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A COLLECTION OF FACTS CONCERNING SOME OF THE ANCESTORS OF
LILA FENTON BURROUGHS MAC HAZLEHURST BURROUGHS, JR.
VALERIA BERRIEN BURROUGHS SWINTON McINTOSH BURROUGHS THEY
BEING THE CHILDREN OF MAC HAZLEHURST BURROUGHS AND
ELIZA FENTON McINTOSH WHO WERE MARRIED OCTOBER 10,
1912
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This volume was prepared especially for Mac Hazlehurst
Burroughs, Jr. And is one of four copies of the book
Compiled for his children
By Mac Hazlehurst Burroughs
Brunswick, Georgia 1936
PREAMBLE
This "family book" as we call it, would not be complete without this
tribute to the courage and patience of the author, Mac
Hazlehurst Burroughs.
My slight eloquence could never do justice to the years of labor and
research necessary to the gathering of the material here-in. His
aboslute loyalty to the truth and facts as he sought his data and his
refusal to include anything of which he was uncertain, made the labor
great. But it was, and is, a work of love. Mac compiled the book as
a tribute to his father,
whose knowledge of genealogy and history generally was
amazing. As Mac grew older and the children grew up,
he realized the need for such a record if the high ideals
and heroic lives of the ancestors were not to be lost
to their descendants, as happens in so many families.
As his wife, companion and “partner” during the years, nearly
thirty-five, that we shared our hopes and struggles to raise and educate
four children and properly instruct them in those things which we felt
essential to make them responsible human beings, true to everything that
is best and finest, Mac set
an example to his children, as a wonderful husband
and father that any man would be proud to claim.
Finally today, a year after his passing, as Swinton and I attempt to complete this work, as he
would want it done, yet often blundering and unsure,
I can only echo what the children often say and I
feel so deeply,--"They just don’t make them any more like Daddy."
E.M.B. (Eliza
McIntosh Burroughs)
TO MY
FATHER,
WILLIAM BERRIEN BURROUGHS
WHOSE TIRELESS EFFORTS TO
INFORM HIS CHILDREN CONCERNING
THEIR FAMILY HISTORY MET WITH SO
LITTLE RESPONSE, THIS BOOK, PREPARED
IN LARGE PART FROM HIS WRITTEN
RECORDS, IS DEDICATED WITH
CONSTANTLY INCREASING
APPRECIATION AND IN
ABIDING MEMORY.
THE COMPLIER
January 21, 1936
A LETTER
To my dear Children:
Fenton, Mac, Valeria,
and Swinton:
In this book, of which I have made four copies, one for each of you, I
have set out all the information I have been able to obtain concerning
your ancestors and the conditions under which they lived. As those
mentioned here have had so great an influence on your lives it would
seem that their names and some facts concerning them might be a matter
of interest to you, for once they lived and the traits they bore are in
your fiber now.
It is not likely,
however, that this interest will arise until the later years in your life,
and I have prepared the books for you in order that the information might
be available to you should you feel the desire for it. I do not expect
you to read the book in whole or in part unless your interest prompts you
to do so. But, I charge you to exercise every care as long as you live to
preserve this book from loss or damage, and finally pass it on to some one
who remains after you. Anything else that I might leave you will be yours
to dispose of in any manner that suits your pleasure, but your possession
of this book shall be considered in the nature of a trust. I would
suggest that you never allow it to get out of your custody. If someone
should desire to refer to it let this be done in your own home. Many
living persons are descended from some of the families shown here, but
only you four children are descended from all of them.
It is doubtful if all the
information contained herein could ever be gathered together again. On
the other hand, someone with more time and money at his disposal than I
have will be able to materially add to the present contents, and with that
thought in mind I have left much blank space in order that additional
facts might be written in.
Not having access to any
books on genealogy I was at a loss when commencing the work to know just
how the information should be arranged. The plan which I evolved seems
clear enough to me, but I realize it may be very confusing to others, so I
have set out an explanation under the heading “How to Use the Book”, which
I hope will be helpful. I regret that the book is so heavy and of such an
inconvenient size and shape. In the beginning I had no idea it would be
even one-half as thick as it is. The large sheets were used because of
the size of the old letters that are pasted in the book. It was my
original intention to include a larger number of these old letters, but
they were crowded out.
I know the efforts that I
have put forth on these books appear to you children as a waste of time,
and you have probably said among yourselves that “Daddy is going to a lot
of trouble for nothing”, but I have enjoyed the work and it may be that
eventually one or more of the books will be a source of pleasure to
someone else. In any event, the mental diversion has been a great help to
me during some of the worst years of the depression through which we are
all passing. I started the work in the Fall of 1932, and it is now
finished except for the pictures which I hope to add from time to time.
Your affectionate father,
Brunswick, Georgia
February 9, 1936 (signed)
M.H. Burroughs
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