Sarah Ann Sallie Buntley

Brief Life History of Sarah Ann Sallie

When Sarah Ann Sallie Buntley was born on 21 December 1858, in Mimosa, Lincoln, Tennessee, United States, her father, Jacob B Buntley, was 28 and her mother, Elizabeth Forrester, was 28. She married Doak H. Groce on 22 June 1877, in Lincoln, Tennessee, United States. They were the parents of at least 1 daughter. She lived in Civil District 6, Lincoln, Tennessee, United States in 1860 and Civil District 5, Lincoln, Tennessee, United States in 1880. She died on 20 December 1932, in Fayetteville, Lincoln, Tennessee, United States, at the age of 73, and was buried in Buntley Cemetery, Mimosa, Lincoln, Tennessee, United States.

Photos and Memories (2)

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Family Time Line

Robert Haggard Isom
1858–1940
Sarah Ann Sallie Buntley
1858–1932
Marriage: 25 November 1883
Delia Groce
1879–
Josephine Isom
1882–
Robert Isom
1884–
Annie Matilda Isom
1886–1964
Minnie Lou Isom
1893–1989
Bobbie Lee Isom
1895–1968
James Edward Isom
1898–1970
Athol Franklin Isom
1900–1968

Sources (41)

  • Sallie Buntly in household of J B Buntly, "United States Census, 1870"
  • Sarah Isom, "Virginia, Bureau of Vital Statistics, County Marriage Registers, 1853-1935"
  • Sarah Ann Isom, "Tennessee Deaths, 1914-1966"

World Events (8)

1862 · Battle of Shiloh

The battle of Shiloh took place on April 6, 1862 and April 7, 1862. Confederate soldiers camp through the woods next to where the Union soldiers were camped at Pittsburg Landing on the Tennessee River. With 23,000 casualties this was the bloodiest battle of the Civil War up to this point.

1863

Abraham Lincoln issues Emancipation Proclamation, declaring slaves in Confederate states to be free.

1878 · Yellow Fever Epidemic

When a man that had escaped a quarantined steamboat with yellow fever went to a restaurant he infected Kate Bionda the owner. This was the start of the yellow fever epidemic in Memphis, Tennessee. By the end of the epidemic 5,200 of the residence would die.

Name Meaning

English: habitational name from any of various places, the chief of which are in Derbyshire, Essex, Hampshire, Shropshire, Staffordshire, Suffolk, Warwickshire, Worcestershire, and East and South Yorkshire. The placename is from Old English beonet ‘bent grass’ + lēah ‘woodland clearing’.

In some cases also an Americanized form of South German Bentele or of its Swiss German or South German cognates Bandle and Bandli.

Dictionary of American Family Names © Patrick Hanks 2003, 2006.

Possible Related Names

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