Monday, December 28, 2015

A Picture Paints a Thousand Words (November/December blog)


Eleven generations ago, my husband's grandfather Isaac Goodale and his wife Patience Cook Goodale had this home built near Salem, Massachusetts and IT IS STILL STANDING!  Its history is described below:
This colonial home was built in West Peabody in 1668 by Isaac and Patience Cook Goodale. In 1928 it was reconstructed at 153 Argilla Road near Russell Orchards in Ipswich by Robert Lincoln and Susan Goodale. First Period elements include 5 fireplaces and a large central chimney, diamond leaded pane casement windows, hand carved raised paneling, a steep pitched roof, bare clapboards and trim, board and batten doors, and chamfered summer beams.
Rear of the Goodale house on Argilla Road

Most first-story summer beams run in a longitudinal direction from the end-to chimney-girt but in this house we find transverse summer beams on the first floor, functioning as binding beams. The first-story transverse summer is almost exclusively an Essex county phenomenon. The house is listed in theNational Registry of Historic Places.




More recently this  home was built in the 1930's in Laramie, Wyoming for William Goodale, also a descendant of Isaac and Patience Goodale. It is currently the alumni house at the University of Wyoming.
William Goodale House (University of Wyoming Alumni House)
This home is located in St. George, Utah and was built after 1864 by John Alger who is my third great grandfather.

Finding pictures of homes, farms, land, etc. adds another dimension to family history research, making a connection with our ancestors more realistic.  Do a little internet googling and perhaps you'll discover something interesting for one of your ancestors! 



Tuesday, October 27, 2015

Sixty Minute Genealogy


Choosing a line that needed some research, I found a John Carless King, son of John and Lyddia Britcher King, who was born on September 28, 1823 or 1825 in Frittenden, Kent, England  and died in 1901 in Baldwinsville, New York.  I took the challenge to see how much I could find about them in sixty minutes of research, and this is what I found . . .
1. Findagrave.com website showed a birth date of September 28, 1825 in Frittenden and a death date of June 20, 1901 in Baldwinsville.  So that eliminated the birth year of 1823 except that I wanted to use a more reliable source of documentation so . . .
2. England, Kent, Parish Register listed John Carless King christened on November 20, 1825, son of John and Lydia King.  Assuming he was born in September 1825, he would have been two months old at the time of christening which seems very feasible.  So I believe the 1825 year of birth to be the correct one.
3. England, Kent, Parish Register listed other children of John and Lydia King, all born in Frittenden and all most likely siblings of John Carless King.  They are as follows:
a. Mary King, born June 12, 1810
b. John King, born November 17, 1811
c. John King, born October 24, 1813
d. Lyddy King, born April 25, 1816
4. 1851, 1861, and 1871 Frittenden, Kent, England census records list John King working as an agricultural laborer.
5. New York Passenger Lists list John and Mary King as passengers on the vessel “Cuba” sailing from Liverpool, England to New York port on May 29, 1873.
6. 1875 New York State Census shows John and Mary King living in Van Buren, Onondaga, New York
7. 1880 Census shows John and Mary King living in Van Buren, Onondaga, New York
8. 1900 Census shows John King, widower, born September 1825, living in Van Buren, Onondaga, New York, coming to the United States in 1873.
9. Gazette and Farmer’s Journal of Baldwinsville, New York newspaper obituary for John Carless King and his wife Mary Ann Dapson King.  Gives a small biography for each.
10. 1841 Census of Frittenden, Kent, England lists John King, age 60, and wife Lydia, age 55, both born in Kent County, England
11. 1851 Census of Frittenden, Kent, England lists John King, age 72, born Biddenden, Kent, England and wife Lydia, age 66, born Frittenden, Kent, England
12. 1861 Census of Frittenden, Kent, England show John, age 82, and wife Lydia, age 76.
13. England, Kent, Parish Register lists death of Lydia King on November 27, 1865 in Frittenden, Kent, England with a birth date of 1784.
14. England, Deaths and Burials, lists a John King who died in Kent, England on April 3, 1864.  This may or may not be the correct John King, father of John Carless King, but is a strong possibility.
15. England, Kent, Parish Register listed John Betts King christened on November 8, 1778 in Biddenden, Kent, England, son of Mary King.  (Previously I had no parents’ names in family records for John Carless King.)
16. England, Kent, Parish Register,  listed Lydia Bricher, christened on August 29, 1784 in Frittenden, Kent, England, daughter of Daniel and Mary Britcher.  I had no parents’ names in family records for Lydia Britcher (Bricher) King.
17. England Marriages, 1538-1973 lists the marriage of Lydia Bricher to John “Pring” (error?) on June 12, 1809 in Frittenden, Kent, England.
In sixty minutes of research, I was able to locate some of the siblings of John Carless King, his parent’s birth dates and possible death dates, his maternal grandparent’s names, and several documents to validate the information I already had in family records as well as a short biography of his life as well as his spouse, Mary Ann Dapson King.
Although sixty minutes of research may not always prove to be so “fruitful,” it is amazing how much I was able to find in sixty minutes using only four websites:  findagrave.com, familysearch.org, ancestry.com, and fultonhistory.com.
Sixty minutes—GIVE IT A TRY!

Wednesday, September 23, 2015

Using Newspaper Clippings to Write a Biography

     A few years ago I wrote a length family biography for the descendants of my husband’s third great uncle.  The entire history was written using documents, studying the geographical location, and history of the time period.  Newspaper clippings were a major source used to write several of the biographies.  Following is an excerpt from the history showing how I used newspaper clippings, beginning in the second paragraph and continuing to the end, to write the story of one of these descendants.
Jeanette N. Goodale
                Jeanette N. Goodale, first child of Joe and Robina Goodale, was born in December 1878 in Panama, Shelby, Iowa.   In about 1887, when she was about nine years old, she and her family moved to Laramie, Wyoming where she spent the remainder of her life.   Her parents divorced in about 1891 when she was a young teenager.  She may never have seen her father Joseph after that time, although she received an inheritance of $135 when he passed away in 1920.  Gus Johnson became Jennie’s stepfather in 1895 when her mother remarried.  By then she was approaching adulthood.
                Jennie’s name first appears in the Wyoming newspapers in 1892, when she fourteen years old.  In that article, Jennie was on the East Side School’s Thanksgiving Program for her recitation of “Pomegranates” as a member of the sixth grade, with Miss Effie Jackson as her teacher.   After that time her name frequently appears in newspapers articles describing her activities as a member of the Laramie community.    Jennie was very involved in Laramie’s social religious, educational, and cultural circles and was a very talented vocalist, musician, and dancer.
An annual tradition was participating in the celebration of the Scottish poet Robert Burns’ birthday celebration each year because of her Scottish heritage.  Her first involvement was in February 1894.  She not only sang a solo “Robin Adair” but also participated in a duet, was a piano accompanist, and performed the Highland fling for the occasion.  In 1896 she performed a solo and sang in a duet, in 1903 and 1904, she performed a solo, and in 1906 she again danced the Highland fling and sang “The Crooked Baubee.”  After all, Jennie was one-half Scottish, her mother having emigrated from Scotland as an infant.
In the spring of 1894, she participated in two plays, one was “The Crowning of the Queen of Fame” and the other “Story of Moses” in which she played one of Miriam’s maids.   These were the first of many musicals and plays that she was a part of over the next decade.
Because of her excellent singing talent, Jennie became a pupil under the tutelage of Mrs. Leroy Grant of the music department at the University and performed at many events, including musical recitals, where she entertained many audiences.  One of her first performances was participation in the musical “The Meeting of the Nations” for the Women’s Relief Corps where she demonstrated music from Scotland.  Two years later she performed in the musical “Messengers of Spring.” At the Opera House she was in a program sponsored by Mrs. Oliver and performed a vocal solo with the orchestra singing a gypsy love song.  Her singing talent led her to become a member of the University Glee Club.
Not only did she sing for various functions but she also played the piano, performed recitations, and danced at various programs.  Her interest in dancing led her to membership in the University dancing club.  In January of 1900, she attended a “hop” at which her Grandma Gray was a chaperone, just a week before her Grandma Gray passed away. 
Although Jennie was involved at the university level in their singing and dancing programs, it is unclear whether she ever attended the University of Laramie as a student or whether she ever earned a degree.
A social butterfly, Jennie attended birthday parties, surprise parties, holiday parties, farewell parties, and other fun social events during her high school and young adult years.  In addition to the parties, were the festive balls that she attended, one of her first being the military ball where she wore a white china silk and satin dress, most likely a creation made by her mother.  In January 1903, she went to the Inaugural Reception and Ball in Cheyenne and the following year attended another ball in Cheyenne given by the Knights of Columbus. 
Community and social organizations she was involved in included the Rebekah Degree Lodge No. 1 where she was elected as the treasurer at the age of sixteen.  In 1906, she became a member of the Royal Highlanders and American Order Protection Lodge and was elected to the office of herald in 1912.    She was also involved in the Bryant Literary Club in 1895 and in 1896 and was a member of the Lowell Club, another reading club. “The Jolly Bums” was a social club with twelve members that Jennie became a member of.    
At the age of twenty-two, she started a courtship with John K. Muckley, known as “Kenneth.” He was the guest at a party in the fall of 1900 held at Jennie’s home.  Kenneth was the same age and had recently moved from Omaha to Laramie.   During the summer months they enjoyed a day spent at Woods Landing and a picnic at Sodergreen Ranch together.  At the end of 1901, Jennie held a surprise party for Kenneth.  The courtship continued into the year 1902 when they attended an elegant social function together.    Both she and Kenneth shared the talent of singing and were involved in many programs together singing in choirs or small musical groups, which may very well  have been how they had become acquainted with one another.  After a courtship of about two years or so, it seems to have ended because no more mention is made in the newspaper of the young couple.  (In 1906, Kenneth married Grace Davis, whom he divorced a short time later.)
 In the spring of 1906, Jennie travelled to California, to the Oakland and Los Angeles areas, with her mother who needed to attend health resorts due to ill health.  They were gone several weeks and were involved in the California earthquake while there.
On January 31, 1907, Jennie attended an inaugural ball with Mr. Will Beacham.   A few years’ previous, Will had worked on a farm in Mandel, Wyoming, but perhaps through relatives living in Laramie or possible change of employment, he met up with Jennie during the early 1900’s.  By the time of the ball, Jennie was almost twenty-nine years old.  A year later she married William J. Beacham in Laramie on New Year’s Day in 1908 at her parent’s home.  Aunt Delia came up from Fort Collins to attend the wedding.
The one New Year wedding in this city was that of Mr. Will Beacham and Miss Jean Goodale, celebrated at the home of the bride’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Gus Johnson, on Wednesday, in the presence only of the family and close friends.  The out-of-town guest was Miss Delia Goodale, the aunt of the bride, from Fort Collins.  Dean Bode officiated at the marriage service.  Mr. and Mrs. Beacham are residing at 111 South Fourth Street.[1]
In 1909, they moved to the Buirge house on 4th Street; and, by 1910, the newlyweds had moved to 611 Second Street.  Three years later, in March of 1913, they moved into a house on Custer Street, No. 416, not far from Jean’s parent’s home at 403 Custer Street, where she spent many of her growing up years.   After Jean’s stepfather passed away in 1915, she and William moved in with her mother.  Will was the owner of the home at 403 Custer Street from 1929 through 1937.  Jean was still living in the family home in 1939, the year following Will’s passing.   During the 1940s a cinder block addition was built onto the east side of the house creating two upstairs apartments and closing in the east porch.  (The house is no longer standing and in 2003 a State Farm Insurance office is located on the property where the house once stood.) [2]
                As an adult, Jean was involved in numerous organizations.  She was a member of La Tarde de Noche from  at least 1908 to 1917.  During this time she also became involved in the court and elections system, starting out as a clerk in 1914, then as a registry agent, and finally, in 1922, she was elected as Laramie District 5 judge, Precinct 1, at North Star Hall. 
Jean was a member of the Senior Christian Endeavor of the Presbyterian church, was a member of the Presbyterian church music committee, and was a member of the Presbyterian Guild serving as their treasurer in 1918.
Besides her civic and religious involvement, she and Will also attended many social functions and dinners throughout their married life together.  Once her name appeared on the society pages of the newspapers, it never left!
Will and Jean never had children although they were married for thirty years before Will passed away in 1938.  After his death she moved to 411 ½ East 4th Street, perhaps a smaller home with less upkeep.[3]  Jean probably lived there until her death on September 27, 1951, at the age of seventy-three years.[4] 



[1]Online, <www.wyonewspapers.org> Laramie Republic, No. 122, 4 Jan 1908, p. 3
[2] Laramie Wyoming City Directories, Laramie Plains Museum, Laramie, Wyoming.
[3] Polk’s Laramie Directory, 1946, Online, www.ancestry.com.
[4] 1941-1957 Index of Obituaries, Albany County, Wyoming, LRB, p. 11, col. 5, 09-28-1951.

Friday, August 28, 2015

Ship Passenger Lists Unlock Mysteries



This summer I was researching information for a client and unlocked a mystery to their family's past using the information from a Ship Passenger List, a census record, a memorial on a website, and a Danish baptismal record. Searching these four sources, family secret came to light.  I have changed the names to protect the confidentiality of my client's family.


A young Danish girl was listed in the 1900 Census with the surname of her "supposed" father.  However, the census record showed her age as five and that her parents had been married for three years.  It also showed that she had emigrated from Denmark three years before at the age of two the same year as her mother but her father had emigrated ten years previous.  I began to question, at that time, if he was a stepfather and that perhaps her mother had married previous to her emigration to the United States.  Further researched proved this theory incorrect.

The New York, Passenger Lists, 1820-1957 listed her mother's maiden name, age 30, and gave her name, age two, with, of course, the same last name. The findagrave memorial site for her mother (maiden name listed) matched the name given on the ship passenger list.  Their last name was not the same as the father's surname in the 1900 Census.  This census record  would indicate that Louis was a stepfather to Sophia, the couple having married shortly after her arrival to the United States. (Louis had emigrated about 10 years prior.) 

Further research included a search of  the Danish baptismal records and marriage records.  I could find no marriage record for the mother.  I could find no baptismal record for the young girl born in 1895.  I did, however, find a baptismal record for her mother and the name on the baptismal record matched the name on the ship passenger list as well as the memorial on the findagrave website!

So the young Danish girl was born out of wedlock.  She and her mother emigrated to the United States where her mother was to work as a servant heading for Colorado as their destination.  Shortly after her arrival, she married and over the years had more children.  At some point in time, her husband may have adopted her the Danish girl. His obituary referred to her as his daughter and rightly so because he raised her from the time she was a toddler until adulthood.

All along the family thought that the man in the census record was her father; after all, he was an Danish emigrant too!  But looking at all of the details of the census records and then delving into more sources, I discovered that he was not her father after all. There is another mystery to solve but  no one alive to tell the true story.


Tuesday, July 14, 2015

Marriage to a Murderer!


Marriage to a Murderer!

Once in awhile, while doing family research, I will come across an interesting tidbit.  The one I'm going to share this month is one of those stories that, at first, I didn't believe was true--my great, great aunt married a murderer?  While I was researched Sophronia's second husband, Martin Battles, I came across this story on the internet written by someone who was travelling through the valley of Cherry Creek in Chautauqua County, New York who heard the story from one of the old timers in the area : 

James Battles lived on a farm in this neighborhood, Cornelius Lynch worked for him. Battles had a son, Martin, by name. Young Battles and Lynch fell in love with the same girl, and a good deal of bad blood was engendered between them, One morning Lynch was found in a dying condition on the floor on Battle's barn, It was supposed he had fallen from a swing. On the morning in question, Lynch got up before anyone in the house, shortly after he was followed by Battles, and the two went to the barn, to do chores. When Lynch was found, Battles was not in sight, A doctor determined that Lynch had been beaten to death, and by this time Battles had returned to the house and was acting in such an excited manner, he was arrested. An inquest was held, and it was determined that Battles knew something about the case, He was tried, found guilty, sentenced to one year in jail then to be hanged. The case was taken to the supreme court and this tribunal determined the sentence was unconstitutional, Battles was released.
(Source:  http://archiver.rootsweb.ancestry.com/th/read/NYCHAUTA/2004-08/1091976313)

This incident probably occurred sometime after 1850.  The 1850 Census of Chautauqua County shows the James Battles family living right beside the John Lynch family!  That is the first source I found that gives credibility to the story.  The second source was the 1855 Census showing both families as neighbors.  At the time Martin was 25 and Cornelius was 14.  Sometime between 1855 and 1860,  Cornelius Lynch, the neighbor boy, could very well have been hired to work for James Battles, a farmer. The last documentation was the 1860 Census.  It shows Martin Battles enumerated on the County Jail Inmates Census as “Martin Battles, 30 b NY farm laborer, Murder.”  Everything in the story seems to coincide with the information from the three census records.

Twenty years later, sometime after 1880 and before her death in 1887, Sophronia married Martin Battles.  Since they both lived in the area of Chautauqua County for over thirty years, one would assume that Sophronia had heard about Martin's past but she ended up marrying him anyway!  She was single in 1880 and had died seven years later, so they were not married for very long.

The 1892 and 1900 Census records shed further light on Martin, the Murderer.  By 1892, just five years after Sophronia's death, Martin had remarried and his new wife was Elmira Battles, 15 years younger than him.  By 1900, Martin was widowed again!  My question is "HOW DID MY GREAT, GREAT AUNT SOPHRONIA DIE?"  She was only 50 years old at the time of her death and HOW DID ELMIRA BATTLES DIE?  She was even younger than Sophronia!  Martin outlived both of these women because I find him at the age of 80 still living in Chautauqua County "widowed" and single.  But it does make me wonder . . .



Thursday, June 18, 2015

Two Servicemen: My Memorial Day Tribute

                                                                           

Two Servicemen:  My Memorial Day Tribute


Last month I attended a Memorial Day celebration at the downtown Phoenix Pioneer and Military Cemetery, where many branches of the service as well as the various wars fought in the United States were recognized.  This caused me to think about some of my own direct-line ancestors who fought in the various wars, including my great, great, great grandfather, Charles Haley and my great, great grandfather John Nilson.  I would like to share a little of what I have learned from their service.

Great, Great, Great Grandfather Charles Haley: Sergeant in the War of 1812


Charles Haley was born in 1788, just a few years after the Revolutionary War.  He was drafted into the War of 1812 into the 10th Company, a detachment from the Richmond Regiment of North Carolina, serving as a sergeant under Colonel David Evans, Captain John Blue, and Commander John Cameron.  Charles enlisted on July 29, 1813 and served for six months with an honorable discharge on January 29, 1814 near Wilmington, North Carolina, north of the Cape Fear River.  I wanted to learn a little more about his personal involvement in the War of 1812 other than what was found recorded in his pension, which was the bare facts just previously mentioned.  Following is what I was able to find, although I couldn't find much information about the Richmond Regiment I was able to find some general information with regard to North Carolina's role in the War of 1812.

North Carolina supplied 13,739 infantry men, 267 cavalry men, and 131 artillery men for a total of 14,137 men, although North Carolina was not the scene of combat during the War of 1812.  The North Carolina residents and officials were concerned with potential British invasions and the state of defenses along the coast and inland sounds. The War lasted for three years and would be the last military conflict between the US and Britain. There were minor battles fought in Ocracoke and Portsmouth along the Outer Banks from July 12 to July 16, 1813--just before Charles was drafted--between the British and North Carolinians. The greatest consequence for North Carolina was that it dissolved the British/Indian alliance, which paved the way for American settlement in Alabama and Georgia.

Charles Haley survived the War of 1812 and during the midst of the Civil War, ironically, was kicked to death by mules after being thrown from a wagon on July 26, 1862!

Sources:

http://www.northcarolinahistory.org/commentary/749/entry/
Haley Cemetery
Fold 3 Pension Papers of Charles Haley
Muster Rolls of the Soldiers of the War of 1812: Detached from the Militia ... By North Carolina. Adjutant General's Dept



Great, Great Grandfather and Civil War Ancestor
Captain John Nilson

The Facts

Enlisted in Company G, Indiana 25th Infantry Regiment on 19 Aug 1861.  Promoted to Full 1st Lieutenant on 18 Aug 1864.  Promoted to Full Captain on 01 Jan 1865.  Mustered out  and honorably discharged on 17 Jul 1865 at Louisville, Kentucky.

The History

The oldest of eight children born to Thomas and Isabella Sawhill Nilson, John was born on May 3, 1832 in western Pennsylvania, moving to Ohio as a child, and as a young man venturing to Indiana where he met and married his wife, Charity Hunsaker.  At the time of the Civil War, John was working as a harness maker in the small country town of Medora, Indiana, 80 miles south of Indianapolis.

John took part in the battles of Fort Donelson, Pittsburg Landing, siege of Corinth, Matamora, Bentonville, North Carolina, Snake Creek Gap, Georgia, where he had command of the left wing of the regiment during battle, siege of Atlanta, the taking of Jonesboro, and the siege of Savannah.  He was never seriously wounded but was twice struck by spent balls.  After his release, he returned to his family in Jackson County, Indiana.

The Fun

On our 2014 trip to Indiana, Kentucky, and Tennessee my family and I visited the town of Medora as well as the Indiana History Society in Indianapolis , where I had the opportunity to touch and hold a very tiny Civil War diary kept by John Nilson.  Not only did he keep a diary but many of his letters to his wife and family members have been preserved as well.  A transcribed excerpt from his diary, a month before the end of the war follows:

March 11 1865

We march at 8am only had about an hours sleep. We were very tired.  We halted here near 11mi [past?]from Fayetteville N.C. We cross Little Rock River near 9 am past here we see a column of snakes issuing from a large pile of Rosin. Near 7 m post we pass through an old village of frame huts filled with women & children. here is a splendid mill seat, the large cotton factory at this place is in ruins. This place is called Rock Fish Factory. One p.m. we hal tin front of Fayetteville, 1 of our foragers was killed by some Rebel Cav. making a dash on them while in
town. He belonged to Co. [F?] 25 Ind. Here we camp for the night.

His letters describe his personal experiences with the Civil War.  One such letter, dated July 9, 1862, at a camp near Lagrange, Tennessee, relates being fired on by civilians while picking blackberries in the woods and an incident at Holly Springs where one soldier was left behind at a plantation only to be hunted down and torn to pieces by blood hounds.

Driving to the places where John lived in Medora and his travels as a soldier in Louisville and passing through Kentucky and Tennessee  made my connection to him more real—especially when I got to hold that little diary that traveled with him from place to place as he served in the Indiana 25th Regiment.  Living the history of the past is one of the best parts of doing family history research!

My Tribute

These two "grandfathers" are just two of my ancestors that served our country.  I have at least one that served in the Revolutionary War.  I am thankful for their contributions to helping us enjoy the freedoms we have today as a country and as a people.





Tuesday, May 26, 2015

HEBER BRIGHAM LEWIS AKA JOHN W. BLAKE

                HEBER BRIGHAM LEWIS 

                  AKA JOHN W. BLAKE


                    Background of the Lewis Family 

  The family of Joseph and Eliza Lewis, British converts of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints, left England for America with their five children with the intent to join fellow church members in Utah.  After a six-week journey, with other converts, they arrived in New York in June 1856.  From there, they took a train to Iowa City, Iowa, where, a short time later, Eliza gave birth to their youngest child, Heber Brigham Lewis, on July 4, 1856.  By August, the Lewis family had arrived in Florence, Nebraska, across the river from Council Bluffs, Iowa.  Because of their late arrival, the family chose to spend the winter in the area, while the majority of the converts left for Utah. The following year, in the autumn of 1857, Eliza contracted typhoid fever and passed away.  Joseph, who for several months after her death had no means to provide for the six motherless children, decided to farm them out to various families,  According to Joseph’s autobiography, the youngest, Heber Brigham Lewis, was given to Mrs. John Blake, the wife of a clerk.  At the time the autobiography was written (1886), Joseph did not know of Heber’s whereabouts.  He did, however, indicate that Heber was adopted and that his name had been changed to John Blake after the name of the man who adopted him. The dilemma then is, “What became of Heber Brigham Lewis aka John Blake?”  This proof argument attempts to answer that question following a series of research steps and an analysis of the indirect and circumstantial evidence derived from the primary and secondary sources obtained through research methodology. 

                    Research of Heber Brigham Lewis

The 1856 and 1860 Iowa Census

  Logically, the first step in the research process was to locate a Mr. and Mrs. John Blake living in the vicinity of Council Bluffs in the time period of 1857.  A check of the 1856 Iowa State Census did not reveal a Mr. and Mrs. John Blake. 
  Next was to locate Heber Brigham Lewis in the 1860 Iowa Census in the vicinity of Council Bluffs, Iowa, where the Lewis family had lived in 1857 and at which time Heber was “taken in” by Mrs. John Blake when he was a little over a year old.  Looking in the census records for a John Blake family with the name of a child in the household listed as either Heber Lewis, John Blake, Jr. (assuming he was adopted prior to the census), or possibly even a  Heber Blake, born in 1856, in Iowa, turned up with no results, although there were several John Blakes in Iowa but none with a child in the household with either the name Heber or John born in 1856. 

The 1860 Missouri Census 

  Next, checking the 1860 Census, outside of the state of Iowa,  for any John Blake families with a child named Heber Lewis or John Blake,  assuming the Blakes had moved from Council Bluffs, Iowa, between 1857 and 1860, there was one very likely possibility: 4  
  John W. Blake, born about 1831, in England, occupation Clerk Esther Blake, born about 1829, in England John W. Blake, born about 1856, in Utah 
  Although it seemed somewhat unlikely that the family would have moved such a great distance (400 miles between Council Bluffs and St. Louis) and because John Blake was established in Council Bluffs and employed as a clerk just two years prior to the 1860 Census, the St. Louis Census record provided the following indirect but circumstantial evidence: 
1. The name of the child, John W. Blake, living in the household, although parent/child relationships are not implicitly stated in the 1860 Census, was most likely the son of John W. Blake, head of the household, and supposed wife Esther.  This validates the information given in the autobiography of Joseph Lewis wherein he stated that Heber’s name was changed to John Blake after the name of his adopted father. 
2. The date of birth of John Blake was about 1856 which validates the birth date of 1856 for Heber Lewis stated in the autobiography of Joseph Lewis.
                                                  
3. The occupation of John W. Blake, Sr., was “clerk” in the census which validates the same occupation stated in the autobiography of Joseph Lewis. 
4. The place of birth was listed as Utah which is a discrepancy and which did not validate the place of birth of Heber Lewis which was in Iowa. 
  The last fact, although it would seem to be contradictory evidence, actually provided an inference that John Blake had some association with the state of Utah which in turn could mean an association with the L.D.S. converts who had been gathering to Utah during that time period.  An inference can be made that there is an association between John Blake, the child, with place of birth stated as Utah and the Lewis family who had planned to join the other L.D.S. English converts immigrating to Utah.  From readings in the book Brigham Young, Colonizer, the migration of converts from the states as well as Great Britain made up the majority of the Utah population during the migration period of the 1850’s.  From this, it seems highly unlikely, though possible, that this Blake family could have been part of the Utah migration; if so, their son would have been born in Utah in 1856, prior to their return to live in St. Louis by 1860.   Very few returned east once they had migrated to Utah Territory, their refuge from their persecutions in the “states.” 
  There were no other children listed in the household of John W. Blake, which did not allow for comparison of same places of birth if there had been siblings listed in the census.  However,  the fact that there were no other children listed in the census provides additional convincing evidence that perhaps the Blakes, who were in their late twenties/early thirties, could not have children and would have been more likely candidates as parents for adoption rather than a husband and wife who already had children. 
        To further substantiate the findings in the 1860 Census, I continued to trace John W. Blake, Jr. and his family in additional census records to collect more evidence to substantiate this particular John W. Blake.
   
The 1870 Missouri Census 

       The 1870 Census revealed no members of the John W. Blake family, living in St. Louis or elsewhere.  There are other John Blakes born in England in other states that were born approximately the same year but none that correlate with a wife Esther and a son John born in the time period and place of birth that would correspond with the 1860 Census Blakes of St. Louis.  More importantly, in case the 1860 Blakes are not the family who adopted Heber Lewis, there were no other John Blakes with a son John Jr., born in 1856 in Iowa in either the 1860 or the 1870 Census records.  So what happened to John W. and Esther Blake and John W. Blake, Jr.? 


The 1880 Missouri Census 

  Continuing to search later census records, a John W. Blake, occupation of painter, born in about 1856, in Iowa was living with his widowed mother Esther Haines in 1880--once again in St. Louis.6  A check for a possible marriage of an Esther Blake to a Haines revealed a marriage entry for a Josiah Haines to an Esther H. Blake, in St. Louis, dated January 20, 1863.7  So then what became of John W. Blake, Sr.?  A search for a possible divorce between Esther and John Blake or the death of John Blake would be a viable research step in order to ascertain the reason for the remarriage of Esther Blake.  A search for divorce records was not available online; therefore, a search of Pre-1910 Missouri death records, however, resulted in locating a death record for a Jno. [abbreviation for John] W. Blake, age 30, born in England, who died in St. Louis on July 15, 1862.8  To determine if this was the same John Blake who was the husband of Esther Blake in the 1860 Census was a dilemma because the death record was an abstract from the original and did not list name of wife, occupation, etc. that would help validate if this was the correct John W. Blake, husband of Esther and father of John W. Blake, Jr.  However, it is very likely that Jno. W. Blake who died on July 15, 1862, is the same John W. Blake listed n the 1860 St. Louis Census, two years previous because of the similarities between the 1860 Census John W. Blake and the Jno. W. Blake who died in 1862: 

1. Both were born in about 1831 or 1832. 
2. Both had the same name, John W. Blake, assuming         Jno. was an abbreviation for John. 
3. Both were born in England. 
4. Both lived in St. Louis, St. Louis County, Missouri.

The 1870 St. Louis, Missouri Census 

  A return to search in the 1870 Census for the Haines family was in order which then revealed the family of Josiah Hanns [Haines] living in St. Louis: 

                                                             
  Josiah Hanns,  born about 1814, occupation of “grainer” [a grainer is a painter who specializes in painting inexpensive wood to appear like more expensive wood]    
  Esther Hanns, born about 1826, in England 
  John Hanns, age 14, born about 1856, in Iowa  

  Presumably, John Hanns [Haines] was John W. Blake, his name most likely recorded incorrectly by the census taker, a fairly common occurrence where the census taker made the assumption that all members of a household had the same surname.  Census records prior to and following 1870 do not reveal a John Hanns, born in 1856, in Iowa. 
   
  A search for a Josiah and Esther Haines, with similar birth dates and birth places in earlier census records, resulted in  a Josiah Haines, born about  1814, occupation grainer, and his presumed wife Frances Haines listed in the 1860 St. Louis, Missouri census with a death record for Frances Haines in November 1862.11 12 There was no record of an Esther Haines.  An inference is made that both Josiah Haines and Esther Blake had lost their spouses during the year 1862 and had remarried by 1863.  A search for a death record of Josiah Haines revealed a Joseph Haines, age 59, who died on August 7, 1874, with a residential address of 1018 North 17th Street, at the time of death.    This is the same address listed for Esther Haines in the St. Louis City Directory for the year 1876.    One can assume that the death record of  Joseph Haines, born about 1815, is the same person as Josiah Hanns [Haines], born about 1814, listed in the 1870 Census. Further, a search in the probate records for Josiah Haines, whose death occurred on August 7, 1874, the following was stated:  “ . . . inasmuch as I have no children of my own . . . to my beloved wife Esther Harrington Haines . . .”   Children “of my own” would mean that he had no biological children of his own  which would rule out the fact that John Hanns in the 1870 census was not his son, but it would not rule out the fact that John W. Blake listed as John Hanns was not his stepson.  Of significance in the probate record is the mention of Esther’s maiden name of Harrington which will be discussed later in this proof. 

1880 St. Louis, Missouri Census

  The fact that by 1880 John W. Blake was a painter provides further derivative evidence that John Hanns [Haines] was the stepson of Josiah Hanns [Haines], who was employed as a grainer and could very well have trained John in a similar occupation.  Also, the fact that John was born in 1856 in Iowa and was living with his mother, Esther Haines, in 1880, at the same address as Esther’s 1876 residence—and the residence of Joseph Haines in 1874 listed on the death record—provides additional circumstantial evidence that the 1880 John W. Blake was John Hanns [Haines] listed in the 1870 Census living in the household of Josiah and Esther Hanns [Haines] and also provides a third source of derivative evidence for the year of birth and the place of birth of John W. Blake.  

1900  St. Louis, Missouri Census 

  The next available census, in 1900, lists a John H. Blake and his wife Sarah, with their four children, living in St. Louis. Scrutinizing the digital image of the census record, rather than relying on the transcription in the Ancestry.com database, it was “W” as the first letter for the word “Wife” following John’s wife’s name is clearly the same letter as the middle initial of John Blake, a “W” rather than an “H” as was transcribed.  The middle initial “W” is very significant since John W. Blake, Jr. was named after his father, John W. Blake, Sr., in the 1860 and 1880 Censuses previously mentioned.  Most likely, this was the same John W. Blake, given the middle initial, place of birth, and approximate year of birth, all which correlate with this same information in the  previous census records.  Facts derived from this 1900 Census include:   

1. The birth date of John Blake was recorded as July 1858 and he was age 41.  The birth date for Heber Brigham Lewis was in July 1856, so the date of birth recorded in the 1900 Census is off by two years; however, the month was the same as listed in the autobiography of Joseph Lewis.  This is the first of the four census records that records a different birth year.  The preponderance of evidence for the birth year from the 1860, 1870, and 1880 census records researched previously, indicates that his birth occurred in 1856 and that the date recorded in the 1900 Census may have been incorrectly stated by a family member. 
2. The birth place was listed as Iowa which matches the 1870 and the 1880 Census records. 
3. The occupation of John Blake was a painter which is consistent with the 1880 Census. 
4. The oldest daughter was named Mary. Heber Brigham Lewis had only one sister and her name was Mary. 
5. The youngest child, a son, was named Joseph.  The biological father of Heber Brigham Lewis was “Joseph” Lewis. 

The naming of two of the four children may be an indication that John was following the traditional naming patterns—naming children after parents or other family members-- common at the time.        

The 1910 Webster Groves, Missouri Census

      The last census in which John W. Blake was recorded was in the 1910 Census of Webster Groves, a city located just outside of St. Louis.17  Facts from this census include the following: 

1. The middle initial of John Blake is a “W.” 
2. The name of the wife of John Blake was Sarah and correlates with her name and age in the 1900 Census. 
3. The names of the children of John and Sarah Blake correlate with the names and ages of the children in the 1900 Census. 
4. The occupation of John W. Blake was a painter. 
5. The place of birth was listed as Iowa. 
6. The date of birth was listed as about 1858 and his age was listed as 52.  The date of the 1910 Census was in May 1910, two months before the assumed July birthday.  If John was born in July 1856, as was Heber Lewis, he would have been 53 years old in May 1910 and turning 54 in July rather than 52 turning 53 years old in July.  This census places his year of birth as 1858, the same as the 1900 Census.  Again, a family member may have given the incorrect year of birth.

The 1920 Webster Groves, Missouri Census 

  Sarah Blake, wife of John W. Blake, was widowed by the 1920 Census.18  A search for the death record of John W. Blake between 1910 and 1920 was conducted with the finding that John died January 12, 1918.  Parents listed on the death certificate were John W. Blake and Esther Harrington, both born in England, which corresponds with previous evidence, cited in census records--namely the 1860 John W. Blake household listing John W. and Esther  in the later census records.   Date of birth listed on the death certificate was July 4, 1857 and place of birth was listed as Iowa.  Burial was in the Calvary Cemetery. 19 The year of birth is, again, inconsistent with the year of birth of Heber Brigham Lewis, but the place of birth is the same as well as the month and day of birth.  The informant, Catherine Blake, probably the daughter of John W. Blake, may have given the birth year in error.  The names of the parents on the death certificate appear to be consistent with the 1860 Census as well as the first name of the mother in the 1870 and 1880 Census record.  The address listed on the death certificate for John W. Blake is the same as the address in the 1910 Census record, 233 Old Orchard, hence this is the same John W. Blake, as the John W. Blake in 1910 which also connects him with  the previous John Blakes in the 1860-1900 census records.                                                 
  
  A search for the marriage of John W. Blake and Esther Harrington revealed a marriage between John William Blake and Esther Harrington in London, England, on April 18, 1853.20  The 1900 Census of St. Louis for Esther Haines also revealed that she immigrated to the United States in 1853.  However, checking immigration records for John and Esther came up with nothing in 1853 or after.  Apparently, they did not live in Council Bluffs, Iowa, until after the 1856 Census and probably lived elsewhere between 1853 and 1857 at which time they would have adopted Heber Brigham Lewis. 
  In addition, the death of an Esther H. Haines was recorded on July 29, 1901 in St. Louis with burial in the Calvary Cemetery, the same cemetery where John W. Blake was buried.  Unfortunately, her maiden name is not recorded but the record did indicate her marital status as Widow.22  In addition, an obituary for Esther Haines, dated July 30, 1901, stated that she was the widow of Josiah Haines; however, there was no mention of children in the obituary.23  The name “Esther Harrington Haines,” wife of Josiah Haines was mentioned in the probate record of Josiah Haines and this would be the same Esther Haines who died in 1901 and the same Esther Haines in the 1880 Census living with John W. Blake, who was her son.  Further, the Findagrave website shows an Esther Genevieve Blake, the daughter of John W. Blake, also buried in the Calvary Cemetery.24  The name “Esther” gives additional evidence that Esther was named after her grandmother, Esther Harrington Blake Haines. These findings supply conclusive evidence that John W. Blake was the son of Esther Harrington Blake Haines, although it does not supply evidence that John W. Blake was the adopted son of Esther Harrington Blake Haines. 

More Remote Possibilities 

  There does not seem to be any other realistic possibilities for the identity of Heber Brigham Lewis aka John Blake, born in Iowa in 1856, with a father by the name of John Blake other than the John W. Blake of St. Louis, Missouri,  unless one of the following, but not too likely, incidents occurred: 
                                      

1. John Blake Jr. (Heber Lewis) died before the 1860 Census 
2. John Blake, Sr. died before the 1860 Census and his wife remarried and John Blake Jr. took upon him the surname of the stepfather (as was the case of John Hanns [Haines] in the 1870 Census) 
3. Both John and Esther Blake died before the 1860 Census and John Blake may have been adopted by a second family and had his name changed by the 1860 Census. 

Adoption or Other Court Records

  Other possible records to research would be adoption records or miscellaneous court documents with adoption proceedings in the state of Iowa, where Joseph Lewis, the biological father lived, or possibly in the state of Missouri, for the time period 1857 to 1860.  However, the adoption records are not accessible.   A search of probate records for Esther  Haines, which may have listed John W. Blake as an heir and may have indicated his adoptive status, was not available. 

Conclusion 

  Although none of the indirect or circumstantial evidence derived from the primary or secondary sources listed in this proof argument prove, without doubt, that John W. Blake was Heber Brigham Lewis, all of the evidence points to the following facts in common: 
1. John W. Blake was born on July 4.  Three (1860, 1870, and 188) of the five census records  approximate 1856 as the year of birth which is in agreement with the autobiography of Joseph Lewis, while the other two (1900 and 1910) census records and the death certificate differ for the birth year but not the birth month or day of birth—month of July in the 1900 Census and July 4 on the death certificate. 
2. John W. Blake was born in Iowa according to the 1870, 1880, 1900, and 1910 Census and the death certificate.  However, the 1860 Census record records his place of birth as Utah, which, as mentioned, is probably an error but was, nevertheless, a significant fact that provided circumstantial evidence.  The majority of the sources agree with the fact that John Blake was born in Iowa as was Heber Brigham Lewis.  It also places the 1860 Census John W. and Esther Blake living in Iowa in the 1856/1857 time period when John W. Blake was born. 
3. John W. Blake was named after his father John W. Blake which was information stated in the autobiography of Joseph Lewis that Heber Lewis had his name changed to John Blake after his adoptive father. 

       Based upon the direct evidence of the autobiography of Joseph Lewis and the indirect and circumstantial evidence of the five census records as well as the death certificate of John W. Blake, it appears that John W. Blake, Jr. of St. Louis, Missouri, is most likely the only possible John Blake who would have been adopted by Mr. and Mrs. John Blake, who later had a stepfather by the name of Josiah Haines, but who was biologically born as Heber Brigham Lewis to Joseph and Eliza Lewis.  The question, “What became of Heber Brigham Lewis?” is most likely answered by the identity of John W. Blake of St. Louis, Missouri.   





Friday, May 1, 2015

And the Real Birthdate is . . .?
or How to use a Systematic Approach to Determine a Date of Birth

My husband’s great-grandfather was Norwegian Peter Tourval Nelson (aka Nielson or Oleson) who immigrated to America in 1863.  Finding his death certificate with his age at the time of his death would be the most likely way to determine his real birthdate.  Peter died on September 2, 1942, at the age of 87 years and 19 days, son of Olie Nelson and Ingbar Johnson.  This would place his birthdate as August 14, 1855.   However, using more than one document to verify dates in genealogy is part of the GPS (Genealogical Proof Standard).  So I researched as many documents that I could find to prove or disprove August 14, 1855, as his date of birth, from the earliest known records to the most current.  These are my findings:
1. Norway Baptisms, 1634-1937 for Peter Thorvald Oleson :  Born April 20, 1854 and baptized 25 June 1854 in Hurum, Buskerud, Norway, son of Ole Nilsen and Ingeborg Torgersdr.  The maiden name of the mother, Torgersdr,  differs from the maiden name recorded on the death certificate, Johnson, but agrees with the names of the parents recorded on Peter’s older brother’s death certificate (see Niels Nielson below).  (1854)
2. Immigration Records:  Peter T. Nielson was eight years old in July 1863.  Assuming his birthdate was April 1854, Peter would have been nine in July 1863.  If the birth date derived from the death certificate is accurate, Peter would have turned eight in August not July.  His age on the immigration record does not correspond to either the recorded birth date on the baptism record or the estimated birth date from the death certificate.   (1854 or 1855)
3. 1870 Census:  Age is recorded as 15 in July 1870.   Assuming his birthdate was April 1854, Peter would have been sixteen in July 1870 not 15.  If the August 14, 1855 birth date is correct, Peter would have turned 15 in August not July.  His age on the census record does not correspond to either the recorded birth date on the baptism record or the estimated birth date from the death certificate.   (1854 or 1855)
4. 1880 Census:  unable to locate in 1880 Census.
5. 1900 Census:  Birth date is recorded as August 1854 and age is recorded as 46 in June 1900, which means he would turn 47 in August, placing his date of birth as 1853.  (1853)  
6. 1910 Census:  Age is recorded as 53 in early April 1910, which means he would have turned 54 on the April 20 birthdate, placing his year of birth as 1856.  (1856)
7. 1920 Census:  Age is recorded as 64 in February 1920, which means he would have turned 65 on April 20, placing his year of birth as 1855.  (1855)
8. 1930 Census:  Age is recorded as 74 in April 1930, meaning he would turn 75 on April 20, placing his year of birth as 1855.  This census also stated that he was 25 when he married.  (Family records indicate that he married in October 1880, placing his year of birth as 1855.)  (1855)
9. 1940 Census:  Age is recorded as 85 years old in April, meaning he would turn 86 on April 20, placing his year of birth as 1854.  (1854)
10. Obituary Record:  Birth date is recorded as August 14, 1855.  (1855)
11. Findagrave Record:  Birth date is recorded as April 20, 1854.  (1854)
12. Gravestone Inscription: Birth year is inscribed as 1855.  (1855)


   ___x____________xxxxx_______________________xxxxxx______________x_________
 1853          1854            1855          1856

Using these records, averaging the years of birth and implementing some statistical interpretations,  the birth year is most likely 1855.  However, the baptism record should be the most accurate record of all because it was the only record from the twelve documents that I researched that was recorded around the time of his birth—unless there were two Peter Tourval Nielsons born in Norway in that time period.
It was easy to see that  I needed to dig a little further by researching  Peter’s older brother and sister, Niels Nielson and Anne Martine Nielson, as well as their parents, Ole Nilson and Ingeborg Torgersdr.  These are my findings:
1. Norway Marriages, 1660-1926:   Ole Nilson and Ingeborg Torgersdr were married on 17 March 1850 in Hurum, Buskerud, Norway.  (This is the same date as the baptism date of Nils Oleson (aka Nielson.)
2. Norway Baptisms, 1634-1937:  Nils Oleson (aka Nielson) was born on 11 February 1850 and was baptized on 17 March 1850 in Hurum, Buskerud, Norway.
3. Norway Baptisms, 1634-1937:  Anne Martine Olesdatter was born on 14 July 1852 and was baptized 12 September 1852 in Hurum, Buskerud, Norway.
4. Death Certificate of Niels Nielson:  The death date is recorded as January 4, 1939, age 88 Years, 8 months, 19 days, placing his date of birth as 15 April 1850 rather than 11 February 1850 as recorded on the baptism record.  Parents names on his death certificate were recorded as  Eingbur Turgeson and Olie Nielson which corresponds to the baptism record above.      
5. Anne Martine Nielson:    I could not locate a death certificate for the sister, Anne Martine Olesdatter and could only find her in one census record, the 1880 Census, taken in July 1880 at which time she was age 27.   She would have turned 28 in the middle of July and so this census record corresponds with her baptism record.

After reviewing these findings, some interesting assumptions from the above documents are:

1. The marriage record of Ole Nilson and Ingeborg Torgersdr and the christening record of Niels NIelson  occurred on the same day.
2. The place of marriage of Ole and Ingeborg and the place of birth of Niels are the same—Hurum, Buskerud, Norway.
3. The second child, Anne Martine Olesdatter, was born two years after Niels also in Hurum, Buskerud, Norway.

Because the older two siblings were born two years apart and in the city of Hurum, Norway, it seems likely that Peter Tourval Nielson would have been born two years after his sister in Hurum, Norway; hence, the April 20, 1854 seems to fit into the pattern.  However, the mother’s maiden name of “Johnson” on Peter’s death certificate and the maiden name of “Torgersdr” on the baptism record, leaves some room for doubt.  Can the question, “And the real birth date is . . . “ ever be answered with 100 percent accuracy?  Probably not but family history research, like science,  uses analysis and methodology to come up with a conclusion.  Based upon a review of all of the documents, that contain both indirect and direct evidence, of Peter Nelson and that of his two older siblings, it is my belief that the real birth date is April 20, 1854.

Saturday, March 28, 2015

A Silver Spoon




                                               
This post is dedicated to my great grandmother, Lydia Butcher Seager, in honor of  National Woman’s History Month whose mission is to share the stories of women’s lives, and “remembering and recounting tales of our ancestors’ talents, sacrifices, and commitments” to give us inspiration.  This is also the first chapter of a family history I am writing entitled, “Coming to America:  The Story of the Butcher and Seager Families Who Came across the Sea, in 1873 and in 1893!”




Writing a history about someone, who left no diary, no journal, and very little paper trail, can be a daunting task.  In the case of my great grandmother, I had little to work with except, thanks to government records, some census records, an immigration record, and birth, marriage, and death records.  And the only tangible item that I inherited from my great grandmother was a silver spoon—part of her wedding trousseau—but her “silver spoon” does not carry the same connotation with the oft said quote “born with a silver spoon in her mouth.”

This traditional English expression was synonymous with wealth.  But the opposite is true when one considers Lydia’s humble beginnings in the village of Staplehurst, near Maidstone, Kent County, England where she was born in October of 1845 to James and Frances Sands Butcher.  The next forty-seven years of her life were spent in this general area, in the small English villages of Staplehurst, Loose, East Farleigh, Thurnham, and Otham,  all situated near the River Medway which runs through the  larger city of Maidstone, where Lydia also lived.  Rural Kent County was known as the “Garden of England,” with its harvest of fruits, especially apples and cherries, and hops, which are grown mainly in the Medway Valley near the river.

Lydia was the fourth of eleven children.  By the time she was five years old, there were seven children in the family, she being the middle child.  In 1851,  Lydia was living with her maternal grandparents, William and Philadelphia Sands, who worked a ten-acre farm, of which all or part consisted of harvesting hops,  in the area of Coxheath in East Farleigh,  about two miles from Lydia’s parents.




Family lore recounts  that her lot in life was as a child servant to her aging grandparents because she was one of the older and healthier of the Butcher children!  According to my Aunt Margaret, whose memories of Grandma Lydia stem from her childhood when Lydia lived with her family, Grandma and Grandpa Sands “made her work hard and she had to wear shoes that were too small . . .”  And so began Lydia’s life of servitude--even though the census record labeled her as “granddaughter” she earned the “distinction” of servant—if you could call it that—and of being far more than a granddaughter!  Besides helping her grandparents, the elderly great grandmother, Philadelphia Elliot, aged ninety, was also a member of the household and whose demands Lydia, I am sure, probably also catered to.

During her childhood years, Lydia worked in the “hops.”  Hops were grown in gardens on wires with lengths of string which trained the hops to grow upwards.  The mature hops were harvested, by hand, at the end of the summer.  Once picked, the hops were dried in an oast house, which was a barnlike structure, until completely dried and packed for sale.  Hops were used in the production of beer.

For the next several years, Lydia served the family perhaps until the time of her Grandma Sand’s passing in 1856 and Grandpa Sands’ remarriage in 1857, at which time she may have returned home to the village of Loose to live with her parents, who, by that time, had added three more children to the already large family!  Whatever the case, it would have been a short stay because, by 1861, she, and two of her sisters, Philadelphia and Esther, were living independently of their family, all in their teens working as house servants in  Maidstone.

Sixteen-year-old Lydia lived with the Stanger family who resided at 100 Scrub Lane (now called Hammersmith). A little clip from a Kent County newspaper in 1866 refers to her employer, John Stanger, a cab proprietor.



The majority of women or young girls during the nineteenth century worked as house servants.    From the book, Annals of Labour, by John Burnett, life as it might have been for Lydia and her sisters is described below:
The hours worked in domestic service, unregulated by any legislation, were undoubtedly longer than in factory work. It was calculated in 1873 that a house-maid's day extended from 6 A.M. until 10 P.M., during which she had two-and-a-half hours for meals and an hour-and-a-half in the afternoon for needlework, a total of four hours "rest." This meant twelve hours of actual work, longer by two hours than a factory woman's day. On Saturday, when the factory hand worked two hours less than usual, the servant worked longer, and on Sunday, when the factory worker could rest completely, the servant was still required to work almost a normal day. Eighty hours of actual work a week, against fifty-six for the factory worker, may well be a fair estimate for the late nineteenth century, and must have been exceeded in many single-handed households.

Lydia, trained as a servant from an early age, may have remained in the employ of the Stanger family up until her marriage, at age 22, in November 1867 to Mr. Edward Seager.  It is quite possible that Lydia met Edward through her employer because Edward, who was a coachman for Leeds Castle, was also in the “transportation” business. Leeds Castle was located five miles southeast of Maidstone, where Lydia, Edward, and their firstborn resided on Upper Fant Road.



Leeds Castle
Besides the fact that Lydia was raised by her grandparents under difficult circumstances, rather than by her own parents, added to this plight was her parent’s decision to leave their native England in 1873 with the two youngest children.  Her brothers, Williams, James, and John set the precedent leaving in 1870, 1871, and 1872, respectively, while her two older sisters, Philadelphia and Sarah, left in 1874, a year after their parents.  All that remained in England were Lydia and one sister, Eliza, but even Eliza was gone by 1880 to immigrate first to New York and then onto Canada.  How difficult that may have been for Lydia--to see each of her family members leave one by one!
The year 1881 finds Lydia and Edward and their children living in Barty Cottages in Thurnham, northeast of Maidstone and less than five miles from Leeds Castle.   Edward, like his wife, was a hard worker attending to three different duties as a groom, gardener, and domestic servant, perhaps continuing in the employ of Leeds Castle, while Lydia was the mother of six, my grandfather, William, and his two younger sisters, who died in infancy, not yet born.
 In 19th century Victorian England, servants were divided into two groups, indoor and outdoor.  The outdoor servants were the coachman, groom, and in the country, the gardener, as was the case with Edward.    The coachman, which was his listed occupation in 1871, required not only maintenance of the coach but also driving the residents from the castle to where they needed to go. As a groom, he looked after the horses, and as a gardener, he was in charge of landscaping and indoor plants.  As a domestic servant, which was not an uncommon occupation in the great households of the royalty and gentry who employed large numbers of servants of both sexes, Edward’s duties may have included servitude for a butler, a steward, or  a footman, to name a few.
Sometime during the next ten years, the Seager family had moved to Otham, southeast of Maidstone, but five miles southwest of the castle and resided in cottages near Otham Lodge whileEdward continued his occupation as a gardener.





Otham Lodge
Eventually Edward contracted consumption (tuberculosis); and, after twenty plus years of working outdoors, the moist climate may have exacerbated his illness causing him to pass away at the age 46, on September 11, 1892.  Within six months of Edward’s death, Lydia, along with her sons Fred, Albert, Sidney, James, and William boarded the ship Gallia as passengers on the bottom level-- otherwise known as “steerage”--travelling with a group of German immigrants.  They left on March 4 and arrived nine days later on March 13, 1893, in the New York harbor.  Son George had left for America two years previous; and her only daughter Anne had married in the early part of the year, so she remained in England.  The circumstances for their travel to America are described below:
Immigrants traveled in crowded and often unsanitary conditions near the bottom of steamships with few amenities, often spending up to two weeks seasick in their bunks during rough Atlantic Ocean crossings. Upon arrival in New York City, ships would dock at the Hudson or East River piers. First and second class passengers would disembark, pass through Customs at the piers and were free to enter the United States. The steerage and third class passengers were transported from the pier by ferry or barge to Ellis Island where everyone would undergo a medical and legal inspection. If the immigrant's papers were in order and they were in reasonably good health, the Ellis Island inspection process would last approximately three to five hours.
Although Lydia’s father had passed away ten years before, her mother, Frances, brother Edwin, and sister Sarah were living in Yates County, New York where, by 1900, Lydia and three of her sons, George, James, and William, made their home in the town of Milo, in the countryside of upstate New York whose lush and wooded lowland resembled their native Kent County.  Sid and Bert had married and were living with their wives and children in the same town and Fred had returned to England.
Milo, their new home, was a small hamlet of about two dozen houses, a store, a shop, a hotel and possibly a few other industries, was situated near Seneca Lake, part of the “Finger Lakes” region of New York state.  When the Seagers arrived, it was one of the larger towns of the county, and was the only one that had a front on the waters of Seneca Lake and also on Lake Keuka, an advantage to the grape production and other fruits that were grown successfully.  This became Lydia’s home for the next several years, until all her sons married, with the exception of her bachelor son Jim.
By 1915, Lydia and Jim had followed her youngest son William and his family to Tioga County where William had started his own patented lock and shingle business.  When that failed, due to the World War, they returned to Yates County, where Lydia lived for the majority of the remaining years of her life, with the exception of a short period of time in Penn Yan when she lived with her youngest sister, Annie, and again, when age took its toll, was cared for by  her daughter-in-law, Ellen (my grandmother), until her death on November 20, 1926 at the age of eighty-one.
Although Lydia was not born with a “silver spoon in her mouth,” she reminds me of the precious metal.  Various bible references speak of the refining process of metals, including one in Jeremiah 6:29:  “For thou, O god, has proved us:  thou has tried us, as silver is tried,” illustrating the kind of trial God's children are called upon to go through.  Lydia’s trials or her “refining fire” started at a very young age working as a servant to her grandparents to becoming a widow in her forties.  But this “refining fire” made Lydia the kind of person she became.  Some of the “silver” qualities I discovered about Lydia were from an interview with my Aunt Margaret Seager Larham:
"Lydia Butcher (grandma) was a wonderful person . . .  She was a very good housekeeper and cook.  She made beautiful bread and meat was always cooked perfect.  . . Grandma was very quiet and neat.  You hardly knew she was around and working most of the time.”

So whenever I pass by the “silver spoon” that belonged to my Grandma Lydia, I think of how I not only resemble her in looks, but how I share some of her qualities and that I am passing through my own “refining process” just as she did.

Sources:
1. England Births and Christenings, 1538-1975
2. http://www.britannica.com/
3. 1851 Census of East Farleigh, Kent, England
4. Memories of Margaret Seager Larham Drakely
5. 1861 Census of Maidstone, Kent, England
6. 1866 newspaper article
7. 1867 Marriage Record
8. 1871 Census Maidstone, Kent, England
9. 1881 Census Thurnham, Kent, England
10. http://kspot.org/holmes/kelsey.htmB
11. Burnett, John.  The Annals of Labour.
12. 1891 Census of Otham, Kent, England
13. 11 Sep 1892 Death of Edward Seager England, Kent, parish Registers, 1538-1911
14.Aldrich, Lewis Cass, Editor.  “History of Milo, NY,” History of Yates County, NY.  D. Mason & Co.:  Syracuse, NY, 1892.
15. 1900 Census of  Milo, Yates, New York
16. 1905 Census of  Milo, Yates, New York
17. 1910 Census of  Milo, Yates, New York
18. 1915 Census of  Barton, Tioga, New York
19. 1920 Census of  Jerusalem, Yates, New York
20. 1925 Census of  Milo, Yates, New York
21. Obituary of Lydia Butcher Seager