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Our Genealogy & History

Our family's historical journey through time.

Penny Smoot

Female


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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Penny Smoot (daughter of Virgil Boyd Smoot and Margaret Renneker).

    Other Events:

    • Reference Number: 3862


Generation: 2

  1. 2.  Virgil Boyd Smoot was born in 1912 (son of Emmett Smoot and Hattie Belle Yates).

    Other Events:

    • Reference Number: 3856

    Virgil married Margaret Renneker. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  Margaret Renneker

    Other Events:

    • Reference Number: 3857

    Children:
    1. Dennis Smoot
    2. Donald Joseph Smoot
    3. 1. Penny Smoot


Generation: 3

  1. 4.  Emmett Smoot

    Other Events:

    • Reference Number: 3855

    Emmett married Hattie Belle Yates. Hattie (daughter of Joseph J Yates and Nancy Elizabeth Sudbury) was born in 1883; died in 1927. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 5.  Hattie Belle Yates was born in 1883 (daughter of Joseph J Yates and Nancy Elizabeth Sudbury); died in 1927.

    Other Events:

    • Reference Number: 3814

    Notes:

    _______________________________________________________________________
    From the Valdo James Smith Research document, The Sudburys of Virginia and Tennessee

    HATTEE BELLE YATES was born in Dyer County, Tennessee, on December 16,
    1883. She moved with her parents first to Texas, and then to Okmulgee,
    Oklahoma, where on October 1, 1902 (according to her husband's obituary) she
    married VALDO SMITH. Valdo founded the first newspaper in Okmulgee, the
    Okmulgee Democrat, and Hattie Belle apparently used to help him with its
    publication. Prior to her marriage she may also have been a schoolteacher.

    Hattie Belle's first husband, Valdo, was born near Manhattan, Kansas, on July 18,
    1872. A journeyman printer by trade (like his mother), he had come south into
    Oklahoma territory at the first opening of the Cherokee strip. In addition to
    founding Olcmulgee's first newspaper, he had served as the town's second recorder
    and acting mayor.

    Hattie Belle and Valdo had been married just over three years when Valdo died on
    October 24, 1905. By March 1908 (as indicated by her daughter Minnie Lou's
    obituary) Hattie Belle had remarried. Her second husband was EMMETT
    SMOOT, who apparently left her shortly after the birth of their only child, Boyd.
    (He later resurfaced in Orange County, California, sometime in the 1930s, in poor
    health, and died there shortly afterward.)

    At the time of her mother's death in 1923, Hattie Belle was married to PAUL
    TRA WICK, an oil field worker by trade. She and Paul resided at 803 North
    Central Avenue in Okmulgee, according to her mother's obituary. Paul was a
    veteran of World War I, and had apparently suffered some disability as a result of
    exposure to chemical weapons. Hattie Belle and Paul found it difficult to make a
    living in Oklahoma during this time, and in 1923 or 1924, with Hattie Belle's
    young son, Boyd Smoot, they began a slow migration westward searching for
    work. At one point they settled in Rico, Colorado, where Paul found work in the
    mines as a driller. They also lived in Denver for a short time.

    Hattie Belle and Paul eventually found their way to Orange County, California,
    where they made their home in the small citrus farming town of Yorba Linda.
    Unfortunately, Hattie Belle did not live long after their arrival. She died on
    September 13, 1927, at the age of 43. She is buried at Loma Vista Cemetery in
    Fullerton, California. Paul (date of death unknown) is buried at the Veterans'
    Cemetery in West Los Angeles.
    _______________________________________________________________________

    Children:
    1. 2. Virgil Boyd Smoot was born in 1912.


Generation: 4

  1. 10.  Joseph J Yates was born on 7 Sep 1840 in Wake County, North Carolina (son of William B Yates and Elizabeth); died on 28 Mar 1907 in Okmulgee Cemetery.

    Other Events:

    • Reference Number: 3688

    Joseph married Nancy Elizabeth Sudbury on 14 Nov 1867 in Dyer County, Tennessee. Nancy (daughter of John Barney Sudbury and Susan E Jackson) was born on 16 Nov 1847 in Williamson County, Tennessee; died on 26 Sep 1923 in Okmulgee, Okmulgee, Oklahoma. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 11.  Nancy Elizabeth Sudbury was born on 16 Nov 1847 in Williamson County, Tennessee (daughter of John Barney Sudbury and Susan E Jackson); died on 26 Sep 1923 in Okmulgee, Okmulgee, Oklahoma.

    Other Events:

    • FSID: 9KDZ-1CN
    • Name: Bettie Sedberry
    • Reference Number: 3687
    • Residence: 1850, Madison county, Madison, Tennessee
    • Residence: 1850, Madison county, Madison, Tennessee
    • Residence: 1880, District 1, Dyer, Tennessee, United States
    • Residence: 1880, District 1, Dyer, Tennessee, United States
    • Residence: 1900, ED 58 Township 14 N. Range 13 E., Creek Nation, Indian Territory, United States

    Notes:

    _______________________________________________________________________
    From the Valdo James Smith Research document, The Sudburys of Virginia and Tennessee.

    NANCY ELIZABETH SUDBURY (1847-1923) and her husband, JOSEPH J.
    YATES (1840-1907) were remarkable individuals. They were true pioneers, who
    faced great hardships and suffered personal tragedies in their quest for a better life
    for themselves and their family, and who, with hard work, ultimately achieved their
    goal.

    Nancy was born on November 16, 1847, in Williamson County, Tennessee, to
    parents who were only 22 years of age. In 1848, while Nancy was still an infant,
    her parents joined her grandfather, Shadrack Sudbury, in relocating to Dyer
    County, Tennessee. There Nancy spent her childhood and adolescence.

    On November 14, 1867, two days short of her twentieth birthday, Nancy married
    Joseph J. Yates ("J.J."). The ceremony, which took place in Dyer County, was
    performed by the Reverend Thomas D. Harwell. J.J. and Nancy were an attractive
    couple. Tintypes in the possession of the Smith family show him to have been tall
    and lanky, with a long, thin face, but ruggedly handsome. She, on the other hand,
    was pretty and petite.

    J.J. had begun life in Wake County, North Carolina on September 7, 1840. (The
    family Bible kept by Valdo Yates Smith lists the year of birth as 1841, but 1840 is
    the year given by J.J.'s obituary and is more consistent with census and military
    records.) At age 10, according to the 1850 census index, he was living with his
    parents, WILLIAM B. and ELIZABETH YATES, in Madison County,
    Tennessee.

    By 1860, he had apparently left home and was living on his own. The 1860 census
    index locates him (age 20) in either Sumner or Sullivan County. One wonders what
    prompted him to venture out on his own at a relatively young age, when his older
    brother William was still living at home. Military records indicate that J.J. "joined
    for duty and enrolled" for state service with the Tennessee Infantry on July 22,
    1861, at Trenton, Tennessee, in Gibson County, just east of Dyer County where his
    mother was then living.

    After enrollment (by C.H. Williams, for an initial period of twelve months), he
    reported to Camp Brown, where he was listed on a muster roll dated August 10,
    1861. He was a 3rd Corporal assigned to Captain William A. Dawson's Company,
    22nd Regiment, Tennessee Infantry. About his company and regiment, the muster
    roll gives the following information:

    This company was known at various times as Captain Dawson's Company,
    Company D and Company I [the "Bell Grays"], 22d Regiment Tennessee
    Infantry. The 22d (also known as Freeman's) Regiment Tennessee Infantry
    was organized for State service July 24, 1861, with nine companies, A to I,
    transferred to the service of the Confederate States August 9 and 10, 1861,
    and reorganized in May 1862. * * * [The regiment, with the exception of
    Companies F and K,] was consolidated with the 12th Regiment Tennessee
    Infantry June 16, 1862, and formed the 12th Regiment Tennessee Infantry
    (Consolidated).

    J.J. most certainly was with the 22nd Regiment when it was engaged at the Battle
    of Belmont on November 7, 1861. He also fought with the Regiment and the Army
    of Mississippi at the Battle' of Shiloh, April 6th and 7th, 1862. The 22nd suffered
    heavy casualties in both of these engagements.

    On June 16, 1862, J.J. became part of the 12th Regiment as a 2nd Sergeant. By
    September 1, 1862, he had been promoted to 1st Sergeant. He participated in the
    Kentucky Campaign with the 12th, now a part of the Army of Tennessee, under the
    command of Edmund Kirby Smith. While there, during the autumn of 1862, he
    was captured by Federal forces. His name appears on a list of prisoners of war sent
    from Lexington, Kentucky, to Louisville, Kentucky, by Colonel Casement, on
    October 23, 1862.

    Although the circumstances of his capture are unknown, it does not appear likely
    from the record of Kirby Smith's maneuvers in Kentucky that J.J. would have been
    taken prisoner during battle. A footnote on page 274 of Thomas Lawrence
    Connelly's book, Army of the Heartland, may hold a clue to this puzzle. Refer
    -ring to the casualties suffered by the Army of Tennessee at Munfordville,
    Richmond, and Perryville, Kentucky, Connelly notes that "Bragg's casualties also
    included some two thousand sick, part of whom were captured at Harrodsburg".

    By January 1863, J.J. had been released as part of a prisoner exchange, but how
    and when this was accomplished is not entirely clear, because his name appears on
    two prisoner exchange records near that time, which may or may not be mutually
    exclusive. The earlier of these two records is a receipt given on November 15,
    1862, for prisoners of war received on board the Steamer Maria Denning near
    Vicksburg, Mississippi. Receipt was given for the Confederate soldiers by Major
    F.W. Hoadley, C.S.A., Acting Agent for Exchange, to Captain E. Morgan Wood,
    Agent for the U.S.

    The other record is a list, undated, of paroled Confederate prisoners, captured and
    paroled by the U.S. forces in Kentucky in September, October, and November,
    1862, who reported to General Bragg and were placed in camp at Chattanooga,
    Tennessee. According to this record, the prisoners were declared exchanged by
    Colonel Robert Ould by telegram to Major Fairbanks, A.A.I.G., January 11, 1863.
    Given this last date, it is unlikely that J.J. was with his regiment at the Battle of
    Murfreesboro, although it is possible that he had returned prior to the date of the
    telegram. The 12th Tennessee had casualties of 56 percent at Murfreesboro.

    On the Company Muster Roll for January and February 1863, J.J. is listed again as
    a 2nd Sergeant, and remained at this rank at least through February of 1864. His
    record again indicates that he fought with his regiment at Chickamauga in
    September 1863, and possibly at Missionary Ridge in November. During the
    period from November 1863 through February 1864, he was listed as being in the
    "Pioneer Corps." for the Division.
    The 12th Regiment fought throughout the retreat to Atlanta, the return to
    Tennessee, the Battles of Franklin and Nashville in 1864, and the final battle at
    Bentonville, North Carolina, on March 19, 1865. Unfortunately, J.J. 's military
    records after February 1864 are incomplete, making it difficult to confirm his
    participation in the major battles near the end of the war. He may have fought in
    some or all of them.

    The last record on which J.J. 's name appears is a Muster Roll of officers and men
    paroled in accordance with the terms of a Military Convention entered into on April
    26, 1865, between General Joseph E. Johnston, Commanding Confederate Army,
    and Major General W.T. Sherman, Commanding United States Army in North
    Carolina. The Roll is dated near High Point, North Carolina, April 28, 1865, and
    the soldiers were paroled at Greensboro, North Carolina on May 1, 1865.

    At the time of his parole, J.J. was a member of Company D, Second Consolidated
    Regiment, Tennessee Infantry. The Second Consolidated Regiment had been
    formed about April 9, 1865, from what was left of the 11th, 12th, 13th, 29th, 47th,
    50th, 51st, 52nd, and 154th Regiments. At the date of the surrender, only 50
    officers and men remained from the original 12th, 22nd, and 47th Tennessee
    regiments. Sergeant J.J. Yates was one of those men.

    Not much is known about J.J. and Nancy's first twenty-five years of marriage other
    than that they remained in Dyer County and engendered nine children, three of
    whom died in relative infancy. The only family document which dates from this
    period is a five-year policy of tornado insurance issued to J.J. on September 21,
    1891, by the Continental Insurance Company. The policy indicates that J.J. and
    Nancy owned their own home on 114 acres situated two miles west of Friendship,
    Tennessee, on Dyersburg and Jackson Roads.

    According to oral tradition passed down to Valdo Yates Smith, J.J. and Nancy later
    moved westward and settled somewhere in Texas, where they homesteaded land and
    tried to make a living as farmers. Probably they left Tennessee sometime in 1893
    or 1894.

    Life in Texas was hard for the Yates family. The area in which they lived was a
    relative wilderness, and Valdo Yates Smith remembered his mother, Hattie Belle,
    telling him that they would occasionally hear "the Comanche squall". From the
    location of the routes of the Comanche Indians at that time, we can speculate that
    they were living in the western part of the state, possibly in or near the Choctaw
    Nation. It was in Texas in 1895 that J.J. and Nancy lost their remaining sons,
    James and John, probably to typhoid fever. At the time of their deaths, the two
    boys were 25 and 21, respectively.

    Sometime between 1895 (when their sons died) and 1900, J.J. and Nancy gave up
    on their pioneer efforts in Texas. Valdo Yates Smith remembers being told that
    they had been "burned out". From Texas they migrated northward by covered
    wagon with at least two of their four remaining daughters, Hattie Belle and
    Mildred, to settle in what was then Indian Territory, and is now Oklahoma. For a
    couple of years, they farmed in an area known as "Bald Hill", on land leased from
    the Indians. Here there was nothing but prairie grass, and no laws or law
    enforcement. The nearest marshal was located in Fort Smith, Arkansas.

    The Yates family left the farm in 1900 (according to J.J. 's obituary) and moved to
    Okmulgee, a small town of a few hundred residents. In Okmulgee, they established
    the Yates Hotel, which became a well known and respected hostelry. About the
    hotel, Nancy's obituary gives the following information:

    To the new blood which has settled in Okmulgee since the first oil boom, the
    Yates hotel means nothing, but to a few pioneer citizens who are left to write
    the history of the one-time Indian trading post, this one-time famous hostelry
    brings back memories of a few log cabins, general store, and perhaps three or
    four hundred settlers. The old Yates hotel was located at Sixth street and
    Grand avenue. It was a one-story frame structure, but was looked upon with
    pride by the citizenship of a thriving hamlet of 400 inhabitants. It was the
    nicest hotel west of Muskogee. * * * Later the old wooden structure was
    torn down and the Severs building which now graces the spot was built.

    J.J. and Nancy operated the hotel "for many years", probably from about 1900 to
    1907, when J.J. died. He fell victim to typhoid fever on March 28, 1907, at 1:30
    a.m., after an illness of several weeks. He was 66 years of age. Funeral services
    were held the same afternoon at his residence, and were conducted by the Masons,
    with Reverend Rippey preaching the sermon. His obituary recites that "[h]e was a
    man of upright character, a member of the Methodist church and of the Masonic
    order." He is buried in the Morton Street Cemetery in south Okmulgee.
    Unfortunately the locations of all gravesites at this cemetery have been lost.

    Some time after M.'s death, Nancy went to live at the home of her daughter,
    Hattie Belle, where she resided for the rest of her life. Valdo Yates Smith
    remembered her as being fastidious in her personal habits; she never came out of
    her room in the morning until she was impeccably dressed, with every hair in
    place. Nancy died on September 26, 1923, at age 77, after having been in failing
    health for some time. Funeral services were held at the Trawick home, with the
    Reverend New Harris, pastor of the Methodist Episcopal church, officiating.
    According to Nancy's obituary, she had been an active member of the "Methodist
    Episcopal church, South" until the time she was bedridden. She is buried in the
    main Okmulgee Cemetery, operated by the Okmulgee Cemetery Association, on
    Highway 75 South.
    _______________________________________________________________________

    Children:
    1. Susan Maseltine Yates Yates was born in 1868; died in 1942.
    2. James Edgar Yates was born in 1870; died in 1895.
    3. Dora E Yates was born in 1872; died in 1873.
    4. John Burrough Yates was born in 1874; died in 1895.
    5. May Centennial Yates was born in 1876.
    6. Ninna E Yates was born in 1878; died in 1883.
    7. Walter Gray Yates was born in 1881; died in 1883.
    8. 5. Hattie Belle Yates was born in 1883; died in 1927.
    9. Mildrid V Yates was born in 1886.




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If you have questions or problems with this site, please email me. Every effort has been made in order to document all sources. In some areas we have made speculative inclusions based on the best information available.