Monday, September 26, 2011

George and Rua Faggart Wolfe

On my trip to Manteca, California in April 2011, I was able to wander the cemetery where several of my ancestors are buried. Here are the headstones for my Great-great-great grandparents.

Friday, September 23, 2011

1940 Census Information

I just came across this blog regarding the release of information for the 1940 Census. I can't wait to be able to look at it. The census will provide some excellent information according to this blog post at Nutfield Genealogy.

Tuesday, July 19, 2011

French Camp School 1919 , Fair Oaks School 1923



This first picture is of the French Camp School 1919, (Stockton, California). My grandfather, Van Wolfe is in the picture as are his sisters Frances (Adeline) and Eleanor (Birdie) Wolfe.

This second picture is of the Fair Oaks School 1923. The bottom of the picture says "Low-High 8th grade - Fair Oaks School - Stockton, California - 1923-24 - Mr. Hawkinson - Teacher". My grandfather is in the back row on the right side with the big tuft of hair.

J. Van Wolfe


Another picture of my grandfather, but I am not sure who anyone else is in this picture, except that it is just a school picture. Looks like it might be like an 8th grade graduation. He is in the front row, second from the left.

Friday, July 15, 2011

Walworth California Company

My grandfather, Van Wolfe, worked for Walworth Company in the early 1930's. This photo has him at the far right. The back of the photo has written:

Walworth Calif Co.
317 North Grant St.
Stockton, CAL

Feb. 14, 1931

Ray S. Pease
Van Wolfe
Tom Godsil (?)
Louis Brandt





My grandparents were married Feb. 28, 1931, 14 days after this picture was taken.



The first picture is the McKinley School - Stockton, California - Ball Team 1923

My grandfather, Jacob Van Cott Wolfe is in the back row, 3rd from the left.This second photo is the Stockton High Football Team - September 1925. My grandfather is in the second row, 5th in from the right.

Laundry of yesteryear







Found these items and many more in a lonely trunk in California. They belonged to my mother's side of the family - most likely her grandmother's (Eugenia [Genie] O'Connor Lobdell) and her great grandmother's (Fannie Stiles O'Connor). It was fun washing them up and hanging them out to dry. Hopefully I get them pressed soon and take some more pictures of them.

Wednesday, June 1, 2011

Fannie Stiles O'Connor's Coffee Pot

Tonight my daughter and I were polishing a beautiful silver coffee pot that was my great great Grandmother, Fannie Stiles O'Connor. Several years ago, when we went to California to celebrate my grandmother's (Wilma Lobdell) 90th birthday, I was blessed to bring this pot home.  On the back of the pot it has Fannie's maiden name engraved which would date this back to at least 1867.

Along with the coffee pot, I brought several pictures and one of them is of Byron and Fannie in their Grenola, Kansas home, with their youngest daughter Elizabeth.   If you look carefully, you can see this very coffee pot sitting on a lovely table in the room behind them.



Tuesday, May 24, 2011

Harriet and Mina Wolfe - Sisters



I do not know much about these sisters at present, but hope to find out more over time through research. On the same trip that I found the pictures of my Grandfather's sisters, I found these pictures of his aunts (his father's sisters). The ladies came from a large family, their parents being in a previous post - Jacob and Frances Wolfe. It is likely that this picture is taken on the San Joaquin river in the area where they owned a large tract of land in the late 1800's. The township was Castoria, which now would be on South Airport Way and the family talked of it as Durham Ferry. Both sisters married, but Harriet died young after having two daughters. In some of my research so far, it looks like Mina adopted one of Harriet's daughters and another sister, Amanda, adopted the other daughter. I will try to feature them in an upcoming post. But, for now, this current picture is of Harriet and Mina on the San Joaquin.


Adeline Frances and Eleanor Wolfe

On a recent trip to California, I was blessed to come across several pictures I don't recall ever having laid my eyes on.  My grandfather was the oldest of 4 children.  When he was about 2 years old, his parents were blessed with twin girls who they named Adeline Frances and Eleanor (who I found out was nicknamed Birdie).  These two girls did not look anything alike, and after hearing some stories, have realized that they were nothing alike in personality either.  These are just two of the pictures that I was able to scan and bring home.  I am sure these girls gave much delight to their home (maybe a little vexation too, from time to time.)



    1. Thursday, May 19, 2011

      Random quote

      Now, I have planned mainly for this blog to be a blog regarding family genealogy, but have been thinking of this quote from an era of time gone by and feel today is the day to post it. I thoroughly enjoy Jane Austen and also enjoy watching the movies that have been made from her books. This quote is from Sense and Sensiblity:

      Elinor Dashwood: What do you know of my heart? What do you know of anything but your own suffering. For weeks, Marianne, I've had this pressing on me without being at liberty to speak of it to a single creature. It was forced on me by the very person whose prior claims ruined all my hope. I have endured her exultations again and again whilst knowing myself to be divided from Edward forever. Believe me, Marianne, had I not been bound to silence I could have provided proof enough of a broken heart, even for you.


      :)

      Saturday, May 7, 2011


                                           JACOB WOLFE




      Among the worthy pioneer settlers of San Joaquin county is numbered Jacob Wolfe, who is likewise a leading representative of agricultural interests here and is well known as an apiarist. His home is located on an excellent farm of four hundred and thirty acres south of Lathrop, and the tract is under a high state of cultivation. Its fine appearance, however, is in marked contrast to the appearance which it presented when it came into his possession. Great Changes too have occurred throughout the county during his residence here, and he has seen its wild lands reclaimed for farming purposes while towns and villages have sprung up and all the comforts of an advanced civilization have been introduced. With the onward march of progress he has kept apace, as is evidenced by his fine ranch.
      Mr. Wolfe is a native of Union county, Illinois, born on the 22d of September, 1832, and is a son of the Rev. George and Rua (Fogart) Wolfe, who were also natives of Illinois. The paternal grandfather, Jacob Wolfe, was born in Pennsylvania and was descended from German ancestry. The father was a minister of the German Baptist church, having devoted nearly a half century to that holy calling. He was known as Elder Wolfe and exerted a strongly felt influence in behalf of the moral development of the community in which he made his home. He removed with his family from Hancock county, Illinois, to California, in 1856, making the journey by way of the isthmus, and on reaching the Pacific coast he located in Monterey county, California, where he remained for a short time. Subsequently he established his home in Santa Clara county, California, where he resided for several years, and in 1860 he came to San Joaquin county, settling near the farm upon which his son Jacob Wolfe now resides. He was one of the honored pioneers of this locality and was a well known citizen, whose labors contributed to the material prosperity and upbuilding of the community as well as to the intellectual and moral advancement of San Joaquin county. He engaged in preaching the gospel, carrying the glad tidings of great joy into many a frontier community. He was a most earnest and logical speaker, and hs influence has caused his memory to be enshrined in the hearts of many who knew him. In all the various departments of church work he took a most active interest, and he became a bishop of the German Baptist church. He was ever tolerant of the opinions of others, while adhering firmly to those in which he believed, and he was a man of broad charity and wide sympathy. His death occurred in 1890 and thus California lost one of its most honored men.
      Jacob Wolfe, the only surviving child of George Wolfe, was six years of age when his parents removed from Illinois to Lee county, Iowa, where he remained through the succeeding ten years. When a youth of about sixteen years he went with his parents to Hancock county, Illinois, and thence he emigrated to California, his wife and her parents being among the members of the party tht came by way of the Isthmus to the Pacific coast. Mr. Wolfe and his wife established their home in Monterey county, California, but soon afterward removed to Santa Clara county, where they remained until 1861, when they came with their children to San Joaquin county, where Mr. Wolfe has since made his home. He first purchased eighty acres of raw land, on which not a furrow had been turned nor an improvement made. With characteristic energy he began its development and soon transformed it into rich and productive fields. To the original purchase he has added from time to time until he now owns four hundred and thirty acres of land, the greater part of which is under a high state of cultivation. His property is attractive in appearance and consitututes a desirable piece of real estate. While residing in Santa Clara county he turned his attention to bee culture in 1858 and has continued in active connection with this industry down to the present time. He now owns six hundred colonies of bees, and his son-in-law, B. C. Stuckey, who resides with him, has four hundred colonies. Mr. Wolfe is the pioneer in this industry in San Joaquin county, and his opinions are quoted as authority in all matters pertaining to the apiary. Annually he takes from the hives a large amount of honey, which is of excellent grade and quality and has a ready sale on the market.
      In Illinois on the 6th of April, 1854, Mr. Wolfe was united in marriage to Miss Frances S. Lane, who was born in Ohio and is a daughter of Frederick Lane, a native of Virginia. They became the parents of the following children: George F., who is a resident of Hanford, California; John W. and Henry E., who are living in San Joaquin county; J. Milo, who is located in Lathrop, California; Emma, the wife of Frank H. Robinson, of Lancaster, Los Angeles county, California, now the editor and proprietor of the Lancaster Gazette; Nina M., at home; and Harriet, the wife of B. C. Stuckey, of San Joaquin county.
      Mr. and Mrs. Wolfe are members of the German Baptist church, have taken an active part in its work and have contributed generously to its support. Mr. Wolfe is now serving as one of its deacons. In his political affiliation he is a Democrat, having firm faith in the principles of the party, but never seeking or desiring public office. He has served as a trustee of the Rustic school district, and is interested in all that pertains to the educational as well as the social, material and moral development of his community. On the 6th of April, 1904, he and his wife celebrated their fiftieth wedding anniversary, which was the occasion of a family reunion and an event long to be remembered by all who participated therein. Mr. and Mrs. Wolfe are numberd among the honored pioneer settlers of the county, and no history of San Joaquin county would be complete without mention of them. They have during the long years of their residence here won the favorable regard, good will and trust of all with whom they have come in contact, and in business circles Mr. Wolfe sustains an unassailable reputation, because he has ever been straightforward, prompt and just in his dealings.
      Source: History of the New California Its Resources and People, Volume II
      The Lewis Publishing Company - 1905
      Edited by Leigh H. Irvine

      Friday, April 1, 2011

      Rev. Geo. Lobdell

      Dies Here After Lengthy Illness


      Former Chico First Christian church pastor, Rev. George L. Lobdell, 80, of 1421 Locust Street, Chico, died yesterday afternoon at the Enloe hospital after a long illness.


      Services will be held at 10 o'clock Wednesday morning at the Nugent Funeral Chapel with Rev. Henry L. Searle of the First Christian church officiating. Interment will follow in the Masonic plot of the Chico cemetery and the Chico lodge No. 111, F. and A.M. will officiate.


      The son of the late Britton and Maria Lobdell, Rev. Lobdell was born in North Sanford, N.Y. On March 10, 1865. His parents were farmers there. The youngest of ten children, he lived on the farm home and received his education. He taught in the Business college in Binghamton, .N.Y.


      He went to Kansas where he was pastor at the Christian church of Grenola. He later moved to Eugene, Oregon, and graduated as minister from the University of Oregon and Eugene Divinity College.


      Rev. Lobdell came to Chico as pastor of the First Christian church on September 16, 1906. A new church building was erected during the six years he was here. He was minister of the following Christian churches: Stockton, Eureka, Petaluma, Pacific Grove, Burley, Idaho; Salt Lake City, Utah. Rev. Lobdell retired in 1933 and returned to Chico to live.


      He was a member of Chico Lodge No. 111, F. and A.M.; the Morning Star Chapter of O.E.S., No. 61, of Petaluma, and the Scottish Rite Bodies at Santa Rosa.


      He is survived by his wife, Mrs. Eugenia Lobdell and the following children: Robert Lobdell of North Sacramento; Mrs. A.T. Henderson of San Diego and Mrs. T.H. Blanchard of Pasadena. Eleven grandchildren survive him: Jean Lobdell, North Sacramento; Jean Eileen Blanchard and Donald Eugene Blanchard of Pasadena; Mrs. Margaret Chapman, San Diego; Robert Henderson, F-2c, U.S. Navy in the South Pacific; John Henderson, Frances Ann Henderson, Donald Henderson, Emma Lou Henderson, Richard Henderson and Charles Henderson, all of San Diego. Two great grandchildren: Paul Chapman, Jr., and Richard Chapman, both of San Diego, also survive him. A sister, Clara Williams of Oakland, and the following nieces and nephews: L. Hapgood Lobdell, Britton Lobdell, George Lobdell, all of Chico; and Mrs. James Dye and Mrs. Paul Pierce of Pasadena, Calif.

      Wednesday, March 9, 2011


      I found this neat little article in the Monterey County, California website regarding my Great-grandfather, George L. Lobdell, and his family. The picture was not included on the website.



      Monterey County: Biographies



      REV. GEORGE L. LOBDELL, D. D.

      Rev. George L. Lobdell, is pastor of the First Christian church, of Pacific Grove, and his efforts are constituting a valuable asset in the moral progress of the community. A native of New York, he was born at Sanford, Broome county, March 10, 1865, and is of Welsh descent, his parents tracing their family tree back to 1600.

      In the beginning he attended the district schools and later became a student in the high school of Afton, New York. Later he took a commercial course at the Binghamton Business College, and became an instructor there. Subsequently he established the Lobdell Business College in Putnam, Connecticut, and on leaving the east went to Indiana, whence he removed to Oregon, where he was graduated from the State University and the Eugene Bible University, winning the degrees of B. D., A. M., and D. D.

      His first pastorate was at Junction City, Oregon, his student church, and next he went to Dallas, Oregon. He next accepted a call to Chico, Butte county, California, in 1906, and there did excellent work as the pastor of the Christian church for six years. He was then pastor of the church of the same denomination for three years at Stockton, San Joaquin county, was at Eureka for two years, at Petaluma for five years, and became a resident of Pacific Grove in 1922. While in Chico he built a new house of worship and added four hundred and fifty members to the church in six years. While in Stockton he started the movement for the erection of a new one hundred thousand dollar church. At Eureka he brought three hundred professing Christians into the fold and he had the largest Sunday school of any church in Humboldt county. During the war, he was one of the four-minute men in Petaluma. He is now treasurer of the state missionary board, and has been a member of the board for a number of years. His church in Pacific Grove leads all Christian churches in the state, per capita, in giving to foreign missions, and is strongly organized in all its branches of work.

      Dr. Lobdell belongs to the Blue Lodge of Masons at Stockton, and the Scottish Rite bodies of Santa Rosa. He is a member of the Elks lodge of Petaluma and also belongs to the Knights of Pythias.

      Dr. Lobdell was married Novebmer 16, 1902 to Miss Eugenie O'Connor, a graduate of the New England Conservatory of Music at Boston. She studied under prominent vocal teachers and was a teacher of music in the Mary Nash College of Music at Sherman, Texas. She also taught music at the State Normal School, at Danville, Indiana, and was teacher of music in the Eugene Bible University, at Eugene, Oregon. She is a mezzo soprano of fine quality and power and has a class of pupils in Pacific Grove, in voice culture, all of whom appreciate her guiding powers. She is a soloist in the church and acts as choir leader. Rev. and Mrs. Lobdell have two children: Frances, aged thirteen, born in Chico, and Robert, aged eight, born in Stockton. By a former marriage, Dr. Lobdell has a daughter, Esther, wife of Thomas Gray, of San Francisco. The family of Dr. Lobdell occupies an enviable position in those social circles where intelligence, culture and true worth are accepted as passports. Throughout the years of his connection with the ministry-years spent entirely on the Pacific coast-he has not only labored most earnestly but, also most effectively, in the upbuilding of the Christian church, his influence and labors being far-reaching.

      Source: History of Monterey and Santa Cruz Counties, California : cradle of California's history and romance : dating from the planting of the cross of Christendom upon the shores of Monterey Bay by Fr. Junipero Serra, and those intrepid adventurers who accompanied him, down to the present day. Chicago: S.J. Clarke Pub. Co., 1925, 890 pgs.

      Wednesday, February 23, 2011

      O'Connor Home, Grenola, Kansas

      In 2006 my family and I drove west to celebrate my grandmother's 90th birthday. On the journey home, it was just my daughters and myself, so we took the opportunity to go to the little Kansas town of Grenola. I had hopes of finding the actual house that Byron and Fannie O'Connor had lived in, but wasn't able to. I am not sure what the present population of the little town is now, but it gave me such satisfaction to see this place where my great-great grandparents had lived along with my great-grandmother (Eugenia (Genie) O'Connor) and my great-great-great grandmother (Elizabeth Dille O'Connor).

      I am blessed to have some inside photos of at least one of the homes they lived in along with a few outside pictures. They did live in at least 2 homes during their 30 years there, but I still need to identify the locations of each of the houses specifically. Regardless of where they were, I am delighted to have some of the pictures of them, and even some of the pictures that you can see in the photos. It's a delight for me to view them over and over again, knowing what a special heritage I have been given.

      The first two pictures show two different directions in the house, which I think is so wonderful so we get a better view of the first floor.  The second two photos are of the same house, but obviously several years apart in being photographed as the trees are much larger and the fence is gone.  The young girl in the picture is Elizabeth O'Connor, Byron and Fannie's youngest child, born in February 1893.



      Friday, February 18, 2011

      Chester Lee Stiles and Hannah Milburn

      In my last post I gave a brief outline of Thomas Daily's family.  In that outline I also mentioned his great-grandson, Lee Stiles.  Lee grew up in the Mishawaka, Indiana area and stayed there for his whole life.  At one point in early 20's he made a trip to Pike's Peak with a friend, which would have been in the early 1860's.  Eventually he married a young lady from the area named Hannah Milburn.  The two of them had two daughters, one who stayed in the area all her life, and one who moved on to Texas and continued her life there.  I have posted here a picture of both Lee and Hannah.



       

      Wednesday, February 9, 2011

      Thomas Daily and some descendents

      A brief genealogy from my mother's side of the family....

      Thomas Daily came to American sometime around the beginning of the revolutionary war. He is married in the 1790 census and found in the Fawn, York County, Pennsylvania. Although not listed in this census, he is married to Margaret Laycock (Laycox). By 1810 they are in Avon, Ontario County, New York.

      By 1820 Thomas daughter Nancy is married to Luman Keyes. They had several children and moved to the Mishawaka/South Bend, Indiana area around 1836. They had a daughter, Mary Ann who married John Alsop Stiles.


      John and Mary Ann were married in 1841 and had several children. This was John's second marriage, his first wife having died not many years after arriving in the Mishawaka area. He had one surviving son from his first marriage.

      By 1850 John and Mary Ann had 5 children and within a week after the last son was born, Mary Ann died, on July 3, 1850. Their daughter, Frances Jane Stiles, was born in 1845 and was left orphaned, along with her siblings in November of that year when their father died also, from organic disease of the brain. (I'm not really sure what that would have been.)

      The St. Joseph County archives has an incredible folder that is filled with all kinds of receipts for the estate of John Stiles. There are also the guardianship papers for the children. Frances (Fannie) and her older brother, Chester Leander Stiles, who went by Lee, were the only children from that marriage to live to adulthood.  (The signature by May in the document above was one of Lee's daughter's who married Schyler Colfax Rose.)

      Fannie married Byron O'Connor and I have already posted a newspaper article marking their marriage in 1868. Fannie and Byron were the parents of my great-grandmother, Eugenia Maude O'Connor, born June 29, 1872.

      Monday, February 7, 2011

      Albert and May Frederick in Spring Lake, Texas

      After Albert Frederick had proved up on his homestead in North Dakota, he moved his family to Texas. My grandmother was born in Texas in 1908, so they had to have moved between 1906 and 1908. I am not sure exactly when these photos were taken, but probably circa 1910. I believe the county to be Castro County.

       
      May Frederick with friends in Texas

      Golda May Frederick




      Friday, February 4, 2011

      North Dakota Farming on the Frederick Farm and a July 4th Party

      Not much to add to these photos.  Hard working people coming together to help one another.  People giving of themselves....



      A photo from a distance.  You can see the grain blowing out the funnel to the left.  Lots of people, horses and heavy machinery.


       
      This last photo is of a 4th of July picnic on the Frederick Farm in North Dakota.  When enlarged, I can see Sophia and John Frederick, along with Albert and May Frederick.  Several siblings are in the picture, but trying to identify each one specifically can be challenging.  Still, it's wonderful to just look at them all and know they are my hard working family, not afraid to venture out to the western frontier.



      Wednesday, February 2, 2011

      Frederick Family Photos

      From a very faded letter addressed to Miss Golda Frederick, Holt, California and a return address of 224 D Street, Roseville, California. Postmarked 5:30 PM April 22, 1923. (The only changes I will make is to put in punctuation as there are no marks at all and the sentences seem to run on.)



      Roseville, Calif. April 21, 1923

      My dear Golda and papa,
      Will write you a few lines. Grandma is very poorly. We have to lift her and move her just like a helpless baby. She has no more use of her limbs, not as much as a baby. Dr. Everett (?) told me yesterday there is nothing we can do but to relieve her pain. Golda, do not go in swimming, do not run the risk. Be careful of that fellow that has the green eyes (I thought that was cute :)). Papa you write a few lines once in awhile. (I don't quite understand this next sentence but will write it as it is before me) I am sorry that Mrs. Hickman have they still that old woman. Take good care of the cats, chickens and papa. Be a good girl and pray for mama. In these times of trouble we are all in God's hands. Anyway, Clarence was down last evening to see us. He is working pretty hard. They are putting in a stock room at Lincoln. Vic Brother and Clarence live together. They have rented two rooms. I will try and get some money to send to you and papa. The renter wants us to come down on the rent. I guess we will have to or lose our renter. You ought to see the little folks bring mother flowers. Well, I must close for this time. Ans soon (answer soon?). Love to papa and you. Mama



      Frederick family below. Back row - Ray, Grandpa (Elam) Daniels, Clarence, Robert Highfill, Grandpa (Albert) Frederick, holding Robert. 2nd row - Catherine, Grandma (Katherine) Daniels, Grandma (May) Frederick, Irena Frederick Highfill. Down front, Golda Frederick, Loretta Highfill. Circa 1920.

      Golda Frederick, Grandpa(Albert) Frederick holding Loretta, Irena, Grandma(May) Frederick, Grandma (Katherine) Daniels and Grandpa (Elam) Daniels. Probably taken around 1918 or 1919 as Grandpa Frederick is holding Loretta and Irena looks quite pregnant.


      Four generations.... Irena, Grandma May Frederick, Grandma Katherine Daniels, Loretta and Robert Highfill. This last picture had to have been taken around 1920 as Loretta and Robert are both in the 1920 Census with Loretta as 2 and Robert as 11 months.


      (I also want to make a note that the spellings for Katherine I have seen both ways. Her obituary had it spelled "Katherine" while I've seen it spelled "Catherine" on census records. I will presently go with the obituary spelling as I wonder that the newspaper would have been given the information directly from the family. I do realize I could be wrong, but I think that the gravestone also has it "Katherine".)

      Monday, January 31, 2011

      Elam and Katherine Daniels

      There are times since we have moved into our current house that I wonder if I have done a disservice to my daughters by them having to live in small bedrooms. One of the bedrooms is about 8x9 and the other one is 10x11 or 11x12 (probably the smaller). But when I look at what some of my ancestors lived in during their lifetimes, I am hushed to silence. A friend commented recently about how we live better today than most kings in history. What a true statement.

      This first house that Elam and Katherine are standing by, is most likely in Springbrook Twp., Williams County, North Dakota. I believe I mentioned in a previous post that they may have lived in McHenry County, but the Census record for 1910 finds them in Springbrook. There is a Louella Anderson living with them, who, through other research, happens to not just be their adopted daughter as stated in the Census, but is actually Katherine's niece, daughter of her brother John. But that's a whole different research project....

      I am truly impressed with the adventurous spirit these people had. They were not very young when they set out from Ohio to begin homesteading. Katherine was 53 yrs old in the 1910 Census and I believe she had to be close to that age in this picture.

      This next picture states on the back "Grandma and Grandpa Daniels in Saskatchewan, Canada" but also has a caption below that says "Believe it is Springbrook, N. Dakota". So whether it is one or the other, both places are quite out in the prairie and continue to point to the determined spirit they had. I love how this lower one is a sod house. Over the years I've seen other photos of people who lived in such (including my beloved Laura Ingalls Wilder), but to see my own relatives standing in the picture is heart warming.



      This last picture is of Elam and Katherine in Roseville, California. In Katherine's obituary dated May 11, 1923, it states that she "passed from this life at the family home on D street Sunday, May 6, 1923 at the age of 66 years, 7 months and 5 days after but a six weeks illness." Maybe at another date I will post the obituary along with a letter that May, her daughter, wrote my own Grandmother when May had left her own home to go tend to Katherine in her last days.


      I will post here a portion of the obituary that points to a life that served others and loved the Lord:

      "All her life was spent in the east until 5 years ago, when she accompanied her family to California and had since made her home in Roseville, where her kindness and helpfulness to those in distress and her sweet and cheerful disposition endeared her to all who came in contact with her. She was a devoted Christian and an earnest worker in the Baptist church, of which she was a member, and her many acts of kindness will ever be remembered."

      Sunday, January 30, 2011

      Albert and May Frederick

      The first picture listed here is of Susie May (who I will refer to as May from now on) and I'm not sure if this is her mother, Katherine Emily Anderson Wyatt or another woman. I have other pictures of Katherine that I will post soon, but the woman here looks tired and worn down by life and maybe a little sickly. She had married Edward Wyatt, gave birth to May, but they divorced not long after. I am still needing to research more information regarding their marriage situation, but find Edward in the 1880 Census already divorced. I am unable to locate Katherine and May anywhere, but that could very well be from a typo in transcription of the Census itself.

      The picture below here is surely May and what a sweet looking girl she was.

      This last picture is one of Albert and May, but I am not sure when it was taken. It is a tintype like the first picture in this post.
      Albert lived all his early years in Donnellsville, Clark County, Ohio. Recently on a trip to the Allen County Library in Ft. Wayne, Indiana, I ran across a book that had obituaries and some death certificate copies for those found in the Donnellsville Cemetery. To my wonderful surprise, there was a copy of May's father's death certificate and obituary, giving me more helpful information in my research.

      Albert's parents were both buried in North Dakota while Katherine is buried in Roseville, California. Katherine eventually remarried a man named Elam Daniels, and they joined the family in North Dakota and on to California. At a later date I will post a couple great photos of Elam and Katherine on two different homesteads in North Dakota and Southern Canada just across the North Dakota border.

      Saturday, January 29, 2011

      Frederick Houses - North Dakota

      Since I was a young girl, I have always been intrigued with the west. Reading the Laura Ingalls Wilder books have always brought me much enjoyment. And then, how surprised I was to find out that my dad's grandparents had actually homesteaded in North Dakota around 1900!

      In ordering pension records and land patent records, I was able to find many things in the genealogy of John and Sophia Frederick. The photo immediately below was taken McHenry County North Dakota and probably a little prior to 1906. No trees, no flowers... it looks so barren, but many of these family members stayed in the area for a large part of their lives.



      My grandmother's parents, Albert and Susie May, on the other hand left sometime prior to 1908 as she was born in Texas in 1908. (Their picture is in my first blog post.) I am amazed to think of how they lived out here on the northern prairie, having left the safe area of Clark County, Ohio to try a new life. What an incredible blessing to have this heritage.




      Friday, January 28, 2011

      Always Dreaming

      The number of times that I have picked up these old pictures and looked at them is beyond counting. Hours and hours have been spent in comparing pictures and trying to find out who this unnamed person is. Below is a sketch I found of my great-great-great grandfather John Alsop Stiles. He was born in Massachusetts and died in November 1850 in Mishawaka, Indiana.

      Along with the sketch,I have a box of old daguerrotypes, and some have absolutely no name attached in their cases to tell me some clue of who they are. After looking online on ways to date the cases, I have been able to surmise that this specific case could very well have been from the late 1840's to early 1850's.

      My dream is to identify the person, and of course I would hope it would be someone such as my John Stiles! Dreams.... Anyway, here is the sketch and the daguerrotype.

      Thursday, January 27, 2011

      Byron and Fannie Stiles O'Connor


      In the previous post, there was a link to the Boston School of Music and Endorsement to teach that Fannie Stiles received. Interesting to think that she entered this school sometime around the close of the Civil War. Previous to that she had attended school at Hillsdale in Michigan, some of which I will hopefully go into more detail in the future.

      After Fannie finished school, she taught in Chicago. I have not been able to find out where she taught or who with. But sometime in that year, she became engaged to Byron R. O'Connor, a young doctor residing in Mishawaka. Below I am posting the newspaper article announcing their wedding. The incredible thing about this announcement, is that the Mishawaka Newspaper had a fire in 1872 and several years papers were lost in the fire, including the one for this date. This copy had stayed in my grandfather's family for years. I found it in his desk several years after he had passed away. What a thrill it was to hold this paper in my hand.