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"Beverly Francis Carradine (April 4, 1848 – April 22, 1931) was an American Methodist minister and a leading evangelist for the holiness movement.Synan, Vinson. Holiness-Pentecostal Tradition, second edition (1997) Wm. Eerdmans Publishing Company, pg. 62 He was a productive author, writing primarily on the subject of sanctification.Balmer, Randell. The Encyclopedia of Evangelism. (2002) Westminster John Knox Press The patriarch of the Carradine family, he was the grandfather of actor John Carradine and great-grandfather of actors David, Keith, and Robert Carradine. Early life Beverly Francis Carradine was born on April 4, 1848, on Altamont Plantation in Yazoo County, Mississippi.Beverly Carradine, Passport Application (New York, NY: June 28, 1890). Source Citation: National Archives and Records Administration (NARA), Washington D.C.; Passport Applications, 1795–1905; ARC Identifier 566612 / MLR Number A1 508; NARA Series: M1372; Roll #356. Source Information: Ancestry.com. U.S. Passport Applications, 1795–1925 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2007. Carradine was the sixth of nine children, and fourth son of Mary Caroline Hewitt Carradine (born June 5, 1819 in Washington, D.C.; died 1881 in Yazoo City, Mississippi) and Henry Francis Carradine (born June 7, 1808 in Yazoo City, Mississippi; died March 8, 1854), a planter.Source Citation: Year: 1850; Census Place: Yazoo, Mississippi; Roll: M432_382; Page: 519A; Image: 1050. Ancestry.com. 1850 United States Federal Census [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2009. Images reproduced by FamilySearch. Original data: Seventh Census of the United States, 1850; (National Archives Microfilm Publication M432, 1009 rolls). The Carradine family moved to Yazoo City in 1852. In 1865, Carradine, aged 16, enlisted in Wood's Regiment in the Confederate Cavalry in Mississippi, and served until the end of the American Civil War.Source Citation: National Archives and Records Administration (NARA); Carded Records Showing Military Service of Soldiers Who Fought in Confederate Organizations, compiled 1903–1927, documenting the period 1861–1865; Catalog ID: 586957; Record Group #: 109; Roll #: 40. Source Information: Ancestry.com. U.S., Confederate Soldiers Compiled Service Records, 1861–1865 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2011. U.S., Confederate Soldiers Compiled Service Records, 1861–1865 provided by Fold3 © In May 1865, he was mustered out with the 6th Cavalry Regiment Mississippi.Source Information: Historical Data Systems, comp.. American Civil War Soldiers [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations Inc, 1999. Original data: Data compiled by Historical Data Systems of Kingston, MA Carradine graduated from the University of Mississippi in 1867. Later he studied pharmacy and worked as a clerk and bookkeeper in a store. Career Carradine "prayed through" on July 12, 1874, and then he told his wife, "Laura, I’m not going to go to Hell after all." He was licensed to preach in October 1874 and became a pastor in Mississippi and New Orleans.Lloyd, James B. Lives of Mississippi Authors 1817–1967. (1981)University of Mississippi Press, pg. 74 He was ordained a Methodist elder in 1878. On June 1, 1889, Carradine received the "blessing of sanctification" in his study in the parsonage at 35 Polyminca Street, New Orleans. His third book, Sanctification, was published the next year. Many of his subsequent books were centered on the concept of sanctification. He published at least 26 books.Catalogue of Beta Theta Pi, (1917) Edited and Published by James T. Brown He also wrote about his opposition to the Louisiana lottery, making an analogy between it and slavery. The New York Times reported that his early opposition as a prominent New Orleans pastor helped to end the lottery in that state.DEATH LIST OF A DAY.; Thomas-Wright Russell, April 24, 1901, Wednesday https://www.nytimes.com/1901/04/24/archives/death-list-of-a-day-thomaswright- russell.html accessed 2010-08-14.Vale of Tears. New Essays on Religion and Reconstruction. Edited by Edward J. Blum and W. Scott Poole. (2005)Macon, Georgia: Mercer University Press. Carradine died on April 22, 1931 in Western Springs, Illinois.Source Information: Ancestry.com. Illinois, Deaths and Stillbirths Index, 1916–1947 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2011. FHL Film Number: 1653756.Lloyd Carradine was buried on April 26, 1931 at Cedar Hill Cemetery (Vicksburg, Mississippi). Personal Although a prolific author, Carradine wrote little about himself and his family, not even in his autobiographical Pastoral Sketches.Time and Location Line of the Life of Rev. Beverly Carradine, Gene A. Long, Holiness Data Ministry (2475) http://wesley.nnu.edu/wesleyctr/books/2401-2500/HDM2475.PDF Carradine was married twice, and had at least nine children. On July 3, 1869,Source Information: Hunting For Bears, comp.. Mississippi Marriages, 1776–1935 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations Inc, 2004. Carradine married Laura Green Reid (born 1851 in Washington, D.C.; died in Vicksburg, Mississippi in 1882), in Yazoo, Mississippi. They had five children: Ernest Carradine (died 1880); William Reed Carradine (1872–1909), a correspondent for the Associated Press, and the father of actor John Carradine,Turley, Briane. A Wheel Within a Wheel. (1999) Mercier university Press and the grandfather of actors David, Keith and Robert Carradine;Carradine, David. Endless Highway.(1995) Journey Editions, pg. 5 Maude Virginia Carradine (born 1874); Guy Carradine (1879–1885); and Lula (1880–1946). Laura died in 1882 at the age of 30, On August 1, 1883, Carradine married Modesta A.M. Burke (born March 16, 1861 in New Orleans, Louisiana; died April 6, 1924 in Chicago, Illinois) in New Orleans, Louisiana.Source Information: Ancestry.com. New Orleans, Louisiana, Marriage Records Index, 1831–1920 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations Inc, 2002. Original data: State of Louisiana, Secretary of State, Division of Archives, Records Management, and History. Vital Records Indices. Baton Rouge, LA, USA. Source Citation: Vol. 10, pg. 85. Their four children were: Burke Carradine (1887–1932); Victoria Carradine (born 1889); Glendy Carradine (born 1890); and Josephine (born 1891). References External links * Open Library * Rapture Ready Further reading * Long, Gene. Beverly Carradine Prince of Holiness Writers (Allegheny Publications, 2003) * Thornton, Wallace, Jr. Lightning from the Past: Camp Meeting Sermons by Early Twentieth-Century Holiness Revivalists (Schmul Publishing) Bibliography *A Journey To Palestine (1892) *Graphic Scenes (1990) *Sanctification (1995) *Sanctified life (2008) *Soul Help (2001) *Yazoo Stories (2007) Category:Holiness movement Category:Methodist ministers Category:Free Methodist Church ministers Category:1848 births Category:1931 deaths Category:People from Yazoo County, Mississippi Category:People of Mississippi in the American Civil War Category:Confederate States Army personnel Category:University of Mississippi alumni Category:Carradine family "
"Bert Kelly (June 2, 1882 in Cedar Rapids, Iowa - January 1968 in Long Beach, New York) was an American musician, who pioneered jazz as a banjoist, bandleader, educator, promoter, night club owner, and night club operator. After professional stints in Seattle and San Francisco, Kelly moved to Chicago in 1914 where he flourished a banjoist, bandleader, and promoter. In 1915 — before the U.S. prohibition — he founded and operated a Chicago speakeasy called "Bert Kelly's Stables," where patrons were introduced to early jazz. Kelly as a musician = Kelly's band Early gigs : Kelly's first professional engagement was in Seattle Washington, around 1896. He moved to San Francisco around 1899. San Francisco : In 1914, Kelly was in Art Hickman's band playing tea dances in the Rose Room of the St. Francis Hotel in San Francisco. Kelly eventually formed his own band and moved it to Chicago in 1914. Chicago : Kelly's band in Chicago included notable early New Orleans jazz musicians, including Alcide Nunez, Tom Brown, Gussie Mueller, Emile Christian, and Ragbaby Stephens. Early use of the word "jazz" Kelly claimed that his band, Bert Kelly's Jazz Band, was the first to publish the word "jazz" in 1915. * In 1914, use of the word "jass" (forerunner to the word "jazz") was forbidden in mixed company in Chicago. Just before winning the Chicago mayoral election in late 1914, Bill Thompson's first police chief ordered Bert Kelly's Stables — the first "joint" on Rush Street — to take down a painted banner advertising "Jass Music." And, public opinion approved. * In the fall of 1915, Kelly's band had been performing at the College Inn in Chicago. Kelly was directing and playing drums, Wheeler Wadsworth (né Frank Wheeler Wadsworth; 1889–1929) was on saxophone; William Ahearn was on piano, and Sam Baum was on drums. Paraphrasing a 1919 newsprint article by a journalist who chronicled jazz, Walter J. Kingsley (1876–1929), the band played blues, hesitations, and quaint syncopated melodies, and were quite the craze in the night life of Chicago. Thomas Meighan, a movie star, gave a party one night and hired the Kelly band for dance music. The guests included Emmy Wehlen, Julian Eltinge, Jeanne Eagels, and Grace George. Richard Travers filmed it. In a segment showing the musicians, he inserted the caption, "The Originators of Jazz." Thereafter, Kelly's band was known as a "jazz band." * In a 1973 article, Dick Holbrook, a researcher, refuted Kelly's claim and challenged Kingsley's published account. Kelly as a jazz club entrepreneur = Chicago In the early 1920s — during U.S. prohibition — he founded and operated a Chicago speakeasy called "Bert Kelly's Stables," located at 431 Rush Street, in Chicago's Tower Town. It rapidly gained regional and national popularity as one of the jazz hotspots of the 1920s. The first house band featured Alcide Nunez, whose featured number "Livery Stable Blues" inspired the name of the venue. Later artists at Kelly's Stables included Freddie Keppard. The brothers Johnny Dodds and Baby Dodds were featured in the house band after their break from King Oliver's band. New York Kelly later opened another jazz club, Kelly's Stables, in New York City, which was prominent on the 52nd Street jazz scene in the 1930s and 1940s. References Category:1882 births Category:1968 deaths Category:Musicians from Cedar Rapids, Iowa Category:Musicians from Chicago Category:American jazz bandleaders Category:American jazz banjoists Category:Jazz musicians from Illinois "
"Siloam daylilies are cultivars of daylilies registered with the American Hemerocallis Society by Pauline Henry of Siloam Springs, Arkansas. Mrs. Henry registered over 450 daylilies during her lifetime. Most of her daylilies were given a name beginning with the word "Siloam", hence "Siloam Daylilies". History Pauline Henry registered her first daylilies in 1963 with Siloam Satin, Siloam Splendor and Siloam Springs. Siloam Double Classic earned the prestigious Stout Silver Medal in 1993, the society’s highest award. She remained active in daylilies for the remainder of her life; registering 15 cultivars in her final year, passing away on September 20, 2000 at the age of 92. Siloam daylily cultivars are still very popular. Today's hybidizers are still cultivating Siloam daylilies as many of the new cultivars of daylilies have been crossed with a Siloam daylily. References * American Hemerocallis Society (AHS) online database http://www.daylilies.org/DaylilyDB/ * Siloam Springs, Arkansas Memorial http://www.siloamdaylilies.com External links * The American Hemerocallis Society * American Hemerocallis Society Region 13 honors Pauline Henry * The Daylily Diary honors Pauline Henry Category:Hemerocallis "