Collins-Hardman family of Georgia
Note: This is just one of 612 family
groupings listed on The
Political Graveyard web site. These families each have three or
more politician members, all linked together by blood, marriage or
adoption.
Some families traditionally (and perhaps properly) considered
separately are joined together here if linked by marriage or
otherwise. These groupings — even the names of the
groupings, and the state or lists of states of main activity —
are the result of a computer algorithm, not the choices of any
historian or genealogist.
- Lamartine Griffin Hardman (1856-1937) — of Commerce,
Jackson
County, Ga. Born in Commerce, Jackson
County, Ga., April 14,
1856. Son of William Benjamin Johnson Hardman and Sarah Elizabeth
(Colquitt) Hardman; married, March 26,
1907, to Emma Wiley Griffin; father of Josephine Staten Hardman
(who married Linton
McGee Collins) and Josephine
Collins. Democrat. Physician;
business
executive; member of Georgia
state house of representatives, 1902-07; member of Georgia
state senate, 1908-10; Governor of
Georgia, 1927-31. Baptist.
Member, American Medical
Association. Died of a heart
ailment, February
18, 1937. Interment at Gray
Hill Cemetery, Commerce, Ga.
- Josephine Collins — also known as Josephine
Staten Hardman; Mrs. Linton M. Collins — of Miami,
Miami-Dade
County, Fla. Daughter of Lamartine
Griffin Hardman; married, January
30, 1934, to Linton
McGee Collins. Democrat. Alternate delegate to Democratic
National Convention from Florida, 1936.
Female.
Still living as of 1936.
- Linton McGee Collins (b. 1902) — also known as
Linton M. Collins — of Miami, Miami-Dade
County, Fla.; Washington,
D.C. Born in Reidsville, Tattnall
County, Ga., June 21,
1902. Son of Ernest Clyde Collins and Beulah Edna (Rogers)
Collins; married, January
30, 1934, to Josephine
Staten Hardman (daughter of Lamartine
Griffin Hardman). Lawyer; Judge of
U.S. Court of Claims, 1964-71. Baptist.
Member, American Bar
Association; Federal
Bar Association; Rotary; Phi
Delta Theta. Presumed
deceased. Burial
location unknown.
"Enjoy the hospitable entertainment of a political
graveyard."
Henry L. Clinton, Apollo Hall, New York City, February
3, 1872 |
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