SHORES
(ON HILL) CEMETERY, (On Hill above
old Phillips-Shores Mill site) GILES COUNTY, TENNESSEE
PHILLIPS, James Alfred, "Alfred", 19 Mar 1808 - 18 Mar 1881.
(Founded Shores Mill and later sold it to James Shores. Thought to be interred
here in unmarked grave, perhaps in this large open area north of his grandson
James his wife Bettie Phillips.)
PHILLIPS, Mary Massey, 1799 - 12 Mar 1870. (wife of J. Alfred Phillips;
Thought to be interred here in unmarked grave, perhaps in this large open area
north of her grandson James his wife Bettie Phillips.)
also.)
Printed in the Pulaski Citizen Thursday April 7, 1881. Written by his son James Jordan Phillips.
"Our Father is Dead."
Alfred Phillips was born 19th March, 1806, in Cheatham County N.C., emigrated to Giles County, Tennessee, in the fall of 182_, and on the 21st of December 1828, he was united in matrimony to Polly S. Massey, daughter of Jordan Massey, who came from North Carolina a few years before. They lived together to raise a family of six children to be grown, until 3rd December, 1870 when our mother died in the triumph of the Christian faith. Our father's life was one of spirituality, temperance, industry, truthfulness and honesty. He kept steadily in view the Golden Rule, "Do unto others as you would have them do unto you", and his benevolent disposition was continually tested by his preference always to receive than to give offense. As a public man he always manifested a lively cheerful and lenient temper, in manners he was firm, steady and retiring, and in habits he was a hard working man, prompt in all his dealings with his fellow man and strove to give satisfaction. In early life he was a Baptist in belief, but many years before his death he believed and upheld the doctrine of the Methodist church, and although he never attached himself to any church, yet he abstained from committing the many gross sins common to others. He used no profanity or obscene language; abstained from deceitfulness hypocrisy, selfishness, covetousness, or narrow mindedness, and accorded all men their just due politically, religiously, or financially.
He was of a nature too generous to
accumulate wealth, and though he boasted of only a few of this worlds goods,
yet he could have boasted of a fortune in the highest place based upon his
character with all who knew him. Everybody was his friend. Enemies he had
none. As a citizen he was a "model man", and to all appearances he
was a Christian; he was a constant reader of the Bible for thirty years or
more; he did not, however profess to have made his peace with his maker until
a short time before his
death when he averred his confidence in the mercy and goodness of God and his
resignation to his will, saying that he was willing to die when it was the
pleasure of the Lord for him to do so. He was sick eight weeks, confined to
his bed for five the two last of which he suffered intensely, but bore it with
patience and Christian fortitude, and on the turning of 18th March 1881 at
9:20 he breathed his last without a struggle, groan or movement of a muscle,
Thus passed, quietly away an affectionate father, a
loving husband, a trusted friend and good citizen.
His remains were interred by the side of our
mother, his wife at the family burying ground on Shoals Creek, Giles County,
Tennessee.
I was at my father's bedside when soul and body were separated. Sad were my
thoughts and gloomy were my feelings, as the facts presented themselves that
"the last link" was broken that once bound our happy family
together. Mother gone! Father gone, as we confidently trust, to the abode of
the blessed, whilst we; their children are scattered, some in one state and
some in another, never to be re-united on earth. But, let us in our
bereavement take comfort from the Christian's hope that we will someday be
together again in this blissful eternity, if we obey the mandates of our Lord
and Savior Jesus Christ.
J. J. (John Jordan) Phillips
Thanks go to Joe Hardiman for finding this and Joyce Grigsby for Securing the copy.
This above was a
transcription of the Alfred Phillips Obituary by C. Wayne Austin 9 Jul 2000
into text. Translated to MS Word 1 Aug 2007. From the family history records of
C. Wayne Austin, the
founder of this web site 14 Jul 2010. Also translated by Sue Davis sometime
later.