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Digging Up My Roots

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Digging Up My Roots

Monthly Archives: May 2020

Ara Belle Gilmore

11 Monday May 2020

Posted by suzieg1969 in Genealogy

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Downey, Gilmore, Indiana, Lankford, Strange

Ara Belle Gilmore was the seventh of nine children born to Robert Gilmore and Martha Jane Lankford.   She was born on May 11, 1873 in Steen Township, Knox County, Indiana.  Her older siblings, in order of birth, were Elizabeth, Bertha Ellen, Susan, Sarah, Benjamin and Nancy.  She was followed by younger brothers Irvin and George.  Elizabeth was the only child not to live to adulthood.  In 1884, Ara’s sister Ellen died.  Ellen’s son Charles was raised by his grandparents Robert and Martha.

Ara married on May 3, 1899 at the age of twenty-five to Thomas Albert Strange from Daviess County.  They had a daughter in 1901 named Elsie.  Albert worked for the railroad and was often gone for stretches of time doing construction.  On May 23, 1905, he was hit and killed by a passenger train in Mitchell, Indiana.

Ara and her daughter lived with her parents for a few years until she met and married Charles Downey around Christmas 1910.  They made their home together in Bicknell where Charles was a farmer.  Ara’s father died in 1920 and her mother followed in 1925.  At the age of sixty-six, Ara passed away on August 6, 1940 from complications associated with a hernia.  She is buried in the Odd Fellows Cemetery in Bicknell.

 

Ara Belle Gilmore is my 1st cousin 4x removed on my dad’s side.

REFERENCES

  • United States Census – 1880, 1900, 1910, 1920, 1930, 1940
  • Indiana Death Certificates
  • Indiana Marriage Collection
  • Find A Grave website
  • Vincennes Commercial, December 23, 1910
  • Vincennes Sun-Commercial,  August 7, 1940
  • Daviess County Democrat, May 27, 1905

 

Mura Mae Cox

10 Sunday May 2020

Posted by suzieg1969 in Genealogy

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Cox, Goodman, Indiana, Killion, McCullough, Missouri, Rogers, Thomson

Mura May Cox

On May 10, 1897 in Vigo Township, Knox County, Indiana, Mura Mae Cox was born to Emily Arabelle McCullough and Frank Cox.  She was the third of five siblings that lived to adulthood–Raymond and Blanche were older, and Anna and Jessie were younger.  Her father supported the family through farming.

Soon after the birth of Jessie in 1904, the family moved to Welch Township in Cape Girardeau County, Missouri.  Frank remarried in 1907 to Mollie Bugg Givens Schwepker.  It is unclear what Arabelle’s fate was between 1904 and 1907.  The Deed Record Index for the land purchase in Welch Township indicated that both Frank and Arabelle were listed in the transfer.  That would lend credence that she possibly perished in Missouri.

With the addition of a step-mother, the 1910 Census actually has the five siblings rather scattered.  Raymond and Mura were living at home with their father.  Blanche worked as a servant for a private family.  Anna and Jessie could be found back in Knox County living with different families.  The exact circumstances surrounding this situation are unknown.  Anna was listed as a ward of Mr. and Mrs Bode Goodman in Bicknell.  Ann and Charles Rogers were raising Jessie in Westphalia.  Ann was Frank’s sister and Jessie’s aunt.

Mura Mae saw both of her older siblings marry in 1911.  In January 1915, her father died of tuberculosis in Vincennes.  It’s possible they were back in Indiana visiting family over the holidays.  Since her father did not have a will, the widow was placed in charge of the estate and Mura Mae basically was homeless.  She was found in 1920 to be living with her father’s cousin Nathan Killion and his wife Cordelia in Daviess County, Indiana.  In November 1920, Mura Mae married Jesse Thomson and they moved to Indianapolis.

Mura and Jesse had three children: Colleen, Shirley and Ramon.  In 1930, they were living on Sugar Grove Avenue, just a few miles from the Indianapolis Motor Speedway.  The house they lived in then may still be there today.  It is possible it was a duplex at the time.  Jesse supported the family as a sales manager for a hardware store.  By 1940, he had risen up to the rank of territorial manager.  They had moved to the Crown Hill part of Indianapolis which not far from the present day Children’s Museum.

Over the years, their children grew up and started families of their own while Mura and Jesse continued to live in Indiana’s capital.  Despite the lack of a cohesive childhood together, pictures of Mura and her brother and sisters would indicate they remained close throughout the years.  In 1965, her sister Blanche died of colon cancer.  Raymond followed in 1968.  On December 22, 1975 at the age of 78, Mura was a victim of breast cancer.

Mura Mae Cox

Mura Mae was my 2nd great aunt on my dad’s side.

REFERENCES

  • United States Census – 1900, 1910, 1920, 1930, 1940
  • Indiana Death Certificates
  • Indiana Marriage Certificates
  • Find a Grave website
  • Deed Records 1805-1910, Cape Girardeau County MO
  • Missouri Marriage Records
  • Missouri Wills and Probate Records

Related Pages

  • Frank Cox
  • Blanche Cox

Rosanna Ishmael

09 Saturday May 2020

Posted by suzieg1969 in Genealogy

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Hunt, Illinois, Ishamael, Keel, Kentucky

Rosanna Ishmael

Rosanna Ishmael was born on May 9, 1848 in Fleming County, Kentucky to John A Ishmael and Margaret Keel.  Rosanna had three siblings–John, Laura and Samuel–although when exactly John was born is not clear.  In the early 1850s, John and Margaret packed up the family and moved to Illinois.  According to the 1855 Illinois State Census for Cole County, they were accompanied by other Ishmael families, likely brothers or cousins of John Sr.  Margaret was counted in the July 1855 census, however, it would appear that she died not long after that, although it is not known whether she was laid to rest in Illinois or Kentucky.  Also, Laura may have also perished during this time as her whereabouts are unknown after 1855.

The 1860 census indicates that John Sr has taken a second wife, likely in early 1856.  It’s assumed the marriage between John and Mary A Hunt occurred in Kentucky since she was a native of Bath County. This marriage added eight more children to the family as half-siblings to Rosanna–Margaret, Nancy, John Thomas, Martha, James, George, Sarah, and Minnie.

As the last of Rosanna’s siblings were being born, she married and started her own family.  She married farmer Timothy Ishmael around 1868 and they settled in Nicholas County, Kentucky.  Together they brought twelve children into this world, Nine of those offspring would live to adulthood–Margaret, Lilly, Eugene, Anna Belle, Lucy, Gertrude, Charles , Rosa and Ethel.  Both Clara and John Samuel died as toddlers while Liddie only survived a couple months.

Rosanna’s father John passed away in 1898 and a few years later in 1906, her husband Tim also left this world.  Rosanna’s children continued to grow up and move on with their lives.  In 1921, her daughter Lilly Alexander preceded her in death after a year long battle with liver cancer.  Rosanna joined them in the afterlife on September 6, 1923 at the age of seventy-five.

 

Rosanna Ishmael is my 2nd cousin 4x removed on my dad’s side.

REFERENCES

  • United States Census, 1850, 1860, 1870, 1880, 1910, 1920
  • Kentucky Death Index
  • Find a Grave website
  • Fleming County, Kentucky marriage index
  • Illinois State Census, 1855

Jonathan Crane Bonnel III

08 Friday May 2020

Posted by suzieg1969 in Genealogy

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Bonnel, English, New Jersey, New York, Russell

Jonathan Crane Bonnel III was born May 8, 1860 in Chatham, New Jersey, the oldest child of Jonathan Jr and Emily Russell Bonnel.  Jonathan was followed by two sisters–Jeannette who never married, and Eloise who died at age six in 1871.

This Bonnel family was instrumental in the development of this area of New Jersey.  Jonathan III’s great-grandfather, also named Jonathan, founded Bonneltown which later was renamed Stanley.  His grandfather, Jonathan C. Sr who went by “Crane”, played an important part in getting the railroad to run a line through what is now Summit, New Jersey.  Jonathan and his father, Johnathan Jr, continued to develop the area economically in the years since.

In 1875, Jonathan’s mother died at the age of forty-three.  His father remarried in 1879 to Sarah English, the daughter of a prominent local doctor.  Unfortunately, that marriage only lasted about a year as Sarah died in 1880.

Jonathan himself married just once.  On June 27, 1892, he married a woman named Carrie in Kings, New York.  Not much is known about Carrie other than she was born in 1856 in Wisconsin, her parents were born in New York and she was likely married once before Jonathan.  There were no children born to this marriage and Carrie disappeared after the 1910 census.  There is some evidence that she might have relocated to Los Angeles.  Jonathan is listed as divorced in the 1915 New Jersey Census.

For several years Jonathan was in poor health.  He was hospitalized when his father died in February 1916.  His sister Jeannette was left control of the family estate and charged with her brother’s care.  Jonathan succumbed to his illness in November 1916.  He is buried in the New Providence Presbyterian Churchyard in New Providence, New Jersey.

 

Jonathan Crane Bonnel III was my 4th cousin 5x removed on my dad’s side.

REFERENCES

  • United States Census, 1860, 1870, 1880, 1900, 1910
  • New Jersey State Census, 1885, 1895, 1905, 1915
  • New Jersey Death Index
  • New York Extracted Marriage Index
  • Find A Grave website
  • The Chatham Press – December 2, 1916 & February 12, 1916 via Newspapers.com
  • The Central New Jersey Home News  – February 7, 1916 via Newspapers.com
  • New Jersey Marriages
  • US Newspaper Extractions form the Northeast

Benjamin Lankford

07 Thursday May 2020

Posted by suzieg1969 in Genealogy

≈ 5 Comments

Tags

Bartlett, Bland, Burlett, hurst, Indiana, Lankford, Martindale, Mattocks

Benjamin Lankford was born in  Indiana on May 7, 1853.  His actual birth year and location are somewhat up for debate.  Most census records would put his birth in or around 1853, however, his death certificate would indicate he was actually born in 1849.  Because he’s not listed in the 1850 census, I am inclined to believe he was born circa 1853.  The year of his birth would also give a clue as to where he might have been born. Taking into account where his siblings were born, it is likely Benjamin was born in Knox County, likely in Steen Township.  His parents were Benjamin William Lankford and Sally Mattocks.  He had four brothers (William, Harrison, James and Burrell) and four sisters (Martha Jane, Josephine, Sophia, and Lucinda).

The Lankfords supported themselves through farming.  The family was actually in Lawrence County, Indiana until around 1850 when they packed up and moved to Steen Township, Knox County.  They stayed in Knox County for a decade or so before they relocated to Washington in Daviess County in the mid to late 1860s.  It was in Daviess County where Benjamin met and married his first wife Rebecca Jane Burlett on May 8, 1877.  It appears this marriage did not last very long as Benjamin was living with his brother Harrison in 1880 in Steen Township and his marriage status was listed as widowed.

On Christmas Day 1881, Benjamin married a second time to Mrs. Sarah M Hurst.  Very little has been found regarding Sarah or this marriage.

Fast forwarding a decade, Benjamin is at the alter once again.  On October 12, 1893 he married Cordelia Martindale Bland.  The specific location of the marriage is not definitively known, but likely took place in either Knox or Greene County, Indiana.  Cordelia’s first marriage lasted less than three years, but whether it ended in death or divorce, that is not clear. Benjamin supported his family as a carriage painter and they resided in Edwardsport.

Cordelia and Benjamin had two children who lived to adulthood…Mary and Walter.  Mary married Robert Bartlett, however, she only lived to be nineteen.  In 1915 she died of meningitis.  Walter married, several times actually.  He lived to be 78 and made his home in the Linton area.  Cordelia outlived her husband Benjamin.  He was afflicted with pulmonary tuberculosis.  He died on April 15, 1916 in Switz City where he is also buried.

 

Benjamin Lankford was my 4th great-uncle on my dad’s side.

REFERENCES

  • United States Census, 1850, 1860, 1870, 1880, 1910
  • Indiana Death Certificates
  • Indiana Marriage Collection

Bernice Fredericka Ireland

06 Wednesday May 2020

Posted by suzieg1969 in Genealogy

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Greger, Illinois, Indiana, Ireland, Rust, Wacker

On May 6, 1888 in Brownstown, Jackson County, Indiana, Bernice Fredericka Ireland was born to Frank and Lillie Wacker Ireland.  She and her older brother William were the only children born to Frank and Lillie.  Bernice received her middle name from her maternal grandmother Fredericka Rush Wacker.

Frank Ireland supported his family as a school teacher while his children were growing up.  Bernice graduated from Brownstown High School in 1904 and later attended Indiana University in Bloomington where she studied to also be an educator.  On February 20, 1919 at the age of thirty-one, Bernice married Walter Greger.  Immediately following the wedding, the couple moved to Chicago where Walter worked as a mail clerk.  On January 20, 1920 in Chicago, Bernice gave birth to their only child Janet.  While living in Chicago, Bernice put her training to good use and taught in the Chicago Public School System.

In 1932, Bernice lost her father to cancer of the lymph glands.  He was seventy-two.  A decade later, her mother succumbed to heart disease mere days after her eighty-first birthday.

Bernice and Walter continued to live in Chicago until their retirement in the mid-1950s when they returned to Jackson County.  Based on the numerous mentions in the local newspaper, Bernice was quite active in the community in various organizations upon their return.  Unfortunately, Walter’s life was taken to soon, as he suffered a paralyzing stroke in 1957.  Bernice continued to keep busy for a few more years, before suffering a fatal stroke in February 1965.  She and Walter are laid to rest in the Fairview Cemetery in Brownstown.

Bernice Ireland

Bernice Ireland Greger was my 2nd cousin 4x removed on my dad’s side.  She is also a first cousin 1x removed of William Puloski Ireland who was previously the subject of a biography.

REFERENCES

  • United States Census, 1900, 1910, 1920, 1930
  • Indiana Death Certificates
  • Indiana Marriages
  • Find A Grave website
  • Jackson County Banner, February 19, 1913, February 26, 1919, September 7, 1932, April 3, 1957 via Newspapers.com

 

 

Norma Lucille Kaiser

05 Tuesday May 2020

Posted by suzieg1969 in Genealogy

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Indiana, Kaiser, Wetzel, Wolfe

Norma Lucille Kaiser was born in Knox County, Indiana on May 5, 1925 to Henry M Kaiser and Josephine Wetzel.  She was one of at least ten children born to the couple which include five boys and five girls, all but one living well into adulthood.  Her brothers included Joseph, Lawrence, Cletus (who died as an infant), Henry and Walter.  Norma was the third girl of the family: Anna, Mary, Norma, Marcella, and Dorothy.

The family made their living through farming.  In the 1920s they resided near Henry’s father’s farm outside of Vincennes, although by the mid-1930s, they had relocated to Haddon Township in Sullivan County.

Lawrence Wolfe, also of Haddon Township, enlisted in the Army in 1942 and served three years.  He married Norma on December 26, 1944 in Sullivan County, in the middle of his enlistment.  After the war, he supported Norma and their family as a truck driver.  They had five children, four of which grew to adulthood.

Lawrence and Norma continued living in in the Carlisle area until his death from cancer in 1987.  Norma lived another eleven years, a victim of heart disease on January 26, 1998 in Sullivan.

Norma Kaiser is a great-granddaughter of Michael Kaiser.

Norma Kaiser

Norma was my half-2nd cousin, 1x removed on my mom’s side.

REFERENCES

  • United States Census, 1930, 1940
  • Indiana Marriages
  • Indiana Birth Certificates
  • Indiana Death Certificates
  • Vincennes Sun-Commercial via Newspapers.com
  • Find a Grave Website
  • US Social Security Death Index
  • US WWII Draft Cards
  • US Department of Veterans Affairs BIRLS Death File
  • US World War II Army Enlistment Records

John L. Cox

04 Monday May 2020

Posted by suzieg1969 in Genealogy

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Cox, Indiana, Polk, Rafferty, Robinson, Steen, Tigert

John L Cox was the first of at least five children born to Jonathan Piety Cox and Rachel Lemen Tigert.  He was born on May 4, 1820 in Knox County, Indiana.  There are some variations on his middle name with some sources listing it as Lemen, a family name from his mother’s side, and others referring to him as Lemuel.  His siblings included Mary J, Harvey Innes, Alexander and Harriet.  Mary was the mother of Henrietta Polk and Alexander was the father of Rachel Cox Rafferty, both women who were recently the subject of biographies on this blog.

John lived his entire life in Knox County, in the area between Bruceville and Bicknell.  He actually amassed a respectable-sized farm which in 1880 totaled more than 300 acres.  John was married twice.  His first marriage began on October 3, 1849 to Mary Robinson.  She gave him three sons, John Crittenden and twins Harmon and Jonathan.  She died at the age of 23 in 1852.

John L Cox Washington Twp

A couple years passed and John married Naomi Steen on September 21, 1854.  Together, John and Naomi added at least six children to their family, all reaching adulthood and all but one living into their late sixties or beyond.  The children in order of birth: Enoch S, James L, Richard T, Logan, Naomi and Caroline.

All of the family was well-known and respected in the community.  Logan, after serving in the military, went to medical school.  Unfortunately, just week’s shy of graduating, he was stricken with a debilitating ailment which slowly killed him for over a year.  He died in 1894 at the age of 32.  John C, the oldest of the nine siblings, was elected County Sheriff in 1898.  Harmon, one of the twins, died at the age of 46.  He was a business man in Daviess County.

After fifty-six years of marriage at the age of 80, John Lemuel Cox passed away at the family home from jaundice.  He is buried in the Asbury Chapel Cemetery located in Ragsdale, Indiana, as are many of his family.

 

John L Cox is my 1st cousin 5x removed on my dad’s side.

REFERENCES

  • United States Census, 1850, 1860, 1870, 1880, 1900
  • Indiana Death Certifcates
  • Indiana Marriage Index
  • United States Indexed County Land Ownership Maps, 1880
  • The Indianapolis Journal, November 14, 1900 via Newspapers.com
  • The Vincennes Commercial, July 2, 1898 & August 14, 1894

Mary Ann Pilard

03 Sunday May 2020

Posted by suzieg1969 in Genealogy

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Tags

Bayard, California, Colorado, Indiana, Pilard, Young

Mary Ann Pilard

On May 3, 1848 in Knox County, Indiana, Susan Bayard and Marie-Ambrose Pilard welcomed to this world their second of three daughters, Mary Ann.  Mary was sandwiched between her older sister Suzanne and younger sister Clotilde.  in 1854, Marie-Ambrose passed away at the age of forty, leaving Susan well provided for to raise the girls into adulthood.

In 1885 at the age of 37, Mary Ann met and married an Irishman by the name of John T Young on August 25 in Knox County.  They immediately started their family which consisted of four children who all lived to adulthood.  Thomas and Helen were born in Vincennes.  Around 1889 or 1890, John and Mary Ann moved the family to Colorado where Bayard and Ambrose were born.  Not long after the birth of the boys, it had been reported that John suffered from a ruptured appendix and did not recover.

Mary Ann went on to raise the family in Denver.  As the years passed, all but Ambrose married and started families.  On August 2, 1932, while visiting friends in Roseville, California, Mary Ann passed away at the age of 84.  She was laid to rest in Denver.

Mary Ann Pilard

Mary Ann Pilard was my 5th cousin 4x removed on my mom’s side.

REFERENCES

  • United States Census, 1860, 1870, 1880, 1910, 1930
  • California Death Index
  • Indiana Marriage Index
  • Indiana Select Births and Christenings
  • The Press-Tribune, Roseville, CA, August 5, 1932 via Newspapers.com

Squire DeMoss

02 Saturday May 2020

Posted by suzieg1969 in Genealogy

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Tags

Davis, DeMoss, Indiana, Lowe

Squire DeMoss was the seventh of eight children born to William DeMoss and Elizabeth Sarah Lowe.  Squire was born on May 2, 1846 in most likely Reeve Township in Daviess County, Indiana.  He had two sisters, Elizabeth and Mary, and five brothers, Isaac, John, William, Democrat, and Fleming.  His parents were originally from Kentucky and came to Indiana in the early 1830s to pursue better farming.

Squire’s older brothers Isaac and William moved Knox County where they built their farms and families.  His brother John stayed in Daviess County for many years and Squire stayed on with him as a farm hand.  His brother Democrat fought in the Civil War and is buried at the National Cemetery in Port Hudson, Louisiana.  On December 29, 1870, Squire married Mary Jane Davis.  The marriage was very short lived, however, as Squire died at the age of 24 on January 16, 1871.  He was buried at the Hawkins Prairie Cemetery.  Mary Jane remarried a year later.

 

Squire DeMoss was my 4th great-uncle on my dad’s side.

REFERENCES

  • United States Census, 1850, 1870
  • Find A Grave website
  • Indiana Marriages
  • Indiana Civil War Soldier Database Index
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