Ruth Dix Whigham
Born June 3, 1892 in Postoak, Alabama (Bullock County)
Married Ralph Fleming Whigham 06/15/1914
Died April 28, 1977. Buried, Hurtsboro AL
They had two sons:
Ralph Fleming Whigham Jr.
b. August 17, 1915; d. March 27, 1973.
Buried in Memorial Cemetery, Montgomery AL
Francis Dix Whigham
b. April 15, 1920 at 12 (now 20) Marshall St., Montgomery AL. d. February
27, 2000.
Buried in Memorial Cemetery, Montgomery AL
Ruth was the second child of Albert Sidney
Dix and Isadora Nicoles Dix. Ruth was born in Postoak,
Alabama (Bullock Co.).

Her older sister, Nelle, was born a little
over two and a half years earlier when the family lived in Brewton AL (Escambia
Co.). Her father was a school teacher in Brewton so we can only assume
that he was still teaching when their young family moved back to
the vicinity of his birth and early childhood near Union Springs
The 1895 Atlas
shows that Postoak had a Post Office. It's now a dead town located
at the intersection of Bullock County roads 8 and 11 in southwestern Bullock
County.
32°0'3"N
85°49'12"W, about 10 miles southwest of Union Springs.
Nelle and Ruth soon had a little brother, Francis
Albert Dix (Uncle Buddy). Buddy was born on October 22, 1894,
in Fitzpatrick AL, (Bullock Co.).
Photo submitted by Frances (Dix) Chapman
Ruth (4), Francis (2), Nelle (7), in about 1896
The next date we have in the family's peregrinations,
is in May of 1897, when Albert Sidney Dix is mentioned in minutes of Butler
GA Church Conference meetings.
Ruth's younger sister, Issalee,
was born on March 24, 1898, in Butler GA (Location inferred from surrounding
dates)
02/2/-1899 Albert Sidney Dix was ordained
in Butler GA. In July of 1900, the family left Butler GA, and
moved to Perry GA where the Reverend Dix served as pastor of the
Perry Baptist Church.
From Ruth Dix Whigham's Red Photo Album
"Ruth Dix aged 7 yrs, 4 mos, visiting her grandparents in Montgomery".
Ruth was born June 3, 1892. 7 years and 4 months later would be
October, 1899. The long sleeve dress, some leaves on the trees and
lsome on the ground, would seem to bear this out. Alexander Franklin
and Nellie Dix lived at 514 Jefferson St. then according to the Montgomery
City Directory. If this is correct, the houses in the background
would be at the intersection of Jefferson St. and N. Bainbridge St.
The next move
was when Ruth was eight years old. We have a letter to Nelle and
Ruth from their aunt Dollie, dated August 25,
1900 with and address in Knoxville Georgia, where their father was pastor
of the Knoxville Church and Benevolence Church.
The following
year, the family gets another baby boy -- WillAllie,
named for ASD's two brothers who had died in their prime. "Billy",
as Ruth called him, was born in either Perry GA or Knoxville GA based on
dates from surrounding events.
In October,
1901 ASD and family are living in Perry GA, (Houston Co.) where the
Rev. Dix is pastor of the Perry Baptist Church, & Houston Factory
Church. They remain there through the fall of 1903, when they moved to
Forsyth
GA, where ASD was pastor of the Forsyth Baptist Church.
Photo submitted by Martha (Whigham) Picardy
Ruth, age 11 years, (front row center) with her fan in this 1903 family
poatrait.
Photo submitted by Mike and Caroline Lyon
We don't know for sure, but this image bears a strong resemblance to
Ruth. We don't know at all who the man is, the location or exact
date. My guess is about 14 years old so around 1906. Macon
GA perhaps?
When Ruth was 12 years old the family was still
in Forsyth GA, where Dorothy was born on March 20,
1904. Three years later, Nelle Graduated from Bessie Tift College
in Forsyth GA on May 28, 1907. It was also in 1907 when Ruth, at
age 15, enrolled at Bessie Tift College Academy, in Forsyth.
The next month, the Dixes moved to Macon
GA, where ASD had accepted a position as manager of the Georgia Industrial
Home. In July of the same year, Granny Dix's mother, Mary
Jeniluska (Jenie) Holipeter Nicoles died. In the years 1907-1910,
Ruth Dix was enrolled at Wesleyan College, Macon GA. In Ruth's junior
year, her baby sister, Eleanor was born (March
13, 1909). In November, 1910, ASD was accepted as pastor at Roberta Baptist
Church (near Knoxville). Tragedy strikes the next month when, two
days after Christmas, ASD died.
Below is Ruth's transcript from Wesleyan College
and letter written by Ruth in 1970, to the The Wesleyan Alumnae that explains
why she could not complete her studies there:

Because the family was living in housing provided by the Georgia Industrial
School, the family had to leave to make room for ASD's successor there.
Granny Dix found herself widowed with six children still living at home.
ASD's younger brother, Lell,
who was living in Montgomery, secured a home for his sister-in-law's
family, next door to his own home. Although we have no hard evidence (the
1911 City Directory for Montgomery is one of the few missing years -- they
are listed in the 1912 City Directory), we assume that the grieving family
moved to 12 Marshall St., in Montgomery AL in 1911.
Photo by Russell Whigham, 2003
The wooden columns have been replaced with wrought iron and the house
number has been
changed to "20", but this is the house we all know from scores of photographs,
as "12 Marshall St."
Photo by Russell Whigham, 2003
Highland Park School where Ruth Dix taught in 1913. Later renamed
Highland Avenue School, where her grandson, Russell Dix Whigham attended
first through fourth grades during the years 1950-1954. Russell's
second grade teacher, Miss Katie Hayden, was a teacher at the same time
Ruth was there. During the early '50's, the trolley tracks where
Ruth must have ridden, were still in the median.
Ruth married Ralph Fleming Whigham on June 15, 1914 at 12 Marshall Street,
Montgomery AL. The wedding was performed by her grandfather
Rev. Alexander Franklin Dix. Ralph and Ruth made their home in Rutherford.
The following is a transcript of Ralph Whigham's oral history, as he recalled
meeting his future wife:
| In 1911, a young lady came
from Montgomery to teach school in Rutherford. I liked Ruth Dix and
we had a good time together before she went back to Montgomery to teach
at Highland Park Elementary School. I visited her a number of times and
we corresponded until she agreed to marry me. The wedding was on June 15,
1914. We came back to Rutherford for our honeymoon. Miss Pauline
and Miss Annie Upshaw met us at the train. The next morning we went over
to the farm and looked it over. (He had bought 200 acres beyond Powell
Creek from Mr. Rutherford.) That afternoon Miss Pauline sent us a leg of
goat. We ate on that goat for about a week! Then one day I went in the
kitchen and Ruth was talking goat Latin and I knew it was time to get rid
of the last of that goat. (If you1ve never heard a bunch of goats in a
pen--you can't imagine what goat Latin sounds like!)
After about 15 months, we
had a baby boy, Ralph Fleming, Jr. When Ruth’s time was due, I got busy
and when after Dr. Hendricks from Hurtsboro. Nothing happened that night,
so the doctor came back the next morning, and brought his son, Walter,
with him. That boy had to play around the yard and at the store all day
long. Late that afternoon, about 5:30, baby boy Ralph was born.
He was the cutest little
fellow and after they got him cleaned up, old Aunt Bessie said, I’ve got
to bus him. (Her word for kiss.) We lived in that house for 3 or
4 years (Jean and Dewey Terry live there now), then I built a house on
the hill between Rutherford and the Bishop Place. Dix was born while we
lived there, but he wouldn't be born in the country. He had to be a big
shot and be born in the city. Ruth went to her mother's at 12 Marshall
St, Montgomery Alabama to have her second son. Her brother Francis call
me on April 15, 1920, to announce the birth of Francis Dix Whigham.
I was on the next train to Montgomery. We were proud of our second son.
|
“The Dix Girls, Aug. 1922”
Issalee, Eleanor, and Ruth at Issalee's home
September, 1945
March, 1946
The two "RDW's" Rusty and Ruth in Rutherford AL, 1947
Summer, 1948
Christmas, 1949
Ruth, Nelle, Dot, Eleanor, and Issalee
Christmas, 1953 at Dorothy's home, "Thornfield", near Millbrook AL
Photo submitted by Frances (Dix) Chapman
Ruth at Spring Hill School in Barbour County
Ruth's teen years were at Bessie Tift College,
Lab High School in Forsyth Georgia
Ralph and Ruth (Dix) Whigham, May, 1975
Photo submitted by Frances (Dix) Chapman
May 30, 1975

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