
| Name | O’Neal SINGLETON [1] | |
| Birth | Sep 1935 | |
| Gender | Male | |
| HIST | Sumter High stuns Charleston; former Sumterite badly injured in plane crash By HUBERT OSTEEN hubert@theitem.com 75 YEARS AGO - 1936 Week of Nov. 25-Dec.1 In a Thanksgiving day thriller, the Sumter High School Gamecocks ended their 1936 season with a 12-7 victory over the heavily favored Charleston High School Bantams on the home field before a large crowd. Trailing 7-6 as the clock wound down in the fourth quarter to two minutes remaining in the game, the Gamecocks called on quarterback Gene McIntosh and halfback Buster Heckle to provide the heroics. With the ball on the 50-yard line, McIntosh took the snap and began running around left end behind good interference before suddenly stopping and heaving a perfect pass to Heckle, who had gotten behind the Charleston secondary. Heckle took the pass in full stride and took off for the end zone. As he approached the goal line two Charleston defenders hit him and appeared to knock him into the end zone but a referee ruled that Heckle's knee touched the ground on the three-yard line. On the next play, Item reporter H.D. Osteen wrote: "The Gamecocks were not to be denied, however, and on the first play McIntosh charged into the center of the line like a runaway locomotive and apparently took the ball over. But the referee again stepped in and ruled the ball was down about six inches short of the goal line. On the next play, however, there was no question about the score. McIntosh cracked the center and was over with several feet to spare." In the remaining minute and half left in the game after Sumter had kicked off to the Bantams, a desperation pass was picked off by the ubiquitous Heckle (who scored Sumter's first touchdown in the first quarter on a fourth down four-yard pass from McIntosh), and Sumter ran out the clock as spectators swarmed onto the field to cheer the home team. Osteen would write: "Sumter was the better team yesterday. ? It was their day and they had the confidence and ability to push over the winning touchdown with only a minute and a half left to play. ... The entire Sumter line played brilliant ball. Haynie Wilson was particularly outstanding, breaking through to smear end runs back of the line of scrimmage, time after time. In the backfield little Buster Heckle played the greatest game of his career, scoring Sumter's first touchdown and putting the ball in position for the second. McIntosh, after a mediocre season as a passer, found the range and uncorked several of the most spectacular passes ever seen on the Sumter field." It was also reported that after the game the entire Sumter team along with coach Hugh Stoddard was given a big turkey supper by Nick Angelakos, "one of the Gamecocks' most loyal fans, at the Carolina Coffee Shop." Next Friday the team would be entertained by the fans of Sumter with a supper at Sunset Country Club. Crosswell case final arguments heard - Final arguments were heard in a lawsuit brought by the state of South Carolina to force the return to the estate of the late John K. Crosswell its half interest in a Coca-Cola franchise sold to Mrs. S.W.C. Lumpkin of Columbia for $255,885, which the state alleged was "grossly inadequate." It was also alleged that the sale was forbidden by the terms of the Crosswell will. Speaking for the state were Sumter attorneys L.D. Jennings and Raymon Schwartz, and L.D. Lide of Marion, while Sumter attorneys George D. Levy and R.D. Epps argued for executors and trustees of the estate. Columbia attorneys R.B. Herbert and Alva M. Lumpkin represented Mrs. Lumpkin. Special Master H.C. Haynsworth of Sumter presided and heard the final arguments in the case, after which he is expected to render his opinion. Baby killed by his brother - A 14-month-old infant, O'Neal Singleton, was killed by his 10-year-old brother on Monday, Nov. 30, in the Privateer section of the county on the farm of M.M. Rivers after the child refused to take his bottle and would not stop crying, according to the brother who confessed to the slaying. He was identified as Marion Singleton by Rural Officer Muldrow Strange, who investigated and reported the confession. The report filed by Strange stated that O'Neal Singleton was left in the care of his brother while his parents were picking cotton. Marion Singleton told Strange that he became enraged when the baby refused his bottle and continued to cry, after which he found an axe in the yard and struck the baby over the head "three or four times," apparently killing him instantly. Marion then placed the body of his brother outside the door of the house and when his parents returned home from the cotton field he told them the baby had fallen out of the house and hurt himself. However, further questioning by Strange led to the confession. Singleton was lodged in the county jail after a coroner's jury ordered him held for possible grand jury action. Star Dodger pitcher visits - Van Lingle Mungo, a native of Pageland and star pitcher of the Brooklyn Dodgers, visited Sumter during the week as a hunting guest of A.L. Middleton, F.R. Baker and L.C. Wilcoxon. Mungo was accompanied by J.N. Brenizer, identified in the story as a "New York capitalist" and Louis P. Moore of Lincolnton, N.C. The men were treated to a quail shoot on land of their local hosts. According to the story, "Mungo holds the strikeout record in the National League, having whiffed 240 batters last season. He is generally conceded to have the fastest ball in the game today, being rated by many as better even than Walter Johnson in his prime." Journalism society established - A chapter of Quill and Scroll, international honorary society for high school journalists, was established at Sumter High School, it was announced by journalism teacher and faculty adviser of the school newspaper Reid H. Montgomery. Purpose of the society is to encourage and reward individual achievement in journalism and creative writing. In connection with that, a group of Sumter High senior students recently attended the Scholastic Interscholastic Press Association convention held at Washington and Lee University in Lexington, Va. Delegates from Sumter High were Hallie Chandler, Hassie Booth and Helen Riley. They were among young journalists from schools in 12 southern states who attended. Advertisements: On Thanksgiving eve, Nov.25, the Manhattan Coffee Shop at North Main and Law Range announced a Special Thanksgiving Turkey Dinner complete with cocktail and salad, fresh vegetables, dessert and drink for only 50 cents. Also stated in the ad: "For accommodation to hunters we will be open all night tonight." Thanksgiving candies were on sale at Lawson's Pharmacy at the corner of Main and Hampton that included Nestle's chocolate bars for 15 cents, one pound of Hershey's Kisses for 29 cents and a full line of Whitman's chocolates for $1.10 and $1.65 a pound. "Call 568, You Don't Have To Wait." Playing at the theaters: During the week the Rex showed "Murder with Pictures" starring Lew Ayres and Gail Patrick; "I'd Give My Life" starring Frances Drake; "Fugitive in the Sky" starring Jean Muir and Warren Hull; "Big House" starring Chester Morris, Wallace Beery and Robert Montgomery; a Saturday shoot 'em up, "Heroes of the Range" starring Ken Maynard; and coming Monday, "Wild Brian Kent," starring Ralph Bellamy and Mae Clarke. The Sumter during the week featured "Swing Time" starring Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers; "Old Hutch" starring Wallace Beery; and "Ramona," starring Loretta Young, Don Ameche, Kent Taylor and Jane Darwell. 50 YEARS AGO - 1961 Week of Sept. 25-Oct. 1 A former Sumter resident was in serious but stable condition after being injured in the crash of an Air Force C-123 Flying Boxcar during an air show before 100,000 spectators in Wilmington, N.C. The crash killed three servicemen, including the pilot, injured six members of the U.S. Army skydiving team, another Army man and five newsmen on the plane. One of the newsmen, Robert "Bobby" LeMoyne, was aboard the transport aircraft as a photographer for the Wilmington Star-News. He was recovering at James Walker Memorial Hospital in Wilmington from a fractured vertebrae, face lacerations and burns. According to an Associated Press account of the crash, the plane was taking off from the New Hanover County Airport when it went into a steep climb, stalled and crashed, catching fire on impact. LeMoyne's wife, Jackie, was with him at the hospital along with their three daughters. Mrs. LeMoyne continues to reside in Sumter, where she is purchasing agent for Tuomey Hospital. Lemoyne was a former employee of the City of Sumter. She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Jack Lunan of Sumter. Jack Lunan is a former reporter for The Item. Buxton to head Chamber - The Sumter Chamber of Commerce board of directors elected Julian T. Buxton, president of Williams Furniture Co., to succeed J. Clint Brogdon as its president. Other elected officers were B.L. Williams, vice president, and John C. Council, treasurer. Brogdon will serve as vice president. Buxton's civic leadership has included president of the Sumter Rotary Club, chairman of the Carnegie Public Library Board, chairman of the Sumter County School Board and chairman of the United Appeal. Buxton declared that Sumter was "on the threshold of a new era" and "we can continue to move forward and continue to build a city that will be a better place in which to live for everyone." Two Sumter men indicted on gun charges - Three men, including two from Sumter, indicted by a St. Matthews grand jury on charges of possessing and transporting machine guns, are expected to be tried in January 1962. The two Sumter men are Charles Leavell, 35, and William A. Brunson Jr., 34, along with Calhoun County man Frank E. Warren, 48. Brunson and Leavell operate a scrap metal parts business in Sumter, and it was there, they told authorities, that a "foreign-talking" man brought unmarked crates for storage, which they moved to Warren's property at an airstrip in Calhoun County and had kept in a trailer since March 1960. The crates were subsequently discovered by a crop duster who was seeking spare plane parts, and after he found 107 machine guns inside them and reported his discovery to law enforcement authorities, who arrested the three men. State law makes it illegal to possess a machine gun, according to the AP story. All three men denied knowing what the crates contained. The Sumter attorney for Leavell and Brunson, Shepard K. Nash, told the court he will prove at trial the crates came from people in New York connected with the deposed Cuban government of Fulgencio Batista, who was overthrown by rebels led by Fidel Castro. All three men are free on $1,500 bond each until their trial. Brown earns dental degree - Alec Eldridge Brown of Sumter received the Doctor of Dental Surgery degree from the University of Tennessee Medical Units in Memphis. The son of Mrs. James B. Brown Sr., he received a bachelor of arts degree from the University of South Carolina. He will intern in pathology for a year at John Gaston Hospital in October before beginning practice. Five from area Merit semi-finalists - Four Edmunds High students and one from Hillcrest were named semi-finalists in the annual National Merit Scholarship competition. They were Geraldine E. Curtis, Janet E. Evans, Stephen H. Reich and Herbert A. Rosefield, all from Edmunds, and Norman Howton from Hillcrest. The students earned semi-finalist status by scoring high on a qualifying examination, a test of educational development given in March to more than 15,000 high schools. Next for the local semi-finalists will be the Scholastic Aptitude Test (SAT) of the College Entrance Examination Board in December, which will determine if they qualify as Merit Scholars eligible for coveted four-year scholarships. Sports news - The Sumter High Gamecocks got back on the winning track after losing two straight close games with Greenwood and Dreher by overwhelming the Columbia High Capitals, 25-0. Highlight of the evening game played in Columbia was an 80-yard kickoff return by 150-pound halfback Robert "Snail" Bradley to open the second half. According to Sports Editor Ray Guest's account, Bradley, "a fancy stepper up from McLaurin Junior High, electrified the mildly interested fans when he took Columbia's kickoff on his 20, sped to the right eluding several tacklers, spun free from a couple more in cutting back toward the center of the field, and broke into the clear for an 80-yard touchdown gallop as several red-shirts vainly chased the speedster." Bradley scored again late in the fourth quarter when he hauled in a three-yard pass from quarterback Johnny Thorne, who tossed another TD pass late in the first half to halfback Doc Harvin. Halfback Larry Parker also scored on a 23-yard run in the third quarter. A superb defensive effort was delivered by Edwin Warner, Pat Devaney, Bubba Weatherly and Henry Harder, Guest reported. The Gamecocks, with a 2-2 record, return to Columbia next weekend to play A.C. Flora. Advertisements: Kirby's appliances at 415 W. Liberty St. was holding a special carload sale on Frigidaire electric ranges and refrigerators, with one group priced at $177 and another at $188, no down payment on qualified trade and 36 months to pay $1.88 or $1.98 per week. Free delivery service. Love Chevrolet Co. was displaying the 1962 Chevrolets in its warehouse at 114 S. Harvin St. on Friday and Saturday, Sept. 29-30, with registration of free prizes - a 6-transistor radio or the grand prize of a portable TV set or stereo phonograph. Playing at downtown theaters: The Sumter during the week showed "The Deadly Companions" starring Maureen O'Hara and Brian Keith; "Come September" starring Rock Hudson and Gina Lollobrigida, co-starring Sandra Dee, Bobby Darin and Walter Slezak. ... The Carolina showed "Goodbye Again" starring Ingrid Bergman, Yves Montand and Anthony Perkins, and "Marines, Let's Go!" starring Tom Tryon. Contact Editor Hubert Osteen at Hubert@theitem.com or (803)774-1298. Posted in Yesteryear on Sunday, July 31, 2011 [1] | |
| HIST | Sumter High stuns Charleston; former Sumterite badly injured in plane crash By HUBERT OSTEEN hubert@theitem.com 75 YEARS AGO - 1936 Week of Nov. 25-Dec.1 In a Thanksgiving day thriller, the Sumter High School Gamecocks ended their 1936 season with a 12-7 victory over the heavily favored Charleston High School Bantams on the home field before a large crowd. Trailing 7-6 as the clock wound down in the fourth quarter to two minutes remaining in the game, the Gamecocks called on quarterback Gene McIntosh and halfback Buster Heckle to provide the heroics. With the ball on the 50-yard line, McIntosh took the snap and began running around left end behind good interference before suddenly stopping and heaving a perfect pass to Heckle, who had gotten behind the Charleston secondary. Heckle took the pass in full stride and took off for the end zone. As he approached the goal line two Charleston defenders hit him and appeared to knock him into the end zone but a referee ruled that Heckle's knee touched the ground on the three-yard line. On the next play, Item reporter H.D. Osteen wrote: "The Gamecocks were not to be denied, however, and on the first play McIntosh charged into the center of the line like a runaway locomotive and apparently took the ball over. But the referee again stepped in and ruled the ball was down about six inches short of the goal line. On the next play, however, there was no question about the score. McIntosh cracked the center and was over with several feet to spare." In the remaining minute and half left in the game after Sumter had kicked off to the Bantams, a desperation pass was picked off by the ubiquitous Heckle (who scored Sumter's first touchdown in the first quarter on a fourth down four-yard pass from McIntosh), and Sumter ran out the clock as spectators swarmed onto the field to cheer the home team. Osteen would write: "Sumter was the better team yesterday. ? It was their day and they had the confidence and ability to push over the winning touchdown with only a minute and a half left to play. ... The entire Sumter line played brilliant ball. Haynie Wilson was particularly outstanding, breaking through to smear end runs back of the line of scrimmage, time after time. In the backfield little Buster Heckle played the greatest game of his career, scoring Sumter's first touchdown and putting the ball in position for the second. McIntosh, after a mediocre season as a passer, found the range and uncorked several of the most spectacular passes ever seen on the Sumter field." It was also reported that after the game the entire Sumter team along with coach Hugh Stoddard was given a big turkey supper by Nick Angelakos, "one of the Gamecocks' most loyal fans, at the Carolina Coffee Shop." Next Friday the team would be entertained by the fans of Sumter with a supper at Sunset Country Club. Crosswell case final arguments heard - Final arguments were heard in a lawsuit brought by the state of South Carolina to force the return to the estate of the late John K. Crosswell its half interest in a Coca-Cola franchise sold to Mrs. S.W.C. Lumpkin of Columbia for $255,885, which the state alleged was "grossly inadequate." It was also alleged that the sale was forbidden by the terms of the Crosswell will. Speaking for the state were Sumter attorneys L.D. Jennings and Raymon Schwartz, and L.D. Lide of Marion, while Sumter attorneys George D. Levy and R.D. Epps argued for executors and trustees of the estate. Columbia attorneys R.B. Herbert and Alva M. Lumpkin represented Mrs. Lumpkin. Special Master H.C. Haynsworth of Sumter presided and heard the final arguments in the case, after which he is expected to render his opinion. Baby killed by his brother - A 14-month-old infant, O'Neal Singleton, was killed by his 10-year-old brother on Monday, Nov. 30, in the Privateer section of the county on the farm of M.M. Rivers after the child refused to take his bottle and would not stop crying, according to the brother who confessed to the slaying. He was identified as Marion Singleton by Rural Officer Muldrow Strange, who investigated and reported the confession. The report filed by Strange stated that O'Neal Singleton was left in the care of his brother while his parents were picking cotton. Marion Singleton told Strange that he became enraged when the baby refused his bottle and continued to cry, after which he found an axe in the yard and struck the baby over the head "three or four times," apparently killing him instantly. Marion then placed the body of his brother outside the door of the house and when his parents returned home from the cotton field he told them the baby had fallen out of the house and hurt himself. However, further questioning by Strange led to the confession. Singleton was lodged in the county jail after a coroner's jury ordered him held for possible grand jury action. Star Dodger pitcher visits - Van Lingle Mungo, a native of Pageland and star pitcher of the Brooklyn Dodgers, visited Sumter during the week as a hunting guest of A.L. Middleton, F.R. Baker and L.C. Wilcoxon. Mungo was accompanied by J.N. Brenizer, identified in the story as a "New York capitalist" and Louis P. Moore of Lincolnton, N.C. The men were treated to a quail shoot on land of their local hosts. According to the story, "Mungo holds the strikeout record in the National League, having whiffed 240 batters last season. He is generally conceded to have the fastest ball in the game today, being rated by many as better even than Walter Johnson in his prime." Journalism society established - A chapter of Quill and Scroll, international honorary society for high school journalists, was established at Sumter High School, it was announced by journalism teacher and faculty adviser of the school newspaper Reid H. Montgomery. Purpose of the society is to encourage and reward individual achievement in journalism and creative writing. In connection with that, a group of Sumter High senior students recently attended the Scholastic Interscholastic Press Association convention held at Washington and Lee University in Lexington, Va. Delegates from Sumter High were Hallie Chandler, Hassie Booth and Helen Riley. They were among young journalists from schools in 12 southern states who attended. Advertisements: On Thanksgiving eve, Nov.25, the Manhattan Coffee Shop at North Main and Law Range announced a Special Thanksgiving Turkey Dinner complete with cocktail and salad, fresh vegetables, dessert and drink for only 50 cents. Also stated in the ad: "For accommodation to hunters we will be open all night tonight." Thanksgiving candies were on sale at Lawson's Pharmacy at the corner of Main and Hampton that included Nestle's chocolate bars for 15 cents, one pound of Hershey's Kisses for 29 cents and a full line of Whitman's chocolates for $1.10 and $1.65 a pound. "Call 568, You Don't Have To Wait." Playing at the theaters: During the week the Rex showed "Murder with Pictures" starring Lew Ayres and Gail Patrick; "I'd Give My Life" starring Frances Drake; "Fugitive in the Sky" starring Jean Muir and Warren Hull; "Big House" starring Chester Morris, Wallace Beery and Robert Montgomery; a Saturday shoot 'em up, "Heroes of the Range" starring Ken Maynard; and coming Monday, "Wild Brian Kent," starring Ralph Bellamy and Mae Clarke. The Sumter during the week featured "Swing Time" starring Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers; "Old Hutch" starring Wallace Beery; and "Ramona," starring Loretta Young, Don Ameche, Kent Taylor and Jane Darwell. 50 YEARS AGO - 1961 Week of Sept. 25-Oct. 1 A former Sumter resident was in serious but stable condition after being injured in the crash of an Air Force C-123 Flying Boxcar during an air show before 100,000 spectators in Wilmington, N.C. The crash killed three servicemen, including the pilot, injured six members of the U.S. Army skydiving team, another Army man and five newsmen on the plane. One of the newsmen, Robert "Bobby" LeMoyne, was aboard the transport aircraft as a photographer for the Wilmington Star-News. He was recovering at James Walker Memorial Hospital in Wilmington from a fractured vertebrae, face lacerations and burns. According to an Associated Press account of the crash, the plane was taking off from the New Hanover County Airport when it went into a steep climb, stalled and crashed, catching fire on impact. LeMoyne's wife, Jackie, was with him at the hospital along with their three daughters. Mrs. LeMoyne continues to reside in Sumter, where she is purchasing agent for Tuomey Hospital. Lemoyne was a former employee of the City of Sumter. She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Jack Lunan of Sumter. Jack Lunan is a former reporter for The Item. Buxton to head Chamber - The Sumter Chamber of Commerce board of directors elected Julian T. Buxton, president of Williams Furniture Co., to succeed J. Clint Brogdon as its president. Other elected officers were B.L. Williams, vice president, and John C. Council, treasurer. Brogdon will serve as vice president. Buxton's civic leadership has included president of the Sumter Rotary Club, chairman of the Carnegie Public Library Board, chairman of the Sumter County School Board and chairman of the United Appeal. Buxton declared that Sumter was "on the threshold of a new era" and "we can continue to move forward and continue to build a city that will be a better place in which to live for everyone." Two Sumter men indicted on gun charges - Three men, including two from Sumter, indicted by a St. Matthews grand jury on charges of possessing and transporting machine guns, are expected to be tried in January 1962. The two Sumter men are Charles Leavell, 35, and William A. Brunson Jr., 34, along with Calhoun County man Frank E. Warren, 48. Brunson and Leavell operate a scrap metal parts business in Sumter, and it was there, they told authorities, that a "foreign-talking" man brought unmarked crates for storage, which they moved to Warren's property at an airstrip in Calhoun County and had kept in a trailer since March 1960. The crates were subsequently discovered by a crop duster who was seeking spare plane parts, and after he found 107 machine guns inside them and reported his discovery to law enforcement authorities, who arrested the three men. State law makes it illegal to possess a machine gun, according to the AP story. All three men denied knowing what the crates contained. The Sumter attorney for Leavell and Brunson, Shepard K. Nash, told the court he will prove at trial the crates came from people in New York connected with the deposed Cuban government of Fulgencio Batista, who was overthrown by rebels led by Fidel Castro. All three men are free on $1,500 bond each until their trial. Brown earns dental degree - Alec Eldridge Brown of Sumter received the Doctor of Dental Surgery degree from the University of Tennessee Medical Units in Memphis. The son of Mrs. James B. Brown Sr., he received a bachelor of arts degree from the University of South Carolina. He will intern in pathology for a year at John Gaston Hospital in October before beginning practice. Five from area Merit semi-finalists - Four Edmunds High students and one from Hillcrest were named semi-finalists in the annual National Merit Scholarship competition. They were Geraldine E. Curtis, Janet E. Evans, Stephen H. Reich and Herbert A. Rosefield, all from Edmunds, and Norman Howton from Hillcrest. The students earned semi-finalist status by scoring high on a qualifying examination, a test of educational development given in March to more than 15,000 high schools. Next for the local semi-finalists will be the Scholastic Aptitude Test (SAT) of the College Entrance Examination Board in December, which will determine if they qualify as Merit Scholars eligible for coveted four-year scholarships. Sports news - The Sumter High Gamecocks got back on the winning track after losing two straight close games with Greenwood and Dreher by overwhelming the Columbia High Capitals, 25-0. Highlight of the evening game played in Columbia was an 80-yard kickoff return by 150-pound halfback Robert "Snail" Bradley to open the second half. According to Sports Editor Ray Guest's account, Bradley, "a fancy stepper up from McLaurin Junior High, electrified the mildly interested fans when he took Columbia's kickoff on his 20, sped to the right eluding several tacklers, spun free from a couple more in cutting back toward the center of the field, and broke into the clear for an 80-yard touchdown gallop as several red-shirts vainly chased the speedster." Bradley scored again late in the fourth quarter when he hauled in a three-yard pass from quarterback Johnny Thorne, who tossed another TD pass late in the first half to halfback Doc Harvin. Halfback Larry Parker also scored on a 23-yard run in the third quarter. A superb defensive effort was delivered by Edwin Warner, Pat Devaney, Bubba Weatherly and Henry Harder, Guest reported. The Gamecocks, with a 2-2 record, return to Columbia next weekend to play A.C. Flora. Advertisements: Kirby's appliances at 415 W. Liberty St. was holding a special carload sale on Frigidaire electric ranges and refrigerators, with one group priced at $177 and another at $188, no down payment on qualified trade and 36 months to pay $1.88 or $1.98 per week. Free delivery service. Love Chevrolet Co. was displaying the 1962 Chevrolets in its warehouse at 114 S. Harvin St. on Friday and Saturday, Sept. 29-30, with registration of free prizes - a 6-transistor radio or the grand prize of a portable TV set or stereo phonograph. Playing at downtown theaters: The Sumter during the week showed "The Deadly Companions" starring Maureen O'Hara and Brian Keith; "Come September" starring Rock Hudson and Gina Lollobrigida, co-starring Sandra Dee, Bobby Darin and Walter Slezak. ... The Carolina showed "Goodbye Again" starring Ingrid Bergman, Yves Montand and Anthony Perkins, and "Marines, Let's Go!" starring Tom Tryon. Contact Editor Hubert Osteen at Hubert@theitem.com or (803)774-1298. Posted in Yesteryear on Sunday, July 31, 2011 | |
| _UID | 6F083D9E2E9F476E94DF23776FE379F09C8A | |
| _UID | 6F083D9E2E9F476E94DF23776FE379F09C8A | |
| Death | 30 Nov 1936 | Privateer section of Sumter County, South Carolina [1] |
| Person ID | I269457 | Singleton and Related Families |
| Last Modified | 7 Aug 2011 | |
| Father | SINGLETON | |
| _UID | C55289D9D78242C58E0881CF359A73EDEEFA | |
| _UID | C55289D9D78242C58E0881CF359A73EDEEFA | |
| Family ID | F181361 | Group Sheet | Family Chart |
| Sources |
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