Cora V Hill
1886 - 1967 (81 years)-
Name Cora V Hill Birth 11 Feb 1886 Clinton, Anderson, Tennessee, United States Gender Female Census 1900 Civil District 06, Anderson, Tennessee, United States Death 9 Aug 1967 Clinton, Anderson, Tennessee, United States Burial Peabody Cemetery, Duff, Campbell, Tennessee, United States Siblings 4 Siblings Person ID I11660 Main Tree Last Modified 4 Feb 2018
Father Masten Tate Hill, b. 2 Dec 1855, Clinton, Anderson, Tennessee, United States d. 13 Jan 1940, Clinton, Anderson, Tennessee, United States (Age 84 years) Mother Eliza Jane Dunn, b. 11 Aug 1870, Knox, Tennessee, United States d. 30 Jan 1931, Clinton, Anderson, Tennessee, United States (Age 60 years) Family ID F1892 Group Sheet | Family Chart
Family 1 Ernest Loveday Last Modified 24 Jun 2009 Family ID F4385 Group Sheet | Family Chart
Family 2 John Wright Last Modified 24 Jun 2009 Family ID F4386 Group Sheet | Family Chart
Family 3 Joe Smith Last Modified 24 Jun 2009 Family ID F4387 Group Sheet | Family Chart
Family 4 Jim O'neal Last Modified 24 Jun 2009 Family ID F4388 Group Sheet | Family Chart
Family 5 Josh Williams Last Modified 24 Jun 2009 Family ID F4389 Group Sheet | Family Chart
Family 6 Archie Allen Last Modified 24 Jun 2009 Family ID F4390 Group Sheet | Family Chart
Family 7 Bill Smith Last Modified 24 Jun 2009 Family ID F4391 Group Sheet | Family Chart
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Event Map = Link to Google Earth
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Notes - Aunt Corie was described by family as being a dissatisfied person.She married 9 times to 7 men and moved innumerable times.
Her second husband, Bill Smith, liked to frighten Sam Kesterson'schildren by threatening to cut off their ears with his pocket knife.The knife was in his hands more than it was in his picket.
Jim O'Neal was her husband twice as was Ernest Loveday.
Sam's children liked to see Aunt Coar coming since she often playedwith them as if she were one of them, even to the point of hiking upher skirt and wading the creek with them.
On one occasion, her husband at the time was away from the house whenhe saw smoke pouring from their home. He rused back to find that Coarwas housecleaning. She had moved everything from the house to theyard except the cook stove. She had apparently set fire to the house.She was ready to move and was determined to do so one way or another!
On another occasion Cora and her husband were planning a visit awayfrom home and to prevent the theft of their chickens, moved them intotheir house while they were way. Alas, it was to no avial! when theyarrived home again the house was empty, the chickens stolen. Chickenswere in great demand during those depression days. They could betraded for other things.
Cora and John Wright lived in Montana. They told rfelatives ofkilloing and salting down rabbits for meat. Cora told, too, of anoccasion when she had climbed to the loft of the barn and a floodcame. She watched the sheep manure rolling in the water from herbasrn loft and was there for hours before the water subsided enoughfor her to get to the house.
Sam went to Melstone, Montana, to live with CFora and Joh for awhileabougt 1915 after his mother forbade him to marry Mary Cox. Hischildren have visited the town, walking on the same wooden sidewalks,seated at the same cafe he must have visited while there.
Mary, Sam's wife and Cora's sister-in-plaw, didn't seem to share thedelight of the childrne at Cora's visits. According to one familymember, Mary swtrongly disliked Cora and "wanted to whip her". Coraapparently caused an injustice to Ethel and Mary sided with Ethel.
- Aunt Corie was described by family as being a dissatisfied person.She married 9 times to 7 men and moved innumerable times.