Muscogee COUNTY GA Ford, Elie File contributed for use in USGenWeb Archives by Ruth Bentley http://files.usgwarchives.net/ga/muscogee/bios/ford.txt THE ELIE FORD FAMILY Elie Ford was born January 1, 1817, died February 8, 1897, and is buried at Linwood Cemetery. As a youngster he was orphaned and sent to live with relatives in Georgia and to work on their plantation. He married Nancy Pollard in Upson County GA on September 18, 1838, but Nancy died very soon thereafter. He then married Barbara Ann Gibson on April 8, 1841 in Upson County and they had five daughters. After Barbara's death, he married Nancy Jane Copeland and they had six children. In the late 1850s Elie moved, along with Coulters and Copelands, from Taylor County GA to the Columbus-Girard-Browneville area. By all accounts Elie was an imposing figure, unusually large and strong in statue with thick, brown, curly hair, brown eyes and a thick beard. He was first a farmer and later became a machinist at the Eagle and Phenix Mills. While reportedly he was a fine family man, one granddaughter remembered him as stern and gruff. Having reared nine daughters, he probably was not one to put up with much nonsense from little girls in his old age! His grandson Louie Coulter remembered him as a man of patience sitting quietly for hours as he taught him to fish. Although old by standards of that day, Elie served in Co. A, 1st Georgia Regiment Light Duty Men. According to family lore, Union troops stayed in his house which was on the hill overlooking the 14th Street bridge at the time of the Battle of Girard. After the deaths of Nancy and Elie and the death of their brother Daniel, Elie's three younger daughters moved to Florida, all eventually settling in the Boynton Beach area. Children of Barbara Ann Gibson and Elie Ford were: (1) Mary Jane Ford (1843-1914), affectionately known as "Aunt Puss" because she was afraid of cats, who was a seamstress, never married, and lived near her sisters Georgia and Louisa. (2) Georgia Ann Ford (1848-1926) who married Thomas L. Coulter (see article elsewhere in this volume for details on this family). (3) Martha Ann Ford (1850-?) who married L.W. Edwards and lived in Phenix City. (4) Louisa Holton Ford (1853-1913) who married William Henry Harrison Coulter and had five children: Melvina who married Wesley Griggs, Esther who married W.H. Gibson, Mineola who married Martin Z. Gentry, Sadie Mexie who married William W. Hill, and Edna who married Arch Lee Tillery. (5) Laura (1856-1935) who married (1) a Mehaffey and had one son Cliff and married (2) Charlie McCardle and had one son, Elmer. Her family operated the Eelbeck Mills. Children of Nancy Jane Copeland and Elie Ford who survived to adulthood were: (1) Abby Sophronia Ford, who was always called Jessie, married Wilbur Leroy Forrey and had no children. (2) Daniel Ford (1863-1904) was confined to a wheelchair from childhood but was well educated at home by private tutors, later served as a tutor himself and Justice of the Peace in Browneville. He never married. (3) Barbara Ann Ford (1869-1939), called Annie, married David Daniel Lee, had no children, and operated a popular Victorian inn called Lee House in Boynton Beach FL. (4) Catherine Missouri Ford (1879-1934), called Kate, married Abel Augustus Rousseau, lived in Boynton Beach FL and had seven children: Callie Mae who married William Hugh Brown, Jesse Ford who married Virginia Keith Powell, Mabel Claire who married John Martin Tuite, Esther Barbara who married (1) Richard McSweany Jr. and (2) Merton Raymond McCorkle III, Laura Katharine who married Joseph Tyler Hogan, Wilbur who died in infancy, and John Robert who married Margaret Howarth. Wm M & Martha Coulter Author: Ruth Bentley Date: 15 Nov 2000 6:00 AM ======================== USGENWEB NOTICE: In keeping with our policy of providing free information on the Internet, data may be freely used by non-commercial entities, as long as this message remains on all copied material. These electronic pages cannot be reproduced in any format for profit or other presentation. The submitter has given permission to the USGenWeb Archives to store the file permanently for FREE access. ==============