Prudhomme Fort Chapter, CDXVIIC Hosts Marking Ceremonies At Williamsburg Cemetery Wednesday, March 31, 2021
Braylan Bull of Martha Stewart Bulloch Society, Children of the American Revolution, reading the language of the new Williamsburg Cemetery sign; along with the Mintie Cantrell Willson family members; and Janet Cantrell, president of Prudhomme Fort Chapter CDXVIIC
Prudhomme Fort Chapter Colonial Dames Seventeenth Century members, from left, Cynthia Guffey; Susan Whelchel; Pauline Moore (Carissa Bull -not in photo); Carolyn Christian Martin, TN State president CDXVIIC; and Janet Cantrell, president of Prudhomme Fort Chapter
Williamsburg Cemetery Sign includes history going back to the 1630 era
Prudhomme Fort Chapter of Colonial Dames Seventeenth Century, hosted historical Marking and Preservation ceremonies at the Williamsburg Cemetery in McMinn County in the Etowah – Athens area. Members of the chapter are related to ancestors in McMinn County.
Bourland began his work when a class in cotton breeding sparked his interest in 1969. Fred Bourland received the A. L. Vandergriff Cotton Pioneer Award from the Southern Cotton Ginners Association for 2021.
Fred Bourland still hand picks a lot of cotton. He s been at it for a little over 50 years.
As a cotton breeder he has spent a lot of time walking cotton fields, selecting varieties to advance in successful breeding programs. There s a lot of stories about how fast he picks cotton, said Bill Robertson, cotton agronomist at the University of Arkansas. He understands the cotton plant. He understands it agronomically. He understands farming from the farmer s point of view.
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