Sarah Ballinger

F, b. 15 November 1821, d. 22 February 1898
Sarah Ballinger|b. 15 Nov 1821\nd. 22 Feb 1898|p14.htm#i467|Elijah B. Ballinger|b. 3 Feb 1782|p13.htm#i465|Mary Wingo||p13.htm#i466|James E. Ballinger||p13.htm#i464|Dareus Dodson||p13.htm#i463|||||||

Relationship=3rd cousin 5 times removed of Pamela Jean Larremore.
Charts
Descendants of William Dodson
     
     Sarah Ballinger Sarah was the daughter of Elijah B. Ballinger and Mary Wingo.
     Sarah Ballinger was born on 15 November 1821 at Greenville County, South Carolina, daughter of Elijah B. Ballinger and Mary Wingo.
     At the age of 22, Sarah married Henry Stone .
     Sarah Ballinger died on 22 February 1898 at age 76.

Child of Sarah Ballinger and Henry Stone

Henry Stone

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Descendants of William Dodson
     
     Henry married Sarah Ballinger , daughter of Elijah B. Ballinger and Mary Wingo.

Child of Henry Stone and Sarah Ballinger

John William Stone

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John William Stone||p14.htm#i469|Henry Stone||p14.htm#i468|Sarah Ballinger|b. 15 Nov 1821\nd. 22 Feb 1898|p14.htm#i467|||||||Elijah B. Ballinger|b. 3 Feb 1782|p13.htm#i465|Mary Wingo||p13.htm#i466|

Relationship=4th cousin 4 times removed of Pamela Jean Larremore.
Charts
Descendants of William Dodson
     
     John William Stone was born, son of Henry Stone and Sarah Ballinger.
     John married Rebecca Emza Hall .

Child of John William Stone and Rebecca Emza Hall

Rebecca Emza Hall

F
Charts
Descendants of William Dodson
     
     Rebecca married John William Stone , son of Henry Stone and Sarah Ballinger.

Child of Rebecca Emza Hall and John William Stone

Margaret Elizabeth Stone

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Margaret Elizabeth Stone||p14.htm#i471|John William Stone||p14.htm#i469|Rebecca Emza Hall||p14.htm#i470|Henry Stone||p14.htm#i468|Sarah Ballinger|b. 15 Nov 1821\nd. 22 Feb 1898|p14.htm#i467|||||||

Relationship=5th cousin 3 times removed of Pamela Jean Larremore.
Charts
Descendants of William Dodson
     
     Margaret Elizabeth Stone was born, daughter of John William Stone and Rebecca Emza Hall.
     Margaret married Herman Luther Krippendorf .

Child of Margaret Elizabeth Stone and Herman Luther Krippendorf

Herman Luther Krippendorf

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Charts
Descendants of William Dodson
     
     Herman Luther Krippendorf was born.
     Herman married Margaret Elizabeth Stone , daughter of John William Stone and Rebecca Emza Hall.

Child of Herman Luther Krippendorf and Margaret Elizabeth Stone

John Vincil Krippendorf

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John Vincil Krippendorf||p14.htm#i473|Herman Luther Krippendorf||p14.htm#i472|Margaret Elizabeth Stone||p14.htm#i471|||||||John W. Stone||p14.htm#i469|Rebecca E. Hall||p14.htm#i470|

Relationship=6th cousin 2 times removed of Pamela Jean Larremore.
Charts
Descendants of William Dodson
     
     John Vincil Krippendorf was born, son of Herman Luther Krippendorf and Margaret Elizabeth Stone.
     John married Elsie Mac Donaho .

Elsie Mac Donaho

F
Charts
Descendants of William Dodson
     
     Elsie married John Vincil Krippendorf , son of Herman Luther Krippendorf and Margaret Elizabeth Stone.

Helen Annah Austin

F, b. 25 July 1848, d. 5 January 1926
Helen Annah Austin|b. 25 Jul 1848\nd. 5 Jan 1926|p14.htm#i479|Captain Ira Austin|b. 30 May 1807\nd. 9 Nov 1893|p3.htm#i113|Harriet Benjamin|b. 5 Jul 1806\nd. 13 Nov 1880|p3.htm#i114|Levi Austin|b. 1 Feb 1772\nd. 22 Aug 1847|p4.htm#i118|Hannah Mack|b. 12 Apr 1776\nd. Jan 1839|p4.htm#i119|Amos Benjamin||p112.htm#i5050||||

Relationship=2nd great-grandaunt of Pamela Jean Larremore.
Charts
Descendants of Richard Austin
     
     Helen Annah Austin was born on 25 July 1848 at Ohio or Illinois, daughter of Captain Ira Austin and Harriet Benjamin.
     Helen Annah Austin died on 5 January 1926 at age 77.

William M. Wilkinson

M, b. 7 July 1901
William M. Wilkinson|b. 7 Jul 1901|p14.htm#i480|Francis R. Wilkinson|b. 5 Jan 1857\nd. 12 May 1936|p108.htm#i4862|Anie (?)|b. 1875|p108.htm#i4863|||||||||||||
     
     William M. Wilkinson was born on 7 July 1901 at Laramie County, Wyoming, son of Francis R. Wilkinson and Anie (?).
     At age 25, William married Evalyn McNeely . William and Evalyn were married on Wednesday, 15 June 1927 at Greeley, Weld County, Colorado.

Child of William M. Wilkinson and Evalyn McNeely

Evalyn McNeely

F, b. 1905
     
     Evalyn McNeely was born in 1905 at Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.
     Evalyn married William M. Wilkinson , son of Francis R. Wilkinson and Anie (?). William and Evalyn were married on Wednesday, 15 June 1927 at Greeley, Weld County, Colorado.

Child of Evalyn McNeely and William M. Wilkinson

Mary Margaret Wood

F, b. 25 August 1879, d. 17 March 1971
Mary Margaret Wood|b. 25 Aug 1879\nd. 17 Mar 1971|p14.htm#i483|Joseph H. Wood|b. 14 Jul 1859\nd. 3 May 1919|p10.htm#i340|Barbara Ann Fanning|b. 12 Mar 1857\nd. 11 Mar 1932|p10.htm#i339|James Wood|b. c 1829\nd. c 1876|p75.htm#i3670|Margaret A. Price|b. c 1834\nd. 29 Sep 1900|p75.htm#i3671|George W. Fanning|b. 23 Dec 1823\nd. 1861|p9.htm#i331|Mary M. McDonald|b. 24 Jan 1829\nd. 25 Apr 1921|p9.htm#i332|

Relationship=1st cousin 2 times removed of Pamela Jean Larremore.
Charts
Descendants of William Dodson
     
     Mary Margaret Wood was born on 25 August 1879 at Junction, Kimble County, Texas, daughter of Joseph H. Wood and Barbara Ann Fanning.
     At age 20, Mary married William Isiah Schrier . William and Mary were married on Wednesday, 14 February 1900 at Eddy County, New Mexico.
     Mary Margaret Wood died on 17 March 1971 at Las Cruces, Dona Ana County, New Mexico, at age 91.

Albert A. Jennings

M, b. 25 August 1834, d. before 1906
Albert A. Jennings|b. 25 Aug 1834\nd. b 1906|p14.htm#i484|John Thomas Jennings|b. bt 1794 - 1795\nd. 1860|p74.htm#i3612|Nancy Isabel Irwin|b. 1798|p74.htm#i3613|Elijah A. Jennings|b. 1773\nd. 1843|p74.htm#i3622|Sarah Shepard||p74.htm#i3623|John Irwin||p74.htm#i3614|Agnes Shepard||p74.htm#i3615|

Relationship=2nd great-grandfather of Pamela Jean Larremore.
Charts
Descendants of John Jennings
     
     Albert A. Jennings was born on 25 August 1834 at Russell County, Kentucky, son of John Thomas Jennings and Nancy Isabel Irwin.
     At age 18, Albert married Mary A. Muse , daughter of James C. A. Muse and Elizabeth Chesney. Albert and Mary were married on Wednesday, 2 March 1853 at Wilkes County?, North Carolina?; according to the marriage index at http://members.tripod.com/~flanaganfamily/marr_j.html Jennings, Albert to Polly Ann Meese. March 2, 1853 in Russell County, KY. Married by Wm. Roy, minister Baptist Church. Witnesses: James Meese, Lewis Hammond, Harvey Jennings. 1-60.
     Albert A. Jennings died before 1906. He was buried; POSSIBLE - There is an Al Jennings burried at Eagle Eye Cemetery, no dates on marker.

Children of Albert A. Jennings and Mary A. Muse

Mary A. Muse

F, b. 1826, d. 11 August 1910
Mary A. Muse|b. 1826\nd. 11 Aug 1910|p14.htm#i485|James C. A. Muse|b. 1791\nd. bt 1870 - 1880|p102.htm#i4649|Elizabeth Chesney|b. 1792\nd. bt 1850 - 1853|p102.htm#i4650|Richard Muse|b. 1752\nd. 1839|p102.htm#i4660|Margaret (?)|b. bt 1750 - 1760\nd. bt 1830 - 1840|p102.htm#i4661|John Chesney||p111.htm#i4996|Elizabeth (?)||p111.htm#i4997|

Relationship=2nd great-grandmother of Pamela Jean Larremore.
Charts
Descendants of John Jennings
     
     Mary A. Muse was born in 1826 at Pulaski County, Kentucky, daughter of James C. A. Muse and Elizabeth Chesney; Alternate birth year of 1935 published by Turpin Family.
     Mary married Albert A. Jennings , son of John Thomas Jennings and Nancy Isabel Irwin. Albert and Mary were married on Wednesday, 2 March 1853 at Wilkes County?, North Carolina?; according to the marriage index at http://members.tripod.com/~flanaganfamily/marr_j.html Jennings, Albert to Polly Ann Meese. March 2, 1853 in Russell County, KY. Married by Wm. Roy, minister Baptist Church. Witnesses: James Meese, Lewis Hammond, Harvey Jennings. 1-60.
     Mary A. Muse died on 11 August 1910; Death year could be 1910-1919.

Children of Mary A. Muse and Albert A. Jennings

Dorotha (?)

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     Dorotha (?) was born.
     Dorotha married John S. Whitesel , son of Samuel A. Whitesel and Charlotte Reichelderfer.
     Dorotha (?) and John S. Whitesel had two girls. One married a chiropractor or dentist.

Child of Dorotha (?) and John S. Whitesel

Mr. (?) Derby

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     Mr. (?) Derby married Mrs. (?) Derby .

Children of Mr. (?) Derby and Mrs. (?) Derby

Mrs. (?) Derby

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     Mrs. (?) Derby married Mr. (?) Derby .

Children of Mrs. (?) Derby and Mr. (?) Derby

Violet Edna Derby

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Violet Edna Derby||p14.htm#i490|Mr. (?) Derby||p14.htm#i488|Mrs. (?) Derby||p14.htm#i489|||||||||||||
     
     Violet Edna Derby was born at Kit Carson County, daughter of Mr. (?) Derby and Mrs. (?) Derby.

Myre Derby

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Myre Derby||p14.htm#i491|Mr. (?) Derby||p14.htm#i488|Mrs. (?) Derby||p14.htm#i489|||||||||||||
     
     Myre Derby was born at Kit Carson County, daughter of Mr. (?) Derby and Mrs. (?) Derby.

James William Pearce

M, b. 8 January 1873, d. December 1940
     
     James William Pearce was born on 8 January 1873.
     James married Lydia Ann Bonney , daughter of James R. Bonney and Eliza Ellen Taylor.
     James William Pearce died in December 1940 at age 67.

Child of James William Pearce and Lydia Ann Bonney

Lydia Ann Bonney

F, b. 3 March 1883, d. May 1941
Lydia Ann Bonney|b. 3 Mar 1883\nd. May 1941|p14.htm#i493|James R. Bonney|b. 26 May 1839\nd. 2 Nov 1911|p14.htm#i494|Eliza Ellen Taylor|b. 5 Sep 1859\nd. 16 May 1934|p14.htm#i495|||||||||||||
     
     Lydia Ann Bonney was born on 3 March 1883, daughter of James R. Bonney and Eliza Ellen Taylor.
     Lydia married James William Pearce .
     Lydia Ann Bonney died in May 1941 at age 58.

Child of Lydia Ann Bonney and James William Pearce

James R. Bonney

M, b. 26 May 1839, d. 2 November 1911
     
     James R. Bonney was born on 26 May 1839.
     James married Eliza Ellen Taylor .
     James R. Bonney died on 2 November 1911 at age 72.

Child of James R. Bonney and Eliza Ellen Taylor

Eliza Ellen Taylor

F, b. 5 September 1859, d. 16 May 1934
     
     Eliza married James R. Bonney .
     Eliza Ellen Taylor was born on 5 September 1859.
     Eliza Ellen Taylor died on 16 May 1934 at age 74.

Child of Eliza Ellen Taylor and James R. Bonney

Waylon Arnold Jennings

M, b. 15 June 1937, d. 13 February 2002
Waylon Arnold Jennings|b. 15 Jun 1937\nd. 13 Feb 2002|p14.htm#i496|William Albert Jennings|b. 3 Mar 1915\nd. 3 Jun 1968|p75.htm#i3665||||Gus Jennings|b. 1 Jun 1887\nd. 27 Mar 1958|p75.htm#i3667|Tempie A. Reed||p75.htm#i3668|||||||

Relationship=4th cousin of Pamela Jean Larremore.
Charts
Descendants of John Jennings
     
     Waylon Arnold Jennings was born on 15 June 1937 at Littlefield, Texas, son of William Albert Jennings.
     Waylon Arnold Jennings lived in 1958 at Lubbock, Texas.
     From childhood, Quinnie Pearl Larremore use to run around with both Waylon Jennings and Willie Nelson. Both are relations of ours, although there isn't a direct link between Willie and Waylon. It is said that one of them use to live with her in Arizona while they were getting their career started. She even helped them finance their career, but we aren't sure which one it was.
     Waylon Arnold Jennings lived between 1960 and 1965 at Phoenix, Maricopa County, Arizona. He also lived in 1965 at Nashville, Tennessee.
     Waylon married Mirriam Johnson . Jessie was his fourth wife. Waylon Arnold Jennings lived in 2001 at Chandler, Maricopa County, Arizona.
     Waylon Arnold Jennings died on 13 February 2002 at Tucson, Pima County, Arizona, at age 64 of Diabetes.
     Waylon Arnold Jennings An interesting Obituary can be found at www.telegraph.co.uk/news It reads:
     Waylon Arnold Jennings was born in Littlefield, Texas, on June 15 1937, into a family of mixed European and Cherokee extraction. His father was a truck driver and part-time dance hall guitarist.
     Waylon began playing guitar as a child and soon dropped out of school, determined to become a musician. He got a job as a radio disc jockey at the age of 12 and began playing in talent shows.
     In 1958 he moved to Lubbock, Texas, making guest appearances on a local radio station where he met Buddy Holly, then an aspiring musician a year his junior. Holly produced Jennings's first single, a version of the Cajun song Jole Blon, and used him as a bass player in his band, The Crickets.
     On February 3 1959, while on tour with Holly, Jennings gave up his seat on a private four-seater plane to J P "the Big Bopper" Richardson, who was suffering from 'flu and did not want to go by bus. Jennings later claimed he told Holly jokingly: "I hope your ol' plane crashes" - which it did on take-off, killing Holly, Richardson and Ritchie Valens.
     In the early 1960s, Jennings moved to Phoenix, Arizona, where he formed a band, the Waylors, topping the bill at a local club, J D's. Playing to customers of all kinds - "long-haired people, lawyers, doctors and all the cowboys" - he began to experiment with his own brand of rock-flavoured country music.
     In 1964, he recorded a live performance that showed a variety of influences, including Bob Dylan. After making an unsuccessful album for Herb Alpert's A & M Records, he was signed to RCA by Chet Atkins.
     Jennings moved to Nashville, at first sharing an apartment with Johnny Cash. He made his first of several film appearances in 1966 as the star of Nashville Rebel, a musical also featuring Loretta Lynn and Tex Ritter.
     After a succession of minor hits, he had his first No 1 in 1968 with Only Daddy That'll Walk the Line and reached the top five with Walk Out on My Mind.
     The following year he won a Grammy for his cover of Jim Webb's MacArthur Park, recorded with the Kimberleys, and soon after began recording songs by Kris Kristofferson. He also recorded several songs for the soundtrack album of Ned Kelly, the feature film starring Mick Jagger.
     In 1970 he recorded a duet version of Suspicious Minds with his fourth wife, Jessi Colter, whom he had married in 1969.
     But Jennings grew increasingly frustrated with the slick, overproduced sound of Nashville and the Nashville system in which producers chose songs and singers were backed by studio bands.
     Together with Willie Nelson and Johnny Cash, he decided to do things differently and started to produce his own recordings with his own band.
     The change re-invigorated his career and from then on he had No 1 hits with song after song, from This Time (1974) to Are You Sure Hank Done It This Way? (1975). Many of his albums reflected his bad boy image, including Ladies Love Outlaws, Lonesome On'ry and Mean and Waylon, the Ramblin' Man.
     At one point he supposedly threatened to shoot the fingers off any musician who looked at sheet music instead of playing by feeling: "You start messin' with my music, I get mean," he said.
     In 1975, Jennings was named the Country Music Association's Male Vocalist of the Year and, in 1976, he teamed up with Nelson, Jessi Colter and Tompall Glaser to produce Wanted: The Outlaws, an album which marked the foundation of the eponymous movement.
     It became the first platinum album ever recorded in Nashville and helped Jennings and Nelson sweep that year's Country Music Association Awards, winning Best Album, Best Single, and Best Vocal Duo for Good-Hearted Woman.
     In 1978 Jennings and Nelson won a Grammy Award for Mamas, Don't Let Your Babies Grow Up to Be Cowboys. The following year his Greatest Hits album sold four million - a rare accomplishment for country music.
     Since the 1960s, Jennings had indulged in every possible excess, developing a $1,500-a-day cocaine habit that got him into trouble with the police; "I did more drugs than anybody you ever saw in your life," he told an interviewer in 1994. Realising he was in danger of killing himself, he kicked the habit in 1984 by going cold turkey.
     After moving to MCA Records in 1985, he put together a frank "audiography" record and one-man show entitled A Man Called Hoss, which included the hit My Rough and Rowdy Days.
     In the mid-1980s, Jennings, Nelson, Cash and Kris Kristofferson formed the Highwaymen, which toured and produced three records, the most successful being Highwayman, their debut album.
     In 1990, Jennings signed with Epic and reached the Top 40 with the tune The Eagle. Two years later he recorded the blunt Too Dumb for New York City, Too Ugly for L A, and made a children's album, Cowboys, Sisters, Rascals, and Dirt, in 1993.
     He later switched to Justice Records, where among his final releases was the album Closing in on the Fire (1998), which featured Sting and Sheryl Crow.
     Jennings toured widely but often declined to attend awards ceremonies, believing that music was not about competition. He did not attend his induction into the Country Music Hall of Fame in 2001, saying it meant "absolutely nothing, to tell you the truth".
     Jennings starred in several films, including the television movies Stagecoach and Oklahoma City Dolls, and Follow That Bird, a Sesame Street film in which he played a farmer. He also had a cameo role in the Mel Gibson movie Maverick (1994), for which he wrote You Don't Mess Around With Me.
     Waylon Jennings is survived by his wife Jessi, their son, and by six children from his previous marriages.
     One of his many obituaries can be found at http://www.roswell-record.com/ It reads:
Singer Waylon Jennings passes away at age 64 NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) — Waylon Jennings, whose rebellious songs and brash attitude defined the outlaw movement in country music, died Wednesday after a long battle with diabetes-related health problems. He was 64. Jennings spokeswoman Schatzie Hageman said Jennings died peacefully at his home in Arizona. Jennings, a singer, songwriter and guitarist, recorded 60 albums and had 16 No. 1 country singles in a career that spanned five decades and began when he played bass for Buddy Holly. He was inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame in October. ‘‘Waylon was a dear friend, one of the very best of 35 years,’’ said Johnny Cash, who recorded and toured with Jennings, Willie Nelson and Kris Kristofferson as The Highwaymen. ‘‘I’ll miss him immensely.’’ George Jones called it a ‘‘great loss for country music,’’ and Emmylou Harris said Jennings ‘‘had a voice and a way with a song like no one else.’’ ‘‘He was also a class act as an artist and a man,’’ she said. Jennings had been plagued with diabetes-related health problems in recent years that made it difficult for him to walk. In December, his left foot was amputated at a Phoenix hospit al. Jennings and his wife, singer Jessi Colter, sold their home in Nashville more than a year ago and moved to Chandler, Ariz. They held an auction before the move, offering up items like ‘‘Leon,’’ a wood carving of an Indian chief that was Jennings’ stage mascot for 20 years. In 1959, Jennings’ career was nearly cut short by tragedy soon after it began. He was scheduled to fly on the light plane that crashed and killed Holly, Ritchie Valens and J.P. ‘‘The Big Bopper’’ Richardson. Jennings gave up his seat on the plane to Richardson, who was ill and wanted to fly rather than travel by bus with those left behind. With his pal Nelson, Jennings performed duets like ‘‘Mammas Don’t Let Your Babies Grow Up to Be Cowboys,’’ ‘‘Luckenbach’’ and ‘‘Good Hearted Woman.’’ Those 1970s songs nurtured a progressive sound and restless spirit embraced later by Travis Tritt, Charlie Daniels, Steve Earle and others. His resonant, authoritative voice also was used to narrate the popular TV show ‘‘The Dukes of Hazzard.’’ He sang its theme song, which was a million seller. ‘‘I aimed the narration at children and it made it work,’’ he said in a 1987 AP interview. He traditionally wore a black cowboy hat and ebony attire that accented his black beard and mustache. Often reclusive when not on stage, he played earthy music with a spirited, hard edge. ‘‘For Waylon it was always about the music,’’ said Joe Galante, president of RCA Records in Nashville. ‘‘The only spotlight he ever cared about was the one on him while he was onstage. It wasn’t about the awards or events.’’ Jennings’ well-defined image matched his history of battling record producers to do music his way. ‘‘There’s always one more way to do something,’’ Jennings said. ‘‘Your way.’’ Some of his album titles nourished his brash persona: ‘‘Lonesome, On’ry and Mean,’’ ‘‘I’ve Always Been Crazy,’’ ‘‘Nashville Rebel,’’ ‘‘Ladies Love Outlaws’’ and ‘‘Wanted: The Outlaws.’’ He often refused to attend music awards shows on the grounds that performers should not compete against each other. Despite those sentiments, Jennings won two Grammy awards and four Country Music Association awards. He did not attend his induction into the Country Music Hall of Fame last year. For about 10 years, he declined to appear on the Grand Ole Opry because a full set of drums was forbidden at the time. The rule was eventually dropped. In 1992, he told the AP: ‘‘I’ve never compromised, and people respect that.’’ Of his outlaw image, he said: ‘‘It was a good marketing tool. In a way, I am that way. You start messing with my music, I get mean. As long was you are honest and up front with me, I will be the same with you. But I still do things my way.’’ Born in Littlefield, Texas, Jennings became a radio disc jockey at 14 and formed his own band not long afte rward. He and Holly were teen-age friends in Lubbock, Texas, and Jennings was in Holly’s band. Holly also produced Jennings’ first record. ‘‘Mainly what I learned from Buddy was an attitude,’’ Jennings said. ‘‘He loved music, and he taught me that it shouldn’t have any barriers to it.’’ By the early 1960s Jennings was playing regularly at a nightclub in Phoenix. In 1963, he was signed by Herb Alpert’s A&M Records, then was signed by RCA in Nashville shortly thereafter by Chet Atkins. In Nashville, he and Cash became friends and roommates. His hit records began in the mid-1960s and his heyday was the mid-1970s. His ‘‘Greatest Hits’’ album in 1979 sold 4 million — a rare accomplishment in country music for that era. In the mid-1980s, he joined with Nelson, Cash and Kristofferson to form the Highwaymen. ‘‘I’d like to be remembered for my music — not necessarily by what people see when they see us — but what they feel when they talk about you,’’ he said in 1984. ‘‘Some people have their music. My music has me.’’ His other hit singles included ‘‘I’m a Ramblin’ Man,’’ ‘‘Amanda,’’ ‘‘Lucille,’’ ‘‘I’ve Always Been Crazy’’ and ‘‘Rose in Paradise.’’ He made occasional forays into TV movies, including ‘‘Stagecoach’’ and ‘‘Oklahoma City Dolls,’’ plus the Sesame Street movie ‘‘Follow That Bird’’ and the B-movie ‘‘Nashville Rebel.’’ He has said he spent 21 years on drugs and had a $1,500-a-day cocaine habit. ‘‘I did more drugs than anybody you ever saw in your life,’’ he told the Country Music Association’s Close Up magazine in 1994. In 1977, he was arrested at a Nashville recording studio and charged with conspiracy and possession of cocaine with intent to distribute. The charges were later dismissed. He kicked the habit in 1984 by leasing a house in Arizona and going cold turkey, he said. He and Colter, his fourth wife, married in 1969. They had one son, Shooter.

Mirriam Johnson

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Charts
Descendants of John Jennings
     
     Mirriam Johnson was born.
     An interesting Biography of Jessi Colter can be found at http://www.cmt.com/artists/az/colter_jessi/bio.jhtml which begins with:
Jessi Colter was born with the name Mirriam Johnson on May 25, 1947, in Phoenix. (She adopted the stage name Jessi Colter after her great-great-great uncle who was in Jesse James' notorious outlaw gang.) Her mother became Sister Helen, an ordained Pentecostal minister, and Colter became the church pianist at age 11.
Click here to find out more!

     Mirriam married Waylon Arnold Jennings , son of William Albert Jennings. Jessie was his fourth wife.

Phyllis Stacherek

F, b. 7 January 1909
     
     Phyllis Stacherek was born on 7 January 1909.
     Phyllis married Walter Wapniarski , son of Stanley Wapniarski and Waclowa Hojhacki.

Waclowa Hojhacki

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     Waclowa Hojhacki was born at Poland.
     Waclowa married Stanley Wapniarski , son of Antone Wapniarski and Maryanne (?).
     A possible immigration record could be: Wojciech Wopniarski, from Kaczynier, Russia in 1913, age 38. This would place her birthdate around 1875.     

Children of Waclowa Hojhacki and Stanley Wapniarski

Mary Hynes

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Charts
Descendants of Richard Austin
     
     Mary Hynes was born.
     Mary Hynes married Samual B Austin , son of Captain Ira Austin and Harriet Benjamin. They were married on Thursday, 18 March 1886 at Denver, Colorado. Marriage banns for Mary Hynes were published on 18 March 1886 at Denver, Colorado; Unknown GEDCOM info: Y.

James Little

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     James married Florence Jones . James and Florence were married on Friday, 15 September 1905 at Crab Orchard, Nebraska.

Florence Jones

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     She was Irish and a bit of English.
     Florence married James Little . James and Florence were married on Friday, 15 September 1905 at Crab Orchard, Nebraska.

Children of Florence Jones and James Little