For More Info
  • Home
  • Browse By Photo
  • Browse By Name
    • Dr. Brenda Ameter
    • Apple Tree Grown from Seed Flown in Space on STS-89
    • Gary Bernath
    • Aura “Joy” Bracero
    • A. J. Brannon
    • Mr. and Mrs. Joe Buntin
    • Dr. William R. “Ronnie” Capps
    • Frederick Bernard Capps
    • Ruby Reeves Carter
    • Mrs. Brenda Chambers
    • Jason Kyle Deason
    • Brian J. Deavers
    • Broward Dell
    • W. Earl Dubois
    • J. R. Dykes
    • Earth Day 2009
    • Michael Todd England
    • Mrs. Jim Byrd Espy
    • Sandra H. and Jim Faria (with Mary and Henry Hutto)
    • Dr. Sandra Faria and Rebecca Yarborough
    • Fred Feagin
    • Donald C. Fricks
    • Daniel L. Harrell
    • Dr. Thomas Harrison
    • Kenneth Michael Harrison
    • Mae B. Harrison
    • Rev. Billy E. and Mrs. Janie Hogue
    • JoAnn Hoekenga
    • Dr. Don Jeffrey
    • Dr. Robert “Bob” Jones
    • Dr. Reiff LaFleur
    • Maude E. Lewis
    • Dr. Michael Malone
    • Bessie and Earl McArthur
    • Joseph and Grace Motola
    • Allen Dennett Nutter
    • Joseph Anthony “Winkie” Outlaw
    • Elisa P. Paramore
    • Mahmood Parsa
    • Alice C. Patrick
    • Robert C. Patrick
    • Joseph and Marie Saliba
    • Joseph Wayne “Joey” Shelley
    • Dr. Mary Eve Shoaf
    • Dr. Jack Sublette
    • Artesa and Scott Walker
    • B. W. “Woody” Whitaker
    • Dr. Richard “Dick” Williams
    • Pam Williamson
    • Harry T. Wills
    • CDR Forrest H. "Buzz" Wood (USN Ret.)
    • Carol F. Woodham
    • Dr. John E. Woodham
    • Sonja Woodham
    • Dr. Quan Yang
    • Spaces and Features
    • Ralph Adams Hall
    • Alabama Power Classroom
    • Erin’s (Malone) Rose Garden
    • Graceba Control Center
    • Thomas Harrison Walking Trail
    • Independence Park
    • Wallace Malone Hall
    • Michelin Conference Room
    • R. Terry Everett Hall
    • Sony Hall
    • Steve and Angelia Stokes Circulation Desk
    • Tony Whetstone Stage, Sony Hall
    • Wallace Malone, Jr. Classroom
    • Dr. Thomas Harrison Room
    • R. Terry Everett Congressional Library
    • Troy Dothan Faculty & Staff Computer Lab
    • John & Gail Watson Computer Lab
    • Sodexho Room
    • James F. Coleman Hall
  • Campus Map

For More Info...Aura Yarit “Joy” Bracero (February 1, 1979 – March 3, 2005)

Joy Bracero was a veteran of the U.S. Army and a student at Troy State University Dothan.  She was killed in a traffic accident in Enterprise, Alabama, on March 3, 2005.

Ms. Bracero was born in Puerto Rico in 1979.  She served in the US Army, lived in Enterprise, Alabama, with her husband, Jorge L. Cedeno, and son Jorge J. Cedeno who was riding with her when their car was stuck by an oncoming truck.

She was interred in Cidra, Puerto Rico.  Dr. Kirk Davis of Troy University Dothan Campus dedicated a tree in her memory.

[Source:  Obituary in The Southeast Sun, March 10, 2005]

The Wiregrass Archives has no other information about Ms. Bracero.  If you have information or a photograph to share, please contact us at wiregrassarchives@troy.edu

NUTTALL OAK

“Nuttall oak (Quercus nuttallii), not distinguished as a species until 1927, is also called red oak, Red River oak, and pin oak. It is one of the few commercially important species found on poorly drained clay flats and low bottoms of the Gulf Coastal Plain and north in the Mississippi and Red River Valleys. The acorn or winter buds identify Nuttall oak, easily confused with pin oak (Q. palustris). The lumber is often cut and sold as red oak. In addition to producing timber, Nuttall oak is an important species for wildlife management because of heavy annual mast production.”  [Source - http://www.na.fs.fed.us/pubs/silvics_manual/volume_2/quercus/nutallii.htm]

GENERAL INFORMATION ABOUT OAKS

 “The term oak can be used as part of the common name of any of about 400 species of oak trees and shrubs in the genus Quercus (from Latin "oak tree).  The genus quercus is native to the northern hemisphere, and includes deciduous and evergreen species extending from cold latitudes to tropical Asia and the Americas.  Oaks have spirally arranged leaves, with a lobed margin in many species; some have serrated leaves or entire leaves with a smooth margin.  The flowers are catkins, produced in spring.  The fruit is a nut called an acorn, borne in a cup-like structure known as a cupule; each acorn contains one seed (rarely two or three) and takes 6-18 months to mature, depending on species.  The "live oaks" (oaks with evergreen leaves) are not a distinct group, instead with their members scattered among the sections below.

The Common North American Oak Species:  black oak, bur oak, cherrybark oak, laurel oak, live oak, Oregon white oak, overcup oak, post oak, pin oak, northern red oak, scarlet oak, Shumard oak, southern red oak, swamp chestnut oak, water oak, white oak, and willow oak.”  [Source - http://forestry.about.com/cs/treeid/a/the_oak.htm]


The “For More Info” Project

The “For More Info” Project is a joint venture of The Wiregrass Archives and the Troy University Libraries funded in part by a generous grant from the Historic Chattahoochee Commission Seed Grant Program.  Begun in 2015, “For More Info” provides a place to find biographical information and images of the people honored in the Memorial Tree Program established by the Dothan Beautification Board in 1991 and continued at Troy University Dothan Campus.

“For More Info” also provides organizational histories and biographical sketches concerning named buildings, rooms, and other facilities on campus.

 

 

wiregrassarchives@troy.edu Last Updated: 03/07/2023