Showing posts with label Black Homesteaders the South. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Black Homesteaders the South. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 9, 2022

Burnell Muse of Muse 3 Farms Hibiscus Plants

Burnell Muse
Muse 3 Farm
Photo Credit: Antoinette Harrell
Burnell Muse, an agriculture and natural resource agent with the Southern University Ag Center. Every Friday from 8:00 a.m. to 12:00 noon you can find Burnell sitting at his booth distributing tokens for SNAP customers at the St. Helena Farmers Market. The market offers a SNAP match program, which provides $3 in free tokens for every $1 spent on eligible food like fresh produce using SNAP benefits. 

 During my visit to Muse 3 Farm, I interviewed Burnell Muse and several of his brothers. His attention was drawn to the hibiscus plants on the farm while driving around. It is estimated that there are several hundred species of flowering plants native to warm climates. From the flowers of the Hibiscus plant, a delicious tea can be made. Cold or hot tea can be served. My favorite way to start my day is with a hot cup of Hibiscus, peppermint, or ginger and turmeric tea in the morning. This is followed by a cold glass of tea with some honey throughout the day. I find it to be so refreshing and tasty. Matter of fact, it is one of my drinks for comfort. 

Hibiscus is described as having a number of medical uses. It is said to lower blood pressure. In Asia and Africa, hibiscus has been used to treat high blood pressure for centuries. Be sure to check with your primary care physician before taking this natural approach. Other health benefits of Hibiscus tea, it can be used to lower cholesterol, manage diabetes, protect the liver, aid in weight loss. Please see the links below for more information about Hibiscus Tea.


Links

www.muse3farm.com

https://facty.com/food/nutrition/health-benefits-of-hibiscus-tea/6/

Wednesday, July 2, 2014

Emma Mead Harrell Left Footprints in the Amite City Courthouse


Johnny Harrell researching with genealogist
Antoinette Harrell
My cousin Johnny Harrell and I spent the early morning hours searching for property records on our Harrell ancestors in the vendors and vendees books. Our attention was drawn to the records of their mother Emma Mead Harrell as we looked through the records of Palmer and Jasper Harrell, Sr. Emma Mead Harrell was an assertive woman during her time. In addition to acquiring land and farming it, she also sold the produce at the markets and community.

I was delighted to see a descendant of Alexander and Emma Mead Harrell wanting to know his family's history. Johnny left the Amite City Courthouse with a great deal of gratitude for his paternal great grandmother Emma. His knowledge of her and the legacy she left him was greatly enhanced. This is the first time a descendant of Palmer Harrell has researched the Harrell family history with me.

Emma Mead Harrell was Alexander Harrell's widow. In 1896 and 1902, she purchased land in Tangipahoa Parish from the U.S. 6th Congressional District of Louisiana. Bolivar Kemp was a Democrat who won the primary election for the 6th District seat in 1924 and won the general election without opposition. Esther Edwards Conner, better known as "Lallie" Kemp, was his wife. The Louisiana Hospital Board appointed her to its board in 1937 by Governor Richard Leche, and she passed away in 1943. Independence, LA, named its medical center after her..

Bolivar E. Kemp
Member of the U.S. House
of Representative from
Louisiana's 6th District

My maternal great grandmother Emma Mead Harrell purchased eleven and 64/100 acres of land from Bolivar E. Kemp. They personally appeared before Louis F. Lefevre, a notary public, duly commissioned and qualified in and for the Parish of Tangipahoa, State of Louisiana. This was done in the presence of the witnesses hereinafter named and undersigned. Bolivar E. Kemp, of lawful age, married once, then to Lallie Kemp, Emma purchased the land for consideration of the price and sum of three hundred and no/100 ($300.00) dollars cash in hand. The witnesses were Lorina L. Ponder, Carroll Buck.


Tuesday, October 1, 2013

Legal Rights to Heirship Property

Emma Mead Harrell and her daughter
Between 1892 and 1902, my maternal great grandmother Emma Mead Harrell acquired 20 acres of land. After purchasing eleven acres, she purchased nine more several years later. Growing up, I remember the old homestead on the hill across the road. Like my grandfather, who lived on the land, I have an attachment to it as it provided for my family and me. .

No one family member had the authority to keep an heir off the property and take possession of it, as this property belonged to all Emma Mead Harrell's heirs. I can't understand why anyone in the family would try and stop heirs from accessing the property. The law prohibits locking the gate to keep other heirs out.  

The Emma Mead Harrell Estate
A number of family members asked me several years ago to help divide up the heir property. I wasn't prepared for the uphill battle I would face from some family members. To make this land available to her children and grandchildren, my maternal great grandmother worked her fingers to the bone. I am heartbroken to see what is happening right now. Emma's descendants do not live on the land, and the property shouldn't be rented. 

Currently, the land needs to be cleared and divided equally, so if any Harrell descendants are interested in helping to settle this estate, please contact me. It is not a land that only belongs to one person and their family, but to all descendants of that person.  An attorney should be consulted by the Harrell offspring to settle the dispute of the land being rented out.  

The terms heirs, next of kin, and distributees usually refer to the persons who by operation of law—the application of the established rules of law—inherit or succeed to the property of a person intestate on his or her death. Statutes generally confer rights of inheritance only on blood relatives, adopted children, adoptive parents, and the surviving spouse. Line of descent is the order or series of persons who have descended one from the other or all from a common ancestor, placed in a line in the order of their birth showing the connection of all blood relatives. The direct line of descent involves persons who are directly descended from the same ancestor, such as father and son, or grandfather and grandson. Whether an adopted child can be regarded as in the direct line of descent depends upon the law in the particular jurisdiction. The collateral line of descent involves persons who are descended from a common ancestor, such as brothers who share the same father or cousins who have the same grandfather. Title by descent differs from title by purchase because descent involves the operation of law, while purchase involves the act or agreement of the parties. Usually direct descendants have first preference in the order of succession, followed by ascendants (persons in the collateral line of ascent), and finally, collateral heirs. Each generation is called a degree in determining the consanguinity, or blood relationship, of one or more persons to an intestate. Where the next of kin of the intestate who are entitled to share in the estate are in equal degree to the deceased, such as children, they share equally in the estatehttp://legal-dictionary.thefreedictionary.com/Rights+and+Liabilities+of+Heirs

The heirs are as followed: Shelton Harrell, Sr., Edgar Harrell, Jasper Harrell, Sr., Bertha Harrell, Theodore Harrell, Palmer Harrell, Henry Harrell, Warner Harrell, Ella Harrell, Alec Harrell and Arthur Harrell and all of their offsprings.

I can be reached at 504.858.4658.