Watty Espy's maternal grandfather was Dr. Walter Scott. Dr. Scott married "Bunch" Lindsey and they had one daughter, Mary Jordan Scott, Watty's mother. Dr. Scott and Bunch divorced. Bunch moved back into her family home - the home Watty inherited, and where he founded his Capital Punishment Research Project in the 80s.
By
T. Larry Smith
Vol. 13, No. 39
Dr. Walter Scott of Headland and Newville
Dr. Walter Scott
was the youngest of three Scott brothers who became Henry County doctors; the
three doctor brothers once practiced medicine at the same time in Headland,
Alabama. These three doctor brothers
were Dr. Marcus Tullis Cicero Scott (1870-1927), Dr. Marvin Scott (1877-1954)
and Dr. Walter Scott (1884-1951). The
attached image depicts Walter Scott as a young man. The three doctors were sons
of Angus McAllister Scott (1840-1915) and Susan Amelia Stovall Scott (1847-1926).
The three Scott doctors were paternal grandsons of Henry Kay Scott (1799-1875) and
Celia Carter Scott (1802-1899) who had settled in northern Henry County
by 1830. The doctor’s maternal
grandparents were Thomas Stovall and Lucinda Key Stovall. The two older Scott
brothers were born at Scottsboro located in the Screamer section near the
Barbour County Line, and northwest of the present Liberty United
Methodist Church . Scottsboro was named for the Henry Kay Scott
family; the village stood at the present crossroads of county roads # 92 and #204. Scottsboro later became known as Dewitt , Alabama
when the post office opened at Scottsboro in 1903. The little Town of Dewitt was named after Dewitt Scott, the
first postmaster. Scottsboro a.k.a.
Dewitt is now among Henry
County ’s dead towns.
Angus M. Scott moved his family to Headland, Alabama in the late 1890’s. He was appointed Grand Lecturer of the
Masonic Lodge of Alabama in 1901, traveling extensively over the state. On January 13, 1902, Angus Scott purchased a
house and lot from Mr. and Mrs. Dr. Wyatt S. Oates that was known as the former
J. E. Grice house, it stood on the present corner of Cleveland and Scott
Streets. The home later became the home
of the youngest of the three doctors, Dr. Walter Scott. This writer purchased the Dr. Walter Scott
house and large lot in 1986 from his step-son, Charles Gary, in order to design
and construct Headland’s first townhomes and garden homes after the old home
was razed. The rear Victorian screen door on the former Dr. Walter Scott house
is now hinged on this writer’s front door in Tumbleton. Scott
Street in Headland was named for the Angus M. Scott
family. The first commercial hospital within
the boundaries of present Henry
County was organized and
operated by Dr. Marcus Tullis Cicero Scott and his Brother, Dr. Marvin Scott in
1907 in Headland. This two story frame hospital
faced Mill Street ,
now called Forrest Street ,
and stood behind the old Methodist Church that was across the street from the present
Headland National Bank and behind the present Landmark Church . This first Scott Hospital
burned in 1915. The second Scott
Hospital was located in
an existing large house at the corner of present East King and the former Depot Street which
is now called South Main Street . Dr. Marcus Scott sold his half interests in
the hospital to his brother Dr. Marvin Scott in 1922. Dr. Marcus Scott died in 1927. Dr. Marvin Scott later closed the Scott hospital
and opened his private office in a small house that still stands on the north
side of Scott Street
and behind the present Sam Vann house. Dr.
Marvin Scott practiced until 1953 when he closed his office. He died in 1954. Dr. Marvin Scott was married
to Clyde Stovall Scott who became the historian of Henry
County ; she compiled the first history
book on Henry County in 1961 titled History of Henry County, Alabama. Dr. Marvin Scott’s house remains today and
stands on the west side of his father’s former house site on Scott Street where it remains today.
The youngest of
the three Scott doctor brothers, Walter Scott (1884-1951), was born in the Clopton,
Alabama area in Dale County
in 1884. He came to Headland during his youth in the late 1890’s with his
parents. Walter Scott was married to (1) Malinda Oates “Bunch” Lindsey (1882-1970)
of Headland on November 1, 1908, by Probate Judge John B. Ward at his home. Bunch was the daughter of Edgar Lindsey
(1854-1942) and Margaret Oates Lindsey (1859-1939). Bunch was a grand daughter
of Ephraim and Mary Ann Ward Oates of Abbeville. After finishing the Atlanta Medical
School , now Emory
University , Dr. Walter Scott settled
in the Town of Newville , Alabama
in Henry County , where he opened his first medical
practice in May of 1910. By 1920, Dr.
Scott was back in Headland living in the home with his oldest brother, Dr. Marcus
T. C. Scott, whose house stood on South
Depot Street , now South Main ,
near the present Wachovia Bank. Dr.
Walter Scott and wife Bunch had divorced. Dr. Walter Scott later moved into the home of
his late father on Scott Street
where he was reared. His ex-wife, (1) “Bunch” Lindsey Scott moved back in her
family home with her parents in Headland. Dr. Walter Scott’s Headland office was located
in the rear of the Slocomb Drug Store on the West side of the public
square. He later operated an office in
the left front room of his home on Scott
Street . Dr.
Walter Scott was renting to a boarder in 1930, a Headland dentist named Dr.
Willie W. Barnard. Dr. Walter Scott was
a member of the Henry County Medical Association.
Dr. Walter Scott and wife “Bunch” were parents of one daughter, Mary Jordon Scott, (1912-1958) who was first married to (1) Major Watt Espy, Sr. (1907-1980), who became the President of the Headland National Bank and a prominent businessman. They were parents of one son, Major W. “Watty” Espy, Jr. (1933- 2009), who never married and later became known as the national expert and historian regarding the death penalty in theUnited States .
“Watty” Espy was the grandson of Dr. Walter Scott. Major W. Espy, Sr. and (1) Mary Jordon Scott
Espy also divorced. Mary Jordon Scott (1)
Espy was next married to (2) Robert R. Warren.
Major W. Espy, Sr., was next married to (2) Edith Vann and they became
parents of Mark, Marilyn and Mila Espy. Watty Espy later resided in his great-grandfather
Edgar Lindsey’s home in Headland after inheriting the home from his grandmother
Bunch Scott. Dr. Walter Scott next married
(2) Letchie Gary (1900-1982) of Midland City, Alabama in 1930, she already had
an eleven year old son named Charles Myron Gary (1919-2003); Charles Gary became
a well known Midland City businessman. Charles Gary has two sons presently residing
in Midland City , John Bowman “Bo” Gary, and Charles
Walter “Chick” Gary who is a newly elected Dale County Commissioner. They are step grandsons of Dr. Walter
Scott. “Chick” Gary was delivered by his step-grandfather Dr.
Walter Scott, and was named for him. Dr.
Walter Scott’s second wife, Letchie Gary Scott, died in 1982 and was buried in
Dale County, Alabama in the Midland City Cemetery
with her Gary
family.
Dr. Walter Scott and wife “Bunch” were parents of one daughter, Mary Jordon Scott, (1912-1958) who was first married to (1) Major Watt Espy, Sr. (1907-1980), who became the President of the Headland National Bank and a prominent businessman. They were parents of one son, Major W. “Watty” Espy, Jr. (1933- 2009), who never married and later became known as the national expert and historian regarding the death penalty in the
Dr. Walter Scott
practiced in Headland for 26 years; he died at age 67 in his home on Scott Street in
Headland on Saturday morning, October 27, 1951.
Headland’s presently retired dentist, Dr. Jim Vann, states that Dr.
Water Scott was the best medical diagnostician in the area at the time. Mr. Sam Vann states that Dr. Walter Scott was
a good doctor. He was a member of the Headland Methodist Church
and is buried alone in a double plot in the church cemetery. Dr. Walter Scott’s first wife, Malinda Oates
“Bunch” Lindsey (1) Scott was a retired milliner and dry goods clerk in Headland’s
Solomon Dry Goods Store and in the Sam Vann, Sr.’s Vann Dry Goods Store. Bunch Lindsey
Scott died at age 86 in Bryce Hospital in Tuscaloosa
on Feb. 8, 1970 after having lived in the facility for several years. She is
buried in the Headland
Baptist Cemetery
in the Lindsey plot with her parents. Bunch Scott never re-married. Dr. Walter Scott’s daughter, Mary Jordon Scott
(1) Espy (2) Warren, died in Pasadena ,
Texas in 1958 at age 46. She was fearful of flying, so the family
requested that her body not be flown to Headland; whereas, her body was brought
back to Headland by Wilton Holman and Oyette White to the Headland Mortuary. Her
funeral was held in her mother’s home at the corner of present Cleveland &
N. Main Street. Mary Jordon had lived in
Texas two
years. She is buried next to her mother, Bunch Lindsey Scott, in the Headland Baptist Cemetery
in the Edgar Lindsey family plot. Dr.
Walter Scott was one of the many doctors who shall forever remain in the annals
of Henry County ’s medical history.
- More Anon!
source Watt Espy's maternal great-grandfather click here for more |
1 comment:
Dr. Marvin Scott's brother was Dr. Walter Scott, father of Mary Jordan Lindsay Scott.
Dr. Marvin Scott had a son Marvin who was born in 1909 and Marvin Scott had a son Marcus who was born in 1932. I would bet that they were the two mentioned in his story. They would have been Mary's 1st and 2nd cousins.
Dr. Marvin Scott was also the father of Agnes Scott Halstead who was our English and Latin teacher in High School. She went with us on our Sr. trip to Washington and NY in 1962. She was the organist at Headland Methodist Church for decades.
Brenda Stroup
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