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Digging Up My Roots

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Digging Up My Roots

Tag Archives: Bemis

Lillian Edeine Fielden DeMoss

25 Tuesday Nov 2014

Posted by suzieg1969 in Genealogy

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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.

Frank Fielden

17 Monday Nov 2014

Posted by suzieg1969 in Genealogy

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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.

Samuel Thomas DeMoss

04 Tuesday Nov 2014

Posted by suzieg1969 in Genealogy

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

Bemis, Cox, DeMoss, Fielden, NaBloPoMo

Samuel-Lillian-DeMoss

Thursday of this week marks the anniversaries of the deaths of two men in my direct family tree.  Today I’ll talk about the older of the two–my grandfather Samuel Thomas DeMoss, Sr.

Samuel was the third child of Samuel I. and Blanche (Cox) DeMoss, born February 25, 1918 in probably Knox County, IN.  He had two older sisters, Doris and Frances, and a younger brother William.  The 1920 census has the family living in Taylor Township, Greene County and in Edwardsport in 1930.

Samuel married Lillian Edeine Fielden on April 23, 1937.  They are residing in Edwardsport in the 1940 census.  He is reported having finished 4 years of high school, and Lester Bemis is living with them.  Lester is incorrectly listed as his father-in-law, and I will explain this in more detail on November 25.  Samuel and Edeine went on to have seven children, four of which grew to maturity.  On November 6, 1955, Samuel succumbed to throat cancer, leaving behind a wife and four children.  He is buried in the Edwardsport Town Cemetery.

I don’t know a whole lot more about my grandfather.  My dad was only twelve when he died and no one really talked about him by the time my siblings and cousins were around.  I know that he was a farmer and that his neighbors pitched in to help get that last year’s crop in.  Oddly enough, while visiting my college roommate’s grandparents one afternoon, I discovered her grandfather had been one of those kind enough to help the family in their time of need.

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

Taylor Township is in Greene County, IN between Odon and Bloomfield.  The junction of I-69 and US 231 is in Taylor Township.

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