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Digging Up My Roots

~ one ancestor at a time

Digging Up My Roots

Tag Archives: DeMoss

80th Indiana Infantry, Company C

11 Tuesday Nov 2014

Posted by suzieg1969 in Civil War, Genealogy

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

Cox, DeMoss, Gilmore, Lankford, Reeve, Winkler

The Civil War began on April 12, 1861 at Fort Sumter, South Carolina.  Initially, seven southern states seceded from the United States to form the Confederate States of America.  This number grew to eleven before it was all said and done.  In 1862 President Abraham Lincoln raised the call to arms among the Union States, requesting 300,000 volunteers step up and help bring an end to the war.

The men of Southwestern Indiana heard the call and the 80th Indiana Infantry was formed.  The regiment consisted of 1,049 men from several southwestern counties in the state.  The men were grouped in to 10 companies identified by letters of the alphabet.  About 100 men from Edwardsport mustered together at Fort Gibson in Princeton on September 3, 1862 to form Company C.  The 80th spent their first year battling for Kentucky before moving on to Tennessee and the Siege of Atlanta.  They returned to battle in Tennessee, then were shipped to North Carolina to fight under General William T Sherman in early 1865.  They war ended in April 1865, along with the assassination of President Lincoln.  The 80th finished out their duties at Salisbury NC where they were mustered out in late June 1865.  In the end, the 80th lost 237 men to death, 49 to desertion and 3 were unaccounted for.  A more detailed account of their battles can be found in the Civil War Index and the website devoted to the 80th Indiana Volunteer Infantry.

William Lankford

William Lankford

Members of Company C were all from the Edwardsport area.  Three men in particular, John S. Cox, George W. Winkler, and Isaac DeMoss, were my 3rd great grandfathers.  All three mustered in on September 3, 1862.  Unfortunately, not all of them came home.  John died at New Haven, KY on January 14, 1863.  George and Isaac fared better, mustering out on June 22, 1865.  While all three entered service as privates, Isaac finished as a corporal.

Of course, these three were not the only ones in my family’s tree that served in Company C.  Isaac’s cousin Samuel Reeve entered as a Sergeant and had attained the rank of First Sergeant by the time he returned home in 1865.  George had two of his extended family fighting by his side.  William Lankford, George’s brother-in-law, mustered out as a Sergeant after the war while Robert Gilmore, who married one of William’s sisters, was discharged early on April 24, 1863.

Blanche Cox DeMoss Robertson

10 Monday Nov 2014

Posted by suzieg1969 in Genealogy

≈ 3 Comments

Tags

Begeman, Cox, DeMoss, Robertson, Rogers

Yesterday, when I was reviewing my information on Blanche Cox DeMoss Robertson, my great-grandmother, there were some questions raised.

  1. My data said Blanche and Samuel I. DeMoss were married in Cape Girardeau, Missouri.  This concerned me because both were born in Knox County, and census records showed they settled in Knox and Greene Counties after they were married.
  2. Blanche’s obituary listed a sister named Jessie, however, I had not located her in the census records or vital records.  I wasn’t sure when she was born or which of her father’s marriages she was a product of.

Blanche was born 1894 to Frank and Arabelle (McCullough) Cox in Knox County.  She had an older brother Raymond and three sisters—May, Anna, and Jessie—according to her obituary.  As of the 1900 Knox County Census, Jessie had not yet been born and Arabelle was still alive.

The Cox family had always lived in Knox County, but I had a 1910 Census record showing them in Cape Girardeau.  Blanche wasn’t listed with the family in the 1910 census.  She was found in another household working as a live-in maid in Cape Girardeau.  The census also listed  a woman named Mollie as Frank’s wife and that they had only been married 3 years.  So, Arabelle was gone and Jessie couldn’t be located.

A copy of Blanche and Samuel’s marriage license was indeed found in the Missouri marriages database. It was obtained on December 22, 1911 and filed on December 26.  What I am curious about is how did this marriage come about?  Samuel was about 5 years older than Blanche and the Coxes had moved to Missouri a good 4-5 years earlier.  Blanche wasn’t even 18 at the time of the wedding, so how did they get together?  Was this an arranged marriage or was he coveting her when she was 12?  At any rate, Blanche and Samuel returned to the Knox/Greene County area and went on with their lives, having four children, one of which was my grandfather Samuel T. DeMoss.  Samuel Isaac died in 1945.  Blanche married Coen Robertson before my grandfather died in 1955.  She died in 1965.

Jessie’s whereabouts were still a mystery.  I stumbled across another researcher’s data on Ancestry.com which referred to the 1910 census where she was listed as an adopted daughter of Charles and Anna Rogers in Westphalia.  Her birth was circa 1904 which would make Arabelle her mother, and most likely Arabelle died in childbirth.  Since fathers did not raise their infants back then, Jessie was given to someone else to raise; that someone else being the Rogers’.  Today I discovered that Anna Rogers was Frank’s sister, so Jessie was raised by her aunt and uncle. Yet another aunt and uncle, August and Emerine Cox Begeman lived in the next house down the road.  By 1920, I had lost Jessie again.  She wasn’t with the Rogers’ who had moved to Greene County, her sister Blanche, or the Begemans.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Westphalia is just down the road from Edwardsport  in Widner Township, Knox County.

Joseph Reeve & Martha Richardson

08 Saturday Nov 2014

Posted by suzieg1969 in Genealogy

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

DeMoss, Hutchenson, Ireland, NaBloPoMo, Reeve, Ryan, Sensabaugh, Smith

Today’s mystery ancestors are Joseph and Martha Richardson Reeve, my 5th great grandparents.  Very little is known about this couple.  I would estimate that they were both born circa 1780.  Some sources have Joseph’s birth listed as New Jersey.  It is thought that Martha was born in Pennsylvania, possibly in the Philadelphia area.  According to a letter from Effie Reeve Sensabaugh to Vera Reeve dated October 19, 1939, Martha’s mother’s maiden name was Mary Hutchenson.  There are entries in the Quaker Meeting Records from Bucks Co, Pennsylvania documenting the marriage of a Josiah Reeve to an Elizabeth Richardson in November 1802, but it’s not 100% clear if this is our couple.

According to Effie’s letter, Joseph was a ship captain working out of the Philadelphia port.  In 1815, he took some money to cover expenses on his journey, but never showed up at his ship and wasn’t heard from again.  It was assumed he was murdered during a robbery.

Joseph and Martha supposedly had three children:

  • Joseph (1808-1887)
  • Mary (1814-1907)
  • Lucy (ca 1810-?)

It is believed that Martha remarried to a John Bower after Joseph’s death and at some point during the mid 1820s the family moved to Jackson Co, IN.  It’s not clear what happened to them after that.

Joseph, the son, married Sarah Ireland in Jackson Co in 1829. Joseph and Sarah moved to Steele Township, Daviess Co in the 1830s and to Vigo Township, Knox Co during the 1850s, according to census records.  They are my 4th great grandparents, their daughter Louisa Reeve marrying Isaac DeMoss.  Joseph was married twice as mentioned in the Carnahan post.

Mary married George Ryan in 1834 in Cincinnati, OH.  According to a letter from William S. Reeve to Vera Reeve dated September 1, 1941, the Ryans moved to Indianapolis around the time of the Civil War and finished out their lives there.  Most of their children settled there as well, working as painters, according to city directories of the time.

Little is known of Lucy.  According to William Reeve’s letter, she married a man by the name of Smith and they had three children: Howard, Ida, and Fanny.  Howard worked as a baker for a Mr. Bryce in Indianapolis in the late 1870s, and according to a letter from Howard Smith to David Reeve dated March 16, 1879, Ida was married and living in Missouri.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Jackson County, Indiana is in SE Indiana and includes the towns of Seymour and Brownstown.  It is east of Bedford.
Steele Township is in NE Daviess County, across the White River from Vigo Township, Knox County.  Plainville is in Steele Township.

Ruth Mix Carnahan

07 Friday Nov 2014

Posted by suzieg1969 in Genealogy

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

Boyer, Carmichael, Carnahan, DeMoss, Ireland, Mix, NaBloPoMo, Reeve

Yesterday, my sister Brenda asked me if we were related to Ruth Carnahan. Ruth had been a close friend of our Grandma DeMoss, and it had been hinted at that Ruth and Grandma were cousins.

The answer, dear sister, is YES, we are related to Ruth, but not through Grandma. Let me try to explain.

Joseph Reeve is one of our 4th-great grandfathers.  He was married twice.  The first time to Sarah Ireland.  One of their many children was Louisa Reeve who married Isaac DeMoss.  They are our 3rd-great grandparents coming down the DeMoss line.

When Sarah died, Joseph remarried.  His second wife was Elizabeth Baker Carmichael.  They only had a daughter, Mary Florence Reeve.  Mary married Alexander Boyer and they had two children, Rex and Ruby.  Ruby married Melville Mix and they had three children, one of which was Ruth.  Ruth then married Bob Carnahan.

So, we are related to Ruth Mix Carnahan through our grandfather and she is our half 2nd cousin 3 times removed.

 

Now, I can almost guess what the next question will be.  Are we related to Kathy’s boss Dirk?  Technically, I guess you could say we are, the generic answer being “very distantly by marriage”.  We cannot, however, call him a cousin.  The definition of cousin states that the two people have to have an ancestor in common which we don’t.  Specifically, according to my Family Maker software Dirk is the grand nephew of the husband of our half 2nd cousin 3 times removed.  

 

So, that clears up that myth.  If you have others, please pass them along and I’ll try to verify them for you.

Samuel Thomas DeMoss, Jr

06 Thursday Nov 2014

Posted by suzieg1969 in Genealogy

≈ 5 Comments

Tags

DeMoss, Keller, NaBloPoMo

On TuesdayDAd I wrote about my grandfather Samuel T. DeMoss.  Today I am going to write about his son, and my dad, Samuel T. DeMoss Jr.  For most of my dad’s life everyone called him Tom.  I was told this was to avoid confusion between him and his dad, and it’s not an uncommon practice for sons to go by their middle names.  It was in the last decade or so of his life that some called him Sam.  Because most of the people who will read this knew him as Tom, that’s how I will refer to him here.

Tom was born to Samuel and Edeine DeMoss on July 5, 1943 at the hospital in Linton, IN.  He grew up in the Edwardsport area with two brothers, John and Jim, and a sister Sandy.  My dad didn’t talk much about his childhood.  His dad died when he was 12 and I can’t imagine what that would be like for a boy that age.  He did talk fondly about working for Mr. Huey on his farm after school with Uncle John.   It was evident that Mr. Huey was a huge influence on my dad during those teenage years.  Dad attended and graduated from Sandborn High School in 1961, even making the honor roll while he was there.

After high school Dad joined the US Marine Corps.  He was assigned to the 1st Marine Division, Platoon 206 stationed out of Camp Pendleton in San Diego.  I know very little of his time in time in the military.  We have a few pictures he took Dad Marinesduring that time, including one of Mt. Fuji.  He never told us what he did only that he was a sergeant (E5) when he got out.

After the Marines, he returned to Knox County and got a job driving a delivery truck.  I believe Mom had mentioned he delivered bread and baked goods, like for Wonder Bread.  He met my mom, Phyllis Keller, who was a classmate of his sister Sandy at the local business college.  On June 24, 1967, Phyllis and Tom were married at St. John’s Catholic Church in Vincennes.  They rented a house just off Main and 14th Street until they bought the house on the corner of 14th and Perry Streets the following year.  Dad went to work for Dick Siefert making kitchen counter tops.  Dick was actually a CPA and Mom’s boss, but he somehow acquired a counter top making business and needed someone to do the work.

Over the next few years, Tom and Phyllis had four daughters, more than doubled the size of the house, and bought the counter top business from Dick’s widow.  The business was moved to a lot on the corner of 11th and Hart Streets next to the railroad tracks.  For the most part, most of the construction on the house and the business building was done by Mom and Dad with help from the neighbors—Jack & Debbie, Carol & Rick, Danny & Kathy, and later on, Jim & Lynn.  Dad was a likeable guy who got along with everyone.  He’d have a beer with one of the guys after work talking across the fence, and cookouts on the weekends were common amongst the group.  As a group they never hesitated to chip in and help the others with a project or a problem.  It was an awesome environment to grow up in.

In the fall of 1976, while out digging dirt, Dad had a mild heart attack which left him in the hospital for two weeks.  He refused to give up smoking completely and switched from 1+ pack a day habit to a pipe.

Dad was a good cook.  He said his mom had taught him how.  On Sundays he’d come home from 7AM Mass and start cooking the noon meal which we called dinner.  It usually took him most of the morning because he’d have the little TV in the kitchen set to Channel 4 out of Indianapolis that shows old war movies .  Most of what he cooked consisted of fried meat, potatoes and a canned vegetable, usually corn, peas or green beans.  He had a few other regular dishes, but whatever he cooked was always good.

The business did well for several years.  Mom and Dad put in a pool in the early 1980s and in the summer our house was party central.  Things slowed at the “shop” and Mom took a bookkeeping job with a charter bus company to help make ends meet.  Dad later would drive buses part-time for extra money.  Sometime around 1983 or so, they decided they wanted to live out in the country and bought 10 acres of wooded land a couple miles south of the Big Peach.  There was a trailer on the property which they demolished and built a house in its place, complete with a full basement.  It took them seven years and countless cases of beer, but they built the house completely themselves, finishing it in 1990.

By the mid to late 1980s, business at the shop had slowed and Dad was tired of running his own business.  He took a job with Knox County Association for Retarded Citizens as their woodshop supervisor.  He spent his time making assembly line furniture while overseeing the work of the mentally challenged client workers.  In 1988, Mom was diagnosed with ovarian cancer, but Dad was right there beside her the whole time.

In the midst of everything else, Mom and Dad both enjoyed wood working and accumulated a variety of work working tools including a lathe, planer and various routers.  They made the kitchen cabinets in the house they built as well as some of the furniture.  They were always coming up with projects of things to make.

Dad enjoyed his time driving the charter bus groups.  One night in particular, he was driving a group of senior citizens through Daviess County when a tire bounced out of the bed of a pickup truck on the highway in front of him.  The tire bounced up and shattered the windshield, narrowly missing him.  Mom had just started her nightly IV of nutrients when we got the call from the Sheriff’s office.  She disconnected and we drove to the hospital to pick him up.  Mom was so scared she almost lost him.

Over the next couple family 1992years, they married off a couple daughters and saw another one move halfway across the country for school.  In the fall of 1992, Mom’s cancer returned and we lost her on March 22, 1993.  Dad seemed a little lost which was understandable under the circumstances.  While he tried dating, it was obvious he still missed her.

Another daughter married off and a couple grandbabies came along.  Dad had taken cigarettes back up when Mom got sick the last time, and they were catching up with him.  He was diagnosed with asthma and needed to do breathing treatments periodically to clear his lungs.  One November night in 1997 he was having trouble breathing and Brenda reminded him to do his treatment.  She went to town to pick up a pizza at Bobe’s, leaving a friend at the house with Dad.  When she returned less than an hour later, she couldn’t make it up the driveway for all the emergency vehicles.  Dad had had a breathing attack and collapsed.  After several non-responsive days, he finally called it quits and went to join Mom on November 6, 1997.  My sisters and I thought it would be fitting to have him buried on Veterans’ Day, however that would have required the cemetery workers to work on a paid holiday.  Instead, we opted for the day before which happened to be Jane’s birthday.  It was done exactly how he wanted it, complete with a 21 gun salute.  Old friends and family we had never met paid their respects to the man we called Dad.

I’m pretty sure I speak for all four of us when I say we miss you, Dad.  We have missed having you, and Mom, share in so many parts of our lives and those of our families.  Just know that we would not be the women we are today without having had your guidance.  You taught us how to be strong, and when things get difficult, how to get back up and keep going.  We all think of you daily and love you with all our hearts.

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.

George Washington Winkler

03 Monday Nov 2014

Posted by suzieg1969 in Genealogy

≈ 5 Comments

Tags

Bartlett, Bean, DeMoss, Lankford, Murray, NaBloPoMo, Watkins, Winkler

George Washington Winkler was one of my third great grandfathers.  He was born March 21, 1843 in Indiana, possibly in Greene County.  The identity of his parents is currently unconfirmed.  There are a few researchers who have linked him to Henry Winkler and Lucy Whitton, but I haven’t yet seen documentation confirming this and have doubts these are his parents.  In 1880, Harriet Murray, 15, is listed in his household as his half-sister.  Backtracking to 1870, Harriet is found with her parents Samuel and Sophia Murray, leading me to believe George’s mother’s name was Sophia.  Unfortunately, a maiden name has not been determined.  George’s whereabouts are unknown prior to his marriage to Josephine Lankford.  He did serve in the War Between the States in the 80th Regiment of the Indiana Infantry, Company C, along with many others scattered about the family tree.

Josephine and George were married in Wheatland in 1861.  They were blessed with the following children:

  • Elisabeth Jane (1862-1926)
  • Sarah Frances (1866-1936)
  • Sophia (1868-1940)
  • George (1871-?)
  • Samuel (1872-1873)
  • William (1874-1948)
  • Charles (1877-1877)
  • Clara Mae (1878-1969)
  • Thomas (1880-1947)
  • Bertha (1884-1961)
  • Maude Nellie (1886-1956)

Sarah, who is my 2nd great grandmother, went on to marry Samuel T. DeMoss who became a prominent businessman in the Edwardsport area.

George lived most of his life in Edwardsport (Vigo Township).  After Josephine died in 1890, he married Katie Bean in Greene County on December 4, 1892.  That marriage didn’t last very long, although how it ended is not readily known since I cannot locate Katie anywhere else.  George then married Mary Emma (Watkins) Bartlett on June 26, 1894 in Knox County. Emma was born in Illinois, possibly Fayette County, about 1849.  She married Milton Bartlett in the late 1860’s and they moved to the Edwardsport area in the mid-1870’s.  He died sometime between 1885 and 1894.

George and Emma, along with several of his children and her youngest daughter Carrie, were residing in the Freelandville area (Widner Township) in 1900. George passed away on December 12, 1909 in Freelandville where he is supposed to be buried.  Mary Emma is listed in subsequent census rolls: 1910 in Widner Township, 1920 in Busseron Township, and 1930 in Oaktown on Hickory Street.  Since she is missing from the 1940 lists, it’s assumed that she died sometime during the 1930’s.

 

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

Fayette County Illinois is west of Effingham.

Busseron Township is south of Oaktown, IN.

William DeMoss and Elizabeth Lowe

02 Sunday Nov 2014

Posted by suzieg1969 in Genealogy

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

DeMoss, Lankford, Lowe, McLees, NaBloPoMo, Reeve, Winkler

Today’s highlighted family is that of William J. and Elizabeth Lowe DeMoss.  They are my 4th great grandparents on my dad’s side.

Based on 1850 census data, William was born around 1803 in Kentucky.  I have no concrete information on his parents, but he was possibly from the Fleming County area based on information found in other family trees on Ancestry.com.  One researcher names his parents as William and Polly DeMoss, but I haven’t found any documentation supporting this as of yet.

Elizabeth Lowe was born on August 15, 1806 in Kentucky.  It is believed that her parents are Isaac and Margaret McLees Lowe.  It’s also thought that the Lowes were from the Fleming County area.

William and Elizabeth were probably married around  1825, but no marriage records have yet to be located. Based on census records, they were in Fleming Co, KY in 1830 and had moved to Reeve Township, Daviess Co, IN by 1840.  The 1850 census lists the following children belonging to William and Elizabeth.  Based on information in the early census rolls, there may be two more sons older than Elizabeth who had left home by 1850.

  • Elizabeth (b. 1831)
  • Isaac (b. 3-31-1833)
  • John (b. 1836)
  • William (b. 10-3-1837)
  • Democrat (b. 1840)
  • Mary (b. 1841)
  • Squire (b. 5-2-1846)
  • Fleming (b. 1848)

William is hard to find in 1860.  It’s possible he was working as a farm hand in Steen Township, Knox County.  This is plausible since he is listed just before Benjamin Lankford and his family.  Benjamin’s yet unborn granddaughter Sarah Winkler ends up marrying William’s toddler grandson Samuel.  Sam and Sarah are my 2nd great grandparents.  William cannot be found in 1870 census records so it’s possible he passed on sometime during that decade.  My next trip home may include a search of the cemeteries in the Wheatland area.

Elizabeth is missing in the 1860 census, but she shares a headstone with her daughter-in-law Mary Reeve DeMoss (William’s wife) in the Edwardsport Town Cemetery.  Elizabeth’s date of death was July 13, 1864.  Both Isaac and William married Reeve sisters, so it’s not out of the question that Elizabeth was either living nearby or with one of them.

Of William and Elizabeth’s children, further information is available for only a few of them.  As mentioned above, Isaac and William married two sisters and settled in the Edwardsport area.  Both lines are fairly well traced with Isaac being my 3rd great grandfather.  John appears to have stayed in Daviess County with his family for quite a while.  At some point, he and several of his grown sons were living in the Decker, IN area.  Knox County death records have his death listed in the Wheatland area in 1908.  Squire was listed in 1870 living with John in Daviess County and was buried there in 1871.  No information has yet to be located on young Elizabeth, Democrat, Mary, Fleming or their two older brothers.

 

 

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

Fleming County, Kentucky is northeast of Lexington.
Reeve Township is in the southeast corner of Daviess County IN, south of Montgomery and Loogootee.
Steen Township is the area around Wheatland, IN and borders Daviess Co.

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