Baker County GaArchives Photo Person.....Ingram, Welthie Anne Davis ************************************************ Copyright. All rights reserved. http://www.usgwarchives.net/copyright.htm http://www.usgwarchives.net/ga/gafiles.htm ************************************************ File contributed for use in USGenWeb Archives by: Elizabeth Ingram Thompson lizzayzay@hotmail.com August 21, 2006, 7:26 am Source: Family Photo Name: Welthie Anne Davis Ingram Photo can be seen at: http://www.usgwarchives.net/ga/baker/photos/ingram11664gph.jpg Image file size: 39.8 Kb This is a photo of Mrs. Welthie Anne Davis Ingram, my grandmother. She was born in Baker County Ga. 1885 married to Jeremiah J. Ingram of Nothcumberland NC. Welthie was the daughter of Jefferson Davis and Sarah Jane McClain or mcClaine, she had a brother Thomas and two sisters Sarah and Etha or Ester sp?. Welthie is buried in Early county in the Gordon cemetery with her son Issac A. Ingram. And shes with her husband James Jackson Ingram (aka. Jeremiah). There are also daughters buried there with their married names of Tabb etc... Welthie was born 23 sep 1885, died 22 nov. 1964 she was married in Geneva AL. Sarah her mother is showing with son Thomas on the 1880 Baker Co. Census and I found Jeremiah Ingram on the North Cumberland NC 1880 census in his fathers household father Issac Ingram. I found Welthie and James Ingram on the 1930 census in Miller county living in Colquit Ga. Her name was spelled Mathy and he was going by James. Apparently Jeremiah James or Jackson Ingram changed his name allot according to my living father his sisters called him Jerry. I found a Sarah J. McClain on the Cherokee Ga. Census 1870 I do not know if this is Welthies mother but the borders were changing around Cherokee and Baker then? I know that Welthie and Jeremiah's first family of children are buried in the Traveler'S Rest cem in baker. What I know of Welthie Anne Davis Ingram, she was working in a kitchen when Mr. Ingram met her, she worked the cotton picking circle was once bit by a snake and almost died after that all her life if she saw a blade of grass growing in her yard she would pluck it. Told by my father she would split rail for 25 cents a day. She made patch work quilts and raised chickens, after Mr. Ingram died her sons Issac and my living father went into ww11 and together they bought her her first home that she lived in until the day she passed.....Elizabeth Ingram Thompson File at: http://files.usgwarchives.net/ga/baker/photos/ingram11664gph.txt This file has been created by a form at http://www.genrecords.org/gafiles/ File size: 2.7 Kb