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Digging Up My Roots

~ one ancestor at a time

Digging Up My Roots

Monthly Archives: November 2014

William Fielden

21 Friday Nov 2014

Posted by suzieg1969 in Genealogy

≈ 1 Comment

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Armistead, Fielden

The end of my Fielden line for now is Wiliam Fielden, my 7th great grandfather.  He is the grandfather of James, who was discussed yesterday.  The name of James’ father is unknown at this time.  Records from that era are scarce; they weren’t nearly as meticulous about recording vital statistics.  Things of that nature were found in church records or family bibles.  As for public records, information gathering is limited to items like wills and land transfers/deeds.

So, evidence of William first appears in North Carolina around 1750 as witness to multiple land transactions.  From what can be gathered he had two sons–William Jr and James’ unnamed father.  They lived in Anson County, NC, which is a ways inland on the border with South Carolina.  William apparently served as a constable for a period of time and signed at least one petition against the English King’s appointed governor during this time (remember this is pre-Revolutionary War).  He apparently died around 1775.

Now, the question is…where was he before 1750?  Unless you truly believe in aliens from outer space, I doubt he just appeared one day in rural North Carolina.  Marvel Fielden mentions in his book, The Fielden Stream, that he was working with Keith Fielden, an uber-genealogist researching the English Fieldens.  Keith had a “dangling” William Fielden.  I say dangling because he just up and disappeared in the late 1730s.  William was born in 1709 in Todmorden.  He married Mary Armistead around 1730 and they had four children.  The last written evidence of William was in 1737 when the fourth child was born in the Quaker Monthly Minutes in Marsden, Lancashire.  Keith did more digging and found that William was not necessarily an upstanding member of the community, partaking in heavy drinking, and not making good on his debts, among other things.  Apparently he was arrested and/or jailed, and consequently, kicked out of the Quaker church.  Where he went after that is a mystery.  His fate is described in various ways in the marriage petitions of his children, but nothing conclusive or helpful.

So, there is a possibility that Keith’s William is also Marvel’s William, but there’s nothing conclusive to tie them together as one person.  Until that missing link is found, we can only speculate that this reprobate is my 7th great grandfather.

~~~~~~~~~~~
Todmorden is in the north central part of England.  It’s about equal distance from Leeds and Manchester.  Lancashire is also in that same area.

James and Margaret Fielden

20 Thursday Nov 2014

Posted by suzieg1969 in Genealogy

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Fielden, Franklin, Harker

My 5th great grandparents would be James and Margaret Fielden.  Both were born around 1780 in North Carolina.  The parents of both of them are yet unknown, however, there were stories that Margaret was a niece of Benjamin Franklin.  It’s speculated that they were married sometime around 1800 in North Carolina since their first child was born in 1803.  They lived in North Carolina until sometime between 1810 and 1817, based on census information from their off-spring.  They relocated to Grainger County, TN where they had more children.  Margaret passed away in either 1830 or 1831 and James remarried fairly quickly to Jemima Harker Neal in Jefferson County.  They had three children before James died in 1841.  She went on to remarry before the next census in 1850.

James and Margaret had a total of ten children:

  • Sally
  • William (my 4th great grandfather)
  • Jane
  • Elizabeth
  • Unknown Boy
  • Allen
  • Wiley
  • James H
  • Gilson Haywood D
  • Mahala

James H was a reverend there in Eastern Tennessee.  Gilson became a doctor.  He was never married and lived in East Texas.  He fought for the Confederacy during the Civil War.

Letitia Casey and William Fielden

19 Wednesday Nov 2014

Posted by suzieg1969 in Genealogy

≈ 1 Comment

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Casey, Fielden

About 15 years ago, I managed to stumble across another researcher who had done extensive research on the Fielden family.  So much so, that he had compiled it into a published book with over 600 pages!  The Fielden Stream was written by Marvel L Fielden and was published in 1991 by Tennessee Valley Publishing, Knoxville TN.  The shear volume of information he was able to gather and present is humbling, especially since it had to be done the “old-fashioned” way in libraries and archives without the aid of the internet and searchable databases.  Most of the information I have on the Fielden line going back from here will be due to Mr. Fielden’s research and is duly cited in my database.  Actual documentation will also be cited when possible.

And now for today’s family of interest…

Letitia Casey and William Fielden are my 4th great grandparents.  Not a lot is known about Letitia.  According to census records, she was born around 1808 in North Carolina.  At some point during her childhood, her family moved to Eastern Tennessee.  William was also born in North Carolina around 1805.  His family relocated to Eastern Tennessee where he met and married Letitia on 11-19-1827 in Grainger County, TN.  They moved to Jefferson County and had 11 children.  There is some evidence that he served as a constable. Stories handed down indicate he possibly was killed serving in the capacity of sheriff or a deputy in 1858.  Six of William’s seven sons fought in the Civil War for the Union Army.  Thomas, the youngest, was still a boy at the time of the war.  Letitia continued on as the matriarch of the family, living in Thomas’ household in 1880.  She died December 14, 1885 in New Market, TN.

Letitia and William’s children:

  • Eleanor
  • Margaret
  • Narcissa
  • James
  • John Wesley (my 3rd great grandfather)
  • Allen
  • Sarah
  • William
  • Jilson
  • Calvin
  • Thomas

Double Cousins

18 Tuesday Nov 2014

Posted by suzieg1969 in Genealogy

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miscellaneous

Today is Tuesday and it’s bowling night.  Unfortunately, I’m not ready to present my next dead-end ancestor so I thought I’d broach the subject of double cousins.

Double cousins occur when a pair of siblings marries another pair of siblings.  The offspring of both couples are double cousins to each other.  They are cousins through both parents.

So far, I have run into several instances of this in my family tree.

  1. My 3rd great grandparents, Isaac and Eliza Reeve DeMoss, and their siblings William and Mary Reeve DeMoss.
  2. My 2nd great grandparents, Arley and June Bennett Fielden, along with their sibling couples John and Ethel Bennett Fielden, and Thomas and Sallie Bennett Fielden.
  3. My great grandparents Frank and Zeda Mattox Fielden, and their sibling couple Curtis and Pearl Fielden Mattox.

There’s no such thing as triple cousins because a person only has two parents.  For example, Arley and June’s kids are double cousins with both John and Ethel’s kids as well as Thomas and Sallie’s kids, not triple cousins.  In fact, this family’s double cousin situation is not the typical double cousins.  Arley and June’s kids are irregular double cousins with the others.  Why?  It has to do with the fact that Ethel and Sallie are June’s half-sisters, not her whole sisters.  There are websites that get into this whole discussion about different genetic combinations of offspring that completely blew me away.  I was more confused than when I started and had to navigate away, but if you are interested a fairly thorough one is Genetic and Quantitative Aspects of Genealogy.

It’s not as common of an occurrence as it once was.  I’m sure a lot of it had to do with sparsely populated areas.  All three of these instances happened at least 100 years ago.

Frank Fielden

17 Monday Nov 2014

Posted by suzieg1969 in Genealogy

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

Beatty, Bemis, Bennett, Fielden, Mattox

Iva and Frank Fielden

Iva and Frank Fielden

Last week, my sister Brenda went on a tear and starting scanning and emailing me a bunch of old family pictures she’d dug out.  One of the pictures she sent me is the one on the left of Iva and Frank Fielden.  She then asks, “Who are they?”

Considering that I hadn’t spent much time on that part of the family in the past couple weeks, I couldn’t give her a solid answer.  I knew that Frank was our great-grandfather.  Iva, however, was causing me to draw a blank.  So, without further ado, here is my very meager attempt at a biography for Frank Fielden.

Frank was born January 29, 1898 in Kentucky to Arley and June (Bennett) Fielden.  At some point between 1898 and 1910, the family moved to Jasonville, Greene County, Indiana.  Frank married Zeda Mattox in Clay County, Indiana in the summer of 1917.  The following year, they had a daughter, Edeine.  According to Frank’s World War I draft card, and some census records, he supported his family as a coal miner.  On June 11, 1920 Zeda died, and Frank was left with a toddler to raise.  As was the norm back then, he handed her off to someone else to raise.  Edeine was raised by Zeda’s sister Iva and her husband Lester Bemis.  According to my aunt, Frank would visit Edeine, but she would cry when she saw him, so he moved out of the area.

In 1929, Frank married Julia Beatty and they lived in Hymera, Sullivan County, Indiana.  In 1933, they had a son George followed by Bobby two years later.  Julia died in March 1945.

Sometime between 1945 and 1958, Frank married Iva, pictured above.  The reason I give that date range is (a) after Julia died, and (b) my aunt remembers first meeting Frank between the years of 1958 and 1961, which is when the picture was probably taken.  The Frank in the picture looks to be in his 50’s or early 60’s which would confirm this.  At some point along the way, Frank moved to Pontiac, Michigan where he would live out his remaining days.  I vaguely remember meeting him once, probably at my grandmother’s funeral in 1979.  Frank died in 1982 at the age of 84.

Sarah Lewis Fielden

16 Sunday Nov 2014

Posted by suzieg1969 in Genealogy

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

Bennett, Fielden, Frye, Lewis

Sarah Lewis Fielden is my 3rd great grandmother.  Census records have her born in Tennessee in May 1841, possibly in Monroe County.  Her parents are currently unknown and there is some question as to whether her maiden name is Lewis or Frye.  Her marriage record to John Wesley Fielden, entered on August 21, 1856 in Jefferson County, Tennessee, has her listed as Sarah Lewis.

Sarah and John had eight children.  Some stayed in Eastern Tennessee while at least three of the sons moved north to Kentucky.

  • Alexander (ca 1857-?)
  • John L (1862-1927)
  • Calvin (1864-?)
  • Martha (1867-?)
  • Thomas (1869-1945)
  • Stewart (1871-?)
  • Arley (1874-1918) my 2nd great grandfather, married June Bennett.
  • Ethel (1883-?)

Sarah and John lived their entire lives in Jefferson County.  She died sometime between 1900 and 1910, based on census records.

Fielden Pedigree

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Monroe County, TN is located south of Knoxville, on the western side of the Smokey Mountains.
Jefferson County, TN is northeast of Knoxville.

Richard O and Sarah Rogers Bennett

15 Saturday Nov 2014

Posted by suzieg1969 in Genealogy

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Bennett, Briscoe, Ceckerell, Fielden, Rogers

Today I am looking into the ancestors of Richard O. Bennett and his second wife Sarah Rogers Bennett.  They are my 3rd-great grandparents.  Much of the information I have is based on an article found in the Ohio County (KY) Times on August 5, 1971, written by Agnes D Ashby.  The Bennetts and their descendants settled in and around Ohio County, Kentucky which is one county southeast of Owensboro, KY.

Richard Bennett was born August 1, 1810 in Kentucky to Joseph and Susanna Ceckerell Bennett.  I have no information on Joseph or Susanna.  Richard was first married to Mary Jane Briscoe, supposedly in Virginia.  They had 5 children: George, Ophelia, Ethel, Sallie Ann, and Samuel.  Richard’s second marriage was to Sarah C. Rogers.  She had been married twice previously, once to a Brown and then to a Maddox.  Richard and Sarah had one daughter, June, who is my great-great-grandmother.  Richard died March 1, 1897.

Interestingly enough, three of the daughters married Fielden brothers.  June married Arley on August 14, 1895; Ethel married John on September 23, 1885; and Sallie married Thomas on February 28, 1895.

also refer back to Fielden Pedigree

The Fielden Branch

15 Saturday Nov 2014

Posted by suzieg1969 in Genealogy

≈ 3 Comments

Tags

Bennett, Ceckerell, Coppock, Fielden, Frye, Mattox, Moyer, Rogers

Today I’m shifting focus onto my paternal grandmother Lilian Edeine Fielden and her ancestors.  To help my sisters see the relevance of the people I write about, I’m first posting a pedigree chart for my grandmother.

Pedigree Chart for Lillian Edeine Fielden (1918-1979)

Pedigree Chart for Lillian Edeine Fielden (1918-1979)

Mini-Summary: The DeMoss Line

14 Friday Nov 2014

Posted by suzieg1969 in Genealogy

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Bunnell, DeMoss, Fielden, Ireland

Pedigree of Samuel T. DeMoss (1918-1955)

Pedigree of Samuel T. DeMoss (1918-1955)

For the past two weeks, I have been exclusively researching my paternal grandfather’s branch of my family.  I have made some progress extending some lines and filling in some of the blanks.  On the right is my grandfather’s pedigree chart.  The rest of the Bunnell line can be viewed on yesterday’s blog post about Sarah Ireland.  While I’m not finished working on this part of my family, it’s time to move on to the next quarter of my ancestry.

Some of the highlights, for me, about this part of the family are:

  • All 4 3rd-great grandfathers fought in the Civil War
  • All 4 sets of 3rd-great grandparents have been identified
  • Some of the vital statistics of the older lines has been substantiated with accepted source documents
  • The Bunnell line can be traced back to 1640 and the New Haven Colony.  This means my ancestors on this continent date back almost as far as the Puritans who settled at Plymouth!

Next up, I’ll be focusing my energy on my paternal grandmother’s family which starts with the Fieldens.

Sarah Ireland and beyond

13 Thursday Nov 2014

Posted by suzieg1969 in Genealogy

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Bonnell, Bunnell, DeMoss, Ireland, Reeve, Richardson, Whitehead

Pedigree of Sarah Ireland Reeve

Pedigree of Sarah Ireland Reeve

Sarah Ireland is my 4th great grandmother.  She was born in Cincinnati, OH in 1810 and married Joseph Reeve (son of Joseph & Martha Richardson Reeve) in 1829 in Brownstown, IN.  They had 10 children, 7 of which lived to be adults, including my 3rd great grandmother Louisa Reeve (who married Isaac DeMoss).  By 1850 the Reeves had moved west to Daviess County, then across the river to Knox County the following decade.

Sarah’s parents were James Ireland and Sarah Bunnell.  They were originally from the Philadelphia area, but moved to western Ohio and then into Indiana.  They, too, had several children who scattered over the years–one son eventually settling in Oregon.

Pedigree of Benjamin Bonnell

Pedigree of Benjamin Bonnell

The Ireland line can be traced back two more generations with limited information.  The Bunnell line, however, has been traced back five additional generations, as illustrated by the pedigree charts of Sarah Ireland and Benjamin Bonnell.  Vital records for the 1600’s and 1700’s tend to be minimal, however, the Bunnell/Bonnell line seems to be rather well documented.  The earliest couple in the line, Nathaniel Bunnell & Susanna Whitehead were born circa 1640-1650 in New Haven Colony.  Since New Haven was established in 1638 as a British Colony, it makes them some of the earliest born settlers in the New World.  The next step is to find rosters of those who settled in New Haven during those early years.

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