Culture
shapes who we are and how the world perceives us. By researching and finding
out the culture of our early ancestors, we can learn how we came about and why
we reside in the areas we were born into.
My great great grandfather, Walter
Griffin married Edna Masters in the small town of Tunnel Hill, Georgia. The two
together had two sons and a daughter. The oldest son, Ernest is my great
grandfather. Walter was a saw mill worker and a farmer. His wife Edna was a homemaker and stayed at
home with the children. Walter passed away in his late 30’s leaving his wife to
take care of two sons and a daughter. Ernest decided to get a job at a textile
mill in Dalton. His wife Clara was the owner of Griffin Sundries, in Whitfield
County.
Ernest and Clara Griffin
Ernest spent the last years of his life
working as supervisor for a route man at a chicken company. Ernest and Clara
are the parents of two boys, Macoy and Hiram. Macoy Griffin is the oldest son
and is my grandfather. Clara his mother and my great grandmother is 94 years of
age and currently resides in the home that was built by her late husband’s
father, Walter.
My grandfather Macoy is on the right side and his brother Hiram is on the left.
Macoy graduated from
high school and went to a business college. He and my grandmother Norma
Henderson met in Dalton and married in 1955. They moved to Alabama for an accounting
job my grandfather had available and continued living there for five years.
While residing in
Alabama Macoy and Norma Griffin had three sons, Keith, Blake and Scott. The
third son Scott Griffin is my father.
In
1960 Macoy Griffin’s Mother, Clara and her husband Ernest spoke to Macoy and
told him he had a job offer back in Whitfield County. The Griffin family is
tightly knit and strongly values the importance of family. Macoy and Norma knew
moving back to Whitfield County would be the best decision for them. Seven
years after moving back to Whitfield County my father’s youngest brother Chris
Griffin was born, and Macoy and Norma now have four Griffin boys.
Most of the
Griffin family has resided in Whitfield County for many decades. The Griffin
family is known to be a middle class, and very hard working family. My great
grandmother at the age of 94 is still a very hard working woman and still sings
in the Tunnel Hill United Methodist choir. Her love for music has influenced my
musical ability and because a large number of the Griffin’s are musically
talented I believe for that reason it has given me the ability to sing in the
Reinhardt University choir. The culture of being a hard working class of people
who have a strong love for music will mostly likely continue to pass down to
generation after generation of the Griffin family members.
My mother Nancy Hair |
My father Timothy Griffin
In 1976 Timothy
Scott Griffin who is known as Scott, meets Nancy Lee Hair. The two met in a
Whitfield County High school referred to as North West Whitfield High.
The family of Georgia Washington Haire (Named after President George Washington).
My Mother Nancy Hair’s great great great grandfather George Washington Haire(before the E was
dropped). George Washington Haire was named after President George Washington
by his father Issac Newton Haire Senior. Issac Newton Haire Senior married
Lavonia Susong. Lavonia’s father was in the military and was close friends with
President Washington. Issac Senior and his wife Lavonia raised their son Issac
Newton Haire Jr. in and out of the Washington’s home during various parties and
functions. The President must have made quiet the impression on young Issac Jr.
because he married Anne Elizabeth Milburn in 1843 and they named their first
born son George Washington Haire in honor of the President.
Family friend President George Washington
George
Washington Haire served in the civil war on the confederate side from Georgia.
After returning from the war the formerly known George Haire had now dropped
the e off his name and Haire with an e became Hair with no e.
George and Emma
bought 180 acres of farm land in 1868. This land at that time cost $150 dollars
and a mule. The property was located in the small community of Dawnville, which
is inside of Whitfield County. George Washington Hair passed away in 1914 and
in his obituary he was said to be one of the communities most loved and valued
citizens. He was well known and highly as steamed farmer and confederate
veteran as well as a loyal Methodist church member. The Hair’s had eleven
children, and the seventh child was Clarence Bivings Hair.
My great grandfather Clarence Hair
Clarence was born
and raised on his father’s land in Dawnville. Clarence at the age of twenty
years old decided to go out to California and work to make enough money to buy
eighty acres of land. His heart was set on it and he spent six years working
out west. When he returned home to Dalton he had made $1500 dollars in gold. He
was hard working and a driven man just like all the former and still previous
members of the Hair family are.
Great grandparents Clarence and Myrtle
Clarence
marries Myrtle Hawkins in December of 1908. They had ten children
My Papaw George Hair is on the first row in the middle
the seventh
child is my grandfather George Moses Hair. He was named after his mother’s
grandfather
Moses and Nancy Hair
Moses and his father’s grandfather George Washington Hair. George
Moses Hair was raised on the same farm and produced cotton, sugar cane
and corn.
Some of the Moses Hair family
At the age of seventeen George was drafted into World War II. After
returning home from the war he meets Mary Lucille Whaley of Whitfield County.
My Mamaw Lucille at 16 years old
After 3 months of dating the get married on March 8th 1947. My
grandfather stayed on the Dawnville property and my home is directly behind his
home on the same piece of farmland. George
and Mary have four children, two boys and two girls. The third child is my
mother Nancy who was born in 1958. My grandfather was once named in 1969
Georgia’s top corn producer for the entire state of Georgia.
Top Corn Producer in Georgia!
His whole life has
been dedicated to farming and his oldest son my uncle Clarence Hair still
continues to farm on a piece of land my grandfather owns in Polk County
Tennessee. The Hair’s came from the northern part of the U.S and lived in
Tennessee for a good amount of time. When my grandfather purchased the land in
Tennessee he said the Hair’s came from Tennessee and now a few of them are
going back.
The
Hair side similar to The Griffin side is all hard working goal oriented people.
I believe the Hair side can set out and achieve anything they desirer without
the help of anyone else. The Hairs’ are of the land they use what crops they
have to make sure money is being made and family is being taking care of. I
know that for me having both sides of my family that are hardworking and truly
good people has shaped me into a very well round and goal driven person. After
researching for my cultural roots I have begun to realize the ancestors we have
make up a large part of who we are. I can see many traits and characteristics
that I have inherited from both sides of my family.
I
can say that I feel very blessed to have family surrounding me and a family
that on both sides have remained in the Whitfield County area. Being raised in a close knit family is
special because everyone has a different ancestry and many families are very
spread out all around the world and are never able to continue that close bond
that my family members and I have. I have learned that family is the most
important thing above all the rest.
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