• About
  • Pedigree Charts
    • Dorothy Marie Cardinal
    • Lillian Edeine Fielden
      • Elihu Puckett
      • Mary Duncan
      • Rebecca Hughes
      • William Fielden
    • Samuel Thomas DeMoss Sr.
      • Elizabeth Lowe
      • Joseph Reeve
      • Sarah Ireland
        • Captain Nathaniel Bonnell
        • Colonel John Quincy
        • Elizabeth Norton
      • William J DeMoss

Digging Up My Roots

~ one ancestor at a time

Digging Up My Roots

Monthly Archives: November 2014

Fielden Branch recap

30 Sunday Nov 2014

Posted by suzieg1969 in Genealogy

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

DeMoss, Fielden, NaBloPoMo

So, the month of November is over and I actually posted an entry in this blog every day this month.  It’s time to set aside the Fielden branch of the family for a while and work on my mother’s family for a while.  But before I do, I want to highlight a few things with the Fieldens:

  • all four sets of 3rd great grandparents have been identified
  • many of the 4th great grandparents have been identified
  • 3 of the 4 3rd great grandfathers fought in the Civil War, all for the Union Army
  • William Fielden, my 7th great grandfather, may have immigrated from Lancashire, England to the Carolinas.

I have also, during the past week, posted the Pedigree Charts for easy reference.  With so many similar first names, it’s hard to keep track of who is who.  These can be accessed from the menu at the top of the blog page, under Pedigree Charts.  Currently the most recent information I have for both the Fielden and DeMoss lines can be found there, starting with my grandparents.  (Jane, I was thinking of you.)

Starting tomorrow, I will tackle the Cardinal line.

Sarah Catherine Rogers & Richard Bennett revisited

30 Sunday Nov 2014

Posted by suzieg1969 in CORRECTIONS, Genealogy

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

Bennett, Briscoe, Brown, Fielden, Maddox, Rogers

As I was making one last check of everyone associated with my Fielden line, I noticed that Ancestry had provided me with more potential data on Sarah Catherine Rogers.  One source, a memorial for Sarah Rogers on findagrave.com blew a whole in my findings for June Bennett Fielden’s parentage.

First, the memorial for Sarah doesn’t mention a daughter named June Bennett.   Then I finally found the 1880 census records for Richard Bennett and his first wife Mary Jane Briscoe.  It’s highly unlikely that Mary Jane died, Richard married Sarah and had June all in a year.  Sarah was a widow in 1880, listed as Sarah Brown.  The newspaper article about Richard listed her as Sarah Catherine (Rogers) Maddox so somewhere during 1881 she had to have been married to a Maddox fellow as well.  Not very realistic.

The memorial on Find A Grave also lists her Maddox husband as Daniel Maddox who died in 1896.  Not a lot of divorces back then, so that meant she probably didn’t marry Richard Bennett until after 1896.  The newspaper article stated that Richard died in 1897, so that would mean that they weren’t married for long.

On top of all that, the 1880 census data indicated that Richard was born in 1846, not 1810.  This was confirmed further in the Kentucky Death Records database which also provided a date of death in 1901, not 1897.  This date of death was also confirmed by the database for Headstones Provided for Deceased Union the Civil War Veterans.  This, in conjunction with a 1900 census entry for Richard and Sarah made the 1898 marriage record for them more believable.

Based on all this, June Bennett’s mother is not Sarah Catherine Rogers, but Mary Jane Briscoe.  Moral of this story:  Don’t make random assumptions, and don’t always believe what you read in the newspaper, or on the internet.

Mary Duncan

29 Saturday Nov 2014

Posted by suzieg1969 in Genealogy

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

Coppock, Duncan, Neal, Pemberton

Mary Duncan was a 4th great grandmother of mine.  She was born about 1786 in South Carolina.  Her father was Samuel Duncan.  Samuel moved the family to Miami County, Ohio where Mary met and married Isaiah Pemberton.  With Isaiah she had one daughter whose name is currently unknown.  Sometime around 1815, Mary then married Henry Neal and they had four children–John, Thomas, an unnamed girl and an unnamed boy.  Henry died sometime in the late 1820s and Mary married once again, this time to John Coppock.  Mary and John had one son, Benjamin, who is my 3rd great grandfather.

John Coppock toyed with the idea of moving to Indiana and went so far as to scout things out in 1836.  He changed his mind, though, and returned to Ohio.  His stepson John Neal, however, stayed and settled in Clay County, living with a brother-in-law.  It’s not clear if that brother-in-law is married to his (unnamed) sister or his wife Elizabeth’s brother.  It’s likely that Thomas Neal soon followed his brother and settled there as well.

John Coppock died at the age of 77 in Miami County, Ohio.  This was probably around 1842 when it is reported that Benjamin moved to Clay County and lived with Thomas and his family.  It’s likely that Mary came with him since she is reported to be living with Thomas in both 1850 and 1860.  According to Benjamin’s biography, Mary lived to be 81 years old.  Combining this with her approximate age from census records, Mary died around 1867 in Clay County.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Miami County is just north of Dayton, OH which is to the northeast of Cincinnati.

Rebecca Hughes Puckett

28 Friday Nov 2014

Posted by suzieg1969 in Genealogy

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

Coppock, Field, Holliday, Hughes, Puckett, Sanders

When I started working on tonight’s blog post, I was originally going to do a quick thing on the parents of Zeresh Puckett, my 3rd great grandmother who married Benjamin Coppock.  Well, that ain’t happening, at least not tonight.  The more I tried to make the pieces fit together, the more they fought back.  I wasn’t convinced that Rebecca Hughes Puckett was Zeresh’s mother.

In the 1850 Census, you can find Elihu Puckett (Zeresh’s father) in Clay County, IN as follows:

Elihu Pucket          41
Rebecca Pucket     41
Zerish Pucket        19
Lewis Pucket         15
George Hughes     14
James Sanders       6
Minerva Sanders    4
Godentia Sanders   1
Elias Pucket          19

If you aren’t familiar with census records, the immediate family is listed first in order by age, then extended family (siblings, inlaws, nieces/nephews, parents, etc) and other people like servants or boarders.  Keep in mind that 1850 was the first year they listed each person individually in the census, but yet they didn’t collect enormous amounts of information.  They didn’t start listing relationships to the head of the household until 1870 or 1880.

So, we have Elihu, his wife Rebecca, Zeresh, and Lewis which are all expected.  But then we have all these other people and no idea how they fit in the grand scheme of things.  My first inclination was that Elias Pucket is a much younger brother of Elihu.  Elihu’s mother died during the 1840s so that seemed logical and I set him aside.  The three Sanders kids were probably orphans of some sort so I didn’t worry too much about them, either.  That left George.  Let’s just say that George is an enigma and here’s why.

Puckett-Swickard Family Bible, courtesy of legacykwst on ancestry.com

Puckett-Swickard Family Bible, courtesy of legacykwst on ancestry.com

There is some question as to what Rebecca Puckett’s maiden name was.  Among the researchers who have posted their trees, there are about half a dozen different last names out there, including Hughes and Sanders.  At first I considered that Zeresh and Lewis were Elihu’s from a different wife, but the closeness in ages for George and Lewis bothered me.  I started looking at what other researchers had for sources and found a Puckett Family Bible posted by a user named “legacykwst”.  Rebecca was listed as Rebecca Puckett and no marriage date was listed in the bible for her and Elihu.  They were listed with four children, including a George Puckett.  So what is George’s real last name, Hughes or Puckett?

So I looked at some of the other documents that legacykwst had uploaded, and there were several pertaining to George trying to get disability as a result of the Civil War.  One in particular was a deposition of Aquillar Field in 1884. When Aquilla was asked what his relationship to George was, he responded, “My first wife is his mother.”  So, after checking a few things about Aquilla, I discovered he had been married at least twice–first to a Becky Hughes in 1840 in Vigo County and then to a Nancy Holliday in 1864.  Then I checked to see who was listed with him in the 1850 census and there was a Martha, age 30, and three youngsters with the last name of Field, probably Aquilla’s kids.  By 1860 it was just him several children…no Becky, no Martha.  So what happened to Becky?

After locating a biography on Lewis Field, one of Aquilla’s sons, in the History of Clay Co, IN by William Travis, I discovered that Aquilla’s first wife’s name was Martha Hughes, not Becky.  Maybe Becky was a nickname.  At any rate, I would suspect that George’s biological mother was Martha who had him out of wedlock at the age of 15 or 16.  Since that was a big no-no in 1836, she gave the baby to her older sister Rebecca to raise.

Lewis Field’s biography also mentions that Martha was born in Ohio, but documentation states that Rebecca was born in Kentucky.  Not a total stretch by any means, especially if they lived down along the Ohio River.  Also, some of the correspondence in legacykwst‘s possession mentions that the Field kids are cousins.  This helps to confirm that Martha and Rebecca were siblings.  Their father was John Hughes, who was a pioneer in Honey Creek Township in Vigo County.

So, with all that said, I think it is safe to say that Rebecca is Zeresh’s mother and her maiden name is Hughes.  She was born in 1800 in Kentucky.  She married Elihu Puckett and they lived in Shelby County, Illinois until 1836 when they relocated to Clay County.  They had three children–Jamima, Zeresh, and Lewis.  They also helped to raise a nephew, George Hughes, and other orphans in the area.  Rebecca died in 1862.

Elizabeth Moyer Mattox Coppock

27 Thursday Nov 2014

Posted by suzieg1969 in Genealogy

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Coppock, Cutshaw, Mattox, Merrill, Moyer

Today’s conundrum is Elizabeth Moyer, another of my 3rd great grandmothers.  Elizabeth was born circa 1822 in Indiana to unknown parents.  According to census data, her father was born in Canada and her mother in Ohio.  She married James Mattox in 1837 in Vigo County, IN and they were living in Riley Township at the time of the 1850 Census.  They had seven children who lived to maturity:  Pelina, Susan, Alzina, Napoleon, Marshall, Calvin (my 2nd great grandfather), and Alonzo.  By 1860, the family had moved to Clay County, IN.  James died at some point after 1860, possibly in the war, and Elizabeth became the head of the household for several years.  In 1873, she married Benjamin Coppock and was listed in his household in the 1880 census, along with her son Alonzo.  This is probably how Calvin and Rebecca got together.  What happened to Elizabeth after 1880 is questionable.  Benjamin married Mary Merrill Cutshaw in July 1882, so obviously something happened to her.  I have two theories:

  • Benjamin and Elizabeth divorced.  Nothing was mentioned in Benjamin’s biography in the History of Clay County about Elizabeth being wife #2.  There weren’t any children born as a result of the marriage, so maybe she was just glossed over as unimportant by the author.  Or, maybe the marriage ended poorly and it was left out on purpose.  It’s hard to say since death records before 1882 are difficult to find and divorce records are even more scarce.  If they did divorce, did she assume the name Mattox once again?  There is a death record in Indiana for an Elizabeth Mattox in 1896 that seems to fit, however, without more information I cannot be sure it is my Elizabeth.  A trip to the Clay County Library needs to be added to my trip home in the spring to find the actual death record and ferret out a newspaper article to confirm the identity of Elizabeth.
  • Elizabeth died between 1880 and 1882.  This is the more likely possibility, but again, I have nothing to document this at this time.

James Mattox

26 Wednesday Nov 2014

Posted by suzieg1969 in Civil War, Genealogy

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

Cundiff, Harrington, Mattox, Moyer

James Mattox is another of my 3rd great grandfathers.  He is the father of Calvin Mattox.  James was born circa 1815 in Tennessee.  His parents are unknown, but there are a couple possibilities out there.  The first, and most likely in my mind, is Valentine Mattox and possibly a daughter of James Cundiff.  Most of the facts presented in Mattox Family: 1755 through 1987 by Shirley (Mattox) Churchill seem to fit.  The only discrepancy I have at the moment is James’s place of birth.  The timeline Ms. Churchill presents for Valentine would have James born in Kentucky, not Tennessee.  The second possible set of parents would be William Mattox and Nancy Harrington, however, the researchers proposing this don’t have a reference listed that confirms this theory.

Assuming Valentine was James’s father, they lived in Ohio County, KY for several years, before moving to Indiana.  It is thought that James was in Clinton County, IN in 1830 living with his half-brother Church.  He then married Elizabeth Moyer in Vigo County in 1837 where they lived until the 1850s. Based on census records, they had five children that reached maturity: Alzina, Napoleon, Marshall, Calvin, and Alonzo.  Calvin’s middle name is Church which further supports the idea of Valentine being James’s father. In 1860, the family appears in Lewis Township of Clay County, IN.  After that, James disappears and Elizabeth is the head of the household in the 1870 Census.

Many researchers have James’s death listed in 1862.  Again, there are no sources listed to confirm this piece of information.  Considering that his disappearance coincides with the Civil War era, it’s a possibility that he was a casualty of the war.  A check of several military databases gives a number of James Mattoxes, but nothing concrete.  One promising lead was a James N Mattox who served in the 99th Infantry, Company K.  He died at the regiment hospital at Camp Sherman, MS in 1863, but a notation in the US Burial Register, Military Posts, and National Cemeteries, 1862-1960, indicated that James was only 18 at the time of death, not 48.  Until I can find something solid, his death will be listed as 1860-1870.

Lillian Edeine Fielden DeMoss

25 Tuesday Nov 2014

Posted by suzieg1969 in Genealogy

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

Bemis, DeMoss, Fielden, Heath, Mattox, Sutton

Lillian Edeine Fielden, high school graduation.

Lillian Edeine Fielden, high school graduation.

Lillian Edeine Fielden, my paternal grandmother, was born on November 25, 1918 in Clay County, IN to Frank and Zeda (Mattox) Fielden.  In 1920, her mother died, and she went to live with her aunt and uncle, Lester and Iva (Mattox) Bemis.  This was a common occurrence at that time; widowed husbands rarely cared for their infant children alone.  They either remarried quickly or handed them off to another couple, usually within the family.

There were several other girl babies born into the Mattox family around the time Edeine was born that were close to her.  Katherine Fielden was born to Arlie and June Fielden the same year Edeine was born, making Katherine her aunt.  Her parents both died when she was young, and Katherine was raised by her older sister Pearl (Fielden) Mattox and her husband Curtis.  Pearl and Curtis also had a daughter Ruth the same year as Katherine and Edeine.  I’m not sure what happened to Katherine, but Edeine and Ruth remained close throughout their lives.

In high school Edeine played the violin and was a cheerleader.  Since my grandfather Sam DeMoss was on the basketball team, it’s likely this is how they met.  On April 23, 1937 they were married and lived on a farm in the Edwardsport area.  The 1940 census has Uncle Lester living with him, but he’s listed as Sam’s divorced father-in-law.  To the best of my knowledge, Lester and Iva were never divorced.  According to my Aunt Sandy, Iva worked in Terre Haute as a nurse and would be gone for extended periods of time.  She may have been gone at the time of the census collection that year.  Why Lester was listed as Sam’s father-in-law could be due to a misunderstanding on the census taker’s part, or maybe because Lester was the closest thing to a father Edeine had at the time.

Edeine and Sam had seven children altogether…Billy Bryce, John, Tom, Richard, Sandy, Jim, and David.  Unfortunately, Billy, Richard, and David all died at birth or as infants.  A few years later, in 1955, Edeine found herself a widow with four children to support.  She struggled, even with help from Sam’s mother Blanche and Lester and Iva.

Hoping to achieve some security for her family, Edeine married John R Heath in 1958.  John R. was a widower from Sanborn with three kids of his own…Dixie, Stan, and Cindy.  Dixie and Stan were about the age of John and Tom, but Cindy was only four or five at the time.  Unfortunately, the marriage was a disaster from day one.  Based on accounts from both Sandy and Cindy, John R. was a bitter man and didn’t treat anyone under his roof very well.  It was bad enough that my Uncle John was forced to move in with Grandma Blanche.  After a couple years, John R decided to kick Tom (my dad) out of the house and he took the rest of the family with him when he left.

Edeine managed to get a job at the hospital in Vincennes, and one by one her kids left the roost during the 1960s.  Tom and John were both in the service early in the decade.  John married Judy and gave my grandmother her first grandchild in Kristi.  Later in the decade, Tom and Sandy married as well while Jimmy joined the Army.  Also during the 1960’s Edeine remarried once again, this time to Bob Sutton.  By the beginning of 1971, Edeine now had six grandkids, all girls except for John’s son Scott.  Unfortunately, though, she lost her youngest son Jimmy to a car accident in Georgia that year.

Grandma and Bob lived in Edwardsport until the mid-1970s.  I remember Christmases in the living room with all the cousins…by now there were nine of us and still Scott was the only grandson.  On weekends we would drive up to spend the day visiting and Dad would haul our bikes so we could ride up and down the road in front of the farmhouse.  I believe there was even an outhouse standing out back.  There were also the trips to the house in the river bottoms in the summer.  Later in the 1970s, Grandma started working at the Senior Center, which was part of the YMCA, and she and Bob moved to Vincennes.  They had a house on 13th Street which was about five minutes from our house and we went over often.  The best part of going to Grandma’s, and I think all my cousins will agree, was the food.  She always fed us and the food was awesome.  Probably one of the favorites among us kids was her chocolate sheet cake.  In fact, I remember we would always beg her to make one if she didn’t have one already made.

Toward the end of the 1970s, Grandma developed a heart condition and in June 1979 she died, the result of a heart attack.

It’s obvious my grandmother was a resilient person.  Her life from the beginning was full of obstacles and challenges, but she managed to get through them and remain positive to the end.  A couple of sayings she would use time and again were “The meek shall inherit the Earth” and “Turn the other cheek”.   She wasn’t one for using anger to express herself; she was generous and kind to everyone.  I think it’s safe to say she was a positive influence on everyone whose lives she touched.  Happy Birthday, Grandma.  You will always live on in our hearts.

Photo Album – Edeine Fielden DeMoss

24 Monday Nov 2014

Posted by suzieg1969 in Photographs

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

DeMoss, Fielden

Tonight I thought I’d share some pictures of my grandmother, Edeine Fielden DeMoss.  Tomorrow would have been her 96th birthday.  I’ll have her story posted to mark the day.  Miss you, Grandma.  We all do.

Edeine Fielden as a baby.

Edeine Fielden as a baby.

Earl and Ethel Mattox, holding their daughter Betty Lou.  Edeine Fielden on the tricycle.  Earl is a brother to Edeine's mother.

Earl and Ethel Mattox, holding their daughter Betty Lou. Edeine Fielden on the tricycle. Earl is a brother to Edeine’s mother.

Edeine Fielden, California, Easter 1923.

Edeine Fielden, California, Easter 1923.

Edeine DeMoss and unidentified baby.

Edeine DeMoss and first granddaughter Kristi.

Edeine with the kids, early 1950s.  Sandy and Jimmy sitting.  John and Tom standing.

Edeine with the kids, early 1950s. Sandy and Jimmy sitting. John and Tom standing.

The DeMosses, early 1950s. Front: Tom, Jim, Sandy, Jim. Back: Sam, Edeine, ??.

The DeMosses, early 1950s. Front: Tom, Jim, Sandy, Jim. Back: Sam, Edeine, ??.

At the house on 13th Street, circa 1978.  Jane DeMoss, Edeine Sutton, Bob Sutton.

At the house on 13th Street, circa 1978. Jane DeMoss, Edeine Sutton, Bob Sutton.

Rebecca Coppock Mattox

23 Sunday Nov 2014

Posted by suzieg1969 in Genealogy

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

Cooprider, Coppock, Mattox, Puckett, Worth

Rebecca Ann (Coppock) Mattox with Lula, Cliff, and Lilly (photo courtesy of Kathy Collins)

Rebecca Ann (Coppock) Mattox with Lula, Cliff, and Lilly, circa 1887 (photo courtesy of Kathy Collins)

Rebecca Coppock Mattox was my 2nd great grandmother.  According to her headstone and a biography on her father, she was born July 16, 1861 in Lewis Township, Clay County Indiana.  Her parents were Benjamin Coppock and Zeresh Puckett, and she had four siblings–Jemima Cooprider, Mary Worth, Ida May Worth, and Thomas B Coppock.

There is some discrepancy out there in the posted family trees as to Rebecca’s early identity–there seems to be two Rebecca Coppocks born around 1861 in Indiana.  According to Quaker Monthly Meeting minutes from Central Indiana, there was a Rebecca Alice Coppock born in 1862 near Indianapolis to a Robert Coppock and his wife.  This is not my 2nd great grandmother whose middle name was Ann.  Further confirmation of her parentage is given in Benjamin’s biography published in History of Clay County, IN by William Travis in 1909.

Rebecca married Calvin Mattox in 1877 and they had 8 children between them: Lulu, Clifford, Lillie, Earl, Susie, Ivan, Curtis, and Zeda.  Benjamin’s biography lists Zeda’s name as Zeresh.  This could simply be a mix-up on the part of the author since Rebecca’s mother’s name was Zeresh.

Rebecca lived the rest of her life out in Clay County.  She passed away on April 14, 1928 and is buried next to her husband Calvin at Sanders Cemetery.

Calvin Mattox

22 Saturday Nov 2014

Posted by suzieg1969 in Genealogy

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Coppock, Fielden, Mattox

Calvin Mattox is my 2nd great grandfather (see Edeine Fielden Pedigree).  He was born in 1855 in Indiana and married Rebecca Coppock in 1877.  They had 8 children, the youngest being my great-grandmother Zeda Mattox Fielden.  They lived in Lewis Township in Clay County, which is just north of Jasonville, IN.

Headstone for Calvin Mattox, Sanders Cemetery, Clay County, IN.

Headstone for Calvin Mattox, Sanders Cemetery, Clay County, IN.

Back in 1999 when I was home visiting family, I met up with Kathy Collins.  Kathy is my second cousin once removed and also a direct descendant of Calvin and Rebecca.  She was kind enough to share her research on the family and show me around to a couple of the local cemeteries, including Sanders Cemetery which is in the middle of nowhere.  Sanders Cemetery is where Calvin and Rebecca are buried, and I took pictures of their headstones.  If you look closely, his date of death is December 23, 1899.  Okay, so what’s the problem, you ask?  In the 1900 Census for Clay County, which was taken in June 1900, Calvin is listed as the head of household.  But, Calvin is deceased.  So what is going on here?  I can think of two possible scenarios:

  1. The census taker was given incorrect information,
  2. The date on the headstone is incorrect.

Unfortunately, I haven’t yet located online archives of the newspapers in Clay County, and the Indiana Death Index comes up with a big zero for Calvin.  This will require a trip to the Clay County Library to sort out.

← Older posts

Subscribe

  • Entries (RSS)
  • Comments (RSS)

Archives

  • November 2025
  • October 2025
  • September 2025
  • August 2025
  • July 2025
  • June 2025
  • May 2025
  • April 2025
  • March 2025
  • February 2025
  • January 2025
  • September 2024
  • February 2024
  • January 2024
  • December 2023
  • November 2022
  • June 2020
  • May 2020
  • April 2020
  • February 2020
  • July 2017
  • January 2015
  • December 2014
  • November 2014

Categories

  • 52 Ancestors
  • Census
  • Civil War
  • Commemorations
  • CORRECTIONS
  • DNA Matches
  • Famous People
  • Genealogy
  • maps
  • Miscellaneous
  • Newspapers
  • Photographs
  • Revolutionary War
  • Uncategorized
  • UPDATES
  • War of 1812

Meta

  • Create account
  • Log in

Blog at WordPress.com.

  • Subscribe Subscribed
    • Digging Up My Roots
    • Already have a WordPress.com account? Log in now.
    • Digging Up My Roots
    • Subscribe Subscribed
    • Sign up
    • Log in
    • Report this content
    • View site in Reader
    • Manage subscriptions
    • Collapse this bar
 

Loading Comments...