The “52 Cousins” series of biographical sketches are Artificial Intelligence (AI) compiled narratives of selected individuals from my Genealogical database. The selected AI will used documents and data from my RootsMagic Genealogical Software. All genealogical data is my research material acquired over the past 49+ years of research. Today's Biography of ”Fannie Geneva Boatwright Radcliff (19094 - 1994)" was compiled with the assistance of Claude Sonnett 4 and is entitled:
Fannie Geneva Boatwright Radcliff
4 May 1909 – 14 October 1994
Chesterfield, South Carolina · Waynesboro, Georgia
Early Life and Family Origins
Fannie Geneva Boatwright was born on 4 May 1909 in Chesterfield County, South Carolina, the daughter of Eugene Thomas Boatwright (1882–1956) and Emma Frances Previtte (1878–1947). She was the couple's only known daughter born in South Carolina before the family relocated north to North Carolina. Her middle name, "Geneva," was confirmed by family member Mary Eddins Johnson — a small but meaningful detail that helps us remember her as a full person, not just a name on a census page.
Fannie arrived at a vivid moment in American history. In 1909, President William Howard Taft had just taken office, the NAACP was founded, and the first Model T Fords were rolling off the line in Detroit. Life in the rural Carolinas was rooted in farming and tight-knit community, and that world would shape Fannie for the rest of her life.
Her Parents
Her father, Eugene Thomas Boatwright, was born in 1882 in North Carolina and lived until 1956, reaching his mid-seventies. Her mother, Emma Frances Previtte, was born in 1878 and passed away in 1947 at age 68 or 69. Together, Eugene and Emma raised a large family, as was common for rural Southern households of that era. Both parents appear in the 1910 and 1920 federal censuses living in Morven, Anson County, North Carolina — a small farming community in the southern part of the state, not far from the South Carolina border.
Eugene was recorded in the 1910 census at age 29, and Emma at age 32, already the parents of several children. By 1920, Eugene was 37 and Emma 41, and the household had grown considerably. The family rented or farmed land in Morven across these decades, typical of many working-class families in the post-Reconstruction South.
Growing Up — Brothers and Sisters
Fannie grew up surrounded by siblings. Based on the census records, she had at least six brothers and one sister who appear in the household records during her childhood years:
Jessie G. Boatwright — born about 1901 in South Carolina (age 9 in 1910)
John D. Boatwright — born about 1905 in North Carolina (age 5 in 1910)
Henry F. / G. Boatwright — born about 1906–1907 in North Carolina (age 4 in 1910)
Bessie M. Boatwright — born about 1912 in North Carolina (age 8 in 1920)
Eugene H. Boatwright — born about 1914 in North Carolina (age 6 in 1920)
Walter D. Boatwright — born about 1915 in North Carolina (age 5 in 1920)
Fannie was the fourth or fifth child, sandwiched between brothers Henry and the younger Bessie. She would have grown up with plenty of company — helping with younger siblings, working alongside older brothers, and learning the rhythms of farm life in the Carolina Piedmont. The 1920 census shows the whole bustling household together in Morven, when Fannie was about ten or eleven years old.
Marriage to Thomas Greer Radcliff
On 23 December 1928 — just two days before Christmas — nineteen-year-old Fannie Boatwright married Thomas Greer Radcliff (1907–1980) in Chesterfield County, South Carolina. Thomas was twenty-one at the time. The marriage license records him variously as "T. G. Radcliff" and "J. G. Radcliffe," a common occurrence with handwritten records of the era, but the details of birth year and spouse name leave no doubt it was the same man.
Their marriage took place during an era of great economic uncertainty — just a year before the stock market crash of October 1929 that would plunge the nation into the Great Depression. For a young farming couple in the rural South, the 1930s would have brought significant hardship, as crop prices collapsed and families struggled to get by. Yet Fannie and Thomas built their life together through it all.
The 1930 U.S. Census finds the young couple already settled in Morven, Anson County, North Carolina — the same community where Fannie grew up — with their baby daughter Vera, just six months old. Thomas was listed as head of household at age 22, Fannie as his wife at 21.
Thomas Greer Radcliff passed away in 1980, after more than fifty years of marriage.
Their Children
Fannie and Thomas had five children together, born between 1929 and 1942 — a span that took the family through the Depression and World War II:
Vera Ratliff (1929–2010) — Their firstborn, Vera arrived in 1929. She lived to age 81.
Velna Radcliff (1932–2018) — Born during the depths of the Depression, Velna lived to age 86.
Thomas Henry Radcliff (1934– ) — Named for his father, Thomas Henry was born in 1934.
Everett Eugene Radcliff (1936–1996) — Born in 1936, Everett passed away in 1996 at age 60.
Emma J. Radcliff (1942– ) — The youngest child, Emma was likely named in honor of Fannie's mother, Emma Frances Boatwright.
It's touching to note that the youngest child, Emma, appears to carry the name of Fannie's mother — a quiet thread of memory connecting grandmother to granddaughter. By the time Emma was born in 1942, America had entered World War II, and daily life was shaped by rationing, war news, and the departure of young men to serve overseas.
Later Life — Waynesboro, Georgia
At some point after 1930, Fannie and Thomas relocated from North Carolina to Waynesboro, Burke County, Georgia. Waynesboro is a small city in the eastern part of Georgia, known historically as a railroad and farming community. An obituary reference from 1947 — noting a "Mrs. Tom Boatwright" — suggests Fannie may have had some connection to Waynesboro by that year, though the exact timing of the family's move is not certain from the available records.
What is clear is that Waynesboro became Fannie's home for the rest of her long life. She lived through remarkable decades of American change there — the post-war boom of the late 1940s and 1950s, the Civil Rights Movement of the 1960s, the social upheavals of the 1970s, and into the early 1990s. She would have seen television enter American homes, witnessed the moon landing in 1969, and watched the Berlin Wall fall in 1989.
Passing and Resting Place
Fannie Geneva Boatwright Radcliff passed away on 14 October 1994, at the age of 85, in Waynesboro, Burke County, Georgia. She is buried at Magnolia Cemetery in Waynesboro — a fitting name for a resting place in the heart of the Georgia Piedmont.
Her Find A Grave memorial (ID #51753872), created by "Diana B" in April 2010, records her birth as 4 May 1909 and lists her husband Thomas G. Radcliff (1907–1980) and children Vera Radcliff Quick Howard (1929–2010), Velna Radcliff Glisson (1931-1918) and Everett Eugene Radcliff (1936–1996) as family members.
She outlived her husband by fourteen years and lived to know her grandchildren and great-grandchildren. Eighty-five years is a life fully lived — from the rural farms of the Carolinas to the changing world of late twentieth-century America, Fannie witnessed nearly a century of history.
A Life in Historical Context
To appreciate the world Fannie lived in, consider the sweep of history across her 85 years:
She was born in 1909, just six years after the Wright Brothers' first flight. She came of age during World War I (1914–1918) and survived the devastating Spanish Flu pandemic of 1918–1919, which killed tens of millions worldwide. She married in 1928, just before the Great Depression reshaped America. Her children were young during World War II (1941–1945). She raised her family as the Civil Rights Movement transformed the South she had always called home. She saw a man walk on the moon (1969), witnessed the end of the Cold War, and died in 1994 — the year that Nelson Mandela became South Africa's first democratically elected president.
Through all of it — the hardships of the Depression, the anxiety of wartime, the upheavals of the 1960s, the losses of her husband and some of her children — Fannie endured. She was, like so many of her generation, part of the fabric of ordinary American life: a daughter, a wife, a mother, and a grandmother whose story deserves to be remembered.
Fannie Geneva Boatwright Radcliff is my 1st Cousin Twice Removed.
Sources
1. Find A Grave, Inc., Find A Grave, database and digital images, (http://www.findagrave.com : accessed 22 May 2020); Memorial page for Fannie Boatwright Radcliff; (4 May 1909–14 October 1994); Find a Grave memorial;# 51753872, Citing Magnolia Cemetery; Waynesboro, Burke County, Georgia, USA.
2. 1910 U. S. Census, Chesterfield County, South Carolina, population schedule, Morven, Anson County, North Carolina, enumeration district (ED) 0012, Page 182B/7B; Line 98, Dwelling 37, Family 37, Eugene T. BOATWRIGHT; digital images, Ancestry.com (http://ancestry.com:viewed 3 June 2012); citing National Archives Microfilm T624_1455.
3. 1920 U. S. Census, Anson County, North Carolina, population schedule, Morven, Anson County, North Carolina, enumeration district (ED) 12, Page 178A & B, Line 50, Dwelling 156, Family 159, Household of Eugene T. BOATWRIGHT; digital images, Ancestry.com (http://www.ancestry.com:viewed 5 June 2012); citing National Archives Microfilm Series: T625, Roll: 1283.
4. 1930 U. S. Census, Morven, Anson County, North Carolina, population schedule, Morven, Anson, North Carolina, enumeration district (ED) 017, Page: 13A/21(stamped); Line 23, Dwelling NL, Family 190, F. [T.] Greer RATLIFF; digital images, Ancestry.com (http://ancestry.com:viewed 20 December 2010);citing National Archives Microfilm T626_Roll: 1672.
5. "Chesterfield County, Original Marriage licenses, 1911-1951,"database, Ancestry (http://www.ancestry.com : Viewed 22 December 2010), Marriage: T. G. Radcliff & Fannie Boatwright; South Carolina Division of Archives and History, 2020; Marriage Date: 23 Dec 1928.
6. Find A Grave, Inc., Find A Grave, database, "Record, Thomas G Radcliff (1 May 1907–24 January 1980), Memorial :#51753819.
7. 1930 U. S. Census, Morven, Anson County, North Carolina, population schedule, Morven, Anson, North Carolina, ED 017, Page: 13A/21(stamped); Line 23, Dwelling NL, Family 190, F. [T.] Greer RATLIFF.
8. 1940 U. S. Census, Burke County, Georgia, population schedule, Waynesboro, Burke, Georgia, enumeration district (ED) 17-2, Page 11B/24 (stamped), Line 78, Household #294, Household of Thomas G. RADCLIFF; digital images, Ancestry.com (http://www.ancestry.com : viewed 20 December 2010); citing NARA publication Roll: T627_645.
9. 1950 U. S. Census, Burke County, Georgia, population schedule, Waynesboro, Burke, Georgia, enumeration district (ED) 17-2, Sheet: 10 (stamped), Line:# 6, House#: 404, Dewlling:#102, Household of Thomas RADCLIFF; digital images, Ancestry.com (http://www.ancestry.com : online 20 December 2010); citing NARA publication Roll: T628.
10. Family oral history as provided by Johnnie Mae Boatwright and Mary Eddins Johnson.