NECROLOGY

 See Recent Obituary of Hetty Sutherland Below 

                           

 

 

 

 

Evleyn Slemp
March 9, 1993
By Sue Stewart Gilliam

     We the members of the Wise County Historical Society, regret with sad hearts the sudden death of our beloved member, Evelyn Slemp (June 6, 1919 - March 9, 1993), yet we bow in humble submission to God's will, though deeply feeling our sad and irreparable loss.

     She was an earnest and consistent member, interested in all our work and always charitable to others.  Her sweet and happy disposition endeared her to all of us.  Thus she has left a memory which can be incentive to us.  We extend our deep and profound sympathy to her sons, Craig and Gary, their families and other relatives in their bereavement.

Evelyn Dale Slemp
Historical Sketches of Southwest Virginia

     Mary Evelyn Dale Slemp, 73, of Wise, Virginia, died Tuesday, March 9, 1993, in Holston Valley Hospital, Kingsport, Tennessee.  Born June 6, 1919, she was the daughter of John Webster Dale and Bertie Estelle Hillman, and was a great-great granddaughter of Arter Dale and Judy Cotton.  On February 7, 1943, Evelyn and William D. Slemp were married.  Two children were born to this union: William Craig and Gary Dale.

     Evelyn was a court reporter, serving in Wise County and the city of Norton for more than forty years.  She belonged to the Fortnightly Club, the Senior Citizens group, and was a charter member of Gladeville Chapter No. 171, Order of Eastern Star.  Additionally, she was a member of the Pound Historical Society, was on the Board of Directors for the Historical Society of Southwest Virginia, and charter member of the Wise County Historical Society.  At the time of her death, she was on the committee which planned, collected records, pictures, and family histories for The Heritage of Wise County and the City of Norton - 1856-1992.  This new history was published September 1993.

     As can be expected from the above interests, she owned a vast collection of genealogical material, records, and old pictures.  She supplied many pictures of pioneer people and places for pictorial books of the area.  The Wise County Historical Society will probably be the repository for  the Evelyn Slemp Collection.

     Survivors include the two sons: Craig, of Wise, with six children; and Gary of Pound, with daughter Allison, Son William, and a new daughter Mollie Dale born September 25, 1993.

     Services were conducted at 11:00 a.m., Thursday March 11, 1993, Jr. officiating.  Members of the Wise County Bar Association served as active and honorary pallbearers.  Burial was in Powell Valley Memorial Gardens.  Sturgill Funeral Home was in charge.

 

    Roy L. Sturgill
October 5, 1993
     By Gladys Stallard  

Roy Lee Sturgill, 79, of 1168 Rhode Island Ave., Bristol,  VA, died Tuesday, October 5, 1993, in Bristol Regional Medical Center. He was a native of Coeburn and had lived in Bristol for 45 years.  He was a member of Shelby Masonic Lodge No. 162, National Association of Retired Federal Employees, the Historical Society of Southwest Virginia, The Wise County Historical Society and American Association of Retired Persons. 

   Roy was the author of "Crimes, Criminals and Characters of the Cumberlands and Southwest Virginia," Nostalgic Narratives and Historical Events of Southwest Virginia," and "Album of Steam Railroading."  He also wrote many articles for the historical society. He was a U.S. Navy veteran of World War II. and was of the Methodist faith.  He was a Shriner.

   Survivors include his wife, Barbara V.  Mullins Sturgill, Bristol; two sisters, Lillian Tucker, Florida and Cynthia Taylor, Big stone gap; one granddaughter; three grandsons, and two great grandchildren.

     Weaver Funeral Home was in charge of the service.  Graveside services were conducted at Temple Hill Memorial Gardens in Castlewood.

Roy Lee Sturgill
Historical Sketches of Southwest Virginia

     Roy Lee Sturgill always claimed Coeburn, Virginia, as his hometown, having been born there December 4, 1913, the son of King and Mary Sturgill.  Due to the death of his mother in 1922, the young family  of two boys and three girls became separated. Fifty-seven years later, in 1979, they all had a grand reunion.

     At age 19, Roy met Barbara V. Mullins.  They were soon married.  He was a coal miner for ten years, then served a stint in the U.S. Navy.  Later, he became a Railway Postal Clerk until passenger service was discontinued in 1969.

     He was of the Methodist faith.  He belonged to the National Association of Retired Federal Employees, the AARP, Shelby Masonic Lodge, No. 162, and was a Shriner.  

     Because of his extensive collection of railroad pictures and memorabilia, Roy Sturgill was persuaded by his son, Phillip to write his last book, "Album of Steam Railroading."  Phil typeset the book, and managed to get it completed, printed, and in the hands of his father before Roy died in the Bristol Regional Medical Center, Tuesday, October 5, 1993.  On Saturday, October 9, the family brought the new books to the Wise Fall Fling.

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Edward Blair, Jr.

     Edward Blair, Jr., was a son of Edward Blair, Sr., and Elsie Hamilton Blair.   He was born on Indian Creek in 1921 and grew up in Pound. He has one brother, James Blair of Titusville, FL, and one sister, Patsy (Imogene) Markham, Leesburg, VA.  Ed married Ruth Powers of Dunham, KY and they had three daughters: Patricia Bayer, Brookville, MD; Wilma Edwards, Gaithersburg, MD; and Linda Monahan, of MD.  

     In 1947 Ed married Grace Sallenburger of Gettysburg, PA, and they had one son, Allan Blair of Viewtown, VA.  Ed has eight grandchildren and five great grand-children. 

     During the years . 1952-1963, Ed took courses in business finance, real estate and insurance, mutual funds and real estate as s second job.  He bought a farm in Culpepper county in 1962  and raised beef cattle until 1974.    Retired in 1981, he sold the farm and moved to Pound in 1984.   

   In September 1985, Ed married Virginia (Osborne) Blair, daughter of Hampton and Lillie Munsie Osborne. They lived at Pound, VA.

     Ed was a retired Superintendent  of passenger stations of Amtrak, with 39 years of railroad service.  He was an army veteran of WWII, member of Pound  lodge # 59, AF  & AM, Pound chapter # 67 of the Eastern Star, Past President of Pound Lions Club, and member of First Presbyterian Church of Pound. Ed is no longer with us and is missed by the Historical Society. 

 

Shelby Blaine Sturgill
February 14, 1917- February 17, 1996

    Shelby Blaine Sturgill was born February 14, 1917 in Flat Gap, Virginia, the only child of Willard Sturgill and Callie Bolling Sturgill.

      He graduated from Flat Gap, High School and Milligan College, majoring in chemistry.  At Milligan while ill, he was lovingly nursed by his dormitory mother Mrs. Cochran.  He never forgot her kindness, and sent her flowers on Easter every year for thirty-five years until she died.

      After college, he taught chemistry at Appalachia High School until he entered the Navy a few months prior to Pearl Harbor.  He earned his wings at Pensacola Naval Air Station.  During the war, he flew a Kingfisher scout plane for the battleship U.S. South Dakota, and served in the Atlantic and in the Pacific.  For bravery under enemy fire during an island bombardment in the Pacific theater, he received the Naval Air Medal.

   After deciding that he might live through the war, he married Nannie Ellison.  To this marriage were born Donald, Thomas. and Vickie.

     To support his family, he completed Pharmacy School at the Medical College of Virginia.  His life-long friend Harold Mullins attended Dentistry School at MCV.  He operated the Pound Drug Store from 1953 until 1984.

     He was a local personality to say the least.  He never considered time wasted talking to his friends and neighbors.  He retired to care for Nannie, who died after a lengthy illness in 1988.

     Throughout his life he loved the camaraderie of community organizations such as Methodist Men, the Pound Lion's Club, and the Pound and Wise County Historical Societies.

     He met Louise Delp in 1993 and fell in love for a second time.  They were married on October 15, 1995.  "To have a friend, be one," read the advertisements from Blaine Sturgill's pharmacy.  More than a motto, this was his creed, his life.

 

Shelby Blaine Sturgill
Gladys Julian Stallard

    Shelby Blaine Sturgill, 79, died unexpectedly at his home in Pound, Va., Saturday, Feb. 17, 1996.  Services were held Tuesday, Feb. 20 at 1 p.m. in the Pound United Methodist Church, of which Blaine was a member.  Officiating were the Rev. Warren Wattenbager, the Rev. Sylvia Jones and Pastor Bob Kespeher.  Interment was in Powell Valley Memorial Gardens.

     Survivors are his second wife, Louise Delp Sturgill; the children  from his first marriage: Donald Blaine, Pound, VA.; Dr. Thomas Wayne, Charlottesville; and Vickie S. Swindall, Big stone Gap; several grandchildren and two stepchildren.  Two half-sisters, Maggie Sturgill Campbell and Betty Sturgill Poore, also survive.

     Blaine Sturgill was born Feb. 14, 1917 at Flat Gap near Pound, the son and only child of James Willard Sturgill and Callie Bolling Sturgill.  From a second marriage of Willard, Blaine acquired two half-sisters.

     After attending the local schools, Blaine received a B.S. degree from Milligan College, Tennessee and began teaching chemistry in the high school at Appalachia.  He enlisted in Naval Aviation on June 6, 1941.  He served through World War II.  He was awarded the Naval air Medal and Citation for Meritorious Achievement in Aerial Flight and was a Naval Lieutenant at the time of his discharge, September 1945. 

     Meanwhile, during a furlough, Blaine and Nannie Ellison were married on September 1, 1944.  After the end of the war, the Sturgills returned to the Pound and both taught school for a short time.  Then, using the GI bill, Blaine entered pharmacy school in Richmond.  Back home again, he opened the Pound Pharmacy for which he was druggist for 30 years.

     Nannie Ellison Sturgill died Jan. 20, 1989.  On Oct 15, 1995, Blaine Sturgill married Mrs. Louise Delp of Norton, VA. Together they shared many common interests, being active members of the Pound Historical Society, the wise County Historical Society, with Louise doing volunteer work at two Norton hospitals.  Blaine also belonged to the Historical Society of Southwest Virginia.

     In his own community, he was a charter member of the Pound Lions Club and a member of the Pound Masonic Lodge, No. 59.  He was generous with his buildings, time and money, especially during such events as Pound Heritage Days.

     A gentleman in every sense of the word, Blaine Sturgill will be greatly missed by his family and all whose lives he touched.

     An entertaining personality, Blaine's fund of jokes and "Yarns" were inexhaustible, all told with a straight face, but a twinkling eye. His pharmacy  motto was, "To have a friend, be one!"

Darthula (Dot) M. Carroll
By Dorothy H. Witt

     Darthula M. (Dot) Caroll, 72 years of age of Big Stone Gap, Wise County, VA died on December 28, 1998 at Norton Community Hospital in Norton, Virginia.

     Dot was of the Baptist faith and was a member of East Stone Gap Baptist Church.  She was a wife, mother, homemaker and friend, and a lifelong resident of Big Stone Gap.  She was preceded in death by one son, James Michael "Mickey" Carroll.

     Her survivors include her husband, Clinton Carroll; four daughters, Mildred Ann, Cora Sue, Donna Jean and Sharon Denise; and five sons, Robert Morris, Gary M., Scott, Melvin Gregory and Clinton Mark; grandchildren and one great-grandchild; two sisters, Easter Adams and Margaret Robinette, and several nieces and nephews.

     Dot was an active member of the Wise County Historical Society and contributed much time and effort to the making of the first volume of the Heritage of Wise County and the City of Norton.  She is  greatly missed by the Historical Society.  Dot was also a long time member of the Historical Society of Southwest Virginia.

     Dot was buried in Powell Valley Memorial Gardens, Big Stone Gap, VA.

 

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Hetty Jean Swindall Sutherland
Courtesy of the Sutherland Family

       Local Genealogist and Historian, Hetty Sutherland, of Clintwood, Dickenson County, Virginia, died June 6, 2004; at the age of 102.

     Hetty was born December 14, 1901 to Milburn Eddie and Ardelia Austin Swindall in a log cabin at Osborns Gap (now Norland), Virginia, north of Pound River and "South of the Mountain" in Dickenson County. Her early education was at a one-room log school house. She attended "Big Seven" School in Clintwood where she boarded seven miles from her home and walked home and back each weekend. After one year of "Big Seven" School, she passed the state teacher's examination and then taught grades one through seven at a one room school house; 1 year at Camp Creek & 1 at Honey Camp.

     In 1921 she went to Fort Worth, TX where she took a six month course at the National Business School. Her first business job was secretary to Lawyer John Flannagan, later Congressman for the 9th District of Virginia. In 1926 she married Elihu Jasper Sutherland, lawyer, judge, historian and genealogist and settled at their home "Sunset Hill" in Clintwood where he lived until his death in 1964 and where she lived the rest of her life.  

     Hetty was a charter member of the Southwest Virginia Historical Society (served as treasurer for over 20 years), the Dickenson County Home Demonstration Club and the Dickenson County Historical Society, which honored her by establishing the "Hetty Swindall Sutherland Archives" at the Johnny Deel County Library in Clintwood. She was a member of the Sandy Basin Historical Society, the Mountain People and Places, and the Clintwood Senior Citizens.  

     In 1978 she compiled, supplemented and published her late husband's information on the Counts family and related families in Some Descendants of John Counts of Glade Hollow (Southwest Virginia) 1722-1977 & in 2003 published a larger supplement to this book. In 1984 Hetty, with Gregory and Joan Short Vanover, published Pioneer Recollections, personal interviews with pioneer citizens of Dickenson County collected, compiled and edited by her late husband. In 1996 she published Swindall-Austin Families of Virginia and North Carolina 1622-1995, information she had collected, compiled and edited on these and other related families. 

     With her vast and intimate knowledge of family and relatives, her remarkable recall, and her tireless efforts; persons asking local authorities in Clintwood about local area or family history were routinely referred to her by the Post Office, Library, County Officers, members of the Senior Citizens Center and Historical Society members.

     Hetty is survived in death by a sister, Lora Anita "Betty" Swindall Hibbitts of Clintwood; two sons William Sutherland and his wife Thora McElrath Sutherland, St. Paul, VA; James Sutherland and his wife Marjorie Ann Pearson Sutherland, Clintwood, VA; two grand-children Sharon Sutherland of Georgia, and Susanne Sutherland and her husband Micheal Frame, and her great-grandchildren April Beth Frame and Ian Sutherland Frame of Telluride, Colorado. 

     She was preceded in death by her husband, her parents and eight siblings; William Theodore "Ted" Swindall, Flora Etta Willis, Arnold Joseph Swindall; Leonard Bruce Swindall; Arizona Powers; Robert Ervin "Bob" Swindall; Lyle Noel Vernon Swindall and Nile Austin "Jack" Swindall. Surviving sisters-in-law, Hester Moore Swindall and Ruby Cox Swindall

     Pallbearers are Freddie Mullins, Gary Mullins. Larry Mullins, Richmond Short, Russell Sutherland, and Leonard Douglas Swindall. Honorary pallbearers are her nephews and grand nephews.

     Hetty requests that there be no flowers, except one pink rose, and that donations be made to the charity of your choice.

     Clintwood Colley Funeral Home is in charge of arrangements with visitation at 7 pm Thursday, June 10 and funeral services at 11 am, Friday, June 11 at the Funeral home; followed by burial in the William Sutherland Memorial Cemetery, Fairview, on Frying Pan Creek, Dickenson County.