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
Whatever
Happened to Richard Jarrett Hood?

Three of the
seven
children born to Mary Reid Hood and Richard Jarrett Hood: Claudia
C; (the
mother, Mary, seated); Talmadge J.; and Cora Lode Hood. Jessie
Mae died
in 1902. Ida, Laura and Zona were not present when this
family
picture was taken.
Last week’s account of the Mary
L. Reid
Hood family noted that Mary’s husband, Richard Jarrett Hood, left on a
cattle
drive from
Carol Thomas-Alexander, a great
granddaughter,
persisted in finding the facts and, together with the help of other
kin, has
solved the mystery of Richard Jarrett Hood.
She writes in her Hood family
history book:
“There were many theories about his disappearance.
Mary thought he had...been murdered, which is
what she told her children...There was conversation in the community
that a
local resident in
Mrs. Thomas-Alexander tells how
Elbert
Carlyle (E. C.) Sanders (d 2002), a newspaperman, editor and owner of The
Rockmart Journal, until his retirement in 1980, made a trip to
Blairsville in the late 1980's seeking information about his
grandfather,
Richard Jarrett Hood, who died in
E. C. Sanders talked to Dexter
Fair, a son
of Claudia Hood Fair. She was the
six-year old child Richard Jarrett Hood seemed most reluctant to leave
behind
in Choestoe when he left in 1895, never to be heard from again by his
family in
When Hood left
From
Mr. Sanders told Carol
Thomas-Alexander
that his grandfather never returned to
Mr. E. C. Sanders told his
newly-found
cousin, granddaughter of the Union County Claudia Cornelia Hood Fair,
that his
grandfather, Richard Jarrett Hood “was not a happy person and seemed to
have a
distant look on his face...which he thought was guilt that went to his
grave
with him.”
The one child borne by Hood’s
second wife,
Eudora, was artistic and musical. She
played the piano for the
The Choestoe Claudia Cornelia
Hood (April
8, 1889-Sept. 10, 1958) married John David Fair (1874-1936). They had seven children: Annie Lee, Jessie
Mae, Charles Winford, Fannie Bell, Clifford Leon, Eurah Vee, and
William
Dexter. Their fourth child, Fannie Bell,
was Carol Thomas-Alexander’s mother.
Carol writes of her grandmother Claudia: “She was a quiet,
composed,
well-mannered person, a devoted mother and grandmother...Her creative
nature
enabled her to be a great storyteller, a wonderful clothes designer, an
excellent seamstress and a writer of poetry, among many other gifts.” John and Claudia Fair were interred at
E. C. Sanders remembered his
mother, the
other Claudia Cornelia Hood Sanders, as a loving and giving person, one
who
touched countless lives with her music, her ready smile and her
Christian
influence.
The adage, “Truth is stranger
than fiction”
is certainly borne out in the Richard Jarrett Hood story.
[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.]
Updated July 18, 2018
Back To Union County, GAGenWeb
Site