In previous posts, I have been expounding on the portraits hung on the wall in my grand mother's home in Irondale, Alabama home in 1945. They remained mounted on the wall until Pearl Caine Holliman's death in 1955.
There was a special collage of photographs in a frame almost a yard wide and 8 inches high. It contained 55 photographs. Every time I visited my grandparents as a young boy, I stared and stared at the pictures of my father's family, when they were all so young.
When Grandmama Holliman died the photographic collage went first to her oldest daughter, Vena Holliman Daly (1909-1990), and while she lived in Irondale, it hung in her home. Later it passed to her older child and first of 19 grandchildren, Mary Daly Herrin. The large collection of Holliman family photos still hangs today over Mary's kitchen table in Irondale. Over 60 years later I still study and ponder the lives of the persons pictured.
Below approximately the first 1/3rd of the collage.
At the Ulyss and Pearl Caine Holliman descendants’ reunion at Al and Linda Herrin Bradley’s house in June 2012, Mary brought the collage for viewing. I took pictures of it, and later scanned them into my computer. With the help of my 93 year old father, Clayton Herrin, Patti Holliman Hairston, Ralph Holliman and others, the persons have been identified and labeled.
It is impossible with my camera to gather the entire collage in a viewable format, so I divide the work into six pieces. The photos are numbered. Click on twice and the picture will enlarge. Here we go to identify the pictures.
1.
Carolyn Ferrell
Tatum, daughter of Charles (1907-1999) and
Loudelle Holliman Ferrell (1914-1996). She resides in North Carolina.
2.
Carolyn Ferrell
Tatum in 1944 in Alabama. Her father was
a United Methodist minister and the family moved often during 1940s serving
churches in Goodwater, Jacksonville, Huntsville and Ensley, Alabama. Her brothers are Charles Halford and John Melton Ferrell.
3.
Carolyn Ferrell
Tatum in 1946.
4.
William Lee Caine,
Lula Hocutt Caine and Martha Jane Walker Holliman (1846-1931 – wife of John
Thomas Holliman, and mother of Ulyss Holliman, photo taken in Fayette,
Alabama). Left and center are William Caine (1862 - 1938)
and Lula Hocutt Caine (1861-1957), the parents of Pearl Caine Holliman
(1887-1955).
5.
Jerry (1940-2003) and Terry
are the twins of Euhal (1912-1989) and Edna Westbrook
Holliman (1916–1992). Jerry died of heart failure while salmon fishing near his home in Alaska. Terry resides in Arizona.
6.
Motie Chism
Holliman (1925-2003) is the first wife of William Ralph Holliman (b 1924) and
mother of Pamela Holliman and Kathy Holliman.
Rachel Harbour is Kathy’s daughter.
Ralph
and Motie married in 1943, a month before Ralph was inducted into the U.S. Army
and World War II. He served in England and France and did not return home to see his young bride for over two years until the summer of 1945.
7.
Glenn Nelson Holliman (b 1946) in Birmingham, Alabama. This
photo was taken in 1947 at the Irondale, Alabama home of his grandparents. The red brick Daly house is just visible in
the background. Many pictures were taken
on the Holliman lawn with the Daly home in the background due to better
afternoon lighting.
8. Bishop and Geraldine Stansbery Holliman in June 1945
outside of Germantown Methodist Church in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. ‘Gerry’, a native of Bristol, Tennessee,
lived in Philadelphia from 1941 to 1944, where she met an Alabama sailor on a
three day pass in 1942 in Atlantic City, New Jersey. Three years later they
married. They are the parents of Glenn Holliman, picture 7.
9. Melton Pearson Holliman (1908-1958) was inducted into
the U.S. Army in August 1943 at the age of 35.
This photo of him is at Camp Barkley in Texas where he did a grueling
basic training and advanced work as a medic.
He served in France with a medical unit from July to November 1944. His health broke, and he was sent home to
serve out his duty in Jackson, Mississippi hospital as a pharmacist. He suffered a major heart attack in 1955 and
a fatal one in 1958. He may very well have been a casualty of World War II.
10. Bishop Holliman (b 1919) came home to Birmingham in
1945 with his new bride. With the G.I.
Bill, he finished Birmingham-Southern College and in 1947 started teaching
school at Shades Cahaba Jr. High and later the new Shades Valley High
School. This picture is of him as a
history and civics teacher. (Do you
wonder where his son obtained his interest in family history?)
11. Euhal Holliman looks snazzy in his cap, probably from
the 1930s. Euhal had some tough timing
in his life as he left high
school just as the Great Depression began.
He went to work to help pay family bills in the only job he could find
at the time - a produce grocer. As his own family grew, he
made food sales his career. During his employment at various
supermarkets in Gadsden and Birmingham, he was tapped by his co-workers to serve as
their labor union representative. His
leadership helped to achieve living wages and benefits for Alabama grocery workers.
12. Ralph Holliman (b 1924), looking dapper,
poses in front of the Daly house in Irondale, Alabama sometime in the
1940s. Ralph served in World War II as a
clerk in an Army Air Corp unit, logging and scheduling air transport flights.
He was praised for his administrative abilities during the war by his commanding
officer. V-E day found him celebrating in Paris. After time at
Birmingham-Southern College, he put his skills to work with a post-war career
at American Bakeries retiring as their national vice-president for operations.
13. Mary Daly Herrin is the daughter of Robert W.
(1901-1959) and Vena Holliman Daly (1909-1990) and the first born of the 19
Holliman cousins. This photo is of her
during school days and before she met the love of her life, Elliott Clayton
Herrin, whom she married in 1951.
14. The Charles and Loudell Ferrell family – back Charles
Ferrell (1907-1999) and Loudell Holliman (1914-1996), married 1935. Left to right: Charles Halford Ferrell, Carolyn Ferrell Tatum and John Melton Ferrell.
15. Charles H. Ferrrell graduated from Birmingham-Southern
College and earned a divinity degree from Emory in Atlanta, Georgia.
In 1963 as a United Methodist minister in the North Alabama Conference,
he wrote a letter to the then segregationist Governor George C. Wallace
decrying his racial policies. The courageous letter, that put Hal's career at risk, was reproduced in a definitive biography of Wallace highlighting that not every white Alabamian supported Wallace’s racial intolerance
during those troubled times.
16. Terry and Jerry Holliman, the twins, left Alabama
in the early 1960s and located to the far north, Anchorage, Alaska where Terry worked as a
fireman for 25 years. Jerry made a
career as baggage supervisor for Alaska Airlines. Unfortunately Jerry died in 2003 of a heart
attack while engaging in his favorite past time of salmon fishing.
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