Mother, now daughter, leave marks on history
Main, News, Russellville, Z - News Main
By Brady Petree For the FCT
 By By Brady Petree For the FCT  
Published 6:03 am Wednesday, July 1, 2026

Mother, now daughter, leave marks on history

RUSSELLVILLE — In the event you find yourself on a trip to the Franklin County Archives, one of the first things you’ll see upon arrival is the name Chris Ozbirn in bold white lettering across the side of the building.

As the founder of the county’s archives, Ozbirn is largely credited with researching and obtaining tens of thousands of pages of documents ranging from newspaper clippings to entire family trees — all in the name of preservation.

While Ozbirn passed away in 2024 after serving two decades as the director of the archives, her daughter, Buffie, took over operations at the archives. She works to ensure her mother’s hard work and dedication is continued.

An X-ray technician with Russellville Hospital — a position she has held for 34 years — Buffie works three days a week at the place that now bears her mother’s name.

CONTRIBUTED/DAN BUSEY
Buffie Ozbirn says she has a strong desire to uncover as much history of Franklin County and its residents as her mother did.

Looking back on her life, history and genealogy has always played a significant role for Buffie. When her mother began volunteering at the Russellville Public Library around 1988, Buffie would often swing by to see how things were going.

Between research and work during the week and trips to battlefields and museums on the weekends, the Ozbirn family spent most of their time in search of a new historical story to tell.

But one thing was missing — somewhere to store all the information they had obtained.

“She (Chris) had tried to get a legitimate archive started for a long time and I was always right there with her pushing for it too,” Ozbirn said.

Eventually, Buffie and her mother’s persistence paid off as the archives facility officially opened in 2004.

Over the past 22 years of the existence of the archives, the Ozbirn name has been synonymous with Franklin County history.

Preserving her mother’s work drives Buffie to keep returning to the archives each week, but she also possesses the same level of intrigue and desire to uncover more history her mother had.

“I love learning about what people did back in the day, or how many children they had and where they all ended up,” Ozbirn said. “My mother and I would spend a lot of time in cemeteries cleaning headstones and things like that. But there’s something about knowing a person or a family’s story that’s just really exciting.”

Each day she’s at the facility, Ozbirn receives a plethora of calls, emails and letters from individuals who are on their own quest to learn about their own family’s history. One of the recent inquiries she received involved helping out a neighbor who was in search of a deceased relative — who the person believed to be their grandfather — they met as a child.

Sure enough, Ozbirn was able to not only track down the relative in question, but she was also able to confirm it was her neighbor’s great-grandfather while also providing a bit more information on the family’s history.

Buffie Ozbirn stands by signage in name of her mother, Chris Osbirn, the Franklin County Archives, Friday, May 29, 2026. [DAN BUSEY/TIMESDAILY]

“That was pretty special to be able to help them out, and that’s really what this is all about,” Ozbirn said. “We want to make sure we keep the records and information so it isn’t lost, but we also want to help people connect with their past as well.”

Today, as she sits at the desk once occupied by her mother, Buffie feels a sense of bittersweet pride each day she arrives at the archives. She is surrounded by her mother’s ambition and lifelong work, represented with each document or artifact found throughout the building. The significance of her mother’s accomplishment is not lost on Buffie, and it’s something she hopes to push forward and leave a mark of her own.

“I’m so proud of the work she did because she worked so hard — mostly all on her own,” Ozbirn said. “I always tell people I’m not as good at this as she was, but I hope I can do my own part and really make her proud of how this has continued.”

Also on Franklin County Times
Woman who shot husband pleads guilty
Main, News, Russellville
By Brady Petree For the FCT 
July 1, 2026
RUSSELLVILLE — A woman who admitted to shooting and killing her husband last month pleaded not guilty during her arraignment on June 24. Sherri Mitche...
$110 idea launched a half century business
Main, News, Russellville, ...
María Camp maria.camp@franklincountytimes.com 
July 1, 2026
RUSSELLVILLE — Customers have walked through the doors of Stidham Feed & Seed for more than half a century looking for everything from garden seed and...
Court upholds Gann’s conviction
Main, News, Red Bay, ...
By Brady Petree For the FCT 
July 1, 2026
MONTGOMERY — A former Red Bay day care worker convicted of manslaughter in the death of 4-month-old Autumn Wells will have to face her original senten...
Book Lovers Club kicks off new year
Columnists, Opinion
HERE AND NOW
July 1, 2026
Summer tends to make it easier to say “yes” to socializing with friends. That’s what members of the Book Lovers Study Club did for their June meeting ...
The Great Charter’s legacy: No one is above the law
Columnists, Opinion
July 1, 2026
By the time Thomas Jefferson dipped his quill in ink in the summer of 1776, he was drawing from a wealth of ideas more than five centuries old. Eight ...
Todds lead LaGrange restoration efforts
Couples, Features, Lifestyles
Chelsea Retherford For the FCT 
July 1, 2026
For Janet and Max Todd, history isn’t something confined to books or preserved behind glass. It’s something meant to be lived in, and when possible, b...
Obituaries
Obituaries
July 1, 2026
Ronald Stephen Pritchard, M.D. June 10, 2026   Ronald (Ron) Stephen Pritchard, M.D., age 70, of Little Rock, Arkansas, slipped the surly bonds of Eart...
Shoals native looks ahead to Miss America
News
By Ella Seaton For the FCT 
July 1, 2026
MUSCLE SHOALS — The Shoals will be on a national stage in less than three months when 2016 Muscle Shoals High alum Makalyn Heaslett competes for the M...

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *