Unnamed Grandmother of Stonewall Jackson Fentry

Like her daughter-in-law, this Mrs. Fentry died before she was forty. According to Pruitt, it was "that place," the poor Fentry farm on which she lived and the impoverished life she led there, that killed both women at such a young age (96).

Unnamed Mother of Stonewall Jackson Fentry

All readers learn about Mrs. G. A. Fentry is that, like her mother-in-law before her, she died before she was forty. According to Pruitt, it was "that place," the poor Fentry farm on which she lived and the impoverished life she led there, that killed her (96).

Unnamed Grandfather of Stonewall Jackson Fentry

Pruitt tells Gavin Stevens that Fentry's "grandpa" worked the family's small, poor farm "until he died between the plow handles" working in the field (97). He was probably the first Fentry to settle in Yoknapatawpha.

General James Longstreet

James Longstreet was arguably the best corps commander in the Confederate army. G.A. Fentry served under him as well as Stonewall Jackson during the Civil War; after the war, he and his son paid tribute to Longstreet when they named the child they adopted "Jackson and Longstreet Fentry" (100).

General Stonewall Jackson

Thomas Jackson received the nickname "Stonewall" during the First Battle of Bull Run. Until his death in 1863 he was one of the Confederacy's most successful generals, and one of Robert E. Lee's most trusted commanders. G.A. Fentry, who served under Jackson, named both his son and adopted grandson in his honor.

Haven Hill Store in "Tomorrow" (Location)

Only mentioned in the story as "Haven Hill store" (100), this is where the Fentrys buy their supplies; it is within riding distance of their farm.

Haven Hill Store

In "Tomorrow," "Haven Hill store" is where the Fentrys buy their supplies (100); it is within riding distance of their farm. Neither the store nor Haven Hill are mentioned in any other of the fictions.

Unnamed Negro Sawmill Workers

Apparently except for Fentry, the workers at Quick's sawmill are all black. At least, when Isham Quick describes Fentry's arrival at the mill, he says he did "the same work" and drew "the same pay as the niggers done" (103).

Unnamed People of Yoknapatawpha

The narrator of "Tomorrow" refers once to "all the people in our country - the Negroes, the hill people, the rich flatland plantation owners" (91). He is explaining that, despite his Uncle Gavin's formal education at Harvard and Heidelberg, he knows how to talk to "all the people" so that they understand him. This is a rare passage in the Yoknapatawpha fictions, in which the population of the county is aggregated across racial and class lines, though the intent of the passage is apparently to praise Gavin rather than the county's shared community.

Unnamed Mother of Narrator

In "Tomorrow" she is mentioned once, when "Uncle Gavin" tells the narrator to tell "your mother" about the trip they will be taking out of town (94). In the Yoknapatawpha saga, she is Maggie Mallison, the daughter of Judge Stevens, the twin sister of Gavin Stevens, wife of one Charles Mallison and the mother of another, "Chick"; her role in the various late Yoknapatawpha fictions in which she appears is usually defined by her relationships to these male figures.

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