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Hilltop Farm- the Turner's Home Place | |
About the house, Jim writes:
This photo was maybe taken after my grandparents died. I remember the screened in porch from the 1950s. I have a photo of John Edward in a chair on the porch circa late 1920s and there was not a screen porch in that photo. I have a painting of the farm as it appears in this photo done by uncle by marriage Melvin Thomas Ives (married Ethel May Harris - my dad's only sister) and the painting was done in 1951. "Tom" painted 3 more - one for Juanita Lucille Turner Dean, Fairy Louise Turner Hoeferlin and the last for Cassie Corene Turner Hockinghomer - she and her husband Harry owned the farm by the late 50s or earlier (?). I still have my painting, one of my cousins has another (It hangs in her living room) and supposedly one of my cousins still has the other two. The fate of the other two though is unknown. During the days when I use to go there, there was only electricity and I believe we had to get water from the well or cistern. We used the out house complete with Sears catalogs. No corn cobs. When Cassie and Harry retired there permanently, they put in plumbing and heating (use to only heat with the kitchen stove). The two story part facing the photographer is where the original log cabin is covered up. The fact that it was still in there was discovered during the remodeling process. Since that time, the clapboard has been covered with siding and the place does not look like this any more. The ambience is no longer there but the memories are. At least circa 1997 the tin roof was still on and serving the place well. |
The family kept the farm after grandma died in 1941, after which it was sold out of the family for a number of years until my aunt Cassie Corene Turner Hockinghomer and her husband Harry Hockinghome bought it in the 1950s. In 1976 they sold it. The farm changed hands several times but is now owned by Kaye Wyrick who bought it with her late husband - possible purchase date around 1990. |
The gravel road from "BB" Highway is the white line coming from the right of the photo near the top. It makes a 90 degree bend and passes what use to be a fishing pond and nature area that my uncle Harry Hockinghome built with the help of the Department of Conservation State of Missouri. The road travels south or toward the bottom of the photo. The farm house and out buildings are on the right of the gravel road coming south or to the east of the gravel road. The gravel road makes another 90 degree bend and heads toward the left of the photo or to the west. It goes to Janes Creek and due west still and just before Janes Creek is a road that parallels the creek and sort of meanders along the creek for 3 miles towards the S.E. and eventually runs back into "BB" Highway. Belgrade, Mo. (where my dad grew up) is due north of the farm - straight through the woods and you go over "Crommer's Bluff" and cross "Big River" for 3 miles...dad use to walk it all the time to court mom. Caledonia, Mo. is about 3 miles east and that is where the Turner's attended church when weather permitted. He help build and found Pleasant Grove Baptist Church (long shut down but building is still standing) and he and grandma were pillars in that early church. He was a real "God fearin man." Behind the farm house (to the right in the photo) about 1/4 to 1/2 mile in the woods (not visible in this photo) is "China Hill" where my mom and her sisters use to play. So maybe every time you see my e-mail address chinahilltop@charter.net you might think of this photo. |
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Terraserver image |
Turner Hill Officially Named after John Turner United States Geographical Society Geographic Names Information System Feature Detail Report On the USGS (United States Geographical Society) maps the hill is still called after my grandfather. It is called "Turner Hill" on the maps. There is evidence that a older cabin existed before but in the woods, which would be behind the farm house and to the east of it. Grandpa Turner built his farm "over the log cabin he built - two story." The farm then is sort of "t-shaped with the farm addition added to the right of the log cabin as you face the front. That 1184 foot hill is "part of me" and always will be...even if I never set foot on it again...that is my beginnings and I am very proud of that place. JTH |
This was my father, James Henry (9/14/1915-4/26/1999) Harris, my mother, Marian "Roberta" Turner (3/20/1917-12/13/1984) Harris and "Mr. Happy Face" - James Turner Harris circa 1943 / 1944. |
"My mom and dad thought I was cute." |
This shows the Inman's Bend area of Cocke Co., Tn. The river is the Nolichucky and was dammed during the T.V.A. era. The uplands are called the Chuckey Knobs area. Notice there is only one Turner location (John [1805-1870] Turner's land where our family use to be. There are two locations for Fox's - one towards the river and one to the right of the photo. I believe we intermarried with one towards "Inmans Bend." The farm owner, Shadrick H. Inman was appointed guardian of my great uncle, Paschal M. Turner's 3 kids - John [1858], Lavina or Vina [1860] and Harriet [1862] when Paschel M. Turner was killed during the fighting at Kinston, N.C. in March, 1865.