Thursday, December 4, 2008
Mary Montgomery Searcy
Tuesday, November 11, 2008
Veterans Day
In 1954, November 11 became the day to honor all veterans. Here are my veterans:
Vietnam my cousin
Korea my Dad
World War II my Dad and Uncle, my Father-in-law and his brother. A cousin who was taken prisoner and received Combat Infantry Badge
World War I my grandfather, and my grandmother's brother (who possibly served his tour in Africa)
Civil War
Benjamin Griffith 140 Reg’t Indiana Infantry enlisted September 15, 1864
John Leachman 54th Kentucky
Charles Brooks 155 Illinois Infantry enlisted February 15, 1865
John H. Cate 3rd Tennessee Infantry enlisted February 1862, captured London, Kentucky August 1862
Elijah Cate (John’s son) 3rd Tennessee Infantry enlisted January 1863 died May 1863
Andrew DeShields 2 Reg’t Missouri Infantry enlisted August 7, 1862
Revolutionary War
Richard Lewis
Joseph Spangler
Seems like William Rodman Benson and Henry Arney should have served in the Civil War based on their ages and locations. They were both in Arkansas, although Henry went to Illinois and then came back after the war. There are also lots of Shamblin from Tennesse that served in the Civil War so probably some of those are related somehow.
Tuesday, November 4, 2008
19th Amendment Women's right to Vote
The right of citizens of the United States to vote shall not be denied or abridged by the United States or by any State on account of sex.
Congress shall have power to enforce this article by appropriate legislation.
Passed August 18, 1920
My grandmother told me about the first time she could vote. She said she was so proud to able to vote and then realized she and my grandfather (she had been married for 2 months) had voted for different people for President.
According to wikipedia, the 1920 election was Warren Harding (R) versus James Cox (D). http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_presidential_election,_1920
So if they had bumper stickers in those days, one of my grandparents could have proudly displayed, "Don't blame me, I voted for James Cox."
It's Election Day, go VOTE!
Tuesday, October 28, 2008
Dancing with the Stars and Cloris Leachman
Then family trees on Rootsweb showed Berkley's father as Robert Parker Leachman and his father as William Leachman. This same info was found on the Census records. I then got out my Leachman genealogy compiled by the unknown cousin supposedly trying to get into the DAR.
There is William Leachman, brother of my gg grandfather, Leonard Leachman. William and Leonard are the sons of Leonard Leachman and Sarah Sanford.
I had previously posted the obit for William's wife, Sarah.
http://youlookirish.blogspot.com/2008/03/sarah-parker-leachman.html
If I was really clever I could tell you exactly how Cloris and I are related, what cousin how many times removed. But I do know her gg grandfather and my gg grandfather were brothers.
Wednesday, August 20, 2008
Layla
Friday, July 4, 2008
Yankee Doodle Dandy
A Yankee doodle do or die
A real live nephew of my Uncle Sam born on the 4th of July
We all know the song. When we were little my brother and I always thought it was so cool that Leonard Leachman was born on July 4, 1776.
This is according to Leachman genealogy that my grandmother had. My Dad said it was done by a cousin trying to get into the DAR. Unfortunately it does not have the cousin's name.
Leonard (my great-great-great grandfather) married Sarah Sanford in 1804 and they had 11 children. Baby number four was Leonard who married Pauline Lewis, whose anniversary articles are posted below.
Happy 4th
Friday, June 27, 2008
Sunday, June 15, 2008
Back up your files
I also had lots of things scanned. If I scanned it, I have the hard copy but most of those things are so old I hate to keep touching them. I scanned them so I could just look at them on the screen. And then some things I had scanned because I wanted to post them here.
The police did get a lot of fingerprints so I have not given up hope of getting some of my things back.
Thursday, May 1, 2008
Ellen Goodman's column
But what we really want from the generations past are not just the facts or the DNA. We want the stories. Love, passion, success, disappointment, humanity. There may be no way to know - really know- their interior life. But how many of us would trade in the data for one good diary?
I don't know how long the link work but this is the column.
http://www.boston.com/bostonglobe/editorial_opinion/oped/articles/2008/04/18/the_secrets_buried_under_a_family_tree/?rss_id=Boston+Globe+--+Ellen+Goodman+columns
Saturday, April 19, 2008
I love quilts
I love quilts. Love the colors, the patterns, the fabric, the creative / artistic part, the social part that was a quilting bee ... did I mention I love quilts?
This double wedding ring quilt is hanging in my den now. It was made by Almira Griffith, my great great grandmother, for my Dad. I also have the one she made for my uncle. She had six grand kids so I guess she made one for each.
I sew but I don't like to hand sew so I can't image
all those tiny stitches.
William Leachman and The Frontiersman
“Regarding the article on Leachman Family Bibles in Kentucky Ancestors, Volume 5, Number 1, July 1969, I thought it appropriate to bring to your attention the following story which I have extracted from various sections of The Frontiersman, a narrative by Allan S. Eckert….
Simon Kenton, born April 3, 1755, in Price William County, Virginia (now the northeastern section of Fauquier County), fell in love at the age of 15 with Ellen Cummins, three years his senior. She, however, did not reciprocate and married in 1770 William Leachman, born 1750, son of Sam Leachman. In 1771, Simon, previously beaten in a fight with Leachman, beat Leachman unmercifully and, thinking him dead, departed for the Middle Ground and his place in Kentucky history. He changed his name to Simon Butler, by which name he was known until 1780, when he learned that Leachman was living. Meanwhile, due to Leachman's bloody appearance and Simon’s disappearance, Leachman was tried for his murder but was acquitted.
William and Ellen had a son born 1772, and she died a few months later. William with his son removed to Kentucky in December 1784, and settled at Simon Kenton’s Station on Lawrence Creek, where he was given land by Simon. He hung himself April 1, 1804.”
I borrowed The Frontiersman from the library. I did not read all 400 plus pages but enough to decide that the summary does match the book. The funny thing is the author spells Kentucky as Can – tuck – ee. Which reminded me of the Ben Stiller spoof from Last of the Mohicans.
http://vids.myspace.com/index.cfm?fuseaction=vids.individual&VideoID=66350
Watch all the way to the end where he says “Can-tuck-ee”
The Leachman Bible, which I posted earlier, says Sampson Leachman went to Kentucky with Simon Kenton.
Wednesday, April 9, 2008
Mattie 1999-2008
She knew to stay off the furniture, well except that one chair when no one was home. But you could feel that it was warm and you knew she had been in it. She did not bark much. She had stopped jumping up on people. She walked well on the leash. And she was our sweetie-pie.
Tuesday, April 1, 2008
Bummer Part II and the great grandmother
I am going to try again for Gioacchino Salvaterra's death certificate. When I filled out the form I was looking at the pictures from the cemetery. But, I think he Americanized his first name to Jacob. So I guess it is worth $9.00 and a two month wait to see if there is a record for Jacob Salvaterra.
Monday, March 24, 2008
No record found, Bummer!!!!
Gioacchino Salvaterra died in 1929 so I thought there was a decent chance of finding a record. I was really hoping for a specific place of birth and maybe his parent's names.
Maybe I'll have better luck with the great grandmother's certificate.
Sunday, March 23, 2008
Tuesday, March 18, 2008
Lewis Family Bible
Monday, March 17, 2008
Monday, March 10, 2008
Saturday, March 8, 2008
Some Sigmon Family History
written by Olive Clements Cotton for the Vevay newspaper in 1944.
John Sigmon b. Viriginia June 6, 1784 married Rachel Richards b. November 26, 1793. They have seven kids.
1. Mary "Polly" married William Griffith (her first cousin)
William Griffith dies, Polly marries William Gray. It probably is convenient to have both your husbands with the same first name. :)
2. Thomas married Rachel Lewis (his cousin)
3. Larkin married Mary "Polly" Gray
4. Julia Ann married Jacob Lewis on May 5, 1841 (grandparents of lady who wrote the article)
5. Catherine "Cassie" youngest by quite a bit born September 8, 1840 married John Protsman, Jr.
6. John R. married Louise Ogle
7. Jesse never married
John Sigmon's sister was Katie she married Jackson Griffith. Katie and Jackson have two sons. William, who marries his cousin Mary "Polly" Sigmon and Joshua. Joshua marries Caroline Vernon and becomes the pastor of Long Run Baptist Church.
Mary "Polly" Sigmon and William Griffith have two sons, Benjamin and William, Jr.
Benjamin married Adeline Huckleberry, they are my great great grandparents. Benjamin and Adeline have 5 kids: Ann Mariah, who went blind from scarlet fever, John, Albert, Mary, Almira (my great grandmother) and Gertrude "Gertie. " My cousin said Gertie worked at the orphanage in Sand Spring, Oklahoma. She did not know if she ever married or had children.
Mary "Polly" Sigmon and her second husband, William Gray have John, Mary Ann and Isaac.
I think this is correct. Parts of the article are hard to follow and some of it mentions people I cannot match up with anyone. The Indiana marriage records, http://208.119.135.17/db/in_marriages_1850/marriages_search.asp
show a Polly Sigman married to a John Griffith not William, but maybe John is his middle name. And there is a Polly Griffith who marries William Gray a few years later. I'm still not sure who William Griffith, Jr. (Benjamin's brother) married.
Friday, March 7, 2008
Joshua Griffith and Long Run Baptist Church
I have found a few things ....
Don't you just love the internet?!?!? What did we do before?????
I saw a "post-em" on rootsweb.com about an article in the Indiana Magazine of History. I was able to find the magazine website http://www.indiana.edu/~imaghist/index.html with a searchable index. And then my library had the two articles on microfilm.
In Volume #31 in 1935 "The Long Run Baptist Church" by Ella Porter Griffith. Ella's father, Joshua Griffith was the pastor for 45 years. A few facts from the article:
The family is of Welsh descent.
The church started in 1818 on land given by William J. Griffith (Joshua's father) in Craig Township seven miles from Vevay. In 1843, it moved across the road and the old church ground became a cemetery.
My great great aunt, Ann Marie Griffith, sometimes led the singing.
Volume #36 in 1940 "Joshua Griffith: Pioneer Preacher" by Ella Porter Griffith
Relevant stuff from the article:
Family left Virginia for Kentucky around 1800.
Uncle John Sigmon in Parks Ridge in Switzerland County, Indiana.
Joshua Griffith born December 11, 1823 to William J. and Catherine Griffith.
Big brothers Tom and John.
Older married sister Mary who dies when Joshua was young.
Joshua is 18 years old when he is ordained at Milton Baptist Church in Jefferson County, Indiana.
Marries Caroline M. Vernon in October 1848.
Caroline has a sister Liza.
The article ends with a quote from a letter written to Ella's oldest sister. "Your father and I have been neighbors for more than sixty years and I know of no one that I would rather have for a neighbor in the great hereafter than him."
Monday, February 4, 2008
Saturday, February 2, 2008
William Huckleberry
I found this article
http://myindianahome.net/gen/switz/records/history/Sigmon.html which gives the name of Adeline's sister as Lucinda. (However, I think it is Laurinda.) She died in 1902. I just got Laurinda's death certificate and it gives the name of her Father as William Huckleberry and her Mother's maiden name as Butchdnenon born in Indiana. So the last name can't possibly be right. By looking at rootsweb and myindianahome.net, I believe the last name is Buchanan.
William has either two or three wives. Not sure if Adeline and Laurinda have the same Mother as they are nine years apart in age. But at least I have the Father's name.
John Stinson Spangler
When I come across these different middle names ie. Stinson, Rodman, Burch, I have been trying to fit them into the family. I guess I will have to check first on the Census and see if they are neighbors.
Saturday, January 26, 2008
Judge Robert Leachman
Friday, January 25, 2008
Ida Lang and her big brother the Mayor
Benjamin Franklin Lang was named after, yes, that Ben Franklin. His Father, Johann George Lang, was a teacher and his grandfather a Lutheran minister. His father wanted him to go into the ministry but Ben wanted to come to America. So, his grandfather gave him the money. To be a fly on the wall during that conversation!
Ben arrived in Galveston, Texas July 4, 1855. http://www.galvestonhistory.org/immigration-login.asp They were supposed to land in New Orleans but could not because of a storm. Basically they walked all the way to Dallas. It takes 5 hours now to drive from Galveston to Dallas; of course, some of that is Houston traffic with which they did not have to contend! Ben joined the utopian society of La Reunion. http://www.tshaonline.org/handbook/online/articles/LL/uel1.html
The colony failed in 1857 and most of the colonists moved to Dallas. Like most utopian societies it failed because everyone was sitting around having great thoughts instead of actually working. Not to be too cocky, that is probably the modern day equivalent of blogging when you should be cleaning the house or doing laundry or cooking, etc.
During reconstruction, Ben was appointed mayor of Dallas by Texas Governor, Edmund Davis. In 1870 he resigned to return to Switzerland to see his parents who were not in good health and to recruit colonists for Dallas. This is when he brought over his sisters Ida and Anna. After they landed in New Orleans they took a steamer to Shreveport, Louisiana then rode the train to Hallsville, Texas which is where the Texas and Pacific Railroad ended. Then the real fun begins … they WALK to Dallas. According to mapquest.com it is 137 miles from Hallsville to Dallas. In Dallas, where you-are-what-you-drive, it’s just funny to think about people actually walking TO Dallas. On December 3, 1870 they arrived in Dallas. To go about a quarter of the way around the world took 23 days. To go 530 miles, took 18 days.
In November 1872, Ben, who had changed his last name to Long, was elected mayor by popular vote. In 1874 he was appointed United States Commissioner.
On the 1870 Census, John Chiesa, also an immigrant from Switzerland, lives near Ben Long. Ida marries John Chiesa on May 20, 1873. I don’t know how they met. The Swiss immigrants had established social clubs and music clubs so I guess they met that way.
Ben was killed June 23, 1877 in a bar room fight over ten cents. The Morning Mail newspaper headline read “Oceans of Blood! A desperado on the war path – for two glasses of beer two lives are sacrificed, two others are jeopardized and a happy home turned into a house of mourning.”
I wonder how Ida felt? I have never read anything that gives her take on it. By this time she has two small children and has moved about 25 miles from Dallas with her husband and his brother to farm. Did she go the funeral? Would she have gotten word in time? Did someone ride out and tell her? Did they tell their Mother still in Switzerland?
Ida and John had five more children. He died in 1899. Their youngest was seven, the oldest 23. I believe she continued to run the farm. Ida died in 1918. http://www.dallaspioneer.org/stories/obituaries.php?ID=166
She and John and buried at Mill Cemetery. Their headstone says, “The righteous shall be in everlasting remembrance.”
Everyone should do this!
Wednesday, January 23, 2008
Random info from my last two library visits
I have ordered 3 microfilms from Family Search. I am waiting and not very patiently (Patient doesn't go with my red hair. And btw, never pray for patience, I did that I few times and then wound up in the grocery lines from hell!)
The 3 microfilms I ordered:
Cemeteries of Carroll County, Kentucky
Marriage and death notices from Switzerland County, Indiana newspaper
Marriage records of Switzerland County
This started out as looking for Griffith and Huckleberry however the Lewis and Leachman families were in Carroll County, Kentucky and I just figured out my husband's Brooks family was in or near Carroll County.
Meanwhile I found a few things ....
Switzerland County Will Records
Lavina J. Griffith will dated 12/28/1893 received 5/21/1895
sons Nelson Griffith and Thomas Griffith both deceased
Thomas Sigmon will dated 10/31/1882 Received 2/5/1883
wife Rachel Sigmon, daughters Elizabeth Sigmon, Ann Eliza Protsman and Antoinette Protsman
Mount Zion Cemetery, Craig Township
William (1824 - 1888) and Lorinda (1823-1902) Brindley
(So let's assume if it says Lorinda on the headstone that is her name and not Lucinda.)
Same cemetery
Mary Malissa Madary wife of George D and only daughter of Wm and L. Brindley d 8/1/1887 aged 22 y 10 m 27 d
Eight Huckleberry (various spellings) marriages in Clark County, Indiana from 1891 to 1901. So then are the Clark County ones related to my Switzerland County Huckleberrys? Which at the moment consists of 2 people, Adeline, my great great grandmother and her sister Lorinda (not Lucinda.)
Sevier County Tennessee cemeteries
Evans Chapel ( Locust Ridge) Mary Shamblin Valentine 1827 - 1885
Aaron Profitt Cemetery Judy Shamblin May June no years listed
Hillcrest Cemetery Bradley County, Tenn
Shamblin , Ida Lee Duggan
Shamblin, Arthur N.
Shamblin, James C.
Shamblin, Vivia Ruth Goins
Shamblin, Chassie
from Carroll County, KY Vital Statistics
8 Lewis babies between 1852 and 1859. Proud parents Stephen and Matilda Lewis, John and Sarah Lewis, Merit and Sarah Lewis, TL and Malinda Lewis
Swiss Settlement of Switzerland County Indiana
In 1870 Joshua Griffith was elected County Treasurer for 2 years from 9/1/1871.
In 1874 Francis M. Griffith was elected County Treasurer for 2 years from 9/1/1875
Wonder if this is the same person as the Hon. F. M. Griffith pictured in Pauline's scrapbook?
Saturday, January 19, 2008
Friday, January 18, 2008
Carmel, Mack and Rosson Arney
John Houston Cate
Don't you just love the internet?!?!?!
My husband's great great grandfather.
Tuesday, January 15, 2008
My first Revolutionary Soldier
Wednesday, January 9, 2008
Dog rides a horse
Tuesday, January 8, 2008
James Henry Arney
At the library one day I checked the Soundex for 1880 for Arkansas. They were hard to read but one looked like maybe it had some of her step siblings names. And then the fire alarm went off ... I'm like I can't leave now I may have found something!!!!! Henry Arney and his wife, Manna. OK that can't be right, Manna like from heaven.
I then began looking for Henry Arney and did he get around. They say we live in a transient society which implies that in the past people did not. However, I have tracked James Henry Arney through 8 states.
He was born in Tennessee, possibly Overton County. He marries Elizabeth Ware June 1861 in Greene County, Indiana. They have Sabrina Florence April 1862. We believe Elizabeth dies but I cannot find any other record of her. In 1863 Henry marries Minerva Jane Baker, daughter of Andrew and Mary Ann Baker (btw in 1843 Mary Ann gave birth to triplet boys, how often did that happen????) For the 1870 Census the Bakers and Arneys are all back in Carroll County, Arkansas except Sabrina. I heard a State of Arkansas archivist speak one time and he said if your relatives left Arkansas, went north and came back after the Civil War, they were Union sympathizers getting out of the way of the fighting. If they went south and came back they were Confederate sympathizers getting out of the way of the fighting.
Between 1890 and 1894, Sabrina, her husband Isaac Benson and kids, and at least one of her brother-in-laws, leave Arkansas for Dallas, Texas. On the 1900 Census, Henry and Minerva are in Dallas County. On the 1910 Census, they live in Ninnekah, Oklahoma with their son John and his family. Their daughter, Jennie Marvin also lives there.
I have a Bible of Isaac Benson's; it seems that the last correspondence received from anyone was kept in the Bible. I have a letter Henry wrote to his granddaughter postmarked 1909 from Ninnekah, Oklahoma. I assumed Henry and Minerva died in Oklahoma. I couldn't find anything but Oklahoma is tight with their records. They have very little online and very little released to the library for research.
Later, I was looking up some of their other kids and found James Henry Arney Nov 18, 1837 to August 1, 1917 buried in Mt Vernon, Missouri. He his buried near his son, Annew. I believe Henry is buried in Missouri and not Texas. But I think the birth date on the stone in Texas would be more likely correct because he would have ordered it.
So that is my story of Henry Arney ... Tennessee to Indiana to Illinois to Arkansas to Texas to Oklahoma to Texas to Missouri.
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Monday, January 7, 2008
Tyrolean Roman Catholic Church
Friday, January 4, 2008
Marriage of Lewis Leachman and Almira Griffith
Married- At the residence of Wm. Griffith, near Vevay, August 25, Mr. Lewis V. Leachman and Miss Almira Griffith by Rev. W. E. Morris; Both parties from Carroll County, Ky. May many flowers of happiness be strewn along their pathway - Vevay Times.
Yes, but what's the use of doing things up that way; why did'nt you let us know beforehand, and have a real good old fashioned wedding, and invite all your friends, including the Democrat? These post nuptial congratulations are not as satisfactory to us, but they none the less sincere.
I believe William is Almira's Uncle. They married in 1887. By this time, Almira's mother had passed away.
Pauline Leachman's scrapbook
Scanning the whole book was my first thought, but it would take a while and some of the paper is so discolored I'm not sure it would scan. Here is a list of what I have, if you are interested an article, let me know.
Lewis Leachman and Shawnee, Oklahoma Masonic Lodge
Leechman brother in Falls City, Nebraska
Mrs. J. R. Stout or Fannie Belle Leachman obit
Robert T. Leachman obit
Mrs Sarah (Parker) Leachman obit
Letter written by George W. Scott to the newpaper in memory of Leonard Leachman
Dr. W. T. Leachman "no hope for recovery"
John T. Blackburn and Lula Craigmyle marriage
Mrs Mattie Leachman and Frank Lewis marriage
Mr Congdon and Cora Leachman marriage
Leonard Leachman and wife Pauline celebrate 63rd anniversary
Robert Blake obit
Mary Louise (Griffith) McCreary obit
Leonard Leachman obit
Pauline (Lewis) Leachman obit
Mrs W. T. Leachman not missing
Leonard and Pauline Leachman Golden Anniversary
Masonic Lodge #107 and 523 Dec 1940
Drawing cut from the newspaper of Hon. F. M Griffith
Grace Mankey and Mr. H. Leachman marriage
Helen Viola (Leachman) Welsh obit
Mary (Montgomery) Searcy obit
Gertrude Lacey and William Clark marriage
Asbury Ames obit
Judge Robert Leachman obit
Thursday, January 3, 2008
Mr and Mrs Jake Spangler
My grandmother's parents, Columbia DeShields Spangler and Jacob Spangler, died when my grandmother was quite young. The story she told me was:
Her Mother was very sick with something people get then and really don't now like TB or smallpox or scarlet fever or something. My grandmother was being cared for by a neighbor. They brought my grandmother back home and told her to say goodbye to her Mother because she didn't have much longer to live. After she died, her Father staggered into the front yard said, "I can't live without her, I just can't live without her" and dropped over dead. One of their sons lived some distance away and was coming home on the train. He read about the death of his parents in some newspaper before he ever got home. I think about that sometimes when I read in the paper, "Names withheld pending notification of family."
When I went home that day and told my Dad what she had said he was very surprised. My Grandmother rarely talked about it. My Dad said when he was growing up they had to go to church every Sunday but Mother's Day. Back then they gave out white or red flowers based on whether your Mother was still living or not.
My grandmother went to live with her second oldest brother, 21 years her senior. I always knew where she lived, I never thought about where her two brothers went to live. I found them on the census with their oldest brother. My grandmother always said if her brother hadn't taken her in, she would have gone to the Buckner Orphans Home (www.buckner.org).
I tried to find the story in the Sherman paper but there was a fire and there are no microfilmed papers from those years. I did find the story in both Dallas papers. The State of Texas does have a death certificate for both of them. Her cause of death in pneumonia, (which isn't exactly what my Grandmother told me.) And his is apoplexa, which I had to look up and it means like a stroke.
See the next post for the newspaper articles.
And so it begins
I also come from pretty descent line of pack rats so I have my Great Aunt's scrapbook full of mostly Leachman obits and a few news stories. My Aunt had a trunk with two old albums of pictures labeled mostly Bensons and Arneys. And then several boxes of unlabeled pictures. I have an album my Great Grandfather had. Most of the pictures are unlabeled but have the photographer's city state. I believe most of these are Leachmans and Griffiths maybe a few Lewis' and Huckleberrys thrown in for good measure.
After I started finding a few things, I had too much paper floating around so I put everything in notebooks. Then I decided I needed a "title" for my genealogy. I have red hair and green eyes and am very fair. ( I take offense to the term pale; that implies you are sick and I am not.) So I settled on "But ... you look Irish." Trust me, I get that alot. So far I have come back to Switzerland on a few lines so maybe I am predominately Swiss. Or maybe I am just Heinz 57 with red hair and green eyes. The Barbie pictured is Princess of Ireland that I bought a Target for $20.00 (Don't you just love Target?) She is the first Barbie I ever saw with green eyes and red hair, and not red like a crayon.
I will try to post a few of the more interesting ( well, to me anyway) finds. Thanks for dropping by. And as my great aunt used to say, "Don't wait til I'm dead to come see me again!"
Amy