James Moore
M, d. before 2023
James Moore married Marlene Kay Bagwell, daughter of Charles Morgan Bagwell and Mildred Evelyn Parsons, after 1962. James Moore died before 2023.
Susan (?)
F
Susan (?) married Calvin Monroe Bagwell, son of Tilmon Monroe Bagwell and Mattie Alpha Conley, after 1945.1
Children of Susan (?) and Calvin Monroe Bagwell
Citations
- [S7233] Calvin Monroe Bagwell Grave Stone, Find a Grave, www.findagrave.com, https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/105188213
Jane Bagwell1
F
Jane Bagwell is the daughter of Calvin Monroe Bagwell and Susan (?)1 Jane Bagwell married (?) Palmer after 1965.
Citations
- [S7233] Calvin Monroe Bagwell Grave Stone, Find a Grave, www.findagrave.com, https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/105188213
(?) Palmer
M
Judith Bagwell1
F
Judith Bagwell is the daughter of Calvin Monroe Bagwell and Susan (?)1 Judith Bagwell married (?) Holmes after 1965.1
Citations
- [S7233] Calvin Monroe Bagwell Grave Stone, Find a Grave, www.findagrave.com, https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/105188213
(?) Holmes1
M
Citations
- [S7233] Calvin Monroe Bagwell Grave Stone, Find a Grave, www.findagrave.com, https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/105188213
Janice R. Schmidt
F
Janice R. Schmidt married Harold F. Bagwell, son of Luther Broadus Bagwell and Gladys Bell Holland, after 1958.
Children of Janice R. Schmidt and Harold F. Bagwell
- Felicia Bagwell
- Carrie Bagwell
- Jill Marie Bagwell b. a 1959, d. b 2023
Felicia Bagwell
F
Felicia Bagwell is the daughter of Harold F. Bagwell and Janice R. Schmidt. Felicia Bagwell married Don Neumann after 1979.
Don Neumann
M
Don Neumann married Felicia Bagwell, daughter of Harold F. Bagwell and Janice R. Schmidt, after 1979.
Carrie Bagwell
F
Carrie Bagwell is the daughter of Harold F. Bagwell and Janice R. Schmidt. Carrie Bagwell married Michael Marble after 1979.
Michael Marble
M
Michael Marble married Carrie Bagwell, daughter of Harold F. Bagwell and Janice R. Schmidt, after 1979.
Jill Marie Bagwell
F, b. after 1959, d. before 2023
Jill Marie Bagwell was born after 1959. She was the daughter of Harold F. Bagwell and Janice R. Schmidt. As of after 1979,her married name was McCormack. Jill Marie Bagwell married Patrick McCormack after 1979. Jill Marie Bagwell died before 2023.
Patrick McCormack
M
Patrick McCormack married Jill Marie Bagwell, daughter of Harold F. Bagwell and Janice R. Schmidt, after 1979.
Benjamin Bagwell1
M
Citations
- [S7236] Email from Benjamin Bagwell dated May 2023 to Hunter Bagwell; Subject Line: Timothy R. Bagwell's Family.
Gregory Bagwell
M
Stephanie Bagwell
F
Stephanie Bagwell is the daughter of Marvin Oliver Bagwell and Roberta Ramsay. Stephanie Bagwell married (?) Hoadley after 1970.
(?) Hoadley
M
(?) Hoadley married Stephanie Bagwell, daughter of Marvin Oliver Bagwell and Roberta Ramsay, after 1970.
Miley Bagwell
F
Aspyn Bagwell
F
Teresa Diane Landford
F
Teresa Diane Landford married James Larry Bagwell, son of James Carroll Bagwell and Nancy Lorene Smith, before 1978.
Hattie Knight
F, b. 28 March 1906, d. 25 October 1994
Hattie Knight was born on 28 March 1906. As of 23 February 1956,her married name was Bagwell. She married Ennis Theodore Bagwell, son of Andrew Jackson Bagwell and Birdie V. Martin, on 23 February 1956 at Belton, Anderson County, South Carolina. Hattie Knight died on 25 October 1994 at age 88.
Gloria Paragas
F
Gloria Paragas married Jonathan Stanhope Bagwell Jr., son of Jonathan Stanhope Bagwell and Martha Ruth Owensby, on 22 August 1991 at Brevard, Florida.
Virginia Ann Bagwell
F
Robert Lee Bagwell
M, b. 16 December 1974, d. 1 May 2023
Robert Lee Bagwell was born on 16 December 1974 in Spartanburg, South Carolina. He was the son of Thurman Woodrow Bagwell and Sarah Francis Wall. Robert Lee Bagwell died on 1 May 2023 at age 48
Mr. Robert Lee Bagwell, 48, of Chesnee, SC passed away on Monday, May 1, 2023. He was born in Spartanburg on December 16, 1974 to the late Sarah Frances Wall Bagwell and Thurman W. Bagwell.
Mr. Bagwell loved working on cars and computers, and was known as a jokester to his friends and family.
He is survived by a son, Mark Bagwell; a brother, James Bagwell: nieces, Cindie Fletcher, Sheila Bagwell, and Rochelle Bagwell; and great niece, Brianna Fletcher; great great niece, Lillie Bagwell; nephews, Wayne Chapman, and “Little Bobby” Chapman; great nephew, Michael Fletcher; and great great nephews, Hunter, Tyler, and Jax.
A funeral service will be held at 2:30PM on Friday, May 12, 2023 at Eggers Funeral Home of Chesnee, with Rev. Reese English officiating. The family will receive friends one hour prior to the service from 1:30PM until 2:30PM. Interment will follow at Springhill Memorial Gardens.
He was buried on 12 May 2023 at Springhill Memorial Gardens, Chesnee, Spartanburg County, South Carolina.
Mr. Robert Lee Bagwell, 48, of Chesnee, SC passed away on Monday, May 1, 2023. He was born in Spartanburg on December 16, 1974 to the late Sarah Frances Wall Bagwell and Thurman W. Bagwell.
Mr. Bagwell loved working on cars and computers, and was known as a jokester to his friends and family.
He is survived by a son, Mark Bagwell; a brother, James Bagwell: nieces, Cindie Fletcher, Sheila Bagwell, and Rochelle Bagwell; and great niece, Brianna Fletcher; great great niece, Lillie Bagwell; nephews, Wayne Chapman, and “Little Bobby” Chapman; great nephew, Michael Fletcher; and great great nephews, Hunter, Tyler, and Jax.
A funeral service will be held at 2:30PM on Friday, May 12, 2023 at Eggers Funeral Home of Chesnee, with Rev. Reese English officiating. The family will receive friends one hour prior to the service from 1:30PM until 2:30PM. Interment will follow at Springhill Memorial Gardens.
He was buried on 12 May 2023 at Springhill Memorial Gardens, Chesnee, Spartanburg County, South Carolina.
Child of Robert Lee Bagwell
Sybil Anne Sewell
F
Sybil Anne Sewell married Carl Edwin “Bags” Bagwell, son of Reverend Winfred Levi Gaffney Bagwell and Ruby McCollum, on 22 April 1961 at Rosewood Baptist Church, Columbia, South Carolina.
Children of Sybil Anne Sewell and Carl Edwin “Bags” Bagwell
- Mitchell Alan Bagwell1 b. 26 Dec 1961, d. 24 Apr 2004
- Carl Gregory Bagwell1
- Christopher Todd Bagwell+1
Citations
- [S6116] Carl Edwin “Bags” Bagwell Grave Stone, Find a Grave, www.findagrave.com, https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/204128406
Emma Clara Bagwell
F, b. 7 June 1949, d. 22 April 2023
Emma Clara Bagwell was born on 7 June 1949 in Birmingham, Jefferson County, Alabama. She was the daughter of Harold Calvin Bagwell and Stella Aline Short. As of after 1968,her married name was Hyde. Emma Clara Bagwell married Fred Hyde after 1968. Emma Clara Bagwell died on 22 April 2023 in Spartanburg, Spartanburg County, South Carolina, at age 73
Emma Bagwell Hyde’s heart of gold came to a final rest on Saturday, April 22, 2023, bringing her battle with Idiopathic Pulmonary Fibrosis (IPF) to a conclusion. While the little-known, uncurable lung disease was mighty, Emma’s determination (with a touch of stubbornness) allowed her to spend several years more than doctors predicted with herhusband and love of her life for the past 50 years – Fred Hyde.
She also was able to witness both her children marry their loves during that time – with Christie Hyde DeNave sharing vows with husband Joe on the beach near her home in Florida in 2015 and F. Michael Hyde pledging his love to wife Gina a year laterin Spartanburg. But her true strength and determination to fight IPF was drawn from her granddaughters – 5-year-old Lydia Hyde and 14-year-old Emily DeNave – whom she loved, supported, and doted upon to the very end.
Emma’s voice over the loudspeaker at Sky City department store in Spartanburg is what initially drew Fred to her in the most random of encounters that eventually led to a lifetime together. After their 1974 New Year’s Day wedding at Collins Chapel, the pair discovered they were born at the same Birmingham, Ala., hospital only six months apart from each other.
After living throughout the southeast, Emma and Fred returned to her hometown of Roebuck, S.C. in 1982 and lived on the farmland previously cared for by both her grandfather and father. Her brother Randy Bagwell, and his wife Maren, and 99-year-old mother Aline Bagwell also have homes on the former farm, as well as her son Michael and her nephew Chris Spelman– allowing Emma to keep family close. She spoke to her mother Aline, originally from Kentucky, nearly every day and was in the midst of helping plan her 100th birthday celebration for earlyMay.
Her illness also brought a ray of sunshine into her life in the form of her caregiver, LauraBeth Mitchell, who became an honorary family member through her years of providing assistance, laughter and smiles to both Emma and Fred.
Emma was one of the first graduating classes from Paul M. Dorman High School in 1966. She later received degrees from both North Greenville Junior College in 1971 and Limestone College in 1974, making her the first in her family to receive a bachelor’s degree. She had a passion for science and nature that carried into her professional and philanthropic careers with the Alabama Department of Forensic Science, the Girl Scouts of America, and Control Management Services.
For many years, she was known as “Mother Nature,” at the Girl Scouts’ Camp Meridale in Mississippi and Camp Mary Elizabeth in Spartanburg. She would visit underfunded nursing homes in the Spartanburg area to help spruce them up each month with seasonal decorations, provide gifts at the holidays,and conduct Bible studies. Even after becoming homebound, she continued to make prayer beads and other items at home for the United Methodist Women to distribute. Her heart of gold loved and supported as many as she could regardless of their culture, race, religion, or preferences.
As a devoted follower of Christianity and member of The United Methodist Church, she did not fear the day IPF finally won. She leaned on Psalm 17:15, “when I awake in heaven, I will be fully satisfied for I will see you face to face.” She looked forward to her heavenly reunion with her beloved mother-in-law Bobbie Jean Hyde and her father Harold Bagwell, a Navy veteran whoexchanged love letters with his darling Aline during World War II and survived the bombing of Pearl Harbor and his ship being sunk in the South Pacific to make it back home to start a family with her.
Emma encouraged those she left behind to miss her, but not too long as she’s found everlasting peace, free of oxygen tubes, pain and medications, together with the Lord. She wants her loved one to remember the love and joy they once shared and bury their sorrows in doing good deeds.
A memorial service and celebration life will be held to honor Emma on Sunday, May 21, at 1:30 p.m., in the chapel at Chapel at J.M. Dunbar Funeral Home, 690 Southport Rd, Roebuck, SC 29376. It will be followed by a Celebration of Life Reception from 3:30 p.m. to 5:30 p.m. at The Vintage Toast, 100 Wood Row, Spartanburg, SC 29306.
The family wants to surround Emma with the love and prayers of those who knew her. They ask everyone in attendance to bring a rock or stone they feel is unique, pretty or from a special place. These stones with be prayed over during the memorial and collected by the family to surround Emma’s ashes when she is returned to the earth in a private ceremony at a later date.
In lieu of flowers or other items, Emma strongly encouraged those who cared for her to support the Pulmonary Fibrosis Foundation to fund research that may find a cure to the dreadful disease that took her from us. Donations can be made in her memory at [EMAIL:]ht[ITAL:]tps://fundraise.givesmart.com/vf/PFFTribute/EmmaHyde.[:ITAL][:EMAIL]
She was cremated.
Emma Bagwell Hyde’s heart of gold came to a final rest on Saturday, April 22, 2023, bringing her battle with Idiopathic Pulmonary Fibrosis (IPF) to a conclusion. While the little-known, uncurable lung disease was mighty, Emma’s determination (with a touch of stubbornness) allowed her to spend several years more than doctors predicted with herhusband and love of her life for the past 50 years – Fred Hyde.
She also was able to witness both her children marry their loves during that time – with Christie Hyde DeNave sharing vows with husband Joe on the beach near her home in Florida in 2015 and F. Michael Hyde pledging his love to wife Gina a year laterin Spartanburg. But her true strength and determination to fight IPF was drawn from her granddaughters – 5-year-old Lydia Hyde and 14-year-old Emily DeNave – whom she loved, supported, and doted upon to the very end.
Emma’s voice over the loudspeaker at Sky City department store in Spartanburg is what initially drew Fred to her in the most random of encounters that eventually led to a lifetime together. After their 1974 New Year’s Day wedding at Collins Chapel, the pair discovered they were born at the same Birmingham, Ala., hospital only six months apart from each other.
After living throughout the southeast, Emma and Fred returned to her hometown of Roebuck, S.C. in 1982 and lived on the farmland previously cared for by both her grandfather and father. Her brother Randy Bagwell, and his wife Maren, and 99-year-old mother Aline Bagwell also have homes on the former farm, as well as her son Michael and her nephew Chris Spelman– allowing Emma to keep family close. She spoke to her mother Aline, originally from Kentucky, nearly every day and was in the midst of helping plan her 100th birthday celebration for earlyMay.
Her illness also brought a ray of sunshine into her life in the form of her caregiver, LauraBeth Mitchell, who became an honorary family member through her years of providing assistance, laughter and smiles to both Emma and Fred.
Emma was one of the first graduating classes from Paul M. Dorman High School in 1966. She later received degrees from both North Greenville Junior College in 1971 and Limestone College in 1974, making her the first in her family to receive a bachelor’s degree. She had a passion for science and nature that carried into her professional and philanthropic careers with the Alabama Department of Forensic Science, the Girl Scouts of America, and Control Management Services.
For many years, she was known as “Mother Nature,” at the Girl Scouts’ Camp Meridale in Mississippi and Camp Mary Elizabeth in Spartanburg. She would visit underfunded nursing homes in the Spartanburg area to help spruce them up each month with seasonal decorations, provide gifts at the holidays,and conduct Bible studies. Even after becoming homebound, she continued to make prayer beads and other items at home for the United Methodist Women to distribute. Her heart of gold loved and supported as many as she could regardless of their culture, race, religion, or preferences.
As a devoted follower of Christianity and member of The United Methodist Church, she did not fear the day IPF finally won. She leaned on Psalm 17:15, “when I awake in heaven, I will be fully satisfied for I will see you face to face.” She looked forward to her heavenly reunion with her beloved mother-in-law Bobbie Jean Hyde and her father Harold Bagwell, a Navy veteran whoexchanged love letters with his darling Aline during World War II and survived the bombing of Pearl Harbor and his ship being sunk in the South Pacific to make it back home to start a family with her.
Emma encouraged those she left behind to miss her, but not too long as she’s found everlasting peace, free of oxygen tubes, pain and medications, together with the Lord. She wants her loved one to remember the love and joy they once shared and bury their sorrows in doing good deeds.
A memorial service and celebration life will be held to honor Emma on Sunday, May 21, at 1:30 p.m., in the chapel at Chapel at J.M. Dunbar Funeral Home, 690 Southport Rd, Roebuck, SC 29376. It will be followed by a Celebration of Life Reception from 3:30 p.m. to 5:30 p.m. at The Vintage Toast, 100 Wood Row, Spartanburg, SC 29306.
The family wants to surround Emma with the love and prayers of those who knew her. They ask everyone in attendance to bring a rock or stone they feel is unique, pretty or from a special place. These stones with be prayed over during the memorial and collected by the family to surround Emma’s ashes when she is returned to the earth in a private ceremony at a later date.
In lieu of flowers or other items, Emma strongly encouraged those who cared for her to support the Pulmonary Fibrosis Foundation to fund research that may find a cure to the dreadful disease that took her from us. Donations can be made in her memory at [EMAIL:]ht[ITAL:]tps://fundraise.givesmart.com/vf/PFFTribute/EmmaHyde.[:ITAL][:EMAIL]
She was cremated.