“Mama Jessie”
Since my grandmother,
my Daddy’s, Momma’s birthday was this month I decided I would write a little
blog post to observe her 122nd birthday.
Jessie
Holeman Doss was born 5 March 1899 in Clay, Webster County, Kentucky the
daughter of George Samuel Doss and Nancy Lougena Woosley. She was the eighth and youngest child of her
parents. She was spoiled rotten by her
brothers and sometimes even by her sisters.
When Mama Jessie (as almost all of her grandkids called her) was three
years old her family moved to Charleston, Missouri. They lived in a tent while her Daddy, was
cutting timber and she told of snakes that were all over the place. She said you could not hardly go anywhere
inside or out without stepping on a snake they were so numerous. She recounted this story many times to my Daddy
and to myself. The following picture if of Mama Jessie in the middle and her sisters Annie & Verlie.
She did not
go to school until she was about 7 or 8 years old because her Mom would not let
her, this school was in Clay, Kentucky.
She hated school did not like it at all.
The last school she went to was at Wheatcroft, Kentucky and she only
went to 5th grade then quit and never went back. Her nickname was Judy, which her brother,
George bestowed on her.
From
Charleston, Missouri they moved back to Kentucky then over to Illinois in about
1908 and lived in Marion, Illinois then moved over to Harrisburg, Illinois and
lived there for a while then moved back to Kentucky and she lived around Clay,
Kentucky until she started getting married. The following picture is: Nancy, Jessie & George and in the back, Lillie, Fred & Lloyd in about 1908.
I wish Mama
Jessie were here to tell me more about the story of her life. I also wish I had written down all the
stories she use to tell me. About all I
can do is try and remember some of the things she told me, and I have been told
over the years by her children and other family members. Mama Jessie was very superstitious and a
couple of her things that I remember the most are, whatever door you come in,
that is the door you leave out of, and do not put a baby in front of a mirror
before they are a year old or they will die before they were 21 years old.
As a child
we went and visited with Mama Jessie and Pa Corley quite frequently in their
little house on Clay Street in Marion, Kentucky. I well remember the front porch and the swing
hanging there. I spent many of my
childhood days swinging in that swing.
Pa Corley would usually be setting in his rocker chair on the opposite side
of the porch, smoking his pipe. If we
were being good and not to loud, he would start telling us stories. My favorites were about Uncle Lug and Aunt
Pootie, a made-up family, from his very vivid imagination. If we happen to be there visiting during the
week, we had to be quiet and stay outside so Mama Jessie could watch her
soaps. She was a stickler about those
soaps. J
Another thing about their house was it had a tin roof and I would sleep
so well when it was raining and pattering on the roof tops. The following picture is of me with my Daddy and Momma on Mama Jessie's front porch. That porch had a lot of changes over the years, with steps in the front and then changed to the side a few different times.
I am only 63
years old, but Mama Jessie did not get an indoor bathroom until I was almost 16
years old. There was a path out the back
and a Sears and Roebuck catalog if we were lucky. J
At night she kept chamber pots under the beds so that you did not have
to go down the path in the dark or the cold for that matter. I seem to remember that it was a two holer,
so you could have company while you were going if you so desired. J
I remember my Daddy telling me that when they ask her if she wanted them
to put a bathroom in the house, her answer was, “I don’t want one of them
stinky things in here.” It took some
convincing to get her to agree to indoor plumbing and that it would not stink
like the outhouse down the path.
Mama Jessie always
wore a house dress when she was home that had two big pockets on the
front. One pocket always had Kleenex in
it and the other carried small change.
When I was young, we would get a nickel if we gave her a hug and a kiss
on the cheek when we were leaving to go back home. As we got older it went up to a dime and eventually,
we got a whole quarter. We lived up in
Henderson about 70 miles north of Marion and on the way back home we passed
through the small town of Sullivan in Union County, and right in the bend in
the road just passed the railroad tracks was a little restaurant that sold ice
cream. Daddy would always stop and that
change we had gotten from Mama Jessie went for ice cream to eat the rest of the
way home. We sure looked forward to that
ice cream every visit. Mama Jessie in one of her house dresses in front of her house there on Clay Street.
Mama Jessie
and Pa Corley made their own lye soap and as I got older, I got to help stir the
big cast iron kettle over the open fire in the backyard. The kettle hung from a big tri-pod and man
was that some hot work. Mama Jessie saved
all the drippings from bacon, sausage, and other meats to use in the making of
that lye soap. I do not know that as a
kid we ever had store bought shampoo, because my Momma always washed our hair
with bars of lye soap that we had gotten from Mama Jessie. After Mama Jessie died, my Daddy was there at
her house with some of his siblings and they were going through her things and
cleaning the house out. There by the
kitchen sink in the window sill was her little soap dish with a bar of lye soap
still in it. She died in 1984, so as you
can see, she was still using lye soap for washing up. My Daddy brought me that soap dish and that
piece of lye soap for me to have as a remembrance of my time helping them make
that soap. That dish and soap are on my
desk as a reminder to me of how things use to be when I was just a kid. The following are a couple of pictures of that soap dish with the lye soap.
Mama Jessie
was married five times, first to William Ernest Teague in 1919; next to Burke
Atwood Ward in 1921 for about two or three weeks when she found out he already had
a wife and several children in Louisiana.
I do not know if the marriage was annulled or if there was a
divorce. Mama Jessie was living in
Kansas City, Missouri when she found out he was a bigamist. This info was given to me by my Aunt, Helen
Beard Loftis, Mama Jessie’s oldest daughter.
Her third marriage was to Benjamin Franklin Walls in 1923, fourth to my
grandpa, Aubrey David Beard in 1925, then her fifth and final marriage to Veldo
Thomas Corley in 1943, who we all called Pa and loved dearly.
Mama Jessie always insisted she was born in 1900, but the 1900 census indicates she was born in March of 1899. I guess she just felt that being born in the 1800's made her seem too old. One of the reasons we all called her Mama Jessie was because she did not think she was old enough to have grandchildren and she never wanted to be called grandma or any other obvious variation. Apparently, she did tell the truth to the Social Security because they have her listed as being born in 1899, but she had her tombstone made quite a few years before she died and had 1900 put on it. 😀The following picture is of me with my youngest daughter and her family, when we stopped by to see Mama Jessie and Pa Corley this past October.
Mama Jessie
was the mother of 10 children namely: Charles William Teague, 1919-2008, Harold
Crawford Walls, 1924-1997, Dorothy Helen Beard, 1926-2009, George Anderson
Beard, Audrey Dale Beard, 1930-2014, Donald Ray Beard, 1932-2004, Jackie Loy
Beard, 1934-2004, Violet Joy Beard, 1934-2016, Duell Franklin Beard (my Daddy),
1935-2009 and Bobby David Corley.
Mama Jessie also
had 50 grandchildren, with her oldest grandchild born in 1938 and her youngest
grandchild born in 1985, a spread of 47 years.
Out of these 50 grandchildren, there have been 6 that have passed away. Two of these 6 were just babies, living just
a few hours.
If I have counted
correctly as of August 2020, Mama Jessie has 10 kids, 50 grandkids, 108
great-grandkids and 107 great-great-grandkids and 2
great-great-great-grandkids. The total
so far of her descendants is 277 people and this does not count the in-laws or
step-kids at all, only the blood relations. I am still needing updated totals for Uncle
Harold and Uncle George’s families to get a more accurate count of all of her
descendants.
Mama Jessie
was one of a kind, to say the least and she will be remembered for many years
to come, as we her descendants, tell our descendants about her and the stories
we remember. Just a few pictures of my Mama Jessie, the one of her setting on the fence in the barnyard is probably my favorite.
Happy 122nd
Birthday, Mama Jessie, we love you!!!!
Written by
her granddaughter, Vickie Beard Thompson in March 2021.
Thank you for sharing this "no holds barred" story of Mama Jessie. I love the fact that you too, are a raconteur and can hold your reader's interest. Thanks Vickie!
ReplyDeleteYour love for her comes through all your writings. Sure makes for interesting reading.
ReplyDeleteI love it. I love you.
ReplyDeleteI sure enjoyed your story of Mama Jesse. We have a Mama Jesse in our family even though it is an unusual name. It's my husband's grandmother. When we started dating everyone referred to his grandparents as Daddy Jesse and Mama. In my family the grandchildren called my parents Daddy Rowland and Granny Rowland. I just assumed that they meant Daddy Jesse and Mama Jesse so I started calling her that and it caught on. All the younger children and later everyone started calling her Mama Jesse. She's spending her time in Heaven now also.
ReplyDelete