Wednesday, June 8, 2022

GEORGE DUNAGAN EARLY YEARS

 We recently visited the small town of Summerville GA where my father was the Assistant Principal circa 1943-46. My sister, Brenda was born there and I believe this was dad's first job as a school administrator. The old school was still standing but abandoned for many years.

Brenda was with me and remembered the house they lived in at the time and is now being restored









Tuesday, May 10, 2022

CONFUCIUS SAY EAT WELL, EXERCISE, DIE ANYWAY.

William Bradley Dunagan

After 6 years and five different Neurologists I finally received a diagnosis. They determined I do have a brain. However, that's not the problem. I was recently diagnosed with Sporadic Inclusion Body Myositis.

This is a recent photo on my 69th birthday. The first thing you may notice is the muscle tissue in my forearms are gone, just hanging skin. I have very little strength remaining in my hands, wrists and feet which for a long time I thought was arthritis developing in my extremities. Turns out, not to be the case. My quadriceps muscles, the large muscles on the front part of the thighs, have weakened to the point it's becoming a real challenge to stand up from a sitting or lying position. When I first begin to notice these developing symptoms, almost six years ago, I was scared to death that it might be ALS. However, the diagnosis of Sporadic Inclusion Body Myositis now has been confirmed by three Neurologist from Emory and The VA. They still want to do a nerve and muscle biopsy to be sure.




There is good news though! Life is Good! I've been told that this rare muscular degenerative disease should not shorten my life expectancy. However, the probability of me ending up in a wheel chair in a few years is very likely. The best news of all is it is not believed to be genetic or hereditary and this is the reason I wanted to post this information on the family blog primarily for the benefit of my children and my10 grandchildren. As I understand it, there is an autoimmune factor involved and it happens to mostly men past the age of 50. They don't know the cause or cure.


What is inclusion body myositis (IBM)?


Inclusion body myositis (IBM) is an inflammatory and degenerative muscle disease that causes painless weakening of muscle.

IBM gets worse slowly and is sometimes misdiagnosed as treatment-resistant polymyositis, another inflammatory muscle disease that causes muscle weakness. IBM also may be misdiagnosed as amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS or Lou Gehrig's disease).

Symptoms of the disease usually begin after the age of 50, although the disease can occur earlier. IBM occurs more frequently in men than in women and is the most common muscle disease in people aged 50 and older.
What are the symptoms of inclusion body myositis (IBM)?

In IBM, the onset of muscle weakness usually is gradual, occurring over months or years. 
Falling and tripping usually are the first noticeable symptoms. 
For some people, IBM begins with weakness in the hands. 
People with IBM may have: Difficulty with gripping, pinching, and buttoning.
Weakness of the wrist and finger muscles.
Atrophy (shrinking or wasting) of the muscles of the forearms.
Weakness and visible wasting of the quadriceps muscles (the large muscles on the front part of the thighs.)
Weakness of the lower leg muscles, below the knees.
Weakness of the esophageal muscles, which can cause dysphagia (difficulty swallowing) in about 30 to 40 percent of patients.
Weakness of other muscle groups as the disease progresses.

From a medical historical perspective for the Dunagan Family on my side:

My father, George Dunagan, died a few weeks shy of his 93rd birthday from kidney failure and just old age. His brother, William Melvin Dunagan, suffered from diabetes before his death.

My Grandfather, William Andrew Dunagan, suffered from diabetes and heart disease. He died at age 59 from complications of Diabetes.

My great Grandfather, Jeter Andrew Dunagan, died in 1923, at the age of 60. Dad told me he was a builder and a craftsman carpenter. He fell from a scaffold working on a house and he never fully recovered from his injuries. I'm not aware of any health issues he may of had.

My 2nd Great Grandfather, John Franklin Dunagan, died at the ripe old age of 58. The only photo we have of him, he is sitting in a wheel chair and looks like he is at least 90 years old. He fought with the 43rd Infantry Regiment of Georgia in the Civil War and participated in over 100 battle campaigns which had to have taken a lot of years off his life.

My 3rd Great Grandfather, Joseph Ellis Dunagan, died at the age of 68. As far as we know he had no serious health issues but died from what they called "the fever" on his return trip back to Georgia from his second gold prospecting adventure out west.

Darline Dunagan Scroggs thinks that her great grandfather, Joseph Alexander Dunagan, one of 4 sons of John Franklin, may have had Parkinson's.

Ezekiel Dunagan, the patriarch of us Georgia Dunagans, and beyond, was my 4th great grandfather, died at the age of 66 in 1837, after fathering 19 children before viagra was invented, I might add. I stand in awe of this man! Veteran of the War of 1812, as was his first born son, Joseph Ellis Dunagan. To my knowledge he had no specific health issues that contributed to his death other than he was one horny dude. 😂

Wednesday, August 7, 2019

My Grandmother Dunagan - Cochran Family Relations

Martha Meldonna "Mellie" Cochran Dunagan

William "Willie" Andrew Dunagan

My grandmother Dunagan was Martha Meldonna "Mellie" Cochran (1883-1960) of Gainesville, Hall County Georgia, buried at Corinth Baptist Church, and married to my grandfather William Andrew Dunagan (1880-1939) on March 17, 1912.

Mellie, as she was called, was the daughter of George Washington Cochran (1858-1929) of Gainesville, Hall County Georgia. Her grandfather was John Cochran (1834-1906) aka Benjamin or Bennie.

William Andrew Dunagan aka Willie and Mellie Cochran Dunagan had four children:

George Jeter Dunagan, my father. (1913-2006)
William Melvin Dunagan (1915-1996)
Lucille Dunagan (1918-2003)
John Dempsey Dunagan (1925-2012)

I don't have a lot of information on my Cochran Family side. If anyone is able to provide additional data on this lineage please leave comments or email me at wdunagan@gmail.com



George Washington Cochran and Mary Adeline "Mollie" Couch







Sources: George Dunagan, Katherine Cochran Slaton, granddaughter of J. B. Cochran/daughter of Margaret Cochran Clark and C. Randall Clark



Wednesday, April 18, 2018

Former Governor and Senator, Zell Miller, Passes.




Former governor and senator, Zell Miller, died at 86 this past week after suffering from failing health for several years, according to his grandson, Bryan Miller.

He is the great grandson of Lydia Dunagan Miller and James Miller. Lydia Dunagan who was the daughter of Joseph Ellis Dunagan, the oldest son of Ezekiel Dunagan and Lydia Ann Brown. Zell is the author of several books and also served in the U. S. Senate before retiring to his home town of Young Harris, GA. He was also a former Marine.

James Miller b. 10 Dec 1816, Hall County, GA, d. 27 Apr 1896, buried in Mossy Creek, White Co., GA.He married Lydia Dunagan b. 17 Feb 1827, Hall County, GA, d. 7 Apr 1891, also buried at Mossy Creek, White County, GA. I am not certain of who the parents of James Miller were but Lydia Dunagan was the oldest daughter of my 3rd. great grandparents, Joseph Ellis Dunagan and Lucinda Beall. Lucinda Beall was the daughter of Frederick Beall, a Brig General in the War of 1812. Lydia was named after her grandmother, Lydia Ann (Brown)Dunagan.

James and Lydia had several children but Zell Miller is descended from their child, William Jasper "Bud" Miller b. 7 Feb 1847, White County, GA. He married Jane Malinda Collins and they had a son, Stephen Grady Miller, the father of Zell Bryan Miller.

Stephen Grady Miller was married to Birdie Bryan. Zell Miller was born 24 Feb 1932, the same year his father died. Birdie never remarried and raised Zell and his siblings as a single mother.

Governor Zell Miller will be remembered by many Georgians for establishing the Hope Scholarship.

A Little Irish History by Darlene Dunagan Scruggs

☘A Little Irish History☘

☘Did you know that present day Hall County was first settled in the late 1790's by two Irish brothers who brought the first settlers here? Joseph and Joshua Dunagan led a small group of white settlers into the then Indian territory and built their settlement on the banks of the Oconee River in the eastern part of present day Hall County, Georgia. Shortly after their arrival, Ezekiel and Isaiah, sons of Joseph Dunagan, led the second group of settlers to the Joshua Dunagan settlement. Joshua was soon slaughtered by the Indians near Maysville, Georgia. After his death the settlement was known as the Joseph Dunagan settlement. Ezekiel stayed and raised his family in this same area. At the time of his death in 1836, he owned three thousand acres. Ezekiel’s descendants remained on his land and built a community that was known as Dunagan, Georgia. Most of the Dunagans in this area today are direct descendants of Joseph and his son Ezekiel. Some of Ole Zeke's descendants are still living on his land today. ☘


Monday, February 12, 2018

Karen Jo Dunagan Wilson Smith - Obituary Announcement

Karen Jo Dunagan Wilson Smith passed away on Sunday, Oct. 29, 2017, at Huntsville Hospital. She was a member of Hartselle First Baptist Church.

Visitation will be Saturday, Nov. 4, 2017, from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. at Cullman Funeral Home with funeral services to follow. Interment will be at Welti Cumberland Presbyterian Cemetery. Pastor Clayton Speed and brother Charles Shaddix will be presiding.

Karen was born Oct. 1, 1944, to William E. Dunagan and Lera Gay Wright Dunagan in Crowell, Texas. Karen graduated from Fairview High School, in Cullman County in 1962. She then went to UAB School of Radiological Technology and graduated in 1967. Over the next 40 years she worked in Huntsville and Cullman Alabama, Plainview, Texas, Louisville, Kentucky, and Kankakee, Illinois.

Karen had a great interest in family genealogy and devoted much of her time to this pursuit. From her research she learned that her father's name originally was Buster Virgil McCorkle, Jr. who changed his name to William Edward "Bill" Dunagan when he went to live with Albert Dunagan, a grandson of Delilah Dunagan (m. Buster Virgil McCorkle, Sr.)/Joseph Daniel Dunagan/Ezekiel and Delilah Trotter Dunagan/Ezekiel and Lydia Ann Brown Dunagan from Georgia. Virgil McCorkle married Delilah Dunagan, daughter of Joseph and granddaughter of Ezekiel Dunagan. Buster Virgil McCorkle, Sr. and Delilah had twins, Bill and Marie, but due to Delilah’s illness, Marie was raised by Delilah’s sister, and Bill was raised by Delilah’s brother, Albert.  Neither were adopted.  Bill enlisted in the army as Bill Dunagan, thus changing his name.  He had 3 children, Roger, Karen, and Lynn. Needless to say Karen was very interesting to talk with. She was a fine person and very generous with her time and resources. She loved all people but especially her family, church family, and friends. She shall be greatly missed by all those who knew and loved her.

Karen is survived by her children, Robert Bryan Wilson, of Hartselle, Alabama, and Keegan Spencer Smith, of Jackson, Michigan; grandchildren, Stella Sims and Elih Wilson, of Hatton, Alabama; brother, Roger Dunagan (wife Connie), of Decatur, Alabama; sister, Lynn Dunagan, of Florence, Alabama; and niece, Erin Dunagan, of Birmingham, Alabama.

Pallbearers are Joe Teachout, Tommy Cobb, Robert Berry, Michael Howse, Michael Wilson, and Matthew Kilgore.

The family would like to express special thanks to Hartselle First Baptist Church for being such wonderful, caring people to Karen and for the untold acts of kindness that was shown to her. Also, to DCI Dialysis Center in Decatur, Alabama for all the years of providing excellent care and to the doctors and staff of the Surgical/Trauma Intensive Care Unit of Huntsville Hospital.


Angie Dunagan Hinson - Obituary Announcement

Angie Hinson, 74, of Macclenny, FL passed away Feb 5, 2018. Mrs Hinson was born in Monroe, GA, to the late Rev. William Melvin Dunagan and Frances Martin Dunagan. She graduated from Colquitt County High School in Moultrie, GA, obtained her Bachelor’s degree from Tift College, Forsyth, GA, and earned her Master’s degree from North Florida University, Jacksonville, FL. She was fascinated with the process of learning, promoted reading to all within arms-reach, and continued to immerse herself into new and exciting topics until her last moments. Teaching was her gift and she taught first in Decatur, GA and then later returned to teach at Fitzgerald High School in GA. For most of her career she taught eight-grade English at Baker County Middle School where she chaired the department for seven years and was selected as Teacher of the Year in 1979-1980. Not one to draw attention to herself, she quietly retired from instructional life in Baker County at the Adult Center. She was a true Renaissance woman who spoke French, read Latin--and could tell you all about astronomy--loved playing classical and even current music on the piano--yet she cherished the simple times with her family and often could be found playing on the floor with her grandchildren. During her life she participated in the Junior Woman’s Club, Beta Sigma Phi teacher’s sorority, the Retired Teachers Association, and was of the Baptist faith. Although very private, Mrs Hinson was generous, enjoyed her service to others, and will be missed by many. Mrs Hinson is survived by her children: Douglas Hinson of Weddington, NC and Jenny (Hinson) Porter-Haag and Jeremy Haag of Kansas City, MO; Grandchildren: Kyle Hinson, Mariah Hinson, Jack Hinson; Drew Porter, Aleigh Porter, and Matthew Porter; Sisters: Melva and Roger Ezell, Perry, FL; Donna and David McMillan, Clayton, GA as well as numerous nieces and nephews. The family will hold a private memorial service and burial of Mrs. Hinson’s ashes with her parents at a later date in Tifton, GA. Guerry Funeral Home, US 90 E. Macclenny, FL is in charge of local arrangements.