Wednesday, March 30, 2011

Betty Ann Beahm Raynor 8/16/40-10/10/81


brothers & sisters: Benjamin Beahm, Thomas Beahm, Clarence Beahm, Gladys Beahm, Betty Beahm
August 1957


sisters: Gladys Beahm (Nicholson) & Betty Ann Beahm (Raynor) August 1957


sisters: Gladys Beahm (Nicholson), Margaret Beahm (Donald), Betty Beahm (Raynor) Madison Co., VA. April 1959


The graduate: Betty Ann Beahm (Raynor)


Newlyweds: Richard Russell Raynor & Betty Ann Beahm Raynor





New parents: Betty Ann Beahm Raynor and Richard Russell Raynor holding firsborn, Sandra Faye Raynor (Furr).


Richard Russell Raynor and Betty Ann Beahm Raynor with children: Richard Alan Raynor, Sandra Faye Raynor and Kenneth Wayne Raynor.

Betty Ann Beahm Raynor
Mrs. Betty Ann Beahm Raynor, 41, of Gordonsville, VA, died Saturday October 10, 1981 while attending a family reunion in Brightwood, VA. Born August 16, 1940 in Madison County, VA, she was the daughter of the late John William and Lilly Nicholson Beahm. Her husband was the late Richard Russell Raynor.
She was a member of the Gordonsville Church of God.
Survivors include one daughter Sandra F. Raynor; four sons, Richard A. Raynor, Kenneth W. Raynor, Timothy W. Raynor and Brian K. Raynor all of Gordonsville; nine brothers John H. Beahm of Madison, Thomas Beahm of Brightwood, Benjamin Beahm of Culpeper, VA, Walter Beahm, Lewis Beahm, Daniel Beahm, Milton Beahm, Charles Beahm and Claude Beahm, all of Maryland; six sisters Mrs. Gladys Nicholson and Mrs. Mabel Clore, both of Brightwood, Mrs. Sarah Jane Thomas of Tyson’s Corner, VA, Mrs. Mary Schmidt of Pennsylvania, Mrs. Emma Corbin of Maryland and Mrs. Margaret Donald of Fredericksburg, VA.
Family will receive friends from 7 until 9, Monday evening at Preddy's Funeral Chapel in Orange, VA.
The Rev. George Johnson and the Rev. Bill Ratchford, Jr. will conduct funeral services Tuesday, 2pm at Preddy’s Funeral Chapel, with interment in Mt Paran United Methodist Church Cemetery in Greene County, VA.


Betty Ann Beahm Raynor 2/7/81 Gordonsville, VA


Betty Ann Beahm Raynor at the annual Beahm family reunion held at The Ruritan 4689 Lillards Ford Road Brightwood, VA. She passed away suddenly at this reunion, shortly after this photo was taken.

Warren Royal Beahm & Frances Margaret Gaines Beahm


Photo of elderly married couple Frances Margaret Gaines and Warren Royal Beahm (1827-1920) taken circa 1905. Warner and Frances married Jul 12, 1855 in Page Co. VA.


Warren Royal Beahm
Born Aug 1827 in Page Co., VA to John William Beahm and Nancy Ann Bowen Beahm
Died Mar 13, 1920

Frances Margaret Gaines Beahm
Born Dec 1835, Rockingham Co. VA to William Edward GAINES and Elizabeth SHOTWELL
Died ?


Children:

Mary Elizabeth Beahm b: 11 JUN 1856

Jackanias Elby L. G. Beahm b: 15 Oct 1857 d: 7 May 1938 + Mollie V. O'Donnell b: 13 Jan 1869 d: 14 Oct 1924

Sarah Frances Beahm b: 11 Oct 1859 d: Feb 1918 + Thomas Welsh Weaver b: 11 Jan 1852 d: 1948

William Warner Rippetoe Beahm b: 11 DEC 1861 d: 11 NOV 1945 + Elizabeth Frances Gaines b: 15 JUN 1873 d: 26 FEB 1961

John Reuben Beahm b: Jun 1864 d: 17 Dec 1949 + Nannie Corbin b: 7 May 1868 d: 14 Feb 1934

Eliza J. Beahm b: 21 SEP 1866 + Hugh Frye b: ABT 1863

Samuel Jacob Hubert Beahm b: 17 MAR 1868 d: 27 DEC 1959 + Susan Mary Ann Elizabeth Beahm b: 1 FEB 1871 d: 29 APR 1922

Susan Rebecca Beahm b: 8 APR 1870 + Henry Wade Corbin b: 1870

Charles Hubert D. Beahm b: MAR 1872 + Daisy Corbin b: OCT 1878

Mary Anna Beahm b: APR 1877

Ella B. Beahm b: JUN 1879 + Ollie W. Tanner b: ABT 1876

Katie Lovice Beahm b: SEP 1880 + Charles Andrew Jacobs b: 2 Apr 1877 d: 31 Oct 1955

Warren Royal Beahm was a soldier in the Confederate army and was a wagon maker by trade. When that fact became known by the Quartermaster Corps he was sent home to Marksville to build supply wagons for use by the army. For this service he was paid privates wage of $7.00 per month and he was allowed to wear his uniform. A 16” x16” picture of Warner Royal Beahm in his uniform existed until it was destroyed by fire in 1984.

  •  Esther Mae Beahm, being held by Nannie Corbin Beahm.  And surely the other girl is Myrtle Lucy Beahm.  The boys, on the other hand, are more of a problem.  John Rueben & Nannie had three boys:  George, James, and Luther.  While there are three boys in the photo, none could be Luther, as he was not born until 1909. Unless the photo is dated incorrectly.  So ... which is George, which is James, and is that Luther standing by Frances?

Clint Collier 1892-1976

CLINT COLLIER
Clint Collier, 84, of Barboursville, died Sunday, December 26, 1976 at his home. He was the son of the late Mr. May Collier and Mrs. Loul Conley Collier of Greene County. Mr. Collier is survived by his wife, Fannie M. Collier of Barboursville; four daughters, Mrs. Thurman Dickerson of Barboursville, Mrs. Claude Collier of Ruckersville, Mrs. Bertie Rogers and Mrs. Walter Brill both of Manassas; five sons, Lester Collier of Barboursville, Clay Collier, Elmer Collier and Dennis Collier all of Ruckersville and Raymond Collier of Baltimore, Maryland; four sisters, Margaret Raynor and Nettie Thomas of Orange, Blanche Collier and Mandy Frazier both of Charlottesville; two brothers, Dewey Collier and William Collier both of Alexandria; thirty-five grandchildren and nineteen great-grandchildren. Mr. Collier was a World War I veteran. Funeral services were held at 2 p.m. Wednesday at the Eheart Pentecostal Church with interment in the Mount Paran Cemetery. Ryan Funeral Home of Quinque was in charge of arrangements.

Monday, March 28, 2011

RAYNOR Family Name

Raynor Family Motto: “FACTA NON VERBA” ( Deeds not words)
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As copied from a manuscript generated by Hall of Names West, PO Box 1363, Cambridge, Ontario N1R 7G6 about 1980.

"The History of the Name RAYNER

The ancient surname of RAYNER makes an impressive claim to being one of the oldest Anglo/Saxon surnames on record. The history of the name is closely woven into the intricate tapestry of the ancient chronicles of England.


Professional researchers have carefully scrutinized such ancient manuscripts as the Domesday Book (1086), the Ragman Rolls (1291-1296), the Curia Regis Rolls, The Pipe Rolls, the Hearth Rolls, parish registers, baptismals, tax records and other ancient documents and found the first record of the name RAYNER in Herefordshire where they were seated from early times and their first records appeared on the early census rolls taken by the early kings of Britain to determine the rate of taxation of their subjects.

Many different spellings were encountered in the research of this surname. Although RAYNER occurred in many manuscripts and documents, from time to time, the surname was also officially spelled RAYNERS, RAINOR, RAYNER, RAYNOR, RAINER, RAYNAR, RAINYER, REYNAR, RAUNER, RAENER, RAINAR, RAYNERE, RAYNARS, RAYNORS, RAYNORE, RAYNARE, RAYNAIR, RAYNAIRE and these variations frequently occurred, even between father and son. Scribes and church officials, often traveling great distances, even from other countries, frequently spelled the names they were recording as they heard it. As a result, the same person could find different spellings of the name recorded on birth, baptismal, marriage and death certificates as well as the other numerous records such as tax and census records.

The Saxon race gave birth to many English surnames not the least of which was the surname RAYNER. The Saxons were invited into England by the ancient Britons in the 5th century. They were a race of fair skinned people living along the Rhine Valley as far north as Denmark. They were led by General/Commanders Hengist and Horsa. The Saxons settled in the county of Kent, on the south east coast of England. Gradually, they probed north and westward, and during the next four hundred years, forced the ancient Britons back into Wales and Cornwall in the west, Cumberland to the north. The Angles, on the other hand, occupied the eastern coast, the south folk in Suffolk, and the north folk in Norfolk. Under Saxon rule, England prospered under a series of high kings, the last of which was Harold. In 1066, the Norman invaded from France and had their victory at the Battle of Hastings. Subsequently, many of the vanquished Saxon landowners forfeited their land to Duke William and his invading Norman nobles. Generally, the Saxons who remained in the south were not treated well under Norman rule, and many moved northward to the midlands, Lancashire and Yorkshire away from the Norman oppression.



This notable English family name, RAYNER, emerged as an influential name in the county of Hereford where they recorded as a family of great antiquity seated as Lords of the manor and estates in that census in 1086, taken by King William for taxation purposes. For the next two or three centuries, the RAYNERs flourished in Hereford and by 1400 had branched to eastern Drayton in Nottingham and also held estates in Yorkshire. The flourished on their estates for several centuries, intermarrying with other distinguished families of the area. Notable amongst the family at this time was RAYNER of Hereford.

During the middle ages the surname RAYNER flourished and played an important role in local affairs and in the political development of England. During the 15th, 16th, 17th and 18th centuries, England was ravaged by plagues and religious conflict. Puritanism, the newly found political fervor of Cromwellianism, and the remnants the Roman Church rejected all non-believers, each promoting their own cause. The conflicts between church groups, the Crown and political groups all claimed their followers and their impositions; tithes and demands on rich and poor alike broke the spirit of men and many turned away from religion. Many families were freely ‘encouraged’ to migrate to Ireland, or to the ‘colonies.’ Some were rewarded with grants of lands, others banished.

Some families were forced to migrate to Ireland where they became known as the “Adventurers for Land in Ireland.” Protestant settlers ‘undertook’ to keep their faith, being granted lands previously owned by the Catholic Irish. They were known as the ‘Undertakers.’ There is no evidence that the family migrated to Ireland, but this idea does not preclude the possibility of their scattered migration to that country.

The New World offered better opportunities and some migrated voluntarily, some were banished mostly for religious reasons. Some left Ireland disillusioned, but many left directly from England, their home territories. Some also moved to the European continent.

Members of the family name RAYNER sailed aboard the huge armada of three masted sailing ships known as the “White Sails” which plied the stormy Atlantic. These overcrowded ships such as the Hector, the Dove and the Rambler were pestilence ridden, sometimes 30% to 40% of the passenger list never reaching their destination, their numbers reduced by dysentery, cholera, small pox and typhoid.

In North America, included amongst the first migrants which could be considered a kinsman of the surname RAYNER, or a variable spelling of that family name was Mary Rainer and her husband James settled in Charles Town S.C in 1767; John, Peter and Philip Rainer arrived in Pennsylvania between 1772 and 1851; John Rainor arrived in Philadelphia in 1843; Elizabeth Raynor settled in New England in 1634, with her children Edward, Lydia, Joseph, Sarah and her husband Thurston; Joan Rayner settled in Virginia in 1623 with her husband.

From the port of entry many settlers made their way west, joining wagon trains to the prairies or the west coast. During the War of Independence, many loyalists made their way north to Canada about 1790 and became known as the United Empire Loyalists.
Luise Rainer 1936

Contemporary notables of this surname RAYNER include many distinguished contributors: Luise Rainer – actress, Sir Derek Rayner, Admiral Herbert Rayner, Neville Rayner of Lloyds; Brigadier Sir Ralph Rayner, Professor Geoffrey Raynor – metallurgist.

During the course of our research, we also determined the many coat of arms granted to different branches of the family. The most ancient grant of a Coat of Arms found was: ermine with a blue stripe at the top on which there are two gold starfish."



and from www.anestry.com:

rayner

1. English: from the Norman personal name Rainer, composed of the Germanic elements ragin ‘counsel’ + hari, heri ‘army’
2. Jewish (Ashkenazic): ornamental name from an inflected form of German rein or central Yiddish rayn ‘pure’.
3. Probably also an altered spelling of German Reiner.

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Information from "Rayner Family Records", Edited by F. H. Carpenter:

"The modern name Rayner can be traced back to the personal name, usually spelt Reyner in English Mediaeval documents, in Old French appearing as Rainer, Reiner, Renier etc., and in Old German as Raginhari - meaning, according to some sources, counsel or mighty army..."

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"Origin of the Name" by Dr. Stuart P. Howell

"Raynor (Rayner) is a distinguished name of Teutonic origin. The Anglo-Saxon Regenhere d. 617 A.D. He was son of Raedwalk, King of East Anglia, an ancient division of England which comprises the modern day Norfolk and Suffolk Counties.

Rainer (Rayner, Raynor) is derived from the old Germanic name, "Raginhari," meaning "counsel or mighty Army" and was undoubtedly introduced into England from France in the eleventh century.

Indeed, the earliest written records of the personal name in England appear in the Doomsday Book of 1086 and testify to the French influence in the formation of many English surnames.

In the Middle Ages, before the development of the hereditary surname system, it became convenient to identify people with the same first name by referring to their father's personal name. Thus patronymic surnames form one of the largest of the surname groups in England and indeed in all of Europe.

Early instances of the surname in England include Ricardus Filius Rainer who is on the written record in Hampshire in the year 1148 (Liber Wintoniensis) and William Rayner who lived in Lancashire in 1229 (Transcripts of Charters relating to the Gilbertine houses). The prefix "Filius" in the first example means "son of" and emphasizes the patronymic origins of the surname.

Among the first instances of the surname in England were those of Rayner Le Blake in County Norfolk during the year 1273, Reyner, son of Reyner Fleming, a Yorkshire man in the 13th year of Edward II's reign, and Thomas Rayner, also of Yorkshire (1379).

Variants of this surname include Raynor, Rainer, Ranner, Reiner, Reyner, and Renner and all are to be found in the East Anglican and Nottinghamshire areas with the "or" ending peculiar to the latter.

The name tended to be concentrated in those counties on the East coast of England, from Yorkshire south through Lincolnshire, Norfolk, Suffolk, Essex and East Kent; and was also fairly common in the Isle of Wight which had close racial links with Kent; both were settled by the same people during the post-Roman period.

Early residents of the Counties of Norfolk, Suffolk, York, Nottingham, Huntingdon, and London, as well as various parts of Wales, bearing this name were, for the most part, of the landed and educated classes.

The Raynor family was well established in England by the 15th and 16th centuries. One of the principal branches of the family was at East Drayton in Nottingham County. Many of the present-day Raynor families in America originated in Suffolk County, England.
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Coat of Arms and Crest

Several Rayner & Raynor heraldic shields are described in standard books on the subject. The Coat of Arms of the branch of the Raynor family at East Drayton, in Nottingham County, England was "ermine on a chief indented azure, two etoiles d'or".

Another Crest, on a mount vert, a leopard passant d'or. "Azure is blue, d'or is gold, vert is green, "etoiles" are six-pointed stars. This Coat of Arms was granted to the family in 1588. The Arms are the same as those of the Nottingham branch.
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King Raedwald
"The surname of RAYNOR was of Norse or German origin, a baptismal name 'the son of Reyner'. The name meant 'mighty army or God-like' and dates in England to Regenhere, AD 617, son of King Raedwald, in East Anglia. This long-established surname is of early medieval English origin, and derives from the Old Norman French male given name "Rainer" or "Re(i)ner", itself coming from the Old German "Raginhari", a compound of the elements "ragin", counsel, and "hari", army. This name was introduced into England by the Normans after the Conquest of 1066. The name was listed in the Domesday Book of 1086 as Rainerus (without surname) a tenant in County Norfolk. One, Reynerus cancellarius was noted in the Register of St. Benet of Holme, Norfolk, dated 1101, and a Ricardus filius (son of) Rainer in the 1148 Winton Rolls of Hampshire.
Pre 7th Century Anglo-Saxon and Old Norse baptismal names were usually distinctive compounds whose elements were often associated with the Gods of Fire, Water, and War, or composed of disparate elements. Early examples of the surname include: Alexander Reygner (London, 1229); William Reyner (Staffordshire, 1286); and Anabilla Rayner (Yorkshire, 1379). Wassell Rayner, an early emigrant to the New World, appears on a list of those resident in Virginia on February 16th 1623. A Coat of Arms granted to the Rayner family is a silver shield with three fleurs-de-lis between eight crosses crosslet gules. The first recorded spelling of the family name is shown to be that of William Rayner, which was dated 1216, in "Transcripts of Charters relating to the Gilbertine Houses", Lincolnshire, during the reign of King Henry 111, known as "The Frenchman", 1216 – 1272. Reyner le Blake, was documented in the County of Norfolk in the year 1273. Edward Rayner of Yorkshire, was listed in the Yorkshire Poll Tax of 1379."

Richard Russell Raynor

OBITUARY
Richard Russell Raynor, 37, died Wednesday August 28, 1974 while working in his garden. He was born February 19, 1937 in Albemarle Co., VA and was the son of Russell David Raynor and Margaret Collier Raynor of Orange, VA. He is also survived by his wife, Betty Ann Beahm Raynor and five children Sandra F. Raynor, Richard A. Raynor, Kenneth W. Raynor, Timothy W. Raynor and infant Brian K. Raynor, all of Gordonsville, VA: three brothers James William Raynor of Orange, VA, David Warren Raynor (Mary) of Rapidan, VA and Albert Carroll Raynor (Loraine) of Orange, VA; four sisters Lucille Smith (Leonard)of Achsah, VA, Dorothy Taylor (Leuit) of Standardsville, VA, Helen Dyer (Johnny) of Orange, VA and Ester Beahm (Thomas) of Culpeper, VA.
He was preceded in death by his father.

Funeral services will be held Saturday August 31 at Preddy's Funeral Chapel in Orange. Burial will be held at Mt. Paran UMC cemetery in Quinque, VA. The Reverend Gene A Smith officiating.

Friday, March 25, 2011

Cabins in Nicholson Hollow

The Corbin Cabin is a log structure built by George T. Corbin in 1909 in the Nicholson Hollow area of what is now Shenandoah National Park. Corbin was forced to vacate the land on which the cabin sits in 1938, when the land was added to Shenandoah National Park. The cabin is unique in that it is one of a small number of buildings located in Nicholson Hollow spared during the creation of the park, and still remains standing despite recent forest fires.
The cabin is maintained by the Potomac Appalachian Trail Club and is accessible within the park by means of Nicholson Hollow Trail.
As the George T. Corbin Cabin, it was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1989.


The Nicholson Cabin across the river was built and owned by one of Corbin's in-laws.

Death of a child, Polly Ann Nicholson

"From the Atlantic Union Gleaner VOL. XXXVII
SOUTH LANCASTER, MASS., JULY 27, 1938
No. 29
OBITUARY NOTICES
PULVER.—Polly Ann Nicholson-Pulver was
born in Corbin's Hollow, Madison County,
Virginia, April 13, 1927, and passed away
at the Washington Sanitarium June 24, 1938.
She was the daughter of Charles Nicholson and
Mazie Corbin Nicholson. Besides her parents
she leaves to mourn her loss, four sisters, two
brothers, her new parents, Cleve C. and Nela
Ray Pulver, and their daughter, Mrs. Reba
Bryan.
Polly Ann first entered the home of Brother
and Sister Pulver on Oct. 22, 1933. At that
time she was brought to Takoma Park by them
to undergo medical and surgical treatment.
Her stay was to have been for two weeks
only, but she was in no condition healthwise
at the end of this time to be returned to her
own home, and a longer leave was requested
of the parents and was granted. She became
so endeared to the hearts of Brother and Sister
Pulver that they requested keeping her and
rearing her as their own child. Her parents
seemed perfectly willing that this be done,
knowing she would have a good home and
care, and from then on she became known to
herself and to all of us as Polly Ann Pulver.
Polly Ann was taken ill on Sunday night,
June 19. She suffered considerably during
the night and requested her father to pray
with her. The next evening she was taken
to the hospital and underwent surgery. She
apparently seemed to be getting along fairly
well, standing a little better than an even
chance for recovery. However, she took a
sudden turn for the worse early Friday after-
noon and quietly slipped away at 6:10 P. M.
to await the awakening call and caress of her
heavenly Father.”

Wednesday, March 23, 2011

Sonya Renee Henrichsen-Raynor

God be with Sonya's family and help them to cope with the heartache. May they live their lives as a testament to her significance in their lives and in honor of her memory.


Sonya Renee Henrichsen-Raynor

Sonya Renee Henrichsen-Raynor, 41, of Orange, died on Sunday, October 10, 2010, at the University of Virginia Medical Center.

She was born on April 28, 1969, in South Ruislippe, England, the daughter of Don Karlkpeter Henrichsen of Waldorf, Maryland, and the late Gun Britt Ingeard Ohlsson Henrichsen.

She worked as a registered nurse at the University of Virginia Medical Center.

In addition to her father, she is survived by her husband, Jeffrey C. Raynor of Orange; two daughters, Kjersti Britt Raynor and Annika Rose Raynor; two sons, Michael Lavurn Brown and Christian Russell Raynor, all of Orange; two brothers, Erik Peter Henrichsen of Waldorf, Maryland, Lars Krister Henrichsen of Columbus, Indiana; stepmother, Maura Dale Henrichsen of Waldorf, Maryland; father-in-law, Albert Raynor of Orange; mother-in-law, Loraine Raynor of Orange; and a host of other relatives and friends.

Funeral services will be held 1 p.m. Friday, October 15, 2010, at the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints in Culpeper with interment to follow at the Ruckersville Cemetery.

The family will receive friends from 6 until 8 p.m. Thursday, October 14, 2010, at Preddy Funeral Home, 250 West Main Street, Orange, VA 22960.

Tuesday, March 22, 2011

William Warren Rippetoe Beahm & Elizabeth Frances Gaines Beahm


William Warren Rippetoe Beahm taken in 1863.
1861-1945 (Rippetoe pronouced like Pinocchio's Geppetto)



Proud parents William Warren Rippetoe Beahm and Elizabeth Frances "Fannie" GAINES with infant son John William Beahm. Portrait taken in 1892.

MARRIED in 1889.  They had 13 children:

John William BEAHM
Stella Florence BEAHM
George BEAHM
Corrie Lee BEAHM
Frank BEAHM
Lillie M. BEAHM
Rachel BEAHM
Levi BEAHM
Amos Gaines BEAHM
Silas Elwood BEAHM
Arthur Nelson BEAHM
Eliza Jane BEAHM
Evelyn Frances BEAHM






Elizabeth Frances "Fannie" GAINES Beahm circa Sept 1959. She was born Jun 15, 1873, in Page Co. VA to John William GAINES C.S.A. and Catherine SHOMO Gaines (The name Shomo origionates from the Chaumonetet region in France). She lived in Page Co. VA & Cambria Co. PA.
She died Feb 26, 1961.

Friday, March 18, 2011

JOHN HENRY BEAHM

JOHN HENRY BEAHM
Photo: John Henry Beahm - November 2010

John Henry Beahm, 85, of Madison, died on Friday, January 7, 2011, at his residence.


He was born September 24, 1925, in Madison, Virginia; the son of the late John William Beahm and Rosa Lee Corbin Beahm.


Mr. Beahm was a retired manager of the Orange Madison Coop and a United States Army veteran.


He is survived by his wife, Gladys Ford Beahm of Madison; one son, Troy Talbot Beahm and his wife, Kim, of Orange; four brothers, Milton Beahm of Maryland, Charles Beahm and his wife, Ethel, of Madison, Claude Beahm and his wife, Margaret, of Madison, and Thomas Beahm and his wife, Ester of Brightwood; five sisters, Margaret Donald of Fredericksburg, Mary Spencer and her husband, Jack, of Pennsylvania, Sarah Jane Thomas and her husband, Bernie, of Madison, Mable Clore and her husband, Raymond, of Brightwood, and Gladys Nicholson and her husband, Bill, of Brightwood; one granddaughter, Amanda Michelle Beahm of Culpeper.


A funeral service will be held 12 p.m. Monday, January 10, 2011, at Preddy Funeral Home Chapel in Madison, conducted by Pastor Josh Shifflett. The interment will be at Mt. Zion Baptist Church Cemetery in Oak Park.


The family will receive friends one hour prior to the service on Monday, January 10, 2010, from 11 a.m. until 12 p.m., at the funeral home.


A special thanks to all the Caregivers, but especially Bonnie, Jackie and Jessica Nicholson and a longtime friend, Wendy Weakley.


In lieu of flowers, please send donations to the Hospice of the Rapidan, P.O. Box 1715, Culpeper, VA 22701 or the Madison County Rescue Squad, P. O. Box 868, Madison, VA 22727.

Wednesday, March 16, 2011

Nevin Wayne Furr


Nevin Wayne Furr, 82, died January 29, 2010 at his home in Concord. He was born February 13, 1927 in Cabarrus County. He was the son of the late K. Clegg Furr and Lula Mae Widenhouse Furr .
During his lifetime Mr. Furr wore many hats but was most proud of that of entrepreneur. At age 13, he had his first entrepreneurial venture when he started an ice cream business on Pine St in Concord. That business was short lived because he was too generous with his portions. In the years to come, he tried his hand at popcorn sales, went to New York City to live and study radio technology, opened his own “Radio Hospital” in 1944 on Union St., and started a car sales lot on Church St. He later established a career purchasing real estate and property rental.
He is survived by a daughter Terri Furr Frye and her husband Leonard from his first marriage to the late Betty Lee Cranford. He is survived by a daughter, Autumn Russell Furr from his second marriage to the late Sandra Raynor Furr. He is also survived by step children Larry Widenhouse and Robin Widenhouse Brown. He is survived by two grandsons Brian and Jason Frye, four great grandchildren Jessie, Joanna, Jaxon, and Jaleigh Frye, and his beloved dog Buster.
A memorial service will be held 4pm Wednesday, February 3, 2009 at Ann St Methodist Church 335 Ann St Concord, NC. Visitation will follow at the church. Private inurnment at Oakwood Cemetery, Concord.

Tuesday, March 15, 2011

Sandra Faye Raynor Furr



Hard to comprehend that Sandra is no longer here. Breast Cancer robbed her of her body and her life. She was a beautiful person with so much talent and personality. I will never understand God's reason for letting her die so young but I know that she has full understanding in His presence.

OBITUARY:

Sandra Raynor Furr
KANNAPOLIS -- Mrs. Furr, 41, of 434 E. 22nd Street, died Friday, August 22, 2003 at her residence.

Funeral service is 2 PM Monday, August 25, at Highest Praise Family Worship Center, 1700 Bostian Road, China Grove, NC with Reverend Bruce Rabon officiating. Interment will be in Oakwood Cemetery, Concord, NC. The family will receive friends from 12-2 PM Monday at the church, prior to the service.

Mrs. Furr was born in Albemarle County, VA on January 14, 1962, the daughter of the late Betty Ann Beahm Raynor and the late Richard Russell Raynor. She was a 1980 Graduate of Orange County High School.

Mrs Furr most recently worked at Lorianna Clothing Store. She was also the secretary and treasurer of Widenhouse and Furr Rental Company. Mrs. Furr was a member of Highest Praise Family Worship Center. She was a choir member and was a volunteer worker for the Crisis Pregnancy Center.

Survivors include her husband of 21 years, Nevin Wayne Furr of Kannapolis; daughter, Autumn Russell Furr; and brothers, Kenneth W. Raynor of Concord, Timothy W. Raynor of Orange County, VA, and Brian K. Raynor of Concord. In addition to her parents, Mrs. Furr was preceded in death by a brother, Richard Alan Raynor.

In lieu of flowers, please send donations to Cabarrus County Hospice, PO Box 1235, Concord, NC 28026-1235.
Entombment at Oakwood Cemetery, Concord, NC.
Arrangements by Linn-Honeycutt Funeral Home, Landis.
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Sandra w/ mother, Betty Ann Beahm Raynor & Sandra w/ father Richard Russell Raynor
in Charlottesville, VA circa 1962




Sandra Faye Raynor 15 mos & brother Richard Alan Raynor 3 mos


Sandra Faye Raynor


Pretty In Pink. She had attempted cutting her own bangs. Not the first nor the last time.



















Sandra holds onto little brothers Alan and Kenny Raynor. Perhaps on the blacktop at Gordon-Barbour Elementary School in Gordonsville, VA or a stop on a trip to the mountains.








Sandra around age 6 or 7.







Sandra Faye Raynor (Furr), a freshman at Orange County High School in Orange VA.


The graduate: Sandra Faye Raynor (Furr) 1980


Sandra with friend, Marsha Graves from Gordonsville Church of God. January 1982

Sandra at Gordonsville Church of God (now DayStar Worship Center). 1982

Thursday, March 10, 2011

John William Beahm


Photo: Infant John William Beahm with parents, William Warrener Rippetoe BEAHM and Elizabeth Frances GAINES.
John William Beahm was born in Page Co., VA on April 6, 1890 to William Warren Rippetoe BEAHM and Elizabeth Frances "Fannie" GAINES.
John William BEAHM was the oldest of thirteen children.
Stella Florence BEAHM
George BEAHM
Corrie Lee BEAHM
Frank BEAHM
Lillie M. BEAHM
Rachel BEAHM
Levi BEAHM
Amos Gaines BEAHM
Silas Elwood BEAHM
Arthur Nelson BEAHM
Eliza Jane BEAHM
Evelyn Frances BEAHM






John William Beahm was twice a widower. Between the two marriages he fathered 20 children. First wife, Rosa Lee Corbin Beahm (b:APR 26, 1896 d:DEC 20, 1935) had 14 children and second wife, Lilly Pearl Nicholson Beahm had 6 children.


Photo: Lilly Pearl Nicholson Beahm circa 1940



Photo: John William Beahm August 1957










OBITUARY
John William Beahm, 84, died Saturday June 15, 1974 at a Madison County nursing home. Surviving are 10 sons, Walter and Lewis Beahm of College Park, MD; Charles and Clarence Beahm of Alexandria, VA; Milton and Claude Beahm of Hyattesville, MD; Daniel Beahm of Riverdale, MD; John Beahm of Madison, VA; Thomas Beahm of Oak Park, VA and Benjamin Beahm of Culpeper, VA; seven daughters, Mrs Mabel Clore and Mrs. Gladys Beahm of Brightwood, VA; Mrs. Margaret Donald of Fredericksburg, VA; Mrs. Betty Raynor of Gordonsville, VA; Mrs. Emma Corvin of Lothian, MD; Mrs. Mary Schmidt of Levitown, PA; Mrs James Walden of Beltsville, MD; 42 grandchildren and 26 great grandchildren; three sisters, Miss Carrie Beahm and Mrs Selbon (Liza Jane) Banks of Leon, VA and Mrs Ohmer(Evelyn)Jackson of Madison, VA; four brothers, Silas and Amos Beahm of Oak Park, VA; Levi Beahm of Philadelphia, PA and Nelson Beahm of FL.


Graveside service will be at 2pm, Monday, at the family cemetery between Leon and Oak Park in Madison County. Rev George Johnson officiating.
Clore Funeral Home of Culpeper is in charge of arrangements.

Silas, Flossie, Carrie, Aunt Mary, Grandma Fannie,
Back: (?), Paul Beeler, Mary Ellen, Pearl, John Will
Children:  (?), Betty Ann, Gladys Marie, Benjamin
Franklin, Clarence Joseph and Thomas Andrew

Wednesday, March 9, 2011

Will The Circle Be Unbroken?

"I was standing by the window
On a cold and cloudy day
When I saw the hearse come rolling
To carry my mother away

Will the circle be unbroken
Bye and bye Lord bye and bye
There's a better home a waiting
In the sky Lord in the sky

Lord I told that undertaker
Undertaker please drive slow
For that body you’re a haulin’
Lord I hate to see her go

Well I followed close behind her
Tried to hold up and be brave
But I could not hide my sorrow
When they laid her in that grave.

I went back home Lord that home was lonesome
Since my mother, she was gone
All my brothers and sisters crying
What a home so sad and alone.

One by one the seats were emptied
One by one they went away
Now that family they are parted
Will they meet again some day.

I was singing with my sisters
I was singing with my friends
And we all can, sing together
‘cause the circle never ends"