
1890 Itawamba County; Mississippi State Tax ListLater that year, they had another daughter, Mary Esta Webb, known almost universally as "Mutt". Then in October of 1892, they had their last child, a daughter named Martha Melvertie Webb. Jim was a farmer in his younger years, and the census tells us that is what he was primarily doing until later in his life.
Webb, J.M.; page 79; Fulton
1900 Itawamba Co. Census.The 1908 school census and 1910 federal census found them in this way:
Page 238B HH # 230
Webb, James M. Head W M Jan. 1858 42 M 17 MS, TN, TN Farmer Can read & write
Webb, Lilley A. Wife W F Feb. 1856 44 M 17 (4 of 4 children still living) NC, VA, VA Can read & write
Webb, George W. F. Son W M July 1886 15 S MS, MS, NC Farm Laborer Can read & write
Webb, Katty Dau. W F Feb. 1889 11 S MS, MS, NC Can read & write
Webb, Mary E. Dau. W F Sept. 1890 9 S MS, MS, NC
Webb, Martha Dau. W F Oct. 1892 7 S MS, MS, NC
1908 Itawamba County House-to-House School CensusAll the children grew up and one by one married and moved away, except for Mutt. She took care of her mother and father and never married. She was very well known around the community and strong willed. When Jim quit farming he opened up a general goods store on the side of highway 78 in the Clay Community, just east of Fulton. It was a good business and Jim became well known for it.
Webb, J.M.
Katie 18 f
Ester 16 f
Melverta 15 f
1910 Clay Prct. Beat 5. Itawamba Co. Ms.
DW#109/109
James M. Webb 52 mar1 27yrs. MS MS NC
Lydia A. 54 mar1 27yrs. 4kids 4liv. Nc Mexico(English) Nc
George W. 23 Ms MS NC
Kate 21 MS MS NC
Ester 19 MS MS NC
Margaret 17 MS MS NC
1920 Itawamba County, Mississippi CensusBut in 1927, Lydia's ill health finally caught up with her and she passed away. She was buried in the Clover-Ridge Cemetery. Three years later, the census found Jim and Mutt together:
Page 273A
Webb, James M. 63 AL AL IN (owns)
Webb, Lydia A. 62 SC SC SC
Webb, Mary A. 28 dau. MS AL SC
1930 Itawamba County, Mississippi CensusThough we are not sure why, Jim at one point ca. 1935 became ill and actually had the money to travel to Memphis to be treated by doctors there, a feat that very few of the folks in those day had the ability to do. The paper mentioned it when he returned:
Part of Beat 5; Bankhead Highway; Page 228B; Household #44/46
Webb, James M. Head Rents M W 71 Widowed Can read and write AL TN NC Merchant
Webb, Mary E. Dau. F W 38 Single Can read and write MS AL SC
Fulton News BeaconThese were the years that most people alive today remembered Jim in. As an older widowed man, he was quite peculiar in some ways, but he sure loved his grandkids. As a business man he was very honest. He paid every penny that he owed to anyone else, but he also wanted every penny that was owed to him! I have seen an advertisement for Silver Fox Flour in 1938 in the Fulton News Beacon where his store was mentioned as one of the ones that sold that product in the Fulton area, but I've never seen an advertisement from his store alone.
June 27, 1935
Clay News: Mr. J.M. Webb returned home Saturday from the Memphis Hospital.
(also) Mr. and Mrs. Yancy Pierce spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. J.M. Webb.
He was known in his later years to sit outside underneath a huge old tree
in his front yard that he used to take a 'siesta' under every day while sitting
up straight in a straight-backed chair. He made quite a sight given
his big white beard. Once a family pulled up for gas at the store and
when their little boy saw Jim he was startled and screamed "Look! That's
Santy Clause!" When they finally cut that big old tree down, much hubbub
was made about it. Photographers came out and took pictures, and the
one in this page's title was made with old Jim sitting on top with his beard
flowing. Another picture is seen to the side here with Mutt standing
in front of it and some other unknown folks on and around it.
William Franklin Webb
(md. Jessie Pearl Harden and lived in the Clay community of Itawamba County
all his life, dying at the age of 61)
Kate Webb (md.
Harbert Virgil Truelove and lived her entire life in Itawamba County, dying
at age 77)
Mary Esta "Mutt" Webb (never married; died at age 77, living her whole life in Clay, Itawamba County, Mississippi)
Martha Melvertie Webb (md. Curtis Wesley Maddox and died at the age of 85)