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Sunday, July 16, 2017

Platting Orientation Using the Census and a Timeline


My progress with creating John Washington Womble’s neighborhood has been slow of late.  This weekend I took a break from visiting my local family history center to research so that I could spend more time on this project.

Earlier in the week I came up with the idea of creating a timeline of events that happened in the Civil District where John Washington Womble lived.  My idea was that perhaps the various land sales would develop into a better grasp of where the various plats were supposed to be. 

A few months ago, I’d listened to a webinar about neighborhood recreation. The lecturer mentioned that one will never completely be able to locate every single tract of land and be able to place it with 100% accuracy in a particular area.  This bit of information was a wonderful boost and needed realism for me.

In creating my timeline I learned a few things, Ellen Womble Bowling and her husband sold their land within a few of her father, John Washington Womble.  Also Womble’s neighbor, Samuel Faught sold his land the exact same day.  Of further interest, John J Womble, nephew to John Washington bought a presumed neighboring tract two years later.  I had always thought mistakenly that at least for a short time the men had been neighbors.  But not so, according to my timeline.

Unfortunately, listing out the various land transactions became less numerous or easy for me.  I’d platted a number of tracts in DeedMapper and began trying to arrange them in a logical manner according to their Census enumeration.  This is slow work because the trying to follow the plats and their placement in the Census doesn’t always seem to follow a logical sequence.

Perhaps something to keep in mind is that the enumerator was likely on horseback and likely wasn’t walking.  The Census for the 12th Civil District of Hardeman County isn’t too helpful because it only provides the month on some of the pages as an indication as to when the enumeration was done.  So I have no idea if it took the enumerator the entire month to complete where he spent a couple of hours each day traveling around in that Civil District, or if he was able to complete his task within a day.

From prior research I know that there is a bridge that goes across the Hatchie River that was owned by a man named Simpson.  A road known back in that time as the Bolivar Simpson road likely ran from the Hatchie River to Bolivar.  My thought is that likely the enumerator may have traveled along that road and then made his way in a circuitous route off the road and onto whatever lanes, paths, or pastures may have existed to reach the various people living in that Civil District.