ELIZA SIMS AND TWO LIBRARIES
             
            By Clinton F. Cross
              
            
              
            1. Preface 
			This is a story about Eliza Harlan-Cross-Tannehill-Dunlap-Sims 
			(#2871)(Harlan, 644), wife of Nicholas P. Sims and mother of Oscar 
			E. Dunlap and Samuel Meriwether Dunlap, Jr. For future reference, a 
			number in this paper after the name of someone (in this case #2871 
			for Eliza) refers to the number in Alpheus Harlan’s book that 
			identifies the particular individual about whom the author is 
			writing (Harlan).  
			 
			N. P. Sims and O. E. Dunlap founded the Nicholas P. Sims Library in 
			Waxahachie, Texas. Samuel Meriwether Dunlap, Jr. founded the Samuel 
			M. Dunlap Memorial Library in Italy, Texas. Both the Sims and the 
			Dunlap libraries have copies of the Harlan book referred to in the 
			preceding paragraph. 
			 
			  
			This paper is about Eliza and her family history—-Harlan, Sims, 
			Cross, and Dunlap histories. It is also a tribute to Eliza, after 
			whom no library was ever named.  
			 
  
			2. Introduction 
			 
			William Sims and Judy Cross Sims were the grandparents of Nicholas 
			P. Sims and Eliza Harlan Sims, first cousins who later became 
			husband and wife. Eliza and her third husband, Samuel Meriwether 
			Dunlap, parented Samuel Meriwether Dunlap, Jr., the founder of the 
			S. M. Dunlap Memorial Library in Italy, Texas. Eliza was Nicholas P. 
			Sims’ second wife; Nicholas P. Sims was Eliza’s fourth husband. 
			 
			Eliza was born in 1814, the year Francis Scott Key wrote the “Star 
			Spangled Banner,” the first of three children born to Elijah and 
			Elizabeth Harlan. She died in 1877, shortly after John Marshall 
			Harlan, her second cousin, wrote his famous dissenting opinion in 
			Plessy v. Ferguson (1896)(Supreme Court, Plessy), in which Harlan 
			condemned the “separate but equal” doctrine.  
			  
			Hopefully, this paper will remind the reader that we are all 
			connected to each other in many different ways, and also to the 
			past. 
			  
			
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