Branch No. 5
1 BEN ? (1) LATTA,
Nearly all the following was given me by Samuel Rankin 
Latta of Dyersburg, Tenn. It was taken from an old family Bible (1903) in his 
possession and has been a family possession for several generations. It was 
presented in London, England in 1602 of the Geneva translation and known as the 
"Breeches" Bible. John Gilchrist Latta says: "At the top of the page the name of 
Thomas Sandie is written. He was a relative of the family and from whom the book 
was probably handed down. The paper is the book is decaying and one of the dates 
is not perfect. I cannot be sure of my great grandfather's name. The initial 
letter is "E, but I cannot determine the remainder of the name." It may be 
Ephraim or it may be Eben as he named one of his sons Eben. Children:
EBEN (2) b. February 19, 1744.
MARY (2) b. September 16, 1747.
JANE (2) b. February 20, 1749.
JOHN (2).
MARGARET (2) b. December 25, 1751.
2 JOHN (2) LATTA,
____ (1). Born in Ireland October 22, 1754; d. in 
Westmoreland Co., Pa. prior to November 23, 1802 as letters of administration 
were then granted to his widow, Mary Latta, James Parr and John Woods. He was 
accidently killed while erecting a mill on Lyalhanna Creek, Westmoreland Co., 
Pa. Married Mary Rankin. She was born about 1753 and died January 25, 1826, aged 
73 years at the home of her son, John (2d) in New Alexandria, Pa. He also lived 
in Salem Tp. Pa. Millwright. His descendants do not know anything of the history 
of him or his wife or of his other children except John (2d) and that one of the 
girls married a man named Rankin perhaps in Indiana or in Westmoreland Co., Pa. 
She left one daughter, who died at an early age at New Alexandria, Pa. John came 
to America sometime between March 21, 1789, the birth of his son, John (1st) 
1789 in Ireland and the birth of his son Ephraim (2d) in America in 1792. He 
first settled in Lancaster Co., Pa. and afterwards in Westmoreland Co., Pa. 
where he died. He assigned land warrant dated April 3, 1769(?) to land in 
Indiana Co. then Westmoreland Co., Pa. -- Gov. John Latta, branch No. 10. 
Children:
GINNEY MARY (3) b. in Ireland November 15, 1783.
PEGGY (3) b. in Ireland August 15, 1795. Came to 
America. John Hart, guardian.
EPHRAIM (1st) (3) b. in Ireland May 21, 1787. Died 
young.
JOHN (3) (1st) b. in Ireland March 21, 1789. Died 
young.
EPHRAIM (3) 2d. b. in America July 3, 1792.
POLLY (3) b. in America November 12, 1793.
3 JOHN (3) 2d.
JENNY (3) b. in Lancaster Co., Pa. May 27, 1796. 
Almost twin with John 2d. Guardians of John and Jenny were Col. Alexander Craig, 
John Hart and Nicholas Day appointed at the March term of the Orphans' Court in 
Westmoreland Co, Pa.
3 JOHN (3) 2d LATTA,
John (2) ____ (1). Born in Lancaster Co, Pa. April 15, 
1796; d. at Dyersburg, Tenn 187_. Married Lucinda E. Gilchrist at Harrisburg, 
Pa. She was born in Dauphin Co, Pa. March 31, 1793, daughter of John and Ellen 
Berryhill Gilchrist. Her father was a lieutenant in the Revolutionary War. His 
widow resided with John 2d and received a government pension up to her death in 
187_. In 1837 John 2d went to Blairsville, Indiana Co., Pa. where his children 
grew up. He learned the saddle and harness makers trade at Greensburg, Pa. and 
worked at his trade at New Alexandria, Pa. In 1855 the rest of the family 
removed from Blairsville, Pa. to Dyersburg, Tenn. Gov. John Latta, branch No. 
10, said that John 2d was related to him and to Ephraim Latta, branch No. 10. 
These two families resided at our place and visited each other. Children:
4 JOHN GILCHRIST (4).
WILLIAM BERRYHILL (4) b. February 1, 1826. Saddle and 
harness maker. Lived with
brother, Samuel R. at Dyersburg, Tenn. in 1880.
5 SAMUEL RANKIN (4)*.
6 JAMES MITCHELL (4).
FRANCIS HENRY (4) b. October 28, 1831; died in 
infancy.
FRANCIS HENRY (4) 2d, b. December 5, 1833; died in 
infancy.
JAMES m. (4).
4 JOHN GILCHRIST (4) LATTA,
John (3) John (2) ____ (1). Born in New Alexandria, 
Pa. May 1, 1824; d. at Atlanta, Ga. May 31, 1901. Married twice: (1) Mary R. 
Silsby August 14, 1860 at Newton Corner, Mass. She died there October 18, 1870. 
She was born at Acworth, N.H. December 4, 1830. (2) Ellen F. Dascomb in 
Massachusetts March 26, 1872. She was born at Antrim, N.H. March 8, 1838. He was 
a saddle maker. In 1862 moved from Dyersburg, Tenn. to Newton Corner, Mass. 
where he was postmaster for a number of years. Children by first wife:
LILLIAN (5) b. July 28, 1861; m. Henry H. Hayes of 
Chicago, Ills. March 9, 1892. In 1904 lived at Hinsdale, Ills.; in 1912 at 
Worcestor, Mass. She said that in 1904 Spiaso Latta, an Italian, was murdered in 
Chicago. This shows the name in Italy. Children: Pauline b. March 24, 1893. 
Marion b. October 6, 1894. Henry H. b. February 24, 1897. Kathryn b. July 10, 
1898. John Otis b. September 30, 1901.
FLORENCE (5) b. April 30, 1864; m. George A. Combs 
October 1891. Children: Zella Silsby b. August 28, 1893. Leota Florence b. 
December 14, 1894. Joseph Charles b. November 3, 1895. Abbie Lucile b. June 7, 
1901. Dorothy Dale b. April 24, 1903. In 1912 living at Riverside, Calif.
MARY CORNELIA (5) b. April 7, 1866; m. Clarence A. 
Brodeur June 24, 1887 of Westfield, Mass. Children: Arthur Gilchrist b. 
September 18, 1888. Mary Silsby b. March 19, 1892. Marion Marsh b. twin with 
Mary. Harold Hills b. June 25, 1894. Paul Evans b. May 3, 1901. Clarence Gordon 
b. October 18, 1905.
JENNIE LOUISE (5) b. April 6, 1869; d. February 2, 
1876.
7 SAMUEL WELLMAN (5).
5 SAMUEL RANKIN (4) LATTA,
John (3) John (2) E____ (1). Born in New Alexandria, 
Pa. December 2, 1827; d. at Dyersburg, Tenn. July 1911; m. Mary G. Guthrie 
December 9, 1852. She was born in East Tenn. of Scotch parents. He took a three 
year's course at Blairsville, Pa. Academy and taught for 18 ears. Graduated at 
Jefferson College, Cannonsburg, Pa. in 1850. Taught in Dyersburg, Tenn. for 
three years. Studied law. Admitted to the Bar in 1854 and practiced until his 
death. His son Samuel G. was his partner. Was a Captain in the Confederate Army 
during the first year of the war. Children:
8 JOHN GUTHRIE (5).
KATE (5) m. T.C. Gordon. Had children. Lived at 
Dyersburg, Tenn.
SARAH KNOTT (5) m. Rev. W.M. Anderson, Presbyterian. 
Lived at Rock Hill, S.C. One child.
NELLIE (5) married.
FRANK WALLACE (5) b. about 1866; m. Pearl Doyle at 
Dyersburg, Tenn. In 1892. In 1929 was Mayor of Dyersburg. Lived there in 1932.
6 JAMES MITCHELL (4) LATTA,
John (3) John (2) E____ (1). Born October 16, 1829, 
probably at New Alexandria, Pa. as his father did not leave there until 1837. 
Died at Dyersburg, Tenn. in 1857. Married ____. He was a saddle and harness 
maker. Children:
SAMUEL JAMES (5) in 1890 lived at Memphis, Tenn.
LUCY (5) m. John G. Seat. Lived at Trenton, Tenn. in 
1890.
7 SAMUEL WELLMAN (5) LATTA,
John G. (4) John (3) John (2) E____ (1). Born March 
21, 1876; m. Mary William of Putnam, Ills. August 29, 1907. In 1912 lived at 
LaGrange, Ills.
ROGER DASCOMB (6) b. August 7, 1909.
JOHN DONALD (6) b. January 27, 1910.
PHILLIP RANKIN (6) b. January 14, 1911.
8 JOHN GUTHRIE (5) LATTA,
Samuel R. (4) John (3) John (2) E____ (1). Married Lee 
Poland at Dallas, Texas. In 1904 was in a bank at Dyersburg, Tenn. Children:
NELLIE (6).
LESLIE (6).
FLORENCE (6).
9 SAMUEL GRANGER (5) LATTA,
Samuel R. (4) John (3) John (2) E____ (1). Born about 
1872; m. ____. Law partner with his father. In 1932 lived at 1356 Troy Ave., 
Dyersburg, Tenn. Children:
FRANKLIN W. (6) in 1932 lived at Dyersburg, Tenn.
GORDON (6).
CATHERINE (6).
____ (6) m. Homer Richards.
EVELEEN (6) b. at Dyersburg, Tenn.; d. January 26, 
1933; m. Mr. Fowlkes. Lived in Tipton, Tenn. She was buried in Fairview 
Cemetery, Dyersburg, Tenn.
 
 
The following autobiographical account was submitted 
by Dorothy B. Ruhmann, great-granddaughter of Samuel Rankin Latta. It was 
originally written in 1886. Samuel R. Latta was born on the 2nd day of December 
1827 in the village of New Alexandria, Westmoreland County, Pennsylvania. His 
father, John Latta, was born in Lancaster County, Pa., on the 15th day of April 
1796, and was of Irish parentage--his father and the grandfather of the subject 
of this sketch,- John Latta Sr., having migrated to this country from Ireland 
late in the eighteenth century. John Latta Sr., moved at an early day to 
Westmoreland County, in western Pennsylvania. He was a mill-wright, and was 
killed in the erection of a mill on Loyalhanna Creek, early in the century. John 
Latta Jr., learned the saddler's trade in Greensburg, the County seat of 
Westmoreland County, and while carrying on his trade in New Alexandria, in the 
same county, he intermarried with Lucinda Ellen Gilchrist, on the 22nd day of 
April 1823 Lucinda, his wife was born in Dauphin County, Pa., on the 31st day of 
March 1793. Her parents were John Gilchrist, who served as a lieutenant in the 
Revolutionary War ---, and Ellen Berryhill, both of whom were of Irish descent. 
John Latta Jr.'s mother was named Mary Rankin and she died at the home of her 
son in New Alexandria, on the 20th., of January 1826, age 73 years. He had but 
one sister and no brothers and the sister died while quite young. To John Latta 
Jr. and his wife, Lucinda, were born, in the village of New Alexandria, 
Westmoreland County, Pa., children as follows, to wit:
- John Gilchrist Latta, born May 1st. 1824
William Berryhill Latta, born February 1st. 1826
Samuel Rankin Latta, born December 2nd. 1827
James Mitchell Latta, born October 16th. 1829
Francis Henry Latta, born October 28th. 1831 and
Francis Henry Latta, 2nd., born December 5th. 1835 
Both the latter died in infancy, the first December 
11th. 1832 and the second on the 24th. of February 1837. The former lies buried 
in the graveyard of Congruity Church, five miles west of the village, and the 
latter in the graveyard of the Presbyterian Church in New Alexandria. After 
carrying on his business in New Alexandria until the Spring of 1837, making but 
a very scanty living, though practicing the most rigid economy, John Latta and 
his wife, with their remaining children, removed to Blairsville, a town some ten 
miles away, in Indiana County. It was situated on Conemaugh River, along which 
was the Western division of the Pennsylvanian canal. Here they continued to 
reside, John Latta carrying on his trade. By practicing the most rigid economy, 
they bought and paid for a comfortable home, where they raised their children 
respectably. They were strict Presbyterians, of the 
strictest of their sort of that day. The children were all required to attend 
Sabbath-school, church and prayer-meeting, as a matter of course, and there was 
no excuse sufficient except sickness. On the Sabbath there was no sort of 
recreation allowed. The children were not permitted to go on the streets except 
on the way to church or to Sabbath School, and the writer remembers that a 
funeral happening on Sunday was a sort of God-send to the children of the 
family, because they were to attend funerals on Sundays, and thus might get out 
from home. No books or newspapers were allowed to be read on that day, except 
the most religious ones; and it was regarded as an awful sin to whistle, even a 
hymn-tune on that day. It was obligatory on all Presbyterian children to commit 
to memory the Shorter catechism, and on every Sunday evening, the children were 
called together, and made to recite it to the father. In those days, the 
catechism was one of the tasks required of Presbyterian children at the secular 
schools, and the writer well remembers reciting his daily task of catechism, to 
the then teacher of the secular school in New Alexandria, John W. Geary, who was 
afterwards a Colonel in the Mexican War, a Major General of volunteers in the 
war between the North and South, and then Governor of Pennsylvania. At the time 
Geary was teaching in New Alexandria he could not have been more than twenty 
years of age. The rigid economy practiced in the days when John Latta and his 
wife were thus bringing up their family of boys, is but little known or 
practiced by their descendants in the good year 1886, in which this is written. 
I have no idea that the whole yearly expense of my father's family in those 
days, was over $400.00 and yet, children were as well cared for then as now, 
though their clothes and schooling did not cost as much; but that was because 
they were not given as much, and taught to make them last longer. Provisions and 
clothing at the present day, are as cheap as they were in the years from 1840 to 
1850, and perhaps more so. Of the four surviving sons, the eldest John G., and 
the youngest, James M. both had good English educations, and both learned their 
father's trade, working with their father until after they were grown. The third 
son, Samuel, was also put into the shop to learn the same trade, but about the 
year 1842, a classical school was opened in Blairsville, and an old gentleman, 
Capt. Wm. Smith, persuaded Samuel that he ought to persuade his father to let 
him go to the Academy. When the notion once got into the boys head, he gave his 
father no peace. The father reasoned with him; that he was wholly unable, on 
account of his limited means, to give him a classical education. The boy's reply 
to this was, that he only wanted his father to pay his way until he was 
qualified to teach, and then he would work his own way. The father then wanted 
to know what the boy wanted to make of himself. The boy's reply was that he 
wanted to be a missionary. The boy may have thought so then, but has suspected 
since that there was some slyness in it. However, he gained his point, and for 
three years he went regularly to the Blairsville Academy, then under the charge 
of Mr. Matthew McCall. At the end of the summer of 1845, the father told the 
boy, that he had done for him all that he could, and that the time had come when 
he must bear the expense of his own schooling. In those days in Pennsylvania, 
the Free-schools were kept open in the county about five months each winter, and 
in the fall of each year the school directors of each township would advertise 
that a given day at a certain place in the Township they would meet to examine 
such parties as wished employment in the township as teachers through the 
winter. So in August of the year 1845, Samuel presented himself, before he was 
eighteen to undergo the dreaded examination. Among a crowd of a dozen or more, 
who were there for the same purpose, he was by far the youngest. The examiner 
was the Rev. Dr. McFerin, a venerable Presbyterian divine, who was pastor of the 
Congruity Church in the neighborhood for fifty years. The examination passed off 
successfully and Samuel was employed to teach that winter in District 
No.----(Shields' schoolhouse) for a five months term at $17.00, out of which 
wages he paid board at $1.00 per week. But at the end of the term he had $50.00 
in clean cash It was now the Spring of 1846. Samuel was flush with money all his 
own, and it struck him that it would be better to try to increase it by trading 
than to spend it just then in going to school. So, in answer to an advertisement 
in a Philadelphia newspaper, he undertook to canvass a district composed of 
Franklin County, East of the Mountains, for a book-publisher, by whom he was 
guaranteed to clear at least $25.00 per month in selling the publisher's 
attractive books. So Samuel invested $25.00 of his winter's wage in books, which 
he found when they arrive in Blairsville, were nothing more than very cheap 
illustrated novels. But he was in for it. His money was in those books and it 
had to be gotten back somehow. The first question to be decided was, how was he 
to get to his territory east of the mountains? There were no railroads in those 
days. So he bargained with the owner and conductor of a canal boat, a section 
boat, for a cheap fare on his boat to Harrisburg,-- cheap in consideration of 
Samuel's rendering what aid he could in running the boat. So on this 
section-boat he shipped himself and his box of books, bound to Harrisburg by the 
canal, from whence he was to go to Chambersburg, the county seat of Franklin 
county and the center of his territory. The memory of that trip over the 
mountains on that section-boat is a pleasant one. The boat was loaded with 
shelled oats in bulk, bound for Philadelphia, and the oats was his bed for ten 
nights it took to reach Harrisburg. How did the boat cross the mountains? 
Between the Western and Eastern divisions of the canal, on either side of the 
mountains, was a railroad. The mountains were crossed by a system of inclined 
planes. The boat was built in sections. Upon its arrival at Johnstown, at the 
Western foot of the mountains, railroad trucks were run down into the water, the 
boat's sections were taken apart, and each section was loaded upon a truck. Then 
a locomotive, or sometimes horses driven tandem, hauled the train on a level 
several miles, until they reached one of the inclined planes. These inclines 
were from a mile to a half mile in length, and rose up the mountain at an angle 
of perhaps 30 or 40 degrees. The train was drawn up these inclines by stationary 
engines at the top, the train being attached to an endless wire rope. By this 
system of levels and inclines, the boats were taken over the mountain and 
deposited again in the canal at Hollidaysburgh on the Eastern side of the 
mountain Down the beautiful Juniata amid the mountains, down the lovely 
Susquehanna with its ever changing scenery, at the rate of about four miles an 
hour, passed the young traveller, enjoying at night his bed on the shelled oats, 
as well as if it had been a bed [of] down Two things at Harrisburg made a 
lasting impression upon his memory. One that war had actually begun between the 
United States and Mexico; the other was seeing the first Telegraph wire he had 
ever seen, and which was then a new thing in the world. On Saturday evening he 
arrived at Chambersburg, the centre of his work, and on Monday morning he 
entered on his new occupation. As before said, the books were cheap novels, 
costing six and thirteen cents each. The former were sold at twelve and a half 
and the later at twenty-five cents each. The travelling had to be done on foot 
from house to house and from town to town. The books in a carpet sack made a 
heavy load, for enough had to be thus carried to make a weeks sales. At the end 
of the first week, the young merchant returned to Chambersburg, footsore and 
wearied. A net calculation showed , that by very hard work, sometimes walking 
twenty miles a day, he had made clear of expenses, about seventy-five cents per 
day. Living cost but little, as he stayed in country houses, where, if they made 
a charge at all, it was very small. Again on Monday he started on his weary 
tramp. The books must be sold, but another week and weary traping over hot and 
dusty roads with but poor success in the way of sales, brought great disgust. 
One weary day he travelled long into the night, before he found a house that 
would take him in, and he began to think of trying something else. He could do 
nothing but teach and inquiry disclosed the fact that in the village of Loudon, 
situated just at the foot of the Blue-Ridge, they wanted a teacher and thither 
he wandered his way. His youth was against him he was only eighteen. But fortune 
favored and he got a situation for a term of five months at $18.00 a month. He 
put the balance of his books for sale on commission in a bookstore in the town 
of Mercersburg, taught the five months out, and then in the fall, staged it home 
over the mountains. The following winter, he taught a country free-school, at 
McClellands school-house, in the Conemaugh Township, Westmoreland County, Pa., 
at $19.00 per month. The following summer he attended the Blairsville Academy 
for five months and the following winter taught another five months session at 
McClellands. The following summer he taught a five month's session in the public 
school at Blairsville, as assistant teacher, at $20.00 per month, and the next 
winter at Youngstown, a village in Westmoreland County at $25.00 per month. 
Having now made enough money to try college, in the spring of 1848, he entered 
Washington College at Washington, Penn., entering the Junior class 
half-advanced. At the end of the first five month's session, the whole of the 
junior class rebelled against the faculty, on account of their suspension of one 
of their number, and refusing to attend recitations, the whole class was 
suspended. Part of the class bought their peace by yielding to the demands of 
the faculty. These were such students as were subject to and dependent upon 
parental authority. About half of the class, among them the writer, refused to 
submit and left school, and were suspended. In a short time they were all 
admitted into Jefferson College at Cannonsburg, Pa., and graduated in the summer 
of 1850. In the fall of that year, he found employment as a chain carrier with a 
party of engineers and engaged in surveying the route of the Pennsylvania 
Central Railroad, on the eastern slope of the Allegheny mountains, from Altoona 
to the top of the mountains. The new flourishing town of Altoona, at that time, 
consisted of one whiskey shop. While thus engaged with the surveyors, the writer 
earned $1.00 per day and accumulated about $40.00., and then determined to go 
south, where the wages of teaching were better. So about the middle of October 
he left home, travelling down the Ohio from Pittsburg by steamboat. He took 
passage to Memphis, expecting to teach in West Tennessee or North Mississippi 
but on his way down the Ohio, hearing of several situations in West Tennessee, 
where he might find employment, he stopped at Hickman, Kentucky, and carrying a 
carpet bag weighing at least forty pounds, he walked from there to Dyersburg, a 
distance of fifty miles. He obtained employment as a teacher in the public 
academy and continued to teach for three years. His wages as a teacher during 
those years varied somewhat, averaging perhaps about $60.00 per month. In 1852, 
he purchased the piece of land about half a mile north of the town of Dyersburg, 
where he now lives, (1886), built a little house upon it, and in December of 
that year, he married Miss Mary Granger Guthrie, at Eaton in Gibson County, 
Tennessee, and brought his young wife to that little house. The house has grown 
as their family increased, but they have never changed their residence, nor do 
they expect to do so, until they are called home. While teaching, he had been 
studying Law, and in the summer of 1854 he was admitted to the bar at Dyersburg, 
and at once entered on the practice of his profession in partnership with his 
preceptor, T. E. Richardson, Esq. He continued the practice of his profession 
actively and successfully until the breaking out of the Civil War. His 
sympathies were warmly with the south, and in May 1861, he assisted in raising a 
company of twelve months volunteers, of which he was elected captain, and joined 
the Tennessee troops, then under the command of General Gedion J. Pillow at 
Randolph on the Mississippi River, where he and his company were mustered into 
service. At the Battle of Belmont, in Missouri, his company which was in the 
13th. Tennessee regiment, was engaged and lost three killed and twelve wounded, 
among the latter, himself slightly. Again at the Battle of Shiloh or Pittsburg 
Landing, his company were engaged, and suffered severely in killed and wounded. 
After this battle, his time having expired, he was discharged and his health and 
the situation of his family forbade his again entering the service, and he 
remained at home during the remainder of the war, though his sympathies were as 
much as ever with the South. After the war he resumed the practice of his 
profession actively and profitably, but in the flush times succeeding the war he 
indulged in buying real estate, and in the crash of 1873 and succeeding years, 
he suffered severely, though never to insolvency. Mary Granger Guthrie, his 
wife, was born on the 8th. day of August 1833, at Bright Hope Furnace in Green 
County, East Tennessee. Her father was John Guthrie, one of the proprietors of 
that furnace. He was a Scotchman by birth and education, but the time and place 
of his birth are unknown to her. Her mother's name was Minerva Wear, a daughter 
of Samuel Wear. John Guthrie, before engaging in the iron business, had owned or 
managed a paper mill in Knoxville, Tennessee. About the year 1840, he disposed 
of his iron interest and moved with his young family to Missouri, and settled 
with his slaves in Polk county, but stayed there but a short time, perhaps a 
year, and moved back, and settled at Columbia, in Maury county, in Middle 
Tennessee, where he bought a mill on Duck River, but before he had time to make 
it a success, he lost his wife, and in a few months he followed her, dying in 
1844. He and his only son, an oldest child, Franklin Wear Guthrie, both died the 
same day, the latter than being about fourteen years of age. He left surviving 
him five daughters named as follows: First Catherine Margaret, who intermarried 
with Dr. Thomas W. Kelton, of Gibson County, Tennessee, in the year 1847. 
Second, Mary Granger; Third Helen Marr, who intermarried with Dr. John Hocker in 
Mt. Vernon, Lawrence County, Mo. They both died soon after their marriage 
without issue. Fourth, Victoria, a bright and intelligent girl who at the age of 
nineteen, in the year 1863 became insane, and is yet living, an inmate of the 
asylum at Fulton, Mo. Fifth, Martha who died when about twelve years of age, in 
Arkansas, where she was living with Dr. Kelton. Mrs. Kelton is still living in 
Mt. Vernon, Mo. She has living the following children: Thomas, living unmarried 
at Mt. Vernon, Mo. Dora, intermarried with Manse Gaither, and now also living in 
Mt. Vernon, Mo. Lucy, intermarried with Frank Smeltzer, and now living in Van 
Buren, Ark. Richard unmarried, and now at Mt. Vernon, Mo. Martha intermarried 
with George A. McCanse, and also living at Mt. Vernon, Harry, Granger and 
Thaddeus, lads all living with their mother. Mary Granger,- wife of S. R. Latta 
(and so named after the wife of Gov. Willie Blount, of Tennessee) was educated 
at the Columbia Female Institute, graduating therefrom in the year 1849. After 
Dr. Kelton intermarried with the oldest daughter, Catherine, he was appointed 
guardian of all the younger children, and removed them all from Columbia, to his 
home in Gibson County, Tenn., and it was there that she was married as stated 
above. To Samuel R. Latta and his wife, Mary Granger Guthrie, there have been 
born children as follow: First: John Guthrie Latta, born at Dyersburg, Tenn. 
June 21st 1857 Second: Kate Latta, born Oct. 17th, 1859 Third: Sarah Knott Latta, 
born February 12th, 1862 Fourth: Mary Elenora Latta, born March 9th, 1864 Fifth: 
Franklin Wallace Latta, born July 4th, 1866 Sixth: Samuel Granger Latta, born 
August 5th, 1871 John Guthrie Latta, the oldest son, was married to Miss Lee 
Poland in Marshall, Texas, on the sixth day of December, 1882, and to them have 
been born two children, -Leslie, a daughter, born at Marshall, Texas, Nov. 1883, 
and Nell, a daughter, born at Dyersburg, Tenn., April 24, 1886. Kate the second 
child of Samuel R. and Mary G. Latta, intermarried with Thomas C. Gordon, at 
Dyersburg, Tenn., on the 25th. of June 1879 and to them have been born thus far 
(1886) three children, thus: Mary, born April 26th. 1880 Winfield Osceola, born 
January the 21st. 1882 Sadie Louise, born July 27th 1884 Returning to the Latta 
family: John G. the eldest son, as before stated, learned his trade with his 
father in Blairsville, Pa. but in the year 1852, his health having somewhat 
failed, he came to Tennessee, and taught school in Dyer county for over a year. 
In the summer of 1854, Samuel R. and his wife and John G. Latta visited their 
parents in Pennsylvania, and the next year the old people, with their son 
William B. and their son James M. and his wife and child all removed to 
Dyersburg, Tenn., and James G and James M. Entered into partnership, in carrying 
on their business of saddlery. A short time after his parents came to Tennessee, 
Samuel R. enlarged his house and took his father, mother and brother Wm. B into 
his family, and with him they lived until their deaths many years afterwards. 
John Latta, the father died December 1872 Lucinda E. the mother died October 
28th. 1874 William B. died January 23rd. 1877 Of the latter, it can only be 
said, that he was of weak mind. He remained, mentally always a child, and was 
never capable of taking care of himself. He lived with his parents, and with his 
brother Samuel, up to the time of his death John G. Latta, the oldest of the 
brothers, married in the year 1861 or 1862, Miss Mary Silsby. She was a New 
England woman and was visiting her brother Mr. Howard Silsby, when he made her 
acquaintance. In 1862, he took his wife and first born child to Newton, Mass., 
the residence of her parents, and shortly afterwards was appointed post master 
of that city, and has so remained until now, 1886. By his wife, Mary Silsby, 
there was born to him the following children: First: Lilian, born in the year 
1861 Second: Florence, born about the year 1863 Third: Mary, born about the year 
1865 Fourth: Jennie, born about the year 1867. The latter died quite young. The 
others are all alive. His wife, Mary Silsby, died about the year 1869, and a 
year or so afterwards, he married Miss Nellie----, by whom he had two sons, one 
of whom died in infancy and the other named Samuel, still survives. James 
Mitchell Latta, while carrying on his business successfully died at Dyersburg on 
the 27th of September 1857, and was buried at Hurricane Hill Church, about five 
miles north of Dyersburg, Tenn. He left two children and his widow surviving 
him. Lucy, the oldest of his children, was born at Blairsville, PA., about the 
year 1853, and intermarried with John G. Seat, at Dyersburg, Tenn. about the 
year 1874 or 5. They still reside in Dyersburg and have three children: Glenn, a 
boy about thirteen, Birdie, a girl aged about eleven and a third child 
(daughter) born to them a few days ago. Samuel R. Latta, and his wife, Mary have 
now (December 1886) been married, nearly thirty four years. They were married 
December 1852. They are yet occupying the same house in which in their young 
days, they began housekeeping, though it has been enlarged as their family 
increased. It is situated about half a mile north of the village of Dyersburg, 
and the same forest trees are still around it, amid which it was originally 
built. Although West Tennessee has always been regarded as an unhealthy country 
the family has always had good health. Death, has never entered their home. They 
have always had enough to eat and wear and in all things have always had enough 
to eat and wear and in all things have always had abundant cause for 
thankfulness to a kind Creator for unnumbered blessings. (After the mention of 
Lucy, as the daughter of James M. Latta, above, should have been mentioned his 
son, Samuel James Latta, born in Dyersburg, Tenn., in the year 1857. In the year 
1885 he married Miss Betty Cowan of Memphis, Tenn., and is now residing in that 
city. I have written the above brief history, that my children and their 
descendants may know more of their mother and father, and their kinsmen, than I 
know of mine. The question might well be asked--"cui bono". Well, it is hard to 
say. It may satisfy some curiosity, at least. There is something in each one of 
us that prompts the quere, "who was my father? Who was my grand-father or my 
grand-mother? And if one can trace back their lineage, through a long line of 
ancestors they are disposed to boast themselves upon it. This perhaps is well. 
But again the question comes, "cui bono"? Where is now the descendants of Caesar 
or Alexander? Or of more recent days, where is now the family of Washington, or 
who cares for them? Victoria, queen of England, may be able to trace back her 
history through many names, but what is there to boasting it? Not a name in the 
whole line as illustrious as that of Washington or Lincoln. And how far back can 
the name Lincoln be traced? Or a hundred years from now, who may be able to 
trace to him, their parentage? We have in our family bible printed in the year 
1601, in London. It is in old English type. It is now owned by John G. Latta, as 
the oldest son of our father. There is in it some family records, of which we 
know nothing. About all that can be learned, is that we have been a Protestant 
family for many years, but that is all. Our grand-father came from Ireland; that 
we know. But where did they come to Ireland from? It is more of a Welsh name, 
than Irish, but if they came from Wales to Ireland, from whence came they to 
Wales? Who can tell, and why should anyone care to know? Still, the world is 
prone to pride itself, upon its ancestry, but for what good reason, it is 
difficult to tell. This is true, that it is important that each individual 
should so well act his or her part on the stage of life, as to leave their 
posterity and to the world, an untarnished name. In doing this, they have more 
to boast of, than they could possibly have, by ability to boast of a long line 
of ancetsry, however distinguished that ancestry may have been. For all that 
however, it would be a matter of great pleasure to me, if I could have, even a 
brief history of my ancestors, telling me of their lives, and actions; where and 
how they lived, who were their ancestors, and where they lived. Such a record 
may have once been prepared, just as this is, who can tell? And a hundred years 
from now, this may be as unknown as if it had never been written. Who can answer 
for it? No one. Some of my children, or my grand children may some day read 
this, and add to it their history for their children. And it may thus go down 
from father to son, or in a few brief years there may be no one who will care 
for it at all. Well, so be it. [Later: this was added to the above history 
twenty years later in longhand, by the S. R. Latta, writer of the above.] In an 
idle time, July 11, 1906, I have re-read this. It is about twenty years since I 
wrote it. We are all living and well. My grand-children number twenty-five in 
all all living. Three died in infancy. Our great-grand-child, Gordon Pelham, a 
bright boy, son of our oldest daughter's daughter, Mrs. Kate Gordon, has been 
born to us. My wife and I are still living in the same old house where we began. 
Today, we are expecting our daughter, Sadie K. Anderson, wife of Rev. Dr. W. M. 
Anderson, pastor of the first Presbyterian church at Nashville, Tenn. with her 
six boys, to spend a month in the old house with us. When she arrives, my whole 
family will be here -- not one missing -- except Dr. Anderson, numbering in all, 
-- parents, children, and grand-children, and great-grand-children, forty souls 
- less one, Dr. Anderson being the only missing one.