Marian Lavina Ware Madigan Obituary, 1986

BARBERTON — Marian Lavina Madigan (nee Ware), 84, died Nov. 18 at Akron General Medical Center.

She was a life resident of Barberton, as a housewife. She was a member of St. Augustine Catholic Church.

Preceded in death by husband, William A.; she is survived by sons and daughters-in-law, William E. and Mary Faye of Akron, Paul J. and Jackie of North Canton; eight grandchildren; two great-grandchildren ; sister, Mrs. Mildred Jones of Barberton.

Funeral services will be held Friday, 9:30 a.m., at the Hahn Funeral Home, Inc., with 10 a.m. Mass of Christian Burial at St. Augustine Catholic Church, Fr. Albert Kunkle, Celebrant. Interment Holy Cross Cemetery. Friends may call TODAY, 4 to 9 p.m. Rosary services THIS EVENING at 8:30. Donations may be may to the American Heart Association.

Source:  Akron Beacon Journal (OH) – Thursday, November 20, 1986

Carl J. Ware Obituary, 2008

Mr. Carl J. Ware, age 69, of 2506 Callier Springs Rd. S.E. Rome, Ga. (formally of Columbus, Oh) passed away at Floyd Medical Center on December 6, 2008. Mr. Carl J. Ware was born May 12, 1938 in Polk County to the late Alton Be Whatley and Ida Be Palmer Ware. He was educated in Cedartown, Ga.. Mr. Ware served in the US Army. On October 6, 1956, he married Mrs. Bertha ‘Faye’ Bray. He leaves to cherish his memories wife, Bertha ‘Faye’ Ware; two daughters, Nila ‘Pokey’ Ware, and Donna ‘Pixie’ Linsey; two grandsons, Brandon Arnold, and DeSean Ware; one granddaughter, Bedie Collins; six great-grandchildren; two sisters, Pearly Mae Daniels, and Louise Mitchell; two brothers, Willie B. Ware (Cookie), and Anthony Whatley. Mr. Ware also leaves a host of other relatives and friends. Services for Mr. Ware will be Saturday December 13, 2008 at 2 p.m. at Bethlehem Temple where Bishop Bobby Braziel is Senior Pastor and Bishop David Westley Braziel Jr. will officiate. The Interment will follow at Chubbtown Cemetery. Messages of condolence may be sent to the family at www.fkjonesfuneralhome.com.

Source:  Columbus Dispatch, The (OH) – Friday, December 12, 2008

Darnella Ware Ross Obituary, 2012

Darnella (Dolly) Ware Ross, Sunrise: December 28, 1915; Sunset: March 5, 2012. Born to Madie and Samuel Ware in Rome, Georgia then resided in the village of Mud Sock which is now Arlington and Grandview both suburbs of Columbus Ohio. Darnella was married 55 years to the late Melvin Eber Ross and was blessed with two sons. She is preceded in death by both parents, brothers Samuel and Neal Ware, sister Gladys Ware Harris, son Phillip Lee Chester Ross, brother-in-law Hillard (Wild Bill) Harris, niece Dolly Harris, and nephew William Hargrow, Sr. She leaves to cherish her memory son, Melvin Earl (Lois) Ross; nephews, Sylvester Hargrow and Ernie Wheelright; niece, Ollie Harris of Atlanta Georgia; and special niece, Sandal Harris-Yarbrough; grandson, Phillip Casby; granddaughter, Tina Marie Ross; a host of great/great-grandchildren too numerous to name; a host of great/grand-nieces and nephews, cousins and other relatives. Services to be held at Oakley Full Gospel Baptist Church, 3415 El Paso Dr. Columbus, Ohio 43204 Visiting hours 1-2 p.m., Service at 2 p.m.
 

Published in The Columbus Dispatch on Mar. 11, 2012

Arthur Ware Obituary, 1991

GEORGIA — Arthur Ware, formerly of Akron, died Feb. 8, 1991 in Rome, Ga.

Mr. Ware was a retired Army veteran with 24 years of service to his

country.

He leaves, to cherish his memory six children: daughters, Linda Johnson

Lanita and Lisa Ware and Laurita Ware Cole, all of Akron; sons, Arthur and

Anthony Ware of Akron; eight grandchildren; ex-wife, Ethel Ware, and many

other relatives and friends.

Funeral service Wednesday, 2 p.m., Feb. 13, in Rome, Ga. Lynns Funeral Home in charge of arrangements.

Source:  Akron Beacon Journal (OH) – Tuesday, February 12, 1991

Capt. James Ware (1778 – 1825)

.
    Capt. James Ware 
1778 – 1832
Nancy Garland Pendleton
1786 – 1825

by Iris Teta Eubank Wagner
3rd great-granddaughter

Capt. James Ware  was born December 25, 1778 in Amherst County, Virginia, son of Capt. John Ware, an officer in the Revolutionary War.  James’s mother is identified  only as Elizabeth.  By the naming of her first child Mansfield, she may have been  Elizabeth  Mansfield.   She may be instead of the Dabney, Dudley, Anderson families, for those names are in the names of her children.

Nancy Garland Pendleton  was born September 2,  1786, in Amherst County, Virginia, the daughter of Reubin Pendleton and Frances Maria Anna Garland. 

Reuben was the son of William Pendleton and nee Elizabeth Tinsley.  William was a brother to Edmund Pendleton (left).

Writer David J. Mays, in his two-volume Pulitzer Prize winning biography of Edmund Pendleton, begins the preface of the book: Edmund Pendleton was, in the considered opinion  of [Thomas] Jefferson, one of the greatest men of his age; and the tribute was deserved, since Pendleton’s high character and conspicuous abilities were devoted throughout his long life to the problems of his fellow citizens, and he contributed mightily to the history of Virginia and the Nation.

James and Nancy were married five days after bond was posted by Nancy’s uncle James Garland.  They were married at St. Mark’s Episcopal Church on December 18, 1800.  Consent was given James Ware to marry by his father John Ware.  Nancy’s father Reubin Pendleton gave consent for Nancy to marry.  St. Mark’s Church was built as New Glasgow Church in 1793. 

The land for the church was donated by  David Shepherd Garland (right)Nancy’s uncle, the brother of her mother Frances Maria Anna Garland.

James Ware – Surveyor
On July 16, 1808, a surveyor’s bond was posted at the Amherst County Courthouse by Reubin Pendleton, David Tinsley, and  Nicholas Harrison for James Ware certification as surveyor.

The Children
Five children had been born to James and Nancy by 1810, Mansfield Ware, Mary Camden Ware, Reuben L. Ware, John D. Ware, and James D. Ware.  They would have seven more children.  All would live to be adults except the last child born, who died at five months.

James Ware’s Inn and Tavern
After 1814, the James Ware home functioned as an inn and tavern.  Nancy’s uncle James Garland  posted bond on February 21, 1814, for  certification from the Court for James Ware to keep an Ordinary.

Full House on the 1820 Federal Census
Entries on the 1820 U. S. Census for James and Nancy list an extensive household of 39 individuals.  Six of them involved in commerce,  one in manufacturingand 15 servants to help in the operation of the inn.

The inn was a full house on this 1820 census entry.  Seven male children under sixteen years, and thirteen male residents ages sixteen to forty-five, and one male resident over forty-five. There are three females – the oldest is James’s wife, Nancy Garland Pendleton Ware, and daughter Mary Camden Ware, and the youngest daughter Ann Ware.  

James’ and Nancy’s daughter Mary would marry Richard Newman Eubank on December 22, 1820.  They would live at the family home Tudor Hall along the Old Lexington Turnpike four miles west of the Amherst Courthouse.

After 1814, James’ inn keeper’s certificate was renewed every three years.  On July 21, 1817, bondsman was Richard Harrison; on May 15, 1820, bondsman was Bennett A. Crawford; and the last bond posted on record for the inn was on June 17, 1823.  

County Court and family research reveal the inn was built of brick and  located at an intersection of two old roads – one that in present-day is called the Wagon Trail Road that ran along the north side of Tobacco Row Mountain and intersected with one called Ware’s Gap Road that then turned eastward through Ware’s Gap and continued to the Amherst Court House. (map above) The road is still called Ware’s Gap Road.

Among those papers shared with us by the late Sallie Eubank (Mrs. Tucker Eubank), a descendant of George Eubank, born 1746.

The Ware Inn and Tavern was the local social  hub, and welcome respite to migrating settlers going west. The intersection at which the inn was located was a major route for early southwest migrations. Waugh’s Ferry at the lower left in the map above was a major crossing point on the James River for travelers heading west.

Death of Nancy Pendleton Ware
Nancy died on September 14, 1825, in her 39th year.  As the last 3-year-bond for operation of the inn was posted in 1823, James may have discontinued operation of the inn due to his wife’s death.  The Lynchburg Virginian announced funeral services  for Mrs. Nancy Ware at the Episcopal church at Pedlar Mills.  She was buried in the family cemetery near her home.   

James’s Marriage to Lucy Eubank
Lucy Eubank was James Ware’s second wife.  Lucy was a daughter of George Eubank, who moved with his brother John’s family to Amherst County from Caroline County, Virginia in 1780.
_____
 Narrative and Website © Iris Teta Eubank Wagner  2006-2014

Sources:

  1. Douglas C. MacLeod, “Ferries in Bedford County on the James River,” included in Bedford Villages Lost and Found, Vol 2,compiler, Peaks of Otter Chapter of the Daughters of the American Revolution, Bedford, Virginia.

      2.  Eubank-Ware Family Bible, contents copied by Margaret Jacqueline Moore of Jackson, Mississippi, from the Bible owned by Richard N. and Mary C. Ware Eubank, published by the Mississippi Genealogical Society, Jackson, Mississippi. 
     
      3.  Lenora Higginbotham Sweeney, Marriage Bonds and Other Records of Amherst County,   Virginia, 1763-1800.

      4.  Bishop William Meade, Old Churches, Ministers, and Families of Virginia, 2 Vols.,     Orig. pub. 1857.

      5.  Genealogy.com, Scotch-Irish Settlement in Virginia, Vol II, Augusta County Court Records, James  Harrison’s Declaration as to his Military Service [in the RevolutionaryWar], Sept.3,1832,p482.

      6.  Margaret Jacqueline Moore, History of Eubank/Ware-Hunter-Allen, privately published, Jackson,  Mississippi. 

      7.  Bailey Fulton Davis, The Deeds of Amherst County, Virginia 1807-1827, Deed Books L-R, p379.

      8. Genealogy.com, 1810 United States Federal Census, Virginia, Amherst, p274, Roll 66 Book 1, copyright, MyFamily.com.

      9. David John Mays, Edmund Pendleton, 1721-1803 – A Biography, Volume I and II.  Second Printing published by The Virginia State Library, Richmond, by permission of Ruth R. Mays, 1984. Original publication, first edition, published by Harvard University Press, 1952.

 

Joyce Ann Ware Obituary, 1993

Joyce Ann Ware, 54, passed away April 26, 1993 at Timken Mercy Hospital after a short illness.

Funeral service at 12 noon TODAY, at St. James A.M.E. Zion Church, 209 Second St. S.W. and Treemont, Rev. Reginald Glenn officiating. Interment at Forest Hill Cemetery, 4414 Cleveland N.W., Canton. Friends may call at the church TODAY, from 11 a.m. to 12 noon. Procession will form and condolences may be sent to 614 Fries St. S.W., Massillon.

(Stewart & Calhoun, 535-1543.)

Source:  Akron Beacon Journal (OH) – Friday, April 30, 1993 

Ethel M. Ware Obituary, 1993

49, of Mt. Healthy, died Saturday. Mrs. Ware was a homemaker. Services: 10:30 a.m. Saturday at the New Friendship Baptist Church in Avondale. Visitation: 9:30 to 10:30 a.m. Saturday at the church. Arrangements by the Renfro Funeral Home.

Source:  Cincinnati Post, The (OH) – Thursday, August 5, 1993