
to rent a
place for their children to live, even as low as higher education costs
were in
those days.
Following his graduation from
Hiawassee
Academy, Ivan Thomas Collins then went to Mercer University in Macon,
Georgia.
It seemed a natural choice in his next step in education, for other
boys from
Choestoe, like Tom's cousin, Mauney Douglas Collins, who later served
for twenty-five
years as Georgia's State School Superintendent, and his friend and
distant
cousin, Norman Vester Dyer, who also became a noted educator in
Georgia,
attended Mercer University.
On October 8, 1916, Ivan Thomas
Collins
married Martha Estelle Tucker of Centerville, Georgia. Her parents were
John T.
and Jesse Reynolds Tucker. By the time of their marriage, Tom was in
his chosen
career of banking. After graduating from Mercer, he took graduate
courses in
business administration, banking, accounting, and commercial law. He
was named
to a national post, that of Comptroller of the Currency. His job took
him into
most of the states of the union where he was what we might commonly
call a
"bank inspector."
Tom and Estelle Tucker Collins
had three
children: Ivan Tucker Collins who married Lillian Andrea Price; Doris
Ophelia
Collins who married Russell Bobbitt; and Kreeble Nix Collins who
married,
first, Josephine Adeline Marino of Italy, and, second, Helene Vite of
France.
Ivan became an engineer; Doris married a banking executive; and Kreeble
spent
his entire career in the Air Force, earning the rank of Lieutenant
Colonel.
After his stint as Comptroller
of Currency,
Thomas Ivan Collins became president of a bank in Athens, Tennessee
where he
spent ten years before his semi-retirement due to heart difficulties in
1952.
He returned to the county of his birth, Union, where he and his beloved
wife,
Estelle, lived until their deaths. Martha Estelle Tucker Collins
preceded her
husband in death (10/08/1897- 05/29/1968) and Tom died ten years later
(03/30/1891- 12/25/1978). They were both interred at the New Choestoe
Cemetery.
Ivan Thomas Collins is a good
example of a
young lad who went out from Union County to make his living, but in
retirement
returned to the land of his birth to live out his days. Industry,
integrity and
ingenuity marked his character.
[Ethelene Dyer
Jones is a retired educator,
freelance writer, poet, and historian. She may be reached at
e-mail edj0513@windstream.net;
phone 478-453-8751; or mail 1708 Cedarwood Road, Milledgeville, GA
31061-2411.]
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