The Collier Collection Goes to the Georgia Historical Society in Savannah

GHS sign

In early 2015, over 200 cubic feet of documents, ledgers, and other material from the Estate of Virginia Collier Dennis was donated to the Thomaston-Upson Archives in Thomaston, Georgia.   The other material included a roll-top desk, large framed portraits, numerous photographs, and textiles.  The desk and some of the portraits were put on display in the Archives meeting room.  The Archives was selected because of the purpose of the facility and because much of the history represented in the collection related to Upson, Pike, and Lamar counties.

In May 2016, the Archives notified CHF the facility had neither the room nor the resources to handle the collection. Alternate facilities were examined and the best fit was found to be Georgia Historical Society in Savannah  On July 26, 2016, Georgia Historical Society had the Collier Collection packaged and loaded on a truck for transfer to Savannah.  It was delivered safely and unloaded the same day.

Georgia Historical Society is one of the oldest historical societies in the country.  The building is impressive and its facilities are excellent.  However, as the state historical society, much of its material is related to Savannah and coastal Georgia.  The “Collier Collection” will give them over 100 years of material from the 1820s through the War between the States, World War I, the Great Depression, and World War II.   The collection includes deeds, legal documents, business and personal letters, farm information, textile mill documents, merchant records, and industrial reports that document the history of middle Georgia and a prominent family of that area.  Many of the photographs and documents you have seen, or will see, posted here will be preserved at the Georgia Historical Society.

The Georgia Historical Society is excited to have the Collier Collection, and the Collier Heritage Foundation is excited for them to have it.

Click on this link to go to the Georgia Historical Society website.  Don’t expect to find our donation listed for quite some time as it is being inventoried and cataloged.

Georgia Historical Society

 

GHS building 5

Main Building of the Georgia Historical Society, Savannah, Georgia

 

 

 

 

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Bonanza for Researchers!!

The papers of J C Collier are extensive.  He was a prolific letter writer in both his business and personal life.  In an effort to piece together his family’s genealogy, J C Collier wrote letters to Colliers and other suspected kin. Many of the people he wrote to were unknown to him.  He was especially interested in tracking down the Efford Cobb Collier branch that located to Texas in the 1850s.

For genealogical research, he mailed out letters accompanied by a standard form which he asked to be filled out and returned.  His stenographers typed the letters and kept copies on onion-skin paper.  They also transcribed some of the return letters.  This link will connect you over to 900 letters from J C Collier’s papers, most of which were written and returned in this manner.

In addition to Collier, some surnames you will find are Wilson, Green, Greene, Jackson, McCoy, Powell, Mills, and Corbin.  Files are named according to the following convention:

year“_”month“_”day” “type” “from” to “to

Enjoy your reading and feel free to download whatever copies you want!

Click Here to Access the First 500 Letters

Click Here to Access the Remaining 401 Letters

9 Thoughts on “Bonanza for Researchers!!

  1. Bobby F.arter on July 10, 2016 at 11:07 am said:

    Glen, thanks for scanning and posting all of these letters. I don’t recall which one it was, but one of J C Collier’s letters that you had with you at the Isaac Collier Family Reunion at Goldthwaite had an error in it. The letter stated that Fannie (Martha Francis Collier) married Hardy Collier. Fannie married Hardy Ransom Jackson. Hardy Ransom Collier was Fannie’s nephew.
    Bobby Carter
    Bosque County, Texas

  2. Bobby F.arter on July 11, 2016 at 4:33 pm said:

    Glen, I have scanned through all of the posted letters and failed to find the one I referenced earlier. I might have over looked that part of an email, or it might have been missed when scanning.
    I found one other error in a letter from J. C. Collier on Sep 16, 1925 to Mrs. Mary Green Wilson of Douglassville, Tx, in which J.C. Collier states that Efford’s daughter who was a McCoy had died. Again, Fannie married Major Hardy Ransom Jackson, not a McCoy.
    Bobby Carter
    Bosque County, Texas

  3. Bobby F.arter on July 12, 2016 at 8:31 pm said:

    Hardy Collier wrote to J.C. Collier on Jan 20, 1924 that he would send him the names, and dates of birth and death of Efford Cobb Collier’s family as recorded in Efford’s Family Bible, but this list is not attached to his Jan 20th letter (which is listed in the first 500 letters posted). However, the listed is included in the second posting as the first undated posting following the posted letter of 2000_10_29.

  4. Bobby F.arter on July 12, 2016 at 9:20 pm said:

    Glen complied an index that is listed on the second grouping, in Word and PDF format. If you are only interested in specific letters this list can help narrow down your search.

  5. Charles Thomas Collier, Jr. on June 1, 2017 at 10:30 am said:

    In looking at this incredible collection, I discovered that my Great Grandmother, Mollie Collier, wife of Efford Cuthbert Collier, wrote many letters to Jena Collier, and included some pictures. Would it be possible for me to obtain high resolution scans of the pictures in TIFF or JPG format? I would love to be able to reproduce them.

    I have one picture of Mollie that I am attaching.

    Attachment

  6. collierheritage on June 1, 2017 at 11:24 am said:

    Charles,

    I’m happy you discovered us! I will gladly provide the photos you want in high resolution if you can point them out to me and if I still have them. The files were so extensive they couldn’t all be retained and so many were sent to Georgia Historical Society where they are being archived.

    By the way, a recent post of additional letters may have other documents of interest to you.

    Glen

    • Charles Thomas Collier, Jr. on June 1, 2017 at 2:02 pm said:

      Glen,

      I am very happy to have discovered this site as well!

      There are pictures with these letters:
      unknown_Ltr with pic Mollie Collier to JCC (2).pdf
      unknown_Ltr with pic Mollie Collier to JCC.pdf

      And these pictures were from my grandmother, Marian Hall Collier, who was married to Charles Alvin Collier, son of Mollie and Efford Cuthbert Collier. The boy is my father, Charles Thomas Collier, and yes, they called him Junior, even though he wasn’t.

      unknown pictures Mrs Chas A Collier.pdf

      As you stated, the files are very extensive! I haven’t perused all of them yet, so perhaps there will be more pictures that I am interested in. I greatly appreciate all of your work on this and your willingness to assist me.

      Sincerely,

      Tom

  7. collierheritage on June 1, 2017 at 11:50 am said:

    This picture was framed like the picture of Efford C. Collier (see “Searching for the Family of Efford Cobb Collier”, Dec. 2015). I have not been able to identify it – even took it to the family reunion in Goldthwaite, Texas last year. Perhaps you can shed some light on it.

    The Efford C. Collier picture was loaned to JC Collier by a Texas relative and had a copy made.

    Glen

    Attachment

    • Charles Thomas Collier, Jr. on June 1, 2017 at 3:30 pm said:

      Glen,

      I am sorry to say that I cannot identify the gentleman in the photo. Perhaps one of the Collier brothers?

      Good luck,

      Tom

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Request of Researchers: Is David W Collier and Dickey W Collier the Same Person?

The following is from Elaine Collier Neal.  Any relevant information would be appreciated.

Researchers of the Vines Collier family are trying to establish proof that David W Collier is the son of Cuthbert Collier (Vines’ son) and his wife Nancy Dickey.  There is information on Dickey W Collier (born 17 Jul 1808 — died 1 Sep 1871) is his son and there is evidence that Dickey W Collier may be the same person as David W Collier.  He may have used Dickey as a nickname and his actual name may have been David.

Evidence of these two being the same person is that if Dickey is in the census, David is not, and when David is in the census, Dickey is not.  Pointing to an alternating use of the two names.  Confusing the issue is the fact that Dickey apparently married four times.  Are there any Bible records of this branch of the family?

Researchers are asked to contribute to this discussion.

 

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Jena Cuthbert Collier, Re-Introduction and Overview

IMG_2214

Portrait of Jena Cuthbert (J. C. ) Collier, probably made in the 1890s.

 

Jena (pronounced “geena”) Cuthbert, or J. C., Collier will be the subject of several future posts.  Family records going well back into the 1800s document his life as a merchant, manufacturer, planter, industrialist, community leader, politician, and visionary.

His father, Isaac Cuthbert (I. C.) Collier, returned from serving in the Army of the Confederacy to find he had lost everything to Wilson’s Raiders, the Union forces that drove eastward through Alabama and Georgia in the weeks after Robert E. Lee’s surrender.  Jena was born the following year, in 1866, in a Georgia that had been turned upside down by the war.  He saw his father, through hard work, recover from the ashes of the war and become one of the most successful cotton growers of middle Georgia.  I. C. Collier’s largest plantation was situated in the valleys of Big Potato and Little Potato creeks and astride what was to become a branch line of Southern Railway.  The plantation essentially became the town of Piedmont, with a railroad depot, a school, two churches, a dry goods store, post office, blacksmith shop, and cotton gin.

Like his father, Jena was motivated to succeed.  In his letters, he claimed to have left the farm behind while a teenager and relocated to Barnesville, Georgia.  There he finished his education and became involved in the mercantile business. Not content to simply buy what local suppliers offered, he learned to buy directly from manufacturers. He routinely made trips to such places as New York and Philadelphia where, as a hard bargainer, he returned with quality merchandise. He operated several stores in middle Georgia, and they were stocked with goods that were a cut above the rest, attracting the discriminating shoppers of the late 1800s and early 1900s.  J. C. maintained his interest in at least one store until the 1940s.

In 1898, J. C. and I. C. Collier organized and built the plant for Oxford Knitting Mills in Barnesville.  I. C. died in 1908.  J. C.’s son, Durward Cuthbert (D. C.) joined the company in 1911 and the name was changed to Collier Manufacturing Company.  The company, eventually renamed Collier Mills, operated several mills and maintained offices in New York and business interests in Canada.  In 1924, Collier Mills was sold to the William Carter Company of Needham, Massachusetts.

When I. C. Collier died in 1908, son J. C. inherited his father’s 3,000-acre cotton plantation that was Piedmont, Georgia.  Concurrent with his textile operations and mercantile businesses, J. C. became a successful farmer.  He kept detailed records of farm and labor and applied a effective management style that yielded some of the best cotton crops in the region.

J. C., a Mayor of Barnesville, was a strong supporter of the formation of Lamar County, Georgia.  When the county was finally formed from surrounding counties, Piedmont lay within newly-formed Lamar County.  In 1924, J. C. Collier was elected the first State Senator from Lamar County.

Upon his death in 1944, his widow, Jessie Stephens Collier, wrote of her husband:

“Possessed of great energy, and ambition with a forceful personality, achieved Life’s Success.”

 

2 Thoughts on “Jena Cuthbert Collier, Re-Introduction and Overview

  1. Interesting to know.

  2. Brenda DiCristina on April 11, 2018 at 1:02 pm said:

    I have read several times that Jena Cuthbert had the family Bible. Does anyone have information on who Martha Marshall Booker Collier’s parents were?

    I am driving myself crazy trying to solve this puzzle. We know she was from Wilkes County and DNA points to the Bookers of Wilkes Co. We just don’t know which male Booker was her father.
    Thank you for any help.

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The Search for Sarah E. Stafford Collier’s Ancestry, A CHF Success Story

The CHF website sometimes generates private comments and inquiries that aren’t always immediately made public.  Once such inquiry lead to re-attaching two ends of a long-broken thread of lineage.  It is one of the success stories of the genealogical effort by CHF.

Sarah E. Stafford was the widow of Robert Thomas Collier (son of Robert Marshall Collier and Amanda Fletcher Green), who died as a soldier of the Confederacy in Savannah (see March 18, 2016 post, “Robert T. Collier . . . . But Not This One”).   The two were married on May 6, 1856 in Upson County.  They had two children, Martha Aldora, born about 1859 and Robert Thomas (II) born in July 1862.   On  May 7, 1862, Robert Thomas (I) enlisted in the 32nd Infantry Regiment Georgia Volunteers Company I.  He left home before the birth of his son and died without ever seeing him, on or about June 29, 1862.  You can imagine the difficulties faced by this young, widowed mother during the war when almost complete devastation was inflicted on much of Georgia.  In 1869, Sarah married James Robert Jordan.

I was contacted by Tom Brigman, whose wife was the great, great granddaughter of Sarah.  Her great grandfather was Robert Thomas II, whose father died before he was born.  Tom and his wife had no knowledge of Sarah’s line before her marriage to Robert Thomas Collier.  Their primary question had to do with the actual date of death of Robert Thomas in Savannah.  CHF was able to provide Tom and his wife limited evidence of the date of death and also photo copies of a page from the Bible of Robert Marshall Collier.  The page from the Bible documents the birth of Robert Thomas.  These were exciting discoveries for Tom and his wife.

But Sarah’s background was a mystery.  The Staffords were known as a prominent family in Upson and Pike counties in Georgia in the 1800s and early 1900s.  Old records showed several Stafford businesses in the Barnesville area, some of which were linked to the enterprises of J. C. Collier. Still there was nothing known about Sarah and nothing to tie her to any of the known Staffords.

Then CHF found this in a a 90-year old letter written in 1925 by J. C. Collier to kin in Texas.

1925_03_13_portion Ltr JCC to Mrs A M Harryman 2

Since Sarah was a Stafford when she married Robert Thomas Collier, then she was the daughter of one of Alvis’ brothers and not a sister.  The ends of the threads were coming closer!!   The information was relayed to Tom, who was able to tie it all together.

Here is Tom Brigman’s resulting article on Sarah Stafford and the Stafford-Collier connection.

The-Stafford-Connection

 

Tom transcribed the following from the Thomas Virden Family Bible.  According to Tom, “The Bible lists and links Robert Thomas Collier (II), Robert T. and Sarah Stafford Collier’s son, by marriage to Mattie Camilla Virden.  It also gives the names and important date for their children:  Aldora, Dovil, Ollie, Robert, and William.  Ollie Collier married Lyra Sallas and their only child, Mary Evelyn Collier, was my wife’s mother.”

Thomas-G.-Virden-Bible

 

Finally, here is the obituary for Sarah E. Jordan (formerly Stafford and then Collier).  The newspaper clipping was found in the Thomas Virden Bible.  The date and source are unknown.

img618

 

Our many thanks to Tom Brigman for allowing CHF to post this information.

 

 

3 Thoughts on “The Search for Sarah E. Stafford Collier’s Ancestry, A CHF Success Story

  1. How good to hear those spiritual pieces of the story.

    • Carol Collier Ballard on May 8, 2016 at 12:11 am said:

      I loved the obituary for Sara! Nothing could be said any better of someone but that they walked with the Lord!

  2. Elaine on May 9, 2016 at 5:15 pm said:

    Wonderful to reunite the family members back in time. I am very glad to know about these cousins. Great story and heartwarming. Cousin Elaine Collier Neal

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