Genealogist at Large

Genealogist at Large

Adventures in family history

  • Home
  • Dedication
  • Introduction
  • Contact
  • Subscribe
  • Diary of a Novice
    Cat Owner & Slave
    • The beginning of a whole new life
    • January 2018
    • February 2018
    • March 2018
    • Easter 2018
    • The Next Step
    • Tux goes adventuring
    • More glimpses of Tux and Tab’s life
  • Barnes
    of Tennessee,
    MS & NC, USA
    • Introduction to the Barnes family history
    • Research Sources and Brief History of Tennessee
    • Clarence Monroe Barnes
    • William Alexander Barnes
    • Roderick Barnes
    • Wright Barnes
    • Summary of Barnes family history
    • Barnes family tree
  • Emptage
    of Thanet,
    England
    • Emptage of Thanet
  • Jefferys
    of Wiltshire,
    England
    • Introducing the Jefferys
    • The Mission
    • In the beginning……….
    • The Early Jefferys
    • Jefferys in the Wiltshire Militia
    • Jefferys Family Tree
  • Martin of Somerset
    & Gloucestershire,
    England
    • Making Connections
    • The Early Years
    • From Minehead to Gloucester and a position of trust
    • The Two Georges
    • Sidney Herbert Martin
    • Sidney in World War 1
    • Martin family tree
  • Miller
    of New Zealand, UK,
    USA and Lithuania
    • Introduction to the Miller History
    • Who Was Henry?
    • The Mysterious Henry Miller
    • Finding Henry and his family
    • The other Hyman Miller
    • The Cousins
    • Miller family of Hull, Leeds & New York
    • Mierson, Goldberg and Isaacs families in south Wales and USA
    • Horwich, Goldstein and Bransky families in Hull
    • A chart showing the Miller, Mierson, Goldberg, Isaacs, Goldstein, Bransky, and Horwich families
  • Wyer and Egan-Wyer
    of Ireland, India
    and England
    • Introducing the Wyers and Egan Wyers
    • Birmingham and the Egan Connection
    • The Irish Connection
    • Patrick Wyer and Ellen Shannahan
    • Three Patricks, three generations, three soldiers
    • Wyer and Egan-Wyer Family Tree
  • Miscellany

    • Yeomen of England
    • Patron Saint of Family Historians
    • How DNA works, “simplified”
    • Family History Detective Kit
    • Practising Safe Genealogy
    • The Moment I Knew
    • A Long Story
You are here: Home / Barnes of North Carolina, Mississippi & Tennessee, USA / Clarence Monroe Barnes

28th June 2016 By Susan Morris Leave a Comment

Clarence Monroe Barnes

The rule in family history research is that you start with somebody you know and work backwards, through the birth, marriage and death records, matching them with the censuses, to discover their parents, grandparents and family groups.

And so we are starting with Clarence Monroe Barnes. How much we find will depend on how many of the Tennessee and other state primary records have been digitized and are available online. No doubt some research will need to be carried out by members of the Barnes family visiting the state and county archives to find the actual records, especially when the online information is only a list of names in an index, not the details to be found on the actual record.

Clarence and Arkie

Clarence and Arkie on their 50th
wedding anniversary in 1971

In March 2015, my friend told me that his great grandfather was Clarence Barnes, who married Arkie Cox.

Clarence’s step father’s surname was Hensen. He had been married and had children before he married Clarence’s mother, Martha.

Some of the family say that Clarence’s father’s name may have been William but others disagree.

The family legend is that Clarence’s father is buried in the same place as Clarence’s mother but that there is no tombstone. This has not been verified by the family.

There is no oral history going back before Clarence as Clarence’s father had died when Clarence was young. It was assumed that Clarence’s father died as a relatively young man.

It is thought that the family had moved from North Carolina to Tennessee at some time and that the family lived in the area where Hardeman, McNairy and Chester counties met. And that they were farmers.

The question is: Who were Clarence’s ancestors?
 
 
We begin our journey backwards in time with the most recent United States Federal Census available to us.

1940: 10th Civil District, Chester, Tennessee (Rural, Hardeman)

Barnes Monro C married, head of the household, aged 35
Arkie married, wife, aged 35
Virginia daughter, aged 17
JC son, aged 15
Geneva daughter, aged 11
Cox Mattie mother in-law, aged 76, widow, same residence in 1935

Clarence and Arkie Barnes (GGP) cropped

Click on the image
to view in full size

Clarence was noted as a farmer working on his own farm. He and Arkie had been resident in Hardeman on 1 April 1935. They worked 45 weeks, 16 hrs per week in 1939 and had other income sources. Both were born Tennessee.

Due to emergency war time conditions in 1940 the birthplace of parents was supplanted by other questions on the census concerning the type of work.

Arkie was listed as having given the information and all three children were marked as temporarily absent from home.
 
 
1930: Massey, Chester, Tennessee

Barnes Monro C married, head of the household, aged 25
Arkie married, wife, aged 25.
Virginia daughter, aged 7 (transcribed as Vegina)
JC son, aged 5 (transcribed as JO)
Geneva daughter, aged 1 (transcribed as Jeneva)

Clarence was a farmer and they worked and lived on rented farm.
Neither Clarence nor Arkie had attended school but could read and write.
They were both 17 when they married.
Clarence, Arkie and their parents were born in Tennessee.

It seems that in 1930 Clarence and Arkie were farming a rented farm in Massey, Chester but then moved to Hardeman. Between April 1935 and April 1940 they moved to live with Mattie. Clarence took over the running of the farm and it was classed as his farm. From their ages in 1930, it seems they had been married eight years at the time of the census.
 
 
Tennessee State Marriages, 1780-2002, lists their names and the date and place they married:

Clarence Barnes married Arkie Cox in June 1921 in Hardeman, Tennessee.

As it is only the index, it is possible that additional information may be obtained by visiting the archives to see the actual marriage license or record.
 
 
1920: Civil District 2, McNairy, Tennessee

Hensen W. C. married, aged 52, farmer
Martha married, aged 47
Clarence stepson, aged 15
Burford son, aged 12
Delphia Pearl daughter aged 10
Grandwill A son, aged 7

The 1920 census confirms that Clarence’s stepfather was WC Hensen and that his mother’s name was Martha.
 
 
1910: Civil district No 2, McNairy County, Tennessee

Hensen W. C. aged 42, second marriage
Martha aged 37, wife, second marriage, mother of 7 children, all living
Artie Barnes daughter, aged 15, born c1895
Lizzie Barnes daughter, aged 13, born c1897
Sarah Barnes daughter, aged 11, born c1899
Clarence Barnes son, aged 6, born c1905
Burford Barnes son, aged 3, born c1907

The children of W C Hensen’s first marriage were listed.

Martha and W C Hensen had not yet been married one full year. They had an infant daughter 2 months old, no name given.

The census lists five children with the Barnes surname, all born Tennessee, father born North Carolina, mother born Tennessee. Unfortunately, it doesn’t indicate which county they were born in.

With the infant Hensen plus the five Barnes children living with Martha and W C Hensen, there must be another Barnes child elsewhere, probably the eldest.

Clarence’s relationship to WC Hensen was mis-stated as son instead of stepson.

Martha and both her parents were born in Tennessee but unfortunately it doesn’t tell us which county they were born in. However, Martha was 37 which means she was born c1873.

[Ages on censuses are not always accurate and the most we can do is calculate an approximate birth date. We use the Latin term ‘circa’ abbreviated to ‘c’. It gives us a clue to when we should look for a birth record.]
 
 
Birth of Clarence Monroe Barnes

1904 Clarence Barnes birth

Click on the image to view in full size

Place of birth: County: Hardeman, City or town: Middleton, Civil District 9

Date of birth: June 18 1904. Sex: Male

Father: William Alexander Barnes, born Hardeman County, Tennessee.

Mother’s maiden name: Martha Evelyn Vaughan, born Hardeman County, Tennessee.

The parents were married and Clarence was the fifth child of the mother.

Source: Tennessee, Delayed Birth Records, 1869-1909
 
 
Clarence was 73 when he died. He and Arkie had been together since they were 17.

Clarence Barnes grave

They were both buried at Woodville Cemetery, Woodville, Chester County.

Clarence M Barnes: birth June 18 1904, death October 5 1977.

Arkie Cox Barnes: birth July 25 1904, death July 11 1988.

Source: Per Find a Grave Index, 1600s to Current

http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=68568880&ref=acom

Next: William Alexander Barnes

Filed Under: Barnes of North Carolina, Mississippi & Tennessee, USA

How to comment

If you'd like to post a comment on this article, you need to log into Disqus. There is a link at the top right corner of the comment section and a login link appears when you start typing a comment. You can either make a Disqus account directly, or you can log in with your Facebook, Twitter or Google account.

Categories

Copyright © 2025 · Whitespace Pro Theme On Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in