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Michelle Whitman

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Updated: April 1, 2023

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Roni McFadden
About me:I haven't shared any details about myself.
Kimberly Mcgill
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Lori Russell
My mother is Pamela Thompson. My dad is Richard William Russell.
My mom grew up in Fenwick Michigan. My dad grew up in Hart Michigan. They had 2 kids together. Living in Michigan.
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Charlotte "Sheri" Thompson
Charlotte Thompson was a grand Lady, with sass & class. She was a devote christian & her faith knew no bounds. She was a faithful daughter, loyal wife, best mother you could ask for, life long Friend, tentative niece, & beloved Grand Daughter. As growing up I heard & seen many people always be kind, sweet to my mother. She her self was kind & sweet. After she passed she was always referred to friends & family alike an angel on earth. I don't know if I should tell her life story. So I decided if I write this, this should cover quite a bit about who Charlotte was as a person.
First marriage
First marriage
Her, & her children with first husband James. Oldest to youngest: David (middle), Sarah (bottom right), Necole (above Sarah), Michael (left if David). Father James, Mother Sheri. I believe to be dated April-July 1980
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(Thelma) Irene (Kidd) Kirkendoll
(Thelma) Irene (Kidd) Kirkendoll
photo from her high school yearbook, 1919.
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1943
1943
G.R. Jesse Mason, 1943
As appeared in the Franklin Democrat (Franklin, IN) 6 Jan 1911 (Friday, pg. 4) The citizens of Amity and of the county were shocked to hear of a crime committed on last Sunday morning that has had few equals in this part of the country. George Mitchell, living a short distance north of Amity, on the State road, shot and dangerously wounded his wife, Senia Mitchell, and then turning the gun upon himself, inflicted injuries to which he has since succumbed. Mr. Mitchell had been acting strangely for some weeks, due, it is alleged to domestic troubles. On Sunday this condition was so appreciable that the members of the household were alarmed. He procured a razor and threatened to cut his throat and afterwards a .22 caliber target rifle with which, he said, he was going to end his life. Mrs. Mitchell to ward off the probability of his carrying out the threat, called for Joe Vaught, a neighbor, to the house to talk with Mr. Mitchell and quiet him. Mr. Vaught stayed there for some time conversing with him, and finally induced him to put the implements of destruction away, although he was unable to get them from the house. He then left for his home, but had not so much got there than the sound of shots told him of a tragedy. After the leave-taking of Mr. Vaught, Mitchell remained quiet for but a short time, and again procured the rifle. During the numerous threats he had made on his own life, he had never once assumed a menacing attitude toward his wife. It was about midday and Mrs. Mitchell had dinner in preparation. She had left the kitchen and gone to the living room. Mitchell who was in the kitchen, suddenly appeared in the doorway between the two rooms, with the rifle loaded and turning to his wife, said, "your life is no sweeter to you than mine is to me; it's time they were both ended." He then took aim at her. Mrs. Mitchell, now, thoroughly terrorized, dodged from a place to place in the room and finally managed to get back of the base burner before he fired. At this juncture his attention must have been attracted by something in the kitchen, for he turned part way around to look. Seizing this opportunity to attempt to escape, his wife made a rush for the door leading from the sitting room to the outside, but it was locked and an exit was impossible. Mitchell then turned his attention to the threatened deed, and taking a second aim, pulled the trigger just as Mrs. Mitchell was in the act of stooping behind a table about ten or twelve feet from him, the bullet entering the back of her neck. The rifle was a single shot one and as he was preparing to reload it, his wife with the almost super-human strength sometimes possessed by persons in such straits, burst open the door and fled for safety to the Vaught home, about the distance of a couple of city blocks away. Three of the children were present at the time this took place and two of them hastily followed after their mother. The youngest one, Elzora, aged five, remained in the house and was the only eye-witness of some of the dreadful scenes that followed. Scarcely understanding what had and what was going on, but remembering her mother's injunction not to go out in bad weather without her overshoes on, she was looking about for them when her father began the acts of self-destruction. After his wife had succeeded in getting away, Mitchell turned from his position in the doorway and made his way to the kitchen and reloaded the rifle. Standing in about the center of the room, he deliberately placed the muzzle of the gun on his forehead and fired. The bullet glanced upward from the skull causing but a skin abrasion. The pitiful story of the little girl, told in the way of a child, is the source of information of the manner in which this was done. She must have found the rubbers she had been looking for, as she left the house, making Mitchell's procedure from this on a matter of conjecture. He must have been possessed of a wonderful determination, however, for he reloaded the rifle, probably while sitting on the floor, and fired a second time, and still a third, the last bullet striking the left side of the forehead and tearing through his brain. By this time neighbors had arrived upon the scene. A ghastly sight awaited their view. There on the floor, lying on his left side, with cartridges scattered about, with the rifle between his legs, in a pool of blood flowing from the gaping wounds, lay Mitchell. Dr. Carl Payne, of this city, was summoned, and medical aid given both parties, Mrs. Mitchell reviving to the extent that she was taken from the Vaught home, where she had been cared for, to her own, on Monday. Mitchell never regained consciousness and on Tuesday morning at about 1:30, he died, a victim of his deed. The three children were at home, Victor, aged eleven; Bidda, seven and the child, Elzora, were removed to the home of John C. White, living nearby, where they have since remained and have been cared for by his wife. Hazel, age, fifteen, has been away from home. George W. Mitchell was born in Johnson county on August 8, 1870, and had spent practically all his life on the farm near Amity, engaging in that work, although occasionally following the carpenter's trade. He was married on October 17, 1894, to Senia Badgely, a daughter of Polk Badgely, formerly of this city, who, with the four children, survives. Besides the parents, Mr. and Mrs. William Mitchell, he leaves three brothers, James, John and Charles; three sisters, Mrs. Della Batton, Mrs. Hattie Nash and Mrs. Claude McKinney; and two half-sisters, Mrs. Joseph Mullendore and Mrs. Nannie McDonald of Kansas City, Missouri. Short funeral services were held at the late home yesterday at 10:00 followed by services at the Amity Baptist church at 11:00, and the remains interred in the Hamner graveyard. Photo of George Mitchell George Mitchell
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Senia Arminta (Badgley) Mitchell/Batton
Senia Arminta (known as "Minnie")'s childhood may be lost to time. Two of her children have shared stories of her when she was in her 30s, and later, however. Minnie was known to have a sharp wit, a ready laugh, and could make the fluffiest biscuits around. One of her favorite meals was a little fried bacon, with cornbread dunked in buttermilk. She married George Washington Mitchell in 1894 when she was 17, 2 years after her mother died, one year after her step-mother moved in. It was implied that she wanted nothing to do with her step mother, and Minnie's daughters never claimed any tie to their maternal grandparents. Minnie and George had their first child, Hazel, in 1895; their next daughter, Georgie (1897), survived less than a year. Their third child, Victor (1900), was celebrated, being the first (and only) son. Two daughters, Biddie (1903), and Elzora (1905), completed the family. Minnie sang her children to sleep each night, and woke them by beating a wooden spoon on an upturned washtub each morning, if the rooster wasn't loud enough to rouse them. Minnie's husband was often absent from the house, either sleeping in one of the outbuildings, or occasionally not coming home at all. Biddie reported that Minnie often said "you're daddy hasn't ever been the same since Georgie died". Although there was singing and often much laughter in the home, there was also an ever present tension that continued to grow. On New Year's Day of 1911, tragedy struck. George began threatening to do away with himself; first with a razor, then with his gun. Neighboring friends attempted to calm and console him, but he escalated as soon as they left, and, after an argument and chase, shot Minnie, the bullet grazing the back of her neck. Minnie fled the home with the three youngest children following behind. Neighbors that took Minnie & the children in returned to the homestead to find George non-responsive with gunshot wounds to his head. The children stayed with neighbors the next week, while Minnie returned to the home to clean up and nurse her husband. George never regained consciousness, and died on January 3rd. Minnie held the funeral on the 5th, and the children returned home shortly afterward. There is gap between this chapter and the next in her life. Over the next year, George's sister, Ettie, and Ettie's husband Samuel, divorced. Within months of the divorce, Minnie married her ex-brother in law, and the couple immediately left Indiana for Oklahoma. Samuel Porter Batton and his son Arthur, & Minnie and the Mitchell children set up a homestead near Calumet, OK, just West of El Reno. Minnie made friends, fit right in to the community, and life was peaceful and quiet. SP and Minnie welcomed 2 children in the next 5 years, a son, Samuel Porter Batton Jr. (1913), and Orilla Grace (1916). By 1922 the last of the Mitchell children had married and moved out, and the Battons moved North and just East of El Reno, where she lived until her death in 1930, survived by Husband SP, son SP (Porter) 17, and daughter Grace, 14.
George Washington Mitchell, 1870 - 1911
George Washington Mitchell, 1870 - 1911
Only known surviving photo of GW Mitchell. Circa 1895. Any family that would have photos please contact me, thanks!
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George Washington Mitchell
George W. Mitchell was born in Johnson county on August 8, 1870, and had spent practically all his life on the farm near Amity, engaging in that work, although occasionally following the carpenter's trade. He was married on October 17, 1894, to Senia Badgely, a daughter of Polk Badgely, formerly of this city, who, with the four children, survives. Besides the parents, Mr. and Mrs. William Mitchell, he leaves three brothers, James, John and Charles; three sisters, Mrs. Della Batton, Mrs. Hattie Nash and Mrs. Claude McKinney; and two half-sisters, Mrs. Joseph Mullendore and Mrs. Nannie McDonald of Kansas City, Missouri. Short funeral services were held at the late home yesterday at 10:00 followed by services at the Amity Baptist church at 11:00, and the remains interred in the Hamner graveyard.
5 year old cousins, El Reno, Oklahoma, 1929
5 year old cousins, El Reno, Oklahoma, 1929
Alice Luvern (Kidd) Stroud and G.R. Jesse Mason, their mothers, Elzora Alice (Mitchell) Kidd and Biddie Alta (Mitchell) Mason were sisters.
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Adsit Family, Terlton, Oklahoma, Circa 1943
Adsit Family, Terlton, Oklahoma, Circa 1943
George Grover and Myrtle Ruth (Rothwell) Adsit with 5 sons; Jack, Bob, Bill, Jerry, and Jim.
Charles & William Mayfield
Charles & William Mayfield
Charles Buren "Pete" Mayfield and his son William Doyle Mayfield
People in photo include: Charles Buren Mayfield and William Doyle Mayfield
Samuel Porter Batton and daughter, Grace, at the family-owned/operated gas station, during the middle of the Oklahoma Dust Bowl.
Samuel Porter Batton and daughter, Grace, at the family-owned/operated gas station, during the middle of the Oklahoma Dust Bowl.
Oklahoma Dust Bowl gas station, located just outside El Reno. My great-grandfather, and great-aunt.
50th Wedding Anniversary, Kidds with Clements and Strouds
50th Wedding Anniversary, Kidds with Clements and Strouds
Kidd Golden wedding anniversary, 4 generations (L to R) (Gerald) Dean Clements, (Alta) Lavonne (Kidd) Clements holding Michelle, Elzora Alice (Mitchell) Kidd, (Henry) Ernest Kidd, (Alice) Luvern (Kidd) Stroud, Delfred Eugene Stroud, Donna Jean (Beaver) Stroud holding (Crystal) Ladawn Stroud, Eugene Ray Stroud holding Kami LeGene Stroud
Kidd siblings and spouses 1982
Kidd siblings and spouses 1982
Ernest and Elzora's 60th wedding anniversary, Last family photo of the Kidd siblings (L to right) (William) Haskell Robinson, Merel Marie (Kidd) Robinson, Collette (Mundell) Kidd, Milford Pinkney (Mickey) Kidd. Seated are (Henry) Ernest Kidd and Elzora Alice (Mitchell) Kidd
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1970s beating the heat in Oklahoma
1970s beating the heat in Oklahoma
1970s cousins, beating the summer heat with the brown Ford sitting in the background.
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Merel Marie (Kidd) Robinson and husband, Haskell Robinson
Merel Marie (Kidd) Robinson and husband, Haskell Robinson
Haskell and Merel at Ernest and Elzora Kidd's 60th wedding anniversary
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Myrtle Maggie (Peters) Kidd
Myrtle Maggie (Peters) Kidd
Great grandma Kidd sitting in an armchair near an air conditioner. Accounts differ - some say it was a water cooler. Either way, it was cooler inside with it than outside, without it. Candid photo taken by other family visiting the home. this is cropped down from the original photo.
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