Friday, March 30, 2012

Ulyss and Pearl Caine Holliman and their Descendants

Ralph Hollimanthe War Sweeps over the Holliman Family… Part III
by Glenn N. Holliman

The successful days of high school closed for Ralph in 1942.  When a sophomore at Shades Cahaba in Birmingham, Alabama, Germany invaded Poland, and before his junior year, France fell to the Nazis.  The British fought for their existence in the skies over London.  After Pearl Harbour during his senior year, the young Alabamian knew he would soon be joining his brother, Bishop, and millions of other Americas in the War.  





Right, William Ralph Holliman, age 17, a senior at Shades Cahaba High School in Irondale, Alabama.

In February 1942, Ralph took a week off from his senior year to travel by car with his parents, Ulyss and Pearl Holliman, and his brother-in-law and sister, Charles and Loudelle Ferrell to visit his older brother in Key West, Florida.  Bishop Holliman had joined the Navy in November 1941, and a few months later Americans were worried sick by the Japanese advance in the Pacific and German U-Boats in the Atlantic.


To this point only one of the four Holliman brothers was in the fight.  This would soon change.

Below Ralph and Bishop in Key West, Florida, both facing an uncertain and dangerous future, and their Mother knew it.
 Life speeds up during war time. 

The War and his coming induction into the Army led to the marriage in the late winter of 1943 of Ralph and Motie Chism, high school sweethearts.  After a honeymoon in Atlanta (an airplane flight no less!), Ralph in March of that year found himself in basic training in Miami, Florida.  Assigned to the U. S. Army Air Corp, he traveled by troop train to his next base in Stapleton, Denver, Colorado.  Although the train stopped in Birmingham, he was not able to get off to telephone Motie, his young bride.

Once again with the Robert W. Daly, Sr. house as a back drop, Ralph and his new bride, Motie, pose for the camera.  Soon Ralph would leave his new wife for Army service, not to return for almost two years. The marriage would last until Motie's death in 2003.


Next posting, service in England and France before coming home....

Wednesday, March 21, 2012

Ulyss and Pearl Caine Holliman and their Descendants





The Seventh Child of Ulyss and Pearl Caine Holliman
Ralph Holliman,  Growing up, Part II
by Glenn N. Holliman, nephew

This is the second of a series on the seventh child of Ulyss and Pearl Caine Holliman.  Left, young well-dressed Ralph Holliman, around age 11 and growing fast, had his photo taken at the side of the Robert W. Daly, Sr. home,  just across the lawn from  his own house.  

Ralph proved a good student and as with his siblings, Bishop and Virginia, developed into a public speaker.  In 1938 Ralph from Irondale Junior High and Virginia from Shades Cahaba High School found themselves in the finals of a Birmingham speech contest pitched against each other!

The Birmingham News carried the following article about the contest. Note the sub headline from the  scrapbook of his sister, Virginia Holliman Cornelius.


                         

Ralph and his sister, Virginia Holliman Cornelius, were at Shades Cahaba High School in Birmingham at the same time, she two years ahead of him.  In this photo, Ralph sits on the right side on the next to the back row, just right from his future brother-in-law, Walter Cornelius.  The year is 1939.  Virginia and Walter graduated in 1940 and married in 1942.  Ralph would marry his high school sweetheart, Motie Chism in 1943 as the U.S. Army beckoned.

Next posting, the World War comes....






Wednesday, March 14, 2012

Ulyss and Pearl Caine Holliman and their Descendants

The Seventh Child of Ulyss and Pearl Caine Holliman:
 William Ralph Holliman, 1924, Part 1

by Glenn N. Holliman, his nephew
                                               Above, Ralph Holliman in 2011.


At the Ulyss and Pearl Caine home at 2300 3rd Avenue in Irondale, Alabama on July 3, 1924, William Ralph Holliman was born.  He was the last of seven children of the couple who had moved in 1918 to the working class Birmingham suburb from the small town of Fayette in west Alabama.  His oldest brother, Melton, had been born in 1908, making a spread of 16 years between the first and last child.

In essence, the Holliman children could be divided into an older and younger generation.  Melton -1908, Vena -1909, Euhal -1912 and Loudelle -1914 were all born in Fayette.  Bishop, 1919, Virginia, 1922 and Ralph 1924 entered life in Irondale. Because Vena and Loudelle married exceptional men in 1928 and 1935, the last three children experienced mentoring and were offered many opportunities the first four children did not receive.


When four years old, Ralph and Virginia, age six, in the wheel barrel, had their picture taken with Vena and Loudelle Holliman, their older sisters dressed in bib overalls, probably for the only times in their lives.

One of these brothers-in-law was Vena's husband, Robert Daly, Sr., a banker and second generation Irishman with a wry sense of humor, a generous nature and desire to travel and take family members with him.  The second was The Rev. Charles Ferrell, a Birmingham-Southern College and Yale Divinity School graduate who became a Methodist minister and quietly encouraged his younger in-laws to pursue higher education.  He married Loudelle in 1935.

Because the Dalys built a home next to the Ulyss and Pearl house in Irondale, Robert Daly became a very strong influence on the family, all for the good.  Ulyss, by nature a taciturn and quiet man, worked long hours for the Birmingham Electric Company, up early to build a fire to warm the house in the winter and back after dark, tired from his long commute and a 10 hour day, 5 ½ days a week of repairing street cars.  He did this from 1918 until retirement in 1949, although thanks to the New Deal he began to experience the 40 hour work week and time off in the middle 1930s.

Into this semi-void stepped Robert Daly who took the children places, gave them odd jobs to earn spending money, gently teased them and challenged them to think.  As Ralph exclaimed  in 2011, “Robert Daly was my father!”
Above, sometime in the early 1940s are left to right, Melton Holliman (1908 - 1958), Robert W. Daly, Sr. (1901 - 1959) and Ulyss S. Holliman (1884 - 1965).                                    

Next Part 2 of the biography of W. Ralph Holliman


Sunday, March 4, 2012

The Post War Era and Back to Florida
by Bishop Holliman


In the summer of 1955, Bishop Holliman took his young family to Daytona Beach, Florida  to join his newly widowed father and the Robert Daly family.  Left to right, Robert Daly, Sr., Vena Holliman Daly, Becky Holliman, age 5, and Gerry Stansbery Holliman, age 31.

"1941 was my last trip to Florida with the Daly trio until 1955 two months after my mother's death.  The simple pre-World War II world of Irondale, Alabama had given way to marriage, children and a career.  We were living in Johnson City, Tennessee and we drove to Ormond Beach to join Vena, Robert, Bobby Daly and Daddy, Ulyss S. Holliman, for a week.



Right in Daytona Beach, Florida in July 1955, two months after Pearl Caine Holliman died of a heart attack.  Back row is Ulyss Holliman, uncharacteristically wearing sun glasses, who had married Pearl in 1906 in Fayette, Alabama.  Next to him is his oldest daughter, Vena Holliman Daly and her husband, Robert Daly, Sr.  Far right is Bishop’s wife, Geraldine, and front row, Glenn Holliman,  age 8, Bishop Holliman, age 35 and Becky Holliman Payne.


Some things I should have remembered….
In 1935 or 1936 Robert got the bug to buy property in Florida and build and operate a ‘tourist court’, as it was called in those days before the coming of the Holiday Inn.  He wrote to real estate folks in several places and his interest in such a project may be why we went to Clearwater in 1936.
Above two first cousins treading Florida water in 1955. The writer, Glenn Holliman, is  on the left and right Robert Daly, Jr., age 11.  Bob is now a Ph.D. professor of biology at North Alabama State University, Florence, Alabama.

I guess the stress of his banking job was worse than anyone could know at the time.  His Aunt Alice was opposed to such a move and she told him to take up golf instead.  In 1939, he bought three lots on the beach at Daytona…the war came and Robert never built his tourist court."

Robert W. Daly, Sr. suffered from congestive heart failure which would take his life in 1959, age 58, a beloved family mentor.


Next, the 7th Child of Ulyss and Pearl Caine Holliman....