Together our core up to date providing exciting additional richings after the children when a snow caught them at school, then some rode horses, then went pony carts or double buggies now it is the custom to have a car for the teenagers and school buses all over the country side or even across the small town. I have seen a lot of changes time. Burney served World War 1 from December 1917 until about time 1919 never going overseas but guarding prisoners who had been captured Germany and shipped overseas to to get them out of the way. This was the first break close family. of family members never traveled to Nashville earlier days. I watch over the hills seeing folks fly overhead but always coming back to peaceful hills. Well, the old ones chatter on and on and I must get back to account of the people you remember and trace the line of modern Crockett and 's returned from his far away camp at Columbia, South and even as far as Jacksonville, to Camp Johnston. We study the pictures Burney sent back of the marvelous cities, palm trees, alligators and ocean, dreaming of someday seeing these things and rejoiced when we could once more gather daily within these walls with our familiar local affairs. Burney married Knox and they lived Lynnville. They had no children, but reared a cousin whose name was and she became their daughter. She and her husband J.T. Lowery lived with them and cared for them their old age with their and his giving their grandparents joy. Teaching the boys to fish became their hobbies as well as cooking all good things for them. the next child had beautiful auburn hair, she had two grandchildren that followed her with this, Harrell and However as they got older their hair color changed. She became elementary school teacher and married Turner Orr who taught for a short time and became a farmer. They bought her father's farm after their death for 2.00 and moved to homestead to on the tradition. Their first child Campbell was two months old when they moved from his birth-place, Little Dry Creek. He grew up on the farm and spent almost three years the U.S. Army stationed Camp then Germany. was the next child of the Crockett and and he married Eugenia Campbell and they lived Pulaski where their two daughters grew up. The first one, Burns, graduate at Rhodes College, then known as Southwestern, a Presbyterian University at Memphis. She was named as a Phi Beta Kappa member and became a school teacher just after she married of Pulaski 1956. He was a Baptist minister. They have three boys who were raised mostly and still live there.- and married and they have a girl Lisa and a and do work such as city planning as does their father helping to make a better life for the elderly or disadvantaged and restoration of old sections of the city. is the U.S. Army Band and serves as organizer of music and sometimes directing the band. taught for the University of and restores old historic houses. The younger girl, obtained her Doctor of Education degree to become of a branch of Home Economics Kansas State University at Manhattan, Kansas. She married a native of that city, Virgil, after going there to teach. They have two daughters, who came to Knoxville, Tennessee for her college education where her mother graduated. She majored Journalism and now lives Kansas City where she works. Her sister has Associate Veterinary degree and specializes the health of horses and trains and rides for her own recreation she also lives Manhattan, Kansas. The next Crockett child was Almanza, who died when about three years of age then the youngest child, Crockett was born 1903. She grew up loving school and was very sad when, due to the poor health of her mother and father, she could not go away from home to school until there was a High School built Campbellsville four years later. returned