See LDS Pedigree Resource File (CD #24 Pin #337762) [http://www.familysearch.org/ENG/Search/frameset_search.asp?PAGE=AncestorSearchResults.asp%3Ffirst%5Fname%3Djames%26last%5Fname%3Ddavis%26fathers%5Ffirst%5Fname%3D%26fathers%5Flast%5Fname%3D%26mothers%5Ffirst%5Fname%3D%26mothers%5Flast%5Fname%3D%26spouses%5Ffirst%5Fname%3Djemima%26spouses%5Flast%5Fname%3Dtuttle%26from%5Fdate%3D%26to%5Fdate%3D%26date%5Frange%3D%26standardize%3D%26juris1index%3D%26juris2index%3D%26juris1friendly%3D%26juris2friendly%3D%26event%5Findex%3D%26testing%3D%26juris1%3D%26juris2%3D%26juris3%3D] for further information.
In 1900, Jemima Tuttle Davis was living with her daughter, Nannie Valinda, and son-in-law, Joseph B. Potts, in Indian Territory, Township 8 South, Range 8 East. The 1900 Census gives Jemima' s date of birth as July, 1847, and says she had 6 children, 5 of which were still alive at the time. Further attempts to settle the question of just exactly who this woman was are sure to follow, but the stories of her marriage to James P. Davis were always absolutely insisted upon by my family and that's not the story you get from other people's family history sites.