WINSTON-SALEM JOURNAL

WOOTERS, Mrs. Clarice McKee, 93, passed away at the Blumenthal Jewish Home Friday, September 28, 1990.  A graveside service will be held Monday at Forsyth Memorial
Park 11 a.m. by Dr. Paul Craven.  Mrs. Wooters was born April 25, 1897 in Belmont, N.C. to
William Rufus and Minnie McLeon McKee.  Mrs. Wooters was a graduate of the
School of Nursing at the old City Memorial Hospital.  For 15 years she was an assistant in the office of Dr. George W. Holmes.  In 1960-1961, the Winston-Salem Chapter of
American Business Women's Association named her "Woman of the Year."  She was very active in the D.A.R. Old North State Chapter, U.D.C. James B. Gordon Chapter,
Woman's Club, and the American Business Women's Club.  Her main interests, in which she took great pride, were the United Fund, Heart Fund , the March of Dimes and the
Retarded Children's Program.  She was a member of the First Baptist Church in which she was very active as long as  her  health permitted.  Her husband,
Mr. Henry Clay
Wooters
, passed away in 1959.  She is now survived by a daughter, Mrs. Elsie Jordan Collins of Norfolk, Va.; a sister, Miss Jessie McKee of Kernersville.  All funeral
arrangements by Vogler's Main Street Chapel.
[On Dec. 30, 1972, Mrs Wooters joined the UDC on the service of her Grandfather Wiley Sabisco McKee,Co. M, 16th Reg’t NC Inf. ]     
WINSTON-SALEM JOURNAL

WEAVER, Mrs. Anne Landqust Lentz, 75, of Winston-Salem died on Friday Feb 3, 2006 at Kate B. Reynolds Hospice Home. Anne was born on July 15, 1930 in
Winston-Salem and was the daughter of
George Dallas Lentz, Sr. and Rozelind Landquist Lentz and the granddaughter of Thomas Eugene and Anne Marie
Landquist
and Adam Wiley and Maggie Miller Lentz.  She grew up in Winston-Salem, graduated from R.J. Reynolds High School in 1948 and attended the University of
North Carolina at Greensboro, completing her education in business education.  She worked as a medical transcriptionist and as an assistant in a pathology practice.  For the
past 20 years, Anne served as an interpretive guide at Old Salem at the Museum of Early Southern Decorative Arts and recently at the Horton Center and Visitors Center.  
She was preceded in death  by her parents and a brother,
George D. Lentz Jr.  Ann is survived by her children, Richard Weaver, George Weaver and  his wife Barbara
and
Mary Roze Lynch and her husband Kevin; her grandchildren, Waverly and Whitney Lynch and Lauren and Dallas Weaver; and former husband, Harold Weaver.  
Anne was a lifelong member of Augsburg Lutheran Church, where she sang in the choir.  She was a member of Forsyth Country Club, the 9th Hole Golf Association, Junior
Women's Club of Jacksonville, Fla., Winston-Salem Kiwanians, the James B. Gordon Chapter of the UDC and the Winston-Salem Symphony Choral.  The family will greet
guests at Vogler & Sons Funeral Home on South Main Street from 7 to 9 p.m. today, Feb. 6.  The funeral service will be held at 2 p.m. on Tuesday, Feb. 7 at Augsburg
Lutheran Church.  Burial will follow at Salem Cemetery.  
[Mrs. Weaver joined the UDC on the service of her Great Grandfather Martin Luther Bost]
WINSTON-SALEM JOURNAL

WEAVER, Mrs. Hazel Katherine Dority, 91, of Arbor Acres, formerly of Lullington Drive in Winston-Salem, died Thursday Oct. 6, 2005.  She was born March 6, 1914 to
Clarence and Iona Norris Dority, the first child born in the old Mercy Hospital in Durham.  She was a graduate of Durham High School and Lees-McCrae junior College.  In
1934 she married
Charles Baker Weaver, who preceded her in death in 1966.  Hazel was a faithful member of Ardmore United Methodist Church, where she taught Alma
Nunn Class as long as her health permitted.  She was also active in the Wachovia Chapter of the Daughters of American Colonists, the Col. Joseph Winston Chapter of the
Daughters of the American Revolution, the James B. Gordon Chapter of the United Daughters of the Confederacy and the Broadway Home Extension Club.  She retired from
Old Salem Inc., after more that 40 years of service.  Surviving are two sons and their families,
Charles B. (Pat) Weaver of Winston-Salem and William N. (Andree) Weaver
of Charlotte; five grandchildren,
Kathy (Ken) Otterbourg of Winston-Salem, Kelly (Will) Goley of Charlotte, Mary Beth (Michael) Evans of Lewisville, Stephanie
Weaver of Charlottsville, Va., and J.C. Weaver
of Charlotte; and five great-grandchildren, Norris Weaver Evans, Alexander Weaver Goley, Patrick McIver Goley,
Samuel Weaver Otterbouorg and Sierra Skye Weaver
.  Funeral services will be held at 3 p.m. today, Oct 8, at Ardmore United Methodist Church, with the Rev. Dr. Frank
Grice and the Rev. Donald Funderburg officiating.  The family will receive friends at 2:30 p.m. before the funeral service in the church reception room.  In lieu of flowers,
memorials may be made to Ardmore United Methodist Church, 630 Hawthorne Road, Winston-Salem, N.C.
[On Jan. 20, 1957 Mrs. Weaver joined the UDC on the service of her Great Grandfather Sidney Baker Malone.  She later included her Great Grandfather Ephraim Norris and
Grt-Grt Uncle Bartlett Yancy Malone to her UDC records]
United Daughters of the Confederacy
James B. Gordon Chapter #211
Forsyth County, NC
Chartered March 30, 1898
OBITUARIES OF MEMBERS OF THE
JAMES B. GORDON CHAPTER
UNITED DAUGHTERS OF THE CONFEDERACY
Forsyth County, NC
WINSTON-SALEM JOURNAL June 5, 1974

Mrs. Bess Transou Walker, 90, of ____ ___, wife of Robert L. Walker, died yesterday at  her home.  The funeral will be at 3 pm Thursday at Hayworth-Miller's Silas Creek
Parkway Funeral Chapel.  Mrs. Walker was born in Ashe County and was a graduate of Greensboro_____ and taught for 41 years.  She was a charter member of Ardmore United
Methodist Church and was a member of the Daughters of the American Revolution.  She was also a member of the United Daughters of the Confederacy.  Surviving is  her  
husband.

[
On May 21, 1925 Mrs. Walker joined the UDC on the service of her uncle E.L. Transou, Co. A, 1st Reg’t Sharpshooters NC Troops.  ]
W
Not in alphabetical order
WINSTON SALEM JOURNAL  Sept. 7, 1975

Mrs. Myrtle Louise Oliver Watson, 84, of 220 New Drive, Apt. A, widow of Fred Watson, died Saturday at Forsyth Memorial Hosptial.  Funeral services will be conducted at
3:30 pm Monday at Vogler's Main Street Chapel by Dr. Ernest Fitzgerald.  Burial will be in Salem Cemetery.  She was born May 13, 1891, in Milton, NC to
John and Nettie
Oliver.
 She attended schools there and in Richmond, VA.  Her  husband was a prominent insurance broker who died in 1961.  She was a member of Centenary United
Methodist Church and was the first elected president of the Parent Teachers Association at R.J. Reynolds High School in the 1930's.  She was a Real Daughter of the United
Daughters of the Confederacy.  Surviving are one daughter,
Mrs. Mary Watson Petty of the home; two sons, Malcom E. Watson of Tucker, Ga. and William H. Watson of
Greenville, NC; two sisters,
Mrs. R. T. Jeffreys and Mrs. S.O. Garrett of Rocky Mount, NC; five grandchildren, Mrs. Joseph Dean, Mrs. Mary Henson, Miss Peggy
Watson, William Watson, Jr., and C.F. Watson, Jr.
; three great-grandchildren and a number of nieces and nephews.  The family will receive friends at Vogler's Main Street
from 7 to 9 pm Sunday.  The family requests that any memorials be made to Centenary United Methodist Church.

[On Mar. 31, 1925 Mrs. Watson joined the UDC on the service of her father John Martin Oliver, Co. C 59 VA.  She was a REAL DAUGHTER of the UDC]
WINSTON-SALEM JOURNAL  Jan 13, 1982

WALKER, Mrs. Della Johnson Walker, 90, formerly of 800 West End Blvd, died Tuesday at 9:30 am at the Moravian Home.  She was born April 21, 1891 in Salem, the
daughter of
Coston E. and Carrie Spaugh Johnson.  She attended Salem Academy for four years, then entered Salem College, graduating in 1909.  She was married in 1914
to Mr. Pierre Bayard Walker of Wilson, who died in 1918.  Mrs. Walker had a wide interest in religious, civic, and restoration affairs of the city and county, and in the patriotic and
social life of the city.  She was a former member of Daughters of the American Revolution, United Daughters of the Confederacy, American Legion Auxiliary, and Daughters of the
American Colonists.  The Women's Club and several other civic organizations.  Mrs. Walker was descended on both sides of her family from Pioneer Moravian stock.  Adam
Spach (1752) of the Friedburg Community and William Johnson (1757) whose plantation is what is now known as Tanglewood Park.  She was a  member of Calvary Moravian
Church.  She is survived by two nieces, Mrs. Nan Johnson Norman of Elkin and Mrs. Carolyn Spaugh Johnson Wilkes of Richmond, Va; two nephews, Russell Coston Johnson of
Seattle, Wash., and Graham Click Johnson of Elkin.  The family requests that memorials be made to the Calvary Moravian Church Book of Memory or to the Moravian Home.  
Graveside seervices will be held in the Moravian Graveyard at 3 pm Wednesday.  The body is at Vogler's Main Street Chapel.

[Mrs. Walker joined the UDC on Sept. 30, 1912 on the service of her grandfather T.T. Spaugh, Co. H. 15th NC  ]