All My Ancestors

17 October 2009

A Cemetery in the Ozarks

Filed under: Arkansas, Ball Family, Cemeteries, Missouri — allmyanc @ 4:33 pm

Hubbo had a conference to attend in Rogers, Arkansas over Fall Break.  Knowing that I can always use an opportunity to prowl around ancestral remains in Benton and Washington Counties, I tagged along.

On Thursday, we drove out to Butler Creek Cemetery in Sulphur Springs, AR.  To get there, we had to go through Missouri.  Actually, as our pal at the hotel said, “Why would you do that?”  We evidently didn’t have to go that way, but it’s what all our various mapping programs said.  And it was scenic.

There was this barn, that I initially thought was built of logs, but upon closer inspection, appears to be just roughly hewn wood.

barnweb

We stopped and ate at a cafe in Noel, Missouri and also admired the view from the gas station.

riverhorzweb

We chose to try to ignore the conversation in the next booth about the website showing how many people had been killed by a former president.  And also the person sitting in the back smoking.  Can you still smoke in restaurants?

The church and the cemetery could have been anywhere–what I imagine New England looking like in the fall.  I felt like a certified leaf-peeper.

The land for the church and cemetery had been donated by a John C. Givens (1806-1885).  There were cattle in the field back behind the trees and they evidently were trying to persuade us to come feed them based on their mooing.

churchweb

cemsignweb

We had a good time despite it being a cold, misty day.  That might even have added to the day.  The cemetery is old.  The 3rd great-aunt I have buried there died in 1898.  I actually had just found out that she was buried here–I blogged about her in an earlier post and another descendant wrote to tell me where she and some of her family were buried.

maryshellmanweb

I think it’s fairly safe to assume this marker was placed long after her death in 1898.  There is an old crumbling concrete footing around her grave, but the stone looks much newer.  There are no dates on the stone nor are any other names included.  She was Mary Esta Ball and married to John W. Shelman.  Another interesting thing to notice is that the surnames on the four stones from these family members are spelled two different ways–sometimes with two “ls” and sometimes with only one.

Two of Mary’s six sons are buried nearby:  William John Nelson (1864-1943), according to my California correspondent, and George Washington (1873-1923).

WJShelmanweb GWShellmanweb

You can barely note that the surnames are spelled differently–William’s is Shelman and George’s is Shellman.

Also buried nearby is a young man who is probably the son of one of these men, but I don’t know the story yet.  Perhaps another contact with Diana will help me know more about John William Shelman.

johnwmshelmanweb

1 June 2009

The Good Earth: Family Ties to the Land

cog73

The Good Earth: Family Ties to the Land

Written for the 73rd Carnival of Genealogy

Writing about this topic could fill a book for me.

As far back as I’ve traced on both sides and all branches of my family, there have been land-owners and farmers.  I learned very early what was meant by a section or a quarter section of land, that there was nearly always a road on the section line, and I learned that land is organized by counties.  I used to take my dad to the county courthouses with me to read the deeds–he taught me to cut through the standard legal language to the “meat.”  He could read the land descriptions which looked like hieroglyphics to me–I still have to be very deliberate when I’m reading and mapping them.

No one was a land baron, though I suspect a couple of great-great grandfathers had such dreams.  For example, John Osborne ((1808 NC – 1865 TN) bought a large amount of land at the intersection of two railroads in what became Humboldt in Gibson County, Tennessee.  My understanding is that this was not an all above-board transaction, but there is even now a part of that town that is called the Osborne Plat.   His son came to Texas and had 9 children, born in about 5 different counties– his letters that survive all refer to his search for land.

My grandfathers kept moving south and west as the nation developed and  land became available.  Everyone farmed.  Even the one professional man, who was born in New York City, William Green Ball (1806 NY – 1881 IA), country doctor, was a founding member of the Warren County Iowa agricultural society.  My third great-grandparents (2 sets of them) who immigrated to McPherson and Harvey Counties in Kansas in 1874 from Russia brought turkey red wheat with them from the steppes of the Ukraine and southern Russia.  I grew up in a town in Texas nicknamed the “Wheatheart of the Nation.”

My dad farmed, his dad farmed, and so did my maternal grandfather.  In fact, my paternal grandfather and uncles often planted and harvested a crop in the Texas panhandle, and then they loaded up their equipment and traveled 640 miles north up Highway 83 to South Dakota to harvest their crop there.  My maternal grandparents left the Dust Bowl scarred Oklahoma panhandle about 1952 for the very cheap land available in South Dakota, and my paternal relatives farmed part time up there as well.

All of the men in my family farmed and all of the women had gardens.  Later, my dad planted a garden out in the field near the irrigation well, but I well remember my mom starting lettuce and some of the more tender plants in hot boxes dad built.  My younger brother was recently recalling his “first job,” at age 7 or 8, hoeing our great-Aunt Eva’s garden– for $.75 per hour and all the candy he could eat.  Aunt Eva managed to make the desert bloom like a rose–the desert of the high plains of the Texas panhandle–she grew peonies and roses and dahlias and foxglove and water lilies in her ponds.  In her garden she grew tomatoes and green beans and cucumbers and onions and peppers and dill for canning.  She also wielded a mean hoe if a snake of any sort dared invade her domain.  Further north, in the even more desolate Oklahoma panhandle, another great aunt grew a garden so lush and beautiful, you knew it had to be tended by a person with very exacting standards.  Aunt Edna always brought us gallon (!) jars of her delicious dill pickles and her pickled, stuffed green peppers, tied with white cotton string.  Yum.  I know now that she learned her gardening and pickling skills from her German Mennonite family.  I’ve given it a try and I can do it, but it sure is a lot of work.

My dad died about 6 years ago.  His brother, my Uncle Ray, is still farming at age 80–just one more year, you know. Uncle Ray is the only one of my dad’s 7 siblings still living.  I suspect my agricultural heritage ends with that generation.  My other brother wanted very badly to farm, but he couldn’t make it pay enough to support his family.  His current place on the lake, though, is tended by a smaller version of his favorite John Deere tractor and his garden is luscious.  And I do have a cousin with a PhD in agronomy–his email “handle” is “Dr. Dirt.”

Every quarter or so, I get a newsletter from the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA), because I still am part owner of the 1/4 section my dad owned when he died, and am a part of the partnership that still “farms” our grandfather’s land in Texas.  It gives me a sense of pride to get that flyer–I know it is counted as junk mail and unnecessary government intrusion by many of my family members, but when it arrives in my urban mailbox, I like it.

I have my herb garden growing, and I have a couple of vegetable plants in my flower bed.  I started some hollyhocks on the back porch and will transplant them soon.  Every time I do that, I think of my family and how many generations we have worked the land.

“We know we belong to the land, and the land we belong to is grand” is part of the Oklahoma state song.  I hope my 6 generations of Texas relatives will forgive me for using it as a way to sum up this posting.


1 February 2009

Lewis Charlton Ball

Filed under: Ball Family, Iowa, Memes, Photos — allmyanc @ 10:50 am

Saturday night fun instructions from Randy at Genea-Musings.

Since Randy lives and posts in San Diego and I am in Oklahoma, I’m often dreaming genealogical dreams by the time he posts his Saturday night fun.  So here’s my Saturday night fun posting on Sunday morning before going off to church.

His directions:

This little exercise in computer file organization was on Facebook this week and a number of genealogy Facebookers played it.

1) Go to your My Pictures folder (or the equivalent) and pick out the 6th item in that folder. Then pick out the 6th item in that folder, and so forth, until you get to an actual picture.

2) Post that picture to your blog with an explanation of what the picture depicts, including place and date.

ALBUMS > Ball Tombstones > AndertonBallCromwell Photos > L C Ball

(obviously I need to do a little cleaning in my file structure–this is not a tombstone)

This photo was is Lewis Charlton Ball, 1848 – 1904.

The photo was probably taken in Iowa.

He is the youngest son of my 4th great grandparents, Dr. William Green and Elizabeth Charlton Ball.  I am grateful to a cousin for this photo as well as copies of photos of William and Elizabeth.

29 January 2009

The Happy Dance: Finding Females

Filed under: Ball Family, Carnival of Genealogy, Green Family, Indiana, New York City — allmyanc @ 1:11 am

Directions for the 65th Carnival of Genealogy read:

The Happy Dance. The Joy of Genealogy. Almost everyone has experienced it. Tell us about the first time, or the last time, or the best time. What event, what document, what special find has caused you to stand up and cheer, to go crazy with joy?

One of the downsides of blogging and having to come up with topics for yourself is that once you decide to participate in the various memes or carnivals, you’ve often already written a post about that particular topic.  But I’m going to assume no one has read previous posts, or at least does not remember them.  :-)

Searching for female ancestors names can be problematic.  Early in my searching I found a 3rd great-grandfather with his children in Anderson County, Texas in 1850.  He is listed as a widower.  Who was his wife, the mother of those children?  Some of the children were listed as born in Mississippi, so a search of the 1840 census showed William J. Duval living in Pontotoc County, Mississippi.  Of course this didn’t provide me with anyone’s name but William’s as the head of the household, so I started searching cemeteries and what records I could find for Pontotoc County.  I found lots of Duvals, who had apparently gone to Mississippi from Virginia via Tennessee, including William’s brother John A. I wondered if William’s wife’s name was Ann — the name of William’s only daughter.  I found the death of John A.’s wife Joanna Moon.  I ordered William J.’s will on the off-chance it might provide the name of his wife.  But I just didn’t have a clue about the name of my own great-grandmother, or at least a worthwhile clue.

I don’t remember what caused me to pick up the Inventory of the Church Archives of Virginia. It may have been that I was looking for information about my husband’s Virginia Baptist family–I just don’t remember.  (This is a WPA project–how many times I’ve been grateful for the work done by those folks!)  What I do remember is finding an obituary indexed from the Religious Herald, the Baptist newspaper of the day, and there was an entry for Duval, Catherine Bibb who died in 1847.  Wow.  Could this be her?  I remember doing a happy dance in the library those 20+ years ago.  That index led me not only to her obituary, it provided me with her maiden name.  In fact, it provided me with her entire name which I had not previously had.

Another happy dance involves another great-grandmother, this time a 5th great.  My finding Catherine Bibb Waddy/Woody Duval was before the Internet.  I had to write for that obituary from the Baptist Archives in Richmond.  And pay big bucks for it to be copied.  And wait. and wait.  But it was worth it when it finally arrived.

I’d looked for my Dr. William G. Ball’s mother’s name for over 20 years.  I was finally able to track down his siblings–a distant cousin helped me know he had brothers named Jacob Weaver and James Robinson Ball.  I finally discerned that their father William Ball died in New York City in 1818, and that the family left for Indiana and Ohio shortly thereafter.  (I still haven’t discovered the reason.)  My persistence paid off in providing the names of the daughters in this family–Isabella who married Joseph L. Webb before they left NYC and later Charles Pickett in Ohio, Adeline who married first James Linton (in Indiana) and then Chester B. Campbell (in Ohio), and Ann Pamela who married Milo D. Pettibone and then Charles A. Sweetser, both in Delaware County, Ohio.   But who was the mother of these children?  I chased Jacob Weaver for a while, thinking perhaps the first son had been named for a maternal grandfather.  I now believe Jacob Weaver was the shipbuilding partner of the father William Ball and William named his first son after his partner.  Who was James Robinson Ball named for?  (That question remains unanswered.)  If Green really was Dr. William G. Ball’s middle name, was this a maiden name for his mother?

I was handicapped by having this family be in New York City.  I’ve learned a lot about researching in these early NYC records, but early on, my experience was with rural Southerners.  Here was a family whose father was a shipbuilder and who were listed in the early city directories of New York City.  I felt a little like I was in the Pace commercial  “New York City?!”

Again, I don’t remember what I was looking for the day I found the name of the mother and wife in this family.  I do know I was testing out my new subscription to Genealogy Bank. Part of the family had gone to Clark County Indiana after William’s death.  I believe this is where William G. obtained his medical training–I know it where he married Elizabeth Charlton.  I wondered if Delaware County, Ohio, where the youngest daughter married and put down roots, was where Mrs. Ball died.  Ann Pamela was only about 14 when she married–would she have been in Ohio without her mother?  Searching for this family’s information in Indiana is complicated by Indiana being the home of the Ball family of Ball jar fame, Ball University, etc., etc.  Ball is a common enough name to search, but there are lots of them in Indiana.  I was reading through entry after entry with no connections to my family when I came to this:

There it was.

In a New York City newspaper.  A short notice of her death.

It had to be her–her daughter was Ann Pamela Ball, and Dr. William G. had a daughter named Ann Pamela as well.  William Ball had died in 1818, and this person is listed as his consort.

The common thread to these stories is that both of these problems were solved by publications back in the places of origin for these women.  I would have never found the one for Ann Pamela Green Ball had there not been an electronic means to do so, and even then, with the county named misspelled and a common name,  it was a lucky break.  I’d been through all sorts of indexes and considered the possibility that there might be mention of her in a newspaper, but I had not been successful in finding the “right” newspaper.  Finding the name of Catherine Bibb Waddy/Woody Duval would not have been possible without the indexing done by the WPA in the 1930s.  This source was also the tool enabling me to find females in some of my husband’s relatives–obituaries were not in the newspapers of the day, but they were in the church newspapers–particularly, it seems, for females.  These church newspapers are somewhat difficult to locate–again, it was expensive to obtain those obituaries but worth every penny for what they added to my family fabric.

Still dancing the happy dance for those two finds–one long ago and one more recent.  We love the hunt, don’t we?

30 December 2008

Non-Tombstone Tuesday

Filed under: Ball Family, Cemeteries, Cromwell Family — allmyanc @ 1:52 am

This is a  map from the Savannah Memorial Cemetery in Rosemead, California.

The yellow highlighted portion at the left shows the burial site of Martha Jane Ball Cromwell, (1858 IA – 1938 CA).

She does not have a tombstone.  Another thing on my “to do” list.

Next month is my birthday, maybe this goes on my wish list.  :-)

You can read more about her on this blog or at www.findagrave.com.

7 July 2008

The Doctor: A Medical History

Filed under: AnceStories Prompts, Ball Family, Dad, Grandmother O, Mom, Osborne Family, Perryton, Texas — allmyanc @ 3:31 pm

Here’s my response to Miriam’s AnceStories2 prompt for this session, “The Doctor”  

*Who was your doctor or health practitioner when you were growing up?

When I was a child, my doctor was “Dr. Roy.” At that time, there were only 2 doctors in town, I think.  Dr. Kengle had his own hospital and had delivered me, but I found in the county history that he started practicing in 1929, so I think he was probably retired shortly after my birth.  I rdo emember being in that hospital as a child–one of my aunt’s worked there.  I don’t remember why I was there, I don’t think it was for an appointment.  But I remember that it was built more like house.  It had wooden floors.  The building was later the local USDA office–pretty appropriate for the small rural town I grew up in.

Dr. Roy’s hospital was on Main Street and was a 3-story building.  I can still smell what it was like.  One of my brothers now has an office in the basement of that building–a few weeks ago we went up to the first floor.  It really still looked the same–the pharmacy, the waiting room, the two halls that the receptionist sat in front of.  It was all office space now but I could still see the hospital there.  We rode up to the first floor on the elevator–probably the first one I’d ever seen as a child.  I remember going to visit my dad in that hospital–he’d had to have an appendectomy.  Hospital rules prevented me from visiting him, but for some reason, they brought him down on the elevator and I got to see him.  He was in a hospital bed and I don’t remember getting to be very close, but somehow just getting to see him and have him speak to me made me feel better.  It was amazing being in that space again–somewhere in the late 1960s the county built a new hospital on the outskirts of town–probably about the time Dr. Roy retired.

So with that move to a new hospital, we could no longer tell by driving down Main Street whether someone was having a baby.  On the top floor on the north end of the building was the labor and delivery room, according to my mom, who ought to have known.  If the lights were on, we knew there would soon be another citizen of our area.  It was one of those rituals we always went through when we drove down Main Street.

*How often did you go to the doctor? Every year for a check-up, or just when you were ill?

I remember going only when I was sick, which wasn’t very often, and when I had to get vaccinations for school.

*Did you have a lot of illnesses as a child? Or were you fairly healthy?

I must have been fairly healthy.  The only childhood illness I can remember having is the mumps in the second grade–I still have the “get well” cards my class made, drawn on that thick now-crumbling paper we used for art in our classrooms in those days.  Earlier, I know I also had the chickenpox and have the scars to prove it, but I don’t remember having them.  The family story is that I got them from my brother who’d been hospitalized with the croup–he came home with chickenpox.

*Did you have any injuries (broken bones) or surgeries? Have you ever had to be hospitalized?

Not as a child, and it’s a miracle, really.  My brother built tree houses and I would help him and then sort of take them over for my own purposes–usually reading.  And we would walk the top of the corrall fence, which was essentially a 2″ x 4″ several feet in the air.  Grandad’s barn was always fun, too–despite dire warnings, we climbed to the top of the hay bales stacked to the top of the barn.  And if he was in the field for the day, we ventured onto the roof of the barn.  I only had brothers and there were only boys in my neighborhood so playing rough was part of my growing up.  My brothers ended up with stitches but I managed to escape with neither stitches nor broken bones.

*What specialists did you have to see?

I never saw a specialist of any type and I don’t remember anyone else having to see one.  Except maybe my cousins might have seen one because they had to wear special shoes.  I’m not sure that as a child I was aware of specialists.

*Did you have to see an optometrist and/or wear glasses?

We always had health screenings at school.  I remember the year I couldn’t read the eye chart–I was in the fifth grade.  So off to Dr. Nowlin’s.  His son was in my class and the last time I checked, he was the town optometrist, following in his father’s footsteps.  My first glasses were pink cat frames.  So cool.

*Was going to the doctor a pleasant or unpleasant experience? Share both your most unpleasant and your favorite medical memories.

I was always scared when I had to go to the doctor.  Probably because it wasn’t any sort of regular event.  My most unpleasant childhood medical memory is getting my diphtheria vaccination.  Those were the years when they stuck your arm repeatedly and then an awful scab almost the size of a dime appeared.  I still remember thinking the nurse wasn’t ever going to stop sticking me and I find myself checking the upper arms of people about my age for a similar scar.

I don’t remember any particularly pleasant experiences, except I do have this vivid image of sitting in the waiting room at Dr. Roy’s hospital, reading magazines.  I think the floor was those green tiles of linoleum and the chairs were red vinyl–it was the 1950s after all.  In my mind, I think I remember reading an article about Twiggy, but she was hot in 1966 and that was kind of late for me to have been at that hospital.  I don’t know–I just remember there were always lots of interesting reads in the waiting room.  We always had the newspaper at home and we went to the library, but there weren’t the glossy magazines that were in the waiting room.  It was a peek into a world I didn’t have much access to.

*As an adult, how do your current medical experiences compare with those of your childhood?

Probably the biggest difference is that I try to do “preventative maintenance” with fairly regular visits to the doctor.  I’ve had surgeries, including knee replacements and a couple of C-sections, with two healthy sons to show for it.  I use health insurance which is not something my parents dealt with until I insisted.

*Do you still see the same doctor?

Dr. Roy is long deceased and I am long gone from my home town.  About 8 years ago, my physician of 30 years retired–much to my distress.  :-)   He certainly deserved some time with his family without the stress of his practice, but I felt pretty abandoned.  I shopped around until I found a good replacement–I was careful to look for one younger than me (easier and easier to do these days) so I don’t have to go through the retirement trauma again.  

*What kinds of health problems are prevalent in your family? Are there any genetic diseases of which your relatives should be made aware? How have you attempted to avoid these risks or diseases?

The two diseases I know of that may be genetic are arthritis and heart disease.  I was diagnosed with osteoarthritis at a fairly young age (35) when I weighed what I should.  I had to have my first knee replacement 20 years later–again, a bit young for such an intervention.  My weight is more than it should be, but I also know that my dad and many of his cousins had knee and/or hip replacements.  Both of their grandmothers were in wheel chairs because of arthritis.  When I first visited him for my knees, the osteopath asked me if there was some sort of cartilege disease in my family–there very well could be but as far as I know, it has never been diagnosed.

My paternal grandmother’s family has strokes and my paternal grandfather’s family has heart disease.  That said, my grandmother lived to be 83 (she did have a stroke a few years before her death) and my grandfather lived to be 93.  And my grandfather smoked unfiltered Old Gold cigarettes until his late 80s. 

And then there’s my mother who had breast cancer despite there being none in the family.  Her mother lived to be 92!

So I eat healthy and attempt to be active.  I’m not as active as I should be but I’m doing better since my knees no longer hurt.  My weight is more than it should be, but my “numbers” are good–no high blood pressure and decent cholesterol.  I cannot discount fate’s role in my health.

*Are there any doctors, surgeons, specialists, nurses or other health practitioners in your family, or in your ancestry?

I have a sister-in-law and a niece who are nurses–they do not currently practice, but it’s nice to have them available as “resources.”

My fourth great-grandfather was evidently a country doctor.  William Greene Ball was born about 1808 in New York City, trained for his medical career in Clark County, Indiana, and practiced for many years in Warren County, Iowa until his death in 1881.  He’s referred to in the family as “Dr. Ball.”  :-)   I have a couple of his “recipes” for various ailments.

*Are there any stories about certain medical problems or injuries, or about interactions with medical practitioners that have been handed down through the generations?

My dad was always proud to have had Dr. Denton Cooley (whom his staff called “LJ” for “Little Jesus”) do a valve replacement on his heart.  My mother’s family didn’t have much use for “doctoring.”  My grandad on that side had a pacemaker implanted and never went back to the doctor–until about 25 years later when the battery was apparently run down.  And the other family story is of “Ol Doc Smith” who came to the family home in Beaver County, Oklahoma, in the early 1930s when my great-grandmother drank carbolic acid.  He left a signed death certificate there because he didn’t think she’d live until morning but left instructions to try feeding her raw eggs to cause her to throw up the acid.  She lived through that episode but was untimately successful in taking her life.  I don’t know where Doc Smith was based, but I do know my grandparents lived several miles out in the middle of nowhere, so he must have truly been a country doctor who made house calls on those dusty roads.

Thank you again to Miriam Midkiff for her prompt down another memory lane.

17 February 2008

Serendipity in the Cherokee Nation, 1890

Filed under: Arkansas, Ball Family, Oklahoma — allmyanc @ 6:03 pm

I’ve always heard of genealogists finding their family while searching for something else. In my 25 years, plus or minus, of searching this has never happened to me.

But yesterday it did!

I was researching a family that was in Vinita, Indian Territory, very early. (For Oklahoma, that means prior to statehood in 1907, which, in the scheme of things, really isn’t all that early.) I did not find that family, but while scanning through the C’s in the index, my eyes fell on Ball, Simson.

Simpson Ball is part of my Ball family I’ve written about before–they started in New York City (late 1700s) and ended up in Arkansas (late 1800s) via Iowa. Simpson is the oldest son of Dr. and Mrs. Ball–2 of his brothers perished in an ill-fated wagon train west.

I knew Simpson had married twice–first to Martha Jane Perkins but I didn’t know who his second wife was. From an interview with a descendant, I knew he had at least two daughters with this second wife–Eula and Hallie.

I’d sort of lost track of Simpson after the 1870 census where I’d found him in Carroll County, Missouri, until I found him in 1900, living in Sevier County, Arkansas, with his son Cyrus. His father had done some business in Montgomery County, Kansas in 1871, and I suspect Simpson was there, too. However, I cannot find Simpson on the 1880 census.

So, I was very excited to see an index entry that might be “my” Simpson. The index I was searching is to non-Cherokee persons who are in the Cherokee Nation in 1890 under permit. The index lists only the heads of household, and although the name was Simson rather than Simpson, I felt like this was probably my guy. When I pulled out the microfilm, sure enough, there he was.

On the actual census, it looks like to me that Simpson’s second wife’s name is Martha as well. I’m assuming the 35 year old female listed right under his name is his second wife. I know Clay is from his first marriage, so I believe the 4th entry, which looks also like Simson, age 12, is the first child with his second wife.

cropped

I can’t yet confirm the rest of children as his–they could also be grandchildren because I don’t know their names for sure. But I’ll keep looking.

This census was taken, as the title implies, of people who were in the Cherokee Nation, but who were not Cherokee Indians. To be there lawfully, they had to have a permit. Those who were not there legally, and there were plenty of those, were called “Intruders.” (Sharron Standifer Ashton has a terrific set of books called “Indians and Intruders” in which she abstracts mentions of intruders in Indian Territory.) Evidently, Simpson came legally, came in September 1889, and is working livestock for Ed Carey. Now I have to find out what all this means–who is Ed Carey and does a copy of the permit or application for the permit exist? Delaware County in the Cherokee Nation is the northeastern-most part of Indian Territory–it shares its west border with Benton County, Arkansas, which is where his parents were on the 1880 census.

In the meantime, I’m glad to have finally found some relatives in the Indian Territory.

I was starting to think I was the only person in Oklahoma who never had family there.

For me, I guess serendipity just takes a little longer.

25 January 2008

Dinner with 4

This version of the Carnival of Genealogy asks which 4 ancestors I would invite for dinner, whether we would meet in my time or theirs, and what I would tell them. I can’t hope for my version to be as clever as The Genealogue’s conversation over pizza rolls, but I’ve chosen 4 of my ancestors that I have some questions for. We’ll meet in “my” time and it probably won’t be all that enjoyable an event for them as I plan to quiz them hard!

Jonathan Osborne (c 1771 NC-1826 NC) 3rd great-grandfather
Jonathan’s father Christopher is my brickwall–the family brickwall for over 50 years. I just want to know where he came from and why he didn’t leave deeper tracks. :-) My theory is that if I talk to Jonathan rather than his father Christopher I can find out more about the succeeding generation as well as the preceding one–conservation of resources, don’t y’know? Christopher

I want to know if Jonathan’s brother Christopher had children in his first marriage. I want to know why this Christopher’s mother-in-law, Mary Stutts Furr, disinherited her daughter, Catherine, his wife–did it have anything to do with Christopher’s first marriage or that in 1818 he moved to Alabama with other families to start Valley Creek Presbyterian Church in Dallas County, Alabama?

sign

I want to know if Jonathan and Christopher had another sibling born after their father’s death in 1789–their father says something in his will about his belief that his wife might be pregnant. I also want to know who all his sisters married–there are names like Brown and Smith and Polk among Jonathan’s brothers-in-law and I want to know first names, marriage dates, and where this tribe ended up. Not too much to ask, do you think?

Delilah Jackson Landrum (1780 SC-1870 TX)4th great-grandmother
I’ve written about Delilah before. I first wanted to know here when I read my great Aunt Marge’s memoirs. She was writing about going to a youth camp where there were racial tensions. She was very much for accepting everyone, regardless of color or creed. She was discussing this with her father and he tells her, “You are very much like my Grandmother Delilah.” I found that statement fascinating because as far as I knew, her father, born and reared in Texas, did not have contact with his Grandmother Delilah who lived in Tennessee. On the other hand, she did spend her later years in East Texas with her youngest daughter, so perhaps he did know her. I love her self-possession when she refused to join the frenzy at the revival as I wrote about here. I have lots of questions about her Jackson family back in South Carolina, and I particularly want to know about the “Dutch fan” that her father left her in his 1817 Union County, South Carolina, will.

William Green Ball (1806 NYC-1881 IA) 4th great-grandfather

WGBDr. Ball is chosen as another bridge between generations. I definitely want to know more about his father–even though he was a young boy when his father died, he must know about his origins, and those of his mother. His parents were married in Baltimore, I think, in 1797, and then his father was a shipwright in New York City. After the death of his father, his mother and family moved to Clark County, Indiana and then some went on to Delaware County, Ohio. His sisters married well–one married twice, first to the district attorney and state congressman, and then to another attorney who was a national congressman. What was the basis of these sorts of alliances? And I also want to know what kind of medical training Dr. Ball went through–I believe he did that while he was living in Indiana, but who was his mentor and how did he come to that profession?

What can Dr. Ball tell me about his wife’s family? Why did they move from Tennessee to Indiana? Who was the minister, John M. Dickey, who appeared on so many of their records? How did his being an abolitionist fit in with their own beliefs?

It was Dr. Ball and his wife who reared their granddaughter Martha Jane after her father was killed enroute to “the West” and then her mother died shortly thereafter. How did they learn of their sons’ deaths? What were the circumstances under which those two sons were moving? Did Dr.and Mrs. Ball plan to join them in the west?

And, finally, what was the impetus for this man to move from New York City to Indiana to Missouri to Iowa to Kansas to Arkansas and then back to Iowa?

Sarah Ann Davis Anderton (1841 AL-1915 OK) Great-great grandmother
I don’t know very much about my Anderton and Davis lines from Alabama. There were about a zillion Anderton families in Marshall County and most of them were named John or James. I believe I have the right line back to a James Anderton, b. Virginia about 1760. This is not work I’ve done myself, but I believe it’s probably correct.

I don’t even have all of Sarah Ann and her husband James’ children all documented. Some of the older daughters stayed in Alabama when they came to Oklahoma after the Civil War. I always have questions about what makes a family move that far to an area that must be unfamiliar to them, not to mention what would possess them to move to the Oklahoma panhandle, aka “No Man’s Land.” Their granddaughter, my grandmother, told me that they did logging back in Alabama–they floated the logs down the river. That kind of work was certainly not a big draw here in Oklahoma. I suppose it was the opening of the land that drew them. They were still in Alabama on the 1900 census, but by 1910, they had “proved up” on their land in Beaver County, Oklahoma. I have their homestead files and they worked hard.

I found this picture of them in a county history, she’s on the left and he’s on the right. One reason she is dear to me is that she doesn’t appear to be “dainty.” :-) And doesn’t he look like the stereotypical Civil War vet?

Andertons

Sarah Ann is buried out in Blue Mound Cemetery in Beaver County, Oklahoma.Sarah's tombstone

My grandmother told me she really wanted to go back to Alabama but she died before that could happen. Her husband James got his Civil War pension here in Oklahoma– he’d served in the artillery back in Alabama. He was approved and apparently went back to Alabama. Years ago, I sent for his death certificate only to be told that it could not be located. Then a few years ago, I was at Samford Institute in Birmingham, Alabama with some friends. The husband of that group was going out to do some research and I told him if her ran across a tombstone for James Anderton, to be sure to let me know. Amazingly enough, he did. He’s been my genealogical hero ever since. James evidently died in March 1918 and he’s buried in Cochran Cemetery.

Anyway, I have lots of questions for Sarah. Her mother’s maiden name was Campbell–another name I haven’t pursued due to the overwhelming amount of info and my lack of familiarity with records in that part of the country. Her father left all of his 1868 estate, 1450 acres, to his youngest son, Joseph Montgomery Davis, with the proviso that he care for the oldest son, William B. Davis. What were the circumstances that required this sort of care? The will did not stand and the estate was eventually equally divided among the widow and 8 children, including Sarah.

So those are the folks I want to interview, two from the maternal and two from the paternal. I want them to know how much I’ve enjoyed learning more about them and how much I honor their lives and their sacrifices. It’s not surprising that I’ve already written about some of these folks–their lives and times are the targets of some of my greatest curiosity.

I don’t know yet what we’ll have to eat, but I’ll definitely cook. I’ll bet those grandmothers could use the rest.

11 January 2008

Where were they in 1908?

Filed under: Anderton Family, Ball Family, Cromwell Family, Oklahoma, Photos — allmyanc @ 6:30 pm

This is another prompt of a sort that is making the rounds of genealogical blogs. It has to do with placing our families 100 years ago. See Lisa’s 100 Years in America that started it all. See the end of the comments of her post for additional blog posts.

Here’s a photo of part of my family that must have been taken about 1908.

Cromwell Family at Poarch

Someone in my family identified the people in this photo–making allowances for corrections based on gender and age, I believe the people in this photo are, from the left, Eula Price Cromwell, Lillian Cromwell, Lida Lee Anderton (child, and my grandmother), Grace Cromwell Anderton (my great-grandmother), Daniel Webster Cromwell (my gggrandfather), Gordon B. “Jack” Cromwell, Martha Jane Ball Cromwell (my gggrandmother).

My grandmother was born in January of 1906 and this photo of her looks like she’s about 2 1/2. Uncle “Jack,” the other child in the photo, was supposedly born in March 1898–he certainly doesn’t look age 10, though I did find him listed as attending Poarch School in 1908. Grannie might be a bit older, but I thought this was an interesting picture of a century ago. I believe it was taken outside their home in the Poarch Community, Beckham County, Oklahoma. Statehood was in November 1907, so this is also just after Oklahoma became a state. The Daniel Cromwell family is enumerated in 1910 as living in the Poarch Community, Beckham County, Oklahoma. I know they were in this area by 1904 because they have a son, Burton, buried in the Poarch Cemetery in that county who died in April of that year.

It looks like Great-great Grandfather Daniel is holding a crutch. I know he had what was probably rheumatoid arthritis. I also found this blurb in the newspaper from the time that confirms his ailments:

from the Carter Express, (23 December 1910) “Mr. Cromwell is reported to be suffering very much yet. Being a cripple already with rheumatism we fear that this accident will go hard with him.”

They didn’t mince words in those days, did they?

And if you have relatives in Beckham County, let me recommend their USGenWeb page–it has lots of excellent transcriptions of early newspapers and county history. It provided lots of data for filling in between “just the facts” of dates, places and times.

29 July 2007

Mary Esta Ball Shelman (1848-c1885)

Filed under: Arkansas, Ball Family, Indiana, Iowa, Photos — allmyanc @ 7:42 pm

This is Martha Jane’s aunt Mary, sister of her father John Washington Ball.

Mary Esta

and here is another photo of her, which looks like it was taken about the same time.

Mary Ball Shelman

I think she looks like her father’s daughter. And I also think these photos were taken around the same time. Mary died sometime between 1885 and 1890 at the age of 40 – 45. Her last child was born in 1885 and I don’t know if her death was related to childbirth.

Do you think she looks older here? I need lots more work in the styles and ways of earlier times as portrayed in photographs. I would have guessed she was at least 60 here, and I don’t know if it’s that her life was hard so she does look older or if the styles made women look older, or both.

Mary was likely born in Missouri, though I don’t know where. I believe her family went there from Clark County Indiana about 1842 and then was in Warren County Iowa by 1845. Some of the census records say she was born in Missouri, and I keep finding scraps of info about the “Dr. Ball family” who came to Warren County from Missouri. My initial searches of Wm. Green Ball’s land records did not indicate where he was in Missouri, but then again, when I was looking, I didn’t know he’d been there.

So that’s a lesson learned–I’ll have to go back now and look at those records again to see if there’s a hint of their location in Missouri. They might be in his Indiana records or they might be in the Iowa records–I just know that I’ve used land records before to track down the former residence of a person. Or to prove that the two men in separate counties are the same person. This happened with Dr. Ball himself–I did find records in Iowa of him having been in Montgomery County, Kansas. When these sorts of moves are in between census years and are stays of only 3-4 years, land records are one of the best ways to track them. Deeds will say something like, “Wm G. Ball of Benton County, Arkansas, formerly of this county. . .” in Montgomery County, or perhaps he’s sold the land after he left the county so it’s registered also in Benton County. You have to be a detective, and that’s the addictive part for me.

Older Posts »

Powered by WordPress