T H E W H I T M I R E M A N U
S C R I P T Page
.
Arlee Claud Gowen, son of Claud
Franklin Gowen and Ora Ethel Cox Gowen, was born November 24, 1922 at Lamesa,
Texas. He attended McCarty community
school and Lamesa public schools, graduating from Lamesa High School in May
1939. For two years prior to graduation
he was employed by "Lamesa Reporter," weekly newspaper on which he
worked as a "printer's devil."
In September 1939 he enrolled
in Texas Technological College at Lubbock.
During his undergraduate days he was employed as a printer at Wood
Printing Company and Texas Tech Press.
Later he was a sportswriter on the "Lubbock
Avalanche-Journal." He was
graduated in June 1943 with a BA degree in journalism.
On October 27, 1942 he
volunteered into the U. S. Naval Reserve as an aviation cadet and, prior to
reporting for active duty, was employed on the flightline by Breedlove Aerial
Service, flight training contractor for U.S. Army Air Corps. His naval training began at University of
Texas where his physical training officer was "the meanest man that ever
walked the face of the earth," Coach Paul "Bear" Bryant, who was
later one of the winningest coaches in college football at Texas A&M University
and University of Alabama. After
additional training at Great Lakes Naval Training Station and the University
of Notre Dame he was commissioned an ensign at South Bend, Indiana. Additional duty assignments took him to Ft.
Lauderdale, Florida; Newport, Rhode Island and Newport News, Virginia.
He was assigned to the USS
Randolph as its construction was being completed. As a "plank owner"
on the new aircraft carrier he was aboard on its shake-down cruise to
Trinidad. Following refitting and
renovation the USS Randolph joined the Fifth Fleet operating in the Pacific
theatre, arriving on station there via the Panama Canal, San Francisco and
Hawaii.
The USS Randolph joined the
fleet in the island anchorage of Ulithi atoll and participated in the war
against Japan until its conclusion, taking part in the Battles of Bonin
Islands, Iwo Jima, Io Shima, Okinawa and air strikes on Tokyo, Kyushu, Minami
Daita Jima and the Nansei Shoto, operating with the Fifth Fleet, the Third
Fleet, Task Force 58 and Task Force 38.
After the signing of the peace treaty with Japan in Tokyo Bay in August
1945 the ship returned to Baltimore, Maryland October 27, 1945 for a Navy Day
victory celebration. He was awarded
four battle stars and six campaign ribbons for service in the Atlantic,
Pacific, Arctic and Mediterranean theaters.
He was cited for "conspicuous gallantry" by Admiral Mark
Mitscher in an attack by enemy aircraft at Ulithi when his ship was hit and
severely damaged by Kamikazi aircraft.
Later the USS Randolph made
shuttle trips to Naples, Italy to deliver Italian war prisoners and to return
to the United States groups of U.S. Army nurses.
In December 1945 Lt.(jg) Arlee
Claud Gowen received a transfer to Naval Air Transport Service and was
stationed successively in Norfolk, Virginia; Patuxent River, Maryland; Olathe, Kansas
and Amarillo, Texas.
On February 16, 1946 he was
married to May Belle "Bonnie" Bonner, daughter of Joseph Drew Bonner and
Alice Belle Hestand Bonner in Crane, Texas by Eddie E. Myers, minister of the
gospel, according to Ector County, Texas Marriage Book 5, page 246. May Belle "Bonnie" Bonner Gowen had
graduated from Texas Technological College in June 1945 and was a teacher in
Phillips, Texas High School at the time of their marriage. After a honeymoon in New Mexico the couple
lived at Pantex, Texas near Amarillo Army Air Base where he was stationed. He
was separated from naval service June 6, 1946 at Galveston, Texas, and they
moved immediately to Lubbock where they had met in college.
In 1946 Arlee Claud Gowen assisted
in the organizing and founding of "South- western Crop and Stock," a
farm magazine. He was named editor of
the publication which printed its first edition in January 1947. May Belle "Bonnie" Bonner Gowen was
a teacher at Hutchinson Junior High School in Lubbock at that time. In 1955 he became a deacon and a bible
school teacher at Broadway Church of Christ.
In August 1956 he assisted in
the organization of High Plains Credit Corporation and was named executive
vice-president of organization while continuing in the publishing
business. In 1959 he established a
wholesale electronic supply which became known as Electros, Inc. In 1961 he purchased a farm in Bailey
County, Texas. In April 1965 the couple applied for a distributorship with
Amway Corporation and in November of that year became direct distributors with
that organization.
He had become interested in
family history research in 1941 and continued to pursue that interest for many
years. In September 1986 he entered a
manuscript, "The Widder Dyches" in the Texas Sesquicentennial
competition. It was adjudged first
place winner and was displayed in the Hall of State at the State Fair of Texas
alongside the original Texas Declaration of Independence. In March 1987 he was named to the board of
directors of the South Plains Genealogical Society.
Having sold their publishing,
finance and electronics interests the couple in June 1987 lived in Lubbock
where they continued to operate their Amway distributorship from their home at
5708 Gary Avenue.
Children born to Arlee Claud
Gowen and May Belle "Bonnie" Gowen include:
Bonnie Lee Gowen
born December 16, 1951
Connie Louise Gowen
born July 3, 1954
Bonnie Lee Gowen, daughter of
Arlee Claud Gowen and May Belle "Bonnie" Gowen, was born December
16, 1951 in Lubbock, according to Texas BVS File 207127. Her first home was at 3107 30th Street in
Lubbock, her second was at 3413 20th street, and in 1970 her family removed to
5708 Gary Avenue.
After attending Lubbock
Christian School and Lubbock public schools she was graduated from Lubbock
High School in 1970. Following two
years at Texas Tech University she transferred to North Texas State University
at Denton, Texas where she was graduated with a BS degree in May 1975. Following graduate work there in chemistry
and computer science she was married June 16, 1979 to David Michael Hill, son
of David Hill and Betty Hill of Plano, Texas.
David Michael Hill, a graduate
of North Texas State University and a U.S. Marine Corps veteran of Viet Nam,
was employed in the university's computer complex where they met. In June 1979 she was employed by Mostek
Corporation, Carrollton, Texas, as a computer engineer, and two years later
she was employed by Phillips Coal Division, Phillips Petroleum Company,
Richardson, Texas as a systems analyst.
In November 1984 they made
their home at Lewisville, Texas where he was employed as a satellite
communications engineer with Bell of Canada in nearby Richard- son, Texas. At that time she was employed by Cray
Research Corporation, a supercomputer manufacturer as a systems analyst. In April 1985 she was employed by Convex
Corporation, a computer manufacturer in Richardson. In May 1985 they purchased a home at 2405 Golden Oaks, Garland,
Texas.
Connie Louise Gowen, daughter
of Arlee Claud Gowen and May Belle "Bonnie" Bonner Gowen, was born
July 3, 1954 in Lubbock, Texas, according to BVS File No. 118566. She attended Lubbock Christian School and
Lubbock public schools and was graduated from Monterey High School in 1973. During her undergraduate days she worked
for the City of Lubbock in its Parks & Recreation Department, for Globe Department
Store and as a waitress for International House of Pancakes, Ramada Inn and Big
Texan Steak House. She was graduated
from Texas Tech University with a BS degree in 1976 and from University of
Texas Medical School at Houston, Texas in June 1979 with an M.D. degree.
In July 1979 she began a
surgery residency at Queens Medical Center in Honolulu, Hawaii. In July 1981 she began a period of residency
at Veterans Administration Hospital, Johnson City, Tennessee.
She was married there June 25,
1983 to Darryl William Hiers, son of Dr. Donald Grover Hiers and Gypsy Lee
Whitten Hiers. In July 1983 she began
the practice of plastic surgery in Chattanooga, Tennessee at Erlanger Hospital
in association with the University of Tennessee. He was graduated there from the University of Tennessee with a
B.S. degree May 6, 1985.
In July 1985 she established a
plastic surgery practice at Jonesboro, Arkansas, and they purchased a home
there at 601 Arrowhead Drive, within 100 yards of the original homestead of
James Gowen who settled there before 1870!
In January 1987 she was
nominated to "Who's Who of American Women."
Willie Elmer Cox, son of James
Madison Cox and Amanda Lucinda "Cindy" McCall Cox, was born September
30, 1896 at Leander, Texas. He apeared
as a three-year-old in the 1900 census of Williamson County, living in his father's
household. His family removed to
Albany, Texas in 1906 and to Young County in 1908, to Round Timbers, Texas in
1909 and to Altus, Oklahoma in 1911.
His father moved the family to Weed, New Mexico in 1915. He registered his cattle brand
"JC" with the State of New Mexico May 23, 1917.
When his father was killed by
gunshot there the following year at a sawmill the 20-year-old Willie Elmer Cox rode
onto the scene with his pistol ready to avenge his father's death. He raced his pony around and around the
sawmill trying to get a shot at his father's adversary without providing a
stationary target himself. Calmer heads finally prevailed upon him to leave
justice to the law.
Willie Elmer Cox and his mother
returned to Texas in 1920, locating on a farm in Stonewall County, and was
married at Swenson, Texas January 16, 1921 to Effie Elmo Ramsey who was born
March 25, 1903 in Stonewall County. In
1924 he began farming in the Klondike community of Dawson County and in 1930
bought the community grocery store there.
He died of peritonitis following an appendectomy February 16, 1936, at
age 39, and was buried in Lamesa Cemetery.
In 1939 Effie Elmo Ramsey Cox and
her son lived in Seagraves, Texas.
Later she returned to Lamesa.
She died April 18, 1956 and was buried beside her husband.
One son was born to Willie
Elmer Cox and Effie Elmo Ramsey Cox.
Dorman Elmer Cox
born June 11, 1924
Dorman Elmer Cox, son of Willie
Elmer Cox and Effie Elmo Ramsey Cox, was born June 11, 1924 in Dawson
County. He was inducted November 13,
1942 at Ft. Sill, Oklahoma in the U.S. Army Corps and received his basic
training at Shepherd Field, Wichita Falls, Texas. He was married January 24, 1943 in Waresboro, Georgia to Meddie
Rilla Chauncey, who was born in Waycross, Georgia January 24, 1923. She was one of 13 children of William
Sylvester Chauncey and Emma Riberton Chauncey. Shortly afterward he was stationed in India and served in the
C.B.I. theatre during World War II. He
was discharged from the Air Corps November 2, 1945 at Ft. McPherson, Atlanta,
Georgia.
Following a short residency in
Georgia he returned to Lamesa where he was employed in carpentry. After a brief period the family returned to
Waycross, Georgia where they were living October 25, 1946. After a short employment on a chicken farm
in Callahan, Florida he brought his family back to Lamesa where he was employed
as a carpenter. In 1955 they lived
briefly in Odessa, Texas and then moved to Lubbock, Texas where he was employed
as a Dr. Pepper route salesman.
Later he was employed in the
printing department of "Southwestern Crop & Stock." Afterwards he was employed as a
"glassblower" and lathe operator in the cathode ray tube plant of
Electros, Inc.
Rilla Chauncey Cox contracted
cancer about 1956, and the family removed to Jacksonville, Florida in 1959 so
she could be near her family. She died
there March 16, 1960 and was buried in the Chauncey family cemetery in Telmore,
Georgia. The family returned to
Lubbock and resumed his association with Electros, Inc.
Dorman Elmer Cox was remarried
September 7, 1962 to Ollie Maurice Green Ramsey. Shortly afterward she was graduated from Lubbock School of Vocational
Nurses. In 1966 the removed to Ft.
Worth, Texas where he was employed as a printer for Manney Co. She was a nurse at John Peter Smith
Hospital. Later she was director of
nurses at Fireside Nursing Home.
Ollie Maurice Green Ramsey Cox died
October 30, 1975 of a heart condition. He was remarried January 8, 1976 to
"her best friend," Mildred Louise Nickens Becker, a nurse who was
employed with her and a mother of four.
She was born November 30, 1923 in St. Louis, Missouri.
In September 1983 he continued
to live in Ft. Worth where he was employed as a super- intendent for a
construction company. Later he was a
partner in C&R Construction Co. He was incapacitated for a time in a
construction accident in December 1984 in which his right leg was fractured in
six places.
Children born to Dorman Elmer
Cox and Meddie Rilla Chauncey Cox include:
Kenneth Dorman Cox
born September 3, 1944
Linda Dardanella Cox
born October 25, 1946
Gary Allen Cox
born February 9, 1951
Stephen Elmer Cox
born January 28, 1956
No children were born to Dorman
Elmer Cox and Ollie Maurice Green Ramsey Cox, but they adopted a daughter and
assumed foster parenthood of another:
Doyla Letta Cox
born October 21, 1967
Theresa Ann Lairmore
born December 1, 1969
Kenneth Dorman Cox, son of
Dorman Elmer Cox and Meddie Rilla Chauncey Cox, was born September 3, 1944 in
Waycross. He attended school in Lamesa,
Odessa and Lubbock and was graduated there in 1963 from Monterey High
School. Following graduation he was
employed by Hemphill-Wells Company and Electros, Inc. In August 1963 he enlisted in the U. S.
Marine Corps and received a medical discharge from the corps in December
1963. Later he was a student at University
of Florida.
He was married August 15, 1970
to Mary Virginia Allencia. They were divorced
in 1972 in Houston. He was remarried
November 20, 1972 to Chloe Lou Schumacher in Ft. Worth. They were divorced shortly afterward. He was remarried April 28, 1984 to Peggy
Ann Threat, a mother of three. In 1985
he, a construction supervisor, lived in Ft. Worth.
Children born to Kenneth Dorman
Cox and Mary Virginia Allencia Cox include:
Rilla Theresa
Cox born March 22, 1972
No children were born to
Kenneth Dorman Cox, Chloe Lou Schumacher and Peggy Ann Threat Cox.
Linda Dardanella Cox, daughter
of Dorman Elmer Cox and Meddie Rilla Chauncey Cox, was born October 25, 1946 in
Waycross. She was graduated from
Monterey High School in 1965. Following
graduation she was enrolled in Lubbock School of Vocational Nurses where she
was elected president of her class and was graduated with honors. She took her state board examinations in May
1967 and was employed by John Peter Smith Hospital. In an 18-year tenure there she has risen to supervisory capacity.
She was married February 14,
1977 to Jeffery Lynn Becker, son of her step- mother, Mildred Louise Nickens
Becker Cox and William Becker. No
children had been born to them in February 1985.
Gary Allen Cox, son of Dorman
Elmer Cox and Meddie Rilla Chauncey Cox, was born February 9, 1951 in
Lamesa. He attended public school in
Lubbock and Ft. Worth and enrolled in the latter city in Tarrant County Junior
College.
He was married September 20,
1971 in Ft. Worth to Donna Lee "Jingles" Peters. In 1972 they lived in Beckley, West
Virginia. They were divorced in 1974 in
Oklahoma. In 1978 he was remarried to
Rita Darlene Gilpin, daughter of William Franklin Gilpin and Lela Irene Lampp
Gilpin of Ft. Worth. In February 1985 he was supervisor of construction and
maintenance at John Peter Smith Hospital and lived at River Oaks, Texas.
Children born to Gary Allen Cox
and Donna Lee "Jingles" Peters Cox include:
Larry Allen Cox
born March 22, 1972
Children born to Gary Allen Cox
and Rita Darlene Gilpin Cox in- clude:
Misty Amber Cox
born January 21, 1980
Stephen William Cox
born July 24, 1982
Stephen Elmer Cox, son of
Dorman Elmer Cox and Meddie Rilla Chauncey Cox, was born January 28, 1956 in
Lubbock. He attended public school in
Lubbock and Ft. Worth. He enlisted in
the U.S. Navy April 17, 1975 and received his basic training in Orlando,
Florida. Later he attended a naval electronics
school in Chicago, Illinois. He was
discharged September 17, 1976.
He was married November 24,
1978 to Karen Dawn Stanfill in Ft. Worth.
They were divorced in 1980. He
was married June 9, 1984 in Las Vegas, Nevada to Rhonda Karen Richard Chasteen,
daughter of Norman Richard and Sondra Sher Richard.
In 1985 he, the owner of
Creative Wood Crafts, continued to live in Ft. Worth. No children were born to Stephen Elmer Cox, Karen Dawn Stanfill
Cox and Rhonda Karen Richard Chasteen Cox.
Doyla Letta Cox, adopted
daughter of Dorman Elmer Cox and Ollie Maurice Green Ramsey Cox, was born
October 21, 1967 in Ft. Worth. In 1985
she continued in the home of her parents.
She was involved in an automobile accident June 16, 1985 and continued
in a coma for several weeks. She
survived and was living in a Ft. Worth nursing home in June 1987.
Theresa Ann Lairmore-Cox,
foster daughter of Dorman Elmer Cox and Ollie Maurice Green Ramsey Cox, was
born December 1, 1969 in California. In
1970 she came into their home.
She died February 15, 1985 from
a self-inflicted gunshot wound to her temple.
She had a history of epileptic seizures and had recently been gripped by
the debilitating malady. Her organs
were donated to transplant patients, and she was buried in Azleland Memorial
Park.
Dan Malone, staff writer for
"Ft. Worth Star-Telegram," wrote an article around the suicide note
which she left for her family:
"The two-page note that
Theresa Ann Lairmore-Cox left her family on Valentine's Day was full of
love. But when her father reads it now,
it brings tears to his eyes and a tremor to his voice.
Theresa, a 15-year-old freshman
at Boswell High School, wrote her farewell Thursday morning, moments before
squeezing the trigger of the pistol she had placed to her head. She died Friday at John Peter Smith Hospital.
Theresa's father, Dorman E.
Cox, says he does not know why his daughter killed herself. Her note did not explain it, although she
expressed concerns about her epilepsy and anxiety about her health, he said.
"She had been having
epileptic seizures, but hadn't been bothered for some time. Here this last week she had two. She had a real strong one on Monday, which
seemed to bother her a lot, then she had another one on Tuesday," Cox said
Saturday evening, "She was worried about going back and having these seizures."
On Thursday morning Cox woke
Theresa up for school, then drove his wife Mildred to work. When he returned about 30 minutes later, at
about 8 a.m, he found Theresa's note, and a moment later, her lifeless body in
her bed. He also found his .22-caliber
revolver in her bed with one discharged shell.
What he didn't find was a wound or blood.
She was taken to JPS, where
doctors found a small wound in her temple, Cox said. The teen-ager was kept on life-support systems until Friday, Cox
said. Cox said Theresa had never
attempted to take her life before and gave no indication that she was upset
before her death.
On Wednesday night she talked
to (her sister) Doyla Letta and one of my sons, Gary. They were over here talking, laughing, cutting up as usual,' he
said. 'One of her girlfriends had been
down for a little bit, and they been out for a while. I think they walked down to the store.'
On the back of Theresa's
photograph, printed at right, she had written message to her brother and
sister-in-law, 'To Gary and Darlene Cox & kids,' she wrote, 'Look now cause
this will be the last time you'll see me in a picture. Love ya, Theresa.'
Cox said he believed that his
daughter's words reflected her dissatisfaction with how the picture turned out,
rather than a warning of her troubled mind.
He said she accepted life on its own terms, 'She didn't expect much out
of life--she was pretty content with what she had and got.'
Cox is not Theresa's father,
though he is the only father figure she ever knew. Her father died of cancer when she was an infant. After her father's death
Theresa was left in her
grandfather's care until arrangements were made to place her in Cox's
custody. Cox, a relative of Theresa's
through a previous marriage, became her legal guardian.
Cox asked that the note that
Theresa left not be published, but he offers a general description. She left word of her love for her family and
a plea to understand what she did--if not why, 'It was just her way of saying
goodbye and God bless you.'
Theresa will be buried at
Azleland Memorial Park on Monday--the day that she was supposed to see her
doctor about the latest round of seizures."
James Alvia Cox, son of James
Madison Cox and Amanda Lucinda "Cinda" McCall Cox, was born August
12, 1898 in Williamson County. In 1901
his family lived in Menard, Texas and in the same year moved to Nolan County,
Texas, returned to Williamson County in 1905, moved to Albany in 1906, farmed
in Young County, Texas in 1908, moved to Round Timbers, Texas in 1909 and to
Altus, Oklahoma in 1911. In 1915,
while living in Throckmorton County, Texas, his father was influenced to move
to Weed, New Mexico to homestead land there.
James Alvia Cox was married
September 1, 1919 at Cloudcroft, New Mexico to Mary Margaret "Maggie"
Drennan, his third cousin, once-removed, who was born in January 1901. They were not aware of their relationship
until his sister, Mary Alnora "Nora" Cox Drennan began to research
the family history about 1958. Mary Margaret "Maggie" Drennan was the
daughter of Braxton "Brack" Drennan and Mary Ann Britt Drennan.
In 1920 James Alvia Cox and
Mary Margaret "Maggie" Drennan Cox lived in Breckenridge,
Texas. In 1923 they lived in Ajo,
California, and in 1924 in Compton, California. He wrote his mother at that time that he was earning $1 an hour
as a concrete finisher. In 1925 they
returned to Texas. He was operating a
service station in the Klondike community of Dawson County across the
intersection from the grocery later owned by his brother. He was shot and killed there February 6,
1929 by W. E. Duke.
A newspaper story regarding the
shooting appeared in the February 7 edition of "The Lubbock Journal:"
"LAMESA, Feb. 7--J. A.
Cox, filling station operator of the Klondyke community, fifteen miles
southwest of here, was shot and instantly killed late last night. W. E. Duke, pastor of the Midway Baptist
Church, near Lamesa, surrendered to officers shortly after the shooting.
Both Cox and Duke are from
prominent Dawson County families. In
addition to his ministry, the Rev. Duke is owner and operator of a store at
Klondyke, where he and his family live.
The shooting occurred in front of the Duke store. The Rev. Mr. Duke has been pastor there for
the past five years.
The Rev. Mr. Duke would make no
statement this morning concerning the tragedy following a conference with Judge
J. E. Garland. County Attorney A. W.
Gibson announced that an examining trial would be held today. No cause for the shooting could be advanced
today by Sheriff Joe L. Ray or Deputy A. M. Bennett of Dawson County.
Mr. Cox is survived by his
widow, four children, one brother and other relatives. The body is being held in a local
undertaking establishment awaiting arrival of relatives."
He was buried in Lamesa
Cemetery. Mary Margaret
"Maggie" Drennan Cox was remarried about 1932 to Calvin Shipley and
continued to live in Lamesa where they operated a taxi service. Later they
removed to Seminole, Texas and continued to operate a taxi service. She died there in 1982.
Children born to James Alvia
Cox and Mary Margaret "Maggie" Drennan Cox include:
James Carlton "Pete" Cox born July 18, 1920
Desmond Ray Cox born September 1, 1921
Margaret DeMelba Cox born July 31, 1923
James Alvia Cox, Jr. born December
1, 1925
Children born to Calvin Shipley
and Mary Margaret "Maggie" Drennan Cox Shipley include:
Billie Kasteen Shipley born June
2, 1933
Jerry Mack Shipley born
October 10, 1934
Gary Paul Shipley born
October 12, 1941
James Carlton "Pete"
Cox, son of James Alvia Cox and Mary Margaret "Maggie" Drennan Cox,
was born July 18, 1920 at Breckenridge, Texas.
During World War II he served as a hospital corpsman stationed at Ft.
Bliss, Texas near El Paso. He was
married there about 1941 to Dorothy Faye Hitchcock.
Following military service he
became a doctor of chiropractic and developed his practice in El Paso where he
continued in July 1987.
Children born to James Carlton
"Pete" Cox and Dorothy Faye Hitchcock Cox include:
James Carlton Cox, Jr.
born September 1, 1942
Phillip Curtis Cox born February 25, 1944
Desmond Ray Cox, son of James
Alvia Cox and Mary Margaret "Maggie" Drennan Cox, was born September
1, 1921. Following U.S. Army service
during World War II he was married to Agnes Kay Way Kidd, a widow with two
daughters. They resided in Ft. Worth
where he was employed as a metalsmith.
No children were born to Desmond Ray Cox and Agnes Kay Way Kidd Cox.
Margaret DeMelba Cox, daughter
of James Alvia Cox and Mary Margaret "Maggie" Drennan Cox, was born
July 31, 1923 in Ajo, California. Her
family returned to Dawson County shortly afterwards. She was married about 1941 to Elton Lee Gossett. In 1985 they removed to Brady, Texas where
he died soon after.
Children born Elton Lee Gossett
and Margaret DeMelba Cox Gossett include:
Margaret Lee Gossett
born December 14, 1943
Ronnie Keith Gossett
born December 17, 1946
Elton Lee Gossett, Jr. born February 26, 1953
Samuel David Gossett
born June 22, 1956
Margaret Lee Gossett, daughter
of Elton Lee Gossett and Margaret DeMelba Cox Gossett, was born December 14,
1943. She was married about 1960 to
Wayland McCulloch. In 1987 they
continued to live in Seminole.
Children born to them include:
Greg McCulloch
born in 1962
Shannon McCulloch
born in 1965
Greg McCulloch, son of Wayland
McCulloch and Margaret Lee Gossett
McCulloch, was born in Seminole
in 1962. In 1985 he lived in
Brownfield, Texas.
Shannon McCulloch, daughter of
Wayland McCulloch and Margaret Lee Gossett McCulloch, was born in Seminole in
1965. In 1985 she was a student at
Texas Tech University.
James Alvia Cox, Jr., son of
James Alvia Cox and Mary Margaret "Maggie" Drennan Cox, was born in
Dawson County December 1, 1925. He was
married about 1946 to Josephine Rachel "Bill" Carter.
He became an oil products
distributor in Bridgeport, Texas. In
1983 they lived in Decatur, Texas.
Following a divorce he removed to Runaway Bay, Texas.
Children born to James Alvia
Cox, Jr. and Josephine Rachel "Bill" Carter Cox, include:
Alvia Cox
born about 1948
Patsy Jean Cox born about 1950
Cary Cox
born about 1953
Alvia Cox, son of James Alvia
Cox, Jr. and Josephine Rachel "Bill" Carter Cox, was born about 1948.
Patsy Jean Cox, daughter of
James Alvia Cox, Jr. and Josephine Rachel "Bill" Carter Cox, was
born about 1950. She was married about
1969, husband's name Craig.
Cary Cox, son of James Alvia
Cox, Jr. and Josephine Rachel "Bill" Carter Cox, was born about 1953.
Billie Kasteen Shipley,
daughter of Calvin Shipley and Mary Margaret "Maggie" Drennan Cox
Shipley, was born June 2, 1933 at Lamesa.
She was married about 1952 to Thomas Ray. Later she was remarried to Glenn Sullivan. Her third marriage was to Olen Locker. In 1987 they lived at Brady.
Children born to Thomas Ray and
Billie Kasteen Shipley Ray include:
Mickey Ray
born about 1953
Bill Ray
born about 1955
Gary Don Ray born about 1958
Jerry Mack Shipley, son of
Calvin Shipley and Mary Margaret "Maggie" Drennan Cox Shipley, was
born October 10, 1934 in Lamesa. He was
married about 1955 to Anita Joyce Kaker.
Children born to them include:
Mike Shipley
born about 1957
Debbie Shipley
born about 1959
Brenda Shipley
born about 1962
Gary Paul Shipley, son of
Calvin Shipley and Mary Margaret "Maggie" Drennan Cox Shipley, was
born October 12, 1938 in Lamesa. He was
married about 1959 to Glenda Burnett.
Children born to them include:
Shelly Shipley
born about 1961
Sherry Shipley
born about 1964
Mary Alnora "Nora"
Cox, daughter of James Madison Cox and Amanda Lucinda "Cindy" McCall
Cox, was born December 24, 1900 in Williamson County. Her family removed to
Nolan County in 1901, back to Williamson County in 1905, to Albany in 1906, to
Young County in 1908, to Round Timbers in 1909, to Altus, Oklahoma in 1911, to
Throckmorton County in 1912 and to Weed, New Mexico in 1915. She was married there in Cloudcroft August
20, 1919 to Thomas Calvin Drennan. He
was a brother to Mary Margaret "Maggie" Drennan and a son of Thomas Braxton "Brack"
Drennan and Mary Ann Britt Drennan, born August 19, 1899.
They were third cousins,
once-removed, but were not aware of the relationship until Mary Alnora
"Nora" Cox Drennan began to research the family history about 1958.
In 1920 Thomas Calvin Drennan moved
his family to Stonewall County, Texas where he operated a farm. In the fall of 1925 they moved to Dawson
County where he continued farming. In
1955 they moved to Lubbock where he was employed by JOT, Inc, owned by his
nephew Stanley Olgee "Jot" Gowen.
Later they lived in Denton,
where his son-in-law Charles Edwin "Doc" Davis operated a Chevrolet
dealership. Following this period they
lived in Ft. Worth and Winnsboro, Texas where they operated a stock farm with
their son Thelbert Roy "Jack" Drennan. In 1977 they retired and returned to Aspermont, Texas purchasing
a home from Ella Rash Parker who was later to become their daughter-in-law. In May 1987 Mary Alnora "Nora" Cox
Drennan lived in Gibson Memorial Home there.
Children born to Thomas Calvin
Drennan and Mary Alnora "Nora" Cox Drennan include:
Thelbert Roy "Jack" Drennan born June 20, 1920
Joyce Arlene Drennan born January 4, 1922
Ora Aladine "Deanie" Drennan born December 13, 1923
Calvin Osborn
"Ozzie" Drennan born January
2, 1926
Thelbert Roy "Jack"
Drennan, son of Thomas Calvin Drennan and Mary Alnora "Nora" Cox
Drennan, was born June 20, 1920 at Weed .
He was married December 24, 1943 at Lamesa to Bernadine Marie
"Jean" Ten Cate Taylor, daughter of Henry Ten Cate and Helena Jantina
Scaap Ten Cate. She was a widow with
one child, Patricia Ann Taylor. They
were divorced about 1946, and he moved to Ft. Worth to affiliate with the fire
department. Bernadine Marie
"Jean" Ten Cate Taylor Drennan died in Los Angeles in 1970.
He retired from the department
in 1977 as a captain. He maintained his
home on his farm at Winnsboro with his parents until 1979 when he removed to
Aspermont. He was remarried there July
17, 1979 to Mrs. Ella Rash Parker.
Children born to Thelbert Roy
"Jack" Drennan and Bernardine Marie "Jean" Ten Cate Taylor
Drennan include:
Patricia Ann Taylor Drennan born September 7, 1941
Teri Rae Drennan born
December 22, 1944
Patricia Ann Taylor Drennan,
daughter of Jean Ten Cate Taylor, was born September 7, 1941 in Los Angeles and
was adopted by Thelbert Roy "Jack" Drennan after his marriage to her
mother. In 1983 she was employed on a
horse farm in Wisconsin.
Teri Rae Drennan, daughter of
Thelbert Roy "Jack" Drennan and Jean Ten Cate Taylor Drennan, was
born in Lamesa December 22, 1944. She
was married about 1964 to Carl Buckley Mahaney. In 1970 they lived at Denton where they owned a farm and a shoe
store. Later they were divorced. After
receiving a Ph.D in education she began teaching. In 1983 she was teaching in Anchorage, Alaska.
Joyce Arlene Drennan, daughter
of Thomas Calvin Drennan and Mary Alnora "Nora" Cox Drennan, was born
January 4, 1922 in Stonewall County.
Later her parents moved to Dawson County where she grew up and was
graduated from high school in 1939. She
was married in 1945 in Lamesa to Carl Hugh Weaks. Later the couple was divorced, and she was remarried in Lamesa
June 17, 1955 to Audie Lee Richey, son of Hurley Lee Richey and Alice Bradford Richey. In 1970 they lived on a farm near Winnsboro,
and she was employed by General Telephone Company in Sulphur Springs,
Texas. In 1983 they removed to
Aspermont, Texas.
One daughter was born to Carl
Hugh Weaks and Joyce Arlene Drennan Weaks:
Carla Joyce Weaks
born March 11, 1946
Carla Joyce Weaks, daughter of
Carl Hugh Weaks and Joyce Arlene Drennan Weaks, was born March 11, 1946 in
Lamesa. She was married January 27,
1967 to Stanley Stafford in Lubbock. In
1970 they lived in Houston. In 1983
they lived in Sulphur Springs where he was employed by Dewitt Trucking
Company, and she was a nurse.
Children born to them include:
Tonya Michelle Stafford
born September 30, 1968
Tonya Michelle Stafford,
daughter of Stanley Stafford and Carla Joyce Weaks Stafford, was born in
Lubbock September 30, 1968.
Ora Aladine "Deanie"
Drennan, daughter of Thomas Calvin Drennan and Mary Alnora "Nora" Cox
Drennan, was born December 13, 1923 in Stonewall County. Her parents removed to Dawson County about
1925 where she attended school and was graduated from high school. Following graduation she was employed by
General Telephone Company there and in a short time became chief operator.
She was married about 1946 to
Bill Harrington in Lamesa. Later the
couple was divorced, and she was remarried December 11, 1949 to Charles Edwin
"Doc" Davis who was employed by an automobile dealership there. Later the couple removed to Lubbock where
they lived in June 1987.
Two children were adopted by
Charles Edwin "Doc" Davis and Ora Aladine "Deanie" Drennan
Harrington Davis:
Charles David Davis
born June 14, 1963
Tommie Ross Davis
born May 21, 1966