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
Brief Thoughts
on Thanksgiving and
a Look at the Firstborn Son of the Rev. Milford G. Hamby
As you gather with family and/or
friends
for a Thanksgiving Day celebration may you find many things for which
to give
thanks. In our family celebration, no two years are exactly the same,
except
that the menu does not vary that much. But with extended family, we
never know
who will be invited for the first time or who will be unable for
scheduling and
other reasons to attend the Thanksgiving fest. For many years one thing
has
remained traditional with our family. As we hold hands around the laden
board,
ready to offer thanks, one by one each names a highlight in the year
just past
for which he or she is thankful. This tradition helps us to focus on
God’s
providence in our lives and the true meaning of Thanksgiving. We are
admonished:
“In everything give thanks, for this is the will of God in Christ Jesus
concerning you.” (I Thes. 5:18).
Last week this column was about
the Rev.
Milford Gilead Hamby (1833-1911), outstanding early circuit-riding
preacher
whose influence reached across not only
While Rev. M. G. Hamby was in
his charge in
Franklin County, Ga., at Carnesville, his first son, named William
Thomas
Hamby, was born
It has been written that with 25
churches
to visit and exhort, the young son’s father was gone from home much of
the
time. Monday was an exception because it was “wash day” when Rev.
Milford’s
wife, Eleanor Caroline Hughes Hamby, got her husband’s clothes
laundered and
ready for his week’s circuit. Likewise, much of the rearing of Elder
Hamby’s
ten children was left to their mother, who succeeded well at mothering.
It was noted of the Rev. William
Thomas
Hamby that “blood of preachers coursed through his veins.” He was the
fourth
generation of known Methodist ministers. He being in the fourth
generation
ordained, his father,
Rev. W. T. Hamby spent
forty-five years in
the active ministry. His first charge was the Hiawassee, Georgia
Mission. He
held pastorates at Calhoun, Winder, Trinity Methodist in
In retirement he remained
active, preaching
on the average of 75 times per year. In a news article lauding his life
of
service, he was called the “nestor of Methodism.” During his active
ministry he
delivered 8,000 sermons, conducted 500 funerals and married 300
couples. His
annual salary for pastoral duties ranged from $65 in the beginning to
$3,250 at
his retirement.
Some of the lighter moments he
shared were
about weddings. While he was at Calhoun, he drove a wild horse 20 miles
in a
storm to get to the place of the wedding. After he had performed the
ceremony,
the groom took him aside and said he wanted to “reverence” him for his
trouble.
The preacher was given 50 cents. At a wedding at
Rev. W. T. Hamby married Emma
Jane Curtis,
daughter of Spencer Lafayette Curtis (1835-1865) and Mary Lou Twiggs
(1835-1899). To William and Emma Jane were born five children: Frank
Munsey
Hamby (1883-1894); Nellie Lou Hamby (1889-1979); George Robins Hamby
(b. &
d. 1893); Fannie Lee Hamby (1895-1903); and Emma Lillian Hamby
(1901-1902).
Only one of the five children grew to adulthood. Nellie Lou Hamby
marrried Dr.
William Lester Matthews in
Emma Jane Curtis Hamby was born
At Thanksgiving, another item to
place on
our thanks list is the legacy of a good ancestry. From our forebears we
get not
only physical characteristics that mark us as their descendants but the
upbringing that helps to mold and make us who we are.
c2005 by
Ethelene Dyer
Jones; published Nov. 24, 2005 in The Union Sentinel, Blairsville,
GA.
Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
[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 17, 2018