Showing posts with label Graham. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Graham. Show all posts
Tuesday, December 10, 2013
WIMAUMA -- A small but devoted band of cousins gathered together for food and family connecting on Veteran's Day 2013 at Little Manatee River State Park, with thanks to the organizing efforts of Tom Santa Cruz for reserving the screened shelter complete with electricity for plugging in and comparing family trees.
Partners, spouses and children added to the gathering, although a bigger turnout would have added to the event.
Sanchez (descendant) cousins include, standing, Bo Haven, Rick Sheffield, Ed Whitehouse; seated, Dee Graham, Tom Santa Cruz. Not pictured, Nickie Rucker.
Sunday, April 21, 2013
Connecting the News
Photo at Tomolato Cemetery of FX Sanchez descendants includes cousins connected to Manatee County Asaph Graham (face slightly hidden behind Ann Browning) on back row, then next, Travis Sheffield and Rick Sheffield. Kneeling in front are Dee Graham, holding grandson, Anthony Quandt Judd. (Photo by Alena Scandura.)
Earl Sanchez of Plant City is one person to the right from Rick Sanchez. Where is Tom Santa Cruz, because you were there? More photos to come, but if the rest of you send in IDs we can add them to the photo. Please excuse any lapses of visual-naming memories.
Manatee folks mentioned in Bradenton Herald blog
After our trip to Saint Augustine for the memorial honoring Francisco X Sanchez's new status with the Sons of the American Revolution, Bradenton Herald columnist Vinn Mannix ran this photo and a feature in his blog about these attending descendants with Manatee County connections.
Even though I'm in the photo, my name isn't mentioned since I'm now working as a reporter for the newspaper. Thanks to Vinn, who also wrote about my dad a few times and does a great job keeping up with local history.
from Rev. Dee Graham
8th great granddaughter of FX Sanchez
Posted by
Unknown
at
4/21/2013 02:55:00 PM
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Wednesday, January 11, 2012
Florida Pioneer Dies After 103 New Year's Days
In
his final weeks of life, Lamar Graham received a standing ovation as the oldest
living graduate of Manatee High School at its Centennial Celebration, cruised
the Manatee Civic Center in his wheelchair for the Ham Fest (Amateur Radio
Convention) and chatted on his i-Phone in the middle of his 102nd birthday
party. Even though he next had to tackle pneumonia, he made it through to see
his 103rd Christmas and New Year’s holidays.
That’s
the kind of genetics he inherited as a Floridano, a member of Florida’s
founding Sanchez family and a relative of the Spanish explorer Ponce de Leon.
He learned about his ancestry when he and his late wife Edith began their
retirement trek of searching for lost relatives and consequently wrote the book
Double Cousins in 1987.

He caddied
for department store founder Robert Beall Sr. on the old Bradenton Golf Course
(site of McKechnie Field) and witnessed Armistice Day (end of WWI) as a
celebration erupted near the downtown courthouse. His first radio was a hand-built crystal one
yet he ended his working life sending out transmissions for WEDU-TV, Channel 3,
in Riverview.
OBITUARY:
Lamar Timmerman Graham, age 102, of Bradenton, died Friday,
Jan. 6, 2012, in Pinellas Park, Florida at Suncoast Hospice Woodside.
Survivors include his daughter, the Rev. Dee Graham of
Bradenton and Saint Petersburg; his grandson Asaph Graham of Seminole; his
granddaughters Austin Graham and Charlotte Quandt, and his great grandchildren,
Anthony Quandt Judd and Lila Shelby, all of Saint Petersburg. His nieces and
nephews include nieces Joanne Graham Dick of Bradenton, Bonnie Graham Ricker of
Michigan, Delia Graham Cirino of Van Nuys, CA; Tonia Graham Hemminger, Joe
Graham, Marion Graham Luquette and Chuck Graham, all of Ellenton; Richard
Graham of Tallahassee, Van Graham of Colorado, Thomas Graham of Saint
Augustine, Peggy Jones Russell of North Carolina and Pat Jones Goodwill of
Tampa.
Recognized as a member of a “Florida Pioneer Family” by the
Florida Genealogical Society and as a descendent of Ponce de Leon of Spain, Graham
leaves behind numerous other relatives who he and his wife discovered while
researching the story of his ancestors from Spanish Florida. The unique relationship between the Sanchez
and Perez family, as well as the Sheffield’s who married into the family,
inspired the title of their 1990 book, Double
Cousins.
In addition to being a Floridano, a member of Florida’s
first European families, Graham has been a resident of Bradenton, FL, since
1922. He was born in Fitzgerald, GA, on Dec. 8, 1909 to Thomas Sentell and
Marion Amorett Sheffield Graham, and outlived all three of his brothers,
Joseph, Thomas and Elmer. He spent much of his early childhood on the rice farm
of his grandparents, Joseph Sealy and Andelia Sanchez Sheffield, in Wimauma,
FL.
As a child he attended Ballard Elementary School on its
first day, Biltmore Elementary when it was housed in the historic Davis
Building (now rebuilt on its site in Manatee High School. Later he went to Bradenton High, which, by the
time he graduated in 1931, had been renamed Manatee County High School. He
played on the baseball team.

Prior to WWII, Graham served in the US Navy, where he worked
as a civilian for the military and studied radio and telecommunications at
Georgia Tech in Atlanta. He returned to Bradenton to take over the Bradenton
Credit Bureau, founded by his father. At
the age of 35 he was drafted into WWII, where he served in the Army Air Force
as a Staff Sergeant working in flight communications.
After he returned from the war, Graham sought government
employment and worked as a postal clerk for the Bradenton Post Office for more
than 20 years, retiring at age 65 and returning to his first love,
communications. After earning his commercial radio license, he worked for
Lampkin Laboratory in Bradenton, and then finished his career working for
WEDU-TV, Channel 3.
Still active locally until his death, Graham (W4FKR)
belonged to the Manatee Amateur Radio Club, the Manatee County Historical
Society, the Sons of Confederate Veterans, First United Methodist Church of
Bradenton, the local chapter of the National Association of Retired Federal Employees,
and the Quarter Century Wireless Association. Through his
amateur radio work with the Red Cross during hurricanes and other disasters, he
continued to be honored annually as a Manatee County Volunteer. In 2011, he was honored with a lifetime
membership in the Kirby Stewart American Legion Post, where he was the longest
standing member.
A graveside service will be held Saturday, Jan. 14, in
Manasota Memorial Park in Oneco at 11 a.m., including military honors. A
reception will follow nearby for family and friends. Those who wish to give a
memorial donation are encouraged to consider the local organizations that
mattered most to him.
Posted by
Unknown
at
1/11/2012 01:49:00 PM
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Labels: cemetery, Confederate, descendants, Double Cousins, Francisco Xavier Sanchez, genealogy, Graham, Louisa Colding, Maria del Carmen Hill, My Florida History, Sanchez
Tuesday, July 14, 2009
Edith L. Graham died on July 8, 2009
Many of us have read Edith's book, Double Cousin. It is a book that anyone studying our Sanchez genealogy should be familiar with. Both she and her husband, Lamar T. Graham, collected the information, and she wrote the book.
The family wrote an informative obituary:
Edith L. Graham (Jones)Edith L. Jones Graham, born May 19, 1915, dies July 8, 2009, at age 94. A genealogist and co-author of Double Cousins, which documented the story of "Los Floridanos" Sanchez family who pioneered Saint Augustine from before 1603, Edith Lucille Jones Graham died Wednesday, July 8, 2009, in Bradenton, FL. She was 94. After an injury forced her to retire in 1978, she and her husband Lamar Graham took advantage of their time to investigate their curiosity in genealogy and his family history to begin what turned into a discovery of a rich part of Florida 's diverse heritage. With the help of their daughter, the Rev. Dee Graham, a professional journalist, they wrote several books about the state's pioneer families. Characters they uncovered range from one of six Spaniards allowed to remain when the British took over in the 1700s to a signer of Florida's original constitution to several of Florida's first preachers and church founders to colonial clergy to pirates, Confederate soldiers and members of indigenous tribes. Surnames they covered included Sanchez, Sheffield, Graham, Thomas and Holland. The daughter of former Bradenton and Elyria, OH, Mayor Asaph R. Jones, and the niece of former Florida Sen. Lee S. Day, was born in Elyria and graduated from Bradenton High School in 1932, going on to both Virginia Intermont College and Florida State University. She married her high school classmate Lamar T. Graham, Sept. 14, 1935, and worked with him in running the Bradenton Credit Bureau until after World War II, when they both ended up working as United States Postal Clerks. Mrs. Graham was a founding member of the first Manatee chapters of the Daughters of the American Revolution and of the National Organization for Women. She belonged to Bradenton's First United Methodist Church and the Manatee County Historical Society. Survivors include her husband of 73 years, Lamar T. Graham of Bradenton; her daughter, the Rev. Dee Graham of Saint Petersburg, grandson Asaph Graham and wife Marlaine of Seminole; granddaughters Austin Graham and Charlotte Quandt, both of Saint Petersburg; three great-grandsons, her cousin Doris Day Leland of Bradenton, and many nieces and nephews. A graveside memorial service will be held at 10 am Tuesday, July 14, at Manasota Memorial Park in Oneco, FL. Memorial donations may be made by check to the National Ataxia Foundation, 2600 Fernbrook Lane, Suite 119, Minneapolis, MN, 55447, www.ataxia.org.
A copy of this obituary appeared in The Bradenton Herald on Sunday, July 12, 2009.
Posted by
Tom Santa Cruz
at
7/14/2009 03:54:00 PM
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Labels: books, Double Cousins, Graham
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