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Thomas Moore - WikiTree Profile

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Thomas Moore - WikiTree Profile Thomas Moore's Plantation House Part of Thomas Moore's Plantation

Thomas Moore Homestead

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Thomas Moore Homestead   Original Moore Homestead, a log cabin covered in siding. Rd.#659, Scott Co., Va.   In June 1990, my sister, Sharon Gillespie, and I decided to go on an adventure to find where Celia Moore Smith lived and died, so long ago. We loaded up her two children, Jamie and Sissy, and drove to Scott County, Virginia. We took food, cooking utensils, and a tent. We camped at the Lover's Leap Campground, in the Natural Tunnel State Park, for two weeks. After breakfast every morning, we went exploring. We spent a lot of time at the Scott County Library in Gate City. We found more information than we ever dreamed. Sometimes we just drove around. We explored Dungannon, Virginia. Sharon spent time in the Scott County courthouse in Gate City and the Russell County courthouse in Lebanon looking up records. One day while driving down a little gravel road, we found Moore's Greenhouse. We stopped and talked to the owners, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Moore. I still can hardly bel

Henry Smith Shuff - WikiTree Profile

Henry Smith Shuff - WikiTree Profile My Aunt, Palmaneda Baker Smith, told me that she loved staying the night with Grandpa and Grandma Shuff. She said he was a wonderful grandpa. He loved to tell jokes. They would sit in front of the fireplace and Grandpa Shuff would get his popcorn popper with the long handle and pop corn in the fireplace while he entertained them. Maybe later, he would take a big bowl and go out to the cellar, and bring it back full of apples. He'd sit down and peel them all apples. He always peeled the pealing off in one big piece. They were amazed by that. Grandma Shuff was real quiet. Sometimes she'd say, "Smith, doesn't your tongue ever get tired?" One joke Aunt Palmaneda remembered him telling went something like this: An Irishman had a big rope. One day, someone weaved the ends of his rope together. When the Irishman wanted to use his rope, he couldn't find the end. He said 'Faith and me jamber, sone cut off both ends of me rope

Sarah A. Victoria Eveline (McClellan) Shuff - WikiTree Profile

Sarah A. Victoria Eveline (McClellan) Shuff - WikiTree Profile My Aunt Palmaneda Baker Smith described Christmas at Grandma and Grandpa Shuff's house when she was a little girl. There wasn't enough room in the livingroom or dining room for the Christmas tree. They put it in the little bedroom. Grandma Shuff had a lot of German hand-blown glass ornaments, strings, (one with paper angels), and small candles all over the tree. The candles were never lit due to the danger of fire. Over all that, was shiny ice cycles. Aunt Palmaneda said it was so beautiful, that it felt like you were in fairyland. The dining room was decorated with a large paper bell hanging in the center of the room. Paper streamers were attached at the large bell and strung across the room to each corner. At each corner hung another smaller bell. The table centerpiece was a glass dish full of chocolates. A lot of the time Grandpa Baker would hand out the presents. Each person recited a poem. Grandma Baker knew

Sarah A. Victoria Eveline (McClellan) Shuff - WikiTree Profile

Sarah A. Victoria Eveline (McClellan) Shuff - WikiTree Profile There is a Christmas tradition that was probably passed down from my Great-Great Grandma Martha Smith McClellan. Everyone tries to be the first one to greet everyone by saying, "Christmas gift!" If you say it first, the person you say it to is supposed to give you a present. Grandma McClellan was born and raised on a plantation in Scott County, Virginia. The tradition is supposed to have been started by the slaves. The slave would greet the master or mistress on Christmas morning with the greeting, "Christmas gift!" They would then receive an extra gift. The whites soon adopted the tradition. They made it into a game. The gifts were usually a small treat of some kind. My aunt, Palmaneda Baker Smith, said that her Aunt Beulah would spend the night with Grandpa and Grandma Shuff, on Christmas Eve, to decorate the house. On Christmas Day, when Grandma and Grandpa Baker would arrive with their children